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                    <text>S e rv in g S a n fo rd , L a k a M a ry an d S e m in o le C o u n ty s in c e 1 9 0 8
85th Yoar, No. 258 - Sanford, Florida

itvJjj y H
l » T

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Indicted for m urder

M l

IN S ID E

|

□ S p o rts

Florida Manor steaming
SANFORD — Even the rain couldn't cool nil
red-hot Florida Manor In the Sanldrd Men's*
Tuesday Night Softball League ai Chase Park.

Seepage IB.

fe

Post office thanks custom ers
SANFORD — Patrick J. Brennan, the U S
Post Master of Sanford, would like to thank all
the residents of Sanford who took the time to till
out the customer survey card.
He said the postal service Is searching for
ways to better serve the customer needs. This
survey guve the Postal Service the opportunity
to realize some problems that customers arc
experiencing locally.
In an effort to provide Improved service the
window hours will he from H:I5 u.m. until f». lf&gt;
P m. Every effort will he made to staff the
window service to best meet the needs of the
Sanford customers.
Brennan Is encouraging anyone experiencing
a problem to report It to him or Ills staff In order
for them to correct it.

Woman adm its stabbing 84 year-old
man; first degree murder charged
By SANDRA ELLIOTT
Horald Staff Writer

SANFORD — An Altamonte Springs woman who
admitted slabbing an elderly man In a robbery earlier
this month was Indicted Tuesday by a Seminole County
grand Jury for first degree murder and armed robbery.
Jill Bojan. 2H. is charged with murder and robbery In
the death of H I year-old George Holder Sr. The elderly
man was found dead In Ills home on Lake Irene Drive
near Longwood.
Bo|an Is scheduled to make tier llrst court appearance

on the Indictment at l 30 p.m. today. Assistant public
defender Arthur Hall was appointed earlier to represent
Bojau.
'
Described as a driller when sin- was arrested, Bojan
may have, at one time, reined one ol Holder's homes In
Lake Irene. She reportedly also visited the tenant in
another ol Holder's rental properties. Assistant state
attorney Sieve Plotulk said despite the reports, he could
nm vcrllv that Holder had actually rented properly lo
Bojan.
She did visit tenants of Holder's. Stic hung out there
See M urder, Page 5A

Anim al trainer vows to fight
T ig e r’s Eye
c a n ’t stay;
borrow pit
p erm it e x te n d e d

Philiba display opens at gallery
SANFORD — The work of photograhcr Allan
A. Philiba will be on display In the mlnl gallcrv
of the First Street Gallery In Sanford
I he collection of signed color prints from the
original photographs taken by Philiba Include
scenes from France. Norway. Switzerland,
Austria. Germany. Yugoslavia, the Caribbean
and the United States.
t Born In Parts. Philiba studied design in New
^ork. He has created and designed advertising
and promotional campaigns for a number of
Fortune 500 corporations. His travel photo
graphy bus also appeared In many ma|or travel
magazines.
Summer hours at the gallery are from 10 u.m
to 2 p.in. Tuesday through Friday.
The exhibit will open Saturday. June 20. from
7 to 10 p.m. during the Super Saturday Night
Cruise.

Goldsboro residents to meet
SANFORD — All residents of the Goldsboro
community arc Invited and encouraged lo
attend the Weslslde Community Association
meeting this evening at 7:80 p.m. at the West
Sanford Hoys A Girls Club. SMB Persimmon Avc
The group has Joined together It) provide
meaningful, positive and productive com ­
munication with city officials and Its district
commissioner and at the same time seek
positive solutions that will help motivate and
Improve the neighborhood.

By J. MARK BARFIELD
Horald Senior Staff Writer

D a v id M c M i l l a n w i l l f i g h t th e
co u nty's do c isio n that will allow his
training sch ool lo close.

H e ra ld P h o lo a by J im H o p p e

Ono of the ton largo c a ls em ployed by Tlgor's Eyo P rodu ction s and
representative of tho b u s in e s s' name, made an appearanco at tho m eeting
yostorday

C o u n ty m ay ra is e g a s o lin e ta x
to pay fo r c u rre n t b u s s e rv ic e
By J. MARK BARPIBLD
Horald Sonlor S ta ll Writer

SANFORD — Seminole County commlssloncis
may be required to raise the county gasoline lax
another penny to pay tor the same level ol tins
service.
Regional bus managers told com missioners
Tuesday Improving service, such as doubling lIn­
frequency o f Sanford bus service, could add
$425,000 or more to the basic service eosl which is

.ilic.ttlv rxprrUled In Increase nearly 2-1 percent,
( ‘nilltlllHSloiii-rs were reluctant to support other
|)II)|)IIS.I Is whirl
doll.ii s
abiiul l&gt;2 pelt eld nl the total cost
1In i OIIIIIV |ia\s
|l.
iiaites F'arcs ai count lor about 20
In iipi't.lie 1lie ll
null i mines Imm stale ami lederal
pen fill I'll*- n l
gl .lilts
Cumin Mauagei Ron Rabun said he was trying to
keep tin county's tax rate ai Hie same level and
Sec Hus. Page 5A

Econom y grew in first quarter
WASHINGTON — The American economy
Inched ulong ut an even slower pace than
previously believed ut the start of the year, while
orders lo U.S. factories fell for a third straight
month In Muy. the government said today.
The Commerce Department said the gross
domestic product — the country's total output ol
goods und services — grew at a barely
perceptible annual rate of 0.7 percent from
Jununry through March, down dramatically
from the 4.7 percent gain of the OctoberDecember quarter.
T h is rep resen ted the second straigh t
downward revision to GDP activity-

Head Start
locations
must be
renovated

Trashing the president?

By VICKI DoSORMIER

Correction
The telephone number published In the June
20 Stinfurd Heruhl for ACES was Incorrect. The
correct numbers urc 324-8855 or 005-1720
Prom etatf and wire reports
•i.

IN D B X
Bridge..............
Claaatflada...... ,.SB|7B Movies................
Comloa............
Croaaword......
Dear Abby.......
Daatha.............
Dr. Oott............
Editorial...........
Florida.............

Cloudy with showers likely

*

,

Variable cloudiness
with a 50 percent
chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. High
arou n d BO. W ind
variable 10 mpli.

Per more weather, see Pag* 2A

!

SANFORD - Seminole County
Head Start students may lie sitting
out more than Just the summer If
their learning sites are not re­
novated to meet national health and
rehabilitative service standards be­
fore August.
When 4C (Community Coordi­
nated Child Care) look over the
lirogram from the Seminole County
school district at the beginning ol
the IBB2-B3 school year, the Head
Start programs were tus|&gt;cctcd only
by Hie school district and con­
formed only to district standards.
Phoebe Carpenter, president ol
4C. said Unit mull tier organization
took over the contract to manage
tile services last fall, the facilities
were only under Hie Jurisdiction of
the school hoard.
During those years, the program
was exempt from licensing by the
I IRS because slate law allowed
imblle entitles lo operate without
I IRS Inspection
The law assumes. Carpenter said,
lhal the stale Department ol Eduealion requirements are stricter than
those lot I IRS childcare licensing.
And. she said. It assumes tin- state
education requirements arc met.
"Although these facilities don't
undergo mandatory Inspection,
they were expected lo meet licens­
ing standards and there was
assuredly an assumption lhal the
staudards liiqiosed by a sc hool
See Renovate, Page 5A

SANFORD — The owner of a wild
animal training school near Oviedo
vowed ihis morning lo light a
decision by Seminole County com­
missioners last night to allow tliclr
school to close In October
David McMillan said commission­
ers seemed unwilling to consider
the benefits of tils Tiger's Eye
P ro d u c tio n s lo ca te d south ot
Oviedo.
"W e feel they hud their mind
m ade up p re tty e a r l y . " said
McMillun. "We don't think they
following nearly three hours of
review, commissioners voted 4-0
last night to allow a 1000 special
permit to operate tlie training
school to expire In October Hits
year. Three yeurs ago. coinmlssloners granted MeMlllaii and tils wife
Paula M eM lllaii tin- perm it to
operate the school weekdays until
ibis year lo enable lhem to find a
permanent location
Tiger's Eye offers classes lor
handlers ol large animals and pro­
vides tliclr 10 large cats lor movie
and commercial productions. They
also dlsjilay tliclr animals tor school
children In teach them of ihc
I See County, Page BA

Five m onths
in a row:
new housing
starts up
By J. MARK BARFIELD
Horald Sonior Staff Writer

Horald S t a ll Wrltor

See addition al Economy story Page 6A

Jill Bojan

Ile ra ld Photo by Susan W enner

Lemuel Stallworth of Sanlord supports tho prosidont dosp ilo the
placomont of a pair ot bumpor stlckors on his garbage ca ns Stallworth
put tho C lin to n / G o r e stick ers on his trash ca ns during the campaign
last tall bocauso he Is a fan and wanted to show his support
everywhere

SANFORD — For the tilth consec­
utive month Iasi month, new home
starts edged above 1BB2 levels,
according (o Hu- latest county Build­
ing Department report.
A tnlul of 101 iierinlls for new
h om es w ere Issued for unincnrpurulcd areas of the county In
May. a IB percent Increase over the
H5 permits Issued In Muy IBB2.
Overall, new home starts have
improved 7 percent over Ihe first
eight months of the county's Heal
year, which began In October 1BB2.
w h en com p a red lo the sam e
elglil-month period beginning Octo­
ber IBB I
Commercial starts look another
|ump last month. Increasing from
two In May IBB2 to eight. For the
fiscal year, there has been a 5(3
perecnl Increase In Ihe number
commercial permits Issued by the
county.
Roof replacements In Hie south
jiart of the county have almost
returned lo normal 15 mouHis alter
the March 1BB2 hailstorms. Al­
though the county doesn't truck
rerooflng permits specifically, per­
mit technician Mary Long said the
number lias "alm ost" returned lo
pre-March 1BB2 levels, in May 1992.
the county Issued 2.0H3 permits
under Hie "A ll Olliers" category,
which Is |irlmarlly comproscd of
roofing permits. Last month, the
county Issued 8(31 permits classified
as other.
Relleeiing ihe completion ol storm
See Homes, Page BA

�SA -

NEWS

FROM

THE REGION

AND

ACROSS

T H E ST A I

9

Cutting medical costs
Workers comp panel asking for co- payment or deductible

Coupte In Cftttna dtteytd shuttte launch
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — A New Jersey couple who landed a
Cessna airplane at the Grand Strand Airport to stretch their
legs and get fuel had a surprise waiting for them.
F-18 surveillance planes were circling overhead, and police
and U.S. Customs agents wanted a word with them.
The Cessna had flown over restricted air space at NASA
Monday, causing a 22-second delay In the launching o f the
Space Shuttle Endeavour, said Bruce Buckingham. NASA
spokesman.
"W e had to hold It to make sure the launch area was clear,
Buckingham said.’ "S o we chose to come out o f the
countdown."
. ..
The plane's occupants didn't realise they had been followed
up the coast by surveillance Jets and were surprised at their
welcome.
—
The couple apparently had attended a wedding In Florida
and was on the way home to New Jersey. They were not
arrested and were allowed to continue their Journey.

Associated Press Writer
TALLAH ASSEE - Florida could cut
workers' compensation costs by asking
employees to share premiums for coverage
of on-the-job Injuries, a legislative panel
member said.
A staff survey Indicated Florida would be
the first state to charge employees a workers
compensation deductible or co-payment,
similar to those for other forms o f health
Insurance, Sen. Fred Dudley. R-Cape Coral,
said Tuesday.
Also, like rewards for workers who don't
take sick days, bonuses for those who don't
use workers compensation could be an
Incentive to keep down claims and cut the
94-blUlon-a-year cost of the system. Dudley
said.
"H ow radical would that be? Can we
make the employee a partner?" Dudley said.
Currently, he said. "W e have a workers'

Woman arretted for swallowing ringa
TAM
— A
woman
accused o f swallowing
m m PA
r n
—
n
w u u w m
— — — p —an E l—1,000
;
nolle
diamond ring w u arrested again after police
said she
committed a similar hdat.
Three months ago, Odalys Wingate was arrested on theft
charges for taking the ring at Montgomery Ward.
Monday night, she was arrested again when Service
Merchandise officials claim Wingate stole a diamond ring from
their store three weeks before the Montgomery Ward theft.
Tampa police arrested Wingate Monday and charged her
with stealing a 92,890 diamond solitaire ring March 1 from
rrvlce Merchandise. Police said that alter
tooKtng at
ai several
Service
after looking
ngs. Wingate took a three-quarter-carat, pendant-shaped ring
rln
anidhandea the clerk a fake.
Wingate was charged with grand theft and released from the
Hillsborough County Jail after posting 92.500 ball. She Is
awaiting trial on the mat i

-Sen. Fred Dudley
compensation system where we give away
health benefits, and anybody who doesn t
use them la Just stupid."
The Senate Select Committee on Workers'
Compensation heard Tuesday from experts
on medical costs that soak up more than
half, o f employers' premium dollars. Next
Tuesday, experts on coats for lawyers
handling contested cases will testify.

Workfare works
in Escambia
By Associated Press
PENSACOLA - Workfare is
working In Escambia County
and so is Jeanette Fountain and
hundreds like her who have
gone through the program.
T o get food stamps, those who
can work are required to put In
up to 30 hours a week for a
g o v e r n m e n t o r n o n -p r o fit
agency.
'It makes you feel you aren't
Just receiving a handout." Ms.
Fountain told the Pensacola
News Journal for a story Tues­
day.
She used her workfare experi­
ence to obtain a regular Job as
secretary with the state Depart­
m e n t o f H e a lt h a n d R e ­
habilitative Services and has
s in c e b een p ro m o ted to a
caseworker.
Local, state and federal of­
ficials say Escambia's program
may serve as a model for welfare
reform across the nation,- al­
though the workfare concept has
edln
failed
In other
; u to rslM
provide work
a£ R M t t * i u i
experience, giving people skills
and motivation to find regular
Job s an d g e t o f f p u b lic
assistance.
Last year. 33 percent o f the
372 people who participated In
Escambia's workfare program
found permanent employment,
according to figures from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The agency provides half of
the 9200.000 It costs to run the
program each year.
The Florida Department o f

HRS computer shut down for two hours
TALLAHASSEE — Florida's 9173 million welfare computer
system shut down, leaving more the 6,000 field workers and an
unknown number o f clients without services for nearly two
hours, state officials said.
Officials at the state Department o f Health and Rehabilitative
'a failure was In a backup
Services said Tu esd ay------------------------------ computer, but
the cause Is unknown. Although the computer Is.the backup,
the program that enables the terminals In the field to talk to the
main computer Is housed there.
HRS officials scrambled throughout the afternoon to revive
the system. The failure was the fust statewide shutdown since
last year, when there were angry confrontations In welfare
offices throughout Florida, officials •

Mental patient dies after eedatlon
DELRAY BEACH — A patient at a mental health center died
unexpectedly hours after he was restrained face-down and
given two sedatives.
A nurse at the South County Mental Health Center told police
that Fred Cooper, 33. had become violent when he was
restrained Monday evening and given the drugs Prolixin and
Ativan. She called the on-duty doctor when Cooper started
hyperventilating and was told to monitor him. reports show..
cardiac arrest. He was pronounced dead at 8:35 p.m. Monday
Community Hmpital.
H u autopsy was completed Tuesday afternoon, but the cause
o f death won't be determined until toxicology and microbiology
results are returned In about 10 days.

Toddter’t d o th rated accidental
MIAMI — The death o f an 18-month-old boy after he was left
for an hour In a sweltering, closed car was ruled an accident by
prosecutors, and the toddler's
w ill
idler's mother will not be charged with
any criminal wrongdoing.
The state attorney's office said Tuesday Marcus Leslie's
death on June 2 waa a tragic event when Tina Mayes left him
unattended In a family car in the blistering, mid-afternoon
heat.
"In this case, It was so clear by talking to all the witnesses,
by talking to her, by her history o f love and care for this child,
that It was an accident," said Dade State Attorney Katherine
Fernandez Rundle. " A bad accident with very severe, tragic
consequences, no one can deny that."

Labor and Employment Security
pays the otherr half. Clients must
go th ro u g h an e ig h t-w e e k
employment search with the
department's Job Services of
F lo rid a b efore e n ro llin g In
workfare and repeat the process
after a year If they haven't found
permanent employment.
Oov. Lawton Chiles’ Com­
mission on Employment and
proposed
Self-sufficiency has prop
that the workfare program in
Escambia, the only, one of Its
kind In Florida, be expanded
across the state.
Minnesota Is looking Into a
similar program, federal officials
said.
The Escambia program since
1985 has required all food stamp
recipients to participate unless
exempt for reasons that Include
age. health, enrollment In school
and dependent children. About
half o f the 715 people referred to
workfare last year were assigned
to Job sites.
T h e a p p ro a c h has fa ile d
.clsew.tier* because politicians
......... too.involved, communi­
ties failed to support it. ana In
some cases, participants were
treated with disrespect, said
Mamun Rashled, administrator
o f the food stamp program In
Escambia for the Department of
Health and Rehabilitative Serv­
ices.
"T h e secret Is that we are
client-sensitive here." Rashled
said.
"W e let them know this Is not
a punishment program," said
C a r la J o n e s , E s c a m b ia 's
workfare coordinator.

By Associated Brass
GAINESVILLE - The Univer­
sity o f Florida received 977
million In charitable donations
lost year, but the growing Im­
portance o f fund-raising for the
state's colleges has raised new
questions.
The Gainesville college ranked
10th among U.S. public un­
iversities, said an annual survey,
"Voluntary Support o f Educa­

WEST PALM BEACH — A couple who admitted to beating
their four adopted children with wooden spoons and confining
them In straltjacketa were ordered to pay them 938,400.
Dawn and Anthony Stoppello o f Palm Beach Gardens
escaped p prison sentence in their plea agreement on child
abuse charges but were ordered Tuesday to stay away from all
children for 10 years.

Prom Associated Proas reports

tion." It was complied by the
New York-based Council for Aid
to Education and released this
month.
UF and Duke University in
North Carolina were the only
two schools In the Southeast to
crack the top 25 among all
universities, public and private,
said Paul Robell, associate vice
president for development at the
University o f Florida Founda­
tion.

'

StlufSiv By The Sen*** HenST
fc*. MSN- Arenoh Av*., Senterd,
S S M O d C l t t e A e e t t g * P a M at O tn to rd ,
Fle riA s t n d t d d H M i t l w i l i n g

’H S B M S H S S ;a a

•as 1SS7, Sanford, FI Sfrib-•1SS7.
Rufcoartetten Itetet
(DeityIsunSay)
DoAwy
fttefll

FlertSe AeeMeMs mud eey 1% eelee
lee IntddMwi te rdw i
Fheoe (4S7) SZZ-M11.

MIAM I — A Colom bian
teen-ager who says he stowed
away in the wheel well o f a
Miami-bound cargo Jet to
‘ life was
escape a miserable
caught In a web o f Ilea — and
now U.S. officials are kicking
him out o f the country.
Juan Carlos Quzman, 16,
arrived June 4 aboard an
A r e a A ir lin e s DC-8 Jet.
Quzman said he took the
three-hour trip from Call
tucked Inside the plane's
landing-gear wheel well.
That may be true.
But he also told authorities
he was 13-year-old Oulllermo
Rosales, an orphan living on
the grounds o f Cali airport,
foraging for food In garbage
cans.
"T h e boy Is not who he
purports to be," Immigration
and 1Naturalisation Services
D is tr ic t D ir e c to r W a lt e r
Cadman told the Sun-Sentinel
o f Fort Lauderdale.
"Th e stufT he said about his
family, hla name and hla age,
none of that Is accurate," he
said Tuesday. "Qlven the fact
that other things haven't
anned out. we don’t know
ow he really got here."
INS officials asked Quzman
to leave the United States by
July 14. when his current
Immigration parole expires.
The boy lay In a bed at his

E

cousin's house on Tuesday
and stared at the celling.
"He Is depressed because he
has to go back to the terrible
life he had in Colombia," said
the boy's attorney, David
Iverson. "He really wanted to
stay here and start a new life
for himself with people that
care about him."
Iverson said he would make
a final attempt at trying to
keep the boy In the United
States, where he has been
welcomed with open arms.
Jalro Lozano, brother of
suspended Miami police of­
ficer William Lozano, took
custody of Quzman. He said
he hoped to adopt the boy.
Quzman moved to his cous­
in's house Sunday.
Q u z m a n 's c o u sin and
lawyer said they believed the
boy's escape story.
But medical, aviation and
Immigration authorities are
.‘ .Bkeptfqal. They said the
freezing cold and lack of
oxygen at high altitude would
have killed him. Cadman said
Tuesday the INS was conti­
nuing Its investigation o f the
boy's story.
As skepticism grew last
week. "R o sa les " admitted
he'd lied about part of his
story. His name was really
Quzman. his mother was
alive and he waa nearly 17.
not 13. She has said she
wants her son to remain In
Miami.

The UF Foundation raised
more than three times what any
other state university garnered
last year. Its assets last June 30
totaled 9162 million, and It has
105 full-time employees, ac­
cording to a legislative staff
report compiled InFebruary.
T h e private U n iversity o f
Miami ranked second behind UF
with 952.6 m illion In gifts.
Florida State In Tallahassee was
third with 922.4 million, and th e .

University of South Florida
Tampa was fourth with 91
million.
Florid a's big losers w
Stetson University in DeLa
where donations dropped by I
to 95.5 million; Florida Atlai
University In Boca Raton, dc
tlons fell by a third to I
million: and Gulf Coast Comi
nlty College in Panama C
where gifts practically dla
peered, falling from 92.7 mill

TH E W EATHER
Todayi Variable cloudiness
with e 50 percent chance o f
afternoon thunderstorms. High
around 90. Wind variable 10
mph.
Tor
onlght: A 30 percent chance
o f evening thunderstorms, then
fair. Law around 70. Light wind.
Thursday: Partly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance o f afternoon
thunderstorms. High around 90.
Wind southeast 10 mph.
E xten ded forecast: Friday
through Sunday: Partly cloudy
with a chance o f showers and
thunderstorms. Mainly during
the afternoon and evei
In the lower to mid 70s.
the upper 80s to lower 90s.

A lt . J J T 7 1

Columbian
stowaway kicked
out of U.S.

University of Florida 10th in donations

Couple ordered to pey for child ebuse

M I A M I - H s r s are th a
w in n in g n u m b e rs s e le c te d
Tuesday In the Florida Lottery:

( W e have a w o rk e rs '
compensation system where
we give away health
benefits, and anybody who
doesn’t use them Is Just
stupid. l

The panel, named by Senate President
Ander Crenshaw. R-Jacksonvllle, will re­
commend legislation to the fill! Senate
Commerce Committee In time for a special
session on Insurance expected to be held in
the fall.
.
Chairwoman Toni Jennings, R-Orlando,
directed the staff to Investigate more
uniform fee schedules for medical charges,
and look at the possibility o f having doctors
rather than Judges make decisions on
beneficiaries'medical care.
Currently. Insurers and beneficiaries In
contested e s s e s hire medlcsl e x p e r t s who
argue before Judges over whether more
benefits are needed.
"Then you've got a situation of what you
call the dueling docs. Which one do you
believe?" said Lynn Houser, a Liberty
Mutual Insurance Co, claims manager. "M y
thought Is: Take It out of the Judge s hands
and put It In the hands o f a truly
Independent doctor."

u
fi

70
77
74
40

mm
n
to
mm

H
to
*4

to
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w

to
or
ot
01

70
II
70
77
73
79
4*
74
70
79

Act
If
SO
SO
.04
.m m
.77
.00

TH U R SD AY
F t ly e ld y 90-70

J «a e IB

F R ID A Y
F t ly e ld y 90-70

SATURDAY
P t ly e M y 90-70

BOLUNAR TAB LE : Min. 9:45
a.m., 10:20 p.m.: MqJ. 3:40 a.m.,
4:05 p.m. T I D E !: D a y to n a
Beach: h i g h s , ----------a.m..
12:15 p.m.:lows, 5:52 a.m., 6:12
&gt;.m.: N ow S m y rn a B eaeh :
t l g h s , ------------ a.m.. 12:20
p.m.: Iowa, 5:57 a.m.. 6:17 p.m.:
Cocoa Reach: h lg h a ,-----------a.m.,12:35 p.m.; lows, 6:12 a.m.,
6:32 p.m.

f

Waves are
1-2 feet with a slight chop.
Jt Current is to the north with a
.00 water temperature o f 82 degrees.
Jt New Smyrna Beach: Waves are
.00
1-2 feet with a slight chop.
.11
.00 Cuirent is to the north, with a
.00 water temperature o f 82 degrees.

.00

■

r

W EDNESDAY
M s ly e ld y 90-70

Jans 26

HI

•

__
__
knots. "S e a t 2 "feet.” Bay "and

SUNDAY
P t ly e ld y 90-70

T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Tuesday waa 96 degreet and the overnight low waa
68 aa reported by the Univeraity
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center, Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e rio d , e n d in g at 9 a.m .
Wednesday, totalled .16 of an
Inch.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today waa 77 degrees and
Wednesday's overnight low waa
72, aa recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Atrport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ T n o a S a y'a h lgh ................ 1

T»mg*f«tur»* Indict)* p rtvto
iloh tn d overnight low to lp .m . BO
H I U Arc
Anchor ao«
44 49
Atlanta
17 4 f
.
Atlantic Clly
•4 47 .94
B iltlm o r*
M 47 .14
Billing*
79 47 .11
Birm ingham
*4 73 .01
Blim arch
N
4f
47 44
U
41 01
74 43 .41
17 71
19 43 1.13
TO 4t
19 40
•7 41
C lrm ls n d
19 41
Cancard.N H .
I t 41 .44
Ooll04-At Worth
n 71
0*nv*r
to 44
D m M a in **
M 44
D *tr*lt
U
43
Honolulu
n
71
Houtton
17 74 .04
Indlonopoll*
N
40
Jo ck to n ,M lw .
M 71 J 3
K a n to * City
00 71
L«* VM M
f t 71
LIH Io Nock
I f 71
7 f 44
W 71
M H w ou kW
70 41
MWotl Paul
0 ! 41
N aihvllla
«
41
N aw O rla on a
I I 71 I S !
Mow Y o rk CWy
07 00 M
Oklahom a C ity
N
40
10 70
07 70 .99
104 71
AlttWgrgh
01 41
OomanAMalno
09 44 .77
01 79
74 44 .00
41 40 . I f
'i 00 71

O f Hi
cdy
cdy
dr
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cd y
re
rn
elr
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dr
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dr
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cdy
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M

S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - W e d n e s d a y . J u n o 23. 1993 - 3 A

Suicide ban back in effect
Armed robbery euepeot caught

By JUDY DAUSBNMIBR
Associated Press Writer

A Sanford man was arrested on an armed robbery charge by
Sanford police early Tuesday morning following the holdup o f a
clerk at the Circle K store on West First Street.
Kenneth Juck Crotty Jr.. 21. 1333 Elliott Ave.. Sanford, was
found driving several blocks from the store and arrested after
the clerk identified him, according to reports. The clerk
reported a man wearing a peach-colored shirt over his head
entered the store shortly before 2 a.m. and Jumped over the
counter. Using a pocketknife, the man forced the clerk to give
It Ini several
bills from the cosh register before leaving.
Police report finding a peach-colored shirt Identified by the
clerk In Crotty's car along with 24 91 bills.

LANSINO, Mich. — The ban on assisted
suicide enacted to atop Dr. Jack Kevorkian
Is back In effect while an appeals court
weighs the law.
The state Court of Appeals voted 2-1
Tuesday to hear arguments in the case as
soon as possible and blocked a Judge's order
that overturned the ban.
The Legislature rushed the law Into effect
Feb. 25 to atop Kevorkian, a retired
pathologist who has been at 16 suicides.
The law makes assisting in a suicide

from n Icrinltiu! Illness," said Howard
Simon, executive director of l lie ACl.U's
Michigan chapter.
Kevorkian's attorney. Geoffrey Fteger.
sold the nppcnls court order was based on
"fear and utter stupidity."

piinlshnhlc by up to Tour years in prison mul
u 82.000 fine.
On May 20, Circuit Judge Cynthia Diane
Stephens, acting on a challenge from the
Michigan chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union, struck down the law on
technical grounds. But she also said that the
law violates a fundamental right to "choose
to cease living."
The stale asked the appeals court to
review Stephens' ruling.
"W e urc disappointed that while the Court
of Appeals considers the merits of Judge
Stephens' decision. It chose to suspend the
rights of competent udults who arc suffering

Kevorkian has vowed to defy the law and
was present at one suicide since (he law
look cffecl. He wasn't charged, however,
because prosecutors said llirre wasn'i
enough evidence that lie assisted.
Stephens ruled that (lie ban was mi
constitutionally tacked on lo a hill thai deal)
with a narrower aspect o f the assistedsuicide debate.

Cocaine possession charged
Qeorge Byrd, 39, 1000 W. 13th St., Sanford, was arrested on
a cocaine possession charge early Monday morning.
A Seminole County deputy assisting a policeman In a
disturbance at Byrd’s home reported seeing kyrd empty the
contents of a pill bottle on the ground. The contents were round
to be cocalnce, according to reports.

Tobacco industry
sues EPA over
secondhand
smoke report

. , 'V'iii* I- ■

Traffic stops Isads to arrest
• Robert O. Stoner. 43. 1203 S. Adams St., Sanford, was
arrested on a suspended driver's license charge following a
traffic stop late Monday night.
• Terrence A. Moore. 18, 90S Pecan Ave., Sanford, was
arrested on a suspended drivers license charge following a
traffic stop Monday night.

By I 8T I 9 THOMPSON

Warrant arrests made

Associated Press Wrller

The following wanted persons have been taken into custody:
• Stephen Matthews, 21, 2002 Summerlin Ave., Sanford,
was served with a warrant on a charge o f failure to appear In
court to answer to a suspended license charge.
• Ricky Joe Rash, 33, 1013 Rosecllff Circle, Sanford, was
arrested on a probation violation charge for a marijuana
possession conviction.
• Henry John Fernandes, 32, 2406 Park Ave., Sanford, was
served with a warrant on a probation violation charge for a
trespassing conviction.
• Michael Joseph Matuszwskl, 45. 406 S. Scott St„ Sanford,
was arrested Monday on a charge o f obtaining property with a
worthless check.

H « r » J d P h o to b y S a ta n W in n e r

Crimes reported to authorities

Hern comet trouble

The following crimes have been reported to Seminole County
deputies and Sanford police:
• A wallet containing $250 and a television were reported
tuken from a residence in the 1600 block of Sipes Avenue,
Midway, sometime between 8 a.m. Sunday and 10:11 a.m.
Monday.
• A television was reported taken from a residence In the
1300 block o f Cypress Avenue, Sanford, sometime Monday
bet ween 8:15 p.m. and 9:10 p.m.
• Speakers and a video tape recorder valued at a total of
9600 were reported taken from a residence in the 900 block of
Elm Avenue. Sanford, sometime between midnight and 10
a.m. Sunday.
• Assorted Items were reported taken from a residence In the
400 block of Oak Avenue, Sanford, sometime between 2 p,m.
Sunday and 2 p.m, Monday.
• A 2 ^ -year-old whfte chow dog was. reported taken from the
rear o f a home on the 9300 black of Palmetto Avenue, Banford,
iometlhie, Monday bfct'wwn' TO a.m. a n d * pm*.
im •
• Four wheel (rand tire*, valued at $800 were reported taken
from a car In, tn« body shop o f Ken Hummel.Chevrolet, 3455
Orlando Drive, Sanford, sometime between 5:30 p.m. Friday
and 7:30 a.m. Monday.
• Two air conditioning units valued at $1,800 were reported
taken from a residence In the 100 block o f Sun Vista Court.
Sanford, sometime between 5 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m.
Monday.

A pair of Sanford pooches mlschievioualy eye a fire hydrant as
they make their way through the neighborhood.

Rape suspect with
HIV faces attempted
murder charges
iiN la ts d Prats
MIAMI — Prosecutors charged
a rape suspect with attempted
flrBt-degree murder because they
say he raped three young boys
while infected with the AIDS
vims.
Ignacio A. Perea, Jr., 31, is
believed to be the first alleged
rapist Dade County prosecutors
have charged with attempted
murder because he knew at the
time of the assaults he was
HlV-poslllvc.
Although rare, there have
been other enses brought under
sim ilar circum stances
throughout the United States,
but convictions arc few.
Perea had a doctor’s receipt ,n
his wallet for T-cell testing, court
records show. T-ccll testing is
used after diagnosis HIV to
determine the body's ability to
fight Infection.
An assistant Dade state at­
torney declined to say whether
any af the boys, two who were
11 years old and the third was
13 at the time of the 1991
attacks, has contracted the virus
that causes AIDS.
Perea Is accused o f snatching
the boyB ofT the street, pulling
them into his car. blindfolding

them and driving them to either
a warehouse or private home,
where they were assaulted by
Perea and an accomplice who
has not been found.
In addition to the attempted
murder charges, Perea also faces
at least five charges of sexual
battery, kidnapping and lewd
nssault In each assault.
Perea's lawyer. Jay D. Levine,
wants the attempted murder
charges tried separately from the
other charges because he said
his client cannot get a fair trial If
the Jury Is told he has AIDS.
"Like leprosy, AIDS carries a
stigma so corrosive that a Jury
confronted with evidence of
one's infliction might well be
Inclined to return a verdict for
that reason alone to ensure one’s
Isolation and removal from soci­
ety at large," Levine argues In
papers filed with the court.
Dade Circuit Court Judge
Michael B. Chavies la expected
to rule Thursday.
In 1988, a California Navy
technician accused o f having sex
with his fiancee without telling
her he had the AIDS virus, was
acquitted of assault by a military
Jury.

GREENSBORO. N.C. - Hit
with a lawsuit from the tobacco
Industry, the Environmental
Protection Agency defended as
scientifically sound a report (lint
concludes secondhand smoke
kills.
Th e tob acco In du stry on
Tuesday asked u federal Judge to
order the EPA to withdraw the
report, saying It wasn't properly
backed up by science.

Burn victim returned to
thank man who helped
By The Associated Brets

watching television when he
heard someone pleading at the
gate of his home. When he saw
W ilson , budly burned over
nearly 40 percent of Ids body, lie
opened the gate to help him. His
wife. Kathy, called 911.

TAM PA - A New York City
tourist badly burned In a racially
motivated attack sought out the
man who sprayed water on his
wounds and thanked him.
Christopher Wilson • and his
" Y o u w o u ld , h o p e a n y h u m a n
mother, Epld Plummer, tried to being would do that to help
kend their thanks to Omer Sur­ another human being," Surface
face In a postcard, but (he note
sald&lt;
never' arrived, Plummer said
Tuesday. June 6 was the first
He didn't know what to do, so
time they hud spoken to Surface.
lie sprayed Wilson with a garden
40.
hose to relieve the pain — pain
“ He and his mother said they
so bad Wilson begged the first
appreciated the help," Surface
deputy who arrived to shoot
said. "I only did what I thought I
him.
could do to help. I would hope
After visiting the crime scenes
that If I needed help, someone
this month. Wilson went to the
would help m e."
P lu m m e r, w h o has c o n ­ Surfaces' to say thunk you.
prosecutors said.
sistently shied away from the
press, said she was glad she
The trial of two white laborers
could thank Surface, but de­
from Lukclund, accused of kid­
clined Tuesday to expand on her
napping uml setting fire lo
visit to Tampa.
Wilson. 1b headed to West Palm
Peach. It Is tentatively set for
On the morning of the attack.
Aug. 23.
Surface told police, he was

"E P A ’s environmental tobacco
smoke report has gone (I,rough
extensive scientific review by
scientists Inside and outside the
E P A ," agency spokeswoman
Lauren Mlcul said. "W e have
faith In our scientific process."
I leal(li advocates said lhe clgarcllc companies are merely
trying to stall tougher unitsmoking laws, which have been
sough! nationwide since the
report was issued In January.
"Th is shows (lie willingness of
this Industry to pervert law and
science to whatever their busi­
ness ends are with no thought to
the harm It might cause people,"
w O d

C lg u rc t tc ma n a fa el n re rs
alleged Ihnt EPA olllelals Ignored
studies that suggested secondh an d s m o k e wa s not
carcinogenic and overlooked
established procedures lo screen
out bias in studies.
"When the EPA could not j
o t h e r w i s e reneh lls p r e ­
determined conclusions using!
generally ucceptcd scientific and
statistical practices, the EPA
simply changed the rules." said;
Steve Parrish, an attorney Inrj
Philip Morris U.S.A . one of th c;
plaintiffs. Other plaintiffs arc!
K.J. Reynolds Tobacco ( o.. IJnt-j
vcrsal Leaf Tobacco Co, and tw o:
Industry groups.
The EPA said It strived lor|
ueeurucy In the report and
submitted a fltm\ draft to ant
outside turned o f aeltYitiMdU
wtuvues'tn ttnrmwnecoindustry.'
Changes were made to the report
In response to Indlisfry FftYlcIsni. j

M lb liu n l 1 &gt; r t t w h i i k ' t i f ' l h *

lAdyttPacy institute tn WasmhRton.
_.___ ,_________ . . . .
,
i
The Industry bus "purposely
The report prompted lighter?
tried to obfuscate the truth
restrictions on smoking In public
about active smoking for the
places around (lie country. The­
pust 40 years. They arc now
re per I could also lead to reguta-'
trying to do the same thing with
tlon o f smoking in the workplace?
passive smoke," said Michael
try the Occupational Safely and.'
Erlkscn. director o f the Centers
Ilcnllh Administration.
for Disease Conlrol's Office on

N

id

W

S #A * L * E
HURRY
LAST DAYS
TO SA17 .

Sanford

322-0285

SAVE ON

« ftth t-iP u tters
in su ra n t'*'

• SM I U S
SI A N S I
• si

ADVANCE DIRECTIVE WORKSHOP

n s m i- A n s

S a le

"Y o u r Wishes C o n cern in g L ife S u p p ort"

I w in

25%

to

33% O F F

i l

2 9 .9 9

* I0 W E L S
iS O S IE S

H ot)

S i ik j o l h

$50.

I( in c h

( ( )l 11f &lt; &gt;1 It M

SEMI-ANNUAL LINGERIE SALE

BRAS, BRIEFS, BIKINIS A DAYWEAR
$ato 1A8T. flag. 14.50. PuR-onsport bta

Tuesday. June 29, 2 P M &amp; 7 P M

^ o r id a ^ e £ is t2 ^ fU v in g J J V ills _ ^ - 9 0 4 - 3 2 8 ^ 7 1 0 ^ _ ^

• I ’ ll L O W S

I S • 0 O M F 0 R T E R S

• IiA 1 1 1Ai

Deltona Nursing Service, 2922 How land B lvd.
1993 F o r m s P r o v id e d a n d C o m p le te d at W orkshop — F R E E
Reservations Requested 1-800-624-5498

A r t s 7

JC P e n n e y

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2870 8. Franoh Av*

Living W ills
• Durable Powers O f Attorney
• D o N ot Resuscitate Order Forms

r

O u r P r o fe s s io n a l A d R e p r e s e n t a t iv e s
W ill B e H a p p y T o A s s is t Y o u In A n y O f Y o u r
C la s s ifie d o r D is p la y A d v e r t is in g N e e d s .

TONY RUSSI

FREE

»ta n

t s li

___________ ________ u

-v//

For Personal
&amp; Commercial
Insurance

Smoking anti Health.
Th e report said cigarette
smoke Is responsible for 3,000!
eases of lung cancer per year In j
non-smokers. Il also said dial
secondhand smoke Is responsi­
ble for 150,000 lo 300.000 cases!
o f bronchitis anti pneumonia;
each year In children and that ii j
Increases the risk of asthma and
tile severity of Its symptoms.

es atwuWiJVyKvestoeeOMn
»riw9qi«si ssH * - w a yows Petee , —cSnpceerewrqt
neatqueer*1” *
--JCftMNytmrtV

JCPenney
Hwy. 17-92, Sanford

�.

rWiwWWWi'i

4 A - S a n fo rd H e r a ld . 8 a n fo r d . F lo r id a - W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 23 , 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanford Herald
( U t P t 4 « 1-2 *0 )

300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Aren Code 407-322-2611 or 631-9093
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATE!
3 Mouths............................919.80
S Months........................... 939.00
I Year ............................. 970.00
Florid a Residents m ust p a y 7% aalee ta x In
addition to ra ta * above.

ED ITO R IA LS

Dual rolls
questionable
T h e L a k e M on roe W a terfro n t S te e rin g
C om m ittee has requested the C ity o f Sanford
to a c k n o w led g e It as a special purpose
com m ittee. Last week, the com m ission in ­
dicated it w ould prepare an ordinance to
bring it about.
T h e S teerin g C om m ittee is faced with a
gigan tic tusk. It is seekin g to d eterm ine what
m a y be done to the w aterfront alon g Lake
M onroe, to m ake It m ore attractive und
usable.
T o accom plish this. It is com m en d ab le that
represen tatives from various clubs, groups,
and organ ization s continue to p rovid e input
us they h ave d on e du rin g past com m ittee
m eetings,
E ven tu ally, the co m m ittee w ill arrive at
recom m en dation s, and b rin g them b efore the
S anford C ity C om m ission . C hanges to the
w a te rfro n t aren w ill re q u ire go v ern m e n t
ap proval as w ell ns som e form o f financing.
Because the w aterfront area b ein g dis­
cussed stretches from the eastern Sanford
area to the Interstatc-4 overpass, there m ay
be o cca sio n s w h en m a tters w ill requ ire
ap p rovcl from the S em in ole County C o m ­
m ission as w ell.
W ith these possibilities, w e question the
re c o m m e n d a tio n to h a v e S anford M ayor
B cttye S m ith and Dlst. 5 C ounty C o m m is­
sion er D aryl M cLain serve on the official
S te erin g C om m ittee.
Both o f these govern m en tal leaders have
b een In volved w ith the origin al steerin g
cqm
vc
h e lp e d p ro v id e ; m p u t i
--------- K ---- S u y \
in to
* erc 19 little doubt that their
andI cou
c ounnty*
tyi*th
expertise w as o f value.
T h e p roblem will be w hen the W aterfront
S teerin g C om m ittee brings a proposal before
eith er o f the com m issions. W ill It be fair to
have a com m ittee m em b er eligible to vote?
O ther organization s bring requests before
the c o m m iss io n s, in clu d in g the S an ford
Historic D ow n tow n W aterfront Association,
Scenic Im provem en t Board, Mnlnstrcet P ro­
gram . and others. None o f them has an actual
com m ission er on the board o f directors.
T h e s e o rg a n iz a tio n s are s ep a ra ted fro m
govern m en t control as they should be in a
d em ocratic society.
In i ti a l r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s f r o m the
W aterfron t S teerin g C om m ittee call for repre­
sentation by the "M a y o r or m em b er o f the
Sanford C ity C o m m issio n ," and "S e m in o le
C ounty Com m ission: Preferably the District 5
Coin m Isslo tier."
W e urge this suggestion to be reconsidered
b y th e c o m m itt e e , o r r e je c te d b y th e
com m ission s If recom m ended.
C om m ission ers should continue to m ake
decisions on behnlf o f the city and county,
and not be faced with a dual-responsibility.

LETTERS

On politicians
Reference Nick Pfelfaufs article "Commissioner
Lon?" I am greatly distressed that the citizens of
Sanford and especially of Howell's district aren't
screaming for his dismissal since he was less than
truthful about being a full time resident o f i 109
Park Ave., Sanford. This In effect makes his
position u s d ly commissioner Illegal. I'm curious to
know how much shafting our people are prepared
to lake before they say enough Is enough.
What Is appulllng Is that the people who will be
Judging Ills qualifications for ills seat are none
other than his old cronies on the board. Tills Is like
die fox caught in the hen house being tried by Ills
fellow foxes, You know and 1 know that they will
do nothing to one o f their awn.
People come up to me and cncourge me to keep
ul them, and I truly appreciate their support. But I
neither can or want do do this on my own. People,
please understand that these hooligans cannot
harm you. they have no more power than you are
willing to give them. They are a bunch of
over-inflated nincompoops who need to be deflated
by o good pricking. These people do nothing, yet
spend and waste our money. Believe me, I could do
nothing without spending a cent.
Lon Howell is a disgrace to his position, and no
matter what proor Is given showing Ills lack of
truthfulness to the people. Ills ego will not let him
swallow Ills pride and admit lie was wrong. This Is
one o f the reasons that people dislike politicians so
much. We arc taught ns we grow up to admit when
we make mistakes, yet this line o f reasoning is
totally alien to this hunch of Nlmrods. 1 have found
rlml people us a rule can be a very forgiving lot If
you will only square with them. If you make a
mistake, more ofien than not they will give you a
second chance. Our commission lost that advan­
tage a long lime ago. I would continue, hut I feel a
strong urge to retch ut the moment.
Hick Shcnfer
Sunford
I

BEN W A T T E N B E R G

Averting the welfare train wreck
Finally, President Clinlon luis appointed a task
force to develop Ills famous plan "to end welfare
us we know It. to break the permanent culture of
dependence." That's the good news.
But Sen. Dunlel P. Moynthan, the man In
politics who knows the welfare Issue best, Is not
happy. He says that H (lie Clinton plan embodies
the principles that have been ascribed to It, It will
tip "n political train wreck walling to happpn."
"there is a dirty
That, says Moynihau, is because
beci
little secret to it."
The secret Is stmptc: The Clinton plan — at
least based on what has been said about It by
Clinton and others — will not end welfare as we
know It. Not even close. Douglas Bcsharov of the
American Enterprise Institute estimates that
under the (admittedly vague) Clinton program a
typical welfare mother will si III receive about 90
percent of her current benefits!
Mow so? The guts of the plan is "tw o years and
out." Thut ostensibly means that for up to two
years able-bodied welfare mothers will get major
support for education. Job training and rhlld
rare, but then must get a Job or lose benefits.
But what happens If a welfare recipient doesn't
go to work? Based on the Ideas propounded by
Clinton, die only pcnnlty would he a loss of the
mother's share of nn Alii to Families with

Dependent Children grunt, Tims, the mother
continues to receive tier children's share o f the
AFDC grant. And food stamps. And housing
g r u n t s . And
M e d ic a id . And
W om en-infantC h ildren benefits.
And is eligible for
abo^t., 70 s m a lle r
programs. There Is
little in ce n tiv e to
work.
Moreover, one o f
the task force's cochairmen. Harvnrd
£ An automatic
®'cu
r illt would
UJfMilH
Pro fessor David
Ellwood, proposes to
send the
establish a "c h ild
message to
support assurance
future
system." Thai new
generations
program would give
that Am erica
e x t r a m o n e y to
w ill no longer
children whose fa­
make It easy
thers ore not paying
to have
child support.
children uni of
( E l l w o o d Is a
wedlock £
mystery. Is he the
lough "tw o ycurs and out" advocate? Or Is he

BUM HIR.M AN.
NO 0 « U N M
IN THIS O N I
E 1 T U IR .^ H

1

ELLEN GOODM AN

Look across another threshold
VIENNA — The floor In front of the podium
was covered by stacks of petitions bearing half
n million numes from 124 countries. In 21
dllferciit languages, people of the world had
Joined together to make u single pica to the
United Nations Conference on Human Rights:
"W c demand gender violence to be recognized '
as a violation of human rights."
Tills bank or petitions may huve served us u
psychic shield for the women who came to that
podium one after another, ull day long, to tell
their stories. While bureaucrats and dignitaries
debated words and compromises upstairs In
this cavernous Austria Centro, women In tills
room took part In n powerful nnd emotionally
cxhuusilng Tribunal on women's human
rights. They shared Just a token number of the
abuses against the world's women that have
often gone unnoticed, unnamed und un­
punished.
Perveen Murtha. u poor Puklstunl woman,
came to tell how she hud survived her
husband's attempt to kill her by burning und
then lost her children lo him when he won a
divorce. Uok Dong Kirn, a dignified elderly
Korean "comfort womun" told a hushed
audience how she hud been taken ns a sexual
slave for Jupuucsc soldiers when she was 14
years old. Gabrlcllc Wilders, a young Ameri­
can. told how her stepfather, a former priest,
served only 18 months in Juil for years of
sadistic sexual abuse Hint began when she was
12.
There were witnesses us well as survivors
who came to testify. A Russian photographer
wiro covered the unheralded conflict In Obslctu. once a purl of the Soviet Union, told of
tanks decorated with severed women’s heads
und breasts. An activist from Zagreb talked of
the women refugees from Bosnia, Including a
woman who was compelled to make a Sophie's
Choice and leave one o f her twin babies tahlnd
with Just a puciflcr and a note. Above all else.
there were witnesses to rape In every Imaglnublc circumstance — in war. at home, in poll
ollce
custody.
But this Tribunal was not just a chronicle of
horrors, a parade o f the world's failures. It was
In Its own way, a tribute lo the "success"
women have had In breaking the silence that
has surrounded tills violence.
In Vicnnu. the- sophisticated city ot Mozurt
nnd Freud, women's rights groups* from every
culture and country have coinc with a unifying
theme — stop the violence. Unlike ninny
diplomats divided along economic and cultural
lines, they have formed (lie most organized
and cohesive force at tills conference. For the
first time, they have succeeded In getting their
message onto the U.N.'s and perhaps the
world's ugendn.
The deceptively simple, even simplistic. Idra
that women’s rlgliis are human rights has
been a long time In coming. After ull, human

rights philosophy wus originally written by
men seeking protection against the state. They
created a list of the things thnt they feared the
most: repression by the state, violence by the
state.
When women were Included, they won the
same protections as men. But over the years, it
has become clear that women's fears and
human righ ts'
a b u s e s arc not
ulways the same
us men's.
In th e m o n t h s
when she was help­
ing to organize this
Tribunal. Charlotte
Bunch o f The Center
for Women's Global
L e a d e r s h i p at
Rutgers, discovered
thut when "you ask
women what Is the
form or Inhumun and
degrading treatment
they arc most afraid
i We demand
will happen l o
gender
them...It's thut they
violence to be
will be raped or bntrecognized as
tcred."
avlorationof
If men fear the
human rights J
state, women also
fear their husbands.
They feur the male traditions In which, as
Sleliu Mukusa of Ugunda told the Tribunal,
"domestic violence Is viewed us the normal
wear and tcarofmurrlagc."
If men need protection from torture for their
political beliefs, women need protection as well
from torture for their gender: from rape or
genital mutilation, beatings or bride-burning.
They need protection from what Sara Portuques of Costa Rica, a 32-year-old survivor of
Incest, called "the repressive regimes of our
dally lives."
The women's agenda brought to this confer­
ence is not then Just a matter of equality. The
U.N.’s Universal Human Rights Declaration
gives the world the oral authority to look Inside
borders ut the wuy countries treat their
citizens. But women arc demanding that the
world look across another threshold at crimes
which were once as private as family and us
personal as sex.
'nils view Is not pretty nor easy. But as
Judge Ellzaliclh Odlo of Costa Rica put It
during this scaring Tribunal. "W c must make
sure the absurd division between the public
and private sphere disappears." Here, at last,
survivors bearing their scars and women
activists sharing u broad moral vision arc
taking off the world's blinders.

the soh "government us Daddy" proponent? He
lius been described by some hard-liners as "a
sheep in w oTs clothing."I
The politics of all this, says Moynthan. are
potentially catastrophic: "W hat an awful sur­
prise voters will get when they find out that
ending welfare means being able to retire on a
court-awarded child-support grant!"
The whole welfare situation Is a mess, driven
by u massive Increase In illegitimate births.
Nothing seems lo work. Moynlhan’s Family
Support Act (1988) was designed to transform
welfare Into workfare. But It Isn’t panning out. A
new report by the Public Policy Institute of New
York State reveals that the New York effort to
reform the system has made It worse, partly
..........................
*"
because It Is based on the
Idea that "entry-level"
Jobs arc not good enough for welfare recipients.
Is there an answer? A quick cut-off of welfare
leaves Innocent children in peril. Incremental
tinkering with AFDC does not change the
bonuses for feckless reproductive behavior, thus
guaranteeing another generation hooked on
dependency.
My sense Is thut the welfare situation must be
seen whole — AFDC. food stamps, housing
grants, and most of the rest. Then those "Greater
Welfare" programs must be reduced, over time.

JA C K

ANDERSON

W h at’s future of
independent
counsel?
WASHINGTON - Ahrr u slx-ycur. $40
million investigation that yielded surprisingly
few convictions. Irun-contru prosecutor
Lawrence E. Walsh has become the poster
boy for those who want to do uwny with the
Independent counsel stututc.
But while Congress dehutes the future or
the law — which calls for a court-appointed
prosecutor to investigate executive-brunch
malfeasance — recently declassified docu
m ents urc adding
new pieces to the
puzzling Iran-contra
Uf f al r. -They a l * o
show where, the linn
dependent counsel
statute should be
strengthened.
N ew C IA d o c u ­
ments, obtained last
year by the National
S ec u rity A rch iv es
und r e c e n t l y
published In a book
e n t i t l e d , ' ' T li c
£ They also
Iran-Contra Scandal:
show where
The Declassified His­
the
t o r y . " by Peter
independent
K o r n b l u h und
Mulcolm Byrne, sited
counsel
statute should
light on how the
be
Reagan and Hush
administrations used
strengthened. J
the cavalier classlfl
cation of documents to stymie one of Walsh's
most solid prosecutions.
A s k ey I r a n - c o n t r a f i g u r e s w e r e
approaching trial, they demanded thousands
of classified documents thut they clulmcd
were essential to (heir defense. Although the
Classified Information Procedures Act of 1980
outlined procedures for court review over the
use such Information in trials, the law
ultimately left It up lo the executive brunch to
decide whut secrets could be releuscd In
court.
in Walsh's probe, (he result was thut the
Reagan and Bush administrations could
derail cases by simply denying the release of
ccrtuln classified Information. Wulsti's In­
vestigation essentially bccumc dependent on
the generosity of the very agencies he wus
trying to Investigate, in effect, a sort of
"graym ail” look place. Defendants sought
release of such highly classified Information
In their trials thut the government wus bound
to terminate prosecution on national security
grounds.
The new documents siiow how "graymail'
effectively killed the case ugainst former Cl/
st at i on c h i e f In C osta Ricu, J o sc p i
Fernandez. Fernandez was Indicted In June
1988 for obstructing Inquiries Into tilt
I run-contra affair and lying lo CIA in
vcstlgators and a special commission chaired
by the laic Sen. John Tower. R-Texos. Ir
N o v e m b e r 1988, all c h a rges agaln sl
Fernandez were dismissed after the CIA unci
tlicn-Attorncy General Dick Thornburgh, a
Reagan appointee, blocked the release o!
classified documents that Fernandez claimed
were crucial to his defense.
Ironically, before the Information was belt
back, the CIA had already determined tha
Fernandez had m isled Its Internal In
vcstlgators and the Tower Commission or
several occasions. In a CIA Inspector Genera
document duled February 1987. which has
never before been published, Investigator!
argue that "Fernandez hud not been com
plctely truthful" with them In his flrsi
Interview. Regarding Fernandez's testimony
before the Tower Commission, the document
states: "OIG subsequently learned that, even
in Fernandez's second session with the
Commission, he failed to be completely
truthful ..." This declassified memo goes on
to admit thut In a Jan. 24, 1987, Interview
with the CIA Investigators, "he (Fernandez)
admits his previous evasions and untruths."

�S s n fo rd H a ro ld , 8 a n fo r d , F lo rid a • W e d n o o d o y , J u n e 2 3 , 1093 - « A

BusilA

recommend
imposing an additional penny
gas tax to help support the
cou n ty's Lynx service. The
county now receives 0.8 cents in
gasoline taxes for each gallon
sold. The bus funding will be
considered next month during
budget discussions.
"Building a public transit sys­
tem takes tim e." said Lynx
director Paul Skoutelos. "Right
now. we're trying to play catch
up."
Commissioners were shocked
Tuesday to find the cost of
m a in ta in in g the sam e fiv e
routes, with no Increases In
frequency, will Increase fom the
current $781,000 to $1 million
or more next year.
Lynx managers said the main
reason for the Increase was
primarily because federal sub­
sidies have dropped and all of
the counties and Orlando must
share the cost o f free door-todoor pickup and delivery for
disabled residents. Seminole
County's share o f that $801,000
tri-co u n ty exp en se w ill be
$287,000.
Beyond the basic service. Lynx
officials recommended modify­
ing three of the five existing

DONALD CARL ANDERSON
Donald Carl Anderson, 64,803
Cheyenne Trail, Oak Hill, died
Sunday, June 20, Halifax Hospi­
tal Medical Center, Daytona
Beach. Mr. Anderson worked for
Scotty's Lumber Co.. Edgewater.
B o r n J u n e 18. 1 9 2 9 . In
Nelllsvllle, Wls., he moved to
Central Florida in 1987. He was
a member of Lockhart Elks Club,
and was a former Mason. He was
un Air Force veteran o f the
Korean War.
Survivors include daughter.
Nancy Nunn, Apopka: step­
daughter. Levina Lou Epstein.
Sanf or d; s te p s o n . Ml che al
Guthri e, S a n fo rd ; b ro th er,
Gerald W.. West Salem. Wls.:
mo t he r , L o t t i e A n d e r s o n .
Richland Center, Wls.; 7 grand­
children.
Gr a mko w Funeral Hom e.
Sanford, in charge of arrange­
ments.

EVBLYN JOYCE ANDERSON
Evelyn Joyco Anderson, 88,
503 Cheyenne Trail/ Oak Hill,
died Sunday, June 20, at Halifax
Medical Center, Daytona Beach.
Mrs. Anderson was a homemak­
er. Bom Jan. 17, 1938, In
Willacoochee. Qa.. she moved to
Central Florida in 1971.
Survivors include daughter,
Levina Lou Epstein. Sanford;
son. Michael Guthrie, Sanford;
stepdaughter, Nancy Nunn.
A p o p k a ; brothers. John W.
Gary. Orlando, Charles C. Gary.
O w en sboro. Ky. ; 7 g ra n d ­
children
Gr a mko w Funer al Hom e,
Sanford, in charge of arrange­
ments.

BUSAN FAPE DAVIS
Susan Pape Davis. 57, 464
Gchr Lane, Lake Mary, died
Saturday, June 19, at Florida
Hospital, Orlando. Mrs. Davis
was a homemaker. Bom Oct. 28,
1935 In Chicago, she moved to
Central Florida In 1981.
Survivors Include husband,
Andrew O.: son, Charles Arthur
Pape, Chicago; daughter, Julie
Ann Fallucca, Deltona; four
grandchildren.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals, Orlando in
charge of arrangements.

GEOROE BOYD MURPHY
George Boyd Murphy. 92.
Whippoorwill Terrace. Deltona,
died Monday, June 22, at his
residence. Bom July 12, 1900.
lie moved to Deltona 28 years
a g o f r o m P i t t s b u r g h . Mr.
Murphy was a dispatcher for
Pennsylvania Railroad and a
m em ber o f D elton a United

routes, Including Increasing
Sanford stops from once per
hour to once every 30 minutes.
T h e flrat-year coat o f that
enhancement will be $428,000.
Other changes Include
eliminating an Orange Blossom
Trail route that Includes por­
tions o f State Road 436 in favor
of creation o f an Orlando In­
ternational Airport to Apopka SR
436 route and a Jamestown to
Altamonte Springs State Road
434 route.
Other changes Include
expanding the number of stops
In d o w n t o w n S a n f o r d ,
lengthening the proposed SR
434 route and adding a Lake
Mary route.
Commissioner Daryl McLain
said he supported the Initial SR
434 and 436 route changes but
not the Increased Sanford stops
because of the cost. Commis­
sioner Dick Van Der Welde said
he supported better service, but
was concerned about the coat.
Commissioners Bob Sturm and
Pat Warren said they were re­
luctan t to Increase service
because of the increased cost of
basic service.
Commissioner Larry Furlong
was not present at the dis­
cussion.

Church of Christ. He was a 37
year member o f Temple Lodge
•678; Scottish Rite, Pittsburgh.
Shrine Temple Bahia, All State
Shrine Club; Life member of
Elks. Scottdale, PA »777.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e wi f e ,
M ildred, D eltona; stepsons,
Thurman Grimm, Pennsylvania.
Ronald Grimm, California; step­
dau gh ter, C arole Sch u eler,
Pennsylvania: 4 grandchildren
and 4 great-grandchildren.
Stephen R. Balduff Funeral
Home, Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.

DONALD FREDRICK REID
Donald Fredrick Reid, 62. of
Cypress St.. Paisley, died Mon­
day. June 21, at Central Florida
Regional Hospital, Sanford. Mr.
Reid was bom In Worcester,
Mass., on June 3, 1931, he
moved to Central Florida from
Portland, Maine. He was a
Catholic and a life member of the
V.F.W., Post *8093, DeBary and
the Fleet Reserve. Sanford. He
was an electronic techlclan for
Strom berg Carlson, and a retired
coast guard veteran.
Survivors Include wife, Elva
Reid, Paisley; sons, David Arthur
Reid, Georgia, Williams James
Reid, Florida: father, Arthur
Joseph Reid. Florida; brother
Robert Reid. North Carolina;
sisters, Theresa Jones, Rhode
Island. Loralne Washburn. Mass.
Altman-Long Funeral Home.
Debary. Is in charge of arrange­
ments.

JEAN JORDAN STEEL
Jean Jordan Steel. 71. 448
Oak Haven Drive, Altamonte
Springs, died Monday. June 21,
at Winter Park Memorial Hospi­
tal. Born Jan. 25, 1922 In
Norfolk, Va.. she moved to Cen­
tral Florida in 1946. Mrs. Steel
was a .member of All Saints
Episcopal Church. Winter Park,
where she was a librarian. She
also belonged to Church of the
Good Shepherd. Maitland.
Survivors Include husband. B.
Brock; sons, B. Brock Jr., P.
Jordan, both o f Matlland; daugh­
ters, Barbara S. Baldwin, Conn.,
Susan Herring. Hutchinson
Island; 3 grandchildren.
C a r e y Ha n d C o x - P a r k e r
Funeral Home, Winter Park, in
charge of arrangements.

MARTIN RANDOLPH
"RANDY"THORNBURO H
Martin Randolph "R a n d y "
T h o r n b u r g I I , 3 2 , 1 81 1
Shoshonee Trail, Casselberry,
died Friday, June 18, at Florida

Space
shuttle
delays
SPACE CENTER. Houston Endeavour's astronauts reshui
fled a day of experiments today
after Mission Control discovered
that the original schedule would
have brought the shuttle too
close to a piece of space debris.
A scheduled jet firing that was
part o f a superfluid helium
experiment the astronauts have
worked on during their first two
days In space was moved 48
minutes after the spent body of a
Russian rocket booster was de­
tected.
•
"Doing It on time would have
had a conjunction with a spent
Cosmos booster," said Mission
Control's Jay Apt.
The U.S. Space Command
tracks more than 7,000 objects
o f space debris, most o f It Junki
spent rockets, dead satellites and
fragments from exploded boost­
ers. Even tiny objects can do
major damage upon Impact,
given the average orbiting speed
o f 17,800 mph.

H o s p i t a l , O r l a n d o . Mr.
Thornburg was a mall sorter for
the postal service. Bom Sept. 14,
1961. in McAlester. Okla.. he
moved- to Central Florida In
1968. He was Baptist and a Navy
veteran.
Survivors Include parents,
M a r t i n R. Sr. a n d I v o n u
Thornburg. Casselberry.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Orlando In
charge of arrangements.

ANTON PETER Z12ICH
Anton Peter Zlzlch. 80, 249
Sorrento Circle, Winter Park,
died Saturday, June 19. at his
residence. Mr. Zlzlch was a
retired warehouse dockman. He
was born March 30. 1913, on
C h i c a g o . He m o v e d f r o m
Chicago, to Central Florida in
1979. He was an Army veteran
of World War II and a member of
the Teamsters Dockmen Union.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e , wi f e,
Adeline. W inter Park; sons.
Dsntsl .R a y ,. .Alpharetta,. Os..
Donald L4e, Bolingbrook, III.;
brqther, John Peter Aurora. HI.;
s is te r s , J e a n n e t t e P o we l l ,
Fllmore, Calf., Alice; 4 grand­
children.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Orlando, In
charge of arrangements.
J. • . u V

A N D E R S O N , M R . D O N A L D C.
A N D M RS. E V E L Y N J.
Jo int funeral services tor M r . D o n *Id C .
ond M rs Eve ly n J . Anderson, ol O a k H ill.
P L . who dlod Sunday aa a r « M lt of accidental
ln|urla«. will bo 11 o'clock Thursday morning
at O ram ko w Funeral Hom o Chapal w ith fha
R a v . Jam oa Oavldaon and fha R a v. Roy
F u fc h co-offlclatlng. Inform ant far M r * .
Anderson will bo In Olan Hovon Mem orial
P a rk and Interment tor M r . Andaraon w ill bo
prlvato.
A rra n g a m o n ta b y O r a m k o w P u n a ra l
H om o, Sanford.
D A V IS . S U S A N P A P I
Suaen I l i a waa bom on September J * . I M3.
I by H en ry and Nellie M e rcy
tw o doya la ter. She lived a wonderful
childhood In O a k P a rk . III. A tta r high achool.
aha attended Linden wood O lrla Collage In St.
O ve r lea. M o . Suaen M arch become Suaan
M e rc y Papa In Juno of 1 4 * whan aha m arried
Robert A rth u r Pope. Together their love
brought two llvoa Into the w orld, Julio Ann
ond Cher lee A rth u r. Together the lour lived o
picture perfect Ufa In the euburbe o f Chicago.
In M arch of 1471 lo b petaod aw ay. Later
Suaen m arrie d A n d re w O ra n t D a via , o
a holiday In
hay lived In
Southern Californio. Together they
A lto La m a , C alif. Th ey have lived hare tor 10
hopgy yeara. The ligh t* o f her life wore In the
bright eyee of her grandchildren, Stephanie.
M e rc y and Heather. Suaen wea alwaya the
p e rfe c t m o th e r, w onderful w ile , doting
grandm other and devoted friend. Alw a ya full
ol love, life happlneae and eunahlno. Suaen
w ill bo mlaaad by all whoao llvoa aha touched.
A m em orial gatherIng tor fam ily and friend*
w ill bo halo Thrvaoey of t p .m . ot the
fa m ily '* rtaldanca, 4*4 O e h r Lo n e , Lake
M a r y . In lieu o f lle w o ra, a m e m o ria l
contribution m ay bo made to the Seminole
County Humane Society.
A rra n o a m tn t* by C orey H and Oordon
Chapel Hom e lor F u n e ra l*, Orlando.

The Difference b

FUNERAL HOMES &amp; CEMETERY
(Orlaindo M em orial Q ardan a)

We are locally
owned and operated
Independent funeral
home. Serving
Seminole County
Since 1975

JOl Ymmra of Curing Services
Prices Quoted By Phone

767/-5101

HARDEN
CHAPEL
93S SR 434, LQNaWOOO

P b . 834-8550
G IG 190Do|Track Rd.
"F T H

i

MurderCoatlnned from Pag* 1A
some­
time* but I don't know If the
actually r e n t e d . " Plotnlk
explained. He said the woman
wanted money to buy crack
cocaine when she went to Hold­
er's home but when the robbery
went badly, she stabbed him.
Plotnlck said after the stabbing.
Bojan took Holder's wallet, car
keys and car.
When Bo|an was arrested, she

confessed to going to Holder's
home Intending to rob him to get
money for drugs and subse­
quently stabbed him up to 10
times In the neck and shoulders,
according to police. She also
took Holder's wallet and his car,
later abandoning It on County
Road 427 le u than three miles
from the victim's home, reports
show.
The discovery of Holder's light

yellow 1987 Bulck led to the
suspect's arrest. After seeing a
news report about the car. a
person notified police placing
Bojan with the vehicle. Bojan
waa arrested on a warrant for
failure to appear in court on an
unrelated matter by Altamonte
Springs Police.
Bojan remains In the John E.
Pol k C o r r e c t i o n a l Faci l i t y
without ball.

In the road, blocking their
passage. Some expressed con­
cerns about the safety o f the
tigers and other cats.
In another vote, commlulonera voted 3-1 to extend the
borrow pit permit for Excavated
Products from three to five
years. Commluloner Pat Warren
opposed the vote. The company
received permlulon In October
1991 to d ig a 55-acre p it
weekdays from 9 a.m. until 5
p.m. on school days and 7 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on non-claaadaya.

Excavated Products said a citi­
zens appeal delayed startup of
their pit for a year and the hours
placed them at a competitive
disadvantage to other pit opera­
tors.
Commluloners accepted the
conditions recomm ended by
staffers to extend the permit to
1996 and extend the weekday
operations from 7 a.m. until 6
p.m.. but Excavated Products
must hire ofT-duty deputies to
monitor traffic at school bus
•tops to assure safety.

CountyC ea tiiM tl fre .Page 1A
benefits of
preserving animals In their nat­
ural habitats.
McMillan said he was unable
to afford a new achdol site,
which he estimated would coat
$500,000, because the economic
downturn of recent years.
Several residents opposed the
school, primarily because of the
traffic It attracted to their tiny
rural road, Oak Hollow Lane.
They complained o f cars parking

RenovateC o a t ia s r it r a a iP a is I A
system would be
equal to or better than state
child care licensing law ," Car­
penter said.
HRS has ordered that 4C must
complete renovations, including
erecting additional fenced areas
at s om e s ite s and a d d in g
bathroom facilities at others,
before the start o f the school
year In late August or that they
move their operations to facili­
ties which meet the federal
standards.
The achool district la still
Involved In some oversight o f the
Head Start program.
Dr. Sammle Tomblln. director

o f special projects for the Seminote County achool district, aaid
the maintenance department for
the achool district will prepare a
cost estimate o f completing the
Improvements aa soon aa they
receive a Hat o f the require­
ments.
He could not estimate the time
frame for completing the work,
he said, until he knew what
would be required.
While the majority of the Head
Start classrooms, which are
almost all housed In portable
classrooms outside schooola,
meet HRS standards, they often
d o n ' t h a v e t h e
40-square-feet-per-chlld outdoor
play area or one bathroom per

16 student that are required by
HRS.
Carpenter said that while the
federal Head Start program will
provide some monetary support,
money must be raised locally to
remodel and repair the portable
school buildings or 4C will need
to find new locations for the
program before the start o f
school In the fall.

Home*
Coatlnaad from Paga IA
damage repairs, the total
value of work permitted last
month was $18.9 million, a
decrease from the $20.6 million
In May a year ago.

Ltqil N o tlc f

Ltqal N o tlc f

Ltqal N o tlc f

Ltqal Notlcat

IN T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
O F T H I R IO H T IIN T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
O F T H IIT A T I
O F F L O R ID A
IN A N O F O R
IIM IN O L IC O U N T Y
C *M N e i4 3 t N t-C A 1 4 &lt; K &gt;
Ooneral Jurisdiction
B A J T B R N S A V IN O S B A N K .
FSB .
Plaintiff,

IN T H I C I R C U I T C O U R T
O F T H I IIO N T R IN T N
J U D I C I A L C IR C U I T ,
S IM IN O L IC O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C I V I L A C T I O N N O .:
fM » 1 7 -C A t4 K
U N I T E D S A V IN O S A S S O C IA T I O N O F T E X A S F S I .a l c .,
Plaintiff,
v *.
F R A N K M A C K I I .o t u a .o t a I.
Defendant!.
N O T IC I O F S A L I
N O T I C I It hereby given that
purauant to ttw Fin a l Judgm ent
o f Fo ro cW tu r* ond M W entered

N O T IC IO F
C O N O IM N A T IO N H I A R IN O
T O i Property Ow ne r*
or In te r** fed pertont ot
ttw followlr&gt;g datcr Ibed
property
Legal Description ol Pro p er­
ty : W I t ft ot N 100 ft ot Lota 41
+ 41 I l k 0 , A .D . Chappell* Subd
P I 1 P O 71 a t recorded In
Sanford. Seminole C ounty, F lo r ­
ida
(aka : 1017 W . 13th Street)
Report N o : * 0 3
O w n e r: Woatald*
Im provem ent A te n . Inc.
tmMCCoeUtlM
M ggoo Avenuo
lO
A va n u *

L I O A L N O T IC I
.Th e School Board ol Seminole
County It accepting Request*
f o r P r o p o s a l to p r o v i d e
E m p lo y ** Assistance Program
S e r v i c e * . C o n la c l R ic h a r d
W a lla . E x e c u tiv e D ir e c to r .
S u p p o rt S tr v lc o t, t i l l
M e ile n v lll* A v e n u e . Santord
33771.133-11S3. E x t . U S
Publish: June I I . 30, 11. 33. 31.
34. U , 1 7 . I t , * , 1 * 3
D IP -1 3 3

va.

J B N S C . R I O S .* 1 * 1 .,
Defendant (a).
N O T IC IO F
F O R IC L O tU R IIA L I
1
Noiico la h ir o b y g lv o n l ^
undersigned a a ty a a a o Alovas,
C lerk o f me C ircuit C ourt o f
Som lnol* County. F lo r id *, will,
on me Sind day o f J u ly , I t n , ot
1 I :M a .m . at tfw W ait Fro n t
door of ttw Seminole County
Courttwuae, In ttw C ity o f Sonford. Flo rid a , offer lor tale and
M il at public outcry to ttw
hlgfwat end boat bidder for cosh,
ttw following deacrlbed property
•Ituotad In Seminole County.
Flo rid a , to-wlt:
L o t t l . SHeO O R O V B
H O M E S U N I T t . Oviedo. F lo r­
ida according to ttw plat ttwroof.
a * recorded In Plat Book I I ,
Pa ge 43, Pub lic R e c o rd * of
Somlnoto County, Pier do.
purauonl to ttw final decree of
toroctoaur* entered u . a c o m
pending In M id Caurt. ttw atylo
o f w h ic h I s : ■ A S T I R .N
S A V IN O S B A N K . P S B v * . J I N S
C . R IO S , of ol.
W IT N E S S m y hand and of­
ficial M a i of M id Court m i* 17th
day o f Ju n o . I f t l .
(S E A L)
M A R Y A N N ! M O R S I.
C L IR K
B Y : Dorothy W . Ballon
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Juno t ) . 30. I f f l
01 p m
I N T H B C IR C U I T C O U R T
O P T H I IIO H T IIN T M
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S IM IN O LIC O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A .
C A S I N U M l I R i 43-4473CA14K
IN O IP IN O IN C I
M O R T O A O IC O R P O R A T IO N
O F A M E R I C A , a FlorIda
corporation,
Plaintiff.
S O U TH LA N D R IA L T Y A
I N V I S T M I N T S , IN C ..
0 F lo rid * corporation; ond
J O H N 0 . H O U F F , Individually.
Defendant*.
A M IN O IO
N O T IC I O F S A L I
N o lle * I* hereby given mat
purauant to ttw Fin a l Sum m ary
Judgm ent of Forocloaur* en­
tered In mi* c o u m ponding In
ttw Circuit Court In ond lor
Seminole County. F lo r id *, bolng
C ivil Action N o . M S 7 S -C A 1 4 K ,
ttw undoralgnod Clerk will M il
the property altuotod In Sem i­
n a l* County. F lo r id *, at 11:00
a .m . on Ju ly 4, I f f l . deacrlbed
aa:
■ X H ia iT " A "
T tw South aoa.70 Wat Of Lo t I I ,
S A N F O R D 'S S U B S T A N T I A L
F A R M S T R A C T N O . 1. accord­
ing to the plot ttwroof a * re_____
P a g o * SS
• • In P l ojt t Rook
" " s.
* -------------and S4 of ttw Public Re co rd * of
Sem inal* C ounty, Flo rid a , and
th * 10 tool vacated right of-woy
ot L a k * Ro a d, to known a *
STI A T F O S D C O U R T . 0 roplat
of -o f 31, Sanford’ * Subatantlal
F a r m * Tract N o . I , according to
ttw plat thkraof a * recorded In
Pla t Book s. P a g o * S3 and S4 of
the Public Record* of Som lnol*
County, Flo rid a , lying and bolng
In Section IS. Township SS South,
R a n g * 30 l o s t . S o m l n o l *
County, F lo r id *.
at public u l o , to ttw hlghoat ond
boat bidder lor ceth at ttw Woat
F ro n t Do o r ol ttw Som lnol*
County Courttw uM . 301 North
P a rk Avenue, Sanford, Som lnol*
County, Flo rid a.
D A T E D m it tln d doy of Ju n o ,
1443.
(S IA L)
M ARYANN! M ORSI
C L IR K O F T H I
C IR C U IT C O U R T
l y :/ » / J a n * I .J o * * w f c
P u S tltftiJM W t3 .3 S .1f0 1
O I F 333

CtreuH Sort t f E W loMoon&amp;

Ju d ic ia l C irc u it, In and for
Seminole County, P for id *. C ivil
A ctio n N u m s o r f O l w r - C A U K
fho undaraignod Clerk w ill M il
ttw property altuotod In M id
County, d ttc rib o d a t:
C O N D O M IN I U M U N I T A l l
O F M A R B IY A C LU B CON­
D O M IN IU M . A C O N D O M IN I­
U M A C C O R O IN O T O T H I
D E C LA R A T IO N O F C O N D O ­
M IN IU M T H I R I O F AS R l C O R O I O IN O F F I C I A L R E C ­
O R D S B O O K 1 * 7 . P A O B 1071.
A N D R E R E C O R D E D IN O F
F IC IA L R E C O R D S B O O K 1 *0 .
P A O E 14*3. O F T H E P U B L I C
R E C O R D S O P S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A ;
T O O I T H I R W IT H T H I
U N IT ’S U N D IV ID E D S H A R I
OP T H I COM M ON E L IM E NTS A N D COM M ON
■X P I N S I I AS P R O S C R IIID
IN S A I O D E C L A R A T I O N O P
C O N D O M IN I U M ,
together w ith *11 alructurot,
Improve manta, fix tu re *, appli­
ance* and appurtenance* on
M id land or utod In conjunction
therewith, at public M l * , to ttw
hlghoat and boat bidder tor cath
at ttiS S o'clock A A A . on Ju ly 21.
lf»3 , at ttw woat front door of
ttw Som lnol* County Courttw uM
Sanford. Flo rid a.
(C O U R T U A L )
M AR YAN N I M ORSI
C L IR K OF T H I
C IR C U IT C O U R T
l y : J a n * I . Ja tow lc
Deputy Clark
Publish:
•ubllth i JJu n e 3 3 .3 0 .1 *3
D IP -1 11
P U B LIC S A L I
C O N T IN T S OP S T O R A O I
U N I T S C O N S I S T I N O O P M ISC I L L A N I O U S IT E M S F O R
M A N U I L A O U IA S
T O N Y O IL O IO R N O
K A Y O N IIY
W IL L I I S O LD A T P U B LIC
A U C T IO N A T 417 M IN I
S T O R A O I , 710 N O R T H C R 417,
LO N O W O O O . P L O N J U L Y 7.
1 * 3 A T 10M H O U R S .
Pu b llih i Juno 1 3 .3 1 .1 * 1
D IP -1 8 3

N O T IC IO F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I
N o lle * li hereby given that I
am engaged In b u a ln a tt In
C a tM lb o rry , Flo rid a . Samlnoio
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , undor the
Fictitious N am e ot I A L C 0 R
E Q U I T Y P A R T N E R S - ! , ond
that I Intend to reglitor M id
nem o w ith t h * Secretary of
Steto, Tallohoaao*. Flo rid a , In
accordance with ttw provisions
Of ttw Flctltloua N o rn * Statute,
To-W it: Section S U 0 4 , F lo rid *
Statute* 1FS7.
T H I B ALC O N C O M PAN Y
N orln o M o rlo rty
Publish: June » . 1 * 3
D IP -1 11

N O T IC IO F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M I
Notice It hereby given m at I
am anj aged In b u tin o u at tti
W . SR 434, W in te r S p rin g *.
Samlnoio County, F lo r id *, undor
th * P k ttllo u t N om e of F L O R ­
ID A S O F T B A L L A C A D IM Y ,
and mot I Intend to register M id
nam e w ith ttw Secretary of
State. Tolioheaao*. F lo r id *. In
accordance w ith ttw provision*
of ttw Fictitious Nem o Statute,
T o W it i Section S U N , F lo rid *
Statute* 1M 7.
T a rry D . H u a to tl
Publish: J u n t a 1 * 1
O I N SIS

N O T IC IO F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E

-------- --- \ j w z &amp; x t L K s r j &amp; i

catod on the obova stated prophoe boon found b y the
iIMfng O fficial o f ttw C ity o f
nford to bo In unaonlfory.
u n s a fe , d ila p id a te d o r uninhabitable condition.
Y O U A l l H E R E B Y N O T IP H D th a t o C end am naflon
Hearing will bo conducted by
ttw Board of Com m issioner* of
ttw City of Santord on tfw 13th
day ot Ju ly . 1 * 1 . at 7:00 p .m . In
tfw City C om m lu lon Chambora,
Room 117. Santord City H a ll, 300
N . P a rk A v a n u *. Santord, F lo r ­
ida. to m a k t full determination
whether or not fha building or
structure located an ttw abovestated property shall bo con­
demned.
Yo u o r * hereby ordered to
appear before ttw C ity C om ­
mission Condom nation Hearing
tg Bo hoard and present your
aid* of ttw c o m . Yo u h e v * ttw
right to obtain on attorney, at
your own axpoito*. to represent
you bolero t h * Board. Yo u have
ttw right to coll wllrwaao* on
y o u r b e h a lf o t w e ll a t to
croat-exom lno oil other w it­
nesses. If you do not appear, ttw
C ity Commission m ay proceed
wlttwut you.
Should the C ity Com m ltalon
determine that told building or
structure shall bo condemned. It
h o * ttw power to Itauo an O rde r
ot Condemnation requiring you
to t o u t * t h * b u ii l d i n g o r
structure to bo demolished
removed o r placed In a s la t* ot
M u n d re p a ir w ith in • tim e
certain.
It th * building or structure o r *
lahed i
re p a ire d w ith in auch lim a
ported, than such building or
structure w ill be demolished and
removed by ftw C ity ond ttw
coat el ttw t o m * at aaeaed aa a
lien against t h * above-stated
property.
It you have any question*
concarnlng
this m atter. p to *M
g mit
contact t h * lu lld ln g D e p a rt­
ment at (407) 330IS M S H O U L D
YOU O IC ID I TO A P P EA L
A N Y M A T T IR C O N S ID B R IO
A T T H I A B O V I H IA R IN O ,
YOU M AY N I I O A V ER B A ­
T IM R I C O R D O P T H I P R O C I I D I N C S . T E S T IM O N Y A N D
I V I D I N C l W H IC H R I C O R D
IS N O T P R O V I D E D B Y T H I
C I T Y O P S A N F O R D . I P .S .
7*4.0103).
P I R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
A B IL IT IE S N IID IN O
A S S IS T A N C E T O P A R T IC IP A T I IN A N Y O P T H I S !
P R O C 1 1 D IN O S S H O U LD
CONTACT T H I P IR S O N N IL
O P P IC I A D A C O O R D IN A T O R
A T 330-1414 40 H O U R S IN
A O V AN C I OP T H I M IIT IN O .
Publish: Jun o S I S Ju ly 4 .1 * 3
D IP -1 1 0

D o u g la s A v * . , A l l o m o n t *
Sp ring*. Som lnol* County, Fto rM o . under tfw Fictitious N a m *
o f IP S , and that I Intend to
re g lito r M id nam e w ith ttw
Secretory of Slate. Tallahassee.
Flo rid a. In accordance w ith ttw
revision* of the F ic titio u s
ame Statute, To-WIt: Section
4U.0*. Florida Statutes 1457.
W illiam W. Casio
Publish: Ju n e 23.1443
D IF - 1 0 3

R

IN T H IC IR C U IT COU RT
O F T H I IIO H T R IN T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D P O R
S IM IN O LIC O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
C A S I N O , 43-0073-CA-14
F E D E R A L TR U S T IA N K ,

F.S.B.,

Plaintiff,
va.
D A W N M . H I L L . J A M E S W.
H I L L and O L O R I A I . H I L L , hit
w it* ond T H I U N IT E D
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A ,
Defendants.
N O T IC I O F M L R
N O T I C I IS H I R I B Y O I V E N
that pursuant to Fin a l Judgm ent
ol F o rte lo tu r* rendered on ttw
17th day of M a y , 1*43 In that
certain c o u m pending In ttw
Circuit Court In and tor Saminote County, Flo rid a , wtwraln
FED ER A L TRUST BANK.
P .8 .1 . It Plaintiff and D A W N M .
H I L L . J A M S ! W . H I L L and
O L O R I A I . H I L L , hla wlfa and
T H I U N IT E O S TA TES OF
A M E R I C A , a ra D e fe nd an ts.
Civil Action No. 410073 C A -14.
I, M A R Y A N N I M O R S E .
Ctork of ttw atorotld Circuit
Court, w ill at 11:00 a .m ., on ttw
Sth doy ol August, 1*03. of tor for
u l o and M il to the hlghotl
bidder tor cash on the stop* ol
the West Front Door at the
CourlhotiM In Santord. Seminole
County. Florid a, the following
described property, situated and
bolng In Seminole County, Flo r
Ido. to-w lt:
loginning at a point 1031.00
t u t Bast ot th * Soulhwaal cor­
ner ol Governm ent Lo t 4, ol
Section 30. Townahlp 14 South.
R a n g * 1 1 E a s t . S a m ln o la
County, Flo rid a , run Baal 703 00
tool, ttw nc* run N orth 110 00
IM t , I hence run W ot! 303 00 I m I.
thane* South 710.00 foal to th *
Point ol Beginning.
Sold u l o will b * m a d * purau
ant to and In order to u tla ty th*
te rm *o l M id Final Judgn
M ARYANNI M ORSI
C LER K O F THE
C IR C U IT C O U R T
■ y : Dorothy W . Bolton
Deputy Ctork
Publish:
i t . 21, l * n
■ubllth i Juno
J
D I P 123

LO CAL N EW S
LO CA L SPORTS
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�0 A - Santord Hornld. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday. Juno 23, 1993

Your money: Clinton’s tax plan and economic anemia

Moynihan: O nce a
doodler, now a doer
ay STIVIN KOMAROW
A s s o cia te d Press Wrltor

W A S H I N G T O N - Sen.
Dunlcl Patrick Moynihan was a
spectator, watching reporters
w a t c h S vi p r e in c C o u r t
nominee Noth Under Gtnatnirg
meet a senior Kepubllrnn on
the Senate Judiciary Commtttec.
As the chi t chat wound
down, a reporter wondered
aloud how Moynihan. a New
York De mo c r a t und new
chairman of the Scnnte Fi­
nance Committee, could spend
time escorting Glnsburg when
he was In the throes of Presi­
dent Clinton's budget bill.
"Let's see. ... I'll get you an
answer In writing on that," he
chuckled.
It seems that after a career
as a big thinker, diplomat, and
d esign er o f hold strokes.
Moynihan. (16. recognizes he
has risen to the rank of
hlg-tlme grunt-worker.
As chairman of the Finance
Committee. Ills Job Is getting
Clinton's tax plan through the
Senate. He's carrying the
water. If nol uncomplainingly,
certainly In good humor.
He'll be tested further. In the
full Senate this week and then
In ne g o t i at i o ns wi t h the
House. Hut If last week's
committee session was any
Indication, the burden Isn't loo
heavy.
At the start of his committee
drafting session last week.
Moynihan called on Sen Hob
Pack wood ol O regon, the
ranking Republican, for any
remarks, referring to him as
"the former chairman."
"And with this hill. I think,
t lie I u t u re c h a i r m a n . "
Puck wood responded.
"Only If tills lilll passes."
said Moynihan.
It probably will pass the
Senate this week, largely
because of the compromise
Moynihan helped forge
T he r o l e o f I n s i d e r
wheeler-dealer seems an odd
one for Moynlhun.
it IliinWr-r wtio i IUii Wm
(list to think." said Sen. John
Hreaux. D-La.
Moynihan was reared In a
w o r k i n g - c l a s s Ne w York
neighborhood but became an
a c a d e m i c , t e a c h i n g at
Harvard. He moved Into gov­
ernment In the early 1960s.
Ilrst m Democratic and then
Republican administrations
lie published "Hevond the

Molting P ol." In which he
discussed the Instability ol
black f ami l y life and Its
harmful effects on blacks'
c h a n c e ol s u ccess. Con
troverslal at Ilrst. Ills Ideas two
decades later drove the 19HH
welfare reform act.
D u rin g his ti me as an
adviser to President Nixon.
Moynihan proposed a policy of
" b e n i g n n e g le c t " t oward
minorities, which opened a
great rift between him and the
groups he proposed to help.
From that, he moved to
diplomacy. And after a stint as
ambassador to India and a
tough-talking United Nations
nminvssudur. he slipped back
Into academia and then moved
to electoral politics.
In 1976. he wtts elected to
the Senate, and he has proved
himself one of New York's
ablest at getting re-elected.
Hut Moynihan has retained
the Image of an academician.
In part because of his appear­
ance — tall, gray-hatred and
tweed-clothed — and In purl
Ills Interest such diverse topics
a s m a g n e 11c I e v 11 a 11o ti
railroads and historic pre­
servation.

T h e e c o n o m y : In a w ord, s p o tty
AP Economics Wrltor
W ASHINGTON
The nation's long
period ol economic anemia in.iv be h i
remission, but the ('Union .idmlulsitatlon
insists It Is si III loo early In decline It cured
President ( Union and others in the
administration have begun to point to
encouraging statistics showing a pickup In
employment growth, a gimp in housing
const ruction and continued low Interest
rates as evidence that the wobbly iconvrrv
Is finally gaining some strength
Hut .it the same time. Treasury Secretary
Lloyd Hcntsen is warning audiences tli.it
"you cannot bet an entire economic iceov
cry oil one uimilli m two months ol
encouraging figures "
"There Is no guarantee yet that what vie
are seeing means we have truly beaten the
reccsslon." he said Tuesday.
The spotty nature ol the recovery so tar
was expected lo lie highlighted with release
today of the government's last look .it
overall economic activity In the Inst three
months of the year along with a report on
o rd e rs to f ac t or i e s lor l ong Li sti ng
nianuliietiired goods In Mav
In advance, economists were predicting
that (lie report on ihc gross domcsiic
product, the economy's total mil pul ol
goods and services, would show lurlhci
weakness in the 1nsi quarter, but they wenanticipating a healthy rebound m durable

In 19H3, Moynihan was the
intellectual force behind an
Increase In Social Security
payroll taxes so that the sys­
tem could build up a surplus
for when the baby boom gen­
eration retires.
He seems now determined to
prove he cun follow In the
footsteps of Treasury Secre
tarv Lloyd Hcntsen and run
tlie Finance Committee.

EVE
II

for W Jt A Chair...tvery living Hoorn Suit* Htducedl • IV e ry HetUner.
Mocker A Wood Becllner...tvery
Htclloer... tvery Shepot
Sleeper IBeduced To SeMI •
MW I Chair. wtvel Hotter
TMfeCfa En te rta in m e n t Center. Desk. C u rio . C ed er C h e s t C urio. Gun i
n A to r S
i/Hedutedl • tvery Mattress Set Hedutedl • tvery Dresser.
Mirror, Chest, Headboard A Mghtstand...tvery Bedroom Suite Hedutedl • tvery
' Dining Boom... tvtty Title. Side Cheir. Am Chad A C W fti Cebinet Hedutedl * Ivory

:saa

Dinette Set Hedutedl • tvery AppHentei • tvery thttronk Item on Sole fridsyl
•
'
-i
.. . .
! ■■
'A

k.'*•

FRIDAY FOR FARMERS
BIGGEST REDUCTIONS!

H it * m o t o r *

fuels tux oil grounds they are
In dire financial condition, he
promised to take up the topic
later In negotiations with the
House.
"Hut for the moment, we are
not going to kill this measure
and we arc not going to slow It
down." he said Danlortb lost.
12 8.

EVERYTHING IS ON SALE!
I M H A T 'S H A P P E N I N G ? L IV IN G R O O M S ■ RECLINERS &amp;CHAIRS ■

C A S U A L S TYLE S O FA .

_

Matching loveseat Site

' '

SWIVEL ROCKER

iaw U.
'

Y O U R C H O I C E I ...I N N E R S P R I N G
Q U E E N S IZE S L E E P E R S O F A

SAW l i W l

S e c u r it y g u a r d s n o w
r e p la c e to w n p o lic e
By H B N R Y S TER N

Associated Press Writer
SUSSEX. N.J. — This bucolic
community ol 2.300 has taken
privatization to a new extreme,
replacing Its four-member police
force with uniformed security
guards packing 9mm pistols.
And llie state doesn't like It one
bit
I'he attorney general's olficc
filed suit Tuesday to try to
disband the security force.
Robert T. Winter, director of
the Stale Division of Criminal
Justice, said the rent-a-cops
have no more enforcem ent
powers than everyday citizens
and could harm themselves or
the public ll they try to act like
police officers.
Sussex. In northwestern New
Jersey. Is the nation’s first town
to icplace Its police entirely with
security guards, said Gerald
Atenberg. executive director of
the Miami-based National Asso­
ciation ol Chiefs of Police.
The lour guards were hired
June 2 to replace the full-time
police force, which was dis­
banded in 1992 after it drug
scandal. The guards supplement
the Stale Police, who patrol
Sussex iis part ol their watch
over (he rural county.
Under their six-month con­
tract with the town, the guards
can use their guns In llfe-anddeath situations only and cannot
Investigate crimes. They can
make citizens' arrests hut must
then call Slate Police to lake
over
Stale and county officials
question whether the guards —
because of their lack of police
training — have any legal au­
thority to use force.
Mayor Peter Horvath said hr
Ixdlrves the town Is within Its
authority to hire guards to en­
force local ordinances. "W e hire
meter maids to give out parking
tickets .uid we don't have to
have a police department to do
thiil." In- told The New York
Times

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[All 100 Southern n o r * * o f tamers furniture mnit dote o f tpfn i
Thundey to prepere tor the biggf i t -fAlDAY OHtY SUMMtH
SIAM SAW to their hntoryl termert employees wit be working
ell dey Thundey. A until *4 Stm opening fmiry, to reduce ptttet
on every Hem m every dtpirtmtnt in every store Inventetyl
everything termete sefh wtt to discounted B tele price legged
tint ‘HU0AV O A K Y SUMMtH SIAM l A l f l Aeductiont up
. during thtt
to t o S . M V t von l t \ Oft Will « * Tokent Don't Mill Ttut Self I

E L E C T R O N IC S

h W W lan9U^B' ,

Private security advocates de­ T R A D I T I O N A L C A M E L B A C K
A P P L IA N C E S
fend Hie step as part o f a S O F A A M A T C H I N G L O V E S E A T
SAWI
$•
growing national trend.
E L E C T R IC R A N G E
l nn&gt; &lt;J.
S well oven comtrvction. lilt up cooktop,
"1 think maybe they're con­
removable coil dementi t •
C O N T E M P O R A R Y Q U E E N S IZE
cerned wliit the fact that If litis S L E E P E R 3 P C . S E C T I O N A L
B dnp bowlt
r ,
14 W 111
program works, how many other
saw i sjo i
S Q Q Q
H E A V Y D U TY W AS H ER
communities would do this?" left trm feting intlmer i s-i 7
J wash/nnse tempereturet. end
said Gerald Gregory, president ol B R O Y H I L L C A S U A L S T Y L E
permenent pren cycle
S
O
F
A
A
M
A
T
C
H
I
N
G
L
O
V
E
S
E
A
T
l(w
lii
the guards' employer. Executive
sa u r n u t n
Security (V Investigative Serv­
14 CU. FT. WHITE REFRIGERATOR
hjb back.solid oak tnm ’ *’ &lt; Q
ices.
(4 cu ft capacity no Iron, lectured
steel, reversible doors &lt; .«• jn g v
Patrick Caiman, a spokesman
•^leveling kg,
^ 4 9
BED RO O M S
In Coral G a b le s. Fla., lor
Wackcnhut. a worldwide securi­ ♦ -P C . C O U N T R Y O A K F I N I S H
ED RO OM GROUP
D IN IN G SETS
ty company, said Wackcnhut B• rUUAJUtiN
IUt HIADSOASD■OOVIll
provides security on buses In M i l lf« • HUTCHMUM04 . HICHf I MM)
O A K F I N I S H E D 5 -P IE C E
"etching Chat SI 4i
SA
O IN E T T E G R O U P
.
Milwaukee and for M iam i's say
! Holoh 4
i.eour
fesy'Cere lemineted
c o mmut e r rail system and
tebletop with two leeves
leevet J J
♦ •P C . C O N T E M P O R A R Y B L A C K
downtown development assoelu- L A C Q U E R B E D R O O M G R O U P
• rVUAOUIIH Itff HtAbtOAADt
O A K F IN IS H E D
tlon. Other security officials say •04(11(4• MUM04•HGHTStAp
5 -P IE C E D I N E T T E
private guards have been used In "etching Chtil S ltf
Solid construction,
14
W
|I0
I
OK
4
rt
uAllur
Includes 4 solid oek
limited roles In Tacoma, Wash..
choirs end teble with ieef
Phi l adel phi a and suburban A P IE C E B L A C K L A C Q U E R B E D R O O M
14w Hot
W IT H M I R R O R E D F R O N T S
Chicago.
•rUCUQUWVtWC SinHUOiOAAOWITHmnoi Y O U R C H O I C E !
• 00(15(4 • HATCHINGMM404
"There are certain things that "etching
&lt; tr^ r&amp; Ir&gt; i
m a t c m in ^ I - n I c e 1
Chest SIM
don't require a fully trained 141/ |1^1III, I K 0401/4
police officer," Caiman said.
NO DOWN PAYMENT! &amp; FREE DELIVERY ALWAYS!
"I don't think it's all that
radical. You essentially get
somebody who can he awake
and cull police.” said Jerry
Wilson, settlor vice president of
the Washington-based Crime
Control Research Corp.
Sussex Is set against rolling
hills and pastures. Hut the
community has fallen Into dis­
repair In rccenl years. Residents
say three downtown bars are a
frequent source of fights, and
c he ap mot el s are d r a wi ng
transients.
The guards were hired after
downtown merchants missed
tiic presence of the regular police
force. The guards' contract costs
$49,000. compared with the
$ 142.6(H) needed to pay tile
regular police force for six
months.
The rent-a-cops have one daily
eight-hour shlil Monday through
Thursduy, und also patrol on
Frlduy and Saturday nights.
Other times, the community
relics on Stale Police, whose
headquarters arc a 12- to lf&gt;
minute drive away

y

HURRY IIU EARLY

When Sen. John Danforth.
R-Mo., pleaded to exem pt
(ru in

H O M E FURNISHINGS ITEM
IUR STORE IS O N S A L E !

1M l

When the new White House
di dn' t con su lt him earl y
enough, he squawked to the
news media Now. when Re­
pub l i c a ns s qua wk , he' s
wielding his gavel on hcliult ol
Hill Clinton, even when he
doesn't agree with many de­
tails. such as the proposed
cuts In Medicare.

titr lln r M ' f u r l

|truer- Steinberg, all economist at Merrill
Lynch III New York, said that alter a shaky
start, he believed the economy would
expand enough In (riming months to lift
overall GDP growth to 2.9 percent lor the
year
While that rate Is subdued when fudged
against the early stages ol a normal
recovery It would still be the Instest animal
giowtli title In live years.
We are having moderate growth and low
mllallon which Is nol a bad scenario, all
tilings considered." Steinberg said
The government reported earlier this
mouth that the unemployment rate, after
being Irn/en lot three straight months.
Dually teglsiered a slight Improvement In
May dipping Itom 7 percent lo 6.9 percent.
Steinberg said the Improved economic
ac t i v i t y shoul d result ill c ont i nued
employment growth In entiling months, but
he cautioned against expecting any dramat­
ic dei lines in tin- unemployment rate, which
lie said would likely remain around 0 7
percent by the end ol the year.
Wltlle the 1990-91 recession officially
ended in March 1991. economic growth was
so weak thiil the unemployment rate
continued rising lor more than a year
alterwards and has been Inching down only
stubbornly since that time.
I lie ( Union administration Is looking to
id iii limed low Interest r a l e s , a beneflrlal
byproduct of Its dellclt reduction program,
to continue to spur the economy

goods orders
A month ago. the government reported
that the GDP expanded at a lackluster 0.9
percent rate In the Hist quartet. |usi ball ol
ilic I M percent growth title il had oilglnallv
estimated
Many analysts were loieeasllng that
would be revised lower still lo perhaps O.-I
percent because ol a bigger tl.S trade delicti
Ilian previously estimated
Alter having lullcn lot two sttaiglii
months, orders lo American factories loi
durable goods. Items expected to List Ihrce
or more years, were expected to post a
respectable Increase ot aiound I f&gt; percent
In May
Michael Nlcnilia. scnloi economist at
Mitsubishi Hank In New York, said lie
believed ilial orders Im conunciri.il airriall
would provide strength in Mav and ilial in
coming mouths Increased demand lor auins.
triggered by stiouger sales, would add to
product Ion.
Cynthia Latin, an economist ni l&gt;l&lt;l
McGrnw Hill Ine . it Lexington. Mass ,
tnrccasttug Him. blamed a portion ol Ihc
flrsi quarter GDP weakness on the sevenlate winter snowstorm In Match and said
recent reports Indicated the economy was
probably expanding at an annual rale ol
close lo 3 percent In llic cuirent April June
quarter
Ollier economi st s agi ced and they
Inrceast lhill growth Wits likely lo bold at
tli.il level lor the rest ol the year

B y M A R T IN C R U T S IN O E R

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�W ED N ESD A Y

S a n fo r d H e r a ld

Jun e

C ASSE LB E RR Y - The Paddy McGce a
sponsored Mice women’s softball team from
Oviedo concluded Its season In the Seminole
County Women’s Class Monday Night Spring
League at Red Bug Lake Park with an 18-2
victory over Magic Business Forms.
The win gave the Mice a final record of 11-5.
good for third place. The team will now move
over to Winter Springs, playing In the Monday
Night Summer League at Central Winds Park.
Jackie Janowlak and and Terri Mann led the
offense with three hits each, while winning
pitcher Brenda Davis, Karen Kohs, Lori Lingo.
Tamml Chesser and Denise Levinson contrib­
uted two hits each. Two other players only had
one hit each, but made the most of It, with Hcldl
Green driving In four runs and April Stoner two.

Bowl* leads Stars rout of Cubs
ORLANDO — Jim Bowie, who had seven RBI
for thd night, blasted two 3-run homers to lead
Huntsville to an 11*3 opening game victory
against Orlando. The Stars scored three times In
the top of the 7th Inning to win the nightcap 6-5.
,mm*1MW

Marlins bast Cardinals
MIAMI — Benito Santiago drove In three runs
with a homer and a triple to help Ihc Florida
Marlins beat the St. Louts Cardinals 7-5, ending
a season-high four game losing streak.
Junior Felix broke out of a 6-for-34 slump
with two doubles and scored twice.
Chris Hammond (8-4) won his sixth straight
start to reach a career high In victories.
Brian Harvey pitched the final 1 2-3 Innings
for his 21st suve, despite giving up his first
earned run since April 24. a stretch of 23
Innings. Tom Pagnozzl hit his fourth home run
of the season with one out In the ninth. Harvey,
who pitched out o f a two-on, one-out Jam In the
eighth, has converted 20 straight save chances.

Mats* Harazln resigns
NEW YORK — Al Harazln resigned as general
U H V tg C th e N*w, YoskMat* after 114 seasons.''
JIM.
tpok qvsr th» daily
.
is o r the team cutan.interim basis. •
fm Harazln decided an offer to stay on In a
business capacity with the team, which Is last
overall In the majors with a 21*48 record. Mets
president Fred Witpon said Joe Mcllvainc. u
former Mets executive who was fired as Sun
Dlcgo‘9 general manager June 9. Is being wooed
us u replacement.

Fla. Manor
wins only
game played
last night
From Staff Rs ports
SANFORD — To use a horse
racing expression, the Florida
QMMpnk!
Manor softbull team Is a good
mudder.
While the other two gumes In the
Sanford Recreation Department
M e n ’ s T u e s d a y Ni ght Spr i ng
Slowpltch Softball League at Chase
Park were being forfeited because of
a lack of players and normally
h i g h - s c o r i n g Ken R u m m e l
Chevrolet couldn't get anything
going offensively. Florida Manor had
no trouble with the damp condi­
tions, poundi ng Ken Rummel
Chevrolet 13-1 In five Innings.
The victory wus the third straight
and fifth In six starts for Florida
Manor, which moved Into third
place and remained within two
games of league-leading ABB Power
Distribution.
ABB Power Distribution and sec­
ond-place Monroe Harbour Marina
both collected forfeit wlnB over
Bamboo Cafe II and Whclchcl &amp;
Howard, respectively.
ABB Power Distribution Is now
7-2 on the season, while Monroe
Harbour Marina Is 6-3 and Florida
Manor 5-4. Completing the Chase
H trak* Photo by Jim H o p p *
s t a n d i n g s a r e Ke n R u m m e l
Donnie
McCoy
(sliding)
and
his
Gager
Pesl
Control
postponement
of
six
of
the
nine
games
scheduled to be
Chevrolet (4-3). Class Act, which
teammates were supposed to play Orkin last night at
played Tuesday. Of the other three games, only one was
had the night off (3-4). Whclchcl &amp;
Plnehurst Park, but early evening rain forced the
actually played while the other two were forfeits.
Howard (3-5) and Bumboo Cafe II
(1-8J.
Pest Control faces Signature Homes
While Ken Rummel Chevrolet wus
Next week at Chase Park. Florida K«n R vm m tl Chovrolat
ut 6:30 p.m.; Mobil Tech tackles
being
held to only five singles, three
Manor pluys Class Act at 6:30 p.m.: Florid* Manor
Mobillte Corporation ut 7:30 p.m.;
In the first Inning. Florida Munor
W h clch cl &amp; Howard takes on
and the Orphans and Gugcr Pest
wus pounding the ball for 13 hits.
for the Ft. Mellon Park softball field
Bamboo Cufe II at 7:30 p.m.: and
Control square off for first place at
Including a home run, two triples
were postponed because of ruin.
Ken Rummel Chevrolet battles ABB
8:30 p.m.
and two doubles.
The standings at Plnehurst find
Power Distribution at 8:30 p.m.
The standings In the women’s
Ken Rummel Chevrolet actually
the Orphans (7-0) and Gager Pest
Monroe Harbour Marina has the
league finds Hopkins Meut Packing
led 1-0. Chris Ntckles led off the
Control (6-1) well uhead of the rest
week off.
alone at the top with a perfect 7-0
game with a walk and Cary Keefer
o f the league, Trailing the leaders
The Florida Manor-Ken Rummel
record, Rounding out the.standings &gt;.singled. David Goldatlck'then lined]
lare Mobil T*ch |3-4)t
Chevrolet contest was the only
arc Papa.fjoc's and Meyer's Tree
Into a double playiittaudlmt Smith;
gstpe to bdrplayed Jn Sanford •Home* and Mobillte
.Scales (both 5-2). Bcer:30 K-3). .&lt; followed wl th&lt;a s litg k 'tO score
Tuesday night as the men's league '(both 2-5) and Orkin
Maynurdlftj (0-5), Suzanne's Oyster
Nlcklcs. Kelly DentonJrfko'Mingled,,
games scheduled for Plnehurst Park 1 (l-fl)N
Reef (l-5) und Vicky's Permit Serv­
but a fly out ended the inn’fng.
Next week at Plnehurst. Orkin
and the women's league games set
ice (1-6),
□Bee Muddere, Page SB

A n d e rso n g o e s
b a c k to front in
L a te M o d e l w in

L IT T L E

Fisk sets record
CHICAGO — Carlton Fisk wus honored by his
Chlcugo White Sox teammates and fans before
breaking Bob Boone's major league record for
games caught. With his family, parents and
friends present on "Curlton Fisk Night," the
45-ycar old Fisk played his 2,226th game
behind the plate In the White Sox's 3-2 victory
over Texas.

By PAUL MARBIQLIA

Special to the Herald

AL All-Star voting
NEW YORK — Two members of the World
Series champion Toronto Blue Jays lead their
positions In voting for the AL All-Star team.
Roberto Alomar leads second basemen with
516,336 votes and John Olcrud tops first
buseman with 275,823. Teammate Joe Carter Is
third, among outriders with 341,02. Seattle
outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. Is the overall leader
with 675,470.
i

f

TP.

. T*

I k A| 9 k 1

1993

Sw inging in the rain

IN B R IE F

i

23,

»

^

i

A 4

Stalker doesn’t phasa Qraf
WIMBLEDON, England — Less than two
months after u fan of Steffi Graf knifed Monica
Seles because he couldn't tolerate her No. 1
ranking, Graf became the victim of verbal abuse
as she began defense of her Wimbledon title.
"Steffi, you're responsible for everything," the
man shouted In German during Q rafs 6-0, 6-0
thrashing of Australian qualifier Klrrlly Sharpe
on Centre Court. "Oh my God. not him again,"
Qraf said, recalling how he heckled her at Ihc
French Open last month. Authorities Identified
the man as Kuil Zumselede, 29, of Frankfurt.
In other first-round matches, second-seeded
Martina Navratilova beat Michelle Jaggard-Lal
of Australia 6-2, 6-1 and seventh-seeded Jen­
nifer Capriati defeated Shlrll-Ann Slddall of
Britain 6-7 (7-5), 6-2,6-1.
In men's matches, top-seeded Pete Sampras
beat Nell Borwlck of Australia 6-7 (12*10), 6-3,
7-0 (7-3), 6-3 and fourth-seeded Boris Becker of
Germany defeated compatriot Marc Gocllner
4-0.6-3,8-2,6-4.
"
•

BABBBALL
□7:30 p.m. - SUN, National L
C ardinal at Florida Marllna. |L)

9MIUUIU n u e t e o u u -u ia in w i l u u r n a m e n i

Terrance Daniels (No. S), who played for the
Railroader Cuba, and (he rest of the 8anford
Little Ma|or All-Stare will host the Florida

Harald Pholo by Jim Hoppi

Sub-Dlatrict Tournament beginning Thursday nt
Fort Mellon Fork’s Roy Holler Field. Sanford
plays the Ormond Beach Nationals at 6 p.m.

ORLANDO — Wildwood's Wayne Anderson
used a lust-place slurtlng position to his udvunluge as he cruised to victory In the Late Model
feature event last Friday night, June 18. at
Orlando Specdworld.
Anderson overtook eurly race leader Duke
Southurd on lup three and. despite two caution
periods, hud clear sailing to victory lane.
'
For Anderson, it wus sixth consecutive win and
his 19th FASCAR (Florida Association of Slock
! Car Automobile Racing) checkers of the 1992-93
season.
"T h e only disadvantage to winning a feuture
nice is the following week, you have to sturt on
the tall end of the field," said Anderson, the
current FASCAR Lute Model division points
leader.
"When the green (lug dropped. 1 looked over
the field and put myself In u position where I
could methodically pick my way through truffle.
The cur wus handling grcul and I was able to ride
Ihc outside groove to get to the front."
Anderson hud a 10 lo 12-car advantage over
Ihc field approuchlng the midway point of the
race, but u caution ilug on lup 15 hunched the
puck with Dave McCabe and Seoll Reeves closing
lo Anderson's rear bumper.
Al the drop of the new green. Anderson
outduelled McCube and Reeves for the point and
quickly regained his earlier advunlagc.
A second caution with five laps lo go regrouped
the field with the same results. Anderson Jumped

L See Orlando, Page SB

(5uban

defector returns 'home’ against Marlins

BySTBVINWIMB
A P 8 p o rt» Writer
MIAMI — When Cuban defector Rene Arochu
iltchcs against the Florida Marlins, he'll likely be
heered by thousands o f countrymen who
onsldcr him a political hero.
Miami Is Arocha's home now, the city where .lie
Irst felt freedom and began his climb to the
najor leagues. The St. Louts Cardinals' rookie
nust be nervous about pitching tonight In such
urrourtdlngs. right?
,’’No," he said. Arocha made Fidel Castro look
hd: he knows he can make Junior Felix look
iad. too, Pressure won't be a problem.
"In Cuba when I pitched, I had to think about
whether the family had enough food on the
able," Arocha sold. "Those were real presures."
.

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

Stll|. anticipation of Arocha's first appearance
nt Joe Robbie Stadium bus stirred considerable
excitement In Mluml's large Cuban community.
He held u news conference that drew two dozen
reporters, and guve away 500 tickets to children
at a Spunlsh-languugc radio station.
The game likely will uttract more thun 40,000
fans, ninny wrestling with tom loyalties.
" I know they're going to he behind the
Marlins," Arocha suld. "There will be u few
people behind me. The Important thing Is that
they get to see me pitch. I want to do that for
them."
"H e's pitching for those who supported him
when he first came to the United States,"
Arocha's agent, Gus Dominguez, said. "They'll
say, 'I hope he throws seven Innings of Bhutnut
ball, but we hit u home run In the ninth and win."

Despite struggling recently after missing one
month with u broken finger, Arochu Is 5-2 with u
3.05 ERA.
"I wouldn't cure If he didn’t get uny better than
he Is now," St. Louis mnnuger Joe Torre said.
Arocha first tnude news In Miami two years
ugo, when he walked out of the airport and Into a
friend’s cur while the Cuban national team
wailed to board a flight for Havana. The defection
wus a highly publicized cmburruB9mcnt to
Castro.
Arocha looked too old and Ills fastball too slow
for the majors, the scouting reports said, but he
didn’t read them. The right-hander, who Bays he
Is 27 but looks older, went 12-7 with a 2.70 ERA
lust yeur at Triplc-A Louisville, and pitched eight
Innings to bcut Cincinnati In Ills major league
debut In April.

□Bee Arocha, Page 3B

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 ILY

�SB - San lard Htratd, Sanford, Florida - W tdntadty, Jona 23, 1903

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
A IIT In m I D T
A M lilC A N L I A O U I
f a i l Dtvteten
W
L
D t f roll
41 3*
4) »
Toronto
41
N ew York
X
Baltimore
M
*3
Botton
31 X
M llw a o k w
1*
1*
Ctevtland
41
1*
W ait D lvltten
W
L
Chicago
N
X
K e n ta tC Ity
14 X
California
13 X
14 3 *
Seattle
Texet
21 X
M lnnateta
1*
a
Oakland
21 a
Teetday'* Oamet
Cleveland 3, M ilw aukee I
Toronto 1. N o w Y o rk 4
B a lllm o r o ll, D o tro ltt
Botton 4, M ln n e u ta 1
Chicago 1 , T e x e t !
K e rn e l C ity 3. California 1
Oakland KVSoattlo 3
«

Pet. O B
.413 —
.404 1
,S77 1
7
.I X
.437 m y
.414 13 Vy
.414 u t y
Pel. O B
.32* —
.32* —
1
.111
.414 1
.44* S it
.433 4W
.424 7

■

T a m (P a vlik 3 3 ) at Chicago (Bara 3 -D .
1:13 p .m .
Milwaukaa (Wagman 4-11) a t C lav*land
I M a u H I . 7 :0 1 p .m .
Naw Y o rk (K a y I D a t Toronto (Slot'
ttomyre 0 4 ), 7 :1 3 p .m .
Datrolt (M o o r* 5 1 ) at Baltim ore (SutclIHe
7 D , 7 :1 3 p .m .
Minnetofa (Guardado 0 -U at B w to n (Sola
o 0) , 7 :l l p .m .
California (H ath a w a y (Ml) at Kanaaa City
(H ana y M I ,1 :1 3 p .m .
Oakland (D o w n * l - l ) a t Soattla (Fle m in g
2 l),10 :0 3 p ,m .
Thart d a y 'i O a m a t
California at Kanaaa C ity , 1 :1 1 p .m .
O akland! tSa att t o ,l :l l p .m .
M ilw a u k e e *! Cleveland, 7 :0 1 p .m .
Naw Y o rk at Toronto. 7 :1 1 p .m ,
Oalrolt at Baltlm ora, 7 :1 1 p .m .
N A T IO N A L L S A O U I
l o t Dtvteten
W L
Pet.
Philadelphia
X
.700
11
343
St. Lo u lt
a
a
Montreal
X
X
.X *
443
Chicago
X
u
Pltttburgh
X
a
.471
.447
Fterlda
a
a
.104
N ow Yo rk
it
X
W o afD ivitte n
Pot.
W
lt
47 14 .441
Son Francltco
X
Atlanta
.334
X
L o t Angela*
a
X
.3 1*
X
Houtlon
.3 1!
a
443
a
Cincinnati
X
San Dtego
42 .400
a
.344
14 X
Colorado
Tvaaday’ t O a m a t
F la rW a 7, St. La w te l
Ph llad alph lal. A tla nta 3
PlHtb urg h 7. Chicago 1
il t . N tw Y o rk 1
ill 14. Colorado I I
1 . L o t Angola* 1
5an O logo 1 , San Fran c Iice I

SB
—
*W
12
IS
(Sty
tl
17to
ea
—
7ly
*te
I0W
14
lSvy
X

S

A tla n ta U m o M ^ t V l ^ T ^ P h l l e d e l p h l e
(R lv e re 5 3 ), 11:3 3 p .m .
Moniraal (M a rtln a i 7-3) a t N aw Yo rk
(T e n a n t 4 4 ), U p O p .m .
San Otega ( G W a r r l t 7-7) at San Fran cltco
(Black t - t ) ,4 :0 1 p m .
Cincinnati (Pugh V I ) at Colorado (Pa rrot)
I 3 ) ,3 :0 3 p .m .
St. Lo u lt lArocha 33) at Fte rld a (Io w a n
4 7 ) , 7 :3 1 p .m .
C h ic a g o ( B o t k l t t-0 )„ a t P l t l lb u r g h
IW ggnaf 1 -3 ),7 :3 1 |
* t . L o t Angatea
(C g m tto ttllS )

■ *•

Lo o te r p 0 0 0 0
W odaonlb 3 ) 1 0
T a f ili
» M l I
T tla li
M I * 4
tea m i ill — i
S t.La u te
113 l i t 11 1 - 7
F lo r id *
I - Berroa 1 ( I ) . L O B - SI. L o u lt I .
Flo rid a 10. I B - O llk a y I I I ) . Jo lfo rlo i (10).
F o l l i 3 ( 1 1 ), Magadan ( I I ) . 3B — Santiago
13). H R — P e g n o til (a). Santiago ( I ) .
T « R
BB SO
IP
It . L oom
C orm ie r L .5 4
1
111 4 3 3 1
Lance tte r
13 3 1 1 0 1 V
1 0 1
O live r# *
111 S t
1-1 0 0 0 0 1
KHgut
0 0 0 0 2
P e re i
t
Fte rld a
1 0 1
H am m o nd W , 54
3 11 4 1
Tu rn e r
111 0 0 0 0 2
M ailm en
1
1 0
t-1 1
1
H a r v a y S .lt
1 1 0 2
12 3 1
H I P — b y Lancetter (Santiago). W P —
La n c a tto r. P B — P e g n o iil 1 .
Rlpptoy; F lra t, Quick:
Sacand, C raw ford: T h irdL. Rtokar. &gt;
T — 1 :0 J . A — 33,14*.

A M E R IC A N L E A G U E ,
Pet.
O A l
R
H
Ote ru d To r
4* 141
.411
31 * *
M ellter Tar
70 253 to *4
.3 1*
W hitaker Oat
5* 1*1
43 X
.X S
G w g iN Y
71
.274
41 14)
a
Lo fto n C to
44 1S4 4 * X
.i n
a N a lltN Y
.323
43 I X
X
71
Q o n to te t T a x
a 1 )1
44 70
XI
O r lfte y Jrle e
M 317 X
X
4 t*
P h illip * Dot
47 7 *
*4 X I
.313
C urtis Cal
44 a t
X
73 .314
Hwn Ic ifti
1,
M e ilte r. Toronto, 44; W hite, Toronto, X ;
R A la m a r, Taranto, 14: O tarud, Toronto, I I ;
F l * t d * r , D a trolt, 1 1 : O V e u g h n , Milw aukaa,
*9 : Lo tio n , C la v*la n d . 4* ; Sao rga, Clavoland.
4 *.
R u m Batted In
B alia, C te vtlan d, 40; Ptelder, Oa lro lt, 40;
Tattteton, D e tro it, 40j Baorgo. C te vtlan d, 31;
O ta ru d , Toronto, 31; C arter, Toronto, 37;
T h o m a *. Chicago, U : G V a u g h n , M llw a u k **.
M.
H tt*
O te rud . Toronto, f f ; M ol Itor, Toronto, *4 ;
S a o rg a , C te vtlan d, 03; M c R a a . K a n ta i C ity,
S4: R A la m a r, Taranto, 14; Lo fto n . C tevtland.
03; O rltta y J r , Seattle, X .

Tim Ralnaa Is a Sanford native and Samlnol# High School
graduate now playing for the Chicago W hite S o x. Hie state are
for the 1903 season in the first column, ptreonkl-bBit season
totals In the seoond colum n and ourrent oareer totals
(Including 1903 games) In the third column.
O n Tuesday night, Raines plnoh hit In the ninth Inning and
drew a walk In his only at bat as the W hite So x trimmed the
Texas Rangers 3-2. The two teams play again today at 1:30 p.m.
In a game that Is being shown on cable television station W O N .
R A IN E S Q A U Q E
C a te g o ry
*8 3
O r t t i g s .........................
A t - b R t s ......................... . . . 1 0 7
R u n s ............................... . . . 2 5
H itit«l*#ll4«****l4IM . . . 3 1
R B I .....................................
D o u b l e a ..................... . . .
5
0
T r i p l e s ......................... . . .
7
H o m s r u n s ........... . . .
S t e a l s ...........................
A v e r a g e ..................... . . . .2 9 0

•

Ote ru d , Toronto, 37: W hite, Toronto, X ;
A n d e n o n , Baltlm ora, 10 ; M V a u g h n , Batten,
I f ; T h o m a *. Chicago, I f ; Pa lm a r, T a x a t, I f :
C a rte r, Toronto. 1 *.
Hulaa, T a r a *. 7 ; C uyte r. O atrolt, 7 ; Lotion.
C te v tla n d . 1 ; M c R a a . K a n t a i C it y , 1 ;
Baarga, C te vtlan d, 1 ; L Je h n w n , Chicago, 1 ;
J o r * tied w ith *.
Ham a R u n t
Balia, C tevtlan d. 30; G o n ta lti, T * * a * . 1 ( ;
F l t l d t r , D atrolt, 14; Tattteton, D a trelt, t l ;
G V a ug hn, M ilw aukaa, 17: G r llft y J r , Saattte,
17; Pa lm a r. T a ia t . It .
tiis i
C u rtlt, California, X ; Lo llo n , C tevtland,
I I ; RHandaraon. O a kla nd , 14; R A la m a r,
Toronto, 17 ; LJo h n to n , Chicago, X ; Polonla,
C alifornia, 1 ( ; W h itt. Toronto, It .
P IT C H IN G
ID a c tN o n a
W lckm an. N ow Y o rk , 4 0 ,1.0 0 0 ,1.74 : Walla,
D a trolt, f t , .10 0 ,1.4 4 ; Lo n g tto n , California,
♦ I , .*00. 1.4 1; Hantgan, Toronto, * :1 , . I I I ,
1.13 ; K t y , N a w Y o rk , I I , .400, 1 .1 7 ; D o tw rty,
D a tro lt, 7-1, .771, 1.74 ; A i v t r t i , Chicago. 7-1,
.7 7 1 ,1 .1 1 ; Sutcllffd. Baltlm ora, 7-1, .771.4 .70 .
Itrlk a au t*
RJoh nton, Saattte. 133: C lam ant, Bo*ton,
* • ; La ng tton , California. ( 7 ; Hanaon, Saattte.
* 1 ; P a r t i. N a w Y o rk . It; Ap p lar, K a m a *
C ity , 1 7 ; O u im a n . Taranto, 13.
la*
M o n tg e m a ry Kam
Baltlm ora, 10; DW prd, ■■ — V l
M inna*at» I f ; F a r r , I
■ e ita n , i l l E c k o r il ty

ffi&amp;j ___

Mr.

\

1
N A T IO N A L L I A O U I
va
0 AB
R
H Pet.
Oa la rra ga Col
32 20* 34 to X I
.131
K ru k Phi
ea 22* S4 11
\
Second H a ll
B g n d tS F
70 240 35 13 .334
E a t la m DtvUten
M erced P it
43 200 M 70 .330
W
44 141 27 43 .344
P la n a L A
1.000 — \
Carolina I P ira te *I
)
.333
V ltc aln oC hl
44 243 34 *7
vy
.300
Knoxville IBlua J a y t)
I
330
44 241 X
44
v Bagwell Hou
0
x { » r w n v llle ( B ra ve *)
.000 1
' Je ffe rle t S IL
43 234 X
14
Xt
Jackieitvllla ( M a rin er*) 4
1
Grace Chi
4f 241
X
13 .37*
Orlando (Cub*)
ivy
t
Blchelte Col
43 242 41 7 *
.X 4
W a itam Dlvltten
M c ^ o tS F
41 114 72 73 .324
H a n liv llte (A th ltc t)
3 0 1,000 _
R
u
n
t
Scored
vy
Chattanooga (R a d *)
I
0 1.000
D y k it r a , Philadelphia, *2 : Bondi. Sen
vy
M j&gt;m p h l*(R o ya ltl
I
0 1.000
F r a n c ltc o , 33; K r u k , P h ila d e lp h ia , 34;
Birm ingham (W Sox)
1
I .304 1
M a W lllla m t, San Fran cltco , 31; Daullen.
« N a ih v lllt (T w in *)
0
I .000
Philadelphia. 31; Blgglo. H ou tlo n , 41; J a B t ll.
won flrat hall dlvltten lltla
P lH tb u rg h . 47: Bonilla. Naw Y o r k , 47.
T u a td a y 't O a m a t
*
R u nt B itte d In
Hvnttvllte I t , Orlando 3, ittg a m a
M a W ill)a m i. Son Fran cltco . 4 1; Daulton,
Jlu n tivtil* 4, O r la n d * 3, ln d gama
Philadelphia.
37;
G a la rrag a , Colorado. 13;
M tm p h li ( , Jacktanvllte 3
B o nd i, San Fran cltco , 34; Grace, Chicago,
C ha it a nooga a, O r w n v 11la 0
31; P l e n a . L o t A n g e la *, 3 ); D H o llIn t,
J&lt;nonvllt» 3, Birm ing ha m 0, U tg a m a
Philadelphia, 4ft Incavlglla, Philadelphia,
B irm in g h a m *, K n o xvIlteO, ln d gama
47; Bonilla, Naw Y o rk , 47.
Carolina 1, N athvillaO
.Hilt
W adnatday't O a m a t
G alarraga- Colorado, *0 ; K e lly , Cincinnati,
H un ttviilaa lO rla n d a
I f ; Bagwell. Houtlon. a t; Ja B e ll, PlH tb u rg h ,
M tm p h lta t Jacktanvllte
•4 ; G r e e t, Chicago, 13; Bond*. Son Fren Chattanooga al Graanvllte
c la c o . 43; J e t f e r i * * , S I. L o u l t , 1 4 ;
Birm ingham al K n e x v lllt
M a W lllla m t. San Fra n c ltc o , 14.
Carolina at Nathvllte
T h u rtd a y 'l G a m a *
G ra ce , Chicago, Rtf Bichette, Colorado, I I ;
Hunltvllto at Orlando
C o r d e r o . M o n t r e a l, 30i D y k a t r a .
Mam phi t at Jacktanvllte
Ph ila d elph ia, 14; C am ln lll, , H o u tlo n , I f ;
Chattanooga al G rw n v llla
O liv e r, Cincinnati, H i Blgglo, H ou tlo n , I I ;
Birm ingham al Knoxville
J a B t ll , P lH tb u rg h , I I ; K ru k , Philadelphia.
Carolina al Nathvllte
I I ; O a la rro g o , Colorado, II.'
Trip le t
v
Fterlda State League
C a tlllla , Colorado, I ; D L a w ll, S a n 'F ra n
Sacand H a ll
c ltc o , I ; E Y e u n g , C olorada, S; M aVtln,
K a ita m Dlvltten
'
P lH tb u rg h . 5; M orandlnl, Ph llad tlph la, S;
L
Pet. O B
W
C o ltm a n , N t w Y o rk , 1 ; 4 a rt Hod w ith 4.
W .P . Beech (Ex p o e )
3
0 1.000 H im i
(
ivy
Daylona (Cube)
1
.100
t
M a W lllla m t. San F r a n d K o . 3 ); Bond *. San
0 .000 ivy
x Lakeland (Tlg e rt)
0
Fra n c ltc o , 70; Bonilla, N aw Y o r k , I I ; G a n t,
1
333 3
F o rt Lauderdale ( Rod S o t) 1
A tla n ta , 11; P la n a , Lea Ang ela*, 13; Me1
Otceola lA tlr o t)
2 .333 1
O
r Ilf, San Diego. 15; Daulton, Philadelphia,
.333 1
1
SI Lucte (M a tt)
1
is
V tro Beach (Do d ge r*)
0
3 .000 2 V*
Staten Be le t
W ttltr n D lvltten
C a rr, Fte rld a , M ; Colem an, N ew Y o r k , 17 ;
0 to w
SI. Pete (Cardlnali)
1
D L a w l l , Sa n F r a n c lt c o , 1 4 ; R o b e r t * ,
vy
Chartott# (R a n g e r*)
2 1 .407
Cincinnati, 21; E D a v l t . Loa Ang ela*, 12;
vy
1
1 .447
Dunedin ( llu a J a y t)
E Y o u n g , C o lo r a d o , 2 1 ; D y k i t r a ,
Fo ri M y t r t (T w in *)
1 .447
w
1
Philadelphia. I I .
1
3 .I X
tte
Se ra w ta (White Son)
P IT C H IN G
x Clearwater (Ph lllle tl
0
3
OW 2
• Doclitent
1 won flrat halt dlvltten title
TGreene, Philadelphia, * I, .*0 0 ,1.3 4 ; Kite,
T u a td a y 't O a m a t
H o u tlo n , 7-1, .173. 2.41; Burka lt, San F r a n ­
Saraiota 3, Fa rt Lauderdale 0
cltco. 102, .1 1 1 . I X ; A v t r y , Atla n ta , 1 2 , .100,
St. Pe ta n b u rg at Lakeland, p p d ., rain
1 .1 7 ; Schilling, Philadelphia. I I , .400. 3.44;
Otceola 1 , F o r t M y a r tO
O l a v l n t , A t la n t a , * 1 , .730, 2 .14 ; R I|o ,
St. Lucte I . Clearwater 1
Cincinnati, 4-2, .750, 3.40.
W ail Palm Beach 1 , Daylona I
it r lk w u t i
Dunadln ll,C h a rlo H a 4
R I|o , Cincinnati, f l i G M a d d u x, A lla n la , *0 ;
W tdnaaday’ a O a m a t
Bo nat, San Diego. W ; H a rn ltc h , H outlo n, 13;
Saraiota a t Fa rt La u d ard a lt
Sm o llt, A llan la. 13; T O r w n a . Philadelphia,
Si. P a te rtb u rg a t Lakeland, 3
■2; Schilling. Philadelphia. 74.
F or 1 M y a ri al O tc w la
Sivea
Claarwatar at St. Lucte
Le Sm ith . St. L o u lt, 24; Back. San Fran Daylona at W w t Pa lm Beach
c l u e , 21; M lW lllla m t. P h lla d tlp h la , 22;
Charlotte at Dunadln
M y t r t . Chicago, 21; H a rv a y , Flo rid a , 1 1 ;
Th u rtd ay'a O a m a t
Stanton, Atla n ta , X ; W atlaland, M ontreal, 14.
Varo Beach at Daytona
Lakeland at Otceola
W att P a lm Beach a l St. Lucte
A l l -B T A M
Claarwatar at Dunadln
Charlotte at F o rt M y e rt
Saraiota al SI. Palartb urg
Am erican League Vetlng
N E W Y O R K - R e tu lli through Juno I I lor
tha tlarllng Am erican League teem lor tha
44th A ll Star G a m e , to be played Tuetd ay,
Ju ly I I al Baltim ore:
Catcher*
M A R L I N S 7, C A R D I N A L S !
1. Ivan R o d rlg u ti, T a x a t. 231,143; 2. Sandy
S T. L O U I S
F L O R ID A
A lo m a r, Cleveland. 211.741; 1 M ickey Tete b rh b i
e b rh b i
tlalon, D e tro it. 304.733; 4. P e t B o rd er*.
W e lt t t t
40 10
G llkey It 3 1 1 0
Toronto,
1(4.304; 3. Brian H a rp e r, M lnnetota.
O S m lt h u 4 1 1 0
B rb e rte lb 4 1 2 0
Canine It 3 0 2 0 141,7SS; 4. Tony Pa ne , Botton. 134,114: 7.
Jllerlea lb 4 0 1 1
T e rry Stelnbech, O a kla nd . 121,401; t . C h rlt
L n k frd c f 1 0 0 0
D t t r d t lb 3 0 1 1
H o 1le t, Baltlm oe. 44.171.
P e p p a trl t o i l
e llxW
ct
rF iiiR
1110
F i r t l la w m e n
2 110
Mgdan
W hite nrf 4 0 0 0
1. John O terud. Toronto, 37J.R33; 1 . M a rk
Zeitelb 100 0
3133
r r o e r f 1 0 0 0 M c G w Iro . Oa kla n d , 734.43*. 1 . C u l l F Wider.
O lv e r w p 0 0 0 0
O a lro lt. m i * ; 4. F ra n k T h o m e *, Chicago
K llg u tp 0 0 0 0
Briley rf
1000
P e rry ph
000
H m nd p
1 0 0 0 White Sox. 1*1,144; I . J . T . Snow, Calllornla.
141.004;
4. Kent
T u rn rp
0
0
00 H rb e k , M innetola. 111,304; 7.
P e r e tp
00 0 0
Don M a ttin g ly, N ew Y o rk . t l l . X I r I . R a lw l
G Penn lb 4 0 0 0
Rnterla ph l 0 t 1
Palm
eiro, T 0
e 0x e t, M .0 4I.
H ftm e n p 0
0
P g n u iifc 4 7 1 1
H a rv e y p 0
0
00
Crmtofp 10 0 0

best
16 0
647

o a re e r
1 ,7 3 3
6 ,5 6 7

13 3
19 4
71
38
13
18
90
.3 3 4

1 |1 6 1
1 ,9 5 2
6 70
321
96
114
73 2
.2 9 7

Tim Rain**
) . Roberto A lo m a r, Toronto, 314414; l .
C arlo * Baarga, C te vtlan d, i*M 4 5 ; 1. Chuck
K n o b la u c h , M ln n a te ta , I I 1 . I 7 * : 4. B ill
R lp k a n , T a i a t , 14 7,3 4 1: 1 . H a v a l a x ,
Chicago. *5 S M ; 4. Lo u W hltakar, Do trolt.
K . * 1 t f 7 . J o w Lin d . K a m a * C ity , 74,303: I .
Rich A m a ra l, Soattla. **.72 4 .
1. Cal Rlpkan J r . , Baltlm ora, t i t , 730; 1 .
T r a v li F ry m a n . Oa trolt. 144,043; 3. Ju a n Ball,
M ilaukaa, 113,*03; 4. O n te Oullten. Chicago,
* 5 1 4 ; 1 . Ton y Farn an d a t, Toronto, * 1 ,1 * 1 ; t .
Drag Oagna, K a m a * C ity , 43 .7/*; 7. Dick
Schofteld. Toronto, 41.041; 4. Splka Ow a n,
N a w Y o rk . 70,440.
T h ird Batam an
I . Wada Boggt. N aw Y o r k , 177,010; 1 . Robin
Ventura. Chlacgo, 133.011; 1 . Daan Pa lm a r,
T a u t . 111,10 4 ; 4. I d Sp ragut, Taranto,
m . f l t t 1 . Ed g a r M a rtln a i, Saattte, ' W t t t ;
4. T a rry Jorgantan. M ln n e w ta , (4.144; 7.
Ka vln Sa ltia r, Oakland. 7 0 .H 1 : 4. La o G o m e l,
B a lllm ora, 17,401.
t . Kan O rltte y . Saattte, 171,470; 3. K irb y
Puckatt, M lnnateta, 4 7 1,l i t ; 3. Ja a C arter,
Toronto, 341.037; 4. J e w Canteco. T a x a t,
2 7 J .I 7 * ; S. Ju a n O o ru a te i, T a x a t, 143,711; 1 .
Dava Wlntteld, M lnnateta, 2351*4; 7 . Alb e rt
Balia, Ctevaland, 117,341; I. Rickey Hend arto n, Oakland , 14 7441; * . Davon W hite,
Torento. 1*4.707; 10. K irk G lb to n , D a trolt,
131.714; 11. Ruban Sterra. Oakland, 107,4*4;
13. Brady A n d trto n , Balllm ora. *3,434; 11.
A n d ft D a w to n, Bolton, #1,114; 14. Shan#
M a c k . M ln n tM la , •*.4 14 ; 11. Rob D ta r ,
D a trolt, 73.74*i 14. K tn n y Lotfon, Ctevaland,

H ilt
1
PG A Tavr ita tlltlc*
PO N TE V E D R A — Statistical teadtrt on
lha P G A Tour through tha U.S. Opan, which
ended J u n t X :
tearing Laadori
1. Grag Norman, e t.X ; 1. Paul A ilnger,
4*.441 3. Payna Stewart, i*.44i 4. V Ilay Singh,
4*.33; s. Nick Price. 4*.3*l 4. Tam Kite, I t . t i l
7. L w Ja n itn , 4*.11; I. Fred Couptet, 4*.*t; f.
David Frott, 4*.fl; 10. Tom Lehman, 4*.*4.
D rivin g D ilta n c t
) . John D a ly , 14 4 .* y a rd ti 3. John A d a m *,
1 7 1 .4 ; 1 . R d ..H u m e n lk , 1 7 4 .li 4. B a rry
, m * M . D a v it L o w I I I . t n . l ; 4 .

D rivin g Accuracy
I . Doug T t w t ll, 13.1 percent; 1 . Dillard
P ru itt, 41.3; 1 . F r t d F u n k , 10 .7; 4. D a vid
E d w a rd *, T f.S ; 3. Fulton Alte m , T f .l ; 4. D .A .
W aibrlng, 73.3; 7 . Bab La h r. 7 1 .1 ; I . La ron
R o b e rt*. 71.0 ; * . Jn tf M a gg a rt, 7 7 .* ; 10. H a lt
Irw in, 77 .1 .
O r t t n t In Ragulalten
I. F u n y Zoallar, 7 7 .* parcanl; 1 . D avid
E d w a rd *. 7 1 .7 ; 3. Tom Kite , 7 1 .1 ; 4. Bill
G la tto n . 71.0 ; 3. F ra d Couptet. 70 .*; 4. Slava
Elklng ta n. 70.3; 7. John Cook, 70.3; I . 1 T lt d
W ith 70.1,
Putting Leader*
t . G rag N o rm a n , 1 .7 1 *; 1 . Dick M a tt, 1.740;
3. B rad Fa x o n , 1.74 1; 4. D a vid F r o tt. 1.744; 3.
Kan G r w n , 1,747; a Ilia ). Ban Cranthaw and
Donnie H am m ond, I 741; 0. Bob L o h r ,. 1.713;
* . W ayna L a v l, 1.733; 10. Scott Slm pton, 1.734.
T i t i l D rlv lftf
1. Bill O la tta n , 33; X N ic k P ric e , 37; 1 d ia l.
Ja il Maggart and G ra g N o rm v n , 34; 3. F u n y
Zoallar, 4 1; 4, Blaine M c C a llltte r, 4 7; 7 . G il
M organ, 70; 4. T am W at*en, 71; * . 1 Tied W ith

n.

£ ||||
I . John D a ly , 10; 1 ( l i t ) . K tllh C learw ater,
E d H um an lk. D a v it La v a III and K irk
T rlp te tt, f ; 4 (tte ). And rew M a g w , Brett Ogle
and D a ve R u m m e llt, I ; * . 4 Tied W ith 7.
Bird la Le a d e r*
1. Payna Stew art, H I ; 1 . L w Ja n ta n , 144;
3. J im M c G overn, 141: 4. Keith C learw ater,
13 J; 3. F re d F u n k , 2 X ; 4. Brian C lea r, 331; 7 .
Fulton A lte m , 731; I . Nolan H t n k t , 333; * .
M a rk O 'M e a ra , 3 1 *; 10. Billy A n d ra d t, 310.
Sand T ra p S a m
I . L a rry M i t t , t i .4 parcanl; 3. N ick Price,
4 7.1; 3. G a ry Hallbarg, 47.0; 4. Jo d lt M ud d .
44.7; S. Jim m y Ja h n ito n , 44.3; 4. Bob G lid e r,
44.4; 7. Ltn n le Clam ant*, 4 1 .1 ; 0. K tfl G r w n ,
43.4; ( . Ban Cranthaw . 4 1 .1 ; 10. Stave Pa te ,
41.4.
A IIA re u n d
1. Payna Stew art, 1*4 ; 1 . O il M organ, 77O;
1 . Paul A iln g e r, 714; 4. Steve Elkln g ta n , H 4 ;
I . L a r r y M lia , 1*3 ; 4. J im M c G a v a m , 10 *; 7.
L w J a n it n , 11 1 ; I . Je ff M agg art. H i t f . Grag
N o rm a n , l l f ; 10. F u n y Z w l t o r ,M * .
F O A Mane y Lead er*
F O N T ! V I D R A - Loading m a w y wlnnart an the F O A Tea r WtreugR the U .S . Ogen,
vHilch ended J u w H i

1. Paul A iln g o r
I . Payna Stewart
1 . L w Ja n tan
5 G ra g N orm an
1 . T o m K ilo
4. N ick Price
7. Bernhard Longer
5 Pro d Couptet
» . Rocco Mediate
10. Stave Elklngtan
11. Corey F a vln
11. L a r r y M lia
t l . J a il Maggart
Id: G it Morgan
13. Jim M cGovern
14. D a v it Le va III
17. D a vid F r o tt
t l . Fu lto n Altem
I f . Scott Slm pton
M . D a v id E d w a rd *
I t . Chip Back
X . V l|e y Singh
X . Nolan Henka
14. Je e y Slndtler
13. O re n t Waite
34. H ow a rd Tw l tty
1 7 . T o m Lehm an
11 . M a rk O ’ M eara
X . Brett Ogle
X . Ban Cranthaw
I t . Donnie Ham m ond
X . M a rk M cCum ber
X . John H utton
34. Ja y H a a t
X . M a rk Caicavecchla

Tot
11
If
11
»
tl
10
3
tl
IS
13
It
14
11
14
»
It
It
X
14
13
17
1
17
17
11
17
17
II
tl
14
15
n
it
17
1*

M e aty
1013.* * *
m o ,n s
1 X 5 7 *0
M M .717
U B M 74
1*4 1,17*
1474*3 *
1322,733
U I 7 .3 X
M tf.2 11
3447.X I
3430.341
3404.443
3404,O X
3400.104
33*3,K 0
33*3501
33*7.347
114* ,440
3344.044
3 17*, I X
3177,041
3145*74
3343,0ft
3 3 X ,fO *
O X , 334
1322,443
330 15X
32*4.713
1203,47*
3240, f 43
3273.334
3272.147
134* 431
3134,733

L F O A M o n ty La ad tra
T h a m e n ty li t d ir * an tha I t f l L F O A Tour
through the R e c lm lt r International, which
tndad Juno H i
T rn
M o n ty
1. P a tty Sheehan
3413,34*
13
1214,32*
2. T a m m te G rw n
17
3. T rlth Johnton
It
3244,474
4. B e tty King
1234,07*
11
3. Helen A llrtd tto n
11
12)*,727
4. K rlitt A lb e rt
14
3113,*41
14
7. Sherri Stelnheuer
11*7.*24
1. M eg Mellon
t i t * . 174
12
t . Michelle M cGenn
14
1174,344
10. La u ra D a vla t
11
II7 I.W 1
11. La u rl Merten
1173,147
11
11. Brand)# Burton
13
3 IM .4 X
&gt;1*4.430
13
11
11*15 74
IS. K r fiT u h e tt e r
14- *
31*1,1*0
1 1 1 7 ,4 7
14. Daw n C w -Jo n e i
14
17. Tin a Barret)
14
114 , Iff
II . Je n e C re fte r
13
1 1 7 *,M l
1)31,433
14
1*. Elain e C rotby
X . Nancy Lopei
e
&gt;131.074
I t . D ollle Mochrie
&gt;133.33?
u
14
21. L ite W a lle n
1133.3*1
X . Ja n e G e d d e t
1131,14*
13
74. H lro m l Kobayathi
&gt;124,74
12
73. Jo A n n e Corner
&gt;104,34
17
24. Deb Richard
&gt;103,47*
11
27. Val Skinner
14
H U ,1 1 1
71. B arb Bunkow tky
II
&gt; 10 1X 7
X . P e l Bradley
11
1*2,407
X . Cindy Rarlck
13
1*2 .3 **
It
1 1 . H o lllt Stacy
3*2,047
3 1 .Alice R llim a n
12
3 *4 X 1
343,443
X . N an cy Scranton
14
343,047
34. M l t t l * Bortoolll
14
33. Ju d y Olcklnton
17
M2.032

ariSKTSK”

lrr"wr**Bi

It:

________

* w A Ml ■

S7.S m illion Wlmbtedon
W I M B L E D O N , England - R e tu lli T u e t­
day ol the S7.S m illion Wlmbtedon tonnii
chom ptonthlpt at th t A ll England Tonn lt
C lub :
Mon
Stngtw
P in t Round
A m a * M o n td e rt, I t r w l , d t l . Brian J w lt o n .
Po rtland, O r a ., 5 7 ( X I I , 5 5 7 4 1 7 4 1, 5 3 ,
5 3 ; J a w n Staltanbarg, A u ttra lla , d tl. D a n itl
Vacek, Ciach Rapubllc. 7 0 ( 7 4 ) . 5 3 ,5 4 .
C h rltto van R antburg. South Africa , d tf.
C a rl-U w * S lw b , O o rm o n y, 5 4 , 2 0, ra tlrtd ;
Ja k o b H la ta k , S w lt it r la n d , dol. D ltg e
N a rg lto , Italy, 7 4 (7 4 ), 5 3 , 5 7 (5 4 ), f t
(7 3 1 .
M lla t Mac La g a n , Brita in , d el. Ke rtte n
B r a a u h , O a rm a n y, 7 4 1 7 4 ) , 5 4 ,5 3 , J 5 5 4 ;
P a ir Korda ( I D , C iach Rapubllc, dol, M artin
Itra lb o , C w c h Rapubllc, 5 1 ,5 2 ,5 1 .
O liv ie r D a la ltra , Fra n c a , d at. T h e m e *
M u tte r ( I t ) , A u ttrla , 7 4 , 5 5 5 1 ; Miegnua
L a r t i e n . Sweeten, d e l. P a tric k Kuhnen,
O a rm a n y , 5 0 ,3 -4 ,7 4 ,5 3 .
Henri Leconte, Fra n c e , def. Dlegs P e re i.
U ru g u a y , 5 5 54&gt; 5 4 ; Ja vte r F r e n i. Argen- .
tine, dot. Je re m y B a te *, B rita in , 5 5 7-S. 7 4
(74 ).
A n d ra l O lh o ve k ly . R u t t la , dot. D a v id

Nalrtkln, South Atrteb, 5 5 4-1, 74 (t-l)t
J am li Morgpn, Auitralla, dal. Andrei
Chnnokev. Ruttla. 4-3,44,4-4.4-4.
Syrott Slack, Ilm bibw *. dot. Rabbto
Wtlta, At Ionia, 41. 47 (47), 41. 41; N O
lo w g r w ID, Tawpa, d»t. NMI Btrwtck,
Auttrallo, 41 (IM S ). 43,7-4 (7 31.41.
J o w Cunha-Sllvo, Portugal, dot. Row
MothOWA, SrItoln, 47, 7-4 (7-1), 41, 41;
l o r d Bockir (4), Oormony, dot. More
Got 11nor. Oormony, 4 4 .4 1 43.44.
Wally Matur, Awfrail#, dot. Javter Son
choi, Spain, 41, 44. 74 (7-4); David
Whooton. Loka Mlnnotonko, Minn., dot.
Nlcolot Porolro, Vonoiuoto. 74 (7-1), 4 4 ,5 5
41.
John Fltigorald, Auitrali*, dot. Sort
Wuyti, Bolglum, 40, 41, 41; Chrlt Salloy,
Britain, dot. Patrick McEnraa; Oyitor Soy.
N.Y.,7-57-1,74.
Brolt I tovon. Now Zoalond. dot. Magnut
Ouatotnon. Swodin, 43.47 (7-1), 44,3-4,43;
Andrei Modvodov (10), Ukraine, dot. Pater
Moralng. Oormony, 47 (141), 43, 5 5 74
(7-3).
Doran Ivanltovle (1 ), Croatia, dot.
Jonathon Stark, Modterdv Oro„ 44, 47, 57,
74 (74). 44; Richard Matuaiowtkl, Hopewell
Junction, N.Y., dll. Chuck Adamt, Pacific
Palltadn. Calif., 7-4 (7-4), 41.44.44,57.
Mlchwl Chang (I I), Htndarwn, Ntv., dtl.
Paul Haarhula. Motherland*. 41, 41, 44. 47
(74), 44; David Prlnotll, Germany, dtl. Atex
An tonHuh, Auttrla. 7 4 (7-1), 43,7417-1).
Ronald Aganor, Haiti, dat. Thoma*
Carbentll. Spain, 44,44,7-5 41.
F k ttl
.
Brant H a yg a rth , Control A frica n Rapubllc,
and Jim Pugh, Rancho P a te l V o rd w . C o lli.,
dot. Alexander Radutetcu, O o rm o n y , and
M lk w l Stadllng, Swadan, 4 1 , 4 1 , 7 4 ( 7 - » i
John La tin to da Ja g o r and M a rc w O n d ru tk a ,
South A fric a , dot. Tom N l|w a n and Ja n
Stemar In k, Netherlands 4 4 ,4 1 ,4 4 .
W ayna P a r n lr a , South A fric a , and M lc h w l
Sllch (10), O o rm a n y , d a l, H an rlk H a lm ,
Swadan, and Bant O v a P adarw n , N o rw a y ,
4 1 . 5 4 . 7 4 . 4 t ; Kan Fla c h . Alpharatta, O r ,
and Rick Loach ( 1 1 ), Laguna Beach, C a lif.,
dat. Icatt D a v it , Naw port Baach, C a lll., and
Ja ra d Pa lm a r, T a m p a , 4 4 / 4 4 ,7 4 (7-4),
T a m p a , and D a va Randall,
Birm ingham . A la ., d * l . M a rtin D a m m and
Karol N e v a c tk , Ctech Republic. 4 3 . 4 4 , 4 4 ,
7 4 ; Todd Woodbrldge and M a rk Weodtorde
( I I , A u itra lla , dat. M a rlu t Barnard, South
A fric a , and Sender O m a n , Natharlandt, 7 4
( 7 - 4 1 ,4 4 4 1 .
Ka nt K ln n to r, Greenwood, ln d ., and C h rle
tlan Sacaanu, G e rm a n y, d at. Ste vt D e vrte t,
S u ltu n , C a ll l., and D a v id M a c p h a rw n ,
A u itra lla . 4 7 ( 7 4 ) , 7 4 ( 7 -t ), 4 1 .4 4 .4 1 .

R u xandra D ra g a m lr, R o m a n is dat. AtexM d r a Fuaat, Frw te a , 4 3 , 4 1 ; SMfcet F r ank I,
Oarm a rty, dat. C la im Waginfc, Natharlandt.
4 1 , 4 4 , 7-S,
Llndaay Oavo np art, Fatea V a r d w , C e ll*.,
dat. Varanlka M a rtlna k, O a rm a n y , 4 0 , 4 4 .
74 ; M iria m O w m a n a . N ath a rla n d t, dat.
Karina Qu ontm c, F ra n c a ,4 4 4 1 .
M a ry J w P a m a a d tt ( I ) , M leiw l. Me*.
Kyoko N ag a ttu k a, Ja p a n , 4 1 . 4 4 ; B a i^ tra
R tttn a r, O a rm a n y , dat. Lin d a H a rv a y W H d ,
Haw thorn W aadt, III., 4 4 ,4 1 .
K a th y R i n a ld i, A m a lia l i l a n d , d a t.
F r a n c a u a R a m an a, Ita ly , 1 4 , 5 t , 4 4 ;
N a ta lia Z v a m v o . B a la ru t, dot. K a tarin a
M ateava&lt; i t ) . Bulgaria, 7-S, 4 4 ,4 1 .
Am a n d a W alnw rlght, Brita in , dat. Carolina
Kuhlm an, La k w ld a P a rk , K y ., 4 7 , 4 4 , 4 4 ;
E llu b a t h Sm ylte, A u ttr a llt, dat. J a Du rte ,
Brita in , 4 4 ,4 4 .4 1 .
L a u lw F ie ld , A u itr a lla . d at. B a va rly
B a w tt, B a lte r 4 1 , 5 4

B AS EB ALL

AiiMt'Nriiv iLiAfin»
C A L I F O R N I A A N S E L S - Activated John
O rto n , catcher, from tha 14 d a y dl tab ted H it.
W aived L a rry O o n ia la t, catcher. R w a lla d
Victor Salvorte, pltehar, tram a m habllltatten
a w lg n m a n t and • a ttlg n a d him ’ to P a lm
Spring* at tho Content la Laagua.
r M L W A U N IE B R EW ER S Activated
D a v a N ll t w n , c a tc h tr, tram tha 14 d a y
ditabled 11*3. Opttenad T ro y O ’ L a a r y , outfielder, to N t w O r leant at tha Am erican
A u o c la tio n .
No Hanoi L t o g w
H O U S T O N A S T R G S - Agrood to te rm *
w ith Silty W ognar, pttctw r, and ow lgnod him
to A u b u m at tha N a w Y a rk -P *n n Laagua.N S W Y O R K M B T S - Am auncad "
ratlgnatten at A l H a ra iln , goner a I r
F i r r a S U R S H P I R A T E I — Slgnad Dam on
A lla n , pltehar.
FO O TB A LL
N a tte M l Football U .
C I N C I N N A T I B E N G A L I - Slgnad Je ff
Q u e ry , w ld i receiver.
T A M P A S A Y B U C C A N E E R S - Agreed to
and Tyree
D a v it, wide rocotver*.
M IA M I H O O T E R S —
Reagan, aWanthn W te w iv o linem an, team
Chartette ter W aayna
y n t A d b ln t, wteo receiversigned
r t c e l v e r - d t f a M•slvd
W o IB a c h , a n d B a a r g a
W illla m i, tullhac k-lln ah ach ar. A c tlv a la d
Ftacad G a ry M e Cum m Inga and KaHhan

aaT
_■
- afV
- t STm
- * j fw1l*»^m
-^ -4- TW
*----S*»e
ILepABM
pe4
•JeH
tlW*rfE
*lt w*^e
Singer, g nartarhach, an m callahia

U m Im
la calta r dafa w tva
F lr t lR e v n d
T A M P A B A Y S T O R M - A c t iv a t e d
Nathalie T a u iia t ( i t ) , F ra n c a , d t l . R e n n w
Ra w ia nd C ra w fo rd , do te n t l * t ip a c te llit.
Stubbt. A u itra lla , 7-S, 4 4 ; Jennifer Capriote
Slgaod Ita c a y R a M m a a , w ide racalvar( 7 ) , S e d d ltb rw h , dot. Shlrll-Ann Siddall.
d otw M lv* back. lu *o « n d id D a m n W lllti,
B rita in ,4 7 ( 7 4 1 ,4 1 ,5 1 .
wtda m caivar-dttem lva back.
R a d ia l M c Q uilla n, A u t t r a llt , dot. J in n y
H OC KEY
B yrn e , A u ttra lla , 5 4 , 5 2 ; Marianna W a rd tl.
N a t lent I Hockey League
Palo A lto , C o lit., dot. Nedlno Ercogovlc.
P IT T S B U R G H P E N O U IN S Nam ed
C r o o llo ,5 4 5 3 .
Ed d ie Jchntto n coach, and Brya n Trotelar
M ono En d o . Ja p an, dat. Karan C ro w .
a u ltta n l coach.
Britain . 5 4 ,4 -3 ; Judith W lotnor. A u ttrla , d * t .
C O L L IO E
Stephonla Ro ttlor, N o lh trla n d t, 5 1 .5 4 .
C O A S T O U A R D - Nam ed Dan C rottm a n
M oredlth M c O ro th , M idlan d, M ic h ., dat.
tecondery coach, and Doug M arrena at­
Nancy Fa b a r, Belgium , 7-S. 5 1 ; Zina O e rrltentive lin t catch.
to n -Je c k to n , H o u tlo n , d al. Sabina H a c k,
L S U — N am ed L a r r y Zlarteln attentive line
G e rm a n y, 5 2 ,7-S.
COACh.
Conchlta M a rtln a i (4 ), Spain, dat. Ginger
O H I O S T A T E - Announced Rick Yu d t.
Holgoton, San Diego, 7 4 , t -J i R o t N ld atfor,
forw ard, h a t tr an ite r red from A u itln P e a y.
San Dtego. d t l . La u ra O lld tm tltto r , Pe ru,
R U T G E R S — Announced tha retlgnatlon ot
5 2 ,4 4 ,5 1 .
J a il M llc h tll. m a n '* a tiltte n t batkatball
coach.
K t lt r ln a Kroupova, Ciach Rapubllc, dat.
C am m y M a c O rtg o r, L a Q u in ta, C a lll., 5 4 ,
1 4 , 7-S; Rachel M cQuillan, A u ttra lla , d tf.
Je n n y Byrne , A u ttra lla , 5 4 ,5 3 .
A n n G ro w m a n , O ro vo C ity , O h io , d t l . Tam l
W hit linger, Naanah. W it., 5 0 ,4 4 .5 4 ; L a r lta
B AS EB ALL
Holland, L a tv ia , dat. Cotette H a ll, Britain.
7:3Q p .m . — E S P N , Datrelt T ig e r* at
5 3 ,5 3 ,
m ora
a rt O r tloti
Baltlm
e t w .I L )
..................,
•ta tfl
', '.dot. Kteirlty " » , W
R-kmi
p .m l -- 'ia u t t e - t * . Louie C ard in a l* a t
S h a r p e .° A u t t J i ' l l i ,1; ' W t ! * , ' Ak n d r a a ' Flo rid
a &gt;■( r...........................................
HaAMMa rtin
M hg
Strna d ova . C ia c h Rapubllc. dal. K rlttla
Baogerf, Natharlandt, 5 2 ,5 1 .
" iVlp.tn.
if W, Wot Id Cup Savant Flite lt
M o n lq u a J a v o r , B rita in , d o l. A n d re a
T R IA T H L O N
T t m t i v o r l , H u n g a ry , 4 -1, 4-3; P a tC 4 l4
3 a .m . — S U N , Oranga County Perform ing
P a r t d lt M angon, Fran ca, dal. Manan Bader It Center Triathlon
g ra t, N a th a rla n d t.5 4 ,5 3 .
O L L IV B A L L
Helen Kate tl. Canada, d tf . F a tra La ng rove,
U i X a m - E S P N , P ro B a tc h : Budweitar
C ia c h R a p u b llc , 4 -1, 4-3; P a tr ic ia H y ,
Fo u r-M a n T o u r
Canada, d t f . R ik a H lra k l, Ja p a n , 7 4 ,5 3 .
Radte
Clare Wood. B rita in , d t f . M erkota Ko cM a,
B AS EB ALL
O o rm o n y. 5 1 , 5 t ; Qlorlo P ln lc h ln l, Ita ly,
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S a n fo rd H e r a ld , S a n fo rd , F lo r id a - W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 23 , 1093 - I S

Orlando’s Rogers enjoys all-green run in Late Model win
■ y PAUL M A H M O U A

E d ito r 's n o te : S a tu rd a y ’ s results from
V o lu s ia C o u n ty S p e e d w a y will app ear In
T h u rs d a y ’s S a n fo rd H e ra ld .

Spaclal to tho Herald
SAMSULA — Orlando’s David Rogers, driving
the TM Ranch Pontiac Firebird, cruised to victory
in the "alt green flag” 35 lap Late Mode) feature
event Saturday night at New Smyrna Speedway.
Rogers, who now has three feature wins on the
season, started the race from the fourth position.
On lap two, Rogers, riding the high groove, got by
race leader John Kennedy to take the point.
Once In command Rogers pulled out to a
comfortable lead and was never cnallanged.
"T h e track was a little slick from the earlier
rain and the car really didn't run good," said
Rogers, a three-time track champion. "Once I got
In the lead I was able to have the car. It’s good to
go home In one piece. This has been a horrible
year for us. Out o f the last eight races I wrecked
the car six times and they were all bad wrecks."
Trailing Rogers to the checkers were Wayne

Anderson, Kennedy, Bryan Campbell and Joe
Middleton.
"David (Rogers) was tough to catch tonight. By
the time I got through the field he already had a
good lead," said Anderson, the current Late
Model points leader. "A caution period would
have helped a lot tonight. 1 had a lot of distance to
make up, but not enough time."
J a co b Wa r r e n raced Mi chael Wi l l i a ms
wheel-to-whcel to notch his 15th Limited Late
Model win of the year.
Chasing Warren and Williams to victory lane
were Keith Balga, Claude Colllgnon and Jim
Braxee.
Dale Howard went green flag to checkers as he
held oh1 Roger Favreau to pick up Sportsman

For Southard, driving the John D. Rue
Chevrolet Cavalier, this was his first official
triumph of the season. Southard was the winning
pilot several weeks ago, but was disqualified
through a technicality. Just prior to the race he
replaced Bob Rainey as driver, but track officials
were not notified of the change and Southard was
stripped of his victory.
"It feels real good," said Southard. "I'm real
glad for this opportunity. 1 have a good car, a
good owner and a good sponsor. What more can
you ask for?"
Osteen’s Marc Klnlcy was fourth and Ross
Etdrtdge fifth.

grounded out to score Wallace
with the 10th and final run of
the Inning.
Florida Manor did not score In
the third or fourth Innings, but
ended the game by the run rule
by plating a pair of runs In the
fifth.

The Ken Rummel Chevrolet
bats went silent after that, as
Florida Manor pitcher Blake
Murray and his defense held
Rum m el to on ly tw o m ore
singles over the final four in­
nings and only one Rummel
Baggett started the Inning
runner reached second base the
with a single and advanced to
rest o f the way.
Florida Manor also got off to a third on a single by Murray.
slow start offensively. K e n L . Helmer lifted a sacrifice fly to left
Brubaker led ofT with a walk, but to score Baggett and Goodman
after a fly out he was forced at followed with a double, moving
second by Noy Rivers. Rivers Murray to third. Brubaker wwas
later scored on a single by Brett Intentionally walked to set up u
force out, but Huck ruined the
Molte to tie the score at 1•1.
Florida Manor broke the game strategy with a sacrifice fly to left
open in the bottom of the second to end the game.
Providing the offense for Flor­
as all 10 Florida Manor batters
scored in the frame before an out ida Manor were Murray (three
s i n g l e s , t w o runs, RBI) ,
could be recorded.
V ic D lBartolo started the Goodman (double, single, run).
outburst with a triple. Spencer Rivers (home run, two runs, four
Baggett walked and Murray RBI). Wallace and DlBartolo (one
singled to score DlBartolo. Jim triple, one run and one RBI
Helmer followed with an RBI each), Brubaker (double, run.
sin gle and Kei th Goodm an RBI). Helmer (single, run. two
si ngl ed to load the bases. RBI). Baggett (single, two runs)
Brubaker reached on an error and Huck and Mode (one single,
and Tim Huck singled In a run, one run and one RBI each).
before Rivers cleared the bags
Doing the hitting for Ken
with an insldc-thc-park grand Rummel Chevrolet were Smith
(single. RBI). Keefer. Kelly De­
slam.
Mode reached on an error to nton. Keith Denton and Murk
keep things going and Jamey Aten (one single each) and
Wallace tripled. DlBartolo then Nlckles(run).

AsoM latod Press
DAYTONA BEACH Dale Earnhardt
maintains a comfortable lead In this week's
NASCAR Winston Cup standings despite
finishing 14th in Sunday's Miller Genuine
Draft 400at Brooklyn, Mich.
Dale Jarrett, who finished fourth In
Sunday's 400-mlle race, moved Into second
place behind Earnhardt, trailing 2,167
points to 1,944. Earnhardt would keep his
lead In the next race even If he finished last.

Rusty Wallace Jumped from fifth to third
in the chase for the S1.5 million champion­
ship with 1,888 points, while Kyle Petty
took fourth with 1,877, and Morgan Shep­
herd moved Into fifth with 1.870.
Davey Allison, who had been second but
finished 35th after his accident In the
Michigan race. Is sixth with 1.8B4.
Rounding out the top 10 are Ken
Schrader, 1,807; Geoff Bodlne. 1.788;
Jimmy Spencer, 1,746; and JefT Gordon.
1.745.

allowed 12 unearned runs dur­
ing the streak this year.
" W e 'r e not deal i ng wi t h
NEW YQRK.tt AntAohy VoM«y nqnnal Circumstances here,"
and hla teammates proved how Oreeh sat'd. ’ "W hen tho errors
it's really not all th*4 difficult'for "happen, he tends to shrug his
a pitcher to lose 2$ straight shoulders. He’s been a pro about
It."
decisions.
Young entered his postgame
Young, 0-9 this season, tied an
news conference wearing a T92-year-old major league record
Tuesday night when he lost 6-3 shlrt which read: " I f I had luck.
to the Montreal Expos. The Mets It would all be bad."
He gave up six runB, three
made four errors In the first five
earned, und six hits In six
Innings and left the bases loaded
Innings.
twice early In the game without
"I*m embarrassed because I
scoring.
know I’ m a better pitcher than
Young matched Cliff Curtis’
that. You saw the game," Young
record o f 23 consecutive losses
asked reporters. "A m 1 that
established with the Boston
bad?"
Braves In 1910-1911.
In a much caBlcr question to
Curtis never knew he held the
answer, the Mets arc Indeed very
record. The Mets right-hander
bad.
has been made painfully aware
It has now been 59 straight
that he shares a losing legacy
games since New York won two
now.
in a row on April 16-17. The
".Damn." he shouted in near
a ll-t im e record wi t hout
disbelief after the game. "I made
back-to-back victories Is 80 cona record today."
s e c u t i v c g a m e s by t he
The loss capped another grim
Philadelphia Athletics In 1915.
day In a season that has spun
Young lost to Montreal for the
out of control for the last-place
fifth time during the streak. The
M ets. O en era l m a n a ger A1
Expos were also the last team he
Harazin resigned earlier in the
beat, on April 19, 1992.
afternoon and the frustration
"He didn't get much help,"
continued at night when manag­
Expos manager Felipe Alou said.
er Dallas Green was ejected
"T h ese things happen when
during an argument In which he
everything goes wrong."
threw a stool onto the field.
For the manager’s son. Jubi
Once again, the Mets didn’t
about everything went right.
give Young much help. He has
■ y JIM DONAOHV
AP Bass ball Wrltsr

Continued from IB
to the head of the pack
und charged to victory lane.
Trailing Anderson were Mc­
Cabe, Reeves, David King, and
Southard.
After three laps of fcndcr-tofender racing, Jacob Warren was
able to get by Michael Williams
to take the No. 1 slot In the
Limited Late Model main event.
Warren, with Williams In tow,
then raced to his seventh win of
the season.
Trailing the lead duo to the
stripe were Mike Todd. Gary
S c h l l c h t c r . and J l m b o
Bjorklund.
Holding off a late race charge

by Bill Loomis. JefT Moyer went
green flag to checkers to take top
honors In the Sportsman feature
event. Rounding out the top five
were, in order o f finish, were
Roger Favreau. Guy McRobcrts,
and Barbara Pierce.
With two laps to go. Bobby
Sears used the high side of the
track to get by race leader Kelly
Jarrett and beat Jarrett to victo­
ry lane by less than two car
l engt hs In the Mint Stock
feuture.
Ge ne Mc r r l l t s was thi rd
followed by J.D. Duncan and
Richard Newton.
Bruce Thompson was took the
lead at the tall end of the last lap
to win his second Modified main
event. Kelly Jarrett was second

Motscs Alou hit a 414-foot homer
off Young in the top of the sixth
and made a spectacular diving
catch to rob Chico Walker of
extra bases In the Mets' threerun sixth.
Young, whose losing streak
has come to symbolize the Mets’
downfall, was cheered by the
fans when the starting lineup
was announced. Fans have also
sent him good luck charms.
From the start, though, It was
not his night again. Dellno
DcShlclds grounded Young's
first pitch up the middle and
rookie second baseman Doug
Saunders had the ball bounce off
his glove on a play scored as a
hit.
Errors by first baseman Eddie
Murray and Saunders led to
pitcher Chris Nabholz's RBI
grounder and DcShlclds' tworun single In the second.
An error by shortHtop Tlin
Dogur helped the Expos score
two more runs In the lilt hr Each
Met Infleldcr mude a iu Ibcuc.
Mel Rojas (3-6) was the winner
In relief of Nabholz, who lost hlB
control In the fourth Inning.
John Wetteiand closed Tor his
14th save.
The Mets lost for the seventh
time In eight games. Their 21-48
record ia the worst In the majors.
Five hours before the game,
the Mets announced Harazln’s
resignation. For awhile, at least,

followed by Michael Joynt, who
relinquished the top two posi­
tions on his way to finishing

FREE
h

A ro c h a m a rried a Mi ami
woman last October, lives here
-In the offseason and likes the
Idea o f wearing a Marlins un­
iform,

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Ads will be scheduled to run for 10 days.
Price of Item muBt be stated In the ad and be $100 or less.
Only 1 item per ad and 1 ad per household per week.
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• ONLY ONI I7CM

"T h e problems In Cuba are
always on my mind," he said.
"Things are going to change, no
matter what Castro says."

a a

AIR CON DITION IN G S E R V I C E

MAIL TO: Sanford Herald
P.0. Box 1187
Sanford, FL 32772*1087

"I'm very happy in St. Louis,
and I can’t ask for more than the
way the Cardinals have treated
m e," Arocha said. "But someday
I’d like to play here."
T'-\
&gt;.
In Cuba. Arocha left behind
his mother, daughter and wife,
who later divorced him. He’s
trying to bring his 10-year-old
daughter to the United States.
#

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Take advantage ol this special otter

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The first defector from the
powerful Cuban national team to
reach the majors, Arocha made
•30 a month in Cuba. Now he
earns • 109,000 a year and saves
most of it. He owns a Toyota
Pasco, rents an apartment in St,
L o u t s a nd b u y s E n g l i s h language Instructional tapes.

third. Fourth and fifth places
went to Kenny Heckle and
Donald Shedd. respectively.

that diverted the attention from
Young.
The TV crews and reporters
sent to cover the 27-yeejr-old •
right-hander Instead "spent the |
early part o f the day talking to
co-owners Nelson Doubleday
and Fred Wllpon.

A ro c h a
"H e was our best starter until
he got hurt," Torre said. "H e's
not your typical rookie."

"W e would have liked to have finished better Sunday, but we're pretty happy to
hang on to the points lead," said Earnhardt,
a five-time national champion.
" I guess as long as those guys right
behind us are slugging it out among
themselves and swapping second place back
and forth, that ought to help us."
Earnhardt surpassed the 81 million mark
In winnings for the seventh season o f hi*
career. The all-time motorsports leader in
career money-winnings, Earnhardt now has
• 1,004,375 this year.

O rla n d o -

Young ties futility mark with help of team m ates

Continued from IB

With four laps to go. Frostproof's Tom my •
Davidson got by race leaders Oary Roberts and- ;
Debbie Santo to win the Four-cylinder Spring
Challenge Enduro,
"I am really thrilled," said the 35-year-old
Davidson. “ This Is only my second enduro. The
first one I finished real good and tonight I won.
The car was good. I stayed out of trouble and
waited to make my move.”
Roberts was second, Santo third. Rick Turney',
fourth and Olen Anderson wound up fifth.
Osteen’s Bobby Sears was the winner o f the
Mini-stock main. Finishing second through fifth, ,
respectively, were Jerry Symons. Ted Vulplus,J.D. Duncan and Keith French.
t*
Mike Hughes led every circuit in winning theBomber feature. Greg Noe, Gary Frosh, Billy *
Belflower and Mike Trocki rounded out the top'
five.
Kevin Lawrence was the winner of the Action,
Performance Run-about Classic.

Jarrett, Wallace move in behind Earnhardt

M u d d e rs
C o s tla a td from IB

Division victory number 13 o f the season.
Bill Loomis was third, followed by David
Lebcau and Barbara Pierce.
Danny Kienltz-Southard edged Jeff Anderson
and Dave Savlckl by less than a car length to win
the Modified main event.

l(

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4 * - S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo r id a - W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 23 , 1993

E People
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Cook of the Week

IN B R IE F

W heelers settle In Sanford, work hard to reestablish themselves
Hollywood East clogging classes
Hollywood East Dancers conduct clogging classes every
Thursday, from 6:30 lo 8:30 p.m., nt Mclodcc Skating Rink, W.
25th Street near Airport Boulevard In Sanford. Cost Is $3 per
class, ages 5 and up. Parents free with paying child. For
Information, call Casey. 407-322-3593 or Dawn. 904-735 0270.

East'W est Klwanls Club meets Thursday
East-West Klwanls Club o f Sanford meets every Thursday at
7 p.m.. at the Friendship fit Union Lodge building, corner of
Locust Avenue nnd Seventh Street. Visiting Kiwunluns are
welcome. For Information, call Robert Whittaker, president.
889-6042.

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Summer veggies
done easily in
the microwave
Summer Is a good time for
microwaving. The quick cooking
with minimal heat Is always
welcome when the outdoor tem­
peratures climb near the 100
degree mark. And, as many
fresh vegeta b les com e Into
season, you can enjoy them
cooked to perfection In the
microwave oven.
If you have corn and lots of
zucchini, combine them for a
flavor treat.

CORN AND ZUCCHINI COMBO
3 medium ears fresh corn
1 small onion, chopped
Vi cup chopped red pepper
1 Tbsp. margarine or butter
1 medium zucchini, sliced
1 tsp.sugar
Vi tap. cornstarch
H tsp. salt
14 tsp. pepper
1 medium tomato, chopped
Cut corn from ears, using a
sharp knife. Place In 1Mi-quart
casserole. Add onion, red pepper
and margarine. Cover with cas­
serole lid. Microwave on 100
percent power 2V4-3 minutes or
until steaming hot. Stir In zuc­
chini. sugar, cornstarch, salt and
pepper; mi x well. Cover.
MlcrowaVe dtrlOO percent power
5-6 mlnUlM o f until vegetables
arc Just abquli,tender, stirring
o n ce . A i t t l T o m a t o . Co v e r .
Microwave on (100 percent)
114-2 minutes or until heated
through.

MICROWAVS
MAQIG
MIDGE
MYCOFF
zucchini and green pepper,
cover.
Microwave (100 percent) 4-414
minutes or until vegetables are
tender. Drain. Add chives, rose­
mary. and olive oil; toss to coat
evenly. If desired, season with a
little salt.

Make a meal of this vegetarian
Spanish rice dish or serve as an
accnipanlmerit to fish or poultry.

SPANISH EGGPLANT
AND ZUCCHINI

1 small onion, chopped
1 Tbsp. water
Vi cup chopped green pepper
2 cups Bllccd zucchini
1 cup quick cooking rice
2 cups chopped fresh tomato
1 can (Boz.Homalosauce
1 Tbsp. snipped fresh oregano'
'A tsp, chill powder
-g
1small eggplant
Vi cup shredded Cheddar
cheese
V* cup g r a t e d P a r me s a n
cheese
Paprlku
Combine potatoes with more
Combine onion and water In
colorful vegetables und serve
2-quart casserole. Cover with
with grilled chicken or fish.
casserole lid. Microwave on 100
VEGETABLE MEDLEY
percent power 214-3 minutes or
1 lb. red potatoes
3 medium carrots, cut Into until Just about tender. Add
green pepper, zucchini, rice,
1-tnch pieces
tomato, tomuto sauce, oregano
1 small onion, sliced
and chill powder, mix well.
1 clove garlic, minced
Cover.
1 Tbsp. water
Microwave (100 percent) 7-8
1 medium zucchini
minutes or until hot and bubbly,
2 Tbsp. chopped green pepper
stirring once. Peel and slice
1 Tbsp. snipped fresh chives
1 Tbsp. snipped fresh rose­ eggplant cross-wise Into '4-Inch
slices. Arrange slices on rice
mary
mixture overlapping as neces­
1 Tbsp. olive oil
Scrub potatoes: cut us neces­ sary. Cover.
Microwave (100 percent) 9-11
sary Into 114-lnch pieces. Place
In 1-quart casserole. Add car­ minutes or until eggplant Is
rots. onion, garlic and water. t ender. T o p wi t h ch eeses:
s pr i nkl e with papri ka.
C o v e r wi t h c a s s e r o l e lid.
Microwave |100 percent) 7-7 !4 Microwave 1100 percent), un­
minutes or until vegetables are covered. 2-3 minutes or until
Just tender, stirring once. Add cheeses urc inched.

By RINKIKBITH

Herald Correspondent
Finding something to do, or
wondering what do do with the
extra time tn her day. Is not a
problem for Cook of the Week
Candy Wheeler. Getting settled
In after their cross-county move
was first nnd foremost for the
Wheelers, and quite an un­
dertaking at that.
Candy nnd her husband.
Roger, arc originally from New
York, moving to Sanford earlier
this year. Choosing Florida as
:hclr new home state was new to
everyone except Roger. As a
youngster. Roger’s family moved
from New York to Florida and
lived here for clghl years, re­
turning to New York, when
Roger was 17 years old.
During their years In New
York. Roger and Candy were the
owners and operators o f an
auction barn dealing In Items
ranging from housewares to the
most beautiful In antiques.
Roger was the buyer as well as
the auctioneer. Candy ulso did
some of the buying but for the
most part she handled the book
work. Unfortunately, fire de­
stroyed their business beyond
repair. According to Candy.
"Roger Is still hoping to get back
into the auction business some­
day.”
Keeping Candy going ut a
steady pace arc the Wheeler’s
children, two sons und one
d a u g h t e r . J u s o n , w h o is
11-years-old. currently attends
Sunford Middle School. His
8-year-old brother, Shawn, and
his 6-yenr-old sister, Julie, both
attend Goldsboro Elementary
School.
In her spare time. Candy
enjoys maki ng cl ot hi ng for
herself and the children. Needle­
point Is another craft she has
found can be rewarding and very
relaxing after a stressful day.
Where Candy feels she really
excels, as far us u craflcr hobby
is concerned. Is In Ihc area of
cake decorating. " I ’ve done all
kinds of cakes." says Candy.
“ Birthday cake** for kids and
adults, baby showers and I’yq
made wedding cakes (fiat were
just beautiful," she concluded.

H O L L Y ’S B A N A N A
CAKE
Crust;
4 c ups c r u s h e d
crackers
1‘4 sticks butter

graburn

Filling;
I
3-4 cups Confectioner’s {1 OX)
sugar

sauce melts. Put meatballs In
2 sticks softened butler
1 cup brown sugar
shnllow 9x 13-Inch baking dish
2 tsp. flour
1-2 cups crushed graham
and cover with sauce. Bake at
crackers
2 isp. butler
350° for about 30 minutes.
Mix
Ilnur,
baking
powder,
suit,
Goodies;
SOUTH DAKOTA BAKE
ci nnamon, nut meg, sugar,
4-5 sliced hummus
shorienlng. milk and eggs into a (Ellen Woodcock)
Juice o f I lemon
2 lhn. ground beef
I lh.. -1 oz. can crushed bailer. Pour one third of butter
6
to 8 potatoes
Into well greased and lightly
pineapple (well draluedl
1 hag frozen green beans
llourcd pan. Combine remaining
I large container Cool Whip
I can cream o f mushroom':
Crushed nuts. Maraseiiluo I cup brown sugar. 2 isp flour
soup
and 2 Isp. bolter, mix well.
cherries
I cup milk
Melt butter for crusl and mix Sprinkle '4 ol crumbs Into bat­
Sail and pepper to taste
ter. Add rest ol bailer, then
with crushed graham crackers
Pat ground beef Into bottom of
balance ol crumbs. Hake at 350°
Press mixture In !)xl3luch pan
!)x 13-Inch baking pan. Peel and
lor 30mlnulcs.
Put In refrlgeratur lor 'v hour
slice potatoes as you would lor
Slice the bananas and In soak to P A R T Y M EATBALLS
scalloped potatoes. Place on top
lemon Juice while you make the lllelcn Denmark)
ol meal. Place frozen green
2 lbs ground beef
filling. With electric mixer, heal
beaus on top of potatoes. Mix
1 cup corn Make crumbs
f i l l i ng I ngr edi ent s, sav i ng
together cream of mushroom
1i cup parsley Makes
graham crackers lor last. They
soup and milk, then pour over
2 eggs
are used lo sullen lhe lllling: use
the remaining Ingredients. Salt
2 Tbsp, soy sauce
more II necessary. Arrange ihe
and pepper to taste. Bake at
sliced bananas on ilu cooled
1 1 tsp. pepper
350° for 1 hour.
crust, making sure to drain off
1
isp. garlic powder
EGGNOG SALAD
all Ihe lemon juice. Pour lllling
cup catsup
(Trudy Ficshmun)
over the bananas and let ehlll I
I medium onion, chopped
1 quart pasteurized eggnog
to 2 hours. Put pineapple on lop Sauce;
2 envelopes Knox undnvored
,’f1l)i;fgr'th (:n Cool Whip,
1 lb. can crunberry sauce
gelatin
j l 12 ox. Jar chllt sauce
liquid bv-nuU-mid cherries*-.
Vi cup sugar
1 Tbsp. brown sugar
c i n n a m o n Cr u n c h c o f f e e
2 cups heavy cream
5 Tbsp. lemon Juice
CAKE
1can fruit cocktail
(Ellen Woodcock)
Mix ground beef wllh ilic corn
Heat eggnog, gelatin and sugar
2 cups sifted flour
Make crumbs, parsley Makes,
214 tsp. baking powder
eggs, soy sauce, pepper, garlic together on lop of stove until
Vt tsp. salt
powder, catsup utul chopped everything dissolves. Put In re­
1 tsp. c innamon
onion. Form Into small-medium frigerator to cool, not set. After
U isp. nutmeg
me at ba l l s and saute until eggnog gelatin mixture has
W cup sugar
cooled, add heavy cream and
browned.
'A cup shortening
C o m b i n e In g re die n is lo; trull cocktail. Pul Into a mold
I cup milk
sauce. Put In saucepan and cook and leave In refrigerator until
eggs
over low heat until cranberry ready lo serve.
j

S

Child abuse suspicions can harm parents
n t iD

a n n v .
. „
„ ____ ______ i
DEAR ABBY:
This
is In
regard
t

i

i

®

i

to "Colorado Mother," who kept
her child home from school
becuuse of u black eye and
bruised cheek sustained from a
fall ugalnst a coffee table, which
could huve looked suspicious lo
u day-care operator. 1 would
have kept my child home. too.
because this Is what happened lo
me:
My 4-ycar-old son was Tooling
around ut the Laundromat,
climbing up und down when
he'd been told not to. He fell and

•'.’wr-' rnw^

lA ii

SPLIT

H*f»I4 DSolo by A iro n K tllh

Candy Whealar mixes up something special for the family.

AD VICI

ABIGAIL
V A N BUREN

got a nasty bruise on his cheek,
bul since he felt uo discomfort,
we let him go lo preschool and
thought nothingofti.
Later. I responded in a knock
on my door from a county child
ubusc Investigatort I was ap­
palled. The Investigators ques­
tioned me, my son and my
daughter (who witnessed her
brother’s fall) and concluded
tlial we were telling Ihe truth,
but I learned that once the report
was made, I had a record and
was on their,"suspicion" list for
a year.
It got to the point where I
examined my soil’s body In the
huth for any bruises sustained in
play. Apparently, one day I
missed one, because the In­
vestigator called met However,
he did say that the teacher who
had made the report was "overly
ambitious." constantly reporting
on other parents as welt.

accused of child abuse.
As a former assistant commis­
sioner o f public welfare lu
Massachusetts, and a member of
the National Hoard ol Directors
of ihe American Civil Liberties
Union. I cun tell you "Colorado
Mother" ueled wisely, ami you
are mistaken.
Schoolteachers are Instructed
lo report a child’s black eye" or
bruise on the chance that Hie
child has been physically abused
at home.
The National Coalition for
Child Protective Reform was

M O V I E l A N D ...........

&amp;

i.

321 -0147
A m e ric a n C t n f r fo r Cultural E x c h a n g e . Ltd.

35*0 I

TTm

l

• N O P A S S M O V IE *

LAST ACTION i n
^11:302:004:189:00— ’

i__ i 1:18
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fin
1■MR ntpM 4
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1

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GUILTY
a s s in

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LSupcrMarioBros,f™1****

T

ts ts fi

iST ACTION
H :0 0 2:30 4:45 9:48

Kara

i .-1

NO PASSES

6:46CE
For 24*hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, June 18

ELIZABETH VORENBERG,:
PRESIDENT, NATIONAL:
COALITION FOR CHILD :
PROTECTIVE REFORM,
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

V o lu n te e r fa m ilie s n e e d e d to
h o s t m a le s tu d e n ts fro m F r a n c e
In J u ly .
C a ll

CALIFORNIA MOTHER
DEAR CALIFORNIA
MOTHER; The same say I re­
ceived your letter. I also heard
from the president of the Na­
tional Coalition for Child Pro­
tective Reform.
DEAR A B B Y : " C o l o r a d o
Mother" kept her child home
honi day care because the child
hud hit, her face against Ihc
coffee table nnd got a terrible
bruise on her cheek, plus a black
eye. The mother feared being

organized alter a conference al
Harvard Law School In an at­
tempt to eliunge this system. We:
believe that the laws allowing .
nearly unlimited coercive In­
tervention Into families need to
he n a r r o w e d , a nd c hi l d protective hot lines must be
required lo carefully screen,
allegations before launching In ’
vestlgatlons.

SNIPER 10:561

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�S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo r id a - W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 23 , 1993 - S B

x L O f i)
i p f c ___ #

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-

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USDA
Choice
Beef
s\ .

MM

/

k

,
—

Tart

Fresh

—

rso n G ra d e A i

Pork
Picnics

Tumbo Pack

Lt&gt;.

—

USDA Choice Beef

Sirloin
/

si?*

I

&lt;s

1 6

^

ass 10 / 1
Tropical
1
QQ^
Mangoes
QQc
Juicy Peaches
Sweet

Ea.

*1.9%

Packaged - Sweet

,

All Varieties

\

^

Jimmy Dean

Lb-

Extra
Lean

Sweet Imported

L t . « . 81 . 8 9

Packham
Pears

V

O

Lb.

EXTRA LOW PRICES...EVERYDAY! EXTRA LOW PRICES...EVERYDAY! EXTRA LOW PRICES...EVERYDAY!

Special K

ScotTowels

V-8 Juice
$

Ceres

Regularly $2.69

v H ^ n -30 0 0

4 6 O s.

1 Lb.

Cocktail

JaUy/Jsm

Regularly $1.39

R e g -/ *

Regularly $1.19

Assorted
Dec./White

/\ / V ^ l

FOOD LION

in A /i
WINN-DIXIE

_______four Coat AJXtr Rebate

Charmin White (4 Pack)
Bounty Designer Single Roll Paper Towels
Solo Party Cups (20 Ct. • 16 Oz.)
Reynolds Wrap Standard Foil (25 Ft.)
Glad Trash Bags (10 Ct.)
Post Sugar Crisp (18 Oz.)
Huggles Him Step 2 (40 Ct.)
Gold Medal Flour (5 Lb.)
Shake N' Bake Chicken (5.5 Oz.)
Breyers Yogurt (8 Oz.)
Ken-L Ration Special Cuts (3 Lb.)
Kibbles N' Bits (4 Lb.)
Bold Liquid Detergent (50 Oz.)
Soft Soap Anti-bacteria (8 Oz. Pump)
Chef Boyardee Spag. &amp; Meatballs (15 Oz.)
Betty Crocker Scalloped Potatoes (5 Oz.)
Carnation Evaporated Milk (12 Oz.)
■

i

WINN-DIXIE

These Items were purchased at Winn-Dixie on 727 S.
Orange Blossom Trail. Orlundo on June 14. 1993.
Some prices may huve chunked since that lime.

Food
Lion
Total

FOOD LION
EXTRA LOW PR1C1

WinnDixie
Total

Pepsi, Mtn. Dew, Diet Mtn. Dew,
Caffeine Free Pepsi, Caffeine Free
Diet Pepsi, Crystal Pepsi, Diet
Crystal Pens!

33.85

30.53

30.53
33.85

One 24-pack, two l2-|iucks. four 6packs, eight 2 liter bottles, six 3 liter
bottles or lour 6-puck 20 oz. NR I lot ties
of Pepsi®. Diet I’cpsl®. Caffeine Free
Pepsi®. Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi®.
Crystal I’epsl. Diet Crystal Pepsi.
Mountain Dew®. Diet Mountain Dew®,
Caffeine Free Mountain Dew®, and
Caffeine Free Diet Mountain Dew®

$089

VISIT OUK DSU DIFASTMSNT
K-Mart Flana. S i l t OrtaaSa OF.. San
aka aftakaM aiy
S4S

.8 8

.96
.73
1.08
3.18
8.38
1.09
1.57
.55
3.28
3.68
3.38
1.43
.93
1.05
.59

$1.00 O ff

Pepsi Cola

Prices In this ad g&lt;xxl Wed. June 23
Vc Res
thru Tues.. June 29. 1993. We
Reserve
The Right To Limit Quantities.

W inn-Dixie
1.09

A Q

h n l , r»p «4 C a ll. D l . l Papal. C d f . l n . F r w Papal.
C a n tin a Fraa D ia l Papal. M a u n la ln D a w . D i d
M a u n la in D a w . C a / f .l n . F ra a M a u n la ln D a w , and
C a n . In * Fra a D ia l M a u n la ln Daw a n n |la la r a d
t r a Z a v a r k a a f P tp a lC a . In c. C rvata l Papal and D i d
Cryatal Fa fa I aia tr a d .m a r k * a i P tp a lC a . b i t .

Food Lion'*
Extra Low
Prioaa Save
You
$3.32.

E x p iru tio n D ate

M a n u fa c tu re r's
Coupon

12 Pack/12 Os. Cana - Diet

2 Liter • Pepsi
Mtn. Dew, i
Diet Pepsi. Ml
Diet Mtn. Dew..........

Mail-In Rebate

8 99

Regularly 690

Food Lion

WINN-DIXIE

24 Pack
12 Oz. Cans

Lt./D ry &lt;

7/13/93
C o n a iim rr O n ly m u i v u | i t n | * f la in h a w ^ ih i | mv
•.lit • la s a n il/ ia ik |*&gt;»il i h .tig r t n u |d tn n u t »n•» U
a s iiilit u i. iia n » lt f f t t l in M iifi« lu i« &lt; l A m m l i t i u « r
• i. n s t it u l t * fia u d C .ts h v .ilu t l/ U K i» MKTAII.KM W»
w ill m m liu iM p s i (m I h t I a n v .ilu t |*lu « n« h a n illin g
if y o u a n ti th e i o fis u im i h .tv t • « 4 n iilittl w ith •*tii
(T n iia a i K u k in p lio ii IS•!». &gt; a v a i l . al i l i t in ltm |.|M » n
• n k lit • • M a ll«&lt;di|M.n in M il'S I C O IA C O M PAN Y. C M H |
t )t 1-1 • 12 000. I ra w . t i l D n t r . O il Hi.. T t ta « 7HHIO

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- S a n fo rd H e ra ld , 8 a n fo r d , F lo r id a - W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 23 , 1903

Ltgal Not lets

Legal Notices

IN T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
IN A N D P O N
S E M IN O L B C O U N T Y ,
P L O N ID A
COSO N o . f t - 1H O -C A -I4 K
M E R I T O R S A V IN O S . F .A .
P la ln tllflsl

I N T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
F O R IIM IN O L f COUNTY.
F L O R ID A

C A I I N O .M -F 7 1 &gt; C A 't*-K
H O M E S A V IN G S O F
A M E R I C A , F S B , form erly
known a , H O M E S A V IN G S
O F A M E R I C A , F . A ..
Pla in tiff,

R A Y A . JO H N S O N , E T A L
Defendant Is)
N O T IC E O P S A L E
Notice Is hereby given that
pursuant to a (Inal lodgment
entered In tha above entitled
cause In ttw Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Flo rid a , I will
sail tha p ro p e rty situate In
Samlnolo County, Flo rid a , de­
scribed a t:
Lo t M . H IG H L A N D V I L L A O E
O N E , according to the P la t
thereof a t recorded In Plat Book
I f , pages 44. i t , end M . public
records o f Sem inole C o unty,
Flo rid a.
at public M ia , to ttw highest and
best bidder for cash, at the West
F ro n t D o o r ot the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford.
Flo rid a , at 11:00 A .M . on Ju ly
21. I f f !
(C O U R T S E A L )
M A R Y A N N E M ORSE
A l Clerk ot ttw Court
B y : Jerw E . Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
D o ted : Jun o IT , t f f l
Publish: Juno 1 1 .1 0 . IfW
O E P -Ilf

A N N IE R . H E A R D and
H IG H L A N D S H O M E O W N E R S '
A S S O C IA T IO N , IN C .,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that, pursuant to a Sum m ary
Fin a l Judgm ant In Foreclosure
a n ta ra d In tha a bove-styled
causa. In the Circuit Court ol
Samlnolo C ounty, F lo rid a , I,
Clark ol ttw Circuit Court ol
Samlnolo County, Flo rid a , will
sail that certain proparty situat­
ed In Samlnolo County, Flo rid a ,
mora particularly d a K rlb a d as:
Lo t I t , T H E H IG H L A N D S ,
S E C T IO N S IX , F IR S T R E ­
P L A T . according to ttw plat
ttwraot as recorded In P la t Book
14, Page I t , Public Records ol
Samlnolo County, Flo rid a.
A lto known a t lo t Keith Court,
Winter Springs. Flo rid a llT O li
at public sale, to ttw highest and
bast bidder, tor cash, on the
West front step* of tha Samlnolo
County Courthouse. M l N . Pa rk
A ve n u e , Sanford, F lo rid a , at
M :0 0 a .m ,e n Ju ly 21, i t t i .
W itness m y hand and the
official tool of this Court on
Ju n o IT, IM S .
(S E A L!
M AR YAN N E MORSE
Clerk o f Circuit Court
B y i Ja n a B . J a t a w k
Deputy Clark
P’ubllsh:
u b lis h : J u r w l l . M , I t t i

IN T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
OP T H I E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IH C U IT ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L IC O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S I N O .f f - M T 7 - t A .1 4 K
F IR S T T E N N E S S E E B A N K ,
N A T I O N A L A S S O C IA T IO N ,
Plain tiff.
v,
E D W A R D R . B R A U N and
N O R Y IN IF . BRAUN,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F IA L B
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y O I V E N
that on Ju ly » . I t t l . at 11:00
A .M . at the Samlnolo County
Courthouse, M l N . P a rk A v e ­
nue, Sanford, Flo rid a a jTT l, ttw
undersigned Clerk w ill otter for
sale ttw real estate described on
B a h lb lt A a tta c h e d h o ro to ,
together w ith all structures,
Impro vem e nt!, fu tu re s, appli­
ances and appurtenances on
said land o r wood In conjunction

D B P 1 I7

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U I T
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N
C A S E N O . M-1S4S-CA
D I V IS IO N 14-K
M E LLO N M O R T G A G E COM ­
P A N Y F/K /A M O R T O A O E
A N D T R U S T , IN C .,
P la ln tllfls l,

IN H IB IT " A "
A tract or parcel of land lying
In ttw West H a lf o f ttw South­
west Quarter of ttw Northeast
Quarter of Section M , Township
44 South. Range 14 E a s t, F o rt
M y e rs , Lo o C ounty, Flo rid a ,
which tract or parcel Is de­
scribed as follows: Fro m ttw
Southwest com ar of said trac­
tion of a section run N orth
•t'O O'SO'' Ea s t along the.South
lino tlwreof tor 407.t fo o t: thence
run N orth r i f f 40" West for 2J.0
feet to the point ot Intersection
ot the Northerly lino of W inkler
Avenue and tha Westerly lino of
F o w le r S tre e t (fo r m e r ly
H a y m a n B o u le v a rd )! thence
continue North fflffe O " West
along M id Westerly line for
1077.14 loot to tha point ol
beginning. F ro m told point ot
b e g in n in g c o n tin u e N o r t h
f f i f f t f f ' W a it along M id Wester­
ly lin e to r 100 fo a l to an
In fa rte d km w ith a Una parallel
w ith and 1 M foot Southerly from
ttw N orth line of told fra d to n of
o section; ffwneo run - South
I I * I f f 10“ W a tt a lo n g l a i d
paralWI lino far I 7 M 0 toot to o
point on ttw Ea s te rly line ot
C ontrel A v e n u e : thence run
South f f j f f l f f * Ea s t along M id
Ea ste rly line for 100.00 teat:
thence run North I f f O ' I f " lo s t
parallel w ith the N orth lino ol
M id traction o f a section for
57* 00 foot to the point ol begin­
ning, less ttw Ea s t i f f .00 foot

R O B E R T E . M I L L E R , as
Trustee under the provisions of
a Trust Agreem ent dated tha tth
day of Septem ber, ItS I and
known as Trust N o . 100, at al,
Defendant (a).
N O T IC E O F
FO R EC LO S U R E SA LE
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
pursuant to a Fin a l Judgm ent of
foreclosure dated June 14, i t t ) ,
a n d e n te r e d In C a s e N O .
fl-B e t-C A -M -K o f ttw Circuit
C ou rt ol the E I G H T E E N T H
Judicial Circuit In and for S E M ­
I N O L E C ounty, Flo rid a wherein
M E LLO N M O R TO AO E COM­
P A N Y F/K /A M O R T O A O E
A N D T R U S T , IN C . tt the Plain ­
tiff and R O B E R T B . M I L L E R ,
a t Trustee under the provisions
of a T ru st Agreem ent dated ttw
tth d ay of September, IS M and
known as Tru st N o . 100, J A M B S
A . C O LV IN . " J A N E C O L V IN " ,
h it s p o u s e tt m a r r ie d ,
K A T I B A 'S H A R D W A R E . S E M ­
IN O L E C O U N X Y , and "JO H N
O O E “ pnd/or " J A N E D O E '
er
are fh aD eS eh dB W AN w ill toll to
the highest and bast bidder for
cash a t the West front steps of
the S E M I N O L E County C ourt­
house at 11:00 a .m .. on ttw « n d
day o f Ju ly , IW 1, the following
described property a t set forth
In said Fin a l Jud g m en t:
L O T 1, B LO C K " D " S E M I­
N O L E S I T E S , R E C O R D E D IN
P L A T B O O K I f , P A O E S 40-41.
O F T H E P U B LIC R E C O R D S
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
W IT N E S S M Y H A N D and the
seal of this Court on June IT,
IffJ .
(S E A L)
H O N O RAB LE
M A R YA N N E M ORSE
Clerk of ttw Circuit Court
B y : Dorothy W . Bolton
Deputy Clerk
Publish:
'u b lls h : June
J
13. 30, 1t f l
O E P -2 1 1

T tw a fo rtM ld tele will be
m ade pursuant lo an order
e n te r e d b y the H o n o r a b le
Clarence T . Johnson, J r . , lor
Robert B . M c G reg o r, on Jun e
II, If f],
Term s t t ta le i Cash or cashler'scheck.
Su b|ed to oil legal lions and
•ncum brencoi.
D A T E D June 14, l f f l .
M A R YA N N E M ORSE
Clerk d ttw Court
b y : J a n e E . Jesowlc
a t Deputy Clerk
Publish: June » , N , l f f l
□ E F no

N O T IC E
N O T I C E Is hereby given thal ttw Board ol County C om m lttlo nort
ol Samlnolo County, Flo rid a , Intends to hold a public Iwerlng lo
consider the enactment of an ordinance entitled:
A N O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N O C H A P T E R 20. S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y C O D E , " A N IM A L S A N D F O W L " : A M E N D IN O T H E
D E F I N I T I O N S : A M E N O I N O T H E F U N C T IO N S O F T H E A N I M A L
C O N T R O L B O A R D : P R O V ID IN G F O R C O U N T Y M A N A G E R
D E S IG N A T IO N O F R E S P O N S IB IL IT Y F O R A N IM A L C O N T R O L
F U N C T IO N S : A D D IN O P R O C E D U R E S F O R E N F O R C E M E N T O F
T H E R E S T R IC T IO N S O N N O IS Y A N IM A L S B Y C IT IZ E N S A N D
T H E A N IM A L C O N T R O L A U T H O R IT Y : A D O IN O S E P A R A T E
P R O C E D U R E S F O R D E C L A R IN G D O O S D A N G E R O U S : A D D IN O
P R O C E D U R E S G IV IN O T H E A N IM A L C O N T R O L O F F IC IA L
A U T H O R IT Y T O D E C L A R E D O G S O A N O E R O U S : P R O V ID IN G
F O R A N A P P E A L O F T H E D E C IS IO N O F T H E A N IM A L
C O N T R O L A U T H O R IT Y T O T H E A N IM A L C O N T R O L B O A R D :
A D O IN O F R O C E D U R R S F O R D A N O IR O U S O O O H E A R IN G S :
A O O IN O S T A N D A R D S F O R T H E C O N F IN E M E N T O F D A N G E R ­
O U S D O O S : D E L E T I N G O R O U F A N IM A L L IC E N S E P R O ­
V I S IO N S : P R O V I D I N G F O R C O D I F I C A T I O N , S E V E R A B I L I T Y ,
A N D AN E F F E C T IV E D A T E.
at C M p .m ., or a t toon ttwrooner a t possible, at Its regular mooting
on ttw tlth d ay ot Ju ly , l f f l . at ttw Samlnola County Servicer.
Building, HOI Ea s t F irs t Street, B C C Cham bers. Santord, Flo rid a .
P e rta n i a r t advised tha t, II they decide to appeal any decision made
at this haartng, they w ill rwod a record of tha proceed ings, and, ter
such purpose, they m a y need to Insure that a verbatim record ot the
proceedings Is m ode, which record Include! the testimony and
evldanca upon which tha appeal Is to be bated.
Persons w ith disabilities needing assistance to participate In any of
ttw M proceedings should contact the Em ployee Relailona D e p art­
ment A D A Coordinator 41 hour* In advance ot ttw nwetlng at
2 2 1-m o , extension 7f4 t.
M A R YA N N E M ORSE
C lerk lo the Board ol
County Commissioners ol
Samlnolo C ounty, Florida
B y : C ary Ion Cohen
Clark
“Deputy
aty Ck
Publish: J u n e s . I f f )
O E F-M S

C IL K B M T Y C IP H IR
pfB B B fll

K auri G l f l f Ml ITK

. Today'* c * » J agues I
• J

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H I C H I H K C H X

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Ltgal Notlcf
IN T H I C I R C U I T C O U R T
O P T H R IIG H T B E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U I T
O P P L O R ID A ,
IN A N O F O R
S IM 1N O LR C O U N T Y
O E N I R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D I V IS IO N
C A S E N O . f l - t m C A 14 K
F E D E R A L H O M E LO A N
M O R T O A O E C O R P O R A T IO N ,
Plaint Ilf,
E R N E S T L . J A C K S O N and
B N I O A. J A C K S O N ,
H u s b a n d /W ite , D O N A L D J .
B A L E S and E V E L Y N C.
B A L E S , H u tb o n d / W lle ,
B AR N ETT R EC O V ER Y COR­
P O R A T I O N , and S T A T E O F
F L O R ID A , D E P A R T M E N T O F
REVEN U E.
D e fe n d a n t!!!.
N O T IC E O P
FO R EC LO S U R E S ALE
N O T I C E IS H B E B B Y G I V E N
pursuant to ■ Pinal Judgm ent of
Foreclosure dated June 14, I f f ) ,
and entered In Case N o. 712721
C A 14 K . ol the Circuit Court of
tho E I G H T E E N T H Ju d ic ia l
Circuit In and for S E M I N O L E
County, Flo rid a w htreln F E D ­
E R A L H O M E LO A N M O R T­
O A O E C O R P O R A T IO N ll
P la in tiff and E R N e S T L .
J A C K S O N , a l a t., a r t Defen­
d a n t!. I wilt M il to ttw highest
and bast bidder tor cash In ttw
West front door of ttw CourthowM. In Santord. S E M I N O L E
C ounty, Flo rid a , at t 1:M a ’ clack
A .M . on ttw S n d day ot Ju ly ,
l f f l , ttw following described
aa set forth In M id
Final Jud g m en t, to w H i
Lo t 7 , L B T O R N E A U A C R E S ,
aa recorded In P ie t Book M ,
Pages 41 and 47, at ttw Public
Rtcorde of Samlnolo County,
Flo rid a.
D A T E D this 17ft* day o f Ju n o ,
Iff).
M A R YA N N E M ORSE
A s Clerk of said Court
B y : Dorothy W . Bolton
A s Deputy Clerk
Publish: J u n e * ) , M , l f f l
DEPTH
I N T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
IN A N O F O R
S B M IN O L I C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E N O . i n -IM S -C A tfL
T A X P R O P I R T Y IN V E S T O R ,
I N C .,
Plaintiff.
S A R A H S C IP IO , JO S H U A
S C IP IO , E L M I R A S C IP IO
O I N O L B , A N T H O N Y S C IP IO ,
JO S H U A S C IP IO , J O Y C E
S C IP IO B R O W N , S A R A H
S C IP IO , M I C H A E L S C IP IO .
S T E P H E N S C IP IO . E R N E S T
A LLEN , KEN N ETH A LLEN .
W IL L IE F R E D A L L E N .
Z E L M A M A E A L L E N ,
B L A Z E R F IN A N C IA L S E R V ­
I C E S , IN C ., A L A N T U L S I D A S
and ttw unknown sp o u M f. tw in ,
devisees, grantees, creditors or
o th e r p a r t it e c la im in g b y ,
through, under or against any
known or unknown persons,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O ; S A R A H S C IP IO
Address Unknown
J O S H U A S C IP IO
Address Unknown
S A R A H S C IP IO
A d d ro M Unknown
A N T H O N Y t f l P |0
• i t b p h b n k Uf i o
r
Address U n k fcw n
M I C H A E L ’ S C IP IO
Address UfUVtewn
A L A N T U LS ID A S
P .O . Box 1171
M a itland, F L M i l l
A n d tha unknow n s p o u M i
heirs, devisees, g ranite s, credi­
tors or other parties claim ing
b y , through, under or against
any known or unknown persons.
Y O U A R B N O T I F I E D that an
action lo quiet lllla h a t bean
tiled against you end you aro
required lo M rv e a copy ol your
w ritten defenses. II a ny, to It on
T H O M A S R . O L S E N , Attorney
lor Pla in tiff, whose address It
U l l Edgew ater D riv e . Orlando,
Flo rid a D M 4 , on or bolero Ju ly
M , l f f l and Ilia the original w ith
the Clark ot this Court either
bolero M rv lc a on P la l n t l t r *
attorney or Im m ediately there­
a fter: otherwise e default will
be entered egalntl you for ttw
rellel demanded In the C om ­
plaint.
T h e p r o p e r t y p ro c e e d e d
against Is legally described a t:
L o tt 1 A 4. Block 4, M E tS C H 'S
S U B D IV I S IO N , according to ttw
plat thereof o t recorded In F la t
Book 1 , Pago 14. of ttw Public
Records ol Samlnolo C ounty,
Flo rid a.
N O T I F I C A T I O N : In a c ­
c o r d a n t with ttw Am ericans
W ith Disabilities A c t, persons
w ith d is a b ilitie s needin g a
special accommodation to p a r­
tic ip a te In th is p roc ee din g
should contact A D A Coordinator
at M l N orth P a rk A vo nua , Suita
N . Santord. Flo rid a 1 1 7 7 1, telephono (407) 1M -43M , e xt. 4227,
not later than live (S) days prior
la ttw proceeding. It hearing
Im paired. ( T D D ) l-MP-eSS-1771.
or Voice (V ) 1E 0 O -!S A »7O , via
Flo rid a Re lay Sarvlca.
W IT N E S S m y hand and tha
seal ol this Court on Jun o t l .
lffl.
(S EA L!
M AR YAN N E M ORSE
A S C LER K
B Y : Hoattw r Brooks
D EP U TY C LER K
Publish: J u r w l ) , M B J u l y ! , 14,
lffl
D B F 124_____________________
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC A U C T IO N
C A J Tow ing will M il at Public
Auction for M lva g e tor cash on
demand to highest bidder the
following
described vehicle t
ngdi
71 F o rd M a ve ric k : O fte n
V I N * lK f 2 T 2 l7 4 1 7

The auction w ill bo on Ju ly M ,
l f f l a l 10 o'clock at C A J To w ­
ing, IM 0 S. C R 427, Longwood.
FLS 2 7M .
Prospective bidders m ay In­
spect vehicle on ttw day
auction between torn e n d :
Torm a ore cash o r cartlllad
funds. C A J Tow ing reserves the
right to occopt or re|act any and
ell bids.
Publish: Ju ly 21, i f f )
D E F -1 1 1

U H C C N I

K 7 L R H C D ,

U H C C H I

J

U H C C H I

T P I V A R C D

L V I
K

V

1 7
i a

M

V I C
C

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F

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—

V

V S X

V

T O
K C H O H

V A A H a .
P R E V I O U S S O L U T I O N : “ It'B n lo e th a t p e o p le p « m o n e y
t o b e g m e , tt’ i H k G g t o v t H fi . I Io v g t t w • t w n t f o o ." Soupy M b* .

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle# I* hereby given thal I
am engaged In buelnoM a l IM
W llshlrs F l a t s l i l t , C aieelb e r r y , F l o r i d a . S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , u nd e r tho
Fictitious N am e of S O .S . S E C ­
R E T A R I A L S E R V I C E , and that
I inland to register tatd name
w ith the Secretary a t State,
T a lls h a ta a s , F lo rid a . In ae*
cor dance w ith ttw provisions of
tho Fictitio us N a m e Statute.
To-W it: Section 045.0!, Florida
Statutes 1 H 7 .
Lorraine C .K M t e r
Publish: Ju n e 21, l f f l
D E P -M t

I

71—HotpW antod

Ltgal Notlcfi
IN t H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F TM R U T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U I T
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. m e t* CA U K
F IR S T F E D E R A L B A V IN O S
A N D L O A N A S S O C IA T IO N .
Plaint Itt,

CLASSIFIED ADS
Stminole

I will M il lo the highest and
bast bidder lor cash In Ihe
S E M I N O L E County Courthouse,
M l N . P a rk Avenue, Santord.
Flo rid a 12771, at ,i 00 a .m . on
J u l y 20, l f f l , tha follow ing
described p rroe rty as M l forth
In said O r do- or Fin a l Ju d g ­
m ent, to w lt:
Lo t *2 , K A Y W O O O R E F L A T ,
according to tho plat thereof a t
Recorded In Piet Book M . Pages
77 and I t . Public Records ol
Samlnolo County, Flo rid a.
O R D E R E O a t S a m ln o la
County, Flo rid a , this 17th d ay of
Ju n o , l f f l .
M ARYANNE M ORSE
A s C lerk, C ircuit Court
B y : J a n o B .J i M wtc
*
A s Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 2), M , l f f l
O IF -114
IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F T H I S T A T E O F F L O E ID A .
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
O E N I R A L C IV IL O IV IS IO N
Case N o . W -0-CAI4K
H O U S E H O L D B A N K , f .t .b .. A
FE D E R A LLY C H AR TER ED
S A V IN G S B A N K
P la in tiff
IV A N L . K I M P U N O and
T R E S H I A K I M P U N O . his w ife:
M O L T O N , A L L E N A
W I L L I A M S C O R P . OP
A L A B A M A f/ k / e M O L T O N ,
A L L I N A W I L L I A M S , IN C .:
A E T N A F IN A N C E C O M P A N Y :
and U N K N O W N O C C U P A N T S
ANO OTH ER UNKNOW N
P A R T I E S . Including, II a named
d e fe n d a n t Is d e c e a s e d , the
parsonsl re p re sen tsIIve t, the
s u rv iv in g s p o u M , h e irs , d e­
visees. grantees, creditors, and
all other parties claiming b y,
through, under or against thal
defendant, and Itw several end
respective unknow n assigns,
successors In Interest, trustees
or other persons claiming b y,
through, under or against any
corporation or olhar ltg al entity
nam ed os a defendant, and all
claim ants, persona o r . p artite .
n e t u r e l V corporate, o r whose
exact legal statue Is unknown,
claim ing under any ol ttw above
nam ed or detcrlbod defendant*
Defendants
N O T IC E O P M L R
Notice It hereby given that,
pursuant to tho Order or Fin a l
Judgm ont entered in this cause,
In ttw C ircuit Court ot Somlnote
C ounty, Flo rid a , t will M il ttw
pr ope rty situated In lam inate
C ounty, Flo rid a , deter Wad as:
Lo t 1 , L e s t ttw N orth M toot
thereof, and all o f Lo t A and ttw
N orth 7 foot of Lo t 7 , Block 31,
Suburban Hom es Section I , ac­
cording to the plat thereof, aa
recorded In F ie f Book I , Page
f2 , of Hw Public Records ol
Seminole County, Flo rid a ,
at public sate, to tha highest and
bast bidder, lor cosh, at the
West Fro n t Door ol tho Somlnote
County Courthoue, M l N . P e rk
Ave nue , Santord. Flo rid a 11771
a t t l :00 A M . on Ju ly 20, l f f l .
D A T E D Juno 17, I f f )
M AR YAN N E M ORSE
Clerk ol G rc u il Courl
B y J a n a E .J a w w I c
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Ju n e 23. M . l f f l
D E F -2 11
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OP T N I E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA LC IR C U IT
OP P L O R ID A ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
O E N B R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D I V IS IO N
C A S E N O . m m C A IS K
R YLA N D M ORTOAOE
COM PANY,
Plain! Iff,
vs.
B E T T Y J .M C L E A D .
O e te n d a n tU ).
N O T IC E O F
FO R EC LO SU R E S ALE
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y O I V E N
pursuant lo a Fin a l Judgm ent of
Foreclosure deled June 14, l f f l ,
and entered in C o m N o . 12-27M
C A 14 K , ot tho Circuit Court of
I h t E I G H T E E N T H Ju d ic ia l
C ircuit In and for S E M I N O L E
C o u n t y , F lo r id a w h o ro ln
R Y LA N D M O R T O A O I COM­
P A N Y I i th e P l a i n t i ff a nd
B E T T Y J . M C L B A D , at a l.. aro
Defendants, I w ill M il to the
highest end b oil bidder for cash
In ttw West front door ol ttw
Courthouse, In Santord, S E M I ­
N O L E C ounty, Flo rid a , at ) 1 :M
o'clock
ID.. i f f ) , ittw
ock on Ju ly n
owing described
property
following
desert
Jud g sot t o r n In H i d Fin a l Jm
m ent, to w lt:
L O T *1 , E N O L IS H W OODS
F IR S T A D D IT IO N , A C C O R D ­
IN G T O T H I P U T T H E R E O F
A l R E C O R D E D IN P L A T
B O O K 17, P A O I 45, P U B L I C
R B C O R D I OP S E M IN O L I
C O U N T Y , P LO R ID A .
D A T E D Ju n e 17, I f f ) .
M AR YAN N E M ORSE
A t Clerk o f m M Court
B y : J e n e l . Jaaowlc
A s Deputy Clerk
Publish: Jun e » , M . i m
O B F -2 14
N O T IC IO P
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
a m tngaged In business at t f l
Aberdeen La n e , W inter Springs,
F L 12 70 *. Sem inole C o u n ty ,
F lo rid a , u n d tr ttw Fictitious
N am e ol W A L K I N ' O N T H E
M O O N , and that I Intend to
register said nam e w ith the
Secretary o f State. Talleh etteo.
F lo rid a , In accordance with tha
'lio n s o f Iho F ic titio u s
Statute, T o -W lf: Section
• M A S , Flo rid a Statutes 1*17 .
L a r r y Turner
Publish: June 11, i m
O IP -W 7

K

N O T IC IO P M L B
Property o f Sharon o r Gerald
O . Be rtlo be ug h. IM S Toyota
F / U V I N « JT 4 R N M R 7 F 0 P 4 f7 2 t
to be to ld to highest bidder on
Ju ly t . I f f ) &lt;
a t l i f t Calory at 10
a .m . to M tls fy lien ( M I - A U D .
Publish: June I X t f f l
DB F-3

e LO O K IN G F O R D R IV E R *
Vertovs route* • clean driving
recerdl Call tedey ter Intel

Orlando - Winter Park

322*2611

831*9993

aYARDMAINTENANCEa
.v n a H M

W ork an yeur Ian a t yeu set
peidt Yo u'll love III

., T O M Ho b
.t il I m o

E xper le n t* lands this one I

PfIVATE PARTY RATES

cuw ancooEPT.
H0 UR8
M 0 A M

D E N I S E M .N O C E , el u x „
at e l.,
D e ten d a n f(i).
N O T IC E O F S A L E
027710)
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y O I V E N
pursuant to an O rd e r Scheduling
Foreclosure Sate entered In this
c s m now ponding In said Court,
tho style ot which It Indicated

AM EMPLOYMENT

.* * * M L

tDIBSEL MECHANIC#

1Hr m ......................................I 1. 1M Hob

PMOAY
C LO ttD SATURDAY
S SUNDAY

a A B S T R A C T /E X A M IN E R »
f i t s + wfcl Put yeur skill* to
work I Cell ter mere Intel

MBBira pwlBBUffkM* onlftwa
•SUrmHMmum

71—H »lp WanfGd
HAIRSTYLIST
F o r beauty salon. La k e M a ry .
Santord............... ' . . .C a l l M l d O y ,..

Him n Egg M i
NOW OPEN
Needs lisd Shift E x p . D ll) '
Person. F u ll lim e , pay bated
on experience, A p p ly A m - , ,
moco, SI. R d .4 4 e l 1-4.
;
;
H E L P W AN TED , OOOD ;
W O R K ER S Report 1:30 A M ; ,- , ,
Corner ot Pe rk D r . and i r ! j \
.
■«**,;(
* 'I* l)
or call M S 744)

HOUSE CLEANERS
fc^w dUteg m ay meted# Horakf Advorttoor at B w ooef of an e d M o n a ld a y
Cancel whan you gel re tu rn Pe y orfyfor days yew ad tuna at rota earned.
U s e M l d M aipOon tor fattest meuUs. C op y must toaow acceptable typo­
graphical tom*. ‘ Commorclaf frequency rates am avaSabte.
D E A D LIN E S
T m a d a y Y v u Friday 1 1 Noon TTw D a y DatoraPubkcaPon
----------------------------- 7M 0 l» M . Friday
A D d U a n d C N T t A N O C M O f t l i In t t w G V « ft( o f a n B fT W In a n

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i^M1

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m w n o n w n v jr i w

iu k lu | n

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ddtea u

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wu| AlteGNl

w i in w i

IfiM ftlo fie H n n th ic k jfo u r i d fo e M c u n o y Ih # fir s t d i y H

MANY MORE
OPPORTUNITIES
AWAIT YOU
AT AAA EMPLOYM ENT
NO FEE UNTIL HIRED
700 W. 25th ST
323-5171
A O B N T S - A V O N . E a rn to 50%.
N o d oo r/d o or. G ua ra nte e d
40% discounts. Sendl 1 1 1 - l it !

AGENTS-REAL ESTATE!
Nothing succeeds like success.
W e're well Into our 3rd decade
ol training successful agents
N o license?..................W e'llhelpl
W ATSON R E A L T Y C O R P
R E A L T O R S __________ IM -M OS

13—Bingo

Ligal No IIc m

T R IM Y AND SATURDAY

IN T H E C IR C U I T C O U R T
O P T H E 1IT H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U I T O F F L O R I D A ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C A S E N O : fl-2 1 M -O R -M
In ro tfw m a rrla g a o f
A N T H O N Y W A Y N E ASSAM
Palllloner,
and
Y V O N N E M . ASSAM

Air Cowditlonlng iM tiiltn

ItileAMaadtiMPM
PLEA WORLD
HWYtl-ft, SANFORD

F o r residential change outs.
H iring now. Experienced only.
M l t i l l e r m 020*

APPOINTM ENT SETTERS
WANTED

3 1 -P tr s o n a ls

P / T eves. Good attitude req.
IS tIO /hr plus bonus. *:3 0 -f P M
S E R IO U S I N Q U I R I E t O N L Y I
C A L L 122 *221_______
A S S E M B L E R S - H a n d m all
w ork. U per hour. Never a
tee I Help Personnel, f l t - t i e t

ADOPTIONS
Free medical care, trenspor
ta llo n , counseling, p riv a te
doctor plus living expense*.
B a r 1217)15 Cell Attorney John
Frlcfcer.......................l-«O A tlM 4 4 S
E N O L I S H F a m ily looking lor
A m e r ic a n " G o d p a r e n t s .’ '
Plsese w rite to: M r . A M rs.
D avid Lines. 42 Ulverscrolt
Rd , Cheeylesmore, Coventry,
C V 3 1 E Z , England.

N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : Y V O N N E M . ASSAM
a d d r til unknown
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action lor Dissolution ol M a r­
riage has been tiled aga in*! you
and you aro required to la rva a
copy ot your written d e le n M t, II
a n y , to It o n A N T H O N Y
W A Y N E A S S A M , w ho M address
It ISA! South H ighw ay 1 7 -fl,
Longwood, Flo rid a 337)0 on or
before Ju ly 14th, t f f l , and tile
the original with the clerk ol this
court either before service on
p e t it io n e r o r Im m e d ia t e ly
thereafter: otherwise, a detaull
will be entered against you for
tho r o ll* ! dem anded In the
complaint or petition.
O A T E O o n June llth , I f f ) .
M AR YAN N E M OUSE
A s Clerk o llh e Court
B Y Sophie Hunt
A s O e p utyC te rk
Publish: June l l , 1 ) . M A Ju ly 7,
lffl
D E F -1 2 4

Assistant Malntanancs Parson
N e e d e d fo r L a k e M e r y
apartment com m unity. M u lt
have electrical and A /C axp.
A p p ly a l: SI C ro ix A p a r t­
m e n ts , 7 ) 1 Secret H a rb o r
La n e , Lake M a ry ............ H I-7 10 1
A U T O A U C T IO N D R IV I R
N E E D E D . M ust have valid
drivers license and be able to
drive stick S4.7)/hr.
Sprint S t o lll B f.H f- ie n
B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D In m y
La k e M e ry home for a tour
month Intent....................... 314 0017

25— S p G d i l N o tic e s
* * BATON C L A S S * *
tndiv. A G roup lessens a vail.
F o r In to : l l f - l f l l . G in g e r
W right. Olrector ol the H u rrl*
cents, t l Slate Champions.

27—Nuntry &amp;
Child Ci re

CARPENTERS NEEDED
34f-S454 No call* after 7 pm

A B C S M A L L D A Y C A R E Babies
end toddlers, 2 hoi meals.
E ■celten) rets. D e e , 111 01 if
C H ILD C A R E
La k e M a ry
Blvd A 17 t l . 'E x p w/all
age*. 'Fe n c e d y d . * Planned
Activities. Personal care and
a tte n tio n lo r y o u r c h ild
m -t 7 7 S ............................................ Kelly

I N T H I C IR C U I T C O U R T
O F T H I IS T H J U D I C I A L
C IR C U IT O P P L O R ID A ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C A S E N O : ft-M S e -D R -S l-P
In rtlh e m e rrle p e o l
P A T R IC IA A N N C R O M W E L L
Pet 11loner,
and
R O O ER M OSBY C R O M W ELL
Respondent.
N O T IC R O P A C T IO N
TO : R O O ER M OSBY
C R O M W ELL
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action for Dissolution ot M a r­
riage h a t bean tiled against you
and you or# required to le rvo a
copy ol your w ritten d a te n M t, ll
any, to ll on P A T R I C I A A N N
C R O M W E L L , whoso address Is
4 71 S P R I N O W O O D C O U R T ,
L O N O W O O D . F L H 7 J0 . on or
bolero J U L Y 24, l f f l , snd tile
tho original with tho cle rk of this
court either before service on
p e t it io n e r o r Im m e d ia t e ly
thereafter; otherwise, a default
will be entered against you for
tho re lle l dem anded In Ihe
complaint or petition,
D A T E D on J U N E 1 1 , I f f )
M AR YAN N E M ORSE
A s Clerk o llh e Court
B Y N an cy R . Winter
A s O e p utyC te rk
Publish: June 2 ), W A Ju ly 7 , 14,
IffJ
O E P -lO f

•

For Excellent...

Professional C H I L D C A R E
Services, cell 1111005
M I C H E L L E 'S H O U S E • I l f
P E R W I R K I Open 4 :M A M I 1
M idnight! 1 1 1-741) I 2 t l 10

CARPENTERS
A ll phase*. U p to t15/hr.
407 414 0101 Retundible Fee

CASHICR/CLERR
Coastal M a rt, Inc. Is now
hiring lor l/l and p/t positions.
Excallenl wagas. banal IIs. and
vacations Apply In person ati
Coastal M a rt, 1421 Orlando
A v a ,, Santord. F L E O E ______

CNA
F o r M D 'solflce ____321 7741

DEMONSTRATORS
Christm as Around Ih * World
now hiring. Frae 5500 sample
k it . N o In v e s tm e n t. A ls o
b o o k in g p a r tie s . 1)0 Ire s
merchandise end m orel
________ t o t - w i l l ________

43—Ltgal Strvlcot
H A V I N O P R O B L E M S gelling
credit? Cell Smiles 2 M S 177
It's yeur right to know w h y.

DOG GROOMER
P a rt tim e, experienced. A p p l y
In person- Pel G room ery 1130
C Elkc am Blvd. Del lone

AT—M o n ty to La n d "
BILLS DUE?

E A S Y W O R K ) Excellent payl
Assambla products at homo
Call toll trea 1 100 447 15*4 e xt.
7f40______________________

Have 1 Place to Pay! Slash
Monthly Peym enlsl Gel CredHors O il Your B ackl Easy
Quallty-No Collateral 1112-7)55

ELECTRONIC TECH
W IIM raln. 407-414 f 101
Refundable Fee____________
OENBRAL

7 1 — H t l p W a n te d
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE/
SECRETARY

WILL TRAIN

F o r one girl offiew. Construe
tlo n b a c k g r o u n d h e lp fu l.
Com puter e xp . and collec­
tions. A p p ly : Southern Truss.
TSOI Aileron Circle, Santord
1 1 7 7 1 ________________
A D D T O Y O U R IN C O M E
S E L L A V O N NOW I
C A L L m a i l t or 211-422)

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
S3S0-S4S0
Wholesale warehouse select­
in g u p to 40 p o s it io n s
W a re h o u s e m a n a g e m e n t,
m arketing sales. Slert today I
N o taper lance required.
Cell Lisa lie -s e ll

A -l hours. A I p ayl N o nlgh ti*
or week ends. C e r n e e d e d ..!) '
Com pany, AAerry M a id *
r S31-MGI________ ****■
yw 4#

LEAD TEACHER

F o r three y r o ld *. Expariaoea ,
required 322-7105 E O E
'
M E O IC A L
*

LPN
F u ll time. 7 3 and lt-7 Charoa1
Nurse positions. E a p e rte n c e V
long term care highly 4 *;*s lr e a b lt. D ru g tree w grfc
p la c e . C o n t e c t i O e b a r y .v
M anor, 40 N . H w y 1 7 -fl, D t i „
b a rv , F I 1 1 7 1 1 .44&gt;4414
M E D IC A L

LPN
II P M t o l A M i h l f t , part tin
apply In person: LakevieS^ Nursing Center, f IS E . 2nd « .'2
Santord._____________ .

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST; ^ '
Experienced, tor busy or thee *
p e d i c o l l l c e In L o f t t r ' "
wood/San lord Call Sharon i V
__________747 5515_______ |__

RIGH TAU0IT0R

.- I :.'

F u ll lim a, experienced p?4t.r’-*
M u tt be honest, dependable,'
oulgolng pertonellly. F A R T T I M E F R O N T D E S K C L E R K ,&lt;&gt;
flexible hours Inc. w eek-am tev*
w ill t r a i n . Im m e d ia te
a m p lo y m tn l. A p p ly lo d a y t Sugar &gt; M etal, S. R . to and l-Z . ~

NURSING ASSISTANT « «
7 3 and 1 11. M ust be certlllwf
o r e x p . w ith c e rtlflc e tto l*.
within 10 days alter e m p lo y '
m ent. Drug Ires workplace)
Contact Oebary M anor, 4 ffM ..
H w y IT fa . Debary F L 440-404

Office Person S j .
Pe rt lim e. Typ in g, light bocki.?
keeping Call In I ha m orning,
hours, M r. Jo n a s ............122 TSpS.^
* * POSTAL J O B S * *5
me fils,
Start t1 l.4 l/ h r . + banaC
Cell
F o r application A Intoo tb
l)
1 114 114 1711 Tam -tOpm 7
R O U T E S A L iS P E R S
Needed lor local company.
Good starting wage. Benefit*
p acka g e a v a ila b le . C O L
license required.
'.'i n
Call John or T o d d ..................J l J O Iff
H OPS, French A v a . Suita 2 2 ;.,.

SALES COUNSELOR

;

Oaklaw n P a rk Cem etery and
Funeral Hom e Is looking lo r 2,
full lim a employees lor p * * v _ naad counseling. Call
M y t r t ..

SMr«Uof-BBEttBB|Mf )• » » '
P u l l li m a .- • a a k k a a p l n g i 1
Com puter skills, fy
typing,
p ifl. sxpd‘ J
rlanca prsterrad. Call fo y a te u
polnlm ant: . . ....... ............... .M I M S R v .
S E R V I C E M A I D hiring In A V
tam onte. G re a t p a y , ba/tUSt.end monthly paid prolll th d r- • 1
Ing. D rive rs paid m llaaga.
Exoerlencedonly.............331 4141

TELEMARKETERS

l .'V *

Permanent And
Temp Positions
Com pany will train people*
with phone skills. E x p ., no?
necessary. Hours M o n -T h u rfi*-"
J f P M : S a l, ! A M IP M F l f x
Ibis on hours when perm gt
nent. Salary plus bonus.
Sr, cllliens welcomed!
Never A Fe e l
Halo Personnel 4210201 • ’

LET A

SPECIALIST
’►

'A .

• /

r
W
4 ,i v

*

w ^

. !i

A

^

Notice

Conerata

P L O R ID A I T A T I R 1 0 U lk f5
•II coot re ctor* be registered
or certified. T o ve rify a stole
c o n t r a c f o r * lic e n s e c a ll
1 0 0 0 1 4 ) 7140. Occupations!
Licen se* are required by the
county and can be verified by
calling
W U o0.,s x l . 7*12
HrsQ *B
M i-iia

C A P T A I N C 0 N C R I T I . W ayne
Baal. 1 M an Quality Operationi m - t m / u + m t

A p d I U• ni e t t

■ itc trifi
nU i t

AA e le c t r ic ia n Residential or Com m ercial
lE R O O IIfO S ..................................3351200
M A S TER E L E C T R IC IA N
L lc ’d /ln t. 14 h r t . F a ir prlcesl

Flooring
H A R D W O O D fIL o O R IN O
Install landing Finishing
4 Q U I N I f I &gt;-42

Handy M « f
AL DOES IT ALL

: *E A v lC l CA
NoimvicrtiErTTii

repairs are done. W a rra n ty. 24
y r s. experlonce I Jo h n ,
A-t- Best
AaMtonces,
te s fA
M U a n c tt, 134-534J

m oiii
otive
Aufom
N l¥ T 2 A )M !7 ? T *o r !^ o n e ?
Call us. We have compressors,
dryers, evaporators. The best
prices In townl Au to King 1)10
B lm Jto ilo r d W m

Carpentry

i

F i x ll rlg hl. L lc ’d /ln t. F ro m
sterl le finish. C a rp e n try ,
p lu m b in g , e le c tr ic a l, and
roollng sves. 2) y r *. ot experi­
ence. N o |ob too big or sm ell.
Call lie-rail or 2 2 4 -N M 14 hre.

i

K

tl

»

Landicaplng

Plu m b in g -

C O M M E R C I A L le d d ln g ,
grassing, Landscape, Ireet,
oaks, palms planted. 407-Jie
73 to 4 0 vrt.e xi

P L U M B IN O R E P A IR A N
S E R V I C E • Fre e t i l Ime
l I C j f C F C O d l U t H t a e o y IM ^_

La w n S trvlc o

R l l . ^ C f U d k V in y l Ild ln g ,
A l u m , F r a m i n g , D r y w a ll.
Deers, Roellng, Cencreta.
121-4022... » 0 . Ea lln t, C E C a iftto

■

D O IT!

.

\

AdcJltlc
lo n i7
Rgm odtllng

ns

I XFERT L • w n Ivc,
447-120-734*. Sod. M ulch, Ferllllie r.B u th o q .4 0 y rs .e x p .
L A R R Y ’ I LA W N * T R E B ,
Professional Se rvice , Fre e
E s I. Llc/ln s. 123 3401
R A N D Y 'S Q U A L I T Y L A W N .
Complete pro cere since 1100.
Clean ups, hauling. 12I f 7I t
T O M A J E F F 'S LA W N C A R B I
R s t./ C o m m ,, dependable, low
rates I Fre e e s t................... 110-7070
T U R F T R I M M E R I Lo w rates,
Fre e e s t , Ree. A com m , t
tlm e /yr. round I R e t.... &gt;13-1344

M asonry
T W P M A S O N R Y , B rick. Block.
Stucc o, C on c rete, R e n o va ­
tions. Lie ./1 a s ... ........ 121-1444

lositslflo LigmmgB
R I F L A C I F4rklf&gt;t let, pole 4
bldg. *e c vH ty

P r B i s u r t C l o a n l n g i r j;
D U N R I T E , Clean d riv e w a y *, '. r a e l t , peel d e c k i, w a l k i ,
hautei. Free eel. 211-4122
:

Roo llng
ROOF R E P A IR !--

-

i r x j r t p lB C # m # n ti. 331*7206

^

,

**•*

C O C O O U S4

T r a m Hauling
A F F O R O A E L E H A U L I N O w ill d e a n , haul tra ih Y o u name HP—
W e'll haul Itl Call 212-1144'

Tilt----- ---E X F I R I E N C B D In all phases
ot tile Installation. In e , lie ,
^ m o je u to llte B flc e t^ M to ^

T r u Service

"*

C L H T R E B I I R V I C I ■«
Llc /ln tu re d . Nobody does it% '
belter I S r .d ltc e u n t.n e -T O t j
■ C H O L S T R I I IV C - Lie 's . In V
" L e t the Protetslenalt do I V C -

Hom e Im provem ent
a m

m

k

repairs, painting A ceramic
Ilia. Richard P re s s .........1 ----------

tAiiWAitTnrnrtnr
outside. Rentals. A lta wklyrates. W indows, teal U I - I 7 M

sw s»Vl

I

*’

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, June 23. 1993 - 71

7 1 —Help W anted

99—Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent

107—M obile
Homos / Rent

v TEACHERS
WlHS BS or abova degree In
aarly childhood, educetl on for
ctnla r In procest o f N A E Y C
accreditation. Free childcare
available. E O ff M I m i

TELEMARKETING
14PM . -B-Z Money. L o ti of
Fuel C all between the hours
2*) M r. Haskell at S ll l l M
rH tltK 'M F L A Y " F u ll time
daycare teacher needed.

ne-iiM

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER
C ljL licence. Only neat and
clean apply. Call *34 M i l
A H IH O U II AN D O IN IB A L
LA B O R H I L F N I I D I D I
Bonui tor drivers. A ll shift*
available. O a lly p a y, no fee.
Report ready to worii S :M e m ,
Industrial La b o r S v c ., 1011
Fren ch A v . N o phone callt

OOOD A R I A , t A 1 Bdrm. apt*.
U lim ie i, t ill- u p , Reft, re
qulred........................ M l 4717
L A K I J I N N I I APARTM BN TS
t Bdrm. A pti. Available. Free
water/— el 114-Sill_________
L A R O 1 1 BDRM ., eunken living
rm., Fplc., quiet on i/a acre,
very dean, garage, S400 mo.
Include* water, treeh pick up.
No yd. malnt. 3141)41 attar I

Levin's landing
14 1 BD R M . V ILL A S
R IN T T O O W N
C R E D IT NO P R O B L E M
A p p lic a tio n s (or 1 B drm .
Hornet Now Being Accepted.

323-4923
MARINER'S VILLAGE

32M670

F u ll tim e, part tim e. U p ip
1 4 .1 * per h o u r. A ll shills
a v a ila b le . 407 424 4101 Re[ fundable Fee _________ *

Quiet Single Story

WELOCR/FAIRICATOR
O M a m e n la l m e ta li, tle e l.
a h M ln u m , etc. La y o u t, cut.
w old. 17/hr. and up. Call lor
■aooolntm ent.........................a tf-1714

7 3 -E m p lo y m e n f
W anted
C O M P A N IO N / C A R I O I V I R .
If) with elderly In your home.
m e h ti.c a in e o -in o
F l t l l O M A L private duty
i L l C N A . R esponsible.
la. Steve I P MCI'

1—Apartm ents/
House to Share
I F O R T A B L I , S A F I apt.
ran le n t, to lown. *7S/w k.
.u t il. H o depot!I i ] trap
[p e e jra m p e rto n p ra l M 4 4457

RS*-Room s for Rent
C L E A N R O O M lT iin g ie T tir tin i
ir e / w li. K itc h e n , p h e n e ,
la q iM ry , video a e m e t, e ll
jfree t perking M » * * U _______
IIH .T R A L O W N A T H
S F I C I A L I R o o m * et M i/ w k .
C *H M l-M W , even Inot_______
I S A N F O R D . F u rn . or unfurn.,
I » 7 0 / w k . in c lu d e * u lllltle a .
W asher, d rye r, p o o H l l l H l
I t U N L A N O . 171/w k. w / A / C , 170
w ith o u t. 170 dep. W e th e r,
jtrjje r^ ltch e n g rlV jlM ^ a iJ^ ^

^.97—Apartm ents
,- burnished / Rent
W ,

NOTICE

AH' rente! end reel etlete
advertltem enlt ere tubject to
the-Federal F a ir Housing A d ,
Which m akes It llle g s l to
advertlM any preference. Ilmlla t lo n o r d lic r lm ln a t lo n
bfakd on raco, color, religion,
ta i; handicap, lam lllal ttalut
or*national origin

N IC 1 L V F U R N IS H ID Apt. In
unique eattlns near downtown.
UHL paid, ret.'a no pott, u u ,

mo,.................... m o m

O N t-B D R M . I both. Furnlthed
efficiency, Sanford. U I ) mo.
tiM d a o o tit...............M4 7*14
SAN FO R D - large 1 bdrm. apt.,
L
Complete privacy l Its per
week plus uoo aecurlty.
Cal I M l m s ________
SANFORD . I bdrm, edulti / no
pela. A ll elec., modern, air.
MW and up. «WQ dtp. M l SOIt
1 BDRM , 1 BATH Cent. H/A.
1115 wk. plut tecurlfy. Waler,
tewer, end garbage pick up
lurnlthed M I-tIH or &gt;44-1137

99—Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent
C O N V IN IB N T A N D SPACIOUS
CALL

E

I

GENEVA GARDENS

........... m-iwe

IC IIN C Y A PA R T M EN T.
| fle lly furn., A /C . Free
ute. Kefle'a Lending
/mo. Nop*t*Ml-4&lt;70
C IIN C Y Apt., very tm all.
i d i c a r p e t , n ic e
rhood. I l / i mo. P lu t
i. lie -M M

C e tlle b e rry , I bdrm. B 1
bdrm .. Attic Storage! C ell
Joan lor appointment, aw &lt;777
Q U IET Senlord 1 plan. I bdrm.
apt, A/C, Ut5/m o. Rel'a requlred, M i- iu a alte r tP M
SAN FO RD 'S Beet Kept Secret!
P o o l B L a u n d ry . 1 B 1
bedroom*. Convenient locetionl Cell Pat. M i eeio
l i l t M O V IS YOU IN. Studio*
an d lb d rm t.e v o lle b lt.
Cat** Iberry location.
C e llM e llita , 4444114

101—Houses
Fu rn lth e d / R tn t
S A N F O R D I b d rm , porch ,
c le a n , u t ilit ie s lu r n lth e d
e ice p l power IMO plut tec. No
pel* *07 l i t m m or wa 141 at* 7

103—HOUSBS ~
Unfurnished / Rent
DOWNTOWN - Huge * bdrm., 1
bath, 1 kitchen*, tingle family.
StO O /m o., tlO O d a p . 414
Palmetto..............Lae I ll- M il

•INLINE

O STEEN , 4 bdrm.,
acreage, pet* ok I Avail
*410 mo. 1090 Plney
T rall.’M l 4771

L O N O W O O O /L A K E M A R Y
M ld -ilt* storage warehouse*,
too too 1*00 tq. tt. Free rent
w / llm e . lea**, (romSI4l/mo.
w o rn
S E C U R IT Y W AR EH O U SE *4A
end Old Lake M e ry Blvd.
*1.110 - 1.000 tq. It. of
flc/w arehouM ’ Finished ol
(Ice spec* alto aval labia
Kapanka Realty, 1-414-1111

119—OHic# Supplies
/ Equlpm #n1
• D ESK, walnut finish wood.
I ’*" X I’J " - 4 deep drawers.
I l l , 114 47) I

191—Building
M aterials

B E A R D A L L M l, 10.011 M ,110
iq. It. w /olllc*t. sprinkled, OH
door*. M.00 tq. It, Slant tram
Really Jim Oeyt* M i l***

117—Com m ercial
Rentals

From *1*4 down W H Y R EN T 4
The H llllm en Oreup, 11M4M
L A K E M A R Y - Nice. cent. H/A
1 bdrm , Hv bath, blind*,
fenced yd. Lake M ery tchoolt.
*400 plus sec. 304 444-1370__
NICE UPSTAIRS hem*. New
eppl. Weter end garbage paid.
*010pIu*depotII.........M l *441
R E N T O R L E A S E PU R C H A SE
1 /1 w /a p p lla n c e * . C / H / A . on
f e n c e d 1 /1 a c r e , g a r a g e ,
U 7 S /m o ; 1 /1 , a p p lia n c e * , fp lc .
g i r a g t , t S M /m o P a u l, V a n
t u r * I P r o p a r t l* t 3 1 1 *7 4 *

Stenstroin Rentals
a SANFO RD I / l Apt. Ig. room*,
tern, patio, CHA, Cltan. Ilk*
newl M i l mo. *100 tec.
• L K . M A R Y 1 /1 c o n d o ,
w /ilngl* garage, fplc., Leat*
w/Opllon. *741 mo. *7M tec.
O SANFO RO 1/1 Apl. W/d*n.
Fplc , l i f t mo., tlOO tec.
Uenttrom Reolty, Inc.
"Wo M o m — your Heme,
Ilk# Itw ate ure w n," Jim Deyl*
1 M 1 4 W A t t e r lF M i u * te w
SAN FO RD 1 bdrm. 1 bath tpllt
plan, lar— home w/blg fam ily
rm. Cant. H/A, Ig shaded
corner lot. 4171/mo. plut tec Ct­
rl ty dep W JL Propertle*

Wet Uuwtma, 111*711

1/1, O A R A O I. W /D hookup,
tern, porch, CHA. *110 mo.
*100 dep. 174-1414/4-4, M l 1717

Senlord, historic downtown
area. Reedy to go. U7S/ma.
*07 424-114*
SA N FO R D • 700 N. E lm Av*.
20,700 tq. It. with o fllc tt.
B rick - truck ht. - iprlnkled.
440V - 1 phete tervlc*. Lt.
manu. or d litrlb u tlo n ctr.
ll.X rtl IM -IJ lt

IIS —Office
Space / Rant
N E W Senlord oltlce* and/or
werehoutet. 400 2.400 iq. It.
Ipeclot. 1241/me. M l 2114
SANFORD . Oltlce spec*. 1*00
*q. It. building total, 1700 tq
It. per oltlce unit. M I -700*

*■*•.
/*&lt;*«_

w t'lm l
itMWMAkw

141—Homes for S a lt

2/1 COND O. No q u a lifyin g ,
atsum eabl* • 1/3% Loan.
Small down payment. Price
Nag. *17.000.174 *110

L K . M A R Y - 3/3 with fam ily
rm., Ig. treed lot. *41.000
W. M a lic iow tkl. M l 74*1

H o m o s / lo lo

LOOK
NO D O W N P A Y M E N T TO
Q U A L IF IE D B U Y E R S I IN ­
T E R E S T R A T E A T 7.1%
F IX E D . Gov't rapo*, bank
foreclosures, attume no quali­
ty mortgages! Low monthly.
Call tor details I

Juwt MtsstisM, 323-7271

141—Homes for S a lt

P H A O R V A A S L O W A S 11-]%
G o v ’ t F o re c lo s u r e * . Rep o t / A t t u m * N o Q u a lit y
H o m e tl Ow ner lln a n d n g .
Seminole, Orange, Voluila.
la n ia rd lets than 17,040 down
o Renovated 1/1 . appl lancet,
fancad yerd. carport, *31,900
ORanovated Ilk* new 2/1. Iplc.,
appl,, new paint. *11.400
• Pool home. 1/2 on cut d* tec.
Garage, *47.400
• 1/1 on Vi acre! Renovated,
appl lancet, fancad yd. *41.100
• 1/tV), 11M tq ft, Ilk* newl Llv.
dining, lem lly rm. *71,400
a 4/1, fenced, garage, *14.400
Aitum * N 4 Q uallll* «l
*1/1 an 1/2 acre l Fenced, cul d*
tec, deed end street. *44.400
Additional homo* avail. Lew
thantrK dow nl
PAO LA. 4/2 on on 2.14 acre*.
Pasture with liab le. It if.K Q
L k , M e ry /L o n g w o e d Pe e l
Heme, 2/2. garage, living,
dining, tern. rm*. *41,500
Lk. M ary peel heme, 4/2. living,
dining, lem lly rm, *104,400

Min t,

hi

hi itsiiiiftrti

A S S U M A B L E NON qualifying
2/1 home lor tale. Low down,
low mo. Quit! area 124-7071

BATEM AN REALTY
S T A R T E R OR R E T IR E S I 2
bdrm. block home. Porch,
workthop, carport plut extra
lo ti Consider laate/opllonl
Only............................ *44.400

321-0759....................321-2257

MALL I&lt;k AI , I V
I I .' W

UN-SATIONAL
UMMER LIVING

I I I i ,1 1.1

. . m l , .i ,1

A F F O R D A B L E 1 bdrm. 2 bath,
concrete block home w llh
extra rooml Dbl. car gerage,
lem lly rm , dining area, eat In
kitchen, fenced yard. Exc.
neighborhood! Only 111.000
D U P L E X ON H W Y 4* - 2
tlo rltt. t bdrm. upstairs, 2
down) Zoned c o m m e rcle ll
Owner w ill finance w llh 17,MO
dawn........................... *44,400
WE N E E O LISTINGS

at

GOEVILLAAPARTMENTS!

323-5774
■ X C H A N O I OR S E L L your
property located anywhere I
Invasion Realty, 774-MIS

1

■LAKE M ARY "T H E
F O R E S T " 7/2 G r e e t lot
*11,000 T6RM SI
•LOB, 7/2 D BL lot, io n td GC2,
Cut t llm to *44,4001
C A L L B A R T R E A L B IT., INC.
1447) 711-7444

160— B u s in e s s

I E A U T Y SALON, 1 wet tie
Mont, good Location I Priced
to te lll M lO lM Iv .m tfl

Sanlord 1/IVt block home.
good condition 1343-2044______

STAIRS PROPERTY
M A N A O IM IN T B R EA LTY
407-M2-72M/3M-4I70

nv&gt; 11

S I 36
»

vf Ai r .

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

Wte list and sell
m o re p ro p e rty than
anyone In the G re a te r
Sanford/Lake M a ry area.
• O P E N B B R IO H T I W ellM a ln ta ln a d 2/2 In Sanore
w /Com m . Pool B T e n n lil
Super Neighborhood. X tra t
Galore 1...................... *77,4001
• R E O U C E D I I D u p le x o r
Single Fam ily Home - You
Decide) 4/2 Home or 3/1
D uplexl E n ta il R E D U C E D
A G A IN I..................... *44.4001
• C O M M E R C IA L OR Retldentla lr Thlt a r tltt'i home It a
2/3 w/unlqu* detlgh I, up
datetl Deck ovtrlooklng Pond
tool *74.1001

CALL ANYTIME

321 322-

i l l — A p p li« n c # s
/ F u r n lt u r a
AIR CONDITIONER - H U N T ER
t*,100 BTU, 4 yr*. old Good
condition *700060M l 11*4
• A N T IQ U E M A H O O A N Y *
d r a w e r c h e it . p o r c e la in
knob*, doug tall |olntt *40
OBO........................... 111*140
■ ID , B re tt queentlte, ortho
m ettre ii, new still In box.
CotUtOQO. Sell *300. M l 71*1
O A Y B E D , W H ITE Iren end
bratt, orlho m etlrett. new
it lll In wrapper, and pop up
trundle. Wat *400. Sacrifice
*300. M l 7141.______________
•ELEC T R O LU X VACUUM
sweeper complete with a ll
accessorial, good condition
W ............................. 9M-441*
• E N T E R T A IN M E N T CBNT E R , open, dark wood. In,
p e rile d condition. To the HI
U l. 3*4-11*7
.
..
H O I P I T A L B E D . A ll *l*c«,
excel, cond., i l l accessories
lnc„ *400 O BO ............. 111-0704
KIN O ItZ B weterbed. Good
condition, couple y r t old.
M irro r and headboard *171
OBO........................... M*-71l*
• L A Z Y B O Y R E C L IN E R . Vinyl
torn a lltlla. but machanlcalty
sound t*0.................. M l-1*4*
M AT TR ESS A N O BOX spring*
double tlta tat* lor tale. Great
value! 170 M l............M l 0440
I Q U E E N S IZ E w a le rb a d .
sturdy tram*. Greet condition
*4 00 80....................M l 0147
• R E C L IN E R -R O C K E R , exc.
c o n d ., B ro w n p in s t r ip e ,
o v e r t lu lt id m a te ria l. *11
110 1701___________________
• STOVE. Large *0 Inch whlta.
Electric Hat large storage
c o m p e rlm in lt. E ve ryth in g
works. A buy II you can III It
Only SHI Delivery lor smell
charge................Call 110 0104
• T O S H IB A M IC R O W A V E .
Touch control, solid stale,
Good working condition. ISO
__________ 1214744__________
• TWO S M A L L IO P A I. Col
orlul, floral W 1 M 1 114*
U SED B ID D IN G S A LEM King,
Queen. F u lIB Single. *41 a Sat
A Dpi L A R R Y '* M ir ! 121-4IM

2720
2420

35*1 Park Or., Sanford
441W. Lake M ary Bl , Lk. Mary

•In Our 37th Y u r*
1411 M A P L E A V E . SA LE OR
R E N T W /Optien, clot* to
tchoolt, shopping, 1/1, living
B dining. *10,000.44+1714712
2 BDRM , I BATH COTTAOB.
Appliance!, storage shed. 1144
Mohawk Av*. *11,000.1101002
3 B D R M . , 2 B A T H . N ic e
neighborhood wllh pool end
tennis court*. Double gerage.
New A/C. *71,000 iliu m * no
q u a lit y V A loan , *41,000
balance. As low a t 13,100
down. Owntr w ill hold 2nd.
Wtakdays *210101 or weekend* 1*07) 2*1 7441

R«lax In Your Ntw Spit
Setts S, portable, never used.
W/ceder geiebo, underwater
light. *1,575 407 U1-7717
DIAM OND SO LITAIR E R IN O I
I f f and up. F ra e tliln g l
Best Pawn B Jewelry, lie-441*

INDIAN*. Lincolns, J tlltrto n t.
Buffaloes, Dimes, helves. 30%
below bid. Eeb 447-HJ-MM

211—Antiqu es/
Collectibles

230—Antlque/Classlc
_______ C a rt_______

• D E A L E R S P A C I A V A ILA B L E * Aunty M a ry 's A n­
tiq u e s, 14(4 F re n c h Av*,
(17-42) tenlerd. W* buy *n*
ptece/entlre e tu te s l tH-TTS*
H O O K E R CA BIN ET. Flour bln,
sugar bln end la iy tusan spice
rack *100....................M l 0441

215—Boats end
Accessories
•A IR B O A T , lif t . OrasiheppeT
144 HP, Lycoming new megs.,
1 props, trailer, *1100. Call
M I -1401 or M2- 7170__________
W IN N E R -1 7 B a i l Beet 14’
IM H P i X P Evlnrud*. • 11-24
volt trolling motor, Tam-LIm
, trailer. Hummingbird depth
tinder. *4M0. M l - n '
• II FT. O L A I t T R d ll snd tr'eller. 11 H P EvInrudw.BxMlIent
'
condlllonl *2,100 M 331II
• If H. BOW RIOER
US H P
I/O, Abaul 21 hr*. Immacu­
late, w /tra lle r-c o v e r. M ust
*eel *10,000060 M7 4114
• 1440 E V IN R U D E ELTO out
board motor, t.l H P Very
pood condition. *71 M l &lt;117
41, 14 FT. SPO R TCR AFT. Open
fisherman. 1ISOMC Seadrlv*.
11400 Consider Ired* tor let
ski or Flats boat. M l OMf

217—O arag e Sales ~
AU£V GARAGE SALE
Antiques, books, collectibles,
paintings, furniture, etc. DOS.
Oak Av*. F rlo n ly l 4em *pm.
NO E A R L Y B IR D IItt

ESTATE YARD SJUi
Thousands o l ilt m s l June
11-3*. N e xt t* Id y llw lld e
School. 100 Vlhten ltd
■ring let* e l money 111

• PONTIAC Firebird 1444, One
ow nerl G aragedl 43K m l.
NIC*. *4M0.407 1M 4444
• 1411 B UICK, Rasteretblel
Call B ill for ell detellsl *1000

^B O iM M 4 7 ^ _ ^ _ ^ _ _ _

LAKE MARY

R a d i o / S 1 # r# o

Crossings Community Church,
140 Longwood Lak* M ery Rd.
M U L T I-F A M IL Y &gt;*t„ 4/24 4-t

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1 2 month FREE

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO M ONEY DOWN
Except lax, t«g, title, etc.
14WOLOS CU TLASS C IE R A 4 door, auto, air, stereo, really
■ nice carl O N L Y SIM M per
month.............Call M r. Payne
C o e rtst) U so e C ifS , 323-2123
TOYOTA. 1441. 2 door. Light
green. Unfed windows, all the
extras 17,100...............1741141
14*4 PONTIAC P k r a GT, rebuilt
V4. Red. SIX M iles, warranty.
LO AD ED . *4441. MI-1741
II C H I V Y F u ll u . Wegen.
diesel, good c o n d . cold AC,
new lire*. 4700. Ml-14S1
47 TOYO TA C tllca OT, 1 tp.,
C o ld A C , s t e r e o c e s s ,
w/equel., run* «xc. E xtra
sharp SHOO 174 3114_________
• M C H E V Y Cavalier Slallon
wagon, AC, auto. 42.400
________ CBHSSMM*________
• 7 L I N C O L N Tewncar.
Slgnelure, E xce lle n t Cond.
47100. M l- * ll4 0 rl4 4 - ill7
• I f C H I V Y C tle b rlly , AC.
Auto, 4 door. 13K miles. *1100.
Firm . &gt;22-4117______________
•42 J E E P Sw/1 Auto, PS, PB.
A C , a la r m . , w h it e . 1SK
ml .S11.ioo. Like new M l 144*

233—A u lo Parts
/ Accessories
• C A M P B r T o p T A I u m ln u m ,
block, good condlllon. *100.
M l- 141*___________________
• R O LLB A R , tor sm ell short
bed truck, good Shepo. *75 or
trad* lor something ol equal

Sanford Motor Co.

L O A N - A - R A N G E R R id e s A g a in

Q u ality Used
C a rs &amp; T rucks

H

Good Credit 1NoCredit 1
Bad Credit!

No Problem! 1
JAiofiar Motors =

153—AcreageLots/Sale
O C A L A N A T 'L F O R E S T ,
Wooded tot* l *1,410 each, no
money downl *71.41 monthly.
________ 1 *00 441 1074________

We ll Advertise Your Car

155—Condominiums
C o -O p /S a le
tA N O L B W O O D V IL L A * . 2
bdrm, 1 bth. Cent. H/A, W/O,
ter. (root porch, kitchen w/ all
am tnlllet, pool. Reduced to
*12.000........................ M l *147

(or other motor ^vehicle)

mm

day

m irs sous

: Welcome Home

to
Country Lake Apts.

• PONTIAC SOM '14. SUZUKI
ratary bike. SUZUKI tithing
beet/treller, 'If. Moving Sal* I
M.100 takes *11. M* 7474

231—C a rt

C a ll In your garage sal* ad by
13 noon on Tuesday and take
advantage of our sp e cia l
garage set* ad price 11 Cell
Classified now (or detallsl

322-2611

PUES AUTO M IE S

★ ★ 327-2692 ★ ★

235—T ru c k s /
B U IC K 1K YH A W K, t4*4. 4 dr,
B u ses/Va n s
A/C. PS, cruise, till, low ml.
excel cond tl.M Q ....... 3*4 4371
• C H I V Y C U S T O M V A N - 'M .
C A D IL L A C S E V IL L E • 1441.
loaded, captains chairs, good
M.000 miles, loaded. Tip top
condlllon. *4,1001M IMS
she pel 114,0001714*04
• FO RD B U I
1471. GOOD
C A D ILLA C SS E L DORADO,
CONDITION. 11.300 C A LL
convertible sty le root, up­
_________ 113 740*__________
graded wheels, tOl.OOOjnl, i
owner *4,100..........
• H A N D IC A P P I D VAN , 14S0
Ford E-ISO. Lift, automatic
• C A M A R O R I+ convertible,
doors. tt.OQO229-2411'
14*4. 11.000 mile*. Excellent
IIU Z U 4x4 P L C X -U P ,/ r..S 4 « a
condition.... ..........■■■..22H401
I0K ml, 4 ci}. . t i t cufihm
• C H E V Y C A M A R O • '77. Re­
Interlor. S4.7MM1 JEOil , , .
built VI, lots of new p a rti 1
K , 041 OBO. MI-0114 any lime.
• C H R Y S L E R IM P E R IA L '42.
L ike new. Must sell. Only
1417 J E E P C H B R O K I I *14.000. Call (407)111 4411
white, * door, 1 wheel drive, 4
• F O R D LTO • ’l l , 4 door,
tile r 4 cylinder, auto, low
excellent condition. Every.
miles I Vary vary claan 17,44)
thing new. *1,400 OBO M l- 1410
Call 127 4113
• PO R D T H U N O ER B IR O - ‘44.
A ll o rlg ln a ll Needs some
241—Recreational
work, tl.441 OBO 111 Oil*
Vehicles / Cam pers
• HONDA ACCORD DX, 1440
Aulo, A/C, am /fm tep*. whit*.
14 FT Sunllnt Traval Trallar.
110,400 L IK E NEWI M2 14)7
*11 Mimosa Terrace, Suniand
L IN C O L N C O N T IN E N T A L
E ilat* . Sanford_____________
S ig n a t u r e S e r ie s , 1414.
24 FT. 1477 OOOOE RV. low
M eleltlc blue. Owner despermiles, sleeps 4. stove, shower,
ate *4.410....................1X37111
fridge. *4400. M l 0224________
M A ZD A RX-7, 1411. A/C, aulo,
•22 F T I L DORADO motor
am/fm tep*, rotary engine.
home, ‘ 74, New awning, tv,
Runs great 142,1)012} *041
runs great. *3.100M l 714)

•GARAGE SALE AO BARGAIN

113— T B l B V i i l o n /

eCOI OR TV, If". Works greet
*44............................ MI-1711

• LU O O A O E S A M S O N IT E .
Hardtlded, three piece, light
fan. Very good condition 141
1110*41

• S E AR S I H P compressor, 12
f allon tank with hot* and
A T A spray gun *100 PI R M
__________ 221-74*4__________
U T ILITY T R A IL E R U tt total
length, I tt bed, t3 ply tire*.
Heavy duty IMO.........314041
• W OODEN SAW H O RSES.
Oreet tor hobbles or craft*
U.COeach.................. M4 171I

205—Stamps/Coins

Seriously looking lor a nice,
clean, used car? D E P E N ­
D A B LE . Down payments as
low as f l f f Includes, tax B
title. Cell:

O R O A N . 2 keyboards. Good
condition. N ice te r sm e ll
church. *100224-4174*.7 P M
T H O M A S O R O A N . R e g u la r
price 41,100, telling for *4001
M tO fa i

A.K.C. 0 0 0 IH OW I. A ll breed
and obedient*. Saturday 4/24,
Sunday 4/37, I S. Friday 4/21
A K C Match 1 PM. Central
Florida Fe lr Grounds 471-7440

• 24 T U R K E Y * . 7 adults. 37
young. A ll colors. A ll forttOO
134-ftM!

O NLY $26,00011

SHORT O f CASH?

• A N IW IR IH O M A C H IN E .
Conelr. Ilka new *112194*11
A T T E N T IO N C A R Phene
Buyers, C e llu e r car phone
liO 00, *071307311__________
• BIKB , 10 speed. Grey, Husky,
m e n t a l............. Cell 221*401
• CA R O U S EL H ORSE R eplka.
N e a rly t c lu e l i l i a . Hand
painted. K00.M4-IMO

200—Registered P e lt

PU BLIC AUTO AUCTION e
E V E R Y F R ID A Y 7 iM P M
D AYTO N A AUTO AUCTION
H w y . 41, O ty te n e Beech
4M-1SI-U11

222—Musical
Marchandlea

• O ARO BN F E R T IL IZ E R ,
hors* manure. F R E E - bring
V o u r p le k t g j j j j j ^ j j ^ lM f M

203—Livestock and
______ Po u ltry______

F o r S o l#

R E N T w/OPTION to buy. 2/1W
each. A p p lt. LONGW OOD,
*44,400. l» S 4 1 0 e lt* r) P M .

BUILDER'S SPECIAL
Brand new 2/2 lor only *41.100
on your lot. No money down It
equity In your lot.
P E T ERf IO
-----------N H OMES 242-1144

N EW 1442'SI Low down B Inter■III 14X70 St75/mo. 34X70,
UIQ/mo. 1411704___________
3 BE GROOM mobile home on 10
x 100 lot In C e w e lb e rry .
Owner (Inane lag, easy terms
m -4 i* i

CO R N IIH H ENS. 4-S lb. *1 each
IM W eklv* Park Drive
121*07* ________
V E G E T A B L E S . P o l* beans,
snap beans, peas, corn, end
okra........................... M l-IM I

223—M lw ellaneous

199—Pels &gt; Supplies

157— M o b il#

2 2 1 -O o o d Things
to E a t

193—La w n ft O a rd tn

E L I Z A B E T H B A U O H • Dog
training. 33 yrt. exp! Privet*
or Group. C e ll MM1*S_______
• F R E E TO 0 0 0 0 HO M E. 4
months old, male, terrier mix,
....................M4-34J0

1 6 5 — D u p l # x f o r S o l#

Century

| (HIVI
U11!l»| I'UMl’l W' |

1/1 .171,1

SANFORD. Modern. 1 bdrm ,
cent. H/A. carport, laundry
rm.. near all U tl/m o *10 0141
SANFORD , U rg e duplex. 1/1,
fenced w/garage, **71 mo. lit ,
1**1, Moo tec . *44 7114_______
SANFO RD . In country. Lcrg* I
bdrm, furnlthed M»1 mo., MOO
to cu rlly d tp .... M i-U M Ivm * g
SANFORD . Modern 3/t, A/C.
carpet, blind*, d lth w e th tr.
Idry rm, carport 1*00 410 701*
1 B D R M D U P L E X , t i l Park
Av*. M tl/m o.. **c. dap.
*07 411 1114
2 BDRM ., 1 Bath, Scrn. porch,
CHA. all appls., 1 w/carporl,
t i l l mo. I l l *444 attar a

155— C o n d o m in iu m s

H ID D EN L A K E . 1 yr*. young. 3
bdrm. 2 bth. sp ill plan. 2 car
g a ra g e , s c re e n e d p o rch .
M erkel price ISO's, listed at
*74.000...... Ool W aller 471 2441
E.R. A. Denial andWohlwender

AA Carnet, Inc., M M 234

VI NII1KI i **HI 1**1 Hill

105—DuplexTrip le x / Rent

3 3 0 -1 4 3 1

• BOAT B U IL D E R S m arinas
have 1100 d e l head brats
screws. Site* % x 4 OA.
through l " x 13 OA. *14
__________ MI-4744__________
L A R O E C O M M E R C I A L AC,
Wes working when rtm ovtd.
*100 Firm . M utt Seel M l 311S
( e e v e ln e s te g r^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

C o - O p / S o lo

CHEEKS TYPE PUI

S a tu rd a y O n lv l N* a a rly
birds I 4:30-4. Baby clothes,
toys, tools, furniture, and
morel M M Grandview Av* I.
OH Sanford Av*

its—Compu1#r»
IBM, PC Compatible, monitor,
keyboard, 114 disk, seftwere,
printer, M71 OBO. MI-4411

M E R C E D E S 140 diesel, 14S1.
14.100 10.000 mile*. Excellent
condition....................741 1707
• O L D S D E L T A M, 14M. Fully
loaded. O n * owner, excellent
condition SMOO.......... MI-4714
O L D S M O E IL B TO R N A D O ,
t m . Low miles. Fully pewered. *7.000 O B O M l P70
P O N T I A C ISO* S T B , 1414.
Loaded, 71.000 mile*. 13.000
O B O ........................... MS-7174

YAROSAIE

PREOUINCY

114—Warehouse
Space / Rent

2 3 1 -C a rt

217—O arage Sales

countar tor C B Or hem radios.
4 digit, 110 volt *71 MI-204*

HUD HOMES

-. 2660 Rldgswood Avt., 8anford

113—Television /
Radio/Sf# r# o

115—Industrial
Rentals

Lake Ada 1bdrm, *340 mo
1 bdrm, S4I0 mo end up

WAREHOUSE

K I T ’ N ' C A R L Y L E S by La rry Wright

s

\

\

&lt; /

3 lines for only
U to A Closer Look

Apartment Living at it's FINEST
k Spacious 1,2, &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments at Affordable Prices
k Gose to Schools
* Gose to Shopping Centers
* Swimming Pool
* Volleyball
dr Laundry Facilities

$0124
I

(additional lines extra)

Ad must include phone number and asking price. I f vehicle hasn't
been sold in 10 days, call us and we'll renew it free. No copy change
while ad ia running except for price. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Tbday!
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1505 West 15“ St.
Sanford
.321*2090

Sanford Herald

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- Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, June 23, 1093

by Chic Y o u n g

B L O N D IE

b y M o rt W a lk e r
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6AM E SEN TENC E

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COMPOSING!
b y C h a r lt i M . Sch u li

PEANU TS

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V l S N 'T H E?
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50 WHAT? HE
WAS JUST LUCKY
T H E LA S T TIM E
WE P LA YEP ...

YOUREROYHO005'
6REAT-6RANPPAU6HTER.
AREN'T Y0U7WEU,SHOW
•IM WHO YOU A R E !

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EEK A M EEK
THERE ARE SO MANV
P0O6UMS IM THE WORID.

M A M B E T H E R E ’S
5 0 M E T H IA JG LU6G O U LD D O I D H E LP
C H A M G E T H IM S S

-

Any blood in urine
is cause for concern
DEAR DR. QOTT: Are any
red blood cella acceptable on
routine analysis when the doctor
is looking for microscopic blood
in the urine?
DEAR READER: The presence
o f any blood cells In (he urine Is
of medical concern, even If the
number Is so small that the cella
are visible only under a micro­
scope. This Is called microscopic
hematuria and la seen In the
presence of Infection, tumors,
kidney stones and kidney dis­
ease.
Nonetheless, some healthy
patients normally have small
amounts of blood In the urine,
for no apparent reason. Such
healthy people must be differen­
tiated (with blood tests and
kidney X-rays) from patients
with disease. Thus, although
blood In the urine requires
thorough evaluation, the condi­
tion doesn’t always reflect a
disorder that needs treatment.
Patients with blood In the urine
should be seen by urologists.
DEAR DR. QOTT: Recently a
relative died from Goodpasture’s
syndrome. It’s very difficult to
find information on this condi­
tion. and I’d appreciate your
addressing It In your column.
DEAR READER: G ood ­
pasture's syndrome Is an un­
usual auto-immune disease of
unknown cause, characterized
by hemorrhage Into the lungs
and severe kidney Inflammation.
The diagnosis Is established by
blood tests and a kidney biopsy.
This disorder may be rapidly
fatal, unless treated with high
doses of cortisone steroids. Even
with therapy, h ow ever, the
prognosis Is poor. Patients with
the s yndr o me may require
dialysis to remain alive.
In many ways, Goodpasture's
s yndr ome resem b les lupus,
rheumatoid arthritis and Bimllar
diseases that are marked by
extreme Inflammation of many
of the body’s organs and tissues.
To prevent life-threatening dam­
age, doctors use cortisone to
shut off the Immune system.
Patients with Goodpusture’ s

syndrome should, In my opi­
nion, be under the care of
rheumatologists.
DEAR DR. GOTT: A relative
suffers from severe bone loss In
the gums, despite the fact that
she takes a dal l y cal c i um
supplement. I found a product
that provides 24 percent of the
U.S. RDA. Would this help her
condition?
DEAR READER: I don't know.
Calcium loss from bone around
—

1 Shadow s

7
II
II
15
16
18
19
21
22
24
IS

O f eyes
Rod m ovsr
Asaom M od
Sym bol for
samarium
Inflnita
Irma —
Doucs
Bible dhr.
O f th a d a w n
Cash drawer
Em peror
War.)
M ake muddy

85sr.r

ctra al
3 1 C ut
I S Train rta.
34 Object o f

36 Flow er
36 Com puter
40 Rebuff
42 Loaaa weight

-

MEDICINE
o

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PETER
GOTT.M.D.

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the teeth Is not the same as
osteoporosis, which usually af-;
fccts the legs, hips and spine.
Your relative should follow her:
dentist’s advice. Perhaps a drug.:
such as Dldronel, that stabilizes
bone would be appropriate.
Answer la Previ ew# Pmsite

48
47
49
50
83
54

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Off-w hlta
U r«a on
W eary
Onaw s
Alternative
word
88 Shipping
88 Singer —
Lyn n
89 Per —
6 1 Naval petty
officer
63 Smell hole
SS Siaap nolaNy
88 Repair (shoe)

DOW N

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14 U nge r
1 7 C ountry of

w itch’ s

and orange
juice

3 College dag
4 M a p w b r.
6 First-rate
(2 wde.)

8 Greek letters
S Ixp e rtm e n t
10 Addictive

30 Film director
Jacques —
33 E g o 's
counterpart
1 4 Aiming at
I B Cincinnati
ball club
2 7 Falsehoods
30 Nobody
32 S o ft part of
fruit
33 Alfalfa
3 7 Contem po­
rary painter
36 E a s y victim
36 Crucial times
4 1 Scottleh hill
43 Small amount

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46 Male title
46 Declare
5 l.8 o H o r'e pa­
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62 Running
64 Behold!

WIN AT BRIDGE

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............................. B fl .....................

By Phillip Alder

b v J i m m y Jo h n s o n

A R L O A N D JA N IS
SOMETHIkKk *&gt;UMY ADD
DI6GU6TIMG TOUCHED
ME//
“

In rubber br i dge and In
tournument team events, you
hid a game If you can smell a
game. The game bonus Is u
potent lure. but In a matchp o i n t e d pai r e v e nt , you
shouldn’t push lor thin games.
You shouldn’t Jeopardize a plus
score.
South overbid on (his deal
from a pair event. And Ills
curd-play t echni que wasn' t
equal to the challenge.
Over North's raise to two
hearts, that South hand Is only
worth a game-try. Perhaps two
no-irump is the best hid. North
will sign oh In three hearts and
there the mutter can rest. How­
ever. South saw 12 points and
forced lo game.
Four hearts needs the trumps
3-2. Ilte spade finesse working
and the club ace onslde: Just
over a 10 percent chance. That
Is how the cards luy. yet South

By Bernice Bede Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Thursday, June 24,1903

FR AN K AND ER N EST

by Bob Thavos

(rtLL THfb w
JH/KLL
THf/F ifttA *A
r f r THf S W A T o f THflfi tfiov*

ROBOTM AN*

by J im M oddick

Someone who was extremely
Imporlattl to you In the past
might re-enter your life In the
year ahead. This Is a person who
has always had a strong benefit'
mllueiu'cuvcr you.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Unl ess you ha nd l e t hi ngs
tactfully today, you might find
yourself on a -collision course
with a very strongly opinionated
person, llc/shc is spoiling for a
fight. Trying lo patch up u
broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you
to understand what to do m
make the relationship work. Mall
82 and u long, self-addressed,
slumped envelope to Matchmak­
er. I'.O. Hox -1465, New York.
N Y . 10103.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Think
twice before Inlying an article
loduy that Is suppose to last for a
very long time. Its claims may
he ovcrcxilggcrutcd and lls cost
may he more Ilian It Is worth.
V1ROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Hnih you and your male could
have short loses today. He verv

went down — how?
He won (tie second diamond,
pluyed u spade to his Juck and
con tinu ed with the A-K o f
spudes, discarding dum m y's
diamond loser. West ruffed In.
hut II was from three trumps.
West got off play with the
diamond Jack, ruffed low In (he
dummy. Declarer drew trumps
ending In bund and led a club lo
the king. Fine, as fur as it went,
bill South had no hand re-entry
left. lie hud In play a clot) from
the dummy and lost two dub
tricks: one down.
Did you spot lhe mistake?
South must rull West's diamond
Jack with the heart six. Then lie
cashes the heart king and leads
the heart seven lo Ills ace. After
the dub king wins trick nine,
declarer can return lo hand for
another dub play by overtaking
(he heart two.
Watch (hose Important spotcurds.

careful you do not disagree In
public, la-cause It might lead lo
something rallu-r distasteful.
LIBRA ISepl. 23-Oet. 23)
Someone who has helped you
recently might he In need of
your assistance today. His/her
problems could In* more com­
plex than yours, so don't com­
pare them. Just irv to help.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) lievery careful how you handle a
close friend of yours today who
Is already slightly milled with
vou to begin with. If you say or
do ilu- wrong things. It could
compound (Ills problem.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
211 It will stibstauttally enhance
your probabilities for success
ioduy If you iry lo see things
through the eyes of your compet­
itors. Look al Issue from every
angle.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
It)) lie very careful with whom
you pick uu argument today,
because you mlghi end up lu a
s i t u a t i o n w h e r e y o u are
overmatched. To he on the safe
side, lie friendly with all.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Manage your resources with

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SOUTH
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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

South

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extreme cure today or else you
or some oilier member of your
family might Incur a debt that
could he difficult to pay off.
PISCES (Fell. 20-March 20)
It's okay lo go lo Olliers tor
advice today, provided they:
know ivhal t hey' re lalklljg!
about, Unfortunately, personk
front whom you may set-k
counsel may not.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 10)
Don't overburden yourself wit »
loo heavy a schedule today.-. Jyou begin In feel pressure. •*&amp;
could make you extremely if-]
I'lluble and cut down your profi­
ciency as a productive pcrforbCer.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Someone you're uni overly fopd
of who you know socially might
b ecom e I nvol ved wi th you
ihrnugh another today. If you
dwell on his/her shortcomings,
problems could result.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) h
will lie up to you lo put a slop lo
an outside Influence ihut has
been seeping In and undcrmlndlng (he tranquillity of your
home

b y L to n s r d S ta rr

A N N IE
..a no mv wAROBpee V tW W tll,
^ « r ? ^ V T5 ^ ll7 A « M N .
1 ' t L J I / 5 T PUMP I t A l l
IM T Hf. HAMPe*;

T U e R y iI
COUCCT IT
l a t e r , tfin .

K M

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                    <text>J u ly

16,

V.-J'V’!'

F R ID A Y

1993

S a n fo r d H

e r a ld

Serving Sanford, Laka M ary and Somlnola County since 1 0 0 8
85lh Year, No. 278 - Sanford, Florida

C leared of m u rd er
□ S p o rts

County duo to live dream
FERN PARK - Trevor Dixon and Michael
Bridges have been rhosen to plnv for the USA In
the Pan-American Games Youth Baseball
Championships In Mexico In August

Seepage ID

W HAT’S HAPPENING
Your go-do guide:
Something for everyone
If you're looking for something out of the
ordinary to do this weekend, meet your local
police or tour the new Heart Center at MCA
Central Flortda Regional Hospital
• From 10 a m. until 2 p m. this Saturday. It's
Kids and Cops Day at Castle Brewer Court.
Sanford police will be displaying various units
including the D.A.R.E. car and BATmoblle.
Members of the newly established community
policing team will also be on hand to meet the
public.
Police officer Rick Poovey said there will be
plenty of hot dogs and canned soft drinks for the
youngsters who attend the gathering He also
promised some special treats and activities as
the youth of the community have an opportuni­
ty to shure a day with local officers.
The Kids and Cops event will be held near the
basketball court at Castle Brewer Court, next to
the Sanford Housing Authority offices. A d ­
mission Is free and all youngsters are Invited to
attend.
• Selected Winn Dixie Stores are cooperating
with AAW Root Beer this Saturday and Sunday.
They arc allowing high school students to sell
root beer floats to raise money to help finance
band, cheerleading and other activities at area
schools. Locally, sales will be at Winn Dixie.
1514 S. French Ave. (see related story on page
2)
• An open house will be held this Sunday,
from noon until 3 p.m. at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. 1401 W. Seminole Blvd.
(highway 17-92) In Sanford. The w ntH s to
Inaugurate the opening of the new Heart Center
facility at the hospital, which will be one of the
most modem facilities In the Central Florida
ntea.
The open house Is free of charge, and
everyone Is Invited to tour the new facility.

Teen free, prosecutor
angry after judge
throws out case
By S A N D R A IL U O T T
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD — An 18-year old man
walked out of the Seminole County
Courthouse Thursday afternoon a
free man after u Judge threw out the
first degree murder case against
him.
Enchano Muhone. 18. was cleared
of the first degree murder charge
again st him after Ju dge Alan
Dickey ruled there was not enough
evidence to find him guilty of
planning to kill Gill Lopez In March
1992. Muhottr testified he consid­
ered Lopez was his stepfather
because hr had lived with the

family for a long time.
The trial, which began with Jury'
selection on Mondny. was drawing
to u close after Mahoue testified In
his own defense. The defense
clulmed although Mahone shot
Lopez during a struggle In the street
outside their Winter Springs. It was
In self-defense.
Dickey said Mahone should never
have been charged with first degree
murder. Dickey ruled the trial was
at an end shortly after testimony
ended. After assistant state attorney
Stewart Stone rested hlscnse earlier
In the week. Dickey overruled a
defense motion fur acquits! That

See Mahone, Page 8A

Correction
Due to Incomplete election Information, a
story In Thursday's Sanford Herald contained a
misstatement about Sanford's District 1 city
commission primary and runnoff results last
year.
In the Dec. 8 primary. Bill Klrchncr led
Incumbent Lon Howell by 8.7 percentage points.
Following the Dec. 22. runoff. Howell retained
his office w ith a l 8.6-polnt lead over Klrchner.
Prom staff reports

'

IN D E X
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D b i IK i .............. ........BA
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Editorial-,,--..... ........ 4 A
Florida...............

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Horosoops.....
M o v lts .............
N ation.............
Fooplo.............
F o lio #..............
Religion..........
•p o rts .............
W oathor.........

Scattered thunderstorms

Enchano Mahone, loft, shown with his attornoy, Frank Bankowltz, was
cleared of first dogroe murder Thursday after Seminole Circuit Court Judge
Alan A Dickey threw out tho case after four day of trial

Open heart surgery unit debuts
Hospital
unveils a
first for
Seminole
By KKLLKY MITCHELL
Herald Stall Writer__________________

Farr resigns from Civil Service
SANFORD — Dave Farr. Executive Director of
the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce, has
submitted his resignation from the city's Civil
Service Board.
Farr has served on the board since July 1.
1990, having been elected twice.
"I Just wanted to avoid any problems with
conflict of Interest." he said. "There could come
a time when my board membership and Job
with the chamber could come In conflict, so I
thought It better to pull out of the board."
He continued. "I talked It over with the
Chamber President (Larry Strlckler) and he
agreed that there may come a time when It
would be best for me to resign from the Civil
Sendee Board, so 1felt the beat would be to do It
now."

rit#Photo

Ho«OM Photo by KoSo, MOchoU

Luo Ella Grant, a nurse's assistant, monitor technician and unit clerk for the
heart center, displays one of the heart monitors used in every room.

Lake Mary
finances in
great shape

SANFORD — A long nwnltrc!
drram for local mrmbers o f the
medical community and those with
heart problems Is about to come
true.
The Heart Center at HCA Central
Florida Regional Hospital. Seminole
County's llrst and only open heart
surgery facility, makes Its debut
with an Open House for the com ­
munity on Sunday. July 18. from
noon to 3 p.m. Tours of the fuetllly.
along with refreshments and d«*or
prizes will be provided.
"The Heart Center will not only
cater to Seminole and West Volusia
county." according to Roy Vinson,
executive director of the hospital.
"T h ere arc goin g to be som e

H «*M Photo by

Hi m &gt;

Ricky Vilomar (I) and Roy Vinson

Humanitarian
is honored
By KELLEY MITCHELL
Herald Stall Writer
S AN FO R D - J o yfu l tears
w elled In Enrique " R i c k y "
Vllomar's eyes when he was
named the recipient of the 1993
Dr. Frtst Humanitarian Award.
See Vilom ar, Page 2A

C See Heart. Page 2A

C ar pool

By N ICK PPEIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer
LAKE MARY - "T h e Clly of Luke Mary Is In
excellent financial condition." Clly Manager John
Lltlon gave the appraisal In presenting his budget
uddress to the clly commission last night.
Although commissioners had received copies of
the flscul 1993/94 budget on July 6. last night's
budget address was to explain plans and projects
which arc being presented for approval In the
budget.
Litton said the excellent financial condition Is
due to the present and past commissions'
"willingness to l&gt;c conservative, yet progressive.

□Bee Budget, Page OA

Marijuana for
medicinal use?
By J. MARK BARPIKLD
Herald Senior Staff Writer

Partly cloudy with a
40 percent chance o f
a fte r n o o n th u n ­
derstorms. High In
the lower 90s. Wind
southwest 5 to 10
mph.

SANFORD A
Longwood woman ar­
rested Wednesday on
marijuana possession
a n d s a le s c h a r g e s
asserts her pot use was
for medicinal reasons.
K im b e r ly S u sa n
Curtis. 41. 969 Lorman
Circle, was arrested at
her home Wednesday

F tn m ra
K lm b«rly Curtis

HotoM Photo by Tommy Vtnconl

It's one way to cool off on a
A low truck driver removes
took a quick dip yesterday
model pool at Semnlnole
French Avenue and Third

hot summer day.
a Pontiac which
afternoon in the
Pool Supply at
Street. Sanlord

police cited Marie Antoinette Dyndul of
Altamonte Springs lor an improper lane
change. Police say she bumped Samruay P.
Allman's Pontiac, forcing It from the road Into
the drink. Allman, horn Osteon, was uninjured.

□ See Pot, Page BA

SUBSCRIBE TO THE SANFORD HERALD FOfe THE BEST LOCAL NEWS COVERAGE. Call 322-2611

�1A - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday, July 16. 1093

NEWS FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

FLORIDA

‘Floats for Funds’ boost schools
■y NICK PFIIPAUP
Herald Stall Writer

Gasoline prices drop

SANFORD - Winn Dixie. AAW Root Deer,
and high school students from the area will
be Joining together this Saturday and
Sunday to raise money for local school
projects.
Students will be selling root beer Hoats at
Winn Dixie stores between 11 a.m. and 4
p.m. The 10 ounce (loafs will be selling for
91 each, wllh all proceeds going to the
schools.
Called "Floats for Funds." the event was
held In May of this year, at which time
students raised approximately 99.000. The
aim for this month's campaign Is to lop that
amount.

HEATHROW — Gusollnr prices dropped ntntewlde In July for
the first time In four months, with prices the highest In Miami
and lowest In Port Richey, the Am erican Automobile
Association said.
"W e may finally be seeing the results of low crude oil prices
and the traditional mid-summer lapse In demand for gasoline,"
Tom Schroder, a spokesman for AAA's Florida bmnehes. said
Thursday.
A gallon of self-serve regular unleaded gasoline cost an
average 91.20 per gallon In Miami and 91.07 In Port Richey.
A A A found.

H e a rt
C on tin u ed from Page 1A
patients pulled this way
from Daytona Reach In Volusia
and also from Ocala In Murlon
county. I don't anticipate as
much from Orange, but that Is
not to say that people who live In
Seminole and work In Orange
won't make the change."
In addition to two open heart
surgical suites. The Center will
have 12 surgical Intensive care
unit (SlCU) beds located adja­
cent to the surgical suites.
"T h e Heart Center will have a
great Impact In a number of
a r e a s . ’ * a c c o r d in g to D r.
L a w re n c e Vallarlo. In v a s iv e
cardiologist and director o f the
Cardlo Catheterization Laborato­
ry. "W e will be able to climb
another rung In the ladder In
supplying the most updated care
for our patients.
"It assures patients that one
physician will be there for them
th ro u gh o u t the e n tire p ro ­
cedure." he said. "W e deal with
u lot o f elderly people and for
them to get on 1-4 and drive to
Princeton will be no more. The
care here In Ihc com munity
means we will avoid Inherent
problem s of transporting pa­
tients. It provides a full scope of
capabilities for our community.
"M y patients are so excited
about the new facility that I have
had three of them say they
wanted to wall for their pro­
cedures to be done after the
Center opens." Vallarlo said. "O f
course I explained to them that
this m ay not be possible, but I
was surprised by th e ir e n ­
thusiasm. I thought only the
medical community would react
In that w a v."
The structural addition has
been planned with the help of
not only architectural specialists
In open heart projects but also
with the physicians and surgical
team that will be utilizing the
facility.
"Everything here has been set
up to maximize the quality of
the center." Vallarlo said. "It
looks like something out o f ‘Slur
Trek.’ "
Cardiovascular Surgeons. PA.
a leading Central Florida open
heart surgical group, will pro­
v id e su rgical services. T h e
group, led by Meredith Scott.
M.D.. who was raised In Sanford,
performs over 3.000 open he.nl
p ro c e d u re s each y e a r.
"Besides his (Scott) great med­
ical abilities, he Is a hometown
gu y." said Vinson. "H e was
raised In Sanford. He's told me
stories o f how he used to go
hunting right here where the
hospital Is today. It's gonna be
neat to have him here because
he Is known In the com m unity."
The surgeons and their sup­
port teams will rotate through
the hospital In shifts. Each team

LOTT8RY
M IA M I - Here are the
w inning numbers selected
T h u rs d a y In the F lo rid a
Lottery:
Cash 3
0-0-7

P la y 4
32-4-2

Ssuiford H erald

will be asslgnrd a week at a
time.
"H e (Scott) will be the first
surgeon on duty." said Vinson.
"Because this Is his town."
In addition to Dr. Scott, the
other physicians In the group
Include S. David Spector. M.D..
Patterson W. Moseley. M.D.. Paul
D. Schumacher. M.D., Paul A.
Thompson. M.D.. Cary L. Stowe.
M.D.. Joseph H. Boyer. M.D.,
and Kevin D. Accola. M.D.
"Not only did they have Im­
pact on bricks and mortor, but
also on staff so they could have
the maximum comfort level."
said Vinson.
Part o f choosing that staff
Include n am in g their nurse
manager for the ICU.
Their top choice was Donna
Wlnsor. who ts also from San­
ford.
"I grew up In Sanford." said
Wlnsor. "T h is Is a tremendous
growth opportunity for the area.
The Impart o f this kind of facility
is going to make more people
aware o f the services available
and open a lot of doors In that
respect.
"Personally this Is the most
exciting thing that has ever
happened to m e." she said. "I'v e
had 17 years o f experience. 12
years open heart experience at
Florida Hospital. It's really neat
to come home to afreet change In
a community you were raised In.
"W hat I’ve learned at Florida
Hospital will allow me to lake
that knowledge and apply It to a
fa c ility w ith the very best
equipment, a customized facili­
ty." she said.
"T h e nurses that will be di­
rectly affected by this unit arc
very excited about working and
cross training," according to
Wlnsor. "T h ey all have open
heart experience and critical
care background.
"T h e nurses In the step down
units are excited loo because It
will expose them to new op­
portunities." she said.
With the amplified expansion,
renovations and additions the
h o sp ita l has taken on the
charges for service at the hospi­
tal will remain the same.
"There will be no cost shifting
of hospital services on other
service leven s." according to
Vinson.
"T h e state controls price In­
creases." according to Vinson.
" I f I put 9100 million Into (his
hospital I can't up the cost of
s e rv ic e s because the State
Legislature won't allow It.
"A ctually The Heart Center
Income is going to offset costs In
other areas o f the hospital.” he
added. "F or example, one heart
may help pay for two or three
Indigent cases."
The Heart Center will officially
open on Aug. 9.

Socond Claaa Poelego Paid at Sanford,
Florida and adds tonal mailing
offlcoo.
PO ST M A ST ER : Sand I
to T H E SANFORD H ERALD . F A
So* 1SS 7, Santord, FL S I 7TE-1SS 7.
luboa ria l ton Ratoo
(Otofy 1 Sunday)
Home DsOvary
3 Months
SI ESS
0 M onths
1 Yaor
ITEM
Florida RaeMsnlt mvti pay 7% aaioa
tax In addition lo rttae above
Phono (407)321-MI1.

According to Larry Beck, marketing
director o f Winn Dixie. "W e try hard to
support the schools In the communities In
which we operate. Winn Dixie ts pleased
with this opportunity to show our support In

helping out the students o f our local schools,
and we encourage the community to come
out and offer their support."
Money raised will be used In supporting
ancillary organizations such as marching
bands and cheerleading squads, which
depend heavily on external fundraising to
help with travel costs, uniforms, and contest
entry fees.
Winn Dixie and AAW have donated the
Ice cream, root beer, straws and cups for the
event. " I t ’s an effort to help the schools cut
down on the event expenses and raise more
money." Beck said.
A third "Floats for Funds" program ts
already being planned during the weekend
of Sept. 18 and 19.

Finishing
touches
With a November openlno
scheduled for the newly re­
novated Sanford Museum,
Alicia Clerk, curator, Howard
Jefferies, ground* mainte­
nance coordinator, right, and
Larry White, of the parks
department, scope out the
remaining work fo be done.
Filling the gounds and Install­
ing the Irrigation system Is
the next step before the final
landscaping Is ptacod.
H«UM N o lo by Tommy Vincent

F lo rid ia n s
ignorant of
state
governm ent
■y Associated Brest_______
FORT LAUDERDALE — A
survey suggests Florida resi­
dents are sorely lacking basic
knowledge o f state govern­
ment. where 20 percent of
those Interviewed didn't know
Lawton Chiles was the gover­
nor of the state.
R es ea rc h e rs at F lo rid a
Atlantic University's Institute
o f G o v e r n m e n t In F o rt
Lauderdale a ls o found resi­
dents didn't grasp Florida's
tax structure.
About 74 percent correctly
said (he state sales tax Is 6
percent, but 12 percent said
there Is no sales lax. Fourteen
percent Incorrectly answered
yes when asked If (he stale
has an Income tax. Another 8
percent weren't sure.

V ilo m a r Continued from Page 1A
Once a year an employee MCA
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Is chosen by fellow worker* and
recognized for his or her exem­
plary performance.
"Everyone In this room de­
serves this award In my eyes."
snld R oy V in son , execu tive
director o f the hospital. "Bui
unfortunately It can only go to
one. and you have chosen that
one."
O r ig in a lly fro m S a n to
D om ingo. V ilom ar has been
employed wllh the hospital for
Just over a year as a transporter
In the Radiology Department.
Patients, fellow workers and
v is ito rs to the hospital are
greeted with open arms and two
words from his lips. "Ricky's
here."
As he accepted many gifts from
(he hospital, he approached the
microphone and said "I want to
first thank my Jesus Christ, and I
would like lo donate 9100 of this
check to the pink ladles (aux­
iliary) because one day I want to
be a pink man," which brought
laughter and cheers from the
crowd gathered.
Prizes for the winner Include a
plaque. 9500. the Dr. Frist pin. a
bouquet o f roses and a parking

space designated for their use
only.
"Just after Ricky' started here
at the hospital I ran Into him In
the hall and asked how he. like
the jo b ." said Vinson. "He said 'I
would do this for nothing. I love
my Job.’ "
Vilomar would one day like lo
be able to slop working and
become a missionary, said Susan
P r a t h e r , p u b lic r e la t io n s
specialist.
" I will go where God sends
m e." said Vilomar.
He la also Involved In the
making and running of a softball
field for the children In Deltona.
He also constructed a heartshaped pool dedicated to the
public al the Prayer Garden as
well as a pavilion for services.
"I'm a people person." said
Vilomar. "I don't look at the bad
In people, I look only al the good.
Everybody Is my hero."
The recipient o f the award Is
not chosen by the number of
votes he or she receives but by
how closely they mirror the
humanitarian spirit of Dr. Thom ­
as Frist. Sr., one o f the founders
o f the corporation. Of the 21
nominees submitted, Vilomar re­
ceived 22 of the 58 votes.
The Dr. Frist Humanitarian

Award has been an HCA tradition
since 1972.
Each winner at each Individual
facility Is eligible fprthe naikxuU
award given later this year.
All lull-lim e and part-time
employees who work 20 or more
hours per week are eligible for
the aw ard. Nom inations are
made by co-workers based on the
following criteria:
• Demonstrated unusual con­
cern for Ihc welfare and happi­
n e s s o f p a t ie n t s a n d has
performed extraordinary acts of
kindness:
• Someone who has a positive
effect on others:
• Made a significant contribu­
tion lo (he Improvement of pa­
tient relations;
• W hose day-to-day perfor­
mance Is dependable, consistent
and people-orlcnlcd:
• Someone whose contribu­
tions may be overlooked because
of personal humility or modesty;
and
• Who demonstrated a level of
commitment to community serv­
ice that parallels their Involve­
ment with patient care.
Vilomar has fulfilled all of the
above standards of excellence,
according to the accolades from
his peers.

TH E W EATHER
LOCAL FORECAST

EXTENDED
• OUTLOOK

Today: Partly cloudy with a 40
percent chance of afternoon
thunderstorm s. High In the
lower 90s. Wind southwest 5 to
lOmph.
T o n ig h t : S c a ttere d th u n ­
derstorms ending during the
evening, then becoming fair.
Low In the lower 70s. Light
southwest wind. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Saturday: Partly cloudy with
s c a t t e r e d a fte r n o o n th u n ­
derstorms. High in the lower to
mid 90s. Rain chance 40 per­
cent. Wind southwest 10 mph.

F VJ'A
FRIDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

1

FLORIDA TSMFS
City
Daytona Beech
FI. LaudBaach
Fort Myert
Gsineavllle
Hometleed
jacktonvllle
KeyWotl
Lakeland
Miami
Pomacoia
Varatola
Telleheitao
Tampa
Veen Beach
W Palm Beach

La

HI

71
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41

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17
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mm

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01
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mm
00
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04
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1.10
too
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03

_____

---------- 1

---------- 1

SATURDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

SUNDAY
Ptlycldy 93-73

MONDAY
PUycldy 93-73

TUESDAY
Ptly eldy 93-73

STATISTICS

[

d

LAST
July I I

Friday. July 16. 1993
Vol 85. No. 278
PubNshsd Only and Sunday, e ic e p l
Saturday by The Santord Kara Id.
Inc. 300 N. Franch A m , Sanford,
Fla. 37771

Locally, schools and organizations which
will be Involved In the drive this weekend
Include: the Seminole High School dance
team which will be at the Winn Dixie store
at 1514 French Avenue In Sanford: the color
guard from Lyman High School, at the store
located at 951 S.R. 434 In Longwood. and
Altamonte High's Cheerleaders at 7800 S.
Highway 17*92.
In all. students from 38 separate schools
will be fanning out throughout Central
Florida, at 48 Winn Dixie stores.

NEW
July 19

€

FIRST
July 26

O

FULL
Aug. 2

BEACH CONDITIONS
Daytona Beach: Waves are
0-1 foot and semi choppy. Cur­
rent Is to the north with a water
temperature of 82 degrees. Now
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 0-1
foot and send glassy. Current Is
slightly to the north, with a
water temperature of 82 degrees.

SATURDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLE: M!n.3:55
a.m.. 4:15 p.m.; MaJ. 10:05 a.m..
10:05 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Bcacht highs. 6:48 a.m.. 7:22
p.m.: lows. 12:51 a.m.. 12:54
p.m .: New Smyrna Beach:
highs. 6:53 a.m., 7:27 p.m.:
lows. 12:56 a.m ..12:59 p.m.:
Cocoa Beach: highs. 7:08 a.m..
7:46 p.m.: lo w s ,l:l 1 a.m.. 12:14
i.m.

BOATING
G

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
T od ay and T on igh t: Wind
southwest 10 knots. Seas 2 feet.
Bay and Inland waters a light
chop. Widely scattered showers.

T h e high tem perature in
Sanford Thursday was 91 de­
grees and the overnight low was
70 as reported by the University
o f Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rain fall for the
p e r io d , e n d in g at 9 a.m .
Thursday, totalled .07 of an
Inch.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 80 degrees and
Friday's overnight low was 72.
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□ThunSoy's high..............9 0
□ Begemstrie pressure.30 .0 8
□Relative Hnm ldlty....77 pet
□Wlmds.... .Southwest 8 mph
□ R alafall..........4 8 of as Inch.
□Today’s sunset.....8:24 p.m.
□Tomorrow's ssarlee see*6:98

citr
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Bllllngi
Birmingham
Bltmarck
Bolt*
Bolton
Burlington.!/!
Chartotton.S C
Charlot ton.W Va
Charlotte.N C
OltyiAAB
Chicago
Cleveland
Concord.N H
Dellat Ft Worth
Oanvor
O n Mol net
Da iron
Houa'on
Indlanapollt
Juneau
Kernel City
Lot Vega*
Lillie Rock
Lot Angeln
Momphlt
Milwaukee
MpH SI Paul
Nathvlllo
Now Or leant
Now York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoonli
Pittsburgh
Port lAnd.Mdlrts
t l Loull
tall Lafca City
tl tie Mane
tea me
Wathlngton. D C.

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�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 16. 1933 - 3A

r -i'

'

« VJ . t
.-•

*

|I * 'fK,
■ .Mi

_____

Sanford budget $14 million
■y NICK RFilFAUF

Burglary suapacta arraatad

Herald Staff Writer

Tw o Sanford men were arrested by Casselberry police early
Wednesday on burglary charges. Police report finding a
television with blood on It In the car with a shiftless man. who
had blood and glass shards on his shoulders.
Held on charges of burglary and grand theft were Anthony O.
Diddle. 25. 810 Cedar Creek Circle, and Jeffrey Mark Dunn. 31.
618 Mcllonvlllc Ave. Dunn was also held on a dealing In stolen
property charge.
A Casselberry policeman reported narrowly missing a
collision with a station wagon driving north In the southbound
lanes of Oxford Road at about 1 a.m. The car was stopped
nearby and a television and concrete saw were found In It. The
Items were Identified by the owner of General Rental Center on
Slate Road 436. At the store, police report finding the glass
door had been smashed.

SANFORD — Only two workshop meet­
ings were required for the Sanford City
Commission's examination o f the fiscal
1993/94 preliminary budget. It will be
presented for formal hearings and adoption
probably during September commission
meetings.
By that time, a number o f additional
changes will be made In the budget request
as a result of the commission work shops.
As presented at the beginning of the work
shops, the Sanford General Fund budget
request stunds at $14,029,908. The amount
Is only slightly lower thun the 1992/93
ad|ustrd budget.
The first subject of this week's workshop
meeting wus the police department budget.
City Manager Bill Simmons had already
examined and fine-tuned each line Item

Auto theft charged
Durrell Anthony Barber. 33. 1404 Valencia Court West.
Sanford, was arrested at his home Wednesday night on auto
theft and petit theft charges. Police report Barber stole hts
mother's cur and a video tape recorder. When Barber arrived at
the his home, he was arrested. Barber told police he pawned
the VCR.

Domestic violence
James Theophllls Morris. 18. 1603 Roundtree. Sanford, was
arrested on a domestic violence battery charge Wednesday
afternoon. A Sanford policeman reported seeing a woman
struggling to get oway from Morris, who was holding her In h'.s
amis. When ordered to release the woman, she hit Morris, who
raised a fist, the policeman reported. MorTls was subdued and
wrestled to the ground In a headlock and arrested.

Hit and run
Angella Ann Walker. 26. 1520 Carlton St.. Ixingwood. was
arrested on a hit-and-run charge by Casselberry police
Wednesday afternoon. A woman reported a white car struck
her car and drove away on Melody Lane. Two witnesses
Identified Walker, who was held on charges of leaving the
scene of an accident, driving with a suspended license and
driving on the wrong side of the road.

Warrant arrests made
The following wanted persons have been taken Into custody
Wednesday:
• Angela C. Omans. 22. 155 Sir Topa* Lane. Lake Mary, was
arrested on a Volusia County burglary charge:
• Larry Dean Rash. 36. 1217 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford, was
arrested on two warrants on charges of probation violations for
a failure to appear In court charge and a failure to appear In
court to answer to a probation violation charge, both charges
stemming from burglary charges:
• Allen R. Vaughn. 30. 634 Church Ave.. Longwood. was
arrested on an Orange County commitment order:
• Theresa Alice Dlrlcco. 30. 222 A com Drive. Longwood.
turned herself In on a worthless check charge;
• Richard Anthony Stanton. 60. 2538 El Portal Ave..
Sanford, was arrested on a probation violation charge for a
battery conviction: and
• Derrick Anton Gordon. 19. 2819 Grove Drive. Sanford,
turned himself In on a probation violation charge for a
possession of a short-barreled shotgun conviction.

Incidents reported to authorities
The following Incidents have been reported to local law
enforcement authorities;
• A gold bracelet valued at • 1.000 was reported taken from
an Old Post Road home near Longwood sometime Wednesday
between 7:30 a.m. and 8 p.m.
• $200 In cash and personal Items were reported taken from
an apartment In the the 1800 block of East Landings Drive.
Sanford, sometime between 1:10 a.m. Tuesday and 1:15 p.m.
Wednesday.
• Soft drinks, beer and a metal-working torch were reported
taken from Commercial Chemical. 2600 Airport Blvd.. Sanford,
sometime 7 p.m. Tuesday and 7 a.m. Wednesday.
• A $1,000 watch was reported taken from a room of the
Fountain Lodge. 2706 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford, at 9 a.m.
Wednesday.
• The kitchen of the First Spanish Assemblies of God
Church. 911 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford, was reported ransacked,
but nothing taken, sometime between 7 p.m. Tuesday and
12:06 p.m. Wednesday.

along with grounds maintenance und cul­
tural and recreational facilities was reduced
by approximately $200,000 from the origi­
nal request by Director Mike Kirby. As the
commission discussed various line Items,
the budget was reduced by $9,644 more,
with the elimination of u requested motor
vehicle replacement.
The total Parks and Recreation budget
stands at 81.426.783. The amount is almost
8500.000 lower than the adjusted budget for
fiscal year 1992/93.

prior to submitting the Initial budget
requests to the commission.
The total police budget recommended by
the city munager for fiscal year 1993/94 Is
proposed at $4,555,958. Unless additional
reductions are made, the amount Is
$165,000 more than last year's request of
$4,390,955.
The budget recommendations submitted
by Fire Chief Tom Hickson required only
four minutes of discussion by members of
the commission before It was accepted.
Sim m ons had trim m ed 855.503 from
Hickson's original requests, mostly from
reductions In operating expenses and the
elimination of a request for a vehicle
replacement, estimated at a cost of $22,763.
The total Fire Department budget for
1993/94 Is p r e s e n t ly e s tim a te d at
S2.581.011. $54,000 above the adopted
ndjusted budget from this previous year.
The Parks and Recreation Department.

In presenting the budget recommenda­
tions. Simmons had projected no reduction
In city services, equitable compensation for
city employees, und a balanced budget with
no ad valorem tax Increase above the
present mlllagc. but without ucccptlng the
roll-back rate.
Formal budget hearings are expected to
la- held In September.

C ounty may buy
K atie’s W ekiva
River cam pground
■ y J. MARK B A R FIILD
Herald Senior Staff Writer
SANFORD — Seminole County
will take a cuutlous look at
purchasing Katie's Wekiva River
Landing to provide the county's
first public access to the river.
Commissioners said use of
natural lands bond money would
be unacceptable to voters for the
business acquisition, but they
agreed to review the $600,000
proposal under their parks and
recreation program.
Russell Moncrief said he and
his wife, campground namesake
Katie Moncrief. are gaining In
age and want to be free of Ihe
debt and responsibility of the
5.7-acre recreational vehicle
camp and canoe launch they
bought In 1974. Moncrief said
the $600,000 usklng price Is the
appraised value of the camp­
ground. less portable cabins and
canoes, based on It's Income
potential.
But commissioners found the
price a bit steep, especially
compared to a nearby five-acre
river-front site the county may
buy for $176,000. The site Is
largely undeveloped und has a
meeting hall but no boat ramp.
Katie's has the boat ramp und
dock, a residence, store and a
restroom and shower facility.
Logan said the tax value o f the
p r o p e r ty and b u ild in g s Is
$277,000.
The county's Nutural Lands
Committee ranked the camp­
ground In their second-highest

priority In June. Colleen Logan,
county natural lands planner,
said committee members pre­
ferred providing Ihe public river
access from an existing bnol
ramp rather thun building a new
one ut the former Plantation site
or elsewhere.
Those ureas should remain In
a more pristine slate. Logan said
the committee recommended.
Katie's could be restored to a
more natural state and restricted
to canoe launches and tent
camping. la&gt;gan said.
"T h e committee felt an al­
ready developed site was better
than the creation of a new one,"
s a id c o m m is s io n e r D a r y l
McLain, who supported thr
purchase Investigation,
After agreeing that natural
lands bond money should not be
used for the purchase, commis­
sioners agreed to direct staff to
Investigate the offer.
Moncrief said he was offering
the county a deal.
"W e're going to dispose of It
o n e w a y o r o t h e r . ’ * s a id
Moncrief. " I t 's already been
advertised In USA Today for $1
million. I'm offering It for my
appraised value to the county
and only the county."

H « r* M F te att k ? I

Prepared mom

When mom Lillie Houston and daughter Brenda embark on a
summer outing from their Sanford home, they go prepared. A
surprise shower doesn't dampen their spirits because Lillie
carrlos an umbrella

LOCAL N IW S
LOCAL SPORTS
C a ll Today To S ta rt Y o u r
S u b scrip tio n D e liv e ry

Sanford H erald
322-2611
a

Cops seek
u n s a fe c a rs
■y J. MARK BARFIILD
Herald Senior Staff Writer________
S A N F O R D — T h e Florida
Highway Patrol will be on the
lookout for unsafe vehicles and
Impared motorists on area roads
during the next several weeks.
Beginning today. FHP troopers
will establish vehicle check­
points on several local roadways.
Troopers will stop traffic during
daylight hours to assure vehicle
safety equipment such os tires
und headlights are sound and
the vehicle's registration Is cur­
rent. Any criminal law violators,
such as drunken drivers, will be
met with arrest.
Troopers may establish the
roadblocks at the following loca­
tions:
• July 16 to 22: Airport Boul­
e v a r d . C o u n t y R o a d 15.
Markham Road. Orange Boule­
vard. Osceola Road. Upsala Road
und Persimmon Avenue.
• July 23 to 29: Celery Ave­
n ue. G en . J C H u tch in s o n
Parkway. Marquette Road. Orunge Boulevard. State Road 426.
Upsala Road and Persimmon
Avenue.
•J u ly 30 to August 5: Airport
Boulevard. Celery Avenue, CR
15. Orange Boulevard. Old Lake
M a ry R o a d . SR 426 and
Persimmon Avenue.
• August 6 to 12: CR 15. Gen.
J .C . H u tc h in s o n P a rk w a y .
Marquette Road. Orange Boule­
vard. Osceola Road. Upsala Road
and Persimmon Avenue.
• August 13 to 19: Airport
Boulevard. CR 15. Markham
Road. Orange Boulevard. Os­
ceola Road. Upsala Road and
Persimmon Avenue.

Welcome
Newcomerl

r\

" Florida'• own Newcomer
service" - dedicated to
welcoming new residents.
It is our desire to make you feel
welcome and to acquaint you
with our city.
If you are new in the area, or
know o f a family who is, a phone
call will bring a prompt visit
from our representative. She has
brochures, civic information,
maps; and to help with your
shopping needs, cards of intro­
duction and gifts from local
merchants.

(^ o m e jp e ^ H n e lS p n i
c&gt;

leartfsuraerv taci

Local merchants are alio en­
couraged to inquire about the
availability o f our services.
-y
ll 1

H

SAHEQRB

r y

V

GRACE M.ST1NECIPHER
322-4381
LAKE M ARY

FLORENCE O'CONNOR
323-4983

'tk

The Heart Center, opening in August 1993.
will be the only open heart surgical facility in Seminole
and West Volusia Counties. It is supported by
a highly-trained professional staff, as well as services
such as our Cardiac Catheterization Lab and
our Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation Center.

Quriing Sttwx vfte.

it f C S l C e n t r a l ^ F lo r id a F s g i o t i a l ^ H o s p it a l

Home Office
904-734-6031

1 7 -9 2 on L a k e M o n ro e , S a n fo rd
o

j Z

^

A r 'n

n

l - 4 5 (J U

from W . Volusia: 66S-4441
from Orlando: 628-8797____________________________

il

�4 A - Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida • Friday, July 16. 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanford Herald

CHUCK STONE

(USPS 461-260)

300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2611 or 831-0903
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher and Editor

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 M o n th a ....................................8 1 0 .SO
0 M o n lh a ....................................830.00

1Year ...........................878.00
Florida Reeldente mual pay 7% ealee tax In
addition to ratee above.

EDITORIALS

Com m ission’s
decision wise
With an eye toward airport growth, Semi­
nole County commissioners boldly spoke
their minds this week, delaying three con­
struction projects to focus on the connector
road between Silver Lake Drive and the new
entrance to the Sanford airport.
"Economic development hns been on our
minds as we look to moving forward on this
project." County Manager Ron Rabun told
commissioners, who agreed.

T im id r u lin g c r e a t e s f a m i ly t r a g e d y
After 34 years o f being a parent. I realize the
truth of a sentiment Paul wrote In his letter to
the Hebrews: "T h ou are a priest forever.”
We are parents forever. Some o f our children
cut the umbilical chord after they finish school.
Others continue to live at home, cither because
they prefer the creature com forts of their
parents' house or because they can't afford to
live on their own.
Whatever the time duration, parenthood Is still
one of the loveliest Joys you will ever experience
in life.
That's why m y heart went out to two parents.
Jan and Roberta DeBoer. A couple of weeks ago,
the courts ordered them to give up a 2-year-old
girl. Jesslcu, whom they had raised since she
was born.
Both the Iowa and Michigan courts agree that
Jessica's biological parents. Cara and Daniel
Schmidt of Iowa, had a higher legal right to her
existence, even though the DeBoers of Michigan
had raised Jessica since her birth.
Cara Schmidt signed adoption papers lor
Jessica when the girl was bom In 1991. At the
time she wasn't married. For two years, the
DeBoers tried to adopt Jessica. And for two
years, the courts gave them the standard judicial

run-around. (Extended waiting periods are
normal in U.S. adoption cases.)
After Cara married, her husband. Daniel,
decided that they should reclaim Jessica. They
filed suit and the
M ichigan Supreme
Court ruled in their
fuvor.
" ( T h e c o u rt) is
c o g n iz a n t o f the
heartache which this
d e c is io n w ill u l­
t im a t e ly c a u s e ,"
w’rote the Michigan
court. But. said the
court, the law left the
court no alternative.
It's hard to believe
that n supreme court
£ Whatever (ho
would stoop to such
tim e duration,
s o p h is t r y . F r e •
parenthood is
quently. the courts
s till one of the
h a v e ta p -d a n c e d
loveliest joys
around "th e la w "
you w ill ever
after a prosecuting
experience in
attorney has pleabargained a lesser
life. ■
sentence. And at

JACK AND ER SO N

Good for them.
Building of the 3.000-foot strip was not
scheduled to begin until 1996. The com­
mission Is to be commended for working with
the Airport Authority to meet the construc­
tion schedule for the access road. County
Engineer Jerry McCollum said design work
will begin In about three weeks. The airport
already has in place state and federal funding
in excess of $3 million earmarked for two-and
four-lane sections of the access road between
the airport and the Silver Lake Drive
extension.
Airport Director Steve Cook says
extension will make It easier to reach
airport from the expressway. He Is
couraged that Industrial development
commercial growth in the area will follow.

Republican cruise
doesn’t leave dock

the
the
en­
and

Trainc congestion along Airport Boulevard
and Wylly Avenue, estimated at between
7.000 and 8.000 cars a day. Is also expected
to be eliminated.
Prioritizing projects,
needed ones in favor of
Drive to the airport,
development; exactly
have InggJufc.,

delaying three lessextending Silver Lake
will spur economic
what commissioners

LETTERS

Little League shame
Another Little League season has ended with
Sanford’s Little Major League All Star team
traveling to Ormond Beach for the second round o f
post-season play. The team did not fare loo well,
but the boys' courage, hustle, and behavior were
exemplary; Sanford should be proud o f them.
Not so with the adults. After only a few practices,
the head coach and his assistant quit when
confronted with self-serving adults maneuvering
for position from which to satisfy their own egos.
From there It was mostly downhill.
Blatant favoritism was the rule. Eighteen boys
were selected as All-Stars. Almost half hardly
played at all in five gomes.
Th e boys witnessed ugly, almost violent con­
frontations. between parents and coaches.
The Sanford Recreation Department was aware
o f these and other elements o f this post-season
fiasco and has. in my opinion, failed to keep the
best Interests of the children at hand.
As a result o f this, the kids come away somewhat
tainted. Little League buscball Is a wonderful thing.
Th e purest form of a great sport. Children having
fun. To those adults who would taint these pure
ballplayers, shame on you.
Daniel Sperry
Sanford

E ditor’s note: Rocky Elllngsworth. Sanford Rec­
reation Department, responds:
"Mr. Sperry Is
pretty much right." Elllngsworth says during Little
League play, it is customary for all children to take
their turn at bat to learn the fundamentals of the
game, but In AH Stars, the focus is to win.
Although Elllngsworth said he personally dislikes
the practice of playing a limited number of kids to
win. because to him, all the kids are stars. All Stars
functions that way.
One change Elllngsworth noted is that next year
only 12 or 13 kids will play on the team Instead o f

ii/ J iiiU L v

IB.
Coaches, parents and players did scufUc, as Mr.
Sperry's letter indicates, but what Mr. Sperry did
not know, according to Ellingsworih. is that
coaches und parents were split up and ballplayers
were told, on the field with coaches present, that
what they saw was not right and was a poor
example of proper behavior. Coaches were then
talked to separately.
Ellingsworih regrets that Mr. Sperry did not
come to him personally with his concerns, and
nssurcs him the door Is always open when It comes
to the kids and Iraseball. And Mr. Sperry 1s Invited
to become a coach and gain another perspective on
Little League play.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
must tie signed. Include the address of the writer
and a daytime telephone number.' Letters should
be on a single subject and be us brief us possible.
The letters arc subject to editing.

times a Judge's Ideological predilections have
been factored Into his ruling.
At any give time In history, the law Is ONLY
what a group of Judges or Juries declare It to lie.
"T h e common law Is not n brooding om­
nipresence In the sky." wrote Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes Jr., "but the articulate voice of
some sovereign or quasl-soverrlgn Ihot can lie
Identified."
Bul when a rourt rules that the law leaves little
alternative, the court Is treating the law as If It
were Indeed some "brooding" •• and sialic ~
omnlprcsencc In the sky.
Suppose Jessica had lived 16 years with the
DeBoers, but bad never been adopted. Would the
courts seriously contend that the child should inreturned to the biological parents, even though
those (Mrents had nut seen or related to the child
In any way for 16 years?
Would I he courts order a child returned to her
biological parents If they were demonstrably
unill or If they have a record of chronic child
abuse?
The questions unswer themselves.
Because the DeBoers had demonstrated good
faith by |&gt;crsts(rmly trying to adopt Jessica. both
the Iowa and Michigan courts should have taken
those efforts Into consideration.

ROBERT WAGMAN

D id t e a m s e e k p e r s o n a l p r o f i t ?
WASHINGTON - White House Chief of StafT
Thomas McLarty and Budget Director Leon
Panetta have Investigated the firing of the
seven-member staff of the W hite House Travel
Office. Thefr recently released 80-page report
finds that four White House staffers acted
"Inappropriately." However, the actions of the
four were said merely to be "mistakes of
Judgment, mistakes of Inexperience."
While the report is strikingly self-critical. It
also serves to exonerate higher-ups In the White
House. More Importantly. In the words of
Panetta. it found "there w ere no criminal
violations involved here." In order to reach this
finding, however, the White House has In­
terpreted the evidence In a clearly self-serving
w
a
y
.
However, without much o f a stretch, the same
evidence yields a much different conclusion —
namely that things were done for personal
financial gain, that higher-ups were Involved,
and that laws were probably broken.
The two central players In the affair were
Catherine Cornelius. 25. a distant cousin ol the
president, and her boyfriend. Jeff Eller, now
White House deputy communications director.
Cornelius was involved In planning campaign
travel for the Clinton camp. Apparently, during a
Clinton transition-team visit to the White House,
Eller discovered the Travel Office was staffed by
career employees. He reported back to Cornelius
that he had found her the perfect Job.
The report confirms earlier press stories that
the two met with David Watkins — then a
transitional official, now White House director of
administration — to urge that the Travel Office
staff be replaced with campaign loyalists led by
Cornelius. In fact, she authored three memos
suggesting reorganization plans.
Finally, the Cllntonltes arrived at the White
House. In a pace that has become the norm for
this administration, days turned into weeks,
then months, and still the Travel Office Incum­
bents remained. It seems clear that, frustrated,
Cornelius and Eller stepped up the pressure.
Enter first friend. Hollywood producer Harry
Thomason.
Thomason owns one-third o f a charter airline
booking com pany run by Darnell Martens.
Thomason has said he became concerned the
Travel Office was not being run Ip a businesslike
manner when Martens was unable to bid for
press charters. He passed along hls concerns to a
number of people. Including Watkins, who began
an entirely appropriate Investigation.
Just as plausible an explanation, however. Is
that Cornelius — who had done business with
Martens' booking company during the campaign
— either went to him for help or the two found
each other aft&lt;T Martens failed to get While
House business. Martens then turned to Thom­
ason. who seemed to have taken on the Travel
Office as a crusade.
Thomason lobbied people In the White House

about the situation, and sat in on several
meetings on the subject. Little happened until he
got first ladv Hillary Clinton Interested. Re­
portedly. she spoke to both Watkins and to
Deputy White House Counsel Vincent Foster, a
former partner at her Little Rock. Ark., law firm.
Things began to move quickly.
Watkins approved a plan by Cornelius In
which she would l)e placed In the Travel Office to
dig up evidence that
could be used to Arc
th e seven Incum ­
bents. Not surpris­
ingly. she came back
w i t h t a l c s of
mismanagement and
worse. She said that
employees were liv­
ing lifestyles far too
lavish for their gov­
ernment salaries and
must be stealing or
getting kickbacks.
Foster turned the
matter over to hls
£ The While
d e p u ty . A ssociate
House has
C o u n s e l W illia m
Interpreted
K ennedy. Kennedy
tho evidence
called the FBI and
in a clearly
d e m a n d e d It u n ­
self serving
dertake a criminal
way. J
Investigation. When
he didn't get a quick
response, he went over the heads of those he
called originally and demanded Instant action.
Meanwhile. Eller anonymously briefed re­
porters about dire things that had happened In
the Travel Ofllcc. suggesting Illegalities. The
accounting Arm of Peat Marwick was brought
In. but. before Its work was finished, the seven
Travel Office employees were fired.
Cornelius was placed In charge of the office.
A close friend of Martens. Penny Sample, was
brought In as a "volunteer" to help run the
office.
It now turns out that, while Peat Marwick
found accounting problems In the Travel
Office. It did not And enough evidence — let
alone the rampant criminality suggested by
Cornelius — to support dismissing anyone.
Thomason has raised a "lo o rich to steal"
defense of his actions — that hr Is too wealthy
to worry about money hls company might
have made from White House business. The
report Ands this defense “ entirely plausible."
However. Just as plausible Is that what
happened here was a Anonclal coup aimed at
taking over the Travel Office and putting
money In the pockets of the participants —
Cornelius, by giving her nn important, highpaid Job; Martens and Thomason, by giving
them charter business.

