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I

J a n u a ry

F R ID A Y

1

t w r v l n g S a n f o r d , L a k a M a r y a n d S a m ln o la C o u n t y a l n e a 1 S O S
85th Yaar, N o . 110 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST

i.

New year, new laws
Local convenience store clerk ordinances change

TV, weekend guide
The week's television listing. Including n
sports calendar, plus a compilation of events
and activities tn nnd around the Sanford and
Lake Mary areas.

y City Clerk Carol Edwards said her
lerk ordinance for convenience stores

Cops seek leads
in bar shooting

Blood drlvt at Flaa World
SANFORD — The Central Florida Bloodmoblle
will make Its first stop of the new year at Flea
World and Fun World on Sunday. Jan. 3. from 2
to 5 p.m.
’
The drive Is co-sponsored by the Seminole
County Harley owners group and the Seminole
chapter of ABATE.

M ID W A Y — Sem inole County
sh eriffs Investigators were seeking
leads Thursday into a shooting at
W hiskey River Bar W ednesday af­
ternoon. No one w as w ounded
during the shooting but a store clerk
received a minor cut from flying
g lass, said sh e riff's spokesm an
George Proechel.
The shooting began at about 5:30
p.m. W ednesday after four men
entered the package store o f the bar,
3730 State Road 46. The store clerk,
a 40-year-old Sanford woman, re-

Fun W orld will donate a free gam e of
miniature golf on the newly-remodeled Dodge
City course for each blood donor who gives
during this special drive.

A fantasy coma true
T A LLA H ASSEE — The Florldu Lottery De­
partment on Thursday released the following
Information on payoffs In Its "Fantasy 5 " game.
The game produced one first-prize winner on
Wednesday night and the winning ticket sold In
Opa-locka Is worth 8778.603.

The winning numbers for Wednesday night
were 02-13-25-33-35.

Odor In tho court
KEY W E ST — Live and dead rats, as well os
bugs, mold and mildew have com bined to chase
a long-suffering Judge out of his cham bers and
Into a temporary trailer.
"T h e rats were falling through the celling,
falling on the clerk's desk." County Judge
W ayne Miller said. "It w as pretty disgusting.
T here's alw ays been dripping water and
terrible air circulation there, m aking Miller sick,
he said. He said he has been constantly III. and
to now taking medicine.
Conditions In the courtroom are horrendous,
c o n c e d e d c o u rt a d m in is t r a t o r T h e re s a
W eslerfleld.

The problem s come from the dilapidated
Monroe County Jail above the courtroom.
"T h e worst part of the Jail to right over the
Judge." said county's public works director Dent
Pierce. "T h e prisoners get upset and stuff their
Jump suits down the toilets and keep (lushing
the toilets. The water (low s down and Into the
Judge's office."
The county cleaned out the air conditioning
system and air ducts and replaced the celling
tiles. The old tiles were heavy. The new ones are
(llm sy. which turned out to be much easier for
the rodents to chew through — dropping them
down into the room s below.

Mostly cloudy with
patchy fog during the
m orning then partly
cloudy. A 40 percent
chance o f showers.
High In the mid to
u p p e r 7 0 s . W in d
northeast lO m ph.

ported the four men started shout­
ing so she ordered them to leave.
The men became abusive with her
as they left, she reported.
A store patron, a 33-year-old
Sanford man. told deputies he
thought the men were assaulting
the clerk, so he pursued them and
knocked the last man to leave to the
ground.
The four men returned to a car
outside, but the man who had been
tackled relumed with a handgun
and fired four shots into the store.
Proechel said the patron obtained
a tag number, but apparently got
the numbers wrong.

C ity supports drug
free zone expansion

In addition to the first-place winner. 541
people won 8409 for picking 4-of-5. and 19.286
people won 85.50 for picking 3-of*5.

"R ats In the walls, and bugs. Mold, fungus
and m ildew — m ildew grow ing on the law
books." she said.
County workers even left poison, "causing
rats to die In places you couldn't get to. Which
then caused decom position," said Westcrfleld.

yesterday. "W e have conducted an extensive
three year analysis of the results and I can report
there has been a 60 percent reduction In crim es
at convenience stores within the city limits since
this ordinance went Into efTcct."
Harriett added. "O f course the two clerks arc
Just one requirement Sanford had. Their ordi­
nance also Involved parking lot and building
lighting requirements, the placement of security
□ B a a L a w s , P a g * BA

and Danzai Lafton Richardson, 2 m onths, o f 8anford ring out 1902 and
ring In 1983 togathar at Laktvtow on Now Ysaris Eva.________________

SANFORD — The City of Sanford
has agreed to support state-wide
Improvements in drug free zone
a re a s. T h e d ru g free d istan ce
around schools would be expanded
from 200 to 1.000 feet.
C ity C om m issio n er A .A . McC lan ah an Is a m em ber o f the
In t e r g o v e r n m e n t a l R e la t io n s
Committee, which had submitted a
written request for support. The
committee also gave the city a copy
o f a suggested resolution previously
approved by the City of Boynton
Beach.
"T h is to a request for the city to
d ra ft a re so lu tio n u rg in g the
legislature to create a state-wide
ordinance m aking these changes,"
McClanahan said.
P o lic e C h ie f S te v e H a rrie tt
explained the use of the zones.
"Persons caught with drugs In such
zones would have charges Increased

to a stronger degree felony." he
■aid. "T h is would reeult In a higher
prison sentence on a conviction.*
In his written comments regard­
ing the request. Harriett stressed,
"W h at really Is needed to truth In
sentencing." He added. "W h en a
drug dealer to arrested and con­
victed. they should be sentenced to
a m eaningful period and not released early or not Incarcerated at
all due to problem s with sentencing
guidelines."
D u rin g com m ission w orkshop
discussion. Harriett also suggested
the addition or the drug free zones
around schools, churches and city
facilities.
"F o r that m atter." he said, "they
(the State) should declare Florida as
a drug free state and Implement
some m easures that w ill address the
revolving Jail door syndrom e."
On a concensus vote, the com ­
mission Instructed City Manager
Bill Sim m ons to have a resolution
□ B a a D ra g . F a g s B A

I

I

1992: Year of change major projects for cities
Lake Mary roads,
tortoises, parks,
sports complex

in Lake Mary. A s the year began,
motorists were faced with bulldoz­
ers and construction crews widen­
ing Lake M ary Boulevard bom
Country C lub Rood to Markham
W oods Rood.
A s the year ended, there w as no
construction, but vehicles w ere
Awiging hazards caused by raised
m anholes, uneven pavement, and
dirt plies near entrance driveways.
Although It w as often the subject
o f discussion, the widening project
has been under control o f Seminole
County, rather than Lake Mary. The
city's portion o f the protect Included
the undergrounding of power lines
along the construction route. Most
o f that work w as completed during
1992.
An additional construction hazard
that had an effect on Lake Mary
during 1992 came tn the form of
gopher tortoises. L an d clearin g
work on the m ulti million dollar
Lake Mary sports complex off Rantoul Lane w as underway. W hen a
large group of the gopher tortoises
were discovered on the property, all

Longwood: Cop
consolidation,
image, flooding

'mYw
1 I—
I I

Sanford: Renovation, mall,
movies, trains and planes
_

_____
“ ““

____ --------------------------- -

SANFORD — A great deal of hope
for future growth and prosperity
w as born In Sanford during 1992.
P lan s for the Sem inole Tow ne
Center Mall, downtown develop­
ment. historical area restoration
and growth at the airport all took
root. •
W h ile problem s continued to

emerge, some were quickly averted.
Prompt action resulted In m id­
year when plans were revealed
concerning the possible move of
Autotrain out of Sanford. Mayor
Bettye Smith. City M anager Bill
Simmons. Cham ber of Commerce
Executive Director Dave Farr and
others went to W ashington. D.C.. to
meet with Am trak/Autotraln of­
ficials. Before the talks concluded.