WASHINGTON — Sen Bob Dole. R Kan.,
who has spent months trying to torpedo the
Clinton administration, was recently forced lo
abandon ship himself.
Dole had beru planning to set sail down thr
Potomac River for a fund-raiser aboard a
luxury cruise liner. He even took a Jab at
President Cllnion hy christening hls floating
fund-raiser "Th e Kan vis Dual House Cruise!"
— an allusion lo a Joke that Uickflred on
Clinton and emboldened Dole earlier this
year.
Hut this Is onr rase
In their hlgh-tirofile
feud In which Cllnion
may enjoy the last
laugh.
w c called Dole last
week to Inform him
thut hls cruise was
on the verge of vio­
latin g tw o fed eral
la w s . W it h in 2 4
hours, he abandoned
ship. Dole Is still
having the July 30
fund-rulser. hut It
will be aboard the
f i We called
A m e r ic a n - fla g g e d
Dole to Inform
Dandy, u dinner txail
him that his
that holds just 200
cruise was on
passengers.
the verge of
Dole’s original plan
violating two
called for a cruise
federal laws. 1
from scenic Mount
Vernon. Va.. to Old
Town Alexandria. Va.. aboard the luxurious,
bul foreign-Bagged. Crown Monarch. Thr
Monarch holds more than 500 passengers
and features such umenities as slot machines
and whirlpools.
Bul the Passenger Vessel Act stales that
"n o foreign vessel shall lrans|&gt;or1 passengers
between ports or places In the United States,
cither directly or by way of a foreign port."
The Anc Is 8200 per passenger, and mure
thun 250 people were Invited.
The law speclAcs that the vessel must be
U.S.-Auggcd. U.S.-owned and U.S.-built. The
Crown Monarch, meanwhile. Is registered In
Panama. Is owned by a Swcdlsh-Flnnlsh
company and was built In Spain.
Ed Dldlon. who was the intermediary
between Dole and the owner o f the cruise
liner, told us that he didn't think this law
applied because Dole's guests were "Just
boarding the ship for the function" instead of
taking a full cruise and were not staying "In
rooms.” Bul Dole offered a "special overnight
package." In exchange for u 85.000 donation
to hls personal political actJon committer.
Campaign America, a couple could slay
overnight In one of the ship's deluxe suites.
Otherwise, the I’ AC charged $1,500 a
person for Just cocktails, dinner, Broadwayshow entertainment and the chance lo
mingle with Dole and other memlxTs of the
Republican leadership. Campaign America
collects contributions und then distributes
them to various Republican candidates across
the country. It's a time-honored way of
winning friends and laying the groundwork
for perhaps another Dole run for the White
House In 1996.
For Dole, the fund-raiser docs not come a
moment too soon. The Senate recently passed
a campalgn-Anancc reform hill that would
ban such PACs. so the cruise down the
Potomac may be one of Campaign America's
last hurrahs.
The second law* the cruise would have
violated, the Passenger Notification Act,
states that "all promotional literature ...
through any medium of communication In
the United Slates offering passage or solic­
iting passengers for ocean voyages anywhere
In the world" has to mention which country
the vessel Is registered In. Dole's PAC failed to
make this disclosure.
JoAnnc Coe. executive director of Cam­
paign America, told our associate Ed Henry
that the PAC would have made a clarification
in Its lollow-up correspondence for the event.
"N cllhcr Sen. Dole nor his guests would
(participate) In any event that would not
comply fully with the appropriate federal
regulations, so that's why I pulled the plug on
the Crown Monarch." said Coe uftcr our
Inquiry.

mmmm
i

�Sanford Herald. Santord, Florida - Friday, July 16. 1993 • 1A

Simplimatic to close,
91 workers lose jobs
operating since 1980. when It
took over Acme Conveyor Com­
p an y. T h e p resen t 75.000
SANFORD — Simplimatic En­ square foot plant was completed
gineering Compa.iy. 2801 W. In 1088.
Airport Blvd.. will cloec Its doors
The Sanford plant designs and
In October, with transfer offers to m a n u fa c t u r e s a r a n g e o f
about 20 o f the 01 employees.
palletlzers. dcpalletlzcrs and
The announcement was made shrink-wrapping machines for
by Gerald A. Poulton. president materials handling applications,
and chief executive officer of primarily In the food and bever­
Simplimatic In Lynchburg. Va. age Industries. Simplimatic En­
He told employees, "long-term
gineering designs and builds
bunlnrss strategies and the complete package amd product
availability of manufacturing handling systems for consumer
capacity at the other company and Industrial product compa­
plants arc the factors that led to nies.
the decision to close the Sanford
Simplimatic Is a wholly owned
plant.”
subsidiary o f CnrnaudMetalbox.
"The decision which has been of Paris. France, and Is the third
made with great regret Is In the largest packaging compuny In
long term best Interest o f the the world.
Simplimatic organization, our
The Sanford operation will be
employees and customers." he transferred to other production
added. "T h e decision is Ir­ facilities In Lynchbu rg and
reversible."
Forest Lake. Minn., with the
LarTy Sliickler. President of Sanford facility expected to be
the Greater Sanford Chamber of completely closed down by Oc­
Commerce said It ts naturally
tober o f this year.
disappointing that the company
Slmpllmatlc's president said
saw the need to move out of the operations at the two other
Sanford to Its other locations,
facilities "are proceeding very
"but that's business life."
w e ll, w it h h e a lt h y o r d e r
The Sanford facility has been
backlogs."
B y N IC K R F IIP A U P
H e ra ld S t a f f W rite r

To assist employees not being
offered transfers, the company
tins engaged the services of
Drake Beam Morin, an Orlan­
do-based outplacement firm,
w h ic h w ill p ro v id e c a re e r
counseling and assistance in Job
searches.
Strlckler Indicated that while
this may be the loss of one
compuny. there Is still u positive
approach to be taken in conti­
nuing development of the busi­
ness-community.
He commented. "Actually, the
key to progress In Sanford Is to
continue having broad economic
development und sec what new
types o f operations can Ik * at­
tracted. not just In manufactur­
ing but tourism as well."
" I th in k we have fin a lly
reached a positive approach In
the c ity , with the d raw in g
together of various groups to
work on Improving the city." he
sild. "and these Include our
excellent airport, the work o f the
Waterfront committee, the Main
Street program, and of course
the work done by the Chamber
and support from the city."

M ahone
Continued from Page 1A
motion claimed
the state had not presented
sufficient evidence to convict
Mahone o f first degree murder.
When ull of the testimony was
finished, another defense motion
was submitted and the Judge
ruled favorably.
Regarding the surprise ending
to the case. Stone commented.
" I think that Judge Dickey
substituted his personal Judg­
ment for that of the Jury. It ts
something that should have
gone to the Jury. It was a Jury
question all o f the way and I Just
completely disagree with Judge
Dickey's ruling as a matter of
fact and as a matter of law ."
The Judge's ruling Is the
e q u iv a le n t to a not g u ilty
verdict. No other charge will be
(lied against Mahone In the cose.
Slone explained. " I f the Judge
felt so strongly about the case,
lie could have let the case go to
the Jury. If the Jury had found
him not guilty, fine. If the Jury
had found him guilty, the Judge
could have thrown the case out
after the Jury verdict. If he did
that. I would lx able to appeal
that. Since he did It before the
case was given to the Jury. I
cannot appeal It. If he did It after
the case was given to the Jury
and they came back with a
guilty verdict and then he threw
It out. I could have appealed It
and the Appellate Courts would
have made the decision. They
would have said. Judge Dickey
was right for throwing the Jury
verdict out or he was wrong for
throwing the Jury verdict out.
we'll reinstate the jury verdict."
Making the ruling as he did.

Stone said Judge Dickey com­
pletely destroyed any light or
remedy the prosecutor had to
appeal.
Further. Stone Mid Mahone's
testimony Indicated when he
pulled the gun from Lopez's
waistband and stepped back, the
threat o f Imminent danger was
r e m o v e d . S ton e c o n te n d s .
Mahone could have thrown the
gun away, ran away or shot the
victim in the knercap or ankle to
slop him.
During the trial, a number of
witnesses described the strained
relationship between Mahone
and Lopez. Mahone testified In
the weeks leading up to the
shooting, he stayed with friends
and returned home only when
Lopez was at work.
On the afternoon of March 4. a
friend failed to arrive to pick up
Mahone before lopez returned
from work. The teen described
how Lopez paced tuck and forth.
Just staring at the youth and
breathing heavily, not M y ln g
anything. Then as Mahone pre­
pared for a cookout late in the
evening. Lopez's taunting In­
creased as he tried to get the
teen to leave with him.
"There wasn’t any way I was
going to get Into the car."
Mahone said. "It wasn't Just a
ride."
Asked by the prosecutor why
he didn't Just leave to get away
from the taunts. Mahone replied.
"If I had turned my back on GUI.
I was definitely a dead m an."
Mahone described how Lopez
chased him around his aunt's
car when he finally decided to
leave the home. As his mother
and aunt were knocked to the
ground while trying to keep

Lopez aw ay from the teen.
Mahone said the victim grabbed
him In u headlock During the
struggle. Mahone said he felt the
grip of a handgun In Lopez
waistband and pulled It free. He
said he was about three feet from
Lopez when he fired.
"I pulled It out Immediately
and opened fire." Mahone Mid.
"I didn't hesitate at all. I shot
four or five limes until it was
empty "

P o tContinued from Page 1A
after­
noon following a search of her
home by agents o f the City
County Investigative Bureau.
A g e n ts report fin d in g four
plastic bags containing mari­
juana and drug paraphernalia.
In a statement to deputies.
Curtis wrote she used marijuana
to ease her pain and suffering
caused by "neuromuscular dis­
ease" and "spinal chord injury"
r e s u lt in g fr o m a 1088
automobile accident. She wrote
her doctor would not grant her a
prescription for the Illegal drug
ixcause of legal concerns.
" I have been using pot for a
year but have used It as an
herbal medicine lur hma. mus­
cle relaxant, pain reliever and
anti-depressant) as I am a retired
RN and my doctor w II only give
me very limited amounts of
medication to control my pain
and discomfort." Curtis wrote.
Lt. Paul Jayne, chief of the
CCIB. said whether Curtis was
using marljuuna for medical

reasons was Immaterial to her
sale o f a bag of marijuana to an
Informant July 2. Arrest reports
state Curtis and her 16-year-old
son were present when the
Informant bought the marijuana.
Curtis wrote In her statement
she o rigin a lly obtain ed the
marijuana from her son and his
friends, then began selling small
quantities to pay for her own
use. CCIB agents arc seeking
Curtis' son.
D r. J a m e s M c C h e s n e y .
director of the Research Institute
at the University o f Mlsslssppl
School of Pharmacy, said natu­
ral murijuana and its byproducts
are not legally available for
medication In the United States
T h e school grow s the only
legally-produced marijuana in
the United States, under a re­
search contract with the Na­
tional Institute on Drug Abuse.
McChesney M id at one time,
about a half dozen people were
granted permission to consume
marijuana for a specific type of
glaucoma, but those licenses

Under cross examination by
Stone. Mahone Mid he wanted
Lopez out o f the family home,
but that It wus his mother’s
decision, not his. Mahone also
Mid he was upset after learning
that Lopez hud threated to kill
him. Mahone Mid he was not In
fear for his life at times during
the evening and even brought
his children back to the home for
a cookout. He Mid he did not
fear for the Mfety of his brother
and sisters nt the home cither.
Mahone also told the Jury under
questioning he did not attempt
to call the police to Intervene In
the situation between the two
men.

W ayne Holmes, ch ief pro­
secutor In the Titusville office of
the Brevard-Semlnolc County
State Attorneys Office, said one
Florida appellate court has ac­
cepted the medleal-use defense,
even though the federal gov­
ernment docs not currently re­
cognize the medical benefits of
marijuana consumption.
"There arc plenty of Illegal
drugs on the street that have
been shown to have some medi­
cal benefits." Mid Holmes. "The
place for them to be considered
Is the FDA (U.S. Food and Drug
A d m i n i s t r a t i o n ) a n d th e
Legislature, not the street."

B u d g e tContinued from Page 1A
in planning our
future.”
R egarding taxation. Litton
recommended the rntllagr rate
remain the same as last year.
3.7648 mills. "Initially." he Mid.
"you may want to set it slightly
higher then consider lowering It
to this point. It's easy to reduce
the millage. but If you found a
need to raise It once you selected
a rate. It would lx difficult."
At the proposed millage rate, a
mill In Lake Mary Is projected to
represent $481,967 In 1994
compared to $455,214 In fiscal
year 1993
” 1 am proposing no increases
In permit fees or water and
sewer rates." he said, "with the
understanding that gnrbagc
charges will probably go up If
Seminole Countv Increas.-s their

tipping fees us they have In­
dicated."
As he discussed the millage
rate for the city. Litton displayed
a graph on the commission
c h a m b e rs v ie w in g screen ,
showing a comparison of millage
rates for all cities within Semi­
nole County. The city of Winter
Springs wus the lowest with
Lake Mary second lowest, almost
equal to Winter Springs. San­
ford's millage was depicted as
the highest In the entire county.
Included in the report, he
predicted a growth In prosperity.
"W e will not be at all surprised
to sec construction activity begin
on some of the approved but
currently undeveloped parcels."
he said.
T h e proposed fisc a l year
1993/94 budget document lists a
n u m b e r o f p r o j e c t s and

During the shooting. Mahone
said It was like Lopez wus
"possessed or crazy." when he
kept moving toward the teen.
After firing off the shots. Mahone
Mid hr turned and ran across a
nearby field.
"I didn't know he was hit."
Mahone testified. W hen he
stopped running. Muhonr said
he sat briefly on a fallen tree in u
pond, where hr "let the gun go."
Later that night, he railed his
aunt's home and wus told Lopez
was dead. He talked to a lawyer
und Sirranged to turn himself In
to authorities.

have been rescinded, he Mid.
McChesney said a synthetic
subslllutc, Mari not. Is available
lor the treatment o f nausea and
loss o f ap p etite cuuscd by
chemotherapy for cancer.
Dr. John Taylor, director of
the Florida Board of Pharmacy,
said Marinol Is the only mari­
juana-type drug which can be
legally prescribed in the state.

purchases which have been In­
cluded for financing In the new
budget. They Included a number
of public Mfety vehicles, road
Improvement projects and the
addition of several full and part
time employees In various de­
partments.
The annual budget message
was presented for Infomatlonal
purposes only during last night's
City Commission meeting.
Work sessions will begin on
line Items and specific proposals
next week, at a special called
commission meeting Thursday.
July 22. beginning at 7 p.m. The
tentative millage may also be set
at that time.
The commission has sched­
uled public hearings on August
5th and 19th to go over the
budget In detail.

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S a l e S t a r t s 7/16/93

siCE HARDWARE A C E HARDWARe A C E HARDWARE A C E HARDWARE i\CE HARDWA

LENA If CQUAOE BROWN
Lena McQuage Brown. 89.
1520 S. Grant St.. Long wood,
died Tuesday. July 13. at Longwood Healthcare Center. Mrs.
Brown was a licensed prallcal
nurse. Bom Feb. 25. 1904. In
South Carolina, she moved to
Central Florida In 1967. She was
Methodist.
Survivors Include daughter.
Sarah B. Morgan. Longwood:
sister. Mildred. Alabama: three
grandchildren and two great­
grandchildren.
Gaines Carey Hand Gurden
Chapel Funeral Home. Longwood. In charge of arrange­
ments.

Trico Co. for 25 years. Born
Sept. 14. 1904 in Buffalo. N.Y..
she moved from Willtarnsvlllc.
N.Y. to Deltona, where she
resided since 1973. She wus a
member o f First United Method­
ist Church. Deltona and United
Methodist Women's Circle.
Survivors Include husbund.
Leslie: sister. Ethel Janosi.
Maitland.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home. Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.

ROSA P1ACENT1

Rosa Piaccntl. 75. Norfolk
Court. Longwood. died Wednes­
day, July 14. at South Seminole
C om m u n ity Hospital. L o n g­
wood. M rs. Piaccn tl was a
CARL JOHN BRYOGER
homemaker. Bom Nov. I I . 1917
C a rl J o h n B r y g g e r . 8 6 . In Detroit, she moved to Central
Wll-O-Wlk Drive. Casselberry, Florida In 1988. A member of
died Thursday. July 15. at Church o f the Annunciation
South Sem inole Com m unity C a th o lic C h u rch , she also
Hospital. Longwood. Mr. Brygger belonged to the Italian Club.
was a plumber for the Orange
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e s o n .
County School Board. Bom Feb. B ernard. L o n g w o o d . P eter.
27. 1907. In Manchester. N.H.. M aitland: sisters. C h ristin e
he moved to Central Florida In Fanto. Altamonte Springs. Millie
1952. He was a Navy veteran.
Sbordonc, Brooklyn. N.Y.: four
Survivors Include wife. Stella: grandchildren.
daughters, Shlrcly Cannella.
B a ld w in -F a lrch lld Funeral
Fern Park. Martha Howe. Cas­ Home. Oaklawn Chapel. Lake
selberry. Vera Cayll. W inter Mary. In charge of arrange­
Park: seven grandchildren and ments.
three great-grandchildren.
All Faith Creamatlon Service. JOHN HAROLD TAYLOR
Joh n H a r o ld T a y lo r . 48.
Casselberry, In charge o f ar­
Spring Oaks Boulevard. Alta­
rangements.
monte Springs, died Wednesday.
J u ly 1 4 . a t P a r k L a k e
EVELYN M. LANOON
Evelyn M. Langon. 82. Ortenta Healthcare. Winter Park. Mr.
Drive, Altamonte Springs, died Taylor was a retired restaurant
Wednesday. July 14. at Florida manager. Bom June 15. 1944.
Hospital. Orlando. Mrs. Langon In Cleveland, he moved to Cen­
was a production line worker for tral Florida In 1961. He was a

member o f Palm Sprins Drive
Baptist Church.
Survivors Include wife. Rose
Murlc: daughters. Dianne Eggcrl.
Fort Worth. Texas. Lori Wertz.
Springfield. Mo.. 1.1m . Altamonte
Springs: son. Michael. A lta ­
monte Springs: sisters. Jeannlc
Huffman. ArkattMs. Carol De­
nton. Marco Island. Elite Mac
Morlarty. Florida. Ann Lewis.
Fort Lauderdale: parents. Harold
und Ola Taylor. Melbourne: two
grandchildren.
B aldw in -F alrch lld Funeral
Home. Forest City, in charge of
arrangements.

VIRGINIA CARLETON
"J IN N Y " WHITMORE
Vlrginlu Carleton " J in n y "
Whitmore. 72. 382 Kantor Blvd..
Casselberry, died Wednesday.
July 14. at her residence. Mrs.
Whitmore was a homemaker.
Bom Oct. 8. 1920. In Washing­
ton D.C.. she moved to Central
Florida In 1980. A member of
W e s tm in s te r P r e s b y te r ia n
Church, she also belonged to
Greater Orlundo Rose Society,
was national trainer of Girls
Scouts In the United States.
Panama und Kenya und chair of
Lady Buden-Powcll Committee
International.
Survivors include husbund.
James L.: son. Murk. Columbus.
O h io: d a u g h te rs . B eth W .
Hamilton. Deltona. Suzanne,
Austin. Texas: brother. Carleton
T. Jones Jr.. Oviedo: four grand­
children.
Gaines Carey Hand Garden
Chapel Funeral Home, Long­
wood. In charge of arrange­
ments.

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S an ford H erald

�• A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, July 18, 1993

Gay rights advocates
threaten to sue over ban
operator who was discharged
after he announced on a televi­
s i o n p r o g r a m t h a t h e 's
homosexual.
U.S. District Judge T erry
Hatter Jr. In Los Angeles ruled
that people cannot be thrown
out of the military’ based on their
sex u a l o rie n ta tio n " I n the
absence of sexual conduct which
Interferes with the m ilitary
mission of the armed forces."
That ruling was appculed by
the government and Is {lending
before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court
o f Appeals.
"It's unclear what effect the
outcome of challenges to the old
p olicy will have on a new
policy." Rubensteln said.

" I t v io la te s fre e speech
By RICHARD CAMLLI
because
It both prohibits you
A s s o c i a t e d P r e s s W r it e r ____________
from speaking and forces you to
WASHINGTON - Gay rights lie. The government can’t say
advocates say they will sue you can be Jewish and serve In
quickly If President Clinton's the military as long os you don't
policy on homosexuals In the tell anybody you're Jewish. We
military’ provides anything less b e lie v e the sam e rationale
applies here." he said.
than "full equality."
About an equal-protection
"W e will be bringing a lawsuit
claim.
Rubensteln said. "The
against a policy we believe Is
military cannot ban homosexual
u n c o n s tit u t io n a l," W illia m
s o d o m y w it h o u t b a n n in g
Kubcnsteln o f the American
Civil Liberties Union's lesbian heterosexual sodomy as well."
Chal Feldblum. a Georgetown
and gay rights project said
University law professor and
Thu rsday. " I f the president
doesn't grant full equality, this legal adviser to the Campaign for
ultimately could end up In the Military Service, a gay-rights
group, said an equal-protection
Supreme Court."
Clinton Is expected to an­ challenge could succeed.
"There's a trend In the courts
nounce a new policy soon,
to granting gay people greater
perhaps today, to replace the
rights under the 14th Amend­
m i l i t a r y ’ s 5 0 -y e a r ban on
m ent's equal protection pro­
homosexuals.
vision." she said. "T h e Supreme
Sources In the gay community
C o u r t In 198 6 fo r e c lo s e d
say Defense Secretary Les Aspln
challenges based on personal
has told White House officials
privacy so a new route was
that the Joint Chiefs of Staff will
accept only a policy allowing
needed."
The high court ruled seven
homosexuals to serve as long as
they refrain from public declara­ years ago that states may make
homosexual sodomy a crime.
tions of their sexual orientation.
The court for years has ducked
That's similar to the "don't
ruling on the constitutionality of
ask. don't tell" policy suggested
the military's ban on homosex­
by Sen. Sam Nunn. D-Ga..
uals. despite plenty of litigation
chairman of the Senate Armed
over It In lower courts
Services Committee.
A federal Judge In California
That's not good enough, gay
struck down the ban as un­
rights advocates say.
"S u ch a policy Is an un­ constitutional In January, ruling
that It violated equal-protection
constitutional restriction on free
rights
s p e e c h and a v io la tio n o f
The ban had been challenged
e q u a l- p r o t e c tio n r ig h t s . "
by Keith Melnhold. a Navy tonur
Rubensteln said.

The Inevitable legal challenge
to the president's new policy.
Feldblum Mid. will name Aspln
as the defendant, but the Job of
defending the policy will fall to
the Justice Department.
Attorney General Janet Reno,
asked Thursday If she opposed
the "don't ask. don't tell" policy,
said: "A ll we're doing Is review­
ing It to make sure we're giving
the t&gt;est advice to the president.”
a c c o rd in g to spokesw om an
Caroline Aronovltz.
"W e will be on opposite sides
and that Is truly unfortunate."
Feldblum said. " T h e le g a l
arguments the Justice Depart­
ment's lawyers may be forced to
make In defense of the policy
could have significant Impact
down the road.

8 skinheads arrested in alleged
violent plot to foment race war
By LINDA DCUTtCH
A P S p e c ia l C o rre s p o n d e n t

LOS ANGELES - Eight skinheads were
arrested In an alleged plot to foment race war by
blowing up a black church and assassinating
Rodney King.
The suspects — members of a neo-Nazi group
called the Fourth Reich Skin Heads - were
arrested In raids In four Southern California
counties Thursday.
The plotters wanted to "help start a race war."
FBI agent Charlie Parsons said. "W e prevented
despicable and violent acta from occurring."
The alleged ringleader. Chris Fisher, and his
young followers discussed assassinating King on
Aug. ♦. wtfrn the two policemen convicted of
violating the black motorist's civil rights were to
be sentenced, law enforcement officials said.
"Fisher said he had been thinking o f targeting a
baseball player or Rodney King." according to
court papers. "Fisher said he felt King would be a
better target." No ballplayers were mentioned by
name In the court papers.
The white supremacists also allegedly planned
to bomb the First African Methodist Episcopal
Church In South Central Los Angeles and mow
down Its members with machine-gun fire.
They also talked of assassinating such figures
as New York activist Al Sharpton. Nation of Islam
leader Louis Farrakhan and rap music star
Eazy-E. the FBI said.
At a news conference, federal agents displayed
Uzl machine guns, pipe bombs, rifles and
handguns, as well as Nazi uniforms and pictures
o f Adolf Hitler.
"1 never feel safe.” King told reporters
Thursday. The acquittal In state court of the four
white officers charged In hts beating touched off
last year’s riots.
"I, like many other persons, do feel a little
frightened when threats ore made." King said,
"but this Is one chapter In my life that I'd like to
shut the door on."
In u lVk-year Investigation, an undercover FBI
agent was Intioduced to Fisher’s group by an
Informant posing as a clergyman for a white
supremacist church. The agent was so convinc­
ing that he persuaded the skinheads to entrust
him with their guns ond bombs for safekeeping,
authorities said.
Fisher. 20. of Long Beach, was the only one
charged specifically with conspiring to attack the
church, a major hub for South Central's black
community.
Five other adults were charged with weapons
o ffe n s e s : G crem y R lncinan. 22. and Jill
Scarborough. 22. both of Orange County; Josh
Lee. 23. of Costa Mesa; and Chris Nadai. 35. and

Legal N o II cbs

Legal Notices

Notit* el Sheriff* b i t
NOTICE IS HERESY 0IVEN
that by virtu* ol that certain
Writ et Ei*&lt;ut&gt;on ittued out of
and under lha Mai ol th# County
Court of SaminoW County, Flor
Ida. Co m ttO S M P upon a final
ludgmant rendered In Iho a for*
Mid Court on ttw llth day Of
January A D. IN I. In that cor
lain caM antltlad: First Union
National Bank of Florida t/k/a
Florida National Bank. Plaintiff
vo. C. John Schlattwr, Dolan
dant wtikh a forma Id Writ of
Elocution wot dtCvorod to mo
at VwrIU of SaminoW County,
Florida and I ha** WvWd upon
all ttw right. M l* and Intorotl of
Ih o d a f a n d a n f , 0 . John
Schlamar. In and to ttw follow
log datentwd property. Mid
property being located In Sami
not* County, Florida mor* par
tkuler ly dotcrlbad at followt:
O n* l* * J Dodge Station
Wagon. Gray In color, VIN.
f1B 4 G D 1 1 TID S 4 l4 li; being
tterod al Altamonte Towing
Sorvk*. Inc.
l o t Shortft
of Somlnoto County. Florid*,
will at 11:09 A Jd onttwJnddoy
of Augwtt A D IML otter lor
M k and M il to ttw hlghotl
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY ANO
ALL EXISTINO LIENS, of Iho
Front (Weot) Door, of the Hap*,
of ttw Seminole County Court
houM In Senlord Florida, ttw

above dttcrlbod property.
That Mid M l* It being made
to Mtitfy the torme ol thit Writ
o&lt; Elocution
Nolle* regarding Iho Amorl
cant with OlMbtllliat Act ot
IMO. pertont with a dlMblllty
needing tpeclal accomodallont
to participote In ttw proceeding
thould contact ttw civil dlvltkn
ol ttw ihorltrt office, enforce*
bio wrltt tec lion. I M l nth
Street. Senlord. Florid#, at katt
five dayt prior to ttw proceed
Ing Telephone: f407) 1104440

TTD (4071 m x m
Donald F.Etimgor. Sheriff
Samlnoi* County. Florid*
Publittwd: July 1. ». 14. 71 with
th* M kon Augwll 7. m i
DEC II
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlnatt at 22*
P r t tiv ltw Av#., Long wood,
Somlnoto County. Florid*, under
lha Fktltlawt Namo *1 UNI­
VERSAL ELECTRIC WIRE A
| Inland to
D fv ltlo n o f C grtW S tlB ttii
Toilahattae. Florida. In ac­
cordance with ttw prevalent of
the Fklltleut Namo Slahdot.
T o Wit: Section M i Ot. Florid*
Statufet l«*t.
JoycoH Weimen
Pvbllth: July 14. m i
DEO 141

his wlfr. Doris Nadai. 42. of Los Angeles.
Two unidentified minors also were arrrsted. but
the charges weren't disclosed.
Fisher. Lee and Nadai were held without ball.
Mrs. Nadai was freed on $25,000. Kinrman and
Scarborough were released without ball
Nadai Is a flight engineer for Continental
Airlines and was suspended Thursday without
pay. His wife Is a real estate saleswoman The
other suspects' occupations were not Immediate­
ly known
Fisher was arTestrd as he and two Juveniles
were preparing a letter bomb Intended lor an
Orange County rabbi, authorities said.
Court papers said Fisher boasted of a reb. 12
pipe bomtumack on the home o f a member bf the
Spur I'ow#. the Lakewood high school gang of
athletes accused of sexually assaulting girls for
points. The bomb damaged the home but Injured
no one.
Fisher said Ihr posse member was targeted
"because he was half Aslan and half Mexican and
... he embarrassed the white race." court papers
said.
Fisher also lold undercover agents he hud
thrown a Molotov cocktail al u synagogue without
causing damage, and bragged of a pipe bomb
attack on a black man In the city's Paramount
district, according lo court papers. It was not
Immediately known If the man was hurt.
Despite their bloody plans, the group was
"unsophisticated." Parsons said. For Instance,
Parsons said, members didn't know, despite
weeks of publicity, that Nelson Mandrlu visited
the church a week ago.

Legal Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M44IS CA I4 X
H O M E S A V IN G S OF
A M E R IC A . FSB. fo rm e rly
known at HOME SAVINGS OF
AMERICA. F A..
Plaintiff,

vt

J O S E P H G. B IR O and
FA B IO LA BIRO, h it w it*.
JOHN DOE and JANE DOE.
flctlllout namet repraMntlng
tananti In p etttttlon . and
FORD CONSUMER CREOIT
COMPANY.
Dtlendentt
NOTICE OF ACTIONPROPERTY
TO JotaphO Biro and Fablola
Biro, hit wilt, ond ill unknown
h o lrt. d t v lte tt. g ra n lo o t.
attignett lltnort. creditor!
trutloet. or other claimant*
claiming by. through, under or
agalntt them
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIED thal an action to loracioM
a mortgage on ttw following
property In Seminole County.
Florida:
Lot 14. Spring Valley Ch*M.
according to ttw plot thereof ot
recorded In Plat Book 27. Pogat
17 and It. ol ttw Public Record*
ol SomlnoW County. Florida
AIM known at 110 Spring
C h a t* C irc le . A lta m o n te
Sprlngt. FloridaI77U.
hat b**n Iliad agalntl you. and
you era required to ierv# a copy
ot your written detente* If any.
to It. on ttw plalntllf t attorney,
whoM name and addratt It
Robert M Quinn el Carlton.
Field*. Ward. Emmanuel. Smith
A Cutler. P A . Pott Ottlco Bo«
H it. Tempo. Florida 11441. on
or before July 3*. lit ), and fit*
t»w original with lha clerk ol thlt
court either be'or* tervlce on
plaintiff* attorney or Immodl
otoly theroottor; ottwrwlM o
default will b* entered agalntl
you lor ttw rtllel demanded In
the complain! or petition
WITNESS my hand and lha
tael ot Mid court on Juno 73.

Iffl.

(Court Sool)
M AR YANN ! MORSE
CLERK. CIRCUIT COURT
■y: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
Pubiith Juno IS A July 1. *. M.
m i
DEF 144

I

C A tiNO .niirsccni

A L A F A Y A WOODS HOME­
OWNERS ASSOCIATION. INC .
Plaintiff.
V*
PHILLIP B CARTER.
Defendant
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TOCHAPTER4S
Nolle* I* given Itwt pur*u*nt
to Order cl Final Judgment in
Foretknure deled July 4. ttfl.
In CaM No f l IS7I CC 71 Z. ot
the County Court In and lor
Seminole County. Florida. In
which A L A F A Y A WOODS
H O M E O W NE R S ASSOCIA
TION. INC . I* th* Plain!ill and
PHILLIP B CARTER I* m*
Defendant, | will Mil lo th*
high**! and bell bidder Ior ca*h
at th* Watt front door ol the
Sem.nole County CourthOuM in
Sanford. Florida, at II 00 a m .
an Augutt S. Iff], th* following
dew' 'bed property **t forth in
th* Order el Final Judgment
Lot (0. ALAFAYA WOODS
P h a se ll. at recorded in Plel
Book 11. gage* *4 through 71. of
ttw Public Record* ol Seminole
County. Florida
DATED July 4. Ift l

OEGtl

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE f IO H TIIN TM
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
OENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO *2 IM l C A U L
lo an

MORTGAGE CORPORATION
Plaintiff
r*
OONALOD LEKICH
Defendant i * |
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pwrtuent to 0 Final Judgment ot
Foredotur* dated Jim* It :tt)
and entered In CaM No t ) 77*1
CA 14 L. at 'ha Circuit Court ot
tho E IG H TEENTH Judicial
Circuit M end tor SEMINOLE
County. Florida wtwretn FED
ERAL HOME LOAN MOAT
GAGE C O R P O R A T IO N l»
P la in tiff and OONALD 0
LEKICH. at *l . or* Defendant*
I will tail te ttw htghatt and bet'
b-dd*r tor catn at ttw Wett front
door Ot th* CourthOuM. M San
lord. SEMINOLE County. Fkr
id* at 11 00 o'clock A M on
Augutt 11. I e*l l«w totlowing
dew "bed property 0* M* forth
in Mid Fmol Judgment to wit
Tho North *| feet ot Lot 1*.
and Let » . LESS THE North *4
t**t thereof CUTLER COVE at
per Plat thereat at retarded m
Plat Boo* 11. page I* PubiK
Record* of Seminole County.
Florida
OATEO Juty II. ten
MAR VANN I MORSE
A* Clerk at Mid Court
By Jan* E JaeewK
At Deputy Clerk
Pubiith July I*. 11. Ifrt
DEG let

j

vt

NO RM AN W M A T H E W S :
CITIBANK. FSB f/k/a Clllcorp
Saving* ol Florid*, a Federal
Saving* and Loan Attociallon
and U N K N O W N TE
HANTS OWNERS.
Defendant*
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO NORMAN W MATHEWS
ANO ALL PARTIES CLAIM
IN G I N T E R E S T S B Y .
THROUGH. OR A G A IN S T
N O RM AN W M A T H E W S .
C U R R E N T R E S ID E N C E
UNKNOWN
You ere notified that an action
lo lorectOM a mortgage on Iho
following property In SaminoW
County. Florida:
LOT 21. FOREST HILLS. * «
cording to ttw Plat Iherecl at
Racerdtd In P ia l Book 10
IPagalt) at and so ol m* Public
Record* el SaminoW County,
Florida
commonly known ot 442 Pint
Drive. Altamonte Spring*. Flor­
ida 2271*244*. hat been filed
agalntl you. CITIBANK. FSB
l/k/a Citicorp Saving* ol Flor
Ida. a Federal Saving* and Loan
Attociallon.- and UNKNOWN
TENANTS/OWNERS. and you
art required to larva a copy of
your written detente*. II any. to
If on RICHARO S. MclVER.
ESQUIRE. Plaintiff* attorney*.
whOM addratt It: McWhlrtar,
Grandofl A Reeve*. P A , 100
Norm Tampa Slreat. Sulfa 2*00.
Tampa. Florida 13403. on or
bator* Augutt II. IMl. and flto
th* original with lha CWrk ol
mit Court althor bttora Mrvlco
on Plalntllf l attorney or Imm*
dlotely tfwreoltor. othorwlM a
Default will b* entered again*!
you tor th* relief demanded in
fh* Complaint
Dated: July U. ttfl
'
(COURT SEAL)
M AR YA N N ! MORSE
HonorabW Maryonne Motm
CLERKOF THE COURT
P.0 Drawer C
Sanford. FL 1177104S*
By: Rum King
Deputy CWrk
Publlth: July I*. 21. 20 A Augutt
*. IMl
DEG 14*

SIERPUTOWSKI. hi* wlfa. at a
Statutory Truttee* o* FUTURE
PROPERTY SERVICES. INC .
a defunct Florida Corporation.
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action ter Braach of Equipment
L**M and Guarantee hat be*"
tiled again*! you ord you are
required to Mfv# a copy et yeur
written detente*. II any. te It on
Pldlntltft attorney. Anthony P
Valent* Jr. Etqulrt. whoM
add'*** I* 1710 Central Avenue.
SI Peteriburg Florida D7I7. on
or before Augutt *. It fl and tiW
ttw original with ttw CWrk ot
mi* Court either before t*r»tce
on Plaintiff* attorney or Imi-w
diately thereafter, other wit* a
default Will be entered agamtl
you tor m* relWI demanded m
ttw petition
WITNESS my hand *"d 1**1
ot thit Court onJurwll. 1M3
ISEALI
FRANCARLTON
At CWrk ot th* Court
BV Sonya M Bowden
Deputy Ci*r»
Publlth Jun* IS A July 1. *. &gt;4.
IM l
OEF DO

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AN D FO R
‘
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASINO. t l 24I2-CAI4 O
SANDRA SCHWARZ.
Plaintiff.
ARTHUR G R E E R . FRANK
RAUCOM and JEWEL
BAUCOM. hit wit*.
Delandanlt
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
•hat purtuent to a Final Jwdg
rrwnt «• toreclotur* rendtred
on July *. I Ml, In thal certain
cauM pending in ttw Circuit
Court In and for Semlnei*
County. F lo r id a , w h trtln
Sandra Schwert It Plaintiff, and
Arthur Greer, Frank Baucom
and Jewel Baucom are Oeten
deni*. Civil Action CauM No
*114)7 CAI4 G. I. MARVANNE
MORSE. CWrk at the atoreie d
Court, will al 11 00 AM on
Augutt 12. IM l otter tor t«i*
and Mil te ttw hlghotl bidder lor
cath al THE WEST FRONT
* DOOR OF THE SEMINOLE
C O U N T Y C O U R TH O U S E
SANFORD. FLORIDA th* Id
lowing dttenbed real properly
tlluel* end being In Sammd*
County. Florida te wit
Let II. Block "K." ENGLISH
ESTATES. Unit Two accord.ng
te the pial thereof at recorded in
Plat Book 1). page U Pubhc
Recordt et Semlnow County
Floy id*
Said taw will be m*de purtu
ant to and In order lo Mlltfy " v
termi ol te d Final Judgment
DATED July II IM l
MARVANNE MORSE
CLERKOF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By JeneE Jawwlc
Deputy Clerk
Publitn July I*. 21. IM )
DEG MO
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
None* it h#r*tyy given m*t l
am engaged in butlnatt al SCI
Swealeawr Club CircW Long
wood FL 1277* 2110. Stmmot*
County. Florida, unde' m*
Flctlllout N#m# e l MODEL
HOME MANAGEMENT SERV
ICES, end that I intend to
regitWr taid name with the
D lv ltle n e l C orp o ra tion !
Tailahattee. Florid* In *&lt;
rordenc* with m* provitWm of
ttw Flctlllout Nam* S'a'u'et
ToWlI Section t*S M. FWr de
Statufet IMl
MOBILE HOME
MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Ian W Pwrc*
Public July I*. IM l
DEG 147

~hlOTICE OF PUBLICATION
Per tonal Property tenanting
ol furniture. maHrattat tirtt.
lam p*, d ra tta rt. clothing,
electronic*, induttrlai equip
m#nt mitctlleneout beret end
other per tonal Item* will be
a tpoted ol Mi ecro-dence with
Florida Statute* Salt Storage
Facility Act. Section (1 (0* to
Mtitfy owner* iwn tor rent* du*
Thit dnpotltwn will tat* place
on July 11. IM1 at S 01 P M *1
the following edd-etl
AAA Security Storage
JtlOW Airport Btvd
Sanford FL W 7I
A 01 Herkrwtt. Samml
A 14Orr. Ralph
L IU Been*. Daw
LIJI Moaner. Mark
B II Mann. Brand*
B II Mitchell. Tothia
B 71 Mann. Brenda
C 01 Groover. ScoM
C 14 RobineH*. Gary
C 14 Vent*. Cynthia
C J* Robinette Gary
O 07 Crowe. Donald A Oian*
D II Cuplt. Larry
D 73 Cebean. Paula
D D Wilton. Sandra
D 3S &amp;r**n RutMl
E 01 Neteon. Gereifl.rw
E 11 Reynold* Kamwen
E IA Hubbard Dwayne
E *B Payte". Joeapn
E IOC Dart*. Marvin t
EIIB Taylor. Diana
F Cl Gilbert, Bill
P OlCrandei. Emmltt
P M Cup'!. Larry
Publlth: July IA D. IM1
DEG I4S

UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE AUCTION
*/•!/*!
tt American
IJCML7*IXJTI4US7
* ] jeep
IJeFTTtSOPLSSriei
*0 Chevrolet
IX4«7A*7t04ll
(0 Chevrowt
CLNUA4U33.I
*4Chevrolet IYISK i*41GZ17*77I
74 Ford
4E(1L17M u
IS Mercury IME6Pt!lSFH4U0CS
tlN ltten 1N4EB72AXMC 714)4!
171*7!)
ISBuiCk
IG *AP»* m DhjO'7I’
74ChevroWt
IHS7H4170744*
TVDodge
NL2*O*Bl40S«0
4) Gee
JCNBE l*UXP»*71**d
Altement* Towing
117 Marker St
All Soot

tel* Begin* At M MAM

View I Hov» Prior
Pubiith: July I*. IM l
DEG 1*4

FREEBIE A D S
Takeadvantageotthisspecialotter

Legal Notices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
CIVIL DIVISION
CASE NO. *1 *7! CAI4L
F E D E R A L HOME L O A N
MORTGAGE CORPORATION.
Plaintiff,

a n d V I V I A N A

FRANK MCDANIEL, deeaatad.
and ALL HEIRS. DEVISEES.
G R A N T E E S . A SSIG N E E S.
L IE N O R S . C R E D IT O R S .
TRUSTEES OR CLAIMANTS
BV. THROUGH. UNDER OR
AGAINST FRANK McOANIEL.
dacaatad. JOSEPH TAYLOR
ADAMS. A LICE ANN
S M IT H S RS. D O R O T H Y
CRAWLEY. RAYMOND
ADAMS. DONALD H
CAMPBELL and BETTY C
CAMPBELL, and all unknown
h air*, d e r lia a * . g ra n t***,
attigrwet. lienor* creditor*
tru ttee* or c la lm a n li by.
through, under or again*!
DONALD H CAMPBELL and
BETTYC CAMPBELL.
Oelendanti
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO DONALD H CAMPBELL
and BETTY C CAMPBELL and
all unnown hair*. daviMet,
gran**** berwfltlerWt credi
tort V o'her unknown pertont
or unknown tpoutet claiming
by. through and under OONALO
H CAMPBELL and BETTY C
CAMPBELL
Retldanc# Unknown
YOU ARE HERBV NOTIFI
EO mat an action to toractoM a
Mortgage an ttw following da
tenbad property in S*mmol*
County. Florida, t* wit
Th* Wett 100 feet ot the Eat'
M0 •**• lying North et Old
Sanford G#»wve Road, let! th*
North }I0 tool 0t Southwett '■» ot
Southwet I It at Section f. Town
thip K South. Rang* 22 Eat'.
Samlno&lt;#County. Florida
hat been filed agamef you and
y«w are required *o Mr re • copy
at your written detent** It any,
upon LIU R Poerton Ctqu'ro.
Frith A Stump P A . 700 S
Orange A m u r Suit* U U Pott
Office Be. DM Orlando Flor
Ida 77*07 an or betor* th* llth
day at Augutt. I**l. and nw th*
original With ttw Clerk *t mi*
Circuit Court either betor* MTV
ICO upon th* Plaintiff* attorney
or immediately fharaettar;
ettwrwiM. a default will b*
entered ogamtt you tor ttw
rtiwl demanded W the com
pi*mt or Petition
WITNESS my hand and ***■
ot thi* Court on tni* 7m day at
July. 1**1
ISEALI
ALARY ANNE MORSE
Cl e r k o f t h e
CIRCUIT COURT
By Caraila V Fkern
Deputy CWrk
Publlth July f. I*. 21.10. IFF1
DEG *1

Clark of County Court
By /*/Jean Brillant
Deputy Clerk
Pubhth July f. I*. I ff l

home

T * H E O D O R E J
SIERPUTOWSKI. Individually.
T H E O O O R E J
SIERPUTOWSKI and VIVIAN
A SIERPUTOWSKI. hi* wll#
a t a Statutory Tru tieet el
FUTURE PROPERTY SERV
ICES. INC. a defunct Florida
Corporation.
Oatendanti
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO
TM EOOORE J
SIERPUTOWSKI. Individually.

INTHECIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO i *11174 CAMP
SUN BANK. NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION.
Plain! lit.

MARVANNE MORSE

fe d e r a l

IN THE COUNTY COURT
INANDFOR
ORANOECOUNTY.
FLORIDA
COUNTY CIVIL CASE NOi
c a n MAT*
BUSINESS CREDIT LEASING.
INC.. n/k/a THE MANIFEST
GROUP, a Dlvltton of LYON
FINANCIAL SERVICES. INC.
a Minna tola Corporal.on.
Plalntllf.

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given thal I
am engaged In butln*** at H70
N Hwy 17-tl. Longwood. Sami
not* County. Florida, under th*
F I c t l l le u * N a m * o l J.
TAYLO R ’ S CUSTOM VANS,
and that I Inland lo reglttar Mid
name with th* Dlvlden •( Car
porallont. Tallahatta*. Florid*.
In accord*nr* with th* pro
viiiont ol the Flctlllout Nam*
Statute*. ToWIt Section M l 0».
Florida Statute* l**l.
Jama* E Taylor
Publlth: July 14. t t f l
DEG 14]

IN THE COUNTY COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN A N O FOR
.SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

This is a great opportunity lor you to enjoy the same great results as
our regular classified custom ers at no cost to you. Just follow these
instructions.
1.
2.
3.
4
5.

Ads will be scheduled to run for 10 days.
Price of Item m ust be stated in the ad and be $100 or less.
Only 1 Item per ad and 1 ad per household per week.
You should call and cancel as soon as Item sells.
Available to Individuals (non Commercial) only. Does not
apply to rentals or garage &amp; yard sales.
6. The ad must be on the form shown below and either be
m ailed In or presented In person fully prepared to the
Sanford Herald Classified Departm ent.
7 . Ad w ill start as soon as possible.
..............
7.
8. C la s s ifie d M a n ag em e nts d e c is io n on co p y a c c e p ta b ility w ill
be fin a l.

S

a n

fo

rd

H e ra ld
MAIL TO:

M J M IM *

CLASSIFIED

F R E E B IE A D S

Sanford, FL 32772-1667
. ONLY ONE ITEM

• MUST INCLUDE PRICE

• 1100 OR LESS

PRINT AD HEREl.

.PHONE.

NAME___
ADDRESS
I HofaM (

I Subscrifco To Tho I

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A Mexican summer

D u o t o p l a y f o r U . S . in P a n - A m e r i c a n G a m e s

LOCALLY
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�I &gt; - San lord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, July 10. 1993

Byars becomes a Dolphin

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

Higgs was a Plan B acquisition in 1990.

A n o o liM Press
Thursday night
Flc»1 raca — Ikli, Mt 1145
) JC'iBattlaScar
17.10 toe la o
] Omni Ratlean
no 7to
4 Roar Bungaa Jump
4 40
Q I I 1) 21.44 7 ( I All) l«.M lAtl l l I N T
&lt;5 7 41274.74
Sectnd raca — m » , 0: 44.45
IMIkays Slick
11 70 1100 1110
7Jatbo Reckaf
lia o J to
I f irval Chapter
4 70
Q ( M l 41.44 7 11*11) II,M (All-7) 11.4* T
II 7 1) 1*4 44 DDO l l t l M
Third raca - UM, O: ll.ee
I Tlog* Buddy
410 770 400
7 E oar Draw
4 40 4 40
* Chales Camlnl
100
0117) 14 4* 7(1-711144 T 11-7-4) 45.74
Fourth race — 14M. B: 11.14
* Blatter Vicky
&lt;0 00 1 40 1 40
7$w**tOlv*
4 70 1 40
* Chaarlul Dig?*'
1 10
Q (4 7114,14 7 (4 7) 14.1ST 111(1117.40
Filth raca - UM. A: N.M
IR M s Virginia
110 140 170
IM iu Applause
100 1 10
4lntl*go
140
Q ( X ) 4 40 7 0 4) 14 44 T (1 * 4) 717.4*
With r a c a - 1* 44, C: 14 41
SM I Moonstone
7 40 1 40 1 00
7 Full Ol Co
7 40 1 00
I Aok Catay At Bat
1 *0
O II 7) 15.10 7 11-7) 114.4* T 11-7-1) 17* M
7lck 1 l a m 1 at 1 ptM 44 M
Seventh raca — UM, 0 : 17.11
4 WlecoOrlvar
4 40 1 40 7 *0
7 ML K ilt Me A Win
*40 170
4 MT’4 Downtown
) 40
0 (14) I AM 7 *41) 17 M T (4 14) 14)44 S
I4 I4 4 I7 IU 4
Eighth 1 aca — UM. C: II 14
1Bob * Back
4 10 100 140
4 Night Owl Andy
1 70 7 40
■ p it i*nr » Ml
700
a (M l (I M 7 0 4 ) 77.M T I M A ) 71 M
Minth raca - UM. Ai 11.17
HJrbn’lOunta
1100 4 00 10 40
4 RC Salty Angel
* 00 * 00
1 RV Spellbinder
II tO
Q (7 4) tl.M 7 ( 1 All) 74.7* (AIIA) 17.14 T
II A I ) 1174 M QD 1)4 A 7 All) U.M ( M A
A All) 141.M
Itth r a c a -U M ,C : 11.41
1RV Divine Outlaw
It 40 410 4 00
7 Hotrod Fir*
4 40 110
I Dancing Dlvar
14.10
Q (1-7) M.M 7 (A I ) 4*4.1* T (A M I Ml .M
lllhraca — 14M.Di)iJ4
*R V Blockbuster
4 40 4 00 1 40
1 Kalay Shikari
)40 100
1 PDA Sherpihoper
7 (0
O (IA ) 11.4* 7 41-11 M i l T (A M ) 44A*
Carryover 771*. w
17th raca — 1 * 44, Bi 144)
I RV Duty Otllcar
7 40 1 70 7 40
4 Deway Chocochlp
7JO 7.40
1 Real Judge
7.00
Q t H ) 21.44 R (1-4) 44.74 T (34-1) 571.44 1
(14-5-0)4)1.44
UTh roc* — 1454, Ai 71.44
1 T*ik Bo Bale*
5 70 1 70 3 00
iGlttot Angel
4 00 4.40
7 Cheer* Dip
4 30
Q (14) 51.74 P 14-All) 4.14 (All-1) 17J4 T
(4-1-3)44144
14th r * M - 14*4. B iI M !
SWinoruKIrfc
14 40 10 00 340
l Nil# Life Body
S « 3 70
7 Heavenly Hem*
4 00
Q (1 1) 44.44 P ( 4 0 174.74 4 &lt;4-1 3 Alt)
115.74
A—1,4T7| H—417X41
1 111

A l AS

'

I

Thursday night
F In i game
II 40 4J0 7.40
7JO 7 40

IF riat
1Cabby
1Marcel
O (111 77.44 7 ( M l 41*4 T (A M ) 744-44

4Tlno
ISJO 7JO 100
I ErkiHa
SA* 740
3 Pit*
1.40
Q (IA ) U J * 7 ( A ll M 4* T (A M ) 1I4J* DO
(14)114.4*
Third pamo
T Gabby Jos*
1140 140 4.00
3 Munoi Forurla
3 40 3 00
1 Erklila Reyet
410
O ( M ) 14.0* 741-1) 1*4.7* T (1-1-1) M)A4
Fourth gamt
4 Gabby Chimel*
10*0 100 *10
• Erkiila Victor
140 1 40
1 Marcel Forurla
I 40
O (4A) 71.4* 7 (*-#) MAM T (AA1) H U M
Filth game
IF ria t Forurla
1100 4J0 310
1Gabby Enrkjua
4 70 7 00
i M ircal'Alcut
I I JQ
Q(l- l) JAM 7 ( A l ) I I JOT (A lA ) *JA«0
Tilth game
1 Pita Aguirre
4*0 4.00 7 00
a Rene B*ltr*n
140 4 74
IColeReyet
470
0 (IA ) M.M 7 (14) 41J t T (lA A ) 1M 04
Seventh *4 me
1 Rent
7 00 4 00 1 M
) Don
740 400
7 Ricordo
140
0(1-1) I7.M 7 (1-1)41 JO T (I-A7I7M.44
rUASl MIDI
4Mend.be Enrique
2440 4 70 2JO
I Nep* Mend I
HO 710
I Erkltl* Don
1 40
Q (A4| 14M 7 (A t ) IA M T T (AA!)*4J0
4 Zugara Agwlrr*
MAO 1110 000
1 Nap* Chimel*
7.00 4JO
1 Ricardo Victor
4.10
Q (IA ) Tl.M 7 (A t ) 173.70 T (A l l ) 7S4M TT
carryover 7141JO
lfftigom *
2 Rena
17.30 440 10 00
IMikel
130 10 00
4 Mend)
440
Q (11) M M 7(1-1) D 1 M T I I 14) 414.M
11th gam*
7 Irlgoyen Reyet
40 40 II M 77.40
101*4 Enrlqu*
10 00 77.40
i Nopd Bob
3 SO
O (17) IM.00 7 (7-1) SIAM T &lt;1-141 IM.M
lllh gam*
1 Zugara Bob
7 70 14 00 4 00
INapa Vklor
100 100
IMandibeDon
IM
Q (A l) 17.40 7 ( A l ) 11.4* T (AA7) M M QD
(7-7 A 1-1) ltl.4*
17th gamt
4 Bob
1140 4 40 4 00
4 Napa
7 40 J 70
1 Balkan
410
Q 14 4141.40 7 (A 4) 1M.M T (AA1) 114 44

14thgat"*

4 Napa Enrelqu*
JOM M M 14 00
1 Zugara Btltran
4 40 7 *0
1 Rene Mend)
IM
Q (A4) M.M 7 ( A l ) 77J0 T (AA1) 1*7.40 S
(A l 1 1) M1J* DD (A4) 111.74
A-O U i H—444,444

BASEBALL BTAMPINOB
Ail Tint** ID T
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eatl Divine*
L Pci. OB
w
U4 —
50 «
Toronto
44 41 .531 1H
Baltimore
5J4 m
44 41
Detroit
44 41
131 i
New York
4
4)
411
Boston
45
41 4* .451 IH
Cleveland
37 JO 475 IIH
Milwaukee
West Otvluan
W
L Pci. OB
tt 41
574 —
Chicago
45 47 417 1
Tesat
44 4)
504 1
KansatCIty
45 44 .504 }
Saallie
41 44 4*4 3
California
414 4
44
If
Oakland
an——
a
m
winntioii
3* M 414 IH
Thurtday*&gt; Garnet
Cleveland 7. Call tomla 3
Oakland I. New York J
Toronto 7. Kantat City 7
Baltimore 1. Minnesota J
Seattle}. Bottom?
Chicago 4. Milwaukee 4
T ria l 17. Detroit 7
Gifwti
California (Finley 1041 4l Cleveland (Clerk

Tim Raines Is a Sanford native and Seminole High School
graduate now playing for the Chicago White Sox. His stats are
for the 1993 season In the first column, personal-best season
totals In the second column and current career totals
(Including 1993 games) In the third column.
The Alt-Star layoff did not hurt Raines' hitting as he went
Iwo-for-flve, Including his ninth home run, scored twice and
drove In one as the Western Division leading White Sox
increased their division lead to two games by edging the
Milwaukee Brewers 6-4. Raines has 12 hits in his last 24
at-bats.
RAINES GAUGE
Category
'93
Games............. 44
At-bats...... . ..... 161
Runs.......... ..... 36
HUS................. 50
RBI............
Doubles..... .....
6
Triples....... .....
2
9
Home runs..
4
Steals........
Average............ 311

boil
160
647
133
194
71
38
13
18
90
.334

A ll, 7:01 p.m
Ocklcnd I Down* 71) « t N*w York (Key
1111,7 » p m
$•*111* (Henson i n at Boston (Clement
7 4 ),7 ,11pm
Minnetot* (Dethewi 4 4) *1 Baltimore
(Muttlri* 104),7 U p m
Kant*i City (Haney 1 7 ) ai Toronto (Morns
14). 7:71 pm
Chicago (A lvarei * 1) al Milwaukee
(Eldred IDII, 4 Clp m
Detroit (Welle 4 4) at Teiat IRogen 4 4).
4 71pm
Saturday') Carnet
Oakland (B Witt * 4) at New York
(J Abbott 111, 1 U p m
Kantet City (Appier l* 41 at Toronto
tStetttemyrel 71 I 01pm
Seattle iBono 141 al Bot'on (Darwin *7).
IM p m
California (Springer t J) at Cleveland
IM u tlslll.1 15pm
Minn*tot* |Tspent ) I I) at Batllmor*
(Mussina 104). 7 01pm
Chicago (McDowell 11 al al Milwaukee
(Navarr*14).4 01pm
Detroll iCuMickton 1 al al Tenai (Pavlik
1 al l U p m
NATIONAL LEAOUE
Sail Civilian
W L
Pci.
OB
Philadelphia
17 35
UJ
4
St. Lout*
»]
57 14
Montreel
44 41
534 IH
Chicago
44) 1IH
47 41
Pittsburgh
43 47
an I4H
FNrtda
.47* 17
17 It
New York
77 41
307 «
West Division
W L
OB
Pci.
447
San Francltco
*0 30
Atlanta
5*7 *
51 J*
Lo* Angeles
47 41
S34 17
Houtton
44 43
573 13
4* 45
Cincinnati
505 14H
San Diego
34 5*
371 74
375 74
Colorado
33 55
Thursday's Oamet
San Diego A Philadelphia 1
San Francltcol. New. York I
Cincinnati 7, Flartda 4
Atlanta 4. Pittsburgh 0
Chicago 1-CatoradoO
St- Loutt 4. Houtton 7
L « Angel#* 3 Montreal 1
frftiif*ft Os im i
Colorado (Latkanlc M l *1 Chicago
(Gutman 7 71.1 M pm
FMrM* (Regg A D *1 Cincinnati (Ri|a A ll.
7tlSp.ni.
Pltttburgh (Cooke 1 4 ) at Atlanta (Maddui
•A ). 7:40 pm
Houtton (Kilo 10 1) at St. Loutt (Magran*
• 7l.(;71p m.
Philedeipbl* (Green* D 1) at San Diego
IWhltehurttll). tO 0)p m
Montreel (Rueter 101 al Lot Angtlet
(H tn hitef Id ). 10 U p m
New York (Gooden I f ) *1 San Francisco
(Hlckartonl 1), to U p m
biturdiv't Q i m*4
Houtton (W llllam t 2 2) ot St. Louit
(Tewktburyf 7). I 01p.m.
Colorado (Reynoto 7 4) al Chicago (Harkay
* 7 ). 4:01pm
New York (Tanana 4 0) at San Francltco
(Burkett 1311,401pm
Flerid* ( ArmtIreng a * ) a l Ciaclanatl
(Browning 4A), 7:41 g.m.
Pltttburgh (Wagner 4*1 at Atlanta (Smolli
17), 7 10p m
Philadtiphla (Mulholland * 4 ) at San Diego
(Benet 4 4). 10 01pm
Montreal (Hill 4 II al Lot Angtlet (Grott
7 7). 10:31pm
Hall
Eatltrn Dtviiien
W L 7*1. O l
Carolina IP Ira let)
1) to .514 KnoivllH (Blue Jayt)
II
10 .114 OrUwdt (Ceht)
II
10 J H iGreenville (Bravet)
0 11 .471 7
Jechiaavllt# I Mar Inert I I
11 .4M IH
Wettern Dlvltien
Chattanooga (R*ds)
13
1 414 —
Momphls 1Ror*l*1
13
1 .41* —
Birmingham (WSoa)
13 10 .545 IH
Hunllvlll# (AlhllCl)
II
11
100 3H
■ Nash via* (Twins)
*
14
500 IH

a wonlint halldlvltion line

Thursday'* Oamet
Orlande 7. Outlaw** ga I
Jacktaaylll* 7, Kneivlll* 1
Carolina 3 Hunttvill* 1
Greenville at Nathvlll*. ppd .rain
Mamphitt. Birmingham 7
Friday*! Oamet
Chatlaneega el Orlande
Knakyilieal lack temrill*
Hunttvill* el Carolina
Greanvlll* tt Nathvlll*, 7
Birmingham at Memphli
Setvrday'i Garnet
Cltetleneega *t Orlande
Kneivlll* at Jacktenvllle
Hunttvill* *1 Caroline
Greanvlll* at Nathvlll*
Birmingham al Mamphlt
Florida Halt League
Second Hall
Eailem DtvItMn
W
L Pel. OB
St. Luc 14 (Matsl
It
r 411 —
Vero Beech (Dodgers)
* 471 H
17
Daytona (Cubs)
10 to .500 7
Osceoio (Astros)
474 IH
10 u
a-LAkoland (Tigers)
a to .444 )
W P. Beach (E.pos)
II
400 4
•
FI Lauderdale (Red Soil 1 13 -III
4H
Western Dl vlllen
Sarasota (WM1* Soil
450 —
13
7
St. Pate (Cardinals)
400 1
17
a
Charlotte (Rangers)
17 4 .571 m
Fort Myers (Twins)
1
450 4
■ Claarweler (Phillies)
■ to 444 4
404 5
Dunedin (Blue JeytI
f
13
■ won tlrsl hall division title
Thurtdey’t Garnet
St. Lucie I. Fort Lauderdale 1
Clearwater at Lakeland, ppd . rain
Vero Beach 1. Weit Palm Beach I
Daytona 7, Fort Myert 4
Otceole 7. SI. Pattrsburg I
Saratota 3 Dunedin 0
Friday'* Oamet
SI Lucie al Fort Lauderdale
Clearweter al Lakeland. 7
Watt Palm Beach el Vero Beach
Dayton* al Fort Myert
OueoieetSt Pelertburg
Dunedin at Saratota
Saturday'* Garnet
Vero Beach at Fart Leudtrdal*
SaratoiaalOtcaoia
Lakelandat Wett Palm Beach
SI Lucia al Charlotte

career
1,747
6,621
1.172
1.971
679
322
98
116
733
298

DAVIE — Suddenly needing help at fullback,
the Miami Dolphins turned to a favorite source of
players — the Philadelphia Eagles.
Keith Byars became the latest Phllly free agent
to Join the Dolphins when he signed a two-year
contract for an estimated 92.4 million.
Thursday's acquisition came simultaneously
with the retirement of fullback Ton y Paige.
Byars rejoins former Eagles — running back
Mark Higgs, offensive tackle Ron Heller, defensive
tackle Mike C olic and tight end Keith Jackson.
Heller and C olic were free agents signed In the
ofT-season, and Jackson came over last year after
being designated an unrestricted free agent.

"K e ith brings a lot o f versatility to our ofTense
as w ell as durability," coach Don Shula said.
"H e ’s missed one game In the last five years. He'll
carry the ball, block for the other back, and shift
to outside receiver" In passing situations.
The 29-ycar-old Byars wasn't happy when the
Eagles moved him to tight end nfter the departure
o f Jackson. He chose Miami for three reasons.
“ M oney is one of the three, but how I fit Into the
ofTense Is No. 2 — feeling comfortable with the
role coach Shula asked me makes me feel right ui
h om e," said Byars, who has plrchased n home In
Boca Raton. "Third Is m y family. I wouldn't go to
a team where my family wouldn't be happy."

D ir t -----------Continued from Page IB

Tim Raines

Fort M yert at Clearwater
St Petersburg at Dunedin

B A SE B A LL BOXES
REDS 7. MARLINS4
FLORIDA
CINCINNATI
e b r h bi
4b r h bi
Cottocl
500 0
Brmfkict 4 0 0 0
Rnlerlolb 4 1 1 0
Brnton 7b 5 0 2 0
Tu*n*p
0000
Lark In si 4 0 11
SMIieio )b 4 0 0 0
Mingenil 3 0 0 0
Conln* II
4 111
Samuel p* 0 1 0 0
Dtfrd* tb 4 0 0 0
RarOonp 1 0 0 0
Snliegoc 4 17 7
S*bo)b
33 70
WMtmr rt 4 17 1
Morris lb 4 1 2 1
Welti it
7000
RSndri rl 7 1 1 1
10 0 0
Hmndp
Oliver t
3 0 17
Briley pb 0 0 0 0
Bektierp 3 1 1 7
Wttievip 0 0 0 0
0
0 0 0
*7*1* P
Ariel ph
10 0 0
Veritioll 1 0 0 0
MLewis p 0 0 0 0
RRttegip 0 0 0 0
Pol.&lt;5« 7b 10 0 0
Totals
54 4 7 4
Totals
&gt;7 7 14 7
Fie* id*
441 447 404 — 4
Cincinnati
l i t III 74. - 7
OP — Florida 1 LOB — Florida 4
Cincinnati * 7B — Santiago (14). Branson
110). Sabo U I). Morns 7 17) HR - Santiago
II). Whilmora 111 SB — RStryfert (tli
IP
H R ER BB SO
Florida
4
7 4 4 4
1
Hmnd L.I01
Waattwri
1
0
t
1 1 i
R Lewis
t
1
0
1 7 i
RRodnguet
13 0 0 0 1 0
Turner
111 1 0 0 0
7
Cincinnati
Belcher W .l 5
7
57 7 5 4 4 7
Ayala
t
1u i a 0 0
Reardon SJ
1 0 0 0 7
1
R Lewis pitched to 7 betters tn the 7th
HBP - by Ayala (Weltsl WP — Mam
mond 7. Weathers 3. Belch**. PB — Olivo*
U m pire* — Horn*. Rtpueno. F ir t t .
Vanover; Second. Wendeltled'. Third.
Marin
T - 7 12 A — 74 447
* - M «
Brittth Open. Scertt
SANDWICH. England - Score* Thursday
alter the lin t round ot the 11J million Britlth
Open, played on the 4 *40 yard par U 71— TO
Royal St. Gaorgo't Got I Club courea (a
•mateia)
Fully Zooli**
77 7a—A*
Peter Senior
) I I A - 44
Mark Cakavecchla
17 71—4*
Greg Norman
Ti l l —44
LPGA Big Apple Claim. Secret
NEW ROCHELLE. N Y - Scoret Thun
day alter the lirtl round ot Ih* 1400.000 LPO A
Big Apple C lettk . pie red on the 4 041 yard,
par 7114—71 Wykagyl Country Clubcourta:
A lk t Miller
14)
Jan* Geddet
141
Dome Andrew*
14 3
Karen Lunn
Ui

T V m A D IO
AUTO RACING
1pm — ESPN.ZereiSaabProSeriat
BASEBALL
l 70 p m — 5*. Florida at Cincinnati. (L&gt;
7 10 p m — ESPN. Kantat City at Toronto.
(L )
M l p m — TBS. Piltiburgh at Atlanta.
(LI
4pm — WGN. ChicagoalMilnawkea. (L )
10 » p m — ESPN.Montreal*IL A . (L )
10 10 p m - WOR. N Y Mett *1 San
Francltco (L )
FOOTBALL
7:70 p m — SUN. Arena League Arlrona
R* Uteri at Orlando Predators. ID
TENNIS
7:10 p m. — SC. U S. Pro. Championship*,
men tquarurlmalt. (L )
Saturday
AUTORACINO
l l o m — SUN. PoconoSporltman
lp m -T B S .A R C A IM
■J 70 p m — TNN , Grand National
Goodwrench 700
4 pm — ESPN. Grand Prli ot Road
America
lp m — ESPN. USACSprinli
4:70 p m - SUN. ASA Salem 700 alto al 1
a m.
BASEBALL
lp m -W C P X 4. Oakland New York. (L I
rp m — WGN. Colorado*• Chicago. (L )
7p m. — 14. Florid* 4t Cincinnati. (LI
7 Olp m — TBS. Piltiburgh al Atlanta
lp m — WGN. Chicago al Milwavke*. ( L )
BOWLING
lp m — W FTVf.EIPataO pen.(L)
DRAORACING
4 p m — ESPN. IHRA Sporltman S tru t
Empire Nalianalt
FOOTBALL
7:70 p m. — SUN. Arena Laagu* Miami at
Tampa Bay. (L )
GOLF
10a m. — WFTV4, BrillthOpen. (LI
17:70pm - SUN.CatobrllyClembak*
4 p m - WESH I. LPGA. Big Apple
Clastic. (L )
a 30 p m — WCPX 4. Amertlech Senior
Open. ID
TENNIS
t X p m — SC. U $ Pro Championship*.
men’s tingles temlllantt. (L)
11 JO p m. — SC. US Pro Championships,
men’s singles and doubles temlflnelt
WRESTLINO
5 pm — TNT. U S Olympic Gold U.S.
Freestyle Nationals
MISCELLANEOUS
Noon — ESPN, World University Gama.
(L)
4 30pm - WF TV*. Wide World ot Sports
BASEBALL
4 11 p m - W TLNAM 111701 Southern
League. Chattanooga Lookoult at Orlando
Cubt
FOOTBALL
7:70 p m - WGTOAM 11401. Arana
League. Arliona at Orlando
MISCELLANIOUS
1 p m - WGTOAM IM0), Pal WIIILamk
Show
Saturday
BASEBALL
I pm - WGTOAM (MO). Kantat City
Royalt al Toronto Blue Jayt
4:15 p m . - W TLN AM (1110). Southern
Laagu*. Chattanooga at Orlande
l p m - WGTO AM (140). Florida Marlin*
at Cincinnati Red*, (otnad Inpregrttt

Duvld Showers o f St. Augusilnc
and Gary Flynn o f Holly Hill
from Ihc race and knocked pole
sitter Joe Kump of Hollywood
front ihr lead. George took the
lead and Purvis took to chasing.
Uni Him on lap 17. as George
and Purvis were closing In on
lapped Bill Kopku nflcr (he imnt
straightaway. George tried to
turn the nose o f his car Inside
Kopka. while Purvis look the
high road around both Kopka
and George.
Kopka. trying to get out of (he
way. slipped to the (op of the
(rack on the hackstrrtch. but
stayed in George's way long
enough for P u rvis to build
enough of a lead to nail down his
second VCS trophy.
George held on for second,
with Kump. Koh Underwood of
Pierson and Mark Pairmlti of
Daytona rounded out (hr lop
five.
Chuck Bosslnger of Jackson­
ville was looking like another
double-winner for the (rack In
the South Eastern Mint-Sprint
Association main event, running
from the pole position to lead for
all but the last (w o laps of the
15-lap feature.
Bui Denton, second (o Boss­
lnger a week ago. pushed the
nose of his car tight Into lum

three on lap 13 nnd flew around
Hossinger on (hr Inside coming
out of turn four ot bout Iasi
w e e k 's winner hack to the
start/flnlsh Hup and held on for
(he final two laps.
" I was Just having fu n ." De­
nton said, trying (o make light of
(he serious way he al lacked (he
track and the rest o f thr field.
Denton and Bosslnger led Boh
ShafTcr. Tom Mtsuraca and Mike
Thomas to the checkered flag.
Layman, running the Bishop's
A u t o m o 11 v e /A 11 F l o r i d a
Fencc/Layman Waste W ell Con­
struction Bulck. powered his
way from ihr outside of row
three on thr slurl to Ih r from by
thr end of the first lap. llirn
proceeded to run away from Ihc
rest of the pack for his first
victory on the track
But l( wasn't all roses for

Layman.
"W e pickrd up a bad vibration
in the motor." lawman sttld. "I
(lacked off Ihe last five laps
trying to save (hr car."
Layman led Ihr way as Brian
Bales of Holly Hill. Iasi week s
winner, flnishrd second. Stacey
Muthrn of Bunnell. Jim m y Hef­
fner of Holly Hill and Johnny
Westfall, also of Holly Hill, com­
pleted Ihc tup five.
Scott Nelson drove his Nelson
P lu m b in g of St. A u g u s tin e
Special to llie head o f the (lack

by the end of (he first lap o f the
Mini-Stock feature (o racr to the
checkered flag for his second win
ahead o f Ronnie Ponce o f Palm
Valley. Marvin Taylor. Chuck
Smith and Scon Lawson.
Krlscr sat on the jxilr and led
from start lo fliridi In the Hobby
Stocks, with train o f Alan Moorr,
Scott Stevens and Jerry Pol
fenberger to (he checkered flag
Dirt track racing continues
to n ig h t al V olusia C o u n ty
Speedway, with gates opening al
5 p.m and racing starting al 8
|t m

RESULTS

FRIDAY, JULY t
Pra Lai* Ma4*1 111 lap*) —, 1
Rot* *
Purvis. Ocala 7 Paul Georg* 1 Jo* Kump
Mo-if wood 4 Rob Underwood Pierson 1
Mark Pelernlti. Dayton* * Bill Kopka 7
Deed Showeri. SI Augustin*. I Gary F l y n n
HoCy Hill
SEMA Mint Sprint! (II laptt — I Tommy
Denlon Orange Part. 1 Chuck dolling*'
Jack tony lit* 1 Bob Shaller. 4 Tom
Misurac*. 1 M l!* Thornes 4 Rob Feeney
7 Perry Caudle Jr . I Unannounced. * Cecil
Peacock 10 NlckRamiey
Pr* Stock IM lapel - 1 Bobby Layman
B l t h o p 'e A u lo mol I * a /A 11 F lo r id a
Fenct'Laym an Wail* Well Construction
Bulck 7 Brian Bale* Holly Hill J Siecey
Malhen. Bunnell, a Jimmy Mellnor Holly
Hill: 1 Johnny Wettphall. Holly Hill; 4
Chuck Julian
Mini Stock! I l l (4pt) - I Scotl Helton
Netten Plumbing Special. SI August in# 1
Ronnie Ponca Palm Valley. 1 Martin
Taylor. 4 Chuck Smtlh.l Scoll Lawton
Hobby Slack 111 lap!) - I Chad K n it'
Palalh*. 7 Alan Moore. J Scotl Sl*y*ni 4
Jerry Podenberger

R o g e rs
Continued from Page IB
Wayne Heckle in the Florida
Modifleds, John Benedlctus m the Hobby Stock
Division and Larry Tyler In the Tampa Bay Area
Racing Association Winged Outlaw Sprints
feature.
Hunter’s win In the SO-lap Volusia Performance
Late Model Stock feature was his second of the
season, but the big winner in the division was
Cam Gibson, who placed second behind Hunter
but earned enough points to take over the lead In
the Winston Racing Series by one point over
Tony Ponder.
Ponder, o f DeLand. blew his engine half-way
through Ihe race and ended up Iasi among the
nine cars (aklng the green flag. Gibson now has
1,875 points to 1874 for Ponder. Hunter, from
DeLeon Springs, is third wllh 1.799 points.
"I could have used some more bite laic in the
race," Hunter said of his Fabco Manufacturing/FIcscr Dairy Products Pontiac Firebird dial
got very loose in the final 10 laps. "But other than
that, I don't have anything to complain about.
We're going to keep on trying. Hopefully, we'll
come out on top a few more times."
Hunter und Gibson led the way across Ihe
start/flnlsh line with Jim Grothu. Kenny West
and MlkcLuddcnl rounding out the top five.
Clegg, turning In his fourth will of (he season,
led the way over Rusty Ebersolc. Sanford's Karl
Stairs. Bill Morris and John Warrington In the
Klnco Windows &amp; Doors Sportsman Division.
Points leader David Ponder hud a horrible night,
losing his own car In the hot laps, then blowing
up a "loaner" car from Mark Stevenson to wind
up sixth In the feature.
Ebcrsole's second place finish and Ponder's
misfortune's tightened up Ihc points race in the
Sportsman D ivision as Ponder on ly leads
Ebersolc by six points now.
(.aughlln had his Your Season Ticket Sports
Pub Chevrolet Camaro of Port Orange on a rail In
the Budget Mobile Homes Street Stock feature,
getting some heat from runnerup Todd Stevens,
but leaving the rest of the pack to battle for third.
Hay Fulford paced the second pack uhrad of Jeff
Miller. Roger Wrcnn. Chris Lawrence and Robert
Young.
Gllllard ran ahead of Rodney Butcher. Phil Orr.
Chad Pclfrcy and Rick Fairbanks to complete Ihe
top five In Ihc Knnken Repair Mini-Stocks, while
Dcbcnedlctus was a second time winner in the

J.L. Hags Hobby Stock feature, ahead o f J.D.
Clark. Jim Butler. Hobrri Milam ami Mlkr
Bcllvcau.
H e r k l e 's win. h is fifth In (h r P a le 's
Drywall/Bcnny's R arin g Equipment Florida
Modified feature for 1993. came quick as he
moved Inna tiw oulstdr potr jKMliion to the frotil
of the |&gt;ack before the end of (he flnl lap and led
the rrst of the 20-lap event.
Heckle wound up leading Ray Mark. David
ludlvert. Ted Richard and Wayne McCall across
(he finish line.
T yler jiowered Ills 99T Power Machine around
the track for another win on Ihr VCS half-mile
asphalt, leading the way over Red Stauffer. Duvld
Steele. Taylor Andrews and Joe Melnlck.
"1 don 't know wluit goes on with this car at this
track." Tyler said, “ but It's good. This car will
run in ihe third and fourth groove’s when I need
it."
Volusia County Speedway will hold another
night of asphalt racing tomorrow, with gales
opening at 5 p.m. and racing starting at 8 p.m.

RESULTS
SATURDAY. JULY 14
Winitari Racing 1*0*1 Let* M *4il Sleek [M legel — I M ae
Hunt**, Febce Manvtacturlng/Fletar Dairy, Poni.ec Firebird
DeLeon Spring! 7 Cam Gibson J Jim Greth*. 4 Kenny W eil i
Mike Luddenl 4. J4l4n B u rk ttl, leulh Seminole Sheet
Melel/Midnight Eigretl Engine*. CTieorelel Camera. Long wood 7
Wayne Locked. 4 Donne Gletiner. t Tony Pond**. Steel A
Poll/ W elt Orange Pump. IMI Chevrolet Comoro. DeLand
Pro Late Medal Steckt (M lent) — l. 0*i&lt;d Rogeri. TM Ranch.
Pontiac Firebird. Orlando. I Eddie Martin. HLB Treniport. 1ft)
Oidimobli* Cutlen. Lei#lend. 2 David Rtruall. He*ten Around
Ferm i. Chevrolet Cam#re. Lengweed , a Tony Newsom*. J Bobby
Blake. Grass Toning A Recovery. CTievroiel Lumtn*. Aitetule. t
Rob Underwood. 7. Jett Burkett, Burkett Racing. Oidtmebtl*
Cutlen. Lengueid
Spertimen (IS legal - I David Clegg; I Rutty £ be* sole, j. Kart
Stein. Pent tec Lament. Vealerd. a BUI Morra. 1 John Warrington.
4 David Ponder. 7. Scott Mark
Flerid* Meddled (7* laOil — I Wayne Hecti*. 2 Ray M e n ]
David Indiverl; 4 Ted Richard. S Wayne McCall. 4 Dwayne Aiey.
7 Jon Com peg non* Sr
Street Sleek (IS lap*) - | Scott Laughlm. Your Seaton Ticket
Sport! Pub. Chevrolet Camaro. Port Orange l Todd Steveni. J
Ray Fullord; 4 Jtll Miller. 5 Rogers Wrenn t Chm Lawrence. 7
Robert Young. I Robery Koykm. 4 Rick GaHty, 10 Dean Totlon
II Rich Turner.
Mitt) Slock ( I f loot) - I Jerry Gillierd 7 Rodney Butcher 7
Phil Orr, 4 Ched Pellrey; S Rick Fairbanks 4 Jay Johnson 7
Nolen Wilton. 4 Jerry Carroll. « Pel Norr i. 10 James Morgan
Hobby Stack (I t (apt) - I Jonn Debened'ctut: 7 J O Clerk. 3
Jim Butler, a Robert Milam, 5 Mike Bellveeu. 4 Robert Letter. 7
Arnold M lllt
TBARA Winged Outlaws — I Larrr Tyler 7 Red Stauffer. )
David Sleet*, a Taylor Andrews; 5 Jo* Melnlck

T r ib u te
Continued from Page IB
Liz took his picture off
the coffin and held it tightly In
her folded arms. She followed
the casket out o f the church.
"God must have needed a
good driver In heaven." read the
card on one spray o f flowers.
A llis o n . 3 2 . w a s b u rled
Thursday. He died Tuesday o f
head Injuries suffered Monday
when Ills new helicopter crashed
as he attempted a landing at
Talladega Superapcedway. The
crash injured the lone passen­
ger. veteran driver Rrd Farmer,
who attended the funeral In a
wheelchair.
During the eulogy, the Rev.
Louis Glardino talked about the
strong bond between NASCAR
drivers and their fans, particu­
larly In Ihe South. U comet, he
speculated, from the way so
many drivers start out working
on cars w ith neighbors as
"shade tree mechanics."
Allison rose far beyond lhat
level, wllh 19 Winston Cup
victories since capturing his first

checkered flag in 1987. He
always said his greatest thrill
was finishing second lo his dad
In the 1988 Daytona 500.
" H e never let fume come
between him and anyone," said
Glardino. the family's priest at
St. Aloyslus Catholic Church In
Bessemer. Just minutes from
their hometown of llueytown.

Fellow drivers were at a loss lo
talk about (lie Allison family's
hurt.
D r iv e r Dale J u rrc tt said
Allison's death was u "trem en ­
dous loss" for NASCAR. The
circuit saw another young star,
Alan Kulwlckl. killed in an
airplane crash only four months
ago.

The church was packed with
an estimated 750 people. In­
cluding promlnunt racing figures
like Roger Pcnske. Nell Bon licit.
Michael Wallrlp. Rusty Wallace,
Mark Martin and Hut Stricklin,
who was related lo Allison by
marriage.

W allrlp said Allison's death
"makes It obvious there arc a lol
of things more Important than
driving a race car."
Four Jcl fighters flew over In
formation as tin- graveside serv­
ice began.

After the funeral mass. Liz
Allison, dressed In black with
her blond tudr pulled back,
walked out stoically behind her
h u sban d's polished w ood en
casket.
Allison's father and mother
wept openly. It was only 11
months ago that they burled
their other son. Clifford. He died
In a racing crash.

C ou n try singer Joe D lfflc
strummed a guitar and sung
Allison’s favorite song. "Ships
That Don't Come In ." Diffle
volunteered (o perform after
learning Allison's widow was
trying to find sheet music for the
tune.
Afterward, funs Joined rela­
tives In filing past llie casket one
last time. Many mouthed the
word "Goodbye.'

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Friday. July 16, 1993 - 3B

People
Protecting valuable records

IN B R I E F
Newcomers Club to meet
Thr Newcomers Club of Central Florida: • Luncheon and
General Meeting 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 19. at Enzo'a In
l.ongwnod. Details call Sharon • 699 8538. Jodcy - 699-0797.
Carol-693-7921.

Voices needed for chorus
GoldenKulr Housing A Community Development Corp. is
seeking musicians and singers to form un Inspirational chorus
lo iierform during public events planned for the future. Events
will Include community forums, conferences, celebrations,
other festive occasions, and fund-raisers. Th e chorus will serve
us the organization's "ambassadors of good-will." and deliver
Its uplifting self-help message through music and song. The
first performance Is projected for October In Sanford. Details to
follow when complete. Persons Interested In participating in
this exciting uctlvlty should conluct Gayle Lewis, program
chairperson, at 14071324-9123 or 324-3191.

Float sale benefits Camp Challenge
Beginning Sunday. July 18. through Saturday. July 24. all
Target stores will sell AAW Boot lleer floats to help ratse
money for (he Florida Easter Seal Society. Floats will sell for SI
and all proceeds will tieneflt the Florida Easter Seal Society's
Camp Challenge, located in Sorrento. This program runs
simultaneously with a s|&gt;eclal promotion by Target, AAW and
Sterling Health.
This is the third year that Target and A A W have teamed up
to raise money for Easter Seals. Both companies are national
corporate s|»onsors of the Easter Seal Society and also support
the national telethon seen locally In Orlando on WOFL FOX 35
TV on March 6.
Camp Challenge is u barrier free. 63-acre wheelchair
accessible camp thut provides services for disabled children
and adults. For more Information contact (407) 896-7881.

Al-Anon group gathers
If you ore troubled by the alcoholism o f a frelnd or relative,
there is help.Serenity Won. un Al-Anon group for friends and
fumily of alcoholics, will meet each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday night at B p m. at the Sahara Club. 2587 S. Sanford
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call 332-4122.

Narcotics Anonymous meets in Sanford
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p m. at the
Presbyterian House of Good will, 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Poets to talk verse
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Drlund Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.
For more Information, please call Hob Shelford. 904-7360416. or Virginia Martin. 904-775-8909.

Sanford Rotarians to meet
Itolary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

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, cull 236-9206.

Oddfellows schedule meeting

Many of us assume that flood,
storms, hurricanes, nr other
disasters will always happen to
someone else. Many jxroplc dis­
like thoughts about death and
consequently postpone the tasks
of luklng care o f family papers.
Protecting family papers Is Just
one part o f being prepared to
deal with natural disasters.
An up-to-date household in­
ventory is a very valuuble re­
source. When making thr In­
ventory. do not overlook tools
stored in the garage, lawn
furniture or food In thr freezer.
You may want to Include a video
or photographs o f your inven­
tory. An accurate Inventory will
help you determine if you have
enough insurance to cover the
contents of your home. Keep the
Inventory current.
Additional copies o f valuable
papers lists should t&gt;r in the care
of a lawyer, thr administrator of
wills, business associates or
trusted family mrinlx-r residing
outside of your home. The need
for greater care of valuable
pa)&gt;ers Increases as your estate
size and family size Increases
and family goals and life pat­
terns become more complex.
Tuble I is a list of the valuable
[tapers that need to lx- in a safe
deposit box especially during u
disaster such as a hurricane.
Table 2 Is a list of valuable
papers that need to be in your
possession nt home at all times
in a w ater-proof, fire-proof,
locked box.
Table I. Valuable papers to
keep tn your sufe deposit box.
One copy of a list of all valuable
papers. Stocks records and bond
certificates, property records.

Cancer support group meets
Support, Hope and Recovery, S.H.A.R.. meets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p.m. at Central Florida Regional Hospital In the
fur comer o f the dining room. This is a self help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatment now or finished
with it. Cull 324-8737 or 322-7785 for more Information.

Pigeon Fanciers to gather
The Central Florida Pigeon Fanciers Association meets the
third Monday o f each month at the Seminole County
Agricultural Center, 4300 Orlando Drive. Sanford. For
Information, call Art or Jean Anderson at 831-8033.

VFW, Auxiliary to gather
Veterans o f Foreign Wars and the Ladles Auxiliary of Sanford
Post 10108 meet the third Monday at 7:30 p.m. at their post
home (the log cabin on Seminole Boulevard).

Seminole County Schools par­
ticipated In a "Violence-Free
Community" poetry /essay con­
test during the month of March.
The Foundation for the Advan­
cem ent o f Our C om m u n ity
Through Schools. Inc. (FACTS!
provided first place winners with
a check for $25. Jason Nichols.
Oviedo High School and Laura
Suhyoun. Tuskaw llla Middle
School won first place at their
level. The following were their
entries:
VIOLENCE

Oviedo High School
Violence is ugly. It Is a termite,
gnawing steadily away at the
framework of our society.
This Insect is fed by hate.
Ignorance, and evil. The termite
eats and rats und eats — It never
stops. It Increases In size with
every meal, gaining tn strength
and destruction.
What Is needed is art Orkin
man. a hero, dressed in white, to
exterminate the enemy. Who is
this man? In reality, he Is not
one man — he is muny people.
He is all people.
We need lo arm ourselves with
Insecticides o f kindness and
unselfishness, and spray the
termite, choking him with that
which Is good.
Surface solutions will not solve

Modern world of hurt demands
more sensitivity than in past
DEAR ABBYt I am still fuming
about that "contest" dreamed
up by some dim-witted program
c h a ir m a n fa r th e a n n u a l
mothers and daughters banquet
at their church, no less.
First, they asked all the
women who were mothers to
stand up. Then they asked all
the mothers who wore dentures
to sit down. 1 have never heard
o f anything so insensitive in all
my life!
1 have a suggestion for their
annua) banquet next year. How
does this sound?
"W ill all the mothers please
stand?" (Docs this include the
women who have hud only
miscarriages or stillbirths? How
about the foster mothers — and
stepmothers who have borne no
children but mothered many?)
Now. " W i l l the youn gest
mother present please stand?"
(Does this Include the 14-yearold victim o f Incest, and the
woman who gave up her child
when she was 15 and has no
Idea where that child Is?)
Now. "L et's sec the mother
who has had the most children!"
(This will revive memories o f all
the ridicule and Insults endured

ADVICB

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

by mothers who have had eight,
nine. 10 or more children.)
We should also be aware that
victims o f parental child abuse
do not want to listen to exagger­
ated praise for a parent they
remember only with bitterness
each Mother's Day or Father's
Day.
Abby, please remind your
readers that there is a need for
sensitivity on both Mother's Day
and Father's Day.

HURTING FOR OTHERS
DEAR HURTING: Thank you
for a suggestion that may prove
enlightening to many.
D E A R A B B T i 1 am a
52-year-old woman, divorced 10
years, no children and am selfsupporting.
About six months ago. I met a

j&gt;aft; deposit box
Important receipts and Bill of sale
Ust of Insurance policies
Automobile bill of tale
Military service records
Copyrights and Patents
Adoption papers
Custody papers
Possporls
Citizenship papers
Religious records
Income tax returns
Supporting documents for years of large
transactions, unusual losses or deductions
Retirement papere

CONSUMER
FOCUS

BARBARA
HUGHES/
GREGG
deeds, title s nnd/or leases,
household Inventory, contracts
(Including promissory notes), a
copy of your will (his and hers).

auto title, birth certificates,
death certificates, marriage cer­
tificates. divorce decrees. Social
S ecu rity cards, governm ent
savings bonds, important re­
ceipts and bills o f side, list of
Insurance policies, automobile
bill o f sale, m ilitary service
records, copyrights and [talents,
adoption papers, custody papers,
passports, citizenship papers,
rrllglous records. Income tax
returns, supporting documents
for years of large transactions,
unusual losses or deductions,
retirement papers.

Table 2. Valuable papers to
keep at home In a safe place.
One ropy of a list of valuable
pupers. Advisors' names and
addresses, guarantees and war­
ranties. educational records,
employment records, employee
benefits, health records, insur­
ance policies, loan payment
books, roples o f birth and mar­
riage certificates, driver license
numbers, income tax returns,
appltcancc manuals, current
bank balances, rental property
records, safe deposit records and
Inventory o f items.

the problem. It wr rid ourselves
of guns, the termite will con­
tinue to feed If wr rid ourselves
of “ detrimental" television and
literature, the termite will con­
tinue to feed. If w r create
anti-violence classes, films, and
public service announcements,
the monster will continue to
devour. The answer lies deeper
than this.
Thr answer Is found In this
paradox: kill violence. Take
aw ay that which feeds the
termite — fear, anger, hate,
greed — and Iced it instead with
compassion and mercy, and it
will not. it cannot survive.
Violrni’r must die. Wc must
kill It.

WHAT IS A LL THIS VIOLENCE
FOR
By Laura Bahyoun

Tuskawllla Middle School
Can anyone tell me what's
become of our home.
No place lo go where violence
doesn't roam.
In Texas people going in rage.
Feeling as if they're being kept
In a cage.
No place to run.
No place to hide.
Where there's not a force that
you must abide.
All o ve r the w orld , wars
breaking out.
People suffering, they scream
und they shout.
Together united so we can lx*

Mary Balk’s Drug Counselor
column will return next week.

to- f it

8 MOVIE LAND o. .. 1* 1.*.’ 1. t»
3? NOPASSES h&gt;i ire w m
•:4a [R ]
THE FIRM
[
INDECENT
« « n i
PROPOSAL

•
•
•
•

WE DELIVER!
No matter wtwra you Uvs, wa bring
youourarM'aff sourta of news

strong.
A lot of people say It's right.
Still too many say u's wrong,
A lot of this over race, shelter,
or food.
Why do these [x-oplc act so
crude.
Cun'l goon u walk at night.
Without feeling scared und
filled with fright.
What a world ttlM would be.
If wc could have It violence
free.
All the violence, all the war.
Someone tell me what It's for.
Break-ins. shootings, murders
and such.
Maybe all this world needs is a
loving touch.

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very charming gentleman who
happens to be blind. He lives
alone with a Seeing Eye dog and
Is remarkably Independent. He
lies In a city about 400 miles
from here, and Blncc wc met. be
has visited me four times.
I thought he was about 45
years old. but he told me that he
ts 38! I was shocked. He said the
age difference Is nol a problem.
Abby. tilts Is the first time I've
dated a man thut much younger
than m yself, and this rela­
tionship has developed Into a
serious love afTair.
The only thing that Is marring
all this Is the fact that he told Ills
mother I was 40 years old.
Obviously, he wus embarrassed
to tell her the truth.
Abby. how Important ts the
fact that he lied to his mother
about iny age? Please answer
soon. 1 really care about this
man.

SLIGHTLY SHOOK
DEAR SHOOK: Lying lo his
mother about your age Indicates
that (1) he needed her approval,
and (b) he Is less than honest.
And now that you arc aware of
these two very Important facts,
don't rush Into anything.

f

TA B LE 2. Valuable papers lo keep at home in a safe place
Loan payment books
One copy of a list of all valuable paper*
Copies of birth and marriage certificates
Advisor’s names and addresses
Driver license numbers
Guarantees and warranties
Income tax returns
Educational records
Appliance manual*
Employment records
Current bank balances
Employee benefits
Rental property records
Health records
Safe deposit records and Inventory of Items
Insurance policies

Essay winners address violence

By Jason Nichols

Lodge No. 27 of the International Order o f Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday of every month, except July and
August, nt P p.m. at 101 Magnolia Ave.. Sanford.

TA B LE 1. Valuable p ap erb to keep in your
On* copy of a list of all vatuabl* papers
Stock* record* and bond certiflcatta
Property record*, deeds, titles and/or leases
Household Inventory
Contracts (Including promissory notea)
A copy of your wilt (his and hers)
Auto title
Birth certificates
Death certificate*
Marriage certificates
Divorce decrees
Social Security
cards
Government savings bonds

At L MOVIES IN STER EO SOUND

�« ■ - San lord Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 16, 1993

LET US REPLENISH THE SEED OF FAITH THROUGH

Presbyterian

Assembly Of God
HOLT caosa LUTMCRAN
CHURCH OF LARI HART

F A M IL Y W O R S H IP C I N t I R

!« &gt; Ai'DOfl Bird

San'wd FI u r n
T*I 177 8777

Faato* Jail Wan
Sunday Behoof
Womh*o Same*
W adnttdty S am t a

• X am
10 X a m
7X p m

WIRIVA ASSIMBLT
I87S Du on Road
longaood 7 1 U77S
*07 7740777
U&gt;#g F rm m jn
Patioi
Sunday
CELEBRATION Sarnca 1 0 0am
Hatrforca
WdUipnng and

Sunday School

r u ta r m u m i u u i c n u m c h

o*» *&gt;• 4 VdS1 .bnlora

n m rn n u

TX Sun On h i laaa Mao
Paul Mot**
Paato*
Sunday W ortNp
Sarvtc*
S i 10 X am
Salu’d l i Sartica
SJOpm
Sunday School •
Adult B U * C la n
• IS am
Holy Ooaa Story Hout P itK h o o i
Foi Ininrmalion Call JJJ0787

Ra* I've* a aeon

Prate

C h u rch Sch o o t

S X t n

MamingWomM#

&gt;000 a n

S*vo&lt; M.gh FaBouthip
Sunday
I
UVadnoaday FamUy Night
Supoa*
I
Youth Oiaupt
Voyagar* (R a Oradati
High Voflaga ( S i Of a d t.l

OOOO SHIPM t R0 (VANOELICAL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
OF SANFORD
(IC A
7817 Orlando OrtyaiMay 17B7)

phonaJ77 n n

■X am

Patnciar Jchnion
Sunday School
Womhip Sarwea
ll wa Study
Madnaaday*
thu'tday*

CELEBRATION Same* 1 0 X a m
Hatrl 0»ca
lU rd-tada,
FAUILT Samca
rc o p m

Pinualorca
M u .o n a tia y
RoyMRangart

Paaloi
SXam
lO X a m
7 00 pm
im a m

h.'*•-&gt; Pro-dad

Baptist
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH

CHRIST U N IltD
METNOOIST CHURCH
104 tucaa* Orira
iCornar Tut*** 0* SCR477T
II#. Larry ArmOrual
Paatar
TaNphona 177 7800
Sunday School
I as a m
Mettung Worahtp
11 00 a m
Wadnaaday B-tua Study
7 00 p m
Tout* Maaimg
1*1 S JrO Wad
7O0pm
CM*a&gt; * Tana metudad m WwaNp
Nurtary proyidad to*
Bat»at and Small Chrfdron
Small Enough To Lena You ■
Q'oamg In Chrtal To Sar*a You

1101W UlSl Sanlofd
117 781*
OonMwU
PAHOf
.'
Fuoaia
A ito c PAllot
j k i U fhomaa
M.ni»lai o l Mu»&gt;c
M.kaQuMt*
Minmldto* Youth
Sunday School
SXpm
Morning W orthip SIS i l l 00am
EyanihflPfwahip
SXpm
Wad Ptara*Safwea
SXpm
COUNTRYSIDE BAPTIST
CHURCH
Country CiuP Road. Laaa Mary
Arary M LonQ
Pailot
Sunday School
»4 S p m
Praactung S Worafuping 1041am
B.W* Study
SXpm
Sharing a ProOatmmg
7Xpm
Wad Praya- Maal
7Xpm
Nuraary Prondad

Catholic

FIRST U N H ID
MITHOOIST CHURCH
« IS Para A.a
UJ4J71
Cultord Uainh
Faato.
Daruai Sahara
C h a t Duarte*
Morning WoraTup ■ X S 1100 a m
CoHaa Tanouahtp
SXam
Sunday School
PASam
Youth 7a«o«an.p
4Xpm
Woman a 7aHonah&gt;p
II I Monday
1100am
Woman aCwcN
Jnd Monday
lO O O a m J O O p m T X p m
Man a P i*y« B'aaafaal
ItiThuraday
SXam

f ir st s a p t is t c h u r c h

OF SANFORD
S it Pam Atanwa Saniord
Ra» Floyd B'aaa Ji
Fa* I ex
N . J.m Coma.1 M .niaitr olMuaic
n *. S^nayB'oea MmaaiarolToulh
M.* Caihy B&lt;»&gt;*
Pra School' Cruid'tn* Mimtlnaa
Sunday Worship
tO X a m
Sunday School
BIS am
Oac.piaahip Training
SIS pm
E»anmgWonn«p
SXpm
Wad P»ara**arvMa
SIS pm
Nuraary Prortdad

In your local supermarket, you may find several facsimiles of 'Grandma’s apple pie." They are iasty, no
doubt, but there's nothing like the real thing cooling on the windowsill.
Of course, times change and so do Grandmas. One thing about Grandmas doesn't change, however, and
that is their capacity for love. It may still be expressed in apple pies or when sharing long walks and talks
with their grandchildren. Some Grandmas have traded in their rustling aprons for rustling walking suits, but
the benefits are nurturing. They are wise, patient, and great listeners. Those attributes are still the real thing.
God is a great listener, too. Take a walk to your neighborhood church or synagogue this Sabbath. He is
waiting patiently for you to share your life with Him Whether God is found in a country chapel or a crystal
cathedral. Hi* capacity for love is unchanging and boundless. . . the real thing._________________________

Sunday School
1000 * m
Morning ta m e *
1100am
Emwng SafYtca
SXpm
Wodnaaday tdoica
TXpm
Old Truth* to* a Ha* Day
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

OF LONOWOOD
M 1C S H U *

Longaood F t JJ7SOSJB*
1*071X9X17

WIRIVA PRRSAYTIAULM CHURCH

Ha* i P*ca*, d Ch*1ftn
Aaaocwta Mutataf • Education
Ha* W alton On * . * '
AyaoctM* M m lita i - Womhip
Rat JattrayT Di.on
A ttociata Muuataf - Youth
BiMa Study
Worahrp
OtaciptatMp Tiatnmg

SXam
tOaSam
SXpm

Sunday Chmth la m e n t
and Sunday School
tO X a m
Wadnaaday
SXpm
Nuraary At a n tra Al AN Sa n .cal
HaaduigRoom Mon-Wad ■
F ftS a l
tO a m t p m
78* 7704

PtHECREST BAPTIST CHURCH
80 1 E Airport Bird . Saniord
Roy Larry Ellington
Paal
Mafodra Brorwp
Mul
Vara D t loach
You
SundaySchool
la ja i
Morning Wo&lt;ahrp
11 X l l
ChAdran a Church
ttX a &lt;
Evamng Worahrp
TXpl

Church Of Christ

Congregational

LONLWOOO CHURCH OF CHRIST
1011 Hary 17 X 1 ml NO M*y 41*

CONOR! OPTIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH (NACCC1
J*0i S Pam A r t
177 ASA*

171 SAX *990*17 BOATS* I t 70

Sun WoraMp tO X a m S S P M
You ata inritad to ttait ttud*. and
•omhip *ttn u* in it* na« tuiu«a A
Man®* granting aratyt aaa.it

United Church
CHURCH OF 0 0 0

X I W IMdStraat
Rat Oonatd E. Wtggma
l
SundaySchool
8*
Momtng WoraMp
103
Cfangauatrc SanLca
80
FamNy Ciwtchmant
Santca Wadnaaday
70

BETTY ANNE'S

UMI#E?5oW!fYUNQ
•HISTORIC DOWNYOWN SANFORD*

H e rb S le n s tro m and S ta ff

MINCER MOTORS
CARS ft TRUCKS
r j |L

CHUCK OALOKNEAU J S Q t
H U M

I H

1B09 B. FR EN C H A V t

322-4913

Fl#» TNymat P Ttachu*

Eastern Orthodox

Mim.inr

Chu'Ct School
9 X 1 0 X am
Womhip
11X a m
FaPowtiup Luncnaon S X p m . arary
Tnd Wadnaaday
Er**y W*t Saturday S X a m Many

IT PITERS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
TXRmahartRoad
la ta Mary. Florida
1*07| AAA LORO
Tha Rat B L Barg*

Episcopal

Sunday
Mo#y ['Rhartat
It
C hnttun Education
- All Apt*
Bi
HolyEwchanai
101
Crndran a Church
101
iEdutai«nW m gi
Nuraary C*ra Bagma M 8 X * m
Through lO X a m San.ca

HOLT CROSS
IP1SCOFAL CHURCH
X I Pam Atanwa
Sanford. Florida
Toiophono (XT) 177X11
Sunday
Chor« Euc hartal
SXam
huraary Samcaa Pror^ad al
S X a m SarYKa
Tuaaday
7Xam
Wadnaaday
lO X a m
Thuraday
7M pm

THE FOLLOWING FIRMS ENCOURAGE
YOU TO ATTEND YOUR HOUSE OF
WORSHIP THIS WEEK

BETTY ANNE HOWARD

W INN-DIXIE STOP
and Employees

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION
D avid Beverly and Staff

H

°

ST. JOHN'S EASTIRH
ORTMODO* CHURCH
77U Country CiuB Road
Rat Donato Bnno*
Pa
ChutchPhcma
M l*
Ovma Liturgy
10X i
SundaySchool
tOXi
ConfatMon By Appotntmant

Out Bmaalatl

Church of God

Of Christ
CMRMTIANFIUOWSMP
CHURCH. tACC.
Rat Aiihu* Anay
Paalor
Church School
t tS a m
Sunday Womhip
tO X a m
Fatto**7up
ttX a m
COME GROW WITH US
OUR TEMPORARY WORSHIP
LOCATION IS
Laaa Mary Community Budd&gt;ng
T U N CountryC*uBRoad
laaa Mary
Mamng Addmaa
Chnyuan FauouaMp Crwreh,
UCC

7X|
S*S(

8EE

Natrtwgt' 5 * w i P 0 Boa NOJ CTu'VXtirA* VA 77906
Scnpturn uNcttO try th* Am*'can (LON Soc«ty

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST

FattoatNp Suppa&lt;
115pm
Wommp
SXpm
Numaty • All aantca* S
Oaal M.mitrv
FIRST SAPTIST CHURCH
HARR HAM WOOOS
SAX Mamham Wood* Rood
Laaa Mary. Honda
Or HoBart iBoOlPama.
Paato*
B&gt;b*a Study
SXam
Womhip
10ASan.
Youth Matting
SXpm
Prayar 8 B **a Study
Adult Chou

Copyright 1991

Christian Selene*

Sunday

■ARNES HEATING A
AIR CONDITIONING
COMPLETE SYSTEMS • ADOONS
FREE ESTIMATES • SERVICE ALL BRANDS
RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL
HEAT PUMP EKPEATS
• • in t m i u u m ji

915 W. 2nd St.

1

BRAM BEAUTY SALON

JIM ROWE
PEST CONTROL

519 E. 1st St. • Sanford
3 2 1 -8 5 8 0

LOCALLY OWNED 1 OPERATED
RON HUSSI 4 STAFF

2628 Iroquois Av.

BETTY WEBER

■ANN FINANCE OR BUY MRS • PAT MAC
MIS B. Highway 17XL laniard
■ a X tr d fW n m ilM Ortandn (XT) XSXBS

i PIZZA* Inc
3837 Lake Emma Rd. L o b M ary
3 3 3 -0 8 7 2

'SERVICE1INSTALLATION
H ealth C a re C enter

(C2o^

S 2 2 -S A 6 0
B s t d w h F A lR c liltd O a K I a w n P

arL

C iA tttta y ta d ItaaaA l Horn*
—mm—
r THE MHPUCITT PLAN#
•* hd «*A a. Nmnahan R*. Laaa IWry

^
^
VA ^ )
3 2 1 -5 4 8 3
HERMAN (SING

STENSTROM, McMTOSH
JULIAN, COLBERT
WHIGHAM A SIMMONS* P A .
A77 OHMTB AT LAW

« 7 ) » J17t

ardord

PaatOBtaa Baa *4*8

8u8a O • BwWdnd Wdt

0 7 ) tl* 8 tt8

HNtBa

XOW WdFVHMaaf

SardoW. rtaRW S7777X X

PLEASE CAU FOR PWC« HFORMATION

W A L -M A R T P L A Z A

330-1660

PETER RUDE2

Com plete Auto Service
Paint &amp; Body
201 N. M aple
(N e x t to S anford H arald)

P id W h o M P ru tlp a M
*A Maway &lt;d D u d id Gad «r Sanhrf
AMM CunoAim
BWara wtd AAa* S«B8H D*» Cam 1-11 Va.

2 5 9 9 Sanford A ve .

(Pa\i ctfvinut ScdUxiti

CAREY HAND
,
GARDEN CHAPEL

fldpfaurjnf And food SdrWc*
Equipment tnd Supplltt
Ptny Good* tnd Ptptt Goods
2620 Iroquois A y r .
Saniord 32773

BILL MARCELLO

AND BISLE STORE

The Stqff O f

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

322-2070

SEMNOLE TRINITY CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL and DAYCARE

*A Little Touch O f Sicily
NICKVIVONA
2477 Paris A v e @ 2S&lt;b S

ECRANRAR
Rattgum o ' I ha Light I Sound
770 Big Traa Ortaa, Suita I X
Longaood, FL 177*0 1V*0
(t 8 ituiaa »aat ot 17/97
on C R X T)
Sunday WorahrpSoratca I t W a rn
For mora mlormallon call S X S IM

323 3517

CENTRAL SYSTEMS

USED CARS

To List Your
Church Services
On This Page
Contact The
Advertising
Dept.

SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL CHURCHES
$6.00 Per Week
To Advertise On This
Pagc.*Call 322-2611

I t a II an R e s t a u r a n t

323-9043

KEN KERN'S
TRANSMISSIONS
323-3040
500 Laurel Ave. Sanford

HOPKINS MEAT PACKING
MCHQAN BTFWT • OFF SANFORO AVt

BRISSON
FUNERAL HOME
OR

Shorty Smith and

Bui Wdiporn

9 th St. and Laurtl Ave.

Saniord

322-2131

Ra-RooflnS ft Repair
* FREE ESTIMATES •
Frank ft Mauren Libera tore
330*9976

KEN'S A IR

HEAT PUMP SPECIALISTS
102 Commerce Way
Sanford
321*6515 3 2 2 * 0 2 0 8

2650 S. Orlando Drive, Sanford

323-6684

Insurance

C*r1 Bergman 4 Employees
uuPm p x x

JPWS

*

3844S. OrtudoDr.,Sanford'
(Corati of 17-92A Ld* May BM.)

323-1204

-A -

�San lord Horata. Sanlora. Florida - Friday. July 16. 1993 - SB

Religion
Franks take command of Salvation Army

IN B R I E F

here in Sanford ts for all of
Seminole C o u n ty ." he said
"Alot of people have the Im­
pression that since It Is lu
Sanford It Is only for Sanford
residents, that Is Just not so.
This facility Is for everyone.
"I'm really a very easy going
guy." he added. "I'm Just highly
motivated.
Lt. Sylvia Franks has served
with the Arm y us an officer for
six years. She has been stationed
In Dallas Grove. Wichita Fulls.
Houston and Austin, to name
Just a few.

■y KILLIY MITCHELL

Herald Stall Writer____________

Life as a monk
The monks of Si. Leo Abbey will conduct their seventh
nnnual monastic Exfierlence Summer Program from Aug.
15-22. The monastic ex|x-rlencc Is for single men who want to
learn about the monastic life.
The program offers participants the opportunity to spend u
week enriching their spiritual life through an appreciation for
prayer and solitude In community. While living In the
monastery they will Join the monks for prayer, meals, work,
and recreation.
A number of monks will give the group talks on vocation and
monastic topic. One does not need to Ire considering u monastic
vocation to participate. Young men. IH years of age and older,
are Invited to apply. For more Information and application
material, write to Fr. David Dralm. O.S.B St. Leo Abbey.
P.O.Box 2 081. St. Leo Florida 33574.

Liardon featured at Wekiva Assembly
LONG WOOD — Roberts Liardon Ministries Reaches Out to
the World. Roberts Liardon is a man of vision and strength. Mr
carries u message of divine Impact and reform for this
generation.
Robert gave himself to God while In his teenage years for the
work of the ministry. Focus and divine providence brought his
ministry International awarrness In over 40 nation personally
and several more nations have also been touched Indlrertly.
Robert Liardon will be at Wekiva Assembly to minister on
Sunday. July 25 In both morning services |8 u.tn. A 10.30). We
are located off of Markham Woods Rd. In lamgwood. Please call
407-774-0777 for more Information.

‘My Wonderful Lord’
SANFORD — The community Is Invited to attend The
Salvation Army "M y Wonderful Lord" Vacation Bible School.
Presented by Child Evungellsm Fellowship. Vacutlon Bible
School will be held July 26-30 from 10-11:30 am at the
Salvation Army. 700 West 24th St.. Sanford.
For more information and If you need a ride please call
322-2642.

Revival service planned
LAKE MARY — First Baptist Church Markham Woods. 5400
Markham Woods Road, Lake Mary, will he having revival
services July 18-21. nightly ut 7 p.m. Rev. David Miller of
Heber Springs. Ark., will be the evangelist. Brother Miller Is un
annotnted preacher of God's Word, and bus held revival
services ucross the USA for the past 20 years. Mr currently
serves on the Board of Trustees of the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary In Louisville. Ky.
Nursery provided for all services. Details: 333-2085.

Group discussion continues
St. Clare Catholic Community. 21M3I Day Hd . continues to
host a series of evening discussion groups for those people In
Deltona. Osteen, nnd Lake Helen urru Interested in becoming
Roman Catholics. The next evening will be July 26. at 7:30
pm. The topic for the evening will be “ What Happens After
Death". The facilitators for the evening will be Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Thomas Connolly. For further Information conluct Bill Cavtns.
Director of Christian Initiation, ut 904-789-9990.

Gifts of love
SANFORD — Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. 2525 Oak
Ave., expressed Its thanks for two memorial gifts in connection
with the celebration, of Its congregation's 40th anniversary.
First, a steeple for the church Is a gift from Mrs. Rachel Ale.
The steeple Is given In loving memory of Stanley Ale and Alfred
Klrschstetn. members who died In 1974 and 1990 respectively.
The congregation had earlier selected a steeple as the 40th
anniversary project. Mrs. Ale remembers u time some years
ago when bcglng new in the urea she looked for our church but
couldn't find lt-a reason behind Rachel's memorial gift. W e
thank her for her generosity! And we pray that the steeple will
"guide many to our church location" In the decades to come.
Second, an anniversary gift was given by Mr. and Mrs. Bill
and Edna Southward in loving memory of John and Katherine
Senkarik. John and Katherine arc Mrs. Southward parents.
They were charter members of our congregation and very
Instrumental In getting the congregation organized truck In
1953. The Southward donation was used to purchusc four
adjustable height lublcs and 58 folding chairs for the fellowship
hall (other members made it possible the purchase of 84
additional chairs}.

SANFORD - With the sparkle
o f a nrw adventure In their eyes.
Capt. Greg Franks and his wife,
Lt. Sylvia, have taken on the
challenge of commanding the
Salvation Army here.
Fresh out of the two year
Salvation Army School o f Of­
fic e rs Training f a c ilit y In
Atlanta. Capt. Franks has some
very ambitious goals for the
Seminole County area.
"Th e facility here In Sanford
has a fully equipped gym that I
would like to see utilized, name­
ly by the Boys A Girls Club,"
said Capt. Franks. "I have al­
ready sent oft for the Information
parkugc on how to set up a
partnership with the organiza­
tion and start one here at the
Army.
"I'ld also like to see a iren care
program d ev elo p ed for the
children of the community." he
said.
Capt. Franks' goals are not
only for the young members of
the community. He has aspira­
tions for the older adult |M&gt;puluilou and of course most Im­
portantly for the chapel and Its
membership.
"There Is a program that the
Army offers called Young at
Heart for 40- to 50-year-olds to
come together and fellowship."
said Capt Franks "Th e Army
has done a need survey for this
area and what they found lack­
ing the most is in child care am)

Capl. Greg and Lt. Sylvia Franks

M a rik ! Photo 0 ; Fahey U ilc h o ll

soldiers and volunteers to not
only help make these programs
come true, but to share the good
news o f Jesus Christ In Seminole
County.

senior adult programs. I would
like to help fill those needs.
“ Of course the main objective
for my wife and I Is to build up
the strong membership base
that exists here ai I be A rm y ." he
said. " W e need d e d ic a te d

' It's very Important for resi­
dents to know i hat llie Arm y

"W e really like Florida." she
said. "W e are Just now getting
settled in our new house, but
everything Is coming together,
slowly hut surely.
"The only thing that is unusu­
al for us urc the violent afternoon
thunderstorms." she said. "T h e
lightning Is really something,
but I guess w e'll get used to that
too.
"W e're here to spread the good
news of the Lord Jesus Christ."
she said. "M e will guide us and
teach us as we go along. We're
really excited nlmut being here."
The Salvation Army is cur­
rently accepting canned goods
and non-perishable food for the
llood victims In the Midwest.
The donations ure being col­
lected at the Colonial Drive
facility In Orlando. Truck loads
of food urc being delivered to the
displaced citizens by the Salva­
tion Army throughout the Unit­
ed Stales.

Where do you like to sit in church?
W ill "T h u n k you for noi
wearing p erfu m e" signs he
Joining "T h an k you for not
smoking" signs?
The First Unitarian Church in
San Francisco has reserved four
jx-ws on Sunday mornings (or
people who don't use perfume
and don't like to lx* near those
who do.
I saw the problem developing
15 years ago when a woman told
tne the reason she didn't go to
church was that she couldn't
stand the perlumr vtm r church­
goers wore.
Under the headline "Perfume:
WhlfTof Controversy." I wrote:
"I thought I had heard every
reusott people could give for not
going lo church. This was a newone.
"Then I discovered others had
the same gripe. Some women
wear so mueh perfume they hold
you smell-bound.' said one.
"I uni sympathetic. I some­
times am forced lo change my
seat on the bus or In a theater
becuuse somebody near me Is
wearing perfume 1find offensive.
But. of course, you can't get up
and move In church without the
rlsk ol hurting somebody's feel­
ings."
But churchgoers don't like to
be told what to do. They want,
for example, to sit where they
please.
Ministers would prefer that
people sit together and closer to

wearing and doing. You miss the
■people show ' If you stt down
front. What about the mam
show' lu the chancel? It's the
same every week It's not like u
sports event where llie action Is
always changing. So there's no
reason to I k * dow n front."
"Some people sit lu the back
because they want to be close lo
the door w h ere they can get out
quicker. T h ey don't like to have
to rub elbows with others uftcr
the service."
"When people stt In the front
oi the church, you know they arehtR givers or their pledges urc
(Mid up lo dote. It ts the small o r
delinquent coutrihulor w h o
hides In the back."

the front. It ts easier to speak to a
group that Isn't scattered and off
In the next county.
Some churches put cushions
un only the front pews in an
clforl to get the congregation to
sit upclose.
The only other place besides
church where people make a
dash for the back sruts Is in the
college classroom, Professors
speculate this Is because stu­
dents feel they are less likely to
be called on there.
The back-benchers arc usually
not the better students. Students
who sit In the front rows have
been found to have a higher
grade-point average. They are
the ones who are Interested tn
the subject.
This may apply also to the
up-fronters In church.
Who arc the people who make
a run for the back seats on
Sunday morning'?
Listen to a couple o f guesses

Whatever reason (x-oplc have
for sluing In the buck. Iliosc w h o
sli In the front probably get m ore

oul of the service.
There are fewer distractions
within their range of vision, for
one thing.
Not only can those up front
hear what the preacher Is suylug, they also cun see him up
close. This Is Impartunl.
The farther away you are from
u speaker, the less you absorb of
bis message - no matter howgood the sound system Is. A
study has indicated thut for
th o s e In t h e b a c k o f un
auditorium less than 50 percent
of what the speaker says sinks
In. even though they can hear
every word.
Despite this, people will sit
wherever they want In church.
So I don't Imagine there Is
much hope o f segregating the
perfume-wearers lu a section of
their own.

S p e c ia l S e c t io n s F o r
S p e c ia l H e a d e r s
Many Special Section* found n th * Santera Harold
throughout try# yaar taalura tntormatm articte* and loperelated advarwamantt Sues feature* hava inducted car
cart, beck lo echool twite. vecakon planning program*
homo improvement. tan Una np*. health and Otnaa* grades
and many more Each taction Natives ntorm ttv* w id e * K Y I ) *£''•
and lopc-rauiad advadaamanti That# pcarout taction* art -K'~designed lo b* kept and uaad a* heipkjl rateranca grade*

S u b s c r ib e T o d a y !
Call 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

from pastors:

j"

S a n fo rd H e r a ld

"T h ey urc the ones who want
lo sec what their neighbors are

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

A lU A N C i CHURCH
Community Ainanca Church, 4*15 East L a ta Drive, W inter S pring *
Neighborhood Alliance Church. Mi Markham W ood* R d . Longw ood
Sanford Ail.anc# Church. &lt;401 S Park A .a . San Ion)
A U tH S L T O rO O D
Emmanuel Assembly otUod 1201 Commercial St l*c io **lfO « C tv i*
C*nt*ft, Sanford
Fam dyW ortM pC antar.Ittl Airport Bird San lord
Freedom A tte m b iy o l God. 7960 Orlando D r. Sanford
W s k lit AatemMyoiOod. 1|75D&lt;ionRd Longwood
BAPTIST
A ntioch Raptiat Church. Oviedo
Calvary B a p tltl Church. C ry tla l Lake t 3rd Lake Ma/y
Caatafberry Bapdat Church. 770 Saminola B ird
Central B a p tltl Church. 3101 W 1*1 St
Chutuota First B a p tltl
Clearwater M ltatonary B a p h il Church. S o u th * * * ' Rd
Countryside B aptist Church. Country C lub Road, la k * Mary
First B a p tltl Church. 519 Park Air*
First Baptist Church o l Allamonta Springs, Rl 43* A ttam onl* Springs
First Baptist Church o l Forssl City
First Baptist Church o t O a n tr*
First Baptist Church, Markham Woods
First Baptist Church ot la k e Monro*
First B a p tltl Church o f long w ood . 991 East SR 434
First B aptist Church o l Oviado
First B a p tltl Church of Sanlando Springs
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. 1101 W 13th St
First Baptist Church ot O tt* * n
Fountain H ta d B a p tltl Church. Oviado
Hop# Baptist Church. Forest C ity Com m unity C *n ltr, F o re tl C ity
ln d *p *n d *n c * Baptist Mis*. C M c la a g u * Bldg . long w ood
Jordan M ltatonary Baptist Church, AM Upsaia Rd
lig h th o u se B aptist Church. *65 lo n g w o o d - la k e Mary Road
LaMvlew B aptist Church, 126 lakaview At* , la k s Mary
Macedonia M ission Baptist Church. Oak H ill R d , O tl* * n
Missionary B aptist Church. North lt d .E nte rprise
M orning Olory Baptist Chw'Ch. Geneva Hyry
Mt. Moriah P rtm illt* Baptist, 110* lo c u s t A y* . Sanlord
Mt. O ily* M ltatonary Baptist Church. Sanlando Springs Rd . Longw ood
M l Sinai Missionary Baptist Church, 1*00 Jerry Ay*
M l Zion M ltatonary Baptist. S ip ** Ay*
N«w Bethel Missionary Church. 9th St 4 Hickory Ay*
N *w Ml Calvary Missionary Baptist. 1109 W 17th St
N»w Salem P rtm itly* Baptist Church, 1509 W 12th St
N tw Tastwnant Baptist Church, Queiiaty Inn. N onh lon g w o o d
New Mt Zion Baptist Church. 1720 Paai A v*
N rw I I I * Fellow ship, 4(*1 E Lak* D n r*. Casselberry. Fl 3270*
N orthsid* B a p tltl Church. C huluol*
Peaceful B on B aptltl Church 11*4 ran* St .Mlamonta Springs
People'# B aptist Church. 1201 W. F irs t Street, Sanford
p u i*c r*lt Baptist Church. S O tt Airport BiA)
Pratrt* Lak* B a p tltl. Ridga R d . Fam Park
Progress M issionary Baptist Church, Midway
l eccnd Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church West Sanlord
Smyrna B aptist Church. 290 Overbroo* Or . Casselberry
Starlight B aptist Church. 190 Bahama Rd
St. Jama* M ltatonary Baptist Church, 81. Rd 41S, O tlaan
SI. John* M ltatonary Baptist Church. 309 Longwood A y * , A tta m o n l*
Spring*
St. Luka M ltatonary Baptist Church of Cameron City. Inc

St Paul B a p tltl C hurch. St3 Pina Ay*
St M atthew * B a p tist lihurcn, c a t * * H g lt
SI John's M issionary B a p tltl Church. 970 Cypress Si
SpnngtMid M lta to n a ry Baptist 12th A Cedar
Sunland B a p tist Church. 2626 Palmetto
Temple B a p tist C hurch. P*tm Springs Rd A llw n o n l* Springs
Victory B a p tist C hurch, 0&lt;d Orlando Rd at Hester A&lt;*
W *tly i* w B a p tist Church. 4100 P*ol4 Road |46A|
W illiam C hapel M issionary Baptist Church. Mark 4 W illiam S t .
A llam onta S prings
Zion Hope B a p tist Church. 712 O ranu* Ave
CATHOLIC
All S oul* C a th o lic Church. 902 Oak Aye Sanford
C hurth o t the N ativity. Lake Mary
Our Lady o l the Lakes Catholic Church *1310 Mai imhan. Deilona
St Ann a C a th o lic Church Dogwood Trail. 0 « B try
St Augustin# C ath olic Chuich. S untaf O' near Button Rd . Casselberry
St Clare C a th o lic Community meets at Osteen Civic Center
SI Mary Magadaiana Catholic Church. M aitland A ye.
A ltam onte S prings

SI Mary 5 UarenienCerholrc Church. 2*5 la»# McCoy Or Apopk*
CHRISTIAN
First C hristian C hurch. 1607 S Sanlord Ay*
First Chnstian Church o l Longwood. 1400 C E W illiam son R d . Longwood
Orac* C hrist ran C hurch, Wilson Elementary School. (Paoiai. 965 Orange
B iv d . S anlord
lakevlew C h ristia n Church. Bear Lak* Rd . at Jamison
Santord Christian Chuich, 730 Upsaia Road. Stn'ord
South S am inola C hristian Church 300 W SR 434 Oviedo
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church o l C h n tl Scientist. 975 Markham Woodk Rd . Longwood
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Church o t C h rist. 1512 S Park Ay*
Church o l C h rist at Lak* Ellen. U S 17 92. N Casselberry
Church o l C h ris t, 600 Palm Springs D r . Altam onte Springs
Church o l C h ris t, Geneva
Church o l C h ris t, Longwood
Church o l C h ris t. W t7 lh S l
N o rth ttd * C h u rch o f C h n tl. Fla Haven Dr . Maitland
South S em inole Church o l Christ Sato Lake Howell Rd
CHURCH OF OOO
Church o l G od. 503 Hickory
Church o l God. 003 W 22nd St
Church o l God. Oviedo
Church o l God H oliness Lak* M onro*
Church o t God M ittio n . Enterprise
Church o l O od, 1402 W I6 lh St
Church o l God in C hrist, Oviedo
Church o f God o l Prophecy. 2509 S Elm Ave
Church o t Ood o l Prophecy. 1706 S Persimmon Ay*
Church o t God o t Prophecy. 496 S Central. Oviedo
Church o t God (71h 0*y). Deltona Community C . nl*r, Deltona iSun Room)
Ratcue C hurch o f God. 1700 W 13th S t . Sanlord
True C hurch o t G od. 2700 R&gt;dg*wood A y * . Sanlord

CONGREGATIONAL
Congregational C hnstian Chinch, 2401 S Park A v e . Sanlord
WWilar Spring* Community Evangelical Congregational Church 219 Wad*
• I . Winter Springy
EASTERN ORTHOOOX
Eastern O rthodo s Church. St Georg* 2001 Dylan Way, Maitland
Eastern O rlhodos Church. SI 8 'rre n 's o l O C A 1995 Lata Emma Road.
Longwood. PL 32750

Eastern O n h o d o i Church. St John O n h o d o i. 274} Country C'ub Road.
Sanlord
EPISCOPAL
AM Salma Episcopal Church, E DaBary A y* . Enterprise
C h iltl E piscopal Church. Longwood
Episcopal C hurch o l the New Covenant. 875 T u tk ia iila Road W inter
Springs
Holy Cross Episcopal, Park A«a at 4 ih Si Sanlo'd
51 Peter* Episcopal Church, 700 R inahart Road lane Mary
51 Richard a Church, 5151 Lak* H ow ell Rd W in tt' P*’ &gt;
The Church o l I he Good Shepherd. M a itla nd. 331 Lak* A w
INTERDENOMINATIONAL
Calf ary Christian Carter. 500W 4lh Si Sanford
New Harvest Christian Fdiowslup 2760 Country Club h i S * lord
flo rth la n d C om m unity Church. 530 D og Track Rd ipngaood. FL 32750
Outraach D eliveranct Centtt, 2231 S ioa« Ay# F a i.i...
JEWISH
Bath Am Synagogue meeting i t C om er o l Sand Lave and County Line
Road W est I 4
Tempta Shalom , 17*5 Elkcam S lid . D elton a
LUTHERAN
Ascension Lutheran Church. O te rbro ok D r , C atlt!b&lt;—r
Good Shapherd Lulheran Church ELCA 7917 Orlando 0* |H#y t7 97i
Sanlord
Holy Cross Lulheran Church o l Lana Mary 760 Sun D m * Lane Mary
Lord 01 l i f e Lutheran Church, 395 T u tn a w iita Rd Winter Springs
Lutheran C hurch o l Providence. D eltona
Lulheran C hurch o f lha Radaemar. 2525 Oan Atanua
Messiah Lulheran Church. Golden Days Dr k Hay 17 92 Casselberry
St Luke* Lutheran Church. Rt 426. S ia v ii
St Stepfien lu th e i4 n Church. 434 |u s t W a tl o l 14 Longwood
METHODIbT
Barnett U nited Memorial Church E OeBary A i t Enterprise
Bear Lane U nited Malhodist Church
Bethel A M E Church, Canaan H g lt
CastalbefTy Comm unity Unilad M e th o d is l Church, Hay 17 92 Pin»y
Ridga Rd . Casaelbarry
Chnst U n ila d Methodist Church Tucker Dr Sunland Eslalas
OaBa'y C om m unity M alhod'lt Church W Mighbenkt Rd DeBary
First U nilad M ethodist Church, 419 Par* A t#
First M a lh o d ist Church o&gt; Oviado
First U nited M ethodist Church o ' Geneva
Qraca U nited Methodist Church 499 N C ountry Club Rd Lake Mary
Grant Chapel A M E Church. O vedo
Oakgrov* M ethodist Church. Oviado
Ottaan M a lh o d ist Church, Cor o l C arpenter k Murray S t, O tta en
Pioneer Mettfodrst Church Comer o ' W -ibut Aie 4 Country Ciuh Road
Laae Mary
Sanlando U nited Methodist Church SR 434 and 1-4, long aoo d
St James A M E . 9th * l Cypress
St lu k * M B Church o t Cameron C ity, Inc . Beerdan o il S R 46 E
St Mary a A M E Church, Si Rt 415. O tls e n
SI Paul a M ethodist Church. Osteen R d . Enterprise
S lia ltord M em orial Ctiurch. 5 DeBary
NAZARENE
First C hurch o l the Nararena. 2561 S anlord Ave
Geneva C hurch o l the Na/aren* S R 46 Geneva
la k e Mary C hurch o f lh * N tteren* 171 E Crystal Lake Ave Las* Mary
Longaood C hurch o l the Najaren*. W aym an t Jessup A w . L o n g a o o d
Markham W oods Church o l lha Nay arena SR 46 3W M.'ev West o l I 4
at the W ekiva River

(
* a -a

PRESBYTERIAN
Deltona Presbyterian C h u rch . Holland Blvd k A ustin Av* , Delton*
First Presbyterian C h u rc fi o l Lake Mary
First Presbyterian C h u rc h . O tk As# k 3'd St
First Presbyterian C h u rc h o l OtBary, E H ighland
Markham Woods P resbyterian Church. 1210 Markham Woods Road La»#
Mary, Ft
SI Andreas P resb yterian Chuich, 9913 Bear Lake Rd
St Mann Presbyterian C hurch. 1021 Palm S pring * Rd , Altamonte Spgs
TuacaaiHa Presbyterian Church. 3600 W est S la t* Rd 426 Oviado Fla
Uptete Community P resbyterian Church. U psaia Rd
Westminister P resb yterian Church, Rad Bug Rd . Casselberry
SEVENTH 0 A ( AD VEN TIST
Forest Lak* Seventh D ay Adventist Church. H w y 436, Forest City
M a rt Hill S tw n th Day A dven iist Church 801 E 2nd S t. Sanlord
Sanlord Sewnlh Day A dve n tist C hu'th . 5615 N Highway 427
Seventh 04y A dven tist C hurch. Maitland A »* . A llam onta Springs
W miar Springs S eventh Day Adventist Church. 50 S M o tt Rd
OTHER CHURCHES
A ll Faith Chapel. C am p S am i not* Wekiva Park. Rd
A ile n 'i A M £ C hurch, O liv e ( 12th
BvardaJi Avenue H o lm e s * Chapel, Bearden Ave
Chutuota Community C h u rch
Church ol Jesu* C h ris t o l Latter Day Saints. 7315 Park Av*
ECKANKAR, 770 Big T ie * Drive. Suite 100 Longwood
Family Church C h ris tia n Center. 1544 Seminote Blvd . Casselberry
First Bom Chu'Ch o t th e Living God Midway
First Church ot C hrist,*S cie n tist. Eitam Blvd and Venus S t . Oeilona
First Pentecostal C h u rc h o ) Longaood
First Pentecostal C h u rc h o l Santon)
Foil Gospel Church o t G o d in Christ. 1626 Jerry Ave , Sanlord
Fun Gospel Tabernacle. 2724 Country Club Road
Grace Bible Church. 2844 S Sanford Av*
Holy Thnty Church o l G o d In Christ. 151* M e n g o u td n * A t*
Kingdom Hall o t Jehovah a Witness. Lake M o nro* Unit. 1562 W th ird St
Lak* Uomo* Chapel, O ra nge B ir d . Lake M o n ro *
M t O nw Holiness C h u rc h , Oak K ilt Rd , Osteen
Neighborhood A llia n c e C hurch X I Markham W o o d * Rote, lo n g a o o d
PaytaWaHeyanChurch. 5650Wayt&lt;de Dr Sanlord
Pentecostal Open B ib le Tabernacle. Ridgewood Ave . O tt 25th opposite
Seminole High S choo l
P r a t* and Power C h u rc h t i t W Wilbur Ave . Lake Mary
IWtloral-on Community C h u rth 5415 N CR 4J7 Sanlo-d
Rolling Hint Moravian C hurch. SR 434. Longw ood
Jenford Ai ianc* C h u rch , 1401 S Pa-t A w
S anlo'd Bible C hurch, 2460 Sen lord Ave
Second Church O l The L ivin g God, 3426 Beardell A v* . Sanford
SI Pe’ teSe'tvan Onn-xtoa Church. 1990 Lak* Emma Rd . Longwood
SI Slew#* Onhodoi Church. IMS la k * Emma Rd . Longwood
The Full Gospel C hurch o f Our Lord Jesus C h rist. W ashington S t . Ce
naan City
The Sanation Army. 700 W 24th SI
Triumph The Church o l th e N ta Age. 1006 W ,6 lh SI
U nited C h u th o l C h ris t. Altamonte C om m unity Chapel, Altamonte
Spnnqt
United Church o t C h rist C hristia n Fellowship. 260 N Country Club Rd .
Lak* Mary
U C S S Spiritual Centre. 125 A South V otetU Ave . Comer o l G ra w t and
Volusia Ay* Orange C ity
W inter Springs C o m m u n ity Evangelical C ongregational. 219 Wade Si .
W in ttf Springs

�- Santord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday. Juty 16. 1993

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
8317 1 -H e lp Wanted

12— E ld e rly Care

ASSEMBLERS

ELDER CARE will provUJ* total
cart lor on* elderly ivmale. 5
d ay *a o li lahr* 177707*

Hand mall work 11 per hour
Never a fee I
Help Pertenwei. tltg iv v

13— Bingo

AGENT S-AVON. Earn lo M \
No door/door Guaranteed
*0*« ditcounli SandiUI IIVI

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
It: MAM and I M PM
ELEA WORLD
MWY II 41. SANFORD

ASSEMBLER
Light electronic*,
mechanically inclined appli
canlt a plutl Application*
taken I day Mon July t**h.
b etw een *! Mathew! A ltec.
Ml HICKMAN CB . Santord

21— Personals
ADOPTIONS
F lr r medical cart, Iranvpor
lattorr. tountallng, private
doctor plus living aipentat
Bar rijTllS Call Allarnar John
FrtcLtr
I 500 *7! 1444

Assistant Miinterunci Ptnon

23— Lost &amp; Found
• FOUND DOG. M iniature
Greyhound 73th St A 17 VI
area, tamale I I I 10*1
_
LOST CAT
M ale tabby"
brown black, Winn Dial*. ISIh
St Needi medicine 1X71!*
REWARD
11531 Loti dog
small gray and white Shth
Ttu. temalt. a ! lb* Loti Irom
Remington Oak*. Laka Mary
on V7I No tag*. 171177*
S M A L L . W H IT E OOO In
Idyllwlidt area Answer* to
■’Munchl*' Reward 777 4B0I
WHERE. OH WHERE hat yeur
little dog genet I found itt
Sm all. I inch et high at
thouldert White, long hair
No tagt Found al 17th and
Magnolia 111 OUt

25—Special Notices
CHEERLEADER CLASS ttartt
toon S&gt;gn up now lor the
Cheerrtlet. aget * tl Have
tun, get in thape, make
Inendt Build confidence and
tall etteem lie 7ia«or 777 I ! 14
HOST FAM ILIES NEEDED.
Hott an aechange tludent
Irom Germany Oenmark.
Croatia, or Poland Studentt
•till arrive in Augvtl to attend
local high tchool For further
information call I *00 777 lit *
or 007 57* m i _______________
SENIOR CITIZENS Need a ride
to doctor or anywhere In
Sanlord! Call Ann 77* let*

27—Nursery &amp;
___ Child Care

N e e d e d lo r L a k e M ary
apartment community Mull
have electrical and A/C e.p
Apply al SI Crole Apart
mantt. 71* Secret Harbor
Lane. Laka Mery
1717X1

CAFETERIA WORKER
NO N IG H T S . NO WEEK
ENDS Part lime Include* all
clean up and tome caihtaring
Hour* tl 10 1 » Mon Frl
55 hr Send retumet ONLY
to Jober1* Cate. 1X1 Silver
Lake Drive. Santord F L 17771
CARPENTERS OR CARPEN
TER HELPERS NEEDED.
No call* alter 7 PM la* HM

Cashier
P*r1 time Apply in Ptrion
Sanlord Eaaon. Corner ol
Highway 17 *1 and Laka Mary
Bl.d EOE

Cashier
Full lim a and pari lima
needed Apply at Caatlal
Mart, it lk Orlande A v t „
Santord.

CHILD CARE HELPER
With day care eiperlence
only Lake Mary 177 1*50

CONSTRUCTION
AH phetet To SIS hourly
Refundable fee
*7**101

COSMETOLOGIST
with following i l l *11* or
771 **!• ___________

DAYTIME HOSTESS
PART TIME WAITRESS
Wantad C all VAM 1 1 AM
Serg o t Italian Retlaurant
m *0*1

Ddnttnf/WtrthoKS* Ptnon
*0 hn . Paid inturance and
benalllt Clatt 0 licant* req
Clean driving recc'd. Knowl
edge of Orlando area a plutl
Apply 1X1S Santord Are

ABC S M A L L D A Y C A R E
Bablet. toddlart I hot maalt
Free week I Dae. 173 01II

For Excellent...

DEMONSTRATORS

Proletttonel CHILD CARE
Service*, call 1717001

Chrittmai Around th* World
now hiring Free 1500 temple
kit No Investment A lto
booking p artlet. *50 tree
merchandise and morel
a t i - m t m _______

31—Medical
FLORIDA CORF it an outpe
Kent rehabilitation feclly
providing the Ideal tarvica
you need For informal ion or a
tpyr call
MO 7*0*

DOCK WORKER
Up to U5K Comp bene , *01K
Refundable lee
-47*4101

EXP. PAINTER

43— L e g al Services
HAVINO PROBLEMS getting
credit! Call Smile* a * i l l *

55— Business
O pportunities
SODA / SNACK vending reute
available. 55.*»5 financing
available Call 170*710 Jim
C u t fo m V e n d m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

59—Financial
Services

Turned Down?
It yog have been turned down
lor know you will be), call the
credit erperlt You can buy a
h e m e w lt h 'b a d c r e d it .
*07 17* HU

Mutt be able to Spray, brush
and roll n i a tll.tv m f .

EXPERIENCED SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
SAn Del Manufacturing l»
accepting application! tor
E X P E R IE N C E D INDUS
TRIAL tewing machine oper
aiort only Accepting epplice
liont thru Juty Tnd then again
starling July 17th for hiring to
begm July ITtn Paid holiday*
and vacation, air conditioned
facility 77*0 Old Lake Mary
Rd. Santord *07 H I X10
GENERAL

MOTIVATED
PEOPLE!
$$$5250-5400$$$

At—Money to Lend
BILLS DUE?
Have I Place lo Pay I Slath
Monthly Paymenttl Gat Crad
ilort OH Your Back I Eaty
Quality Ho Collateral! 177 7SU

71— Help Wanted

EMPLOYMENT

323-5176

Peopl* needed lo perform
v a r lo u l d u tie s w ith ou t
supervision In a last paced,
lake charge environment Full
lima positions only to be tilled
this week Call 11*0*17
GOOD WORKERS NEEDED
Dally work, dally pay Sl.X/hr
and up Report 5 X AM Corner
ot 17*1 and Park Dr. US 7**0

Hairstylist

now. utdst.

ADD TO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL 117 *717 a r m M il

AG ASST.
Parmanant. full time 14 ]l/hr
Outlet Include growing «ege
tablet and ornamanlalt in
tietd and greenhouM. applying
petlicldet and farm mainle
nance H S grad and 7 y n
Bap. For application call
I X a m or wrlta 1700 E Celery
A v e S a n to r d F L 11771
E E O / A fllrm a ttva Action
Employer___________________

AGENTS-REAL ESTATE!
Nothing tucceedt lika tuccvit
We’re well Into Pur Ird decade
ol training tuccetiful agenlt
Noilcanta?
We’ll help)
WATSON REALTY CORP
REALTORS
111 1700

APPOINTMENT SETTERS
WANTED
P/T eve* Good attitude req
t l StO/hr w ith b o n u t
&gt; XVPM
SERIOUS INQUIRIESONLYI
_______ CALL i l l *177_________
ASSEMBLY WORKERS. Lang
term aitignment In the San
ford area Car k phone a
mutt l Apply taday al OPC
Temporary Service!, 1751 S.

II VI tvs till

Full or Part lima. *5 00 hr 1
up Paid vacation* and tome
paid H olld a y tl Fantastic
Sams In Santord 171 *0*1
NAPPY ELVES OUMcare, Lk.
Mary, need* e . p . organlitd
Caregiver-Taactar. W/natural
love tor Children 77) 7X*

Huvy Collision Body Ptnon
Mutt have own tool! Eiperl
•nee required
EXPERIENCED PAINTER,
must have own tooit Apply In
person « A M I PM: Sanlord
Paint and Body. M l Country
Club Rd. Santord 177H**
IT’ S EASY - WORK TOOAY.
GET PAID TOOAY I SPRINT
STAFFING..............J1V-XII

Ktnntl Jiniloritl
Retpontlbi* per ton. to care
tor animal* A facility. 17 pm.
M o n .- F r l. A A lt e r n a t e
Wkandt UIS W. 11th SI.
LABORERS NEEDED Dally
work, dally pay. Right Hand
Man. i m S. 17 *7 '
4H-I1X report at **m.

Landscapers
Full lima, CDL Clast O re
quired m i l l ] ______________
LIVE IN NEEDED. F o rld a y •
wk |ob Clean and cook In
return lor room, board and
salary OFLIt**4-77MI*1

CELEBRITY CIPHER

71—Help Wanted

71— H e lp Wantod

LOOKINO FOR Matere. outgo
Ing Individual to train In the
Upholstery butlnott. Exp
hetplul BUT not neceuary.
M W per hr. Send resume to
Blind Box 700. P O. Box M*7.
Santord. FL 37771____________

PR E S C H O O L TEACH ER
NEEOEDI CDA preferred
Call Maiody, 7717Alt_________

MAIDS
F/T. M F . a * Will tralni
Uniterm* Molly Maid, 7*7 X07

MAIDS
Honest and d epen dab le.
Mon Frl. Must past poly
graph) 1117***______________
MEDICAL

LPNS
II PM 7AM shift full time
Apply In person: Lekevtew
Nursing Ctr . ft * E. Tnd St
Santord_____________________
MEDICAL

LPN
Full time, 7 1 and 117 Charge
Nurse position*. Experience In
long term care highly da
sir sable Drug Ire* work
p la c e . C on ta ct: O abary
Matter, 4* N. Nwy 17*7. D r
b a g , FI 77711, *44447*
MEDICAL

RN
P/T to i l P M * *5 AM Sub
acute car* •**, highly da
sir able, but net required Will
train. Salary dependent upon
experience Contact: Debary
Manor, al N. Nwy 17 *1. De­
bar* ■Ft JITt I. *444*74_______
MEDICAL

NURSING ASSISTANT
a X AM 1 X PM and I X
PM 10 X PM FIT and P/T
ihitt* On th* |ob training
provided Must enroll In a
certified nursing assistant
court* and show proof ot
completion within *0 days or
caper fenced end registered to
challenge the lest within 7 w ti
ot employment Drug free
work piece Centect: Deb a g
Manor. M N. Nwy 17 *7. De
bary. FI P T IL M M O t

WGHT SHIFTWORKERS
Hourly. Apply at Lltchttald
Theater. 1SW N. Mary 17 *7
after I W____________________
PART TIME HOUSEKEEPER.
15th Street ere# Mutt have
d river's license. Call Bill
m 15*0_____________________

FART TIME BINDERY HELP
u n did Cat) m a a n _________

RHONE PROS NEEDED
For strang badge deal Call
___________ P i n t * ___________
r . --- m« i ---racTwrj rrorsan
Full lima, all shitts. benefit
Apply at: 1X0 Cherlet SI.
L a n gw e e d . A c ro s s tram
Lyman High School__________

* * POSTAL I0BS * *
Start | ll.*l hr ♦ banettlt
For application A Into, call
1 (1M&gt;U* S540, lam lBpm 7
days,
_____________

P rt School Teacher
Naadad tor Early Intervention
Pro K program Applicant
mutt have a CDA. M«gh scop*
training it a plus. Salary
n e g o tia b le , p lta s a c a ll:
*07 1714X7 it you are Inter
•sled and wish to have en
Interview.___________________

" SALES COUNSELOR
Oak lawn Par* Cemetery end
Funeral Home it looking tor 7
lull time employees lor pr»
need counseling Cell Dele
.................. m *7*1
SKILLED LABOR

Curb Machine
Operator
Must be experienced with
Gomeco curb mechlne Re
iponubie lor operation, main
tenence and transporting
machine to end Irom job site
Some form and finish work
necessary. ALSO HIRING
Streamline Seller and eiperl
enced Finisher. Apply Ward
Martin Concrete C o . 1M1 S.
Nova Rd., South Daytona.
EOE

■F M G D D Z

V E
H D Z
N Z Q ■ Z E A

U H H N U Q
HI

8 N

A K Z

K • O Q D

V Z V D C E

SHIFT MANAGER WANTED
Restaurant monagamant rap
preferred High school grad,
soma college pret Apply:
Taco Bell. Santord
SMALL AUTO broker iooktog
lor part time driver and car
dataller In Santord » « Its!
SMALL CONSTRUCTION com
pony needs Yerd Mae*gar.
Class E license, clean record.
heavy work. 1X **M _________

TEACHERS
COA/AA or above degree In
early childhood education tor
center In process ol NAEYC
accreditation Free ch:tdc*re
available EOE 777 ***5
T E L E M A R K E T IN G . Work
from home setting up *p
pointmenls Flat rata plus
com m ission Call 7 10PM
77*0117_____________________
WAREHOUSE AND GENERAL
LABOR H E L P NEEDED!
Bonus tor drivers All shills
available Dally pay. no tee
Report ready lo work 5 X am .
Industrial Labor Svc . 1011
French Av. No phone calls
WAREHOUSE Warktrs Strong
Clean cut people, tome heavy
lilting at different |ob toe*
lions In Sanlord Longwood
area Apply today al GPC
Ternpar ary Service*. ITS! S.
13*1.445 t i l l
_ _

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent

LAKE MABY. Furnished till
ciency UX/maittSsecurity
___________ 771-1411___________
ONE BOBM I bath. Furnished
efficiency. Santord 1775 mo
SIQOdapOsH........... 774 755*
PRIVATE, larg* I bdim. apt.
newly painted. M l tile bath,
country living I l*ower. water
furnished 577} mo plus drp
NO P E T S ................. 777 1*17
SANFORD. Downtown area
Smalt I bdrm apt Utilities
Included Rtasonabtai 777 5051

JUST OUTSI0E OF SANFORD.
7/t, Ig living rm, t*1 in
kitetan. A/C. catling Ians. Ig
bath. Plenty ol storage and
ctosal spec* Newly pan ted
inside and out i* X plus drp
No pats P7 1*17______________
LAKE F R ONT fenced corner to*.
1/1, llrepl. family rm. carport
Quit! near 17 *7. remodeled
5575 mo Lisa 777 !7X No pets

NICE. OLDER HOME Big tot.
quiet, near. 1 bdrm, studio. I
bath 5100-wk plus on* month
security I X ****

SANFORD, oil 15th 1/1, cent
A/C. very clean No pet*
5745/m o, i mo dap *** &lt;1*4
U N F U R N IS H E D . 1 Bdrm .
newly remodeled. IM* W Ird
SI. Front apt 5715 mo or 511
wk . plus wc. m 1144 Call
before* TOAm A altar &gt; 70Pm
I BDRM. 1 Bath. Scrn porrh.
CHA. all applt. ) w/cerport.
77* *401 or 171 44*4

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
ALL UTILITIES Paidl 1 bdrm"
living rm Kit. w/FpIc new
carpel, fresh paint. AC SX5
mo plus SItl NO PETS.
TXI004___________________ _
CLEAN, QUIET, I bdrm ap t.
AC. Iridge, stove, wattr incl
near Lk Monroe Reasonably
priced Eves 777 557*________
CONVENIENT A N D *PACIOU1
CALL GENEVA GAROENS
_
177 74*4
LAKE JENNIE APARTMENTS
I Bdrm Apt! Available Free
watev/pasl 77* 5557__________
LANGE I Bedreem 7&gt;&gt; bath 7
Story. Fplc , prlv yd . deck
5550 mo water, sewer in
clotted 77* 1777______________

Lavan's Landing
I A 1 BDRM VILLAS
REMTTOOWN
CREDIT NO PROBLEM
Applications lor 7 Bdrm
Homes Now Being Accepted

323-4923

WAREHOUSE

MARINER'S VILLAGE

1* NEEDED

Lake Ada I bdrm. 57*0 mo
3 bdrm. 5*10 mo and up

Maitland Unloading 'loading
SS per hour 7:*S AMS PM
Mon F rl Own phone and
Iransporfallon a tr.wsl Never
atoet Help Parsaawei.tt* elta

WELDERS
All types Hiring now, test req
Refundable toe .
47**101
WHOLESALE PLANT rhwtery
LABORERS nemM U 50 hr
777 1X7

• * Window S*mu* *
* * TECHNICIAN* *
• Full lime
• Eap preferred, will tram
• Full Company Benefits
Mon Frl. 7 : X * Apply at 777
PowerCt . Santord m i x *
575* 1544 W E E K LY. Work at
home at your own pace For
more intor. Send a SASE to
Six Away Publishing. I ll S
Oleander. Santord. FL 77771

91— A p a rtm e n ts/
House to S ta r t
PBIVATE Mother In law apt
Bath, lull kitchen, unturn 7
l£ r ^ n c tu d e * u t t^ 7 M * * ^ ^

93— R o o m s for Rent
CLEAN ROOMS. U n fit starting
t ll/ w k . K itch en , phene,
laundry, vid e* gamei. aft
Street p a rtin g 774*477

CLEAN, PU R NIINE O ream,
w'ktt avail *M wk . is* me
Downtown z n tea*
LIVING, n o . b AVn .1 Pile
ant use. share kit . ALSO
EHtoancy w/belh. priv enf
SIS wk plus dap Settorcabto.
tmn.er unturn 7X47*1______
WASHER-DRYER SIX. Fraerer
1100. Bikes IB speeds SXeach.
Eitrcycles Oym ityia AND
MOREII a * 4701

95— R oom /B o zrd
LIVE IN MATURE FEMALE
companion tor elderly woman
Room/board provided Salary

97— A p a rt n w its
F u rn ish e d / R«nt

notki

______3234(70______

Q uiet Single Story
Cassletarry. t bdrm A 1
bdrm.. Attic Storage1 Call
Joan tor appointment *44 4777
SANFORD'S Best Kapt Secret!
P o o l A Lau n d ry. I A 7
tadroomi Convenient toca
ttonl Call Pet. 777**50_______
SANFORD West l*1h St arte 7
bdrm apt. eat in kitchen 5715
Inc water/garbage 777 1557
S A N F O R D T O W N N O U S I.
1/tto. C M/A. M l kitchen.
W/D avail
rear yard. &gt;g
covered decs storage rm . 7
Hunter tans, verticais/mlnls.
extra clean 5**0/mo7a041H
I BD RM e lllc le n c y , quiet
5100/ma. 5700 dxp Util me 4
mites west o il eon *4 777 l i t !
I BEDROOM. 5175 month plus
5775 security deposit A refer
ences
17711*7

A Little Bit of EnrythiRi
77* Miller Road. Sanford
Friday and Saturday B S
A I FAMILY SALE. Thur. A
Frl.. boat, motori. toots, and
loo much to mantionl B 4.. X I !
S Magnolia
______________

BIG, LARGE SALE
n s Flamingo Dr. Sat.
SUNLANOESTATES.

A Sun

BIG YARD SALE
I FAMILY. Sal. only. A ll.
Baby tad. baby Item*, man A
womens clothes, baseball
cards, lamps.hardback books,
paper back books, bikas.
other household Items and
tools l i f t PALMETTOAVE.

GARAGE SAU
X7 Cottonwood Dr . Winter
Springs. Side by tide re
frig/treeter, cacalient condl
lion. Household and mltc.
Items Sal, only B 5* * » MIS

HUGE SALE
Many tools, cloitat and a tot
ol everything else) FRI. A
SUN. t-7 l7t*CBLERYAve.

SALE OF THE TEAR

TOOLS. OUNS. chain saws,
household, furniture. Trucks.
704 N 4th Slrtat. 777*777
S*turd#y end Sunday. * 7

TWO FAMILY TARO SALE
Furniture, baby deltas, etc.
107 E. Coleman Circle
Friday and Saturday 4 7

YARD SALE
107 Skogen Court. Santord. Oft
ol Uptolo Rd Basaball cards,
books, mags. toys, bikes,
luppvrware ■mlsc. Sat. &lt; T

YARD SALE
II* W. I7th Street Saturday
t i l l A total mltc

Yard Sab
Sat only. Household
cloth**, lots el mltc. 714
BRIARCLIFFE ST. B#hlnd
China King.

YARD SALE
•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garage sal* ad by
17 noon on Tuesday and taka
advantage ot our special
garage sal* ad prlcoll Call
Classified now tor datalltl

322 2111

Household goods, bikas. cam
ping equip 115 E Goodtaart
Ave . Lake Mary Sal, only 1 7

2 FAMILY SALE
m Bright Meadow Dr. Hills of
Lk. Mary. Frl Sat. A ll. HUGE
HUGE SALE________________

3445 Marfcftla A»a.

MULTI FAMILY

A K O A
Z F Z I
UQE
V H I D .
I K Z
VC
G
D Z Q R
R O N T . *
—
E T RP Y O
E V N D Z T .

Fri. Sol. 0*1 CHRISTIAN PL.
Tools* Fur«i., boby furn ,
ctefhosoftdtk tU UU______

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: *'l want to do p la y i and movtM
and TV movtM, and I'd like to work in w a ry tingle
medium ” — Mario Thoma*

T oys and c lo th e s , push
mower, dresser, end mltc
Fri. and Sal. 411 ONLY
1101 East Tnd Street

TODDLER

Frl. - Sot. A Robi. Pool table.
7700. C H A unit $70. Bays
d e lta t and thwt, toys, com
pntor and furniture and more
Everything must go I 777 5x74

4215 Shota CrtsUn.
Woodbine Sub Frl Sal. 01.
Furn. Clothes, toy* A mlsc.
household 011*77

SANFORD Executive 4 bdrm. )
bath 7,000 sq II P o o l,
workshop. I acre No pels!
51.I X Porilg Realty 777 **X
S A N F O R D , S/l H O U S E .
Acreage, horses allowed, on
lake 51 IM mo X I TOO* ___
SANFORD. 1/1 Stout, retrigtr
atar, detached garage 5715
piusd»p 777 7&gt;00or*** X U

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
COMFORTABLE. SAFE, con
ventanl to town 5175/mo plus
it 73* *700
LAKE MARY. Cat*, private 1/1
on* block * at Lakx Mary
Blvd New ceramic til* and
carpal 5*15 plus on* month
tacurlty
111 *777
LAKE MARY. 1 bdrm. CHA.
w/w carpet, ceil Ian. mints,
fenced yd (71 4!M

S tenstrom R entals
a SANFORD. 1/7 w/tingle g a r ,
ig rooms, fenced y d . CHA,
55!*mo 55X*ec
a LOCH ARBOR. 7/1 w/dtn.
u rn pool w/jacuiii, tp ic,
dbl u*r I SITS mo 5*00 sac
Stemtrem Realty. Inc.
”Wa Mttteg* yeur Heme,
like It was xvr awn." Jim Dtyto
373 74*5 Attar IPM- )M 11*5

COMFORTABLE I BORM. I&lt;i
bath hem* All amenities
5*4Vme plus dap 714*30*
SANFORD. Country home 1
bdrm 5*00 mo plus ttotlrtc

(D

LIT U N U l S A M f’ A&gt; IOR
YOU OR YOUR ( MH OS
i D il i A I ION

College •I’nivmay-TrKle School
Grant! ft scholarship* ire available through tlx
pnemmenl if you know how to find them and
qualify! Certain dead!ineVmirkttons nuy apply

@

11 M I N I O N r t o r it ARt
DOI NG IT AND HAVE N O
I N U N I I O N O l SIOI’ PING:

Home based businesiei Tlte answer to
Income, ficiibilry *nd f.rcdom It's easier
than you think.' H o i are they and
now do you get suited.'

@

C O MB I NG THI CORPORATE
I A DD tR /B RI A KING THRU
THE Gl ASS CUEING

If your ulenu arc over-looked or you feel
stalledby artificial harden, there are options!
Successful esenXivcs have theinm rt

FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE
THROUGH THf *)00«
BUSINESS
How to get involved and succeed in tlx
t mowing multi 1
dullar industry.

H A M M I N G AN D
SIORAGI Of
IOXK MAURI A l S
iTi not safe to travel in ihe U i anymore,
maybe not even In your own hometown.
The only protection n x have
it knowing how not lo oe a victim.

Radatkm leakage, chemical seepage into
groundwater and misuse of landfills are
hazards that affect us all
Ue informed!

JOBS (OR
THI dOc

PROTECI Y O U R S m
I R O M LI I N I O N S
I W ( MANGES

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Prepare now or pay later Can you
afford not to have this
tnfornuUm’

The M&gt; market and the skills required are
changing dramatically. Will you be
empoyable five yean from now!

BRYNHAVIN. 1/1 Shows Ilk* a
model, new carpet- tape FL
rm . W/D. LEASE OPTION or
Rent. 5550 ma or 51500 Down
Lease la awn Avail |/7.
References required 174 5B41
CASSELBERRY. House te rent
ml purchase eptiwv 4/7. pool.
air, dishwasher $7X4*5 *741
DELTONA. Cut* Clean. }/t.
carport. I yr. la*** 5*00 mo
Ratorancas *0* f&gt;* 7*74 .
HIDDEN LAKE Sanlord/Lak*
Mary. 7 bdrm. 1 fath. lanced
yard 547Vm o tail 1*7 7*44

LONOWOOO/LAKE M ARYMid sit* storage warehouses.
*00 100 1*00 sq It Free rent
w/llmo teas*, from tl4S/mo
___________ 7)1057*___________
SECURITY WAREHOUSE 44A
and Old Laka Mary Blvd
* t .150
7 000 sq It ol
tlc/warahous* ‘ Finished ol
tic* spec* also available
Repaid* Rtally, I 41* t i l l
**■*4 with II It callings 7 phase
power Suitable lor anything,
heavy toning 300 S Myrtle ml
private office Available now
5*X mo *0! 14* *4*4

After years o f providing extraordinary research for industry, the
INSTITUTE is proud to offer its services to you, the consumer!
Our expertise is now accessible to individuals who want to raise
their "quality o f life". It is our goal lo provide you with the best
information available. There are no "miracle methods" or "quick
fixes". W e offer you practical information and proven methods
that will m a k e t h e " s y s t e m " w o r k f o r y o u .

West $ B ** No pet» 77) 7737

BEAUTIFUL *'7 family home
*700 plus dtp Must seel San
ford Court Camm 777 7X1

114—Warehouse
Space / Rent

THE MOST VALUABLE COMMODITY
IS INFORMATION

101— Houses

START YOUR O W N SUCCESS STORY N O W

Indicate the one (s) you want: (D © (3 )® © © (Z H D
at $18 each and send to:

AMERICAN RESEARCH A DATA INSTITUTE
HowardHughesCenter

6601 Center Drive West • 5th Floor
Dept. R-22 • Los Angeles, CA90045

HUD HOMES,
Raak tortetoteres and VA
resales tram 55*4 dawn.
Why rent! Tha HIHMsaa Group
444-7711.......................Rtetter

All rental and real estate
advertisements are subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act.
which makes It illegal lo
advertise any preference. Urn
nation or discrim ination
bated en race, cotor. religion,
sex. handicap, lamlllel status
or national or I

X years ol treasure* Wife
say* get rid el. Tools, sport*
equipment, furniture, clothes,
you name It. Priced tro tell
Sat 17 Idyll wild*, oil **A II*
Aldaan Drive________________

VEBY SMALL HOUSE. 1 bdrm.
I bath Mo pets S31S/mo
___________ 777075*__________
7 BOBM. } BTH. Cant H/A.
fenced, screen porch, deck
5**5 pius deposit 771*147
1/1, O AB AO I. W/O hookup,
sern porch, CHA S5X mo
5500 dap S74 B it/ * A 777 B7B7
1/1 S A N F O R O , la n c a d .
spacious. 54*1 a month * * x
dtposil 14* 5400or 775 *5*0

Furnished/ Rent

Satisfaction guaranteed or your money buck

LET A

SPECIALIST

T H IS W E E K S

e r e cryp togram * are &lt; reeled horn quotations « y tamows

people peat and present
Earn tetter w
i me epher ttende lor
another io U rttU * OeguwU

S ecurity Officers
Licensed. Santord start Im
m e d i a t e l y . Up t o SS
w/eiperience. benefits avail*bto*B7B»**)53____________

97— A partm ents
Fum lshG d / R ent

r ,&lt; m

A

DO IT!

K
Notice

Concrete

FLORIDA STATE REQUIRES
all contractors ta raglstored
or cartlflad To verity a ttata
c o n tra c to rs lic a n t * c a ll
I *00 7*1 7**0 Occupational
Licant** are rtqutrtd by tta
county and can ta veriliad by

CONCRETE. Btock, glatt blk .
pool deck* 4 pool plattoring
75 yr* »xp f-ail 7*4 4474

calllngritilfcaii^rjlT^^
A dditions &amp;
R »m o d tH n g

RES /COMM. Vinyl Siding .
Alum. Framing. Orywall.
Door*. Roofing, Concrete
111 4*17 S O, B*llnl.CBC#ir**4

Carpentry/
CARPENTER Ail hind* ol tame
repairs, painting 4 ceramic
tile RtctardGro** . 77) 5*17

Clcftnlng S ervice
CHRISTIAN WOMAN will clean
vacanl/occuptod r**td*nce or
ot I ice* Mon SalTX 45*4
S P R I N G C L E A N IN O . In
outtldt Rental* Alto wfclv
r a t o ^ M n d w r t ^ o o ^ l/ ii

^ ^ "T T o o r T n g ^ """
HARDWOODFLOORING
inttall Sanding FlntiMng
TOM OLSEN 1417-474-71*7

T ^ rn eT m p rovem en l
AL DOCS IT ALL
FI* II right al a price you can
allord Llc’d/lm From ltart
to linith. Carpentry, plumb
Ing, electrical, and rooling
*vc» 71 yr* of experienc*. No
|ob too big or email. Call
174-fin arTTaXM 14 hr*.

R IU -W A Y
•71

SHOW

ill

Lewn Service

Plum bing*

E X PE R T LAWN SERVICE.
44M7475U Sod. Mulch. F*r
iillier fluthog X y r* exp
KENNISON LAWNCARE Pro
Low r a t* * ! Com m ercial*
Re*td*ntl«l Lie 4 In* 4 !! 4*7!
LARRY’ S LAWN 4 TREE.
Proltttlonal S*rvlc*. Free
Est Lk/lnt 777 7*41_________
RANDY'S DUALITY LAWN.

PLUM BINO R E P A IR AND
SERVICE
Free attlmalei.
^tofCFCOJUM W COW LTom

C om plat* p ro care t ln c t 1*40
Clean up*, hauling 17H l l *

TOM 4 JIFF'S LAWN CARE!
Re* /C om m , dependable, tow

rate*! Freeett..........-7X X X
TURF TRIMMERS Low rata*.
Free x t l . Ret 4 comm I
I lm e J r ^ o t m d ^ a ^ ^ l^ T * *

Lftke C learing
WEED Removal. Lakelront
Ratantlon Pond*. Creativa
^ a n d M jm t. Call*H *577

Masonry
BRICK, btock. itona. stucco,
and concrete. Also repair* No
|eh tootmalI Freeett t x taal
TWP MASONRY. Brick. Block.
Stucco. Concrete. Ranova
lion* Lie./In*............n i l ***

-------

~

Tile

CERAMIC TILE 4 MARBLE.
*&gt;p*rl*nced In all phatai,
custom work, painting anq
other home repair* 407 X I
47*4 or *04 757 *1*4 _______
EXPERIENCED in all phase* *
ol tile Installation In* . lie , ^
whole**I* tila price* *47 laal .

Tree Service
ECHOLS TREE SVC Lie *. Ini S
" l e t tta Protottionait do it." J
Frx* animate*
33) 7737 *

MAKE YOUR PITCHI

W o rk f o r t o u . . .

REPLACE Parking tot. po&lt;« 4
bldg tecvrlty light* Paint 4
rrpair* S W S f * )0 iX

Concrete

Pilntlng
H em e R epairs

CUSTOM FAIHTINO by Jeffrey
Power. Int. # «l . He'd. In*.

CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayta
Baal. 7 Man Qualify Opara

M A R I N O Nam* R a p a lr,
spaciallilng In small lobs.
CRC05*07* Fret eti H l-III*

YoUY touch Bl trw I

an ed In tta dawdled. For
‘grand liam* krtpad.

Free E*Hm«tos..........X I Bias
K * H PAINT AND REMODEL

Frta Ettimatotl Raft.. Ik.
fia tub to* small 144*4744

\ t l r r r ( j . \ r ) o u r I ! n s i n r vs / r v r v D u\
S

Trash Hauling

AFFORDABLE HAULINO Will
c Nan. haul tr**h You nam* it I
Wa ll haul III Call 1714)44

Outside Lighting

Lta Tlila DtapUy Ad

A D D ITIO N S-B lock, tlucco.
Slab*, walk* paliot. demoll
Hen Lit. X yr*. tap. t * M W

*_______

Pressure Cleaning ~
DUN RITE. Cltan driveways,
real*, p**l d tc k i. walks,
h*e*o* Frteett 771 4177

t » I ' c r M o n t h . ( i l l / I hi s si f i n i .

l nr

ce ll 322-2611

S a n fo rd H e r a ld
1a

lo ir

2
‘ (i 11

■
r '» .'ftl j l ^ i l ■ fjl j II b JJjjJJJ

l.s

'Ofli r iT r r r ~r i lK I W f O T i / / / /

ta

�/

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 16. 1993 - 7B

K IT ’N* CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

115—Industrial
Rentals

141—Homes tor Sale

141—Homes for Salt

U.Mt AND M.M* sq tt Dock
high, Ilr* sprinkled Ml Cor
nw*1l Hood W Cornotl WNtd.
Broker
» ? rm

DELTONA
DELUXE. OELUXE. DELUXE

SANFORD. WS Woodmera Bird
1 bdrm. family rm, new A/C.
naw carpal 11.100 down FHA
147.100.......................17* 15*4
Atwail Realty

• W E D O IN O ORESS. Taa
length. Short puff sleaves. Ill*

SPACIOUS 1 b d rm . X bath. X car
garaga I ♦ yr» new. Fancad.
plus m uch m o ra l Only 1C.*00
J u lia B oyd. Realtor Higgins
and H aalh 1*417** hom * of
lie * o r ( * ♦ * * * * m ain o llk a

Collectibles

N a* 4 bdrm 1 bath aim all
tha *atr*i includedl Only |t
total down Good, bad or no
credit Bankruptcy OK Call
Jim at RE HI. act *11 m m
EXCHANOE OR SELL your
property located anywhary'
Iwaaitar* Realty,7MMI)
FANTASTIC EUVI } bdrm. I
bth. C/H/A. paddi* fans, na#
paint Intid* and out. naw
klfchtn cablnats itov*. tread
tot Must i*at m ooo *** » 1*

117— CommercialR e n ta ls ___
MOOULAR OFFICE BLDG.,
lor sale. 1* 000 or ronl.
lurmshad. WO mo Ollica W
sr m Can m tm __________
N IO H T C L U B -4 1 ** tq . II.,
Titusville lull, aquip m oo
mo Liquor lie avail 17*011*
SANFORD
WO N Elm Ay*
W 700 sq It with silicas
Brick truck hi
sprinkled
*»JV
) phata servlet LI
manu or distribution tlr
u son m isi*

O n lu ijQ
GO V'T REPOS bank foraclo
s u r a l, assum e no q u a lity
m ortgagast Low m onthly
• BANK FO RECLOSURE. M
cant H /A . scr porch, m e*
naighborhood
1)0 OCC
• H U D H O M E . *71 In
P lnacrasl G raat hom at Low
down
1 )0 1
■ I BORM. on doubt* tot w 1
u t garaga A ll appl includes
w asha r/dryar, t a t In k llc h t.t
Super neighborhood 114 *00

118—Office
Space / Rent____
NEW laniard oilier s and.or
warehouses *001.(00 vq ft
tparlal. 11*1/me MS ?Ua
O F FIC E . I M « lq . ft. East
downtown Sanlord tor a Iion
MMmo o a e i i f __ ________
SANFORD Camm i u i sq M
*1 Sa a tt High tratllc area.
Jim Oatila. Sltnitram Rralty.
lac 111 !«♦»_________________
SANFORD Qll.tr ipa&lt;r vuo
sq tt building total. I too iq
tt per ottkaursi! HI &lt;004

Call tar d a ta ilif

tenet H intlield.

A A C a raa*. lac.. I l l i l i a
LK MA R Y
1 1 w ith fa m ily
rm . Ig tread lot M l 000
W M a lic to w ik i. 171 t * t i
~ LO C H A R B O R
W a lk to
M a y fa ir Goll Course' J bd rm
doll house on ] lots In lovely
area
T t r r a t t o Moors,
w h a a lc h a lr access c e n tra l
A C, hom * w arranty A much
m o ra l O nly 1*1.110' L«na
lleectl l i * «V4) r . t )ja

123—Wanted to Rent
USED CAR LOT WANTED
TO RFNT

&lt;J* 11*1

141— H o m e s lo r Sale
ArrOROABlf homes
VENTURE I PROPERTIES

LOCH ARBOR
Specious a
B # , 111 BA hom * on Lake
A rm o ry Is an aaceiiani value
not to ba m issed 1 1 000 • sq tt
on appro■ * r acre* F a m ily
r m w / flrtp la c a A tre nch
doors opening to M back
porch, p n .a t* yard and l* k *
I B R ’ 1 BA gu asl/intow apt
Sul*#’' taatures tu tly equ'pped
k itc h e n » / appliances and
p r l v a l * porch en trance
overlooking l ata O n* m inute
to M a y fa ir Country Club and
easy acctss to l a and Tim a
cuan 1 s q fta a c a lla n l tor a r t *
1IT7.W0 Gar. P arker 1)4*14)
a i t 11*

FHAOR VA AS LOW AS I' pN
O or t For tlto iu r a s . Rt
p o t A u v m t No Q uality
Momast Ounrr financing
Seminole (Vang# Volusia
Santerd last ttsan 1! OMdewn
a R#ne«at#d 1/1
appiianrat
t*n&lt;rdt*&gt;d carport 111 400
a Hrnoritrd &gt;kr nra S I. tplc
appl n#* pa rt SI* &lt;00
a Pool horn# 1 } on cut da sac
Garage. U7.*00
a 1&lt;I on « i a c ra l H a rc ra ta d
appl areas tancad yd. Sal M0
al/Ht, H M s q It lik e n e w l Llv.

U P LA N D PARK 4 B R 1 BA
on traad com ar lot. I ] • aa
&lt; o .* r* d patio and pool a r t
screened In Close to AAayfair
C ountry Club G reat buy lor
U * *00 Pat L in t G R I ( la a*00
a it It)

dining family rm, 171,*00
ac t. tancad garaga 11**00
Aisuma No Oualillasl
al/t on 1/1 acral Fancad tu t da
sac, drad and itraal 1 ** *00
Additional homas a . ad Las*
mar 1 /K down!

ID V L L W IL D C
* bd rm
)
ba th pool hom * sn good a r t *
ce ra m ic t il* in kitchen baths,
a n d h a ll; F p l , la rg e lo t
1 MO 000 B a r b a r a Wa t s o n
■la I M l a s t l * !

PAOLA a 1 on an 1 I* acras
Pasture withstabta t il* *00
Lk M a r y /L on gn ead Paal
Hama, I I garaga living
dining, lam rm* 141.MO
Lk Mary pool ham* 4 1. hying
dining, family rm 110* *00

OFF l f * l
1 B R / t BA
bungalow on 1j acre '-re d let
ISO frontage on SR 41* lust
east Ol 11*1 A lready cored
C l Reduced to 170 000 P al
L in *. GRI lla a a o o e it 111

PAUL k BETH 0SB0RNI
Vf NHlRf

P R O P 'R 'ilS

HIDDEN LAKE
Off
Mary Bled Open Saturday 1 1 Coma tea fa n ta s tic 1
Bedroom ] Bath hom* with
Ig
Sion* Fireplace, plush
carpet Whit* ceramic hi* in
• n t r a n c * . k itc h e n , and
walkway! Atiumeblt with
q u a lify in g Only t**.*0 0
MOUREEN DANIEL. *1* **00
a it 170

1/1

BATEMAN REALTY
Lk Itrai Estate RroStr
14*0 Sanlord At*

321-0755............. 3112257
BUILDER'S SPECIAL
Brand naat 11 for only 1*1.100
on your tot No menay ( S o a r it
tqvnty In your lot
PETERSON HOMES Ml 1IM

H ALL REALTY
312 W Flint St

Sanford

COUNTRY L IV IN G
Coty 1
bd rm ho rn*, s m a ll ic r* * n * d
p o rc h
I r a t H a n d in g B *n
F ra n kltn sto re , in lid * u tility ,
p a ddi* Ians. a * tra big yard
• ith Iraast O nly Sal. WO
D U P LE X
1 b d rm horn* n tlh
*11ached 1 b d rm m other In
te a a p t S eparata e le c tric
t r a i a r i w a ih a r/d r y a r hook
ups cant H A naw carpat
fa n c a d . c a rp o rt la rg t oaksH
L &lt; c tnco m ai U M 00
FH A -V A

323 7271

T h e P ru d e n tia l f o b
F lo r id a R e a lly
LONOWOOD */1'i. cant H/A.
tancad Owner financing or
leak*option Only (11*00
_________ID ** * )**«
-MINT Grereyiew 1/1 w POOL,
all appl . Util dbl gar ,
Beautiful let A more 1** 000
CALLBART HEAL EiT., INC.
( R t I W l H l ________
POOL HOMED w/custam deck.
p rlv le n t* . 1/lly. near
schools, verts. carpet, naw
root, dining rm A sern
porch' 111 000 111 m i

STAIRS PROPERTY
MANAOEMEHTA REALTY
*•7 » ) 7)11/1X1 AIM

323-5774

UN-SATI0NAL
UMMER LIVING
at

COEVILLAAPARTMENTS!
Abput Our
1 MONTti f r e e
A sk

2 5 8 0 R id g e w o o d A v e ., S a n fo rd

330-1431____

la in A Closer Look
Apartment Livingal it's FINEST
★ Spacious 1,2, &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments at Affordable Prices
A Close lo Schools
AtClose lo Shopping Centers
★ Swimming Ptol
it Volleyball
★ Laundry Facilities

irtio doc

yl a m s

215—Boats and
Accessories

STENSTROM

a AIR BOAT, I (ft. Grasshopper
140 HP. Lycoming new m a gi,
1 props, frailer, (1100 Call
17) 5*01 or 117 7)70__________
14 FT Aluminum V hull, consol*
controls. *0 HP Evlnrud*.
trailer IWOOBOm 7M4
M FT. JON Boat, W/Gal tilt
trailer 11 HP Merc 1*00 firm

REALTY, INC.

Wc list and sell
more property lhan
anyone in the Greater
Sanford lake Mary area.
#SUPER CONDO! Cut*. Neal
A Clean this t/l hat upgrades
galore, all appliances A a
Comm Pool loo'
11*1001
* T R E A T F A M IL Y Ham*!
Spooout 1/1 w Gnat Room.
Fpk . Lg Family Room, btg
Country kitchen. Formal
Dining Room, on a &lt;« Acral
SMI.*00'
e A DREAMY HOMEI Thli
lovely 1/1 has an Eat In
Kitchan. spacious rooms.
F a m ily room. Hardwood
Floors A an 11X11 Scrn
Porch!
141 000'

CALL ANTTIME

322-2420
321-2720
IMS P*rk Dr., laniard
*41 W Lake Mary AL. Lk Mary

•In Our 37th Yur*
TUSKA W ILLA AREA Built
l**0 a bdrm. 1 bath Lg
screen porch, fenced yard,
backyard playground For
s a l* or laas* purchase
1111000
________ ««1 7110
t ill MAPLE AVE SALE OR
RENT W/Opt ten. Close lo
schools shopping VI. living
A dining (10.000 *0*1110111
1 BORM. t BATH COTTAGE
Appliance* Storage Shad JUa
Mohawk A rt tl* 000 ) » 10*1

151—Investment
Property / Sele
SANFORD INCOME PROPERTV. Llv* In 1 b&lt;r. 1 bth and
rant 1 t b r, I bath units
Income 11 000 mo or rent all
tour unit! for tl,4!0/mo
Mortgage payment 1*40 PITl
C*ll Ha 7(1* P M____________

153—Acreage
Lots/Sale____
O IN E VA, I ACRES. V I m
eludes large ettc apt. duck
pond. Buyer pay* doting
170.000 1*07 1)5 4*11________
OC A L A N A T ' L F O R E S T ,
Weeded lots! IS *10 each, no
money down! |7I *1 monthly
_________ I (00 1*7 1C)&gt;________

155—Condomlniums
Co Op/S ale___
SANFORD / LAKE MARY
AREA 1 bdrm 1 bth ]rd
lloor A C. vAulted calling,
screen porch Amanttial In
elude pool, tannli. sauna,
lake access IM. *00 Reduced
111 *117

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
NEW m i ’ ll Low down A inter
ait! 14X70 1171 mo 14X70.
1)10 mo 1*1170*____________
SET UP IN CARRIAGE Cava.
Gregory Mobil* Homes. San
lord Sing to tact 1X11100
1 BEDROOM mobii* home on *0
■ too lot In Caiteibarry.
Owner llnancing.aaty term*
111*10

17) 5( 5)

163—Waterfront
Property / Sale

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

GOOD LOCATION 1 ♦/ acral

• SOFA. 7 It. Yallow Print
Loose Pillow back MO Call
17* 707*_________

B e a u tifu l to t L a k e M a r y
schools, walk to SCC Good
in va stm a n lp ro o 111 1*7!

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
A * BEST APPLIANCES NOW
AT FLEA WORLD! Row W tt
Buy/S*ll/$*r*lca appliances
fre e del.. err 17*11*1
A IR CONDITIONER IB.000
BTU. New Freight damaged
Workiperfect! Warranty
A a- Rest Appliances. P a n e l
a ANTIQUE ORESSER. Ma
hogany. porcalam knobs dor*
tail joints UP OBO174 1&gt;ll
• BOOKSHELF DESK. Combi
nation. 70’ M 70" W Il'O .
Four shalvas Two movaabto
on top of closed desk com
partmont |p ) » 1701_______

BUFFET
Oak
. iso 177 nn
• CHAIR, laathae. brown color.
* *r y com lortabi*. Danish
style. Ilka naw HOP 177 (471
• COFFEE TABLE. Mftd wood
with three tmoied glass In
se'l Used only * taw months
U0 Call see 110 1117
• RIVE METAL CHAIRS with
podded seats and backs Can
be used in home or etfica 110
lull p rk « 1 » (004
FURNITURE. Twin beds Solid
wood headboards, vary nk*.
U00 bon Quaan haadboard
sol'd wood HOOOBO 111 0343
KENMORE WASHER. Whit*,
vary good condition IDO
DO 1171
KENMORE washar/dryar Vary
meal Free delivery/warranty
A a- Bast Aagttaacai. 17*17*1
• KINO SIZE BED Ad|uit*bi*
tram*, mettrest. «nd boi
Springs 111 1 » 1701__________
• LOUNGE CHAIR. Brand naw.
Highland House Beige *n
ttque velvet with brown and
burnt orang* design Cen'1 use
color gift Will Irada tor chair
ot equal value lapproa (1001
In peach, leal, off whit*, or
gray D4 1*40_________________
• LOVE SI AT. gold and lilvar
Sturdy and vary comfortable
1100
Call 111 11*»
LOVES EATS Brown, gold, and
orang* velour Like naw 1100
lor both
lit 01*0
MATTRESS ANO BOX spring!
doub'e Ht* tatt tor tala Great
value! i n sat
1110**0
• M A T T R E S S . 17" X 75’ ’
E• ceItont condition 110 aach
171(7**
• OCTAOON TABLE. Larga
Refmthad antique style. Oak*
top. Mahogany claw foot base
1*1 1710*11
• R A N O E . Avocado grtan.
work! good 170 Mult sail
11007*7

to

• U P H O LS T E R E D C H AIR .
B*iga vinyl seat and back
cushions Solid wood arms and
frama Tough, will tail for
years Good for den. porch,
ate Excellent Only t i l U0

©ML
THIS SUMMER

at Sanford Court Apartments
Sin# Story desijMio one itort *FrkadIj08iftelbBi|en
orbdor
UniqueAputoest Extm
• Studio, I t 2Bedm
•Security' ForYourPace
Affordable ApU.
OfMind
•Furnished / Unfurnished Studios

3301 Sanford Ave. • SEnfonl • 323-3301
H o u r» : M -F , 9 -8 . S a t .^ 1 0 -2

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts.

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
l/2 month FREE
It It .1 I

Ill''III ll It ,|u

USED BEDDING SALEIt King
Ouaan. Full A Stngi* (a l a Sat
AUpl LABRY'S Mart 777*117
WASHER / DRYER Good
condition (17137) *14!
_________alter t P M ___
a WASHER, S**M Kenmor#
Works great! M l i n MM

183—Television/
Radio / Stereo
• GRUNOIG dual recorder 1
dual player. 1 speakers, came
from Germany (100 firm
1710114

Ta 7— S p o ilin g G o o d s
• OP A IR C IS IR aicaiian t
condition, original cost (1**
Will kaap you in graat shag*
lor 1 IOCOBO 11)1)1*_________
• EXERCISER. OP Air Skidtr.
Ilka naw I Cost 11)1 n*w. Sail
Ing fo r SI00 fir m C a ll
407 H I *1*1__________________
• TOURING BIKE Huffy (41
phone 11) 11*4______________
• W E IG H T L IF T IN O SET.
Bench, bars, weights Good
shape Disassem bled (50
X77 R U _____________________
• I* SPEED BIKE. Roadmastar
Scorcher, man’s, rad SIS Call
171(401

193—Lawn 6 Garden
B A M B O O be a ut i f ul ter
landscaping. FURNITURE.
POLES. CANES, and ate
Ha r d y BOSTON T Y P E
FERN. PALMETTO Paint.
Young MAONOLIA Treat.
You D u ll » 1 &lt;77*

195—Machine ry/Tools
• WEN ELECTRIC chain saw
D mch cat lie Pleas* call
S rtp p H w
• FREE TO OOOD HOME.
Loving 7 yr aid cockar tp*ni*l
Intid* or outsid* All shots *nd
wormed *07 X7( EWE__________
FREE TO OOOO HOME. Ador
*bl* puppies art going fasti 1
llttart Shepard mu and other
mliad 1 months old 777 TOM
HAND TAMED COCKATIELS.
110 A lio . Sullar Crested
Cockato*. (100 l*a *1*1 attar a
aP U F P V Paadla *
Ch'huahua HOP m MO*

a l l FT. OLA55TRON A Trail
*r, 55HP Evlnrud* Excellent
Condition! 1)1*1 m i l l )
I* FT Carolina Skill. *0 HP
E vlnrud*. traitor Coast
Guard equipped 11.100171 IMS
• 1* ft BOWRIDER
1*1 HP
I/O. A haul it hrt. Immaca
laft.w /frailar cover Mutt
5*e! 1* lOOOBO W *11*
*l*»a SKI/FISH Baal tOHP
Merc . w/trailer Runs great
l»OC Partial Imance * tt 7(0*
• (I . )* FT. SPORTCRAFT.
Open fisherman, ID OMC
Seadrlv*. 11*00 Consider
trade tor jet sLI or Flats boat
171071*

223—Miscellaneous
AIRBED Saif inflating. |D0 at
B r o o k l t o n a . sal t (1 5 ,
NETSCHKE'S Erotic 1 In
Ivory figurines 111! ea j
FROG Lika tt In ttultod
animal s*0. M ERCEDES
frailer hitch lor i l l body style
1*0 t mi 14* 4511____________
(B EAU TIFU L HAND Minted
c*rou**i hors* replica Coi
lector’ s item 1* 0 11* lo o
• BOX OF COIL COLLATEO
nails 70 7'* inch n it Fits
Bottifch or Hitachi nail gun
1 » firm 171 7*1*_____________
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE RINGS
St* and vp Free tiling I
Best Paten A Jewelry. MMEH
• EXERCYCLE, Dual id ia n
tor lag. uc&gt;p*r body, stomach
a i a r c l t * . aquippad with
spaadomatar. com lortabi*
teal M l 11)0(0____________
KINO SH E evatarbad. Un
demaath storage, headboard
Dark wood 1700 Older Kitchan
laM* w/1 Chairs. 140 1*«7 IS*
|*t ibl. naadi work, w/ trailer
A accessorial 11,0001)010*3
• LADDER RACK with locking
handlas Good condition 1I00
_________ 407 a** 3111_________
• PORTABLE STEAM BATH.
All tibarglast 1(0110 volt
___________ 177 1*41___________

work 11.4*5060 311 01M
• HONDA ACCORD DX, lt*a
Auto. A/C. am/fm fact*, white
110*00 LIKE HEWt 177 1417
• HY U N O A I . 1(17 51.100
OOOOE COLT. 1**1 ll,*00
M l 1W«or 134 Vila___________
• JAOUAR XJ*. 1*11 Great
condition, low mileage rail
eblalMOOO negotiable 111 MS*
MERCURY SABLE Ol, 17*4
Eicallent condition, all power,
Call 1*5 *D*
MO N TE

CARLO.

1*71

Sanford

322-2090

235—Trucks /
Buses/Vans
CHEVY VAN. If*4 V » aulo
A&lt;C. naw liras (1000 OBO
171 MM J i m _________
CHEVY VAN. 1*11 Interior
nice I dent, runt great 57.000
OBO 771 MMJim____________
DATSUN KING Cab (7. 1 sp
Stereo, t*K ml Vary Depen
dable m oo 317 01*7_________
• FORO BUI • 1(7), GOOD
CONDITION 11.000 CALL
___________ 777 /CM____

G re *!

F O R D V A N . 1H1. P lu m b e r's
S p t t l e l l Slocked, Many

eitret. Sharp! (4 (00 *44 *447.
**1 *4041beeper)____________
e HANOI CAPPEO VAN itio
Ford E 150 Lilt automatic
doors (J 000171 74M
____
ISUZU TROOPER II. KM 4 whl
dr 4 door. A)C. stereo I tpd
Eice! cond ! (4.X)0 MS *1*4

NOW OPEN
R.C. HILLS
Guaranteed Financing!

rss, Sanford Motor Co.

328-7777
OLDS SIERRA. IM). (1*1 OBO
Sea af ID Gerriton D'lv*.
SanfordorcallfO* 11! M«*
eOLDSMOBILE N. ISM 4 door
sedan 7) 000 miles, p w. p'l.
cru'S* A/C (1,100117 a ll!
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION .
EVERYFRIDAY 7:M PM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. *7, Daytona Baath

1**0 J E E P C H E R O K E E
LIM IT E D
Leather, all tha
toys I 15,000 miles 114 *00
_________ Cell 111 4M1_________
77 DODGE Pick Up Long tied
slant*, Punt Great I (700
____ ____ 111 *7*5____
*1 DODGE RAM. Conversion
van, UK ml.. 1*1 owner! TV.
nlnfando (1) 4W 11) *7*1

**4 151(111
SHORTOFCASH?

238—Vehicles
Wanted

Seriously tooling for * nice,
daen. used car? DEPEN
DABLE Down payments at
tow as ( I f * Includes tai A
title Call

C A D I L L A C EL D O R A D O
WANTED !• () IMS in nlc*
condition (1* 1)75

FUESAUT0 SALES
* *327 2692* *

WANTED to r*
t*o r* Any year or condition
14 000 lim it 41* llto_________

CORVETTE

SUBARU, ISO. Runs good,
needs left CV lolnt UuO or bast
otter
111 *7*t

USED M R LOT WANTED
TOHENT____________ 41* 1141

TOYOTA Cratside. (1. Il l * ml .
loaded, clean Ind owner,
m oo i i * i u i
1»7( TOYOTA Stefian wagon
run* good. Auto. AC. (100
OBO
..........
1)014*4

239—Motorcycles
and Bikes
HARLEY 1)4 Clastic. Naads
work, consider trade Reason
able of tar only 1Tarry 130 IM*
• SUZUKI LT 540R. KM Quad
racer. t!*M cash, or trade for
* whl tour stroke *71 MM

71 MOB

{CONVERTIBLE!
1*00 OBO 37) MSI
• U CH IVY C*v*it*r Station
wagon. AC. *uto SI.(75
Cell 14*4(11
• U PONTIAC Fiaro GT. auto.
V*. Rad. MX Ml Good cemdi
Non LOADED U**J n i im
I I SUBARU. 4 whl dr hat
chbeck eng replaced naw
aiheult 11IBP Nag 3*0*1**
• H IE BARON convartibl*.
red loaded dig dash 75K ml
(7000 Partial Hnenc* **S it0*

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
• M FT. 1*77 DODOE RV. tow
mlla*. sleeps *. s'o.e shower,
fridge 1MOO ID 011*________
• 31 FT EL DORADO motor
home. ‘1* Naw awning, tv,
runs great IS 000 OBO 111 71*5

231-Cars

aW E O D IN O ORESS. Long
whit* lac* dress Tiarad with
train Silver pearls and M
quins on hack lint and tie*vat
In o r ig in a l boa. S lia ( .
b e a u t i f u l i m n o o n t law

CHEVY CITATION. ltM. * Cyl .
on* owner Auto, cold A/C.
power window*. Runt and
loo*i g m lH M O B O 174 773*
• CHEVY CAMARO • 17. Ra
built VI. tot* of naw partii
tt*l 771 OIM any time________
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL ’*7.
Lika naw Must tall Only
txs.wo. C*n (*07)W east
• CJ-5 J E E P , l*7 (. ( cyl.
custom. Rebuilt angina, naw
lira*, brakes 14.775 firm 777
MS*________________________
DO DOF CARAVAN SE. t»*l. *
c y l. seals I. loaded aicaiiant
condition Il0.*00*04 7(t DU

*0.9% USED VEHICLE
FINANCING

■ A P ir
A l f . 11

tdiim

tt*sv U m m I C .i i s

ion is yoom cm m i

IF YOU WILL MAKE THE PAYMENTS,
WE WILL MAKE THE LOAN
Wo Soil Dependable, Attordablo Cars
&amp; Trucks To People Who Want To
Establish o r Re-Establish Credit
We Care About Your Future, Not Your PastI

/CREOiT PROBLEM
/N o c f l H t r T ji

✓ BANKRUPTCY
✓ DIVORCE

WE HAKE IT SIMPLE TO BUY A CAR OR TRUCK!
WE OFFER FLEXIBLE PAYMENT PLANS
TO FIT YOUR NEEDS!

C o u r te s y 425-5098
USED CARS 3 2 3 - 2 1 2 3
A '.k

f oi

M i

tJ ;iy n c ?

Offtr Good Until July 31,1999 • 6 P.M.
•MUST BRING AD TO BE EUGIBli FOR THIS PROMOTION

•ANVORD HERALD

Well Advertise Your Cor
EVERYDAYTIL ITS SOLD!
(or other motor vehicle)

\

'

'

* /

3 lines for only

$0124
I

(ad d itio n al lines e xtra)

Ad m ust include phone number and asking price. If vehicle hasn’t
been sold in 10 days, call us and we’ll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is running except for price. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Ibday!
geneva Q a rd e rg
1505 \Ve»l 25" SL

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories

PARTINO OUT 1*71 I irebird
1*7] Plymouth Duster HI. IUI
Nissan Santre ) » S**0

condition. A/C. runs Ilk* a top
Sharp looking I 51.(10174 1151
NEED A CAR credit problrmi’
I can help, dapandab'e used
c a r t e nd t r uc ks D e v *
Shannon R C Hill * World Of
Wheal*. Lek* Mery *71 5)51
NISSAN SENTRA XE. Ml* 1 dr
cold air, lull spaed, clean
Priced to tall H )004&lt;l 411)
NOVA. 1*7* Black w/ red tt
Auto. A/C. naw seals (7,100
1)1 MU Jim

230—Antique/Classic
Cars_______

209—Wearing Apparel

,| I. .11 y| ,\M*. l*| ft . UI
ItlANx Y* II '..'.'ll l«t
MU t t UMUI lit lAi »1
ljANI OMU • »40 \ ».** «ttM »

_

A ll orlglnelf Needs some

Relax In tout N tv Spi!

BEAUTIFUL, fclankalad Apyalease Golding. 1 yr*. wall
cared tor. am liant riding A
trail hors* For e ip or begin
w M * c k (ij« r if m n a i» o *

HOME APPLIANCE CENTER

• ( * CHEVY Celebrity. AC.
Auto. * door (1100 Firm
111 *517
• * ) JEEP Sport Auto. PS. PB
AC. alarm 1(K millS.700
Like naw I 4071(1 1«*7

DODGE O YNAITY LK. I*ft.
Baaufiful. ell power, must tell
14.4*517101*7 or (1 1 71*0
• FORD TIIUHDERBtRD - ’**,

Seals A portable, never utad
w eed*! gatatt,.underwater
light .11,511401-Cl. 7777
• TWO l l i l l i f A/T 4 wheeler
liras SaOGood condition
___________ XXI salt___________
• I DOZEN Maian Jars. t)00
XXXXXSf_____________________
It CU. FT. REFRIOERATOR.
Hotpoint SIS0. 1 ( Cu Ft
MICROWAVE MO 77( 741*

FORD MUSTANO. IM4. ' v i
Runs good, body in good shape
gJCOOBO
.........77* MW
• FONT!AC Firebird 1H*. On*
ownarl Garagadl Y7K ml.
Nice 14X0 407 117 a*a*
• 1*7) MO C!*llic Cenvertlbt*.
Good cend S1»U OBO U*
707*

201—Horses

231-Cars

DODGE wagan l*M. Auto. air,
clean, p/i. slarto flit. *0.000
ml. good point, never dam
aged 13.1*5 4Q7 (A* Hal

fan o*ncn*

• COLLECTOR'S PLATES. Sal
of thra* Goddess of fh* sa*.
wind, and earth Signed and
numbered adilion Including
plate frames S*S 171 M il
•D E A LE R SPACE A V A IL ­
ABLE* Aunty M ary’ s An­
tiques. I ( t t French Ava,
(17 *1) Santord. W* buy an*
(Saca/antir* estatall ***77(*

SI 36
m

mi ii«

211— A n tiq u e s /

OVl H

W

231— C a rs

209—Wearing Apparel

Sanford Herald

�M - Santord Horald, Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 16. 1993
b y C h ic Y o u n q

B LO N P IE
AVUT AflOl/r CMCKCN M V
*5 ru e m a n c o u r s e 9

Leukoplakia is
linked to smoking
D E A R D R. O O T T : I was
operated tin for leukoplakia 12
years ago. ami again Oils past
year. Whal causes tills and what
preventive measures cun be
taken lo avoid recurrences?
D E A R
R E A D E R :
Leukoplakia, a painless. |&gt;early
while Him dial may ufTecI porlions o f ttic oral cavity. Is
eommoil In smokers and. In the
past, was liellevrd lo lx* procuiieerous. Tills Is probably not
true; less (ban 5 percent of
leuknplaklc lesions are m a ­

lignant.

by A rt Sansom

THE BORN LOSER

CARl SA6AN SAYS THERE ARE

HUNPREP Billion STARS IN OUR
6ALAYY.ANP THERE ARE A
HUNPREPBILLION galaxies
AMP EACH 6AIAXY CONTAINS
A MUNPREP BILLION STARS!
sort o f puts th in g s in

PERSPECTIVE DOESN'T IT /
CHARLIE BROWN1

________ b y H o w ie S c h n e id e r

EEK A M E E K
J U S T O C A U S t I 'M
AM O fiU M
T H A T I 'M
W

ftftfj C O M W

A ILO M A LI

D X S M O T AAfcAM

l O i i V O R H LLPU SS

FATHER n m £ D

fath er

\

DCWY IUARM ME ABCLTT
AMYTH/MG f

M C ABOUT

G C V 5 U t f SOU . ' tO U SE£ A
IU0MM 1 Bt&gt; H £ R S O f N X) THEM

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b y T .K . R y a n

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A lT X IZ Z X T P

.

ARLO AND JA NIS

b y J im m y J o h n s o n
I f I COULD l o s e
f l f t e e u R0UDD6...

if i co u ld lo s e F iv e
AOUWOS, I'D B t H A P P Y '

ACROSS
t Rttlgn
5 Tobacco
chaw
0 Govt, hous­
ing org.
12 Sovlal Union
(abbr.)
13 Govt, (arm
agancy
14 Raagan'a ton
16 Not
outwardly
16 Slmpla
17 Old aga
18 Collar*' org.
tg Building lot
20 Raddith
22 Inquisitive
24 Aviation
tgey.
25 — opsrandi
27 Tslsvlsion
tystsm
31 Pllchor
32 Flying toy
33 Fish sggs
34 Usl ds —
35 Soil drink

36
37
39
40
41
42

Kiss Ma —
Utlla bona
Twofold
Brown kiwi
King —
Imprassionist
aintar
lonk't litis
Author Umbarlo —
— and m t
Indian walghl
Actrass
Madalin* —
An tip lo slvt
Willow
Singar —
Adams
Possassta
And othtrs
(2 wds.)
Approach

S

46
49
50
52
53
54
55
56
57
58

DOWN
1 Joka
2 Military abbr.
3 Ntw York
hockay laam
4 Atlsmpt

Nf
•?I

PETER
G O T T .M .D .

i&gt; .v 3 b
productive years) who experi­
ences vaglnul bleeding or spot
ling should be examined by a
gynecologist.
Antwsr to Provtous P unlo

UULJU
ju u L iu
uuuuy
jju u

u iju u

U U kJ u y i s
u im ju u u a
u u tJ L U u y o ]

l u ju u u is l i

uuy

uyua
uuu
IBUIJUUU
uuuuu

u u u l iil j ij

JU U U U
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0
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LdUJUUUULJ UUUL1U
aLU U U U U U U U U Q Q
u i.m u c in Mhinci
5 Ouastlon

6 Air dafansa
org.
7 Egos'
countsrparts
8 Typo ot pay
(2 wds.)
B An Astttro
10 Clutch

TT~ w TT
lu
Id

11 Singar
WIIHamt
19 Curvy Isttsr
21 Labor org
23 Tour and my
24 Graak
chaata
25 S ocrtlsry s
nota
26 Is in dsbl to
27 Nsst of
phsasants
28 Summtr
drink
29 Church court
30 Bottom ol
Ship

32
35
36
38
39
41

Tropical nut
Braad of dog
Rolativaa
Angtr
Faathar scarf
Cattla
anciosurs
42 logand
43 Eugana
0 Nun i
d iu g M vf

44 Cashawi
ag
45 Jumping
in sac t
47 Maiican
shrub
48 Rtm srksbl*
parson (si.)
51 Basabaii
K ar Mai —
] • ot
knowladg*

ir
IT
sr

WIN A T B R I D G E

TU M B LEW EE D S

; m

Nonetheless, physlelans ami
dcnllsts alike are concerned
when th ey see leukoplakia.
Consequently, they may re
commend biopsy. You should
cheek with your deni 1st lor
specific advice about how to
avoid leukoplakia. Obviously, il
you smoke, you should dlsconIlnur this holm ASA I*.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'lrasc tell
me uhout plant.ii fasclllts Your
su re st Inns lor ireattnenl of Ibis
t-omllllon will lx- of great Inter­
est
DEAR HEADER: Th e
structures In ihc sole of the loot
•• Including leiidoiis. nerves and
blond vessels - are kept III place
by a lough. stringy tissue railed
fascia Oil rxraslon. tilts fascia
can Ix'cumr Inflamed. leading &lt;o
pain anil difficulty w alkin g
Such fa s c iitis Is fre q u e n tly
caused by overuse (hiking or
running). I'M i w slide lung dial
fi-r l) and contracted heel cords
Heading lo unusual stress on d ir
lav-la)
This roniinnn condition Is
treated by s|M*elal strapping r&gt;(
the fixit (to reduce stretching),
ami'tiiflainmutory drugs (such
as Motriiil. orihotlr devices til
die shix' (lo equalize weight
dlslrihullon). ami •• Ur severe
i '.im s •• rnrtlviix' liijei lions To
obtain further advice and thera­
py. you should w a (Mxllairl.sl or
an ordio|x-dli surgeon
DEAR DR. GOTT: Ikx-s a
woman In her 7&lt;K have to worry
if she begins lo menstruate
again?

D E AR READER: W ith out
question. The reason Is that
women do not ‘ ‘ menstruate
again'* after menopause; rather.
Ihey bleed from abnormal tissue
In the reprcxhielive tract.
Unfortunately, such bleeding
may reflect a growth. Therefore.
an y w o m a n (p ast h er re-

M E D IC IN E

Ely Phillip A ld er
Sli.ikes|x-.tre, III Ills pluy about
Julius Cursor. UM'il the line “ lie
shiill mil live: lixtk. wlllt a s|xit 1
damn hint “
However, one qu.dlly that dis
llngulshes an expert front a less
capable player is the way in
which he keeps careful track of
the s|Mit-cards In today's deal.
Irom the Spring North Amrrlean
Championships, the declarer
was Richard Schwartz.
South's opening hid showed a
Italaneed 20-22 (xilitts North's
lour diamond res|xmse was a
tntnsler lo lour bruits
West cashed Ills IW'o top clubs.
Hast playing llrst die two. llieii
the nine. Heading the latter play
as a suit-preference signal. West
switched to the spade king
There were 10 easy tricks
available, hm as dlls deal was
from a pair event. It was Impor­
tant (or South to try to make an

overtrick
Schwartz won with the spade
a ir and cashed the heart are.
‘ TMrase play the four, juitltier."
Next, declarer (ashed Ihc A-K
ot diamonds. Then lie rullrd die
diamond three wldi dummy’s
heart jack to ensure dial East
couldn't overrulf
" A n y heart but the two.
please, partner."
Schwartz won with the king
and led (he diamond lour.
"Hull with any heart hot the
two. partner."
North. Drew Casco, had got
the message. "Now may I play
the heart tw o?” he asked.
That's the card I want." re­
plied Schwartz, lie overtook the
lwo with Ills three and cashed
the diamond nine, on which he
discarded dummy's spade loser.
H ie overt rick had Ix-en collected
for an excellent score on the
board.

NORTH
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#43
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fit

♦ Q«

WEST
♦ K7

EAST
♦ w 10 &gt; S 4 2

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¥ 10 0
♦ Q»
♦ » J7

♦ J 10 7 2
♦ A K 10 7 5 4

SOUTH
♦ AJ S
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♦ A K » 4J
♦ J*

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

So* Ik
2 NT
4*

W rit
C ut
P*M

Norik
4♦
P au

Eatl
P tu
Pau

Opening lead 4 K

HOROSCOPE
FRANK AN D ER NEST

X P U T AN

u. s.

£LVI$ STAMP ON

POST
OFFICE

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G A R FIE LD

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9

b y J im D a v is

By B ernice Bede Oaol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Saturday, Ju ly 17. 1093
In dii- year ahead you could lxlucky in rather unusual ways.
There mav tx- a few limes you're
templed to loss In the towel, hut
you'll discover the calvary will
arrive II you Just hold on a hit
longer.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Today you might do something
th a t c o u ld In c o n v e n ie n c e
another even though tills jx is o ii
might not lx- directly Involved In
your decision making. Know
where to lcx&gt;k for romance and
you'll find il. The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker Instantly reveals
which signs are romantically
|x-rfeel for you. Mall S2 and a
long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope lo Matchmaker, e/o this
newspaper. I'.O. Box -I-U55. New
York. N Y. IOI63.
LEO (July 23 Aug 221 Using
excessive nailery lo iry to win
sniiicDtH- over io your corner
could have an opposite effect lo
dial for which you hoped. Your
recipient may lx- Initially Hal­
tered. then feel manipulated.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpl. 221 You

lend to I k - somewhat wasteful
with your resources today. Take
care you don't needlessly spend
In order to make a big Im­
pression on another
LIBR A ISept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you participate In social activi­
ties today that have compctlllvc
clcmcuts. don't let being the
winner become unduly Impor­

tant.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Iksure lo look at your problems
today as they really are and not
through an optimistic lens. Il
could do you more harm than
good If you irv lo kid yourself.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov 23 Dec.
2 1) Business and pleasure might
not make a congenial mix today.
Don't try to pitch u business deal
In a prospect who Is on ly
I n t e r e s t e d

In

e n j o y i n g

liim/hcrsclf.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22 Jan
ID) In order for a partnership
arrangement lo succeed nxlay,
both parties must have a single
goal or purpose. A spill decision
could spell failure.
AQU ARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 19)
You're rather gullible today and
there Is a possibility you may be

Inclined lo believe everything
you hear. Someone rise's exag­
gerations could cuuse you lo feel
a I rifle Inferior.
PISCES I Feb. 20-March 20l
Lady Luck might treat you In a
fickle manner today, so don't
depend upon her loo heavily
Unfortunately, however, your
gambling urges might Incline
you lo do so.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
There's u possibility you may
expcrlcnce severe disappoint­
ment today, because of your
Inclinations to expect more from
others and situations Ilian you
should.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A
beh avior pattern that com ­
fortably fits a d ose friend Is not
necessarily tailored lo suit your
requirements. Live your life from
your own comfort zone.
' GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
You're likely to he rather thrifty
toduy regarding Insignificant
expenditures, however, you'll
also have a strong extravagant
urge dial could blow your bud­
get In one shot.
(C| 1993. N E W S P A P E R E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.
by L e o n a rd S ta rr

ROBOTMAN’

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, ; v‘ ^

ik p .'&amp; ib -it

•* - *.-

v &gt; ■ m

Sanford Herald
S e r v in g S n n f o r d , L a k e M a r y n n d S e m in o le C o u n t y s in c e
H5th Y**.ir

No

?&lt;V

1900

Li.i ‘ riJ Floml.i

H o w e ll p ro b e g ro w s
Sanford commissioner's
residency investigated
by governor’s office

IN S ID E
□ Sports

Illusions gets help

Oy J
N« r r . * * » r

M A R K (I A M M F . L D

I II

d People

An unusual collection

B R IE F S

S r r l* r i i l i r

f- ill ►irclinpr

l on M u w n U

| * iij » r "&gt; \

Chamber after hours

• • ♦•holft

Sharing
space

Slip slidirV away

County, school
board may merge
some operations

Discovery countdown begins

0,

J

MARK t l A H f II to

Man breaks waitress jaw

Si r M r Igr

Should city fine
schools for
false alarms?

l ’ .tg f

i \

See, speak, hear no evil

Qy N I C K P F E I F A U F

Insurance benefits denied

IN D E X
C lassified*
Ctirnic s
Dr &gt;«r A t r l i y
Or G o t t
f cliliiri.il .
F lorida

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�• A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 15, 1993

NEWS FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

Pamala Oaks subdivision approved
Sanford P/Z agenda
set for this evening
By NICK PF1IFAUF
Herald Staff Writer

W ild h ogs killed to feed needy
L A K E B U E N A V IS T A - W ild hogs k lllr d on the Disney
W ilderness Preserve w ill be used (o feed the needy Instead of
the vultures.
A n agreem ent w orked out th is week between the environm ental group that m anages the park and a food b a n k ca lls for a
trapper to take the hogs to a slaughterhouse, w here the meal
»U1 be packed for d istrib u tio n to the poor.
T h e p o rk w ill be checked for diseases at the slaughterhouse
to m ake sure It Is safe to ca l.
The Nature C o nservancy, w h ich m anages the 8.500-acre
preserve, has been w o rk in g on a plan to use the pork slnre
May. w hen a new spaper reported the pigs were being shot and
left to feed the v u ltu re s and other scavengers.
U nder the plan, w h ich N nturc Conservan cy o fficials say
sh ou ld be signed soon, the unpaid trapper w ill get to keep two
out o f every three hogs he kills: the th ird w ill be slaughtered for
Second H arvest.

Radioactive isotope stolen
J A C K S O N V I L L E — A van co n ta in in g a poten tially dangerous
radioactive isotope device has been stolen from a m otel parking
lot. police reports said.
T h e m issin g device, w hich co n ta in s a m e riciu m 241, Is a
portable gauge used to measure the flow and density of
m a te rials through pipes, said P h illip Thom as, a p u b lic health
o fficials w ith the state office of rad iation control.
W hen It w as stolen Tuesday night, the nu cle ar m aterial was
enclosed In a m etal case, slig h tly larger than a briefcase and a
sm alle r flat m etal container.
A nyone co m ing w ith in two Inches o f the device. Thom as
said, co u ld be exposed to about a fifth of th r n o rm a l yearly
am ount o f radiation.

Attorney’s fee set
T A M P A — A private attorney w ill be paid SCO an h o u r rather
than a $ 7 00 flat fee to represent one o f two w hite m en charged
w ith setting afire a black tourist New Y ear's Day. a Judge has
ruled.
The ru lin g Tuesday b y C ircu it Ju d g e Donald C. E v a n s w ill
cover the 250 ho urs tliat court-appointed attorn ey Kay
M cG u ck cn already has w orked on b e h alf of C h a rle s R ou rk and
w ill co n tin u e u n til h is tria l ends.
R ourk. 33. an d M a rk K o h u l. 27, are scheduled to go on trial
Aug. 23 In W est Palm Beach on charges o f attempted
first-degree m u rder, robbery and kidnapping.
M cG u ck cn Is on H illsborough C o u n ty 's list o f attorneys
w illin g to represent defendants w hen the p u b lic defender
cannot serve because of legal conflicts.

W om an found dead
B O C A R A T O N — A 24-year-old w om an w as found dead In
her ca r the sam e day she w as supposed to ta lk to sh e riffs
detectives about filin g s ta lk in g charges against her exhusband.
Police searched W ednesday for W illia m B run ner. 32. the day
after K im B ru n n e r w as found dead In her ca r outside her
apartm ent west o f Boca Raton.
A neighbor discovered B ru n n e r's body before B a.m . inside
he r T o yota M R 2 sports car. T he paralegal and legal secretary at
a B oca Raton law firm had been stabbed In the throat and shot
In the head. T h e d riv e r's side w ind ow w as broken out.
H er ex-husband is a suspect In the k illin g . P a lm Beach
C o u n ty s h e riff s spokesm an Bob F e rre ll snld.
WUIIam B ru n n e r rem ained at large W ednesday night. bu|
au th o ritie s received word of several sitin g s In the south Boca
Raton area, said Sgt. W illia m Springer.
T h e d ay K im B ru n n e r was kille d , she was supposed to talk to
s h e r iffs detectives about filin g sta lk in g charges against her
ex-husband. F e rre ll aald.

Suit filed against welfare agency
J A C K S O N V I L L E — A law suit filed In a c h ild 's nam e against
the state w elfare agency charges the you ng ster contracted
gonorrhea through se xu a l abuse w h ile In foster care.
T h e girl, now 6, liv e d In o foster hom e for three m o n th s un til
her ad option In 1089.
A co m p a n io n s u it charges the g irl's sister, now 15. also was
se x u a lly abused at a separate foster hom e w h ile she and her
five s ib lin g s aw aited adoption.
T h e o ld e r siste r d id not contract an y venereal diseases,
accord in g to the la w su its filed M onday ag ainst the state
D eportm ent o f H ealth and R eh ab ilita tive Services.
T h e c h ild re n w ere taken from th e ir m other an d pluced In
footer care after fo u r c a lls to the state's c h ild abuse hot line, the
s u its so ld . C a lle rs com p lain ed the you ng sters were left
u n sup e rvised In h a zard ou s co n d itio n s w ith Inadequate food.
A tto rn e y C y n th ia N ichols, w ho filed the la w su its, said It
appears the girl was m olested by a boy also In foster care.
H R S de clin e d to com m ent on the law suit.
F fB N l A s s o c ia t e d P r e s s rsoorts

2-23-13-25-19

Thursday, July 15, 1903
Voi. 86, No. 277

1 War

H"T n aie 1 '
Mesa

ma

«5u n
m am

mam

WsrtM A m Mm Is m m pay 7% u in
M s In i M m I* M m i b o n
P h a n * (407) 123-3*11.

S A N F O R D - T he Planning
a n d Z o n in g C o m m is s io n
holds Its regular m eeting to­
night. Several co nd itio nal use
rrq u e sts are scheduled for
consideration.
T h e fo llo w in g Herns urc
listed on the agenda:
• P u b lic h e a rin g — R e ­
v isio n s to th r L a n d Develop­
m ent R eg ulations changing
perm itted use o f land, in ­
c lu d in g m a jo r re visio n s to
m in in g requirem en ts (l&gt;orrow
pits), in clu d in g specified uses
and e n viron m e n ta lly sensitive
lands.
• P u b lic H earing — Request
for cond itional use for proper­
ty located at 212 W. First
Street. Sanford, In a SC-3
Sp e cial C o m m e rcia l zonin g
d is t r ic t , fo r a n In d o o r

explanation ol the plans for the
development.
lie also told the co m m ission
that a list of 13 co m p la in ts had
been obtained from residents
su rro u nding the proposed devel­

opm ent. and all but two of them
had been resolved.
T h e two were the height and
lo cation of a fence to su rro u nd
the area, and more objections
about the density.

He also proposed a concrete or
m asonry covered w all of at least
six feet In height, and com plete­
ly su rro u n d in g the development,
rather th an having a m asonry
w a ll o n o n ly p a r t s o f th e
perlm lter and wooden fencing
for the rest.
Lee sum m ed up h is co m plain s
by te llin g the com m issioners. "If
you approve this, the land owner
w ill m ake money, the developers
w ill m ake money, the city w ill
make m oney through taxes, and
we. th e s u r r o u n d in g h o m e
o w n e rs , w ill get a b s o lu te ly
noth ing ."
The com m issioners also ob­
tained an agreement from the
developers to have fencing In­
stalled com pletely around the
d e v e lo p m e n t p r io r to th e
issuance o f th r first certificate of
occupancy (CO).
W ith the additional s tip u la ­
tions. the com m issioners voted
four to one to |&gt;ennit the rezonIng. C o m m is s io n e r W h lte y
Eckstein cast the negutlve vote.

Republican
poll shows
Chiles
ratings up
B y BURNT K A L L U T A D
A ssociated Press Writer
TALLAH ASSEE A Re­
p u b lican Party poll gives Dem o­
cra tic Gov. loiw ton C h ile s the
best ratings he's had In nearly
tw o years, but the n u m bers
are n 't good enough to w in reelection. the G O P state ch a irm a n
said Wednesday.
C h a irm a n T o m Slade said the
p o ll showed any o f four possible
R epublican nom inees — M iam i
businessm an J e b Bush. Senate
President A nd er Crenshaw , stale
T re a s u re r T o m G a lla g h e r or
Secretary of State J im S m ith —
w ou ld defeat C hiles. T h e y were
the o n ly R epublicans tested In
the poll, but Slade declined to
d isclo se the G O P ca n dida tes'
num bers.
" Y o u r ad m in istratio n has lust
the confidence of the people
because your |xdicles fur gov­
e rn in g continue to differ s u b ­
sta n tia lly from yo u r prom ises
w h ile c a m p a ig n in g . " S la d e
w rote in a two-page letter to
C h ile s accom panied w ith the
po ll results.
C h ile s. 03. has not announced
h is re-election plans, keeping
other potential D em ocratic hope­
fu ls on the sideline. But he was
tic k le d about the R ep u b lica n
n u m b e rs that gave film h is
highest [roll standing since curly
in h is adm inistration.
" M y people are w orried that
I'm about to pe a k." chu ckled
C h ile s , who has fared m u ch
poorer In recent Independent
polls.

A silver lining
An om inous rain clo u d blankets Bram Towers,
an elderly housing development on F irst Street
In downtown Sanford, as the area's dally
atternoon show ers and thunderstorm s move
through Central Florida. A high pressure ridge
extending from the A tla n tic a c ro s s North

Central Florida will drift over south Central
F lo rid a by Friday. The w ln d flo w w ill be
southwest over the norlhern part of the stato
with typ ical summer thunderstorm activity
oxpectod.

Officials recover stolen quarters
By Associated Press
O R L A N D O — Federal ag ents sa y they've
recovered most o f the $87,500 In qu arters stolen
from a Federal Reserve Bank sh ip m en t and have
arrested three o f the 11 people they believed
orchestrated the heist.
,
A t a b u ll h e a rin g for tw o s u s p e c ts on
W ednesday. U.S. Secret Service agent K evin Rice
testified about 872,000 of the loot w as recovered
at the home of R avcnd ra Seobarrat, o f Orlando.
Scobarrut, 18, a busboy at U n ive rsa l Studios.

and Zam un "R aym o nd " A ll. 21. a sh ipp ing clerk
from Brooklyn. N.Y., both were charged w ith
theft of U.S. property and tem porarily held
w ithout b all at the Sem in ole County Jail.
A n o th er ball bearing w as scheduled for the two
men after prosecutors asked for more tim e to
Investigate the suspects' backgrounds.
Secret Service agents and Orange County
deputies say the men an d another Juvenile, who
was arrested but not identified, were am ong the
11 w ho used a blow torch Tuesday to cu t off a
door lo ck and burglarize a tractor-trailer.

NATIONAL T K I N

■XTBNDftD OUTLOOK
Today: P a rtly clo u d y w llh af­
ternoon th u n d e rsto rm s likely.
H igh In the low er 90s. W ind
southeast 5 to 10 m ph. Chance
o f ra in 6 0 percent.
Tonight: A 3 0 percent chance
o f e v e n in g t h u n d e r s t o r m s ,
otherw ise b eco m in g fair. Low In
the low er lo m id 70s. Light
w ind.
Friday: Pa rtly clo u d y w ith a 40
p e rce n t ch a n c e o f afternoon
th u n d e rs to r m s . H ig h In the
low er 90s. W in d southwest 5 to
10 m ph.
Extended forecast: Saturday:
P a rtly clo ud y w llh a chance of
afte rn o on an d e ve n in g th u n ­
derstorm s. Low s In (he m id 70s.

Of,

i b h Bs
iim m

m a nufactu ring use for custom
m ade furniture. (Tabled from
J u ly 1).
• Pu b lic H euring — Request
for conditional use for prop er­
ly located at 3851 S. O rlando
D riv e , In a G C -2 G e n e ra l
C o m m e rcial zonin g d istrict,
for the pur[x»sc o f autom obile
an d (n ick rental and indoor
non-hazardous storage.
• Consideration of site plan
for Sanford Lake Apartm ents,
n 184 unit m u ltip ic-fu m lly
use. located ut 1900 W. F irst
Street, In a RMOI- M ultiplef a m i l y
r e s t d e n tial/ofTIrc/lnstltutionnl zonin g
d istrict.
• Other business from the
floor or com m ission m em bers
T h e P A Z m eeting Is sch e d ­
uled for 7 p m . tills evening,
in the com m ission cham bers
o f Sunrnrd C ity Hull. 300 N.
P a rk Avenue.

B y N IC K P P E I P A U P
Herald Staff Wrltor

THE W EATHER

Here are th e
winning numbers s e le c t e d
Wednesday In t h e F lo r id a
Lottery:
M IA M I

Fantasy 5

SANFO RD Despite co n ti­
n u in g objections from nearby
homeowners, a new su bdivision.
Pam ala Oaks, w as approved by
the Sanford C ity C o m m issio n
M onday night.
Pam ala Oaks Is to be a single
fa m ily residential neighborhood,
w ith 28 homes planned for 4.9
n rrrs. It Is located on Upsnln
Road, Im m ediately south of th r
site for the proposed G rcrn cw a y
Expressw ay.
The com m ission approved a
request to rezone the property
fro m S R 1 - A A . s in g le - fa m ily
d w e llin g r e s id e n tia l, to P D .
planned development.
T h e m atter had p re v io u sly
been dented by (he Pla nn ing and
Z o n in g Com ission.
T h e d e v e lo p e r . A . D a v id
Kclnberg. had requested the c ity
overtu rn the denial of the zoning
change at the Ju n e 28 co m ­
m issio n meeting, but the m atter
w as |&gt;ostponcd pending a d is ­
cussion of problem s voiced by a
n u m b e r o f r e s id e n ts In the
su rro u nding co m m u nity.
At that time, several persons
spoke In objection to the pro
p o s e d d e n s it y p la n n e d fo r
Pam ala Oaks. O thers demanded
fencing around the property.
D u rin g M onday's C ity C o m ­
m is s io n m eeting. S id V lh le n
spoke on behalf o f the property
developers, going into a lengthy

One resident. A lv in Lee. J r.,
spoke In opposition to the pro­
posal M onday night. "M ost of us
live on one acre lo ts," he said. "If
you a llo w 5.69 homes per acre In
Pam ala O aks. It w ill be lik e you
urc p u ttin g In u m in i-city. It's
not appropriate for our co m m u ­
n ity."

Daytona Boach
FI. Laud Beach
Fort Myers
Gainesville
Homestead
Jacksonville
Key West
Lakeland
Miami
Pensacata
Sarasota
Taiiahauae
Tampa
Vero Beach
W. Palm Beach

Pci
It
.41
n
IH
H .14
II
01
mm
mm
mm
oi
ri .I
•o
.1
n
n
00
n
M
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00
n
74
01
«
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H .1
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10
.1
n
i
15
HI

p V J 'A ------- 1

r
THURSDAY
P t l y c l d y 9 3 -7 3

F R ID A Y
P t l y c l d y 9 3 -7 3

y

-------

SATURDAY
P t ly c ld y 9 3 -7 3

r \J ^
SUNDAY
P t ly c ld y 9 3 -7 3

STATISTICS

»

LAST
J u l y 11

•

NEW
J u l y 19

C

F IR S T
J u ly 26

O

FU LL
Aug. 2

F R ID A Y :
S O L U N A R T A B L E : M ln.3:05
u.m.. 3:20 p.m.: MaJ. 9:10 a.m..
9 :4 0 p.m . T I D E S : D a y t o n *
B e a ch : highs, 5:53 a.m.. 6:28
run .: lows. 11:59 a.m ., — p.m.:
N e w S m y r n a B e a c h : highs.
5:58 a.m., 6:33 p.m.: lows. 12:04
a.m ..—
p.m.: C o co a B each :
highs. 6:13 a.m .. 6:4H p.m.;
lows. 12:19 a.m.. — p.m.

La

•0

w
M
oi

MONDAY
c ld y 9 3 -7 3

M A C H CONDITIONS
D a y to n * B e ach : W aves are
1-2 feel and choppy. C urrent Is
to th e n o rth w ith a w a te r
tem perature of 82 degrees. New
Smyrna Beach: W aves arc 1-2
feet a n d g la ss y . C u r r e n t Is
slig h tly to the north, w llh a
w ater temperature o f 83 degrees.

BOATING
S t. A u g u s t in e to J u p it e r
I n le t —
Toduy, w ind south 10 kts.
Seas 2 ft. Bay and Inland wuters
a lig ht chop. W id e ly scattered
sh o w e rs an d th u n d e rs to rm s.
T o n ig h t, w ind south to so uth­
west 5 to 10 kts. Seas 1 lo 2 ft.
Bay and Inland w aters smooth.
A fe w s h o w e r s o r t h u n ­
derstorms.

T h e h ig h te m p e ra tu re In
S a n fo rd W ed nesd ay w a s 85
degrees and llic overnight low
w a s 69 as reported by the
U n ive rsity or Florida A g ric u l­
tu ra l Research and E du cation
C enter. Celery Avenue.
R e c o rd e d r a in f a ll fo r th e
p e r io d , e n d in g a t 9 a .m .
W ednesday, totalled .82 o f an
Inch.
T h e temperature at 9 a.m.
to d a y w as 7 8 de g ree s a n d
T h u rsd a y 's overnight low was
72. as recorded by the National
W eather Service at the O rlando
International Airport.
O th e r W eather Service data:

□Wednesday's high.........SB
□Barometric pressure.30.17
□Relative Humldlty....85 pet
□Winds.
□Rainfall H M t I M t t 04 of an Inch.
□Today's sunset
0:28 pan.
□Tomorrow's sunrise**•*6tS8

Temper e lu te s In d kale previous d ay's
high and o ve rn ig h t low t o l p m. E D T .
City
H i La Prc Oflk
Anchorage
41 40
C lf
A lla nta
II
74
cdy
Atlantic C ity
n
44 .17
c lr
B altim ore
so 71 .11 C &amp; f
B illin g s
rn
IS 40
B irm in gh am
*1 74
cdy
B ism arck
ar 45 n
cdy
Boise
40
n
C&amp;f
Boston
as 71
Clf
Burling ton. VI
u
57
cdy
Charleston.S C
so II
cdy
Char lesion. W V&lt;
tt
70 »
cdy
Char lotte.N C.
ft
71
cdy
Cheyenno
H
51 .14 cdy
Chicago
to
41 .11 cdy
Cleveland
45 45
c lr
Concerd.N H
fC 54
cdy
D allas F I W orth
H
77
cdy
Denver
01 51 .54 cdy
Des M oines
75 70 SO cdy
Detroll
II
70 .14 cdy
Houston
ff
cdy
77
Indtonopollt
17 70 01 cdy
Juneau
77 55
cdy
Kansas C ity
77 71 O l
cdy
Las Vagas
101 74
Or
Lim a Nock
M
01
cdy
Los Angeles
71 05
cdy
Memphis
05 75 05 cdy
M ilwaukee
*1 41 45 cdy
Mpis Si P a u l
11 40
rn
N ashville
tl
74 04
rn
New O rlean s
fl
71
cdy
New Y ork C ity
tl
71 .05
c lr
Oklahom a C ity
U 70 JO cdy
Omaha
70 M J 4
cdy
Philadelphia
fl
75 11
c lr
Phoenls
104 04
eftr
Pittsburgh
05 01
clr
PortlandJAalno
04 01
cdy
V Louis
04 74 JO cdy
Soli L a k e C ity
04 so
cdy
SI Sto Marie
17 so ot cdy
Seattle
70 54 01
m
Washington. D C .
07 70 07 cdy

�Sanlord Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday. July 15, 1993 - 3A

Abuse alleged: Brothers shoot dad
B y E L L E N K N IC K M E Y E R

Loiterers charged
Sanford police arrested Iwo men Tuesday near u |xxd room
on Sanford Avenue. C hurned w llll Irrspanslng afler w arning,
were D a vid I*. W illis. 23. 1*103 Locust Avenue, and lln r t ls
Leonard W illis. 23. o f 37 Castle Brew er Court. Officers said
Iroili m en had tx*rn Issued w arnin gs the preceding day agalnsl
Inhering In the area. W hen they were found near the
e stablishm en t the follow ing day. they were both arrested.

Winter Springs arrest
M au rice C herry Brow n. 19. 112 Lakeside Circle. Sanford,
was arrested by W inter S p rin g s police Tuesday. Officers said
i hey Investigated w hen they saw his ca r parked on the
shoulder o f a streel. D u rin g a check by an Ovldco K-9 dog.
officers said they uncovered a 10 Inch long knife and a bag of
green leafy substance u n d e r ih c seal. B row n was charged w ith
d riv in g w ith a suspcndcd/rcvokcd license, having a concealed
weapon, resisting arrest w ithout violence, and possession of
ca nna bis un der 20 grams.

Associated Pross Writer
O K L A H O M A C IT Y — Lon nie D u tto n 's
c h ild r e n s t u c k t o g e t h e r , s o m e t im e s
squeezing In four to a seal on th r school
bus.
T h is week, the Iwo oldest txjys. ages 12
and 15. acted as one again, decid in g It w as
lim e lo put an end to th eir father's alleged
sexual abuse o l ih e ir IO year o ld sister.
One held a deer rlile lo h is sleeping
father's head, the other pu lled the trigger, a
law yer for one o f the youngsters says.
"P ro b a b ly both were so scared neither one
knew what to do separately." said Hubert
Perrlne. the 12 y e a ro ld 's rourt-app o lnled
attorney.
Several tim es au th o ritie s had been to
D u tto n 's rural hom e outside Hush Springs,
a town ot 1.200 about 50 m iles southw est of
O klahom a C ity , to Investigate relatives’

allegations the unem ployed, divorced man
w us a b u s in g h is three s o n s and Ills
daughter.
On M on day, they found the 39-yeur-old
dead on h is couch , killed by a shot fired at
close range.
The Iwo boys arc In the custody of
Juvenile a u th o ritie s and probably w ill not be
tried as a d u lts. Assistant D is tric t A llo rn e y
Klchard V a n D yck said. T h e state has
turned Ih c lr sister and 8-ycar-old brother
over lo a n au n t.
Van D y ck sa id he could not otherwise
com m ent on the case because h Involved
minors. Hut S a ra h Evans, n la w ye r for the
15-year-old. sa id the four w ere sexually,
p h ysically a n d em otionally abused, nnd the
sexual abuse of their sister pa rticu larly
disturbed the o ld e r boys.
The c h ild re n were apparently too afraid of
th e ir fa th e r to say a n y t h in g to the
authorities w ho came to th e ir home on a

secluded, b ru sh y piece o f property lo try to
help, said B ill C ham bers, the p rin cip a l at
Ih ro ld e s l b o y 's school.
A m em b er of the football and ba ske tb a ll
team s, th e teen-ager guve no h in t o f
problem s a l home, Ohnmlx*rs said. T h e
p rin cip a l said Ihc o n ly tim e h r had lo take
the 15-ycar-old to task w as when he heard
the lx&gt;y w as throw ing a b a s k e ik ill o n Ih c
Inis. The Ixiy slopped.
‘ %
*

"H e was Just un all-A m e rica n , apple p ic
little bo y." C h a m b ers said.
The ch ild re n had been Isolated sin c e
school let out for the su m m er, forbidden by
ih r lr father to bring friends over or to go lo
friends' homes. C h a m b ers said.
" I lls dad taught him lo sta y lo h im se lf."
C ham lx-rs said of the oldest Ixiy. "I g u ess
w hen It cam e lo han d lin g h is problem , he
solved II him self, Jusl lik e fie had been
taught."

Burglary in progress
Sheri ITs deputies arrested H ickey W u yn c Jo hnso n, *10. 3805
Plnew ay A ve., Sanford, near the iih c rs c c ilo n ol V lh lcn Hoad
and l(u b v S i reel nil Tuesday. Deputies said they were
responding to a call regarding a suspected burglary In
progress, T h e y reported fin d in g a man am i w om an In the area,
and fo llo w in g a check, discovered the m an was In possession of
a plastic bag containing Item s reportedly stolen from a nearby
residence. W itnesses reported seeing the m an enter and exit
ilie b u ild in g while ih c w om an remained outdoors. Johnson
was charged w llh b u rg la ry to a residence am i crim in a l
m ischief. T he woman w as not Im m ediately charged.

Theft solved
S h rrtfT s deputies urrested Ja m e s H om er Dussurd. 23, w llh
no local address. In ro n n cctfo n w llh a slo rcagc room burglary.
A cco rd in g to the arrest report, on J u ly 8, Dussurd reportedly
broke Into a storeroom at a residence In the BOO block of
M im osa Terrace, and rem oved a su rf troard valued at S I 50.
Deputies said he later paw ned the Item for S25. The re|&gt;ort
indicated B ussard had been arrested on an unrelated charge
the same day as the reported burglary, and while he was
confined to Hie Jo hn E . Polk C o rrection al Facility. H is
connection w llh the case w as not verified u n til Tuesday when
the arrest w as made for burglary and dealing In stolen
property.

Trespasser arrested
Sanford police* arrested M alcom Leroy Saunders. Jr.. 50. of
Hanuhun. S.C. who was loeuted In front of a business In the
2(XKJ block o f W. First Street Tuesday. The arrest rrjxirt states
that S a u n d e rs had been Issued a w arning against trespassing
at the pro jie rty on M onday, but they found him there the
follow ing day. Saunders w as charged w ith tresspassing afler
w arning.

Battered woman syndrome
Life prison sentence com m uted in sla yin g of husband
By CURT ANDERSON
Associated Pross Writer
T A L L A H A S S E E - M illie Je a n
K aln s was released from state
prison after G ov. Law ton C b lle s
and the Cabinet com m uted her
life sentence fur the 1988 sla y in g
o f a husband w ho had abused
her for years.
M rs. K a ln s. 58. w us freed
W ednesday from Flo rida C o rre c­
tional Inst Hull* In Low ell, where
she had served n e a rly three
y e a r s fo r f a t a l ly s h o o t in g
57-yrar-old H ill K a ln s w hile he
w as beating th eir son. W avne.
Mrs. Kalns. o f St. Petersburg,
b e ca m e th e s e c o n d w o m a n
whose sentence was com m uted
un der a new state program to

take a clo se r l«&gt;k at co n v ictio n s
in v o lv in g battered w o m e n 's
s y n d r o m e . T h e f i r s t . K im
Sou hie He. was freed M arch 1 1.
A l a J u n e h e a rin g before
C h ile s an d ih r Cabinet, s ittin g as
the C le m e n cy Board. M rs. K a ln s'
daughter. Betty Metcalf, said her
m other had suffered for yea rs al
the hands of a violent hu sb and .
"1 w itnessed my m om being
bealen m any, many tim e s ." she
said " B ill w as healing u p my
brother and choking h im the
night he died. My m o th e r Just
Hipped."
In a ease analysis. Mrs. K a ln s
told Investigators she hud been
beaten for years by her h u sb and
They were divorced tw ice but
each tim e remarried.

"H e w ou ld gel me on the floor
and k ic k me in the side u n lll I
would be so sore It w ould take
three w eeks for the soreness to
go o u t." she said. "H e would
come In d ru n k and beat me. He
would blacken m y eyes."

had first tried to hire a hit m an
to k ill tier husband and then
txilight a gun h rrse ll six d a y s
before the sla yin g .
Although M rs. C o llin s was a lso
abused, the facts of her case
were different. C h ile s said.

U nder the order signed by
Chiles. M rs. K alns m ust undergo
a psychological exam and thera­
py If needed. Hoth m ust be
approved and m onitored by the
Clem ency Board.

C le m e n cy sta ff had re c o m ­
mended against II. as did a
sjK-clal review panel up|K)!utcd
to exam ine c la im s of L itte re d w lfe s y n d r o m e . T e s t im o n y
sh o w e d sh e h a d lu re d h e r
estranged husband. Jo h n C o l­
lins. to her house and shot him .

“ T h is case was pretty cle ar."
C h iles said W ednesday. "It ce r­
ta in ly appeared the battered
woman syndrom e was v a lid ."
C h ile s an d the Cabinet, how ­
ever. tu rn e d down a s im ila r
request from Rita N. C o llin s of
Orlando, w ho prosecutors said

“ On the basts o f the fuels o f
that case. It d id not up|x-ar to
m erit It." the governor said.
Mrs. C o llin s. G2. Is eligible for
parole In six to eight m o n th s
anyw ay.

JCPenney

Warrants served
• Fred e rick T- H endricks. 39. 21H Palm Drive. Sanford, was
located by Sanford jxdlcc In a parking lot on South French
Avenue e a rly Wednesday. He was wanted on a warrant for
u n em plo ym ent com pensation fraud.
• A n th o n y Bernard S tu w a rt. 30. I21G Lin co ln Court.
Sanford, w as located al the co un ty Jail T uesday where he was
lx-lng held on another charge. He was w anted on a warrant for
violation of parole on a c o n v ictio n of theft.

Sw
G O W ITH N U M B E R S

Dom estic violence
• J c fT re jJ J . t Slagle. 30. 203 Laurel D rive. Sanlord, was
arre slcth b g Sanford poltre a l h is residence T uesday follow ing a
fight w llh ’ll woman He w as charged w ith dom estic violence,
battery.
• Bobby Cotleld. 22. 122 C e n lc n la l D rive. Sanford, was
arrested at Ills residence b y Sanford ixrllcc Tuesday. Officers
said lie hud Ix-cn In a lig ht w ith a female In the 1500 block of
W 13th Street. He was charged w ith dom estic violence,
battery.
• C lu m d V in ce n t King. 21. 2561 Craw ford Ave., Sanford,
w as arrested by sh e riffs d e p u tie s Tuesday. Deputies said he
had been In a light w llh a w om an w ho w as four m onths
pregnant. He was charged w llh aggravated battery, and
aggravated assault.
• K e vin Eug ene C a m p b e ll. 110 C a stle Brew er Court.
Sanlord. w a s arrested by sh e riff1s deputies In the 2500 block o f
Frog A lle y . Tuesday. D eputies said be hud been In an
altercation w ith a wom an. He was charged w ith battery,
dom estic violence.

Two For

son
ou

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Dress Sh »T fom- ’
i”

~ 7

I

C o t t o n L. i c p
C r u s s O v e r B r &gt;1

Two For

Incidents reported to the sheriff
• $5*I5 in Items was reported stolen d u rin g a burglary
Tuesday, at n produce m arket in the 3H00 block of E. S.R. 46.
• A b u sin e ss burglary w as reported Tuesday, ulso In the
30(XJ block o f E. S.K. 40. A co py m achine p lu s $908 In other
Items were reportedly stole n . Deputies reported several
hundred d o lla rs In damage w as done during the burglary.
• A w o m an 's purse c o n ta in in g un estim ated $55 In property
was reportedly removed from a store In the GOO block of L ik e
M ary B lvd. on Tuesday. O fficers said the w om an had left the
purse on u co p y m achine to go outdoors and remove an Item
from her vehicle. They said w hen she returned, the purse was
gone.

Two For

Two For

■7

$ O A
Boys 4-7 Pro-washed Joans
from The Arizona Joan Co

(

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$v)U

In fn n t s O n e P i e c e
P ilu ch o

Two For

c o r

b*i5

Mon s S o l i d C o l o i P o l o
from St

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Three Pair For
W A A

4.98

Boys

C lo w S o cks

Itl* lit ' *
lift

Two For
A
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6.99

Hom o C o lle ctio n

S o lid C o lo r B .H h Towel

Four For

* Io
$1

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I . i d l e s S n t io
S t r i r u j B i k i n i P a n t ie s

Incidents reported to Sanford police
• The southw est dtxir o f a restaurant was reportedly broken
In a b u rg la ry attempt e a rly Wednesday at n restaurant In
the 2700 b lo ck o f Sanford Avenue. Police said an alarm
apparently frightened the burglar, and nothing was reported
m issing, altho ug h $200 In dam age was reported.
• A M cIntosh com puter, valu ed al $2,000 w as reportedly
stolen T u e sd a y from H am ilton Elem entary School. 1501 E. 8th
Street. Police said a door w as pried open In a portable building
for entry.
• A radio pager valued a l $3 50 was reportedly stolen from a
tru ck parked In the 1200 block o fS . Park A ven ue on Tuesday.
• A bu rglary was reported Tuesday In an occupied dw elling
In Ihc H(X) b lo c k o f Sanlu B arb ara Drive. Police said entry’ was
m a d r through an unsecured front dixir. T h e y reported a desk
had been rum m aged and $5 rem oved from a purse.
• S ix Iru c k tires w llh chrom e rim s were reportedly stolen
Tuesday from the buck yard o f a residence In the 2500 block of
El portal Avenue. The tires and rim s were valued al $200 each.
o (x *ii

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nadue»on«ononQln«&lt;pr1cadmarchan&lt;»iaaWiCBvairamodUii)aplaiad.*No«f phcairapraairtisanf r onraqul*
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V

�4 A - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday. July 15. 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
S a n fo rd H e ra ld

'WILLIAM A. RUSHER

(lisp s aa 1-2*0)
300 N. F R E N C H AVE.. SAN FO RD , FLA. 32771
Area C o d e 407-322 2 6 1 1 or 831-0093

Health care: the obvious solution

Wayne 0. Doyla. Publisher and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 M onths........................... 919 50
8 M onths........................... 839.00
l Veer ..............................$78 00
Florida Raeldanta muat pay 7% salsa Uur tn
addition to rataa above.

EDITORIALS

Fix it or
demolish it
The C ity o f S a n fo rd has been very le n ie n t in
m atters p e r t a in in g to the d e m o litio n nl
dilapidated b u ild in g s . T im e e x te n sio n s in
repair b u ild in g s have been c o n s ta n tly g ra n te d
at even (be slig h te st sign o f progress.
One re s id e n tia l hom e h a s been on the list nl
tim e e x te n s io n s for o v e r fo u r y e a rs
A
two-story u n fin is h e d b u s in e s s s tru c tu re near
a prom inent Intersection h a s a lso been o n the
verge of d e m o litio n for o v e r a year.
T h e m a y o r a n d c o m m is s io n e r s h u v r
p u b licly stated that the bu sin ess s tru c tu re
has been a n eyesore for u lo n g tim e, yet tim e
extensions h a v e been given.
On the surface. Sanford m a y appear in Ik - a
c ity in the b e g in n in g stages of Im provem ents.
T h e M ain Street program is w o rk in g on
refu rb ish in g the d o w n to w n area, the la ik e
Monroe W a te rfro n t co m m itte e is try in g to
im prove (hat a rea.

Ms. HiMtham ('Union a n d her 500 little elves
are s t ill tend al work, se cre tly devising the
health ra n - plan that the C lin to n ad m in istratio n
in te n d s to iuqKisc on the A m e ric a n people.
W e are not living allow ed to w atch the process,
p re su m a b ly tor the sam e reaso n dud lilsm a n -k
w arned sausage lovers a g a in st w atching the
tnm tulm litre nl sausage. Hut d ie Presidential
P n tln e i and various nthers in the know have said
enough tn make It clear th at a huge new federal
burenneraev will I m- re q u ire d to ad m in ister the
program , arid II w ill have In he paid lor w ith
u p w a rd s nl $90 billion in new taxes — over an d
above" d ie quarter nl a tr illio n the Dem ocratic
C o n g re ss is ahrady p re p a rin g to Impose on u s at
Mr C lin to n s hehrsi lit t h r m dm prnvahle w ord s
of P J . O Untilke, II you d u n k health care Is
rx|M-ri*i\t now wall n il y o u see what it costs
wilt'll II H llCi

A ll tin s is rirrrs s .in (allegedly) because o f the
oh repealed -.ssertion that " 3 7 m illion A m e r i­
cans
(nut ol 250 m illio n )
have no health
in su ra n ce
When declaim ed w ith a dying fa ll on
the last wont, drat statem ent is easy to confuse
w ith the very ih llc n nl — an d totally false —
pro p ositio n that
m illio n A m e rica n s have no
health care
As F red Iko ttf- |Mitt|lrd n u t In The A m e rican

Spectator recently. "Everybody gets h e a lth cate
In this country — tin pom die u n in su re d ,
everyone ..."T h o se w id mu i In alih In surance
are treated free ol
c h iirg r hy ho sp ita l
e m e r g r n r y ro o m s.
Federal law. B arnes
g o e s on r e q u ir e s
" m e d ic a l scre e n in g
nl everyone request
mg care at a hospital
emergency room. II
treatment Is needed.
It must lx- p io v ld e d ."
The chief reason llir
u n in s u re d g n less
m r d lr n l r a r e p e r
capita Ilian avrntge
Is th a t th e y a re .
II you dunk
o v e r w he I m i u g ly
health caro is
y o lin g e r t h a n
oxpnnsivo
a v r r a g e a n tl
now. wait till
t h r refill r need less
you see w h al
Hid Ihe srM'iallzed ■
it costs *.'iHn
m e d ic in e l a r i a i l r s
it's hee ■
have the hit to liir tr
teeth, and tin- A in r r
lean people are going t

ir the q u a lific a tio n s for b u ild in g d e m o litio n
a rc too w eak, w e urge that they be re v isite d
a n d strengthened.
If they a re a lread y stro n g enough, we
suggest the c o m m is s io n take off th e ir k id
g lo ves and p u l o n their b o xin g gloves.

LETTERS

Thanks for display
What a tx-aurlful display wc saw on the Fo urth of
J u ly , E veryth in g was so exact, no one would turnknow n the effort and lim e an d devotion linn went
Into m aking it possible. O n ly love for our co un ttv
c o u ld have ca u se d such devotion, to b rin g
memories o f o u r forefathers dying Tor the rig id to
keep our land from ever having foreign blood split
o n our soli. O u r history books tell of our A m e rican
forefathers d y in g and fin a lly w inning on d ia l
glorious day. W h ile looking out am ong the- crow d 1
saw some ry e s w ith tears, others w ith drep sorrow
w ith m em ories o f another era. another son. w ho
ulso died to keep o u r shores free from gangs and
violence.
Then I saw children w ith eyes b rig lil and
clapping of little hands. I wondered if their parents
explained that it w asn’t just a thing fur fun. but
ulso for the proud Am ericans who paid 11nsupreme price for them to be lhere.
A s 1 watched, som ething wonderful started to
happen, a d ifferent look began to come across d ic ir
faces. They also began to feel the love dint was
there all around them .
Now O rlando an d Disney hud larger d isplays bid
they didn’t have w hat was here that made lid s the
best In the w orld — we had love and devotion from
a few men. w o rk in g lo pul It on.
We are proud to have such dedication for our
cause.
Thanks again for such a display or the A m e rlan
flag; people ca m e to see just a display, but went
aw ay with respect for our Hag and country.
Mary R. J o lly
Sanford

F E IIB P allow s those covered to choose am ong
illtfe rrn l health plans, w ith different prem ium s
and se rv ic e s tailored lo d ic ir spcclfli needs
Com p e ll (Ion am ong tire p ro v id e rs keeps a
iln w n w a id pressure on co sts Heritage proposes
lo a p p ly (tie same p rin c ip le nationwide fry
((in ve rtin g the tax h rra k em ployers now receive
lor p ro v id in g he.illh c a r r benefits Into an
Individual "m edical la x cre d it.' w hich could
thru I m- spent by In dividu als on prci Isely Hu
qu an tity a n d tv|&gt;e ol m edical coverage drey need

F ir s t

I have

to

t e ll

you

u lm ti!

K ir k

HIimmIsw ort h
III A u g u st 1984. the ( M i l l i e I n iia llim o r r
C o u n ly . Md charged h im w iili the M-xual
assa u lt and m inder ol a 9 year old girl In
M arch I9H5. be was c u n v lc lrd o l d ir it iu ic
and sentenced lo death T h r m iiv ti tion was
s u lts r q o r u d y o ve rtu ru rd am i h r was tried
again lit Apr it I9H7. he w as convicted lor t i n
second tim e and sentenced lo two conxecu
liv e life term s

III M a y

1993. a

so p h isticate d generic
trs i determ in ed that
sem en found on the
V i c t i m ' s (mi n l I r s
c o u ld not possibly
h a v e c o m e (ru m
H lo n d tw n flh An FBI
ir s i c o n firm e d the
lin d iu g
U n J u n e 28.
lll(M M lsw otlh w a l k e d
m il ul priso n a Irer

T h e o w n e r s h o u ld Ik * re q u ire d to h a v e tinhouse put b u c k in liv a b le c o n d itio n a n d on
the (ax ro lls . If not, e ith e r o rd e r the o w n e r to
d e m o lish It. o r have c ity cre w s ao the w o rk
a n d place a lie n against the pro perty lo r the
co st of the d e m o litio n to the c ity .

If the p e o p le o f S anford are expected to
w o rk together In m a k in g It m ore a ttra c tiv e
a n d a Oner p la c e in w h ic h to live, they need
c it y c o m m is s io n support.

Proposed by the H eritage Foundation, u i s
trased o n the Federal E m p lo y e rs Health B e lle lli*
Program , w h ich already co ve rs II m illion ledcral
em ployees and m lr r e s an d Ihr-lr dr|» u ilrn is .
Ineiudlng H ill. H illary and Chelsea

Punishm ent ought
to fit the crim e"

Yet the c it y c o m m is s io n e rs co n tin u e to
a llo w d ila p id a te d s tru c tu re s to re m a in as
eyesores. M o st o f them a rc ofT the tax ro lls.
If progress in the p h y s ic a l a p p ea rs nee of
S a n fo rd is to be m ade, the c ity m ust lig h te n
Its req u irem en ts. If and w hen tim e e x te n sio n s
a re g ra n te d o n c e a b u ild in g h a s b een
suggested fo r d e m o litio n . II m u st Im- for one
s p e c ific t im e p e rio d w ith n o a d d it io n a l
exte n sio n s.

There m a y be som e room for leniency, but
o n ly in a few cases. Most stru ctu re s bro ught
before the c o m m is s io n fo r d em o litio n c o n s id ­
eration a re lis te d as vacant, open to van d a lism . p ossible c r a c k house, deteriorating, and
otherw ise u n s a fe .

I o i in n a te ly d ie rr Is nne alternative d ia l h a s
been w id e ly and s u c c e s s fu lly le sle d . llu il
w ou ldn 't re q u lrr a huge new b iim iu r n ir ) lo
a d m in iste r it, dial w ou ldn 't cost a cent in new
taxes, a n d that would guarantee every A m e rican
q u ality h e a lth carr by p h y sic ia n s ol his m her
choice

JOSEPH SPEAR

Mem bers o f th e S c c n lr Im provem ent H oard
a re c o n sta n tly a w a rd in g o w n e rs of rem odeled
b u ild in g s fo r t h e ir e ffo rts. T h e S a n fo r d
M u se u m h a s been d o u b le d In s iz e a n d
rem odeled in kee p in g w ith the h is to ric a l
re v ita liza tio n a tte m p ts in the c ity .

It so u n d s h a rs h , and m a y seem u n fa ir to
people w h o m a y not be able to a ffo rd
restoring a h o u s e to meet c ity codes.

health cure program w hether they nerd or want
one o r not. T he only question led Is wind kind

man*

MARTIN SCHRAM

What the Perot Bloc really wants
O il tin plav grounds ol W a sh in g to n 's strate­
gists an d pundits, lire hot su m m e r game is
plotting th e sf-dtu lion ol the Perot Bloc. It's fun
to w atch the Hunkers (M ind er the polls, crunch
the i u i i u I m i s
then miss the poin t.
M a m m outh the n e o co n v e n tio n a l wisdom
The party that pushes tire m ost "ce n trist"
policies w HI mln-fit Boss P e ro t's voters. Wrong
O thers chant thr iri.uitrn d u Jour: something
about deficit cuts being o u r cu re -a ll Perhaps
th e y v c b e e n s m a c k e d b y lo o m a n y
pie-charts in (hr-lace.
M ean w h ile , the D e m o c ra tic L e a d e rsh ip
Count il am i Progressive P o lic y Institute (w h rrr
I re cen tly cu edited a hook o l p o lic y proposals!
have ro u te tip with an Im pressive package. It's
a new s u m \ of Perot voters a n d a strategy of
reform s try w hich Hill C lin to n can capture
them N othing short ol re in v e n tin g govern­
ment w ill do
d m tin a the leaders ol th e D L C and PPI
exp la in e d I h r lr hold new strategy' by using an
o ld N ix o n sym b ol T h e ir re p o rt lik e n e d
C lin to n 's opportunity lor fo rg in g a governing
m a jo rity that Includes P e ro t's voters to Richard N ix o n 's Infamous ''s o u th e rn strategy,"
w hich lu re d southern D em o crats and George
W allace voteis of I'MiH into K rp u h llra n ls m by
pro m ising lo - av enforcem ent o f c iv il rights
co m p lian ce
Amt d ia l’s uiilm lunate. B e cau se that "N ixo n
soudu-rn strategy com parison sends signals
and sv m lm ls ihat arc n o xio u s, evocative or
racial an d regional hostility, an d Inviting a
kncc-Jerked n ils characterization of a sensible
effort to Ik * responsive to rig h t-th in k in g folks
w lio tracked Perot la ‘92.
P e r h a p s | can lend a hand here — for 1 first
got to k n o w the voters w ho a r c today's Perot
Bloc an d their a n le c r d r n ls w ay track lit
tu m u ltu o u s 1968 — before R o ss Perot had
made h im se lf a legendary b u s in e s s tycoon, let
alone a lu ll blow n (roluieal typ h o o n .

A la b a m a n Gov. George W a lla ce and his
th ird-p arty presidential c a m p a ig n were draw ­
ing huge crow d s In the h e a rt ol Yankecland
that a u tu m n — ami I'd begun a s k in g people In
Ids uudiences: “ Before y o u k n e w W allace
would Ik * running, who w e re you leaning
toward nupiN irtlng for p re sid e n t?” The answer
1 heard tim e and again: "B o b b y K e n n e d y."
A l 111 st It seemed lo m ake n o sense: Robert
K e n n e d y w a s the lib e r a l s e n a to r w h o
advocated aggressive civ il r ig h ts enforcement
un til hr- w as assassinated th a t Ju n e : Wallace
was the conservative governor w h o 'd stood in
the school house door lo halt desegregation.
Then It m ade a lot of sense: These people
told m e. lim e und again, th at th e y had viewed
RolK-rt K e n n e d y as a c h a m p io n o f folks like

th rm se b rs. w hile m id dle and lower Ii k i i i i k
A m ericans who were tired ol tiriiig ignored hy
th eir government Now W allace was ta lk in g -■
sim ila r line tn Ills populist rant
These lo lk s w ould be di stilled lo «n d u tr
decades ol disillu sio n m e n t with governm ent
They and new ly elig ib le voters Jtisl Ilk) them
w ould try J im m y Carter In *76. Ronald R eagan
In "80 and 8-1 A n d fin a lly - deeply c y n ic a l
an d frustrated — Perot In 92
News of th r Dl.C-PPI report, Including the
reference to N ix o n s so u l h e m strategy, w a s
carried In The New
Y o r k T 1 in e s
a l o n g s id e a n In
l e r v l r w In w h ic h
H ousing und Urban
Developm ent S e cre ­
tary Henry Cisneros
blasted "New Demo
cra ts." such as the
D L C and PPI lo r
g iv in g I n s u ffic ie n t
attention to the d a m ­
a g e r a c is m s t i l l
causes in Am erica
O d d ly , o n e r y o u
£ It 'S fun lo
w arle th ro u g h the
watch iho
rh e to rir. Cisneros is
thinkers
espousing m uch ol
ponder Ihe
the DLC/PPI program
polls, crunch
stressing fam ily v a l­
the numbers
ues and In d ivid u al
Inert miss Ihe
r e s p o n s ib ility . Hut
point m
the Juxtaposition ol
the "southern stratc
g y " exam ple unfortunately (ami Inaccurately)
seemed lo validate C isn e ro s' criticism
A s President C lin to n studies die p a th
churtcd by h is old D LC -PP I colleagues, let h im
set Ids m ind toward th is goal: He must teat h
out to the sort o l folks who. in another era.
were fed up w ith governm ent amt em braced
both Bobby Kennedy am i George Wallace
A n d here's a start: Let h im announce that In­
is quadrupling Ills plan to cut the fed eral
b u re a u cra cy by 1 0 0.0 00 civ ilia n s h i Ills
four-year term. C lin to n ca n cut ln o .o o o in
each of bis four years — and silll do It al!
through attrition, w ld io u t firin g anyone.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters lo the editor arc weir nine A ll letters
m ust lx- signed, in clu d e the address ol the
w rite r und a daytim e telephone nu m ber.
Letters should he on a sin gle subject and lx- as
brief as |K)sslhle. The I r t lc is ui&lt; stihjei i to
editing.

S in c e that
Ja y . the
—lib e ra ls h a re
b e e n c h e w in g
on
B lo o d s w o rth a

Stm-e that day. the
l i b e r a l s and
l lo ld - y o u -s o s have
b e e n e t ir w ln g o n
case like a
H lo o d s w o r ill’s rase
scra w n y
like n s&lt; ta w n y hound
hound
gn aw in g on a soup
g n a w in g o n a
(Mine
I lie (ar t that
so u p bone ■
others like him may
still Im* o n death row
|_
rem ains the strongest argunieoi ag.uiisi
&lt;•ipii.il pu nishm ent." o pin ed die W ashington
Post
L e t s im agine that lie had lie rti
e xe cu te d ." wrote B a ltim o re Son ro lu in n ts i
Mike L llt w ln "W hat w ould we In- saving now
that scien ce has proven h im Innocent ol ,i
t tim e that 12 people
Iw iit- loum l him
guilty o l co m m ittin g ?"
I Intend lo take Issue w ith that sentiment
hut llr s l I waul to m ake it c lear d ia l tin
strong o p in io n s have n o th in g in do w iili K u k
Hloodsw orth, Hell. I know K irk iilo o d sw o illt I
mean. I never m rt hint, but I know him H r is
Im m C a m b rid g e . Md . the i l l y ol my h irrii
Ills lir s i night out of p riso n , he went out (or
crabs. I know this man. and I am happy lie is
lire
But the lesson w r sh ou ld lx- learning hum
Ills experience. It seem s lo rne. Is not th ill
capital punishm ent Is s lu p ld und should lx
tiuutshed. but dial It Is d ra stic and severe and
Irreversible and ought tu lx- resorted to w ith
grrat r are and only w hen d ie (x-rviii Involved
Is g u ilty lx*yond any doubt
I in ta lk in g about sane |K*ople who do
violence to others, p a rtic u la rly the Innocent.
I'm i.ilk iu g about terrorists; about thugs w iih
m a ch in e gu ns who k ill (irnph* w illy m lly from
car w ind ow s; alxmt bank robbers who lake
th eir sw a g and e xe cu te em ployees am i
hy s la n d e rs before leavin g, uhoui utterly
dep raved m iscreants w ho lire autom atic
w eapons at sw im m ing pools lu ll ol children.
People w ho do these tilin g s are not hum an
They have no rigid to lx- takin g tip spurt- on
die p la n e t, and ll we ever run out of
executioners, I would lx* privileged lo throw
lilt- sw itc h .
I h a v e s im ila r f e e lin g s a b o u t a ll
|x*rpctrator» of violent c rim e s I believe we
have been far loo forcbcuran l lor i &lt;m &gt; many
years. I am up to m y klester w ldi lenient
judges w h o favor light sentences and early
parole. I am tired of hearing therapists
bu bb ling o n about "lo w self esteem " and
social w o rk e rs lecturing u s atxnii d yslim c
llo n a l fa m ilie s anil s h rin k s who believe an
abusive ch ild h oo d is an excuse for murder.
P o v e rty und bud h o m e s und ab u sive
p a rrn ts e xist. I wish they d id n 't, but they do.
and th e y u n deniably h e lp to m old the
rr lm ln a l psyche. I believe that all elem ents
ought lo lx- studied and rrs tu d lrd and If we
run e v e n tu a lly elim in ate the factors d ia l
Inrge m urderers, then by a ll m eans lets do tl
In th e m eantim e, how ever, m iscreants
should be behind burs. W hen prisons bulge
Imlld m o re. They don't huve lo be expensive
Stu dy th e M exican prison system - four w alls
and a b o w l of aw lll a day - and may Ik - build
w alls a ro u n d some federal lund nut west and
put th e most hardened c rim in a ls behind
them an d let them survive as b rs i they ran.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July &lt;5, 1M 3 . g a

Lake Mary defines department heads
B y N IC K N P E IP A U P
H erald S t a ll W riter

L A K E M A R Y — T w o revisions
to the c ity code of ordinances
w ill be considered d u rin g to­
n ig h t's Lake M ary C ity C o m ­
m issio n meeting. Both are the
result o f a citize n s referendum
on c h a rte r revisions approved
late last year.
C ity Manager Jo h n L itto n has
e xplained that one of the charter
am endm ents approved by the
v o trn i last year provided that the
" c r e a t io n , e lim in a t io n ,
em ploym ent, or term ination of
departm ent heads sh all tic upon
the recom m endation o f the city
m anager and the approval of the
city co m m issio n ."
"H o w e v e r." L ltlo n said, " a
departm ent head was not d e ­
nned."
One o f the ordinances to tic
presented for second reading
and p u b lic hearing d u rin g to­
n ig h t's co m m ission m eeting w ill
c le a r ly e s ta b lis h d e p a rtm e n t
heads to be covered under the
charter change.
T hey Include: flrr chief: police
chief; finance director: P a rks and
Recreation director: city clerk;
and P u b lic W orks director. A c ­
co rd in g lo the w onting of the

ordinance. " T h e creation, e lim i­
Lake Mary agenda
nation. em ploym ent or term ina­
tion o f departm ent heads sh all
be In accordance w ith the c ity 's
By MICK P W M U P
charter.**
Herald Slsff Writer_________
The docu m ent also Indicates
what dep artm en ts constitute the
L A K E M A R Y - The L . l , M a r y C ity
c ity ’s operational organization.
Com m in io n w ilt hold It! r tg u lo r m ooting
tonight
boginning at 7 p m P o r t o l tho
In ad dition to the departm ents
mooting *111 Inclw di tho proton totton ot
governed by the specific de­
It* C ity M o n o g o r't budgot m n u g o and
t i n t took ot tho budgot.
partm ent heads, the document
also lis ts G eneral Governm ent
Tho follow ing llo m t w oro Ititod cm tho
and P u b lic W orks.
o g tnd o lor proM ntotfon. o to f y n lo r d o y
o Invocation. Plodgo of A ’to g lon to . op
Part of the proposal for defin­
p rovo l ot m lnu to t
ing departm ent heads has been
o Spot lot prooontotlon — C ity M o n o g o r
stricken from the ordinance. It
John Litton. Iltc o l yoor IfW budgot ond
budgot m oMogo
defined In dividu al departments,
* Spot lot prcoontolfon — C ity P lo n n o r
but C ity C le rk C a ro l Foster had
M o lt W ot I, uvobfo ocroogo ofong R ln o h o tt
Rood
Indicated th ey needed to be
o C t l i im p o r t k lp o llc n ( llo m t not on tho
deleted because they arc re­
ogondol
dundant o r In co nflict w ith other
o R o p o r ti ot tho C ity M onog or (too
sections o f the code.
• R rp o r ft ot tho M ayo r
A noth er change In the code of
• R r p o r lt ot tho C ity Attorney
ordinances scheduled for second
o M ot font and/or o rd tn o n e n b y c ity
co m m lttta n o rt
reading d u rin g tonight's m eet­
OOrdm onco — tnd roodm g - V o c o lm g
ing. has been slig h tly revised
couth ho lt ot Tlm ocuon U n it 14. Itoblod
since It w as first presented. It
fro m Ju ly I)
OOrdm onco - 2nd roodlng — E lt o b llt h
deals w ith c la rify in g the position
mg rutot ond rogw lotlont for uto o l e tty 't
o f city m anager. In establishing
rocroolfon ol lo c ilitw t
u strong c ity m anager form of
O Ordm onco - 2nd roodmg — Am o nd m g
Choptor 12. co d o o to rdm on cot
g o v e r n m e n t . M a n y o f th e
O Ordm onco - 2nd roodlng — A m e n d in g
ch a n g e s In v o lv e d fin e -tu n in g
some o f the language o rigin ally
presented, lo m ake Ihe docu­ for ttrrund rra d ln g and p u b lic
hearing d u rin g lo n lg h t's c ity
ment d e a re r In Its Intent.
Both rh a n g rs are sch rd u lrd c o m m is s io n m e e tin g in I h r

Alarms
Continued from Page 1A
d r ills
b rin g In Ih rir v ic in ity ."
Shupe subm itted a letter re­
garding Ihe situation lo C liy
Manager BUI Sim m ons. H r rr(K trlrd h a v in g requested Ih r
m aintenance department of ih r
Sem inole Courtly Public School
s y s lrm lo evaluate and repair
_ the entire alarm sy slrm H r also
l| said he had requested ih r San" ford P o lle r D rjw ftm rn t lo srn d
someone o u l In rx a m in r Ihe
system .
In the m eantime. Shupe re­
quested an exem ption of th is
policy for schools. "R e m e m be r."
he wrote, "these fines are not
p u n ish in g anyone bul o u r s tu ­
dents. If I were a private rltlze n .
or ow ned m y ow n business,
these fines w ould come out of
m y p o ck e t an d yo u r p o lic y
/* w ould have a direct Im part on

IT to n e ,"
lie continued. " A s It stands.
as a school, have no m onies
| ; lor such e xp rn srs. Paying fines
’W e.

would tie to deprive our students
of llrrn s they nerd lo further
Ih rir e du catio n ."

ficult lo draw a lin e regarding
w lto m ight rn jo y an exem ption
and who w ould not."

Shupe m n rlu d r d . "I sincerely
ttoubl Hull Ihe la x (laying public
would u p p rrc la lr Ih rir school
dollars tirin g s p rn l on fines from
Ihr Sanford Police Department.

S im m on s added. " T o dale, no
exem ption* have been g ra n te d ."

Ttie Id le r w as senl lo S im ­
mon* on M ay 15. w hen Ihr fines
against the s c I k k i I liituled $105
They have since grow n an a d d i­
tional $ 7 0 w ith an additional
fine levied on J u n e 30.
S im m on s responded on Ju n e
7. e xp la in in g Ihe structure of the
ordinance sgalnst false alarm s
"W h ile I understand your de­
sire for a general exem ption
from ih e alarm fee for your
school." he wrote, "I do not have
the au tho rity lo provide such a
w aivrr. C ity C o m m issio n action
would be required and I suspect
th a t s ta ff re c o m m e n d a tio n s
would tie for d e n ial since It
would become ever more d if­

"N o m a ile r how m u ch we
check Into Ih r system ." S h u p e
said recently. "Ihere are s till
going to b r problem s, and I hate
to ser school money used to pay
lln r s against som ething w h ich
w r cannot control.
"T h e o nly th in g I co u ld d o ,"
he added. “ Is disconnect the
system to avoid a co n tin u a tio n
of these fines, but that w ould tie
foolish as we w ould then be
Inviting burglaries and thefts to
take place."
Strupe said he Is presently
lookin g Into what approach to
take next In the m a ile r, w h ile
Ih r srhool tmard m aintenance
|M-oplr continue to exam ine Ihe
system lo srek w ays lo reduce
the false alarm s.

Chop lor JJ. codo e l o rd n o n c o t
o O n S n o n c o — H I roodlng — 1
poymont tth o d u fo d lor t u t t in g w o lo r
u n lo m o r t w h o o ro rogulrod to co n n ect to
• O d Ino n ce — I t l roodlng - Screen in g
ot m o c h o n k o l lo o tu ro t
O O rdm onco — I t l reeding — A m e n d in g
Import too o rd m o n co
• Item lo r c o n tld r r o llo n "M o d e l
Homo** tlg n to r AAoodowbrooko

OAdtournmenl
Included In tho C ity M o rvogrr't rep o rt
oro Ihe to !lo w ing llo m t
O R oguott — C o m m tu to r o p p ro v o l lo r
(Kongo o rd e r, rrg ord rng L o to E m m o
W rier L in o P r o t e c t!
O Roquet! — Com m illio n o p p ro vo l lo r
Incotton ond tu n d ln g. co n tlru clton ot two
new b o th o fb o ll c o u rt! o l the Lofce M o r y
Sporti C o m p te r
0 R o q u et! — Com m illio n o p p r o v o l.
p e rtklp o tlo n In J o t l on tho B ir d coteb ro
lion, tp o n to ro d b y tho Chomber o f C o m
m e rit
0 Roquet I — C o m m It non opprovol. p e ld
toeve o l o b to n c o lo r p o lk , C o p t Som
Botttore
OH equotl o p p o m lm e n l lo L o c o l P lo n
ring Agency
the o rd e r o t llo m t on Ihe ogendo It
tubtect to ch o n g e Tho City C o m m itn o n
meeting w ill b e g in &lt;1 I p m th u evem nt.
m the c o m m lttia n cho m b ert ol L o k o M o r y
Cdy Holt. M O W L o k e M o ry B ird

com m ission cham bers of Lake
Mary C ity H all. 100 W. Lake
Mary Ulvd.

Trial

C o n t in u e d fro m Page I A
w hile h r w as pre­
p a rin g a barbecue g rill fire and
sold " G iv e m e five. E v e ry th in g Is
a lrig h t," hut then later again
began a s k in g If the y ou th was
ready to leave w ith him . She
dem onstrated how Lopez stood
over M ah on c Inside the house
m a k in g faces and hand m ove­
ments. S h e said her sister. Debra
told h e r U tjtcz threatened to k ill
K n ch a n o . Y vcttr said she did not
hear L o p e z make any death
threat ag ainst Mahone.
Lo p e z chased the defendant
around the car as he tried lo
leave w ith his aunt, she testified.
As D r b n i and her sister tried lo
keep L n p r z and Mahone apart in
the stre e t In front of the house,
th e y w e r e k n o c k e d to th e
ground.
"I d id n 't see w lial happened
n e xt." Ihe woman sold. "I sat op
and a ll I saw was blue fire."
U n d e r cross exam ination. Ihe
w om an testified she did not hear
Lopez s a y why he wanted Ihe
youth lo go with him or w hal
"It" m e a n t when he said 'll has
to tx* do n e tonight."' Further,
when a sk e d about a dcpo sliion
sta tm cn l In which she M id she
saw E n c h a n o running one way.
while L o p e / walked hack toward
ihe h o u se after ihe shots were
fired, s h e M i d she did not see
where h e r nephew went

Evidence of sick
school syndrome
■y Ttw Ai

Istsd P r s s s

F lo rid a h e a lth o ffic ia ls are
averaging fiv e " s ic k s c h o o l"
reports a d a y from sch o o ls re­
questing a ir qu ality In vestiga­
tions. a state toxicologist says.
Research in to building-related
Illnesses la s t ill evolving. B u l
Ihere Is g ro w in g evidence that
c o m p la in ts o f s ic k b u ild in g
syndrome In schools, hom es and
offices arc v a lid , according to Dr.
Roger In m an , head of to xico lo gy
and hazard assessment for the
state D epartm ent of H ealth and
Rehabilitative Services.
Poorly ven tila te d Indoor air
can be ta in te d in two ways: from
chemical v a p o rs given o ff by
b u ild in g m a te r ia ls , c le a n in g
supplies, e ve n rugs or fu rn itu re ,
and from a v a rie ty of m olds that
thrive in h ig h hum idity.

H ealth o fllrla ls are startin g to
recognize Florida as the na tio n's
"sick b u ild in g " capital bcra u sc
of Its h u m id clim ate and rapid
d e v e lo p m e n t since the e a rly

1970s.
The dam pness prom otes the
growth o f molds and m ildew ,
while th e energy-efficient co n ­
struction methods of the past
two d ecades have created tight
b u ild ing s that lim it ulr cirru lu lion an d m a gn ify Ihe efTcct o f an
Indoor co ntam in ant.
The seriousness of the pro­
blem w a s dem onstrated In De­
cember. w hen a 16 m onth o ld
s c h o o l In P in e lla s C o u n t y ,
O ldsm ar Elem entary, was closed
because o f m old contam ination.
A ls o la s t y e a r, a lm a s t-n c w
courthouses In M arlin and Polk
counties w ere shut down for the
same reason.

L a ic In Ihe day. a Sanford Fire
Rescue unit w as called lo Ihe
lobby outside Ihe court to attend
lo Ms. Mahone after she testified.
A court bailiff wus told, Mahone
hud suffered an u n xlcty attack
and requested no l In be recalled
to the court.
E arlier In the day. Sem inole
C o u n ty M edical E x a m in e r Dr.
S h a s h i B. G o re t e s t if ie d
W e d n e s d a y L o p c x d ie d o f
m u s s lv c h e m o r r h a g e fr o m
w ounds In h is chest an d a b ­
d o m e n . U s in g a c la y a n d
styrofoam h u m an lik e m odel.
G ore used to o lh p lck s lo a p p ro x ­
im a te the p a th s of Ihe tw o
bullets that stru ck Lopez.
M ajor Internal organs in c lu d ­
ing a lung and stom ach were
la c e ra te d , a c c o r d in g lo th e
doctor. One o f Die b u llets went
through the v ic tim 's chest and
o u t h is b a c k a n d w a s n o l
recovered. A second bullet went
through his left upper arm and
entered his body tru n k through
Ihe stom ach and liver. It was
recovered as evidence.

Merge
C o n tin u e d fro m Page 1 A
The site of the potential co m ­
plex would lik e ly tie located at
ellIter Ihr eastern end of First
Street, where the C o un ty S e rv ­
ices B u ild in g Is located, or Five
Points, on property cu rre n tly
owned hy Sem inole C o m m u n ity
C o lle g e . T h e d o w n to w n site
w ould require bu ying lakefronl
projierty from J r n o Paulu ccl.
C o m m is s io n e rs B o b S tu rm
and Pat W arren endorsed the
Five Points sllc. saying It w ould
tie m ore ce n tra lly located to
m ore residents. W u rrrn udded
she d ld n ‘1 want In la ke la x-rich
lakefronl property ofT Sanfo rd 's
lax roles.
B u l S a n fo rd M a y o r B e lly e
S m ith lo ld the group c ity o f­
ficials prefer governm ent opera­
tions to rem ain In the dow ntow n
area.
"I th in k I speak for Ihe whole
board when I say we ra n m ake
up the la x roll lo ss." S m ith said.
" W h a t 's Im p o rtan t to u s Is
(icople. H aving people here in
dow ntow n Sanford Is Im portant
to u s."
S m ith said she w ould lobby
Pa u lu ccl for h is cooperation In
negotiations.
C o u n ty and school o fficials
suld any innd negotiations m ay
Include land sw aps from school
and county Inventories.

Probe
IfrmaPagalA
Park A vr.. In pari, based
a n a letter he said tie obtained
fro m V o lu sia C ounty schools In
W hich H ow ell statrd h r w as a
residenI of Volusia County.
K earney M id she wrote (lie
letter lo llo w r ll fo llo w in g u
j te le p h o n e c o n v e rs a tio n w ith
R lc c n n rr that day. She said
Klrchnrr called In determ ine
■ h e t h e r lo s s o f h o m e s tru d
n e m p lk in w as grounds for rr
■Mvxl o f a c ity com m issioner.
"W h e n t asked him If he w ould
^ M n d If I looked Into II, h r said
P $ D . " said Kearney.
K lr c h n r r refused co m m e n t
byh Is m orning.
. "I d lik e In com m ent but I'd
like lo le i the governor's ofTlce do
lit* jo b ." said K lrrh n e r.
H ow ell did not return several

LURLENE LAZBIfBT CLARE
L u rlc n c Lazenby C la rk, 78.
7 4 4 S h e r w o o d D r .. W in t e r
Springs, died Monday. J u ly 12.
al her residence. Mrs. C la rk was
a retired flic supervisor for E a st­
ern A irlin es. B om O cl. 7. 1914 In
Georgia, she moved lo C entral
F lo rida In 1983. A P rim itive
Baptist, she also belonged to
Eastern A irlin e s Retirees A ss o c i­
ation and A A R P .
S u rv iv o rs Include daughters,
Sandy Coggins. Charlotte, N.C.,
l*eggy A . Ogle. St. Petersburg;
s is t e r . L y n c t t c M a x e y ,
N a p o le o n v llle , L a .; tw o
g r a n d s o n s a n d tw » g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
G a in e s C arey H and C hapel
Funeral H om e. Lungwood, In
charge o f arrangem ents.

ERNE8T E. GLAZIER
Ernest E. G lazier. 68, North
Hart Road. Geneva, died M on­
day, J u ly 12. at h is residence.
M r. G l a z i e r w a s a r e t ir e d
electrical engineer for R CA . B o m
Oct. 24. 1924 In M ayvllle. M ich.,
he moved to Central Florida In
1956. He w as a Mason and u
m e m b e r o f E le c t r o n ic a n d
Ele ctrica l Engineers. He w as an
A rm y veteran.
S u r v i v o r s in c lu d e s o n s ,
Charles E . II. G erm any. George
G.. Anchorage, Alaska; d a ug h­
ters. L u c ille M. Haddad. Orlando.
P e n n le A . T h o m a s . M o u n t
P ly m o u t h , K a r e n K . E s t r y .
Venezuela; alater. Ha J . RJes.
Mich.; m other. Rose L. G lazier.
Geneva; 10 grandchildren.
B a ld w ln - F a lr c h lld F u n e r a l

ca lls left at h is Sanford house
W ednesday an d T hu rsday.
llo w r ll fared opposition from
K lr r h n e r d u r in g la s t y e a r's
co m m ission elections along w ith
Boh C h u rc h and Jo rd a n
B e r k n r r . K l r c h n r r a c t u a lly
edged ahead of llo w c ll In the
first prim ary Dec. N by slightly
more Hum a percentage point.
H o w e ll s p u r t e d a h e a d o f
K lrrh n e r lo w in (he Dec. 22
runoff by m ore ttia 17 points.
Kearney described the Inquiry
os routine, but said If llo w c ll Is
determ ined not to be a resident
of Sanford. G o v Law ton C hiles
can declare a vacancy In his
D istrict I seal. T h e city com ­
m ission. un der ih r ir charter,
w ould then decide how lo fill Ihe
vacancy.
How ell lia s filed an appeal of

S u lic r '* decision, w h lrh w ill be
review ed by Ihe county V a lu e
A d ju stm e n t B oard la te r th is
year. The V A B Is com prised o f
c o u n ty c o m m is s io n e rs L a r r y
Furlong. D aryl M cLa in and D ic k
VanD crW elde and school txiard
m rm tirn i Jca n n le M orris an d
Lurry S lrlck le r. They hold ih c tr
fir s t, o rg a n iz a tio n a l m e e tin g
J u ly 30.
T y p ica lly , appeals o f property
appraisal decisions are c o n s id ­
ered by an ap|X)tnted sp e cial
m aster, who Ilien m akes re c­
o m m e n d a tio n s on d o ze n s o f
appeals are routinely approved
by Ihe V A B In u single vole.
S u b cr said h r didn't an liclp u te
H o w e ll's a p p e a l w o u ld b e
handled any differently. bu l sa id
Ihe fin a l d e cisio n w o u ld be
determ ined by Ihe V A B .

Home. O aklaw n Chapel. Lake
M ary. In ch a rg e o f arrange­
ments.

Hom e, Goldcnrod. In charge of
arrangem ents.

LORRAINE H. NORTHCOTT
DAVID O. MCGUNEGLE

David G. M cgunegle, 51. O r­
ange Street. A ltam o nte Springs,
d in t Tuesday. J u ly 13. at Florida
Hospital. A lta m o n te Springs. Mr.
M cG u n cg le w as bra n ch staff
counsel for the Flo rid a Bar. Bom
Jan . 5. 1942 In F lin t. Mich., he
moved lo C e n tra l Klorldu In
1967. He w as a m em ber o f the
Florida Bar, N ational Association
o f Bar Counsels, F lo rida Stale
U n iv e r s it y C o lle g e o f L a w .
A lu m n i A ssociation. He was a
lieutenant colonel In Ihe A ir
Force Reserves.
S u rviv o rs Include wife. Ju d ith ;
brothers. D aniel. Lubbock. T e x­
as. Sam uel. A rm ad a. Mich,: s is ­
ter. K a th ic Frccl. B a y C ity , Mich.
B a ld w ln - F a lr c h lld F u n e ra l
Home. A lta m o n te Springs. In
charge of arrangem ents.

DONALD MEINBHAUBEN
D o n a ld M c ln s h a u s c n . 44.
W oodridge D rive. Geneva, died
W ednesday, J u ly 14. at W inter
P a rk M e m o ria l H o sp ita l. Mr.
M elnshauscn w as vice president
o f operations for R yla n d M ort­
gage Co. B o m Dec. 23. 1948, In
C in cin n a ti, he m oved lo Centra)
F lo rida In 1993. He w as Protes­
tant.
S u rviv o rs Include wife. Sue;
father. George E.. Cincinnati;
mother. V iolet. C in cin n a ti; sis­
ters. T e rl Carter, Sa n ta Monica.
Calif.. Peggy Boodey. Phoenix.
B a ld w ln - F a lr c h lld F u n e r a l

L o rra in e H. N o rth co tt, 74.
K cn tia Road. Casselberry, died
Tuesday. J u ly 13. F lo rida H o sp i­
ta l. A lta m o n te S p rin g s . M r.
N o rlh co lt wus a retired de live ry
m an for T.G . Lee D airy. B o m
M ay 6. 1919 In B urlinga m e .
Kansas, he moved lo C e n tra l
F lo rid a In I960. He was a A rm y
veteran of W orld W ar II.
S u rviv o rs Include wife. B etty
M . : so n s. D ale L ., T a c o m a .
W ash.. W illia m D.. Fayetteville,
N . C .; d a u g h te rs, M a rle n e J .
U s bom . Casselberry; five g ra n d ­
child re n .
B a ld w ln - F a lr c h lld F u n e r a l
H om e. O aklaw m Park C hapel,
La k e M ary. In charge of a r ­
rangements.

MAXINE TRAWEEK
M a xin e T ra w cck . 68. 1440
A n d e rs o n S t.. D e lto n a , d ie d
Su nday. J u ly 11. at her re s i­
den ce. M rs. T ra w c c k w as a
h o m e m a k e r. B o rn D ec. 18.
1924. In Logunspot. Ind., she
m oved to C e n tra l F lo rid a in
1974. A Baptist, she w as a
m e m b e r o f R e tire d O ffic e r s
W iv e s Club.
S u rv iv o rs Include daughters.
Am anda. W inter Haven. Lecana.
Deltona, Rebecca Lew is, C o l­
u m b u s . G a ; s is t e r s , B i l l i e
Overstreet. W inter Park. F ran ces
M oore. T ro u t Dale. Va.; o n J
grandchild.
B rlsslo n Funeral Home. S a n ­
ford. In charge of arrangem ents

_ _ C e n t e r , o p e n in g in A u g u s t 1 9 9 3 ,
w ill b e t h e ip n ly o p e n h e a r t s u r g ic a l f a c ilit y In S e m in o le
a n d W e s t ^ o lu s ia ^ C o u n t ie s . It i s s u p p o r t e d b y
a h ig h ly - t r a in e d p r o f e s s io n a l s t a ff, a s w e ll a s s e r v ic e s
s u c h a s o u r C a r d ia c C a t h e t e r iz a t io n L a b a n d
o u r C a r d io p u lm o n a r y R e h a b ilit a t io n C e n t e r .

C e n t r a l F lo r id a R e g io n a l lH o s p ita l
17-92 o n L a k e M o n r o e , S a n f o r d
^ o -V A e*
3 f C l~ 4 5 U U

from
Voftisia: 668-4441
from Orfando: 628-8797___________________

�• A - Sanford Horald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday. July 15. 1993

Pentagon nears proposal
on gays serving in military
■ y D O N N A C A t lA T A

Associated Press Wfltor
W A S H IN G T O N - Presid ent C lin to n Is p ro m is­
in g a q u ic k decision on the contentious Issue of
hom osexuals serving o p e n ly In the m ilita ry as
W hite H ou se and Pentagon o fficials w ork o ut the
final d e ta ils o f a proposal.
"M y sense Is there's s till some difference of
opinion e ven among the se rvice chiefs about what
they w ant. But I hope th e y 'll come u p w ith
som ething that everyone can agree Is fa ir."
C lin to n said Wednesday.
Defense Secretary l.es A s p ln and W hite House
a d v i s e r s D a v id G e r g c n a n d G e o r g e
Stephanopoulos conferred late Into the eve n in g at
the Pentagon over A s p ln 's im pending re co m ­
m endation.
Today w as the deadline Imposed by C lin to n six
m onths ago for a Pentagon proposal on how to
end the 50-year ban
The president said h is fin al decision "w o n 't
take long at a ll" once he has received the
proposal. C lin to n , who spent W ednesday to urin g
flooded regions of the M ld w rst. spoke In an
Interview on Cable News Netw ork.
A spln has told White House officials that the
Jo in ts C h ie fs of Staff w ill o n ly accept a p o licy that
allow s hom osexuals to serve as long as they
refrain from public or p rivate declarations o f tlie lr
sexual orientation, accord in g to sources In the
gay co m m u n ity.
The p o lic y
service m en
friends, said
Inform ation

would allow som e latitude lo r gay
and women to confide In close
the sources, w ho received their
from senior Defense Departm ent

Legal Notices
N once or
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
th e Sem inole County Boa-d o'
County C o m m iu lo n e i (BCCI
w ill conduct a p ublic hearing on
August 10. I* t) beginning ••
* 00 p m . o r a t soon iher*a»fer
as possible In the County S«'&lt;
Ices B uildin g. 1101 E a tt First
Street. Sanford. P L Room iJTt
(the Board C h am b ers) to can
t i d t r th* lo tto * in g
P U B L I C H C A R IN O
F O R C H A N O I OP
ZO N IN O R E G U L A T I O N !
SW EETG U M PARTNERS.
LTD
— R t io n in g trom C ?
( R t t s il C o m m e rc ia l D tttrlct) to
P U D (PtA nn sd U n it Oevetep
m e n l) s n d a s s o c ia te # P la n
am endm ent front Com m ercial
to P la n n e d Developm ent d*
scribed e t
That p art ot Section 20 T o n "
Chip It South. Rang* » E a t'.
Sam mala Coun ty. FtsrtdA 0•
scribed o t lot tows
Com m ence at a point on the
E a tt lme ot L ectio n &gt;0. TawnsMp
I t South. R ongo M East. It i t U
lo o t N o r th e a s te r ly from the
Southeast c o rn e r of M id Section
70 M id p oin t being on a curve
having a r o d iu t of S i l t AS tret
end hoing co n ca v e Soutnaat'tr
ly: thence fro n t a tangent beer
ing of N orth J**00’11’ ’ E tt t. run
241ST loot A lon g M id Curve
th ro u g h a c o n t r o l Angle ot
O jrjC S T " to the end ot M id
curve thence N o rth 4I*11’ IS’ ’
E a tt. too as feet thence South
0**I4’2J’’ W e tt JOT I t leet to the
West R ig h t o f W ay line ot in
le r tto te 4 IS R
aoo e 100
R / W ) j I h e n c e r u n S o u th
A l 'l J 'i S " W e tt 14 Ot leet to the
boginning o l a c u rv e horing a
rad ius ot U t t . t l tool, and being
concave S o u th a atterly. thence
ru n S a u th e e o tle rly 11 Tt loot
along t e M c u rv e , through a
c o n t r o l a n g ia o l oo*i»’l l ’ ;
thence run South St* l t ’» " Wett
I t H loot to tho PO INT O F
B E G I N N I N G , thence continue
South ***U’H " W e tt H i r e feet
to a point on a cu rv e having a
ro d iu t o l AITt AS loot, and being
concave S o u th e a tte rly i thence
from a tangent bearin g ol South
M * i r i r W o tt IMA AA tool Along
M id curve through a control
angia o l 12*07 0l~ ; thence run
South ***I4’ 1 1 " W att H A M A
leet; th an ca N o rth 74*4*’ S7’ ’
E a t t 100 u feet to the South line
ef the N o rth MOO leet ot the
Southeett u o f sa id Section » .
thence run South 0**M o r Wett
along M id South Una M l A1 feel
to the E a t t lin o o l the Wett IS 00
feet at M id Southoott tei thence
run South O0* l l ’i r ' E a tt I0TT0A
loot along M id E a t t Una. thence
run N orth I**I4’71" E a tt 1401 IT
teat to M id W e tt Right of Way
lin e o l In te rttate 4. thence run
N orth 14*00’0 l " E a t t along M id
W ett R ig h t o f W ay lino 110 TT
feet to the b eg inn ing o l a curve
having a r a d lu t of SOTTAS leet.
and being co n cave Southeaster
ly ; thence ru n N ortheasterly
1TIT At leet along M id curve
th ro u g h a c o n t r o l angle o l
ll* 0 J '0 r * i th e n c e run North
OO-WJO" W e tt along tha E a tt
Una ot tha N o rfh a a tt U at M id
Section K tor a d lttan ca at 14 K
teat to tho P O IN T O F B E G IN
N IN G
lu r t h o r d o tc rlb o d o t
abutting South O regon Street on
the n e tt an d I 4 on the eatt
ap p roe im ate ly 1.000 leet of tho
Intersection o l S R. 44 and South
Oregon Straet containing ap
p roeim ately M l acres (BCC
O lt lr k f S )
G E O R G E V I E L E - R tion ing
from A I A g ric u ltu re I to P U D
(Plo nn od U n it D evelopm ent!
and atto cla to d P la n amendment
fr o m S u b u r b a n E s ta te s to
Planned D evelopm ent described
as:
Tha South is o l tha North &lt;i
d oss L o se C resce n t Subdlvl
Sion I; the N o rth le o l the South
is and th a W a tt is o l tho
South n e tt l* o l the Northeast &lt;4
of tho Southeast 14 lying North
and West o l the paved road, all
In Saclion II. Tow nship 11 South.
Range 77 E a s t. A N O all that
par! of tho E a s t 14. East ol tho
F lo rid a E a t t C o ast Railroad

Legal N otices
R ig h t at W ay. In S a c lio n 10
Tow nship ]1 South. R ange 11
E a s t lyin g South ot L a t e C re t
cen t Subdivision a cco rd in g to
tha P la t thereof a t reco rd ed m
P la t Boos 10 Page AS P u b lic
R e c o rd s of Seminote County.
F lo r id a
LESS
Beg&gt;n at ma Southeett corn er
of the Northeet! 14 Ol Section 21
Tow nship It South. R ang e 11
E a t t. Seminote County. F lo r id a i
thence S 00*01 » ' W alo ng the
E a t t tma at M -d Section. 4 04
feet; thence N 40*70 77
W .
744 00 teet. thonco N 00*07 »
E .. IIT 00 t o o l, th o n c o S
04*10 11 E . 144 00 N e t to tho
E a t t Una at M id Section It
thence S 00*07 10 W . IA4S4
lee t to the Po-nt ot B eg inn in g
fu rth e r deter le d a t abutting
Snow H ut Road on the east
Ja c o b s T ra il an the west, end
M a g n o l i a L a k e P U D lu n
developed) on the north, appro*
im ototy ISO leet north ot F irs t
Street containing ep ovovim atel?
110 ( a c r e s (BCC D istric t l).
T ho g en eral p u b lic Is on
c a u ro g o d to ap p ea r a t th is
h e arin g and present Input in
acco rdance With th# p rocedures
u tii'te d by the BCC in clu d in g the
su bm ission ol written com m ents
to the BCC C/O "Cw rront P la n
n in g O ffic e ". KOI E a st F irs t
Street San lord. F L 17T/1. tele
phone 1401) 111 IIM extension
7444 T h u heenng m ay be con
Im ued from tim e to tim e es
deem ed necessary
P e r s o n s w ith d i s a b il i t i e s
needmg attu to n ce to p e r t ld
p ete m any ot theta proceedings
sh ou ld contact tha E m p loy ee
R elatio n s Department A D A C o
ord m a to r &lt;4 hours in a d rtn c # of
the m eeting at (407) 111 IIM .
te te n slo n 7041
P erso n s are advised th at If
they decide to appeal any da
Cttton made at this hearing, they
w ill need a record of the pro
ceo d m g t and lor such purpose
th ey m ay need to onsu ra a
v erb atim tocord ot the proceed
Ings Is made, w h ich ree p rd
Includes the testimony and evi
dene a upon which tha ap p eal It
based Section 204 0105. F lo rid a
Statutes. B O A R D O F C O U N T V
CO AA M ISSIO N ERS. B V H E R B
H A R D IN . C U R R E N T P L A N
N IN G M A N A G E R
P u b lis h : Ju ly IS. ITT1
D E G 114
N O T ICE O F A
P U B L IC M f A R I N O
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
A D O P T IO N O F A N
O R D IN A N C E B V
T H E C IT Y C F
SAN FO RD . F LO R ID A
N o tice Is hereby given that a
P u b lic H earing w ill be he ld In
the Com m ission Room at the
C ity H a ll In tho C ity ot Sanford.
F lo r id a , at 7 00 o’clock P M on
J u ly 74. ITT], to consider tho
adaption ot an ordinance by the
C ity o l Sanlord. F lo rid a , till# of
w h ich Is as follows
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1IA1
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C IT Y OF SAN FO RD. F LO R
ID A . C L O S IN G . V A C A T I N G .
A N O A B A N D O N IN G A P O R
T IO N O F T H E 14 FO O T W ID E
E A S T W EST U T ILIT Y E A S E
M E N T L Y IN G O N T H E N O R T H
S ID E O F THE P R O P E R T Y AT
IS0A M E L L O N V I L L E A V E
HUE
P R O V IO IN G F O R S E V
E R A B I L I T Y . C O N F L IC T S A N O
E F F E C T IV E DATE.
A copy shall be a v a ila b le a l
m e o llic e o l the C ity C le rk tor
a ll parsons desiring to aaa m ln a

Its#Mm#

A l l p arties In Interest and
c lU io n s shall have an opportunl
l y to be beard at M id he aring
B y order o l the C ity Com
m issio n o l the C ity ot Sa n lord
F lo r id a
P E R SO N S W IT H O IS
A B IL IT IE S N E E O IN G
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T I C I
P A T E IN A N Y O F T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
C O N T A C T TH E P E R S O N N E L
O F F I C E A D A C O O R D IN A T O R
A T 1 )0 * 4 7 4 41 H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E OF THE M E E T IN G
A O V I C E TO T H E P U B L I C : II
a parson decides lo ap p eal a
d e c isio n mode with resp ect to
any m atter considered a t tha
ab o ve meeting or he aring , he
m a y need a verbatim re c o rd o l
m a proceedings. Including the
te stim o n y and evidence, w h ich
re c o rd Is not provided b y the
C ity o l Sanlord ( F S 104 OIOS)
Ja n e t a . Oonehce
C ity C la rk
P u b lis h Ju ly IS. IW1
D E G IM

officials.
T h a t's sim ila r to the " d o n 't ask. don't te ll"
policy p u t forth by Sen. S a m Nunn. D-Ga..
ch a irm a n o f the Senate A rm e d Services C o m ­
mittee. w h o has been u lead ing defender on
Capitol M ill o f the current ban.

Legal N o tices

Legal N o tice s

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E IIT H J U D I C I A L
C IR C U IT I N A N O P O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F LO R ID A
C A S E NO. *2 7*00 C A 1 4 P
H O M E S A V IN G S B A N K .
F S B . a U S corporation l/k /a
H O M E S A V I N G S A S S O C IA
T IO N O F F L O R ID A , a F lo rid a
corporation.
P la in tiff.

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF THE IIO H T IIN T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N
C A S E NO. M-04SICA
D IVISIO N U K
V IC T O R IA M O R T G A G E
C O R P ..
P la in tiff.

v

M ea n w h ile, four m em bers o f the House Arm ed
Services C om m ittee urged C lin to n to reject any
co m p ro m ise projrosal that co n ta in s the provision
that ho m o se xu ality Is Incom patible w ith m ilita ry

A N T H O N Y R A M O S a /k /a
A N T H O N Y N R A M O S an d
F R A N C I N E B R A M O S , his
wife. Unknown P a rlie s as hairs,
devisees, grantees, assignees,
lienors, creditors, trustees or
other claim an ts c la im in g by.
through, under or against A N
TH O N Y R AM O S a /k /a A N
I H O N Y N M A M O l. not known
to bo deed or alive . H IO O E N
R IO G C C O N D O M I N I U M A S
SO C IA T IO N
IN C . a F lo rid a
corporation: U N I T E D S T A T E S
O F A M E R IC A . S O U T H ER N
S P R IN G S D E V E L O P M E N T
C O R P O R A T IO N a F lo rid a cor
peration. F IR S T U N IO N B A N K
l/k /O A T L A N T I C N A T IO N A L
B A N K O F S A N F O R O . and SUN
B A N K /S O U T H F L O R ID A . N A
l/ k e F L A G S H I P B A N K O F
T A M P A a F lo rid a corporation
d b e B A N K A M E R lC A R O .
Defendants
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO A N T H O N Y R A M O S O 'k / e
A N T H O N Y N R A M O S and
F R A N C I N E 6 R A M O S MS

service.

wit#

The J o in t Chiefs of S ta ff voted two weeks ago
for a p o lic y that retains the current statement
that "h o m o se x u a lity Is Incom patible w ith m ili­
tary s e rv ic e ."
Hut A s p ln reportedly has decided on a slig h tly
different w ording that de scribe s "h om osexual
co n d u ct" as incom patible w ith m ilitary service,
bul w o u ld recognize that gay people have served
honorably and w ill do so In the future.
C lin to n faces strong cong ressional opposition to
any plan th a t lacks the support of the Jo in t C h iefs
of Staff a n d top m ilitary leaders.

In a le tte r to the president, the lawm akers said
any |&gt;ollcy that contains that language Is "e x p licit
approval of discrim ination against gays and
lesb ian s."
S ig n in g the letter were Heps M artin Meehan.
| ) M a s s . Pa tricia Schroeder. D-Colo.. and Sam
Karr. D C a lif., as well as Robert U ndciw ood. a
D em o cratic delegate from G u a m .
Hut S e n . Dan Coals. IM nd .. a defender of the
ban. sa id the debate over the language on
In co m p atib ility demonstrates that tin C lin to n
a d m in istra tio n Is trying to prom ote a "p o licy In
search o f a (Hilittcal so lu tio n."

Legal Notices
IN T H E C I R C U I T COURT
IN A N O F O R
S E M I N O L E CO U N T Y ,
F L O R I OA
C A SE N O : 01M 77 CA 14 L
N A T IO N S B A N K O F F LO R ID A .
N A I k a T H E C IT IZ E N S A N O
S O U T H E R N N A T IO N A L B AN K
OF F L O R I D A
P ia m lill,
It

F R A N K H A M I L T O N JR
C A T H Y J H A M I L T O N and
U N IT E D S T A T E S O F
A M E R IC A I N T E R N A L
REVENUE DEPARTM ENT.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F A CT IO N
C O N S T R U C T I V E S E R V IC E
PRO PCRTT
To C A T H Y J H A M IL T O N
YO U A R E N O T I F I E D mat en
action to fo re c lo se a mortgage
on the fo llo w in g property in
Seminole C o u n ty . F lo rid a
Lot 114. L e g o V is 'a Subd'vi
sion, a c c o r d i n g to the P lo t
Iherret as re c o rd e d m P la t Book
JO. P ag es U and U . Public
Records o l S e m lno N County
Florida, h a s been tiled against
you and y o u Ore reouired to
serve e c o p y Ol yOur written
defenses it a n y . to it on Roger
A K e lly . P la in t if f s attorney,
whose ad d re ss is N North Or
ange A ven ue. Suite 400 Post
Office Bo&gt; 1M 7. Orlando Fior
Ida U SUI o n o r before August
I). tw j and til# the original with
the C le rk o f t h lt Court either
before s e r v ic e on P la in t iff s
attorney o r im m e d ia te ly there
alter, o th e rw ise a default w ill be
entered a g a in s t you lor tha
rebel d em a n d ed m the Cam
plaint or P e titio n
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
Ot the C o u rt o n tha l*th day ot
Juno.IF*)
Clark of tha C ir c u it Court
by H oath er B rooke
As Deputy C le r k
Publish J u ly l . t . IS.21.m i
D E G 17____________________
IN T H E C I R C U I T COURT
OF T H E E I G H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L CIRCUIT
IN A N O FO R
S E M IN O L E COUNTY,
F LO R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N
C A S E N O SI IIIC A
D I V IS IO N I4K
STM M O R T G A G E C O M P A N Y .

Plelnlltt,

JOSE P H F O A C O S T A, e l al.
Deferdantls)
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N
TO J O S E P H F D ACO ST A
LAST K N O W N R E S I D E N C E
le t M a r jo r ie B lv d
Long wood F L 127M
C U R R EN T R E S ID E N C E
UNKNOW N
TO C IN D Y L D A C O S T A
LAST K N O W N R E S I D E N C E
147M a r jo n e B lv d
Longwoed. F L 11740
CURRENT R E S ID E N C E
UNKNO W N
and II D e fen d an t is deceased,
her re sp e ctive unknown heirs,
devisees, g ra n te e s, assignees
creditors, lie n o rs and trustees,
and a ll o th er persons claim ing
by. through, un der or agam tl
the named D e fen d ant,
YOU A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action to fo re c lo se a mortgage
on the fo llo w in g property in
S E M IN O L E C o u n ty . Florida
LOT II A N D T H E WEST 's
O F L O T 14. B L O C K
”N ’ ’ .
L O N G W O O D P A R K . AC
C O R D IN G T O T H E P LA T
TH ER EO F A S R E C O R O E D IN
P L A T B O O K II A T P A G E S 1.1
A N D 10. O F T H E P U B L I C
R E C O R O S O F S E M IN O L E
COUNTY. F L O R ID A
has been M e d ag ain st you and
you are re q u ire d to serve a copy
ol your w ritte n defenses. It any,
lo II on M ic h a e l J Echevarria.
P A . P la in t if f s attorney, whose
address Is 401 B ayshore Bouie
vord. Suit# 750. Tam pa. Florida
1)404 on o r b e lo re August 10.
Ittl. and M o the original with
this Court e ith e r before service
on P la in tiff's a tto rn e y or Imme
diatoly th e re a fte r, otherwise a
default w ill b e entered ogolnsl
you lor the ro b o t demanded In
the C o m p lain t o r petition
This notice s h a ll be published
once each w eek lo r lour con sac
u llv e w e eks In the Sonlord
Horald
W IT N E S S m y hand and the
seal o l this C o u rt on this 4th day
Ol July, m i
(S E A L )
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
Clerk ol the C o u rt
By : P a tr ic ia F H eath
As Deputy C la r k
Publish J u ly B. 1S.11.1*. m i
D E G 01

Legal Notices *
l
o
N O T IC E OF A
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
T O C O N S IO C R THE
A D O P T IO N OF AN
O R D IN A N C E BV
T H E C IT Y OF
S A N F O B O . F L O B I DA
N o tice is hereby given that a
P u b lic Heaving w ill be held In
the C o m m issio n Room a t me
C ity H a lt In the C ity o l San lord
F lo rid a , at 7 00 o ’clock P M on
J u ly 14. m i to consider me
adoption e l an ordinance by me
C ity ot Sanford F lo rid a title ot
w h ich is es follows
O R D IN A N C E NO 1144
A N O R D IN A N C E OF T H E
C IT Y O F SANFO RO F LO R
ID A . A M E N D I N G S E C T I O N
10 14 10 21 A N O 1 4 I U 7 O F
T H E S A N F O R D CO O F B Y E S
T A B L IS H IN G N EW W A T E R
R A T E S AND SEW ER R A T ES
A N D R E C LA IM E D W ATER
S Y S T E M C O N S U M P T IO N
C H A R G E S . P R O V IO IN G F O R
S E V E R A B I L I T Y . C O N F L IC T S
A N O E F F E C T I V S D AT E
A copy shall bo a v a ila b le ot
the o ttice ot the C ity C la rk tor
a il persons desiring to eve m in e
the sam e
AH p a rtie s In Interest and
c itize n s shall have an opportunl
ty to be heard at M id hear mg
B y o rd er ot the C ity Com
m issio n o l the C ity ot Sanford.
F lor Ida
P E R S O N S W IT H O IS
A B IL IT IE S N E E O IN G
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I
P A T E IN A N Y O F T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
C O N T A C T TH E P E R S O N N E L
O F F I C E A O A C O O R D IN A T O R
A T 110 S414 41 H O U R S IN
A O V A N C E OF T H E M E E T I N G
A O V I C E TO T H E P U B L I C II
a parson decides to appeal a
d e cisio n made with respect to
any m atte r considered at the
above meeting or hearing, he
m a y need a verbatim reco rd o l
the proceedings, including the
te stim o ny and evidence w hich
re c o rd is not provided by the
C ity Ot Sanlord (FS704 0I04)
Jan et R Donahoe
C ity C lerk
P u b lish ; J u ly IS. m i
D E G 140

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O P T H E E IO H T IE N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT ,
IH A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE CO UNTY,
FLO R ID A
C A S E N O i t l f l M CA I I I
B R O O K O A L E P R O P E R T IE S , a
lim ite d partnership.
P la in tiff.
vs
T H O M A S I M O O R E and
U N O A A M OORE, t t a l.
Defendants
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N
T O J A S IG M A N
P O Bo&gt; 4)4)
W inter P a rk. F to r ld a U T tl
A N O A L L P A R T IE S H A V IN G
O R C L A I M I N G TO H A V E A N Y
R IG H T . T IT L E OR IN T E R E S T
IN T H E P R O P E R T Y H E R E I N
D E S C R IB E D
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D IhAl an
a ctio n lo foreclose a m ortgage
on tho follow ing properly In
Sem inole County, F lor Ida
Lo ts 1 and 4. Block 10. T ier I.
E R
T r a tfo rd 's M ap of tha
T ow n ot Sanlord. according to
the p la t thereof as recorded in
P la t Book I. Pages 14 through
44. P u b lic Records o l Sem inole
County. F lo rld e
T O G E T H E R w it h a l l
stru ctu res, improvem ents. He
lu res, appliances and ep p u rle
nances on M id land or used In
co njun ction therewith
h as been tiled against you and
you a re required lo serve a copy
o l your w ritten defenses, i l any.
lo II on T O D D M H O E P K E R .
E S Q U I R E P la in tiffs attorney,
whose address is P O Bo* 111.
O rlan d o . F lo rid a 11101. on or
before August 17. m l . and M a
tha o rig in a l with tha clerk of th is
c o u rt o ith o r botoro service on
P la in tiff’s attorney or Im medi
a fo ly thereafter
otherwise o
d efau lt w ill be entered against
you tor th# reb el demanded In
the co m p la in t or petition
W IT N E S S m y hand and tha
sa a l of th is Court on Ju ly I X
1*01
(S E A L)
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
A s C la rk o l tho Court
B Y P a tr ic io F H oaih
A s D eputy Clerk
P u b lis h J u ly IX 11. I f A August
S. I**J
D E C 1)4

Residence Unknown
and
U nknow n p a rtie s as hairs,
devisees grantees assignees
lienors, creditors trustees or
0*htT claim an ts by through
under or ag ain st A N T H O N Y
RAMOS a k a ANTHONY N
R A M O S not known to be dead
or a liv e
and
S O U T H E R N S P R IN G S DE
V E L O P M E N T C O R P O R A T IO N
]41 W Ma&gt;n Street
Apopka F L 11701
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y NOT I
F l E O that a com p lain t *0 tore
cipsa a certain m ortgage on th#
ta llo w in g d e sc rib e d p rop e rty
has been filed egamst you
Condom inium U n it No H E ol
H IO O E N R ID G E C O N D O M IN
IU M the O e c la ra lio n o t w hich Is
reco rd ed In O ffic ia l R ecords
Book 1117 at Page 0415 et seq
u l the P u b lic Records o l Semi
n o te C o u n ty
F lo r id a , a n d
am endm ents thereto. It any
Y O U A R E R E Q U I R E O to
servo a copy a* you» w ritten
delenses to the com plain t. II
a n y . on J E R R O L O K N E E
B U R N S T E IN 1 K N E E . A l
torneys lo r P la in t iff 1720 H er
r ls o n S t r e e t , S u lla 4A
Hollyw ood. F lo rid a 11010 and
til# the o rig in a l with the C le rk of
the above styled court on or
before the 4th day ot August
i t t l otherwise a default w ill be
entered egemt you to* the relief
dem anded in the com piem !
W IT N E S S m y hand end seel
o l M&gt;d court a l Sanford Semi
note County. F lo rid a this )*th
day ot June m l
IS E A LI
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
A s C le rk et the Court
By C e ce lia V E k ern
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish Ju ly t. 4. IS. 21 1001
D E C II

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTEBMBH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
INANOFOR
SEMINLECOUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NUMBER: fl4S4 CA 14 L
lu cy m

M c Do n a l d

• single

woman
P la in tiff,

Vt
M ARTIN

M A IA C O N

R E B E C C A M A L A G O N . his w ile
Defendants
C L E R K 'S
N O T IC E OF S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to a F in a l Sum
m a ty Judgm ent ot Foreclosure
entered m the above entitled
cause in the C irc u it Court ot
Sem inole County. F lo rid a . I w ill
sell at p ublic auction to the
highest bidder for Cash at tho
West front door of tho Court
house In the C ity ot Sanlord.
Sem inole County. F lo rid a , at the
hour ot II 00 a m on Ju ly I f
if f ) , that certain p arcel ot reel
property described as follow s
LO T 17, T H A T P A R C E L OF
L A N D L Y I N G IN S E C T IO N 1
A N D S E C T IO N 10. TO W N SH IP
» SO U TH . R A N G E 12 E A ST .
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R
ID A . O E S C R I B E O AS
FO LLO W S
B E G IN N IN G AT
T H E NORTHW EST C O R N ER
O F S A ID S E C T IO N 10. R U N
A L O N G T H E W E S T L I N E OF
S A ID S E C T IO N 10. S 00 OE
G R E E S 01 M I N U T E S 44 SEC
O N D S W E S T . 1*4114 F E E T TO
THE N O RTH W ESTERLY
R IG H T O F W A Y L I N E O F TH E
40 F O O T W ID E R IG H T OF
W A Y OF O SC EO LA ROAD.
A N D A P C O F A C U R V E TO
T H E R IG H T H A V IN G A R AO I
US O F XT! 44 F E E T . A C E N
T R A L A N G L E O F 14 D E ­
G R E E S 44 M IN U T E S 7* SEC
ONDS ANO A TAN G EN T
B E A R I N G O F N O R T H II
D E G R E E S I f M I N U T E S 07
SECO NDS EAST; TH EN CE
R U N A L O N G SAIO N O R T H
W E S T E R L Y R IG H T O F W A Y
A N D A L O N G T H E A R C OF
SAIO C U R V E 144 11 F E E T TO
T H E P T O F SAIO C U R V E ;
T H E N C E RU N N II D E G R E E S
11 M I N U T E S 14 S E C O N O S
E A S T . 1110 71 F E E T TO T H E
P C OF A C U R V E TO THE
R IG H T . H A V IN G A R A O IU S
O F 401 44 F E E T . A N O A C E N
T R A L A N G L E O F 54 D E
G R E E S 14 M I N U T E S I f SEC
O N O S. T H E N C E R U N A L O N G
T H E A R C O F SA ID C U R V E
47| 41 F E E T TO T H E P T .
T H E N C E R U N N O R T H If
D E G R E E S 47 M I N U T E S IS
S E C O N O S E A S T . 1414 12 F E E T
TO T H E P O IN T O F B E G IN
N IN G T H E N C E R U N N O R T H
00 D E G R E E S 12 M I N U T E S OS
S E C O N O S W EST. 702 41 F E E T .
T H E N C E R U N N O R T H If
D E G R E E S 47 M I N U T E S IS
S E C O N D S E A S T . 110 00 F E E T ;
T H E N C E R U N S O U T H 00
D E G R E E S I) M I N U T E S 9S
S E C O N D S E A S T . 701 41 F E E T ;
T H E N C E R U N SO U TH If
O E G R E E S 47 M I N U T E S 44
S E C O N O S W EST . 110 00 F E E T
T O T H E P O IN T O F B E G IN
N IN G
T H E A B O V E DE
S C R I B E D P A R C E L C O N T A IN S
100 A C R E S . M O R E O R L E S S
D A T E D Ih lt 2nd day of Ju ly.

1ft)

IS E A LI
M A R Y A N N E M ORSE
C L E R K O F T H E COURT
By t / C o c o lla V . E k ern
D EPUTY CLERK
P ub lish : J u ly ! . IX I t t )
D E O 10

R O B E R T O F R I T S C H .a la l.
D e fen d ant!)).
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO R U S S E L L F A IB IS C M
1475 N W 14th Street
M ia m i. F I U I I S
and II Defendant it d e fe a te d
h lt / h e r r e t p e d lv e u n k n o w n
h o ir t . d t * it ( « t . g r a n lo t k .
assignees. creditors. lienor t end
trustees and o il other p e rto n t
Claim ing by. through, under or
egem tt the named Defendant
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to loroclOM a m ortgage
on tho lot low ing property In
S E M IN O L E County. F lo rid a
LO T a
B L O C K
It
W E A T H E R S F IE L O SEC O N D
A D D IT IO N . A C C O R D IN G TO
THE P LA T T H E R E O F AS R E
C O R O E O IN P L A T B O O K 17.
P A G E S 102 A N O 101. P U B L I C
R E C O R O S OF S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
h a t been tiled eg e m tl you end
you or# required to verve a copy
Ol your w ntton dofentet. It any.
to It on M ichael J E c h e v a rria
P A . P t a m t llf I attorney. w hoM
ad d re tt It M l B ayth ore Bov *
vard, Suite MO Tam pa F lo rid a
IMOt on or belore August IX
I f f ! and file the o rig in a l w ith
th lt Court either before service
on P la in tiff I attorney or Irrm e
diatoly thereafter otherw ise a
default w ill be entered against
you lor tho reb el dem anded m
the Com plaint 0* petition
T h lt notice shall be published
once each week for four contec
u t lr e w eekt In the S a n fo rd
H erald
W IT N E S S m y hand and the
te a l of &gt;hit Court on th is leth
day ot Juno m i
IS E A LI
Clerk o l ttio Court
By Heather B 'oo*e
A t Deputy Clerk
P u b lish Ju ly t . l . IS 12. If*)
O E G 14

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF THE E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R IO A
C e te N e *MI44 C A is L
B O B B IE J E A N M E Y E R
P ie m lill,

vs
R IC H A R D E M a c N E I L .
A N N E M a c N E I L .a n d
SANORA HO M EO W N ERS'
A SS O CIAT IO N INC .

Defendants

N O T IC E O F S A L E
Notice is hereby g iven mat.
pursuant to an order e l a F Inal
Judgm ent ot F oreclo sure en
tered In me above captioned
action. I w ill sell tha property
situated m Sem inole County
F lo rid a described a t
Lot 1. Block G R e p U i of
5ano*a U nits t and 2 according
to m# p iat maraof a t recorded in
P la t Book 17. Pages II and 11. ot
me P u b lic Records ot Semmoie
County. Florida
l Street address
111 Sonora
Boulevard. Sanlord. F LI
at public sale, to tha hig h att and
bast bidder lor cash a l m a West
Iro n ! door Ol the S e m in o le
County Courthouse In Sanford
F lo rid a at II 00 a m on Ju ly
l*1h l**l
Dated Ju ly 4 m i
M A R YA N N E M ORSE.
A t Clerk o tC lr c u il Court
By R um King
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish Ju ly 4. II. '**)
O E G II

Legal N o tic e s
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* It he reb y g ive n that I
am engaged In b u t in o tt a l l la
Shady Long. Lon g wood Sami
nolo County. F lo r id a , undor Iha
Fictitious N a m e Ol F A S H IO N 1
G IF T W A R E M A R K E T IN G
G R O U P , and th at I Inland lo
ro g itlo r sa id n a m e w ith the
D i v is i o n o l C o r p o r a t io n s ,
T a lla h a tta o . F lo r id a . In ac
co*dance w ith the provisio n s o l
the F lc llllo u s N a m e Statutes.
To W il Section 045 0* F lo rid a
Statutes m i
Robert F H ooker
Publish Ju ly IS. I**l
DEG in

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is he reb y g iven that I
am en gaged In b u k ln e tt In
Seminole County. F lo rid a , under
the F lc llllo u s N a m e o l L U N
CH N M U N C H , an d that I Intend
It re g ll'e r seld n a m e with the
O l v l t lo n o l C o r p o r a t io n s .
T allahassee. F lo r id a . In ac
cor dan c v w ith tho provisio n s o l
the F ictitio u s N a m e Statutes.
To Wit Section 0410*. F lo rid a
Statutes m i
Don L Sellers
Publish Ju ly IS. I**l
O E G IIS

IN T N I C I R C U IT C O U R T
OF T H E E I G H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L C I R C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F LO R IO A
C IV IL D IV IS IO N
CASE NO *141111 C A I4K
G O LD O M F C R E D I T C O R P O
R A T IC N a D e la w a re

Legal N o tic e s
IN T H I C I I I C U I T C O U R T
O F T H I IIO H T IIN T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O U COUNTY.
FLO R IO A
C A S I N O . *11*44 DR-01 •

IN R E To the marriage ot
ANNETTE MARRERO
P o t l t l o j i o r / W l l o

|f&gt;d

r afaelm ar tin ez

Rvtpondrnt/Mutbtnd

NOTICE OF ACTION

TO R A F A E L M A R T I N E Z
UNKNOW N
YO U A R E H E R E B Y NOTI
F I E D that an action lo r O is
solution o l M a rria g e h a s been
tile d against you Y ou a re ro
q u ire d to servo a copy o l your
w ritte n defenses. It any. lo tha
a c t io n on. M A R I A O F
JE S U S F E R N A N D E Z . ES
Q U I R E . Petitioner s atto rney,
whose address Is 4a0i C u rry
F o r d Road. O rlando F lo r id a
12011. on o» belore A U G U S T tt.
I**l and lUe the o rig in a l w ith
tha C la rk o l Court, aim e r before
se rv ic e on Petitioner t atto rne y
o r im m e d ia t e ly th e r e a f t e r
othe.w .vc a judgment w ill be
entered to the relief dem anded
in lh e P e titio n
W IT N E S S m y hand and the
seal of this Court on m is 10th
day of J U N E . I**l
(S E A L)
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
C le rk o l tho Court
B y N an cy R W inter
A* Deputy Clerk
P u b lish Ju ly IS. 11. 2* A August
S. t**l
O E G IM

co rp o ra tio n

P la in tiff.
ROGER H E N R Y R U S S E L L
Defendant
N O TICE O F A C T IO N PROPERTY
.T O
R O G E R
H E N R Y
| R U SS ELL A N D A L L P ER S O N S
I C L A IM IN G B Y . T H R O U G H
UNDER
OR A G A IN ST
R U SS ELL B JO N E S AN O A L L
O T H E R S W H O M IT M A Y
CONCERN
C u rrent R e sid e n c e A d d ress

Uftfcno**
F if m t f lr
Al
S101 a it T h ird Street
Sanford F lo r id a 17771
YOU A R E N O T I F I E D that an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on the lot low mg property In
Semino&gt;a County. F lo r id a
L o t 4. M U S S O N A N D
A B E R C R O M B I E 'S S U B O IV I
SION, ac c o rd in g to tha p lat
thereof, as re c o rd e d in P 'a t
Book 1 page 102. of the public
records Ol S e m in o le County.
F lorida
has been tiled eg a m st you and
you are required to k e rv t a copy
ot yOur written defenses It an*
to mis action on m e P ie m titt s
a tto rn e y , w h o se n e m o and
address IS M A R K J B E R N E T .
E S Q U IR E . S te a rn s W eaver
M ille r W e itt'e r A th ed e ft A Sit
torson. P A L e n d m o r t Centre
— Su'te 7NO P o t ' O ttice Bo&gt;
l it * . T am pa
F lo r id a IM O t.
Telephone (111) 771 4400 on or
before August 17. 1**1 end til*
me original w ith m a Clark ol
m is Court either b e 'o re service
on P la in tiffs atto rne y or Imme
dieteiy thereafter otherw ise a
d e t a il w ill be en te re d egamst
you tor ttia robot dem anded In
ma Complaint
O A T E D o n J u ly I). I**)
I Court Seal I
M ARYANNE M ORSE
Clark ol the C ir c u it Court
P O D raw er C
Sanford F lo rid a 11771
By H ea'har B ro o ke
deputy c le r k

Publish Ju ly 15 71. 2* A August

4 mi

O E G D4

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC I A L C I R C U IT .
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO t t 111* C A IS G
IN R E F O R F E If U R E O F
1*74 F O R D R O L L B A C K
W RECKER
N O T IC E O F F O R F E IT U R E
PR O C E E D IN G
T O H ector Santiago
40S&lt;r W ylly Avenue
S anlord F lo rid a 1J77I
and a ll others who c la im an
I n t e r e s t In Ih o f o l l o w i n g
property
1*74 F o rd R o iib ect W recker
D onald F E stinger of me
Sem inole County Sh eriff s O t
flea. Sammof# CoiKify. F lo rid a ,
t h r o u g h h ie o f f i c e r s , in
v*s*igetors or agents sa red me
above property on June I t t t ]
at O* near X )4 'i W ylly A venue
Sanford. Seminole Counfy. F io r
Ida and is presently ho ld in g
said p ro p e rly tor the purpose of
to rfoitu ro pursuant to Sections
*1] 70 1 704 F lo r id a S ta tu te s
an d w ill R E Q U E S T th at an
H on oreb 'e Judge ot the C ir c u it
C o u r t . E ig h te e n th J u d i c i a l
C ir c u it Semmoie County. F io r
Ida tmd probable causa m at the
a b o v e p r o p e r t y s h o u ld b o
fo rfeited to tha above agency
Y ou w ill be sent a copy of tho
order fm dm g Probable C ausa
once it ik s gned by me Ju dg e
and It w ill advise you h o * and
whan to respond to this request
tor fo rfeiture
I H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y TH A T
o true and correct copy ot th is
N otice was sent !• me above
nam ed address by U S re g is
te red m a il, rotum re ce ip t re
quested m is tth day o l J u ly ,
m i
O A N IE L N BRO O ER SEN
LEGALCO UN SEL
S E M IN O LE CO UNTY
S H E R I F F S O F F IC E
tlaS n t h S'reet
Sanford F lo rid a 11771*1*0
Telephone &lt;407) 110 4414
P u b lish Ju ly I f IS. &lt;4 27. 1045
O E G *7

Legal N otice
N O TICE O F P U B L I C H E A R I N O
P R O P O S E D A M E N D M E N T S T O T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C O M P R EH E N S IV E PLA N
A U O U S T 4. I*»l
Notice IS hereby glvon that tho Seminole County L o c a l Land P la nn in g Agency ( L P A I w ill conduct a
public hearing on August 4. I**3. beginning at 4 00 p m . o r os soon m e ro e tle r as possible. In the C ounty
S e rvle ts Building. 1101 E a st F irs t Str*et, Santord. F L . R oom 1020 (the B oard C h am b ers! The purpose o l
this hearing It to rece ive p ublic input. Input from any lo c a l governm ent or other agency, and to m ak e
recom m endations to the Board o l County C om m ission ers IB C C lo n proposed am endm ents to the S em ino le
County Com prehensive P la n
The L P A w ill consider am endm ents to the test ot the Com prehensive P la n In p a rtic u la r am endm ents
to the Introduction. G oals. P o licie s. O b ieclivet. F in d in g s. Issues and Concerns. M ap s. Tables. F ig u re s or
other G raphic Depictions to any number ot the fo llo w in g P la n E lem ents a I M P L E M E N T A T I O N a
F U T U R E L A N D U SE a C A P I T A L IM P R O V E M E N T S • C O N S E R V A T IO N a O E S IG N a D R A IN A G E a
H O U S IN G • I N T E R G O V E R N M E N T A L C O O R D IN A T IO N a L I B R A R Y S E R V IC E S a P O R T S
A V IA T IO N A N D R E L A T E D F A C IL IT I E S a P O T A B L E W A T E R a P U B L I C S A F E T Y a R E C R E A T I O N
A N O O P E N S P A C E a S A N I T A R Y SE W E R • S O L ID W A S T E a T R A F F I C C IR C U L A T IO N a M A S S
T R A N S IT A N O T H E IN T R O D U C T IO N A N D D E F I N I T I O N S S E C T IO N S o l the Saminoie C oun ty
Com prehensive P la n
...
_
Tha L P A w ill also consider, and make recom m endations, to the B C C on a proposed U rban D e sig n
P ro g ram for tha N orthw est H I P (H igher Intensity P la n n e d Developm ent) Study A re a tatting form c a p ita l
Im provement focem m endetlens/develepm enl stand ard s and guidelines that w ould achieve a s p e c ific
vision of the quality, quantity and term ot future developm ent in tha two are as known a t mo R ic o L a k e
end M a ll D istrict (see m ap below) Tha study • •a m in e s em itting and future P la n n ed Developm ent, new
land use alternatives, and p u b lic (ecillU ot required to support luturo developm ent II app-oved and
Incorporated Into tho Sem inolo County Com prhentlv# P la n , tha Study w ill Impose certain c a p ita l
im provem ent provisions, standards and guidelines upon p rop e rty assigned Ihe H I P land use d esig nation
w hich w ill alter and am and tha H IP land usa d esig nation as to certain p rop e rties depicted In th# m ap
bolow This urban design p rog ram w ill not apply to oth er properties designated as H IP land usa In
unincorporated Seminolo County
I• | • w4

SEMINOLE COUNTY • FLORIDA
Tho oenerol Public It encouraged lo appear a l th is h e a rin g end present Input In accordance w ith tho
orocedurss u lliu o d by tho L P A . Including tho su bm issio n e l w rltton com m ents to the L P A c /o
"Com orshenslvo P la n n in g O ffic e ". 1101 East F irs t Street, Sanford. F L 22721. telephone (402) 221 1110.
• •tension 71*4 Com m ents m ust bo received no la tt r th an J u ly 21. I**l. to ba included In tha s ta ll rep o rt
distributed to L P A m em bers T his hearing m ay ba co ntin ue d from tim e lo lim e as deemed necessary by
fha L P A Coplat ot the proposed amendments. Including tho proposed urbon design program m entioned
above and ralatad Inform ation, including any com m ents received, w ill ba a v a ila b le for publl&lt; rev iew at
tha address above. Room 1147. between the hours o l • 00 a.m . and S 00 p m . M o nd ay through F r id a y ,
••eluding holidays Staff w ill ba a v a ila b le to answer an y questions regarding the proposed amendm ents
Persons with d isa b ilitie s needing assistance to p a rtic ip a te In any et these proceedings should contact tha
E m ployee Relations D epartm ent A D A Coordinator 40 h o u rs In advance o l tho m ooting at (401) 321-1130.
•■tension real
P o rte n t a r t advised that It they d e c k * to appeal an y d ecision m ade at th is hearing, they w in need a
racord ot tha proceedings, and tor such purpose, they m a y need to ensure a v erb atim record ot tho
DTOceedmos It mod#, w h ich reco rd Includes the te stim o ny and evidence upon w h ich the appeal i t based
Svctton 114 0I0S F lo r id a Statute#. B O A R D O F C O U N T Y C O A A M IS S IO N E R S . B Y
FRANCES
C H A N D L E R . A A A N A G E R . C O M P R E H E N S I V E P L A N N I N G D IV ISIO N
P u b lish Ju ly 1S.2*. l**3
*
O E G 107

�Thank you very m uch
Idle Illusions gets help in softball race

LOCALLY
Darts tournanent Saturday

F ro m St a ll R e p o r t s

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S u n d a y 's

�S B - Sanford Herald, Sanfotd, Florida - Thursday. July 15, 1993

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
DOQS
W td n ttd a y mg til
F l r i l ra ce — I t 10, M i J l 41
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0 ( 1 1) 77.M P II 11 7t TOT (1-7-4) 711.40
( M c D o n a ld 3 I I , 7 7 7 p m
S lit h fo m «
S s o lfla (F la m in g a 1) at B utto n I V io la 7 71.
O E r k lt la F o ru rla
77 00 10)0 0 40
/ 73 p m
3 In g o y e n A g u lrr*
II 40 0 40
C h ic a g o IF tr n a n d ft 10 4) a l M ilw au kee
4 Ttlto Bob
7 40
t B o n * t a 3). I OJp m
O I) 0) 47 M P (0 3) 14) 00 T &lt;0 34) M l M
D e lro U IMoor* 3)1 a l T t r a i I Brow n 1 * 1,
3*v*nth gam *
* 73 p m
7 Ran*
10 00 TOM 4 00
( R ic a r d o
3 40 7 *0
N A T IO N A L L E A O U E
7Don
1 at)
C a t l D toitton
Q 1* 7) 7) 04 P (7 4) ITS 14 T ( 7 * 1 ) 731 M
W
Pci
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77
P h ila d o lp h ia
440 —
17
( M o n d ib * B eltran
4 00 4 00 7 )0
144
1*
S t Lou)*
71
3
I Z u g o ia E n tlq v *
4 40 7 40
M o n tre a l
40
40
341 kto
O E r h lila M*ndr
(70
477 *4*1
C h ic a g o
41
47
0 ( 7 4)34 t« P M 7) OS 44 T T &lt;4 7 0) 741 40
P itto b u rg h
477 U&gt;*
41
44
N in th gam *
F lo r id a
77
71
.411 1*
7 lr ig ,y*n Bob
11)0 3 40 4 70
N e w Y o rk
77
*0
710 7*
7 M e n d itw V ictor
3 4} 3 70
W t t l O rn tio n
I N a p a M andi
'4*0
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Pel
OB
L
O 17 7) 34 74 P (1 71 1)7.04 T (7 )0 1 140 to
S a n F r a n c iic o
10
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3*
T T C a rry * v * r 7)0 M
A tla n ta
30
7*
3*7 *
10th gam *
M o u lto n
41
41
171 11
O E r h lila
70 00 J » 7 ao
(1
40
L o t Angeto*
371 11
4 Irlg o y e n
7 70 7 00
*3
43
300 l* 1*
C in c in n a ti
7 M e n d , be
700 C o lo ra d o
771 73
17
34
O (A 0 ) 44 M P (0 4 ) l i t t t T &lt; 0 4 II 717 4*
San Diego
17
30
111 74
l l t h g am *
W e d n e id a y 'i G a m t t
I M I h a l R *y*t
73 00 f 00 0 70
74o gam ut w hadutod
T hu riday i G arnet
4 lrlg o y * n B a llra n
77 40 0 70
1 N a p a Bob
1aO
F-h iiao tip hi* lJa c k to n 7 4) * l San D a g o
&lt;7 &lt;741 M M P I ) 4) 7*4 4« T O 4 1)13410
(G ro g H a rr Ii 01). I 03 p m
l lt h gam *
N r * Y ork IH iiim a n 0 1 ) a l San F r a n c iic o
7 M e n d .b e Don
10 70 4 00 7 *0
( S w ill II 71.4 0 3 p m
3 R ic a rd o M andi
&gt;*0 7 00
Fto rrd a (Ham m ond 1041 a l C in cin n ati
I R t n a B eltran
3 40
&lt; B*lch*f 711, 7.7)0 m
O &lt;1 3) 11.40 P 11 1) 44 3* T (7 ) 1 ) 1)4.M OD
P itiv O u r g i (T om lin I S ) a l A tla n ta I G le n n *
(7 4 A 7 1) 744 M
10 41. 7 40 p m
17th gam *
O Z u g e ra
1*00 t 40 7 00
3 Bab
1 40 4 00
4 Don
) oo
Q ( M l I t I# P t t ) ) 17.00T 173-41474 M
14th gam *
7 Zu 424* V id o r
10 40 0 40 10 00
3 R ic a r d o B*ttr an
0*0 10 *0
( M a n d ib * R»y*t
3*0
Q 14-7) 103.7# P (7-0) 174.00 T (7-041144 40 3
(7-O-AII A ll) 171J l D D IS-7) 141JO
A - 7 M 1 H —141.774

JA I-A LA I

H is career up|K-.ircd lo Ik - over
In 1990. w hen a lin e drive
d u rin g b a llin g p ractice hit him
in th e face. A fte r tw ice u n ­
derg oin g re co n stru ctive surgery,
do cto rs left ihret' screw s in Ills
I r ll cheek an d a w ire in h is right
ch e ck.
W hen R enteria returned to Ihe
diam o n d In M exico in 1991. he
lllm lu r t every lim e be beard a
bal till a ball. T h e n be look an
opponent's spike over b is left eye
.ind was again sidelined.
"1 ealled m y w ife and said. ‘ It
doesn't seem lik e l ‘ m supposed
lo be p lay in g anym ore.*" be
sa id. "A n d I lo ld her I was going
lo bang it u p ."
He changed b is m in d , then bit
.442 w ith 24 borne ru n s and lOti
K ills . He returned lo M exico Iasi
y e a r an d b it .3 3 9 w ith 13
iio n ic n t and 83 R Uls.
M ajor league expansion gave
R enteria one last chance at the
m ajors. He began sp rin g training
w ith u n ifo rm No. 72. spent most
ol M arch In the M a rlin s' minorleague cam p an d fin a lly moved

tn lo the big league clubhouse on
M a rch 29. Tw o d a y s later, lie hit
a lo ih in ning grand slam lo beat
M ontreal. 9-0,
W h e n tbe season began. Henlerta gradually em erged us the
M a r lin s ' beat b a tte r in the
c lu tc h . Of b is fo u r pinch-lm
R ills , the most dra m atic came
ag ainst Colorado o n M ay I. with
R en teria fouling o ff seven p il­
ch e s before a sin gle gave Florida
a 7-6 victory in 12 in ning s.
G o in g into u four-game series
sta rtin g tonight in C in clnn all.
R e n te ria 's .425 slu g g in g per
cen luge Is l be best o f uny player
w ho has been w ith the Marlins
a ll season. W hen Injuries leh
th em w ithout three regulars.
R en te ria moved in to the No. 3
s|M&gt;l In the lin e u p Iasi Friday and
c o lle c t e d th re e h it s against
A tla n ta A ll-Star J o h n Smoltz.
"1 had n e v e r heard m uch
ab o ut him. but I gu u ru iilcc you I
k n o w him n o w ." Ilru v rs manag­
e r Hobby Cox said following llte
w eekend series. " H e 's us lough
an out as there is. Where has
thut guy been h is w hole life?"
W e ll, thut's a lo n g s to r y ...

halfw ay o u l w hen fcllou
s lo c k ca r d riv e r N ell Bonnctt ran
u p and pulled h im out.
"N e ll got me aw ay front It and
got D avcy out as soon os possi­
ble w ith the m otor still running
w ide open." F a rm e r said.
A llis o n , su ffering from a head
In ju ry , n e v e r re g a in e d c o n ­
sciousness. H e died T uesday.
Farm er said h is "n a tu ra l In­
stin cts from race c a rs " probably
saved h is life because he braced
h im s e lf w hen th e h e lico p te r
started to go down.
A llis o n c o u ld n 'l d o th a t.
F a n n e r said, because "he was
s till hold ing o n lo the controls

K n o ry ilt* ( B lu e J a y t l
II
t
C a ro lin a (P ira to t)
to
10
O rlan d o (C uS t)
10 10
• G reen v ille IB rave* I
1
II
J a c k ta n v ill* ( M a r in e t t i
I
II
W e ttern D ir III**
Chattanooga ( R e d tl
1)
I
M * m p h ik (R o y * tt)
17
0
B irm in g h a m (WSoa I
II
t
M u n ltv ill* ( A lh ltc t)
11 10
■ N a t h r lll* I T w m t)

*

14

iTW AN dACTH M Id

I»
400
)7t
374

I
13*
!&gt;&gt;

700

7

Farm er, w ho begun his racing
ca re e r In 1949 u n d had won
m o re than 700 races on various
c irc u its , said he w o u ld never get
o ve r the death of the 32-year-old
A llis o n .
" H e 's Just lik e m y son." Farm ­
e r said. "I’ve k n o w n him since
the d ay he was b o rn ."
F a rm e r said he learned of
A llis o n 's death w h ile he was
u lu n e in h is ro o m w atching
tele visio n new s Tuesday morn­
ing.
" S o I hud so m e tim e by
m y se lf." Farm er said. "A little
la te r two of the n u rse s came In
an d told me. I guess the shock
had already set In.”

Held a car In S u n d a y 's M iller
G e n u in e Drafl 5 0 0 but has not
de cid e d w hether to race the
fo llo w ing week in the D lcllurd
5 0 0 al Talladega.
II Y ales R acin g d o cs relurn lo
d ie W inston C u p circu it this
season, one of the biggest tasks
w ou ld In- choosing a driver for
tin* No. 2H Ford Ttiu nd crblrd .
"W e don't know w ho It w ill be
or w hen it w ill b e ." Yutes said.
"It w ill take a w hile, hut we're
g o in g to do It. A fte r all. a lot of
IM’ople depend on th is program."
Y ates and L a rry McRcynotds.
A llis o n 's crew chief, broke into
ic u rs several lim e s during Ihc
g a th erin g w ith reporters.
"It was a lo ug h decision" not
to ra c e t h is w e e k e n d ."
M c R c y n o ld s s a id . " I know
D a v c y ’s looking d o w n on u s ...."

~|

BASEBALL
A m e rican Laagu*
T E X A S B A N O IR S S ig n e d Odd.be
M cD o w e ll, outfielder. lo a m inor toagu*
contract and e tiig n e d him to T u lta o l lh*
T e ia t Ltag u * A d lr a i* d J* U H uton. in
litld * r. from lh* llc t o y d i ta b tod list Op
honed Jon Share, Inltoktot. to O klahom a City
Ol lh* A m e ric a n A tw c ia lto n

P c i.
OB
3)0 300
1
.30*
I
471
) 'i
740
J 'j

N JlM fU l L tlO lff

F L O R I D A M A R L IN S - R ecalled Chuck
C a r r . a u t lt o lJ t r . I r a n a r a h a k ilila lia n
a ittg n m a n l w ith lh* M a rlm t *1 lh* G u ll Caatl

■ won l l r t l h a ll d iritto n lilt*
W*#n*td* y*t G a m tt
O rland a 1, Chattanaaga I
K n o a t III* 3. Ja c k to n y lll* 7
Caro-.na 3. H u n lw llto 7
B irm in g h a m 4. M e m p h lt 4
T h u rtd a y ’t G *m *t
CTiartarm * # a l O rland a
K n a a n lto a l Ja c k ta n v ill*
M unit*III* at C a ro lin a
G r t* n v ill« a l N a th r lll*
B irm in g h a m at M a m p h it

L O S A N O E L E S O O D O E R S - E rle nd e d
lh* contract o l Tom La tor da manager
through the l i t 4 tea toe*
S A N D IE G O P A D R E S - P rom o ted te rry
C la rk . pUch*r. tram Rancho Cucam ong* *•
the C a lifo rn ia League to W lchH * o l lh * T u a t
L ta g u * R e in ila to d Sean M u llig a n catcher
to Rancho Cucamonga'* active ro tte r
S A N F R A N C IS C O O IA N T S - Activated
M a lt W illiam *, third b atem an Irom lh*
IS d a y d i t a b l t d l i l t
P la c e d H o b b y
Thompton. **&lt;ond baiem an. on rh* l) d * r
disab led 11*1. retroactive to Ju ly * Placed
W lllto M cG **. oulttolder on lh* IS da,
d tabled ll*(. retroactive to Ju ly II Reca'tod
Lu i* M e rte d e t outfi*l&lt;3*r. Irom P ho *nn *1
lh* P a c ific C a a tl Ltagu*
BASKETBALL
N altonal B a tk t tb jll A tto c ia tw n
S A N A N T O N IO S P U R S - N am ed J(dm"r
Moov* com m unity relalto nt r*pr«i»nl*ltv*
FO O TBALL
Naltonal Feetkeil L***u*
N F L - Announced lh* rm g n a lio n ol AH
Mode 11 Chairman of the N F L broadcast ng
com m ittee
C L E V E L A N D BRO W NS - S g«tod H erm an
A ry l* , o lle n ti re lack to to a two year con
tra ct
D A L L A S CO W B O YS - Announced me
re sig n a tio n of A lo n V e m g re d c lie n t ,e
lin em an Signed B a rry M m tof littobacke'
B ro ck M a rio n ta to lf R ich B a r i tows* I t-gnt
end, and Carey Gambto d eien tivo linem an
K A N U S C IT Y C H IE F S - Signed f r*d
Jonet. w id *rece ive r. )o* on* year co nn ect
M I A M I D O L P H IN S
Sr«&lt;wd K e ith B ya rt
running back, to a two year centract. and
Renata B radford, corn arbatk. to a an* year
cen tract
M IN N E S O T A V IK IN O S - Signed ( rere ll
L m d ta y
g u a r d a n d O ln * T a r r a t la .
igj:wkgi (FfImi ch
N E W O R L E A N S U I N T S - Announced me
resignation of J im Fink*, generoi m anage'
N EW YORK JIT S
Agreed to term* * m
C ra ig H en tn ch. kicker puntov
P H IL A D E L P H IA E A O L IS Signed

F tor Ida tla t* Laagu*
3*cend H a ll
E a ito r n 04 -men
W
L
Pci
OB
SI LuCto I M a li!
I0
7
3 M V * ro B each t Dodger 11
11
t
330
'i
D aytona ( C jb t)
t
10
474 7
O ic e o la lA t lr t r t l
*
II
430 l i t
• L a k elan d ( T ig e r it
I
10
*44 7 't
W P B ra c.t ( E r p o t)
4
II
*7* 1
F o rt Leu d ffd ato IR e d S o a l
I
17
400
1
l1
W * tl* rn O n t t o r
S i P*to (C a rd in a l!)
II
7
477
S a r a w la I Whit* So*)
II
7
4»
Char toll* I Ranger 11
17
0
400 I
F o r i M y*r* IT w m t)
*
10
474 I
• C learw ater iP h 11•«-%)
I
10
4*4 J ’ l
Dunedin (Bin* J a y t l
t
II
*7* 4
• won l i r t l h a il d ir it to n lllto
T e e id a y * G arnet
F o r i Laud*rdato 7. O tcn o i* 1
SI L u c to ) T o rt M y m I
Lakelan d ). v * ro B aach I
St P etortb u rg 4. N r t l P a lm Baach 1
Char toll* 1 C to*r wetor 7
D aytona 7. Durwd n 4
W a d n a td a y 't Garnet
O K N i a 7. F o r i Lauderdato )
SI L u c to I A F o rt M y e r t I
L a t t i*nd 7. v*r o B each I
S i P e to rtb u rg ) W e tl P a lm Beach 0
Ch ar lotto 7. C toarw ator 1
D aytona 3. Dunedin 4
T S u n d a y '! OddMO
S i Luc to a t F a r l L au d e r dato

MJcnaal C a rte r, not* lack)* to a on* yeacans a d
U N O IE O O C H A R G E R S ( - S ig n M Jo*
C o c iito . g u a rd R tto a ia d Jam ** Jo h n ton *nd
K tn re th S lm i. running back*.
U N F R A N C IS C O 4 0 IR S - Agreed to
to rm i w l'h Sl*y# Young, quarterback, on *
llv d y ia r co n tra c t A g r* ad to to r m i with
Dana SlubbtoftoW. d* (e n tire U n m a n
S E A T T L E S E A M A W K S - Signed Sian
G*ib*ugh. q u a rter back, and John Hunter.
Qv«n)
T A M P A S A Y B U C C A N E E R S - Agreed •*
to rm i w ith u a m ar T hom ai. wto* n c i l r t r
HOCKEY
h a lia n a l Mackay Laagu*
F L O R I D A P A N T H E R S - Signed Dellat
E a k in t and G reg Sm ytli. detontemen and
J * ll O reenlau and D arin K im b le , torw ardt
P H IL A O IL P H IA F L Y E R S Signed
T arry C a rk n rr. datontam an. to a m u llife a r
contract

TVIRAOIO
AUTO RACIN'
; jo p m — S U N . M ictg et W o rld C h allenge
R at*
170pm
- !U N , P rim * T im * A to lortp o rti
II p m - SUY. Thi* Week in N A S C A R
BASEBALL
7 70 p m
- 34, F lo r id a M a r t in i al
Cincm ngti Red- I D
M l pm
— TBS
A n a n t a B 'e v e t J L )

P itts b u r g h

P ira te s el

4 p m
kiG N C o lo rad o Roc4.es *i
Chicago Cub*. I D
B O W L IN G
7 70 p m
I SPN Ja c k to n Senior Open

ID

B O IIN O
*pm
E S P N . H eavyw eight* Jo* M pp
v i M ich o e l Bent
J a m - S U N F f h l N ig h t a lltt o F w u m
G O LF
4p m — E S P N Irit.th O p e n
T E N N IS
t X pm
SC. |) S
| L ) a l t o o i U 70p m

V O LLEYBALL

7 X am
ieur

P ro O e m p m U it

ESPY Budwriter Four Mar­

M IS C E LLA N E O U S
V dn.ghl
SUN ( 4 &lt;*&lt;lor t M amo, • '
,
Madia
BASEBALL
* S3 p m
W U * A M (11701 South...
le a g u e ChaHanoogr Lookowto at O 'la n k
Cub*
7p m
W G TO AP, | M ) . F lo rid a Ma- i
at C in cin n ati Reds
M IS C E LLA N E O U S
1 p m — W G T O A M | d l 1 o * li H u 4 4 ,
4p m
W W N7 A M 7a0) Tha Sp o rlt Nv*
4 p m — W G T O A # l Vact Toto Sp » H
With Peto R ote
a 10p m
W P R O A d n t « i S o o rll Bea*
14 p m
W W N / AM |7a0l F lo n d a Sp»»,
E ic h o n g a
It p m — W G T O A M (3*B| Sport* B , -*
USA

WE'VE GOT
THE PARTS!
Shellzone Coolant

oA m m
toW Tlab.

II

*»«•»

m
______

Radiator Specialty Rust
Inhibitor Or Radiator
F lu a l| _ = _ j f lk k .

■ Mldwtst
S t a t io n

Air Tank

u rt

IN
ftid
wH
g ia w
iWwDrl

O N i- G F O N fr a ffl
| ^ iB iie lE . * &lt; *
VSSSSA

t r y in g lo lly . "

Y a te s
C o n tin u e d fro m P a g e I B
" T h is team has som ething
m issin g right now an d I w aul us
a ll to take tile lim e lo mourn
ih u l loss." lie said. "W e nerd
I lin e to grieve.
" W h a t's m ore, preparing a
tin e car for som eone lo drive at
JOO inph is a serious responsibil­
ity. I Just don't d u n k d ia l we can
b u ry D avcy tom orrow and be
ready to meet that responsibility
«in the next (dayj."
Y u le s said he had Im-oii con­
tacted by o ilie r W in sto n Cup
team ow n ers w h o offered lo
pre|Kire a ear for I’ocono. Hut
they w ill race again o n ly when
t h e y a re r e a d y lo do ii
them selves.
"I didn't feel like we could get
o u r ca r ready w ith Icars in our
ry e s ." he said.
Y a le s said the team would not

Southern Laagu#
3*cend H a ll
E a t lt r n D ir it ton
W
L

Castro! ~

F a rm e r
Continued from Page IB

Colorado ( B la ir 7*1 a l Chicago (M o rg an
* t ) . 0 03pm
M oulton (D rabek 7 0) a l SI Lout) (Aroch a
* 1 ), O J i p m
M o n tre a l ID* M a r lln a i to )&gt; a l L o t A n g t lr t
|R M a r lin * ! 7 4). 10 7 3 p m

Discount
fluto Parts

RenteriaC o n tin u e d fro m Page I B
Renteria said.

■ A t M A L L tT A N D IN M

W e tl P a lm B * a c h a l Vero Beach
O tce oi* a l SI Petertbvcg
Ctoarw ator a l La k tla n d
Daytona a l F o r i M y * n
Ounedm at Saratota

ShalVJ PaataOr
12 Ol Liquid Wax

Qodan
Raady-Rad]
Radiators

i« ih K S e « h * e t

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SANFORO
U S 17/92 i Slit# Sdool

2923 South OrtooOo Drivo
321-1199 Open 8 9
DELANO

BenUcrtJ Av*AVooOUnd B/vd
734-3*21 Opdn M
ORANG E CITY
Entorpnoo I U S I7/V2
7 7 S -IN E Opdn *-*
APOPKA
St . Rd *34 A T h o n p jo n Rd
1201 E u t S U lo R c j J 434
•44-4433 Opdn 4-9

ON QUANTITIES IN S O C X

U FK TW K QUAHAMTU

S,aek*tone

Starters and Alternators
4%

* ig
siL. , 49 “ Price*
Start At V
70Ck0mmi- 52“
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9400 um58tL 1|,0OuarantM
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C U R R Y F 0 R 0 R 0 A 0 i 431
5447 Curry Font Road
3 I2 -M 7 2 Opon 7-11

L E E R 0 A 0 • ED CEW ATER
4909 EdOtvaior Dnro
3*4-1841 Opon M l
LONGWOOD

CORE 8 0B T
W 5 S O fdngt B b tso m TioJ
42341171 Opdn 7-*

H oy. 434 i Huy. 17/92
27S South H it f m y 17/92
495-0421 Opon 3 9
0BT
2 B kx )u South of Oak RaTgo
•210 S. O n n g t Btoooom Tf.
1834171 Opon 3 9

I

• Cart 0

% # ? £ £ *****
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LfflTrucU

OPEN SEVEN DAYS a w eek

KISSIMMEE
No It to Scofty’ i
18G4 North U* n St/M l
847-9077 Opon 7-11

t B*. N. Statd Rd. 434
1185 H o u r ly 436 Wool
774-4739 Opdn M

i« {ilM “ r n »
3 9 mL to 7 9 ? «
u p iiu

CASSELB ER RY
S i Rd 434 i U S 1T/92
5800 S
17.92
134-0344 Opon 1-9

FOREST CTTY

Most US &amp; Import

Hurry, Sale Ends July 20,1!

OVIEDO
11f Coni/M Atonud North
3339297 Opon 9 9

PMKHUS
W o&lt; Pmo H R l * S4vgr Slat
$410 S t a r S w Road
294-8230 Opon 7-11
S T .C L 0 U 0
K flfr w y 192
S I M 139) Strata
992-1111 Opon 3 9

UNION PARK
Cckxkol 8 A u liy a

U800 Ellt COMSI Crryg
•*3*438 Opon 3 9
WINTER PARK
A to m | Sonoran
3094 A to m Arotxjg
•77*5414 Open 7-11

L A K E I4ARY
L A id U A /y B v I M a t f iS L
USMOOo S i
Opon 0 . 0 .

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida • Thursday, July 15, 1993 - SB

People
‘He’s a boozer’

IN BRIEF

Sanford resident welcomes curious questions about bottles

Creatures featured at the library
A n im a ls from the C e n tra l Florida Zoo w ill l&gt;c show n at
Sem inole County L ib ra rie s as pari of the Sum m er L ib ra ry
Program this year. T he 2 p.m. show Is for preschoolers an d
ih r lr families. The 2:45 pm . show Includes a slide program In
ad ditio n to the a n im a ls and Is for sclioolugc children and th eir
lam llicK. The program is free and open to all.
For more inform ation c o ll any lih ru ry below. The schedule Is
as follows:
W ednesday, J u ly 21 ul Northwest B ran ch. Lake M ary.
•121-2419: Thursday, J u ly 22 al West Brunch, Longwood,
802-2282; Friday. J u ly 2.'!al North B ranch, Sanford. .'122-2182

B y JU L IA N S T K M B T R O M

Horald Colum nist
Scarcely a soul has not lienn!
the e x p re s s io n " u b o ttle o f
lxjo/e" or " h e ’s a boozer.” D id
you ever w o n d e r w here the
term s "b o o ze " o r ‘ ‘ Itoozer’ ’ cam e
from ? Well, now you w ill know-.
Sanford re sid en t George C.
Scott, no not the accom plished
actor who played In ” W csl Side
S to ry ” or the role o f the four-star
general "B lo o d and G u ts” In
"P a tto n ." T h is George C. Scott Is
a native of C o lu m b u s. O hio One
of his first Jobs was an 11-year
h itc h w ith th e P e n n sy lv a n ia
Railroad. D u rin g a vacation he
and his wife, G ypsle. cam e to
F lo r id a a n d v is it e d Ills f a ­
ther In law. T o m Ferguson. He
was Involved in the b u ild ing and
construction business.
George and G y p sle liked F lo r­
ida so m uch they settled here.
George, too. got Into the b u ild ing
and co n stru ctio n trades. T hey
now reside at 295(1 G randview
Ave,, In Sanford. latter, after
w orking for K a v Sh oem aker’s
C o nstruction C o m p a n y for 2 1
years. Scott retired but be d id n ’ t
pack away h is hu m m er and saw-.
I If hung them u p for easy access
e n o io b , tom m y V i a c o m
Georg* C. Scott shows one ol his many treasured antique bottles.
and every now and then he w ill
do a sm all |ob for a Irlrnd nr a
Most ol ihe distillers in those that la te r ih e Ja ck D aniels peo
expressions " n bottle of bo o ze"
neighbor.
duvs (m illed their beverages In pie p u rch a se d the m a n u fa ctu r­ and "he's a Ixxtzcr" came Into
Now, alMiut that "bottle of
glass containers made by the ing plant from the Booze C o m ­ existen ce. S c o tt has s e v e ra l
booze ” It was m ade by the E G
Ikxize Com pany.
pany a n d co n tin u e d m a k in g
products m a d e by the Booze
llo o zr C o m p a n y In a plant on
The ItoHle Is a Ix-autltul am b e r Ixiltlrs for th e ir own products.
Com pany p lu s a great deal o f
W alnut Street In Philadelphia
Colored product In u h s o lu rly
llicraturc. H e 'll share the lite ra ­
The date on Ihe Ixitlle Is 1840
perfccl condition It is. believed
T h u s , t h i s I * h o w t h e ture with vou hut not the bottles.

Baseball night benefits MADD
R ealtor liav-ball Night! Free Tickets? w ill l*cnc*flt M others
Agalulst Drunk D riv in g O rlando C u b s vs Carolina Mudcnts.
T in k e r Field. August 7th at 7 0 5 pm. Pre-game autograph
p arly and prizes aw arded tietween Inning! Pickup your free
ticket from any realto rs office or the Greater O rla n d o
Association of K r.illor* ar 407-422-5143 E x t 107

Al-anon gathers
II vou know, or live w ith an alcoholic, there Is help
Al anon is an anonym ous, non profit organization, often to
anyone w ho is a relative or friend of an alcoholic.
Serenity Won A l-anon meets each M onday. Tuesday um l
rhurscbiy. (Thursday non sm oking) evening at 8 p m Meetings
are heltl In the Itat k room of Ihr Sahara C lu b. 2857 South
Sanford A v r , Sanford
For additional m eeting lim e s and location* In the C entral
Florida area, or (or more inform ation, ca ll 332-4 122

Hollywood East clogging classes
H ollyw ood East D ancers conduct d o g g in g classes every
th u rsd a y , (rom 6 30 to 8 30 p.m., at M clodee Skating Kink. W.
25th Street near A irport Boulevard In Sanford Cost Is $3 fier
class ages 5 and lip Parents free w ith paying child For
In lorin aiion . call Casey. 407-322-3593 or D aw n. fXM 7354)270

East-West Kiwanls Club meets Thursday

Questions of dem ocracy pit
the many against the few

K lis tW r s t Kiw anls C lu b o f Sanford m eets rv e ry Thursday at
7 p m at the F riendship A Union laxlge building, corner o f
lax-pst Avenue and Seventh Street. V is itin g Klw anlans are
w elcom e For Inform ation, ca ll Robert W hittaker, president.
889 6042.

Omni Toastmasters gather
The O m n i Toastm asters C lu b w ill gather al 5 30 p.m. every
T h u rsd ay at the Old Lake M ary C ity H all, 158 Country C lu b
Road. L a k e Mary.
('nil Sam Ryan al 0 7 1 2050 (nr more Inform al Ion

Group targets depression
The M id-O rlando D eprrsslveZM anlc D epressive Support
G ro up in ertin g lor depressed persons, th eir ia iiilly m em bers
and lh c|| blends is held the first an d th ird Thursday* of each
m outh id 7.30 u in. at L a k r s ld r A lte rm illv rs . 434 W. K r iu ir d y
Ills il.. O B a n d o A n d ih e second Saturday o f each monih. 10 30
a in., .it the Orlando P u b lic Library.
For inform ation, ra il 057-4703 or 3 8 1-5070

Sunrise Kiwanls meets Friday
I be Sem inole S unrise K iw a n ls C lu b m e n s every Friday, at 7
a m . at Shoney'x. U S 17-92, south of A irpo rt Boulevard.
V isitin g Klw anlans are welcom e For Inform ation, call Tony
D u n am , president, at 330-2094.

CO M A announces meetings
The C oncerned O rgunl/atlon ol Men In A c tio n (COMA) meets
the llrs t and third Friday, at 0 p.m.. In the c h u rch annex at St.
Ja m e s A M E C hurch, n in th Street and Cypress Avenue.
Sanford.

U.S. Savings B onds for ankation grow
ALMOST AS fAST AS KIDS DO.
for M W I ri» r!crr&amp;cr. al
1100 O US1 0 8 0 • 1 1DO-417 M U
A

&lt; m * f,&lt; Zihnnc»*fuprf

SAVINGS
k iA m e rk T C tO L BONDS W

DEAR ABBT: Recently. I saw
a news story on television re­
garding Ihe p o ssib ility of Install
tng public l otic is tin the streets
In New Y ork C ity . It seems a
L u n ija an co m pa n y had installed
as a test, w h ich were very w ell
received by the people of that
city, w ith tgu; notable exception
— a group o l handicapped peo­
ple who w m s u | M r i lire a use the
to ilets wci^"" not designed to
a c c o m m o d a t e w h c e le h a ir s .
These people threatened to block
Ih r adoption ot these tu llels u n til
provisions for w heelchairs were
made
One group argued that the
facilities m ight tie used for p u r­
pose* other th an lor the one
Intended. S till, th is action by a
few could prevent the adoption
of these toilets b y the city.
Ahby. what is happening to
our society? W h y sh ou ld a vocal
m in ority prevent the m ajority
from realizing an enorm ous c o n ­
venience s im p ly because they
cannot ulso ben efit? My high
school civ ics teacher taught us
that a test for dem o cratic action
w as "the greatest good for the
greulest num ber o f people."
S in ce you h a v e fre q u e n tly
cham pioned the righ ts of the
disabled, what are your feelings
about this?

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

th in k l»*s unfair lo deprive the
able-bodied m ajority of tlie- c o n ­
venience of public toilets on the
streets because (hr p h y s ic a lly
challenged m inority cannot lxa c co m m o d a te d . T h e re fo re . I
w o u ld r e c o m m e n d a c o m ­
promise: Include some p u b lic
lo ile ls to accom modate jw o p lr In
wheelchairs.

DEAR ABBY: T w ic e . I ’ v e
asked a friend of m ine lo c o n ­
certs — usually with the oftenlug. "W ou ld you like to go to the

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Ju ly 9 — 1lo lly and M ark
Fivek. C a sse lb e rry , girl
Ju ly 10 — E v e ly n uml Alfredo
Claudia. C a sse lb e rry , girl; A n itu
and W illiam L c w ln , Longwood.
g ir l; D o r e e n u n d J a m e s
W illiam s. L a k e M ary, girl; T in a
Carder and M atth e w Ham ilton.
Casselberry, g irl
Ju ly 11 — D iane Grayson.
Oviedo. Ix»v

is
jxtsslhle. a v e ry special gift lo r
the ch ild o f divorced parents
would he for those parents to
celebrate th e birthdays of th e ir
growing c h ild re n together — as
the saying goes: "Ju st for to d a y "
— put asid e resentment a n d
anim osity for the sake of the
child’s hap p in e ss.

SmTEKIWLS
B e s t In t H e G a Ia x y

•

Z55TST

Ju ly 8 — Je n n ife r and Steven
Mounts. Lon gw oo d , girl: Danielle
Havens and L in c o ln Blake Glflnrn. C a sse lb e rry , boy; Diana
and Preston L o w ry , Casselberry,
girl: S la cy a n d H arry Schem ing.
Sanford, ixty: S u sa n and M ichael
W ilson, S a n lo rd . g irl

DEAR READERS: H it

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THIRD

AU M 8 VILLE, ORE.

W ED N ESD AY’S PRIME TIME

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DEAR

C
E
N
T
E
R
:
The next tim e you ask her. tell
her that y o u w ould he plrased tu
have her c o m p a n y nt the co n ce rt
— If she w a n ts to go " D u tc h ."
Better yet. so there w ill be no
m isunderstanding, say. "W e w ill
each jxty o u r o w n w ay."

DEAR MR. JOHNBTONt I.
o

The fo llo w in g b irth s have been
recorded at F lo rid a H ospital.
Altam onte Springs-.

concert w ith m e ?" She accep ted
Ju ly 5 — P a m clu anil Herbert
txith tim es.
R u m m c l. C a s s e lb e r r y , h o y :
I was e x p e c tin g her to pay (or M e lin d a W ig g in s and D a v id
her ow n tick e t, but she sa id Pedraza. A lta m o n te Springs, girl
nothing — n o r did she suggest a
Ju ly fi — M elinda Irven and
"pre" o r " p o s t- c o n c e r t" r e ­
Thom as E v a n s . Longwood, boy;
freshment o n her.
She Is good com pany an d I am Nalda an d N e lso n Feliciano. A l­
co n te m p la tin g asking Iter ag ain, tamonte S p rin g s , hoy; S a n d ra
hut how ca n I ensure that she Newshum a n d Jo h n Nunes. A l­
"gets It" by paving for her w on tamonte S p rin g s, g irl
ticket?
J u ly 7 — W anda Colon and
THIRD ROW CENTER Jose Torm os. Longwood. girl

ROBERT M. JOHNSTON, JR„
t

NKW ARRIVALS

X * 1 m »N0W $25.00:
Muicure

^ S I O .O o N O W

Pedicure
Fills

• . . t t / T - t ^ r / r s v e x k a x a ^ ht

2 7 0 9 S . O r la n d o D r .
S a n f o r d (SAVE-A-LQTShewingCeniei)

Hours:
TABATHA A. E1CHLER
L A C K L A N D A IR F O R C E
B A S E . San Antonio — A ir Force
R ese rv e A irm a n T a b a th a A .
E lc h lc r has grudulaed from A ir
Force basic training here.
D urin g the six weeks of tr a in ­
ing the airm an studied the A ir
Force m ission, organization an d
custo m s and received sp ecial
tra in in g In hum an relations.
In nddlllon. airmen who c o m ­
plete basic training cam c re d its
to w a rd un asso cia te d e g re e
through the Com m unity C ollege
of the A ir Force.
E lc h le r Is the daug hter o f
R ich a rd J. E lch lcr o f 4301 O liv e r
W uy. O rland o, and J u d y E.
Priest of 101 Sugunnaplc C o u rt.
Sanford.

BONUS

Houn
(J to til

M o n , T u ts . U iu r* A F r l 1Haiti - 7pm
lt)am • Jpm
W c d n c u la y
S a tu rd a y

10 am • fepm

(jilchf ield
cinemas -j , -i

Liichlitld Qualiiy Th**lrt&gt;

om

•NO P A SS MOVIE*

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7
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WEEKEND
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17,00 2.30 1 00 730 ID 00

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( SLEEPLESS
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MOVIFl AND

£
For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, July 9

. .

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BO PASSES N*r i7.«.fc£j
THE FIRM
1:44 \R\
M0ECENT
PROPOSAL

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ALL MOVIES IN STEREO SOUND

�4B - San lord Herald. Sanlord, Florida - Thursday. July 15. 1903

Legal N o tices

Legal N otices

N O T IC E U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E L A W
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , under Chapter » 2 * 7 ,
that iha u n d e r lin e d , d e llr in g to
engage In b v iln e ii under the
t ic t it io u i n a m e e l F U T O N S .
E T C located at » ! 0 U S H ig h
te a r M l N orth, Suite IIS. In the
C ity ot A ltam on te Spring!. Seen
Inote County, F lo rid a . Intendi to
reg iste r the said nam e w ith the
D iv is io n o l C o rporation! e l the
D e p a rtm e n t of Slate
M O S T L Y FU T O N S . INC
P u b lis h ; J u ly IS. I f f )
D EG lit

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice la hereby given that I
am engaged In b u t Iness at t i l
N H w y 17 f l . Long wood F L
H I M . Sem inole County. F lo rid a ,
under the F ic titio u s Nam e o l
A C T IO N A U T O P A R T S , and
that I Intend to reg iste r sa&gt;d
name w ith the D iv isio n of Cor
poreiions. Tallahassee. F lorida.
In a cco rda n ce w ith the pro
visions o l tho F ic titio u s Nam e
Statutes. T o w n Section M l W.
F lo rid a S ta M o s IT*t.
T w Ila A B lerSe
Publish: J u ly II. ITTJ
D E G IN

N O T IC E O F
P U B L I C H E A R IN O
The Sem inole County P la n
nln g and Zoning Com m ission
w ill hold a pvb i;r hearing In
Room 1071 of the County Serv
ices B u ild in g . Sanlord. F lo rid a
on A u g u it *. It* l A T 1.00 P M .
o r as soon thereafter as possl
ble. to consid er the following
A P U B L I C H E A R IN O
FO R C H AN CE OF
Z O N IN G R E G U L A T IO N S
1 . F R A N K J. D O L A N
(PZ O I’ lSI Reran# tram A -l A g ­
ric u ltu re to P U D PUnned U nit
D evelopm ent — The E a st '» of
the SW v* and the W e s t'» o l the
S E ’ • a ll In Section IS. Township
II South. Range 11 E ast, ly in g
and being In Seminole County
F lo rid a , u s s righ t o tw a y tor
L o ck w o o d Road; said
righ t of w ay being p rescrip tive
and m ore p a rtltu trly described
as follow s com m ence at the
south U corner ot Section IS.
Township I t South. Range II
E a st, thence south Of 1 M J "
west along the south line o l the
southwest U of Section IS tor a
distance of m i l * feet to the
point of beginning, thence con
tlnue south #» 5711" west. U 50
teet. thence north 00 t t ' 40" west
along the west line of the east
of southwest U o l Section IS tor
t i l l * t leet. thence north I t
r* a l" east along the north lin e
ot the southwest to of Section J5
lo r 10 SO feel; thence south 00
« St” east along the easterly
c o u n ty m a in ta in e d lim it s of
Lockw ood Road tor M S I 1* teet
to the P oin t of Beginning
Those in attendance w ill be
heard and w ritten com m ents
m ay be file d w ith the C u rre n t
P lann in g O ffic e H earing s m ay
be continued from tim e to tim e
a t lo u n d necessary. F u rth e r
d e t a ils a v a ila b le b y c a llin g
III I ISO. E &gt;tension H u
NOTE
P e r s o n s w ith d ls
a b ilitie s needing assistance to
p a r t ic ip a t e In any ot th ese
proceedings should contact the
E m p lo y e e R e la tio n s D e p a rt
merit A D A Coordinator a hours
in ad van ce ot the m eeting of
m n io .e &gt; t e n s io n m i.
Perso ns a re advised that If
they w is h to appeal any decision
m ade at th is m eeting, they w ill
need a reco rd of the proceed
mgs. and for such purpose, they
m ay need to ensure th at a
v e rb a tim re c o rd of the proceed
m gs Is m a d e , w h ic h re c o rd
Includes the testim ony and e v i­
dence upon w h ich the eopeel is
to be based, p e r Section jU o io j .
F lo r id a Statutes.
BOARDOF
C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N E R S
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y.
F LO R ID A
B Y H E R B H A R D IN ,
M ANAGER
C U R R E N T P L A N N IN G
P u b lis h : J u ly 11. l t d
D E G 111

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice Is hereby g iven that we
are engaged in business at l i f t
W. Lk. B ra n tle y D r.. Long wood.
Seminole County. F lo rid a , under
the F ictitio u s N a m e ot P A L M S
O F C E N T R A L F L O R I D A , and
that we Intend to register said
name w ith the D iv isio n o l Cor
poratlons. Tallahassee. F lo rid a .
In acco rd a n ce w ith the pro
visions of the F ictitio u s Nam e
Statutes. T o W it: Section Sat Of
F lo rid a Statute! ITTI
G eo rgeS A n d e rso n Jr
C h ris A Anderson
Pub lish J u ly IS. ITT]
DEG l»
N O T IC E O F A
P U B LIC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
A D O P T IO N O F A N
O R D IN A N C E B Y
T H E C IT Y O F
SAN FO RD. F LO R ID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
P u b lic H earing w ill be held In
the Com m ission Room at the
C ity H e ll In the C ity o l Sanlord.
F lorida , at 1 00 o 'clock P M On
Ju ly M . m i . to consider the
adoption ot an ord inance by the
C ity of Sanlord F lo rid a , title ot
w hich Is as Tot Iowa:
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1ISS
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D . F L O R
IDA. A M E N D I N G C H A P T E R
II. S E C T IO N 111* O F T H E
CO O E OF O R D IN A N C E S OF
T H E C IT Y O F S A N F O R D TO
R E Q U IR E P E R M I T S FO R
"S P E C IA L E V E N T S "! PRO
V ID IN G A D E F IN I T IO N OF
THE T E R M " S P E C IA L
EV EN T": REQUIRING A
P E R M IT FO R A L L S P E C IA L
E V E N T P E R M IT S : AUTHO R
IZING C I T Y C O M M IS S IO N TO
G RAN T OR D E N Y S P E C IA L
E V E N T P E R M I T S ; P R O V IO
IN G F O R P E N A L T Y i P R O
V ID IN G F O R C O D IF IC A T IO N .
S E V E R A B I L I T Y . C O N F L IC T S
AND E F F E C T IV E DATE.
A espy shall be a v a ila b le at
the office of the C ity C le rk tor
a ll persona d ealring to e ie m ln e
the same.
A ll p a r lie s In Interest and
c ltlie n s sh a ll have an opportunl
ty to be heard at sa id hearing
B y o rd er of tho C ity C o m ­
m ission ot the C ity ot Sanford.
F lo rid a
P E R S O N S W l TH D I S ­
A B IL IT IE S N E E D IN G
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I
P A T E IN A N Y O F T H E S E
P R O C EED IN G S SHOULD
CO N T A C T T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A C O O R D IN A T O R
A T 110 IS IS S I H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E OF T H E M E E T IN G
A O V IC E T O T H E P U B L I C : II
a person dec ides to appeel e
decision mode w ith respect to
eny m atter considered at tho
above m eeting o r hearing, he
m ay need a verb atim record o l
the proceedings. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not p rovided by the
C ity of S a n t o r d lF S M S 0165)
J a n e lR Donahoe
C ity C le rk
Publish J u ly 11. t**l
D E G - lit

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R S E M IN O L E CO UN TY.
F LO R IO A
C A SE NO. d e n t C A 1 P L
H O M E
S A V I N G S O F
A M E R I C A . F S B . l o r m e r ly
known es H O M E S A V IN G S O F
A M E R I C A . F .A ..
P la in tiff.
vs
G A I L L. C A S E and D A V ID W,
C A S E , her husbend. U N I T E D
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A ; T H A D
B C A L H O U N ; and M A T T H IA S .
M O R S E .
R O B I I
M ESSERVEY. P A .
Defendants
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N PROPERTY
TO: G a ll L . Case and D a v id W
Case, her husbend. end Thed B.
C alhoun and a ll unknown heirs,
devisees, grantees, assignees,
lienors, cred ito rs, trustees, o r
other cla im a n ts cla im in g by.
through, under or against them .
R E S ID E N C E UNKNO W N
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y N O TI
F I E D that an action to levee lose
a m o rtg ag e on the follow ing
p ro p e rty In Sem inole County,
F lo rid a :
L o t 11. C A R D I N A L O A K S .
P H A S E II. accordin g to tho
am ended p ie I thereof a t r e ­
corded In P U i Book II. pages H .
f t and 100. P u b lic R ecords Of
Sem inole County. Florida,
A ls o know n a t *1) M ourning
Dove C ir c le . L ake M e ry , F lo r ­
ida n ie a .
h a t been tile d egalnsi you. end
you a re req u ire d to serve a copy
of you r w ritte n defenses If any,
to it. on the p U In tlft's attorney,
v ho t* nam e and address Is
R ob e rt M Q uinn o l Carlton.
F ie ld s . W ard . Em m anu el. Sm ith
A C u lle r , P . A „ P o tt O ffice Bos
m t . Tem po. F lo rid a U*6I. on
o r before J u ly I t. t t f l . and file
the o rig in a l w ith the c le rk of this
court eith e r before service on
p U m t lt l’ s attorney or Im m odl
ato ly thereafter: otherwlae a
d e la u lt w ill be entered agalnal
you lo r the re lie f demanded In
the co m p la in t o r petition
W IT N E S S m y hand and the
aeel of aald court on June It.
m?
(Court Seal)
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
C L E R K . C I R C U IT C O U R T
By: Ruth K in g
Deputy C le rk
P ub lish June 14 A J u ly t. A IS.
ITT)
D E F III

N O T IC E O F S A L E
OF M OTOR V E H IC L E
Pursuant to F lo rid a Statute
1I1.5U. M I D F L O R I D A L I E N
S E R V IC E S , w ill t e ll a l public
s a le to r c a s h th e ta llo w in g
described v e h ic le !!) located a l
M a n o r's p la c e to s a t is f y a
claim ed lien lo r lab or and/or
storage Y e a r / m t B U IC K V IN :
I G a W B U T s K U M lH L ie n am t/
S i l t * . 41. O w n e r / J a m e * J .
Sm ith. J r. 4101 C ro a t Roads Ct..
O r la n d o . F L . L l t n h o l d t r /
Orlando Fed C red U n 1111 S.
W estm oreland O r . O rlando. F L .
L le n o r/S e m ln o lo T iro A C ar
Care. 155 N H w y. 11*1. Long
wood. F L . T e l: * 0 7 4 tt* * M .
S A L E D A T E : A U G U S T II. I t t l
a l 11:60 P M at 1411 A L O M A
A V E . W IN T E R P A R K . F L . Said
vehicle!*) m a y be redeem ed by
satisfying the lion p rio r to sale
dale. Y ou have the rig h t to a
hearing at arty lim e p rio r to Sato
dale by tilin g a dem and tor
hearing In the C ir c u it Court.
Owner h a t tho rig h t to recover
possession ot veh icle by posting
a bond In a c c o r d a n c e w ith
F lo rid a Statute 55**17. A n y
p ro c e e d s In e i c a s t o l th e
am ount o l th e Men w ill be
deposited with the C le rk ot the
C ir c u it C o u rt In th e county
where vehicle It held
Publish: J u ly IS. I t t l
D E G 111
U N C L A IM E D
V E H I C L E A U C T IO N
R tm o v a l ot the below de
scribed veh icle w as conducted
in com pliance w ith F S IIS Cl.
Notice that B u tch 's Chevron A
W recker Service Inc. w ill te ll
said vehicle a l P u b lic Auction
tor cash on August S. I t t l at
10 00 a m . at 7X7 W 1st Street.
Sanford. F lo rid a . W e reserve
the right to w ithd raw said veht
cte from P u b lic A uction
IttO Ford P K
IO H F T C R I0 A 4 L U A 1 H I0
V ehicle m a y be viewed one
hour p rio r to sale S a le begins at
ICa m.
Publish: J u ly IV I t t l
DEG t il

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

C — arOy C c M cryptogram# are u esled Iran eut sobt rw by temeiw
people, pet* end pres m l
keen letter in Ow Mphsi Mends lor
anobw redey e oue 4 squab A
‘ M
W

N

L T

B

U L X Z
B C

L T

M

N E F V
Z M T I U O
J L F U E

A E

L T A

L T A
A

B E

J E C M O Z

J E C M O Z ,
* A

U M V O

M T

B E

O C O P X
J

O A

M

K

J

. *

—

B B E J L Z .

P R E V IO U S SOLUTION: "I got plychodollcttpd at San
Fran cisco S tala and professionalized a l S tanford." —
(Poster artist) Robbia Conal.

71— H * lp W a n te d

Legal N o tic e s
U N C L A IM E D
V E H I C L E A U C T IO N
R e m o v a l o l Ihe below do
scrib e d v eh icles w as conducted
In compliance- w ith F S I I S 01.
N otice that B u tch 's Chevron a
W re cke r Se rvice Inc. w ill sell
sa id vehicles a l P u b lic A uction
lo r cash on August S. I t t l a l
10 00 a m . a l 1107 W 1st Street.
Sanlord. F lo rid a W e reserve
m e r ig h t to w ith d r a w s a id
v eh icles from P u b lic A uction
IM 4 M e rc u ry 40
ID 4 1 M E P B 1 S R IE KS50541
ItU Y u g o G V X
ID 4VX 1BC I5IS JK41IM 7
V eh icles m ay be view ed one
hour p rio r to sale Sale begins at
10a m
P u b lish : J u ly IV I t t l
D E G 111

N O T IC E O F C L O S IN O .
V A C A T IN O A N D
A B A N D O N IN G
A P O R T IO N O F A N A L L E Y
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N !
Y o u w ill la k e notice that the
C ity C o m m issio n ot the C ity of
Sanlord. F lo rid a , on J u ly 11.
I t t l. P A S S E D A N D A D O P T E D
O rd in an ce No I t t l to close,
vacate and abandon any rig h t o l
the C ity and the p u b lic In and to
that c ertain north south a lle y
between O ak Avenue and M y r tle
Avenue and between tfh Street
an d 10th Straet. lu rth a r da
scrib e d a t follow s
T h a t c a r ta ln i s toot w lda
no rth south a lla y lyin g in B lock
H . T ier V Town of Sanford, a t
recorded In P u t Book I. Page
5*. P u b lic R ecords ot Sem inole
County. F lo rid a
C ity C om m ission ot the
C ity of Sanlord. F lo rid a
J a n e tR Donehoe
C ity C lark
P u b lis h Ju ly IV I t t l
D E G III

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C I R C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A
C A S E NO.: t l IM a -C A -U K
A N D R E W S and S H E R E E M
C L E M O N S , husband and w ife
and K E N N E T H and D IA N E
P L A T E , husband and wife.
P la in tiffs .
vs
C L A R E N C E 6 IR K H A U S E R .
dec eased, and F L O R E N C E
L A U E R . as appointed te ecu to ra
f o r m e E sta te o l C H A R L E S C
B I R K H A U S E R . J R .a n d a s
p ersonal representatives of the
estate o l A N N A B
B IR K H A U S E R . E O N A
B I R K H A U S E R . as su rv iv in g
s tw u s e o tC L A R E N C E
B I R K H A U S E R . and a ll
unknown na tu ral persons. II
a llv o . and it dead, o r It not
known to be dead or a liv e , their
several and respective smknown
spouses, heirs, devisees,
grantees, creditors, o r other
p artie s c U lm ln g by. through,
under or ogams! the above
nam ed Defendants, and alt
claim an ts, persons or p a rlie s,
n a tu ral o r corporate, whose
e ia c t legal status Is unknown,
c la im in g by. through, im dar or
ag ain st any o l the above nam ed
or described Detondonts or
p a r tu s or cla im in g to have any
rig h t, tlt U or Interest In and to
the land herein#tier d escrib ed .
T H E U N IT E D S T A T E IO F
A M E R IC A ; en d T H * ST A T E
O F F LO R ID A .
Defendants
AM ENDED
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O A ll unknown n a tu ra l per
sons. If alive , and If dead, o- It
not known to be dead o r o live,
th e ir se v e ra l a r d re sp e c tiv e
un kno w n spouses, h e irs , da
v Ite e t grantees cred ito rs, or
o th e r p a r t ie s c la im in g b y ,
t h r o u g h , u n d e r o r a g a in s t
CLARENCE BIRKHAUSER.
d e ce a se d , and F L O R E N C E
L A U E R . a t appointed executor*
tor tha E t U U ot C H A R L E S C.
B I R K H A U S E R . J R . , an d as
personal representatives o l tho
E s t a t e ol A N N A
B.
B IR K H A U S E R ;
EO N A
B I R K H A U S E R , a t s u rv iv in g
sp ou t# of C L A R E N C E
B I R K H A U S E R ; and a ll c la im
ants, persons o r p a rtu s , natural
or corporate, whose en act legal
status It unknown, c la im in g by,
through, under or ag ain st any o l
tho above nam ed o r d escrib ed
Defendants o r p a r tu s o r c la im
Ing to have any rig h t, title or
In te rest In an d to tho la n d
describ ed a t follows:
Tho northerly one h a lf ot tha
vacated p ark w ay ly in g south of
and contiguous to Lot V B lo c k A .
R e p la t o l Lots A V and S. Sunset
Shores, accordin g to tho p la t
ttw reof. as ro c e rd td In P la t
Book v Peg# II . ot tho P u b lic
R eco rd s o l Sam lnoto County.
F lo rid a
and
Tha southerly one h a ll o l tha
vacated p ark w ay lyin g north o l
and contiguous to Lot 5. B lo ck B.
R ap la t o l Lo ts 4. V and S. Sunset
Shores, acco rdin g to tha p lat
thereof, a s reco rd ed In P la t
Book I. P ag e II. of the P u b lic
R eco rd s of Sam lnola County.
F lo rid a
Y o u are notified that a C o m ­
p la in t has bean Iliad ag ain st you
and you are req u ired to serve a
copy o l your w ritten defenses to
tha Co m p lain t. It any. on P la in
lilt s ' attorneys nam ed below, on
o r before August 1. m i . and lito
said w ritten defenses w ith the
C la rk ot th is C ourt e ith e r before
se rv ic e on P la in tiffs ' attorneys
o r I m m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a ft e r ]
o th e rw is e a d a ta u ll w ill be
en te re d a g a in st you fo r the
re lto l dem anded In the Com
p laint.
D ated on June 1*. m l
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
C la rk of C irc u it Court
By: Jean B rllla n t
Deputy Clark
D a v id G. W illifo rd . E sq u ire
F lo rid a B a r N o 0045147
Lowndes. D rosdlck. Doctor,
K a n for A Reed. P A ,
115 N E o la D rive
Post O ffice Bo * n o *
O rlando. F lor Ids 12*021*0*
P u b lish J u ly 1 .1.15.21.1**1
D E G IS
N O T IC E O P
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N otice It hereby g ive n that I
am engaged In business at 111
Steep tec fu s e C ir c le . Sanford.
Samlnoto County. F lo rid a , under
the F ictitio u s N am e Ol G 4 C
C A B I N E T R Y , and that I Inland
to reg iste r said nam e w ith tho
D i v i s i o n o t C o r p o r a t io n s ,
T a lla h a sse e . F lo r id a . In a c ­
co rd ance w ith the p ro v isio n s ot
tho F ic titio u s N a m e Statute.
T o W it: Section *45 0*. F lo rid a
Statutes m l .
N elson C an d elen o
P ub lish : J u ly 15. I**l
DEG-111

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

HOURS

COSMETOLOGIST
w ith lotto w in g
i2 i m t

r c o n M c u t f v a V r t M _______ 7 0 m

Rm

D E A D LIN E S
T uesday thru Friday U N oon Tha O o y B o k jro P v A ie a a o n
Sunday And ktonday S X P .M Friday
A D J U S T M E N T S A M O C R b O T T S : In t t w b V b f t t o t b n E r r o r In B n
a d , t h e S a n f o r d H e r a ld w tH b o r a a p e n a lb lo f o r t t w U r a l
I n e e r tt o n o n ly a n d o n ly t o tt&gt;# e x t e n t o f t h e c o a t o f th a t
I n s e r t io n . P l ea s e c h a d s y u u r a d f o r a c c u r a c y t h a U r a l d a y It
ru n e .

ADOPTIONS
Free m ed c a l care, transpor
ta fie n . c o u n s e lin g , p r iv a t e
doctor p lus liv in g expense-.
B a r n i r V i C a ll A ttorn ey .- a n
F rtc k e r
lO M T lM a a e

23— L o s t &amp; F o u n d
O F O U N D D O O . M in ia t u r e
Greyhound, ir t h St A 11*1
area, tom ato M l W*1________
LOST CAT
M a la t a b b y ,
b ro w n ,b la ck . W inn D ia ls . 15th
I t, N eeds m edicInu 116117*
REWARD
t m i L o t i flop
tm e il g ray an d w h ile lh ,h
T tu. tomato, a 1 lbs L o tt from
R em ington O aks. L a k e M a ry
on * 'I7 N o le g s 113 H U
___
S M A L L . W H I T E D O O In
Id yllw iid e ara a Answ ers to
" M u n c h u " R ew ard O T M 6 i

25— S p e c ia lN o t ic e s
C H E E R L E A D E R C L A S S starts
toon Sign up now tor ttu
Chaerattes. ages a t l H ave
tu n . g a l in th a p e . m a k e
fru n d a Bu&lt;kf confidence and
aait esteem m t u t o r t i l i l ia
H O L Y ST J U O f . a p o s iu and
m a rty r, greet in virtu e , ric h in
m ira c le s N ear kin sm e n in
Jesus C h rttt To you I have
recourse fro m tha d rp th ot m y
h e a r t a n d h u m b ly b eg to
whom G od h a t g ive n such
great power to com a to my
a u d ie n c e In re tu rn I pro
m is a to m a k e you r nam e
known and causa you to be
invoked______________ ____ _
H O ST F A M I L I E S N E E D E D
H o st a n e ic h e n g e student
Iro m G e r m a n y . D a n m a rk .
Croatia, o r P o la n d Student*
w ill a r r iv e In A ug u st to attend
loca l high school F o r lurthar
inform ation c a ll I (06 111 *U *
or 401 514 4*54 __________
S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S Need a rid e
to d o cto r o r a n y w h e re In
Sen for O f C a ll Arm 114 1444

27— N u r s e r y &amp;
C h ild C a r e
A E C SM ALL DAYCARE
B ab u a . toddlers 1 hot m eals
F re e week I Dee, O T Q ua

For Excellent..
P ro fe s s io n a l C H I L D C A R E
Services, c a ll 111 1605________
M I C H E L L E 'S H O U S E • t l *
P E R W E E K ! O p e n * 10AM 11
M x P '. g M m i i s i s m i i e

P / T 16 II P M * 45 A M Sub
acuta c a r* t i p
h ig h ly da
su a b le but not req u ire d W ill
tra in S a la ry dependen t upon
experien ce Contact; Oebary
M an o r, at N. H w y 11*1. De
b o ry , F l m i l . ***-*41*

EXPERIENCED SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
S A n D e l M a n u fa c tu rin g la
a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s tor
E X P E R I E N C E D INDUS
T R I A L sew ing m achine oper
a tors o nly Accepting apptlca
Nona thru J u ly 2nd. then ag ain
sta rtin g J u ly 11th for h irin g to
begin J u ly 11th P a id ho lid ays
and vacation, a ir conditioned
le t iilly 1140 O ld Lake M a ry
R d . Sanford 407 H I OTO

M E D IC A L

AGENTS-REAL ESTATEI
N othing succeeds lik e success
We re w ell Into our V d decade
o l fram in g successful agents
No lic e n s e i
W e 'llh e to '
W AM O N R E A L T Y CORP
REALTORS
» ) JWO

NIGHT SHIFT WORKERS

P e o p le needed to p e rfo rm
vario u s dull** without
su pe rvision In a tasf paced.
•#k# charge environm ent f-utl
lim e position* only to be titled
Ihisw eoa Can J J * e * l7 ______
GOOD W O R KE R S N E C O C D
D a lly work, d ally p a r S4 to hr
and up Report 5 TO A M C o rner
of i f e i end P a rk Or H a feao

H o u rly A p p ly at lllC h lw h J
Theater 11*0 N H w y 17*1
a W a r l 60 _________________
P A R T T IM E H O U S E K E E P E R
l l f h Street area M u st have
d r iv e r 's lic e n s e C a ll BUI
111 15*0

PHONE PROS NEEDED
F o r strong badge deal C a ll
___________ *1) l it * __________

Hairstylist

APPOINTMENT SETTERS
WANTED

F u ll or P a r t tim e SS00 hr 4
up P a id vacation* and to m e
p a id H o lid a y a l F a n t a s t i c
Same m Sanford H I *045
H A P P Y E L V E S Ch ildcare L k
M a r y , rued* e » p . o rg e nlte d
C a regiv er Teechev W in e lu re !
Ipve tor C h ild re n U 1 11*4

P / T eves Good attitude req
II 110/hr w ith bonus
5 »ePM
S E R IO U S IN Q U IR IE S O N L Y !
c a l l i n a m _____
A S S E M B L Y W O R K E R S . Long
te rm assignm ent In the San
fo rd a re a Car A phone a
m ust I A p p ly today at O P C
Tem porary Services 11(5 S
I ! « L * * 5 J J 1 1 _____ _________

* * POSTAL JOftS * *
Start *1141 hr
* benefits
F o r application A into, c a ll
I 111*11)4 I t t O 7am 16pm 7

ASSEMBLERS
H and m a ll work S i per hour
N ever a feat H elp Personnel.
*1*010*_______________ ___

Peiminent And
Tfmp Positions
Com p any w ill tr a in people
w ith phone s k ills E x p . not
necessary H ours M o n Thurs,
i t P M . S e t . * A M I P M Fl ex
ibl# on hours when perm#
nenl Salary plus bonus
Sr c ltlie n s w elcom ed'
Never A F e e '
Help Per senna I al* (to*
T E L E M A R K E T I N G . Work
fro m home settin g up ap
p oln tm ants F la t ra te plus
commission
C a l l 7 10PM
m o t i f ________________
WAREHOUSE A N D O E N t R A l
LABOR HELP N E IO E O l
Bonus tor d riv e rs A ll shifts
a v a ila b le O alty p a r. no tee
R eport ready to xxora 1 J ) am
In d u stria l Lab or Svc
t o il
P r o n c h A v No phono celts
W A R E H O U S E W orkers. Strong
C lean cut peopla some heavy
liftin g at different |ob toe#
lio n s In S a n lo rd L u n g wood
area Aepiy today a l G P C
Tem porary S e rvle ts I&gt;*1 5
ii- n . * * s - n is

WAREHOUSE
U N I tO t O

Pre School Teacher
N a a d id tor E a r ly intervention
P re K p ro g ra m
Appli cant
m ust have a C D A H ig h scope
tr a in in g is a p lu s S a la ry
negotiable, pleas* ta ll
407 » 1 0407 if you are inter
estod end w ish to have an

M u st have own tools E eperl
a n te required
E X P E R I E N C E D P A IN T E R
m u st have own tools A p p ly in
person * A M 1 P M Sanford
P a in t and Body 1*61 Country
C lu b Rd. Sanford P I **44
IT S i A S Y
W ORK TODAY
G E T P A I D T O O A V I S P R IN T
S T A F F IN G
P H ttl

ASSEM BLERS

TEACHERS
C O A / A A or above deqree in
e a rly childhood education tor
center In prncei* o l N A E V C
accreditation F re e ch ild care
a v a ila b le f O E I t ) east

_ * » n -----------------------------------

Huvy Codwon Body Parson

F u ll tim e plus helpers! F o r
cabinet m tg p la n ' im m ediate
openings. I l l 1*01

R estaurant m anagem ent exp
p re fe rre d H igh school gred
so m e co lleg e p re f A p p ly
T aco B ell. Sanlord

TELEMARKETERS

* 1 0 A M J X P M and 1 1 0
P M 16 » P M F /T and P /T
sh ifts On tha |eb tra in in g
provided AAwSt e n ro ll in a
c e r t i f i e d n u rs in g ass i s t a nt
c o u rse an d show p ro o f o l
com pletion w ithin *0 day* or
experienced and reg iste red to
challenge the tost w ith in 1 was
of tm p lo y m e n l D ru g tree
w ork place Contact D*A*ry
M an or, a* N Hwy 17*1. Oe
b o ry , F l n ? n a a a a o a

$$»250-J400S$$

A G E N T S A V O N E a rn to 5 0 \
N o d o o r/d o o r G u a ra n le e d
40% discounts S a n d lM l 11*1

Security Officers
Licensed. Santord sta rt Im
mediately
U p t o IS
w/**p*rtonc*. b tn e lit* a v a il
abto. 407 0*4 4151____________

NUR SING ASSISTANT

MOTIVATED
PEOPLE!

71- H e l p W a n te d

O aktaw n P a rk C em etery and
F u n e ra l Horn* Is looking tor 1
fu ll tim e em ployees tor pre
need counseling C a ll Oat#
M y e r s .......................... C T &lt;)*l

SHIFT MANAGER WANTED

RN

M u st be abto to (pray, brush
an d ro ll. M l 4)11. Iv.m sa

Scfw dU m g may Irc4uda Horatd A d iuriaa* at t » coal o4 an addbonal day
C a ncel whan you g M w e s m P a y otdy tar dayoycao ad tuna M u n o w n e d
U e e k J daocrtpBon tor tastoct roauts Copy must to*ow accwfXabto typo­
graphical term •Commercial frequency

21— P r s o f i a l s

M E D IC A L

EX?. PAINTER

• 3 Un** Minimum

NO W ACCEPTW G

E L D E R C A R E w ilt p rovid e total
c a rs lo r one e ld e rly fem ale. 5
d a y s a w k I t h r s 111 101*

F u ll lim a , 7 1 and II 7 Charge
N u rs e fo s iU o n s E x p e rie n c e in
tong te rm c a re h ig h ly da
a lr e a b le . D r u g tr e e w o rk
place. C o a t e d t Dabary
M a in e , a* N . H w y !7-*t. Da
b a ry , F l H 7 H . *ae~44T*

U p to SJ5K Com p bene . 40IK
R efundable t o e ..........414*10)

1 t t f M ____________________11.11 ■
R *(*• art pdf Iaaus , batad on 3 arm

12— E l d e r ly C a re

LP N

DOCK WORKER

a a M M e u t f v a t i n t M -----------o i m Rm

SALES COUNSELOR

M E D IC A L

111*114 o r

4B hr* f . P a id Insurance and
benefit*. CU aa D license req
C le a n d riv in g record. K n o w l­
edge o l O rla n d o area * p i us I
A p p ly HOI S Sanlord A v t

1 4 o o n c « c U t v B t 1 n iM -----------S f t a l M

fc00A JL-fc90P .il.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

71— H elp W a n te d

71— H t t p W a n te d

M a itla n d U n lo ad ing loading
*5 (wr hour I 41 A M 1 P M
M a n F r l O w n p h o n e end
transportelion a m ust t i n t '
a le e 1 Help Personnel, s)s ale*

WELDERS
AH types H irin g now tos* 'e q
Refundable tee
al* »t0i

THIS WEEK'S

K t flM lJ iM t o fiH
R esponsible per eon to c a re
tor an im al* A fa c ility 1 7 pm ,
M on
F rl
A A lto rno lo
W k end* 1S1I W. ISfb SI.

Assistant Muntifunc* PtnoR
N e e d e d tar L a k e M a r y
ap artm en t com m unity M u st
have etoctr»&lt;el and A /C e»p
A p p ly at
St Crete A p art
m an ta . 711 S a c ra l H a r b o r
Lane, L a k e M a ry ,
P IT O T

L A B O R E R S N E E D E D D a ily
w o rk, daffy pay. R lg M Hand
M a o . I M S I f *1 U o g u o e d .
♦ H - im r o p a r la T a a m ._______

CAFETERIA WORKER

A UtU* lit t l EmytMRf
114 M ille r Road. Santord
F r id a y and Satu rd ay » 5
A 1 F A M I L Y S A L E . Thur A
F r l , bpaf. m otors tows, and
too m u ch to mow font • 4 . I t t l
S.

Landscapers

NO N IGHTS. NO W E E K
E N D S P a r t lim a Include* a ll
ctee&gt;t up and soma cash ierin g
H o u r s II H ) »
Mon F rl
t i- h r Sand re sem es O N L Y
to Ja b e r's Cato. IM I H ir e r
Laao D rive . Sanford F L 11771

F u ll lim a . C O L Class D r*
g ufred m a m ______________
L I V E IN N E E D E D . F a r a d a y a
wk. fob Clean and caoa m
re tu rn tor roam , board and
s a la ry g P i l S n a n a o w

Cashier
P a r t lim a A p p ly In Person
S a n lo r d E a t e n . C o rn e r ol
H ig h w ay 17 *1 and L a k e M a ry
B ir d E O E

Cashier

H U G E S ALE
M a n y tools, d o m e s and a lev
of everything else I F B I A
SU N • 7 l l l * C E L E R Y Av e

L O O K I N G F O R kaatura outgo
mg in d iv id u a l to tra in m the
U p h a is ta r y b u sin e ss E a p
he lpful B U T no* necessary
**60 par h r Sand resum e to
B lin d Bo* 106. P O Bo* taal.
Santord. F L 11771____________

F u l l lim e an d p a r t lim a
needed A p p ly a t
Co asta l
M a r l . 1*1* O r ia a d a A v a .,

MAIDS

CONSTRUCTION

KAYW000 SUBDIVISION
1400 O regon A y * . Santord
Thurs. F r l, Sdt * 1 F u rn itu re .
clo th in g , and k it Items______

M E D IC A L

2 FAMILY SALE
*7* B right M a a d o * D r H ills o l
L k M a ry . F r l Sat I II. H U G !
H U G E SALE

F r l Sat 4101 C H R IS T I A N P L
T o o ls . F u r n . b a b y tu rn ,
clothes and etc H 4 n t i

11 P M 7A M Shift M l lim e
A p p ly in parson
la k e v U w
N u rsin g C fr . *1* E Ind SI
Santord

Wanted
C a ll * A M 1 1 A M
Serg io’s Malian R estaurant
m *6«)

107 Skogen Court Santord Oft
of upset* R d B aseball cards
book s, m a g i
toys bi kes
tupperware. m isc Sat * ’

M ULTI FAM ILY
LPN S

DAYTIME HOSTESS
PART TIME WAITRESS

Toy* and c l o t h e s
push
m e e e r, dresier, end m isc
F r l and Sat * I I O N L V
1*0) East Ind Street

YARD SALE

H o n a s f a n d d t p a n d a b l* .
M o n F r l M u s t p a ts p oly
g rap h ! H I 7***_____________

A ll phases Ta S1I hourly
Ratundablo lae
41**111

TODDLER

C a ll In ywur g arag e ta le ad by
II noon an Tuesday and take
a d v a n ta g e *1 o u r a p a c la l
gar eg# sat* ad p r t c a ll C a ll
ClAaaifiad now tor detail*!

MAIDS

CHIU) CARE HELPER

SALE OF THE YEAR
n years at treasu res W,t*
says get rid ot Toot*, ip o rtt
equlpm anl, fu rnitu re clothes
you name it P ric e d tro sell
Sat • ! Idyllxytlde oft 4*A I t!
A ld a a n D rive

•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN

F / T . M F . 1 4 W ill tra in .
u n ifo rm s M a lty M aid . 7*7 1067

W ith d a y c a r* e x p e rie n c e
o nly L a k e M a ry m 1*50

MULTI FAMILY
B a a a b a ll c a r d s c h ild r e n s
c la th e * and b o o s t shoes
Stuffed anim al*
FRIDAY
only I A * III La rk wood O rty t

4215 SA M tsC m l Ln.

T O O L S . O U N S . c h a in saw*,
haueehold. fu rn itu re T ru ck s
10* N 4th Street, i n *111
Saturday and Sunday. * T

Woodbine tu b F r l Sa l I I
F u ry -. Cloth**, toy* A m isc
household O ff 417

31— M e d ic a l

LET A

F L O R I D A C O R F It an outpa
l ie n l r e h a b ilit a t io n l a c i ly
p ro v id in g tha id eal service
you need F o r inform ation or a
lo u r c a ll........ ......
*401*04

SPECIALIST

43— L e g a l S e r v ic e s
S M IL E I t W ill*, pow er o l at
torney. alrn p U d ivo rce, legal
^ M t d A it o C a jt t M in ^

,r.

55— B u s in e s s
O p p o r t u n lt la s
SO D A / S N A C K vending routo
a v a ila b le tS.**S fin a n c in g
a v a ila b le C a ll 116*110 J im
Custom V ending

*1— M o n e y to L e n d

DO IT!

r v v i^ \ s

BIUS DUE?
H ave I P la c e to P a y I Slash
M onthly P aym en ts I G e l Cred
Itor s O ff Y ou r B ack I E a sy
Q u a lify N o C o lla te ra l I 111 1555

71— H e lp W a n te d

f ib

EM P LO Y M EN T
323-5176

i g g w . u ih S t .
A D O T O Y O U R IN C O M E
S E L L A V O N HOW I
c a l l m a m or m a u *

AG ASST.
Perm anent, fu ll lim e ta J l/ h r
Duties Include grow ing vege
ta b le s an d o rn a m e n ta ls In
f u id and greenhouse, applying
p e t lic td tt and la rm m ainte
nance H S g ra d and 1 yrs
t ip
F o r a p p lic a t io n c a ll
H O *71S o r w rite 1100 E C e U ry
A v t S a n f o r d F L 11111
E E O / A t t l r m a l l v e A c t io n
E m p lo y e r___________________

Legal N otice
V E H I C L E A U C T IO N
This auction w ill be hold on
Ju ly i t . I t t l at 10 a m . a l m t
A la ta y a T r a it, O v ie d o P ro
tp t c liv e bidder* m ay Inspect
vehicles on tha d ay before. Irom
f:0 0 a m . u n til 4:00 p m . Term *
a re cash o r c e rtifie d funds only.
T lb b ttt* In c / A lo m a S tm o ra n
Towing reserves the rig h t to
occopt o r ra fa c f an y and at!
bids.
1*01 A M C S p irit Burgundy
F L A I K lM t O A M
I M H yun dai E . c e l G L B lue
K M H L F I3 JX JU 1 7 M *
Publish: J u ly IS. 1t*l

L a w n S e r v ic e

P lu m b in g

■ X P E R T LAW N SE R V IC E .
M i n o r ) * * Sad. M u lc h . F a r
tlllio c Buahog a e y rs exp

P LU M B IN G R E P A IR AN D
S E R V IC E
Free estimate*.
U ^ C F C O T ia M lT a O J O L T o m

K E N N IS O N L A W N C A R I P ro
L o w r at #*, C o m m e r c ia l
R esid en tial L k . A In*. 077 4*77

F LO R IO A ST AT E R E Q U I R E S
a ll contractor* be registered
o r c e rtifie d To v e rify a stale
co ntra cto rs license call
t (00 M l 7(40 O c c u p a tio n a l
Lice n se s ar* required by tha
county and can be v erified by
c a llin g 111 I IM. ext. 7*11

L A R R Y 'S L A W N A T R I E .
P ro fe s s io n a l S e rv ic e . F ra *
E at L k / ln a i n 14*i

C O N C R I T l , Stock, glass htk..
pool dock* A pool plastering
l S y r i tx p l-e*l-l***4S*

R A N D Y ’S D U A L I T Y LAW N .
Comptoto pro c a r* sine* 1W6
C leo n up*, hauling 111-0714

TIpoHnSr

T O M A J E F F '* L A W N C A R E t
R es /Com m . dependable, low
rates I Fro# a t f ............ 110 7670
T U R F T R I M M E R S L o w rales.
F re e o a f . R at. A com m . 1
flm o /y r. round I Rat. .111-11**

H A R D W O O D F L O O R IN O
Install la n d in g FtoisM ng
T O M O L S E N l-* IM 1 4 11*F

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

H o m e I m p r o v emenT

R E S ./ C O M M . V in y l S id in g .
A lu m
F r a m in g , D r y w a ll,
Door*. Roofing. Concrete
m a n
so . Baum , c b c s i n **

L a k e C le a r in g

A l DOES IT ALL

W E E D R e m o v a l, L a k a tr o n l
R e te n tio n Pond*. C r e a t i v e
t C a ll * H *511
L a n dIM
Mg
o m t.

F l* If rig h t at a p rice you can
afford. L k 'd / ln * F ro m ale rt
to lln la h C arpentry, p lum b
Ing. e le c tric a l, and roofing
svc* » y r s of axpartonco No
|ab too b ig o r sm all. C alf
w - i a n a rm -1 0 0 * I* br*.

C a r p e n try
C A R P E N T E R A ll kind* e l homo
re p airs, painting A ce ra m ic
l ll ^ lc h o r d G r o a ^ ^ T lM J T l

io n r y
B R I C K . M a ck , atone, atocca.
and caocrefa. A lto rep air*. No
lob too sm a ll F ra * **&gt;. *70-10*7
T W P M A S O N R Y . B r k k , B lo ck.
S tu c c o . C o n tro l* . R en o v a
H o n e U c T lo t j ^ ^ ^ lim *

C le a n in g S e r v ic e
C H R I S T I A N W O M A N will clean
v acan t'occu p ie d residence or
o ltlc e a M o n S a in * » 5 to

P re s s u re C le a n in g
D U N R IT E . Clean drive w ays,
r e a l* . e##l d e c k * , w a lk s ,
h a u s a s ^ r e e a s C T lM ll^ ^ ^

^ ^ r e s T W a u li n g
A F F O R D A B L E H A U L IN O W ill
clean, haul Irash Y ou nam e lit
W a 'll haul Ilf Call 111*1*4

__________ T ile ___________
C E R A M IC T IL E A M A R B L E
aa p o ria n ca e In a ll phases,
custom work, p aintin g ano
o lh ar home repair* *07 751
*H * o r *04 1ST *7*0___________ I
E X P E R I E N C E D in alt phases
of 111* installation In s . lie ,

M A K E Y O U R P IT C H !

J?

P a Int i

\ i l l ’r l l i s r
S / i

H o m e R e p a ir s
M A R I N O Homo Repair,
•poc la lliln g In s m a ll Iaba.
C R C 6S4W0. P re * #*»; » U £ ! 4 _

) mu
I ’n

liu

w ’/ i r s N

M o n th .

I fill

Y o u l touch a* gw I

CUSTOM PAINTINOI
P o w e r. I n i . a i l . . H e'd. In*
P ro * B aflm ato*........... M l-B ia S
K A H P A IN T A N O R E M O D E L
F ro * Estim ate*I R a ft.. I k .
W a H b W o a m a fll *♦»«!**

/

rri \ Pu\
* h is s ifin l.

Ini'

1

Tree Service
E C H O L S T R E E SVC U c '* . ins
" L a f the Professionals do it ”
F re e estimates
lim n

R E P L A C E P a rfc la i tot. polo A
b ld g secu rity light* P a in t A
^ j j j iir a ^ S W S 7*10116

C o n c re te
A D D I T I O N S B l o c k , k lu c c o .
slab*, walk*, patios, demon
Hon L k M m . * » » . * * M M «
C A P T A IN C O N C I I T I . W ayne
B aal. 1 M a n Q u a lify Opar#
Hon! n t U a / M A T S B l

•
J

wholesale III* prices a n taaa

O u ts id e L ig h t in g

S P R I N O C L E A N I N G . In
outside R e n ia lt A lso w kly.
rale* Wlndoxvs. tool l l M T t l

;

an ad In tv* daaadtod For
•grand Siam* knpoct.

c e ll 322*2611

Sanford H erald

Is

loir

I s

.T J 'J J h l l

DIO-11*

I

'
,
s

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 15, 1993 - SB
71— H e lp W a n te d
W H O L E S A L E P L A N T nursary
L A B O R E R S needed 14 10 hr
Long*rood M S 1777__________
I I N IS M W K I K L Y , W ork *1
hem* at fo ur o n n pace F o r
m ore Inlor. Send 4 SASE to
i n Awa y P u b lish in g III S
Oleander Sanford. F L &gt;1111

91— A p a r t m e n t s /
H o u se lo S h a re
P R I V A T E M other In la * apt
B a lh fu ll kitchen. unfurn /
turn Includes u til IX) 0444

93— R o o m s to r R e n t
C L E A N R O O M S, lin g to S tirlin g
i r i r w k . K it c h e n . p h a n a ,
la u n d ry , v id e o g t m t t . a l l
street p a rk in g ))* 411)
C L E A N . F U R N I S H E D raam .
* / k l t a v a il i l l * k . I l l i* c
Q o * n lo * n M7 K »1
____
L I V I NO. B E D ., B A T H . P r lv
m l I lk ) share h i t . A L S O
Efticerscy er/bath p rlv ant
t H * k p lo t dap Sat tor cabla.
turn or unturn l i t I10I

95— R o o m / B o a r d
L IV E IN M A T U R E F E M A L E
companion tor e ld e rly woman
R oo m 'b o ard p ro u id rd Salary
nacj H a lt rag
H I )&gt;41

97— A p a r t m e n t s
F u r n is h e d / R e n t

NOTICE
A ll ra n ta l a n d ra a l a t t at t
advertisem ents or* subject to
itva Federal F a ir Itou ting Act.
w h ic h m a k t t It llla g a l to
ad vartita any p ra ttra n c t llm
I t a lia n a r d i s c r i m i n a t i o n
batad on raca. c o w ryllg lon
handicap, fa m ilia l ita tu t
. or nalicacal orv

IK E M A R T Fum .uhad afti
Ic w n c y l l M m o I n s e c u r it y
111 I4M
O N I R O R M I b a lh r um thad
g o lf o a n c y . Sanford S i l l mo
iio o daposii
m m *
IV A T E . M l a* * bdrm 4 pi
ty pa -ta d M l tit* b ain
‘( • u n iiy Using I Pow er watar
fg rn u n a d U H m o plus dap
■
NO P
I E T S ___________ W M M
J S A M FF O R D D ow n tow n a ra a
II I hdrm opt U tU ilia t
rdad R a a u v a l la ’ 111 M M

^ 9 9 — A p a rtm e n ts
U n f u rn is h e d / R en t
R U U T I L I T IE S P a id ! I bdrm
' Being rm K it w 'FpIC nan
RpA* fra th pa m l AC t i t )
p lu s S )* l N O P E T S

i toot

__________

|§J|« O U IE T . I
trnlga stove
ar I t M onro*
cad Enas i l l i

b d rm a p t .
watar me I ,
R aatonab'y
u s ___

7 E N IE N T A N D S P A C IO U S
IL L G E N E V A OAR OENS
tT s
m ia * *
| K E J E N N IE A P A R T M E N T S
i B drm A p is A v a ila k la Fra*
ilr r gad l i t t i l t
S R G E 1 Badraam 1 i ba«n 1
I story. Fp H
p riv y d . ta c c
11W mo n a tg r. t***&gt; •"
Ciudad 11*47) 2 ___

Lavan's Unding
I A 1 B D R M V IL L A S
R E N T T O OW N
C R E D IT N O P R O B L E M
p p l'c a t ie n t to r t B d rm
as N o* Being A ccaplad

323-4923
MARINER'S VILLAGE
• t a k e Ad* I b d rm 1)40 mo
Ib d rn v VdO m e and up

3731670

Quiet Single Story
Cassia b e rry . I b d rm
h 7
d rm
A ttic Storaga! C a ll
' tor app o in tmant S H t i l l
t N F O R O l B a it Kapf Sac rat I
[P o o l A L a u n d ry . I &amp; 1
(b e d ro o m s Convam ant io&lt;*
ir t o n l C a ll P a l. m aA S O _______
k N F O R O W M t lt d . St araa &gt;
| b d rm apt. a a l in kitchan 11)1
. w a te r/garbage 111 11S3
B D R M a l l l c l a R c y . q u ia t
11)00 mo tw o dap u til m d
■ m il* ) west o l I 4 on 44 M ) 1111

K I T *N* C A R L Y I . E ® by U r r s W r lx h l

99— A p a r t m e n t s
U n f u r n is h ed / R e n t

114— W a re h o u s e
Space / Rent

1 B E D R O O M . 1)11 month plus
l l l i se cu rity deposit A ra la r

M a M w ith II ft c a llin g s I phat*
powar Su itable tor anything,
heavy toning 100 S M y rtle w /
p riv a te o fllc e A v a ila b le now
I t 10/m o 4)7 M l *441_________

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

m

d ii

101— H o u se s
F u r n is h e d / R e n t
C O M F O R T A B L E 1 B O R M . )•&gt;
b ath horn* A ll a m a n lllt s
s m / m o p lus dap M i U M
S A N F O R D . C o u n try hom o )
bdrm tiO O 'm o plus a M etric
Was! S R M N o p a ls I » D l l

103 — H o u ses
U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t
C A S S E L B E R R Y Hous* lo rant
w ' pur chat* option. V i . pool.
a ir, dishw asher 1710 a a i T U I
O E L T O N A . C u la C la a n . 1/1.
carport, I yr Irav* SHO mo
R atoroncos f M l i t U M ______
H ID D E N L A K E Santord/Lafca
M a ry ) bd rm . 1 bth. tancad
y a rd 1411/mo c a ll M I T B it

HUD HOMES,
Bank torectosures and V A
ra t* lo t from tVO* down
Why r a n t! Tha H illim a n Gre««.
i n D l l __ ___________ .^Realtor
JUST O U T S ID E O f S A N F O R D
) / l . lg H yin g rm . a a l In
kitchan. A /C , callin g tons. &gt;g
bath P ia n ty of tio rag * and
d o t a l tp a ca N aw ly p am lad
m tld* and out 1410 p lus dap
N o p a ls I D I S I I __________
L A K E M A R Y N ice, cant H /A
) b d r m . I M b a th , b lin d s ,
tancad yd L a ta M a ry schools
1400 plus sac 104 4M W O
L A K E F R O N T tancad corn ar lot.
J/1. tirap l. fa m ily rm . carp o rt
Qutol naar 11 n
ram odalad
S l l l m o L M I D D M N o pals
S A N F O R D I «r. . by* 4 b d rm , I
b a t h 1 .000 s q
It
P o o l,
workshop. I acr* No patsl
ll. H O P p r j ig R aalty H I 0&gt;7Q
S A N F O R D , 1 /t N O U S I.
A traag*. horsas *1 lowed, on
laka SHOO m o M l 7004

WASHER / D R YER
condition 117)771 4)4)
___
a lte r a p m

lo r t a le . I k . 000 o r r e n t ,
furnished. SkOO'mo O ffice W
SR *4 C a li U S 1 * 7 7 _______
H I O H T C L U B 444I tq . II.,
T itu s v ille fu lly equip 11)00
m o L iquor He av a il I lk OIOS

N E W Sanford o tlic e s end or
warehouses 400J 100 sq If
Special SH I me JD1114
O F F I C E . 11«« sq . II. B o i l
dow ntow n Sanford location
i l / 1 m o 17* OIOS____
S A N F O R D Cam m
'444 iq tl
a la a ft H ig h tra ttic area
Jim OoyM. S ta n tlia m Raalty.

iwt. moots____________

S A N F O R D O tfu * spa&lt;a Vac
sq tt buildm g total t)00 sq
It p»r o tfita u n if M l 7004

173— W a n te d to R e n t
USED CAR LOT WANTED
TORENT

a S A N F O R O . 1/1 w single gar
&gt;g room s laneod yd CM A
S i l l m o 1)10 sac
O L O C H A R S O R . 1/1 w dan
u rn
pool * ' [ o c u fli fptc
dbl g a ' i 111) m o 1*00sac
Stom trem Raalty. In&lt;
' W# M anag* yaur Ham*.
Ilka It was *u&lt; awn " J im Dayl*
111 1*»1 AfSar 1PM 1)8 111)

F H A O R V A A S LOW AS I N
G o v i F o r e c lo s u r e s
R*
p o s A s s u m e 7ao Q u a li t y
H o m a s l O w n e r tm a n c ln g
Seminole. O ran ge V olusia
Sanford Mss than 11.000 dawn
a R t n a v i tad t / l . appliances,
fenced y e 'd carp o rt. S D *OC
e Renovated lik e n e * 1 i Ipic
appi new p ain t 111*00
• Feel H a m a t O n c u id e ta c 1 7
rm o v a M d garage 147 too
• l / t en &lt;s e c re t R enove'ad
appuences fenced &gt;d 14) V00
• 1 / t 'i. D M v q t t iia e n e w l L lv
d ining fa m ily rm i l l tu)
• 4/1 M nced g arag e 1)4 *00
Assum e Ne O u a litie sl
• 1/1 en I/) a c re ! Fenced cut da
sac. d**dand street S44 *00
A d d itio n al hom es a v a il Lass
th an S IK dow n'
P A O L A 4 1 on on 1 14 at res
P a stu re w ith sle b M I l l s *00

C O M F O R T A B L E . S A F E , con
vancmt to Ipwn S i l l mo plus

Lk
Mery/Lenqw eed Peel
H em e 1 1 , g a ra g e liv in g
d n m g .ta m rm s MI.SOO
Lk M a ry peel ham* 47 . liv in g
d ining fa m ily rm . SIOO *00
S A cres 04 Seclusion! Contem
p ore ry 1 7 two story fplc K r
pjrch w s p a
detached
garag*. workshop. t&gt;)4 too

L A K E M A R Y , I b d rm . C H A .
w 'w c a rp a l c a ll tan. m inis.
lancad yd. t l ) * m ___________
U N F U R N I S H E O . I id e m ,
naw ly rym odalad. 1711 W )rd
St F ro n t apt S ID mo or M l
wt
p lus sac 1 D D M C a ll
tjalora S JO A m A altar | » P m

1 B D R M ., I Bath. Seen porch.
C H A o lta p p ls . I n carport
H I 9001 or I D 4M4

114— W a re h o u s e
Space / Rent
L O N C W O O O /L A K E M A R T
M id sir* slorag * warahousas
400 tOO 1400 sq It F ra* rent
* 1 1 mo Mas*, from IM S ' mo
____________D I O llS ___________
S E C U R IT Y- W A R E M OUSE 4*A
and O ld L a k * M a ry B l* d
•1 ,1 )0
1.000 sq It Ot
llC '* * r th o u s * ‘ F in ish e d ol
IK * spac* also avaiiab M
Kapaobo R ealty, 1*7*11 II

© r a n
T H IS S U M M IR

|at Sanford Court Apartments
•SingleStorydesign•nooneshort *Friendljon-siteUini|oi
CniqueApotmentExins
orbdor
•Security■TorT«rPact
*Studio, \ t 3Bdnn.
OfSCad
AffordableApts,
•romlshed/UnfurnishedStudios

3301 Sanford Ave.1Sanford * 323-3301

PAin L Bf 1H OSBCIPhf
V M lIU RI i P B O P f RI If S
J / l 4/b4

BATEM AN REALTY
L ie R eal E sta te B roker
1440 Sa n lord A ,*

B ra n d new ) / ) for o nly Ml.S00
on your lot No money down il
equity in your lot

PETERSON HOMES M l lis t

HALL REALTY
31J W

• w i t h d I J l i m n l l l Ira sr-

2714RidgewoodAvt,
330-5204

G O V T R E P O S bank foreclo
s u ra s , a ssu m e no q u a lity
m ortgages' Low ntAnthly
• BANK FO RECLO SURE 11
cent H /A . scr porch, nice
neighborhood
SM 000
4 HUD HOME
4 ' I in
P in e cre sl G reet horn** Low
down
SlO's
*1 B D R M on doubM tot * 1
car garage A ll appi includes
washer dryer, aal in kitchan
5 upar n* ighborhood 1)4*00

Ji m I Minsfitld, 373-7371
l i t III*

S A N F O R D TO) Woodmar* B ir d
J bdrm fa m ily rm naw A/C .
n*w c a rp a l St M down FM A
S47 100
D 4 7)44
________ A tw e ll R ealty
S P A C IO U S 1 b d rm . I bath, t car
garag* 1 • yrs naw Fenced
plus m uch mor*&lt; O nly M t *00
Ju lia Boyd (traitor H iggins
and Haath 14* 1744 horn* of
flea or ISi&gt; Skkk m ain o ffice

STAIRS PROPERTY
M ANAGEM ENT A REALTY
*•7 i d n n / i t i s i 7*

OVER

S I 36
STENSTROM
REALTY, I NC.

Wt* list And sell
muff property than
Anyone in the Greater
Sanlord lake M iry area.
• L A K E M A R Y ! Cut* A Ctoan
I h l v t / l Is p e r f e c t f o r
N e w l y w e d s or R e t i r e e s !
Fenced Y a rd A M o re l 147 400'
• H IS T O R IC A L C H A R M ! StaM
ly 1/1'» 1 Story Hom e on 11
A c r e ! Shading O aks Apt ,
P o o l A C o m p l e t e l y R*
m odeled!
S lat MOt
• O R E A T I N V E S T M E N T P ro p
e r t y l N e w ly P a in te d
O u a d ra p le y w / ) / 1 in each
u n itl A S S U M E N O Q U A U F Y I
1170 000'

322-2420
321-2720
114) P a rk D r . Sanlerd
441 W. Laka M e ry B l . Lk. M a ry

•In Our 37th Ytif*

f lib t S f . S . t n lo it l

L A K E M A R Y 1 bdrm 1 bath
w /ta m lly room , cen tral H A.
fenced yard, oarage, walk lo
g o lf c o u rt* 144 100 O w ner
lin an cin g w ith 111.000 down
L A K E F R O N T H O M E . I bdrm
w ith fa m ily rm . U nique view
Ire m k itc h e n a n d re a r o l
horn*! tnsid* u tility , carp o rt
O n ly S U M K

T U S K A W I L L A A R E A . B u ilt
tttO 4 b d rm . 7 bath Lg
screen porch, fenced yard,
b a c k y a r d p la y g ro u n d
For
s a l* o r le a s * p u r c h a s e
S ID 000
.............. ASS IM P
ISII M A P L E A V E . S A L E OR
R E N T W /Optl# n. C lo se lo
schools. Shopping. 1/1, living
A d ining 1 X 0 0 0 S 0 4 S D 0 II1

321-5774

I BO RM . 1 BATH COTTAOE.
Appliances, storage shed IU 4
M o h a n ) A r * SM 000 1)0 IQS)

DELTONA

*t H O M E S O N 1 LO T 1 7 . la m
rm A l / t tor M om 140.to o !
*4/) O R E A T for Ig fa m good
toe. quiet, sa l* 'le a se opt. Ilea
term s 114 S00»

D E L U X E .D E L U X E .D E L U X E
Naw 4 b d rm 1 bath with a il
!h* o it r a v included! O nly SI
total down Good, bad or no
c re d it B an kru p tcy O K C a ll
J im at R E IQ t.iO / t i l 1*44
E X C H A N O E O R S E L L your
p rop erty located anyw here!
Investors R e a lty, 7741111
F A N T A S T IC B U Y I 1 W rm . I
bth. C H A paddle fans, new
p a in t Insid* and out, naw
kltcTwn cabinets stove, treed
tot M u st seal S ir 0004*41011
LK. M A R Y
1 7 w ith la m ily
rm . Ig treed lot M l 000
W M a lic /o w s k l I D 7 ti)

Welcome Home
to
Country
LaApts.

153— A c r e a g e
L o ts / S a le
O C A L A N A T 'L FO R ES T
Wooded to tit Sl.tlO each no
money dow n11/1 41 m onthly
1 400 SY1 WI4

CALL ANYTIME

331-0751.............. 371 7357
BUILDER'S SPECIAL

L O N G W O O D 4 l's . cent M/A.
fenced O w ner lln en cln g or
Mas* option Only til.SCO
________ 111 t i l tssq________
P O O L H O M E D w / tu iM m deck.
prlv
la n c e . J / I ' s . n e a r
schools, v e r t s . carpet, new
r o o t, d in in g rm
&amp; se rn .
p o rc h l 111000 1 D I M I _______

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1/2 month FREE

1B7— S p o rtin g Goods

O n tu i)c

AA C a rn a l. Inc

105— D u p le x T r ip l e x / R e n t

L*7i*»9*
L A K E M A R Y C o ry p riv a t* I t
on* b lock I of L a ta M a ry
B ir d Naw co ra m ic tH* and
c a rp a l S41S plus On* month
k tc u rlty _______
I D 4111

/ ■ it
t a« 4(t “ s
W 4 IV H 1
C 1*41 *y MSA M

C a ll tor d atailst

VINIURI i PROPlRTlfS

4/7 H O U S E . Lb. M a ry , naar L k
M a ry C ity C lr uo o m o C a ll
111 1004 or I D m i

• G R U N D IO , dual recorder A
dual p lay er. 7 speakers cam*
tro m G e rm a n y
1190 llr m
M I 0)S4

155— C o n d o m in iu m s
C o -O p / S ale
SANFORD / LAKE MARY
A R E A I b d 'm I bth Jrd
floor A 'C . vaulted callin g ,
screen porch A m am lies in
elu d e
p o o l Iannis, sauna,
la k a a c c a s t 1)4 *00 Reduced
)/) 41)/

1 5 7 - M o b ile
H o m e s / S ale

414 1141

Stenstrom Rentals

l / t S A N F O R D , la n c a d .
spacious t e n a month tc io
d a p o tii seesaaoor MJ4540

183— T e le v is io n /
R a d io / S tere o

141— H o m e s fo r S a le

118— O ffic e
S p a c e / Rent

Good

• W A S H E R . S « a r t K tn m o re
W orks p r e a l1 14 U P 1144

MODULAR OFFICE BLDO

AFF0PD AB1 f itO M I^

1/1, O A R A O B . W /D hookup
kern porch C M A &gt;110 mo
1)00 dap 1/4 M I t » 1 I D a M 7

U S E D B E D D I N G S A L E H k.ng
Queen. F u ll A Single 14! a Sal
A UfH L A R R Y S M a r l M l-S IM

117— C o m m e r c ia l
R e n ta ls

141— H o m e s lo r S a le

S B M M . t B T H . Coni H /A .
tancad. scraan porch dock
S a H p iu s d a p o s iin ia ia

• U P H O L S T E R E O CHAIR.
Beige v in y l se a l and back
cushions So lid wood arm s and
tram * Tough, w ill Iasi lor
y e a n Good tor den porch
#tr E v te lto n t O nly 111 MO
0*0* ___
_____

ll.to q A N D 14.0b# tq It Dock
high, lir a sp rin k le d SOI Cor
n w a ll Road W G a r n a il W hite.
B ro k er
m /M l

S A N F O R D 1 i Stove. ra tng * r
ator. d a'ach ad garag* SJ1S
plus dap I D i l oo oa a w » 11

V E R T S M A L L H O USE 1 bdrm .
I bam N o p a l) t i l l mo
i
i d c m ___________

• S O F A . 7 It. Y e llo w P f ln l
Loos* P illo w back, in Cali
M i to n

115— I n d u s t r ia l
R e n t a ls

SANFO RD
100 N E lm A y r
10700 Sq II w ith ot f l c t s
B ric k
truck M
sp rin k le d
440V
1 phase service LI
m e n u o r d is tr ib u tio n c tr
S) SCSI 171 I l l s

.

C A L L B A R T R E A L E S T . . INC.
_________ 1447) 111 74SS_________

151— In v e s tm e n t
P ro p e rty ^ S a le
S A N F O R D IN C O M E P R O P E R
T V . L iv e In 1 b 'r , 7 b ih and
rent 7 t b /r. I bath units
Income 11,000'm o or rent a ll
lo u r u n its lo r S M S O / m o
M ortgage paym ent Skao PITI
C a ll 774 ISIS P M

153— A c re a g e L o t s / S a le
O E N E V aT S A C R E S )/) in
eludes large etfc a p l . duck
pond. B u y e r p a y s c lo sin g
170 000 t 401175 U »
_____

UN-SATI0NAL
UMMER LIVING

at

COEVILLAAPARTMENTS!
t O ur
FREE
2580 Ridgewood Ave.. Sanford

330*1431

215— B o a fs a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n it u r e

N E W m r n Low d t» n A inter
• i l l 14X70 SI71 mo 74X70
S i l t mp M l 1/0*
_
S I T U P IN C A R R I A G E Cava
G reg ory M obil* Hom es San
to » d S ln g M « # ct_ 1 7 M 1 0 0 ^ ^ _

163— W a te rfro n t
P r o p e r t y / S a le
G O O D L OC A T I ON 2 • acres
B e a u t ifu l to* L a s * M a r y
schools walk to IC C Good
In vest m*n i prop I D t t l l _____

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n it u r e
A I R C O N D I T I O N E R I I 000
B T U . Flaw F raigh f dam aged
W o rks perfect! W arranty
A * Best Appliances. 77* OSS
• A N T IQ U E D R E S S E R . M e
hogany, porcelain snobs dove
ta il lo m ls S M OBO 114 D l l
• B O O K S H E L F D E S K . C om b i
n a tio n 70 M M
W 7 0
F o u ' shelves, ta o m oveabM
on* top ov closed dess com
p artm en t H I 770 I7Q]_______
• C H A IR , toathar. brown color
v e r y c o m fo r ta b le
D a n is h
sty to. lik e new | i a 0 )D 447)
• C O F F E E T A B L E send wood
w ith threw sm otad g lass In
ta ts Used only a te* month*
SF8 C a ll to see 778 H77________
D IS H W A S H E R . P ortab M very
good cond I M
BUFFET.
Solid oak. HOP J77 77/7
• F I V E M E T A L C H A IR S with
padded seels and b acks Can
be used In home or o ffice 1)0
M l p ric e ITS K O I____________
K C N M O M E W A S H E R W hite,
very good condition SD0
___________ D O D P
K E N M O R E washer d 'y t r Very
n lc e l F re e d eli very/w arran ty
A 4 Bast Appttonc**. )1 4 1)4)
• K I N O SIZ E B I O A d iu siab M
fr a m e , m a ttre ss, and boa
sp rin g s 111 7)0 1701__________
■ L O U N O E C H A IR . B rand new
H ig h la n d House B*&gt;g* an
tiqu* velvet with brown end
b urn t or eng* design C a n t us*
co lo r g ift W ill trad* lo r c h a ir
of equal value lapproa A1001
In peach. M ai. o il whit*, or
g ra y )74 1440
a L O V E I E AT goto and slive r
Sturdy and very com fortable
HOC___ _________ C all I D l i f t
L O V E S E A T S B ’ Own. gold, and
orange velour L ik e new 1700
tor both
_______
M l 0140
M A T T R E S S A N D BO X springs
doubto su e sett for sole G reat
value! SIC sal
1710**0
N O S E R V I C E C A L L F E E when
re p a irs are don* W arranty 74
yr* e x p e rie n c e 1John.
A 4 Best Appliance*. 174 7)41
• OCTAOON TABLE
L a rg e
R e u n ifie d antique sty to. Oak*
top. M ahogany claw foot base
SSI M l 0411

• DP AIRCISER
•■c al t o nt
condition o rig in a l cost SIS*
W ill keep you in great shape
lor S IC O O B O ID ? )* *
e T O U R I N G B I K E . H uffy 145
phone M l D S 4
e W E I G H T L I F T I N G 1ET
Bench bers. weights Good
sh ape
D l s a s s e m b t t d 110
M7 4tol
• IS S P E E D B I K E Roadm aitor
Scorcher, m en s. red SD C all
M J MOt

193— L a w n &amp; G a rd e n
B A M B O O b e a u t i f u l tor
la n d s c a p in g
FURNITURE.
P O L E S . C A N E S , and etc
Hardy BOSTON TYPE
FERN
P A L M E T T O Palm s
Y o u n g M A G N O L I A T reat
Y o u D ig tt I77Q714

195— M a c h in e ry /T o o ls
• W E N E L E C T R I C cha n taw
I) inch cut 170 P le at* call
4 * 4 4 4 ) 4 ___________________________

NOW OPEN
R.C. HILLS

• 1*14 S K I / F I S H Boat *0HP
M a r c . w /tra ll* r Runs great
1)000 P a r tia l IInane* 4*1 7404

Deeranteed Finan cin g )

____ 328-7777______
222— M u s ic a l
M e r c h a n d is e

O L D S S I E R R A . ITS). 11*1 O BO
See at- IIS G a rriso n D rive.
Sanlord or c a l I *04 ) H M t*

T O R S A L E : Yom aha portable
keyboard. U M cash only C a ll
747 171* after II A M ask for
B ill

• O L D S M O B IL E SI. I M . 4 door
sedan. 7) 000 m ile i. p w. p /l.
t r u ll* A /C 11.100 )T1 41)7
P U B L I C A U T O A U C T IO N a
E V E R Y F R I D A Y 7;»0PM
D A Y T O N A A U T O A U C T IO N
Hwy. »). Daytona Beech
*44 M U I I I _______

223— M is c e lla n e o u s
A I R B E D Sell Inhaling. 11)0 *1
B r o o k t t o n a . t a l l 171)
N E T S C H K E S E r o t i c 1 In
Ivor y l i g u r in t t S i l l aa .
F R O O L i k e II In s lu f le d
a n i m a l 140. M E R C E D E S
tra ito r hitch tor I D body ttyto
1*0 1 407 744 4)71____________
B A B Y T H IN G S C rib. Sim m ons
w ith dresser SM C h ild p icnic
t a b l e 1 7 0 ) 7 7
1410
• B E A U T I F U L H A N D painted
ca ro u se l hurt* rep lica Col
le c to r's Hern S40 M4 14*0 ____
• B O X OF’ COIL C O L L A T E D
n a ils 70 7 'y Inch sire F its
B o s tllc h or H itach i n a il gun
17) fir m M J /»)* ___
____
D I A M O N D S O L I T A I R E R I NGS
le t and up F r t e il l ln g l
Best P aw n A Jew elry, 1)4 4414
• I X E R C Y C L E , D u ll i d t o n
for leg, Upper body. Itom ech
• ■ •rclse . equipped with
s p e e d o m e t e r , c o m fo r ta b le
tea t 14) ) )) 044)
• F O L D I N G T A B L E )0 • 77"
L ik a new ! Sail new lo r 1100
N o w S7S P e r le r t tor y a rd
ta le s, ch u rch hall 101 C a la lln a
D riv e M7 04)4 leave message
K I N O S I Z E w a le r b e d . U n
derrw ath storage, headboard
O a rk wood 1200 Older Kitchen
table w / 2 c h a in , sao I N I 1)4
|et sk i needs work, w / tra ile r
A a c cessories. 1 1 0001)0 )04I
• L A D D E R R A C K with locking
ha nd les Good condition 1100
__________407 444 7)7)_________
• P O R T A B L E STEAM BATH.
A ll fib e rg la ss 140 110 volt
___________ M7 1*4)___________

Relax In Your N&lt;* Spa!

199— P e t* A S u p p lie s
* F R E E TO G O O D HOME
Loving 7 y r o ‘d co cker tperuel
Inside or outside AM th o u *nd
wor m.ad40 M J I 40J l______
F R E E TO G O O D H O M E Aocr
a t a puppies e re going fasti 1
I,H art Shepard m l* and other
m u ad ) m onths o ld J l) 7014

231— C a r s

Seats ), portable never used
W ced a r gaiebo underwater
lig ht 11,171407 1)1 7777 _____
• TW O l i t t l e * A /T 4 wheeler
tire s 140 Good c o rd 11ton
M l 14) I ________
• I D O Z E N M atan Ja rs U 00
M ) )71*

SHORT OF CASH ?
Seriously looking tor a nice,
ctoan. used c a r ? D E P E N
D A B L E . Down paym ents a t
tow a t tl* * Includes lav A
Illto C a ll

ruES AUTO SALES

* * 33/ 3692 * *
S U B A R U , m s R un s good 1200
o r best otter M l )?)S leave
nstssag*
T O Y O T A C / e tu d e , I ) . I Ilk m l .
lo a d e d , c le e n 2nd o w n er.
SHOO 17* 1411_______________
im
T O Y O T A Statton wegeti.
run s good A uto . A C . 1100
OBO
) » 1444
7) M O B
(CONVERTIBLE)
1*00 O B O M ) 1*11
II

C H E V Y F u ll ( I. W ig or.
diesel good cond . cold AC.
new tires S700 M l 1441
• 14 C H E V Y C a v e lie r Station
wagon. A C . auto SI.I7S
C a ll 1*4 4422
• 14 P O N T IA C Ftero G T. auto
V4. Red. I4K M l Good cond.
lio n L O A D E D 174*1 721 1744

17 L I N C O L N T a w n c i r .
Sig n a tu re, E e c e lle n t Cond
17100 M l I t 14 or 14* 4)77
17 S U B A R U . 4 w hl d r hat
chbeck eng replaced, new
l&gt; haust StlOONeg 74047*4
• 14 L E B A R O N convertible,
red.loaded. dig dash 71K ml
S7000 P a rtia l Im anca 4*17104
• I* C H E V Y C t ll b r lf y . A C .
Auto 4 door 1)100 F irm
727 4117
• *2 J E E P Sport Auto. PS. P B
A C . a le r m U K m l 111.700
L ik e new I 407 M l 7447

235— T r u c k s /
B u se s/V a n s

230— A n f iq u e / C la s s ic
_________ C a rs _________

C H E V Y V A N . I**i V V I . auto
A /C . new tires 1) oco OBO
M l U U Jim

• P U P P Y Poodlo A Longhair
Chihuahua 1100 I D 1104

F O R D M U S T A N G . 1*44 V I
R uns good body m good shape
17 100 0 6 0 ________ M l )*)*

C H E V Y V A N . 1*42. In ttrlo r
n ice I dent, run s g reat S1.000
O B O M t M44 J i m

203 — H o rs e s

• P O N T IA C F ire b ird 1*4* One
o w n e r ’ G a ra g e d ! *1K m i
N ic e 14)00 407 M l 44*4

O A T 1 U N K IN G Cab 47. 5 tp .
Stereo, 4*K m l V e ry Depen
dabto 17)00 177 07*7

HAN D T A M E O COCKATIELS
SIS A l t o
S u lla r C r a s t t d
Cockatoo 1)00144 *)4) attor 4

B E A U T I F U L , b la n k a le d Ap
p atotta Ge'd-ng. 7 yrs, wall
cared tor. a ic e lto n t riding A
tr a il horse F o r evp or begin
w tec* 11 700 llr m M 4 7SQ4

209— W e a r in g A p p a re l
• WEDDING DRESS
Long
w hit* la ta d re s t T to rtd with
tra m S liv e r p e a rls and t*
qum s on neck lin e and ttoevet
In o r i g i n a l b a r
Si t* 4
B E A U T I F U L I H 1IOOM1 T ilt

211— A n t iq u e s /
C o lle c t ib le s
e C O L L E C T O R ' S P L A T E S Set
of three G oddess ot the tea.
wind, and e a rth Signed and
num bered edition, including
pl*to fram es SSI M l 1411__
’ O EALER SPACE AVAIL­
A B L E * A u n t y M a i y I An
liq u e t , ISOS F r e n c h Ave,
117*71 S anlord W* buy on*
p ie c e / e n tire e tla ta ti 4*4 7704

215— B o a f s a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s __
• A I R B O A T , l i t ! OrattTwpper,
ISO H P . L y c o m in g new mags ,
1 props tra ile r. 1)100 Cell
M l 1401 or M l 7 1 7 0 ________
14 F T A lu m in u m V hull, contoto
co n lro ts. 40 H P E v ln ru d e ,
tra ile r 1SO O O B O M l 7)44_____
14 F T . JO N Boat W G al Mil
tra ito r I) M P M e rc 1*00 tirm
771 M i l ____________________
• II F T G L A S S T R O N A Tr*,l
*r I1MP E v ln ru d e E ic e lto n l
Condition! S JtS l M l 1711
14 F T C aro lin a S k ill 40 H P
E v ln r u d e , t r a i l e r . C o a s t
G u a rd equipped S 1.100 I D IM)
• IS It. B O W R I D E R
IS) H P
I/O. About II h r t Im mecu
late.w/traller cover
M u ll
SeeI SS 100OBO 777 4 U S ____
• 1 1 . 1 4 FT. S P O R T C R A F T .
O pen lit h e r m a n , t l ) OM C
S e a d r i v * . 1)100 C o n s id e r
trade lor |*l sk i o r F l a i l boat
77) 071*

• 1*7) M O C la stic Cenvertibto.
Good cond * 1 t» O B O )74
7074

2 3 1 -C a rs
C H E V Y C IT A T IO N . t*M * c y l .
one ow ner Auto to ld A /C .
p o w e r w indow s. R uns and
loo* s g reat 1*10 O B O M4 M)»

• FORO BUI

1*71. G O O D
C O N D IT IO N 11.000 C A L L
MJ 740*
F O R D V A N . 1*41. P lu m b e rs
I p e c l a l l Stocked. M any
•e tras. Sharp! l l 400 444 *447
44) 4604 Ibeeper I____________
VAN
1?»0
F o rd E 110 L ift, autom etlc
doors 1)000 M J J i M _________

• HANOICAPPCO

• C H E V Y C A M A R O • *77. R a
b u ilt V A 'n it ol new parts)
SW l M U H i a any lim a _______
• C H R Y S L E R I M P E R I A L **)
L ik e new M ust Sell O nly
175 000 C a ll (4071)7) **14

IS U Z U T R O O P E R II, 1*44. 4 whl
d r.. 4 door. A/C, stereo, 1 spd
E ecel cond 114.100)4)4144

• C J ) J E E P . 1*71. I c y l .
cu sto m R eb uilt engine, new
tire*, b ra k e s 14.771 llr m )7J
)4 * 4 __________________
D O D G E C A R A V A N I E . 1*fl. 4
c y l . seats 7. loaded e ice lto n t
co ndition IIP *00 *04 Tt* I D )
D O D G E waven 17*4 Auto a ir.
ctoan. p .y. stereo t ill. *0000
m l. good point, never dam
aged 17.2*1407 4*4 *444
___
D O D G E D Y N A S T Y L E . It**.
B eau tifu l, a ll power, m ust sell
14 4*1)71 0)41 or I) I 1140

)**0 J E E P C H k N U H E E
LIMITED
Leather, a ll the
to y s I IS 000 m llea 114 *00
_________ C a ll 777 4)47_________
•) D O D G E R A M , Conversion
van I7K m l, 1st ow ner! TV.
nmtondo 17) 4M ) ) ) *74)

S Sanford Motor Co.

238— V e h ic le s
W a n te d
C A D I L L A C EL DORADO
W A N T E D l»S7 1*4) In nice
condition*)* 177)____________

• F O R D T H U N D E R B I R D • *44.
A H o r i g i n a l l N e e d ! som e
work 11,4*1 O B O M1 O il*
• H O N D A A C C O R D D X . It**
Auto. A /C . 4m /tm tape, whit*
110 400 L I K E N E WI M I )417

C O R V E T T E W A N T E D to re
store Any year or condition
14.000 lim it 47* I I N __________

• HYUNDAI
1*17 S t . 700
O O D O E C O L T . 17*4 *1.700
M ) )v*4 o r774 1414
___

239— M o t o r c y c le s
a n d B ik e s

M E R C U R Y " S A B L E OS. !7S*
Ev t el t ont condition, o il power,
14 400___________ C all 34)711*

H A R L E Y 2)4 C la s tic . H erd )
work, consider trade Reason
able otter o nly! T e rry ) M 1*4*

M O N T E C A R L O . 1171 G reat
condition. A /C . run t lik e a top
Sharp to o k In g U l.H O M 4 SMI

• S U Z U K I LT 1*4R , Itt* Quad
racer. II4S0 cash, or trada for
a whl tour stroke 471 1414

N E E D A C A R cred it p re b la m tf
I c a n help, dependable used
ca rs and trucks
Dave
Shannon R C H ill * W orld of
Wheel*. L a k a M a ry M l 7777
N IS S A N S E N T R A X E . 1*4* 7 dr,
co ld a ir
lu ll speed, ctoan.
P r ic e d to sail 14.M0 S7I 41)7
N O V A . t«7*. Black w/ red i t
Auto. A /C . naw seats S2.S00
M l M l* Jim

USED CAR LOT WANTED
T O R E N T ____________ 42* 1141

V

241— R e c r e a t io n a l
V e h ic le s / C a m p e r s
• 74 F T . 1*77 O O D O E R V . tow
m iles, sleeps 4. stove. sTiewer.

fridge n*oo m oil*

• TI F T E L D O R A D O motor
home. -|* New aw ning. Iv.
runs great 1) 000 O B O M l 74*1

We ll Advertise Your Car
(or other motor vehicle)

EVERT M Y III IT'S SOUK
lines for only

$2124

(a d d ilio n n l line s e x t r a )

Ad must include phone number and asking price. I f vehicle hasn’t
been sold in 10 days, call us and we'll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is ru ining except for price. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Ibday!

Sanford Herald

�SB - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Thursday. July IS. 1993

by Chic Young

BLONDIE
: j u s t «h s e p
C *« F AS?
• B il l ia n t '

a

J

3 6&gt;rr s o w

►,e.s
.

h

ES

so

ON M'S LATEST INVENTON...
AATEfltracCP TOAST

AM AT CAN &gt;OU OO A iTM
AATBBPBOC* TOAST »

—

C

T

j

w N OEO P O A C m E O

'

See a doctor about
hyperthyroidism
DEAR DR. OOTT: I'm tin

by Mort Walker

BEETLE B AILEY

C3

POK*T LET THE HEAT
GET VOU.MEN.THE
WEATHER CHANGES
RAPIPLV IN THIS
AREA

THE BORN LOSER
HO) DO YOU LIKE YOUR
NCW CAR.

WOW! CLIMATE CONTROL ?
f ij IRPR£iSet&gt;WITH WHY. THAT!) IHCRCPfBUE
IT} CLIMATE
• \ “
CONTROL WTEA1

love it ! i m particularly

ihnde rueOR.rwoRKAfRX1
tro c w R x s m c
CLIMATE iMbioe
THC C A R '

by Charles M. Schuti

PEANUTS
I HAVE VERY
ST?0*.£ 0RNI0N5
ABOUT EUE*YTM,’N6

U/MAT DO YOU WANT TO BE
WHEN YOU 6R0U) UP ETHAN?

MEDICINE

THAT’S a STUPID
LOOKIN6 5HIRT
YOU'RE WEARING

K C L tR

I H ycar-nld female. I sweat
thrmighoul the day and am
nervous all the lime. Therefore. I
t hi nk I suffer from
hyperthyroidism. Please discuss
fills condition anti advise the
proper treatment.
DEAR READER: E x c e s s
l li y r o I d h o r m o n c
(hyperth yro idism ) speeds up the
tx x ly 's m etalM illsm . leading to
nervousness. sweating. Intolcra lte r m heat, weight loss, rapid
pulse. la tlg u c . Insom nia an d
m any o ther sym ptom s. Som e
patients also exhlh lt prom inent
eyes (Graves’ disease)
lly p e rth y ro ld tsm is caused by
an o ve rpro d uctio n ol horm one
d u e to th y r o id n o d u le s. Iu&lt;
fla n im a tlo u or p o lle r
T h e d ia g n o s is Is made b y
hhxxl tests and. it necessary, a
th y r o id sca n to Identify the
IcH .itlon of the over-active tissue.
T h e c a u s e d e t e r m in e s th e
treatm ent: m edicine, surgery or
radioactive Iodine.

DEAR DR. GOTT: I have
trouble digesting dairy products.
T h e y ca u se severe iilo a tln g .
cram ps. pain In m y lower stouta e h . a n d d ia r r h e a . L a e la ld
h a s n 't h e lp e d
A g a s tro e n ­
terologist ran m any tests, yet
noth ing was revealed to help me
DEAR HEADER: Some people
c a n n o t d ig e s t m ilk s u g a r
(lactose). T ills co n d itio n m ay Ik *
In h e rite d la n d present fro m
chlldh/Mxl) or It m a y Ik - ai ipitred
M an y a d u lts develop lactose
Intolerance as they age
The disorder causes the very
sym p to m s you m ention and is
diagnosed by a lest that an alyze s
the breath.
II y o u r g a s t r o e n t e r o lo g is t
|K - r lo fin e d th is lest a n d you d o .
Indeed, have lactose-intolerance,
you should Ik * hcl|x*d by u sin g
pre digested m ilk products, su ch
as U ic ta ld If these com pounds
are Ineffective, y o u 'll have to
consider a v o id in g m ilk products
altogether, an d using c a lciu m

supplements (such as TU M S) In
provide this essential mineral.
If your hydrogen breath lesl
was normal. Ihc doctor will have
to search for another explana­
tion for your symptoms, such as
Irritable bowel syndrome or
other c a u se s of Intestinal
ACROSS
t F a t c lil
S C h ill, tum m er
tlma
B CIO partnar
11 C u ito m i
12 Old W orld
14 Tolarata
15 Fa lta r
16 — culpa
17 Civa a nama
to
19 In addition
21 TV alian
22 Lat tall
25 Lookar
2B M adlcal

•uffli
29 Mada cow
sou n d!
32 L a t io
34 S cotch co cktall (2 w d i.)
36 Army group
37 Finish
38 Edgad
41 Smaar
43 S cooby —

44 R alu aa from
am altlng
48 Parualng
booka
51 E lta n h o w a r'a
nlcknam a
52 — C h aplin
54 Not to galhar
56 Farthaat
57 Kin g of Crata
58 Opp. ot poat
59 — w ill ba
dona
60
-a ngla

DOWN
1 — P rli#
2 Solo*
3 Laat la lta r
(Brit.)
Two word* o l
4 T*
under­
standing
5 P ounding
Inatrumant
6 O badlant
7 Jo g
8 Tiny planat

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

m alabsorption. R eturn to your
g a stro e n te ro lo g ist lo r fu rth e r
suggestions.
Anaw sr lo Pravtowa P u n la

t f lJ U L J
U L JU U IJU
JL U U U U □LU ULaUUU
U U L9 L9 U U U U U U U U
U LJU U U U
ULLIUU
□ULJ U U U
U U U ULUULJ U U U
J U U U U U LLILZJLUU LJ U
U U U U U U U a iU U L lL J
U U L J U C JU LJ U U U
u u u

aU LU LJ
□

u

l o

u u u

U U L lU L jy
u

u

m in iu m

u

UUULLILJLIU EJEJLJUU
c i u m i .i h i . i

a r im

9 Sham a'
10 H o u tah old
god
am bar
It Pi Ram
f

20
23
24
26
27

13 — Lang
Syna
18 N agativa

29
30
31
33
35

vota
A b o rt
— Khayyam
Top of haad
Aroma
Spaad
contaat
TV *
talking h o n a
12 wdt.)
Eugana
O N a lll't
daughtar
Stubborn
Radiation
maatura*
Ja w lth
languaga

39 Half
40 N a il to Sun
42 Highway
ahouldtr
45 Clim bing

plant

46
47
49
50

Rut
Rubbar city

C4tcha«
Many (2 wd« )
E ip lo ra r
V a tc o da —
52 Pohca officar
(at.)
53 Ban —
55 Fruit ta a d

WIN A T BRIDGE
Hy Phillip Alder

by Jimmy Johnson

ARLO AND JANIS
YOU LIKE C H E E «&gt; e '
YO U LIK E TOAATO E*)?

YOU L I K E M ILK ?
YOU L I K E C H IC K E N '
YOU LIKE EN G LISH P EA S ?

I LIKE ICE C R E A M
A D D POeK CHOPS. B U T
MOT TOGETHER?

DOU T LOOK AT ME '
CASSEROLE*) AREN'T 60
HIGH Ok) MY LIST EITHER

.John Stuart M ill said. "I have
l&lt;arned In seek m y happiness by
lim itin g m y desires, rather than
In atte m p tin g lo satisfy th e m ."
To me. lh .il Is a rather dep ress­
ing defeatist attitude. W hy not
light lo a&lt; lile v c am bitions, h o w ­
ever extravagant?
TiKlay's deal doesn't require
a n y th in g q u ite so extreme. It
|ust needs declarer to rem em ber
what d id n 't hap|M-u In tlie* b id ­
ding. wh.it did hnp|M-u Irt the
p la y an d w h e re tils d u m m y
entries are.
Against four hearts. West led
tile diam ond k in g E a st signaled
encouragem ent w ith tin* eight,
so W est c o n tin u e d w ith the
d ia m o n d a ce a n d Ills t h ir d
diam ond.
Now It co u ld e a sily be right lor
East lo lead llu* 13th diam ond If
West has. say. queen doubleton
ol lic a rls. th is defense results In
a tru m p prom otion to defeat tile

By Bernice Bede Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Friday. July 16. 1903

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNEST

J DON 'T Nttt&gt; AN OUNCf Of
PrtVtNTlON OR A
POUND OF CUfiB,
J N ttP A
)A \

t o n
»
SVm P A T M I

7 - i$
J h A v EJ

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD

SUDDENLY I HAVE THIS URGE TO
M AKE AN EXERCISE VIPEOJ

ift'A P A V fS 7 /5

by Jim Meddick

robotm an;
"S C R IM S H A W

WHAT'S \ I'M ENQRAVtN*
SCHOONER OH
L’ ERE YfHA.Lt TOOTH.

m d ev elo pe d
ALL KINDS OF CRAFTS T’ ELP
US THROUGH THE LONG Ml’
MADDENIN' 'OURS AT SEA..,
we p ir a t e s

I'M YJGPKING
I'M MAKING A
ON A
PDPSiClt STICK
TERRARIUM , k B'RD HOUSE

h i the year ahead patience and
tenacity w ill Ik - required lo fu lfill
yo u r a m b itio u s objectives. If you
|K*rslst. yo u r rew ards could lx*
rather large and o f an end uring
nut ure.
CANCER (Ju n e 21 d u ly 221
Y o u m ig h t he a s k e d lo do
som eth ing lo r someone today
that yo u 're even reluctant lo do
for yourself, yet the pride y o u 'll
derive from Ix-lng helpful w ill be
all the paym ent y o u 'll require.
G e l a Ju m p o n life hy u n ­
d e r s t a n d in g th e I n flu e n c e s
w hich arc governing you In llu*
y e a r a h e a d . S e n d for y o u r
Astro-G raph pre d ictio n s today
hy m a ilin g $1.25 and a long,
s e l f - a d d r e s s e d , s Ia m p e d
envelope lo A slro -G ra jih . c/o th is
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465. New
York. N. Y. 10163. Be sure lo
slate y o u r zodiac sign.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 221 Friends
who seek y o u r advise or o p i­
nions K xlay expeel you lo le ll II
like II Is. Be tactful and co n sid ­
erate o f Ihelr feelings, hut don't
fall to lay all of the facts out on
the table.

7 r-

"It-

VIRGO (Aug. 2 3 -S cp l. 22)
Y o u r e n e rg ie s. In te lle ct and
jx'rlix ls of o|&gt;pommlly w ill all
have their lim itatio n s tnduy. In
o r d e r to p e r fo r m w i t h the
greatest efficacy, you m ust keep
you r priorities In projx*r order.
LIBRA ISept. 23 0( 1. 23)
Don't |)ul any plans Into |&gt;ruc(lcc
today u n til y o u ’ve taken su ffi­
cient tim e to study all o f llie lr
ram llle allo n s. Elim inate guess
w o rk w here the o u tco m e Is
concerned.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-N'ov. 22) Dr
extra patient and realistic In all
ol you r co m m e rcia l d e a lin g s
to d a y. In sist up o n f u ll d is ­
closures of |x*rtlncnt Inform ation
where others are Involved.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Stand behind the prom ises
you make to friends today, even
if you're Inconvenienced. Being
a person o f y o u r w ord w ill
strengthen you r Image and credlia b ility .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2 2 -Ja n .
IB) Before jm llln g out fresh
hin d s luday for som ething you
th in k you need, cheek lo set If
you can m ake do w ith what you
alreadv have at you r disposal.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

.. A t A liy, KB5. s«w SM£ PIP
C X C L 0 6 IV C F IK i S h i n O

6CHOOI

NORTH
♦ K 41

m u

♦ 10 9 4 4

♦ J7I

♦ K J 10
WEST
q J » a%

EAST

1771

♦ 42

♦

♦ 10 1

♦ a K:

♦ q to i i

♦ 914

♦ Q 74 S 2

SOITil
♦ A74

V VKWJ S
♦ 94 1

♦ A1
Vulnerable Both
Dealer West

South
IV

4♦

Wr«l
Pau
1♦
I’U I

North
P an
:♦
Pan

K a.t
P an
P an
P an

Opening load ♦ K

S itu a tio n s D ial com e under your
direct co ntro l today m ight re­
qu ire a hit m ore a tle n ilo u than
usual. Fortunately, yo u 're llk rly
to handle y o u r responsibilities
quite well.
PISCES (Feb. 20 M arch 20)
Let a frie n d w h o h a s ht-cu
h clp lu l lo you recently know
llta l you are also an appreciative
pal w ho can Ik * ca lled ti|xm In
help w hen he/ahe Is In need.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
Don't hesitate to question nr ask
advice about an Issue for w hich
friends th in k you already have
all the answ ers. T h e y ’ ll adm ire
you even m ore for revealing your
shortcom ings.
TAURUS (A p ril 20-M ay 20)
Protect yo u r Interests today so
what Is Justly due you Is not
overlooked. Associates w on't de­
lib e ra te ly try to sh orieh ang e
you. yet II could happen Jusl the
same.
GEMINI (M ay 2 1-June 20)
Sh ou ld you he faced today with
a situ a tio n that requires special
knowledge and know -how . you ’ll
be grateful you once tackled and
mastered ib is d ifficu lt subject.
(01993. NEWSPAPER EN­
T E R P R IS E A SSN .

Leonard Starr

ANNIE
COUP « TX«
PROOOCT OF Tx £ * 05T

It

contract. Ih-rr. though, the play
Is l.ital South discards Ids spade
lo s e r and has an easy ride home.
So let's suppose Easi sw itches
to the spade |() — nut instantly
fatal, lint sufficiently revealing to
a th o u g h tfu l S o u th . A s th is
sw itch m arks West w ith th r Q-J
of s|&gt;adcs, declarer has "see n"
l() p o in t s In W e s t 's h a n d
Therefore, as West passed as
dealer. East m ust have the club
queen.
D is p la y in g e x c e lle n t lech*
nique. South w iiti Ilie spade
sw itch w llti his ace and drew
three rounds ol hearts end ing in
the du m m y. He called (or the
clu b Jack and finessed when
East played low Now cam e a
clu b to the ace, a spade to
d u m m y 's king, and the clu b
king, on w hich South discarded
Ills s|&gt;adr loser.
Always remember what didn’t
hap|K-n. In ImiiIi the bidding and
the play.

, SKf W’4$ IMTP tx f

M5W0N f*US. Txf
C*fTY C01UXN5.

5 5PON 46

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                    <text>Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Samlnola County slnoo 1006
85th Year, No. 257 - Sanford, Florida

Abolishing city police

D Sports

Longwood cops may gain protection in charter
No new utility tax on
phone users...probably

By SANDRA IL L IO T T
Herald Stall Writor

Baseball for all ages
SANFORD - Tilt- Sanlord Hahe Until All Stars
and a group of adults met In an exhibition
baseball gallic at /Inn Meek Field Monday.
See Page IB .

Party Machine fire deemed arson
SANFORD —Last Thursday's lire at the Party
Maehlne. on Park Avenue, has now been
formally labeled arson by Sanford lire In­
vestigators. Fire Marshall Rleltard Cohen said
the lire was Intentionally set In one location,
although he declined to cite further details,
saying the Investigation Is continuing. Cohen
said two suspects have been Identified.
The fire curly T h u r s d a y m o r n i n g did a n
estimated $120,000 to $130,(XX) In damage In
the contents, although an Insurance Investigator
has not completed an Inventory, said Cohen. No
one was Injured. Cohen said the rear door of the
club had been forced open to galti access lo the
club. The fire appeared to have been set by
someone unskilled In arson.
"I'm not sure If It was the building or the
contents they were after." said Cohen. "II I were
going to Intentionally set a building on lire. I
wouldn't have done It that way."

Sign theft case comes to a close
SANFORD — A misdemeanor tliclt ease
against a hake Mary man charged with stealing
political signs during Iasi yeat s election will end
soon II he successfully completes a class
conducted by the slateattorney'solllee
At a pre-trial hearing last week. Seminole
County •fudge -John Sloop ruled lo uhoic the
ease against .James Leon McKceby. -10. II lie
completes a class lor mlsdemeanoi ollcndcrs.
.McKceby was charged with taking political
signs owned by Gary Mender valued ai less than
$3(X) on Nov. I. 1902. Mender was a candidate
for Lake Mary City Commission.
A Lake Mary resident reported seeing cam­
paign signs lor Mender and Mayor Lowery
Rockett at Sun Drive at about 0 p in., but
reported them missing at I I p.m. when lie
walked Ills dog.
McKceby was charged with removing the
signs.

Pat Nixon dead at 81
WASHINGTON — Pal Nixon, the oil
complaining sllenl partner in Richard Nixon's
quarter century of political triumph and dis­
grace. died of lung cancer today at the Nixon
home In Park Ridge. N.J.
She was HI.
She had suffered from lung disease lor years.
The former president and their daughters.
Trlelu Nixon Cox and Julie Nixon Elsenhower,
were with the former first lady when she died.
Funeral services were set for Saturday at the
former president's library In Yorlm Linda. Calif.,
according to a statement from Nixon's office
that announced the death.
In their 53 years ol marriage — their
anniversary was on Monday — through the dark
years of Watergate, through the pain of Ills
resignation from the presidency — the former
Thelma Catherine Ryan was al Nixon's side,
never showing In public how much It hurl
"P&lt;it" wiis only a nickname, bestowed by Iter
father because she was horn llie day before St.
Patrick's Day
Mrs. Nixon's health had not been good sitter'
that Friday morning In 1974 when a helicopter
carried them from the White House Into exile. A
major stroke In 1978 left her with a paralyzed
left side and Nixon suggested that the sudden
Illness was linked lo her having read "The Final
Days" a harsh account ol the Watergate
scandal

LONGWOOD - An cllorl to
establish the police department In
the city charter and remove It Irotti
polities prompted a lively discussion
at Monday night's city commission
meeting.
A draft ordinance proposed by
commissioner Harvey Smcrllsou to
establish the department In the
charter was reviewed. The depart­
ment Is currently controlled by (he
city commission and a simple ma­
jority vole, three ol the live com­
mission members could abolish It If
the department Is made part ol the

city charier. It would lake a unani­
mous vote of the commission to
make any change.
Mayor Paul Lovcstrund ques­
tioned why the police department Is
being singled out for Inclusion in
the charter and not the public works
or fire department, lie said he
thinks the move puls |&gt;olltlcs Into
the department rather than taking
them out. Smcrllsou said he pro­
posed the change because con­
st It ulents of hls expressed concern
about rumors that another attempt
was underwuy to do away with the
city police department.
In a referendum during last year's

f See Cops, Page BA

R e s id e n ts fa ce
la n d o w n e rs : b ig
c a ts , b o rro w p it

Partly cloudy with a
•U) peieeul chance ol
atlcrnonn showers or
I It u tide t s l o r m s .
Highs around 90
Wind variable 5 lo
inpli.

LONGWOOD - City Commis­
sioners decided not to change the
formula for utility taxes on tele­
phone users, despite the city
administrator's request to wait
until they reviewed the city's
revenue needs for funding the
1994 budget. t

In an unofficial consensus, the
five member commission agreed
to continue to collect the 10
percent tax on local calls. The
change, which the commission
members rejected, would have
reduced the tax to 7 percent on
local calls, but would have ulso
taxed Intrastate calls. Whut ap­
peared to be a tax decrease ut
OSes Tax, Page SA

Their business Is picking up

pll under the county's October 1991
permit and requirements Imposed
Horald Senior Staff Writor
by the St. Johns River Water
SANFORD — Residents will lace Management District.
Al 7 p.m., grade school teachers
landowners today In two con­
troversial proposals before Seminole and other supporters of Tiger's Eye
Productions arc expected lo give
('omit v commissioners.
Ai I 3(1 pm . ibis allcrnoon. their encouragement to extend the
eiimmlHsloneis are scheduled lo animal handler school’s operations
consider extending t lit- time allowed permit to June 1998. Their special
Ini Excavated Products lo mine permtl expires Mils month.
Some neighbors ol the rural south
i heir borrow pit near Geneva The
company currently lias another Ovlcdo-area school, which houses
year to remove a portion ol the 2 10 rare Florida panthers, tigers and
million cubic yards ol dlrl from Hie n See County, Page BA

H earing is set in case
of rescin de d p ro m o tio n
Presley was prumoted to assistant
foreman of grounds maintenance In
Horald Staff Writor
October. 1992 Over 30 co-workers
SANFORD — Hearings are sched­ signed petitions claiming favoritism
uled today and Wednesday lor a toward Presley. The promotion was
woman who claims site wrongly Inst rescinded In November.
Affidavits from two grounds
a job promotion Iasi year when
workers
stated Presley told them
Seminole l.'ounty School otflelals
she was going to get the assistant
gave Into pressure from a union.
The ease Involves Rebecca Presley foreman Job three days before the
as the plaint III against the school Job opening was posted. The peti­
and NIPSCO (Noii-lustructlonal tioners also claimed Presley's
Personnel of Seminole County). f See Hearing, Page BA
By SANDRA E LLIO TT

Up, up and away In space

Htrald Photo by Tommy Vincanl

Rogor Harris, loft, and Frooman Bagelt, members of the Rotary Noon
Club of Sanford, participate In one club project done twice a year,
cleaning up downtown Sanford streets. The pair spruces up the north
side of the U.S. Post Office at the cornerol N. Sanford Avonuo.

Panel takes
over, channels
money for
social needs
By J . MARK BARFIBLD
Herald Sonlor Stall Writor

Horoaoopa...............0B
Movlos......................3B
Nation.......................8A
Paopla...................... 3B
Polios....................... 3 A
School Manu...........SA
Sporta................. 1 B,2B
Talavlalon............... 3B
Woathar................... 2A

Increased chance of rain

Herald 8la(f Writer

By J. MARK BARFIBLD

From itatl and wlra reports

Bridge........................OB
Claaslflods.........4B,5B
Comloa...................... 0B
Crossword................OB
Dear Abby.................3B
Doatha....................... SA
Or. Qott..................... 0B
■dltorlal.................... 4A
Florida.......................2A

■y SANDRA IL L IO T T

Htfdd Photo, by TommyVioconl

Eighl-yoar old Jonnifor CozaeJ brought her stuffed
doggio along lo watch tho launch ol the shuttle
Endoavour yostorday Watching tho Titusville
launch from Sanlord, Jonnllor and parents Gary
and Dobbio, aro visiting Florida from Franklin,
Penn For an updatu on the shuttle's mission, See

Page 3A

For mors woathar, soa Pago 2A

SANFORD - Three local resi­
dents met with 12 other Central
Florida citizens Friday In the histor­
ic first meeting of the District 7
Health and Human Services Hoard.
A founder of a cltlld-supporl
advocacy organization, a former
retirement home administrator and
the principal ol a local middle
school will serve oil a panel that will
decide how lo distribute stale up
proprlullons for health and social
service programs. Tills year, those
appropriations will total $190 mil­
lion for the four comities In the
district. Including Seminole County.
The board, one of 15 created
throughout the slate, represents a
shift lit philosophy for the Florida
Department of Health and Re­
habilitative Services. Prior lo Ibis
year, department olflcluls have de­
cided bow to distribute appropria­
tions lo each program.
Now. the lltlS boards will decide
bow lo divide their district's appro
prlation Into various programs.
They call even decide to pay an
Independent organization to provide
some services historically supplied
by HRS. Their budget needs will be
submitted lo the HRS secretary lor
funding.
The boards will also screen can­
didates for district administrators
and supply their top three choices to
the HRS secretary lor appointment
The Ixiards are appointed by the
governor to provide Input front a
I ISee Panel. Page SA

A

I

�IA - Sanford Horald, Sanford, Florida - Tueaday, Juno 22, 1993

NEW S FROM TH E REGION AND ACR O SS T H E S T A T E

P re s c rip tio n s diverted to C u b a
l y Associated Press

Alligator attack confirmed
HOBE SOUND — Wounds on the body of a 10-ycar-old boy
matched the Jaw of an alligator captured and killed only hours
after the fatal attack, a wildlife official confirmed.
"Our Investigators have conferred with the medical exam­
iners," Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission Lt.
Jim Huffstodt said Monday. "They compared the wounds and
they matched up perfectly."
Bradley Weldcnhamer of Lantana was attacked and killed by
the 1 l-foot-4-lnch bull alligator Saturday as he waded In the
shallow waters of the Loxnhntchcc River at Jonathan
Dickinson State Park.
The boy's father. Gary, wrestled the boy from the Jaws of the
alligator as other park visitors beat the animal with canoe
paddles. Bradley was later pronounced dead at a Jupiter
hospital.
Investigators were alii! puzzled Monday as to the motive foe
the attack. Huffstodt said in many attacks there is Information
which provides an idea as to what provoked the animal — such
as a female alligator feeling her nest was threatened.
But he said this case doesn't (It a typical attack profile.

Man accuaad of trying to kill wlfo, again
ORLANDO — A man who keeps trying to kill his ex-wife was
charged — once again — with trying to hire someone to do her
in, police said.
Woodson Poe was charged on Monday with trying to hire
someone to kill MonUlee Duffy. The would-be killer once again
went to detectives to help get Poe arrested.
"He Is Just adamant about doing away with her,'* said
Orange County sheriff's Inspector Bill Morris, who charged Poe
with solicitation to commit first-degree murder.
Poe was charged last July with trying to hire someone to kill
Duffy, 43. According to detectives, he was in Jail on a spouse
abuse charge when he offered a fellow inmate 92.000 to slice
up his ex-wife's face and then kill her later.
In February, on the day he was sentenced to house arrest, he
used a pay telephone at his probation office to call and threaten
his ex-wife, according to Orlando police reports.
In the latest case, Morris said, Poe offered a fellow prisoner
9600 to kill Duffy. Poe gave the Inmate a hand-drawn map to
Duffy’s house. Morris said.

j Torching trial moved to Waat Palm

TALLAHASSEE — Medicaid prescriptions
being diverted from Florida to Cuba that
may be costing taxpayers as much as 92
million a week Is being Investigated by state
health officials.
The prescriptions that have been discov­
ered were traced back to Medicaid clients.
Officials don't know whether doctors are
cooperating in the scheme and wrote the
prescriptions knowing they weren't going to
be usedb
I by the patient.
State Rep. Luis Rojas, R-Hialcah. and the
Dade County Commission have been look­
ing Into the practice and commissioners'
aides estimate that 12 million a week In
Illegal Medicaid prescriptions might be sent
to Cuba.
"I don't want public dollars being sent to

l l do n' t want publ ic
dollars being sent to Cuba.
If we are doing It through
Medicaid funds, It’s costing
th e F l o r i d a t a x p a y e r s
money. |
•S tate Rap. Lula Rojaa
Cuba." Rojas said Monday, "ff we arc doing
it through Medicaid funds. It's costing the
Florida taxpayers money."
Rojas said the Investigation could be
completed within about two weeks and new
state laws may be needed to curtail the
practice.
"A lot of this medicine that is sent doesn’t

get to the people: a lot of it is being
Intercepted by the Cuban government." he
Bald.

A shortage or food and medicine In the
Communist country has caused several
health problems for citizens of Cuba. The
U.S. government also maintains a trade
embargo against Cuba that prohibits selling
goods to the Island country.
About two dozen shipping houses In
Miami are licensed by the federal govern­
ment to send goods to Cuba. Rojas said the
owners of those houses said tnfcy had no
way of knowing the prescriptions had been
paid for by Medicaid.
The practice isn't unique to the Cuban
community. Rojas said. Similar practices
hove been found in large Vietnamese
refugee communities, where prescriptions
were Illegally sent to Vietnam.

Effective
date of
tax cap
postponed
9 y A s a — ia t s d P r e s s

FORT MYERS - A Fort Myers
circuit Judge ruled the Save Our
Homes s ta te co n stitu tio n al
amendment shouldn't go into
effect this year.
Circuit Judge R. Wallace Pack
said he'll • wait until today to
decide whether the cap should
take effect in 1994 or 1905.

1 TAMPA — The trial of two white men accused of torching a
The court hearing Monday was
i black New York tourist will be held in West Palm Beach, the
held to resolve a dispute be­
j prosecutor said.
tween Lee County Property
} State Attorney Harry Lee Coe III said Monday the site had
Appraiser Ken Wilkinson and
• been selected after court administrators surveyed which city
i might be able to hold the racially charged trial.
t the stute of Florida about when
the state constitutional amend­
J "Fortunately for us. West Palm Beach was in a position to
ment should take effect.
j accept it," Coe said.
|
In West Palm Beach court administrator Susan Ferrante said
j a hearing was held Monday on a recommendation to move the
The amendment, which Flor­
proceedings from Tampa.
ida
voters approved In Novem­
A tentative trial date of Aug. 23 has been set.
ber, limits annual Increases In
Three laborers are accused of abducting Christopher Wilson,
the appraised value of home­
a 32-year-old stock brokerage clerk, at gunpoint an New Year's
steaded residential property to 3
Day at a shopping plaza. They allegedly drove him to a remote
percent, the Inflation rate or the
field, doused him with gasoline, and set him ablaze.
change in the home's market
Mark Kohut, 27. ana Charles Rourk, 33, are to be tried on
value, whichever is lower,
; charges of attempted first-degree murder, kidnapping and
. r*’n : J. marmit* -tm vy mr
robbery In the attack on WUaon. who suffered bums over it II |hw
Im.-, o.i ii.t M.r
*■i(jI.ii.i .
nearly 4to»rcent of his body.
At Monday’s hearing, riorlda
• Assistant Attorney General Lee
F lm ttn b ln g probod
Rohe said that because no ef­
TAMPA — Arson Investigators were probing the firebombing
fective date was Included In the
of a State Farm Insurance Co. office In Tampa, police said.
amendment, state law requires
No one was injured In the Monday predawn fire, confined to '-that it take effect the first
the break room of the office on Busch Boulevard, said Steve
Tuesday after the first Monday
Cole, potlce spokesman.
In January, or Jan. 5 of this
Someone hurled a molotov cocktail through a window at
year.
1:25 a.m.. he said.
"The glass bottle contained an undetermined substance,
possibly gasoline." Cole said.
But because p ro p erty is
Arson investigators from the police and fire departments
assessed u b of Jan. 1 , Rohe
were investigating.
a r g u e d , th e a m e n d m e n t
wouldn't become effective until
Bigamy charges filed
Jan. 1, 1994. which would be a
TAMPA — Bigamy charges have been filed against a Tampa
"base year." The date for de­
dentist already accused of kidnapping and shooting his wife.
termining the 3 percent cap
Dr. Charles A. Myers has been held without ball since May
would be Jan. 1. 1998. As a
12, a day after Tampa police say he lured his wife Evelyne
result, homeowners wouldn't
Davla-Myert into his BMW, shot her three times, pushed her
benefit from the cap until their
from the car and left her paralyzed by the roadside,
November 1999 tax bills arc
i The bigamy charges were filed Monday In Hillsborough
mailed.
County after Investigators said they believe they can prove that
Charles Myers was married to Jacqueline Myles Myers when he
Michael Tice, Wilkinson's at­
wed Evelyne Davis Lamar on March S.
torney, described Rohe's argu­
A civil lawsuit filed by Davls-Myers on May 10, alleging that
ment as a "strained Interpreta­
Charles Myers is a bigamist, prompted the philanthropic
tion" of the law and argued that
community leader to violence, said Hillsborough Assistant
the "will of the people1' was to
State Attorney Julia Best Chase on Monday.
apply the cap immediately.

‘Just Say No To Drugs
Members of the West Sanford Boys &amp; Girls
Club participate In an ongoing program
specializing in drug awareness, development of
social sKllls and employability skills for the
teens, sponsored by the Grove Counseling
Center’s Goldsboro Family Support Program
held at the club. The youngsters, ages 6-8 years
old, studied a unit on drug prevention and

made a banner, above, telling why to "Just Say
No To Drugs," " Because They Will Kill You."
Some of the members studying the unit
Included front row, left to right, Armani
Brinson, Charneshia Thomas, Chris Adams,
Jason Church, Brandon HuQhes, Ricky Outlaw,
back row, Corey Young and Danny Hughes.

THE W EATHER
mmMWtf
ft
1J
Todayi Partly cloudy with a 40
percent chance or afternoon
thunderstorms. Highs around
90. Win variable.
Tonight: A 20 percent chance
of evening thunderstorms, then
fair. Low around 70. Light wind.
Wednesday: Variable cloudi­
ness with a 50 percent chance of
ufternoon thunderstorms. High
around 90. Wind variable 10
mph.
Extended forecast: Thursday
through Saturday: Partly cloudy
wilh a chance of showers and
thunderstorms, mainly during
the afternoon and evening.
Highs in the upper 80s to lower
90s.
Published OsHyjand fu n d s *, s u sp i
tshwdsw by The Ssntsrd tisrsid,
hw. M O N. Frsnsti A m , tenford,
pis . u m

fspsnd
Class -Pslsfs Paid
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msltlnn
w
PRma Basm
sW
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POSTttASTIPt; Send I
■ Is T H I fANPONO H i

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SulMIfiltllR H||^|
(tM y liu n d s y )

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plo sm st
City
Daytona Baach
PI. Laud Baach
FortMyan
Oalnaivllla
HomaUaad
Jacksonville
Kay Watt
Lakaland
Miami
Pantacola
Saraiota
Tallahatata
Tampa
Varo Baach
W. Palm Baach

Pci

.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00

&lt; -4 ^
\|"^v

’-V
'

V t j m ;----------1
WEDNESDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

TUESDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

NEW
Jo n s 19

FRIDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

WEDNESDAY)
SOLUNAR TABLE) Min. 8:48
a.m.. 9:20 p.m.: MaJ. 2:40 a.m.,
3:10 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Beaoht highs. 11:22 a.m., 11:3B
,m.: laws, 5:04 a.m.. 5:16 p.m.;
ew Smyrna Beach) highs,
11:27 a.m.. 11:43 p.m.: lows.
5:09 a.m.. 5:21 p.m.: Cocoa
Beach: highs. 11:42 a.m., 11:58
p.m.: lows, 5:24 u.m., 5:36 p.m.

&amp;

€

FIRST
Jane 28

»

LAST
J n ly lt

. Daytona Beach) Waves are
1-2 feet with a slight chop.
Current Is to the north with u
w water temperature of 81 degrees.
.If
.fr New Smyrna Beech) Waves are
1-2 feet and glasay. Current Is to
.00
.01 the north, with a water tempera­
ture of81 degrees.
.00
.00

THURSDAY
Ptlyeltfy 90-70

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
T o n ig h t: W ind so u th to
southwest 10 knots. Seas 2 feet.
Bay and Inland waters smooth.
Widely scattered showers und
thunderstorms.
Wednesday: Wind south to
southeast 10 knots. Seas 2 feet.
Buy and inland waters a light
chop. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms.

SATURDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

The high tem perature In
Sanford Monduy was 93 degrees
und the overnight low was 68 us
reported by the University of
Florldu Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Monday, totalled .06 of an Inch.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 79 degrees and
Tuesday’s overnight low wus
73, us recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□Monday’s high..................92
□Bazometrle preesure. SO.OS
□Relative Humidity *#**79 pot
□ Winds.............. tooth 9 mph
□ Belatell................ .......tzacs
□Today's sunset •«*••9)28 p.m.
□Tomorrow's sunrise •st*8)29

Tomporaturos Indlcal* p rtvtou t day's
high and ovtrnlghl low to !p .m . E D T r
CD*
HI La Prc OtIU
Anchorag* '
41 1]
cdy
A tlanta
71 71 .0* cdy
Atlantic City
17 M
dr
Baltlm ora
17 47 .0? d r
B illing)
*4 40
cdy
Birm ingham
U
73 .IS cdy
Bism arck
»J St
cdy
Bolia
44 43 .04 d r
Boston
is 41
- dr
Burltngton.VI,
77 44 .14
dr
Charloslon.S.C.
IS 71
cdy
Charleston,W.Va.
7f 41 .01 clr
Chariot!#,N,C.
4S 73
clr
Chaytnna
77 4f
clr
Chicago
so to
dr
Clovoland
74 44 .34 d r
Concord.N.H.
S3 » .04 d r
D a li*)-F t Worth
*4 73
cdy
D onv*r
I f S7
clr
D a i M e in a i
M M
cdy
O a lrd t
7? 4S .47 d r
Honolulu
17 73 .01 clr
Houston
M 74 l.N
rn
Indianapolis
7 t 47 .SO clr
Jack son,Miss.
t3 73 1.34 cdy
Kansas City
t l 44
cdy
Las Vogas
N
73
clr
L lllla Rock
17 a *
cdy
Lo* Angolas
74 43
dr
Mam phls
17 70
cdy
M ilw aukee
74 40 • cdy
M p Is S lP a u l
»4 so
m
N ashvlllt
u
4 t .01 cdy
Naw O r loans
«
74 . 40
rn
Naw York City
| ] 41 .41 clr
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Phlladalphla
Phoanl*
Pittsburgh
Port Iand.M a in *
SI Louis
Sail Laka City

Saattla
Washington,DC.

�■fUUWV

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22, 1993

- 3A

Space shuttle closes in on quarry
■yMIKIDRAOO
Associated Press Writer_______

DUI charged
John Steven Porco. 33. 747 Baywood Clr., Sanford, was
charged with driving under the Influence and driving with a
suspended license by Seminole County sheriffs officers on
Saturday.
Officers said he was
drlvln erratically when they tried to
as driving
stop him. They said they caught up with him at U.S. Highway
17-93 and Bush Ave.
They said he smelled of alcohol, his eyes were watery add
bloodshot and hla face was flushed.
He was given a roadside sobriety test which he failed.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 9500 bond.

Domestic violence charged
Jonn Franklin Wheatley. 34, and Allen Lee Mann, 39, both of
1237 Upsala Dr.. Sanford, were charged with domestic violence
by Sanford Police.
Police said the two. who are brothers, got Into an argument
and the two hit each other In the face with their fists.
They were taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
and held on 92,500 bond each.

SPACE CENTER. Houston Endeavour's astronauts awoke
to a full day of experiments
today as the shuttle closed In on
Its quarry, a science satellite.
Shortly after the crew woke up
to the song "Sitting on Top of
the World" by Les Paul and
Mary Ford, Mission Control told
Ilot Brian Duffy that Endeavour
ad moved to within 5,300 miles ,
of Its giant orbiting target.
"That's good news and we're
pedaling as fast as wc can,"
Duffy said. "We’ll be there in a
couple of days.”
The satellite, called Eureca for
the European Retrievable Carrl-

S

t That's

good news and
we’re pedaling as fast as we
can. We'll be there in a
couple of days, y
-Brian Duffy
er. has been orbiting Earth for
nearly a year. Scientists are
anxious to get back the 15
scientific Instruments aboard —
cosmic dust catchers, solar
m o n ito rs, c ry sta l-g ro w in g
furnaces, among other things.
Endeavour's crew will use the
shuttle robot arm to grab Eureca
296 miles above Earth and tuck

it Into the cargo bay Thursday.
The 17.500 mph chase began
Monday, when the shuttle and
Its crew of six lifted off from
Cape Canaveral, Fla. The launch
was delayed a day because of
bad weather.
If the satellite chase goes well,
two astro n au ts will take a
four-hour spacewalk Friday to

help NASA practice for the
Hubble Space Telescope repair
mission this winter.
The eight-day flight will large­
ly be devoted to rcscurch. most
of It Inside the new Spucehab.
the world's first commercial
space lab. It contains wasps,
shrimp and flics for experiments
on how anlmuls develop In
weightlessness.
Spacehab — 9 feet long. 11
feet high and 13 feet In diameter
— Is Inside Endeavour's cargo
bay and reached through a
tunnel. It provides space to
conduct experiments but Is
compact enough to allow room
for the 414-ton Eurccn.
i

No driver’s license
Denffeld Rogers, 38, 116 Anderson Clr.. Sanford, was
charged with driving without a driver license and attaching a
tag not assigned to his vehicle by Sanford Police.
Police said he had been stopped on a traffic violation when It
was discovered that hla licenae waa not valid and that the tag
on the car waa stolen.
Police said that he admitted he waa the owner of the vehicle
but he "does not know how the tag got on his vehicle."
He was taken to the John E. Polk (Correctional Facility and
held on 9100 bond.

Disorderly conduct charged
Kevin Penny, 22, who Identified himself as a transient, waa
charged with disorderly conduct by Sanford Police on
Saturday.
Police said he was found trespassing on property and refused
to leave.
He told them to "shoot me. I don’t care."
Several people came out of their apartments in the area when
he began shouting, police said.
He waa take to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 9100 bond.

FIRST
SEMINOLE
BANK

Open container law violated
Erick Lamar Young, 20. 1300 Sanford Ave., Sanford, was
charged with violating the open container law by Sanford
Police on Saturday.
Police said they performed a traffic stop on a car In which
Young was a passenger.
When they looked Into the car, police said, he had a half
empty, open quart of beer at hls feet.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 9100 bond.

Domestic violence
Felicia Anderson Alexander, 25, 57 William Clark Ct..
Sanford, was charged with domestic violence and In
connection with a warrant for criminal mischief. Sanford Police
made contact with her after they responded to a call of a
domestic disturbance.
They said that her husband hit her In the back of the head so

•bond; she

Cruise on down
Bill Sabine, vice president of Celery City Cruisers, polishes hls
1940 Ford Coupe, one of the about 150 vintage cars that will
cruise along First Street In Sanford this Saturday from 7 to 10
p.m. The Sanford Historic Downtown Waterfront Association,
sponsors of the event, Intend to bring back the days when
citizens came to First Street to cruise, meet people and have fun.
The block parly, complete with music by the 'Rumble Seats', will
take place from Oak Avenue to Sanford Avenue along First
Street. Entry is free. For IhfOrmation, call 3*3-8844.
” •

FIRST SEM INO LE BANK Is soliciting
public comment regarding:
• The effectiveness of the Bank's current efforts
to meet com m unity credit needs.
• Specific credit programs not currently
available which are needed to meet com m unity
credit needs.
W ritten com m ents should be directed to:
joe m. deitz
....................... , ...... . ... - .
Compliance Ottlcar
-n il 'it v
Ml Weal Lake Mery Bird.
Lake Mary, Florida
, . nr
(407) 330-0330
&gt;• •
tfjp

Pope appoints committee to study
dismissal of priests who molest
■y The Aeeoolated Press

'ope,
a committee to study whether to ease church law
to make It easier to dismiss priests who molest
children.
The panel will look specifically at whether the
church's 5-year statute of limitations on dismiss­
als can be lifted In such cases. Roman Catholic
officials said Monday.
It will also study whether the age when
Individuals are considered minors can be raised
from 16 to 18 and whether abusive priests can be
dismissed even if their actions resulted from
m ental illness, said Deacon C hristopher
Baumann, a spokesman for the U.S. Catholic
Conference.
The pope appointed the committee of Vatican
and U.S. Roman Catholic officials at the request
of American bishops.
In a letter to U.S. bishops released Monday, the
pontiff said he has become aware how much
Americans Catholics are suffering because of
clergy scandals.
"I fully share your sorrow and your concern,
especially
ly your concern for the victims so
seriously hurt by these misdeeds," the pope said.

The pope suld the committee will study how
church law "can best be uppllcd to the particular
situation of the United Stutes."
Last week, leaders of the 55-mllllon member
Catholic Church In the United States established
a committee of bishops to address the problem of
priests molesting children.
In personal meetings with the pope, muny
bishops have expressed particular concern ubout
their ability under cunon law lo dismiss a priest
whose moral and psychological condition pre­
cludes hls return to ministry.
Archbishop William Keeler, president of the
National Conference of Catholic Bishops, said
Monday that the pope "has taken to ills own
heart our concern for both the victims of abuse by
priests and the priests who abuse."
David Clohcssy, national director of Survivors
Network of those Abused by Priests, suld. "We're
cautiously hopeful." The group favors lifting the
statute of limitations.
"It Is a good sign (hat the pope Is taking an
Interest in this Issue," Clohcssy said.
There has been no systematic study of clergy
sex abuse, but author JaBon Berry hus said tht
more than 400 Catholic priests In North America
have been reported for molesting children since
1084.

’Last Action Hero’ opens

FREEBIE ADS
Take advantage of this special oiler
T h is is a g re at o p p o rtu n ity for you to en jo y th e sam e g re at res u lts as
o u r reg u lar c la s s ifie d cu s to m e rs at no co st to you. Ju st fo llo w th e s e
in s tru ctio n s.
A ds w ill be sch ed u led to run fo r 10 days.
P rice o f Ite m m ust be s ta ted in the ad and be $1 00 or less.
O n ly 1 ite m per ad and 1 ad per hou seh old p er w eek.
You sh ould call and ca n ce l as soon as Ite m sells.
A v aila b le to Ind ividu als (non C o m m e rcial) only. D oes not
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S an fo rd H e rald C la s s ifie d D e p artm en t.
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8. C la s s ifie d M a n a g e m e n ts d e cisio n on copy a c c e p ta b ility w ill
be fin al.
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5.

Movie In shadow of ‘Jurassic Park’
ayJOHNHORN
AP Entertainment Writer_______

LOS ANGELES - Arnold
Schw arzenegger proved no
match for the prehistoric beasts
of "Jurassic Park."
The muscleman’s "Last Ac­
tion Hero" opened In second
place over the weekend with a
disappointing 915.3 million as
Steven Spielberg's thriller about
a dinosaur theme park con­
tinued setting box-office records
In its second week.
"Jurassic Park" passed 9100
million In nine days, the fastest
ever. It has made 9120.2 million
to date, Exhibitor Relations Co.
reported Monday.
"Last Action Hero." an 980
million movie, fell short of min­
imum of 920 million predicted
by Columbia. For comparison.
Schwarzenegger's "Terminator
2: Judgment Day" made 931.8
million In Its first weekend In
1991.
"Last Action Hero" has been

savaged by critics.
The competition for "Last Ac­
tion Hero" grows on Friday with
the arrival of "Sleepless In Seat­
tle." starring Meg Ryan and Tom
H a n k s, a n d " D e n n is th e
Menace," with Walter Matthau.
Sid Oanls, Columbia's presi­
dent of marketing and distribu­
tion, said he was nonetheless
pleased with the performance of
"Last Action Hero." But he
conceded, "The next few weeks
are going to be key weeks.'"
Here arc Exhibitor Relations'
estimated ticket sales Friday
through Sunday, with distribu­
tor, weekend gross, number of
theater locations, average per
location, total gross and number
of weeks In release.
Figures are based on actual
receipts and projections where
actual figures were not available.
1. "JuroM lc P a r k /' U n lv « ru l. IN I m il.
lion, 1 .0 7 location*. 111.710 por location,
I1 M .2 million, two wook*.
1. " L o tt Action H o ro /' Columbia. I I 1 J
m illion. I J M location*. 14.01 por location,
f l l . l million, ona woak.
1. "C lllthonoor," TrIS tar. 0 7 m illion. 2.2*1

location!, 17.10 par location, 1 1 1 7 million,
lour w **k *. 4. " W h a t'l Lov* Got lo Oo With
It," Dltnoy. U i m illion, 471 lo c itlo n i. 14.415
par location, 0 4 m illion, two w t*k t
I . "M a d * In A m trlc a ." W irrw r Bro*., U i
m illion. 1.041 location!. 11.711 p *r location.
114 4 million, tour w **k t.
4. "G uilty a t Sin." Dlinoy, 11.7 million.
I. 141 location*. 11.171 por location, l i l t
m illion, throo w o*ki.
7. ” 0 * v » ," W arrw r B r o * 12.1 million, 1.400
location*, 11,10 por location. 0 1 4 million,
aovon wook*.
0. "Onco Upon a F x o t t ." N th Canlury Fo«,
II.
2 m illio n , 1.417 location !, 11.444 p *r
location. 11.2 m illion, ona wo*k.
f . "Monaco II Soclaty." Now Lina, 12
m illion. 170 location*. 12.111 par location.
III.
* m illion, lour wooki.
10. " L ila W ith M lk ty ," D l*n ty , 11.4 million.
1.01 location*, |M 7 por Ix a tio n . t f . l million,
thrto wook*.
It . "M ol Shot*I P art D *u » ." N th C *nlury
Fo», I t . I I million, 1.271 Ix a tio n *.. toot por
Ix a tio n . 12 2* m illion, tlv * w **k *.
12. "S ilve r." Param ount, 1107 million.
1.027 Ix a llo n *. 11.01* par Ix a tio n . 1141
million, llvow ookt.
I I . " In d x tn t Propo*ol," Param ount, 11.04
m illion. 177 Ix a tio n *. 11, l i t por Ix a tio n ,
0100.1 million. I I wook*.
14. "M uch Ado About Nothing " Goldwyn,
01.01 m illion. I l l Ix a tio n *. I7.M 7 par l x *
tlon. M l million, *#v*n wook*
15. "S u par M a rio B ro th a rt," D lin ty .
1771.000. U N Ix a tio n *. M44 por Ix a tio n .
110.4 million, lour wooki.
11. "U n tx g lv a n ." W arnor Bro* , 1402.000.
444 Ix a tio n *. 1477 par Ix a llo n . 1100 m illion.

Sanford
Herald

CLASSIFIED

FREEBIE AOS

P.0. Box 1967
Sanford, FL 32772-1957
* ONLY O N I IT1M

• MUST INCLUDI PRICE

• 1100 OR LIU

PRINT AO HIRIL.

NAME

PHONE.

�H H M m ifw

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June U, 1W3 - IA

Clinton says he wants to reach
man claiming to be half- brother
JO S E P H

P ER K IN S

T h e re s p o n s ib ility for arts fu n d in g
but also at the state and federal levcf who dare to
suggest that arts funding should be In the private
d o m a in . To th e ------------------------------m in d s of the art
c r o w d , t he
withdrawal of gov­
ernment support for
th e a r ts w ill In*
c v ltu h ly lend to
IB M jf* W
America's cultural
% Vdccllnc.
\a M
Art advocates often
point out that some
of the greatest works
M
In history — some of
M
B eethoven’s symM
phonics, some of da
^ __________
V inci's canvasses,

E D IT O R IA L S

Would you leave
if hurricane hit?
An Associated Press poll of people In the
area hardest hit by Hurricane Andrew on
Aug. 24. 1092, Indicates S3 percent said they
would leave If another hurricane heads In
1 their direction.
The percentage Is far greater than the
' number who left when Andrew warnings
were first posted in South Florida. After
having aufTered over 923 billion dollars In
damage In the hurricane ravaged area, people
are frightened. They have goodreason to be.

change for aspiring thespUns and divas and
sculptors and ballerinas.
It Is that mind-set that brought a gaggle of
artists and art administrators to a recent meeting
of San Diego's City Council. The srtists draped
themselves In black to dramatize the "black eye"
that'the financially strapped city supposedly will
suffer If the council follows through with its plan
to trim arts funding.
This is the kind of protest that greets
government officials'notonly i t the loci

Shakespeare's plays
perhaps I
— were sponsored by
might be
a e s th e tlc -m ln d c d
observing a
governm ents. But.
historic talent. J
th e n , m u c h h a s
changed over the last
several centuries.
During the lifetimes of Beethoven, da Vinci and
Shakespeare, wealth was concentrated In the
hands of the few. mainly monarchs and nobles

Sky-bound drug
interdiction
not panning out

Street.

•

There is no guarantee we will not have a
hurricane visit us this year. With that in
i mind. It's time to make plans on what to do In
1 an emergency.
i If a severe warning is Issued, would you be
I willing to leave the area? Where would you
’ go, how would you get there, and how will
1 you pay for it?
N Not everyone has a cousin Martha In the
. Panhandle, or an aunt In Cleveland with a
. spare room.
i Low Income families In less th an adequate
i hom es m ay have more of a reason to leave
-i&gt;than&lt;otbcrs. How&gt; will they afTord to pay for a
) motel elsew here In the state?
For those who would refume to evacuate

J undeP’ aq/t'Circumstances, there are addi­
tional questions. Can you guarantee your
1 family that the house Is safe? Have you
arranged for emergency food and water?

Should we disarm
law-abiding citizens?
As a response to Hodding Carter's editorial
"Time to Put Away Our Handguns" regarding the
need for gun control pressed upon law-abiding
citizens. Rodney Pcalrs shot Yoshiro Hattorl. Pealrs
was not "reacting" to societal training nor did the
Jury "react" and "set him free" because of a code
whose origins can be traced to the nation's frontier
past. He was tried by a Jury of his peers. Judged not
guilty, and released. Carter Identifies the problem
aa "behavlor that had a certain logic when the law
waa somehwere over the horizon la Inappropriate
within 'civilized communities.'" Does he consider
South Dade County following Hurricane Andrew,
South Central Los Angeles during the riots, or
Luby's Cafeteria In Killeen. Texas when a
homicidal maniac shot, casually relaodcd, and
continued to shoot fatally, 22 victims? Perhaps
Washington, D.C. Is civilized: have you walked
their streets lately?
"When handguns are available to all. safety Is
available to none" la pure non-fact. Each year
645.0QP law-abiding citizens use handguns, and
300,000 use rifles and shotguns In lawful self
defense (Gary Kleck. FSU criminologist).
Carter Identifies the problem as "those people
who ore armed with lethal weapons." Would
weapons Include automobiles — 41,000 deaths
(1991) , or smoking materials — 400,000 deaths
(1992)?
The statistics are at beat misleading. "FBI
Uniform Crime Report (1991). There were 327
Justifiable homicides committed by irivate cltl*
zens." That number ta Incorrect. The National
Center for Policy Analysis states that "potential
victims shoot to death 2,000-3,000 criminals every
year."
Using a telephone to call police la certainly
mandatory, 911 is even quicker, but what does an
unarmed citizen do as he or she waits In the
Immediate vicinity of an armed felon?
"Tougher gun control laws would be an
unqualified good thing" Is true If you are a
criminal. We already have almost 20,000 gun laws
on the books today. Do we need more? Or do we
need fewer criminals preying on society?
Remember, drugs are Illegal by law. Have drugs
disappeared? Should we disarm law-abiding cltl*
sens?
KimTownscnd
.
Sanford

There Is another perverse aspect to public
funding of the arts: Even as arts advocates In Sun
Diego and certain other cities throughout the
country lament cuts, certain segments of the art
world are making huge sum s of money.
Broadway theatergoers, for Instance, spent $327
million during the recent season, the highest
total ever. Art buyers dropped $146 million at
Sotheby's and Christie's spring auctions on
various contemporary. Impressionistic and mod­
ern paintings.

JACK ANDERSON

Sanford and the surrounding area have
never had a hurricane with the destructive
force of Andrew. With the amount of land
between the ocean and the city, the speed
would quickly dwindle.
Yet Sanford has experienced hurricanes
with winds of slightly over 00 miles per hour
In the past few decades. The waters of Lake
Monroe have riaen high enough to reach First

Prior to the arrival of a hurricane, there are
two a n n o u n cem en ts. A h u rricane w atch
Indicates one m ay possibly move Into the
area. A hurricane w arning m eans one Is
definitely approaching.
These questions regarding w hat to do m ust
be an sw ered an d p lan s m ade before a
w arning or w atch Is ever Issued.
In addition to property dam age, hurricanes
also cost lives. If a recom m endation to leave
the area Is ever Issued, do It w ithout question.

Had It been left to the peasantry to financially
support the arts, then artists truly would have
starved.
By continuing In modern-day America the
centuries-old tradition of government support of
the arts, we actually do the average tuxpaycr un
Injustice. Qo to the ballet or the symphony or the
opera, attend a museum opening, check out a
play or musical. Look over the audience. They
are disproportionately affluent.
Government funding of the arts amounts to un
Income transfer from average working stiffs to
the most well-off members of our society. If Joe
Slxpack has to pay the full freight to catch a
ballgamc or a movie or rock concert, why should
he be forced to subsidize the amusements of
people who arc earning far more than he?

J A Y D. H A IR

Human rights agenda asserted
The Clinton administration is reclaiming
U.S. leadership to confront the social and
environmental problems associated with the
world's burgeoning population. The decision Is
a stark reversal of the Reagan-Bush view of
population growth as a neutral factor In
human affairs.
The policy is new not only for Its change of
direction, but for the principles of human
rights tt Is grounded on. The United States is
asserting that a woman's right to basic
education, and her and her children's rights to
primary medical care are fundamental con­
cerns to the International community.
Education and health care are two of the
essentials shown by experience to be the
pathways to lowering the rate of population
growth.
"We m ust recognize th a t advancing
women's rights ana health and promoting
family planning are mutually reinforcing
objectives." State Department Counselor
Timothy E. Wlrth said in announcing the new
policy.
In the Industrialized world, the challenge lies
more in the rate of consumption than In the
rate of population growth, with less than a
quarter of the world^ population. Wlrth noted,
'’developed nations consume 75 percent of all
raw materials" accounting for a "dlaproporoccurring almost entirely In poorer nations. A
population larger than that of the United States
Is added to the developing world every three
years. These people ore Increasingly raised In

effect of Increasing family income and-reductng family size. Acquiring non-farm skills
begins with the rudiments or literacy. In many
poor nations, high birth rates are linked to
high rates of Infant mortality and to the
parents' desire for several children to help
support them In later years. Primary health
core can strike at the curse of Infant mortality.
Having fewer but educated children can
provide parents more security, particularly In
an urban environment, than having many
children who have never had the benefit of
schooling.
These same studies show again and again
that as women gain access to education, they
choose to have fewer children. That choice Is
enhanced In direct proportion to a mother's
confidence that the children she does have will
not be denied primary health services.
These conclusions confirm the Intuitive. But
In th e l u m b e r i n g worl d of pol i t i cal
bureaucracies, they are nothing short of

revolutionary. As vital as It Is to mukc
voluntary family planning avullublc. It alone Is
not enough. The Integration of education,
health services and family planning comprise
the necessary structure upon which to build
persona) and family security, u declining
growth rate, and.eventually development for
an entire nation.
------------------- ---------The United States
has now acknowl­
edged these Inter*
relationships and Is
[
pledged to promote
4 *9 p R
them In the Interna*
, .JE &amp; v
tlonal arena.
\ ~
T h e p o lic y de*
,\
serves support. It Is
A
the right thing to do.
As a leader In the
world com m unity,
the positions taken
by the United States
£ A population
must have a base of ■
larger than
moral content If they
that
of the
are to win support at
United
States
hom e or to have
Is
added
to
meaning abroad. The
the
developing
new policy on popu­
world every
latio n m eets th is
three years. ■
standard.
The policy also
makes practical use
of the limited resources this nation has to meet
Us International responsibilities. In the longer

encouraging population stablll;
investment In a healthier and
world community,
This policy In our foreign rclat
remain linked to domestic effor
waste in our economic life with
husband rather than squander
seek out a pattern for our own gn
be sustained Into the Indefinite hit
"No Issue will leave a greater ni
generations than the population

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor arc welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the address of the writer
and a daytime telephone number. Letters should
be on a single subject and be us brief us possible.
The letters arc subject to editing.

WASHINGTON — It has the elements of a
modern-day "French Connection." except the
chase scenes take place with some machines
borrowed from a U.S. Air Force designed in
fight the Cold War. but which are now
Increasingly being conscripted Into the drug
war.
This story pluys out every day In the
Increasingly dangerous skies over Mexico and
Central Amcrlcu. Interviews with lawenforcement officials
and pilots paint u
picture of a program
that can often be
more perilous to U.S.
filers than to drug
sm u g g le r* , w hile
making little dent In
drug trafficking.
O ne r e c e n t
skirmish In the skies
north of Colombia
Illustrates the futility
many fliers arc feel­
ing. According to our
A program
sources, a drug-laden
more perilous
aircraft took off from
a strip In northern
Colombia unaware
uiiim
that it would be the
whTle making
focus of day-long
little dent In
monitoring by six of
dmQ
the United Stales'
trafficking. 3
most sophisticated
________
______
surveillance planes. The hunt Intensified its
soon as the plane ventured north over the
ocean.
,
First there was a U.S. Navy ship In
International waters olT Colombia. Next, a
U.S. AWACS spy plane begun tracking It
from high above. Then two U.S. F-15 Jets
from Panama and a U.S. Customs Service
Piper Cheyenne from Honduras Joined the
chose. When the F*15s and the Cheyenne ran
low on fuel, they, were replaced by two
backup aircraft from the Customs Service.
Unaware of the forces arrayed agulnst him.
the pilot finally dropped his load some 50
miles ofT the coast of Guatemala to an
awaiting ship.
Despite the effort und expense, there was
no seizure. An American pilot Involved In the
chase expressed frustration wc heard echoed
by many pilots In Interviews:
"There were no locals (authorities) down
there to get it (drugs). That'a the biggest
problem we have. There’s no endgame. We
can follow them all we want, but half the time
nobody's down there to get It."
Issues surrounding sovereignty preclude
the United States from Interdicting narcotics
flights In Mexico and Central America. The
U.S. role is relegated to tracking flights, and
relaying the Intelligence to local authorities
on whom they rely to apprehend the
shipments. The atm is for these countries to
develop their own capabilities.
Untti that time, logistical nightmares und
suspicions of corruption play havoc with the
Interdiction efforts. A recent General Ac­
counting OfTlcc study found thut of the 107
suspect aircraft tracked by U.S. und Mexican
authorities during 1991, only 23 were
uctually apprehended by Mexican law en­
forcement officials. In the first seven months
of 1992, there were eight apprehensions of 59
suspect aircraft that landed In Mexico.
"Although the amount of cocaine seized by
(the Joint operation) appears Impressive ... It
becomes evident that most (lights arc
transiting Mexico without being Interdicted."
the GAO report concluded.
The joint effort Is not without some notable
successes. Officials point to the seizure of
more than 65 metric tons of cocaine. In
Mexico between 1990 and 1992 as a result of
the air operations. Last year virtually all of
the 9.5 tons of cocaine seized in Guatemala
were the result of Joint efforts with the United
States.
In 1991. seven Mexican drug agents were
killed In a shoot-out with Mexican army
soldiers who were protecting a landing strip
for narcotics traffickers.

W A S H IN G T O N - T h e
California man who clulms to be
Bill Clinton's half-brother said
today he hopes the president
believes they arc related but
says he wants no favors.
Henry Leon Rltzenthaler said
lie wus cn route to New York
when Clinton tried to contact
him Monday. " I'd be very
honored and very privileged to
talk to him." he said on ABC this
morning.
"I don't know what I'd say to
him." he said on CBS.
The retired Janitorial service
owner from Paradise. Calif., says
lie und Clinton have the same
father: W.J. Blythe. Blythe died
a few months before the future
president was born, and ubout
nine years after Rltzenthaler's
birth.
Without confirming Rltzcnthaler's claim, Clinton said he
tried to call him Monday. "I
placed a call but there was
nobody home. I don't think I
should say unythlng until I've
talked to him," Clinton told
reporters, promising to release a

statement as soon as he did.
Ritzcnthulcr suld the only
thing he wants from Clinton Is
recognition that they are related.
"I know lie's my half-brother. I
know he Is In my mind, my own
heart. 1 hope he reaches the
sumc Idea.” he said.
"I don’t want nothing from Mr.
Clinton at all. I don't want no
fuvors or nothing." he said.
Rltzenthaler und Ills wife,
Judith, said they wrote Clinton's
campulgn last June when they
learned of the family connection.
They never heard back, but hold
no hard feelings.
"When wc never received a
reply, wc decided ut that time
we'll let It drop because we
didn't know. one. If he was
Interested or If lie even got the
letter." Mrs. Rltzenthaler said.
A campaign aide said Clinton
shrugged off all questions about
his father, saying he wanted his
dud to "rest in peace."
The Rltzcnthalers said they
wrote Clinton to learn about the
Blythe family history because
the California man has a history
of heart trouble.
After Blythe died, ’ Clinton's
mother rcmurrlcd and Clinton

took the name of hie ftrat
stepfather, Roger Clinton. His
mother's second son by that
marriage. Roger, now 39, spent a
year In federal prison In 1984 on
a cocaine charge and Is now
pursuing a singing career.
Until now, media accounts of
Clinton's humble upbringing
have Invariably said he was
Blythe's only son.
The Washington Post reported
Sunday, however, that records
show Blythe married Adele Oath
ColTclt 11 years before Clinton's
birth. The couple divorced a year
later, then Rltzenthaler was bOm
In 1938. Rltzenthaler said today
he was conceived the day his
father and mother signed their
divorce papers,
W.J. Blythe was listed on his
birth certificate as the father.
Coffclt says Blythe was the
father.
Clinton is 48; Ritsenthaler. 58.
Blythe's sister, Vera Ramey of
Denison. Texas, says the father
actually was a member of W.J.'s
family, a married man whom
she would not Identify. She said
Clinton's father accepted re*
sponslblllty to avoid a family
scandal.

The Sanford .Rotary Club, whioh meets at the
Sanford Civic Canter aach Monday at noon,
donatad a ehaek to Sanford Malnstreet, Inc., for
lie renovation projects of the downtown

DAN "DUT" WILLIAMS
Dan "Dut" Williams. 79. of
1611 Strawberry Ave., Sanford,
died Monday. June 21, ut Cen­
tral Florldu Rcglonul Hospital.
Sanford. Born Nov. 19, 1913. In
Hrooksvlllc, he moved to Sanford
50 years ago from there. He wus
u retired citrus luborcr and a
Baptist.
Survivors Include son. Terry.
Rochester. N.Y.; stepson, Lcnurd
Jam es. California; brother.
Spencer Williams, Sanford; one
s I c p g r a it d s o it u n d o n e
siepgrcut-grutidchlld.
Sunrise Funeral Home. Sunford, In churgc of urrungements.
JUAN DEYNE
Juun Deync. 82. Lu Cusltu
Street, Sunford, died Sunday.
June 6, ut Florldu Health Care.
Daytona Beuch. Mr. Deync wusu
muchlnc operator for Chambers
Paper Co. Born Feb. 5. 1911 In
Mocu. Puerto Rico, he moved
from New York to Central Flor­
ida In 1987. He wus a member of
Our Lady of the Lukes Catholic
Church. Dcltonu.
Survivors Include wife. Suntlugn: son, Mlcltucl of Deltona;
daughters, Mildred Cruz of
Bronx. N.Y.. Evelyn Suntos of
Dcltonu; brother, Oolllio of
Brooklyn; sisters, Bonlfuclu of
Puerto Rico, Murta of North
Carolina, Altagracla of Bronx;
seven grandchildren.
Stephen R. Hulduuff Funeral
Home, Dcltonu. In charge of
arrangements.
ALICE M. OIDDEN8
Alice M. Guldens. 77. of 520
Glddcns Lane. Osteen, died
Monday. June 21. ut Central
Florida Rcglonul Hospital. San­
ford. Born Muy 14. 1916. lit
Baldwin, she was a lifelong
resident of Central Florida. She
wus u h o m e m a k e r un d u
m em ber of O steen B aptist
Church.
Survivors Include daughters.
Barbara Snyder. Olivia Karp,
both of Osteen. Estelle Kolhcr.
Selma Ala.. Martha Ann Biddle.
Port St. Lucie: sons. Herbert.

House narrowly approved a dif­
fcrent energy tax. based on heat
content and covering virtually
all sources of energy, with
estimated revenues of $71.5
billion over the next five years,
The president said he still thinks
that was u good concept, but It
was blocked by Democratic dlss e n t In th e S e n a te , a n d
bargained down to the gasoline
tux.
The White House said Clinton
obviously would prefer his orlglmil tax plan but needs terms
thut can command majorities In
Congress,
So the president Is declining to
pick n version, leaving his posttlon on a gasoline tax purposely
vague, ut least until the budget
bill Is ready for a conference
between the House and Senate
on their rlvul energy tax provisions.'
1 1
.
The energy tax proposals of
.'curlier administrations, purlieularly Jimmy Curler's and Richurd Nixon's, were aimed ul
conservation and nl reducing
U.S. reliance on Imported oli.
They were prompted by Arab oil
embargoes, filling station lines
und the economic pinch of fuel
shortages. Taxes, some direct.
some standby, tu he triggered by
excessive consumption were to
be part of a long-term national

Port St. Lucie. Lee. Osteen;
s te p d a u g h te r. J e n n ie Muc
Cohen, Osteen; stepson, Uucl. Ft.
Worth. Texas: brothers. Irving
Lawcrcncc. Dcltonu. Albert
Luw crcncc, DcLund. Jo h n
Lawcrcncc. Eugene Luwcrcncc.
W alter Law crcncc. C onrad
Lawcrcncc. ull of Osteen; sister.
Martha Rouse. Fulls Church. Vu;
16 g ra n d c h ild re n an d 22
greut-grundchlldrcn.
Gruwkow F uneral Home,
Sunford. It) charge of arrangeincuts.
RICHARD THOMAS HAMELIN
Richard Thomas liumelln. Sr..
58 Homestead Ave., Dcbary,
died Sunduy. June 20. at West
Volusia Memorlul Hospital, DeLund. Mr. Huntclln wus born In
Huverlll. Muss.. June 29. 1934.
He wus un Air Force veteran und
u self employed cabinet maker.
He moved to tjtls urea 24 years
ago from Huverlll. He wus Bap­
tist.
Survivors Include wife. Cindy
Humclin, DcHury: sons. John
and Richard Humclin of Sanford.
Richard Murk. Nashville. Tcnn.;
daughters. Lori Vczlnu und
Tummy Muxson both of DcUary;
b ro th er. Normutt Humclin,
Nashville.
Altmun-Lang Funeral Home.
DcBary, In churgc of arrange­
ments.
MAROARET O. HOWELL
Margaret G. Howell. 81, 400
Locust Ave.. Sunford. died
Monduy, June 21. at Central
Florldu Regional Hospllul. Mrs.
Howell wus u homemaker. Born
Dec. 12, 1911, In Francis, she
moved to Central Florldu In
1918. She wus Huptlst.
Survivors Include sons. J.B..
Deltona. Juck. Detroit; dnughtcr.
June Caldwell. Huntsville, Alu.;
brother, Frank A. Guilin, Luke
Monroe; 10 grandchildren, 10
great-grandchildren and several
great-great-grundchlldren.
Brisuon Funeral Home. San­
ford, In charge of urrungements.

b u sin e s s district. Randy R obarts, R otary
praaldant, presents $1,000 to Chris Cranlas,
co-president of Sanford Malnstreet Inc.

Hearing
Continued from Page 1A
husband was
hired temporarily as a school
mechanic ut top puy, rather than
the usual minimum wage, when
he was out of work for a 30 day
period from his regular Job,
Further, the entire grounds
department of 35 employees,
many of whom would have
worked under Presley, signed u
petition stating they believed she
was hired through favoritism
rather than far leadership ublllty
or experience.

In energy crisis or deficit
crunch, taxing gas is tough
■y WALTER R. MIAR8 An AP News Analysis
---------------------------------------WASHINGTON — For 20
yeurs, since the first energy
crisis hit home at the gasoline
pump, the option of taxing gas
has been on and olT the table, an
Idea that always stirred a struggle. And still does.
In the Senate this week, and In
th e c o n g re s s io n a l b u d g e t
bargaining that will follow.
energy taxes will be a major
l&gt;olnt of contention on President
Clinton's economic program.
Not with him, though. He's
slaying out of the way. although
D e m o crats in th e S e n a te
scrapped his original energy tax
In favor of a 4.3-ccnt-a-gallon tax
Incrcusc on gasoline und other
transportation fuels, coupled
with sharper spending cuts.
"It at least Is small cnodgn'bo
that It's not particularly Unum to
people in rural areqs," Clinton
said In a radio Interview Monday. "... I did not want just n big.
old gas lux."
In d e e d , he c a m p a ig n e d
against the very Idea of a gus
tax. coming around after the
election, and now says be was
forced to flint point when the
Hush administration Increased
long-term deDelt projections.
Clinton recommended and the

H *f«M Photo by Temmv Vlneenl

Sanford’* future

energy policy.
,Ca? " «al" ed enactment of a
windfall profits tax on oil. with
revenue estimates of up to $227
billion over a 10-year period. But
that was based on oil prices that
never happened. Instead, prices
fell, and by the time the tax was
repealed In 1987. proceeds had
dwindled near zero.
The energy crises eased, the
oil Imports flowed and later
energy tax proposals were, like
Clinton's, sought for the revenuen they would raise to offset
budget deficits. In 1983, Republicans In the Senate even
considered a tax based on heat
content, the kind of Btu tax
Clinton proposed this year.
In one of a half-dozen radio
Interviews promoting his economlc program on the eve of
Senate debate, Clinton aaid hit

Finally, petitioners claimed
Presley's promotion should be
reviewed because she was not
the first choice of the review
ronimltlcc but got the Job any*
wuy.
Presley tiled a complaint with
the stute after school officials
took away her promotion.
11. Lee Cohee II is the state
hearing officer on the case. The
hearings will be conducted at the
Seminole County School Board
nlTlcc, 1211 South Mellonvllle
Avenue.

awaXw,in ,ne C,,YP°l,cc’
In the November 3 election,
commlaslonera Rex Anderson's,
pred pearl's and Smerllaon's
teats are up for election. Comm listeners Steve Miller's and
Loveatrand'a seats are not. Miller
and Loyestrand sometimes vote
the „ „ „ way on liaUMi
1
Lovestrand was the only
tunce services. "How are you
commissioner to vote against Continued from Page IA
drafting the charter amendment. first glance, from 10 percent to 7 going to get some fly-by-night
The proposal Includes a pro- percent, would huve been an lo n g d l s t u n c c c a r r i e r In
vision that the question will be Increase because intrastate calls Wisconsin to pay us?" Pearl
asked McNutt. Pearl added that
placed on the Nov. 3 ballot, would also be taxed.
City finance director Dun at least two of the carriers listed
Although Miller voted In favor of
drafting the proposal, he said he McNutt explained the change in McNutt's proposal recently
could not vote in favor of it would have created more reve- had gone out of business,
nuc for the city with the addition
City a d m in istra to r Jam e s
Monday night because tt would
take control of the police de­ of the Intrastutc calls tax. The tax McFcllln urged the commissionpartment away from the com- would have ulso upplled to people ers not to mukc a final decision
mlaslon and for a lot of other using beepers, p ag ers and on the new utility tax formula
ccjjulorphones.,
M. ,(J ,j :«,(tluntili seeking tthe. proposed budreasons, which he did not state.
*M M trfebtamlsslon members get which mayutirufetdy next
e n e rtv '^qpnsurapttar.
n iu ra o T to ^• T*®"***
n
•vo’te to
IV, ll/lw JHillll L .'i
energy
«bool|«h o utr^golbg^to*
police deport*
conservation and encourage ment..,evgr •• *Juier sutetfeitl*. « r r r W &amp; U l d adversely affect "I,have u feclipg.wg afe going
tMvMuals calling relatives but- to need additional revenue."
side their calling area.
McFcllln said, "or be faced with
C om m issioner F red Pearl making substantial budget cuts,
questioned how the city could be Please don't suy 'No'yet."
able to effectively collect the
The commissioners did not
intrastate phone tux from the 30 tndlcutc they ure Interested In
companies providing long dls- imposing the additional taxes.

Panel

WALDENBE "PAP" REPOE
Wuldcnsc "Pap" Refoe, 73,
Philadelphia, died Wednesday,
June 16 at, Episcopal Hospital,
Philadclph. Mr. Refoe was a
retired postal service clerk. Born
Nov. 5. 1919, in Sanford, he
moved to Philadelphia In 1941.
He wus u World War II veteran.
He Is survived by a brother.
Herman L. Jr. Sanford.
Wllson-Elchclberger Mortuary
Service Inc., Sanford. In charge
of arrangements.
ROBERT B. WHITE
Robert B. White. 62, 481
Sugar Ridge Court. Longwood.
died Sunduy, June 20, at Florida
Hospital. Altamonte Springs. Mr.
White was a merchandising
ittanugcr and group manager for
Scars, Roebuck and Co. Born
March 17. 1931 in New York, he
moved to Central Florida In
1975. He was Unitarian and an
Army veteran of the Korean
War.
S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e w ife,
Barbara B.; sons, Richard C.
Duvls. Palm Harbor. Steven C.
Davis, Tampa; daughter, Nancle
D. Kclchlc. Tampa: mother,
Hurrlct B. Bacza. St. Petersburg;
brother, Churlcs M. Weiss, St.
Petersburg: three grandchildren.
Moss Fcaster Funeral Homes.
Clearwater In charge of a r­
rangements.
.' *T I f f
%.i F*
r 1
V U M l 'lUMS'XV* &lt;

m

H A M S U N . R IC H A R O tH O M A I
A m em orial aervlce for Richard Thom ai
Ham alln, Sr., aga SI, ol Dabary, who died
Sunday, June 30. IWJ, w ill be held Wednes­
day. June 23. at 1 p.m . at lha A llm an Long
Funeral Homo Chapel. Dobery, w ith F a lte r
J.C. Steele officiating.
Allm an Long Funeral Home, D eSary, In
charga ol arrangam entt.
O IO D IN S . A L IC IM .
Funeral tervlce for M r i. Alice M . O M dent,
11, ol Oateen. who died Monday w ill be IS
o'clock Wedneadey morning o l First Saptlat
Church of O ateen‘ with the Rev. Cherlea
Petaraon officiating. Interm ent w ill be In
Oateen C em etery. Frlenda moy cell et
G re m k e w F u n e ra l H om e th la evening
tTueadey) from M P.M .
A rra n g tm e n fa by O ra m k o w F u n e ra l
Home. Sanford

$12,000 from the police departm ent consflscatlon fund to
establish a weekly dance club to
keep kids ofT the streets and
away from drugs and alcohol.
• Agreed to work with, a
hardw are owner who owes
$27,552 in uncollected nubile
service tax from filling small
propane tanka uaed in barbecue
grills. The city and atore owner
were unaware tax was to be
collected. The $27,000 amount
reflects only five year* worth of
tax. Due to an opinion by the
state attorney general, the
commission voted to collect all
the tax. Just over an extended
period of time. ACE store owner
Robert Panel), Jr. said a lump
sum payment would put him out
of business. He said Sanford
commlssionera voted norto collect the bock taxes on hla store
sales there under a home rule
law.
• Agreed to change lot size
requirements for new and used
car lots and marine and recreatlonal vehtle sale, lease and
rental facilities.

Continued from Page IA
variety of disciplines.
Including citizens, health pro­
fessionals. youth und seniors
advocates, and thcjudlctury.
Locally, Seminole County
commissioners nominated three
Sanford residents who were
uppolntcd by Gov. Lawton
Chiles. They met Friday In an
organizational meeting. The
appointees arc:
• Debbie Brooks-Kantor. co­
founder of the local chapter of
ACES, Association for Children
for Enforcement of Support, a
support group that aids parents
seeking child support from
estranged partners. BrooksKantor Is owner of About Mar­
keting of Florida, a full-service
marketing firm. She cites child
edre. elderly heullh care und
affordable heulth for all us her

three arcus of Interest.
• Longtime Sanford resident
Art Harris, former administrator
of Florida Manor in Orlando, a
420-1,ed nursing home. Harris
served on numerous boards.
Including an curly predecessor of
the HHS board, he wus a founder
of Community Cure for the
Elderly and bus served on the
Sanford Plunnlng und Zoning
Commission. Harris suld he'll
offer his services where ever he's
needed, but udded. "I'm 70
years old. so you know I'll be
Interested In the elderly."
• Bill Moore, completing his
first full ycur as principal of
Sanford Middle School. He pre­
viously served us assistant prin­
cipal of Lake Mary High. Moore
Is ulso pust president of Semi­
nole Education Association, the
local teacher’s union.

State Rond 46 nnd Cochran Roud
near Geneva was the subject of
months of controversy. In Muy
1991. commissioners first perm l t t c d J a m e s F r o c 11 c h
permission to dig u 40-acre pit.
Residents opposed that, saving
Frocllclt wunted to dig the hole
within 12 feet or the "Geneva
bubble." their fragile drinking
water supply.
The property wus sold to
Excavated Products which re­
vised the digging plan to be
larger, but slightly shallower,
After commissioners und the
water district approved the see­
ond P|an- residents challenged
l*16 permits und u stute hcurlng
officer recommended digging a
portion of the pit to ullow district
engineers to review the Impacts
before completing the pit. Dlstrlcl governors accepted the rec
ommendatlon.
Don Crabtree, leader of u
Broup of Qcncvu residents opposing the pit and extension
request, says the year remaining
In the permit Is plenty of time to
allow thcni to complete the first

pliusc of digging.
C ounty staff has reco m ­
mended upprovlttg the two yeur
extension, but not Increasing the
dally operating hours.
Near Oviedo, several neighbors
of Duvld and Paula McMillan'B
Tigers Eye Productions oppose
their request for a three-year
extension on their permit,' first
grunted In 1990. Residents have
primarily complulncd about the
Increased traffic on their rural
rouds serving the school for
people seeking certification to
bundle large cats and other
animals.
David McMIllun suld he In­
tended to move the school to u
permanent location, but the
economic downturn prevented
him from earning the estimated
$500,000 he needed to mgve the
school. Although un Orange
County anlinul society wrote
commissioners, saying they had
offered the McMilluns u new site
In s o u th O range C o u n ty ,
McMillan suld the site was
swampy and unsuitable for their
unliiials.
C ounty Htuff has re c o m ­
mended upprovul of the, request
to extend the license, but to
deny other requests Including
Increasing the number of stu­
dents und dally hours of opera­
tion.

�§A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22, 1993

Younq

&amp;

affluent
Hakr Oeatgn A Tanning Can tar

C ounties ranked by percent d h o u a e h e W • under ege
38 Wits 1 H t household incom e* of 180^80 or m ore
County (metro area) an uuueeftAkni unflp e fll »

83.1% 1

I i Putnam, NY iNew Vorti) SOW
1 I Someraet NJ (Mldae*e**Somet*et.Hurterden) U.m
1

i Naaaau, NY (N eaaeu-S u **) W .JW

W -3 % 1
itrh l

1 |Hurrttrdon. NJ (M flJ i— » 8om yitt«Hffttfflon) $.996 W .1 % 1
|Morn*. NJ iNtwarti) U.21T
1Fault*, VA' (Waahwgton) « t .M )

a t y

1Suaaea. NJ (Naeaau-Suffolk) 11.009
1 Uoudoun.VAtW athm atonlF.W t
1Howard. MO (Baltimore) Z M H

V M k 't o m t y W

44.4% |

under eg* 38 had Income* ova* IH 000 waif til New JetMy. Putnam. N.Y.,
however. tedthe wey lor young effluent*- Nterty M perteni ot houtahoidei*

Clinton: Tax plan
goal is fairness,
rich included
WASHINGTON - President Clinton, defending
his deficit-reduction plan against Republican
attacks, says his aim Is fairness — not to soak the
rich.
"This Is not about the politics of envy, this is
about who can afford to pay the freight," Clinton
said Monday on WCUS Radio, New York.
"In the last 12 years, we had tax decreases on
upper-income people and tax increases on the
middle class, even though their Income trends
were lust the reverse," Clinton said. Reversing
that, he added, "is not about class war, this is
about fairness."
Republican leaders have accused Clinton and
his Democratic allies of an anti-business, antisuccess attitude in writing a deficit-reduction
plan that faces votes In the Senate later this week.
The bill's biggest money-raiser would raise taxes
sharply on those making more than about
9100.000 a year.
"I don't buy the argument that Just because we
tax the rich a higher percentage, this therefore Is
a good bill," Sen. Bob Packwood of Oregon, senior
Republican on the Senate Finance Committee,
said after the panel's Democrats pushed through
a version of Clinton's plan.
A new analysis by the Congressional Budget
Office Indicated those with Incomes of 9200,000
or more would pay 78.5 percent of the 9249
billion tax increase In the Senate plan. They
would pay 925,195 more a year, on average.
Those with incomes under 930,000 would get tax
cuts.
The typlcql family with Income between
930.000 and 940,000 should pay about 961 more
a year because of the bill's 4.3-cent-a-gallon tax
on m o to r fu e ls , CBO e s ti m a te d . T he
940.000-to-950.000 family should pay about
.000-IO-975.000 family, about
wguld oigto higher taxes on moat middle-income
people. However, about 2 million retirees with
incomes of about 932.000 (single people) or
940.000 (couples) would pay tax on a bigger
share of their Social Security checks.
Senate Republicans, outnumbered 56-44, arc
drafting dozens of amendments to eliminate the
bill's tax Increases and replace them with
additional spending cuts. Several more targeted
amendments also arc likely.
Sen. John C, Danfortli, H-Mo., has some
Democratic support for exempting Jet fuel from
the fuel tax. He argues that the airlines, after
losing 910 billion over the last five years, can III
afford another 92.3 billion In fuel taxes over the
next five.
Other Republican amendments would kill- a
provision prohibiting businesses from taking a
tax deduction for any executive's pay over 91
million; exempting amall businesses from the
higher individual Income tax rates; and
eliminating Clinton’s proposal to cut the 80
percent deduction for business meals to 50
percent.
Democrats have some amendments in mind,
too.
Several liberal senators object that the Finance
Committee voted 969 billion of restraints In
Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, when
Clinton had asked for only 950 billion.
And members of both parties wunl to kill the
huge superconducting super collider research
project in Texas and the space station as prime
examples of spending (hat cannot be Justified In
times of tight budgets.
Clinton went on six radio talk shows Monday in
an attempt to win support for the bill. He would
not suggest how the final version would tax
energy, hut predicted It would be smaller than
the 972 billion broad energy tux he recommended
and the House passed and bigger than the 925
billion fuels tax in the Senate plan.
New estimates by the Congressional Budget
Office Indicated the Senate plan would reduce the
deficit by 9516 billion over the next five years, or
916 billion more than Clinton asked.
Although the bill to be voted on this week
would impose 9249 billion In lax increases and
restrain mandatory programs, chiefly Medicare
and Medicaid, by utmost 9107 billion, it only
promises cuts In u broad range of other federal
programs.
CBO said that If those cuts totaling nearly 9102
billion arc enacted, the government will save
another 958 billion in lower interest charges,
yielding a total deficit reduction of 9516 billion.

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It's "Tee" Time! T-Shirts, That Is
'Summer time...and the living Is easy!* Espe­
cially in clothing from Florida Sportwear.
Donnie and Donna Green are celebrating the
relocation of their five year old business to their
new Sanford location In the K-mart Plaza. Origi­
nally in downtown Sanford, Florida Sportwear
moved 3 months ago to a storefront between Kmart and the new Food Lion.
If you have never been to Florida Sportwear,
summer is the perfect time to check them out.
They carry T-ahtrts, shorts, socks and accesso­
ries for men, women and children.
But the real speciality, (SPECIAL-TEE) ofFlorida
Sportwear Is custom designed T-shirts from one
to a hundred or more, Florida Sportwear can
design and produce T-shirts for athletic teams,
schools, civic organizations, businesses, churches.

special events, fund raisers and family reunions.
T-shirts of any color can be screen printed or
heat transferred, lettered and/or numbered.
Want an absolutely authentic and original
Florida souvenir for the relative visiting from up
north? Why not let Florida Sportwear create one
for them.
This family-owned business can create any
number of T-shirts for your group, in any number
ofaizesonhlghqualityT-shtrts. Florida Sportwear
can even heat transfer numbers and letters on
baseball hats.
Call Florida Sportwear at 321 -5354 for a quote
on T-ahirts and hats for your group. Or come by
their new location, at 3105 Orlando Drive, Sanford
to see their One selection of summer fashions. The
store Is open Mon.-Sat. 9:30 • 6.

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Senior CHlzene Shampoo A Set Only 99.00

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Haircuts O nly $0 .0 0

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Tlw adding maahlna was Invantad by tha Frenchman Pascal In 1643.

t

�OPBaHlBI

tfrity fo y i

*v *t-'f"

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22, 1093 - 7A

P u b lic

FLYINGEMERYBOARDNMLACADEMI

Review

fa ils

Buyafullsetofnailsfor$20.00
BringafriendforFREEI

Prepared by the Advertising Dept, of the

to

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» in Q
Mon - FW 10:00 - 0:00
I
Smt0:30-0:30
S a n fo r d ciom od o:so • a.so

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE M OVE

WASHINGTON — A massive federal public
works luw enacted In 1991 Is helping restore
America's transportation system but has nol
lived up lo advance billing as a Job-creator and
has other growing pains, an Assoclulcd Press
survey shows.
Across America, vast stretches of highways arc
being repaved and scores of bridges repluecd.
In two years, the law has helped pay tor new
bus yurds In California, bicycle storage lockers In
Ohio, pnrk-und-rlde lots In New York und a
pedestrian overpass spanning Las Vegas' famed
casino strip.
Dot an AP survey of Iwo dozen slutes shows
many projects pul on bold because the federal
government has provided only about 85 percent,
or nearly $41 billion, of the 848 billion Congress
originally promised for 1992 nnd 1993. The law
has four more years to run.
The economic stimulus puckugc President
Clinton sought tills year would have restored the
missing funding for 1993. The package was
filibustered to death by Senute Republicans In
April.
Transportation Secretary Federico Pena, a
strong supporter of the legislation, said. "We've
got lo recognize It's time to Invest In America" or
"we will have a country In the year 2000 we may
nol like."
Officially called the Inlcrmodal Surfncc Trans­
portation Efficiency Act of 1991, It was signed
Into law by President Bush who predicted It
would generate 4 million Jobs by 1997.
Thut gout apparently will nol be realized.

ADVCRTI8INQ

Discover Treasures
From Yesteryear
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SANFORD
ANTIQUES
700 W. FIRST ST., SANFORD • (407) 321-2038
By Appointment (407) 348-1387

i u \ r 1r n o n i in u i •&gt;
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• Relocation Specialists
• Home Buyers Protection
• Home Sellers Protection

We're 1st In Service
141 W. State Rd. 46 • Geneva • 32732

••l A
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Th e road Is about flnlshad,
t o tt Is tlm s for a sale, S N lQ .

W

"Mow. Mow. Mowyour lawn gently down the...."
wait a minute • what won that nol*e?l Oh. Just the
sound of the engine blowing up. You don't think
I Hound worried? Why should I he? Ah long hh
Smltty's Snappln' Turtle Mowers Is around I don't
have to worry about my lawn mower.
People find It easy to trust the years of experi­
ence behind Smltty's Snappln' Turtle Mowers.
The seeds for the business were sown early In die
1940's when Alexander "Smltty" Smith designed
the original Snappln' Turtle. In this age of mass
production, tt Is hard to believe that the original
mower was hand built und that there were only 13
made. One of the original proto-types Is ntlll
displayed in the store as a constant reminder of
their roots.
•Sinltty* began concentrating on the sulcs und
■service-aspects of his dealership in-1960 when
McDonough Power Equipment took over the large
task of production. The tradition of quality sulcs
and service continued after "Smltty's* son, Mike
Smith, and wtfe, Connie, bought the business In
Janunry, 1971. JefTls the third generation to play
a part in the family business. He Just graduated
with a B.S. degree In Business Management from

- l
V/
y -1
* &gt;111 W 1111 I. »w •. /Via|i(«c |
/

A T radition On The C u ttin g E dge
Palm Beach Atlantic College.
Smltty's Snappln' Turtle Mowers, one of the
oldest snapper dealers around, will be happy to
service your snapper. Let 30 years of snapper
product experience care for your equipment. Car­
rying n variety of engine parts lines enables them
to service most other brniuls of mowers and
equipment and to handle warranty and service
work lor most of the mass merchants In the area.
Smltty's maltitulns a good supply of most parts
and Is usually able to receive out of stock parts In
24 hours to provide quick service for Its custom­
ers. In order to stay Informed on product changes
and service procedures, the slalT attends many
service update schools each year. A service facil­
ity Is maintained to provide an average turn
around time of only 2 or 3 days In season.
—What begun us a simple suupper dealership has
grown to Includemany oilier Brands------ ------Mike and Connie Smith Invite you to visit them
at 2606 S. Park Drive and experience the family
tradition of quullty sales and service. No mutter
whatit type of lawn and garden equipment you
have they can service it for you In a quick.
efficient. and friendly manner. Go see them todny
before the grass shirts growing under your feet.

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•A - Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Tuesday, Juno 22, 1003

asi g ro u p in
HIV-infected Hal
MIAMI - For Michel Vllsalnt.
one of the last HIV-posltlve
Haitians who arrived here from a
U.S. military base In Cuba this
week, returning to Halil would
be like "going to my own
death."
Vllsalnt, 20. said he left Haiti
on a boat with 183 other people
nearly two years ago because the
Haitian military was after him
for being a supporter of ousted
P r e s id e n t J c a n - B e r tr n n d
Aristide.
Vllsalnt. who neted ns n lender
of the mostly HIV-posltlve Hai­
tians at the Navy base at Guan­
tanamo Bay, was among the last
of 130 Haitians to be brought to
the United States for resettle-

ment In the post week.
Immigration and Naturalizetlon Service officials In Washing*
ton didn't Immediately answer
requests for Information about
two pregnant women airlifted
out of Guantanamo separately
for medical reasons and a man
brought to Florida Monday,
whose asylum request remains
unsettled.
The detention facility at the
U.S. Naval Base In Guantanamo
Bay, described by a federal Judge
as an "HIV prison." Is scheduled
to be closed over the next two
weeks.
"Whnt was really bad was
there were no medical services,"
said V llsalnt, who Is HIV­
positive. "The soldiers acted as
though we were at war with
them.

refugees land in U.S
"I came from Haiti where It's
bad and I went to Guantanamo
where It was worse Anywhere
eh« should only be better," said
Vllsalnt. a former agriculture
extension agent In Halil, who left
a wife and two children behind.
He will be staying with his
sister-in-law In Miami.
The Haitians brought to this
country during the lost week
shouldn't be alnected by a U.S.
Supreme Court ruling on Monday that upholds the policy of
returning Haitians Intercepted at
sea without hearing their claims
of political asylum.
"The (HIV-Infected Haitians)
were already Interviewed and
determined to have a fear of
political persecu tio n ," said
Cheryl Little, director of Florida

W h a t’s driving medical
costs up so fast?
WASHINGTON - Ross H.
Arnett III knows the Medicare
program Inside out and can
rattle oft billlon-dollar budget
figures without blinking.
But when the federal official
Is asked what drives medical
costa up so fast, he thinks
b a c k to t h e b i l l h i s
mother-in-law got from a
Pennsylvania hospital after
her husband was felled by a
massive heart attack.
"He had been stone cold
dead for two hours by the time
he reached the hospital, and
they still gave him 86.000
worth of care." said Arnett,
director of the Office of Na­
tional Health Statistics. "We
give people every last treat­
ment no matter what the
cost-benefit ratio."
Decades of double-digit unnuul growth In the nation's
medical bill has finally forced
Arnett and other Americans to
pay heed to where their health
dollars.Ant going.

The nqt/pn will spend 8012
billion, Wp year. 14.8 percent
of Its gross domestic product,
on health care. That covers
everything: aspirin, heart
transplants, nursing homes,
dental checkups, everything.
The bill was up from 8832
billion last year and 8675
billion In 1000. Buck In 1065,
when Medicare was luunchcd,
Americans spent just 842
billion on health care, or 5.0
percent of the gross domestic
product.
This cost spiral, more than
the plight of the nation's 37
million uninsured, has cornelied President Clinton to put
e a lth c a re a m o n g h is
domestic priorities.
"A ll of o u r e ffo rts to
strengthen the economy will
fall unless we also take ... bold
steps to reform our health care
system." Clinton told Con­
gress Feb. 17.

R

AIDS cases among adults and adolescents
by exposure category,
United States (for cases reported through 1991)

Insurance cushioning them
from the bills, and most
doctors are rewarded for or­
dering more tests and pro­
cedures. Fear of malpractice
lawsuits also spurs doctors to
do more rather than less.
"Technology In medicine 1s
not like technology in In­
dustry." said Dr. James S.
Todd, executive vice president
of the American Medical Asso­
ciation (AMA). "If you put u
robot on an assembly line,
you’ve saved money. If you
put an MRI (magnetic reso­
nance Imagery machine) In a
hospital, you've added 10 peo­
ple to the payroll."
A recent AMA study blames
the cost spiral In part on
A m e r i c a n s ' b e I.Jgg
"overinsured." The d o ctm '
lobby noted that health insur­
ance Is a tax-free fringe benefit
for moBl workers and many
consumers pay only 20 per­
cent of health costs out of
pocket.
That spurs dem and fur
"beyond whut It would be If
consumers faced the true cost
of services." the AMA said.
Dr. William B. Schwartz, a
physician-economist and pro­
fessor of medicine nt the Uni­
versity of Southern California,
said the polio vaccine that put
iron lungs Into storage was a
rare advance th a t saved
money.
"Most of the things we do
add enormously to expenses."
said Schwartz. "Take hip re­
placements. Before we treated
It with aspirin and a walker.
Now we do a hip replacement

Rura| Le- a| services, which
pr0V|des legal counsel to Haitian
^.fugees. -since they're already
|nte?vlewed ... they are not
affected bv this rullmt."
fllIcctccl W ,nw m,m8'
Justice Department officials
confirmed the refugees weren t
affected by the Supreme Court s
ruUng‘
The dusty camp which held
12.500 Haitian migrants at Its
peak last year stayed open In
recent months to shelter the
HIV-Infected Haitians seeking
political asylum but unable lo
enter the U.S. because of their
HIV lhfectlon.
Immigration officials have de­
tcrmlned that the refugees risk
political persecution If they're
sent back to Haiti.

*

Men Who Have Sex with Men
^ Injecting Drug Use
i-1 Men Who Have Sex with Men
2 and Inject Drug*
1 Heterosexual Contact
• • • 5 'm a
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f4\ o *

Clinton says Japan must open markets,
no matter what Its political problems
By T B R IN C a HUNT

AP W hite House Correspondent

It was only the third no-confldence vote In
postwar Japan, ostensibly prompted by his
refusal to fight for reform after political scandals.
"What's happening In Japan now I think has
more than anything else to do with the legacy of
the various political scandals and the political
corruption," Clinton said.

M IC H A E L H. W EST end ADA
D . W E S T , h i* w ife , en d
F R E E D O M IN V E S T M E N T S .
IN C ., a dissolved Florida corpo­
ration,
*
Defendant*.
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that purtuant to Sum m ery Final
Judgment of forecloture ren­
dered on the Ir d day ol June,
i m , In that certain caute pend­
ing In the Circuit Court In end
for Seminole County. Florida,
w h e r e in S E M IN O L E N A ­
T IO N A L BANK I* P lalntltl, end
M IC H A E L H. W EST end A D A
D . W E S T , h i* w lto . e n d
F R E E D O M IN V E S T M E N T S ,
IN C ., * d ltM lv td Florida corpo­
ration, are Defendant*. C ivil
Action No. t l O U C A ie-L, I,
M A R Y A N N S M O RSE. Clerk of
the *fo re **ld Circuit Court, w ill
a t 11:00 A M ., on the H lh day of
July. I N ) , offer tor tale and tell
lo the high**! bidder for cath at
Ih * W a tt fro n t door of the
Courthou** In Semlnol* County,
Florida, In Sanford, Florida. Iho
following detcrlbed property,
tllu a la d and being In Seminole
County. Florida, to-wlt:
Lot I, (le t* that part lying
w llhln 40 faet ol the centerline ol
Sfal* Road S « 7 Section 77410,
•eld canlarllne In relation lo th*
above property being detcrlbed
a t follow*: Begin at a point on
the South line of Section I,
Townthlp JO South. Range 30
E e il a dlttance ol f . h loot W ett
fro m th * S outheast c o rn er
Ihereol; thence North 00*J3'J4”
W ett 1140.11 feet; thence North
00*34#04” W e tt atJO. I I feet;
thence North 00*0fM 4'' W att
U S .n feet lo a point on the
North line ol told Section I, a
dlttance of 4.J4 feet W ett from
the N orlheett corner thereat
end Ih * and of Ih lt description).
Block t, ROSALIND H E IG H TS .
Senlord. Florida, according to
th* Plat thereof a t recorded In
P lat Book I , P ag * 47. ol Ih *
Public Record* ol Sem inole
County, Florida.

(additional lines extra)

Ad m ust include phone number and aBking price. I f vehicle hasn't
been sold in 10 days, call us and we'll renew it free. N o copy change
while ad is ru in in g except for price. Non-com m ercial only.

KtMflk

Receipt of Blood Transfusion,
Blood Components or Tissue
Hemophilia/Coagulatlon
Disorders

(or other motor vehicle)

C a ll 322-2611 Ibday!

Other/Undetermined

W e now accept MasterCard and Visa

Lst I . Slock 0, T ie r I , E.R .
T R A F F O R D 'S M A P O F THE
TO W N O F SA N FO R D , occord
Ing to tho P lo t th ere o f o*
recorded in Plot Book I, P t g t i
10-44. of tho Public Record* ol
Seminole County, Florida.
Sold ta le w ill bo m od* purtu
•n t to end In o rd *r to te tltfy th*
te rm * of to ld Sum mery Final
Judgment.
M A R Y A N N S MORSE
C L E R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
By: Oorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June IS. ti. I f f !
D E F -ttS
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY,
FL O R ID A
C A S B N O .n-m S -C A -14-K
B A N K U N IT E D O F TEXAS.
F.S.B..
Plaintiff,
v*.
SHARON K. W EB B . e la l.
Defendant!*),
N O T IC E O F C LBRK I
FO RECLO SU R E SALE
N olle* It hereby given that
purtuant to th * Summary Final
Judgment of Foreclosure and
Sale entered June tt, I f f ] , and
entered In Ih * ceua* pending In
th* Circuit Court ol th * Eigh­
teenth Judicial C ircuit. In and
ter Semlnol* County. Florida.
C ivil Action No. fl-*f*S -C A 14-K,
th * undersigned Clerk w ill tell
th * property situate In teld
County, detcrlbed a t:
The East 10 feet of Lot 14?.
and all ol Lott IM end It t .
LO CH A R B O R C R Y S T A L
LA K ES CLU B SECTIO N. *c
cording to th* plat thereof a t
recorded In P lat Book 4. Paget
Ti and 74, of th * Public Record*
ol Seminole County, Florida,
at public ta le , to th * highest and
best bidder lor cath at 11:00
A M , on July » . IW J, at th* W ett
Front Ooer of th * Semlnol*
County C ourthou**, Sanford.
Florida.
D A T E D June I I , If * ] .
(C O U R T SEA L)
M A R Y A N N S MORSE
Clerk ol th * Circuit Court
Semlnol* County, Florida
By: Jon* B. Jataw lc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: J u n o n . I f , I f f )
O B F -in

�Sports

B
Fun at the old ball park
All-Stars,
adults play
exhibition

LOCALLY
Easter Seal softball
( &gt;l&lt;| \ N | &gt; ( &gt;
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F ro m S taff R e p o rts

Longwood softball
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ARO UN D T H E S T A -------------TE

kholUN f&gt;» Jim Mnpiis
Min ,i tic'i a . i ‘, tiot and heavy at Zinn Beck Field
V
t i, . i Mi thi i um Babe Hulh All Star shortstop Alexis
A' i.i t n| I ' h o t m prepares to make throw* to hrsl base

,r

.......rut Pasemao Cornell Daniels (No

3) looks on

Doan Smith (No 28 bottom ptiotoi heads tor ft*m n •with
the tying run as All-Star catch«&gt;r Tommy Haines toes tn
snag errant tfirow The City St.tr*. came from an 8 2
deficit to beat the All Stars 11 8

________ —---*------ ----------------------------

Cardinals edge Marlins
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CITY NIAWS ll tIAttt HUTU ALL STAMNlI
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ARO UND T H E N A TIO N

S u m m e r b a sk e tb a ll le a gu e p la n n e d

Fisk to set record tonight
i III! \ i ,&lt; l
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Bonds holds All-Star lead
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Nets-Lakers trade center’s
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Com ploto listings on Png© 2D

\t «'t »• »

By D E A N SM ITH
H e r a l d S p o r t s Writ er

___________

S.\\|t»U I&gt;
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�IB - Sanford Harald, 8anford, Florida - Tuaaday, Juna 22, 1993

S T A T S &amp; STAN D IN G S
AttomlMtoPorti
M onday nlgM
Flref ra ta — 14M. A t M.41
e M e d re i F ire
7.00 4.40 1.40
1 M is t Rat
S.M 140
I Pinto Paula
1.40
0 (1 4 ) 14.4* P (4-1) M .M T ( 4 - M ) la .ta
lecew&lt; r a t e - * W , O t 41.04
* Spirit W alhor
110 1.40 1.40
T IC K Buddy
17 0 1.40
I Who Oat
4.10
Q (4-7) 11.10 P (4-7) 1 1 t.ll T (4-7-0) 1M.40 DO
(4-4) 11.00
Third r a c a - t 4 M . l i 10.04
1 Urban's I m pala
1.00 1.40 1.10
7 SJ Carla
1.40 1.40
IM Ik ty a C M
4.10
Q (1-7) I t JO P (1-7) U .M T (1-7-1) 41.00
Paw rthraca - U M , l i lt.4 4
4 NXS Oebby H o yt
10.00 7JO 1.40
lA b b y Adam s
1170 10.00
1 MRS Broveeaprett
4.00
0 11-4) U .00 R (4-1) 101.M T (4-1-1) 45X40
R llth r a t a -1 4 1 4 ,1 .1 1 .1 1
I Task Bo Bote*
100 4.10 1.40
1 P rim e Rem eherger
0.10 4 00
1 Big Bsnny
1.00
0 (1-0) 10.00 R (O l) 17.40 T (0 0 1 ) 74.40
t i l t h raca — 14M, I t 11.11
4 Omni Ithlca
41.00 1J0 1.40
1SJ Spaady
1.70 1.10
5 Faathar Tots
1.40
Q ( H ) 11.00 R (4-1) 140.10 T (4-1-1) 4I7.M
Rich 1 (4-0 4) 1 at 1 H id 417.11
la van th raca — M44. Ci 40.10
] Dragon's Jaws
11.00 4.00 1.00
1 M L Jeopardy
4 JO 1.40
7 Donna B art
I JO
O (1-1) 11.40 R (1-1) 70.00 T ( H - 7 ) M M O B
11-1-7-1) I1 M .M
llghth raca - U M . t i M.00
l tndapandanca R D
10.10 4.10 110
I Cyasa Lonar
1.10 1.40
7 Dewey Spaady Jim
1.40
Q (1-1) I I JO R (1-1) 40.00T (M - 7 ) 710.44
N U t h r a c a - U M . l i 11.01
1 Pay Richard Oaar
t.00 1.10 110
4 Wood's F la iti
11.00 1.40
ORV Cathy Laa
1.70
Q (1-4) 4A M R (1 4 ) 140.70 T ( 1 4 4 ) 144.71 QO
(1-1 01 -4 ) 10M .M
IH h r a c a — 14M, C i l l . M
I Rundown
t.00 1.00 1.00
7 Sam tu la Sand
4.40 1.10
s Spatial Savaga
1.40
0 (1 -7 ) I f JO R (1-7) 4 1 .M T (1 -7 4 ) 47.M
11th raca — U M . D i 11 .fl
1Y Knot Thomas
0.40 1.40 1.00
1 Norm al Rotaanna
4.40 4.40
4 Somethin Sweat
1.00 4.00
0 11 1) U .M (1 4 ) 10.M R (1-1) I f . f f 114)
S f.M T (1 -1 4 ) 117.44 (14 -1) 1I1.M (1-1-4,14-1)
7I7.M
IH h ra c a — U M , l i M .f7
5 Mahogany F lra
1.00 1.10 1.10
1 F irs M a tte r
1.40 1.40
1 Urban's Brat
1.40
Q (I S) 0J1 R (1-1) 17.70 T (5-1-1) 41 .M S
(5-1-1-4)547.45
tlth r a t a - l 4 M . l i M . f l
4 M T ’sA ndyM a&lt;
1.40 1.00 1.40
OKatsuTakahanada
l . » 17.00
1 Hallo Captain
0.00
O (4 41 a.M R (4-0) 14.70 T (44 -1) 1M .M
1 4 th r a c a -N 4 4 .B ilf.7 1
7 Caro's Ram say
10.40 1.40 1 40
iM Illla tB a b a
4.40 1.00
S N a n a C ru i
1.40
0 0 -7 ) 17.M R (7-1) 41.101 (7-1-S-l) 741.00
A— M)&gt; H— SIM.fft

p T " ’v '7 T * ’?| Y P —

O alrott
Taranto

1

M a la r League Baseball
A ll Tim as H O T
A M E R IC A N L IA O U B
Ia s i D ivltlan
W
L Ret. OB
m . .
41 U
*W ' '
’ 41 74 400
1

Balllm ora
Boston
M ilw aukee ’
Cleveland

U
U 111 0
II
M
440 11W
1 1
»
14 411 tliy
70
41 .404 t i n
West D ivltlan
W
L Ret. OB
California
ll
11 .111 —
Chicago
11
17 .171 Kansas C ity
11
11 .171 Seattle
14
15 .403 1
T e xet
H
17 414 4W
Minna sola
If
17 .41f H i
Oakland
17
M .411 7
Monday’s O am ts
C lavaland 1. M ilw aukee 0
Chicago 7, Texas 4
California 4, Kansas City 1
Boston 4, Minnesota 1
Oakland 1. Seattle 1
Tuesday’s dam es
M ilw a u k e e (E ld re d f t ) a t C leveland
(C.Young 111,7:05 p.m .
New York (P e re i 4 4 ) at Toronto (M o rris
4 7), 7:11p.m .
D etroit (G u lllc k to n 4 1 ) a t B alllm o ra
(M u tiln a f 11,7:11p.m .
M in n es o ta (D e t h a le t i- 4 ) a t Boston
(Q u a n lr lllll), 7:11p.m .
Texas (Rogers1 1I 1 ) at Chicago I Fernanda!
7 4), 4:01p.m .
California (Sanderson 7 4) a t Kansas City
(Cane 4 7 ),4:11p.m .
Oakland (W itt 4-4) at Seattle (Converse
1 1 ). I 0 :0 1 p.m.
N A T IO N A L L IA O U B
Bast Division
OB
W L
Pel.
*
41 11 ■*f* —
Philadelphia
.174 I D
If If
St. Louli
S I) t)
3* U
Montreal
.401 14
11 u
Chicago
.471 l i l t
1) M
Pittsburgh
.44f 17
It
M
Florida
30t )*W
)1 47
Now York
W a it D ivltlan
OS
Pet.
W L
.471 —
47 »
San F ra n c lu o
40 11 .141 7 ll
A tlanta
M
11 .1)7 t w
Lot Angala*
14 33 .107 t m
Houtton
.417 IS
1) X
Cincinnati
77 4) .M l l»W
San Ologo
&gt;4 44 .153 »
Colorado
Monday's Games
Chicago 1. Pittsburgh I
St. Levis 4, Florida 1
New York 4, M ontreal 1
A tlanta I, Philadelphia t
Colorado). Clnclnnotl 4, Winnings
Los Angalos 7. Houston 0
San Fran cisco!, Son Diego I
YuamU v' i Q ifn ii
St. Louis (Corm ier A l ) O l.R U rld a (H em -

mend 7-4),7tllp.m.

A tla n ta (S m ith 1-4) a l P h ila d e lp h ia
(Jackson A l) , 7:11 p.m .
Chicago l Wendell 0 1) a t Plllsburgh I Walk
1 1), 7.11p.m.
M o n lraa l (N a b h a li 1
I YourtgO S I.7I40 p.m .
Cincinnati (Sm iley I f )
1 1 ), f :01p.m.
Houston I K ile 4-1) a l Los Angelas (Gross
1 1 ). 10:11p.m.
San Diego (Bones 74 ) a l San F ra n c lu o
(S w ill A l) , 10:11p.m.
Florida State League
Second H all
■astern Division

L p*t.

OS

0 1000
W .P. Beach (Exposl
1
0 1000. w
Oxytona (Cubs)
I
1 SCO 1
t-ort Lauderdale (R ed Sox) I
0 .000 l
x Lakeland I Tigers I
0
1 .000 1
Osceola (Astros)
0
) .000 )
St. LucU (M ats)
0
) .000 )
Vero Beech I Dodgers)
0
Western Division1
0
1.000 _
Charlotte (R angers)
0 1.000 —
Fort M yers (Tw ins)
0 1.000
St. Pete (Cardinals)
1 •SOS 1
Dunedin (Blue Jays)
1 .000 ID
xC le a rw «a ttea r (IR hlllies)
1 .000 1
Sarasota (W hite Sea)
■ wen first halt division 1111a
M e a d a y s O am ts
Charlotte f , Vero Beach 7
West Palm Beach I, Sarasota 0
C learw ater 1. Daytona 1 ,1 Innings, susp..
(allure
Dunedin f . Fort Lauderdale 4

Tim Rolnoo Is ■ Sanford nativo and 8om lnolo High School
gradual# now playing fo r tha Chicago W hite Sox. HI a atata ara
fo r tha 1993 aaaaon In tha firs t colum n, personal-beat season
to ta ls In th e second co lu m n and current career to ta ls
(Including 1993 games) In the th ird colum n.
Raines was 0-for*5 but drove In a run w ith a ground o u t aa
tha W hite Sox held on to beat tha Texas Rangers, 7-6, Monday
night and moved Into a firs t place tie In tha American League
W estern DIvlBldn w ith tha C alifornia Angela and tha Kansas
C ity Royals.

RAINKS OAUQI

Category
Q s m ts ................
A t-bsts................
R uns....................
H its ......................
RBI.......................
O oublss..............
THplOS I4fl4«4t**l*«(4t
Hom s runs.........

’•1
29
107
25
31
17
5
0
7
4t**a«i4iffaff44i
3
A v s rs g t.............. .290

bast esroor
1,732
160
6,567
547
1,161
133
194
i;952
670
71
321
38
13
96
114
18
90
732
.334
.297

Fort M yers 3, Osceofe 1
It . R tU rs b u r| A I t . LucU 1
T w sdsy’ s Bernes
Sereseti a t Port Leuderdele
St. RgMrsBura a t Lakeland
Fort M yars afOsceola
Clearwater a t St. LucU
Daytona a t West Palm Beech
Charlotte a t Dunedin

C A R D IN A LS 4. M A R L IN S )
F LO R ID A
IT .L O U II
o b rh M
a b rh M
4 0 10
G llk ty If 5 0 0 0
C a rre l
B r b fr le lb 1 1 1 0
O P a n a lb 5 0 1 0
Conlne II 4 1 1 1
J fto r ln lb 1 1 1 1
O tfrd * lb 1 0 1 1
Lnhtrdcf 5 1 1 0
4 110
F a lla rt
Brower rf 0 0 0 0
Whiten rl 1 1 1 0
M g d an lb 4 0 0 0
Snflagoc 1 0 0 0
Z e lle lb
111)
W e lti •• 1 0 0 0
W o d te n lb 0 0 0 0
Aquino
p 10 0 0
P fln o til c 4 0 1 1
Crpnter p 0 0 0 0
O q en d o u 4 0 0 0
A rlaeph
10 10
M g r tn tp 1 0 1 0
R Lewie p 0 0 0 0
ItS m lh p 0 0 0 0
R ntorlaph 1 0 0 0
00 0 0
T u m rp
Tetale
51 1 7 1
Tefal i
M 411 4
I t ) 400 00* - 4
t t . Louie
111 *40 Oft - 1
Pier Ida
E - Zaile 1141. WOlss (10). D P - SI. Louis
1. LOB - St. Louis f , Florida 1. IB - Zaile
(17), Conlne I I I ) . IB - Whiten 11). HR J e lte rU t (10), Conlne I I ) . CS - Jefferies (S).
C arr (10). SF — Desfrede.
IP
H R I R BB SO

It. LaWs

M egrene W.4-4
LeSm llh $.14

Tim Rains*

Ignatieva. Batarus. 1-4.4-1. M .
Y eyuk Basukl, Indonesia. Oof. N aalU fa n
Lattum . Netherlands, 4-4.7-1.
N lcala A r tn d f, R rln c e le n . N .J ., dal.
IsabelU Demon asot, France, 1-4 ,41 , t a l l .
Magdalena M aleeva (10). B ulgaria, dal.
L a lla M e tk M , O fc rg la ,*-),# -!.
N aoka S aw am alsu, Japan , dal. Ju lia
H alard . Franca. 4 4 ,4 4 ,4 1 .
Nicola Rrovls, A ustralia, dal. Tessa Prlca.
South A frica. M U .
Chanda Rubin, Latayatta, La., del. Wlltrud
Probsl. G erm any, 4 1 ,4 1 .
O abrlala Sabatlnl (4 ). A rgentina, dal.
C arrla Cunningham. Livonia. M ich., 7-1.4-7.
Sandra Wassarman. Belgium, del. Fang LI.
China. 4-1,4-4.
Brenda Schulll, Netherlands, dst. P atricia
Tarablnl, Argentina, 4 -4 ,4 ).
Silvia Farina. Ita ly, dal. Radka Bcbkova.
C iech Republic, 4 0,4-1.
Helena Sukova (11), C itc h Republic, dal.
N atalia Baudone. Ita ly, A 0 ,74 1 7 0).
Lori M cN eil. Houston, dot. Am ende Grunlaid, Britain, A t , 4 0.
Anka Huber I f ) , G erm any, del. Cecilia
D ahlm an,Sw eden,7-1,7-4 ( l l f ) .
N atella Medvedeva, U kraine, del. Debbie
G raham , Fountain V alley, C alif., 14. A A A4.
Claudia Porw lk, G erm any, daf. Dinky van
Rensburg, South A frica. 1-7, A t, A l.
Elena Brloukhovats. Russia, dal. Dom ini­
que Monam l, Belgium, 4 1 ,1 * . 4 1 .
P atty Fendlck. Sacramento. C ell!., del.
E In * Reinsert, South Africa. 41,4-1.
Florencl* Label, Argentine, del. Kim berly
Po. Rolling H ills. C alll., 7 1 .4 1 .
Nenne Dahlm an. Finland, dal. Linda Farrendo. Ita ly. I-4 .A 1.A 0.
L a u ra G o la rs a , Ita ly , d a l. K a ta rin a
Studenlkova. Ciech Republic, 4-4, A4.

Heiald Photo by Jim Hopps

4

Aquino L.4-1
Carpenter
R Lewis
Turner
W P — Megrene.
Umpires — Hem e, R U k e n First, Rlppleyi
Second. Quick; Third. Crawford.
T — M g .A - M .S 4 1 .

WlmBladon RtseHs
&gt; AC
W IM B L B D O N , EitMond - Results Monday
a l the I7 J m illion Wimbledon tennis cham pi­
onships a l tha A ll England Club:
Iln g U s
P lr tt HiuR&lt;
Jim C aurU r (1 ). Dade City. dal. OUnluca
P eril, Ita ly, A t, 7-1,44.
Aaron Krlckstaln. Grossa Polnte, M ich.,
dal. Alex O'Brien. A m arillo, Taxes, 41 , 7 4
17 41,41.
M 4 llV *l Washington (14), Rente Vedre
Beech, del. O ellleum e Reeux, France, A*»
4 1 .1 -4 ,4 1 ,4 1 .
Richard K ra|lcek ( f t , Netherlands, dal.
Nlcklas Kultl. Sweden, A A A l. A4.
Mercoe O o rrli, Spain, del. Ctlslev Doeedel,
C itc h Republic, 4 1 ,4 1 ,4 1 .
L u ll H errera, M exico, del. Karel Novaee*
(11), C itc h Republic, a a . a a , a -i , a i . A l.
Andrew Potior, B ritain, del. Thomas Bnqvlst, Sweden, A4, A l, A ), 1 * . A l.
Stephana Sim ian, Franco, dal. Richey
Renabarg, Houston, 1-4,7-1. A t, 7 * (7-4), A ).
Jared Palm ar, Tam pa, dot. G rant lle tfe rd ,
South A lrlco, 71 ,7-4 , A A 7-4 ( M l .
Todd M ortln, East Lansing, M k h ., dal.
Redolpha O llbart, Franca, 7 4 (7-1), 7 4 ( f t ) ,
4 7 (4 4 ), 4 4 .
Andre Agassi (4 ), Las Vsgas. daf. Bernd
Karbechar. O ar m any, 7-1, A A 4 4 .
Raul K IM arry, A ustralia, del. Tam m y He,
W inter Haven. A A 4 A 4 4 , a ).
P atrick R a fU r, Australia, dal. Simon Voul,
A ustralia, A t 4 1 ,4 4 .
Laurence Tlelam an, Ita ly , d tl. Gitberl
Sc hoi U r, Austria, 4 1 , A A 7-1.
M arcos Ondruska, South A frica, dal. J e ll
Terango. M anhattan Beach, C all!., A t, 4-4,
A t
M a rk Woodforde, A ustralia, del. Shuio
Matsuoka, Japan, 4 4.1-4, A A A t
Jacco Eltlngh. Nalharlands, dal. M arc
Rossat. Sw llterlond, A t A t 1 A 4 4. A l.
B rad G llb e ri. San R ataai. C alll.. d tl.
Christian Bergstrom , Sweden, )■*, 4 1 , 4 0 ,
A t.
A tta in d e r Volkov, Russia, d tl. Anders
Jarryd, Sweden, a a A ), A l.
M lchaal Stlch (4 ), G erm any, dal. Jan
Slamer Ink, Netherlands. A t 7 4 (7 1 ). 41.
Sendon StolU, A ustralia, dst. Jose Francis
A ltur, Spain, A A 7-4(7-11,44.
Todd Nelson, San Diego, del. L e rt Jorison,
Sweden, A t A A 4 7 1 4 7 ), 4 4, A ).
D e rric k Rostagno, P e c illc Palisades.
C a lll.. del. O rant Doyle, Australia, t A l *.
71, 41.
Ktnnath Carlson, D enm ark, del. Horst
Ik o lf, Austria, A ) ,4 - t ,A i.
Todd Woodbrldga. Australia, dal. Horaclo
d a le Pane, Argentina. A t 7-4I I I f I, retired.
M a rk Fete hay, B ritain, del. M a rk K ell,
Tem po, A A A 7 ( A lt ) , 4-1,41.
H ele n Edberg ( ) ) , Sweden, del. Oreg
Rusedski, Canada. 7 4 ( I l f ) , 4 A * 7 (7 7), 7 4
(7-1).
Bryan lh a lle n , Atlanta, dal. SUve Bryan,
Katy. Taxes. 4 7 (1-7), A A A I. 7 4 (7 4).
W a y n i F a rre lra 111), South A lrlca , dal.
Roberto Acer. Argentina, A l, A 1,44.
Ivon Lendl (7 ), Greenwich, Conn., del.
B rian Dovtnlng, Dallas, 4 7 (B-10), AA 4-1.
A l.
Dave Randall, B irm ingham . A le., dal.
Andrei Cherkasov. Russia, A A A 4,4-4.
Arneud Boatsch, Franca, dst. Sean Cola.
B ritain. A A A ) . ! 4. A ).
Carlos Coal*. Spain, dal. Fernon W lblar.
Nethsr lands. 4-4,4 4,4 A A4.
Cedric RUIlne, Franca, del. M a rtin Dam m ,
C iech Republic, 4 A 71. A t, 71.
Ssbastlsn Lareeu. Canada, dal. Jonas
Iventson, Sweden, 3 4. 4 4 . 7-4 17 41, 7-4 (f-7 ),
IDS.
Chris Wilkinson, B rllaln, dst. D anU I Or
sa n k. Argsntlna, A X AP, 4 7.
Women
Singles
FlC lt WoBind
Shaun H a lU r d , O a ln a te llU , dal. Silks
M a U r, O erm axy, 4 7 (4 7 ), 4 4 , A t.
Am anda C o ttie r ( I t ) , South A lrlca. dal.
Sandrlne Testud, Franco, A X I - A 4 1 .,
M a n u a la M a le e v a - F r a g n i e r e ( I I ) ,
Iw ltie rla n d , del. Lorna WoodrolU, B rllaln.
7X44.
Lisa Raymond. Wayno, Po., dst. Louisa
A lU n, Winston la U m , N .C .. A 1,41.
Robin W hile. Del M a r, C alll., del. Tatiana

i

BASBBALL
American League
BOSTON R E D SOX - Placed Roger
Clemens, pitcher, on the 1!-day disabled list,
retroactive to Juno It. Purchased I ha con­
tract ot Aaron SaU, pitcher, Irom Pawtucket
of tha International League. Signed Ryan
M cO ulre. first baseman.
CHICAGO W H IT E SOX - Signed Billy Joa
- Hobart, outfielder, and D avM M o o n , third
N L — Suspended Rick Trllcek ot Lo t
Angelas and G ary Sheffield of Ia n Diego tor
three games each tor a baanball Incident on
June 10. Suspended Jose Bautista ot Chicago
for three games tor InUntlonally throwing el
end hilling M a rk Carreon ol San Francisco
on June 11. Suspended Ramon M artinet ol
Lo t Angeles tor five games lor hilling C htrllo
H a y e i ol Colorado end Hayes tor three games
(or lighting a lte r he was hit by the pilch on
June 11. Suspended K ellh Shephard ol
Colorado lor seven games tor hitting Cory
Snyder ol L o t Angeles w llh a pitch on June
11. A ll the suspended players also w ere lined
undisclosed amounts. A ll sxcept Shephard
have appealed and w ill continue to play
pending hearings. Upheld a throw gam a
suspension tor Howard Johnson e l New York
tor bumping um pire Jerry Layne on M ay l l .
Johnson w ill servo h it suspension when ha
returns from fho disabled list.
C H IC A G O CUBS - Signed O a m a lle r
C astro and O e n U I O il, pitchers; B relt
M cCabe and Kevin O rU . InlUlders; and Vee
H ightow er and John Sauer, outfielders.
Assigned O rU and Hightower to Peoria ol the
M idw est League.
H O U STO N ASTROS - Assigned Juan
Agosto. pitcher, to Tucson of Ihe Pacific
Coast League. Recalled Richard Parkar,
outlieIder, tram Tucson.
LOS A N O B L 'E I DO DOERS - Placed Jody
Reed, second basemen, on the IS day die
abled list, retroactive to June IS. Recalled
H tn ry R edrlguei, outfielder, from Albu
querqueof the Pacific Coast League.
B A SK ETB A LL
N elU nel Basketball AssocUtUn
N EW JE B S E Y N ETS - Traded Sam
Bowls. cenU r, and a conditional second
round d ralt pick to tha Lot Angeles L a k trt
lor Benoit Beniam in, center.
H O C K EY
National Hockey League
CKICAO O BLACKHAW KS - Signed Chris
Roglss and Christian Soucy, goal tenders

'b u r * .

d ltja n u iW f-*

mmm
v ilh Wwf
Oh lhat elusive baseball. Cornell Daniels (top
photo) ol the Babe Ruth All-Stars can’t quite
roach a single over his outstretched glove, while

HeraldPhotobyJimHopps
Stove Laurence (standing) and Brett Counts look
lor the boll a3 It bouncos Into conlar flold during
Monday's exhibition game al Zlnn Bock Flold.

Exhibition-

Continufld from Page IB
"They played hard agulnst us
and never gave u p ," said
Schaefer, "I Ihlnk everyone hud
a lot of fun and hopefully we can
make Ihls dame a yearly thing,
because 1 think It enn only help
the All-Stars lo play a game nr
two before heading Into (lie
All-Star tournaments."
Schaefer also expressed tils
thanks to Duane LaFollettc and
Tom Nye from the Sanford
Officltmlng Service for donating
their time and efforts lo umpire
tile i’iiidc.
The All-Stars Jumped out to a
2-0 lead In the bottom of the first
Inning. Hrelt Counts singled lo
right and moved around to third
base on a pair of stolen buses.
i Cnrnell Daniels was then hit by a
pilch and Counts scored on a
passed ball. Daniels Inter scored
BASEBALL
7:10 p.m . — TBS, A tlan ta Braves at on a pussed hall.
Philadelphia P h lllU t.IL )
The City Slurs evened the
7:10 p.m . - W G N . Chicago Cubs at score In (lie lop or ihe second as
P ittsburghH lraU s, I D
7:10 p.m . — WOR. M ontreal Expos a l New former Minnesota Twin Mike
York Mats, &lt;LJ
Giordano walked, moved to sec­
10:10 p.m . — ESPN. San Olego Padres al ond on a wild pilch and scored
San Francisco G lanlt, (L )
on a double Into the "Ivy" In
BO A TING
f:10 p.m . — SUN, Otlshore Power Boal right by Dean Sinflli. Smilh
Series from M iam i
came around to score on a single
BOX I NO
hy Jerry Herman and a throwing
f p.m . — USA, Heavyweights: M lk tM o o rs r
error.
vs. Jemos Pritchard. &lt;L&gt;. elsoet 1 a m .
11:10 p.m . — SC. Heavyweights: Tony
The All-Stars eame right hack
Tubbs vs. C arl "T he Truth” W illiam s
ill the bottom of (lie second
FO O TB ALL
I p.m . — SC, College, Kentucky el Florida inning wllh five runs. Waller
replay
[Jrynnl struck out. hu( reached
H O C K IV
4:10 e .m . — S U N , ‘f l N H L A w ards safely on an error and moved (o
Television Special
second on a single by Ryan
SU R FIN O
Colgate. The duo Ihen stole a
1:30 p.m. — SUN, PSAA/Bud Pro Tour
base and Hrynni scored on a
trom Im perial Beach
VOLLBYBALL
steal of home, hill when the
7 p.m . — SUN. Pro Beech: Coors Light throw got pnsl the City Stars
Women's Tour Irom , Santa C rut
l : M p.m . — ESPN, Pro Boach: Bud Light catcher. Colgate was called out
Four-Women Tour
when the on deck batter InR edU
lerfereil with the ball.
BASBBALL
Alexis Aeosla llieti singled off
f:$S pm. - WTLN AM (1570), Southern
League, H u nltvllle S tart al Orlando Cubs, the pi teller’s glove and udvunccd
double header
lo second on a bunt single by
I p.m , - W G T O A M 1540), SI. Louis
C ardinals a t Florida M arline. |oined In Tommy Haines. Cedric Williams
progress.
then lolled a fly lo ccntqr field
M I IC IL L A N IO U t
that fell in for a lilt, wltii Acosta
1 p.m . - W G T O A M (SeO), Tim e Ou* lor
scoring. Baltics moving over lo
Motor iper ft
Sp.m . - W W NZ A M (740). Tha Sports Nul
third and Williams winding up
a p m , - W G T O A M (140), Talk Sports on second.
W llh Pete Rose
Babies scored ou u passed ball
4 :M p m. - W P R D A M IS40). NASCAR
mid Williams scored on a single
Live
10 p.m . - W W N Z-A M (740), Florida Sporlt i&lt;&gt; center by Counts. Counts
Exchange
10 p.m . - WGTO A M (140), Sports Byline stole second ami advanced to
USA
third when Ihe llirow got pasl

second and scored on another runs, five stolen bases. RBI).
Bryant (single, two runs, four
passed ball.
The Dube Umh stars added stolrn bases), Williams (single,
another run in Ihe third. Wllh run. RBII. Acosta and Raines
two out and no one on, llryunl (one single and one rim each),
lomahawkcd a single lo left and Colgate (single, three stolen
stole two bases, eventually bases) and Daniels (run).
Ollier members of the Dube
scoring on a throwing error on a
Kuih
All-Slurs are Hinson.
grounder by Colgate.
The score remained 8-2 until Dickerson. Lloyd Dixon. Dclrlck
Ihe (op of (he sixth Inning, when Guinn. Richard Badger. Ronnie
(he City Stars exploded for nine MeNell, Kevin Butler. Gerald
Bishop and Robcrl Randall.
runs.
Elllngsworlh led off the Inning
wllh u walk and moved over to
Ibird on a pair of wild pilches.
Tom Marlin then singled to rigid
Continued from Page IB
to score E lllngsw orlh and
Australian Nell Borwlek. .
advanced (o third on a wild pitch
The Iwo top seeded women,
and a stolen base as former New
York Mel Robcrl Smilh walked. appeared headed for easy victo­
Tom Boyd ihcu walked lo load ries In their first-round matches,
Ihe bases and Giordano plated a also against Australians. Stem
pair or runs with a single lo G r a f , s e e k i n g h e r rift li
Wimbledon tide, faced Klrrlly
center.
Schaefer walked lo reload the Sharpe, a qualifier ranked 231 si.
bases and Laurence was hit by a and second-seeded Martina
pitch to score Boyd. Dean Smith Navratilova, seeking Iter 10th:
then singled to center lo score title, fuced Michelle Jaggard-Lal.'
Giordano wllh run number ranked 891 h.
Agassi used a new serving'
seven and Schaerer scored the
tying run on a throwing error. slylc which eul down on Ills
Ken Colter singled to lefl lo plidc buckswing In order to ease the!
Laurence wllh (he go ahead run strain nit Ills arm, It produced 10
and Dcun Smith scored on aces, more than he had In any of
another single lo left by Ell- IiIh seven victories ett route to
the title last year.
Ingsworth.
But Stlch, considered one of
Coder scored the final run on a
long single to lefl hy Robcrl the top contenders (his year,
Smith, tail the All-Stars avoided noted (hat A gassi's victim.;
furlhcr damage when lefl field Bernd Karhacher of Germany.;
Robert Dickerson made a great had been weakened by bronthrow to third baseman Colgate chills.
"He played u guy who had a
who In turn made a perfect relay
throw lo catcher Donnie Hinson virus for two weeks ... so I don'l
lo retire the runner nl the plate think tliut was a real test for him
regarding his form." Stlch said.
to end the inning.
"He's not as good as he was!
Doing the damage for the City
Stars were Dean Smilh (double, last year," Karhacher said. "But!
single, two runs, two RBI), I think he has a pretty good draw;
Giordano (single, two runs, two now. and these kind of players,!
Rl)l|. Elllngsworlh (single, two they gel belter every round they!
;
runs, RBI). Coder and Robert play."
While Ihe attention focused on!
Smith (one single, one run and
one RBI each). Marlin (Hlugle. •he favorites, some lesser-known!
RBI). Herman (single), Laurence players waged epic struggles. In!
(ru n . RBI) and Boyd and one striking upset. Scbastlrn
Schaefer lone run seated each). Lnreuu of Canada, a qualifier!
Also playing were .Hon McNeil ranked only 1711th In the world,
rallied lo heal BOth-rankcd
and Jeff Deen.
Pacing Ihe Bube Ruth All-Stars Jonas Svcnsson of Sweden 2-6.
were Counts |lwo singles, two •1-0. 7-0 (7-4). 7-6(9 7). 10-8.

Courier-

&lt;

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22, 1993 - 38

People
F o r H a m ilto n , age is n o barrier

IN B R I E F
Libraries offer ekite again this summer
Featured again this summer at the Seminole County
Libraries will be skits by The Castle Player. Presentations
adapted from "The Wolf's Chicken Stew" by Kelko Kasza and
"Miss Nelson Is Missing" by Harry Allard will star Owen Burke.
There will be a shadow play of "Once A Mouse" by Marcia
Brown and the audience will participate In telling of "One Fine
Day" by Nonny Hogroglan. The schedule Is listed below. All arc
welcome.
Monday. June 28 at 2 p.m. — East Branch Library. Oviedo.
366-8150
Wednesday. June 30 at 2 p.m. — Norhtwest Branch Library.
Lake Mary, 321-2419
Thursday. July 2 at 2 p.m. — North Brunch Library, Sanford.
322-2182
Tuesday, July 6 at 2 p.m. — Central Branch Library.
Casselberry. 339-4000
Thursduy, July 8 at 2 p.m. — West Branch Library.
Longwood. 862-2282.

First night orlentaarlng sat
The Florida Orienteering Club would like to unnounce that
they will be sponsoring an Orienteering event at the University
of Central Florida Campus on Saturday. June 26.
Courses offered will range from a String-0 for ages 2-6 up to
un uvanccd red course approximately 4 miles long complex
controls for more advanced runners. We will be using a new
map. Everyone Is welcome. The cost Is $4.00 for non-FLOC
members und $3.00 for FLOC members. All UCF students will
be $ 1.00 with a UCF ID. Fun for the entire family.
Start times will be from 8-9:30 p.m. for all courses. Note- Yes
this Is at night, this Is our first ever Florida Night Orienteering.
Participants should bring a flashlight.
For more Information call Bob Putnam at 366-9603.

■y H IS M A N S C H R O ID IR

Special to the Herald__________

SANFORD - Ruth Hamilton,
world truvclcr. teacher and
writer at age 95 Is still very
active with church groups und
senior citizens giving her travclaugc and slide programs.
As nn educator, she continues
to learn about the world und
shares It with anybody who will
listen.
Hamilton Is of Viking ancestry,
her mother was from Sweden
and her father Danish. Her
wanderlust and energy can be
traced to the Viking era. She hus
visited over 20 foreign countries
and was In the New Hampshire
legislature for four years.
She shares her travels and
adventures through slides and
narration with other seniors at
the Longwood Nursing Home
and Dram Towers residents.
Her lust program was on
Portugul, soon to come Is
Athens. Greece.
Her most recent adventure
wus n Bluck Sea Cruise on a
Russian ship that took her to 10
different countries which In­
cluded Yalta and Odessa.

Ruth Hamilton gav# a talk on Portugal during a vial! to Bram Towara.

h.-^ i Photob,M#rm.nsehro.d.-

Single parent support group to meet
The Purcnt Resource Center will sponsor Single Parents
United Support Group meeting on the first and third Tuesday
of each month. The meeting for July will take place on
Tuesdays. July 6 and July 20 at the Ascension Lutheran
Church In Casselberry.
Tills support group Is designed to provide support and
Information for single purents who want to learn more about
community resources, child care, support und preventing
Issues.
The support group Is free und ehtldcurc und transportation
cun be arranged.
For Information or to register, contact the Parent Resource
Center at 425-3663.

Movin' up
Some of the young ladles of
Brownie Troop No. 848, which
meets at Upsala Community
Presbyterian Church, Sanford,
celebrated their graduation to
Juniors recently. Graduates
Include, from left to right,
Sasha Baker, Meredith Hagg,
Danielle Falk, Mary Peacock,
Carolanne Hendrix, Hilary
S l l s b y , J e s s i c a Spragg,
Jessica Hendrix, Marloy Hagg
and Sabrina Deshner.
H«r»k) Photo by Jim Hoppi

Substance abuse discussed
SAFE, Substance Abuse Fumlly Education. Is conducting a
"Families In Crists" outreach program. Interested organiza­
tions wanting to contuct the Life Savers Club of SAFE may call
Libby Kuhurske at 291 -4357.

O p tim is t C lu b m eets w eekly
The Sanford Optimist Club meets every Wednesday at noon
at Shoney’son U.S. Highway 17-02. Visitors are welcome.

Klwanis Club meets Wednesday
The Klwanis Club of Sunford holds Its noon luncheon
meetings every Wednesday ut the Sanford Civic Center. North
Sanford Avenue ut the lakefront. Visiting Klwanlans are
welcome. For Information call Walt Smith, president. 32350HH.

Aerobics offered

Cat tales are
DEAR READERBt Our feline
friends have had a lot of bad
press In this column lately. In
the Interest of even-handedness,
let’s hear It from some renders
who should know:
DEAR ABBY: When I was an
Infant, wc had ail adult female
cat. She was a short-haired
Siamese named MulTy. While I
remember MulTy only from my
later years, my parents liuve told
me many things MulTy did when
I was an Infant.
Not once was Muffy seen
trying to smother or hurt me. In
fact, she would sit on the floor
near my cradle, and whenever I
cried out. she would race out of
the room to find my mother:

denied

A D V IC B

ABIG AIL
VAN BUREN

of huhlcs belong In the same
category as those who swear
they have been guests on UFOs
or "know" the earth Is flat.
These people may be sincere,
tail are confused at best.
I have known und loved
hundreds of cats, uud never
huve I seen one act out of
Jealousy or malice. On the other
Nar-Anon to meet
t h e n
s h e
w o u l d
m e o w
persistently until my mother hand. dogs, whom I love equally,
Nar-Anon meets every Wednesday ut 8 p.m. at West Luke
followed her buck to my room. are often Jealous, but do little
Hospital. 589 West State Road 434. Longwood. Nar-Anon Is a
Then,
uflcr Mother had done more than Just push the object of
support group open to fuinlllcs and friends of addicts. Dully
whatever was necessary to quiet thelrjealousy aside.
living with un addict Is more turmoil than you cun handle by
Cats will always seek the
me. Muffy would resume her
yourself. Join for support In coping with your addict: guln
warmest
place In the house.
"post"
by
my
crib.
serenity to muke decisions and put your life back In focus. Call
Sometimes
It’s my chest when
KAREN
BTEIMAN
260-1900 for more Information.
DEAR ABBY: People who In­ I’m lying down. It could be a
sist that cuts suck the breath out baby’s chest, so I agree. It may
be best to keep cats away from
sleeping babies. The cat does not
know that It can suffocate an
Infant.
Hut as for sucking the breath
out
of a baby, or doing liurm out
10 00 I 10:30 I 11:00 I 11:30
8:00
6:30
7 00
7 30
8 00
ol Jealousy —utter nonsense!
D
iltb
x
iin
iin
„
o
l;;
N
tai
:
j
|to»pM
Cm
Tomphl
i
N
K
N&gt;«ti1ly
»!J M a l i ;
liton
THEA C O L L I N S ,
fiTJff
Hutu *II |ln r.laraoj i j iu&gt;. lim (TUT N5m I mi 1535! iufiinu,,'
STUDIO CITY, CALIP.
*(»»«• HU
Ounvwx# iIn5l*fto|:j
■(Tfur
The City of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. Wednesdays und Frlduys from 9 to 10 u.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Cost Is $3 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, bourd certified with over 10 years
experience.
Cull 330-5697 for more details.

DEAR THEA: Hundreds of
redUcrs have related stories of
having cuught cats in the act of
sucking the breath out of the
mouths of Infants. An equal
number of readers have written
to say t hat c a t s ar c not
malicious. However, they huve a
keen sense of smell, and when
they smell milk on a baby's lips,
cuts, loving milk the way they
do. go Immediately for the
baby's mouth. But they would
never Intentionally harm a baby.
On the contrary, cuts have been
known to protect un Infant
should It be threatened.
DEAR ABBYi I was dismayed
to read those letters from people
who witnessed cats attempting
to suck the life out of Infants.
What poppycock!
I huve had dozens of cuts over
the yeurs. and there 1s nothing u
cut enjoys more than curling up
next (a a warm human. When
my cats try to share my pillow. I
make them move; a helpless
Infant would not be ublc to do so.
and might be suffoeuted by u
very lurge and heavy cat — but
certainly not due to evil Intent or
Jealousy on the part of the cat.
Ahby. letters such as those
you published only add to the
ulrcudy stuggcrlng amount of
Ignorance und human hatred of
one of G od's most m isun­
derstood and often-abused
'.V&lt;T,
il mm

W“ ■M
.
••
« I.»
creatures.
PAMELA J . FRIZELLE.
SULTAN, WASH.
DEAR PAMELA, THEA AND
KARENi All right already. I'll
take 20 whacks — with a
cat-o'-nlne-tat!s.
DEAR ABBY) Many people
write to you to complain about
hnvlng sent a gift that was never
acknowledged. It Is not always a
case of bad maimers.
Recently, my parents celebrat­
ed their 60th wedding anniver­
sary with an open-house party.
A good number of gifts were
separated from the curds before
the gifts were opened.
My parents would have been
delighted to send everyone pro­
per thank-you notes. If they had
known whom to thunk —and for
what!
I reud some time ago. In a
helpful hint column, that It Is a
good ldcu to write a description
of the gift on the back of the card
accompanying the gift.
This Is done by some people —
but nut enough. It Is very dilllclt
to write a thank-you note for a
gift If you don’t have a clue what
the gift wus.
FRUSTRATED IN KANSAS
DEAR FRUSTRATED! Thank
you for a valuable addition to
tills column. I plan to use t^ial
suggestion myself.
M O V I tl AN D ii„.. i„ i.’ .1 i. t

•*r 1»•' . I Xsf*1

H*y 17-K.I

4:

8:48 LG
The following births have been Winter Springs, girl
June
13
—
Dawn
und
Darren
recorded at Florida Hospital.
SNIPER io m LG
Lennon. Winter Springs, girl
Altamonte Springs:
June 4 — Janice and Anders
Llndberg. Lake Mary, girl
June 5 — Kathy and Wayne
iimiiiiir.:u.iii«r.ii.imi
Hrlske. Oviedo, girl: Patricia and
Matthew Zanonc, Altamonte
•NO PASS MOVIE* A
Springs, boy
June 6 — Jacquelyn Luwson
and Peter Cole. Winter Springs,
LAST ACTIO N fR n jj)
boy: Alcssatulra und Jerome
^ 11:30 2:00 l:H 0:00-------- 7
Garrett. Fern Park, boy
June 7 — Katherine Lumpkin,
f GUILTY
IP *
a o q , u
i -to 3 jo InJ
Longwood. girl: Sheryl and
A O D I N iMi.tono
)jg b )
Roger Freeman. Lake Mary, boy:
Marie Beasley. Casselberry, boy
June 8 — Teresa und Angelo
JflO 3:00 8:00 7:00 WO ^ J
Feliciano. Altamonte Springs,
girl: Kerri and Jason King.
Longwood. girl: Susan and
LAST A C TIO N
Donald Crist. Chuluotu. boy
12:00 2:30 1:48 1:48
June 10 — Domicile and Kerry
McCoy. Longwood. girl
June 11 — Tewanu Chisholm
and London Campbell. Sanford,
girl; Cynethea Coleman and
Malik Evans. Kern Park, girl:
t \', k t , IN '. M Itf i &gt;1,( H INI)
Susan and David llollowcll.

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�4G - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22, 1003

L tg a l N otices

Legal N otices

Ltgal Notlcaa

IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E I I O N T B IN T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT .
IN A N D F O R
S IM IN O L I C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. i tt-M74-CA-14-K
S A M U I L L. C H E S S E R , is
Trustee,
P la ln lllt.
v*.
M U R R A Y E. CA LHO U N and
B O B B IE A N N C A LHO U N , his
w ife : C H A N D Y L E E
W I L L I F O R D end V E R N A
W IL L IF O R O i J IM W A L T E R
H O M E S , I N C . ) H. 0 .
F R E D R IC K , J R .. T ru s t**: and
M IC H A E L L. K R IL L ,
Do fondants.
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
that pursuant to * Summary
F in a l Judgm ent In favor ot
P te ln llll, doted th * llh day ot
A p r i l , l f f l , In C o s * N o .
fl-J *7 4 C A -t4 K ot lh * Circuit
Court of th * Eighteenth Judicial
C ircuit, In and tor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r i d * , In w h ich
M U R R A V E. C A LHO U N and
B O B B IE A N N C A LHO U N , hi*
w it * ) C H A N D Y L E E
W I L L I F O R D end V E R N A
W IL L IF O R D ) J IM W A L T E R
H O M E S , I N C . ) H. 0.
F R E D R IC K , J R .. T ru s t**) end
M IC H A E L L. K R IL L , w ere
Defendant* and S A M U E L L.
C H ESSER, a * Trustee, Plolntltf.
I w ill soil to th * h lg h H t and beet
bidder lor coah at th* West
Fro n t Door e l the Somlnol*
County CouttwuM, M l N. Pork
Avonu*. Somlnote County, San­
fo rd , F lo rid a 33771 at i i : «
o'clock A .M .. on th * tlth day of
J u ly , IM S. the following de­
scribed proporty sot forth Tn (ho
O rder ot Final Judgment:
Lot No. 11:
Start a t tho Southwest corner
ol th * Southeast q u a rte r ol
(action 15. Township t f South,
R a n g * l l B a s t. S o m ln o te
C o u n ty , F l o r i d * a n d r u n
N .s r 4 ? 'a ‘‘E.. along th* South
m argin ot sold quarter, tor X T
to th * East m argin ol th* 4 0 C
right-of-way ot St. Johns Avo­
n u * ) th o n c * N.OO, 3O'0O"W .,
•long said m argin, ter 45.1' to •
point ot curve: thence along sold
m argin curve to tho Woat, w ith •
control angle ot 0 f*4 l'J *" , ra d i­
us ol 5,753.34', lor length ol
curve of te e .tr to • concrete
m o n u m o n t lo r a p o in t ot
tongoncy; th o n c o N .I0 *tr3 4 "W .,
along sold m argin, for 344.77' to
• concrete monumont lor •
point; thonc* N .E ta47'J4,'E . fer
1,310.7* to • concrete monumont
lo r a p o i n t ) t h o n c *
N,77*04'34"E tor tfi.JT to •
concrete monumont (or • point)
thoncoN. 17*00 (k T E . lo r 574.45'
to a concrete monument tor •
point) thonco N.OO*JO, 17"W. ter
304 0' to on Iron pin for a point ol
beginning ol tho proporty to bo
d e s c rib e d ) thonco co ntinue
N.0O*3Olt7‘'W . tor 17.V to a pin
to r a c o r n e r ) t ho n c o
N .14 *1I'I? "W . tor 141.3' to on
Iron pin tor a corner: thence
N OreO l l ' E . tor 1.140', more or
loss, to on Iron pin tor • corner
on th * West bank ol tho 5t.
Johns R iver: thonco In a South­
erly direction, along sold bonk,
tor 104', more or loss, to on Iron
p in to r a c o r n e r ) th o n c o
S .lf* 4 rs i" W ., aw ay from sold
rlvo r, lor 1,4*0', m ore o r too*, to
tho point of beginning.

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
OFTHBSTATI
O F FL O R ID A
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY
COSO
5*01
A*4
ll^._(N )
w .r|.f|in-11
in—10
j-Ci —
WwTBI
#qFf
IWIdWfi
F L E E T N A T IO N A L B ANK,
P lolntltf,

IT . JOHNS R IV E R W A T E R
M A N A G E M E N T D IS T R IC T
• IV E S N O T IC E OP
IN T IN D ID A O IN C V A C T IO N
TI m District give* nolle* of I I I
lnt*nt lo deny tho request for a
porm lt by tho following oppllcan tis) on July 11 l f f l :
a r v i d a Co m p a n y , a t t n i
JOB OOBOSH. l » IN T E R N A ­
T IO N A L P A R K W A Y . S U IT E
m
H E A T H R O W . P L 31744,
a p p lic a tio n 14-117 O CIOAM U.
T h * pr*|oct It located In Somlnolo County, Soctlon I I , Town­
ship M Sooth, R ang* i f l o i l .
Th# application I t for M O D IF I­
C A T IO N T O T H E P R E ­
V IO U S LY IS S U E D P E R M IT TO
S E R V E H E A T H R O W T E N N IS
C L U B A N D S U B D IV IS IO N .
TR A C T I . T h * rtcolvlng waterbody li H E A T H R O W IN ­
T E R N A L LA K ES.
T h * O litr ld gives nolle* ot It*
Infant to Issue a porm ll to fho
following ap plicant!*) on July
a If f ] :
L A R R Y D A L E . P .O . B O X
fS 0 4 H LA K E M A R Y . P L Jtm ,
a p p lic a tio n n - m o u i A O M j .
T h * pro|act la located in (am inolo County, Socllon 14, Townthlp I I South, R ang* 30 B ait,
T h * application la for M O O IP IC A T IO N T O T H E P R E ­
V IO U S L Y IS S U E D P E R M IT
A S S O C IA T E D W IT H C O N ­
S TR U C T IO N A T A S IN G LE F A M IL Y S U B D IV IS IO N
K N O W N AS C A R D IN A L
C R E E K S U B D IV IS IO N . T h *
r a c o l v l n g w a t e r b o d y la
H O W E L L CREEK.
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
SCHOOL B O A R D , l i l t
M E L L O N V IL L t A V E N U E ,
SANFORD. PL U t i l applica­
tion « 4 -11 7«1 lA O M . T h * p ro ­
tect 1a located In S em inole
County, Soctlon f . Township 11
South, R a n g * I f E aa t. T h *
application la ta r M O D IF IC A ­
T IO N TO T H E P R E V IO U S L Y
ISSU ED P E R M IT IN C L U D IN G
T H E C O N S T R U C T IO N O P
M E T A L B U IL D IN G S TO
H O U S E H IO H S C H O O L
SPO R TIN O A C T IV IT IE S FOR
L A K E B R A N T L E Y H IG H
SCHOOL.
W H IT E C O N S T R U C T IO N
C O M P A N Y , IN C ., P.O. BOX
* 1 1 ,' S A N F O R D . P L 31771.
application I4-1I7 0U 1AM 3. The
protect la located In Somlnote
County, Socllon 13. Tewnahlp M
South, R a n g * 30 E aat. T h *
application la for M O D IF IC A ­
T IO N O P T H E P R E V IO U S L Y
IS S U E D P E R M I T W IT H
E X C A V A T IO N B E IN G IN A
D R Y A R E A IN S T E A D O P W E T
FOR T H E P .D .O .T. BORROW
P IT .
Th* flla ta) containing o*ch of
tho above-listed application!*)
o r * a v a ila b le for Inspection
Monday through Friday except
lor legal holiday*. I : N a.m . to
5:00 p.m . at th * St. John* River
W a te r M a n ag em e n t O la lrlc l
H eadquarter* or th * appropriate
field offlc*. T h * O latrlct w ill
tak a action on each p orm lt
application Dated abov* u n le u a
petition lor an ad m lnlatratlv*
proceed I no (hearing! I* filed
purauanf to th* provlalon* of
aoctlon 130.17, F.S., and faction
e O C -i.S tt, P .A .C . A pe ra an
w ho** aubftantlal Intareat* ora
affected by any of th * D ittrlcta
propoaod perm itting decltion*
identified above m ay petition for
an adm lnlatratlvo hearing In
accordance With aactten 1J0.n,

• t quarter of Soctlon
1 1 Township I f South, Rang* 11
East, end tho Northwest quarter
of tho Southwest quarter ot
Soctlon M , Township I f South.
R a n g * 11 B e s t, S o m ln o l*
County, Florida.
Lot No. t l :
Start at tho Southwest corner
ot tho Southeast q u a rte r ol
Secg Ion 15, Township I f South,
R a n g * 11 E a s t , S o m ln o l*
C o u n ty , F lo r i d a a n d r u n
N .lf*47 '03 ''E .. along tho South
m argin ol M id quarter, lor 30.0‘
to the East m argin ot th* 40.0'
rlght-ol'w ey ot St. John* Ave­
nue) thence N .00 *3O '00 ''W .,
•long u ld m argin, for 41.1' to •
point ot curvo) thonco along M id
m argin curvo to tho Woat, w ith •
control onglo ot 0f*44'34''. rad i­
us ot 1753.10'. tor length ol
curvo ot S44.lt' to a concrete
m o n u m o n t lo r • p o in t ot
tongoncy) thonco N .I0 *1 I'!4 "W .,
along u ld m argin, lor 3S4.f7' to
a concrete monumont tor •
point) thonco N .0f*47'*4"E . for
U l O T to • concrete monumont
lo r • p o i n t ) t h o n c o
N.33*04‘34“ E. lor ltS H ' to ■
concrete monumont lor a point)
thonco N .1 7 *0 0 W ‘E . for 574.41'
to o concrete monumont lor a
point; thence N.00*30'I7"W . ter
I f l . O ' to a p o in t) th o n c o
N.14*11'I7"W , tor 141.1' to on
Iron pin tor a point ot beginning
ot tho proporty to bo described;
thonco continue N .1 4 *in 7 ''W .
lor 343.7‘ to on Iron pin tor •
corner) thonco N .4f*44'4l"B . to r.
1440', more or less, to on Iron pin
for a corner on tho West bonk ol
tho St. John* Rlvor; thonco In a
Southerly direction, along M id
bonk, for 114’, more o r loss, to
an Iron pin lor a corner: thence
S.0f*4rirw., away tram u l d
rlvor, ter 1,540', more or lets to
tho point of beginning.
Tho proporty doacrlbod Is lo­
cated In tho Southeast quarter ol
tho N o rth **}I quarter ol Soctlon
2 1 Township I f South, Bongo 32
lo s t, and tha Southwest quarter
of tho Northwest quarter ol
Soctlon M . Township t f South,
B o n g o l l l o s t , S o m ln o l*
County, Florida,
old fproporty shall ba sold
Sola
subject to any outstanding liens

SCOTT R O B ER T
E O TTIC B LLO , oto l.,
D efendant!*).
A M E N D E O N O T IC E OF
FO R E C L O S U R E S A LE
BYCLBEKO F
C IB C U IT COURT
Notice Is hereby given that tho
undersigned M aryann* M o re*.
Clerk of tho Circuit Court ol
Somlnote County, Florida, w ill,
on July 11, l f f l , ot 11:00 o.m . ot
tho Woat Front door ot tho
Somlnote County Courthouse, In
tho City e l Sanford, Florida,
otter tor u t e and M il at public
outcry to tho hlghoal and best
bidder far cosh, tho following
doacrlbod property situated In
Somlnote County, Florida, to
w it:
LO T t t l , U N IT F IV E O F
M O U N T G R E E N W O O D , AC.
C O R D IN O T O T H E P L A T
T H E R E O F , AS R E C O R D E D IN
P LA T BOOK 40. A T PAG ES 4-f,
O F T H E P U B L IC EBCOROS
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
T O G E T H E R W IT H T H E
F O L L O W IN O I T E M S O F
P R O P E R T Y W H IC H A R E LO ­
C A TE D IN A N D IN S T A L L E D
AS A P A R T OP T H E IM ­
P R O V E M E N T S ON SAI D
L A N D : R A N Q E /O V E N , D IS ­
POSAL. DISHWASHER,
P A N /H O O O , C A R P E T IN O ,
SMOKE D E TE C TO R ,
P A N /H O O O
pursuant to tho final decree of
foreclosure entered In a c o m
ponding In u l d Court, tho stylo
of which Is: P L E A T N A TIO N A L
B A NK , vs. SCOTT R O B E R T
B O T TIC E LLO , o tol.
W ITN ESS m y hand and otflclal soot ol u l d Court Juno 15.
If f } .
(S E A L)
B Y : JonoE.Jaaow lc
DoputyCterk
■ufallsh: J u n e ll ,if . l f f l
Publish:

DEF-U3_________________

N O T IC E OP A P P L IC A T IO N
PO RTAXM EO
NOTICE II HEREBY
O IV E N , that J a m o t R. Dye us.
Custodian ter tha Urotegy C lr.
PA Prod I Sharing Plan, tha
holder ot th* lollowing certific­
a te !*) h a * filed M W certlllctte (s ) for a (ax deed to ba Issued
thereon. T h * certificate numb* r (a ) end year(s) of Issuance,
lh * description of tho proporty,
end tho n o m tls ) in which it w o*
•su ssed it/e r e as follow *:
C o rtlfko te No. I l f
Voer of Issuance; lf M
Description ot Proporty: LEO
LOTS I + 3 E L K S LO CKHARTS
SU B DPB 1P07Q
N am es In which o tM U o d i
Ben|am ln J. H olt. Yvonne P.
Hell
A ll ol M id proporty being In
tho County el Somlnote, State ol
Florida.
Unless such c t r ll lk a le ( s )
shall be redeemed according to
low, the property deter Ibed In
such certificate!*) w ill bo u ld
to tho highest bidder ot tha waot
tha M th day of July, l f f l . ol It
A .M .
A pproxim ately Itll.C O cosh
lor loo* I* required to bo paid by
tho succotsfui bidder ot tho M lo .
Full paym ent ol on amount
equal lo lh * highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
la x ** and recording too* I* duo
w ith in 14 h o u r * o t t e r tho
advertised lim e ot tho u te . A ll
payments shell be cash or guaranieed Instrument, made pay­
able lo tho C ltrk el tho Circuit
Court.
Doted th l* 14th day of Juno,
lffl.
(SEA L)
MeryonnoM orso
Clerk ot tho Circuit Court
Somlnote County, Florida
■ y iM k h o llo L .S IIv a
Deputy Clark
Publish: Juno ti, I f i and July 4,
11, I f f !
DBF-157
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U N T
O F T N I I4TM J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
FL O R ID A
CASE NO.tl-1454-CA-14-L
T H E R E S O L U T IO N T R U S T
C O R P O R A TIO N , os Rocolvor
tor Boll Fodsrol Savings Bank.
Plolntltf.
vs.
TA L L T R E E S - S E M IN O L E
IN C ., oto l.,
Dotsndants.
N O TIC E OF SALE
N olle* Is horoby given that on
tho tJth day ot July, l f f l ot
M:00 o.m . at fho West Front
door ol tho Courthouse of Seminote County, F lor Ido, the un­
dersigned Clerk w ill otter tor
u lo tho following described reel
A ll ot T A L L T R IE S according
to tho plot thereof os recorded In
Plat Book I f , Pages 34, 17 end
3 1 LESS L ots4.13, I I , 17,17,34.
4 4 ,4 1 44.45, 47, 70, 71, 72, 7 1 45,
14.17,14. I t . « . 74, f t . 111 t it ,
131 Public Record* ot Somlnote
County, F terldo.
Tho otoroM id M lo w ill bo
m od * pursuant to tho Final
Judgment ot tho Foreclosure In
Civil No. f l 1414-CA-I4L, now
ponding In tho Circuit Court In

A d m in is tr a tiv e C o d * R u le *
4 0 C -I.IU and aS C -I.U I and bo
tH *d w ith (received b y ) tho
Dlatrlct Clerk. P.O . Bo* M l*.
P a la tk a , F lo rid a 1117a-M l*.
P e titio n * for a d m ln la tra tlv *
hearing on th * abov* appllcatIo n ia ) m uat bo tile d w ith in
fourteen IM ) day* of publica­
tion* ot thl* nolle* or w llhln
fourteen (14) d a y * of actual
receipt of th l* Intent, whichever
lira) occur*. Failure to III* a
petition w ithin th l* tim e period
ahall com m ute a w aiver of any
right auch p*r*on m ay hav* lo
requeat an ad m lnlatratlv* de­
te rm in a tio n (h ea rin g ) uniter
faction 110.57, F.S., concerning
tho aubject perm it application.
Petition* which a r * not tiled In
accordance w ith th * abov* prov aIon* a r * *ub|*ct to dlamlaaal.
Shannon Barlcen
Senior Record* Technician
P erm it O ata Service* Olvlalon
St. John* River W ater
Managem ent Olatrlct
Publish: J u n e ll, l f f l
D E F-tag
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A
CASE NO.fl-D tO -C A -14-K
H O M E SAVING S O F
A M E R IC A , FS B .form erly
known a * H O M E SAVINGS
O F A M E R IC A , F.A .,
Plaint lit,
H E L E N 0 . L A N H A M i TO N Y D.
LA N H A M , and T H E W E K IV A
H U N T C L U B C O M M U N IT Y
ASSO CIATION. IN C .,
Defendant*.
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that, purauant to o Sum m ary
Final Judgment In Forocteaura
en te red In lh * obovo-stylod
couao. In lh * Circuit Court of
Som lnol* County, F lo rid *, I,
C lerk of tho Circuit Court of
Somlnol* County, F lo rid *, w ilt
•oil that certain property *Jtin t­
ed In Somlnol* County, Florida,
more particularly doacrlbod aa:

EXH IB IT "A "

L O T 7, W E K I V A O O L F
V IL L A S SECTIO N O N E , AC­
C O R D IN G T O T H E F L A T
T H E R E O F AS R E C O R D E D IN
P L A T ROOK 11, F A O E 11,
P U B L IC RECOROS OF S E M I­
N O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
LESS T H E FO LLO W IN G D E ­
S C R IB E D F A R C B L t B E O IN
A T TH E SOUTHW EST COR­
N E R O F S A ID LOT 7j TH E N C E
N O R T H 0 f*4 3 'tt” W .. A LO N O
T H E W E S T L IN E OF SAID
LOT 7. M l F E B T i TH E N C E N
71*5I'34"B., A N D P A R A L L E L
T O T H E SOUTH L IN E O F M I D
L O T 7 . 1 7 .4 0 F E E T , S .
4 t * 4 r a r '« , i i . t i f e e t , t o
T H E SOUTH L IN E OF M I D
LO T 71 T H E N C E S. 71*iS'14"W,
A L O N O T H E SO U TH L IN E
T H E R E O F . *1.00 F E E T TO
T H E P O IN T O P B B O IN N IN O .
A l i a kn o w n o * 114 W aa l
W yn dham C ourt, Long wood,
F lo rid * ttT7ti at public aote, to
tho hlghoal end boat bidder, (or
coah, on th * Woat front atop* of
tho Som lnol* County Courthouao. M l N . F o rk Avenue,
Sen ford. Florida of 11:00 a.m .
on July 27, l f f l .
W ltnoa* m y bond end th *

altklal eaat ot Mile Court on

Ltgal N o tjcat
N O TIC E O F CODE
ENFORCEM ENTBOARD
P R O C E E D IN G S
TO: D o vId L .D o lp
or lh * o w n o r(t) ot th * follow­
ing doacrlbod property:
Lot* 7 A S I l k B Buena Vlata
E ffe te * BPS P O l
1114 Elliott It ., Sanford,
Florida
R E : Caaa No. *3-103
T h * Sanford Cod* Bntorcomont Board w o* created by
Sanford C ity Cod*. Ordinance
ttM . a * em ended, a * autherliod
by Chapter 141, Florida Stat­
ute*. The purpoaa at thl* Board
la to facilitate th * an ter cement
ot tho code* and ordinance* In
tore* In th * C ity of Sanford. You
have boon charged w ith vio­
lating th# following Cod* on
your proparty: Chapter 11, tac.
11-17 by allowing high g ro t* and
w eodete devtl
orty.
You a r * hereby form ally not)
Had that a P u b lk H earing w ill
be conducted In lh * above-aty ted
couao by tho Cod* Bntorcamont
Board of th * City ot Son ford on
th * 11th day *1 July, IfW . ot 7:00
p.m . In th * City Commlaalon
Cham ber*, Room 117, Sanford
City H ilt, 300 N . P ark Avonu*.
Sanford, F lo rid *, concerning tho
ob o v o -sty lo d v io la tio n . T h e
Board w ill receive teetlmony
and o v ldtnc* a t to ld Hearing
and ahell m ake finding* o f fact
and canclutlono of taw.
You a r * hereby ordered to
appear before M o t Board a t the
H earing to enaw or th * charge*
and prooant your fld a a t the
caaa. You have M e right to
M a i n an attorney, a t your own
oaponw, to roproeont you before
the Board. You hove the right to
coll wltnooao* on your behalf a *
w ell o t to erooaexomino oil
other w ltnoa***. It you do not
appear, th * Board m ay proceed
without you. Should tn * Board
d e te rm in e th a t a v io la tio n
oilata, It ho* th * power to lu u *
O rder* requiring you to bring
th* violation Into compliance
Including th* power to levy lino*
and C ro at* * lion on your
property up to S IM M for ooch
day th * violation continue* peat
th* dot* aet tor compliance by
th * Board'* Order.
It th* violation I f not cor.
rtetod by th * flm * ot tho H ear­
ing or If, prior to tho Hearing,
you com * Into comp Hence with
th* above-atetod alleged cod*
violation but th* violet Ion recur*
prior to lh * Public Hearing, tho
Hearing w ill b * held an th*
•Itegotlen* ogolnal you.
It you hav* queatlona con­
cerning th l* m a tte r, p ie * * *
contact th * Building D epart­
ment at (407) 330-S4J4. SHOULD
YO U O B C ID I TO A P P E A L
A N Y M A T T E R C O N S ID E R E D
A T TH E ABOVE H E A R IN G .
YO U M A Y N E E D A V ER B A T IM R ECORD O F TH E PROCEE O INOS, T E S T IM O N Y A N D
E V IO E N C E W H IC H R EC O R D
IS NOT P R O V ID E D BY T H E
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D IF .S .
314.0103).
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS ­
ABILITIES NBEOINO
A S S IS TA N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y O F T H E S E
P R O C E E O IN O S S H O U L D
CONTACT TH E PER SO N N EL
O F F IC E A D A COO R D IN A TO R
A T 130-5414 41 H O U R S IN
A D VAN C E O F T H E M E E T IN G .
Publish: Juno 11 n . I t B Ju ly 4.
f « W M S W '» '« W 'IR
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H i l l T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT , IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
F L O R ID A .
CASE N O ,tt-M tg-C A -14-L
U N IT O W E R M O R T O A G E
C O R PO R A TIO N ,
P laintiff
P R E S T O N S . R O T H ,*1 el.,
Defendant*
N O T IC IO F
F O R E C L O S U R IS A L E
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
pursuant to a Sum m ery Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure dated
June 4. I t f i end entered In C o t*
N o. * M 4 t l- C A - 1 4 - L o t tho
C ir c u it C o u rt ot lh * I I T H
Judicial Circuit In and for SEMIN O L B C o u n t y , F l o r i d a ,
whoroln U N IT O W C R M O R T ­
G AG E C O R PO R A TIO N, Plain­
tiff, and PR ESTO N E . ROTH,
of. o l„ ore defendant*, I w ill foil
lo th * highest bidder tor coah at
tha Woat Front Door e l th*
Som lnol* County Courthouao,
Sanford, Florida, ot th * hour ot
11:00 * .m „ on tho 15th day of
July. I t t l , tho following de­
scribed property a * set forth In
sold Sum mary Final Judgment,
to w it:
Lot 11, C A R D IN A L O AK S
CO VE, according to th * plot
thereof * * recorded In F lat Book
31. Pago* I f end t i, P u b lk
Record* of Somlnol* County,
Florid*.
D A T E D th l* 7lh day of Juno,
lffl.
M a ry onne M ore*
C lerk Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W . Bolton
Deputy Ctork
Publlah: Juno 11,11, l f f l
O IF -Itf
IN T N I C IR C U IT COURT,
O F T H E B IO H T B B N T H
J U D IC IA L C IB C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO: fl-IM f-C A -1 4 -L
AVCO F IN A N C IA L S E R VIC ES
O F F L O R ID A . INC .,
P laintiff,
T *M O T H Y B E L L I o to l,
Defendant*.
SECOND A M IN D IO
N O TIC E OF
FO R ECLO SU R E M L E
NO TIC E la hereby given that
th * undoralgnod Clerk ot th *
C ir c u it C o u rt ot S o m ln o l*
County, F lo rid *, w ill, on th * 15th
day of July. 1ff3, ot l l : M A .M .
e l th* Woat Front Door ot th *
Som lnol* County Courthouao,
M l N . F o rk A vo., Sanford.
F lo rid * otter tor fate end toll at
p u b lk outcry to tho hlghoal end
boat bidder, for coah, tn * follow­
ing d**crlb#d property altueted
In S E M IN O LE County, Florida:
L o t i .
B l a c k 1,
W E A T H E R S F IE L D F IR S T
A D O IT IO N , according to th*
M op or Plot thereof o t recorded
In Plot Book 11. P ag* 44 and 47
of tho P u b lk Rocord* ot Semi­
nole County, Florid*,
purauant to th * Final Judgment
entered In a c o m ponding In told
Court, th * etyte of which I*
Indicated abov*.
W ITN E S S m y hand and of(Id o l tool of m m Court M l* tth

Ltgal N o tlc u

Legal Notices

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S IM IN O L B C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. fS-tl7f-CA14L
SUN B A N K , N A T IO N A L
A SSO CIATION
P laintiff,

L IO A L NO TIC E
T h * School Board of Somlnol*
County Is accepting Request*
l o r P r o p o s a l lo p r o v id e
E m p lo y** Aaalatonc* Program
S e r v ic e * . C o n ta c t R ic h a r d
W o llt, E x e c u tiv e O lr a c to r,
S u p p o rt S a r v lc o * . l i t )
M a ilo n v illo A vtn u o , Sanford
31771. M l - t i l l , E xt. M l.
Publish: Juno 11. M , I I . » . 11.
34,31,37,14.1*, l f f l
DBF-131

F R E D D IE M . S M IT H and
V E R A B. SM ITH ,
Defendant*.
AMENDED
N O TIC E O F M L R
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
that on July M , l f f l , a t lt : M
a .m ., a t lh * Weal Front Ooor ot
th * Courthouao In Sen lord, Som
Inelo County, Florida, th * unilgnod Clerk w ill otter lor
derate
i th * following doacrlbod root
T h * Woat 171 loot ot th *
louthw ott to of th* Southwest to
of th * Northwest M , lying North
of th * Northerly Right ot Way ot
t h * S o o b o o rd C o o a f L in *
Railroad, Socllon 34, Township
I f South, Rang* 1
note County, Florid#.
T h * oforoM ld M l* w ill b *
m od * pursuant to th * Final
Judgm ent of Foreclosure In
Cos* No. n H 7 f C A U L , new
ponding In th * Circuit Court In
Somlnol* County, Florida.
D A T E D thl* f*th day ot Juno,
IMS.
M A R Y A N N B MORSE
Clerk ot tha Circuit Court
By J a n o l. Jaaowlc
D oputyCterk
Publish: J u n o H . I f , 1W1
O E F -tM ______________________
IN T N I C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T N I I4 T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D F O R
SR M IN O LE C O U N TY.
F L O R ID A .
C A S IN O .fJ -lM -C A -14 -K
M A O N O L IA F E D E R A L BANK
FO R SA VIN O S.
P laintiff,
A N Y UNKN O W N H E IR S ,
D E V IS E E S , O R A N TE E S ,
ASSIG NEES. LIEN O R S.
C R ED ITO R S A N D O T H E R
U N KN O W N PERSONS
C L A IM IN O B Y, TH R O U G H ,
A N D U N D E R OR A O A IN ST
H .O E O R O E L O U S E R .
DECEASED, E T A L „
Defendant*.
N O T IC IO F
FO R ECLO SU R E M L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
pursuant to a Sum mary Final
Judgment o' Foreclosure doted
Juno IS, I f f ! and entered In
Co m No . ts 131CA-14-K of th *
C ir c u it C o u rt of t h * I I T H
Judicial Circuit In and lor Somlnote County, Florida, whoroln
M A O N O L IA F E D E R A L BANK
FO R M V IN O S . Plaintiff, and
A N Y U N K N O W N H E IR S . OEV IS E II, ORANTEES,
A S S IO N B E S , L IE N O R S ,
C R E D IT O R S A N D O T H E R
U N K N O W N PE RSONS
C L A IM IN G B Y . T H R O U G H ,
A N D U N D flR OR A O A IN S T H.
O EO R O I LOUSER. D E­
C E A S E D . B T A L .. a r * deton
dent*, I wilt M il to th * high**!
bidder (or cosh at th * Woat
Fro n t Door ot Ihe Som lnol*
County Courthouao, Sanford,
Florida, * 1 11:M o'clock A .M . on
lh * » n d day of July, t t f l . lh *
th * following doacrlbod property
o * M l forth In M id Sum mary
F inal Judgment, to w it:
L o t 4 7 . T H E S P R IN O S
tM * 4 t* P « a iM O P la t a * S E C ­
T IO N TW O, according to th*
Plot thereof a t rtco rd td In Piet
Booh I t , Pago* M , 100 and 101 ot
th* P u b lk Rocord* of Semlnol*
County, Florid*.
TO G ETH ER with all lh * lmprovamonts now or hereafter
erected on th* property, end *11
ea s e m e n t*, rig h ts , a p p u rte ­
nance*. rent*, royelllei, miner*1, oil end gaa right* and protlla,
w ater, water right* and water
llock, and all fixture* now or
horoalter a part ol tha proparly,
Including raplacamanl* and ad
dlllona l hereto.
D A T E D this tlth day ol Juno,
lffl.
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE. Clark
Circuit Court
By: Jon* E. Jaaowlc
Deputy r i " fc
Publish:
DBF-111

N O T IC E O F CODE
ENFORCEM ENTBOARD
F R O C I ID IN O I
TO : A lice M o o r* H olr*
A IM : J a m ** M oor*
or lh * ow norla) ol th* followIng doacrlbod property:
Lot 7 Blk 1 Molscha Subd PB 3
POM
Vacant Lot on W. 11th St.,
Sanford, F lo rid *
R B tC o a * No. 71-104
The San lord Cod* Enter ce­
ment Board w a* created by
Sanford C ity Coda. Ordinance
IM *. a * amended, as author I red
ar 141, F lo rid * Slotby Chaptei
h * purpose
ot th l* Board
ute*.. TTh#
p
la to facilitate lh * onforcomont
ot th* cod** and ordinance* In
lore# In lh * City ot Sanford. You
h a v * been charged w ith vio­
lating th* following Cod* on
your property: Chapter 11, aoc.
11-17 by allowing trash, |unk,
dabris. e tc . to ac cu m u late )
allowing high growth, vino*, end
underbrush to develop upon th*
property which provide* • hid­
ing piece for transients end
illegal activity.
You ore hereby form ally noti­
fied that a P u b lk Mooring w ill
bo conducted In th * obovo-atylod
m u m by th * Cod* Enforcement
Board ot tho City ol Son ford on
th * 11th day of July, l f f l , *» 7:00
p.m . In th * City Commission
Cham ber*. Room 117, Sanford
C ity H all, 300 N. Pork Avonu*.
Sanford. Florida, concerning tho
ob o v o -aty lo d v io la tio n . T h *
Beard w ill recolv* testimony
end evidence ot M id H earing
and shall m ake finding* of fact
and conclusion* of low.
You o r* hereby ordered to
appear before that Board at th *
Hearing to enawor th * charge*
and present your ante ol th *
case. You h a v* th* right to
obtain an attorney, ot your own
expense, to represent you be tor*
th * Board. You hove th * right to
coll w ltnoa*** on your boholl * *
w ell os to cross-examine oil
other wllneaeet. It you do not
appear, th * Board m ay proceed
without you. Should lh * Board
d e te rm in e th a t • v io la tio n
oxlata. It ha* lh * power to Issue
Orders requiring you lo bring
lh * violation Into compliance
Including th# power to levy tin#*
and c re e l# * lien on your
property up lo 5250.00 for each
day the violation continue* peat
Ihe date set tor compliance by
th * B oard'* Order.
If th* violation I* not cor­
rected by th# tim e ol th# H ea r­
ing or It, prior to th * H earing,
you com * Into compliance w ith
the ebove ita te d alleged cod*
violation but th * violation recurs
prior lo th* P u b lk Hearing, the
H earing w ill ba held on th *
■Ilegations ogolnal you.
If you have queatlona con­
ce rn in g th l* m e tie r , p le a * *
contact th * Building D eport­
ment ot (407) 3305454. SH O ULD
Y O U O E C IO B T O A P P E A L
A N Y M A T T E R C O N S ID IR ID
A T T H E A B O VE H IA R IN O ,
YOU A M Y N E E D A VER B A ­
T IM R E C O R D O F T H E P R O ­
C E E D IN G S , T E S T IM O N Y A N D
E V ID E N C E W H IC H R EC O R D
IS N O T P R O V ID E D BY T H E
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D (F .S .
144.0105).
PERSONS WITH DIS­
ABILITIES NEEDING
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y O F T H E S E
P R O C E E D I N G S SHOULD
CONTACT T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A CO O R D IN A TO R
A T 330-5414 41 H O U R S IN
A D VA N C E OF T H E M E E T IN G .
Publlah: Juno 15, 13 , i f 4 July 4.

Iff!
DBFS

CLASSIFIED A D S
Seminole

Orlando •Winter Park

322-2611

831-0093

C lA M m tD D C F T .
HOURS

M u u i'ie ri

P f W A T l P A R T Y R A TES
.1 7 1 ■ Am

14

MONDAY t w
P f« 0 A Y
C L O U D SATURDAY

1
I

..TOi a H M
»M M H m
.S 1 .1 I i l m
• pB TlB B U B ,hSB B 4«
•jU m B N M m m

t p h a d to te jM f KWudn H arold A d m r tM fB fta com et « n n d *c n *l&lt; to y
C a r a t whan you gat reouRi Pay orty 1st day* yeua ad tuna at rate aomod.
Woo M dooenpBontor teoteot reouM. Copy must tooowacxwptabte typo-.
araaM oBlerm . •Oommomtel koouoncy r t*

2 7 - Nursery A
Child a r e

11~Ptr»oiMil»
AOOfTKMS
F ro * medical core, tronsporlo lio n , co u n M lln g , p riv a te
doctor plus living oxponaa
* II Attorney
Bor m i l l l Call
,1 -H H ItN N
E N G L IS H Fam ily looking tor
A m e ric a n ''O o d n o r e n t* .''
PIo o m w rite to: M r. B M rs.
Dev Id Linos, 41 Utvoracrott
Rd.&lt; Chaoytosmoro, Coventry,

21-SpGCUI N o tlc ti
* w BATO N C U S S *
Indlv. B Oroup tenon* even.
For Info: 137 2717. O lngor
W right, Director ol th# H u rri­
canes, f l State Champion*.

27— Nursory 4
Child a r t

ABC SM A LL O AYCABB Bablot
and toddleri. 3 hot meals.
Excellent rets. Dee, 373 01 if

For Exedkflt...
Profetalonel C H IL D C A RE
Service*, call 3131001.
M IC H E L L E 'S H O U SE - I l f
P E R W B B K I Open 4:30AM 11
M ld n lo h llP I 7415*1*3 10

42—Lgdr I SorvICES
iS u L B S ^ W m a T T o w e r ol at
torney, alm pl* divorce, legal
research, etc. Call 407110 * 3 it

SS— Buslniss
____Opportunities
LscjI VM4ifl| Rwto

1 1100 00 o w eek potential.
Must te ll, t-100411 V E N D

C H IL D C A RE • L * k * M a ry
Blvd. B 17*1. 'E x p . w /a ll
ago*. 'Fenced yd. * Planned
Acllvlttea. Personal cere and
a tte n tio n lo r y o u r c h ild .
»4-fT74.................................Kelly

Legal Notice
N O TIC E
Notice I* hereby given that
T h * School Board ol Somlnol*
County, Florida, ot th# regular
mooting on July 13, l f f l , In th*
Bo a r d R oom ot lh * A d ­
m l n l a t r a t l v * O fflc o a , 111)
M otionvlllo Avonu*, Sanford,
F lo rid * w ill adapt th * following:
REVISED POLICY E m p lo ym en t o l Nondoarood
Vocational end (JR O TC ) Junior
R eserved O ffic e r'* T ra in in g
Corps Instructional Personnel.
R E V IS E O PR O C ED U R E Nondegreed F u ll Tim # Voca­
tional Per tonne I Modi I lex Non t
lo th * policy end procedure a r *
required because local school
district* hove been eutherlred to
certify instructional personnel
In Nondegreed Vocational end
JRO TC program *
N R W p A o c i o u r i ~ in­
s tru c tio n a l P orso nnol. T h is
procedure I t nocosMry duo to
im plem entation of now JRO TC
ro g ro m s o t L a k e H o w e ll,
-y
L m o n and Ovlodo High for th *
If f l- lf f X school yoor.
R E V IS E O PO LIC Y - Pupil
P ro g re s s io n P la n . S e c tio n
131.145 F lo rid * Statutes require*
each school board to establish a
co m prehensive p ro g ra m lo r
pupil progression.
Copies ot tho** docum tnl* ore
available lor inspection at th*
A dm lnlatratlv* O ffice* ot th#
School Board at t i l l M ailonvillo
Avenue, Sanford, FL.
JE A N N E M O R R IS,
C H A IR M A N
SCHOOL BOARD OF
S IM IN O L B CO U N TY

41—Money ti&gt; Lend

v

BILLS DUET

Have t Place lo Pay I Slash
Monthly Poym onltl Ool Cred
Iters O ft Your Back I Easy
Q uallty-No Collateral 1 331 7535

71— Help Wanted

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE/
SECRETARY
For on* girl o lllc*. Conilruc
tlo n b a c k g ro u n d h e lp lu l
C om puter exp. end collec
Nona. Apply: Southern Truta.
I N I Aileron Circle. Senlord
31773________________________
A D D T O Y O U R IN C O M E
S IL L A VO N NOW I
CALL 313-045* e r 311-4311
A O IN T S AVON. Earn lo 5 0 \
No do o r/d o o r. O uerenteed
401L discounts. Send! 331 Ilf3

AfiENTS-REAL ESTATEI
Nothing succeeds Ilk * success.
W e're well Into our 3rd deced*
ot training successful agents.
No license?...............W e'll help!
WATSON H IA L T V C O R P
RBALTQRS____________ I1 3 1 IN

Air ConRHlMini IrtsUlkrs
For residential change oult.
H iring now. Experienced only.
311 4515 or 311 QUO
A S S E M B L E R S • H and m a ll
w ork. S3 per hour. Never a
tee I Halp Personnel, m -0 1 0 *

Assistant MaintinancE Pimm
N e e d a d to r L a k e M a r y
eperlm enl community. Must
hav* electrical and A/C tx p
Apply at: SI Croix A part
m ents, 733 Secret H a rb o r
Lena, Lake M e ry ......... 331 7301

CARPENTERS NEEDED

34f *454 No calls alter 7 pm

CARPENTERS

^ ^ r e » u r e T le in ln g

NotlCt

Electrical

F l o r id a i v a i e n o r m
a ll contractor* bo registered
o r certified. To verify a state
c o n tr a c to r s llc o n a * c a ll
1 *00 341-7f40. O ccupational
Licensee a r * required by lh *
county and con bo verified by
colling
Iln g331-IIM
M I-IIM ., oat, 7433

MASTER IL I C T R IC IA N
L lc'd /ln a. 14 h ri. F a ir prlcasl

Remodeling

Install Sanding Finishing
T O M O LSEN l- H I- 4 H - lt f l

AcMIflc
ionsT

R i s . / c W U i . v T n y l tid in g .
A lu m . F ru m ln g , O ry w o ll,
Door*, Rooting, Concrete.
1H-4B1J... 1 0 . Be lint, CBCaittO*
" ^ T u T o m o T Iv E ^ "
N I I D CAB A /C work done?
C all us. Wa hav* compressors,
d ryer*, evaporators. T h * boat
rice* In town) Auto King t i l l

8

,w w !2 i2 S i!S ^ 2 i* £ l^ « w w
C e re e n try

Residential or Comm ercial

I ERBIUM ................... llf-fIM

A L D U S IT A U
Fix I) right. L k 'd /ln * . From
a ta ri to finish. C arpentry,
p lu m b in g , o lo c trlc o l, end
rooting avc*. 13 yra. ol export
■ e No lob too big o r small.
B a rtttX M M k t
U IW W
H o m e Inroprovimont
r

R ill WAY

C A R P E N T E R A iT T S a o T h O T *
repair*, painting 4 ceram ic
lltei R k h * r d G r o * ^ J l l P 7 3

id ito n r y

m a m r n ffs :

ic e

Stucco, C oncrete, R enovallona. L k ,/le * ...............H1S444

Lighting
RIFlA^I Sorilng
c r sto r s r i

bldg, security light*.
lights. Point B
i i i i i i n l imil II &gt;43-0130

Painting
T,

Cleaning Sarvlce

Ini.- oxt., Ile.d', In*.
Free Estim ates............3310145
K B H F A IN T A N D R IM O O IL
Fro# Katlm ateal Rote., Ik .
No |0b too tm o ll 14*44144

30 yra. experience)
Rotoroncoa. S p o d llliln g In
reskStntlal. Courtoou* prompt
aorvlcal Call 407-333-154*

^oteaJMndowajteoyiMgM^

concrete

COMMERCIAL
grassing, L B
oaks. palm *

Soa d in g .

r e e ls , peel d e cks , w a lk s , 4
Frei
*reo 0*1.3314113

Rooting
R O O F R B P A IR I
and replocomonts .131- 710*
COCOM1S4

Trish hauling

umW
PLUMBING

nnbr

AND
SERVICE - Fra# ootlmote*.
lk .K F C 0 4 t4M P 40M 3.Tom

:

A F F O R D A B L t H A U L IN G W ill '
clean, haul Iris h You nom * It I •
W o'll haul 111 Colt 313-4344
;

TffT

E X F E R IIN C E D In 'a ll phases*
ol tlto Instollotlon. Ins., Ile * 4
w holstel*
price*. 443*444
te to lotile
lll* prli

TreeSeirvlce
r

________

'&gt;

CLN T R B l I E R V I C E
1
Llc/lnsured. Nobody does H i
bolter I Sr. discount. 314 f » 4 "
■ C H O IS T R B l SVC- Lie’s. In s ."L ot th * Protestlorvils do It." i
Freo o stlm etei.............m m * x

CUSTOMPAINTINoVf

r tp e r hin ging
ilONAL tecal p aper

S P R IN G C L E l f T T S T T f r
outside. Rentals. Also w kly.

C A P TA IN C O N C R ETE. W ayn*
Boot. 1 M an Q uality Opera
tie r I M B StM TSM -Tftl

Sod, M ulch, Pertlllio r. Buehoa. 48 vra. *«o.
LA R R Y 'S LA W N B T f l l l .
Professional Service. F ro *
Eat. L k /ln * . 313-34*1
B A N D Y 'S Q U A L IT Y LA W N ,
Complete pro co r* tin e * 1M0.
Clean up*, hauling. 331-471*
T O M A J I F F '* LAW N C A B II
R et./C om m ., dependable, tew
reteel Free eat............. 330-7070
T U R F T R IM M IR I-L o w rates,
F ro * eat., R et. B comm. 1
llm e /y r. round I B e l....333-1344

£

W ^nTl^BI^rlvewaysI 5

|n iJ
rB m
a nw
s k ills y o u
t m h k I to .

�&lt; *

Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, June 22. 1993 -

71—fteip Wanted

71—H tlp Wanted

HOUSE CLEANERS

WAREHOUSE AND OINERAL

A t hours, A-1 payl Ne nights
or week and*. Car needed. *1
Compeny, Merry Melds *
MI-1441

NO FEE TILL HIREO
TERMS AVAILABLE
AAA EMPLOYMENT
700 W. 25th ST.
323-5176
LOW FEES

IT'S EASY -• WORK TODAY,
GET PAID TODAY I SPRINT
STAFFING............... 334-10) I

LEAD TEACHER
For three yr olds. Experience
required. Ml 7*01 EOB
MEDICAL

LPN

★ CLOSER*

two wkl Rial tllalt or till*
sipartencawlnsthlsl

★ ROUTE SALES*

, MMwhl Train tar local rout*I

Full lime, 7-1 end 11-7 Charge
Nurse positions. Experlsnc* In
long term car* highly de•Ireable. Drug fret work
place. Centacti Debary
Manor, m N. Hwy tr n . Oa­
kery, FI 51711. 4*4-4414
MEDICAL

.*★ WAREHOUSE WORKER ★

LPN

H*ndl* Shlpplng/Rtcslvlngl

:★ ABSTRACT SEARCHER*

*440 wkl Put your ikllli I*
work here. Hlrlns newt

★ CLERICAL*

Experienced, for busy ortho­
pedic o ltlc e In Longwood/Sanlord. Call Sharon:
__________7471131_________ _

* YARD MAINTENANCE *
Paid rain ariaiMl

NIGHT AUDITOR

★ WILDER*

Full lime, experienced prat.
Must be honest, dependable,
outgoing personality. PART
TIME FRONT DISK CLERK,
flexible hour* Inc. week and*,
w ill tra in . Im m ediate
employment. Apply todayl
Super &gt;Motel, S.R. «* and 1-4

■'Mtfland Tig sip, her* I

★ INSURANCE CURK*

Leant all pheMtl

MANY MANY MORE JOBS
YOUR FUTURE
IS OUR CONCERN

NURSING ASSISTANT

C A R P IT T IC H Mult have
driver'* llcanie. E«p. helpful,
not* necessary. Will traincarpet cleaning, dyeing. In. stalling, s negotlabl* 4W MSS

,

CHILDCARE
CNA

• For M. P.'s etllce......H I 7741

DEMONSTRATORS
-Christmas Around the World
now hiring. Free S300 sample
. kit. No Inveslmtnl. Also
•booking parlies. (10 Iree
merchandise and morel
________ eoMissin________
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
Musi have Long Itrm Car*
*xp*rl*nc* or experience
working with geriatrics In an
acute car* selling. Salary
based upon exp Drug Iree
workplace. Contact DeBary
' Manor, leo; I ut-4414, s* N.
Hwy 17-91 DeBary FI H7U
DOG GROOMER
Part time, experienced. Apply
In person: Pel Groomery 1110
C Elkcam Blvd. Dellona

ELECTRONIC TECH
Will train. 407-424 *101
Refundable Fee____________
OINERAL

I
I

marketing salts. Start today!

r r Noexperience required.
!
Call Use 119-ltll
[

O ffkB PBrson
RECEPTIONIST
Needed lor Sanlord and Or­
lando companlas. Must be
proficient In word procaeslng.
Experienced with multi line
phones required. Temp to
perm position* avillabl*. Coll
GPC Temporary Sarvlces lor
more Into, 441-1133_________
R O U T E S A LE S P E R S O N .
Needed lor local company.
Good starting wage. Benelll*
package available. CDL
license required.
Cell John or Todd........ 1110117
HOPS. French Ave. S u ite n

Security Officers
Sanlord, Lake Mary area.
Excellent pay benatlts available. 407 104 4113___________
SERVICE MAID hiring In A1
tamonl*. Great pay, bonus
and monthly paid profit shar­
ing. Driver* paid mileage.
Experienced only...... 131 4743
TELEMARKETERS

WILL TRAIN
, IMMEDIATE OPENINGS', u
S350-S450
Wholesale warehouse select
Ing up to 40 positions.
Warehouse management,

71 and 1 11. Must ba certified
or exp. wllh cerllllcallon
within SO days alter employ­
ment. Drug Ire* workplace.
Contact Debary Manor, 40 N
Hwy 17 *1. Debery FL 4*4-441*
Pert lima. Typing, light I
g. Calf
keeping.
C In the morning
hours. Mr. Jonas..... in 7001.

Part a Full lime positions
• is p .iM u iT ........... nuete

:

It PM to 7AM shllt, part lime,
apply In person: Lskevlew
Nursing Center, *1* E.lnd SI.,
Senlord.

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST

Typing, tiling, data entry I

-

HAIRSTYLIST
For beauty salon Lake Mary.
' Sanlord.........
Call 311 SOSO

Ham n Egg Dell
NOW OPEN
Needs Snd Shllt Ixp. Dell
Person. Full lime, pey based
on experience. Apply Am
moco, St. Rd. *4at 1-4.
H E L P W A N T E D , G O OD
WORKERS Report 5:10 AM
Corner ot Perk Dr. end 1i n
»»;or call 37174*3_____________

?; Industrial WorkBis
e-.Warahousa, assembly end
'.[packing lobs avallabla. Wa
C-ar* looking tor strong, clean
?;cut paople to apply now. Call
'[.today lor Inlormallon; OTC
; . ; T smportry Services*41-11)1

K I T ’ N ’ C A R L Y L E ® b y U r r y W r ig h t

7 1 -H t l p W anted

Petminenl And
lamp.PoiitJons ...
. &lt;Company - will train-paople
with phone skill* Exp., not
necessary. Hours Mon Thurs,
ItPM ; Sal., (AM 1PM. Flex­
ible on hour* when perma­
nent. Salary plus bonus.
Sr. dlliens welcomed I
Never A Feel
Help Personnel Sit Slot
TELEMARKETING
1IPM E Z Money Loll ol
Fun I Call between Ihe hours
11. Mr. Haskellal431 31*1
"THINK 'N PLAY" Full lime
daycareleacher needed.
__________134-1144_________
TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER
CDL license. Only neat and
daan apply. Call 134-1411
VETERINARY
TECHSXustom ir Assist.
Part time, weekends. Techs
must be exp. animal handlers.
Wa need dependable and
motivated people who love
anlmalil P.V.S. provide* ellordable Vel services all over
the slat* of Florida. If Inter­
ested pleas* call Danila:
330 4100

Beautiful
Apartments to
Have and to
Hold...
Banfoid Court Apartmsnta
1 •Slngta Blory Dealgn •No one •Friendty orvslla Managers
above or below
•Unique Apt Extra*
*Studio*, 1 A a Bedim.
•Security - For Your Peace ol
Affordable Apartment*
Mind
• FumlshacVUnfumlshed Studio*

' 3301 8anford A v t., Sunford • 3 2 3 *3 0 0 1
Hours: M-F, 9 •5, Sal., 10 •2

labo r

n il p

to

Country Lake Apts,

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
I 1/2 month FREE

1 BDRM, I BATH COTTAOI.
Appliances, ilorag* shad. 1544
Mohawk Ave. (14.004...MfrlOtl
1 B DR M ., 1 B A TH . NIC*
neighborhood with poet and
tennis court*. Doubts garage.
New A/C. 171,000 assume no
quality VA loan, 141,000
balance. At low at 11.100
down. Owner will hold Ind.
Weekday* 415-01M or week­
end* (4071141 7441

n ib d id i

Bonus lor drivers. All shift*
available. Dally pay, no fee
Report ready to work S:M am,
Industrial Labor Svc.. 1011
French Av. No phone calls

WAREHOUSE
Full lime, part lima. Up fp
sa i l par hour. Alt shills
available. 407-414 *101 Re
fundable Fee
__________

WELDER/FABAICATOR

133—Acreage*
Loti/Sale

Ornamental malals, sleel.
aluminum, ele. Layout, cut,
weld. 17/hr. and up. Call lor
appointmanI..............*** ITH

O CALA N A T 'L F O R E S T,
Weeded letsI si,(10 each, ne
money down 1171,41 monthly.
1400(41101*
laniard 44X110................ 11.(00
OittM 111X117............... 110.(00
Oeneva s 1/4Acres......... 144.(00
0(t*#n(+ Acres.............til. (00
Lem Bluff 10Acres......... 4*9.500

73— Employment
W in ttd
PROPBISIONAL private duty
MALB CNA. Responsible,
dependable, llev* 3l3 7341

T A l 5 5 o A T H 4 t n J a Ithopper,

140 HP, Lycoming naw mags.,
1 prop*, trailer,' 15100.
— 0. Call
HI-MMor
lor H I 7170
WINNER-47 B lit Bait 14'
I50HP, XP Evlnrudt, 17 14
volt trolling motor, Tam-Llm
trailer. Hummingbird daplh
tinder. (4100 3311304
•II PT. OLASITRON and trail­
er. 55 HP Bvlnrud*. Excellent
condition! 42,500515 5317
• It tt. EOWRIOBR 145 HP
I/O, About IS hr*. Immacu
lata.w/trillir-eovsr. Mutt
*•*&gt; 410.000OBO nrasit
• 1444 IVINRUDB ELTO out
board motor. I.t HP Very
good condition, (7SH3 *5)7
It, tl PT. IPORTCRAPT, Open
fisherman, Its OMC Saadrlva,
SHOO. Consider trade for jet
ski or Flat* boat. H3013S

t l —A pB rlm enl*/
Houstfo S lisrt

CALLEART R IA L l» T „ INC.
________(407) H1-749E_______

217—Oarage Sales

COMPORTABLI, SAFE apt.
convanlant to town. I7l/wk.
Inc. util. No deposit. II step
prooram person prel, 314 ttl?