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S

and Longwood politics did not get
uny tamer in 1992 and the disputes
may well continue Into 1993.
Several candidates In their cam ­
paign for the city commission In
1992 noted the nickname of the city
as "W rongw ood" and said they
would attempt to change the repu­
tation of the city.
However, as the year ended, the
city was still embroiled in verbal
lights. An exchange during a De­
cember coommlsslon meeting be­
tween Commlssoncr Steve Miller
un d C ity A d m in is t r a t o r J im
McFellln wus an Indication that the
lu-alt-d politics hod not yet cooled
down In the city.
A referendum during the year
may have ended the argument
about the police consolidation
Issue...for a while.
Backers. Including Commissioner
Paul Lovcstrand. wanted to consoli­
date the Longwood police depart­
ment with the Seminole County
Sheriff's department. Supporters
said the move would save money
without uny loss of police protec­
tion. •

C O V E R A G E .

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•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 1, 1M1

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CcaMfomla ha* tt» poten­
tial, with the big orep they
heve. to put a lot more fruit
on th« market — a market
that’s already well supplied. 9

Man charged with trashing aqulpmant
T A LLA H A SSE E — A psychological exam w o ordered
T h u n d ay for a 32-year-old m an w ho allegedly sm ashed up
equipm ent With a m etal b a r during a college radio etatkm's
"M etal M adneaa" program , police said.
So far, suspect Charles Douglas Franklin o f Tallahaaaee h o
refused to talk about possible motives, Florida State University
police Sgt. Ron Moet said.
"H e 's given no Indication w hatsoever." he sold. "H e. h o no
history ofim ythlng like that before."
The suspect entered the W VF8-FM control booth about 10:30
p.tn. W ednesday during the "M etal M adneee" show that
features heavy m etal roekmuatc^
The assailant then asked disc Jockey "D isco D an " to move
aw ay from the control board w hfle w ielding the bar in a
threatening m anner, authorities said. A ll three disc Jockey* on
duty at the time fled:

vV

Ifis'iT.-

-AMmi Kinney
sS aT
iced im o the commaroial market
rraeton rre m arketing order hie*

ensure profitability and a etable supply of
fruit.
The quota system has long been controverslal, and the, U.S. Department of

Sunklst Orower* Inc., a large cooperative
or California and Artrona grow er* and
ahlpper*. filed Mill contending that the
d epartm en t'* lifting o f the order w o
"aibttretry and capricious" and w as done
ist the grow ers Tuesday,
would continue the legal

Oesell ruled
and Sunklst si
figh t

The ju d ge's decision Was good for con
Burners, but It worried Florida growers,
packers and shippers already firin g .*
depressed fresh fruit market.
"W e 'r e a p p reh en siv e." M W Rtehart
Kinney, general m anager o f Florida Cttnu
Packers Inc.. In Lakeland.

P td i pond#f hijacking ohifgw
MIAMI — A Cuban pilot w ho flew M aconunerc
freedom recounted Thursday how he secretly
relatives and friends, fooled air controllen and ti
to the United States.
But Carlos C&amp;ndo P ored . 47. stU) h as a shadow
him - U.8. officials are considering flttng hgec
against for the fligh t
Canrio said that even tf he goes to prison t
States, the night w ould be w orth tt bscauas M s ’
and some other relatlvea w ere am ong tha 48 dal

INVERNESS - A letter carrier
risked his life when he entered a
burning house to search .liar a
child, and now. his supervisor*
ere telling him he also risked His
Job.
&gt;7 A n g e l D a v ila w a s on h is
rounds W ednesday when he saw
(he blase and a child outside
shouting that his brother might
be trapped Inside. For Davila,
there was ndr .question what he
would do.
"T h e Dre w as inimenee. He
told me M s brother. Was suit
Inside, so I tow-efawted Into the
Hu Ih W s i n maasi mtaraoif awrl•ftU woais

" 5 - kMMrtna that mv fomltar la aU riaht la a
reporters.
The Cuban Am srican
law yer to represent Cam
charges, la id the group's i
said he felt confident after
."1 think that nothing la |

Wm4

o u t." Davila said.
The other person in the house.
20-year-old O rsem e Oslnes. had
a lre a d y g o tte n , o u t. D a v ila
learned later.
Davila Was scorched slightly
on the right aM e o f M e foce. Hie
iiyury w b i W jinit ovti
.w ofo#
c / h is supervisor were more

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who rtally would Ilka to ba
mort aotiva and giving, but they
also havs soma leg itim ate
oonoarna about m alpractice
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 1, 1983 - 8A

2 teens charged in stabbing death

Vallbona. 28. 500 8. Oak Ave., Apt. 16. Sanford, w ere arrested
on drug-related charges at Sm all s residence by Sanford police
following a search o f the home.
Police report Sm all w as in possession of m arijuana, cocaine
and drug paraphernalia and charged her on those counts.
Police report Ballbona had a cocaine pipe stem in his pocket
and charged him with parapem alia possession.

CoealM potM tslon charged
Kenneth Lam ar Qadaon. 18. 400 Pine Ave., Sanford, w as
arrested on a charge o f cocaine possession by Sanford Special
Investigations Unit agents conducting a street-level drug sales
sUng at the vicinity of Sixth Street and Cypress Avenue.
Agents report seeing Oadsen holding a sm all piece o f crack
cocaine.

Traffic violation loads to arrest
David Charles Laytig. 21. Mingo Trail, Longwood w as
arrested on charges o f driving with a suspended license and
probation violations for s driving with a suspended license
■nr.victlon.
A Seminole County deputy reported stopping Layng at about
9 p.m. W ednesday after seeing him drive throujpi a stop sign at
Jackson and North streets. The deputy reported when Layng
w as asked his name, he responded David Charles Lang. After
confirming Layng'a name with hia employer, the deputy
arrested Layng and subsequently charged him with obstruc­
tion o f Justice by disguise.

Drunken driving charged
•C hristopher Lynn Donaldson. 22. 171 Franklin Road. Lake
Mary, w as charged with drunken and careless driving by a
Seminole County deputy following an accident InvesUjpUion
near the intersection of Palm Springs Drive and North Streeet
at about 3:40 a.m . W ednesday.
•M ichael Scott Hasner. 26. 309 Saba] Palm Park Place.
Longwood. w as charged with drunken driving by an Altam onte
Springs policeman at about 12:30 a.m . W ednesday in the
parking lot o f a W eklva Springs Road shopping center.
Police stopped the car Hasner w as driving after tw o wom an
reported he had followed them.