135— Condominium!
C o -O p /S alt

•GARMC SALK A0 MRGKIN

13— Room* For W&gt;nl
CLIAN ROOMS, single Starting
470/wk. Kitchen, pbane,
laundry, video gam**, *11
street garbing MO-4411
E X T R A LOW R A T I !
SPBCIALI Room* at S*l/wk.
Cell 131 MM, evenings
LAR I MARY/SANFORD. Lg.
room, both. Mature adull
SlO/wk. Kllchan. ate. avail.
Nice spill bdrm home m -l l l l
SANFORD. Furn. or unlurn.,
170/wk. Includes utilities.
Washer, dryar, pool 111 lilt
SUNLAND. 171/wk. w/ A/C. S70
without. S70 dap. Washar,

^r^arkllchenjirliO^^
17—Apartmanls
Furniitw d / R tnt

NOTICE
All ranlal and real astaia
•dverlitamenl* art *ub|#ct to
th* Federal Fair Housing Act,
which maka* It illegal to
advertise any preference. Itmllallon or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
sex, handicap, familial slatus
or national origin
NICELY FURNISHED Apt. In
unlqua salting near downtown.
Util, paid, rat.'* no pals. *310
mo........................... 113 OIK
ONE BDRM. 1bath. Furnished
elllcltrcy. Sanlord. *315 mo
HOP deposit.............. 314 7IIS
SANFORD - large 1 bdrm. apt..
Complete privacy I SIS per
week plus 1100security.
________ Call 313 7*71________
SANFORD. I bdrm, adults / no
pat*. All alec., modern, air.
Illfand up STOPdtp, i l l SOI*
1 BDRM, t BATH. Cent. H/A.
t ill wk. plus security. Water,
sewer, artd garbage pick up
furnished Hl*t14er 34(1*37

103— Housrb
Unfurniifw d / Wtnl
U K I MARY Nice. cent. H/A
3 bdrm, II* bath, blinds,
fenced yd. Laka Mary tc hoots.
(400plus sac. 10444*1370
U K I MARY. 4 bdrm, 1 baih.
Corner lot. 1,100 sq It. Clot* to
shopping and Lake Mary
schools. Call Bvelyn 114-Utl
NIC! UPSTAIRS ham*. New
appl. Water and garbage paid.
*310 plue deposit......... 431(4*1
RINTORLEASE PURCHASE
1/t w/applt*nc*s. C/H/A. on
fenced 1/1 acre, garage,
*!7!/mo; 1/1. appliances, (pic.
garage, 1110/mo. Paul. Van
lure I Properties 311 4744
SANFORD 1 bdrm. 1balh spill
plan, large horn* w/blg family
rm. Cant. H/A, lg. shaded
corner lot. S17i/mo. plus ttcu
rily dep WJL Properties
Wet Leuwsma, 113*71*

Stenstrom Rentals
•SANFORD 1/1 Apl. lg rooms,
tern, patio. CHA, Clean, like
newI (431 mo. (100 sac.
I L K . M A R Y 1/1 condo,
w/tlngl* garage, fplc., Leas*
w/Opllon. 1741mo. 1710sac.
elANFORD 1/t Apt. W/d*n.
Fplc, S3W mo. *300 tec
Stenstrom Realty, Inc.
"W* Manage your Ham*,
Ilk* It was our awn." Jim Deyl*
1IT 14*1After 1PM: 134-14(3

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
SANFORD. Modern, 7 bdrm ,
cent. H/A. carport, laundry
rm., near all (393/mo. 130 0111
SANFORD. Urge duplex. 1/1,
fenced w/gerege. *471 mo. ill,
Iasi, 1300sec. 444 7*1*_______
SANFORD. In country. Large I
bdrm. lurnlthed Sltl mo.. 1300
security dep.,...331-14(4 Ivmsq
1 BDRM DUPLEX. (II Park
Av*. llfl/mo.. sac. dep.
________ 407 4)3 1114________

1 BD*M„ I OxHi, tern. panh.

■ a rin

CHA. all applt.. 1 w/carporl,
^ lIV n a ^ T M M a lle r a ^ j^

Uniurn i»h*d / R e n !
CONVENIENT ANDSPACIOUS
CALL GENEVA GARDENS
APTS........................ 111-1444
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT.
Partially turn., A/C. Free
canoe use. Katie's Landing
*311/mo- No pels 311 4470
OOOD AREA, I A 1 Bdrm. apis.
Ulllllltt. 1171 up Rais re
qulred....................... Ill *717
LAKE JENNIE APARTMENTS
1 Bdrm. Apts. Available. Free
water/gasl 1141117_________
LAROE I BDRM.. sunken living
rm.. Fplc., quiet on 1/4 acre,
very clean, garage, S400 mo.
Includes water, trash pick up.
No yd maim. 114-1M1 altar 1

La vin'* Landing
1*1 BDRM. VILLAS
RENT TO OWN
CREDIT NO PROBLIM
Applications lor 3 Bdrm.
Homas Now Balng Accepted.

323-4923

107—Mobile
Home* / Rent
OSTEEN, 4 bdrm., doublawld*.
acreage, pelt oki Avail, nowl
S4S0 mo 1030 Plney Woods
Trail. 3)3 S37I

114— Warehouse
Space / Rent
LONGWOOD/IAKE MARYMid til* ilorag* warehouse!.
400100 1400 sq. II. Free rent
w/llmo. leas*. lromtl41/mo.
__________331 QMS__________
SECURITY WAREHOUSE 4*A
and Old Lake Mary Blvd.
*1.110
3.000 tq. It. ot
llc/wirehout* 'Finished ol
lice space alto available.
Kapank* Really. 1-51(1111

1 1 5 - Industrial
_______R enteli______
■ EARDALL M-l, 10.01(11,110
sq. II. w/oltlc*s. sprinkled, OH
doors, tl.00 sq. It. Stenstrom
Realty Jim Deyt* m ists

MKHINER'S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm, 1)40 mo.
1 bdrm, S410mo ond up

323-1170

117—Commercial
_______Renteli

Quiet Single Story
Castlabarry, 1 bdrm. A 1
bdrm.. Attic Storage! Celt
Joan lor appointment. 4(4 4777
QUIET Sinford 3 plex. I bdrm.
apl, A/C, Slll/mo Rel’s re
qulred. I ll 1134aller 4PM
SANFORD'S Best Kept Secretl
Pool * Laundry, I * 1
bedroom*. Convenient locatlonlCell Pal,3)3 4410
lift MOVES YOU IN. Studios
and t bdrm*. available.
Casselberry location.
Call Melissa, tw ill*

101— Houses ~
Furnlihtd / Rtnt
SANFORD 1 bdrm, porch,
clean, u lllllltt furnished
except power *330 plus sec. No
pelt 407 144 2304or SO* 1414(47

DOWNTOWN - Huge 4 bdrm., 1
bath, 1 kitchens, single lemlly.
l*00/mo,, S300 dap. 414
Palmetto............. Lea 331 3311
HUD HOMES
Frem SMOdawn - WHY RBNTT
Th* Hllliman Group, )lf 1431

1 4 1 -H o m n for Sals

118— Office
__Space / Rent
NSW Sanlord olllces and/or
warshousas. 4001,100 sq. tt.
Special, lio/me. 333 111*
SANFORD. Olllc* space. 1400
tq. It. building total, lioo tq.
It. per oltlce unit. H I 7004

BATEMAN REALTY
STARTER OR RKTIRRBI 3
bdrm. block horn*. Porch,
workshop, carport plus extra
loti Consider lease/opllonl
Only........................... *41900

321-0759..............121-2297

UN-SATI0NAL
UMMER LIVING

at

G0EVH1AAPARTMEBTS!

F HA OR VA AS LOW AS 5Vk%
Gov't Foreclosures, Rap o i/A ttu m t No Quality
Homed Owner financing.
Samlnol*. Oranga, Volusia.
Santard lets than 11,4*4dewn
• Renavated .1/1 , appliances,
fenced yard, carport, 111,400
• Renovated like new 3/1, Iptc.,
appl.. new paint. Ul.SOO
• Pool ham*. 3/1 on cul da sac.
Oaraga. 147,400
•1/1 an Vi acral Rtnovaled.
appliances, fenced yd, *41.100
• 1/11% 1144 sq tt. like new) Uv,
dining, family rm, 171.SCO
•4/1, lenctd, garage, (14,(00
Assume N4 Qualities I
• )/i en l/l acral Fanced. cul d*
sac. dead end sirael. 144,(00
Additional horn** avail. Last
than (7K downI
PAOLA, 4/1 on on 1.14 acrat.
Pasture wllh liable. (114,400
Lk. Mary/Langwoad Pool
Home, 1/2. garage, living,
dining, (am. rm*. (41.MO
Lk. Mary peat heme, 4/2. living,
dining, family rm, (104,(00

IMMI K.HMmii ,HtIWNI
nil'll/1 i
0*NJi' M1 N
1

11 A l l - U I A I . I Y
II .* V7 I ii-.t .1

. ml , , i . l

HUOI 1 story home, lg, oak'
trees, handyman tpeclall 3404
tq. It. ol living area. Owner
will consider holding mortgagal Oraat commercial
potential I Only (14,300
S S O U C tO (* .* * * !«

J k 4 r» .,

home, remodeled. Paddle
fans, family rm, screened rm.
walk to parkl Low down, low
monthly...................... 144.(00
DANK REPOS

323-5774

EXCHANOE OR SELL your
proparty localad anywhere)
Investors Really. 774-t4lf
HIDDEN LAKE. 1 yrl young. 1
bdrm. 2 bits, spill plan 1 car
garage, screened porch.
Market price 140’t. listed at
174.000 Dot Waller 471-1441
E R A Daniel and Wohlwender
LK. MARY • 3/1 with family
rm., lg. Ireed lot. *41,000
W Mallcrowskl. 131-7M3

LOOK
NO DOWNPAYMENT TO
QUALIFIED BUYERSI IN
TER ES T RATE AT 7.5%
FIXED. Gov't repos, benk
foreclosures, assume no quali­
ty mortgagisl Low monthly.
Call lor details!
J in tt M in s fiild , 323-7271
AA Carnet, Inc., 1H-11M

3 3 0 *1 4 3 1

N IW im 'ltTewdewrTA Inter•til 14X70 1175/me. 14X70,
5314/ma. 5*5-1704__________
i BEDROOM mobile home sn 10
x 100 lot In Casselberry.
Owner flnenclng, easy terms
m -o o

140— Bus I nets
For S alt
REAUTY SALON, 3 vmt Heliens, good Location! Priced

^osalllJlTWMWjmtL^
1 4 5 -Duplex ter Sate
RENT w/OPTION to buy. 1/m
each. Applt. LONOWOOO.
*41,(00.4304(10 atfOr 5PM.

I l l —Appliance*
/ Furniture
AIR CONDITIONER •HUNTER
14,500 BTU, 4 yr*. eld Oeod
condition. STOPOBO101344
e A N TIQ U I MAHOQANY 4
drawer chest, porcelain
knobs, doug tali lolnts 140
OBO.......................... 333 4140
BIO, Brass queenslie, ortho
mallrass. new still In box.
CoiKIOOO. Sell (300.13173*3
• BOOKCASE. White formica,
clean* easily. Great lor child's
room or anywhere you need a
white boekeata. Priced to tell
al only (33 Call H3-3394
OAYBBD, WHITE Iran and
brass, orI ho mattrast, new
still In wrapper, and pop up
trundle. Was (400. Sacrifice
4300.511 7145.______________
• E N TE R TA IN M E N T CEN­
TER. open, dark wood. In
periled condition. To the 1st
*55.544-1143_______
HOSPITAL BED. All atac.,
•seal, cond.,itell accessories

3im.iSP«aPMiu»rocu:------

HUTCHES. Cherry weed, *100,
OBO. Blende v»4ed. 1130, OBO.
Good condition.,,'........ H3 914I
KINO SIZI watarbad. Oeod
condition, couple yri old.
Mirror and headboard 1175
OBO.......................... Mi-7114
0 LAZYIOY RECLINEN. Vinyl
torn a Hill*, but mechanically
sound 140....................331-14*4
MATTRESS AND BOX springs
double ilia sals lor sal*. Oreat
vsluel *30 tel............Ml 0*(0
NO SERVICE CALL PEE when
repairs are done. Warranty. 14
yr*. experience! John,
A4- Best Appliances. 134-33*1
• Q UEEN SIZE waterbed.
sturdy tram*. Great condition
lap OBO....................333 01*7
• RICLINIR-ROCKBR. axe.
cond.. Brown plntlrlpa,
ovarstutlad malarial. I l l
J30 17&amp;3__________

• IL B IP IR SOFA. Rattan and
overstufled 171 »5 -1544
• TOSHIBA MICROWAVB.
Touch control, solid state.
Good working condition. 140
515-1744_________
U IIQ IE O D IN Q IA L1 I1 King,
Queen. Full A Single. 445 a Set
A Upl U E R Y 'l Mart.Hl-4111

113—Television /
Radio /S tereo

G n tu iK
ONLY $21,00011

Sanlord l/IW block home,
goodcondlllonl 1*1-10(4_____

STAIRS PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT* REALTY
447-H T 7121/111-4171

SI K
STE N S TR O M
REALTY,

INC.

W e H it « n d s e ll
m o r e p r o p e r ty th a n
a n y o n e in t h e G r e a t e r
S a n fo rd /L a k e M a r y a re a .
• STARTINO OUT OR RETIRINQT This cul* 1/1 In
Dellona Is perlscll Oraat
Room, Scr. Porch, Workshop,
• Morel (43.1001
• HERON COVE V IL U w/
Beautiful Comm. Pool A
Grounds I Formal DR. Coiy
Fpl. Spill BR Plan A Scr.
Porchl 1*3.1001
•W ONDERFUL FAM ILY
HOME In Orlendol 1/1 w/
Open Living Area, Eat-In
Kltchin, Lg. Treed Loll
Xlrasl (44.(001

• COLOR TV, 14". Works great
*40............................ 1211715
• IN L IN B P R I Q U I N C Y
counter lor CB or ham radios,
4 digit, 110volt 171MI-504*

113—Computer!
TbmTk c S mT T K

keyboard. SU disk, software,
printer. 1175OBO. B5-4411

l i t —Office Suppites
/ Equipment
■ O IIK , walnut finish wood*
D’4" X I T ' •4 deep drawers.

1f3—Law nA Q erden
• O A R O IN P I R T I L I Z I R ,
horse manure. PRBB - bring
your pickup............... 313 7(03
HONDA Mil propelled mowar.
Sear* site, edger. Call eva*.

I t f — Pats 8 Suppllti
ADORABLI Kittens, F R B i“
good homeI Call 5441)71 leave
message pleaMl
HAPPY START PUPPY CLASS
Up to II wkt. old. Basic
training lha easy way. Mt-1145

203—Livestock and
_______Poultry
•M TURKIYS. 7 adults, 17
young. All color*. All for SIOO
H4454S

203—Stamps/Coins

C A U ANYTIME

321322-

HtDtAlTTincoinriaiteraonr
Bulls loot. Dimas, halvM. 50%
below bid. b*b*47 «M 4 M

2720
2420

IMS Park Dr., tantord
441W. Lake Mary It., Lk. Mary
• In Our 37th Y * i f

2880 Rldgawood Av«., Sanford

1/1 CONDO, Ne qualifying,
assumeabta ■ 1/1% Loan.
Small down payment. Price
Neg 117.000 114 4340

Call In your garage Ml* ad by
11 noon on Tuesday and taka
advantage of our sptclal
garage sal* ad prlcall Call
Classified now for details!
322-2111

137—Mobile
H o m t /S a le

CHEERS TYPE PUB
Sanlord, historic downtown
area, Ready logo, tl/l/mo.
________ 407 434 1141________
SANFORD • 300 N. Elm Av*.
20.700 tq. It. wllh olllcet.
Brick • Iruck ht. - sprinkled.
440V - 1 phase service. U.
menu, or distribution dr.
tl.10tl.31H Of

141— Homes for Sale

103— Ho usbs
Unf urniihed / Rent

Welcome Home

219— Beats and
Accessories

141—Hornet for Sale

lilt MAPLB AVE. SALE OR
RENT W/Qptlan, dot* to
schools, shopping. 1/t, living
t dining (30 000 (44 SM 4211

311—Antiques/
Collectibles

• OIALBR BRACE AVAILABLE* Aunty MaryT An­
tiques, 1440 French Ave,
(17-41) Santerd. W# buy ana
•Mca/tntlrawtatetl 444-7744
HOOSIIR CABINET. Flour bln.
sugar bln and laiy susan spice
rack 1100................... HI 0441

221—Good Things
to Eat
COeNIIH M IN I, 4-1lb. 15each
IMWtfclva Park Drive

_______ 1H4034_______
V IO IY A B L It , Pol* beans,
snap beans, peas, corn, and
okra...........................Hi-1141

_

223-M usical
Merchandise

ORGAN. 3 keyboards. Good
condition. NIc* far small
church. SMOH4-tl7t 4-7 PM
THOMAS ORGAN. Regular
price 13.300. Ml IIng lor *4001
131-0(41

223—Miscellaneous
• AN IW BRINO MACHINE.
Corsair, IlfcenewtllHl *431
A T T E N T IO N CAN Phon*
Buyars, Calluar car phon*
130S0.407-530-1313 _____
• BIKI, 10 spaad. Dray, Husky,
mans 111............. Cal IH3 4407
• CANOUSIL HORIB Rapllca.
Nearly actual ill*. Hand
painted. SIOO. H4-1440
DIAMOND SOLITAIRI RINGS
tWandup. Free sitingI
■ait Pawn A Jewelry, W-4H4
• IMPORTED SERVICE lor 4.
Yellow Italian dinner dishes
SIOO........................... 330 0711
• L U O O A O E . A m e ric a n
Tourlstar, 19 Inch blue
hardslded, Built In whael* and
built In pull hand!*. Kays and
combination lock. Used twice.
Selling less than hall price lor
143........... .................3H 4473
Appl
71 Inch** by 30 Inches, alumi­
num tram*. Delivery possible.
141..................... Call 3300*09
Seats I. portable,
W/cedar gaiabo. underwater
light. *1,373 407 431-7717
• (BARS I HP comprador, 17
gallon tank with hoM and
SATA spray gun 4100 FIHM
MI-7934______
U T IL IT Y T R A IL E R tt tt total

length, 4 tt bed. 12 ply lire *.
Heavy duly *500........... 31(1343

• WOODEN SAWHOR1ES.
Oraat for hobbit* or cralts
(100 tech.................. 374-1714

230—Antique/Classic
Cars
• PONTIAC Firebird 1H(, One
owner) Garagedl (IK ml.
Nice. 44100.407 313 44*4
• 1(11 BUICK. Rasteraablel
Call Bill lor all datallsl 13000
OBO; H r * * 7 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _ _

2 3 1 -C a rt
BUICK IKYHAWK. 1(49. 4 dr.
A/C, PS. crulM, lilt, low ml,
excel cond 13.300........34* *371
CADILLAC IB V ILLI • m i,
55,000 miles, loaded. Tip top
shapel SK.0005H (404
CADILLAC M I L DORADO,
convertlbl* style root, up­
graded wheels, 103.000 ml. I
owners*. 100.............. 19*0444
• CAMARO RS-f convertible,
im . 53,000 mil**. Excellent
condition................... H I 1903

SB

231—Cars
•CHBVY CAMARO • '77. Re
built VO, lot* ol new parlil
SI.093OBQ.nl 0)34ony time
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL '91.
Like new. Must Mil Only
134,000. Call (9071333 (93* _ _
• FORO LTD
'03. 4-doorT
•xcelltnt condition. Everythlng new. SI ,400OBO H I 1*30
• FORD TNUNOERBIRD - '44.
All original I Naads soma
work. 114(3 OBO HI 0134
• HONDA ACCORD OX, 1(90
Auto, A/C. am/tm tape, while
110,(00 LIKE NEWI 333 3417
LINCOLN C O N TIN E N TA L
Signature Seriet, l(0 (
Metallic blue. Owner desper
at* 31,950.................. .330 33H
MAZDA RX-7, 1(41. A/C, aulo.
am/tm tape, rotary engine
Runsgreatl *1,130H i 40(3
MERCEOBS 140 dl*Ml, 1(41.
14,500 *0.000 ml lei. Excellent
cond11Ion...................741 3707
• OLDS DELTA 14, Hll. Fully
loaded. On* owner, excellent
condition *3,100.......... 371 (734
O L D IM O E IL E TORNADO.
1(41. Low miles. Fully pow
ertd. 13,000OBO 331*370
PONTIAC 1(44 STE, 1(14.
Loaded, 74.000 milts. U.OOO
OBO.......................... 313 717*
• PONTIAC 444A '14. 1UZUKI
ratary bfka, SUZUKI fishing
haat/trallar, 'If. Moving Salt!
u ,300takas all. H4 7179
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION*
EVERYFRIDAY 7iMPM
DAYTONAAUTOAUCTION
Hwy. (1, Daytona Beach
________ (M lH t H !________
SHORT OF CASH?
Seriously looking tor a nice,
clean, used car? DEPEN
DABLE. Down payment* as
low a* Site Includes, lax a.
till*. Call)
FUES AUTO SALES
★ ★ 327-2M 2* ★
TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
Excapl lax, tag, title, ele.
1(44 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA
4 door, auto, air, stereo, really
a nice carl ONLY 1149.14 per
month............ Call Mr. Payn*
CBEftjfl Uste Cats, 323-2123
TOYOTA. 1(91. 2 door. Llghl
green, tinted window*, all Ihe
extras *7.300.............. 114-1141
1(44 PONTIAC Fiero GT, rebuilt
V4. Red. 43K Miles, warranty
LOADED. *4(93 171-1741
•I CHEVY Full si. Wagon,
diesel, good cond., cold AC.
new liras. *700. H I 34*1
•14 CHBVY Cavallar Station
wagon. AC. aulo. 13,000
________ Call 3*0*411________
47 L I N C O L N T s w n c i r .
Signature, Excellent Cond
17300 HI 4114 or 34) 4377
M CHEVY Cslebrlly. AC. Auto.
4 door. Good condition 33K
miles. (1300. Firm. HI 4317__
•91 JEEP (port Aulo. PS,&gt;U
AC, alarm., while. t(K
ml .(13,300. Like new 313 14(4
233— A u to P a rts
/ A c c e s s o rie s
• CAMPER TOPj Aluminum,
• ROLLBAR. tor small shorl
bed Iruckl'g&amp;x) Shape. f73 or
trade lor something ol equal
valut........................ H3 *137
235— T r u c k s /

Bu m s / V ans
• CHBVY CUSTOM VAN M,
loaded, captains chairs, good
condition 14300 373 333a
• FORD BUS
it/3. GOOD
CONDITION (1.300CALL
__________JH /SOS
__
• HANDICAPPED VAN. 1010
Ford E-IM Lift, automatic
doors (3.000 H3 3431________
ISUZU 4X4 PICK-UP, '(I. 3 spd.
I0K ml. 4 cyl. A/C. custom
Interior. (9,700 331 M13

Sinford Motor Co.
)f(7 JEEP CHEROKEE •
white, 4 door, 7 wheel drive, 4
liter 4 cylinder, aula, low
miles I Very very dean f 7,(f3

241— Recreational
Vehicles/C a m p e r*
30 FT. 1(77 DODOB RV. low
mile*, sleeps 4. stove, shower.
trldge. *4400 373 0339_______
•31 FT I L DORADO motor
home. '74. New awning, tv,
runs great. (3,300 311 74(3

Write A
Want Ad
That Sells!
YOUR CLASSIFIED AD
works best when it contains
what the reader wanta to know.
GIVE FACTS
PaSyounetf In lha buyer1* piace. What would you wans loknowT
Lias Dm llam'a aft, condition, alia, brand name, modal and
apgradmtU rain* If yuu'ra eellina ■ car, aUto lha type of
(n a ra M on , mDaaft(ull'akw)arid*pedal equtpmeaL

DON’T EMBELLISH)
It‘l rieky bualnsea la auiaurate and It won t Increexe your
chanMi of auecMi. Nlaleadfng Uftrmatlon may gel a buyer to
yoohoMi II aay *leo|eiyou a punch In ihenoxa.

AVOID ABBREVIATIONS!
W Ub a fcer aUmiattoM can aare you ■pace, loo many of lham
linsag Isghkw c m truela eonAm ion. A confuted rmaxr won't
tab* u*M la M(t out your meantog.

INCLUDE PRICE!
BerrmtndicatalhalbuyenaramcnintrrMMdlnlha martharsdiea whan they kaew the price. ThU asplice to everythina from
KooaeMd BanriiMap toautomobilm. Good m m handle*, prfead
fklrfjr, N tba baa* gurutaa of succsm

BE AVAILABLE!
A kaiaabowa wsoherl* Baelfypu're athorns when your ad rune.
IfyouVl not fotnj^to^baJsonse, atata tba tima ,-ou will be. Moet

U SB YOUR NAME)
Put year m o m ia your ad. It g im credibility to the llara you are
•dmsMag. You nay even gat rueulta when eomaone who baa
dreap ad sqmyou In areatagrant or walking down thastnut
That t taking advantage of being In n small community such aa

!P YOU NEED ADDITIONAL HELP, CALL THE SANTORO
HIXALD AND Wf WILL HELP YOU WORD YOUR AD.

C all (407) 322-2611

�••11

111

•

- Sanlord Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Tuosdny, June 22, 1993

How to control
intestinal gas

by A rt Santom

T H E BO RN LO SER
tAJsenebooR
FRANCHISE
PLAYER! y

r WEVe GOTO PICK. UP&gt;
WRTYeOWCj
fierore

youm£Anh £^

fHE BEST PLAYER
vOHTMCTEAM?

we,

PLm
OUR GAME

by C b a rla i M . Sch u li

PEANUTS
YOU'RE UP NEXT, CHARLIE
BROWN..YOU CAN HIT THIS
PITCHER! THE LAST TIM E
YOU FACED HER,YOU HIT
A HOME RUN !

YOU CAN VO I T !
YOU'RE THE HERO TYPE!

OR THE GOAT TYPE..

T

DEAR DR. QOTTi I'm a
h e a lth y 3 3 -y c a r-o ld . n o n ­
smoking. female homemaker
who suffers from flatulence. It
doesn't matter what I eat, every­
thing gives me gas that is always
accompanied by a very unpleas­
ant odor. Is there a prescription I
can take for control?
DEAR READER: Intestinal gas
Is a common medical problem.
Although It can be associated
with various diseases, such as
tumors and ulcers, It's usually
caused by certain foods In the
diet; carbonated beverages,
legumes and beans are major
gas producers. Also, people with
flatulence tend to cat quickly,
chew their food Inadequately
and swallow large amounts of
air. Once this air traverses the
intestine, it takes on an unpleas­
ant odor when It Is passed.
I suggest the following: Eat
slowly, chew your food, be
careful not to swallow air, avoid
gas-producing foods (including
sugar-free cnewlng gum ana
candy), try a compound such as
simethicone (available as non­
prescription Qas-X), or consider
using Beano-0 (an over-thecounter natural product that
reduces gas). In my experience,
prescription drugs for flatulence,
such as Librax. are no more
effective than the n o n ­
prescription products I men­
tioned.
If these suggestions arc inef­
fective. ask your doctor for
specific advice based on your
physical examination.
To give you more Information.
I am sending you a free copy of
my Health Report "Digestive
Gas." Other readers who would
like a copy should send (1.25
plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to P.O. Box
2433. New York. NY 10103. Be
sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT: A cousin's
daughter has Gaucher's disease.
Treatment Includes steroids.
Any Information on this disease
would be appreciated.
DEAR READER: Gaucher's

M ID IC IN I

disease Is an uncommon, Inher­
ited metabolic abnormality that
results In an excessive ac­
cumulation of a fatty substance
In certain cells In the body. This
c a u s e s liver and s pl een
enlargement, swollen lymph
g l a n d s , bone pai n, skin
pigmentation, a deficiency of
blood cells, and hemorrhage.
Although children may be af­
fected early in life, the disease
ACROSS
1 Word to call
atlantlon
4 Monty back
aatlafiad
TV'a — Haw
WWll area
Attamptar
(dado traa
Annual
uttMftnB
17 Book of maps
19 Sird’a boms
9
12
13
14
IB

S 11T
23 Ptychoioglit
— CMS

27 Rows
29 French for
father
30 Alop
31 Mai de —
32 Nlckela and
dlmaa
34 Tint
1 - 1
IT

vi

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

may not become evident until
adulthood.
The diagnosis is made by
biopsy. The condition can be
confirmed before birth by analy­
sis of the amnlotlc fluid.
Answer le Previous Futile

35 Elec. abbr.
38 Facta and
flgurea
37 Run away to
marry
39 Lasting 12
months
42 Angers
43 Bundle
44 Beliefs
48 Adult Insect
48 Monaco
prince
81 — King Cole

UUULJ
UULHJ
U U U U L'JIJU LIUULJ
LULILJ UL1UUU .JL1LJ
U U U U U l’J U U UU
y u iju a

u c ju u L d

UULJLIIJ JJL1U JLdU
aUUt'J JJLIIJ lilUUU
□ U U JJUJJ tfULIUU
IIU U l-1

82 PubNah

Id U U U

U U PIU U U U U ULU
U U U ULLUJkJLJ
U U U U UUl'J U U U U

84 Ip k e
omamant
85 Observe
88 Chairs

H I II I I J

87 Male eheep

M l.in

9 Greeting
10 Quido'a high
note
11 River in
Germany
18 — do-wsll
18 Story
20 Part of stove
21 To whom —
— concern
22 Female
relative
24 Of bate
25 Two-door car
26 Leg joints
28 Shellfishes
33 Sloui Indian
34 More equine
36 Haul
38 Oellneate
40 Oecreate
41 Huge person
48 Uses chair
48 — and outs
47 — West
48 Inlet
49 Federal agey.
50 Border
83 Concerning

5 Foam
8 Author Anala

1 That woman
2 French for
"cummer"
3 Less old
4 How sweet

7 Faroe Islands
whirlwind
8 Cross

n

1 'J M H U

w~

si
M

WIN AT BRIOQE
i
A

'I

A R L O A N D JA N IS

by J im m y Johnson

By Phillip Alder
Occasionally a deal will come
along In which you must cling
like a barnacle to a collection of
low cards In one null. Sometimes
l he highest card Isn't as low as It
looks. Mill today's deal exhibits a
different reason.
In an International team event,
only one pair reached the
borderline six diamonds, via the
given auction. They held only a
combined 23 hlgh-eard points.
Inn five heart tricks would be
enough to bring home the slam.
(Note that II North has the heart
Jack extra or South has three
spades and two clubs, the slam
Is phenomenal.)
West led a lop club and
switched to the spade queen.
South won with the aee and ran
oil six rounds of diamonds. West
discarded four clubs ami one of
Ills "useless" hearts. Now It was
easy for South to play hearts
from the lop and claim when the

lack dropped.
Suppose Instead that West
defends belter, keeping all four
of bis hearts. Even though the
percentage play In hearts Is to
play olT the king, ace and queen.
South will probably be aware
that West has kept four hearts. If
so. there are 10 low doublcluns
that East could hold and only
live Jack doubletons. So It Is
twice as likely that West has
luck-fourth than four low cards.
II South thinks tills way. lie
\v111cash the heart king and lead
a heart to dummy's 10. going
down with the actual distribu­
tion. When you have length In
a suit In which an opponent is
also long, always consider
keeping your holding intact II
you can.
Readers arc invited to send
card-play questions to i’hlllip
Alder. In care ol this newspaper.
They can be answered only
through the column.

NORTH

M ill

(976
( A Q 1063
♦ AJ 7 8
♦ 10

WEST
(QJB

EAST
♦ K 52
( J 9
♦ 96
♦ Q98532

( 7 5 6 3

♦ 3
♦ A K J 76

SOUTH
♦ A 10 6 3
VKB
♦ K Q 10 8 5 2

(6
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
South

Weil

29
3♦
19

P au
Pui
Pass

Nor Ih
1(
3♦
54
P au

Eail
P au
P au
P au
P au

Opening lead: ♦ K

|
-

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavos

HEALTH CLUB
Sion up hers
FOR FITNESS
CLASS l

X KCtNTLY HAt&gt; AN
our-or-iopy
tUT. ONfOtTUNATfLY,
x j cAmt sack
THE SANK ONf.

RO BOTM AN*

by Jim Atoddick

IF YOl/RE W0NPWIN6 WHY THERE'S
A PHOTO OF NVE IN MY UNDERWEAR
ON THE FRIP6E, IT'S A QWIMICK 1
OCfT FROM A WET BOO*,,,

lA . iUJW*

I T , 'H iffiftfW i iB N iM M w r r»iim rr

)V- .
S'.
.
___ —
u
n
d
o
in
g
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Me
By Bernice Bede Oaol
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l'eh Mil
your own person today, but try
YOUR BIRTHDAY
You
are In a cycle where It might
io do so without offending
Wednesday, June 23,1 9 0 3
prove unwise lo invest In sliiiii
others.
There's
a
chance
you
hi the year ahead devote your
Hons or people about whom you
lime and energies (o the fulfill­ might he so self-involved, you know
little. There could even he
won't
he
cognizant
of
lliclr
me n t of y o u r a m b i t i o u s
potential
problems In a r e a s
e x p c e I a 11 o n s . Mi nt in I z e needs.
where you know what you’re
LIBRA
(Sept.
23-Oel.
23)
participating in frivolous activi­
doing.
ties. because you’ll have plenty Don't let your ego pul you In a
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareli 201
position
today
where
you
may
of time lo do that later.
Persons
whom you'll Is
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) A leel compelled to do something Involved wllh
today
won't like it II
you
really
don't
know
how
to
do.
sure-fire way lo have others
you
lake
them
or
what they dp
come down hard on your ideas If you're honest up front Mills for you lor granted.
This Is p
could
he
avoided.
today Is to first find fault with
volatile
area,
so
be
careful.
theirs. Don't lie the one who
SCORPIO (Get. 24-Nov. 22)
ARIES (March 2 1-April 10)
Introduces controversy In the Someone as strong willed as Any
assignments
relationship. Gemini, treat your­ yourself might try to he the you'veImportant
neglected
early In Ilip
self to a birthday gilt. Send for dnmlimilng force In your peer week might start popping
u p IP
your Astro-Graph predictions for group today. A collision Is likely haunt you beginning Indus?.
the year ahead by mailing $1.23 If you oppose this Individual.
Don't prelend they don't exist.
and a long, self-addressed,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20)
stamped envelope to Astro- 21) Today you mlgltl have dif­ Try
keep your Involvements
Graph. e/o this newspaper. P.O. ficulty distinguishing between with to
friends
today as low keyed
Box 4465. New York. N.Y. those who arc In your corner and and uncomplicated
as possible.
10103. He sure lo stale your those who oppose you. Poor Complex arrangements
might be
zodiac sign.
Judgment lessens your chances destined to fail.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) It
LEO (July 23-Atig. 22) lie lor success.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jun. won't he an accurate measure­
prudent ami cautious In your
commercial affairs today; If you ID) Usual l y you' r e bel t er ment lo compare the achieve­
make Impulsive Judgments, they equipped lo deal wllh large Ideas ments of on outsider against
could create a loss, regardless of than you are to deal with little those of kin. Your presentation
whether you’re buying or sell­ ones. Today, however, grandiose could he prejudice towards any
schemes could lead lo vour non-family members.
ing.
by Leonard Starr
A N N IE
„1H&lt; NSW

tVtVAft TOLO f*t.

r y&lt;y

9ANN1, ( fH tK t! W A 4N M ROUM fOU
H IM OM W 66R FLIG HT.

.

,.1'VE MSN LJOKK60
KORWARP ID M teilt
YOUR NSW riAY/HAI

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♦0APPVr

&lt;11

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                    <text>S e r v i n g S a n fo r d , L a k e M a r y and S e m i n o l e C o u n t y since 1 9 0 8
b 5 th Y e ar. N o

276 - S a n fo rd . F lo rid a

Garbage rates to jump
Sanford’s fee would be highest in county
□

Sports

Dy NICK P F E I F A U F

H e ra ld S ta ll W n lo r

And then there were two
S A M O K I&gt; A IM I’m vrr &lt;111(1 Monroe II. i i I h u ii
turned the sulth.dl league &lt;il Chase Park into
tiled mvil ItilMle Held Willi w Ills lliesif.iv lllgllt
See Page 11)

□

P e o p le

_________

SANFOKD
S.mlord i oinmlssiiiuers who two
weeks ago Inked water lulls as much as 2 1
|MTCcltl sav they ate forced to pro|Hisi- a luke in
lesIdeitlV garhage collet lion fees to tlie- highest in
tin- county
City Manager Hill Simmons ts studying tin.in
eial problems with solid waste collections Kates
are cxjn c ln l to I k- Increased by 7 5 jK-rcenl

Ih c Solid Waste Division's llscal year 93/94
budget request. even w ith a Mihstaull.il reduction
ol expenses Is out ol balance with projected
revenue t»v approximately SUiH.tXM)
Frank Kilgore, with the Public Works Depart­
ment. says it is due in yard waste and recycling
s. paratloii requirement* causing higher lalxir
,oid operation i ..sis Also, t«-x« ours are suint‘ttH.il
lower and lantlllll costs are higher than cx|»rclcd
During Momlay .illerntKin's city i omintssion
work session. Simmons gave the commission

three alternatives to consider whit h would help
resolve the problem
In each case however, the plans •.ill lor a
reduction in personnel to help ollsci the tin
balance
Following a discussion ol the various ways
suggested to overcome the Imbalance the
commission selected the llrst alternative which
calls lor no change in operation, hut a rale
Increase.
See G arbage, Page 5 A

Creative cooking
T o d a y 's Cook of llie W eek sl.ixs "hitsv .m il
in vo lve d ’ with die e o n n n iin llv and tier f.nnllv

A night of death, a day in court

See Page 411

BRIEFS

v ic tim s

Panel to discuss health care
I.A K K MAHY — Th e Federal Government's
new health rare program will Ik- discussed
riinrsd.iv evening In l..ik»- Marv The piddle is
invited to attend a panel discussion on how the
new program will or will not help various
individuals
P a n e l m e m b e r s .ir e fro m th e O m
lilt oast m.inters C hili T h e y inehide Koscllu
I Ion ham. Donna Palagann. frishl.i Dniin.ivan
.mil Sam Kyan. who are latnlll.ir with the
v arions segments o| the governtnetn's plan
Ourntlon* will Ik - taken from tin- andtem e
although i hallenges w ill not In *allowed
The meeting will he held at the Old City Hall
I5H N Country Chili Hoad in Like Mary
Thursday evening Irom 5 30 until t» 3&lt;»
lo r further tnfominttou or reservations rail
I rish.i Dunn.iv.in 321 W H I

Kids to meet Cops
S A N F O K D — A lull day tor youngsters. Kids
and Cops Day has lieen planned lor tills
Saturday at &lt; astle llrewer Court
Aeeordlng to |Hdler ollleer Kick PiKivey 'We II
have a nuttilM-r of activities, tree hot dogs and
soil d rin k s and m u c h more lot all the
youngsters in the area
Units to he on display Include the D A l&lt; K
vehicle us. .1 in drug ahuse prevention course*,
the IIAT mohlle (breath u n u ly m unltl and
memlH-rs ol the new eommuntty |ndlelng team
"These are the olfteers who will Ik assigned
s|M-tilli ally in i Ik - Cattle Hrewer l ourt area,
said pidtee ( ointnander Dennis W hitm ire
Th e y will he working directly with the |NN-p|c
ol that area, and tills will he an excellent time
lot the ( htldren and residents to get In Know
them as well as lor them to meet the youngsters
ol the com m unity
Convey said Metro C h ry s Ic rTly tu o u ih is
donating a hut dog unit, and they will luiv«
plenty nf canned soil drinks, free ol charge lor
youngsters w hoallcnd the event.
"W e will I k- near the basketball rottrl area at
Castle Hrewer Court, next door to the Sanfoid
Housing Authority ofllecs Irom 10 a in until 2
l&gt;m this Saturday Poovey said It’s free and
we I i ((| k - all youngsters will turn out

Falling oak limb crushes man
O K A N G K I'AKK - A huge limb Irom a ltv&lt;
oak tree fell on u Clay County man. fatally
crushing him and Injuring his 15-tnonthold
nephew he w as t arrying In Ills arms
Michael David Wltynot. 30. was walking
under the tree Tuesday w hen the rolling Hum
weighing 4 to 5 tuns broke loose. crushing Ids
skull and rlhs.
•It sounded like the crack ol lightning I heard
what sounded like a child cryin g ." *ald netghlM.r
vld Darnell
|r said he wa-s horrified i&lt;&gt; * * W liynot pinned
der the tree, his Isidy shielding the st reaming
Idler. Christopher Kitts.
..
..
\lirr rtiuiiintt Iiih IcIc to
|K&gt;lltr. l)«»rtn it
empted to pry the llml* off Wltynot hut could
t move It
SlelghlKirs were able to free Hie child, who w as
WII to University Medical Center In da. kson
h Th e child was listed In good condition.
F r o m s ta ll reports

______

INDEX
C l s s s l l l e d s .......... 011,711
C o m i c s ......................... 00
C r o s s w o r d ..................0 0
D e a r A b b y ................... 5b
D e a t h s .......................... 5A
D r. C o l t .........................00
E d it o r ia l....................... 4A
F l o r i d a .......................... 2A

~l
H o r o s c o p e .................. 8 B
M o v i e s ......................... 4 0
N a t i o n ..........................6 A
P e o p le ...............4 0 ,5B
P o l i c e ...........................3 A
S p o r t s ..................... 1 -3 B
T e le v i s i o n ................... 4 B
W e a t h e r .......................2 A

Partly sunny
P artly sunny w ith
scattered alteruoon
thunderstorms High
in the mid !H)s Light
wind Ik-i liming south
f&gt; to It) tnpli Chance
ot rain 40 percent

F o r m o re w e a th e r, see P a v e 2A

F lo o d
g e t h e lp
By J . M A R K B A R F IE L D

H e ra ld S e n io r S ta ll W rite r

Enchano Mahone. 18. and dolonse attorney Frank B an kow llz glance toward the jury.

Teen on trial
for murder

SAN FOKD San
ford-Seminole .lav . ees
president Steve Alturd
is M-eking contributions
ol water and Inn ks to
help the residents ol
D es M o in e s . Io w a
without water due to
liver ll.KKllng
A llo rd nl S.m lord
Haiti Winter Springs has
See Flood. Page 5A
Related sto ry Puge 0 A

Sieve Allord

Affordable
housing gets
bank’s backing

By S A N D R A E L L I O T T

Morald Stall Wntor
S A N FO R D — "Conte go w ith me Tonight is
ih rnlg h l no other night
Those are the words a lorutcr Winter
Springs woman claims her iMiylrlend said over
and over to her son that latehil Match night
last year H.-loje the night was ovci her
iHiytrtrnd lay ileail m tin- sin-el Her s&lt;in is on
trial lor lust degree murder
Km llano M.dione |s K.itonville is being
tried lor shooting &lt;.ill l.ope/ March I I'thJ
at 25H H i i i i o i i w i k k I Avenue Winter Springs
The defense ts claiming In- shot In sell
delrttse
Debra Mahon. 35. told a Seminole &lt; ireuli
t ohm 1111v that her hv. m Imyfrlrnd lai|K-/
ie|K-.itedly taunted her son Kn. hano She told
the Jury l.ope/ did not sav
I'm going to kill
you." or "Put going to heal von up. he |ust
kept repealing ('nine gu with me I . might Is
tin night
See T r ia l. Page 2A

By K E L L E Y M I T C H E L L

H e ra ld S t a ll W rite r
S A N FO K D
A ItKllI
hank has te.imed with a
Sanlord based afford.ihie housing developer
to oiler $1 milium III
m ortgag- tin.in. mg to
tpiallfled clients
GnldcuKulc Housing
A ('o m m u n lly Devel­
opment Cor|N (ration a
nnu-prullt |irogr.itn. rc( eiv ed e o n lirm a tin n
See H ank. Page 5A

A m elika Gueka

County speeds
road work to
boost airport
development
By J. M AR K B A R F IE L D

H e ra ld S e n io r S ta ll W rite r
SANFOKD
Semmoli ( mmiv . oniniissioncrs
tiliainmniish agreed Tuestlav In speed up
.-.instrti. lion &lt;&gt;l a 3.000 loot . nune.-t.-r helweett
Silver Lake Dtlv. and the new entrain e toCcntr.d
Honda Kegnm.il Atr|Kirl to L misi eoiuiueri lal use
ol tin- city atr|Hirt
"W e do need this road." McLain said
It s
import.ml to the entire county
"Knnimuli- development lias been on our
mtntls as we liKiked In m oving forward this
project.' said &lt;'&lt;mutv Manager Kon Kabtin
Advancement ot the consinn tl.m project from
Its Hi'Mi scheduled start will require tin- delay ol
three jtlaimctl |&gt;to|. i ts and a dip into tin- &lt;uiintv
reserves
lln- delayed projects are tin design and laud
purchases lor i'|isal.i Ko.nl. design ol Osceola
Ko.nl improvements in Geneva and the i ompl.
tiott ol |i.ix lug Hi.Niks Lane near Winter Sjirtngs
( '.instruction and land Im lln- Silver Lake Drive
extension will cost $717.000 County Engineer
Jerry McCollum said design wink will have in
iK-glll III three weeks to meet the alrjKirl s
i otisliil. Ill ill schedule
Kahuu had included $1 2 million lor next year
to complete tin design o| the entire extension
Irom l..ik&lt; Mary Houlevard to Stale Knud -in.
w here n will conuccl wllfi State Koad 415 The
eonnretor had In-en touted by commissioner Hob
Sturm for several years as a revenue-producing
link between west Volusia County and the
See Road, Page 2 A

Metaid ***&gt;otPby Tommy Vmctnf
W h e n y o u re 13 a n d th e s u m m e r s p re a d s
e n d le s s ly b e fo re y o u . s m a ll p le a s u re s m ig h t
in c lu d e a b ik e fid e , a shady o a k tre e at
P ln c h u r s t Park In S a n fo rd , and s o m e s w e e t

lo llip o p s . B e n W e ig e rt a n d E ric S p e rry lo u n d
ju s t th a t, s o m e T o m S a w y e r-lik e a d v e n tu re
y e s te rd a y , n o t a lo n g th e M is s is s ip p i, b u t near
th e St J o h n s

�2A • Ssntord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, Ju ly 14, 1933

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

Ordinance passed
Longwood mayor warns voters of massive tax increase if passed

Recycling plant heavily damaged

Herald Stall Writer
LO N G W O O D — A massive lax increase
would be necessary If voters pass the
ordlnanee placing the city police depart­
ment Into (he city charter warns Mayor Paul
Lovestrand. He was the only "no” vote
when the ordinance passed Monday night.
According to the guidelines for manning
the police department used In the ordi­
nance, Lovestrand claims, the city would
have to add 10 to 10 new officers at a cost of
between $400,000 to $800,000. There ure
currently 34 police in Ihc department.
In the ordinance. It says. "Th e police
department shnll consist of such other
members as shnll be dcrm lnrd by ihc
guidelines as established by the Federal
Department of Justice's 'Crim e In the

Teen indicted in woman’s slaying
FO R T PIER CE — A St. Lucie County grand Ju ry Indicted a
teen-ager for first-degree m urder and kidnapping In the beating
death of an elderly wom an who criticized the lyrics of a rap
song he was singing.
Victor Hnmcacclo. 16. Is accused of killing Molllc Mae Frazier
on June 14. Police said Brancacclo beat Mrs. Frazier to death
then later returned to b um and spray paint her body.
Ills attorney contends that Brancacclo was Insane ut the time
of the killing because of a combination of rap music, alcohol
and antidepressant drugs.
"W e feel as though the kid deserves a break because of his
age and situation." said longtime family friend Mike Santagata.
"We need to support the lad morally and financially."

Trial

United Stales'
Region."

■y SANDRA ELLIOTT

S A R A S O TA — A paper recycling plont was heavily damaged
today by a blaze (hat shot flames at least 40 feet In the air and
smoke could be seen 10 mites away, (Ire officials said.
The fire at the Mid South Recyled Cardboard started shortly
after 6 p.m . Tuesday, said Sarasota County Fire Department
1.1. Brian Kehoc.
There were no Injuries reported, and Kchoe said the 10,000
square foot warehouse was In a business district that didn't
threaten residential areas.
"W e had reports that they could see It several miles," Kchoe
said In fact, one of his firefighters living about 10 miles from
the fire said he saw the smoke from his home
Forty units from four separate fire department, and 100
firefighters, battled the blaze. Kehoc said.

for Ihc South

A liu n d e

Lovestrand obtained a copy of the those
guidelines, which set forth the number of
officers based on the city population. Based
on the Longwood papulation of 13,828. he
said Ihc guidelines say there should he
either 3.2 or 3.8 police for every 1.000
citizens, either 53 or 44 depending on die
figure used.
Com m issioner Harvey Smerllson pro­
posed (he ordinanc e ut the request of some
citizens to try and remove the department
from political wrangling, such as the move
to abolish (he department last year. Lov­
estrand worked hard circulating petitions to
get the proposal on Ihc ballot. However. 70
percent of die city citizens taking purl In the
election voted to retain the city police.

As a charter lxised department, it would
take a unanimous vote or the commission to
change it rather than the three-fifths vote
now required.
S m e rllso n assured the co m m issio n
members, the staffing provision was a
guideline and not a requirement for police
department.
Lovestrand claims the word "shall" Is an
imperative, requiring the city to staff the
department ucrordlng to the guidelines.
The voters will decide In a November
referendum whether to okay plarlng the
police department In the city charter.
Lovestrand said n jHilitlcal action com­
mittee (RAC) will Ite formed to fight die
measure. If the measure passes, the mayor
warns, "brace yourself Longwood. Big taxes
are coining."

Auditors
question
overtime
By Associated P f » n __________

Continued fro m Page 1A
Shr told the Jury, however.
Lopez, had threatened her. and
her son In the three weeks
leading up to that March 4 night.
She claimed earlier. Lopez said
he was going to take Enchano
out alone somewhere and kill
him.
When Enchano learned about
the threats, he was angry and
(old his mother she did not have
to take It anymore, she testified.
Ms. Muhonc said Lopez also
warned her to stay out of his
way. or he would massacre her.
and her other children.
Although she did not know
specifically w hy her boyfriend
disliked her son. Ms. Mahonc
said Lo|iez complained Enchano
w as a " s p o ile d b r a t " a n d
thought he was the father of the
house. She also said Lopez called
the teen "M om m a's boy" and
claimed the mother and her son
were "tooclose."
Ms. Mahonc testified she had
known Lopez, a native of Puerto
Rico for 13 years and he had
Ijccii tier boytftcud for six years.
Due to flic'ill'feelings between
LopcA-tuid JEijchano. Ms. Mahonc
said her son lived part of the
time with her and at other times,
with his girlfriend. Th e day qf
(he shooting, her son was at her
Winter Springs home.
When Lopez and E n cha no
returned from different errands
that night, the taunting and
arguing continued between the
pair, us the teen prepared a
barbecue grill for u cookout. Ms.
Mahonc told the furors. Lopez

TA M P A — A handful of Tam pa
took a gun from his car and fired water departm ent employees
five shots In the air.
were paid thousands of dollars In
Earlier in the day several o ve rtim e pay for bein g on
neighbors testified they did not standby and wearing beepers,
hear any shots that night except auditors said.
around 10 o r 10:30 p.m. when
Larry D. Livingston, a city
t he shooting occurred.
water department crew supervi­
As Lopez tried to grab Mahonc sor. earned $31,549 In overtime
as they argued In the street. pay for eight hours of work and
Debra said she and her sister.
1.625 hours of luting a beeper,
Evcttc. tried to keep them apart. auditors said.
Lopez knocked both women
In L iv in g s to n 's case, city
down and went after Enchano. uudltors found (he emergencies
according to Ms. Mahonc. Shots ra re ly o ccu rre d — but the
were fired. Lopez, who was still overtime pay was constant d u r­
moving toward the teen while ing a two year period.
the shots went olT. turned after
His standby pay for two years
(he lost shot toward the house.
amounts to a 55 percent In­
"He was staggering with me crease In his annual pay of
back to the house." she said. $28,537. giving Livingston a
"A s we got to the driveway, he total of $88,623 In comings.
collnspcd to the g ro u n d . I
In a report released Monday,
kneeled down, holding his head auditors found Ihe standby pay
and asked h im if he was okay. seemed to be meted oul to a
He Just looked at me. Th e n I small group of employees — a
yelled to coll 911. I didn't see
ractlcc that Water Department
Enchano after the shooting."
hector David Tip p ln defended
D e fe n se a t t o r n e y F r a n k as necessary since w orkers
Bankowltz attempted to portray would not report to work volun­
Lopez as a " D r. Jckyll and Mr. tarily.
Hyde" character whose pf«cm- f* "A n employee can refuse to
allty changed w h e n 'h e drank. J-Omc to wqrk for recall, and
Ms. Mahonc said Lopez J f as m any have. If Ihe employee In
drinking beer the night o t t h e not bound by standby hours."
Tip p ln wrote In response to
shooting.
After assistant state attorney auditors' questions about the
Stewart Stone rests his case. practice.
Bankowltz w ill present defense
In other Instances, five water
witnesses. Mahone. who claims department equipment opera­
he shot In self-defense. Is sched­ tors earned 817.415 for approx­
uled to testify, posslblly on imately 893 hours of standby.
Thursday.
D u rin g that time they were
Seminole C ircu it Court Judge called back to work for only 21.5
Alan Dickey Is presiding In the hours.
case.

B

• Herildptolab* Jota Kvmltkl

The tangled webs we weave

(angled wob between the blossoms, senses his
presence.

A small beetle works diligently to complete his
task on a Queen Anne's lace before the
nelghbornhood spider, which has woven its

Road
C o n tin u e d from Page I A
Sem i­
nole County Expressway. The
link was dubbed the "S tu rm
Spur" by former commissioner
Bill Klrchhoff.
Ah|M&gt;rt Director Steve Cooke
said airport officials have sought
the link for two years. Cooke (old
co m m issio n e rs Ihe S a n fo rd
Airport Authority has received
83.3 million in slate and federal
grants to build four- and twolane sections or ail access road
lie!ween ihe airport and Silver

I-ikt* Drive extension.
Cooke said the extension will
d ir e c t (r a f f le fro m th e
expressway, now expected to be
completed by next February, to
th e a i r p o r t . T h e ca se o f
expressway access should en­
courage companies lo locale to
ihe airport's Industrial area and
still trade with Orange County
businesses, he said.
T h e analysis lead com m is­
sioner Larry Furlong to query.
"If we build It. they will come?"

Cooke ulso said (hr link will
also eliminate m uch ol the tralllc
on Wylly Avenue and Airport
Boulevard, estimated at 7.000 to
8.000 cars per day.
Airport and city officials a( tin
meeting found a w arm rcccptlur
from commissioners Tuesday
Earlier meetings. In Dcccmbei
and January, found Sturm and
Furlong reluctant to use sales
taxes or property taxes for Ihc
project.

Investigator says illegal prescription drugs in Castro hands
By Associated Prase__________
T A L L A H A S S E E - Million or
dollars In prescription drugs
paid by Medicaid and sent by
exiles lo relatives In Cuba are
actually being seized by Castro's
government and distributed to
hospitals catering to foreign
tourists, investigators sold.
A g u s tln G a r c ia , a n i n ­
vestigator w ith the Dade C ounty

LOTTERY
M IA M I - H e re are Ih e
w inning num b ers selected
Tuesday In the Florida Lottery:

Cash 3

Play 4

6-0-2

0 -6 -B -B

S a n fo rd H e ra ld

C o m m is s io n , said T u e s d a y
Cuban dictator Fidel Castro has
mounted an advertising cam ­
paign to lure vlaltora from other
Caribbean nations to Cuba with
the promise of cheap health
care, provided In part' by the
illegally o b ta in e d A m e ric a n
drugs.
The Investigation focuses on
Cuban Am ericana In South Flor­

ida who use Medicaid to obtain
prescription drugs und send
them to relatives In drug-starved
Cuba.
" I was outraged." Garcia said.
"Y o u ’re swindling twice.”
A caller (old Investigators the
drugs are being seized by Cuban
government agents under a law
that requires incoming drugs to
arrive In sealed pharmaceutical

Fla 13771
Second Claaa Poalaga Paid at Sanlord,
Florida and additional mailing
offteae

POSTMASTER Send addreee chengee
le THE SANFORD HERALD, P.O.
Soa 1MT, Sanlord, F I 17T7MMT.
lubeariplton Ratee
(Oeity A Sunday)
MortoDaXuary ( “ *Ji
S Month*
I Vaer
Florida Raaidenta muai pay 7% aaiae
tai In addition lo ratee above.
Phone (407) IZ M S tl.

G a r c ia s u ld the s c h e m e
amounts to a giant rip-off for
South Florida Cubans, who are
p a y in g to h a ve the d r u g s
shipped to relatives In Cuba who
never receive them.

Th e Illegal shipments of pre­
scription medication lo Cuba
were discovered two years ago.
Since then, about 100 packages
of prescription drugs bound for
C u b a have been seized In
random Inspections.
But no one has been arrested
tor the offense, which takeB little
priority among other trafficking
crimes In South Florida.

An ongoing Investigation by
state social services officials
could lead to Medicaid clients
losing coverage, doctors and
pharmacists being fined and
banned from handling Medicaid
accounts, and possible criminal
charges.
State Rep. L u is Rojas. R
Hialeah, said the problem may
require new legislation.

TH E W EA TH ER
To d a y: P a rtly su nn y w ith
s c a tte re d a fte rn o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. H igh In the mid 90s.
Light wind becoming south 5 to
10 mph. Chance ot rain 40
percent.
Tonight: A slight chance of
evening thunderstorm s other­
wise fair. Low In the mid 70s.
Light and variable wind. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
Thursduy: Partly sunny with
s c a tte re d a fte rn o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. H ig h In Ihe lower
90s. W ind southeast 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.

FLORIDA TBMFS
City
Daytona Baach
Ft laud Batch
FortMyar*
Gainavfiita

WEDNESDAY
P tly c ld y 93-73

Hometteod
Jocktonvlllt
Kay Wat1
Lai (land

Miami
Pantacoia

laratota

Taiiatouao
Tampa
VaraSaach

W. PaimBaacti

*i

70
74
73
71

ti
mm
N
«0
f)
*0
It
ti
«i
f1
to
•t

74
7t
73
77
73
73
44
ft
71
73
71

Pci
00
00
00
00
mm
00
00
00
.11
00
34
00
M
00
00

Tr \j'-L--------- -

V V J V L --------- 1

THURSDAY
P tly cld y 93-73

FRIDAY
P tly c ld y 93-73

SATURDAY
P tly c ld y 93-73

TIDES

d

LAST
July 11

NEW
July 19

u

HI

NATIONAL T IM M

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

LOCAL FORECAST

Wednesday, July 14, 1993
Vol. 85. No. 276
Pubuttod Dairy and Sunday, aicapr
fto Sanlord
Herald,
Saturday by Tk
“
Inc. 100 N. Franch Av*. Sanlord,

containers.
The drugs arc transported to a
warehouse In Cuba, then dlsirthuted to hospitals catering to
foreign tourists.

€

FIRST
July 26

O

FULL
Aug. 2

BBACN CONDITIONS
Daytona Beach: Waves arc
1-2 feet and choppy. Current Is
lo ih c n o rth w ith a w ater
temperature of 82 degrees. New
B a y r a a Baacb: Waves are 1-2
feet and glassy. C u rre n t Is
slightly to the north, with a
water temperature of 82 degrees.

THRUSDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLEl Min.2:15
a m.. 2:30 p.m.; MaJ. 8:20 a.m ..
8:50 p .m . TIDES: D ayton a
Beach: highs. 4:54 a.m .. 5:34
p.m.: lows. 11:08 U.m.. 11:59
p m .: N ew Sm yrna Beach:
highs. 4:59 u.m ., 5:39 p.m .;
lows, 11:13 a. 111..12:04 p .m .:
Cocoa Beach: highs. 5:14 u.m ..
5:54 p .m .; lo w s .11:28 u .m ..
12.1‘) p m .

B O ATINQ
St. A u g u stin e to J u p it e r In le t
Tonight: Wind southeast to
south 5 to 10 knots. Seas 1 to 2
feet. Bay and Inland waters
smooth. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms.
Thursday: W ind southeast 10
knots. Seas 2 feet. Bay and
Inland waters a light chop.
Widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms.

SUNDAY
P tly cldy 93-73

STATISTICS
T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Tuesday was 93 de­
grees und the overnight low was
71 us reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
und Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded ruln fn ll for the
period, ending ut 9 u.m. Tues­
day. totalled 0 Inches.
Th e temperature at 9 u.m.
today was 81 degrees und
Wednesday's overnight low was
74, us recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Aln*)rt.
Other Weather Service data:

□Tuesday's high.............. B1
□ Barometric prcsanre.30.17
□Relative Humidity....83 pet
□W inds tlftlM Southeast 4 mph
□Rainfall.................... trace
□Today'a sunset....8:25 p.m.
□Tomorrow's sunriae....B:S7

Sigh And overnight lo* la 1 p m E DT
City
Hi La Prc
Anchorag*
71 53
Atlanta
t l 73 07
Atlantic City
tl u
Baltlmora
47 71
Billing*
aa 4* 0]
Birmingham
*3 70
Bitmarck
to 51 37
Botip
■3 41
Bo*1on
tl 71
Bur ling Ion, VI
■3 54
Charl**ton.S C
II
n
Chart**ton.WVa
tt 44
9t 74 03
Charlotla.N C
Cheyenne
aa 51 0}
Chicago
It
»
Cl*vc land
43 ft
Concord.N H
U 54
Dal la* Ft Worth
44 74
Denver
40 55
Oc* Mom**
44 44 .11
Detroit
43 54
Honolulu
4* n
Movtton
44 74
Ind'anapollt
44 41
Ja&lt;* ion.Mitt
tt 71
Kon*at City
41 41 44
La* Vega*
100 77
Little Rock
*4 74
Lo* Angel**
71 47
Memphli
t i 71
Milwaukee
75 41
Mpl* $t Paul
47 ft .10
Naihvtll*
tl 70
Ne* Orlaant
tt 71 1 57
Her* York City
44 75
Oklahoma City
47 73 04
Omaha
45 45 40
Philadelphia
N 74
Ptoanie
101 11
Pifltburgh
04 44
Portiand.Maina
H 44 It
SI Lout*
tl 71 31
Sail Laka City
41 51
Seattle
71 S3
Warning ton 0 C
tt 71

Ollk
elf
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
Cdy
rn
cdy
Cdy
cdy
Cdy
cdy
Cdy
cdy
cdy
Cdy
dr
cdy
rn
Cdy
Cdy
dr
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
m
cdy
m
cdy
cdy
dr
cdy
c*y

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Wednesday, July 14, 1993 • 3A

POLICE
Driver license violations

Give 'em the boot

• Thom as Ervin Mock. 38. 2477 S. Chase Avenue, was
stopped at S.H. 46 and Osceola Ave. In Geneva Sunday. He was
charged with driving with n suspended/revoked license.
• Glenn Robert Hlxlcr. 38, was stopped at Sanford Avenue
and 23th Place by sheriffs deputies Sunday. He was charged
wlih driving with a suspendetl/rcvoked license.

Sanford police officer William
Crapps placed a restraining
"boot" on a vehicle parked
near the Seminole C oun ty
Courthouse yesterday. It Is
used In cases where a vehicle
owner Is found lo be behind in
paying traffic fines. Police said
the owner of this car was In
arrears by $65. While this was
the first time a bool was used
by Sanford police, It Inaugu­
rates the start ol what will be
an on-going use of the re
straining equipment.

Restaurant robbery
Sanford police arrested Michael Andrew Attebury. 30. on
Saturday. Police said he gave his address as a wooded area In
Sanford. According to the arrest report, Attebury walked up to
a drive-through window at a restaurant on French Avenue and
after several attempts, reached through the window and
removed $75 from a cash register drawer. Officers said he then
fled south on Highway 17-92. W ith a description of Attebury.
l&gt;oltcc located him ut 22nd Street und Holly Avenue. The y said
he had $50 In Ills possession, and they found $25 which had
been drop|&gt;ed on the street near the restaurant. Attebury was
charged with strong armed robbery.

H#r*(d Photo by Tommy Vtncont

Car theft charged
Sanford police arrested Lamas Donell Jess. 25. at 2547 El
Portal. Sanford, on Sunday. Police said he had reportedly taken
a car on Saturday, belonging to another man at that address.
Pollrc arrested him when he returned with the vehicle. He was
charged w llh grand theft, aula.

Retail theft
Sanford police arrrsled Johnnie Earl Beveiilt. 19. of Orange
City, at a store In Ihe 1500 block of S. French Avenue. Poller
said Bcverltl hud been retained by n slore security officer when
he was seen carring a $3 bottle of substance, and a case of beer
from the store without (saying. He was charged with retail theft.

Dom estic violence arrests
Kenneth Edward Davis. 26. 2466 Sanford Avenue, and
Tanya Davis. 28. of 1470 Lake Harney Road, were both
arrested on t*ake Harney Road by sheriff's deputies Saturday,
following u domestic dispute. Kenneth Davis was charged with
battery, domestic violence. Tan ya Davis was charged with
battery, domestic violence and aggravated assault.
• Hcsslc Mae Home. 22. 116 W . 2nd Street, and Stephen D.
Russell. 27. of 502 Hickory Avenue, were arrested on W. 2nd
Street by Sanford police Saturday following a fight. Each was
charged with aggravated battery, domestic violence.

O ffer to com m it lewd act
Madeline Zugick. 52. 213 E. First St.. Sanford, was arrested
on a charge of offering to commit a lewd act with a Sanford
police officer Monday night. T h e officer reported encountering
Zugzck ul about 10:30 p.m. while on undercover duty at the
comer of Second Street and Palmetto Avenue. A t Zugzek's
request, the policeman reported driving her to Seminole
Boulevard at Fort Mellon Park. There, the officer reported
Zugzck asked him to disrobe and perforin a sexual act with
her.

Drunken driving charged
Steven Sean Wheeler. 18. 212 Weeping Elm . Longwood. was
arrested on a drunken driving chnrgc following a traffic stop by
a W inter Springs policeman early Monday morning. Wheeler
was also cited on a charge of failure to maintain a single lane.

Peace disturbed
Sarah Willis. 43. 37 Castle Brewer Court. Sanford, was
arrested on a disorderly conduct charge Monday night for
disturbing the peace, reported a Sanford policeman.

W o m a n r e p o r t * b e i n g f o llo w e d
Jo hn David McAdams. 28. 2005 Glen way Drive. Sanford,
was arrested on a violation of Injunction charge after he turned
himself In to Sanford police Monday evening. A woman had
reported McAdams followed her home.

Injunction violated
Tunla L. Harris. 23. 1205 W. 13th St.. Sanford, was arrested
on an Injunction violation charge Monday night after a man
reported she entered his property.

W arrant arrests made
The following wanted persons have been taken Into custody:
• Ju s tin Samuel Dimmock. 20. 104 W yndham Court.
Longwood. turned himself In to deputies at the Seminole
County Jail Monday on a probation violation charge for a
cocaine purchase conviction.
• Heuther M. Willard. 23. 805 Elm Ave.. Sanford, was
arrested Monday on a Volusia County charge of failure to
appear In court to answer to a suspended driver’s license
charge.
• Deborah Gull Courtney, 38. 1270 Sutton Tra il. Geneva,
was arrested ut her home Tuesday on a charge of failure to
appear In court to answer to a marijuana cultivation charge.

Incidents reported to authorities
The following Incidents have been reported to area law
enforcement officers:
• About $5,100 was reported taken from Ihe safe at Sonny's
restaurant. 3506 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford, sometime between
11:30 p.m . Sunday and 7:20 a.m. Monday.
• A Deltona man reported discovering a Fort-o-lct on fire In
Ihe 300 block of Lake Breeze Circle near Lake Mary at 1 a.m.
Tuesday. Th e man tried (o put the fire out. but a Seminole
County Fire Department engine was called to extinguish the
blaze.
• A Sanford Water Division employee was slightly Injured
when a firecracker-type device exploded In his hand Monday
morning. T h e man. Gary Hngc. had opened the door to his city
(nick when he discovered the device taped to the door,
according lo police reports. When he grabbed the device to
remove II. It exploded, causing m inor bums lo his hand.
• A resident of a home In Ihe 2500 block of El Captain Drive,
Sanford, reported someone tried to enter the home while the
resident was asleep.
• A handgun was taken from the nlghtstnnd beside two
sleeping residents of a home In the 600 block of South
Magnolia Avenue. Sanford, sometime between 10:30 p.m.
Sunday and 7 a.m. Monday. A money clip holding $200 was
removed from a mantle, according lo reports.

Young girls
in peril at
public pools

T IT U S V IL L E . Fla. - A Judge
ordered Ihe immediate arrest of
Keith Tu ccl. executive director
of Operation Rescue, after he
defied the court lo appear as a
witness by keeping a speaking
engagement In Minneapolis.
Tuccl on Friday promised vis­
iting Judge Jo h n Rudd he would
comply w llh a subpoena and
appear Monday as a stale wit­
ness In Ihe trial of 39 protesters
accused of violating a court-

ordered buffer zone outside a
Melbourne clinic. Rudd found 38
of the defendants guilty.
When Tuccl did not appear at
the trial Monday morning. Rudd
Issued a bench warrant for his
failure to be In court.
However, when prosecutor* on
Tuesday told Rudd the religious
leader had been In Minneapolis
at a speaking engagement on
Monday as part of Operation
Rescue's "C itie s of Refuge"
campaign, Rudd revoked Tuccl's
appeal bond.

By CURT ANDERSON
Associated Press Writer

■yKILEV ARMSTRONQ
Associated Press Writer
NEW Y O R K - The kids at
Ihe city's public swim m ing
pools call II the "w hirlpool."
Iloys form a circle around
girls and churn the water.
Sontctlmrs. Hie girls gel
trnpprd. Som etim es, the
boys get m il of I'onlrul.
Authorities s.tv the game
has led to a series ol attacks
In which shrieking girls
have been stripped and
fondled. At least six such
sexual assaults have been
reported at city |mm&gt;Is In a
week.
In tile latest Incident. on
Su nd a y, about 12 boys
surrounded a girl at a |mmiI
In Munhullan's Washington
H e ig h ts n e ig h b o r h o o d ,
ripped off Iter bathing suit
and fondled tier as they
chanted the rap Iv r lr s .
"Whoops, there It Is."
Police arrested three troys.
Mayor Dinkins launched a
ca m p a ig n a ga in st s u c h
b e h a v io r T u e s d a y . I n ­
troducing buttons (hat read
"Don't DIs Your Sin" uml

"Whirlpool A in 't Cool." He
said tie wants nip singers lo
work with the campaign.
"It Is not acceptable lo
have young men put upon
young w o m e n ." he said.
"It's noi macho. It's cow ­
ardly. Th e y are brutes."
The series of assaults
began J u ly 5 at a pool In the
Bronx. T w o boys were a r­
rested lor allegedly strip­
ping a 14-year-old girl and
fondling her.
Ben Rosario, IH, said he
saw the boys m oving In.
"It's not right, man. T h e
girl was defenseless." he
said Tuesday at the pool. He
said he turned away as the
girl's top came olf Ik t u u s c
he d i d n ' t w a n t t h e
a s s a ila n ts to th in k he
"railed them out."
The women and girls at
the pool were taking no
chances T u e s d a y . M any
d o u b 1r - k n o 11 c d I h e I r
swimsuit tops and sunned
with towels around their
waists.
"Guys get too loose with
their hands." 25-year-old
A n n a C o n c e p c io n said.
"Th e y don't know when to
stop."

T A L L A H A S S E E — A fraternity whose members
were Involved In Ihe 1988 gang-rape of a female
student w ill be barred from Florida State
University for at least three more years.
In a letter dated Monday to national PI Kappa
Alpha leaders. Jon Dalton. Florida Slate vice
president for student affairs, said memories of the
assault arc still too fresh.
"The Institutional and com m unity memory of
the tragedy five years ago Is still very strong and
very’ negative," Dalton wrote. "It would be
extremely difficult. If ncit Impossible at this time,
in recruit new pledges and to expect support for
new m em bers."
Tw o m em bers of the fraternity's chapter at
Florida State and a visiting fraternity member
from A u b u rn University were charged with
sexually assaulting the student St the fraternity
house In March 1988. One Pike was sentenced to
a year In Jail, and the other two were put on
probation.
A five-year suspension Imposed by the universi­
ty expired in June, prompting the fraternity to
request a new chapter. W om en's groups objected

strenuously and Intend to continue pushing lor a
permanent ban.
"W e commend F S U for sending a strong
message that sexual violence Is an unacceptable
part of campus life," Lyn n Rosenthal, executive
director of the Refuge House battered women and
rape crisis center, said Tuesday. "W c wunt a
permanent ban because of the horrific nature of
these crimes.”
Th e victim was gang-raped, sodomized with a
toothpaste tube, had denigrating rem urks
scrawled on her body nnd was dumped at a
neighboring fraternity. Five hours after Ihe
attack, she still hud a blood-alcohol level of 0.349
— more than triple Florida's legal limit.
During a recent review, the fraternity made "n o
recognition of the apprehensions and negative
altitudes and perceptions" about the Pikes ut
Florida State. Dalton wrote.
Pike can appeal the decision, but officials ut the
fraternity's national headquarters In Memphis.
Ten n ., did not return a telephone call seeking
comment.
Dalton outlined several requirements Pt Kappa
Alpha must meet to be considered for rein­
statement In 1996. Even If those are met.
however, he said there's no guarantee such u
request would be approved.

NOTICE OF CHANGE
OF LAND USE
Tbs Local Planning Agsncy of the City of Longwood, Florida, will hold a public hearing at 7:00 p.m. on
Wednesday July 28.1993, or as soon thsrsaftsr as possible. In the City Commission Chamber* of the City Hall,
locatod at 175 W. Warren Avenue, Longwood, Florida, for the purposed considering making a recommendation
to the City Commission regarding the adoption of an ordinance to amend the Comprehensive Plan of the City
of Longwood, Florida.
The public hearing on plan amendments may Invotv# th* change in th* use of land throughout the
Incorporated dty Emits of the City of Longwood, Florida.

I

For Personal
&amp; Commercial
Insurance

Operation Rescue leader
defies court, arrest ordered
By The Associated Pres*______

Fraternity involved in FSU
rape refused reinstatement

An ordinance of the City of Longwood, Florida, amending th* City of Longwood, Florida
Comprehensive Plan to meet th* objections of th* State Department of Community Affairs;
adding *Exhibit 1*to th* cover of th« Comprehensive Plan; amending th* Introduction to clarify
concurrency management requirement*; amending the Land Us* element to clarify th* types
of applications to be reviewed, to address Infill development, and to clarify th* applicability of
wetland types affected by land use pofldee; amending the Conservation Element, to clarify the
applicability of wetland type* affected by conservation policies, to add • wetland buffer, to
provide for Innovative zoning technique*, and to provide mitigation measure! for when
wetlands are altered, and to clarify language; amending the Public Facilities and Services
Element to address Infill devalopmant and to clarify applicability of policies; and amending th*
Capital Improvement* Element toaddress Infill development; providing for conflicts, seversblltty
and an effective data.

RICHARD RUSSI

TONY RUSSI
INSURANCE

Any person wishing to appeal any decision mad* by the Local Planning Agency with respect to any matter
considered at this hearing wO need • record of th* proceeding, and lor such purpose, will need to ensure that
a verbatim record of the proceedmg I* mods which record Includes the testimony and evidence upon which th*
appeal Is to be baaed. A copy of the proposed Ordtoanc* la pusfed at tha City of Longwoodt Planning
Department and may ba Inspected by fit* pubic. Alfwrwaafing.partlea may appear and be heard with respect
to the propoeed Ordtoanoe*. This hairing may be continued Irom time to dm* until final action Is taken by the
Cftv Commission,
Persona with tfisabHaa naatfing aaslstanca to parfldpata In any of thasa proceedings should contact th*
A D A Coordinator, at (407) 260-3481, at least 48 hours In advance of th* meeting.
Geraldine Zamfari. City Clerk
City ol Longwood

2575 S . Fre n c h Ave.
S a n ford

322-0285
t

tn tn -O tc n c r s
In s u r a n c e
"
'
I' fl.iN t i*s ,
r ; /. •
•

f f ‘)fu ,

The proposed ordinance will bring th* Comprehensive Plan Into compliance with the conditions set forth In
the Stipulated Settlement Agreement between the Florida Department of Community Affairs and the City of
Longwood. The Stipulated Settlement Agreement has previously been approved.
At this public hearing, the Land Planning Agency wW consider making a recommendation to the City
Commission on th* adoption of Ordinance No. 93-1143 entitled:

mm

�4 A • Santord Herald. Sanford Florida - Wednesday July 14. I W J

Editorials/ O p in io n s
Sanford Herald
(US PS 481.260)

300 N. FR E N C H AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Aren Code 407-322-2611 or 631-0993
Wayne 0. Doyle. Publisher and Editor

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 Month*...............................$10.90
6 Month*....................................... 03900
I Vear ....................................678 00
Florid* Resident* mint pay 7% sates tax In
addition to rates above.

EDITORIALS

Partners in
education
Earlier In th is c e n tu ry , elem entary school
graduates had a choice. T h e y could go on to
h ig h school, c n route to college, or enroll In n
tra d e school.
T ra d e schools were specifically alined at
h e lp in g yo u n g ste rs learn an o ccu p a tio n to
h e lp them e a rn a livin g by the tim e they
i cached l heir late teens.
B y gra d u a tio n , students at su ch schools
h a d more tha n a haste education. T h e y were
p r iv y in h a n d s -o n experience a n d training.
E m p lo y m e n t w a s easier to find.
In this m o d e rn d a y. an extensive education
Is m ore p ro m in e n t. H ig h school gra du atio n Is
o lte n not e n o u g h . A degree Is required for
m a n y Jobs.
Ye t In the In d u stria l w orld, there is still a
s tro n g need for actual hands-on experience
d u r in g schooling.
School graduates of the 90's a rc often faced
w it h one of tw o responses w hen looking for
w o rk . E ith er th e y are told they s h o u ld obtain
m o re education, or they are told the Job
re q u ire s p rio r experience.
A lth o u g h vo ca tion al education has been
available, p ro g ra m s Invo lvin g In d u s try tn the
process Is new to the area.
T h r o u g h co operative efforts of Sem inole
C o m m unity C o lle ge and S ie m e n s S tro m b c rg -C u rls m i in La k e M a ry th e re is an
o p p o rtu n ity to h a ve both.
W h ile a tte n d in g Ju n io r college, a n u m b e r of
elec'lionlcs stu d e n ts are Involved in actual
operations at the Siem ens plant. B y the time
th e y arc rea dy to receive the ir Associate
D e gre e , they w ill have already had some
tra in in g in re a l-w o rld w o rk .
F o r high sch o o l level students, S iem ens
also has a cooperative program w h ic h offers
Jo b experience b u t at u sligh tly lo w e r level.
A s a result, th e y m a y be m u c h better
em ployees, a nd th u s have less p ro b le m s In
lln d in g a Job.
T h e cooperative program Is patterned after
e d u c a t i o n a n d w o r k c o m b in a t io n s In

Germany.
W e sec this as an excellent m o ve , and
c o m m e n d S ie m e n s S lro m b c rg -C a rls o n and
S C C lor their In v o lve m e n t.
A t the p re se nt tim e, this project o n ly
In v o lv e s specific occupational fields, basically
in electronics.
T h e re ure so m e program s u n d e rw a y in ­
v o lv in g other schools and businesses w h ich
a ls o help p ro vid e on-the-job tra in in g d u rin g
th e school ye ar. B u t tf m ore businesses w ould
b e c o m e In v o lv e d , the e x p a n sio n of this
tra in in g could g ro w lo a n even h ig h e r level.

LETTER S

On filling prison beds
S a y It isn't so! Tell me that It Is not true thul
6.077 prison beds ure empty while at the very
same moment tile Governor says Florida's prisons
are so overcrowded tiu t we must build another
21.000 prison beds or else he will be forced to
release violent lelons on October 1!
It Is either outright deceit or mismanagement at
its worst...or both.
W ho can we Ixdlcvc?
Florida's elected and uppoinlcd leadership was
rc|K-.itcdly asked In committee hearings, according
to legislators. II the nerd for new treds was
predicated on the m axim um use ol existing beds.
T h e legislators were led to believe that these tx-ds
were full.
•'We’ve Ix-en lied to." said Representative Carol
Hanson. R-Boca Raton, as reported in several
Florida nrwspajx:rs.
Tra g ica lly, lor the last five years violent
prisoners have been released early because of
prison overcrowding. On November 18. 1988, a
violent felon named Charlie Slreel was released
from Marlin C ounty Correctional Institution —
having served only halt Ills sentence for attempted
m urder. Days luter. lie brutally murdered two
police officers on tlu- streets of Miami. At that time
tin- State had 33,000 pirson beds and not enough
room to keep Charlie Street In prison where he
belonged. Five years and two administrations later.
Charlie Si reefs unsconsclotuihle early release from
prison Is slill standard operating procedure In a
m u ch larger 32.000 bed prison system In which
tin- typical Inmate serves less that one-third or the
sentence.
Alter baldly mentioning this problem for iwo
years, the prrsetil udiiilnlstnilirm highlighted it
tins year as a major problem which had lo be
solved by building more prisons to bouse 21.000
more Inmalrs. lie vetoed a bill passed by the
Legislature which provided 7.000. then called a
sjm-i tal legislative session on the subject and
set lied lor 10.500 beds at un additional construc­
tion cost ol $200 million
W h y weren't the true facts explained? — that an
additional 6.077 prisoner capacity existed but was
not Ix-lng utilized.
Hill Nelson
former U.S. Congressman.
Florida

H O D D IN G C A R T E R

High court underm ines voting rights
T h e U.S. Supreme Court Iasi week rendered an
atrocious 5-4 decision that raises legitimate fears
it could weaken the 1965 Voting Rights Act
Nevertheless, though the ruling was based on
(uulty logic and bud law. It had the |&gt;crversely
useful effect of rclnvlgoratlng an unsettled
debate about the proper remedies In today's
world for yesterday's racist discrimination.
Specifically, the court decided that geographi­
cally "bizarre" redtstrtctlng plans drawn solely
to guarantee success for m inority candidates can
be challenged as a possible deprivation of the
rights ol white voters to equal protection under
the Constitution.
In doing so. the narrow m ajority effectively
repudiated what Congress, the executive branch
and the courts had all long ago decided was
setilrd law . h also guaranteed a lengthy period of
legal uncertainty in ihat handful of congressional
districts that would appear to fit the extraordi­
narily vague proscription written for the majority
by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Hut som r of the Initial reaction was knee Jerk
and overwrought. Nowhere Is ll written (hat the
best way lo achieve full equality In this country
Is through the continuing, scir-consclaus and
deliberate segregation of its politics. At a given

point, old tools should be abandoned In the fare
of new understandings.
First, however. II Is
necessary to reiterate
tw o basic truths. One
la that race has been
the great Am erican
dilemma and Its a n ­
g ry wound from co­
lonial days to the
present. T h e C o n ­
stitution was written
by men who explic­
itly refused to abolish
slavery and counted
slaves as less than
fully human for p u r­
poses of political rep­
But so m e of
resentation from the
the initial
states. Those w h o
reaction was
p io u s ly r e n o u n c e
knee jerk and
race-based remedies
overw rought J
for racially Inflicted
inequalities tu rn a
blind eye to history.
T h e second Is that gerrym andering lias
historically created weird and wonderful district

lines -- hence the designation, a combination of
the name o! unc notorious district's creuioi,
Klhrldgc Gerry, and the salamander II was said
to resemble. Perhaps none was quite as long and
narrow us the new 12th Congressional District In
North Carolina, the object of the lawsuit that the
Suprem e Court sent back for rehearing Iasi
week, bill many were equally tortured In design
Th e ir Inlcnllon was to advance or retard a
num ber ol special Interests, often ol party,
sometimes ol factions. Incumbents and urban or
rural voters. In the South, they were frequently
draw n to minimize or eliminate the potential
strength of minority voters, and in particular,
black voters.
Tha t is why (hr Voting Rights Act of HKi5 and
Us amendments 10 years ago required that race
h r taken into account "in order (o avoid dilution
of m inority voting strength
ns Justice David
Souter wrote for the dissenting court minority.
T h e Supreme Court agreed us recently as 1977
Affirmative action to open doors was required to
undo what affirmative action lo k rrp them shut
hud produced.
T h e results have Ix-en gr.inlying Blacks In Ihc
formerly repressive South now vote In projxir
tlonal numbers nearly rquul to whites

JA C K

ANDERSO

German firms
may be trading
with Iraq
W A S H IN G TO N — Nearly three years allei
Iraq Invaded Kuwait, evidence Is seeping out
that one ol America's strongest allies may
once again tx- fueling (lie fires of outlaw
nations in the Middle East.
A new report prepared by Middle East
expert K rnn rlh R. Tim m erm an tor a House
subcommittee alleges (hat dozens of cum i |ki
tiles In Germany may have sold technology
with possible weapons applications lo Iraq in
viola!Ion ol flit- Unit­
ed Nations embargo
A c c o r d in g lo tlae
s t u d y . U rrn ia n
customs officials are
investigating more
than 150 companies
for possible sanc­
tio n -bu stin g a ctivi­
ties.
The

ELLEN GOODM AN

The closet is incompatible
B O S TO N — Let me begin with the obvious: It
w on't work.
I am not being clairvoyant about the
compromise over guys In the m ilitary that 1*
being hatched for a Ju ly 15th due date. But I
can say that any variation on the current
theme entitled "Don't Ask. Don't T e ll." won't
work.
II w on't resolve the legal questions. Sooner
or later someone will ask. someone will tell,
someone will lx? discharged and someone will
be back tncoun.
It w on't resolve the political questions either.
Sooner or later, a compromise Intended to
satisfy the ambivalent majority — Americans
who don't want to discriminate against gays
and don't want to uccept them — will fall apart
from the weight of Its own contradictions.
A n d It certulnly won’t resolve the conflict
between the military leaders and the gay
com m unity.
W hen you get right down to It. "D on't ask.
Don't tell." is not really ubout ending the witch
hunt. Nor Is it really a gentleman's agreement
not to tutk about sexuality. Don't ask. don't
tell, means don't talk...or else.
It means the closet.
T h e military no longer claims that gays and
lesbians arc a security risk. Th e y no longer
claim that homosexuals can't serve ably, even
heroically. The last ditch effort to say that
homosexuality is — "incompatible with mili­
tary service" will fall because, as Rep. Barney
Frank says. It's "Incompatible with the truth."
In these months of a long and often
unwelcome debate, the Pentagon has finally
come down to arguing one thing: that the
discomfort, the fear, even the hatred of gays Is
Itself disruptive to bonding and morale. So
disruptive that gays cannot serve — and here
is the crucial word — "openly."
Now. openness means different things to
different people. There Is u lot of room between
being In the closet and being In your face.
There's a scale of behavior that runs from
repression to flamboyance.
Bui gays have always been able lo serve and
succeed in the military, and everywhere else In
society, as long as they were not "open." What
different lairs the gay rights movement even
now from that of blucks or women, is that
homosexuals aren't discriminated against as
long us they “ pass."
For that reason, the prim ary symbol of gay
repression hasn't been a ghetto or a list of
segregation laws. It's been the m uch more
psychologically complex Image of the closet:
the dark place where cultnial hate meets, and
makrs. self-hate.
Th e closet may have claimed more gay lives

In America than hale crimes. It lias surely
devastated more psyches, through hiding and
lying, than dishonorable discharges.
Because of the closet, the ga y rights
movement has not Just been about breaking
the barriers. It's been about breaking silence.
For a generation, the most Important gay
m arch has been a long line of men and women
com ing out. one at a time.
Som e of these decisions have meant quid
and private talks w ith parents. Som e have
m eant public and ostentatious pronounce
m ents of a "Q ueer
N ation." At times, as
a gay comedian put
It. " T h e love that
dared not speak Its
nam e, can't seem to
shut u p ."
T h i s conversation
about single-sex love,
lovers and partners
has, to put It m ildly,
m a d e m illio n s o f
A m e rica n s uneasy.
But ll has also made
m illio n s of A m e r i­
cans more comfort­
able w ith gayness.
I Don't ask,
Each and every su r­
don't tell,
vey says Ihat straight
means don't
Am ericans who
talk...orelse.
k n o w homosexuals
It means
personally, as family
(he
closet. J
m e m b e rs and
friends, are more
accepting than those w ho don't "k n o w " any.
In that sense, gays and lesbians heroine
change agents sim ply by making themseves
"k n o w n ." We've seen that too In the argument
over the military. T h e soldiers com ing out. with
Purple Hearts and m ilitary bearing, arc the ones
w ho proved that homosexuality and heroism can
go together.
It's the closet that's Incompatible...with self
acceptance and public acceptance. A n d with
change. ‘
T h e compromise being workrd out now will, nl
best, balance precariously on Ihc threshold of (he
closet door. "Don’t a sk " offers a step forward for
gays In the military. But "Don't tell" threatens a
step backward In the overall direction of the gay
movement.
Fused together, this may be Ihc most wc can
expect from an anxious Congress, and angry
Pentagon, a nervous president and an am­
bivalent public. A pretty good rule In politics Is to
take what you can get.
B u t take this one w ith a caveat. In the medium
ru n . and maybe even the short ru n : It won't
work.

G r im .ill

K lll-

iMinsy In Washington
Ii.id no comment on
the investigations,
( O n e of
but a U.S. official
Am erica's
w ho monitors pro
strongest
literal ton Issues con­
allies may
firmed that some of
once again be
I tie lindings are ac­
fueling the
cu ra te . "A lth o u g h
fires oi outlaw
I t ’ s a lot m o r e
nations in the
expensive, and mil
quite the same vol­
M iddle Easi J
ume. the Iraqis ure
essentially getting what they need to rebuild
(m ilitarily— . ... Unfortunately, German com
(xintes (igurc Into this equation." the official
told our ussoclulr Dean Boyd.
Am ong the deals Gcntiun Investigators an
looking at. the report says, is Ihc alleged sab
ol calutron magnets and special centrifuge
piping (o Iraq — material that can tx- useful in
m aking a nuclear weapon. One company is
Ix-lng Investigated lor |x&gt;sslt&gt;ly rx|xtr(liig a
s|M-eialized X-ray camera (o Iraq. In the wake
ot the Persian Gulf W ar. U.N. Inspectors
found a similar Item at Iraq's Al-Alheei
nuclear weapons lab. where It was being used
lo make nuclear explosive lenses.
T h e stall report says several Iraqi-owned
(ront companies In Germ any are also Ix-lng
prolx-d for buying local m urhtnr tools with
lake "end-use" certiorates from Jordan
These certificates are designed lo guarantee
ili.it Hie tools wontd be used tor pracclul
purposes in Jordan, allowing llu-m (o lxlr gully cA|HJtlcd there. But otten once the
equipment uirives In Jordan. It is pul on a
truck txuiiid fur Iraq, where tl Is later put lo
ixissihlc military use.
None of the companies In (tie report have
Ix-en churged with any wrongdoing m dale.
Nonet tieless, any new revelations about
Germ an business dealings with Iraq could
strike yet another embarrassing blow tu the
country, which suffered a string of humiliat­
ing exposures about Its pre-war dealings with
Saddum llusscln. Fro m 1985 tu 1989.
Germ any wus Iraq's largest supplier ol
high-technology, with sales ol more than $4.2
billion.
Shortly aflcr Ihc G ulf War. U.N. inspectors
discovered thul German-made technology
hud played a crucial role in enhancing
Saddam ’s chemical and nuclear weapons
programs. More than 80 percent of Saddam's
poisonous gns supply, us well as key purls ol
Ills nuclear program, were ol German origin
An cstlmutrd one-fourth ol the technology
used to upgrade Ira q 's Infamous Scud
missile, which hit civilian targets tn Israel
and Saudi Arublu. bore the "M ade in
G e rm a n y" label.
Germ an Embassy officials say that since
the G ulf War tiusco, their government has
enacted five new laws and some -10 new
decrees to limit proliferation of dangerous
mulcriuls abroad. Bui In the case ol Iraq's
longtime enemy Iran, these efforts have
proven to be little more Ihuu a paper tiger.
While Iraq has been recovering from us
beating by allied forces, Iran has been
m ounting an unprecedented military buildup
In recent years. Much of the hardwnrr for tills
boom has German origins.

�Sanford Horald, Sanford. Florida • Wednesday. July 14. 1993 - S A

Garbage

BankContinued from Page 1A

recently
from NationsBank Tor mortgage
financing to low and moderateincome clients.
Mortgages will lie made to
qualified homebuyers whose
Income does not exceed $46,000
for a family of four, which is 115
percent of the county's median
$-10,000 for u family of four.
Applicants will also tie required
lo co m p le te N u tlo n s B a n k 's
Com m unity llomcbuycr's E d u ­
cation Program prior lo making
application to the bank.
The NntlnnaBunk commitment
lo GoldcnKule Is the first of its
kind by u lender In Seminole
County and Is expected to be
used In conjunction with grants
or loans for d o w n p a ym e n t
a s s is ta n c e fro m S e m in o le
C ounty's recently announced
S t a i r H o u s in g I n it ia t iv e s
Partnership (S IM P.) Affordable
Housing Program. The corpora­
tion anticipates applying lor a
share of those funds prior to the
deadline Aug. 11.
"W e look lorwurd to drvclopng
a successful program that will
necessitate our extending an
even greater level than what we
arr contemplating now." said
R.B. Sansomc, NationsBank vice
president.
The commitment will produce
a m inim um of 20 homes at an
average mortgage amount of
$50,000 per applicant, according
to Ameflka G urka. GoldrnRulc's
executive director.
A n o t h e r lo c a l bank h a s
ve rb a lly offered to co m m it
$250,000 to finance substantial
rehabilitation of 10 substandard
homes at an average cost of
825.000 per structure, said
Gurka.
"W e are extremely grateful to

C o u n ty Com m ission er D aryl
Seminole County has donated
McLain for the crucial role hr
a lot in the Mldwuy com m unity
played In fnrllllutlng these- two
and the county's bourd of ad­
c o m m itm e n ts ." said G u rk a .
j u s t m e n t w ill c o n s id e r a
"N ow we would hope the com ­
variance lo ullow construction of
mission sees fit lo allocutc suffia home there at Its meeting on
J u ly 26.
c lc n l S H IP d o w n p a y m e n t
assistance funds to match the
"W e hope lo have a buyer
S 1.250.000 In private-sector fi­
approved for the Midway lot
nancing thus fur committed to
within two weeks." according to
our efforts on behalf of lowerGucka.
income homebuyers in Seminole
In F e b r u a r y o f 1 9 9 3 ,
County.
GoldenBulc submitted u pro­
posal lo the City of Sanford to
"W e would like to Ik * putting
at least 100 lower-income fami­
expand the production of new
lies per year into homes of their
homes under the W INS "2 5 "
own by 1995." said G urka. "It Is
Initiative ortglnully advanced by
hoped that other lenders will
the City Commission In 1987.
follow NationsBank's example
Key participants include:
and make similar commitments
• Seminole C oun ty govern­
to GoldenRulc's efforts."
ment as the funding source.
I'luns to build Its fifth and final
• City of Sanford government
home under the Wcslslde Im ­
as co-applicant and budget ad­
provement Neighborhood Strat­
ministration.
egy (W INS) Demonstration pro­
• GoldenBulc H .C.D .C .. Inc. as
gram with the City of Sanford
c o -a p p lic a n t a n d p ro g ra m
arr now complete.
operation.
A new home will Ik - built fur
• Locul lenders to supply
Jo an H aw kins and Iter four
construction und mortgage fi­
children ut 1702 Peach Avc. In
n a n c i n g a n d f I r s t - 1i m c
Goidsbom.
homebuyer counseling.
• U uu lifted f irs t-tim e
In addition to the lot which Is
uppraised at 84.500, Hawkins
homebuyers
w ill receive an Interest-frer
• A Florida licensed, bondablc
" s o f t " s e c o n d -m o rtg a g e of
builder.
82,021 from Seminole County's
"T h e W INS "2 5 " Demonstra­
Com m unity Development Block
tion Project promises to be a
Grant funds. The home will br
W INS-W INS proposition for all
bullt by Lifestyle Builders of participants int he partnership,
O r la n d o , w it h c o m p le tio n
according to Gucka. "Everyone
expected by m id-August.
W INS.
In January of 1992. the city
"Neither the city or county Is
commission agreed to transfer asked lo Invest ItK-ul ad-valorem
title to five cHy owned residen­ tax dollars Inthls project, yet a
tial lots to GoldenBulc to con­ modest amount of state money
struct affordable hom es for already dedicated to affordable
low-income residents. With fami­ housing will leverage substantial
lies placed In four new homes In private-sector funds." he said.
the Goldsboro area, this home " T h is is the way affordable
wilt complete the demonstration housing ventures arc supposed
project.
to w ork."

Legal Notices

Legal N otices

NOTICK
SIMINOLC COUNTY EXPRESSWAY AUTHORITY
M K IT IN O

Th* S*m.noi* County E&gt;pr*tlw*y Authority announce* th*r# will
b* a regularly kth*dul*d public mooting to which oil p*r*on* oro
Inyltod ot follow*
DAT* Wodnoodoy. July 10. It*]
TIME J » P M
LOCATION WmlnotoCountyService*Building
Comm niton Chombort ( ION I
1101 Coil Elr it Itroot
Sonford F lor Ido JJ77I
GENERAL SUBJECT MATTER TO BE DISCUSSED Tho
P'opctod oaprttiwoy In SornmoN County
Addittonol Intormotion moy bo obtained by contorting
GoroldN Btinton Eaecutlre Director
Seminole County E opronwey Authority
Phono (OOF) 371 IDO.eiteniienmo
PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES NEEDING ASSISTANCE TO
PARTICIPATE IN ANY OF THESE PROCEEDINGS SHOULD
CONTACT THE SEMINOLE COUNTY EXPRESSWAY AUTHORl
TV OFFICE ot HOURS IN ADVANCE OF THE M EETING AT
» l 1130 EXTENSION me
PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT IF TH EY DECIDE TO APPEAL
ANY DECISIONS AAAOE AT THESE MEETINGS/HEARINGS.
TH EY WILL N EED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND
FOR SUCH PURPOSE THEY MAY NEED TO ENSURE TH AT A
VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE WHICH
INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH
THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED. PER SECTION 20*010).
FLORIDA STATUTES
Pubiith Ju ty M .ltn
OEG 104
REPORT OF CONDITION
CONSOUDATINO DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIESOF
THE SEMINOLE NATIONAL BANK OF SANFORD IN THE
STATE OF FLORIDA. AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESSON
JUNE M. Ittl PUBLISHED IN RESPONSE TO CALL
MADE BY COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. UNDER T ITL E
I t UN ITED STATES CODE. SECTION 111.
CHARTER NUMBER I1M1. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
SOUTHEASTERN DISTRICT
Siotomont ot Retourcet end LUbillllo*
ASSETS
TNovMndt *1 Del loro
Coth end beienct* du* from depository Institutions
Noninterest booring boloncos end currency ond coin.............. 1.414
Interest Peering boloncot..................................
...
B
Securities...................................................................................
Federol funds sold...................
..............................
Securities purehosed under agreements to resell....................
0
Loons end loose financing receivables
Loons and leases, net of unearned Income.................... II 4*0
LESS: Allowance tor loon and lease losses ...... — ....... U*
LESS: Allocated transfer risk reserve ................ .......
0
Loons and leases, net of unearned Income.
allowonce, and reserve.
— ......................................... .
Assets held In trading accounts.......— ........................ - ...........
0
Premises and fised assets
(Including cepitolittd leases)....«.......................................... AM
Other real estate owned.............................................................
*t
Investments In unconsolidated subsidiaries
and associated companies.... ............ —
— •— ........—
0
Customers' liability to this bank on
acceptances outstanding................................. ............ .........
0
Intangible assets•e»eeeeeeeeeee»*eeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeeoe*eeeeedooeeeeeoeeeee«e*eee
0
Other assets..............................................................................
Total assets................................................................................MAO*
Losses deterred pursuant to IJU S C. 112)111............................. N/A
Total assets and losses deterred
pursuant to I] U S C H U H ).................................................. UAO*
LIABILITIES
Deposits
In domestic offices................................................................ ...
Noninterest bearing........................................... ...... &gt;■**»
Interest bearing ................ ..............—................... 10.17}
Federal funds purchased...................
•
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase ..............
0
Demand notes Issued to the U S Treew ry.............. ..................
0
Other borrowed money..............................................................
•
Mortgage Indebtedness and obligations under
capilailted leases..................... ...................... - .................. —
*
Bank's liability on acceptances esecuted
and outstanding.....................................

Subordinated notes and debentures
Other liabilities........................................
Total liabilities....

Limited life preferred stock and related surplus
EQUITY CAPITAL

aeoeoooeoeeoooe

0
0
14]
71.]*]
0

Perpetual preferred stock and related surplus...... .....................
0
Common stock ............ ..........................- ...............................— — *.700

Surplus ............ .................— ---------------------- -------------------------- 1-AAJ
Undivided profits and capital reserves.................................... U.IA7I
LESS Net unreal Ired loss on marketable equity securities-------

Total equity capital

0

.................... .................................. *•*'*

Losses deterred pursuant to I ] U SC. H M III................................ N/A

Total equity capital and losses deterred
pursuant to II U.S.C l*2J(|).... - ..............................- ........... I-*1*
Total llabllllles. limited HI* preferred
slock, and equity capital and losses
deterred pursuant to I1U.SC. IUJ(|I.....................................UAO*
I. JOHN C. ARCHER. VICE PRESIDENT AND CASHIER, ot the
above named bank do hereby declare that this Report ot Condition Is
true and correct to the best ot my knowledge and bet let
/S/ John C. Archer
July 1.1**)
We. the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness ot this
statement of resources and liabilities We declare that It has been
eaamlned by us. and to the best ot our knowledge and belief has been
prepared In conformance with the Instructions and Is true and
correct.
Director*
/»/ OonoldJ. Bales
/*/ Ronald L. Russi
/*/ Stanley H. Sondsfvr
Publish; July 14. I**]
O EG -tll

Donf Miss A Slnglt bcut!
LOCAL «W1-LOCAL SPORTV LOCALKXTOAAU
FEOPU»WALTHIBTRO&gt;»PUCATX)M»

NOTICE
The St Johns River Water
Management District has re
ceived an application for Can
sumptlve Water Use from:
** F l o r i d a m i n i n g a m a
TERIALS CONCRETE CORP.
P 0 BOX )IMJ. TAMPA. FL
l)A )t. application
&lt;} II7 00JIANFM The applicant
proposes to withdraw 0 0J1MGD
ot GROUND WATER FROM
THE FLORIDA AQUIFER via
ONE E X IS TIN G W ELL lor
COM M ERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
to serve If 17 acres In Seminote
County located In the IR
REGULAR Section )). Township
I* South. Range M East.
** L 0 P L A N TE INC .
A TTN CHARLESSCHOLPP.
P O BOX 17 TAVARES FL
) ] 77I . a p p l i c a t i o n
r) tit O07OAUFM The applicant
proposes to withdraw 0 011 SAGO
of GROUND WATER FROM
THE FLORIDAN AQUIFER via
FOUR EXISTING WELLS tor
CO M M / IN D E S S E N T IA L
HOUSEHOLD LIVESTOCK and
URBAN LANDSCAPE to serve
1)4 acres In Seminole County
located In the IRREGULAR
Section M. Township } l South.
Rang* )t East. IRREGULAR
Section M. Township ]t South.
Rang* )1 East. IRREGULAR
Section M. Township 21 South,
Rang* )1 Essli IRREGULAR
Section II. Township 21 South.
Rongell East.
•• CENTRAL FLORIDA RE
SEARCH AND EDUCATION
CENTER. 2700 CELER Y AVE .
SANFORD. FL 22T7I. opplICA
lion 12-117 0O71AUGFM The
applicant proposes to withdraw
0 0*0 MGD ot GROUND WATER
FROM THE FLORIOAN AQ
UIFER via SEVEN EXISTING
WELLS FOR AQUACULTURE,
CABBAGE AND SQUASH to
serve 5 acres In Seminole
County located in the SW U QF
SW is OF SE It OF SE U at
Section 2*. Township I* South.
Rang* )l East. NW U OF SW U
OF SE v. OF SE U ot Section 2*.
Township I* South. Rang* )t
East: NW U OF NW W OF SE
U OF SE M ot Section 2*.
Township It South. Rang* )l
East. SW t* OF SE U OF SE W
OF SE M ot Section 2*. Town
ship It South. Rang* )1 East:
NW U OF NE U OF SE U OF
SE la ot Section if. Township I*
South. Rang* ) l East: NW la OF
SW 1* OF NE U OF NE M ot
Section 22. Township 1* South.
Rang* )l East: SW 1* OF SE U
OF SE la OF NE l* ot Section
)}. Township I* South. Rang* It
East.
•• A OUDA AND SONS INC .
1*7) WEST SR 424. OVIEDO. FL
) 2 74 S . a p p l i c a t i o n
&lt;2 117 0I74ANRM2 The appll
cant proposes to withdraw 0 27*
MGD ot GROUND W ATER
FROM THE FLORIDAN AQ
U IF E R via T W E N T Y FIV E
EXISTING WELLS tor SOO to
serve IIS acres in Seminole
County located in the SW U OF
SW la OF SE la OF NW la of
Section 21. Township 21 South.
Rang* )1 East: SW 1* OF SE la
OF SE la OF NW &lt;a of Section
11. Township 21 South. Rang* )1
East: SE 1* OF SE 1* OF SE U
OF NW la ot Section 21. Town
ship 21 South. Rang* )l East:
NW la OF NE 1* OF SE 'a OF
N W Uot Section 21. Township II
South. Rang* )l East: SE 'a OF
NE la OF SE la OF NW la ot
Section 21. Township 21 South.
Rang* }l East: NW 1* OF NW &lt;a
OF SW 1* OF NE U ot Section
21. Township 21 South. Rang* )1
East: NE la OF NW la OF SW
la OF NE «a ot Section 21.
Township II South. Rang* )1
East: SW la OF SW U OF SW la
OF NE &lt;» ot Section 21. Town
ship }l South. Rang* )1 East:
SW la OF sw &gt;a OF SW &lt;a o f
NE t* ot Section 21. Township 21
South. Rang* )1 East: SW la OF
SE IS OF SW la OF NE la ot
Section 21. Township 21 South.
Rongell East. N W U O F NE 'a
OF SW la OF NE la of Section
21. Township It South. Rang* ]l
East: NE la OF NE W OF SW la
OF NE la of Section 21. Town
ship 21 South. Rang* 21 East:
NE 1* OF SE 1* OF SW 14 OF
N l U of Section 21. Township 21
South. Benge 11 East: NE 14 OF
SE ia OF SW 14 OF NE 14 of
Section II. Township 21 South.
Range )l East: NW la OF S I la
OF SW 14 OF NE 14 ot Section
21. Township 21 South. Rang* )1
East: SE la OF SE 14 OF NW 14

Legal Notices
OF NE la of Section 21. Town
ship 21 South. Kang* )t East.
NE la OF NE 1* OF NW 1* OF
NE 'a ot Section 21. Township 21
South. Rang* )! East: NW 14 OF
NE la OF NW 14 OF NE la of
Section 21. Township 21 South.
Rang* )| East: NW la OF NW la
OF NW &lt;a OF NE la of Section
21. Township ]l South. Rang* )1
East: NW la OF SW la OF NW
ia OF NE la ot Section 21.
Township 21 South. Rang* )l
East: SE la OF NE 14 OF NE Vs
OF NW ia of Section 21. Town
ship 21 South. Rang* ) l East;
NW V) OF SE 1* OF NE 1* OF
NW l* of Section 21. Township 21
South. Rang* )l East. SE la OF
SE la OF NE 14 OF NW 1* ot
Section 21. Township 21 South.
Rang* )t East; NW la OF SW la
OF NW la OF NE •* ot Section
21. Township II South. Rang* ]l
East; SE la OF SW 'a OF SE la
OF NW &lt;a ot Section ji. Town
ship 21 South. Rang* Jt Cast.
*• TENNECO INC’.-A T T N STEVEN GIESLER. P O BOX
2)11. HOUSTON. TX 772)2.
application *2 II7 020*ANF The
applicant proposes to withdraw
0 004 MGD ot CROUND WATER
FROM THE SURFICIAL AQ
UIFER via FOUR EXISTING
W ELLS lor RECO VER Y to
serve 1 acre In Seminole County
located In the SW la OF SW la
OF SW la OF SW la ot Section
) l . Township 20 South. Rang* »
East. SW ia OF SW la OF SW la
OF SW la of Section )1. Town
ship 20 South. Rang* 20 Easti
SW la OF SW 1* OF SW 14 OF
SW la ot Section II. Township »
South. Rang* X East; SW 1* OF
SW l* OF SW 1* OF SW 1* ot
Section )1. Township 20 South.
Rang* » East.
•• S TA R E N T E R P R IS E .
A TTN MARK MALONEY. 11)
WINDERLY PLACE.
M A ITL A N D . FL 127)1 7471,
application #2II70J « a n The
applicant proposes to withdraw
0 001 MGD ot GROUND WATER
FROM THE SURFICIAL AO
UIFER via TWO EXISTING
WELLS tor OEWATERING to
serve 0 4 acres In Seminole
County located In the SW la OF
SW la OF SW la OF SW la of
Section It. Township 21 South.
Rang* 2* East; SW la OF SW U
OF SW ia ot SW la ot Section I*.
Township 21 South. Rang* 2*
East;
Should you be Interested In
any of the listed applications,
you should contact the SI. Johns
River Water Management Dis
trkt at P. O Bo« 142*. Paiatka.
Florida 12171 142*. or In person
at Its office on State Highway
160 West. Paiatka. Florida.
*04 220 BUI. Written objection
to the application may be mad*,
but should be received no later
than 14 days Irom the date of
publication Written objections
should Identity the ob|*ctor by
name and address, and lully
describe the objection to the
application Filing a written
ejection does not entitle you to
a Chapter i}0. Florida Statutes.
Administrative Hearing Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by the
application and who III* a petl
lion meeting the requirements
ot Section *0C I 111. F A C.. may
obtain an Administrative Hear
Ing All timely tiled written
objections will be presented to
the Board lor consideration In
its deliberation on the applica
Hon prior to the Board taking
action on the application.
Rosie Parker
Data Control Technician
Division ot Permit Data
Services
St Johns River Water
Management District
Publish: July 14. It*)
DEG 117
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 4)00
Rocky Ridge Place. Sonlord. FL
12771. Seminole County. Florida,
under the Fictitious Name ol
DISCOUNT COMPUTER RE
PAIR A SERVICES, and that I
Intend to register said name
with tho Division ot Corpora­
tions. Tallahostoe. Florida. In
accordance with tho provisions
01 tho Fictitious Noma Statute.
To Wit: Section 14)0*. Florid*
Statwtos i**1.
Daniel R. Ellery
Publish: July 14. t**l
DEO 101

Continued from Page IA
Under Ih r projxtsal. the cost
Tor solid waste plckiqis will go
from $ 14 .4 3 to $15.51 per
month for single family resi­
dences. For multi-family resi­
liences. costs would climb from
$9.66 to $10.38.
Commercial costs would go
from 813.65 per cubic yard, to
814.67 per cubic yard.
With the proposed residential
rate at 815.51. Sanford would lie
above Ovidco's rate of $14.69.
Longwood's rate of 814.68. und
Lake Mary's rate of $ 13 .15.
The second suggested solution
lo the problem would have
called for co-mlngllng collections
but c h u n g in g the re cyclin g
routes from onre |x-r week lo
bi-weekly. In this case, rales
would still lie Increased, but only
to 815.15 for single family resi­

dences.
Th e third alternate would have
culled for an even lower rate
increase to $15.08. but would
have reduced work loads more,
a n d e lim in a t e d m o re c it y
workers.
During discussion of the m at­
ter. Com m ission er A .A . MeClunuhun commented. "It looks
like we have u problem with 'his.
and we must do what we have to
do."
“ U n d e r th e w o r s t e ase
scenario." Sim m ons explained.
"W e would I k - cutting as many
as eight people from the staff,
which would reduce the cost of
operation by about $200,000.
but that may not necessarily be
Ihe way lo g o ."
He added. "Vet a seven .md a
half percent Increase sounds like
a lot to the average resident."

Commissioners on Ju n e 28
voted to raise water bills by as
much as 24 percent. effective
s o m e t i m e in A u g u s t . If
a p p r o v e d , the c h a n g e s In
garbage rates are expected to go
Into effect by Sept. 30.

water to Iowa, but they have
requested fuel for the trip Alford
suld he is negotiating with a
major oil company lo donate the
fucl.
“ It's really frustrating to huve
thc water, hut not In- able lo get
It to them ." said Alford.
Alford said be lias been sue
ccsful In securing several carge
trucks returning empty to tin
Midwest to take l&gt;ottled water.
He asks local residents to take
scaled, bottled water In one- and
2 lA-gullon bottles to any of the
following fire stations:
• Seminole County Station 35.
201 W. Countv Home Road.

Sanford:
• County Station 41. 3355 E.
Stale Road 46. Midway;
• County Station 42. 320 W.
SR 46. Geneva:
• C oun ty Station 13. 1240
Stale Road 436. Forest City:
• County Station 22. 7122
U S . Highway 17-92. Fern Park:
• Winter Springs Fire Station
1 • 102 N. Moss Road: and
• W inter Springs Fire Station
2 •850 Northern Way.
T o oiler vehicles or other aid.
c a ll i be S u n f o r d -S e m in o le
Jaycccs at 1-800-949-5773 or
the Florida Jaycce Relief Elfort
at 1800 6211181.

"I |usi don't want to see any
more r ilv employees put out Af a
Job." said Commissioner lain
Iiowcll. I'll go along with the first
proposal.”
MrCluuuhun suit! be was In
cllned to go along with the same
decision.
"W h a t I am looking for."
Sim m ons said. "Is which direc­
tion you wunl me to follow. So
unless there ate no objections.
I'll go uhrud and prepare u
formal proposal for the next
commission turning, based on
option number one."

Flood
Continued from Page 1A
agreed to donate I
million gallons of water lo the
relief effort. Alford works for the
city's Water and Sewer Depart­
ment.
The 250.000 to 300.000 restdents of Des Moines have hern
without tap water since this
weekend when risin g
flood w aters Inundated their
city's water treatment facility.
Jaycccs throughout the nation
have formed u network to uld
flood victims.
Alford said he has received
commitments from several local
trucking companies lo take the

OEOROE CLOYDE ARR1SON

grandchildren und three great­
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w if e .
George Cloydc Arrlson. 79. grandchildren
Golden: daughters. Georglu Mac
1700 Monroe Avc., Maitland,
Stephen R. Balduuff Funeral S u tto n . A ltam on te S p rin g s .
died Saturday. Ju ly 10. at Flor­ Home. Deltona, tn charge of Mary Francis Anderson. Newton.
ida Hospital. Orlundo. Mr. Ar- arrangements.
Ga.: son. Sylvester. Tum pa: sis­
rtson was a cabinet maker. Horn JACQUELYN "J A C Q U E " B. t e r s . R o s a Lee C o r e m a n .
March 27. 1914. In Vanderbilt. GUN8T
B a ln b r ld g c . G a .. C a th e rin e
Pa., he moved to Central Florida
Jacquelyn "Ju c q u c " B. Gunst. Elliott. Largo: 13 grandchildren
In 1946. He was a Navy veteran 67. Rosewood T ra il. Delaind. and nine great-grandchildren.
of World War II.
M arvin C. Zander* Funeral
died Monday. J u ly 12. at her
Survivors Include daughter. residence. Mrs. Gunst was a Hom e. Apopka, in charge of
Beryl Taylor. Carson City. Ncv.: homemaker. Bom May 15. 1926 arrangements.
brother. William. Curllsvllle. Pa.: In Beaver Fulls. Pa., she moved
sister. Marie Dtxon. Curllsvllle.
lo Central Florida In I9H5. She
SHARON KAY W ILLIAM S
Gaines Carey Hand Funeral was a member of First Pre­
Sharon Kay Williams. 46. Iris
Home. Longwood. In charge of s b y te ria n C h u r c h . D e L u n d .
Road. Casselberry, died Sunday.
arrangements.
Kappa Alphu Theta Sorority at
J u ly 11 at her residence. Ms.
University of Pittsburgh. Roots
W illiam s was a licensed practical
J1NN1E B. BROWN
nurse. Born Nov. 8. 1946. In
Jln n lc B. Brown. 77. 2191 and Branches. DeLund Chapter
Petroleum. W.Va.. she moved to
G r a m b y S t ., S a n fo rd , died and D e L u n d C o u n tr y C lu b .
Central Florldu in 1972. She was
Tuesday. J u ly 13.-at HUlhaven W om en's 18 Holers.
Su rvivors include husband.
Healthcare Center, Sanford. Mrs.
Protestant.
Brown was a homemaker. Born Cy#4l “ C y " . DeLund: son. Robert
S u rv iv o rs Inrlud e parents.
Sept. 15. 1915 In Georgia, she C. Charlotte. N .C .: daughter.
Robert W. and Wilma Davis.
moved to Central Florida In Patricia G. McKenna. Cam p Hill.
Petroleum: sons. Jam es David.
Pa.: sister. Patricia J . Barrett,
1980. She was Baptist.
Jeffery Alan. Ixtlli of CusselS u rv iv o rs include brother. D e L u n d : fa th e r. D e lb ert L.
iK-rry: sisters. Barbara Htlkcy.
Bowers. Tam arac; four grand­
Jo h n Holme, Jacksonville.
E lle n b o r o . W .V a .. P a m e la
Fredrick. Ik-lpre. Ohio.
W lls o n -E lc h c lb c rg e r M on- children.
Stephen R. Bulduufi Funeral
tuary. Inc., Sanford. In charge of
B a ld w in -F a irc h ild F u n e ra l
Home. Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.
Home. W inter Garden. In eburge
arrangements.
ofuirangcm cnls.
LENA MCQUAGE BROWN
Lena Mcquage Brow n, 89.
BETTY A. MASON
LEONA DUMMITT WOODS
1520 S. Grant St., Longwood.
Betty A. Mason. 63. Slate Road
Leona Dum nillt Woods. 64.
died T u e s d a y . J u ly 13. at
46 West. Sanford, died Tuesday. Huber Heights. Ohio, died S u n ­
Lonwood Healthcare Center.
J u ly 13. at Chrcthu Tru ll. Winter day. J u ly 11. Mrs. Woods was a
Mrs. B row n was a licensed
S p rin gs. Mrs. Mason was a former resident of Geneva und
prallcal nurse. Bom Feb. 25.
registered nurse. Bom J u ly 17. Chuluota.
1904. In North Carolina, she
1929. In Cypress III., she moved
survivors Include sons. Steve.
moved to Central Florida In
to Central Florida in 1992. She Dick. Mike, all of Dayton. Ohio.
1967. She was Mcdodtst.
was a member of New Life Jeff. Doug. both of Mogadore.
Survivors Include daughter.
Fellowship Baptist Church.
Ohio. Kelly. Logan. Ohio: daugh­
Sarah B. Moran. Longwood: sis­
Survivors Include husband. ters. Linda. Orlando. Lisa Hays.
ter. Mildred, Alabama: three
Charles IL : sons. David Chris.
Rav. Ohio; sisters. Myrtba Fish­
grandchildren and two great­ Gregory Keith, both of Paducah.
er. Columbus. Ohio. Marge. O r­
grandchildren.
K&gt;\: daughter. A n n Barclay.
lando: 14 grandchildren.
Gaines Carey Hand Garden
W in te r S p rin g s : six g ra n d ­
Kncchtly-Potts Funeral Home.
Chapel Funeral Home. Long­ children.
Russcllvlle.
Ohio. In charge of
wood. In charge of arrange­
Bald w in -F a ir c h ild Fu n e ra l
arrangements.
ments.
Home. Golden rod. In charge of
RANDALL ETLINO
arrangements.
Randall Etllng. 81. Bailey A v ­
FUNERAL
enue. Deltona, died Monday.
ELOIE WASHINGTON
J u ly 12. at hts residence. Mr.
E lg lr W a sh in g to n . 94. 87
Etllng was a weather-seal for 30
Spring St.. Altamonte Springs, WASHINGTON. EI.GIE
years and plant manager for
died Monday. J u ly 12. at his
Funeral »*r*lc*t to* Mr Eigw W**hmgton.
Georgia-Pacific In Ottowa. Ohio.
residence. Mr. Washington was a *4. ot 17 Spring St . Aitamont* Spnr-gt. who
d.ed Monday J--'y II. will b* h«id 1 p m
Born Oct. 21. 1911 In Barberton.
retired farmer. Born Jan. 28. Saturday at Faith Tempi* Mittionary Baptut
Ohio, he moved to Central Flor­
1899. In Colquitt. Gu.. he moved Church with th* R*y MoHIt oltuiaing
ida In 1973. He was head Elder
to Central Florida in 1974. lie Interment will b* In F*rn Park C*m«t*ry
Em etrlus and head usher of was a member and deacon of Friend* may call at fh* church Saturday
Irom noonuntil fun*r*l lime
Deltona Alliance Church.
Under th* direction of Marvin C lander*
Faith Tem ple Missionary Baplisi
Survivors Include wife. Rob­
Fon«ral Mom*. Apopka th*p*op&gt;**choice
Church.
erta. Deltona; son. Ted. Winter
Springs; brother. Lavcrnc. Canal
Fulton. Ohio; sister. Juanita
Baxter, Ft. Wayne. Ind.: three

The Difference Is
We are locally
ow ned and operated
Independent funeral
home. Serving
Seminole County
Since 1975
r.

F U N E R A L H O M E S &amp; CEM ETERY
(O r la n d o M e m o ria l O a r d e n s )

lO l

Y e a rs o f C a r in g S e r v ic e

P r ic e s Q u o t e d B y P h o n e

767-5101
G lG ISODot Track Rd.
fT h
Longwood

GARDEN CHAPEL
3 3 5 S R 4 3 4 , LON C1W O O D
A Member of Carey Hand Funeral Home Tradition - Est. 1890

�OA - Santoed Herald. Santord. Florida - Wednesday. July 14. 1993

Des Moines’ dilemma: Too
much w ater—and not enough

From parlors to porches,
w icker part of America
Dy N IT A L E L Y V E L D

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON -

Ah. it"

comforting creak of a porch
wicker chair on a warm , hrerzy
evening. It once was as much a
part of America's summertime
as baseball amt lemonade.
Rut these days, watching I he
world go by from the veranda Is
a riving ari. with the household
wicker relegated to bathroom
wastebaskets and clothes ham ­
pers
That needn't I k -, as demon­
strated by an exhibit at the
Smithsonian Institution's Rruwick Gallery that traces the
history of the woven furniture
and highlights its glory days,
when It suited the parlor as well
as the patio
Wicker furniture dates back s&lt;&gt;
tar that no one quite knows who
I n v e n t e d It
T h e ancient
Sum m ons bad It So did the
Unmans
llul the furniture made out of
willow, reed and rattan only
found Its lull expression In
America, where It lient n&gt; every
change In American tastes
' liasicallv each lime there was

a major change in the middleclass American home. American
wicker changed with It." said
the exhibit's curator, Jeremy
Adamson.
"It liecames part and parcel of
lhe development of taste In
America." fie said.
Portuguese m erchants llrst
brought wicker from the Far
Hast in the Kith century. Hy the
17th century it was ail the rage,
and the llrst Am erican colonists
Imported It.
Hut It wasn't actually made In
America until the mid Kith cen­
tury. when huge clipper ships
Iregan bringing track rattan from
China Soon alter, massive facto­
ries were chu rning out wicker
furniture
At llrst. wicker was touted as
good, warm-weather ware, and
u as destined lor use In summer
homes
Hy the late IHOOs. Victorian
taste worshipped the ornate —
and American wicker manufac­
turers kept up w ith It. producing
hrrniiure lull ol Intricate curli­
cues. twists and ornamental
designs
There were wicker side tables,
wicker reception chairs and ele­
gant wicker set lees There were
also wicker chairs and tables

Aspin: Gays
in m ilitary
should’t tell

alone will cost $75 million
President Clinton was to get a look at the
devastation during a visit to the city today. lie
has declared the entire state a disaster area
Iowa's flood losses are expected to lop SI
billion.
M any residents here have tried to be
creative, collecting rainwater to use fui toil. i
flushing, relying on paper plates to avoid
having to wash dishes, grilling Instead of
cooking, traveling to nearby towns for show-

By S H A R O N C O H E N

Associated Pross Wriler_______________________
moons woven Into them. Frames
could Ik- made of wicker. So
could fireplace screens. Wicker
b a b y c a rria g e s c a u g h t on
quickly.
Wicker of the casual porch
variety came Into vogue later In
the century, as Americans re­
belled against the fancy stuff and
dem anded plainer, smoother
lines Simple wicker chairs and
recllners graced the porches ol
homes, hotels and spas.
Wicker also kepi pace with
technology — and was used In
the early '20th century to make
lamp stands and even phono­
graph cases.
Hut the Great Depression vlr
tuolly pul an end to the busi­
ness. and today wicker Is mainly
mass-produced In Asia It's often
thickly layered in paint at the
factory.
Adamson hopes the cxhlhll
will change that trend
"I want It to bung back dignity
to wicker, to rescue tt Irom all
that white paint." he said "It's a
part ol American history."
"A m e ric a n W icker; Woven
Furniture From 1850 to 1930”
w ill remain at the Rrnw lok
Gallery through Aug. I

D E S MOINES. Iowa — Donna Uoctcl-Haker Is
the answer lady, trying to calm a city flooded
with water and worries.
Sandbag volunteers? She'll tell you where in
go. Need a shower? She has a list of spots No
water to drink? She'll set up the delivery
In her drier days. Mrs. Boetcl-Bakcr Is the
city clerk. Th is Week, she's a one-woman
rescue squad working out of u high school
cafeteria, zipping through thousands of calls at
a hot line set up to help tills city rope with Its
crisis.
" W e have virtu a lly shut d o w n ." Mrs.
H orlrl-tiakcr sold Tuesday during one of her
15-hour shills. 'Every major business Is
closed. There's no transit. Th e re 's one road
linking the north and south of the c ity."
Des Moines has a dllemmn: There's too
much water where It shouldn't Ih - and none
where It needs to lx- — faucets and toilets.
To d a y, the capital city entered Its fourth day
of water woes. The trouble began Sunday
when the Raccoon River surged .over the
15-foot levees and sandbag dikes protecting
the l)cs Moines Water Works, contaminating
filters and pumps.
About 250.000 people have em pty taps and
.ire dc|&gt;cnding on lens of thousands of gallons
of bottled water available at about 60 distribu­
tion sites.
Olficlals estimate Des Moines' flooding will
cost $253 million business and home lovses
account lor more than hull lii.il Levee repairs

era.

G ov. Te rry Hrnnstad Joined the pilgrimage ol
shower seekers, heading to Ills brother-in-law s
house In Alleman. |usl north of the city, and
waited In line for Ills allotment ol bottled
water.
Ills spokesman. Richard Vohs, simply
stepped outside during Tuesday's rains and lei
nature Ih* Ills shower. "W e have a very
secluded back yard." he explained
Darlene Lewis, director ol t lie YW CA In
nearby Altoona, has welcomed more than
2.200 people to her building lor Ir* «• showers
since Sunday. "It's something you don't think
about until you lose It." she said
Hotels canceled weddings, reunions ami
hundreds ol IxHiklngs The em pty Savery Hotel
m oved some $50,000 in line wines from the
basement to the third floor

" A t moments you feel like « rylng At
moments you feel like laughing You're at a
point where you're almost delirious,
said
Carole Chambers the Savory'* marketing
director.

TH U R SD AY, F R ID A Y A N D

OyOONNACASSATA

A s s o c ia te d P re s s W rite r
W A S H IN G T O N
Defense
Secretary Les Aspin Is recoin
mending allowing homosexuals
lo serve In the mlhl.it v as long as
they don’t declare their sexual
orientation, sources in i In gay
&lt;ornmunlty sav
Aspin told W hile House olllclals Tuesday that tills is as
lar as the Joint d u e ls will go
on the matter, said the sources,
who s|&gt;okc on condition ol ano­
nymity
The sources said they received
their Information Irom senior
Defense Department olficlals
President Clinton will have the
final sav on the proposal and the
White H ouse could have an
announcement by week's end
The president laces possible
siroilg congressional up|M&gt;s!ttou
to any policy change that lacks
the backing of the military
A s p in 's r e c o m m e n d a t i o n
would allow gay men and les
luatis to serve as long as they
keep their sexual orientation
private, a version ol the "don't
ask. don't tell" policy pul fortli
by Sen Sum Nunn. D-Ga . the
Senate Armed Services C o m ­
mittee chairman and a leading
projmneut ol the 50-year ban on
gays serving o|»cnly In the m ili­
tary.
Homosexuals would be liarrcd
from making public or private
declarations ol their orientation,
the sources said The pollcy
would allow some latitude tor
gay service men anti women to
confide inclose friends
The Joint Chiefs ol Stall voted
I wo weeks ago lor a jMilicy that
retains the current statement
that “ homosexuality is incompatlhlc with m ilitary service."
Aspln's policy would include a
variation that describes
homosexual conduct as Incom­
patible with m ilitary service but
recognizes that gay people have
served honorably and will do so
in the future.
Those who make a public
declaration ol tltelr homosex­
uality would Ih - forced out of the
service, and m i l i t a r y i n ­
vestigators would have tile au­
thority l » pursue allegations
about homosexual acts because
there would be no proposed
change lo the Uniform Code of
M ilitary Ju s tice that makes
sodomy unlawful, the sources
suld.
Reps. Harney Frank and Gerry
Studds. D-Mass.. the two ac­
knowledged hom osexuals In
Congress, were briefed at the
White House on Tuesday on
Aspln's recommendation.
Defense Department olficlals
refused to descrllx- Aspln's rec­
om m endation. " I t 's a presi­
dential decision." Ca|»t. Michael
Doubleday. a department
spokesman, told a Pentagon
news briefing Tuesday.
Clinton said during his prcsldcnttal campaign he would lilt
the ban T h e m ilita ry and
members ol Congress resisted in
Juu uury when the president
attempted to move forward on
an executive order implement­
ing the change.
Instead. Clinton was forced lo
(kick down and adopt a com ­
promise in which recruits were
no longer questioned alxiul their
sexual orientation and formal
discharges for homosexuality
were tem p o rarily suspended
|M-ndtng the policy review

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Davey Allison succumbs to injuries
By J A Y R E E V E S
Associated P te s s Wnlet

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See A llis o n . Puge 2 It

�SB * Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Wednesday. Ju ly 14, 1993

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
NtnMrece-me.Aite.fi

DOQS
Tuesday "*eM
Firttrac* — U M M : 11.44
I Smlity Pftlem
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4 40
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170
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m

T m i ) tor m

ALL BOXBB

BASEBALL STANDINQS
Southern Leeyue
Second (foil
Eettern Drvltton
W L Pel. CB
Knoavllle (Blue Jaysl
10
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f &gt;0 47* I
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411 1
Jecktenvllle (Merinert) 7 11 Mf I ' l

144 441 444 - )
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American
ttl 41) Ita - 4
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American 7 JU — Bond* 1. DHolllnt. White.
Puckett. Rodriguet, Steinbech HR — Shel
field. R Alomar. Puckett SB — White SF Larkin
IP
H R ER BB SO
National
I
Mul hotland
I 1 0

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Burketl L
Avery
Smoltr

I

1 1 1 0
1
1) 4 1 1 0 I
1 1 0
11
1 ) 0 0 0 1 0

Ft. M ellon—
Continued from Page ID
Whllr Hopkins has not clinchcd the idle Just yet. It Is not far
olf, as II Improved to 9-0 on the
season. I’apa Jo e 's and Mycr’s
arc lied for second at 7-2. while
lkcr:30 Is 5-4. Slzannc's is 1-7.
Vicky's 1-8 and Maynard 0-7.
Contributing to a 24 hit Myer's
attack were E ste lle Norvell
(double, three singles, three
runs, four RBI). Hobln Baggett
Ifour singles, three runs, three
RBI). Delons Gallo (double, two
singles, three runs. RBI). Sandy
Balough Ithree singles, five RBI)
and Debbie Riley (three singles,
run).
Also contributing were Sheri

Peterson (trip le , double, two
runs, three R B I). Debbie Ziegler
(double, single, two runs, two
RBI). Lira C la rk (two slngtrs.
three runs) and Linda Kenny
(single, run).
Doing the hitting for Maynard
were M ic h e lle L y n n (three
singles. RBI). Christie Caldwell
(two singles, ru n . RBI). Valarle
Azar |two singles, runl. Patty
Gchhardt (double, run. RBI).
Dondt O'Neal (single, (wo RBI).
Laura Stapleton (single. RBI).
Karen Loplccolo and Sharon
Stephens (one single and one
run each) and Denise Wright
(run).
Doing the damage for Bcrr:30
were Lori To w n s (three singles.

two runs. RBI). Becky Simpson
(three singles, two RBI). Carol
Dick (two single's, two runs,
three RBI). Lannlc Mnnhnllrn
(two singles, two runs). Connie
Thom as and Belinda Anderson
(two singles and one run each).
Lcann T ill chon (double, two
runs). Paula Songer (run. RBI)
and Joany Lulscr (RBI).
P ro v id in g the offense for
Suzanne's were Mary bet h Moore
a n d J e n n if e r F o rsto n ( two
singles, one run and onr RBI
each). Lori Poe (two singles,
run ).' Sue Sojka It wo singles.
R B I). Sue Mangham (double,
run). Sandy Reid (double. RBI).
Renee Carter (single, two runs).
Faye Kennedy (s)ngle. two RBI)

I
1 1 1 0
1
B*cfc
1 1 0 0 0 1
Merver
AiMrtcen
1
1 1 1 1 1
Lenotton
BJohnton
1
0 0 0 0 1
1
0 0 0 0 0
McDowell W
1
1 I I 0 I
Key
I
0 0 0 0 1
Montgomery
Aguilera
I
1 0 0 0 1
I
0 0 0 0 1
DWerd
H B P -b y Burkett (Fielder) WP - SmoUl
1.

Um pire! — Home. McKean: Flro l,
Davidson; Second. Reilly. Third. Darling.
Ltd. Scott. R&gt;ghl, M Hlruhbeck
T — 1 at A — 44 147

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VOLLEYBALL
4 » a m - SUN. Pro Beech Coer* Light
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II Mp m. - SC. U S Olympic Show cat*
Radio
BASEBALL
t 11 pm - WTLN AM (ISJOI. Southern
League. Chattanooga Lookouts at Orlando
Cutn
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10 p m - WWN7 AM 17401. Ftorida Sportt
E (Chang*
10 pm
WGTO AM 11401. Sportt Byline
USA

and Carol Pcndarvls and Jo
Carol Rutherford (one single
each).
Pacing the Hopkins attack
were Kelly Barthalow (double.
Iwci singles, three runs, two
RBI). Clndv Perry (double, two
singles, run. two RBI). Vickie
Miller (double, two singles, run.
m ill. To ri g u irk (triple, single,
two runs). Norn Llssy (double,
single, run. RBI). Jennifer In ­
gram (double, single, runl and
Katie Barbour Itwo singles, run).
Also contributing were Renee
Lanza (single, run. two RBI).
Terri Hlrt (single. RBI). Jam ie
Hart IRBI) and Gena linker (run).
Jodi Johnson hud the lone lilt,
a single, for Vteky's.

W hile. But
NL manager Bobby Cox. who brought five of
his Braves, saw his players out-performed
by Toronto's. Just like In last year's World
Scries. Jo h n S m o ltz threw a pair of
run-scoring wild pitches and David Justice
and Jeff Blauscr made errors that set up
runs.
Rut did (lie A L 'n arvrnf/t win In IO games
make Amu tn Baltimore happy?
Not at all. Instead. Orioles rooters were so
fed up with seeing Blue Jays that they spent
the whole ninth Inning booing, upset that
Gaston allowed Toronto's Duane W ard close
It.
"W c want Mike! Wc want M ike!" they
chanted, a cry for Orioles pitcher Mike
Mussina, who could be seen w arm ing up In
the two-tiered bullpens In left-renter field.
Gaston Ignored tt.
"M y guys have done the Job from day one.
and they showed they could do it." he said.
" I guess I should Just gel out of town.
They're Oriole fans." he said.
It's a good thing Gaston won't be back tn
Baltimore until the final weekend of the
season.
Gary Sheffield homered for the Nationals
and Barry Bonds hit a pair or doubles, but
that could not stop the AL from extending
its longest w inning streak In the series. The
NL. however, still leads 37-26-1.
"W e came out there strong. Everybody
felt confident this lim e." Bonds said. "Hut
Ihclr guys arc powerhouses over there, and
they're (caring us u p ."
A crowd of 48.147. the largest at Camden

A llison----------Continued from Page IB
uddlctlon to D a v c y ." said H.A.
"H u m p y" Wheeler, president of
Charlotte Motor Speedway In
North Carollnu and a friend of
Ihc Allison family.
At the Bpccdwuy on Tuesday.
Investigators from the National
Transportation Safety Uourd
probed the c ra s h site. Th e
bluc-and-white helicopter was
being held upright by u backhoe.
Its tall section broken off.
Rolf Sasser, an N T S B In*
vrsiIgator. declined to speculate
on the cause but suld there was
no sign of mechanical failure.
based on Interviews with 10
people who witnessed all or part
of the crash. Sasser suld that
Allison attempted to land In u
small, frncc-enclosed (lurking lot
directly behind the Infield media
center. T h r helicopter came
within a foot of touching down
when It suddenly shot hack up
25 feet off the ground, begun
oscillating and then spinning
before p l u m m e t i n g to the
ground on its left side, where
Allison was sitting. Sasser said
there was no Indication the
chopper hit the fence before It
crashed.
Friends In Allison's hometown
of Mueytown. about 15 miles
wrest of BlrniIngham, look news
of his death hard.
Allison was the last member of
Ills Immediate family still behind
the wheel. His younger brother
Clifford dlrd In a racing crash 11
months ago and his father's

Chase
Continued from Page IB
K e rry Myers llw o
singles, two ru n s, RBI) and
Manny Silvia and Paul Ingamclls
Itwo singles and two runs each).
Also contributing were Roger
Klnnaird (double), John Boggs
(single, run. RDI). Rlcltlc M c­
Cormick (single, two RBI) and
Mark IteKiy (single).
Doing the damage for Ftorida
Manor were Blake Murray (three
singles, Iwo runs. RBI). Krnt
Brubaker (three singles, two
RBI). Th n Buck and Brett Molle
(three- singles and two runs each)
and Greg McCleland (double,
single, run. two RBI).
Also lilt ling were, Spencer
Baggelt and Noy Rivers Itwo
singles, one run and one RBI
each). Jim Helm er (two singles.
RBI). Vic DIBartolo (single, run).
Jam ie Wallace (two runs. RBI)
and Jerry DIBartolo (RBII.
Paring the Monroe Harbour
attnrk were Robert Stevens (two
doubles, run. two RBI). Mike
Merthlr (two singles, runl, Sam
Raines (single, two runs, two
RBI). Calvin Bryant (single, run.
RBI). Dale Peters (single, three
R B I). Kerry W ig g in s (single.

Yards and the IOOth sellout since the
stadium opened last year, watched the park
play a perfect host for the game. And. It gol
to show off several of Its quirky, old llmey
features.
Sheffield's two-run homer In the first
Inning off Mark Langston landed barely
Inside the oddly angled left-field wall. Just
over the Crown gasoline sign. Puckett's
homer over the CCntcr-hcld fence settled into
(h r m iddle of u small sod farm, shy of the
Ivy-covered badftdrop. Plus, several balls
bounced off the 25-foot high scoreboard In
right.
B ut. with the smoke from Hoog Powell's
barbecue stund beginning to billow up from
Eutaw Street In right. In front of the B&amp;O
warehouse, the most unusual hit In rerent
A ll-Star play eutnc tn the fifth Inning.
T h e score was tied ut 2 when Rodriguez
led olf against Jolm Burkett with a line drive
to left field. Bonds ran back, and could only
watch os Hie hall stuck hi a crack of the
padded fence for a ground-rule double.
After that, the A L cracked open the game.
A lo m a r advanced the runner with u
groundout to the right side, and Albert Belle
singled home the go-ahead run. Belle
continued to second when Justice fumbled
the ball In right, and Ken Griffey Jr. lilt an
RBI single, making him 6-lor-11 In All-Star
play.
W ith two outs. Puckett, who hit u solo
hom er In the second off Te rry Mulholland
and was the game's M VP. udded an RBI
double that finished Burkett and made It
52.
" A lot of people say I should not be here
because my numbers arc dow n." said

Puckett, batting .298 wtlh 11 home runs
and 50 RBls at the break for Minnesota. "1
went out and played hard. The numl&gt;crs
might not have Indicated the way things are
going."
In the sixth, after the N L scored against
Jim m y Key on a double by Bonds and a
saeriflec fly by Barry Larkin. the A L came
track with three more run*.
Ailantu's Steve Avery retired llir (lrsf two
bailers, but Blauscr made un error. W hile
hit an RBI double to end A very’s outing, and
Smoltz threw a pair of wild pitches, each
scoring u run.
Jack McDowell pitched one perfect Inning
for the win and Burkett took the loss. They
are tied for the major league lead with 13
wins.
Sheffield, the Itrsi player from a first-year
expansion team to be voted Kilo the starling
lineup, homered alter Bonds’ one-out double
In the first Inning. Sheflleld. from the
Florida Marlins, picked on an old favorite —
lie got his first major league lilt — also a
home run — on Sept. 9. 1988. for Milwaukee
ngulnst Langston.
Puckett homered with one out In the
second and Alomar led off the third with a
home run on Andy Bcnes* second pitch.
Te rry Strlnharh accounted lor the game's
other run with an RBI double In the A L
seventh.
Th e game was full of extra-base hits — an
All-Star game record-tying 10 — a sharp
contrast to the only other All-Star game held
In Baltimore. In 1958. the A L won 4-3 at
Memorial Stadium In Hie only All-Star game
without an extra-base lilt.

C o n tin u e d fro m Page IB
onahtp.
Doing the damage for Mohlltlr
Corporation were Perry Hetslcr
(four singles, tw o runs, three
Rill), Darrell Low ery (double,
single, two runs. Rill). Chris
(hooks (iwo singles, two runs,
two RBI) and Pete Hodnarlk (two
singles. run^lw oR H Il
Also likttng were. Mark Smith
and Keswick Lush ley (one single,
two nm * and two RBI each).
Paul Vlsnoskl and Scan Sumter
(one single and one run each).
Chris Walnut (ru n . two RBI).
T o n y Santa ( t wo runs) and
Angel Figueroa (run).
Doing Hie hitting for Signature
Homes were Robert Jones (two
s in g le s), A u b re y B illin g sle y
(single, run. IBM). Randy Pellrey
and J im Knowles (one single and
one run each) and Ralph Hove
and J im M urray (one single
each).
Contributing to a 15 lilt Gager
Pest Control offense were Donnie
McCoy (triple, single, two runs.

followed by funeral services at
10 a.in. Thursday.
Allison was N ASCAR 's rookie
of the year III 1987. and he had
19 victories on stock car racing's
biggest circuit. Including the
1992 Daytona 500. Allison won
S6.7 million — No. 10 on the
all-time earnings list.
Allison's name helped him
break into racing. But It was
talent that kept ills black Ford
Thunderblrds ahead of the pack
and made him a fan favorite.
"Great drivers ure good-fast.
Good drivers are average-fast.
D a ve y was good -fu st," said
Wheeler. "Genetics have a lot to
play with It. a lot to do with a
race driver."
Allison was pronounced dead
at Carraway Methodist Medical
Center In Birmingham at 7 u.m.
C U T . said hospital s|M&gt;kesittan
D a vid Sm lthrrnran. Relatives
asked (hat Ids organs lie offered
for donation “ so others may
live." said Sm It henna it.
A)Itson and racing veteran Red
Farm er were the only (tropicaboard the helicopter when II
c ra s h e d near the N A S C A R
garage at Talladega. Farmer,
who suffered broken ribs und a
broken collarbone, wus expected
to be hospllultzed several days.
F a rm rr told The Birmingham
News thr helicopter went out of
control and crashed as Allison
wits attempting to land. Th e two
had llowu to the track from
Birm ingham to watch driver Nell
Bonnet t's son lest a car.
F a rm e r snld he yelled tn

A llis o n from the cru m p le d
chopper: "D avcy. let's get out of
here, the motor's still running."
But lie said there was no re­
sponse.
"Davcy was hanging upside
down, hill I couldn't undo his
seat l&gt;elts because he'd fall cm
me. I knocked the glass out and
crawled out of the helicopter."
Farmer told the News.
A helicopter landing pad was
under construction at Allison's
home, where |Hillcc were sta­
tioned following Ills death to
keep away onlookers. Th e lawn
was freshly sodded.
Allison was born cm Feb. 25.
1961. He grew up watching Ills
father and uncle, Donnie Allison,
race cm the Winston Cup circuit.
Hobby Allison Is third cm the
Wliisioii Cup list wllli 84 career
victories, and uncle D o n n y
Allison won 10 races.
Hut Davey Allison quickly
established his own Identity
once he climbed in the driver's
seal, lie made Ills debut in 1085.
finishing 10th In Hie Talladega
500.
Allison finished ililrd In the
Winston Cup |m&gt;K)1s standings
Hie Iasi two years, and lie was
fflHi at the lime of his death. Ills
only victory this year came ut
Richmond.
Allison finished third In the
Sllek 50 300 on Sunday at
Loudon. N .ll. Allison was sched­
uled to race In the Die-Hard 500.
to be held at the Tulludegu
Supers|H-edway J u ly 25

two RBI), Jo h n Krentrr (triple,
single, run, RBI). Rich Hemuilngrr (double, single, two runs.
RBII and Scott Williams (two
singles, two runs, three M ill
Also contributing were Sonny
Eubanks (trip le , two ru n s).
Frank Turner (double, two runs,
two RBI). Phillip Sutherland
(single, two runs. RBII. Mark
Uollim (single, two runsl. Scott
Wade (single, run). Todd Motgan
(sing le, R B I). Stan Im m tcli
(single) and Ron Cardrll (run)
Providing the offense for Orkht
were Gary Nuss (double, two
singles, run. two RBI). Joel
Braswell and Glen Donahue (two
singles, one run and one RBI
e a c h ). J o h n P lacable (tw ii
singles, run) and Bruce Taylor
Itwo singles. RBI).
Also. Cesar Vcrgcra Ihome
run. run, three RBII, Ross Llsheit
(single, two runs, two RBII. J r l(
N'eadue (single, two RBI). E&lt;{
Diamond and Don Cuto (one
single and iwo runs each) and
Mnrk Wyrosdlck (run).

UP TO 22 MONTHS TO(PAT
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slock-rnr career was ended by a
crash.
" It ’s not going to be the same
without an Allison running In u
rare somewhere." said Charlotte
Hammonds, w ho works ut u
M ueytow n a u to p arts store
where the Allisons do business.
Throughout th is blue-collar
tow n, motorists burned their
headlights at m idday tn tribute.
"W e ll Miss Ydu Davcy - No.
2 8 " and "The W inn e r's Circle of
Pence Belongs to D avcy" were
among the signs displayed out­
side stores.
Gov. Jim Folsom directed (lags
to fly at half-staff. Elsewhere In
th r racing world, flags also were
lowered. Including those at the
New Hampshire International
S p e e d w a y , w h e r e Allison
finished third In the track's
inaugural Winston C u p race un
Sunday.
Track owner Bob Huhrc said
he saw Allison liclorr Sunday's
race and wished h im luck.
"H e was excited about coming
buck In August for our Grand
National rare." Butirc said.
In the world of racing. It was
the second off-track tragedy tills
year. Less than four months ago.
1992 Winston C u p champion
Alan Kulwlek! died In a small
plane crash nrnr Bristol. Tcnn.
Allison Is su rvive d by Ills
Tather and mother. J u d y Allison:
wife Liz: two children, ages 3
and I; and two sisters. A wake
w ill be held at 7 :3 0 p .m .
W ednesday at S t. A loyslu s
Catholic Church In Bessemer.

RBII. Satnmle Edwards and Mike
Edwards (onr single and one run
each), David Jones (single) and
David Graham (two runs).
Doing the hitting lor K m
Rumntel Chevrolet were Scott
Murphy (two singles. RBI). David
Goldstlek (home run, two runs.
RBI), Cary Keefer and Mark Aten
(one single and one nut each),
Darrell Ervin and Ted Starr (one
single each) and Keith Denton
(RBI).
Providing the offense for Class
Act were Carl Lee (two singles,
two runs. RBI), Bruce Stuart
(single, two runs. RBI). To lllr
Frank (single, run. two RBI). Jim
Adams (single, three Rl)l|. Nick
Mcrgo (single, two RBI). Tom
Grarcy (single, two runsl. Bill
Graccy and Nick Brady (one
single and one n m each) and
Gary Muse (run).
Hitting for Whclchcl ft Howard
were Chris Wargo (double, two
singles, run. RBI), Joe Dclucla
(triple, run. two RBI), Denny
Clayton (double. RIM). Anton
Grooms (run. two RBI) und Vince
1low.inl. Brian Howard, Rick
Eckstein and Rtek Bryant (one
single and one run each).

Pinehurst—

All-Stars---------------C o n tin u e d f r o m P a g e I B

Herald fftoio Oj Jim noMn

The outfield fence let's the Florida Manor center fielder know he's
run out of room on a home run blast by ABB Power's Joe Benton
Tuesday night at Chase Park ABB edged Florida Manor 13-12

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i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday. July 14, 1093 • 3H

Van Alstine wins marathon at SpeedWorld
■ y P A U L M A R tlQ L IA

Special to the Herald
O R LA N D O — Coca's Gene Van Alstine won the
m arathon, fcndcr-bcndcr M int-Stock feature
event Friday night at Orlando SpeedWorld.
T h e 15-lap event, which had seven caution
periods, took 40-mlnutes to go from green flug to
checkers. In contrast, most 15-lap events are
completed In about 10 minutes.
Van Alstine. who sturted on the pole, led every
circuit to notch his fifth victory of the season.
" T h is sure was u long, hot race." said the
•14-year-old Van Alstine. who has been racing for
21 years. "I've run 100-luppcrs that didn't take
this long. I'm sure glad all the wrecks were

behind me. It's fun to win. especially when you
tukc the car home In one piece."
Some pushing and shoving took place early In
the race, as Dave Dcblllus. substitute driving for
Osteen's Bobby Sears, scraped by Kelly Jnrrrtt
for the third spat going Into turn one. Tw o laps
later Jarrett relumed the favor by banging
Debllius coming out of turn two. bringing out a
caution.
Chasing Van Alstine to thr checkered (lag were
Dink Sulilvan. Richard Newton. Dave Lecklltner
and J .D . Duncan.
Wayne Anderson continued Ills outstanding
year as he dominated thr Late Model feature to
notch Ills 12th victory of the year.
Anderson, who led w lrc-to-w lrr, crossed the

finish line 12 car lengths In front of Jim m y Sills.
Trailing the Irnd duo were Duke Southard. Don
Frn n and J im GrolT.
liarbara Fierce edged Jim Robinson lo take the
win In the Sportsman main event.
Despite repeated challenges by Robinson. Rick
Johns and Hill Loomis. Pierce maintained her
position to score her fourth win of the year.
Rounding out the lop five behind Pierce and
R o b in son , w ere J o h n s . Lo o m is and G u y
McRoberts.
Kenny Heckle out-muscled Ilrucr Thompson to
take lop honors In the Modified feature race.
Joe Adams was third. Glen Carter, fourth, and
Kelly Jarrett. fifth.
Jacob Warren took a flag-to-flag victory In the

Limited Late Model Division.
Warren, who now has eight feature wins on the
season, took th r checkered flug ahead of John
Mlkalowskl. Michael Williams. ROb Lyon and
To m m y Peters.
Glen Castro captured th4 checkers In the 30-lap
Bomber Special. Completing the top five were
Mkke Hughes. W ally Scmrow. Geln Cordell and
Rick Schllnuner.
J im C«Kik scored Ills first every feature win In
the Run-AtHHit Division, ahead of Doug Samlson.
Teresa Lyon. Jody Flynn and Eugene Wilks.
Chris Hardin was victorious In the FourCylinder Bomber main. Finishing second through
fifth were Ray Short. Bill Lucas. Doug Johnson
and Sniper Napier.

M eredith w ins duel at N ew Sm yrna
By PAUL M A R ilO L I A

R ltU L T S

Special totho Herald____________
SAM SULA Apopka's Ed
M eredith outduelled u hard
charging Wayne Anderson In the
waning laps Saturday night, lo
capture the checkered flag In the
Late Model feature event at New
Sm yrna Speedway.
M eredith, abourd the Part
G e n e r u l / S ft S D r y w a l l
Oldsmoblle Cutlass, led the first
14 laps only to slip out of the
groove, allowing Anderson to
take thr point.
Wi t h two laps rem aining.
Meredith regulned the lead and
held off a lute race challenge by
Anderson to pick up his first
checkered flag of the season.
" I'm real pleased with the
performance of the car tonight,"
said the 35-year-old Meredith, an
18-year veteran of the stock car
wars. "I messed up real good
going though going Into turn
one. T h r track was a little bit
sl i ck, so I trie d to tip -to r
through! the turn and got a little
high, and Wayne (Anderson) got
by me. I went back lo m y old
line and got by him with two
laps to go."
" T h is Is the car that Scott
( B r a m l e t t ) d r i v e s . " added
Meredith, "lie felt we had a little
problem with It. so I tried to sort
It out for him. We reworkrd It
from front to back and I think
we've got It now. I set the car up
us If I was driving It and It seems
to work alright. Scott now will
have lo adjust to the car Instead

L « l« M*4tl - I Ed MaradUh.
Oldtmoblto CutlMi. Apopka, } Wayna
Andarton. Cocoa. 1 Crag Froammlng.
4 JoSn Kannady; J Brvca laarranca
Mad 11tad — I Jatt Andarton. I
Dava Savlckl; 1 Marc Klolay. OUaan.
4 Jlm Trtct. *. JlmCro*aJr.
SpaMusaa — I. Data Howard.
Chavrotat Camaro: &gt; Arl Chapman. )
Barbara Places; 4 Don Tracy. J
Jacry Smith
Umltsd Lata Madal - 1 Jacob
WarrsfU 2 Kalth Baiga, J Doug Pills;
4 Rotor t Lyon; S John Mlchaiowtkl
Mini I tack - I Dava Oabillut. 2
Jacry Symoni. ] Dink Sullivan; 4 Tad
Vulpiut; S J D Duncan
Sombar - I Bob Fllligar. 2 Wally
Samroar, 2. Gaorga Samrow. 4 Billy
Ballloarac. S bobby Sltvant
A dla n Ptrfarmancs Run Ab.ul
Clastic — I. Lyla Mau ngac. 2 Tim
Waliac; J Brad Cogtwall. 4 Mika
Ssnsrco; 5 Ai Thomat
Ga Kart — I Jacry Jonsi
Dam slltlsn Darby — l. Oaan
Clchowlct.

of us adjusting the cor to h im ."
Tra ilin g the lead duo to the
stripe were Greg Froemmlng.
J o h n K e n n e d y a n d B ru c e
Lawrence.
S u r v i v i n g four c a u t i o n
p eriods. Jeff Anderson o u t­
gunned Dave Savlckl to take the
victory In thr Modified feature.
Chasing Jeff Anderson and
Savlckl to victory lane were
Osteen's Marc Kinley. J im Trice
and J im Crowe J r.
Dale Howard claimed his N th
checkered flag of the season,
running from the pole position to
the checkered flag unheaded In
the Sportsman Division.
Rounding out the top five,
repsectlvely. were Art Chapman.
Barbara Pierce. Don Tra c y and

Je rry Smith.
W inning In the Limited Late
Model Division at New Smyrna
Speedway Is becoming a routine
for Jacob Warren.
W arren, piloting the Boyd
Engine Chevrolet Camaro. held
off a furious late-rare charge bv
Keith Baiga to record Ills IHth
victory of the season.
Doug Pilla was third, followed
by R ob ert L y o n and Jo h n
Mlchalowskl.
Dave Dcblllus. driving In relief
of regular shoe Bobby Scars
from Osteen, came from the
back of the park to score an
Impressive win In the Mini-Stock
feature event.
D e b l l i u s p i c k e d his wa y
through traffic to overtake early
race leader Ted Vulplus on lap
seven.
Holding off repeated attempts

by Vulplus and Je rry Symons to
lake the (mint. Dcblllus raced to
his first ever Mini-Stock win.
With a lust lap pass. Symons
and Dink Sullivan got around
Vulplus to finish second and
third. Vulplus held on to fourth
plncc ahead of J .D . Duncan.

After several

COMPLETE CAR CARE
A IR C O N D IT IO N IN G S E R V IC E

l a p s of

whc c l - t o - whe el e a rin g . Bob
F i l l lifer e d g e d past W a l l y
Scmrow to score Ills first ever
Bomber feature w in.
In low behind Fllllgcr were
Wally Scmrow. George Scmrow.
B i l l y B e lflo w e r a nd B obb y
Slevcns.
Lyle Mcsstnger was the winner
•il the A c t i o n P erform ance
R un-A bout Classic. Finishing
second through fifth behind
M esslngrr were T im Welter.
Brad Cogswell. Mike Sanarco
and AI Thomas.

✓

I

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In c lu c lm y n y a liH ii for l«*.tkn
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I BA LA N CE AN II |

ROTATE TIRES

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(4 0 7 )3 2 2 -7 4 8 0

2413 8. French Avt., (17-92) Sanford •HRS. M-P 7:30-6:30, 8 a t 8-4

m

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A U TO
P A R TS
YO U R H O M ETO W N A U T O P A R TS S TO R E !

E a rn h a rd t still
h o ld s b ig lead
A a a o c l a U d Prase_____________

D A Y T O N A B E A C H - Dale
Earnhardt lost nearly onet h i r d of h is le ad In the
N A S C A R Winston C up stock
car racing nutlonul standings
utter Sunday's Slick 50 300
race at Loudon. N.H.
Earnhardt, who entered the
race with a 2 5 1-point advan­
tage over second-place Dale
Ja rre tt. now leads by 171
(mints. 2427-2250.
Th a t lead after first 16 races
of the 30-event. 826.5 million
season Is still more than the
148-polnt difference between
first and 42nd place In u single
race. Rusty Wallace, who won
Sunday's race. Is 250 points
b eh in d E a rn h a rd t, trailing
with 2177.
"E v e ry week you do the best
you can. Most weeks we've
done pretty well. I guess we
had a few p ro b le m s this
week." suld Earnhardt, who
finished 26th at the 1.058-milc
New Hampshire International

Speedway.
"W e would have certainly
liked to have won the race."
said Dale Jarrett. who finished
fourth. "B ut we did In a way.
W e f i n i s h e d In fro n t of
Eurnhurdt and we picked up u
lot of points. There Is still a
long way to go this season."
Morgan Shepherd Is fourth
In the NA SCA R Winston C up
standings with 2112 points,
followed by Davey Allison.
2104: Kyle Petty. 2088: Rookie
of the Year points leader Jeff
Gordon. 2056: Mark Martin.
2048: Ken Schrader. 2026.
and Ernie Irvan, 2007.
Earnhardt also easily leads
the circuit In money-winnings
with 81.095.615. Irvan Is sec­
ond w ith 8693,125. w hile
Jairett Is third with 8688.310.
Th e N A SC A R Winston C up
circuit next moves to the
2.5-mllc Pocono |Pa.) Interna­
tional Raceway for Sunday's
Miller Genuine Draft 500. Pole
qualifying is scheduled Friday
afternoon.

Bridgestone

W71 n
f
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1 7 1 7 EXTENDED
vJ E j J C j w a r r a n t e e s

A Re-Balancing A Fist Rapa* A Routcn A Road Haiard A M4aagt Warranty
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SUNDAY,
JU LY 18. 19931

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Cards Welcome '
We Reserve The Right
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GAutoSuro 1993.

j
i

�4B - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday. July 14 1993

People
Cook of the Week

IN BRIEF

Olszewskis stay ‘busy and involved’ in and outside the home

‘Am erica’s Most Beautiful Baby’
The directors of the world's only nationally televised
children's pageant "Am erica’s Most Beautiful Baby” will
conduct an official search for "Florida's Most Beautiful Babies”
on Aug H at Wlnier Park Mall In Winter Park.
This program Is open to all children from newborn to five
years old only. The children selected to represent their
hometown will advance to the nationally televised finals which
are aired on USA Network, where they will have the chance to
win a SI 0.000 college scholarship, a new ear and thousands of
dollar in cash prl/e.
Carol Adlan, director of this piogium stales "Absolutely no
experience Is needed, we ure simply looking for cute, happy
babies with lots of personality. "Am erica's Most Beautiful
Babies" Is based on the same premise as the "Miss America"
pageant, except we focus our attention on the achievement of
children! This Is a childhood experience that can lead to a
successful career In the modeling or entertainment Industry for
these children. This is a beneficial program for those chlld'vn
who show an early Interest In modeling or enteralnmenl. It’s
an inexpensive way to test their potential, while at the same
lime, win some great prize, become n little celebrity In their
hometown, and represent their hometown at the televised
national finals in Myrtle Beach. S.C.
This program provides the opportunity for young children to
begin building finds for college. A S I 0.000 college scholarship
Is awarded t o one of "Am erica's Most Beautiful Baby"
contestants annually. A S I.000 college scholarship will be the
I light point Champion Award at Winter Park Mall on Aug. 8 .
|*o obtain further information on "Am erica's Most Beautiful
Baby" call Mrs. Adloti ul 1-800-654-69-19. or pick up an
application form at W inter Park Mall, T o be considered,
children must apply prior to August 8 .

Substance abuse discussed
SA FE. Substance Abuse Family Education, is conducting a
"Families In Crisis" outreach program. Interested organiza­
tions wanting to eontart the Life Savers Club of SAFE may call
Libby Kuharskc at 291-4357.

Aerobics offered
The City of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 to iO a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 6 :30 p.m.
Cost Is S3 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, board ccrtilled w ith over 10 years
experience.
Call 330-5697 fur more details.

Nar-Anon to meet
Nar-Anon meets every Wednesday at 8 p .m . at West Lake
Hospital. 589 West State Road 434. Longwood. Nar-Anon Is a
support group open to families and friends of addicts. Dally
living with an addict Is more turmoil than you can handle by
yourself. Join for support in coping with your addict: gain
serenity to make decisions and put your life back In focus. Call
260-1900 for more information.

Al-anon gathers
Ifyoii know, or live with an alcoholic, there Is help.
Al-anon is an anonymous, non-profit organization, open to
anyone who is a relative or friend of an alcoholic.
Serenity Won Al-anon meets each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursd a y. (Thursday non-smoking) evening at 8 p.m. Meetings
arc held in the back room of the Sahara Club, 2857 South
Sanford Avc., Sanford.
For additional meeting times and locations In the Central
Florida area, or for more Information, call 332-4122

Hollywood East clogging classes
Hollywood East Dancers conduct clogging classes even,’
Thursday, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.. at Mclodec Skating Rink. W .
25th Street near Airport Boulevard In Sanford. Cost ts S3 per
class, ages 5 and up. Parents free with paying child. For
Information, call Casey. 407-322-3593 or Dawn. 904-735-0270.

East-W est Klwanis Club meets Thursday
East-West Klwanis Club of Sanford meets every Thursday at
7 p.m.. at the Friendship &amp; Union Lodge building, corner of
Locust Avenue and Seventh Street. Visiting Klwanlans ure
welcome. For Information, call Robert Whittaker, president,
889-6042.

Omni Toastm asters gather
Th e O m ni Toastmasters Club will gather at 5:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the Old Lake Mary City Hall. 158 Country Club
Road. Lake Mary.
Cull Sain Ryan at 6 7 1-2656 for more Information.

Ellen Olszewski loves to be. as
she puts It. "b u s y and Involved."
and that seems to be exactly
how her life is going these days.
Her effervescent personality Is
almost “catchy" in a very warm
way.
Hulling originally from C o n ­
necticut, the Olszewskis' moved
south to Florida making Lake
Mary, their home (or the last 15
years. And what a warm, lovely
and yet very busy home It Is.
Ellen lias been married for. as
she puts it, "20 lovely years" to
her husband Ed. " A friend of
mine set me up with him on a
blind date." “ W e met at Dis­
neyland and the rest is marital
history," says Ellen.
*
Ed and E l l en have three
daughters. Th e girls, much like
their parents, also have very full
schedules, especially where their
e d u c a t i o n s a rc c o n c e rn e d .
Shelly. HI, ts currently attending
Rollins Ju n io r College. She Is
working towards a double major
In math and economics, with a
minor In English This by no
means Is a sm all task T h e
twins, Kristie and Kelly, are 15
years old and attend Lake Marv
High School. T h is summer they
have chosen to take some addi­
tional classes w hich will ease the
required credit load for their
graduation. Kristie and Kelly
also volunteer their time to the
Seminole County Humane Soci­
ety.
Ellen lias been employed for
the last four years with Saint
Marks' kindergarten in A lta ­
monte Springs as a teacher. She
Is a Girl Srout leader and has
been a member of the Garden
Club for right years
Ed has been employed with
Frultland Clearing. In Altamonte
Springs for 15 years He has a
side business doing bush hog
mowing. "He works seven days
u week at llnics.” says Ellen.
However, they still manage to
And family time together.
Plants and cooking arc two
hobbles tii.it Ellen and Ed really
enjoy doing together. Ed. built a
greenhouse for Ellen on Ihelr
two acres. Although violets are
Ellen's absolute passion, the
greenhouse is also home to their
hrrnthiuklng orchids. They grow
several different varieties of
plants, some more different than
the next. For Instance, as Ellen
states. "I have this black plant.
It's really weird and hard to
explain." she said. " I guess I'd
have to say that tt almost looks
'Hailoweetilc.* Hut. It's really
beautiful In its own w ay."
Cooking is another area Ellen
puts a lot of herself into. She

Poultry Is increasingly ImiKirlain In our diets as we atm at
healthier eating habits. It is low
in fat. mildly flavored, versatile
and quickly prepared.
Th e microwave oven is ideal
for preparing chicken tiiat is
simmered, baked, or sauteed. Ms
quick cooking w ill render II
tender and Juicy without drying
and toughening.
The mild flavor of chicken Is
Ideal for enhancing with a sauce
or glaze.
The microwave oven also does

6:30 1 7:00 | 7:30 1 0 00 | 8:30 | 9:00 1 9:30 | 10:00 | 10:30 1 11:00 | 11:30
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RENEE
K E ITH

enjoys preparing different and
new recipes ranging anywhere
front dips to desserts Marinated
Chicken Wings Is a recipe that
lias been handed down to Ellen
f r o m h e r 9 2 ■y e a r •o I d
mother-in-law. Her family enjoys
this different way of having
chicken, however, as Ellen says,
"the llrst time I cooked It. I
overcooked it. The meat, what
wasn' t b u rn t, was a little
ch e w y." Of course. I've im ­
proved greatly on ibis one."
“ My h u s b a n d ' s c o u s i n .
Margaret, gave me the recipe lor
Taco Dip." she said. "M's a sure
lilt when I make It for my New
Year's Eve parties. But then
again. It's really good anytime."
sfie concluded.
A N T IP A S T O S A L A D
2 cans sliced m ushroom s,
drained
2 cans artichoke hearts
2 cans carrots, cooked and
drained
cup oil i'-i olive and
vegetable oil)
44 cup vinegar
' « cup onion, minced
I tsp. Italian seasoning
1 tsp. salt
I tsp. sugar
3 cloves fresh garlic
tsp. black pepper
I cun black olives, drained
1can green olives, drained
Heat oil. vinegar, onions.
K a lia n seasoning, salt and
pepper, sugar and garlic on lop
n! stove. Bring to boll and (ben
pour Ingredients over vegeta­
bles. Refrigerate 24 hours.
MARINATED CHICKEN
WINGS
3 ibs. chicken wings
Mi cup soy sauce
2 tbs. sugar
Mi cup white wine
l tsp. ginger

Mix soy sauce, sugar, while
w in e and gi n ge r to g e th e r.
Marinate for 4 hours. Bake at
325° F. for I hour or until
brown.
TACO DIP
l can refried beans
I envelope luco mix
I can black olives, sliced
1 can green chill peppers
I medium onion, chopped
1 tomato, chopped

H*nk) Photoby Jim mood*

Ellen Olszewski searches for a creative dish for dinner.
I small container sour cream
1 c u p shredded Cheddur
cheese
Mix envelope of tuxo mix witli
can refried beans. Place in bot­
tom of bowl l.aver Hie rest of
Ingredients. Add sour cream and
sprinkle Cheddar cheese on lop
A U N T PICK Y- P I E' S
(CYNNIE'S) SALAD DRESSING
l small onion, chopped
1 cup mayonnaise
44 cup salad oil
2 Tbsp.su ga r
*« cup cutsup
2 Tbsp. vinegar
1 Tb s p . mustard
V» tsp. salt
*4 tsp. paprika
14 tsp celery seed
Big dash of pepper
I cup 14 oz.l blue cheese,
crumbled
Mix all Ingredients except blue
cheese in blender 2 minutes.
Then fold in blue cheese. Re­
frigerate,

SAUERKRAUT CASSEROLE
1/4-V4 ll&gt;. bacon, browned and
crumbled
1 large onion, chopped and
browned
4-6 pork chops, browned
4 potatoes, sliced
I 16 oz. can sauerkraut, undrained
Pepper lo taste.
In large casserole dish or
baking pan. layer pork chops in
a s i n g l e l a y er . N e x t , add
browned onion und crumbled
bacon. Next, add sauerkraut,
then sliced potatoes. Season
with pepper. If desired. Cover
casserole and bake 1 hour at
350° F. Remove cover 10-15
minutes before cooked in brown
on top. it desired.

(Reneo Keith is a Sanlord
Herald correspondent end Cook

of the Week columnist. Please
submit nominations tor the
weeklyfeaturelo321-0748.)

Quick and nutritious poultry dishes

WEDNESDAY’S PRIME TIME
o
o
o

C O O K OF
TH E W EEK

E55ij

'w - v r

For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, July 9

C

•m rft
1 mr

a good Job ol partially precook­
ing chicken before broiling or
barbecuing. By first starting it in
the microwave oven, you reduce
the g rillin g time and help
achieve a more moist barbecued
product to say nothing of the
time spent over the hot barbecue
grill. (No fun these hot duys.)
For turkey, microwave atxnit 5
minutes per ]&gt;ound. turning the
bird over once during cooking.
For chicken pieces, microwave
about 7 minutes per pound,
lx-fore transferring to the hot
grill. Cover the poultry with
waxed paper or a casserole cover
when microwaving.
This gluzc will enhance the
flavor of chicken and give a
nicely browned appearance. The
glaze can be used on pork roast
as well as the whole chicken or
chicken pieces.
POLYNESIAN GLAZED
CHICKEN
Vi orange, sliced
1 clove garlic, minced
3 lbs. f r y i n g c h i c k e n ,
quartered
lx isp. dried rosemary leaves
2 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. catsup
I Tbsp. honey
Place orange slices In bottom
of 12x8-lncb baking dish. Cut
garlic Into six pieces. Scatter
over orange slices. Sprinkle u n ­
derside of each chicken piece
with a little rosemary. Place
skin-side-up over oranges in
baking dish.
Combine soy sauce, cutsup
and honey; mix well. Brush
evenly on chicken using about Mi
of mixture. Cover with waxed
paper. Microwave on 100 per­
cent power 22-25 minutes or
until chicken Is done. Brush
with remaining sauce once dur­
ing cooking. Let stand covered
about 5 minutes before serving.
You can get this chicken dish
at a num ber of restaurants
around town or make your own.
ft takes about 20 minutes and
they arc good.
CHICKEN FAJITAS
1 clove garlic, minced
1 small onion, ihlnlv sliced

M ICROW AVE
MAOIC

MIDGE
M YCOFF

1 small red pepper, thinly
sliced
I Tb sp . olive oil
1 lb . sk in n e d boneless
chicken, cut Into strips
Vi Tb s p . cornstarch
1 Tb s p . lemon or lime Juice
*.* tsp. dried oregano leaves
l « tsp. paprika
H tsp. chill powder
14 tsp. salt
U tsp. Cayenne pepper, op­
tional
8 flour tortillas (H-Inch size)
1 tomato, chopped
I a v o r a d o . peeled and
chopped

Plain yogurt
Combine garlic, onion, pepper
and oil In 1-quart casserole.
Cover with lid. Microwave on
1 00 p e r c e n t p o w e r 3 - 3
m inutes or until Jus! about
tender. Add chicken strips, cor­
nstarch. lemon Juice, oregano,
paprika, chill powder, salt and
pepper: mtx l ightly to coal
evenly. Cover.
Microwave (100 percent) 6 G 6i
minutes or until chicken is done,
stirring twice. Set aside. Place
tortillas on micro-safe serving
plate. Cover with plastic wrap.
Microwave ( 100 percent) 45-60
Bcconds or until warm. Serve
w a r m c h i c k e n m i x t u r e In
lortlllas topped with tomato.
See Microwave. Page SB
MOVIELAND .......... 122 1216

©

NOPASSES
THE FIRM
INDECENT
PROPOSAL

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|3580 N. Hwy, 17 921

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�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday, July 14, 1993 - SB

Microwave

Wife may be helpless widow
DEAR ADBY: I want to say
sonu-tlmg about a letter you
recently had in your colum n. It
co n ce rn e d a w o ma n whose
husband refused to tell her
anythin}* about their finances.
He seemed to feel that as long as
she was well provided for and
had e v e r y t h i n g she c o u l d
(Mtsslhly want, there was no need
ior her to worry her head about
his Investments, and how they
stood financially.
I have a brother In Denver who
Is a CPA. lie retired some years
ago — very comfortably. I might
add. lie told us recently al&gt;out
two women who had become
very rich widows in this last
year. In both cases, he was
bewailing the fail that neither
woman had the slightest Idea of
her husband‘s finances — Ills
assets, what he owed. etc. Of
course, neither woman knew
how to manage money. Like
m any husbands, they told their
wives that they would always be
there to lixik after them.
I'll admit, there are a lot of
men who deliberately withhold
this Inform ation from their
wives. Some men have the
mistaken Idea I hat their wives
need to lie "protected." hilt who
Is going to protect them If their
husbands die before they do?
DOROTHY L.
DEAR DOROTHY: Go o d

ADVICE

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

question. Especially since most
women outlive their husbands.
My advice to married women:
Insist on know ing all there Is to
know u ImuiI where you stand
financially. T h e same goes for
married men concerning their
financial status.
DEAR ADBY: I think parents
who encourage their teen-aged
daughters (and some sons, loo)
to get a nose Job arc doing their
children a terrible disservice.
The message they are sending
i heir children Is wrong. They arc
clearly saying that the way God
made them Is not good enough
— a plastic surgeon should he
called In to Im prove on God s
work
Parents should put more em ­
phasis on character. A beautiful,
honest character Is what makes
a person beautiful — not the size
and shape of a person's nose.

Continued from page 4B

MANHATTAN MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: My mall Is

DEAR MARION 0. AND NO
REORETS: T h e Simla Monica.

overwhelmingly In favor of nose
Jobs. For a typical response, read
on:

Calif., m o the r who Inq u ire d
about plastic surgery for her
15-year-old daughter was c o n ­
cerned not about whether she
should have It done — but o n ly II
the girl was physically m ature
enough to achieve the Ix-st result
right now. T h e plastic surgeon's
derision should prevail.

DEAR ABBY: I worked lor a
plastic surgeon for over 20 years
(appointment secretary), and the
one comment I heard more than
any other following rhinoplasty
(the technical name for "nose
Job") was: " I'm sorry I didn't do
this years ago!"
MARION G..
RETIRED IN MALIBU. CALIF.
DEAR ABBY: Regarding the
mother who Is not sure her
15-year-old daught er should
have a nose Job: Our bcautllul
15-year-old becam e te rrib ly
s e l f* c on s c i ous about her
"longlsh" nose, so we promised
If she still fell that way at 17. we
would lake her to a plastic
surgeon.
Well, she had her nose done In
the summer before her senior
year In high school and It made
all the difference In her self
esteem and confidence.
Today she Is a straight-A
university student and a new
bride. She says her new nose
was the best gift her parents ever
gave her.
NO REGRETS IN CALIFORNIA

DEAR ABBY: My sou and his
wife were murrled three m onths
ago at a formal church wedding.
My husband's family Is ve ry
large. One of his brothers ( a
professional) and Ills wife have
five adult children who are all on
their own: none of them live at
home. Each one of them re ­
ceived Individual Invitations to
the wedding. The y all accepted,
and enjoyed themselves.
At the gift openi ng, m y
huslrand. and I noticed that the
whole family wenl together and
pitched In for one gift — a
two-sllrc toaster. Do you think
my son and his wife should write
six ihau-you notes?
DISAPPOINTED IN FLORIDA
DEAR DISAPPOINTED: One
thank-you note addressed to
your husb an d 's brother, his
wife, and their adull children
would be appropriate.

avocado, and a spoonful of
yogurt. About H lajltus.
Looking lor a classy chicken
dish? One that is light and
sum m er-like? Th e s e orangeglazed chicken breasts topped
with raspberries urc Ideal to
serve with steamed rice, a fresh
spinach salad and perhaps n
lemon mousse for dessert.
RASPBERRY CHICKEN
H skinned tameless chicken
breasts
% cup orange Juice
I Tbsp. cornstarch
I Tbsp. brown sugar
V« tsp. salt
H tsp. poultry seasoning
! « tsp. paprika
I tsp. grated orange
1-2 Tbsp dry sherry or apple
Juice
1 cup fresh raspberries
2 Tbsp. brown sugar
A r r a n g e c h i c k e n breast s

evenly In l2xH-lnch baking dish
Set aside. Measure orange Juice
Into 2-cup glass measure. Hitaid
In cornsta-' h and I Tbsp. brown
su g u r. Stir In salt, poul t ry
Bcusonlng. paprika and orange

peel.
M icrowave on 100 percent
power, uncovered. 2-2,/‘i minutes
or unt i l mi xt ur e bolls and
thickens, stirring once. Stir In
s h e rry . Brush m ix tu re over
chicken breasts, using all of
sauce. Cover with waxed paper
Microwave on 70 percent power
16-18 minutes or until chicken Is
done. Sprinkle raspberries over
chicken Sprinkle with 2 Tbsp.
brown sugar.
M icrowave on 10O percent
power, uncovered. 2 - 2 minutes
or until healed through If de­
sired Garnish with a few mini
springs.
Next
dishes.

week: more ch icke n

WE'RE THE #1 HOPE
FOR THE # 3 KILLER,
LUNG DISEASES.
A M E R IC A N ±

j

L U N G A S S O C IA T IO N *
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D ouble
M a n u fa ctu re r's
Coupons u p to
5 0 &lt; . Sec st or e
for detail s.

l i U

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L S

(I

&gt;x*xc««|

urkey Breast
Grade A
Frozen
4-7 Lbs.
Avg.

M r * .• • A M . I I FM
▼ H A Y * A W IR N
VIB IT OCtt U I U D irA J H M lN T
I Mm I H s i s . &gt; m O rU sA* D r. l i s ( » H

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Prices In this ad good
Wednesday. Juh
July 14 thru
Tuesdny, July
i l y i20. 1993.
Wc Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities.

PnotJ Py p»u* 0 B&amp;tvtrl Xv N«h* England Cuinjry Intttutt

Pasta Prlmavera Is a s a u c y dish lor pasta Ians.

Pasta Primavera:
Good for what ails
B y M A R IA L IS A C A L T A

According to Molly OW elll's
‘ ‘ New York C o o k b o o k "
(Workman Publishing. HI02I. It
was Sirin M.ici tout, owner of
Manhattan's renowned Le Clr
que restaurant, who llrst created
Past.i Prlmavera That was In
May 1974. and according to
O 'Neill, the restaurateur had
o ve rd o se d on ve n iso n and
lobster during a Canadian tast­
ing lour, and said he "had to cat
some pasta." lie set out to make
two sauces •• an Albedo since
and a simple hutlcrsaucc with
asp a rag us, zucc hini and
tomatoes. "At the Iasi minute,
hi- mixed the two together."
writes O'Neill, " n volla. a star
was iKirn."
Mr. Maccionl bad the dish on
Ills menu until It attracted 50
percent of Ids orders, and he
Ijccamc concerned, according to
O'Neill, that Le Cirque would
Ix-comc known as a "spaghetti
house." He retired the dish 15
years ago.
Ik-low Is the original rrclptih.it caused all the fuss, but first
a tasty variation devised by the
New England Culinary Institute
In Essex. Vi
LE C I R g U E ' S S P AG H E T TI
PRIMAVERA
1 hunch broccoli, trimmed and
cut into bite-sized (lords
2 small zucchlnls. quartered
lengthwise and cut Into I-Inch
lengths
-I asparagus spears labout 5
Inches long), peeled, trimmed
and cut Into thirds
1 1/2 cups green beans,
trimmed and cut Into I -inch
pieces
1 12 cup fresh or frozen |h - . i s
-I tablespoons olive oil
2

c u p s

t h in ly

s lic e d

mushrooms
I teaspoon finely chopped
fresh red or green chile, or u Ikiu I
1/2 teaspoon dried red pepper
(lakes
1 teaspoon finely chopped
garllc
I) cups seeded, diced ripe
tomatoes. Juice reserved
I /-I cup finely chopped fresh
(wrsley
ti fresh basil leaves, chopped
. I pound spaghetti or spaghet-

Cook broccoli, zucchini, as­
paragus and green beans in
txillmg sidled water until crisp
but tender, about -I minutes.
Adil peas and cook I minute
more. Drain and relrcsh vegeta­
bles by plunging tnunedlately
tuto a large Ixiwl of very cold
water. Drain and set aside In a
mixing bowl.
Ileal I tablespoon ol olive oil
lit a large, non-reactlve skillet
over medium heat. When hot.
add mushrooms and chile (or
dried red |&gt;cp|K-rl and saute for
alxiut 2 minutes. Add remaining
3 tablespoons ol olive oil. garlic
and tomatoes Unit not their
Juice) and cook for about -I
minutes, stirring gently so as not
to break up the tomatoes. Add
parsley and basil, stir and set
aside.
Conk spaghetti In a large pot of
Ixillmg sidled water until Just “ al
d c n ic "; the spaghetti should
retain Just a slight resilience In
the center. Drain.
Meanwhile, In a non-reactlve
(Mil large enough to hold lludralned spaghetti and all of tinvegctahlcs. melt butter over me­
diu m li&lt;*iil. A d d cream and
Parmesan and stir constantly
until heated through. When hot.
■educe heal and cook gently on
and oil ht-iit until smooth. Add
spaghetti and toss quickly to
blend. Add hall the vegetables
and pout In reserved Juice of the
tomatoes. Toss und stir over
very low heal until the mixture
Is heated through. 5 minutes
Season with salt and pepper.
Add remaining vegetables und
toss gently. If sauce scents loo
dry. add additional cream - but
don’t make It soupy. Adjust
seasonings. Add toasted pine
nuts, and give m ixture one llnal
loss. Dish out Into heated soup
or pasta bowls. Spoon some of
the mushroom-tomato mixture
over eac h serving. Serve Imme­
diately.
Yield: -I servings as main
course: or ti to H as an appetizer.
R e cip e front " N e w Yor k
Cookbook." by Molly O'Neill
(Workman Publishing. 1992).

mm

Cubed Steak

Tyson/Holly Farms Grade A
Jumbo P a c k
Chicken
Leg Q u arters

Q Q
O a/ ) k

Lb. Sliced FREE!

U8DA
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w w

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Avg.) Sliced FREEl
_ _ _
Beef Tenderloin

D . o o Lb.

2 Liter - Diet Coke,
Caffeine Free Diet Coke.
Sprite, Diet Sprite

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9 9

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Turkey Breast

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Gourmet

Finish First W ith These Extra Low Price W inners!
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Kellogg’s

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tln l

■I tablespoons butter
1/2 cu p heavy ( whi ppi ng)
cream, or more If needed
' 2 /3 c u p fre s h ly g r a t e d
Parmesan cheese
• salt und freshly ground black
pepper, to taste
2/3 cup toasted pine nuts

1 Roll • Print/
Microwave White

24 Oz.

Paper Towels
Regularly 694

Regularly $1.39

Regularly $2.56

Corn
Flakes

I

�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Wednesday. July 14, 1993

Legal Notices

7 1 - H t i p W a n te d

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE N O .itl IMS CAUL
TAX PROPERTY INVESTOR.
INC .
Plaintiff,

vt
SARAH S C IP IO JO S H U A
S C IP IO , E L M IR A S C IP IO
OINGLE. ANTHONY SCIPIO.
JO S H U A S C IP IO . J O Y C E
S C IP IO BROW N. S A R A H
SCIPIO. M ICHAEL SCIPIO
STEPHEN SCIPIO. ERNEST
ALLEN. KENNETH A LLEN .
WILLIE FREO ALL E N.
Z E L M A MAE A L L E N ,
BLAZER FINANCIAL SERV
ICES. INC . ALAN TULSIDAS
and the unknown ipouwi hairs,
devisees grantees, creditors or
other parlies claiming by.
through. under or egaintl any
known or unknown person*.
Orlrndanti
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO SARAH SCIPIO
Address Unknown
JOSHUA SCIPIO
Address Unknown
SARAH SCIPIO
Address Unknown
ANTHONY SCIPIO
Address Unknown
STEPHEN SCIPIO
Address Unknown
MICHAEL SCIPIO
Addroti Unknown
ALAN TULSIDAS
P O B o illTI
Maitland. FL 12751
And tha unknown tpouttt
halrt. devisees. grantaot. cradi
tort or othtr partial claiming
by. through, undtr or agalmt
any known or unknown persons
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that an
action to qutat tint hat baan
Iliad agalntl you and you art
required to larva a copy ol your
writ tan datanioi. if any. to It on
THOMAS R OLSEN. Attorney
for Plaintiff, whota addrttl ll
1511 Edgawatar Drlvo. Orlando.
Florida »*04, on or bafora July
M. If*) and III* tha original with
the Clark of thlt Court either
bafora tcrvlct on Plaintiff's
attorney or Immediately there
attar, otherwise a default will
b* entered against you tor the
relief demanded In tha Com
plaint.
The property proceeded
against it legally deter lbad at
Loti ) A 4. Black S. MEISCH’S
SUBDIVISION, according to the
plat tharaof at recorded in Plat
Book ). Pag* At. of the Public
Records el Seminole County,
Florid*
N O T I F I C A T I O N : In a c ­
cordance with the Americans
With Disabilities Act, ptnont
with disabilities needing a
special accommodation to partldpate In this proceeding
should contact ADA Coordinator
at Ml North Part Avenue. Suite
N. Sanford. Florida »T 7 I. t*i*
phona (tot) m U X . eat 4777.
not later than five 111 days prior
to the proceeding. It hearing
impaired. I TOD) I ICO H I ITT 1.
or Voice (V) I M O W 1770. via
Florida Relay Service.
WITNESS my hand and the
teal ot this Court on June II.
I**)

(SEALI
MARYANNE MORSE
ASCLERK
BY: Haather Brook*
DEPUTYCLERK
Publish: June IX X A July t. W.
IMX---------------------------------------

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
140 AM .-SJO PJI.
MONOAY thru

FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993
PfWATEPARTYRATES
MCOWBCNlhBttBBB_____ S T l llM

7 cotwBcutfM flmaa_____704 &gt;log
3 c m m c u Bv* UnwB_______ 11 * a Hob

1 time____________________t l.H a lo t
Rj Ibb art pet Ittut, bated on3I om
•3 Line* Minimum

NOWACCEPTNG

Sdwxaeig may mdude Horaid Advwiw al ft* coal ot an eddWxnN dey.
Cancel «w&gt;*nyou get reauft* Pay orly far day* your ad tune at rateearned
Use tut deecnpeon tor taatoat reskits Copy muat toaow acceptable typo­
graphical farm •Commercial baquancy rata* are avadabto
DEADLINES

Tuesday thru Friday 12 Noon Th* Day Bator# Pubkcabon
Sunday And Monday BJO P M Friday

ADJUSTMENTS AND CREDITS: In tha event of an error In an
ad, the Sanford Hamid will be raeponsiMe for the Itrat
InaarBon only and only to tha aslant of the coat of that
Inaertion. Pleas* check your ad for accuracy the ftret day It
run*.

Legal Notices
IN COUNTY COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: *1 *0*14 SP I* O
JERRY KLEIN BERG
PLAINTIFF
vs.
JEFFW ACHTLER
DEFEN DAN T
NOTICE OF ACTION
TOJEFFW ACHTLER
Mil SWItTH AVE SUITE 411
FT LAUDERDALE. F L )U I4
You are hereby notified that
on action hot been filed ogolntt
you In the County Court. Semi
note County. Florida Summary
Claims Division
You or* required to appear
before JOHN R SLOOP, o Judge
ol thlt Court, ot * 00 AM,
AUGUST It. l*f). Seminole
County Courthouse. Courtroom
E. Sanford. Florida to answer
ih* statement of claim tiled
herein Any written answer or
other pleadings mutt bo tiled
with the Clerk ol tha Court and
copies thereof furnished to the
Plaintiff at It ) P A L M E TTO
CONCOURSE. LONGW OOD,
F L »m .
Upon your failure to appear on
ih* above indicated date, a d*
fault may be entered against
you lor in* relief demanded in
the statement ol claim.
Witness my hand and the
Official Saal at this Court In
Sanford, Seminole County. Flor­
id* this lit day of JU LY. t m .
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE.
CLERK
COUNTY COURT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
SANFORD. FL
by: Cindy Burtleld
DEPUTY CLERK
Publish July I. &gt;4. )1.» . Iff)
DEGJ4

am &gt;M
IN T M i CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I t I T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUITOF FLORIDA.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO: (1-146ADR4) P
In re the marriage of
PATRICIA ANNCROMWELL
Petlllonac.
and
ROGER MOSBY CROMWELL
Respondent.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : ROGER MOSBY
CROMWELL
YOU ARE N O TIFIED lhal an
action lor Dissolution ot Mar­
riage ha* baan Iliad against you
and you are required to serve a
copy of your written defenses. II
any. to it on PATRICIA ANN
CROMWELL, whose address ll
41) SPRINGWOOO C O U R T,
LONGWOOO, FL 117J0 on or
botoro JU LY 14. Iff), and III*
the original with the clerk of this
court either before service on
petitioner or Im m ediately
thereafter: otherwise, a default
will be entered against you ter
the relief demanded In the
complaint or petition.
OATEDon JUNE It. I f « .
MARYANNE MORSE
As Clerk ot the Court
BY Nancy R. Winter
At Oeputy Clerk
Publish: June U M A July 7.14.
I**)
DEF 70*

PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT
INVITATION TO BID
PROFESSIONAL
CONSULTANTS
Tha District Board of Trustees
of Seminole Community Collage
In compliance with the Consul
tents Competitive Negotiations
Act - Chapter 7} Mt. Lews ol
Florida and Chapter 1*7 051
Florida Statutes, announces that
protest Mmol architectural serv
Ices will be required tor Ih*
following prelect.
Comprehensive Cam pus
Master Plan ter Seminole
Community College
Te be eligible lor consid­
eration. Interested llrmt or In
dividual* must be certified by
•h* Board ol Trustees at quail
lied pursuant to lew and rogulo
I ions ottho Board
Any firm or Individual dttir
Ing to provide professional serv
Ices for thlt proloct mutt submit
a statement ot qualifications
and performance data to Include
the capabilities, number of
personnel and qualifications,
and record and experience of
the firm or Individual, to the
Beard of Turstaes on a current
copy el U.S.G.S A. Standard
Farm H i and a fully completed
copy of U S G.S.A Standard
Form ISS with pertinent tup
portIv* data on or before July
21. Iff).
All letters ol Interest, along
with ell pertinent supportive
data
are to be sumitted to the
N O TIC IO F PUBLIC AUCTION
Notice It hereby given: Ol* following address
Otfk* ol the Vic* President
count Towing will tell at Publk
tor Administration
Auction tor salvage tor cash on
end Finance
demand to highest bidder the
Seminole Community College
following described vehicles
100Weldon Boulevard
l**4 Bk-lck L* Sabre
Sonlord. Florid* 7777541**
1G4HR1TMGH44I0TS
Upon review of the inform*
1*44 Ford Pickup FIOYNCMW
Hon recalved, the Board ot
i**4 Chrysler Station Wagon
Trutltet
will determine the
IB)8D4*ClEFIStltT
This auction will be on July IS. quel Ifkat Ions of tech firm pur
I**) at * a m. at Discount suant to future interviews re­
Towing. 4*0 N Orlando Ave . lated to thlt prelect.
By: E. S. Weldon, President
Maitland. FL M7II. Prospective
Seminole Community Col leg*
bidders may Inspect vehicles an
And
the day betor* auction betwaan f
Ex O ttkk Secretary
AM A II PM Terms are cash or
the District Board of Trustees
certified funds. Discount Towing
reserves the right to accept or The District Board ot Trustees
Seminole Community College
r*|*ct any and all bids
Publish: July 7.14. I**)
Publish: July ID * * )
DEO
71
DEG ll*

12—Elderly Cure
ELDER CARE will provtda total
cor* tor on* elderly female. 1
days a wk . 74 hr* CXM M

1 3 - B in g o
FRIDAY AN0 SATURDAY
IS.MAM and tiMPM
FLEA WORLD
HWY 17 *7. SANFORD

21— P e r s o n ils
ADOPTIONS
Free medical car*, transpor
tation. counseling, private
doctor plus living expenses
Bar #7)7511 Call Attorney John
Frlcber...............I-MM7M44*

23— L o s t A Found
* FOUND p o o . Minister*
Greyhound 77th St a If *)
area, tamale 777 10*5
LOST C A T
Male labby.
brown/black. Winn Dixie. 11th
SI. Needs medicine 1M51T4
RBWABD • SM*I Lost dog.
snail gray and white SMh
Tiu. ftmale. 17 lbs Lott from
Remington Oaks. Lata Mary
on 4/77 No togs M l 177*
S M A L L . W H I T E OOO In
Idyltwtld* area. Answers to
Muncmo Hewer* J7J Sic I

23— S p e c ia l N o tices
C H E E R LE A D IR CLASS starts
soon Sign up now ter the
Cheer*!to*. ages 4 17. Heve
tun, get In shape, make
Irlends Build confidence and
salt esteem 174 714*or 777 7714
HOST FA M IL IE S NEEDED.
Hast on oxchangt student
from Germany. Oenmark.
Croatia, or Poland Students
will arrive In August lo attend
local high school. For further
mlormalion call I *00 777114*
Of 467 174 4*14______________
SENIOR CITIZENS Need a rid*
»0 doctor oe, any whs re In
Senlord* Call Arm X24 7444

27— N u r s e r y A
C h ild C a re
ABC S M A L L D A Y C A R E
Babies, toddlers 7 hoi meals
Free week I Dee, TO 01II

For E xcellent..
Professional CHILO CARE
Sorvkat. call 17)1061_______
M IC H E L L E 'S HOUSE - 11*
PER W EE K I Open *:MAM 12
Midnight! M I 745147*110

31— M e d lc il
FLORIDA CORF It an Outp*
(lent rehabilitation faclly
providing tha ideal service
you need For inform* IIon or a
tour cell.......... ...........1*6 2*0*

~43— L e g a l S e rv le ts
SMILES. Paralegal service*
end legal research W# may
be able to help Call OS «17*

55— Business
Opportunities
SODA / SNACK
available. SS.*tS financing
available Call MO*71# Jim
C j«to m V # n d J «^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ _

♦1— Money to Lend
BILLS DUE?
Have I Place to Pay I Slash
Monthly Payments! Get Cred
Itort Off Your Beck! Easy
Quality No Collateral I 557 7SS)

71— H e lp W a n te d
ADD TO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOW1
CALL 777-4775 or 177441*

AG ASST.

Permanent, full time 14 )l/hr
Dufies Include: growing v*g*
tables and ornamentals In
Held and greenhouse, applying
pesticides and farm melnto
nance H S. grad and 1 yrt
*&gt;p For application call
5M4751 or write 7766 E Celery
A ve S a n fo rd F L 11771
E E O / A ftlrm a tlv o Action
Employer

Legal Notice
CELEBR ITY CIPHER sby famous
*T

V M J

K F N R X U O U E T R T H U O
CJ

F C Y

F J C J U

I L C Y R T F R M
e v a

K L M I U F F T M V C E T H U O
CJ

F J C V I R R k O . '

I K M F J U L
L M 1 1 T U

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 10*4
Feather Lana. Sanford. Semi
not* County, Florida, under the
Fictltiou* Nam* ef K A D
Nursery A Landscaping, and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Division ef Cor­
porations. Tailahatsa* Florida.
In accordance with the pro­
visions of Ih* Fictitious Nome
Statutes. ToW II: Section M l 6*.
Florida &amp;tatutotl(*l
Kevin Kempko
Publish July 14. t m
OEG-tt*

—

C L J T F J )
R M Y C K

PREVIOUS 80LUTION: "Lot Angeles la nothing more
then (tie Bronx with palm tree*." — Joseph Wambeugh.
c t*») kyNCA.lv

14

A O E N TI AVON. Earn to K \
No door/door Guaranteed
46% discounts SandIMl lt»)

AGINTS-IEAL ESTATE!
Nothing succeeds Ilk* success
We're well Into our Srd decade
of training successful agents
No license?........ We'll help'
WATSON R EA LTY CORP
r e a l t o r s ___________ n in e *

APPOINTMENT SETTEIS
RANTED
P/T eves Good altitude req
SI 116/hr w it h bonu s
1 M*PM
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY!
________CALL 711-477)________
ASSEMBLY WORKERS. Long
term assignment in the Son
ford area Cor A phone a
must I Apply today al OPC
Temporary Services. DM S.
17*1. W i l l ) _______________

ASSEMBLERS
Full lime, plus helperti For
cabinet mfg plant Immediate
openings. Ml 1*61___________

Assistant Miinttnanct Person
N seJed for Lake M a ry
apartment community Must
have electrical and A/C exp
Apply of: St Croix Apart
menls, 7)) Secret Harbor
Lane, Lake M a ry ..... 1717105
A U TO A UCTIO N D R IV ER S
NEEDED. Musi have valid
drivers license and be able to
drive stick S4 7S/hr
Sprint Slatting. W ISH___

CAFETERIA W0NKEN
NO N IG H TS . NO W E E K
ENDS Part time Includes all
clean up and some cashiering
Hour* II 10 1 10 Mon Frl
I V hr Send resumes ONLY
to Jobar's Cat*. 1701 Silver
Lake Drive. Sanford F L M771

Cashier
Port time Apply in Person
Sanford Exion. Corner ol
Highway if *7 and Lake Mary
Bird EOE_________________

CHILD CARE HELPER
With day car* axperlanr*
only Lake Mary M l IMP

Collision Person
Needed for busy body shop,
lop pay. excellent benelif*
Call Ml *0*6osk lor Shelly

CONSTRUCTION
All phases To SIS hourly
Refundable lee......... 474*101

COSMETOLOGIST
with following 711 *114 or
iM 4616___________________
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Handle phenes and poopI?
with tmito. Top Paid Benefits
AAA EM P LO Y M IN T
fee Fa* TM Hired
Law Fee-Terms Available
7W W .2M btf.m -H7*

DAYTIME HOSTESS
PART TIME WAITRESS
Wattled. Call 6 A M -M A M
Sergio’s Italian Restaurant

MAIDS
Honost and dependable.
Mon F rl. Musi post poly
graph! 771 74**
MEDICAL

LPNS
II PM 7AM shill lull lime
Apply in person. Lakeview
Nursing Ctr , *1* E Jnd SI
Sanfor d
__________
MEDICAL

LPN
Full time. 7 ) and II 7 Charge
Nurse positions Experience In
long form core highly d*
tlreabt* Drug Ire* work
place C o n ta ct: O sbary
Manor, a* N. Hwy 17*1. Do
bacy, FI M ill. *46-4474_______
m e d ic a l '

RN
P/T 10 I ) PM* 41 AM Sub
acute care exp highly de
Slrabl*. bul not required Will
train Salary dependent upon
experience Contact: Otbary
Manor. 4* N. Hwy 17*1. D*
b4ry. FI 7771). 44V44I4_______
MEDICAL

NURSING ASSISTANT
4 » AM 7 » PM and 2:26
PM 10 30 PM F/T and P/T
shills On Iff* 1sb training
provided Must enroll In a
certified nursing asslslant
course and show prool ot
completion within &lt;0 days or
experienced *nd registered to
challenge the lest within 7 wks
of employment Drug free
work place Contact: Debary
Manor. ** N. Hwy If-ft. O*
Lory, FI M ill. 4464474_______

NIGHT SHIFT WORKERS
Hourly Apply of Litchfield
Theater. Jiao N Hwy 17*2
after) 00______
_______
ORDER PULLER TRAINEE
Keep track of In A outgoing

71— H e lp W a n te d

IHEMANKETERS

WAREHOUSE Workers. Strong
Clean cut people, tom* heavy
lifting al different lob toe*
lions in Sanford Longwood
area Apply M y *1 OPC
Tamper ary Sarvkts. 110) S.
17*1.4*1-111)______________ ,

Permanent And
Temp Positions
Company will train people
with phone skills Exp. not
necessary Hours Mon Thurt.
StPM. Sal. fA M tPM Ftoa
Ibto on hours when perm*
nenl Salary plus bonus
Sr. cltlrem welcomed I
Never A Few!
Help Fersannel *1* tiff

TELEMARKETERS
Longeood. I S .10 hr. plus
bonus Phone and order entry
exp Day to evening hours.
Mon Sat Permanent pot I
lions Never a feel
Help Personnel *7* *7**
WAREHOUSE A N D OENERAL
LABOR H E L P N E E D E O t
Bonus lor drivers AM shifts
available Daily pay. no lee
Reprvl ready lo work I X) am.
Industrial Labor Svc . toll
French Av. Nophonwtallt

*6 hr*. ♦ . Paid Insurance and
benefits Class D license req
Clean driving record. Knowi
edge of Orlando area a
Apply: nets. Santoed Ave
DELIVERY PERSON
En|oy scenery while making
deliveries Fentestk Benefits!
— AAABM PLOVM SNT
N* Fee Till Hired
Lew Fee-Terms Available

7t*W.7Hh t l . m i l l t

DOCK WORKER
Up to 171K Comp bene, aoiK
Refundable to*...........41**161

EXP. PAINTER
Musi be able to spray, brush
end roll 171 41II.lv msg

EXPERIENCED SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
SAn Del Manufacturing Is
accepting application* lor
E X P E R IE N C E D IN D U S
TRIAL sewing machine oper
ators only. Accepting *ppik4
lions thru July 2nd. than again
storting July tlth for hiring to
begin July 17th Paid holiday!
end yeealton. elr conditioned
facility. 7)46 Old Lake Mary
Rd. Sanford 467 171 1116
FIELD INSTALLER
uoo/wk! Fully Irolnl Great
future. Permanent.

WELDERS
All types Hiring now. tesl req
Refundable lee
47* *161

PR IVATE Mother In law apt
Baltf. full kitchen, unturn /
fum. Includes ulll 1X&gt; 0444

93 — R oom s fo r R e n t
CLEAN ROOMS, single sterling
S70/wk. Kitchen, phene,
laundry, vide* gomes, ell

street parking5)0447)_____

CLEA N , FURNI1HED ream,
w/kll. avail i l l wk , tit sec
Downtown 777 10*4

(D

LET U N C l f SAM PAY FOR
YOU OR YOUR CHILDS
EDUCATION

* * POSTAL J O B S **

Start t i l 4t hr. 5 benefits
For application A Into, call
I 111*1)74 1510 7am 10pm 7
day*.______________________

SALES COUNSELOR
Oak lawn Park Cemetery and
Funeral Horn* Is looking tor 2
full time employees for pro
need counseling Cell Dole
.................... M l *707

Security Officers
Licensed. Sanford liar I im
mediately
Up l o I S
w/*ap*rtonc*. benefilt avail
able *67 6*4 4 iu ___________

SHIFT MANAGER WANTED

Restaurant management asp
preferred High school grad,
same college prof. Apply:
Tacq Dell, Sanford__________
SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR
If you're a people person, you
can land mis golden job I
AAA EMPLOYMENT
N* Foe Till Hired
Law Foe-Terms Available
766 W. m b it .. M ill 74

^ u f iT M A R ^ T u r n ls h o ^ t t l
Cloney 17V)/mo. 1110 security
III 1*1*__________
ONE BDRM. 1 belli Furnished
eltktonry. Sanford 1521 mo
HOOdeposit ........... 174 7*1*
PRIVATE, large I bdrm. apt.
newly palmed, full III* bath,
country living! Power, wafer
furnished U7I rro plus dep
JtO P E TS _
7711*17
1ANFORD Dun Mown area
Small I bdrm apt Util Hies
Included Reasonable! J7J Ml*

43 MILLION PEOPLE ARE
DOING IT AND HAVE NO
INTENTION OF STOPPING:

Home Ita^cdbusinesses. 11k answer in
College- University-Trade School
GrandA scholarship* are available through live Income, flciibility and freedom. It’s easier
(tun you think! Vflut are they and
government if you know how lo find themand
liow do you get sUftcd’
quiltfyl Certain deadlines/restricttom may apply.

FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE
THROUGH THE 900BUSINESS

1/tour Laicnu arc over-looked or you feel
stalledby artificial barriers, there are optional
Successful executives hive like answers.

RECEPTIONIST

LIVE IN M ATURE FEMALE
companion lor elderly woman
Room'board provided Salary
neq Reft rrq
III 1741

After years o f providing extraoidinary research for industry^ the
INSTITUTE is proud to offer its services to you, the consumer!
Our expertise is now accessible to individuals who want to raise
their "quality o f life". It is our goal to provide you with the best
information available. There are no “miracle methods" or "quick
fixes". W e offer you practical information and proven methods
that will make the "system" work for you.

PHONE TROS NEEDED

For printing company. Call
___________4*16677__________

95— R o o m /B o a rd

THE MOST VALUABLE COMMODITY
IS INFORMATION

CLIMBING I HE CORPORATE
l ADDE R/RRLAKING THRU
Till GLASS CEDING

_________6)1 MM________ •

LIVINO, B E D . BATH, Prlv
ent B)S0, there k it. ALSO
Etfkency w/bath. prlv enl
*71 wk plus dtp Set tor cable,
turn or unturn 17**701 ___

9 7 ^ A p a r tm e n fs
F u rn is h e d / R e n t

91— A p a r tm e n ts /
H ouse to S h a re

AAA EMPLOYMENT
No Fee Till Hired
Law Fee-Terms Available
Tee W 11th S I. 271)171
For strong bodge deal Coll

93— R o om s fo r R e n t ■

71-Help Wanted

Ilow to get involved and succeed in the
fastest p s ing multi billion
dollar industry.

©

( HIM!

|OBS K)R
TMI 90s

HANOI ING AND
SIORAGf Ol
IOXIC M ATI RIAL S
Radialinn leakage, chemical seepage into
groundwater and misuseof landTilu arc
hazards that affect us all.
lie informed!

In not safe lo travel in the U.S. anymore,
maybe not even in your own hometown.
The only prouxtkm you have
is knowing bow not to dc a victim.

DfliRiy/Rjffhivii Ptnofi

PROTIC1 YOURSIll
IROM CLINTON S
TAX CHANGES
Preparerenow
or pay later Can ynu
A ... .. ... 1. ... .

©

The Jobmarket and theskills required are

Sing dramatically Will you be

information*

able five ytars from now*

S T A R T YOUR O W N SUCCESS STORY N O W

Indicate the one (s) you want: (D © (3) @ ® ® ® ®
at $18 each and send to:

AMERICAN RESEARCH L DATA INSTITUTE
Howard Hughes Center

TEACHERS

6601 Center Drive West • 5th Floor
Dept. R-22 • Los Angeles, CA 90015
Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back

CDA/AA or above degree In
early childhood education for
cantor In process at NAEYC
accreditation Free childcare
available EOE 177*441

AAA EMPLOYMENT
NaFee Till Hired
Lew Fee-Terms Available
m w . am si , n i-iir t
GENERAL

MOTIVATED
P re s su re C le a n in g
OUN RITE. Clean driveways. '
K EN N IIO N LAWNCARE Pro
reals, peel decks, wslkl. ■
Low rafa* Com mercial | heuses. F freest, ni-4171

$$$1250-1400$$$
People needed to perform
various du tie s w itho ut
supervision In o fast paced,
lake charge environment Full
time positions only to bo filled
this week Call 17*4*17
OOOOWORKERSNEEDED
Dally work, dally pay *4 »/hr
and up Report) )0 AM Corner
of 17-Wand Pork Dr 576 7466

Hairstylist
Full or Port lima. IS 06 hr A
up Paid vacation* and tom*
pold Hotidaysl Fantastic

Sa-m in Sar^ord 111 soil

HAPPY ELVES CbWdtare. Lk
Mary, needs exp., organ.led
Caregiver-Teacher. W/natural
love lor Children M l 75*4

Htny Collision BodjPonon
Must have own toots. Expert
enc* required
EXPERIENCED PAINTER,
mutt have own foots Apply In
person * A M ) PM: Sonlord
Pamt and Body. 2*01 Country
Club Rd. Sanford M l 6«a4

KwiMf Janitorial
Responsible person, to core
for animals A facility. &gt; 7 pm.
Mon - F r l . A A lte rn a te
Wk ends 111) W. 11th St.

Landscapers
Full lime. CDL Class D re
gutted 777 am ____________
LIVE IN NEEDED For * day e
wk |ob Clean and cook In
return for room, board end
salary. QFLIH66-7M6747
LOOKINO FOR Mafvr*. outgo
Ing Individual to train In the
Upholstery business. Exp
helpful BUT net necessary
U 00 per hr Send return* to'
Blind Box 100. P O Box IM7.
Sanford. FL 17777___________

MAIDS

c u L jm e u

71— Help Wanted

F/T, M F . 14 Will train:
uniforms Molly Mold, 7411607

Concrete
FLORIDA STATB REQUIRES
all contractor* be registered
or corfltied Yo verity • state
c o n tra c lo rt license c a ll
1 *06 )47 7*40 Occup4lion#l
Licenses are required by the
county and can be verified by
calling 2JUIJ0,pit. 7477

Additions &amp;
Remodtllng
RES./COMM Vinyl Siding .
Alum . Framing. Orywatl,
Door*. Roofing. Concrete
71) 4671 S.O. Ballet, CICII

A p p lia n c e s "
NO SRRVICE CALL F IB whan
repairs are don* Warranty. 26
yrt experience! John.
A + Best Appliances. 174)14)

C a r p tn tr y
CARFENYER All kinds Of fvomq
repairs, pointing A ceramic
lit* Richard Gross
771 t t n

CAPTAIN C O N C R ETE . W«rn*
Beal 1 Man Quality Opera
lion! S)e 757S/74Q- r**3_______
CONCRETE. Block. gUss BN.,
pool decks A pool plastering
ISyri exp 1-4*7 7*4 447*

TToorlng"
HARDWOOD FLOORINO
iMtsll Sanding Finishing
TOMOLSIN 1 *1)474 1777

TfortTfm p^vem enr
XL DOES IT XU
Fix II rlghf al o price you con
oltord LIc'd/Ins From start
to finish Carpentry, plumb
ing. electrical, and roofing
ives 7) yrt ot experience No
|ob loo big or small Call
» 4 t i l ) a r m neat*hr*.

Rin m

“

"

'.VI S H O W Ui

Concrete
A D D IT IO N ! Block, stucco,
slabs, walk*, patios. dtm*lli ;mv. Lk.2)m.*xa.**MSM

Lake C leari

12L

W E E D Remeval. Lakefrorf
Retention Ponds Croativ*
Land Mgmt. Call *H 4)77

M a s o n ry
BRICK, Mack, stone, stucca,
and cancreto. Also repairs No
|ob too small Free est *7* *161
TW P MASONRY. Brkk. Block.
Stucco. Concrete. Renova
lions Lk./lns
111 7444

O utside L ig h tin g ~
REPLACE Parking tot. polo A
bldg security l-gnts Paint A
reoairs SW S 745 0IJ0

Painting

C le a n in g S ervice ~
CHRISTIAN WOMAN will clean
vac ant/occupied residence or
ol Ikes Mon Sal 77*47*4
I P R I N O C L E A N IN O . In
outside Renta's Also wkly
rotes Windows, tool » l 17*1

Residential Lie A Ins *77 4477
LARRY'S LAWN A TR EE.
Professions' Service. Free
Est Lie/Ins 77) 5461________
RANDY'S D U A L ITY LAWN.
Complete pro core since 1*60
Clean ups, hauling 711*714
TOM A JEFF'S LAWN CARCI
Res /Comm . dependable, low
rates' Free est
...... IX) 7676
TU R F TRIMMERS Low rates.
Fro* est . Res A com/r. I
llme/yr round! Ref 7711)41

Home Repairs
M A R IN O H o m o R e p a ir.
speclalliing In small |obt

CUSTOM PAINTINOby Jeffrey
Power, Int.axl.. He'd, ins
Free Etllmales______ H I OUS
K A H FAINT AND REMODEL
Freq Eslimalesl Refs . lie.
No |ob too small I 4(* 4144

CRCMSOT^rojestjBMIt*

Lawn Servlet

P lu m b in g

■ XPERT LAWN SRRVICE.
467 DS7M6. Sod. Mulch. Far
til lit r Bushoe. 40 m exo

P L U M R IN D R E P A IR AND
SIRVICI - Free estimates,
lie rCFCO)14)4174 0*0). Tam

RAINEY ROOFINO. Over 70
yrs exp Serving Lake,
Volusia. Samlnol* Free
estimates Lie . St. D C
00) 5554 bonded *04 7)4 *477
(04 (71 7*17or m *471

Trash Hauling

~

AFFORDABLE HAULINO Will
clean, haul Irash You name ill
We ll haul III Call 772 SM4
I

Tile
CERAMIC TILE A MARBLE..
*xp*rlenc*d In all phases. custom work, painting and'
other home repairs 407 7*1 •
47*6 or *04)57 474*__________ „
EXPERIENCED In oil phases:
of tilo installation ins. lie .,
wholesale Ilia prices 467 5441 *41

Tree Service
ECHOLS TREE SVC Lie’s, ins '
"Lef the Professionals do ll "3
Free estimates . ..... 57) 777* .

MAKE YOUR PITCHI

O -..
You* touch al that
anadfafaactaasihad For
‘grand slam* Impact,

c a ll 3 2 2 *2 6 1 1

Sanford Herald,

!&lt;/r r t l i s/* ) om lin s i n r w I r r r y Day I nr Is / &lt;nr Is
s / f*rr Wnnth, ( ill! &lt; ht.ssifirtL .'{'J'J '2(ill

j

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida • Wednesday. July 14, 10)3 • 7 8

99— A p a r tm e n ts
' U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
ALL U T IL IT IE S Paid I I bdrm .
living rm Kll w/Fptc naw
carpal. Irvth paint AC Sl*(
me plut l i t } NO P E TS .
MO IPS*____________ ________
CLEAN. Q U IE T . I bdrm a p t.
AC. Iridge. iteve. water met.
near Lk Monro* Reasonably

priced Eves 323 1134________
C O N VEN IEN T AN D SPACIOUS
CALL G E N E V A GAR D EN S
a p ts .
............m we
LAKE JE N N IE A P A R TM E N TS
I Sdrm A pit Avplleble. Free
erelev/getI n « 1SS1__________

Lavan's Landing
IA I BDRM V ILLAS
R EN TTO O W N
C R E D ITN O P R O B LEM
Applications for J Hdrm
Homes New Being Accepted

323-4923
MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm. U U mo
1 bdrm. (410 mo end up

________3231670

j Quiet Single Story
&gt; Cattleberry. I bdrm A J
’ bdrm
Attic Storage' Call

&gt; Joan lor appointment t H err;
I a n f o RD’S Betl Kept Secret I
{P o o l A L a u n d r y , I A J
•bedroom t Convenient Ioca

’ Horn Call Pat. MS ease______

SANFORD West Iftti SI area I

1 r bdrm apl. eat In kitchen IJ1S
! Inc water/garbago M l 1)11
T B D R M e fficie n cy quiet
r 1)00 mo SJ00 dep util Inc 4
l milet wetlol I «onaa M U n r
T. BEDROOM S27S month ptut
1 •I J t l security depot it A refer
! enen
M l u&lt;]

101— H ouses
F u rn is h e d / R e n t

’l

103— H ouses
U n fu rn is h e d / R ent
CASSELBERRY. Home to rent
! ml purchete option. 4/2, pool.
atr. d'thwoiher t?50t*5 W4l
O ELTON A Cult Cltan. J/|,
carport. I yr leate 1410 mo
Referencei 104 m U)4
HIDDEN LAKE Sanlord Late
Mary ) bdrm. J bth. fenced
‘ yard (411 mo cell 442 lt d

HUD HOMES'

w

; Bank lereclsturet and VA
rttaiet tram (too down.
Why rent! The Hilliman Group
♦ M U M .......................Reader
JUST OUTSIOE OF SANFORD
4l/l. lg living rm. eat In
; kitchen A/C. ceiling I ant ig
bath Plenty ol ttorage and
Jctotal (pace Newly pamted
. intide and out S450 ptut dep
. No pelt MI III)_____________
LAKE MARY Nice, cent It A
•1 bdrm. |ti bath, bllndt.
' fenced yd Lake Mary tchoott
•saooplot tec 304 44* 1370
LAKEFRONT fenced corner lot.
!S/t. tirepl. family rm, carport
•Ouiet near 17*2. remodeled
! *571 mo Lite M l MM No pelt
MAYFAIR Etc area 2 bdrm
■cam a ir. W 'Q , garaga
jiaso/mo MOOdep n i i W
SANFOKO Eaeculivu 4 Itdrm. J
■belh I 000 tq II Pool,
.{workshop I acre No pelt!
•SI.MOPoritg Reelty i n 0470
SANFORD. I /I HO USE.
; Acreage hortet allowed on
lake SHOO mo Ml r004 ___
SANFORD 2 1 Stove refnger
alor. detached garage SM(
plot dep Ml TFOOor &gt;00 1011

} Stenstrom Rentals
OSANFORD. 1/1 w tingle gar .
Ig rooms fenced y d . CMA.
SIM mo m o tec
• LOCH ARBOR. 1/1 w den
-tern pool w/|acu&lt;tl. Iplc .
dbl gar i s*7( mo S«00 tec
Stemtrom Realty. Inc.
"We Manage your Homo,
frke It mat our awn." Jim Deyte
/ M l )4tt Alter 1PM: 1H lift
\jlR Y SMALL HOUSE. 1 bdrm.
( I bath NopeltSllS'mo
Ml 01(4

CLASSin ZD ADS |
:w

o r k

r a n

1 BORM. 1 BTH. Lent H/A.
fenced, tcreen porch, deck
U K ptut depotlt 222-41*7
1/1, OAR AO E W D hookup.
K m porch. CHA ISM mo
(WO dep (14 2*1*/* 4. m V t t
&gt; / } S A N F O R D , to n c o d .
tpaoout (415 a month S4S0
depotlt (4* SaOOor M l 4S40
4/1 HOUSE. Lb. Mary, near Lk
Mary City Ctr taoo mo Call
Ml I0M or M l d l l

105— D u p le x *
T r ip le x / R e n t
COMFORTABLE. SAFE, con
voment to town SMS'mo plut
tit M4 a m
LAKE MARY. Cory, private 1/1
one block t ol Lake Mary
Bird New ceramic llle and
carpal (415 plut one month
tecuriljf
JU 4 1 M
LAKE M ART, 1 bdrm . CHA.
w/w carpet, coll Ian. minis.
lenced yd S1I47M ______
U N F U R N IS H E D , I Bdrm .
newly remodeled, li lt W (rd
St Front apt SMS mo 1700
toe 111 114t Call balora
I MAm latter I IQPm
1 BDRM.. I Bath Scrn porch.
CHA. all applt, I w carport
&gt;105 or Ml 4414

1 0 7 - M o b ile
Hom es / R ent

v o u i

U o n l I s k s osar w o n t fo r 11.
a ll T o d a y T o P U « « Y o u r A d i I

ford Herein 322-3011

LONOW OOO/LAKE M ARY
Mid tiro dor age warehoutet
400(001(00 tq It Free rent
w ill mo leate. from SI4(/mo
__________ M iooe__________

SECURITY WAREHOUSE

4tA

and Old Laka Mary Blvd
*1.1(0
1.000 tq II Of
IlC/warehoute 'Flnlthad ot
lice tpace alto available
Kapanke Realty. I H i I III
Mat* with II tt collingt 1 phata
power Suitable lor anything
heavy toning 100 S Myrll# w/
private otlico Available now
(HO mo ao; M4 H 4 _________

1 1 5 - In d u s tria l
R e n ta ls
I3.M9 AND 14.000 tq tl Dock
high, fire tprinkied 101 Cor
nwall Road W Garnett White.
Broke*
Ml 2MI

117— C o m m e r c ia l
R e n ta ls
MODULAR O FFIC E BLDO.
for talo. (4.000 or ront.
furmthed. (aOO’mo Office W
SR 44 Call Mi t e n _________
N I G H T C L U B 41(0 tq. II..
Tltutvllle fully equip (1500
mo Llquof Ik avail (74 PIN
SANFORD
100 N Elm Are
10.100 tq tt with olflcot
Brick truck hi
tprinkied
aaOV
J phate teroev LI.
manu or dittrlbulion ctr
bi.tmi i n im p _____________

118— O ffic e
S pace / R e nt
NEW Sanford otllcot and or
warahoutet aoo 1.000 tq tt
Spoctal. SIK/mo. MJ 1((4
O F F IC E . U t ( tq. ft. Ball
downtown Sanlord location
m irn o 174019*
SANFORD Comm.. laM tq tt
R (4 a tt High traffic area.
Jim Oayte. Stenttrom Realty.
Inc. M1I4H________________
SANFORO. OH.ce tpace. (400
tq tl building total. 1100 tq
It per otlica unit Ml 1004

121— C o n d o m in iu m
R e n ta ls
SANDALWOOD I bedroom,
wether, dryer, tcreen porch.
no pelt S ill'mo 410 ISM

123— W a n te d to R e n t
USED CAR LOT WANTED
TOR EN T

410 1141

UN-SATI0NAL
UMMER LIVING
at

COEVILLA APARTMENTS!
Ask About O ur
1 MONTHFREE
Special
■w

b iim

Jm h

2580 Ridgewood Ave., Sanford

330-1431

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts.

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1/2 month FREE
\*tlh a 1.’ month Ir-asr

141— Homes for Sale

209— Wearing Apparel

223— Miscellaneous

AffORDAKlI iKIVIS
VlhlllR! PPOPf BUIS

• W E O O IN O ORESS. Long
while lace dross Tiered with
train Silver pearls and la
quint on nock line and t leevet
In origina l boa. S lit 0.
PEAUTIFULIIISIOOMI 7ft*

• LADDER RACK with locking
handles Good condition S100
407 444 1(11
• POPCORN POPPER. Hot olr

FHA OR VA AS LOW AS S«l%
G ov’ t Forecloturet. Re
p o t/ A ttu m t No Q ualify
Homotl Owner financing
Seminole. Orange. Volutle

2 1 5 - B o a t* a n d '
A ccesso ries

PAOLA. 4/1 on on } It acret
Petiurowithttebie 1111*00

141— H o m e s fo r S a le

PAUL A Bl IH OSBORNf
vnmiRf i pimpfRius
J?1 4764

Lie Real Eitale Broker
1440 Sanlord Ave

321-0759................ 12I-22S7
BUILDER'S SPECIAL
Brand new 1/1 lor only tal.SOO
on your lot No money down it
equity In your lot
PETERSON HOMES 141 SIM

HALL REALTY
312 W FirbISI

G rtu ffc
GOV’ T REPOS bank loreclo
turat. attuma no quality
mortgage*! Low monthly
OBANK FORECLOSURE. 11
cent H/A. ter porch nice
neighborhood
SJ0.000
• HUD FORECLOSURE. 4/1
In Plnecrett Great home!
Low down ....
ISO’s
• 1 BDRM on double lot w J
car garage All eppi includes
wather/dryer. eat In kitchen
Super neighborhood 1(4.100

Sanford

NICE 1 bdrm home, central
H/A. Ig corner lot. new
plumbing, inside pantry,
formal dmlng rm Only 41 500
ENJOY THE COUNTRY AT­
MOSPHERE oilered by this 1
bdrm 1 bath w temlly rm on
almost 1/1 ocrtl Raised pal o
overlooks oak1 1
(1.500

Call fir deUiltl

lin c t Mansfield. 323-7271
_ AA Carnet. Inc.. Ml tl&gt;4
•LAKE M A R Y " T H E
F O R E S T " 1/1 Great loc
(55.000 TE RMS’
-K M * Sq FI. }/}. OBL lot.
roned G C] Good cond Re
duced 170m lo (44 4001
CALLBART REAL EST . INC

14471Ml tits

323-5774
DELTONA
D ELU XE.D ELUX E.D ELUX E
Now 4 bdrm 1 bath with all
the aitrat Included! Only SI
total down Good, bad or no
credit Bankruptcy OK Call
Jim at HE 101407 1SI 0444
EXCHANOE OR SELL your
property totaled enywtiera'
lavesten Realty, 7MS4IS
FANTASTIC BUVI 1 bdrm. I
bth C/H/A. paddle font, new
paint Inside and out. now
kitchen cabinets stove, treed
lot Mutt see* 144 0004*4 2074
L|T” m ARV
1/1 with family
rm .Ig tr red lot 145 000
W Malictowtkl, M l 1W1
LONGWOOO 4/1-1. cent M/A.
fenced Owner financing or
leate option Only Ul.tOO

STAIRS PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT A REALTY
401 Ml 1111/1M SI70

ov en

S T 36
m

151— In v e s tm e n t
P ro p e r ty / Sale
SANFORD INCOME PROPERTY . Live In 1 b t. | bth and
ront 3 I bit. I bath unlit
Income tl 000 mo or font oil
lour unlit lor |l.4l0/mo
Mortgage payment 14(0 P lTI
Call 114 l i d P M

1S3— A c rea g e L o ts /S a le

REALTY,

OENEVA. I ACRES. 1/1 in
etudes large otic apt. duck
pond. Buyer part doting
s/o ooo i ao; m e a n ________
OCALA N A T - L FOREST.
Wooded tattl 15 *50 each, no
money down! Ill 41 monthly
1000 tei 5014

155— C o n d o m in iu m s
C o -O p / Sale ___
SAN FOR D / LAKE MARY
AREA. 1 bdrm. 1 bth. Ird
lloor. A/C. viulled ceiling,
tcreen porch. Amenities in
dudo: pool, lennit. sauna,
lake accost. IM.100 Reduced
1M 4(1?

1 5 7 - M o b ile
H o m e s /S a le

YI AMS

STENSTROM
INC.

W e list and sell
m ore p ro p e rly than
anyone in the G re a te r
Sanford la k e M a ry area.
OPOOL HOME IN Sprlnghurtll
Contemporary 4/l'i *77*0«
tq M l Every Amenity. Pool
w/Founlaln, Builder War
rantyl ................SI4M00!
• ALOT OF House lor the IS!
New Paint a New Carpel I
14X11 l4mlly r m . Fenced
Yard. Porch A Moral This 1/1
iteBuyl
.
141.loot
• LAKEFRONT Pareditel This
4/1 Pool Home hat It A L U
Every Feature Imagineablel
O v e r 1100 tq tt. on I
Acrel
1145 0001

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720
1141 Park Or.. Sanlord
441W. Lake Mary •!.. Lk. Mary

•In Our 37th Ytar*

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e
OLOUNOE CHAIR. Brand new.
Highland Hoot* B »‘n» an
•ique velvet with brown and
burnt orange design Can’t use
color gift Will trade tor chair
ot equal value (epproa SIOOI
In peach, tael, oil whlfo. or
groy M4 1440_______________
o LOVE SEAT, gold ond silver.
Sturdy and very comfortable
SlOO................... Call M l M g
LOVESEATS Brown, gold, and
orange velour Like new SlOO
lor both
.Ml 0140
/MATTRESS AND BOX springs
double w e sett lor tale Great
value1S10 set
111 QUO
oSOFA. 1 It. Yellow Print
Loose Pillow back tec Call
M4 1014____________________
STOVE While. e&gt;ec Tappan
range Good condition SUO
DROP L E A F Table, w/1
chain SIS GLASS Cottee ta
bloilO M l 1(44_____________
O U P H O L S T E R E D C H A IR .
Beige vinyl teat and back
cutMont Solid wood armt and
Irama Tough, will lost lor
yaart Good tor dan. porch,
ate Excellent Only Sll IK
0001___________________

1111 M APLE AVE. SALE OR
R E N T W/Opllen. Close to
schools, shopping. 1/1, living
fc dining 110000 404 SM0U1
1 BDRM. I BATH COTTAOE.
Appliances, storage thed 1(44
Mohawk Ave 1(4 000 IK KOI

________m ow iwo________
POOL HOMED w/cvtttm deck,
p rlv fence. J/1 't. near
trhoolt verts, carpet, new
root, dining rm A tern
porch I liS.OOO W lS Il
SPACIOUS 1 bdrm. ] bam 1 car
garage 1 ♦ yrt new Fenced,
plus much morel Only Stl.100
Julio Boyd. Rtenor Higgins
and Meath 1441/44 home of
Ilea or N4 1444 main otlico

Rtlai In Your NraSpil
Seal! S. portable, never used
W/cedar garebo. underwater
i ght.SI.SlSaomi m i
• TWO M illa l A/T 4 wheeler
llrot 140 Good condition
__________ Ml 5411__________
• I DOZEN Me sen Jan. SI 00
M l MW___________________
• PONTIAC Flrtbtrd IN I One
owner I Goreged! S1K ml
Nko 14300 401 M l 404
• 1*11 MO Claitlc Convertible.
Good cond ll»(0 OBO M4
7074

• O EA LE R SPACE A V A IL ­
ABLE* Aunty Mary’s An
tlquoi, 1(01 Frtnch Avo,
(11-11) Sanford. Wo bey one
ptece/antira estates 141A17M

Aitume No Oualilietl
oi/l on l/lacrel Fenced, cul de
tec. dead end tlreel (44 too
Additional hornet avail Lett
than (IK down I

Lk. Mary/Langwood Pool
Home. 1/1. garage, living,
dmlng. tarn rmt (41.500
Lk Mary pool home. 4/1. living,
dmlrg. family rm. (I01.100

typell .............. M0no)

• PORTABLE STEAM BATH
All fiberglass MO 110volt
__________ 2M I44S__________

211— Antiques/
Coliectlbies

Sanlord Ittt than 11.000 down
oRenovatad 1/1 , eppl.encrv
fenced yard, carport. Ul.tOO
o Renovated like new 1/1. fplc .
appl . new paint H i. 100
a Pool heme. J/Z on cul de tec
Garage. S4l 100
ol/l m ty acrol Renovated
appllancet. fenced yd (41500
• 1/l'j. 1IM tq tt. like new I Llv.
dmlng. family rm. S7S.SO0
• 4/1. fenced, garage. SS4 100

BATEMAN REALTY

L O V E L Y M O B IL E HOME
Rent lo buy Bargain Call
Bob. InSantordM) MOO
NICE SANFORD Feralibed.
Mobile Home Available Rent
to bur Bebaamiaaoo

114—
W a re h o u s e
Space ^ R e n t^ ____

OMFORTABLE I BDRM I'j
•belh home All amenlflet
I S44(/mo plot dep M4 4100

B

103— H ouses
U n fu rn is h e d / Rent^

NEW i n i ’ll Low down A Inter
t ill 14X10 SllS'mo . 14X10.
t llO'mo (45 MW
SET UP IN CARRIAOE Cove
Gregory Mobile Hom«a. San
lord Single tad Ml (100
1 BEDROOM mobile home on *0
■ 100 lot In Cetitlborry.
Owner financing, oaty terms

^ 1 1 — A p p lian ces
/ F u r n itu re
• A N TIO U E ORESSIR. Ma
hogeny. porcelain knobt. dove
loll |olntt UQ OBO M4 1111
• CHAIR, toother, brown color,
vory comfortable. Danish
style. Ilka new (100 Ml 44K
OCOFFEE TABLE, solid wood
with three smoked glatt In
sets Used only a tew months
UP Call to tee IK 1IM_______
DISHWASHER Portable very
good cond SIS. B U FFET.
Solid oak, SI00 Ml Mil
KENMORE WASHER. Whit#
very good condition 1150
___________MO IM1__________
OKI NO SH E BED Adjustable
frame, mattrett. and boa
tprlngstlS________________
OKITCHEN TABLE and lour
chalrt Round solid oak table,
chairs are Ian with (mail
print Very nlcal »&lt;00 OBO
Ml 1141

USED BEOOIHO SALEM King
Queen Full A Single S4J a Set
A Upl LARRY’S Marl 123AIMW ASHER / D R Y E R . Good
condition SI1SM1414S
otter 4 PM

• ORUNDIO dual recorder A
dual player. 7 speakers, came
from Germany St00 tlrm
M l 0154

187— Sporting Goods
• OP A IR C IS E R . evcellent
condition, original cost lif t
Will keep you In greet shape
tor SlOOOBO M l OB*________
• II S P IED BIKE. Roadmatter
Scorcher, men’s, rod SIS Call
Ml 4401

193— Lawn 8 Garden
B A M B O O b e a u t i f u l lo r
landscaping. FU R N ITU R E .
POLES. CANES, and ate
Har dy B O S T O N T Y P E
FERN. PALM ETTO Paint.
Yeung M A O N O LIA Treat
You Olg ll M l 0174__________
OLAWN MOWER. So'l propel
Excellent condition SI00
Ml 1744

195— Machinery/Tools
• WEN ELECTR IC chain taw
11 inch cut (10 Pioato call

199— P a ts * S u p p lie s
• F R E E TO OOOO HOME.
Loving 2 yr old cocker spaniel
Inside or outside All shots and
wormed 407 M l 0010_________
FREE TO OOOO HOME. Ador
able pupp'et are going fat* I 1
1litert Shepard ml« and ottier
mi.ad 1months old M l 10S4
HAND TAM ED COCKATIELS.
S10. Alto. SoMor CretltB
Cockatoo. (500144 U4J alter 4
e PUPPY Poedle A
Chihuahua SlOO M l

201— Horses

m om

217— G a ra g e Sales
•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garage tale ad by
11 noon on Tuesday and taka
advantage ol our tpecial
garage tale ad price 11 Call
Classified now tor datalltl

322|2811
RAVW000 SUBDIVISION
1400 Oregon Avo. Sanlord
Thurt. Frl. Sat *1 Furniture.
clothing, ond kit llomi______

TODOLER
T oy t and clothes, push
mower, drrsser, end mltc
Frl ond Sal I llONLY
1101 East 2nd Stroot

YARD SALE
107 Skogon Court. Sar-lorO Off
ol Uptala Rd Batobail cards,
books, mogt. toyt. blktt.
tupporwiro, mtoc Sot &gt; *

4215 Shades Cmt Ln.
Woodbine Sub Frl Sat. I I .
Furn . Clothes, toyt A mlK
household Oft Ml__________

183— Television/
Radio / Stereo

B E A U TIF U L , blanketed Appaloose. Golding. 1 yrt. well
cared lor. excellent riding A
troll horto For e»p or begin,
w/teck 11.100 firm M4 1104

OAIRBOAT, IH1. Oratthepper,
140 HP. Lycoming now mogt.
1 preps, trailer, 11500 Call
Ml^(405or M l 717Q__________
14 F T Aluminum V bull console
controls. 40 HP Evlnrude,
trailer (5QU OBO M0 7144
14 FT. JON~Boet. W/Gel till
trailer 11 HP Merc 1*00 firm
M l 5451___________________
o i l FT. QLASSTRON A Troll
or. (IMP Evlnrude Eicellen!
Condition! (M U M l (111
Ol* tt. BOWRIOER
145 HP
I/O. About IS hrt Immecu
lete.w/traller cover Mult
See I (1.(00 OBO M7 4(11
11*44 SKI/FISH Beat. tOHP
Marc . w/trallor Runt great
(MOO Partial tlnance 4*( MOO
• I I , M F T . SPORTCRAFT,
Open llthorman. I ll OMC
Saadrlvo. SHOO Contldar
trade for |et ski or Flats beat

222— M u s lc e l
AAerchendise
FOR SALE 1 Yamaha portable
keyboard. (150 cash only. Call
141 111* alter II AM a U lor
Bill

223— M is c e lla n e o u s "
AIRBED. Sell inflating. | i » at
B r o o k i t o n e , t e ll t l h
H E TS C H K E ’ S Erotic 2 In.
Ivory llgurlnei t i l l oa.i
FROO Lika I I In ilultad
animal S40i ME RC E D E S
traitor hitch tok 111 body style
Sad I 401 la4 4»2___________
• BEAU TIFUL HAND pointed
carousel horto replica Col
lector-t Item IBP M4 1440
• BOX OF COIL COLLATED,
nallt 10 25* inch tiro. Fltt
Bottltch or Hitachi nail gun
SIS tlrm Ml HSf____________
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE RINOS
lit and uf. Free tilingl
Beat Pawn a Jewelry. 220-M14
• DOLLS. New. plattlc type to
drett for croft shows Black or
whlto IS” Cote ol II for SIS
MB 1101________________
• B X B R C V C L I. OMl action
lor log. upper body, stomach
•a orclto. equipped with
tpeedomeler. comlorfabto
tool US 2M0B41___________
• FOLOINO TABLE. M ” a 71”
Like new I Sell new lor SlOO
Now SIS Ported lor yard
tales, church hall (01 Calalina
Drive M l Pall leave message

230— A n tiq u e /C ia s s ic
C ars
FORD MUSTANO. 1*44. VI
Runt good, body in good shape
tl. 500OBO
114)45*

231— C ars
CADILLAC 41 EL DORADO,
convertible style root, up
graded wheels. 10( 000 ml I
owner (1400
t** 0444
• CHEVY CAM*RO • 71. Re
Dull! VI. loft Of new parttl
(1.0*5OBO Ml 0154 any time
C H E W CITATION. 1*00. t Cyl.
one owner Auto, cold A/C.
power window*. Run* and
looks groat (*50 OBO 114 M il
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL 7).
Lika now Mu»t Mil Only
11(000 Call (40IIM) **54__
• CJ-1 J E E P . 1*71 | Cyl.
custom Rebuilt engine, new
tiros, broket 14 775 firm Ml
24*9______________________
CORSICA, tttl ml new com
puler. brakes. A/C motor
E a lro clean 14.500 OBO
407 447 40tle»t 4M_________
DO DOE CARAVAN SE. 11*1. 4
c y l. tee's 1, loaded eacellenl
condition 110 *00 *04 7t* 114]
DODGE wagon tr*4. Auto . olr.
clean, p/*. stereo tilt. *0 000
ml. good point, never dam
aged 11.115 407144 Nal
• FORD THUNDERBIRO - '44
All original! N tid t tome
work 1I.41SOBOMI0154
• HONDA ACCORD OX. IN*
Auto A/C. am/lm tape, white
110400 LIKE N IW I Ml 1417
HYUNDAI. 1*07 11.100 DODOE
ARIES tlollon wagon. 1NI
SlOO DODOE COLT, t i l l
11.100 M l t**t or M4 S4I4
JAOUAR XJt. IN I Auto. Oil
power, runt groat 1 Beautiful I
Consider trade S4XOO Ml &gt;444
MERCURY SABLE OS. I**t
Eacetlont condition, all power.
............ Cali 145 *17*
MONTE CARLO. 1*19. Groat
condition. A/C. runt like • top
Sharp looking I ll.4 K M 4 tl(l
N EED A CAR-credit problamtr
I can help, dependable used
c a r t and tru c k s . Dave
Shannon R C. Hill's World of
Wheats. Lake Mary M177T7
NISSAN SBNTRA XE. IS9*2dr.
cetd olr. M l speed, clean
Pr iced to tell *4.100419 al 12
NOVA. 1*1*. Black ml rod tk.
Auto. A/C. now seats S2.M0
Ml 3000 Jim________________
OLOS SIERRA. IMJ. 11*5 OBO
See at IIS Garrison Drive.
Sanford or call *04 151 JON
• OLDSMOBILE It. 1*99. 4 door
sedan. 73.000 miles, p/w. p/l.
cruise A/C tl. 100 Ml till

SHORT OF CASH?
Seriously looking lor • nice,
clean, used car? OEPEN
OABLE Down payments at
low •• SIN Includes !•■ A
llllo Call:

FUES AU10 S A liS
* * 3 2 7 -2 6 9 2 * *
SUBARU. Itu . Runt good S100
or betl otter Ml 5715 leave
message

231— Cars
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION 4
E V E R Y FRIDAY 1i20PM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. *2- Oiytowa Beach
_________ S U ltF tlll_________
TO Y O TA CrttlUa. 41 lllk ml .
loaded, doth 2nd owner,
11100 22* I4M______________
11MOB
(CONVERTIBLE)
t*00 OBO Ml M l)
II C H E V Y Full tl. Wagon,
diotol. good cond. cold AC.
new llrot (700 Ml 1401_______
• U C H E W Carallor Station
wagon. AC. Auto 11.17)
Call 14*4*11_________
• U PONTIAC Flero GT. auto.
V*. Red UK Ml Good cortdl
lion LOADED UWS MI1744
17 L I N C O L N T o w n c • r .
Signature. Etcellont Cond
__
*7100 Ml 4I140T14* M il
17 SUBARU. 4 whl dr hat
chbeck eng replaced, new
eehautl SIIOONrg 1404144
• U LE BARON convertlblt.
red.loaded, dig dath 7SK ml.
HOOP Partial linanca 4*17*00
• I* C H E W Ctltbrlty. AC.
Auto. 4door 0500 Firm
__________ 11)4111
___ _
• *1 JE E P Sport Auto. PS. PB
AC. alarm UK ml SIS.200
Like new I 407 Ml 244!

2 33 — A uto P a rts
/ Accessories
e L E A T H C R FRONT MASK,
(bra) for Maida RX1 tits
1*04 INO125 Cell Ml 1M1

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B u s e s /V a n s
CH EV Y VAN, l*U. V I. auto.
A/C. now tires S1000 OBO
M l MM Jim________________
C H E V Y VAN. 1*11. Interior
nlco I dent, runs great S1.000
OBO Ml MS* Jim___________
OATSUN KINO Cab. (2. S tp .
Stereo *»K ml Very Oepen
dabte 11500 Ml 01*1_________
• FO N D BUS
1*13. GOOD
CONDITION *1.000CALL
___________ Ml IKK__________
FORD VAN. It*!. Plumber'*
Speci al ! Stocked. M any
Oitrat. Sharp! 14 *00 444 *447,
44) 4404 Ibteptrl____________
• HANDICAPPED VAN. 1*00
Ford E ISO LIN. automatic
doors S1 000M114M________
ISUZU TROOPER II. IN4. 4 whl
dr . 4 door. A/C. stereo. S spd
E .cel cond I S4 K 0245 4144

S

Sanford Motor Co.

I* * ( J E E P C H E R O K E E
L IM IT E D
LMttwr. all the
toyt I SS.000 miles 114.(00
_________ Call Ml Otl_________
*1 DODOE RAM. CenveriNn
van. UK m l. 1st owner I TV.
nlntendo U5 450 1211145

2 3 * — Vehicles
Wp-*ed
C A D I L L A . 4 L DORADO
W A N TED K U I N l In nlco
CO. Litton tl* Mil___________
C O R V ETTE WANTED To ro
store Any year or condition
14.000 IlmllCH 11*4__________

USED CAR LDT WANTED
T O R E N T ............... : 42AU4I

239— Moforcycfts

a n d Bikes
H A R L E Y IS* CUtlk. Ntods
work, consider trade. Rooton
able otter only I Terry I K HO*
SUZUKI LT MIR, It** Quad
racer. 11450 cash, or trade lor
4 whl tour llrot# 411 44(4

241— R e c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le s /C a m p e r s
• M F T . 1*77 DODOC RV. low
mile*, steeps 1. stove, shower.
tridge 14000 M1011*________
• 12 F T CL DORADO motor
home. 7* New owning, tv,
runs gruel IS 000OBO Ml 7*15

LOAN-A-RANGERRidesAgain
Q u a lity Used
C a rs &amp; T V u c k s
Good Credit! NoCmM!
Bad Credit!

•SINCE
1912

HOME APPLIANCE CENTER
,1 if . •• ** ..»•

I»4 M . »»♦ .
1Hi\f.f » ( m1 ’.Afa* *»ir

»m 4 I

I O M M I »• i A i .1
OMD
«4 u ' J. . IHB J

No Problem!!
Mincer Motors “Z

Well Advertise Your Car
EVERYDAYTIL ITS SOLD!
(or other motor vehicle)

3 lines for only
lake A Closer Look
Apartment Living at it's FINEST
★ Spacious 1,2, &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments at Affordable Prices
it Gose lo Schools
it Gose lo Shopping Centers
it Swimming Poo!
it Volleyball
it Laundry Facilities

$2124

(additional lines cxlrn)

Ad must include phone number and asking price. If vehicle hasn’t
been sold in 10 days, call us and we’ll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is m ining except for price. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Ibday!

2714 Ridgewood Ave.,
330-5204
g e q c v a Q a rd e rg
I50S West 15“ SI.
Sanford
322-2090

Sanford H erald

• t ie r

�• I I

•• - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Wedneaday, July 14. 1003

by Chic Young

BLONDIE

Gearing up for
a gluten-free diet
DEAR DR. G O T T : I'm told I

by Art Sansom

T H E BORN L O S E R
r

£

UM, MOTHER GARGLC ^
YOU MV£
A RUH
in your/
HOSE

/

S O M E T H IN G

Y

r
fv

r

\

7

-4 *

*
-

by Chartes M. Schulr

P E A N U TS
M l! MY NA M E 15 ETHAN..
I JU 5T GOT 3 A C &lt;
FROM “ C R A f T $

UJEVE SEEN LEARNIN6
HOW TO MAKE 0OU&gt;5
A N D ARROulS LIKE

-------------— T
/
TMI5 15

THE ARROW
I MADE .&gt;

THAT'S
AN INDIAN
A R R O W '’

SURE WITHOUT IT,
THEYWOUIPN'T
KNOW WHICH
WAY THEY
WERE GOING

d ia g n o s e In fla m m a tio n lh a t
w on't show up on X-rays) and
then to a neurologist (to m ake
sure the pain Isn't from a nerve
disorder, such ns Intercostal
neuralgia).

need a non-gluten diet. Please
give me some direction.
DEAR READER: Cellar dlscase, a chronic Intestinal dis­
order caused by a sensitivity to
Ask for these referrals; you can
gluten. leads to diarrhea, ane­
mia. Has. bloating, bone pain. always use the pain clinic as a
Iluld retention and alnlomlnal
ACROSS
36 Actrosa
discomfort. Gluten Is a protein
Sandra —
p r e s c n l In m a n y f o o d s ,
1 Crtdl*
37 Portion of
5 Building front
especially grains.
modlctno
11 Pondsrs
Sensitivity lo the product Is
30 Uf* story
13 Mors
40 What's Up.
hereditary. Therefore, the only
muscular
— 7
successful treatment for celiac
14 Prstontlous
41 Naw aoclillta
disease Is avoidance of gluten.
rural
43 Motisy —
rasJdsnca
(music group)
Patients can usually eliminate
IB Fsalar
46 Wolfdsr
wheat, rye. barley and outs from
18 Frail drink
40 Poat-offlco
llirlr diets; however, gluten Is
IB Commotion
option
10 Roman
commonly added to commercial
52 Troplcsl fruit
bronit
54 Gusrsnlood
foodstuff*, such as soups. Ice
20 Spock
55 Palm traa
cream and hot dogs.
22 Typs of
56 Closar
T h e r e f o r e , people on a
Buddhism
57 Batwaan Ky.
gluten-free diet need detailed
24 Maka s conand Mtaa.
tontod sound
lists of "unsafe" edibles, and
26 Dsatroy (si.)
DOWN
advice supplied by a licensed
20 Having dull
dietician familiar with celiac
finish
1 005, Roman
disease. Once the diagnosis Is
31 Mors
2 Oavaatata
humorous
3 Capri, a.0.
made (by Intestinal biopsy), pa­
33 Tha mar4 Styta of aingtients must scrupulously follow
chant ot
Ing (2 wda.)
the diet. Ask your doctor to refrr
Venlca
5 — and
35
Bltarrt
you to a dietician.
D E A R DR. G O T T : I'm a
36-year-old female who suffers
from chest pain that radiates to
m y left up|K-r »&gt;ack. Sometimes
the pain is an ache, other limes
It's stabbing. I’ve had a chest
X-ray. echogram, lung scan and
upper G l. all of which were
negative. My doctor has now
suggested a pain clinic, anil I m
very frustrated.
DEAR READER: Chest pain
can I k - harrowing for patients.
cs|K-clally when II recurs and no
cause can t»e found. Your doctor
semis lo have touched most of
the bases by evaluating your
lungs, heart and upper Intestine.
II hope he obtained a gallbladder
ultrasound, because gallstones
can cause chest pain.I
Rather than send you lo a pain
clinic. I'd Ik - Inclined to refer you
(Irst to a gastroenterologist (for
endoscopy, a technique of look­
in g I n t o y o u r s t o m a c h to

MEDICINE

•1

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

last rrsort If the specialists strike
out.
Anawar ta Pravtaua Paula

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[ih

6 Musaum
contanta
7 Cravtca
6 Japanaaa
natlva
0 Latra
10 Epochs
12 Surf alt

u l h ib

13 Saloon
17 Snaka

20 Actraaa
Joanna —
Y a a ---------Author Gray
Famlnlns
auffli
Flying saucara (abbr.)
Typa ol pasta
01 alrcratt
Opp. ol post
Inaans
Opposlta of
octo
Lumplsst
Oly.nplc org.
Dutch town
Hava
scruplaa
Columnist —
Bombtck
Actor Jamas
44 Aacand
45 — Major
(conataF
lotion)
46 Old aga
47 Otharwlsa
46 Horsa color
50 Eilat
51 Comparative
ending
53 Author Anala

WIN AT BRIDGE
By Phillip Alder
Richard J . Ferris, the former
president of Unlit-d Airlines,
said. ''It Is now |K»sslble for a
(light attendant to gel a pilot
pregnant.'' And why not?
Many years ago. all In-llighl
m agazines contained several
puzzlr pages, which Included a
b rid g e c o l u m n . N o w a d a y s ,
though, a crossword Is usually
the only challenge lo a passen­
ger's analytical mind.
Therefore. I was pleasantly
s u rp ris e d to find that the
Turkish Airlines In-flight maga­
zine contained an Interesting
chess p ro b le m and t oday' s
bridge deal. T h e reader was
shown all 52 cards and asked —
I think — lo analyze the pluy In
three no-trum p. Well, hdw do
you think It should go?
North's bid of three no trum p
Is aggressive, but lie has a good
five-card suit and excellent con­

By Bernice Bede Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Thursday. July IB, IB93

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ER N EST

MUSICIAN’S
TUI M
H N
M
N IT O

M EETING

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n
n - S m p : STA£ F

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itt N J- TWAT vAT-*-

V

U -p .M -'-M eP T lM eN T O

3ARFIELD

IN S A P
by Jim Davis

The year ahead could be an
exceptionally pleasant one for
you . because sonic of yo u r
iicart's Innermost desires might
he f ul f i l l ed. Dar e to be a
dreamer.
C A N C E R (June 21-Ju ly 22)
Although a new channel might
not I k* very obvious lo you at
tills lime. It could be an avenue
(or fortuitous developments In
material ways. What occurs to­
day could get things rolling.
Try in g lo patch up a broken
r o ma n c e ? T h e A s tro -G ra p h
Matchmaker can help you to
understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mall $2
and a l ong, self-addressed.
stant|&gt;cd envelope lo Matchmak­
er. P.O. Box 4-165. New York.
N Y . 10163.
L E O (J u ly 23-Aug. 22) Today
you could be In for a pleasant
surprise when you receive an
Impressive amount of attention
from a member of the opposite
ge n d er y o u t ho u g ht n e v e r
noticed you.
V IR G O ( Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)

by Jim Meddick

..1 P0t/T

JO TtATH

VNEIL FORTUNATELY IT LOCKS LIKE
YER M A SEWED YER RW At ON YER
JERSEY tAR UH " l l

“Jr

-a-

NORTH

tiiij

♦ AQ4
VQJ97)
♦AI 5
♦ A to

EAST
♦ J961

WEST

♦ 107:
VAIS

9Kt:

♦ K7

♦ W»M

♦q

io 7 11

♦ J4

SOITII

♦ KIS
V 10 4

♦ K 92
♦ J 8 5 32

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: North
SMlk

l NT

Weil

Norik

Eotl

Pam

1V
J NT

P»u
All paw

Opening lead ♦ 6

Someone who Is extremely fond type of lucky break today. It's a
of you might set something up safe bet to say tt could come
today that could udd to your through one of your favorite
resources In a substantial way. social contacts. Be friendly
His/her gesture won't have any towards all.
strings attached.
PISCES (Frb. 20-March 20) A
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You venture you thought was un­
could have ample reasons to be profitable and outmoded still has
smiling today when you sec your lots of life left In It. Reexamine It
long range plans starting to ugaln to see how It can Ikunfold In the |&gt;osltivc way In revitalized.
which you originally envisioned.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
SCORPIO (O ct.' 24-Nov. 22) You're apt lo Ik - luckier today ll
An agreement Into which *you you coordinate your efforts with
might enter today should work someone else iusleatl of trying to
out mutually beneficial, as long do everything on your own. The
as both parties involved are loyal person you need Is someone
tn o n r another.
with whom you worked pre­
SAGITTARIUS INov. 23-Dec. viously.
21) A member of the opposite
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
gender to whom you're attracted
Is equally as Interested In you. Chances are before (he day Is
However, you bellcr make a over you could garner some type
move because hc/shc might lie of material rewards either as a
gift, bonus or for a service you
too shv to do so.
CAPRICORN |Dec. 22 Ja n . |K-rformed for another.
GEMINI ( May 2 ) - June 201
19) Forego the slrlctly business
ut t l t udc today and show a You could Ik - more fortunate
friendly warmth to persons with than usual If you freely express
whom you deal In your business yourself and let others know
world. The effect could Ik * very your true feelings, especially III
the romance department.
beneficial.
AgUARIUB (Jan. 20 Feb. 19) (C l 19 9 3 . N E W S P A P E R E N ­
If you're going to get any unique TER P R IS E ASSN.

by Leonard Starr

A N N IE
R O B O TM A N '

trols. Aces are worth more than
lhe four points we normally
assign to them.
You start with six lop tricks.
T h e other three tricks can come
from the heart suit. But while
establishing lhat suit, you must
lose the lead twice. If the oppo­
nents can establish and cash
three diamond tricks lo go with
their two heart winners, you will
fall to defeat.
Th e danger Is a 5-2 diamond
spilt. If Hint is the situation, you
must try to cut the defenders’
communication In the suit. The
key play Is to duck the llrsl trick
completely.
W in trick two In the dum m y
und lead a heart toward your 10.
West may win and establish Ids
diamonds, but he has no entry
remaining. And If East wins this
trick, he has no diamond to play.
If the opponents are trying to
establish a suit, always consider
a ducking play.

I 22J1

a**®?

KNOW HOW AJhSL

TAUGHT
ItfK fH«

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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, July 14, 1993; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>S e r v i n g S anf o rd , Lake M a r y and S e m in o le C o u n t y since 1 9 0 0
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Sanford
children
survivors

T o astin g art in Sanford

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t o o k a s . n l i m n hi f i n n i n g l i n n I &gt; \ \ t i n u u \ i i
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I d u n k ssi II have quite a lew ul ilmse
si in Ii ills i nun in mi Mnniltis
lie said
I ■11it 111111si said ih&lt; l u i m h e r ul s t u d e n t s
• spii ssiiif an inn i i si in s u m m e r seliuul lx
aln ails a m ails i c r n r d laeakiiij; iiuiiilier W illi
'll' ' vpei led addUlulial irglxtrn ills nil MiilldllV.
all pi i s inns i i t m ds sin add he sli.illered. lu* said.
Ih said dial J l nisii in inrs had already h ren
' 111pins i d Im iln s i i i i h i i c i and lie e x p c r l r d dull
See S u m m e r , Page 5IJ

Night train w histles irk citizens
B y N IC K P F E IF A U E
He r a l d S t a l l Wrllur

I.A K I M A I C
^i UI/MI-* has i l.imi' In d a di is t in
pn si ul Main sslusdes h u m In u if snuuded al uiflit in
Hit i US I In m allei ssas illsi lissrd I hlltsd.is Itlflll
al lilt l.aki Mtii y i iis &lt; ninm issm ii iiieeimii
M d m u f li ( n\ M m.ift i Inliu l.ittun at kuusslt dip s
llieit hast hern ■m n p l j i ^ j j ^ n l n ail d a m ss hisil&gt;
must s m da past
Hns Is III' lust time a |n llltnll has
In i'll pi esenled
lie said
I III pi 1ll 1&lt;'ll Is slum'll hs H i H'Sldi Ills I lie leipit si
na ils
We dn le s ld e u ls u l l.aki Mats a n opposed
in Iln s n m id m u " I ill) d a m inn ns I ii I sseen I lit Imuts
•d I n p m
a n d li a til
p.u I n nl,H Is i h i m i f h

Set A 11 pm t . I'.nje a \

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pi edi m i nia l ills n snli

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d a l a re a s .”

It

i m um iies
We leel d i a l s i n c e ili crc- a r c
" H i m , mi e s m si si i a I ell i r s d i a l s t a l e l l i e r e wi l l h e n o
d a m lim n s whistles, e h
b lo w n b e tw e e n 10 p .m .
and k a in
u is iml I n n n u l l ' l l t o a s k t h a t w c b e
allt m led die same i t nil It-sy.
\i i n rdiui' I " dm uiiicnts received b y Ih c city, Uupi i ii mu ssas itiHiaicd bv I'beudur F e lt h tiler, w h o
Iis i s on ( m in u s ( lo b Kn.id, .is do 114 other signers.
I t in In i ss inn tu t.niuii no J u n e I . s u b m ittin g the
p r iu ln iis
We hast tried to negotiate a n d sent
several lei u i s m C S X iii J a c k s o n v ille ," he said, " b u t
ssi! I mu I uei I lug even till a n s w e r .”
( h i lit ball "I the signets Felteiier Is requesting the
Sf-e W h i s t l e s . P a g e 5 A

�. &gt;; ' . a;-.'itJJ)Vy1].

A*

f . « A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, Juno 21. 19M

NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Girls committing more crimes, but little attention is made to them
Two found dtad of hovoln ovordoto
FORT LAUDERDALE — The bodieo of two men. one holding
a hypodermic needle, and an unconscious third man w en
found alter they apparently overdosed on heroin, authorities
said.
Angela Noll, 31, was looking for her boyfriend, Patrick
Gardner, at the Pompano Beach home of Larry Stout when she
saw Gardner and another man lying on the floor, the Broward
County ShertfTs office said Sunday.
When she got no answpr at the door, she climbed through a
window and called for hetp.
Gardner, 30, of Pompano, was pronounced dead at North
Broward Medical Center. Stout was found by deputies In the
bathroom, still grasping a hypodermic needte In his hand,
sheriff's deputies said.
Mike Stillwell, 31, dfPointiano Beach was In fair condition
Sunday night at the medical center, a nursing supervisor said.
Stillwell told Broward Sheriff’s Office detectives that Gardner
had provided the heroin. He said It was the second time the
three had Injected heroin together, the sheriff's office said.

Pilot kfllud Hi orMh
PENSACOLA - A single-engine airplane crashed Into a
wooded areai at
i the edge ofPeneacola's airport, killing the pilot
and Slightly Injuring a passenger.
______________
Witnesses
said the____
planedived
divedInto the trees inside Pensacola
Regional Airport's fence. The National Transportation Safety
Board is Investigating the wreckage to determine what caused
lane to lose power Sunday.
the two-seater pi___________________
Michael B. Jackson, 43, died after being thrown from the
aircraft, according to Pensacola Police reports.
The passenger, Greg Sabo. 33. first declined medical
treatment then went Into shock. He was treated and released at
Sacred Heart Hospital.
Sabo said he and Jackson took off from the airport just after
midnight for a Joyride In Jackson's plane when the accident
occurred.

MottMf w H n tm s son’s shooting
BROOKSV1LLE — A Brooksvllle womann ple/ide&lt;
pleaded with a
gunman to spare her son’s life aa he brandished a rifle on a
restaurant patio with fellow diners watching.
"Please, don't shoot my child," Rosabell Blake screamed
Saturday aa the man aimed a .22-callber rifle at her 38-year-old
son.
Moments later, Rodell Blake died, bleeding from a gunshot
wound to the head In back of the restaurant.
Police charged Robert Lewis Johnson, 67, of Brooksvllle with
first-degree murder In the shooting In front of about 20 people
on the restaurant's patio. Johnson was being held 8unday
without ball at the Hernando County Jail.
Hernando County deputies charged Johnson after he told
detectives he drove to the restaurant Saturday looking for
Blake, according to a sheriff's report. The reports say Johnson
told authorities he meant to scare Blake.
No one could say what prompted the Incident.

- A f p i M l g a i A O S * John Rybovtoh Jr*
an¥Jlp8H4m«lf Wta Matt several Innovations
veasslaPtHti: Rolls-Royce of Ashing boat#, died . at Qood
Samaritan Medical Center. He was 80.
Mr. Rybovich and his brothers, Tommy and Emil, made
Palm Beach famous with their boats.
Everything that characterises modem sportflshlng boats —
leir sit
sleek profiles to the transom door that opens to
from their
accommodate big' fish to the pedestal fighting chair — were
it yi
yard,
Innovations created by Rybovich and Sons cost
Mr. Rybovich Is survived by his wife, Kathryn Jordahn
Rybovich: one son, John Jordahn RyboVlch, of Delray Beach:
one daughter, Sally Altlzer of High Point. N.C.: two sisters,
Ethel Dodge and Mary Irene McLane, bath of West Palm Beach;
one brother, Emil, of North Palm Beach.

Circus smployss drowns In pond
NATICK. Mass. — A circus worker who drowned In a pond
had gone Into the water to cool off with fellow employees after
erecUng a circus tent, police said
Charles
rle Bonner. 31, of Jacksonville, had Joined six others of
the Clyde Beatty-Cole Bros. Circus for s swim Saturday
afternoon In a pond behind a high school.
Police said they received a call around 1:30 p.m, that the
man had gone under water. Bonner was declared dead at Metro
West Medical Center about two hours later.
"He got In over his head and he probably panicked." said
Fire Chief Oene Sabourin.
Prom Associated Press reports

MIAMI Here are th* Winning
numbers selected 8undey In
the Florida Lottery:
L ette
4-12-20-87-46-48

TAMPA — Even though a growing
number of girts are committing crimes In
Florida, little
tie attention Is being paid to
them, said participants at a Juvenile Justice
conference.
"Qlrls who come In contact with the
justice system are really one of our most
vulnerable groups," said Shirley Thrasher,
a researcher from Wayne State University
who spoke at the three-day conference. "We
have paid virtually no attention to them, as
far as who these girls are and what their
needs are. Theories of criminology have
totally Ignored girls."
. c u . ..
LaWsnda Ravolra coordinates a statewide
program designed specifically for troubled
girls. She said the state and nation have
shown no commitment to understand girls
who get into trouble with the taw. Few
programs are designed to deal with them,
she said.
"We're trying to put girls Into a male
system that doesn't even work for males."
Ravolra said.
Juvenile crime statistics show that males
still commit the vast majority of offenses,

more are being arrested for stealing cars,
pie and
burglarising homes, assaulting people
committing murder.
Advocates say the dearth of programs for
female offenders may be a factor In two
troubling trends.
First, girls are more likely to be Incarcer­
ated for running away, truancy or un-

Tepper .said she has .been working with
He
officials at the state Department of Health
and Rehabilitative Services "trying to
establish a commitment program for girls"
so that aa a judge she can have a place to
send troubled girls.

• r julian m t ta m o M
Herald Columnist
If local folks didn't know better
they would think this was San­
ford's lakefront around the turn
of the century. But it Isn't at all.
Actually this Is a photo of the
Clyde Line docks not In Sanford
but In Jacksonville Just off Bay
Street,
Pictured here are the "Fannie
Dugan," the "DeBary" and "the
Queen of the St. Johns." As river
traffic Increased during the early
1900a the Clyde Line became
the St. Johns River Line and a
huge warehouse was built Just
off Bay Street Just about where
the present Main Street Bridge
now connects downtown Jack­
sonville with South Jacksonville.
1941.
Line
k h K iW

a Wa

k S 0 nyJti 1e

rrpm .tptal doetruc
o 9 0 / S u n d a y m .o r i a A g . . waterfrontt;\ fro
Thousands Of’ soldiers Worn . tIon. This event created a certain
Camp Blanding plus sailors and amount of confusion since It
marines from the Jacksonville happened about six months be­
Naval Air Station and Cedi Field fore Pearl Harbor. The Herald’a
Joined firefighters In preventing "Way Back When" editor, Julian

Stenatrom. a member of the
medlqal d etachm ent of the124th Infaiftry o fth e 31st Dixie*Division, was on special duty In
Jacksonville at the time and
operating out of the old Duval
bounty Armory
At
County
with Charles L.

Hayes of Sanford and Edwin
Pridgen of- Paola. Stenatrom
handled ■the*' hospitalization of
soldiers from Camp Blanding at
St. Vincent's, St. Luke's and the
Duval County hospitals during
the fire.

Film to steer troubled youth from prison
TALLAHASSEE - The state
Department of Corrections hopes
a film featuring Inmates talking
about life behind bars will steer
youngsters on the verge of get­
ting Into trouble away from
prison life.
The (Um narrated by Inmatea
nd Ifrequent
tell of the vlolerlce and
sexual assaults Inside the pris­
ons. It tells of the loss of freedom
and contact with families.
"A lot of these guys have no
heart," one Inmate says, adding
how’ he Has..................
seen others stabbed
aver a bar of soap, or In a dispute
over a game of checkers,
Bobi Maci
Macmaster, a Florida De-

p a r tm e n t of C o r r e c tio n s
spokesman who Is associate
producer of the film, said groups
that work with troubled kids
frequently want to show them
what is In store for criminals,
But taking children into a prison
Is risky.
"This isn't meant as enter­
tain m en t," Macmaster said.
"There were no efforts made to
embellish It one way or another.
This Is just strictly the way it
Is."

There Is no blood and gore
from a Hollywood production
here. But there Is some frank
discussion about what It takes to
survive.
The 30-minute movie was

p ro d u c e d by c o r r e c tio n s
employees. Lee Berger, a 18-year
veteran
of
producing videos for
'”
__ ■
ides, and his crew
state agencies,
traveled
„«Tv.vU .v
across
.w the state last
year to film life In prison and to
Interview Inmates.
Last month, the film won a top
award — best-produced film of
the year — from the American
C o rre c tio n a l A sso c ia tio n .
Macmaster said the department
hopes to distribute the film to
schools and community groups
across the state.
"A lot of the times we would
be walking across the compound
with our equipment and the
inmates would yell out, 'Tell It

P j•/A
f jVi
y 'ivVj*vv/
r Iw
'.ij'tjv,

straight,"’ Berger said. "That's
" ' ----------8
g rto do."
• ..
what
we’ve tried
The Inmates say plainly that
new inmates can expect to be
raped or beaten by older, bigger
Inmates for their new socks and
underwear. They can expect to
be shaken down for money by
Inmates who rule the prisons
like their personal kingdoms.
The movie shows new Inmates
getting a litany of Instructions
on behavior — march In single
file, no talking In the dining hall,
no yelling. An inmate who
breaks the rules Is shown being
placed In solitary confinement
:hedaagain.
and strip-searched

\ VLL* , J*.

Tbday: Partly cloudy with

Tamparafurat Indicate prtvtowi day's

*F VJ' l

MONDAY
PtlyeM y 90-70

1

TUESDAY JjjL ^
rtly cld y 90*70

v
WEDNESDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

THURSDAY
Ptlyeltfy 90-70

June 19

TUESDAY:
BOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 7:50
a.m.. 8:25 p.m.: M#J, 1:45 a.m..
2:10 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 10:34 a.m., 10:53
.m.: lows. 4:20 a.m.. 4:26 p.m.:
law Smyrna Beach: highs.
10:39 a.m.. 10:58 p.m.: lows.
4:25 a.m.. 4:31 p.m.; Ceeea
Beach: highs. 10:54 a.m.. 11:13
p.m.*, lows. 4:40 a.m.. 4:46 p.m.

R

£

Ms. seek Franah Art., lantord,

Jane 28

ns. amt

J u ly 11

si *—*—*
Daytona Beach: Waves are
1-3 feet and rough. Current Is to
the north with a water tempera­
ture or 80 degrees, N tw Sm yrna
Bsaehi Waves are 1-3 feet and
tugh. Current la to the north.
with a water temperature of 79
degrees.
fj’ljysiLtvC -,u

FRIDAY
Ptlyoldy 90-70

Anchorage
Atlanta
Attertlc City
Bdtlmoro
Billing*
Birmingham
Bltmsrck
Solis

Sotton

Monday, June 21, IB M
Vol. 86, No. 266

m -

especially violent crimes. More than four
times as many Juvenile males were arrested
In 1991.
But more girls are being arrested.
Although Juvenile girls tend to be arrested,
for less serious offenses such as running
away, possession of alcohol and truancy.

TH E W E A TH E R

of rain 30 percent.
Tonight: mostly fair. L
around 70. Light wind.
Tuesday|, partly cloudy wltn a
40 percent .chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Highs around
90,
Extended forecast: Partly
cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows In the
lower to mid 70s. Highs in the
upper 80s to lower 90s.

“ ““

- 8 hIrtfy Thrasher

Way Back
When

w

IClBAABaafsaa

I We have paid virtually no
attention to them, as far as
who these girts are and what
their needs are. Theories of
criminology have totally ig­
nored girls. §

govcmablllty because there are few options
other than Jail.
.
„
In 1987. fewer than half the females
confined In public training schools and
detention centers nationally were there for
o recrimes. Second,
the most serious category of
girls who commit less serious offenses are
not getting the help they need and are going
on to more serious trouble, advocates
contend.
.
„
Pasco-Pinellas Circuit Judge Lynn Tepper
said because of the trends she see In the
backgrounds of female offenders, programs
should be designed specifically for girls.
Female delinquents are more than twice as
likely to be the victims of sexual abuse than
bays, and for a longer period.
"We have not fully addressed the needs of
girts In programs," Tepper said. She said
there also Is a lack of programs for boys, but
"there are more options for boys."
,

at. Aagnstlns to Jnpltar Inlet
T onight: Wind becom ing
south to southwest 10 knots.
Seas 2 feet. Bay and Inland
waters a light chop. Widely
scattered showers and Isolated
thunderstorms.
T uesday: Wind so u th to
southwest 10 to 15 mph. Seas 2
to 3 feet. Bay and Inland waters
a light chop. Scattered showers
and thunderstorms.________

The high tem perature
Sanford Sunday was 87 deg
and the overnight low waa 6u as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center, Celery
Avenue,
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending at 9 a.m. Mon­
day, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today waa 87 degreea and
Monday's overnight low was 70,
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
D I u B i y ' i high............. ....99
□B ar sm s trie yrasaara.S O .il
□R elative BoastJity....BI yet
n w to tta................W ait I myh
□BalafalL.......................0 la,
□Today's aaa a at.....8:89 y.m.

nr

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Char totton,I.C.
Chortotton.W.Va.
Char lotto, N.C.
Chicago
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Dallas-Ft Worth
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Houtton
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�*.., ■ U

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 21, IB M - SA

Battsry|domsstlc violence charged
Craig A. Lindsey, 38, 800 Von Neeo Circle, Longwood, was
charged with battery/domestlc violence on Saturday by
Longwood Police.
Police said that after his wife returned from an outing with
other family members, the couple became Involved In a verbal
altercation, but the argument turned violent when he tried to
le t th e a ir o u t o f th e t ir e s o f th e f a m i l y c a r .
Police said he had attempted to choke her and that she was
having trouble using her arm which she said had been struck
repeatedly.
Police noted that all the phones hod been pulled out of the
wall at the house.
He was taken to the Jo hn E. Polk Correctional Facility where
he wus held without bond.

Two arrested for possesion
Hrlnn Paul Lovett, 30, 303 E. 18th St.. Sanford and Louis
Emldlo Olnclntl. 33, 34th Place, Sanford, were charged with
possession of cocaine by Casselberry Police on Saturday.
Police said they stopped the car driven by Olaclntl because
he was driving erratically.
A plastic bag of what was later Identified as cocaine was
found on the front seat of the car. A bag containing more of the
substance was also found In Lovett's pocket, police said.
Th e y were taken to the J E P and held on 13,000 bond each.

DUI arrest
Joseph Todd Hurst, 33. 46614 Orange Ave., Longwood, was
charged with DUI by Seminole County sheriff1a officers
Saturday.
Deputies said when they stopped H urst for driving
erratically, they noticed his eves were watery and bloodshot,
his race was flushed, his speech was slurred and his breath had
a strong odor of alcohol. He refused to take u breath test,
according to the department.
He was taken to the J E P and held on 1300 bond.

.Argument, stabbing rsportsd
Michael David Tru ll, 30. 3303 S. Orlando Dr.. Apt. 607.
Sanford and Acy Hires 111, 37. 3301 S. Sanford Ave., Apt. 100.
Sanford, were charged with aggravated battery by Sanford
Police on Friday.
Police said the two were involved In an argunent at the
Sanford Courts Apartments when Tru ll allegedly used a
butcher knife to stab Hires.
The two were taken to the J E P where they were each held on
84,000 bond.

Battery leads to arrest
Dennis Wayne Evans, 40. 250 N. 2nd St. Lake Mary, was
charged with battery by Lake Mary Police on Friday.
Police said that Evans and Ills wife had been In n verbal
nrgument when his 23-ycar-old daughter drove up and Joined
In the argument.
Police said he struck her across the mouth, causing a bloddy
lip.
He wus taken to the J E P and held on 82,300 bond.

Warrant arrest
Alton Jerome Butts, 23, 1216 W. 13th St., Sanford was
charged In connection with a warrant for violating the terms of
his probation.
He turned himself In at the J E P where he was held without
bond
■ : .* .m

i *

s t w . i 4 M m M tw . M K )

&gt;

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

inm

i

«i

Longwood
considers
ordinance
Hsrsld Staff Wrltsr
LO N G W O O D — A city charter
amendment making the police
department leaa vulnerable to
being dissolved will be consid­
ered by Longwood City Com m is­
sioners tonight. Th e first step In
the process, an ordinance, will
be discussed at the commission
meeting.
Com m issioner Harvey
Smerllson la proposing the city
charter be amended to provide
for a police department along
with operation guidelines. Th e
amendment would go before the
voters Nov. 3. Th e city's police
department was created under
the city code but Is not part of
the city charter.
In p ro p o sin g the change,
Smerllson explained, It would
take a unanimous vote of th£
city commission to abolish the
department If tt was a part of the
city charter. As It stands now the
police
department, could be
abolished by a majority (three of
five) vote of the clly commission.
Three of the five commission
scats are up for election In the
Nov. 3 election. Candidates have
already filed for seats held by
Smerllson. Fred Pearl and Rex
A n de rso n . M ayor Paul Lo vestrand and Steve Miller are not
up Tor election.
During the last election, voters
voted to keep the city police
department rather than turn the
law enforcement duties over to
the county. Lovestrand backed
the proposal to do away with the
city department. By creating the
department In the charter. It
would be less vulnerable when
the composition of the com­
mission changes.
In other business, the com­
mission will consider a proposal
from Longwood Police Chief
Greg Manning to spend 812,000
of drug confiscation money to
start a teen dance club for area
youth. He has proposed the
project to help reduce crime and
drug activity by providing a fun,
supervised place for youth to go.
Th e project geared for 12 to 18
year olds would serve youth
from Lym an and Lake Mary high
school* and Mllwe*,, Qrcenwood
___ litCSfl_______________
Lakes and Rock Lake middle
schools. About 7,600 students
attend the five schools.
bt),.i
Video music at the twice a
week chaperoned dances would
be provided, uccording to the
proposal. A 83 per person fee
Inventory reduction eale
w o u l d a l s o h e l p p a y t he
In our La w n e n d G a rd e n C e n te r
1 H a r d w a r e .
expenses such as building rent,
Insurance, utilities, music and
- S t o r e s g tt*
A lt p l a n 's in a l M k
chaperones. T h e re m a in in g
IMfu* *Ma n i U M I
binding would come from con­
SANFORDSTORE ONLY
°
ROSEBUSHES - HEDGEDWARF
-ALLSHRUBS
fiscation money.
•AZALEAS
• RAPHIOLEPtS OWARF • PETUNIAS
Th e commissioners will con­
Cwort8000iq.lt
(1 or 3 OzJton) • GARLIC BLUE
•BEGONIAS
duct a 6 p.m. work session
• GARDENIAS
• SWEET OUM
• MPATHMS W
• IXORA MAUI
• RED BUOTRIES
Monday to review two proposals,
•GERANIUMS
a change In the telecommunica­
EALEENOSMVS)
I
tions utility tax and a solid waste
LONGWOOD LAKE MARY . A M
SANFORD CASSELBERRY I
commercial franchise. Th e regu­
a
r m mnSmnm,,
1 *7 i t e m
m a e fM ir.
I
lar commission meeting begins
zj w a s
*******
Narvmm
»-***•
t» m
at 7 p.m. In the commission
AAMNMMitOf
NAMVAMf
M AM nM
chambers of city hall.

A musical
calibration
First Shiloh Missionary Bap­
tist Church, Ssnford, plsysd
host to a celabratlon In honor
of fathsrs svsrywhsre on
Sunday at the Ssnford Civic
Csnlsr. Ths Mississippi Mass
Choir, First 8hlloh Maas
C h o ir, fe a tu rin g E lo lae
George, ebove, end sa x ­
ophonist Ronald Nathan, right,
delivered performances to the
Joy of the crowd.
■HbrtU Photo* b» Ktn|oZabulunql

GftttOeN CENTER

agenda
The following Is the agendu for
the Monday m eeting of the
Longwood City Commission, A
work session proceeds (he regu­
lar meeting.

• Work session
1. Cult to order.
2. Review proposed exclusive
solid waste commercial fran­
chise.
3. Review proposed change to
telecommunications utility tax.
4. Adjourn.
• Rcgulur session
1. Call to order.
2. Silent mcditutlon followed
by the Plcgc of Allegiance.
3. Public participation.
4. Consent agenda:
u. Pay approved bills.
b. Approval of minutes of June
7. 1993.
c. Approval of annual re­
quirements for the purchase of
gasoline and diesel fuel from
Munsllcld Oil.
3. P ub lic beu rln g —
Reconsideration of previously
upproved conditional u b c re­
quest to be permitted to provide
access through SR 434 In lieu of
p a v in g Pine a nd O le a n d e r
streets. A p p l i c a n t : R.R.
Brucc/agent for Mike Hattuway.
Location; 340 E. SR 434.
6. Public hearing— Ordinance
no. 03-1130, amending code of
ordinances, appendix A. article
VI, O cn cra l regulations und
special e xce p tio n s , section
60B.3u. New and used motor
vehicle, m arine, recreational
vehicle sale, lease and rental
facilities and lots, regulations,
deleting certain distance and lot
size requirements.

7. Public hcurlng — Ordinance
no. 93-1140, am ending F/Y
92/93 budget, providing for bud­
get transfers.
8. Public hcurlng— Ordinance
no. 93723, approving a stipu­
lated settlement agreement be­
tween the city und the state
department of community af­
fairs to resolve objections to
adopted "comprehensive Devel­
opment Plan."
9. Mr. Robert Purscll, J r., Ace
Hardwure-rcgurdlng payment of
utility tax.
10. First reading-Ordinance
no. 93-1142, am ending F/Y
02-93 budget, providing for bud­
get transfers, (public hearing
7-12-93).
11. Review draft of Ordinance
93-1141 proposing an amend­
ment to the charter of the City of
Longwood, Florida.
12. Request approval of overall
concept of "project-dunce" and
authorize an expenditure not to
exceed 812.000 from the con­
fiscation fund.
13. Monthly financial report.
14. City administrator's re­
port.
a. Schedule work session for
proposed budget for f/y 1093-94.
15. C lly attorney’s report.
a. Approval of loan for Richardo C. Joseph for water con­
nection fees.
16. Mayor and commissioners'
reports.
Districts * 2 .»3 , »4 .* 5 ,* 1 .
17. Adjourn.
The commission meets In city
hall at 7 p.m. The work session
will begin at 6 p.m.

it C f
°14u

I

Man arrested
in son’s
drowning

Need Help With
Consumer Problems? Call:

D ELA N D — Volusia County Sheriff Bob Vogel's
cash-seizure tactics along Interstate 03 will come
under congressional scrutiny on police abuses.
Vogel has described the seizures as a needed
weapon in the wur ugulnst drugs, but critics say It
is racial and unconstitutional.
U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-MIch.. convened the
hearings scheduled to begin Tuesday after an
Investigation by Th e Orlando Sentinel found that
Vogel's deputies bad used the stale seizure law to
take money from hundreds of drivers, although
they made un arrest In only one of every four
cases.
Conyers, chairman of the House Government
Operations Committee, has made It clear he
believes Vogel's five-man drug squad exceeded Ita
nuthorlty by seizing more than 88 million from

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■y Ass— latad P ra ia
W E S T PALM B E A C H A
man was charged with m an­
slaughter In hla 2-year-old son's
drowning when he fell off a boat
police said hla father was racing
through a canal,
Chad David W right was sitting
In the back of the 20-foot boat
without a life vest on when he
fell backward Into a canal. His
father, David Mankowskl, 27, of
West Palm Beach, was trying to
pass another boat at a high rate
of speed, police said.
Palm Beach County Sheriff’s
Detective Jo h n Van Houten said
passengers In the other boat saw
something go off the back of
Mankowskl'sboat.

M aster C&lt;

Controversial cash seizures
head for congressional hearing
i y Associated Prase

Invan

10am , J u ly 9 * ^ 1 0

133 South Overlook Dr.,
Chula Vials, South ofSanford
I . t i t t*f r o u t H o m e -

motorists along 1-95 since 1989.
More than 90 percent of those whose money
was taken, but who were not charged with a
crime, were black or Hispanic. All were accused
In sworn affidavits of being drug couriers.

You can get sales quick with the help of your
Visa or MasterCard. Just call us at
322-2611 with your card number and expiration
date, and we'll be glad to help you write an ad
that's a sure sell.

Friday, a black woman from Charleston, S.C.,
sued Vogel In the first class-action racial
discrimination lawsuit In the nation against
seizures.
Saturday. Vogel told a news conference that his
agency will continue the policy of seizing money
that officers believe may be Involved In drug
trafficking.

Sanford H erald

"These members of our department are out
there courageoualy lighting the drug w ar," he
said. "I am very proud of the members of that
learn."

i

-

�4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 21, 1983

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanfbrd Herald

N A T

H E N T O F F

(USAS 4« 1*410)

300 N, FRENCH AVB„ SANFORD. FLA. 33771
Area Code 407-333 3011 or 831-9003
Wayne D. Doyle, PuMtetwr and Editor

SUBSCRIPTION RATI:
3 Month*............................... $10,30
6 Months............................... 830.00
1 Ytar ................................. 878.00

Fleride Reeldenta nwe pay t s salsa last in
itern taer

E D ITO R IA LS

B etter propery
use at airport
S

» The Airport A uthority at the Central Florida
Regional Airport has taken Initial steps which
m ay lead to better property use. The J e tt Aire
Corporation has been approved for a new
facility to be located at the northern side of
the airfield. Vehicular access to J e tt Aire will
be from S.R. 48.
• T hat portion of the airport property has
never been developed, even while the field
Was used as a military base. There Is a great
deal of land available however, and we hope
J e tt Aire’s move may give other com panies
the Incentive to look at the possibilities of
operations In th at area as well.
Sanford cannot compete with Orlando or
Daytona Beach In major commercial airline
p a sse n g er (lights. It m u st u n d e rta k e a
different approach.
Sanford la an excellent location for support
o p e r a tio n s s u c h a s m a in te n a n c e a n d
overhaul, charter flights, cargo flights and
flight training.
The move of J e tt Aire Is not expected to
cause any large scale traffic problems on S.R.
46. Aviation director Steve Cooke however,
predicts It will become the best corporate Jet
facility In Central Florida, and one of the best
In the nation.
Planning such as this will help bring
additional revenue Into Sanford In m any
ways. It will also help In publicizing the city
through aviation contacts elsewhere.
We com m end the Airport Authority and
officials of J e tt Aire for this new move and
hope It leads to future progress for Sanford
and the surrounding area.

Balkanizing the First Amendment
Largely unnoticed in the recent clashes
between black and white students over free
speech rights at the University of Pennsylvania
was a fundamental conflict between two groups
of lawyers — one white and the other black. The
First Amendment Issues raised go well beyond
the University of Pennsylvania.
Sixteen members of the university's law school
wrote an open letter to university President
Sheldon Hackney concerning the confiscation of
a day's run of the student newspaper. Th e Dally
Pennsylvanian — 14.200 copies — by black
students who consider the paper racist.
One of the law professors told me he could not
recall that m any members of the law faculty ever
before publicly chastising a president of the
university — a president, moreover, who hnd Just
been nominated by the president of the United
States to be head of the National Endowment for
the Humanities.
Th e letter to Hackney began by stating that
"the removal of the newspaper ... was a direct
denial of the principle which ta most basic to the
university. It was conduct which cannot be
excused or tolerated. Th e fact that the newspa­
pers were confiscated as an act of protest cannot
excuse it or make It any less Intolerable. Those
who disagree, of course, are entitled to protest,
but not by attempting to silence those with

whom they disagree,"
Hackney had re­
sponded to the de­
s t r u c t i o n of t h e
new spaper by not
condoning the act,
but be also did not
condemn It. Instead
he said, In a pass at
cvcn-handcdncss,
that "tw o Important
university values —
diversity and open
expression — seem
lo be In conflict."
£ An open letter
Th e law professors
concerned the
would have none of
confiscation
that: " T h e Important
of the student
university values of
newspaper by
diversity and open
black students
expression were not
who consider
In conflict here. The
the pape r
offensive columns In
racist.
no way prevented the
university from cur
rylng out its policy of diversity and its m any
programs to promote understanding. Removal of
Ihc newspapers struck at the very heart of the
most fundamental diversity which the university

WITHOUT A
PWNER..
WITHOUT A
DIME."
J

everyone agrees

“Hey, baby, are we on to something,
or what?"

If that bold Innovation In First Amendment luw
Is ever affirmed by Ihc courts, a huge swath may
be cut through nil sorts of publications by all
sorts of groups claiming to be in "closed
environments." Catharine MacKinnon has new
allies.

H O D D IN G C A R T E R

w o u ld

W avering m ay ruin C linton
For five months, I have tried to resist the
Washington-based columnist's overwhelming
urge to make sweeping pronouncements about
the Clinton presidency. Despite a slip here and
there, It has been a successful effort. No more.
Like every other American citizen 1 encoun­
tered on a recent three-week swing through the
South and Southwest, m y concerns have
overwhelmed m y reluctance to rush to prematurejudgment.
At root, the problem that Bill Clinton has
created for himself can be attributed to
habitual Inconsistency. He w on’t stay fixed,
whether on programs, promises or people. He
apparently believes he can square any circle.
Policies and nomlneea alike are offered up and
abandoned with head-spinning frequency.
Th e president Is a "N ew Democrat" one day,
an old-fashioned liberal another and. ub when
he named former Nixon, Ford and Reagan
flack David Oergen as White House counselor,
Mr. Coalitionist on the third.
When he and his spokesmen announce that
they are 100 percent behind an embattled
nominee, you can Just about bet the bank that
the poor sap Is through. (If 1 were a paranoid
feminist, l’d wonder w hy it is that the
administration moves with particular Bpccd to
abandon women.) Th e hotter the flame, the
quicker the pot Is taken off the stove.
Th e Btu tax on energy was advanced as the
absolute bedrock of the president's deficit
reduction program . But that was before
energy-state Democrats such as Sens. Boren of
Oklahoma and Breaux of Louisiana unnounced
their total opposition. When the tax was
thrown over the side last week, the White
House simultaneously betrayed the House
Democrats who had gone out on a long limb to
pass the program and undermined the presi­
d en ts credibility. Anything the Senate might
devise to raise the money would be nil right
with him, the president said. Th is from the
man whose presidency's high point was the
announcement of an economic game plan
fashioned as a comprehensive whole.
Gays In the military? The president has
managed to catch hell on both sides of the
Issue, first by announcing his support for a
total change In Pentagon policy, then by
capitulating to Sen. Sam Nunn's stubborn
insistence that there should be no real change.
Bosnia? For weeks there seemed to be a
policy de Jour. Now there ts silence. Th e Lord
forbid that a diplomatic historian Bhould ever
try to make sense out of the twists and tuma
which led the administration deep Into a desert
of Incoherence and retreat. It did not seem
possible that anyone could make the Euro­
peans look like models of clarity and purpose
when It came to the former Yugoslavia, but the
president has almost pulled It off.
Health care wqa supposed to be the other
pillar of the Clinton presidency's first year.

OVERSTREET

Th e Clinton administration Is starting to
look like an awkward, self-conscious suitor.
If fishes around for (he correct group to
date, dropping one constituency after another
us it sees a better catch Just over (tie fence. So
worried about doing ull Ihc right things tliul II
can't uct naturally. It docs all tin* wrong
things. Yet so euphoric In the flush of all
tilings new and the first stirrings of an
Infatuation, It sufTt-rs from tor. much en­
docrine production for good Judgment and
common sense.
Who but someone
s o it o r m o u a 11y
directed would keep
plane-loads full of
voters walling white
he g o t a f a n c y
haircut? What team
Init one infatuated
w ith Its own new
power would fire five
employees and put In
It s o w n p e o p l e ,
without so much ns n
Job Service hearing?
( It s u ffe rs fro m
Who hut u (cam so
to o m u ch
exhuusted from re­
e n d o c rin e
creating history

_

Berry's World

Am ong the N C B L arguments Is that the
materia! published by the student newspaper
was "Intended to Inflict psychic Injuries" on
black students. A n d in a closed cam pus
environm ent this Is not protected speech.
A cco rd in g ly. Its perpetrators cannot hide
"behind the First Amendment. Speech that
would ordinarily be protected Is subject to
regulation when the speech Invades the privacy
of the unwilling listener’s home, or when the
unwilling listener cannot avoid the message."

President Clinton
is a fickle suitor

WROUTk

lit hi

There are people who are concerned that
any Increase In aviation operations at the
airport w ill.re s u lt In more noise. Several
m onths ago. Lake Mary residents formed a
stu d y group from various com m unities,
concerned with the flight path approaching
from the west.
Many aircraft fly over Heathrow and other
residential areas, using the east-west runway.
The com m ittee was formed after several
residents complained about an Increase In
aircraft noise.
Closer to the airport, there are other
w orries. Som e re sid en ts of th e Midway
com m unity are concerned that the airport
m ay eventually try to expand and take over
their property. This was brought out at a
recent m eeting In Midway.
A nother m eeting, open to the public, Is
scheduled for Tuesday, J u n e 22 at Sanford
City Hall.
Members of Seminole C ounty's Land Use
S tudy group, Airport Authority officials, and
representatives from Sanford and Lake Mary
will be In attendance.
T he airport has been In existence since the
1040s. It w as th e re w h en m an y local
residents purchased their homes. Did they
think the airport would become stagnant and
never grow?
If there Is a question or a problem about the
airport, attend the meeting.
w e believe people should take the time and
m ake an effort to learn of plans for the
airport.
The Central Florida Regional Airport exists,
and h as outstanding potential. This has been
a know n fact for years.
Now th at progress Is being made, this Is not
the tim e to s ta rt a battle against expansion
an d growth.

Meanwhile. Sheldon Hackney received another
letter. It was from the National Conference of
Black Lawyers and was signed by Lorrny Brown,
president of the Philadelphia chapter.

SARAH

teM B VIM ftN

II lft|.
lit

should foster — diversity of thought, views and
expression."
There was a dissent. Law professor Rulph
Smith, who Is black, wrote, "T h e right to protest
Injustice and oppression deserves no less protec­
tion than the right to publish."

along with deficit reduction, and that Is the
wuy It Is still presented. But for reasons that
defy anulysls, the White House has prepared
the way for the coming national debate by
leaking utterly contradictory ideas wcck-ln and
week-aut. The result ts confusion, rage, fear
and incomprehension, not merely among
health-care professionals and the Insurance
Industry, but In the
general p u b lic as
well.
While this has not
been a comprehen­
sive review, it is Il­
lustrative of an ad­
m i n i s t r a t i o n t hat
talks too much be­
fore It Is sure of what
It wants to do and
yields too quickly to
fo rc e fu lly a p p lie d
pressure.
Wa s h i n g t o n
commentary to the
contrary, this Is not
£ He won't stay
because of an inade­
fixed, whether
quate or too youthful
on programs,
stalf. The president's
promises or
ci r cl e I n c l u d e d a
people. £
n u m b e r of experi­
enced hands well be­
fore the Gcrgcn ap
paintment. His Cabinet is on average quite a
bit older than John Kennedy's. When Bill
Moyers was named Lyndon Johnson’s press
secretary, he was still In his 20s, three years
younger than George Stephanopolous.
No, the responsibility is centrally and
squarely the president’s. Therein lies the hard
truth, but ulso the prospect for solution. Bill
Clinton remains, us always, an extraordinarily
Intelligent, resourceful and decent man. He has
stared Into the abyss before, pulled back and
gone on to success. It is not too late for him to
do it again.
But the hour is very, very late. Most of his
supporters that I met recently In North
Carolina, Mississippi, Arkansas, New Mexico
and Texas are on the brink of changing their
minds ubaul Bill Clinton, perhaps for good.
Th e y were as one In saying thut they are
entitled lo far more clarity and consistency
from the White House. Not one was demanding
Bill Clinton be a miracle-maker. All believed
that the president owes them credible, steady
commitment to principles and programs that
they can understand and that offer hope of
gradual Improvement in the national condi­
tion.
What the people neither need nor want are
more town meetings, presidential seminars
and eloquent promises. What they do want
from the president is a demonstrated willing­
ness to set and then stay the course.

t h in k

it

p ro d u c tio n fo r

good
w o u l d n ' t ma k e a
ju d g m e n t and
press corps guffaw lo
com m on
announce they had
se n se J
**f I r c d ' ’ f i v e
employees one day.
only lo suy u few
days later that they'd only pul the employees
on "administrative leave" and were slill
looking Into the mutter?
But If (he Lunl Guilder mess doesn't
bespeak hormones run amok, nothing does.
This Is the most bizarre toe-dance I have ever
seen In presidential nominations, Based on
press accounts of the president's statements,
this Is a logical reconstruction of the
presidential team thinking:
A. "She's absolutely, positively Ihc one for
Ihc job. We'll make all kinds of points with
Ihc civil rights crowd. We may disagree on
some fundamental tcnunls, but she'll Just be
carrying out our directives anyway, so II
doesn't matter whut she thinks."
B. "Uh-oh. It looks like u lot of the Right
People really disagree with whatever It 1h that
Lanl Guilder thinks, and thut could mean we
won't win Most Populur Senior Boy. We'll Just
luy low and see which way the wind's
blowing."
C. "O o p s , the w in d 's blow ing up a
maelstrom. And dugnubll, her writings are so
darned .obtuse we don't understand them
anyway. How can wc predict whut might
h a p p e n In u c o n f i r m a t i o n h e a r i n g ?
R u-u-u-u-n-n-nnn!"
Th e president’s U th -h o u r confession that
he'd Just read Gulnler's writings und hud now
decided he couldn't In good coil sole itcc
support them hud about ns m uch spin as a
Jack Morris breaking bull.
Can ihc man not pick a staff that can brief
him on a nominee and hend him off al the
pass before he pilches the horse lido the
canyon? I’ll acknowledge that lids wns.
Indeed, one troublesom e up po ln tm cn t:
Members of the Reagan, Bush and Ford stuffs
said Gulnler's philosophies were on par with
some adopted by those Republican ad­
ministrations. Then on the other side, even
moderate Democrats called her a radical who
would divide us along raciul lines. Bui is 11
asking loo m uch that a team headed by
honor scholars be able to mukc a firm
decision on a nomination und early? Did they
have to come off looking like such favorseekers?
There urc rougltiy a bazllllon voters In
America who would like to say to President
Clinton right now: Get u grip, und get u stuff
that can hold on to something, too. Quit
wandering around like a dog In a meat
market, wondering how everyone will react
and whatever will you do if they respond
badly. Let the chips fall, for heaven's sake.
It doesn't take a Rhodes scholur to sec the
effect your waffling and backpcdullng have
among those who voted far the simple
precepts with which you wooed them so well.

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, Jung 21, 1909 -

Whistles------Continued from P i|« i a
city to
pass an ordinance to prohibit the
whistles during the night-time
hours.
After receiving the petition,
Litton requested City Attorney
Ned Julian lo review case law for
discussion.
Julian says it would be possi­
ble for the city to enact such an
ordinance without the city In­
curring liability,
Th e state already has a statute
banning whistles from 10 p.m.
until 6 a.m., but It Is only
effective If a municipality or
county enacts an ordinance.
"Some cities have done so,"
Litton said, "but Lake Mary has
never had an ordinance per­
taining to that."
"T h e city mfght Incur liabili­
ty ," Julian had commented In a
written report. "If it became
aware that the crossing, gates,
bells, and/or flashing lights were
not properly functioning, but
failed to take action to provide
traffic control until repairs are
made, or failed to provide notices
, to the railroad that repairs were

necessary.”
He added that the city might
also Incur problems^If It failed to
make sure that the proper D O T
signage was In place and m ain­
tained.
During discussion last night.
Commissioner George Duryea
commented, " I con see the basis
for this petition, but whenever
there is a contest between cars
and trains. I assure you, trains
will be the winners."
"If we try to regulate this."
Duryea said, "we may be putting
ourselves In Jeopardy If no odeq u a t c w a r n i n g Is at t he
crossings." He added, "Le t's
face It, crossing gates don't
always work.
C o m m ission er A .R . " D o c "
Jore asked If there were not
other crossings besides Country
Club Road and Lake Mary Blvd.,
alluded to In Julian's letter.
C i t y P l a n n e r Ma t t We s t
explained there was a private
driveway leading to possibly five
houses, w h ic h crossed the
tracks, and did not have a
crossing gate.
Police Chief Richard Bcary told

fficer
itinatd from Page 1A
Brewster was the
chool's resource officer between
1987 and 1989. Brewster was
■pended with pay shortly beare his October 1991 arrest on
ie sex-related charges.
Lt. Dennis Whltmeyer said he
auld not comment on the case
Ecause Russell Initiated the
process to remove Brewster's
Certification. W hltm eyer said
lussell Ison vacation.
Danny Quick of the Florida
jreau of Standards and Tra in ig. officer discipline section said
sbablc cause was found last
reek to r evoke B re w s te r's
Brtlflcatlon. He said Brewster
about 30 days to file an
iswer. The finding of probable

cause against Brewster will be
mailed to him this week. Quick
sold.
U n d e r the b u r e a u ' s p ro ­
cedures, Quick said Brewstfer
may request an Informal hearing
to try to keep his certification or
voluntarily give up his certifica­
tion. If Brewster disputes the
hearing officers* findings and
wants a hearing, Quick said the
group is expected to meet again
In Tam pa near the end of Ju ly .
Brewster's case is scheduled
for trial June 25 before Seminole
Circuit Court Judge Alan Dickey
but will be postponed because
several pre-trial motions must be
argued and ruled on prior to
trial. Arguments on all pre-trial
motions Is set for J u lv I.

irport
itinued from Pago IA
available lo address
tlzen concerns.
(T h is will be the third In a
1es of four meetings. The last
II be Tuesday. J u ly 20, at
Iway Elementary School.
addition to the study group,
•airport's Aviation Director
ve Cooke, and pther officials
|, bo on' hand, ut ‘Addition to
entatlves of the Seminole
inty Commission.
In th e a u d i e n c e , r e p r e natives from Lake Mary and
ter cities as well as residential
eas will be on hand.
According to the Seminole
bounty Comprehensive Plan­

n in g D iv is io n , the p u b lic 's
assistance Is needed In order to:
identify Important community
issues and goals; establish study
area priorities; und determine
appropriate land use designa­
tions.
T h e com m unity workshops
arc Intended tq prpvidcji process,
which gives residents and prop­
erty' owners the ‘o pportunity"!!)
comment on and contribute to
the plan for the future develop­
ment of the airport area.
The meeting has been sched­
uled for Tucsduy, from 6 p.m.
until 9 p.m.. In the commission
chambers of the Snnford City
Hall, SOON. Park Avenue.

chools
I Continued from Page 1A
Th e school hopes to allocate
additional money to purchase
'appropriate textbooks and addi­
tional technological equipment
over the next few years.
Th e school has set a goal of
having 100 percent of its stu­
dents pass Algebra I or Applied
Math and Chemistry I or Prin­
cipals of Technology I with a
grade of75 percent or better.
Strong self-esteem for all stu­
dents has been set as a priority
for the schools. Teachers will
receive training to help the
youngsters achieve that goal.
The y will also be schooled In
management techniques that
allow students to use a multi­
media approach to plan, and to
budget time and money coopera­
tively to complete a' research
project.
Th e school hopes to convert
their scheduling to the block
method where students study all
subjects in a lab-type setting.
Th e team has suggested that
lo encourage attendance, the
nine-week and semester exams
be waived for those students
who have only one absence
during the grading period. The
method was used during the
1986-87 school year and the
attendance rate was 97 percent
us compared to the current
89.45 percent.
T h e school will muke an effort
to m ake tea ch e rs and ad-

MART "MARSHA" A. TARR
Mary "Marsha" A. Tarr, 71.
Cluff Avenue, Altamonte
Springs, died Saturday. June 19,
at Florida Hospital, Altamonte
Springs. Mrs, T a rr was a home­
maker. Bom Aug. 4. 1921. In
Pontiac, Mich., she moved to
Central Florida In 1960. She was
Catholic.
Survivors Include husband,
Howards stepson. Ronal d,
Greenville, Pa.s sister. Hilda
Sebastlanelll, Pittsburgh.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h ild Fu n e ra l
Home. Altamonte Springs In
charge of arrangements.

xm aa

*f/SCTi6Py&gt;*rVf7v'Tvqlwi.

- *- ,

mlnlstrators more aware of the
signs of drug abuse and make
school resource officers more
visible on campus while making
the campus more secure.
Seminole plans to contact the
parents of students suspected of
Illegal drug use.
Lake Mary High School hopes
to Increase the readiness of
freshmen to enter the ninth
grade by beginning their orienta­
tion during middle school with
visits from the high school
teachers and with an eighth
grade Issue of the school news­
paper.
T h e school plans to offer
applied technology programs
and maintain those programs as
soon us they get the money to
Implement the plan.
T h e r e ar c also p l an s to
establish a committee to make
recommendations on curricular
offerings and they hope to
reevaluate advanced placement
offerings for the purpose of
expanding the total program.
The y plan to extend the school
day by five minutes and revise
the bell schedule to maintain six
full 60-mlnu(e academic class
periods while adding a five
minute, televised announcement
period each day.
Lake Mary hopes to improve
student attendance by huvlng
the school board waive the
district-wide attendance policy
which the tcum deemed to be
"Ineffective."

LORRAINE C. THOMPSON
Lorraine C. Thom pson. 75,
331 Kcnlla Roud, Casselberry,
died Saturday, June 19, ut the
O a k s of K i s s i m m e e . Mr s .
Thompson was a retired medical
laboratory bookkeeper. Born
May 5, 1918, In Chicago, she
moved to Central Florida In
1955. She was a member of
Prairie Lake Baptist Church.
Survivors Include sons. Robert
E.. Longwood, Stuart J ,, Grove
Spring, Mo.; four grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home, Longwood In charge of arrangements.

the commission that he had
surveyed the situation. " I found
several cities, mostly In South
Florida where they have made
these changes," he said, "but
several of them have already
repealed the m atter."
Deary recommended the city
o b ta in data from other
m unicipal agencies and talk
with railroad olTIclals about the
situation. "I, like you,” he said,
"am seriously concerned about
llublllty."
Commissioner Gary Brendcr
agreed that additional informa­
tion should be, obtained. "W e
should especially try to find out
w hy some cities rcpealled their
ordinances,” he said.

AccidentCoatliiusd from Page 1A
with a i « u i
Chevrolet driven by Vicki D.
Corbitt, 35, of Oviedo, who was
killed on Impact.
•Her car was shoved backward
by the Impact of the collision
and smashed Into the 1988Plym outh that was traveling
behind her. Th e driver of that
car, Donald Carl Anderson, 63,
of Oak Hill and his wife, Evelyn
J . Anderson. 58. were also killed
In the crash.
Tim othy Corbitt, a passenger
In the car driven by V icki
Corbitt, was seriously Injured,
and Is listed In serious, but
stable condition at Halifax Medi­
cal Center this morning.
The Anderson's grand­
children. Michael C. Guthrie, 5,
and Katie J . Guthrie, 3, both of
Sunford, were passengers In
their cor, but received only
minor Injuries, according to the
highway patrol.

Summer-------Continued from Page IB
several more would need to be
hired next week,
'
While classes in English, math
und science urc being oITTcrcd.
Lundquist said, the most popu­
lar class, by Tar. is Personal
Fitness.
"T h e y can get their PE credit
for the yenr out of the way In a
few weeks In the sum m er,"
Lundquist explained.
T h e first su m m e r session
begins today and runs through
Jq ly 8. Monday, Ju ly 5 .will be a
vacation day. Hours' are 7:30
u‘. m . to 1:20 p.m.
Th e second session runs from
J u ly 12 lo J u ly 29, Hours arc
7;30n.m . to 12:50p.m.
Classes for both sessions will
meet Monduy through Thursday
only.
‘We're very excited," Lundquist said.

Th e y nope to Improve security
at the school by lim iting access
lo und from the campus and by
a s ki ng teaegers and a d ­
ministrators to help devise a new
cam pus m o n ito rin g system .
The y will also ask the county to
Install signs ad lights on the road
In front of the school to Indicate
a school zone.
Th e team recommended that
th e s c h o o l l o o k I n t o t he
posslbllty of Instituting a de­
merit system as a means of
making the school a safer place,
One of the goals established by
the team was Increased student
participation In school planning
to ensure that the needs of the
students are being met.
Th e y have also said they hope
to incrcuse the cooperation be­
tween the school and businesses
In order to enable students to
make more inform ed career
choices.
Some of the school Improve­
ment plans front the district arc
dctulled, whllo others only out­
line the goals the schools huve
set for themselves.
The school board will review
ull the plans next month before
sending them on to the state
Pepurlmenl of Education.

What's for lunoh?
Tussay, Juns22,1M3
Manager's Choice
Milk

ANNIEBELLE ENGLETT
Annlcbdlc Bnglctt. 60, Jam ie
Lane, Casselberry, died Satur­
day, June 19, Lire Care Center,
Altamonte Springs. Mrs. Englctt
was homemaker. Dorn Sept. 2.
1912. In Clark County. Ain., she
moved to Central Florida in
1983. She was a member of First
Baptist Church of Casselberry.
Survivors include husband, Oble
J .: daughter, Vlglnia E. Hamlin.
Casselberry: son. Oblc Williams.
S e l m a , Al a. ; seven g r a n d ­
c h i l d r e n and six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h ild Funer al
Home. Goldenrod In charge of
arrangements.

California man claims to be
half brother of Bill Clinton
■y Associated Proas
A P P LE V A L L E Y , Calif. — Henry Leon Ritxen*
thaler loves Junk food and has blue eyes with
bags, but said Sunday he never thought much
about politics — until his mother told him
President Clinton was his long-lost half-brother.
Ritzenthaler, 55, of Paradise, said he was told
last June that he was Clinton's half-brother. His
mother. Adele Coffelt, said she was married at
age 17 to William Blythe, the president's father.
Th e couple divorced a year later, but visited
several times afterward and a child was conceived
on one of those visits. Mrs. Coffelt told The
Washington Post.
H enry Leon was born In Austin, Texas, on Jan.
17, 1938. His birth certificate lists Blythe as his
father.
A few years later, his mother married Charles
Ritzenthaler, who adopted the boy. Blythe
married Vlglnia Cassidy and their son, William J .
Blythe IV, was bom Aug. 19.1946.
Blythe was killed In a car crash several weeks
before their son was bom. When the boy was 7,
his mother married Roger Clinton, a car dealer,
and the family moved to Hot Springs. Ark.
Over the years, RltzentniUer'a mother lost
touch with the Blythe family, said Ritxenthaler's
daughter. Virginia Oana, 32, of Sheridan, Ark.
lt w asn't until Clinton was ru n n in g for
president that a family member told Mrs, Coffelt
that Blythe was Clinton's father.
She didn't Immediately tell Ritzenthaler, but
when she did, "H e was in awe," Mrs. Oana said.
T h e Washington Post spent four months
Investigating the claim. On Sunday, It printed a
copy of a marriage license showing Mrs. Coffelt
married Blythe in 1935.
Th e White House has refused comment on the
claims.
Clinton's mother. Virginia Kelley, said she was
unaware that Blythe had fathered any other
children.
Blythe's sister, Vera Ramey, of Denison. Texas,
angrily denied that Blythe was Rltzenthaler's
biological father.
"If they want to make a big deal out of It and
bring charges, I will be there to testify. That's all
I'm going to s a y ," Mrs. Ramey told T h e
Associated Press before hanging up.
Earlier, she told The Post that she believed
Ritzenthaler was fathered by another member of
the Blythe family.
Ritzenthaler, Mrs. Gana. and several other
family members gathered here over the Father's
Day weekend to celebrate Mrs. Coffclt's 75th
birthday.
After her second husband died, she married
Lloyd Colfelt. She refused to speak to reporters

L tg a l N o tic e
in t h e c i r c u i t c o u r t ,

IN ANDROS
U M IN O t a COUNTY,
s r r 'r
C A t f N 0 .n -i m .C A K K
A N ti.lV 0. SMITHWtCK,
ALLISON D. JENKINS ond
CLAY B. DICKINSON,
Plaintiff,
- r t -

STEVENC. LOEHRsnd
BARBARA R.LOEHR, hit wilt,
(formerly Barbara Krunlc):
NORWEST BUSINESS
CREDIT, INC: And
CHARLES W. DAPP, Trustee,
Defendant.
NOTICE OP SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY given
that pursuant lo Pln«l Judgment
of Foreclosure rendered on th*
Jlth dey of April, Iff), and
amended on the Nlh day of
Juno, 1W3, In that cartaln cause
ponding In tho Circuit Court In
and for Seminole County. PlorIdo, wherein A N S L E Y D.
SM ITHW ICK , ALLISO N D.
J E N K IN S , ond C L A Y B.
DICKINSON, ora PlAlntlfl* and
S T E V E N C. L O E H R and
BARBARA R. LOEHR, fill wife,
(formerly Barbara Krunlc):

NORWEST BUSINESS CRED­
IT, INC.: and CHARLES W.
DAPP, T rut tat, art Defendants.

'CdseKumbet gjaaocwu-K. I.

|*MAAYANNL

, Clark i

^irMEIthdayot
July, Iff), effe/ for tale and tail
fo tho highlit and baat blddtr
for caih at tho W nt front door
of tho Somlnolo County Court
HouM at Sanford. Florida. tho
following doacrlbod rial propar­
ty, altuata and balng In Saminolt County, Plorlda, to-wlt:
Tha Eat I 313 taol of tho Wait
J4J44 tool ot tho NWte of tha
NEU ot Section IS, Tovrmhlp If
South. Ranga If Sail. Samlnolt
County, Florida, lying North ot
South Sylvon Lako Drlva.
Said Mia will ba moda pursu
•nt to and In ordor to tatlify tho
tormt ot Mid Pinal Judgment.
Dated Jun* 14, iff].
MARYANNS MORSE
CLERK OP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By JonoE. J im w Ic
Deputy Clark
Publish: JunaJI.il, Iff!
OEP-tff

Legal Notices
SEMINOLE COUNTY H A R O OP COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
N O TIC IO P PUBLICNIARINO
JU LY II, Iff)
til* P.M.
Tho Somlnolo County Board of CommlMloneri will hold a Public
Hearing lo contldor o request from White Construction Company,
Inc./baker Parma (or a H« month extension ond to omand the haul
route tor ■ Borrow Pit Permit (BPtid*) Jocated on the following
'dater lbed pyopsr fy i
LOTS U-4J, 44, 44. d l l , ff, 101, 10), 100. 107, lOf, 111-1)0. 117, 114,
1M, IM. IM, 177, 134, ISO. IM, 140. Ut. I4S-1D. 1*3-714, IIIA . 1I0B.
m i . m . ns, 177, n f, m i . m i . p i n e c r e s t p b i . p o t* a n d t a x
PARCELS ). 1. AND SA IN SECTION 1). TOWNSHIP SO. RANOE M.
FURTHER DESCRIBED AS LOCATED SOUTH OP CR 41/ ANO
WEST OP SANPORO AVENUE, ON BOTH SIDES OP THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY EXPRESSWAY RIQHTOF-WAY, ALSO
KNOWN AS TRACT "C " AND "B " OP CRREKSIDI PUO.
(DISTRICT IS)
Tho hearing will bo hold In Room I0M of tho Somlnolo County
Service* Building. HOI E. First Stroot. Sonford. Plorlda on JU LY IS.
Iff). 1:S0 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible. Tho mealing may ba
continued from lime to time, o* nocosMry. Tho** appearing will bo
hoard and written comment* may ba 11ltd with tha Current Planning
otllea at m m iso. extension 7441.
Persons or* odvltod that, II they decide to appeal any decision
mode ot this hearing, they will need o record ot tho proceodlngt. and
tor such purpose, they may naed to Insure that a verbatim record
Includes tho testimony and tvldtnct upon which tho
il Is to ba
bated, per Soctlon IM OIOS. Plorlda Statute*.
Psrsons with dlMblllltet noodlng assistant* lo participate In any ot
those proceedings should contact tha Employ** Relation* Depart­
ment ADA Coordinator *• hours In advance of tho mooting *1
M M IM, extension 7*41.
H A R O OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
BY: BOB STURM. CHAIRMAN
A TTES T: MARYANN B MORSE
Publish: Jun*It, Iff!
D EF-UI
S IM IN O L I COUNTY BOARD OP COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARINO
JU LY 1). Iff)
liM P.M .
Tho Somlnote County Board of Commltatenori will hold a Public
Hearing lo centldtr a request from Sullivan Materials. Inc. for a f
month OMltAtlen to on existing Borrow Pit Parmil (BPS I OS) located
on iho following dotcrlbod property:
AX PARCELS S AND 7, SECTION M, TOWNSHIP 11 S. AND
R NOE II B. SEMINOLE COUNTY FLORIDA (DISTRICT III,
FURTHER DESCRIBED AS THE WEST SIDE OP IRON BRIOOE
ROAD. V*MILE NORTH OP MCCULLOCH ROAD.
Tho hearing will bt hold In Room toil ot tho Somlnolo County
Sorvlcos Building, 11011. First Slroot, Sanford. Plorlda on JU LY 1),
Iff). 1:30 p.m. ores toon there*Iter a* possible. Tho mooting may b*
continued from tlm* to tlm*. os nacstsary. Those appearing will b*
hoard and written commant* may bo (Hod with tha Current Planning
oflie# ot Ml-1IX, extension 7441.
Persons or* advised that. It thty docldt to appeal any decision
mod* at this hoarring, they will need a record ot tho proceeding*, and
tor such purpose,i, they may naod to Insure that a verbatim record
include* tho testimony and ovldanco upon which tho
it is to I
based, par taction ns.oio), Florid* Statute*.
Persons with dlsablllttes noodlng assistance to participate In any of
as* proceedings should contact tho Employ** Relation* Depart
man! ADA Coordinator 41 hour* In odvonc* ot tho mooting *1
MI-ltM, extension 7*4t.
BOARD OP COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
S IM IN O L I COUNTY. FLORIDA
BVi BOB STURM. CHAIRMAN
A TTE S TIM A R Y A N N I MORSE
O IITB IC T tfl
Publish: Jun# 11, Iff]
DEP 1*0

Sunday,
Ritzenthaler had a Janitorial business before a
heart condition forced him to retire. He u n ­
derwent open heart surgery in 1980 and 1984.
and has a speech Impediment and hearing loaa.
T o describe himself, Ritzenthaler, who goes by
his middle name, Leon, uses words like "com ­
m on " and "ordinary."
Ritzenthaler said he wrote Clinton In J u ly 1992
and sent a picture and birth certificate. He
received no reply.
Mrs. Oana followed that up four months ago
with another letter.
"W e don't want to Intrude In their lives,
la
Ritzenthaler, who said he has no other brothers
rs
or sisters.
:
Tall and thin, Ritzenthaler never graduated'
tied
from high school but did play the trumpet
grade school.
He's a registered Republican, but, " I vote for
the' man, not the party. I did vote for Clinton, but
not because he's m y brother.''
He notes there are a lot of similarities between
himself and Clinton. "H e Is very emotional and I
am very emotional. I have blue eyes and m y bags
are the same."
1
He saya he wants nothing from Clinton except,
his father's health records so he can p a n them on)
to hla own two children. He noted, however, that]
doctors told him that hla heart problem did not
appear to be hereditary.

1

"1

Legal Notlctt

Legal Notices

CITY OP
CITYOP
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
&gt;
N O TIC IO P
NOTICE OP
PUBLIC HEARINO
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVBN
NOTICE IS HERESY OIVBN*
by Tho City Commission of th#
by Th* City Commlsaton of Bin
City of Lake Mary, Plorlda that
City ot Lak* Mary, Pter Ida that
said Commission will hold a
said Commission will hoM a.
Public Hearing on July t. Iff),
Public (tearing an July l. tm.1
at 7:00 P.M.. or os soon thereaf­
at 7:00 P.M.. or a* toon there**-,
ter as possible, to consider
ter a* possible, to tenelder1
Second Reading and adoption of
Second Reading and edition of)
an Ordinance entitled:
an Ordinance entitled:
Ordinance No. 0*0
Ordinance Nd, 411
AN ORDINANCE OP TH E
AN ORDINANCE OP T H E '
CITY OP LAKE MARY, FLOR­
CITY OP LAKE MARY, PLOR-,
IDA, PROVIDING FOR THE
ID A , A M E N D IN O O R D I­
VACATING OP A DRAINAGE
NANCE U t AS CODIFIED IN!
AND U T IL IT Y EASEMENT AS
CHAPTER IM OP THE CITY
P A R T OP S T R A T F O R D
OP LAKE MARY CODE OP
COURT. LOCATED IN THE
ORDINANCES: A M EN D IN O 1
CITY OP LAKE MARY, PLORSITE PLAN REVIEW PRO­
10A, AND MORE PARTICUCEDURES: AMBNOINO SITE.
L A R IY DESCRIBED
P L A N S U B M IT T A L R E I
H EREIN; PROVIDING FOR
Q UIR EM EN TS: AMENDINO;
CONFLICTS. PROVIDING FOR
Q U A L I F I C A T I O N OP.
SEVERABILITY, AND PRO­
E N O I N I I R R E Q U IR E ­
VIDIN G FOR E F F E C T IV E
MENTS: AMBNOINO SURETY
GATE.
OP PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT
Th* Public Hearing will ba
REQUIREM ENTS: PROVID­
held in th* Commission Cham­
ING FOR C O D IFIC A TIO N :'
bers, 100 W ill Lak* Mary Blvd.,
PROVIOINO FOR CONFLICTS,
Lake Mary. Th* Public Is In­
S E V E R A B IL ITY , ANO E F ­
vited lo attend and ba hoard.
FECTIVE DATE.
Said hearing may b* continued
Th* Public Hearing will bo,
Irom lima lo Urn* until a
hold In th* Commission Cham-,
decision Is mad* by tho City
bars. IM West Lake Mery Blvd.,
Commission. Copies ot !h* Ordi­
Lake Mary. Th* Public It In-nance In full *r* available In th*
vltod to attend and bo hoard.
CltyCtefh'sOttk*.
Said haarlng may bwaantlnued
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS ­
Irwn 'TWn* Tk |t|n w b n tii a
A B I L I T I E S N IE O IN O
dacieten.lt J a j J t t J S a City
ASSISTANCE TO P A R TIC I­
Commission. Coploo of Mm OrdlPATE IN ANY OP THESR
P R O C E E D IN G S -S H O U L D
CONTACT THE CITY ADA C a
P E R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
ORDINATOR AT LEAST at
ABILITIES NEEDINO
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
ASSISTANCE TO P A R TIC I­
M EETINO AT (407) 374 3034.
PATE IN ANY OP THESE
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
P R O C E E D IN O S S H O U L D '
M EETIN O IS MADE BY THE
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO­
C IT Y FOR ITS C O N V EN ­
ORDINATOR A T LEAST 4S
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE­
M EETING AT (407)374-3034.
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
POSES OP APPEAL PROM A
M EETINO IS MADE BY THE
DECISION MADE BY THE
C IT Y FOR ITS C O N V E N ­
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
FOREGOING MATTER. ANY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN AD E­
PERSON WISHING TO EN­
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
POSES OP APPEAL PROM A
RECORD OP THE PROCEED
DECISION MADE BY THE
INOS IS MAINTAINED FOR
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
PORIOOINO M ATTER. ANY
A D VISED TO MAKE TH E
PERSON WISHING TO EN­
NECESSARY ARRANOBSURE TH AT AN ADEQUATE
M IN TS A T HIS OR HER OWN
RECORD OP THE PROCEED­
EXPENSE.
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
C ITYO P LAKE MARY,
APPELLATE PURPOSES II
FLORIDA
A D VISED TO M AKE T H E
CAROL A. POSTER
NECESSARY A R R AN G E­
CITY CLERK
MENTS A T HIS OR HER OWN
DATED: Jun* II. Iff]
R X P IN IE .
Publish: Jun* It, Iff]
QBP-lfl
CITY OP LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
I N T H I CIRCUIT COURT
CAROL A. FOSTER
OP TH E IIO H TB E N TH
C ITY CLERK
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
D A TID : Jun* II, It*)
INANOFOR
Publish: Junell, Iff)
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
D IP-lf4
FLORIDA.
CASE NO, fl-744-CP
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
IN RE: THE ESTATE OP
O P TH ER taH TB R N TH
M A R O A R C T M .
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
BLANKENSHIP,
SIM IN O LIC O U N TY,
Oeceeted.
FLORIDA.
NOTICE OP ACTION
CRIMINAL CASINO)
TO: Rabort Lo*
n-IMS-CPA-O
Blankenship, Jr.
IN RE: FORFEITURE OP
(Addras* Unknown I
1N7FORO MUSTANG
YOU ARE NO TIFIED that on
VIN: 1PABP41ESHP14744)
action to Otter Later Will ter
N O TIC IO P FORFEITURE
Probate Pursuant to Plorlda
PROCEEDING
TO: Mona Both Wofp*
Statutes, SS7U.N0 ha* boon
10411 Prostwlck Road
llted against you and you or*
required to sorv* a copy ot your
Boynton Booth,
written dotensas, it any, to It on
Florida I M P 4411
Karvoy M. Alpor, Esquirt, al­
Ford Motor Credit Company
ternay tor tho personal repre­
Poet Otfle# Rex f7S7
sentative named In tha Will
Pert Leudtrdol*.
Florid* 73310-f7*7
dated December X , Iff I, whoso
oddross Isi III Wost Citrus
and all ottwra who claim an
Interest In tho tallowing proper­
Stroot, Altamonte Springs, Plor­
lda 17714, and to Robert L.
ly:
1M7 Ford Mustang
Denials. Esqulro, attorney for
personal representative undtr
VIN: 1FABP4ilIHFW14M
Will doted April 17, iff t, whoso
Donald P. Etllngor, of ttw
address Is I ) South Magnolia
Somlnote County Snerllfi Of­
Avtnuo, Orlando, PL 77*01. on
fice, Somlnote County, PlortdoJ
or bolero July tf, Iff], ond III*
through h it olllcort-,
th* original with th* Clark ot
vet) Ig*tors or apontt, soiled
this Court tllhtr botor* service
above property on March
on Petitioner's attorney or lmiff), at or near Uth
mediately Ihart* Iter; otherwise
Sanford. Somlnote County,
a default will b* entered against
Ido. ond It prosontly h
you ter th* roltel demanded In
told property ter the purpoto i
th* Petition.
ilture pursuant to Soctk
NOTICE
*33.701 704, Florida Statutes,
ond will REQUEST that
AMERICANS WITH
Honorable Judge of tho Clrcut
DISABILITIES
Court, Elghteonth Judlcta
ACT OP IffO
Circuit, Somlnote County. Flor­
Administrative Order No. f l 77
ida, find probable cause that
Person* with a disability who
abova proparty thauld b&lt;
need a special accommodation
lo participate In this proceeding
forfaited to ttw above apancy,
should contact ADA Coordinator
You will bo sent a copy of
ordor finding Probable Causal
at Ml N. Park Avenue, Suite N.
Ml, Sanford, Plorlda 77771 at
once It It algnad by the Judge
least live days prior to th*
end It will
when to respond to this request
proceeding. Telephone: (407)
33J43M Ext. 4717; ISOO-fUter tertelture.
I771ITDD), or I »0PfS*l77O(V),
I HEREBY C E R TIFY TH AT
via Plorlda Rslay Service
e true and carrect copy of Milt
Nat tea was sent to M » above
DATEDon Juna7. Iff).
C LB H K O FTH E COURT
named address** by U .t.
BY: Roaamary Hamilton
certified moll, return receipt
A* Deputy Clerk
requeued. this 7th day of Jun*,1
Publish: Juno 14, I t , » &amp; July I.
iff).
Iff)
DIP-11
DANIEL N .B R O O IR IIN
LEOALCOUNSEL
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'S OFFICE
1141 Mth Street
Sanford. Florida n r r r m e
Telephone (4*7) 33*4471
Publish: June IA IS, II, H Iff) I
DIF-fS
n w e iB ir

�• A - Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - M onday, June 21, 1993

Lake Mary
IN BRIEF

Heathrow Stingrays beat the heat

Sewing club gathers

LAKE MARY
HEATHROW

Every Tuesday front 9:30 a.in. to noon, the W OOPIE Sewing
Club gathers at the Lake Mary Senior Center. 158 N. Country
Club Road, to make baby clothes, and Items for nursing homes
as well as Items for the Christmas Store. The Items made by
the club arc donated to preemle babies, nursing home residents
and gifts for the annual Christmas store.

SARABECCA
ROSIER

Bridge club meets every Monday
Lake Mary Seniors Invite anyone 55 years or older to piny
party bridge. The Party Bridge Club meets every Monday
between 1-3 p.m. at the Lake Mary Senior Center at the Old
City Hall. 158 N. Country Club Road.

Camera club sets meetings
The Seminole Lake Mary Cnmcru Club meets flic second
Wednesday every month In Old Lake Mary City Hall. 158 N.
Country Club ltd. at 7:30 p.m. For more Information, call Grace
at 321 -4723 or Scl at 323-8091.

Club takes the lead
L.E.A .D .S to Success, u newly formed club to share business
connections, will meet 7:30 n.tn. Wednesday at Pebble Creek
Apartments clubhouse. 7H0 Crcckwnter Terrace. Luke Mury.
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 to Join.
For more Information, contact Murcia Kurtze 046-0609.

Rotary meets early
Itolury Club of Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings.
7:30-8:30 u.m. at the Tim acuan Country Club, on Rinehart
Itoad. Contact Paul Osborne, president, at 321-4764.

Lake Mary Optim ists m eet weekly
The Optimist Club of Lake Mary meets every Tuesday at 7:00
p.m.. at 109 E. Crystal Lake Ave. (corner of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors are welcome.

W om an’s Club to meet
Lake Mary Woman's Club meets the fourth Wednesday of
each month. Contact Cheryl Greene 323-5102 or Pauline
hundschu. 330-3905.

Historical Com mission gathers
Th e Lake Mary Historical Commission meets 7 p.m. Monduys
at Lake Mary City Hull, 100 W. Lake Mary Ulvd. Contact James
Thompson at 322-9432 for more Information.

Clogging group to have classes
DIxIcluVu'r’fcloggcrH hold classes from 7-8 p.m. each Monday
at the Lake Mary Volunteer Fire Station *33. First Street and
Wilbur Avenue.

W eight Watchers meet on Thursdays
A local chapter of Weight Watchers meets at the Lake Mury
Com m unity Hulldlng every Thursday from 4:45 to 6:45 p.m.

Youth Center open on Friday nights
Every Friday night, the Lake Mary Com m unity Building Is
transformed In a Youth Center from 7-11 p.m. Area youth ure
welcome to participate in the fun.

Sunbelt Daylily Club to meet
Sunbelt Daylily Club meets the first Sunduy of the month ut
2 p.m through April at the Old City Hall. Highway 15A near
Lake Mary Houlevurd. Lake Mary.
The club educates members on daylily growing through slide
shows, guest speakers and trips to daylily gurdens. A May
flower show and plant sale Is planned. There arc no club dues.
Call 886-3196 for more Information.

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
is a proud member of the "Welcome
Wagon" Family In Seminole County

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

L e t y o u r W elcom e W agon re p re se n ta tive
a n s w e r y o u r que stio n s a b o u t th e a re a a n d
p re s e n t y o u w ith free gifts.
If You Live In One Of These Areas, Please Call

Sanford
323-5265
Lake Mary
321-6660
Longwood- 869-8612 or 774-1231
Winter Springs 777-3370
Altamonte
339-4468
Casselberry
695-7974
Oviedo
695-3819
\
Or Anytime Day Or Night Call 646-9644

T o beat the bent, the Heathrow
Stingrays swim teams hit the
water.
Th e teams arc divided Into two
groups of 8 and under and 9 and
over. Instructor Ross Hohlkcn
really works these teams hard.
Ross says t hat t h e y have
"com petitions between other
country clubs In the area such ns
Intcrlachcn. Islcsworth,
Tuscaw llla and the C oun try
Club of Orlnndo." However Ross
said that "the whole paint Is
participation, not the ‘gottn win'
attitude. I believe that the effort
Is more Important than the end
result. My emphasis Is In trying
something and having fun. I
hope that most of the kids enjoy
it enough to go on with the
s w i m m i n g a b ilitie s t hey' ve
gained. The y do work!”

Harald Photo by Sarabecca (toiler

Heathrow Stlngraye warm up for competition.

Students pitch In
The school vandalism of late to
the many schools In our area
really upset Andrew Simmons
and Ryan O'Leary when they
read about their own elementary
school. Lake Mary Elementary,
sustaining damages.
After reading all about what
happened the iioys called their
school principal. Sherrill Casey,
and told her how upset they
were and volunteered their serv­
ices to come up and help clean
up the mess and damages.
"I don’t slarl camp for a week,
so I can help out until then.”
said Simmons.
Their services were gruclously
accepted by Casey.

Herald Photo by Sarabecca Sotlar

Danielle Eger and Stephanie Albert practice the backstroke.

La Sarloma presented check
During the last meeting of the
Greater Seminole La Sertoma
Club, the Event Chairwoman
Mary Sculto presented u check
In the amount of $1,000 to
Sandra Sun Miguel who Is the
school social work supervisor for
Seminole County public schools.
The donation was made to the
Marie Taylor Needy Children's
F u n d whose funds arc admlnstercd by San Miguel. The
fund hus no operating costs,
therefore, all monies donated are
spent on direct service for the
child. This particular donation
was earmarked for hearing Im ­
paired children In need. Semi­
nole C o u n t y School Hoard
Member Hurbara Kuhn was on
hund during the presentation.

(Sarabecca Rosier la your
Sanford Herald correspondent
covering
the
Lake
MaryHeathrow arsa. To contribute to
this column, phone 323-5599.)

Harald Photo by Sarabecca Roilar

Sandra San Miguel, loft, Barbara Kuhn and Mary
Sculto,
present check from Greater Seminole

La Sertoma Club.

Church offers fun program for kids
Since Year Round Education
(YR E) Is right around the corner
for Lake Mary and Heathrow
areas, H oly Cross Lutheran
Church has come up with a pilot
program that will alleviate the
problem of what to do with
children during olT(rack periods.
Tills pilot program Is called
Kids Kamp and will run for only
one week this summer from Ju ly
26-J u ly 30 to see the type
reception It receives.
It Is for boys nnd girls entering
kindergarten through 6lh grade
In the fall of 1993. Kamp will
begin at 9 a.in. and end pro­
mptly at 2 p.m. After care Is
available from 2 p.m. to 0 p.m.
Th is week's session will close
with a performance and art
exhibition Friday evening from
6:30 p.m. lo 8 p.m. "W e want to
celebrate alt our campers who
have learned at Kids Kam p."
said Pastor Dave Schllllnger.
Kids Kamp Is a community of
campers from different religious
backgrounds. The staff will pro­
ject a positive attitude In a
warm, caring atmosphere. How­
ever. Kids Kamp Includes no
religious Instruction or related
activity.
Ki ds K a m p Is offered In
partnership with the Orlando
Science Center and the Orlando
Museum of Art.
Each of the cam pers will
experience the following activi­
ties each day.
• Fine Arts. The vivid colors of
flowers, foliage nnd birds will
come lo life In this class. Kampers will also experience the

excitement of a different culture
expressed through mask making
and unlive fond fesl as well as
Ihc fun of squlgglc. squirt and
spray palming art form. The
course will he presented by the
Orlando Museum of A rt In ­
structor, Chcry I’aben.
• Nnturcworks. Hampers will
enjoy hands-on experience with
the environment. Topics Inrludc
aquntlc studies, reptiles and
amphibians. All classes focus
around the Orlando Science
Center' s permanent exhibit.
Nnturcworks. This Is presented
by the Orlando Science Center
Instructor. Deldra Engle hart.
• Drama. Knmpcrs will partic­
ipate In dramatic experiences
through a variety of theatrerelated act i vi t i es in c lu d in g
games and preparation of a
special presentation lor Friday
eveni ng' s perform ance pres­
ented by Jeff and Rachel Hoycr.
members of a New York City
theatre group.
Class sizes are limited lo a
m axim um of 15 per age group
and there will he three age
groups. The cost Is $65 which
Includes the $25 non-rcfundnbic
reglstration fee. Children will
need to bring a sack lunch, drink
and snack each day. "T h is Is like
having the Orlando Science Cen­
ter ami the Orlando Musucm of
Art come to your door." said
Pastor Dave. "Right now we are
projecting one week In each
intercession period, hut we hope
lo expand lo three weeks for
kindergarten through 6th grade.
We feel this Is going lo he a

much needed community serv­
ice during YR E and II Is basically
a non- r el l gl ous c o m m u n i t y
servee type- program." continued

Pastor Dave. "W e are really
excited about the program and
the benefits of the cultural
exposure lo our kids.

L itrlJ ie h l T !w.itr*

Kid B m M qyie
A Kamival of Movies,Pofxorn,and Coca-Cola
Plan* ara taking ahape lor our Summer KMFunMovta, bringing a day ot
movto km and ondtemenl lo tha children of Laka Mary and aurrounding
area each weak all 8umm*r long
Our program ttna year will include many apodal feature*, tuch a*,
coloring conteata tor the children with prize* and gifti from tom* of the
area merchant* and other turpruot Wo will, of court#, have a apedal
•electron of Q Rated movie* that will be certain lo plea*#
The KidFunMovt* will be ahown each Tuetdiy at 10 00AM al tha
Litchfield In lake Mary Hera la our ptannod program

AMS QOLOEN AQE OF LOONEY TUNE8
SNOOPY COME HOME
JUST PLAIN DAFFY
LIFE A TIMES OF BUQ8 BUNNY
LOONEY TUNES HALL OF FAME
ROCK-A-DOODLE
A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN
QUACKBUSTER8

POPCORN
INCLUDEI

W1I tralnad ttaftlo halp with auparvlalon. Doom opart al 9:00
AU. Coma aarfy and aao tha aurprlaaa and fun waftava tor you.
With a amgle edmtaaion of only $2 00, each child will receive a
KkJPak, which include* a boa ol popcorn and coca cola
uid you deaire further Information, pleate call u* at 324-01 18

W

4

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�Sports
' vj,

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Small field plays big

lSr-

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S ee T o u rn a m e n t, I'njje 211

‘Hooligans’
celebrate
Bulls’ title

Calling it a season

K r u k ’s h o m e r sinks Marlin
I ’I Ill Al &gt;1• l . l ’I I I A
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By T A M A R A S T A R K S
Associated Press Write'
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s i u d i n i i i i vnl v i d i n l l u
l l u uli III p t n V f d l i m l l i a l l I m I t t a k i
S m a l l "I s t a t u t e
tin vniilui m a n
nnimk i d h a t (I i " m . i k i l i m i s i ll a s i a l f
i h . m i p m i i m nn i ii*.111llll i n n m n l a k&lt; v
• m il III in I ■il I " I a s i Ni. il s Si i n i l m l f
st a ll i l i . m i p i m i s l i i p b a s e hall n m u
I " n t u l i l s i . i i i , I nn l i al m a x I i . ini
• a n s e d ibis lapsi
nl | u d n ' n n ul
m i all
vmu
M m I m l i nnI i m i v hi i i
d . u l m i i ' h i l i l l l u a p p l e nl v m u m i
NNIII I s Ilf N■ I n d ' h NI Ml .1 II llll I If III s
• a n m nnm i n s i i d d f i i l x In i m i l e s a
l u ll spaNN i n il i m p a t l l u i t m s l i n
■' p p m t u l u i i i i u
I h n* Hl lll s s "I 111•NV l l l i u ll Null i a l t
I'll V i l l i i l a i d II l i st l a l l ull a l l d Mil
l i a i a s s u i M i l i p i u IdX III I Isl ll i mi l l l l l l "
t in;. I u l u i i Di a l * 1111&lt;I s e f i l l s I "
Nxill.nntx m i d " p i ni x l l m i i n m m
d m i linn
n i l I " I • x " ih n d i n n l i i s h
l l u i l l s si i mi i N'Mii " l l h m i l N
dull
| ' 11v s n nl lv i Ii ilk l i e ' N"ii
I i I m i i i ■n i di m i HI ik* *. a. i i i mi s
l u l l ll s t i " ! I'M l l u I " i m u l e Hill
\ l l l l l M is ll 111 V pl.ll I III t mi l l N l "I
" H m il is. i l n l m i i
Hi l i l '
i ii Im si a n d
\ i u l I nn i s h
111 II NN• II I l I f s I " I III l i l l ' l l IN I .1 s

�!■ - Siniord Herald, 8anford, Fioridi - Monday, J u i» 21, 1PM

Seminole-

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
All Tlmat I D T
AMERICAN LEAOUE
Rati Dlvlttofl
W
L
Dalroll
43 IS
41 IS
Toronto
Naw York
41 tf
Baltimore
35 31
Botlon
30 31
Mllwauka*
It 37
Cleveland
27 41
Watt Dlvltlan
L
W
Kantai City
35 31
34 31
California
Chicago
34 31
34 34
Saalll*
31 34
Taxat
Mlnnatola
If 34
Oakland
H
M
Saturday'* Oam* i
Detroit to, Milwaukee 7
New York I, Minn*tola a
Clavaland 3. BalllmoraO
Toronto*, Bo*ton4
Kxntxt City 3, Oakland 0
CaliforniaJ,Chicago*
Stall)* 1, Taxat!
Sunday'* Oatnat
Naw York I, Mlnnatola 0
Dalrolt 7, Milwaukee 3
Baltimore *. Clavtland 3
Toronto 1 Bottom, II Inning*
Oakland *. Kantai City I
Chicago 11, California*
Saalll* 13, Taxat 3

Tuatday'i Bam**
Saratola at Fart Laudardala
St. Palartburg at Lakaland
For* Myart al Otcaola •
ClaarwataratSt. Lucia
Daytona al Watt Palm Batch
Charlolta at Dunadln
PC*.
.431
too
5*4
.315
.441
.431
.317

OB
—
2
3
•
13
13
I*

Pci. OB
.530 —
.SIS 1
.515 1
.500 2
.4*3 5
.44* SW
.40* 1

Mllwauka* (Navarro 3 3) at Clavtland
IKramtr 1 1 1 , 7:01pm.
Mlnnatola IBrlckton 3-7) at Botlon
I DoptontJ).7:35p.m.
Taiat (Brown 5-3) al Chicago (McDowall
10-4),1:05 p.m.
Californio (Finlay 7 3) al Kantai City
(Pichardo* 3), 1:35 p.m.
Oakland (Darling 1-43 at Sttillt (Hinton
5 3), 10:05pm.
Tuatday't Oamat
Mllwauka* at Clavtland. 7:05 p.m.
Ntw York al Toronto, 7:35 p.m.
‘
Dalrolt al Baltlmora, 7:35 p.m.
Mlnnatola al Botlon, 7:35 p m.
Toxot at Chicago, 1:01 p.m.
California al Kantat City, 1:15p.m.
Oakland*! Stall It. 10:03p.m.
NATIONAL L E A O U I
■ail Dlvltlan
W L
Phlladtlphla
4* W
SI. Loull
31 1*
Monlraal
1* 31
Chicago
31 14
Pllltburgh
31 IS
Florida
It
17
Naw York
JO 47
Wail Dlvltlan
W L
4* 23
San Francltco
Atlanta
If 11
Lot Angela*
33 It
14 3!
Houtton
11 37
Cincinnati
17 41
San Dlago
Colorado
73 44
Saturday'* dam n
St. Loullt, Chicago*
Pllltburgh I, Ntw York!
Cincinnati I. Lot Angola* 4
Atlanta 4, Monlraal!
Philadelphia 5, Florida 1
San Francltco 10, Houtton 1
Colorado 17, San Dltgo 3
Sunday'* Oam*«
Atlanta S, Monlraal 1
Phlladtlphla 4, Florida 1
Lot Anga la**, C IncInnat 11
SI. Loul*7,Chlcago*
; ; Calfradnj, ban a j g a g r ,) ; ,

Pet.
.70*
.5*7
.5If,
.40S
.470
.41*
•Iff
Pet.
.447
.537
530
SIS
.444
.117
141

OB
tV*
II
IS
11(5
17
17W
OB
—

7li
tw
10(3
14
III*
Ti

1 -CMOE “
0 I), 3:03p.l
St. Lault IMagrana S-41 at Florida (Aquino
a al. 7,15 p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 4-9) al Phlladtlphla
(Schilling* l),7 :U p .m .
Montraal (Barn** 1'1) al Now York
(TalghadtrOO),7:40p.m.
Cincinnati ( RI(o *3) al Colorado (Rtynoto
4 3), t: 09 p.m.
Houtton (Portugal 31) ot Lot Angol**
(H Martina; 5 4), 10:15 pm.
San Dlago (Brocall 1-9) al San Frandtto
(Wilton* 3). 10:35p.m.
Tuatday't Oamat
SI. Lault at Florid#, 7:55p.m.
Ahanl* at Philadelphia, 7:13 p.m.
Chicago at Pllltburgh, 7:15 p.m.
Monlraal al Now York, 7:40p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorado. *: 05 p.m.
Houtton at La* Anga lot, 10:15 p.m.
Son Dltgo ot San Francltco. 10:15 p.m. •
■attarn Dlvltlan
L Pet.
W
* GroanvlIlf (Bm vft) 31- 33 J41
Orlando (Cubt)
M S3 .135
37 33 .51*
Carolina (Plratatl
Knoxvllla (BluaJayt)
33 M .4*5
Jicktanvllto 1Mariner!) It M .4*4
Wattorn Oivltton
.Nathvlll# (Twin*)
40 31 .1*3
Birmingham IWSoa)
35 3* .4*3
Hunttvlll# lAthltct)
34 37 .47*
Chalt*nooga(R*dtl
14 M .471
Mamphlt (Royal!)
31 M
.4*1
x clinched llrtl hall dlvlilon lllla
Saturday'* Oamat
Orlande*, Jacktanvlllal
Carolina I, Oraanvlllal
Chaltanoogaf, Knoxville I
Birmingham*, Hunttvlll**
Mamphlt f , Nathvlll* 2
Sunday'* Oamat
Orlande 3, Jacktanv III* 1
Carolina 7, Oraanvllto I
Chaltonoogal. Knoxville 1,11 Inning*
Nathvlll* II, Mamphlt*
End at Flrtt Hall
Monday'* Oamat
Nogamattchadultd
Tuatday'tOamat
Second Hall Eaglnt
Hunttvlll* at Orlando, 1
Mamphlt at Jacktenvlll*
Challanooga at Ortenvlll*
Birmingham al Knoxvllla, 3
Carolina at Nathvlll*

OB
—

1
)Vt
«w
7
5
*
*W
7

Florida Slat* League
Sacond Hall
■attorn Dlvltlan
L pci. o a
W
1 0 1.000 Daytona (Cub*)
1
. Baach (Eapot)
0 1.000 W.P.I
i) 1 0 1000 0
a Lakaland (Tlgtrt)
0 .000
55
Otcaola (Atlrot)
0
000
St. Lucia (Mali)
0
.000
Vara Baach (Dodgar*)
0
.000
Wattorn Olvltlan
Chtrlatl* (Hangar*)
t 0 1.000
Fort Mytf* (Twin*)
I
0 1.000
SI. Pal* (Cardinal*)
I
0 1.000
Dunadln (Blu* Jay*)
0
t .000
x Claarwatar (Phllll**)
0
1 000
Saraxol# (White Sox)
0
1 .000
* won flrtt half dlvlilon till*
Saturday'* Oamat
Lakaland 1, Vtro Baach 0
Chariot la *, Otcaola 3
St. Lucia I, Wa*t Palm Baach 1
Claarwatar 7, Daytona 3
Fort Mytra 14, Fort Laudardala 13,
Inning*
Saratola 4, SI. Palartburg 3
End a lFIril Halt
Sunday’* Oamat
Charlolta 4. Varo Baach 0
Watt Palm Baach f, Saratola 3
Daytona 10. Claarwatar S
Fort Laudardala l Dunadln 0
Fort Myart 4, Otcaola 3
SI. Palartburg}, SI. Lucia 1
Monday'* Oamat
Charlolta al Varo Baach
Saratola at Watt Palm Baach
Daytona at Claarwatar
Fort LaudardalaatQwnadln
Otcaola at Fort Myart
Si. Lucia at SI. Palartburg

LJ'tfir IJ(.

PNILLIIS4, MARLIWSl
PMItA
FLORIDA
P B rb M
a b rh M
Carr ct
40 00
Dyktlrcl 1 1 1 0
Ouncan u 1 1 0 0
Brbarlalb 4 13 1
Millet!#** 0 0 0 0
Mgdanlb S 0 ) 0
Kruk lb
3)11
Otirda lb 3 111
Hllmanp 0 0 0 0
Incvgialf 40 0 0
WMtP' 0 0 0 0
Conlntll 3 0 0 0
Ftllxrl
4 1 00
MtWmtp 0 0 0 0
■inrkhrf 4 0 10
Snllagoc 3 0 1 0
Pratt c
4 0 10
W tltttt 4 0 10
Batlttalb 4 0 10
Hough p 3 0 0 0
Kllnkp
00 00
Mmdnilb 30 00
TOrnap 1 1 1 0
Brllay It 0 0 0 0
MTmtnll t o o o
Arlatph t 0 0 0
T ttilt
M ill
TOM*
tf 4 « 3
It* *10 tot - 1
Phlladtlphla
Ml m M i - 4
6 — Barbaric ill, Dattrad* If), Kruk It).
DP - Florida 1, Phlladtlphla V LOB Florida *, Phlladtlphla t. IB - Barbarl* IS),
llttn rtk h CIO). HR — Dattrad* (7), .Kruk
(7). SB - Dykltra ()*). I F - Dattrad*.
IP
H R I R BB SO
Hough
Kiln
Kllnk
Hoffman L» 91

*1)4
t 0 4
0
1 1 1 0
I M 1 1 1 0

AMERICAN LEAOUE
O AB
a H Pet.
tt 137 N tl .431
Olarud Tor
Mod lor Tor
*• 271 ft M .341
*4 247 41 1)
Lotion Clo
3M
OTtolllNY
*2 2Tt 23 71 .33*
Curtlt Cal
*2 222 44 72 .324
Whlltktr Dal
M IH 41 *1 .323
BoggtNY
to 21* It 7* .322
Oomalti Ttn
M III 44 *7 .3)1
Phlillpi Dal
*5 14* *t 71 .317
MVaughn Bet
*1 231 24 73 .31*
Crlltoy Jr Saa
M 250 41 7* .31*
Runt Scant
Mol Ilor. Toronto, 5*: While. Toronto, 57:
RAlomar, Toronto, 54/ Fltldtf, Dalrolt, 11/
Oltrud, Toronto, 30/ OVoughn. Mllwauka*,
50: Lotion, Clavtland, Mi Baarga. Clavaland.
41
Rum Bottod In
Fltldar, Detroit. *0/ Baarga, Clavtland, 57/
Olarud, Toronto, 57/ Talllaton, Dalrolt, 17/
Carter, Toronto, 57/ Bolt*. Clavoland, 54/
GVaughn, Mllwauka*, 51.
Hit*
Olarud, Toronto. *5/ Molltor, Toronto, *3:
Baarga, Clavoland, lit RAlomar, Toronto,
*1/ Lotion, Cleveland, *1/ McRae, Kantai
City. *1/ Orlftoy Jr, Soattlt, 7*/ Whit*.
Toronto, 7*.

Tim Ralnee la a Sanford nativa and Samlnola High School
gradual* now playing for th * Chicago Whlta 8ox. Hla atata are
for tha 1093 aaaaon In tha first column, penonel-beet aaaaon
totala In tha aecond colum n and ourrenl caraar totala
(Including 1003 gamaa) In th * third column,
Rainta had a huge waakand, going 2-for-5 with a doubla, a
run, and an RBI in Saturday’s 5-4 loss to tha Galfomla Angale.
On 8uhday, Raines was 3-for-3 with a double, two runs, an RBI,
and a stolon base In an 11-8 W hite Sox win over the Angela.
RAINK8QAUQE
Category
Q Arras........ .
At*bat8xM...*...xt.ai.
Runs..................

’93
28
102
25
H ll® 1*441414111#*****t*a■ 31
r b i ..... ................ 18
Doublaa............. 5
Triples............... 0
Home runs........ 7
Steal® I**it *•■•(»*■**«* 3
Average............. .304

beet oereer
1,731
180
6,562
847
1,181
133
194
1,952
669
71
38
321
13
96
114
18
90
732
.334
.297

Oraca, Chicago, lit Cordtro, Montraal, Mi
Bi chet t e. C o lo ra d o . )•/ O y k t lr a ,
Philadelphia, Mi Camlnlll, Houtton, I*/
Blgglo, Houtton, 11/1 ora Hod with 17.
Trlptot
DLawit, Son Francltco, */ EYoung, Col­
orado, 1/ Martin, Pltttburgh, I; Catlllla,
Colorado. S; Morandlnl, Phlladtlphla, 1/
Coleman, Now York, 1/ * or* lied with 4.
Hama Rum
MaWllllamt, San Francltco, lit Bond*. San
Francltco. Mt Bonilla, Naw York, 17; Oant,
Atlanta, 14/ McOrltf, San Dlago, IS; Doulton,
Phlladtlphla, II; Plana, Lot Angela*, 14/
Jutllco. Atlanta, u.
Staton Batat
Carr, Ftortda, M; Coleman. Naw York, 17/
D Lawit, San Francltco, 24/ Robert*,
Cincinnati, tii EDavIt, Lot Angatot, il l
EYoung, Colorado, 21/ ACoto, Colorado, M;
Nixon, Atlanta, M.

LaSmlfh, St. Loult, 21; Myart, Chicago. 22;
Back, San Francltco, 21; MtWIIIIamt.
Philadelphia, 21; Stanton. Atlanta, 20;
Harvey, Ftortda, M; Belinda. Pltttburgh, 11/
Wtdtland. Montraal, 12/ OJonat, Houtton,

II.

Tournam entT i m R a ln a a

CHICAOOvt. PHOENIX
Chicago wlnt champion ihip 4 2
Wodm idoy, Jam*
Chicago 100, Phoenix *2
Friday, June H
Chicago ill, FhoanlxlOO
Sunday, J u m ll
Phoanlx 12*. Chicago ill, JOT
Wednatday, Juna it
Chicago II I, Phoanlx 101
Friday, June 1*
Phoanlx 101, Chicago to
Sunday, June I*
Chicago**, Phoanlx *0
CHICAGO (If )
Orant 0-5 1-1 I, Plppan 1921 3-7 23.
Cartwright t-2 90 2, Armitrong 4-10 2-2 1*.
Jordan 11 1* 4 « 3), Paxton 3-4 90 0,
S.William* 97 1-11, Tucker 4 4 90 f, King 9 t
900.Tat#toJ**J1IMf*.
PHOENIX (tot
Barkley 7 10 7-10 21, Duma* 90 91 * Watt
1-1 94 4. K. John ton 914 7 7 t». Malaria 7-17
9* II, Millar 1-4 11 a, A Inga 9* 1-T f,
Chamber* 910 94 ti, P.Johnton 93 90 0.
Totall 3913393* to.
CMcaga
17 tf )t II - **
Fheenlx
to 2) i i t* - to
9 Point goal* — Chicago 1914 IArmitrong
4-5, Jordan 35, Paxton 21, Tucker t t).
Phoanlx 4-11 (Alngo 2 3. Malaria 1-1). Fouled
out — Nona. Rabound! — Chicago M (Plppan
12), Phoanlx *0 (Barkley 17). Attltlt —
Chicago 14 (Jo rd a n 7 ), Phoanlx 20
(K.Johnton 10). Total foult — Chicago 24.
Phoonlx 11. Technical — Chicago Illegal
dotonte. A — H.OlJ.

NBA Flm lt- Record!
Rtcordt Ml lor a tlx-geme tarlai in th*
NBA Final*:
Individual
Hlghatt tearing tvtraga
41.0 — Michael Jordan, Chicago vt.
Phoonlx, Iff). Provlout record: 40.1. Rick
Oltrud, Toronto, 24/ White, Toronto, 11/ Berry, San Francltco vt. Phlladtlphla, IN7
Matt paint*
Thomai. Chicago, I*/ Palmar, Tax**, 1*/
24* — Michael Jordan, Chicago v*.
Andarton. Baltimore, If/ Carter, Taranto. If;
; Phoonlx, l**3. Preview ;*acard: SM, -Akk
MVaughn. Botlon, tit Orittoy Jr, laattM 1*.
Barry. San Francltco v*.J*hWt*M*. HOT
t- m
- Wfotl
'
■
Hu/*#, Tana*. ft Cuy/*!'! oitcatt! 7, Lofton,
tor - M ie h itl Jordon, Chicago v*.
Clavoland, 1/ McRae, Kantai CUV1, *i
Baarga. Clavaland, 5/ LJohnton, Chicago, 5/ Phoanlx, 1**3. PrtvtouS record: *4, Rick
Barry, San Francltco vt. Phlladtlphla, IM7
5 art lladwllh 4.
Matt i pointer*
Ham# Runt
17 — Don Malaria, Phoanlx vt. Chicago.
Gonial*!, Tax**, if/ Balia, Clavaland. l*/
1**3. Provlout record i 14, Mlchetl Cooper,
Fielder, Dalrolt, 11/ OVaughn, Mllwauka*,
17/ Tollmen, Dalrolt, 17/ Palmar, Taxat, 14/ LA Lakart vt. Bolton, (H4
Matt 3-mlnt altomptt
Crlltoy Jr. Saalll*. 15/ Carter, Toronto. IS.
3* — Dan Ma|trl*. Phoanlx vt. Chicago.
1**3.
Pravtout
rtcord: II, Mlchaal Jordan,
Curtlt, California, 31; Lollon, Clavtland,
Chicago vt. Portland, l**2
II; RHandarion, Oakland, 14/ RAIomar,
Team
Toronto. Ill LJohnton. Chicago, It/ Polonla.
Mail 1-polnltrt (gam*)
Calltornia, 11/ Whlta. Toronto, 1*.
10 — Chicago vt. Phoanlx, l**3. Pravtout
Pitching
record: *, Phoonlx vt. Chicago, lf*3
I Dtdttom
Matt Ipelnlxrt (tarlatl
Wlckman, Naw York, 10, 1.000,1.74/ Wall!.
32 — Chicago vt. Phoanlx, t**3. Pravtout
Dalrolt, f t. .*00. 1.41/ Langtlon, Calltornia.
record:
25.
Chicago vt. Portland. lf*2
91, .*00. 1.41/ Hantgan, Toronto, *-1. .Ill,
Matt 9 paint altomptt
3.13; Kay, Naw York. 0-1. .100,1.17/ Dehtrty.
4* — Chicago vt. Phoanlx. Ittl. Pravtout
Detroit, 7 1, .771, 1.74/ Alvarai, Chicago, 7-1.
record: *1, Chicago vt. Portland, 1**1
.77*. 3.11; Sutcliffe, Baltlmora, 71. .77*. 4.70.
Fawait palntt toorth quartor
SlrHwoutt
12 — Chicago vt. Photnlx, l**3. Provlout
RJohnton, Saaltla, 131; Clamant, Botlon,
*•; Langtlon, California, *7; Hanton. Saattia. ■ record: 13, Phllodolphlo vt. Son Francltco,
1MI; Mllwoukoo vt. Boiton, 1*/4: LA Laktrt
I I ; Applar, Kama* City, 17; Ouiman,
vt. Ottroll, IN*.
Toronto, 13; Poroi, Naw York, *4.
Save*
Montgomery, Kantai City, W; Olton,
Baltlmora, II; Aguilera, Mlnnatola, tt;
DW*rd, Toronto, II; Farr, Ntw York, 17;
Ruttoll, Beiton, 14; Eckonlay, Oakland, 14.
QUEBEC — Satoctlon order tor the tint
NATIONAL LEAOUE
round ot the NHL entry draft Juno 2* In
0 AB
■ H Pet.
Quebec City la coin lllp will detormlne
SO 300 31 M .410 Miami Anah*lmorder):
Galarraga Col
BondtSF
M 122 S5 •1 .344
1. Ottawa
*4 111 11 •0 .3*1
Kruk Phi
2. San J o m
MarcadPtt
*1 If2 35 t* •15f
1. Temp* Bay
VluelnoChl
*4 217 33 12 .34*
4. Anahalm or Miami
*1 313 3* 10 .343
Plan# LA
3. Anaheim or Miami
Oraca Chi
47 2S4 31 •4 .33)
*. Hartford
Bagwall Hou
M 231 40 U
.31*
7, Edmonton
Blautar All
tf 24* 41 •1 .337
I. NY Monger*
Blchatto Col
*3 m
30 71 .333
♦.Mlnnotot*
Hutu Scertd
10. Quebec (from Phllodolphlo)
Oyktlra, Phlladtlphla, *1; Bond*, San
II. Wethlngton (from St. Loult)
Francltco, SI; Kruk, Phlladtlphla, I I ;
11. Toronto (from Buffalo)
MtWIIIIamt, San Francltco, SI; Deulton,
12. NawJarMV
Philadelphia, Mi Blgglo, Houtton, Mi JaBoll,
14.
Quebec (from NY Itlandart)
Pllltburgh, 41.
15. Winnipeg
Runt Ballad In
t*. Edmonton (from Lot Angtlat)
MaWllllamt, San Francltco, *1; Doulton,
17, Wathlngton
Phlladtlphla, 17; Bond*, San PranclKO, 54/
11. Calgary
.hicage, II; Oalarraga, Colorado, 52;
One*. Chicago,
1*. Toronto
DHollInt, Phlli
hlladolphla, 47; Plana, Lot
10. Vancouver
Angolat, 44/ Oant, Atlanta, 4*.
21. Monlraal
Hits
21. Dalroll
Oalarraga. Colorado, M ; Kolly, Cincinnati,
11. NY Itlandart HromOuabacI
(5/ Bondi, San Francltco, IS/ Oraca,
24. Chicago
Chicago. •*/ MaWllllamt, San Francltco, H i
25. Bolton
Bagwell, Houtton, 11/ JaBoll, Pllltburgh, *1.
24. Pllltburgh

GMaddux. Atlanta. It; Hamltch. Houtton,
U ; 3mold, Atlanta, U ; Rita, ClncInnaH, M;
TQrtent. Phlladtlphla, H i Banat, San Dtogo.
Tt; Schilling, PhUadalphla, 7S.

fffii

0
0
1

TGradhaW, 91
7
* 1
I 1 7
WMt
I
1 0
0 0 2
MtWIIIIamt I , It
i
1 0
0 0 2
Kllnk pltchad to 1batter In th* 7th.
HBP — by Hough (Duncan), by TOraana
Barber)#), by TOraana (Conlnt).
Umpires - Hama. Winter*; F lrtt,
Dormant Sacond. Froammlng; Third. Mon
togu*.
T — 2:41, A — 54,50*.

9 P i til tom
TCrtona, Phlladtlphla, * I, TOC. I.M i
Schilling, Phlladtlphla, I I, ,lt*. 3.11/
Burkett, San Francltco. 192. .131. 1.10/
Avery, Atlanta, *2, .MO, 1.17; Qlavlnt.
Atlanta, 93, .710, l.M ; Swllt, San Francltco,
* 1. .750.3.10; Rl|o. Cincinnati, *-1,.710,1.11.

M i . ' ' - : i / r -Vf . *

lA lW B R A B W iP iP H I
LaManiRatulto
LE MANS, Franc* - Final rttulli Sunday
*1 th* 14-havr La Man* endurance rac# ever
IM M-mlto circuit with car, drlvart, leader'i
dtttonca covered and average tpeadt
t. Paugaot KS, Oaolf Brabham, Auttralla;
Ctn iiiuvliv Bouchut, Franco; and Eric
Halary, Franca, 27) Iapt, 2,77* mltot. 133 34
2. Peugeot *05, Yannick Oalmat, Franca;
Thlarry Boultan, Belgium, and Tao Fabl,
Italy, on* lap bahnd.
1. Paugaot *05, Phlllppo Alllol, Franca;
Mauro Baldl, Italy; and Jaan-Plarra
Jaboullle, Franc*, eight lap*.
t. Toyota TS010. Matanorl Saklya, Japan;
Tothto Suiukl, Japan; and Eddl* Irvine,
Britain, 11 lap*.
I. Toyota RY2, Roland Ratitnbargar,
Auttrla; Naokl Nagataka, Japan; and Mauro
Marllnl, Italy, 12lap*
t. Toyota RVf) Nllto. Slav* Andtkar.
Sweden; Gaorga Fouch*. South Alrlca; and
l|*Etoh. Sweden, 17topi
7. Ranch* H i . Jurgan Opermann.
Oarmany; Olio Allanbach, Oar many; and
Lorrlt Ktual, Swlliarland, M lap*.
I. Toyota TSOIO. Oaolt Lt#», Britain; Jan
Lammart. Nalharlandt; and Juan Manual
Fangio; Arganllna, 12 lap*.
*. Partch* to). Bob WoHafc. Franca; Hanrl
Patcarolo, Franca; and Randy Malxnar.
United Statot,)* lap*.
to. Caurag* C30LM. Darak Ball. Britain/
Patcal Fibre, Franca; and Lionel Robert,
Franca, 10 lap*.

firs t out,
o u t, h e h a d
getting the first
C o itiiE id from IM
usual deadly efficiency control p r o b le m s a n d a u rre n *
in the second inning, when he d e re d t w o w a lk s . B u t b o th run*,
"threw the wrong pitch" to n e r s w e r e g u n n e d d a w n b y
Chris Snow, who tripled and c a t c h e r C o r y O o c h e e o n p itc h y
I
■cored on Steve Rlng'a ground o u ts .
"
T
h
e
c
o
a
c
h
e
s
p
ic
k
e
d
u
p
theli*
out.
"( kept the ball low on them," ste a l s i g n ." sa id F e rg e rs o n . " W e
said Chunat. "The only pitches w a it e d u n t il th e s e v e n th I n n i n g
they hit hard were the high ones, to u s e I t ."
M a tt D ie m e r s u rr e n d e re d o n ly
My change-up worked well, but
my curve ball wasn't working th re e h its o v e r s ix In n in g s In th e
n ig h tc a p . T w o o f th o s e h its c a m e
well at all."
Sanford tied the game 1-1 in In a ro u g h first In n in g , w h e n
(he bottom of the aecond. Scott T o n y B o y e tte d o u b le d a n d D a v id
Johnston and Chunat led ofT R o b in s o n s in g le d . H e s t r u c k o u t
with singles, and Johnston s ix a n d w a lk e d Ju s t o n e .
S c o tt F e rg e rs o n crosse d h o m d
scored on a wild pitch. David
Eckstein's single in the fifth In t h e s ix t h I n n i n g o n M a t!
Inning gave Sanford the lead, F r e e m a n 's g r o u n d o u t to tie the*
s c o re . R o v lto re lie v e d D iem erf
scoring Beamon.
Closer Ben Rovlto picked -up a n d p itc h e d a p e rfe c t s e v e n th i
hla aecond save by pitching a p ic k in g u p h is s e c o n d w in w h e ri
scoreless seventh, but not B e a m o n s c o re d in th e b o tto m o f
without a lot of help. After th e In n i n g o n th e d ro p p e d t h r o w .!

114 mill Ian U.i, Open
SPRINGFIELD, N.J. - Final tcorn and
money winning* Sunday ol tM S1.4 million
U.S. Open, played on Baltotrol't 7.IS3 yard,
par 70 lowar courM(aamatour):
La* Jantan, *2*0.000
t7*7*9**-171
Payna Slawarl, 1145,000
70 *4 *979-274
Craig Parry, *71.554
4* 74 4* **-277
Paul Ailngar, 171.354
71 4* ****-277
Tom Walton, *41,730
7044-73 4*— 37*
Scotl Hoch, *41.730
*971-72 *9-17*
Ernl* EIt. *35.411
71-794* 47-37*
Raymond Floyd. *35.4*1
49797949-17*
Nolan Hank#, 135.411
72-71*7 *9-27*
Frtd Funk, 135,4*1
79 71-47-79-27*
David Edward*. S3*,24*
7971-4979-110
Nick Price, *24.14*
71 *979 73-3*0
John Adamt. S3*.)4*
7970-4971-3*0
Loron Robartt, *14.14*
797921-49-3M
Jaft Sluman. S3*.)**
7171-*9**-2to
Barry Lana. *31.577
794979*9-3*1
Frtd Couptot, t il ,377
(971-71-71-1*1
Mika Standly, *31.377
79497972-M I
It
tM
Clsfcstc
COON RAFIDS, Minn. — Final team and
prlt* money Sunday ol tM 11,030.000 Burnt!
Senior Clattlc, played on th* *,P*4-yard.
par-72 Bunker Hill* coutm :
Chi Chi Rodrlguat. 1157,500 4947-4S-20I
Bob Murphy, U4.000
*7 ** 47-103
Jim Colbtrt. U4.000
4* 4**4-103
j4CkKltltr, U3.000
*4-70 70— 104
Larry Gilbert, 540.tJ0
794* 17-105
Jim Farr**, |40.*50
47 M 79-K5
Rocky Thompton, S40.*50
47 4949-105
Jim Dent, MO.fSO
*t 47-70-M3
Bob Chari#*, 117,100
49 79*7-20*
JlmAlbut.S27.100
79*9*7-10*
Simon Hobday. *27.100
«* *« 72-20*
*5*43*4 LFOA Rachaitar Intornaltontl
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Final K o m and
prlia Monty Sunday ot tha SHO.OOO LPOA
Rochetltr Inltrnallonal, played at Ih*
4,1*2 yard, par 72 Locutl Hill Country Club
courMi
Tommie Orton, *75,000
74**43 79-17*
Pally Sheehan, sat,54*
*971-4949-177
Helen Alfrtduon, *30,1*2
*979*7*9-171
Kattv Rabbin*. 130,1*2
7971-4971-271
Doltla Mpchrto, sit,***
.,,2l-7l-*7-70-97f
7971*979-27*
A lie* RI liman, *!*,&lt;**
71*7-7179-2*0
Mag Mafton.SH,M3
**•714*71-7*0
Barb BunkDwtky, SI3.W3

7TZ
BASEBALL
Amarlctn Latgua
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Placed Damlon
Eatlay, Mcond bataman, on Ih* IS day
dltablad lltt, ratroactlv* to June 1*. Recalled
Rod Correia, Intlaldor, Irom Vancouver ot th*
Pacific Coat! League.
CHICAOO W HITE SOX - Placed Ron
Karkovlc*. catcher, on Ih* 15 day dltablad
llll. Recalled Mlk* LaVal liar*, calchar, from
Saratola Ot th* Florida Stato Laagu*. Re­
called Rick Wrona, calchar. Irom Nathvlll*
ol Ih* American Anoclallon. Sant Scotl
Rutlcorn, pitcher, to Birmingham ol lha
Soul ham Laagu*.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS - Signed Gary
Oaatll, third bataman. Racallad Bill Sampan,
pllChar, Irom Omaha ol Ih* American
Anoclallon. Opllonad Craig Wilton, Inllaldar.
to Omaha. Datlgnalad Harvay Pulliam,
oulllaldar, (or aitignmanl.
Natlorul 1t u t u
CHICAOO CUBS - Placed Mlk* Harkay,
pllchar, on Ih* 15 day dltablad Hit, ratroaclive lo June 13. Racallad Tommy Shlaldt,
Inllaldar, Irom Iowa ot tl)0 American Attodatton.
CINCINNATI RIDS - Activated Kavln
Wlckandtr, pllchar. Sant Scott Sarvlca,
pitcher, to Indlanapolit ol th* Amarlcan
Attoclalton.
COLORADO ROCKIES - Racallad Eric
Wedge, ctlchar, Irom Colorado Spring! ol tho
Pacific Coat! Laagu* and than placed him on
th* 15 day dltablad lint.
MONTREAL E X P O S -S a n l Jimmy Jonat.
ilchar, to Ottawa ol Ih* International
•ague lor a JO day ln(ury rohabllllallon
aitignmanl. Oranltd Jack Clark, llrtl
bataman, hit unconditional rtltat# Irom hit
minor toaguo contract.
NEW YORK MET* - Recalled Jtromy
Burnlti, oulllaldar, from Norfolk ol th*
International Laagu*.
PITTIEURO H PIRATES - Announced Ih*
migration of tho Tod Simmon* gcnoral
manager. Named Cam Bonllay gtntral
manager.
HOCKEY
Nattonal Hotkey Laagu*
BOSTON BRUINS - Traded Oord Murphy,
dtlanMman, to tht Da Mat Start lor tuluro
contldarallont.
D A LLA S STARS - T ra d td Gattan
Duchotn*. toll wing, to tha San J o m Shark*
tor a tlxlh round pick In lha lt*3 draft.
DETROIT RED WINGS - Traded Jim
Cummin*, right wing, and a fourth round
pick In Ih* Iff! drall to Ih* Ih* Phlladtlphla
Plyart lor tha right* to Grtg Johnton, cantor,
and tutor* contldtraHont.
H A R TFO R D W HALERS - Acquired
Sargal Makarov, right wing, Irom Ih*
Calgary Flam** lor tutor* contldaratloni.
MONTREAL CANADIANS - Sant Donald
Dulrttn#, dafanMman, to Ih* Tampa Bay
LlfMntng to complat* a trad* tor Rob

C

N IW * JE A S IY DEVILS - Traded Craig
Bllllnglon, goallandtr. Troy Mallalla,
forward, and a fourth round pick In th* lt*3
draft, to th* Otlawa Senator* tor Patar
Sldorklawlct. goal land*r, and tutor* contldtrallont
NEW YORK ISLANDERS - Traded Jaft
Norton. dafanMman, to th* San J om Shark*
lor a conditional Mltdlon In th* IW4 draft.
Traded Mark Fllipalrlck, goallandtr, and a
flrtt round pick In Ih* t tn draft to th*
Quebec Nordlquat lor Ron Haatall,
goallandtr, and a llrtl round pick In th* 11*3
draft.
NEW YORK RANGERS - Traded John
Vanbiatbrouck. goallandtr, to Ih* Vancouver
Canuck* lor lutort contldarallont.
Q U IIE C NORDIOUES - Traded Scotl
Paarton. Htt wing, to IM Edmonton Oiler*
tor Merlin Oallnot. left wing, and a tlxlh
round pick In the 19*3drall.
SAN JOSE SHARKS - Traded Polar
Ahola. dtlanMman, to tho Tampa Bay
Lightning lor DaveCopueno. cantor.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS - Traded Paul
MacDarmld and Haggle Savage, right wlngt,
to Quebec tor Mika Hough, toll wing. Tradtd
Pout Cavalllni, dttontaman, to Ih* Delia*
Start tor toturt contldtraHont

Continned from IB
Sportsman, which plays In the
S a n fo rd W ed n esd ay n tg h t
league, lost Its opener
D penci to Just Do
It, T)ut got back to the loser's
bracket Anal by beating R.E.
Templeton Co, Inc. 1Q*7 and
scoring six runa In the bottom of

FIRST ROUND
BamMaCsto
n r i m « - tl 22
Hancock Hataaara tM 111 to - I I M
Bamboo Cato: tour hltt -t- Jay Jobnton
(tour run*, two RBI): three hltt + Moony
Silvia (run, four RBI), Bill Marino (tour
runt); two hltt -f Kavln Julian Itrlpla, two
runt), Jerry Dick and Slav* Woodlay (two
runt, two RBI), John Dunn (two runt),
Duane Carlton (two RBI); on* hit -t- Rich
Moreland (run. RBI), Itu Satock (R BI);
on* RBI + Bab Crow*.
' Hancock: tour hltt + Robert Smith (lour
runt. RBI); thrao hltt -I- W.L. Oracty
(doubla, run, tour RBI), Phil Hancock
(three run*, tour RBI), Bill Or*c*y llhra*
runt, RBI), Chrlt Doper* I two runt); two
hltt -t- Daan Smith liour RBI); on* hit +
Mark Whltlay (R BI), Tony DoSormtor
(run); one run + Mark Blythe.
Sparttmarl
5*4 to* a - 7 14
Jutt Da It
III Mt 4 - » 14
Sporltmart: two hltt + Jim Troxtll (two
runt), Ami* VanZyll, Tim Felon; on* hll +
Pata Harrlton (two runt, RBI), Randy
Fargarton (run, two RBI), J.T. Adamt
(two RBI), Jim Smith and Billy Warneck
IRBI), Jim Chalmart and Brian Bl* (run).
Tim Wllkl.
Jutt Do It; two hilt -r Homar (two
doublet, run, three RBI), Ray Frtta*
(doubla. run, RBI], Ron Lampkln (two
runt), Bob Aubuchon; on* hit -f Tom
Crawt and Oav* Boyc* (two RBI), Lai
Varmllllon, John Springer, Kurt Otmmtr
and Ralph Nanna (run).
FetMHEsarftagOaedtito Ito • — I 11
R.B.Ttm gtotonC*.Inc. to* to* t - t l
Fotkatt: two hltt -t Orag Abblnanl*
(doubla, two runt, two RBI), Mlk* Mather
(Iwo runt), Jorge Ruli; on* hll to Dtva
Blackmora (ttoiita, RBI), Gaorga Paullk
(run. RBI), Ron Pragar and Harbl# Rlvltra
(run), Mark Maltgar (RBI), Art Batch;
on* run to Jim Thompton.
Templeton: Iwo hltt to Bill Ttrwllllgtr
(double. RBI); on* hll to Darryl Swlfl
(double, run), Dal# Yalat. Tony Dunklmon,
Dav* LaFlam*. Fall* Ramot. Brian Jonat.
WINNER’S BRACKET
Slfnxlurt Hemet
000 61 — 1 I
Bamboo Cal*
241 41 - 14 I*
Signature: two hltt 4 Aubrey Bllllngtlay
(run); on* hit to Jim Knowlat (run).
Darrin Earley (RBI). Ralph Bov*; one RBI
to Carman RoMmonda.
Bamboo: thrao hilt to Ounn (triple, Iwo
runt. RBI); two hltt to Solock (twodoubltt.
run, thrao RBI), Julian (doublo, run, two
RBI I, Dick Idoubla, run, RBI), Marino
(two runt, two RBI); on* hit to Woodlay
(two runt), Carlton (run, RBI), Silvia,
Mortland and Danny Splvoy (run); on* run
to Crow*.
Jutt Da II
M H I I - I II
Fatkatt Spading Oaadt it* Mt I — 7 11
Jutt Do It: thrao hltt to Crawt (run, two
RBI); two hltt to Lampkln llrlplt, two
.rum I, Varmllllon and Homar (two rum,
RBI)/ on* hit to Oammar (two RBI),
Springer (run, RBI), Aubuchon IRBI),
Fret**, Boyc*, Nanna.
Fotktll: two hilt to Rlvlara (triple, two
RBII, Jafl Dtpaw IRBI), Abblnanl* (run);
on* hit to Matigar (double, two RBII,
Paullk (two RBII. Ruli (two runt). Pragar,
Mother, Blackmora and Batch (run).
WINNER'S BRACKET FINAL
Jutt O* II
100 M l f - 11 M
EamMCato
H i 000 o - 5 10
Jutt Do It: lour hit* to Boyc* (doubla,
thra* rum, RBI), Lampkln (four rum.
RBI), Dammar (two runt, RBI); three hltt
to Homer (horn* run, run, llv* RBI),
Varmllllon (double, thro* rum. thrt* RBI),
Nonna (double, Iwo rum, thrm RBI).
Aubuchon Idoublo, run, thro* RBI); two
hilt to Springer (doubla, thra* rum. Iwo
RBI), Crawt Itwo rum. Iwo RBI), Frata*
(two runt, RBI).
Bamboo: two hltt to Marino (triple, two
runt, RBI), Julian (run. RBI); on* hll to
Woodlay (doubt*), Dick (RBI), Moreland
(run), Johnton, (a lock, Crew*; on* run to
Dunn; on*RBI to Silvia.

th e s ix t h In n in g to e lim in a te
H a n c o c k , 6 -8 .
In o t h e r g a m e s , F o s k e tj
d ro p p e d R .E . T e m p le t o n In t o t h ^
lo s e r's b ra c k e t, 8 -1 , a n d H a n t
c o c k e lim in a te d F o s k e tt, 1 7 -0 ;
b e h in d th e o n e -h it p it c h in g o f
T o m Q ra c e y .
;

LOSER'S BRACKET
Sparttmarl
tM M l 1 - 1 * 1*
R.E.TamptotanC*. W I I I P - I I I
Sparttmarl: thra* hll* to Bla (two
doubltt, thra* rum. RBI), FtrgarMn
(doubt*, two rum, two RBII; two hltt to
Tom Wllkt (double, run, two RBI), Ward
(doubla, run, RBI), Harrltan I two rum,
thra* RBI), Troxall (run. Iwo RBI), Jim
Smith (run, RBII; on* hll to VanZyll
(doublo, run, RBI), Felon (run, two RBI),
Chalmart (two runt 11 on* run and on* RBI
to Warneck.
Tamplaton: two hltt + Ttrwllllgar (Idpi*, double, two rum, two RBI), LaFlam*
IRBI), Wayn* Ktlly (run); on* hit to
Ramot (trlplo, run), Jonat (RBI), Kan
Parry (run), Dunklmon; on* run to Swift,
Roy Tamplaton.
Hancock Hardware
500 05 — 17 10
Fotkatt Spading Oaadt
000 to - 0
t
Hancock: Ihrt# hilt to W.L. Gracay
(doubla. two runt, two RBI); Iwo hltt to
Hancock (Ihra* runt, RBI), Robert Smith
(thra* runt), Daan Smith and Dapor* (run,
RBI), Whltlay (runl; on* hll to Blylh*
(triple, two runt, thra* RBI), Tom Oracay
(double, run, tour RBI). Bill Oracay (Iwo
runt, two RBI); Iwo RBI to Raimi; on*
run + Tom Nya.
Fotkatt: Dapaw (doubla).
Signature Nomat
501 000 o - 4 7
Spodtmad
401 111 x — 11 10
Slgnalurt Horn**: two hltt to Bllllngilty
(doublo. run); on* hit to Jim Murray and
Knowlat (run), Rotamonda IRBI), Darrin
Earlty, Kan Earley; on* run + Randy
Palfray.
Spodtmad: four hltt to Ftrgtrton (two
doublet, two runt, two RBI): thra* hilt to
Harrlton (home run, trlplo, lour runt, two
RBII, Troxtll (run, lour RBI); two hilt to
VanZyll (doubla, run), Wtrd (run, two
RBII, Tom Wllkl IRBI), Tim Wllkt (run);
on* hit to Oary Chamban (doubla. runl,
Chalmart (run): on* RBI to Bla.
Hanctck Hardware
100 110 I — S 17
Spodtmad
000 004 x — 0 10
Hancock: thraa hltt to Daan Smith
IR BI): two hltt + Whltlay (Iwo RBI), Tom
Gracay (RBI), Bill Gracay (two rum),
Robert Smith, W.L Oracay and Hancock
(run); on* hll to Oil* Ralnai (RBII.
Dapora.
Sporltmart: Ihra* hltt to VanZyll Idou
bla, two RBII, Bla (run): two hilt 4
Fargarton (run, RBI): on* hll 4 Mlk#
Marthall (run), Ward; on* run to Harrlton,
Tom Wllkt, Troxtll.
LOSER'S BRACKET FINAL
Spodtmad
i n oto o - I u
Bamboo Cal*
045 tot x - » 15
Spodtmad: thrao hll* + Jim Smith
(R BI), Bla; Iwo hilt to Harrlton (run),
Forgarton (R BI); on# hll + Tom Wllkt
(run, R B I), Chalmtrt, Marthall and
VanZyll (run), Chambtri.
Bamboo: throo hilt to Silvia (Iwo rum);
two hltt to Dunn (two RBI), Woodlay llwo
runt), Mortland (run, RBI), Johnton
(run); on* hll to Julian (run. Iwo RBI),
Satock (two rum. RBI), Carlton IRBI),
Marino.
FINALS
Jutt Da II
Nt M t - 1
II
BamMaCaf*
H I Ml x - 4 «
Jutl Do II: Iwo hit* to Boyc* (doubla),
Springer and Dammar (R BI); on* hit to
Vdrmllllon (ru n ), Lampkln, Crawt,
Aubuchon, Ntnna; on* run to Homar.
Bamboo: Ihrt* hilt to Marino (run,
RBI); Iwo hltt to Dunn (run), Silvia; one
hll + Julian (two rum), Woodlay; two RBI
to Dick; on* RBI to Johnton.
CHAMPIONSHIP
BambtoCal*
im M 1 4
Jutt 0*11
111 4 1 - 1 4 11
Bamboo: one hll to Julian (run), Johnton
IRBI). Mortland, Salock.
Jutt Do II: lour MH to Crawt (triple,
Ihra# rum, lour R B II; thrao hilt 4Vtrmllllon (triple, two runt, RBI); Iwo hilt
+ Homor (doublt, two rum, two RBII,
Springer (two runt, two RBI). Fraia* (run,
RBII, Lampkln (two rum), Aubuchon and
Boyc* IRBI); on# hi) to Dtmmtr (run,
RBI), Nanna (run).

Sell your
unwanted items
by calling and placing an
ur Classified Dept, today!
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SanNird Herald
312-1611
I

�T V

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 21, 1003 - SB

People
Nematodes: Get the facts

IN B R IEF
Wlldflowara taka Junglt Crultt
SA N FO R D — Nine membera or the Wlldflawer Circle made
another sojourn to Ft. Lauderdale. They enjoyed the Jungle
Cruise and all were amazed with the circus acta at the Swap
Shop, 80 acres of vendors, amusement ridea. Tree concerts and
circus acts.
The y collected shells on the beach to add to crafts during the
next craft workshop at 9:30 a.m. at the Oarden Club.

Job Sarvico assists ssnlors
L A K E MARY — Jo b Service of Florida will be at the Senior
Center, 158 North Country Club Road, Lake Mary, every
Thurday from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. please contact Oscar M.
Fluke. Jo b Services Coordinator at 334-3060 for an appoint­
ment.

Antique show to benefit handicapped
A n antique show to benefit mentally handicapped adults will
be held at the downtown Plaza, St. Augustine. Saturday, June
26. and Sunday. June 27. Antique dealers from St.Johns and
surrounding counties are participating. The sponsor, Th e Daisy
Adams Center, Is the first psychiatric mental health day
treatment program In North East Florida for duallydlagnosed
(mentally retarded/ emotionally disturbed) adults, and Is a
not-for-profit organization.
For further Information contact Jeanne Moeller at (904)
829-9569.

Fire fighters fight for MDA
The Seminole County Professional Fire Fighters will sponsor
a Golf Tournam ent on Sunday, Ju ly 9. at 9 a.m.. at the
Koscmont Country Club. Proceeds will benefit the Central
Florida Fire Fighter Council and the Muscular Dystrophy
Asaocatton.
Players of all levels arc Invited to participate In the
tournament. Entry fee Is $40 and lunch Is Included. Companies
may nlso participate as hole sponsors for $150. or as hole
Bponaor and four entries with lunch for $275.
Fire Fighters arc the Muscular Dystrophy Association's
largest contributor, raising $8.5 million dollar natlonswldc In
1992.
For further Information and registration, contact Allen Levcll
at 298-3473

Newcomers plan meetings
The Newcomers Club of Central Florida- Membership ColTcc
on Thursday. J u ly l . at 10a.m.
For further Information call Mario- 699-9002.
The club's luncheon and general meeting will be held on
Thursday. Ju ly 15. at 11:30 a.m. at the Panda Chef, cost $6.00.
F o r details call S h a ro n -6 9 9 -8 5 3 8 . J o d e y -6 9 9 -0 7 9 7 .
Carol-695-7921.

Crafters’ Bazaar approaching
Crofters' Bazaar of Goldenrod. an annual benefit for Hospice
of Central Florida. Is now accepting reservations for the fifth
annual pre-holiday selling bazaar set for Saturday. Sept. 18.
The outdoor event Is held on Aloma Avenue (SR 426) one
block cast of Scmoran Boulevard (SR 436). Th e show attracts
large crowds and offers 200 exhibitor spaces. It has been a
complete and early sellout over the past four years, and has
raised approximately $27,000 for the patients or Hoplcc of
Central Flordla. „
Rental fee for a 10 by 10 foot space Is $40, with exhibitors
providing their display setups. Th e bazaar Is open to original
art and cruft work only, no commercial or resale space
ucccptcd. All proceeds from Individual sales go to the exhibitor.
Proceeds from booth rental fees benefit Hospice of Central
Florida, a nonprofit organization which provides special care
for children or adults with tcrmlnul Illness, and their families.
Craftcrs who would like un application to participate urc
asked to send u self-addressed, stumped envelope to Craftcrs'
Uuzaur Attcn: L. Ryan, P.O.Box 492. Goldenrod. FL 327330492. for further Information please call (4071678-8080.

■»
•. -jn w

Toastmasters meat at SCC
Seminole Com m unity College (SCC) Toastmasters Club
*6581 will meet every Tuesday. 7:30 p.m ., at Seminole
Com m unity College. Contact Rosclla Bonham at 323-8284 for
more information

Kiwanis Club off Caasalbarry matte
Klwanls Club of Casselberry meets every Tuesday at 7:30 a.m.,
at Village Inn. corner Dog Track Roud and US Highway 17-92
In Longwood. For Information, call 831-8545.

Weekly Lions Club masting
The Sanford Lions Club meets every Tuesday at noon at the
American Legion on South Sanford Avenue. For information,
call 321-0700.

Laks Mary Optimists mast waakly
Th e Optimist Club of Lake Mary meetB every Tuesday at 7:00
p.m., at 109 E. Crystal Lake Ave. (corner of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors ore welcome.

Taka off pounds sensibly
Members of Take Off Pounds Sensibly, TO P S. Invite the
public to Join them on Tuesday evenings from 7 to 8 p.m. at
the First Christian Church, 1607 Sanford Ave., Sanford.
The group now has a private room to weigh people between
6:15 and 6:45 p.m.
Each week a different program on weight loss will be
conducted.
For more information about the club, call 323-7562 or
323-1664.

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

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

Nar-Anon to offfar halp
Nur-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.

Brfdga club to maat, play
Sanford Duplicate Bridge Club meets st noon each Tuesday
at the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce, 400 E. First St..
Sanford.

Even though nematodes are a major
problem here In the sandy soils of central
Florldn, most homeowners are not aware of
exactly what a nematode Is or the extent of
the damage they cun do. It's Important to
keep In mind that while complete control Is
not practical, steps can be taken to keep
damage at acceptable levels.
Nematodes arc extremely small organ­
isms that live primarily In the sail. Many of
these smnll, worm-shaped animals are
beneficial to plants. However, there arc
several species of nematodes that are
purasltlc and attack plants by feeding on the
roots.
Nematodes arc microscopic and cannot be
seen with the nuked eye. Diagnosis of a
nematode problem Is difficult. The only way
to confirm a nemtnode problem Is to send a
sample to Gulncsvillc for analysis. Kits for
sending this test to the lab arc avilable from
our office. The charge Is $ 12.00 per sample.
Nematodes arc always present In the soil
to some degree. It's when their numbers
become too great that damage can occur.
There arc some basic symptoms that may
Indicate a nematode problem. However,
these symptoms can be caused by many
other problems, m aking It difficult to
pinpoint a nematode problem without
testing.
First, examine the general appearance of
your luwn. A nematode problem mny
appear as yellowed, stunted nr dying areas
In the lawn. The lawn will thin out or appear
unhealthy. The grass inuy look as though
fertilizer or water Is needed but may not
respond to nn application of cither.
Next, examine the roots. Nematodes feed
on young roots und can cause severe

ROOSEVET JACKSON JR.
F O R T G R E E L Y . Big Delta.
Alaska — A rm y Sgt. Roosevelt
Jackson J r. has arrived for duty
here.
.Jackson, a helicopter mainte­
nance supervisor. Is the son of
Roosevelt Jackson Sr. of 2360
C h u r c h St. and M ildred J .

TRICIA
THOMAS

stunting of the entire root system. Affected
roots appear shriveled, dark colored and
stubby and generally lack light-colored
feeder roots. Healthy plants should have a
deep, well-developed root system with
healthy feeder roots. Nematode damage
reduces the root system which affect the
uptake of both water and nutrients. The
grass slowly declines, yellows and becomes
thin. Th e weakened turf then becomes
Invaded by weeds.
. All of our commonly planted lawngrasses
can be affected by nematodes. Bahia grass
seems to be the least affected. There are
m nny different species of nematodes and
generally more than one type are present In
a lawn. A nematode assay from the lab In
Gainesville will tell you which types you
have In your lawn and If the numbers are
high enough to cause damage. Th is Infor­
m a t i o n Is i m p o r t a n t because som e
nematodes can be controlled and some
cannot.
Basically, If a nemtode assay Indicates
that you have nematodes in your lawn
severe enough to cause damge, you have
. 11 ■ 1.1".
1

Jackson of 3912 Kentucky St.,
both of Sanford.
Th e sergeunt Is a 1985 gradu­
ate of Seminole High School.

JAMES E. WARD
E G L IN AIR F O R C E B A S E.
Valparaiso — James E. Ward hus
been promoted In the U.S. Air

Woman goes to bat
ffor man who hit son
DEAR ABBYl I am 38 years
old und huve been reading your
column since I wus 8. and this Is
m y first letter to you. Regarding
that 14-year-old hoy who called
his father a filthy name und got u
slup in the face for It: I have a
14-ycur-old son. and If he ever
called me a filthy name. I would
slap his face — und not apologize
far It. One slap for that kind of
behavior shouldn't warp Junior
for long. The father stated that
he had not made a habit of
striking the boy. Well. It appears
thut tiie boy hus needed dis­
ciplining fora long time.
1 work In a school with ninthto 12th-graders. und the lack of
respect shown by some of the
students to the staff and ad­
ministration Is a disgrace. Our
entire cducutlonul system Is be­
ing undermined by these un­
disciplined brats.
Maybe this father who slapped
his son's face ovcrrcuctcd. but at
leust he cared enough to react.
For the record. I love young
people and 1 am opposed to any
kind of abuse — mental, physi­
cal, emotional, sexual; und the
abuse suffered by so m nny
children today — neglect.
Ahby, you should try working
with some of these undisciplined
children. It's a real eye-opener.

.i

AOVIOE

FRANK J. RICHIE.
ORMOND BEACH, FLA.
DEAR MR. RICHIE: A church
Is not a museum for sulnts; It's a
hospital for sinners — so be
comforted (hat these thoughtless
people are spending some time
In the right place. Perhaps men­
tioning your pet peeve to your

Trade names are used for educational
purposes only and not meant as endorse­
ment of any product.
Seminole County Cooperative Extension
Services are open to all regardless of race,
color, sex. or national origin.

Force to the rank of senior
ulrmun.
T h e a i r ma n , a per sonnel
specialist. Is the 9on of Edward
S. und Alda M. Ward of 88158
Golf Club Drive. Dlamondhcad.
Miss.
H is wife, Michelle, Is the
duughtcr of Lou Palmer of 957
Monroe Harbor. Sunford und
Puullnc Smith or 2120 112 W.
Oak, Enid, Oklu.

with a United Nations Security
mandate.
Smith Is a motor transport
o p e r a t o r at F o r t D r u m .
Watertown, N.Y.
He Is the son of Dolores A.
Gracey of 457 Gehr Lane, Lake
Mary, and Larry L. Smith of
1509 Elliott St.. Sanford.
Th e private la a 1991 graduate
of Seminole High School, San­
ford.

JAMES O. SMITH
M O G A D I S H U . S o m a lia A rm y Spec. James G. Sm ith as
deployed to Somalis In support
of Operation Restore Hope.
T h e - operation Is to provide
h .q q ia n lt$ c i«n re lie f to the
Sofnsll people In accordance

ABIG AIL
VAN BUREN
•NO PASS MOVIE*

fXWIERKiA
fMsrAcnoffiRrni)
l •"gssaa".., a J »*&gt; moinToo— J

elergyperson would result In a
not-tao-Bubtle hint being
dropped from the pulpit for
those who need to hear It.
Otherwise, you haven't got a
prayer.

q u il t
A O

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1:90*00 MO7*0 9*01
^ L A D D I N ( Q « 5

LAST ACTION, f ? 5 W

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(Problsms? W rits to Osar Abby.
For a porao nal, u n p ubllah sd
rsply, sand a tsll-ad d ro aasd ,
stamped snvslops to Osar Abby,
P .0. Box 69440, Los Angslss,
Calif. 90069. All corrsspondsnes
is confidential.)
iB M jM m i*
MX Y
1 T f

O W

A O D IN taor.40*ao

C O N F ID E N T IA L T O
"F E E L ­
ING LO W ER T H A N A S N A K E S
B E L L Y IN B R E M E R T O N .
W A S H .": Don't cash In your
chips, son: The world Is round.
What may look like the end may
be only the beginning.

m

7
.
.

BHERRYW.,
WOODRUFF, $.C.
DEAR BHERRYi I agree - It Is
vital that parents spend time
with their children und try to
establish mutually loving and
respectful re lu llu sh lp s wi th
them. A neglected child Is a
child at risk on mnny levels.
But corporal punishment Is
not the answer if a child hus not
been taught respect for authori­
ty. When a parent (or any adult)
reacts with violence, It tenches a
child thut the bigger, stronger
person cun use tout advantage
against one who Is smnllcr und
weaker. Violence begets vio­
lence.
D E A R A B B Y l My pel peeve is
the people who come to church
services every week und plop
themselves down at the end of
the pew. These selfish few
expect the disabled to crawl over
them, us they refuse to move to
the center. It's all I cun do to
refrain from stepping on their
feet as I crawl over them.
Also, w hy can't women bring
smaller hundbugs to services, so
their suitcases won't take up the
room of nn additional person?

several choices for control. A pest control
company can apply a pesticide called Mocap
which can help reduce certain nematode
populations. Eventually, however, popula­
tions will rebuild and Mocap m ay need to be
applied on a yearly basis.
Another control would be to remove the
grass and soil and replace It with sterile soil
and new sod. By removing the grass and
roots, many nematodes will be removed
also. But populations will rebuild with this
method also.
Adding organic matter, such as compost,
can also help by slightly lowering the pH of
the soli to a level below that which
nematodes prefer. Solarizing the soil In
areas that are replanted each year (annual
beds and vegetable gardens) Is also effective
If done properly. Remember to use clear
plastic and prepare the area In advance.
Rem em ber, positive Identification of
nematodes requires examination of a lawn
sample u n d e r a microscope by a
nematologlst. It Is possible to see symptoms
of nematode damage but not the acutaJ pest.
Kits are available at our office to send a test
up to the University of Florida Nematode
Assay Lab In Gainesville.
For more Information about nematodes
and their control in lawns and gardens, call
or drop by the Cooperative Extesnlon
Services Office at 250 W. County Home
Road across from Flea World.

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•I * .../ •
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�4 # - Sanlord H erald, Sanford, Florida - M onday, June 21, 1903

Legal Notice
IN THK CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND
FORORANQE COUNTV, FLORIDA
c a iin o

. c in -itx

FIRST UNION NATIONAL BANK OF FLORIDA, a national banking
association.
Plaintiff,
vt.
V.S. HASEOTES 4 SONS LIM ITED PARTNERSHIP, a Rhode
Itlend limited partnership; OEMETRIOS HASEOTES. Individually
and at a gantral partner ol V.S. Hataolat 4 Sont Llmltad
Parntorthlp; OEOROE HASEOTES. Individually and at a gantral
partnar of V.S. Hataotat 4 Sont Llmltad Partnership; BYRON
HASEOTES, Individually and at a gantral partnar ot V.S. Hataotat
4 Sont Llmltad Partnarthlp; and LILY H BENTAS. Individually
and at a gantral partnar of V.S. Hataolat 4 Sont Llmltad
Partnarthlp.
Dtftndanli.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN that on lha lath day of Augutl. l m
at 11:00 A M. at lha Oranga County Civil Court Building, 37 N.
Orange Avenue. Suita 400 Lobby. Orlando. Florida, lha undertigntd
Clerk will otter for tala lha following deteribtd real property:
EXHIBIT "A "
(Store 1)
The Watt W O feel ot the Eait 3110 feat of lha North
of the
South U ol lha NE U ot lha SE U of Section 33. Townthlp 31 South.
Range 34 Eait. Polk County. Florida, LESS AND EXCEPT the South
41.0 feet thereof.
AND ALSO
(Store No. 10)
The fractional part of Lol 1. all of Loll 3 through 7, inctutlve. and
the fractional pari of Lot I. all lying Eati ot U.S, Highway 17A, all In
Block It ot LAKE WALES LAND COMPANY INDUSTRIAL
ADDITION, according lo plal thereof recorded In Plat Book It, Page
34. Public Recordt of Polk County. Florida; and the fractional partol
Lot 4 In Block 30 Of LAKE WALES LAND COMPANY INDUSTRIAL
AODITION, lying North of Burnt Avenue. Lake Walat, according to
plat thereof recorded In Plal Book it, Page 34. Public Recordi ot
Polk County. Florida, and lhal vacated part of 7th Avenue lying
between Scenic Highway and Eait Street at thown on tald plal ot
LAKE WALES LAND COMPANY INDUSTRIAL ADDITION;
tublect to a utility oatement on lha South 35 0 feat of tald portion of
7th Avenue.
AND ALSO
(Store N o.ll)
The Eatt ISO feet of the Watt 170 feat of the South ISO feat of Block
or Lot 13, in ALEX ST. CLAIR - ABRAMS EXTENSION TO THE
C ITY OF TAVARES, FLORIDA, according to lha plat thereof
recorded In Plat Book 1, Page 5) of the Public Records ol Lake
County, Florida.
AND ALSO
(Store No. 13)
Parcel II
That part of Lot 5 In FRANCIS J. HINSON S PLAN OF THE
TOWN OF ALTOONA. FLORIDA, according to the plat thereof
recorded In Plat Book 1, Paget 31 and 31, Public Records ol Lake
County. Florida bounded and described at follows: Begin af the most
Westerly corner ol said Lot S and run thance Easterly along the
Southerly line of tald Lot S a distance ol 133.34 feet; thence Northerly
and parallel with lha Westerly line of tald Lot S a distance of no
feet; thence Westerly and parallel with the Southerly line of tald Lot
5 a distance of 133.74 leal to the Westerly line ol tald Lot S; thence
Southerly along lha Westerly line ol tald Lot S a distance ot IIS feet
to the point ol beginning, LESS the right-of-way ol U.S. Highway No.
IP.
Parcel 43
That part of Lot 5 In FRANCIS J. HINSON’S PLAN OF THE
TOWN OF ALTOONA, FLORIDA, recorded In Plal Book I, Paget 31
and 31, Public Records ol Lake County. Florida, bounded and
described at follows: From the most Westerly corner of tald Lot 1.
run Easterly alonn the Southerly line of tald Lot 5 a distance ol 133.74
feet to the point of beginning of this description; run Ihence Easterly
along the Southerly boundary of said Lot 5 to a point on said
Southerly boundary that It 173 leel Northerly of Ihe Southeasterly
corner of said Lol S. Ihence Northerly parallel to and 133 feel
Westerly of fhe Easterly line ol said Lot 3 to the Northerly line of
said Lot 3. thence Westerly along the Northerly line ot tald Lol 3 to
the Northwesterly corner ol said Lol 3. Ihence Southerly along fhe
Westerly line of said Lol 3 fo a point 110 feet Northerly of the
Southwesterly corner ol said Lol 3, Ihence Easterly parallel lo the
Southerly line ol said Lot 3 a distance ol 177 74 leel, Ihence Southerly
parallel to the Westerly line ot said Lot 3 a distance of HO feet to Ihe
point ot beginning, LESS the right ol wayot State Road No. If.
ANDALSO
(StoreNo. 71)
Lois 41 and 47. and Ihe Southwesterly 30 leel ol Lot 43 ol
ROCHESTER HEIOHTS. eccordlng to Ihe plet thereof recorded In
Piet Book f, P*ge 30 ol the Public Records ol Polk County. Florida,
being a part of Section It, Township 71 South, Ranga73 East.
ANDALSO
IStora No. 33)
Lots 7 and I In N.J. TROWELL'S PLAN OF THE CITY OF
UMATILLA. FLORIDA, according lo lha plal tharaol recordtd in
Plat Book 4, Faga A Public Records ot Leko County, Florida.
ANDALSO
(IkereNo. 14)
"•
‘ ‘ ”
From the, Aforthdesterly corner at Lol 73, LAKE MINNIE
ESTATES, ecnr'ding to the plat thareol recorded In Piet Book 4.
Page f7, ol Ihe Public Records ol Seminole County, Florida, Ihence
run South IT* East along Ihe Eest line of said Lot 33, *73.14 leel.
thence run Soulh 71**4'44" West 741.14 leel, thence run South
44*3*37“ West 701.71 Im I, Ihence run Soulh II* Eest 4)7.41 feet lo Ihe
Point ot Beginning, thenco run North II* West 704.71 leel, ihence run
North 44*3*37“ East 101.71 leet, thence run Soulh H* East 104.71
teat, thence run Southwesterly along a curve concave lo Ihe North
having a radius of 1071.31 leet, Ihence run along Ihe ere ol sold curve
lll.lt leet to the P C., thence run South lf* l)’4t“ West 33 71 leel lo
Ihe Point ol Beginning.
ANDALSO
(Store No Ml
Thai perl ot Ihe following described property lying North ol U.S.
Highway No. 441; Lots II through It, Inclusive, all In Block A, MAP
OF PLYMOUTH, as shown In the plet Ihereol recorded In Plat Book
1, Pagas Hand II. Public Records ot Orange County. Florida.
ANOALSO
IStora No. 40)
From the Intersection ot the North line ol Ihe NW U ol the 5W te ol
the NE le ot Sactlon f, Township If South, Rang# 30 East. Volusia
County, Florida, and lha East right ol-way line at the SCL Railroad,
-------Mid N1
beginning; thence run Soulh ISO feat, thence run North It*44' East
113 leal to the West right-of-way line ol U.S. Highway 17 *3, thence
run Northeasterly eking said right-of-way and a curve concave
Southeasterly having a radius of 4477.33 leel, a central angle ol
1*4*33" on arc distance ol I34.4f foot, a chord boaring of North
13*37'JO" East to the North Una ol said NW te, Ihence run Soulh
•*•44' West 311.4 feel to the point of beginning
ANDALSO
(Store No. 41)
Thai part of the North
ol tho SE 14 ol Sactlon 14. Township 3f
South. Range 33 East, and Lol 13. Block "C " of AIR BASE
SUBDIVISION, as recorded In Plat Book 31, Page 30, Public Records
ot Polk County, Florida, mora particularly described as follows:
Commence al Ihe original Southeast corner ol the Lot 13 of said Al R
BASE SUBDIVISION, and run North 1*31'44" West along Ihe East
boundary of said Lot, 10 feel fo the North boundary of Slate Road
33f; thance run South 44*31' Weil along said boundary 141.04 leel;
thanes North 44*4*03" West, along Mid North boundary I.f4 leet to
the point of beginning, from Ihe point of beginning, continue North
14*4*03" West, along Mid North boundary 33.73 feat to a point of
curvo; Ihence Northwesterly on the ere of a curve to the right
(radius 140 feat, central angle 43*tl’00"&gt; 134.34 ftel lo a point ot
lengontj thence North e4*IJ'00" West, along Mid North boundary
33.01 tael; thance North 10*03'34" Eatt along Mid North boundary
I00.W feet to Ihe Southeasterly boundary of Slate Road SSI (U.S.
Highway 171; thence North 4J*47'00" Eatt, along Mid boundary 17.43
feat fo tho Southwesterly boundary of Lol 1, Block C of Mid AIR
BASE SUBDIVISION, thence Soulh 44*13 00" East, along told Lol
boundary 131.03 feet to Ihe SE corner of Mid Lol; Ihence South
4 4 V JW 1 East, along the prelection of Mid Lof boundary 11.71 feel lo
lha point which lies 130 teat from the East boundary ot Lnt 13; Ihence
run South l*S1‘44" East, parallel with Mid East boundary 171.41 feel
to Ihe point of beginning.
ANOALSO
(Store No. 43)
The West 140 leet of fhe South 170 feel ol Ihe West Ui ol Ihe NE U of
Ihe NG 14 of Section 4, Townthlp 34 Soulh, Rtnge 33 East, Polk
County, Florida.
(collectively, Ihe "Reel Property")
TOGETHER WITH all buildings, structures and other Improve
menlt ol any kind, nature, or description (hereinafter sometimes
together referred lo at "Improvements") now or heroalfer erected,
constructed, placed or located upon Mid Red Property, Including
without limitation, any and all additions lo, substitutions lor or
replacements of such Improvements;
TOGETHER WITH all and singular, lha tenements, heredita­
ments, strips end gores, rights of-way, easements, privileges and
other appurtenances now or hereafter belonging or In any way
appartalnlng to tha Real Proparfy Including, without limitation, all
right. Illle, and Intarest of tha Mortgagor In any atteracqulrod right,
tltla. Interest, remainder or reversion, In end to lha beds Ol any

ways, streets, avenues, roads, alleys, passages ana puonc pieces,
open or proposed. In front ot. running through, ed|olnlng or edlacent
to Mid Real Property (hereinafter tomelimes together referred lo as
"Appurtenances" I j
TOGETHER WITH any end all teases, rents, royalties. Issues,
revenues, profits, proceeds. Income and other benetltt. Including
accounts receivable, of, accruing to or derived from Mid Real
Property, Improvementa tnd Appurtenances end any business or
enterprise presently situate or hereafter operated thereon and
therewith (hereinafter sometimes together referred to at "Rents") t
AS WELL AS ell fixtures, gasoline tanks and pumping equipment,
goods, chattels, construction materials, furnishing*. equipment,
machinery, apparatus, appliances, and othar Items of personal
property, whether tangible or Intangible, of any kind, nature or
description, whs Iher now owned or hereafter acquired by the
Mortgagor, which Is, are or shall hereafter be located upon,
attached, affixed to or used or useful, either directly or Indirectly, In
connection wllh tha complete and comfortable use, occupancy and
operation ol each and every parcel constituting tha Real Property
and Improvements thereon at a food and gae convenience store, or
any other business, enterprise or operation at may hereafter be
conducted upon or with Mid Rm I Property, Improvements and
Appurtenances, Including, without limitation, any and all licenses,
permits or IranchlMt, used or required In connection with such use.
occupancy or operation, together with any and all additions,
replacements or substitutions thereto. Ihereol or therefor at well as
lha proceeds Ihereol or (herefrom regardless ot form, but
specifically excluding all such tangible personal preparty used in the
operation ot Mortgagor's butlnott which It not attached or affixed to
Ihe Mortgaged Properly, Including without limitation, tree standing
cablnelt and freeiert, toll drink machines, signs and cash raglttert.
All Insurance policies and all renawalt and proceadt ihereol
regarding the sub|ect encumbered property. All condemnation and
eminent domain awards regarding lha tublect property.
The aloreMld Mia will be made pursuant lo a Summary Final
Judgment ol Foreclosure entered In CaM No. Cl *3-3174 now pending
in (he Circuit Court ol Ihe Ninth Judicial Circuit In and lor Orange
County, Florida.
In accordance wllh lha Americans Wllh DiMbllltles Act, persons
with disabilities needing a special accommodation lo parllcipat* In
this proceeding should contact Court Administration al 17 North
Oranga Avenue, Suite 1130, Orlando. Florida 31*01, telephone (407)
134 3030. not later then Mven (7) days prior to lha proceeding. If
hearing Impaired. (TD D ) 1-10**33-1771, or Voice (VI 1 SOOH3-I7TO,
via Flerlda Relay Service.
DATED this 13th day ol June, 11*3.
FRAN CARLTON
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
BY: YOLANDA I. VERA D.C.
CIRCUIT COURT SEAL
Deputy Clerk
D E F -m
Publish: June7l,3l. 11*3

Legal Notices
L ITY O F
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by The City Commission ol the
City ol Lake Mary, Florida lhal
Mid Commission will hold a
Public Hearing on July I. 1113,
el 7:00 P.M., or at toon thereofItr et possible, lo consider
Second Reading and adoption ol
an Ordinance enIII led:
Ordinance He. i l l
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLOR
IDA, PROVIDING FOR THE
VACATING A PORTION OF
THE PLAT OF TIMACUAN
UNIT 14, LOCATED IN THE
CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLOR­
IDA, AND MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED
HEREIN; PROVIDING FOR
CONFLICTS. SEVERABILITY,
AND EFFE CTIV E DATE.
Tha Public Hearing will be
held In ihe Commission Cham­
bers, 100 Weil Lake Mary Blvd.,
Lake Mery. The Public Is In­
vited to attend end be heard.
Said hearing may be continued
from lime lo lime until a
decision Is made by Ihe City
Commission. Copies ol tho Ordi­
nance In lull are available In the
City Clerk's OUlce.
PERSONS WITH DIS­
ABILITIES NEEDING
ASSISTANCE TO P A R TIC I­
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S S H O U L D
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO­
ORDINATOR A T LEAST 44
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
M EETING AT (4071 334-3034.
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
M EETING IS MADE BY THH
C IT Y POR ITS C O N V E N ­
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE­
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
POSES OP APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOING M ATTER. ANY
PERSON WISHING TO EN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
A D V ISE D TO M AKE THE
NECESSARY AR R AN G E­
MENTS A T HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE.
CITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
CAROL A. FOSTER
CITYCLER K
DATED: June 11,1*13
Publish: June31,1113
DEF-113

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
IN A N D P O R
S E M IN O LIC O U N T Y ,
FLORIDA
PR O BATI DIVISION
FILE NO. n-MS-CP
IN RE: GUAROIANSHIPOF
MARGARITA PAGAN
NOTICE OF ACTION
THE STATE OF FLORIDA
RICARDO PAGAN
Address Unknown
You ere hereby notified lhal *
Petition for Appointment of
Guardian of Minor hat been
filed In Ihe above styled Court.
You are required lo serve a copy
ot your written defenses, II any,
lo II on Richard W. Copeland,
attorney lor Ihe guardianship,
whose address It 431 Palm
Springs Drive, Sulla 104. Alta­
monte Springs, FL 31701, on or
belore July It, IttJ. end III* the
original wllh lha Clark of this
Court, al lha Seminal# County
Circuit Court, P.O. Drawer ” C",
Sanford. FL 33771, before serv­
ice on Petitioner's attorney or
Immediately thereafter; other­
wise a default will be entered
against you.
Your lallur* to respond on or
before July It, 1113, may be
treated at content to the
above referenced Petition.
WITNESS my hand «• the
Clerk ol Mid Court and M il
theraot, this 7th day of June,
1113.
(SEAL)
C LE R K O FTH E
CIRCUITCOURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
BY: Pallrcla Thatcher
Deputy Clerk
Nellc*
Americans Wllh OlMbllltlet
Act of mo
Administrative Order #1317
Persons with a disability who
need special accommodations lo
participate In this proceeding
should contact ADA Coordinator
at Ml N. Perk Avenue, Suite
NMI, Senlord, FL 33T7I al leesl
3 days prior lo the proceeding.
Telephone; (407)311-4110
X4237; I 000 433 *771 (TD D ) or
1400 *33 4770 (Vie) FL Relay
Service
Prepared By:
Richard W. Copeland
431 Palm Springs Drive.
Suit* toe
Altamonte Springs, FL 33701
(4071 IM 7770
FLBARNO. 13SI74
Publish: June H, 31,71A July *•
11*1
.
DBP-4J

Legal Notices
CITY OP
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
FUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
by The City Commission of lha
City of Laka Mary, Florida that
M id CommlMlon will hold a
Public Hoarlng on July 1, lira,
at 7:00 P.M., or at toon thereaf­
ter at poulbla, to consider
Second Reading and adoption of
en Ordinanceontltlod:
Ordinance He, *41
AN ORDINANCE OP THE
CITY OF LAKE MARY, PLORID A , A M E N D IN G O R D I­
NANCE NO. 3J0 AS AMENDED
BY ORDINANCE NO. 371;
AMENDINO TH E FINAL DEV E L O P M E N T PLAN OF
TIMACUAN PLANNED UNIT
D E V E L O P M E N T; ESTA B­
LISH IN G SIDE SETBACKS
FOR SINGLE FAMILY LOTS;
P R O V IO IN O FOR C O N D I­
TIONS OF APPROVAL; PRO­
V ID IN G FOR CO N FLICTS.
PROVIOINO FOR SEVERA­
B IL IT Y . AND PROVIDING
FOR E FFE C TIV E DATE.
Tha Public Hearing will ba
held In the Commission Cham­
bers, 100 West Lake Mary Blvd.,
Laka Mary. Tha Public It In­
vited lo attend and b* hoard.
Said hearing may ba continued
from time to llmo until o
decision Is mado by tha City
Commission. Copies of tha Ordi­
nance In full are available In lha
City Clerk's Office.
PERSONS W IT H DIS ­
A BILITIES NEEOIHO
ASSISTANCE T O P A R TIC I­
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D I N G S SHOULD
CONTACT TH E C ITY ADA CO­
ORDINATOR AT LEAST 41
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
M EETIN G AT (407) 114-1034.
A TAPED RECORD OF THIS
M EETIN G IS MADE BY THE
C I T Y POR ITS C O N V E N ­
IENCE. THIS RECORO MAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE­
QUATE RECORO FOR PUR­
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOING M ATTER. ANY
PERSON WISHINO TO EN­
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED­
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
A D VISED TO M AKE TH E
NECESSARY A RR AN GE­
MENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE.
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
CAROL A. FOSTER
C ITY CLER K
DATSO: June II, IH3
Publish: June 31,W l
DBF-113
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am engaged In butlneM al 43S
Fawn Trail, Osteen, FL 33744,
Samlnol* County, Florida, under
the Fictitious Ntm* cl N.Y.T.
PR O PER TY ENTERPRISES
OROUP, and that I Intend fo
register Mid name wllh the
Secretary of Stale, Tallahassee,
Florida, In accordance with Ihe
provision* of lha Fictitious
Nam* Statute. To-WIt: Sactlon
4*3.01, Florida StalulM 1157.
Owen Tracey
Publish: JuneII, 1111
DEF-113
NOTICE OP PUBLIC SALE
A public Ml* wilt b* held July
10, i m at 11:00 a.m. at 3343
Park Drive, Sanlord. FL. A
mobile home It to bo sold,
previously owned by Marlerl*
Castel. The mobile horn* It fo b*
liken out of Ihe present location
by Augutl I, 1W3. A minimum
bid ol 13,100.00 It required.
Publish: Junell, 1113
DEF-300
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* Is hereby given lhal I
am engaged In business al 1334
Samlnola Blvd., C*tt*lb*rry,
Seminole County, Florida, under
the F i c t i t i ou s Nam o of
SOUTHERN RAIN PROOFING,
and lhal I Intend to register Mid
name wllh Ihe Secretary of
Stele, Tallahet***, Florida, In
accordance wllh the provisions
of the Fictitious Nam* Statute,
To-WII: Section 141.01. Florida
Statutes 1137.
Audrey KayMangum
Publish: Junell, 1W3
DEF 301
LEOAL NOTICE
Tha School Board of Seminole
County It accepting Requests
lo r Proposal lo provide
Employe* Assistance Program
Service*. Contact Richard
Wells. Executive Director,
S u p p o r t S e r v i c e s . 1311
Meilonvlll* Avenue. Sanford
33771.331 1111, Ext. 113
Publish: Juno tl. 30, 31, 31,11,
14,31,17,3S, 31, H U
DEF-113 '

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER
A CONDITIONAL USE
Nolle* It hereby given lhal a
Public Hearing will ba held by
the Planning A Zoning Com­
mission In lha City Commission
Chambers. City Hall, Sanlord,
Florid#, at 7:00 p.m. on Thurs­
day. July 1, 11*3, to consider a
request lor a Conditional Us* In
a SC-1, Special Commercial Zon­
ing District.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Lots
7 to 11, Blk I, Tr 3, A Lots 3,4, A
* and tho W 14.4' ol Lol 7, Blk 1,
T r 3, and lha Alley ad| lo Lot 4
on lha N, Town of Sanford, as
recorded In the Public Records
Ol Seminole Caunly, Florida In
Plal Book 1, Pag* 31.
Balng mor* generally d*
scribed at 313 W. Itl Street.
Conditional U u Requested:
Manufacturing (custom mede
furniture).
All parties In Interatl and
elllion* shall hav* an opportuni­
ty to bt heard al Mid hearing.
By order ol Ihe Planning A
Zoning Commission ol Ihe City
ol Sanlord. Florida, this Jnd day
of June, 1113.
Jo* Dennison. Chairman
Planning A Zoning
Commission
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC; If
a person decides to appeal a
decision mado wllh rotpocf to
any matter considered al the
above mealing or hearing,
he/th# may need a verbatim
record of tho precoodlngt In­
cluding tha testimony and evi­
dence, which record It not
provided by Ihe City ol Sanford.
(PS 3*4.0103)
PERSONS WIT H DIS­
ABILITIES NEEDING
ASSISTANCE TO P A R TIC I­
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D I N G S SHO ULD
CONTACT TH E PERSONNEL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
A T 330 3414 44 HOURS IN
ADVANCE OF TH E MEETINO.
Publish: Junell, IttJ
DBF-40

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIG HTEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
File Number 13-M3-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
W ILLARDCLINTON BROWN.
Deceased
NOTICE TOCRBOITOR1
TO ALL PERSONS HAVINO
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A O A IN ST T H E A B O V E
ESTATE
You ar* hereby notified lhal
an Order ol Summary Ad­
ministration hat been entered In
the estate ol W I L L A R D
CLINTON BROWN, deceased,
File Number 11313 CP. by the
Circuit Court lor Seminole
County, Florida. Probate Dlvl
lion, lha address of which It:
Seminole County CourthouM.
Sanlord. FI 33771; lhal the total
cash value ol the estate It under
S33.000.00, and lhal lha names
and addresses ol those lo whom
It hat been assigned by such
order are.Robert O. Brown, 40* Apt. C
Kings Highway Towers. Maple
Shade, N.J. 0*033
William C. Brown. 434 Werley
Street, Florence, S. C. 3*301
ALL IN TERESTED PERSONS
ARE N O TIP IED TH ATi
All creditors ol the decedent
and other persons having claims
or demands against decedent's
estate on whom a copy of this
notkv It served within three
months alter the date ol tha llrtl
publication ol this nolle* must
III* their claims wllh this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A FTE R THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS AF T E R THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All other creditors ot Ihe
decedent and parsons having
claims or demands against Ihe
estate ol Ihe decedent must III*
their claims wllh Ihlt Court
WI T HI N T H R E E M ONTHS
A FTER THE DATE OF THE
F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
THIS NOTICE.
A L L CL AI MS A N D D E ­
MANDS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED.
The del* ol Ihe Oral public*
Hon ol this Notice Is Jun* 14,
IttJ.
Person Giving Notice:
RoberlO. Brown
404 Apt. C Kings Hlgtg^ey
Towers
Maple Shade. N.J. 01013
Attorney For Person Giving
Notice
Thomas G. Freemen
P.O. Box 70 (1001E. Mwy 4341
AltemonI* Springs,
FL 33713 0070
Telephone: (407) 431-111*
Florida Bar No: 0011700
Publish: Jun* 14,11.1113
DEF-44

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
TO CONSIDER
A W A IV IR O P A O N R
YEAR W AITINO PERIOD
Nolle* It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will bt held by
tha Planning A Zoning Com
mission In tha City Commission
Clumbers, City Hall, Sanlord.
Florida, al 7:00 p.m. on Thurs­
day, July I, 1113. lo contldtr a
request lor a Waiver of a On*
Year Welling Period In a Gen
erel Commercial Zoning Dis­
trict.
LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Lois
I thru S (LESS Rd on N A W)
Blk I, Palm Terrace, at re­
corded In Plot Book 4, Page 17 of
the Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida.
Being mor* generally detcribedailSOI S. Sanlord Av*.
Waiver Requested: Waiver ol
on* year welting period lor
reappllcallon ot an eppl leal Ion
tor ■ conditional use decided on
13-17*3.
All parlies In Interest end
cltliens shell hav* an opportuni­
ty to be heard *1 Mid hearing.
By order ol Ihe Planning A
Zoning Commission ol Ihe City
ol Sanford. Florida, this 3rd day
of June. 11*3.
Jo* Oennlton. Chairman
Planning A Zoning
CommlMlon
AOVICB T O T H S PUBLIC: If
a person decides to appeal a
decision mad* with respect lo
•ny matter considered al lha
above mealing or hearing,
he/she may need a verbatim
record of lha proceedings In­
cluding the testimony and evi­
dence, which record It not
provided by the City ol Sanlord.
(FS344.0103)
PE R SON S W I T H DI S
ABILITIES NEEDING
ASSISTANCE TO PARTICI
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D I N G S SHO ULD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
A T 130 3414 41 HOURS IN
ADVANCE OF THE MEETING.
Publish: Jun* 11,1113
OEF-40

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given Diet w*
•re engaged In business el 330*
McIntosh Point, Sanford, FL
32773, Seminole County, Florida,
under the Fictitious Nam* ol
DOOR TO DOOR DECOR, and
that we Intend to register Mid
name with the Secretary of
Slat*. Tallahassee, Florida. In
accordance wllh tha provisions
ol Ihe Fictitious Nam# Slelul*.
To-WII: Section *43 0f, Florida
Statutes 1137.
D. Miller
John F. Sheridan
Publish: Junell. 1113
DEF-lf*
NOTICE OF SALE
OF MOTOR VEHICLE
PURSUANT TO F.S. 711.71(1)
1140 Chav VIN #1B440AA143403
1177 Chav VIN IIN41U7S333400
I * S 7 O I d t V I N
41G3N F 31U4HM7JVOOS Sal*
del* July 13. 1113. Located al
1310 S. Hwy 437. Longwood. FL.
Sales *1 10:00 A M . el 1431
Atom* Av*., Winter Perk, FL.
Towing company reserves the
r i g h t to w i t h d r a w sai d
vehicle (t) from Ihe auction. For
mor* Inqulrletcell 407-437 7HS.
Publish: Junell, 1113
DEF-117

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

14 M flM CUKw Hu m s .— — 87# ■ fins
7 oonstouSvt ttn&gt;ss-------------TOE • Hot
3 oonsBCutfvB UfiMS-------------S I M line
1 Sm s--------------------------------- 11.11s lint
Ratss b ig psr Issus, bssBd on 3 lint*
* 3 Llnsa Minimum

M 0 A .* -M 0 M l.
MONDAYthru
FRIDAY
CLOSEDSATURDAY
A SUNDAY

’ £^* * * * 0 may Include Herald Advaritoaf allha ooet of an addteonaJ day
f Cancel erfmn you gat results. Pay onfy tordaye your ad runa al rate aarnod.
’ W*a LA daecnpSon lor laateel fasten. Copy must tobow acceptable typo­
graphical town. •Commercial frequency ntee are av*4abl*
DEADLINES
Tuesday thru Friday IS Noon The Day Before Pubdcebon
Sunday And Monday 8 30 P M Friday
A D JU S TM E N T S A N O C R f D IT S : In t h B tv t n l of an srror In an
•d, the Sanford HonUd w4M bo rooponslblo for tho first
InosrUon onfy and onfy to tha axtanf of tho coat of that
Inaarton. Pfaaaa check your ad for accuracy tha first day It
runs.

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Car#

21— Personals
ADOPTIONS

Free medical care, Iranspor
teflon, counseling, private
doctor plus living expanses.
Bar #337111 Cell Attorney John
Frtcker..............iaee-ri7 744e
ENOLItH Family looking lor
American "Godparents."
Pleat* writ* lo: Mr. S Mrs.
David Lines. 43 Ulverscroll
Rd., Cha*yl*tmore, Coventry,
CVl 1EZ, England.__________

23— Spodal Nollcdt

For Excellent...
Professional CHILD CARE
Servlets, call 131 3003.

MICHELLE'S HOUSS - 111
PER WBEKI Open 4:30AM 13
Midnight! 331 7413 1313JO

43—Legal Service*
SMILES. Peralsgal services
end legal reMarch. W* may
^ &gt; ^ b l* ilohel£i C a in 3 ^ J 3 1 _

33— Business
Opportunities

* * BATON CLASS ★ *
Indlv. 1 Group lessons avail.
For Into: 1313117, Glngar
Wright, Director ol the Hurrl
^eneSj^J^toN^hemgloni^

Local V tn d in i Pouts
11300 00 a week potential
Musi sail 1100 43) VEND

27—N u rstry S.
Child Cars

41—M onty to Lend

BILLSDUE?

ABC IMALL DAYCARS Babies
end toddlers. 3 hot meals.
Exceltenfrtls. Dee, 331 Cl II
CHILD CARE
Lake Mary
Blvd S 1711. ‘ Exp. w/all
ages. ‘ Fenced yd. * Plenned
Activities. Personal cere end
alltnllon lor your child.
114-1774....... ................... Kelly

Hava I Piece lo Pay I Slash
Monthly Paymantsl Get Cred
Hors Oil Your Beckl Easy
Quality NoCollaltrell 333 7311

7 1 -H e lp Wanted
AGENTS-REAL ESTATE!

Legal Notice
IN TH E CIRCUITCOURT
OF THE EIG HTEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 13-347] CA 14 K
FORD CONSUMER LOAN
CORPORATION,
Plalnlltl,
vt.
RONALD CASTIELLO and
DEBORAH A. CASTIELLO,
hit wile; and UNKNOWN
TENANTS/OWNERS.
Delendanllt).
N O TIC I OF SALE
Nolle* It hereby given Ihet,
pursuant to Ihe Order or Final
Judgment entered In this c*u m
In Ihe Circuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida. I will Mil Ihe
proparfy situated In Seminole
County. Florida, described as:
Lot 13, Block J. INDIAN
HILLS. UNIT ONE REPLAT,
according lo Iht Plal Ihereol as
recorded In Plal Book 14, Peg#
41. Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida.
at public Mia, to tha highest end
best bidder, lor cash, et the
Weil Front Ooor ol the Seminole
County Courthouse, In Sanlord.
Florida, at 11:00 A M., on July
IS. 1*11.
MARYANNE MORSE
AS CLERKOF THE COURT
By: JaneE. J j m w Ic
Deputy Clark
Publish: Jun*It. 1(, Iff]
DEF-I7I

Nothing succeeds Ilk* success
We're well Into our 3rd decade
ol training successful agents
No license?........... We'll helpl
WATSON REALT YCORP
REALTORS___________3311100

Air Conditioning Instiltm
For residential change ouls
Hiring now. Experienced only
311 43l3or 133 0301

AREA REPRESENTATIVES
Solid International comp with .
growing monthly sales seeks l/l. p/t area reps Upward'
mobility, benefits available
Call Tom ter appl. 331-1141
ASSEMBLERS
Hand mail,
work. S3 per hour. Never * •
teal Help Personnel, 434-4304 '

Assistant Maintsnancs Ptrson •
Needed for Lako M e ry,’ ,
apartment community. Must have electrical and A/C exp
Apply of: SI Croix Apart
mints, 733 Secret Harbor.
Lane, Laka Mary....... Ill 7301

CARPENTERS NEEDED
1411*3* No calls alter 7pm

;

CARPENTERS
All phases Up lo SIS/hr.
407 474 1101 Refundable Fee
CA RPE T T E CH Musi have
driver's license Exp helpful,
not necessary Will train
carpel cleaning, dyeing. In
stalling. Snegotiable 479 3644

CHILDCARE
Part 4 Full lima positions
f xp. a MUST..............111*434
AOBNTS-AVON. Earn lo 30%
No door/door. Guaranteed
40% discounts. Sendl 311-1113 ;

LET A

SPECIALIST
/

w

'

DO IT!

I

ik V &gt;YM

K

T W

e

■RoTTcT

E Itctrkat

FLORIDA STATE REQUIRES
*11 contractors ba registered
or cartlflad. To verify a stale
contractors Meant* call
I K W 'J 417144. Occupational
Licenses ar* required by the
county end can b# verified by
^ e llln ^ lM IlO jx l^ M ^ ^ ^

MASTER ELECTRICIAN Ret Ident IaI or Com mer cI■I
tE ROO) 1104.................... 3311304
MASTER ELECTRICIAN
Llc'd/lnt. 14 hrt. Fair prlctsl
Rat's. IER0004113...... 331 4473

Additions &amp;
R am odtllng

HARDWOODFLOORINO
Install Sanding Finishing
TOMOLSBN MIS-414-3117

RES./COMM. Vinyl Siding ,
Alum. Framing, Dryw*ll,
Doors, Roollng, Concrete.
131-4S31... I.O. Bellnt, CSCtlteSO

Handy Mar

Flooring

Carpanlry
CARPENTER All kinds of home
repairs, painting A ceramic
Ilk ^ le h a r j^ r o t ^ ^ J lM IT S

DUN RITE, Clean driveways,'
reefs, peel decks, walks,Jhouses. Free esf. I l l 4133

RANDY'S Q U A L ITY LAWN.
Complete pro care since IISO.
Clean ups, hauling. 331-471*
TOM A JE F F ’S LAWN CAREI
Res. /Comm., dependable, low
retesl Freeesl............330 7070
TUR F TRIMMBRSLow rales,
Free ett.. Ret. A comm. 1
(Im e /i^o o n d ^e L ^TllM tM

end replacements. 311-730*

ftAasonry
TW F MASONRY. Brick. Block.
Slucco. Concrete, Renovalions Llc./tns............. 311-3*4*

6utildB Lighting

AL DOES IT ALL
Fix It right. Llc’d/lnt. From
start lo finish. Carpentry,
plumbing, electrical, and
roofing svci. 33 yrt. of experl
enc*. No fob loo big or small.
CalMMJAjUtei^SM^iajltHnr*^

—
N EED CAR A/C work done?
Call us. W* hav* compressors,
dryers, evaporators. The bast
prices In town) Auto King 1310
E lm jS a n te r d M T T * )^ ^ ^ ^

Horn#

Improvimint

r m way

REPLACE Parking tel, pot* A
bldg, security lights. Palnf A
^* g a lrv S JM S J| 4 3 0 IM ^ _ _ ^

fain tin g
CUSTOM PAINTINO by Jeffrey
Power, Inf.- ext., Ilc.d', Ins.
Free Estimates...........331 0143
K A H PAINT AND REMODEL
Free Etllmatttl Reis., lie.
N o|te&gt;lcotm #IIU 1^1*^^^^
Papar

doa'nlng
mg iService
SPRINO C
e LrErA N I N G , In
outsida. Rentals. Also wkly.
ratesJMndowsJoo^lMTU

CokltTil'VI,

Hanging

PROFESSIONAL local paper
hanger. 30 yrt. experience!
References. Speclalltlng In
resident tel. Courteous prompt
MrvIcelCall 407 333 13*0

Concrtft

CAPTAIN
Wayne
Beal. 1 Man Quality Opera
Hon) 334-333S/S44-71*3

Prassura Cleaning t

Lawn ia rv lc #
E X P E R T L a wn Svc,
447-334-7144. Sod. Mulch, Farlllltar. Bushog. 40 yrt. exp.
LARRY'S LAWN A TREE,
Professional Service, Free

Plumbing
C O M M E R C I A L la n d in g ,
grassing. Landscape, trees,
oaks, palm* planted. 407 331
7344 40 yrt. tip .

I # / / • # ' / 7 / %# * ) / / / / /

s / &gt; I ’t l

\h&gt;nth

CGC ooajn

Trash Hauling

\

I h M

I till I fn s s tjird

I n l

~

AFFORDABLE MAULINO Will
clean, haul trash You nama III
We’ll haul III Call 3331344

Til#
■ X P IR IIN C ID In ill phases
ol III* installation. Ins., lie..
whotesel^ll^rlc*^4M44*

Tree Service
CLH T R E E S E R V I C E
Llc/lnsured. Nobody does It
belter I Sr. discount. 334 4734
ECHOLS TREE SVC Lie's. Ins.
"Lei Ihe Professionals do It."
Free estimates.......... 333 3331

Find tho
skill* you
ne#dto

got a

hotter
Job
In«ho

P LU M B IN G R E P A IR AND
SERVICE - Free estimates,
lie. #CFC03I434374 0*03. Tom

/ I f f

&lt;

Roofing

I \

/ i n /■

I

n

{ J‘ 'J 'J t i 11

I

mm

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - M onday, Jurta 21, 1903 - BB

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

71—Help Wanted

71— H tlp W a n ftd

141—Homes for Solo

CNA

LEAD TEACHER

A l u m i n u m hhmi
Vi N1IIHI l I'HIll’i Iff 1

For M P .’i office.......11177*1

DEMONSTRATORS
Chrlilmei Around tho World
now hiring. Free UOO temple
kit. No Invattmant. Alio
booking partial. ISO tree
mtrchandlieend moral
_______ t t M P i i n _________

LOOKING FOBTHAT

GREAT JOB

COME SIE THE

EXPERTS
FREE REGISTRATION
LOW FEES
tc d u c

AAA EMPLOYMENT
700 W. 25th ST.
323-5176

" DIRECTOR OF NURSING
Mutt htvo Long form Caro
experience or oaporltnct
working with gorlatrlc* In on
aculo coro tailing. Salary
bated upon tap. Drug tree
workplace. Contact DaSary
Manor, (407) 44* 4421, M N.
Hwy 17 97 DeBery FI MTU

DOG GROOMER
Part tlma. experienced. Apply
In per ion; Pel Groomery 1130
C Elkeom Bird, Deltona

ELECTRONIC TECH

* ROUTESALES*
Deliver
eitebllihed ac­
count* and build rauta

Will train. eoMM *101
Refundable Fee____________
GENERAL
t

•MARKETING REP a
lupar llrm needi your Man
on premellen today I Banallfil

WILL TRAIN
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
3350-1450

* FACTORY TR A IN EE*
Hara'i yaur duncti Laarn a
trad* andgof paid l Call nowl
a COLLECTOR a
Oaal with commercial at■count*. Call ter Into.

Wholetele werehoute telacl
1rig up to 40 pet Ml ont .
Werehoute management,
marketing ulet. Start today I
No experience required.
Call Llia U M M I

Him n Eg| Deli

at OOKKEEPERa
Top pay I Mev* to the belt I

NOW OPEN

a T ITL E CLOIER a
1IKI Putyour tkllltlo workl
a OAIRV DRIVER a
1140 wkl Put yaur clan B
llcania to workl Bail benefllil
a LEOALT RAI NEE a
A llltla of tlili. a 1111la ol Ihall
. WE L D E R*
•MO hr.+ Raad bluaprlnli
and wold. Hiring nowl I
a RECEPTIONIST a
Antwtr phenet and cron train
tor other dutloti

MANY MANY MORE JOBS
Lot AAA Employ man! work
tor you and pul you Into a
parmanant petition I
________ Call Today!_________

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE/
SECRETARY
For ona girl office, Conttrue
lion background helpful
Computer exp and collet
tloni. Apply: Southern Trull,
1001 Aileron Circle, Sanlord
m n ______________________
AOOTO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
c a l l m oil* o rin -e m

Need! ind Shill Eap. Dali
Parian. Full tlma. pay batad
on aiparlanca. Apply Ammoco, St. Rd. at at 14_______
H E L P W A N T E D , OOOD
WORKERS Report 3:30 AM
Corner of Park Dr. end 17 *1
or call 37*74*1______________

HOUSE CLEANERS
A t hourt, A l payl No night*
or weekendi. Car needed ft
Company, Merry Meldt
__________ i i i m i __________

Industrial Workore
Werehoute, auembly end
pecking |obi available. We
are looking lor itrong, clean
cut people to apply now. Call
today lor Information: OTC
Temporary Service! 4H-1)31
IT'S EASY
WORK TODAY,
G ET PAID TODAY) SPRINT
STAFFING................33*1011
MEDICAL

LPN
Full time, 7 3 end 117 Charge
Nurte poilllont. Experience In
long term care highly detlreable. Drug tree work
place. Contact) Dabary
Manor, M N. Hwy I7-*1, Dabary, FI 1171). 44S-4414

UN-SATI0 NAL
UMMER LIVING

at

COEVILU APARTMENTS!

Far three yr old*. Experience
required. M l-7*01 EOE

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Experienced, for buty orthop e d l c of f i c e In Long
wood/Sentord Call Sharon:
__________ 747 113)__________

NIGHT AU0IT0N
Full lima, experienced pref.
Mull be honeit. dependable,
outgoing perionellfy. PART
TIM E FR6NT DESK CLERK,
flexible hourt Inc. week endt,
wi l l t r ai n. I mme d i a t e
employment. Apply today I
Super I Motel. S.R. 44and 1-4

RECEPTIONIST
Needed tor Sanford and Or­
lando companltt. Muil be
proficient In word proceulng.
Experienced with multi line
phonal required. Temp to
perm poiltioni available. Call
GPC Temporary Servlcai tor
more Into. 491 1133__________
RO UT E SALESPERSON.
Needed tor local company.
Good ilartlng wage. Benellti
package available. COL
licanta required.
Call John or Todd...........221 4717
1300 S. French Ave. Sulfa 11
SALES

Security Officers
Sanlord, Lake Mary area.
Excellent pay benefit! avail
able. 407 1*4 4113
SERVICE MAtO hiring In Al
lamonle Great pay. bonui
and monthly paid profit ihar
Ing. Driver* paid mileage.
Experienced only____ 111 4243

TELEMARKETERS
Petmanent And
Temp Positions
Company will train people
wllh phone ikllli Exp., not
necettary. Hour! Mon Thun,
IfP M : Set , 4AM 1PM. Flex
Ible on hour* when perma
nent. Salary plut bonui.
Sr. clllient welcomed I
Never A Feel
Help Periennet *2*0209

TELEMARKETING
1*PM. E Z Money. Loll ol
Funl Call between the houn
11 Mr. Heikell al 111 3111
"THINK 'N PLAY” Full lime
daycare teacher needed.
__________ 314-11*4__________

VETERINARY
TECHS-Cuitomei Assist.

2580 Ridgewood Ave., Sanford

330-1431

la k t A Closer Look

Apartment Living at it's F1NECT
★ Spacious 1,2, &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartments at Affordable Prices
it Close lo Schools
★ Close to Shopping Centers
★ Swimming Pool
★ Volleyball
★ Laundry Facilities

Port lime, weekend!. Tethi
mult be exp- animal handler!
We need dependable and
motivated people who love
anlmoltl P.V.S. provide! al
lordable Vel tervlcei all aver
the ilate ol Florida. It Inter
oiled pleate call Denlie:
330 4100___________________
WAREHOUSE AND OENERAL
LABOR HE L P N E E D E D !
Bonui for driven. All ihlftt
available Dally pay, no fee
Report reedy lo work 1:10 am.
Indutlrlel Labor Svc . 1011
French Av. No phone calli

WAREHOUSE
Full time, pert lime. Up Ip
t* .ll per hour. All Ih llll
available. 407 414 *101 Re
lundeble Fee_______________

WELDER/FABRICATOR
Ornamental metali, tltel.
aluminum, etc. Layout, cut.
weld. 17/hr. and up Call for
appointment...............6»» 1734.

73— Employment
Wanted
PROFE1IIONAL private duty
MAL E CNA. Rtiponilblt.
dependable. Steve 111 1141

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share

Q e n e v a g a rd e n s
1505 Weil 25"* Si.
San fori)
322-2090

COMPORTABLE, SAFE apt
convenient lo town. 173/wk.
Inc. util. No depoilt. II tltp
program perion prat. 314 *117

Share Your
Good News!
PLACEA
. HAPPY
CLASSIFIED!
birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, hlessed event*,
promollon»...when sumeunu you know is celebrating a
happy event, wliy nol congratulate them will) a
Happy ClassiDed Ad!
P a y a s little a s $ 1 .1 4 p a r tin e .
T T

H«ra are tom* lompl# greelingi:
Conor WMtl
OredueM

Happy birthday
Roionna,
W m 161 Wa’i*
»o very proud at
r»u.
Lor* and |or.
Mem and Dad

Mom and Dad,
Hoit’l lo ih« nail
40 yawl! W* lcr»x
you both,
Ltio, MrthrW ond
Cro-g

liW*.

W* 1no* yawtov4d
da xandwa’i* at
p«ovdoi ion be Nl
■habaOteha
kxwa
Lora..

Untie thd

W # w ant you lo bo happy too, *o w h y no l
char go yo u r a d lo M a tta rC a rd o r ViaoT

PAOLA, All on on 2 14 acre*.
Patlur* wllh liable. *1if.fOO

93— Rooms for Rent
E X T R A LOW R A T E S
SPECIAL! Room* al $4!/wk.
Call 31310*4, even Ingi_______
FURNISHED BEOROOM with
kitchenette, 1 perion. Ullllltei
furnlihed, A/C, ifove, refrig­
erator, and double tlnk
|7)/wk. Oft ol 77th SI. al 2419
Magnolia Ave.............17143*3
LAKE MARY/SANFORD. Lg
room, beth. Mature adult
IM/wk. Kitchen, etc. avail
Nlctiplltbdrmhom*33llll)
SANFORD. Furn or unfurn .
•70/wk. Include! ulllltlei
Wather, dryer, pool *31 311)
SUNLAND. 17)/wk. w/ A/C. 170
without. 170 dep Wather,
&lt;^lrjer&gt;ltchenjjrlv;230 431^_

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent

LOVE CLOTHES?
A talei/menagemeni career
c a n be y o u r i w i t h
MUL T I PL E S cotton knit*.
Buy your own wardrobe nt
lubitantlel dlicounfi while
telling part lime or lull-time.
_________904 714 41)7_________

NOTICE
All rental and real eilate
adverlltemenli are iub|tcl lo
the Federal Fair Homing Ac),
which maket It Illegal lo
adverllw any prelerence. lim­
itation or dlicrlm lnatlon
bated on race, color, religion,
tax, handicap, familial ttalui
or national or Igln___________
NICELY FURNISHED Apt. In
unique M il Ing near downtown
Util. paid, rel.’t no pell S150
mo.............................. 371 011*
ONE BORM. I beth. Furnlihed
efficiency, Sanlord. 1321 mo
•100depoilt................ 3147*1*
SANFORD large 1 bdrm. apt..
Complete privacy! 1*1 per
week plut 1700 lecurlty.
________ Call 3117*7)_______
SANFORD. I bdrm, adulli / no
petl. All olOC.. modern, air
HI* and up two dep. 111*01*
1 BDRM. 1 BATH. Cent H/A.
•I ll wk. plut Mcurlty. Water,
Mwer, end garbage pick up
furnlihed 3H-4H4or )49-l*77_

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
CONVENIENT AND SPACIOUS
CALL GENEVA GARDENS
APTS......................... H I I W
EFFI CI ENCY APARTM ENT.
Partially (urn. A/C Free
canoe u u Katie’! Landing
•311/mo. No petl 111 4470
OOOO AREA, I A 1 Bdrm. epti.
Ulllllltt, 11/1 up. Reft r«
qulred........................ 311 6717
LAKE JENNIE APARTMENTS
I Bdrm. Apti. Available. Free
wefer/geil 114-11)1_________
LARGE I BORM.. tunken living
rm., Fpic . quiet on 3/4 acre,
ve y dean, garage, 1400 mo
includei water, traih pick up.
No yd melnf. 214 310) aller 1

Lavan's Landing
I A l BDRM. VILLAS
RENT T OOWN
CREDIT NO PROBLEM
Application! for 3 Bdrm
Homn Now Being Accepted

323-4923
MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm. *340 mu.
2bdrm, 1410mo and up

323-8670

Quiet Single Story
Cattleberry. I bdrm A 3
bdrm.. Attic Storage! Call
Joan for appointment. 6*4 4777
Q UIET Sanlord 3 plat. I bdrm.
apt, A/C, Hll/mq. Rel't re
qulred, 1111)34 aller 4PM
SANFORD'S Beit Kept Secret!
Pool A Laundry, I A 2
bedroomt. Convenient loca
Don I Call Pat, 313 4410_______
•I** MOVES YOU IN. Sludlo*
and I bdrmt. available
Catiolberry location
Call Melllta, 49*1116

93— Rooms for Rent

101—Houses
Furnished / Rent

CLEAN ROOMS, tingle tfertlng
•70/wk. Kitchen, phene,
laundry, video garnet, ell
itraal parking llo-441J

SA NF ORD I bdrm, porch,
clean, utllltlei furnlihed
except power 43W plut u c No
petl 407 14* 1W&lt; or *04 141 4947

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Lk. Mery/Longwood Peel
Name, 3/2, garage, living,
dining, (am. rm*. M 1,100
Lh. Mary poal ham*. 4/1, living,
dining, family rm, 1)09,400

DOWNTOWN Huge 4 bdrm,. 1
bath, 1 kltchem, tingle family.
1400/mo , 1300 dep. 414
Patmelto............. Lee 311 3311

I’ll ll I f, ill ’ll 1
. &gt;%1 1U1 ■‘ -/11i i *; ? »
V t t

HUD HOMES
From U M down WHY RENT*
The Hllllmen Oreup, 119 4427
LAKE MARY - Nice, cent. H/A
3 bdrm, IV* bath, blind*,
fenced yd Lake Mary ichool*.
1400 plui tec 304 464 1370
LAKE MARY. 4 bdrm. 3 bath.
Corner lot. 1.100 iq fl. CloM to
thopplng and Laka Mary
ichooli Call Evalyn 114 1441
RENT OR LEASE PURCHA1E
1/1 w/appllancet. C/H/A. on
lanced 1/1 acre, garage.
•371/mo: 1/1. appliance*, (pic.
garage. 1150/mo. Paul. Vanlure I Propertlet 111 4744
SANFORD 3 bdrm. I belh iplll
plan, large home w/blg family
rm. Cent H/A, lg theded
corner lot 1171/mo plut lecu­
rlty dep WJL Propertle*
Wei Lauwime, 313-471*

Stenstrom Rentals
• SANFORD 1/1 Apt. lg. room*,
tern, patio, CHA, Clean. Ilka
new! *411 mo. *300 tec
• LX M A R Y 3/1 condo,
w/ilngi* garage, Ipic . Leave
w/Option 1741 mo. lliO m c .
aSANFORD 1/t Apl. W/den.
Fplc . 13*9 mo., WOO tec.
Stenitram Realty, Inc.
"We Menage your Home,
like II waiour awn." Jim Ooyle
1)114*1 Attar 1PM: 110-14*1

105— D uplexT rip le x / R ent ___
SANFORD. Modern, 1 bdrm.,
cent. H/A, carport, laundry
rm , near all 1391/mo IIP 01*1
SANFORD. Large duplex. VI,
lanced w/garage. 1471 mo. lit.
lait, HOP MC. 44* 7*14________
1 BDRM DUPLEX. *11 P*rk
Av*. U*)/mo., Me. d*p.
'•
407 4233114 ’ ’
1 BDRM.. I Belh. Scrh.' porch!
CHA, ell.eppJt. I iw/corporl,
t il l mo. 371 44*4 after 6

107— M o b ile

OSTEEN. 4 bdrm.. doublewld*,
acreage, pell okl Avail nowl
*410 mo 1030 Plney Wood!
Trail 31) 1274

114— W a re h o u s e
___ S p a c e / R e n t
L ONGWOOD/ L AKE MARYMid lire ilorage warahouMt.
400 *00 1400 tq It. Free rent
w/llmo lent, lromtt41/mo.
___ _______111 0)3*
SECURITY WAREHOUSE 44A
and Old Lake Mary Blvd.
■1.1)0
2,000 iq . It. ol
Hc/warehouM 'Flnlihed of
lice tpac* alto dvallabl*.
Kapanke Really. 1*39 1114

115— In d u s tria l
R entals
REAROALL M l. 10.01121,110
iq. It. w/otflcei. iprlnkled, OH
door*. *2 00 *q It. Stenitram
Realty Jim Doyle 111-14*1

117—Commercial
Rentals
CHEERS TYPE PUB
Sanlord, hlilorlc downtown
area Ready logo, 1171/mo
________ 407 414 1145_________
SANFORD W0 N. Elm Av*.
20,700 iq fl. wllh olflcei.
Brick truck ht. iprlnkled.
440V
3 ph*M Mrvlc*. LI.
menu, or dlilrlbullon clr.
12 5011 111 1)39_____________

118— O ffice
____ Space / Rent
NEW Sanford olflcei and/or
wareltouM*. 400 2,*00 tq II.
Special, 1161/me. 333 1114
SANFORD, Office ipace, 1400
tq fl. building total, 1300 iq.
_II per olfIce unit. 311 7004

HALL REALTY
I I . ' VV I li!.t St

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts.

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1/2 month FREE
ill 11 I I** III* Hit I I I* -1VI

"

Homes / Rent

S .tu to r&lt;1

COUNTRY LIVINO
Cory 2
bdrm home, imall icreened
porch, free Handing Ben
Franklin ilove, Inild* utility,
paddle f«nt, extra big yard
with traaa I Only *41,100
DUPLEX • 2 bdrm. horn* with
attached I bdrm. molher In
low apt. Separata alactrlc
meter*, weiher/drytr hook
upi. cent. H/A, new carpet.
Fenced, carport, large oaktll
6xc. Income 1117,500
BANK REPOS

323-5774

LOOK
NO D O W N P A Y M E N T TO
QUALIFIED BUYERS! IN
T E R E S T RA T E AT 7.1%
FI XED Gov’t repot, bank
lorecloiurei, atium* no quail
ly morlgageil Low monthly
Call lor delailtt

Janet Mansfield, 323-7271
AA Carnet, Inc., 1)1 11)4

322-2611

Sanford H erald

113—Talavision /
Radio / Starao

Atium* No Qua llflet I
• 1/t an 1/1 acral Fancad, cul da
u c . dead and lira*! I44.no
Additional hornet avail. Leu
IhantlKdownl

NURSING ASSISTANT

Part lima. Typing, light book
keeping. Call In tba morning
hourt. M r.J n n t....... 132 7000

BATEMAN REALTY

Sanford teit men 11,0**dawn
e Renovated 1/t , appliance*.
fenced yard, carport, *31,900
o Renovated Ilka new 3/1, fplc.,
«ppl , new paint. 1)5,900
• Peel home, 3/2 on cul da *ac.
Garage, 147,100
•1/t on to acral Ranovatad.
appliance*, fenced yd, *41,100
• l/l to, DM *q It, Ilk* new) Uv,
dining, family rm, t7).*00
• 4/1, fenced, garage, *14,*00

II PM to 7 AM thill, part time,
apply In parion: Lake view
Nurilng Center, *1* E. Ind SI.,
Sentord.___________________

Office Person

LK. MARY - 3/3 with tamlly
rrn .lg. treed lot. 1*1.000
W Mallciowikl, 321-7*13

Gov ’ t For e do i u r a t , Rep o i / A i i u ma No Qual i t y
Homeil Owner financing.
Seminole, Orange, Voluila.

LPN

7 3 and 3-11. Mutt be certllted
or exp. wllh certification
wllhln *0 dayl after employ
menf. Drug free workplace.
Contact Dabary Manor, M N
Hwy 17*1, Debar* FL 44*can

B IO . Bratt queen*lie, ortho
maltreat, naw aim In box.
. Coel 11000 Sell llQO. 331 73*1
D A Y B IO , W HITE Iron and
bran, ortho mattreoi, new
•till In wroppor, and pop up
trundl*. Woi MOO. SMrlllco
*100.231-mi.______________
• E N T E R T A I N M E N T CBNTER, open, dark wood. In
portfoct condition. To tho lit
131.34*-1143________________
HUTCHES. CtMrry wood. UOO.
OBO. Blondt wood. SIM, OBO.
Pood condition............ 371*241
KINO S i l l wotorBod. Good
condition, ceuplo y ri old.
Mirror ond headboard 1)7)
OBO............................ 124-7114
• LA1YBOY RECLINE A. Vinyl
torn o little, but m«ch«ntcol!y
toundieO.................. 221-*4*4
MATTRESS AND BOX iprlngt
double t in aeti tor ulo. Greet
veluel UOiet............ B j R B
• Q U E E N SIZE woterbed.
tlurdy Irome. Great condition
MOOBO.................... 122 01*7
• RBCLtNER-ROCKER, exc.
cond , Brown p lm trlp o ,
overilutfed motorlal. 11)
330-1701___________________
• SLEEPER SOFA. R*tl*n and
overilutfed 171311-21*4
• STOVE, QB. Almond. Mil
cleaning, electronic timer,
excellent condition 1100Call
M40H7 attar* PM
• T O S H IB A M IC R O W A V B .
Touch control, oolld ifato.
Good working condition. M0
__________ 313-47**________ _
TRUNDLE BED. Brand nowl
Beautiful, whit* w/ ipr#*d,
ruttlo, ond ihom 1 4*4-711*
USED BBDDINO SALEH King,
Quo*n, Full A Single. *41 a Sat
A Up I LARRY'S M*rt.«2-41I2

FHAORVAAS LOWAIIVi%

MEDICAL

O rtu i^

i l l —Appllancas
/ Furnitura

■ XCHANQE OR SELL your
proparty located anywhar* I
Invertor* Realty, 774-Mil

STARTER OR RETIRBBI 3
bdrm. block bom*. Porch,
workihop. carport plut extra
loll Comlder leaie/opllonl
Only............................. *4*.100

• COLOR TV, t r . Work* groat
140..............................221-1711
•INLINE FREQUENCY
counter for CB or ham radio*,
4 digit. HO volt 17133HOOP

321-0759..............321-2257
ONLY $28,00011
Sanlord 1/1to block home,
good condition I 242-30*4

STAIRS M0PENTY
MANAGEMENT B REALTY
’___ 407-223-7311/321-*) 70
nvi n

IBS— Com putan
IBM, PC CempeUMe, monitor,
koybeard, 1W diik, oottwore,
printer. 1271OBO. 221-4411

1B9—Off ica Supplias
/ Equlpmant
• DESK, walnut flnlrti wood.
VA" X V i" ■ A deep drawer*.
S31. 319-4711________________

193— Law nA O ardan
VI A M ’ .

STENSTROM

•OAROEN FERTI LIZER,
heroo manure. FREE - bring
your pickup................113 1903
HONDA Mll-propollod mower.
Soar* *Iic . edge r Call eve*

REALTY, I N C .

199— Pats A Supplias

We list and tell
more property than
anyone in (he Greater
, Sanford/Lalte Mary area.

ADORABLE Klttom. FREE to
good home I Call 149-D71 leave
meoaeoapleatal____________
■ LIZABBTH BAUOH • Dog
training. 2S yr*. exp I Private
__ or Group. Call 321-1)41

• B E A U TIF U L .CONNER Lai
1/1 In quiet Sanfcrd Piece- Big
Eat In Kllonan, Vaulted
Celling*, A tiu^e No Qualify.
•*4,1001
av,
• RIVERCRE1TI Palm Baach
Style 4/1 Home on I Acra,
w/Ev*ry Imaginable Feature
A Cuitom Decor Thruoutl
Enc. Pool Tool......... t22t,t00l
aLAKEFRONT VILLA!
Beiulllul 3/2 In Heron Covet
Wei Bar, Atrium, Fplc., Glatt
Root, Br k C o u r t y a r d l
•110.0001

303— Livastock and
Poultry
• 34 TURKEYS. 7 adulli. 27
young. All colori. All foritog
__________ 114-4141__________

205— S ta m p i/C o ln s
INDIANS, Lincoln*, Jiffertont,
Buffalo**, Dime*, helve*. 30%
below bid. Bob 4*7-113SIM

CALL ANYTIME

321322-

2720
2420

1141 Park Dr., Sanlord
*41W. Laka Mary Bl„ Lh. Mary

•in Our 37th Ywt*
•VERY MOTIVATEOI Mult
Seel MUSTSELLI Imprtttlva
1/2 Owner till pay almort ALL
doting cotti lo refinance.
Oder Qulckl 174.9001
CALLBART REAL EST., INC.
1407) 121-749*________
1*lt MAPLE AVE. SALE OR
R E N T W/Optlan. clot* to
Khooli. chopping, 3/1, living
1 dining. *30,000. W M B W I
3 B O R M. , 2 B A T H . NIC*
neighborhood wllh pool end
lennli court*, Double gareg*.
Naw A/C. 171.000 aitume no
qualify VA loan. Ml.OOO
balance. A l low at 12,100
down Owner will hold 2nd.
Weekday* 41)0103 or week­
end1 1407) 343-74*1

153—Acr«ag»Loti/Salc
OCALA NAT'L FOREST,
Weeded lam U.tM each, no
money down I *71.41 monthly.
_____ I 400 993 1024

155—Condominiums
C o -O p /S alt
2/2 CONDO. No qualifying,
aiiumeabl* • 1/2% Loan.
Small down payment Price
Neg. *17,000. 324 4210

157—Mobil#
H om as/S ala
NEW It t T lI Low down A Interartl 14X70 SI7!/mo. 24X70,
*3t0/mo. 141170*___________

1*0— Businass
ForSala
BEAU TY SALON, 1 wot It*
tloni, good Location I Priced
Io m III 323 0141 Iv. mig

1*5—Duplax for $«lo
RENT w/OPTION lo buy. 1/m
•ach. Appli. LONOWOOD.
14*,*00. *»**)0 after 1 PM.

181—Appllancas
/ Furnituro
A+ BEST APPLIANCES NOW
AT FLEA WORLDI Row W 7
Buy/Seli/Servlc* appliance*.
Fra* delivery. M43M1
• A N TIQ U E M AHOQANY 4
drawer cheit, porcelain
knob*, doug fall |olnl* 140
OBO............................323 4140
• BOOKCASE. While formica,
dean* aatlly. Great for child'*
room or anywhere you need a
white bookcat*. Priced lo Mil
*1 only S3) Call 22)1)**

211— A n tiq u e s /
C ollectibles

•DEALKR SPACE A V A IL ­
ABLE* Aunty Mary't Antlqu ii, 1MI Franch Ave,
(17-91) Senterd. W* bay ona
pkco/ontlroeafoteil 4*4-7704
DRESSER A B U FFET, both
Tiger Oek, onllqu*. 1200 each.
330 7111

213— Boats and
Accessories
• AIR BOAT, lift. Oreiihoppor,
140 HP, Lycoming now mogi.,
3 prop*, tralter, SHOO. Call
11) 1401or 122 7270__________
• SAILPISH 170. •«*!. 17 ft.. *0
hp. depth finder, accaioorlei.
Boat trailer. 04,000121-1*1*
bSKI/RUNABOUT. 14 fl. I ll
Evlnrud* outboard. Boron
lroUor.lt.410134 1*32________
WINNER- 17 B a n Boat II'
I10HP, XP Evlnrud*. 1224
volt trolling motor, Tam LIm
tralter. Hummingbird dopth
finder. 14100.131130*________
b ll FT. O LA IITR O N ond (roll­
er. SI HP Evlnrud*. Excellent
condition! 13,100 313-1)11
• It rt. B O W R U IR - 1*1 HP
I/O, AbMrt 21 hn. Immecu
late.w/trallor-covor. Mutt
S*e1110,000OBO 327 411*
• 1*4* EVINRUDE IL T O out
board motor. 1.1 HP Vory
good condition. S71M341I7
• ItM SKI/FIIH Boot, *0HP
More., w/lralter. Run* groat.
13000. Porllol finance. 4*1/000
M, II PT. IPORTCRAPT, Open
fliherman. IIS OMC Seedrive,
13400 Comlder trad* tor let
iklor Flotaboot. 323022*

217— O a r a g e

S a lt s

wm m m m m m i

•GARAGE SAU A0 BARGAIN

Call In your gar*g* tel* ad by
12 noon on Tuoadoy ond toko
advanlag* ol our iptclal
garag* sol* *d pricell Coll
Cloullted now lor dotallal

322-2811

O LD SEWINO notion* and
kltehon gadgafa. 123 3404 leave
meiieg*

222—Musical
AAarchandlH
OROAN. 2 keyboard*. Good
condition. Nlco tor imoll
church. S300124137* 4 7 PM

223—Miscellaneous
• A N IW IR IN O M A C H IN E .
Conalr, Ilka now S3! 313 *433
A T T E N T I O N CAR Phono
Buyert, Colluar cor phono
S10 00.407-330-3311__________
• BIKE. 10 ipeed. Gray. Huoky.
mem i l l ..............Coll 3110402
• CAROUSEL HORSE Rep4Ka.
Nearly actual tit*. Hand
painted. UOO 124 IM0

223— M is c e lla n e o u s
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE RINGS
St*and up. Free tiling I
Boat Pawn A Jewelry, 1344114
• IMPORTED SERVICE tor I.
Yellow Italian dinner dlihet
1100............................ 130-07H
• L U Q O A Q E . Ameri can
Tourl atar, I t Inch blu*
hardaldad. Built In wtwola and
built In pull handle. Kay* and
combination lock. Uwd twice,
telling leu than hall price for
141............................. 3221471
• PICTURB WINDOW. Approx.
72 Inch** by SO Inch**, alumi­
num from*. Delivery potilbto.
141...................... Cell 130000*

Rilu In Ygui Now SpaI
Seefa 5, portable, never mod.
W/ctdar geiebo. underwater
light. It ,171407 SH 7727
• SEARS I HP compratoor. 12
gallon tank with hoe* and
SAT A ipray gun S100 FIR M
__________ 211-7*5*__________
• W O O D E N SAWHORSE S.
Great lor hobbloi or crotli
S3 OOoach................... 314)711
2 3 0 — A n t lq u a / C la s s lc

C a rs
• PONTIAC Flroblrd 1*4*. On*
owner I Garaged I *3K ml.
Nlc#.t*m. 407-322 4404
• Itll BUICX, Rottertoblol
Colt Blit tor all dotolltl *3000
OBO. 3H-4S77
2 3 1 -C a r s
BUICK SKYHAWK, IMt. 4 dr,
A/C, PS, crulM, lilt, low ml,
excel cond u.loo.........3444371
CADILLAC SIV ILLB • 1**l.
33,0M mile*, loaded. Tip top
thepe 1119.000 372*404_______
CADILLAC IS I L DORADO.
convertible ilylo roof, up
gradod wheel!. 101,000 ml. I
owner *4,100...............MS0444
• CAMARO R l-f convertible,
IMt. 13.000 mllot. Exeoltent
condition.....................3231*03
• C H IV Y CITATION, 1M1. V *.
auto., A/C, *3,000 mil**. Exc.
cond. 111,2104440*71________
• C H IV Y CAMARO • '77. Rt
bull! VI. loti of now partil
11,0*1 OBO. 321-0)1* any lime.
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL '*1.
Like new. Mult toll. Only
124.0M. Call (407)33)-**)l
• FORD LTD • '11, 4 door,
excollont condition. Every
Ihlng new. 11,000 322-1430
• FORD T H U N O liB IR O - '44.
All original! Needt tome
work. S).4*l OBO 111 011*
• HONDA ACCORD DX, IttO
Auto. A/C. am/fm tape, while.
IIP,*00 LIKE NEW! 312 1417
LINCOLN CONTI NENTAL
Si gnature Seri al , i t l t
Metallic blu*. Owner detper
ate 14*50.................... 130111)
MAZDA RX-7, IN I. A/C. auto,
am/lm lepa, rotary onglne
Runt greet 113.1)0)21 40*1
MERCEDES 140 dtetel, IN ).
14,300 10.000 mil*! Excellant
condition................... 741 1707
OL DSMOBI LB T O R N A D O ,
1*02. Low mlloi. Fully powerod. U.000OBO 111*370
P O N TIA C *•*• S T I , 1*14.
Loodtd, 74,000'mile*. 13,000
OBO.......................... 323-7174
• PONTIAC M R ■JM. SUZUKI
rotary Mka. il/ZUKI fltMng
boat/trallor, T*. Moving Sate I
13.1001ek*t all. 124 717*
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION*
E V I RY FRIDAY 7iM FM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. *2, Daytena Beach
*04211-1211

SHORT OF CASH ?
Serloutly looking tor a nice,
clean, uted cart DEPEN
DABLE. Dawn payment! at
low at 11** Includ** tax &amp;
llll*. Call:

FUES JUJTO SALES
★ ★ 327-2192 ★ ★
TAKE U9 PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
Except lax, lag, tltla.alcItM OLDS CUTLASS CIERA
4 door, auto, air, tterao, raally
a nlco carl ONLY S14*M par
month.............Call Mr. Payna

Courtssi Usd Cars, 323-2123
TOYOTA, 1**2. 2 door Light
groon, llntad wlndowt. all lh*
extra* 17.M0...............3143141
ItM PONTIAC FteroGT. rebuilt
VS, Red, U K Ml lei. warranty.
LOADED. *4*9112 II74S
II C H IV Y Full u . Wagon,
dletel, good cond.. cold AC.
new tlroa. *700.111 1441
•M C H IV Y Cev4ll#r Station
wegon, AC. aula. S3.000
________ Cell 240 4031________
17 L I N C O L N T o w n c o r .
Signature, Excellent Cond.
17100. I l l 4114or 34* *117
• M LB BABON c o n v e r t i b l e ,
red, toocted, dig. d*th. 71K ml.
17000. Partial finance 495 740*
•t C H IV Y Celebrity, AC. Auto.
4 door. Good condition 53K
mile*. *3100. Firm 132 4517
• *1 J E E P Sport Auto. PS. I’ D
AC, al arm. , whlla. 1BK
ml.*11,200 Like new 323 3444

233—Auto Parts
/ Acctssoriss
• CAMPER TOP. Aluminum,
black, good condition. UOO
133-1411___________________
• ROLLBAR. for imall ihort
bed truck, good Shape &lt;71 or
trad* for oomelhlng ot equal
VOtUQ......................... 373 4437
TO P PIR FOR SMALL TRUCK
117) or bail otter
221 4370

235—T ru cks/
B uses / V ans
• CH IV Y CUSTOM VAN
M.
loaded, ceptelm chain, good
condition 14.100173 2324
• FORD aUl
1473. GOOD
CONDITION. 11,200 CALL
__________ 222 7404__________

• HANOICAPPID VAN, 1410
Ford EDO. Lilt, automatic
boon *1,000 323 2434________
ISU1U 4*4 PICK-UP, tel. 1 tfxS,
10K ml, 4 cyl, A/C, cuitom
Interior. &gt;4,700 331-4031______

Sanford Motor Co.
IN I J E E P CJ1 - 4 cylinder. 1
■pood, hardtop and air I
Coll 133*31
241— R a c r « a t i o n a l
V * h ic its / C a m p «rs
N FT. 1*77 DODGE RV. low
mite*, 1leapt 4. ilove. thower.
frjdjjj. *4*00 33) 022*________
•12 F T EL OORADO motor
homo, ’7*. New owning, tv.
run* groat. 11.300 231 7491

�- Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Monday, Juno 21, 1993

B L O N D IE

by Chic Young

by A rt Sansom

T H K B O R N LO SER

100SeeATDHNfcNONE*IR*
EVERYONE OF THQ£
BANK MACHINES IN
TOWN!

if "

by C hariot M . Schulz

PEANUTS

I KNOW.. THE LAST TIME UJE
MEY, KIP.. REMEMBER
ME? I'M ROY HO005' I'MVERY PLAYERYOU HIT A
6REAT-6RANDDAU6HTER IMPRESSED HOME RUNOFF ME,
ANDRUINEDMY LIFE!
T C -----------

I WASY I SUPPOSE
JUST/ YOU THINK
LUCKY [ YOU'RE 60NNA
^ p ^ p o it again..

tUHATRE YOU
TRYIN'TOPO
NEXT, RUINMY
AFTERLIFE?

by Howit Schnoidor

E E K A MEEK
A LOT &amp; MIDDLE
MAUAGEMEMT PEOPLE
ARE N fU G "TH0DMJM
OUT OF W ORK...

Use caution when
using steroid drugs
DEAR DR. QOTT: Can the use
of steroid drugs such as Medrol
and prednisone Impair adrenal
gland function?
DEAR READER: The adrenal
glands, which produce cortisone
and related compounds, are
under the control of the pituitary
gland. When a person Is given
Inflammation-combating pre­
scription cortisone, such as
prednisone or Medrol, the pitu­
itary stops stimulating the adre­
nals to produce their own cor­
tisone. Over time, the adrenal
glands wither and become un­
able to manufacture the sub­
stance.
This is why patients taking
cortisone drugs for more thun a
couple of weeks must be slowly
weaned olT the prescription. If
the medication Is suddenly
stopped, the adrenal glands are
unable to respond to the body's
need for natural cortisone: shock
and death may ensue.
On the other hand. If the
prescription drug Is slowly
tapered, the adrenal glands
gradually begin production
again and. after a few weeks, the
situation returns to normal.
Cortisone drugs are marvelous
for reducing Inflammation; how­
e v e r, th e y m u st be u sed
cautiously because of serious
side effects and should be
stopped gradually once they are
no longer needed.
D E A R DR. O O T T : My
23-ycar-old daughter recently
passed away from thrombotic
throm bocytopenia purpura.
What causes this and how easily
Is It diagnosed?
DEAR READER: A disease of
unknown cause, TTP is an
acute, serious disorder of the
blood marked by a sudden drop
In platelets (the tiny blood cells
that are essential to clotting),
destruction of red blood cells
(leuding to anemia), and multi­
organ failure. This latter feature
Is associated with Jaundice, renal
damugc and changing mental
state.
TTP Is diagnosed by blood

By Bernice Bede Oaol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
Tuesday, Ju n e 22, 1093
New a s s o c i a t i o n s und
friendships might play a major
role In helping you achieve your
gouts In the year ahead. Some of
these contacts you'll make could
be labeled "sheer luck."

by Bob T h a vo i

PRANK AND ERNEST

T H * 0000 N*U$ IS T H ^ T TOPAY \S TH *
LONOtST PAY Of 7H * Y M * . T H * IAO
YOU C O M M U TE S A n 60 IN6 TO M t* \T.

G A R F IE L D

IS

CANCER (June 21-Ju ly 22)
Even If you are subjected lo
some types of elumges toduy
i n s t i g a t e d by o i i I h U I c forces,
don't get upset. Matters are
trending lowurds favorable con­
clusions.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Do not
waste your time on Insignificant
matters today, because you're
likely to be far more fortunule
with endeavors, Issues or pro­
jects (hut arc substantia! und
meaningful.

by Jim Davis

VIRQO ( Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Today you might be luckier lliun
usual In your commercial or
financial dealings thun you have
been for quite some lime. T ry to
rup lta lizc In these arcus us
effectively as possible. •

■9 9 !

A N N IE

by J im M addlck

J

*

ACROSS

Aaewsrte Previous Pauls

31 Talon

1 Construction
boom

34 Capofcleof

Roman
• Imporor
[vsr.)

34 Parent1*
nickname
37 Peak
.

8 1,10 0 ,

12 TSSft

13 Fancy vas#
14 Mature
18 YodtsMre
14 Actress —
Papas
14 Married wom­
an's Wla
14 Actor —
Aanar
tOWIranaN
11 Ma’sM rtnar
13 Thai Wna
34 — OH M ,
24 Poetry foot
14 Mad* of a
hird wood
24 Sntarmadlat*

,.K L

31 —

tla*

40 Fool

41 Computer

HJUIJ U U L'JU U UULJ
J .J L I ULHJUUl LTULIj
H U M LJUU.'J L1HLIU
UULJLJL-J LIU
UJLJ JU LJ U U L K JU U
uJUU U U U LL'.IU LJU U
□ U U L J l-JUU W U U U
( j u u i a ii i u i i u u

43 Ya* (Oar.)
44 Recount
48 Plutonium

fJLllJLJULI

urj UUU11U

□ U U L J U b JU U
UL'JJJ LJUL'JWU

4 7 Ad —

49 Song* for

'11,111

B&amp;L.
64 Onion's

3
3
4
4
4

84 Elaetrieat

I IM H

I3w ds.)
7 TV co.
4 24th pros.

• Actor AiatlUr

1 Qenuin*

47 Utters of

UUU
UUU

f llM l.ll 11*1

Kind o f cross
u84 «■------

.

Duck Kirs
Monkey
k*d. monsv
wan painting
TV's talking

10 PaaeMke
fruits
t l Rais*
14 Country of
17 Polk versa
20 Concoct
23 — apples
day
24 O k a fft'l
cousin
24 Comparative

J
f

TT
r

i:iu u

ULLILJ U U

p

27
28
29
31
33

I m
_

Drive
Wood sorrel
Hebrew letter
Typo of larva
A stooge

34 Russian river

38 Honey wine
37 Mountain
m am

39 LP spinner

40 Constellation
41 — Donshuo

42 ZIP —
44 Rip
48 Toll

44 Single Horn
48 Fair grads
80 Actress
Hagan

IT
H

61 Which
person?

H

63 N. outs

88 Son of radio

m hsm —
B y P h illip A ld e r
Duck In I OHO. two of Hrltuln's
lop pluyers. Ulxl Markus and
Terence Reese, wrote an Inter­
esting book entitled ' ' Belter
B r i d g e for C l u b P l a y e r s ”
(Golluncz. $11.43. The Bridge
World. 30 West 04th Street. New
York. NY 10025-7124). There
are 50 articles covering all facets
of the game. Th e main theme of
die deals Is that the normal­
looking play doesn't work. You
iiinsl look deeper Into the
possibilities and Had a belter
approach. If you don't see the
answer, you will kick yourself as
soon us you read the authors'
explanation.
Today's deal from (lie book
woul d trip up the unwar y.
Against your four-spade eontract. West leads the heart king.
What Is your line of play?
Three spades is a limit raise
showing about 11 total points
and at least four spades.
T h e lead Is annoying. Without

YOU Know SOUtTWNG.,. \
I'M GETTING
IT I
MUST BE M \ . m RICH
EARTHLING FOQP.. f {

tests and treated with blood
transfusions and cortisone. Un­
treated TTP Is uniformly fatal.
However, even with therapy, the
prognosis In poor. Unfortunately,
If the first attack Isn't fatal, the life-threatening. Patients with
patient may experience subse­ TTP should be under the care of
quent attacks that are equally hematologists.

NQ.NON&amp;
YOU LOOK
FlNE.TM
THE ONE

Who’S ear
TO COUNT
C N D W E8L

HOOO WAYf
YOU WOK

V ^

» un mir
]

ORW. MOTE OF CONFIDENCE.
FROM EL LARPO.

iw K '
nw «r

v r t o r \ SHAPE.

*

•

•f -

It. you could have established a
discard for your heart loser on
Ihc third diamond. Most players
would win the first trick, play a
club In hand and lead the spade
queen with an Illegal furtive look
In their eye. The y hope that
West, will) king lor uce) douMelon of spades, will pul up his
honor. There's not much chance
of that.
Yel there Is one possibility:
that the clubs are 3-3 and either
opponent has a singleton trump
honor. After winning the llrsi
trick, play a club lo your king,
cash your club aee and overtake
the club Jack with dum m y's
queen. Then lead the I3tli club
and discard your heart loser.
Kllltcr East or West may ruff.
Inti II costs one of their iwo
trump tricks.
Readers are Invited to send
card-play questions to I'hllllp.
Alder. In cure of Ibis newspaper.
Th e y can be answered only
lit rough the column.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl. 23) In
order to advance your selfInlcrcsts today you must lie bold
In situations that require bold
meusures. Have fulth In your
abilities.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You huve some X-pluses going
for you today uhoul which you
might not even be aware. How­
ever. like the ealvary, they'll
arrive when you need them.,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Agreements you work out
with friends today should benefit
both you and your puls. Negoti­
ate with an eye lowurds nuituul
gain and nil will come out okay.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2 2-Ja n .
19) You could huve a marvelous
opportunity today to strengthen
your position In a critical urea
that has nn Influence upon your
work or career. Don’t let li
escape you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Your probabilities for success are
considerably enhanced toduy by
merely doing thut which you do
best, which Is to gel along well
with everyone from all walks of
life.

NORTH

a-u-aa

♦ »M 2
f A I

♦ KJ •
A Q 682

EAST

♦K

♦ AO

f 07 01

♦ H Q 10 0 3
♦ 10 7 0 S

♦ A004

♦ 10 0 4

♦ 073

SOUTH
♦QJ 7 0 0 J
YJ 4
♦ Q1

♦ AK J
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

I♦

4A

Pan
Pan

Nartb
10
Pan

Ent
Pan
Pan

Opening lead: Y K

PISCES (Feb. 20-Murch 20}
Keep a whether eye peeled lit
tills lime for a new development
that could provide you with a
second source of curulngs or
Income. There's a good chance H
might be revealed lo you today.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191
You could he rather fortunate
today In mutters tltul Involve
some form of verbul or written
communication. Your skills as u
salesperson or promoter ure also
considerably enhanced.
TAURUB (April 20-May 20)
Don't be dismayed today If you
gel off lo a slower start thun you
anticipated. Your strengths are
likely lo begin to grow us you gel
near (lie finish line, or more
Imporlunl. Ilic bottom line.
OEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Keep all of your lines of com­
munication open today, bccuuse
there Is an excellent chance you
may be getting the good news for
which you’re hoping.
by Loonsrd Starr

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                    <text>S e rv in g S a n fo rd , Lake M a ry and S em in o le C o u n ty since 1 9 0 8
85th Year, No. 275 - Sanford, Florida

M a in

S tr e e t: W h o

p a y s ?

O ffic ia ls d e b a te s la s h in g S anford C h a m b e r b u d g e t

IN S ID E
□ Sports
All-Stars play for crown
OVIEDO — The O viedo Mu|ors and ihe
Altamonte Springs Seniors will go after District
14 lilies tonight In O viedo .mil Clermont

See Page ID

O P e o p le

Bringing home the bronze
Lake Mary resident compete* in the United
State*, national S|&gt;oris Classic IV in liaton Rouge
and bring home a bronze medal.
Sec P a g e 3B

By N IC K P F E IF A U F

Herald Stall Wrdor
SANFORD - Commissioners Monday tin.ml
mnusly approved Sanford's application lot
downtown redevelopment under the Main Str«-« t
program, but could not agree whether to yank
landing from the Chumtx-r ut Commerce budget
to help pay lor It
The matter came up as the City Commission
Itcguu 1993/94 fiscal year budget dclltx-nillnns
last night.
During the June 2Hlh meeting, the commission

f l serve on the executive
board of the chamber, and I
assure you it will be difficult if
the budget is reduced. The
chamber is not prepared for
that. J
-M ayor Bettye Smith
ga\. a concensus vote to give $20.(KM) to the
Sanford Main Street pro|ccl $|(&gt;.(XX) was to be

taken from funds originally budgeted for the
Scenic Improvement Board. The remaining
$10,000 was to be removed from money destined
for the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
As budget discussions got underway during the
commission workshop meeting yesterday nfterniKtn. the matter of removing money from the
Chamber of Commerce budget wus questioned.
While Ihe commissioners agreed It would be
able to reduce the SID budget by $10,000 for half
ol ihe Main Street money, they disagreed on
culling the chamber's budget.

See Money. Page SA

Police
oppose
strict gun
control

It’s clear as crystal

B R IE F S
Allison reported dead
BIRMINGHAM. Ala — Winston Cop auto racing
star Dnvey Allison d ied this morning at
Carrawav Methodist Medical Center Irom Inju­
ries received In a helicopter crash yesterday at
Talladega Speedway. Allison was piloting the
helicopter when It went down on speedway
grounds. Another race driver, lied Farmer, who
was with Allison. Is recovering from Injuries
received In the wreck.
Stories tegaidlng the race driver, contained in
the Sports section ol today's Sin/ord llcra ld
were written prior to the announcement of
Allison's death

B y N IC K P P IIF A U P

Horald Stall Writer

Jury selection begins
SANFORD — The lirst degree murder trial lor
a m an accused ol shooting Ills m other's
boyfriend In Winter Springs early In I992 began
In Seminole Circuit Court Monday with selection
of a Jury.
Kuchauo Mahone. IH. is charged with shoot­
ing C&lt;lll Lope/ on March -I. 1992 The trial
originally scheduled on the May court docket
was delayed after Mahone hired a private
attorney to represent him. Assistant public
defender Arthur Halt wus set to defend Mahone
at Ills Muy I7 trial Mahone did not appear that
day and told .Judge Alan Dickey on May IH. he
did not think he was scheduled to appear the
prcvlous day.
Orlando attorney Frank Hankowllz filed a
motion to represent Mahone und requested a
continuance to prepare Ills case for trial.
Due to a scheduling conflict. .Judge Dickey
requested senior .Judge Joseph S. Davis. Jr. to
preside In Ihe Mahone ease.

Navy holds opening, closing
SUFFOLK. Vu. - T h e $I0 T-shirts sold
Monday at (he ribbon cutting for Ihe Naval
Undersea Warfare Center may become col­
lector's Items: The new $30 million renter is on
the base closing commission's hit list.
"T h is Is the kind o f thing that makes Ihe
government look foolish." said Rep. Robert C.
Scott, one of several Virginia congressmen who
tried to gel the center removed from the federal
Base Closure and Realignment Commission's
list.
The engineering und testing center will
consolidate about 1.500 military and civilian
employees now working at live locations In
ncurby cities.
But the commission is recommending further
consolidation by moving the Virginia detach­
ment to Undersea Warfare Center headquarters
In Newport. R.l. It made the recommendation
even though the federal General Services
Administration has a 20-ycar lease at almost $4
million a year on the new building and the Navy
signed a 15-year commitment to the building
with the GSA.
"T o m ove Into a brand-new facility custombuilt fur this operation and pay all of the m oving
expense to gel here, and then turn around and
spend m oney to move again. Just doesn't make
any sen se." Scott said.
F ro m s t a f f a n d w lra r a p o r t a

IN D E X
C l a i t l f l a d a ........... 4B ,S B
C o m lc a .......................... 6B
C r o s s w o r d .................. SB
O sar A b b y ....................3B
D o a th s ............................5 A
D r. Q o t t ..........................6 B
E d ito r ia l........................ 4 A
F lo r id a ........................... 2A

H o r o s o o p * ...................SB
M o v la s ...........................3 B
N a t i o n ................... 6 A .8 A
P a o p l s ........................... 3B
P o l lo a ........................... 3 A
S p o r t s .................... 1 B .2 B
T o la v ls lo n ....................3 B
W a a t h s r ........................2 A

Donald Draper, 9. oxaminos a crystal at
Hamilton Elomontary School, us part or
Science Advonturo week programs sponsored

Charges dropped
against Longwood
code board officer
By S A N D R A E L L IO T T

Herald Staff Writer
LONGWOOD — Commissioners
closed a chapter ol city history
Monday night by dismissing the
ensc against the only person ever
churgcd with violating the rules and
regulations of a board on wtdeb she
served.
City commissioners voted unani­
mously to dismiss charges against
Lyncttc Druids who serves on the
city code enforcement board. City
attorney Becky Vosc recommended
thr commission drop the charge
dial Dennis violated the CED rules
when she discussed an "on-going"
ease In a letter lo Mayor Paul
l.ovest rand
Through researching the CED
minutes of the case In question
against AAA Tree Service. Vosc said
the ease was closed, not open, when
Dennis expressed her concerns In a
letter to Ihe commission.
In May. Dennis' attorney. Gerald

Herald Senior Stall Writor

Partly sunny with a
50 percent rlianrc ol
a fte r n o o n t h u n ­
derstorms High m
the lower 90s.

F o r m o r a w a a th s r , sss P a p a 2 A

See Gun, Page BA

Roost and ride

Korutau requested the charges
against Ids &lt;held lie dropped citing
three reasons First, the CEB had
not renewed or readopted Its rules
at its annual org.ud/ntlunal meeting
as required Second, the AAA Tree
Servtie case was finished when
Demits made her observations.
Third, the ( Kit could adopt rules lor
the conduct ol hearings lad not fur a
m em ber's conduct outside tlie
hearing.
Although Vosc said she thought
tin' first and tliitil points were not
trusts lot dismissal, tlx- second point
hud merit It the com mission re­
moved Dennis In mi tin- board and
the ease was appealed In court. Vosc
snld tlie city might lose
"I would tic hard pressed to argue
point tw o." she commented
Dennis complained about the
handling of the business' ease. The
tree servlet- Is owned by Henry
Hardy Dennis, a on etim e city
commissioner, is friends with the
See Longwood. Page 5A

New Cracker Barrel
restaurant may bring
180 jobs to Sanford
By J. M A R K B A R F IE L D

Hot and muggy

Pt*otoby Tommy Vmctnl
by lho Orlando Sctonco Center and Sanford
Molmy Noon uluU. PioytMttB
b«li«u tivlil ail
tho school each morning this week.

A new survey of [xillce officers shows most
believe strict gun-control measures will not
decrease violent crime.
Local law enforcement leaders believe lighter
laws will only cause problems for average people.
"I believe a waiting period before purchasing
guns and especially an Intensive background
cheek on purchasers will help reduce some
crim e." said Lake Mary Police Chief Richard
Deary, "although It may not be a major
reduction."
"But I don't think It Is going to actually reduce
crimes Involving guns." he added. "Criminals
uiru'i w e ri«Ml mImhi! iNiyinn iltrir jfunn. They Imy
them o ff the streets or steal them during home

SANFORD - A new Cracker
Darrel restaurant near Snnford
could bring 180 new Jobs to the area
next year.
Tom Reddy, real cslale manager
for ihe growing Tennessee-based
chain of home-styled restaurants
said Monday the company has an
option to buy a parcel of laud Irom
Spaceport USA. developers ol I I
Industrial Park, now 1-4 Park North
The site Is located northeast of the
1-4. Stute Road 40 Interchange.
Reddy said the restaurant will
employ IHO lull- and part-time

workers, managers right on down
to Janitors." lie said the mix
depends on walker's availability.
Reddy -.aid lie anticipates the
/otilng and permuting phase to take
11x«• to six mouths to complete, then
another live to six months to
complete the cniisliuctloii ol the
10.(MM) square-loot building.
Reddy said the location was
selected ln-causc ot access to tlie
Interstate and plans lor a major
mall, lie said about ball the cus­
tomers will Ik* travelers and the rest
locals.
The first Cracker Darrel restau­
rant and gilt shop was o|&gt;4*ud In
See Cracker. Page 5A

Hm *M PSolo by Tommy Vlneonl

The rivershfp Grand Romance regularly makes scenic trips on Lake
Monroe and the St. Johns River. One frequent passenger who always
gets a tree ndo is the osprey seen perched on Ihe top ol Ihe starboard
stack.

�SA - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, July 13, 1993

NEW S FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STAT

P/Z to welcome newest member
By NICK FFBIPAUF
Herald Stall Writer

Inventor s e n te n ce d to th ree years
TAMPA — A former lab assistant was sentenced to prison
when he refused to sign over to the University of South Florida
his rights to the water purification substance he said he
Invented.
Petr Taborsky. 31, wos sentenced to 3 years In prison
Monday for falling to follow a court order to sign over the
patents to USF. The former student was convicted In 1900 of
stealing research notebooks,
" I maintain that 1 am Innocent." said Taborsky. after he
refused to sign the paper that might have won him his
freedom. "I have been falsely charged and convicted.”
Taborsky was an engineering student when he was
employed to do research at USF. He claimed the Invention that
resulted was his, while USF officials and the company that
sponsored the research said they own the rights.
He was sentenced to 15 years probation and told not to use
the research material again. He applied for a patent the day
after his sentencing.
Taborsky also refused to sign a form relinquishing his rights
to the Information. In a March hearing, a Judge told him that
unless he gave up those rights and a tta in e d from using the
research In a future patent application, he would go to prison.
The research project Taborsky worked on was sponsored by
Progress Technologies Corp. and Progress Water Technologies
Corp.. affiliates of St. Petersburg-based Florida Power Corp.

F e w e r sea tu rtle n ests co u nted
BOCA RATON — Female sea turtles may be taking a break us
biologist are finding fewer nests this year.
"It s quite likely that a lot o f females nre taking a break. They
don't nest every year." said senior scientist Eric Martin. "It’s
not a cause for great concern."
Nesting season for the loggerhead, leatherback and green sea
turtles began April 1 and ends Sept. 30.
It’s the first year In four that the numbers have dropped, said
Cheryl Rider o f the state Department o f Environmental
Protection. The deportment Is conducting a long-term nesting
survey, which may take 10 to 20 years, to determine the
turtles' reproduction patterns.
Rider said the number of nests has been "Incredibly high"
for the last three years. She added that the state doesn’t tally
the nests until the end of the season. "T h is may Just be a
leveling ofT."
Experts are considering reasons from Hurricane Andrew to
the fact that turtles don’t make the nesting trip from Africa or
South America every year, but they aren’ t sure what the
numbers mean.
Along Gumbo Limbo shores. 516 nests have been laid ibis
year. At the end o f last season, park authorities recorded 1.106
nests. On Hutchinson Island off Martin and St. Lucie counties.
3,353 loggerhead nests have been found since July 11. During
the same time period last year. 4.437 nests were found.

C ity declares war on M uscovy ducks
CAPE CORAL — The city o f Cape Coral has declared war
against Muscovy ducks.
The city council voted 8-0 Monday that declares areas where
the ducks congregate be considered an "unsanitary" nuisance,
and the ordinance gives Lee County Animal Control the
authority to relocate the prolific ducks, destroy their eggs, or
euthanize them.
It also says If someone ts caught feeding the ducks or
encouraging their propagation, the "responsible person may be
(

11|-rf m d M M a n f o r o u i U i b u t i i u

to t h r m m illa n

o f m h r u llji

nuisance."
Councilman Earl Hamilton sponsored the ordinance because
he said he's been Inundated with complaints from residents.
One woman broke her hip when she slipped on a driveway
covered with duck feces, he said, and In another Incident, a
duck shattered a motorist's car window when It llcw Into the
window while the man was driving.

O ffic e r had urged alligator be destroyed
JUPITER — A game officer had recommended an alligator be
destroyed weeks before the same animal killed a 10-year-old
boy on the Loxahatchcc River last month.
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission Officer
Richard Obach said Monday he recently saw photos of the
alligator that killed Bradley Weldenhamcr. and says It was the
same gator that approached him.
Obach said he was approach In May by a "friendly gator,"
meaning It lost Its fear of humans.
The gator that killed Bradley on June 19 during a canoe trip
with his parents and Little League team had a distinctive
golfball-sized lump over Its left eye. Obach said ihc gator he
saw had the same mark.
In late May. a canoeist told Obach about a human-friendly
gator he had encountered, and Obach and Park Ranger Derrick
Valez went to investigate.

From Associated Frost rsports

MIAMI - Here are the
winning numbers selected
Monday In the Florida Lot­
tery:

FantasyB

25
-2 2 -9 -2 -8
5-22-1

Cash 3
0 -4 -9

S tu rfb rd H e ra ld
Tuesday, July 13, 1993
Vol. 85. No. 275
PuMshsd Oaltvand Sunday, aicapt
Saturday by T h a r .................

.»Paid al Sanford.
Florida and additional mailing
POSTMASTER: Bond &lt;
_______ ,
lo THS SANFORD HERALD, P.O.
Soi 1SS7. Sanford. FI SZITS-IMT.

habacrfolion Ratal
(OoRy 4 Sunday)

“ ssOadnry
OYSlSO
SMSS

we
out
w js

Florida R u ldanta mutt pay 7% aalaa
las In addition la ralaa abort.
Phono (407) SZ3-3011.

Ed and Mary Wilson will Ik - requesting a
requiting o f property at 444 Lake Road, from
A-l. agriculture, to R-1AAA. for the devel­
opment o f half acre single family homes on
three lols.
Robert Dcllo Russo, owner of an nlr
condition company, has requested a site
plan approval for landscape break place­
men! and size In an existing parking area,
lor an odlce/warchouse building In Lake
Mary's Commerce Center. Russo owns the
property which Is located Immediately
adjacent to his business
An update ts scheduled on the city's

landfill survey. "W e are still trying to find
out where any landfill nrens might be. or
may have been In the past In the city
limits." West explained. "O f primary Im­
portance. we want to Investigate to make
sure there has been no toxic waste dumped
on any property within the c lly."
West will also give an update on a recent
meeting of the Sanford Airport Authority
which he attended. The meeting featured
Input from a number of residents reprr
striding eight communities In and near Lake
Mary, who have voiced objections to nolst
created by airplanes using the west-to-nisi
approach.
The I’AZ meeting will begin al 7 p.m
Tuesday. In the commission chambers ol
l-ake Mary Clly Hall.

City
airs
johns’
names
By Associated Press
ST. PETERSBURG Mrn
arrested on charges of soliciting
prostitution got their names on
prime lime television.
The namrs of 20 Johns scrolled
down the screen Monday even­
ing on channel 15. the city's
public access station.
Police say naming prostitutes'
clients, combined with other
e ffo rts such as un d ercover
stings, can only help. They also
said they hope the show warns
people o f the health risks with
sex with prostitutes. And they
want Ihc community to know
that prostitution Is not a victim­
less crime.
"M y best hope Is that people
will sec the show, learn that the
problem Is a lot more com­
plicated than they would have
thought otherwise." said Si.
Petersburg police Chief Darrrl
Stephens. *‘H's not victimless,
and It has some potential con­
sequences that are pretty de­
vastating."
Men at the Cactus Charlies
Lounge, which the bartender
explained Is located In the mid­
dle of an area known for pro­
stitutes. didn't miss a sound
bile.
"W e're all silling glued to the
inwc sec any
TV on Ch. 15 lo sec if
of our people up there." said the
bartender, who Identified herself
as T. Rodcnbaugh. "Anybody I
know*? Our customers?"
Sure enough. As thr Jukebox
played Whitney Houston's I Will
Always Love You and the names
o f Johns scrolled slowly down thr
television screen, one o f the
customers spotted the name o f u
friend.
" A friend of mine!" Ronald
Epplcy said pointing to u name
on the screen.
"1 believe It's a violation o f the
Constitution." he said, nursing
his beer and p u ffin g on a
cigarette. " I f I want to spend my
money on any girl, that's my
right. ... I have a room full of
condoms."
Some men whose names ap­
peared on the city's cable televi­
sion show Police Report merely
lashed out at law enforcement.

■v

r^m r-

.i- v. £-1
H*f*M Photo b| Sums Wtnnar

S p e c ia l h o m es n eed ed
lelghann Galloway and Elaine Guanclate
cuddle with two ol tho dogs burnod in the lire
at the Seminole County Humane Society In
April. A numbor ol the K-9's Injured In the blaze
havo finished treatment ol tholr wounds and

are returning to tho facility, which Is already
cramped for space. Anyone interested in
adopting iheso special puppies please contact
the Humana Society.

P ro s e c u to r s h o c k e d at n u m b e r o f
c o n t r ib u t io n s -o r -le s s c h a r g e s
aJL.
By Associated Prasa
PANAM A CITY — An outside prosecutor
assigned lo Investigate the reduction or dropping
of charges In exchange for donations lo police
agencies or charities thought there may In- a few
dozen or maybe 100 cases.
Instead. Paul Duval Johnson, a top assistant to
Slate Attorney Harry Coc 111 of Tompu. said
Monday lie is Investigating thousands of cases.
"It is shocking." Johnson said of the scope of a
practice his boss has dubbed "cash register
Justice."
Gov. Lawton Chiles In April appointed Coc to
Investigate the donations In the 14th Judicial
Circuit.
Johnson confirmed that one of the cases being
Investigated Involves a woman who balked al
making a 8500 contribution to the Callaway
Police Department's Investigative fund. A pro­
secutor wrote. In n letter to her lawyer, that the
donation would "encourage" him to drop crimi­
nal charges against her.
The woman, who had been charged with
battery’ against n police officer, resisting an officer
with violence and disorderly conduct, told Thr
News Herald of Panama Clly that she refused to
make a donation out o f principle although her
lawyer had urged her to accept the deal.

"And this is supposed to be justice?" asked the
woman, who has worked In law enforcement for
32 years.
She asked that her name not Ik- published in
providing the newspaper with the 1992 letter.
"It's like asking for a bribe." said Stetson
University College of Law Dean Bruce Jacob.
"Another crime Is being committed."
The charges eventually were dropped because
doruments bad been lost when Callaway dis­
banded Its Police Department last October and
transferred municipal law enforcement to the Bay
County Sheriff's Department.
State Attorney Jim Applemun of the 14th
Circuit declined to be Interviewed about the
Callaway rase but has defended thr donations in
the past, saying It was a way to recoup
Investigative costs and save weak cases from
being total losses
H ow ever. Applcm an has suspended the
practice pending the outcome of Coe s Investiga­
tion.
The Callaway case stemmed from a fight
between the woman's son nnd another youngster.
An officer clulmcd the woman swung at him In un
attempt to stop police from arresting her son. The
woman contended the officer was using excessive
force and denied touching hi in.

THE W EATHER
LOCAL FORECAST

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

Today: Partly sunny with a 50
percent chance o f afternoon
thunderstorms. High In thr
lower 90s
Tonight: Scattered evening
showers and thunderstorms
otherwise partly cloudy. U»w in
the mid 70s. Light southeast
wind. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Wednesday: Partly sunny with
s c a tte r e d a fte r n o o n th u n ­
derstorms. High In the mid 90s.
Light wind becoming south 5 to
10 mph.
Extended forecast: Thursday
through Saturday: Partly cloudy
with a chance of mulnly after­
n o o n a n d e v e n i n g (h im dcrslorms.

FLORIDA TEMPS

Inc-SOON. Fn
rranch An.. Sanford.

Fla. 17771

LAKE MARY — Several reports urc
scheduled on the agenda of Ihc regular
meeting o f Lake Mary’s Planning and
Zoning Board this evening.
This will be the first official meeting for
newly elected P&amp;Z member Sheila Sawyer.
She was elected to the board by the Lake
Mary City Commission during the July 1
meeting, as a replacement for J. Craig
Spearman, who resigned because o f busi­
ness conflicts which kept him from attend­
ing meetings.
City Planner Matt West will be Informing
the board on the current slutus o f two
basketball courts which had been scheduled
for demolition, but will now be revisited by

the Lake Mary City Commission.
West will also give updates on a replat and
vacate decision regarding n portion of the
Tlmncuan development.

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Daytona Booth
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NATIONAL TEMPS

Temper aluret Indicate prenout da. t high
Ando.tr right lewtoIp m EOT
Cit»
HI La Prt Olik
Anchorage
7« 17
clr
V
F
-----------1
Allonto
V \ j ^ -----------1
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44 77
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Atlonllc City
»J 70 M cdy
Baltimore
SATURDAY
THURSDAY
*1 •'1
cdf
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Bllllngt
44 1)
cdy
Ptlycldy 93-73
Ptly cldy 93-73
Ptly cldy 93-73
Ptlycldy 93-73
Ptlycldy 93-73
Birmingham
H 71
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Bltmarck
41 47 07 cdy
Boiw
71 &lt;1
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Boifon
li 77
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BuriinglonVI
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4
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STATISTICS
TIDES
11
Charlei ton.SC
ti M
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Cher
let
Ion
w
V*
II
4
4
0
7 cdf
WEDNESDAY:
The high tem perature in Charlotte.N C
V# 74 01 Or
SOLUNAR TABLE: Mill. 1:30
heyenne
(4 4f 10 cdf
Sanford Monday was 93 degrees C
Chicago
7f 41
n.m.. 1:45 p.m.: MaJ. 7 35 a.m..
cdf
and the overnight low was 69 as Cleveland
14 17 11 rn
H:00 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
LAST
FIRST
reported by tin* University of Coiumbui Ohio
17 47 41 cdf
Beach: highs. 3:54 a.m.. 4:37
oncord. N M
17 17 oe Clr
July 11
July 26
Florida Agricultural Research C
Oallei
FI
W
orth
ft 77
p.m.: lows. 10:13 a.m., 11:59
cdf
and Education Center. Celery Denver
♦1 11 0) cdy
p.m.: New Smyrna Beach:
Dei
Molnet
re
14
Avenue.
cdy
highs. 3 5 9 a.m.. 4:42 p.m.:
Detroll
rn
u 44
Recorded rainfall for the M
oulton
Iowa. 10:18 a.m.. 12:04 p.m.:
M 71
Or
period, ending at 9 a.m. Mon­ Indienepolii
41 47 .70 cdf
Cocoa Beach: highs. 4:14 a.m..
NEW
FULL
Juneau
day. totalled .07 ol an Inch.
71 11
O'
4:57
p.m
.i
lows.
10:33
a
m
,
July 19
Aug. 2
Clly
U 41
cdf
The temperature at 10 a.m. Kanui
Lai Vrgat
12:19 p.m.
in 10
Or
today was H2 degrees and Lillie Rock
er 77 74 cdf
Loi
Angela*
Tuesday's overnight low was
•0 47
cdf
BOATING
BEACH CONDITIONS
*4 74
cdf
73. as recorded by the National Memphlt
MlUauk ee
to 41
rn
Weather Service at the Orlando Mpll SI Paul
Daytona Beach: Waves arc St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
74 11
rr
Haihvillc
International
Airport.
fl
74 » edi
0-1 foot and semi glassy. Current
Today and Tonight: Wind
Hen Orleani
17 71 01 cdy
Other Weather Service data:
Is to the north with a water south io southeast 10 knots,
Hen York Clly
*4
7
1
Cdy
Monday's high M iiiiitM ititm 93 Oklahoma Clly
temperature of 82 degrees. New bras 2 feet. Bay and Inland
n 70 14 cdf
Barometric preaaurc.30.10 Omaha
to 41
Cdy
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 1-2 waters a light chop. A few
u 74 01 Cdy
Relative Humidity....07 pet Philadelphia
foot and semi choppy. Current Is showers and thunderstorms.
Phoeni*
100 77
cd»
Wlnda......Southeast 6 mph Plftibargh
slightly to the norih. with a
17 47 .71 rn
Rainfall.....0.15 of an Inch. Portland Me.ne
*4 41 01 Clr
wntcr temperature of 82 degrees.
u 74
n*
Today's aunaet....8:25 p.m. SI Louie
Sell Lake Clly
u 40
Or
Tomorrow's aunrlae,...6:37 Statll#
70 11
cdy
Walkingion. 0 C
fl 74
edr

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Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Tuesday. July 13, 1993

aa

Kids detained at clinic protest
The sidewalk and driveway
entrance at Aware Woman arc
within a 30-foot restricted zone
MELBOURNE - Taking a new tui[&gt;osrd by a court last April —
tuck, abortion upixmcnts used a ruling which also has resulted
children to challenge court or­ In the arrest of dozens o f adulis
ders. resulting In llie tem|&gt;oniry since then.
The children, ranging In ugc
detention of a dozen young
demonstrators at an alxirtion from 10 lo 14, were released to
their parr ills afler videotaped
clinic.
"T h ey have their ow n strong Interviews conducted by police
convictions about the killing oI and state stx-la! workers.
The children's parents and
babies." said Linda McGladc
other
supporters — some 50
about her four youngsters, who
defied a court-lmpost'd buffer men, women anti children —
zone around a Melbourne clinic were across the street from the
clinic, behind police barricades.
Monday.
The protest action, which
ller two older boys were taken
(ailed
lo disrupt ocllvltlcs at ihe
In to custody by M elbourne
poller along wilh 1U other boys clinic, was pari of Hie nationwide
and girls walking single file "C lllcs ol Refuge" campaign by
ulong Ihe sidewalk In front of ihe anll-nhorllon m ovem ent,
A w a r e W om an C e n t e r for which has targeted Melbourne
Choice, the Florida focal point of and six other cities.
Keith McGladc. 12. the first
the current anti-abortion cam­
youngster taken Into custody.
paign-

BY IKE FLORES

D o m estic vio len ce
Culhetinc Elizabeth Uuchannn. 30, 154 Sprlngwood. Longwood, was arrested and charged with aggravated assault and
battery Idrimestlr violence) after u fight with her ex-husband
turned violent when she went to plrk up her children.

DU I arrests
• Edward Neal lluirstutler. 37. 226 Wilbur Ave.. Lake Mary,
was charged with driving under the Influence Saturday on
L ik e Mary Boulevard at State Hoad 600.
• Steven Erie Wilder. 29. 761 Creekwaler. Lake Mary, was
r harged with DUI after tie turned against a red signal arrow at
SK 6(X) Dutton Hoad near I&gt;og Track Hoad.

O bstru cting ju s tic e
Gary E. S/retter. 28. 735 East Church Ave.. Longwood was
charged with obstructing Justice, resisting without violence, no
valid drivers llcrnse and lmpro|»er or unsafe equipment. He
was stop|&gt;ed by police for lmpro|&gt;cr lighting and gave an
Incorrect name, said he left Ills license at hoim and gave the
wrong dale of birth. When he was correctly Identify by a
co-worker, he was arrested.

S uspended licen se
George Karoulsos. IH. 305 St. laiwrence Dr.. Sanford, was
charged with driving with a suspended driver's license when
hr was n1op|x-d on SK 434 for what ap[xared to la- a headlight
out. Tfie “ bra" light covering had slipped making It appear the
light was out. A computer cheek revealed he had a suspended
license He was arrested

Associated Press Wrllor

Your p ro p erty taxes
State d e n ie s delay ta c tic s over Save O u r H om es cap
B y J . M A R K B A R F IE L D

W arran t arrests

Herald Senior Stall Wrllor

The following people were arrested on warrants:
• Jerry David Dillard. 33. 1009 E Second St.. Sanford, grand
theft, burglary to a dwelling. Volusia County.
• Luts Rodriguez. 34. 615 Park Ave., Sanford, failure to
appear for no valid driver's license and battery.
• Milton Leon Peoples. 30. 19 Castle Brewer Court. Sanford,
stale parole violation.
• Daniel Lee Collins. 20. 2507 Georgia Ave.. Sanford,
violation oi p.nole/battery on a law enforcement officer.
• Joseph Fields Jr.. 38. 103 Hollins St.. Sanford, wrll of
attachment.
• Wllllard James Harrell, 54. 1102 W. Third Si.. Sanford,
lewd and lascivious assault on a child.

SANFORD - An olliclal o f Ihe
Florida Department o f Revenue
denied Monday an appeal of a
decision lo Inlllutc the Save Our
Homes cap next January was a
delay tudlc.
"W e're asking In go to the
Florida Supreme Court |ust as
fust as Ihcy can." said Jerc
Moore, director of DOR public
and government affairs “ We
need to get lids resolved lo the
benefit o f every body."
Ken Wilkinson. Lee County's
property appraiser and SOII
president, had criticized the
state for ap|K*allng the decision
to have Hie rap lake eflect nexl
year, saying It suggests a delay
tactic.
"T h a t's what they wan ter I all
along," said Wilkinson.
Friday, the DOR ap|M-aled a
June 23 decision by Lee County

• Hrandy Joseph Hunch. 23. 360 Golf Cove Court. Sanford,
was arrested ai Pebble Creek Apartments by sheriffs deputies
Sunday. He was wanted on a warrant for driving with a
suspended/revoked license
• Deborah Frunclnc Fernandes. 34. 700 Santa Barbara.
Sanford, was arrested by Sanford police In a parking lot In the
2500 block of S French Ave. Sunday. She was wanted for
failure to apjiear on a worthless check charge.
• Dexter Laverne Williams. 25. 1122 Orange Avenue.
Sanford, was arrested by Sanford |H»llce during a traffic slop
Saturday at 3rd Street and Elm Avenue. He was wanted for
violation of parole on a conviction of obtaining property with a
worthless check. He was also charged with driving with a
suspended/revoked license.
• Fred Stanley Coleman. 41. 701 Brlarcllff. Sanford, was
arrested by Sanford police In n parking lot In the 2700 block of
Orlando Drive Saturday He was wanted on a Volusia County
warrant for violation ol parole on a conviction of possession of a
controlled sulrstancc.
• Timothy Lynn Kobiuson, 31. 2431 Chase* Ave., Sanford,
turned himself In to Sanford police at his residence Saturday.
He wns wanted lor violation of parole on a conviction ol
burglary.
• Denise Ann Jandlk. 37. 322 Koscclllf Circle. Sanford, wns
Hop|tcd by Like Mary [Killer on Lik e Mary Hlvd, Saturday.
Officers found she was wanted on an Orange County warrant
lor grand theft.
• Georgia Landers Bergman 28. 1217 Palmetto Avenue.
Sanford, was turned In by a trail trondsmun at the Jail Sunday.
She was wanted lor violation of parole on a conviction of theft.
• Churles Huy Bruce. 32. 1160 Scenic Point Drive.
Longwood. was served a warrant at the Jail Sunday. He was
wanted for violation of parole on a conviction of grand theft.

In cid en ts reported to th e sheriff
• $105 In Items were reportedly stolen Sunday from a uilllly
room at a residence in the 2900 block of Jewett Lone.
• A residential burglary was reported In the 3000 block ol
Celery Avenue Friday. A children's walker and several cans ol
loud were said to have been taken from an unsecured and
abandoned residence.
• $250 In food slumps were reportedly stolen from a purse In
the kitchen of u home Friday In the 4000 block of Myrtle
Avenue.
• $1065 In electronic equipment was reportedly stolen curly
Monduy during u vehlclular burglary on W. Wind Court In the
Crossings, Lake Mary.
• A window ulr conditioning unit valued at $800 was said to
have been taken Sunday from a vacant house In the 2900 block
of Airport Hlvd
• Four tires and wheels plus other Items valued at $800 were
re|Mirtedly stolen from u residence on Pineway. near Like
Jessup on Sunday.
• A golf bag and clubs valued ul $1,800 plus other Items
valued at 8200 Including a pair o f punts and two bags of bird
seed, were reportedly stolen from a vehicle In the 8000 block of
Murry Court. In Dawn Eslntcson Sunday.
• T h e owner of u car parked In the 800 block of Silversmith
Circle. Lake Mary, reported her purse wus stolen when
someone smashed open the window of her ear on Saturday.

In c id e n ts reported to Sanford police
• A business was reportedly burglarized Friday In the 3000
bl(K-k of S. Orlando Drive. Entry was reportedly made through
celling tiles. Items listed as stolen Include $1,679.40 from the
safe und $300 from |ietty cash.
• A color TV set was reportedly stolen Friday from a
residence In ihe 1100 block of Cedar Avenue.
• A homeowner reported u bike, sterro and too) box were
stolen from Ills unlocked front porrh on Friday. He said two
vehicles near his home were also burglarized, hut nothing wus
reported as stolen.
• At 9 a.m. Saturday, a man told police he wus robbed by
two men In Fort Mellon Park. He said $7,600 In checks und
$240 In cash were taken before the pair fled In a ear. He said
one of the men had an unknown iy|&gt;eof handgun.
• A rented VCR was reportedly stolen Sunday from a
residence In the 1400 block of W. 12th Street. Police said entry
was made through un unlocked front door.
• An attorney's office wns reportedly ransacked Saturday on
First Street In Sanford. Nothing was Immediately reported as
missing.
• $56 In currency, compact discs and two wutchcs were
among Items reportedly stolen between Friday and Monduy
from n residence In Ihe 2500 block of Myrtle Avenue.
• An undetermined amount of property and Jewelry were
reportedly stolen Sunday from a residence In the 600 block of
Mellon vllle.
• A portable building was reportedly burglarized Sunduy ul
Goldsboro Elementary School. 1300 W. 20th Street. Police said
the burglar was apparently startled by the alarm and fled from
the area. Icuvlng several article behind.

said, " I believe they arc killing
Police officials mid Hn up- ,
babies In there."
w o u ld I k* re v ie w e d by tin sumHis lather. Keith McGladc Sr . a tto rn ey s oilier* lo Jet- mini*
a n y possible c h a rg e s
was on trial In nearby Titusville
Besides a second son who ' nn Monday, along with a group
of protesters arrested at the
detained. Mrs. McGladc had t*
same clinic Iasi April.
Other i hlldicn
Erl* 7. ,tt.&lt;'
"This Is a new lactic." said
Haclu-I. 9
who n|)ciu aim'-Police C hief Kellh Chandler
two hours m arch in g -noon
"W e’ve detained children before,
under a blistering sun lor ah
tail It wus always wilh parents
two hour*- I lit- ynuma 1 nm
Joined hi I ac loss the sdt - i when
or adults, not like this."
[Krllce ollieers iK-gan ;n pul
lie was careful to point out tin
stop to Ihe rnlnl-inarch
children were not arrested
M a rga ret T h o m a s ol the
"Tin \'re hilllii). ff. itjjl -S 1(It
Feminist Majority which Is like llial." m k I IO \t ar old Da
helping with clinic protection.
Shrock. the vo*ir
si ell
said she believed protesters here
pulled oil die sidewalk ff &gt; poll!
His mother. Lisa Sc brock
were desperate for attention
Bradenton, -aid no 111lulls )
“ I Hunk there's some kind of
pressure on Operation Rescue to Joined Hie elufflrt 1) bccut
make some kind of a statement
many had been arrt .
before
at each of the seven cities," she
"t don't warn my {'ll illdrcii
said. "T h e y ’re using ehlldrcn do II. bin ii s ihelr &lt;-tii i lions
because they're running out of G od’s law Is bight i till in nun
adults "
la w ." she said

Circuit -Judge Wallace Pack who
otdered fhr SOU property value
cap lo luke effect Jan. 1. 1994.
IX)K decided Ihe cap shouldn't
take effect until 1995 lo give
pro[M*rty appraisers the op|&gt;or1unity to assess all their residen­
tial properties at their “ Just"
value.
Wilkinson feared appraisers
wotdd boost residential property
values by 20 percent In-lore Ihe
cap took effect.
The cap. approved by voters In
November 1992. would II id It
homestead pro|K-rty value In­
creases lor lax purposes to 3
percent or the cost of living,
whichever was less, Any dif­
ferences between the capped
increases and fair market values
could be eliminated when the
property Is sold.

acceptable compromise
Bill Sober, Seminole County's
pro|K-rty appraiser, said even II
Ihe slate luid no! appealed the
derision. It wouldn't affect Scin
Inole County because it was
made In a different Judicial
circuit. Sutler said he plans to
abide by the DOK position that
llic cap won't take effect until
Jan 1. 1995
l-ee Rohr. DOR attorney, sold
he has asked the Second District
Court of Appeals In Lakeland lo
forward the appeal lo Ihe Florida
Supreme Conn lor a statewide
decision. Rohe said he expects u
response from ihe 2nd DCA In

about a week II the Supereme
Court takes It up. lie will seek a
quirk derision, said Rohe.
"Tim e l» running out lor the
appraisers who need in gn n-atlv
Tor Hair 199-1 tax year
said
Rohe
Moore said the state would
also like iln- Legislature to eraft a
plan to pul Hie cup In plat e He
said qnesllonx whether home
I m p r o v e m e n t s w o u ld be
exempted from the cap should
Ire addressed before property
appraisers Iregfn their valuations
tim ing the t ap Moore added Ihe
DOR will c o m p ly w .i i. Hitcourt's derision

Wilkinson said Ills Intent was
Hie cap would take effect Jan. I
1993. hill the 1994 date was an

Report: Skinheads
are more dangerous
than Ku Klux Klan
By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer

beneath that down-home exteri­
or there's a powdrrkcg getting
ready to blow."

NEW YORK - Skinheads have
replaced older while suprema­
cist groups as Ihe nation's most
dangerous racist movement. Hu*
AntlUcfum.ilIon League o f fi nal
B'rlth says.
Racist skinheads tiave com­
muted 22 murders In the last
Hirer years. Hie ADL said tu a
report Monday.
"N ot even the Ku Klux Klans.
so notorious for Ihelr use of Hie
rope und tire gun. come close lo
Hie skinheads In the number
and severity of crim es com ­
m itted." the ADL said.
The number of skinheads has
grown steadily since 1988. when
1.500 members were reported in
12 states, according lo tire re­
port. In 1993. an estimated
3.500 were found In 40 stutes.
Hie report said.
W h ile e x c e e d in g th e
established groups In fury. Hie
skinheads are turning to the
old-line hate groups like the
Klan. Aryan Nallnn and the
W h ite Aryan R esistan ce as
allies, the report said. T h e older
groups us&lt;- the skinheads as
"front-line warriors." the report
said. a
The ADL found 160 skinhead
gangs operating around the
country under such names as
A m e ric a n Front, N o r th e r n
Huuiim-rsklns. Aryan Resistance
Leaguc and SSol America.

KEEgs

The ADL detailed 22 slayings
it said were com m itted by
skinheads since* 1990 — more
than triple Hie number blumed
on skinheads in (he three pre­
vious years. Mosl of Hie victims
w e r e If l s p a n I c s , b la c k s ,
homosexuals or homeless.
The biggest skinhead popula­
tions were found In New Jersey
1400). Texas 1300 to 400). Or­
egon (300), and Colorado. Flor­
ida. Michigan and Virginia (200).
Ihe report said.
“ Lots of llirsc young jrcoplc
tiKik like typical young Am eri­
c a n s ." the ADL said, "b u t

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�4A - Sanlord Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Tuesday, July 13, 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanford Herald
(USPS 441-280}

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2611 or 831-9903
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher and Edllor

SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
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Florida Residents must pay 7% ssies tax In
addition to rates above.

ED ITO R IA LS

Soapbox Derby
the best ever
Sanford held Us fifth S oap box Derby even t
this past Sunday. T h e even t wns the m ost
suecessful to date.
T h is w as the first tim e the even t has been
held on a track specifically designed for the
derby cars. Construction w ork on the n ew
track, located ofTO regon A v e n u e In southwest
Sanford, was Just com pleted Friday.
For the parents and ch ild ren involved, it
w as a great tim e. T w o youn gesters from
D cLand and one from Lo n gw o o d . all w ith the
sam e ra cin g team , w a lk ed o ff w ith top
honors.
Yet. w hen the official D erby Day is held in
Akron. Ohio, w e w ill be con siderin g them as
our "h o m e-to w n w in n e rs ." and rootin g for
them to take the national titles.
T h e con cern fo r a s ep a ra te track for
Sanford's races has been discussed for m a n y
years. T h e new location h ow ever, w as not
proposed and planned for until Just a few
m onths ago.
S a n fo r d P u b lic W o r k s D ire c to r J e r r y
Herm an should be given a great deal o f
appreciation for his design and construction
supervision o f the track.
T h e m an w h o has pushed this even t since
Its beginning. Parks and Recreation D irector
M ike K irby, also d eserves m uch credit, as
d o c s h is n e w S u p e r i n t e n d e n t T o m
Farnsworth, w h o has Just gon e through his
first local derby.
W h ile the track w as ready. (Just In the nick
o f tim e) for this past w eek en d 's event, there Is
no doubt, additional w ork w ill im prove It even
m ore.
National Derby officials from Akron w ere on
hand for the first tim e this year. T h ey said
th ey w ere e x tre m e ly pleased with what

JOSEPH PERKINS

Pesticides scare is a false alarm
Arc Amrrtcan children exposed to dangerous
levels o f pesticides in the fruit anil vegetables
they eat? Some may be. but probably not most.
That's the conclusion o f a new study by the
National Academy of Sciences.
Though the academy's study is hardly de­
finitive. it nonetheless provided a pretext for
Environmental Protection Agcnry administrator
Carol Browner to announce that the Clinton
administration plans " a dramatic shift In policy
to reduce the use of pesticides."
This is yet another example of how govern­
ment environmental policy is Informed by
political distortion of science. It mattered not to
Browner whether the scientists presented hard
evidence that pesticides are harmful to children’s
health. To her environmentally correct way of
thinking, pesticides arc evil and therefore must
be stricken from the food supply.
But It simply is Irrational for the government
to further restrict the use of pesticides. In 1990.
the Food and Drug Administration analyzed
more than 19.000 domestic and Imported foods
for pesticide residue. Some 99 percent of
domestic foods were well within safety stan­
dards: 96 percent of Imports.
And it's not as though government I«kk I safety

standards are lax. The EPA sets allowable levels
for pesticide residue 100 to 1.000 times lower
than actual safe levels
T h e r e 's a n o th er
perverse aspect to
the pesticide Issue. II
more American fami­
lies turn to "natural"
foods, as a n-sidl id
th e C l i n t o n a d m inistration's d ra­
in a I I e s li I I l 1 II
p e s t ic id e p o lic y ,
children actually will
Ik* excised to higher,
not lower, levels of
harmful pesticides.
That's I m-cuu sc lIn­
£ Are Am erican
most carcin ogen ic
children
pesticides are proexposed to
d u e e d h v p la n ts
dangerous
themselves to ward
levels of
oil predatory Insects.
pesticides in
It will not be the
the fruit and
first time that gov­
vegetables
e rn m en t e n v ir o n ­
they eat? ■
mental |H)licy lias

SARAH OVERSTREET

Don’t get upset
over housework

H a n f o r d lim a t o o f f e r .

S a n fo r d Is o n ly o n e o f m a n y c it ie s
throughout the nation to hold these p relim i­
nary d erb y races. It m ay not h ave the m ost
entries or the largest turnout o f spectators,
but It is certain ly som eth in g o f which each o f
us can be proud.
C o n g r a t u l a t i o n s to K i r b y . H e r m a n .
Farnsw orth, and all the others for m aking the
fifth Sanford Soap Box Derby the best ever.

LETTERS

Golf after hours
Wc see it every day. Children In trouble. Drugs,
theft, arson...the list goes on.
We've forgotten the solutions, the preventable
medicine. As a boy I went often to my local golf
course after the starter decided that there wus nut
enough time for playing nine holes. I could then
play two or three holes of golf. Just enough!
So I took my grandson to Mayfair. At 7 p.m.. I
fell this nine-year-old could get In two or three
holes.
But no! No one is allowed to tec off after the pro
shop closes. The groundskeeper murmured some­
thing about liability. Insurance and too many
people would play without paying.
What a far cry from my youth. No longer do we
give our children a positive few Joys of life. Instead
wc teach them that only money counts. Then wc
wonder why Mayfair hus to take the flags out every*
evening or else the (lags would be stolen by kids.
Is It any wonder our children Icam to take from,
rather than give to. society?
William Russell
Lake Mary
E d itor's note: John Daniels, owner of Mayfair,
responds thut the club has always had programs
for Juniors, for which Mr. Russell's grandson
qualifies. Junior camp ofTers kids ages 6 through
17 two hour lessons for four days plus course
uctlon for 8-10. Mayfuir sponsors Seminole High
School golf team and offers Instructional lessons at
no charge to high school golf team players.
Mr. Daniels feels the bottom line Is that Mr.
Russell "is out of order, lie wanted to play for free
after hours."

Berry's World

JAY D. HAIR

Is in d u stry cleaning up its act?
Tw o salient points npjK*ar In the govern­
ment’s most recent rc|&gt;ort on the quantities of
toxic chemicals being relcused to the ulr. wutcr
and land at 21.000 Industry sites across the
nation.
The first Is the sheer bulk of toxics set Iikjsc
on the environment that are not otherwise
trapped, treated or recycled - und by
extension, an Insight In how far we still must
go to prevent the damage and costs of pollution
Instead of struggling to clean up the uftcruiuth.
The second, brighter note Is thut while we
stlll have far to go. public disclosure has been
remarkably effective In getting Industry to
clean up Its act.
The new Information appears In the Envi­
ronmental Protection Agency's 1991 Toxics
Release Inventory*. The report results from a
1986 law requiring some Industries to tell the
public on a piant-by-planl basis what they're
doing with 320 toxic chemicals.
Of the 37.8 billion pounds of toxics ac­
counted for in 1991. 10 percent or 3.8 billion
pounds slipped away as that year's additional
load on the general environment. Chemlculs
known or sus|&gt;ectrd to cause cancer accounted
for 212 million pounds of thut total. Releases of
bloaccumulators •• chemicals that work their
way through the food chain and eventually
build up In human tissue - weighed In at 3
million pounds.
Medical evidence Is Increasingly pointing to
certain bloaccumulators acting In minute
amounts us a mechanism behind the rapid
growth In the rate o f breast cancer. The
bloarcumulullon of dioxin ha:» been shown in
studies of exposed humans to be a mechanism
behind several forms of soft-tissue cancer.
There are, however, some genuinely positive
uspects to the overall figures. Since the
selected Industries begun public disclosure of
their handling of loxlcs In 1988. they have cut
releases to the air by 31 percent, to water by
26 percent, to the land by 20 percent und have
scaled t&gt;ack injecting toxins underground by
47 percent. Some critics churgc a good portion
o f these reported reductions stem from book­
keeping gimmicks, but the trend has been In
the right direction.
The message of all tills Is that these
reductions were achieved without lengthy
government proscriptions, but by the timehonored device of simply owning up In public
about what's going on. The ulr. after all. isn't
company pro|&gt;crty.
"T h e law hus proven its value In getting
companies to push for voluntary changes
simply based on the embarrassment factor.”
says Paul Omni, coordinator for the Working
Group on Community Right to Know, an
environmental organization.

li-a-bil-pho-bi-a: intense tear ot liability.

yielded unintended consequences. Ovrr the last
decade, the American people have witnessed one
environmental false alarm after another. Here
are four of the more outrageous examples.
Asbestos: Back In 1987. the EPA Issued un
order that more than 100.000 school buildings
throughout the country I k * Inspected for "fria­
ble" asbestos, the dry. crumbling material that
can become airborne.
The agency stoked public hysterln hy wildly
estimating that as many ns 15 million school
children and 1.3 million teachers, administrators
and staff were at risk of asbestos exposure.
Later, the EPA acknowledged that the asbestos
scare was overblown. The science on asbestos
showed no evidence that low-level exposure to
the substance In such settings us schools
resulted In a higher Incidence of asbestos-related
cancer.
To put the risk Into |KTspcctlve. the odds of
succumbing to lung cancer from smoking Just
one cigarette a day were 1.000 times greater.
The &lt;Klds of dying in a traffic accident 10.000
times greater.
One would think that the government (mil.
cy-makers would have learned a lesson from
environmental false alarms of the Inst decade.

Industry agrees. "There Is no question the
program has been tremendously successful In

getting business focusing on their emissions
and then getting them focused on reducing
their emissions." says David Bu/zelli. vice
president lor environment, health and safety ut
the Dow Chemical Co.
In the process, many firms have discovered
the Intuitive: The best path Is to prevent
pollution Instead of treating It. a course that
often generates greater profit.
Dow. for Instance,
p o in ts to s e v e ra l
e x a m p les . One o f
them In volves In­
troducing u recycling
system thut cut the
loxlc waste stream at
u Pittsburg. Calif.,
plant by 80 percent
and cut costs by
$750,000.
This Is one cose
where the country
cun b e n e fit from
more o f a good thing.
The current law is
n arrow ly focused,
£ Tho air, alter
both In terms of In­
all, Isn't
dustries covered and
company
chemicals that must
properly. J
Ire accounted for.
President Clinton
look the lead in de­
ciding to issue an
executive order requiring ull federal agencies
to meet the same reporting standards that
private businesses arc ulreudy meeting.
EPA Administrator Carol M. Browner has
pledged to go another step. "By November of
this year, we will expand the list of inventory
chemicals by approximately 200." she has
said. "B y this time next year. I also will
announce un expansion to Include additional
Industries."
Orum's Right to Know organization Is
pushing legislation In Congress to vastly
expand the reporting requirements that his
group says currently cover only 5 percent of
the nation's annual toxic release burden.
Amid all these positive signals, however, it Is
useful to note that volunteerlsm and simple
reporting didn't get lead out of gasoline, nor do
they account for the greut hulk of progress In
cleaning up the nation's ulr und water. Strong
legislation, backed up by regulation, did thut.
To the degree that disclosure ran assist in
cleaning toxins out o f the environment. It
should Ik * encouraged. Hut disclosure alone
should not Ik* mistaken as a silver bullet for a
problem the nutlon hus a long wny to go in

solving.

I recently visited a friend several states
away who'd lanight a new house and wrltlrn
me alK&gt;ut all her rcmmlcllng projects. I was
eager loser It.
I hadn't I k-c ii In the house 5 minutes when
I was enveloped by a wurmth I hadn't fell in
ages, yet I couldn't quite put my finger on
what was so appealing. The way their old
hutch and chairs fit with the new rugs and
sofa? Mmmmmm. no. I didn’t think so The
light from all those
great windows? No.
dial isn't It ... but
What is it the light's
h it t in g ? Is It ? ...
C o u l d it b e ? . . .
Yesssssssss! Thank
you. laird! It's dust.
Glorious dust! And
over there, on the
throw pillow.... It's
dog hair! Ahhlih. Just
like home.
She tried to u|K&gt;logl/e. "Gee. I'd hoped £ I'd have
to give the house a
wondered how
iK-iier lick before you
YOU can work
got here. But things
LG hours a
got hectic at w ork."
week and
"No. stop." I told
keep a Juno
her. "Don't break the
Cleaver house
spell' How do you
when I can't. ■
think I'd have fejl II
I'd walked in and
found ‘Similized for your prolection' wrap­
pers on the to ilets, u ltcr I Just left
Wrrsilrmanla ut my own house? I'd have
wondered how YOU can work 60 hours u
week and keep a June Cleaver house when I
can't."
We made a pact: I won't clean my house for
her. and she won't clean her house for me.
Thai fell so g&lt;K&gt;d that we pricked our fingers,
dripped a little blood on the carpel to prove
we could, und formed the "All-Girl SheWoman Mop-llalcrs Club." No one allowed
who keeps better house than wc do.
I personally advocate going one step
further, to the national adoption of a more
relaxed "SOD" - Standard of Dirt. Working
men and women toduy. reured In u society
where primarily non-working women cooked,
cleaned and reared children, arc killing
ourselves and our relationships, trying to
keep up with the chores, fight the rolrmodeling wc intuited and keep some sem­
blance of equity.
It's a topic much on our minds. Recent
articles In The New York Times - both In the
" A " section, no less! •• look at our struggle to
Juggle.
"Even Women At Top Still Have Floors To
Do" chronicled the career vs. chores sagas of
those in Congress und in the Cabinet. "For
Many Fathers. Rolfs Are Shifting" studied
the adjustments and frustrations of men who
begin with a much different standard of
cleanliness and nutrition thun their wives.
Both sexes in The New* York Times articles
lament the men's lesser skills In organization
and keeping several plates spinning at once.
"T h e difference is not physical work."
summed up Yoel Sbcrlo. a San Francisco
father of four. "The difference Is thinking
ahead. It took me years to gel that."
Relaxing our standards won't solve all of
our housekeeping, child rearing und gender
problems. Society changed so fast thut we
became a generation of adults who had as
role miKlels parents who hud modeled roles
entirely out of whack with the way wc live
now. That may require enough therapy to
buy every psychologist In America a Volvo,
and enough Marriage Encounter Weekends to
keep churches In fancy recreational buildings
for another century.
Who will suffer If we eat off paper plates
and the dog slops Al|xi from her dish to the
door? Cun (ooth|&gt;astc spatter* truly ruin one's
entire bathroom experience? Dishes sitting In
a sink for three days have not once caused
the Public Heulth Department Vector Control
Squad to I k * summoned, nor hus one cobweb
long enough to touch u head harmed one hair
In the entire history of the Earth.
I say if you want to cut off nty floor, you
deserve everything you catch.

\

-f

�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tuesday, July 13. 1993 • 5 a

MoneyContinued from Page 1A
The Greater Sanford Chamtx-r
o f Com m erce had requested
$14,250 be budgeted for regular
operations, and $0,075 for In­
dustrial promotion.
"M ayor Bettyc Smith com ­
mented. "I serve on the execu­
tive board of the ehamlM-r. and I
assure you It will Ik- difficult tf
the budget Is reduced. The
chamber Is not preparrd for
that."
Commissioner Wliltey Ecks­
tein suld he had heard the
chamber planned to phase out
money required from the city by
rutting its budget request In half
by next year, and reducing It to
|M&gt;sslbly zero by the following
year.
"Hut I don't want lo take It out
of this year's churntK-r money."
he said."
C o m m is s io n e r A . A . M c •
Clanahun disagreed. "I would
have no problem In taking the
additional $10,000 out of the
chamber funds."
lie observed. "T h is money
would have gone for economic
development, und what's the
dllference If we give It to Main
Street for economic develop­
ment?"
C h am b er P resid en t L arry
Strlckler was also on hand dur­
ing the workshop budget dis­
cussion.
"I think Lurry Is one of the
best presidents tire chamber has
had In u long tim e." said com­
missioner Lon Howell, "and I
commend him for this Idea of
planning to reduce the budget
requests for next year."
Howell added. "Hut there Is no
telling what will happen In the
future. The next president may
chunge his mind, and In my
opinion, this would present protriems."
Commissioner Hob Thomas
commented. "I have to go along
with Commissioner Eckstein. I
don't want to lake the money
from the Chamber of Commerce.
I think what we should do Is
continue with our budget dis­
cussions. and perhaps we cun
find some other source rather
than staying on this one sub­
ject."
The commission dropp'd the
discussion, but brought It up a
short time later. In preparing the
b u d get. C ity M an ager Hilt
Simmons had listed $15,000 lo
l&gt;c used for preliminary planning
und architectural concepts for
L a k e , M o n ro e W a te r fr o n t
rtverwalk and uun;ifUlcs.
When, questioned why the
Item was In the proposed budget
without a request for funds.
Simmons explained. "I just wunt
to be ready In case they ask for
funds. 1 wouldn’ t want to be In u
situation where we couldn't give
them any money because wc
don’t have It available."
He udded. "O f course If they
don't ask for the money. It will
still be there next year."
Commissioner Howell com ­
mented. "T h is Is getting ridicu­
lous. We have $15,000 for the
w a te rfro n t g ro u p , p rom ise
$20,000 for Muln Street, get u
request for $25,000 from the
chamber, why can't they Join
together Instead of trying to do
things separately’'/"

OWEN VINSON CALLIHAN
Owen Vinson Calllhan, 77.
Amhurst Drive, Orange City,
died Saturday. July 10. at Palm
G ard en s N u rsin g Hom e In
Clearwater. Mr. Culllhan wus un
self employed aulomlblle dealer
In Ashtabula. Ohio. Horn Feb.
12. 1916 In Ashland. Ky.. he
moved to Central Florida In
1974. He wus a member of
Stetson Baptist Church. DcLund.
lie was un Army -veteran of
World War II nnd the Korean
Wur.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife .
Frances. Orange City; son. Rich­
ard. Clearw ater; five grand­
c h ild r e n an d o n e g r e a t ­
grandchild.
Stephen R. Haldauff Funeral
Home. Orlando. In charge of
urragements.

NICHOLAS
CHIMATO

CARMEN

Nicholas Carmen Chlinuto. 76.
lin e Run Trail, DcLand. died
Saturday July 10. In lllnesvlllc.
Gu. Mr. Chlmuto was u police
officer for Nassau County. L.l. .
N.Y. He wus born March 31,
1917 In Ccdnrhurst. N.Y.. and
moved to Central Florida from
Hunter. N.Y. In 1972. He was u
member of St. Peter's Catholic
Church. DcLand. He was a
veteran of World Wur II and a
member of the American Legion.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife .
Eleanor. DcLand; sons. Paul.
Hunter N.Y.. Vincent. South
Carolina; daughters. Mary Ellen
Chico. DcLand. Veronica Scall.
Valley Stream. N.Y.; 12 grand­
c h ild r e n an d tw o g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Stephen R. Halduulf Funeral
Home. Dcltonu. In charge of
arrangements.

FLOYD TOMMY JOHNSON
Floyd Tom m y Johnson. 59.

"W c have already approved
the Muln Street request for
$20,000. but this Item is on the
budget even though nothing has
been requ ested. L e t's pcul
$10,000 ofT this Item und give It
to Main Street."
C ity P lan n er Jay Murder
explained that the walrrfront
committee has already spent
approximately $5,000 and will
soon be needing more.
" W c on ly have a certain
union! of money coming In."
Howell said. "W e urc being
asked to separate It and give It to
various groups. Then each Is
going to argue that the others
got more which puts us In an
adversarial position."
Commissioner Thomas sug­
gested ull of the groiqrs must
work together. " I f people want to
see things gel done, they are
going lo iuive lo cooperate with
each other. We have got to have
that courtship or nothing will
work."
As the first budget session
ended, there was no decision on
where the second $10,000 will
(time from for the Main Street
program.
l»ust night, during the regular
city com m ission meeting, a
unanimous vote wus given of­
ficially approving the develop­
ment of the Main Street pro­
gram. The uproval will Ik- sub­
mitted along with other docu­
ments. ns the Main Street cornniltlec submits Its application for
entry Into the Florida Main
Street program.
Hudget hearings continue at
the Sanford City Hall this after­
noon beginning at 2 p m., with
|s&gt;lice and fire department bud­
get requests leading off the
session.
If additional time Is required, a
third budget meeting will Inh eld b e g in n in g at 0 a.m .
Wednesday.
Follow in g fine-tuning, the
budget will he presented for
public hearing und finul approv­
al during City Commission meet­
ings In August.

Cop trial could be in autumn
■y SANDRA BLUOTT
Harald Staff Writer______________
SANFORD - It may be rail
before a former Sanford Police
officer goes on trial on sexreluted charges after the Fifth
District Court of Appeals granted
a stay for the cose Monday.
Assistant state uttorney Meryl
Alluwus Is appealing pre-trial
rulings of Seminole Circuit Court
Judge Alan Dickey In the case
against Guy Urewstct. The ap­
peals court has allowed 15 days
lor the filing of legal papers, after
which the defense will l&gt;c given
lime to respond. The appeals
court will then weigh the Issues

und rule.
"It could lie September or
October." Allawns said, "before
the case gets to trial."
Hrewster is facing a total of 93
sex-related counts of lewd and
lascivious assault on the child
and engaging In sexual relations
with a child In custodial custody.
O rigin a lly charged with 12
counts. Allaw-ns Ifled an addi­
tio n a l 85 c o u n ts a g u ln s t
Hrewster Friday.
In u pre-trial hearing. Dickey
ruled only evidence relating to
the specific charges In the in­
formation could Im* presented In
court, not testimony about an
alleged on-going relationship be­

SARASOTA - Although a few
shark species comb the Florida
shoreline lor stingrays, scientists
believe Increased summer (reach
activity has more to do with
shark uttacks than their feeding
habits.
"T h e chances o f Interactions
are greater, and you’ ve got more
eyes out there lookin g for
sharks." said George Burgess,
director o f the International
Shurk Attack File nnd biologist
ut the Florida Museum of Natu­
ral History. "Not all slturks are
feeding on stingrays."
Ctuirles Munire. biologist at
the Mote Marine Laboratory,
a grees. “ T he ch an ces of
(swlmmersl being struck by
lightning ... are greater thnn the
chancts of them being bitten by
u shurk." he said. "It'sju st a fact

5 11 Pine Ave.. Sanford, died
Monday, July 12. at his resi­
dence. Mr Johnson was an
ulrcraft machinist-. Horn June 4.
1934 In Tlchqor. Ark., he moved
to Central Florida In 1983. He
was Baptist and a Navy veteran.
Survivors Include sons. Floyd
Jr.. Derrick Anderson, both of
Sanford. Antwan. San Francisco;
daughters. .Shirley M. Lyons.
Copperas Cove. Texas, Rose.
S a n fo r d : b ro th e r s . O r v ille
B a lfo u r. A r iz o n a . A u w b ry
Balfour. Hangs. Tcxus. Larry
Charles. Gary. Ind., Christopher.
Sacramento. Cullf., Williams
Paul. Arknnsas. Rubin. Oakland.
Calif.: sisters. Shirley Franklin.
South Ucnd. Ind.. FransonJIa
Young. Edith J o y. both o f
Richmond. Calif.. Vlrglnlu Lee.
Canton. Ohio. Jessica Young.
Gary: 14 grandchildren and four
greut-gnindchlldrcn.
Wllson-Elchclbergcr Funeral
Home Inc., Sanford. In charge of
arrangements.

EUNICE ARA KILJAN6KI
Eunice Ara Klljanskl. 82. 989
O r le n t a A v e . , A lt u m o n t e
Springs, died Friday. July 9. ut
Sunbelt Nursing Center. Or­
lando. Mrs. Klljanskl was a
retired auto worker far General
Motors. Detroit. Horn Oct. 17.
1910 In Renfrew. Okla.. she
moved to Central Florida In
1977. She was a Protestant. She
was a volunteer for Palms of
Pusadenu Hospital, u teaching
aide for Leulmun Elementary
School, both of St. Petersburg,
and a children's reuder for
Longwood Elmentnry .School.
Longwood.
Survivors Include daughters.
Arlren Cuz. Maitland. Minnie
Lou M ay. D a v is o n . M ich .:
brother. Fred Givens. Anadarko.
Okla ; six grandchildren und

by then chief Steve Harriett.
Current chief Ralph Russell fired
Hrewster In June after the slate
found probable cause to revoke
his certification. Hrewster re­
served the right to appeal Ids
dlsmlssul until after the criminal
case against him Is resolved.
The appeals court stay halted
the discussions between the at­
torneys and Judge about ques­
tioning of potential Jurats. The
Is s u e s In c lu d e d p r e - t r ia l
publicity; the fact that the de­
fendant Is white and the alleged
victim is black and are the same
sex; the difference in their ages
und that a police officer Is
charged In the case.

LongwoodContinued from Page 1A

Smcrllson. who proposed the
Hardys. The Hardys' charter change at the urging of
son Is u former inuyor o f Long- some citizens, said the city
would not In* required lo add
wood.
Dennis' crlllzlsm about the more officers to the present force
case prompted two CE1I mem­ despite manning guidelines re­
bers and the ctxlc enforcement ferred to in the ordinance.
Under "M em bers" In the ordi­
board officer lo resign.
In other business, the com­ nance. It says. "T h e police
missioners agreed by a 4-to-l department shall consist of such
vole lo let lamgwood voters other members as shall Ik- de­
deride If they wunt the city terminer! by the guidelines as
|toller department established lit established by the Federal De­
the city charter. The question partment of Justice's ‘Crime In
will lie put on the Novemlter the United Slates' for the South
ballot Mayor Paul Loveslrand, Atlantic Region."
Based on the population of
who bucked u petition drive last
year to abolish the department laingwond. critics of the plan say
and turn the law enforcement two more officers would have* to
duties over to the sheriff, voted Ik- hired to meet the guidelines.
S m erllso n assured fello w
against the ordinance.
Hy establishing the poller In commission memlM-rs the city
the charter. It would take a would not have lo hire any new
unanimous vote of the city offlecrs if the ordinance Is
mm mission to change the de­ adopted by the voters.
partment. As It stands now. a
Com m issioner Steve Miller
three-fifths vole of the com ­ suld although some people prob­
mission could axe the depart­ ably were "astounded” he voted
ment Three of the five city In lavor of the ordinance, he did
commission scuts arr up for so to give the people the chance
to vote on the Issue.
election In the Fall.
"I don't necessarily agree with
C o m m is s io n e r H a r v e y

Gun
Biologist says lightning
Continued from Page IA
greater threat than sharks
By Associated Brass___________

tw e e n th e p o lic e m a n and
teenage boy. With the filing of
the additional 85 charges span­
ning the period from 1987
through 1989. Allawas hopes to
show an on going relationship.
Hrew ster met the alleged
victim while serving as the
s c h o o l re s o u rc e o ffic e r at
Lukcvlew Middle School In San­
ford. The youth claims he was
15 when a sexual relationship
with Hrewster began. Through
Ills attorney. Jeff Deen. Hrewster
has denied the existence of any
sexual relationship or Incidents
with the youth.
In October. 1991, Brewster
was suspended with pay from
the Sanford Police Department

of nature. There are sharks out
there all the tim e."
The most recent shurk utlack
In Florida wus ut Daytona Hcach.
one of two reported this ycur.
according ..to the International
Shark Attack File. The other was
In March at Singer Island off
Palm Hcach. when a shurk bit
the feet of u 25-year-old man.
N e ith e r a tta c k w as life threatening.
The agen cy estim ated an
average 13 attacks per year In
Florida between 1987 und 1992.
The last shark-related death was
in 1988.
Dennis Kellcnbcrgcr. execu­
tive director for the Clearwater
M a r in e S c ie n c e C e n t e r
uquarlum. sold the chance of a
shark attack Is small because
sharks typically feed at night
nnd stay beyond the breaker
zones.

several greut-grandchlldren.
Beacon Crcumutlon Service of
Central Florida. Orlando, in
charge of arrangements.

TRUMAN
KNUTSON

STANFORD

Truman Stunford Knutson. 80.
1001 Blue Jay Court. Osteen,
died Frlduy. July 9. at Ills
residence. Mr. Knutson was u
l&gt;owllng lanes munager. Horn
May 18. 1913. In Illinois, he
moved to Central Florida In
1985. A member of First Con­
gregational Church. Lockport.
III., he also was a 33rd Degree
Mason and a Shrlner.
Survivors Include wife. Pearlc:
daughters. Candace Ann Clanfetid. Schamburg. III.. Judith
Kuy Sorensen. Wauwatosa, Wls.,
Trade Marie. Orlando. Susan
Lynn Yungmunn. Hrooksvlllc:
son. Norman Harley. Hudson.
Mich.. William Jumcs. Orlando:
sisters. Arllne Thompson. Ot­
tawa. 111., B u rn ette S m ith.
Wcdron. III.. Ruby Vanderburg.
Calabash. N.C.. Helen Hugcn.
DeKnlb. III.. S h irley Alloto.
Garden City. Mich.: brothers.
Leman. Joliet. III.. Manley. Ottuwu. Maynard. Clinton. Mo.. Dr.
Wesley. Mlnooka, III.. Robert.
Morris. III.: 11 grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren.
G rn m kow Fu n eral Horne.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

MAROARET ANN LEWIS
Margurcl Ann Lewis. 44. 2520
Tahoe Circle. Winter Park, died
Monday. July 12 at her resi­
dence. Mrs. Lewis was a building
construction office secretary.
Horn July 5. 19-19, In Atluntlc
Clty. N.J. She moved from New
York City lo Central Florida in
1984. She was a Christian.
Survivors Include husband.

and car burglaries.'
In Longwood. police Capl.
T e r r y Baker ugreed. " T h e
background checks muy elimi­
nate some requests for gun
purchases." he suld. "but people
w h o w o u ld n 't be a b le to
purchase u gun from a reputable
dealer rould probably gel a gun
through other means
In Sanford. (Killer chief Ralph
Russell commented. "A n y time
you place strict controls on
anything such us this, all you
arr doing is increasing the bluek
market operations."
Russell said he did not expect
the stricter controls to help
reduce crime, but he favored the
waiting period during which
criminal checks ure to be made
of prospective purchasers.
The poll of 3.825 members of
the Southern S lates P olice
Benevolent Association found
95.8 percent rejected un outright
bun on all firearms und 96.4
p e r c e n t s t r o n g ly s u p p o rt
firearms ownership for self-

Tllford. Winter Purk: son. Guy
Scungarcllo. Winter Park: sis­
ters. Doris Goldin. Mousey. N.Y..
Mary Abrams. Lundisvllle. Pa.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Central Florida. Orlando, in
charge of arrangements.

LESTER
CRACKEN

HARRY

MC­

Lester Harry McCracken. 86.
420 Fust State Road 434. Winter
Springs, died Frlduy. July 9. at
Florida llosptlu l. Altam onte
Springs. Mr. McCracken was
retired salesman. Ikirn Nov. II .
1906 In Waverly. III. Hr moved
to C e n t r a l F l o r i d a fr o m
Glcnwood Springs. Colo.. In
1970. He was Protestant. He was
a member of the Blue Lodge 84.
Scottish Rite Ikidles. St. Louis
Lodge, Shrlncrs nnd Moolah
Temple o f St. Louis. He was a
32nd Degree Mason and an
Army Air Corps veteran.
Survivors Include wife. Cleo:
daughter. Elizabeth J. Dlcffcnderfer. Arlington. Va.
Ik-acon Crcarnation Service of
Central Florida. Orlando. In
churge of arrangements.

FRANKIE
PHILLIPS

MICHAEL

Frankie Michael Phillips. 6-1.
Raleigh. N.C.. died Monday.
July. 12. at her residence. Mrs.
Phillips wus u retail food sales­
woman. She was bom Aug. 1.
1928. In North Carolina.
Survivors Include husband.
W illiam Edgur Stoudcnmlrc.
Raleigh; daughter. Cynthia Gall
Phillips Exum. Hartsvllle. SC.;
sisters. Am le Anthoncy. Raleigh.
Doris Lee Regensburg. CollIn g d a lc . P a.: th ree g r a n d ­
children.
Urown-Wynnc Funeral Home
and Crematory. Raleigh. N.C.. In
charge of arrangements.

the charter amendment." Miller
explained, "for several reasons. I
don't really understand the
manning provisions (under the
guidelines cited In the ordi­
nance!."
He added that he chose to "put
|Milltlcs aside and let the people
of Longwood decide the Issue.”
In other business, the com­
mission:
• Learned It must pay the
stute a fee for retirement funds
placed in an unnunlty for city
administrator James McFcllln.
McFcllln opted for an annunlty
provision In his contract rather
than have retlnnent funds deI&gt;oxlted In the Florida Retirement
System. Even though funds are
not deposited In FRS. Vose said,
the stale still requires u type of
service fee be paid. McFcllln said
the city may have lo |&gt;ay $2,000
more than they expected.
• Agreed to mutch a $6,500
Florida Division of Historic Re­
sources (DHR) grant to be used
In the development of a separate
historic preservation element
within the Comprehensive Plan.
• Accepted a citizen petition

protection.
About 86 percent said waiting
(K-rlods to purchase guns would
nffect only law-abiding citizens,
and 63.8 percent preferred an
Instant background check.
The officers ranked drugs, the
decline of family values and the
combination of light prison sen­
tences and early re 1ruse pro­
grams ns the top three reasons
for the nation's upsurge In
violent crime.
T h e p o ll, c o n d u c te d by
Spectrum Resources Inc. o f
Tullnhu&amp;scc. Flu., has a less than
1 percent margin o f error.
"W c simply had enough of
every special Interest group ...
c l a i m i n g t h e y s p o k e fo r
runk-und-fllc officers on the sub­
ject of gun control." association
President Jack Roberts said
Frlduy. "T h e only way to know
how law enforcement feels about
gun control is to usk them."
The association hus 10.614
members in Virginia. Kentucky.
North Carolina. South Carolina.
Tennessee. Arkansas. Georgia.
Alabama. Mississippi. Louisiana
and Florida.

for the paving of West Huy
Avenue located between County
Road 427 and Mllwce Street. It
will Ik * placed on the paving
priority list In the 1993/1991
budget.
• Approved a resolution adop­
ting rule and regulations lor
Longwood Memorial Gardens
and the Longwood Cemetery.

Cracker-------Continued from Page 1A
1969 In Lebanon. Tenn..
according to Information pro­
vided by the corporate Informa­
tion office. The chain has 153
stores throughout the south.
Including 13 In Florida. The
company opens 24 to 25 new
stores yearly. Locally, there arc
Cracker Barrel restaurants In
W in ter Haven and Daytona
Hcach.
D r. J a m e s lllc k m u n .
Spaceport USA developer, said
n egotiation s have been un­
derway with Cracker Barrel for
three years.
"It's not a done deal, but It's a
lot closer." Hickman said last
week.
Hickman said Spaceport will
sell three acres ulong 1-4 Imme­
diately north of the McDonald's
restaurant. Hickman said the
purchase will be contingent
upon county approvals.
Neither Hickman nor Reddy
would discuss the selling price of
the deal.
Dave Farr, director o f the
Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce, tuiid llie rcutaurunl
could provide Jobs to a large
number o f out-of-work people.
"T h e folks that will be working
at Cracker Barrel will be quali­
fied to work most anywhere."
suld F a rr. " T h e y h a ve an
excellent training program with
good management advancement
opportunities. It will definitely
fill a niche of people who arc
looking for work."
Farr ndded the growing devel­
opment at the 1-4. State Road 46
Interchange will attract more
people to Sanford's, downtown
merchants.
" A lot o f people who go to the
mull und travel the Interstate
who will slop ut Cracker Uarrel
will hear about the historic
qualnlness o f downtown Sanford
and decide to visit It." he said.

Sanford Herald
Is a proud member of the "Welcome
Wagon" Family In Seminole County

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

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
ansv/er your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Live In One Of These Areas, Please Call

Sanford
323-5265
Lake Mary
321-6660
Longwood- 869-8612 or 774-1231
Winter Springs 777-3370
Altamonte
339-4468
Casselberry
695-7974
Oviedo
•
695-3819
Or Anytime Oay Or Nigh! C al 646-9644

�• A - S e n fo r d Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tuesday, July 13. 199.1

Justified or not,
some states
get the joshing

Business Review

WHY FIRE???
You'll Love s *
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By AVIVA L. BRANDT
Associated Press Writer
CH ARLE STO N. W.Vn. - West Virginia?
Hlllhllllt-* and Ural cousins who marry each oilier.
New Jersey? "D id you hear the latest?" Johnny
Carson once quipped. "A tidal wave hit the New
Jersey coast — causing $7.52 In damage."
Arkansas? People without shoes. George Hush
also railed Arkansas "the biggest failure of the
United Stales." although, it must be admitted,
that was more o f a swipe at Hill Clinton.
It's enough to make you wonder where all the
Jokes are about uncultured Connecticut residents
or hick Rhode Islanders.
Hut the Rodney Dangcrflrlds o f the road atlas
can take heart: Help. In the form of these touchy
times, may be on the way.
"It's a lot more dlfHcult to use stereotypes In
general." says Tim Kelleher. a staff writer for
"T h e Arsenin Hall Show " and a former stand-up
comic. "W e're living In such politically correct
times."
" I think If It doesn't hurt anyone directly. It's
O K,” he said. " I f you're saying people In
Appalachia marry their cousins. If you go to
Appalaehlu. you got a problem. Hut If you go
somewhere else and say you were Just In
Appalachia, it's O K ."
Still. Kelleher acknowledged, "People are so
touchy. You have to be so Innocuous. You make a
Joke and you get five phone culls the next day
from people who were offended."
Regional stereotypes In Amcrlcu date back to
Urlllsh Jokes about Yankees, then portrayed as
uncouth country’ bumpkins, said Ken Thigpen, a
Penn State University professor o f folk history
and American studies.
"T h ere arc often conflicting stereotypes."
Thigpen said. "O ne Texas stereotype Is of a
braggart, who says. ‘ Everything's bigger In
Texas, everything's better In Texas.* At the same
time, there's the western Texas stereotype of the
man of few words."
Stereotypes often develop as u rivalry between
neighboring states, lie said, while others are more
regionally based.
Hut he couldn't explain why some states
continue to be the butt of Jokes while others
aren’t.
" I think there arc those places that are
’different." Thigpen said, “ for better or worse."
An example: It recently was discovered that a
Kentucky softwure maker that uses graphics to
symbolize each o f the 50 states ofTcred an Igloo
for Alaska, a cable car for California, a horse for
Kentucky — and an outhouse for West Virginia.
That's exactly the kind of thing that West
Virginia Tourism and Parks Commissioner John
Brown worried about before taking his Job four
years ago.
" I came to the Job with the bias of most
natives." Drown said. "A fter growing up hearing
about all the negative things about West Virginia.
yttu think everyone's thinking negative things
about the state."
But a survey several years ago showed most
people did not think poorly of West Virginia.
Brown said.
"W e not only had no negative Image, we hud no
Image. People didn't know where we were or
what we were like," he said.
Gerald Hall, vice president of the New Jersey
Chamber of Commerce, called It "un uphill
battle" to pullsb the Garden Slate's besmirched
Image, rooted in the urban decay characteristic of
towns like Newark and Camden and Industrial
pollution common along one short stretch of the
; New Jersey Turnpike.
There Is truth to the negative linage of New
Jersey's Industrial parts, but to sully the entire
state Is unfair. Hall said.
Much of New Jersey Is farmland, and the slate
also has a wide expanse of forestland known as
the Pine Barrens and miles of beaches that attract
tourists from the Northeast and Canada. Hall
said. Travel maguzlncs and beach-goers describe
the state's southern coast as one of the nation's
most beautiful.
"But It's hard to fight the Image, the cliches."
Hall said. "Johnny Carson loved to pick on New
Jersey. ... Everything Is so Instantaneous today
that one crack by Carson undoes a lot o f work you
may have done."
Sometimes, the Jokes don't work.
Bush, whose presidential campaign included
attacks on Arkansas ("th e lowest of the low"). Is
retired, while the Ozarks' Clinton Is living In the
White House.

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Bvauty Boutique (left to right) Roma Padda, Batty Norwood and Bill* Crows (stated).

SOI 1 MVS | S I

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...make me beautiful to alll Beauty Boutique can
moke you look and feel beautiful with halrstyltng
fashion clothing and unique Jewelry, all at their
Beauty Boutique location. Betty Norwood and
Roma Pedde started their business In March of
this year at 2518 Park Drive In Sanford. Their
salon can do Just about anything for that perfect
look: family halrstyltng. colors, frostlngs. high­
lights. perms, barber cuts, shampoo and seta.
Family and senior citizen discounts ore given.
Both Nexxus and Redken products are featured.
Both Betty and Roma have kept updated with oil
the new cuts and styles. Betty has done hair here
In Sanford for 17 years, and loves to update your
looks. She has been married for 27 years, has 3
children and 7 grandchildren, which help to keep
her young Roma has owned shops In Lake Mary,

Sanford, and ML Dora, and even has spent some
time In Germany. She has 2 children and 3
grandchildren.
The boutique has many handmade Items: oneof-a-kind clothing, porcclnln dolls. Jewelry, flower
arrangements and wood crafts. Consignment
clothing Is all updated, upgraded, and seasonal.
There Is a nice selection ol hnrd-to-dnd women's
large sizes, blue Jeans, nml special occasion out­
fits. Bllla Crews. Roma's sister. Is the shops con­
signment 'buyer*. Site also has taught arts and
crafts.
Come and get beautiful, and then browse the
boutique. Hours are 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p m. Mon­
days thru Fridays, and 8.00 a m. to 2:30 p m. on
Saturdays, or phone 321-0059.

CERAM IC FEVER

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Lccep6ona!}y rke consignment clothes for women
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Ron Russell, executive vice president of the
i Arkansas Chamber o f Commerce, said he didn't
ji let Bush's zlngers bother him.
After all. he noted, "backwoods" Arkunsu* is
home to powerhouse corporations such as
Stephens Inc. — the largest brokerage linn off
Wull Street In the country — Wal-Mart Stores
Inc., and Tyson Foods Inc.
"T h a t's politics. You don't take politics
pirsonnlly." Russell said of Hush's remarks. “ I
didn't particularly like It. but politics Is open
season. I don't think u lot of people put u lot of
credibility In things that are said in the hrat of
campaigns.
"T h e fact of the matter Is. people In Arkunsu*
have a lot of pride, as they do In West Virginia."
he said. "But we realize who we are. ... I think
you cun spend too much lime worrying about
your Image."

n

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Sanlord Herald, Sanford. Florida - Tueeday. July 13, 1993 - 7A

N

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CustomClothesAtAPriceYouCanAfford.

Business Review

| Come Celebrate Our lit AnnKcranry Sale

Prepared by th* Advertising Dap). ol lh#

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BRIDAL
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701 S. FRENCH AVE (HWY. 17-92} SANFORD • 322-8600

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Publlth July t 17. IQ. and 77.
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c*r1*licai*(t) hat lll*d tald cert
lllc*l*lt) lor a lav dead lo b*
lltued th*r*on Th* cerllllcal*
n u m b trltl and y * a r (t ) ol
Ittuanc*. th* description ol th*
properly, end lh* n*m *(t) In
which II wat attetted 11 'art at
lollowt
Cerllllcal* No 1710
Ytarol Ittuanc* It**
Description ol Property LEG
SEC Of TWP JOS RGE J7E N
77f JS FT OF NW 'a (LESS W
UM H FT i E *70 II FT!
Nam«t In which attetted
Development Corp ol St Johnt
All ol tald properly being In
lb* County ol Seminole. Slat* ol
Florida
U nl*tt tuch c e rtificate!!)
than be redeemed according lo
law. lh* property deter.ted In
tuch c*rliflc«l*(tl will br told
lo lh* hlgh*tl bidder al lh# n*tl
Ironl door. S*mlnot* County
Cour thoui*. Sanlord. Florida, on
lh* tth day ol Augutl. 1WJ. al 11
AM
* Approximately tt7&gt;00 rath
lor l**t it required lo b* paid by
lh* tuccettlul bidder *1 lh* tale
Full payment of *n amount
equal lo the hlghet* bid p&lt;ut
applicable documentary ttamp
lavtt and recording fee, It due
wllhln 74 hourt alte r lh*
adverllted lime ol lh* tale All
payment! lhatl be cath or guar
antted Intlrumenl, mad* pay
abl* lo lh# Clerk ol the Circuit
Court
Dated Ihlt Jlth day ol June,

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NOTICE OF CODE
ENFORCEMENT BOARD
PROCEEDINGS
TO Anthony! Id* Fikett
or th# ownerltl Ol th# loMO*
Ing described prop*'*/
E 'v o l Lot l i t All Lot l»U * t»
S II III Blk If 2nd S*c S*n Lenta
PB 4 PC 40
n&gt; E K tm U i Dr , Sanford.
Florid*
RE Cat* No « !U
Th* Sanford Cod* Enforce
nvmt Board wat created t ,
Sanford City Cod*. Ordinance
HI*. at amended. « t author lied
by Ch*pl*r IU. Florid* Sill
Utet Th* purpose ol thll Bo*rd
If to 1*0111*1* lh* enforcement
ol lh* codtt *nd ordinances in
lore* In Iho CUy ol Sanlord You
h*v* b**n charged with vlo
Idling lh* following Cod* on
your property Ch*pl*r It, i*c
1171 A U K. Ch*pl*r A. t»c
* 11 (101 i 1al by (Mowing |unk
t dvbrit lo accumulate upon
premltev Idling to m*lnt«in
Structure. (Mowing euto parti to
remain In op*n ilor*g*
You or* h*r«by formally roll
ll*d th*t a Public Hearing will
b* conducltd m lb* *bov* tfyl*d
caul* by th* Cod* Enlorc*m*nl
Board ol ttw City ol Sanlord on
lh* 10th day ol Auguil. Iffl. al
100 p m . In lh* City Com
million Chambtr*. Room 117,
Sanford City Hall. TOO N Park
Av*nu*. Sanlord. Florid*, con
earning lh* above tiyled vlo
latlon Th* Board wilt racilv*
testimony and *yld*n&lt;« al tad
Haarlng and that I mak* rinding*
ol la d and conclutIon* ol law
You or* h*r*by or dared lo
*pp**r b*lor* that Board al lh*
Htarlng lo amwar lh* charges
and present your tld* ol lh*
cat* You bar* lh* right lo
obtain an attorney, al your own
• &gt;p*nt*. lo r*pr*t*nl you b*l0»*
lh* Board You ha** lh* right lo
call witnesses on your bahall at
w*ll at to crottaiamin* *M
olh*r witn«tt*t II you do not
app*ar. lh* Board m*y proc**d
without you Should lh* Board
d *l*rm ln * that • violation
•aitlt. II hat lh* power to Ittu*
Order 1 requiring you lo bring
th* violation into compliance
Including lh* pow*r lo lovy llnat
and c r*a l* a Han on your
properly up lo S7JOOO for each
day lh* violation continual pail
lh* dal* t*l lor compliant* by
th* Board ! Order
II lh* violation It not cor
reeled by lh* lima ol lh* Hear
Ing or II, prior lo lh* Haarlng.
you com* Into compliant* with
lh* abor* tt*t*d alleged cod*
violation but lh* violation recurs
prior lo lh* Public Hearing, lh*
Hearing will b* h*ld on th*
allegation! agamil you
II you bar* qu*tU0nt con
earning Ihlt m *ll*r, pleat*
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�BA - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tuesday. July 13, 1993

___________________________________________________ _____________________________________ _______ _______________

—

■

Midwest flooding like ‘a Third World country
By MIKE QLOVER
Associated Press Writor
OKS MOINES. Iowa Residents carrying
plastic Jugs lined up for their five-gallon rations of
drinking wafer In the flood-stricken Oes Mollies
area, and hundreds o f Midwesterners were
Inoculated against water-borne diseases.
"I feel like we're In a Third World country,
said Ed Conlow. a researcher for life Iowa stole
House.
The rain-swollen Mississippi River and Us
tributaries continued to swallow up land today In
i)te upper Midwest as residents and National
Guardsmen ptlrd sandbags to try to save homes
and businesses.
lies Moines and other cities have been brought

to a near standstill. About 250.000 people In and
around Iowa's capital were without running
water after floodwaters knocked out a water
treatment plant over the weekend.
Damage across the region will far exceed the
S I.2 billion In aid announced by President
Clinton last week. Gov. Terry Branstad sold.
Hranstad said he will ask the government to
declare all of Iowa a disaster area.
The flooding has caused at least 19 deaths. 13
In Missouri. The Red Cross said more than 7.600
homes were damaged or destroyed In Minnesota.
Wisconsin. South Dakota. Nebraska. Iowa.
Kansas. Missouri and Illinois.
No looting has been reported, but some
residents still feared losing their belongings. In
West Alton. Mo.. Michael Payeur refused to leave
Ills waterlogged home and relied on supplies

brought to him by boat by Ills daughter.
"There's looters out here." he said. "T h ey can
gel in and out."
Water Patrolman Don Carnahan nnvlgated the
West Alton area with care. "You got to watch the
road signs," he said. "They'll sure cut a hole In
the bout."
Vice President Al Gore visited Lcmny. Mo., and
Grafton. III., on Monday. The water was so high
he had to duck when Ills boat passed under
power lines. He also look a helicopter tour and
••uld In wonder. "You can’t even tell where the
Mississippi begins and the farmland ends."
Gore talked to the president by phone and then
assured residents there would l&gt;c a "forceful,
coordinated response."
More rain was forecast for today and Wednes­
day. but the National Weather Service said It was

...&lt;i cvneeted to raise water levels. Some
Mississippi tributaries were slowly falling. The
D e s Moines River was 7.8 feet above flood stage at
Des Moines on Monday but was down nearly a
fool from Sunday's record crest.
In Missouri, nurses from Cameron Community
Hospital and the Harrison County Health De­
partment gave more than 800 Inoculations for
(llnhihcrta and tetanus from Friday to Monday.
3,1 Mary Trlpollno. the hospital's nursing
director.
Missouri health officials warned those working
around the floodwaters to get shots. The water
has been contaminated with raw sewage, fertiliz­
er a n d other contaminants.
Health Officials In Des Moines opened a cllnl&lt;
offering free tetanus shots.

President Clinton’s budget and your money

As goes Hawaii,
so goes the nation
on health care?

R e s t a u r a n t s lo b b y to s a v e m e a l d e d u c t i o n s
Meetings were arranged during the recess
with the olflees of a dozen key lawmakers.
Including I louse Ways ami Means Commit­
tee Chairman Dan Roslenkowskl. D-lll.
Leach led a group ol restaurant owners to
meet In Hillings. Mont., with an aide to Sen.
Max Haunts. I) Mont.

WASHINGTON — In Southfield. Midi..
Reid Ashton Is afraid President Clinton's lax
package Is going to kill Ills upscale restau­
rant business. In Maryland, waitress Jan
Hergwall lean* losing her Job And Bozeman.
Mont., restaurateur Parker Leach says lu­
st.mils to lose $160,000 a year.
As lawmakers return to Washington today
from their July Fourth recess, the ears of
many will Ik- ringing with complaints about
at least one aspect of Clinton's deficit
reduction plan: cutting the deductibility of
business meals from 80 percent down to 50
percent.
"They're assessing me anil excising me to
death." said Ashton, owner of the Golden
Mushroom restaurant In the Detroit sub­
urbs. "W hy does the government think they

While cautioning that every­
thing in Hawaii's plan might
not III the rest o f the country,
she said. "There ate some very
HONOLULU - Hinting at
strong features ol the Hawai­
th e s h a p e o f P r e s id e n t
ian system that I want the
Clinton's health care plan.
Am erican people to know
Hillary Rodham Clinton says
about as we m ove Into a
H a w a ii's grou n d -b rea k in g
discussion of the president's
program Is a good example ol
proposals.
how to provide near universal
" A lot of concerns they have
coverage at lower costs.
are: Will cvrryltody Is- cov­
She said President Clinton's
ered? Will everybody Is- taken
pro|K)sal — delayed now until
care ol? Will we have security
September — won’ t require
no matter who I work lor. no
major tax increases although
matter what my health condi­
"there may Ik- some taxes ...
tion Is? And the only place In
on cigarettes or something" to
our country that's even come
pay for federal oversight of the
program. A tax as high as $2 a close to answering those Is In
Hawaii."
pack has been discussed.
She said Hawaii pays about
"There's a lot to be learned
9 percent of Its stale gross
from the Hawaiian system ."
domestic product for health
the first lady said as she
care compared with 14 percent
focused a national spotlight on
nationally.
"That ts a big
this tiny state's Innovative
margin because you're talking
program. She planned to take
big dollars." she said.
part in a forum today on the
"W e believe there Is a rela­
strengths and weaknesses ol
tionship between their near
Hawaii's system.
universal coverage through
Kuwait's plan Is built around
tills system and the lower cost
a r e q u ir e m e n t th a t a ll
employers provide health In­ per capita that business and
individuals have to bear In
surance for employees who
Hawaii." Mrs. Clinton added.
work at least 20 hours a week.
She expressed strong skep­
P e o p l e n o t c o v e r e d by
ticism about the Canadianemployer plans or Medicare or
styled "s in gle -p a yer" plan
Medicaid are protected by a
wtllcli itlvv* ilir Hiivnnmull
• lu te l»r .m il uiM ir.iiK i* iila n .
Compared with other Amer­ centralized control over health
Insurance. It Is favored bv
icans. Hawaii's I.) million
many In Congress.
residents rank at or near the
“ The single jMtycr system
top In health status.
would require. If It were truly
Mrs. C lin to n d iscu ssed
to lie a single payer system, a
health cure Monday In an
significant lax Increase right
Interview with reporters on the
now because you'd Imslcally
bcarli. sitting under u shade
be te llin g em p lo yers und
tr e e n e a r w a t e r 's e d g e .
employees. You're going to
Clinton's plan Is expected to
m ake a con trib u tio n but
r e q u i r e e m p l o y e r s und
you're going to do It through
employees to share Insurance
the tax system Instead of
costs In a yet-lo-be defined
t h r o u g h t h e p r e m iu m
way.
approach which Is how Insur­
The president, meanwhile,
ance Is paid for.’" she said.
played golf from morning till
"A n d I think that for a lot of
night. 18 holes on one course
people, they don't want to give
and then 18 holes on another.
up the control they currently
White House aides left open
have or at least feel that they
the possibility that Clinton
have In paying for their own
might stop In the Midwest to
hculth care." Mrs. Clinton
view flood damage on his
added.
return to W ash ington on
"A n d a lot of the large
Wednesday.
The architect of the presi­ employers with whom we've
consulted over the last several
d en t's plan. Mrs. Clinton
months are desperate to get
sought to allay con cern s
costs under control but they
among business groups u'ooul
want some mechanism lor
being required to provide
being u continuing pluyer In
health Insurance.
that, they're not ready to say.
She said Hawaii's program
has. "so far as we cun de­ 'Let the government go do It
for us.
termine. very few adverse
"So. there are both flnunelal
c o it s e q u c n c e s f o r th e
considerations and kind of
employers."
altitudinal considerations that
"Most employers view the
would ... I think, make It
provision of health care for
difficult at this (Milnt In our
their employees as part of the
history to turn lo the Ameri­
social contract In a sense,
can people and say, 'We're
which they think makes sense
going to have a governmentfor them because everybody's
run health care system."'
in the system then."
By T E R E N C E H U N T

AP Whlto House Writor

ness. They try to keep very' cordial rela­
tionships with their members o f Congress."
said Mark Gorman, a lobbyist for the
National Restaurant Association. "Hut
things have changed, and they're mad. I've
never seen II llkr this."

should ruin my particular kind of busi­
ness?"

By JIM DRINK ARD
Associated Press Writer

By proposing to lower the 80 percent tax
deduction to 50 percent. Clinton hopes not
only lo bring In $16 billion over five years
but lo give his budget package some
populist appeal by targeting the "threemartini lunch."

Restaurant e x e c u tiv e s and servers
picketed outside the Manhattan office ol
Senate Finance Chairman Daniel Patrick
Moynlhan. D-N.Y.

Hill restaurants are fighting back, using
two ol lobbying s favorite tools: a grassroots
appeal that portrays low-income waitresses
and minority employees — not wealthy
businessmen — as Clinton's victims, and a
disputed study that claims the Industry will
Itis&lt;* 165.000 Jobs If the provision passes

And television x|M&gt;tx were aired In al least
15 cities featuring Hergwall. who urged TV
viewers lo call a toll-free number and Ikconnected with their senator's office to
register complaints.
"Our people are in the hospitality busi­

&amp;
"Who should 1call If my nswspapsr Is wet, late or missing?"
Subscribers should cal our orculaton department any tuns toex paper ••
*ot m uing or unreadable W ei defcvr* a now paper at toon a t pottM a It
it it alter 5p m Monday through Friday or after S 00 am Send-iyt and your
paper hatnT arrived, please cal and wo? nakn *•!»• *« dshverod to you

"May I suggest Ideas lor storks?"
Certainly Write to toe assignment
odtor, it it Is urgent, call toe news
room ‘

I "How can I gal publicity prlmsd about a
_ local svsnt?"

"What If I havs an urgsnl naws Up?"
~

C

e

l

toe newsroom

H it is about sometomg tost won!
happen for several days, maJ us a ne’e
tolirig us who. what, where, why and
whon MarX it to toe attonBon ol toe
Assignment Desk Indude your daytime telephone
numoor If ifs mere urgent, cal too newsroom

A

"Do you print
letters to the editor?
Ws welcome letters to toe odter
Letter! should be on a single topic,
bnal end tivtl Mark toem to toe alienson ol
Letters to toe Editor. They should be signod end
include your address and daybme phone number

_

A

"What If I havs a complaint about
something reported In the
r. . newspaper?"
X jL •

W A S H IN G T O N A fte r
months of behind-the-scenes In­
fighting. President Clinton will
unveil a significantly scaledtrack loan program for creditstarved Inner clllrs and rural
areas this week.
He originally
envisioned creating 100 new
community development banks,
modeled after South Shore Hank
of Chicago. They were to foster
housing development, commu­
nity projects and small busi­
nesses In distressed arcus un­
derserved by trudltlonal lenders.
But an existing network of
community development corpo­
rations. loan funds and credit
unions pointed out thut they
ulready were striving to do the
same thing.
5k&gt;. under the administration's
current proposal, they would be
eligible to apply to a nine-

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to tho paper?"

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department at 322-2611
between l a m andfipm
weekdays and we can
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»

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Community lending plan
only half its former self
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Aaaoclatod Pross Wilier________

*

"How Is the nawspaper useful lo students
and teachers In today's classrooms?"

member board for grants and
seed money to expand their
activities. Investors trying lo
slarl new community develop­
ment banks would have to
compete for grants front the
same pool of money — $382
million over four years.
The money Involved Is much
less than first projK»sed. Before
Clinton took office, transition
aides had written a plan lo spend
$850 million over five years. A
similar plan drafted by Senate
Hanking Committee aides curly
tills year would have provided
$1.2 billion.
.
A drall message lo Congress
prepared far Clinton's signature
urges early enactment of the
C o m m u n it y D e v e lo p m e n t
Hanking and Flnanelul Institu­
tions Act of 1993 and asks
lawmakers not lo let the bill gel
delayed hv contentious financial
service Issues such as Interstate
thinking.

Newspapers lor dassroom use are sold at a
discount rate to encourage school partci
pation For inlorma&amp;on on program, contact our
circulation dopartmont at 322-2611.

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A

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S p o rts
D is tric t title s
AROUND THE STATE
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Oviedo Majors, Altamonte Seniors one
victory away from tournament crowns
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Compl ot n l i e t l n g * on P a ge 2D
s i r M l Ison 1'iig r 2 II

»'U:
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�I S &gt; Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, July 13, 1093

Bowling

STATS &amp; STANDING S
Aitoiiribifpniflit
f lr»1 race — 1*54. At J0.*l
lA R M e lk M e n
10 JO ) M 400
4 Fond A Cash
) 10 &gt;40
I RC Sally Groton
3 to
O IIO ) I0.M R I I 4111. X T (l-o-u 110.40
W c M 4 r K l- lM 4 .C i&gt; t J t
JCK Genie
ION 140 I X
1Omni IU K *
&gt;40 I N
11’m The Rosa
110
0 It M 11.40 R ( M l 141 M T (I M l 154*4
0 0 (1-1) 144-M
Third rac* — 1454. D: M.*4
1SJ Falcon
5 40 7 X I N
1 Public Approach
140 140
) Eaton Plenty
140
Q ( M l 11.00 P (11110.M T ( M i l 114 M
Feerfhrac* - 1450, Ci II.tt
)L w »F iy A w a y
on * n am
« Just Apoodi*
IN
1M
1 Stor mm Del
1140
O &lt;!4&gt; M.M P tl-0) 40.10 T (I t !&gt; 154.N
Fina rot* -1450.0: 11.41
4 Trlpl*Cross
O N 4 40 1 40
1 Great Reverence
1 40 I N
I Tracy sPlufo
40
0144) 114* P 14-1114.14 T 14 441 1*1 *0
tilth rot* — H44. 0: 14.01
I Spirit s*n«
17 40 I N * N
IM T i Freebird
4 N 1 40
I Aitic Pride
4 00
0 (1-4) 11.00 P (4-11 *1.10 T (4111 114 00
Pith 111-4 411 *11141.04
Seventh r » n — 145*. A; 11.0*
]J C * King And I
MIC II N *40
• Task Fat Ctunc*
SOD 140

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0 11-41 40.0* PI M l 114.4* T (14 1) 4,a X t
11-410)1*11.4*
Ktghthraw - 141*. B. li. lt
4 Kentucky Bonnie
&gt;1 N 1*0 I N
0 My Lltttrw Nlnoon
1*0 140
7 TB Font Grace
ION
O 14 0111.4* P (4*1to X T I* t i l 44* 1*
Ninth rac* - 141*. A M 44
1Urban i tta*l
* 004 M I N

2 Talk Otar Jordan
7Madras Fire

4N

IN
IN

O II I) 14 X P (M l 114* T I I1 M 114 0* OO
( 4 * t l 1I1I1.M
Itth rar* — 141*. Oi 11.41
4Omni Lucltrr
I N I N 110
7 Holland Elvll
4 00 I N
1 Cam Royal
I 40
0(1-4) 11** P (4-1111.M T ( t l im .M
nth r a t * - HI*. C: 11.5*
5 EepretslaneJim
11 N I N I N
• JO't Leapnhounds
140 1*0
4 ML Jeopardy
1 40
O ( M l M.4* P (5-4) 45.10 T (14 4) 11V.N
Carry**** 10*1.11
IXftrace — M44. A: 1*55
1RV T*ntp*cd
1*40 ION I N
• Monies Babe
ON I N
1 Bobbin Bart
4N
O l i t ) 11.4* P (1 01 15U0 T l i t » 44144 t
( I t 1-5) 10*4.40
11thrata- 1410. B; 11 40
1 Jam
11 W 0 40 I N
1 Dewey Turbodrlv*
U N UN
• Jutl P*t*r Pan
*N
O &lt;M ) M.N P 11 1) IM.M T ( t i t ) 10*0.10
14* rar* — IN * Ti *4.11
1 Brandy parhar
I f 00 0*0 I N
0JCKBuddy
IN
IN

Florida (Hammond I M ) al Clnclnnall
IBalcherM ), lil l p m .
Pittsburgh (Tomlin 11) al Atlanta IGlavIn*
10 41, J 40 p m
Colorado I Blair 14) at Chicago (Morgan
* * ) . I 01pm
Houston (Drabek 1 *) al St Louis (Arocha
*ll.0 :1 5 p m.
Montreal I Da Marlin*: io 5) at Los Angeles
(P J Martinet 4 11.10:15pm
Southern Ltagwa
5*(and Hall
Eetlern Diviiwn
W
L Ptl.
OB
Knoialll* (Blue Jays)
•
10
iH —
Carolina (Pirates)
*
474 1
10
Orlando (Cubs)
»
If
.474 1
• Greenville (Braves)
4)1 )
1 II
Jacksonville (M enn*rt) 7 II
.11* )•&gt;
W*st*rn DiviSton
4*4 —
Chattanooga I Reds 1
I)
a
1
&gt;
4)1
Memphis IRoyalt)
t)
550 )&lt;&gt;
Birmingham (WS«&gt; 1
11
*
II
*
Huntsvilto (Alhltcll
510 ) ’ &gt;
■ Nashville (Twins)
4 14
)00 &gt;'*
* won first halt division title
Monday's Games
AA All Star gama at Memphis
National League ll. American League 1
Tuesday's Games
Ho games scheduled
Wednesday's Ga met
Chattanooga at Orlande
Knoiville at Jacksanvilla
Huntsville al Carolina
Birmingham at Memphis
Florida Slal* League
Secend Hall
Eaittrn Division
W
L Pet.
Vyro Beach IOodg*n)
11
7
*11
St Luci* (Mats)
4
7
s»
444
Osceola (Astros)
1 10
W P B*a&lt;h lEaposI
7
»
4j*
7 10
Daytona (Cubs)
41}
Fori Lauderdal* (Red Seal 7 11
to*
a Lakeland 1Tigers)
. 4 10 -)7)
Western Division
Charlolt* (Rangers)
II
7 *11 Sarasota (While Soal
II
7
4)1
SI Pel* (Cardinals)
10
7
544
7
Fori Myers (Twins)
*
U)
DuneOm (Blue Jays)
474
»
10
a Ci«arwafer lPhillies)
7
f
4)7
a won llrsl halt division HIM
Monday’s Games
Lais Games Net Included
Clearwater s. Fort Lauderdale 1
Daytona*. Lakeland)
Osceola).St Lucie)
Vero Beach 1. Dunedin 4
Charlotte at West Palm Beach, ml
Saratotaal Fori Myers, (n)
Tuesday's Games
Fort Lauderdale at Osceola
Fort Myers at St Lucie
Lakeland at Vero Beach
St Petersburg al West Palm Beach
Charlotte at Clearwatar
Daytona at Dunedin
Wednesday's Games
Fort Lauderdale al Osceola
Fori Myers al 51 Lucie
Lakeland at Vero Beach
51 Petersburg#! Wesl Palm Beech
Charlotte *t Clearwater
Daytona at Dtmodfn

CO
Its
)
)
J 'j
4
4

‘4
1
)'S
)

i oC ( i t i i a t t p n t ) to.it s n - t t i ) * n * o 4 X
A—*Mj H-5II7.H1

All-Star Lineups
BALTIMORE — The starling lineup* and
pitchers lor Tuesday night * All Star gam* al
Camdtn Yards:
fOatian* I League
Marquis Grissom, cl, Montreal
All Times ID T
Barry Bends. It. San Francisco
AMERICAN LKAOUC
Gary Sheffield, lb. Florida
Eat) Dfvlstan
John Kruk. lb. Philadelphia
W
L Pel. 01
Bar'y Larkin, ss. Clnclnnall
4* 40 . 1 5 1 Toronto
• Mark Grace.dh. Chicago
40 40
545
&gt;1
Detroit
David Justice, rf. Atlanta
New York
4* 41
51* I
Darren Oaulton. c. Philadelphia
41 41
514 19
Baltimore
Rynt Sandberg, lb. Chic ego
Boston
45 &lt;1
111 1
Starter: Terry Mulhoi land. Philadelphia
40 at .451 1&lt;1
Cleveland
17
at
.4)0
10&gt;)
Milwaukee
American League
W ell DhrlMan
Roberta Alomar, lb. Toronto
«
L Ptl. OB
Paul Molltor, dh. Toronto.
45 41 .11) Chicago
Ken Grlltoy Jr , cl. Seattle.
44 41 .51) 1
Kansas City
Jo* Carter, rt, Toronto
44 4) .511 I
Tanas
JohnOMrud. lb. Toronto
44 44
500 1
Seattle
Kirby Puckett, II. Minnesota
41 41
500 1
California
Cal R token, ss, Baltimore
X
44
45] 4
Oakland
Wad* Boggs, lb. New York
Minnesota
M 4*
411 19
Ivan Rodriguat.c Tanas
Manday'i Games
Starter: Mark Langston.California
No games scheduled
Tuesday's dam*
All Star gam* al Baltimore. I X p m
Wednesday'* Gamtt
No games : h*duled
Thwraday’t Gam**
California (Langston * )&gt; *1 Cleveland
AMERICAN LEAOUE
IMi m M I. 1:05pm.
TEAM BATTING
O** land (Welch 44) at New York I Peru
H: H HR RBI1P tl
AB
4 0 ),):10pm
XM&gt; 455 1)7 *5 477 )75
Toronto
Kano** City (Con* * I) *1 Toronto (Gutman New York
&gt;107 440 454 tot 434 .*74
M ). 1:15pm
&gt;010 41) 074 •7 7*7 &gt;7)
Cleveland
Minnesota (Tapani 111) at Baltimor*
x in &gt;04 434 105 440 i r t
Detroit
(Mussina 1041, l:15p m.
7*44 141 •04 54 145 *71
Kansas City
SaattN (Firming 4 1) at Boston IViola 11).
X03 404 10* 17 &gt;74 74*
Seattle
1:15 p.m.
Tt 14 4)7 700 H 400 &gt;47
Chicago
Chicago (Ftrnandtt 10 4) at Milwaukee
2*44 451 704 to 4)1 &gt;45
Teaas
(N a v a rro M l.t 01pm
7444 MS 744 04 1)7 7*5
Minnesota
Detroit (Wells *41 at T*ias (Brown *4),
7*0* J7J 777 55 551 2*5
Boston
0 15pm
7**S 7*4 740 71 34* 7*0
Baltimore
7454 345 7U • 1 15* ))7
California
7447 Ml 774 •4 347 )M
NATIONAL LEAOUE
Oakland
East DtvNton
Milwaukee
7*70 &gt;41 744 57 &gt;41 )5a
Pet.
OB
W L
*40
INDIVIDUAL BATTING
Philadelphia
tt
»
J* .504 5
SI. Lewis
SI
Based on 15* plat* appearances.
Montreal
4* 40 .545 I 'l
R H HR RBI Avg
AB
477 I4'»
41 45
Chicago
Ml 54 in
15 4* .3*5
Oterud Tor
Pittsburgh
4) 44 .477 149
147 &gt;1 4*
1 X 5)5
E spinel* Cle
Florida
5# .421 1*
5 ) ) .in
))
&gt;1) 74 70
Vegui Bal
40 n *
New York
*0
II
&gt;10 x
it
O Neill NY
743 31 ♦)
West DtvNton
7 } ) 224
)7) 4] 0*
Hamilton Mil
OB
1
17
&gt;7l
W L
Pet.
5)7 47 10)
Lofton Cto
San Francisco
*
»
XI
44)
»
U 571
IU »
LeyrltiNY
Ul *
4 77 .5)1
50 )*
X Mania
IN 31 *1
Trammell Del
Houston
)X i)
4* 41
74: 5* *1 2) 40 170
Conialet Tea
44 41
Lbs Angelas
5X a
7 40 51*
&gt;10 45 47
Whitaker Del
500 14*1
4} 45
Clnclnnall
1)5 s. 105 77 40 717
Orilley Jr Sea
54
J7» 1)
Color ado
u
341 t) 110
5 &gt;4 114
McRae KC
&gt;71 74
San 01*90
54
41 514
»
771 7* 77 II
Stanley NY
Monday's Games
7 X 514
&gt;»4 47 t]
Hak tier Bos
No games scheduled
4 47 11)
) l t 00 100
Phillip* Del
Tuesday's Cam*
0 M 511
LJohnson Chi
315 41 *4
All Slargam **! Baltimore. I X p m
*
44 DO
Harper Min
711 I ) 17
Wednesday's Games
74* 47 4* 11 U 304
MVaughn Bos
304
No games scheduled
1*
44
514 U *1
GVeughnMIl
Thursday's Gamas
325 43 ■00 10 45 304
RAlomar Tor
Philadelphia (Jachion 1 *) al San Dago
1 75 .704
Rama* Chi
1)4 34 44
iGreg Harris0*1.4 05pm.
» &gt;07
1** X 4t
)
Easley Cal
New Vorh (Hillman 01) al San Francisco
702 25 47
5 )&gt; X7
Bainas Bal
ISwIttll 51.4 05pm
RHenderson Oak
Ml 5* 40 1) 7* X7

Molltor Tor
Gwyrm KC
Kreultr Del
ThomosChl
GreenwtN Bos
SteinbachOak
PalmalroTaa
Gollego NY
Hoiies B*i

344
til
7)1
511
175
It*
174
IU
&gt;U

40
77
X
54
7*
14
5*
&gt;4
51

107
55
70
*4
5)
17
to
44
74

10
t
7
70
7
7
14
4
II

5)
72
24
44
47
54
57
75
44

MAJOR LEAGUE PITCHINO
AMERICAN LEAGUE
TEAM PITCHINO
ERA
H ER BB 50 ShO
Bos'on
147 705 7*7 745 544 1
404 755 35)311 4*5 7
Beltimore
Chicago
4 05 7*0 345 )14 47* 5
Seeltl*
4 17 74* 3*4 U l 404 f
Kansas City
4 17 7)3 ) J * ) I ) 5)7 1
California
4 31 7*» 341 747 444 4
New York
4 25 715 17) 31) 417 10
Teias
4)1 7*1 3*7 7*4 50) 5
4 7* I I ) 1*5 110 547 7
Toronto
Milwaukee
443 101 575 751 34* 4
4 5) 1)7 7*4 )00 477 7
Detroit
Cleveland
441 *44 400 70* 474 1
Oakland
41) • 14 405 34* 4)4 7
Minnesota
5 1* 4)4 47* 7S2 454 7

X7
504
X3J
307
307
XI
XI
XI
300

SA
7)
7*
&gt;1
1*
74
71
7)
70
&gt;4
II
II
&gt;4
&gt;4
24

INDIVIDUAL PITCHING
Based an 1decitieni
IP H Bfl SOW L ERA
Key NY
IM III 21 101 11 1 2 31
Harris Bos
17 4) 31 37 4 1 7 43
54 44 If 3) 3 4 7 47
Coa Tor
1amende r Chi
IU too 45 *&gt; 10 4 7 77
Langston Cal
140 171 44 114 * 3 7 42
Finley Cal
1)5 177 45 104 10 4 717
Hanson Sea
111 111 M &lt;07 7 4 7*7
Quenlrtlt Bos
to i ) If U 4 4 7*7
Appier KC
17* IQ* 47 105 10 4 300
Darwin Bos
I I) f t » 3) 1 ; 5 0)
Plunk Cl*
V 3) 17 44 4 i 5 II
Brown Tea
17) 115 54 70 1 4 3 71
144 107 i t 171 10 1 ) X
R Johnson Sea
AivererChi
11* 10) 41 14 1 S 3 37
Collage Oak
n 74 If 1* 4 4 1 4)
Krueger Del
34 47 n 74 5 3 3 44
107 101 41 7) 5 1 3 57
McDonald Bal
Cona KC
1)7 105 45 100 4 • 3 U
Hentgen Tor
117 107 X 4) 11 4 3 54
Moyer Bal
4) 7t 11 71 5 4 3*0
104 44 3) *4 7 4 3 4)
Clemens Bos
IX 11 4) 4* 4 7 3 47
Valentuela Bal
107 I t) 41 54 3 1 344
Viola Bos
Frohwlrth Bal
50 47 ) ) 77 4 4 3 7)
113 110 3* 44 1 4 3 71
MesaCle
BWill Oak
II* 117 X &gt;1 * 4 ) 77
Doherty Del
*7 104 &gt;7 71 1 S 3 40
5* 47 X 54 ] 4 111
Bello Sea
EldredMil
13) IT* a 1* to • 3 4)
McDowell Chi
141 144 43 73 1) 4 3 14
Lelbrandl Tea
III 177 » 70 * 4 3 t»
Pavlik Tea
44 *7 34 it 1 4 3 *0
Wells Del
170 105 X 4* » 4 1*7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
TEAM BATTING
AB
R H HR RBI1Pci
San Francisco 5017 444 MO 4* 47* 744
Cincinnati
3105 411 45* 7* 7*0 77*
Chicago
7*to 574 III 7* 554 77)
7*4) 400 *07 44 374 772
Colorado
2*44 2*4 *04 U 374 771
SI Loun
Philadelphia
)ioo a i •35 *0 454 744
Pittsburgh
X I ) X I 7*» u 344 &gt;45
Houston
7*73 X I 775 11 343 .7*5
Los Angeles
XI7 17* 7*5 *4 154 le i
Montreal
7*5) 300 753 I t 357 254
3077 54* 744 75 171 ) U
San Diego
1*44 314 73* 51 11) .154
Florida
New York
7*04 M ) 7)1 7) 144 241
TWO 34) 73* 71 333 147
Atlanta
INDIVIDUAL BATTINO
Based *n 154 plate appearances.
AB
R H HR 1OBI Avg
171 41 104 1) 45 Ml
Galarraga Col
4 4* 342
7*5 SI to
Merced Pil
Mitchell Cm
1) 5) 157
&gt;41 41 u
7*4 44 103
* SI 3)0
Kruk Phi
BondsSF
7** 71 104 74 71 341
m 73 5*
51 145
Elsenreich Phi
)
&gt;77 3) II)
1) 51 143
JelteriesStL
McGee SF
77) 51 *1
)
35 131
X7 44 10)
t 40 l i t
GraceChi
Tt* 1) rt
Gwynn SO
)
7* U l
77) 5) *0
4 X 377
Gilkey SlL
4 40 113
777 SO *Q
RaThompson SF
710 23 *4
0 II 314
SanchaiCbi .
BegwaHHou
)W 50 107 .14 51 J74
VanSlyk* Pil
247 37 71
4 7* 377
77* M tt
3 55 314
CedenoHou
370 44 10)
Kelly Cm
* ) ) .11*
LarkinCin
542 52 10*
1 41 .)!*
Piana LA
30* 41 *7 14 51 117
1 77 314
Alicea StL
IU 1* 44
54 111
30* 45 t*
I)
Hayes Col
* 14 111
Bteuser All
312 54 *7
Wilkins Chi
77* 40 74 17 3) 310
4 II 310
Orsulak NY
X ) 17 43
X7 41 *5
1 77 30*
VllcainoChl
X I 3) ♦)
to 57 30*
Bichette Col
40
Ito
103
0 7* X )
Butter LA
Clayton SF
314 I I *5
3 47 X I
77* 71 4*
7 3) X I
Slauchl Pil
t .300
144 1* 41
1
Barbette Fla
May Chi
74) M 1)
• 44 300
NATIONAL LEAGUE
TEAM PITCHINO
ERA
H ER ■ B SO ShO
Atlanta
I X 717 &gt;4) 174 537 10
3 47 747 30) 142 571 5
San Francisco
3)7 74) 111 111 54* 5
Lot Angeles
3 47 7*3 7:» 111 477 3
SI Lout*
Houston
3 7) 750 IX 17* S7t 7
314 740 Df 111 477 4
Montreal
Flarida
3 45 7)0 27* 7*1 504 1
Philadelphia
34* 7*4 337 30* 5*1 1
4.15 •00 35) 747 477 5
Chicago
4 1* 470 34* 14) 577 4
Cincinnati
4 14 I X 14/ &gt;44 Ml 4
San Diego
4 41 M l 177 734 44) 5
New York
444 434 »J2 710 a t 1
Pittsburgh
&gt;40 *41 &lt;*4 173 471 0
Colorado
INDIVIDUAL PITCHINO
Based *n 7decisions
IP H BB SOW
Got! LA
31 44 17 44 )
7* *4 X U 10
KltoHou
MJaction SF
a t t 1) 17 5
PJMarlirw: LA
i t i t 54 54 1
13* 107 X 107 f
Bents SD
Hill Mon
»* 7) to 4) 6
Mulholtend Phi
in to* M 73 f
14* IX 37 II) •
GMeddue All
Glavm* All
IX n* II 35 10
17) 107 7* *0 II
SwilfSF
II* to X fJ 2
Candiofli LA
107 104 34 41 1
Reynoso Col
114 107 5* 11* 1
SmolK All
Saberhagen NY
it* no 1) M S
RMarline: LA
11) 107 M n 1
RiloCin
IX 177 11 IX *
7* 11 i i 45 4
Aquino Fla
1)1 177 » 12 I)
Ourkelt SF
74
71 24 tO 2
Whitehurst SD
5) 17 II 11 4
GeHamsSD

SA
7)
75
7t
14
72
11
&gt;7
2)
27
14
17
4
71
14

L ERA
5 70*
1 7 7*
1 1 5)
1 7 S3
1 7 57
7 7 17
1 7 77
1 2 0)
4 7 t0
5 7*5
5 307
4 10)
7 30*
7 3 17
4 371
5 3 77
1 3 21
) 3 71
5 3 74
) 111

De Marline: Mon
Gooden NY
Stanton All
Avery All
Portugal Hou
Arocha SlL
TGreen# Phi
Drabek Hou
Black SF
HershiserLA
Osborne SlL
TWilsonSF
Magren* StL
Cooke PH
Harnisch Hou
Ro|as Mon
Tewksbury SlL
Minor Pil
Morgen Chi
AyelaCln
Hammend Fla
Burba SF
Mason Phi
GrHarruSO
Hibbard Chi

174 111
l&lt;) Dt
11 X
I t ! 1)1
IM 104
1) 12
11) ♦»
IX i l l
04 71
III IM
111 10*
*0 I*
107 100
111 104
It* 104
a 47
IX (4)
54 55
107 10)
1* 1)
111 III
50 51
t f 51
IX 134
*7 to

14 71 10
43 II 1
14 M 4
11 to f
44 IB 7
II 44 4
IS fi II
X •’ 7
» 4) 1
a X 7
3) M 1
1) ti 5
X 34 1
37 77 3
44 IM 1
X )) 4
* 54 *
1) 5: 3
X If 1
1* ) ) 3
:• 51 II
1) 4) 1
H 41 0
JS '4 1
77 35 7

5
*
1
3
4
)
7
*
1
■
1
4
)
4
1
*
7
i
*
4
4
7
7
«
4

1 32
3 14
3 A)
1 4*
) 47
3 47
) SI
1 37
3 34
1 to
3 57
J *0
3 41
1 44
1 11
1 70
) 7)
1 44
1 to
) tt
3 tl
1 to
1 *7
1 to
3 to

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
Nalwnal Leegue
CINCINNATI REDS
Traded Sieve
Carter, outfielder to the Houston Aslros for
JacS Daugherty. Ilrst baseman outfielder
HOUSTON ASTROS - Aligned Steve
Carter, outliolder. to Tucson o! the Pacific
Coast league
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Attecielien
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS - Named
Richie Adubalo «n d Ron Rolhslem assistant
coaches
WASHINGTON BULLETS
Signed
Colbert Cheanoy forward, to a sis year
contract
FOOTBALL
National Foolball League
DENVER BRONCOS - Signed Jason
Elam, plecakicker Eatended the contract of
Arthur Marshall, wide receiver
DETROIT LIONS - Re signed Victor
Jones, linebacker
MIAMI DOLPHINS
Signed Chris Gray,
tackle Waived Tim Crumartie. defensive
tackle
NEW YORK GIANTS - Signed Stephen
Baker, wide receiver, and Brian Williams,
o Itensive lineman
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES - Named Dr
Joseph Totg team pCrysicien replacing Or
Vincent DiStetano who wilt remain with the
team as a consultant
PHOENIX CARDINALS - Cla med Ryan
Ptery, defensive back, oil waivers from the
San Francisco 4*ers
SAN FRANCISCO 4tEHS
Signed Adrian
Hardy, defensive back
HOCKEY
Haftonal Hockey league
NEW YORK ISLANDERS - Signed Milan
Hnlllcke goalie
COLLEGE
DIVISION I AA FOOTBALL ATHLETIC
DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION - Named
Georgia Southern athletic director David
Wagner president. Western Carolina athletic
director Larry Travis Ilrst vie* president,
LafeytH* athlellc director Eve Atkinson
second vice president and Boise State
ethielk director Gene Blermaier third vie*
prtlidvrtf
TRANS AMERICA ATHLETIC CONFER
ENCE - Announced mat Tier Ida Atlantic
will became a lull member *1 the cenlerenc*.
ellectiv* Sept. 1BLOOMFIELO — Announced the resign*
lion pt Jim Gwinn. sports information
director
OUQUESNE - E .tended the contract ol
Brian Cotieary. athletic director, through
Jun# ItN
FAIRFIELD — Named John Palad.no
women sassistant baskatbailcoa-.h
LAWRENCE - Named Jett School sports
Information d ire c to r Promoted R ick
Peterson to manager of news services
MISSISSIPPI - Mamed Dan O Dowd
men's restricted earnings beskelbell coach
NEBRASKA — Named Dan K andlg
women's assistant gyrymastics coach.
PEPPERDINE - Nailed Gary Henderson
lull time assistant baseball coach
PITTIBURGtl - Named Cindy Brettel
women's volleyball coach
ST. PETER'S - Named Robert Abraham.
Dave Baran and Lou Per ad'SO assistant
football coaches
SOUTH FLORIDA - Named Lee Roy
Selman associate athletic director lor
•sternal elfairs.

TV /R A D IO
AUTORACING
5a m — ESPN. Toyota Atlantic Senes
BASEBALL
I p m WCPX *. Special Alt Star Edition.
(L)
• Mpm
WCPX a. All star Game. I L )
la m - SUN, Class AA All Star Game
BASKETBALL
l|:H am
SUN, AAU Junior National
Championship
FOOTBALL
7 X p m — SC. Louisville al Florida replay
RACOUETBALL
II X) am — FSPN, National Champion
ship
SURFING
4 10 pm — SUN. ASP Irom Seasido
Heights N J
f 4 p m - SUN. PSAA Bud Pro Tour Irom
Oceanside
TEAMTENNIS
II X pm. — SC. Los Angelos Strings at
Phoenle Smash
VOLLEYBALL
7 p m , - SUN. Pro Beach Coors Light
Women i Tour Irom Fairborne
» pm — ESPN. Pro Beach Bud Light
Four Women Tour
Radio
BASEBALL
* II pm
WGTOAM 1540). M ajor
League All Star Game
MISCELLANEOUS
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Marlins hope to get healthy during break
Hr STBVIN WINB
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI - The All-Star break
oITcns a chance (o mend for the
Florida Marlins, who can blame
their most painful stretch of the
season on a series o f Injuries.
Sunday's 6-3 loss to Atlanta
was the Marlins* eighth in nine
panics. They're 13 gamon under
.500 und 10 games out of first
place, matching (he season low
In both categories.
" I think (he break will be
beneficial for us to regroup and
gel some people healthy again.”
manager Rene Lachemann said.
While losing two o f three to
A tlanta, the Martina played
without three regulars.
" T h a t ' s a l i t t l e to u g h ,
esp ecially far an expansion
team ." said Sunday's losing
pitcher. Charlie Hough.

Third baseman Gary Sheffield,
who decided to serve a threegame league suspension over the
weekend and let his sore right
shoulder heal, will start In the
All-Star game and return to the
Marlins' lineup Thursday at
Cincinnati.
Center fielder Chuck Carr,
who has missed 11 games with a
pulled rib-cage muscle, likely
w ill retu rn Friday. S econ d
Irascman lirct Harbcrlc. who has
been sidelined for 13 games with
a knee Injury, should be bark
next week.
The Marlins are 3-B without
Carr. They miss his speed (26
steals), bat (30 RDIs from the
IcadofT spot) and defense (fre­
quent spectacular catches).
“ He's our little sparkplug.”
closer Dry an Harvey said. " I f he
goes, we go. That's the way It Is
with your IcadofT man."

The pitching stuir has not been
spared.
Luis Aquino, whose 3.28 BRA
Is easily the lowest among the
starters, could remain on the
disabled list for another three
weeks because o f tendinitis in
bis pitching shoulder. Reliever
Jim Corsl likely will miss (be
rest o f the season w ith a
cartilage tear In Ills pitching
shoulder.
Despite struggling - Florida Is
last In the majors In runs and
homers — there have been no
signs of clubhouse dissension.
And on the field, the Marlins
show plenty of hustle.
"I think they're hungry." said
Uiavea pitcher Greg Maddux,
who beat them Sunday. "I'd
rather face teams that aren't as
hungry."
R e g a rd le s s o f In ju ries, a
summer sinking spell by the

Marlins was perhaps Inevitable.
Of lhe 10 previous expansion
(ram s, o n ly the 1901 L o s
Angeles Angels |&gt;ostcd a winning
record In either July or August.
The other expansion learns were
a combined 152-360 (.293) lor
those two months.
A n d a s II o it g h n o t e d ,
established teams slump, too.
"T h e past 10 days w e 'v e
outplayed Toronto." he said.
"They've lost nine of IO. So
there you go. It happens."
A recent seven-game losing
slreak may have spoiled any
chance the Murllns had o f
finishing at .500. They're now
on a pare to win 09 games, one
less thnn the expansion record
set by the Angels.
A 9-20 mark In one-mn games
Indieules (hat the Marlins have
hern more competitive Ilian
Ihelr record would suggest.

Continued from Page IB
Women. High Game: Charlcen
(215). Dec Christian (2(H). Deb­
bie Settle (204).
Special note: Mardell Qon*
terman picked up a 5-10 split.

PORZIG REALTY. JUNE 24
Men. High Series: Ray Dcvcns
(030|, Al Dciiutnn (538).
Men. High Game: Ray Dcvcns
12201. Al Denman (200).
Women. High Serlrs: Mary
Mittlck (476). Helen Barbour
1463).

REACHTIME, JUNE 27
Men. High Series: Pat Johnson
(075!. Mike Davis (005). K&lt;!
Jackson 1548).
Men. High Game: Mike Davis
12-13). Pal Johnson (238). Ed
Jackson (204).
Women. High Series: Donnie
lx (Mire 1508). Sheri Mullen 1519).
Shawn Keller (5 171
Women. High Game: Linda
Stafford (2131
SH E R IFF'S DEPARTMENT.
JUNE 28
Men. H ig h S eries : K en t
Showaltrr (51H|. Dan LaFleur
(509). Bob Marlin 1103)
Women. High Series: Linda
Moss (5751
Women. High Game: Linda
Muss 12-10).
TUESDAY N IT E MIXED, JUNE
29
Men. High Series Vince Cara

(5051. Donnie Green 1502). Todd
Porter (497). Bob Flowers (497).
Men. High Game: Todd Porter
(190). Jim Carroll (187). Donnie
Green (180).
Women. High Scries: Nancy
Johnson (520). Linda Lewis
(475). Shelly Ripley (457).
Women. High Game: Nancy
Johnson 1200). Linda Lewis
(171). Shelly Ripley (163).

ABB POWER DISTRIBUTION.
JUNE30
Men, High Scries: John Lay nr
(555). George Fulcher (512).
Darryl Kroeplln (500).
Men, High G am e: G eorge
Fulcher 1225). Darryl Kroeplln
1220). John l-aynr (204).
Women. High Series: Linda
Bounder (494).
Women. High Game: Linda
Boucler |177). ilarhnra Richards
(170), Beverly West guard IIOO).
Special note: Ester Lansing
picked up a 3-7-10 split,
PORZIG R E A L T Y . JU LY 1
Men. High Series: Frank Rosen
1580), A) Denman (547). Charles
Rife (538).
Men, High Game: Frank Rosen
|2II). Charles Rife (202). Al
Denman 1190).
Women, High Series: Helen
Barbour 1470). Doris Taylor
(46-1). Judlc Van Heulcn (457)
Women, Digit Game: Helen
liartxmr |203). Sue Rosen (190),
ftidle Von Heulcn ! 172)*

A llis o n
Continued fro m Page IB
"It just went out of control,"
Ilelion sale! In a telephone intcrvlcw. " I t didn't really hit
anything."
The chopper went down about
3 p m. CD I
"The next 24 to 48 hours are
going io very critical lor him ."
Smlliirrman said ol Allison.
Asked whether Allison would
recover. Smlthrrman said that
was “ something wr Just can't
say at this p oin t."
Smlllientmn said Allison hud
an "acule subdural hcmulomu."
a severe, deep bruise of the
brain.
Farmer, w h o won bis Ilrst race
and has mnrr than 7 0 0
victories on m lier circuits, sus­
tained a broken rib. eollarlxim'
a ll d ll o s e . a c c o r d in g t o
Smilhcrman. He said Farmer
w iis critical but stable and was
expected to recover.
"Red crawled out and they
werr trying to get Davey out. but
they tiail io gel emergency units
to cut him o u t." Carolyn Yules
said after talking to her husband
Roller I. w h o owns the Ford
Tliimdrrblrds driven by Allison
on the W inston Cup circuit.
"The helicopter hit u fence and It
lurnrd upside down."
The F e d e ra l Aviation A d ­
ministration had a team o f
Investigators on the scene trying
to determine the cause ol the
crash.
III 1949

A cousin. Donnie Johnson,
said Allison, who has had u
pilot's license lor several years,
purchased the hrllroptrr only
three weeks ago. He and Farmer
had Down Irom Birmingham to
lhe lrack to watch racer Nell
Honncll's son David, who was
testing a Buseli Grand National
car on the 2 GG-mllc tri-oval
a ho u l 5 0 m i l e s e a s t o f
Birmingham.
It was Just the latest tragedy to
strike Alabama's first family o f
racing. On J u ly 19. 1992.
Allison w a s In volved In a
spectacular wreck al Pocono
International Raceway In Long
Pond. Pa. H is cur touched
another and begun spinning
wildly, flipping 12 limes and
leaving Allison wllh a broken
right arm. broken ribs and a
concussion.

Allison was scheduled Io race

111 die Dir-Hurd 500. to be held at
the speedway July 25.
The crash was the second this
year to Impact the Winston Cup
circuit. D efending champion
Alan Kutwlck! died rlong with
three companions In a plane
crash April 1 near Bristol. Tenn.
Allison, continuing the tradi­
tion of the so-culled Alabama
Gang — comprised of bis father,
his uncle Donnie Allison, Bonnetl and Farmer — lias risen
quickly ihrough die ranks ot
Winston Cup racing.
Hr has 1!) victories. Including
t)ie 1992 Daytona — the most
prestigious race in the serlrs. He
nearly won the race four years
earlier, finishing a very close
second to his father, a three-lime
Daytona 500 winner.
Allison is com ing off his best
season, lie tied a career-high by
winning five races — Ineluding
anolher major, the Winston 500
— last year and earned u ca­
reer-best S1.955.628.
Hr also won another of the
lour Wlnsipn Cup mujora. die
Corn-Cola GOO. In 1991.
Allison was rookie of the year
In 1987, when he won two races.
Hr has won at least one race In
seven consecutive seasons. Only
four active drivers have current
streaks In excess o f that.
In his nlnlli season on the
Winston Cup circuit. Allison has
career earnings o f 30,720,974 to
stand lOdiall-lime.
He has enjoyed some of his
biggest victories at what he culls
his home truck, winning three
Wlnslon 5UOs and one Dle-llard
500. He also has won several
races there on the ARCA and
I ROC circuits.
At Robert Yates Racing In
Charlotte, N.C.. members o f
Allison's racing learn grimly
wrnl Ihrough Ihelr paces Mon­
day as lliey waited for the latest
news on the romlltlon of their
driver and friend. They had been
preparing ears for Sunduy's Mill­
er Genuine Draft 500 ni Pocono.
Yates was preparing lo fly to
Alutiama on Monday night along
w ith

c re w

c h ie f

L a rry

M cR r y n o l d s and ( r u m
s|x&gt;krsmun Brian VanDercook.

Alter spending five nights in a
hospital, he (pialined Ills ear lor
the race the following weekend
al Talladega.

“ All you huve to do Is look a'
them — they don't have lo sav
much." VanDercook said of the
team. "You don't spend seven
days a week. 52 weeks a year at
this unless you love II."

Ills lather Bobby was critically
Injured In a 1988 crash at
Pocono and had to retire as a
driver afler 84 career victories —
leaving him tied lur third oil the
Winston Cup list. Last year.
Davey'a younger brother Clifford
was k ille d In a wreck at

T h e ten in w a s h o l d i n g
together much like die Allison
family, he said.
"Davcy's a fighter — we know
that." lie said.
VanDercook said Allison never
wanled sympathy for his fami­
ly's hardships.

M ic h ig a n

In te r n a tio n a l

Speedway.
Allison Onlshed third in the
Slick 50 3 00 on Sunday al
Ixudon, N IL . in move up to (Iftli
In die Wln.-itnn Cup standings,
323 (mints tx'lilnd leader Dale
Earnhardt. Allison finished third
overall the last two years.

if

"They have been through a
tremendous amount, but Davey
tins always said other families go
ihrough Hie sam e kind o f
things." VanDercook said. "Ills
trials are no different than die
(&gt;eople In Des Moines. Iowa, or
anyone who loses a brother. He's
never asked. 'W h y me?"*

Updated in fo rm a tio n
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. - Of­
ficials ill a Birmingham hospi­
tal sel up a special telephone
number lo give oul InfonnaBon about the conditions o f
W lnslon C u p star Davey
Allison and veteran racer Red
Farmer.
Cullen Clark, a Carrnway
Mclhodlsl Mcr11c.il Critter

spokesman, said the hospital
was being deluged with culls
about Allison.
A llis o n w u s p ilo t in g a
helicopter that crushed Mond a y at t h e T a l l a d e g a
Supcispcrdwuy. Farmer was u
passenger In die hrlirnplrr.
The recorded Information Is
available at |2()5) 226 6210.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, July 13, 1993 • as

People
Boyd brings home another bronze

BRIEF

By SARABECCA ROSIER

Funshops open at H a m ilto n E lem en tary

Herald Correspondent

Hamilton Elcmcntry In Sanford will host one week of
FUNSHOP this through July 16.
Funshop In a program o f the Orlando Science Center and Is
Ix-lng offered to children between the uges o f 4 and 11. for the
children of Sanford a special price of $20 is being offered. The
sperlal rale was made passible through the donation of Sanford
Rotary Noon Club anti a private donor.
Sessions meet from 9 a.m. to noon. Monday through Friday.
Topics Include: Dlggln Dirt. Earthworks, Crystal Clear, and
Mineral Magic.
For more Information or to register, please cull 896-7151.

During the week o f June 11-19, 7.200
senior athletes attended the United States
National S|&gt;orts Classic IV.
Seniors arrived In Baton Rouge. La. from
ull over the United Slates and Canada.
Astronaut Alan ShcjKird was master of
ceremonies for this event anti the theme for
Baton Kougc was "luilsscz les bon temps
roulcr" (Let the good limes roll)! The events
took place ut Louisiana State University
ILSU).
Lake Mary's Hurlett Boyd entered discus,
shut p u tt. J a velin , b a d m in to n and
threc-on-lhree basketball. It took two days
to play the teams for the thrcc-on-thrcc
eliminations. Harriett Boyd's team, the
"Florida Queens.” was made up of mostly
Haines City athletes, luikc Hamilton, laidy
Luke. Lake Mary. They were allowed to have
one member from out-of-state .jrnd that
member was Irom Brooklyn. N.Y. Harriett

Seniors speak o u t on $3 m illio n question
If you're over age 60 and would like to give your two cents
worth of advice to the Department of Elder Affairs on how you
think they should spend their $3 million budget, plan on
attending the Public Fomtus listed below. The more seniors
participating, the better understanding Tallahassee will have of
where their funding priorities should be.
Each com tvm lty Is bring offered the opportunity to tell state
and local officials what their most pressing concerns are. and
share Ideas on how to meet needs. For Seminole county, the
meeting Is planned for Thursday. Aug. 26. from 10:30-11:30
a.m. at the Casselberry Senior Center. 200 Lake Triplet Dr..
Casselberry.
Information will be presented on services already available
through the Eider Helplines in each county. For additional
details call 407-623-1330

Boyd brought home the third place Bronze
medal.
Boyd attended along with her grand­
daughter. Heidi Boyd and friend. Billie
Terwllleger. They left Lake Mary for Baton
Rouge on June 11 taking two days to drive
approximately 1.000 miles. Upon arrival,
they went to the Pete Murnvieh Assembly
under the big dome and received their
packets o f Information and goodies that the
s|Kmsors hand out. Billie Terwllleger took
them to Graham Hall dorm where they
stayed for the duration of the tournament.
While at the cafeteria at LSU on June 16.
the accordlun p la y e r, S tan ley, from
Michigan who attended the four previous
years also, announced that someone in the
cafeteria was having a birthday, ll was little
Heidi Boyd who was celebrating her 10th
birthday. Slanley sang Happy Birthday and
everyone Joined In uml nlso "It's A Small
W orld." which was apropos as Heidi's dad,
Adrian. Just happens to work at Disney.
"Also, three people gave Heidi Si each.

took pictures: one lady. Jean, gave Heidi a
silver fox stuffed logo and another lady.
Virginia, gave her a cloth-covered Journul In
red und black und a couple of birthday
cards. Held! almost cried, she was so
overwhelmed." said Grandma Hovd.
"A s an extra treat for Heidi's blrthduy. we
caught the shuttle bus to the Capitol and
look a tour which happens to Ik* the largest
cnpliol in the United States. The tour guide
pointed out where Huey P. Long was shot
on Feb. 2. 1935. Long had been a senator
and governor and u sort of Robin Hood- type
person who helped the poor and was rather
notorious. From the top of the Capitol, you
could see the Mississippi River. It was a
good history lesson for Heidi as well as a lot
o f fun." continued Boyd. Before heading
back lo Lake Mary they attended a jazz
breakfast which was a nice ending to an
exciting and fun-filled week.
Congratulations. Harriet Du/d. for bring­
ing the bronze home to Lake Mary.

r / I

Airborne Division looking for so ld iers
The H2nd Airborne Division Association Is trying io locate all
former Paratroopers and Cilldermen. The Wings you earned
during your military service has made you eligible for
membership. We have nnnuu! convention's, picnic's, meetings,
dinner-dances and many smaller reunions for your enjoyment
each year.
Current members are from the llth . 13th. 17th. H2d. 101st
and many smaller airborne units Including today's special
forces. Write or call for complete detnlls ubout our Chapters In
the U S A as one may l*e In your city. All the way.
Wrlle to Nashville Convention-1933. 5459 Northernt PI
Dayton. OH 45414-3742. or call 513-898-5911.

Job w ell done
Twice a year, the Sanford Pilot
Club recognizes the "GoldLevel" students at Rosenwald
Exceptional Education Center.
Burger King furnishes lunches
for the students and members
of the club serve and en­
courage them to keep up the
good work. Sara Patterson, a
member of the Pilot Club,
presents a student with a
"Good C itizen ” certificate
during the feast. Twenty
children were awarded certifi­
cates.

C orrection
Due to an editorial error In a recent Sunday Issue of the
Sanford Herald, the name of the newly elected commander of
the Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary was left out. The
new commancer Is Pat West.

W eekly Lions C lu b m eeting
The Sanford Lions Club meets every Tuesday at noon at the
American Legion on South Sanford Avenue. For Information,
rail 32 1-0700.

Lake M ary O p tim is ts m eet w e e k ly

Mom’s mission of education
helps spare child’s feelings

The Opilmlst Club of Uikc Mary meets every Tuesday at 7:00
p m., at 109 E. Crystal Lake Ave. Icorner o f Crystal Lake and
Country Club Hoad). Visitors are welcome.

-*,».» Hli -I **- H i

Take o ff pounds sensibly
Members of Take Off Pounds Sensibly. TOPS. Invite the
public to Join them on Tuesday evenings frum 7 to 8 p.m. at
the First Christian Church. 1607 Sunford Ave.. Sanford
The group now has a private room to weigh people between
6: IS and 6:45 p.m.
Each week a different program on weight loss will be
conducted.
For more Information about the club, call 323-7562 or
323-1664.

DEAR ABBY: I am writing In
response to the letter from u
birth mother whose daughter
was adopted shortly after birth.
You responded with a beautiful
poem titled. "L e ga cy of an
Adopted Child."
I can certainly relate lo this
poem, being the mother of two
children, an 11-year-old son by
birth, and an adopted 2-ycar-old
daughter from Korea. This col­
umn referred to the "natural"
m other vs. "b ir t h " mother,
which brings me to my reason
for writing.
As an adoptive parent. I feel It
is Important to educate the
public regarding the use of
proper terms when speaking
ubout adoption. I con sider
myself and my daughter to be
very "natural" und "real." I
have also t&gt;cen asked whether or
not I have uny children "o f my
own." My response Is: "A rc you
uaklng If I have uny children by

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

O vereaters to g ath er
A regular meeting o f Overcatcrs Anonymous is conducted on
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Florida Power and Light. 301 Myrtle
Ave.. Saniord. For more Information, call Curol at 322-0657.

Nar-Anon to o ffe r help
Nur-Anon. a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, will meet Tuesday ut 8 p.m. at Orlando General
Hospital. For more information, call 869-6364.

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birth?"
I do not wish to discourage
these questions, and I am very
sympathetic to the fact that
most people simply do not know
the proper lerms to use. but I am
con cerned ubout how their
questions sound to the adopted
child. Imagine how you and your
child would feel If someone
usked you point-blank: "Do you
know anything ubout her real
mother?" Thanks for helping me
educate a few people.

JUST CALL ME ‘'MOM"
DEAR MOMt You hnvc made

DEAR ABBY: I recently at­
tended the wedding of a coworker and was shocked to see
another guest (fcinulel handing
out her business cards to all the
guests. (She was In real eslale.l
I noticed that some of the
guests politely put the card In
purse or pocket, then walked
away shaking their heads as If to
say. "How tastesless!"
I have been In business a long
time, und 1 carry’ my business
cards with me. but I am very
discreet about where and to
whom I give them.
In your opinion. Abby when Is
It appropriate to give someone
your business card?

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For 24-hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, July 9

ODETTE A. SILVA
SOESTERBERG AIR BASE.
Soestcrberg. Netherlands — Air
Force Airman 1st Class Odette
A Silva has been named athlete
of the year. Selection was bused
on the Individual's exemplary
duly |&gt;crformance, Job knowl­
edge. leadership qualities, signif­
icant self-im provem en t und
other accomplishments.

DEAR ABBY: It is not u myth
that cuts will Jump Into a baby's
crib und suck the breath out of
the baby. When my cousin was 2
months old. I saw our family cat
sittin g on the baby's chest,
sucking the air us it came out of
the baby’s nostrils!
I pulled the cat off the baby's
chest. Shortly after that, we gave
the cat away. I was IH at the
time, ami now I am 64. I will
never forgt It. Never!

S ilva , a law en forcem en t
s|H-rlallst, is (he daughter of
Marla C. und Vlrlato J. Sllvu of
736 Silversmith Circle. Lake
Mary.

MRS. ROBERT THURESON.
ALHAMBRA. CALIP.
DEAR MR. CARROLL. MR.
A D A M S A N D MRS.
THURSE80N: No additional

MOVIElAND o.,., i. 12? i?ifc

NOPASSES Hnu.B.tarton
THE FIRM
I W rm

exp ert I could quote would
convince you otherwise, so I'm
not even going lo try. Let's all
agree on one thing, however;
Parents should not leave Infants
alone with cats (or dogs)
BONUS
HOUM
(4 lo 6)

INDECENT
PROPOSAL

[jiic h fie ld

ItM

nr

Ltlchfitld Quality Thotlrts

CINEMASO24-0H5

* N 0 P A S S M O V IE *

GlimjiF a)

or she bus asked for It.

one that many others have these
days, t do not enjoy being
vldcoluped. As a matter of fad. I
hate III I am not photogenic, t
absolutely despise the way I look
In the playbacks. For some
reason or other, the person doing
the recording Just assumes that
he or she has the right to film
anyone who huppens to be
around. They don't even bother
to ask for permission.
What Is the best way to handle
this Invasion o f privacy —
hr sides destroying the video

Horl. who graduated from
Oviedo High School. Oviedo In
June 1993. entered busk- train­
ing on Junr 18 ut Fort Henning.
Gu.. followed by advanced Indi­
v id u a l t r a in in g us an in ­
fantryman at the same base.

"ta p e r " first, you can gel out of
camera range. You can also let
the taper know how you feel
ubout having your picture taken.
W hatever you do — do not stick
out your (ungut- and cross your
eyes In an effort to "ru in " the
tape. It will give the taper an
even more unflattering picture to
preserve for posterity.

APPALLED
IN BEVERLY HILLS. CALIP.
DEAR APPALLED: When be

DEAR ABBY: My problem Is

Jesse D. Horl. 17. has enlisted
In the Army's Delayed Entry
Program, according to Sgt. Jody
Gaddy. Altamonte Recruiting
Station.

THEDA PACHECO.
A L T I M O R E
DEAR THEDA: If you sec the

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JESSE D. HORL

I would assume the ho3t or
hostess should be able to control
(he videotaping, but sometimes,
thev are the gutltv parties.

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ADVICE

some excellent points. Thanks
for educating (he general public
concerning adopt Ion tcrmlnolgy.

TUESDAY’S PRIME TIME
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ALL MOVIES IN STEREO SOUND

�4B - Sanlord Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tueaday. July 13. 1993

Legal N o tices

NOTICE OF COOi
ENFORCEMENT BOARD
PROCEEDINOS
TO: Jerry 1 Sh*f*n* Smith
or the owner (t) ot the follow
Ing described property:
Lot M A W 10 It ot to* *1
Sentord Heights PB J POM
334 W itth St.. Sentord.
Florida

NOTICE OF CODE
ENFORCEMENT BOARD
PROCEEDINGS
TO: Freedom Invetlmentt. Inc
or the owner(t) of the follow
Ing detcrlbed property
Lot 4 Blk 4 Tr 3 Town of
Sanford PB I P C 43
433 Palmetto Avenue — San
ford. Florida
RE: Cate No 03 134
The Sanford Cod* Enforce
men! Board wat created by
Sanford City Code. Ordinance
ISM. a* amended, at author!red
by Chapter 143. Florida Slal
utet The purpote of thlt Board
It lo facllltad the enforcement
of the codet and ordinance! In
force In the City of Sanford You
have been charged with vto
latlng the following Code on
your property Chapter II. tec
II 37 and Chapter I a tec 14 I
1307 4) by allowing high growth
lo develop upon prom ltot;
allowing debrlt lo accumulate
upon the premltet: falling lo
maintain the premltet on a
regularbatlt
You are hereby formally not I
lied that a Public Hearing will
be conducted in the above tty led
caute by the Code Enforcement
Board of the City of Sanford on
the 10th day ot Augutt. 1*0). al
7:00 p m in the Clfy Com
million Chambert. Room 117.
Sanford City Halt. 300 N Park
Avenue. Sanford. Florida, con
corning the above tty led vio
latton The Board will receive
tettlmony and evidence at s*i«*-Hearing and thall make finding!
of fact and conciutiont of law
You are hereby ordered to
eppear before that Board at the
Hearing to antwer the charge*
and pretent your tide of the
cat* You have the right to
obtain an attorney, at your own
eipente. to repretenl you before
the Board You have the right to
call wltnettet on your behall at
well at to crotteiam in* all
other wltnettet If you do not
appear, the Board may proceed
without you Should the Board
determ ine that a violation
eelttt. II hat the power to Ittue
Ordert requiring you lo bring
the violation into compliance
including the power lo levy fine*
and create a lien on your
property up to S3S0 00 for each
day the violation continue! patt
the dal* tel for compliance by
the Board ! Order
II the violation It not cor
reefed by the lime of the Hear
Ing or If, prior fo the Hearing,
you com* into compliance with
the above ttated alleged cod*
violation but the violation recurt
prior to the Public Hearing, the
M&lt;*'ir&gt;g will be held on the
allegation* againtt you.
II you have quettlont con­
cerning fh li matter, pleat*
contact the Building Depart
ment al (443) 334S4S4. SHOULD
YOU DECIDE TO APPE AL
ANY /MATTER CONSIDERED
AT THE ABOVE HEARING.
YOU MAY NEED A VERBA­
TIM RECORD OF THE PRO
CEEOINGS. TESTIMONY AND
EVIDENCE WHICH RECORO
IS NOT PROVIDED BY THE
C IT Y OF SANFORO (F .S .
344 OIOS)
P E R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
A B I L I T I E S N E E D IN G
ASSISTANCE TO P A R T IC I­
PATE IN A N Y OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SHOU LD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
A T 3)4 141* 44 HOURS IN
ADVANCE OF THE MEETINO.
Publlth: July 13, 30. 37 A Augutt
3. It*)
OEGSO

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number *3 343 CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
Daniel H Van Pelt.
Defeated
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The admlnltlrallon ol Ih*
etlat* of Daniel H Van Pell,
d e c e a t e d . F i l e N u m b er
*3 347 CP. It pending In the
Circuit Court, tor Seminole
County. Florida. Probate Divl
tton. the addrett of which It
Seminole County Courthoute.
Probate Dlvltion. Santord. Fl
33771. The name and addrett ol
Ih* Pertonal Repretentallv*
and Ih * P e r to n a l R epretentative'! attorney are let
forth below
ALL INTERESTED PER
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All per ton i on whom thlt
notice It ter red who have ob
jectiont that challenge the valid
Ity of the Will, the quallllcaltont
ot the Pertonal Repretentallv*.
venue, or |urltdlction ot thlt
Court are required to file their
ob|*cllont with thlt Court
W IT H IN THE LATE R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
OATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All creditor! ol Ih* decedent
and other pertont having claimt
or demand* againtt decedent *
etlat* on whom a copy of thlt
notice It ter red within three
month* alter the date of the flrtt
publication ol thlt notice mutt
file their claimt with thlt Court
W IT H IN THE LATE R OF
THREE /MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All other creditor* ol the
decedent and pertont having
claim* or demand* againtt the
decedent ! ettate mutt III* their
claimt with thlt court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
OATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANOS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
The date ot the flrtt Publico
tlon of thlt notice It July 4. I**3
Jecquelln* Von Pell Lundy
Pertonal Repretentallv*
4343 Roblnton Rd .#S7
Lockport N Y. 140*4
THOMASG. FREEMAN. ESO
Attorney For Petitioner
Florida Bar No 00*1700
P. 0 Boi 701100* E. Hary 434)
Altamonte Spring*. FI X37IS0070
Telephone (407) 431 14*4
Publlth. J u fy 4 .il I f f )
DEO 7_______________________

RE: Com No t ) I S
The Sentord Code Enforce
men I Board wet creeled by
Sentord City Code. Ordlnence
ISM. et emended, at author Ired
by Chapter 143. Florida Stat
ufet The purpose ot this Board
It to facilitate the enforcement
ot the codec end ordinencet In
force In the City ot Sentord You
have been .harped with yip
leling the following Code on
your property: Chapter II. tec.
11-37: Chapter M. tec. M l
(SO? 4); Chapter 4. tec 4.1.1
(101 S I al by allowing high
growth to develop upon pro
mltet. allowing junk, debrlt.
etc to remain In open ttorege;
tailing to maintain ttructure In
good repair.
You are hereby formally noti­
fied Ihat a Public Hearing will
be conducted In the above tty led
ceute by the Code Enforcement
Beard ot the City ot Sanford on
the 10th day ot Augutt. 10*1. at
I 00 p m In the City Com
million Chamber*. Room lit,
Sentord City Hall. )00 N Park
Avenue. Sentord. Florida, con
corning the above tty led vio­
lation The Board will receive
tettlmony and evidence at te&gt;d
Hearing and the 11make finding!
of tact and cenclutlont of lew
You are hereby ordered to
appear before that Board at the
Hearing to antwer the charge!
and prevent your tide of the
cate You have the right to
obtain an attorney, at your own
eipente. to repretent you before
the Board You have the right to
call wllnettet on your behalf at
well at to crottemamlne all
other wltnettet If you do not
appear, the Board may proceed
without you Should the Board
determine lhaf a violation
e ilitt. it hat the power to Ittue
Ordert requiring you fo bring
the violation into compliance
including the power to levy flnet
and create a Hen on your
property up to SI SO00 tor each
day the violation continue! pact
the date tat for compliance by
the Boaru't Order.
It the violation It not cor­
rected by the time of the Hear­
ing or If. prior to the Hearing,
you come Into compliance with
the above ttated alleged code
violation but the violation recurt
prior to the Public Hearing, the
Hr*' -g will be held on the
allegation! egjlntt you
If you have quettlont con­
cerning thit matter, pleate
contact the Building Depart
ment at (407) JX S4S4 SHOULD
YOU DECIDE TO APPE AL
ANY /MATTER CONSIDERED
AT THE ABOVE HEARING.
YOU /MAY NEED A VERBA­
TIM RECORD OF THE PRO­
CEEDINGS. TESTIMONY AND
EVIDENCE WHICH RECORD
IS NOT PROVIDED BY THE
C IT Y OF SANFORD (F .S
&gt;44 OIOS).
P E R S O N S W IT H O IS A B IL I T IE S N E E D IN G
ASSISTANCE TO P A R T IC I­
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SHOULD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE AOA COORDINATOR
AT 134 14)4 4| HOURS IN
ADVANCE OF THE MEETINO.
Publlth: July 13. &gt;0. 77 A Augutt
x im
DECK
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that County of Semi
note, the holder ot the following
certificated) hat filed teid cert
llk eto(t) lor a faa deed to be
Ittued thereon The certificate
n u m b e r(t) and y e a r lt ) of
Ittuance. the deteription of the
property, and the named) In
which It wet attetaed It/are at
follow!:
Certificate No 3921
Year of Ittuance: i m
Deter Iption of Property: LEG
SEC 33 TWP SIS ROE 3IE S 30
FT OF E ’ t OF S W U O f NE U
OF SWI4
Nemet In which assessed:
Centei Real E id le Carp
All ot tald property being In
the County of Seminole. Sled of
Florida
Unlett tuch ce rtific a te d )
than be redeemed according to
law. the property detcrlbed In
tuch certificated) will bo told
to the hlghett bidder at the well
front door. Seminole County
Courthoute. Sanford. Florida, on
the *th day of Augutt. 1993. at II
AM .
Approilmalely SI3100 cath
for foot It required lo be paid by
the tuccettful bidder al the tale.
Full payment of an amount
equal to the hlghett bid plut
applicable documentary ttamp
d i e t and recording loot It due
w llh ln 34 hour* a lte r the
ad vert ited lime of the tad. All
payment! than be cath or guar­
anteed Inttrumenl. mad* payabd to the Clerk of the Circuit
Court
Dated thlt 2tth day of June.
1993
(SEAL)
Maryanne Morte
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminod County. Florida
By. M kheldL. Silva
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: July I). &gt;0. &gt;7 and
Augutt 3. Itt)
DEG 34

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that County el Semi
not*, the holder ot the following
certificated) hat tiled tald cert
Ificoto(t) tor a tai deed to be
Ittued thereon The certificate
n u m b e r(t) and y e a r lt ) of
Ittuance. the detcnpiion of the
property, end the named) In
which If wat attetted it/or* at
follow*:
Certificate No 3*30
Year of Ittuance i**o
Detcrlptlen of Property: LEO
SEC 30 TWP SIS RGE 3IE N 13.S
FT OF S 34) FT OF E to OF NW
to OF NW to (LESS E 33 FT
FOR RD)
Nomet In which attetted:
Craig V. Cook. Tr.
All of tald property being In
the County of Seminole. Stat* of
Florida
U n ion tuch ce rtific a te d )
thall bo redeemed according to
law. the property detcrlbed in
tuch certificated) will be told
to the hlghett bidder at the well
front door. Seminole County
Courthoute. Santord. Florida, on
the *th day of Augutt. 1991. ot II
AM
Approilmalely SI3S 00 cath
for fee* It required to be paid by
the tuccettful bidder al the tale
Full payment of an amount
equal to the hlghett bid plu*
applicable documentary ttamp
taie* and recording loot it due
w llhln 34 hourt after Ih*
adrefilled lime ot the tale All
payment! thall be cath or guar
anteed intlrumenf. mad* pay
able to the Clerk of the Circuit
Court
Dated thlt 7*th day ot June,
l**3
(SEAL)
Maryann* Morte
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminole County. F lor Ida
By: Michelle L. Silva
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: July 4. IX 30. and 77.
I**)
DECS*

W hatever Your Field
P IN O A

B U M M t CRO P O P

O P P O R T U N M IK S I N T H I

CLASSIFIEDS!