TA M PA
— Tw o teen-agers have been
charged iu the stabbing death o f a wom an
w ith c e re b ra l p a lsy , an d a u th o ritie s
searched Thursday
mrsday for others who m ay have
we o f the body.
David Sheren. 18. o f Tam pa, and a
15-year-old gtri whose Identity w as withheld
both waived extradition and were trans­
ported W ednesday night from Indianapolis,
where the couple had been staying with
Sheren’s relatives.
Both were being held without bond on
ch arges
first-degree m urder In the
stabbing death o f 18-year-old Linda Kaye
Bonck, a frail woman who suffered from
cerebral palsy.

or

the body, and Terry said a search w as on Tor
friends who m ay have helped the couple.
*’W e believe there w ere other people
present alter the hom icide." Terry aaid,
•'who may have been involved In cleaning
up after the homicide and m oving the
bod y."
Bonck's parents held a-n ew s conference
W ednesday m orning In which they de­
scribed their reaction to the m urder. They
didn’t know then o f the pending charges
against the 15-year-old.
"W e 're talking about someone w h o's very
cold inside,” m other Linda Golden said o f
Sheren. "I wish that he gets tenfold o f the
torment that went through our m inds for
three weeks before they found her bod y."

Home alone
Couple accused of leaving kids alone released on bond
ie and her 4-year-old sister, w ho took the children in after
lana. were alone.
they had called 911. "T h ey're
real reclusive and secretive and
The Schooa are to appear for a they wanted their privacy."
rellm ln ary h earin g J an . 5.
._______

CHICAGO — A couple who left
their two young children home
alone while they vacationed In
Mexico were released from Jail
today after posting bond.
D a v id an d S h a ro n S ch o o
walked quickly out o f the Kane
County Corrections Center into
an awaiting station wagon. Nei­
ther responded as a swarm of
reporters shouted questions at
them.
T h e c o u p le w a s a rre ste d
Tuesday at O 'H are International
Airport as they returned from a
nine-day vacation to Acapulco.
Bach posted $5,000 today on a
$50,000 bond.
Their lawyer. Gerard Keppte,
said the Schoos w ould not return
to their home but w ould be

A fuel line problem
uised the crash o f a
igee organisation 's
eek that left the pilot
according to the
ansportstlon Safety

Offer to perform acx act
Kimberly M. Wasam er. 24. 208 W estwood Drive. Longwood.
w as charged with offering to commit prostitution by Sem inole
County sheriff's Investigators Monday.
An agent with the City County Investigative Bureau w ho w as
working undercover In the vicinity o f Plum ose Avenue and
Anchor Road near Casselberry reported W aaam er offered to
perform a sexual act for $15.

She had been m issing since Dec. 8 until
her body ,w as found behind a west Tam pa
shopping center Tuesday. The discovery
came after Sheren confessed to Indianapolis
police and drew them a m ap allowing the
location o f the body, police said.
Hillsborough Sheriff's Capt. Qary Terry
said Sheren and hia girlfriend met Bonck in
the neighborhood Just days before the
killing. An argum ent allegedly provoked the
attack, but Terry wouldn't provide further
details.
Investigators w h o searched S h eren 's
Tam pa home found a bedroom splattered
with blood and 88 posters that asked lor
information on Bonck's disappearance.
Also Impounded w as a white pickup truck
believed to have been used in transporting

when the facta are known the
pase w ou ld "tu rn out quite
differently" from people's im ­
pressions of it.
D a v id S c h o o . 4 5 , is a n

r e lle a o . r e g io n a l
the board's south■aid W ednesday the
i m ay be concluded
u

T h e p lan e m ade a forced
landing on Christm as Eve in the
Everglades when pilot Jorge A .
L a « * J r - experienced engine
trouble,
The Cessna 310 twin-engine
plane w as leased by the group o f
volunteer pilots who fly over the
F lorida Straits searching for
Cuban rafters.
Lares. 20. w h o suffered a
s p in a l In ju r y , w a a m o v e d
W ednesday out o f intensive care

tfpuiaiiilMm m m
ImUUlillj

The City Commission of Lake Mary, Florida wWhold a publo hearing to dteouaa fie WneldrMt of the
City's Comprehensive Plan for tranemttal to the Department of Community Affairs. Areas of
dtoueeion may Include, but am not NmMedto: Transportation. Land Use. Intergovernmental Coon*-

Christmas Left Overs
Broken Packages
One of a Kind
Discontinued Items

SAVE

50% 1

SAVE TO
SAVE
Fill Up NowFor Your
N§w rears Cookout
20 lb. Bodies Only...

70%

�4A

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Fridav. January 1, 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
(USPS 461-280)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 3277)
Aren Code I07-322-2GI 1 or 831-9993
W ayna D. D oyla, P ub llaha r and E d ito r
R onald G B ack, A d v e rtis in g O lra c to r

SUBSCRIPTION KATE:
3 Mnnili*.......................... 819,50
fi Mon Ills........................... 839.00
I Year .............
878,00
F lo rid a R aaldanta m ust pay 7% aalaa ta x In
a d d itio n to rataa above.

Some New Year’s
resolutions we
would like to see
Tin* v a r i o u s g o v e r n m e n t a l b o d i e s In
northern Seminole C m m ly have not released
a n v lormnl N e w Y e a r 's resolution lists.
Tlierelore. we oiler the billowing lor Iheii
ennsider.it ion:

...County Commission
Ksiablisli a g arba g e eolleellon program that
provides servlet* and is eosl-elliefent. Th e
enmity eominlssion has d em onstraled a lack
ol leadership in this issue lor more than two
years, h has vel in decide on a permanent
p rog ra m . Each lim e a etisloiner yowls or a
g a rb a g e c o m p a n y executive roars, llic com
mission wavers.
T h e re is a reasonable plan on the table for
m a n d a tory collection in su b u rb a n areas and
volun tary service in rural areas. It won't
m a k e everyone happy. Nothing will. T h e plan
sh ould Ih* given serious consideration, with
action taken early thisyear.

Violence is a learned sickness

When I opened my mail a few days ago. there
wet. no letters to me from ethnie-eleanslng
terrorists In Bosnla-licrzegovitiu or bombthrowing Nazis in Germany or liaton-wleldlng
policemen iti Los Angeles and Detroll or
(Irtve-hV'Sliooling barbarians In Washington.
D.C.
Instead, one letter tied all ol those together
with an eerie Imw of tragic coincidence. It was a
six-page “ Report from King William’s Town io
South Africa” by a former colleague, photogra­
pher Susan Winters. She had |nst rrturnrd from
a two-week it ip there.
What gave her report its eerie quality ol
colueidenee was that on the same day I opened
her letter, front-page headlines reported the
massacre ol four whites by blacks in a country
club In King William's Town. This sylvan-serene
community Is over t&gt;(H) miles away from the
violence-choked black townships that surround
•Johannesburg in satellite symbiosis
Hut why a page-one headline when murders
have become so commonplace III South Africa?
The reason may be tbe rarity ot attacks by blacks
on whites.
II’s |be same rarity that causes a htglici
concern to In* registered In America when
members ot more privileged groups are attacked

ALL OF A SuPOFN -me
APMlNimZATiON HAS A6REEP
ft) EM*NPTHE ENPANGEREP
SPECIES ACT.

or massacred.
The world has grown aeeuslmned to black
Sooth Africans slaughtering each other, liven
black Soulh Africans
place a lower value
on their own lives.
('lacing lower value
on the lives of illsprtvllegcd groups is
not an isolated pa­
t h o l o g y . It is as
widespread among
Los Angeles and De­
troit policemen as it
is a m o n g y o u n g
black terrorists in
W ash in g ton . D C . ,
y o u n g N i l / i s in
G e r m a ii y a n d
youthful S e rb s in
f This should
ilosnla-llerzegovlnla.
be painfully
H u t t n S o it i h
obvious, but
Africa, black Iccn-agc
violence does
terrorists have gone
nol occur in a
heyoml Internecine
vacuum ■
slaughters Many ol
them have embarked
on a campaign to murder Ireedom ol speech.

AFTER FIGHTING IT All
THe$e TEARS?THAT'S ODD
how v o you explain i t ?

Y

HFRE*$ A CLUE.THEY'VE RECENTLY
IDENTIFIED ENDANGERED SPECIES
THAT INCLUDE...,

...School Board
T h e board sh ou ld resolve to rezone the
district’s high schools to brin g Seminole High
u p to capacity a nd put it on an e qu a l looting
with the other schools in the district.
It should also resolve to start the new year
with more inlerraetion with the s u p e rin ­
tendent and staff, so that the public will have
u better u n d ers ta n d in g
o f the impact ol
school related decisions.

PAT BUCHANAN, PAT ROBERTSON,
JERRY FALWELL, PHYLUS SCHLAFlY,
PAN QuAYLE ....

powt wemti

...City of Sanford
Entering into the final stages ot negotia­
tions for the establishment ol the Seminole
T o w n e &lt;'enter Mall is a big m ove that requires
a great deal ol work, lie it resolved that ear'll
step be given serious examination belore anv
a greem en ts are made.
T h e city would also do well to continue
work siiirted in 1992 on m akin g im prove­
ments in the historical residential district,
d o w n t o w n b u s in e s s a re a a n d a lo n g the
lakelmut
Consideration must be given to
what is economically feasible a nd equitable
for all.

...City of Lake Mary
Then* is no question. T h e most prominent
N ew Year's resolution is to get the Lake Mary
lioulcvaid w id enin g project completed in
1993. As 1992 ends, prospects appeared good
that tin piojeet might be finished on time, by
•June I I Alih ou gh Lake Mary is not at liberty
In resume the widening, the county and
bonding agency are. w e urge the city in
p le d g e in get its c o m p a n i o n b o u le v a r d
iieauiilieation program m o v in g and c o m ­
pleted by the time the w id enin g work is done
and trallie can ret urn to normal.
Willi a new mayor, new m e m b e r on the city
commission, new finance director and new
police c h id . Lake Mary should resolve to have
no more peisonnel problem s that plagued the
governiiicnt in 1992.

...City of Longwood
The L on gw o od City C o m m is sio n should
resolve to have fewer conflicts and more
cooperation on important resolutions and
ordinances 1993 should be a great year lor
the city as well as all of Its residents and
businesses. May the com m issio ners spend
less time in disputes a m o n g each other or
with m em bers ol tin* city stall.
Each ol these governm ental entities deal
with ordinances, resolutions an d policies
which involve the sp e n d in g ot taxpayers
moiicv
I In v also enact m e as u re s to pioteel
a nd piesei v&lt; the wellareol the people.
Mill all o| tlieii decisions lot this new vc.u
be based on logic, economy, and lor the good
ol lilt people w h o elected them to olliee. Yes.
even lot tie good ol those w h o voted against
l l i e m . or did uui even vilie

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letlels to lie* iiillni .in well nine All i. (lets
must he signed. Include die nddiess ol die witlei
and a dovilnie telephone mitnh. t l.eiieis should
in* on a single subjerl anil be as hi c t a s p o s s ib le
The lellt isaiesubject (ocdiiuig

Quandary over Yeltsin’s crisis
WASHING TON — Lights have lieeu blazing
late into the night at Hie Stale Department, the
White House and International organizations
all over Washington as ollieinls — many in
their llnnl weeks in office — try to form a
response to the biggest political crisis In Russia
since Hurls Yeltsin assumed power.
The Russian Congress ol People's Deputies
has just concluded a session so stormy that It
was pmu-ntnlrd by at least one IlsUlghi each
day. The big news to come out ol the session
was the ouster ot Acting Prime Minister Ycgtn
Gaidar.
Gaidar. 30. was looked on bv Washington
and the International llmmelul community as a
champion ot Hie lough flimiu’lal measures
needed to transform the Russian economy. He
Inis been teplaccd by former vice prime
minister hi charge of oil and gas Viktor S.
Chernomyrdin, f&gt;4. who Yeltsin culled a
"moderate with whom I look tin want to
working with."
Hut "mudeiole." in current Russian political
patltmee. means someone who does nol want
lo return In Leninism. Chernomyrdin repre­
sents (lie htoatl fact ion within Russia that want
to radically slow reform and to return lo some
considerable measure ol slab- control.
A key person In the Russian economicrelorin nmvcmcnl is Harvard economist delfrey Sachs, who Is on-lcuve to act ns tin adviser
lo Yeltsin. He returned In the United Slates lor
the holidays Just as Gaidar was misled.
Sachs pulled no punches lit Ills assessment
uf what had happened. Publicly, he identified
Chernomyrdin as "one of the leading oppo­
nents of reform" within the Russian cabinet.
He was much stronger In private, saving
Gaidar's mister means the return lo power ol
the olt! Com mi m isl eslahllslmieiil.
Chernomyrdin, in his role us oil and gas
minister, litis Inuglit against decontrolling oil
anil natural gas prices, an important Interimlimial Monetary Fund requirement il Russia is
lo gel massive new loans. He lias also been
very erflieal ol allowing loieign currencies to
be used wllliiii Russia and ol the many small
pi tvate shops that have sprung up.
Wlitle Gaidar's ouster lias captured most ol
tile aticniioii, expeils lien* tire as irmihlcd bv
ihe emergence to powei ol two former
C om m tinlsi* apparatchiks
I’ai Ilament
Speakei Ruslan Khasbul.ilm and Aikatlv
Volsky
I lie Itillei holds no olllcial position, bill
heads an nrgaiii/aliun called "Civic Union."
which pmtl.ivs llselt as ti gimtp ol eelitilsl

reformers. Inn is actually the heart ol the old
Soviet mlltlary-iiHhistrlal complex. Volsky Is
said lobe very close toChcmomvnlln
Kvcii as the People's Congiess was taking
place, other Russian ollleials were makhig
news in siriinge wavs.
Here In Washington, tile IMF was meeting lo
consider Russia's Ihiuiiclul plight. Un the eve
ol Hie meeting. Russia defaulted oti a sched­
u le d r e p a y m e n t ol $ 1 0 .9 m il l io n in
U.S.-giiartmleed bank loans, bringing lo $-10
million the amount it is m at tears on U.S.
agricultural loans and guarantees. At Hie same
time it drew down uhmil half ol a $1 billion
IMF revolving lurid that had been set up curlier
Ibis year.
The IMF estimates
Hint in 1993 Russia
will need more than
$20 billion in loans
m dll eel gills lo pay
ils import bills, and
another $H billion in
forgiven interest and
previous loans it will
dcfuull oil.
IMF officials say
new grants will nol
Ire forthcoming tmlit
II is clear that Russia
will not go hack oil
C The session
p r e v l o u s I y a ii a was
Honored economic
punctuated by
reforms. With key el­
at least one
ements the Increase
fistfigld each
in oil and gas prices
day j
coupled with a con­
trol of the money
supply — till openly
opposed by Chernomyrdin — the IMF is taking
a wait-and-see upproucli.
Meanwhile, as the IMF was meeting on these
eritteal Issues lo Russia's humcdialc financial
future, the Russian representative lo the body
antagonized many by a spirited defense of
Serbia's actions in Bosnia. I bis came as the
IMF attempted in negotiate membership ar­
r a n g e m e n t s w ith the fo rm e r parts ol
Yugoslavia.
As II till Ibis was nol bad enough. Russia’s
Fmcign Minister Andrei Kozyrev gave a
saber-fill thug Cold Wui speech loti meeting of
NATO ministers, lie returned to the stunned
hull within a lew minutes lo say il was all a
kind ol practical joke, hut warned that the dire
consequences lie had piedieted in the speech
could happen If the West does not increase its
assistance to Yeltsin
Kx[x*tls here saw the bizarre speech as a
( loss between a veibtil blackmail Icttci and the
liberal Kozyrev's near depression over the
evelllsot the Peoples Cougl ess