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that Jam** R. Dycut.
Cuttodlan for the Urology Ctr
PA Profit Sharing Plan, the
holder of the following certlflc
atoll) hat filed tald certllic
atolt) for a tai deed to be Ittued
thereon. The certificate numb
* r (t) and yearlt) of Ittuance.
the dttcrlptton of the property,
and Ih* named) In which II wat
euetted I*/ore at follow*:
Certificate No 31*
Year of Ittuance: 1*44
Detcriptlon of Property: LEG
LOTS I * 3 BLK 4 LOCKHARTS
SUBDPB3PG70
Name* In which attetted
Beniamin J. Hall. Yvonne F.
Hall
All of tald property being In
the County of Seminole. State of
Florida
Unlett tuch certificated )
thall be redeemed according to
law. Ih* property detcrlbed in
tuch certificated) will be told
to the hlghett bidder at the well
front door. Seminole County
Courthoute. Santord. Florid*, on
the Mm day of July. 1**X at 11
AM
Approilmalely IDS 00 cath
for feet It required to be paid by
the tuccettful bidder al Ih* tale
Full payment ol an amount
equal lo the hlghett bid plut
applicable documentary ttamp
ta u t and recording feet It due
within 74 hourt a lte r Ih*
advertlted lime of the tale. All
payment* than be cath or guar
anteed Inttrumenl. mad* pay
able to the Clerk of the Circuit
Court.
Detod thlt lelh day of June,
l**)
(SEAL)
Mary arm* Morte
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: Michelle L Silva
Deputy Clerk
Publlth June 33. 3* end July 4.
1 1 10W_______________ DEF 117
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, that ChlpT Adam* and
Karen L Schaffer, th* holder of
the following certificated) hat
filed taid certificated) tor a tai
deed to be ittued thereon Th*
c e rtific a te n u m b erlt) end
yearlt) ol Ittuance. the d*
tcriplion of th* property, and
Ih* named) In which It wat
attetted lt/ar* at toltowt
Certificate No *33
Year of Ittuance l**l
Detcriptlon ot Property LEG
LOT 40 MYRTLE LAKE HILLS
PB I3PG I
Name* in which attetted:
Michael J. Solltro, Jr.
All of tald property being In
m* County of Seminole. Slat* ot
Florida
Unlett tuch certificated )
thall be redeemed according to
law. Ih* property detcrlbed In
tuch certificated) will be told
to the hlghett bidder at th* wetl
front door. Seminole County
Courthoute. Sanford. Florida, on
the 3nd day of Augutt. I**3. al II
AM
Approilmalely 113)00 cath
tor fee* it required to be paid by
•he tuccettful bidder at Ih* tai*.
Full payment of an amount
equal to th* hlghett bid plut
applicable documentary ttamp
taiet and recording feet It due
w llhln 74 hourt after th*
advertlted time of th* tai* All
paymenlt thall be cath or guar
an teed Inttrumenl. mad* pay
able to the Clerk ol Ih* Circuit
Court
Dated thlt 77nd day of June.
19*3
(SEAL)
AAaryarme Morte
Clerk of Ih* Circuit Court
Somlnoto County. Florida
By Michelle L. Silva
Deputy Clerk
Publlth June 3*. July 4. I I and
30. !**)
OEF3S7

*

Legal N o tic e s
NOTICE OF CODE
ENFORCEMENT BOARD
PROCEEDINOS
TO New Day Outreach Center*.
Inc.
or th* ownerd) of th* follow
Ing deter Ibed property
Lott 133 134 San Lanta 3rd Sec
PB 13 PG 73
Vacant Lott on Valencia Court
E. Sanford. Florida
RE: Cat*No *3»S
Th* Sanford Cod* Enforce
ment Board wat created by
Sanford Clfy Cod*. Ordinance
ISM. at amended, at author lied
by Chapter 143. Florida Slat
utet Th* purpote of thlt Board
It to facilitate th* enforcement
ot th* rodet and ordinance! In
force in the Clfy of Sanford You
have been charged with vio
latlng th* following Cod* on
your property: Chapter II, tec
II 77 by allowing high growth to
develop upon premltet, allow
Ing troth, debrlt. etc. to ac
cumulate upon th* prvmitet
You ar* hereby formally noli
lied that a Public Hearing will
be conducted in Ih* above ttyled
caute by Ih* Cod* Enlor cement
Board of the Clfy of Sanford on
th* tom day ot Augutt. let), at
7 00 p m In th* City Com
mittion Chambert. Room 117.
Santord Clfy Hall. 300 N Park
Avenue. Sanford. Florida, con
earning th* above ttyled vio
lotion Th* Board will receive
tettlmony and evidence al taid
Hearing and thall make finding*
of lac I and cone lutiont of law
You ar* hereby ordered to
appear before that Board at the
Hearing to antwer th* charget
and pretent your tide of th*
cat* You have the right to
obtain an attorney, at your own
eipente. to repretent you before
th* Board You have th* right to
call wltnettet on your behall at
well at to crotteiam in* all
other wltnettet If you do not
appear, the Board may proceed
without you Should the Board
determ ine that a violation
eilttt. It hat th* power to Ittue
Ordert requiring you to bring
the violation Into compliance
Including th* power to levy fine*
and create a lien on your
property up to 13)0 00 for each
day th* violation continue* patt
the date tel tor compliance by
th* Board! Order.
If th* violation It not cor
reefed by th* time ot the Hear
Ing or If. prior to th* Hearing,
you com* Into compliance with
th* above ttated alleged cod*
violation but th* violation recur*
prior to the Public Hearing th*
Mi*-.ng W ill be held on th*
allegation* againtt you
It you have quettlont con
corning thlt matter, pleat*
contact th* Building Depart
ment at (407) 330 S4S* SHOULD
YOU DECIDE TO A PPE A L
ANY MATTER CONSIDERED
AT THE ABOVE HEARING.
YOU MAY NEEO A VERBA
TIM RECORD OF THE PRO
CEEDINGS. TESTIMONY AND
EVIDENCE WHICH RECORO
IS NOT PROVIOEO BY THE
C IT Y OF SANFURO (F .S .
344 0I0S)
P E R S O N S W IT H O IS
A B I L I T I E S N E E D IN G
ASSISTANCE TO PAR TIC I
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
A T 330 )434 41 HOURS IN
AOVANCE OF THE MEETING
Publlth: July I I 30. 77 A Augutt
L I E _________________ B t f i J f
NOTICE OF CODE
ENFORCEMENT BOARO
PROCEEDINOS
TO: Jackton A Emet tine Green
or the owner(t) of th* follow
Ing deter Ibed property:
Let 171 San Lanta 3rd Sec PB
13 PG 73
413 Valencia Cl.. N . Santord.
Florida
RE Cat* No *3 131
Th* Sanford Cod* Enforce
ment Board wat created by
Sanford City Cod*. Ordinance
ISM. at amended, at authorlted
by Chapter 143. Florida Slal
utet Th* purpote of thlt Board
It to facilitate the enforcement
of the cudet and ordinance* In
force In the City of Santord You
have been charged with vto
latlng the following Cod* on
your property: Chapter II. tec
11 77: Chapter 14. tec. 14 I
(307.4)1 Chapter 4. tec 4.1.1
(101.S.1 a) by allowing high
growth to develop upon pro
mltet. allowing debrlt to ac­
cumulate upon property, falling
to maintain ttructure.
You ar* hereby formally not I
fled that a Public Hearing will
be conducted In the above ttyled
caute by th* Cod* Enforcement
Board of th* City of Sanford on
th* 10th day of Augutt. It*3. al
7:00 p.m. In Ih* City Com
million Chambert. Room 117.
Sanford City Hall. 300 N. Park
Avenue. Sanford. Florida, con­
cerning th* above ttyled vto
latton Th* Board will receive
tettlmony and evidence al tald
Hearing and thall make finding*
of fact and conciutiont of law
You ar* hereby ordered lo
appear before that Board al th*
Hearing to antwer th* charget
and pretent your tide ot th*
cat* You have th* right to
obtain an attorney, al your own
eipente. to repretenl you before
th* Board You have Ih* right to
call wltnettet on your behall at
well at to crotteiam in* all
other wltnettet If you do not
appear, th* Board may proceed
without you. Should th* Board
determ ine that a violation
e iltft. If hat Ih* power to ittue
Ordert requiring you to bring
th* violation Into compliance
Including th* power to levy fine*
and create a lien on your
property up to 1730 00 tor each
day th* violation continue* patt
•tie date tel tor compliance by
•he Board* Order.
If Ih* violation It not cor
reefed by th* time of th* Hear
Ing or If. prior to th* Hearing,
you com* Into compliance with
th* above Hattd alleged cod*
violation but th* violation recurt
prior to Ih* Public Hearing. Ih*
Hearing will be held on th*
allegation* againtt you
If you have quettlont con
corning thlt m ailer, pleat*
contact Ih* Building Depart
ment at (407) 3 » S4S4 SHOULD
YOU DECIDE TO APPE AL
ANY MATTER CONSIDERED
AT THE ABOVE HEARINO.
YOU MAY NEED A VERBA
TIM RECORD OF THE PRO
CEEDINGS. TESTIMONY AND
EVIDENCE WHICH RECORD
IS NOT PROVIDED BY THE
C IT Y OF SANFORD (F .S .
344 OIOS).
P E R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
A B I L I T I E S N E E D IN G
ASSISTANCE TO P A R T IC I­
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SHOULD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE AOA COORDINATOR
AT 3)0 1434 44 HOURS IN
AOVANCE OF THE MEETING
Publlth: July I I 30. 77 A A-gutl
3. 17*3
OEG33

7 1 -H e lp W anted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-26 it

Orlando • Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
1:00 A l t •5:30 PJtf.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
ISconcRCUttvothnoo________S T falln o

7conoocuttvo tknoo______704 a Rn*
3 ctvioocuOy* Untno------- IKiUn*
1 Mm*______________$1.19 o floe
Riloo art per issue, based on 3 line*
• 3 Unos Minimum

EIP. PAINTER

AG ASST.
Permanent, full time S4 Jl/hr.
Outlet Include growing vog*
tablet end ornamental* In
Held end groenhout*. applying
pvtllddvt and farm melnt*
nance H S gred end 3 yrt
e ip . For application cell
lie 473) or well* 7700 E Celery
A v * S a n to rd F L 37771
E E O / A lllrm a llv * Action
Employer___________________
AGENTS AVON Earn to S0\
No door/door Guaranlrrd
40\ discount* Sandi 331 l i t )

AGENTS-REAl ESTATE!

NOW A C C EP TN G

Schediimg may ncSud* Herak) Advergeer N tw ooet of an addbonef dey
Cancel when you gefretuAt Pay or9y lor day* your ad runs strata earned
U t* fid detenpeon lor latletl teeiPi Copy mutt loaow acceptable typo­
graphical form •Commorrki Oequency rate* are avakabto

DEADLINES
Tuwtdey thru Fnday 12 Noon The Day Before Pubkcabon
Sunday And Monday 5 30 P M Friday

ADJUSTMENTS AND CREDITS: In tha event of on error In an
ad, th * Sanford Herald will be raaponalble for th* flrtt
Insertion only and only lo tha axtant of tha coal of that
Insertion. Pleaae check your ad for accuracy tha first day 11
rune.

Nothing tuccrvdt like tuccett
Wo re well into our 3rd decode
of training tuccettful agent!
No Ileant# 7
W ell help!
WATSON REALTYCORP
R E A L T O R S ________ 1 » 17*4

APPOINTMENT SETTERS
WANTED
P/T *v*t Good attitude rtq
t l siO /hr w ith b o n u t
S X tPM
SERIOUS INQUIRIESONLYI
____ CALL 377 4113_________
ASSEMBLY WORKERS Long
term ettignmenl In the San
lord area Car A phone a
mutll Apply today at GPC
Temporary Service*. INS S.
17 *7 47) 1133
___

ASSEM BLERS
12— E ld erly Care

25—Special NotlcM

ELDER CARE will provide total
car* tor on* elderly lemal*. )
daytawk 74 hrt 333 3071

CHEERLEADER CLASS ttartt
toon Sign up now lor Ih*
Chverrltot. aget 4 17 Have
fun. gvt In thap*. make
Irlendt Build conlldmce and
tall rtlvem 37* 7144 or 377 771*
HOST FAMILIES NEEDED.
Hotl an eachang* tludonl
from Germany, Denmark.
Croatia or Poland Student*
will arrive in Augutt to attend
local high tchool For further
Information cell I 400 777 114*
or apt 17* &lt;tS4 _____
SENIOR CITIZENS Nrvd a rid*
lo doctor or anywhere In
Sentord7Cell Ann 374 3444

21 — Personals
ADOPTIONS
Free medical care. Irantpor
•allon. countellng. privet*
doctor plut living eipente*
B*r *737)1) Call Attorney John
Fncker_________ I «0 **37 3444

23— Lost &amp; Found
LOST CAT
M ale t4bby.
brown black. Winn Di*i*. ISIh
SI Need! medicine 3X3174
REWARD
I3tei Loti dog
tmetl grey and while Shlh
Tiu. lemal* 4 7 Ibt Loti from
Remington Oats Lake Mary
on 4/77 No leg* 373 )771
S M A L L . W H IT E DOO In
Idyllwlld* area Antwert to
' Munchie Reward 377 4*01

Legal N o tic e s
NOTICE OF SALE
In accordance with Florida
Statute*. Self Storage Act Sec
tton* 43 404 and 03 40) Th* tel*
ot houtehoid good* in looted
ttorege unit*, to telitly Owner
Ltont
143CYNTHIA MONN
714 JEFF L MEJERAS
To be told or ditpoted of July
77. IftJ el 10 a m by tested bid
end cath tato Al: SunRay Store
Away. 410 Rinehart Road. Laka
Mary. FL 17744 All tpacet may
not be available on del* ol tale
Publlth July I I 70. It*3
DEG 100____________
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that » ,
are engaged in butinett el igo
Cryttel View So . Santord. Sam
mote County. Florida, undvr th*
Fictitiout Name ol NETWORK
CRUISE SERVICE, end ihel w*
Intend to regltler taid name
with tha Dlvltion ol Corpora
•Ion*. Tallahatta*. Florida. In
accordance with Ih* provisos
ol the Fictitiout Nem* Statute*.
To Wit: Section 145 0*. Florida
Statute* Ittl
Lloyd Elekmen
Michael Artlt
Publlth: July I I 1991
DEG IIS

; Tou t

U w 'l lah* our wont M II.
Call Tortey To l-Uov Your Adi

BanfocJ Harold 833-2811

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
AB C S M A L L D A Y C A R E
Bebiet lodd&gt;*rt 7 hoi meal*
Brae week! Pee, 373 a n a

For Excellent...
Profettlonal CHILO CARE
Service*. call 333 3001________
M ICHELLE'S HOUSE
Sit
PER WEEKI Open 4 30AM 1}
Midnightl 331 741)«7*3 10

31—Medical
FLORIOA CORF It an outpe
llenl rehabilitation feeIIv
providing th* ideal terries
you need For Information or a
tour cell.................. 440 3404

43—Legal Services
NEED A WILL O' liy.ng m il'
Call Smile* 334 4134 Alto, legal
retearchdon*

55— Business
Opportunities__
LOCAL VENDING ROUTE
11700 00 a week potential
Mull tell I 400 4V3 4343 _____
SODA / SNACK vending route
available 1S.991 financing
available Cell 130*710 Jim
Cutlorn Vending

61—M oney to Lend
BILLS DUE?
Have I Piece to Pay I Sloth
Monthly Payment*! Get Cred
itort Oft Your Back! Eaty
Qualify No Collateral I 333 7SIS

71—Help Wanted
ADDTO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL 177-U23sr 337*4)1

7 1 - H e lp W anted

Full lime. ; ’us helper* or
cabin*! mlg plant Immediate
opening*. 131 Itol____________

Assistant Maintenance Person
N eed ed lo r L a k e M ary
apartment community Mult
hay* electrical and A/C eip
Apply at St Crofa Apart
menu. 733 Secret Harbor
Lane, Lake Mery
331 7303
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE
Need t your thlning tmilel No
eap needed. Lott ol public
cContectt Great Benefit*!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
No Ft* Till Hired
Law Fee Term* Available
790 W lt lh St. 113 117*

CAFETERIA WORKER
NO NIGHTS. NO WEEK
ENDS Pari lime Include* all
clean up and tome cath Wring
Hourt II 10 1 30 Mon Frl
IS'hr Send retumet ONLY
fo Jobar’t Cato 1301 Silver
Late Drive. Sentord FL 13771

Cashier
Part lime Apply In Perton
Santord Eaion. Corner ol
Highway 17 *3 end le t# Mary
Bird E O E ________________

Collision Person
Needed tor buty body thop.
top pay. excellent benefit*
Call 373 *070 etk for Shelly

Mutt be able to tpray. (truth
end roll 171 4l&gt;l,lv m u
GENERAL

M OTIVATED
P EO P LE!
SSSJ250-J400SW
People needed lo perform
v a r lo u t d u f l e t w ith ou t
tupervitien In e letl pared
lake charge environment Full
lime potillont only lo be filled
fh ltweek Call 33**«I7
OOOO WORKERS NEEDED
Dally work, daily pay S4 SO hr
and up Report 1 X AM Corner
et 17 Wand Park Of 33» 7*40
a a a HAIR STYLIST. Al Merit
Nor ma n Wa I mar I P lata
3114141** 4*S 7101

Hairstylist
Full or Part lime IS 00 hr A
up Paid vacation* and tome
paid H oliday*! Fantatllc
tern* In Santord 333 *04)
HAPPY ELVIS Childcare Lk
Mary, need* eap . organurd
Caregiver Teacher. W natural
love tor Children 331 7304

Hearj Collision Body Ptrson
Mutl haw own toolt E .per i
ence required
EXPERIENCED PAINTER
mutl haw own tool! Apply In
perton t AM 1 PM Santord
Paint and Body. 3*01 Country
Club Rd Sanlord 177 t*&lt;4
HYORAULIC PERSON
1*00 wk Put your filfingt and
valve eap and knowledge to
work here' Benefit*!
AAA EMPLOYMENT
Ne Fee Till Hired
Low Fee Ter mt Available
700 W. Ilfh SI .37)1174
IT’ S EASY
WORK TOOAY.
GET PAID TOOAY I SPRINT
STAFFING
___ IT* J0U

Kennel Jamtofial
Retpontibl* perton to car*
lor enimelt A facility 3 7 pm.
M on F rl
A A lt e r n a t e
Wk end* 111) W ISIh St
Santord

Landscapers
Full lime COL Clatt O re
qulred 337 41)3
LIVE IN NEEDED Room A
board and monthly talar y
M* Fa*. OFLIS *04 7344743

MAIDS
F/T, M F. 4 4 Will train:
unllormt Molly Maid 747 M0&gt;
MEDICAL

’ CONSTRUCTION
All phatet To SIS hourly
Refundable tee
4M*IQI

DAYTIME HOSTESS
PART TIME WAITRESS
Wanted C ell TAM H AM
Sergio'* Italian Rettaurent
___________ 331 *043___________

LP N S
11PM 7AM thift M l lime
Apply in perton Lakevtew
Nurting Ctr , *1* E Tnd Si
Santord
MEDICAL

LPN

Deiisery/Warehouse Ptrson
40 hrt ♦ Paid Inturanc* end
benefit* Clou D license req
Clean driving record Know!
edge ol Orlando are* e plut!
*FP*7 MO'* **nlord Aye

DOCK WORKER
Up to USK Comp bene . aOIK
Refundable tee
4MTI0I

ELECTRICIANS
Journeymen and helper*
Tr importation a mutt Call
177 74S4

EXPERIENCED SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
SAn Del Manufacturing It
accepting epplicallont tor
E X P E R IE N C E D INDUS
TRIAL tewing machine oper
atort only Accepting applies
tiont thru July 7nd. then again
ttertlng July 13th lor hiring to
begin July 13th Paid holiday*
and vacation, air conditioned
•acuity 3140 Old Lake Mary
Rd. Sanford 403 331 3410

Full lime 7 3 and It 7 Charge
Nune potitiont Experience in
long term care highly de
tlreabte Drug free work
p la c e C a n te d : D ebar*
Manor. 4* N. Hery 17*1. De
h*ry. F133713.44A4434

NIGHT SHIFT WORKERS
Hourly Apply at Litchfield
Theater. 1300 N Hwy 17*3
offer 7 00___________________
NOW ACCEPTING Applicelient
for full lime position Account
M enafer Experience pre
ter»ed Mutl hew valid F l
DL with good record Apply In
perton Champion TV. I l l ) S'
Orlando Orlw
_________
OFFICE ASSISTANT
Growing co need* you now I
Variety ol duflet to keep you
happy I Thltone’tfor youl
AAA EMPLOYMENT
Ne Fee Till Hired
Law Fae-Termi Available

Ttew.tsm si., m in s

Pressure Cleaning

Notice

TToorTng

FLORIDA STATE REQUIRES
all contractor* be regiitored
or certified To verify a !tat*
c o n tr a c t o r ! Ilc o n ia c a ll
I 400 343 7940 Occupational
Llcentet ar* required by Ih*
county end can be verified by

HARDWOOD FLOORINO
Install Sanding Finishing
TOM OLSEN I-$13-439)397

calllngnMIlOjeeLT*!^^^
Additions &amp;
Remodeling

RES./COMM. Vinyl Siding .
Alum Fram ing. Drywall.
Door*. Roofing. Concrete
111 sail S O Belinf, CBCSITOO*

C arpentry
CARPENTER All kinds ot home
repairs, painting A ceramic
III* Richard Gros&gt;
3311*77

Health &amp; Beauty
REOIRCCT SATINO partem*
for contlstenl end long lasting
weight toss Healthy, effective
new product now available at

adtordebj#^rfc^_^[3^3*4
Home Im provem ent ’
ALDOCS IT ALL

Fla It right at a price you can
altord Lk'd/lnt From start
to finish Carpanfry. plumb
Ing. oleclrkal. and roofing
Svc* 73 yr* of experience No
|ob too big or small. Call
174 7*71 tr 114 300434 hr*.

Cleaning Service

WEED Removal. Lekefronf
Retention Pond*. Creative
LandIMjjml^
Mgmf Cell *94 4)31

sonry
BRICK, Meek, tton*. three*,
end concrete. Alto repair* No
lob too small Freset I 47b 1*4)
TWP MASONRY. Brick. Block.
Stucco. Concrete. Renova
lion! Lie ./lot............331 3444
REPLACE Parting 1*1. pole A
bldg security lights Peml A
repairs S W S 7*30110

RAINEY ROOFINO O wr 70.
yrs e i p Serving Lake,
Voluala. Sem inole Free
• illm a te s . Lie. SI. R C
001)9)4. bonded 904 734 9417. ,
904 473 7917 or 371 447?

Trash Hauling
AFFORDABLE HAULING Will*
dean, haul trash You nem* III
We ll haul III Call 131 0344

TUT
CERAMIC TILE A M A R B L E ."experienced In all phatet.
custom work, painting end
other home repairs 407 391 •
4394 Of 904 3i&gt; 4744___________ &lt;
EXPERIENCED In ell phatet '*
ol III# Installation In t. lie ,
whole**!* Ill*price* 443 9441

Tree Service
ECHOLS TREE SVC lie s. mt
"Let Ih* Profetttonalt do II."
Frooetllmetet .
333 3739

M A K E Y O U R P IT C H I

j$

Home Repairs
M A R I N O H om o R e p a ir ,
speclallllng In small |obt

^RCotoorOFreoeoLaMJM
Lawn Service
E X P E R T LAWN SERVICE.
407-330-7340. Sod. Mukh. For
fuller Bushog sOyrs eip.

CUSTOM PAINTINO by Jeffrey
Power. Ini. e il.. He'd. Ins
Pre* Estimate*
311 QMS
K A H PAINT AND REMODEL
FreeEttlmeletl R e is.Ik
No lob too smell I 4994144

Plumbing
P LU M B IN G R E P A IR A N D
SERVICE
Pro* estimate*.
Ik. KPCOSI4S4 S3449SX Tern

) o n r Itu .s in r w / r r r y I h n

lor

;

DUN RITE. Clean drlvoweyt.'
r e e fi, peel decks, walks, &lt;
heuses. Freeesf. 111-4133
. -J

Painting

Concrete

\ i l r r r ti.s r

lkd/jrro«jd|»ii^JjlW
Lake Clearing

Outside Lighting

CHRISTIAN WOMAN will clean
vacant.occupied residence or
office* Mon S*l33&gt;aST4
S PR I NO C L E A N IN O . In
out tide Rental* Alto wkly.
rate* Windows, tool 131 STBS

AD D ITIO N S Block. HuCCO.
slabs, walks, polio*, demon
tlon L k .3 S m .e ip . 499-43)4
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Beal 1 Man Qualify Opera
tlon I 330-1330/440-7903________
CONCRETE. Blech, gtobt Mb.,
pool deck* A pool plastoring
» yrt exp 1-407-394-04)4

KENNISON LAWNCARE Pro
Low rate*. C om m ercial
Resident!*! Lie A Ins 477 4477
LARRY'S LAWN A TREE.
Professional Service. Free
E»t LlC/ln* 333 3401_________
RANDY'S OUALITV LAWN.
Complete pro cere *inc# 1900
Clean ups, hauling 3)1-0314
TOM A JBFF'4 LAWN CAREI
Ret./Comm . dependable, tow
retesl F reeesf..........310 &gt;470
TURF TRIMMERS Low rate*.
Free e tf. Ret A comm I

Youl touch a lb* base* won
an ad el the classified For

call 322-2611

8anford Herald
1a l o i r

S ir&gt; 1*01' M o n th . ( n i l ( h i . s s i / i n l . .72 ’J 2 l i l l

l.v

r »fw r .\ v r/ r / ,

L eg al N o tic e s

/ / / / r m e / / r r r r a u r t # / r r r m r / # / //&lt;•

L eg al N o tic e s

�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tuesday, July 13. 1993 • S I

71— H elp Wanted
PHONE PROS N EEM D
For strong badge deal Call
U l 72It
PHONE INVESTIOATOR
Pleasant phone skill* and
caring personality naadadl
E seallent Benetilll
AAA EMPLOYMENT
Na Faa TUI Hired
Law Faa Term* Available
w a w .H t M t . m j ih

Prtcjti ConcrtU Worker/
Equipment Operator
W ith e x p erien ce A pply
Mon Frl. * J Seminole Precast
Inc 1*19 Coign** Place. Port
of Sanford Eill SI at I 4

RECEPTIONIST
For printing company Call

atsetrr

ROUTE SALES
D e l i v e r p r o d u c t * to
established account* and build
rout* along lhe way Creal
B t n e l M t l C a ll q u l c k l
AAA EMPLOYMENT
No Fee TUI Hired
• Lew Fte Ttrmi Available
too W llih 11.117 Ilfs

SALES COUNSELOR
Oaklawn Park Cemetery and
Funaral Horn# ll looking lor 1
lull lima employe#* lor pre
need counseling Call Data
M yar*_______________773 * 1*1

Security Officers
E

Licensed. Sanlord start Im
m e d ia t e ly
Up t o tS
w eip ar irrur benelils avail
able *01 (S* *IU

, SHIFT MANAGER WANTED
* Restaurant management e&gt;p
' j prelerred High school grad.
I i soma college pret Apply
v Taco Bell, Sanlord

TEACHERS
1 CDA/AA or abo*a degree in
■ early childhood education lor
i tenter In process ol NAE YC
‘ 'Accreditation Frea childcare
1 Available EOE 111*4*1

TELEMARKETERS
Pem unenl And
Temp Positions
Lk T
Company will train people
with phone skills E»p not
necessary Hours Mon Thurs.
S*PM. Sat . SAM 1PM Ftei
iblr on hours when perma
nanI Salary plus bonus
Sr. cl titans welcomed1
Haver A Feet
Help Periannel I t t D H

TELEMARKETERS
Longwood. I ! SO hr plus
bonus Phone end order entry
evp Dey to evening hours.
Mon
Sat Permanent posl
lions Never alee!
Help Persanrwl SI* t u t
UTILITY TRAINEE
.G reat antry lavel choke
Learn all phases ol produc
Hon Call us nowl
AAA EMPLOYMENT
Na Fte TUI Hired
Law Fee Term* Available
799W 11th SI .111 t i l l
WAREHOUSE AND GENERAL
LABOR HELP NEEOEOI
Bonus for driver* All shills
•velleble Deity pay. no let
eport ready to work S 10 am.
Industrial Labor Svc,. toil
‘■French Ay No phone calls
VAREHOUSE Workers Strong
' Clean cut peep*#, soma hepvy
2, lifting at different |ob Idea
'* Hons In Sanlord Longwood
1area Apply today at OPC
Tamper ary Services. IMI S.

■i i n . a w itn ______________

“ welders
All types Hiring now. test rtq
Refundable lee
*3* 0101

91—A partm ents/
__ House to Share
PRIVATE Mother In law ept
Bath, lull kitchen, unturn /
turn Includes util 7700444

93— Rooms for Rent
CLEAN ROOMS, singly starling
l&gt;0/wk. Kitchen, phene,
laundry, vide# games, all

i_styeal£arklnj&lt;l&gt;M «J_^^_
95— Roo m /B oard

UVE IN MATURE FEMALE
'Companion lor elderly woman
•Room/board provided Salary
nag Rais rea
111 1141

97—A parlm ents
F u rn is h e d /R e n t

NOTICE
All rental and real estate
advertisements are sublet I to
the Federal Fair Housing Act.
which makts II Illegal to
advertise any prtltrence. Ilm
nation or discrim ination
based on race, color, religion.
s*« handicap, tamlllal status
or nallonal origin

ONE BDRM I bslh Furnished
elflclancy. Sanlord M l! mo
H90 deposit
134 111*
PRIVATE, large 1 bdrm. ap*.
newly painted, lull III# bath
country living! Power, water
furnished t i l l mo plus dep
NOJ’ ETS ............... .7771*17
Sa n f o r d Downtown area.
Small I bdrm apt Utilities
Included Reasonable! I l l 1014
WINTER SPR I NOS. Funs, stu
dio apl In private home
Utilities paid arid cable
Private entrance ttJl/wk ,
1100sec dep 4*1 747* anytime

99—Apartm ents
Unfurnished / Rent
CLEAN. QUIET. I bdrm ept .
AC. Irldge. stove, weter Irscl.,
near Lk Monroe Reasonably
priced Eves 111 111*
CONVENIENT AND SPACIOUS
CALL GENEVA GARDENS
APTS.
11 IW *
LAKE JENNIE APARTMENTS
I Bdrm Apts Avallebla. Frea
waler/gasl 114 1111

Lavan’ s Landing
I A ] BDRM VILLAS
RENT TOOWN
CREOITNO PROBLEM
Applications for 1 Bdrm
Homes Now Being Accepted

323-4923
MARINER’S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm. 11*0 mo
1 bdrm, t419mo and up

323 8670

Quiet Single Story
Castlebarry, I bdrm A 1
bdrm
Attic Storage! Call
Joan tor appointment 4*4 *111
SANFORD'S Bast Kept Secret I
Pool A Lau n d ry, t A 7
bedrooms Convenient Ioca
Hoot Call Pat, 1714*10_______
I BORM a llic la n cy . qulat
DOT 'mo, 1)00 dep ultl tnc 4
miles west ol I ion *417) 7II!_
I BEDROOM 1115 month plus
S7H security deposit A refer
ences . ... ...........J77 71*7

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
COMFORTABLE 7 BORM Hy
bath horn# All amenities.
***) mo plus dep 77* 4704

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
CASSELBERRY. House to rent
w purchase option. */7. pool.
_air, dishwasher If 50*S5 *741__
DELTONA. Cut* Clean. I l l ,
carport. I yr leas* t*70 mo
References SO* IIS 1*1* ____
HIDDEN LAKE Sanford Lake
Mary 1 bdrm 7 bth. fenced
yard 1471/mo call *47 lt*t

HUD HOMES.

Bank lareclaswrti and VA
resales from ties down.
Why rent! Th* Hilllman Croup
444 1111
Realtor
JUST OUTSIOE OF SANFORD.
7/1. Ig living rm, eat In
k itc h e n . A / C . ctlllng fa n s . Ig
bath Plenty ol storage and
closet space Newly pamled
Inside and out 1*50 plus dep
No pats I Q 1*11_____________
LAKE MARY Nice, cent H A
7 bdrm. t ' j bath, blind*,
fenced yd Lake Mary schools
MOOplus sec KM **4 1110
LAKEFRONT lenerd corner ic,t
1/1, firepl. family rm. carport
Quiet near 1117 remodeled
t i l ) mo Lisa 1)1 111* No pets
MAYFAIR. Esc area 1 b d r m .
cant a ir . w D. g a r a g e
S4M mo 1100 dep 1)1 *1)1__
SANFORD E &gt;Kutlve 4 bdrm. 1
bath 1.000 sq It P ool,
workshop, 1 acre No petit
tl.U0 For Hq Realty 177 M il

mm

TH IS SUMMER

at SanfordCourt Apartments
1 Single Story design * do one ibore * Friendly on-site lluugei
• rdqoc Abutment Eitm
orWot
■Studio, 1 ft 2 Bednn.
•Sw ritj-rorTw ftiee
Of mad
AffordableApti.
• Furnished / Unfurnished Studios

3301 SanfordAve. • Sanford • 323-3301

____________H o u r s : M - F , 0 - 5 , S a t . , 1 0 - 2 ___________

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts.

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1/2 month FREE
' ik till J 1J m iiiilli Irasr

K IT 'N * C A R I.Y I.K “ b&gt; I.B rry W rig h t

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

Stenstrom Rentals
• SANFORD, 1/7 w/ting I* gar .
Ig room*, lanced y d , CHA.
t i l ) mo 1550 sac
a LOCH ARBOR. 1/1 w/den.
sern. pool w/|acuiii. tpic .
dbl gar I St1) mo 1*00 sac
Stenstram Realty. Inc.
"We Maisaga yaur Ham*.
Ilk* II wasaurawn." Jim Dayl*
177-7401 After 1PM: 110-1401
1 BORM., I heth. sern porch.
CHA. all appls . carport,
fenced yd S4M mo plus dep
» 000*40*1111v msg
___
1 BDRM. 1* BTH. Cent. M/jC
fenced, screen porch, deck
1*01 plus deposit H I *1*7
1/1. OARAOK. W/D hookup,
sern porch. CHA 1)10 mo
1500dep SH M W * 177*111
1/1 S A N F O R D , la n c e d ,
spacious. ***5 a month 1*50
deposit MS 1*00or 171 *1*0
4/1 HOU1E, Lk. Mary, near Lk
Mary City Clr 1400 mo Call
171 100* or 771 **01

COMFOBTABLE. SAFE, con
venient to town 1711/mo plus
deposit 77* «w a
LAKE MARY. Coly. private 7/1
one block t ol Lake Mary
Btvd New ceramic III* and
carpal *47) plus on* month
security.____________ 171 *777
LAKE MARY, I bdrm. CHA.
w/w carpel, call fan. minis.
fenced yd *7) S I M ____ ____
U N F U R N IS H E D , 1 Bdrm.
newly remodeled, til* W Ird
St Front ept 111! mo 1700
sec 111 l i t * Call before
S TOAmAattar I TOPm_______
I BORM, 1 Both, Sern porch.
CHA, all appls , I w carport.
77* soai or 171 art*

1 07-M o b ile
Homes / Rent
NICE SANFORD Furnished
Mobile Horn* Available Rent
tobu. Bob*01 in seat

114— Warehouse
Space / Rent
LONGWOOD/LAKE M ARYMid sue storage warehouses.
*00*00 1400 sq II Free rant
w/llm o teas* from Sf41/mo
___________ 711 OS7*___________
SECURITY WAREHOUSE *4A
and Old Lake Mary Blvd
*1,710 - 7.000 sq ll ol
lie 'warehouse 'Finished ot
tic* spec* also available
Kapawk* Realty, l-OTS-lill
4**4* with 17 It callings 7 phas*
power Suitable lor anything,
heavy toning 700 S Myrtle w/
private attic* Available now
t* 10'mo *01 *******

115— Industrial
Rentals __
II 000 AND 14.000 sq tl Dock
high, lira sprinkled *01 Cor
nwall Road W Garnett White.
Broker
177 IMI

117—Commercial
R e n ta ls _____
MODULAR OFFICE BLDO..
for kata, 14.000 or ront,
furnished. 1400/mo Office W
SR 44 Call 14* 1*77___________
N IG H T C LU B 4*0* sq. It.,
Tltulville fully equip 17100
mo LIquorate a vail 114 011*
SANFORD
NO N Elm Av*
70.100 sq tl wllh offices
Brick truck ht. sprinkled
440V
1 phase service Lt
menu or distribution d r
1) 5011 m 111*

118—Office
Sp ace/ Rent
NEW Sanlord offices and'or
warehouses *00 7.(00 sq H.
Special. 17411me, 11J 7)1*
O FFICE , It* * sq. ft. Bail
downtown Sanford location
111) mo *14 01**
_
SANFORD Comm 1*41 sq ft
«| M a It High tratllc area,
Jim Oeylt. Sfeniiram Ratify,
Inc. 7717**1_________________
SANFORD. Oltic# space. 1*00
sq tl. building total. 1700 sq
It. perottlce unit 771 100*

121— Condominium
Rentals______
SANDALWOOD I bedroom,
washer, dryer, screen porch,
nopelsUJl mo 479 711)

141— Homes for Sale"

BATEM AN REALTY
Ltc. Real Estate Broker
74*0 Sanlord Av*

3210759.............. 321-2257
BUILDER'S SPECIAL
Brand new J/7 tor only M l.100
on your lot No money down It
equity In your lot
PETERSON HOMES 14711*0

DELTONA
DELUXE.DELUXE.DELUXE
New 4 bdrm 1 bath with all
th* aitrat Included! Only 11
total down Good, bad O' no
credit Bankruptcy OK Call
Jim at RE 191, 401 Ml M44
DELTONA. 1.900 sq ft block
home cent H/A Fenced yard,
many tr e es , qulat
neighborhood Assume It qua I
ItyMl.WO *04 19**071 lymsq
EXCHANGE OR 1ELL your
property located anywhere!
Invested Realty, 114 MU

222—M usical
Merchandise

NO SERVICE CALL FEE whan
repair* are don* Warranty 74
yr*. experience! John,
A * Bos) Appliances. 774 7741
• SOFA. 7 It. Yellow Print.
Loos* Pillow back MO Call
714 701*_____________________
STOVE. While, alec Tappan
rang* Good condition BIBO
DROP LE A F Table, w/7
chairs Sis OLASS Call** la
ble 170 771 *S44______________
• U P H O LS T E R E D C H AIR .
Beige vinyl sett and back
cushions Solid wood arms and
Item* Tough, will Iasi lor
years Good lor den. porch,
etc Eacellenl Only t i l 170

S A N F O R D , 1/1 H O U S E .
Acreage, horses allowed, on
lake 11100 mo n t TOO*

105— DuplexTrip lex / Rent

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

oao*___________________

USED BEDDiHO SALEH King
Queen. Full A Single M l a Vet
JlU pt LARRY'S Marl 173jMJ7
WASHER / D RYER. Good
condition t i l l ) ! ] 474)
__________ alter t PM__________

103—T elevisio n /
Radio / Stereo

141— Homes (or Sale

H I — H o m esjo r Sale

A H O R D A B IE HOMES
V « H U R l l P RO PERTIES

STAIRS PROPERTY

FHA OR VA AS LOW AS |V|%
G o v ‘ I F o r e c lo s u re !. Re
p oi/ A tsu m e N o Q u ality
Homes! Owner financing
Seminole. Orange. Volusia
Sanlord less than ll.aaa dawn
a Renovated 1/1 . appliances.
fenced yard, carport. D ) too
a Renovated like new 7/1. Iplc .
appl. new palnl 151,*00
• Pool ham*. 7/7 on cut de sac
Garage. U!.*00
# 1/1 an Is acral Renovated,
appliances, fenced yd. 1*7.MX)
• l/l'y, 11*0 sq ft. like newt Ltv.
dmlng. family rm. f l }.*00
• 4/1, fenced garag*, 15* *00
Assume No Qualities&lt;
• 7/1 on 1/1 acral Fenced cul de
sac. dead end slreel Ua.fOO
Additional homes avail Less
than UK down!
PA OLA I I on on J 14 acres
Pasture with liable 111* *00
Lk. M *r*/ L *n g w o o d Peal
Horn*. 1/7. garage, living,
dining lam r ms Ml. 500
Lk. Mary peal ham*. 4/7. living,
dining, lamlty rm. |t0*,*00

PAlJl K Bf TH nSRflBNf

Vf N'llRI 1RRflPI RTif'i

G n k J g c

GOVT REPOS, bank loreclo
suras, assume no qualify
mortgegesl Low monthly
• BANK FORECLOSURE 7 1
cant H/A. scr porch, me#
neighborhood
tXt.OOO
•HUO FORECLOSURE.47
In Pinacretf Great hornet
Low down..................... ISO'S
• 7 BORM. on double lot w'1
car garag* Alt appl includes
washer/dryer, eat in kitchen
Super neighborhood 1)4 *00
Call far delail*!

Jantt Mansfield, 323-7271
AA Carnes. Inc., I l l 11)1
LK. MARY
1/1 with family
rm ,lg treed lot 1*1000
W Mallctowskl.73? l * t)
LONOWOOO -4/m. cant. H/A.
fenced Owner financing or
leas* option Only SSI.*00

_______ It) *4* I***_______

POOL HOMEII w/custom deck,
p rlv lin e * . 1 ' 1 'y. near
schools, verts. carpal, new
roof, dining rm A sern.
porcht 111.000 777 IM )
SPACIOUS ) bdrm. 7 bath. 7 car
garag* 1 t yr* new Fenced,
plus much morel Only M l.&lt;00
Julia Boyd. Realtor Higgins
and Heath 7441144 horn* ol
He# or 9*4 *444 main of Ilea

OVER

S I 36
W

»

Y t ARS

STENSTROM
R E A L T Y ,

I N C .

Wfc list and sell
more properly than
anyone in (he Greater
Sanford/Lake M a ry area.
• A COUNTRY Collage I Oueml
7/1 w/B*aulllul Hardwood
Floors, nice Eat In Kitchen.
Lg treedyardl 17* *001
• WHY PAY RENT* When you
can buy this 1/7 Condo w/AII
Appliances A W/D. Sern
Porch, Comm, P ool loot
ST*.*001
• A S S U M E No O u a l l l y l
Spacious A Bright )/7 Split
Plan w/Graat Room. Formal
Dining rm Equip Kitchen A
Fenced Yard! 1)1000!

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720
114) Park Or., Sanlord
*41 W. lake Mary 81, Lk. Mary

•In Our 37th Y u r *

UN-SATIONAL
UMMER LIVING
at

COEVILLA APARTMENTS!

MANAGEMENT A REALTY
4*1 71) 7777/177 111*

I BDRM, I 'B A T H COTTAGE
Appltenrwt. storage shed 7144
Mohawk Av* S7e 000 77010*7

151— Investm ent
P ro p e rty / Sale
SANFORO INCOME PROPER
TV. Live in 7 b/r, 7 bth and
rent 7 1 b'r, t bath unit*
Income It.OOO/mo or rent all
lour units for S1.4)0/mo
Mortgage payment MW PIT!
Call 174 111* P M

153— AcreageLots/Sale
GENEVA, 1 ACRES

1/1 In
dud#* large etlc apt duck
pond. Buyer pays dosing
110 COO I 40? 71) 44)7__
___
O C A L A N A T 'L F O R E S T
Weeded total S).*M each, no
money down! i l l 41 monthly
_________ 1*00 **7 1074_________

155—Condominiums
Co Op / Sale
SANFORO / LAK E M ARY
AREA. 1 bdrm. 7 bth. Trd
lioor A/C. vaulted celling,
screen porch Amenities In
dud* pool, tennis, saun*
lake access M*.*00 Reduced
777 457?

1 5 7 -M o b ile
H o m e s /S a le ___
NEW l**7'*t Low down A Inter
estl 14X10 tllS/mo 74X10.
1710/mo 74)110* _________
SET UP IN CARRIAGE Cove.
Gregory Mobito Hornet. San
ford Single sad 77) STOP
1 BEDROOM mobile horn* on 90
■ 100 lot In Catsetbarry.
Owner financing, easy terms
_________ 777-4747___________
1/1 COMES WITH LG Camer
lot *1X1)0 Owner will linanc*.
with SHOO down I1*w ! ) » mo
lor ID yrs F R E E AND
CLEARI Deeded access to St
Johns River I
CALLBARTREAI. EST.. INC.
(497) 171 74M
Alter Hours (40?) 171 *1M

• GRUNOIO. dual recorder A
dual player. 7 speakers, came
from Germany S100 Nrm
777 0774

187— Sporting Goods
a OP AIH CI1E R e.cellen t
condition, original cost t l* f
Will keep you In great shape
tor IIQOOBO 771 7174
• It SPEED BIKE Roadmaster
Scorcher, men's, red 17) Call
777 *407_____________________

193— Lawn &amp; Garden
a LAWN MOWER Self propel
E •cetlen! condition 1100
777 4744

199— Pels &amp; Supplies
a COCKATIEL. hand led baby
171 Call 777 10*7 ___________
• FREE KITTENS I yellow
tabby male, t calico lemal* 9
weeks old 177 4144 _______ __
• F R E E TO OOOD HOME
Loving 7 yr old cocker spaniel
Inside or outside All shots and
wormed 407 714 *074 _______
HAND TAMEO COCKATIELS
S70 Also. Sulltr Crested
Cockatoo. 1100 544 * 54) alter 4
a PU PPY Poodle A Longhair
Chihuahua 1100 771 M04

201— Horses
BEAUTIFUL, blanketed Ap
paloasa. Gelding. 7 yrs. well
cared for, eacellenl riding A
trail horse For eip or begin
w lack ! 1.700 t.rm 174 7*04__
HORSES 'O R SALE Nothing
over 17 000 74* 5121
Alter 4 PM

eCHAIR leather, brown color,
very com fortable, Danish
style. Ilk* newt lo o m 9417
•COFFEE TABLE, tolld wood
with three smoked glass In
sat* Used only a law month*
MO Call to see 170 7177________
DISHWASHER' Portable, very
good cond SIS; BUFFET.
Solid oak, H OP 171 7111____

•D E A L E R SPACE A V A IL ABLE* Aunty Mary's An­
tiques. 1*91 French Ave,
(11*71 Sanford. W* buy an*
ptect/enliraestolesl 4*4 1194

215— Boats and
Accessories
• AIRBOAT. 1911. Orasshappar.
140 HP. Lycoming new mags ,
1 props, iratlar. sisoo Call
»1 5401or 377 TITO
___
i 4 FT Aluminum V hull, consol*
controls. 40 HP Evlniude,
trailer 1500 OHO 719 1744
14 FT. JOH Boat. W Gal lilt
trailer. IS HP Marc. 1*00 llrm

_

*r. 55HP Evlnrud# Eicallent
Condition 1177*1 177 1717
*1* if. BOWRIDER
141 HP
I/O. About 11 brs. Immacu
lala.w/traller cover Must
Seal S*.)00 OBO 7; ? 4) 7*
*1**4" SKI/FISH Baal. *0 HP
Marc . w/fralltr Runs great.
U 000 Partial Hnanc* 4*1 7*0#
#11. 1*’ FT. 1PORTCRAFT[
Open llihermen, ttl OMC
Seadrive, 11100 Consider
trad* tor |et ski or Flat* boat
777 077*

OKITCHEN TABLE and tour
chairs Round solid oak table
chairs art tan wllh small
print. Very nlcef 1100 ODO
771 *141_____________________
•LOUNOE CHAIR. Brand na*
Highland Hous* D*ig* an
llqu# valval wllh brown and
burnt orange design Cantus*
color gltt Will trad* for chair
ol equal vatu* (approi ttOOl
in peach, teal, oil while, or
gray 774 14*0________________
a LOVE SEAT gold and stlvtr.
Sturdy and very comfortable
StOO .................Call 177 17**
MATTRESS AND BOX springs
double site sets lor sate Great
value! 170 set
771 04*0

223—Miscellaneous
AIRBED. Salt Infilling. H50 at
B r o o k s lo n * . s e ll H I :
NETSCHKE'S Erotic 7 In
ivory llgurlnas t i l l •#.:
FROG Lika 19 In Mulled
animal S40; MERCEDES
trailer hllch tor 177 body style
HO I *37 14* 4)77____________
• BEAUTIFUL HAND painted
carousel hors* rapllca Col
lector's llam MO 774 14*0 _
• BOX OF COIL COLLATED
nails 10 Its inch sit* Fits
Bostltch or Hitachi nail gun
17) firm 771 m * _____________
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE RINOS
t** and up Frea siting!
Bast Pawn A Jewelry, 77* *914
• DOLLS. New. plastic type to
dress tor craft shows Black or
whltt 11" Case of 11 tor I I )
170 1107___________________
aEXERCVCLE. Duel action
lor leg. upper body, stomach
a a e r c t l.. equipped wllh
speedometer, com lortebl*
seal 141 777 0947_______ ____
• FOLDING TABLE 70’ • 17"
Lika new) Sell new lor HOO
Now t l ) P tr ftc l tor yard
sales, church hall ani Catalina
Drive 171 0419 leave massage
• LADDER RACK with locking
handies Good cond 11ton HOO
40? 449 7)77 ______
# POPCORN POPPER Mot air
_____ 770 1101
type 17
• PORTABLE STEAM BATH
All fiberglass MOttO volt
___________ 777 t o « __________

Relax In Your New Spi!
Seats 5. portable, never used
W/cedar gatebo. underwater
light. 11,571407 931 7717
• TWO ISallk* A T 4 wheeler
tires S*0 Good condition
177 5411
a t DOZEN Mason Jar*. MOO
777 7?1»

230—Antique/Classlc
_______ Cars________
FORD MUSTAHO. 1*44. V*
Runs good body In good shape
17. MO0 8 0 ............... 174 741*
a PONTIAC Firebird 1*4*. On#
owner) Garaged1 V1K ml.
NIC* 14500 *0? 777 4494
I *11 MO Clatslc Convertible.
Good cund lt*M OBO 174
1014

2 3 1 -C a rs

*11 FT. GLAS1TRON A Trail

~T 81— Appliances
/ F u rn itu re ___

• DRUM SET. Per tec I lor mid
dt* school band claskas Loti
oteetras SHM Call M il)* *
FOR SALE: Yamaha portable
keyboard. MM cash only. Call
147 111* attar It AM ask tar
BUI

211— A n tiq u es/
Collectibles

m n » _______ ____

2 3 1 -C a rs

217— Garage Sales
•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garag* sale ad by
17 noon on Tuesday and lake
advantage ol our special
garag* sal* ad priced Call
Ciassitiad now tor deteiisl

3222611

105 Brentwood Dr.
Sanlord. Idyllwlld* oft 44A
Sat A Sun tarn 5pm Tools.
Fishing gear. Chavy engine,
sern doors, pictures, toys
Christmas Items, etc .etc. etc

CADILLAC U EL DOHAOO.
convertible tly l* roof, up
graded wheels. 105 000 ml. I
owner 15400______ ___ 1*9 0444
OCHEVY CAMARO • '77. Re
b u i l t VI. l o t * O l naw p a r t i l
11.0*5OBO 171 01Many time
CHEVY CITATION. 1*9*. 4 c y l.
Auto, cold A/C
lows. Runs and
looks great MM OBO 774 77)9
• CHRYSLER IM PERIAL ’*1.
Lika naw Musi tall. Only
171.000 Call 14071757 *S19
• CJ I JE E P. 1*19. I cyl,
custom Rebuilt engine, naw
liras, brakes 14.711 llrm 777
7**e
_______________ _____
CORSICA. 1*M w/ new com
put*r, brakes. A/C motor
E atra d e a n 14,100 OBO
_401^44? 4097 eit 479_______ ___
DODGE CARAVAN SE. IMI. 4
c y l. laats 1. loaded enellenl
t ondillon 110 *00*04 79* 1747
DODGE wagon 1*94 Auto. air.
clean, p i. slerto till. *0.000
ml, good palnl. never dam
aged 13.7*1407 994 *449
• FORD THUNOERBIRD • '44.
AH original I Needs some
work 11,4*1080 731 01)4 _
• HONDA ACCORD DX. I**i"
Auto. A/C. am 'Im tape, whit#
110400LIKE NEWI 777 741?
HYUNDAI 1*lt SI.TOO DODGE
ARIES nation wagon. 1(91
1100 0 0 0 0 E COLT. I f t l
S I .W O 7 7 ) 5 **9 o r 77 4 14 14

__

JAGUAR XJ4. 1*91 Auto, all
power, runs graatl Baaulliull
Consider trade 14 000 771 1444
MERCURY SABLE OS, l*M
Eacellenl condition, all power,
j 4 . a o o ______ Can 1*1 * 17*
MONTE CARLO. 1*19. Great
condition. A/C. runs Ilka a top
Sharp looking! 1I SM 714 t i l l
NEED A CAR credit problem!*
I can help, dependable used
c a r s and tru c k s
Dave
Shannon R C. Hill * World ol
Wheals. Lake Mary 779 77»

3 3 0 *1 4 3 1

SHORT OF CASH?
Seriously looking for a nice,
clean, used car* OEPEN
DABLE Down payments as
low as It** Includes toe A
till* Call:

FUES AUTO SALES
» *327-2692* »
SUBARU. 1*91. Runt good MOO
or best olttr 171 1711 laava
message
TOYOTA CrestldJ, N. 111k m l.
loaded, clean Ind owner.
15500 77* 1471_______________
75 MOB
(CONVERTIBLE)
1*00 OBO 777 M »
SI CHEVY Full l l . Wagon"
d esal. good cond. cold AC.
naw liras 1700 777 7491_______
094 CHEVY C*v4lltr Station
wagon. AC. auto S1.S7S
_________ Call 14* 4977_________
*44 PONTIAC Flora GT. auto.
V4. Red. MK Ml Good cond!
lion LOADED 17**) 73) I7ea
17 L I N C O L N T i e a c i r ,
Signature. Eacellenl Cond
17100 731 4tl4or 74* 9137
97 SUBARU. 4 whl dr hat
chback eng replaced, naw
aahaust 11100 Nag 740434*
i l l LE BARON convertible,
red loaded, dig dash 7SK ml.
17000 Partial Hnanc* 4*S 7909
as* CHEVY C*l*brlly. AC.
Auto. 4door M »0 Firm
___________ 777 4117___________
o n JEEP fporl Auto. PS. PB
AC. alarm .U K ml.t)S.700
Like naw 1 *07 791 2447

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
(L E A T H E R FRONT MASK,
(bra) lor Maid* RX7 fill
1*94 I**0I1S Call 711 7177

235—T r u c k * /
B u *o » /V a n *
CHEVY VAN. 1*94. V ) . auto.
A/C. now liras MOOQ OBO
731 7999 Jim_________________
C H E W VAN, IM I. Intarlor
nlc* 1 dent, runs groat M.000
OBO 171-7999 Jim____________
DATSUN KINO Cab. 97. 5 t p .
Stereo. (*K ml Very Depen
(Ubie 17500 777 07*7_________
e FORD BUS - 1*7). GOOD
CONDITION It 000CALL
___________ 777 7909___________
FORD VAN, 1*9). Plam befi
S p e c la ll Stocked. M an y
eatras. Sharpl 14.900 044 9947.
447 4404 (beeper)_____________
a HANOI CAPPED VAN. 1*90
Ford E-IM Lilt, automatic
doors 17.009 777 laN _________

Sanford Motor Co.
1*99 J E E P C H B R O K E E
LIMITED • Leather, all lha
toy* 111.000 mil** 1U.W0
___
Call 777 4797_________
*7 DO DOE RAM, Cenverswn
van. I7K ml.. 1st owner I TV.
nlnlendo 135 450 177 *14)

23B—Vehicles
Wanted
C A D IL L A C E L D O R A D O
WANTED IMI IMI In nka
condition 97*717)____________
CORVETTE WANTED to ro
star* Any year or condition
14.000 limit 474 I IM

239— Motorcycles
____ and Bikes
__
HARLEY 1)1 Clattlc. Needs
work, consider trad* Reason
able otter only I Tarry 770 7Bt»
SUZUKI LT M4R. IMS Quad
racer. 114M cash, or trad* lor

^whMourstroka^7^941^^_
241— Recreational
V e h ic le s /C a m p ers
07 * FT. 1*77 DODOE RV. low

mil**, sleeps 4. stove, shower.
tr.dge 14*00 777 077*_________
#17 FT EL DORADO motof
horn*. '74 Naw awning, tv.
runs great U.000 OBO 771 79*1

Well Advertise Your Car
(or other motor vehicle)

EVEKT PAT III ITS SOUK
3 lines for only
$ 2 1 2 4
( a d d itio n a l lin e s e x t r a )

Ad must include phone number and asking price. I f vehicle hasn’t
been sold in 10 days, call us and we’ll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is running except for price. Non-commercial only.

C a l l 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 T b d a y !
2580 R ldgtw ood Ave., Sanford

NISSAN SENTRA XE, 1*9* 7 dr,
cold air. full spaed, clean
Priced to Mil M.700 *79 41)3
NOVA. im . Black w/ rad si
Auto. A/C. naw seat* M.MQ
771 79B9Jlm________________
OLDS SIERRA, MB7. l i t ) OBO
Sa* at: IIS Gerrlion Drive.
Sanlord or call 904 111 79**
• OLDSMOBILE 44. 1*99. a door
sedan. 77.0(50 ml las. p/w. p/l.
cruise A/C M. 100777 4177
PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION a
EVERY FRIDAY 7:79 PM
DAYTONA AUTOAUCTION
Hwy. t). Daytona Beach
__________**4 717 9711__________

Sanford Herald

�by Chic Young

B L O N D IE

&amp; 4 0 0 T . .I U * E P
C L 'C rtiN S 5 S T T E 0

v»vry v o x a j uS€ tvc

Qtvcrt cc**mou

C ;.iC *B H * w 6 N VOU8E

5 0 CLOSt r o

TV’

.

Reduce fat and
sugar to lose pounds
^

.

DEAR DR. OOTTt Much has

by Charles M . Schulz

PEANUTS

HELLO? OH, 15 THI5
YOU 0i6 BROTHER?

/c

q

— r--------------

- Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Tuaaday, Juty 13, 1903

•&gt;

Im' cii written about the buttle of
the buluc. Please explain the use
of amino acid tablets taken at
liedllmc for weight loss. Is this u
safe method If combined with
exercise and a low-fat diet? What
side effect* arc to be considered?
DEAR READER: There are no
tricks to losing w eight, no
"m agic potion" that will help
you slim down and keep the
weight off. The most successful
weight reduction programs In­
volve the use of exercise and an
acceptable diet.
lly "acceptable" I mean a diet
that Is not too restrictive and can
Ire tolerated lor long |K-rlods. For
example. I’ve had good results
by encouraging patients to cut
down on fat. omit sugar and
alcohol, and consume modest
|iortlons of f«&gt;od without between-meal snacks.
Amino acid tablets are of no
benefit in weight reduction.
These and other "q u ick -fix "
solution* are either Ineffective or
Inappropriate for long-term use.
The low-fat. low-sugar diet plus
exercise are the Important con­
siderations.
To give you more Information.
I am sending you free copies of
my Health Reports "C alorie
Wise Cooking.” "Winning the
Hattie of the Bulge" and "Weight
Control Through Calorie Con­
trol." Other readers who would
like copies should scud $1.25 for
each rejHtrt plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
PO. Box 2433. New York. NY
10103. Be sure to mention the
title!*).
DEAR DR. GOTT: I have
almost completely lost my taste
of food I can smell everything,
but can't experience a true taste.
I've been to an ENT s)&gt;eclallst
who gave me prescription nose
spray at $30 a bottle, but this
hasn't corrected my problem.
What will?
DEAR READER: Ageusia
(lost taste) can result from heavy
smoking. Inflammation of the
tongue and Sjogren's syndrome

. .. n
„
(a

____
.. m
. . . iui nnfci
aut—
o - Il .m

rdl il s
ue
na
i Ns e

MEDICINE

PETER

marked by dryness of the mouth
G O TT.M .D .
and eyes, diagnosed by blood
tests).
More often, ageusia Is second­
ary to a complete or partial loss
of smell. This can I k - caused by
sinus Infection, ullerglc conges­ e lu d in g the nnll-deprcssant
tion of the upper respiratory amitriptyline), head trauma and
tract, stroke, various drugs (In- , tumors.
Ana w ar te Pravtaua P u x il#

ACROSS
1 — be*

7 Champagne
(at.)
13 Aviator —
Earhart
14 Girt'a nama
15 Moat
compatanl
16 Actraaa
Sandy —
17 Mlaalng
16 Ouldo'a high
nota
30 Catchaa
21 Til* aaam
malarial
23 Mora dartino
27 Encouraged
32 Waar away
33 Bartar
34 FortunetalNng
card
35 Movabla door
ieri
ngradlant
39 — on:

f

40
42
46
47
51
53
65
56
57

Incited
01 tha moon
Grafting twig
Map abbr.
MoUon
picture
Over
Sawing
implement
— and Clyde
Legal
document
Looks
prylngly

58 Remington

DOWN
1 Idol
2 Canter of
shield
3 Torme and
Gibson
4 Fruit decay
5 Fleur-de- —
6 Food
consumer
7 Smear

U U lilJ J

UUU

LllJULS

uuuu

uuu

yuum

U U U U L 1 U LJJJUUfcjLJ
U U LJkJU
UUU L1U
UJU1LJU U U l i U
U U L J LJUJUUJU L3UD
am
LJLJL3
CJLU

au u u uuuu uuu
uuuu uuuu
auyua
uuuau
uuuuyu yyyyyu
□ u u u lju lj

k'JNCIM (4IIC1 Mklk'JN

8
g
10
11

Eskimo knife
BeN aound
Blue pigment
Future
LL-Bs.' eiam
12 Deep
earnings

21
22
23
24
25

volcano
Mauna —
Hansel's
slater
Tie
Whale
Russian rtvar
Raced

26 Esau's
country
28 Sprues
20 Sharp flavor
30 Bordar
31
37
38
41

Act
Takes care of
An eiplosive
Mosquito
otn u t

42 Engineer*'

compart­

43
44
45
47
48
40
50
52
54

ments
Sacred Imago
Y e * -------Taboo Item
Algonquian
Indian
Author of
"Picnic’'
Playwright
— Simon
Art deco
tlluatrator
Drink slowly
Model Carol

WIN AT BRIDGE
By P h illip Alder
Bridge Is lull of opportunities
lor play* thnl mislead an oppo­
nent. Some of these plays arc
barefaced swindles. Inil others
give lhe opponent a losing option
th.u doesn't exist without the
false-eurd. On our first troard of
lfie second session In Turkey,
my partner (New York expert
Jim Krekortanl didn't miss the
chance for a mandatory falsecard.
After an auction lh.it fell as If
II had slopped In the middle. I
led I he club king. Dec larer won
with tlit* ace and played a heart
to dummy's Jack. Krekorlan was
ready: fie dropped the nine.
Note that If he plays the five,
dcrlurci Is ImiuiicI lo continue
with the are. killing my king.
She will draw the last trump,
play on diamonds and win at
least nine tricks: one spade, five
hearts, two diamonds and one

club.
When the nine appeared.
South was presented with a
losing option. She played a low
diamond to her tpiccn: then she
led the heart rpirrn. She was
hoping In pin the 10 In East's
hand. Also, she was allowing for
the possibility that East's nine
was a singleton.
Here, though, the play rost
South dearly. When the heart
ace didn't (imp the It). South
returned lo diamonds. Krekorlan
ducked his ace until the third
round, cashed the heart 10 and
returned a club. Declarer rufled
and tried a spade to the queen,
but Eust won with the acr and
played another club. Now South
hail only eight tricks: one spade,
four hearts, two diamonds and
one dub.
Keep an eye open for false
carding opportunities.

NORTH

T il'll

♦ 04

♦ A J4
♦ K 10 9 7 2
♦ J 7J

♦ 4

EAST
♦ A 10 4
*I09S
♦ At(3

♦ KQ8I12

♦ 10 4 4

WEST
♦ J 7 11

YK1

soirrn
♦ K 9I 4
* 0 8762
♦ 0 J5
♦ A

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: West
Soslh
1*
14

W rtl
Pam
l*ASS
Pats

Norik
Pass
14
J*

E oil
P us
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: 4 K
(0 1 0 0 3 . N E W S P A P E R
TERPRISEASSN.

EN-

HOROSCOPE
By Bernice Bede Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
July 14.1003
In the year ahead you might
devote your efforts and energies
In a new direction where your
work or career Is concerned. It
looks like you may become
Involved In something both In­
triguing ond profitable.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Things you handle for others
might not work out as well ns
you hope today, so don’t get too
Involved. However, you should
get straight A’s In managing
your personal Interests. Cancer,
treat yourself lo a birthday gift.
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­
dictions lor the year ahead by
mailing $1.25 and a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o* Ids newspaper.
I'.O. Box 4465. New York. N.Y.
10163. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Left lo
your own devices today your
creative Instincts and Imagina­
tion should Ik - very fruitful. This
might not be true, however,
when you feel you must Incorpo­
rate the Ideas of nssoelalcs.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It
looks like you’re going to break
A N N IE

-n r

chance you might devise a better
into that group of people with
way of doing something that will
whom you've always wanted lo
enhance produ ctivity, make
establish a friendly rapport.
your Job easier and cut costs.
You'll lie surprised as to how
PISCES (Feb. 20 March 20)
much everyone has hi common.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Today you lend to draw strength
Because others will Ik- paying and Idrus off of friends with
close attention to you today, whom you're Involved. If they
your words and Ideas will carry arc optimistic and enthusiastic.
It could have a dramatic, posi­
considerable weight. Be sure
what you c s |k i u * c leaves the tive clfect on your attitude.
type of Impression you feel ts
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) An
most desirable.
abrasive situation from the past
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. .22) might I k * favorably terminated
Try to devote time to mental today as your attention shifts to
projects today. You're especially new Interests. However, the
glltcd In this area und you could Idrus thut motivate you aren't
come up with a new spin for a apt to originate with you.
fatigued endeavor.
TAURUS (April .20M ay 20)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. Don't Ik- afraid lo ask questions
211 Generally speaking your today If someone ts truchlug you
assets arc rather well rounded something you do not fully
out today, hut you're likely to be grasp. It might Ik necessary to
the sharpest at doing tasks that review this material two or more
allow you to research, probe and ttmrs.
detect.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) Partnership arrangements There are Indications you might
could produce mutual benefits be more adroit ol handling
for persons with whom you're (lnunclul matters today thun you
Involved today. The results _ will Ik- later In the week. Take
might not lie optimum, hut they cure of these situations now
while you're on a roll.
should he quite good.
AQUARIUS Man. 20 Feb. 191 (CM 1993. N E W S P A P E R E N ­
While at work today there Is a TERPRISE ASSN.
by Leonard S ta rr

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                    <text>S e r v in g S a n fo rd , La ke M a ry a n d S e m in o le C o u n t y s in ce 1 0 0 8
85th Yonr. No

255 - Snnford, Florida

C o u rt r e c o r d s fla p b r e w s

Equipment, policy: Pros complain , clerk responds

IH SID E

piopeii\ iiausleis In Ihlseouniy than elsewhere.
h makes lItem less productive and can mean
h i g h " cost Im their customers

By J . MARK BAR FIELD

w Iih

Herald Senior Stall Writer
SANFORD
I'lolesslonals who IreipieiilK list
Seminole r'nimlv m i n i records me grumbling
about clerk Maryatme Morse's otpiljmxni ami
policies. Inn Morse says she's responding
A n d at least one prulesslonal s a . s tin
grumblings are mituir
Employees and owners ol more than two dozen
Independeni and small title search companies
signed a protest Icllci sent to the S iw lo n l I ln ., h i
recently saving the land refolds departin' lit .■i
the Seminole Countv Courthouse is in pom
condition In Seminole C o u n lv when couip.ucd in
other comities
They sav llicv must spend mote nine u.irtug

M»r »ld Pholo to, Kell*, M.lrhcll

L e t’s Rap
I hirst coliiiiiMiHt Michael Slu'llim. center, an
aitlst writer, leat her and program coordinator
loi itie S.mlord Housing Authority, addresses
•he spirit til creativity and how young people
might express themselves
See Page OA

Q People

Best dads around
T he letters have been read and the winners
chosen T o p dads nominated lor the //er.i/r/'s
annual Dad ol the Year are featured today

Sec Page SB

r /Special th is S u n d a y

O ur To w n , Lake M ary
I-'rum a young environmentalist, an Inventor,
and a civic activist to the persimmon man. meet
some ol your l.ake Mary friends and neighbors
m a special section Inside today

BR IEFS
Food d is trib u tio n set
S A N F O R D — Distribution and registration lot
ib&lt;- IK FA I' bee lood program will lie held dune
22 and 21 at /.ayre I'la/a al U S lllgbwav 17 ‘ 12
and Airport Boulevard. T h e distribution will be
held b om I0 a .n i until b p m cach day
Residents who meet Income re(|ulremeuls aie
eligible to participate ( ’all ' M l 1520 lor mote
lull,i dial Ion

‘W ater
police’
warn few
violators

A K R O N , Ohio — A man laces up tu five years
In prison and a $25,000 line lor falsely telling
police tli.it meal at two grocery stores bad been
Injccicd wlllt blood carrying the A ID S virus.
Curtis Burley. MH. ol Campbell pleaded guilty
I liursdav lo making a lulsc product tampering
com p la in t
II.S. District J u d g e S a m Bell
post polled sentencing until August.
lie was arrested March Ml. a day alter two
Yoimgsluwn-area stores cleared I heir shelves ol
meat products because ol the claim.
Burley later told FBI agents he licit lie had
said the meat was tainted by a woman. FBI
agents said be told them lie was seeking revenge
against a former girlfriend
Health olllelals said an Injection ol IlIV taluted
blood probably would nut have posed a threat
Cooking Ih r meal likely would have destroyed
the A ID S virus, they said

From staff roporta

IN DEX
Buslnass......................4B
Classifier's.......10*12B
C o m ic s .........................8B
C ro ssw o rd .................. 8B
Dsar A b b y................... 7B
Deaths..........................8A
Editorial.......................4A
Rap................................8A

Florida..........................2A
HaalthJFItnaaa......... 7A
H orosoops.................. 8B
Nation.......................... 8A
Psoplo...................... 5-7A
Sports....................... 1-3B
Tele visio n ................... 7B
W eather....................... 2A

D ryer than usual co n d itio n s

Fo r mors w eather, see Peps 2A

J

_______________________________ -Maryanne Morse
consuming records requests, she says
I llle searchers are Individuals who scan public
land records, cheeking in assure properly Is
owned tree and clear and wllhntil "clouds" such
as liens u bankruptcies Indexes, sometimes
spanning decades, must be scanned and any
relcrcncc to the properly must be i becked
In Seminole C o u n lv Indexes are computerized
9ce Records. Page 5A

School
a d v is o r y
c o m m it t e e
d is b a n d s

F irs t F a th e r’s D ay

Combines with
leadership group

By J. MARK BAR FIELD
Herald Senior Staff Writer
SANFORD
I earns ol 'water
police" spread out ovci Central
Florida Fiitlav like raludiops soak
mg Into pavi'inent hut tumid most
lolks were complying with irrigation
I ides
"The teams that have n im i in
said m general, u was bard loi them
lo llud viol. i i o i s ." said Pat Frost,
manager ol the Orlando ulllce ol the
Si Jo h n s Rivet Water Management

By V ICKI DeSORMIER
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD
Alter more than two
vc,us ol in* ciuigs and work, the
counlv school advisory tommlltcc
was s n ill In 1/cd bv l be school board
I lie gioop was disbanded, at llicli
own in|ucst. and i omblncd with
tin district leadnsl np committee to
|n&lt; in a stronger, more elfielent

l l l N l l II I

T b l r l e e n t w o p e r s o n te n n is
patrolled Seminole. Orange and
Lake counties Friday, on the look
ool lot Illegal sprinkling bill not lo
Issue their $51) lines lo vlolulots. All
Ihc 7H v io la to rs loiind In Ihc
Irl-eounty area were Issued warning
notices and given llle correct
watering tunes
Fiosl said oulv one vlulnlni was
loimil in tin Sanlonl an a I blrlv ol
the \ mlaiiiis w e ir m Scm m oli
( mull v . mosllv m the Wekiva R l V ' i
It.isin Virtu.dlv all ol I he violations
weie al lesldenees, lie said
In Seminole Couotv. icsidenls
west ol lilteislale I i all vv.ilet tin’ll
lawns with spilnkleis seven tlavs a
week, except hi I ween the boors ol H
a hi and H p m Mast ol I I. n sidi til
can w a in each day except hctwci n
I lie bouts ol l&lt;) a m to I p m
l iosl said ball ol the violations

False report: A ID S in m eat

I I " v sav seaicites In Orange County can lake
minutes computed to Seminole Counlv. which
may lake an hour or more, liven searches in Lake
and Volusia counties, where the records systems
.uen l as a d v a n c 'd .ls Orange Coun ty, are
ipitckei. they say.
Also, a ptolessional who scans large numbers ol
"Mill Dies Is piotesllog a new MOeent lee Morse
will impose .Inlv I which Die prolessional says
could put lici out ol business Morse says Ihc Ice
is nccccsarv because her elcrksinow spend an
a u i.igc oi i wo hu m s each day retrieving IOO or
•lion lilt s loi some piolcssloiials
Sian law allows her lo charge lot lime

i l ’m
not
g o in g
to
m ake
a
$5 0 0 ,0 0 0
or a $6 0 0 ,0 0 0
or a
$ 7 0 0 , 0 0 0 c o m m i t m e n t u n t i l I ’m
s u r e it ’s g o i n g t o l a s t .

were In the tlitcc countv Wekiva
River Basin which lias bn n undn
Sec W ater. Page 2A

" W e liave two teams doing doulile
ellnrt," said Barbara Spragg. who
lias led llle district advisory com
inlllcf since Its Inception
Spragg explained Ill'll while I he
school advisory c omml l l cc was
heavy vvllli pareul volunteers, the
leadership committee was more
laden vvllli distil' I admlnlsiratois
Kcdclimtlon ol I lie loles ol llle
i i MillllII Ices is si ill Heeded she said
We im i d lo Inr 111 one committee
dial has ihc adinluisirallvc makeup
ol Hie lead' isblp i iMunilllci’ and tin*
pan nlal volimlccrs ol Ihc school
advisory c o m m ll lc c ." S pragg
explained

t u m i d Pholo to, Kelt** Mitchell

Proud dad. Fat nek Bush, wulcomos son, Austin James, to the latnily
at. morn. Donna looks on Austin was bom Thursday night at Central
Florida Hugion.il Hospital, |ust in lime lo colobrato Father s Day with
be, pop lorlay Related Editorial, Page 4A

( &gt;vci the last two years, the school
advisory c o m m lllc c lias loiincd
'listilet learns and picparcd Haloing
im iln school advisory conuulilees
.,I cat b school which were pu pal
mg ihc individual school Improve
11 ic 111 plans they have " , m in d e d
ila n a m ing sessions, developed Iln
See D is b a n d . Pugc 5 A

W AY
BACK
WHEN

F a th e r’s D a y is very d iffe re n t for
k id s of d iv o rc e w ith d e a d b e a t d a d s

J U L IA N
STEN STRO M

By SANDRA E L L IO TT

Yarns about
a large clan
A couple years ago wc did some
va rus about some ol Soutorh s
"larger" families One we wanted to
tell you about was the Ja m e s
I'ldmond Mi Alcxaiidct "elan" (hut
came lo Saulotd about H H O a llc i In
bad married Miss Mav Olgee m I be
west leunessei d l y ol Milan ill
I HUM
T he senloi MeAlexaudei was a
caipeulei bv Hade
II was ila
Allaulli i oasi lane tb.il bioogbi
him lo Sanlonl lie and Mav settled
m &lt;i I ion i&lt; i bev bought at Klcvcntb
and Ficncb A \ n in e
I lie couple as did many lamibcs
in 11lose davs opted lo have a l.llgc
lamllv I b n i liisibotn was Waison
who glcw up hen beloic going to
Mil luinglium Ala and gelling m l"
the pliologiaphv business Watson
died In MIM5 file sn oti'l was son
dale lie grew up lin e bin moved lo
Del.and lain on and became a
'.u p c n lc i lli passed.ivv.iv in I i h &lt;
I lie 1 11ii d was a daughter la a 11•i
Ills! husband died and six m a r i m l
M i l 's And' ison vvllodied in 11IH).
See StciiHtrom, Page 5A

Herald Stall Wider
A liai kvaid barbi cm
A dav al
lie biaili llappv dilldicn galhcicd
aioimd ilidi dad as lie opens a
I allici s Day gill ll mav be another
loud lie "I one mole sllll I
111ai is ilie traditional picture
ma m people have ol tills annual
liohduv lionorliig lathcis

Ii is a vi i v (iltlercnl dav loi the
&lt; b 11dti n ol divoici' whose lathers
lull to pav coon ordered child sup
poll Although i Itlici pareul mav lie
onlcich in pav suppoit generally
llic tion cuslodi.il paicnl ordered to
pav siippni i is ihc talbci
Al a mil ling last week ol the
Association lot Cbildicii lor Enl o i " incut &gt;&gt;l Support. Iiu , (ACES),
mcinhcis discussed iln dilllcultles
IInv lai i living lo coll " I com I
iildi 11 ii -aipp.it | 11&lt;m11 dc.ulbc.il
dads
l o opi o tin session, alicndccs
Sian i| ib&lt; oumhci ol » Inldico they
bad lie ani'MUil . I soppoii owed
and tin bow l«mig and when lie
d' "Huai dads .i p living, il then
VVllelc.lboUls well Isliovv II
III lie r*li#iip ol ,tin.til 2H. ab'Mil
$.172.1 M&gt;U III snppoii was due III
scveial cases. llicv had tiled lo
■o i l " I -uippni i loi v ■ ai s ( )nc
woman
win.si live . Iilldn ii an
glow M said tlicv al' dm about
Vill'MH) \n.Mb' l lias l l " d I'M 27
v&lt; Os lo cul l" I the suppoll due llel

Sec Support. Huge 2A

-.1

S in g le P a re n t B u rn o u t
Brain scan to help you rem em be r ah a t you
were (diking about

Bloodshot eyes from not getting
enouqti sleep

Painted or* smile to wear
in front ol youf

child
Perm an en t shakes (r um trying

Broken hear f from worr ying
about your life

todO it dll

&gt; ingers worn to the bone born
fair |f&gt;bs

working
Worn * loth* g b u m mu t
h a . mg enough money
to Iiu t itfA 0 *'e\

Knee pad*
begging f.

worn

while

Shmguards to profit ♦ you
from being kicked
around trie system

Mild

Support

Worn out shot’s from standing m line for lood

stamp*
V isitors to AC E S m eetin g s roceivo this hnndoul.

�- Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 20, 1993

HEWS FROM THE

FLORIDA
BRIEFS

REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

HRS and Dept, of Elderly Affairs
ay J A C K I I

HALLIPAX

Associated Press Writer

10-year-old dies after alligator attack

TA LLA H ASSE E . Flo. (AP) ll'n been nearly five years since
voters approved a constitutional
amendment allowing creation of
a Department o f Elderly Affairs,
It’s been more than two years
since Gov, Lawton Clitics fought
with the Legislature to get n
department created, refusing tn
agree lo less than a full-service
agency.
And It's been 18 months since
the Department o f Elderly A f­
fairs began operating.
So who Is II that makes homes
visits after neighbors become
concerned the elderly woman
down thr street Isn't Inking cure
of kernel I?
T h e s ta te D e p a r tm e n t uT
Health and Rehabilitative S erv­
ices,
Qrlffln’s sanity questioned
W ho Is It that determ ines
PENSACOLA — A man accused o f fatally shooting an
• when elderly people qualify for
Med lea Id V HRS.
abortion clinic's doctor will be examined by three mentalAnd who runs one o f the
health experts to determine If he Is competent tostund trial.
sta le's home care programs,
Circuit Judge John Parnham on Frlduy scheduled a July 0
hearing for Michael F. Griffin, who Is accused o f killing Dr.
providing rare givers with a
David Gunn on March 10 outside an abortion clinic In
monthly stipend lo help make
Pensacola, Fla.
ends meet and Id lin g them get
Police said Griffin confessed to the killing shortly after Ids
out of the house occasionally?
arrest.
Again. It's MRS.
Griffin has shown unusual behavior, suck as accusing Gunn,
Most o f the services provided
President Clinton and others o f treason.
to the m ore thun 3 million
people 60 years o f age or older
Griffin's courl-appolnteri law yer claims his client may have
neuropsychological Impairment caused by meningitis.
come out o f the new department.
Including llie $62 million Older
From Associated Press reports
A m ericans Act and the 857
million Community Care for the
Kklcrlv program.
The services lltose two pro­
g ra m s p r o v id e r a n g e fro m
personal care In llie home to
menls-ou-whrcls to adult day
Continued from Page 1A
fees. Zorlan said (lie sh eriffs
care.
children. She Is trying to
d ep a rtm en t g en e ra tes about
attach her ex-husband's social
$ 3 2 0 ,0 0 0 a n n u a lly s e r v in g
security benefits. Even though
various types o f legal papers.
the children arc grown, the
One o f llie major otiHlacles In
unpnld support debt remains.
collecting the support, according
Many of the women said the
lo Harriet Is Identifying the
By VICKI DeSORMIBR
missing fathers live out o f state,
In d ivid u al, He ex p la in ed a l­
Herald Staff Writer
sometimes moving often, swltthough support Information Is
chlngjobs.
entered In the Seminole County
SANFORD - Spl ash!
One woman tracked tier ex- com puter, the Florida Crime
Stan Hnglcy. general stipcrlnhusband to his Job us a Broward
Information Center (FCICI does
tendciU o f Die Washington Divi­
C ou nty sh eriff's deputy bnl
noi allow the Information lo be
sion o f Amtrak. hit Die crystal
when she tried to have papers placed In the statewide com ­
blue water of Du* dunk tank with
served there, she said the of­ puter because It Is civil rather
a c o o l s h o w e r fo r th o s e
ficials could not locate him.
limn criminal dala. If an Indi­
spectators standing close by to
Seminole Counly Undersheriff vidual Is slopped oulskk* Ike
ace managers knocked from the
j Steve Harriet, who spoke to the counly were the support is due.
scat into Die tank.
L a c ES—group—a lon g with Sgl.
other law enforcement -nlUcem
" I realty believe tn thl* pro­
^av&amp;ZerlfULAM M p u n ted that a eunnot access the Information.
gram ." Uaglcy said. "1 think It In
gleputy, even In a large depart­ The national crime Infurinallon
a really worthwhile program ."
m ent, MHltll nut be located. He center (NCIC) also prolilliis the
Uaglcy. and .other inuuagers
civil support Information In Its
utld at some point, the man
from Die Washington Division
v o u ld h a v e to p ic k up a computer, making It easy lor
were In Sanford Dlls weekend to
non-paying parents to go un­
Hive beck.
support tlu* family day celebra­
Since October, 1902, Harriet
detected.
tion sponsored by A m tra k 's
kl 96 Individuals have been
ACES members become de­
Safety Division and Operation
irrcstcd for non-paym ent o f tectives in llielr own right using
Red Block, an em ployee volun­
:hlld support cllher by an order any Information they can lo
teer drug and alcohol prevention
rack the non-payers.
if attachmenl or being directly
program.
For more Information about
^em u nded fro m th e Ju dges
Operation Red Block Is based
ham hers. In order to gel out of ACES, call 263-5H38.
on the Idea that em ployees have
all. the person can pay "p u rg e”
the right lo a drug und alcohol
noncy, the child support due.
Ircc work en viron m en t. T h e
The sheriff sends the money to
em ployees volunteer to educate
he Clerk o f the Circuit Court for
one another about the dangers o f
disbursement to the family. The
C on tin u ed fro m P age 1A
dn ig and alcohol use In the work
96 Individuals paid 874,383.53
place.
Die 10-to-l0 rule since
In support In order lo be released
Employees arc made aware of
June 12. He Mild most o f Die
from Jail.
the signs o f abuse and enn help
residents thought they were still
"Som ehow , they nlwnys seem
one another to get help.
under Die tO-lo-4 rule.
to be able to come up with the
"It used In be that If you
Frost said no citations have
money so they don’ t have to stay
showed up at work under the
been Issued since the June 12
In J a il," Z orlan com m ented.
Infliiliencc you would lose your
W ekiva rule look effeel, but
Many women work through the
Job," engineer Jim Sim m ons
Department o f Health and Re­ s o n ic v io lu to r n h a v e b e en
said. "N ow , you can get help.
warned. Frost said tils office has
habilitative Services to collect
You won’ t lose your Job and you
received
several
ca
lls
about
back child support.
Th e sher­
Just might save your own life."
T im sir mm G o lf and Country
iffs department hns also served
M ost o f th e 1 60 o r so
Club hut Die Lake Mury-urrtt golf
or a ttem p ted to se rve HRS
em ployees who are based In
course uses reclaimed water,
papers an 2.846 Individu als
Sanford made llielr way lo the
which can be used anytim e ol
uring that tim e period and
family day festivities.
day.
ollccted 922.540.32 In service
The scent of barbecued meat
HOBE SOUND, Fin, — A lO-ycur-okt Luntnnn boy died nTter
being attacked Saturdny by an alligntor.
The boy, Identified by a Martin County sheriff's dispatcher ns
Bradley Weldenhnmcr, had been on a canoe trip with his
fam ily ntJ. D. Dickinson State Park.
He had gotten out o f the craft and was was wading tn the
shallows o f the Loxnhntchec River about 1:30 p.m. when an
alligator measuring 8 to 11 feet seized him: witnesses told
Investigators from the state Game and Fresh Water Fish
Commission that the animal pulled the boy under water.
"T h e father and other party members attacked the alligator
with paddles and were able to free the b o y." said commission
spokesman Lt. Jim HufTstodt. No one else was hurt.
The party placed Bradley in n canoe and paddled smith to a
carioe outfitter’s shop In the pnrk. where the hoy was given
CPR.
From there. Bradley was taken by hcllcopler to .lupltcr
Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival, Ihilfsiodt
said, adding that the boy had suffered serious pm trlurc
wounds to the head.

Support

But a few key programs re­
main In HRS.
" I f Ihey'rc really old and really
sick and they're looking for a
n u rsin g h om e, chunces are
they're going, to find us first."
said R ob L om b u rd o, a c tin g
assistant secretary o f A gin g and
Adult Services at HRS.
The Tate o f those programs will
be the topic o f a series iff
l e g i s l a t i v e w o r k s h o p s th is
summer, beginning Monday In
Orlando.
Between 80 to 85 percent of
Florida's elderly residents who
turn lo the slate for services gel
them from the new department,
es tim a te d S e creta ry B en tley
Lipscomb.

He said Ills agency is func­
tioning fine without the aging
programs left In HRS.
"Could we function better with
those programs? Yeah, I think
so.
"C ou ld we more efficiently
administer them limn I IRS Is
doing currently? I think proba­
bly so,
"D o we have to? No.
"A m I going lo continue lo
scream at HRS cause they're not
doing It right? Y es."
And. Lipscomb added, elderly
people who get services from
HRS still have an advocate in the
Depart incut o f Elder Affairs,
which is wlml lie and Chiles call
the new department.

"E ven though I don't have
control over these things I urn
not exactly well-loved by some
o t h e r (a g e n c y ) s e c r e t a r ie s
because I hove been right down
their n e c k s ," he snld, That
Includes HRS, lie snld.
W hile elderly departments in
other states hnve responsibility
for health and social servlet*
programs, Lipscom b enn go to
any state agency to promote
p o lic ie s and p ro g ra m s that
benefit the elderly.
" T o the best o f my knowledge,
there's not another Department
o f Elder Affairs In the country
that lias the broad charge Dint
w e've got." he said.
Chiles snld he's pleased with
the Job the new department has
done mid with its ability to do
more with less by activating
volunteers across the state.

ClrdllilKhouw- a*MM* HO people a month
and haa “ Elder Helpline*" In nil 07
rtninlln.

" I th in k t h e y 'v e d o n e n
tremendous Job," he said earlier
this month.

Main aging programs
TALLAH ASSEE — Hara't a rundown ol
Iht main aging program* run by Dvparlmtnt ot Eldtrly Attain and th« itata
Dopartmanl ol Haalth and Rthabllltatlva

Daparlmaal of Haalth and RahabltliaUv* a*rvlc*a

Service*.

Departmant of Eld*tip Affair*

aConitminlly Cure tor tlir Klilrrlv With
n liiitlgt-t of (.17 mi III ■&lt;hi . thr prngrnm
provide* 30,000 |M-npl&lt;- wtill a r.iiigr of
nervier*. Iiululling adult tLiv roir, liiiinr
lir.illh Hide*, inrdlrnl •riiii*|w&gt;ilMII&lt;&gt;n. Inline
drllvrrrd
delivered mrulv
niriiV phynhul therapy mill
(mine mirilnit
• lllilrr Afnrnt,irm Ail. Willi n liudyri nt
M l million, ihr pn&gt;t(imii * m r » :i :in .i i « i
wllti Inliuilir u-rvlini. nilllllplirpovr le ­
ft tnr ernle r* urid in11rHh&gt;11 pt (i|&lt;rum*.
• Al/lirtnirr'* I’ rujreta. Willi n lnnljjrl nl
a I I million, i hr |irnt(riim provide* tiny
ear r lo 1011 proplr. nrrvlir* Irmn tlir
Mute* Me inrmoiy dlwirdrr 1 1lilies In
11.0.14 proplr. pier* Ihrrr tiiiur-n wrrk
Inrain |o family mnnbrr*. »pon»or» revarrh mill run** a irijM iv ami Inlnminikin
ayilctn ,

• oniir ill Volnnlrrr anil Comimnnly
Servlrr* Willi a tiuit||rl of *417 1)00. Ihr
idllrr mill u rlnirliidiimw linn acl* * » u
rqanllory anil millrir nl rrlrrnd* for all
federal, -Mute mill local m m ilm . Thr

• thmir Cure lor ihr Elderly. With a
budget ol nraity * 1.7 nillllon. ihr program
*rrvr* I1.11H proplr with all uveragr Hge
of Hi who hvr ui imnir wiih a care giver
Thr prngfiiiti. Malted hv I Mil IINS wotkrr*.
provide* a inimlhly Mlprud. ilaually itlmtll
• 100. In liny Immc* Mrdh nlil due* not
rover,
• I’ll ilr i tlvr Scrvlrr* Willi a InoInn ol
*7 million and a Mall nl 201. ihr program
llivratlgslr* report* id alm«- and nrain't.
Sonic 17.000 irjxilt* air liiindlril rath
yrar with nnnr Ilian hall Involving i.n n n l
wll nrglrel Willi a Imdgr I of *1 0 nillllon
and a Malf of 90 rmmvrlor*. Ihr program
provide* up lu ala month* of emergency
nervier*.
• Eligibility Orlrrinlnatlon* Willi a
binlifrl ol * 30.9 million and a alalf ol OHO.
Ihr dr|Mrlincnl drlrnnlnr* eligibility ol
100.000 rldrily |iroplr lor Mrdlenld roverugr With a budge I ol *1 7 and a Mall ol
113. Ihr program v rrriii 90 000 imirnll.il
run-ina Imnir iraldrni* lor coinmunlty
rnrr service* dial ipialtly lor Mrdlcald.

Hut the services left In’ HRS do
need to be transferred. Chiles
said.
"W e need lo go further." he
HuId . a ddin g that m isu n der­
standings about Die mechanics
o f Iht* transfer more (hun any­
thing else held things up.
" I don't think w c’vc slopped."
he said. "It's evolvin g."
Larry Pollvku. who worked for
(he creation o f the department In
1091 ns head o f the agin g
services for HRS', warns that
failure to consolidate soon could
hnve a far-reaching Impact on
the improvement o f long-term
enre.

Amtrak celebrates drug- free family day

Water

r

I i

'

TALLAHASSEE
Winning
numbers for the "Fantasy 5"
game Friday night are:

Todny: Partly cloudy. High In
Die low 90s. Wind cast 10 lo 15
nipli.
Tonight: Fair. Low In the mid
70s. Wind east lO m ph.
Monday: Partly cloudy. High
lu the low 90s. Wind east 10 lo
15 mph.
Extended forecast: Tuesday
t h r o u g h T h u r s d a y : P a r t ly
cloudy. A chance of showers and
th u n d e rs to rm s east const
anytim e and mainly afternoon
and evening elsewhere. Lows In
the lower lo mid 70s. Illghs In
Die lower 90s except mid to
upper 80s cast const.

'

'
Sunday, Jung 20, 1993
V0 l. 85, No. 255
PuMiahad Daily and Sunday, *»c*pt
lufday by Th* Sanford Herald,
Safe
i. NON. French A**., Sanford,

FfeU ni
Second C law Poalage Feld U Sanlord,
FforMa and additional melting

POSTUASTSR: Band *ddre«* cK»ngc*
la THI SANFORD HIRALO, P.0.
Boa 1N 7, Sanford, FL U m - 1« l 7.

f

SMbMitpUan Rate*
(Daft jSunday)
Kama 0(iS*^t
11M O

1Yagr

NMO
170.00

Em ployees of Am trak gathered for go o d food, fun and cam araderie Saturday.
and hot dogs wafted through Die
air to draw them In. Parents and
children gnlliered under the
yellow and while striped tents lo
cat and wait their turn at the
games.
A pony patiently took the little
children for rides.
AI Edclson, Assistant Vice
President for Safely at Amtrak,
said Die com pany's safety d ivi­
sion has always hud picnics far
their employees, but since 1085
they have promoted safety and a
drug free workplace by hosting
Die event In conjunction with
Operation Red Block.
"Really, we are all promoting
the same thing, the safety o f our

e m p lo y e e s and the p u b lic ."
Edclson said. "Y o u can't do
safety without having a drugfree workplace. You can't do one
without the other."
D.C. S to k es, cliutrm nn o f
O peration Red Block In the
Washington Division, said the
Sanford community lias given
strong support to thrtr program.
"T h e crew base in Sanford
works very hard with us," he
said. " F r o m con d u ctors, to
engineers, to on-board servers.
Everyone Is supportive."
The family day Is one o f the
few lim es nil the Sanford-bused
em ployees conic together each
year. Hugs and handshakes

r' \r A

F L O R II
HI Lo Pel
U 74 01
17 77 .06
»l 74 00
17 M 04
i ; *1 00
t i 77 00
i t 00
17 10 1
17 74 00
fl 71 00
n 41 00
n 70 00
•7 77 oo

Ft Laud UtiuM
F w IM yrr*
Oalnetvllla
Jacktonyille
K*y Wail
Lakeland
Miami
Saratola
Tallaham e

Tampa
Vero Heath
W I’alm Heath

'V

---------- 1

SUNDAY
P tly cldy 90-70

MONDAY
P tly cld y BO-70

U It

I

o

FU LL
Ju ly 3

»

LA S T
Ju ly I I

BBACH CO N D ITIO N !
Daytona Beach: Waves are
1-2 feet and rough. Current Is to
the north with a water tempera­
ture o f 80 degrees. New Sm yrna
Beach: .Waves are 2-3 feet und
rough. Current Is to Die north.
With a water temperature o f 79
degrees.

W EDNESDAY
P tly cldy 00-70

THURSDAY
P tly cldy 90-70

BTATIBTIOB
SUNAYi
SOLUNAR TAB LE ! Min. 6:00
n.m.. 6:00 p.m.; MuJ. 11:50 n.m.,
....... p .m . T ID E S i D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 8:57 u.m.. 9:21
p.m.; lows, 2:53 u.m.. 2:53 p.m.;
N ew S m yrn a Beach: highs.
9:02 u.m.. 9:26 p.m.: lows, 2:58
u.m., 2:58 p.m.; Cocoa Beach:
highs. 9:17 n.m.. 9:41 p.m.;
lows. 3:13 u.m,, 3 :13 p.m.

BOATING
St. Augustine to J u p iter In let
Suruluy and Sunday night:
Wind cast to southeast 10 knots.
Sens 2 to 3 feet. Bay und Inland
waters a light chop. W idely
scattered showers.

FforMa ItaaManta mual pay 7% eaiaa
t u In iddMton la rataa abov*
Fhana ( 0B7) M S-M 11.

' -

abounded in the parking lotturned festival grounds.
" W e love doing this every
yea r," Slakes said. "T h is Is lots
o f fun for all o f us."
As the time approached for the
AutoTraln lo pull out o f Sanford
on Its way north, .many o f the
em ployees bid furewell to their
fain Ilies and friends and made
th eir w ay ucross the tracks
currying foil-covered plates with
un evening meal.
"T h e Irnln Isn't going to w a ll,"
one mun said, balancing n soda
on lop o f the plate to give Ills
daughter a kiss.
"H ap py Father's D ay," she
culled after him before relum ing
to her meal.

■

---------TUESDAY
P tly cldy 00-70

MOON B H M I t

NEW
J u n e 10

Hiritd Photo by Jim Hoppt

NATIONAL TRMFO

1

F IR S T
Ju n e 26

air
Daytona Btath

j

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

€

Pantacoia

m oo

' t t ' i tftf

THE. W E A TH E R
LOCAL F O M C A S T

03-04-05-16-26.

'

JL

T h e tem perature at 4 p.m.
Saturday was 87 degrees and
Friday's overnight low was 71,
as recorded by Die National
W eather Service at Du* Orlando
International Airport.
O llier Weather Service data:

[F rid a y's high................... 88
□ B a ro m etric preaaurc.30.11
□ R e la tiv e H um idity....47 pet
□ W ln d a..............East 14 mph
□ R a in fa ll...................... trace
□ T o d a y 's sunset.... 8:28 p.m.
□ T o m o rro w 's sunrise,...8:28

high *nd overnight low
City
Atlanta
Dolton
Chicago
Cl*v*land
Dallai Ft Worth
Hartford Spglld
HeltnA
Honolulu
Indlanapollt
Jackson,Min
Junta u
Kantai City
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Pllltburgh
Portland,Main*
Portland.Or*.
Provident*
Raloigh Durham
HapIdCIty
R*no
Richmond
Sacramento
San Juan.P R.
Santa F*
St St* Marl*
S«atll*
Shrtvtport
Slou* Fall!
Spokan*
Syracut*
Topeka
Tucton
Tuna
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Wichita

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Sanford Harald, 8anford, Florida - Sunday, Jun# 30, 1993

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Aggravated aaaault chargad

Sllp-slldlng
away

Anthony Joaeph Lopreato, 47, 2013 Crowley
■owley C
Cir., Longwood.
ivaled aaaault by Seminole County
waa charged with aggravated
Cou
ahertfTa deputlea on Tnuraday.

Whara the playground for tha
Flrat Praabytarlan C hu rch
P ra ao h o o l In Sa n fo rd h a t
stood for tha lu t faw years,
thsrs la an ampty fsncsd lot.
Tha school, which h u bssn
operating out tha Praabytarlan
Church Tor 20 yaars, and tha
playground aqulpmant, war*
moved this weekend by volun­
teers whoaa children have
attened tha facility. New
quarters war* found at St. .
P iter's Episcopal Church In i
Lake Mary.

Deputlea aaid they were responding to a report o f a
disturbance Involving Juveniles when they saw a group of
young people ch u ln g Lopreato.
Deputies aaid he informed them that “ they" were trying to
kill him. The young people Informed officers that Lopresto had
•hot at therpDeputlea said Lopresto admitted to shooting at the young
people.
He said that a truck full of Juveniles had backed Into hla
driveway and that he had gone out to Investigate with a .380
Semi-automatic weapon.
He told deputies that when he confronted them, they began
yelling at them ao he fired a shot to frighten them off.
It waa unclear from the arrest report how the chase began.

■ o sM Fists by V k U

However, while deputies were queatlonlng Lopreato,
13 Holbrook Cir., Lake
Christopher Kent Cambridge, 20, 313
Mary, walked p u t the officers and punched Lopresto In the
face, almost knocking him down, deputies Mid. They said he
struggled against them but waa soon subdued and waa charged
wltnbsttery.
Both Lopresto and Cambridge were taken to the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility. Cambridge w u held on 4800 bond.
Lopresto w u held on 42,000 bond.

Fo rm tr houum ate'ft proparty pawned
Susan Rebecca Storms, 19, 833 RoseclIfT Cir., Sanford, w u
charged with dealing In stolen property by Seminole County
sheriff** deputies on Thursday.
Deputies said that on Friday, June 11, the victim received a
phone call from Oviedo Oun and Pawn telling her that her
typewriter w u about to come out of pawn. She did not know
about the pawn so she checked and found two typewriters
missing.
She confirmed that the typewriter at the shop w u hers via
the serial number, deputlea u id .
They added that the name on the pawn ticket and the thumb
print belonged to Storms.
Deputies said Storms had lived with the victim until last
month. An Investigation revealed that several Items missing
from the victim's house were found to have been pawned by
Storms over the lu t year.
’
Storms w u taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
where she w u held on 45.000 bond.

Thrown keys bring arrest
Jason Ray Butler, 19. 121 Anderson St., Sanford, was
charged with domestic violence by Sanford Police on
Thursday.
Police said he and the victim were Involved in a verbal
altercation when he threw a set of car keys at her, striking her
in the knee, causing It to bleed.
Police noted that she la seven months pregnant.
Butler w u taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility

New report says evidence
doesn’t support conviction
By The Aaaeelatek Press
TALLAHASSEE - The physi­
cal evidence docs not support a
conviction for an Arcadia fruit
picker Imprisoned for 21 years in
the fatal poisoning of his seven
children, a new report to the
governor said.
James Richardson w u freed
In 1989 after Janet Reno, now
attorney general, reviewed the
case as a special prosecutor
when a key witness recanted
and the prosecutor and police
were accused of framing the
black farm worker.
Reno was asked to re-examine
the case again after Robert
Merkle, a former U.S. attorney,
charged her Investigation was a
“ miscarriage of Justice." When
she left office, the task fell to
other prosecutors in her office.
In their report last month.
A s s is ta n t S ta te A t t c n e y s
Gertrude M. Novlcki and Rtchnrd
L. Shlffrln dispute Merkte's view
that Richardson had a clear

motive for killing the children:
collecting on a new Insurance
policy.
"In summary, the physical
evidence does not establish the
defendant's guilt beyond a rea­
sonable doubt." the report said.
The new report mentions a
potential new witness against
Richardson w ho could lend
support to the theory that he
killed the children to collect on
the policy he signed the night
before the m a n poisoning.
But the case against Rich­
ardson Is too weak to expect a
conviction, the prosecutors said.
"Whether or not the defendant
Is guilty of this horrible crime Is
u n certain ," they concluded.
"W hat Is certain ts that proof
beyond a reasonable doubt of
guilt is lacking,"
Richardson h u filed a $35
million federal suit against the
state and DeSoto County over
hla conviction and tong in­
carceration. which Included five
years on death row.

Wall Street may be
a nice place to work,
but I wouldn’t want
to live there.
And why should I? I have access to everything
Wall Street has right here. Plus something they
don't: friends and neighbors I can help with
investment ideas tailored to their needs. Call
me if I can help you.

M IC H A E L J. FA U G H N A N
SANFO RD
407-321-1198

S S E d w a r d D . J o n e s &amp; C o .*

and H«td on SI ,OpO bond.

Drug ohargoa Iliad
Orlsell E. Hlllery, 21, 2380 Church St., Sanford, w u charged
with possession or less than 20 grama of marijuana by Sanford
Police on Thursday,
Police said they witnessed what they believed to be a drug
transaction betwecen Hlllery and and another man. They said
they approached Hlllery and found a small amount of what
Inter tested positive as marijuana and some rolling papers.
He w u taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 4500 bond.

Warrant arrasta
• Richard Bernard Fredrick, 31, Jenkins Rooming House.
13th Street. Sanford, w u charged with violating the terms of
his probation on charges of criminal mischief. Deputies located
him at his place of employment and he turned himself In. He
w u held at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility without
bond.

Today* Grads — Tomorrow* Leaders

WE SALUTE THE SUPPORTERS OF
SEMINOLE HIGHSCHOOL

• Stacy Everett Merldllh. 20. 989 Wildfire Way. Longwood.
was charged In connection with a warrant for failure to appear
In court on charges of burglary to a dwelling. He w u arrested
at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and held without
bond.

Wishes to thank the entire community for its strong support, the following businesses
for their generous donations and the many
man1 individuals
. . . . . . . . . . who
. . . . in so many ways
contributed to the success of Project Gradwuation.

S a n ford H era ld
I $ a p r o u d m e m b e r o f th a ''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 t y

MMCOTMHHM
AV00HMKMLBMCH
■ALLY
lAMTTIAMIAWOUfTAff
■mANfllAlH
■OTTH

MUMKM

UIIMAUf 1,001
CAimumo

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

aHnALAUMunanava
conuLRanAKuiua

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OMansBaixn

a n Min mn iaiu m

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Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
If You Uvo In One 01 These Areas, Please Call

Sanford
323*5265
Lake Mary
321-6660
Longwood- 869-8612 or 774-1231
Winter Springs 777-3370
Altamonte
339-4468
Casselberry
695-7974
Oviedo
695-3819
O r Anytim e D ay O r Night C a l 843-9644

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MducommiaioNcoi

�- Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 20, 1903

S a n fb rd H e ra ld
300 N. FRENCH A V I.. SANTORO, FLA. 38771
Area Code 407-322 3011 or 331*0083
IWPJrlnOi
N a t u u pi*
Ml ■NPJfpP'i
fla ula D
a llW
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SinOCMPHON RATE)
3 Months........................... $10.80

6 MooUia........................... $80.00

1Y*ar .................

$70.00

E D IT O R IA LS

Th a n k s,
Dad
B eco m m ln g a father for th e first tim e can be
a startlin g realisation. A couple, w h o m a y
h ave been free to e n jo y life, la about to
expand.
D o in g ou t fo r the e ve n in g w ill b e curtailed.
A full n igh t o f undisturbed sleep m a y b e gon e
for several years. A din n er o f o n ly plssa w ill
h ave to b e exp an d ed to In clude form u la and
b a b y food.
P ossibly even m o re shockin g, for those w h o
g iv e It thought, la th e con cep t that the w eek ly
paych eck w ill n o w h ave to p ro vid e for an
addition al person. N o t ju s t fo r a fe w years, but
.possibly several decades.
T h e r e w ill e v e n tu a lly be th e c o s t o f
cloth in g, education, and activities.
: T h e a rriva l o f the n ew addition to the fa m ily
c a n be frigh te n in g to the father.
Fathers h ave these concerns, but th ere are
blessings as w ell.
T h e re are m a n y ad van ta ges to fatherhood.
H a vin g a son o r d au gh ter w ith w h o m yo u can
re-enjoy activities that h ave ceased sin ce yo u r
ow n childhood. T h e jo y o f w a tc h in g th e child
grow , s a y th ose first w o rd s and take those
first steps.
E ven tu ally, a con cerned fath er w ill help
m o ld th
h e c h ild 's futu re d ev elo p m e n t w
whlcl
hich
cou ld lead to a career for his offsprin g.
T o d a y , F a th er's D ay, la a d ay In which
ch ild ren should pause and reflect o n w h a t has
b een tran sm itted to them th rou gh th is m an.
M any m a y th in k o f the standards established
fo r tbs w h o le fa m ily, o r th e lessons ln&lt; righ t

'Education system is big business
Larry Strlckler. regional manager, Southern
Bell, has contributed many, many hours of hla
time and expertise to this community. Last fall
the voters o f Seminole County affirmed their
belief In Strlckkr's leadership by elecUng him to
the school board.
Strlckler is convinced that the future o f public
education depends upon the two components of
the educational system, the business and the
curriculum utilising the best practices from both
areas. Education ts big business, one, If not the
largest employer In the county. Hence, organisa­
tional management procedures from the cor­
porate sector can positively Impact the budget,
making more funds available for education.
Currently, like many other employers, the
school board ts in the process o f downswing.
This Is being accomplished through reorganisa­
tion and retirement. For example: planning,
building and maintenance are all directed by ohe
person. Diane Kramer, executive director o f
facilities and planning. This organisational
arrangement ts practical because o f the Inter­
relationship o f the three functions.
Competition In bidding for contracts with the
school board has been broadened. Maximising
competition is often the forerunner o f minimis­
ing cost. Each segment o f the business compo­
nent la being evaluated relative to decreasing
coat and maintaining quality service.

Strlckler la an advocate of Inter governmental
cooperation, The school board has some In­
terlocal agreements with some of the cities In the
county. However, he Is interested in a Joint work
eeasion with the county commissioners to
discuss mutual building needs. The current
school board administrative building is environ*
mentally substandard. There Is sufficient land
behind the c u m n t office to construct a new
facility. However, If the county la In need o f
additional space, It Is probably more feasible to
design a structure to accommodate both needs.
Pooling resources would certainly be more
economical. Common areas like board rooms,
conference rooms, etc. would be shared and
would be. more fully utilised. Currently, the

JACK ANDERSON

Clinton, vets warm
to each other

■g o mtsmmmm

us o r has&lt; d eparted fo r a long-deserved rest,
w e urge everyo n e to spen d som e tim e today
and reflect.
Fathers are special p eop le an d d eserve this
d ay o f tribute. A g o o d fath er supplies the
roots from w h ich th e branches o f a fa m ily are
established. W e o w e h im ou r appreciation.
H appy F ath er's Day.

LETTERS

Solving some problems
Because a substantial percentage o f drivers on
the road today don't have a valid driver's license,
legally registered vehicles, or sound driving skills,
motorists In Florida should be required to produce
a driver's license when purchasing fuel for
transportation needs. Oaa station attendants can
request licenses before taking money, Jut as they
must when selling alcohol, tobacco at|d lottery
Ucketa. Eventually a magnetic coded strip could be
a tta ch ed to d riv e rs licen ses and scanned
electronically to enable the gas pump, as credit
;card purchases or bank transactions are made
icurrently. No new technologies would be neces*
aary.
; The
.h e vast underground economy would be
profoundly impacted by limiting the transportation
o f contraband and the movements of criminals on
land. In sir and at sea. When gas is unavailable to
Illegal motorists, taxpayers would soon see:
/ a.) Criminals leave the state to places where their
mobility isn't restricted.
b. ) The "revolving prison door" shut for good;
'Prison overcrowding being a thing o f the past,
.expensive new prison construction would not be
; necessary.
c. ) Habitual drunk drivers grounded! criminals
learning to fear certain, lengthy Incarceration.
f: Automobile Insurance rates would have to be
i lowered because the roads would be patently a
i safer place. This frees up cash for other consumer
activity, and helps the economy In general.
‘ Because there would be fewer accidents and less
chaos on the streets, police could concentrate more
on crime and maintaining an orderly society.
Florida, now regarded around the world as a
danger xone for tourism, could repair Its ugly
Image and look forward to a brighter future.
Because there would be fewer overcrowded
roadways, precious man-hours behind the wheel
would be saved. Commercial vehicles could
operate more efficiently. Transportation expense*
In general would be reduced, deflating the costs o f
ttlng goods and services to the market place,
{W ith fewer care on the streets, leas maintenance
and new road construction would be required.
Obviously, gasoline taxes cot Id be scaled back or
used to fund other Infrastructure needs.
Overall consumption o f toss', fuels would do d
; This would lower production o f pctro-pollutanu.
reduce smog, help Florida meet dean air stan­
dards, and enhance protection o f our environment.
Ultimately, the "N O LICENSE - N O Q A S " policy
could decrease our nation’s dependence on foreign
petroleum, weaken the overseas oU barons,
perhaps render bloody Desert Storm^type opera­
tions obsolete, end assist other
in protecting the global environment. The money
spent for iuel by motorists with revoked or
suspended driving privileges ooutd be channeled
into mase-transit; an Inevitable component o f our
country's future.
William Q.Heald
BelleaJr, FL

administrative staff o f the school board l* housed
In several units. This does not enhance efficiency
or decrease cost.
^
.
It has been recognised that public schools have
been extremely alow to change. Planning for
change Is essential because change Is always
occurring. It Is Impossible to maintain the status
quo. Obsolescence is the pay-off when change Is
not planned. The common denomination or a
failed business and a public school system Is an
Inability or unwillingness to recognise the need
for change.
Strlckler hopes that he and the other board
members are effecting positive change. Hla
desire la to aid Seminole County schools In a
manner that will be most helpful and supportive
o f the needs o f the children of this county.
In consonance with this objective, change*
have been made in the selection proems
administrators. It has become more Inclusive,
affording greater teacher and parental participa­
tion on screening committees. This spmka to the
principal o f Involving as many stakeholders in
the process as possible. Two o f the newest
principals. Doris Jennings and Ronald Nathan,
were selected In this fashion.
Strlckler will share some o f his concerns about
the curriculum In my next column. Curriculum
has been broadly defined as "all that takes place
at school."

ELLEN G O O DM AN

Affirm ing the human com m unity
The banner outside the conference center
offer one of those picturesque Images from
civics class. A full panoply of 183 flags of
different nations ore all blowing In the same
dtrecUon.
The men and women entering this huge
building, that alts against a backdrop o f
Austrian mountains, offer a similar happy
portrait o f Internationalism
. About hrive
‘
\
thousand atrong, they form a rich human quilt
o f language, culture, clothing.
But the U.N. Conference o f Human Righta
that opened here Monday also offers a darker
Image o f multlculturallam. There la a second
Imsge here o f tribalism, disintegration, a
dla-Unlted
Nations where not even the simul­
's 4 J «
taneous translator* can always make one
culture undrestand another.
The first conference on human righta In 25
years was called in the heady months after the
fall o f the Berlin Wall. A world that had been
divided Into East and West, locked Into a Cold
War and supetpower politic* was turn Inside
out. There was s real hope that the human
righta Impulse which had been released In
Eastern Europe would catch on across the
world.
But this meeting Is being held only a few
hundred miles or more from Bosnia, where
genocide and mass rapes, the honors of
"ethnic cleansing", go on unchecked by the
w orld 's opinion or action. As the U.N.
Secretary Ge
General Boutros Boutros-Ghali said
with poignance, "In place o f two contenting
ideologies, there are many ethnic, cultural.
linguistic and religious conflicts. In place of
one vast nuclear thre
threat are fears of ambush,
rape and random shelling." He might have
added that In place or optimism about
expanding human rights there la anxiety about
maintaining the elmple principle that human
righta are universal.
What is at stake here la values. In many
ways, human rights have become our ecumen­
ical, secular religion, a catolog o f the world's
values. It's a catolog that began In 1948 when
the U.N.'s Declaration o f Universal Rights,
modeled alter our own BUI o f Rights, declared
that "all human being are bom free and equal
In dignity and right. They are endowed with
reason and conscience and should act toward
each other In a spirit o f brotherhood."
For the first time, the United Nations had
established the notion that no state had the
moral authority to violate the rights o f its own
citlxena. The world looks Inside borders and
Judges a government by the way It treated Its
people.
Over the decades, the original catalog has
grown to Include not only political rights but

economic righta-freedom from want as well as
freedom from fear. It has been expanded to
Include the rights o f Indigenous people and the
right to development, the rights of women and
children.
What hot emerged gradually la an ethical
chopping list o f the things that people can and
can’ t do to each other. If 11..........
~
this list Is often
used
selectively, It's nevertheless been a guide post
for foregln policy and foreign aid from South
Africa to China. It'si been
~
a guiding light as well
for the victims o f abuses.
But In recent years,
a backlash of sort has
emerged, especially
fro m aom e T h ir d
World governments
In Asia and Africa.
Waving tha banner of
m u ltlc u ltu r a lla m ,
they have come here
to insist that their
country cannot be
Judged by some uni­
versal standard but
o n ly b y Its o w n
"particularities," Its
ow n c u ltu ra l and
econ om ic con text.
They resist the no­
tion that democratic
o r h u m a n - r ig h t s
strings should be tied
to financial aid from
the West or North.

Thltm Mtlna
Isbalnaheld
only* raw
hundred miles
from Bosnia,
wh$ra
gsnocldsand
mass raptttQo
on, j

There are serious
question that emerge out o f any clash of
countries or cultures, but many o f the
governments claiming special exemption to
universal rights are abusers o f those right:
Burma. China. Yemen. Syria ana others that s
Jade U.N. spokesperson called “ the usual
suspects." In stark contract, activists in these
countries disagree with their own govern
ment's view
ew or
o f “ cultural
c
differences." They
Insist there is no
culture that favors
discrimination. torture, "disappearing^"
In a strong speech on opening day in which
he proposed an International tribunal. Secre­
tary o f State Warren Christopher put the laeue
bluntly: "W e cannot let cultural relativism
become the last refuge of repression."
At the heart o f the human rights movement
In this fractionalised world la the notion that
these rights are the same everywhere for
everyone. As Boutros-Qhali said, these values
are the way "w e affirm together that we are a
single human community. 'A world communi­
ty that accepts anything less Is just flags flying
In the wind.

WASHINGTON - As the Air Force In­
vestigates a two-star general for making
disparaging remarks about Bill Clinton, the
president is winning over American veterans
by ladling out more largesse and lip-service
than any recent predecessor.
Clinton's fractured relations with the
active-duty military found a spokesman when
MaJ. Gen. Harold N. Campbell told a banquet
audience that the commander In chief was
"d r a ft - d o d g in g ,” " g a y - lo v in g ." "p o tsmoking" and "womanizing."
As bad as relations
are with the active
duty. Clinton la rap­
idly making friends
with American vet­
erans — not the least
o f w h o m is a
48-year-old form er
Marine who was dis­
ab led In V ietn am
when a bullet shat­
tered his right arm.
His name Ts Jesse
B row n and he Is
Clinton's Secretary of £ T h e president
is winning
Veterans Affairs. The
over Am erican
evolving relationship
between these two
veterans by
ladling out
men may serve as a
morei la
largesse
metaphor for mend­
than any
in g V ie t n a m - e r a
recent
wounds.
Sources describe
predecessor,
Clinton's relationship
with Brown, the former heud or the Disabled
American Veterans, as cool but correct. For
two men who barely knew each other on
Election Day, they forged a common respect
by Memorial Day.
T h a t's when Clinton braved Jeers of
"cow ard" to deliver one o f the most poetic
speeches o f his presidency on a visit to the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial to honor the
58,000 Americans who died fighting a war he
opposed. Many previous sins got washed
away at the black granite Wail when Clinton
didn't flinch In the face of repeated provoca­
tions.
"T o nil of you who are shouting. I have
heard you." Clinton said over the din. "I ask
you now to hear me. I have heard you and I
ask you at this monument, can any American
be out o f place? And can any commander in
chief be In any other place but here on this
day?"
Brown Intimates say he was genuinely and
unexpectedly moved. *'l know Jesse walked
away from there with a lot o f respect for
h im ," said one administration friend of
Brown's. “ Jesse was truly Impressed with
Clinton's willingness to stand up at the wall
and do what he d id ... to stand up and stick to
hla principles and deal with It under tough
circumstances really hit home with Jesse."
Submitting himself to pillory la only part of
the penance the president seems to be paying
for his past. According to administration
officials, the penance also showed up In the
VA budget, which Increased more than 5
percent while moat other agencies were
trimmed.
A new era o f activism was ushered In In
which long-ignored problems ranging from
veteran homelessness to substance abuse
were finally tackled. And the VA, whose
views often were discarded by previous
administrations, was elated when 33 of its
own were Invited to Join Hillary Rodham
Clinton's task force on health-care reform.
In a presidency marked by Its misadven­
tures, Clinton's management of the VA la an
Intriguing contrast. Officials cite one incident
In which Brown and VA Deputy Secretary
Herahel W. Oober, a dose Clinton friend,
teamed up to defuse a potential time-bomb.
The administration was putting the finishing
touches on Its national service program when
officials realized that It would pay students a
higher stipend during college than veterans
received by under the Gl BUI.
“ Before It's over, the people In uniform will
understand this guy.'' Gober told us. "BUI
Clinton wUl be a good commander-in-chief. If
they'll get to know him they'll understand
that this la a man who Is very pro-military
and pro-American."

�Sanford H erald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 20, 1993 . a a

Stenstrom—
Continued from Page IA

Family outing

H«r*MMato byJtan

Thn Altlerl family, Al, left, Jimmy and mm,
standing, Join K im 's parents Jim m y and
Josephine Alaon for a picnic Saturday In Sanford

RecordsCoat inasd from Fags 1A
lor the past six
months, with three months on
each or two computer terminals.
Earlier annual Indexes are on
cartridges of microfilm which
look like the old eight-track
cassettes. A 20-year search re­
quires checking tw o computer
terminals and a minimum o f 20
tupes for references to docu­
m e n ts s t o r e d on o th e r
cartridges, which also must he
scanned.
" I worked on a report Iasi
week where the property was
bought In 1957 and the home
was built In 1961," says Juanita
Johnson, a Sanford title searcher
for Mortgagee T itle Services In
O rlando. " I t took m e three
hours. You can easily go through
40 tapes. In Orange County, It
would have taken 10 m inutes."
Johnson .and other searchers .
contacted bay |he tape viewer*
are In'p torlcon d ltn jn arid often
broken. So. not only do searches
take longer, Its sometimes dif­
fic u lt to fin d fu n c t io n in g
machines.
Gall French, o f Title Search
Associates Inc., o f Astatooln.
Fla., says she charges 95 to 810
more per search report In Sem i­
nole County due to the In­
conveniences.
Johnson. French und others
say the Orange County clerk's
office has computers that have
Indexes to 1955. Earlier Indexes
arc better organized, they say.

What’s balng dona?
Morse says she has been Irving
to Improve landI records conditlons since soon1 after she took
office In 1988 and may have

dads and kldi _____ _
celebration of

«

Family Fun Day. Many
festivities as an early

The fourth McAlcxander was
Virgil. He's a mechanic In Fort
Myers. Then cam e Alva. She
married civil engineer and sur­
v e y o r M a rlo n G o rd o n w h o
passed away a few years ago but
was well known to most Sanford
folks. A lva still resides In the
G ordon hom e on M ellonvllle
Avenue.
Oh. no, we haven't overlooked
Harold. He developed his own oil
retail and d e liv e ry business
which he sold not long ago and
retired. Th e next son was James
Jr. A s a young man James went
to work for Bill Hofmann who
was Involved as a partner In the
"Hof-Mac Battery C om pany" lo­
cated st the end o f East First
Street which stopped at Sanford
Avenue. Right here It's nccessary to clear up a long misun­
d e rsta n d in g . T h e " M a c '' In
"H o f-M a c " B attery Com pany
d id n 't h a ve any con n ection
whatsoever with James M cAlcx­
ander. Jam es went to work for
BUI Hofmann and became prob­
ably this area's top expert in the
repair and rebuilding o f electric
motors o f any and every size you
could Imagine. This was and has
always been his specialty.
Hofmann him self was a man o f
many talenis. Hr brought to
Sanford, sold und Installed the
area's first radios and televi­
sio n s. He w a s a lso an ac-

many of the problems resolved
not spent. All unspent money
bulk from Morse and other
by October.
from the clerk's ofTIce Is turned
clerks.
In 1989, Morse says she In­ over to county commissioners
"N othin g says |thc Indepen­
creased the number of microfilm
for their general fund.
d
e
n t s ) h a v e to r e l y on a
enmeras from one to three to
Th e 9112,000 for the 10 ter­
benevolent clerk to make their
speed the records availability. In
minals and future Improvements
life easier." says Bauchle. " I
1990, Morse says she found to com e from Morse's "Pu blic Rec­
don't know Maryanne, but I
upgrade the entire system to o rd s M o d e rn iz a tio n F u n d ."
think it would 1* Irresponsible of
e v e n t u a l l y d o n w a y w it h
which is filled with fees on
her to go to n great expense Just
microfilm, she would have to ecrtnln documents hied In the
to benefit a few professionals
convert all o f the main computer
clerk's office. The fund Is re­
who
don’t pay for the services
network lines in the courthouse
quired by the state. Since 1986.
anyw uy."
to fiber-optic cables. She began
the fund has been growing at the
that process In 1990. but Its rate or about 8125.000 or more
N e w fee
completion was dclnyed until cuch year.
1 9 9 2 b e c a u s e o f a 1991
Lisa Huisltp has another com ­
After the Indexing expense,
downturn In revenues.
plaint. The Oviedo woman scans
th e fu n d w i ll h a v e a b o u t
Next, Morse says she found
8500.000 In It by the end o f lawsuits and other court docu­
she had to convert three-month September, according to a report
ments filed In Seminole County
computer lupcs, about 60 o f released by Morse.
courts for Information she and
them, to a form that could be
Morse says future Im prove­ her mother provides to a credit
accessed by a sin gle, m ore
company. A typical file request
ments, such us the computerized
powerful computer. That 97,500 "Im a g in g " o f documents will
may call for 100 or more files.
conversion will be completed
Beginning July 1, Halsllp and u
probably use all o f the amount
within a month, she says,
sm all num ber o f oth er proand more. The technology hasn't
i iMorsc says (n-bouscjgOTpuUr\
ressfonala will. M v c ip
3Q.
-p«rfecVf«J and Morse soys
programmers .tell her 7 h e y .lt'ft [ J HM,.«anV)&lt;taW«U myear or ao to \ cema for each eaae ipSV. raqUs»f
beyond 10 cases.
done with thc|r vyork fly r n e endI assu re th e m o n e y Is sp en t
Halsllp says she can't afford to
o f July and county crew * are wisely.
continue to provide the service
scheduled to begin counter mod-'
"I'm not going to make a
because she Is paid by the name
Iflcatlons Aug. 10. As soon as the 8500.000 or a 8600.000 or a
and will lose money. Although
modifications are done, Morse $700,000 com m itm ent until I'm
Morse says such requests arc
says she will buy 10 computer sure it's going to lust." says
tim e-consum ing. Halsllp says
term inals for the Indexes, u Morse.
her requests nre cusy for clerks.
8112.000 expense. She’ll also
"T h e y Just grab ’em off the
C
o
m
p
la
in
ts
un
fair?
modify all 3.000 microfilm tapes
shelf and put 'em In u curt and
so they'll work more reliably In
Carl Bauchle thinks the com ­ push II o v e r to m e , " says
the renders.
plaints qre unfair. Uuuchlc Is Halsllp. "W e 're taking less o f the
"T h e y have no clue of whut's
past president o f the searcher's clerk's time than someone re­
Involved here," says Morse. " I
local trade group, the Central
questing 10 Hies from 1991 or
started In 1990 and It continued
Florida Title Association, and
w hatever."
Into 1991 and 1992."
serves on the statewide Florida
Morse says the lurge requests
W ith the exception o f the
Land Title. Association. He Is have recently Increased. At least
9112.000 expense, most o f the
vice president o f Fidelity Title
four Individuals huve made the
expenditures for the Improve­
and Guarantee In W inter Park, u requests and two do so regularly.
ment so far have come from
company that docs Us own title
The fee Is reasonable, she says.
left
excess fees, which Is money
n
searches with Its own In-house
" I f I breuk even. I’ll be lucky,"
over from fees charged on court
Indexes and records obtained In she soys.
that
are
und document minds

compliance imagician
— quite
quite
m a8,clafl —
frequently doing shows from
lim e to time on the stage o f the
M ila n e T h e a t r e . H e w o u ld
m y stify au d ien ces esp ecia lly
with feats Involving electricity In
particular. I learned he was quite
adept at handling playing cards
and as a result was banned from
participating In shall we say
"poker gam es" played from time
to time around the Sanford area.
By the way. he was also a
professional wrestler.
Bill was married to Gladys
Bryan — daughter o f the ow ner
and operator o f the Bryan Bicy­
cle Shop located on the eastslde
o f the 100 block o f South Park
Avenue, next door to the Sem i­
nole Hotel. I can even tell you
B r y a n h a n d le d " R a l e i g h "
b ic y c le s . H is a ssista n t w as
Earnest Brotherson who lived
with his wife and son on East
20th Street. Bryan also had a
son nam ed L es lie w ho w as
assista n t ca sh ier o f F orrest
Lake's Seminole County bank.
But he was not Involved In the
charges and Indictments that
resulted In Lake and cashier
Raymond Key serving time In
prison.
J a m e s m a r r ie d C h r is t in e
Whitten, daughter o f an Atlantic
Coast Line employee. Unfortu­
nately. she passed away In 1088
and James is now married to the
former Daisy Herman.
It would be difficult to write

Barry Richards, a Jacksonville
law yer w ho often represents
publishers In public records
mailers, says the fee can be
charged and m av be reasonable.
"T h e clerk can charge for the
actual amount or personnel lim e
involved In the search." says
Richards. " I f someone were to
challenge It. she would hove to
prove It Is reasonable. It Is not
unusual to set up an average us
long as It Is reasonable."

Disband—
Continued from Page IA
procedures for subm itting the
school Improvement plans and
are currently review ing those
plans to be sure they w ill satisfy
the state requirements.
"W e 're going over those, plans
n i n l i '' S f i r s u said.

Spragg tn hoping that now that
tlw district school advisory team
IslMisbsnded. the board w ill call
for the leadership team to be
expanded to Include as many
parents as teachers and a d ­
ministrators. She said the dis­
trict advisory team could provide
the names o f many parents who
arc willing to serve an the new.

Lillian E. Archdeacon, 81. 771
St. John River Dr., Sanford, died
Friday, June 18 at South Sem i­
nole Com m unity Hospital.
Bom July 18. 1911 In Catsklll.
NY, she was a homemaker and a
Protestant. She m oved to Cen­
tral Florida In 1986.
She is survived by her daugh­
ter Frances E. Archdeacon o f
Sanford; and her sisters Kathryn
Reese o f Saughcrtlcs, NY. Myrtle
T orch la o f Hudson, NY and
Patricia Allerton o f Catsklll, NY.
Carey-Hand Garden Chapel,
L on gw ood , In ch arge o f a r­
rangements.

ROBERT L. GEORGE SR.
R obert

L.

G eorge

S r„

76,

A lafnyu T ru ll, O vie d o , d ied
W edncsduy, June 16 at his
residence.
Born In Matewan. W V on April
26, 1917, he w a s an a u ti
mechanic who moved to Central
Florida In 1941. He was a Baptist
and a Navy veteran o f World
W a rll.
He is survived by hls sons
Robert L. Jr., William W „ both
o f Chicago. James A. and Carl
M.. both o f Oviedo; hls daughters
Janet M. Geiger and Sandra K „
both o f Oviedo, Dianna M. Yates
o f Apopka, Sarah B. and Shearl
J. bath o f Orlando; hls brother
Owen Sr. or Belle Glade; hls
s is t e r Is a b e lle D lsh m a n o f

In llw midst of our khiow , we with to express our
Kirtfeli dunks and appreciation to our many relatives,
frtada and neighbors for the kindness and aympathy
tow n us in tbeloa ot our beloved husband and father,
Lawk Dei). We especially wish to thank the Rev. John
Black for his payers, consoling words and spiritual
comfort, the pallbearer*, all the dooon of the many
manes, beautiful floral offerings as well as all those
who assisted In any way at the funeral.

The Pcllaroo Family

Oviedo; 28 grandchildren; and
seven great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lr c h lld F u n eral
Home, Goldenrod, In charge of
the arrangements.

HAZEL SAPP NILL
H a ze l S app N III, 85. 205
O d h a m D r., S a n fo r d , d ie d
Thursday. June 17 at Central
Florida Regional Hospital, San­
ford.
Born In Concord, NC on Oct.
22, 1907, she was a Registered
Nurse retired from the Veterans'
Hospital in Concord. NC. She
m oved to Central Florida In
1978, She was a m em ber o f the
Plnecresl Baptist Church, the
Sanford Garden Club and the
V F W L a d l e s A u x i l i a r y In

Ashvllle, NC.
She Is survived by her sister
Della Alexander o f Winter Park;
her nieces Zcldu Waterflcld o f
W in te r Park, P a tric ia H o ll­
ingsworth o f Tulsa, OK and
Virginia, Cudlc o f Paoll, Penn,
and one nephew. Hurbert Sapp.
Jr. o f Rochester, NY.
G r a m k o w F u n e r a l H o m e,
Sanford, In charge o f the ar­
rangements.

Caring people is one of the things that makes
Brlsaon Funeral Home special. "BilT Welborn, is
a licensed funeral director with over 20 years
experience in the funeral business. Caring people
is what you expect and what you get at
322*2131

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME
905 LAUREL AVE., SANFORD
A member at (be Cany Hand Funeral Home Tradition - Rat. ISOO

3

expanded tcum In Its first year.
The newly defined leadership
team could provide nt least two
training sessions for school advi­
sory groups each yeur.
Th e team would hold regular
and announced m eetings like
th e d is tr ic t'- s c h o o l' a d vis o ry
m m m itlM haa dbfcO.Univw.
And they would also take on
the respon sibility,)of,providin g
com m unication and resources
between and am ong the Individ­
ual school councils.
" W e believe there is no need to
duplicate effort." Spragg said.
"T h e redefined, expanded lead­
ership co m m ittee con better
serve lie district's needs."

G u ard ian M anor,
A C L F R etirem en t
H o m e &amp; D a y Care

* LOW RATES ★
•

34 Hr. Supervisor! • Day Care
• Nurse On Staff
• Planned Activities

431E. Airport B h td .* Sanford

LILLIAN E. ARCHDEACON

this yarn without mentioning
another Hofmann em ployee -3
BUI Harvey, He wns a radlp
specialist for years until televi­
sion came along. Harvey went (p
work as an attendance officer for
the Sem inole County Schura
Board. He now lives In AllonnS
and Is arranging tours o f thr
Holy Land.
*
'
How many o f you enn
m em ber when R.J. Reel and
some other aviation-interested
folks once had planes In Fori
Mellon Park and took folks up foi
rides. One day McAlexandcr and
a friend o f his found a dollar biff.
T h ey went Into Homer L ittlc 'i
place at First and Sanford and
tried to tnlk a fellow named
Kratzert (not the gent who lulcr
married Minnie Beck) Into taking
them up for a plane ride. Finally.
Jam es and his friend got their
dollar ride and "M ac", said It wns
an experience he would never
forget.
I want to mention one more
thing. J am es's brolhcr-ln-law
was Earl Whitten, now deceased.
Earl was a Northeast Florida
Conference basketball all-star
w ho played for Seminole High
Coach Leonard McLucas.
One m ore word about my
friend James. I've known him
for many, mnny years. I don’t
believe I've ever heard him mukc
a critical remark about anyone.
If he doesn't have anything good
to say about you he Just doesn't
say It.
1 Just wish wc could go "fis h ­
in g " and "sh rim p in g " again.
"M a c " wasn't a big baseball fan
and I wasn't much o f a fisher­
m a n . But n u m e r o u s tim e s
Jam es and 1 would go to Cape
Canaveral at night, lash a couple
lanterns to the bow and stern o f
the boat and while he would
catch the fish I would use a net
to fill sacks full o f shrimp. Since
this was during the Depression
days and before freezers, "M a e"
and I shared our bounty with
friends nnd neighbors.

�•A * Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 20, 19M

■

Keep the flame of creativity alive
fly MI4HAIL SMSLTOM
Specie! to the Herald
The eaaence o f the creative
apirtt lay In wait within the
hears and souls and minds of
our youth.
Untapped wells o f wealth laid
dormant waiting for some brave
creative and courageous Indi­
vidual to awaken a sleeping
giant, to motivate and activate a
blessed gift called creativity. The
range o f artistic expression that
our youth are capable o f Is
limitless.
We must encourage and create
more forums and outlets for this
artistic expression.
By supporting our school art
DSARTRSNAi
programs
we prepare our young
There Is a girl In my class
My boyfriend and 1 have been
people
for
a
more enriching life.
w h o 's aw fu l, but e veryo n e
dating for about six months and
Whatever
the art form .. . po­
thinks she's the best so 1 don't
he's malting me crasy.
etry,
theatre,
dance, painting or
dare criticise her.
He runs hie fingers through
I've seen her cheat on her d ra w in g .. . the arts must be
my hair all the time. I spend an
boyfriend, copy o ff o f other supportedl
hour brushing It and putting it
The quality of young person I
people's tests, pay other people
up and then he sits down next to
have
met nerc in Sem inole
to do her homework and even
me and messes It up.
County and Sanford has im­
take things that aren't hers.
I know he's Just showing
If I say anything about her to pressed me greatly.
affection, but hera making me
Michael Shelton works on • mi
Having spent a lifetime In art
anyone else, they say I'm being
crasy.
education,
1
have
been
around
Recently I heard a beautiful
mean and all of a sudden I'm the
What should I do? I hate to
the world looking at the artwork poem by Taheerah Lawrence* port the arts?
break up with him over some­ bad guy.
W e ll.. .
She shouldn't be allowed to o f students and talking with Knight, age 10, who Is In the
thing like this, but I can't stand
A rt us a valuable tool for
get away with what she does, educators. When 1 had the op­ R ifted program at Sem inole
It much longer.
enhancing
life. It prom otes
p
o
r
tu
n
ity
to
a
ssem
b
le
the
ligh.
m A RADt-RAlSINO RELA- should she?
As she read her lovely poem, It awareness and understanding of
T IO R IH IP , LA K E M ART
Should I do anything or let her ' ’Young In A rt" exhibit at the
Sanford Housing Authority, I stirred In me rich Images of self, one's peers and the envi­
saw great talent coming from budding talent.
ronment. .
DEAR HAIR)
Decuslon-m aklng and pro­
Seminole
County
youth.
Have you tried talking to him
b le m - s o lv in g s k ills are
1 re m e m b e r s e e in g som e
Such ta len t m ust be e n ­
DEAR FLUSTERED)
about this?
wonderful paintings oy Joe strengthened through the cre­
He may be showing affection,
In her case, you'd be better off couraged.
Mr. Taylor's art program at Arnold and great drawings by ation o f an art product. Art gives
or he might not even realise he’a heeding the old adage; If you
Seminole High has produced Craig Martin. All these young the students a chance to explore
can't say something nice, don't
doing It.
many aw ard-w inning youn g people and more tell me there Is themselves and to recognise
Sit across from him and tell say anything at all.
artists.
Likewise at Lake Mary great hope and promise for the their potential growth.
him that you like to look dice
Obviously this girl hasn't got a
It builds a young person's
High and Goldsboro Elementary, future.
and you spend a great deal o f whole lot that you can say nice
visual
language and gives a
You
might
ask
why
Is
art
so
just
to
name
a
few
programs.
time and effort making sure that about her so you're better off
you do. T ell him nls habit keeping your mouth shut.
wreaks havoc on those efforts
Sooner or later, her cheating
and you hope he will honor your will catch up with her and she
wishes not to do that to your will have to account for her
actions. Don't worry, she'll never
hair.
The annual scramble Is on for
In fact, families may find It a prove financial need.
Also, try holding his hand "g et aw ay" with the things she
&gt;Uege-bound students and their little easier to pay for college
Fortunately, a number o f opwhen you sit next to him. It will does.
irenta who are searching for because of additional asatstan- tlons from n on -govern m en t
be harder for him to mesa up
Let her go. Smile and nod
ays to pay for college.
ce-mostly In the form of loans- sources also exist to help offset
your hair If he la holding your when she's around, but don't
The the annual cost o f college from the federal government and the coot o f a college education,
criticise.
mroachlng 925.000-at some fro m s u rp ris in g ly lo w -c o s t
Privately-sponsored college

This summer, the YMCA of
Lake Mary will be offering art
courses. Also, First Impressions
Early Childhood Development
Center, the West Sanford Boys
and Olrls Club and the Sanford
Housing Authority will have
guest artists and displays.
Mlch**l Station It Ita coordinator at tta
Worthy Opportunity* for Roildont* Through
Holistic Approach** program tor tta Sanford
Housing Authority.

D on’t wait to apply for college help

I
;

,
'

My mom won't buy me the
clothes that I need, but she
won't let me get a job so I can
buy them myself.
She buys me the geeklest
clothes that I hate to wear to
school. I look like a geek.
She says I have to study and
concentrate on school so a Job Is
out o f the question. Meanwhile
I'm asocial misfit.
My dad sometimes gives me
some money to buy some real
clothea, but it sure isn't enough
to get all the right things.
W h a t d o T d o ?

a a a S e te s &amp; a tti • a s r a s » « .

My mom has started doing
drugs.
We haven’t got much. My dad
left with one o f his girlfriends
and left us. Now mom Is always
depressed and she la doing
stupid things.
I’ve seen her smoking crack
with some o f her new friends
and I don't like It.
I hear about kids turning their
parents Into police, but if I do
that I haven't got a place to go.
It's Just her and me.
Is there some other way I can

f It. But thanks to a variety of
federally- and privatelyprograms, relief Is In sight

college student la' now eligible

SOCIAL MISFIT, SANFORD
DEAR SOCIAL)
I'm sure your parents don't
want you to be asocial misfit.
T h e y 'r e p r o b a b ly b o th
i operating under real tight budi gets ana they're doing the best
.’ they con with the money they've
got.
Try talking to your mom and
te llin g her that yo u 're not
ex cited about the styles o f
clothing she's getting you. Qo
• shopping with her or point out

Your mom needs professional
help.
First, try talking to her about
her problem. Tell her that you
don't like to see her doing drugs
and hurting herself.
• Tell her you're behind her and
will support her If she goes for
help and that you will help her
keep off drugs.
Remember that she has to
want to get help. Your support
will help her see she la loved and
cared for.
If she doesn't want to go for
help you need to go to an adult
who can help you deal with the
environment In which you are
being forced to live. Talk to a
school counselor or to someone
at a drug treatment center.
Jrsm ttounspaapto Ilk* yaw In an-KwKraal
ttawvMMjtila Mtk. Ms'S Ilk* yau ta writ*
tokwwlto yew euaaltota. Ita premia**
CMflSMrismy...yav ain't avanhavs to ai«n
n w nsnw. Ita |uat wgnto to tala If ata can.
If m v Sew aw prektoma ar guaatlarw, writ*
to Taana st tog I m M KaraW. P.0. Sox
1U7, SMtorS, PtorWa jmilMT.

FLOWERY

PUZZLE

Nearly filly young women wore
on hand this week to take pari
In the "Twenty-first Century
Woman" program this past
week at Seminole Community
College. The young wornon,
ninth and tenth graders fp&gt;rn
Sem inole and Lyman high
sohools, ware taught about
high-paying technical oareere
that are now more accsssable
to women than ever before.
They learned job skills and
laadarshlp techniques that wjll
h elp them In fu tu re lo b
searches. The young ladles
recleved Instruction on how to
R repare for a workforce that
as been traditionally bean
olosed to women, but which
has been more accessabla.

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plemental loans.
Private credit based loans
often o ffe r lo n g er payback
periods and smaller, more af­
fordable monthly payments.
School guidance departments
and volunteer-staffed college information rooms at the local
high schools have information
about such loans available to the
students who ask for them.

�Santord Herald, Snnford, Florida - Sunday, June 20, 1993 - 7 A

Health/Fitness
IN

B R IE F

4Early Pregnancy' class offered
SANFORD — The W om en's Center nt MCA Central Florida
Regional Hospital Is presenting n class on "Early Pregnancy."
as part o f a scries o f free prenatal olnsscs offered nt the hospital.
The class will be held Thursday, done 24. Rom 7:30-9:30 p.m..
In the hospital's classroom.
Th e "Early Pregnancy" clnss focuses on the first five months
o f pregnancy. The cIobs will Include insights Into fclnl
development, the minor discomforts o f prcgnnncy, danger
signs during prcgnnncy. nnd nutrition.
For more Information or to register for the clnsses, call the
HCA Central Florida Regional Hospital Eduction Department.
321-4500. ext. 5007.

Babyaaver course begins
SANFORD — CPR for Citizens is offering a Habysnvrr course
on Monday, June 21. and Monduy, June 28, from 6-10 p.m.
each night at Central Florida Regional Hospital. Th e class will
be held In the first floor classroom at the hospital which Is
located at 1401 W. Seminole Blvd.
Babysaver ts an American Heart Association training course,
taught In two sessions, which covers CPR and the choking
maneuver on both infants nnd children, as well ns home safely
and first aid Information. Class fees arc 919/person. T o register,
call 679-4277.

Zborowakl appointed as vice president
ORLANDO — Richard W. Zbornwskl has been appointed vice
president or human resources for Orlando Regional Healthcare
Systcym (ORHS). Zbornwskl is responsible for the leadership,
policy direction and long-range planning for more thnn 5.400
ORHS em ployees Including Orlando Regional Medical Ccnlcr
(ORMCJ, Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children &amp; Women, Sand
Lake Hospital nnd St. Cloud Hospital,
Before Joining ORHS, Zbdrowskt was Corporate Vice
President o f Human Resources for the R.O. Barry Corporation
o f Sun Antonio. Texas. Previously, he was Corporate Vice
President o f W endy's International, toe., of Columbus. Ohio.
Zborowskl received his bachelor or science hi business
administration from Indiana State University and his master of
arts In human resources from Central Michigan University.
Zborowskl resides in Longwood with Ills wife, Jutncy. and
their two children.

H o s p ita l h o n o rs e m p lo y e e s
SA N FO R D HCA Ccntrnl
Florida Rcglonul Hospital re­
cently presented service awards
to em ployees with (lvc, 10. 15.
20 nnd 23 years o f service to the
hospital.
Employees were honored with
a banquet nnd awards, pres­
ented by C hief Executive Officer
Roy C. Vinson,
Award recipients were:
• 25 years o f service: Sandy
Dunn, laboratory
• 20 yeitrs: Barbara C u m ­
m ings, ccntrnl service: Ann
Gilchrist, nutritional services:
Marlon Shaw, Shirley Williams,
and Glorlda Wright, all o f nurs­
ing.
• 15 years: Valeric Hill, central
s e r v ic e : P a d d y -H o llo w a y ,
cardiopulmonary: Dorn Smith,
n u t r it io n a l s e r v ic e s : M a ry
Cullup, Audrey Latson, Annie
Richmond nnd Evelyn Wise, all
o f nursing.
• 10 years: Catalina Arias,
Juanita Brudlcy. George Hare,
from cardiopulm onary: Betty
Baker. Velma Clny. Beryl Dec,
T h e r e s a H u tc h in s . C y n th ia
Richardson, all o f nursing: Pnul '
Brady. June Curtis, both o f plant
operations; Tcra McAnney, labo­
ratory: and Jewell Rose, materi­
als management.
'
• Five years: Cindy Cochran,
Irene Ullckm nn. Jim Jam es,
B elly Kructzcr-Neale, Rcldun
L in d q u is t, A n ita L o m b a rd i,
K a th le e n P r e s s c r . L a u ra
Prlmnvcrn. Doris Sawyer. Allison
Srhallcr, Sheryl Woodrow nnd

Roy C. Vinson, cheli executive officer, center,
presents 20-year service awards to Marlon Shaw,
Bernice Wosk, all o f nursing:
M a r g e B r o e k w a y , C a r o ly n
Jackson, both o f environmental
services: Janet Corvlno, Patti
Ford, both of health Information

Photo by Tommy Vlncont

Shirley Williams,
Cummings.

management; Dolores Johnson,
communications: Jackie Joiner,
information systems: Ray Mcrrlrnan. belaud Mitchell, Donna
Pauley nnd Bruno Wicneck, all

Ann

Gilchrist

and

Barbara

o f ca rd lop u lm on n ry; D elores
N tck s. a d m is s io n s : T a m m y
Terry, im aging services; and Jim
Van Clevc, materials m anage­
ment.

Benefit to h e lp C M N
ORLANDO — Basketball enthusiasts will have a chance to
compete for a trip to Disneyland when Florida Mall, Orlando
hosts "Bent the P ro" to benefit Children's Miracle Network
ICMN) on Saturday, June 26, 10 a,m. to 9:30 p.m and Sunday.
June 27. 11 n.m. to 6 p.m. In Center Court.

Board retirees
Throo membors of Iho Winter
Park Memorial Hospital Board
ol Trustees woro honored tor
their service as they retired
from their dutlos. From left to
right, Roland Lee, 1984-93;
Clyde A. WeBt, j M ^ snd

For each 91 donation, participants will have a chance to
"Beat the P ro " In an electronic basketball shooting game.
Plnycrs will race ngulnsl a 30 second clock to sec how many
points they can score. Professional NBA player Danny Atngc of
the Phcnnlx Suns hns established a benchmark score of 50
points thnt players will attempt to heal to win prizes, discounts
v or other offers nt participating m all1 retailers: In-addition,,
. i participants.who aoore 50 or more points Wilt he eligible to -win
a basketball autographed by Dntmy Alngc. All scores o f 25 or
more w ill lie entered In n Disneyland Swe&lt;?pstn|ras drawing.

C U H o id

L.

E u b s iV M K , n t y O -

1985-93. J. Lindsay Builder Jr.
Phylls B, Crosby arid James C
Hur/burt, M.D., were elected to
the board during (he hospi­
tal's annual association meal­
ing.

flic proceeds will benefit the pediatric progrums at Sbands
Hospital at the University o f Florida. Sbands Is (be designated
CMN Hospital for Central Florida and the state's leading
referral center for the most complicated arid severe pediatric
cases. Over tbc last five years, Sbands has trented an average
of 236 pediatric Inpatients and 736 outpatients per year from
Orange, Osceola. Seminole and Brevard counties.

Ht rifd Photo by Jim Hopps

Taking control of diabetes
SANFORD — Diabetes: Take Control, a diabetes education
course offered by HCA Central Florida Regional Hospital, on
ongoing program which commenced on June 3. will take place
from 3-4 p.m. nnd is held In the hospital’s classroom.
"O ur program educates diabetics and their families about the
dlscnsc," says Marsha Moxley, RN. "A lso, the contact with
other diabetics lets the person know that they're not the only
one with the disease. So. In addition to the Information that we
provide, they ulso receive helpful hints In managing lheir
diabetes from each other."
Th e course covers topics ranging from self blood glucose
monitoring to diet anti medications. Cost for the six-week
program is $60, which Includes an appointment with a
registered dietitian. In addition, u consultation with the
registered nurse to discuss other aspects o f diabetes m anage­
ment Is available for **30. For more Information or to register
for the course, call the HCA Central Florida Regional Hospital
Education Department at 321-4500, ext, 0607.

Men's Health Forum continues
SANFORD — The Urology Ccnlcr and HCA Central Florida
Regional Hospital present u Men's Health Forum on Tuesday.
June 29, 7:00-8:30 p.m. In the hospital classroom. This Is a
free presentation, There will be discussions on kidney stones
by Gregory Lomas, M.D.. urologist nnd coronary artery disease
by William David, M.D.. cardiologist.
Refreshments will be provided. Reservations are requested.
Call the hospital's Education Department at 321-4500. ext.
5607.

First aid for nosebleeds
Th e first concern about a nosebleed is getting il lo stop.
Simple first-old procedures usually enn do tbc trick, says Dr.
John K. Jones, an otorhlnnlaryngologlsl nt Baylor College of
Medicine In Houston.
A m ong his recommendations:
• Apply pressure lo the soil part o f the nose (not the hard
bony portion) for several minutes.
• S o a k a piece o f cotton with nasal drops such us
Ncoslncpbron and pack It Into the nose.
If bleeding can’ t be stopped In 20 minutes, consult a doctor.
Jones recommends using a humidifier during winter months
when Indoor nlr Is dry to lessen the chance o f nosebleeds. He
says that children should be discouraged from putting their
fingers In their noses — the leading cause o f nosebleeds In
children.

A cold in hand
Wash your bunds a lot to avoid colds or to keep from passing
the one you hnve to someone else.
You enn catch a cold by rubbing your nose or eyes with your
fingers, which may have picked up the virus from hand-tohand contact, according to Dr. Christine Matson o f Baylor
College or Medicine In Houston.
Cold sufferers often sneeze or cough Into their hands, then
touch objects or other people, thus passing the bug to someone
else. Frequent handwashing will lessen transmission chances.
Tissues or handkerchiefs also can help keep the germ s from
spreading. Just be certain in dispose 61 or launder ihem
quickly after use.

Fitness Factor

Walking: The best exercise choice
By Associated Press
What exercise equipment do
you always have with you. costs
nothing, adjusts lo your sched­
ule and your whereabouts, helps
you lose weight, strengthens
your heart, and lets you see a tilt
o f the world In the bargain?
Your own two feet. In a walk.
"W alk in g is otic o f the best
and easiest sports around. Any­
one can do it." says Selh Bauer,
editor o f the W alking magazine.
W a lk in g m ay he the best
choice If you're out o f condition
and shirting hack in, observes
Dr. Mark AnderBon. associate
professor o f physical therapy at
tile U n iversity o f O klahom a
H e a lth S c ie n c e s C e n te r In
Oklahoma Clly,
Anderson says that with the
ex cep tio n o f speed, w alk in g
benefits arc equal lo those of
running — toning muscles and
th e c a r d io v a s c u la r s y s te m .
W alking a mile hums the same
number o f calorics as running.
Out of-shapc types will benefit
r ig h t a w a y fr o m w a lk in g ,
because It stresses the licnrt and
elevates the heart rale lo an
optimum target, he says.
" I f you're In very poor condi­
tion and you start a walking
program. It may not take much
to elevate your heart rate to that
target heart m tr."
As Illness Increases, the heart
rale slows, and llir person needs
to up ilie ante on the amount
and speed In achieve the desired
heart rate.
Another advantage lo walking
,ls that It Is less stressful to the
Joints — good news for people
with arthritis.
" I rea lly c a n ’ t see m an y
advan tages o f run ning o v er
walking, unless It's that It saves
lim e out o f a busy schedule."
Anderson says.
Walking also Is likely to suc­
ceed. where diets have fulled fur
frustrated would-be losers.
The problem ts. every time

you diet, you lose fnt-buriilng
m uscle." writes Rob Sw cclgall In
the W alking mugnzlnc. "Quick
weight-loss diets tower both your
muscle muss nnd metabolism,
making It Increasingly difficult
to control your w eight."
But consistent walking burns
calorics. Increases aerobic capac­
ity and contributes to overall
fitness. And exercise Is a natural
appetite depressant.
Swcclgall, author o f at least
eight bunks on walking, re­
commends a walk light after
each meal. "It will help diges­
tion, relieve any bloated fueling,
mid hum a few dozen extra
calorics."
One of the challenges Is lo
learn lo differentiate between
appetite, a mental signal, and
hunger, a physical need, lie
says. If your appetite drives you
to' eat. take a walk until real
hunger surfaces.
And importantly, change the
way you think about food. A ie
you a " n io iit li- m ln d " or a
"m uscle-m ind?" Swcclgall asks.
"M ou th -m lu d s live lo cat:
m u s c lc - n iln d s liv e to a c t,
pursuing vigorous lifestyles. The
Inner eat lo live,"
Accessibility and convenience
nrc yet other advantages.
You have only lo step outside
your home for a place to walk,
r go for a walk at the nearest
nipping mall If the weather Is
had or you crave company.
.Many malls sponsor walking
clubs. Typical Is the South Hills
M a l l W a l k e r s ' C l u b III
1’ o u g h k c c p h I e . N . Y . C o •
sponsored by the South Hills
Moll and Vnssar Brothers Hospi­
tal. tills club targets older people
who waul to control weight,
Im p ro ve d ig e s tio n , tone up
muscles or Just get out of the
bouse lo socialize.
' "It saved my life, I was all
alone," says Mildred Weiner,
who Joined I lie club nftri the
dcatli o f her husband several
years ago. There she met Don

Scgnll, n w id o w er w ho had
Joined for the same reasons. The
two were married last year.
Another club member. Alice
Johnson, weighed In til 435
p o u n d s and w as b a t tlin g
diabetes, heart problems and
depression after her husband's
death when she Joined Now
she's 245 pounds lighter and

works ns a licenced pructlcu!
nurse caring for terminally 111
patients. "N on e o f tills would
have happened If It weren’ t for
mull-walklng," she says.
W alking can help working
women In particular, says Dr.
Deborah lloolon, who directed a
walking study program for OU’s
College o f Nursing.

W arm up before
working out
By Aaeoolatad Praaa
W a lk in g m uy se em c o m ­
monplace, bill If you wulk for
exercise he sure to warm up
first. H ere's som e w arm -up
advice from Seth Bauer, editor of
the Walking magazine:
• Slart with a sliori walk. run.
or mutch-in-place for three lo
live mtnutcH before doing stret­
ches.
• Stretch your lower hack and
hamstrings by extending one leg
and resting II on a chair (or
counter, wall. tree, or fence).
Lean over I be leg and reach for
the ankle until you cun feel a
slight pull In tbc back o f your
leg.
• Sireteb your calf muscles by
planting your feel on the ground
and leaning forward lo rest your
hands on a wall (or tree or
telephone pole). Keeping your
feel flat, maintain un angle that
gently stretches your lower legs.
D on 't Jerk o r lean ton far
forward. Hold for at least one
minute, and repeat.
• Stretch your upper body by
bending one arm behind your
head, using the other hand to
ranch back to grasp the elbow,
gently stretching your shoulder
and lot so. Hold for 30 seconds
and repeat with the other urm.
W h en you begin w alk in g.

Bauer says, start with a pace
that Is easy on your teg and foot
muscles, then Increase the pace
uflcr about live minutes. Walk at
a pace Hint Is brisk yet comfort­
able. "O ne d u o Is breathing. You
should have enough breath to
carry on a conversation while
wulklng. If you're out of breath
or feeling strained, slow down
mid enjoy you rself."
For (lie last 10 minutes o f your
walk, slowly decrease your pace.
Then stretch again after the
walk.
Bauer also advises breaking In
new shoes well before taking uu
extended walk, to avoid blisters
liud sore feet.

�•A - Sanford Herald, 8 anford, Florida - Sunday. June 20, 1993

O d d s over im pact of ra cism in u rb a n reform
W ASH IN G TO N - Housing Secretary Henry
Cisneros and the "n ew Dem ocrats" holding sway
at the W hite House are at odds over writing the
effect o f racism Into President Clinton's blueprint
for urban reform.
Cisneros says the president must consider the
impact o f racism, or his policies w on't cfTect
much change. The new Democrats say race-based
policy Is passe, and new solutions, steeped In
economics, must be found.
Th e new Democrats are m ainly the Democratic
m oderate group that
Leadership Council
Clinton led until the start o f his presidential
campaign.
Cisneros said the pet liberal Issues o f hom e­
lessness. poverty and crime can't be resolved
w ithout an honest discussion o f race. But

Clinton's attention has been focused on the
economy, and some Democrats are pushing him
to m ove toward the political center.
In an Interview taped for broadcast Sunduy.
Cisneros said some o f the new Democrats have
told him ' ‘that you'rc'not supposed to talk about
race ... because, as they say, there's nothing you
can do about it."
'"T a lk about class, talk about Income,' they
say. 'because that you can do something about.'
Dut frankly, my assessment Is, frequently It’s not
about class or Income; It Is about race."
W ill Marshall, an urban policy expert at the
DLC's Progressive Policy Institute, said Demo­
crats are sim ply trying to m ove the discussion to
the next level.
"W e are quite ready to talk about racial
questions." Marshall said, adding that Democrats
arc proposing a new remedy rather than "th e old
liberal race-based rem edies."

" I f I were talking to the secretary, who 1 have
high regard for, ! would say. 'I agree with you
that race Is an Important question, but I disagree
with you that It's all o f the problem .'"
Th e new Democrats, Marshall said, want
Clinton to change governm ent policies that have
not Improved dire urban conditions and to study
alternatives such as links between government
and private Industry. T h ey want to dc-cmphoslzc
race-based lawm aking and litigation.
That runs counter to some o f Cisneros' enrly
plans.
The secretary wants to toughen HUD's en­
forcement o f antl-dlscrimlnatlon laws In housing
and home Insurance redlining, a practice In
w hich Insurers refuse to Issue policies to
h o m e o w n e r s In d e c l i n i n g o r m i n o r i t y
neighborhoods. •
Cisneros said his views haven't locked him out
o f the president’s circle o f advisers — " I have

been surprised at the number or times the
president, over the course o f a w eek, turns to me
as an Individual" - but admitted that hla talk o f
race "Is not a message that resonates well with
some o f the new Dem ocrats."
Marshall said the new Democrats generally
argue that " I t ’s time to rethink the whole strategy
o f race-based rem ed ies.... that they haven t been
terribly effective In solving the mewt pressing
problems facing m inority Americans.
"T h e fight for racial Justice Is really shining to n
new front, and that's economic em powerm ent."
Marshall said. " I t ’s a whole new ngendn. And
that's controversial, because people vested In the
old strategics don't necessarily like It."
Cisneros has spoken out about racism and Its
Impact on Inner cities since taking olTIce In
January. He repeatedly said he envisions re­
shaping HUD policies to help rem ove the barriers
holding people In poverty.

Rural AIDS sufferers: Few places to turn
not like that. It's everyw h ere."
Sm iley was am ong about 200
people from 18 states attending
th e T h i r d A n n u a l H id d e n
Kpldcmlc Conference, sponsored
by the Rural AIDS Network and
the U.S. Public Health Service.

K A N SA S C ITY. Mo. - When
Stuart Sm iley discovered he was
HIV positive In August 1989. he
left the A ir Force and returned to
his hom etown In North Dakota.

T h e th ree-d ay co n fe re n ce ,
which focused on prevention
and care In rural areas und small
cities, began Thursday.

| But In Grand Forks, a city o f
som e 49,000 people, he found
jnowhere to turn.

•\ " T h e r e w e r e no s u p p o r t

Outside big cities, people cop­
ing with AIDS or HIV have less
a c c e s s to e v e r y t h in g fro m
doctors to m oney, panelists said.
Workshops addressed building

;groups for people with AIDS or
;HIV,r' Sm iley said Friday. "Peojple think It's only a gay problem
•or only In the big cities, but It's

Funeral for
girl who
wanted to
be an angel

health care teams In rural areas,
rural housing, benefit and In­
v e s t m e n t c o u n s e lin g , a n d
reaching sexually active gay
men In small towns.

on AIDS program administered
from the U n iversity o f New
M exico In A lbuquerque. " A t
least that w a y I'm not an
anonymous voice on the phone."

"F in d in g m edical care pro­
viders Is our first big obstacle."
said L it Hager-Macc. a planner
with the Missouri Bureau o f
AIDS Prevention. "Som etim es
It's their personal values, or they
say their staff would bulk, or
they don’t tuke M edicaid."

D e s p it e th e e f fo r t s o f
advocates, rural AIDS patients
often are forced to travel long
d is t a n c e s fo r t r e a t m e n t ,
Hagcr-Mace said. "T h e y often
spend more on transportation
and hotel costs ... than what the
actual procedure costs."

" I try to meet fucc-to-face with
physicians," suld Mary Gray,
coordinator for Partners In Care,

Volunteer families needed to
host male students from France
In Ju ly.
Call
3 2 1 - 0 1 4 7

H O LLYW O O D . Fin. The
n eed to c o m m u n ic a te w ith
children was n lesson learned
from the s u ic id e o f a kindergartner who stepped In front
o f a train, relatives said Saturday
nl her funeral.
Slx-ycar-old Jackie Johnson
told companions she wanted " to
become on a n g el" and be with
f a r rqpther^ whp l» dying o f
AtD4^e«v&gt;,foM«ht their attempts
Tuesday to pull her from the
trackk. ,
tj „
J a c k ie s m o t h e r . C a r la
Johnson. 31, had recently been
released from the hospital ofter a
three-week stay but was read­
mitted last week for three days.
" S h e th ou gh t Just lik e a
child,” the Rev. D.L. Hickman
suld at the funeral. "L ittle Jackie
wanted to be an angel. The only
way she could get there was to
cross the tracks to get on that
train that runs from Garth to
glory ."
T h e p a s to r o f N ew H op e
M is s io n a r y B a p tis t C h u rc h
opened his eulogy by asking,
"W h y did It happen? W hy ask
w hy? W hy docs the sun shine?
W hy do the lilies bloom ?"
Th e girl's parents and about
190 other mourners filled the
church. Her flower-decked pink
casket was opened at the end o f
the service for a last glance.
" I'v e learned how Important It
Is to always have an open line o f
c o m m u n ic a t io n w ith m y
c h ild r e n ," said her cou sin ,
F lo r e n c e M u r p h y . " J a c k i e
wanted to be an angel, and she
truly Is an angel because I know
a lot o f people have learned
something from this tragedy."
Th e stunning suicide by one
so young touched the hearts o f
many who never met her.
A clothing store owner d o­
nated a 9100 white dress for the
girl's funeral and refused money
collected by Broward County
sh eriffs deputies.

American Center for Cultural Exchange, Ltd.

P R O G R A M Y E A R 1993-1994

2666 Hiawatha A venue. Sanford

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S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
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fu (o

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
AND PROPOSED STATEMENT OF
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES
AND PROJECTED USE OF FUNDS

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This Proposed Statement of Community Develop­
ment Objectives and Projected Ubo of Funds Is lo
advise the citizens of Seminole County of tho
general objectives the County will pursue with their
• proposed allocation of Community Development
Mock^ Grant (0D8G) funds, and ol the specific
rpaafeela which Uie County Intends to consider with
those funds. The County has been advised that Its
1993-94 grant amount Is 92,336,000.
County staff will conduct a public hearing on
Thursday, June 24, 1993 lo present the proposed use
of 1993-94 CDBQ funds lo the public for comment.
All Interested persons are Invited lo attend the
public hearing. Stall will take all comments lo the
Board of County Commissioners and will answer
questions regarding the proposed use of funds. The
Board of County Commlsslones will approve a final
statomont of projects and funding on July 27, 1993,
which may or may not differ from this Proposed
Statement.
The County has an approved Comprehensive
Housing Affordability Strategy, a Community Devel­
opment Plan, and a residential antldiaplacement and
relocation assistance plan, with which to effectively
operate the CDBQ Program. Seminole County will
make every effort to minimize the displacement of
households and businesses vyhen carrying out Its
housing and community development activities.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OBJECTIVES
1. To use CDBQ funds In a manner which bonoflts
low and moderate Income persons; to alternatively
U3e CDBQ funds for the elimination or alleviation of
slums or blight, or for an urgent community need (If
necessary).
2. To Improve the quality of lifo In Seminole
County by providing Infrastructure Improvements,
public facilities, parks and recreation improvements,
housing assistance and other activities which aro
related to nelghborhood/community Improvement.
3. To concentrate the use of funds In Identified
low and moderate Income neighborhoods and
communities In order lo stabilize and Improve those
neighborhoods.
4. To provide for long range community
Improvement by assessing current conditions and
planning long range Improvement programs.
The community development objectives of Semi­
nole County are fully consistent with the national
objectives as established by the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974, as amended,
with a major emphasis on meeting the needs of
lower Income persons and a lesser emphasis on
eliminating slum and blight. Ol the anticipated
92,336,000 In available funds for FY 1993-94, over
96% of those funds are expected to benefit low and
moderate Income persons within Bemlnole County.
The remaining funds ara to be used to eliminate
slum and blight.
Seminole County received funding requests
totaling over 96.5 million during the planning period
for Program Year 1993-94, which far exceeds the
available funds. The County utilized an extensive
citizen participation process to Insure fairness and
accountability In selecting projects and activities lo
be funded.
The list of proposed projects for the proposed use
of funds Is as follows:
South Seminole Christian Sharing Center, Inc./
Emergency Food Assistance 917,990
To purchase a cargo van to deliver food to lower
Income persons In less accessible areas of the
County. Also, to pick-up and deliver furniture and
food for distribution to lower Income persona at the
center.
letter Living for Seniors, lnc./Maals on Wheels
Program 913,926
To provide home-delivered meals to 15 homebound
elderly residents of the County for one year. These
meals would be additional meals to those already
being provided.
The Housing Authority of the City ol Sanford/
Tenant-Based Rental Assistance and Family Self­
Sufficiency Programs 92,000
To purchase a computer to Improve services for
lower Income families receiving tenant-based rental
assistance (TBRA).
Seminole County Victims' Rights Coalition, Inc./
Shelter for Victims of Domestic Violence 992,000
To renovate and repair a building which has been
donated for use aa a shelter for victims of domestlo
violence and spouse abuse.
Seminole County Demolition end Clearance of
Dilapidated Structures 992,426
To demolish and remove abandoned and ttilapl-

dated buildings within Seminole County following
authorization from the Board ol County Commis­
sioners.
•
Seminole County Housing Delivery services
9200.000
Funding lor operating expenses for Implementing
housing rehabilitation and development activities
under the HOME Investment Partnership Program
and/or Slate Housing Initiatives Partnership Program
wllhln Seminole County. Housing services may
Include client counseling, energy auditing, prepara­
tion of work specifications, loan processing,
Inspections, and other services relatod to assisting
owners, tenants, contractors and other entitles
seeking to participate In housing rehabilitation,
housing development or other eligible activities.
Seminole County Emergency Housing Repair
Assistance 9100,000
Funding for emergency repairs to correct health
and safety deficiencies of low Income owner
occuplod housing units within Seminole County.
The Housing Authority ol Seminole County/
Connection to the City of Oviedo Sanitary Sewage
System 916,000
To provide engineering, design and survey services
for Installation of a new lift pump station and
sanitary sower lines connecting to the City of Oviedo
sewage system.
City of Cssselberry/Northeasl Area Improvements
9140.000
To completo drainage Improvements In tho
Northoast Area (Lake Drive target area) and to pave
Hilltop Road from Lake Drive lo Park Drive.
Midway Drainage Improvements Phase II 9900,000
To completo 2,600 linear feet of channel
Improvements lo Chlldre's Ditch from Jitway Avenue
retention pond to Brlsson Avenue In the Midway
target area.
Bookerlown Paving and Drainage - Dubois Street
9120.000
To complete 1,075 linear feet of roadway paving
and drainaoe Improvements to one (1) residential
street In tho Bookerlown largot area.
Johnson Hill Paving and Drainage - Chlnaberry
and Daisy Avenues 9219,000
To complete 1,600 linear feel of roadway paving
and drainage Improvements to two (2) residential
streets In the Johnson Hill target uroa.
Lockhart's Subdivision Paving and Drainage Completion ol "8tub" Streets 999,000
To provide engineering, survey and design services
and land acquisition lor the construction 2,t60 linear
feel of roadway paving and drainage Improvements
lo nine (9) residential streets In the Lockhart's
Subdivision target area.
Jamestown Potable Water System 960,000
To provide engineering and design services for the
construction of 6,500 linear feet of potable water
mains to serve the Jamestown target area.
SherlH’ e Departmenl/Work Release Center
Structure 9200,000
To construct a Work Release Center (Halfway
House) for lower Income offenders on property
adjacent to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility,
located In tho 8emlnole County Five Points
Complex.
Rescue Outreach Mlsslon/Open Door Shelter lor
Homeless Women and Children 9100,000
To complete construction of an emergency shelter
for 27 homeless women and children.
Total activity funding: 91,709,719
Estimated funding for administration: 9416,901
Estimated funding for contingency: 9192,069
Total grant amount: 92,999,000
This Proposed Statement of Community Develop­
ment Objectives and Projected Use of Funds was
developed by the Seminole Cosunty CDBQ Citizen
Advisory Bosrd on April 29, 1993 snd will be
presonled to the Board of County Commissioners on
July 27, 1993 for consideration and final approval.
The Board of County Commissioners may amend the
Proposed Statement and projects as they see fit,
prior to approving the Final Statement. Any and all
questions regarding this Proposed Statement of
projects should be directed lo Matthew Kane ol the
Community Development Section, Comprehensive
Planning Division, Seminole County Planning and
Development Department, County Services Building,
1101 East First Street, Sanlord, Florida 32771
(telephone: (407) 321-1130, extension 7384).
Tho public hearing will be held on Thursday, June
24, 1993 at 7:00 p.m. In the County Commissloo
Chambers (Room 1028) of the County Services
Building in Sanford, Florida.

�K
LOCALLY
F a s tp itc h s o ftb a ll cam p
O K I . AN IM ) - Valencia C m iilim m tv College
head softball coach Terri Holmes will cmnltk t
her second week long Iddlt (ilrls Fast pin li
.Sollh.ill ('a m p s this work. .I u i i c 21 2.r&gt;. al tin
Y.ileiiha f m iiu u u o ix ( " U r g e West C am pus
sollh.ill Held
I Ii&lt;•limit anil llnal session Is planned lot .him
28 to J u l y 2 Dalh wm km its a ir scheduled lot ’ (
a in lo I p m
C a m p le.ilnres Include I In ilrinoiisiialion anil
applirallon ol skills In pitching. rah I i Iiil*
hitting. hunting. lidding. throwing. haseinnn
Iiijj . olienslve strategy. and Irani ilrlrn sr; Irani
play; and I' shirts, awards, and prizes
Cost inr (h r r a m p Is $50 per playri
I'm m n rr Inlornialloii. ron lari C oarh llolm rs
al (•1071
I'M 1408. nr (4071847 ()7:t.ri

Jay B ergm an B aseball C am p
MAI I L A N D — I lie .Jewish ('iiinniniiiiv ( ' m i n
ol Central Florida. 8J&gt;1 N Maitland Avenue
Maitland, will hr hosting a .lav Hctgman
llasrhall C a m p Ioi hoys and girls in ih r ilnnl
i In n seven III grades limn . Innr 2H , liilv 2
l'lir lee lot ih r ‘ I a m lo noon r a m p is S h u and
$55 lot C r t i l n M rin h ri Dlsi onnl
All da\
pingram opiton is avail.ihlr loi work It in parr ills
Km moie Inlorinallmi ro n la ri Fill .a i |ii7l

i c k i n

g

a r o u n d

C

o

c o a

Cipolla, Bernard, deBruin named to
Under-18 ODP Florida state squad
From S tall Reports
l.A K F MAKS
Filler Seminole C m m lv young men
will In lln sole i r p i r s r n ln liv r s Irom Central Florida on
lln I loi Ida I nil&gt; i 18 team competing III tile IiWill D S
Voinli S o n e t A shim ial lo lls O lym p ic Developilieill
I’lo n m m sorrel eliailiplniishlps lllls week In Cocoa.
l.x in.in 1111*11 Si linnl graduates F'ratlk Cipolla and
.lolm H em .m l along with Lake Mary High .'school rising
srnlm dodx delirnln have earned herllis mi the F'lmida
sipiad. w Ilk h will emnpele with HI oilier stale teams
Irom the southeast region ol the United Stales
Florida's main cmnprtltlmi In die tmirnnmciil Is
expel led io enine From North Texas. South Texas.
North &lt; amlin.i South Carolina, and Oklahoma.
I'lie lorniiamein. which Is being played From Tuesday
lo Sunday this week al Ihe Cocoa ISxpn Center near the
intersection ol 11ii*hxvav 5*20 and Inlerslate 05 In
Hiev.ud Counlx
Is actually a try-mit lor the U S .
Sonllieasi Kcginiinl Irani
\ n otdlng to l.vm an roach Kay Samlldgc, the
tmiiuamenl gives the coaches ol die regional team an
oppm iim llv lo In inti in the lies! players from each stale
and see diem m compel It ion against one another.
I..isi vrat ( ipolla was named to the Southeast Kcglmi
learn, which pul him In die pool lor the U n d e r '17

National team
All direr Seminole County players have extensive
experience on O lym p ic Development Urogram age
group stale teams delirnln lias played mi OD P stale
teams loi the last live years, Cipolla lot tin- Iasi lour
years, and lleruard the last three veins
Cipolla. who will he attending die I Inlversliv ol South
Florida In T a m p a in the tall, was die 1002 03 (ialoraile
I hull School Player ol the Year In Florida and a
llrsl-leam seleellmi to die Florida Alhletle Coaches
AssoelalIon's Class 4 A All-State Irani
A 1002 N .S .C .A .A All American and an All-South
seleellmi. Cipolla was one ol seven players limn Florida
named to Ihe South Kcglmi squad for Ihe Puma Clip
Invitational, an all-slat soccer tournament showcasing
graduating high school seniors From around die
eounlry.
Hernard. xvlm has received an aeademle scholarship
in attend Cornell University, was named to the 1002 03
PI//.I Hill lux national All ’I oiiruameni Irani tills |iasi
season and xvas a 1002-fill All Stale pick hv the I"A C A
deliriilu. die youngest ol Ihe trio, also was a ld!(2
N S C A A All Amerlean and a 1002 All South seleellmi
T h e olienslve Most Valuable Player al the Plz/a Hut
Invitational tournament ilils season, delirnln also xvas
named to Ihe Class 4A All-Stale Irani liv Ihe F A C A .

1 ‘

*

Fll« Photo

Frank Cipolla is one ol throo local
playors who will play for Florida in
Iho U S Y S A ’s Olympic Development
Program regional tourney this wook

&lt;vir&gt;

E aster Seal so ftb a ll

County
infested
with B’s

34 and co u n tin g

O K I . A N D O — I'lie Klorlda K.asin Sral Soeirtx
and (lie C llv ol Oilando will host ih r l ull
A n n u a l K a s i n Seal's D o n h lr K lnn in aiioii
Sollh.ill rmiriiamenl lor AS A lA m a i n n Sollh.ill
Assnci.ltloll) irnish red Men's and Women s (
I.ennnrs and hound hnhm l o inn .n n rni lot &lt; ord
A S A Irn is trlrd Irannrs al Ilk l ain I itnlrxx
Sollh.ill Complex on the n i l l l r l ot I n Road and
\o| 11| Ol.IIInr Hlossolll I I .III
llli r x r n l w ill hr held Ih r Wi i ki nd ol
Sainrdav •Innr 2*iand Snnd.ix Innr 27
Donalions lo ih r lo i n n.nnrnt w ill no io hrnrltt
I h r Florid.i Faster Seal Sortclx and spn illia llx
1lu ll l r side lit la I i amp ( amp Challenge
For.Ill'll III S o irrn lo C a m p &lt; hath Ug. is a
lil.n ir
h.nrtei lire
w h r r l r h a l l ai i rssihli
ra m p tlial pi ovules i hlliln n and adnlls with
dlsalillllllrs and ontdom lliernpeiilli and iri n
at lonl expel inn i
F'm limn' minimatlnn. roin.n i I in la Kanhat
I'lie F'lmida Faster Sral Snclriv Inr.. al 14071
K‘ l(i 788 1

By T O N Y DaSORMIER
^

IBM
•4

A
V /

,
&gt;

m
'1

Herald Sports Editor

1

H v* y m

JJy

( IVIKIM &gt; - Where'd all these IPs
rulin' Iron)''
Seminole C m illlv hlnll schools
have created yet another det ol
voiilli siiuiinei haseh.ill. Iieldmn a
seronil m "IF Irani almin will) then
prim ary, or " A " squads
Tills summer. Lake Mary. Lym an.
Oviedo. Lake Howell, and Lake
llrantley will Held " A " teams made

• &lt;C-' » V

up

L o n gw ood s o ftb all
L O N C iW O O D
I lie Cllx ol l.onnwood Keen
alion D r p a ilm r n l will host siiinm ri slow pin h
sol I hr 1 11 Irannrs lor M e n s ( ' M e n s Sn p ri (
Co Fd and ( Ivet 5(1 stall Inn Ih r week ol Inlx 12
and m il I vvo mnhl s a week lor live weeks
I lie lee is $200 lor Men's ( and Snpri I and
s'j'jn lot ( h i i "&gt;() and ( o Fa I
Inh ii sled Iranis should rail Sainlv l.oniax al
2m i .11 1.1or 2(i(» II 4 7 Moinla v 11n oiinh I i id a x
Front row (loft lo right), Brian Peterson, Owen
Tun/or Jeremy Sisk. Benny Gomez. Nick Graham
Second row (loft lo right). Drew Vandegrlft. Kyle

Ju n io r G olf C lin ic
( I K I .A N I ) ( )
A lain*' riowrl ol .isp 11 1rn* Jo h n
Daly's and Nam v Lopr/ an r v p n ird lo hr on
hand lor a lire .Jtinlm (loll ( linn al IvasiWood
( 'muse mi l inn sdnv. .Inlx I
l'lir rlln lr lor hoys and guts Imri lo 1/ vr.ns
old will hr held limn 2 lo l p m and w ill &lt;oxri
all aspects id I h r gauii • in c lu d in g hasn
hm d .n n rn la ls rules and rllipn ilr d i i\ inn sand
plax and pntlinn. savs Hill Slides assist.ml noil
pio al Falsi Wood and c x rrn ilxi d l n r i o i ol i In
. hm im ( ioll Assorlallon ol C rn lra l F'lm Ida
IvaslWnod Is one ol srveial slops on this
sum m er's .Innlm (ioll S r h r d n lr A loial ol 2d
instrm llon.il rlln lrs and Im irn a m rn is havi hern
s rh r ih ilr d loi various C r n tia l lloin la noil
ionises IvaslWood rrrrllllx held a .Inmol (mil
I om namrtil lor hoys and gli Is live lo M
lln Faislxvood rllllli Is lire lo anx punni
nollrr
F'm addlllonal Inlormalimi ahmn lln
i linn , rail Iv.islWood (ioll C m n s r al 28 1 In rl
l oi inurnment Inlminatlon. ro n la ri ih r .Jiinim
1mil Assorll.ilIon at Odd 0580
F.asiWood is located on Smith Alalaya hall
appioxlrnalrlv Ixvo miles smith ol lln Flasi Wrsi
l.xjiK sswav in soul I least Orlando

L o n g w o o d C u b s roll on
Special to tho Herald
I. ( &gt;N( i\\ ( K ID
When du l ulls nl the Lmigwnml
ll.dm Kill 11 League s M i i i i i i Div ision gel mi ,i roll, they
|llst 'l u l l I s lu p
III l.li I till V s till ll.lX I'll I

Alii i eii|n\ lilt; a Id I kill season dial saw the Cubs
lose du n opening name then will l.'i names In a row.
lilt ( libs i .11111 hark III Ihe spring and pill together
du milx inilie.Hen and u n d i d irenrd in die history ol
d ie Lmigwood Italic hnili M i i i i i i Division. Ilnishlng

2l(i
( 'iinbiiirit wnh du ll slieak in die tail, die Culls
ha v i w i hi a 11 unseen I ivr names
I Ins learn has hern a clinch's dream.
said
m.m.igci Mlk. Hi&gt;1 iti
hi nn LI years ol clinching. t
have in xri had a lean will) die ovetall eliellllslrv ol
this le,nil
Li ailing (hi i ulis mi dir held xvrre Mad limxvalli.

Kvau .mil Kvlc Hollo. Kyle Mills. Nick (iia lia m . and
lirlau Peterson. Ollier key playris luelude Owen
Tan/er. Hennv (Jmnez. Drew S'audenrlll. Adam
Segall. and Jerem y Sisk
Kyle Mono led ihe Cubs with a tiflti li.iiiiun average
lolloxved by his twin hrotliei. Kyan. who Im al .f)8 1
clip. Mall ilorwalll pared Ihe Culls in extra base lilts
with live home runs, direr triples, and six dmililes,
T h e Cubs scored 21f&gt; runs ilurlun die sprint* and Im
I Id as a Irani
Horwalh and die Mono Iwins also am limed Ihr
Cnhs piiehmn stall, emntiluliitt I'm two no hlllrrs
and lour oiie-hitters as die Cnhs li m i t 'd opponents in
|usi m i runs, the trio ol Hmxvadi and die Honos
averaned over two strikeouts pci !nu!ii|* while
allow inn less than two walks a name
Willi Ihe ample olienslve support. Mike Mono was
able lo achieve one ol Ills preseasmi n*'als hv Ulvlnti
Sec Cubs, Put&gt;c 3H

r c liir n lu n

u i i d e i e l i i N H m i. | |

In

AROUND THE WORLD

M arlin s provide nursery so w ives can enjoy g a m e s

Toyota, P eugeot pace Lem ans

Aaaoclntod Preaa

I.F1 MAN'S Frailer — Fiddle Irvine (hove
lovola into a trillions lead over the d rlrn d in u
&lt;haiiipimi I'rnneol ol I *) ill Ipp&lt;* Allloi in lln* l.r
M ans 21 h o u r s on S t i i n i d a v . w ith hotli
i at m.ikri s li adn in I lie lead and snllri Inn sri Ions
seth.ii ks w nh some ol then racers
Fol IV seven &lt;ais look oil III pill suit ol Ihr
coveted inlr. one ol iIn most prrslinions in
Inteln.n imi.il auto r.irnin. inrlndlnn 1’orsrlir
&lt; a n ria s, Loins F.sprits and \'rn ln rl f»(K)s in the
&lt;il caienmx dial xxas invited hark allei an
ahsrin e ol six vr.ns

MIAMI
In ilieii llisi year ol
li.isrhall Ilk die Flmkla M.ullns not
milx have a xlunijj hullprn Inil
rtle.ll pl.ivpelis, too
Smile M.il tills sax ulir le.isi'li lul
lliell pu t in lulls oil held snrress
max tie hidden m Ihe bowels ul Joe
Kuhliie Stadium where a nursery
allows wives to i&lt;et aw.iv In watch
die names .mil Im players m spend
mull lime xviili d i m l.umlles
Ii lakes a load oil the wives so
Ibex ran rti|i'V die i(.mie. said Wall
Weiss lln Mai Ilils slim Istop whose
li xe.ll "III sun III.ike seellls lu lie .1
1 1 1 1i*11 .■1 11 i "I die Marlins
lialix
III ll.lllr
W ill II HI.ike i "lues lu the
si .ii 11u 111 lie s "III luuklim Im waul I"
srrlllK UK pi.ix hill i.itliri sreui|&gt;
w Ilk Ii kids .io lin e lie ran play

BEST BETS ON TV

U A 8K E T U A L L
7 pm
W I S H 2 Nit A Finals
( lllrano Hulls al I'llormx Sails ||.|
C om plete listing* on Pnge 20

I

Mills, Adam Segall, Kyle Bono. Mall Horwalh, Ryan
Bono Back row (left lo right) couches Glen Tolloson
and Mike Bono.

ol

die Nallmial Am aieiir Masehall Fed
eration sum m er leanur and a " H "
learn ul rising Ireshinen and soph
illumes
Lasl year, only Lake ilraulley and
( Ivied" llrlded H teams
Aeeordltin l " Lake Mary coach
Allen Tuttle .mil Oviedo roach Mike
F r i u li, die .iddlllmi nl II learns In
lln siuu m ri proniauis basically is a
i r spouse "I the supply mil iiieellnn
die demand
We pisi had so many kids who
XV.mied lo pi.iv liasehall tills sum
mei . said I utile
And we wanted
10 n»vc them ihe o p porlm d ly lo
play, so we det tiled lo nivc it a shot.
"W e have a loi ol n**od pmlm
varsity players who w.uiled a n,M|d
place lo plav d m inn the sunmiei "
1'errrll was astonished at die
response lo the rail lor trvouls lor
die Oviedo H learn
I Just went and made a couple nl
an non i i r r m r ills a i a couple ol
middle schools, sayutn dial Ihe
elnhlh n r a d n s rmild come Irv out
Im Ihe It Irani." said F r r ir ll " W r
ended up liavtnn 'Lr» hoys Irv &lt;nil lor
m u It team
File most emnpctlllvc iryouts
w r ve had was lur this It Irani
1'hclc w e ir some hard eliulees In
I I I . ike "
While ii max' seem that the hl|*h
srhoiil simiuie* it program is an
11 ii n e e e s s a r v . u l d i i i o n lo th e
liasehall millets lor an aj*e rfroup
See K iller " B ’ s " , P a «e 3B

with
..........

l&gt;

T in
i iu is r ix is s I ih ki ll w ith
rli.uiLpuu tallies plax pells, luxs and
a p un ’ll i*x in File telex Islmi V'l L
iisu.illx limed i" a Disney movie is
net asimiallx switched I" die Marlins
l*.lllle jlisl lu see it tl.lildx Is almost

done.
" T h a t ' s i n v d a h i l a h . " said
Jordan Magadan, feyear-old son ul
Marlins third baseman Dave, eves
sparkling as lie i au^hl Ills lather
erosstnu home plate on the screen
Alter the name. Jordan's 3-year
old brother Christian screeched
with |oy when Ills lather emerged
hum the eluhhmise.
It's d e ltn ttc ly a bin p l u s . "
Manadan said "My wile wouldn't he
able lo collie to Ihe name, unless
they toped oil a section "
I'lie "m nh l-care " providers, con
traded and paid Im bx Ihe Marlins
mnanl/.ilkm (owned by II Wayne
Hin/eun.i Ihe Mloekhustn Video
iii.inoatel. is coordinated dirminh
die Sorel Jewish Cmiiimimix C r n
lei m Sunrise I'lie rotation stall ul
III. headed In Kobln Cullen, lias
been screened, IIK SIk e tise d and
are all experleueed dayi are pro
vldeis
Willi a new team like tins wi
wanted lu make the transition as
smoothly as possible so they leel
part ol the Marlins tamtlv " said

'

lioimle Liiiklqulsl. Marlins dlreelm
nl eouimiinllx I el.it Ions "We're liol
|ust a team mi the Held, lull nil as
well ”
C l u n k ( an
the Marlins tiedlooted center holder, had to be
lalked mil ul u.union his 7 mmilli
old sun Spoils iccm mis Ills wile
" C h u c k and die doctor were
watehiiin the World Series while I
was position." Candace ( an said.
"I lax inn Sheldon In here enables
me to watch the nidi" without
worrym n ahoui eh.iiinmn diapers m
Ids sr l e.imlnn p ti111iin hair, m
dnoxvuin bottles. " she said
lie's
able to take his normal nap m
here
Ol course. Sheldon C a n is die
laslesl i I.twlri ul ill'' nimip
l.um hpiist
the iniiseix s deli
mm In r . is keen nil piulertllin die
ti.lllpl.ix el s pi ix .11 \
It s siii Ii a (lem.uiiliun sport
t.uiidipilsi said
It their w ixi s anil
rluldreu are happy dial s mie less
hm den nil ilieii shoulders
In hot ween tim innv the Marlins
masriit Hilly du Marlin, emues intn

the nursery and puls on a private
show lor the children. Sometimes
din tun rain delays, the ballplayers
will pup III to sav hello
I don't like liasehall," said Kascy
Huweii. 5. whose lather Kyan was
the starlet and xvltiulnn pitcher this
evcnlnn " T h e nursery is m uch
limner tli.in the liallplayers."
While die Marlins clubhouse reInncraim is stocked with beer and
soda, the nursery Icebox leatures
|ulcc. buttles ul milk, and leepops.
HI.ike Weiss was on his third
ehm olale i tup cookie when m om
peeked III
'F'm other kids n s a treat lu runic
to the li.illnaiuc. said Terri Weiss
F'm us, It's like a chore, )usl
because we're here every day I
dmi't know what xve'd do without
this
Michael Kciilcrla. the H-year-old
soil nl Marlins' iillliix plax r Kleh.
w ou ld rather ham* out in the
nursery palnltm* or watching his
3'Vear-old brnther A m lim iv

�- Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 20, 1993

S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
i t SEM INOLE PARK
Friday night
First rat* — 1,450; Bt It 34
] Jake The Rake
31 20 7 40 200
l Omni Gecko
240 2.20
5 SJ Allheerl
220
0(1)119.20; P(&gt; 1) 43.40; T O 1 » 201.40
Second rece - - 1,454; D: 11,44
3 Rylblck Mgc
tin
600 7 40
5M*ltr*D
1 40 2 20
i Lynn Jo*
740
Q (3 51 27.14; P 0 5) 45.00; T 0 5 1) 101.00;
0 0 0-3)201.00
Third r#c# — 1,650; Ci 21.51
7 Godfather H
4.70 4.00 7.70
l I'm Smoolhi#
410 7.60
3 RC Sassy Baauly
2.20
Q (11) 11.10; P 0-1) 10.40; T 0-1-1) 75.40
Fourth roc#- 1,450; Di 21.57
5 H trv N Tina
0 60 4 60 710
2 Champ Charmer
500 200
OMPS Ariel
2.40
0 0-5) 21.00; P (5-1) 101.00; T 0 2 0) 90.10
Fifth race - 1,450; Cl 51.01
t Black Lion
4.40 2 00 270
OOmnl Itasca
7 40 2 40
7 Jo Jo Boomer
140
Q 11-4)7.00; P O D 14.10; T (I I 7)41 06
Sixth roc* — 1,450; O: 21.91
iPenros* Brandon
4.00 420 320
I T H Emary
9 20 6 40
6 Buckskin Gal
3.20
0 12 I ) 11 00; P 12 I ) J ) 20, T 12 I A) 161.40.
PICK 3 IS 1 21 lo t 1 paid 10 00
O TH ER R ESULTS NOT AV A ILA B LE

JAM M Jtl
at O RLANDO-1EM INOL E
Friday night
Flrtt gam*
6 Gabby
21H If.20 160
JMunoi
7.70 5 00
IMarcal
12 0
Q (S-a) 66.Mr P f i l l ItJ.M i T (4-5-1) 110.60
Sacond gam*
1160 110 2 (0
6Munoi
500 J.20
I Pinion
4 10
7 E rk lili
O 0*1 24.401 P 141) 41.24; T (4-171
M14.44J 0 0 (4 4) If 7.40
Third gama
2 Frlai Andy
12.20
6 40 2 10
7 Munor-Chi mala
7.40 4 10
1 Pinion Oyarl
1 60
0(17)61.44; P (1711)4.10; T 117 1) 501.10
Fourth gama
11rlgoyan Oyarl
11 40
10 00 1 40
4 Frlai Don
6 40 4 40
IP IIaForurla
4 40
Q It 4) M.M; P ( M l 94.90; T t l 4-)) 417.4*
Filth gam*
4 Plla Baltran
1)40
10.00 4.10
4 Friat Goltli
1 40 2 60
1Ran* Andy
4 40
0(4-4)14.40; P (4-4) 244.10; T (4-4-1) 174.10
Sixth gam*
SMunol Jos*
26 00 22 20 7.20
1 R*n* Urald*
10 00 4 40
3 Tlno Aguirre
5 40
O (I 5)45.40. P (S I) 111.70; T 15-1-1) 574.40
Savtnlhgom*
lTlno
H 40 6 60 1 00
401**
5 40 4 00
*lrlgoy»n
5 70
0(1-4) 10.00; P it 4)17.50; T (1-4 1)411.40
Eighth gam*
I Arameyo Enrlqua
II 60 4 70 2 40
4 Said Oyarl
5 00 2 20
INapaAguIrr*
7 40
0(1-4)11.40; P (1-4 ) 40.40; T (1-4-1) 151.00
Nlnlhgam*
ISaldUradl
4 40 4 70 7 60
7NapaB*ltran
6 60 5 70
1Aramayo Agulrra
4 60
Q (17) 14.20;P 111) 101.10; T 11-MI
17T.40; Jackpot Carryover 1,000.00
10th gam*
2 Gold)
10 20 7 70 3 40
aMandlba
5 40 2.40
7 Don
400
til H ill
140 10 60 X 60
) Irlgoyan Ballrpn,,
700 12 60
4Mlkal Enrlqua
3 40
1 Napa Victor
.60
O fl-d ) 4IJ
lllhgam*
4.70 4 40 2 40
1 Said Bob
7.00 340
2 Ricardo Don
4.20
IMIkal-Urald*
77.60;
O D IM A 1 A II) 71.40; (1-4 A 1-All) 71.40
ilth gam*
1Napa
14 70 4 70 4 00
2 Baltran
5 20 5 60
7 Bob
7 00
O 11 1) 40.10; P (1-1) 101.10; T (1 1 1) 110.10

BAlBAAik STANDINGS
M AJOR LE A O U C BASEBALL
All Tima* E D T
AM ER IC AN LCAOUE
Bait Dlvltlon
W
L Pet. OB
Dalroll
47 15
427
Toronto
41 74
594 2
Naw York
40 79
540 1
Baltlmor*
14 22
507 I
Boilon
20 27
12
Mliwauka*
.
21 36
17
Clav*land
27 40 .40) IS
Wait Dlvltlon
W
L Pet. OB
KaniatCIty
15 20 .524
22 It
Calltornia
.516 IVY
Chicago
12 It
.516 111
Saattl*
12 24
415 3Vs
Tana*
21 24
477 4
Mlnnaiota
71 25 .452 Sis
197 9
Oakland
25 24
Friday'* Oamai
Oakland 10. Kama* City 1
Baltlmor* 4, Cleveland I
Milwaukee*. Detroit)
Naw York 5. Mlnnaiota 0
Toronto 11, Boilon 2
Californio 9, Chicago I
Saattl* 2. Texas 7

Saturday's Oamai
Lair Oamai Not Included
, Detroit 10. Milwaukee I
‘New York 4, Mlnneiola 4
Cleveland 1. Baltimore0
Toronto*. Boilon 4
Kama* City 2, Oakland 0
Chicago at California (nl
Teaaial Seattle, (n)
Sunday's Gamai
Minnesota (Tapani 3 7) al New York
(Wlckman 7 0), 1:20p.m.
Milwaukee titonai 14) al Oatroll (Doherty
6 2). t i l l p rn
Baltimore (Moyer 2 2) al Cleveland (Ab
bollO I). I 35p m
Bolton (Viola 4 7) at Toronto (Gorman 6 1 ),
I 35 p m
Kamai City (Garnder 4)1 al Oaklnnd
(Welch 4 4). 4:05 p.m.
Chicago lA lv a ra i 6 2) al Calltornia
(Springer 0 0), 4 05p m.
Texas (Lelbra-idt 7 21 at Seattle (Leary
4 31.4 35p m
Monday's Gamei
Milwaukee al Cleveland, 7;05p m
Minnesota al Boston, 7:25pm
Texasal Chicago. 4.05 p m
Calltornia al Kam aiClty, 4:35pm
Oakland al Seattle. 10 05 p m
N A TIO N A L LEAO UE
East Division
W L
Pet.
OB
Philadelphia
46 70
097 —
St Louis
37 29
561 9
Montreal
36 30
545 10
Chicago
37 13
4*7 I3'j
Florida
31 35 .470 15
Pittsburgh
30 35
467 15'»
New York
20 45
304 251y
West Division
W L
Pet.
Ofl
San Francisco
44 7)
657 —
Atlanta
37 21
544 7'j
Houston
34 20
531 4's
Los Angelas
34 20
531 4' y
Cincinnati
31 36
461 12
San Diego
27 34
X04 14' 7
Colorado
21 44
37) 72
Friday's Oames
Chicago!. St. Louis)
Montreal 2. Atlanta I
Philadelphia 7, Florida 1
Pittsburgh 5. New York 2
Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 1.10 Innings
San Franciscos. Houstono
San Diego II. Colorado 1
Saturday's Games
Late Games Not Included
SI Louisa. Chicago!
New York al Pittsburgh, Ini
Los Angeles at Cincinnati, (nl
Atlanta al Montreal, (nl
Florid# at Philadelphia, (n)
San Franclscoat Houston, In)
San Diego al Colorado. Ini
Sunday’s Gamas
Atlanta (Glavlne 12) al Montreal (Shaw
I 3). I 35p m.
Florida (Hough 2-7) at Phlladtlphla
I Green* 41), t i l l p.m.
Los Angalts (Aslaclo 5 4) at Cincinnati
(Belcher 5-4), 7 :15 pm
SI Louis (Tewksbury 6 4) al Chicago
(Castillo! 4), 2:20pm
San Francisco (Hlckerson 0 I) al Houston
(Harnlsch6 41, 2:35 p m
San Dlago (Whitehurst 7 3) al Colorado
(Henry 2 4), 3:05 p m
New York (Sabarhagen 3 5) al Pittsburgh
(Cook 4 31,1 05p.m.
Monday's Oames
Chicago at Pittsburgh, 3 05p m
St Louis at Florida, 7;J5 p.m.
Atlanta at Philadelphia. 7 35p m
Montreal at New York. 7 40 p m
Cincinnati at Colorado. 9 05 p m
Houston al Los Angeles. 10 35 p m
San Diego ul San Francisco. 10:3$ p m
Southern League
First Hall
Eastern Division
Graanvlll* 1 Braves)
34
Orlando 1Cubs)
24 33
-,.3
Carolina (Pirates)
35 3)
Knoxville (Dlu* Jays)
33 36
474-94
Jacktonvllla (Mariners) 33 &gt;7 .444 1
Wtsltrn Division
x Nashvlll* (Twins)
39 30
565 —
Birmingham (WSox)
34 36
486 5*1
Huntsville (AlhllCI)
34 36
486 S’T
37
464 7
Memphis (Royals)
37
Chattanooga (Rads)
457 7’ j
32 34
* clinched llrsl hall division title
Friday's Oamai
Jacksonville 3, Orlando 0
Carolina II, Greenville 1
Chattanooga 4. Knoxville)
Birmingham 4 2, Huntsville I 6
Nashvlll# 7. Memphis!
Saturday's Games
Jacksonville at Orlando
Greenville al Carolina
Chattanooga al Knoavllle
Birmingham at Huntsville
Memphis at Nashville
Sunday's Gamas
Jacksonville at Orlando
Greenvllloal Carolina
Chattanooga al Knoxville
Memphis al Nashvlll*
Endot Flrtt Hall
Florida Stale League
First HOI
Eastern Division
W
L
37 29
W.P. Beach I Expos)
Lakeland (Tigers)
37 30
SI Lucie (Mats)
36 30
Oscaola (Astros)
74 17
Daylona (Cubs)
74 34
Voro Btach (Dodgers)
74 40
Fort Lauderdale (Red Sox) 22 42
Weitern Division
x Clearwater (Phillies) 43 24
Charlotte (Rangers)
39 27
SI Pete (Cardinals)
37 29
Sarasola (While Sox)
16 29
Dunadln ( Blue Jays;
34 11
Fort Myers (Twlnsl
26 19

I H IS W l ( K S I IS H IN C . I O H l C A S I

mu

U k iC tw a M
la in ftioqii
O uiaP orM i
E

U te K w r
U k a h n a a c f f liN

Ctomont Ctwln
LAka KlMlmmM
U R * OrtWIn
Lake Harrlo

OrmflaLalta

U ** ifrchkHxa
T m Ir Apopka CHafn

Lalta TohopafcaDga
Lafca RouaaMu
lakaWalr

i n

1 Johna Bhrar ftl)

SSL
WlthlaeoocWM M vw

n

n

a

647 591 2Vj
561 5(i
554 6
.507 9
400 16

l l A f ALL LBAPBWA
AM ERICAN LEAG U E
T E A M B A TTIN G
R
AB
H HR RBI
7JX4 375 666 IB 35)
Toronto
Detroit
2291 xOQ 63X 80 J81
Cleveland
7276 304 47X Al 799
New York
7)67 3X0 6X5 n 3)0
KansaiClly
771) 775 596 30 767
Seattle
2253 746 601 65 766
7137 77* 565 50 261
Minnesota
Chicago
2185 111 57) 66 2*5
California
7099 791 5X7 48 269
Texas
72)3 373 57) n 309
Boston
1148 1)1 561 30 734
Milwaukee
2114 747 5X6 40 247
Baltimore
7134 275 557 4a 757
2092 271 515 59 760
Oakland

Pci
713
776
77X
773
249
266
264
743
760
157
.756
151
7X9
7X6

IN D IV ID U A L B A TTIN G
Based on 1)0 plate appearances
AB
R N HR 1RBI Avg
Olerud Tor
731 49 93 14 56 40)
Molllor Tor
771 57 92
8 XX 339
LodonCle
7X0 47 80
0 19 1)3
Leyrllr NY
1)0 24 43
8 31 131
Krculer Det
178 36 59
5 20 331
Gwynn KC
135 18 44
0 20 376
O'Neill NY
271 50 72
8 79 326
Boggs NY
728 28 74
0 38 325
Whitaker Del
7 36 324
187 19 59
127 23 41
1 17 373
Kirby Cle
717 42 69
2 25 314
Curds Cal
4 35 317
Phillips Del
7X6 46 78
MVaughn Bsn
8 35 316
225 33 71
Gonralei Tex
703 43 64 18 XX 315
7X5 ss 77
While Tor
7 21 314
1 18 313
Hamilton Mil
701 31 63
17) 26 54
Easley Cal
2 14 309
Thomas Chi
733 37 72 12 X8 109
RAIomar Tor
9 39 309
756 52 79
Stanley NY
165 29 51
B 76 309
41
McRae KC
80
260
3 27 304
Grldey Jr Sea
7X2 J0 74 13 17 306
175 22 38
Trammell Del
2 19 304
Baer ga Cle
267 46 79 12 55 307
Harper Min
205 23 62
7 31 302
4 70 301
126 18 41
Segul Bit
Buhner Sea
230 18 69 14 43 300
Cooper Bsn
21X 22 64
3 29 799
AM ERICAN LEAO U E
T E A M P IT C H IN Q
ERA
H ER
DB SOShO
Boston
1 51 531 778 199 xll 6
Baltimore
3 72 562 1X5 778 374 3
Detroit
3 96 602 767 727 320 7
3 97 560 761 7X6 464 9
Seattle
3 90 566 755 230 392 5
Chicago
4 13 600 767 716 361 2
Texas
California
4 15 565 261 214 358 3
4 16 593 747 214 147 8
New York
Milwaukee
4 18 597 266 191 310 4
KansasClly
421 562 271 247 395 0
Toronto
4 50 611 301 760 440 7
4 96 601 30X 167 101 I
Oakland
3 11 657 375 203 3*9 3
Cleveland
5 19 606 319 221 365 1
Minn* sola
in
INw
Diviw
IV IDim
U Aie
L rPiITC
■vniii*i
H IN O*
be a d t n l decisions
IP H BB to w
HsnkaTax
30 21 8 76 4
Cox Tor
4) 37 11 46 5
107 91 M 78 8
Key NY
Langston Cal
103 76 34 91 8
GossagaOak
75 17 15 14 4
Fiohwlrlh Bll
34 V 20 23 3
93 69 20 73 8
Wells Del
Brown Tex
97 09 76 55 5
RJohnson Sea
106 78 47 173 8
MacDonald Dot
71 2) 10 lx 3
Itanson Sea
107 101 78 88 5
40 AX II 34 5
Darwin Bsn
98 vx 24 74 7
Finley Cal
83 68 50 68 6
Alvarei Chi
Fernanda; Chi
107 78 1$ 77 7
68 66 7) 19 6
Doherly Del
93 97 77 55 7
Lelbrandl Tex
U I ) JO tx X
Viola Bsn
Krueger Del
X8 56 IX 76 5
56 57 15 34 3
Quanlrlll Bsn
47 39 14 4) 7
Boslo Sea
86 74 I I X4 9
Henlgen Tor
Moyer Bit
34 XX to 15 7
99 93 39 10 7
Appier KC
Pavlik Tex
X2 34 71 74 3
Con* KC
101 78 51 79 X
Mussina Bll
I0X 90 73 73 9
31 17 11 17 7
NuneiOak
3) 76 16 XI 7
OeLucIa Sea
McDowell Chi
106 106 37 61 10
107 95 I I 7X 9
EldredMIl
I0X 14 37 98 7
Clemens Bsn

SA
N
31
16
13
15
13
19
70
14
20
19
15
13
77

L ERA
1 1 47
2 2 17
2 2 17
1 2 74
3 7 49
4 2 50
| 2 59
5 7 68
3 2 71
2 73
2 81
2 97
7 9?
2 93
2 99
301
3 07
3 IX
3 17
&gt; 18
3 71
3 23
3 XI
3 X)
3 X3
3 X6
3 XA
3 X8
3 51
3 57
3 67
3 6)

N ATIO N AL LEAO U E
T E A M B A TTIN G
AB
R
H HR RBI
San Francisco 2117
373 6X6 61 104
Chicago
7778
741 617 60 768
Houston
7156 79! 574 67 769
Colorado
270)
746 591 X4 76X
Phlladalphla
7777
34X 60S 71 3X7
Cincinnati
2290 245 609 x8 270
PIMsburgh
723)
379 546 35 760
Los Angeles
7163
240 568 xs 267
SI. Louis
7203
37) 5/4 35 762
San Diego
33*0
373 576 CJ 747
Montreal
2728
2U6 571 X5 269
Florid*
2232
751 55t 54 235
Allards
7275 764 563
747
New York
2163 759 517 52 343

Pel
779
776
264
768
267
265
767
767
760
757
250
250
747
7)6

IN D IV ID U A L B A TTIN O
Based on IJOplat* appearances
R H HR RBI Avg
AB
191 32 87 10 50 429
Galarraga Col
144 35 68
5 36 342
Merced Pit
274 54 81 19 57 361
Bonds SF
9 37 367
145 76 67
Mitchell Cln
6 36 360
KrukPhl
214 51 77
1 20 346
724 31 79
VlicalnoChl
274 33 77 12 41 .344
Plana LA
3
9
1
0
41 3)1
745
81
Bagwell Mou
5 44 324
246 JO 81
Grace Chi
5 27 326
Blauser All
742 XI 79
4 72 174
148 36 61
GllkeySIL
7 37 323
773 36 72
BlchelteCol
6 39 327
VanSlyke Pll
747 32 78
9 45 314
234 67 76
Grissom Mon
8 20 314
DSmllhChl
170 31 5X
247 29 77
2 74 314
Gwynn SO
Sanehe; Chi
1
7
5
1
0
12 315
162
1 15 315
11* 71 68
McGee SF
153 X4 7*
3 19 312
JaBall Pit
4 29 311
175 37 70
RoThompion SF
4 71 Jll
164 7) 51
Sandberg Chi
9 310
176 17 39
2
Castilla Col
6 74 304
761 JX 41
Kelly Cln
4
74 307
207 77 67
CedenoHou
9 37 307
734 34 71
Jetlerles SIL

.........
§|| h )
"
. .

OekkNMlM Rivar

Pet. OB
561 552
ti
545 I
4)1 4’ i
424 4ll
275 17
344 14

« clinched llrsl hall division Idle
Friday's Games
Lakeland 9, Vero Beach I
Charlotte 5. Osceola 0
West Palm Beach 3, SI Lucie 2
Clearwater 7, Daylona t
Fori Lauderdale 7, Fori Myers 2
St Petersburg*. Sara sol a 2
Saturday's Oamai
Vero Beach al Lakeland
Charlotte al Osceola
SI Lucie al West Palm Beach
Daylona al Clearwater
Fori Lauderdale al Fori Myers
SI Petersburg al Sarasota
Endol First Hall
Sunday's Games
Charlotte at Vero Beach
Sarasola al Weil Palm Oeach
Daylona al Clearwater
Fori Lauderdale al Dunedin
Osceola at Fort Myers
St Lucie at SI Petersburg

i

N ATIO N AL LE A G U E
TEA M P ITCHIN O
BB SO ShO
ERA
H ER
3 72 5X2 119 712 407 9
Atlanta
3 36 531 224 219 44) 6
Philadelphia
) 34 555 721 14* 391 4
San Francisco
3.67 546 7)5 12) 144 1
Florida
3 63 546 730 724 410 2
Los Angeles
344 5*6 237 143 320 3
St. Louis
Houston
1 72 551 716 140 396 3
San Diego
344 546 7)2 205 341 2
317 571 256 744 3X0 3
Montreal
4 04 599 266 199 377 3
Cincinnati
4 17 54) 761 206 332 3
Chicago
4 15 41) 764 186 34) 5
New York
X 69 61) 304 214 167 1
Pittsburgh
5 97 716 341 761 162 0
Colorado
IN D IVID U A L PITCH IN G
Basad on 1 decisions

5A
14
21
21
11
IX
25
18
12
72
IX
77
5
17
9

H BB
37 20 7
35 32 11
41 34 14
49 67 37
88 65 21
34 30 11
97 81 70
71 44 11
93 90 16
41 27 77
106 S9 31
Ml 94 23
45 JA 23
94 17 44
45 17 11
45 55 6
111 99 10
95 17 23
107 15 25
82 78 75
72 17 10
107 08 47
43 72 17
9^ 88 28
98 07 16
45 /a 41
103 90 26
16 73 31
96 89 17
no 106 74
09 76 34
7) 69 11
82 77 31
n 74 73
58 55 M
Bt 01 77
ip

MJtichson 5P
Gull LA
PereJ SIL
Hill Mon
T Greene Phi
FassoroMon
Mulholland Pht
Aquino Fla
Avery Ad
PMarliner LA
Benes SD
GMrtddu* Atl
Kile Hou
Glavlne AH
Saberhageri NY
Arocha SIL
Gooden NY
SwillSF
Schilling Phi
Osborne SIL
Aydta Cln
Small; All
Belcher Cln
DeMarllner Mon
Burked SF
RMarllner LA
RI|oCln
Portugal Hou
Onjftcksdn Phi
Drabek Hou
Hfirniith Mou
t Wilson SF
fandloltl LA
Reynoso Col
Black SF
Cooke Pif

so w
34 4
]9 7
16 4
40 6
15 4
JX 5
4) 8
36 4
50 B
37 3
19 7
U 6
37 6
]0 8
(0 3
34 5
43 7
57 9
15 4
41 4
17 7
IS 6
33 5
55 7
*4 9
56 5
05 A
45 5
51 A
71 5
J0 6
19 4
;o 3
45 4
39 6
54 4

L ERA
» 164
3 1/7
7 7 31
1 7 52
1 2 36
1 2 5*
5 2 3*
4 7.1)
7 2 74
7 7 43
6 2 84
S 2.91
1 2 96
3 3 04
5 3 05
2 103
6 3 09
3 3 10
1 3M
3 3 17
3 3 IB
6 3 20
4 3 7)
5 3 74
7 3 74
4 3 27
7 3 11
7 3 32
1 3 35
7 3 47
4 3 43
J 3 45
5 3 50
3 15 3
1 3 57
3 3 39

NBA PLAYOFFS
All Timas E O T
NBA FINALS
CHICAOO vs. PHOENIX
Chicago leads series 3 7
Wednesday, June*
Chicago 100. Phoenix 92
Friday, June II
Chicago III, Phoenix 104
Sunday.June I)
Phoenix 179. Chicago 111. JOT
Wednesday, June It
Chicago III. Phoenix 105
Friday, June 14
Phoenix 108. Chicago91
Sunday,June 20
Chicago at Phoenix, 7 p m

Wtdntsday, June 2)
Chitagoal Phoenix. 9 p m II necessary
Friday's game
Al Chicago
PHOENIX (10!)
Dumas 12 14 1 7 25. Barkley 9 146 7 34. West
7 X 1 3 5 K Johnson 10 20 5 5 75. Maierlc 3 11
3 x it, F Johnson 0 2 7 7 2. Miller 3 4 7 7 4.
Alngo 3 6 12 1, Chambers 0 0 000. Muslal 0 0
000 TotalsX7 4)31 76 101
CHICAGO (9!)
Pigpen 8 70 6 8 32. Grant OX IX I,
Carlwrlgh! 13 0 0 7 Armstrong 3 4 0 0 7.
Jordan 16 79 7 10 xl. Williams 2 X 00 x.
Pax son X 500 12. King 1 7 7 7 X. Perdue 0 70 0
0. Tucker 2 7 00 5. Walker 00 00 0 Totals
37 79 16 7X94
Phoenix
33 21 74 14 - 10!
Chicago
21 3! 74 II 9!
3 Point goals — Phoenix 3 10 (Maierle 3 6
Alnge 1 1. Barkley 0 3). Chicago 4 II (Paxson
x 5. Jordan 3 7, Tucker 1 1, Armstrong I 3.
Plppon 0 3) Fouled out - None Rebounds
Phoenix 51 IMa|erle 12). Chicago X5 (Jordan,
Grant 71 Assists
Phoenix 7x (K Johnson
4). Chicago 70 (Jordan 7) Tulal louls —
Phoenix 16, Chicago32 A
18.476

GOLF
11.6 million U.S. Open
SPR IN G FIELD , N J
- Graded scores
Saturday alter the third round ol lire tl 6
million U S Open goli championship on iho
7,152 yard, par 70 Baltusrol Gall Club lower
course (a donoles amateur)
LeoJanjen
6' 67 69-20)
70 44 6*-204
Payne SUwart
71 64-20-107Nick Price
71 4*46-204
Paul Axlngor
David Edwards
707 2 64 - 204
70 72 67-201
Fred Funk
John Adams
70 70 49-709
66 74 49- 309
Craig Parry
71 69 69 209
Wayne Levi
70 69 70 209
Mike Slandly
Tom Watson
70 66 73 209
Sc oil Hoch
66 77 72 310
68 7) 71 710
Fred Couples
Ian Baker Finch
70 70 70 -210
Mike Donald
71 n 67 710
Nolan Henke
77 71 67 710
Steve Elklnglon
71 70 69 710
Raymond Floyd
68 73 70- 711
71 71 69 711
Jell Slurnan
John Cook
75 66 70- 71 1
Mark Calcavecclua
70 70 71-711
Loren Roberts
70 70 71 211
John Daly
72 68 72 212
Chip Beck
72 68 73 713
Barry Lane
7X 64 70-712
Sieve Pale
70 71 71-712
Davis Love III
70 74 64-317
Ernie E ll
71 7)64-717
Kenny Perry
7X 70 68-717
Robert Allenby
7X 49 69-217
Larry Nelson
70 71 71-217
Tom Lehman
71 70 71-212
Craig Stabler
67 7X 71 217
Corey Pavin
48 49 75-212
Billy Andrade
72 67 74-213
Brad Faxon
77 71 70 313
Rick Fehr
71 72 70 -213
71 73 69 313
Ted Schulr
Bob £ - les
71 7)49-213
Lee Rlnker
70 77 71 -3 1 )
Jay Don Blake
73 70 71-213
Brian Claar
71 70 72-213
a Justin Leonard
69 71 73-21)
RoccoMediale
48 72 73-213
Jell Maggert
69 70 75-3IX
Arden Knoll
71 70 73 714
Mark Brooks
73 44 74-214
61 77 74 - 314
Mike Smith
70 70 74-314
JoeOiaki
Blaine McCalllsIor
68 73 73-214
71 71 72-214
Jumlio Oraki
Dari Forsman
73 71 70-214
Greg Twiggs
72 72 70-214
Dully Waldorf
71 77 71-214
70 74 70-714
Sand* Lyle
Wayne Grady
AV 74 70- 7IX
71 73 70- 214
Joel Edwards
Kellh Clearwater
71 72 71- 214
70 73 71-714
Steve Colic he
Mark McCumber
70 71 73-214
71 70 72-714
Pete Jordan
Fulton Allem
71 70 74-215
Scoll Simpson
70 73 73-215
73 71 73-715
Ed Kirby
70 74 71-315
Michael Christie
73 71 71-215
Hale Irwin
Barney Thompson
71 71 71-715
70 73 73-215
Vance Hoalner
71 49 75-215
Jay Haas
70 74 72-216
Ian Woosnam
MlkeHulberl
71 73 73 -316
71 73 73 -716
Colin Montgomerie
69 73 74-216
Grant Waite
73 61 75-216
Curbs Strange
70 74 73-317
Nick Faldo
71 72 74-217
Tony Johnstone
73 69 75-217
John Flannery
70 77 75-217
Kirk Tripled
72 71 75-218
Sieve Lowery
70 72 74-214
Jack Nlcklaus
73 47 78-214
Furry Zocllar
71 70 74-219
Stephen Flesch
Robert Gamer
72 70 74 -220
Sieve Strieker
72 72 76-220
Doug Weaver
70 73 77-220
Mark Wiebe
71 72 77-220
68
7) 40 -271
Holrert Wrenn
eniors God, Scores
COON RAPIDS. Mmn — Scores on Satur
day alter the second round ol Ihe 11.050,000
Burnel Senior Classic, played on Ihe 6.49X
yard par 16 34-72 Bunker Hllltcourse
64 70-1)4
Jack Kleter
66 64-1)4
Simon Hobday
68 67- 1)5
Jim Dent
67 64— 125
Jim Ferree
69 67 - 126
Chi Chi Rodriguer
67 69— 126
Rocky Thompson
67 69— 136
Bob Murphy
6a 09- 1)7
Jim Colbert
70 64-13*
MlkeHIU
70 44—134
Larry Gilbert
70*9-139
Jim Albus

Tim Raines I b a Sanford native and Seminole High School
graduate now playing lor the Chicago White Sox. His stat9 are
for the 1993 season In the Mrst column, personol-bosl soason
totals In the second column and current career totals
(Including 1993 games) In the third column.
hltloss In one at bat
Raines carne off the bench and v)
Friday nlghl as the White Sox lost lo thi

RAINES GAUGE
’93
Category
Gamos.............. 26
At-bats.............. 94
Runs................. 22
Hits.................. 26
RBI................... 14
3
Doubles............
0
Trlplos..............
7
Homo runs......
2
Steals...............
Avorago............ .277

beat
160
647
133
194
71
38
13
18
90
.334

career
1,729
6,554
1,158
1,947
667
319
96
114
73)
297

Tim Raines
Terry Olll
nobby Nichols
Tommy Aycock
Bob Charles
Joe Jtmcrver
Dick Hendrickson
Dave Slocklon
Hives McBee
Dewlll Weaver
Dave Hill
Larry Ziegler
George Archer
Tom Welskopl
Al Geiberger
1sao Aok 1
Gibby Gilbert
Kerrnll Zarley
Al Kelley
Gay Brewer
Miller Barber
Harold Henning
Dick Loir
(lob Wynn
Mike Joyce
Oon B les
Bruce Lehnhard
John Brodle
Lee Trevino
J C Snead
Babe Hlskey
Dob Hellh
Gary Player
Charles Coody
Don January
Ban Smith
Bruc* Cramplon
Frank Beard
Dale Douglass
Orville Moody
Lee Elder
BobGoalby
Tommy Aaron
Don Massengale
Roger Kennedy
Doug Da trial
Bulch Baird
Larry Laoredi
Bert Yancey
Bruce Devlin
Waller Zembrlskl
Larry Mowry
Bob (true
Tom Shaw
Jimmy Poweli
Tom Worgo
(tarry Toscano
Dick Rhyan
,
KVt Still
Howvero Blancas
George Johnson
Lou Graham
Robert Zimmerman
Billy Maxwell
Doug Sanders
Charlie Sldord
Howie Johnson
Dow Flrislerwald

70 69— 139
70 69-139
69 70-139
69 70-139
6871-139
65 74-139
71 69-140
70 70-140
69 71-140
69 71-140
68 77-140
73 68-140
70 71— 141
73 68-141
68 73-141
60 73 -141
77 69-141
68 74— 147
69 73— 147
73 69- 147
72 70 142
71 72-143
72 71- 143
71-72-143
71 72-143
70 73- 143
69 74-143
69 74 - 143
69 74-143
77 71-141
73 70- 143
77 71-143
77 7 1- 143
72 71- 143
77 7 2- 144
71 73-144
73 71 144
71 72- 144
72 72- 144
75 70-145
73 72 -145
73 77-145
71 75-146
74 77- 146
73 73- 146
73 73-146
73 7 3- 146
71 76-147
74 73-147
75 73- 148
74 74- 148
73 75-140
72 76- 140
76 73-149
75 74-149
74 75-149
,.. . 7376-149
7674— 110
74*16— ISO
7278— 150
7775-152
7874-157
77 75-157
77 76-153
75 79- 154
79 79-158
75 84-159

Rochester International Scores
ROCHESTER N Y
Scores Saturday
alter the third round ol the 1500.000
LPGAHochesler International, played un Ihe
A 162 yard par 72 Locust Hill Country Club
course
Tommie Green
7X 49 63 -206
Kelly Robblni
70 71 66-707
Jenny Lldback
67 49 72- - 304
Nancy Lope;
66 49 73-308
Dolbe Mochrle
71 71 47-309
Alice Rltiman
70 7) 44- 309
Potty Sheehan
49 72 64 209
Barb Bunkowsky
49 71 69 -209
Nancy Scranton
47 77 70-309
Beth Daniel
64 64 73 - 709
Helen AKredsson
6! 75 67-210
Kris Monaghan
7X 66 7 0 - 310
Drandie Burton
68 72 70-210
Meg Mai Ion
71 67 77-210
Cindy Flgg Currier
64 70 72-210
Lynn Connelly
70 64 74-310
Sally Lillie
76 71 44-211
JoAnne Corner
73 49 70-211
Lisa Wallers
69 71 71-211
Sherri Slelnhauer
76 70 66-317
Marla Figueras Oolb
77 70 70-212
Pomelo Wright
73 73 47-213
Tina Tombs
72 74 47- 313
Cathy Johnston Forbes
71 76 68-711
Mary Both Zimmerman
75 49 49-213
Amy Read
71 73 49-313
Tina Uarretl
73 74 47-214
Cindy Rarlck
73 72 49-71X
Barb Thomas
73 73 70-214
Lori Garbaci
73 71 71-214
Mlssle Berleodl
73/1 71-214
Tracy Kerdyk
70 73 71-214
Gall Graham
75 71 49-215
Allison Finney
72 74 *9-215
Karen Noble
73 72 70-215
Jutl Inkster
49 76 70 -215
Dale Eggellng
72 72 7L-2IS
Laura Davits
71 73 71-215
Karen Lunn
70 74 71-215
Lisa Klggens
73 70 72-215
Paid Rlno
77 70 49-214
Donna Andr#w&gt;
77 70*9-214
Joan Pllcock
75 71 70-214
Alicia Olbos
72 73 71-216
Rosl* Jones
73 70 73-216
Lynn Adams
72 71 73-216
Danlalle Ammaccapane
71 71 74-216
Oeb Richard
70 72 74-216
Kalhy Poitlewall
70 71 75-216
Vicki Fergon
49 71 74-214
Cathy Morse
74 71 70-2(7
Anne Marl# Palll
73 72 72-217
Lanore Rldenhous#
75 49 73-217
Barbara Mucha
77 77 73-217

1994 Werld Cup Qualifying
EURO PE
Group On*
L T GF GA PI*
w
Swllrerland
s 0 7 14
4 12
4 1 2 15
Italy
6 10
Portugal
3 1 2 12
4
d
3 2 7 10
9
Scotland
0
1 7 1
Malta
3 31
3
Eslonia
0 5 1
1
5
1
1
Saturday, Junt 19
At Oporto. Portugal
Portugal 4. Malta 0
Sunday, Sopt. 5
Portugal al Estonia
Wodnosday, Sopt. I
Switrarland at Scotland
Wodnosday, Sopt.22
Italy at Estonia
Wodnosday, OctII
Swilurlandal Portugal
Scotland al Italy
Wednesday, Nov.10
Eslonia al Portugal
Wednesday, Nov.17
Portugal al Italy
Scotland at Malta
Estonia at Switrarland

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
C LE V E LA N D INDIANS - Released Mike
Bleleckl, pitcher Recalled Mark Clark
pitcher, trom Charlotte ol Ihe International
League
KANSAS C ITY ROYALS - Signed Gary
Gaelll, third baseman Recalled Bill Sampen
pdrher. Irom Omaha ol Ihe American
Association Optioned Craig Wilson, Inlielder
1o Omaha ol llto American Association
Designated Harvey Pulliam, oudlelder. lor
assignment
NEW YORK Y A N K EE S - Signed Pau'
Gibson, pitcher, lo a minor lenque condor*
with Columbus ol Ihe International League
OAKLAN D A TH L E TIC S
Placed Rick
Honeycutt, pitcher, on Ihe 15 day disabled
list, relroacdve lo June 15
TE X A S RANGERS - Activated Gary
Redus. oudlelder. Irom Ihe 15 day disabled
list Optioned Dan Pellier, oudlelder Ic
Oklahoma City ol Ino American Association
Nallanel League
CHICAOO CUBS - Placed Mike ttarkny
pitcher, on Ihe 15 day disabled list, rrlroac
live lo June 1) Hcralled Tommy Shields
inlielder, Irom Iowa ot the American Associ
allon
CIN CIN N ATI REDS - Placed John Roper
pitcher, on the 15 day disabled list Recalled
Scott Service, pitcher. Irom Indianapolis ot
Ihe American Association
LOS A N G E L E S DODGERS
Placed
Darryl Strawberry oudlelder. on the IS day
disabled list
M O N TR EA L EXPOS - Sent Jimmy Jones
pitcher, to Ottawa ol the International
League tor a )0 day m|ury rehablIllation
assignment
NEW YORK M ETS - Optioned Em
Hillman, pitcher, to Norfolk ol Ihe Inlerna
llonal League
PITTSBURG H P IR 5TES
Signed Dour;
Plait, pitcher and assiqi -d him to Carolina
ol the Southern Lenque
BASK ETB A LL
National Basketball Association
DALLAS M A V E R IC K S - Named St,
Inman team corisultanl
P H ILA D E LP H IA 7*ERS
Named Jrl'
Rulnnd assistant coach
United Stales Basketball League
D AYTO N A DEACM HOOTERS - Signed
and activated Tim Burroughs, center. Placed
Cornelius Holden, center, on ln|ur*d reserve
FO O TB ALL
National Football League
P H ILA D E LP H IA EAOLES - Agreed to
terms with Joey Mickey, light end. on two
ono year contracts
Arena Football League
TAM PA DAY STOHM
Placed Carl
Walts, ollensive defensive lineman, on In
lured reserve.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
B U FFA LO SABRES
Announced Ihe
resignation ol Cralq Ramsey assistant qon
oral manager to become an assistant coach
with the Florida Panthers
C H IC A G O B L A C K H A W K S
traded
Jimmy Walle gonllender, to the San Jose
Sharks lor future considerations
LOS AN G ELES KINGS
Extended the
contract al Barry Melrose, coach, through
the 1996 97 season
NEW JE R S E Y DEVILS - Signed Cain
Hulso and Geordle Klnnear defensemen
SAN JOSE SHARKS - Traded Peler
Ahola, delenseman, lo Ihe Tampa Bay
Lightning lor DoveCapuang, center
TAM PA BAY LIG H TN IN G - Acquired
Donald Dulresn*. delenseman, Irom the
Montreal Canadians to complete the Rob
Remag* trade.
CO LLEO E
HOUSTON - Named Neil Callaway assis
Mint head toolbalt coach. Gene Smith
linebackers coach and Frank Gansr Jr
special learns coach
O K LA H O M A S T A T E Named John
Pelphrey men's assistant basketball coach
PEP P ER D IN E - Named Mark Trakh
women's basketball coach
YA LE — Named Dick Hopkins defensive
coordinator

MO
AUTO RACING
I p m - WCPX 6. NASCAR. Miller X00. IL)
4p m
ESPN, Zerex Saab Pro Series
4 p ns , 3 a m — SUN. SCCA Trans Am
Mosporl Park
10 30 p m — SC Sprlnls and Llmlled
Sprints
i 30 am
ESPN, USAC Midqels
DRAG RACINO
2 p m — WESH 2. NMRA Sprmgnallonals
4 30pm
ESPN, IHHA Sprmgnallonals
BASEBALL
I 30 pm — WIRD 56, Florida Marlins at
Philadelphia Phillies. (L I
1 30 pm — WTBS, Atlanta Braves at
Montreal Expos, ILI
2pm
— WGN. St Louis Cardinals at
ChicagoCubs. (LI
4 pm
— ESPN, New York Mels at
Pittsburgh Pirates. (LJ
BASK ETB A LL
7 p rn
WESH 2. NBA FINALS. Game 6
Chicago Bullsal Phoenix Suns. IL I
7 30 p m — SC, High school. Boston
Shooloul Tournament bn.sls
10 p m
SUN USBL. Palm Beach
Stingrays,il Miami Tropics
BOXING
2 30 p m
SHO. Super welterweights
Terry Norris Vi Troy Waters
5pm
— ESPN Light heavyweights
Prince Charles Williams vs Art Bay Its (L )
FOO TBALL
7 p m — SUN, Arena League Orlando
Predators at Tampa Bay Storm, replay
OOLF
10 am — SUN Pud lo Win
t 30 p m - WF TV I. U S Open hnal
round, &lt;L)
SOCCER
I 30 p m
SUN, European Champions
Cup final AC Milan vs Marseille
TR IA TH LO N
3 pm
- W ESH 7 Irunmon World
Championship
Radio
AUTO RACING
12 tS p in
W GTO AM (5x01 WOCA AM
111701, NASCAR Miller X00
BASK ETB A LL
6 JO p m
W GTO AM (5X0), NBA Finals
Game 6 Chicago Bulls at Phoenix Suns
BASEBALL
5.55 pm - W TLN AM ( 15201. Southern
League, Jacksonville Sun at Or lando Cubs

l
-f t

�Sanford H erald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday. June 20, 1993 - a ft

Fish Commission program
'attracting’ more than fish
Get a found! o f fleh clustered
in one spot and watch the
single™ gather around them.
T h a t ’ s part o f the co n ce p t
foehlnd the Game and Fresh
Witter Ftsh Commission's fish
nltrndor program.
Th e agen cy’s fish attractor
c re w has been p la c in g un­
derwater structures designed to
;attract fish In lakes and rivers
throughout Florida for m ore
than 20 years. There are more
'ihnn 250 sites statewide and an
a ddition al 50 attractors arc
added every year.
According to Gib Owen, head
of the Com m ission's fish at­
tractor program, the undertak­
ing Is part o f the agency’s effort
to Improve nnglcr catch rates In
lakes nnd rivers by providing
structures, which Bcrve to con­
centrate ftsh In fresh water.
A typ ical a ttractor Is one
quarter-acre In size and made up
prim arily o f hardwood brush
piles. The brush provides food
jm cl cover for fish by creating
conditions favorable to the food
chain. Plankton, larval forms of
Insects, crustaceans and other
food

o r g a n i s m s

a t t a c h

themselves to the submerged
limbs. The liny creatures arc
lavornblc food for bream which
In turn become prey for con­
gregating largcinauth bass.
"E ven without a dcpthflnder
in your boat, you can recognize
attractor sites because they are
marked by bright yellow buoys
with the Commission's Identi­
ty lug logo on them ," Owen said.
T o fish an a ttra c to r su c­
cessfully. unglcrs should anchor

A U TO
SERVICE

hnrsh sun.

PISHING FORECAST
Bass fishing Is going to foe
tough until this foil due lo the
torrid heal. Bream and catfish
arc hitting In the river. Crickets
arc the most popular bream halt,
w h ile catfish w ill title dead
shrimp, worms, cut bait, and
mussels.

Sebastian In le t is featuring
about 50 feet away from the
buoy and cast Into the structure
with wcedless lures. Some at­
t r a c t o r s a rc s it u a t e d n e a r
shorelines to concentrate fish
within casting distance o f the
bank for anglers without boats.
"O nce an angler learns how
b e s t to fis h an a t t r a c t o r ,
largemouth bass and bream can
be caught w ith r e g u la r ity ,"
Owen said. "Although attractors
will not Increase numbers o f fish
In a take, they do concentrate
them and provide opportunities
for anglers to catch more fish."
Owen said the program Is
funded by Federal Aid In Sport
Fish Restoration monies that
come from a federal excise tax
on fishing and boating equip­
ment and a motorboat fuel tax.

BHUPE'B SCOOP
Fishing In the summer sun Is
hazardous to both your skin and
your eyes. Coat your face and
other unprotected areas o f skin
with a quality sunscreen such ns
the "B u llfrog" brand, which Is
w a t e r p r o o f . W e a r a w id e brim m ed lint and a pair o f
polarized sunglasses to round
out your ptotectlon against the

good action with flounder, redfish. Jack cre va llc. ladyflsh.
snook (senson closed) nnd a few
tarpon. Th e best fishing Is on the
outgoing tide. Live shrimp or
finger mullet arc the best halts,
while a variety o f artificials such
us Jigs or sw im m ing minnow
type lures workjunt fine.

1 m i Kmart* I i*r|Mir*tk»n

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Plus, If w e don't carry the tires you need, w e can special ord er them fo r you.
We keep an eye on the market to ensure that ou r prices are com petitive
anytim e and e very time.

C a p ta in J a c k at P o r t
C anaveral reports good dolphin
action from 100-240 feet of
water. Some big grouper and
snapper are foiling ut the 37
fa th o m c u rv e und at the
“ s te e p le s ." King mackerel are
being caught In 80-120 feet or
water. The buoy lin e Is slow,
while sheepsheud nnd flounder
arc producing steady action In­
side the Port. RcdflBh arc ruted
us good on the fla ts o f the
Banana and Indian R ivera.
Guide Troy Perez reports huge
schools o f red fish In the south
end o f M osquito Lagoon.
Expect shccpshcnd. folneflsh.
Jack crcvallc. drum, whiting, nnd
redflsh at Ponce In let. Live or
dead shrimp will not lust long at
th is p o p u la r fis h in g s p o t.
Shccpshcnd are also tilting back
In the river around docks and
bridge pilings.

If you And a lower price eUcwhere, bring it In and we’ll match It*.
-low mMcltona aaat*. **• ilar*

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Before you buy you r tires,
there are a few questions you
should ask yourself.

Killer “ B’s”C o n t in u e d f r o m P a g e I B

that a lread y Inclu des L ittle
L e a g u e B a s e b a l l 's S e n io r
League, the Pony Division of
PONY Baseball, nnd the Babe
Ruth division o f Babe Ruth
baseball, the B programs should
su p p lem en t those progra m s
rather than compete with them.
To begin w ith, the youth
leagues have completed their
regidar seasons and now arc
m o v in g In to t h e ir A ll-S ta r
seasons, which arc abbreviated
at best, while the high school B
schedule will run toward the end
of July.
While the high school B teams
and youth league all-star teams
probably draw from the same
sm all pool o f players, some
Judicious sch ed u lin g should
keep the strain from being too
much.
"Must ol these hoys play Little
League or Pony League," said
Ferrell "1 have 20 to work with
on our B team, foul I'm not going
10 take them away from their
All-Stur teams. It's Important
that they play All-Sturs If they
get selected.
"T h ere will kids who w ill mtss
some o f our games, hut that's
UK. We only need to have 10 or
11 kids to put on the field for any
one gam e."
Seminole High School will also
held A and B squads this year,
hut v is in g m u c h d if fe r e n t
guidelines.
Rather than play an NABF
summer schedule with the rest
o f the county, which would
duplicate largely the Seminole
A th letic C onference schedule
played during the school year.
Seminole couch Mike Powers has
opted to have the Tribe play
A m e r ic a n L e g io n B a s e b a ll
against programs from other
parts o f the stutc.
American Legion Baseball has
guidelines for A und B programs.
Basically, the American Legion
II teams, which are open only to
players with high school eligibil­
ity remaining, are slmllur to the
NABF A squads.
Where I he rest of the county 1b
adding B teams, Seminole has
added an American Legion A
squad, which Is for players 19
years old and under who haven't
entered I heir sophomore year In
college.
A c c o rd in g to P o w ers, the

CubsC o n tin u e d fro m Page I B

every player on
lhe learn nil opportunity to pitch
In a game,
" A i a typical practice, you
would Hud at least half of the
mothers getting together to talk
and shag foul balls," Bono said.
"A t least two fathers were at
every practice along with the
coaches."
The Cubs benefited from the
assistance o f former University
ol T e n n e s s e e p itc h e r G len
Tollcson. who volunteered his
lime lo work with the team
despite not having a child on the
tenm.
Bill llorw nlh und Joe Findclscn were Bonn's usslstunt
roaches. Cat11 Mills served ns the
team mom. and Boh Peterson
was I lie team seorekeeper.

• What would I change about the
performance o f my old tires?
• What do I like about my present
tires?
• How many miles did 1 get on my
' last set o f tires?
'* Will my driving habits or
eonditlons be changing?
• H ow long do I want to keep my
present vehicle?
• Will good tires effect the trade-in
price o f my ear?

Fllg Photo

Seminole pitcher’s Deon Daniels (above) and Todd Braden will play
for the Sanford American Legion Post 53 Cyclones on both the A
and B levels this summer.
formation o f the A team Is art
effort to keep together for one
more year a group o f players
who led Seminole to the Class
3A state championship last year
and advanced to the sectionals
this year.

B ecau se A m e ric a n L eg io n
allows teams to druw players
from nil area rather than a
school, several 1993 Lake Mary
graduates will also play lor the
Suuford American Legion Post
53 A team this summer.

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�pm m -»

4S —StriTBn* Herald, Sanford, Florida -

Sunday, .lima 20, 1903

Business
Bankers respond to criticism

IN B R I E F

■y NICKPFIIPAUP
Herald Stall Writer

A C Q U ISITIO N !
Higgins

Hsath taks Morton

Higgins A Heath Realtors, Inc.fBeltcr Homes and Oardens, a
long-tune real estate company In Central Florida, has acquired
Morton Realty/Better Homes and Gardens o f Longwood.
No purchase price was disclosed.
Higgins A Heath principal and broker Ned Heath said that
the purchase Includes all company assets Including over $3
million In current residential listings.
According to Heath, plans cal) for closing Morton Rcliy'a
Longwood office at 1400 W. S.R. 434, and consolidating staff
and operations at Higgins A Heath's downtown Orlando
location.
The comany provides real estate services for the entire
trl-county market or Seminote, Orange and Osceola counties.

On June 8. the Public (merest Research
G ro u p and C o n s u m e r F e d e r a l ton o f
America. P1KG/CFA, released a bank fee
survey staling! banking service fees were
clim bing at a faster rale (lam should be
expected.
This week, the Florida Hankers Associa­
tion, FBA, has Issued n statem ent In
response. "T h e re are numerous reasons
w hy Florida banks' service fee structures
have Increased In recent years." said Gary
Wright. FBA president, and president o f
Farmers A Merchants Hank. Montleello.
Wright listed the following reasons in an
official policy statmcal on bchnlf of the FBA:
• Hanks are fnclng Increasing compliance
costs resulting fnan a rising number or
consumer protection laws and regulations

dinner and a movie generally costs more in
slates like New York. California and Flor
Id a " Wright said. "O n e w ould expect
financial services, like other products. i„
cost more in these markets."
• Bunks have been paying Increasingly
higher Federal Deposit Insurance (FDIC)
premiums over the Inst three years.
Write added, "Banks have no choice hut
to Tartar In the Increasing cost or compii
nnee wllh regulations, bankruptcy losses,
legal costs and higher deposit Insurance
premiums when pricing their financial
services."
He concluded. "Like other businesses, all
costs must be considered when selling
priecs Ifyou arc to remain profitable."
The FBA represents 414 banks, wllh
3.186 banking offices throughout the stale
Wright, head o f the organization. Is head
quartered In Orlnndo.

surfacing In the last few years.
• Florida has the second most lenient
bankruptcy laws In the country. Research
revea led that Florida banks lost an
estimated 6264 million In 1091 alone due to
50,932 bankruptcy filings within the state.
• Banks are experiencing Increasing legal
costs. When a bank pursues collateral on a
delinquent account, lengthy legal disputes
often add up to high legal fees and lender
liability suits for the Institution.
• Florida is a high growth state. To better
serve a growing number of customers,
banks arc building branches and adding
automatic teller machines to their networks.
The Investment for this represents n huge
financial commitment by banks In Florida
us compared to those In non-growth states.
• States that appeared high on the
P1RQ/CFA survey ure generally more
, 'k iw m llM

n ln iv a

In

liv e .

"Qolllg

O t ll

tO

Harkins ta k ta T R C
TRC Temporary Services, an Altamonte Springs employ­
ment service, has been purchased by businessman C. William
"BUI" Harkins. The sale o f the five year old company was
completed in May.
Madeline Kinney will be handellng dally operations and new
business development.
Harkins is president o f Harkins Development Corp., a custom
home building company. He Is also a developer and owner of
Driftwood Village, a Lake Mary office and retail center, and an
organizing director ofFlrat Seminole Bank.
Under Harkins' ownership, the company Is continuing to use
the TRC Temporary Services name, and location at 283 N.
North Lake Blvd., Suite 261, Altamonte Springs.

Certified
to fly
seaplanes
Seaplane flights at the Monroe
Harbour Marina are more than
tourist attractions. Florida
Soaplane owner Rich Hensch,
tell, has been providing flight
training, along with Paul Beat,
right, chlel flight Instructor
R eceivin g a certific a te of
com pletion, center, Is Bill
Hudson, Irom Bolivia. Another
recent student will be (lying in
Saipan.

Flowers and decorations
Naomi Vann and her daughter, Lynn Smith, are now
operating Nay and Lynn's Flowers, 1738 W. Airport Blvd., in
Country Club Plaza. The business opened Its doors In
mid-April, and deals with flowers and decorations, both live
and silk. They handle needs for funerals as well ns weddings.
" I f we don’t have what people need," Smith said, "w e ’ll create
It."
Both ore life-long residents of Sanford. Naomi Vann Is also an
evangelist at Mt. Pilgrim Primitive Baptist Church, at 7th
Street and Locust Avenue.

Htrild Photo by Tommy Vlnctnt

Mobil to add card payment
Mobil Corporation In Fairfax, Va., has announced plans to
have electronic payment systems at the pump at 2,000 service
stations by the end of this year. The electronic terminals enable
customers to fill their tanks and pay fur their gasoline at the
pump with the use o f credit cards.
In Sanford, the Mobil station Is located at the Intersection of
ay 17-02 and Lake Mary Blvd. A station spokesperson
(If Mobil la doing that. It Isn't here, because we have had
-at-the-pifinp electronics operation going for almost
ears." She added. "W e are probably one of the most
operations In the area, and we are pleased to see Mobil
Is expanding the concept to other areas around the country."

S IM IO N S A M M IN A M
F E D P m . hold* Orlando moating
Robert P. Forrestal, president and chief executive officer of
the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, will hold a press
conference In Orlando, Tuesday, June 22. at 10 a.m. The
meeting will be at the Omni, at the Ccntroplcx hotel, In the
Executive Lounge.
Thee .session will also Include a meeting with area business
leaders. Forrestal and the leaders are scheduled to discuss local
business, economic and financial conditions.
For additional Information, phone (4071843-6664.

Hospice offere workshops
Hospice o f Central Florida, a non-profit organization that
serves patients and families facing lift-limiting illnesses. Is
offering a series o f four Volunteer Training Workshops on July
12, 16. 10i and 23. The claaaea will be held at the Maitland
office, 2600 Maitland Center Parkway. For additional Informa­
tion, contact Yolande Ftola, at (407) 875-0028, ext. 470,

Export ssm insr
A seminar to help Florida growers and producers learn about
export programs to assist them In marketing agricultural
products, will be held in Orlando on July 26. The seminar Is
sponsored by the Florida Department o f Agriculture and
Consumer Services, in cooperation with the Southern U.S.
Trade Association.
Agriculture Commissioner Bab Crawford sa|d, "This seminar
will offer Florida agricultural producers valuable information
about the availability of federal assistance funds and programs
that can help them succeed In today's competitive global
economy.

Image is
growing
■ y N IC K P P IIP A U P
Herald Stall W riter_____________
SANFORD — Second Image,
located nt 102 E. First Slrccl In
downtown Sanford, has been
enlarged. The usable display
space him been doubled tbrnugii
Hie leasing nl an adjacent buildlng.
"You might say wc nrc located
at 102 04 E. First Street now ."
said Margie Davidson. Margie
and her husband Aubrey Combs
own uud operate the store.

Lakefront land ready to develop
SANFORD — Plans continue toward the
eventual developm ent o f the lakefront area by
the Waterfront Mnsler Plan Steering Comtnlitee. Most o f the Interest voiced thus far centers
on rccrcnllonnl and passive development.
Not all o f Ihc land however, must be
restricted from comm ercial development.
Greg KIcbnnoJT, J r „ o f C. Brenner, Inc,,
Realtor, Is hiking a slab at promoting commer­
cial development by offering two parcels of
land along (he lakefront.
Brenner Is seeking to sell 8.5 acres o f land at
the Intersection o f N. French Avenue and
Seminole Blvd. Th e property is located north
and northeast of the Stanford Herald facility.

"W c started oil 1!1 years ago
w llh a small 1.000 square loot
building," she said, "Ilie n we
m oved to a slightly larger build­
ing at the Plnccrosl Shopping
Center where wl- stayed for eight
years."
"F o r slightly over three yrars
now, w e’ ve been In downtown
Sanford," she continued, "and
w c have grown so much we have
had to double our space."

Th e property Is zoned OC-2. Commcrdaf
Klchnofr Is suggesting the'best use for Hie fund
would be forn nurslng/rctlrcriient home, illnir,
ofTlccs, restaurant, nparltm-nts. or retail.
He Is also offering for sale, a vacant one amtract Immediately west o f the larger properly,
abutting Seminole Blvd.
He Is suggesting the land, also zoned GC-2
Commercial, rould he used for a restaurant,
office building, clinic or nursing home,
T h e nsklng price for the 8.5 acres is
•975.000. For the I-cure site. 8245.000.
Both properties face Lake Monroe near tlunrcu where the city Is conducting a massive
beautification program In Ihe median between
the trafTlc luncs o f N. French Avenue.
For Information, contact Qreg KIcbanoiT, Jr.,
at 677-1700.

Hsrald Staff Writer

B e c o m

e

S u c c e s s f u l
I n

O

n e

A
S e l l e r

E a s y

S t e p

Th e downtown store bus had
approxim ately 2,500 squurc feel
o f space. It has now expanded to
5,300 square feet, with 2,500 for
costumes, pud 2,000 for Indies
consignment Hems and formal
wear. The remaining 300 Teel
arc used for storage uud office
areas.

You can get sales quick w ith the help of your
V isa or M asterC ard. Ju st call u s at
322-2611 w ith your card num ber and expiration
date, and w e'll be glad to help you write an ad
th at's a sure sell.

S an ford H erald
*

"1

’V/gj / 1 v - ' r

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j

' f * r*

-Vj
'«

Ths Greater Lake Mary?H«athrow Chamber of
Comnwreo hold a ribbon cutting recently for
Specialty Cleaning Servloee, operating at 643
Bergham Place In Lake Mary. The ceremony was
held In front of the chamber office. Left to right,

chamber membera Glnny Coombs, Diana Parker,
8C 8 amployee Carol Galorneau, owners Valerie
Williams and Hector Rodriguez, and chamber
officials Richard Starcher, Kathle Ragan and
^am Maynard-Hall.

U .S . S A V IN G S B O N D S
T H E G R E A T A M E R I C A N IN V E S T M E N T

V "

,

i

�Sanford H erald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 20, 1W 3 - SB

People
P liT llte fIM te y

■I

O u ts ta n d in g

D a d s

Babysitter declared father of century
s c h o o l sh e p la n s to a tte n d
Brigham Young University, both
o f her sisters hnve already gradu­
ated from Diul university, and
pursue a course r»f study only
known lo lic rn l this time.
She hns very high praise for
her ndnpted father and credits
him w llli teaching her many
tilings (hat she could never learn
on her own. Her letter follows.

By ED KORQAN
Herald Correspondent____________

Tw in

of Joy

Kristy und Brett Marshall are the proud
parents o f twin grits Kaurtnec and Brltnee. born
May lS.ftea D a rla D te trie h ’ e e o liia w b e lo w .

Antique show
An antique show to benefit mentally handi­
capped ndults w ill be held at the downtown
Piuzn, St. Augustine, Saturday. June 26, and
Sunsay, June 27. Antique dealers from St.Johns
and surrounding counties arc participating. The
sponsor, The Daisy Adam s Center. Is the first
psychiatric mental health day treatment pro­
gram In North East Florida for duallydlagnoscd
(m e n ta lly rcta rd ed / cm otlo n a ily distu rb ed )
adults, and Is a not-for-profit organization, for
further Information contact Jeanne Moeller at
(904)829-9569.

One vibrant 13-yenr-old de­
clares her babysitter to be father
o f the century.
Julius Blnckwclder, B2 years
old, moved to Snnford from Ohio
In I960. While In Snnford he
owned his own business, sold It,
and then went to work In a local
real estate ofTlcc. He began re­
tirement after working for 10
years In the Seminole County
Real Estate Appraiser's office.
Dluckwelder retired. In 1984, to
take care o f his wife after she had
had a stroke the previous year. Al
the same time he began to take
care o f Sarah,
Sarah Lynch, a Sanford Middle
School seventh grader, has many
fond memories o f the times she
spent with her Uncle Julius while
her mom. Ann Lynch, tuught nt
S em in ole C om m u nity C ollege
during the day.
Snrnh, 13 years-old. is enrolled
In the gifted program at school.
' She loves to read and write.
When she graduates from high

My name Is Sarah, and I want
to t e l l y o u a b o u t J u l i u s
Blackweldrr and why he should
be Fat her o f the Year.
I was ndoplcd by n single
mother and so I don’t have u
father o f m y own. From Die lim e I
was six months old, nud he was
69, Uncle Julius and his wife.
A u n t B e tty , h a v e b een m y
babysillers.
Aunt B elly Imd a stroke 11
years ago ami she has been in n
w h eelch air ev e r since. U ncle
Julius sets a wonderful exam ple
for me by Ihc way lie lakes care
o f her. He always tells me Dial
being In Die service of others Is

»*-— -u

Julius and Batty

□ S e e B lackw cldcr, Page 7B

Ed

two of 8ar$h Lynoh'a favorite paopte.

H o w th e D a d s w e re c h o s e n

Qolf tourney
The Herald printed a notice asking readers to help us find
"Outstanding Dads" by submitting lottors of nomination about the
favorite dads In their lives.
The judges selected the throe lottors on this page as the top
outstanding dads.

The Seminole County Professional Fire will
sponsor u G olf Tournament on Sunday, July,9
at 9am , at the Roscm ont C ou ntry Club.
Proceeds will benefit the Central Florida Fire
Fighter Council and the Muscular Dystrophy
Assocatlan.
Players o f all levels are Invited to participate In
the tournament. Entry fee Is $40 and lunch Is
Included. Compunlca m ay also participate as
hole sponsors for $150, or us bole sponsor and
four entries with lunch for $275.
Fire Fighters arc the Muscular Dystrophy
Association's largest contributor, raising $8.5
m illion dollar nutlonswldc In 1992.
for farther Information and registration, con­
tact Allen Lcvell nt 298-3473

Patience
One hug from this special
grandfather soo th e s pain
B y I D KO R Q A N
Harald Correspondent____________

Hospice benefits

W IN TE R SPRINGS - A patient
and caring grandfather wins over
a mischievous granddaughter.
David Ross o f W inlcr'Sprlngs Is
70 years old. He and his wife are
natives o f Indiana and have lived
In Florida the past 10 years.
With retirement on his mind,
he Is still working for the com ­
pany he once organized as an
electrical engineer. Ills 12-hour
dnys are beginning to wear on
him and be Is looking forward lo
when he can spend a lot more o f
his tim e p la y in g one o f bis
favorite games, golf.
But for the past 22 years, he
has been concerned solely for the
welfare o f Ills granddaughter who
for many years has been passed
back and forth from mother lo
grandparents to mother.
Stephany Love o f Sanford who
admits to being n rather pro­
blem-providing teenager, cures
greatly for the one person who
took the time to talk to her and
provide her with the help th a t'
would eventually lead her out o f
the world o f teenage rejection
mid Into reality.
Stephany spoke o f her grandfa­
ther, " I am told at m y baptism I
was fast screaming and didn't

T o benefit Hospice o f Cental Florida, the 5th
Annual Craflers* Buzaar o f Goldcnrod will be
having a Outdoor Selling Fair It will Include 200
exhibitors with thousands or original craft. Tills
fulr will be held Saturday. Septem ber 18. 9 a.in.
to 4 p.m. on Alom a Avc. (SR 426) I block east o f
Scmoran Blvd. (SR 436) In the comm unity o f
Goldcnrod,
There will be free admission &amp; parking for
visitors. Food and refreshments at nominal cost.

IN TH E SERVICE
Ned June
!

!
!
!

f
[
I
!

Marine Pvi. Ned L. June, son o f Henry and
Vera D. June o f Sanford, recently completed the
m otor vehicle operator course.
During the course at Marine Corps Service
Support Schools. Marine Corps Busc. Camp
Lcjcunc, N.C., students receive classroom and
bchlnd-thc-whccl Instruction on the operation
und capabilities o f Marine Corps vehicles.
Defensive driving techniques, "ru les o f the
road" and user-level preventive maintenance
arc also Included In the course.
He Joined the Marine Corps In July 1991.

want to have anything to do with
wliat was happening. My grand­
father w u s ut the buck o f the
church and he came up and look
me In his arms and (hut was It. It
seems like he Itas been the only
one In m y life so far who could
understand my feelings. Even
now. Just one hug from him Just
soothes away any pain or hurt
that I suffer. It lias always been
Dial w ay."
Slenhany's grandmother and
grandfather are In Indiana al this
lim e white her grandm olher goes
through a microscopic operation
lo rem ove cancer from her lung.
Her letter follows:
Through my life there is one
man who stands nut In m y mind
ns truly "g re a t." It Is because of
Ills undying love and affection
that be has reign of my pedestal
labeled A tf 1,
T h is m an bu rped m e, lie
changed iny diapers. He bought
me candy. He held me In Ills lap.
He scolded me. He bought me
more candy. He consoled my
worries. He gave me lots of hugs.
He gave m e his ABC gum. He
gave me m y own pack of gum. He
showed m e off, he look me In
Disney. He grounded me. He
tried lo teach me math. He tried

□ S e e Rose, Page 7B

n v iB N r iw iB B f ■ « rvwfwi

Patrick and David Daly support different team s and each other.

Team
Id e a s m a y differ, but
th e y ’re a lw a y s s h a r e d
By E D K O R Q A N
Herald Correspondent_____________
SANFORD — Even political and
sport (inferences cannot break up
tills lather-son relationship.
David Daly Is a seventh grade
English teacher at L a k evlew
M iddle School. He has been
teaching In Sanford for the past
15 years. For quite a few years he
lias also been (caching college
composition classes at the Uni­
versity of Central Florida.
When David la at home he Is

always working with Patrick on
Improving hla sporting skills and
tnlnd gam es. Son Pa trick is
ulways challenging dad In politics
and sports.
"W e seem to differ In m any
Ideas," David said. " It Is funny
bccuuac as fans. Patrick w ill go
for Die Miami Dolphins and I w ill
go for the Tam pa Buccaneers. He
roots for the Toronto Blue Jays
and I root for the Atlanta Braves.
We don't seem to agree on our
(cams but I guess that's the w ay

□ S e e Daly, Paga 7B

in the twilight years is golden, still

lou

' ;■

Mouonaia

The winds or World War II
were raging when John L. Sauls
Sr. took Clara Haskins Tor Ills
bride on June 12, 1043.
Little did the lovebirds realize
that when they met on Nov. 11.
1941, that the Japanese would
bomb Pearl Harbor In less than a
month as the devastating begin­
ning o f the great global conlllct.
John moved to Sun ford from
South Cnrollun In 193B and was
Introduced to Clara, u Sanford
native, by Zona Beckwith, the
wife o f John's cousin. Arthur.
have one son.John
who lives In Sou­
nd d i r e c t o r at
Tuakawllln Middle School, John
Jr. has iw o children, Erik. a
senior nt Seminole High School,
and B crlt, n D isn ey W o rld
employee.
John Jr. honored Ills parents
at u golden wedding celebration
on June 12 ut the Sanford Bible
Church on Sanford Avenue.
Clara said they did uol want a
"form al, stu ffy" affair and what
started out as a "m eetin g to
glorify the Lord ." turned Into a
rather Inrgc celebration for about
150 friends and relatives. "O h. It
wash lot of fun," she said.
John Jr. served as master o f

SANFORD

DORIS
DIETRICH
ecrcm onlrs and registered the
guests In the guest book. Music
was provided by Jenn Sherwood
a n d C r y s ta l G ln d le s p e r g e r ,
pianists, and Joy (less, organist.
The following speakers who
d elivered Christ Ian m essages
w e re : K e n n e th R clnu ldn. a
missionary: George Howe, DO:
and George Davison o f the New
Tribes Mission.
Th e event was videotaped by
Theresa Villalobos and Clara’s
brother. Hamel Haskins or San­
ford, gave an appropriate toast.
Guests brought cards, old photos
and oilier mementoes which will
go into a large fam ily album. "I
can’ t wait In sec It," Clara said.
,J e a n e t t e a n d E d w a r d
V illa lo b o s c r e a t e d a la rg e
bulletin board of memorabilia

l ’See D ietrich, Page 7B

Clara and Jo hn S a u ls Sr.

�4 B * Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 20, 1993

‘A true star’

Johnson honored at retirement celebration at Goldsboro school

&lt;

Mr. and Mrs. Denial (Elian) Blair

Cooper, Blair joined
in holy matrimony
O RLAND O E llen Debra
Cooper and Larry Daniel Blair
w ere married June 6. at 2 p.m..
at the Rosemont Country Club.
Orlando. Rabbi Jack Levinson
assisted by the Rev. Jeanne
Davis, pastor o f the G eneva
U n ite d M e th o d is t C h u r c h .
Genevu. officiated at the w ed­
ding.
Th e bride is the daughter o f
Mr. and Mrs Marvin Cooper of
Altam onte Springs. The groom
is the son o f Mrs. Daniel Blair o f
Dnytoua Beach.
Glven^ In m arriage by her
father, the bride chose for her
vows u forma) w hile satin gown.
T h e em b ro id ere d and fitted
teardrop collar descended to a
(filled bodice covered In sequins
(and beads.,Th e puffed sleeves
h a d c u t o u t s o f m u lc h in g
em broidery
a rutiled scallop
at the shoulder. Her fingertip
illusion veil was caught hy a

beaded and scqulncd crown. She
carried a bouqct o f white roses
and baby's breath interspersed
with greenery.
Matron o f honor Shelln L.
Policy of Sanford wore a lealength fuschln silk dress and
carried a bouquet of w hile roses.
Maid or honor Ronnie Katz,
Brooklyn. N.Y. wore n ten-length
peach silk dress and carried u
bouquet of white roses.
The bridesmaid. Laurie Blair
o f Sanford, dau gh ter o f the
groom, wore a light green tealen gth dress, and carried a
bouquet or white roses.
C.J. Hass o f Sunlbrd served ns
best mart. Usher was Bob Coo­
per. brother o f the bride.
Following a wedding trip to
Jam aica, the n ew lyw eds are
m aking their home In S a n fo r^ .
The groom has been ow ner
Care-O-Scll Pet Palace, Sanfqrd
for the past 22 years. Th e bride
Is an executive secretary.

The heudllne at the retirement
celebration given by Goldsboro
Elementary for Shirley Johnson
W ilson read. " A True Star." This
soft-spoken, coring, lovable d y­
namic educator who for over 37
years has been a great leader In
m odeling the young lives o f the
many children who have com e
through her class. And o f those
who were a part o f her years nt
Goldsboro and Longwood Ele­
m e n ta ry sc h o o ls w h ere she
worked.
Th e headlines from the special
Ooldsboro Elem entary School
paper told how the "W o rld ’s
Greatest Teach er" began her life
In 10 3 4 In t h e s t a t e o f
Pennsylvania. After the fam ily
m oved to Florida, she graduated
from Jones High School and
co n tin u e d h er ed u c a tio n at
North Carolina A &amp; T College. She
com pleted fu rth er studies at
B e th u n e -C o o k m n n C o lle g e ,
Hampton University, Va, and
Rollins College.
W ilson's desire to be a role
m odel for the youth o f the
comm unity Inspired her dally to
g iv e s o m e th in g o f h er s e lf
worthwhile to her students. She
touched their lives in many
ways. Her motto, "success wnlts
at labor's g ate" was truly seen In
h e r e d u c a tio n a l c a r e e r , ns
Teacher o f the Year In 1971.
Her Goldsboro teaching team
planned her retirement celebra­
tion with Nonette B rozzo as
toast mistress, The group pres­
ented a dynam ic affair fit for a
great teacher, leader and educa­
tor such as Shirley J. Wilson.
Betty Chambers o f the Longw o o d E le m e n ta r y S c h o o l
b ro u g h t g r e e tin g s and c o n ­
gratulations from the staff at the
school where Wilson worked for
16 years. She said that Mrs.
Wilson will always be rem em ­
bered at Longwood. She was an

education fam ily, Sheri Ih a
teacher In Broward County. Kim
and Edward II will be attending
Seminole Com m unity College In
the field o f education.

Women'i. men’a day sat
Th e Mt. Zion Missionary Unplist Church on Sipes Avenue
(Midway) will observe Its Annual
W om en and Men's Day services
today, at 11 a.m.
T h e guest speaker w ill be
Nellie M. Smith of Mt. Moriah
Prlm lllvc Baptist Church at 2:30
p.m.
The Rev. Eddie Martin will be
the guest speaker for Men's Day.
Dinner will be served after the
m orning worship. Th e com m u­
nity Is Invited to worship with
Pastor W. Prank William s and
Mt. Zion.

Classes of the 50s to moot

MARVA
HAWKINS
asset to education, a creative,
colorful worker and a dedicated
team worker.
Retiree Wilson was given a
"G olden B room ," an "A p p le ,"
and an "E agle o f Music." These
gifts will forever remind her o f
h e r te a m a n d fn c u lty at
Goldsboro.
"O nly B elieve" was dedicated

Delta Sigma Theta
awards distinctions
to local youths
■ y SH IR LCY K . B A K IR

Herald Correspondent__________
A fter on evenin g or en ter­
ta in m e n t p r o v id e d b y Jabbcrwock contestants, Merthlc's
Day Care. Tajlri Arts. Mclondy
Hiilsman, a form er "M iss Jabbcrw ock." Cathy Stunlcy. and
the Seminole High School Gos­
pel Choir, under the direction o f

Mr. McGuire, the moment the
audience iiad excitedly antici­
pated arrived, the crowning o f
"M iss Jabberwock."
T crin a Debose, "M iss J a b ­
berw ock" 1991-93. relinquished
her crown to Tam clla Robinson.
"M is s J a b b e rw o c k " 1993-95.
d a u g h te r o f E lla and G re g
R obinson. F irst anti secon d
ru n n e r s -u p w e r e T a m c lc

to the honorec and words o f
gratitude were spoken by her
former principals. Herman Refro
Jr. nnd Leroy Johnson, both
now retired. The presentation o f
37 roses was presented to Mrs.
Wilson by her husband. Edward
Wilson, who ulso recently retired
from Seminole High School.
9harlng the afternoon o f cele­
bration with their mom were
daughters, Sheri Lynn Wilson
Evans, K im b erly M. W ilson,
husbund, Edward Wilson Sr. and
son, Edward W ilson II. Also
wishing a happy retirement to
Shirley were aunts, cousins and
a niece. O ver 50 co-workers,
friends and well-wishers were on
hnnd to witness this great sur­
prise.
Th e Wilsons continue to be an

T h e Classes o f the 50s of
Croom s Academ y will meet to­
day at 5 p.m. at the Elks Lodge.
A ll Interested classm ates un­
invited to attend. Richard (Dick)
Evans Is chairman.

Birthday wishes
Happy Birthday to the June
blrthduy fellows Earl E. Mlnott,
Andrew Perkins, and Andrew
Perkins Jr.

Choir celebrates anniversary
T h e C h r ls llu n F e llo w s h ip
C h o ir o f N e w M t. C a lv a r y
Missionary Baptist will celebrate
Its Second Annlversnry, Salim
day, June 20 at 7 p.m. Dimuifl
Low ery Is president, the Rev.
B.J. Player is pustor.

(Msrva Hawkins Is a Sanford
Harald correspondent covering
Sanlord news. Phone: 322-5418.)

MIbs Jabberwock Tamolla Robinson with her parents Ella and Grog

Robinson.
M c K In n c r and C e c ily R ose
Lewis.
Presented earlier In the pro­
gram were this year’s Sanford
Alumnae Chapter o f Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority. Inc. scholarship
recipients.
Scholarships totaling 92,500
were presented to the following
1993 high school grnduates:
Nicole Lemon. Richard Peterson.

Mlntrcll Martin — all Seminole
H igh School graduates, and
C h a n tel T h o m p s o n , a Lake
Howell High School graduate.
The Sanford Alumnae Chapter/DST Sorority, Inc. Is grcally
Indebted to tlie contestants,
th e ir parents, re la tiv e s mid
friends, for making Jabberwock
1993 an overwhelm ing success.

Gloria Nation and Robart Pitta, Jr.

Nelson and Pitts
plan July wedding
SANFORD Luella Nelson
and Adolfus Dctrevlllc or Sanford
arc announcing the engagement
of their daughter, Gloria Jean
Nelson, to Robert Van P ills Jr.,
son of Patricia W ells o f Miami
and Robert Pitts Sr. o f Orlando.
Born In Sanford, (lie brideelect Is the m aternal grand­
daughter o f the late Dinah and
J o h n W e s i, fo r m e r ly o f
Louisiana. She Is the paternal
granddaughter o f Alberta Dc­
trevlllc of Sanford and the laic
Mr. Henry Dctrevlllc.
Ms. Nelson Is a 19H2 graduate
or Seminole High School, San­
ford where she wus uctivc in
basketball, softball. AAU , CBE
and Student Governm ent Asso­
ciation. She attended Sem inole
Community College In 1083. Ms,
Nelson Is presently em ployed as

d

w-/p/«rapn,’7 ,

v

a legal secretary at Child Welfare
Legal Services, Orlando.
Her fiance, born In Orlando, Is
the maternal grandson o f Buena
Dixon o f Orlando and L ou Ib
Dixon o f North Curolina. He Is
the paternal grandson o f Bertha
Pills o f Orlando.
P ills Is a 1086 graduate o f Oak
R id ge High S ch ool, O rlando
where he participated In football,
track and weightlifting. He Is a
1990 graduate o f South Carolina
State University. W hile attend­
ing university lie was a m em ber
of the football team.
Pills I h presently em ployed us
a teacher, Union Purk Middle
Schixil, Orlando.
T h e wedding will be an event
o f July 10. 1993. 5:30 p.m., at
St. John's Missionary Baptist
Church, Sanford.

..

r.

H*t«MPtotoby Hm m u M vm Ow

The Over 60 Club held Its regular meeting al the Sanford Senior
Center with president Jim Gunater, left, presiding. Ray Stacey, right,
from the Seminole Sheriff's department, gavo a talk on crime
prevention and what the community could do to help, He has been
with the department alnce 1970.

H*taMPhoto by KormonIchroodo*

Sanford Chapter -1977 of AARP held Ha meeting at the Sanlord
Senior Center. Ralph Herwltt, center, principal of Arbor Ridge
Elementary school In Orlando, was greeted by Mary Kaminsky, left,
and Joyce Wllllnk. He spoke on some of his experiences as a
volunteer with the Hospice program. After the program a covered
dish luncheon was shared by all. The next mooting Is set lor Sept. 9.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 20, 1093 - 7 1

Memory of deceased father
inspires thoughts of love
DEAR READERBi Today Is
F a th e r’ s Day. and althou gh
one's father may be deceased —
us mine Is — he lives on In the
heart. My favorite column for
this special day. a prayer In
m em ory o f n father (from the
H ebrew Union Prayer Hook),
follows:
T h y m em ory, my dear father,
fills my soul at this solemn hour.
It revives In me thoughts or the
love and friendliness which thou
didst bestow upon me. The
thought o f thee Inspires me to n
life o f virtue: and when my
pilgrim age on earth Is ended and
I shall arrive at the throne of
mercy, may I be worthy of thee
In the sight ol God and man.
May our merciful Father reward
thee for the faithfulness and
kindness thou has ever shown
me: may He grunt thee eternal
pence. Amen.

like being In the service o f the
Lord. Even thuugh I'm noisy
sometimes and crack Ihc dishes
and step on the garden and
Rower plants, he Is always pa­
seldom accessible for public
tient with me.
bundling, so the shop's loss was
He's taught me to have a great
minor. Since no police arrived.
love for growing things. Every
Ms. Manager probably only pre­
spring he and I plant snapdrag­
tended to call them, hoping In ons, niurlgulds. zln n ca s und
frighten the elderly man Into
pansies In the beds In front o f the
paying the $40 she claimed was
house.
owed her.
Once, when 1 was In the fifth
I don't blame the gentlem an's grade. I was working on n report
companion for refusing to puy. 1 with my best friend Megan. She
would have given Ms. Manager a had the report at her house and
generous $5 bill and departed.
we needed lo work on It. Uncle
Julius drove me the 20 miles to
her house and brought her back
DEAR ABBYt Th e letter from
so we could work on It together.
"T h e Doctor's W ife," concerning
We got an A. He helps me with
p e o p le w h o c o r n e r e d h e r
my homework even when 1 don't
husband at social gatherings to
want
him to.
ask for free m edical ndvlcc,
He's also taught me by his
struck a familiar chord.
Attorneys also have that pro­ exam ple how Important It Is to be
in church. He knows everyone
blem. I am reminded o f the story
und
they all love him too. Every
about a doctor and lawyer who
were out for a friendly gam e o f Sunday I sit next to him and feel
Im portant because he Is m y
golf. T h e doctor com plained
friend.
ubout the problem o f people
Uncle Julius should be Father
m ooching free medical advice at
social functions, and the a t­ o f the Year because he not only Is
a father to me, he ulso has 10
torney said, "H ey. no problem;
children. 35 grandchildren and
just scud a bill to the moochcrs
15 great-grandchildren. He Is ns
lor a consultation,"
kind lo me ns he Is to them. And
"W o w . I didn't think o f that!"
ull 60 o f them respect him.
th e d o c t o r r e s p o n d e d en It's your decision but If It were
thusalstlcally.
up to me he'd be Fnthcr o f the
Three days later, the doctor
Century.
received a bill from the uttorney
Surah Lynch
fora "consultation."
Sanford
W IL L IA M R. BENEDETTO,

ADVICE

%

A B IG A IL
VAN BUREN

"You break It and It's yours." A
young woman rushed over and
said, "Y o u ow e me $40 for that
piece!"
, T h e g e n t le m a n lo o k e d
shocked, hut got out Ills wallet
and started in count the few hills
he had, when the woman with
him said to "M s. M anager,"
"Y o u must be Insured for this:
Th e gentleman Is living on his
Social Security. Also, 840 Is
outrageous Tor that plate: It
wasn't even m arked!"
Well. Ms. Manager run to the
telephone, saying, "I'm calling
the police!" Th e woman with the
elderly grnllcm un led him from
the store, and they were soon
out of sight.
My husband and I stayed Tor
half an hour, and no police
came. Abby, how would you
have handled this?

DEAR ABBYi My hushnnd
and I were traveling through a
tourist-trap town In Washington
state when we wandered Into
tills small novelty shop, clut­
t e r e d w it h c h e a p - lo o k in g
crockery mid souvenirs.
An elderly gcnllcmnn, ob vi­
ously another tourist, brushed
by a counter and accidentally
knocked a small plate o ff a
wooden rack. It fell in the floor
and broke Into several pieces.
There was no sign Hint said.

Blackwelder

Continued from Pago BB

CURIOUS T R A V E LE R
DEAR CURIOUSi Such shops

A TTO R N E Y-A T-LA W
BEAVERTON, ORE.

expect a certain am ount o f
hreukage, and pieces o f value urc

DalyContinued from Page BB

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LUM9, feml TP*1’

It goes with father und sons."
Patrick Daly, B ycurs old, is a
mature young mun who attends
Hamilton Elementary and loves
sports. His favorite football tcum
Is the Miami Dolphins. He plans
lo piny linebacker for the Sem i­
nole High School team when he
gets Inlo high school. During the
baseball season lie roots for the
Toronto Blue Jays.
Patrick writes about bis dud.
My name Is Patrick Daly, und
my father's name Is David Daly. I
think my father Is outstanding
because, first o f all. be takes care
o f m y m other and me. and
second o f nil. he works Iwo Jobs,
one at Lukevlcw Middle School,
and the other at UCF. Also he lets
me hnvc u full-time mother.
As busy ns he may seem he
always has time to read to me
and to throw the ball. My father
walks Ihc dogs tw o times a day
when he's working und three
times when he’s not.
Finally even though my father
uiul I don’t always ngrcc on
everything, we still love each
oilier. For example, 1 forgive m y
fnlher for voting for BUI Clinton.
Patrick Daly
Sanford

Dietrich--------Continued from Page BB

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For 24&lt;hour TV listings, see LEISURE magazine of Friday, June 18

from the co u p le 's 50 ycurn
together which Included their
w ed d in g u m in u u cciiicnl, old
jihotogruplis.- foreign currency.
Clara's war ration book und
oilier Items to conjure iiji a lot of
memories.
Guests arrived from as far
away as South Carolina. The
com m ittee Included: John Sauls
&lt;Jr., Patricia Dalcnhcrg and her
son. Joe Tittle, Jewel Drum and
Jeanette and Edward Villalobos,
Together, the Saulses have
()|ierated the John Sauls Agency
In downtown Sanford for llupast 33 years and are sllll going
strong. He Is an elder In the
Suuford Bible Church where
Clara leaches the adult Indies
class. Modi also enjoy a ministry
al the ’ .ukcvlcw Nursing Center,
where tltey have been associated
for 23 years, and a Jail ministry
over which they have presided
for 24 years.
Clara Is a born writer and
teacher. She wrote a book. "T h e
C h ris tia n S a b b a th ." In the
lD70s which she suld was "v e ry
|)0 |&gt;ulur. had good reviews and
sold ou t" after one jnilillshlng.
Devout Christians, the Saulses
have had a good marriage which
Clara credits "to com m itm ent."
She said. "E ven though we are
In our (wlllght years. Hie future
Is so bright...today Is briglil.

Staphany Lova, gives her winning grandfather a hug.

Ross-----------------------------Continued from Pago SB

always available for me. He still
gives m e lols of hugs. 1 will
always need him.
He loves me. I love him. He Is
my grandfather.
Stephany Love
Sanford

to understand me. He understood
me better than I did. He trusted
me. I broke that trust. He still
trusts me. He olTcrs good udvlcc. I
have learned to take It. He Is

R unners-up are
great dads, too
T h e runners up In this
y e a r ’ s Father o f the Year
contest were us follows:
Carolyn Tlllotson of Sanford
n o m in a te d h er b o y fr ie n d
Duvld Fryman who has helped
her regain custody o f her
daughter from her ex-husband
and who has "show ed us what
a family Is all about."
She said (bat some day she
and Fryman will get married
and he will ado jit her daugh­
ter.
S h irley Scott o f Sanford
nominated Gene Scott who
she suld has "a lw ays supp u rled h is c h ild r e n sin ce
birth." Though he bus been
married three times und has
five children he has been there
for the children no matter
whnt the relationship with
their mothers was like.
She said he has raised good
ch ildren who have "n e v e r
been In trouble."
Barbara Scblrard o f Sanford
nominated her husband Mike.
She said he has' only been a
father for a year und u half, but
he lias taken a very uctlvc role
In r a is in g th e ir d a u g h te r
Claire.
She said lie changes dlujicrs.
jilays chase even though he's
tired. He has a "great big hug
and a sm ile" Tor Claire no
matter bow bad a day lie has
bud. He always kisses her
"boo-boos" and nllcnds her

who was associate church pastor
a couple o f years ago.
Vlekl Is expecting the blessed
event In July with great Inlaiitlelpallon. On June 12. she was
honored at a baby shower In
McKinley Hall o f the church. The
site was transformed Into an
a tt r a c tiv e b a b y la n d s e llin g
e a m ji I e l e w i t h c o l o r f u l
streamers, balloons, a decorated
sheet cuke and finger foods.
The honoree received a variety
o f beautifully jiackaged gifts
Including a stroller for two to
a c c o m m o d a te her p resen t
(laughter. Veronica. 19 months,
as w ell as th e new fa m ily
addition.

"tea parties."
Terrence Johnson o f Sanford
n o m in a ted h is s te p -fa th e r
Aaron Keith. Johnson said he
m o v e d t o S a n f o r d fr o m
Arcadia a year ago to be with
Aaron and his mother.
He said Keith showed him
love and has learned to trust
and believe In him self again.
He said that he has become
Involved In the Police Explor­
ers (Keith Is a sergeant In the
Sanford Police D epartm ent}
und he has made m any friends
though he Is fulrly new to the
area.
"Just helping me to un­
derstan d and sort out so
m u c h ." he said ubout Ills
step-father. " I Just love him. 1
always w ill."
K im b e r ly and A u b re y
N elson of Lake Mary
nominated their father Phil
N e ls o n . T h e y suld he Is
"thoughtful, caring and lov­
ing."
Th ey Bald he's always ready
to talk or play gam es and he Is
always encouraging her und
her sister In all thdlr e n ­
deavors.
Jennifer uiul Jessica Russl of
Sanford nominated their fa­
ther Murk Russl.
They suld that he "alw ays
takes time to show us that he
loves us." und that he always
greets them with a big smile
and n kiss.

I t ’s t w i n s
Kristy and Brett Marshall ure
the jiroud parents o f twin duughlers born May 18 at Winter Park
Mcmorlul Hospital In W inter
Park. Kourtncc weighed 8 lbs., 7
ozs.. and Hrltncc weighed 8 lbs.
They arc welcomed home by a
slsler, Kayla. 3,
M aternal gran d paren ts arc
Linda and Wayne Keeling of
Sanford. Pulcmul grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cooper.
DcLuml, uiul Dr. and Mrs. Byrne
Marshall, Little Rock. Ark.

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Sanford Verticals
750 Wylly Ave.f Sanford
321-3601

Newest Technique

NO P A S S M O VIE* A

Baby show er
The Rev. Vlekl Recce. Minister
o f Evangelism o f the First United
Methodist Church. Is making
history at the over lOO-year-old
church. She's a first, according
to the church atliuils. Vlekl Is the
only minister lo ever deliver u
baby while active In the church
puHlorutc.
o r course, all of the other
church jiusiors have been men
except the Rev. Jeanne Davis

^

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Bsnlord Herald, Sanford, Florida • Sunday, June 20, 1993

SAY THAT*

By Bernice Bade Oaol
YOU* BIRTHDAY
Juoaao, IM S

u iu i- j

Improvements are indicated In
your Iona range financial pro*
Jcctlons lor the year ahead. Try

» « 1 T I.« B A IL 1 Y
THAT 5B EM 8 } I J U * T CAN'T

TO HAVff jr t { THINK ANP
WOWK B P f / V W # C BATCH
-____ AT THE
SA M E
T IM E

CQ&gt;

by Art Ssntom

THK BORN L O U R
O A P ft! CVIXYTIME A PUNE FUE5
GMOL OUR HOUSE,THETV PICTURE

r—c z r r \

WEAR* UP!

jflW f t r v &amp; J t , /YOU HAVE
)\ou) Aaut \ A PEN
^occ -/&gt;*At v ? \

wP A L ?/

CALM DOWN]
NORMAL FOR
AIRPLANES TO INTERFERE WITH
RELe f t w n !

NOT WHEN YOUVE GOT CABLE! ^

✓

TO LEARN ABOUT OTHER
CULTURES... HE TELLS M E
ABOUT M IM5EU* A N P I
TELL MIM ABO U T M E..

WHY DOULP
ANYONE WANT
TO H EAR
ABOUT YOU?

U LLH X)
C M EfiT

to be patient, however, because
you m ight not get everything
you want im m ediately. T im e Is
your ally.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
kind and considerate today o f
the one you love, but be careful
not to nvcrindulge his/her every
whim. Your excesses could hurt
more than help. Qemlnl. treat
you rself to a birthday gift. Send
for your Astro-Graph predictions
for the year ahead by m ailing
$1.25 and a long, self-addressed,
sta m p ed e n v e lo p e to A stroGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
B ox 4 4 6 5 . N ew Y o rk . N .Y.
10163. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
There Is more than one type o f
opportunity around you today,
so don't be single minded. The
m o re seed s y o u p la n t, the
greater your variety o f potential
benefits,
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
optim istic today, but also be
realistic and logical. All o f these
Ingredients must be operative In
order to bring your hopes and
expectations Into being.
VIROO (A u g. 23-Sept. 22)
Financial conditions appeur to
be a bit -mixed for you today.
You r chances far acquisition
look reasonable, but you might
suffer a loss through a cureless'
involvement with friends.
LIBRA (S ept. 23-Oct. 23)
Loyal friends will be willing to
tr
pinch hit for you today, but
don't count on them to blast the
ball out o f the park. They may
get you only to first base.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't make hasty Judgments work or career, seek out persons
w ho will tell you the truth and
to d a y , b ecau se w h at you
not Just what you wunt to hear.
perceive ut first glance might not
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. IB)
be representative o f the true
picture. Take u long, hard sec­ Today If you have to choose
between work or play, you're
ond look.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. likely to select the latter hoping
your responsibilities will take
21) If you have something good
going for you at this time, it's care o f them selves. U nfortu­
nately, they won't.
best to keep It to yourself rather
thnn talking about It with pals.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Speaking out o f turn could hurt
Left to your own devices today
your arrangement.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. you should be uble to work
19) Should you feel a need for th in gs out to a satisfactory
a d vic e today regarding you r conclusion. However, If others
By Barnlce Bade Oaol

TOUR BIRTHDAY

60 IT POiBM'T COUNT/

*NTHiN6 NOW
fOTTiTOHN*
TOt. 8,7S3
8,79$ P tO U t 8,79 3 STOMtf

M on day, J a n e 2 1 ,1 9 9 3
Your Influence over your pres­
ent peer group could Increase
appreciably over the com ing
months. In the year ahead the
standards you set for yourself
will be the ones your puls will
also follow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Today you might put your mate
In an awkward position where
lic/shc has to make a decision In
an area where In the past your
spouse has previously used poor
Judgment. Don't .let history re­
peal Itself.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22| Before
taking on new duties today, try
to finish wltui Is already de­
m anded 'i&gt;r you. If you nllempt to
do more, this could Icud to
front rat Ions and poorer p ro­
ductivity.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It's
extrem ely Important loduy you
treat all o f your friends equally.
If you play favorites or show
partiality, you m ay loose on both
end-,.

By Phillip A ld s r
W e have all heard about the
heat o f the moment. A t the
bridge table, this sorts out the
men from the boys, Th e men
keep their eyes firm ly on the
cards and find the right plays.
T h e boys work It out In the
post-m ortem after they have
erred.
T oday's deal com es from

HAPPY PIRTHPAY.
T S S Q G A R F IE L W

YOUR
BI6 OBSESSION
WITH SUMMER
1 OUST WANT TO
HANGOUT WITH ,
w MY FRiEHMJ |

a

rubber-bridge game In London,
for the paltry stake o f $3 per
point. How do you think the play
proceeded In three no-trump?
After an aggressive auction.
West led the spade two, and
East, confident South had the
acc, made the expert play of the
Jack to find out who held the
queen.
When only six clubs appeared
In the dummy, declarer Howard
Cohen realised that he stood no
legitimate chance. Neither oppo­
nent was going to duck the heart

TRUST M£.YOU'LL
LOVEIT, REAP
THE BROCHURE?

LIBRA (S e p t. 23-O ct. 23)
Ambitions that are focused on
achieving materia) gains hnvt*
good chances for helug fulfilled
loduy. You m ight not scare
equ ally us high where your
social interests are concerned.
8CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Today It behooves von to he
more o f a listener than a talker.
W hile you're id lin g others about
something you already know,
someone might be trying lo tell
you something you don’ t know.
SAGITTARIUS I Nov. 23-Dec.
21| Joint endeavors appear to be
quite " Iffy " today, especially If
you're Involved with a person or
persons with whom past eudcavors didn't work out too well.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jnn.
19) In partnership arrangements
today, subdue your usscrtlvcness. Your churl Indicates your
c o u n te r p a r t m a y he b e lte r
equipped to handle things than
you are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. I9|
This could be a productive duy
for you. provided you work with
tested methods mid procedures.

acc. and a diam ond sw itch
would be automatic. W illing to
gam ble 50 paints (and $150) In
an e f f o r t to t h r o w up a
smokescreen. Cohen won the
first trick with the spade acc.
In other circum stances,, this
would have been brilliant, but
here It seemed to sacrifice his
potential ninth trick. W atch
what happened, though. Cohen
led a low heart. Afraid declarer
was trying to steal his ninth
trick, West shot In with the heart
ace. Then. Instead o f correct ly
sw itch in g to a diam ond, he
returned the spade 10,
Having been taken In at trick
one, East thoughtlessly played
low. Cohen scooped up the spade
queen and soon claim ed 11
tricks.

Afterward East apologized. If
West had started with the Q-10
o f spades, he would have led the
queen, not the 10, at trick three.
In the heat o f the moment. East

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---------- my
brother's

get Involved, they could drive
you o ff course.
i&gt;
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You're rather am icable today
and cusy to get along with. This
Is commendable, but be careful
you do not make comprom ises
or concessions you'll be unable
to honor.
u
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Co-workers upon whom you can1
usually rely might not be avail­
able today. If you want som e­
thing done quick and done right;
do It yourself Instead o f waiting
for the calvary to save you.
E xp erim en tin g w ith the u h m
known might sel your whole
opcrtitttihhnck o'riiiy:1 ■' 1 1
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mnreh 201.
Guard against Inclinations today •
to gam ble on persons or things t
about which you know little,.•
lately Luck Is only apt to hr
friendly to you on familiar turf, mi
A R IE S (Mureh 2 1-April 19)*'
Family mailers should lie given
lop priority today. Only nftef
these have been dealt w ith 1’
satisfactorily can you switch;
your focus to your other Inler*4ests.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20),..
Today you mlghl have to make i i j
choice regarding a combination,o f unusual circumstances. Some
are bu ndle, som e are co u tvv
icrprodin iim - Lot all are In- &gt;
ternilngled.
G E M IN I (May 2 1-June 20),
B e fo r e t a k i n g on n e w re-’;-1
spoiislbllltlcs today, clean tin,
your present circumstances, if,'
you feel required to make a
Choice, don't add new woes to.
the unfinished.

money.
NORTH
H IM
$76
VQ943
♦ 7
$ A 10 9 7 6 1
EAST
* $ K J 91B
VJ76
♦ A K 10 S
$•
SOUTH
$ A &lt;14

TKBI
♦ 9161
♦ KQ4
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer; North

Opening lead: $ 2

&lt;SetyurKl&amp;i outt ayurhair

CWAPP1D0NT

I

�Sanford H erald, Sanford, Florida *« Sunday June ?0. 1993 • 08

In the footsteps of
upermom, here com es
he new, improved dad
IM IT C H !L i L A N D t M M

' National Writer
(N E V A D A : C ITY , Calif. - Six men sit crossSgged on a w hite carpeted floor. They are In the
i try studio o f a cedar house that hugs the flanks
&lt;T the Sierra Nevada, and they are talking quietly
and seriously about Important things.
Big things. Things that could change the world.
Not once. In tw o hours, do they mention the
war In Bosnia. President Clinton, the price o f
gold, “ Jurassic Park." Charles Barkley, all terratn
vehicles or the San Francisco Giants.
No. for a full two hours and then some, they
talk about fatherhood.
Actually, they talk about more than that. They
talk about their children, their fathers, their wives
and themselves. They talk about after-school
soccer, about homework, about who cooks and
w ho fixes the car. Th ey talk about the struggle to
balance work and family, about how much
discipline Is too much discipline. T h ey wonder
whether their children can be their pals.
They talk about things that men don't usually
talk about.
Or do they?
There's a new man loping about the planet, or
so It would appear from reading the literature.
Psychologists talk about the "N e w Fatherhood."
whose adherents universally ascribe to the
following adage: When a man Is dying, he never
says. " I wish I'd spent more time at the office."
No. the new dad Is the one you see with a
toddler at the playground, or standing up at the
I’T A meeting, or rolling Junior through the aisles
o f the supermarket. He's the one who misses days
nt work because a child la home sick: who dashes
out the office door at the digital crack o f 5 to
make It to the day care center on time.
"S o m e th in g has ch an ged ,'" saya Jcrrold
Shapiro, a psychologist in Los Altos who has
written two books on fatherhood. "W hether men
have been enticed or cajoled, the fact Is that w e’re
around our kids a lot m ore."
“ A n d ," he adds, "w h en you’re around your
ktds, you get to like It."
The evidence Is bath anecdotal and scientific.
Ftar Instance, Rcdboak magazine recently con­
ducted a random, nation'll telephone poll o f 420
fathers, with a margin o f error o f plus or minus
4.8 percent:
I*1—98 percent said they changed their babies'
diapers. T w o thirds o f them thought their own
fathers had skipped dlnpcr duty.
—80 percent took their children to the doctor.
Only hair as m any thought their fathers hud done
so.
—75 percent had left work to take care o f their
kids. Fewer than one-quarter thought their duds
had done that.
And nearly seven out o f 10 o f the m odem dads
said they'd like the opportunity to stay home and
care for their children while their w ives wurked.
The pollsters didn't bother to ask about the
previou s g en e ra tio n . T h e q u estion sim p ly
wouldn't apply.
"In reality." said the pollster. Ethel Klein, "w c
haven't asked men these questions. Nobody ever
tbought about It."
Plenty o f people are thinking about It now.
Under the Influence o f Ihc much-mnl!gned men's
movement, books nbout fatherhood have been
hupping off the presses In the past few years.
Besides Shapiro's books, the most recent o f which
is "T h e Measure o f a Man: Becoming the Father
You Wish Your Father Had Been," they Include
such titles us "Letters to My Son: Reflections on
Becoming a M an." and "M an Enough: Fathers,
Sons, and the Search for Masculinity."
Certainly, the men gathered at Troy Ram py’s
house, perched In the forested hills above Nevada
City, have thought about it.
"T h e re ’s a much more participatory parenting
going on than there was when I grew up," says
John Daly, a 48-ycar-old, touslc-halred real estale
agent who speaks with the clarity and precision
Implied by his steel blue eyes.
,'"We fathers now arc much more a part o f the
process than w c were. W ives arc working, fathers
are working, and wc have to share In the
l|duschoId duties. Probubly most m en and
\yomcn will admit that women are still doing
ifiorc of the household stuff, but I think the
fathers are much more Involved In Ihc kids' lives.
.... W e're really taking on a lot more responsibility
lor the chlld-reailng."

I IN T H I C IR C U IT COURT
1 OP T H I 1 I T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN A N D POR
!
I I M IN O L I C O U N T Y .
P LOR I DA
! C A l l NO. i TI-M I7-CA-H-K
HOME SAVINOSOP
America, psb, »/n/«home
I a VINOSOP AM ERICA, P.A.,
Plaintiff.
f W . JONES, elal..
Defendants.
N O TICE OP M L !
i! NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
al, pursuant lo the Pinal
udgmenl at Foraeloiur# anrad In Ihls cauta In Iha Circuit
durl ol Samlnola Courtly, Flor­
ida, I will Mil Iha proparty
situated In Samlnola Courtly.

$
s

Florida, datertbad a i :
Lot ISO. L A K E OF T H E
WOODS TOWNHOUSE “ SEC­
TIO N I " , according to tho plat
tharaof a i racordad In Plal Book
27, Paga 14. Public Records ol
Samlnola County, Florida
at public Mia, lo lha hlghait and
bait bidder, tor cath, at 11:00
A M. on July 1C, Iff], at lha
Wait Front Door ol tho Samlnola
County CourlhouM, M l North
Park Avenue, Sanford, F L
D A TE D Juno II, i m .
(SEAL!
&gt; MARYANNB MORSE
Clark ol Circuit Court
By: JanaE. JaMWlc
Dtputy Clark
Publish: Jona JO. 37, IWJ
D EP-IM

E

js a k

$

L »fl«l Nolle*

Legal Notice

IN T H B C IR C U IT COURT,
E IO H TS B N TH JU D IC IA L
CIR C UIT, IN A N D P O R
I I M I N O L I CO UN TY,
FLORIDA.
C A I I N O .m m -C A I 4 -K
F E D E R A L HOM E LO AN
M OR TG AG E CORPORATION.
« corporation organlred and
•xlHIng undar lha law* ol lha
United Slalts ol America,
Plaintiff,

iff).

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C UIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE C O U N TY.
FLO R ID A
CASE N U M B IR i
D41I7 CA-ML
IN D E P E N D E N C E M OR T
G A G E C O R P O R A T IO N OF
AM ER IC A, e Florida corpora
lion,
Plalntlll,
vt.
LO R R IE K. T E L K A M P . an
unmarried perton.
Defendant.
NO TICE OF SALE
Notice Is hereby given thel
purtuent to ihe Final Summary
Judgment ol Foreclosure an
lartd In this cauM pending In
the Circuit Court In and for
Samlnola County, Florida, btlng
Civil Action No. tlO U F CA-I4L.
lha undersigned Clerk will Mil
the property iltueted In Semi
nole County, Florida, el 11:00
a m. on July IS. Iff), described
as:
E X H IB IT “ A "
Lots 7, 0 and tha North is ol
Lot t. Block IS, Tier I. E.R.
TR A FFO R D 'S M AP OF TH E
TOWN O F SANFORD, accord
tng to the plat ihareot as ra
corded )n Plat Book t, Page *0.
Public Record* of Samlnola
County, Florid#
•I public Mle, lo tho highest and
bast bidder tor cosh et Ihe West
Front Door ol Ihe Seminole
County CourlhouM, M l North
Park Avanua, Sanford, Florida.
D A T E D this 10th day ol June,

(Court leal)
M AR YANNE MORSE
Clark ol tha Clrcwll Court
By: JanaE. J o m w Ic
At Deputy Clerk
Publlih: June II. 70. Iff]
O B P - III

M AR YA N N E MORSE
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT COURT
B Y : Dorothy W. Bolton
Publish: June70.77, If f )
D I F IU

v».

RAND A. RHODES) el el..
Delendanli.
N O TIC E OF I A L I
Notice 11 hereby given that,
puriuent to a Summary Final
Judgment of Foreclosure an
lartd herein. I will Mil the
property iltueted In Samlnola
County, Florida, described as:
Condominium Unit F I ol
M A R B E Y A CLUB CONDOMIN
IUM , a condominium, according
to the Declaration ot Condomln
lum thereof at recorded In
Official Record* Book Iff/, page
1014, and re recorded In Official
Racordi Book 17*1. page 1443, ol
lha public records ol Samlnola
County, Florida: together with
the unll't undivided there el
common altm tnli and common
•ipenMt ai proscribed In Mid
Declaration ol Condominium,
at public Mia, to lha hlghail and
best bidder lor cash, at the Wall
Irani entrance, Seminole County
CourlhouM, San lord in Sanford.
Florida, el 11:00 A.M. on July

U, IMS.

W IT N E S S my hand and of
lltlal Mai et Mid Court June I,

l**3

t»
HJHMMBAAi

$fL H v t i &amp;

It­

Legal Notices

IN TH E C IR C U IT CO URT
OF TH E tIT H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY,
FLO RID A
CASE NO. fS-BMl CA14K
C ITIZEN S F E D E R A L BANK, A
F E D E R A L SAVINGS BANK,

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
IEMINOLICOUNTY,
FLORIDA, CIVIL ACTION
CAIENO.flOaajCA 14
DIVISION L

Plaintiff,

It's true, as Daly says, that men haven't exactly
shoved their w ives put o f the kitchen, laundry
room or nursery.
"O u r attitudes have ch an ged ," says Ron
Levant, n psychologist In Brookline, Mass., who Is
co-chair o f the Society for the Psychological Study
o f Men and Masculinity. "O u r behavior has
changed, but not that m uch."
In the 1960s, Levant says, men did virtually
nothing In the w ay o f household chores — about
1 hour a day, on average, compared to 8 hours a
day for women.
"In the late '80s. the figures indicate that
husbands put In about one-third o f the total
family work and w ives put in about tw o-thirds....
It's still far from 60-50."
Still, Levant says, the changes in attitude are
important — and icould be a sign o f (htnga to
come.
ittlcantly, men say their families are more
cant than their work, and they derive more
a.sense o f well-being from their families than
their work, which Is a ch ange."
And, he says, "M en are no longer saying that
the main Way to be a father is to be a good
rovtder. Th ey're saying that being with your
ids Is Just as Important an making a good
Incom e."
The guys at Troy Ram py's hounc couldn't agree
more.
This group o f acquaintances, living In a former
m ining town turned New A ge hnven, doesn't
pretend to be representative o f men at large. They
are all white, they arc nil well-educated and they
all tend to tilt toward the drum-bcutlng fringe of
m en's consciousness.
Rich McCulchun Is a fumlly counselor who
works part time at home. He considers him self n
househusband. Paul Jorgensen, a shop owner,
spends as much lim e as he can pluylng with his
5-year-old son, Narayan, and believes he shnres
equally with his wife In household duties. Crulg
Rubens, a teacher who Is In the midst o f a
divorce, says he takes care o f his two small
children at least two-thirds o f the time,
Humpy, who runs a small business selling
educational' materials, comes closest to being a
traditional dad. If your Idea o f traditional
encompasses someone who conducts n "Shadow
W orkshop" in which men use masks and drums
to help "com e fncc-to-fnce with another part of
yourself."
Rnmpy works out or his house und secs his two
chllden constantly, hut bin wife Is their "prim ary
care-giver": be., a full-time mom.
Even so, he says, he and his wife. Maryann,
have "totally divided" the housework. "M en can
cook," he says. "M ost o f the best chefs are men.
Men can do housework. Women can fix cars.
Maryann Is more mechanically Inclined than I
am. so something breaks and we say, .'Maryannt
You get here!' I think
that Is qp,for grabs. ...
W e're all muklng It up as wc g o ,"
And finally, children
‘ liar
have played a role —
perhaps the biggest one. Thirty years ago, men
w eren’t expected to play such an Intimate role In
their children's lives: until urouiul 1070. for
Instance, It was almost unheard o f for u man to be
present at his child's birth. Now It Is the norm.
"It's a long process." says Klein, who con­
ducted the Kcdbook poll, "b ill us men become
Involved In the details of their kids' lives, they get
hooked Into their kids Just the way mothers do. ..
. It's the way children seduce parents. They fall In
love with you. und you fall In love with every little
change, and that’s happening lo men more und
m ore."
It Is happening lo these men In Nevada City.
You can hear It In the way they speak about their
children — "th e best two boys In the w orld." Rich
McCutehcn says with bursting pride — and In Ihc
wuy they describe their enjoym ent In the
seemingly mundane tusks o f childrearing.
"I'm really happy to be able to put that much
time into my children," John Daly says, " lo be
with m y children much more than my father was.
It gives a whole new perspective to m y IITc.
Having three children and each one o f them Is
very different... you learn u tot.
" I feel rcully privileged that I uin ublc to do this,
because 1 know there arc a lot o f families —
probubly the majority o f the families thut urc oul
there — that urc still doing what my parents did
40 years ugo. ... Hopefully what we're doing will
grow. I think It will. ... And I think what we're
teaching our children, they'll wnnt to teach their
children loo."

Legal Notice

Legal Notices

'Sjon-

BOBBY E U G E N E W ELLS and
M AR TH A A. W ELLS, his wife,
• lilt.,
Defendants.
' N O TIC E OF A C T IO N C O N STRU CTIVE I I R V I C I PR OPER TV
TO : BOBBY E U G E N E W ELLS,
Deceased
end any unknown parties who
are or may be interested In the
tub|eef matter of this action
whose names and residences,
efltr diligent March end Inqui­
ry, ere unknown lo Plalntlll end
which M id unknown parties
may claim at heirs, devisees,
granites, assignees, lienors,
creditors, trustees or other
claimant* claiming by, through,
under or against tha M id Delendant(s), BOBBY E U O E N E
W E L L S , Deceased, who It
known to be dead.
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D thel an
action to toraclOM a mortgage
on Ihe following property In
Seminole County, Florida, to
wit:
L o t 110. T R A I L W O O D
E S TA TES - SEC. O N E, ec
cording to the Plat thereof as
recorded In Plal Book te. Page*
27 and 2* of the Public Record*
ot Seminole County, Florida,
hat been tiled against you and
you ere required to Mrve a copy
ol your written detenMt, It any,
lo It on K E L L Y A N N E
L U TH E R . ESQ U IilE. Plalntlll'*
etlorney, whose address It:
LAW O FF IC E S OF STUZIN
AN D CAM NER, 1771 Brlcksll
Avenue, JJth Floor. Miami,
Florida JJI31, on or before July
74. Iff], and III* the original
wllh the Clerk ol this Court
either btlor* service upon
Plalnllll’* etlorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter; otherwlM. a
default will ba entered against
you lor Ihe relief demanded In
the Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand the.Mal ol
this Court on June 10. I f f !
(S E A L)
M AR YA N N E MORSE
Clerk ol the Court
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June a 70, 77 A July 4,
Iff]
DEF-117
IN T H B C IR C U IT CO URT
FOR SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
FLO R ID A
C IV IL ACTION
CASE NO. fl-7547-CA-M-K
HOME SAVINGSOF
AM ERICA, FSB. formerly
known es HOME SAVINGS
O F AM ERICA. F A ,
Plalntlll.

vt.
JOSEPH A LUDW IG and
C A TH E R IN E R. LUDW IG, hit
wlla. S E LE C TIV E
INSURANCE COMPANY OF
AM ERICA. U N IT E D STATES
OF AM ERICA, andEAST
COAST SUPPLY CORP.
Defendants.
SECOND A M E N D ED
N O TIC E OF SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
that, pursuant lo • Summary
Pinal Judgment entered In lha
abovt sty lad cause, In Ihe
C ircu it Court el Seminole
County, Florida, I, Clark ol tha
C ircu it Court ol Semlnola
Counly, Florida, will Mil that
carlaln property situated In
Seminole Counly, Florida, more
particularly described at:
Lot (, Sabal Gian al Sabal
Point, according lo Ihe plat
lhareol at recorded In Plal Book
77. Paget Mend IJ, ol the Public
Records ol Seminole Counly,
Florida.
Also known as sir Long
meadow Circle, Long wood, Flor
Ida 7777*.
al public tala, lo Ihe hlgltest and
betl bidder, lor cath. on the
west Ironl steps of the Samlnol#
Counly CourlhouM, 101 N. Perk
Avenue, Sentord. Florida, at
11:00a.m. on July 20, Iff}.
Witness my hand and tha
official Mai ol this Court on
June 14. Iff]
(S E A L)
M ARVANNE MORSE
Cltrk of Circuit Court
By: Jene E. Jattwlc
Deputy Clark
Publish: June 70, 27, Iff]
DEF 1/5
IN T H B C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E I I Q H T I R N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
OF FLO RIDA,
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE COUNTY
O IN E R A L JU R ISD ICTIO N
DIVISION
CASE NO, *7-IM f-CA-M -L
F E D E R A L HOME LOAN
M ORTGAGE CORPORATION,
Plalnlltf,
vs
G IL B E R T H. ROGERS,
CAPISTRANO COND-JMINIUM
ASSOCIATION. INC., AC IE
G EN E G R IF FITH .a n d
G EO R GIA V. G R IF F IT H ,
married.
Defendant It).

NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment ol
Foreclosure dated June I, Iff),
and entered In C at* No.
*7 l i l t CA 14 L, ol Ih* Circuit
Court of Ih* E IG H T E E N T H
Judicial Circuit In end for SEM
INOLE Counly, Florida wherein
F E D E R A L H O M E LO AN
M O R TG A G E CORPORATION
Is Plain!!)! and G IL B E R T H.
ROGERS, ft al., are Da ten
danft, I will Mil tp Ih* highest
end beil bidder lor cath al Ih*
West Ironl door ot Ih* Court
houM. In Sanford, SEMINOLE
County, Florida, at 11:00o'clock
on the 15th day ol July. Iff], Ih*
following described properly at
Mt forth In teld Final Judg
ment, towll:
Thai carlaln condominium
parcel known et Unit No. I ) end
end undivided 0044 Interest In
Ih* land common elements end
common * ipenMt eppur tenant
lo said unit, all In accordance
wllh and tub|act to Ihe cove­
nants. conditions, restrictions,
Itrm i and other provisions ol
Ihe Declaration ol Condominium
ol Capistrano, a Condominium
as recorded In Olllclel Records
Book 1774, Pag* nos, Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida.
D A TE D this 10th day ol June.
Iff).
M AR YANNE AHORSE
As Clerk ol Mid Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
A t Deputy Clerk
Publish: June70.17, Iff)
DEF-117

F IR S TA TE FIN AN CIAL,
Plaintiff.
v*.
K E ITH MIZE LL E , el al,
Defendant!!)
N O TICE OF SALE
Notice It hereby given lhat,
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgmtnt ol Foreclosure dated
June 7, iff}, antered In Civil
Co m Number f ) oassCA-u L, In
the Circuit Court lor SEMI
HO LE County, Florida, wherein
F IR S TA TE FIN AN C IAL Is Ihe
P le ln llf t , end K E IT H
M IZ E L L E , et al., are the O*
fendants, t will Mil Ih* property
situated In SEM INOLE Counly,
Florida, described at;
Let 50. D E ER RUN, Unit fA,
according to Ih* plat Ihereof a*
recorded in Plat Book 71, Peges
14 and IS. Public Records ol
Seminole Counly, Florida,
at public tele, to Ih* highest end
best bidder, lor cath. at the west
Irani door of the Seminole
County CourlhouM. Sentord,
Florida, at 11:00 A M on the
llfhdayof July, Iff).
Dated: June*. Iff]
Maryann# Morse
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT CO U R T
By: OorottiyW. Belton
Publish: June I), 70, I f f ]
DEF-114

IN T H B C IR C U IT CO URT
OF T N I ISTH JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D F O R
f E M IN O L I CO U N TY,
FLO R IO A
O IN E R A L JU R ISD IC TIO N
DIVISION
CASE NO. «0730 CA 14 K
FLO R IO A BAR NO. 7»f401
TH E D IM E SAVINGS BANK
OF N EW YORK, FSB,
Piainlilt.
RONALD B. BROWNE and
BARBARA A. BROWNE,
his wile; elal..
Defendants
N O TIC E OF ACTIO N
TO : E R N E S TIN E PRICE and
LOUISE FORO and any un
known hairs, assignees, gran­
tees, Ifenort. creditors, trustees,
or other claimants by, through,
under or against them end all
unknown parties claiming to
have any right, title or interest
In the property herelnattar de­
scribed.
Defendants
Last Known Residence
Address:
l)l7WlnewoodOrlv*
Tallahassee. Florida
PraMnt Residence Address
Unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTI
F IE D that an action lo toraclOM
a Mortgage on tho following
property located In Seminole
County, Florida:
Lot 4. Block B, W ASHINGTON
OAKS, S E C TIO N TW O, according lo the Plal lhareol at
recorded In Piet Book It, Pages
U 17, Public Records ol Semi
not*Counly,
Hy. Florida.
has been (lied egelnst
it you and
you
are required
lo
a copy
to Mrve
i reqc
______
____*d___
ol your wrlltan detenMt, I) any.
fo It on Ih# LAW O FFIC ES OF
W IL L IA M P. M cCAUO HAN.
P la ln tlll'* e tlo u e y , whose
address It World Trod* Center.
Suit* *2M7. 10 S.W Eighth
StrMl. Miami, Florida 111)0. on
or before July X , Iff), and (II*
Ih* original wllh ihe Clerk ol
Ihlt Court, either before service
on Plalnllll’t altorney or Imme
dlalely thereafter; otherwise a
Default will be entered agalnsl
you tor lha relief demanded In
Ihe Complaint or Petition
T H I S N O T I C E shall be
published once each weak tor
lour consecutive wteks In the
legal pa par ol publication.
W ITNESS my hand and tha
Seal ol Ihlt Court on this lath
day ol June. Iff]
(C O U R TS E A L)
Clerk ol Ihe Court
By: Heather Brooke
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 70. 77 A July 4, II,
Iff]
D EF 177

IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number M-4*l-CP
IN R E: E S TA TE OF
B E T T Y A .H IL L M A N
Deceased
N O TICE TO C R E D ITO R S
I Summary Administration)
TO 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 E A B O V E
E S TA T E :
You art hereby nodded Ihet
an Ordar ol Summary Ad
ministration has been entered In
lha estate ol B E T T Y A .
H IL L M A N , daceesad. File
Number fl-4 0 1 -C P , by Ihe
Circuit C o irt tor Seminole
County, Florida, Probate Divi­
sion, Ih* address ot which Is
Post Office Drawer C. Sentord.
Florida 11771,- lhal Ih* total cash
value el the estate It SIf .00000
and that Ihe nam es end
eddretMt et Ihota to whom It
hat been assigned by such order
•re i
Belly A. Hillman, 7ff Cornelia
Court,Orlando, FL 37111
A L L IN T E R E S T E D P E R SONSARE N O T IF IE D T H A T :
All creditors ol the decedent
and other parsons having claims
or damandt against decadanl't
•stale on whom • copy ol this
nolle* It Mrved wllhln three
months alter the date ot Ihe tint
publication ol this nolle# mutl
(lie ihetr claims with this Court
W IT H I N T H E L A T E R OP
T H R E E MONTHS A F T E R TH E
D A TE OF T H E FIR ST P U B LI­
CATIO N OF THIS NO TICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A F T E R THE
D A TE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NO TICE ON
TH E M
All other creditors ol the
decedent and parsons having
claims or demands against lha
estele ot the decedent must tile
their claims wllh Ihlt court
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
A F T E R TH E O ATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NO TICE.
A L L C L A IM S A N D D E ­
MANDS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO R EV ER BARRED.
The date ot Ihe first publlca
Hon ol this Notice It June 70.
Iff}.
MACK N. C LE V E LA N D , JR.
Attorney lor Petitioner
Florida Bar No. 0141)1.
70* No. Oak Avenue
Sentord. FL 77771
Telephone: &lt;407)172 1114
Publish: June70,17. Iff]
DEF-141

Legal Notices
IN T H B C IR C U IT COURT
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. i f ) 05tl-CA't*'L
B E N E F IC IA L SAVINGS BANK,
FSB,
Plalntlll,
v*.
RAMON RODRIGUEZ: L E V IE
M O R TG AG E, INC. AND
S H IR LE Y B ER LIN ,
Defendants
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgment ol Foreclosure
dated June 4, Iff], In CaM No.:
*10SI) CA 14 L the Circuit Court
In and lor Samlnola County,
Florida In which B E N E F IC IA L
SAVINGS BANK, FSB. It tha
P l a i n t i f f , and R A M O N
RODRIQUEZ, E T AL.. are the
Defendants, I will Mil to Ihe
highest and best bidder for cash
at 11:00 AM on lha IJth day ol
July. If f ] at the West Front
Steps ol the Seminole Counly
CourlhouM, Ml N Park Ave.,
Sanford, Florida, tha following
described raal proparty at Ml
forth In tho Summary Final
Judgement ol Foreclosure:
Lot 4, Block F. NORMANDY
A D D IT IO N TO C A S S EL
B ER R Y, according la lha Plal
lhareol at racordad In Plat Book
7, Pages 4f — 50, Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida.
D A TE D THIS 10th day ot
June, Iff).
M AR YA N N E MORSE
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT COURT
B Y: Dorothy W Bollon
Deputy Cltrk
Publlih: June 70.17. Iff)
OEF-154
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T OF TH E IIT H JU D IC IAL
CIRCUIT, IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLO RID A.
CASE NO, tl-llU -C A -le -L
FIRST FE D E R A L SAVINGS
BANK, formerly known as First
Federal Savings A Laon
Assoc latlon ol Monatsen. PA.,
Plalntlll
vt.
IV A N L . K IM P LIN O .alal.,
Delendanli
N O TICE OF
FOR ECLO SURE SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
pursuant lo a Summary Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure dated
June 4, Iff), and entered In Case
No. f l l l i a C A 14-L ol tha
Circuit Court of lha I IT H
Judicial Circuit In and lor SEM
I N O L E C o u n ly , F lo r id a ,
wharaln F IR S T F E D E R A L
S A V IN G S B A N K , form erly
known as First Federal Savings
• Loan Association ot Mo
netMn, PA.. Plalntlll, and IVAN
L. K IM P L IN G , at al., era
delendanli, I will Mil to lha
hlghait bidder lor cash al lha
Was! Front Door ol tha Samlnola
County Courthousa. S a n f o r d
Florida, at tha hour ot II 00
a.m., on tha 15th day ol July,
Iff), lha following described
property as Mt forth In said
Summary Final Judgment, lo
wit:
Lot 5, less the North 17 tael
thereof, and all ol Lot 4, and tha
North 7 faat ol Lot 7, Block It.
SUBURBAN HOM ES SECTION
7, according le tha plat lhareol
as racordad In Plal Book 5, Pag*
*1, ot the Public Racords ol
SamlnolaCounly, Florida.
D A TE D this 7th day ol June,
Iff).
Maryann* Mori*
Clark Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W Bollon
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 70, 27. Iff)
D E F 153
I n t h e c i r c u T t COURT,
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. *1-751-CA-H-K
ER N IE BAU M EISTER.
Plaintiff,
V*.