Last year, while I was on a two-week trip to
Soul! Africa, a disturbing booklet. "Mini Miming
Hie Media." was published. The booklet detailed
a series of reports by black South Ah lean
reporters who were threatened and nccasltmallv
attacked for publishing stories that young
township llmgs deemed hostile to their ethnic
Interests.
In the Iasi few weeks, reports horn South
Africa reveal a trlghlenlng cqual-uppuilunlly
sickness. Three months ago. 309 youths horn
Nelson Mandela's African National Congress
surrounded a black rejxirter liiitii South Alt Ira's
largest black dally, the Sowetan. and Ihieairurd
to "necklace” him (place a burning the umutid
tils neck) because they disapproved ol ariteles
llial had hern published in the Sowetan
During the same month, two while repotlets.
one ol them a correspondent lot the Washington
Post, were shot by loin voting terrorists io
Kvaton. it black township. Hotli rrputters sur
vivrd.
This should he painfully obvious, hut violence
does mil occur In it varmint It Is a learned
sickness. When does Hie learning begin? I hat 's a
ehleken-aiid egg qtirsllnn

JACK

AMA keeps some
unusual company
WASHINGTON
lo ils i-nistidi ugumsi
lub.ii i n i hnli slt inl and Itqooi Hie American
Medteal Assoeiailnii keeps some siiuugc
bedlellovv s
llu same ginup Hiai admonishes dm lots
ugumsi accepting gills horn ding i nuipomcs
and owning a liuuiiii.il miriest m
labor.Holies where Ihrv letei palteiilx — lias a
cm loos sponsor m ils campaign lo educate
the public mi alcoholism ihrhqnoi mdiisirv
W h ile the AMA
would likely be loath
I o t it k e ill o ii e v
sti.light linitl hqunl
il i ami ti i et ill e r s. il
s a w no j i r o h l e m s
with aeeepllog hinds
Irom Hie Licensed
B e v el a g e I n loi Ilia
lion Council, a
n o n - pi ol i l g r o u p
stalled IT years ago
In educate 1lie ptihhi
f The AMA tins
Oil a l c o h o l -related
stib|eels The I.BIC
a curious
lakes all ns liuiding
sponsor in its
Irom the Im(inii in
campaign lo
dusiry
educate Ihe
Until several
public on
metllheis ob|eeletl to
alcoholism
Hie pitliev ill a leeeitl
Die liquor
industry J
Hireling ol the AMA
Ixiiird ot delegiites
Hie AMA I tin I accepted mine Hum Sb'MMMio
limn the I.BIC lo pioiluee a doeiimeniai v
called
New Fioiltlers
l l la g i ms mg and
ITciUlng Aleoholism
I he poliev is now
under lev lew l)V .III .III AMA &lt;ollillilllee
Although the dncumcniai v won wide
einie.it praise lot its eoolem. many doelois
wondered il il s iippropriale lot Hie medleal
ci iiiiiii unit v's liiigesi and uiusi powciliil
lobby in iieeepl nionev Mom tin |j(|om
liidltslt v
"T ilt- I.BIC is lepiesenlalive ol an imlositv
I hill has a dllleiem appioaeh lo alcohol
ieluted Issues Hum llic AMA
s i t s |)i Jolm
S la d e , it New .Jersey p h y sic ia n who
speeiali/es m uddicUou science. Ovei Hie
years. llic AMA has mil up against Hie hquoi
mdiisirv on issues ticini sales iu\ Lin leases io
ail vert islug i esiiTetions and warning labels on
beei and liquorcnnlaiiicis.
In fuel. Ilie I.HIC's predecessor, the Bevel
age Alcohol liiloriiiiition Cmmeil came idiom
III 1979 iillei Congiess lulled lo ilglcc oil
legisliiHon llial would have eiciiled eigil
rcllc-slylc warning kihels loi lii|uoi and b&gt; ei
eoiiliiiiiers. Inslead ol wanting labels, the
liquor Industry agreed lo hmd a piilille
iiiioriiiiillon campaign.
I.BIC Director Manila Fontaine says llieie is
nnihiiig wrong vvitli her gimip's iclutionslilp
Willi Hie AMA — (he I.BIC iilso gives rrseaieh
llliillev lo several ol Hie ll.ilion's lop medical
schools — and mum AMA memheis ague
including Exeeulive Vice ITeslilent .lames
Todd.
"I do lint believe lluii lbe public oi anyone
else Will believe the AMA was lioughl " bv llic
liquor Industry, said Todd.
"The I.IHC did linlliing besides vvitic a
cheek" lo the AMA. Foiiliiine siivs. The AMA
leliiioed lull editorial mill ml over Hie pm|ei I
with no sitings iiliiiehed. Foulaiue also
dispiiles claims t»y her t lilies Hud the I.IIK ' is
an advocacy arm ol Hie iiuhisii v "(The I.BIC)
has nevei lohhled one duv ol Ils Hie no anv
Issue, period." Foniaine told mu ussncluh•Jau Mullet
Bill inic person's ediieiilioiuil seminal can
sometimes be sham eless udvnrurv to
another (Titles eomplidu llial Hu liquor
tndilslry wins valuable eiediliilllv In sunplv
being able lo associate ils name vvllli Hie likes
ol Hie AMA These i lilies point lo a .lime
seieeiilltg ot the documental v on ( apllol Util
spoil son'll In Hie I.BIC Fvetv inrmhci ol
Congiess and lliril slalls wclc tmlled lo
al lend
hi advame ol the scicelling Hie LBK soil
mil a piess iclease espousing Ilie piogiain
spmismed |oiiiilv
In the AMA and l.lllt
I lie Idol was "pmdui i d lllioogli a silt eesstul
putllieishlp between tin alcohol bevetuge
mdiisirv ami Hie oudie.il eimumiiuiv
llu
version show ii on Capitol Ihll also &lt;on lamed
a pelsoiial Iwoimimle milodmlloli In loll
t.tit!■ explaining Ilie llltil and til l ag'-m v s
lute ill It

�Sanlord Humid. Sanford. Florida - Friday, January 1, t'»93 - 5 A

Drug-----------Continued from Page 1A
support lug llu‘ In
i ir»isc In the /ones, mill luivc II
presented ul ilie ne.M regularly
selletltileil eily euiniiilssinii
meeting.
Tile eiMlillilsslnMeis agreed
ili.it die icHuluilim should in
elude .1 leenuiiueiiitiiliiiii lor I lie
/lines lo he included ucui
chilli lies
I think Mils should
in e n u ii o l |u s i r e g*u I .i l
churches," II.ii ridi suggested.
hui c h u rch sc h o o ls , rest
homes, mid other places where
people leglllat Iv eollgregille."