BRUCE A G LASP EY.atal..
Delendanli
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO TH E D E F E N D A N T :
D E B O R A H L HILL
addreit unknown
Iasi known addrass:
7)5 S. Maitland Avanua.
Sla. 105
Maitland. FL 37731
YOU ARE H E R E B Y NOTI
F IE D that a Complaint to lore
class a mortgage on Ihe follow
log property situate In Seminole
Counly, Florida, lowll:
Lol 7, Block C, FLAM INGO
SPRINGS, according lo lha Plat
lharaol a* racordad In Plat Book
I. Page 71, Public Records ot
Seminole County. Florida
ALSO: Begin al tha Southwell
corner ol Lot 7 In Block C ot
FLAM INGO SPRINGS. Semi
nole County, Florida, according
lo tha Plat lhareol recorded In
Plal Book I. Pag* 77. Public
Rtcordt ot Samlnola Counly,
Florida, run Northwesterly lo
Ihe Northwesterly line ot Lol 4.
ot 4*ld Flamingo Springs. In
tarsecllng al a point 10 II.
Southwesterly ol lha Northwesl
corntr ol Mid Lot 7, run thanee
Norlhtatlarly a distance of 10II
to the Norlhwbst corner ol said
Lol 7, run Ihance Southeasterly
a distance ot 144 II.. along Ihe
Southwesterly line ol said Lol 7,
10 tho point ol baginning (Being
a wedge shaped parcel ol Lol a,
ol u ld Flamingo Springs)
has batn Iliad against DE
BORAH L. H ILL, D C., and you
are required lo Mrve e copy of
your written detenus. II any, lo
11 on FRANK C. WHIGHAM, ot
S TE N S TR O M . M d N TO S H .
JU L IA N , C O LB ER T.
W HIOHAM 1 SIMMONS. P.A.,
P. O. BOX 4141, Sin lord. Florida
77771-4141, on or batore lha tflh
day ot July, A. O. Iff), and III*
Ihe original wllh lha Clerk ot
Ihls Courl either belore lervlce
on Plalnlltf or Immediately
therealtar; otherwise a default
will be entered against you lor
lha rellal demanded In the
Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and Ihe
m #I ol this court on June f.
A D.. Iff)
M AR YANNE MORSE
C LE R K O F THE
C IR C U IT C O U R T'
By Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June I), 10. 71 A July 4.
Iff)
D EF 104
LE G A L N O TICE
“
The School Board ol Seminole
Counly Is accepting Requests
to r P ro p o s a l to p ro v ld a
Employe* Assistance Program
Sarvlcas. Contact Richard
W alls, Ekacullva Director.
S u p p o rt S a rv lc a s . I l l )
Mallonvllla Avenua, Sentord
)777l J77 125), E ll 155
Publish: June II. 10. 71. 71. 71.
74. 25. 77, 21. If, Iff)
DF.F 115

Legal Notices
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E IIT H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. t l 14)0 CA ML
G R E A T W ES TER N HANK, n
Federal Savings Bank, l/k'a
G R E A T W ES TFR N SAVINGS,
a Federal Savings A I nan Also
elation.
Plalntlll,
v*
RICHARD E. G U LLIN G TO N ;
SHATAUKA A B U LLIN G 7 0N ;
LA U R A KORNICK WILSON;
and JOHN DOE, Unknown Ta
nanl In Posiesilon,
Delendanli
N O T IC E O F SALE
Notice Is hertby given lhat
pursuant lo Ihe Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure and sale entered
In Ihe cause pending In Ihe
Circuit Court in and lor Semi­
nole County, Florida, being Civil
Number *7 U X CA I4L. Ihe
undersigned Clerk will sell Ihe
properly situated In Seminole
Counly. Florida, described as
Lol 14. FIR ST R E P L A T OF
HIG H LAN D HILLS, according
lo the Plat thereof, as recorded
In Plal Book 2f. Page 7 of Ihe
Public Records ol Seminole
County. Florida.
al public sale, lo Ihe highest
bidder tor cxili at 11:00 o'clock
a rn. on Ihe 17lh day of July,
Iff), al Ihe W rit tronl door ol
Ihe Seminole Counly Court
houM. Sanford. Florida
D A TE D this 7lh day ol June.
Iff)
(S E A L)
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court
By: Dorolhy W. Bollon
Oepuly Clerk
Publish: June 70.77. Iff)
D E F 154
____
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
FLO R IO A
C IV IL ACTION
CASE N O .f) I1ICA
DIVISION MK
A LLIAN C E M OR TG AG E
COMPANY.
Plalnllll,

vs
W ILLIAM A CRIM . at al,
Delendanllt)
NO TICE OF ACTION
TO : NELSONS. ZAMLER
LAST KNOWN R ESID EN C E:
UNKNOWN
C U R R E N T R ESID EN CE:
UNKNOWN
and It Defendant Is deceased,
his/her respective unknown
h e irs, devisees, grantees,
assignees, creditors, lienors and
trustees, and all other persons
claiming by, through, under or
agalnsl Ihe named Delendanl,
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D lhal an
adlon lo foreclose a mortgage
on lire following properly In
SEMINOLE Counly, Florida
LO T 74. OAKLAN D VILLAG E
SECTION TWO. ACCORDING
TO THE P LA T TH E R E O F AS
RECO RD ED IN PLAT BOOK
24. PAGES 27 AND 75. OF TH E
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI
NOLE CO U N TY. FLORIDA
T O G E T H E R W IT H T H E
F O L L O W IN G D E S C R IB E D
PERSONAL P R O P E R TY :
R AN G E-OVEN . R EF R IG ER A
TO R, D ISH W A SH ER ,
G AR BAG E DISPOSAL, V E N T
F A N , W M LL TO W A L L
CAR PET
has been tlled^ejemsl you and
you ara reqtArrAff® &lt;kf i* a copy
ol your wrlltan defenses. II any.
lo It on Michael J. Echevarria.
P.A., Plalnllll'! attorney, whose
address Is 401 Oayshor* Houle
yard, Sulla 7)0. Tampa. Florida
1)404. on or balora July 10, Iff),
and III* Ihe original wllh this
Courl either belore service on
PlalnllN't altorney or immedl
atnly thereafter, otherwise a
ilelaull will lie entered agalnsl
you for lire relief demanded In
the Complaint or petition
This notice shall tie published
once each week lor lour consec
ullve weeks In lha Sanford
Herald
W ITNESS my hand and the
seal ol this Coorl on this I4lh
day of June. Iff)
(S E A L)
Clerk ol the Courl
By: Heather Brooke
As Deputy Clerk
Publish Junq 70. V • July 4. 11.
Iff)
OEF 174
IH TH E C IR C U IT COURT
OF THE E IG H TE E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEMINOLE CO U N TY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO. f ) OSIOCA
DIVISION MK
RYL AND M ORT GAGE
COMPANY.
Plalnllll.

v*.
EDW ARD J G R IF FIN , elal.
Defendant!*)
N O TIC E O F ACTION
TO JASANOCORPORATION
LAST KNOWN R ESID EN C E:
c/o Waller Gould. R A.
117 Hrnnllty Ave
Winter Springs. FL )7f04
CUR REN T R ESIDENCE
UNKNOWN
arid II Delendanl Is deceased,
his/her respective .unknown
hairs, devisees, grantees,
assignees, creditors, lienors and
trustees, and all other persons
claiming by, through, under or
against the named Defendant.
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action lo foreclose a mortgage
on Ihe following properly In
SEMINOLE Counly. Florida:
Lot Sf, Bear Creek, according
lo Ihe plal Ihei eot as recorded In
Plat Book 11, Pages )4 and S),
Public Records ol Seminole
Counly, Florida
Together wllh Ihe following
described personal property
Hinge'Oven. Venl Fan, Dlspos
al, Ollhwaiher. Smoke Oe
lector,Carpel. Refrigerator
has been Hied agalnsl you and
you are required lo serve a copy
Ol your written deleruel, It any.
to It on Michael J Echevarria,
P A , Plalnllll'* attorney, whose
address Is 401 (leyshore Houle
yard. Suite 7)0. tarnpa. Florida
J1404. on or belore July 10. Iff),
and III* Hie original wllh Ihls
Court either belore service on
Plalnllll'! attorney or Immedl
alely Iherealler. oilier wise a
default will be entered agalnit
you lor the rebel demanded In
the Complain! or petition.
This nolle* shall be published
once each week lor lour consec
ullve weeks In lha Santord
Herald
W ITNESS rny hand and Ihe
seal ol Ihls Cocrrt on Ihls 14th
day ol June. Iff)
(S E A L)
Clerk ol Ihe Court
By: Heather llrooke
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: June W. 77 &amp; July 4. II
Iff]
D E F 171

�• •

i

Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Sunday. Juno 20, 1993 - 1 1 1

1 M - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday. June 20, 1993

Logal N o tlc ts

Ltg al Notices

IN TM 1 C IR C U IT CO URT
OF T H I1 IT M JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT O F FLO R ID A ,
IN A N O F O R
I I M IN O L IC O U N T Y
C A I1 NOi 41-MM-OR-ai-B
In rath# marriage of
W IL L IA M L . M EE K S
Paflllonar,

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO URT
OF T H E 10TH JU D IC IA L
C IR C UIT IN A N O F O R
SEM INOLE C O U N TY,
FLO R ID A
O EN BR AL JU R ISD IC TIO N
OIVISION
CASE NO. i 41041* CAI4K
C ITIB A N K . F E D E R A L
SAVI NOS BANK, an attoclatlon
organliad and editing under lha
law* of th* United Stale* ot
America, formerly known at
CITIC O R P SAVINOSOF
FLORIDA, a Federal Saving*
and Loan Attoclatlon,
Plaintiff.
vt.
AR THUR W ILLIAM
MARSHALL, hit unknown
tpouMandall unknown halrt.
daviteat. grant***, attlgnaat.
legatee*. Ilanholdart. creditor*.
Irutteet or otharwlM. claiming
by. through, under or again*!
AR THUR W ILLIAM
M ARSHALL: BLAZER
FIN AN CIAL SERVICES. INC.
OF FLORIOA. d/b/a G R E A T
W ESTER N FIN ANCIAL
SERVICES. IN C .O F
FLO RIDA : U N IT E D STATES
OF AM ERICA: and STATE OF
FLO R ID A D E P A R TM E N T
OF R EV E N U E .
Defendant!
NO TICE OF ACTION
TO : ARTHUR W ILLIAM
M A R S H A L L , ratldanc* un
known. If alive, and If dead, to
all partlat claiming Inlarattt by.
through, under or again*! th*
t a ld A R T H U R W I L L I A M
M A R S H A L L , and all other
peril** having or claiming to
have any right, title or Inter**!
In th* property herein datcrlbad.
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D , that
an action to Iover lot# a mort
gag* on th* following detcrlbed
property In Samlnol* County,
Florida:
Lot 2. Block 41. TOW NSITE
OF NORTH C H U LU O TA FIRST
ADD ITIO N , according lo th*
Plat thereof, at recorded In Plat
Book tl. Pag* 4. Public Record*
of Samlnol*County. Florida
hat baan Iliad agalnit you and
you ar* raqulrad to *#rv* a copy
of your written detan***, II any,
to It on K E ITH . MACK. LEWIS.
COHEN A LUM PK IN . Plain
tiff'* attorney*, who** addrat*
It 700 South Bliceyn* Boul*
vard. Twentieth Floor, Miami.
Florida 11111. on or before July
72nd, Ittl. and III* th* original
with th* Clark ot Ihlt Court
either bator* tarvlco on Plain­
tiff'* attorney* or Immadlataly
tharaaltar: otharwlM. a default
will b* antarad agalnit you lor
the rallaf damandad In tha
Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and teal
of thl* Court on June I*. Ittl
(S E A L)
M AR YANNE MORSE
Clark of th* Court
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
Publlth: Juna 20. 77 A July 4. II,
Ittl
OEF-171

B E T T Y A L IE N M EEK S
R#*pond#nf.
N O TIC E OF A C TIO N
TO : B E TTY ALLEN M EEKS
YO U ARE N O T IF IE D ItMl an
action tor Dltm lullon ot Mar
rlago ha* boon Iliad again*! you
and you ar* required to tarv* a
copy of your wrltfon dafan*a», If
any. lo II on W ILL IA M L.
M E E K S , whota addrat* I* 7*00
IN D E P E N D E N C E A V E .,
O V IE D O . FL 7774J, oner before
Juno 7f , if fj, and Ilia lha
original with tha Clark of Hilt
court alfhar bafora *arvlca on
p a tltlo n o r or Im m adlataly
thereafter: otherwise a dafaull
will bo antarad agalnit you lor
the rallaf damandad In lha
complaint or patltlon.
D A TE D on May IS. 1443
M AR YA N N E MORSE
A* Clark of tha Court
BY JoycaClacklay
A t Daputy Clark
Publish: May 10 A Juna 0. II. 20.
If f ]
OSEM I
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T OF
T H E IM h JU O IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F FLO R ID A , IN AND FOR
Seminal* CO UNTY
CASE NOi fS-IISB-OR-tl-B
In r* tha marrlaga ot Batty L.
Hatkln Patillonar.
and
Marvin D. Hatkln Retpondenl
N O TIC E O F ACTION
T O : Marvin O. Hatkln
addrat* unknown
Y O U ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action for Dltiolutlon ot Mar­
riage hat boon Iliad egalntt you
and you ar* required lo tarv* a
copy of your written dafantat. II
any, to It on Baity L. Hatkln.
wttota addrat* It fie Salt Pond
Place #101 Altamonte Spgt
» 7 U , on or bator* July I. Itfl.
and III* tha original with th*
Clark ot thl* court either bator*
torvlc* on pallllonaf or Immedl
atoly tharaaftari otharwlt* a
default will b* antarad agalnit
you tor th* rallaf damandad In
th* complaint or patltlon.
D A TE D e n June]. IttJ.
M AR YA N N S MORSE
A t Clark of th* Court
By: Nancy R. Winter
A t Deputy Clark
Publlth: June*. II. 10.11. Ittl
OBF-S1
I N T H I C IR C UIT COURT
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N O F O R
SEM INOLE CO UNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASENO.t!-!lte-CA14L
O E S TIN Y SPRINGS CONDO
M IN IU M ASSOCIATION. INC.,
a not lor profit Florida corpora
lion.
Plaintiff.

N O TICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that we
ar* engaged In builnatt al 120
State Road alt. Winter Spring*.
F L 127M. Samlnol* County,
Florida, under th* Fictitious
Nam* of HUB E N TER PR ISES,
and that we Intend to regular
M id name with th* Secretary of
Slat*. Tallthati#*. Florida. In
accordance with th* provltlont
ot th* Flctltlou* Nam* Statute.
To Wit: Section MJ Of. Florida
Statulai If 17.
Brian Clin*
Tim Shea
Publlth: June 20. Ittl
D EF-II7

SANJAY TANDON, at aI .
Oafandanli.
N O TICE O F SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
that on th* tlth day ot July, if f)
at 11:00 a m. at tha Watt from
door of tha Caurthouta In SEM ­
IN O LE County, al Sanford.
Florida, th* undartlgnad Clark
will otter tor tala th* tallowing
datcrlbad real proparty:
T H A T C E R T A IN CONDO
M IN IU M PARCEL KNOWN AS
U N IT (ISA, D E S T IN Y
SPRINOS. A CONDOMINIUM .
ANO AN U N D IV ID E D .001111
IN T E R E S T IN T H E LAND.
COMMON E L E M E N T S AND
COMM ON EX P E N S ES A P ­
P U R TE N A N T TO SAID U N IT.
A L L IN ACCORDANCE W ITH
AND S U B JE C T TO TH E COV
ENANTS. CONDITIONS. RE
S TR IC TIO N S . T E R M S AND
O TH E R PROVISIONS OF TH E
D E C LA R A TIO N OF CONDO
M IN IU M OF D E S T IN Y
SPRINOS. A CONDOMINIUM .
AS R EC O R D ED IN O.R. BOOK
t i l l , P A O E 10*0, AS
A M E N D E D IN O R. BOOK 1140.
P A G E loaf, A L L O F T H E
P U B LIC RECORDS OF SE M I­
N O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
AND W ITH T H E FOLLOW ING
S T R E E T A D D R E S S : 444 D
LA K E O E S TIN Y ROAO. A L ­
T A M O N TE SPRINOS. FL 12714.
together with all tlruclurat.
Improvement*, datura*, appli­
ance*. and appurtenance* on
u ld land or utad In con|unctlon

NO TICE OF PUBLIC AUCTIO N
Nolle* It hereby given TrlCounty Towing will Mil al public
auction lor Ml vega lor cath on
demand lo hlghatt bidder, th*
lollowing detcrlbed vehicle*:
iteaBuIck Regal
VINllGA4J47A0EH4tll*0
I t i l Honda Civic
VINIJHMST1411BS01G47I
li f t Ford Aerotlar Van
VINIlFM CA1IUIKA717tl
If7* Ford LTD4dr
VIN &lt;7B01SIS)f 72
IN I Caddy Eldorado 2dr
VINllG4ALJ7t0BE*4WJ4
I tea Maid# P/U Truck
VINIJM2UF11Z44MI017
IN I Honda Civic
VIN# JHMST1411BS01G47I
If77 Ford P/U Truck
VIN IF2SBNY2M7I
Th* auction will b* held ON:
July 14. IttJ A T : 2 PM A T:
T R IC O U N T Y TOW INO. 111!
B ELLE AVE., W INTER
S P R IN O S . F L 12701. Protpacllva bidder* may Impact
vahlclat on* hour prior to Ml*.
Term* ar* cath or certified
fundi. T R IC O U N T Y TOWING
rat«rv*i th* rlghl lo accept or
r*|*ctany and all bid*
Publlth: June 20. Ittl
O E F -IIJ

Tha a foretold tale will b*
mad* purtuanl to a Summary
Final Judgment entered In Civil
No. *1 M M C A U L ponding In th*
Circuit Court of lha E IG H
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit In and
tor SEM INOLE County. Florida
D A T E D thlt Ith day of Juno,
im .
M A R YA N N E MORSE
C L B R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clark
Publlth; June II. 70.1443
OEF-113______________________
UNCLAIM ED
V E H IC L E AUCTIO N
Removal of lha below da
tcrlbed vehicle* wat conducted
In compliance with FS 71S.07.
Notice that Butch'i Chevron A
Wrecker Service Inc. will tall
M id vahlclat at Public Auction
far cath on July I. It t l at 10:00
a m . at 2107 W. Itl Street.
Sanford. Florida. W* reterve
the right lo withdraw Mid
vahlclat from Public Auction,
tttt Plym Van
ID#JPJBOJ4VXKZOIOJ41
ItM T o y tlD
ID# AL10I42CJ4
IttO Honda Civic
ID
flH0E044S7LHSIlltl
Vahlclat may b* viewed on*
hour prior to Ml*. Sal* baglnt al
10a.m.
Publlth: June 10. Ittl
DEF-177

NO TICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION
Nolle* It hereby given: Mc­
Connell Towing will Mil at
Public Auction for Mlvag* lor
cath on demand lo hlghatt
bidder th* following datcrlbad
vahlclat
7-tS-tl
74 Chevy
lY ttU iW llltao
7-tt-tl
74 Data
HLB210*tt044
41 Ford
IPABP27X4PK1M77
17 Maid*
JMIGC22I7HIIU440
7-20-tl
77 Marc
7AtlH114421
Th* Auction will b* held al
12:00 pm on Mid data* above.
McConnell Towing A Recovery,
2400 Sanlord Av*., Sanlord. Fla.
11771 Protpactlv* bidder* may
Impact vahlclat on* hour prior
to Ml*. Term* ar* cath or
certified fund*. McConnell
Towing raMrvat th* rlghl lo
accept or r*|*ct any and all
bldt.
Publlth: June 20. Ittl
DIF-114

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram* ere creeled from quotation* by lentous
people, peel and preeanl
lech tetter n the cipher atanda lor
another redey e ckr* O equare V

• O
a

f t

K D O F L 8
u n

K V I A I M
I U M C I I
P T a F V C Q

o

f d

TE
a

D
t k

OV
A P T W M J T 8 Q F
DU

O U k i a P L O T A . ’

—

71—H«lp Wanted

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIEDDEPT.
HOURS
•:00 A.M.-8:30PM.
MONDAY thru
FWOAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

Chrlttma* Around Dm World
now hiring. Fra* 1100 lamp)*
kit. No Inv*tlm*n1. Alt*
booking p * rll* i. 114 Iraa
merchandise and moral
*4712*4)21

Sub confractari, paid p*r
ton*. Alta l i p . fnttaltart.
Good M 404-744-2114
I T ! EASY - WORK TO D A Y ,
O B T RAID TO D A Y 1 SPRINT
STAR RIN O ................. m » U

LIAO TEACHER

HOUSECLEANERS
A ) hour*, A-1 payl N# night*
or W4*k-*ndt. Car n**d*d. fl
Company, Merry M «ldt
2111411

For fhr** y r old*. Ixportanc*
raqulrad. 1217441 IO C
M ID IC JtL

LPN

Industrial WortiofB

Full lima, 71 and 117 Charg*
Nuria pealllon*. Exparlenca in
tang tarm car* highly da•iraable. Drug fraa work
p la c a . C a a fa cti D a ba ry
Maaar, 4* N. Hwy 17-42, D r
bary, F l SS71S. 44B44M

W trehout*. •it#m bly and
packing lob* avallabl*. W*
•re looking tar ilrong, d**n
cul pMpta
apply naw. Call
today for Information: Q TC
Temporary S*rvk*4 4H-1IH

ScheAing may Include Herald AdvertHec at *ie coat of an addMonal day.
Cancel when you gal ratufft Pay only kx day* your ad rune at rat* earned
Uta M deecnpton for faetaal ia*uNt Copy muat toaow acceptable typo-,
grephtcel form. -CommerctrU frequency ratea are aveiabt*

ta

DEADUNEB
Tueeday Pw Friday 12 Noon Tha Day Before PubaceBon
Sunday And Monday B:30 P M. Friday

I

N B LP W A N T ID . OOOD
WORKERS Report 1:30 AM
Comer of Park Or and 17 t l
or call » t 7445
A D D T O YOUR INCOME
S I L L AVON NOWI
C A L L 2210414 t r i l l 4121
AOENTS-AVON. Earn to J0%.
No doer/door. Gutranlaad
•0% discount* S e n d im 7 )W

ACCNTS-RCAL ESTATE!
Nothing succeeds Ilk# tuccett.
We're well Into our 3rd decode
of training tuceettlul egenlt.
NollcemeT............W t’llhilpl
W ATSON R E A L TY C O R P
R EALTORS___________ 1 » » M *

Alt Cbr BWor Iii i tmtaltefs
For retldenllal change out*.
Hiring now. Eaperlencedonly.
l ll A llJ g r 1210104

Solid Inlernallonal comp, with
growing monthly Ml#* teak*
f/t, p/f art* rept. Upward
mobility, benolll* available.
Call Tern ter appl. 1211144
ASSEM BLERS - Hand mall
work. *5 per hour. Never a
(eel Help Persennel, *14 4704

Anhtint Malniiflanct Pifion
Needed lo r La ke M a ry
aparlmanl community. Mutt
have electrical and A/C aap.
Apply at: SI Crola Apartmanlt. 711 Sacral Harbor
Lent, Lake M ary........ I l l 7101
A U T O A U C T IO N D R IV E R
N B E O E D . Mutt have valid
driven Meant* and be able lo
drive »llck 14.7J/hr.
Sprint Stolllng, W - 2411

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C UIT
IN A N O F O R
SEM INO LE CO UN TY,
FLORIOA.
CASE NO. tl-2tS4-CA-14-K
R E S O LU TIO N T R U S T CO R ­
PORATION. at Racalvar lor
F IR S T F E D E R A L SAVINOS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
SEMINOLE C O U N TY . F A.
Planum.
vl.
OVIEDO DEVELOPM ENT
CORPORATION, a Florida Cor
porallon, R O O N EY G R E EN ,
and JU D IT H A G R E E N , hit
wile:
Deltndanlt
N O TICE OF SALE
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that purtuanl to Final Judgment
of Foreclotur* rendered on Iho
III day ol June. Itfl. In lhal
certain caut# pending In lha
Circuit Court In and for Sami
nol* County. Florida, wharaln
R E S O LU TIO N T R U S T C O R ­
PORATION. at Racalvar for
FIR S T F E D E R A L SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
SEMINOLE C O U N TY. F A . It
Plalnllff and wherein OVIEDO
D E V E L O P M E N T CORPORA
TION. a Florida corporation:
ROONEY G R E EN and JU D IT H
A G R E EN , hit wll*. ar* Oalen
danlt. In C ivil Action No
47 1114 CA U K
I. M A R Y A N N E M O R S E ,
Clerk of Ih* aloretald Circuit
Court, will at 11:00 a m . on July
II. Ittl. oiler lor tala and tall lo
tha hlghatl bidder for cath on
Ih* Wall Iron! tltp t ol Ih*
Courlhout* al Sanlord. Samlnol*
County, Florida, Ih* following
detcrlbed properly, tllualed and
being In Seminole County. Flor
Ida. lo wit:
Th* Northeait U ot th*
Northwett U ol Ih* Norlheatl U
ol Section 7f, Townthlp II South,
Rang* 11 Eait, and that pari ol
th* Southaail U ol Ih* Southwet I 14 of th* South***! W ol
Section 11. Tgwnthlp I I South.
Rang* 22 E4*t, lying North ot
Center Street, East oi Avenue O
end South ol Filth Street. Semi
nol* County! Florid* Containing
10 411 acre* more or lait....
Said Ml* will b* mad* purtu
anl lo and In order lo talltly th*
larm iol Mid Final Judgment
M AR YANNE MORSE
C LER K OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
By: Jan* E. Jatewlc
Deputy Clark
Publlth June 11, 20, Ittl
D E F 114
IN TH E CIRCUIT C O U R T'
E IG H TE E N TH JU D IC IA L
C IR C UIT IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE CO UNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: t l 2141-DR 01 P
IN R E: TH E M A TTE R OF
A D O P TIO N O F
KAM ERON E. SILER HUGHES
NOTICE OF ADOPTION
TO : G UY HUGHES
Addrat* Unknown
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that a
Petition lor Adoption lor your
minor child wat Iliad In Sanford.
Samlnol* County, Florida, by
Leoma B Howell and you ar*
raqulrad to tarve a copy of your
written dafantat. II any, to If on
LEOM A B HOW ELL, whot*
addrat* It 2400 MIOWAY AVE..
SANFORO. F LO R ID A 22771,
and Ml* Ih* original with Ih*
clerk ol Ih* above court on or
balor* July 14. Ittl: otharwlt* a
ludgmanl may b* entered
agalntl you lor Ih* rallaf d*
mandtd In (hit Petition
D A TE D on June II, Ittl
M AR YANNE MORSE
ASC LER K O FTH EC O U R T
BY Joyce Cleckley
ASOEPUTYCLERK
Publlth: June I], 20. 77 A July 4.
Ittl
DEF 174
N O TICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It hereby g &lt;»n that I
am engaged In butlnett at t il
SR 414 N.. Sulla 1101. Altamonte
Spring*. Seminole County. Flor­
id*. under Ih* Flctltlou* Nam*
ol C E N TR A L FL LACROSSE
CAMP, and that I Inland lo
rtgltlar Mid name with Ih*
Secretary ol Slat*. Tallahatte*.
Florida, In accordance with Ih*
Rrovltlont ol th* Flctltlou*
am* Statute, To Wll: Section
145 Ot, Florida Statute* if 17
U N IT E D SERVICES
IN T'L . INC.
Robert Kenny
Publlth: June20. Ittl
DEF-lfO

M uil have Long form Car*
experience or oxptrlonc*
working with garlatrlci In an
acute car* Mtllng. Salary
lined upon axp. Drug Iraa
workplace. Conlacl DaBary
Manor. (407 ) 4M 4424, M N.
Hwy 17 42 DaBary FI 11711

TRY ACHANGE OF PACE
0y lolnlng VNA and hike a
new direction In your future.
We bring our help and our
heart* lo our pollenl*' home*
Oultlanding opporlunllle* lo
y&gt;ork Independently ere avail
ebl* to Individual* commuted
lo providing quality care. We
offer an attractive salary and
excellent benefit* Your Indl
vldual attention and com
pattlon can really make a
difference In Ihe following
.potlllont:

Part lima, experienced. Apply
In per ton: Pal Groomary IIM
C El team Blvd, Delian*

ELECTRONIC TECH
Will train. 407 47* 4101
Ralundablt Fee_____________
O EN ER A L

W ill TRAIN
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
S350-S450

You will a»*lll our homecare
£plltnt» varlout houteke«plng
r in d rtla'ed ocMvIlle*. Potlfion
J-)*quir*» ollentlo to detail* and
‘1jjoofl communication tklll*.

Wholatal* warahout* MlaclIng up lo 40 p o llllo n i.
Warehoui e management,
marketing tale*. Start today I
Nooxperlenco required.
Coll LIm 1141*11

$

645-5371, l i t 341
:;:jS0O) 456-9420, Ext. 346

£

2 1 - P tr s o rials

Ham n Egg Deli
NOW OPEN

VNA

Need* 2nd Shill Exp. Dali
Ptrion. Full Mm*, pay bated
on oxporlanc*. Apply Amrnoco. SI. Rd. 44*1 I 4.

M/F/D

ADOPTIONS
Free medical care, Irantportallon, counMtlng, private
doctor plut living eipenMt.
Bar &lt;117511 Call Atterney Jehu
Frlcker............... 1444-477-1444
ENOLISH Family looking lor
Am orlcon "O o d p o ro n t* .”
Pleat* writ* to: Mr. It Mr*.
David Llnat. 42 Ulveracroft
Rd.. Chaaylatmor*. Coventry,
CV11EZ. E nqlend___________

,

Pool
Basketball
Playground
1A i r C on ditionin g

P a p e r H a n g in g

* * BATON C L A S S **
Indlv. A Group lattont avail.
For Into: 114 2*17. Glngtr
Wright. Director ot tho Hurrlcanet, 42 Stole Champion*

FLO RIO A S TA TE M Q U IR B S
oil contractor* b# roglttored
or corllflad. To vorlty a tl*»#
c o n l r a d o r t llc o n i* ca ll
I 400 343 7440. Occupational
Llcantat ar# required by th#
county ond can b* verified by
celling M l 1120. exl. 7*17

“^ - N u r s t r y A
Child C a rt
ABC SM ALL D AYCAR E Bablot
and loddlort. 7 hoi moelt.
Excellentrot*. Deo. 223 0114
CH ILD CARE
Loko Mary
Blvd A 17 42 'Exp. W/Oll
age*. 'Fenced yd. ' Planned
AcllvIMat Partonal car* and
a lltn llo n lor your child.
22A4774.............................Ktlly

-------&gt; &lt; l d l i U . i —
R «m o d .lln f l

—
I l IV t r ic ia h - Retldenllal or Commercial
IER00II4O4......................n f 420*
m a s te r
ELECTR ICIAN
Llc’d/ln*. 74 hr*. Pair pricwl
R oft.lE R O 1™ ' " .......ttf-4471

Floor-Tug
H A k o w 6 o b p l.^ liN O

Imull londing Ptetihln#
T O M O L S I N t l lM lA ll W

____JlBHCBB
Applli
A F BEST APPLIAN CES NOW
A T F L E A W ORLD! Row W 7
Buy/Sell/Servlc# appliance*
F r e o d e M v e r jr J lt M * ^ ^ ^ ^

Prolattlonal C H IL D CARE
Sarvlcat. coll 121 2001________
M IC H E L L E 'S HOUSE - t i t
PER W E E K I Open 4:10AM 17
M ldnlghllM I 74117241 10

A u to m o tlv
N E E D CAR A/C work donol
Call u*. W# hav* competitor*
dryart. evaporator*. Th* boti
price* In lownl Aulo King 1110
Elm. Sanlord 111 747*

43— Legal Sarvlcas
N E E D A W ILL or living will?
Call Smllat 124 4124 Alto, legal
ratearchdona

Carptnlry

Landscaping

m a st^L

R B S ./ C O M h T 'v in y r s id ln g T
Alum . F ra m in g. D ryw a ll,
Doort, Rooting. Concrot*.
I t H T O - l O Aallnl, CACOIt***

For Excellent...

_

Handy M an
AL DOES IT A ll
Fla It right. llc'd/lnt From
ita rl to tlnlih. Carpentry,
plum bing, oloctrlcol. and
rooting tvc*. 21 yr*. ol aaporlone*. No |ob too big or tmoll.
Call 214-7411 or 314-144* 1* hr*.
HANDYM AN. I do It till Fro*
animate* Low price. U yr*
oip. Call Robert M l 1104
S M tM s k y ir

-

C ltaning St

local Vandini Rout*

v

L a w n S a r v lc a

Outside Lighting ~
RE P U C E Parking 4»t, poi* A
bldg, aacurlly light*. Paint A
repair*. S.W.S. 7410110

kCLASSinXD

CALL 3914911

Plumbing

Single Story Design
N ew M anagem ent
Lau n dry Facilities

iout Our
1 MONTH FREE

Trash hauling
A FFO R D AB LE H AU LIN O Will
clean, haul Irath You name III;
Wo'll haul II1Call H I 4144

Hava t Place lo Payl Sloth
Monthly Paymanlll Got CredItort Oil Your Bockl Eaty
Quality No Collateral! 112 7151

) rH U

t ile

s / # /'#&gt;/

I Inn

/ f#*/

\

t h i y

I IH

Tree Service

2580 R id g e w o o d Ave., San fo rd

~

330-1431

CLH T H E E S E R V IC E
LlC/Inturad Nobody doe* il
belter I Sr. dltcounl. 114 4714
ECHOLS T R E E SVC Llc t. Int
"Let th* Prolattlonal* do It."
FraaatMmalat........... H I 7224

Is

/ n il'

CARPENTERS
All phatot. Up lo lll/h r.
407 424 4101 Refundable Foe
C A R P E T T I C H Mutt have
driver'* llcenM. Exp helpful,
not ntcettary. Will train
carpel cleaning, dyeing. In
tuning. Inagollabl* 474 7444

________

Experienced, for buiy ortho
p o d l c o f f l c o In L o n g wood/Sanford. Call Sharon:
7*71115

Beautiful

Ls

4

H a ve a n a

— MV

FREEBIE ADS

• Single Story Dexign ■No one
•rrtendly on-tile Manager*
above or below
•Unique Apt Extras
'• Studios, 1 A 2 Bedim
•Security - For Your Ponca ol
... Atlonfabla Apartments
Mind
• Fumi»ha&lt;lUnlurni»hed Studios

For M D .to llIc a ....... 122 7741

ConstructionWorkm
No Exp. nocatMry, will Iroln.
14 A Upl Apply Immediately:
404 711 1471_________________

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF P U B LIC AU CTIO N
Nolle# It hereby given T r i­
County Towing will Mil at public
auction for Mlvag* for cath on
demand lo hlghoit bidder, Ih*
following d*tcrlbed vehldot:
147* Oodge Atptn 4dr
VIN #NL4!DtFIS7447
14*0 Daltun Pickup King Ceb
VIN IKHY30241200
1471 Dodge Van
VIN IB22BEIK114344
1444 Chavy Cavalier adr
VINflGIA04tPIEJ242051
Th* auction will b* hold ON:
July t, It t l A T : 1 PM A T :
T R l C O U N TY TOW IN O, f i l l
B E LLE AVE., W IN TER
S P R IN G S . F L 11701. Protpadlve bidden may Intpacf
vahlclat on* hour prior fo Mia.
Term* ar* cath or cartlflad
fundi. T R IC O U N T Y TOW INO
raMrvat Ih* rlghl lo occopt or
ro|#cf any ond all bldt.
Publlth: Juno 30. Ittl
D E F 144

Loyalty, Cam araderie, Adventure
At Its B est

Hours M-F.9-5. Sal . IO -2

You're tcikng t mountm RmiAng ouaecomtry
in a tank. Kapprira from a hricofXcr. Yax frifcw
adventurmare aanScalcd lam — ihere'inouneyoud
rether haw it you lack— and they're tnxting you In
bring the irwacn off ■M y.
h'i nol the mark*, tt’i the Antty Kattaal G uvd
and *'i the moN aotiod pret-th* Job ki Anuria.
Tb be part cf the uixrd you need only cxireri
anut tiro(fcy* a mtrth n l hto M c b i m r . In return
y u jl r*m excellent bmcfta n i I montnqr paycheck
wide you tadde knportaE d x Ia w tA Reacue mMon*
(hug intenietkn n d ihe chance to tenewur country in
Iknea of trodie. P U , y o il pick ig&gt; new ddb hi
coreiukcationA canpUerx eiectnxta n d hundrwk of
technical area* you o n put loixeetecy &lt;tty. thnimka
ywx efunre to dkoter your belt C tl Ihe Cured tahy

Americans At Their Best

T V Amy N«u#l G#w4 m to E«al (k*i&lt;tir#y KacAaTt

This It a graat opportunity for you to enjoy the sam e great results as
our regular classified custom ers at no cost to you. Just follow these
Instructions.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Ads will be scheduled to run for 10 days.
Prioa of item must bo atatad in tha ad and be $100 or less.
Only 1 Item par ad and 1 ad per household per week.
You should oall and cancel as toon as item sells.
Available to Individuals (non Com m ercial) only. D oes not
apply to rantala or garage &amp; yard sales.
6. The ad muat ba on tha form shown below and either be
mailed In or presented In parson fully prepared to the
8anford Harald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start aa toon aa possible.
8. Claaslfiad Managem ents decision on copy acceptability will
ba final.

C l

A S 5 I F I E D

FREEBIE AOS

Sanford, FL 32772-1687

.O N LY O N I r u n

]

4»f/Q
t f P

‘ h.

Spectacular Summer Specialsl

1Bdrm
*

mm

1*104

4PARTHINTI

733 Secret Harbor Ln.
Lake Mary
3 2 1 -7 3 0 3

-

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

Sanford
Herald
t ^ t l W I

Packers-Assemblers

Ask About Our

H

MAH.TO,

Office Person

*

Takeadvantageol this special oiler

CHILDCARE

• MUST INCLUDI BM C!

* 1100 OR LESB

PRINT AO HBSIL.

Welcome Home
;
to
Country Lake Apts.

2 Bedroom / 2 Bath
1/2 month FREE
m il

li it 1

7 1 and 1 11. Mutt be certified
or exp. with carllflcallon
within 40 day* after employ
rntnl Drug tree workplace.
Contact Debary Manor, 40 N
Hwy 17 41, Dabary F L 4*4-4414

Part lima. Typing, light bookkaaplng. Call In tha morning
hour*. Mr. Jont*........ 122 700*

3301 Sanford Ave., Sanford • 3 2 3 - 3 3 0 1

Paradise
at
Your
Doorstep...

i n- ml li !• &lt;i &gt;

I4.10 44.71/hr. Lake M ary
araa. Dapandabla people
needed lor great longterm
opportunity with growing
company. Aiiamblari 7AM
1PM, Mon. F rl. Packer*
7 A M - 7 P M or 7 P M - 7 A M .
Rotating schedule. Mutl have
own car and pfion*. Call Job
Service. 110 4700 for op
polnlmenl on Monday
Or Callt
TramwarId Service* 4*4-4471

POSTAL JOBS
111.41 par hour lo atort, plu*
benolll*. Poital carrier*,
torlar*. dark*, maintenance.
For an Application and Exam
Information, call Ml*'7144715, OKI. P2144 4AM 4PM, 7
day*._______________________

RECEPTIONIST
Naad#d for Sanford and O r­
lando componla*. M ull b*
prollclonl In word processing.
Exparlancad with mulll lln*
phone* raqulrad. Tamp lo
perm position* available Call
GPC Temporary Sarvlcat lor
more Info. 441 f i ll___________
ROUTB SALESPERSON
Needed for local company.
Good starling wag*. Banaflla
package a v a ila b le . C D L
IkWiM required.
Call John or Todd............1114117
HOP S. French Av*. Sulla 71

LOVE CLOTHES?
A salai/managamant career
ca n ba y o u r * w i t h
M U L T IP L E S cotton knit*.
Buy your own wardrobe at
lubitantlal discount* whll*
•oiling portllm* or full-tlm*.
'
444-7M-4U7

i T« D m

lHwaW(

)VB8(

X

TELEMARKETERS

1UNLAND. 171/wk w/ A/C. 170
without. 170 dap. Washer,
dryar. kllchtnorlv. I H 47H

Permanent And
Temp Positions

*

97— A partm ents

Furnished / Rent

Company will train paopl*
with phona tklll* E x p , nol
nocouory. Hour* Mon-Thur*.
S-4PM: Sat.. 4AM I PM. Flox
Ibla on houri when porma
nan). Salary plut bonus
Sr.clfltantwalcomadl
Never A Ft* I
Help Portannal 424-0244

NOTICE
All rtnlal and real aslata
advertisement* ar* *ub|tcl lo
Ih* Federal Fair Housing Act,
which mokot II lllogal to
advarflt* any preference. Mm
Itatlon or d licrlm ln a llo n
bated on race, color, religion,
sox. handicap, familial italu*
or national or lQln____________

TELEMARKETING
* 4PM. E Z Money. Loll of
Funl Call between lha hour*
2 5 M r. Haskell al *11 31M
" T H IN K 'N P L A Y " Full lima
daycare teacher needed
___________ 114-11*4___________

N IC E L Y FU R N ISH ED Apt. In
unique Mtllng naar downtown
Util paid, rat.'* no pal* USO
mo...............................H I 0224
ONE BDRM. I bath. Furnished
•fflcltncy. Sanlord. t H l mo
HOOdaposll................ 374 7*14
SANFORO large 2 bdrm apt .
Complete privacy! 141 par
waak plus 1700 Mcurlty.
_________ Call H I 7471_________
SANFORD. I bdrm. adults / no
p#l» AM alac.. modern, air.
1144 and up 1200 dep H I MIS
2 BDRM. 1 BATH. Cant H/A.
4121 wk. plut Mcurlty Water,
Mwar. and garbage pick up
turnl*h*^2L*t14*04M427

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER
COL Means*. Only neat and
dean apply. Call 41414)1

VETERINARY
TECHS-Customer Assist.
Part time, w*#k*nd*. Tech*
mutl bo asp. onlmol handler*.
Wa need dapandabla and
mollvatad paopl* who lov*
anlmalil P.V.S. provide* af
fordable Vat services all over
lha ttal* ol Florida If Inlar
ailed pleat# call Danlio:
1104100_____________________
W AREHOUSE AN D O E N E R A L
LA B O R H E L P N I E D E D I
Bonus for drlvart. AM shift*
avallabl*. Dally pay, no fa*.
Report ready to work S: 10 am.
Industrial Labor Svc., 1011
French Av. No phonecall*

99— Apartm ents
_ U nfurnlshed j^Rent^
C O N V E N IEN T AN D SPACIOUS
CALL G E N E V A GARDENS
APTS.......................
HI-7440
DOWNTOWN SANFORD. I and
2 bedroom a v allabl*
Loundry
N a a r lo 1-4
17S Ul/w k 671 4111___________
E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R TM E N T.
Partially turn , A/C. Fraa
canot u m . Kalla'* Landing
IH l/m o No pall 3H 4470
OOOD A R IA , 1 A 2 Bdrm. apt*.
UMIIIIa*. IH lu p . Pel* r*
qulrad......... ........... .Ht-*717
L A K B J E N N IE AP A R TM EN TS
1 Bdrm. Apt*. Avallabl*. Fraa
wat*f/ga«l 174-1112__________
LAROE 1 BDRM.. sunken living
rm.. Fplc , quiet on 1/4 acre,
very clean, garage. 1400 mo.
Includes water. Irash pick up
No yd main! 124 1101 alter 1

Warehouse Person
For Longwood laslnar dlllrlb
ulor Faifnar axparlanca pr*
farrad. Heavy lining raqulrad
Good driving record, salary
bated upon axparlanca. Hour*
7:10 - 4:00. Full company
b a n a llli. Apply S 3. 1420
Stonewall Place. In Ih*
Midway Com mere* Confer.

WELDER/FABRICATOR
Ornamental metal*, *1**1.
aluminum, ale. Layout, cut.
wald |7/hr and up. Call lor
appointment................ 444 1714

Lavan’s Landing

73— Em ploym ent
______ W anted

1E 1BDRM. VILLAS
R E NT T OOWN
C R E D IT NO PROBLEM
Application* lor 2 Udrrn
Home* Now Being Accepted

PROFESSIONAL privet* duty
M A L E CNA Responsible.
dependable. Slav* 171 2245

323-4923

91— Ap*r1m ants/
Hom e to Share

MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lak* Ada I bdrm, 1140 mo.
2 bdrm. 1410 mo and up

C O M FO R TA B LE, SAFE apt
convenient lo town. !7J/wk.
Inc. ulll. No dtpotll. 12 step
program parson pral. 174 4417
C O U N TR Y S IT T IN O . l2»/m o
for all. Lk Jtu u p art*. Carter
oriented per ton praf, 171 4704

• SANFORD 1/1 Apt lg rooms,
tern patio. CHA. Clean. Ilk*
new 11421 mo *100 tec
• L K . M A R Y 1/2 condo,
w/tlngl* garage. Iplc . Lease
w/Optlon. 17*5 mo 1710 Me.
• SANFORD 2/1 Apl. W/den.
Fplc., 1144 mo.. 1200 MC.
Stanstrom Realty. Inc.
"W* Manage your Horn*,
Ilk* II wai ouf awn." Jim Dayl*
W 1441 Attar IP M i M4-1441

105— DuplexTriplex/ Rent
LAKE M AR Y. 2 bdrm.. cant.
H/A. wall lo wall, carpal, mini
bllndi. calling lam. 4H-474I

Quiet Family Community
Ovlado. 1 bdrm. 7 balh,
garag*. good tchoolt. mlnutai
Irom Sanlord For mor* In
formation call:
Th* Oakt Patio Heme*
___________ 145)114___________
SANFORO. Modern. 7 bdrm .
canl. H/A. carport, laundry
rm . naar oil M41/mo.4H 01*1
1ANFORD, Largo duplex. 2/7.
lanced w/garaga. 1471 mo. lit.
1**1,1200 MC *4* 7414________
1 BDRM D U P LEX , t i l Park
Av# 5241/mo., MC. dap.
_________ 407 471 111*_________
2 BDRM., t Bath. Scrn porch.
CHA. all a p p ll. 1 w/carport.
t i l l mo H I 4444 altar a

107— M obile

___Homes / Rent
O S TEE N . 4 bdrm., doublawld*.
acreage, pet* okl Avail nowl
*410 mo. KUO Pln*y Woods

114— W arehouse
Space / Rent
LONOWOOO/LAKE MARYMid ill* ilorag* warahouM*.
400 400 1600 iq II Fra* rant
w /llm o lean, Iromtl4!/mo
___________ 111 0114___________
SECURI T Y W A R E H O U IE 44A
and Old Lak* Mary Blvd
*1.210
3.000 *q. II. o&gt;
llc/warahouM 'Finished ol
flea space alio available
Kapanke Realty, I 414 )1)*

115— Industrial
Rentals
_
B IA R D A L L M l , 10.051 77.110
tq II. w/olllca* sprinkled. OH
door* 11OO *q II. llanitrom
Really Jim Doyl* 177-1441

117— Com m ercial
Rentals

CHEERS TYPE PUB
Sanlord. historic downtown
area Ready logo 1571/mo
_________ 407 416 11*1 ________
SANFORD
700 N Elm Av*
20.700 sq It. wllh olllctl
Brick truck hi
sprinkled
440V
1 ph*M Mrvlc*. Lt
menu, or distribution d r .
17 H it. I l l 111*

323-8670 _____
N EW LY R E M O O E LE O Apt*.
. In Sanlord HHIorlc Olit CHA.
Fplc.. naw kitchen* 1171400
plm uUllllt*................. 114 4040

Quiet Single Story

93— R o o m ifo r Rant

Caultbarry. 1 bdrm A 2
bdrm.. Alllc Storegel Call
Joan tor appointment. 444 4777
Q U IE T Sanford Iplax. I bdrm
apt. A/C. 4711/mo Raf t r*
quire J, 111 1514 allar 4PM
SANFORD'S Bast Kept Sacratl
Pool A Laundry, I A 2
bedroom* Convenient Ioca
llonl Call Pal. 17144)0_______
1144 MOVES YOU IN. Studio*
and I bdrm* available
CasMiberry location
Call Mellt*a, 444 III*

C LE A N ROOMS. slngN itorilng
»70/wk. Kitchen, phona,
laundry, vide* gam**, oil
tfroof parking 114-4423_______
E X T R A LOW R A T E S
SPECIAL! Room* al Ul/w k.
Call H I 1044. evening*
FU R N ISH ED BEDROOM wllh
kltchenelte I parson. UMIIIIa*
lurnlihtd, A/C. ilov*. rtlrlg
orator, and double sink
S7S/wk. Oil ol 27th St at 2414
Magnolia Ava..............177 4141
LA K E MAR Y / l AN FORD. Lg
room/, bath. Malur* adult
110/wl^. Kitchen, ale. avail.
Nice split bdrm horn* 131-11)5
SANFORD. Furn. or unlurn.
470/wk. Include* utlllllo*.
Washer, dryar. pool 111 1111

P

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
S A N F O R D 1 bdrm . porch,
clean, utilities lurnlihad
except power 1120 plux »ec. No
pal* 407 147 7704or 404 14] 4447

LOOK

At I llRHAHI I HUM I

NO O O W N P A Y M E N T T O
Q U A L IF IE D BUYERSI IN
T E R E S T R A T E A T 7.J%
F I XED. Gov'I rapo*. bank
torecloiura*. asiumt no quail
ly mortgage* I Low monthly.
Call for dalallsl

FHA OR VA AS LOW AS 5%
G o v ’ t F o r o d o iu r o i, Re
p o t / A n u m * No Qu al i t y
Hom oil Ownar financing
Samlnol*. Orange, Volutla.
Sanford Ian than 11,000 down
• Renovated 1/1 , appliance*,
lancad yard, carport, 111.400
• Renovated like naw 1/1, Iplc..
appl., new paint. 111.400
• Peal Hemal On cul d* tec ]/}.
renovated, garege. 147,400
• 1/1 an \i acral Ranovatad.
appliances, fenced yd, 147,100
• 1/1' i, 21M tq It. Ilka nawl Llv.
dining, family rm, 171,400
• 4/2. lancad. garag*. 414.400

Janet Mimfiild, 323-7271
AACarn**. IIW..2H-I2M

O n tu iff.

STAIRS PROPERTY
M A N A G E M E N T A R E A L TY
447-111-7HI/H1-4170

Anum * No QuallUeil
• 1/1 on l/2acr*l Fenced, cul da
MC, dtad and sir**!. 144.400
Additional homtt avail. Lei*
than 17K down I

&lt;)V&gt; M

B l 36

PAOLA. 4/2 on on 2.14 acral
Pailur* wllh liable 1114.400

STENSTROM

Lk. M a r y / L a n g wo s d Pool
Horn*. 1/7. garag*. living,
dining, lam. rm*. 111,100
Lk. Mary pool homo. 4/7. living,
dining, family rm, 1104.400
1 Acres Ot Saclutlonl Conttm
porary 1/2 two story, Iplc. *cr
p o r c h w / i p o , dotochod
garage, workshop, 1174.400

REALTY. I N C .
We list and sell
1 more properly than
anyone In Ihe Greater
Sanford/Lake Mary area.

iMitl •. (O l«i i .HiiMSt
#I N ’ 'lM&lt;

• IM M A C U LATE 4/1 In Sanaral
W/Oraat r m , Spill Bdrm
plan. E tl In Kltchan. Fam
r m . . Naw Reef. Ce mm.
Pael/Tannli A Clubhousal
174.0001
• OW NER M O TIV A TE O I Cut*
3/1 Spill Pl«n w/Eat In Kltch
an. Fenced Yard A Loll Moral
Only. .......................... 1*4.4001
• FUR N ISH ED POOL H«m*l
Move Rlghl Into this 1/1 In
Sunlandl Enc Garag*. Eat In
Kl tchan A Much Mor al
114.9001
• LA K E FR O N T HOMEI 4/1 In
Oelton* W/XIra* Galoral
Sunken Pit In Living rm., Lg.
Scrn Porch. BBQ A Ski Fish
From your BackyardI Above
Gr Pooll . ...............1144,4001
• O R E A T ST ART ER HOMEI
Thlt 1/11* hat an Eat In
Kltchan. Fenced Yard A
Moral Call Today 1
144.0001
•FO RM ER M ODEL HOMEI
Contemporary 1/1 W/Graal
rm , Fplc . Spill Bdrm Plan.
Eat In Kllchan, Scrn. Porch,
on Cul D*l Sect
1104.4001

»*MI »&lt;*»*# I I

'A L L FOR 114.4401 1/l'S Lrg
lot, lancad. Scrn Porch. Intid*
workshop, C HA . storage.
Iron!/rearAcctit
'M IN T Orovavlaw 1/1 w/POOL.
all appl.. Util dbl gar .
Baaulllul lot A mor* 144.000
C A LLB A R T R I A L EST., INC.
_________ 14471 121-7441_______

BATEMAN REALTY
S TA R TE R OR R E T I R E D 7
bdrm. block horn#. Porch,
workshop, carport plus axlra
loll Consider laasa/opllonl
Only............................... 144.400

321-0759......... 321-2257
•BUY OWNER*
"
1.000‘t ol properties
AM type*, araa*. prices
Call tor F R E E LIST
Orlando, loll free, t 100 tl* 1444
Watch Ih* Buy Owner
T V lh o w
Sunday'*. 11AM. chann«l *1

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720

ONLY $26,0001!
Sanlord 1/1's block horn*,
good condition 1141 20*4

1141 Park Dr., Senferd
Mt W. Lak* Mary Bl.. Lk. Mery

U .S . i A V I N O I B O N D S t o

•In Our 37th Y «ir«

THtf Gtf Al AMIttCAN^JVf SfMINf

I1

W

r it e

A

W

a n t

A d

T h a t

S e lls !

Y O U R C L A S S IF IE D A D

w orks beat w hen it contains
w hat the read er wants to know.
G IV E F A C T S
Pulyourxairin th* buyer'* p ln ». What wmild you wan* to know?
Met lha Uam'a a**, condition, ilia, brand name, modal and
car. aUte lha type of
approximate value IT you r* m IIIh
Irene mieaion, mileage (Iff*'* low) an •pedal equipmanL

D O N T E M B E L L IS H ]
i ,your
Il‘a Heky business lo M*cgvrata and II won't Ini
Information may
gal * buyer to
chance# of aucc«aa. Misleading
— -- --------------------------- *-•
your houee. Il may aWo g*l Y00 ■ punch In lha nos*.

A V O ID A B B R E V IA T IO N S :

118-O ffice
S pace / Rent
NEW Sanlord olllcat and/or
warahouM*. 400 7.400 iq ft
1pedal, lltl/m o. M l 7114
SANFORD. Otllc* spec*. 1400
sq It. building total. 1200 sq
tl paroHIcaunll. 171-7004

Whtl* a few abbreviation! can save you spec*, loo many of (ham
strung log*4h*r can creau con(baton. A confW d reader won’*
lake Um* to sort out your meaning.

IN C L U D E P R IC E :
Surrey* Indies la lhal buyers era mor* In lrm M d fa lha merehe ndla* whan they know th* prlca. Thie appl lea lo everything from
houeahold RimUhlngs loautomobilM. Good inarc handles, priced
fairly, I* Ih* b*el guarani#* of *una**.

141— Hom es for Sale
B E A V A IL A B L E :

H A L L K K A 1 .T Y
11/W

I li r&gt;t S t

S .m lo iil

LAKE M ARY 1 bdrm 2 balh
w/lamlly room, canlral H/A.
lancad yard, garage, walk to
goll court*. 141.400 Owner
financing with 111,000 down.
LA K E F R O N T HOME. 2 bdrm
wllh lemlly rm. Unlqu* view
Irom kltchan and rear of
homo! Inild* utility, carport
Only 154,500
WE BUY HOUSES

323-5774

A UWphon# number le (In* If your* at homt when your ad runa.
If your* not going lo b* horn*, alaU Ih* Mm# ;-ou will b*. Most
paopl* won't call back twice.

USE YO U R NAM E:
Put your name In your ad. Ilg lvM credibility to U m item you era
advertising. You may a rm gat m u ll* wh*n aomaon* who has

readyouridea** youInarestaurant or walkingdown lha etrreL
That* taking advantage of bdng In a amall community soch aa

IP YOU NEED ADDITIONAL HELP. CALL THE SANFORD
HERALD AND WE WILL HELP YOU WORD YOUR AD.

C a l l (4 0 7 ) 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

SERVICE M AID hiring In Al
tamont*. Great pay, bonus
ond monthly paid profit thar
Ing. Orlvar* paid mllaaga. Experienced only........ H I 4141

i l l M o.

INCLUDING LOT
NO «
'.
M » v/\/ a t

( B i l l

M Q

i

SECRETARY
Word procoulng for bonk
consulting firm, prollclonl In
MS DOS. Word Period 5.1 and
Lotus. Sp**d A accuracy a
m u it. Bright, airy ofllc*
(Lak* Mary Commerce Cen
tar) Raiumai 144 Ctmmtrc*
St. Sufi* 1*1, Lak* Mary, FL
H24A41I2

Sanford. Lak* Mary araa
Excellent pay-b*n*fll» avail
able. *07144 am_______

. PHONI.

VI NIIIRI ' I’ ROI’ I R!i( S

141— Homes for Sale

SALES COUNSELOR
Oak lawn Park C#m#f#ry and
Fumral Homo It looking lor 2
full tlm* employ*** tor p ri­
nted counseling Call Dal*
M y*r»...........................1224141
SALES

Security Officers

NAM .

93— Room s for Rent

..............,
flexible hours Inc. wook ond*.
will train. Immodlat*
•mploymtnl. Apply todayl
Super* Motel, S.R .«4* ndl-«

Sanloid Court ApartmBnts
i

&gt;

7 1 - H t l p W a n fa d

to

Hold...

Part A Full Mm* potlllont.
Exp, a M UST..............221-4424

CNA

For on* girl ofllc*. C o n d u c­
tion background holplul.
Computer axp. and collecflan*. Apply: Southern Tru*».
2401 Allaron Circle. Sanford
m n _____
M ED IC A L

NURSING ASSISTANT

CARPENTER WANTED
CARPENTERS NEEDED

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE/
SECRETARY

' MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST

1l i . i n i l ( hissi/inl. -I'J- J t i l l

* # BUY OR S E LL* *
TU P P ER W AR E
331 *471 ______

14*4414 No call* allar 7 pm

Lat AAA Impfaymant work
far yau and put you Info a
permanent p**ttl*nl
_________ Call Today I_________

11 PM lo 7 AM thlfl. port llmo,
apply In person: Lakovlew
Nunlng Ctnler. 414 E. 2nd St..
Sanlord,____________________

71— Halp Wanfad

Need general contlrucllon #«
parlance. Own Iraniportallon.
Pleat* call Mike, 124 4704

•LEOALTRAINEIa
A little ol thl*. a 11til# of than

LPN

L «W /o ia m o .t* * a

A p a rtm e n ts to

I t il W / H 'S N

a D AIR Y D R IV ER #
IM* wkl Put y ^ r d a n B
llcanMtawarkl Baitbanatlfil

-----------

E X P E R IE N C E D In all ph.iv*
ol III* Intlallallon I n t . lie .
w hol*taldM ajjrUetJ41*44^

DOWNTOWN Hug* 4 bdrm . 1
bath. 7 kitchen*, single family.
1400/mo., 1200 dap. 414
Palmallo...............lee H I H l l

Stenstrom Rentals

• FAC TO R Y T R A I N ! ! *
H#f»’» yaur chancal Laarn •
trad# and galpafdl Call n#wl

MANY MANY MORE JOBS

COEVILLAAPARTMENTS!

Rooting
ROOF REPAIRS
end replacement* 111 770*
CGC 004114

, .rn -A .* 4 -# q .
I f / I • # ' / ' / / N#'

* R O U T IS A L E S #
Deliver fa (ltablllh*d ac­
count* and bwIMrouf*
i
a MAR K I T I NO RBP*
Super firm n**d» yaur M*a*
on promotion today I Banfffftl

a R E C E P TIO N IS T*
Antwar phan** and era** train
tar*ftMrdutl**l

at

□ UN R ITE , Clean driveway*,
real*, poal dackt, walk*,
h e u M t.F ra a e tt.lll n i l
.

41— M o n ty to Land

BILLS DUET

EXPERTS
FREE REGISTRATION
LOW FEES
TERMS
AAA EMPLOYMENT
700 W. 25th ST.
323*5176

o T IT L E C L O U R a
24KI Rut y*ur afcllfi V w*rkl

U N -SA T I0N A L
U M M E R LIVING

PrBSSurt Cleaning “

M a s o n ry

C0MC SCI THE

• W IL D E R *
11.14 hr. +
Raad Wu«print*
and weld. Hiring nawl I

P L U M B IN O R E P A I R AN O
SERVICE - Free atllmalet
lie. «CFCOH*14174 0*01, Tom !

‘

B X P B R T L a wn S v c.
4*7 214-714*. Sod. Mulch. For
tlllior. Buthog «0 yro oep
LA R R Y'S LAWN A T R E E .
Prolattlonal Service. Fret
Ett. Llc/lnt. 1711441_________
R A N D Y 'S Q U A L IT Y LAWN.
Compltlt pro coro tine* i**o
Clean upt. hauling. llt-O ltt
TO M A JE F F '* LAWN CAREI
Rot./Comm., dapandabla, low
rolotl Fro* i l l .............HO 7070
T U R F TR IM M ER S Low rata*.
Free ett.. Ret A comm 1
tlm#/yr. roundl Rot... 111-1144

Icb

S P R I N O C L E A N I N O , In
outtld*. Rental*. Alto wkly.
rate*. Window*, tool MI-17S1

41200.00 a waak potential.
Mutl Mil. I 400411 VEN D

C O m S T T c IA L Sodding.
grasolng. Landtcap*. tree*,
oakt. palmo planted. *07 H I
7144 aOyrt. t io

TW P MASONRY, Brick, Block.
Stucco. Concroto. Ranova
tlont Lie./In*.......... I l l 14*4

C A R P EN TE R AM kind* ot horn#
repair*, painting A ceramic
M l a ^ lc h a r d G r o i ^ J lM t T J

55— Businas*
Opportunltlei

PR OFES SIO N A L local paper
hanger 20 yrt. experience!
Reference* Speclellilng In
retldenllal Courlaout prompt
tar vlcal Call 407 171 11*0

Man Quality Opera

100RING FOR THAT

. ’
o B O O M K I lF I R #
Tap payl M*vtldtfMb**tl

2 Bdrm./l Bath From $369

Power. Ini.- eel.. Ile.d', In* ‘
Free Etllm etet............H I P ill
K B N P A IN T AN D R EM O D EL
FreeEtllm aletl Rett .lie.
N ^ o trio y m * W lt4 4 4 1 * I^ ^ ^ ^

~25— S pV d a l NotlCM

7 f e t t l ’( t f J

141— Hom es for Sale

From UMdown W HY RENTS
Tho Hllllmon Oroup, 114 *411
L a k e m a r y n ico . cant, h /a
1 bdrm. Hy balh. blinds,
ftnetd yd. Lak* Mary school*.
»*00plu*MC. 104 *44 1170
LA KE M AR Y. 4 bdrm. 1 balh.
Cornar tot, 2,100 »q ft. CIo m lo
shopping and Lak* M ary
school*. Coll Evelyn 114-1441
R E N T O R LEASE PURCHASE
1/1 w/appllanc*t, C/H/A. on
loncod 1/3 aero, garag*.
1571/mo: 1/1, appliance*, fplc.
garage. 1550/mo Paul. Vanlure I ProparllasHI 4744
SANFORD - 1 bdrm. 1 balh split
plan, large horn* w/blg family
rm. Cant. H/A, lg. shedad
cornar lot. 1571/mo. plul m c u
rltydep W JL Propertl#*
Wa* Louwimp, 111-4714

STILL UNEMPLOYED

* C O LLEC TO R o
Deal wffk camnvtrclal acc#**t*. Call tar In4p.

( ’( ' • ' l t t C

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

HUD HOMES

GREAT JOB

DOG GROOMER

HOMEMAKER

8

Legal Notices

DIRECTOR OF NURSING

HOME CARE
PROFESSIONALS

AREA REPRESENTATIVES

KIT 'V CARI.YI.K® by l.urry Wright

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

7 1 -H B lp W a n t t d

71— Help Wanted

7 1 - H B l p W a n te d

ADJUSTMENT* ANO CREDfTt: Inthe event of an error In an
ad, the Sanford Herald wM be reepenelble for the Ural'
Inaerllon only and only to lha axiom of the coal of that
Inaordon. Pleeee check your ad for accuracy the href day N
rune.

Sgt Al FtJlciano 323-3317
X D C W
F D S I L I .
PREVIOU8 SOLUTION: “ Every time you perform
onstage kve, II cornea from the heart. II can't come from
any piece alee." — Tommy Tune.

7 1 -H tlp Wanted

DCMONSTMTOtS

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
HconeecuNveMmee------ ..SToaHnB
7 coneecuUve tlmee______ 70* a Una
Seoneecuttyettme*------- tit aRne
tome___________ ____11,111 Ins
Ratea art gar Ibbub, beeeS on S Hnaa
* 3 LJnee Minimum

71— H t l p W a n te d

from

&lt; &gt;I

i y 1i m *l i I

I

9*484

I 4 a •• l • •4 I

(

U 1*1

4 »•.!•**

$ 58 ,750^

3 B E D R O O M , 2 B A T H from $58,750.

LOCATED IN ESTABLISHED SANFORD NEIGHBORHOOD
__ _ _ __ __ _____

D EV ELO P M EN T
4 0 7 -3 3 9 * 8 2 8 1

•Concrete Block with Stucco
'Choice of Lot Location
. Full Carpet
•Central Heat/AC

CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION

'Electric Range
*40 Gallon Wafer Heater
'Tile Tu b Enclosure
•Washer/dryer Hook-ups

broker participation welcome

1Cathedral Ceilings
Roll-up Garage Door
*Concrete Driveway/Walks
'Many Color Choices
* Subject to Qualification

�12B

Suntan) Mt*
* ««l&lt;1

Sunday

1 " 'f " 1,1

Juno

OPEN HOUSE

r.ivd 1 ?/I O.’AI Iv

ihm|

J73 S«ll

165- Duplex lor Sale

SELL

your
property totaled any where*
Investor* He,il ly . 7/4 SAtS

F A M IL Y HOME

H I N l « O l ' I I O N to buy ; I 1.
...a l, A p p l s
I ONGWOOO
y w V0.I n 10 IWM Ittrl s I’ M

1 bdrm

7
bath Ig room* and u r r r n n l
porch. 60X14 overlooking pool
A nd t o u r ly
d s e ttin g
wga/rtxj
Lg
lot
lOOXtso
Wooden p riv a c y
fem e
» t lO 000 ( M L S • ;V4IAV&gt;

181 — A p p l i a n c e s

• A N TlQ tir
MAHOGANY
4
it» a a ••r . » r ♦ por c el a m
knctlts itnug •
|0 " » K $60
011(1
12* 4'4il

$71 WO* J b d r m 7 bath owner
will hold $7 S00 second Great
investment' Heady tor sun*
mer I f/1 100 (M L S • 794166’

It I l)
h» .i
quei'fiM rv nrttici
mattress new s!*H m tin*
( ost |tguU Sell 1 UHl III 7UP*

ON LAKEt J b d r m 7 baft, eat

• H O O K t AST
Wti'h to*mu a
. 'vans easily (•real *r»r i tnld s
i (Him •»» anywhere you need a
A i d e lnK»kiase I ' m r d to sell
♦*only $ Is L ah \2 I SS99

In kitchen lg b a c k y a r d ' Qo*et
unpaved Street olt ih r beater’
path
Lg
Fl or ida r m
and
Flor ida coral rock brush on
outside' $0% 000 i M l S •m in o r

D A Y O rt)
W ttllf
Iron and
!.• »s\ u»lhn mattress u c a
.till in srapgM't and |iop up
r» i indie Was |R&lt;Hl Sa fl i n t'
| UK) IM /IMS

• * HEADY TO UPSIZE • •
4 bd r m 7 bath a pool l ake
B r an tl ey access' C lost »••
schools churches and shop
pin g
Stone fi rep la ce end
S c r e e n e d p o r c h ' S'AV 900
I M L S • 7901061

• C N I f M I A I N M I NT C F N
tlH
open dark wood m
pr»rsf»«&lt; » lOndit oM To Itie "»t
St% M9 1 7 1 /

Call lean R. Wells. Realtor
Evening 332-7784
W ATSON REALTY, 332 6000

H U T C H E S l harry wood 1S4X)
O H O hloMiti' wood %i SO O H O
(•ood condition
J7I 974I
K I N G S IZ E water bed (rood
con di tio n
c ou p le yr s old
M irm * a»u! headboard $I/S
OHO
J74/2I4

insert thin black border

LK M ARY
) 7 with lamiiy
rm lg treed lot
OcX)
W Mal iciowski

l/? 79*1

• L A Z Y B O V R F C L I N F R Vinyl
torn a little ho! mechanically
sen nd S 10
)2J 1684

W A TE R FR O N T

Seville Lake
George 7 b d r m home a dock
and boat house Priced tot
quick sale 169 900 Owner t
nancing J i m O w n b * Weai'v
1 904 T i l u/8

M A T I H T SS A N D B O X spnngs
itnotile v / e s»'t', tor sale* (treat
value' $20 set
l/l 069U
• Q U E E N S l/ r
A a t e . be d
inly t» ame ( .»• i ' *nndit nn
SMI O H O
I/.'OSH'

1921 M APLE AVE SALE OH
R E N T W Option do s e
•
schools shopping l i living
a. din ing IJO 000 904 s i? o n ?
J

• H T C l I N I H HOC K T H •••
.toil
|ir a • p ' s i r |n&gt;
♦iyer S'i tfeil
a'* «i
W»
I IU I /I* *
• SI r I P I w sot A Rattan a&gt; d
Ove. dullt *1 $/% I? • / *94
• STOVr
GE
A unond sett
. ,i. ng e ie» »r nn-i tmief
, . •
i &lt;e it » a" S '&lt;»' ( a"
1/1 09%/ alter 6 P M

ROHM . 2 HAIM
N •c r
neighborhood with pool and
tennis courts Double garage
Ne w A C $7$ 000 assume *u&gt;
q u a l i t y V A lo a n
l*% 00c
balance
As Io a as I? %(*
down Owner will tiold /nd
Weekdays 42% O l d or werk
ends 140/1 j x ) /6V?

• T O S H I B A M IC H O W A V I
t
•
solid state
. ,&lt;i*
' •ing i»"d*tii 1 160
1/ I *794

153— Acreage
Lofs/S'ale

I MONTH I B E D
H m " i I "••*%
I!«• * . I •' i
a
spr i »il
♦ M i r i ) sti.irns 696 7IIA

OCALA
NAT l
FO Bf SI
Wooded lots'
•
money (town' |/1 i .« - •» ,
__________ 1 800 rv; so;*__________

US E D 1)1 D O I N G S A l f " k •eg
j #•#" » . * Single S» i Se«
% 1 11• I AMI/ 1 s Mat t I7? I l l ;

155— Condominiums
Co-Op / Sole

183

2/2 C O N D O
N . i i . i .i •.
,
assumeabtr* 8
2
I •
Small down pay m m * *'r •
Neg 1S7 noo 121 4/nu

• ( Ol O P T v
$*4'

19

a IN l lN I

I MI O U I N C Y

•
K » j t

N E W 1992’sf I d a dowr S
•
es l' 14X70 l i r % m u
j I■’
I I 10 m o 16% \ 709

W"» ••’ «p ea»
!/• 7rtS

•

.

n ...It t S t ;

•i
.1146

185— Computers
I B M PC Compatible monitor
keyboard % « d'Sfc suit/..ire
p r i n t e r 1 7 / S O B O 1 / 1 141 I

2/1 C O M E S W I T H L G Corner
lot 9 1X ISO W d h dedn atert
water mete» Own er w&lt;h ti
nance with iisoo dowr*
•
APH
1JS0 mo
tor IU yrs
F R E E A N D C L E A R ! Deeded
access to St Johns M. .er
C A L L B A R T REA1 EST
140/1 327 74tl

T e le v isio n /

R.idio / Stereo

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale

189 -Office Supplies
/ Equipment
• DESK
Arilnnt finish /.uod
ft
»
s
t deep dr ,i A e r s
17% H9 &gt;7_____________________

INC

193— Lawn &amp; Garden

h t hi

•GAROfN
F F R IIll/ fR
•im s*- -n,|’. , *• T R E E
t*» ncj
ym.r p i k up
12J /V0l

^ 7 Smice

HONDA
1 | |*et led U
........................dger • «ll • •e s
123 111/

■A N FO R D /W A TEB FRO N T •
Bdrrrv’3 B«tf&gt; St Johns Hi»*r L*
u t » « xxx)
n its® von
tA NF O B D SH A O O W LAKE
^
B«ctm
? 5 bath .1 4
lot
Cuatom ven&lt;»ow
|*y».

M TD M U IC M E R SHRf ODE R
I k * . a 1 tlk» i utter l 10
1/7 I &gt;*7
M U R R A Y
R I D I N G
I A W N M O W E H 10 inch 1/00

123
SANFORD SAN L AN T A Omv
14/ V » 3
» % Hath
SCrMnad porch !•' ' •&gt;■I l a v ya*1
can today
t A N F O R O M A O N O LI A MTS
Onry 145 OOO 2 txlrm, 1 hart, horn*
on la/ga tancad k*t icianfsMela

* *»Hl/l PHI
199 - Pets &amp; Supplies
A D O R A B L E Kittens &gt; W T F to
good t urn. (
I \ tv 71'% ••.!.♦•
mesS.igr* pie,is,1

IMS

GENEVA Naw rr*oCv'a or* J 04
ta % on pavadroal County/orvng
lor hortas Wont last lung a*
165 000
QENEVA/PAVEO HOAD - Gran I
maa houaa it tor
l arg« *u.et
porch n txg oak tr*«s 16W 8V)
GENEVA / IN TOWN J 0&lt;P' i
bath on lg fancadM Cedar« -kng
•cia*nad tack
ri ii » m w ’y
162 ®50
GENEVA 3 bdrm J Datr* trr&gt;&gt;
homaon 5 acras acraar&gt;adp*v fi
C4vpor1 /onatl %&lt;r h«-.»»as
'y
163 250
GENEVA •SaOu-t* Ion 5 acrat country Workshop tot*ott»eas »
2 la/ga rooms %• / *4X'
GENEVA-CsUitary|«rMj&gt;r.a guia-i
V3 homa or* 5 la'iitscajail acras
tarwscourt taa#n#&lt;Jpu&lt;4 g*aa"
house ftrapJace 2/car ga/a p hot
Sub end aauna ptua pkjs1ft 09 k o
7 LOTS AVAILABLE l aba tear
nay Woods Estatas gatad com
murvty accass to Si x4*n% sonra
yyrth ownar Bnancmg
GENEVA* ^2 5or* t lacraa anr.
Arr tUIchan wars'iad 7 car ga
raga hatvdy wothIw ] tot 199 9V)

H A P P Y S T A R f P U P P Y CLASS
U p to . H w*&gt; s old
B . i mc
*r ■» it.ng *t.« e.lsy ,s,ir t/l M4%
• M O V I N G B U T Pels Can't*
Dog .pul * •»&gt; young ridor.drm
•• red breed ip.tdo .»r*d shots
I rirf1111» O ltdour |)»*ts gr . •«SI
w * Ctt H r F TO G O O D
t A M I l Y 17! 17VH

I N D I A N S l incnlns Jeltersor»s
hi.tf.poes D*mes t»,lives 10
he QA l&gt; d Bub 40/ 123 1100

211 — Antiques /
Collectibles
DEALER
SP A CE A V A IL
A B L E * A u n t y M a r y ' s An
t iq ue s. 1001 F r e n c h A v r .
0 / 9 2 ) San lor d We buy one
piece/enttie estates* 696 //04

f U

l C

T

I

O

N

• IV tt B O W H I D E H
I 6 S ttP
I O About 21 hrs Im m a c u
la*e a t ra il e r c o v e r
Most
See' 110 00001*0 I// 6 SIV

FreaslurvitHj C cm H ocU, Mc^4a

Bedroom Furniture Mmlar RfuJroom

End Alcjrvt»ei*l Muclnne, '77 &gt;oko l^Mta Trock-&gt;r (JD 301 A ) &amp;
G U N S - SK5 Carbine. ScrvcKj# Mrjdel VV Tolc^kwvn Wincl*ep«r Model

97 ,

Rosu 35 7 M i h W V2 Corivr-* W W 2 W a b l « r P1X Early |*rocJ Colt
Pyllon, Coll 45 G ol d C u p BrtiwnMiHj /*Vnlel 22 JHO [&gt;akotu 35/ Sirigle
Acliur., Additional Slulguta. Rd'es, A harNitjurii A Muck AV*te
Fj i U I c P r e v i e w i W r tl n r a c la y, |uly 2. .* '/*m

Krai

Terms; Heal i i i u l r 10%drj*osil Day «»f Aiution lialamrat
closing 10%Iluyrr's Hrrmium Pusslhlc*&lt;»wnrt linatumg
P t r t t m a l iY u / i e r t y - Cash or ( I k - c k w |*ro|M-r (1&gt;
ijjfn ftiG E N B O T H A M

\ * A vIG.T10NEERS

wmtoMixxMi. in*, m.

N l __ A l«HM r/l Nft lli V

M«4m|

In lo m i.llo n J. r . e . Brochure

800 330-2350

I•
•Mill W* i »*• •« l «

Hi w .u h « i

s.,1 i k e tl 'Uv*

1984 P O N T I A C F i e r o G T rebuilt
V6 Reel B1K M de s warranty
I O A D E . D 14WS 1/1 I/4B

f n mill Sun 701119 6 K i d s
( lot ties and toys
lurm lnr e
household items Devonshire
66s L helsea Met l.oncjAood

%

• M A N O IC A P P f O VAN
l9Bfi
t orcl F ISO 1 «tt automat"
doors 1) 000 171 /418

in r r

I S U Z U 4.4 P I C K U P ‘91 s spd
I0K m i 6 i yl A C
tustnm
interior 19 700 i l l m« ) s

• 27 F T E L D O R A D O motor
home
76 New awning tv
runs great 1% 100 171 /09S

G o o d C r e d it ! N o C r c d it !
B a d C r e d it !

II// DODGE RV

N o Problem ! .121*2993
!

i.va

rmles sleep** 6 slnv« Show*"
fridge lIHOt 12 •027V

M in c e r M o to rs

3 2 1 -1 4 5 0

Well Advertise Your Car
EVERY DAY TIL ITS SOLD!
(or other motor vehicle)

3 lines for only

$0124

• IS L E B A R O N convertitite
re d loaded dig dash /%K m,
1/0CX) Partial finance 6«S /80N

M KM

■

( ni idd i. l i lt ii o nmni l l i u p s « * x t r n )

19 C H E V Y Celebrity AC Auto
I door Good condition S/F
miles 1ISO0 f ir m 377 413/

•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
( *■: n y i . n garaqe sale ad h*
17 noon or* Tuesday and t,»ki
•d v ’i n t a q e of our spur &gt;.»'
gar age *.a'e ad pr u e ' ' ( a
f issitrednow tor det,ids'

• 92 J E E P Sport Auto PS PH
At
alarm
whi t e
i hk
rm I I S /(X) l ike new t/l *6H*

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories

322 2611
219— Wanted to Buy
Ol D S E W IN G
s it&lt; her* gadget
mc’ssaqe

Q u a lit y U sed
C a rs &amp; T ru c k s

241 — Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

T O R T ) 310 I ton flatbed
1981
G oo d i ond't nn 1 1 6tM&gt; ( a l l
alter 6 P M
171 017V

0/ L I N C O L N
T ow nca i
S ig na tu re
E i r r l l e r t t Co nd
1/SOO 121 AII 4or J4V HS?/

GARAGE SALE

1913 J E E P CJ1
t vybndef
spord hardtop and a i r '
Call 177 118/

F O R D BUS
IV 7i
GOOD
( O N O l T I O N It 700 f At t
17/ 7808

• 06 C H E V Y Cavalier Station
wagon AC auto 1/ ooo
Call 760 6077

217— Gariiqe Sales

LO AN -A-R ANGER RldesAgain

Sanford Motor Co.

• C IITV Y CUSTOM VAN
66
loaded , aptams c h a " ■ quod
condition 14 siX) 1/7 /I/6

•I C H E V Y F u l l w
VV.igun
diesel good r ood
ro' d AC
new tires 1/00 17) 140!

BS 10 F T S P O H T C H A F T Open
fisherman I I S O M C Seactrive
1SBlX) Consider trade fo» |et
ski or I lats boat t?i 0279

• CAM PFR TOP
A im . m um
Mack good condition 1100
I7J 1418
• ROLLBAR
for small \*mr i
tied truck good Sha|»e I ' S o»
trade lor someth&gt;r*g ot equal
value
37) 681/

n o ti o n s and
|7J I iov leave

221- Good Thinqs
to Eal

TO P P ER FOR SM ALl TRUCK
l l / S o r I test offer
17! 01/0

VEGETABLES
Pate beans
•.nap beans peas m m
arid
i i m , i____________________ 127 1161

Ad must include phone numher find asking price. If vehicle huso !
been sold in 10 days, call us find we ll renew it free. No copy change
while nd is ru ining except for price. Non-commercial only.

C all 322-2611 Ibday!
VISA

S a n f o r d H e r a ld

222— Musical
Merchandise
ORGAN
: k ey bo a rd s
Good
»u|i *,fjM Ni c e lor sm a ll
church S 100 17 * Hi/9 4 / P M

223— Miscellaneous
• AN SWF R IN G M A C H IN E
( on,|,r like new 11% 32 I 64/1
A T T T N T IO N C A R Phone
H *&gt;y •" s Celiuwr i .** ptmne
ISO 00 40/ U'J / ISS
• B I K E 10 sp»'»*d G r . iy Husky
mens 1/1
Call l/J 640/
• C A R O U S E L H O R S E Replica
N e a r l y ,t&lt; luitl size
Hand
painted 1100 i/4 1660
D IA M O N D S O L I T A IR E R IN OS
S99 and up T ree su ing!
Best Paw n 6 Jewe lry . 3)0 4114
• I M P O R T E D S E R V I C E l« r 8
Yellow Italian dinner dishes
SUM)
3)0 0/1'
• l U G G A G f
A m e ric a n
T ( l a r i s t e r 79 , n c h liI i»e
hardstded Bud* a* wheels and
bind in pull handle Keys and
i rjMih.nafiiiri lock Used twice
Selling less »li.»n i .*■• pru
fur
16 %
M2 1*47%

Brand New 1993 Isuzu Stylus

• P i t T U M E W I N D O W Appro*
‘j •« •••••, by so &gt;ni ties alum
i.
i» att’,- D f ’ .er* puss'b1*
14%
L a lU O O H U V

Relai In Youi New Spa!
’jeats S portable never used
•V t edar ga/elwi underwater
light I I S/S 407 8 1 ' ////

1

• S E A R S I H P compressor 17
gallon tank A*tt, hose and
SA T A spr ay gun %io0 1 I MM
111 /9%9
U N I D I N V I D E O cyp he r II
stereo satellite* re« eiver and
d sh 7 yr s u*d IHixi Craftsman

• (1, and mulch LAWN
M O W E R If) H P 10 m S spd
16 0 0
S E A R S
2600
L I T E S T Y L E R M X T e-erc ise
tr .,.»•••*
lik e in* A S400 2
S O L I D O A K bar stools a
•.me hac ks
custom m ad e
tauge upholster y 11SO
3)0 964? leave message

• P O N T I A C F i r , bird 1**9 O n ,
ow ne r i Ga ra ge d * 97K rm
N u e 14100 10/ J77 4686
• 1971 B U I C K
Restoreablel
( all Bdl tor all details' 1 1000
O H O 371 46//

231- C a r s
I1UICK S K Y H A W K . I*,* 4 Ur
A L PS cruise* lilt low mi
e«c**l cond IS S00
166 4 3/7
CA D ILLA C S E V IL LE
33.000 miles loaded

1991
Tip lop

shapei iiv ooo \n 940i
C A D I L L A C 81 E L D O R A D O
c o n ve rti bl e style rool
up
graded wheels IUS 000 mi I
owner 14 100
898 0446

.V

' i

f JSl \

M.S.R.P. $12,529
• Air Conditioning
• 13“ Aluminum Alloy Whuols
•Power Slooring
• Power Windows &amp; Door Lock9
1Electric Outsido Mirrors
■Bod Roar Garnish Panol
1Variable Int. Windshiold Wipers
■AM/FM ETR Cass Stereo Radio
1Carpotod Floor Mats
' Drlvor's Side Airbag
Rack and Pinion Slooring

Power Front Disc Brakes
Fully Independent Suspension
flocllning Front Bucket Seats
• Tinted Glass
Cigarette lighter
Digital Clock
•Halogen
Hoadlamps

\*as #
V

/

r

S i m i l a r T o Il lu s t r a t i o n

• C A M A R O MS » ( o n . e r l i t i l r
I9d« 1 1 ooo mile* E ac.ll cn,
lo nd dio n
i n ivoj

• C H EV Y CAMARO
I I Re
built VO lu ll ol n.-rt p.irti!
» l O Y lO ll G 4?l 01i6 .my time

Suite, Dirvny Room T i i J « w/Sis C I k i u * A p k h k i Si do By Side, Walders,
Tunki, Gouges, G M C Trcxlor. .1 C cm Trunifioft Trailer, Com|,r«tvjf Front

TOYOTA
1997 / door
l iqht
green tinted windows all th*1
I’ .tras 1 / SOO
174 )34)

• 1 9*4 S K l F I S l t Boat V0MP
M«*ri.
a trailer
Huns great
1100U Partial tmance 69% /no*

Lalccfront H o m e Plus C o n te n ts

Hrghlghti CcivnCruiww Mond Tooli, Fo^er Tooit,

Courtesy Used Cars, 3 2 3 7 1 2 3

• 1940 ( V I N H U D E C l T O ou*
hoard motor
I I I I P Ve» 1
g o o d » ondibon %7s t?i i s h

• C H E V Y Cl 1 A T ION , 11,1 V H
.lulu A L 6 1000 tni lvt E « c
cor'd I H n o 646 06/6

BB ConvertitU Corvefta. fou l |/(XX)) (&gt;urr^»ltuck w / G t i x l e A.01X) ft&gt;

|: «c e p tt a « tag title el,
1918 O L D S C U T L A S S C I E R A
I door auto air stereo really
a nice c ar • O N I V 1 1 6 V 86 per
month
Call M r Payne

• 1% E T G L A S S T H O N and trad
er SS HT* F v l n r u d e E •rellent
i ondition' l ; sou 173 M t ;

10am, Friday, July *7 M Saturday, Jul y 10
133 S. Overlook I * r , t.luil.i Y im .i , South oJSatifoni
2-Slory; 3700±sf; M u /2M ha, Pool Home on
liikc Kiwanis with 2(XK)ls( Work Shop
Contents Include*: Cars, Truc ks, (inns, l urnilurc,
Ikiuipmcnl, TcxjLs, \ Anijcjucs

F U E S A U TO SALES
* * 327 2692 * *
TAKE UP PAYM EN TS
NO M O NEY DOWN

W I N N E R •/ Ba s s B oa t 10
IS0 H P
XP Evmrude
1/ 24
volt trolling motor Ta m l im
trader
ttu m m tn qt n id deptti
tmder 1HS00 I I I MOB

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�The view from city hall: tranquil lakea and a etate of the art boulevard

UbrofV

C raig Spearm an, civic activist, Is restoring a vintage M axwell

Brian N olan worka on hla nature newsletter.

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a - Sanford Harafd - Sunday, June 20, 1K3 - Harold Advartltar - Thuraday, Junt 24, 1M3 - Sanford, FL

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E v e ry N e e d
With personalized care from our staff of professionals

Top student is
inventor of
computer games

F a m ily s

By VICKI DeSOIIMIlIt
Herald Staff Writer

QUNOANOACK

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EVA SHELTON

Locally Owned and Operated Since 1956

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500 East Airport Boulevard • Sanford, Florida • 322-9213

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Mark Nari
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USA Today awarded
Nerl a $2,500 scholar*
□ See N erl, Page 3

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can greatly Improve yo ur understanding.
Patients report better speech perception In all
types of situations - in a car, office, group,
theater, church, restaurant, even at partlaa.
F R E E H E A R IN G T E S T

S a n fo r d
3 2 3 -4 7 7 3
(Including Volusia County)

IN OUR OFFICE OR TOUR HOME

HEARING
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W in t e r S p r in g s 3 2 7 - 4 5 0 0

SANFORD

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O ra n g e C o u n ty
L a k e C o u n ty

Th e tapestry of
a tow n is w oven
from the m any
d ive rse yarns
s p u n by people
w h o live there.
F ro m the 6,426
ta le s to tell
ab o u t Lake Mary,
a han d fu l here
have been gleaned
from your friends
an d ne igh b o rs.

Loved Ones

V is it in g N u r s e A s s o c ia tio n In c .

3

LAKE M ARY - Mark
N erl, w ho graduated
second In his class o f
n e a rly 500 at L a k e
Mary High School re­
cently. was selected as
one o f the top 20 stu­
dents In the nation by
USA Today.
Nerl will attend the
Massachusetts Institute
o f Technology next year
where he plans to study
computer technology.
lie was the only Cen­
tral Floridian named to
the publication's 1903
All-USA Academic First
Team.
USA Today selected
Ncrt for his outstanding
ucadcmlcs but also for
Ills Inventions of a vari­
ety o f computer games.
Three o f the games
u rc c u r r e n t l y b e in g
m ark eted n ation ally.
One, D u n g e o n s of
D r n k k l o r . Is b e i n g
m a r k e t e d b y a
California-based com-

(4 0 7 ) 6 2 8 -0 0 8 5
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T o s c h e d u le a n I N - H O M E T E S T
C a ll 1 -8 0 0 - 3 3 0 - 2 8 2 4

i O n A n y 8 « l r mt O u » « o m
i B a lta n a H a a rin * A M s
xp. e/ao/ea

Battery Sale

m

Durecell Actlvair

31213875
pieVp»»|«F»»m lt)

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•Coopona cannot ba combined
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Wf- H O N O R H U M A N A . M E D IC A ID . U N IO N A H 0 S P I1 A L P L A N S

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Sanford Htraid - Sunday, Junt 20, 1993 - Htraid AdvarUtar - Thuraday, June 24, 1903 - Sanford, FL - •

Senior
keeps
ticking

Neri

Continued from Page a
ship and provided him a
t ri p to W a s h in g to n .
D .C . to a c c e p t t he
publlcantion's honor.
Team m em bers ore
chosen for their aca­
demic talent and their
student leadership
skills.
In addition to his ncadem lc skills. N eri is

■ y V IC K I D a S O ftM IU '

Herald Stiff Writer
LA K E M ARY - George

Baaen'a doctor told him
he could not take the
degenerative arthritis in
his legs sitting down.
" I f I wanted to ease the
pain," Bascn said, " I had
several alternatives and
one o f them was to go
out. keep m y mind active
and w ork."
Bascn hus been re-

.

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/

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Whatever Your Field...

'W a ­
'

ft

P
lu.

_________________

PIND A BUMPM CROP OP
OPPORTUNITIKS IN THI

____
H*r*1d ftvolo by Tommy Vlnconl

Gtorflu Basan with Publix atora managar Tarry Dugglna.

□See Bascn, Page 13

very. Involved In -a rea
soccer. He is a member
o f the Seminole Blades
team. He also coaches a
youth team and serves
as a referee.
Acaem lcally, he has
maintained a perfect A
average throughout his
h igh s c h o o l and he
scored 1540 on the
S c h o la s t ic A p t i t u d e
Test (SAT).

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ERA

M l W . C I I U U C J I A V l i • M O N .-S A T . 10-5

�•V.. twu - -&gt;v%in&lt;d

F\

a*1.***—&lt;t.

to perform
&gt;t to go to

with his (Elvis') backup band. R rst wa
Las Vegas for rahaaraala and than did
tha Taj Mahal with paopla Ilka J.D . Souther. And
than I was Invitad to ba In tha inaugural. It's baan
almost unballavabla. 9
---------

,V?■

* 5 8 .9 5

Jack of all trades Is
athlete, cop, rock star

mSSmS

tty DKAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
LA KE MARY — When young boys
are asked what they want to be when
they grow up, the most popular
answers would probably be: police­
man, fireman, rock star and athlete.
Jack Eltonhead has been all o f
those...and more.
The personable Eltonhead. who lives
In Lake Mary with his wife Kim and
pet dog Penn State, has gained na­
tional recognition In the past year,
pr o t r ay l ng Elvis Presl ey whi l e
perform ing with Presley's original
back-up band In the Spirit o f America
Tour at the Taj Mahal In Atlantic City
and In Bill Clinton's Inugurnl parade In
January.
But Central Floridians have been
aware o f the multi-talented Eltonhead
since his migration from Philadelphia
back In 1972.
Whether playing softball, doing his
Elvis show ot playing 50's and 60’s

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MH.FMNCH

TEXACO
Express
Lube
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�Swford Htnld - Sunday, Jung 20, 1903 - Hsrsid AdvrUw r - Thursday, Jung

Elvis

Coatianad from Page 4
t couldn't stand the cold weather any
m ore."
A fter making the move to the area
he got more Into his music and got
heavily involved with the Sanford
Church Softball League, becoming one
o f the premier players for the Holy
Cross Episcopal team that dominated
the late 70's and early 80's.
He Is still active In the Sanford
league's today, playing left field and
batting cleanup for Sanford First
United Methodist, which has won four
Church tournament titles and two
regular season crowns over the past
Ove years, as well as with the Hancock
Hardware tram on Thursday night's.
When Jon, who recently finished his
freshmun year as a pitcher at Northern
Iowa University, w u b gellin g Interested
in b a s e b a l l . E l t o n h c a d s t a r t e d
couching on the youth level for several
Lake Mary teams playing out o f the
Seminole PONY League at Five Points.
He served as an assistant to Ronnie
Almun In the Pinto League (7-8 year
olds) lor a year and with Ed Suggs for
two years In the Mustang League (8-0
year olds) and then one more year us
nn assistant at the Pony level before
taking over as head coach, where he
had such players as Chucky Suggs and
current Seminole Community College
player Rick Eckstein.
He finally gave up coaching baseball
uftcr Jon got Into high school, but
cam e out o f "retirem en t" two years

ugo to coach a couple o f wom en's
softball team that his wife was playing
on.
" I r e a lly e n jo y s o ft b a ll," said
Eltonhcad. " I like the competition and
jct psyched up to play, It Is a release
or me. I've been known to take It
pretty seriously on occasion, a couple
o f times I've blown o ff a g ig (musical
show) because I didn't want to miss
, playing In a church tournam ent."
In addition to hia athletic Involve*
ment, Eltonhcad haa also served as a
reserve with the Sanford Police De­
partment, doing patrols with officers
on weekends, and was on the Board of
D irectors o f the Lake M ary Fire
Department for five years, even taking
part in helping subdue several fires.
And while most Sanford and Lake
Mary people know Jack through these
endeavors, it is through his protruyal
o f Elvis Presley that he has been able
to touch m ost people In Central
Florida.
" I hod done Elvis' songs for a long
time, but actually started doing an
E lv is show back In 1 0 7 4 ." said
Eltonhead, who bears an uncanny
likeness to " T h e K in g " when
coslumc. " A couple o f years ago I got
to perform at halftime o f the Thundcr-B erlln G a la xy W o rld Football
League gam e in Orlando that was sent
Into the Middle East for the Desert
Storm troops.
"T h en a year or so ago I got the

S

U ,

1993 - Sanford, E l - »

Extra services
vithout extra fees.

□See Elvis, Page 8

m trm r2iZTGtz&amp;Bav;-seLTUi ^ v^ K a T a 'a a a eM L j.a si’a aiiaiM,? .itttsuuxzzua

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�0 - Sanford Hsrald - Sunday. June 20, 1809 - Herald AdvarUaar - Thursday, June 24, 1089 - Sanford, FL

" 4 l
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Crown Bonk

Crslg 8paarman at home In hla office works for a batter oommunlty.

Active participation in
community is priority
already chaired the Lake Mary B u b Inesa Advisory Board for tw o years,
served on the Charter Revision Com ­
mission and now serves on the Lake
Mary Planning and Zoning Board.
" I have alw ays been som ewhat
Involved In the com m unity,” said

■ y j . M ARK B AftPIRLD

Herald Senior Stall Writer

105 Uva Oaks Gardena
Cassslbsny, PL 32707

W.B.NEWMAN, M.D.
In The Practice O f

Obstetrics, Gynecology and Infertility
B O A R D C E R T IFIE D

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is h h h h h h h h h h h h h m h h h h h

LAKE MARY - Active participation
In hla comm unity la Important to Craig
Spearman.
Though a resident o f Lake Mary for
only three years. Spearman, 47, has

□Bee Spearman, Page 10

You Don't Eat.
You Don't Lose.
You
Yo

Too Much.
»n‘t L«

You've, Tried Everything.
Y o u D o n 't L o s e .
LOSE YOUR EXTRA
WEIGHT THE

TRANSFORMATIONS WAY
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• Real Supermarket Food
• No Food Supplements
• Prescription Help Available
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from registered nurses
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• Onaolna maintenance Droaram

�•anfofd Herald - Sunday, June 30, 1W3 - Herald Advertise - Thursday, June 34, 1 M 9 - S an fo rd , PL - ?

Environmentalist all action
By SAMOftA ILLtOTT
Herald Staff Writer

fort In a woods near their
neighborhood. About two
months later, the group
decided to become an
environmental club and
a d o p t e d the name
"Nature Club." During
the first year, the club
a d o p te d a w h a le , a
manatee and a road.
Club members pick up
trash along Main Road
leading Into their Card!*,
nal Oaks neighborhood.
The club has protested
CFCs In aerosols to urg­
ing expanded recycling
efforts at area schools.
While picking up the
roadside. Brian said, "W e
find cans and cups and
other things so bad, I
can't even say what they
are." Trash from fast
food restaurants is also
som etim es c a re les s ly
tossed along the road.
The 13 members o f the
club m eet In Brian's
b e d r o o m . A b o u t 10
members attend meet­
ings regularly. With the
use o f his father's com­
puter. Brian publishes a
c lu b n e w s le t t e r fo r
m e m b ers and s u b ­
scribers. He has also put

Books and pamplets
about the environment
sit on a bedroom shelf,
ready for use at a mo*
m e n t's n otice. T itle s
cover a wide range of
topics from recycling oil
to saving the whales. A
certificate proclaiming
him this year's outsland*
Ing environmentalist at
Greenwood Lakes Middle
School is framed and
proudly hung on the
wall.
Thlrtcen-year-old Brian
Nolan of Lake Mary easi­
ly lists the activities of
the Nature Club, formed
b y a g r o u p o f
neighborhood children
obout a year and a half
ago. He Is president of
the club and the oldest
member. Club members
recently planted trees
and picked up trash In a
revitalisation effort at
Crystal Lake Park behind
the Lake Mary Commu­
nity Building.
The nucleus o f the club
form ed In F e b ru a ry.
1092 when some
children were building a □Sss Nolan, Pago 9

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Brian Nolan, praaldant of tho Nature Club

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�Some faces and places around Lake Mary
• L a e a lla a B e tw e e n
Sanford and Orlando,
m ostly to the east or
Interstate 4.
•Area 9.B square miles
• P e p a la t le a

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Entrance to Lake Mary City Hall la flanked by eofMmn$.^^ra^ * T'w&lt;m,v,"',,rt

D

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Elvis

SANFORD

Continued from Page 8

N O -TA P TO U R N A M E N T

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opportunity to
rform with his backup
nd. First we got to go
to Las Vegas for rehears­
als and then did the show
at the Taj Mahal with
people like J.D. Souther.
And then I was Invited to
be In the Inaugural. It's
been almost unbelieva­
ble."
If a crisis strikes anyw h e r e In t h e a r e a
Gltonhead Is cither there
trying to help out, or
getting on the phone to
find out what he can do
to help. He haB done
hundreds o f benefits over
the years, most having to
do with helping the el­
derly or disadvantaged
youth.
" I like taking people's
m oney,'* kidded
Eltonhead when asked
why he does so many
benefits. "But 1 guess I
took too many shots to
head while boxing as a
four year old, because 1
never keep very much of
It.
" I don't have a lot of
money, but I live a pretty
good life. So if 1 can use
my talent to help others,
I can't help but get In­
volved."

• O everaaeat Mayor
and four commlsaloners
e le c t e d to tw o y e a r
term s. C ity m anager,
appointed by the com­
mission. City Hall. 100
W . Lake M ary Blvd..
324-3000.
•Annual budget $0.7
million
•T ax rate Property, 3.7
m ills p e r $ 1 ,0 0 0 o f
assessed value, minus
exem p tio n s Including

His most recent good
samaritan activity came
when he worked to get
p eo p le In volved with
h elp in g the Sem inole
County Humane Society
get back on Its feet alter
the recent fire.
" I love animals and
couldn't stand to see
those poor dogs suffer,"
s a id E l t o n h e a d . " I
bought some food myself
and took It to them (the
Humane S ociety) and
then tried to get other
people to cither donate
food or volunteer their
time to help rebuild the
facility."
Over the yearn he has
done benefit concerts to
raise money for Chucky
Suggs' heart transplant,
the Police Benevolent As­
s o c ia tio n an d Y ou th
Deputies, the Meals on
W h eels program . Hill
Haven Retirement Home
and the Little Red School
House.
He has also done five
C erebral Palsey
Telethons, a concert for
Leukemia research back
In 19B0 at the Tupperware C ivic Center,
and last year did the
Wish Foundation
T e le t h o n , w h ic h he
hopes to do again this

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Sanford Herald - Sunday, June 20, 1 W 3 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, June 24, 1003 - Sanford, F I - •

At a glace,what you really need to know
$ 2 5 ,0 0 0 h o m e s t e a d
exemption: sales tax 6
percent: no state Income

tax.
e E m p l o y m e n t
Slcmens-Stromberg
Carlson Is the largest
em ployer. Professional
offices em ploy the second
highest numbers.

e Recreation City De­
partment o f Parks and
Recreation adm inisters
year round recreational
programs. Major parks
Include Liberty Park with
a co m p lete c h ild re n 's
p la y g ro u n d a re a and
Central Park adjacent to
City Hall. A major sports
c o m p l e x o p e n e d last
year. The city also con­
t ai ns fo u r d e v e lo p e d
neighborhood parks and
eight still undeveloped
parks.
o Polios, firs City has
full time police and (Ire
departments. Both locat­
ed at Public Safety Build­
ing, 235 Rinehart Rd.
333-8250.

N o la n -------

CHINA KING

Continued from Fogs 7

together a club yearbook
with photographs he has
taken with hand printed
captions.
Along with working on
community projects such
as the tree pl ant i ng,
Bri an sai d the c l u o
members conduct their
ow n e n v i r o n m e n t a l
e x p e r i m e n t s su ch as
testing the biodegrada­
tion o f various types o f
paper.
"W e put a piece of
new spaper out In the
w eather," Brian recalls,
"and we could still read
It weeks later."
Blake Longslaff, a vice
president o f the Nature
Club, who Just completed
third grade at Lake Mary
Elem entary School
stopped by recently to
discuss a recycling pro­
gram. Blake and Brian
picked up trash around
the retention pond at the
elem entary school earlier
In the year.
" W e had wanted to

take a trip to Blue
S p r i n g s to see the
m anatee w e adop ted."
Brian said, "b u t they
have all left by n ow ."
Club members adopted a
ma n a t e e n a me d
"B oom er."
Envlm om ental themes
abou n d In th e N olan
household from Recycle/
Save the forest/Save the
seas to Be N oble-Think
Global, Brian has even
placed two bricks In the
tanks o f each toilet o f his
home. "It saves about a
gallon or water with each
flush," he explains.
Chosen to work on the
stalf o f the Eagle's Eye,
the G reen w o od Lakes
Middle School newspaper
during the com ing school
year, Brian has not de­
cided what he wants to
be,
" I either want lo be a
photojoumallst, an envi­
ronmentalist. a writer or
a geography teacher," he
said.

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�19 - tar ford Herald - Sunday, Juna 80, 1903 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, Juna 84, 1993 - Sanford, FL

Spearman

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Suita 106
Sanford, F L 32771
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Spearm an. "W h e n we
m oved to Lake Mary with
our two small children, I
felt I had a vested Inter­
est In the community. I
believe you can stand an
the sidelines and grouse
or you can get Involved,
so I chose to get In­
volved ."
The Spearman fam ily,
Craig. Marcia and their
tw o children. W hitney
and Justin, m oved to
Lake Mary from Longw ood, where he lived
since 1982. Spearm an
has spent much o f his life
and career In Central
Florida, growing up In
Orange County. For 11
years, he worked with
Southern Bell, Including
several years as district
manager for Orlando and
Brevard County.
Spearman left Central
F lorid a from 1979 to
1982 to work for two
Exxon ventures with of­
fices In Connecticut and
Swltxerland. He returned
to Central Florida and
began a new career In
co mp uter Insurance
applications, first with
The Travelers and sub­
sequently, with two firms
he founded. He Is cur­
rently founder o f Extra-

Point Inc., an Insurance
Information and market­
ing firm.
S p e a rm a n 's In v o lv e ­
ment In the community
spans many years.
Am ong Ills past activi­
ties, he served as presi­
dent and general cam ­
paign chairman for llcnrt
o f Florida United Way,
which encompassed
fund-raising activities In
S em in ole, O range and
Osceola Counties.
He served ns president
o f John Young Museum
and Planetarium , now
Orlando Science Center,
and whb u director of Sun
Bank. He also served on
the Florida Fine Arts
Council.
Spearman suid he secs
real p ro m is e In the
UBlness development of
Lake Mary, u vision he
helped create as a plan­
ning board member.
" It 's a good place to
liv e ," soys Spearman of
his adopted home. " I t ’s
rural enough to be ap­
pealing ana offer a high
q u a lity o f liv in g . But
there's a significant
commercial tax base with
a potential for growth.
Th e outlook for taxes Is
very favorable compared

□8«a Spearman, Page 18

Developer of
"H A Y W O O D "

A Residential Community
Heavily W ooded Lots

•RESIDENTIAL
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T O C H O O S E FR OM
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2701 West 25th Street
P.O. Box 1885
Sanford FL 32772
407- 322-3103
National Association

MVfH

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8*n&gt;ofd Herald - Sunday, June 20, 1983 -Herald Advertiser - Thursday, June 24. 1M3 - Banford. FL - 11

Historical commission
learns about cassava
By s a h a m c c a h o b i b r
Horald Correspondent
The Lake Mary Histori­
cal Commission held its
dual m eeting and pro­
gram before taking a
summer break. Mrs. Ivor
I'owell presented a "m ost
In t e r e s ti n g and In­
structive program on the
history, cultivation and
uses o f the p la n t,
cassava." said Margaret
Wesley. The m eeting was
held at the Old Lake
Mar y C i t y Hal l . T h e
cassava was the plunt
grown In Lake Mary from
10 0 1 to 1900 for use In
making sturch and other
products at the huge
I’kmtcrs Compuny facto­
ry that stood In the area

Uses of
cassava

o f Fifth St reet and
Crystal Lake Avenue on
n part of the company's
79 acres. The workers
were Imported from the
Island w h ere eaHsava
grew Indigenously. How­
ever, the manufacturing
o f starch becam e un­
profitable and the plunt
w as sol d to the
O ve rstre et T u rp en tin e
C om puny whi ch later
sold It to A.E. SJoblom.
Officials o f the Turpen­
tine C o m p a n y , l ater
called the Overstreet In­
vestment Company, were
M oses O. O v e r s tre e t,
C.W . E n lzm ln cr. A .N .
Goodwin und J. I’ lcton
Wurlow.
James B. Thompson,

□See Powell, Page 18

Estaila Pow ell teaches the many usee o f cassava

105 Commerce St.
Lake Mary
Sunday School 9:30
Worahlp
10:30

Bob Wilbur, Pastor

■PortlyW ilry
-FriwxnyF^p

324-5433

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10:4.3 AM
10:43 AM
3:0(1 PM
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i

G210 Markham Woods Rd., Lake Mary • 333-2030

MinitUr

Sunday School
9:15AM
Worship
■* 10:30AM

CO N G R EG ATIO N ]
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SUNDAY

9 Cue Fidman, Swioa Puroa

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Longwood

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M O -IO O I m

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Don T . DeBeviote

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W EDNESDAY
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SUNDAY
Sunday School
M o rn ljn i W orahlp
Children1! Church
Youlh
Evening Worahlp

^ 3 9 0 Long wood-Lake Mary Road ♦ Lake Mary, FI 3274#

•Contemporary Style

333-8078

IIN O O n N S O .

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for

Pastor Milam

200 WAYMAN ST. • LONGWOOD

Evangelical Presbyterian

A ChrlajyBsJ

L0NGW00DCHURCHOF1HENAZARENE

ir e c t o r y

Abundant Life Church
i?

□See Cassava, Page 18

W elcom e to the

C huR ck
D

The following report on
the cassava plunt was
prepared by Estcla G.
Powell o f Lake Mary for
Its recent Luke Mary His­
torical Commission meetIng.
Whut is cassava? A c ­
cording to the dictionary.
Cas s uv n ( kusuvul (K.
Casavc, sp. Casabc —
from Haitian). Any of
several tropical
cuphorblaccous plants o f
the genus Manlhot, as
Manlhot (bitter cassavuf
much cultivated for Its
starchy tuberous roots
which yield Important
food products: also a
nut r i t i o us sta rch o b ­
tained from the roots, the
source o f tapioca.

(407)831-7372
V. REV. FATHER
NIKODIM PRIBOJAN

Sunday Worship
10tl5 AM
Sunday School
9t00 AM
Nursery Provided
CIIUHCH

(407) 3334233
The Hev. Sieve W . Lucaa
Senior Mlnlaier

- —T-p-yj

COUNSKIJNO CENITM
( 407) 1604H03
I&gt;r Paul L Martin
Dir. uTthe Cou meting Center

�11 - Sanford HaraM - Sunday, Juna 30, 1903 - Harald Advartlaar - Thursday, Juna 24, 1993 - Sanford, FL

*7 4 e

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n

if it u

Persimmon farm

il

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red's Shoe Repair

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MnisiusL

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Herald Staff Writer______

m

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JULY24,1983.

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The early summer
blooming pink and rose
crape myrt les along
L o n g w o o d Luke M ary
Road draw glances o f
casual p a s s e r b y and
p a r t i a l l y o b s c u re the
view o f dozens o f trees In
the meadow. In the early
autum n, h ow ever, the
trees In the background
take center stage, bear­
in g bushels o f bright
orange ripe persimmons.
Pcrsjmmons huve been
grown' on the fnrm for
over 80 years, ever since
John Farina Immigrated
from Italy and became a
h o m e s t e a d e r o n t he
property near the present
site o f Lake Mary High
S ch ool and G reen w ay
Boulevard. Three genera­
tions o f the Farina family
have raised and sold
persimmons on the farm.
John Farina, 69, who
was named for his Italian
g r a n d f a t h e r , a n d hi s
wife, Ruth, carried on the
tradition after Farina’s
father. Columbo
Augustino died.
One o f eight children,
Farina bought the family
furm. with the exception

o f his father’s old home,
and con tin u es raising
persimmons.
A Longwood city man­
ager for 20 years and a
fo r m e r post o ffic e
employee. Furinu retired
about 11 years ago after
suffering two heart at­
tacks and u n dergoin g
open heart surgery.
He continues to work
wi t h hi s 4 0 0 to
pe r s i mmon trees,
curefully grafting buds
onto the root stocks with
pnrafnn wax. Although
the trees generally die
after a decade or so.
Farina said he does have
some thut are 60 or 70
years old. He sometimes
cut s d o wn wi l d
p e rsim m o n trees and
uses the root stock to
graft new trees. It takes
about seven y ea rs to
grow a one-inch diameter
Ircc from seed. Farina
ex plain ed , so gra ftin g
produces new trees at a
faster rate.
Last year, the trees
produced a bumper crop
o f more than 300 bushels
o f persim m ons. Farina
sale) the trees usually
bear heavily one year,
then lightly the next.

□See Farina, Page 15

DIPLOMAT OP THE AMERICAN BOARD OF SURGERY
DIPLOMAT OP THE AMERICAN BOARD OP THORACIC
AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY

[ i

Wishes to thank the readers of the
Sanford Herald for their support
in making his practice a great success
and pledges to continue to provide the
best medicine that they are
entitled to, with the most recent
advances in endoscopic or
"band-aid" surgery and the
most recent thorascopic techniques to
treat lung diseases.

If
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All other ana codes dial l-SOO-tea-OS25

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Sanford Herald - Sunday, Juna OO, 1M9 - H«raJd Advarllaar a ThufWey. duiw » r 1M3** Baftlord; PL

Basen
Ccntia*e4 trwm Page I
warded for hla eflbrt with
im proved h ea lth and
with the Tim ex "You're
Still Tic kina" award that
is presented to outstand­
ing seniors across the
state who continue to
work well beyond
"normal" retirement age
and who have become
community leaders.
Dr. Stephen Reed, an
orthopaedic physician in
Sanford who was treating
him, helped Baaen get a
job bagging groceries at
the Publix in Sanford
before the Lake Mary
store opened.
"H e asked m e If I
would consider working
at Publix," he admitted.
"A t first I said no, but
then I thought that if It
meant I would not have
to get artificial knee capo
then I'd do it."
Baaen said he had
worked in a grocery atory
many years ago when he
first got married. He said
he had been a meat
cutter, but at the start of
World War II he was too
old to fight, but he was
given a Job In a defense
plant.
"I never went back to
working at a grocery
store after the war," he
said.
His last Job before re­

tiring was as assistant to
the vice president at
W hite Motor Carp,, a
truck manufacturer in
Cleveland, Ohio.
Baaen said he loves
working at the Publix In
Lake Mary where he can
meet so many different
people, especially
children. He aald that he
loves children and that
he spends most o f his
Income on gifts for the
voungaters he gets to
know on the Job.
"It makes me feet pre­
tty darn proud when
children say they want to
go to George’s store," he
said.
He works about 20
hours a week at the store,
he said. Usually he works
mornings, arriving at 5
a.m. to open the store.
He said that while he’s
on the lob he's always
looking for ways to save
the com pany m oney.
R ecen tly, he was re ­
cognized for helping the
Publix chain save nearly
•200,000 by suggesting
that each store stop ren­
tin g Just one o f the
skid-resistant carpets
they have.
When he's not working
at Publix, Basen said he
volunteers his time with
his wife Ruth at the
American Red Cross and
at his church.

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�Humid Senior Stuff Writer
HEATHROW - Prom
outer apace to the tennis
court. Larry Lucas allows
his mind to lead him to
search for ways to Im­
prove man’s lot.
“ I really believe I'm
h ere to b e n e f i t
mankind." eaid Lucas,
56. "I'm no Einstein, but
I'm a worker. Hopeftilly, 1
can do something to help
people."
Many local folks know
Larry and Joanne Lucas
th rou gh th e ir volu n teertsm. Joanne has been
active In organising and
o p e r a t i n g th e L a k e
Mary-Heathrow Festival
o f the Arts while Larry
raised funds for the an­
nual event. Larry has
raised funds for disabled
children and has dabbled
In local political issues.
Larry Lucas was also
active In the Save Our
Homes effort lsst year to
place a cap on pocket­
emptying property value
Increases. He personally
collected thousands o f
signatures for the ballot
effort. This Is the visible
Larry Lucas.

But few people may
know Larry Lucas Was a
k e y e n g in e e r w ith
Lockheed Missiles and
Space Co. In California
for 25 years. There, he
helped develop computer
guidance system a for
missies, Including the
Trident and Poseidon,
and helped develop key
s ta b ila s a tlo n c o m p o ­
nents for the Hubble
Space Telescope.
L u c a s r e c e iv e d 33
c o m m en d a tio n s from
Lockheed for his work on
p a te n t-p ro d u c in g In ­
novations. Even today,
he Is a guest reviewer of
NASA technical writings.
H e w a s a l s o an
"associate founder" of
ALTOS Computer Sys­
tems. one o f the fastest
growing computer com­
panies In the country
during the late 1970s
and early 1980s. Joanne
w as o n e o f th e fiv e
founders o f the company
which exploded to a 5180
million a year venture
less than 10 yearn after
the $50,000 startup of
the company. After the
company was sold, the
L u c a s e s c o lle c t e d a
h an d som e retu rn on

th eir in vestm en t and
shortly thereafter, they
moved to Heathrow at
the suggestion of their
son, Monte Taylor.
T h e y c o n t in u e to
operate Repltco
Technologies Corp., a
c o m p u te r a to ra g e
upllcatlngi
dm
“
The Lucases became
active In the Lake Mary
community as a way at
familiarising themselves
with their new home.
"W e were retired and
new In the area," said
Lucas. "W e knew the
way to get to know peo­
ple was to get Involved."
The Lucases attended
a Heathrow art fesUval
organisational meeting
and since then have been
active In many areas of
the community. He has
served on the board o f
the Lake Mary Chamber
of Commerce, served as
vice chairm an o f the
C h u c k S u g g s
Medla/Celebrlty Tennis
Tou rnam ent, and haa
been active In his home­
owner’s association.
Now. after seven active
social years, Lucas says
he's ready to devote his
next seven years to hla

Larry Luoaa explain# an engineering oonoept.
love o f creation that fas­
cinated him since his
youth tinkering In his
dad's Decatur, 111. radio
store, He has Joined the
I n v e n t o r s C lu b s o f
Am erica, a non-profit
support group that aids
In product development
and markeUng. He serves

as a state director o f the
group.
One project Is an Inhome recycling processor
that will shred plastic
and crush gla ss and
cans. The machine will
be built Into a kitchen
counter o f the envlroconscious homeowner o f

______ ________

shores

me
future.
I n h I
workshop, .......
hedge clippers, Lucas Is
also designing a
ro b o tic a lly -c o n tro lle d
te n n is b a ll p r a c tic e
□ t e a Lucas, Page 15

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�•w ford HtraM - tundsy, Juft* 20, 1M3 - Hm M Advsrtlew - Ttiurtdey, Jurw M .1M S - aanfort, PI - t *

JU.

Lucas*

Farina-

14

ti
“ I may not even get
enough fruit thie year to
put out my sign," he
said. Beginning In late
August through October
a small "persimmons for
sate" sign Is usually
posted o v e r F a rin a 's
mailbox. "Even If 1 don't
put my sign out, custom­
ers come back anyway,"
he added.
Although many people
p r e f e r to e a t t h e i r
persimmons ripe. Farina
said many of his Viet­
namese and Korean custa m e rs ptek g r een

SpearmanContinued fro m Page 10
to other m unicipalities
along 1-4."
In t h e f u t u r e ,
S p e a rm a n s e e s tw o
(-ImllrngcH to that cornin c r c l a I l a x b a u 1
healthiness, a developing
downtown and a commerlcally-altractlve tele­
phone service.
S p e a rm a n s a id th e
town's core Is lacking In
utilities needed to attract
businesses. He said a city

Cassava—
Continued from Page 11
Its uses: food and m ed­
icine,
1low to prepare cassava
lor food. Following Is a
recipe for Cassava Cake:
CASSAVA C AK E
' 4 cups grated cassava
I1
/) cups sugar, brown
or white
2 eggs
2 cups coconut milk
I tsp. butter
Sweet m acupuno on
lop (o p tio n a l). (S w eet
mucapuno can be ob ­
tained at oriental stores.
It Is u grated coconut
different from the usual
c o c o n u t s f o u n d In
supermarkets In that It
contains no water, just
the white (lesh.)
M ix a ll In g r e d ie n ts
together, except
m acap u n o. M ix w e ll,
pour In a baking pan.
lloil coconut syrup with
some brown sugar and
sprinkle on top o f batter.
Hake at 375°F. about 45
m in u t e s . T e s t w it h
toothpick. Cake la done

persimmons to pickle or
dry like prunes. Some­
times they buy 10 to 20
bushels at a time. Some
s i m p l y eat green
persimmons which are
•our and astringent.
Farina and his wife,
who will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversa­
ry In August, have seen
th e a r e a c h a n g e
d r a s tic a lly o v e r the
years. Ruth re ca lled
when Longwood Lake
Mary Road was nothing
more than a two-rut sand
road. In dry weather, she

s a id s h e w a lk e d to
Longwood rather than
risk getting the car hung
up In the sand.

server to give players
tru ly random serves.
With a clap o f his hands,
a baaeball-slied model
a c u r rle a a ro u n d h is
"W e uaed to hunt wild garage floor In hla direc­
turkeys around the lake tion before losing a wheel
where Remington Oaks Is and tipping over.
"That one still needs
now." Farina recalled, re­
ferring to a subdivision some work," he admits.
A firm b e lie v e r In
across the road from
their farm. "W e used to- things extraterrestrial
hunt everything In those and extraordinary, Lucas
o a k tre e s , and o v e r says many o f hla ideas
around the lake behind are "channeled" through
the library, near where his thoughts In the early
the m iddle school la morning hours. Lucas
s o r ts th ro u g h th o s e
now."
thoughts, from whatever
their source, and decides
whether they're usable.
A companion fascina­
commissioned engineer­ from Orlando were billed
tion with unearthly life,
ing study should show at a long distance rate.
Lucas says he believes,
whut Is needed. Once the Lake Mury city officials though he admits he
drainage and other Infra­ and businessmen, along
can't prove It, the U.S.
structure Improvements with Sanford and county government Is secretly

arc made, a vision can be officials, have sought to
erufted that will atlmct eliminate those toils with
businesses w h ile p ro­ limited success.
tecting the town's ap­
A lth o u g h S p ea rm a n
peal.
provided surprise testi­
Spearman said a de­ mony at a slate hearing
terrent to small business here last year In support
development In the city o f expanding the toll-free
Is the telephone service. calling area, the Public
For years, culls to and S e r v ic e C o m m is s io n ,
which regulates public
utilities, relented only
when Inserted toothpick enough lo ullow Orlaud o • n o r I h S e in 1n o I e
comes out clean.
F o r m e d ic in a l p u r­ C o u n t y cul l s to be
poses. cassava can be charged nt a 25-ccnt flat
used for bruises, fever or rale,
dislocation.
For bruises, peel the
skin o f the roots. Wash
th o r o u g h ly , cru sh or
grate the w h ite part. Continued from Page 11
Squeeze Juice through chairm an, presided at
H lc r illz c d g u u zc and the business meeting, at
plucc Juice In a sterilized which plans were made
container. Then apply for a community celebra­
the Juice to the bruise tion In May 1894 and will
with forceps and steril­ be c o o r d in a te d by a
committee consisting o f
ized cotton.
For a fever, apply or Shari Brodlc, Etttc Jane
place leaves o f the plant Keogh and Bettyc Dcon the foreh ea d (0-8 dmon.
M argaret W esley, li­
leaves). Tie with a cloth
around the head. When brarian, reported several
p e r s p ir a tio n a p p ea rs, generous and valuable
remove the leaves, wipe gifts had been received
to dry and do the suinc by the llbrary/museum
procedure again, Repeat Including two boxes o f
records and artifacts by
until fever subsides.
For dislocation, place Cindy Brown. DeLorcs
the leaves on the affected Lash presented a large
p a rt (kn ccB , e lb o w s , framed map o f Florida
ankles) or whcFcvcr the made In 1855. Members
disloca tion Is. Repeat tasted samples o f cooked
u n t il d is lo c a t io n or cassava p resen ted by
Estclla Powell,
BwelllngBubsIdcs.

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�</text>
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S e r v in g S a n f o r d , L a k e M a r y a n d S e m i n o l e C o u n t y s i n c e 1 9 0 0
85th Yoar. No

254

Sanford. Florida

Ju ry: Life in prison
Man w h o killed i n - l a w with silv e r bullet s e n t e n c e d

COMINQ SUNDAY
Our Town, Lake Mary

By SA N D R A E LLIO T T

I'ltcrr arc over 0.000 lairs In Irll ahum
residents c&gt;l l.akr Mary
Sonic ol viiiii lilends and neighbors will lie
prntllrd In a special srrllon. Out 1'mvn. coming
Sunday

INSIDE____________
□ Sports

Bamboo Cafe nears crown
SANKOKD - Hamboo Cafe tripped Sanlnrd
I Inal Sales 0 1 In ellneli a lie Inr the title nl the
Men's Tlnirsilav Softball League al Chase I’ai k
Sec Page 10

BRIEFS
Utility fee passes
I.AKK MANY - The City nl Lake Marx
officially appmveil a Slnrmwaier Utility I r e
ordinance last night The measure, which
heroines rllrcllvr immediately passed unaiu
inmisly on second reading. with no public oi
commission i oiiiinenls
l lic tee en.icled hv the ordinance is expert* d
lo generate appi n\ lit lately‘ $252.(MX) pel yea I
Charges will In made to homes and I iiisi
nesses based on the K*pnviilrnl Drainage I mi
ILIUM determined hv .ivnagtug sioim w.m t
mlioll and the im pelvlous areas on tin aiiu.il
pi Opel I \
lali ll silicic laitltlv lesldelli e Will he i lasses as
having one LI HI. ami lie &lt;h a iled a total ol S',
pel month which Includes a base lei and i
■nullIhtilloll Ice Nnniesldentlal piopnl\ wuh
site mltlgallon laclluics will uni pay t!"
i i in 11 11&gt;i 11Ini i lee
( iiinmerclal properly will lie i oiisidcicd on an
individual basis, delcrmlned by the amount "t
surlace a n a on the btilldmu- mid paved parking
areas

Even trees pass on
SANKOKD — The Fort Mellon Park area will
soon be losing two lanilllar IIMures I wo lam.
0 ik trees are turning brown and dying
U i o u n d s Maintenance Coordinator lot tile ( 11v

01 Sanlnrd. Howard Jellrles. said the bees will
be removed w it bln Iw o or three weeks
rill v aren't posing am lineal al lhe pn si nl
Uliie
be said, but we wouldn I waul I " leave
them up too long
■lr lilies said I lie i it x has had the lieesi be&lt; ked
by the ml).in loiesliv deparimeiil whit h has
deter milled lb) liees w i le appaienlly bill* •1 to
lightening
I hey werru I dllci ll\ hll
lie said
Ian apparetillv tin- lightening slim k I In
mound under the tools aiea. and killed both "I
I hem
'They al) Kl In 50 yc.lls old
l« lilies
i oilllliellled. and I ill sme they will be missed
in the p.uk an a I bey haw provided r\i client
shade mat tin pn nil table a n a s lot I hi peoph
who v isil ill*- p.n k and I'm soi i y they will ha y*
I o no
Within tin- next leyy weeks. tin * iiy is
planning on planting some new tires m Hi*
area, conslrh-rably sinallet

Clarification
An article in I Imrsdav s .Sau/ou/ l l r i . i l i l a bool
eouuty commission candidate Kaudv Moirls
staled he ehalied a euiiumllee that bad a $5 I
million puiposal lo landscape and beaullly l.ak*
Mary Houlevanl. a proposal lli.il was sulisi
(juenllv w hll tied down lo $750,(MMI
Morris, who could not lie im i lied pilot to lit*
publication ol the article, said Thursday tin
$5.4 million llgurr represented the lolal cost ol a
prellmlmiry list ol beaullllcallon options In
tween Markham Woods Moail and U S Highway
17 512. The list Included the cost ol burial ol
powerllne-s and other options not Included In tin
Lake Mary Houlevanl Study Conmilltec's llnal
recommendation. which totaled $750.1)0(1

Herald Staff Writer
S A M ( &gt;KI&gt;
A mail i nnv Icicil ol
k l l l m u his sisii i m layy in In r
Wi kiva Iioiiii Iasi veal w a s sen
Icin i (I lo III* iii pilson laic I I nns
day alii'innou by S«-minule ( in ml
Judge Al an I )i&lt; key
I lie tyy*-1y * mci ub« ,i |mv yvhlch
III Man' ll c o m i c i c d \l Will deli IH
ol llrsl d r g l r r III III del III * ll*' sllool
Ion death &lt;&gt;! ( aiol W a i d c h
n
c o mme n d e d the penally lie nuisi
serve 25 veai s in prison without
pillule, . lo Milling t " slali sculi in
lug mudehnes
W a i d c h w a s also
I 'o IIV U 'l e d

ol

.....................H i l l s

ol

ai&gt;

Play ated assault t**1 shooting .11
M h.u l and lleihany W.iuli h Ins
nephew and ill* &gt; •
Hi
yy as also
rnlixlctrd ol shooimil ill an &gt;h i upl* &lt;1
buil ding I h&lt; 1111 y i&lt; l i mn d lo i out I
riitusd.iy
11* a i testimony and
l

c i o i i i

Ill'll d

i

si

n 11 m

•

in

tin

penalty phas* ol tin &lt; .m
Assisi.ml Si an
\ l lot I ii y snyyai l
Sl um aii'.iii d \\ iiilrh
lioilld In
gi ycii tla di at h |•* 11a 11y lot ih&gt;
suit* 11Hi; &lt; a used li\ I In ill Ill'll I H&lt;
i ailed i in it It 11&lt; 1 ol y* 'iii* ssi s in
i I ml I III'. 1In
y 11 1 1in
li ii s I .a ml
Sai l i k
i l i ' i i ' 11 ■Idi • ii
Mn hai l
Ililll.Uiy and l l a u n l and a s|s|ci
yy ho tcsithi il aboui tin lliipa* I nl
( aiol s di .till
In I iii ii d* Iciisi attoi ncys \i i Inn
Hall and ( i i m g e Kiiss* II * all* *I lyyo
psy i Inal 1 1sts and lorinci m l g l l b m s
yy ho n si dn d \\ at d* h yy as a It n ndly
In Ipi 11 1 haul yyoilviiiL ma n yy ho
I ii'call n di pu ssi d a nil yy 11Ini i a yy 11
a l n a losinii Ins |oli
1In ii Iat lonship I ii i w ■ i ll \\ c l * Ii
a n d h i s s o n i in I a yy lit i mi*
sii ,mn d y\ In ii tIn tyy ■• ui i i nd m u
moil* y
his c a m b i u m a n d I In
In bay mi nl Iti Hi.my
W inl&gt; h
i
Syi i an i i i i u i i i i m i yylm r&gt;• • urn
i

Her Hentrnee. Page 5A

Art*,,,.

m

,,o

nut ( iconic*

Lake
Mary
lakes
healthy

Suspicious fire probe continues

Burglar
may have
set fire
□ y N IC K P F E I F A U F
M.-ald Staff Writer
S \ M i &gt;NI )
\l sou is si ill
Siispei li d III ill' III'
rll.lt ill
stioyed ill* ml' llol ol a S. ml ol d
n 11; Ii t ' l u l l r a l l y
I 11 ll I si l a V
mot mini Poin t say u may 11.*y*
been • oniieeled lo a bill dial y
Poll* e and tin my i'si|y iilurs an
ehei kltlll oil III* eoutlei (Mill tie
t U'f’f tl .» I &lt; tf fllM'l tll.lt \V.l

lit &lt;&gt;k •*11

ii

|»«* ii

*i i

ill*

D u t l a f* A

Herald Staff Writer
I.AKK MANY - The larger lakes
m Lake Mary are iii relatively good
londliton That's the word of thr
latest l.akew ati li ProHrain report
Hi Ian Luc. whu heuds the pro(Irani lur the City of Lake Mary,
made a presetitiilloii oil the first IH
in *&gt;n1 11 sliulv du ring Thursday
imilil s i iiy commission meeting
Volunteers. led hv l.oe. have been
"blutiimii lake samples I rum each of
tin lakes yyilliiu oi partially In the
■iiy hums

I' si r l \

Maclim* and a h m g l . u v tepoii
mad) at a p p i o x i m a n ly tin sam*
mm as i|a In* 1 1 poll
IlH esl III.llols an
si iIt i l.issl
|y imi tin bla/e as highly siispi
i lolls bill IlilV* not .IS ol I Ills
mm imi i'. 11111* tally dei l a n d it
aisoii \l&gt; .inyxlnl* Hn si an Ii Im
i tin s i i hi 1ii ii n d il J i l l
I '.ll k
I &gt;i iy• today
l i n y Mill lay at ■ liai hi o| the
Im investigation said sin Imped
lo i nm bide hi a my esi Inal ion In
yrslei ilay Imi u as oliable lo do
so
I III loot si.Illi'll I nll.ipslmt
Iloyy n on us
s|i&lt; said
so yye
11IXi It ed d s mill lo i;i I mil lot M i l l
o wn sail i y
Mm i a y said sin pi.ms in i o n
&lt;• Ii I r u

By NICK P F E I F A U F

I oi

MmUtl t’hoto hy Tommy Vioc«nt
,v,r trr*ikon open prior lo

Hit • hai k door at P a d , M.n fun*?
in.. t m . *i tr I T h 11 r *.i l . c . l i l t i f f l l M :

See Lukes, Page 5A

A ircraft co m p an y m oves to expand
l&lt; II \||I ll.'S I.' &gt;ll "|» I 'll".

B y N IC K P F E I F A U F

Herald Staff Writer

________________________

SAM'(iKI)
lln S. ml oi d Aitpoil Aulliotiiy
met in a special yvoiksliop meeting I'liuisday I "
discuss Hie lilt in** ol one iciiani yx ll Ii expansi on
plans
As a icsull ol the inerting. . let I Al i e yy ill •»•
mo v i ng ll'iHll I lie smith to mil ill side ol I lie .litI"il I
area

" ll"

l lpoll l"l

ill. p is I H im « '.&lt; . us h di il- n 11 ■ i di • *1* ■
in. ol d' n.im '
onl b o n o i i c
|"
me in
• O l p u l .111 I* ■ l*M l . l l l

In Hn .nil Ili &gt;t H x n n ' Mi u • al n i il*
on nil li
ills) llssll 'll st i l l ed "II .1 I ill'. Idlin'. ' \p III SI" II 11 I In
pn si nl -.iii
I In "si
luliiis U Ci : M *n.ilf on ol
I hsl i n i Ii m w c m i bli il .i i ii in lb* i "i i" yy ..
dey i Inpim id &lt; mistianil s "li any &gt; h.uic.'
l i ny im link d a n ipoM un in lot a si pal at)

..... BB
..... 3B
..... BA
..... 3B
..... 3A
..... SB
1B.2B
..... 3B
..... 2A

See Move. Page 5A

By VICKI DaSORM IER

Herald Staff Writer
S A M OKU
Young yvnmcii still don't have
pinlessiunal role models when It comes lo
iiilm ic.il and other m ini radii loiiiil high-paying
|olis
Si iii i i ndi- ( iimmunilv Cullege lias been trying
lo .aidless Hint need
Ninth and n oth guide girls who attend both
Si-mmole and Lyman high si huol have spent the
past week ai ih&lt; college preparing for success In
i ollcg* and llic |oh market
I yy&lt;-nl\ litst Century Woman'
Is a free
week long yvoiksliop that has helped lo educate
Hi* students about mm traditional, high paying
a i huio.il cnri'cis
I illy yiuiiig w o m e n pa rticipa ted In (be
workshop dial tvns designed In supplement the
.......
I'ecli I' m p opportunities that are offered
ai ilieii high schools in cooperation with SCC.
o r g a n iz e r s said the pa rticipants In the
See Tech. Page 3 A

hi .my

Dryer than usual conditions

Partly sunny with a
high m tin- loyy oils
Wind cast at I 5 ilipli

MU,ill! ftioloh* nmHoops
F o r m ore w eather, sea Page 2A

in in i.d p&lt; 11nit loi building development. a large
u n iiinm pond in be constructed near the
■I* y &lt;li ip 11h i 11 ii localton nl an existing drulnugc
pip&lt; m location ol iitllilles. and demolition of
11« i il* In ii* I lilic Airport Aulliortly oflleea) 111 order
i" i omplcnicnt the pro|eel.
Natlici i I i .iii get Involved In all of tills." said
\y i,it ion Ulieelur Steve Cooke, " w e started
looking ai i elm at mg Jett Aire to the northern

21st-century
women explore
tech careers

INDEX________
H o ro s c o p e
M o v i e s ......
N a tio n.......
P e o p l e ......
P o l i c e ........
R e ligion ...
S p o r t s ........
T e le v is io n
W eather...

ai least tin lour largest
l.oe said
we have enough
d.u.i yyiili yvhlch In lorui an Intttal
i oui hisioii
I he other lakes still
need more study
Lee explained the watch's findmils on each nl 11if lakes, which
hay e been researched at the Univer­
sity ol Llurlda I bey were based on
ilie lust 12 In IH months of data
obtained Irum water samples He
lakes

F ro m staff report*

B r id g e .......................... OB
C l a s s i f i e d s ........... 6 B .7 B
C o m i c s .........................BB
C r o s s w o r d .................. BB
D e a r A b b y ................... 3B
D e a t h s ..........................BA
Dr. O o tt........................BB
E d it o r ia l...................... 4 A
F l o r i d a ......................... 2A

Hussoll dolonso attorney:;, confer with Wardeh,

oritur duriin) ric, Man h trial

Alina Rivera and Jessica L. iihjl* of Seminole Hnjh
School explored the employment possibilities in

tertuni.al and oitnir n o " o 1111,1
women m the 2b.t ( entury c 1

11

'

1

"

f

f

�’ IA - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, June 18, 1993

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G IO N A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Governors meet with first lady
...
Ji

• y K A R IN BALL
Associated Press Writer

MIAMI — A tropical depression formed In the southwestern
Qulf of Mexico and forecasters expect tt to become this year's
first tropical storm.
A reconnaissance plane la scheduled to fly Into the season's
second depression this morning, said Ed Rappoport, n
hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center In Coral
Gables.
"A t this point, It Is still a depression." Rappoport said today.
"The organization has been Increasing slowly aver the last
' several hours."
The depression was carrying heavy thunderstorms across
the Yucatan Peninsula In Mexico as it moved toward the
northwest at about seven miles per hour, the hurricane center
reported.
It was expected to hit land at the northern Mexico coast or
southeastern Texas.
At 4 a.m. EOT, the depression’s center was located near
latitude 21 degrees north and longitude 92.4 degrees west, or
about 465 miles southeast o f Brownsville. Texas. Its tops winds
were near 35 mph.
If the system's maximum winds reach 39 mph, It would
become a tropical storm and be named Arlene.
The six-month Atlantic hurricane season began June 1.

WOODSTOCK. Vt. - Governors pushing
the White House for some autonomy on
health care reform arc calling for a trlul-byfire experiment: Let states go their own way
and sec what works. That way. If President
Clinton’s plan is llawcd, not everyone
suffers.
" If 50 states have to go ofT and do things
the same way and you have something (hot
falls, you'll have a 50-slatc failure," said
Qov. Lawton Chiles of Florida.
"Let Hawaii do one thing. Florida another
and Vermont try something else. Sec what
w o rk s," said Chiles, one o f a dozen
Democratic governors meeting In this,New
England town for n weekend retreat on

POMPANO BEACH — The son o f a 97-year-old woman was
arrested after police said he kept her sealed in the bathroom
and forced to sleep there.
Edgar Awln, 60, apparently only freed his mother, Irma Awln
Elsenstsdter, when he would stop by dally to visit and feed her,
police and neighbors said.
"H e said he would confine her to the bathroom for her own
well-being so she wouldn't hurt herself," police spokeswoman
Sandra King said Thursday. "In other words, he caged his
mother In the bathroom for her own good."
Firefighters had to break Into the stench-filled apartment,
where they found a frail Irma Awln Elsenstsdter locked Inside
the bathroom.
She was lying on what appeared to be a lawn chair covered
with soiled bedding.
Police charged the son with elderly neglect.

By Aasaglatad Brass
MIAMI — Undeclared guberna­
torial candidate Jeb Bush has
cut all tics to hla real estate
development company to spend
more time preparing for his
campaign bid.
"W hile I have not officially
announced. I believe my can­
didacy requires full-time atten­
tion from now to Election Day."
said the 40-year-old Republican.
Bush, a son o f former Presi­
dent George Bush, refused to
divulge the size o f his financial
settlement with Codlna Bush
Group — one o f Miami's most
active firms of its kind.
But his partner o f 14 years,
Arm uhdo C odlna, told The
Miami Herald for today's edi­
tions that It was In the "seven

Customs donstss jeans to farm laborers
HOMESTEAD — The U.S. Customs Service donated 26,000
pairs of fake designer Jeans to several hundred farm laborers In
south Dade County.
The Jeans, which bore counterfeit "P epe" labels, were
confiscated by Customs agents at Port Everglades In
November. The shipment's worth was estimated at a
half-million dollars.

Hoteliers ask for a break
DAYTONA BEACH — Hoteliers want the spring break mcccn
to stop spending tax dollars for promotions.
Members of the Hotel Motel Association of the Daytona
Resort Area voted overwhelmingly Thursday to stop the spring
break promotions paid by the city’s resort lax. The majority of
operators said spring break and Black College Reunion
weekend tarnished the city's Image, causing vacationers to
avoid Dny tona at other times o f the year.
"Is this the end o f spring break? I don't think so." said Gary
Brown, president o f the hotel association. " I do think, though,
that this sends a clear message that we have an Image problem
and that we need to redirect some marketing and advertising
dotlBis.”
■.r.f.
■
Brown expects individual hotels to continue promoting
spring break, however, he wants Destination Daytona!, .the
city’s visitors bureau, to stop spending- tax dollars‘ fd f"W e 'l1*
promotions.
Destination Daytanal spent about $270,000 promoting
spring break and Black College Reunion weekend this year.
Spring break attracted about 260,000 college students this
year, according to local estimates.

Gas prices up slightly

Play 4
9-7-5-Q

S a n fb r d H e r a ld
Frid a y, Ju n e IB , 1093

Vol. 89, No. 254
Publtohad Dolly and Sunday, aico p t
Saturday by Tha Sanford Harold,
1no. 3S0 N. F ranch A v a , Sanford,
Fla. 12771
Soeand Claaa Postoga Paid at Sanford,
Florida and a (MMtonal m ailing
PO ST M A ST IR : Sand addrooa chongao
to T H t SAN FO RD H I HALO, P O .
Boa 1M7, Sanford, F L 12772-1M 7.
(Dairy A Sunday)

*J---- ----------HMD

1 Y aw

m n
gases

STOOD

Florida Raaidanta muat pay 7% ealaa
taa In addition lo ra la t above.

health care reform, the economy and
education,
"There’s not a single right anawer to
medical care In America; there are a
number of right answers," said Qov.
Barbara Roberts o f Oregon. "Different atatea
have chosen different paths. Out of that we
will probably get an Incredible amount o f
learning ... and In the end, devlae a better
national plan."
The Democratic governors said they're
looking for reaaaurance on states' flexibility
from Hillary Rodham Clinton during her
scheduled talk to them today. Mre. Clinton
Is leading the White House task force on
health care reform.
In the past, the White House has pledged
state flexibility under the developing health
care reform package Clinton will propose

later this year.
The governors said they're all for the
federal government setting a minimum
package of benefits for everyone. That way
some states won't have anything better than
others, they said,
And Oov. Howard Dean o f Vermont urged
the fed era l go v e rn m e n t to m andate
whatever financing mechanism will pay for
It, whether It's premiums or payroll taxes or
something else.
"S o the states don't compete with each
other on taxes, one having cigarette taxes
and another Income taxes," Dean said.
Each state has different circumstances to
deal with, the governors said.
"Don't tell me I have to do what Oregon
does," Chiles said, "because It won't
necessarily work for Florida."

figures."
v ;■; \
"He won’t have to worry about
putting bread on the table while
devoting hla time to the cam-palgn ," Codlna said. •*
Bush will be required to file a
persona] financial disclosure
statement when he becomes an
official candidate. While he said
he and his partner had nothing
to hide, he hopes Codlna Bush
will not come under scrutiny
during the campaign.
" I t w o u ld n 't be fa ir to
Armando or the company,” he
said.
Bush was appointed as Florida
secretary of commerce from
1987-88 by former Gov. Bob
Martinez. He Is running for
public olTlcc for the first time,
but be ran (he Bush-Quaylc
presidential campaigns in Flor-

Local family wins
lottery drawing
said he plans to "Just take It
easy," He enjoys bowling and
fishing. Mrs. Smith has been an
employee of the Sanford Herald
1'
yekrd: "T h ey '‘have1 onfc
' Dcmllt. 38. of Lauderhill was teenage daugh'liV; Cindy; Wanda
one of seven scratch-off finalists TByior,' •' 30; " of "■Valdosta;' Q a„
$15,000; TanlHW Black. 23. ctf
Georgians, Ala,, $15,000; Robert
million top prize.
Holloway, 63, of Cocoa Beach,
The other winners and their $15,000; Susan Miller, 30. of
prizes were Jack and Cheryl Winter Haven, $10,000; and
Smith. 54, o f DeLand. $50,000. G la d y s A d k in s , 76, o f St.
Smith, a salesman at Scotty’B, P e t e r s b u r g , $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 .

SUNRISE — Laura Dcmllt was
the grand prize winner In the
Florida Lottery's 24th $1 million
grand prise drawing.

fM M iM t fn

able to get homeowners policies
on the open market after Hurri­
cane Andrew.
Such boards hire Insurance
companies as "servicing carri­
ers" to operate their funds, said
Gallagher, who Is also state
treasurer.
•,
&lt;
"A t the recent public hearings
we have held, citizens expressed
deep concern that borne Insurers
are being paid to be JUA servic­
ing carriers while those same
Insurers have representatives on
the board who selected these
servicing carriers,” he said.

By Associated Frees_________
TALLAHASSEE - Members of
boards op era tin g Insurance
funds, Including one for people
who can’ t find homeowners'
coverage, arc barred from finan­
cial gains from the posts, state
Insurance Commissioner Tom
Qallahgcrsald.
Gallagher said Thursday he
adopted ethics rules as a result
o f hearings on a Joint un­
derwriting association set up to
assess all Insurance carriers to
provide coverage for people un­

From Associated Press reports

Cash 3
1-5-3

4y*'/

II'd

WhoartfoHopcaofon
Ann Lam«r, left, Roy Vltwon, administrator, of Canhai Florida
Regional Hospital, Sanford, and Emy .Bill, right, an|oy
rsfrsahmsnta and aoclallza during tha Qrsatsr Sanford Chamber
of Commarcs Bualnaaa Aftar Hours at tha hospital Thursday
avanlng. Membara of tha hospital staff took chambsr mambera
and guaats on a VIP tour of tha naw Heart Center which Is due
to open In late July.

Gallagher bars conflicts on boards

HEATHROW — Gas prices were up slightly In June, but AAA
Clubs of Florida reported the trend of higher prices appeared to
be stabilizing across the state.
The average cost per gallon of self-serve unleaded rose .6
cent to $1,141. AAA said on Thursday. This month's Increase
Is significantly smaller than last month's rise o f more than 2
cents per gallon.
Mid-grade unleaded rose 1.3 cents per gallon to $1.27, while
premium unleaded was up 1 cent to $1,35 per gallon.
Full-serve gasoline also was up. Regular unleaded rose 1 cent
per gallon to $1.51, mid-grade Increased 1.1 cent to $1.60 per
gallon and premium unleaded Increased .9 cent to $1.68 per
gallon.
The highest reported price for self-serve regular unleaded
was $1.21 In Palm Beach and the lowest reported price was
$1.09 in Port Richey.

M IAM I - H ere are th e
winning numbers sele cted
Thursday In the Florida Lottery:

&lt;
■* •*

t

Jeb Bush leaves
firm to concentrate
on gubernatorial race

Man ehargad with aldariy naglact

;

'

Health care flexibility might avoid ‘50-state failure*

Tropical deprasslon forma In Gulf

LOTTBBY

,

The new rule says members of
such a 'b o a r d c a n 't act as
servicing carriers for the board,
use the post for financial gain, or
accept gifts or gratuities other
than meals.
The boards also must put
limits on travel and expenses
that w ill be re v ie w e d and
approved by the Department of
Insurance, Oailagher said.
The rules apply to the Florida
Residential Property &amp; Casualty
Joint Underwriting Association
that provides the homeowners'
coverage a {id to other state-

created boards that act as "In ­
surers o f last resort."
They Include the Florida Prop­
erty ft C asu alty J oin t Un­
derwriting Association, a com­
mercial Insurance pool; Florida
Medical Malpractice Joint Un­
derwriting Asaoclatlon: Florida
Joint Underwriting Asaoclatlon,
a high-risk auto Insurance pool;
Florida Patients Compensation
Fund; Florida Comprehensive
Health Asaoclatlon, and Florida
Windstorm Underwriting Asso­
ciation.

TH E W E A TH E R
I

**r y •t-jjk—

Tamparaturat Indlcat* pravleui day'*
Today: Partly cloudy. High In
.* *r
high and ovamtght low lo I p. m , E DT.
the high 80s. Wind southeast 10
City
HI La Prc Otlk
Anchoraga
41 m M
cdy
to 15 mph.
Atlanta
¥
......
J
}
cdy
»i to
Tonight: Fair. Low In the mid
i ht
*
--------- [•"-*
Atlantic City
to »
rn
70s. Wind east 5 mph.
Baltlmora
IT
J
7
dr
TU
E
SD
A
Y
M ONDAY
SUND AY
S ATU R D AY
F R ID A Y '
Billing*
Saturday: Partly cloudy. High
*1 41 .0)
dr
P t ly e ld y 90-70
P tly e ld y 90-1 0 .. P t ly e ld y 90-.70 . P t ly e ld y $0-70
P t ly e ld y 90-70
Birmingham
»3 73
elr
in the upper 80s. Wind cost 10
llim a r c k
dr
t i 53
to 15 mph.
S oIm
Tt 44
dr
• acton
rn
74 II
Extended forecast: Sunday
■urtlngfon,vt.
cdy
Tt 4t
through Tuesday: Partly cloudy. a u '.-.Uriaft *«4'javrtka.-a
CharInfon.S.C.
10 Tl
dr
A chance o f showers and thun­
Char fot ton,W.Va
Ot IT
dr
high tem perature
dr
t l at
derstorms cast coast anytime
S A TU R D A Y l i
Charlotto,tic.
SI 4f .13 cdy
SOLUNAR TA B LE ) Min. StlO Sanford Thrusday was 88 de­ Choyonno
and m a in ly . a fte rn o o n and
Chicago
t l IT
rn
aim.. 5:30 p.m.'; MuJ. 11:20 a,m.. grees and the overnight low was
evening elsewhere. Lows In the
C lav* land
cdy
U
ST
64
as
reported
by
the
University
FU
LL
11:45
p.m.
TIDES:
Day
te
a
s
Concord, N H .
NEW
lower to mid 70s. Highs In the
cdy
•J 40
Dal la*-Ft Worth
t l TJ
cdy
Ju ly a ;&lt;
Baacht, highs. 8:10 u.m.. 8:34 o f Florida Agrii
J on s IB
lower 90s except mid to upper
rn
M S3 .IS
ion Center. Celery
p.m,i lows, &gt;2:09 u.m. 1,2:07 p.m.t and Educatio:
80s east coast.
rn
M T3
N sw Smyrna* Btaeht • highs. Avgnue.
Dotrail
•T 57
rn
Recorded rain fall for the
dr
M T4
8(15 u.m;. 8:39 p.m.;.lnws, 2:14
rn
•4 Tl .44
p e rio d , e n d in g at 9 a.m .
a.m., 2:12 p.m.: «
cdy
N 41
Thrusday.
totalled
0
Inches.
highs, 8:30 a.m., ,8:54 p.m.:
cdy
H
TO
F IR S T
K a n n o City
The ’ temperature at 9 a.m.
cdy
I t 74
jpW^t 2:29 ly.pi., 2:27 p.m
Ju ly t l
Jan
e
20
LatVosao
Pd
dr
t l Tl
La
City
HI
today was 79 degrees and
Littl*
Rack
rn
U
74
74
.00
Daytona Saadi
M
I
M
i|uU|
Friday's
overnight
low
was
68,
dr
.00
03 41
Tt
IT
Ft. Laud Boach
•IW
77
7HVQBIVB
--W
as
recorded
by
the
National
t4
TS
.01
cdy
to
73
F o rtM y o rt
lhoaukoo .
t t 40
47
.00
rn
C a ln tiv lll*
M
Weather Service at the Orlando M
M plo -lt Foul
.mm
Daytona Beach: Waves arc S t .A s | t it l««t o Jdpitsr Inlet
rn
mm
TO 4 ) ) .t4
Hom ntoad
mm
International
Airport.
N M .41 cdy
.00
17
41
Jacktonvllla
2-4 feet and rough. Current Is (o
Tonight'
and
Saturday:
wind
Now Orloana
Other Weather Service data:
01 41 S t cdy
M
Tt
Kay W ad
is
the north with a water tempera­ eust 10 to 15 knofb.’ Seas'3'tb 5
Now York City
V
43
rn
La k« land
Tl
.03
M
□ T fc fM B a y 'a h ltfi ....... „»,«S6
Oklahoma City
ture of 80 degrees. Naw Sm yrna feet. Bay and inland-, water*, a
•St
H
Tl
07 72
cdy
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□
P
A
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M
l
r
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c
prssaurg.SO.19
.00
00 40 *0 rn
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TS
Pamacola
Beach: Waves arc 2-3 feet and moderate chop. A few showers.
□Rslativs H « a U H y „ . J I pet Philadelphia
IT 44
rn
74
.00
Saraiota
tl
rough.
Current
is
lo
the
north,
PhoonU
dr
94
.00
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l Tt
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with a water temperature of 80
or i t
rn
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Tampa
tl
□Rainfall..... .....94 of aa la. FortlsncMaino
cdy
IT
.00
n u
VoroB otch
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degrees.

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□Today’s smasat.it*iStfiBp.m.

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Phono (407) 122-2S11.

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Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, Juno 18, 1993 - 3A

Pepsi tampering scare
Domattic vloltnct ohargad

Federal Investigators find no proof of foreign objects

j ,

• Patrick Lynn Steele. 27. 785 Mlricrva Lane, Lake Mary,
was arrested on a domestic violence aggravated assault charge
at hts home early Thursday morning.
Steele's estranged wire reported she locked him out o f the
home during an argument about their Impending divorce. She
reported Steele got Into their car and drove It Into a wall of their
home several times.
• William O. Brewer. 36. 181 Oak St., Sqnford. was arrested
on a domestic violence battery charge Wednesday night.
The son o f Brewer's girlfriend reported Brewer struck him
several times.
• Vince Edward Howard. 26, 2580 Ridgewood Ave., Apt.
205, Sanford, was arrested on a domestic violence battery
charge by Sanford police Wednesday eveing.
Howard's girlfriend reported he pushed her during an
argument.
• Michael A. Parton, 34, 1510 Sparrow St.. Longwood, was
arrested early Wednesday morning on a domestlv violence
battery charge following a scuffle with a family member.

Shoplifting charged
Kattlc C. Fatuzzo, 75, 378 Bahia Circle. Longwood. was
arrested on a shoplifting charge ot the Pic N Save In State Road
434 In Longwood Wednesday afternoon.
A store employee reported Fatuzzo attempted to leave
without paying for 88.62 In merchandise.
'

Traffic atop leada to arrest
Jow Stephen Smith Jr., 20, 1210 W. 15th St., Sanford, was
arrested early Wednesday morning following a traffic atop by
Sanford police.
Police report stopping Smith after noticing the tag light was
out on his car at 3:55 a.m. When asked for hts Identification,
Smith opened his glove comparment, revealing a ,22-callber
handgun, police report. Smith was -arrested ’ en charges of
carrying a concealed firearm, possession of a firearm by a
convicted felon, and driving with a suspended license.

Several namee given
Walter Dennis Schuler. 42, 1108 County Road 427 South,
Longwood. was arrested early Wedntsddy. morning following a
traffic stop by a Seminole County deputy.
The deputy reported stopping Schuler on Dunbar Avenue
near Altamonte Springs after watching him drive slowly with
no headlights. When asked for hla name, Schuler gave him
several Identities, the deputy reported. Schuler was held on
charges of obstruction of an Investigation and driving with a
suspended license.

Suspended license, wrong tag
Angel Timmy Ocasio, 24, 304 Fourth St.. Sanford, was
arrested following a traffic stop Wednesday afternoon.
Seminole County deputies took Ocasio Into custody on
charges o f driving with a suspended license and having a tag
on his vehicle which was assigned to another vehicle.

Warrant arrests made
The following wanted persons have been taken into custody:
•Shona Lynn Thongsamut, 22, 110 Sugar Maple Court.
Sanford, was arrested at her home Wednesday afternoon.
Thongsamut was wanted on a charge of failure to appear In
court to answer to a suspended license charge.
• Manuel Vincent Medina, 25. 157 Morning d o r y Drive,
Lake Mary, was arrested Wednesday In Altamonte Springs on
an Orange County warrant c b a r (p «f issulog'-a wprUilosfcheck. I
• Charles Wilson Redman, 29. 1300 Park Ave.. Sanford, was
V served with a Warrant Wednesday1in the Seminote County Jail,
where he was being'held on a prior aitestl Redman was
charged with failure to appear' In court fo answer' to a
suspended license charge.

Crimes reported to authorities
The following crimes were reported to Seminole County
deputies and Sanford police:
• The owner of Ellis and Associates Computer Center, 2200
S. French Ave., Sanford, reported the business wus burglarized
sometime Wednesday between 6:10 p.m and 9:27 p.m. The
same business was burglarized June 8.
• More than $2,000 worth o f Jewelry and other Items were
reported taken from a Goldsboro residence In (he 1700 block of
Strickland Avenue sometime Wednesday between the hours of
8 a.m. and noon.
• More than $3,200 In stereo equipment and other Items
were reported token from a vehicle parked al a residence In the
100 block of Cumberland Circle East near Longwood Bometlme
between 11:30 p.m. Tuesday and 8 a.m. Wednesday.
• A $400 speaker was reported taken from u residence In the
200 block of Plam Place, Sanford, sometime between 11 p.m.
Tuesday and 5:30a.m. Wednesday.
-—

Kessler said there had been a
handful of federal arrests of
people who claimed to have
WASHINGTON - Federal In­ found syringes, nails or other
vestigators are finding no proof objects In Pepsi cans and that
that foreign objects were delib­ otner people who had made such
erately sealed Into Pepsi cans claims are recanting.
"1 would not be surprised If
and are arresting people for lying
about finding such things In the there were other additional ar
soft drinks.
rests," Kessler said.
He said that In addition to un
"It Is well-known that even
one report of possible tampering arrest ea rlier this week In
can — and will — lead to Pennsylvania, federal authorities
unfounded reports," said Food arrested three people Thursday
and Drug Administration Com­ in Covina, Calif.; Albion. Mich.,
missioner David Kessler. "It Is a and Ohio. Officials on Thursday
also arrested n woman In Col­
vicious cycle.
"On the basis o f the Informa­ orado and a man In South
tion we have so far, the notion Carolina after store security
that there has been a nationwide cameras captured them putting
tampering of Diet Pepsi Is un­ objects In Pepsi containers.
founded," Kessler said at a news
Kelly Jo Fltzwatcr, 29, of
conference Thursday,
Beach City, Ohio, was arrested
He said the conclusion was on a federal charge o f knowingly
based on Investigators’ Judg­ communicating folse Informa­
ment, logic and forensic analy­ tion that a product had been
ses.
tainted, said FBI spokesman Bob

l y RICHARD L. VIRNACI
Associated Press Writer______

Hawk.
Ms. Fltzwntcr, who said she
found a sewing needle In a can of
Diet Pepsi, appeared before U.S.
Magistrate Jam es Dallas in
Akron ami was released on
$10,000 bond. Hawk said.
Federal authorities arrested
Maria Luz Martinez. 02. of Cov­
ina, on churgcs of making false
and fictitious statements to the
FDA. said Carole Levitsky, a
spokeswoman for the U.S. at­
torney's office 111 Los Angeles.
Covina police said Ms. Martinez
confessed that she hod fabri­
cated her story about finding a
syringe In n Pepsi.
"Let me stress one point, und 1
am serious about (Ills: We will
prosecute false reports of tam­
pering," Kessler said.
Working dny and night since
the reports of possible tampering
began, "w e huve been unable to
confirm even one case of tam­
pering," Kessler said.

4C £HARDWAREACBHAADWAABACSHAADWAAB It

Charges:
Wendy’s test
asked about
sex fantasies
l y Ths Asa— latad Praas
PENSACOLA - A Wendy's
franchise owner says he didn't
realize a test being given to Job
applicants Included a question
about sexual fantasies and says
he stopped using It when a
p ro sp ec tiv e e m p lo ye e com ­
plained.
But Jacqueline Lopez said the
letter of apology sne received
was insufficient and Wednesday
she filed a formal complaint with
the Pensacola-Escambia County
Human Relations Commission.
It accuses W endco Corp.,
owner of 12 Wendy's restaurants
In the Florida Panhandle, of
sexual harassment.
"This test ofTended me. It was
o u tra g e o u s ," the Pensacola
woman said. " I want It stopped
now, I want to make sure no one
else is ever humiliated this way
during a Job Interview."
Wendco owner Roger Webb
. said the teat warn used only four
times and Intended only to get
applicant, to .peak freely about
their backgrounds. He said com­
pany officials don't even look at
the answers and didn't know the
test, actually a computer game,
contained an offensive question.
"W e are as shocked as any­
body because we didn't know
whut It s a id , " W eb b said
Thursday.
Ms, Lopez said Wendco con­
troller Charles Coder tried to
goad her Into sharing her sexual
fantusles by saying, "W ell, the
girl before you secretly wanted
to be ln a nudist camp."

Kessler at first said lie did not
wool lo speculate on motives,
but asked lutcr why anyone
would make a false report, lie
said: "T h ey may have though!
there's som ethin g In II for
them."
The flrsl report came June 9.
when an 82-year-old man In
Tacoma, Wash., said he peered
lnlo a can of Diet Pepsi lo rind
out If he'd won a prize mid found
a syringe. Soon after, similar
reports came pouring in.
The FDA and Pcpsl-Cola would
not release numbers, but local
media accounts compiled by The
Associated Press Indicate more
than 50 reports of tampering In
n( least 23 stales had been made
by Wednesday night.
Mosl com plain ts In volved
hypodermic needles or syringes,
hul other Items were reported as
well, Including a crack cocaine
vial, n bullet and a glob of dark
brown goo.

GARDEN CENTER

Hardware

Inventory Clearance Salefc
Shop our year end
Inventory reduction sale
ln our Lawn and Garden Center

•k x - M _ _
d ld f G S

All plants In .took

(oltrua tre e s e x clu d e d )

* ROSE BUSHES • HEDGE DWARF
• ALL SHRUBS
* AZALEAS
• RAPHIOLEPIS DWARF * PETUNIAS
(1 or 3 Gallon)
* GARLIC BLUE
* BEGONIAS
* QIARDENIAS
f ------------------------------------------SWEET GUM
IMPATIENS
• IXORA MAUI
• RED BUD TREES
GERANIUMS
DIAZINON or DURSBAN 0 &lt; $ ^ 8 8
Covers 5000 sq. ft.

SANFORD STORE ONLY
LONGWOOD LAKE MARY SANFORD CASSELBERRY
4141427 M b S h e r i f f 207 E. 25$St WMuPvkDt.

1JHI43

U055IJ

*tC£ HAROWARE

1210141

3117345

SALE ENDS 6/30/93

H A R D W M IilC F HARDWARE Ad? HAADW AABACB HARDWARE

T h is Father's D ay gfive
D ad a treat that sizzles.

Coder was unavailable for
comment, but Webb denied the
accusation.
The teat Is a lifestyle computer
game for adults that was given
to Job applicants during their
third Interview.
$L

JCPenney

FOR W O M E N
Jawalry Sal*

50% O FF

14K GOLD CHAINS &amp;
BRACELETS

40% OFF
14K GOLD EARRINGS

30% O FF
25% O FF
BETTER WATCHES
14K GOLD CHARMS

Sami-Annual
Llngarla Salt
i

j

15-30% O F F 6.99 and7.99

ALL DRESS SHIRTS FROM
STAFFORD*

PRE-SCHOOL AND SCHOOL
AGE BOYS SHORTS

20-25% O FF 6.99 and7.99
ALL BRIEFS AND T-SHIRTS
FROM STAFFORD* AND
LEE WRIGHT*

20-25% O FF

ALL PJ'S AND 8ELECTED
ROBES '

NOW 24.99

DOCKERS*. TWILL PANTS

24.99
25-33% O FF NOW
DOCKERS* STRIPED

BRA8, BRIEFS, BIKINI8,
BHAPEWEAR 4 DAYWEAR

| FOR CHILDREN

FOR MEN

' OXFORD SHIRT ‘
l'; •,

.» t

PRE-SCHOOL AND SCHOOL
AGE BUGLE BOY* AND BODY
GLOVE* TEE SHIRTS

FOR H O M E

Q uincy’s Sizzlin’ Strip

W hit* S alt Savings

lie li get a l)!g, tender 1 2 n /. N e w V i r L S tr ip ,
lE t a t n , Q u in c y ’* f.im oiin Ye ,lit R o ll*, .inti free D e iie r t lia r.

S A LE 5.99
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FITTED CLAS8IC
TRADITIONS™ ULTRA FORM™
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JCPenney

*^ Hwy. u-oa, sanfom *323-1310

i :

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FAMILY STEAK HO USE

i I'rr 1rt.ii.ii I ...i
Ii,
■. i ■ ■ * ■

�v W P fP

i

’*

^

*

4A - Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Friday, June 18, 1983

Editorials/ Opinions
CHUCK STONE
•N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FLA. 33771
Area Code 407-332-2611 or 831-0903
Wayna 0. Doyta, FubMalwrand EdHor

E D I T O R IA LS

Pitch in and
help make
celebration
a success
The 217th anniversary o f our nation's
Declaration of Independence la almost upon
us. July 4th la a day to commemorate the
Initial signing o f the document In 1776 which
la aimed at preserving and protecting our
freedom.
In Sanford, the celebration appears to be
g ro w in g larger than ever. T he SanfordSeminole Jaycees have been walking the
streets seeking Junulio;** for the People's
•Fireworks fund. In addition to the display that
night on the lakefront, other events are
planned. They Include a car show, fun events
Tor children, food, entertainment and various
day-long family activities.
A special salute la also being planned for
the Sanford National Guard, Com pany B,
,,124th Infantry Regiment. The event will be
held by the "Friends of the National G u a rd "
-at the east end of Fort Mellon Park from noon
until 4 p.m.
Last year, because of problem s connected
with launching of fireworks, the display got
underway late. Many people becam e very
Irritated over the delay.
This year, fireworks organizer Steve Alford
said other arrangements have been made,
and everything Is expected to take place as
scheduled.
T h e m ain Ingredient in producing an
outstanding July 4th observance.Is cocmeta*’
tkm. W hether tt Is thfc Natw hat Quart) salute,
events at the partt 'o r fireworks, succesk is
going to depend on the4 people w ho are

funds w ith w hich to pay for the fireworks.
'Additional people will be required as the day
draw s nearer to give other assistance.
No one can do tt alone. Everyone should be
Involved In one w ay or another.
It's Individuals who will be celebrating
Independence. T h e day Is not being financed
by governm ent or Industry. It Is being put on
h y people.
: D uring these rem aining days before the big
event, w e urge the people of Central Florida to
Jielp In any w ay possible. W orking together
pan m ake this a great event for everyone.
It w ill be a day In which each o f us will

it guaranteed by the constitution we are
tbratlng,

C lass reunion sparks fond memories
MIDDLETOWN. CONN. - Arkansas may have
produced Bill Clinton, but It took a law school In
New England to hone hla cognitive skills Tor the
presidency,
I could have predicted his success because I
grew up In Hartford, Conn., undergirded by two
self-evid en t truths: New E ngland Is the
birthplace o f Am erica and the intellectual
fountainhead for the nation's most superior
universities (even George Will owes his collegiate
beginnings to New England).
A few days ago, In this bucolic Connecticut
valley, 1 attended my class's 45th class reunion
at Wesleyan University,
Every time 1 visit Wesleyan, I marvel at Its
distinguished uniqueness — a synthesis o f
academic excellence with a firm commitment to
multiculturallam. This year's freshman class will
be comprised of 33 percent minorities (Aslans,
blacks and Hlspanlcs). Over 200 blacks are
already in the student body.
With apologies to the well-known cigarette
advertisement, Wesleyan has come a long way,
baby. Women are now a majority o f the formerly
all-male student body.
Forty-five years ago, I was sitting on the dorm
steps w ith m y blonde room m ate. H ow ie
Williams, on a muggy summer day. "N ext year.
Wesleyan plans to cut Its quota on Negroes in

■entative o f the Central Florida Police Benevolent
£Association asking you for a donation to help
j widows and orphans o f local police, I suggest you
hsend a check, If you wish, to the Sanford Police
"Benevolent Association. The local police depart: ment doesn't belong to the Central Florida Police
j: Benevolent Association and to the best o f m y
t knowledge never has.
- The Central Florida Association hires pro­
fessional solicitors and a considerable amount of
; money raised never reaches a point where tt helps
(anybody. On the other hand, when the Sanford
' association puta on a fund-raiser, Just about every
penny collected goes for the purpose Intended.
s
J. Stenatrom
1
Sanford

Berry's World

•WHAT A 9TORYI You $hould M l It Io HMmy

With Its majority o f low-income blacks and
Puerto Ricans and an Insurance Industry that
still hasn't figured out how to coexist with poor
people, Hartford typifies many major metropoBut the America where 1 lovingly thrive today
la still vastly superior to the America where I
began my commencement 45 years ago.

Out with one
defense system
in with another
WASHINGTON — Consider this a talc of
two defense systems.
Last month, ..Defense Secrctury Lcs Aspln
scoffed at the threat of nuclear war as
something that has "receded to the vanishing
point," when he announced the cancellation
o f (he "Star Wars" missile defense program.
Two weeks later, Aspln gave the green light
to complete an 811 million defense system
that smacks o f "Dr. Strangclovc." It's the
Ground Wave Emergency Network, which
would allow m ilita ry------leaders lo communlcate after a nuclear
fir
doomsday.
j£ r,'
A
I f th e c o u n t r y
w, 1-.
'. 8 j
needs OWEN, why n T j C f e g Q f M
doesn't tt also need
T ^ y
"Star Wars," which
\9‘ / J k /
w a s d e s ig n e d to
*
rotect civilian popua tio n s from a
nuclear war with the
former Soviet Union?
A ir Force officials
£ Two weeks
maintain that GWEN
later, Aspln
is an essential com­
gave the
ponent o f America’s
green light to
nuclear deterrence
complete a
efforts. Yet. Aspln
defense
declares the end of
system that
the nuclear threat,
smacks of 'Dr
but then signs off on
Strangelove. i
GWEN.
______________________
GWEN Is a throwback to the Cold War
when Pentagon officials talked about "sur­
vivability" In the same sentence as nuclear
war, GWEN, a ground-based network o f 500
communications towers from coast to coust,
was part o f this military mlnd-sct. Officials
would be able to send messuges across the
country at a speed 80 times slower than u fax
machine. A leading Air Force official once
compared OWEN to the "Pony Express,"
Only 54 o f the 500 GWEN towers arc
currently In operation at a cost of 8235
million. The Pentagon wants another 29
Installations. But communities are chafing at
the prospect of having their landscapes
blighted by 209-foot military communica­
tions towers, despite an aggressive Pentagon
sales Job.
In Livingston, Mont., one or the world's
premier fishing locations, local activists arc
opposing GWEN on the grounds thut it's an
eyesore. Since the Air Force proposed Install­
ing one o f Its towers there, the local citizens
started firing back, but It's nothing personal
against the Pentagon. They're also resisting
efforts by McDonald's to Install a 95-foot tall
sign tn the vicinity o f the tower.
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.. Is siding with
Montanans who fall to see the practicality of
erecting a Cold War monument In Liv­
ingston's serene surroundings. In a recent
letter to Aspln, obtained by our associate
Andrew Conte, Baucus explained his opposi­
tion: " I do not foresee the Imminent danger or
a hlgh-altltude nuclear explosion over the
next several years that would require senior
commanders to operate the Ground WaveEmergency Network."
QWEN isn't galvanizing much other con­
gressional opposition. The price tag for its
completion represents 911 million in a 9300
billion Pentagon budget — or what one
private defense analyst calls "peanuts."
Others see it almost as a parable.
"GWEN Is a satire on military planning —
there wasn't anything to Justify it (tn the
early '60s, when It originated) and there's
nothing to Justify tt now," said retired Adm.
Eugene Carroll o f the Center for Defense
Information. "T h e fact that this program Is
still surviving Is absolute proof that once a
program gets funded, it's Impossible to Btop."
UNDER THE DOME - Rep. Floyd Flake.
D-N.Y., was not among the group o f six black
Secret Service agents who were allegedly
dented service at a Denny's restaurant.
But Flake and other African-American
members o f Congress have their own version
o f that story: Alter a tough day legislating,
they have trouble hailing a taxi.

r

BEN W A T T E N B E R G

An interview with Bill Clinton
There is one question I have wanted to ask
B1U Clinton for a long time. I got my chance,
unexpectedly, on Tuesday afternoon. June 15,
when I was at a White House ceremony
announcing a solid new policy for American
International broadcasting. Suddenly, I was
Invited, along with one other commentator, to
Interview the president in the Oval Office.
My question to the president was: " I f you
were forced to give a one-word answer, would
you describe yourself os a 'liberal' or u
'moderate'?"
In the conversation that followed, the
president said he believed he has been unfairly
typecast as governing from the left side of the
oliUcal spectrum. Moreover, he disclosed that
e expects to produce further evidence of his
centrist economic tendencies later this year.
In answer to my question, Clinton paused
m om entarily, and said, "m o d e ra te." He
quickly added that, of course, It was complex,
because he was liberal on civil rights and
conservative on crime.
Clinton thinks he has been mistakenly
portrayed as a liberal largely because of the
Issue o f gays In the military, although he has
spent little time on the Issue since taking
office. He does not regard the Isaue as liberal or
conservative. "T o m e," he said, "It’ s an issue
o f civil liberties."
He noted that Sen. Charles Robb, s Marine
hero and "on e of the iqpat conservative
Democrats," shared his view. He said he was
v e r y p lea sed th at c o n s e r v a tiv e B arry
Oolawater had also finally gone public in
support o f gays tn military service.
I asked Clinton why, if he saw himself as a
moderate, there were so few moderates on the
White House staff. I said 1 believed that his
originally tough-minded education program
had been transformed and diluted by liberals
In Congress. 1 suggested that the same fate
would befall his other most Important social
programs, crime and welfare, unless he had
more of his own Ideological White House shock
troops to fight for them.
Clinton said he thought that he would end
up with solid crime and welfare legislation. He
Indicated that he was concerned about what
was happening to his education proposal. He
had read s critical New York Times op-ed
article by Diane Ravltch (former assistant
secretary o f Education In the Bush ad­
ministration), and had directed policy adviser
BUI Galston to find out the state o f play.

fj , Jfc |m OlfnAfm ft
Hoantm
umiton*

But the genial and handsome Ted Ethcrlngton
outdid all o f us. Having been president of the
American Stock Exchange, the scholarly lawyer
returned to his alma mater to become president,
only one of two men in American history to serve
as a stock-exchange president and a university
president. (1 told you we were unique.)
As class reunions go, however, ours was not
that unique. Maybe we'll do better on our 50th.
But my reunion with America was far more
Inspiring. I visited with my three younger sisters,
all retirees. "W h y Is your brother still working?"
Inquired one o f their fellow retirees who lives in
nearby Manchester. "Charlleboy always was a
slow learner," quipped Irene.
Two sisters. Irene and Anne, live in the
suburbs. Madalene, the moat courageous o f the
three, has remained In Hartford, a synonym for
urban disaster.

JA C K ANDERSON

R

Idows, orphans

half." Howie Intoned.
I w a s s tu n n e d .
How can they do
that? I'm the only
Negro In the student
body. "E a s y ,"
deadpanned Howie,
"they plan to admit a
half o f a Negro next
year."
T h a t sam e Ir ­
reverent humor was
present at our 45th
reunion o f a class
th a t p r o d u c e d a
con gressm an , a
New England
White House corre­
spondent, one of the
n ation 's top legal
sch olars, a prizewinning medical re*
s e a r c h e r , a
cardiologist, a private
school headmaster,
several corporate CEOS, bank presidents,
theologians, university deans, chaired pro­
fessors, high-school teachers, small-business
owners, advertising copywriters, commercial
artists and your newspaper's syndicated colum*

The president sold he had asked A! From,
head of the moderate Democratic Leadership
Council, to work at the White House, but that
From had turned him down. (From confirms
the Invitation, noting that It had been extended
late last year, during the transition.)
: Clinton then elaborated, turning to his

recently appointed counselor David Gcrgen
(present at this Interview, along with Fred
Barnes of The New Republic and Senior
Adviser George Stcphano. He says that
everyone Is agreed that the current round of
tax Increases Is as much as the economy can
afford.
Moreover, Clinton revealed that lie is
expecting Important budget results from the
report o f Vice President Albert Gore's "N a______
tlonal Performance '
Review" task force,
whose recommenda­
tions to streamline
and slenderize gove r n m e n t are
expected by fat).
C l i n t o n

cm-

phaslzcd that the
G ore re p o rt can
(rigger "a big round
o f spending cuts."
The president is now
trying to determine
w h at le g is la t iv e
vehicle would best
g e t th e G o r e generated spending
cuts Into the con­
g re s s io n a l bu d get
cycle for Fiscal Year
'94, which begins
Oct. 1, '93.

Inanawarto
my queation,
Clinton
paused
momentarily,
and said, M
'moderate}

Clinton also cites conservative congressional
leader Charles Stcnholm, D-Texas, who says
the House of Representatives made a massive
but little-noticed cut in the current budget
proposal, zeroing out any domestic discre­
tionary spending Increases for the next five
years.
In response to Barnes' question regarding
the process by which he chose Judge Ruth
Bader Qlnaburg for the Supreme Court,
Clinton said he had started with a pool o f about
40 potential candidates. He narrowed the list
down to seven, and then to two fully qualified
finalists, Judge Stephen Breyer and Olnsburg.
stressing that "both arc moderates
(Clinton
said he chose Oinsburg because, In a personal
Interview, he was profoundly Impressed by her
inner strength and deep conviction: "A s we
say down home, her waters run deep.")
So, the president has plenty of answers for
hla moderate and conaervaUve critics. What he
says, and alludes to, makes sense: more
moderates to fight his fight, more spending
cuts, leaner ana meaner government, careful
attention to keep the tough Integrity o f the
original domestic agenda he campaigned 6n.
I’m Impressed. All he has to do to win me
over Is deliver.

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Friday. Juns 18, 1993 - SA

Lakes

M em orial Stadium
By NIOK PPBIFAUF

Harald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Monday night,
the Sanford City Commlaaion
discussed whether or not a lease
had been violated an the Memo­
rial Stadium. The decision was
to have the City Attorney In­
vestigate the matter and report
back on his findings.
Wes Rlnkcr, doing business as
Florida Base ball School, has not
paid the 1992 taxes on the
stadium. As o f May 17. the
amount due was $3,157.86.
The commission Is question­
ing whether the lack of payment
and a problem with the level of
insurance Rlnkcr has on the
f a c ilit y v io la t e s th e le a s e
agreement.
Rlnker is currently traveling,
and was not at the commission
meeting. "I intend to pay the (till
amount," he said Tuesday by
phone. " I told them that I
planned to pay before I left town
two or three weeks ago."
He added, "L et's lace It, I'm a
business man and business
hasn't been that great for many

,.|-••‘j
v ,-j ‘
5f. •*,-o f us working class people. I was
late in making my tax payment
last year, and I'm late; again this
year, bql I will pay It."
Rlnker Indicatedheplans to be
back In the Central Florida area
during the last week of this
month, and hopes to be able to
attend the next City Commission
meeting, scheduled for June 28.,
at which time he hopes the
matter will be brought back for
further discussion.
The commission agreed that
they felt the lease had been
breached. The city attorney was
Instructed to Investigate the en­
tire situation and report back at
the June 28 meeting.
Fin an ce D irecto r C arolyn
Small told the commissioners
that Rlnker had been notified
over a year ago that he had not
met the requirements o f his
contract regarding Insurance.
"H e was required to have on
A-rated policy," she said, "but
he had a B-plua. We notified him
o f this about IB months ago, but
haven't heard that the A-pollcy
had been obtained."
Commissioner Whltey Ecks­

Attorney general asks Beard’s
removal from Southern Bell cases
By BILL BlftQBTROM

Associated Press Writer______
TALLAHASSEE Florida's
attorney general and Southern
Bell agreed a state Public Service
Commission member should
stop m ixin g regulation and
romance, by removing himself
from cases Involving the state's
largest telephone company.
Qov. Lawton Chiles agreed
Thursday that Commissioner
T o m B e a rd , w h o d a te s a
Southern Beil administrative
naslatant in Miami, should bow
out of Southern Bell cases,
spokesman Ran Sachs said.
"W hen you’re sitting there
lite r a lly in ju d g m e n t o v e r
billions of dollars of rate In­
creases for the public of the state
of Florida, the public has a right
to have each and every commis­
sioner voting without any ap­
pearance of conflict." said At­
torney General Bob Butterworth.
Beard wasn't in hia office.and
didn't return calls to his office
and home for comij*$nt. He and
Southern Bell employee Alma
Paruolo have said they don't
discuss business and keep their
professional und private lives
separate.
PSC attorneys will review the
attorney general's motion and
Ucurd will have 12 days to
respond, PSC spokeswoman Bcv
DcMello said.
In addition, the Florida De­

workshop hud the
opportunity to talk to women
ulrcady employed In high tcch
careers und to learn sonic of the
advantages and the pitfalls for a
young woman entering such
careers.
The young women learned
what the highest paying techno*
logical careers will be In the

U.S. citizen,
disliked the girl's friends und
behavior, warning Carol that his
niece was promiscuous. She
disagreed und would not talk to
Wardch an the telephone or
welcome him Into her home.
Wardch gambled heavily on the
lottery.
Wurdch went lo his brother's
home the night of the April 28
shooting to talk, Haft told the
Jury. The uttorncy said Wardch
always carried a gun for his own
protection. After being largely

luiure; nicy were luuglit some
strategies for success and given
tips on money maugagement.
One of the most Important
features of the seminars wus (he
training In leadership skills.
"W c want to prepare these
young women for the work force
and p repare them to take
charge." said Pamela Pelaez.
who organized the workshop.
Career and educational plum

Ign o red by Curol und her
c h ild r e n . W n r d e h 's a n g e r
exploded and he began shooting
into the home to scare them, the
attorney said.
He was urrcslcd later that
night at his Kissimmee apart­
ment and claimed he did not
know bullets had struck his
slHtcr-ln-luw. When he wus In­
terviewed by police he said the
silver-tipped bullets he used
could not kill unyonc. They were
only meant to scare them,
Wurdch told Interviewers. The
bullets In the gun and extra clips

Fire
Continued from Page 1A
tlnuc Interview s today with
Freddie and Thelma Mungcn.
owners of the club, as well as
several others whom she did not
Immediately identify.
The Sanford Fire Department
responded to the blaze at 1:05
n.m. Thursday. Almost all of the
flames were contained within the
building.
"A t about the same time, the
police department received a call
about a possible burglary at the
b u i l d i n g . " said p o lic e In ­
vestigator Lt. Dennis Whitmire.
"That Is one of the main reasons
why we arc looking so deeply into
a possible arson situation."
Murray commented, "The bur­
glary call was received at almost
the same time the call came In on
the fire," she said.'*

• W est C ry stal Lako —
When the lest first started, the
lake was clear, but through the
months, it became less clear.
•C ast Crystal Lako — Simi­
lar to the rest o f Crystal Lake but
with no major problems at the
present time.
• Lako Sauna — Loe said It
was not In as good shape as
expected. It is more shallow, and
more In a natural state.

I

• Lako Bingham
He de­
clared this between medium and
low In quality standards. The
lake Is not as deep nor clear as It
should be.

adequate lake management,"
said, "especially at the fo
largest lakes."
He recommended the city olfei
tain assistance from a U o f F
specialist in establishing the
program.
Mayor Lowry Rockett aug
gested charts or graphs be com­
piled on the various lakes within
the city, and displayed at thr
city halt, so that the citizen*
would be able to learn o f thr
condition o f each or the lakes
"Th is could be the forerunner o
getting more people In the tota
community Involved," he said
"and I believe a visual display
will help generate Interest."

. «L ak a Dawson and Lako
Como — Loe said there was not
enough data at this time with
which to reach a conclusion.
"One of the best findings we
made," he said, "Is that none o f
the lakes were rated at the
lowest levels o f contamination.
Some were below the middle
range, but overall, they are
probably better than most lakes
in the area."
"W e will be needing more
volunteers to continue checking
on these lakes," Loe said. "W e
would like to have people who
have property on a particular
lake or access to one, and a
boat."
He announced the University
or Florida would give training in
coloform bacteria testing to any­
one interested in becoming in­
volved In the project.
"O u r objective la to have

Loe suggested pci
persons Inter*
ested In joining the Lakewatc
Program In Lake Mary, conta
him at 323-6128. "W e have t
|et data on a regular monthly
sis," he said. " I know It hasn't
been easy, but we have a greol
group of people who are con­
cerned enough to become in­
volved, and we could use the
assistance of others."

S.C. children tell story of
hurricane Hugo to children
Associated Press Writer______
COLUMBIA. S.C. - Three
years after Hurricane Hugo,
South Carolina's schoolchildren
are providing a helping hand to
students In South Florida who
l i v e d t h r o u g h H u r r ic a n e
Andrew.
In crayon and careful, pen­
cil-drawn letters, they recount
the night of Sept. 21, 1989,
when Hugo roared into Charles­
ton and across the state.
"Hugo. He got my house. He
got my car, He got my tree But
he den git m e." wrote Trey
Smith, a Moncks Corner sec­
ond-grader.
His town lies 40 miles Inland,
directly In the path of the storm
that took the lives of 29 South
Carolinians and destroyed $4
billion In property.
Trey's account, like scores of
others made In the days and
weeks after the hurricane struck,
Is collected in "Hugo Blue." It's
un 8 0-p agc, p ro fe s s io n a lly
printed book with a black and
blue. Hugo-inspired painting by

“ When a child sees another's
notebook sheets with pictures of
fallen trees and floating houses art work. It seems more un­
are reproduced to accompany d e r s ta n d a b le ," said B arrie
Hinson In Goose Creek, who
the words.
"Hugo made us cry." wrote teaches art to the children qf
third-grader Stephanie Simmons C h a r l e s t o n N a v a l B a s e
o f Ladson. "Hugo, Hugo go, go personnel.
"Little children see things ab
goodby."
A high school student from vividly," she said. The storm
destroyed her classroom trailer
H a r t s v llle s a id th e sto rm
brought "a few precious mo­ and she had to teach classes lb
ments of togetherness to a fairly the cafeteria for the rest o f the
year.
.
distraught family."
The Hugo Blue project began
Two-thousand copies o f the
book will be In public schools as an Idea from Cicmson Univer­
next fall in Florid a's Dade s ity E n glish tea ch er D ix ie
County, hit hard by Hurricane Ooswaml. The Rural Education
A n d re w la s t A u g u s t, said A llia n c e fo r C o lla b o r a t iv e
Humanities put the different
Joanne Kaspert In Miami.
Some students still live in w o r k s t o g e t h e r , said J im
tents, and a small thunderstorm Andreas, head Of the university'..*
can bring back Andrew's terror, English Department where the
book was produced.
she said.
“ T h e s tu d e n ts o f S ou th
The works in the book gretv
Carolina understand that. The from homework assignment*,
rest of the people In the world the What-I-Dld-Over-My-Vacatki
don't understand that. They n type. Andreas said. Except the
think It's over,” Ms. Kaspert days after the storm were mi
said.
vacation — tens or thousands
She hopes the book will help were left without power, water,
Florida's students write and roads and worse.
paint their way past the cataatxunh||iForty-one pcqple died In
gf
all an 'inocula­
* BtroMf^lorida and more than Henry Miller calls
250,000 were left homeless In tion against suffering,"' Andrews
l T u Yt icathartic."
'
the Aug. 24, ^902. storm.
, ,
Ml

i

Move-

nlng that will help the girls alter
they graduate from high school
w a B an Integral part of the
training as well.
The training wus not limited to
the classroom , Pelaez said.
Students also went to local
manufacturing facilities and had
hands*on experien ce In the
various types of technical train­
ing offered at the college.

Sentence
Continued from Pag* 1A

listed them
according to quality standards,
reporting on the best lake first.
• Lake Mary — Loe said It Is
probably in the best condition of
all. There ure a few minor spots
with algae blooms, but generally
It was in surprisingly good
c o n d itio n . T h e r e Is not o
tremendous number of fish, but
those that are there are o f good
size.
• Little Lake Mary - Loe
said It contained very little
phosperous, and had som e
algae. He considered the water
cloudy, but there la better fish­
ing In the lake than In any other.

partment of Law Enforcement Is
Beard. 43, told Southern Bell
continuing an investigation of officials, but not PSC officials,
Beard's telephone and travel about his relationship with
rerords to see if public funds Paruolo. 37. six months after
were spent on personal calls or they began dating In June 1992,
trips, Sachs said.
Paruolo said In a deposition. She
Chiles has said he will await suid a Southern Bell attorney
the outcome of the probes before advised her not to discuss busi­
ness with him.
deciding whether he should act.
Meanwhile. Sachs said. "The
The company previously said
governor concurs that to main­ it was confident Beard could act
tain public trust In the regulato­ impartially, but decided to Join
ry process. It would be most Buttcrworth’s motion because of
appropriate for Commissioner concern about public confidence,
Beard to recuse himself from nny spokeswoman Wcndle Felnbcrg
said.
v o t e s h a v in g to do w ith
Southern Bell."
"Even though there has been
Buttcrworth's office looked no wrongdoing, there Is the
into Hcurd's relationships with appearance factor to consider,"
Paruolo und earlier with Mary Felnbcrg suid. "The continua­
Duudelln, a stuff manager for tion of any Illusion o f con­
B ellS ou th , S ou th ern B e ll's troversy just can’t be allowed."
I f Beard d o e s n 't re m o v e
parent company, in Atlanta.
Daudclln told Investigators she himself from Southern Bell votes
und Beard dated In 1991 and and the rest o f the five-member
PSC doesn't remoye him. the
1992.
_____
. Buttcrworth's tiB tifc e A lH tiA tMtWRMqr
“ ■ Office can
e state Supreme
investigation , found no direct appeal to
Spelling errors are kept Intact.
evidence Boat'd Was Improperly Court, Butterworth said.
In many accounts, wide-spaced
The motion didn't say whether
Influenced, but sgld the question
"is whether or not there has B e a r d s h o u l d l e a v e h i s
been the appearance of impro­ 990.000-a-ycar post on the panel
altogether. He's said he won’t
priety."
"Mr. Beard has been saying all seek reappointment by Chiles
Continued from Page 1A
along that he has not been when his term expires In Janu­
side of the
influenced at all; In his own ary.
"T h e immediate issue Is his field, off S.R. 46." He added. "A t
mind he has not. But that's not
the test. The test Is not what he recusal from voting an Southern the present time, thut area Is not
believes. The test Is what the Bell matters." Butterworth said. developed, and would probubly
public believes," Butterworth "His resignation Is something he be an Ideal locution for Jett
would have to consider himself." Aire."
said.

Tech
Continued from Page 1A

Continued from Page 1A

tein suggested the Insurance
rob lem shou ld have been
rought before the commission
when it was first noticed.
R e g a rd in g th e In su ran ce
question, Rlnker commented
yesterday that he was in the
process o f looking into obtaining
a new level of coverage.
"This Is a difficult situation,"
S m a ll said. " I f s o m e o n e 's
personal property becomes de­
linquent In taxes or the lease is
broken, it is sold on the court­
house steps. But this particular
property Is owned by the city,
and It has to be approached
differently."
Small said punishment could
result with the county revoking
Rinker's license, or the city
re v o k in g th e o c c u p a tio n a l
license.
Rlnker said he hoped the
entire matter could be resolved
during the next commission
meeting. "I'v e been teasing the
facility for 17 years now, he
said, "and I'm already making
plans for the 18th year, so I
intend to do whatever It takes to
continue using the stadium."

E

ip ff flf i,i

Sanford Fire Marshal Richard
Cohen said the point of origin of
the Are appears to be In the stage
area, which is located In the
middle of the north side o f the
structure.
Murray reported no suspicious
materials were discovered which
may have been used to ignite the
blaze. ‘
Almost the entire Interior of the
building was destroyed In the
blaze by either Are, or In fighting
the flames.
The Mungens yesterday an­
nounced they do not have plans
to rebuild and try to continue
operating the dance hall. "W e
thought we were doing some­
thing for the people and youth of
the city," Thcmta Mungcn said,
"hut apparently there are some
who believe otherwise."

he carried were hollow-points.
In arguing against Imposing
the death penalty, Huft de­
scribed Wardch as a good man
who fell apart. He lost control,
and although he was responsible
for his actions, he should fucc
life In prison, not death In the
electric chair. Haft contended.

Cooke said a number of factors
make the northsldc location fa­
vorable. The Master Drainage
Permit has been issued, the
aircraft ramp Is In place and In
good condition, utility services
ure In place, and the location Is
central to the airfield.

Rose Lee Williams. 72, 2031
Juek Court St., Sanford, died
Thursday, June 17, at her reald&lt; icc. Mrs. WIlllaniB wus a
home maker. She was born Sept.
13. 1920, in Middlcburg. She
was a member of New Bethel
AME Church.
Survivors Include husband,
Nathaniel Sr.; mother, Nettie
Nelson. Sanford; sons. Sammic
Lee. Luke Monroe. Nuthanlcl Jr..
Johnnie, Willie. Danny, all of
Sanford; daughters, Equllla
Ross, Nettle Sutton, both of
Rochester, New York. Estelle
Ash, Okeechobee, Jackie Smith,
Rose Sanders, both of Sanford:
24 grandchildren.
Butt Funeral Home, Orlando.
In charge of arrangements.

CECIL BROOK
Cecil Brook. 70. of Plant City,

excellent plans for the neiy
fa c ilit y In clu d in g b ca u tlfql
lan d scap in g and oth er Im ­
provements.
Jett Aire has also applied to br
a "Fixed Base Operator," widen
will allow them to sell aviation
fuel at their new site.
Cooke said he could not IrWmedlately estimate when work
would actually be able lo gel
underway for the new operation,)

W m le o m m
N m w to m m rl

He also told the authority of
the disadvantages. They In­
cluded the logistical duplication
o f fuel and other services be­
tween the north and south sides
of the field, the undcr-utlllzatlon
of a ramp designed for large
transport aircraft, same potential
operational conflicts with trans­
p u t aircraft, and the limited
access to the new Eustcrn
Beltway, presently under con­
struction.
Access to the new facility will

m
ROBB LEE WILLIAMS

be from S.R. 46. "T h e actual
e n tr a n c e w ill be fro m an
extension to Brlsson Avenue,"
Cooke said.
As for the beltway, he com­
mented, "T h ey will Just have to
te ll p e o p le c o m in g in the
beltway, to get ofT at the Stiver
Lake exit, and take Sanford
Avenue north to S.R. 46, then
turn right to get to Jett A ire."
Cooke said Jett A ire haa

died Thursday, June 17. at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal, Sanford. Born Jan. 22. 1923
In Newberry. He moved to Plant
City from Sanford In 1970. He
was a operator o f a plant nursery
und a member of First United
Methodist Church. He was a
member of the Disabled Ameri­
can Veterans, Sanford. Mr.
irookB was a Marine Corps
Veteran during World War II.
Survivors include wife, Shuron
Brooks, Plant City; sons, Derek
Ingram. Plant City, Antony
McMahon, Lukcland; daughter,
Dcltra Andrew, Jacksonville.
Dana Ingram, Valeria Vernon
both o f Plant City; brother.
Badger Brooks, Polk City; sister,
Minnie Kennedy, Sanford;' 10
grandchildren.
Wells Memorial Funeral Home,
Plant City, in charge o f ar­
rangements.

”Florida's own Newcomer
service" - dedicated to
welcoming new residents.
It b our desire to make you feel
welcome end to acquaint you
with our city.
If you are new in the area, or
know ofa family who U, a phone
cell will bring a prompt vbit
fromour representative. She has
brochures, civic, information,
maps; and to help with your
shopping needs, cards of intro­
duction and gifts from local
merchants.
Local merchants are also en­
couraged to Inquire about the
availability of our services.

SANFORD
GRACE M.8T1NECIPHER
322-4311
LA K E M ARY

FLORENCE O'CONNOR
323-4993

%

wyr-ppjap ■

— gga—

QftMtag S a m m g e ­
nome Office
904-734-6031

�•A - Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Friday, June 18. 1993

Bishops establish panel
on clergy sexual abuse
By DAVI D a n i o o t
Associated Press Writer_______
NEW ORLEANS - A panel
report calling for urgent action
b y th e n a t i o n ’ s R o m a n
C a th o lic b ish ops to Htop
priests from m o le stin g
youngsters was met by the
formation of another commit­
tee to study the problem some
more.
"W e are met agnln with a
barrage of wonderful sounding
p l a t i t u d e s . ” sai d D av i d
Clohcssy. national director of
Survivors Network of those
Abused by Priests. "It's long
past time for action.”
The bishops formed the new
Ad Hoc Committee on Sexual
Abuse on Thu rsday after
h ea r in g a report from a
church-sponsored panel re­
commending. among other
things. Independent review
boards to oversee the church’s
handling of nbusc allegations
and a ban on abusive priests
w o rk in g wi t h y oun gs te rs
again.
The report by a group of

Legal Notices

Legal Notices
NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS FOR THE VACATINO,
AtANDONINO. DISCONTINUING. AND CLOSINO
OF RIOHTS-OF-WAY OR ORAINAOE EASEMENT
FOR i J im t i W llltrd, Etq.
W**drufl Sprlnfi Road b*tw**n Intent*!* 4 and Or*ton Av*nu*
IVA93-I7)
,
TO WHOM ITM AY CONCERN:
YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that th* Board of County
Comml»*lon*rt ol Samlnol* County, Florida at l: » p.m. on tha 13th
day ol July. A.O., IttJ. In tha County Commlulonan' Maallng Room
at Ih* Samlnol* County Sarvlcaa Building In Sanlord. Florida, will
hold a public hearing to conildar and determine whether or not the
County will vacal*. abandon, dlicontlnu*. dove, renounce and
dltclalm any right ol the County and the public In and to the
following rlghti of way or drainage eaiement running through or
edlacent loth* deter Ibed properly, lo wit:
That portion ol Woodrulf Spring* Road between Interttate 4 and
Oregon Avenue a* detcrlbed In Exhibit "A "
EXHIBIT " A "
WOODRUFF SPRINGS ROAD
Between I 4 and Ortgcn Avenue
DESCRIPTION
That part ol Woodrutl Spring* Road, a* recorded in Plat Booh I.
Pag* 73 ol the Public Record* ot Seminole County. Florida, lying
Ee*t ot Inlerttaf* 4 and Watt ol Oregon Avenue within Section 79.
Townthlp It South, Range X Eatt. Samlnol* County. Florida, more
particularly detcrlbed at lollowi:
Commence at the South ta corner ol tald Section 7*. Townthlp 19
South. Rang* JO Eatl and run S 19*47’]}“ W along Ih* South line ol
Ih* Soulhwetl 'a ol tald Section 79 lor a dlttanc* ol 7S 00 leet: thence
run N 00*ll'34‘* W along Ih* Well Right ol Way line ol Oregon
Avenue lor a dltlanc* ol 7119.73 leel lo the POINT OF BEGINNING:
thence continue N 00*l}'34“ W along tald Right ol Way line tor a
dlttanc* ol 54.97 leel to Ih* Northerly Right ol Way line ol Woodrull
Spring* Road: thence run $ t****’**” W altong tald Northerly
Right of Way line and Ih* South line ot land* detcrlbed In Official
Record Book 717). Pag* SOol the Public Record* ol Seminole County,
Florida, lor a dlttanc* ot 9S.74 leet to Ih* Eatterly Right-Of-Way line
ot Interttate 4i thence run S 73*)7’39" W along tald Eatterly
Right-Of-Way line lor a dlttanc* ol S7.S4 leet to the Southerly
Right of-Way line ol tald Woodrull Spring* Road: thence run S
4*, 17'5*’ ’ E along tald Southerly Right ol Way line for a dlttanc* ol
170.4* leel loth* POINT OF BEGINNING.
Containing M7) tquart leel more or let*
Pertont with dltabllltlet needing attltlanc* to participate In any ol
theta proceeding* tliould contact Ih* Employe* Relation* Depart
men) ADA Coordinator 41 hour* In advance ol Ih* meeting al
371 1130, attention 7941.
Pertont are advlted that II they decide to appeal cny decitlont
mad* at theta meeting*/hearing*, they will need a record ol the
proceeding* and lor tuch purpot*. they may need lo Intur* lhal a
verbatim record of the proceeding* It made, which Includei the
tettlmony and evidence upon which Ih* appeal It bated, per taction
714 010), Florida Statute*.
PERSONS INTERESTED MAY APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE SPECIFIED
BOARDOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Publlth: June II. 1993
DEF 170

NOTICE OF PROCEEDINGS FOR THE VACATINO.
ABANDONING. DISCONTINUING, ANDCLOSINO
OF RIOHTS-OF-WAY OR ORAINAOE BASEMENT
FOR ■Sear* Mortgage Corporation
VA93-10
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN:
YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that Ih* Board ol County
Commlttlonert of Seminole County, Florida at 1:30 p.m. on Ih* 13th
day of July, A.D., 1993, In the County Commlttlonert’ Meeting Room
at Ih* Samlnol* County Sorvlcot Building In Sanlord. Florida, will
hold a public hoarlng to contldor and determine whether or not the
County will vocal*, abandon, dltconllnue, clot*, renounce and
dltclalm any right ol Ih* County and Ih* public In and lo the
following right* of way or drainage tatomtnl running through or
ad|• cent to Ih*detcrlbodproperty, to-wit:
E X H IB IT " A "

TO APPLICATION FOR VACATION OF EASEMENT
774 SPRING RUN CIRCLE, LONGWOOD. FLORIDA
A part ol Lot 30 SPRING RUN PATIO HOMES, at recorded In Plat
Book 71, Paget M A *7, Public Record* of Seminole County, Florida
More fully detcrlbed at follow*:
Commence al Ih* Soulhwetl corner ol tald Lol 30. thence run South
•I degree* 05 m lnulti 10 tecondt Eatt. 4.00 leel to Ih* Point of
Beginning; thence run North 01 degree* 54 minute* 50 tecondt Eatt.
77.00 la*t; thence South II degree* 05 minute* 10 tocondt Eatt, 9.00
leet; thence South 01 degree* 54 minute* 50 tecondt Wett, 17.00 leet;
thence South II degree* 05 minute* 10 tecondt Wetl, 17.30 leet;
thence South 31 degree* 4] minute* 30 tecondt Eatt. 15.17 leet;
lh*nc* South 51 degree* 14 mlnulet X tecondt Wett. 5 00 leel lo a
point on Ih* lot line of tald Lot X ; thence North 31 degree* 43
minute* X tecondt Wetl. 13.57 feel; thence North II degree* 0)
minute* 10 tecondt Well, 74.00 leet to Ih* Point ol Beginning.
Pertont with d lta b lllllti needing attlttance to participate In any ol
that* proceeding* thould contact Ih* Employe* Relation* Depart
menl ADA Coordinator 41 hour* In advance of the meeting al
171-1IX. attention 7V4I.
Pertont are advlted that If they decide to appeal any decitlont
mad* at th*t* meellngt/hearlngt. they will need a record of Ih*
proceeding* and for tuch purpot*. they may need to Intur* that a
verbatim record ol Ih* proceeding* It made, which Include* the
tetllmony and evidence upon which Ih* appeal It bated, per teclion
744.0105. Florida Slatulet.
PERSONS INTERESTED M AY A P PEA R AND BE HEARD AT
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE SPECIFIED
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Publlth: June II. 1993
DEF-149
NOTICEOF PUBLICHEARINO
The Seminole County Planning and Zoning Commlttlon will hold a
public hearing In Room 1071 of the County Service* Building.
Sanford, Florida on July 7,1993 at 4:00 P.M . or at toon thereafter at
pottlble, to contlder the following:
A. PU B LIC H IA N IN O FO R CH ANO E OF ZONINO REG U LAT IO N S

I. ALAN P U L M IR (PZ93-14) Retene from A-1 Agriculture to PCD
Planned Commercial Development — Located In Section 77,
Townthlp 19, Rang* X . Beg. SWcor.. run E. 551.34 It.. Sely on curve
X.74', N 77 33’ 55“ E 134 43’ lo POB. Run N 77 33'55'' E 154.44’. N 10
S4'39“ E 14047'. E. 547.44'. N 47 E 737 43', S II 4)'44“ W 451.74', W
753.74' lo beginning. Further detcrlbed at Northeatt of the
Intertactlonol CR 44A (Paola Rd.) and Rinehart Road
Thot* In attendance will be heard and written commend may be
filed with the Current Planning Office. Hearing! may be continued
from lime to time at found neetttary. Further detail* available by
calling 37I-I1X, E*t*ntlon 7444.
NOTE: Pertont with d lta b lllllti needing attltlanc* lo participate
In «ny ol the** proceeding* thould contact Ih* Employe* Relation*
Department ADA Coordinator 44 hour* In advance ot Ih* meeting al
37I-IIX,attention 7941.
Pertont a rt advlted that It lh*y with lo appeal any decltlon mad*
at thla meeting, they will need a record ol th* proceeding!, and for
tuch purptt*. they may need to entur* that a verbatim record of the
proceeding* It mad*, which record Include* Ih* tettlmony and
evidence upon which Ih* appeal It to be bated. p*r Section 744.0105.
Florida StttutM.
B O A R D O F CO U N TY COM M ISSIONERS
SEM IN O LE CO U NTY. FLO R ID A
B Y l H E R E H ARD IN , M A N A G E R
C U R R E N T P L A N N IN O

Publlth: Jun* 14.1993

but author Jason Berry says
more than 400 Catholic priests
In North America have been
re p o rted for m o le s tin g
children since 1084. Connors
said from 2 percent to 4
percent of Catholic priests over
the past 30 years mny huve
been guilty of ubusc.
Experts In child b c x i i u I
abuse say the problem crosses
religious and vocational lines,
but the Catholic Church has
come under erlllclsm for not
addressing the problem openly
In the past. Several luwsults
brought by alleged victims
accuse the church of quietly
reassigning offenders to other
parishes.
"W c can only ask the pa­
tience of God's people." Arch­
bishop Wllllum II. Keeler, pres­
ident of the bishops' confer­
ence. said In a n n o u n c i n g the
formation of the new commit­
tee.
He said the c o m m i t t e e
would be charged with advis­
ing the bishops on how they
can deal with nbuslvc priests
and help victims and their
families.

more than 30 experts on
clergy sexual abuse also re­
com mended establishing a
national task force on child
abuse and a national day of
p r a y e r and p c n u n c e Tor
victims.
"W e must be pro-victim.”
the Rev. Cnnlcc Connors, the
panel chalrmnn. told the na­
tion's bishops nt their annual
spring meeting.
Hlshop John F. Kinney of
Bismarck. N.D.. chairman or
the new committee, vowed to
come up with more recom­
mendations for "decisive ac­
tion."
"I want to make sure that all
of us bishops understand the
depth and the seriousness, the
pain and the agony of tills
problem and why It strikes at
the very heart of the church's
trust level and credibility
level." he said.
The report and the new
committee come against a
backdrop of increasing allega­
tions o f clergy sex abuse
around the country.
There has been no systemat­
ic study of clergy sex abuse.

„ „

...

DEF-137

NOTICE OF A
PUBLICHEARINO
OF PROPOSEDCHANOES
ANDAMENDM ENTS
IN CERTAIN DISTRICTS
AND BOUNDARIESOF
THE ZONINOORDINANCE
OF THE CITY OF
SANFORD, FLORIDA.
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held In
the Commlttlon Room at Ihe
City Hall In ih* City of Sanford.
Florida, at 7:00 o’clock P M on
June 71. 199], to contlder
change* and amendment* to Ih*
Zoning Ordinance ol Ih* Clly ol
Sanford. Florida, at follow*
A portion ot lhal certain
properly lying between the
aban don ed S C L R a ilr o a d
right ol way and Vlhlen Road
and between Uptala Road and
Old Monroe Road *&gt;tend*d
toulherly It propoted to be
reroned Irom SRI AA, Single
Family Dwelling Retldentlal. to
PD. Planned Development Said
properly being more particular
ly detcrlbed at lollowt
Lol 74. New Uptala. at re
corded In Plat Book t, Page 47,
ol the Public Record* of Semi
noleCounly, Florida
All partly* In Inleretl and
cllltent thall have an opporlunl
ty lob* heard al tald hearing
By order ol Ih* Clly Commlttlon ol Ih* City of untord.
Florid*,.
. .
.....
P E R S O N S W IT H - O IS
A B I L I T I E S ’N E E O IN O
ASSISTANCE TO P A R T IC I­
P ATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SHO ULD
CONTACT THE PERSONNEL
OFFICE ADA COORDINATOR
AT 330 5474 41 HOURS IN
ADVANCE OF THE M EETING
AOVICE TO THE PUBLIC
IF A PERSON DECIDES TO
A P PEA L A DECISION MADE
WITH R E S P E C T TO A N Y
M ATTER CONSIDERED AT
THE ABOVE M EETING OR
HEARING. HE MAY NEED A
VERBATIM RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS. INCLUDING
THE TESTIMONY AND EVI
DENCE. WHICH RECORD IS
NOT P R O V ID E D BY THE
C IT Y OF S A N F O R D (FS
744 0105)
Janet R Donahoe
Clly Clerk
Publlth: June II. 199)
DEF II

INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
O FTH E EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CRIMINAL CASE NO:
91-1015'CFA O
INRE: FORFEITURE OF
1947 FORD MUSTANG
VIN: IFABP45E5HF147443
NOTICEOF FORFEITURE
PROCEEDING
TO: Mona BelhWolp*
10411 Prattwlck Road
Boynton Beach,
Florida 334)4 4411
Ford Motor Credit Company
PotlO lllce Boa 9747
Fori Lauderdale.
Florida 33310 9717
and all otheri who claim an
Inleretl In the following proper
ly:
1947 FordMutlang
VIN: 1FABP45E5HF147443
Donald F. Etllnger, of th*
Seminole County Sherlfl’t Ol
lice, Seminole County. Florida,
th ro u g h h it o ffic e r* , In
vetllgalort or agent*, ttlie d th*
above properly on March 19,
1993. at or near 75lh Street,
Sanford. Seminole County, Flor­
ida, and It pretenlly holding
tald property for Ih* purpot* ol
forfeiture purtuanl to Section*
937.701-704. Florida Slatulet,
and will REQUEST thal an
Honorable Judge ol Ih* Circuit
Court, Eighteenth Ju d ic ia l
Circuit. Samlnol* County. Flor­
ida. find probable caute that th*
above p rope rty th ou ld be
forfeited to th* above agency.
You will be tenl a copy of Ihe
order finding Probable Caute
once II It tlgntd by th* Judge
and It will advlt* you how and
when fo retpond to thlt requetl
for forfeiture.
I H ER EB Y CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy of thlt
Notice wat tenl to Ih* above
named a d d re tte t by U.S.
certified mall, return receipt
requeued, thlt 7th day ol Jun*.
1993.
D ANIELN.BRO DERSEN
LEG AL COUNSEL
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'SO FFICE
1345 71th Street
Sanford. Florida3777) 9399
Telephone: (X 7 I3 X 4435
Publlth: June 14.14.71.7). 1993
DEF-94

i

Legal Notices
LEOAL NOTICE
Th* School Board of Seminole
County It accepting Requetlt
fo r P r o p o t a l to p ro v id e
Employe* Attltlanc* Program
Service*. Contact R ichard
Well*. E te cu tlv* D irector.
S u p p o r t S e r v ic e * , 1711
M ellonvllle Avenue. Sanford
77771.777 1757, E«t. 71)
Publlth: Jun* 14, X . 71. 77. 7).
74. 75.77. 74.79. 199]
D EF 1)1
NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In butlnetl al 1047
Hwy 44 A, Lake Mary. Semi
nole County. Florida under Ihe
F I c I I I I o u t N a m * ot
GREENW OOD NURSERIES,
and lhal I Intend to regltler tald
name wllh Ih* Secretary ot
Stale. Tallahatte*. Florida. In
accordance wllh th* provlllont
ot the Flctltloui Name Statute.
To Wit Section 145 09. Florida
Statute* 1957
Am lrM Badakhthan
Publlth: Jun* II. 199)
DEF 144
....

NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In butinett al 1370
E.E. Wllllamton Road. Long
we**. -PC/ -aemlrtele- Ceuittyr
Florida under th* Flctlllout
Nam* ol PLEASANT HAVEN
P E T C EM ET ERY, and that I
Intend to regltler tald name
wllh th* Secretary ot Stale.
Tallahatte*. Florida. In ac
cordanc* with Ih* prnvltlont ot
Ih* Flcllllout Nam* Statute.
To Wit: Section 145 09. Florida
Slatulet 1957
Alice M Mewet
Publlth June 14. 1991
DEF 144
NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In butinett al 4)9
Blrgham Place. Lake Mary. FL
37744. Seminole County. Florida,
under Ih* Flctlllout Nam* ol
C R E A T IV E W A L LP A P E R
EXPRESSIONS, and lhal I In
lend to regltler tald name wllh
Ihe S e c r e t a r y ot S ta te ,
Tallahatte*. Florida. In ac
cordanc* with th* provltlont ol
Ih* Flctltloui Name Stalul*.
To Wit: Section 445 09. Florida
Statute* 19)7.
Jennifer O. Wagner
Publlth: Jun* 14. 1993
D EF 147
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given lhal I
am engaged In butinett at 500
Palm Lake Cl , Longwood. Fla..
Seminole County, Florida, under
Ih* Flctlllout Nam* ol GLASS
RECYCLING CONCEPTS, and
thal I Intend lo regltler tald
name wllh th* Secretary ol
Slat*. Tallahatte*. Florida. In
accordance wllh Ih* provltlont
ot the Flctlllout Nam* Statute.
To Wit: Section 44) 09. Florida
Statute*1957.
Cllnlon Atwater
Publlth: June 11.199]
D E F1 M
.
IN THE COUNTY COURT
O FTH E EIOHTSRENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 9) 1)11 CC
COMMUNITY PROPERTIES
D EVELOPM ENT
CORPORATION
TOP GUN CORPORATION
Plaintiff
vt,

HAIM TABAK

Delendanlt.
NOTICEOF ACTION
TO: HAIMTABAK
YOU ARE H ER EBY NOTI
FIED that a complaint to for*
dote a ilatulory hat been filed
agalntt you. You are required lo terve a copy of your written
detent**. II any, to Ih* action on
Ih* Plaintiff’! attorney, William.
W. Carpenter. Etqulr*. whote
addrett It I X Eatl Highway 434.
Longwood. Florida 377)0, on or
before July X . 199) and file Ih*
original with th* Clerk ol Ihlt
Court either before tervlc* on
Plaln llfl't attorney or Immedl
ately thereafter; olherwlt*. a
ludgmenl will b* entered for th*
relief demanded In th* Com
plaint.
WINESS my hand and teal ol
Ihlt court on thlt lath day ol
Jun*. 1993.
(SEAL)
M ARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of Ih* Circuit Court
BY: Carrie E.Buetlner
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: Jun* 14. 75 A July 7. 9,
1993
DBF-147

Clinton’s news conference
was a fact-filled tutorial
By TBAINCB H U NT
AP White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON - With grace and good humor.
President Clinton used an East Room news
conference lo give Americans a fact-filled tutorial
on Ills budget plan — complete with Ross
Pcrot-stylc charts — und lo declare a victory of
sorts In Somalia.
He was. at turns, charming and disarming
Thursday night. He stopped one reporter In
mid-question to compliment him on his Mickey
Mouse He.
To another reporter's question about strained
relations wllh New Zealand. Clinton confessed
with a smile. "I'v e given absolutely no thought to
(lint question."
He also paused to accept a glass of water from a
tuxedoed waiter and then cracked. "I hi pc Ills
mother's watching."
The performance was u distinct change for a
president plagued recently by missteps on
everything from guys In the military to trouble
with appointments.
The only drnwbuck far Clinton was that many
television viewers likely didn't sec It.
ABC and CBS refused to carry the 8 p.m. news
conference live und NBC cut Clinton off after 25
minutes. CNN curried It all.
The White House was angry, recalling that
Ronald Reagan und George Bush didn't have
much trouble getting primc-tinic covcrngc.
"W e're really disappointed." Clinton adviser
George Stcplinnopoulos said.
But not with Clinton's performance.
"W e arc putting our economic house in order."
the president said as Ills 8500 billion deficitreduction plan advanced In Ihe Senate.
Pointing to a multicolored chnrt tracking the
surging budget deficit that he Inherited. Clinton
said: "I may iiavr a lot to learn but I didn't create
the red line.”
Explaining his plan in detail und pronouncing It
fair and balanced, Clinton promised: " I f tills plan
passes you will sec a continuation of whut's
happened already in the Inst five months: low
Interest rates. Increasing housing sales, more Jobs
coining Into the economy."

Clinton opened his news conference by saying
U.S.-led military strikes had "crippled the forces"
ofSomall warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidld.
He said the operation "Is over and ... It was a
success" In punishing Aidld for killing U.N.
peacekeepers. "W c could not let It go un­
punished." the president said. Aidld. however,
continued to elude U.N. forces trying to arrest
him.
On other matters, Clinton:
—Said he would have preferred preserving a
multi-ethnic state In Bosnia, rather than carving
It up Into three ethnic zones as proposed by
International mediators. However, he said the
United States would have to look at the proposal
very seriously If Its accepted by all the parties.
However. Clinton said that "Serbian aggression
hus been rewurded" to some extent.
—Said he remains optimistic that a health-care
reform plan can puss the Congress this year. "W e
cannot get the deficit down to zero, which Is
where It ought to be. until we do something about
health care costs." he said.
—Said that enacting a reform bill this year
depends largely "on how warmly embraced It Is
by Congress."
The central message o f Clinton's news confer­
ence was that he Is making progresa on Issues
important to Americans after a string of victories
In Congress.
He cited action on his deficit-reduction plan.
Senate approval of a campaign-finance reform bill
and endorsement by congressional committees of
his plan to offer college loans In return for
community service.
Clinton called the economic plan, which
Includes hundreds o f billions In new taxes, "the
most progressive tax plan this country has seen
in decades." with two-thirds o f the increases to be
puld by people with Incomes above 8200,000.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan..
grudgingly gave Clinton good marks for the news
conference even while Insisting that his deficitreduction numbers didn't add up.
" I thought It was a good performance, but he
didn't huve his facts right,” Dole said. “ He's a
nice person, he looks good. It's the product thal
ought to be traded in."

Clinton, Republicans joust
over deficit-cutting bill
"Seventy percent o f the eco­
nomic
gains of the last decade
Assoclatod Pross Writor
went to about 1 percent of the
Amcrlcun people" — the richest,
WASHINGTON - Democrats
Clinton said ut Ills news confer­
readied President Clinton's glunt
ence Thursday night. "They urc
deficit-reduction bill for Senate
liU».position now to puy more to
dcbutc. ,bucked by j l .. W hile
House cfampulj}Wto Hpfrtf m fll" MffF'triake this economy move
tt*Bh),**nd they will."
the- rnrmmfv m*Hy
yBjgHty percent of the *249
heaviest burdriinoillie rich- l „ ,
Majority-DcmoMtsplunhed td bffllokii- tax Increase would be
paid by those with Incomes over
whip the bill through the Semite
8100.000 a yenr. The typical
Finance Cnimnlltee todny. and
family earning less Hum 820.000
take It lo the Senate floor next
would get a tux cut through an
week.
expanded eurned-lnconic credit.
The pucknge would pave the
The only new levy bitting
way for lowering federal deficits
practi cal ly all middle-class
by a record 8508 billion over the
Americans would be the new 4.3
next five years, largely by taxing
percent tux on cuch gallon of
the wealthy, businesses and
gasoline und other fuels —
motorists and by slowing the
estimated to cost the average
growlh of Medicare.
As committee members pre­ family 829 y curly.
During c om m i t t ee debate
pared for whal was expected to
Thursday. Republicans urgued
be a straight party-line vote.
that the measure's new taxes
Clinton engaged bis Republican
would do the opposite of what
foes In a public-relations war
Cllnlon most wants to do —
over whether the legislation wus
spark robust economic growth.
a sensible mix of lax boosts und
"That makes no sense when
spending cuts, or a doomed
recovery hus Just begun," said
attempt In trim rampant budget
Sen. William Roth. R-Dcl.
deficits with unneeded new
They also complained that
levies.

By ALAN P R AM

nearly 8170 billion of the bill's
envisioned savings would have
to come from future spending
bills or from less federal bor­
rowing. Thut leaves big (ax
Increases now. with no guaran­
tees thut spending cuts will be
made later, they said.
" I f the Rcugun-Rush packugcs
were called voodoo, this package
ought to be called deja-voodoo."
said Sen. Charles Grassley, RIowa.
The House passed a similar
version of the bill in May. After
Senate pussugc. Senate-House
negotiators will have lo craft u
compromise Unit both chumbcrs
will consider.
Like the House, the Senate bill
Is dominated by higher taxes on
the rich and corporate America.
The current top Income-tax
rate of 31 percent would In­
crease July 1 lo 38 percent and
39.6 percent for the wealthiest
people. For the first time, the
rich would have to pay the 1.45
percent Medicare tax on annual
Income exceeding 8135,000.

Charge
it.
We now accept MasterCard and Visa.

Sanford Herald
i

t

�Sports

E'Q

T h e ir s fo r the lo sin g
LOCALLY
Y o u t h h o c k e y lurid m is e r

B a m b o o C a f e c l i n c h e s tie
for T h u r s d a y league title

.......'

b i om Staff Report s

SSCi h a c k qualifier S atu rd a y
.

S n 1 111. 111

.'I t

Small field
turns S O S
tourney into
1-day affair

CITY C H A M P S C R O W N E D

ft i DE AN SMI TH

AROUND THE S T A T E
K u e h n c la i m s amateur lead

A R O U N D T H E NATION
Hammond

K of C C a r d in a ls . L o n g w o o d M a r in e c o l l e c t h a r d w a r e

M a r l i n s cl ip P h i l l i e s

filer c o n t r ib u t e s to R a ide rs s u c c e s s
! no leads U S

Open

■, - 'it*,ll:v r

i vi,., m,.,

f rate ll o t a k e s over C a v a l i e r s

* 1

"•v

M u lt i- t a le n t e d M a s h b u r n i m p r e s s e s M a g i c b r a s s
fly F R E O G O O D A L l

B E S T B E T S ON TV

j i m i n u y

4. •••n |i I «*1 1* li *•t r m t j •• h i

P .u ji'

.’ l l

M ,h». i

it

�IB - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, Juno 18, 1983

Allison returns to
tracK that claimed
his younger brother

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
Ttm rtdaynloM
F lrttra e * — iu * , Di 1144
a Omni Nomad
1)40 410 1.10
STabath
a.00 1.40
1 D ova'i Honaf
4. JO
O ( M l 14.10 P ( M l 10.10 T IPS-l) 177.40
b c w O n c i — I M i T i H .H
5RVT*oSp**d
M O 4.40 *40
0 U Snook or
1.00 440
1 Wlllowron Shalom
)00
Q ( M l » *0 P ( M l U.00 T ( M l ) 111.00 DO
( M l 14.00
Third rata — 10*4, C i ) l.M
0 Anthony D
0.40 1.00 1.40
7 Gltnwood Clover
1.40 1.10
4 Took M ain Evant
4.40
Q ( M l 11.40 P 10-1) 41.00 T 10-1-4) 144.14
F o v r t h r o c o - t o n , Ci )t.)0
tR H S g o A tm E b
14.00 1.00 4.00
1 Xtboc Joyco
1.40 0.10
I W t k o Driver
1.40
0 (10) 11.40 P (0-1) 41.00 T (0-1-4) 144.10
Fifth r a t o - t * M , liW . 14
tF o a ltw r Toot
1.00 1.00 1.40
I S M M y M a r i l y n ’ ) . 10 1 . 1 0
1 Bloc knot*
4.00
Q (1-0) 0.00 P (0-1) 14.10 T (0-11) 14.00
U it h r a t a - iu o . S iia . o o
1 Mahogany Flro
1.00 1.00 1.40
0 Big Bonny
5.00 500
1 Prlm a Ramchargor
11.00
Q 0-0) 11.10 P ( M ) M .M T (1-0-1) 111.00
P ic k ) (o-o-l)) of l paid 14.00
S a v tu h ra c a — 14*0. D i 11.1*
0 RV Snowmobile
O M 1.00 1.00
aWallwaddayaknow
1.00 J.M
1 RC Sau y Candy
1.00
O ( M l 11.04 P (0-4) 100.00 T (0-4-1) 100.40 I
(M-1-11 *40.00
■l*Mh r a t a -1004, Si so.lt
(T a lk So Bata*
400 1.40 M O
ikaltuT aka hana da
5*0 1.00
SSorlln Oanlallo
440
Q 41-0111.00 P (1-1) t l . N T (1-M ) 11040
Ninth ra ta -10*0, St M.40
OMIkoyoOM
100 1.00 1.00
I Ju d y'tC ry tta l
1.40 4 00
4C'»N lc*L# dy
1.00
Q (1-4) 11.00 P (0-1) 40.00 T (0-1-4) M4.40 DO
II 1 A 0 - A ll) tl.M (1-1A 1-All) 114.10
lO t h r a t o - 10*0, Di 11.40
*Aok M a rlin
U.00 4.40 4.00
IDarlln'oAAatt
11.10 0.00
1 T a lk Shako Hand*
4.10
Q (1-0) U.00 P (0-1) 1*1.10 T (0-1-1) 1*4.10
n m r* t* -u * * .c i i i . i l
I P loth Splaoh
11.00 4.00 1.00
1 Hoavonly Homo
1.40 1.10
1 B a il la n d
4.00.
O ( M l M.40 P (1-1) 11040 T (1-M ) 140.0* *
Carryover 0)11.14
llt h ra ta -10*0, Si 10.41
IM T 'o Andy m at
0.40 1.40 1.00
0 Urban’* Impala
4.00 1.00
iF Ira M a o la r
1.00
Q ( M ) 0.04 P ( M ) 11.10 T ( M l ) 44.10 S
( M M ) 111.10
11th rata — 1014, Si 10.10
1 SJ Spoady
1.00 1.00 1.00
O RV Cathy la *
J.M 1.00
lO m n lllh lc a
4.00
Q U O ) Il.M P 0-0) I l.M T 11-0*1) 11.00
1 * t h r * t * - l! M , lt ) 1 . M
4 M P 'i R o m Lynn
Il.M 4.M 4.40
1 Making Quality
0.00 S.OO
IT H A p h ra
1.40
Q (41) 41.M P ( a t) 71.44 s 14-1-7-0) 011.4*
A - 1 ,0 4 4 H - lt l) .M I

All Timor ID T
N AT IO N AL L I A O U E
■ a it Dhrlttan

Pet.
08
w, L
45 30 443 —
PhlladtlpMa
M M .54) Ik
SI. Loult
35 30 .SM 10
Monlraal
Chicago
31 13 .4*3 i)
)1 M a v 14
FkrMa
ilk
Pllltburgh
»4k
Navi York
•■» s - • 4
Wat) Divltkn
Pet.
OB
W L
4) 31 453 —
San Francitco
»
M .553 4k
Atlanta
Houtlon
34 34 .140 7k
Lot Artgtlt*
U 3* .540 7k
30 34 .455 t)
Cincinnati
34 It .400 14k
SanOlago
31 41 37* 31
Colorado
Thursday'i Carnot
San F ra n tltto 1, Cincinnati 1
SI. Loult 11. Chicago 10
Florida 4, Philadelphia I
Plltib u rg h 0, Now York 1
Houiton *, San Otago 1
Frid a y '! Oam*!
St. Loul* (Arotha 5 1) a l Chicago (Batfcl*
0 01.1:30pm.
,
A t la n t a ( S m o lt i 0-1) a l M o n t r e a l
(Oa.MartlnolO l),7:15p.m .
F lo rid a (lo w o n 4-4) at P h ila d e lp h ia
(Rlvara M ) , lilt p . m .
Now Y ork (Young 0-1) a l Plttoburgh
(Wag nor 1-1), 1:15 p.m.
Lot Angalat (Candlolll 111 a l Cincinnati
(Roper l-l), 1:15p.m.
San F ra n tltco (Black S I) a l Houtlon
(Orabak S41,0:05 p.m.
San Diago (Crag H a rrlt S I) at Colorado
(R u llln ll),4 :0 1 p .m .
Saturday'! O am tt
SI. Loul! at Chicago. l:M p .m .
Now York at Plltiburgh, 1:05 p.m.
Lot Ango lot alC Intlnnall, 1:05 p.m.
A llo n la at Monlraal. l:)Sp.m .
Florida at FMIadalphia, 7il5 p.m.
San F rancltco al Haul Ion, 1:55 p.m.
San Diago at Colorado, 4:05p.m.
Sunday'! O* mat
Atlanla al Montreal, 1:15p,m.
Florida at Philadelphia, 1t l i p.m.
L o tA n g tln a lC In cIn n a ll, 1:15p.m.
SI. L o u lta lC h ic a g o .l:M p .m .
Son F ra n tltco at Houtlon, 1:11 p.m.
San Diago at Colorado, ):M p.m.
Now York at Plltiburgh, 1:05 p.m.
A M E R IC A N L E A C U B
■ i l l DtvMa*
L Pet. OB
W
41 14 411 —
Detroit
543 1
Toronto
3* M
.147 4
M
Now York
if
.10* 1
13 a
Baltimore
.441 11
Botlan
a
X
Milwaukee
444 11
15
M
Ckvaland
14 X
.400 If
W e ttO iv k k *
W
L Pet. O B
.540 —
Kantat City
U
a
33 X
.534 1
Chicago
Call lorn la
.too 1
3) i i
.404 i k
Taxat
11 a
Seattle
)1 14 .477 4
.440 4 k
Mlnne*ole
)* a
7*3 ♦
14 17
Oakland
T h u n d a y 'i Oamot
Detroit 4, Clave land 5
Oakland 5. Chicago 1
Toronto 1, Bolton 0
New York a, Mlnnttota 5
Tax** 11, California)

OlfMI

Kama* City (Hanty SCI at Oakland
(HlHagoalll, 4:05a.m.
Batllm ora (McDonald IS ) a l Cleveland
(Mata 5 4), 1:05 p m,

Mllwauka* (Eldrad 0 4) al Detroit

(M L a lta r S I) , 1:05 p.m.
M lnnttota (Guardado 00) at Maw York
(Koy 1-1), ItM p .m .
Boiton (Clom oni 15) at Toronto (Hontgan
M l , 1:11p.m.
Chicago (Bora 1-1) at Californio (Hathaway
M ) , I0:M p.m.
Ttxoo (Pavlik S I) at Seattle (Flam ing l-l),
10:15 p.m.
atw d a y 'o l
Mllwauka* at Detroit, 1:11p.m.
M k tnooalaatNaw Yarh, 1:11p.m.
Baltim ore at Ctavaland, 1:15 p.m.
Batten at Toronto, liJIp .m .
Kan to* C ity at Oak land, 4:05 p.m.
Chicago at Calltomta, 10:01p.m.
T o x m at See It la, 10:00 p.m.
Sunday'* Oamat
M lnnaoetaatNaw York, ItM p.m .
Milwaukee at Detroit, I :S5 p.m.
Batllm ora at Ctavaland. 1:1* p.m.
Bo*ton at Toronto, h M p.m.
K a n tat C ity a l Oakland. 4:01 p.m.
Chicago t i Calllom la. 4:01 p.m.
Taxat at Seattle,*: a p.m.
Southern Laagu*
P in t H a ll
l a atom Dlvlttan
W
L Pet. OB
Oraanvlll* (Bravat)
M14.514
—
Orlande (Cuba)
M
a
.53* 1
Carolina (Plrataa)
14 a
407 4 k
Knoxville (B lu a Jay t)
D
15
.4 1 I
Jackaamrllla (M arlnart) II 11 .0 4 I

f.

i, *1** *

Tim Ralntt It a Sanford native and Seminole High Sohodl
graduata now playing for tha Chicago White Sox. His stats are
for tha 1003 season In tho first column, portonal-bost season
totals In tho second column and current career totals
(Including 1093 garnet) Inthe third column.
On Thursday afternoon, Rainas waa hltlass In five at bats as
the White Sox suffered a 5-2 loss to the Oakland A’s.

RAINES OAUQE

Category
Games...... ......
At-batB...... ......
Runs...............
Hits.......... ......
RBI...........
Doubles....
Triples......
Home runs.......
8tBllB.......
Average....

&gt;B3
25
93
22
26

7

Chicago at Photnlx. 1 p.m., II n tca tie ry
Wadnatday, June 1)
Chicago at Photnlx, 4 p.m., II nacattary

HflflTTlIN1%
iirWMHI141

Jacfcaawvlltt a l Drlaad*
Oroanvtll* at Carotin*
Chattanaaga at Knokvlll*
M am phlt at Nath vl lla
End at P in t H alf
PlarM a Mat* Laaga*
P in t Halt
Eettam Dlvlttan
W
L Pet. O B
.154 St. lu c k (Mat*)
M
M
M M .514 W.P. Beach (Ixpoa)
Lakaland (Tlgart)
M M .141 k
454 7k
Otcaola (Attrot)
M
M
Daytona (Cuba)
17 .411 0
M
V»ro Baach (Dodger«I
14 M
-M l 11
Fort Lauderdale ( R id tax) 11
.M l 14
W ttla n i DluMlan
—
14
A
M
x Clearwater (Phi IItat) a
Charted* iRanetr*)
X 17 JOS i k
Sarateta (While Sax)
X
4*1 l
M
St. Pat* (Cardinal*)
X
1* 454 5 k
a
J07 • k
Dunedin (B lu a Jayt)
u
.404 IS
PortM yara (Twine)
X
a
x cllnchad (tn t hall dlvlttan till*
T h u n d a y 'i Oamat
Fort Lauderdale), St. lu c t a l
Varo Baach 11, Otcaola 1
W atl Palm Baach S, Dunedin 1
Laktland A Fori M yart 1
Sf. Pttaraburg A Dayton* )
Sarateta 1, Clearwater 1, M Inning*
Friday's Oamat
Vara Baach at lakaland
Char lotto at Oacaala
Watt p«im Baach a ll) . L u c i a „
Daytona at Clearwater
F art Lauderdale at Part M y art
St. PatanburB at la ra ta ia
Saturday'* Oamat
Varo Baach a l Lakaland
CharloltaalOacaata
St. Lucia a l Watl Palm Baach
Daytona atClaarwatar
F o ri Laudordalaal Port M yart
St. Palartb urg ol Saratola
In d o l F lr t l H all
Sunday'* O am tt
Char loti* a l Varo Boach
Saratola o l Watt Palm Baach
Daytona at Clearwater
Fort Loudtrdalo o l Ounodln
Otcaola a l Fort Myara
SI. Lucia at St. Pataraburg

M A R LIN S A P H IL L IE S 1
FLO R ID A
P H IL A
a b rh b i
rhM
D y k ttrct 110 0
1
0
0
0
C a rre t
M T m tn lf 4 0 1 0
B rb a rla ft 1 ) 1 0
RJrdn tb 4 0 0 0
Conlnalf 1111
Oouttanc 4 0 11
D ttrd t tb SOI)
Harvay p 0 0 0 0
Incvgiarf 4 0 1 0
D uncan* 1 0 0 0
Snllagoc 1110
B a tM ta * 1 0 0 0
M g d an M 4 * 1 1
MiUattoa* 1 * 0 0
4**0
Falla rf
Am araph 1 0 0 0
Walt* i t
4000
“ 00*0
10 1 *
Hmndp
OnJkanp 1000
Brltwy II 0 0 0 0

DaLaonp *000

1*00
Pratt ah
M D a v ltp 0 0 0 0
Tata It
M I 4 1
Total*
M 444
M* I N 1*0 — 4
Florida
IM ON m - I
D P - F lo rid * I. L O B - F lo rid a 4,
Conln*
II), Dot trad*
Philadelphia 4. )B 11), Santiago III.
H S I R I I K)
4
0

1
0

1
0

1
0

S
0

DnJackion L, 4 )
7 4 4 4 s
7
0 0 0 0 0
D*L*on
1
1
1 0 0 0 1
M O avlt
Hammond pitched to I bailor In the 4th.
Balk — Hammond 1.
U m p ire * — H om e, O o rm a m P i n t ,
F ro a m m ln g i Second, Montagu#: T hird,
T — 1:1*. A —

A ll Tima* ID T
N B A P IN A L !
CHICAOO v l. PH O EN IX
Chicago laadt tarlat l- l
Wamatday, June 4
Chicago 100, Phoenix 41
Friday, Jana l)
Chicago III, Phoenix tod
Eju^wu

wraMfr v m 11
l i,

Photnlx IM, Chicago 111, » T
Wtdnatday, Juno M
Chicago 111, Phoontx 10)
Friday, June I*
Photnlx at Chicago. 4 p.m.

•portal Sections Fo r
•portal Readers
Many Special Seaton* found In ft* Bantord H onk)
throughout d a year feature totormOv* ardUrn and loptoEuoh taamria ham todudad: oar
car*, bach-kt-echool Nnt*. vaoaBon planning program*,
home knprovam*rd.tauSmaBpa,haaRh and IbMMBuidaa
——-J: ■■■■ail I ig u i M
mrdklnrii .dUwawAiuiHUk L h Ab W IM iA m
■w
nwiy mOftv RMflmW
CiWl MMH 'inMRriraMVV

TO R O N TO — Aw ard wlnrwrt announced
Tutaday a l the 1441-41 National Hockey
Laagu* award* caramony at the Toronto
Convention Cantra:
Hart Trophy
(M at I valuabta t* M t team)
M ario Lamlaux. Plttoburgh
Harrl* Trophy
(Out*tending datanaama a)
Chrl* C hallo*, Chicago
Catdor Trophy
(OuttUndU n raakla)
Taamu Satanna, Winnipeg
V a tlM Trophy
1Outitandlng gooltandor)
E d Bailoor, Chicago
Lady ly n g Trophy
(Iportamanahlp and gawHawoty play)
PlarraTuroaan, N.Y. lalandara
Frank J. Salk* Trophy
(OuhMnd iwg da (ani iua leeward)
Doug Oilmour, Taranto
Jack Adam* Award
(Ouatandinecaach)
P a l Rum t, Toronto
King Clancy Trophy
(Hum anitarian contribution)
D iv a Poulin, Bo*ton
B ill Mettarten Trophy
H p o rtM M M h lM a d lca tla n to hack ay)
M ario Lamlaux, Pim burgh
Award* Baaed an Regular-Saatan S ta tlitk i
A rl Rata Trophy
H earing loader I
* M ario Lamlaux, Plltiburgh
W illiam M . fanning* Trophy
(Oaallat playing minimum at U gam**
iar team with la watt gaalt againtl &gt;
Ed Balfour, Chicago

ji Jf i^#a*J g J ^ t U U W B K l
i l . t m illion U.S. Open
United Slala* Open on the 7,in -y ard , par-70
B allutrol Oolf Club lower court* la denote*
amateur):
Scott Hoch
13 55-44
Joey Slndtlar
14 M -4 4
Craig P a rry
1114—44
Laa Jan ia n
33 35—47
Craig Stadlar
3134-47
Mlk* Smith
3135 -ta
Coray Pavln
35 33-4*
FradCouplai
34 34-4*
Robert Wrann
34 14-41
B la ln a M cC a llltla r
1115-4*
RoccoMadlata
3135-4*
Raymond Floyd
14 33-4*
M ika W*4kt
13 34-44
W aynaOrady
13 34-44
B ill O la uo n
14 15-44
J a il Maggar I
1415-44
Grant Wall*
1134-44
• Ju»1ln Leonard
1415-44
LaaRInkar
1515-70
Stave Oottch*
1117-70
K irk Triplett
14 14-70
B o b Q lld tr
14 14-70
M lk a C h rlttl*
M U -7 0
Scott Slmpton
14 M -7 0
John Adam*
1117 70
David Edward*
1137-70
M arkM cCum bar
1515-70
M lha Slandly
14 M -7 0
Vane* Haalnar
M-14-70
L a rry Nation
1117-70
Sandy Lylo
1*34-70
Ian Bakar-FInch
1515-70
Slav* Pal*
i n 5—70
Doug Weaver
1134-70
Loran Robert*
15 35—70
Davl* L o v a lll
M 14-70
Tom Wat ton
17 13-70
PaynaSlaw art
1515-70
Ian Wootnam
M M -7 0
M ark Calcavacchla
1317-70
Nick Faldo
1515-70
JackNIcklau*
1117-70
Prod Funk
13 M -7 0
JooO takl
37 13-70
*5*0,M t L P O A Rachattar IntarMtlanal
R O C H E S T E R . N .Y . - Laa d tr* alter
Thurtday’ * tlrat round o l tha 1500.000 LPO A
R ach a tta r In ltrn a llo n a l. played on tha
4,143-yard, par 15 37—73 Locutl H ill Country
Club:
Nancy Lopar
liu - u
Nancy Scranton
11 M -4 7
Jenny Lldback
M 17-47
Cindy Flgg Currlar
111 5 -U
Bath Oanlal
13 35-44
Brandla Burton
U 15-41
Jarllyn B r ill
M 14-4*
Leigh Ann M ill*
M 14-40
H4l*n A llr ad*ton
1115-40
L lta Walter*
3110-49
P a lly Shaahon
13 17-4*
Ju ll Inktlar
1415-44
V icki Fargon *
1114-44
Barb Bunkowtky
1) M -4 9
Alice Rltim an
M M -7 0
Dab Richard
M la -7 0
Kalhy PootHwalt
1117—70
K a lla Patarm n-Farkar
U J5 -7 0
Tracy Kardyk
M M -7 0
Lynn Connolly
1515-70
KaHy Robblnt
M M -7 0
Karan Lunn
M J4 -7 J
Am y Fruhwlrth
M M —70
Nancy Rubin
M 17-71
SharrITum ar
J7-M -7I
Am y Road
M 17-71
Nancy Ram tbollom
M 17—71
D olllaM ochrla
M 15-71
Mag M ai km
M 17-71
Cathy Jotwitton-Forbaa
3 5 M -7 I
Carolina Cowan
15-M-71
Laura Davlat
M 1 5 -7 I
Dan ta lk Ammaccapan*
15 M —71
K r lt ll A lb e rt
1130-71
Llaa Brandalaa*
M 17-71
Tania Abltbol
M U -7 1

and topto-raWad advardaamardt. r

v

3 2 1 -2 6 1 1
S,| 111(II (I lit i ,il&lt;l

The 2*mlle, high-banked oval
where the 32-year-old NASCAR
star will race in Sunday's Miller
Oenulne Draft 400 !b also the
place where his younger brother,
CHfTord, was fatally Injured last
A u g u s t in a crash duri ng
practice.
Last w eeken d at Pocono.
Allison was bombarded with
questions about his horrifying
a c c i d e n t l ast J u l y at the
Pennsylvania speedpiant.

Tim Ralnts

K h a xv llta l, Hunttvlll* 1
Chattanooga A Birmingham 1
M a m p h lil, NaahvlllaO
.
F rid a y '! Oamat
J i chtamlWaatOrtaad*
Oraanvlll* a l Carolina
Chattanooga at Knoxvll la
Birm ingham at Hunttvlll*
M am phlt at Nathalll*
Saturday'* Oamat
JacktanvllM at Orlaada
Oraanvlll* at CaretIm
Chattanooga at Knexvilla
Birm ingham at Hunttvlll*
M amphlt *1 Nath villa

1
1

B R O O K L Y N , Mi ch. M ich iga n in te rn a tio n a l
Speedway will forever be more
than a racetrack to D avey
Allison.

beet oareer
160
1,728
6,553
647
133
1,158
194
1,947
71
867
38
319
96
13
114
18
90
731
.334
.297

ffW lTtfH KJfVltfvn

x Neahvlll* (Twin*)
*
M
45* Birm ingham (WSax)
a
15
.4*1 5
H u n tiv illa lA th ltc t)
a
1)
.4*5 l
M am phIK R aya lt)
a
M
.411 4
Chattanooga (Radt)
11 M
.444 7 k
a-clinched t in t hall dlvlttan tltl*
T h u n d a y 'i 8a mat

Hammond W. 7-4
Harvay 1,70

■v MINI N A M I t
APMrtoreporlB WfUtr_________

.x

i

BASEBALL
Am erican laagwa
C A L IF O R N IA A N O E L S - Clalmad Doug
Linton, pitcher, on waiver* Irom the Toronto
Bluo Java. Optlonad D arryl ScoH, pitcher, to
Vancouver ol tha Pacific Coat! Laagu*.
D ET R O IT T i n p f t - Activated Rob Oaar,

oultialdar, from Ih* IS day dlte bkd lltl.
N E W Y O R K Y A N K E E S - Activated M lk*
Witt, pitcher. Irom Ih* lld a y d lte b k d lltl.
Placed Jim Abbott, pitcher, on tho 15-day
d lte b k d lilt.
&lt; , O A K L A N D A T H LE T IC S - Placed. Rick
Honeycutt, pitcher, on Ih* lld a y d lte b k d
llt l, retroactive to June IS. R tk a ia d Dal*
Svaum, Inllaidar. Recalled TrOy Neal, outllaldar, and Vinca Hortman, pHchar, from
Tacoma ol Ih* Pa cific C o a il Laagu*.
N ilio iiil L i m i m
A T LA N T A B R A V E S - Signed Andr# King,
oulllaldar. and attlgnad him lo Danvlll* ol
Ih* Appalachian Laagu*.
P H IL A D E L P H I A P H IL L IE S - Signed
Joth Walt*, J a il Kay, and Brian Cottalk,
o u t lk k k r ii Richard Hunter, pitcher: Oenton
P la rra-Lo ul*, l i n t baseman: and B ary
F ltrg tra ld , catchtr. Placed W*t Cham ­
berlain, outlkldar, on Ih* 15 day dliablad 11*1,
ra lro a cllv * lo June t*. Recalled Ruben
Am aro, oulllaldar. Irom Scranlon-Wllka*
Barra o l Ih* International Laagu*.
BASK ETB A LL
N atkn al Batkalball A n a c la lk n
BOSTON C E LT ICS - R atlgnad Robert
P a rlth , canlar, lo a one-year contract.
Nomad Dannie Johnton a ttlila n l coach.
C L E V E L A N D C A V A L IE R S - Named
M lk* Fratallo coach and tlgnad him lo a
tlv* yaar contract.
FO O T B A LL
N a lk n a l Football Laagu*
HOUSTON O ILE R S - Agraad to tirm t
with A l Smith, llnabackar. R alatiad Derrick
C r u d u p , l a t e l y , a n d M lk * P o w e r ,
quarterback.
SOCCER
Am erican P r a k t tk n a l Soccer Laagu*
F O R T L A U O B R D A L I S T R IK E R S Signed Dannlt H am kt, defender. Waived Ja il
Batt*. forward.
M O N T R E A L IM PA CT - Signed Chrktian
Mlndru, goalkaapar.
TORONTO B L II2 A R O - Waived Ivan
J u rlilc , forward.
N a lk n a l P r a k t tk n a l Secctr Laagu*
B A L T IM O R E S PIR IT - Traded Slav*
Boardman, dakndar, to Ih* SI. Loult Ambuth
lor Dan O'Kaafa, forward.
C O LLIO I
P A C I — Announced tha ratlgnatkn ol
John Byrna, man'a a n iit a n l basketball
coach.
, « «
1
W A O N IR
Annooncad that M lladin.
M u ia v d ilct - MMh'alW allO rtilaM ‘ h S h lr a n t &lt;
tarred to l o u i t i a n a l l a k j i
)

Iry m A W O

1^1km &amp;

BASEBALL
7:30p.m. — 54, Florida al Ptilladalphla, (L)
7:30p.m. — TBS, Atlanta at Monlraal. (L)
10:30 pm . — ESPN. WGH, Chicago al
California,IL)
B ASK ETBA LL
9 pm - WESH 1, NBA Final*. Gama 5.
Phoanlx at Chicago. IL)
FOOTBALL
a p.m. — SUN, Arana Laagua: Miami
Hootar* at Detroit Drive, (L)

OOLF
5 p m. - ESPN. U S. Open. (L). alto at 7:30
p.m
11:15 p .m .-W F T V 9. U S Open highlight*
SOCCER
• pm. — SC. U.S. Cup ‘tJ: England v*.
Bratll
Saturday

BASEBALL
3p.m. — WON. SI. Lou iial Chicago, (LI
7 pm . — WOR, N Y. M alt al Plttiburgh.
(L)
7:30p m. — M. Florida al Philadelphia, (L)
7:30p m. — TBS. Allanlaal Monlraal, (L)
10 p m. — WGN. Chicago al California, (L)

BASKETBALL
* p.m. — SC, Intercontinental Cvpllnal*
11:30 p.m — SC, High achool. Bo*Ion
Shoolout Tournament tam lllnali

BOWLINO

Midnight — SUN, ABC Team Chalkng*
Irom Baltlmor*
BOX INO
Midnight - SUN. ABC Team Chalkng*
Irom Batllmora

BOXINO
3:30 p.m. — SUN, Light flywalghl*:
Mlchaal C*rb#|*l vt. Humberto Gonial*!

ORAO RACINO

The second-generation driver
— son of longtime star Bobby
Allison — was able to put the
memories of his own pain into
the background and finish a
respectable sixth In that event.
This week, the painful memo­
ries of Clifford's death are on his
mind.
"I can't say that I haven't been
thinking about what took place
up there last year because I have
and I think about my brother
every day," Allison said.
" I miss him tremendously."
he added. "... Life still has to go
on and I know he would want us
to remember the good times."
A l l i s o n s a i d he w a s at
Michigan for testing a few weeks
ago.
"A s I first drove through the
third and fourth turns I had to
take a look over at the watt
where he crashed,” he said.

7:30 pm — WESH 3. Arana Laagua:
Of landoal Tampa Bay. IL)
I p.m, — SUN, High tchool. Florlda/G*orgla All Star Gama. (L)
Mldnlghl — ESPN. Arana Laagua: Orlando
at Tampa Bay. tapa delayed

OOLF
I p.m. — WFTV f, U.S. Open, third round.
Ul

HOM E RACINO
5pm , - E S P N , Ohio Darby, (LI
5 p.m. — SC, N. Hampton, Sw**p*lak*t.
(L)
SKIINO

Noon — SUN, The Water v*. Snow
Challenge

SOCCER

3 p.m, — SC. U.S. Cup V3: Germany vl.
England, (L)
TEN N IS

1 p.m. — ESPN. Volktwagan Cup

VOLLEYBALL
13:10 p.m. — SUN, World Laagua;
Germany vt. United Slate*

TRACK AND FIELD
4p,m
4 p.m. — TNT, U.S. Outdoor Champ IonIh Ip

JUdto

BASEBALL
• :55 p m. - WTLN AM &lt;1530, Southern
Laagua, Jackionvllk Sun* at Orlando Cub*

BASKETBALL

• :M p m, - WGTO AM 1540). NBA Flan*l,
Phoanlx at Chicago
MISCELLANEOUS
3 p m, - WGTO AM 4540), Oolflalk
4 p.m. — WGTO AM 4540), Pal Summarall
Show
5 p.m. - WGTO AM 95401, Pat William*
Show
4 p m. - WWNZ AM (740), Tha Sport* Nut
a p.m. - WGTO AM *5401, Talk Sport*
With Pa la Rota
4 : » p .m .- WPRD AM (1440), Sport* Baal
10 p m. - WWNZ A M 1740). Florida Sporlt
Exchange
Saturday

BASEBALL

1:30 p.m. - WGTO AM 4540), Bo*Ion Rad
Sox al Toronto Blue lay*
4:55 p m. - WTLN AM (1530). Southern
Laagu*. Jackaonvlll* Sunt at OrlxnoCubt

FOOTBALL

7:30 p.m. - WGTO AM 15401, Arana
Laagua, Orlando al Tampa Bay

"Then it dawned on me, that
(it's) a good thing that I'm doing
this today Instead o f when we
get back here in June," he said.
"1 feel good about coming
here. I feel good about the way
we’ve been racing,
"There's only one thing bad
that's happened at MIS. and
that's the death of my brother.
I've got a lot of friends up there,"
he said. "I don't have any mixed
emotions at all."
Allison went Into last Sunday's
race fourth In the Winston Cup
standings, 245 points behind
leader Dale Earnhardt and also
trailing Rusty Wallace and Dale
Jarrctt. His solid finish vaulted
him to second, 225 points
behind Earnhardt.
Even before taking over sec­
ond place In the season stan­
dings after 13 o f the 30 races,
Allison was remaining optimistic
about his title hopes. He noted
Alan Kulwlckl came from further
back lo win the title last year,
"so it's possible."
"W e're not looking at the
points. W e’re looking at perfor­
mance." Allison s h \ u .
Practice and qualifying for
Sunday begins today, with the
top 20 positions In the 40-car
field to be set In the opening
round of time trials. The rest of
the grid will be determined
Saturday.

Tourney
Continued from IB
At 9:10 a.m. at Plnehurst
Park, R.E. Templeton Co. Inc.
will face Foskctt Sporting Goods
with Signature Homes getting
the bye unless an eighth team
can be found today (Friday).
"W e still have hopes of getting
an eighth team." said LaFolJcttc.
"it makes scheduling much eas­
ier and the teams get to play
more."
Games then will continue at
otic hour and 10-minute Inicrvulti throughout the after­
noon. The championship game
Is scheduled for a 4:30 p.m. start
at Chase Park with ’If necessary
game’ being set for 5:40 p.m. at
Chase Park.
The top three teams In the
tournam ent will reclevc
sponsorship trophies, with the
Individual members from the
championship winning teams
getting bat bngs.
The Most Valuable Player for
the tournament will be awarded
a Steele Sports softball bat worth
around 9100. The bat was do­
nated by Pete Kinsey, owner of
S p o rts m a n , located In the
Koscgarden Mini Shoppes on
Soulh Orlando Drive In Sanford.

/

^

...

\

-

d

v -:

F lk F h a lo

Tom Holland 8r. and the R.E.
Templeton Co. Inc. squad will
play Foskett Sporting Goods In
the first round ol the Sanford
Officiating Service tournament.

Softball-----Continued from IB

4p.m. — ESPN, IHRASprlngiNational*

FOOTBALL

From a mental standpoint,
Allison said it was good to test at
the track before racing there
again. He realized that when he
passed the place where Clifford,,
who was 27, crashed.

Bingle each)
and Wargo (RBI).
Florida Sport Wear continued
Its torrid hitting, rapping 31 hits
and scoring at least one run In
every inning, Including six In the
first, four in each o f the fifth and
seventh Innings and three runs
In each o f the second and fourth
Innings. Eight different Florida
Sport Wear batters had at least
three hits.
Despite Its hot hitting, and
luklng 10-0 lead In the top of the
third Inning. Florida Sport Wear
was still In a fight for the win as
the scare was Just 13-8 after four
j Innings.
But Florida Sport Wear outscored Myers Tree Service 9-1
the rest of the way.
* Contributing to the Florida
Sporl Wear attack were Mitch
Burke ( tr ipl e, double, ( wo
Singles, three runs, four RBI).
Randy Yates (two doubles, two

Blnglcs, three runs, two RBI),
Dave Nobles (four singles, run,
two RBI) and Randy Rawlings
(four singles, three runs. RBI).
Also contributing were Steve
Woodley (double, two singles,
four runs, R ill) and Gordon
Clark (three singles, three runs,
two RHI), Steve James (three
Blnglcs, two runs, RBI), Brantley
Brumlcy (three singles, run.
RBI), Paul Pratt (double, single,
run. two RBI), Lee Hood (double,
run) and Wes Tanksley and Joel
Kean (one RBI each).
Providing the offense for Myers
Tree Service were Robert Carter
(double, single, run). Denny
Miller (two singles, run, RBI),
Steve Thlebauth (two singles,
two runs), Randy Smatners
(double, run, Iwo RBI), Bobby
Krelnbrlng (single, run, RBI),
Doug Braswell (single, two runs).
Tom StlfTcy (single, run). Sonny
Eubanks (single, RBI) and Sam
Romaldo(RBI).

Mashburn—
Continued from IB
He needs- his space to roam
■around,"
The Philadelphia 76crs, who
draft second, have Interviewed
MgBhburn, who also Intends to
visit with the Golden State
Warriors (No. 3) and Dallas
Mavericks (No. 4). Being No. 1
would mean more money, but

going second or third wouldn’t
be Hint bud.
"I Just want to play In the
NBA. It doesn't matter which
tcum." Mashburn said. " I f you
go In the (op three, you can’t be
disappointed. That says a lot
about your game and that people
really believe in you."

�Sanford Horold, Sanford, Honda - Friday, June 18, 1993 - 30

People
Hurricane preparedness

IN BRIEF

Making a game plan means being ready when disaster strikes

Birds of a feather
Doris Mngcr, tier eagles and other birds will be making
appearances at the five branches o f the Seminole County
library. Mager Is known ncross the nation for her efforts to save
the eagles and other raptors from extinction.
The programs are free and open to all.
Monday. June 21 at 7 p.m. the program will be at the Bast
branch of the library In Oviedo.
Tuesday. June 22 nt 10 and 11 a.m. at the Central branch In
Casselberry.
Wednesday. June 23 ut 10:30 a.in. at the Northwest branch
In Lake Mary.
Thursday. June 24 nt 10:30 a.m. at the North branch In
Sanford.
Thursday. June 24 at 7 p.m. at the West branch In
Longwood.

Hike and canoe trip planned
The Central Florldu chapter of the Florida Trail Association
will host n hike on Saturday, June 26 at 8:30 a.m.
There Is no charge for the hike.
The hike will be 11 miles through the Seminole State Forest.
Hikers should bring lunch and water.
Call 407-275-8507 to get directions to the meeting point.
There will be a cunoc trip on the Econ River from Highway
17-92 to Snowhlll Road on Sunday. June 27.
Cnnoers should bring a canoe, ralngear, sunscreen, lunch
and water.
Thcrc will be no charge for the event.
Call 298-5704 for directions to the starting point.

Rose Society seta meeting
ORLANDO — The Grcnter Orlando Rose Society’s monthly
meeting for June will be held at Morrison's Cafeteria at the
Wlnler Park Mall. 700 N. Orlando Ave.
Dinner will be at G p.m. and the meeting will be at 7 p.m.
Peggy Denson. Seminole County Master Gardener, will give a
presentation railed "It's A Dirty W ord" will highlight the do's
and don’ ts for soil sampling and pH testing.
For more Information, call 339-5931 or 671-0614.

Free diabetes screening scheduled
ORI.ANDO — Princeton Hospital will hold a free community
seminar on diabetes on Wednesday, June 23 beginning at 7
p.m. In the hospital's auditorium.
There will be discussions on lifestyle changes and the latest
treatments for the disease.
Those who attend will be offered a free blood test to screen
for diabetes.
Reservations arc required and may be made by calling
407-295-8280.

RSVP elects officers

!•

i

CASSELBERRY — The Seminole Community Volunteer
Program, which sponsors the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program (RSVP). has elected the following officers for their
board of directors; Urucc Coxe, president; Linda Anderson, first
vice president; Fred Gaines, second vice president; and Ted
Williams, secrctnry/trcusurcr.
Also, ut the June meeting, the RSVP Advisory Council
elected the following officers; Valerie Barber-Slmpson. chairmam Larry Muse; Vice chairman and Jo Dyer, secretary.

COMA announces meetings
The Concerned Organization of Men In Action (COMA) meets
(he first and third Friday, at 6 p.m,. In the church annex at St.
James AME Church, ninth Street and Cypress Avenue.
Sun ford.

If you are troubled by the alcoholism of a frelnd or relative,
there is help. Serenity Won. an Al-Anon group for friends and
family of alcoholics, will meet each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday night nt 8 p.m. at the Sahara Club, 2587 S. Sanford
Ave.. Sanford. For more Information, call 332-4122.

Narcotics Anonymous meets In Sanford
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the
Presbyterian House of Goodwill, 317 Oak Ave., Sanford.

Sanford Rotarians to meat
Rotury Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Oddfellows schedule meeting
Lodge No. 27 of the International Order of Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday of every month, except July and
August, al 8 p.m. ut 101 Magnolia Ave,, Sanford.

Cancer support group meets
Support. Hope and Recovery. S.H.A.R., meets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p.m. at Central Florida Regional Hospital In the
for corner of the dining room. This Is a self help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatment now or finished
wiih It. Cull 324-8737 or 322-7785 for more Information.

Help for child support enforcement
Association for Children for Enforcement of Support, ACES,
will meet the second and fourth Monday of each month, 7 p.m.
ut the Seminole County Library, Casselberry branch, S.R, 436
and Oxford Road. Meetings are free. Call 263-5838 for more
Information.

Pigeon Fanciers to gather
The Central Florldu Pigeon Fanciers Association meets the
third Monday of each month at the Seminole County
Agricultural Center, 4300 Orlando Drive, Sanford. For
Information, call Art or Jean Anderson at 831-8033.

• Do you have u means of heating foods
and balling wutcr without electricity — a
enmp stove, grill or fireplace, for example?
• Do you know how to sanitize your
utensils, pots, pans or any item that Is
contaminated by flood water?
• Do you have a safety box to protect
Jewelry, photosand valuables?

CONSUMIR
FOCUS
BARBARA
H U G H ES/
GREGG

Don't forget the Importance of Including
children In the plan. Children should he
treated and respected as people toot Since
children often arc less Informed than adults,
they experience a great deal o f fear. Parents
can help children prepare by explaining
what a hurricane Is and what may happen If
one occurs. Let them plan which of their
fuvorlte toys and books they will pack If you
must evacuate. Giving children some small
responsblllty may help reduce the amount
o f anxiety they're likely to experience.

• How much con you carry If you mu9t go
too public shelter?
• How much food and other supplies will
you need to last a week or more without
water or electricity?
•W h a t can you get by without?
• Does someone In your family have
specific health care needs?

Poor taste in contest
sets woman on edge
DBAS ABBTt I recently at­
tended our annual molhera and
daughters banquet at church
I've belonged to for more than 20
yeara. (I am 52 years old.)
First, they asked all the
women who were mothers to
stand up. Then they asked all
the mothers who wore dentures
to alt down. Then they kept
eliminating mothers according
to their age ("A ll mothers under
30,40,50 years old. ect.") The
last woman left standing got the
prize for being the oldest mother
present with her own teeth.
Abby, I have had dentures for
a long time, but It was not
something I cared to advertise. I
spoke with several women who
agreed that the teeth contest was
very poor taste.
I told the program chairman
that I was ofTended by the teeth
business, and she laughed and
said, "Oh, everyone knew it was
Just a Joke. D o n ' t be so
sensitive."
1 will leave It to you and your
readers If you want to print this.
How do you feel about such a
"Joke"?

NO TOWN, PLBASE
DRAR NO TOWN; t agree
&lt;vlth you. It wasn't a very good
Joke. It was tnsensttve, unkind,
and an invasion o f privacy.
DBAR ABBTt 1 am writing to
ask how to obtain a passport or
visa. What is the difference
between them? I am planning a
trip to the Philippines this
summer and need this Informa­
tion. and I'm too embarrassed to
ask anyboby else.

JUST PLAIN BILL

Al-Anon group gathers

!
r*

Hurricane preparedness means more than
storing emergency suppltesl June 1 marked
the beginning of hurricane season, and
Florida realdenta shouldn't overlook the
importance of preparing mentally for a
disaater.
People need to aak themselves several
"W hat will I do IT* questions. For example,
what will you do If you must evacuate?
Where will you go and what will you bring
with you?
It all bolls down to having a game plant
Everyone In the family should discuss and
know now the emergency will be handled.
Some might even find It helpful to write
down their plan.
For thoae who live alone, coordinating a
plan with neighbors and friends la recom­
mended becauae being alone during a crisis
can be very stressful.
Consider the following questions:

DEAR B ILL! A passport Is
proof o f your citizenship and

z

ADVICB

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN
*

allows you to leave and re-enter
your country. It also offers indentlflcatlon protection while
you are In foreign countries.
Your U.S. passport will allow
you to leave the United Slates
and travel, with the guarantee
thnt you can re-enter the U.S.
According to the Stutc De­
partment's Office of Passports
Scvlccs, Washington, D.C.: To
obtain a passport, contact your
local post office, courthouse or
U.S. passport office. (A U.S.
passport Is valid for 10 years for
adults.) You must fill out an
application, provide proof of
birth, pay a fee. and have
passport photo taken. Allow four
weeks to obtain U Grat-llmc
passport.
•

Sohoot of Dane* Aria atudanta art raady.

A visa Is stamped In your
pussport and allows you entry
Into a specific country. In your
case, the Philippines docs not
require n visa for trips under 21
duys. To obtain a visa, contact a
travel agent or the local consul­
ate of the country you wish to
visit. To simplify the process,
contact a travel agent for Infor­
mation about both the passport
and visa.

S A N F O R D — Dancers at
Miriam and Vulcrlc's School of
Dance Arts are “ rcvlng up" for
this weekend’s five show series
of Showcase '93 Performances.
All three studio locations,
Sanford, Lake Mary and Orange
City, will combine to create the
dance excitement.
This evening's performance Is
ulready sold out. however, the
opening night will be followed by

Weekend dance
extravaganza set
a Saturday matinee at 2 p.m.
and an evening performance ut 7
p.m. The show will continue on
Sunday with a 2 and 7 p.m.
performance.
Tickets may be purchased at
the door for 85 at (lie Lake Mary
High School auditorium. Eaeii
show is different, so find out
when your favorite Is on "la p "
for the weekend dance extrava­
ganza.

Teens should not be served alcohol
DEAB MART: I know you take
th e p o s i t i o n that p a re n t s
shouldn't let kids share a little
beer or wine at home with
f r i e n d s or at f a m i l y ge ttogethers. Why don't you people
Just lighten up. My dad lets me
have a little beer when .we had
friends over from the time I was
about 14. I'm telling you right
now. I don't see anything wrong
with It and when my brother's
family comes over for a July 4th
cook-out, the teenagers will be
allowed to have a Tittle beer If
they want It.
Who do you think you ’re
kidding? If they don't drink In
front of their parents, they'll
sure do It behind thetr backs, in
cars, who knows where. I'd
rather lust be open about the
whole thing.

DNUO
COUNSELOR
MARY
BALK
good reasons for It I
• A d olescen ts becom e ad­
dicted to alcohol more quickly
than do adults. It's because they
are s t i l l d e v e l o p i n g
p h y s i o l o g i c a l l y and
psychologically. This maturation

process continues until approx­
imately 21-24 years of uge. An
udull may become addicted to
ulcoliul In 5 to 15 years. An
adolescent cun become addicted
In 6 months to two years.
• Youngsters do not drink
—"s o clu lly " — they usually
drink to get "bom bed" or drunk.
(Kids themselves admit tills, so
we better llstcnl) A pattern of

drinking to get buzzed or drunk
Is one of the early signs of an
Impending drinking problem.

Get He

When the
Rooster
Crows
•ANTIQUES
•C0LLECT1ILES
•FURNITURE
•DINETTES

M O V I E l A N D it,..

&amp;

iO PASSES Hvy.iMa.brMl

M BKULrn

CASSELBERRY
FURNITURE
B IMLN.J06
JiW iH w y , 17-92

If r U H

UP-FRONT DAD
DBAR UP-PRONTi There are
a lot o f parents who feel the way
you do about this Issue, but for
another point of view, I'd like to
share an ed itoria l by Tom
Btntllff, Communications Coor­
dinator. from the February 1993
Prevention Review, entitled,
"W hy Adolescents Should Not
Use Alcohol At All."
" I f this sounds like a hardline
approach, It tsl And there are

Come In And Meet Huey
This Saturday, June 19th
Huey, the lovable dinosaur
will make a guest appearance
at A Second Image.
A photographer will be
taking pictures from 10 am til noon,
and from 1pm til 3pm.
D rop by and say "Hi" to Huey!
A Second Image
102 E. First St., Sanford
323-9421

mm
Tn

1

y j a f i Mwiywwpi

�i nit.iv

Sa n lo rd H nrnld. Sanford. Flo rid a

4D

June in

lltlM

LET US REPLENISH THE SEED OF FAITH THROUGH

Regular Church Attendance
PALM ETTO A V f NUf
B A P T I S T C H im C M
l Y l m t ' l l i i A »•*
U«tyi*u&gt;nif t rt« *i*'
O a v ti'i
S u n d a y S» h O itl
1 4ft &lt;» I’
M w n m g W o r s h ip
f t 0(1 .i rti
f v A u gw h sli* S *nrn **
l&gt; ( V ft r r .
W m l P t 4y«»r A

t A M li Y W O R S H IP C E N T E R
/ A M A ir p o r l H U tf
S.»*&gt;fim1 H
1 /7 7 1
TeM J 27*271
C A ltO l J e H K t*II
S u m h ty S i lio o
1 JO a rn
W o rfth .t S r rv ic i*
10 JO i f f '
W m lrm s c M y S » "» u r*
’ 0 0 p re*

Ir&gt;iI| t(» n ili m l M i l l i o n ,i*y
W E S T V IfW B A PT IST C H U R C H
41IX) P o o l# N o a i i4f»Ai
S a n f o r d * lo m M
0» H o h h y M M . I » IK
P4»l&lt; v
Sunday S fh tM l
VOO 4 m
M o r n in g W m s h if t
lO'CW a *n
[) iS C Ip ^ S tll|l t M if im g
0 (XT I’ M1
f. yarn in g W o r s h ip
f &lt;X) v
W*fi1 f t «yrM Sr*i-*'1"*'
^ 00 ft it1’

H 0 0 .i to

M m ilw i'i
W « ll s.(if m g a fii)
S uth I a v S c h o o l
SI 10 j m
t . l L t H M A T IO N S ftrv tc-f 10 M l,« M e it l o i r p
W in frip s d » y
I A M U Y S«tviCf*
S l n b e l a ie "
M ts v m c f if fif
UoyA» M fln gw f*

Baptist
C E N T R A L B A P T IST C H U R C H
1101 W H I 51 S a n f o r d
1 ? ? /9 1 4
P s tto r
D o n M ic k s
J ru ry F iig a t n
A s s o c P a sto*
M in is t in o f M y t ic
Jacfc M T h o m a s
M in u t e r o f Y o u th
M in e Q u a I is
V 30 a m
S unday S ch o o l
M o r n in g W o r s h ip
fi IS A 11 0 0 4 m
E v e n in g W o r s h ip
e io p it i
W n d P ta y n r S sn rtC 9
fi 10 p m

F IR S T B A P T I S T C H U R C H
OF S A N F O R D
yiy* P a rv A v a n u p S A rd o r d
M**&gt; 1 IO f if n u b e J*
P a n in 1
ftay J .fti ( .ii'in * ii
M m i l l t U Of M u s e
Hu* S " 1 n«*y ti'iu :* M m in ln r n* Y o u th
M m C a th y Hlarti*
F’t* Si: fKKJi G h d d ru M n M"ii*tru**i i i n d . i i W o r s h ip
1 0 1 0 a ,T
Sunday Sc h o o l
u 1ft a m

fi 1ft c m

S l j K iU f S i flOO l
f I 'l 4 1 ’
W i j 's h 'p
f t 00 a m
d 'e e r r 1 U ia * h ip 4*1.; vVo»*hip
'. u n l.iy (Iitile S tu d y
10 £Kl 4 tti
A 1 A re W e k 'o rn e M u m h u i» u * y A v a d ih le

f i w o tg« S i t i l d
F 'a it u '
Sunday S ch o o l
10 0 0 a «■
M o r n in g S e r v ic e
' 1 00 a m
t v i- n in g S e r v ic e
ft 0 0 p m
W e d n e t d l y S e r v ic e
7 00 p n
O ld T ru th* fpr A ta n * Day

S A N F O R O C H R IS T IA N C H U R C H
7 V0 Up*a&gt;4 H o a d S a n h u d
P h o n e l / / 0 9 « 0 :u iJM W109
,) D b iM tjrovM b
Ma s ! "
Vuot* L .1 Ll'U* l
JLH’ LdiOUf.
&lt; K 1.» «
(litfip S c him o
*U W1 .i *’
W o*ru n g VVf i •mf i' |
f i Or) t: •»
E v w m n g S e rv ic * ’

F IR S T B A P T I S T C H U R C H
OF LO NQ W O O O
W91 f S H 4 14
i u n g e (K M ) F L 1 / 7ftO ftJ9 4
(4 07 i 3 1 9 H J t 7
J R ic h a r d C h a f f in
A s s o c ia t e M im s la r E d u c a t io n
H e* F^reston G r e e n e
A s s o c ia t e M m t s le i W o r s h ip
lin y J n llrrry T O i l O n
A s s o c ia t e M in is t e r
Y o u th
Sunday
rt.h ie S t o l y
W o r s h ip
D is c i p le s h i p T r a in in g

Arc* fathers &lt;ts tough .is tlu*v seem? Maylu* not . .X|aPM
Yes, most lathers seem hrave aiui strong, but the\' m ay not a lw a y s
feel that wav. Som etim es, the w o rld is not knul to lathers I hey t r y to
h id e tile hurt, but there are signs amt sym p tom s.
T h e y m a y ap p e a r droopy, even m tluni best i ‘lollies I lalt sm iles .uni
w r in k le il b r i m s an* sure sig ns S o m e tim e s lathers are g roue hy, like
bears . . . or u n u s u a lU talkative
. or strangely quiet .
they just
aren't them selves
I lo w ran wo soothe a hurt lather? Wo ran ask him h o w he tools, but
he m ay not answer. Wo ran tell him w e love him. that lie is tin* best
father in the w o rld . &lt;I hat's better than a handaid.) A lw a y s smile. It’s
contagious.
M ost im portantly, rem in d him that h is H e a v e n ly Father loves him
un cea sin g ly and rereives visitors in I 1is housy^paeh SaJjbath.
Finally, g iv e h im a Lug hug. Fathers need lo v in g too.

F IR S T C H R I S T I A N C H U R C H
iD t ic V p I e i o f C h t l t l i
1607 5 S a n t iir d A y e
S i la a n t J c ih n y o n
P a * tm

JO R D A N B A P T IST C H U R C H
9 / 0 U p n a la Md S»n»o»tJ
1 /3 9 0 7 ?

W fltJ A d u lt H in 'ip
E i h i f S f u U ix s
W « d N ig h t y li utft

7 (X )(■ rn
7 (X) p rn

Christian Science

9 Mi a m
K» 4ft a m
ft 0 0 p rti

Church 01 Christ

Congregational

"nn * 7i|h

L O N O W O O D C H U R C H O F C H R IS T
1018 N * y 1 7 9 / 1 m . N O M « , 4 14
J / J ft B M . h 9 9 0 6 1 / 904 7fth |t7 i
S u n W o u if iip
It) V i a m 1 M ' M
t in art? m v ltd if T«&lt; »i*lt * lu d y i " |
ivi &gt;rvt|i| a if 11 u". i&gt;. it.p "»ii.i. S,r ■,”•' t.
♦'■ u n iily g»d»*ling a* a a y v «**a.r'

United Church
Of Christ

C O N U R I . O A T lO N A l
C H R I S T I A N C H U R C H iN A C L T ‘
,'4(11 ' t 'V k A * i
I ? / 4ftn4
M " , : fi. .ip a it 4'
* a T.'it
M e ..
l fu e * 1,i tn uni
4 t i 1 !11 »' l a ' '
W V irftfiii
I 1' He i n
l *K|l&gt;*v1in
IKI. h|*|l" * N u III »"*+"
.'n 1 W**'Ji
I ***r « .i sI ' i i ' , • j a * H ;K -i - M i

Church of God

S u n d a y C h u n h S m **ii . m *
am f S u n d ay S c h o o l
M) i bei .■
y V e d n e srla *
H U M ti
f i n i n ' , A *a il A b le A f A 11 S*" v1 »■
M efe lin g M i« m M ih

F IR S T B A P T I S T C H U R C H
M ARKHAM WOODS
S4(Xt M Atb h a m W* h i d s M ir«n 1
l a b e M a r y f ic im la
D r H o b e r l ( H o til P a r s e r
P a s ln

sal

H«t»e S t u d y
9 Ml ar»‘
W o r s f it p
10 4ft am
Y o u t h M e e t in g
6 00 pm
W o r s h ip
7 U0 prri
W e d n e v fa y S e r in e j
P t a y e i % t lit ) le S lu t ly
7 (KJ prri
A ilu M C h o ir
ft 4ft prn
P IN IC R C S T B A P T IST C H U R C H
h O M A itjK iM B»*d S a n to r ft
F»a*1m
Me* L a rry | H irtg tu "
M uvu
M e lo r ly e tlr o r u p
Ti ...i r.
V e ra U n L u A I1
L
4
4ft
i n
S u n d a y S e fV H il
T T IX) a it
M u rn m g W u m h ip
U h ih lr itn * C h u r r h
» l IX) a «*
7 U Q (i i ' 1
I p*-rimg W o r s h ip
W ednuyday
f iX) J) rn
P f j» u " M e e t m g
f r u 'v e 'y P f im d e d F ur
A ll f t e f y t ie s

C H U R C H OF U O O
HOI W / / n c | S lr n « l
M k * D o n a t it ( W ig g n w
T f t iiiu '
Sunday S ch o o l
‘J 4*- a m
M o r n in g W o r s h ip
ig f tO a r .i
D i n g y l i t l i t ft 0 ryict&gt;
PO O pm
f iir h ily l n n c h r n x r d
S*irv(( *» W p q n i f v l . i i
7 LH&gt; P m

p o llu a 9*al&lt;x&gt;«
i a b r M a 'y f l J / / 'P i On*.n
.......p it CMId V/ I 11 14

S tu d y S a tu rd a y
10 (X) a m
W if f » n R a n d a ll
B a ilo r
I9 04 i 7/f* ( 6 / 3

BETTY A N N E'S
UNISEX HAIR STYLING
110 E FIRST ST
•HISTORIC DOWNYOWN SANFORD’

3 2 2 -4 9 1 3

ST J O H N S I A S T E R N
ORTHODOX CHURCH
? / 4 1 G o u riM y ( In ti Roar!
h r n D fK i.ild IV*rli i*
FS»V e
&lt; f iiif i h'REi&lt;grfti
}/ 1 4 tg
l ft y il ii' i d l i i g .
Ill I H i a ll
S m irp iy S i fit h ■I
III Mil i n
I a iiifrM fV n ri M ■ A .ip
.Iu k ii

W

C H U C K

R o a m ’ \ Mra i m &lt;
W in f'U ’ V l d t S i l r*i ■ r

S l in i l . l r ft*
I ’ ll. i l l - ’
1 '|.|*,I ♦ l|.
N o r *t' . , S i

I l" , i n
t r lf b yn
I*..In.I d
m d It) Oil ,■ n
*IH a &gt;
111 U() a in
7 ,Mt p rn

Iim V ila *
W ednesda.
t iio f v l,lr

I N N - D I X I E

S T O R E S

H A R R E L L

a n d E m p lo y e e s

A

T R A N S M

A I R

B E V E R L Y

H E A T I N G

915 W. 2nd SI.

AVE.

BRAM BEAUTY SALON

f) IX) p rr.
7m p ”

BETTY WEBER

P E S T

Hardware
Stores

tnu.«w&lt;

R O W

E

C O N T R O L

l O f A . i l O W N ! t l ft O P I MA r 4
H O N IU J S S I ft ft T A • *

2626 Iroquois Av

322 2070

f

3

LONGWOOD - 767-5101

O

a

L I

a w n

P

a h

K

i* T M I 5 L M P U C I T T P L A N S t Rd 46A «f Fit irw fian Ho u u U ary

322-4263

K

2

I

K

A V I * ’, ,

4V: I ' t i r k

- 5 4 H

A v t-.)

. 1

STENSTROM, MclNTOSH
JULIAN, COLBERT
WHIGHAM &amp; SIMMONS, P.A.
A T IO W N I Y S A T L A W
H O / ) 3 / 2 ? 1 71
Sar&lt;of(J
{ 4 0 7 )0 3 4 ft 119
O f U n d ci

P o s t O ff* .* I t o i 4 84 8

fiui1« 37 * Sunlxnk lUdg
AJ0 Wuftt f irst Sir*
S a n fo rd F lo n d a 3 2 / 7 / if l a f l

ADCOCK ROOFING &amp; SHEET METAL

f u n e r a ls

PLEASE C A ll FOR PRICE IHfORMATlOH

r - A lR c h lld

I ’ A
2 5 th

H E R M A N ISING

C l * t t U R ) A ftlt I I NI A *l |( U M I

homa
lor

CAREY HAND
GARDEN CHAPEL

2 4 6 7
d 'n r iic r

S

323 3517

To List Your
Church Services
On This Page
Contact The
Advertising
Dept.
322-261 1

j\r J ( ^/jutiuu IbattLiUi.
'S tm cE 'iN sim m s

:i22-iir&gt;&lt;m
ilA ld w l*

A B U N D A N T L IF E C H U R C H
l l w a n g e h c a l P m s h y ln r ia H i
1' "i*1 ■' ' i* rfi*■r. i» S i i i m - M u ' y
41171 1 ll * HU (fi
ip'url W d.fkii1
P.i'-r i
m il i . S i ft-iiif
I VP i ".
i i ' n i ’n) W . iffth -i
10 M i "

IC K A N K A H
M m i &gt;.;j h . . nf Iftv-1 ig fd A S iiu f iq
7 7t) R ig Tip-f, f)fnr« S u d n H Xi
U m g w t K H l F i 3 / 7**0 tft40
i T ft m ile s a n s i r&gt;1 17 9 /
o n G El 4 ? 7 i
S u n d a y W o r s h ip S m y u t* 11 Of) J in
» o r q . ' i f f ir d u r m a lm n eatt 8 3 0 ftlfift

Health C are Center

( ir f f E B H M E W I I ( C R E M A T IO N
J I M

519 E. 1st St. • Sanford
3 21 -8 5 8 0

W IK IV A P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H
/ 11 W n b iv a S p u n g y l an**
L u n Q a i h m J P h o n e 8 0 9 IfiQ fl
RrtAr fia rn u a i Ft 0 M a y s a y
P a sto r
C h u r c h S *o vtt.es fi IP a n d 11 fXl a rr'
SurM tay S i tio o i
i A d a g e 1*i
9 4ft A M
N u r s e r y P ro y id ffil

I'd tj-nria fpin tun C h u r iJ i F u n ctio n s , arm
S p ird u a J C o u n f H lm g
(.a ll *904 / / H / / ? ?

Hillhaven

C O M P l . l f s r s r t M s • *01) O N S
&gt; M l . I S T I M A . I s . s r i l v . c i A l l I lf .A N ..*
M l V D E N T . A i A N D C O W M L M C .A l
M t A t I'D M f* H W I I H i

I S S I O N

David Beverly and Stall

Q A L O n N E A U

F f lE N C H

U P S A t A P R I S B Y T f R IA N
W / f ttn A U p A a la Eld S a n fu rd
fte* O ar a m S h e a
P iM i. "
S u n d a y S c lw m
9 a rn
C h id e h S a rv icr*
Hi am
liltih * S lu d y
Tu e s
9 a m A f 3U p tri

Other

The Stuff Of

C O N D I T I O N I N G

PC A

T r a d itiim a 1 V a iu w v
i .,Ki|Mmi&gt;.&gt;r«»y S I yh*
N t W M f I T INC* E*l A1 I
O rd f A d o d VMIagn S h o p p ir ig f *. i#'
*i4 9 W 1 ab« M a ry B i» d . ab,* M i ’ y
W nr«fiit&gt;
9 X) A 11 H i a rn
Or Ju fir. M iin ig o n u r r y S e m ru FSi%ln»
I X) 910 I

U C S S S p ir iiu a l C a n f ia
1 /ft A S u u tf. V i K n v i i A * a
”
i i l ( 11riv»*■ i . 1.1 V tjh y v a A*n
Me ■ M i|ig a * K ' An»
t&gt;mn|( I'.i-ifrn
W» a " I . i "Tin *«*i+i y i .' u*
fi U u ' M*I V-I I-N
‘ ‘ U 'ld a y S ip y i. ,«
TO J P A M
M m i'ia h n r i H H tii.'ig i^ i 1u ' m . an.)
M u n fa y u *
T h i i r v l a f S « rv u ;n
/ k) f1 M
M &amp; d d a rifjn .'M iM i CtaA% .ani|

S H O W E R D O W N OF B L E S S IN G S
?01 I Im A n n u m 5 in ln i'd
1/ I « Irtd
Tirn n lfiy H u d fto n
B a ilie
10 00 am
S u n d a y S c f itju l
11 0 0 a rr
M o t ru n g W o r s h ip
7 1ft p M*
t u H V la y P ra y m
7 4ft j i m
T u n v l i f Bdjtf* S tu d y

THE FOLLOWING FIRMS ENCOURAGE
YOU TO ATTEND YOUR HOUSE OF »
WORSHIP THIS WEEK

331 T O T ]
lS O # S

R IV E R O A K S
P R E S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H

Nazarene

C A t V A R Y C H R IS T IA N C E N T E R
m x «w 4in s«
fi.in fo rd
M -n ^ S iis n * Mo i Hm
** aA t. •
Sunday
M o m n ig S u n . .
1IHX) a in

r. 1 t ■i *r 11J i
. i l l 7. I/. 4r *

B A R N E S

S E E

M ARKH AM WOODS
P l l L S B Y T E R IA N C H U R C H
f t / 10 MarbhafT* W e n d s M. i t
i ab** Mrt *
P tir mt- I t . . 11 V .
[&gt;* 0 u M 1 D e E tm i.'i -&gt;
P * » ■■
S u n d a y S l fi'H il A|i A g i”
'f 11 i it
i .r.iif. i ' N m tit r*.
H p \ n i I. it
N u i S " ' i 4'. i v. 1. . i
y «ui in G tii !(|. S u n g t.
i. n , "
P m S. fHHti M u ri I f n i Ft .
i i
I,
M n 'i t h l , I in .ily N ig 1" S i.iift* "
I h ird W**d’ i i ‘ s d 4 y '
l. p iM l'M
il ill ,

F IR S T C H U R C H
O F TH E N A / A R E N E
/ f t f ll S a n fo r d A*w
l o i ' i J M in io n
F*a^loi
Sunday S ch o o l
9 4ft a m
M o r n in g W o M ih g
10 4 5 a rti
Y o u th H o u r
fi BO p i*
L v a n g n iift f S m y ic a
h ?X) p n

Interdenominational
MOL » (.R O S S
I P IS C O P A L C M U R l H

UE TTY A N N E H O W A R D

M IN C E R M O T O R S
C A R S ft T R U C K S

F IR S T P R E S B Y T E R I A N C H U R C H
OF LAKE M ARY
W ilb m A * p l -ibn M a r ,
Mn* A f S tli»« n* i
l*i|%tr l'
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fh u M , Y iiu t h ( h im
f 1X1 |, n.

G R A C E U N IT ED
M l T H O D IS T C H U R C H
4 9 9 f a n iu M y G lu fi H o arl
I .ib i* M a ry
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P a it i i 'i
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9 JO a m
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fi (XJ i rr.
M o n d a y B itiiK S tu d y
TO 0 0 -* m
f l u i u i r y E*iu*irjni| f i k A 11 't « ly h n s

L U T H E R A N C H U R C H OF
TH E R F D E E M F R
.M * * v u u S y m iili
/ft?* Da* a ¥,
M iii I Ia ti. ■ A M u n v ru i'
ii-a-,11
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Episcopal

ST P L I E R S
E P ISC O P A L C H U R C H
ft B i Mi n n t 1 a* I M ' nt
i t‘ i* M a ' f * 11 'I &gt;
1411S 444 i O K I)
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i f d u r a ln r r i W in g
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T h ro u g h 10 0 0 a rr i S &lt; t i* i't
W i'd ru ts d a y
H o ly E u c f ia r iv i
7 Q 0 p rr.

C H U R C H OF G O D
(FT M O A Y )
D irltO o a C o r n m u n d y C a n ttn
S u n FVtdjffi
W o r s h ip S u rv ri P A EPbi**

utc

Herb Stenslrorn and Staff

m
m

Lutheran

Eastern Orthodox

&lt;'I n i' B'wabft*

C H R IS T IA N F E lL O W S M lP
CHURCH U C C
M k ¥ a rt rt 111 A"* a i
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/ i" N ( . m in l'y t . lu t i Mi* i 1
I ab t“ M i ri
M a n n ig A if.p i-* *
■./ in s f .,1 1 t « Hoar*hg.i Chi.r* ».

STENSTROM
REALTY

i«’
m

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7 00 p m
N u r v i' y P ro v id e r I fre a ll SmviL#**

F IR S T C H U R C H O F C H H IS T
S C IE N T IS T L O N Q W O O O
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G o m e * o f I i W iliii*in% un Md

W iH ln e s d a y
f e llc jv y s h ip S u p p e r
ft 15 P m
W o r s h ip
b 30 p m
N u r s n 'y
Ah sendee* A
[ le a l M in is t r y

F IR S T P R I S B Y T I R t A N C H U R C H
(M b a *k A l i d S t S a n f im t
P h n ri« 1/? / f i l l /
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/ tx) a m

F IR S T U N I T E D
M E T H O D IS T C H U R C H
4 1 9 P a 'l A*»&gt;
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piff»i Iu *
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A11 ‘ 11**■*i
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Christian

1 » c '''iiy W n * i 11*(
ft IX) I: it
W e il P 'J y lf* SrtUyu *(l 1ft 1- "
f h t jy n ir d

Presbyterian

Methodist

ST C L A R E C A T H O L I C
C O M M U N IT Y
M»*» h m o lh y W h a n d e i
.HJh I D ay R o a tl
tM Ih m a F l 1 /7 ie
i'X14i 7H9 9*4P
W e e b e n d L itu rg y
l O if e e r i t 'ly n C e n t e r '

S A iirru a y
Sunday
iS p a m ih i

JA M ES HOUSE OF PRAYER
? 1 4 6 C h u r c h r.t
S a n Io n l
P lu m # J / l fl?7tt
B is h o p F u g « n # Ctw iim *
(‘ u stu f
Sunday S ch o o l
to X i a m
S u n d a y W o r s h ip
1 / j( j p m
S u n d a y N ig h ! S n iy ic y
H IX) p m
T u fm d ay S « rv iti«
t) 0 0 p m
H i u i ' u i i f S « iy n r*
41 (XI p m

C H R I S T U N IT E D
M l T H O D IS T C H U R C H
4ITM 1 ||i lM* [ I li K 1
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in y i'H i In C h rr.T 1 11 S * i’ » i‘ Yi

A LL S O U L S C A T H O LIC C H U R C H
9 0 / D ab A y e S a n f o r d H a
F a th e r l h o m e * H u m s P e n h F 'a t t iv
S a t V ig n M a s*
ft 0 0 r m
Sun M ass
a 0 0 10 K) 1 / 0 0
G tm le * * io n S a:
4 4 4ft p rr&gt;

C o u n tr y G lu t) Wo#t1 l a * * M a n
A*«»ry M l o n g
P it t u r
S u n d iy S c h o o l
9 4ft p n '
P r e a c h in g A W o r s h ip in g t o 4ft a m
l i i Me* S tu d y
0J O p m
S h a r in g A P r o c la im in g
7 10 p m
Wr*d Of ly
M eet
7 VO p m
N o rs c u v P r o v id e d

;tn&gt; iplanhip Trainmg

Fftlltu M f jt lf ir v b i.'.
g to j
........il ly f tt h lK lI
in m 4
W t H i h l f ft^ryi. ,'
li i h l n S tu d y
7 fNJ p
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1100a
T hu*% ifjyft
f4ur*i&lt;iy P rir « llli'd

Catholic

C O U N T R Y S ID E B A P T IST
CHURCH

ST

(ID O L ) S M E P H E R 0 » V A N Q E U C A l
LUTHI RAN CH U RCH
OF S A N F O R D
FLCA
*417 O r L ir k f o t in * ' M H A 1 I ' '17 f
1**10111- 1// 7 'l 1J

N E W lir t
B A P T IST T E M P LE
lU B C o n m w r c i* S t S 11» UW
L Abn M j &lt;» F l J?74fc
P it 407 1 11 14 77
R p t tT-if' M . l i m i f l
04*1(01
Sunday S chool
I OCX) a m
M o t ru n g W o r s h ip
M 00 4 m
6 .VO p m
E v e n in g W o r s h ip
M id W»**ti P t iy e r
7 VO p m

t (X) ft fft

Pentecostal

H O LY C R O SS LU TH ERAN
C H U R CH OF LAKE M ARY
11
7fi0 f i u 'i [lf»yi« f *ih «i M a ry
P a u l H o y ftf
F 'a tt n r
S u n d a y W o r s h ip
S in fv irP
M A IQ V ) a in
S a lu r d a y Sf*»vn «
ft If? p m
S un d af S chool *
A d u R I I .N p C la s s
9 1ft a m
H o ly C r t m 5&gt;to»f H o u t Fftnur h o o l
&lt;o r In fo o rin if'im ('..#11 13,M J7df

Fathers Need
Loving Too...

f Ui ftm

flit»l* Slwty

W IK IV A A S S E M B L E
if. 7 ft l i t e m ' H o a d
l «•»1 (1*004 F l
4(1 ^ 7*4 0 7 7 7
S u 'k le y
( | 1 1 H M A t IO N *&gt;•*. »■

Lutheran

Baptist

Assembly Of God

)

800 F R K N C H

A V F ..

CH RYSLER •PLYM OUTH
4113 Hwy. 17-82 • P.O. Box 3297
Sanford, FL 32773
322-1835

322-9558

C U S T O M S lA U O H T E n iN O
C E N T R A L

S Y S T E M

S

N u f l i i u r a n r . I 'M T i j d i j S i *.v . i’ (*
C iiU ip m o n l . ( '. i f S i/ ( .| H .f lv

Recipe,
C O U N TR Y C H IC K EN
Fam ous

• IT S H O N E Y
.9 0 S T R E N C H

AVE.

BANK FINANCE ON BUY HERE A NAT HERE
M i l S Highway 1 7 *1 , SanlOKl
It M

GAUERIA RESTAURANT
&amp; PIZZA, Inc
3837 Lake Emma Rd Lale AAary
3 3 3 -O B /2
BILL MARCELLO

O lla n d o | A 0 n A M SO**

( I I , till It I I Ll

I 1IIIU..I

C

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

A U T O

• C o m p i* t i F u n # r» l S s r Y iC P t • C r e m x liu n
* M&lt;i*Pnr% ft M o o u m « n t s • Pr«Jd»A h g e m » n fb

3223213

2 4 7 7 I’ n r k A v e fr i' 2 5 t» i S I .

3 2 4 -5 1 4 7

B
P A R T S

210 S. French Awe.

S B O

A N D

R N 'S

B I B L E

321-7169

B O O K
S T O R E

2599 Sanford Ave

Ave

estaurant

W AL M ART PLAZA

3 2 3 -9 0 4 3

32773

330-1660

PETER RUDEZ

J
l V ir \ CJ j&gt;
C o m p le te A u to S ervice
P a in t &amp; B ody

B R IS S O N
F U N E R A L HOM E

2 0 1 N . M n p la
( N u x t t o S n n f o r d H u r n ld )
3 2 3 - 0 0 0 0

SEMINOLE TRINITY CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL and DAYCARE
P rn icfK A X thru 1 /
m
A U'f'At'y t f C * * ri* i f t *ft7 f f SAnfonT
A t o u C u rricv iu f^
«r&gt;d A n * S c Yk x k tk»y C x /p t 12 Y r t
(aturtx flu fT Y * p n n ctp N

SPECIAL ORDERS
DELIVERY SERVICE

O

“ A L illie T o u c h O f S ic ily "
N IC K V IV O N A

S

I r o q u o is

S a n lo r d

1100 8. French Avanua
Sanford • 322-7953

323 M 5 0

USED CARS

O lK J lJ S .( ( .il I ’. l i ' C ’ l l U O J S
2620

D IP P E D "

COURJESY i S
S a n lo r d |* 0 r) m

r ’r f . l t

I t a II a n R

801

W . 2 2 n d S L , S a n lo r d

• 3 2 1 -2 7 2 3

SUPPORT YOUR
LO C A L CHURCHES
$6.00 Per Week
To Advertise (hi This
Pune. Call 322-261 1

11

ftf.r .r r ,,

ft Irui f

f i 1

d ll' w Ml hi i f '

9Ui St. and Laurel Avo.
Sanlord 322-2131

K E N

K E R N

h c k o iit

’ S

f it rA n
T R A N S M

’m

HOPKINS MEAT PACKING

323-3040
500 Laurel Avo.

S anlord

70 % O FF
Omni Window Designs
up to

102 Commerce Way
Sanford

3 2 1 - 6 5 1 5 • 3 2 2 -0 2 0 8

HOMI A m iA N C f CINTIK. INC.
"‘SfAffCMtt A L L U A J Q A M 4 M0 X*
QKNCRAL IL IC TR JC • M AYTAG • C AftJUEM
M fftM J U I M I — V iU lf lV f iillM - P M 8 H M H I
MA C (MANI KM* M - MK W i i l | a « IO v l • * B U M

322-3803

I M S C O M M fftC tA L t i

2650 S. O rlando Drlvo, Sanlord

HEAT PUMP SPECIALISTS

322-9291

32 3 -1 1 4 4

TIRE EXPRESS

KEN'S AIR

MChOAMsm£EI-OFl SANIOHDAVI

Verticals 8* Draperies

Re-Roofing ft Repair

3 3 0 -9 9 7 6

s a u s

I S S I O N S

LIBERATOR! RO O FING
• FREE ESTIMATES •
Frank Tv Muuren Llbcrntorc

sM oxna

323-6684

T H E

M

c K I B B I N

A G E N C Y

Insurance

C url Borgm an &amp; E m p lo yees

as

COLONIAL
ROOM
RESTAU RANT
M l. l I M 1 .

323 2999
I l f E. F U H I I f - . M M O I D

1 KM

C O U J N S FLOW

3844 S. Orlando l)r„ Sai
H &lt;Anci.il I M ’ A Ijkc Mail Hi

323-1204

�M* *«*ft S.infrit f Mnfirttl

I M&gt;l iv li.rfj 1M !'♦'*&lt;

Religion
C avins re-elected to fourth term
Choirs meet to celebrate fathers
I hr Mississippi M ums ( 'holr will hr ill concert ill
ihr Sainlonl ( ivii ( r u i n . •101 K Seminole lllvil.. on Sunday ill
■I p hi Alsu appriinn|&gt; will hr lilt* Flrsl Shiloh Muss Choir uni!
s.iMiphoolsi Konulil \.oh.m
Ailv.mrr in Kris nic uvulluhir nl First Shiloh. 700 Klin Avc
I’l it rs .111 $ I 2 In uilvuiirr anil $ I .‘I ill I hr door
Fot niuir iiiiorin.ilii&gt;n. rail lhr Krv Murker or Shrrvl Jones
.0 322 r&gt; IH«t
S A M 'O U h

Blackaby to speak
I.AKK MAKY
I &gt;i llrnrv Hlack.ihv will hr speaking at
Cclrhi.iiioii Chiitrli 120 \V l.akcvlrw Avc . on Sunilay during
till* ID ,i in sn vlrr
l*i HI.H k.ihv is in i I ii i i i*&lt;* nl pt.ivrr and spirllii.il awakening
lot tin Soul tin n Itapllst l o m r i i i l o n in Allaiila. and Is author
ol ill' lunik Kxpei leiiemg God
I'lli* pi11&gt;1li is liivllrd toallrnd

Family and Friends Day
SA M 'O KD
Family and Friends Day will hr held al Shower
I low n ol Hlcsslngs. 201 Klin Avc . on Sunday al .'CIO p in.
I hr guesi sprakrr will hr Kvimgellsl Marlowe Smith
Kvrrvoin is uivllrd to conic and praise Hie Lord Ingellier.
I'm tin ii I- uilornialion please rail Molliri Inc/ Smiley al
.122 0505

‘Peter Rock’ a drama of faith
I.AKK MAIO
(u .ii. Culled Mclhodlsi Church. 499 N
&lt; tiimi t \ ( lnl&gt; Mil will hold Vacation I ill &gt;lt- School Iroui June
21 23
Willi iln Ihcuic
I ’d e l Hock.
A Drama ol Faith, the
week loin; piogram will lie held loi ages three through adult
limn (&gt; H p ni

Central to host Bible school
SAMOMD
Y’aiallon Millie School al Central Mapllsl
( 'hurt'll
l l o I \\ I s i S i will hr hrltl June 2 I 25 Irom 6:30-9
p in
( lasses w ill h e avull.ihlr lor ages tom through udllll.
I m moic i uloi in.ii ion. call the church oil Ire al 322-2914.

I

Frank W Hathhurn. Jr., fi­
nancial secretary of Assisi
Council 10.366 Knights o f
Columhus. and chairman of the
1993-94 officer nomination
commlllt-c announced the re­
sults of the elections held al
Clare Hall. 2961 Day Rond.
Deltona, as follows:

St. Clare
to honor
fathers
Sunday

William It Cavins. PGK. grand
Knight; Samuel J. Kilgore, depu­
ty grand Knlghl; Leonard II. La
I’ olnit*. chancellor; Kdward
Woodward, recorder; Louis C.
Fulkerson, treasurer: Robert A
I’lcper. advocate: Francis Millies,
warden: Mrlim Podunavar. Inside
guard; Wayne .J. Cavins and
Cclesllno Rodriguez, outside
guards; Joseph It. Klejhuk.
trustee one year; Paul A. Lemlrc.
trustee two years: and John C.
Goodrich. trustee three years.
Grand Knight William R.
Cavins. PGK. was rc-cleclcd to a
fourth term. He serves us charier
grand Knlghl from Mny 6. 1990
to June 30. then served full term
Irom July I to June 30. 1991.
He w as s u c c e e d e d by MK
Kdward Kyle. Sr.. PGK. FDD.
from July 1 to June 30. 1992.
Cavins was elected to a third
term which began July 1 and
will end June 30.
Cavins. 40. Is a teacher al
Geneva Elementary and Is mar­
ried lo Karen R. (Steele) Cuvlns,
ItN, MSN. a nurse with Florida
Hospital. Orlando. They have
two children. Zachary, age 6. a
kindergartener at Geneva Ele-

Si &lt; larc ( .nholle ( i i i i i
muol i Y. 2 ‘ M&gt;I Dav Hil
Dellona. will I i i i i m i i Hu
lathers ol the parish al all
liturgies tills weekend
Masses will he celehralcil
on Saturday evening al 5
p in . and nil Sunday al M
and H&gt; a ill In Kngltsh and
iiiion In Spanish
I'lie Rev. Tim othy W
Kandel. pastor, will runtlnue Ills series ol homilies

oil the liturgy.
Members o I Assisi
Couuell 10,367 Knights ol
C o l u mh u s w HI p r o v id e
e o I I e e . d M n k s and
(lougliuuls alter idl ol Hie
Siindav liturgies. Proceeds
will he donated lo Hie two
seminarians being support
liv (he council

Wllliam R. Cavins
I In ( avius will host a New
(Hliccis ( ookoul the weekend ol
Jilin 21&gt; 27 \i iliai lime the
.uiiiiiiini cincni nl the appointmi nts ni itu i ■iiiiii 11 chaplain
ami In imcr w ill he made, along
w ith pingt.im sci \ n r i hairs

menlary and Stizaiinali. 3. al
home.
"I am humbled In the Imsi
and eo n fld e n e e my hrnthei
Knights place In my admlnlslra
lion
I thank them lot ibis
o p p o r t u n i t y l o s e r v e t he
council.” said Cavins. lie also
noted that a new leadeislnp
leant Is developing which will
lead (he council In Hie luliire

Fr Kandel. will also he
conducting a workshop on
l.a\ Presiding'
Ioi Hie
ulllee ol Lav Mmlslrv De
velopmeui ol Hie Diocese ol
&lt;)rlaiido

Insiallaion ol ollicers is slaled
Im Aim 13. printing Hie reap­
pointment ol Disirld Depul v
I- rank llaic|.i\

I Feeding hungry minds

.VMOINW

M t u ld Photo* by K*ll«y M llc lx ll

fh o w ooklong c la s s o s o l the 1993 Com m unity
Vacation B ih lo S ch o o l cam o to an ond Thursday
as com m unity (numbers agos 0 lo adult finished
Oiblo study, c r a lls and s in g a lo n g s Tho lour

p a rticp a lin g ch u rch e s each caterod to d illo re n t
ago groups. St. Paul M issio n a ry B ap tist Church,
9th Stroet and Pino Avenue, enjoyod their c la s s of
ch ild re n , agos 4-8, above, as they gradually

P a rticip a n ts of tho B ib le sch o o l w ill all meet at
6 30 p m th is evening al H ou so o l R e lu g e
M in is trie s , on C e le ry Avenue, lo presen t a
program and share the word o l G od

co n stru cted m ob iles day by day and learned tin
word of God. Tho youngsters, above listened
intently as thoy wore told a story about Lydia and
h ow s h e w e lc o rn o d J e s u s into her home

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

ALLIANCE: C H U R C H
Com m unity Ailiam e &lt; hu 'ch 4rti*&lt; fa s t i 4 H 1 Drive* Winter Springs
N eighborhood Am.in. . C h u n » i.*i M a ’ kham W oods Mil lo n g wood
Sanford Aiioim e Ch u n h M I M S Kir* Ayr* Sanford
A S S IM H LY O F UOO

I il|'ti4'6iM| AssoM'lH*

*I••••

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Jim on.l S h n o f i M .s- ,, r
S m y r n a f l a p l ' S l U n t i l ft
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a* y iiapti*&gt; f ( D i u f f h S t M il 4f*. C&gt;s
• •
St John*. M r .s u r • . Haptisf U f i u f f fi Kt# i ..n jA o o il A y r Altamonte*
Springs
Si

I u h r M is s io n . * '*

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Ann s C atho lic C h urch O o g A o o d Trail. DeBary
Ai/yusltne Catholic Church. Sunset Or . near Button Rd . Casselberry
Clare C atho lic Com m unity m eets at O stoen C ivic Center
Mary M agadaiene C a th o lic Ch urch M atlland Avo
Allanypnfe Springs
St Mary | Ukranian CatholK Lhurch ^4Maka M cCoy Dr Apopka
CH R IST tA N
f irst Ch ristian Ch urch H»0J S Sanford Avo
f irst Christian C hurch of LongarOod. 1400C E W dliam son Md lo n y * o o d
G race C h n s lia n C h urch. W ilso n Elernenlary S ch o o l (Paula). 9dS Orange
Uivd Sanford
L.ikuvniA Christian C h u rch Bear la k e Rd . al Ja m ison
S4 &gt;«orcl Christian Church / 10 Upsara Road Sanford

*f G e n e v a

C h u n h M a rk h a m W ood*
l i t u i h t&lt; o f i tH u ' M&lt; u in . e

f ir s t B a p t i s t C h u n h o f I t u ig w o n d
f i r s ! B a p t i s t L h u r t fi o f O v in d o

31 Paul ( U p h s l C h urch. 813 Pina Avo
Malth«M« O a p n tl C h urch. Canaan H y U
St Jo h n a M issionary Baptist C h u rch 970 Cyprus* St
S p n n g lio id M issionary Baptist 12th A Cedar
Suniand Baptist Church. 2676 Palm etlu
Tem ple Baptist C h urch. Palm Springs Rd A flem o nle Springs
Victory Baptist C h u rch O ld O rlando Rd at H ester Ave
W e s U io * Baptist Ch urch. 4100 Paola Road (46A)
W illiam C h a pel M issionary Baptist C h urch. Mars &amp; W illiam St .
Aliam orile Springs
/ion H ope Baptist C h u rch /I? Orange Aye
C A T H O L IC
All S o uls Ca th o lic C h u rch 90? Oak Aye* Sanford
C h u rch of tho Nativity l.ik o Mary
Our l edy of the 1 akes Catholic Church. 1310 M|itm«lian. Deltona

S n u lli tie.ninoto Cti„»ti.in C tiu .tt. 300 W SR 4 3 . O .m ilo
CH RISTIAN S C IE N C E
t "SI C l.u .c h of ChM tl Sc,t,r,li*l 9/S Ma.hham W u u tl. HO Lo n u o im it
C H U R C H O F CHRIST
C h u rch of Christ !S1? S Park Ave
C h u n ft of Christ at la k e Ellen. U S 1/ 97. N Casselberry
C fiu o h ot Chu»| f&gt;00 Palm Springs Dr A itam o nle Springs
C h u n h of C fm s l Cieneva
C h u rch ol Christ lo r ig A o o d
C h u rch of Christ W 1/IF* St
N o tlh sid e Cfiurcfi of C fin s l. Ffa Haven Dr Maitland
South Sem inole Ch urch of Christ. 5410 Lake H o a o II Rd
CH U R CH OF GOD
Ch urch of G o d 503 H ickory
Ch urch of G o d H03 W ??nd St
C h u rc h ot G o d Oviedo
C h u rc h of G o d H o lin e ss la k e Monroe
C h u rc h ot G o d M issio n Enterprise
C h u rch of G o d 14U? W 16lh Sf
C h u rc h of Clod in Christ O viedo
Ch urch of G o d of Prophecy. 7509 S Elm Ave
C h u rch of G o d of Prophecy. 1^08 S Persim m on Ave
C h u rch of G o d of Prophecy. 496 S Central. O viedo
( hurch of G o d (fth Day) Deltona Com m unity Center Deltona (Sun Roomi
M r v ue Ch urch of G od 1/00 W 1.1th St Sanford
True C h u rch of G o d 7/00 H idg eA o o d Av# . S anfm d
C O N G R E G A T IO N A L
Congregational Ch ristian Ch u rch . 7401 S Park Ava Sanford
Winter Springs (aHTimundy Evangelical Congragjhonal Church 7MI Wade
St Winter Springs
E A S T E R N O R TH O D O X
t usturn Orfhodoa Ch urch St G eorge 2001 Dylan Way. M aitland
E astern O rfh o d o i C hurch St Steven s of O C A . 1895 Lake Em m a Road
lu n y « o ix J FI 37/50

Eastern Orfhodoa Ch urch St Join - f &gt;*»»*. 1. 1 . .
Sanford

:

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E P IS C O P A L
All S a m ts 'C p isco p a i C h urch f t M t . r . a ,.
Christ E pisco pa l Churcti l ong*t«&gt;d
E p isco p a l C h u rch of Ihe N r a C o v r ’ i.mt «/*• ...........................
Springs
Holy C ro s s Episco(ial P.i'k Ay«. .it Ith *.f
.« *
SI Peters E p isco p a l C h urch /(Ml Rinehart h , • j i
».t. .
31 Richard s C h urch M S I la k e H n a e ll 11 1 W m h " »*.*»•
Tfie Ch urch of the G o o d Shepherd Maitland lt»
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IN TER D EN O M IN A TIO N AL
Calvary Chnslian Carrier MX) W 4tr St *, « ,»&lt;•
N ew 'larvest (Christian F «riin«v%hip //f*nti«..» •» • i
N tu lh la n d Com m unity C fiu u ti M O D »; T• ,. • »c
D u lruach Delivurancv Confer 7 7 H ' .
a ..
JEW ISH
b e lh Am Synagogue mooting at ( .......
• . i &gt;.i i .*•
Road W est I 4
Tem ple Shalom 1/85 Elkc.irn ltl« l Delin' &gt;

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M *ry F I

.1 A id*,

a s fh e sh yle n a n (.hurcti T it l Ilea* l .ike Md
,i M e* I'reshyteo.in Church tO?t P a "’ Springs Md Altam onte Spg
' .
tA ' 11.1 Preshylen an ( Inin fi IfMXt West S la te Md 476 O viedo F &gt;*
t| • .1 i i iittitiiiiiil* Preshyleftan (.fnjn fi lip sa ' i Mil
hnmtsle* Presbyterian Ch un h Med Bug Md Ca sse dterr,

S f VI N TH DAv A D V f NTIS1
1 e .11 e e Seventh Da* Adventist c*.U*l r H a * 4 Ih F u r e s t C d y
*., ,
»ni*erdt« Da* Adven.is* ( ti.,n h him » /*id St Sanford
\ i • ,ri) .eventh Da* Adventist ( huh h *4)1* U ♦♦•gfiaa* 4.’ /
,• v n I (■ [)av Adventist I fni* Ii M .tJ'a i t A ..
Ad.irnonle SpiDn)
W&lt;‘d*'* Springs Shverdri |&gt;ay Ailve' ltsl
hnr* n. *4) *» M o ss Md

•

•

LUTH ER AN
Asr en sion Lutheran ( huti r« Overj • • » 1 ».
Ik h x I Shepherd Lutheran (.huh ft I »&lt;-A /'*tr ♦ &gt;
•t .*&gt;&lt;.*.
••a
&lt;
^anford
Holy C ro s s lo lfio ra n Church id i .»►•• Mary 'i.c
M •
lo r d O f lif e Lutheran C h u rch IT' f«t
if*
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Lulherert Churcti ot Piovtdorico DH t,. .
Lutheran C h u rch of the Redeem er .•*,/* i ••• a .
M e ssia h l uttioran Church G ulden Day* '»• s **/.
St Lukes Lutheran C h u n .ft Ml 4/6
SI Sleptten Lutheran Chutcfi 4 14 ur1** /*••' -* • »
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M ETH O D IST
Barnett United Memorial Ch u n t, f Delta** A,»
*
Bea» la k e United M ethodist Chu»*
Bethel A M I Ch urch (Canaan H gls
Casseltaury Com m unity United Muthodts* ( hurt* ’ ’ v*.
* *
Midge Md Cassedierry
C h rist Uniteil M ethodist C h u n r- Tucker (•» .i,
.
DeBary Com m unity M ethielist f tude
W »’ •
•• •
First United M ethodist Ch u n f» 4 »'* !»«.» a ..
F irst M ethodist Church
Ovie t&gt;
First United M ethodist t.hu* r- •' (.*•• • • •
G ra ce Unded MetfHMhst Cf*un r. 4 M »«
Grant Ctiapel A M t (diu*i * 1N e d
O akgrove Mettiodist l.f'u*« *&gt;
O steon M idfuelist Chur&lt; h l^«" *f &lt; afi"
\ ».*
Pioneer M(dh(MiiSt ' hu* f

PMf S flY TI HfAN
( M il
. m.«stiyler.an C fiurch H olland B'vd K Austin Av*
D»*d......
*'*c ,|(»1on o C h u n h nt i i*i' M.oy
•
»*n- fiytr-rian ( tiun.h Oak Ave \ l»d Sf
• • •• I'm -.fiyiiinan Ch un h of Delta'* f Mig»uar&gt;J
M ifvr».*". W oods Pntshytenan Chur. l&gt; 5/10 M.i'kh.eri W immIs Fheet i

OM1I R C H U R C H E S
Ai »adh ( .riape* (ia*"(» la*m"u»U Weki«.i Pan Hd
All#**. s A U I
Ch u n h O t.¥e K l/tfi
H ea'dai' Avenue *h,nnr*ss (diape Hea* ! « A,*.
hiiiii'.fi* ( um m undv C h u n e
1 1 * ft id J e s u s C h rist of latter (),«* S a m is / H 5 f* a o Ave
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Sanlando United MetfHMhst Ch u n r. ',H 1 14 t • t
St Ja nies A tA ( 'Jifi a&lt; ( »,m ss
St l uke M B Cfiurcfi id Cameror ,,f ,
* i•
St Mary s A M E C h u rch Si Mt 0 5 Oshfit Paul s M ethodist C h urch (K le e - Mrl l *•t••rj *i
Strafford Memorial Ch urch S DeBary

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to »la&gt;i i d Jefiovaf* s W itness l .»*»• Monne* Unit I5»»/W tn ir(js t
... M I'ei.e CftrtjMU O range Hlvd la k e M on roe
M (i ., Mijitnii*,. (.hurch Oak Fhti Hd Oslee*
5
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Mile
at the Wektva Mt«er

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W •»*•#*» ipruigs Co m m o iid v I vangeln a&gt; I ongregaiitiria' / t 9 W a d e *»l
W*n?e' Springs

�M

- Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, June US. 1003

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notlc«s

IN THK CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH I f IOHTRRNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
StMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVILACTKM
C A I I N O .m tII C A
DIVIIIONUL
HYLAND MORTOAOR
COMPANY,
Ptalntltf(s),

IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH I 10th JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
Casa Net H U U CA H K
RHEA REIN
Plaintiff

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
StMINOLICOUNTY.
PLORIDA
CASE NO. f )-t7IB-OR-gS-P
IN THE M ATTER OP THE
ADOPTION OF: S. E. R„
a minor child.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: George M. Leydlc
Address Unknown
YOUR ARE NOTIFIEO that
on action tor adoption ol tho
minor child. S. E. L„ has been
Iliad end you are required to
serve a copy of your written
defenses. II any, to It on W. L.
R.i Petitioner, whose address Is.
IMS Park OrIv*. Casselberry,
Florida X707 on or batoro July
7, iff), and you must file tho
original with tha Clark ef this
Court before service or Immedi­
ately thereafter. If you fall to do
so. a default will fa* entered
against you tor the relief de­
manded in the petition.
WITNESS my hand and teal
of this Court dated this hid day
ot June, Iff).
MARYANNI MORSE
CLERK OF TH I COURT
By Joyce Cleckloy
Deputy Clark
Publish:
•ubllsh: JJunas,t1, II, 15. Iff)
DBF-4)

rw. DRENCKHAHN.al at,
Oafandant(t).
NOT ICR OF
FORRCLOIURISALE
NOTICE It HER EBY GIVEN
pursuant to a F Inal Judgment of
foreclosure dated Juno 7, Iff],
and antarod In Caaa NO. *)■
0015CA of tha Circuit Court of
tha EIG H TEEN TH Judicial
Circuit In and for SEMINOLE
C o un ty, F lo r id a w horaln
RYLAND MORTGAGE COM
PANY I* tha Plaint IIf and I.W.
ORENCKHAHN, GRACE 0.
LABARBERA art tha Dolan
danta, I will aall to tha highest
and bait blddar for caah at tha
watt front stop* of tha SEMI­
NOLE County Courfhouta In
Sanford, Florida at UiOO a.m.,
on tha lllh day ol July, Iff], tha
tallowing daacrlbad proparty at
tat forth In aald Final Judg­
ment:
LOT M DEER RUN UNIT 14.
ACCORDING TO T H I P U T
THIRBOF AS RECORDED IN
P U T BOOK If. P A O It H AND
f f. P U B LIC R ECO R D S
CO U N TY OF IIM IN O L B .
STATION FLORIDA.
T O G E T H E R W ITH T H I
FO LLO W IN G O I I C R I B I O
PERSO NAL F R O F IR T Y i
RANOE/OVEN, REFRIGERA­
TOR. DISPOSAL, V IN T FAN.
SM OKE D E T E C T O R , W/W
CARPET. OISHWASHIR.
WITNESS MY HAND and tha
tool of this Court on June I. Iff}.
(SEAL)
HONORABLE
MARYANNI MORSE
Clark of tha Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clark
Publish: June 11.35, i f n
0EF-14S
IN TNI CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Number tt-ftS-CP
IN RE i ESTATE OF
B. FRANKLIN MANSBACH
NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS HAVINO
C L A I M S OR D E M A N D S
A G A IN ST TH E A B O V E
ESTATE AND A LL OTHER
PERSONS INTERESTED IN
THE ESTATE:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that tha admlnlstrstlon of
tha attata of B. FRANKLIN
MANSBACH, dacaatad, File
Number n-4IOCP, It pending In
tha Circuit Court tor Seminole
County, Florida. Probata Dlvlitt of which It XI
Hon. the
North Park Avenue, Sanford.
Florida. Tha pereonal rapratenleflve of tha Mlata It Mark
Manabach whoaa addrata It Ml
Blrgham Place, Lake Mary.
Florida M7M, Tha name and
addrata of tha personal rapreaenlatlve'e attorney are aal
farip below.
All Faraont having claims or
demands t
“
regulr
O F-TH T FlN lTI
OF THIS NOTICE, to file with
the clerk of tha above court a
written statement of any claim
or demand they may have. Each
claim must be tn writing and
mutt Indicate tha basis for tha
claim, tha name and address of
tha creditor or hit agent or
altornay, and lha amount
claimed. It lha claim It not yet
due, tha data whan It will
become due shall be stated. II
tha claim It contingent or unli­
quidated. lha nature of tha
uncertainty thall be stated. If
tha claim fa secured, tha securi­
ty shall ba described. Tha
claimant shall deliver sufficient
caplet of tha claim to tha clerk
to enable tha clerk to mall one
copy to each pertonal repre­
sentative.
All persons Interested In tha
attata to whom a copy of Ihlt
Notice of Administration hat
boan mailed are required.
WITHIN T H R E E MONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE
FIR S T PU B LIC A TIO N OP
THIS NOTICE, to tile any abloctlont they may have that
challenge tha validity of tha
decedent's will, Iho quail flee
tlont of tho personal repre­
sentative, or tho vonuo or
jurisdiction of tho court.
A L L CLAIMS. DEMANDS,
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILED WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED.
Data of lha lin t publication of
thlt Notlca of Administration:
Juno IS. Iff}.
MARK MANSBACH
A t Parsons IRepresentative
oflhaEstottot
B. FRANKLIN MANSBACH
PtCMMd
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE
ROBEBTE. MILLER.
ESQUIRE
4*0 Doug las Avenue, Suita 103
Altamonte Springs.