Laws----------Continued from Pngc 1A
signs, iind limits mi how
much cash can he kepi m any
one lime."
"Il s uol |usi the lwo clerks."
thilTlell said.
lull (lie lolal
scope ol Saniurd‘s security ordi­
nance."
Now dial the slide has a new

C o n v en ie n c e store law. an
estimated 7.Olid convenience
sioies uuisl meel new safely
slanilards. siiid Attorney General
Uol) llullerwniih. lu 1991. Id
clerks were killed ill Florida
convenience stores and 5.(MM)
serious i’t lines occurred.
"Convenience si tires are uni
lhe salcsl place lo lie as a i In k.
■ii as ii euslomer." Uiillerworlh
said
File new law requires all
eonvenienei stores In liisiall
sccnrllv cameras, silent alarms,
drop sides, lighted pinking luls
and lo post ;i sign saying die
i eglsier cunl.ilns S'|() in less.
Itni stnies dial remain •&gt;j&gt;■-i•
hum I 1 p i n -5 i i . m where a
serious erlme h its oeetured lu
die piisi 5 ‘ j \e,us would have lo
adopt much mine stringent
protect ions.
"The camera does a good |nh
ol apprehending the person who
emu to II led die crim e," Ihu
lerworlli said. "Util we wain to
prevent die clerk Irom hecomlng
a vietlin ol a crime."
Those stores can chouse horn

tir e opl inns:
'•K e e p Iwo clerks mi duly
helrvcen I I pan. and 5 a.in.
• r.mplor a security guard
during those hours.
• Ihitld it hidlelprool enclosure
lor i lie ciish-iegislcr areii.
• l.oek die store lille ill ulglll
and tiisiall ii piiss i h rough
window to llie outside.
• Close die business bclwecn
I I pan and 5a m
"II thcy'ie going lo keep II
open, i hey’re going in have in
devise security Inr the clerks
who are there." Uiillerworlh
said.
H c s la u ra n ls . d ru g stores,
s u p e r m a r k e l s and gas-only
businesses arc e\cmpi. Ihu so
called "mom and pup" stores,
exempt under previous laws,
would have tu comply.
Regarding iiuollier law which
goes lulu elfecl Imliiy. llie
l.egisliiture this rear gave Ihe
Revenue Departmeiil a uumlier
ol loots to eolleel delinquent
laves, most ol diem sharp lit
creases. lu pcnalllcs lot those
who won't pay.

Fur ihe past three muinhs the
agency Inis held an amnesty
prngram lo allow lav deadbeats
In come forward without le.u ol
penally. The program eollci led
mure lliiiu $2 million.
Ihu heginniug today. lines lor
failure In pay must taxes will
double and SIOO rewiirds will lie
ollered lo people who blow Ilic
whistle on lax cheats.
For example, anyone lalllug lo
pay Ihe doeumeuiary stamp nix

on real esiale transactions was
liable lor a 25 pereeni penally
plus a I pereeni inleresl charge
The new law makes dial a 50
pereeni penally and 1.5 pereeni
inleresl charge.
Revenue ollielals estimate the
changes will bring In $2H million
lor lire stale during this fiscal
vear.
Another new law merges Iwo
stale departments — General
Services and Admlnlsirallnii —

lulu the new Department ol
Management Services I k i i i . i i i i
dutv is supporting other stale
agencies in areas such as com
puicr technology and purelias
lugIn additlnu. spouses of dis
allied veterans who die will lie
able to keep a stale lax cxemp
lion even II they move lo a new
house. The spouse's exemption
ends If lie or she remarries.

Miller, as well as retired busi­
nessman Jimmy Russ as l hose
wanting lo abolish the depart­
ment
Although there is no love lost
between Manning and the oilier
three Individuals. Cuveslrand
and Miller denied die charges.
They said lliev would eouilmie
lo Irv lo persuade voters ol die
soundness ol Ihe consolidation
proposal
The eily came to terms with
the controversial road-wtdcniug
project along CR427, for which
many businesses whl be demol­
ished

one ended when MclYlHn ac­
cepted tile post. However. II did
not lake long helore MeFellln
realized lie bail stepped Into a
hornet's nest.
Although su pp ortin g c o n ­
solidation. Cuveslrand was re­
elected lo die commission. Miller
won unopposed since die In
eumhenl had moved oul ol low u
H a l v e / Smerllsou. a_ former
Longwood eomiiilssinui r. won In
a five-man field in lake die ililnl
commission seal uji fur elect ion.
The mouth alter die election
Miller said MeFellln had not
responded quickly enough in the
faee ol citizens' complaints
about Hooding In die town.
MeFellln denied I lie charge.
In a reply. MeFellln noted die
t o w n h a s 11,&lt; cl s e v e n a d
mliilsiralors in the last seven
years

In fo rm a tio n from th e A««oc inlet! P res* l»
co ntained In th U rep o rt.

Longwood—
Continued from Page i A
Opponents said llie move
would reduce ihe numbers of
nl Ijecrs on pal rot In (he eily.
They a ls o q u e s l i n n e d I lie
iuuuuul. II any. in savings.
Anli-enusiilklallrm Inrees said
Ihe details nl the propusal had
nut been worked mil sn a
knowledgahle vole on Ihe pro­
posal could uol really he east.
The deliaie raged during die
year and was voted on by
elllzens lu a November referen­
dum Anti etmsolldallon lon e
won by a solid tna|orlly.
However, seveml weeks alter
I be vole. I’ollee Clilel Greg
M a l i n i n g s a i d I Ii a l p r o ioiisolnl.ilion loree would altempi in abolish I lie department.
Ill spite ul die vole. He named
eiiinlssloners Ciivesiraiid and

In April. City Admlnstralor
Don Terry resigned The resig­
nation mcnnl that Longwood
would have al leasl seven eily
administrators in the Iasi seven
years. The search for the new

Lake Mary—

Herald Photo by Richard H opkln t

Widening of CR 427 In Longwood will cause several businesses to be demolished.

Harald Photo by Richard Hopklni

The tranquil view near Lake Mary City Hall.

Survivors Include father. Saul.
Deltona: mother. Kdllh. Deltona:
stepmother. Marla Allarii. DeI l o n a : b r o t h e r s . R e n e . Kl
Salvadore. Saul. Cos Angeles:
sisters. Nora Marline/. Fresno.
CaliC, Mayra and Marlscla. Iwitli
of Kl Salvadore, Nila. Kdllh
Ztilma and Marla, rill ol Dellnna.
Stephen K. Ilahliiull Funeral
Home. Dellnna. in charge ol
arrangements.

DORA EDITH A L F A R O
Dora Kdllh Alfaro. 19. ol Coro­
net D r i v e . D e l t o n a , d ie d
Wednesday. Dee. IK), as the
result of an .mlomohile accident
in Deltona, Horn Dee 17. 1975.
in Police. Puerto Kirn, she
moved io Deltona I I yrais ago
I ruin t h e r e . S h e w a s an
assembler lor Calibron ol Cake
Mary and a senior ai Dellnna
I huh School. She aMended Oui
Cady ol Ihe Cakes Catlmlie
Church. Dellnna

BATTS FUNERAL NOME
AND MONUMENTS
Easy Credit • Free Headstone
Orlando (407) 841-2351

The charter revisions as well
level dial a special master was
as die runoll election proposal
called In to resolve the disputes
were all approved l&gt;v die voters.
' Any decisions were cancelled
Among progress made or at­
however, when several ol die
tempted hv die city during die
department heads resigned tliclr
vear. was die aimmmeemeni
posts.
dull ATAT. would lake over Ihe
As a result. Cake Mary ended
NCR plant on Cake Emma Drive.
Tile move, still lo lake place. Is
1992 willi a new police clilel.
and a new liuanee director.
e x p e e l e d l o Ini r e us e the
One 1992 Incident lu Cak&lt;
employment picture in die- city
Mary brought sadness io .ill ol
in 1995.
Central Florida. A trailer became
Other major businesses also
unhitched, and struck three
moved to Cake Mary, and several
children wailing lor a selmol
major housing developments
litis. One. I I year old Jeremy
emerged and grew during die
Mlllhousc. was killed Two oilier
year, giving the city an excellent
youngsters were seriously In­
growth pattern.
jured.
T Ii e u e 1 g h h o r s f o r
Tile tragedy has spurred a call
neighborhoods park project got
for reconsideration of school bus
underway al the suggestion of
slops and salcly. which is still
Mayor Randy Morris In 1992.
being studied.
Four jiarks were renovated dur­
The Lake Mary eily elect funs
ing the year.
brought about several changes
Central Park, adjacent to the
late In the year. Cowry Koeketi
City Hall, was given a new
was elected Mayor, sueeedlng
lighting and sound system,
Randy Morris who did not run
allowing the city lo hold it's
for re-elect Ion. Gary Hrender was
Christmas event outdoors.
elected Ul ihe einmutsstnii.* mid
David Meulor. although mi the
Within the confines ui Ctty
commission during ihe past
Hall. 1992 saw an internal dis­
year, was elected tu a new term
pute between many members of
uu a different seat, replacing
the city stuff, with several de­
Paul Tremel. who did not seek
partment heads filing accusa­
re-elctlon. Hrender took Menhir's
tions ugulnsl others.
original seat.
The problems reached such a

Sanford-------

DEATHS

M AR K IN G R A M O U T L A W
Mark Ingram Outlaw. 25. of
hh St. North. St. Petersburg,
died Tuesday. Dee. 29. ill Ids
residence. Horn Fell. 21. 1967. In
Sanlord. lie was a inciting resi­
dent ul the area, lie was an
avionics engineer and a Pre­
sbyterian. Mr. On 1law was a
Marine velerau.
Survivors Include paternal
great-gnmdmnl her. fo ra Snider
and Nannie Cooper, both of
Mayo: paternal grandparents.
Flonnle and Harold Cooper.
Mayo: maternal grandparents.
Sara and Vermin Harrison. Saillord: mother. Sura " S a l l y "
Murdoch, Ducllion. (in.: lather.
Carry. Orlando: sisler. Sara. Or­
lando.
iia Id win -Fa Ire Ili Id Funeral
Home. Oiikliiwu Park Chapel.
Cake Mary, in charge ol mr.mgeinenls.

C ontinued from P age 1A
work w a s halted until the
tnrtnlses were removed and
taken toa new local Ion
The lirsi phase of die sports
complex was dedicated as the
year ended, and die hall Helds
will begin operating lu the new
vear.
C'ili/ens ruse up several limes
lu various Unities with city
ollielals. A major problem arose
wheu the City Commission in­
dicated an Intention lu close
Hrondmoor Road. A residential
street. It Is used as one ol die
major approaches In Seminole
Community College, and con­
cern was voiced over traffic
congestion and safely. The city
planned lo close tile road at Ihe
edge of die college properly
After a lengthy huitie. the
problem was resolved with the
installation of speed humps to
slow lraffle. The road however,
remains open.
Another crmlllcl arose In 1992
on proposed changes »n tile city
charter. Although most ot a
charter advisory group’s rccuimncndaUniis fur changes were
approved by the City C o m ­
mission. It took a citizens peti­
tion drive to force an item
pertaining io runoff elections
onto die November ballot.

W A R D R U S S E L L D A V IS
Ward Russell Davis. IIH. ol
Mcrrimae Avenue. Dellnna. died
Wednesday. Dee. 110. al his
residence, limn Nov. 5, 1894. lu
Alum liiiuk. Pa., lie moved to
Dellnna 27 years ago from
Akron. Ohio. He was a supply
manager for Goodyear Tire and
Rubber. Akron, lor Hi1/ years
and a member ul F'lrsi Hulled
Methodist Church. Dellnna. Mr.
Davis was a also a member o|
i he Dellnna Sliulllclioard Club
and die Deltona Civic Assnciallnn. lie was an Army veteran ol
World War 1
Survivors include daughters.
Helen M. Rickard. Dellnna.
Dorothy Koineslicrg. Tnlmndgc.
Ohio. Pauline Sweet, MillurtC
Calif.: brother. Edwin O. Davis.
Milillnliurg. Pa.: right grand­
children. 21 great-grandchildren
ii n d f I v e g r e a t - g i e a I
grandchildren
Stephen R. Itiildiiuii Funeral
Home. Dellnna. in charge ol
arrangements.
G EO R G E L. O RTIZ
George C. Old/. III. ol fnimli v
Club Drive. Daytona llcacli. died
Tuesday. Dee. 29. al Halila.v
Medical Center. D.iviunn llcacli.
Hum del. 20. 1952. In Brooklyn.
N.V., lie moved lo Dellnna Hz
years ago Irom Deltona lie was
a police nllU'cr In Brooklyn. N Y .
and a meiulier ol I lie Rock
Clmreh. Dcllnu.i
Survivors include wife. Curline. D.iviona lieaeh: mnllier.
Ana Gun/.ile/. Ilayamuu. Puerto
Rico: d a u g h te rs . C hevoiine
Getahei t Tm res. Dellnna. Cl Islal
Genrlue and Celeste, Daytona
Heiieli brothers. Ralph Joe and
Vidor, slsieis, Marian Halmaii
Alta Nevarez. Ada and Rr-heei a
Torres: one grandchild
Stephen R ltald.mil I imer.il
Home. Deltmiii. in charge ol
iirriUlUeilieiUs

N O R M A M. ROBB
Norma M. Rolih. Gif. ul 5550
lieardidl Ave.. Sanlord. died
Tuesday. Dec. 29. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Horn Oct. 7. 1925. In
Dellwuod. sin- moved in Central
I'lnrlcla in 19G0. She was :i
bookkeeper and iidmlnlslrallve
.isslslaiil lor Rolih Construelinii
and a member of ilic First
Presbyterian Clmreh. Sanford.
Mrs. Robb was also a member ol
die Timneunii Golf and Country
Club.
Survivors Include husband.
CcRoy C.: sons. William T.
Freeman. Jr.. Hnslwlek. David.
Titusville. Mike. Gainesville. Git.:
daughter. Dlann Dowell. Sanlord: brodier. Coleman Messer.
Tallahassee; slst«-rs. Margerla
Lawrence. Tallahassee. Flora
Neel. Greenwood. Veda Colev.
J a c k s o n v ille . Hilda Klkius.
M a r ia n n a . Ann H en derson .
G a in e s v ille : seven g r a n d ­
children. one great-grandson
andsever.il nieces and nephews
llrlsHOii Funeral Home. San
lord, lu charge ul arrangements.