Florida W H
Tslephona: (407) 1*2 4544
Publish: June II, l*. Iff}
D E F IM
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Property of Jimmy Olovar
te s t F o rd H a n g a r PK
SCIFTBRWC*OUC)I047 to ba
sold to tho hlghost blddar to
satisfy lion and storage on July
i, Iff] ol i m Calory. Sanford.
F L a l 10:00 AM, phono 311-4414.
Publish: Juno 11. Iff)
D E F IM

PATRICK CONNELL and
MARSHAH. CONNELL,
his wife, at el..
Defendants.
NOTICE O F SALK
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that on tha llth day o&gt; July,
Iff), at 11:00 A.M. at tha West
Front Door ol tho Main Court­
house In Sanford. Stmlnolo
County, Florida, "MARYANNE
MORSE," Clark of tho Circuit
Court, will offor for solo to Iho
highest and bast blddar lor cosh,
at public outcry, ttw tallowing
described property In Somlnole
County, Florida, more particu­
larly described as fellows;
Lot IS, Block "B", SWEET­
WATER OAKS. Section 17, ac­
cording to Iho Plat thereof os
recorded In Plat Book 11, Pogos
11 and SI. ol tho Public Records
of Sam Inote County, Florida.
Tha above sale Is made pursu­
ant to Final Judgment at Fore­
closure entered In tha abovestyled causa.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I
have hereunto set my hand and
official seal this ffh day of June,
ten.
(SIAL)
MARYANNI MORSE
Clerk ef Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W. Batten
Oemity Clerk
Publish:
•ubllsh: JJune II. 14, Iff)
DIF-111
INTHBCIBCUIT COURT
OF THH IIBHTBBNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
IIMINOLB COUNTY,
FLOBIOA
CIVIL ACTION
CASI NO. 43-3S71-CA
DIVISION I4L
FED ERAL HOMI LOAN
MORTGAGE CORPORATION,
PlalnlltUs),
SE AN DAVID B LA U S ,
amlner.etal,
Defendant(s).
NOTICE OF
FORBCLOSUBISALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment ol
foreclosure dated June f, iff),
and entered In Casa NO.
n-2471-CA ef tha Circuit Court of
tho EIG H TEEN TH Judicial
Circuit In and for SEMINOLE
County, Florida wherein FE D ­
ERAL HOME LOAN MORTOAOE CORPORATION It the
Plaintiff and SEAN DAVID
BLAESS. a minor, JASON
WILLIAM BLAESS. a minor.
BAY TREE. A CONDOMINI­
UM. SECTION NINE, INC.,
HIOHUNDS HOMEOWNERS’
ASSOCIATION, INC., ore the
Defendants. I will toll to Iho
hlghost and bast blddar for cash
at tha west front stops of tho
SEMINOLE County Courfhouta
In Sanford. Florida al 11:00
a.m., on fha llth day of July,
Iff), tho following dttcrlbod
properly as sat forth In said
Final Judgment t
CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO.
X , BAY T R IE , A CONDOMIN­
IUM*' SICTION NINB. INC.,
A C C O R D IN G TO T H I
AMRNOMRNT TO 'THB.DBCU R A TIO N OF CONDOMINI­
UM RICO RD ID IN OFFICIAL
RECORDS BOOK 1010. PAGE
144, PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLOR­
IDA, B EIN G AN AM ENDM I N T TO THE ORIGINAL
D EC U R A TIO N OF CONDO­
MINIUM RECORDED IN O F­
FICIAL RECORDS BOOK fW.
PAOBS )4 THROUGH It),
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA,
ACCORDING TO THE FLOOR
P U N WHICH IS A PART OF
THE PLOT P U N AND SUR­
VEY WHICH ARE EXHIBITS
” B"« "H", ” 1” AND "J" TO
THE OECURATION OF RE­
S T R IC T IO N S , R B S E R V A TIONS, COVENANTS, CON­
DITIONS AND BASEMENTS,
OF SHBOAH, SECTION f, A
CONDOMINIUM RECORDED
IN OFFICIAL RECORDS BOOK
fM. PAGES M THROUGH 7f
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
AND SAID EXHIBITS TO THE
AFORESAID DECLARATION
O F C O N D O M IN IU M R E ­
CORDED IN OFFICIAL REC­
ORDS BOOK fft. PAOES 71
THROUGH ID. PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEM IN O LE
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
WITNESS MY HAND and tha
teal of thlt Court on Juno 10.
Iff).
(SEAL)
HONORABLE
MARYANNE MORSE
ClerkotthaCIrcult Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clark
Publish: June 14.25, Iff)
OEF-ISQ

U N C U IM EO
VEHICLE AUCTION
7/M/t)
74 Toyota
TI1I44MI4
41 Toyota
J TITS 75C4B057I440
S) Mercury IMS BPfl)fOH4l7414
II Mercury 1MEBP4U1BT43IM)
UBuIck
IGtAT4MXDK4llfSf
7/11/f)
7f Chevrolet
1N44G4SMM1*
15 Chevrolet 1Q5JI17FIFJ)4f7f4
SOHonda
SMDIOOMW
ft Nissan
INISDIISIMCMMU
Alts manto Towing
117Marker St.
Alt. Spgt.
Sale begins at D i m AM
View I hour prior
Publish: Juno II, Iff)
DBF-ISf

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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peopts. peel end ptseenl. taeft tetter MVwctphw stand* tor
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PREVIOUS 80LUTION: “I may not b«an optn book, but
I mink people know as much about me aa they need to
know." — Daniel Waahlnoton.

l

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANDPOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASI NO.t fWSLCA-14-L
HERMAN fILLU CC I,
Plaintiff,
vs
,
CYNTHIA CANNON, RIPAAT
I.HAMAIL, ROBERT
JANTOSCIAKand
ROBERTCANNON.
Defendants.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: CYNTHIA CANNON
X I Lake Point Drive, m i
A It*monte Springs,
Ml
Florida M70)
YOU iARB NOTIFIED that an
action to toracteoa a mortgage
on tha following described real
property located In Seminole
County, Florida, ha* bean filed
against you. and fha othor Dofondants Identified herein, In lha
Circuit Court of tho llth Judicial
Circuit. In and tor Samlnol*
County, Florida, by Flelntlft.
HERMAN BELLUCCl.to-wll:
Lot 47, H ID D EN L A K E ,
PHASE III, UNIT VII. accord­
ing to the plat thereat t* re­
corded In Plat Book x , Pages 7f
end X , of the Public Record* of
Somlnole County, Florida.
You era hereby required to
servo a copy ol your written
defenses. It any, on BMIL A.
OASPERONI, JR., Esquirt,
P la ln llU ’ s altornay, whoso
address Is 505 Woklva Springs
Rood, Sulla 140. Longwood.
Florida 37774, on or before July
Itth, Iff), end tile the original
with lha Clark of thlt Court
•Ithor before service on Plain­
tiff's attorney or Immodlatoly
thereafter; otherwise * default
will ba entered against you for
(ho rollot demanded In Ihe
Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and toil
of thlt Court on June f, Iff).
(COURT SEAL)
Maryann* Mora*
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Ruth King
A t Deputy Clark
Publish: Juno 11.11.» A July 1,
im
W r» P»
,i
IN TNR CIRCUIT COURT
O PTH E EIGHTEENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,

PLORIDA
CASE NO: f)-lt7t-DR-41-P
IN RE; The Marriage of
Hedrick B. Jackman,
Husband.
end
ColltenE. Jackman,
Wife.
NOTICE OF ACTION
DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAOB
TO: Colleen E. Jackman
Address Unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that an action tor dissolu­
tion of marriage hat bean Iliad
against you and you are re
qulred to serve a copy of your
any, to If on
written defenses. If*any
Hedrick B. Jackman, PafI
whet* address It I4S Bentry Or.,
Lake Mary, FL 37744, on or
batoro July 14, Iff), and til* the
original with the dork of thlt
court before service on Peti­
tioner or Immodlatoly thereaf­
ter. If you toll to do so, a default
will be entered against you tor
the relief demanded In the
petition.
WITNESS my hand and the
teal of Ihlt Court on Juno f, Iff).
(SEAL!
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE COURT
By Joyce Clock ley
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June It, II. 11A July ),
Iff)
D E F IM
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
O P T H I EIGHT!ENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CASI NO. tMIIICA
DIVISION tSK
FIR ST UNION NATIO N AL
BANKOF FLORIDA.
Plaintiff (s),
vs.
H. teO N COUCH, etel,
Defendant!*).
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
foreclosure doled June 4. Iff),
and entered In C a i* No.
f)-4lllCA-l4K of tho Circuit
Court ol the EIGHTEENTH
Judicial Circuit In and tor SEM­
INOLE County, Florid* wherein
FIRST NATIONAL SANK OF
FLORIDA It tha Plaintiff and H.
LEON COUCH end LINDA O.
COUCH are tha Defendants, I
will sell to the highest and bast
bidder ter cash al the west front
•ntranc* ol the SEMINOLE
County Courthouse at 11:04
a.m.. on the 14th day of July.
Iff), tho following described
property at set forth In told
Final Judgment:
LOT 10. BLOCK O. WINTER
SPRINOS, ACCORDING TO
THE P U T THEREOF AS RECOROID IN P U T BOOK IS.
PAGES II AND t). PUBLIC
R ECO R D S OF SEM INO LE
COUNTY, FLORIDA.
WITNESS MY KANO and lha
teal of this Court on Juno I, im .
HEAL)
HONORABLE
MARYANNE MORSE
Clorkol the Circuit Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clerk
’ubllsh: Ji
Publish:
June II.IS, Iff)
DEF 144

7 1 — W tlp W a n te d

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

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

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 0 9 3

CLASSIFIEDDEPT.
1

fcMAJL-KKNI.
MONDAYthru
3
PfBOAV
1
CLOtCO IATUROAY
A SUNDAY

ROUTE SALISPIRSON.
Needed for local company.
Goad s t a r lin g wags.
Benelllipackegt available.
CDL license required. Call
John or Todd............. D5SR7
IXOS. French Avo. Sulla M

Part lima, oxpartaticed. Apply
In perton: Pel Groom*ry ISX
C Elfccam Blvd, Deltona

DRIVERS NEEDE0

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

HOURS

m

.
a x

.TSMSRt
..91#BIm
. H . I f B Ant

3 Lima I

Bchadudng may kwtoda Herald Advwttoai at tw coal of a t adtSBonalday
Canoaf whan you gal mauRs. Pay orty tor day* your ad run* at tax earned,
Use M OeecrlpSbn tor (eelest raeuM* C ----— -----grapNoN tame *OommarcNf N g a s c y
DEADLINES
Tuaaday Bwu Friday I t Neon The Pay At
Sunday And Monday B30P.M. (Way
ADJUSTMENTSANOCMOrTSl NltteMAM BlBH SfPBT fclBN
SM M
*BT I M A M
a#, ttw A l t e r # Herat# wM A t t w P
pB
A tO
e ter
lu B
llljIN
^ j meU
Ar^R AMRA
in
ve
m in n
erwy
en e gyjy
wwy ^
iv e m eNiPte P# B
ww
a m * •M M
Am
first Nay N
iM RfARn. PtoRRR BNRBk yRUT •# ter RRRWRRyr A
m An

A O C A R R I E R S , a w all
Mtabilthed and growing con
Irai Florida bated company
otters you:
PSoml Annual Pay Inert****
a Stop Oil Pay
* Unloading Pay
•VacationPay
a Safety Bonus
espouse Riding Program
OAver age Trip S-7 Day*
* Let* Model Conventional
Tractor*
If you hav* 1 year* tractor
trailer, OTR and snow and Ice
experience plu* a good driving
record, call:
_______jMMTMeS*______

SALES COUNSELOR
Oeklawn Park Comotary end
Funeral Homo I* looking for 1
full Unto employees for proneed counseling. Call Data
Myars....................... m 41*3
SALES

LOVE CLOTHES?
A sales/management career
c a n be y o u r * w i t h
M U LTIPLES cotton knlls.
Buy your own wordrobo ol
substantial discounts whllo
soiling porl lime or full-time.
_______ 404-7IB4U7______

ELECTRONIC TECH

Word processing tor bonk
consulting firm, protlclon) In
MS DOS, Word Pertact 5.1 and
Lotus. Speed A accuracy a
must. Bright, airy ofllct
(Lake Mary Commerce Cen
tar) Resume; 14* Commerce
St. Suita XI, Lake Mary, FL
&gt;1744-4117_______________

SUMMER HELP
$ 2 0 0 -3 3 5 0

71— H &gt; j p W a n t e d

• "iBSWiar
-

1 1 - n n M

S

Fra* A p U c a l care,
tatlon, courtsallng- private
doctor plu* living txpensr
B ar 1217115 Call Attorney
..l-ESMtT-MM
ENRLISH Family looking tor
Am erican "G odparents."
Pleas* writ* to: Mr. B Mrs.
David Unas. *1 Ulvarscrott
Rd.. Chaeylesmor*. Coventry,
IBZ, England.
Ei ‘
CV3-5EZ,
27— N u n t r y A
C h ild C a r t
ABC SMALL DAYCARE Babies
and toddlers. 1 hot meals.
E«coIIonI rets. tto ^ M M lX
CHILD CARB • Lake Mary
Blvd. B 17-12. 'Exp. w/all
ages. 'Fenced yd. ' Planned
Acllvlllet. Personal car* and
allanllon lor your child.
m-t77«...... ...................Kelly
For E x c e lle n t ..
Professional CHILD CAB I
Services, toll M l 1005.______
HIOHLY EXPERIENCED In
font car* In Hidden Lake.
lli-teso 4C's end licensed
M IC H E LL E ’ S HOUSE • I lf
PER WBEKI Open 4:XAM-U
Mldnlghll 3217*15 13*1-10

43— LadaI StrvlMB
fTw ^ream ptotaUbouTsor^
Ice or products? Coll Smiles
MSSMt Also, legal resesrch
41— M o n t y to L t n d
S liL S D U C r
Hava 1 Place to Pay) Slash
Monthly Poymontsl Oof Cred­
itor* Off Your laefil Easy
Quel l ht-No Collatora)taa-TW

L tg ii N o tlc f

Security Officers
Call Mr. Aril* MFISM
T h feji not a job plectmonl

FRIDAY A M M T W 0 A Y
3 2 3 -3 1 7 1

______

s

m

* j * * * L

AOO TO T4MR INCOMB
I f LL AVON NORM
C A L L W M M O a rM M m
AO I NTS-AVON. la m to 10%.
No door/doar. Guaranteed
40%discounts, tondl M l) 1*1

AGCNTIRCAL ESTATE!
Nothing succeeds like success.
We’re well Into ovr 3rd decade
of training successful agents.
No Ikentaf........... Wo’llnalpt
WATSON M A L T Y CORF
REALTORS_________MI-MO*
inataMefi
fwf S^WWI^XvsfS^ sswewriwFir
For rotldonllal change outs.
Hiring now. Rxportonctdonly.
Ml-4411 orlHOM I

AREA REPRESENTATIVE!
M id International comp, with
growing monthly tele* seeks
f/t, p/l ores rep*. Upward
illty, benefits available.
Coll Tam Nr tap*. M2-IS4S
ASSEM BLERS - Hand mall
work. I) par hour. Never o
feel Help Personnel, tie-eret
* * BUYOB S I L L * a
TUPPIBW ARI
_________Ml-SSI)_________

C AR H N TIR WANTED
Need general construction ex­
perience. Own transportation.
Please call Mike. D P 4701

CARPENTERS NEEDED
144-4414 No telle attar 7am
CARPENTERS
All phases. Up'to IlS/hr.
407-4)4-4X1 Refundable Fa*

CHILDCARE
Part A Pull tlm* petlllont.
■— .a MUST............. MM4M

CNA
Far M D .’s Office 32T7741

V

Sanford, Leka Mary ore*.
Excellent pay benefit* avail
abW. 407-044-415)__________
SERVICE MAID hiring In Al
famonta. Great pay. bonus
and monthly paid profit shor­
ing. Drlvors paid mltaaga
Experienced only....... M U M )

VIEW LAWN CARE,
Saak* raipanilbl*. careermindedIpartan
poteen tor
l I opening In
WB O FFER:
fljh '
PFald Training
• Great Banafln
• Excellent Compensation
Flan
•Advancement
W R R IR U IM i
a Lawn Cate or related
experience
•Good Driving Record
•Quality Minded Individual
a Quick Learner
Pleas* call Mr. Joyce *t
MI-4M)________________
H E L P W A N T B O , OOOO
WORRIES Report S:X AM
Comer of Park Dr. and 17-43
or call MS-74S5___________

if it C

O O N **

NOTICE OP
CONDEMNATION HSARINO
TO: Preparty Owner*
or Infer*tted persons of
the following described
Christmas Around the World
property
props
now hiring. Froo *500 sample
logo I Description of Properkit. No Investment. Also
IX ff of Lot 17 (Lett W 100
&gt;: N If
booking parti**, iso fro*
Hi) Robinsons Survey of an Addn
merchandise and more I
to Sanford PB 1 PO f) at
_______ 447-W-41M_______
recorded In Sanford, Somlnole
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
County, Florida
Musi hav* Long lorm Car*
(oka; toil W. nth Street)
experience or oxporlonct
Report No: 10-01
working with geriatric* In an
Owner: Simoon Austin, Hairs
acuta car* tailing. Salary
C/O Honrlott* Austin
bated upon oxp. Drug froo
101) W. llth Street
workplace. Contort DtBary
Sanford, PL » n i
Manor, (4*7) 44R44S4. 4* N.
Tho building or structure lo­
Nwv 17-41O*Eery FI M71)
cated on the above-slated prop­
erty has bean found by tho
Building Official ol fha City of
Sanford to bo In unsanitary,
unsafe, dilapidated or un­
inhabitable condition.
YOU A R I H IR E BY NOTI­
FIED that a Condemnation
Hearing will b* conducted by
fha Board of Commissioners of
tha City of Sanford on tha 12th
day ef June, im .o t 7:00 p.m. In
fha City Commission Chambers,
Room 117, Sanford City Hall. X0
N. Park Avenue, ten ford, Flor­
ida. to maka full determination
whether or not the building or
structure located on the abovoslated property thall ba con­
demned.
You or* hereby ordered to
appear before the City Com­
mission Condemnation Hearing
to b* hoard and present your
tide of tho cat*. You have tha
right to obtain an altornay, at
your own expanse, to represent
before Ihe Board. You hove
right to call witness** on
your bahatl as wall os to
crott-oxomln* all othor witN o tlC R
nesses. If you do not appear, lha
City Commission may proceed
F l o r i d a *’Ta t i m r u i h b i
without you.
all contractor* ba regisSorqd
Should tho City Commission
or carflflad. To verify a ifato
determine that said building or
contraclor* license call
structure thall be condemned, II
M04-J42-7440. Occupallqnsl
hat lha power to Issue an Order
Licenses era required by th»
ol condemnation requiring you
county and can ba varlftod by
to cause the building
ding or
structure to b* demollishod and
removed or placed In a slate el
sound repair within a lima
R s m o d B lI
certain.
RES./COMM.
Vinyl Siding ,
If tha building or structure ar*
Alum. Framing, Dry wall,
not demolished and removed or
Door*, Hoofing, Concrete.
repaired within such tlm#
M M O J L O h lt o L C B C I f N ia
ported, then such building or
structure will be demolished end
removed by Ihe City and the
cost of Iho some attested at a
NEED CAB A/C work donrt
lien against tha above-slated
Call U*.
«n nwv* H x n p n w ii,
to. Wol
dryers, evaporator*. Tlx bail
lT"you have any quttllont
price* In tovml Auto Klpg 1)19
concerning Ihlt maltor, pleat*
contact lha Building Department al 1407) 130-545*. SHOULD
YOU D ICIO I TO A P P EA L
CA B FEN TIB All kind* (
ANY MATTER CONSIDERED
repair*, painting 4 caramlc
AT THE ABOVS HEARING.
III*. Richard Orost..... M1147)
YO U M A Y N I B D A
VERBATIM RICOBD OF TH8
PROCEEDINGS. TESTIMONY
t
o
e
s
AND EVIDENCE WHICH R E­
I F R I N R 1 CLllWIWlT" IffCORD IS NOT PROVIDED BY
outside Rentals. A|M wk)y.
TH I CITY OF SANFORD. (F.S.
rata*. Windaw*. tael MI-1711
M4.0I05).
P E R S O N S WITH D I S ­
Cow cf l t
ABILITIES N BfO IN O
CAFTAIH e O M C R lfl, Wayn*
ASSISTANCI TO PABTICIBaal, I Man Quality OpwaPATB IN AN Y OF T H U S
ttoml — — ---------------P R O C E E D I N G S SH OU LD
CONTACT TH I PERSONNEL
OFFICE AOA COORDINATOR
AT &gt;101414 41 HOURS IN
ADVANCE OP THE ME I T INO.
Publish: J u n til S July 2.1M)
-V / . I
DEFIM

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER
CDL license. Only neal anil
clean aooly. Cell SJ4 3411
.•

Warehouse Person
For Longwood fastner dlsln.u
ulor. Fastner experience prF
forred. Heavy lining require.
Good driving record, talorj
based upon experience Houte
2;}0
4:00. Full company
benefits Apply 4 5. 1431
Stonewall Place.
Midway Commerce Center.

WAREHOUSE
Full Time Permanent
Day and Night Positions
In Sanford and Maitland
S5 per hour. Never a fee

HELP PERSONNEL, 629-0201
WAREHOUSE
Full time, pari lime. Up ip
IS.15 per hour. All shlf(s
available, 407-41* 4101 Relundabls Fee____________

WELDER/FABRICATOR “
Ornemenlal metals, steel,
aluminum, etc. Layout, cut.
wold. *7/hr. and up. Call for
appolntmonl...............

7-Eleven
We Have a
jQB "IN-STORE”
Fot Y0U»”

TELEMARKETERS
Permanent And
Temp Positions
Company will train people
with phone skills, Exp., not
necessary. Hours Mon-Thun.
S 4PM] Sat.. 4AM 1PM Flex
Ibl* on hours when perma
non!, Salary plus bonus
Sr. dllien* wtlcomodl
Never A Feel
Help Personnel sw-noe

TELEMARKETING
5 SPM. E Z Money. Lota of
Funl Call between Ihe hours
I S. Mr, HaskellolMl-lM*

ll
Sub contractor*, paid por
sana. Alto Exp. Installers.
Pood 4*. 404-7*0)5)4_______

VETERINARY
TfCHS-Customer Assist.

LEAD TEACHER

Pert lime, weekends, Techs
mutt be exp. animal handlers.
W* need dependable and
mollvaled people who love
anlmaltl P.V.S. provides allordabt* Vel services ell over
the stale ol Florida. If Intar
ested plaes* call Denise:
1X4100________________
WAREHOUSE AND OINERAL
LABOR H E L P NEEDEDI
Bonus tor drivers. All shifts
available. Dally pay, no too.
Report ready to work 5:Xam,
Industrial Lebor Svc., 1014
French A v. No phono colls

Far three yr olds. Experience
required. M2-7e05 EOE_____
MEDICAL

LP N
Fu ll lim e, 7-1 and 11-7 Charge
Nurse positions. Experience In
long lorm core highly d*
slre a b lo . D rug f r e t w ork
p la c e . C e n t a c li D e b a ry
Manor, SO N. Hwy 17-41, Oebary, FI M7I). *44-441*
M E D IC A L

LP N

F U L L AND PA R T - T I ME
HOURLY POSITIONS on 2nd
and 3rd shift (7 employees on
3rd shllt)
w-

s

• Flexible hours
• Benefits
• Paid Training
• Promotional Opportunities
• 1)4 Increase attar X days

If you have a dynamic
sonallly and good math ablll
ty, Apply today at:
Store lTWO 4005W. S R. 44 s\
74* I51V
Store *259/6 HO Lake Mary
Blvd
3)1 4043
OR ATTEND OUR JOB FAIR
ON;
Saturday. June I*. S a m -4
p m at Store 35*74

M/F/O/V EOE

73— Employment
_____ Wanted___
PROFESSIONAL private duty
M A L E CNA Responsible,

dependable Steve M3 2341

THI S W E E K S

11 PM to 7 AM shill, pari tlm*.
apply In parson: Lakovlsw
Nursing Cantor. 414 E. Ind SI..
Santoro.

ME01CAL RECEPTIONIST
Experienced, tor busy ortho„ . M R U ~ * ll lc a In L a n g -

Nursing hemV '49$ IVfdnc*
preferred. Apply In person:
La ktv lew Nursing Center, *14
E.tndSf., Sante*._______

"THINK 'N PLAY” Full tlm«
doyc are teacher needed
MS-M44
;;

SECRETARY

Will train. 407-424-eiol
Refundable Fa*__________
• IN IR A L

F U L L T IM E

n-nn—

71- Htl p Wanted .

71— H t l p W a n t e d

A rtfX rA fts Show
Sot. 4 Sun. 4 5. 1-4 4 Lk. Mary
Blvd. Bob Ivon* Forking Lot.
Shirts, cows, decorator lloms

M O ffM M T M
Full tlma, experienced prof.
Musi ba hontsl, dependable,
outgoing porsonallly. FART
TIME FRONT OISK CLERK,
flexible hours Inc. wook-ond*.
w i l l t r a i n . I mm e d i a t e
employ mtnf. Apply today I
SvporlMrtol, S.R.Mand 1-4

SAT. • AM-1 FM....1413 Key Avi
I black east of Summerlin
erlfn
off Hwy 44, Housahold llem
im4

4

qpull and children (girl*
clothes, end toys
r' 1

GARAGE SALE
Frl, lllh • Sun.. Mlh 44. Kid's
clothes and toys, furniture,
household Items. Devonshire S45ChOlSOa Rd. Longwood

IN OUR BARN
Rain or Shine. Frl. 4 Sal. 4 4.
575 N. El der Rd. Lake
Monroe, MULTI FAMILY

NURSING ASSISTANT
7-1 and I'll. Must b* certified
or oxp. with corlHIcoflon
within 40 days altar employ
ment. Drug free workpiece.
Contort Dabary Miner, so N
f 17-42, O lbaryFL 44*4414

•GARAGE SALE AO BARGAIN
Coll In your garage solo od by
13 noon on Tuesday and toko
advantage of our special
garage sal* ad pricell Celt
Classified now tor detail* I

Person
Part tlm*. Typing, light b
keeping. Call In fha mom
hours. Mr. Janos....... M l 7

SAT. $-3
147 Edgewatar Cr, Hidden Lta
Baby Items, drapes, lln*n{
pictures 4 mlsc,
»

SATURDAY ONLY*
Plenty ol goodlesl Variety
things tor Father’s Day
W. I4lh Street, 9 AM 7

4

YARD SALE

!

Jeep Laredo. Ce|un boa(
clothes, mlsc. lit N. Orange
Ava., west ol 1-4.

Thurs. and Frl., 4-T

*

322-M ll

C

----I3omoTEr~

r/trtl/M

MASTI
Rath
IIR4BI14M.:

Flooring
TURF TBIMMIBt-Lgw rotas,
Fret •*!., Res- 4 comm. I
^Imo/jytound^Rrt^yMJlM

Im IDWOODF LOOSING
lartaN Sanding FtoHMna

M s to n ry
TWF MASONRY, Brick, Block,
llucco, Concrelo, Ronovotlons. Lit./Ins........... MI-1444

AL DOCS IT ALL
Fix It right.’ Ll«'d/lnt. From
tfarf to finish. Carpentry,
plumbing, •toclrlcat. and
roofing *vc*. 1) yr*. of experi­
ence. No |ob toe big or small.
CallM*-743)*f 3&gt;4-XM34hr*.

OutildR Lighting
R B F U C K Forking lot, pole 4
bldg, security lights. Paint 4

• ssa ^B
Hit

IX FIR IB N CED In all p h « t
of til* Installation. In*.,
^ fw lw le JIlsp rk e v JX ^ LB

T rtf Servico
CLH

TRIB

Llc/lnsured. Nobody doefcV I
better I Sr. discount 3)4 *73#!
ECHOLS TREE SVC Lie's, i
"Lol the Protasslonels do j
Freeesllmstet.......... 33)1

CuJYoSTRIiklTINO by Jeffrey
Inf.- oil., Ilc.d’, In*.
FraaEsflmota*.......... Ml 0145
K I N FAINT ANO REMODEL
FroaEsllmatasI Rsf*.. lie.
No lob foe small 1444-4141

IL* 4.4.T1111/ a JL-

mu MY

P a o o r H a n g in g
F A o M W A L Ik o i ' paper
hanger. M yr*. exporlsncol
Rsferencst. Speclollilng In
residential. Courteous prompt
sarvlcal Call 487 3M-1MQ

T lm # is m o r w y
But It only lake* an Inatontto
call a ctawlAed aakapata^n
and gst your rocrchandtat

Plumbing
F n n w n r T in n r T iJ B
SERVICE • Free estlmota*.
IK. KFC02I454 S74-OOBV Tom

V,Bi/ r/

nn
i

/ t i l l

•&gt;.

SERVIC.

/

I &lt;
I

/\

Ih I \

/f/ss///t'//

/ft/
t 'J J

_322»2S11

^ / fJ//’ Is
J i t

/ /

f

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Friday, June 18, 1M3 - 78

91— Apartments/
House to Sturt
C O M F O R T A B L E , I A F I apt.
convenient to town. *71/wk.
Inc. util. No deposit. 1} step
program p xso n pro t. 114 **57
C O U N T R Y IR T T IN O . MJO/mo.
tor all. Lk J***up area. C arter
oriented perton pref. M I

U v i n ’s Landing
I A 1 BD RM . V I L L A !
R B N T TOOWN
C R E D IT NO P R O B L E M
A p p lic a tio n ! tor 1 B drm .
Homea Now Being Accepted.

323-4923
♦3— Rooms for Rent
C L I A N ROOM I, tingle sterling
(7 1 /w k . K it c h e n , phene,
laundry, vldee gam es, a ll
street perking 1144411_______
I X T R A LOW R A T H
I F I C I A L I Room! at 145/wk.
C a ll M l 10*4, evening*
P U R N I IH I D B IO R O O M with
kitchenette. I per ion. Utllltlea
formatted. A/C, atove, refrlg
e r a t o r , an d d o u b le aln k
*75/wk. O il o l 17th St. at 245*
Magnolia A ve............ 211*3*3
U K I M A R Y /tA N F O R O . Lg.
room , bath. M atu re adult
UC/wk. Kitchen, etc. avail.
■' Nice aplltbdrm home M l-I1 H
SAN FO R D . Furn. or unturn.,
S ip /w k . Includea u lllltla a .
Waaher, dryer, pool i l l 1151

*7—Apartments
• Furnished/Rent

MARINER'S VILLAGE

Lake Ada i bdrm, siao mo.
2 bdrm, $410 mo and up

323-8870
N E W L Y R E M O D E L E D Apt!.
In Sanford Hlatorlc D ill. CHA,
Fplc., new kllchena. $175 400
p iu iu lilllle a ................Maeoao

Quiet Single Stovy
Caaaleberry. I bdrm. A 2
bdrm .. A ttic Sloregel C all
Joan lor appointment, **44777
Q U IET Sanford 1 plea. I bdrm.
apt, A/C. S2l5/mo. Rat's requlred, M l 5534 alter 4PM
SAN FO R D ’ S Beat Kept Secretl
P o o l A L a u n d ry , I A 2
bedrooms. Convenient locotlonl Call Pat, M l 4450_______
Sit* M O VE S YOU IN. Sludlos
and I bdrma. available.
Casselberry location.
____ Call Melissa, 4tt *114

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

NOTICE
A ll rental and real ealata
advertiaementa are aub|act to
the Federal F a ir Houalng Act,
w hich makea It Illegal lo
advertlae any prelerence, llm
. .Itatlo n o r d la c r lm ln a tlo n
baaed on race, color, religion,
tea, handicap, fam ilial atatua
or national origin

LA BO R F U R N IS H E D
A P A R T M E N T . I bdrrrv, util.,
t u r n . , u p a t a lr a , p r iv a t e
entrance. Newly painted. No
pel* *175 » deposIlM l 1*17
N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D Apt. In
unique aelllng near downtown
U lll. paid, rat.’a no peta. iiso
mo............................. m i one
SA N FO R D - large 2 bdrm. apt.,
Complete privacy 1 STS per
week plua 1100 aecurlly.
■•
Call 311717]
SANFORD. I bdrm, adulta / no
peta. A ll elec., modern, air
t l t f and up. S200 dep. M l M lf

9f—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rtnt
C O N VE N IE N T A N D SPACIOUS
C A L L O E N E V A G A R D EN S
APTS......................... M M S M
DOWNTOWN SANFORD . 1 and
2 b e d ro o m a v a ila b le .
■ L a u n d r y . N e a r lo l a
s is s a s / w k a ta a n i__________
L A K E JE N N IE A P A R T M E N T S
I Bdrm. Apia. Available. Free
watar/gaal 174-5557_________
1 M O E I BDRM.. aunkan living
•* f m , Fplc . quiet on 1/4 acre,
.very dean, garage. $400 mo.
. Include* water, Iraah pick up
No yd. main!. 214-IMS alter I

tea-ouaiw?*8®

9f—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

CA R R IA O B HOUSE, Charming
and Clean, t bdrm., AC, $100

month Plui deposit. 121M15

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
DOWNTOWN • Huge 4 bdrm., 1
bath. 2 kllchena, single lam lly.
t4 0 0 /m o ., 1100 d e p . 414
Palmetto..............Lee M i- M il

HUDHOMES
From tltO dow n-W H Y REN T ?
The H llllm an Oreup, 15M4M
L A K E M A R Y • Nice, cent. H/A
1 bdrm , My bath, blinds,
fenced yd. Lake M ary schools.
1400 plua sec. 104 444-1170
L A K E M A R Y . 4 bdrm. 1 balh.
Corner lot. 2.100 aq It. Close to
shopping and L a k e M a ry
schools. Call Evelyn 114-1441
P R IM E LOCATION. 2 story, 2
bdrm.. CHA. Fplc., Lg. Kit. A
Yard, reflnshed. wood floors.
MOO month plua deposit. Referenceal M l 1*55___________
R E N T OR L E A S E PU RCH ASE
1/1 w/eppllancea. C/H/A. on
le .ice d 1/1 a c re , garage.
5575/mo; 1/1. appliances, fplc.
garage. tS50/mo Paul, Vanture I Properties 111 4744

Stenstrom Rentals
O SAN FO RD 1/2 Apt. lg. rooms,
aern. patio. CHA. Clean. Ilka
new I $425 mo. $100 sec.
• L K . M A R Y 1 /2 c o n d o ,
w/slngle garage, fplc.. Lease
w/Opllon. 1745 mo. *750sec.
• SAN FO RD 2/1 Apt. W/den.
F p lc ., S ltf m o . $100 sec.
Slenstrem Realty, Inc.
"We Manage your Heme,
like It was our own." Jim Doyle
111 1444 4IMr SPM i 110-1405

UN-SATIONAL
UMMER LIVING

COEVILLAAPARTMENTS!

U K I M A N Y .' 1 bdrm., cent*
H/A, w ell «• w all, carpel, tr
blinds, celling tana.
io.tol4 7M
A u K l ta a ^ li
■
a d eo ., 3
1 B
I Bath,
be
OMv ied
b d rm . S
aarago, good schaato minute*
from Sanford. Fa r more In
torm atlancalli
The Oaks Petto ttoose*
__________ 3M-II1S_________
SANFO RD . Madam . S bdrm..
cent. H/A, cerpert, laundry
rm.. near el 1*1*5/me. M4
SANFORD. L a rfe dup4ai. 1/ 2,
fenced w/garage. $471 mo. 1st,
.............
last, tic * sec. M
4*4
477*M
1 B D R M O U F L I K . f i t Park
Ave. *2*5/me., etc. dep. •
_________402-423-MS*_________
3 BDRM .. t Rato, Scm. porch,
CHA. a ll apple., I w/carport.
*5IS mo. 333-4404 alter*

107— Mobil#
Horn— /R#nt
I B D R M , MeBtto Mease tor rent
in Mullet LB. Ffc. on I s le t Or.
*37Jnto.................*14-337-1312

114—Warehouse
Space/ Rent
LONOW OOD/LAKI MA^YM id »i m aterete warehouses.
400-*00-1400 aq. N. Free rant
w / llm e . toa*a.fram(14f/me.
SE C U R IT Y W AR I HOUSE - 44A
end Old Lake M a ry Blvd.
*1.250 • 3,000 IR. II. OfHe/warehouse 'Fin ish e d of*
lica ipaca a h a availabto.
KapaaBa Realty. i- W M I lt

IIS— Industrial
R tnfili
B I A R O A L L M-1. I0.055M.I10
aq. H. w/offlce*. sprinkled, OH
deers. *3.0* aq. It. Ite nair ans
Realty Jim Otyto333-3*N

117— Commercial
_____ R in fi it
CHEEMTYPEPUI
Sanford, historic downtown
area. Ready toga. *475/me.
_________w m - u u _________
SAN FO RD - MO N. l l m Ave.
20.700 tq. ft. w ith elllcee.
B rick • truck M. - sprinkled.
440V • I phase service. LI.
menu, or distrib ution d r .
S2.50II. M2-IS3*_____________

P H A O R V A A S L O W A IIW *
, O e v 'l F o re c lo a u r e a ,

Re

os/Asiume
iiu m e
Ras/A

No
Na Qualll)
Quality
ameel
financing.
-------Owner1 llnandi
i, Vdutia.

lealardlexthenso,Ml dawn

O B i■**«♦*&lt; t / l . appliance*.

toncadyard, cerpert, ill,too
eRenovated like now3/1. fplc..
appl., new paint. 555.S00
a Peal Rama. 1/1 on cul da sac.
Oarage. 147.W0
•3/1 en Vk acral Renovated.
appliances, fenced yd. 141.100
• V I Vk, 11MIR ft. Ilka new I Llv,
dlnlno. fam ily rm , *71,to*
•4/3, toncad, garage, 554,too
A dR g Ni g P9r CigglHIgR I
•3/1 on t / l acral Fenced, cul de
sec, dead end afreet. *44.too
Additional homea avail. L e tt
than *7K down I

PAO LA, 4/1 en an 1.14 acre*.
Feature with stable. II If.fCO
L b . M e ry /L e n g w e e d F e e l
Heme. 3/1. garage, living,
dining, fern. rm*. Ml.500
Lb. M ary peal Hama. 4/3, living,
dining, lam lly rm,«l0».t00

11G—Offic#
Spict/Rtnf
N I W Sanford elllcee and/or
werehouae*. 400-2.100 aq. ft.
Special, &gt;341/me. 3M-1554
SANFOBO, Office apace. 5400
aq. It. building tele), 1100 aq.
II. per olllce unit. Mi-Teas

123— For Lm

m

T R U C K IB I* S F 0 C IA L. Place
lo perk truck, work on truck.
Fenced security. Power and
water evlleble. MI-03S3

141-Homos for l i l t

S • I»

’ • o il. T i'* 1 •
S T A R T IR O R R B T IR B II 1
bdrm. b lx k home. Perch,
workshop, cat-port plus extra
te ll Consider leate/opflonl
O nly............................ S4f.N0

321-075*...........321-2237

i II s f * at

IV

' • III f I SI i I

NICB 1 bdrm. home, central
H /A . lg. co rn e r let. new
p lu m b in g . Inside p a n try ,
formal dining rm. Only 41,JO*
B N JO Y T H I CO U N TRY ATM O S P N R R I ottered by this 1
bdrm. 3 bath w /fam lly rm . on
almost l/ t acre I Ratted patio
overleekagekat............ 51.500

B T

h

STAIRSPROPERTY
M A N A O IM IN T A R IA L T Y
407-M3-7M1/314M7*

36

, i A ir

h a n d le ?

C

‘

mo* property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.
• W IN T B R P A R K C herm erl
Lovely 3/1V* w/new paint, new
r o o t , c o t y b r k . , F p lc . .
Breeklett Booth In Kitchen I
*127.4001
• ASSU M I-N e Owalltyl Great
Rental Income Propertyl Live
In ene-renl the other 1 Good
C a ah Plow l.................*47.sooi
• WHAT A BUVI Cut 1/2 In
Hidden Lakes on a quiet Cul
De Seel Spill Bdrm. Plan, Eat
In Kitchen A Sern. Porch I
*45,5001

CALLANYTIME

3 2 1 -2 7 2 0
M M Park Dr., lan iard
441W. Labe M ary B L. IB . M ery

____•iaOerSTtkYssr*

Beautiful
Apartments to
H ave and to
H old ...

•enfold Court ipaitm anta
’ OMgtoStory D e sign -N oon a
• Fitoraty on-elto Menage*
above or below
• Unique Apt. Extra*
• Btudtoe, 1 AEBedrm .
• Seourtty • For Your Peace ol
Alfontoblo Ape/kneote
MM
• FumlehedA/ntomlahed Bludtoe

3901 Sanford Ave., tenford • 339-4901
H o u r*: M -P, B • 6, Sal.. 1 0 - 2

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts.
1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
1 month FREE

I X C N A N O I OR 1 R L L your
property located anywhere I
Investors Realty. 77*5415
L K . AAARV • 3/2 with lam lly
rm., lg. treed let. 4*5,000
W. M e iicre w a ki.iM T to i

LOOK

JaMtMimfiEld, 323-7271
A A C e rm * . Inc.. 231-1134

O n t u iK 0

Sanford 1/Hk
b lx k home,
good condition124120*4
IN I A A A F LI A V I . M L R OR
H I N T W /Optlan. clo t* lo
K h M lt , thopplng, l/ f , living
A dining. *20.000. **4-522-0212
*2 H O M S* ON I LOT. 1/2, lam
rm. A 2/1 l x Mom .140.*001
• C A S S 1 L B IR R Y 4/2 Tr#ai. Cul
O* S x . Terms. It*, opt. OUT
STANOING DOt.tOO.

133—AcreageLot»/Sale
O C A L A N A T 'L F O B B I T ,
Weedtd le n t U.fSO each, no
money down I S7 M l t

137-Mobile
Hornet/Sale
N IW mi'll Low down A Inter
t i l l 14X70 *17!/mo. 74X70.
1110/mo. 145170*

B E A U T Y SALON. 1 wat Its
Ilona, good L x a tlo n l Priced
to sell I 1110144 Iv .rrig

143— Duplex for Salt
R E N T w/OPTION to buy. 3/Hv
each. Appla. LONGW OOO.

111—Appliances
/ Furniture
A + BEST A P P L IA N C E S NOW
A T F L E A W ORLDI Row W 7
Buy/Sell/Servlc* appliance*.
Free delivery . 114 1145
• A N T IQ U E M A H O O A N Y 4
d r a w e r ch ea t, p o r c e la in
knobs, doug tell io ln lt 140
O BO........................... 121 4540
RRD. B rel* queenilia, ortho
mattraaa. new still In tax.
Coat *1000. 5*115100.111 7145
• BOOKCASE. While formica,
dean* easily. Great tor child's
room x anywhere you need a
whit* bookcase. Priced lo tell
at orily SIS Call M I SS**

219—Wanted to Buy
O L O S B W IN O notion* and
kitchen gadgets. H I 140* leave
messaoe

183— Computers
IBM, PC Compatible, monitor,
keyboard. 5% dltk, software.
printer. S175QBO. I l l 4411
444 SX Mint fewer, w/4 Meg
R AM , Sup*' VG A Monitor,
keyboard, mouse. A H P Desk
Jet SOO printer, 4 mo. old.
Sl7QOOBO.IH-447ttv.msg.

M l—Good Things
to Eat
U PIC K PSA S, M 00 a bushel,
S ip e s A v e . S t. M a th e w s
C h x t h ground. F rl. A Set.
V g O B T A B L I S . Pole beent.
snap beent. pee*. c x n , end
okra...........................123-1M l

INDIANS. Lincolns. Jallersoni,
Buffalo*!. Dimes, halves. 10%
below bid. Eek *e7-lll-*4*4

211— Antiques/
Collectibles
-D E A L E R S P A C E A V A ILA B L E * Aunty M a r y '! A n ­
tiq u e !, 1441 F re n c h Ave,
117-42) Sanferd. W# buy one
placa/anllra e ila le il 4*4-7744
D R ES S E R A B U F F E T , both
Tiger Oak, antique. S200*ach.
1X17115

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. *2, Oeytone le e c h

S x lo u tly leaking tor • nice,
clean, used c a r t D I P I N D A B L I . Omen payments s i
lew a t t i f f include*, lex A
till*. Cell!

FUES AUTO SALES
■e e 317-2891 ★ ★
TAREUPfATMERTS
NO MONEY DOWN

222—Musical
Merchandise
OROAM . 3 keyboards. Good
condition. N ice ter sm a ll
church. *100 » 4 &lt;17* 4-7 P M

223—Miscellaneous

_____ Poultry_____

205—Sfemps/Colm

graat. Stood* U tondx and
bum px. !•*. «t »i,*oo m is s *
• C H E W CITATION, 14BI. V-4.
■ufo., A/C. *1.000 mil**. Exc.
cond. I *1.2*0*440*7*________
• CHEVY CAMARO • '77, R«
built V*. tot* at m w partsl
tlO M O B O . M lO tM e n y flm e .
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL '*1.
Like m w . Must sell. Only
*24,000. c « ii ( x r i m m t
• F O R D L T D • '45. 4 door,
•xc e lltn t condition. B v x y thing m w . 02,0001221410
• FO R D T H U N O ER B IR O • '44.
A ll o rig in a l! Needs tern*
w x k . &gt;1,4*5 OBO llt-O IM
L IN C O L N C O N T IN IN T A L
S ig n a t u r e S e ri* * . 1*1*.
M etallic blue. Owner deeper•te**.*50.................... X » t J lS
M E R C H D I I 14* M , lt*3.
M.300 10.000 miles. Excellent
condition.................... 241-1707
O L O IM O B ILE TO RNAD O ,
i m . Low mite*. Fully paw•red. *2,000 080321-070
P O N T I A C MOO S T I , 1*04.
Loaded, 70.000 mile*. 12.000
OBO........................... 323-7174
• PONTIAC 4000 • '04. IU Z U K I
ratery Mke. SUZUKI HtMog
b e e t/trsllx , 'I*. Moving Sale I
SI.IOO takes all. 324-717*
PU B LIC AU TO AU CTIO N*
E V E R Y F R IO A V 71to P M

SNOUT Of C M NT

• A N S W B R IN O M A C N I N E .
Conelr, like new SIS 1214421
• D IS K , w tlnut lln lth wood.
A T T E N T I O N C A R FbaR O
1’4 " X IT * - 4 deep drawers.
Buyers. C elluer car phone
*50.00.407-130-11SS__________
• B IK E . 10 spaad. Gray. Hutky,
193—Lawn A Garden
mens SIS.............Cell 121-3402
BOOM BOX • X F x c e , breed
O O A R D IN P I R T I L I Z I R ,
(ww. Reg. l it * New t lt f. M
hors* manure. F R I I • bring
M a t Fawn 4 Jewelry. 114-4*14
your pickup................1717*03 (
• C A R O U S IL HORSE Replica.
HONDA self propelled mower
N t e r ly a c tu al site . Hand
Seers elec, tdger. Cell eves.
paInled 1100.124 1440
__________ 111-1517__________
• IM PO R T E D S E R V IC E l x *.
M T D M U L C H IR /S H R IO O E R .
Yellow Italian dinner dishes
Like m w . 5100 C ell alte r]:*)
1100..................
J10-0711
• L U O O A O B . A m e r ic a n
193—Mechinery/Tools
T o u r l t l e r , 3* Inch b lu e
hardtlded. Built In w h x lt and
O I N I I S U P I R L I F T . 24 It
built In pull handle. Keys and
Good condition. New cable.
combination Ix k . Used twice.
110 4710
Selling lets then hall price l x
S4S............................. 222 *475
199—Pets A Supplies
• PICTURE WINOOW. Apeirox.
72 Inches by 50 Inches,
i. eluml
alum i­
A D O R A B L E Kittens, F R E E lo I
num Irame. Delivery possible.
good home I Call 14* 2175 leave
*45......................Call 1300*0*
message please I____________
M u i R V wr N iff S a il
E L IZ A B E T H R A U O H
Dog
Seat* 5. portable, never used.
training. 25 yrt. expl Private
'WVcedar
geseba.’ wwMrwvtor
or Group. Call 1115145
—
Hghl.SI.S75407 MI-7717
■
• M IN IA T U R E DACHSHUND.
• IBARS I HP compretax, 12
Male, 4 yrt. Free to good
gallon lank with hose and
home. Ideal lor adults. House
SATA spray gun $100 FI RM
Irelnad....................... 14*21*1
__________
221-7*5*__________
• M IN IA T U R E SCH N A U ZB R.
U N ID E N V IO B O cypher II.
10 months old. Good welch dog
stereo satellite receiver and
and good with chlldran. Naedt
dish. 2 y rt old S*00. Craftsman
fenced yard to run and play.
r
ld a a n d m u lc h L A W N
A ll shots and wormed. SI00
M OW ER. 10 HP. 30 In , 5 tpd
Pleete cell f x more Into
SSOO. S E A R S 2*04
__________ 111 *444__________
L IP B tT Y L E R M X T sxardte
o MOV INO BUT Psts C an'll
tra in e r. Ilk* new 4400. 3
Dog end Cat, young, adorable
SOLID OAK bar steell w/
mixed breed Spade end tholt.
ca n t backs, custom mada
Indoor Outdoor p e lt great
beige upholtlery. 5150.
w /k ld t. F R E E TO GOOD
lie -*441 leave m ettate
F A M IL Y I 111 12*4
• W O O D EN S A W H O R S B I.
Great f x hobblat x crafts
203— Livestock and
5100 each................... 124-171*
CORNISH HENS. 2 l i b t lt a c h
IS4 Weklva Park Drive
111 4014

CHEVY VAN C-$e. tNS. Rum

_______ R M to g tl_______

113—Television/
Radio /Stereo
•C O LO R TV.
Work* gleet
140............................. 111-1745
•INLINR PRSQUIMCY
counter l x CB x ham radio*.
* digit, I ’ Qvolt 175

231— C e re

a AIRBO AT, 14ft. Orastheppar.
140 HP, Lycoming new megs.,
3 propi, trailer, 11500 Celt
M l 5405x121 7170__________
• SAILFISH IT*. IN I. 17 f t . N
hp, depth Under, accessxles.
B x t Ire ltX . *4.000 IH-S42*
• SKI/RU NABO U T, 14 ft. MS
Evlnrud# outboard. Baron
trailer. &gt;1,410 414 5*M_______
W IN N IR -1 7 B e t* M a t 11'
tSOHP. X P Evlnrud*. 1124
volt trolling m o tx , Tern llm
tra lltr. Hummingbird depth
Under. 54100 111510*________
• II FT. O U S S T R O N and tra il­
er. SS H P Evlnrud*. Excellent
condition 151,5001215111
• It ft. EOW RIDBR
I4S H P
I/O, About IS bra. Immacu­
la te ,w / lra lle r.c o v e r. M u lt
5oet 410,000 OBO 227 451*
• 1440 B V IN R U O E BLT O out­
board m o tx . 1.1 H P Vory
good condition, 1751114517
• 14*4 SKI/FISH Beet. N H P
Merc., w /treller. Rum great.
SHOO. Partial llnence. 44$ 740*
M . 1* FT. SFO R TCR AFT. Open
flshxm en, IISO M C Seedrlve,
55*00 Consider trade f x |et
ski x Flat! boat. H 1 0 » 4

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipment

ONLY$21,0001!

140— Business
_____ For Sale_____

D A Y E B O . W H IT E Iren and
brats, ortho mattroat. new
d ill In wrapper, and pop up
trundio. Wat SSOO. Sacrifice
$100.111 7145.______________
HUTCHES. C h trry wood. SSOO.
OSO. Blond* wood. SIS0. OBO.
Good condition........... 121*241
K IN O S U B w atx b e d . Good
condition, couple y r t old.
M l r r x and headboard 1175
O B O ........................... 124-7214
M A T T R IS S A N D BOX springs
double alt* seta lor set*. Greet
value I STOaet.............. 11104*0
• Q U E E N S U B w a te rb e d ,
sturdy tram*. Great condition
MO OBO..................... 1210547
• R E C L IN H R -R O C K B R , tx c .
c o n d ., B ro w n p in s t r ip e ,
o v e r t lu lfe d m a te rie l. SIS
110-1701___________________
• S L E E P E R SOFA. Rattan and
ovenlutled 575 22112*4
• STOVE, OB. Almond. M ilcleenlng, e lectronic tim er,
excellent condition S100 Cell
114 0*57 after 4 P M
• T O S H IB A M IC R O W A V E .
Touch control, solid ila lo .
Good working condition. S40
__________ 11147**__________
T R U N O LE IS O . Brand nowl
Baaullful, white w/ spread.
rutile, and them* 4*4-7114
U S ED EBO O IN O S A L I H King.
O u xn . Full A Single. *45 a Sel
A Upl L A R R Y 'S A M rU M -a iM

213— Boats and
Accessories

tr*.

N O O O W N P A Y M E N T TO
IE D B U Y E R S I IN
QU■ AR LEIF
S T R A T E A T 7.5%
F I K I D . Gov't rtp ot. bank
torecloaure*. attum e no quali­
ty mortgegeal Low monthly.
C all tor detallal

C A L L I A R T R I A L B IT., INC.
________ 1407) 222-74**________
I B D R M . , 2 B A T H . N ic e
neighborhood with pool and
tennis courts. Double garage.
New A/C. I7S.000 attum * no
q u a lit y V A lo an , 145.000
belanco. A t low at 13.500
down. Owner w ill hold 2nd.
Weekday* 4150101 or week
end* (407) 241 74*7

STENSTROM
.

BATEMAH REALTY

II,' W

3 3 0 -1 4 3 1

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

TrigjMARejd

M A I L U K AI

2580 Ridgewood Av«., Sanford

KIT 'N* CARLYLE® by U rry WrlXhi

230— A n t i q u e / C l a s s l c

______ Cere______
• PONTIAC Flrablrd 1*4*. Ona
ow narl G aragadl *2K ml.
Nlca. $4100 407 122 44M
1*11 BUICK. R atteraab kl Call
B ill l x all detallsl SIOOOOBO.
_ 1 2 M 4 7 7 _ ^

231—Ceri
BUICK SKYNAWK. tto*. 4 dr.
A/C, PS, crulta, till, low ml.
axcal cond &gt;1.100.........144-4172
CADILLAC SEVILLE • Iffl.
11.000 m llat. loaded. Tip lop
shepel SI*,000121 *404_______
• CA M A R O RS+ convertible,
1*1*. 11.000 mile*. Excellent
condition.................... 1221*03

Except tax. tag, title, etc.
IN I OLDS CUTLASS C U R A •
4 d o x . auto, air, itoree. raelly
a nice c x I O N L Y H 4t.M p x
month.............Cell M r. P a y M

CEErtuiUlEAClM. 333-1133
a llt !
extra* &gt;7.100.............. m - m i
IN * PONTIAC Plara OT, rebuilt
V*. Red. M K Mile*, warranty.
LO AD ED . $S*f&gt;. 321-1741
31 C H I V Y F e ll u . W*«e«.
diesel, feod cond.. cold AC.
new tire*. STOP. 223-3431
• M C H I V Y C e v e llx Station
wagon. AC. auto. *2.000
________ Cell 3*44*22________
*7 L I N C O L N T s w n c a r .
Signature, E xce lle n t Cond.
*7500.221 4114x144*527
• M L I BARON convertible,
rad. leaded, dig. dash. 7SK ml.
*7000. Partial finance.**$7*00
H C H I V Y Celebrity. AC. Auto.
4 d o x . Good condition. 51K
mile*. *1500. Firm . 2M4M7
o n J E E P ip s rt Auto. PS. FB.
A C . a la r m . , w h ile . U K
ml.(15,200. Like new 121-M M

233—Auto Parte
/ Accessories
• C A M P E R TOP. Aluminum,
black, good condition. 1100.
233-1411 ■'
b A i k k A k l l a s s e m b ly ,
, lf / 3 - lt u O M Vk ton track with
3.01 to I ro ll* goers. New teals
end brgs. DOB 331-4047
T O P F I R FO R S M A L L TR UCK.
0115 x b * * t offer
__________ 331 M70__________

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans
• C H I V Y CUSTOM V AN
M.
loaded, captains chelrs, good
condition. S4.500122 7224
F O R D H U S - 1*71, O O O D
CONDITION. *1.200 C A L L

322 7*0*_________

FO R D IM I ton ftatked • IN I.
Oood condition SI,*00 Coll
o tte r* P M ................. .223 *17*
• H A N D IC A P P I D VAN . t**0
F x d E-ISO. Lift, eutomellc
dox* $2 000121-141*________
ISUZU 4x4 P I C K - U P ,'ll. 5 spd,
I0K ml, « cyl, A/C, custom
In le rlx . St700H)*«15

Sanferd Motx Ca
I N I J E E P C J i - 4 cylinder. 5
speed, hardtop and e lr I
Cell 222 a m

241— Recreationel
Vehicles/Campers
2* FT. i m DO DO I RV. low
mil**, sleeps *, stove, shower,
Irldpe. *4*00.221 022*________
•22 F T I L DORADO m o tx
home. '7*. New awning, tv.
runs great. M.200 M l-Ttt*

We ll Advertise Your Car
(or other motor vehicle)

EVERY DAY TIL IT S SOLD!
\

s

\ '

/

3 linos for only

$2 1 2 4

(additional lines extra)

Ad must include phone number and asking price. If vehicle hasn't
been sold in 10 days, call us and we'll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is raining except for price. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Ibday!
Sanford Herald

�I I I

S I - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, June 16. 1093

BLONOIE
' S ib

P! I

Hormone pills treat
cancer of breast

TO PICK

DEAR DR. GOTT: Please dlshormone therapy for breaat
cancer. I've started this regimen,
yet I can't find very much
Information about It.
DEAR READER: Many types of
breast cancer appear to be stim­
ulated by the female hormone
estrogen, much as graM grows
more abundantly on a lawn that
has been fertilized. Thus, for
decades doctors have attempted
to treat breast cancer with
hormones that compete with
estrogen.
Originally, the male hormone
t e s t o s t e r o n e wa s used e f ­
fectively; however. Its side ef­
fects were unacceptable (facial
hair, deepening voice, acne and
other masculinizing signs).
In the past few years, after the
discovery o f tamoxifen (an an­
ti-estrogen hormone with few
side effects), the treatment of
breast cancer has been revolu­
tionized. Tam oxifen Is now
standard therapy for women
who have (or have had) breaat
malignancies. The drug Is ad­
ministered In pill form twice
dally.
Side erTccts, which are mild.
Include hot (lashes, nausea and
vomiting. This Is not surprising
because, as an anti-estrogen,
tamoxifen produces early meno­
pause.
Inasmuch as you have started
therapy, you are entitled to
Information about the drug. Ask
your gynecologist about this or better yet - request a package
Insert from your pharmacist.
The manufacturer of tamoxifen
Includes with each package a
detailed summary of the chemis­
try. Indications, effects, and
complications. Your doctor can
translate the technical terms for
you that might appear In the
Insert.
DEAK DR. GOTT: Can you
describe whut polyneuritis Is and
what medications arc available?
DEAR READER: Polyneuritis
(also known as polyneuropathy)
Is Inflammation of nerves. It can
result from trauma. Infection,
malnutrition, diabetes, kidney
cum

by Arl San»om

TH E BORN LOSER
r p€G0TA

\ 7 s0 T A K £ A N

SPUTTING

IV

}

I G E T S (D £ E f F E C T b W H E N l

^

ASPIRIN 1 ^ 1 --------------

W £

M P lR tN !

THEY Give
HEADACHES!

H C A D M H t!

i n '

h

2=1
0

W

by Charles M. Schuli

PEANUTS

PIP YOU KNOW THAT
0LACK0EARP, THE PIRATE,
BURIEP A ll HIS 60LP
HERE IN THE PE5ERT?

ANP THAT 0LACK0EARP
ONCE SPENT THE NIGHT IN
A MOTEL IN NEEPLES?THAT'5
WHAT SOMEONE TOLP ME..

by Howla Schneider

EEK A M EEK

CO06RESS DOESN’T FfcSS
LEGISLATIOW THESE DArS
WlTHOOr T^ M oTO SE/JD
A MESSAGE EITHER TD
THE PRE5IDOJT OR THE
RJ6LIC...

I'M GOING to SEKJD
(tyjGRESS A TELEGRAM

1 INJAAJTTO SEAP A MESSAGE
THAT THE WAV D SEAJD A
MESSAGE IS BY SEWOMG
A MESSAGE

■

failure, cancer, overdose with
vitamin DO (pyridoxine) and a
host o f other causes.
However, regard Ic m o f cause,
the nerves cease functioning
normally, with resulting weakneM, tingling. Io m of sensation
and other symptoms.
The diagnosis Is usually made
by a neurologist uHlng a battery

ACROSS
1 Greek Isttsr
4 A c c tj.
• 1S48 confersacs sits
11 Bscoms
slsctrlcslly
charged
13 In good work­
ing
18 Howerd —
Silva
18 Composer of
Solero
18 QsNup —
19 80s ssglo
3 1 Impollts
22 Symbol for
tin
23 Opens
28 Organ of

order

hMrtng

20 tostonole
31
33
34
37

writing
Drudge
Roman 101
Julius —
S o rts gsntly
and smoothly

30 No. of ft. tall
4 0 -------- on thd
back
42 Irsland
43 Shads has
48 Lumborlacks’
asms
48 Can. prov.
80 Handle
ro u g h ly

81 Socrst agsnt
84 Slngar —
Pinza
88 Typs of
wheat
88 Sons
89 Lunch, In
London
81 Volcanic rock
83 Understand?
84 Symbol for
samarium
88 At tho pries
of

DOWN
1 Qo on horse­

back
2 Whits frost

of tests. Including nerve con­
d u ctio n v e l o c i t y studies.
Treatment depends on the un­
derlying dlsense or Injury.
A n a t r t r to P re v io u s P u z z le

U U U LSLI

UULHJU

U U U U L U U

U U U

lJ

U U

□L5 11.11LI hJLHJLI (JU
UUU
UUUUU
UUCJ
UUJULJ U U U
LHJLUd
IJ U U U
U U U L IU U
UUUU
IJ U U U
UUUUUU
ULJUU
LLIU LIU ILHJLi U U U L 1
U L J U [ilU C J U U U U U
(J U U U U U L J U I J U U
U U U U L J k J l JLHJW LJU

tn ii.ii.in

Hiini.in

3 Running
4 Russian
kings
8 Musical show
6 Christmas
Itsm (2 wds.)
7 Similar to
8 Circuits
9 Cut of baaf

10 Everyone
12 Negative
prefix
14 — Paso
17 Kind of
choose
20 Unclothed
24 Space sgey.
28 Vsllow ochsr
27 Mspls genus
28 Ascend
29 Rapetltlva
sound
30 Information
32 Hold on
roperty
38 ollcs al&lt;isrt
fabbr.)
38 Apparel
38 Excavates
4 1 English
atreatcar
4 4 Pises o f
cutlery
46 Swalllnga
4 7 Part of small
Intestine
49 N ot hard
82 8omewhat

r~ r~ r n
w
n~

P

mus.)

t

84
88
87
60
62

'■

Ilvsr In
Belgium
— Tu, Bruts
Sharp turn
Hotel dlv.
T w o , Roman
Supposing
that

**T — IPQK__________________
|

J

........... ■ ■ ■ -

queen (a dlumond Is no better).
Declarer won with the king,
Stephen Leacock wrote,
crossed to dummy with a club to
"Anybody who has heard cer­
the Jack, ruffed a spade, played u
tain kinds of performances on
club to dummy's queen and
the concertlnu will udmlt that
ruffed another spade. Now came
even suicide has Its brighter
the diamond king and the club
aspects."
In bridge, (here Is n concertina king to dummy'll ucc.
South had won nine tricks:
play. It Is featured In today's
two spude ruffs In hand, the A-K
deal.
of hearts, the A-K o f dlumonds
Against four hearts. West led and three top clubs. Left In his
the dlumond Jack. Things looked hund were the 0-8 of hearts and
like plain sailing to South. He the diamond four. Eust had the
won trick one In hand with Hie J-IO of hearts and the diamond
diamond king and played a seven.
trump to dummy's ace. Howev­
Declarer culled for dummy's
er. West’s dlscurd wus a rude spade Juek. How could East
shock. Suddenly there uppeured defend? If he discarded. South
to be four lncscnpablc losers: one would rufr low for his 10th trick.
spude, two hearts and one Uut when Eust ruffed. declurcr
diamond.
discarded his diamond loser. He
Hearing the strains o f u con­ hud u trump trick (o come.
certina being played In the street
South was pleased he had
outside. South hud a clever Idea. been ublc lo concertlnu two of
He led a spade off the dummy. the defenders' tricks. However,
Eust won and returned the heart neither East nor West fell suffl-

By Phillip Alder

by Jimmy Johnson

AR LO AND JANIS

1H0&amp;G.Y0UDG WOMEN
^ OVfcR T H E &amp; E __ _

(^WHATABOUTTHEAfJ

(

By Bernice Bede Osol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
June 10,1003

by Bob Thavos

FR A N K AND ER N EST
“

• -A*;:

/
•

C

im s

TAKt o u t A PAY UHTlL tlT V tf

rne AttscurTion

*U H f OUT Of THir
ttMASt A Ntw
STUDY.

PMA/MACY
-Th *

% •

v«*

6 - lfl

• t« M by NBA. * *

G A R FIELD
F IF T E E N /1 C A N T

AMW MBf

by Jim Devls
( H O W 'S I T G O IN G /)
V ^ /O L P M A N ? J Z S

r y

^

m

.

&amp;

S i g ni f i c an t d e v e l o p m e n t s
could be In the olTIng for you In
the yenr ahead where your
' ureer Is concerned. The type of
promotion for which you've
always hoped may become u
reality.
GEMINI (Muy 2 1-June 20)
Your two most promising areas
today arc career and finances,
yet there may not be uny direct
relationship. Independently you
should do well In both. Know
where to look for romance and
you'll And It. The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker Instantly reveals
which signs are romantically
perfect for you. Mall $2 and
along, self-addressed, stamped
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 446S. New
York. N.Y. 10103.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Today you might have to handle
a situation very similar lo one
you re ce n tl y handl ed suc­
cessfully. If you do what you did
previously, all should come out
well.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There

could be a spill over toduy from
things or situations you com­
petently managed for others. If
they come out well, you'll do
okuy yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You’re a very good negotiator
today bccuusc you're able lo see
things from (he other guy's
perspective. The good tilings
you'll want for yourself, you’ll
also want for them.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct. 23) Your
possibilities for fulfilling two
Important, ambitious objectives
look very good today. Once one
Is nailed down, the others should
quickly follow.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
little apple polishing or priming
of the pump might be necessary
today In order to win over
someone special who Is perti­
nent to your present plans.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Double check your budget
and resources today, because
you might be ublc to And a way
to do or get something you’ ve
been wanti ng but felt you
couldn't afford.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You'll be prepured to face

clcntly
suicide.

p a i n ed

to c o mmi t

NORTH
J 7 62
A 5 4
♦ A 1 J
♦ A Q J

t- il- H

♦

V

EA ST

W EST
♦ A9B53

♦ K q 10
v q j io 2
♦Q 76

v...
♦
♦

J 10 9 5
9 6 5 2

♦ 10 4 3
SOUTH
♦ 4
VK 9 8 7 6 3
♦ K 4 2
♦ K 87

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
S o u th

W e it

4V

N o rth
1 NT

E a it
Pau

Pau

Pau

Pau

Opening lead: ♦ J

Issues squarely toduy and deal
with life on rcnllsttc terms. This
constructive uttlludc will cnublc
you to make very sound de­
cisions.
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20-Feb. 19)
Properly bundled tills could be u
red letter duy for you financially.
Focus your cITorls on situations
(hut cun offer favorable returns
over an extended period of tlnibi
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Being the person In churge is.a
role you should pluy In yopr
Involvements with others toduy.
Don't leuve Important mutters
up to Ineffective peers.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Something might be going on
behind the scenes today re­
garding u matter about which
you've been concerned. It looks
like It rnuy be bundled better
thun you could yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Plaudits muy be uwarded today
for the wuy you conduct yourself
with your peers In sticky devel­
opments. Your tactics will be
appreciated and admired by all.
(0 1 9 9 3 , NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

Lsonard Starr
ROBOTMAN*

by Jim Meddlck

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                    <text>Sanford Herald
Serving Snnford, L n k c Mnry and S em in o le C ou n ty sin ce 1900
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FROM

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AND

ACROSS THE STATE

Juvenile violence escalating
MIAMI — Tclcdync Industries and two of Its executives have
pleaded Innocent to charges they exported material used to
make Iraqi cluster bombs.
Also Indicted In the case are Chilean arms exporter Carlos
Cardocn, who is believed to be In his homeland: Cardoen's
Swlssco Management Inc.; and two of his employees.'
Tcledyne, headquartered In Los Angeles, Is accused of
hipping 130 tons of weapons-grade zirconium to Cardoen in
shl|
he 1980s In violation of U.8. export laws. Cardoen allegedly .
the
used the material to build 24,000 cluster bomba for Iraq.
Appearing before U.S. District Judge Shelby Hlghsmlth on
Wednesday were Teledyne's zirconium sales manager Edward
A. Johnson. S3, and fellow employee Ronald W. Griffin, 61,
both of Albany. Ore.
They remained free on 880,000 bond after pleading Innocent
to the federal Indictment.

Autopsy confirms murdsr, sulclds
PALM BAY — An autopsy shows the deaths of three
members of a Palm Bay family were a double murder and
suicide, police said.
Police detective Clark Maara said Wednesday the autopsy
showed that Rodrigo Selles, just recently fired from his
part-time Job. shot his wife Joan, 39, and 12-year-old son
Dylan, before killing himself.
All three died from gunshot wounds to the head.
The bodies were found Monday after Mrs. Selles failed to
show up for work. A semiautomatic handgun was found near
the bodies of Selles and his wife In their bedroom, The boy's
body was found In another bedroom.
Rodrigo Selles was fired last week from his part-time Job as a
park attendant and groundskeeper with the city park's
department after he criticized his supervisor.

Angry youths esuss 92300 dsm sgt
ORLANDO — Youths angered over a sold-out reggae concert
caused some 82.300 in damages In downtown Orlando, police
said.
Police who dodged a barrage of rocka and bottles on
Wednesday arrested 13 people for disorderly conduct and
battery on a law enforcement officer.
Authorities said Dekko's nightclub and South Trust Bank
each sustained 8500 In damages. An Orlando TV news van
received 8300 In damages and city damages were estimated at
81.000.
The problem began about 12:05 a.m. Wednesday outside
Dekko's when the club became full, leaving several hundred
youths outside. According to police, some members of the
crowd became disorderly and began smashing In the cashier's
window und doors of the club.

Driver’s licenses revoked for solicitation?
ST. PETERSBURG — Pressing their war against prostitution,
police now want to revoke the driver’s licenses of people
convicted of soliciting prostitutes.
"Thut means riding a bus to work," said David Llndaay, an
ofneer helping organize the new program. "If you’re a
salesman or a plumber or a carpenter and your Job depends on
that motor vehicle, you probably have a real problem."
The latest tactic In the aggressive campaign to combat
prostitution Is likely to become as controversial as tome of the
department’s earlier efforts
FoKexample/the names of people convicted of prostitutionrelatcd.crlmca.will be broadcast orithe city'a cable television
station.
" Even bciore the show debuts, police officers aald "JohriT”
have become more cautious. "Johns” Is the term used by
prostitutes for their customers.

Screws found In Diet Pspsl esn
JACKSONVILLE — A sealed Diet Pepsi can containing a
metal screw has been found here, but federal officials
discounted any link between the discovery and recent report*
of contnmlnatcd cans.
"It Just sounds like a quality control problem." said Randy
Brlngger. of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's office In
Jacksonville.
Janice and Regan Askwlth told investigators Wednesday
they noticed something rolling around Inside the sealed can
and had It examined with an X-ray machine at a local hospital.
"I think (Pepsi) ought to clean their doacta out and find out
what's going o n /' Janice Askwlth aald.
Brlngger said the X-ray appeared to reveal a screw, probably
from a machine used In canning. The can was turned over to
the FDA.
The screw likely came loose from the beverage filling device
and slipped Into the can. said Pepsi spokeswoman Becky
Madeira from the company's Somers, N.Y., headquarter*. A
code on the can will point investigators to the plant where the
can was filled.

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h*;'JiVr

"As long as wc keep relegating our
nation's societal problems to a lower strata
of concern, we will not diminish violence In
TAMPA — Juvenile violence is escalating
our society, we will Increase It." she said.
In the stale and Florida Supreme Court chief
"We're being too shortsighted If we
Justice said It's no surprise considering the
continue lo believe that Issues of racial
easy access to guns and the violence kids
Inequity. Issues of taking care of our
see on television and In movies.
-Rosemary Barkelt children ... are parochial and less Important
Rosemary Barkctt described a boy who
than the environment or building roads.
was abused regularly by his alcoholic father.
The 95,000 Juvenile arrests reported In Success in (those other) areas Is meaning­
The abuse culminated with (he father
■hooting his son, causing permanent dam­ Florida In 1990 were up 7 percent from the less If our children won't be around to enjoy
previous year.
age td the boy's arm. Ut)."
From 1982 to 1990, murders Involving
"Violence Is all they know, and It Is
After her speech, Barkelt was asked what
Inevitable that they turn to what they Juvenile suspects reported to the state Florida should do to address Juvenile'
know," Barkelt said Wednesday at the Department' of Health and Rehabilitative violence. She said people must stop looking
opening, of a conference sponsored by (he Services rose 151 percent. During that same to the Legislature or the Judiciary for
Florida Mental Health Institute, the Univer­ period, rape referrals Increased 72 percent, solutions.
sity of South Florida and the Florida and robbery referrals Increased 144 percent.
She challenged (he conference partici­
Barkelt said, In reaction to the escalating
Department of Health and Rehabilitative
violence. Florida and the nation must make pants — educators, counselors, police and
Services.
government officials — to trv
try to find
Barkelt cited figures claimingg a Juvenile la
arrested for murder In Florida an average of detention and the trend toward trying solutions every day. She urged them to view
the problem as a challenge.
Juveniles in adult court.
every other day.
By Associated Press

Executives plead Innocent

f v i o l e n c e is all th e y
know, and It Is Inevitable
that they tum to what they
know. ■

Sergeant
asked to
rove
Reritage
By Aseeeleted Brass
TAMPA — A police sergeant
has been asked to prove his
ethnic heritage after fellow
Tampa officers complained he
switched from white lo Hispanic
on a promotion list.
But Sgt. Robert Guldara. 39.
sa id W ed n e sd ay th e c ity
approached him In laic 1988
asking him lo consider changing
his ethnic classification.
Guldara, who wns born in
Rome to Italian parents, said the
city's employee relations ofTlce
"Initiated It and encouraged it to
look good on ... statistics,
Thrpugh their own recruitment
effort. 1 agreed lo II. Now (hey
want me to prove It (o them. I’m
totally perplexed."
Being a minority or female
sometimes con make (he dif­
ference In promotions In the
llce department. And the city
a Its own goals for promoting
minorities.
»
Guldara. a supervisor on the
"cwparnirciirs "srmiarug squad,
said he-alway* has considered
himself an Italian American,
But because his wife Is His­
panic and his daughter bilin­
gual, Guldara believes federal
guidelines allowed him to switch
fom white lo Hispanic shortly
before being p ro m o ted lo
sergeunt In 1989.
"I contend that I have a
legitimate, legal und elhlcal right
to Identify myself as Hispanic
based on legitimate bloodlines
and cultural Identification." the
15-year veteran said. "I am
proud of who I am and of my
selected ethnic affiliation."
A person's race or ethnic
classification Is left up to the
person, not the "scientific defini­
tion of anthropological origins,"
according to federal Equal
E m p lo y m e n t O p p o rtu n ity
Commission guidelines.
guidel
"An
employee can be Included In a
group to which he or she ap­
pears to belong, Identifies with
or Is regarded In the community
as belonging."

K

?

Herald Photo by Jim Hoppi

Blazing glory

one used by an automobile dealership.
Conducting the burning, loft, Legion Sgt. at
Arms Tony Bruno. Assisting him Is Legion
member Bill White

Ovar 200 American (lags were burned in Flag
Day ceremonies held Monday at American
Legion Post 53, In Sanford. Flags ranged from
small ones used at csmetarles to • very large

Airman sentenced for mailing
liquor into Saudi Arabia
By Associated Press
MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE - Boxes
addressed to Ihe enlisted chief of the military post
office at King Abdul Aziz Air Base In Saudi Arabia
uftcr (he Persian Gulf War looked suspicious (o
one of the postal clerks.
They arrived once or twice a week by registered
mall, each wrapped with brown paper and
weighing 45 pounds, for Senior Master Sgt.
Charles Hamilton.
"Most people who are deployed here don't get
that many boxes." clerk Joy Barleen told military
Investigators In December 1991.
On Wednesday, a military Judge sentenced
Hamilton to up to six years in prison for having
40 cases of gin and scotch mailed to him between
September and December 1991 after the Persian
Gulf War. He sold the liquor on the black market.
Alcoholic beverages are illegal In the Muslim
nation.
"I sold It to civilian contractors," Hamilton said
Tuesday as he pleaded guilty at a court-martial.
"I'd take it to their houses in downtown
Dhahran."
The judge ordered Hamilton to serve four years

of confinement and two uddltkmnl years If he falls;
to pay a 875.000 fine. Hamilton also was reduced]
to airman basic, the Air Force's lowest rank, and;
will lose nil pay and allowances.
Hamilton will be allowed to retire, but his;
retirement puy will be the lowest possible because-:
of the rank reduction, tlumlllon. 39. a 21-year
veteran, had been only one stripe shy of the Air;
Force's highest enlisted rank.
He had faced a maximum of nine years ln:
prison and a punitive discharge, which would:
have disallowed retirement benefits, for violating;
federal postal law and mllltury orders againsij
selling, transferring or drinking alcohol In Saudi;
Arabia.
Hamilton, who now lives In Valrlco near]
Tampa, took In more than $60,000, getting 8200;
fora 1.75 liter bottle or 8100 a liter.
Security police discovered u bottle of liquor:
near a friend's bed during a routine Inspection.;
Investigators soon heard of drinking parties ln[
Hamilton's quarters.
U.S. Customs agents at Philadelphia Intcnia-j
tlonal Airport then opened a package with a blank
declaration form attached. Inside wus 843,450 In'
cash, four watches und assorted Jewelry.

THE W EATHER
_______

Cash 3
0-4-0
Play 4
76-3-8

Thursday, June 17, 1993
Vol. 89, No. 293

Today: Partly sunny with a
alight chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. High around 90.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Tonight: Partly cloudy. Low In
(he lower 70a. Wind east 5 to 10
mph.
Friday: Partly cloudy. High In
the lower 90a. Wind southeast
10 to 15 mph.
Extended forecast: Saturday
through Monday: Partly cloudy.
A chance of ahowers and thun­
derstorms east coast anytime
and m ainly afternoon an d
evening elsewhere. Lows In the
lower to mid 70s. High* In the
lower 90a except mid to upper
80a east coast.

c ity
Daytona Beach
P t.L a u tB a a ch
F o rtM y o rt
O alneivllle
Jac keenvilla
Kay Watt
Lakeland
M iam i
Tallahaataa
Tamps
Vero teach
W. Palm Saach

Pet
74
St
00
74
M
n
W
7t
tt
mm
.mm
V . *7
J9
.00
M
a
7t
*0
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74 *1
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74 St
m
«»
N 71
71
M
•tt
M
71
•7
71 .00
to
7* .t

Nt
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&lt;7
n

THURSDAY
P tly eld y 90-70

FRIDAY
Ptlyeldy 90-70

SATURDAY
P tly eld y 90-70

SUNDAY
P tly eld y 90-70

BBaBM W
HBhhmkr

o
FULL
J u ly 3

U

i&gt;sB*wdB

Deytoua Baachi Waves are
2*4 feet and rough. Current Is to
the north with a water tempera­
ture of 81 degrees. New Smyrna
Beaehi Waves are 2-3 feet and
rough. Current Is to the north.
With a water temperature of 81
degrees.

St. Augustine to J u p lta r Inlet
Tonight: Wind cast lo south­
east 15 knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet.
Bay and Inland waters a moderate chop. Widely scattered
ahowers and thunderstorms.
Friday: Wind southeast 15
knots. Seas 3 to 5 feet. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Widely scattered ahowers and
thunderstorms.

Ptlyeldy 90-70

7T
'.".'VLiuaSS
The high tem perature In
Sanford Wednesday was 88
degrees and_ the overnight low
was 6V as' reported by the
University of Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
Recorded rainfall far (he
p e rio d , en d in g at 9 a.m .
Wednesday, totalled 0 Inches. .
The temperature at 9 a.m.
today was 80 degrees and
Thursday’s overnight low was
72, as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□ W i t o i l i y 'i high.......... 89
□Bar— Mtrie pressure.30.14
□Relative Humidity....77 pet
□WteSs....... ......Beat 12 mph
□ R ain fa ll.............. 10 of u IS,
□Today's euaaet*****8:28 p.m.
'* #UUri*#,...8«28

Ttm peralurai Indies)* prtvlout day'!
high and ovarnlghl low to IIp.m.
p m. EOT.
ED
City
HI Lo Prc Otlk
H A a
cdy
Anchoraga
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltlmoro
B illing!
Birmingham
B lim arck
Do Im
Boilon
Burlington.Vt.
Chartaiton.S.C.
Ovar le i ton.W.Va.
Cher lotto, N.C.
Choytnno
Chicago
Clovt land
Concord.N.H.
D a lle iF t Worth
Donvar
Do* Molnoi
Dot roll
Duluth
Honolulu
Houtlon
Indiana poll!
Jack ion, MI m .
K a m a i City
L a i Vaga*
U til* Rock
Loa Angolot
M em phli
Mllwaukoo
M p li St Paul
N aihvllle
New Or teem
Now York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoonti
Plttiburgh
Port lend. Maine
SI Lout!
t a ll Lake City
Seattle
Waihlngton.D C

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, June 17, 1993 - 3 A

Caught In the act
Sheriffs depullea arrested Alvin C. Williams, 39, with no
local address on Tuesday. Deputies responding to a call
regarding a burglary In progress, said they saw Williams
exiting from n shed. They reported when Williams saw them
approaching, he fled from the area. A K-9 unit was summoned,
and the dog located Williams hiding In a nearby field between
two rows of corn. A search reportedly discovered the man was
in possession of drug paraphernalia. Deputies determined that
lawn tools and electrical equipment had been taken from the
shed, and a pickup truck had been burglarized of a number of
hand tools, Williams was charged with Burglary to a structure,
burglary to a conveyance, grand theft, possession of burglary
tools, and possession of drug paraphernalia.

CCIB crackdown
Members of the Joint City County Investigative Bureau
conducted a reverse drug sting on 5th Street In Sanford
Tuesday night. Marc McDonald, 22, of Lake Monroe Camp*
ground was arrested at 5th Street and Sanford Avertue, and
Wiley Frances Fossltt, 42, of 3421 Hughey Street was arrested
at 5th and Cypress. CCIB officers said each of the men
purchased crack cocaine from an undercover agent. Both were
charged with purchase of crack cocaine.

Domestic violence
Sanford police arrested Ronald D. Hampton, 25, at Ills
residence, 1006 Cedar Creek Circle, Sanford, on Tuesday
following a dispute with a female. He was charged with
domestic violence, battery.

Warrants served
•Jo h n Leon Montagne, 33, of Freeville, N.Y., was arrested
by sheriffs deputies at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
Tuesday. Ho was wanted on six separate Seminole County
warrants for violation of parole on a conviction of obtaining
property with worthless checks.
•Joshua Smith, 21, 970 Charlotte Street, Longwood, was
arrested by deputies at the County Probation Office Tuesday.
He was wanted for violation of parole on a conviction of battery.
• Bruce Qlendale Beck, 21, 500 W. Airport Blvd., was
arrested In Fern Park by sheriffs deputies Tuesday. He was
wanted for falling to appear on a charge of driving with a '
suspended/revoked license, and violation of parole on a
ircvlous conviction of driving with a suspended/revoked
Icense.
• Norecn Ann Lohncs, 41, 385 Raccoon Street, Lake Mary,
turned herself In at the county Jail early Wednesday. She was
wanted for falling to appear on a charge of battery and
domestic violence.
•Charles Dewaync Olllson, 30. with no local address, was
served o warrant at the county Jail Tuesday. He was wanted for
violation of purolc on a conviction of grand theft.
• Edward Seth Slslruck. 19, with no local address, was
served a warrant at the Jail Tuesday. He was wanted for
violation of parole on u previous conviction of burglary to a
dwelling.
• Star Regina Lawrence, 20, of *8 Higgins Terrace. Sanfbrd,
was located at 3rd Street and Avocado Avenue by sheriffs
deputies Tuesday. She was wanted on a warrant for violation of
parole on a conviction of forgery. After she was taken to the
Jail, deputies found she was also wanted far violation of parole
on a previous conviction of side of cocaine.
• Reginold B. Lawrence. 24, 1011 Peach Avenue. Sanford,
was located at his mother’s residence early Wednesday. He was
wanted for violation of parole on a conviction of battery on a
law enforcement officer, and violation of an Injunction for
protection.

f

Trial
moved,
reset
Oy M T LIIOMIft
Associated Press Writer________

TAMPA — Christopher Wilson,
a black New York City tourist
allegedly kidnapped by three
white men and set ablaze,
doesn't care a Judge moved his
trial from Tampa, but he's dis­
appointed at the delay.
"He wants this to be over with,
to get through with It and get on
with his life, and ultimately he
wants Justice to be done," pro­
secutor Eric Myers said after
telling Wilson a defense request
for a change of venue was
granted Wednesday.
Hillsborough Circuit Judge
Donald Evans set Aug. 23 as a
tentative date. Possible sites
mentioned In court were West
Palm Beach. Orlando and Fort
Myers, but later a prosecutor
said Fort Myers was eliminated
because Its demographics were
not similar enough to Tampa.
Three laborers are accused of
abducting the 32-year-old stock
brokerage clerk at gunpoint on
New Year's Day at a shopping
plaza. They allegedly drove him
to a remote field, doused him
with gasoline, and set him
ablaze. One has agreed to testify
against the others.
Mark Kohut. 27, and Charles
Rourk, 33, both of Lakeland, arc
charged with attempted firstdegree murder, kidnapping and
robbery In the attack on Wilson,
who suffered burns over nearly
40 percent of his body.
A note left at the scene read
"One les nigger, one more to go"
und was signed "KKK."
Hillsborough Circuit Judge
Donald Evans cited publicity In
his decision to move out of the
Tampa area TV market. His
ruling came nine days Into
selecting a Jury pool of 00.
Evans had promised Jurors
who served anonymity for six
months after the trial.
Two women Jury candidates
on Wednesday asked Evans to
excuse them saying their ano­
nymity was compromised by TV
news coverage. Even though
their faces weren't shown on
television, frien d s and coworkers recognized them from
profiles.

NOTICE OF ESTABLISHMENT OR
CHANGE OF A REGULATION
AFFECTING THE USE OF LAND
Th« Board of County Commissioners of 8emlnole County, Florida proposes to adopt or change
• regulation affecting the use of land In the unincorporated area shown on the map In this
advertisement.
A PUBLIC HEARING ON THE REGULATION AFFECTING THE USE O F LAND WILL BE HELD
A T 7:00 P.M., OR A S SOON THEREAFTER A S POSSIBLE, A T ITS REGULAR MEETING ON
THE 22nd DAY O F JUNE, 1902, IN ROOM 102S (BCC CHAMBERS), SEMINOLE COUNTY
SERVICES BUILDING, 1101 EAST FIRST STREET, SANFORD, FLORIDA.
AN ORDINANCE PERTAINING TO SKINS AND THE DEFINITION OF THE TERM
'AD U LT BOOKSTORE”; AMENDING THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY; AMENDING THE PROVISIONS OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY COD E;
PROVIDING FOR DEFINITIONS; PROVIDING FOR AN EXEMPTION; PROVIDING
FOR THE REGULATION O F NONCONFORMING SIGNS; PROVIDING FOR THE
REGULATION OF BANNERS, FLAG S AND PENNANTS; PROVIDING FOR ADMINIS­
TRATIVE PROCEDURES AND THE GRANTING OP VARIANCES; AMENDING CHAP­
TER 2 AND SECTIONS S.9S2, 9.963 AND 9.996, LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE O F
SEMINOLE COUNTY; AMENDING SECTION 49.96&lt;B), SEMINOLE COUNTY CODE,
TO ADDRESS THE DEFINITION OF 'AD U LT BO OKSTORE'; REQUIRING CERTAIN
BUSINESSES TO P R O V E * SIGNAGE WHICH INDICATES THAT MINORS AR E NOT
ALLOW ED WITHIN THE P R f MISES; PROVIDING FOR CODIFICATION; PROVIDING
FOR SEVERABILITY; PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.

SKMINOLI COUNTY
kMKXWCNJIlS

Persons are advised that, Hthey decide to appeal any decision made at this hearing, they will need a record
of the proceedings, and, for such purposes, they may need to insure that averbatim record of the proceedings
Is made, which record includee the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal Is to be based.
Persona with disabilities needing assistanceto participate In any of these proceedings should contact
the Employee Relations Department ADA Coordinator 48 hours In advance of the meeting at 321-1130,
extension 7941.
M ARYANNE MORSE, Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners, Seminole County, Florida.

M*'O'tt'M

(LcudL&amp;&gt;—

bv
•Mi* 1

Q

Deputy Cfcm

' " i ,t\'f )

"irmi

Incidents reported to authorities
•Sheriffs deputies report u Jurassic Park Display, valued at
$200. was reportedly stolen Monday from McDonalds Rcstau*
rant. 150 Hickman Drive.
• A 38 caliber Colt pistol and a 22 cnllber Browning pistol
were reportedly Btolcn Monday from a home In Ihe 4000 block
of Francis Avenue In Sanford.
• A John Deere lawn mower, valued nl $350, was reportedly
found Tuesday In the 200 block of Wcklvn Park Drive, on the
side of the road. Sheriffs deputies say the mower hud not been
listed as stolen property.
• A toolbox with an estimated value of $700 was reportedly
taken In a residential burglary Tuesday In the 2000 block of
Hiawatha Avenue In Sanford.
• Sunford police ore Investigating a car Are. Police said a
1984 Pontiac, belonging to a Fern Park man and parked near a
business at 4425 S. Mellonvllle Avc. was totally destroyed by
fire on June 3rd or 4th. The police report Indicates the case
may have been arson.
• An equipment lift, valued at $2,500, was reported missing
early Wednesday, from Sanford Landing Apartments, 1800 W.
First Street.
• A number of small plants, valued at $30, were reported
stolen Tuesday from a store In the 100 block of S. Sanford
Avenue.
• Equipment valued at $100 was reportedly stolen from an
unlocked car In the 100 block of May rose Drive, Sanford, on
Monduy.
• A business burglary was reported early Wednesday, at the
Frlto Lay facility, 1990 C.R. 427 In Longwood, Deputies said
someone had apparently climbed over the perimeter fence and
removed Items from a loading dock. 45 bags of snacks were
reportedly taken, but six bags of potato chips were recovered
near the facility.

AIRPORT AREA LAND USE STUDY
COMMUNITY WORKSHOPS
• g a n d
ST U O Y A R E A

Seminole County Florida

Judge is asked to divide
male couple’s belongings
constitutionality of marriage
laws that discriminated against
WEST PALM BEACH - A gay homosexuals.
’ "I've got my clerks looking
j couple’s “divorce" lawsuit has a
Judge searching for relevant case throughout the nation for case
law and some advocates arguing law," Gross said. "I don't know
, the case shows the need to what I'm going to do yet. It's an
establish some legal status for Interesting case."
"I think this Is a great test
such relationships In Florida.
Without the names, Palm case," Bald Carolyn Karettls. a
Beach County circuit court case Coral Gables attorney who rep­
03*4215 looks like just another resents many gay and lesbian
nasty divorce, complete with clients. "I don’t know of any
allegations of promiscuity, be­ published cases on this. I- do
trayal. emotional blackmail, and know that these kinds of dlsutes between homosexuals
even thievery.
lappen
everyday."
But Judge Robert Gross can't
treat it that way os he tries to
The property lists for Runner
divide their Joint assets and and Skidmore arc hundreds of
liabilities.
Items long: A black leather
Florida courts don’t recognize Jacket, Georgia O'Keefe prints,
the private cerem ony Tom cowboy boots, an extensive col­
Runner and Daniel Skidmore lection of native American
conducted In the Arizona desert artwork, electronics equipment,
on Jan. 18. 1991. It doesn't bedroom furniture, the toaster.
matter that they exchanged Ihe blender, plants, the 1991
vows, and rings.
Toyota Camry.
That would matter only If they
Runner, 45, filed suit May 14.
were legally married, something
accusing Skidmore of running
no state allows homosexuals.
Earlier this year. Hawaii up Runner's credit card bills to
became the first state to move in more than $20,000, then taking
that direction when the state their property. Skidmore, also
Supreme Court questioned the 45, accuses Runner of Infidelity.
6y T M Associated Frees

E

m r-ijW

T H I M M I N O U CO U N TY M M M T M I N T O F PLANNING AND M V I L O M M N T I t CONDUCTING A STUDY O F
TH E LAN D U S IB IN T H I VICINITY OP T H I O IM TR AL FLORIDA REGIONAL AIRPORT. T H I STUDY WILL
EXAMINE EXISTING AND PLANNED DEVELOPM ENT, NEW LAND USB ALTERN ATIVES, AND PUBLIC
FACILITIES REQUIRED TO SUPPORT FU TU RE DEVELOPM ENT.
YOUN PARTICIPATION IB NIQUBBTBD
IN O RDER TO DEVELO P APPROPRIATE LAND USE ALTERNATIVES, WE NEED YOUR ASSISTANCE IN: * IDENTIFYING
IMPORTANT COMMUNITY I8SUES AND GO ALS * E8TABUSHING STUDY A R EA PRIORITIES AND ■ DETERMINING
APPROPRIATE LAND USE DESIGNATIONS.
The p u rp oM M r having com m unity w orkshops Is to prw IM • p ro e m that gives residents and property
ow ners the opportunity to oommont on and eantrlhuta to the plan for the future developm ent of the airport

TU ESD AY JU N E 22 ,1 609 6t00 P.M. - BtOO P A L
SANFORD MUNICIPAL BUILDING
200 NORTH PAR K A V IN U B
SANFORD, FLORIDA

I* DRAFT PLAN P R IIIN T A T IO N
STAFF WILL REVIEW TH E CO N TEN TS OF T H S |
PLAN ANO A D O R E S ! TH E REMAINING CITIZEN

NUM BER POUR * RECOMMENDATIONS AND IMPLEMENTATION
S TA FF WILL DISCUSS PLAN RECOMMENDATIONS
TU BSD AY, JU L Y 10,1002 6(00 P A L . BtOO P.M .
ANO PRESEN T AN OVERVIEW OP TH E
MIDWAY ELEM EN TARY
IMPLEMENTATION STR A TEG Y.
2SS1 JITW AY S TR EET

IN ADDITION TO T H ESE COMMUNITY W ORK8HOP8, PUBLIC HEARING8 WILL BE HELD WITH THE COUNTY COMMIS­
SION TO REVIEW THE AIRPORT AREA LAND USE OPTIONS, COMMUNITY IS8UE8, AND RECOMMENDATIONS.
FOR A D O m O R A L INFORMATION P LEA S E OONTAOT TH E SEMINOLE CO U N TY PLANNING OFFICE, 1101
BAST FIRST S T R U T , SANFOR0, PL 2*771 OR O ALL (407) 2*1*1190 E X T lN tlO N 7907.

�4A - Sanford Haratd, Sanford, Florida - Thuraday, Juna 17, 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
o n f b n l H e r a ld

►

(USP6 481-MOI

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2611 or 831-0003
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATEi

3 Months............................SIB.SO
8 Mootha............................839,00

I Year .............................. $78.00
nmol pay
itsrstssi

E D IT O R IA L S

Kids who carry
guns to school
The Dade County School system has a new
policy against children carrying guns on
school property. Although Seminole County's
restrictions are' m uch better, the Dade
restrictions deserve comment.
Until a five year old policy was reversed,
children In Dade County caught carrying
guns were allowed to continue schooling, but
with rehabilitative training.
Beginning this fall, children over age 16,
with guns on school property, or using guns
to commit assault and battery, will be
expelled.
It was not clear what would happen to
children under 16 carrying guns. That
problem was apparently not decided upon by
the Dade School Board.
The board stopped short of specifying
automatic expulsion for the older age group.
Students will be required to go before a board
to have their case examined.
We can be pleased that Seminole County
has not determined an age differential for
expulsions, A child of any age, with a gun on
school property, la automatically suspended,
and will be brought before the board to
determine If expulsion is required.
The decision was not made easily In
Seminole, nor was It In Dade County. No
doubt, It required many hours of soul
searching on the part of board members, and
probably several cases of gun-carrying before
the matter came up for a decision.
We should be pleased that Seminole
County’s School Board took stronger action In
this situation. It is unfortunate that guns on
school
property has reached a slnt where
----- — —

■ ■“

■

i a re req u ired .

W IL L IA M A. R U S H E R

Have you seen a woolly mammoth?
Much or the excitement over "Jurassic Park"
arises from the fact that cloning dinosaurs is not,
scientifically speaking, altogether out of the
question. We have only begun to digest this fact,
however, and when wc are finished some of Its
Implications arc going to surprise the daylights
out of us.
The fundamental point that needs to be
grasped Is that every cell contains material so
structured that It describes all or the charac­
teristics possessed by the plant or animal of
which the cell was a part. It should theoretically
,be possible, therefore, to produce (or "clone")
from a single cell of any organism a genetic twin
of that organism.
The hypothesis on which "Jurassic Park" is
based is that, although the last dlnosaurdled 65
million years ago, certain Insects who dined on
dinosaur blood were subsequently trapped in
tree sap. This hardened Into amber, was found
by modem scientists, and provided them with
enough of the dinosaurs’ cellular material to
enable them to clone a whole park full of living,
breathing dinosaurs.
Of course, there are plenty or troubles with the
hypothesis, most of them having to do with the
unlikelihood of finding enough of the necessary
genetic material to piece together a whole
dinosaur. (Dinosaur fossils contain no dinosaur
tissue whatever: they are simply rock casts of

dinosaur bodies that biodegraded many millions
of years ago.) But
t h e r e 's n o t h i n g
w ro n g w ith th e
theory: tn fact, a car*
rot has already been
cloned from a cell of
another carrot.
That raises some
v e ry i n t e r e s t i n g
questions indeed. For
example, what's to
prev en t scien tists
from cloning a woolly
mum m oth? These
huge animals, rela­
tives of the modem
e le p h a n t, once
S In fact, a
roam ed over Asia
carrot has
and North America,
already been
but became extinct
cloned from a
about 10,000 years
ce ll of another
a g o . B ut a lm o s t
carrot. J
complete mammoth
bodies have been re
trteved from the Siberian permafrost: in fact,
according to my Brltannicn, "cases have been
reported In which sled dogs were actually fed the
meat fh&gt;m frozen mammoth carcasses." There Is
obviously no shortage of mammoth DNA to use

President Clinton
hits a home run

eye on ways ttf (frfprove the^T
is, which could come from
other counties. Dade however, la not setting a
good example for us to follow,

MARTIN SCHRAM

Bring back
boarding houses

Goldwater urges moderation

A boarding house, a room and board, a bed and
breakfast are all the same song, "A Rose is a
Rose." All smell the same.
In every large southern city there has been and
tn some cities they still have a "Mrs. Somebody's
boarding house" where single ladles and
gentlemen could stay who work everyday and do
not want the responsibility of an apartment or
house, cooking, etc. Salespeople from miles away
know they have a clean room and a good meal In
the evening with friends to talk of old times or of
problems, a ready-made family. If people travel
much they have stopped at Mrs. Carter's, the
Hamilton House, Andrew Homer In Boston, all the
historical Inns which are proud to have them in
their cities. You Just don't ring the boil as a
newcomer to a boarding house: you fill out papers,
you are investigated, only the nicest people are
welcomed Into the family. After that you will
always be "family" and welcomed home.
There are several huge homes in this area that
would make good boarding houses. People could
stay for the senior games and people who are alone
and Just need company at the dinner table would
have others to talk and laugh with on the front
porch. Relax and the world becomes right again.
Just think, on weekends, rest and then go down for
coffee (no food In room), loaf around or Just go out
on the porch or go for a drive, Just waiting for that
6 o'clock call for dinner (you have from 6 to 6:30 to
be seated) after which the dining room is closed.
Small tables or the famous long table In the center
of the room (you earn that right by how long you
have been there, or a vote).
How many large six or seven bedroom homes do
we have near a fine location, but they would be
taxed to death. What do you really have of history
In this area? When can a person returning here say
proudly, "(remember this when...."
Someone talked real good to gel two bed and
breakfast homes (another name for room and
board). That is for transient people, tourists. I'm
talking of boarding houses for people alone, tired of
a big home, tired of freeloadlng children, tired or
being alone at dinner, tired of not hearing another
human voice day tn and day out. coming home
from work to see nothing or no one.
But no, that would make too many lonely people
happy, not tourists, so no money for the tux
pocketbook. Just people wanting human compa­
nionship and a decent place to live. That's what
history Is about.
Mary R. Jolly
Sanford

Barry, we hardly knew ye.
Some of us were Introduced to you in 1B64
by a little girl picking petals olf a blossom
while a voice counted backward to zero and a
mushroom cloud enveloped our black-andwhite TV screens. Others figured they knew
the real Barry Ooldwater after hearing The
Sentence In The Speech ("...extremism In the
defense of liberty is no vice....”) as you
accepted the 1B64 Republican presidential
nomination.

LETTERS TO EDITOR

"Some In Congress think I'm wrong. They
say we absolutely must continue to discrimi­
nate, or all hell will break loose. Who knows,
they say. perhaps our soldiers may even take
up arms against each other.
"Well, that's Just stupid....

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 a single subject and be as brief as possible.
The letters are subject to editing.

By now you probably think (or hope) I'm
Joking, but I'm not. I see no reason why we won't
be able, in the foreseeable future, to clone any
extinct species of which a shred remains. As for
the northern spotted owl, Its survival, If not Its
prosperity, can be assured without the loss of a
single lumberjack's Job, We might even, as a
precaution, clone tne blue whale (though I
wouldn't want the assignment).
From there. It would be just a step to
producing clones of anything that Interests or
appeals to us. Assuming Russia really does have
Hitler's lower Jawbone, we might clone a genetic
twin of the old boy, tight down to his mustache,
and send him on a lecture tour'promoting the
Qospels.

JOSEPH SPEAR

-

LETTERS

In cloning new specimens.
Or what about the extinct giant ground sloth,
which survived in at least one Patagonian cave
as late as 50,000 years ago? 1 have seen, hanging
on a wall In the British Museum of Natural
History In London, a yard or so of bumpy sloth
skin retrieved from that cave. Plenty of DNA
there!
Or how about bringing back the dodo? It was
extinct by 1681. but (again according to the
Britannlca) there Is "a head and foot at Oxford,"
plus other DNA-rlch oddments here and there.

But only now. in your retirement years, have
we been permitted to glimpse and appreciate
the thoughtful, unexplored side of "The
Conscience of a Conservative." Your recent
bold declarations of opposition — to your
cx-milltary colleagues' ban on gays and your
National Rlllc Association colleagues’ tolerance
of cop-killer assault weapons — sent fellow
conservatives a powerful new message:
Moderation in the defense of liberty is no
vice.
Your military credentials (Army Air Corps
pilot. World War II; major general. Air Force
Reserve; founder, Arizona National Guard:
chairman. Senate Armed Services Committee)
add Influence that exceeds that of our present
commander tn chief and pundit corps —
combined! Your legion of admirers ought to be
rethinking their opposition tn President
Clinton's position after reading your unmlnced
words, written for The Washington Post:
"After more than 50 years In the military
and politics, 1 am still amazed to see how upset
people can get over nothing. Lifting the ban on
gays in the military Isn’t exactly nothing, but
It's pretty damned close.
"Everyone knows that gays have served
honorably In the military since at least the
time of Julius Caesar. They’ll still be serving
long after we're all dead and buried....
"The country and the military know that
eventually the ban will be lifted. The only
remaining questions are how much muck will
we all be dragged through, and how many
brave Americans like Tom Panlccia and Col.
Margarethe Cammermeyer will have their lives
and careers destroyed In a senseless attempt to
stall the Inevitable.

"If I were in the Senate today, 1would rise on
the Senate floor in support of our commander
in chief. He may be a Democrat, but he
happens to be right on this question."
Meanwhile, In our urban battlegrounds, drug
gangs are out-gunning cops and murdering
bystanders with AK-47s and other rapid-firing
weapons, as the NRA fights even modest curbs
urged by police chiefs. Once ugain. you. Barry
Goldwater. lent a voice of authority to the side
of common sense. Having posed with your
faxorlte rifle for those "I’m the NRA" magazine
ads — having declared, "I've been a member of
the NRA. I collect, make and shoot guns" —
you've also taken altn at the NRA when you
knew in your heart it was wrong.

'T m completely opposed to selling
au to m atic rifles."
you said a few years
ago, as quoted In The
Washington Post."...
I've never used an
automatic or semiau­
tom atic for h u n t­
ing.... They have no
place in anybody's
arsenal. If any SOB
can't hit a deer with
one shot, then he
ought to quit shoot­
ing."
On l y now,
b elatedly, are we
getting to know all
f Moderation In
th e re is to know
the defense of
about Barry
liberty Is no
Goldwater. Just the
vice. j
other day. on CNN's
'Larry King Live,"
w e hie
e a rrdd y o u r
straight talk on gays
in the military — plus a rare Jolt of decency In
politics. When the ever-genial host asked what
you thought of President Clinton, you replied:
"I would not like to answer that question right
now. Ask me that about December. I'd like to
give this man a chance. He inherited one
[lawful mess. Let's lust admit that.... He's a
mocrat. I’m a Republican. 1want to give this
kid a good chance."

ISO
78

K

Your lead ersh lp -ln -retlrem en t. as an
84-year-old resident of Arizona, has made you
a commanding presence back here in the
nation's capital, a place where leadership and
bipartisanship are in painfully short supply.

Sometimes, you Just can’t tell how well a
person Is going to play the game until he gets
to the big leagues.
Take Clcorgc Bush, for example. He had all
the credentials — well-bred, wcll-schoolt-d.
diplomatic experience. He plays the annual
China Game three times Mild he strikes out.
fouls out. lilts little dribblers In front of tin­
plate.
Comes Bill Clinton.
Bookish policy wonk.
Minimal foreign poli­
cy experience. His
first China Game, he
s t e p s up und
pow ders one.
S traig h t over the
wall.
I know, the game
everybody wunts to
piny right now is
called Bush Clinton.
Bui I'm taking a time
out to tell you tic
C c o m e B B ill
slammed a home run
Clinton.
when he pul the des­
B ookish
p o ts who govern
p o licy wonk.
China on notice Hint
M inim al
it's time to clean up
foreign p olicy
their human rights
experience, j
mess.
The occasion was
t he annual debate
over whether to grant most-favored nation
trude status to Beijing. Countries so desig­
nated pay shurply reduced tariffs on goods
exported to the United Slates. Almost all
trading partners are grunted MFN status.
Once they've got It, the mutter rarely comes
up again.
Not so with China. After the 1989
Tiananmen massacre — in which hundreds If
not th o u san d s of pro-dcm ocrucy de­
monstrators were shot or crushed beneath
tanks — Congress insisted on an annual
review of Chinn's trade BtutUB and on linking
It to Its record on human rights. Three times.
George Bush beat down efforts to put
’ conditions on China's MFN status. He hud
been the American llulson officer In Beijing
for a yeur, und he fancied himself un expert
on ull things Chinese. "I know the Chinese,"
he kept telling us. They won't respond to
pressure, lie said.
Just to make sure the butchers In Beijing
understood that their friend Qeorge un­
derstood them, he dlsputchcd his nutlonul
security udvlscr.and deputy secretary of stute
to China to lick boots, offer toasts uud
"resume our Important dialogue on Interna­
tional questions of vital interest to both our
nations."
And how did the Chinese respond to
George's gentle touch? They executed, Im­
prisoned and tortured thousands more dis­
sidents. They forced women to undergo
sterilizations und abortions. They continued
their brutal suppression of Tibet.
During the 1992 campaign, Bill Clinton
castigated George Bush for his Indulgence of
Chinese oppression und called for "un
America thut will never coddle tyrants, from
Baghdad to Beijing," He vowed to tic China's
MFN status to Its human-rights record, its
umis sales und Its unfair trade practices.
Clinton's decision was Solomonic: Anns
sales and trade practices would henceforth be
severed from the MFN Issue, but human
rights would not. With exiled Chinese
students standing beside him, the president
renewed China's MFN status und Issued an
executive order outlining the conditions that
must be met ITIt Is to be approved next year:
Progress In human rights, release of political
prisoners, protection or the "religious and
cultural heritage" of Tibet and much more.
Trade with China Is Important, Clinton
said, but "wc are concerned that many
activists and pro-democracy leaders ... con­
tinue to languish behind prison bare In Chinn
for no crime other than exercising their
consciences."
Four years after Tiananmen, a president of
the United States finally stands up for
principle. Nice game. Bill.

�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Juna 17, 1093 - $A

P/Z addresses new development,

Coach

derby track approval this evening
Work at constructing the race
the site, and Is expected to
separate the area from the sur­ course Is already underway.
rounding property which Is "We have started clearing some
SANFORD - The city's Plan­ planned for commercial and of the land and working on
ning and Zoning Commission Industrial development.
setting up the facility." said
will meet this evening to consid­
and Recreation Director
The Director of Planning and Parks
er n new residential develop­
Mike
Kirby,
"but we won't start
ment, n single-family home In a Development Is recommending any actual construction until we
commercial area, and the city's the rczonlng be approved for get final approval from P&amp;Z."
Pamnlu Oks.
planned soap box derby track.
Planning and Development
The residential area Is being
The conditional use request for
proposed by David Felnberg, a single-family residence has Director Jay Marder Is also
representing James and Debra been submitted by David A. recommending approval of the
Trlzzlno, owners of property on Stump, representing the cstnte. race track plans.
The race had previously been
the cast side of Upsala Road, one of Sarah Krldcr. The request Is
half mile north of C.R. 46A.
for a single fnmily home at 2818 held on French Avenue In San­
The property Is presently S. French Ave., In a QC-2, ford from approximately 18th to
zoned SR-1AA, for a single general commercial zoning dis­ 13th streets. Several complaints
fnmily dwelling. Felnberg Is trict. Mardcr Is recommending were received however, regard­
ing the full day of street closing
asking for a rezontng to PD. approval of the request.
which
effected a number of
planned development.
The third matter for P&amp;Z
Plans call for the establish­ consideration Is In two parts. A businesses In the area, and
ment of Pamala Oaks, which public hearing Tor conditional prevented the easy flow of
would have 28 dwelling units on use, and consideration of the site through traffic.
lots with a minimum of 4.000 plan, both connected with the
The matters are all scheduled
square feet each. The total city's proposed Soapbox Derby for consideration by the Plan­
property Is 4.0 acres, with one race truck, to be built by the city ning and Zoning Commission
small single family dwelling al­ at the northeast quadrant of this Thursday night, beginning
ready on the land.
Oregon Avenue and Lowe Ave­ at 7 p.m., In the commission
The Greene way Expressway Is nue. The land Is presently zoned chambers of Sanford City Hall,
proposed Immediately north of AO, agricultural.
300 N. Park Avenue.
■y NICK PPEIPAUF

Harald Staff Writer

Voting----Continued from Page 1A

tlon
day because of being away or for
medical or religious reasons.
Gourd said she supports the
Idea of extending voting, but Is
concerned about the potential
expenses. She voted against the
proposal last week, saying It
needed further discussion.
"I agree with the concept of
early voting," said Gourd. "I’m
Just concerned u lot of people arc
going to vole absentee because
they don't like their new polling
place."

MorrisContinued from Page 1A
won't seek re-election
in November 1004, but his
health bus deteriorated during
the pnsl year. He now sometimes
enters the County Services
Building by aid of wheelchair or
cane. If Sturm were to resign
before the end of his term.
Democratic governor Lawton
Chiles could appoint a replace­
ment for the Republican commls^oner.
Sturm could,not tjerpached Tor
Doth In and out of office,
Morris has taken *thc lead In
several controversial Issues,
notubly on the l&gt;coullflcatlon of
Luke Mary Houlevurd. As a
commissioner, he Ird the effort
to beautify the rand to turn It
Into a gateway to the county.
A committee led by Morris
recommended a $3.4 million
package of landscaping and up­
scale roadway Improvements.
I but the flnanelally-frugnl op­
posed the plun and eventually, a
dram atically trimmed down
$750,000 plan wus approved. As
mayor, he led an unsucccsful
fight to force utility companies to
bury their cables along the
roadway,
The tight reached the Florida
Supreme Court, which ruled
local governments In the state
don't iiuvc the power to force
utilities to bury their lines. City
commissioners subsequently
agreed to pay the $1.2 million
cost with city revenue bonds.

I ROBERT C. COLLIER.
Robert C. Collier 60, of Harry
! Avenue, Orange City, died
! Tuesday, June 15, at Central
• Florldu Regional HoBpllal, Sun! ford, Mr. Collier was born Oct. I,
i 1932, In Pink Hill, N.C.. he
i moved to Orange City in 1978.
j He wus u ceramic tile setter und
!u m em ber of Firs! Baptist
I Church, Orange City,
i S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e w ife,
| Melanie L. of Orange City; son,
Robert C., Jr. of California;
daughters, Dorothy Patricia
Holcombe and Sandra Rut
Mahur, both of Florida; step­
mother, Tibbie Collfcr of North
Carolina; brothers, Roger of Flor­
ida. Woodrow of Colorado. Lloyd
of North Carolina; 5 grand­
children.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
Home, Deltona. In charge of
arrangements.
GERMAINE MARTINEAU
Germaine Mariincau, 88. 102
Tollgute Trail. Longwood, died
Wedncsduy. June 16, nt South
Seminole Community Hospital,
Longwood. Mrs. Martlncau was n
homemaker. Born Dec. 13.
1904, In Haiti, she moved to
iCcntral Florldu In 1988. She was
in member of Church of Aninmjcailon,.Altamonte Springs.
Survivors Include daughter,
iMarie Grubb. Longwood: sons.
Claude, New York; brother. Ar­
thur NIcoIob. Part-au-Prlncc.
Haiti; nine grandchildren.
Gaines Funeral Home, Long­
wood. In ehnrgc of arrange­
ments.

r

Goard said a dramatic Increase
In absentee voting could nlso
delay election results. Absentee
bnllots must now be counted
before precinct-east ballots are
laltlrd.
State lawmakers showed a
marked Interest In early voting
this year. Several proposals were
tacked onto an election reform
bill then removed, said Sarah
Jane Hrudshaw, director of the
House Ethics und Elections
Committee. None of them were
considered by the full House.
Bradshaw mild one proposal
would allow voters to cast
absentee ballots In elections of­
fices before Election Day simply
bccuusc they chose to do so.
A nother p ro p o sal w ould
extend voting to begin 10 days
before Election Day. Supervisors
could establish voting booths In
malls ami grocery stores, even

on Saturday and Sundays. Vot­
ing would end four days before
the day of the election to allow
ballot-counters to prepare lists of
those early voters to assure they
don't vote twice.
Juck Aschcrl. the New Smyrna
Qcach Democrat who chaired the
House elections committee, said
he will propose another early
voting bill next year that will
likely extend the number of days
people can vote.
"It seems to me that In this
day and time with people's busy
schedules It should be easier for
them to come out and vote."
said Aschcrl.
Aschcrl said most of the
county elections officials In the
s ta te oppose e a rly voting
because of the Increased costs,
so he will address their concerns
In his proposal next year.

Lottery to start
new bingo game

Continued from Page 1A
go to the office as told. An
undetermined number of other
students Joined Ihc confronta­
tion.
SHS P rin c ip a l G rc tc h e n
Schapkcr ' said school officials
Investigating the Incident found
that Blake "did not use his best
Judgment In dealing with the
cuse." Although she said she did
not know the number of stu­
dents who Joined the confronta­
tion. she said one student was
suspended for falling to follow a
directive, "They didn't use their
best Judgment eith er," she
commented, referring to the
students.
Phillip (Duke) King. 19, the
senior Involved In the Incident
said he called "down" to get on
the ball court. Blake said
another student culled for a turn
first. King said he cursed but did
not curse at the coach. King
clulms the coach began shouting
at him. Physical contact resulted
between the coach und student
according to King. King claims
he struck the coach and that
Blake then picked him ofT the
floor, lifted him over his
shoulder und slammed him to
the floor more than once. King
also claims Blake choked him
during the fight. The fight con­
tinued, King said, until another
coach Interceded. A school re­

TALLAHASSEE - Lottery
Secretary Marcia Mann said she
plans to kick off a $2 lottery
bingo game tills full.
The L ottery D epartm ent
hasn't decided on the odds for
the game or the prizes but It
does know the basic rules of the
game, which will lake about 10
minutes to play.
"It's not the game you stand In
the store and play; you tukc it
home," Mann said Tuesday.
"Anybody who likes board
games will like It."
On (be left side of a ticket
nbout three times the size of
Instant scratch-off tickets will be
a " c a lle r's sq u a re " where
players will scratch off 25 letter
and number combinations.
Players then can check and
sec which combinations they've
m atched on four p la y e r's
squares an the right side of the
ticket.
Plnycrs would get prizes for

"Mr. Blake is a valuable teach­
er." Schapkcr B a ld . "He Is
well-known In the community
and a very prominent citizen.
This is an unfortunate situation
and a loss to Seminole High
School,"
Blake said he told Schapkcr tie
would work with the new acting
coach to adjust to the ins and
outs or the SHS program.
A coach and PE teacher nt
SHS for 18 years. Blake coached
the girls track team to four
consecutive slate track champi­
onships, 1986 to 1989. They
have won the district champion­
ships every year since 1979. The
girls team won the state hep­
tathlon titles In 1987 and 1988.
Head football coach since Feb­
ruary, 1988, Blake's teams
compiled a 33-20 record. Blake
is also a minister nt a Sanford
Baptlil Church.
*
Blake graduated from Crooms
High School and BcthuneCookman College. He taught in
1972 then played football In the
Canadian Football League for
three years before returning to
teaching.
In addition to resting and
fishing, Blake said he hopes to
fallow his son, Jeffs career with
the New York Jets. Between
training camps and pre-season
workouts. Bloke said JcfT may
come home far a visit In a few
weeks.

Fire
Continaad from Page IA
presented to the Sanford City
Commission.
They complained about beer
cans and bottles being left In the
area, p atro n s cau sin g d is­
turbances until 5 a.m.. a lack of
monitoring, and damage re­
ported to nearby establishments.
In January. Freddie Mungen
said (he club would only be open
to adults, If a beer and wine
license was oblnlucd. By Muy.
the club was converted for use us
u teen dunce facility, with the
alcoholic beverages to be kept
unavailable.
Thelma Mungen commented.
"We have learned Hint since we
started having (ccn dunces, the
crime rule among tcenugers in
(his urea has dropped somewhat,
because many of them, for the
first time, hud u place to go und
something to do without having
to heud for the south end of the

county."
showing signs of collapsing.
Marshal Cohen and Fire In­
Cohen met w ith Sanford
spector Terry Murray spent the Public Works Director Jerry
entire morning at the scene of Herman this morning to de­
the blaze toduy, checking to termine If temporary bracing
determine the cause and extent might be Installed to prevent the
of the damage. Late this morn­ roof from caving In.
ing. they met with the Mungcns
The building has been In
to discuss the fire and conditions cxlstancc since the 1940'a, when
now existing In the structure.
It was Wade's Grocery. In the
Murray, who Is In charge of the lute 1950's, Shoemaker Con­
Investigation, suld the interior of struction Compuny remodeled
the building was badly burned, the entire structure, turning it
but not to the point where she Into u supper club known us the
would consider It a total loss. Cnprl.
"Actually, we can't mnke any
Cohen said there had been two
decisions until after we finish the previous fires at the building,
investigation," she said.
one approximately 10 years ago,
The exterior walls of the und a major fire five years ago.
structure were not severely One fire was determined to have
damaged. The roof however, was been caused by ruts aborting
badly destroyed, and Cowan electrical power lines.
suggested It could possibly colSince the closing of the Capri,
lapse. At one point, cement the building hus been used for
blocks near the top of the north other businesses, but has spent
wall were splitting apart and a great deal of time vacant.

- •h'w*’

such things a» matching a row of ‘
five or the four corners of. one
square. The prizes In other
states' bingo games range from
$2 to $10,000 per ticket, and
about one out of every four
tickets Is a winner.
The reason for the game Is to
add a new dimension to the
lottery's lineup — und poten­
tially mure than $330 million
anuunlly to the state's $2 billion
sates.
Bingo would be the first major
new game since the lottery
Introduced Play 4 In July 1901.
The other games arc Lotto,
Fantasy 5, Cash 3 and "Instant"
scratch-off games, which change
every few months.
Bingo lottery games have
caught on In the lost couple of
years. Kentucky and Iowa both
have games.
Kentucky lottery spokesman
Greg Donaldson said the new
game has generated sales of
ubout $2 million a week.

I n Asaoolatad Praia

s o u rc e o ffic e r e v e n tu a lly
rscorted the student to the
office, where the witnesses were
Interviewed. King said he has
pain in his back and neck since
the Incident and may be unable
to play ball on an SCC baseball
scholarship.
The Seminole County School
Board Is expected to make the
suspension ofTIclal at Its July 27
meeting.
Schapkcr said no change In
Blake's coaching duties was In­
cluded In the suspension.
Blake said he will take time to
think over the summer and "do
n little fishing with my Dad."
"Seminole High School has
been a big part of my life for
almost 20 years," the Sanford
native said. He said he Is
teaching the children of his
former fallow classm ates at
Crooms High School.
"I don't know what will
happen In the full." Blake said,
"I'll wait and sec what the
options arc." He does not know
what Jobs will be available or
whether he will coach. "I'll have
to see what Is brought my way."
Schapkcr said she will appolni
an acting football coach from
within the SHS coaching stafT, If
any coach is willing to lake the
position. She will be hiring a
physical education teacher to fill
Blake's teaching position.

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T i l l

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JEWELERS

i l l i c i t

i L i i i . . .

FATHER'S DAY &amp;
A GOLD SALE!

THOMAS DENNIS
m em ber of First Methodist
PATTERSON
Church, Sanford, she also was
Thomas Dennis Patterson. 41. past matron and member of
Stardust Street, Orlando, died Seminole Chapter No.2. Order of
Wednesday, June 2, al Orlando Eastern Star, Sanford.
Regional Medical Center. Mr.
Survivors Include daughter,
Patterson was born May 29. Hazel Dyess. Sanford; sister,
1952 In Boston. A member or St. Sarah Taylor, Fort McCoy; two
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church, grandchildren and four great­
he also belonged to Hope Club.
grandchildren.
Survivors Include stepmother.
Grumkow Funeral Home,
Lorraine Patterson. Orange Park; Sunford,
In charge of arrange­
brother. Paul. James. Robert, all ments.
of Beaufort, S.C.. Michael. Cas­
selberry; sister. Joanne Putrrrp
rc- nrterson Jenkins. Orlando.
Baldwin- Fairchild Funeral
—i
Home, Oak lawn Park Chapel,
ZORN,MRS,
H
IN
H
IIT
T
A
S.
Lake Mary. In charge of ar­
G r o v tild * lu n t n l lo r v lc o t tor Mr*.
rangements.
H«nrl«lto R. Zorn. *0, ot Sonford, who dtod
Wtdnotdoy, w ill bo 10 o'clock Frldoy morn­
ing at Lokevlow Comelory, Son lord, with tho
Rov. J ton no O o v ll offlcotlng. Commlltol
to rv lc o i w ill bo conducted by Semlnolo
CSoptor n Ordor of E otlor Slor, Sonlord
A rrongom ont* by O rom kow Funorol
Homo, Sonfard.

HENRIETTA R. ZORN,
Hcrtctin R. Zorn 90. ,2102
Amcllu Ave,. Sanford, died
Wednesday, June 16. at Deltona
Health Care Center. Mrs. Zorn
was a homemaker. Born Nov. 4,
1902 In Michigan, she moved to
Central Florida In 1913. A
I would Ilk* to thank
my family k hrfands
for th* prayars,
flowers
cards gtvan
to m* during my
racant Illness.
Also, a thank you to
O lgs and M ands
at Olga's Clam our
studio.

I Love You All,
Opal Robertson

*•T.

“--.-p *'*■»'

-*T

SUM M ER CLEARAN CE

to
Dr. P.T. Smith, Dr. W arren,
Dr, Friedman, Dr, W itten,
Barbara L all o f the staff
o f CCU for such
wonderful care during m y
recent Illness at
Central Florida Regional
Hospital.

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E a rrin g s

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Opm yourFrUdm an'i Ckargt Account Tbdayt
Samlnote Centre
Altamonte Mall
Winter Park Mall
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Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Thursday, June 17. 1993

L«galIN otlct

Legal Notice
N O TIC I
NOTICE It hereby given *hel Ihe Board ot County Commissioners
o l Seminole County. Florida. Intendt to hold e public hearing la
contider the enactment o l an ordinance entitled;
AN O RD IN ANCE A M EN D IN G P A R T », C H A P T E R 41. "O C­
C U PA T IO N A L L IC E N SE T A XE S. "S E M IN O L E CO U NTY CODE)
AD D IN G L A N G U A G E TO SECTION 43.1 TO PR O V ID E FOR
P A R T IA L A N N U A L L IC E N S E T A X P A Y M E N T i C R E A T IN G
SECTION 43.2(gg), "W H O L E S A L E R L IC E N S E !" ESTABLISH IN G
C H A R O E S FOR CON D UCTIN G A W H O L E S A L E BUSINESS;
PRO VID IN G FOR INCLUSION IN T H E SE M IN O LE COUNTY
CODE; PROVID IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y ! PRO VID IN G FOR AN
E F F E C T IV E DATE
at 1;S0 p.m.. or at toon thereafter at pottlble, at Its regular mealing
on Ihe Uth day o l July, 1**1, at the Seminole County Service!
Building. 1101 E a it First Street, BCC Cham bers Sanford. Florida.
Pertont are edvlted that, It they decide to appeal any decltlon made
at thlt hearing, they w ill need a record ol the proceedings and. tar
tuch purpose, they may need to Inture that a verbatim record o l the
proceedingi It made, which record Includet the tetllm ony and
evidence upon which the appeal It to be bated.
Pertont with dlsab llltlei needing attlttance to participate In any ol
theta proceeding! should contact Ihe Employee Relatleni Depart­
ment AD A Coordinator 41 hourt In advance of the meeting at
37MI30. extension 7*41.
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
Clerk to the Board ol
County Commissioners of
Seminole County, Florida
By; Cary Ion Cohen
Deputy Clerk
DEF-102
Publish: June If, I ff!

Legal Notices
NOTICE OF A
PU B LIC H BARIN O
TO CONSIDER T H E
ADOPTION O F AN
O RD IN AN CE BY
T H E CITY OF
SANFORD , FLO R ID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held In
the Commission Room at the
City H all In Ihe City o l Sanford.
Florida, at 7:110 o'clock P.M. on
June 21. Iff], to consider Ihe
adoption ol an ordinance by the
City ol Santord, Florida, tllle el
which is as tallows;
ORD IN ANCE NO. J i l l
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF SANFORD. F L O R ­
IDA.
A M EN D IN G
O R D I­
NAN CE NO. MfS A N D ITS
A M EN D M EN T S. AND AD O P­
TING AN A M E N D E D CLASSI­
FICATION AND P A Y P L A N
E F F E C T IV E IM M E D IA T E L Y
TO PRO VID E FOR T H E R E ­
CLASSIFICATION O F FOUR
(4&gt;
"PO LIC E
LtE U T B NANT/W ATCH
CO M M AN D
E R " POSITIONS, T H R E E 111
"P O L IC E
L IE U T E N A N T "
POSITIONS AND ON E ID
"P O L IC E AD M IN ISTRATIV E
O F F IC E R " POSITION TO BE
R E C LA SSIP IED
TO
THE
POSITION CLASSIFICATION
O F "C O M M A N D E R " WITH
CO N CU R R EN T AU T H O R IZA­
TION TO R E G R A D E THE
"P O L IC E L IE U T E N A N T " AND
"P O L IC E AD M IN ISTRATIVE
O F F IC E R " POSITIONS FR O M
0)11 TO 0)14. AND PROVIDE
FO R
THE
R EC LA SSIFIC A ­
TION OF ONE (I) "P O L IC E
C A P T A IN " POSITION TO BE
R E C LA S S IFIE D TO "D E P U T Y
PO LIC E C H IE F " PROVIDING
FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y , CON­
FLICTS, AND E F F E C T IV E
D ATE.
A copy shall be available at
the office ol Ihe City Clerk lor
a ll pertont desiring to examine
the tame.
A ll parties In Intereit and
c lllu n a than have an opporlunl-

C
kn.
i RSRSWtv

011

A B T U T fE S 7^ ■*1* N B E D I N O
ASSISTANCE TO PA R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y OF T H E SE
PR O C E ED IN G S
SHOULO
CONTACT T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T 3301424 4S HOURS IN
A D V A N C E OF T H E M E E T IN G .
A D VIC E TO T H E PU B LIC : It
a perton decides to appeal a
d e d ilo n made with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hearing, he
m ay need a verbatim record ol
the proceedings, Including the
tetllm ony and evidence, which
record It not provided by the
City of Sanford. IFS 2*4 0101)
Janet R. Donahoe
City Clerk
Publish: June 17, i m
DEF-143
IN T H E C IRCU IT COURT
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
Cato No. t l Ills C A H P / L

MERITOR SAVINGS. F A.
P la ln tllllt)
F R A N C E S C O C R E T T I and
E L L E N P .C R E T T I. h it wife
Defendant!!)
NO TICE O F S A L E
Notice It hereby given that
pursuant to a final |udgment
entered In the above entitled
cause In the Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Florida, I w ill
ta ll the property situate In
Seminole County, Florida, de­
scribed at:
Let I. C R E E K 'S B EN D , ac­
cording to tho plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 27, page
N , public records of Seminole
Cminltf. Florida,
at public tala, to the highest and
best bidder tor cash, at the Watt
Front Deer e l the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanlord.
Florida, at 11:00 A.M . on July

20, 1m

(COURT SE A L)
Maryanns M arta
A t Clark of the Court
By: Jane E. Jetewle
Deputy Clerk
Dated: June l. I t f l
Publish; June 10,17, im

DEFT)

Find th o
skids you
m ed io .

1

ft. J
CLASSII 1EDS

Legal N o II c m
NOTICE O F A
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S IO E R T H E
AD OPTION O P AN
O R D IN A N C E B Y
T H E C IT Y O P
SAN FO RD , FL O R ID A
Notlco Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ilt be held In
the Commission Room at tho
C ity H all In tho City of Santord,
Florida, at 7:00 o’clock P.M . on
Juno 20, I f f l, to consider the
adoption of an ordinance by the
C ity of Santord. Florida, title ol
w h lch lsa tlo llo w t:
O R D IN AN CE NO. l i l t
A N O R D IN A N C E OF THE
C IT Y OF SANFO RD , F L O R ­
ID A, C R E A T IN G C H A P T E R
IIW, A R T IC L E V. OF THE
COD E O F O RD IN AN CES OF
T H E C IT Y O F S A N F O R D ,
FLO R ID A , TO BE KNOW N AS
THE "IN T E R IM G E N E R A L
S E R V IC E S F E E " ; E S T A B ­
LISHING A U T H O R IT Y ! PRO ­
V ID IN G FO R DEFINITIO N S!
P R O V ID IN G A P U R PO S E
T H E R E F O R E ! P R O V ID IN G
FO R T H E E ST A B LISH M E N T
A N D IMPOSITION OF SUCH
IN T E R IM G E N E R A L S E R V ­
IC E S F E E ; P R E S C R IB I N G
T H E RA T ES TO B E C H A R G E D
T H E R E F O R E ! P R O V ID IN G
FO R THE Y E A R L Y REVISION
O F SUCH RATES: PR O V ID ­
IN G F O R C O L L E C T I O N ;
PR O V ID IN G CODIFICATION.
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND EF
FE C T IV E DATE.
A copy shall be available at
the office o l the City Clerk tar
a ll pertont desiring to examine
the tame.
A ll parties In Interest and
c lllie n t shall have an opportuni­
ty to be heard at said hearing.
By order of the City Com­
mission ol the City of Santord.
Florida.
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS
A B IL IT IE S N E E D IN O
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y OF T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CON TACT T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T JIB -1 4 2 4 'U H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E O P T H E M E E t I N O .'
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC ! II
a parson d o c m i to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record of
the proceedings. Including the
letllm ony and tv Idsnet. which
record It not provided by the
CltyolSantord. (FSU4.010S)
Janet R. Don t hoe
City Clerk
Publish: June If, ISO) DBF-140
NOTICE OF A
P U B L IC H E A E IN O
T O C O N S IO E R T H E
ADOPTION O F AN
O E D IN A N C E B Y
T N I C IT Y OF
SANFORD , FLO R ID A
Notice Is hereby given the! a
Public Hearing w ill b t bald In
tha Commission Room at tho
City H all In tho C ity of Santa
Florida, at 7:00 o’clock P.M. on
Juno 2f. tat), to consider the
adoplion ol on ordinance by the
C ity o l Sanford, Florida, title ol
which Is as tallows:
O RD IN AN CE NO. ItM
AN O R D IN A N C E OF THB
C IT Y OF SANFO RD , F L O R ­
ID A , E S T A B L I S H IN G A
"W A T E R F R O N T M A S T ER
P L A N S T E E R IN G C O M M IT ­
T E E " , R E C IT IN G TH E
P U R P O S E OP T H B C O M ­
M IT T E E . P R O V ID IN G FO R
THE COMPOSITION O F THE
C O M M I T T E E , P R O V ID IN G
FO R P R O C E D U R E S FO R
A P P O IN T M E N T O P M E M ­
B E R S , P R O V ID IN G PO R
E F F E C T IV E D ATE.
A copy shall bo available at
tha office of tha City Clark tar
all pereons desiring to examine
tho same.
A ll parties In Internal and
c lllia n s shall have an opporlunl
ty ta be heard at said hearing.
By enter
order ol tho C ity Com­
mission ol the Clfy of Santord,
Florida.
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS ­
A B IL IT IE S N E E D IN G
A S S IS T A N C E T O P A R T I C I ­
P A T E IN A N Y O P T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CONTACT T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T 110-341* 41 H O U R S IN
AD VAN CE OF THB M B E T IN O .
AD VICE TO T H E PU B LIC ; II
o person decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m ailer considered o l Ihe
above mealing or hearing, ho
may need a verbatim record ol
Ihe proceedings, Including Ihe
testimony end evidence, which
record it not provided by the
City o fte n ford. (PS204.01QI)
Janet R. Donahoe
City Clerk
Publish; June 17, I f n
DBF-141

Call Today To Start Your
Subscrtbtioh Delivery

fiM Bw itlBiidit
322-2611

CIT Y O F SANFO RD , FLO R ID A
N O T IC I O F F U B L IC H EA R IN O
TO WHOM IT M A Y CO N CERN :
Notlco It hereby given pursuant to Sections 1U.14S Florida Statutes
that on the 2*lh day o l Juno, I**), o l 7:00 p.m., or a t soon thereafter
a t tuch matter m ay be heard of C ity H all, 200 North Pork Avenue.
Santord, Florida, the C ity Commission of Santord, F lor Ido, w ill
contider Ihe adoption o l Ihe following two (2) resolutions:
I. A RESO LU TIO N A C C E P T IN G T H B S E M IN O LE COUNTY
B O ARD O P CO U NTY COM M ISSIO N ER'S D E LE G A T IO N TO THE
C IT Y OF SAN FO RD . FLO R ID A , CIT Y COMMISSION O F R E D E
V E L O P M E N T PO W ERS AS D E F IN E D U N D E R T H E COM M UNI
T Y R E D E V E L O P M E N T A CT O F IN* IC H A P T E R It). P A R T III,
FLO R ID A STATUTES. AS A M E N D B D Il FIN D IN G T H A T THE
SE M IN O LE TOWNS C E N T E R C O M M U N IT Y R E D E V E L O P M E N T
P R O JE C T A R E A W ITHIN TH B C IT Y O P SAN FO R D , FLO R ID A . IS
A B LIG H T E D A R E A AS D E F IN E D U N O E R T H E CO M M U N IT Y
R E D E V E L O P M E N T A CT O P IN * (C H A P T E R 14), P A R T III,
FLO R ID A STATUTES, AS A M E N D E D ); D E5IQ N ATINO SAID
A R E A AS THE SE M IN O LE TOWNB C E N T E R CO M M U N IT Y
R E D E V E L O P M E N T A R E A ; F IN D IN O T H A T T H E R E ­
H ABILITATIO N , CO N SERVATIO N. OR R E D E V E L O P M E N T OR A
C O M B IN A T IO N T H E R E O F OF SAID B L IO H T E D A R E A IS
N E C E S S A R Y TO T H E P U B L I C H E A L T H , S A F E T Y , A N D
W E L F A R E ; F IN O lN O T H A T T H E R E IS A N E E D FO R A
CO M M U N IT Y R E D E V E L O P M E N T A G E N C Y TO C A R R Y OUT
C O M M U N IT Y R E D E V E L O P M E N T W ITHIN SAID S E M IN O LE
TOW NE C E N T E R A R E A ; D E C L A R IN G T H E CIT Y COMMISSION
O F T H E CIT Y O F SANFO RD , FLO R ID A . TO B E SAID C O M M U N I­
T Y R E O E V E L O P M E N T A O E N C Y ; D IR E C T IN G C IT Y S T A F P TO
P R E P A R E A R E D E V E L O P M E N T P L A N FO R SAID SEM IN O LE
TOWNE C E N T E R C O M M U N IT Y R E D E V E L O P M E N T A R E A ;
R E P E A L IN G CITY O F SAN FO R D RESO LU TIO N NO. 13*1; A N D
PR O V ID IN O A N E F F E C T IV E DATE.
Tho proposed resolution (II finds a blighted area exists In Ihe Clfy
e l Santord. Ill) designates Ihe tre e described below as tho Seminole
Towne Center Community Redevelopment Area, (III! creates a
Community Redevelopment Agency, end (Iv) declares the City
Commission to bo solo Community Redevelopment Agency, end Iv)
repeals a previous resolution allowing tor a community redevelopment agency tor the Seminole Towne Center Community Rtdevolopment Area.
Tho area proposed to be designated o t a Community Redevelop
ment Area Is as to Hows;
Portions o l Sections l* and U , Township I t South. Range jo Bast,
nty, Florida, described a t toItows:
Commence at Ihe North ta comer of sold Sec lion a and run S
S**47*3l" W along tho North lino Of sold Section a tor o distance of
13.00 toot to the Point o l Beginning; thence run S 00*I f 4)" I parallel
with end 25.00 feet West o l the East line of the Northwest (e o l sold
Section a tor a distance of 7M,)t toot to tho point ot curvature of a
curve concave Easterly, having a radius of 304.47 toot and a control
angle o l 20*00*00") thence run Southerly along the arc of sold curve
(or o distance of 1*3.71 teat; thence run S 2 t* tf 42” E for a d is tin c t
of til.) * lost to tho point ol curvature ot a curve concave Westerly,
having e radius o l 4*0 00 lest end a central angle o l ***21*20" i thence
run Southerly along tho ore ot told curve tor a distance ot 3*4.M4 toot
to e point on sold curve, told point alto being the Northeast com er ot
Lot ) Pino Lake Groves, as recorded In P la t Book 0, Pago 27 of tho
Public Records of Seminole County, Florida; thence run S 2T*07'0S"
W along tho East lino ot told Lot 1 tor a distance of 1*4.71 toot to the
point o f curvature ol o curve concave Southeasterly having a radius
of 1Q30.lt tost and a control englo of 23*02'00*'; thence run
Southwesterly along the ore of sold curve and said Bast lino tor o
distance of 4t4.lt tool; thence run S 0Q*S4‘U " E tor o distance ol
441.20 feet to a point 21.00 tool Westerly of the Southeast com er of the
Northwest U ol sold Section 32; thence run S IW O '40" W along tho
South lino o l told Northwest W lo r a distance o l 2200.22 tool to tho
Easterly Right of Way line o l Inlerstato 4; thence run N 23*33*1*" E
along told Right ol-Way lino tor o distance of 1214.00 toot; thence run
$ 44*12'J4” E along told RIghl-of-Wey lino tor a distance e l ft.01 foot,
thenco run S 00*1J'J4" E along told RIghl-of-Woy lino tor a distance
ot 02.2* feel; thence run S 04*51*1*" E along sold RIght-erf-Woy tine
tor a distance ot 21.44 teat; thence run S 00*11'24" E along tha
Westerly RIghl-of-Wey line of Oregon Avenue (sold lino being 23.00
teat West o l and parallel with the East line ot tho Southwest W of said
Section 2*) lor a distance ol 30M.44 leal to tho Point ol Beginning.
L e u a 100.00 foot Railroad Right of-Wey In Section 12, Township 1*
South, Range X East.
AN D
Commence at the South W corner o l sold Section 2* end run N
0**47‘M " E along the South lino o l sold Section 2* tor a distance el
2100 leet to tho Point o l Beginning; thenco run N OOMS'M” W along
tho East Right ot Way line o l Oregon Avenue (said line being 23.00
tool East ot a parallel with the West line o l the Southeast ta of sold
Section 2*1 (or o distance o l 2040.31 leet Ihence run N lt*44’ 24" E
along e non-redial line end the Easterly RlgM-ol-Wey line ot
Interstate 4 and Oregon Avenue lor e distance of 21.40 leet to e point
on a curve concave Easterly, having e radius ot 1302.)* foot, a
control angle ot 3l, 44’03” and o chord bearing ot I0*31’07" E; thence
run Northerly along tho arc ot told curve end sold Right of-Wey line
(or a distance o l 323.20 toet to o point on told curvo; thence run S
7l*42’J2" E along a non-redial lino and tho Easterly line ot lends
described In Official Record Book 1107, Page 117 ol tho Public
M K o rd t 4 |flV » p o lB £ o u n t* d N p rld a tar
'
--------------thenco r
■long
STWST'
toot N r
01224.3*1
*t*)3'33" w. to re distance of 1
W to re d ts ti _ M I2*.7t feet; tkenc* leaving I
41 i 'i f " for a distance
I tor a distance of 371-42 leaf; thence run N14**S
e l loo.oo feet to tho told Eettorly Right-Of-Way lino ot Interstate 4
and Oregon Avenue; thenco run N 4D*ot'4t" E along sold
Rlght-ot Woy lino tor ■ distance ol 111.40 loot to tho point ot
curvature el a curvo concovo Southeasterly, having a radius ol l l t . l t
toot and o control angle ot 4**M’40"i thence run Northeasterly along
Ihe arc ot said curve end said Rlghl-ul-Wey line lot a tllslem.e ul
144.30 toed thence run N 0t*43’i r ’ E along said Right ol-Wey line tor
• d il Is net ot t.S f food Ihenco run 5 00*14’)*" E along tho West line ol
lends described In Official Record Book 141), Pogo 104 ol tho Public
Records o l Somlnole County, Florida lor e distance ot llf.10 loot;
thenco run N l**4l‘l l " E along Iho South lino ol M id lands for e
distance o l 130.00 loot; Ihenco run N 00*14*)*" W along Iho East line
o l M id lends and a non radial lin t lo r a distance ot lit . M loot to a
point on a curve concave Northwesterly, having a radius ot 112.00
toot, a central angle o l St*43'44" and a chord ol N 3t*3*'0O" £; thence
run Northeasterly along the arc o l M id curve and M id Easterly
Right of Way line lor a distance o l 101.11 loot to a point on M id
curve; thonca run N #**30'I7" E along the Southerly Right-Of-Way
line o l Slato Road 44 lor a distance o l 74.*7 feat lo tha point ol
curvature ot a curve concave Northerly, having a radius ot 2010.00
teat and a central angle ot 00*14’ 11"i thence run Easterly along the
arc ot m M curvo and M id Southerly Right of Way lino lo r o dlstonco
o l 10.00 toot to ■ point on M l* curve; thence run S 00*14’) ) " E along
tho East lino ol tho Southwest u ot tho Northeast ta ot M id Section 2*
lor a dlstonco o l 133.40 toot; thenco run N 0**14‘i r E tor a dlstonco
of 20.00 tool; thenco run S 00*t4‘13" E parallel with end M OO toet
Easterly of M id East lino ot tho Southwest ta ot tho Northeast ta tor
■ dlstonco ot 3)4 03 toot; thonca run S t**32'42" W along Iho South
lino ot tho North 1114.00 toot o l M id Section 2* tor o distance ot M OO
toot! thonca run S 00*M'13" E along M id East lino of tho Southwest
ta ot the Norlheett ta tor a distance ot 41*.4* toet to tho Southoost
corner ol M id Southwest Mo l the Northeast ta ot M id Section 2*i
thence run S 00* 17*43" E along Iho East line o l tha West ta at tho
Southoetf ta o l Section 2* tor ■ distance o l 2440.12 loot ta tho
Southoost comer thereof; thence run S l**47'34” W along the South
line o l M id Section 2* tor o distance ol 12*3.71 teal to the Point of
Beginning.
Together containing 111.70) acres more or less and being sub|ect to
any rights ot way, restriction and ooM m enlt ol record.
AN D
Portion* ol Iho East ta ol tho Southeast ta and Iho Southeast ta ol
tho Northeast U ot Section 2*, Township t* South, Range M E o tl,
Seminole County, Florida, described at follows;
Commence at the Southeast comer o l Section 2*. Township If
South, Range M East, Somlnole County, Florida and run S 0t*47'31"
W along tho South lino ot Iho Southoost ta of M id Section 1* lor ■
dlstonco ot IM0.71 tool! Ihenco run N 00*17*41" W along Iho West line
o l tho E o tl ta of tho Southoost ta o l M id Section i f tor a dlstonco ot
It0 t.lt toot to tho POINT OF B EG IN N IN G : thenco continue N
00*17*42” W along M id Wotl lino lor 13)1.12 feel to the Southwest
com er o l tho Southeast ta o l Iho Norlhootl ta ol M id Section It;
thonca run N 00*I4'M” W along the West lino o l u id Southoost ta ol
tho Norlhootl ta for a dlstonco ol 4if.*f tool; thence run N lt* 1 4 '4 r
E along Iho South lino el tho North 3110.00 tool o l M id Section 2* Ipr ■
dlstonco of M OOfoot; thonca run N 00*41’) ) " W tor a distance of *:.4i
toot to a point on ■ curve concave Southeasterly having a radius ot
710.00 toot and a chord bearing el N 13‘ M'OS" E i thenco run
Northeasterly along tho ore o l M id curvo through o control angle ol
0**I1’43" tor o dlstonco ol 114.03 tael to a point el raverM curvature
o l • curvo concovo Westerly having e radius o l 3*0.00 toot; Ihenco
run Northerly along tho ore ol M id curve through ■ control angle el
M * ir4 0 " tor a distance ot 1*4.74 tool; thonca run N 00*I4'13" Witor o
distance of 1.0) toot to o point o l curvature ot a curvo concovo
Southwesterly having a radius ol M.C0 loot; Ihenco run Northwester­
ly along (ho ore o l M id curvo through ■ control englo ol *4*12*24" tor
0 dlstonco o l S0.M tool lo o point on tlw Southerly Right of Way line
01 State Reed 44 end the point ol cusp e l o curvo concovo Northerly
having o radius o l 1010.02 teat; thence run Easterly along tho arc ot
Mid curve and sold Rlght-ot-Way lino through o control angle ol
at*l1‘M ".to r ■ dlstonco o l *3.22 toot; thenco run N S1*JT 17” E along
M id■ Rlght-of
o qitience
dlstonco o
tool to
m g n ro r Way
w ay lino
line tor
iw ■
n l 113.47
11&gt;.« reel
id a point
poinr o
orl cusp
ot aI curvo concave
'
concovo Southerly
having t radius ot M.00 toot; thenco
ruh Southwesterly along tho am o f sold curvo through a control
la ol
toot tor
angle
. . . ll*SS‘S2"
.. I M
■ ■■ distance
■ ■ . . o l 43.S0 toot; thence .run
. . . .S
.
00*I4'23" ■ tor a dlstonco e l 13.44 tool to ■ point ot curvature ot a
curvo concave Westerly having ■ radius ot 710.00 tool; Ihence run
Southwesterly along the ere o l sold curve through o central angle ot
M * ir4 0 " tor ■ dlstonco o l 477.4) teat to a point ol reverse curvature
ot a curvo concovo Southeasterly having a radius el 3*0.00 tool;
tlwnce run Southwesterly slang Iho ore ot M id curvo through •
control englo o l i r i l ’40" tor o distance o l 2*4.74 foot; thenco run S
og*WM*' I parallel with and NLCO teat East ot tho otorosold West
lino o l tho Southeast ta e l lho Northeast ta tor a distance o l 147.M
foot; Ihenco run S *0*17'42" ■ parallel with end 40A* tool East ot (ho
atorcM ld Wool lino of Iho lo s t It of the Southoost ta tar a distance of
1170.33 toot to O point o l curvature o l a curvo concovo Westerly
having a radius o l lOSO.lt toot; (banco rim along tho ore ot M id curvo
through o control angle ot l* * tr f t " ter a dlstonco ot 1M.3S h o t to tho

POINT OF BEGINNING,
Containing 4.4» acres mere or lo u and being subfoct to any
nghteef wey, restriction* end easements ot record.
A parcel ot land lying In the Northwest quarter ot the Northeast
1M Bast,
tsr ol Section 22,
22. Township i*
I* South, Rang*
Rongg 10
lo
lo u tho
« Northwesterly «
13.00 tool, lying
of tho proposed
of wey
lino
ot Towne
M pi being
. _... rtght
„
_____
Towns
CanterCantor
Bat Boulevard hpares!
described a t fallows;
Commence at the North quarter com er of Mid Section 12 tor o
point of reference; thenco. along Iho North lino o l Mid Norlhootl
quarter, run North 2**47*ir* lo s t , 23.00 teat to tho point ol

n

beginning! thonca, along M id North lino, continue North O f 47‘M "
East, *7.40 toot to a point lying on tho a fo rtM ld proposed
northwesterly rlgM -ofw ey line of Towne Confer Boulevard, M id
point also lying on ■ non-longort curvo concovo Southeasterly;
lhence run Southwesterly, atom M id proposed Northwesterly
rlghlef-w ay lino and M id curvo. having a radius length ot 1030.00
toot, a control angle ot 04*12*30". an arc length ot 222.11 loot, a chord
Isooth ol 222.70 toot, and o chord bearing of South 23*4t't7" West to a
point tying on Iho Bast right-of-way lino e l South Oregon Avenue
according to tho plot thereof, a t recorded In Plot Book 3. Pogo 2* ot
tho public records of Seminole County. Florida] thence, along M id
■ost..........................
rlg h ty p lw e y lino, run
r
North 00*t**43" West, 10033 toot Totho
PO IN T O P BEG IN N IN G .
Tho above described parcel el lend lies In Somlnole County,
Florida and contains 0.114 acres, mere or loss.
AND
That p o rt ot Oregon Avenue lying In Section 2*, Township I* South,
Range M East, Seminole County, F tor Ida. described o t tallows:
Begin o l Iho South ta corner ol Section i t , Township 1* South,
Range M E o tl and run S 0**47'33" W along tho South lino ot Iho
Southwest ta o l M id Section 2* for a distance ot 13.00 teat! thonca run
N 00*ll’34" W parallel with and 23.00 teat West o l tho East lino ol
M id Southwest ta tor o d is tin c t o l 20)4.44 toot; thenco run N
U * o r it " E for o dlstonco ot M . ll teat; thenco run S 00*t)‘24" E
parallel with and 23.00 tool East of tho West tine ot tho Southoost ta
ot M id Section 2* for ■ dlstonco ot 2040.11 toot; thenco run S lf*47‘M "
W along the South lino o l M id Southoost ta tor a dlstonco ot 23.00 toet
to tho POINT O P BEO IN N IN O . containing 3,240 acres mom or toss.
AND
Commence o l the Southeast corner o l tho Northeast ta o l Iho
Southwell ta ot Section if , Township If South. Range M East and run
N 00* 13’ 13" W along the-East lino el the Southwest ta ol M id Section
i f , SUMtooli Ihenco run S 0**er07" W 13.00 tool to Ihe PO IN T OF
B EO IN N IN O i thonca continue S 0f*4r07" W **.40 tael to a point on
Iho Eostorlv Right of Wav line ol State Rood 400 (Interstate 4),
thence run N 1)*31'I4" E along M id Easterly Right of-Wav lino 142.13
( M il Ihence run S 00*11*13" E 111.1* teal to the PO IN T OF
BEO IN N IN O , all lying and being In Seminole County, Florid#,
containing 0130 acres mom o r le u .
AND
Thai port o l Soctlon 2*, Township 1* South, Range M East.
Seminote County, Florida, described es follows:
Commence o l Iho South ta comer of Section 2*. Township 1* South,
Range M lo s t and run S #**47’U " W along tho South (in* ot the
Southwest taat M id Section 2* lo ro distance of 11.00 teat; thenco run
N 00*11*24" W parallel with and 21*0 teat West ot tho lo s t line of
M id Southwest ta tor e distance ot 10M.44 toot to Iho PO IN T OF
B EO IN N IN O i thence run N 04*»*J4'’ W along ■ Rlght-ot Woy lino as
Shown on Florida Department ot Transportation Rlght-ot-Way Mops
tor Interstate 4 (Sections 7714-401 ond 7*114011 for a dlstonco ot 21.44
teat thonca run N 00*13*24" W along M id Right-Of-Way lino for o
distance ot 01.1* toot] thenco run N M 'S l'M " along M id right of way
lino lor ■ distance of **.02 toet; thence run N 23*31*3t" B along M id
RIght-ol-Woy lino o l Interstate 4 tor a distance ol 32.34 tael; thonca
run N l**44*44" along the South line ol that parcel o l land described
In O fficial Record Book 212), Page 0030 o f the Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida for ■ distance of *0.74 toett thence run N
00*13*34*' W along the E osl lino of M id portal tor a distance ot 2M.40
le o ti thence run M 13*32*3*" E along the olorom entloned
Right ol-Wey lino of Inlerstato 4 ter o dlstonco ot 117.04 tool; thenco
run S *4*07*01" E lor o dlstonco of f f 04 tael to tho Southwest corner
ot that parcel of lend described In Official Record Booh 1007, Pago*
117 ot M id Public Records, M id comer being on a non tangent curve
concave Southeasterly, having a radius o f 1202.2* text. ■ control
angle o l 21*43*30" oncf o chord bearing o l S 10*10*30", W i thenco run
Southwesterly along tho ore ot M id curvo and the e lores I■ted
Rlghtef-W ey line shown on Florida Department ot Transportation
Right of Way Mops lo r Interstate 4 for a distance of 323.10 teat to ■
point of non tongencyj thonca run S tf*44*34" W along M id
Right of Wey lin t for ■ dlstonco of 10.40 teat; thence run S 13*00*2***
W for ■ distance of 30.14 toet to the POINT O F BEG IN N IN G ,
containing 1.413 acres mom or test.
The following existing or planned public rood rights o f ways i
1. The) portion ol Interstate 4 from Station *14-100 (approximately
MOO toet south ol Stole Road 44) to Station 474 +00 (approximately
7200 leel north of Slate Rood 44) *t per plans prepared by Greiner
Engineering lo r Seminole County Expressway Authority deled
January, Iff).
2. Thai portion ol State Road 44 Irons Station 71+00 (west of th«
on-ramp to westbound Interstate 41 to Station 122+00 (approximate­
ly 400 Im I east of UpMte Roedl a t per FD OT 1*4* construction plans
tor westbound State Road 44.
3. That certain 110 foet wide right-of-way lor * lour tan* divided
connector roed (the "St. Johns Parkw ay") between Station 10+00
(centerline ol Town* Center Boulevard (realigned Oregon Avenue)
to Stallon 21+44.27 Iconterlln* of Rinehart Road) at per plens by
Professional Engineering C onsultinli. Inc. deled February, )**),
described*! follows:
A parcel of land lying In the Southeast Quarter of Section 2*,
Township If South. Rang* 30 East, described a t follows:
Commence el the Northeast corner of M id Southeast Quarter for a
point of roference; Ihence, along tho E o tl lin t of M id Southeast
Quarter, run South 00*t*'47" E otl, 1114.24 footi thonca run South
angenl curvo
It*40*I t " West, (24.00 leet to a point lying on ■ non-tangent
c» bogtrsnliIngr­
curve, having a radius long
am
OBOrc
On41 le n g th o ll* .!7 fe e t.*
bearing oT North 4 S * ir il"
South Of*40'ir* West, 7*.01
concovo Northerly
iberiyi m
run W itte rly, along M id curve, having a radius length ot 703.00 feel,
central angle ol 70*33*47", an ore length of 237.3) feel, ■ chord
length o l 230.10 (eel end a chord bearing o l North 7**3t')7*' West to a
point ol tangency; thence run North 4f*2J'44" West, 102.13 feet to the
point ol curvature o l a curve concave Southerly; thence run
Westerly, along M id curve having e radius length of 3*3.00 feet, e
central angle of 7Q*iT5l", an ere length of 117.0) toet, e chord length
ot 213.0) feet, end a chord bearing ol North 7t*30'4)" West lo Ihe
polnl ol tengency; thence run Soulls •*•42*14" West, 444 33 Im I to Ihe
point of curvatur* o l e curve concave Southeasterly; Ihenc* run
Southwesterly, along M id curve, having e radius length ot 23.00 leet,
e central angle o l *0*00*00", an arc length ot I f .77 feet, a chord length
ol J3.34 loot, and e chord beerl-iq ol South 44*42*11" West to a point ol
cusp. M id polnl lying on the poposed easterly right ot way line ot
Town* Center Boulevard! thence, almsg te ld proposed Easterly
right of way line, run North 00*17*0" Wet), 140.00 feet to a point ol
cusp with a curve concave Northeasterly; ihenc* run Southeasterly
along M id curve, having a radius length of 23.00 feet, * central ongl*
ol *0*00*00". an ore length of 3*.W feel, ■ chord length of 13.34 foet.
and e chord bearing o l South 43*11*42" East to 0 polnl ol tangency;
thence, run North lf*42, l l " East, 444.21 leet to the point of curvature
of * curve concave Southerly; thence run Easterly, along M id curve,
having a radius length ol 703.00 leet, 0 centre! angle ot 20*31*30", en
arc length of 237.14 foet, a chord length of 233.7) feel ond a chord
bearing of South 7t*30*4l” East to the polnl of tangency; thence run
South 4**21'44" East, 102.1) feet to tho point o l curvature o l 0 curvo
concave Northerly! thence run Easterly, along M id curve, having ■
radius length of 3*300 toet, ■ central angle ot 20*33*47", an ore length
ol 117.13 feet, a chord length ol 214.14 teat ond 0 chord bearing of
South 7**3t*17” East to tho polnl of tangoncy; Ihenc* run North
**•40*2*" East, Tf.oi toot to tho point of curvature of 0 curve concave
Northwesterly; thence run Northeasterly, along M id curvo, having ■
radius length o l 13.00 feat, a control englo o l *0*00*00". on ore length,
of M.J7 feet, ■ chord length o l 23.24 toot and 0 chord btorlng ot North
44*40*2*** East to ■ ja ln t ot cusp, M id polnl lying en the west
right-of-way lino of Rinehart Rood according lo Seminote County
right-of-way plant for Rinehart Rood os record In Right of-Way Book
2. Pogo *7 ol Iho public records of Somlnole County, Florida; thenco
along M id west right-of-way lino run South 00*t**ir* East, 140.00 leet
to the point ot beginning.
The above described parcel ol tend lies In Somlnolo County,
Florida and contains 2.*73 acres more or loss.
AND
A Parcel of land lying In Iho Southoost Quarter of Section 2*.
Township Itlo u th , Rang* 10 East, described a t follows:
Commence at tho Northeast comer ot M id Southoost Quarter for 0
point e l retortncs 1 thence, along tho East lino o l M id Southoost
Quarter, run South 00*1**47" Bast, 1114.1* toot! thence run South
tr*4Q*lt" West, l i t *0 fool to 0 point lying on 0 non-tangonl curve
concave Southwesterly! thence run Northwesterly along M id curvo.
having ■ radius length of 23.00 fool, ■ control englo of 31*40*04**, on
■rc length ot 23.40 loot, 0 chord tength of 34.4* toot, and ■ chord
bearing of North 2**i**31" W otl to o point lying on tho West lino ot ■
13.00 toot wide perpetual rlght-of-wey easement tor Hlnohert Rood
01 record In Rlght-ot-Woy Book 3, Pope *7.of tho public records ol
Somlnole County. Florida, 11 U point being tho point ot beginning;
thence, olong the West line ot M id 11.00 teat wide perpetual
right-of-way easement, run, non-tangent to M id curvo, South
0 0 * m r East. 1*4.2) (M l; thane# run South 0**40*2»" West 200.00
feet; thenco run North OOMPH!* West 200.12 toot ta a point lying on
tho South right-of-way lino ot ■proposed rood. M id point oIm lying
on ■ non-tangent curvo Northerly! Ihenc* run Easterly along M id
' right-of-way lin t and M id curvo, having ■ radius tength ol
701.00 teat. ■ control englo of 00*40*30". on arc length of 100.41 toot, a
chord length of 101.10 toot, and 0 chord bearing of South 13*33*12"
Bast to tho polnl ot tangency; ihenc* run North •**33*11" Bast, 7* 02
loot to tho point of curvature of a curve concave Southwesterly;
thence run Southeasterly, along M id curvo, having 0 radius length ol
13.00 teat, ■ central englo ot ) 1*1*1*", on arc length ot 11.47 toot, ■
chord length ot 11.30 teat and 0 chord bearing of South 74MPM** Best
to tho point ot boginning.
Tho above described parcel o l land Hot In tho City of Santord.
Seminote County, Florida ond contains 0 *2) acres, mors or less.
4. That portion o l Rlnoharf Read between Stations 04+00 and
(0+00 ond also between Stations 141+00 and 111+00 por plans
prepared by Orece B R e d d ltf dated November, t m . The loregoing
■root describe the proposed Intersections ot the East-West Connector
and Rinehart Roed a t w all a t Iho Intersocton o l Towno Center
Boulevard (realigned Oregon Avenue) end Rinehart Roed.
I. That portion ol Oregon Avenue from Stallon 4+41 lo Station
I t f 74.40 along relocation No. 1, per plans prepared by Reynolds,
Smith B H ills tor FO O T dated fiscal year 1*11. The tomgoing arse
describes existing Oregon Avenue Irom State Roed 44 to Its proposed
terminus.
4. P re p lie d Town* Center Boulevard tram Its proposed interne
lion with Slate Rood 44 to Its proposed Intersection with Rinehart
Roed. described as follows!
A parcel of land lying In Sections 2* end 12. Township I* South,
Rang* 10 lo s t , described « fol tews
Commence ot tho Southwest corner ot M id Northeast Quarter ol
M id Soctlon n tor ■ point ot reference; thence, along the West line ol
M id Southeast Quarter ot M id Section 22, run South 04*1**41" East,
1* 70 toot to a point en tho Northwesterly right of-woy lino ol
Rinehart Reed according to Seminote County "P la n t of Proposed
RlgM-ct-W ay" a t record In R lghtol Way Book 2, Pogo *7 ot tho
public records ol Somlnolo County, Florida; thence along tho
Northwesterly rlghl-el-woy line, run South 40*40*03" West, 14.71 feet
to the point o l beginning; thence run North 00*21*14". 2500 toot;
thonca run North 10*44*2)" Watt to th* polnl ot curvature ot a curvo
concave Easterly) thence run Northorly olong M id curve, having a

radius tength ot 723.00 toot. 0 control angle of 20*74*33", on arc tength
of 404.00 toot, 0 chord tength ot 477.01 teat, and 0 chord btorlng ol
North 01*13*17" West; thence run North I7*)4'30" West, 4*7.4* leet to
tho point ot curvature ot O t u r n concovo Westerly; thonco run
Northorly, olong M id curve, having a radius length ot 440.00 toet, #
control angio ot 41*13*14", an ore ■
l ith ot 4*0.11 net, 0 chord tength
ot 430 *2 toot and o chord boorlng ol North 02*01’07" west; inonco
run North I0*30*44" Wost, 100.00 toot to tho point of curvature o l #
curve concave Northeasterly; thence run Northwesterly, along M id
c u m having a radius tength ot 1030,00 toet. • control angle ol
22*23*40". on ore tength o l 414.07 teat, 0 chord tength o l 411.1* tool,
ond ■ chord bearing o l North 12*20*33" Wotl; thonco run,
non-tangent to M id curvo, North 44*2)*3*** Wost, 14.77 teat to a polnl
lying on a non-tangent curve concave Easterly; thence run
Northerly, along M id c u m , having a radius tength ol 10*2.00 toet, e
central angle ot 10*34*30". an ore length o l 330.47 toot, a chord length
o l 241.1* teat, end ■ chord bearing o l North 0**01*1t" East! thonco
run, non-tangent to M id curvo, North 12*20*04'* East, Jl.W teat lo 0
point lying on ■ non-tangent curve concave Southeasterly! thence
run Northeasterly, along M id curve, having ■ radius tength ot 2030 00
teat, ■ control angle o l t2*47H**, on ore length o l 437.44 toot, ■ chord
tength o l 434.lt toot, ond o chord bearing ot North 20*0**52" Rost to ■
point o l compound curvatur* ot * c u m concave Southeasterly;
thence run Northeasterly, along M id curvo, having ■ radius tength ol
1400.00 toot, a control angto o l l**H’4 l", on arc length ot 471.13 lee ,
a chord tength ot 470.1* toot, and ■ chord boorlng of North 44*11*11"
East) thonco run North 31*33*03" East. 32* *1 teat to tho point ot
curvature ot o curve concovo Northwester ty; thence run Northwest­
erly, along M id curvo, having ■ radius length of *30.00 teat, e central
angle ot 22*32*44". on ore length o l 2 7 l.fi feet, a chord length ot
247.N toot and ■ chord bearing o l North 17*13*47" East to tho point ot
compound curvature ol a curvo eoncav* Westerly; Ihenc* run
Northerly, along M id curve having a radius length o l *40.00 teal, *
control angto ot 21*»7'tO*', on ore length of 134.43 feat, ■ chord length
ot 234.41 toot, and ■ chord bearing ot North t0*20*J4*' East; thonce
run North 00*17*42** Wost. »*.** feet; Ihenco run North 43*71*41"
West, l*.*7 toot; thonco run North 00*17*42" West, 240.04 teat! thence
run North 02*ir04" East, 1*0.10 tool; thonco run North 00*)7'42"
West, 227.01 tool; thonco run North *4*71*41" West, 1*.*7 teat; thonco
run North 00*17*42" Wost, 240.43 (set; thonco run North 03*7*1*"
East, 141-fO loot to ■ point lying on a non-tangent curve concave
Sowtheeetorly; thence run Northeasterly, along M id curve, having a
rod) u* tength d l 132 22 toet. a control angto o l 12*24* 12", an ore tength
e l 111.01 toot, 0 chord length of 114.43 teat, and a chord bearing of
North t7*4l‘0 l" Bosti to the point ot eurvotum ot ■ c u m concovo
Southeasterly; thonco run Northeasterly along M id curve, having ■
radius tength ot 710.00 teat, a control angle of 0**li*34", on ore tength
ot 11400 toot, 0 chord length of I1S.»2 Mot, ond a chord bearing ot
North H*14‘ 0I‘‘ East to 0 point ot raverM curvature ol a curvo
concave Northwesterly; thence run Northwesterly, along M id c u m ,
having a radius length ot 4*0.00 toot, ■ central angle o l 20*)l’40'‘, on
ore length ol 1*474 toot, o chord tength ot M f . X feet end e chord
bearing ot North It*It* 11" East; thonco run North 00*14*13" Wost.
0.0) leet to tho point o l curvature ol 0 c u m concave Southwesterly;
thence run Northwesterly, along M id curvo having • radius length ol
M.00 teat, a control ongto ot *4*17*14", an ore length ot 30.14 feel, a
chord length of 44.44 toot, ond ■ chord boorlng ot North 40*n'3l'*
West to tho polnl ot cusp o l 0 curvo concave Northerly, M id polnl
lying on the Southerly right o f way line of State Roed 44; thence run
E atterly, Oteng M id right ot way curvo, having ■ radius length ol
M l 0.01 toot, 0 control angto o l 01M l*11", an ore length ot 43.11 teat, 0
chord length of 43.21 toot, and ■ chord bearing el North *2*13*04"
East to tho point of tangency; thenco run, olono M id right ot wey
lino, North ll*J**20" E o tl, 113.0) too M o ■ point ol cusp ot o curve
concave Southeasterly; thence, deporting M id Southerly right ot
way lino ot State Rood 44, run Southwesterly along M id curve,
having a radius tenth ot M OOteat. * central angle ot I2*)4'24‘ ’, on ore
tength ot 41.1S toot. ■ chord tength ot 3*.40 leet. ond 0 chord bearing
o l South 41*01*42" West] thence run South 00*14*13" East. 22.4* teat to
tho point of curvature ol a curve concave Northwesterly) thence run
Southwesterly along M id curvo, having 0 radius tength ot 710.00 toot,
■ control angle of 2**11*40". an ore tength ot 477.43 teat, a chord
length ot 441.4* toot, ond a chord boorlng ot South 11*3** 14" West to a
point ol raverM curvature concave Southeasterly! Ihenco run
Southwesterly, along M id curve, having e radius length e l 3*0.00
Met, e central angle ot M *)l'40", an ere length o l )*4.74 feet, e chord
tength o l M f .X feel, end e chord boaring ot South Il* s r i4 " ; thence
run South 00*t4*23M East, 147.70 (eel; thence run South 00*17*47"
East, 117*33 feel to e polnl o l curvature ol e curvo concave
Westerly; thence run Southerly along M id curvo, having e radius
length o l 10M.00 teal, e central angle ol II* i n I", an ere tength ot
2*3.41 leal, e chord length ol 1*1.33 (eat end e chord bearing o l South
10*30*34" West to a point of compound curvature of e curve concave
Northwesterly! thence run Southwesterly, along M id curve, having a
radius length o l 730.00 (eel, e central angle o l )l*32‘M ", en ere length
ot 430.23 leet, e chord length o l 474.47 leet, end e chord bearing ol
South 17*73’47" West: thonce run South 32*51*03’ *West, 37*.ft teat lo,
the point of curvature ot a curve concave Southeasterly; thence run
Southwesterly, along M id curve, having a radius length o l 1)00.00'
tool, e central angle ot 1*MI’4*’’, an arc length o l 41*.)4 teat, a chord
tength o l 4)7.2) leet, and e chord bearing ot South 44‘ U 'H '' West lo a:
point ol compound curvature o l a curve concave Southeasterly;
thence run Southwesterly, along M id curve, having a radius length
o l 1*30.00 feet, a control ongte ol t2*)0’40", en arc length o l 425,7* •
&gt;
‘ M , a chord length of 4)4.*3 tool, end a chord bearing ot Southj
20* 14’SO" West to a point ot compound curvature of o curvo concave
Easterly; thence run Southerly, along M id curvo, having a radius
length ot *30.00 leet. a central engte o l 43*M*22‘*. on arc tength ol&gt;
734.72 teat, q chord tength ot 724.4* teat, end a chord bearing ot Soulh,
flO*4t*13" East! thence run South tl*M '44" East, 100.00 loot to the
point o l curvature ot a c u m concave Westerly! thence run'
Southerly, along M id curve, having a radius tength o l 740.00 (tel, el
central angle ot 4t*13’ 14", en arc length of 3)1.11 (set. a chord length,
o l 321.11 feet, end e chord bearing ol South 0l* 0l’07" East; thence
run South t7*M 'M " West, 4*7.4* foot to the point ot curvature ot •
c u m concern Easterly! Ihenca run Southerly, along M id curve,’
having a radius length ol tlS.OO teat, a central angle ot MM+'SJ", en,
ere length of 41* 04 feat, e chord length ot 411.1) leet, end a chord
boorlng o l Soulh OI*21’37" East; thence run South 70*44'21" East,’
1)4.74 leet; thance run North l** 10 '4 r East, 37*1 Met lo * point,
lying on the aforesaid Northwesterly right ol way line of Hlneh«rl|
Roed; thence along M id Northwesterly right of wey line, run South
S4*44'05’’ West. I lf.23 teal lo Ihe point of beginning.
The above described parcel of lend lies In Seminole Counly end Ihe
C lfy o l Senford. Florida end contains 14.472 acres, more or ta il. N o li
that portions ol M id parcel of lend overlap with and/or ore also
contained within e portion of tho ebovrdescrlbed 213.70) acre, 4.47*
acre, 0.214 acre, and/or 2.340 tern parcels.
II. A resolution adopting e community redevelopment plan
proposed for the erne o l approximately 170+/- acres located e l Ihe
southeast corner of Iho 1-4 end SR-4* Interchange, approximately 4
mite* west e l downtown Sanford. Tho general scope of Ihe
community redevelopment plan It lo reduce or eliminate those
conditions o l existing or faulty end Inadequate roed layout and road
capacity by developing a proper highway system In order to provide
transportation access to the redevelopment area.
Copies of the proposed resolutions a rt available at the office ot the
C ity Clerk tor inspection.
A ll Interested parlies ere Invited to protent their comments at the
time end piece set forth abovo.
CIT Y COMMISSION
CIT Y OF SANFORD , FLO R ID A
Publish; June 17. I**3
DBF-111

Legal Notice
NOTICE O F CH ANGE OF L A N D U S I/N E IO N IN G
S M A LL S C A LE A M E N D M E N T TO S E M IN O LE COUNTY
C O M P R E H E N S IV E P U N
P U B L IC H B A R IN O TO B B H B L D
J U L Y 7, m i
Notice Is hereby given that Ihe Seminole Counly Local Land
Planning Agency/Plannlng and Zoning Commission (L P A /P B Z ) w ill
conduct a public hearing an July 7. IS*), beginning at 4 0 0 p m . or as
toon thereafter os possible, In the County Services Building, not
East F irst Street. Senford, F L , Room 1022 (the Board Chambers).
The purpeM o l thlt hearing Is to receive public Input, ond Input from
■ny local government or other agency, and to moko recommenda­
tions to the Board ot County Commissioners on ■ requested Small
Scale amendment to tho Seminole County Comprehensive Plan. The
L P A /P B Z w ill contider en associated reionlng concurrently with the
requested amendment. Lend use amendments on property containIng flood prone end wetland areas remain tubiecl
I the applicable
“
1 lo
Conservation
itlon lend use designation and various overlay toning
classifications end Ihe provisions relating thereto. The lend u m
amendment end reionlng to be considered by the L P A /P B Z Is as
follows:
M IC H A E L GOOD — Plan amendment from Suburban Estates lo
Planned Development end associated reionlng from A-1 (A gricul­
ture) to PCD (Planned Commercial Development District) de
scribed a t Lot t, Block 2, Senford Farms, according to the plat,
thereof recordod In Plo t Book 1, Page 132 ol the public records at
Somlnolo County, further described e t located on Ihe north side of
Orange Boulevard, Immediately northwest o l the Intersection ol
Orange Boulevard end Dunbar Avenue, containing approximately,
five (I) acres. BCC District 13.
The general public It encouraged to appear of thlt hearing ond
present Input In accordance with the procedures ulllUed by the
L P A /P B Z , Including Ihe submission of written comments to the
L P A /P B Z c/o " Comprehensive Planning Oftfce". 1101 East First
Street, Sanlord, F L » 7 7i, telephone (407) » l l l » . extension 71*4.
Comments must be received no later then June 23. 1t t t to bo
Included In the staff report distributed lo L P A /P B Z members. T hlt
hearing may be continued Irom lim e to lim e es deemed necesMry by
the L P A /P B Z . Copies of tho proposed Smell Scale amendment end
related Intormalion, Including any comments received, ere aval table
tor public Inspection et the address above. Room 1147, between the
hour* of l;00 a.m. ond 1:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding
holidays. S tall w ill be available to answer any questions regarding
tho amendment and reionlng.
Person! with disabilities needing assistance to participate In any ol
proceedings should contact tho Employee Ratal Ions Depart
ADA Coordinator 40 hourt In advance at tho mooting ot (407)
311-1120, extension 7*41.
Persons ore advised that ItI they decide to appeal any decision
made at this hearing, they w illI 1need e record et the proceedings, en^
tor such purpose, they may need
a verbatim record of the
tho
Nd to ensure ■
proceedings Is mode, which record Includes the testimony ond
evidence upon which tho appeal It based. Section 204.0101 Florid*
Statutes, BOARO O P CO U NTY COMM ISSIONERS, B Y : F R A N C E S
C H A N D L E R . M A N A G E R , C O M P R E H E N S IV E P L A N N IN G DIVI:
SION.
Publish: June 17 and M .1**l
DEP-113

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, June 17, 1OT3 - TA

Retirement worries: health, money
By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer________

WASHINGTON - Substantial
num bers of A m ericans are
nearing retirement without a
pension, assets or health Insur­
ance. according to early results
from one of the largest studies
on how people Tare as they age.
The emerging portrait or the
80-somethlng generation, re­
leased today by the National
Institute on Aging, also finds
many middle-age Americans
sandwiched between obligations
to Trail, aging parents and their
own adult children and grand­
children.
Conducted by the University
of Michigan's Institute Tor Social
Research, the study la based on
interviews last year and early
this year with nearly 13,000
middle-age Americans In 7,600
households.
“People nearing retirement are

mostly In pretty good shape
physically, mentally and eco­
nomically," says F. Thomas
Juster. who directed the study.
“But behind the averages are
large proportions of people fall­
ing Into some category — III or
disabled, without pensions, In­
surance or assets, or lacking
family support — that may rob
them of a satisfying and suc­
cessful retirement," said Juster,
an economics professor.
The study began In 1090 and
researchers plan to continue
their work for the next 13 years.
The research Is designed to
provide reliable Information on
the labor force activity, health
status and family responsibilities
of Americans nearing retire­
ment.
"As we move through the turn
of the century, the U.S. popula­
tion will be aging rapidly, thanks
to the baby boom generation.
The magnitude of this age shift

w ill p r e s e n t m a jo r n ew
challenges to the nation's health
and economic Institutions."
Among the study's findings:
—Almost half of those sur­
veyed believe that there Is some
likelihood they could lose their
job In the next year and that
they have teas than a 50-50
chance of finding a new Job In a
few months. “Overall, there Is a
good deal of Job. Insecurity ...
possibly a good deal more than
existed In the past," the report
said.
—The median Income among
households surveyed was about
$37,500, with median assets
about $80,OQO, About 20 per­
cent of couples reported virtually
no assets.
—One out of every seven
people surveyed Is not covered
by any kind of health Insurance.
Substantially higher numbers of
black and Hispanic households
don't have a health plan.

Parents, school children try to
cope with kindergartner’s suicide
By JOHN PAOBNTI
Assoclatad Press W riter________

DANIA, Fla. — School officials
gave out hugs and explanations
to young elementary students
trying to make sense of the
death of a 6-year-old girl who
killed herself by standing In
front of a train.
Meanwhile, some parents of
the students wondered why
kindergartner Jackie Johnson
had to cross the railroad tracks
to Danla Elementary School
when another school was In her
neighborhood.
Authorities said Jackie fought
off siblings and a cousin to stay
In front of the oncoming freight
train, because she wanted "to
become an angel and be with her
mother."
School o fficials say her
mother, Carla Johnson. Is ter­
minally 111. Officials with the
Broward County Medical Exam­
iner's office say they arc trying
to confirm news reports that the
mother has AIDS.
"We're not sure of that." said
R ichard R odriguez, an In­
vestigator with the medical ex­
aminer's office. "That's the mil­
lion dollar question."
Gloria Wright, the cousin of
Jackie's mother, said Wednes­
day she couldn't comment on
the accident and quickly closed
the door at the home' where
Jackie had been living.
The girl with a sun of a smile
was the youngest suicide In
Browurd County, according to
the county medical examiner
and students had questions for a
team or counselors who con­
verged on the K-5 Danla Elemen­
tary School.

"We are de-emphasizing the
suicide part so that children
don't think they can get atten­
tion by doing this," said Danla
Elementary School principal
Carole Stanler, fighting back
tears. "I was a little bit con­
cerned with the 'wanting to be
with the angels' part because
somebody might want to be an
angel, too."
Fourth-grader Josh Coe says
he understands why Jackie
might want to die since her
mother was terminally 111.
"If my mother was 111, I'd do
the same th in g ," said the
11-year-old Coe. "I know how
she feels. My grandma Is 111,” he
said. "It's still a tragedy."
School p sy ch o lo g ist J a n
Lowcnthal said the students
appeared to be handling the
tragedy well.
"There's maybe a question or
two and they're a little quieter
than usual," she said, "We are
not seeing a lot of tears."
Stanler said Jackie showed no
signs of being distraught, but It
often is hard for teachers to tell
with younger children.
"It could truly be an acci­
dent." Stanler said. "I don't
think alje thought p u t,a ll the
consequences
of It. t | t rf pr 1*1 1*y 1 I
' !4 I
,l*lR . t IT.Ilf I' *

attending Bethune Elementary
In her neighborhood.
"I live a block from Bethune."
she said. "I don't think It's fair."
Moments after Ceasar crossed
the track with her daughter, a
freight train at full speed roared
north down the Florida East
Coast Railroad Tracks.
Some students waited for It to
pass.
B row ard C ounty schools
spokeswoman Merrie Meyers
said students cross the tracks to
Dania Elementary because of a
court-ordered desegregation set­
tlement and that bus service
isn't allowed within a two-mile
boundary of the school.
“ There are s tu d e n ts
throughout Florida who cross
railroad tracks In order to attend
schools," said Meyers, adding
the crossing isn't considered
dangerous because of the nearby
intersections.

—Two In five will have no
pension Income at all. other than
Social Security.
—About tw o-thirds of the
p articip an ts say th ey 're In
excellent or very good health.
About 20 percent reported a
health condition that limits
work.
—Almost th ree-fo u rth s of
participants would prefer to go
from a fulltime Job to part-time
work when they retire, rather
th an leave the work force
abruptly.
—About one In five are afraid
to leave their current lobs
b e c a u s e th e y m ig h t lose
pensions or health Insurance
b e n e fits If th e y sw itc h e d
employers,
—About 70 percent of the
married couples are members of
four-generation families.
-Two-thirds of those surveyed
h a v e liv in g p a r e n ts or
parents-ln-law.

7 5 a n d up...
Tlop 10 counties ranked

b y percent aged 78 an d
older, and num ber aged
78 and older, 1990
■

(1)Tampa-8l. Peteraburg-Cloarwalor (2) Bradenton

Rank Metro erea — aged 75 and older
1 r

Llano, TX — 1,692

1 *

Sareaote. FL — 39.551

% aged

178 and

fo ld e r

“ li$ % *

14.2 % a

Six of 10 U.S. counties with the highest percentages of people 75 and older
are located in Florida. Llano. Texas, however, Is No. 1 with 14.6 percent.

Postal service introduces
stamps commemorating rock
By PATRICK DOLAN
A s s o c la ltd P ra ia W rllar

CLEVELAND — The Elvis stamp got some
company Wednesday when the U.S. Postal
Service issued stamps commemorating music
legends BUI Haley. Buddy Holly, Otis Redding,
Ritchie Valens. Clyde McPhatter and Dinah
Washington.
Elvis Presley got another stamp — this one
featuring his last name. The original, issued In
January, bore only his first name.
Special Issues drew lines of stamp collectors
at Postal Service ceremonies In Cleveland,
where the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum Is being built, and In Santa Monica.
Calif., home of the National Music Foundation.
"1 think nearly everyone has strong memo­
ries of the songs of these seven giants of rock
'n* roll and rhythm and blues," said Michael
Coughlin, U.S. deputy postmaster general.
"They are pioneers. They have changed the
course of everyday life."
Officials of the Rock Hall, which broke
ground for construction June 7, assisted at the
Cleveland ceremony. Hall Chairman William

Hulett received a framed display of the stamps,
which will be displayed when the hall opens In
1995.
"Most of us grew up with rock 'n' roll, so
these stamps interest a lot of people," Hulett
said.
Other cities marked the occaslon with events
that attracted a mix of music fans and stamp
collectors.
Hundreds of Buddy Holly fans went to his
hometown. Lubbock. Texas, to get special
postmark cancellations, be-bop at a Crickets
concert and visit his grave. Lubbock
Postmaster John Frisby canceled the first
Holly stamp and presented It to Holly's widow.
"To me. his music Is the top," said Garland
Pool of Athens, Texas. "It’s fresh and crisp. It
doesn't go out of style."
In Macon. Go., about 300 fans of Redding
gathered outside the Douglas Theater, where
he was discovered In the early 1960s. He died
at age 26 In a plane crash in 1967.
At Washington's Hard Rock Cafe, Presley's
"Return to Sender" was playing as collectors
lined up at a post office on wheels parked at
the curb outside.

After school, Stanler walked
some students out, giving.them
encouragem ent. Meanwhile,
some parents rushed their stu­
dents across the tracks before
sheriff deputies could make
them use the Intersections.
Helen Ccasar was walking her
7-year-old daughter, Shecna,
across the tracks from Danla
Elementary School. She said
that Jackie should have been

Multiple meteorites
idoomed dinosaurs,
study suggests
By MALCOLM BITTIII
1
A P Science Writer

-------

NEW YORK - Scientists re­
ported evidence today that the
dinosaurs were killed ofT not by a
-single asteroid crashing Into the
Earth, but by several.
■ A popular theory blames the
extinction of the dinosaurs on a
single Impact near the Mexican
town of Chlcxulub.
But the new study says bits of
asteroid found north of Hawaii
could not have come from the
Mexican site. And It says similar
finds In Europe, New Zealand,
the Atlantic and Indian oceans
and elsewhere have differing
chemical com positions that
suggest they came from still
other impacts.
Eric Robin and colleagues at
the Center far Law Radioactivity
in Qlf-sur-Yvette in France pres­
ented their evidence In the
Journal Nature.
Virgil Sharpton of the Lunar
and Planetary In stitu te In
Houston said that while the
French scientists may be right
about a Pacific Impact, he found
it more likely that the Pacific
material came from the Mexican
Impact.
The Idea behind the meteorite
theory is that a large impact
could have doomed dinosaurs by
setting off such catastrophes as
widespread firestorms or kicking
up dust that blotted out the sun
and led to a lethal cooling.
The French scientists studied
material that was deposited on
the ocean floor at about the time

of the dinosaur extinction. Tiny
rounded grains and Jagged
fragments contained spinels,
which are crystals that form In
very high temperatures, such as
those of an asteroid burning in
the atmosphere or smashing Into
a surface.
The researchers said the Pacif­
ic spinels did not come from a
Mexican impact because the
Jagged fragments could not have
been blasted all the way from
the Chlcxulub crater same 6,000
miles away without melting.
Besides, the spinels would not
have foqncd from an Impact on
land, where most of the asteroid
material would be vaporized,
they said.
Sharpton disagreed, saying
unmelted fragments of quartz
thought to have come from the
Mexican crater have been found
all over the world. The spinels
could have come front a land
impact because research sug­
gests the back end of a crashing
meteorite blows Into the sky
while retaining Its basic com­
position. he said.
Sharpton also said the size and
aluminum content of the Pacific
spinels fit In with prior work
s u g g e s t i n g t h a t s p in e ls
worldwide came from an Impact
In the area of Chlcxulub.
Robin replied that it Is not
clear whether the widespread
quartz all came from the Mex­
ican crater. He also said spinels
rich In aluminum appear only In
the Pacific, which argues for an
Impact there.

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Thursd ay, Juno 17, 1993

Democrats set to ram a deficit
cutting bill through Senate panel
■yALAN PHAM
Associated Pross Writer

\

WASHINGTON - Democrats are ready to
muscle President Clinton's deficit-reduction hill
through the Senate Finance Committee after
replacing an unpopular energy lux with a
gasoline tax hike and new Medicare cuts
Like the measure the Democratlc-conlrollcd
House narrowly approved last month, the Senate
hill ts dominated hy higher taxes on the
well-to-do, companies and some Social Security
recipients.
"We mean to see It gels all the way through"
the Senate. Majority Leader George Mitchell.
D-Malne. said Wednesday after the Finance
panel's 1 1 Democrats ended a month-long
standoff and crafted a compromise measure.
Treasury Secretary Lloyd Hcntsen ladled the
agreement, which Increased the hill's reliance on
spending cuts, as "an Important step along the
path to enactment."
The Finance Committee planned to vote today
on the legislation, which would add 4.9 cents to
the 14.1 ecnl-per-gallon tax already on gasoline.
It seemed all hut certain that the panel's nine
Republicans, eager to kill the hill because of taxes
they call excessive, would not succeed. Mitchell
said drbatc hy the full Senate would begin next
week.
Flnunce Committee Chairman Daniel Patrick
Movnlhan. D-N.Y.. said people earning more than

$ KK).(XX) a year would hear 80 percent of the
hill's lax burden. Families under 820.000 would
actually pay Irss taxes, he said.
When combined with spending cuts planned In
later measures and reduced interest payments on
federal borrowing, the legislation would shave
$r&gt;OH billion off budget deficits over the next five
years —a hit higher than the House total.
Hut the Senate's Democrats, generally more
conservative than their House counterparts,
refashioned parts of the package.
Overall, the changes reshaped Clinton's defi­
cit-reduction plan Into one relying on spending
cuts for $280 billion and tax Increases for $248
billion — a ratio that conservatives said was
Important.
"It keeps faith with a Democratic Party being
on a new course, a centrist course," said Sen.
David Horen. D-Okla.. who led efforts to kill
Clinton's energy lax and add spending cuts.
The senators' most prominent change: killing
Clinton's tax on the heal content of fuels,
electricity and other forms of energy. The
so-called Htu tax was designed to raise $72 billion
over five years.
They replaced It with the new levy on cuch
gallon of gasoline, diesel and aviation fuels. The
new tax. which would lake effect Oct. 1. would
bring the government about $25 billion over the
five-year period.
To find extra savings, senators added $19
billion In Medicare cuts.

Doctors say $170,000 income not all that much, by comparison
■y CHRISTOPHER CONNILL
A s s o c l a t n d P r o s s W r it n r

CHICAGO - Ask a doctor
about the medical profession's
$170.(XX) average Income and
chances are you'll get a short
lecture on how much basketball
stars and corporate tycoons
make.
"I don't think I'm overpaid.
What I do Is just as Important as
the basketball players." said Dr.
Morton M. Kurtz. 59. a family
practitioner from New York. "It's
a pretty good living, but I
deserve It. I earn It."
Dr. Peter W. Carmel. 58. a
New York neurological surgeon
— one of the higher paid
specialties — said. "I don't
apologize lor my Income because

1 work harder than anybody you
know."
Money Is a hot tuple at the
American Medical Association's
semiannual convention — the
money It costs to go to medical
school and set up a practice, the
money doctors earn from what Is
commonly a 80-hour, six- or
seven-day work week, and the
money they fear health reform
could take from their pockets.
These doctors — some ol tin*
nation's 800.000 practicing
physicians — say their six-figure
Incomes barely put them on a
par with mid-level business ex­
ecutives. not to mention cor­
porate lawyers. Among pro
ballplayers, imdilmilllon-dollar
contracts arc commonplace.
After hearing a pitch lor health

reform from Hillary Rodham
C lin to n . Jo y A. Mnxcy. a
84-year-old pediatrician from
Atlanta, said, "I would gladly
swap work hours and paychecks
with Mrs. Clinton from when she
was In her law practice in Little
Rock before becoming first
lady."
Mrs. Clinton made $209.(XX)
last year.
Maxey said she made 878.1XX)
working 70 hours and getting "a
day oil every other week." She
still owes 810,(XX) from medical
school.
She thinks that most ol the
tidk about health reform Is really
about "how physicians are going
to gel paid."
L)r. Scott A arons. -10. a
urologist from Huytown. Texas.

said. "My Income Is very, very
low. I.ast year I made about
$120,000. I was working my
butt oil. ... Seventy to 80 percent
ol what I do Is Medicare. The
payincut Is so poor that there's a
very slim prollt margin."
Aarons |ust qull a managed
care plan that had been paying
him a meager 40 cents a month
per patient to provide services
for some 2.000 patients.
"We need collective bargain­
ing." said Aarons "Tlml's the
only weapon we can have to tell
these managed health care pro­
grams. ... 'No. we will not accept
what you're doing "
Dr. M. Frank Soluncr. 89. a
g a s t r o e n t e r o l o g i s t I ro in
W inston-Salem . N.C.. said.
"(Chairmun) Michael Eisner gets

$178 million for Ills stock
benefits In the Wall Disney Cnrp.
Is t hiit wrong?"
"I know some physicians I
think iire making too much
money, some cardiovascular
surgeons who make 8750.(XX) or
SI million it year." said Soluncr.
"Yet the stress these people are
under, the training that they've
had and the things that they do
arc wonderful."
The most Soluncr ever made
In Ills practice was $105,(XX)
"That's a lot ol money I've had
a good lllc." la- said. "Hilt the
rcal |ov In the profession Is the
admiration (and) acclaim from
vour patients. What's In the
bank isol little value."
I)r Michael I). Hlsliop ol
Hloomlugton. Ind.. president­

elect of the American Hoard ol
Emergency Medicine, said some
of his group's 12.(XX) members
worry that Clintons push for
managed com petition could
drive down b u s i n e s s a t
emergency departments.
Hlshop doubts It. "We're still
going to have the disenfran­
chised. Illegal aliens, drug ad­
dicts and people who arc
super-sick and super-ln|ured."
he said. And II Clinton achieves
universal coverage, emergency
doctors will no longer have to
write oil 90 to 40 percent ol their
Ices as had debt.
Many doctors approached at
the AMA meeting were skeptical
about ('Union's ability to pull oil
health reform, but convinced the
system needs changes.

Hair pitchm an gives free
hairpieces to sick kids
■y LARRY MoSHANI
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK — Adam Cox
thinks the Hair Club for Men will
change his life for the heller. Hut
Adam Is no 98-ycar-old divorced
man with male pattern baldness:
he's a 10-year-old boy battling
back from bruin surgery.
The boy Is one of several dozen
youngsters who turned to hair
replacement expert Sy Sperling
for help when an Illness left
them bald.
Sperling — who Is not only the
Hair Club president, lie's also a
client — provided Ills services for
free.
"We've been doing this for a
long time." said Amy Sperling.
Sy's wife and the handler of such
requests. "It's there for children
who huve this problem."
Adum. a fourth-grader from
Asheville. N.C.. has endured
seven years of radiation and
three operations since he was
diagnosed with brain tumors.
The t r e a t m e n t s bur ne d a
cross-shaped patch atop Ills head
that will no longer grow hair.
"Kids are kids. Even Ills best
friends. ITthey want to gel under
Ills skin, cull him huldheudcd."
said Ills mother. I’aui
The Cox family, with two
tickets donated by American
Airlines. Is flying to New York for
u fitting this month.
The Sperlings recently made
arrangements with other youth
cuncer centers to help out: the
Memorial SI on n - Ke 11e r I n g
Cancer Center and Snyder's
Children Hospital In New York
City, and Jackson Memorial
Hospllul in Miami.

STO R E
HOURS:
THURSD AY
9 AM - 7 PM
FRID AY
9 A M - 8 PM
SATU R D AY
9 A M - 6 PI

"It's siid. very sad." said Mrs.
Sperling, whose husband has
made Ills fortune refurbishing
America's hairlines. "You wish
you could give them more than
Just luilr."
Many of the youngsters are
reluctant to discuss their plight,
although they're thrilled the
Sperlings have helped them lit
in
"Thunk you lor mv wig it
makes me real happy." read a
letter Irom one teen-ager.
And the parents ol a 17-yearold who lost his hair during four
months of chemotherapy sent
the Sperlings hefore-and-aftcr
pictures with a warm note.
The Sperlings' first young re­
cipients were brought In by
Sperling's ubiquitous TV com­
m ercials. Mrs. Sperling re­
membered an 8-year-old cancer
patient who repeatedly heard the
televised pitch.
The girl finally asked her
mother. "If they can help bald
men. why can't they help me?”
Mrs. Sperling recalled. "We
helped them."
The Cox loudly had a similar
experience. The family — mostly
Adam's dad. who was getting a
little thin on top —was watching
a 90-minute Hair Club In­
fomercial.
"There were all these different
guys with their hairpieces." Mrs.
Cox recalled. "And Adam said, ‘I
wont to look like that.'"
Later tills month, he will.
"Hey. there's grown men go­
ing and doing (Ills lor that very
reason." Ills mother said. "I
can't Imagine what it's like to go
through this at 10."

E A R L Y A M E R IC A N
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Group Includes:
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Sports

B
My kingdom for a pitcher

LOCALLY

Alexander, Colem an sparkle on mound in N A B F action

Sanford baseball banquets

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See Soft ball,’Pngc'^B

Sunshine State Games track qualifier Saturday
F r o m Staff Reports

l l l r s l a l r a t le a s t A M t l a s s p i i m
&lt; l i g i l i l r in i , u n iM i r

W I N C K K I ’ A K K — Y o u n g a t h l r i r s h o p i n g tu
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M IA M I
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u l I I H 7 l n | ( .1.57 |

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a i - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, June 17, 1M3

Ponder, Rogers notch
Late Model victories

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
■;? :t ’J-W.
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DOOR

W*4no4d*y nlgM
P in t race — I4M, M i ll. M
J C Y ’iK I d D u itln
H 40 5.20 l.M
/O m ni T rlih a Y
&gt;.M 1.00
S M L C o lft t Mug
100
a (1 / 1 M .M P (17) 145.M T (17-1) 154.04
Second race — U M , C i It .U
2 Jam
10.00 4.40 2 40
I M P 'i Royalact
io .m 3.40
4 Hondo Boomerang
1.40
Q ( I D 11.0# P ( M l 01.40 T (1-1-4) 101.40 DO
(17)211.00
Third race - 2044, Oi it.7*
l Linda'* Sally
lf.40 5.00 4.20
1 JA Dentin Raba
7.40 4.40
2 JC K Genie
4.20
Q O -l) 40.04 P (4-AID ll. M (A IM ) 0.10 T
(0-1-1) 740.40
Fourth race — 1044, C i 40.11
1 Secults
7.40 1.00 1.00
4 RV Hidden Aganda
TOO 1.40
7 I’m The R o m
4.00
Q 11-4) 11.04 P (1 -4) 40.00 T (1-4-1) 101.00
Fifth ra c e - 1 4 M , B i l l .17
I Gull'* F lirt
11.20 4 40 1.00
0 Tonka Moonbeam
4.40 1.40
/Jim * Swiff Wind
lo o
Q 11-4) 11.04 P (1-4) S7.M T (1-4-7) M . M
t ilt h r a c e - U M , At 11.41
1 Dewey Am y Ray
17.40 7.40 4.20
I RV Midnight Jake
7.00 4.00
4 Okie M arly
1.40
O (14) 110.00 P (1-All) U .M (All-0) ll. M T
( i &gt; 4) 1041.40 P k k l ( i l l ) i at 1 aaM Sit#
Seventh race — U M . C i 11.71
i Bretilm Wood*
j .k
4.40 1.40
1 BO Deltona
4.00 1.40
4 Dewey Chocochlp
2.10
Q 11 1) M .M P ( I D 02.44 T (4-1-4) 11M0 I
11-14-7) 407.04
l l o M h r a c e - m m . 8: i i . n
1Mrque#'* Cht#
10.40 7.40 4.40
I T Honey Graham
1.00 1.00
2 M PS Bravooipre**
JK
Q 11-4) 11.00 P d -a ) 71,10 T (1+1) M l. H
Ninth r a c e - U M , A i 11.11
l M y U tile Nlneoh
f.oo l. M 1.40
1 Back On Track
100 4.00
1 Bobby Tinker
7 00
Q ( I D t.M P (I S) 12.11 T (1+1) 07JO QD
(1-1A 1-1)411.04
loth race - U M . C t 1141
4 JC'» King And I
1100 1.40 10.40
1 RV Blockbutter
7.00 4.20
I Ju»t Perfect
0.20
Q (1-4) 14.04 P (4-1) 117J 4 r (4-1-All) 114.10
11th r a c e - 1 4 M ,D i 11J t
I Tioga Nicole
11.20 l. M 1.00
O E u rA P rln c e
1.40 1.10
SDllllgaeSon
1.00
Q (1-4) M .M P (1-4) 40.44T 11+1) t H J 0
Carryover 14.014.10
11th r a c e - 1 0 M ,A i 11.17
4 Jenna’* Mitten*
tl.oo 1.00 1.00
4 M L Fa*f Getaway
1.40 ISO
I R V Spellbinder
i.oo
a (o-4) 10.M p (M)u.ee t (*+etioo.ee o

(o-o+i) eei.oe

n t h ra ce — M44, I t ir.o i
1 Tlega M ania
7.40 l. M 1.00
0 Bubble* Bart
11.40 7.40
7 Brink* Bobble Sue
4.00
a (1-0) M .N P t I D 01.11 T (1+7)410.00
H th raca — 10M, Di 11,17
/Je tta F a w n
4.00 4.40 1.00
1 Night Owl Andy
S.40 1.40
J J u t l A M irage
4.00
a (17) 11.40 P (7-1) 41.40 0 (7+1-1) 071.00
A - 701/ H—107,147

sJAI-ALAI

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Wednesday night
F irst gama
ITIno
7.M 4.40 1.10
2 Gabby
1.00 l.M
7 Pinson
ll. M
Q ( I D M .M P ( I D M.40T (1+7) 141.00
Socandgain*

O (17) ll. M P (1-7) 141.10 T (1-7-1) M2.M
D O O M ) 10T.M
Third oamo
2 M arcel Aguirre
1.40 4.20 2.10
4 Col# Andy
*10 J.I0
SPIntofi Oyerl
4.40
Q (I *) ».«• P (1-4) 71.44 T (1-04) 444.14
Fourth same
1 Tlno Jot*
14.40 1.00 4.20
7.20 200
4 M arcel Oyerl
7 E rtd fle Andy
320
Q 11-4) 24.24 P 0-4) 11.40 T (1+1) 141.44
F ilth game
I Plte-Forurle
12.40 5.20 400
2 P Inton Chi mole
2.40 2.40
4 M ercal-Enrique
l.M
Q 11-0) 44.00 P (P I) II1.T0T (4+4) 401.00
Sixth gome
1 Pinson-Enrique
11.00 1.00 1 00
1 M ercal Andy
4.00 l. M
1 1rlgoyen Forurle
l. M
Q ( M l M .M P (1-1) M .M T (+1-1) 144.40
levenfhgem#
5 Enrique
M .M 10.40 11.40
1 Rena
(0.40 11.40
4lrlgoyen
4.00
Q (11) ll. M P (1-1)47.10 TU-1-4II004.M ’
Eighth gama
OM andlbaChlm ala
U .M 11.M l. M
4 Rene-Mendl
T.M 4.00
4 Said V id o r
t.00
0 (4+) 44.3# P (4-4) 117.14 TT (4+4) l l l . M
Ninth gama
JM endlb e-G allli
M .N 11.00 1.40
1 Said Beltran
1.40 l.M
7 Napa Victor
1.40
0(1-1) M .M P ( l- f ) 141.10T lt-l-7 )4 H .H
10th gama
2 Beltran
l. M 4.M l.M
5 Gel III
4.40 l.M
4 Don
1.00
QII-4) 41.40 P (1-4) IM .M T (1+4) IM.44
n th gome
4 Said Enrique
3.40 l. M 1.24
3 Ola* Cottle
3.40 l.M
4.40
/Zugete-Dofa
Q (1-4) M .M F (4-1) 17.74 T (4-1-7) 141.10
u ih gent*
4 Mandl beB oh
14.40 7.M 4.M
4.30 7.M
I Zugeie Urald*
3.M
IM Ikol Oyerl
Q (O S) 55.40 F (4-1) 114.14 T (4+1) 774.44
QD (1+4-1) 141.14
11th gam*
/Aram ayo
000 l. M 4.M
3 20 l.M
1 Bob
l. M
2M*ndl
O (1-7) U .M F ( M l 41,44 T (7+1) 717.44
tathgantt
12.00 7.M 4,20
101(1 Bob
t l.M *10
1Aram ayo Oon
0.40
1 Said Chlmol*
Q 0-1) 54.04 F ( l- l) U2.44 T (1-1-1) 1U .411
(4-1+4) 411JO DD (7-All) U .M
A —M7j H—114, M l

B A M iA U s A f AMAilMMI 1
A ll Tim et EOT
N AT IO N AL L E A O U E
East Dlvltlen
W L
O l
Pet.
45 t* .701 —
Phlladalphla
.554 U S
St. Lout*
35 M
Montreal
IS 30 .530 tow
Chicago
31 31 .500 13
34 .447 II
Florid*
M
71 35 .444 141*
Pitttburgh
20 4] .317 14is
New York
Wed Dlvltlen
W L
Fcf.
OS
41 13
444 —
San Fra n d tco
Allanla
37 30 .552 4
34 M
•5M 7
Lo* Angelo*
Houtton
33 27 .532 71*
30 IS
443 12
Cincinnati
24 34 .404 111*
San Diego
Co.ui ado
11 4] .321 M 'y
W adisttday'i Oamet
ji . Louis), Pittsburgh!
Chicago *, Florid* 4
Atlanta I, Ntw York 2
Montreal 4. Philadelphia 1 ,10 Innings
Sen Francisco I, Cincinnati 1.10 Innings
Houston 1, San Diego 4
Colorado/, Lo* Angeles 4

Thuf t d iv 't Q iittii

sen Francisco (Sw ill 111 at Cliwlnn#ll
" . m ilt y l 01,12:11p.m.
SI Louis (Corm ltr 11) a l Chicago (Wandatl

O0), 1:20 p.m.
Florida (Hammond 4-4) at Philadelphia
(Jack ten 4-1), 7/11 p.m.
New York (Gooden 7-s) at Pittsburgh
( W a lk / 1), 7:11p.m.
San Diego (Bane* 7-1) at Houtton (Kile
S -l).1:01 p.m.
Friday'* Oemet
SI. Loul*atChlcago,2:M p.m ,
Atlanta at Montreal, 7:11 p.m.
Florida at Fhiladtlphla,7ilSp .m ,
New York at Pittsburgh, 7:11 p.m.
Los Angela* at Cincinnati. 7:11 p.m.
San Franc l»co at Houtton, 1:01p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, *:0l p.m.
A M E R IC A N L I A O U I
■ a it C iv ilia n
W
L Pet. OB
Detroit
40
14 .411 Toronto
00
11 .174 1
New York
17
It
.M l 4
Baltimore
11
11 .100 7(j
Boiton
10
14 .440 10
Milwaukee
24
11 .444 m y
Cleveland
24
14 .404 14
West Dlvltlen
W
L Pet. GB
Kansas Clly
14
IT .140 —
Chicago
11
IT
ill
Is
Cel Itor n il
11
30 .114 l i t
Seattle
11
14 .477 4
Tsxas
M
11 .474 4
Minnesota
IT
12 .471 4
Oakland
21
17 .141 t U
Wednesday'* Oemet
Toronto 4, Minnesota 0
Milw aukee/, Baltim ore 2
Chicago a, Oakland 0
Cleveland I. Detroit 1
Boston 7, New York 1
California I, Texet 1
Kansas City S, Seattle 1
Thursday’s Oemet
Cleveland (Cook 1-4) at Detroll (Moors
4-1), 1:11 p.m.
Chicago (Fern a n d a ! 7-1) e l O akland
(B.W Itt5-4),l:tlp.m .
Minnesota IDathalat Id ) at New York
IM.W itt 11), 7:10p.m.
Boston (Quentrlll 14) et Toronto (A.Lelter
1-5), 7:11p.m.
Texes (Rogers 41) at California I Sand­
erson 71), 10:01p.m.
Frid ay's Oemet
Kansas City at Oekland, 4:01 p.m.
Baltim ore at Cleveland, 7:01 p.m.
M l Iweukee el Oetrol t, 7:01 p .m .
Minnesota el New York. 7:M p.m.
Bos Ion i f Toronto. 7:11p.m.
Chicago a) California, 10:01 p.m.
T a x a ta l Stadia, 10.-11 p.m.
F irst Halt
■ostern Dtvtslon
W
L Pet.
G rte n v lllo (B rsv o t)
M
If
.M7
Orlando (Cubs)
M
It .117
Caroline (Pirate*)
14
U
.107
Knoxville (Blu* Jays)
12
11 .470
Jacksonville (Mariners) 11
17 .4*4
x-Nashvlil* (Twins)
14 2T
Birmingham (WSoxI
11 14
Huntsvllla (Alhltcs)
M
k
Memphis (Royals)
II
M
Chattanooga (Reds)
M
14
x clinched first hall division title
Wednesday's Oemet
Oroenvllte 11, O rle n d o l
Carolina 10, Nethv Ilie*
Knoxville 1, Huntsville 0
Birmingham 4, Chattanooga 1
Jacksonville 4, Memphis J
Thursday's Oemei
Orlande at Ortenvllle
Huntsville ilk n o x v llla
Birmingham at Chattanooga
M am phlsatN ashvllla
Friday's Oemet
Jacktanvllia at Or lend*
Graanvl lit at Carolina
Chattanooga at Knexvllla
Birmingham at Huntsvllla
Memphis at Kathvtlla

.147
,4 fl
. it )
.441
.441

OB
—
1
4
4
7V»
—
1
I
7
Ih

RAINES GAUGE

•93
C s ttfo r y
G a m is ............
A t-bals............ .. 88
R u n s...............
H its .................
R B I..................
D oubles.......... .. 3
T rip le s............ .. 0
7
Home rune.....
S te e le .............
Average..........

best
180
647
133
194
71
38
13
18
90
.334

Runs Scared
D y k tlra , Phlladalphla, 17/ Bends. San
F ra n cisco , 11: K ru k , Phlla d a lp h la , 4tj
Daulton, Phlladalphla, 4ti Biggio, Houston,
4*i M aW llllam s, Ian Francisco, 41; DHelllnt,
Phlladalphla, 41.
Rant B allad In
M aW llllam s, San Francisco, U i Daulton,
Philadelphia, s i; Bonds, San Francisco. 51;
O a l a r r a i a , C o lo r a d o , 10) D H e llln t ,
P h lla d a lp h la , 47; G ra ta , C hicago. 47;
Grissom, Mantra* 1,41.
N th
Oalarraga. Colorado, 01; Bagwell, Houtton,
M: Kelly, Cincinnati, M : Bleuter, Atlanta,
7t; Bonds, S in P r tn c ltc o , 7fi G rsco,
Chicago, 74: VtnSlyko. Pittsburgh, 71.
Oroco, Chlcogo, M ; Cordero, Montreal, it;
C am lnlll, Houtton. it ; D yktlra, Philadelphia,
It; Bichette, Colorado, II; I ore tied with 17.
T riplet
D Lew is. Son Francisco, 4; I Young, Col­
orado, 1; M artin, Pittsburgh, 1; Castilla,
Colorado, 1; M orandlnl, Philadelphia, 1;
Coleman. Now York, 1; J a r t Hod with 4.
M aW llllam s, San Francisco. If; Bonds. San
Fra ncisco , It; B o n illa. Now Y ork, t l;
M c O r l t f . S o n D l t g o , I I ; D a u lt o n ,
Philadelphia. IS; Justice. Atlanta. 14; Gent,
Atlanta. 14.
S ftltn B a ta t
Carr, Florida, 171 Coleman, Now York, 17;
DLowls, San Francisco, l i t EYoung, Col­
orado. H i Robert*. Cincinnati, M; EDevls,
Lot Angeles, 70; ACole, Colorado, If; Nixon,
Atlanta, If.
PITCH ING
J Otclslens
TGrtana. Phlladalphla, l - l , SIT. 2 1*;
Schilling, Phlladtlphl*. l- l, .M f, 1.11; H ill,
Montreal, 4-1, .157, l.SI; Burkett, Sen F ra n ­
cisco. * 2. .I ll, l.M ; Avery, Allan!*, 4-2, .400,
2.70; OnJack son, Philadelphia. 41. ,7M, 1.11;
RI|o, Clnclnnell, * 1, .710,1.11.

, 1,

CUBS4, M A R L IN I4
CHICAGO
* eh r h M
a h rh h t
C a rrc t
OSm thcf 1 0 0 )
4 It 0
V ice ln o Jb 1 2 1 0
Brberie2t&gt; 5 0 1 1
Sndbrolto 4 1 1 1
Mgdan 3b 4 0 10
Dttrd* 1b 4 0 0 0
Oface lb 1 0 10
Conlnell 4 0 0 0
M ay It
4 0 11
Fall* rl
4 0 10
Wilkin* c 4 0 11
Lydenc
4 1) 1
4 t t 0
Sosert
Weiss ss 3 1 1 0
S n c h e iu 4 1 1 0
Aquino p 1 0 0 0
B u tlita p 1 0 0 0
Kllnk p
0 000
S llngerp 0 0 0 0
Briley ph 0 1 0 0
Aamchr p 0 0 0 0
R Lewis p 0 0 0 0
Scanlan p 0 0 0 0
Rnterlaph 1 0 0 0
0000
M yerap
Total*
U 4 11
Total*
11 4 7 *
Florid*
111 7*7 l i t - 4
100 M l M l — 4
Chicago
E - RLewis (I), DSm llh (II, le n ch e i (f)
O P — Florida 1, Chicago 1. LO B — Florida I,
Chicago 1. 2B - Fell* If), Wall* (a),
Sandberg (4). IB - V lica ln o (1). HR —
Lyden II). SB - Carr (171, V licalno (7). S —
Scanlan. SF — DSmllh.
IP
H R E R BB SO
Florid*
Aquino L, 4-4
1
Kllnk
R L tw It
Bautista
1
1 2
1 1 1
BullIngarW, 10
IM 0 I 1 1 1
Assanmachar
M l
0 0 0 1
Scanlan
IM 0 0 0 0 0
Myar* S. II
I
1 1 1 0
2
Aquino pllchad lo 1 batters In Iht 4th.
P B - Wilkins.
U m p lr t s — Horn*, R s lllo r d ; F ir s t ,
Kellogg: Second, DoMuthi Third, Rung*.
T — 1:41. A — 11,140.

b A M B A II
I
E S S S S B S S J S E I B H hE L J
N
It
77
77
44
77
75
M
7*
71
74
71

P ci.
.421
.141
.141

.in

.145
.244
.221
.111
.117
111
.221

osresr
1,727
8,548
. 1,168
1,947
687
319
98
114
731
.297

Tim Ralnaa

Itrlkeeute

FLO RID A

-.p.c* f-p

Tim R slnes Is a Sanford natlva and Sam lnole High School
graduate now playing for tho Chicago W hlta Sox. Hla stats are
for the 1993 season In the first column, personal-best season
to ta ls In the second colum n and currant career totals
(Including 1993 games) In the third column.
Ralnee w as 0-for-3 W ednesday afternoon but scored a pair of
rune In the W hite S o x’* 4-0 victory over the Oakland A'e.

GMaddux, Atlanta. M ; RI|o. Cincinnati, IS;
Hernlsch, Houston, 71; Sm oltl, A llanla, 71;
T G ro o n t, P h ila d e lp h ia , 71; S c h illin g ,
Phlladalphla, 71; Senes, San Diego, 74.
Sam
Myers, Chicago. 21; Back, San Francisco.
M i LaSmlth, St. Lault, N ; Stanton. Atlanta,

Flerlda lla ta League
First Half
Eastern Dlvltlen
W
L Pet, O B
SI. Lucie (Melt)
34 34 .543
W.P. Beach (Expos)
35 2* .547 t
Lakeland (Tigers)
35 10 .531 l i t
Otceole (Astros)
21 35 .444 7 li
Daytona (Cubs)
21 34 .431 1
Vsro Beach (Dodgers)
73 Jt
.371 11
Fori Laud erdilt (RtdSox) 30 41
323 t i
Wsstsrn Dlvlstsn
Cl tor water (Phillies)
43 23 .444 «_
Charlotte (Rsngtrs)
31 27 .515 4
Sarasota (Whit* Sox)
35 2* .554 4
SI. Pete (Cardinals)
U
2T .147 * h
Dunedin (Blu* Jays)
M
12 .111 I h
Port M yers (Twins)
24
17 .41] is
Wednesday's Oamet
Daytona 4, Fort Leudordale 7, H Innings
Laktlend 4. Osceola 1
SI. Lucie 1, Dunedin I
West Palm Beech II, Vero Beech T
St. Petersburg 4. Clearwater 0. I ll gem*
Clearwater 4. St. Petersburg 1,2nd gam*
Charlotte at Sarasota, ccd., rain
Thursday'* Oemet
Fort Laud erdeloatlt. Luclo
Otcoole et Vero Botch
Ounedin at Wetl Palm Beech
Lakeland e l Fort M yers
Daytona at St. Petersburg
Cleerweter at ta re ie ta
Frid ay's O* me*
Vero Beach at Lakeland
Charlotte at Otcaola
West Palm Baach at It. Lucia
Daytona at Clearwater
F o ri Laud* del* *1 Fort Myers
St. Petsrsburg at Sarasota

N ATIO N AL L E A O U E
O AS
X
Galarraga Col
47 117 »
Kruk Phi
41 111 47
44 111 S3
Bonds SF
M srced Pit
» IR
n
57 171 *3
P le n a LA
V lica ln o Chi
M 111 M
Bagwell Hou
42 137 27
Bleuter Att
44 737 41
Grace Chi
4) 137 I t
Orlstom M on
41 134 42
V anSlykePit
M 243 »

M b #Ib &gt;t&gt; the Herald________

J

A M E R IC A N L E A Q U I
H Pci.
O AS
X
44 114 47 71 .404
Olgrud Tor
M 151 44 71 .355
Lofton Ci*
U 44 ■3H
45 M2
M olllor Tor
Whitaker Del
55 177 17 51 .324
O 'N eill NY
JI 212 27 47 .334
MVaughn Ban
*1 111 33 70 .221
Phillips Del
41 111 41 74 .117
Boggt NY
U 311 24 70 .317
314
SI 207 17 M
Curtis Cal
Hamilton M il
a 174 30 41 • lit
Runs Jeered
M olllor, Toronto. 51; White,, Toronto. 51;
GVaughn, Mllwaukea, 4T; RAIomar, Toronto,
of; Olsrud. Toronto. 47: Lofton. Clovolond,
44: F folder. Detroit. 41: Phillip*. Detroit, 41.
Rons Balled In
Bell*. Cleveland, 11; Flolder. Detroll, 11;
Carter, Toronto. 14; Oltrud, Toronto, 11;
GVaughn, Milwaukee, 11; Boergo. Cleveland,
so, Tellltlon.D elrell.a*.
Hit*
Oltrud, Toronto, Tl; Mol Itor, Toronto. M&gt;
Lotten, Cleveland, 74; McRae, Kansas City,
77; Baarga, Cleveland, 74; Phillips, Datrelt,
74; RAIomar, Toronto, 71.
Oltrud. Toronto, 14; While, Toronto. M;
Thomas, Chicago, It; C e rttf, Toronto, It;
Anderson, Bolllmoro, II; MVaughn, Boston,
17; Palmar, Texet, 17,
T rlp lst
Hulto, T s x o i , 7; Cuylor, Oslrolt, 7; Lofton,
Clovolond, I; M cR a e , K a n so i City, 5;
Baorga, Clsvtland, I; LJohnion, Chicago, 1;
Sara Il«dwlth4.
Ham* Runt
Balls, Clsveland, II; Gom alei, Texas. 17;
GVtughn, Milwaukee, 17; Palm er, TTxat, II;
Fielder, Detroit, 15; Oltrud, Toronto, 14;
Teltleton, Detroit, 14; Carter, Toronto. U.
Curtis, Calllornla. II; Lotion, Cleveland,
II; RHenderson, Oekland, 24; RAIomar,
Toronto, M i LJohnson, Chicago. 17; Polenla,
Colllornlo, 11; While, Toronto, IS.
PITCH ING
7 Decisions
W lckm tn. Nov. York, 7 0.1.000. 4.14; Wells,
Detroll, P I, .MT, l.Sf; Lengslon, Colllornle,
• I, lee, 2.2*1 Ouim an, Toronto, 4-1, .117,
SOt; Hontgon. Toronto, I I, .400, l.M ; Key,
New Y o rk , 7-1, .771, 1.10; S a te llite ,
Baltimore, 7-2. .771,4.70.
Itrtk tents
RJohnton, Seattle, m i Clement. Boston,
t4; Lengslon, California, t l; Hanson, Seallle,
M i P e r t i, New York, 04; Appier, Kansas
City, M ; Con*, Kansas City, 7f.
Montgomery, Kanset City, It; Aguilera,
Mlnnasota, it ; OWard, Toronto, II; Olson,
Balllm ora, 17; Parr, N tw York, 11; Russsll,
Boston, M; H tnn tm tn, Detroit, 11; Henke,
Texas, 12.

Cartwright t-4 U 1, Armstrong *10 2-2 It,
Jordan i t 17 tl-10 IS, M cC ray 0 0 0 0 0,
Tucker OO 00 0, Paxton 1 -1 0 0 1, King I t I I
X S. W illiam s 1-1001, Walker 000-10. Totals
a e n iG U t n .
17 11 11 14 - 111
It M 11 11 - III
1 Point go o li — Phoenix 1-0 &lt;Me|*rl* I I,
M ille r 0-1, Barkley 01), Chlceeo I f IPaxion
1-4, Arm ttrong 11, Jordan O t, Pip-pen 01).
Fouled out — West, S.WIIIIamt. Rebounds —
Phoenix 41 (Berkley i l l , Chicago t l IGrent
let. A m Iit* — Phoenix N (Barkley to),
Chlceeo 14 IPIppon 10). T o u t louts —
PhoonTx It, Chicago 14. Technical* — Alnge,
Jordan. Flagrant tout — Arm tlrong. A —
IIJ74.

BASEBALL
A m o rtu n League
C A LIFO R N IA A N O E L S - Optioned John
Farrell, pitcher, to Vancouver ol Ih* Pacific
Coast Ltegu*. Recalled H illy Hathaway,
pitcher, Irom Vancouver.
CHICAGO W H ITE SOX - Placed Kirk
M cC atklll, pitcher, on Ih* 14-day disabled
list, retroactive to Jun* IS. Purchosod the
contract ol Scott Rulfcorn, pitcher, Irom
Birm ingham o l the Southern League. Signed
Oregory Norton end B*n|emln Boulwero,
Indeldert.
DETROIT T IG E R S - Pieced David Heat,
pitcher, on the IJ day disabled list.
O A K L A N D A T H LET IC S - Signed Leon
Hamburg, outfielder; W illie Morel**, catch­
er; and John Wa*dln, pitcher.
TORONTO B L U E JA Y S - Signed Adam
Melhuse, third basemen, and Robert Stelnert,
pitcher.
Natlenel League
C IN C IN N A T I R E D S - Signed Sieve
Wllkeroon, pitcher, end Cobl Cradle, outM O N T R E A L E X P O S - Signed M arlin
M alnvllla.pltchar.
P IT T S B U R G H P IR A T E S - A ctivated
Zen* Smith, pitcher, Irom the IS day disabled
list. Optioned M ark Pelkovsek, pitcher, lo
Buffalo e l tho Am erican Association
ST. LOUIS C A R D IN A LS - Activated Tom
P a g n o n li catcher, Irom the U d a y disabled
Hit. Optioned Hector Villanueva, catcher, lo
Louisville ol Ihe Am erican Association.
B ASKETBA LL
No Hon* i Baskotball Assoc lollen
D E N V E R N U G G E T S - Agroed to forms
with Chris Jackson, guard, on a (our year
contract.
FO O T B A LL
Naltanal Foatbal) League
CHICAGO S E A R S - Signed Je rry Fon
tenet, center; Chris Gedrwy, light end; and
Todd Perry, guard, lo Ihrte year contracts.
D A LLA S COWBOYS - Signed Bill Bel**,
defensive beck, to a on* year contract,
D E N V E R BRONCOS — Agrtod lo terms
with David Wymen, llnsbacker.
D ETRO IT LIONS — Signed B u rn s U Deni,
linebacker.
HOUSTON O ILE R S - Agreed lo terms
with Jessie Small, linebacker.
N E W Y O R K 01 A N T S - R e sig n e d
Lawranca Taylor, linebacker, lo a Iwo year
contract.
Arana Football League
A RIZO N A R A T T L E R S - Signed Judd
Rachow, lineman, and John Marxen. kicker.
Placed John Bankhoad, lineman, and E ric
Dooley, w ldt receiver defensive back, on
ln|urod reserve. Placed Richard Athe, line
man, on recallable waivers.
D A L L A S T E X A N S - Signed K e lv in
Edwards, wide receiver defentlvt back. Re
leased Rodney Blackshear, wide receiver
defensive beck
HOCKEY
National Meeker League
M O N T R E A L CANAD IANS - Signed Kevin
Haller, defenseman, lo a Ihrs# year contract
with an option year.
SAN JG 1E S H AR K S - Named Kevin
Con slant Ino coach.
T A M P A B A Y LiO H T N IN O - Acquired
Petr Kllm a, left wing, irom Its* Edmonton
Oder* Mr M u re centfderetlens.
SOCCER
American Professienel Soccer League
M O N T R E A L IM P A C T - Signed John
Llm nlells. mldf loldor, to a two-year contract.
NeHaael Professional Soccer League
C L E V E L A N D CRU NCH - Re signed Gary
Hlndley, coach, foe two-year contract.

P rm A D to
A U T O R A C IN O
M idnight - SUN, Slick SO/Bagl* On*
M idge' World Challengo
10 p.m , — SUN. Chevrolet MotorSporIs
Hour
1 a.m. — SUN. Prim * Time M olortporls
Midnight — SUN, Midget World Challenge
Race
BASEBALL
7:10 p.m, — 14. F lo rid a M a r lin s *1
Philadelphia P h llllts .fL I
7:M p.m. - WOR, New York M els *1
Pittsburgh Pirates, (LI

BOXING
1 a.m. — SUN, Fight Night tram tho Forum
G O LF
7:10 p.m. — E SPN , U.S. Open, llrst round,
(L)

A ll Times BDT
N BA FIN A LS
CHICAGO vt. P H O EN IX
Chicago Mods series 11
Wednesday, Ju n e t
Chicago 100, Phoenix t l
Pride*, June t l
Chicago 111, Phoenix 100
Sunday, Jim* IS
Photnlx 1M, Chicago 111. SOT
W tdnttday, June It
Chicago 111, Photnlx 101
Friday, Jun* II
Phoenix a l Chicago, t p.m.
Sunday. Jun* N
Chicago al Photnlx, 7 p.m., It n tc ttta ry
Wednesday, Jun* 1)
Chicago a l Photnlx, t p.m.. If necettery

PH O EN IX ( Itl)
Dumas 1-11 M 17, B a rk lty t(H7 11-11 H .
Watt P I M I, K.Johnson 7-14 S I It, M o|trlo
P t M 14, M ille r 1-2 0 4 2. Chambers I t S I 7,
Alngo I I 0 0 1, P Johnson 2 2 0 0 4. Totols
34 77241110J.
CHICAGO (111)
Plpoon 7-U 0 1 14, Gronl M l 1 4 17.

11:11 p.m. - W PTV f, U.S. Opan. first
round highlights
HOCKEY
7:10p.m. - SUN, N H L Awards Special, (L)
MOTORSPORTS
f p.m. — SUN, Cycl* World
M IS C E LLA N E O U S
■ p.m. — SC, U.S. Olympic Showcase, also
at ttiio p .m .
Y A CH TIN G
1:10 a.m. — SUN, Omega Orand P rlx ol
Match Roe* Sailing
BASEBALL
7 p.m. - W TLN -A M (1120), Southern
League, Orlande Cube a) CrttnvIII* Brevet
7 p.m. - WO TO-AM (140). Florid* M arlins
a l Philadelphia Phillis*
M IS C E LLA
EOUS
liXNni
1 p .m .-W O T O - A M (144), Sports Huddle
t p m .- W W N I A M (740). The Sports
Sc
Nut
0 p.m. - WOTO-AM (140), Tl
Talk Sports
With pot* Rooe
4; JO p.m. — W PR D A M f 1440), Sports Boot
10 p m. - WWNZ A M 1740), Florid* Sports
Exchong*
to p.m. — WGTO-AM (140), Sports Bylin*
USA
I0p.m , - WWNZ A M 1740), Florida Sports
Exchangs

BARBERVILLE - Tony Pon­
der took only a half-dozen laps to
get to the lead In the Volusia
Performance Winston Racing
Series Late Model Stock feature
last Saturday night, June 12, at
Volusia County Speedway, slip­
ping into the winner’s circle one
more time during the 1993
season.
In the final main event of the
evening, David Rogers of Or­
lando held off a strong challenge
by Daniel Keene to win the
30*lap feature for Late Models.
Other winners during the
program were Chris Lawrence
(In Ihe Budget Mobile Homes
Street Stocks feature), David
Clegg (Kinco Windows and
Doors Sportsman Division), J.D.
Clark (J.L. Hags Auto Body
Hobby Stock Division). Jerry
Ollliard (Rankcn's Repair Mini
Stock Division), and Ray Mark
(Pate's Drywall/Benny’s Racing
Tires Florida Modified Division).
Ponder, who has had some
trouble keeping his left rear tire
working the Inst few weeks, got
back on the winning track to
keep his place atop the points
totals for both the Winston
Racing Scries and the track Late
Mode] Stocks standings.
"We had some real good luck
tonight," Ponder said from the
winner’s circle. "We kept the left
rear (Ire from going down. We
work hard. We’re not scared of
trying something different each
week."
Ponder took over on the sev­
enth lap and led the rest of the
way In the 30-lap event, closely
pursued by Cam Gibson In
second and Jim Orotha In third.
Kenny West finished fourth with
Wayne Lockett rounding out the
top five.
In the Late Modrl feature,
Rogers Jumped to the lead on (he
first lap and never fell behind,
except when he mid Keen bat­
tled door-to-door, Rogers on the
Inside and Keene an the outside,
for the majority of the race.
"I've waited a long time to get
back here," Rogers said. "It was
a lot of fun out there. Daniel was
working hurd. but so wus I. Wc
ran hard and I’ll be honest with
you, I couldn’t believe Dunlcl
was out there as long as he was.
I thought he needed to go by or
slow down or something."
Keene held on for second
ahead of Ronnie Burkett. Eddie
Martin, and J e f r Burkett.
Lawrence hud to filter his way

from the back to the front as
several of the season leaders
were bouncing their way out of
the race one way or another.
Lawrence, moving back Into the
track points lead for Street
Stocks, took another win aa J«jfT
Miller. Ray Fulford, and Scott
Laughlin, among others, had
trouble staying In the race.
"Wc definitely did It the hard
way," Lawrence said, "And wc
had to come from the back to tlje
front, but that’s what makes It: a
show."
;
Lawrence was followed by
Bruce Baker, Debbl Gammon,
Robert Young, and Roger Wren
across the finish line.
;
Clegg was on the point on the
first circuit of the .15-tap
Sportsman Division race and
never looked back. David Pon­
der, the division points leader,
pushed his way from the back In
time to take second place ahead
of R u s t y E b e r s o l e , Mark
Stevenson, and Karl Stairs.
For Mark, It was his first time
In the winner's circle for a
Florida Modified feature as he
outlasted .Wray Shaffer, Wayne
Heckle, Jon Compagnone Jr.,
and Denzll Cormican.
Clark got a strong challenge
from n e wc o me r J o h n Debenedlctus In the Hobby Stock
Division while leading Jim
Whitaker, Gene Mennlng, and
Mike Blevleau across the line,
Gllllard went from the outside
pole to the lead on the first lap.
then held on to take his second
Mint Stock win In two weeks,
leading division points leader
Rick Fairbanks across the finish
line. Rounding out the top five
were Phil Orr, Chad Pelfrey, and
Rod Butcher,
"1 Just wanted to get away
from everyone and keep out of
trouble," Gllllard said. "The car
was Just handling great."
Votuslu County Speedway, lo­
cated 15 miles west of Daytona
Beach on Highway 40. continues
racing this Saturday, June 10.
with the running of the NASCAR
Winston AH Pro Series race, the
Greater Tampa Bay Auto Action
250, a 250-lap race on the
half-mile oval.
Originally scheduled for May
29, the Winston All Pro race will
bring the stars of the circuit to
the Barbcrvllle spccdplant- for
practice Saturday afternoon
from noon to 4 p.m. with racing
scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m.
For more Information, call
(904) 085-4402 or (904) 2552243.

Softball-

Continued from IB
runs.
L e n d i n g I h e S c o r e AI
Touchdown offense was Joe
Ferpca, who had a double, three
singles, Iwo runs, and two RBI.
Jerry DlUurtuto lilt three singles,
scored a run, nod hud an RBI.
Kent Brubaker lilt three singles
and scored a run. Nick Fcrpcs
doubled, singled, scored twice,
und had an RBI.
Joe Lewis chipped In with two
singles, a run, and an RBI. Kyle
Brubaker doubled, scored a run.
und drove In another. Ralph
Correa hud u single, run, and
two RBI. Del Horton Blnglcd and
scored u run. Vic DIBartolo had a
single and an RBI.
In the nightcap. Illusions
scored three runs In the bottom
of the first Inning und never
looked back, building a 0-0 lead
before Sportsman scored In the
lop of (be fourth Inning und
hanging on for an 11 -7 victory.
Bobby Wells highlighted the
Illusions attack with a double,
single, and two runB. Dean

Debose added Iwo singles, two
runs, and two RBI. George
I’nrzlg lilt three singles and had
liircc RBI. Mike Kotundo and
Dave Johnson each hit Iwo
singles, scored u run, und drove
in a run
Tommy Haddock had a single,
two runs, and nn RBI. Mike
Duvls singled and Bcorcd two
runs. Bobby Garner singled and
scored n run. John Stewart had
u single and an RBI. Brian Jones
ulso hit a single.
For Sportsmart, Jim Smith
was 3-for-3 with* a run scored.
Chris Colon contributed two
singles, a run, and an RBI.
James Troxcll tripled, scored a
run, and bad an RBI. Brian Bla
had a double, run, and RBI. Tom
Wilks chipped In with a single,
run, and nn RBI.
Arncy Vanzyllhud a double
and an RBI. Tim Wilks singled .In
u run. Duane Towcry and Tim
Fallon each hit a single and
scored a run. Billy Warnock hit a
single. Gary Chambers had an
RBI.

NABF
Continued from IB
the game, that Junt got him
pumped up and he threw that
much harder."
Mike and Carlos Martinez, the
Nos. 8 und 9 hitters, respective­
ly, In Ihe Marlin lineup in the
second game, each scored two
runs.
In the third Inning, Mike
tripled to center field and scored
when the relay throw on the play
went Inlo the Oviedo bullpen.
Carlos then reached on a wild
pitch third strike, stole second
and scored an u single by Tim
Slavik.
In the fifth Inning, Mike
doubled and scored on a pass
ball while Carlos reached on n
bunt single and scored on an
Infield single by Coleman.
The spill gives the Marlins an
9-3 murk already this summer,
an Impressive start when you
consider that Ihe Oviedo High

School varsity team spent Its
scuBon havering around .500.
"I thought It was Important for
us to start off the summer
playing well and winning sonje
games," said Ferrell. "We were
close all year during the high
school season, but we didn't do
enough of the things necessary
to win games consistently.
"In the last week, wc were
down 8-3 |n one game and came
buck to win 9-8, We had ;a
10-rim Inning In a game agalnpt
Merritt Island, and wc were
down 7-2 to Lake Brantley and
came back lo win. As a result,
we’re playing with a lot of
confidence right now."
;
Lake Mary (2-1) will play again
this evening, traveling (o Winter
Park for a 6:30 p.m. makeup
game with Bates Team Sports at
Lake Howell High School.
Oviedo Is off until next Monday
night.
:

writ!
TNI #1 HOM
FOR INI # 3 KIUIR,
LUNG DIMAMS.
t

AMERICAN

-

LU N G ASSOCIATION*

Tho Chnttma* Seal P*op** *

n m sm m m

T

�Sanford Haralri Sanford, Florida

IN

B R IE F

MDA benefit set
ORLANDO — The Central Florida Advisory Committee of the
Muscular Dystrophy Asnocnlatlon will host Viva I Los Vegnsl, a
casino night to benefit MDA, on Saturday, June 10 from 8 p.m.
lo 11 p.m. In the Royal Palm Ballroom nt the Orlando North
Hilton and Towers In Altamonte Springs.
Tickets are *20 per person nnd Include 50,000 In casino
script, entertainment and hors d'octvres.
For ticket Information, contact MDA at 677-0065.

Ballroom dancing acheduled
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — There will be ballroom dancing
the second Wednesday of each month at the EuBtmonl Civic
Center, 830 Magnolia Dr.. Altamonte Springs.
Music will be provided by Southern Comfort, a 16-plecc
dnnee orchestra.
The dances last from 7:30 to 10p.m.
Donut Ion Is 92 per person.

Senior Job fair offered
ORLANDO — Meals on Wheels, Inc. and the Council of

!

Marks St., Orlando on Thursday. June 17 from 2:30 lo 4 p.m.
There Is no charge for the program which Includes a
presentation by Tom Fisher of the New Beginnings Employ*
mcnl Training Program nnd vnrlous area employers.

Substance abuse discussed
SAFE. Substance Abuse Family Education. Is conducting a
"Families In Crisis" outreach program. Interested organiza­
tions wanting to contact the Life Savers Club of SAFE mny call
Libby Kuharskc at 291*4357.

Aerobics offered
The City of Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays, Wednesdays nnd Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Cost Is 93 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, board certified with over 10 yenrs
experience.
Call 330-5697 for more details.

Al-anon gathers
Hyou know, or live with an alcoholic, there iBhclp.
Al-anon Is an anonymous, non-profit organization, open to
anyone who Is a relative or friend of an alcoholic.
Serenity Won Al-anon meets each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday, (Thursday non-smoking) evening nt 8 p.m. Meetings
ure held In the back room of the Sahara Club. 2857 South
Snnford Avc.. Sanford.
For additional meeting times nnd locutions In the Central
Florida area, or for more Information, call 332-4122.

Hollywood East clogging classes
\
4
4

Hollywood Enst Dancers conduct clogging classes every
Thursday, from 6:30 lo 8:30 p.m.. at Melodee Skating Rink. W.
251 h Street near Airport Boulevard hi Snnford. Cost Is 93 per
class, ages 5 and up. Parents free with paying child. For
Information, call Casey, 407-322-3593 or Dawn, 904-735-0270.

.

East-West Klwanls Club meals Thursday
East-West Klwanls Club of Sanford meets every Thursday nt
7 p.m., at the Friendship A Union Lodge building, corner of
Locust Avenue nnd Seventh Street. Visiting Klwanlnns arc
wrlromr. For Information, call Robert Whittaker, president,
889-6042.

Omni Toastmasters gather

.

The Omni Toastmasters Club will gather at 5:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the Old Lake Mary City Hall, 158 Country Club
Road, Lake Mary.
Call Sum Ryan at 671-2050 for more Information.

Qroup targets depression
JM

The Mid-Orlando Dcprcsslve/Munlc Depressive Support
Group meeting for depressed persons, their family members
and their friends Is held the first and third Thursdays of each
month nt 7:30 p.m. at Lakeside Allcmnllvcs, 434 W. Kennedy
Blvd., Orlando, and the second Saturday ofench month. 10:30
a.m.. at the Orlando Public Library.
For information, call 657-4763 or 381 -5070.

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Assoclited Press Writer_______
In "Orlando" an aged Queen
Elizabeth I — played by a man —
tells the young nobleman Or­
lando — played by a woman —
"do not fade, do not wither, do
not grow o ld ." With thle
supreme gender-bender begin­
ning, Orlando winks his way
through 400 years of history,
first as a man, then as a woman.
Through hls-her journey,
there's a buoyant air of adven­
ture and much charm as this
strange creature slips through
the boundaries of time and
sexuality. And what a stunning
Journey It la. "O rlando" la
nothing less than a sumptuous
tale ofTove and loaa and passion
and possession and the curse
that each of the sexes must bear.
It‘nall that. And more.
Sally Potter's film, based on
the Virginia Woolf classic, Is a
lyrical unfolding, cloaked In
silky layers of subtlety and wit.
It's not all highbrow muslngs
either, but more of a playful
dash.
"Orlando" begins In the 1600s
with Its curious changeling (a
b e g u i l i n g Ti l d a S wl n t o n )
ministering to a dying Queen
Elizabeth (deftly cast with
Quentin Crisp). The queen gives
her favorite nobleman property
nnd mystically grants him Im­
mortality.
The slim and
fine-boned Orlando sets out by
falling In love with an exquisite
Russian princess. Sasha
(Charlotte Valandrey), telling her
she shoul d be his simply
because, "I adore you and you
arc mine."
In scenes of breathtaking
beauty, he courts her during a
strange pagentry on the frozen
river Thames. They dine out­
doors under big-top tents with
the food delivered by swirling,
snaking lines of waiters on Ice
skates.
These sets get their visual
punch und fairy-tale quality
from production designers Ben
Vun Os und Jan Koelfs, who
mude the memorable seta on
Peter Greenaway's "The Cook,
the Thldf. His Wife &amp; Her
Lover."

Coop*.
Otn Ct

DEAR ABBYt I met a very
pretty girl. (I'll coll her Mary.) I
liked her u lot and wc started
seeing a lot of each other, but 1
never laid a hand on her. She
(old me site was three months
pregnant when wc met. and I
stood by her until after the baby
was born. The baby's real father
look off, and I ended up taking
responsibility for a kid who
w asn't even mine. I am a
dishwasher In a fast-food place. I
lied about my age to get the Job.
Mary's parents think I am the
bnby's father. I told them I
wasn't, but Mary's father said
that "God" told hint 1 was — and
God doesn’t lie. Mary begged me
to tell her parents that I am the
baby's father, so I did. Now they
hate me and don't want me

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Outgoing president of the Greater Seminole
International Training In Communications Club,
Joan Hansen, top photo, left, was presented a
plaque by club officers, left to right, Belli
klotber, treasurer, Sharron Wolfram, Beverly
Janowskl, vice president, and Edith Valentine,
secretary, at the Steak and Ale Restaurant In
Altamonte Springe. Using an Alice In Won­
derland theme, Dr. Barbara Kuhn, bottom

OchaS Cana |h Sh»ao&gt; PQ-ir g ________
riM i n - r ^ r . T . T t . n m i t in

LEISURE msgszlns of Friday, Juns 11

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CONFIDENTIAL TO "USED
IN ELKHART. IND."i An open
foe mny lie a curse, tail a plumy
friend (seven worse

AD VICS

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ABIG AIL
V A N B U REN

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around.
I hate lying to Mary's parents,
and I urn not In love with Mary.
If I tell her parents I lied, It will
be very hard on her. How can I
bring out the truth without
hurting Mary? She's 15 and I am
17, and I was told that if Mary's
father makes a stink, I will be in
trouble with the taw. Whut
should I do?
ALL MESSED UP
DEAR MESSED UPt Do you
realize that by suylng that you
are the baby'B father you will
have to support the child until
he Is an adult? It would uppear
that Mary used you to get herself
out of a Jam.
Tell Mary that you are through
lying, then tell her parents that
you are not the buby’s father —
that you and Mary never hud
sex, and if they will pay for the
test to prove It, you are willing to
take the test.
Where are your parents? You
seem to be a very decent but
naive young man, but you need
adult guidance. The lesson to
learn here Is that honesty Is
always the best policy.

rLJ

J IMS 7:00A ( G U ILTY
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DEAR ABBYt My sister, who
lives In Ohio, Is visiting me und
my husband for three weeks, (we
live In Florida.)
"Sts” received a telephone coll
the other evening, and my
husband answered the telephone
and asked the caller who was
calling.
I told my husband that he was
rude to have U B k c d who was
calling, since the call was nol for
him,
My husband thought he did
the proper thing to have asked
the caller who was calling. Who
was correct?
DEBBIE
D E A R D E B B I B i Your
husband. (I am assuming he
inquired In order to tell your
sister who was calling her not
out of personal curiosity.

0.

WITH
W fl THIS COUPON
In clu d in g
24 B illfo ld s

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NOW ONLY

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BMflSBBsam ■ iiw w a a

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One 8 x 10, Two 5 x 7’s (approx, size), 24-Billfolds
Ten Wallets and 18 Mini-Portraits

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Wad. thru Mon., Jun* 16-21
Daily 10:00 A M -7:00 PM
Sunday 12:00 - 5:30 PM

WALa MART

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t i l i n g m a n y l u w e f pile e cl n t l v e i l i i f t l o f f e r a n d W t l l

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photo, front row, left, Installed the following
officers outfitted In their appropriate hats: front
row center, Marianne King-O'Connor, secretary;
Beth Klolber, treasurer, back row, left to right.
Dr. Edith Valentine, president; Susan M c­
Cullough, first vice president; Dorothy Baker,
council delegate; and Elaine O'Neal, socond
vice president.

M A IC M

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Thursday Juno 17, 1993 -

�4 * - Sanford Hotald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, June 17, 1003

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T.
E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N U E O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
CASE NO. 41 III) CA I4 L
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
M O R T G AG E ASSOCIATION, a
c o rp o ra tio n , o rg a n lie d and
existing under Ihe law* ol the
Untied Slnlesol Aineilca,
Plaintiff.
vl
R ICH ARD JONES, t r ia l,
Defendant (t|.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO R E B EC C A O H O T T O
Resident# Unknown
Ia s i Known M ailing Addressc &lt;&gt; R i c h a r d J o n e s . 10 5
Alham bra Avenue, M allland,
F L J17JI
Unknown heirs, devisees. gran
tees. assignors. Ilrnors. credl
tors, trustees, or others claim
Ing by. through, under and
a g a in s t K A T H E R I N E C .
JONES, deceased and/or RE
OECCA GROTTO
Residence Unknown
YOU AR E N O TIFIED lhal an
acl'on to foreclose the mortgage
on the following properly In
Seminole County, Florida;
l o t 30. L A K E H A R R I E T
ESTATES, according lo Hie plal
liter m l as recorded In P la l
Book IT, Pages 15 and It, Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida Togalher with: Tappan
G a s R a n g e M o d a l 1 0 - ll4 i
Wall to wall carpaling In living
room, hall and all bedrooms,
has been (lied against you and
others In the above entitled
cause and you ara required lo
serve a copy ol your written
delenses. II any. lo It on SMITH
A SIMMONS, P A . Plaintiff's
attorneys. 111 W est A dam s
Street. Suite l i l t . Jacksonville,
Florida 31701. on or before July
f. and (lie the original with the
Clerk ol this Court either before
service on P la ln llll's attorney or
Immediately thereafter; other­
wise. a delaull w ill be enltrad
against you lor the rallet de
m a nded In Iha complaint or
petition
D A T ED on June 1. 1443
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Courl
By Heather Brooke
Deputy Clerk
ISE A LI
Publish June). 10.17.14,1443
D E F 1J
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN A N D E O R
SE M IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO R ID A
CASE NO.i 4)0411 CA-I4-K
C.W WINN,
P la ln lllf.
vs
R A Y M O N D L. S M IT H and
C H E R R Y I. SMITH, his wile.
LEW IS G E O R G E , JR ELOISE
W IL L IA M S G E O R G E
B AR N ET T R E C O V E H Y COR
P O R A T IO N and C IT IZ E N S
AND SOUTHERN NATIONAL
B A N K OF F L O R ID A , l/k /a
NATIONS BANK,
D e fe n d a n ts
NOTICE OF
FO R E C LO S U R E SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVE N
l h a l th e u n d e r s ig n e d ,
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE. Clerk ol
the C irc u it Court. Seminole
County, Florida, w ill on July II,
1443. between the hours ol 11:00
A M . and 1.00 P.M., at tha west
Ironl asm nf Ihe Sem inole
County CenrShOdse. Sanford.
Florida, offer, lor sale and sail at
public outcry la (ha.frigheil and
best bidder for cash, Ihe follow­
ing described properly In Semi­
nole County, Florida, lo w ll;
Lot 14, G E O R G IA ACRES,
according lo the P la l thereof as
recorded In P la l Book 1, Page
31. Public Records nl Seminole
County, Florida
pursuant lo Final Judgment ol
foreclosure entered In Ihe above
styled (lending cause
W ITNESS my hand and seal
nl said Court this 4lh day ol
June. IWJ
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
by: Jane E. Jaeewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 10. If, IW1
D E T 47

AT J10 5*1* 41 H O U R S IN
A D VAN CE OF THE M E E T IN G
AD VICE (O THE PU B LIC . II
a person d rsld e i lo appeal a
decision tn,idc with respecl lo
any mallet considered at Ihe
above mealing or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record of
the proceedings, Including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by Ihe
C lly ol Sanford I F S lM 01051
JanetR Donahue
City Clerk
Publish: June If, IW]
D E F 144

IN T H E CIRCU IT CO U RTO F~
T H E E IO H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
CIRCU IT IN A N O F O R
BREVARDCOUNTY,
FLO RID A.
F A M IL Y DIVISION
CASE NO. 41-1154-PD-H
IN R E ; THE M A R R IA O E OF
D O N A L O J. JONES.
Pelllloner/Husband
and
C A S E Y D. JONES,
Respondent/WIt#
NO TICE OF ACTION
TO: C A S E Y O . JO N ES
PRESEN TAD D RESS
UNKNOW N
PR E V IO U S ADDRESS:
4130 Barns Avenue, Apl. A
Titusville, F L 11740
YOU A R E H E R E B Y NO TI­
F IE D that a Petition tor Ol*
solution ol Marriage hat baan
Hied and you ara required to
u r v e a copy of your written
de te nus to It on Pelllloner,
D O N A L D J . JO N E S , whose
address It: 41)0 Barna Avenue,
A p l. A , T itu s v ille . F lo rid a ,
H7M. on or bafore tha 15lh day
o l J u ly , 1441, and Ilia tha
original with Ihe Clerk ol this
Court, Post O llice Orawer H,
Titusville. Florida, 11700, either
belore service on Petitioner or
Immediately thereafter; other
wise a default w ill b t entered
against you lor tha rallal demended in lha Palllton.
W ITNESS my
ly hand and saal
o l this Court on May 11.
10.1441.
(C O U R T S E A L)
C L E R K OF THE
C IRCU IT COURT
By Chris Dugan
Deputy Clark
Publish; Ju n a l. 10,11,14,14*3
DBF-13

NO TICE OF A
P U B L IC H EA R IN O
TO CONSIDER T H E
AD O PTIO N OF AN
O R D IN AN CE R Y
T H E CITY OF
SAN FO R D , FLO R ID A
Notice It hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held In
Ihe Commission Room af tha
City H all In fha City of Sanford,
Florida, a l !: M o'clock P.M . on
June it . 1443, to consider fha
adoption of an ordinance by the
City ot Sanford, Florida, Idle of
which Isas follows:
O R D IN A N CE NO. ItM
A N O R D IN A N CE OF T H E
C IT Y OF SANFORD . F L O R ­
ID A , A M E N D IN Q O R D I­
N A N C E NO. M i l A N D ITS
AM EN D M EN TS, AND AD O P­
TIN G A N A M E N O ID CLA SSI­
FICATIO N A N D P A Y P L A N
E F F E C T IV E IM M E D IA T E L Y
TO PR O V ID E FO E T H E R E ­
G R A D IN G O P A L L C E R T I ­
F I E D U T IL I T Y O P E R A T O R
POSITIONS, PRO VID IN G FOR
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , CONFLICTS,
A N D E FFEC T IV E D A T E .
A copy shall be available at
Ihe office of tho C lly Clerk for
e ll persons desiring to examine
ihe seme.
A ll patties In Interest and
c ltlie n i 1 1tall have an opportuni­
ty to be :ward at u ld hearing.
B y order of fha C lly Com
m it ik n of tha City of sanlord,
F lo rid I.
P E R S O N S WITH D IS ­
ABILITIES NEEDINO
A S S IS T A N C E T O P A R T I C I ­
P A T E IN A N Y O P T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CO N TACT T H E P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T 150 5*1* 41 H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E OF T H E M B E T IN O .
A O V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : II
a parson decides to appoal a
decision made with rasped lo
any matter considered e l Ihe
above meeting or hoering, he
may need a verbatim record ot
the proceedings, Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provldad by the
C lly of Sanford. (FSM 40IM 1
Ja n e tfl. Donahoe
City Clerk
Pub llih: June 11,1413
DEF-143

NOTICE O F A
P U B L IC H EA R IN G
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
ADOPTION OF AN
O RO IN AN CE BY
THE CITY OF
SANFORD , FLO R ID A
Nollca 1s hereby given lhal a
Public Hearing w ill be held In
Ihe Commission Room al Ilia
C lly H all In Ihe C lly ol Sanlord,
Florida, al 7:00o’clock P M on
June II, IWl. lo consider Ihe
adoption ol an ordinance by Ihe
C lly ol Sanlord, Florida. Mile ol
which Isas follows
O RO IN ANCE NO 1114
AN O R D IN AN CE OF THE
CIT Y OF SANFORD . FLOR
10A , CLO SIN G . V AC ATIN G ,
A N D A B A N D O N IN G TH A T
C E R T A IN PORTION OF OR
EGO N A V E N U E L Y IN G B E ­
T W E E N R IN E H A R T R O AD
AND THE SO U TH EAST
Q U A D R A N T O F T H E INT E R S E C T I O N OF IN ­
T ER ST A T E 4 AND STATE
ROAD 44; PROVID IN G FOR
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , CONFLICTS
A N D E F F E C T IV E D A T E .
A copy shall be available al
the o llice ol Ihe C lly Clerk lor
all persons desiring lo examine
Ihe same
A ll parties In Interest and
c lllie n t shall have an opportuni­
ty to he heard at said hear Ing.
By order ol Ihe C lly Com ­
mission ol lire City of Sanford,
Florida.
P E R S O N S W I T H DIS
A B II. I I I E S N E E D I N G
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y OF T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O ULD
CONTACT THE P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E AD A COORDINATOR

~ IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
O F T H I E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E CO UNTY,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. C l t l - m i CA-M-L
W H IT E H A LL FU ND IN O , INC.,
a Delaware corporation,
formerly PW FU ND IN O , INC.,
a Delaware corporal Ion,
Plalntltf.
vs.
G R A C E P R O P E R T IE S NO. II.
LTD., a Florida lim ited
partnership d/b/a
SH EN AN D O AH V IL L A G E
APARTM EN TS,
R O T &amp; R O O T E R S E R V IC E S
C O M PA N Y , a Iowa corporation,
a n d C H A O S U P P L Y , INC.,
a Florida corporation,
Defendants.
SECO ND A M E N D E D
NO TICE O F S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that pursuant to tha Summary
Judgment of Foreclosure an
fared In Ihe case pending In tha
Circuit Court In and for Sem i­
nole County, Florida, being C ivil
No. 4 M 4 4 1 C A -1 4 L fha un
dertlgned Clark w ill ta ll the
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida described at:
PARCEL I
From Ihe Northwest corner ol
the Southwest Vt o l Section 14,
T10S. RJOE. Seminole County,
Florida, run South MO W feel
along Ihe West line of said
Soulhwesl tt; thence S 5**0'1I"
E 15 00 leel lo Ihe Point of
Beginning: thence S 44*43‘ l l " E
441.11 feel: thence S 11W i t " E
31 01 feet; Ihence S IW O 'II" E
45.17 feet: thence S 05**1'33" W
145.44 le e r thence S 17*4)04" W
74 07 feet thence S 54*M‘SI" E
3114 feel; thence S 40*4)'04“ W
44.55 leel; Ihence N S#*I4')1" W
11.00 feel: thence S 10*01')7" W
71.54 feet: Ihence S 44*15'11“ W
111 W feel; Ihence S 04*1J'I1" W
14.17 leelt thence S 1I*I0'37" W
17414 leel lo Ihe North line ol
Ihe Soulhwesl U ol the South
west 34 of s lid Section 14;
Ihence N 44*54'14" W 141.50 leel
lo Ihe Norlhwesl corner ol the
Soulhwesl 34 of Ihe Southwest ’4
of said Sedlon 14: Ihenca North
along Ihe Wasl line ol said
Soulhwesl 34 v»t j i leel; Ihence
H 4CJ7 I7 ' E 14 i t leel lo Ine
Point ol Beginning containing
10.441 acres more or less.
Together With;
An Eesement lor Ingress and
agress over, and maintenance
end repair ol, a driveway re­
served In W airanly Deed Hied
August 17, 1404 In Official Rec
ords Book 1745. Page 111, Re
recording tiled October I, 1444 In
O t fld e l Records Book 1775.
Page 1414, located w llhln Ihe
following described property.
PARCEL 4
From Ihe Northwest corner of
Ihe Southwest 34 o l Section 14.
T10S. R M E. Seminole County,
Florida run Louth M O M (te ll
ttveACO S St*4T3V* t 1044.54 feel
lo lha Northwesterly Right of
Way S.R. IS A 400; Ihinca S
40*45W * W along said Right ol
Way 314.lt (tel to (ha Point ol
Baginning; Ihence S 40*45 04” W
along said Right of Way MOO
f a a ll thence departing U ld
Right of Way run N M*U'51“ W
114.W feat; thence N 40*45'04“ E
M 00 teet; thence S 34*I4’51” E
114.00
to the Point of
Beginning, conlelnlng 1417.14
square leet more or lets
Together Wllhs
R e se rvatio n s In W arranty
Deed Hied Jenuery M. 1447 In
O ffic ia l Records Book 1114,
Paga 1144 for on Easamant over
and undtr tha following de
scribed property for the pur
poses of Ingress end egress and
for maintaining the water and
sower pipelines referenced In
Ihel certain Easement dated
M ay 7, l t d and rtcorded In
O ffic ia l Records Book 1141.
Page 441. of the Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida,
and any replacements thereof.
And lor an Easamant lor lha
construction and malnlenanca of
one or more signs located on lha
following descrlbad proparly,
containing lha name o l the
apartment complex retained by
G r a n t o r (n o w k n o w n a s
“ Shenandoah V illag e A p a rt­
ments"), sub|ec! to all eppllca
bla County rastrlcllons as lo
S ilt, location and other metiers:
From Ihe Norlhwesl corner ol
Ihe Southwest 34 o l Section 14.
TMS. R M E . Seminole County,
Florida, run South M0.00 teat
along Ihe West line o l sold
Southwest 34; thence $54*41'I r
E 7M .fl feel to Ihe Point of
Beginning; Ihenca continue S
54*41'II" E 117.41 feel lo Ihe
Northwesterly Right of Way of
State Road IS and 400; thance S
40*43 04" W along u l d Right ol
Way 10.14 feet; tlianca departing
s a id R ig h t of W ay ru n N
54*41'I1" W M l.44 (M l; thence N
11*0414'' W 11.01 feel to Ihe
P o ln lo l Beginning,
at Public Sale to lha (lights!
bidder lor cash a lll: 0 0 a .m .,o n
tha 15th day o l July, 144), at lha
Sem lnolt County C iv il Courl
Building, M l N. Park Avenue.
Sanlord. Florida 11771.
D A T ED Jun#4, i m
Mar yanne Morse
Clerk ol Ihe Courl
By; Ja n e E . Jaiew lc
Deputy Clerk
Publish- June 10,17, I44J
D E F 41

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

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T F O F

I N H O
—

NOTICE OF A
PU B LIC H EARIN O
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
ADOPTION OF AN
ORD IN ANCE BY
T H E CITY OF
SANFORD , FLO RID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held In
tha Commission Room at tha
City H all In tha City ot Sanlord,
Florida, at 1:00 o'clock P.M. on
June II, 1441, to consider the
adoption ol an ordinance by Ihe
City ol Sanlord. Florida, title ol
which Is as follows:
O RO IN AN CE NO. 1111
AN O RO IN AN CE OF THE
CIT Y OF SANFORD , FLORIDA. IMPOSING A M O RAT O ­
R IU M ON T H E PE R M IT T IN G
O F BORROW PITS IN T H E
CIT Y O P SAN FO RD FOR A
P E R IO D OF 40 OAYS FR O M
THE E FFEC T I3 /E D AT E OF
THIS O R D IN AN CE; D IR E C T ­
IN G T H E C IT Y S T A F F TO
R E S E A R C H A N D R E V IE W
A N O TO P R O P O S E R E ­
VISIONS A N D A M E N D M E N T S
IF D E E M E D N E C E S S A R Y TO
BORROW PIT REG U LAT IO N S
PR IO R TO THE E X P IR A T IO N
OF THE M D A Y M O R AT O RI­
UM; PR O V ID IN G FO R S E V ­
E R A B I L I T Y , C O N F LIC T S ,
A N D E F F E C T IV E D A T E .
A copy shall be available at
tha o ilie r of lha C lly Clark lor
a ll parsons desiring lo n o m in e
Ihe seme
A ll parties In Interest and
c lllie n t shall have an opportuni­
ty lo he heard a l u ld hearing.
By order ot the C lly Com­
mission o l the City of Sanford,
Florida.
PE R S O N S WITH D IS­
ABILITIES NEEDINO
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y OF T H E S E
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CONTACT THE P E R S O N N E L
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T 110 5415 41 H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E OF THE M E E T IN G .
AD VICE TO THE P U B L IC : If
a parson decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m ailer considered e l Ihe
above meeting or hearing, he
may need e verbatim record of
Ihe proceedings. Including Ihe
testimony and avldanca. which
racord Is not provldad by tha
C lly o f Sanford. (FS1U.0HU)
JanaIR Donahoe
City Clerk
Publish: June ll,1 4 t l
D E F 145

V F R

C H L C J H

T H

IN T H I C IR C U IT COURT
OF T N I 14TH JU D IC IA L
CIRCUIT, IN A N O F O R
SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO RID A,
CASE NO. 41-14I1-CA-14-L
FIRST TRUST NATIONAL
ASSOC IATION, as Trust##, a
National Banking Association,
P la ln lllf,
vs.
W ILL IA M L . FO STER and
JU D IT H FO STER, husband
an dw lfa .a tal..
Defendants.
NOTICE OF S A LE
PU R SU A N T TO C H A F T I R 41
Nolle# Is given lhal pursuant
to a Final Judgm tnl datsd May
11, 1441 In Cat# No. 431411 CA
I4L o l lha Circuit Court o l Iho
lath Judicial Circuit, In and lor
Seminole County, Florida In
w h ic h F I R S T T R U S T N A ­
TIO NAL ASSOCIATION, Is the
p la ln t lf l an d W I L L I A M L.
F O S T E R and J U D I T H
FO STER, ara Ihe defendants, I
w ill M il to Ihe highest and best
bidder lor cash a l M l North
Park Avenue, Sanford. Florida,
a l 11:00 a m. on Ju ly 11, 144],
the following described properly
M l lorth in Ihe order of (Inal
ludgmenl.
Lot 10. L A K E B IN G H A M
WOODS EAST, according to Ihe
plet thereof as recorded In Piet
Book If, Pages 70 end 71, ol the
P u b lic Records ol Seminole
County, Florida, together with
thet eeMmenl lor ingress and
egress as reflected In that plan
ot Laka Bingham Woods recorded In P la t Book It, Pages 70
end 11, aforesaid records.
D A T E D June 1.1441
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
Clerk of ClrculfCourt
by: J a n e E . Jaiew lc
D tpuly Clerk
Publish: June 10,11,1441
D E F 44

Z O
RL
O H a V H J

t Z 1 P N I I R L I .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Acting 1* groat ttw apy - you
g«t lo do thing* you'd normally gat a rru to d lor." — Ian
McShan*.
i

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notice Is hereby given lh a l we
are engaged In business a l SMB
McIntosh Point, Sanlord. F L
12171, Semlnolt County. Florida
under Ihe Fictitious Name Of
C E N T R A L SUN SALES, and
lh a l we Intend lo register u ld
name with the Secretary of
Stala, Tallahasuo. Florida, In
accordance with the provisions
of fha Fictitious Nama Statute,
To Wit: Section *45.04, Florida
Statutes 14)1.
George L King
Jim Noguai
Publish: Juno II, 1441
D E F 145

NOTICE OF A
P U B L IC H EA R IN O
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
AD OPTION OP AN
O R D IN AN CE B Y
T N I C IT Y OP
SANFO RD . FLO R ID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be hald In
lha Commission Room at the
City H all In Ihe C lly o f Sanford,
Florida, at 1:00 o'clock P.M . on
June IB, 1441, lo consider Ihe
adoption ol an ordinance by Ihe
C lly o l Sanford, Florida, title ol
which Isas follows:
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1140
A N O R O IN A N CE PR O V ID
ING FO R A N D ESTABLISH
IN G A R E D E V E L O P M E N T
TRUST FU N D PU R SU A N T TO
T H E PROVISIONS OF SEC
TION 141.11, F LO R ID A STAT
UTES; PR O V ID IN G FO R CITY
R E V E N U E S TO BE A P P R O
P R IA T E D INTO SAID TRUST
FU N D ; PROVID IN G C E R T A IN
O T H E R M A T T E R S IN CON
N ECTIO N T H E R EW IT H ! AN O
PR O V ID IN O A N IP P E C T I V E
D A T E.
A copy (hall be available at
the office o l the City Clerk for
ell peraons desiring to examine
th e u m e .
AH parties In Interest and
d tlia n s shall hava an opportuni­
ty lo bo hoard at u l d hearing.
By order of tho C ity Com­
mission of tha CHy of Sanford,
Florida.
P E R SO N S WITH D IS­
ABILITIES NEEDING
A S S IS T A N C E TO P A R T IC I­
P A T E IN A N Y OF T H E S E
P R O C E E D I N G S SH O ULD
CONTACT T H E P E R S O N N EL
O F F IC E A D A COORDINATOR
A T 1)0 5414 4S H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E OF T H E M EE T IN G .
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : II
a parson docldos to appool a
decision made with respect to
any matter considered at fha
above meeting or hoarlng, he
may need a verbatim racord el
lha proceedings, Including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by Ihe
C lly of Sanlord. (FS 1*4.0105)
Janet R. Donahoe
City Clerk
Publish: June If, Iff)
D E F - t it
I N T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H E IIO H T R E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A
CASR NO. 41-IN CA 14 L
Home Savings of America, FSB,
t/k/a Home Savings of
Am erica, F.A.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
James C. Faulkenberry and
G loria J. Faulkenberry,
h it wile, e l el.,
Defendants
NOTICE OF
F O R E C LO S U R E S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y O IV EN
that pursuant to a Final Judg­
ment of foreclosure dated M ay
11, ItM . and entered In C e u No,
41140 CA 14 L ot fha Circuit
C o url of fha E IG H T E E N T H
Judicial Circuit In and for Sami
nole County, Florida wheraln,
Horn* Savings of America. FSB,
f/k/a Home Savings of Am erica,
F.A., Plaintiff, and Jamas C.
Fau lke n b e rry and G lo ria J.
Faulkenberry, his wife. Resolu
Hon Trust Corporation, Receiver
ol CenTrust Federal Savings
Bank, Association Dry Goods
Corporation, ■ Virginia corpora­
tion qualified to do builness In
lha State of F lo rid a d /b /a
Robinson's of Florida, Ford
Motor Credit Company, a Dela­
ware corporation, United States
ot A m trk e , Silver Lakes Homeow ntre' Association, ln e „ a
F l o r i d a c o r p o r a t io n , Tha
Crossings M aster Community
Association, Inc., a Florida cor­
po ratio n , S e cu rity N a tio n al
Bank of Samlnola County ara tha
Defendants, I w ill u l l lo the
highest end best bidder lor cash
■I Ihe West front door of Ihe
Seminole County Courthouse, In
Sanford. Florida a l 11:00o'clock
A .M . on J u ly II, 1441, tha
following described property as
u l forth In u l d Final Judg­
ment, to wit:
Lot II, S IL V E R L A K E S EAST
A T T H E CROSSINGS, U N IT
O N E , according to tha plal
thereof a t recorded In P la t Rook
1). Pages II R 14, Public Recorde of Seminole County, F lo r­
ida.
D A T E D June 4,1441.
M ARYAN NE M O tS t
C L E R K , CIR CU IT CO U R T
B yt Ja n e E . Jeetwtc
Publish: June 10.11, IBM
DEF4I

71— H *tpW an1*d

71— H r I p W anted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322*2611

831-9993
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
14 eOMMUVvBfern —.— .ITM
7 oomBouHvgMnm
fce
3ocf— PuPvgltmgp------- -Elga Bin
1Mem .......... — - — 11.11b I re

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS
M O A J L .fc M P J L

PRBAV
CLOSED SATURDAY
S SUNDAY
NOW ACCEPTING

. BchediMng may Include Herald AdvBftMf at f it ooet of MPdMonal day.
.1Cancel whan you gat reaufta. Pay only tar days your ad tun* al rato earned
Usa ft* dMcnpaon tor taaseat rsauRa. Copy must toaow acoeptatto typo-,
graphical form. •Commaretolkaquancy rain ara avaaabia.
DEADLINES
Tuaaday d m Friday IE Noon Tha Day B ato n Pitteattgn
Sunday And Monday l : » P M . Frtday »
’A D J U S T M E N T * A N O C R E D I T * : b i th a o v o n t o f a n a rro r In a n
In o a rtto n o n ly a n * o n ly t o N m w t o n t o f t h a c o a t o f th a t
Ino a rtto n. P lt n a o ohoefc y o u r a * l o r a c c u r a c y th o lint d a y ft

21-P e rs o n a ls

7 1 -H e lp W anted

ADOPTIONS

ADD TO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL M1-B414 Of Mi-4111
AOINTS-AVON. E arn to )0«.
No door/door. O u a ra n tu d
40% discounts, S a n d lM M lM

Free medical cart, transpor­
tation. c o u n u lln g . privet*
doctor plus living expenus.
B ar &gt;111511 C a ll Attorney Jahn
P rick e r..............la s e - n iH t s
IN O L IS H Fam ily looking lor
A m e r ic a n “ G o d p a re n ts ."
P la a u write to: M r. A Mrs.
David Linas, 41 U lv e ricro ll
R d . Cheeytosmore, Coventry,

F o r residential change outs.
Hiring now. Experienced only.
M t 4111 or 111 0101
A I I B M B L E R S - Hand m all
work. 1) per hour. Never e
tool H e lp P e ru n n e t.414-4104
e • BUY O R 1 I L L * *
TUPPERW ARE
_________1114411_________

A R C S M A LL O A V C A R E Babies
and toddlers. 1 hoi m u ll.
Excellent rets. Dee, m o m
C H IL D C A R R
Lake M ery
Blvd. A 1141. *Exp. w/all
ages. 'Fenced yd. * Planned
Activities. Personal cere and
a tte n tio n to r y o u r c h ild .
110-4774.......................... Kelly

Per I lim e. Typing, light book
keeping. Cell In lha morning
hour*. M r. Jones....... I l l 7000

LPN

CHILDCARE
Pert A Full lim e positions.
Exp, e M U 1T ..............1114414

tlS K yr. W ill train ell types
C a ll 140-1101 E m p lo y m tn l
Network Only 1114

CUSTOMER SERVICE
UOOUOO wk. -t benefits. W ill
train. C all MO-llOl Employmant Network Only 4110

DIRECTOR OF NURSIN6
Must have Long term Cere
e x p e rie n c e or e xp e rie n ce
working wllh geriatrics In an
acula car# ( tilin g . Salary
based upon axp. Drug I r u
workplace. Contact OeBary
Manor, (407 ) 441 4414, 40 N.
Hwy 17-41 DoBary FI 1171]

323*5176
ieaw.iith it,

MENU-REAL ESTATE!

TELEMARKETING

.Ii i I

SUMMER HELP

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER
C D L llcen u . Only neat and
dean apply.Catl 514141)

C O R P S !!!!

i

S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y

&lt; . i ii / i

Chlnota Burke
514 Lake Mary Blvd.
Sanford, FL 32773
407*330-8700

FULLTIME
$200*6350

O R A N G E COUNTY
Berta Robinson

Cell M r. A rils 13*1*3]
This Is not a |ob placement
agency
__
.
..

CALL 91**911

S fP M . E Z Money Lott ol
Funl Cell betw un the hour*
13 M r. H atkeltal 431 1341

C a ll Your C losest Job Service o f Florida Office

OENERAL

Sett that old etr

Company w ill train people
w llh phone skills Exp , not
n e ce tu ry. Hours Mon Thurt,
5 4PM; Set.. 4AM IPM Flex
Ible on hours when permit
nenl. Salary plus bonut
Sr. c lllie n t welcomed I
Never A F u l
Help Perunnet 414-4104

If you're 16*21 and looking for a good job and
a bright future • join the Job Corpsllll You can
learn a skill • get your Q-E-D* &lt;earn spending
and saving money • and make a new life for
yourself.
IO R r n O D C 18 A FR E E YEA R ROUND
tJUD b u n r o TRAINING p r o g r a m .
in n rn D D Q p r o v id e s f r e e m e d ic a l
d U D b u n r s a n d DENTAL CARE.
in n n n n o Q c e n t e r s a r e l o c a t e d
dV/D b u n r o THROUGHOUT T H E c o u n t r y .

CRUISE LINES

EMPLOYMENT

TELEMARKETERS
Peimanent And
Temp Positions

JO B

COURIER DRIVERS
Up lo 1400 weekly. Hiring
Im m e d ia te ly . R e fu n d a b le
F u ......................407 414 4101

71— H elp W an ted-

SECRETARY
Word p ro ce u ln g lor bonk
contulllng llrm , proficient In
MS OOS, Word P e rio d 5 la n d
Lotus. Speed A accuracy a
m ust. B rig h t, a ir y o ffice
(Lake M ary Commarca Can
tor) Resume: IM Commerce
St. Sulfa t i l , Lake M ary, F L
Mf44-41t7_________________
S E R V IC E M A ID hiring In A l
tamonle. Greal pay. bonus
and monlhly paid profit shar
Ing. D rlvars paid mileage.
Experienced only.......I l l 414]

II P M lo 7 A M shllt, part lim a,
apply In person: Lakevtow
Nursing Cantor. 414 E. Ind SI.,
Sanlord.

N u rsin g home expe rien ce
preferred. Apply In person:
Lab*vlew Nursing Cantor, t i t
E .ln d It., Santord._________

Have I Place to Pay I Slash
Monthly Paym enisl Gel Crod
Itors Off Your Back I Easy
Quallly N oCollateral! I l l 7555

SALES COUNSELOR
Oaklawn Park Cemetery and
Funeral Home Is looking lor 1
lu ll lim e em ployus lor pro
need counseling. Call Dele
M yers........................ M l 4143

LPN

★ ★C O O K * ★

BILLS DUE?

Recept.*FHe Clerk
F o r lo c a l com pany, busy
phones, ligh t typing, c a ll
407 441 0154________________

M E D IC A L

CNA
F o rM .D 'sotllce111 7741
B U ILD E R needs hslper exp'd
a ll phasai; clean and sober
110 4445 lor appointment

41—M o n ty to Land

O ffice Person

F u ll lim a. 7-1 and 11-7 Charge
N u ru positions. Experience In
long term care highly de
tlre a b le . Drug free w ork
p la c e . C o n la c t i D e b a r*
Manor, 44 N. Hwy 17-41, Oa­
kery. FI 12711.440-4410

Irs 4454 No calls alter 7 pm

43— Legal Services

NURSIN6 ASSISTANT
71 end 1 11. M u ll be cerlllled
o r exp, w llh c e r llllc a llo n
w llhln 40 days alfer employ
menl. Drug I r u workpiece.
Contact Debery Manor. 40 N
Hwy 17 41. Ptbery F L 441 4414

LPN

CARPENTERS NEEDED

H AV IN O P R O B L E M ! gelling
credit? Cell Smiles l i i u i f
JH jy ro u r^ rlg h H o k n o v n jh v ^

Nothing euccoodt Ilka mcceis.
We're well Into our 3rd decade
of (raining lu c cs silu l agents.
No llc e n u ? ........... W e'll helpl
W A T IO N R E A L T Y C O R P
R EA LT O R S__________ m i » B

O R E B N V IEW LAW N CA R E,
Seeks responsible, careerminded person for t opening In
urvlce de pt.
W E O FFER:
• P a id Training
o O raat Benefits
• Excellent Com penullon
Plan
•Advancam anl
W « R EQ U IR E :
• Lawn Cara or relatad
ax per lane#
•Good Driving Record
•Q uality Minded Individual
• Q u ick Learner
P la a u c a ll M r. Joyce a l
M l WM___________________
H E L P W A N T E D , OOOO
W O R R B R I Report 1:10 A M
Com er of Pork Dr. and 17-42
o rc a lU M -rsa i_____________

CARPENTER WASTED

Professional C H IL D C A R E
Services, call 111 1005.
H IG H L Y E X P E R I E N C E D In­
fant c a r t In Hidden Lake.
1130440 4 C's and licensed
M I C H E L L E 'S H O U SE • I l f
P E R W E I K I Open 4:10AM 11
M ldnlghtl III 7511 *141-10

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST ~
Experienced, lor busy ortho
p o d l c o l l i c e In L o n g
wood/Senford C a ll Sharon:
__________ 757 1515__________
N E E D TWO pari lim a people
lo r carpet cleaning m o illy
nights, tome days. Must have
own transportation and phone.
11/hr. lo start. Leave mig,
__________ 111-4541__________

F u ll lim a. 7-1 and 3-11 shifts
a v a ila b le . Contact Dabary
Manor, 40 N Hwy 17-41,
DoBary F L .................454 4414
M E D IC A L

Need general construction experlence. Own transportation.
Please call M ike, 31*470*

For Excellent•••

For t h r u yr olds. Experience
required. 122-7404 EOE

DRIVERS NEEDED
A G C A R R I E N S , a w e ll
established and growing con­
tra! Florida based company
offers you;
• Sami Annual Pay Inert#tat
• Slop Oft Pay
• Unloading Pay
• Vacation Pay
• Safely Bonus
• Spouu R Idlng Program
•A ve ra g e Trip 1-7 Days
• Late Modal Conventional
Tractors
If you hava 1 years tractor
traitor, OTR and snow and lea
experience plus a good driving
rocord, cell:
________ 1*84474 405*________

Irrip tlE R lit t iiila r a
Sub contractors, paid par
tone. A l u Exp. Installers.
Good 51 404 74413)4________

Mr Conditioning Installora

27— N u r s e r y *
Child C i r *

LEAD TEACHER

DOCK WORKER
Up to 114.000 y u r ly . Company
benefits. 401X rallramanf.
Refundable F u ...... 407-41*4101

407*697*2880

L E T

A

SPECIALIST
,.4 DO IT!
P r&gt; !!u ro Cleaning

Lawn Servlet^

%i£&amp;t 1

V M

m t- m - n m . led. Mulch, Far-

E le ctric a l

Notice
FLORIDA STATE R EQUIP E l
a ll contractor# be registered
or certified. To verify a state
c o n t r a c t o r s lic e n s e c a ll
I-M0-I417t4«, Occupational
L lc e n u t ara required by lha
county and can be verified by
calling J ll- lllO .e x l. 7432

Residential or Com mordal
IER0D114B4....................IW-Wai.

Floor!
Install lanEInfl FlnlsMnf
JO JJO L M N b JIM JS W ^

tHIier. Buthoa- SB yrt. axp.
L A R R Y 'I LAW N B T R E E ,
Professional Service, F r u
EsI. U c / I n t . i l i m i ________
R A N O Y 'I Q U A L IT Y LAW N ,
Complete pro caro tinea tfto.
C lu n ups, hauling. 131-4714
TOM B J B P F 's LAW N C A R B I
Res./Comm,, dependable, low
ra to tl F r u asI............M0-7070
T U R F T R IM M E R ! Low rotot,
F r u o t l„ Ret. A comm. I
J m o / j j r j j o j g d M le L j J l^ lia ^

kAaionry

Handy M an
ALDOCS IT ALL

A dd ition! a
Rem odeling

^ ^ C T o m e H y e *"
S f f im T S T S T c ^ u H T d o n l?
C a ll US. Wa have compressors,
dryers, evaporators. Tha bast
prices In townl Auto King 1110
Elm jSantardO TTJT ^
m

TWP M A tO N R Y , Brick, Block,
Stucco. Concrete, R enova­
tions. Lie./Ins.............111-1444

F ix II right. L lc 'd /ln i. From
start to finish. Carpentry,
p lu m b in g , e le c tric a l, and
roollng »vc». 11 yr*. of axporlt. Noi job
| too big or small.
CallM 4-74Jlern4-iaaai4 hrs.

R E l./C O M M . V in yl Jld ln g ,
A lu m . F ra m in g . D ry w a ll,
Doors, Rooting, Concrtto.
m -e a ii... i, o . Be lint, c b c i i n m

I fa in tin g
CUITOM FAINTIHO by
r . Inf.- «xt„ lle.d', Ins.
F r u Esllm atos.......... 331-0145
K A H PA IN T A N D R E M O D E L
F r u E tilm a to tl Rtfs., lie.
N o jo bto o sm a llU W ^ M^

Hom e im grevem enf

R i f f w /\r

C A R P E N T E R A ll kinds of home
repairs, painting A u r e m ic
Ilia. Richard G rots.....111-5471

outside. Rentals. A l u wkly.
rates. Windows, tool 11 M 715

) im
r

Tile
E X P E R IE N C E D In all phases
ol Ilia Installation. Ins , lie .
whotoula Ilia prices 4*14441

T re e Service
CLH T R E E S E R V IC E
Lie/Insured Nobody does II
botlorl Sr. discount. 114 4714
ECHOLS T R E E SVC Lie's. Ins.
“ Lei lha Professionals do II."
F r u esllm atos....... . . . ill 1114

m
H im
B utltontoftakaaantnatanfto
ca ll • d a Miffed aalcapeieon
and u t y o u r raercnandlm

P L liM B lt l* l l l U m
AND
IB R V IC E - F r u estimates.
1IC. fCPCOI14441744W1. Tom

pressing, Landscape, trees,
oaks, palms planted, m t-»
714140 yrt. exp.
____

a Man Quality Optraiioni m -m i/M a -m i

*■* /

j

Plum bing
C O M M E R C I A L U ld ln g .

I r / i r - M / w

Trash Hauling

A F F O R D A B L E H A U L IN G WIN ]
dean, haul trash You nama III (
Wa’ll haul III Call 111*144

Pager Hanging
hangar. N yr*. oxporle k :
Roftronco*. Specialising In
residential. Courteous prompt
sqtvIu I C e ll407m -i5ao

/ ’/

/

l
I A

/►, i / i / / / r ' \ h / i ( ' f i
i l l I 11

I

I I i II

Ii

I h l \

Ii .‘ / ' N 1 1 / ( &lt;/

I m
/

|
\

FROPBIIIONa L local p

CleaningService
ilng 1
ikklWi illlWIWA. m-

Concrete

Roofing
ROOF R E P A IR !
and replecemenli. i l l 7141
CGC 404154

fluiilde LightingR E P L A C E Perking tot. polo A
bldg, security lights. Paint A
repairs. l.W.S. 7410110

H A N D Y M A N . I do It a ll I F r u
estimates. Low prlco. U y ri.
o » X a lM » o b o r f a jliQ B i ^

C a rp e n try

DUN RITE, C lu n driveways, •
roofs, pool d e cks, w a lk s, \
houses. P r u e t t . 111-4111
;

Is

I n n '

' t i l l

I

n

�1 *T

I r i

Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, Juno 17, 1993 - SB

71— Help W anted

99—A p a rtm en t!
Unfurnished / Went

Security Officers
Sanford, L a k t M ary araa.
Excellent paybenellt* avail*
abla. 407 (94 4133

TR/UNEE/WRREHOUSE
To 1400 wk. Plus ban*. Hiring
now I C all 1401101 Employ
man! Network Only l i s t

VETERINARY
TECHWustofflir Assist
P a ri lima, weekend*. Tachs
m u il b# a ip . anim al handlart.
Wa naad dapandabla and
motlvatad people who lova
an lm a lil P.V.S. provldai al
fordabla Vat tarvlcai all ovar
tha ita la o l Florida. If Intera tla d p lt a ia c a ll O tn lte:
]»«100_________________
W AR EH O U SE A N D O S N B R A L
LABO R H E L P N E E D E D !
Bon Lit for d rlvarv A ll ih lfti
avallabla. Dally pay, no faa.
Rtport raady fo work S.-JO am.
Industrial Labor Svc., 1011
Fra nthA v. Nophona calls

WAREHOUSE
Up tp I M S par hour. A ll shills
a v a llab la. Rafundablo Eaa
407 4 3 * 9 1 0 1 ___________

Warehouse Person
For Longwood fatlnar distrib­
utor. F a iln a r experience profarrad. Haavy lilting raqulrad.
Good driving racord. salary
batad upon aaparlanca. Hours
7:10 - 4:00. F u ll company
b a n a f lli. A p p ly i
S lo n a w a ll P la c e . In lh a
M idway Commarca Can Itr.

s, 1930

WAREHOUSE
Full Time Permanent
Oayand Night Positions
In Sanford and Maitland
$5 per hour. Never a lee

HEIP PERSONNEL 629-0209
WEL0ER/FAIRICAT0R
O rnam antal m atals, steel,
aluminum, ate. Layout, eul,
waid, 17/hr. and up. Call lor
appolntmant.............. *99 1734

L in n 's Landing
IA 1 B D R M . V ILLA S
R EN T TO OWN
C R E D IT N O P R O B L E M
A p p lic a tio n s lo r 1 Bdrm .
Hamas Now Being Accepted.

323-4923

MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm. *144 mo.
2 bdrm, 1410 mo and up

3238670
N E W L Y R E M Q O E L S D Apis.
In Sanlord Historic D ill. CHA.
Fpic., new kllchans. *175 400
plus utilities............... 33**040

Quiet Single Story
C a u ltb a r ry , t bdrm. A 7
bdrm .. A lllc Storage I Call
Joan tor appolnlmsnt. 4*4 4777
Q U IE T Sanlord I p le i. I bdrm.
apt, A/C. *7*S/mo. Ral’a re
qulred, 377 553* after «PM
SANFO RD 'S Bast Kept Sacrstl
Pool A L a u n d ry , t A 1
bedrooms. Convenient lo c i
tlonl Call Pat, 373 4*50_______
Slf* MOVES YOU IN. Sludloi
and l bdrms. avallabla.
Castalbarry location
Call M ilit ia . 4** *114

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
C A R R IA O I H O U SI, Charming
and Clean, t bdrm., AC, 1300
month. Plus dapotll. 117 1*55

PR O FESSIO N A L prlvata duty
M A L E C N A . Responsible.

^^ndMilr^leveWTTW^^
91—A partm en ts/
House to Share

C O M F O R T A B L E , S A F E apl
conyanlanl fo town ItS/wk.
Inc. ulll. No dapotll. 17 tl«p
program parson prol. 3J4 Hi t
COUNTRY SETTINO. t7S0/mo.
lor all. I k Jtssup araa. Cartar
&lt; oriented person prel 323 4709

93— Rooms tor Rent
C L E A N ROOMS, slngla starling
t is / w k . K lt c h a n , phona,
laundry, vldao gamss, o il
street parking 334-4473
C X T R A LO W R A T E S
SPE C IA LI Rooms al (45/wk
Call 333 7094, evening*
SAN FO R D . Furn. or unlurn.,
1 S/0/wk. Includes u tllltla s.
, Washer, dryer, pool (IT 1)31

97—Apartm ents '
Furnished / Rent
NOTICE
A ll ranlal and raal a ila la
a d v srllta m tn ti ara sub|acl lo
tha Fadaral F a ir Homing Acl.
w hich m akas It llla g a l lo
advarllsa any pralsrancs, llm
Ita lia n o r d is c r im in a tio n
based on raca. color, religion,
it s , handicap, fam ilial slalu*
or national origin

L A R O I F UR N I S H E D
A P A R T M E N T . 1 bdrm . u t il,
t u r n . , u p s t a ir s , p r i v a t e
entrance. Newly palnltd. No
pats. *375 -f deposit 323 1917
N IC E L Y F U R N IS H ED Apt. In
unlqua salting naar downlown.
U lll. paid, ral.'s no pats. (350
mo.............................333 037S
SAN FO R D - larga 3 bdrm. apt.,
Complata p rlv acyl t f i par
w atk plus 3300security.
Call 371 7*73

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
OOWNTOWN Huge 4 bdrm.. 1
bath, 3 kltchant, tingle lam lly.
1400/m o . 1300 dap. 414
Palm etto............. Lea 111 3311

HUDH0MES
Prom (M4 down ■W H Y RE NT*
Tha Hllllman Group, 31**477
L A K E M A R Y Nlct. cant. H/A
1 bdrm , |i» bath, b lln d t.
lanced yd Lake M ary tchoolt.
MOOpjut sec 304 44* 1370
P R IM E LOCATION. 7 tlory. 7
bdrm., CHA, Fpic., Lg. Kit. A
Yard, rallnthad. wood llcors,
*400 month plut dapotll. Rat
arancasl 377 3*55
R E N T O R L E A S E PU R C H A SE
3/1 w/appllancet. C/H /A. on
fenced 1/2 a c re , g a ra g s,
*375/mo; 9/1. appllancat. fpic.
garage. 1550/mo. Paul, Van
tura I P ro p trtltt 111 4744
SAN FO RD
1 bdrm. 2 bath,
fam ily rm, dan. cant. H/A,
1430/mo.. HI. latt and dapotll.
W. Mallciaw sbl, 327 )9(3
•111

Stenstrom Rentals

- i ’,• SA N FO R D f / f A p O g ' ’ riortii.'
Scrn. patio, CHA. Clean Ilka
newl *425 mo. 1300 tec.
• L K . M A R Y 3/3 c o n d o ,
w/slngla garage, fpic.. Laata
w/Opllon. *745mo (750tec.
• SANFO RO 1/1 Apl. W/den.
Fple „ *19* mo.. *300 sac
Slenttrom Really. Inc.
"Wa Manage your Home,
Ilka II w it our own." Jim Doyls
J17 1495 Alter 5PM: 31b 14**

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
L A K E M A R Y . 2 bdrm . cant
H/A, w all to wall, carpal, mini
bllndt. calling Ians. *31-471*
SANFORD. Modern. 3 bdrm.,
cent. H/A. carport, laundry
rm ., naar all *3*l/mo. *30 05*5
SANFORD, Large duplts, 3/1,
lanced w/garaga. *475 mo. 1st.
la tl, STOP sac. 44* 7*5*_______
3 B D R M D U P L E X . *11 Park
Ava. *7»5/mo., sac. dap.
407 471 3154

a R E C L IN E R -R O C K E R , axe.
c o n d .. B r o w n p in s t r ip e ,
o v e rtlu ffa d m a la ria l. *15
330-1703____________

1 0 7 -M o b ile

• S L E E P E R SOFA. Rattan and
ovarstutfad 175 333-73*4
• STOVE, Q E. Almond. **lfc lM tiln g , electronic tim er,
excellent condition 1100 Call
334 0*57 attar* P M
U SED R ED O ING lA L E I t King,
Queen, P u ll A Slngla. *45 a Saf
7'»Mar*.ni-4llI
A U p l LARRY'1

Homes / Went
T T o R M T M a k lls Hama tor rani
In M tillel Lk. Pk. on E lla s Dr.
.................*04 337 .317

114— Warehouse
Space / Went
L O N O W O O D /L A K E M A R Y M id i lia tloraga warahousat.
MONO 1400 sq. II. Fra* rant
w /l7m o. lease, from tt4|/m o.
I l l 053*
SE C U R ITY W AREH O U SE - 44A
and Old Laka M ary Blvd.
•1,710 • 1,000 tq . II. ofllc/warahouta ‘ Finished of
Ilea tpaca also available.

•INLINE FREQUENCY
counter for CB or ham radio*,
(digit, H0voU«73

BATEMAN REALTY

CHEERS TYPE PUB
Sanlord, historic downtown
araa. Raady logo *)7J/mo.
_________407 414 1143________
SANFORO - 700 N. Elm Ava.
70,700 tq. II. w ith o fllca i.
Brick - truck hi. - sprinkled.
440V - 1 phase service. LI.
menu, or d istrib ution d r .
*7.5011.121 ill*

118-O fllc *
Space / Rent

S T A R T E R OR R I T I R I E t 7
bdrm . block home. Porch,
workshop, carport plut extra
lo ll Consider leete/opllonl
Only............................ *4*,NO

321-0759.............. 321-2257
CASSELBERRY
Dear Run. Secluded 4/7. larga
tread lot on quiet cul da sac,
stot.no

CAUJART REAL ESTATE

N E W Sanlord offices and/or
warahousat. 400 2.100 tq. It.
Spatial. «7tl/mo. 333 7354
SANFORD, O llic t spec*. 5400
tq II. building total. 1100 tq.

R E T I R E D C O U P L K w ith I
child A 2 outside pats wants 7
or 1 bdrm. house. M utt accept
ranlal O M lita itc .........373 7774

125— For Leese
T R U C K E R S ' S P E C IA L . Placa
lo park truck, work on truck.
Fenced security, Power and
walaravllabla. I l l O ltl

141— Homes lo r Sale

AlfOHOAHt f MOMI S
vt rilllHi I I'HUl'l Hill \
PH A OR VA AS LOW AS 1%
G o v 't F o r e c lo s u r e s , Rap o s / A t iu m a N o O u o llly
H o m ssl Owner fin an cin g
Seminole, Orange. Volusia.
Sanlord Ian than (l.OMdawn
• Ranevalad 1/1 , appliances,
lancad yard, carport, 133,*00
• Ranevalad Ilka new 3/1, fpic.,
appl.. new paint. *55,*00
• Peal Hemal On cul da sac. 1/2.
renovated, garage, (47,NO
•1/1 an 4s acral Ranavetsd.
appliances, lanced yd. (41.J00
• 3 /H l, SIM tq It. Ilka new! Llv,
dining, fam ily rm, (7i.N 0
a 4/7, lanced, garage, *54.400
A n u m t No Q u a llllsil
a l / l on 1/2 acral Fenced, cul da
sac, dead and ilreat. (44,*00
Additional homes avail. L t u
I h a n t l K down!

PAOLA, 4/2 on on 2 14 acras
Paslur# wllh stable tilt,N O
Lk. M a ry /L a n g w a a d Pool
Homs. 1/2. garage, living,
dining, lam. rm i. *11,500
Lk. Mary pool home. 4/7, living,
dining, lam lly rm, tlOf.SOO
5 Acres Ol Saclullanl Contem
porary 1/1 two tlory, Iplc, ter.
p o rch w / t p a . detac he d
garage, workshop, *124,NO

I'AIJI * HI I't (IMIlIHril
VI f*IIIHI **iIt*I Hhf
E X C H A N O S OR * E L L your
property located anywhere I
In vttta n Realty, 774-1*11

at

COEWLLAAPARTMBfTS!

H A M . K K A I.T Y
i I .* W

I ir .1 ‘ il

'i. m ln iil

A F F O R D A B L E 2 bdrm. 7 bath,
concrete block home with
outre rooml Dbl car garage,
fam ily rm, dining araa, aal In
kltchan, fenced yard. Exc.
neighborhood! Only *35,000
D U P L E X ON H W Y 44
7
tforlas, 1 bdrm. upstair*. 7
down! Zoned com m ercial!
Owner will finance with *7,040
.........................tat.NO
B AN K REPO S

323-5774
HISTORIC H O M E I 4/3 h and
garage apt., corner 701h
Park Ava, Sanlord. *139,000
M u it ta ll lor appl. 373 *4*4

o v r it

S I36
STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
We list and sell
more property than
anyone In fhe Creator
‘ e Mary area.
Sam
j.

• L A K E VI EW HOME
w/Counlry Charm l T h li7/1 on
l-t Acre In Slone lilan d hai
over 1500 Sq FI ol Sty 1*1
SI 14,0001
• B E A U T I F U L 7/1 V illa In
Heron Covol Cath Ceilings.
Form al Olnlng rm , Fully
Equip Kllchen, Fpic , Atrium
A Scrn. P o rch l......... $103,5001
• BRI NG YOUR F A M IL Y A
Friends! Spacious 3/1 on
Acre w /Form el Dining rm .
S pill Bdrm Plan, hls/hers
Workshop I Baautllul Sailing I
(49.500I

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720
3541 Park Or.. Sanlord
*41W. Lake M ary B l„ Lk. Mary

•In Our 37th Y w *

Sanford Court Apartments
2860 Ridgewood Ave., Sanford

3 3 0 *1 4 3 1

» Single Sloiy Design • No one
• Friendly on-all* Managers
above or bolow
• Unique Apt. Extras
• Sludoo, 1 A a Bedrm.
• Security ■For Your Peace of
Affordable Apartments
Mind
• FumMMdiUnfumlehed Studios

3301 Sanford Avn., 8anford • 3 2 3 * 3 3 0 1
Hours: M-F. 9 • 5. Sal.. 10 - 2

Welcome Home
to
Country Lake Apts,

1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
1 month FREE
' l l l l .1 I

•GARAGE SAIEU) BARGAIN
Call In your garag* tala ad by
11 noon on Tuosday and lake
a d v a n la g t ot our sp e cia l
garag* M l* ad p rlc a ll Call
Classified now for dolallsl

LOOK
NO D O W N P A Y M E N T TO
Q U A L IF IE D B U Y E R S ! IN ­
T E R E S T R A T E A T 7.5%
F IX E D . Gov'I rapoi, bank
foreclosure*, assume no quali­
fy mortgages I Low monthly.
C a llfo rd ata llsl

Janet Mansfield, 323-7271
A A Carnes, Inc., 331-1114

C e n tu m
ONLY 121,000!!
Sanlord 3/tlV
block home,
good condition I 343 70*4

STAIRS PROPERTY
1*11 M A P L E A V E . IA L E OR
R E N T W /Optlen, close to
schools, shopping, 3/1, living
A dining. *30.000 *04-531-4313
3 B D R M . , 7 B A T H . N ic e
neighborhood w llb pool and
Itnnls courts. Double garage
New A/C. *75,000 assume no
q u a lity V A lo an , 145,000
balance. A t low as 12,500
down. Owner w ill hold 2nd.
Weekdays 425 0101 or weekends 1407114174*7

153— AcreageLots/Sale
OCALA NAT'L FOREST.
Wooded total *5,*50 each, no
money down I *71.41 monthly.
I 900 997 5024

1 5 7 -M obile
Homes / Sale
NEW 1991‘ it Low down A Inter
t i l l 14X70 *l7)/mo. 14X70,
*310/mo. 345 570*

160— Business
For Sale
B E A U T Y SALON. 3 we I ite1 tlons. good Locatlonl Priced

toielMJ7107t»j^n4^^^_
165— Duplex for Sale

R E N T w/OPTION to buy, 2/IVj
each. A p p lt. LONGW OOD
*4*,NO. IIP 4*10 alter 1 PM.

181—Appliances
/ Furn iture
BED. B rats queensli*. ortho
m allrett, nsw i l l l l In box.
Cott 11000. Sail *300.131-73*3
• BOOKCASE. While lor mica,
cleans taslly. Great far child's
room or anywhere you naad a
while bookcase. Priced to sail
at only *33 Call 333-35**
D A Y S ED , W H IT E Iron and
brass, ortho mattress, new
aim In wrapper, and pop up
trundle. Was MOO Sacrifice
*300.331 73*5.______________
HUTCHES. Chsrry wood, *500.
OBO. Blonde wood, (150. 0 6 0
Good condlllon...........333*741
KIN O S U E water bed. Good
condition, couple y r t old.
M irro r and headboard 1175
0 8 0 .......................... 374;
74-77
7714
th
NO S E R V IC E C A L L F E En Jrhen
repair* ara dona. Warranty. 24
y ri.exp e rltn cel John,
A-F B a it Appliances. 314-324*
• Q U E E N S I Z E w a ta rb s d ,
sturdy Irama. Great condition
*40 O BO.................... 122 05*7

YARD SALE
Jeep Laredo, Ca|un boat,
doth**, mlsc. I l l N. Orange
Av*.,w *ltotl-4.
T k a g jn d FrjU A *

ft

• OB IK . walnut finish wood.
1'*" X V I " • 4 deep drawer*.
(15.33* 471)

1 9 3 -L a w n

4 H BENEFIT SALE
Friday, Juno Itth Irem A l.
Cloth**, oppllancn, children's
and B A K E SALE I 150
W. County Homo Rd, Sanlord.

Garden

• QARDBN FERTILIZER,
hors* manure. F R E E • bring
your pickup.............. 373 7*03
HONDA self propelled mow*r.
Sears alec. edger. Ca 11ava*.
__________ 333 1517__________
M T D M U L C H E R /IH R A D D E R .
Lika new. *100 C all after ] :W
__________ 33707*7__________
S N A P P E R lawn mowar, 1 yr.. 4
H P, salt prop*)lad, 11 In., w/
^ lu lc M 'm e d J W S W t J * * ^ ^

195—M achlnery/Tools
O I N I E I U P I R U P T , 24 II.
Good condition. New cable.

M ANAG EM ENT A R EA LTY
407-122-7222/232-«379

SAT. 9-3
1*7 Edg*water Cr. Hidden Lk.
Baby Hams, drapes, llnons,
pictures A mlsc.____________

189—Office Supplies
/ Equipm ent

141— H om e* for Sale

322-7491

Beautiful
Apartments to
Have and to
Hold...

UN-SATI0NAL
UMMER LIVING

IN OUR MRU
Rain or Shine, F rl. A Sat. 9-4.
S7S N . E ld a r R d . L a k a
Monro*. M U LT I F A M IL Y

T b m T T ? " C ompatlbl*, monitor!
keyboard, 51* disk, softwara,
prlnttr. *373 OBO. 373 4413
4*4 I X M ini tower, w/4 Mag.
RAM . Super VOA Monitor,
keyboard, mouse, A H P Desk
Jet 500 printer, 4 mo. old.
(IfOOOBO. 331-4471 Iv. msg.

141— Ho mas for Sale

117— Com m ercial
_______ Rentals

^klorFUUbooOlXWJ^^
217— O arage Sales

1 U -C o m p u te rs

I St H i
€ ilt ) bT HIA. me,

219—W anted to Buy
O L O S E W I N O n o tio n ! and
klfchtn gadgtti. 223-340* I t iv t

221— Good Things
to E a t
U PIC K P B A I, 15.00 a bushel,
S lp * ( A v a , SI. M a t h a w i
1 Church ground. F rl. A Sat.
V B Q I T A B L B I . Pol* beans,
snap bean*, pees, corn, and
o kra........................... 331-1141

222—M usical
M archandlsa

1 9 9 -P e t! 4 S u p p lie r
A D O R A B LE Klttan*. PR EE~ io
good home I Call 34* 7175 laava
message please I____________
H A P P Y START P U P P Y CLASS
Up lo II w kt. old. Basic
training tha easy way. 371-3145
• M IN IA TU R E DACHSHUND.
M alt. 4 yr*. f r t a to good
home. Ideal for adults. House
trained.......................14*13*1
O M IN IA T U R E S C H N A U Z IR .
10 months old. Good walch dog
and good wllh children. Naed*
Itnced yard lo run and play.
A ll shots and wormad. 1100
Please call lor mora Into
_________ 331-4*44__________
oM O VIN O BUT Pats C a n 'll
Dog and Cal, young, adorable
mixed breed. Spade and shots.
Indoor Outdoor pals great
w /k ld t. F R E E TO GOOD
F A M IL Y I 371-17**_________

O R Q A N . 2 keyboards Good
c o n d lllo n . NIc* fo r ( m a ll
dW rck. 1300114-(37* 4-7 P M

223—Miscellaneous

CORNISH HB NS. M lb. U each
I tiW .k lv . Pa rk Drive
377*074

• A N I W E R I N O M A C H IN E .
Conalr, Ilk* naw (151734473
A T T E N T I O N C A R Phona
Buyers. Colluar car phona
(30 00.407 130 1333__________
BOOM BOX • X Fore*, brand
naw. Rag. (It* Now (I4*.*5
B o il Fawn A Jewelry, 330-4*14
a C A R O U S E L HORSE Replica.
N e a rly a c tu a l s i l t . Hand
palnled. 1100.374-1440_______
( IM P O R T E D S E R V IC E lor I.
Yallow Italian dinner dishes
(100.......................... 3300711
o L U O O A O B . American
T o u r l i t a r , I t Inch b lu e
hordslded. Bull! In wheel* end
built In pull handle. K e y i and
combination lock. U ttd twice.
Sailing last than h a ll price ter
(45............................ 371*473
O P IC T U R I WINDOW. Approx.
77 Inch** by M Inches, alum i­
num Iramo. Oollvory possible.
U 5 ...................... C a ll 3JO OOOt

2 0 5 -S te m p i/C o ln f

A lin In Ytxir Nsw Spal

2 0 3 -Livestock and
_______ Poultry_______

INDIANS. Lincolns. Jofferioni.
Bullaloes, Dimas, halvas. 30%
below bid Bob 407 )13 *000

211—Antiques /
Collectibles
• D I A L E R SPACE AVAILA B L I * Aunty M a ry 's A n ­
tiques, 1041 F re n c h Ava,
(l/-*l) Sanford.- W* buy one
place/entlre estate* 14*4-774*
D R ESSER A B U F F E T , both
Tiger Oak, antique. *700 each.
330 7155

215— Boats end
Accessories
• AIRBOAT. 1011. Oresshopper,
140 HP, Lycoming new megs..
3 prop*, trailer, 51500. Call
331 5405 or 371 7370__________
• IA IL F IIH 174, IH1. 17 ft.. N
hp, depth Under, accessories.
Boat trallar.M ,000121-5*38
• SKI/RUNABOUT, 14 It. 115
Evlnrud* outboard, Baron
Irallar, 11,450 *34-5*13_______
• IS FT. O LA tS T R O N and Ira ll­
ar. 53 H P Evlnruda. Excellent
condition I 53,500 333 5313
• 1* It. B O W R ID IR
145 H P
I/O, About 11 hr*. Immecu
la ta ,w / lra llo r cover. M u st
Seal IIO.OOOOBO337 453*

Soots 5, portable, nover used
W /ctdar gaiabo, undorwaiar
light. 51,373407 *31 7717
a S I A R S 1 H P comprassor, 17
gallon tank w llh hot* and
SATA spraygun 1100 F IR M
__________ 311-Ttlt__________
U N IO B N V ID E O cyphar II.
starao salalllt* receiver and
dish, 1 y r i old MOO. Craftsman
rid* and mul ch L A W N
M OW ER. 10 H P. 10 In.. 3 spd
1*00. S E A R S 1*0*
L I F I S T Y L E R M X T exercise
tra in e r, Ilk* naw (400. 1
(O LIO O A K bar deals w/
cane backs, custom made
beige upholstery. (150.

^ X H U lM w m ju ij^
230—A n tiq u e /C la isic
________ Cars________

FUIS AUTO SALES
★ ★ 3272992 ★ ★
TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
Except tax, tag, llll* . etc.
19** OLDS CUTLASS C IB R A
4 door, aulo, air, stereo, really
a nice carl O N LY 9149 M per
month.............Call M r. Payne

Cwirtm Usui Cats, 323-2123
TOYOTA, 1(91. 7 door Light
green, tinted windows, all the
extras 47,500...............314-1347
194* PONTIAC Flare OT. rebuilt
V*. Rad, U K M ilts, warranty
LO A D ED . *4993.371 1741
•1 C H I V Y F u ll s i. Wagon,
diesel, good cond., cold AC,
new lire*. (700,373 34*1
a (4 C H IV Y Cavalier Station
wagon, AC, auto. (3.000
________ Call 340-4071________
•7 LIN CO LN Tewncar.
Slgnatura, E xcellent Cand.
(7500.371 4t14or 349 1327
• I* L I BARON convertible,
rad, loaded, dig. dash. 75K ml
(7000 Pa rtial llnanc*. 493 7901
H C H IV Y Celebrity, AC. Auto,
4 door. Good condlllon. 57K
mllas. (3500 Firm . 377-4537
*91 J E E P Spoil Auto. PS. PB
A C . a l a r m . , whi t *. I I K
m l.115,700 Lika new 373 14*4

233— A uto Parts
/ Accessories
• C A M P E R TOP. Aluminum,
black, good condlllon. (100.
333-141*___________________
• R E A R A X L E a s s e mb l y ,
1973 19*1 GM \ l Ion truck w llh
3.01 to I ratio gaari. Naw M a lt
andbrgi. (100 321 4047

238— T ru c k s /
B u s tt / Vans ___
O C H IV Y CUSTOM V A N - 14.
loadad, captains chairs, good
condition. (4,500 327 2114
F O R D BUS
1971. G O O D
CONDITION. (1.100CALL
__________ 373 710*_________
FO R D DO I ton (latbad • 19*1.
Good condition (1.400 C a ll
alter* P M ..................133 1179
#H A N D IC A P P E D VAN. 19(0
Ford E -150. L lll, automatic
doors (3.000 373 143a
IIU ZU 4x4 PICK-UP, '91. 3 spd,
I0K ml, 4 cyl, A/C. custom
Interior. (9,700 13) U33

SanfordMotor Co.

231— Cars
C A D IL L A C S I V I L L E • I ttl.
33,000 mllas, loaded. Tip top
thapel (19.000 377 9404_______
e C A M A R O RS+ converllblt.
19*9. 31.000 m ilts. Excellent
condlllon....................3711903

241— R « cr«stio n al
V t h l d s t / C am pers
7* FT. 1977 D O O O I RV. low
miles, ilatp * 4, stove, shower,
Irldg*. (4*00.373 0179_______
• 11 FT l l DORADO motor
homo, '7*. Naw awning, tv,
ru m g rta l. (3.300 371-7195
•91 FIF T H Wheel, 15 It . sell
contained, CH A, Power slid*
out, washer, dryer, awning
ALSO 91 F O R D F354 Super
cab loaded 1 W llh h llch l Cosl
(45.000. Asking (47,000. Corn
plat*. (04 7412(21

(or other motor vehicle)

\

\ &gt; /

3 lines for only

$0124

Doorstep...

MM

Ask Abo it Our
Spectacular Summer Specials!

III, ' Ul l l ll .1

I

(additional lines extra)

Ad must include phone number and asking price. If vehicle hasn't
been sold in 10 days, call us and we'll renew it free. No copy change
while ad is running except for price. Non-commercial only.

C all 322-2611 Tbday!
733 Secret Harbor Ln
LakeMary

321-7303

SHORT OF CASH?
Seriously looking lor a nice,
clean, used car? D E P E N
C A B L E . Down p e y m tn li as
low at 1199 Includes, tax 1
title. Call:

Well Advertise Your Car
EVERYMT III ITS SOLDI

Your

m wnugp

C H I V Y V A N C-14, IMS Run*
great. Needs % lander and
bumper. Sac. al(l,*00 374 154*
a C H B V Y CITATION, 19*1. V 4.
auto., A/C, *3,000 miles Exc.
cond. 10,750 4440471
• C H I V Y CA M A R O • '77. Re
built V*. lots o l naw parts I
(1,093 OBO. 371 015* any llm *
t C H R Y S L I R IM P B R IA L *9j“
Llk* naw. M usi M il. Only
(77,000. Call (407)331 9951
FO RO L T D II, 1979. 307 motor
Car rum good. (400
________ Call 737 4417_______
• FO R O L T D - 13, 4 door
axcallant condlllon. Every
thing new. 17,000 377 1430
• FO RD T H U N O B H B IR D • '44
A ll o rig in a l! Needs lorn*
w ork.(t.4*30BO 1710154
M E R C E D E S 240 diesel, m i
14,300 10.000 mile*. Excellent
condlllon................... 741 3707
P O N T I A C 4400 S T B , 1414.
Loaded, 71.000 mllas. (7,000
O B O .......................... 373 7)74
• PONTIAC 4040 - '*4, SUZUKI
rotory bike. SUZUKI fishing
baat/lraller, 'It. Moving S altl
(3,500t*h**all.374 7179
PU B LIC AUTO AU CTIO N* ~
C V I R Y F R ID A Y 7 iM P M
D A Y TO N A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy. 97, Daytona Beach
_________944-153 4311________

19(3 J I I P CJS - 4 cylinder. 5
speed, hardtop and a ir I
C ell 377 4313________

* PONTIAC Firebird 1f4f, On*
ow nerl Garaged I t I K m l.
NIC*. *4300. 407 323 44M
I t l l B UICK, Rastertablel C all
BUI for all d a la lltl *3000 OBO.
311-4477

\

Paradise
at

231- C a r s _____

• 1*40 I V I N R U D I iL T O out
board motor, t.l H P Vary
good condition, *71 371 4517
• 1t*4 S KI/PIS H Boot. N H P
More., w/trallor. Runs groot.
*3000. Portlal (Inanco. 4*3 7*0*
U , It FT. SPO R TCR A PT, Open
fisherman, It5 OMC Seadriv*.
*5*00. Consider trodo for |ol

113—T e le v is io n /
R a d io /S te re o

^&lt;^ankaiRMlt2;jjlMlli_
115— Industrial
Rentals_______

B C A R O A L L M-t. 10.053 37.110
tq. It. w/ofllcat. tprlnkltd, OH
doors. 12.00 tq. (I. Stanslrom
Really Jim Ooylt 377 14*3

215— Boats and
Accessories

161— Appliances
/ Furniture

7 BDRM .. I Bath, Scrn. porch,
CHA, a il appll.. I w/carport,
*515 mo. 323-44*4 alter *

123—W anted to Rent

73— E m ploym ent
W anted

-r

C O N VE N IE N T A N D SPACIOUS
'C A L L G E N E V A G ARD EN S
APTS......................... W W W
DOWNTOWN SANFORD . 1 and
7 bedroom avallabla .
L a u n d r y . N a a r lo 1-4
(7 3 ( I3 /W k ( 7 ( .1)12____________
L A K E JE N N IE A P A R T M E N T S
I Bdrm. Apts. Available. Free
w a te r/ta il 134-sm_________
L A R G E I BDRM., sunken living
rm., Fpic., quiet on 3/4 acre,
vary dean, garage, *400 mo
Includes walar, trash pick up.
No yd. malnt. 134 3303 altar S

KIT *N’ CARI.YI.K0&gt; hy Larry Wright

105— DuplexT r ip le x /R e n t

■ •*.»?»•. ■

3E

S an ford H erald

�*&gt;. f-l r r

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n.

- Sanford Herald, Snnford, Florida - Thursday. Juno 17, 1093

by Chic Young

C h ro n ic facial pain
may be neuralgia
DEAR DR. OOTT: I’m a
32-ycar-old female and suffer
sharp pains In my left face from
my ear to my neck, I've un­
dergone all tests possible and
have consulted specialists In two
leading medical centers In my
area. After five years, my pro­
blem still persists. Do you have
any suggestions?
DEAR READER: From the
short description of your ail­
ment, I cannot second-guess the
many specialists you have seen.
However, one diagnosis that you
should consider Is trigeminal
neuralgia.
This Is a nerve disorder of
unknown cause, marked by
frequent attacks of excruciating
pain In the distribution of the
trigeminal nerve, along one side
of the Jaw. the check or the neck.
In some patients, the condition
Is associated with nerve com­
pression from abnormal blood
vessels. Thus, surgery to de­
compress the nerve may be
necessary. Non-surglcal treat­
ment Includes carbamazeplnc
andphcnytoln pills.
Trigeminal neuralgia (tic
douloureux) must be differen­
tiated from nerve pain caused by
tumors. Sometimes the affliction
Is associated with multiple sclcroslB. Sjogren's syndrome or
rheumatoid arthritis, diseases of
the Immune system. Also, mi­
graine muy masquerade us facial
pain. Finally, the diagnosis of
atypical facial putn must he
Included, although It Is fre­
quently throbbing In character.
Because the treatment of your
pain syndrome depends on the
cause, you should return to the
neurologist at one of the medical
centers In your community,
where specialists will conduct
blood und nerve tests to confirm
the diagnosis. If you do have
Irlgcmtnnl neuralgia, surgicnl
decompression may he your best
option.
DEAR DR. GOTT: What can be
done about a droopy eyelid? I've
tried numerous creams, but my
left eyelid Is prone to droop so
much now that It rests on the
top of my pupil. Can you offer a

by Chariot M. Schuli

P E A N U TS
LUCY, YOU'RE THE
WORST PLAYER IN
THE HISTORY OF
^ THE 6AM E!

YOU CAN'T PROVE
THAT! YOU SHOULP
NEVER SAY THIN65
THAT YOU CAN'T

IN ALL PROBABILITY,
YOU ARE THE WORST
PLAYER IN THE
HISTORY OF THE 6AM E!

MEDICINE

1

PETER
solution?
DEAR READER: A droopy
G O T T .M .D .
eyelid (ptosis) can be congenital
or It can result from a number of
neurological disorders - most
notably myusthcnla gravis, a
Bring this symptom to your
treatable disease of muscle
doctor's attention.
weakness.
ACROSS
1 Elongated
circlet
6 Egg-thspsd
11 Borsdom
13 Asian land
14 — Pacino
IB Mimic
17 Between WV
and MN
18 Actor —
Low#
20 Famous
acton
21 How was —
— know?
22 Chrlstmaa
24 SI plus on*
25 Putted

26 Slona
28 Astray
30 8ound a horn
32 Floworltii
iant
Inally
(2 wda.)
38 Blaggar
37 Plaintiff

r

38 TVa — Haw
40 Pormar Rus­
sian rular
(yar.)
42 Collage dag.
43 Pig aounda
45 Opp. of W"
45 Therefor#
47 University in
N.Y. stats
40 Par —
50 Qlvsn to
wandtrlng

52 Want by
walar
54 — cotta
55 Cogwhaals

DOWN
1 Earad aaal
2 Clothing
fabric
3 Classified
Ham

4 82. Roman

5 Totals
6 Horst food
7 Compato

A n e w * to P re v io u s Pu a ale

UiJU LlUfJU UWU
ULJUULIULJUU UUU
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uuu uuu uuu
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LILIU U U J UUU
UU UUUUUUU LIU
UUU UUU UUU
a u L iu u u u u u u u
uuu uuu uuu
UUUUUU UUU UL1
u u u u L iu u u iu u u m
U l II I

L’JM U I I

8 — ahuckel
9 Sampled
10 Supply w
funds
12 Catcher’s
glove
13 LIU of
chargea

I II IIR

16 Scarlett
O'Hara’s
19 Absorbed s i­
esta mois­
ture from
21 Disease
23 French for
’’school"
25 Cap
27 Hawaiian
timber Iras
20 Comparative
ending
31 Leisure
oarment
33 On land
34 Between Ky.
30 Aclroaa
Louisa —
37 Unnerve
30 Uaaa thriftily
41 Rai and
Donna
43 Eugene
O'Neill’s
daughter
44 Refute from
smelting
47 Vahid#
48 Fib
51 Train rta.
53 Irma —
Oouca

71

WIN AT BRIDGE

i

A R L O A N D JANIS

by Jim m y Johnson
D A IX 5Y IS U Y C W IC K &amp; ) JWO
[HE IS L'T fS R A S A IU K iO i//

FR A N K AND ER N EST

by Bob Thavot

oh ,
,

H A f iC I N f l

You s^oulpn’t

n THAT H ^R P
O n Y O U tS U * .

.

1 . &lt; 1 * ^ ..

V

.

6-i 7
• imnMO

O A R FIE L D

,

by Jim D avit

!

ROBOTM AN*

^W*K?

tv^

o d

make.
West should have led Ills
heart, hut he selected his
fourth-hlghcst diamond. South
won In hntul with the seven and
returned a diamond. West's nine
forcing dummy's king. Next
came a successful finesse of the
spade queen, bringing declarer's
(rick total to eight.
A 3-3 spade breuk would he
sufficient, tail that didn't seem
likely. Instead, South derided to
let an opponent supply the ninth
Irlrk. lie played oil the A lt of
hearts, the A It of clubs and the
spade ace before exiting with a
club.
If East won tills trick, even­
tually he would have lo concede
a Irlrk lo dummy's heart Jack;
whereas If West played the club
queen to swallow his partner’s
Jack (the Crocodile Coup), even­
tually he would have to concede
a trick lo declarer's diamond
queen.

By Bernice Bede Oaol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
June 18,1003
Look toward the year uhcad
with enthusiasm and optimism.
Conditions that previously hin­
dered you In the past could now
s er ve us b r i d g e s lo your
achievements.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Usually you’re open to sugges­
tions regarding the agenda for
the day. However, today your
Independence could he of
extreme Importance und you
won't want to he regulated by
outside fuctors. Gel u Jump on
life by understanding the Influ­
ences which arc governing you
In the ycur ahead.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Today your gratification Is not
apt to come from whut you do
for yourself but what you do for
others. Help where you can,
cspcclully those who have re­
cently been helpful to you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In­
volvements with pretentious
people sometimes brings out this
characteristic In you as well. To

avoid making a bad Impression
today, associate with humble
puls.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your probabilities for un out­
standing achievement arc quite
pronounced today. To get In the
success mode, first establish a
worthy target.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Those Intuitive perceptions you
somcltmcs get rcgurdlng the
outcome of events might he
more accurate than your loglcul
assessments today. Don't treat
them Indifferently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
For your particular needs at this
time you arc well connected with
the right people In the right
places. Don't be timid ubout
going lo persons who want to
help you If they can.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Your potential for a c ­
complishment Is likely lo be
g re a ter today through
partnership arrangements than
through independent uctlon. All
you need to do Is find the right
productive ally.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
10) Assignments thut require

A N N IE_______ ___________

by Jim M oddlckl

SAY, HOW PO
THESE THINGS

By Phillip Alder
Louis Kronenbcrgcr said, "The
(rouble with us In America Isn't
Hut the poetry of life has turned
to prose, but that It has turned to
advertising copy."
Thai happens In bridge, too,
when an opposing hid gives
declarer enough Information
about the lie or the cards to
make a contract that might
otherwise have failed.
The play In today's deal —
from South Africa, not America
— was made much easier for
South by the East-West activity.
In the United Stutes, West
would either pass or make a
weak Jump ovcrcall of two
diamonds. The one-diamond
ovcrcall on such a weak hand
serves III lie purpose. Even
though North's negative double
showed 4-4 In the inujors, Eust
mentioned Ills long suit. South
bid whut he thought he could

AML,' WHCfUAOi l'AA

^ V[kc c \:

AttfyMSY,

:\v M
ANP
THAT
MOPEL
ALSO
HAS
AN
N JP IO
fEATURE.j

•L&gt;y

•»

r .-

■ 1 Vj

NORTH

4 im

t-llll

PJ 7 42
♦ K85
♦ K4
WEST
♦ J7

EAST

♦ K 10 9 2
PQ 10 9 8 5 3

f «

♦ A J 9842
♦ Q 10 S 7

♦ J 82
SOUTH
♦ AQ4
fA K
♦ Q 10 7 3
♦ A 6 53

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
South

Weil

I♦

Dbl.

North

E a il

3 NT

Pau

Pais

Pau

1♦

1P

Opening lead: ♦ 6

physical strength or aptitudes
could be the ones you'll perform:
most effectively today. Use your
muscles, us well us your head. .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. If))
Social Involvements aren't likely,
to be a waste of time for you:
toduy. In fact. It's through one of.
these events you muy make a
connection thut could benefit
you In Ihc workaday world
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don’t wustc time fretting today
ubout how you will huudlp
problematical developments. Ac-'
lually, you’re apt to do much
better than you or others may •
think.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Try to spend some time today on
matters that pertain to com­
munication. Clear up old corre­
spondence and make those
phone culls you’ve been mean­
ing to make but huven't.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Flnunclul trends should be sur­
ging In your fuvor today. Focus
your efforts and energies on
matters that arc materially
meaningful to you.
( 0 1 0 9 3 , NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.
by Leonard Starr

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