FUNERALS
OUTLAW , MA R K IN G R A M
O u t l a w . M a r k I n q r d m , ?S, 0 1 SI
P i-U rrs liu rq , d ie d Tu e sd ay. Dec
79 M r
O u lla w * &lt; i! e m p lo y e d b y R nd u B ion S y&amp; term .
*1 ilu d e ro t dif N a tio n a l A ir fr a m e and P o w e r
P la n ! V o c a tio n a l S chool a nd a r e t r r v i l l w ith
Ihe U S M a rin e C orps
[ lo r n m S a n fo rd
fie g r a d u a te d fr o m
S e m in o le H ig h School In 1985 M r O u tla w
s e rv e d vis y e a rs in th e U S M a r me C orps av
.» te a r g a n t in A v io n ic s in c lu d in g a lo u r o&lt;
O e H 'rl S to rm
S u r v iv o n fa th e r L a r r y . O rla n d o m o th e r.
S ara
S a lly
C a lifo r n ia
i n t e r . B e th , Or
la n d o g ra n d p a re n ts S ara a n d V e rn o n M ar
riv o n S a n fo rd
g ra n d p a re n t* . H a ro ld and
F lo n n te C o o p e r, M a y o
p a te r n a l g r e a t
g ra n d m o th e r C ora S nid e r, M a y o aunt% and
u n c le * a n d c o u v in v
In lie u o f f lo w e r i
1J 0 n . it 1 o n * m a y h e m a d e to T a u n to n
C h ild r e n ’ * H om e. Mt I. B or 60 W e w a h it
th k r t. F L . J7A6S F u n e ra l ie r v tc e * fo r M r
O u tla w w«M be co n d u c te d on S a tu rd a y a t 1
p m a t O ak la w n P a rk C e m e te ry . L a k e M a ry
w ith th e R ev
B ill D u c k w o rth o ffic ia tin g
V m fa h o n to r fr ie n d * w ill be h eld S a tu rd a y
fr o m Id a m u n til s e rv ic e tim e
B a ld w in F a ir c h ild F u n e ra l H om e O ak law n
P a rk C ha p e 'I fc-QCl C R t 416 A L a k e M a ry , F L

ROBB NORMA M
f u ne ra i e r v ic e * to r M r * R obb w ill be
S a tu rd a y Jan 7 at 10 a m
n the B f i i io n
fu n e r a l C hapel w ith th e Re# G eo rg e B
S p r a n ty
jr
o f f ic ia t in g
In te r m e n t w ill
to iio w in Oaisla w n P a m C e m e fe ry F r ie n d *
m a y c a l! a t the fu n e ra l h om e today ( F r id a y
Jan t tra m 4 u n til ? p m
A r r a n g e m e n t! b y B r it t o n F u n e ra l H om e
S a n fo rd 37? ?»H

C ontinued from P age 1A
i hey had re ceived
assurance Hint Ihe train operaHun would slay In the Sanford
area.
S a n fo r d .also m a d e Itself
known on Ihe silver screen
during the year. Casting calls
went out on Jail. 2 lor the first of
two movies filmed In Sanlord
during the first five months. One
movie, "Passenger 57." filmed
at llie Central Florida Regional
Airport, was nol released utilII
November.
"My Girl." although filmed In
Sanlord In 1991. contained
many downtown scenes, h spent
1992 In theaters across the
nation as well as on cable TV.
The second 1992 movie. "Wilder
Napalm ." with many scenes
lllmrd lu downtown Sanlord.
has not yet been released.
The planned additions al the
llcnry Shelton Sanlord Library
and Museum were held up
during the early part ol the year.
Concerned citizens and Isiards
objected lo exterior designs of
the project, wauling llie building
In take no mure ul a historical
appearance.
W11 Ii n e w p l a n s I I nal I v
approved, the consintcllou work
got underway following the
eonehisiou ul another successful
tear of Golden Age Games lu
Sanlord during Ihe lirsi week In
November

With more paperwork still
needed before bulldozers move
In. most of the final arrangements were made during 1992
for llie Seminole Towne Center
Mall. The major mall complex
will lie built on city property
adjacent to Interstate 4. near
S.R. 46. Melvin Simon and
Associates plans lo have al least
lour major tenants. Hurdlnes.
J.C. Penneys. Parisian, and
Dillards. In addition to possibly
140 smaller stores. Eventually,
two more major tenants may be
added.
Other plans calling for the
development ol office complexes
and convention size hotels lu the
area near llie development.
While llie mall and surround­
ing area wtll not he completed
lor several more years, con­
struction work Is expected to
begin In 1995. and It is expected
lo Increase tin- employment
picture In the area.
One long-term project that was
finished in 1992. was the re­
paving of the main H.(XX) fool
landing strip and laxlwaysai llie
airport. The work look almost
die entire year. Inn the facility Is
again lully operational, wit Ii new
lllglil service lo tlit- New York
area and Fori Lauderdale gelling
underway jusi helore year's end.
The Clly Recreation depart­
ment spent the year using the

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NUMBER
*11*41 CAI40
A M E R IC A N G E N ER A L HOME
E Q U IT Y . INC . a Delaware
corporation,
Plaintiff,

VI

P A U L W G R U E N IN G E R .
♦*-------------** G R U E N IN G E R .
unknown w lte o l P A U L W
G R U E N IN G E R , P A U L W
G R U E N IN G E R . o l Trutlea ol
The Gruenlngcr H aulage T rutt
d*t»a February I I . IffO. MA R K
D G R U E N IN G E R . a t Trutlaa
ol T h t Gruenlnger H arltaga
Trutt datad February II . 1**0,
U N IT E D V IR G IN IA M O R T
G A G E C O R P O R A T IO N , a
Virginia corporation. C ITY OF
SA N FO R D . " --------------- D O E ".
unknown tanan t,
K I S H , l a n a n t . " --------------”
BONOMO. tananl. *•------------ "
C H R ISTIA N , lanant, ” ------------ ”
TABOR lanant and " — - **

facilities ol tile Salvation Army
gymnasium lor summer recre­
ation. hut concluded the year
with a new contract to lake over
operation of llie Sanlord Gym­
nastics association facilities as a
move to reduce rental charges.
A d d it io n a l im p r o v e m e n t s
around Sanford In 1992 Included
tile expansion nl the Central
Florida Regional Hospital east­
ern wing, the Inauguralioii of ilic
first Bed a n d B r e a k f a s t
establishment, and the start ol
seaplane tourist lllgliis from the
Monroe Harbour Marina.
Many families will also relfeel
on llie year and remember the
activation ol Company H ul the
National Guard Hull stationed in
Sanlord lu help ihe people ul
Dade County, ravaged by the
severe wi nd s ul l l i i rri eaue
Andrew.
As Ihe year neared an end. city
elections failed lu change any
|Misillniis oil the Sanlord Clly
Commission. Bellyr Sinllii was
re-elected lor another lour year
term as mayor. Huh Thomas was
rc-elccled wllliuul opposition to
serve district 2 on llie C’liv
Commission
Con Howell event (tally was
re-elected to llie district I com­
mission seal, alter llnlslilng sec­
ond In the 4-man city clcclimi
race, ilieu winning llie run oil
election early 111 December

SU LLIVA N , tenant
Delandantt

NOTICE OF SALE
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , (hat purtuant lo lha
Final Judgmant ol Foracloturt
and Sala enlared In Ih lt cauta In
tha Circuit Court of Dta Eigh
laenlh Judicial Circuit, In and
lor Sammola County. Florida.
Civil Action No f l If!) CAUG,
Ihe undertigned Clerk will tell
Ihe properly iltualed In tald
County, detcribed at
Lott J and 4. L a tt lha North SO
leel of Lot J. Block 10. Tier 7,
E R TRAFFORO'S M A P OF
TH E TOWN OF SA NFO R D ,
according lo lha plat tharaol a t
recorded In Plat Book I, Paget
» through U . Public Record! ot
SemlrtoleCouhly, Florida
al public tala, to tha hlghett
bidder tor cath al 11 00 o'clock
A M . on tha llt h day of Janu
ary. 1*93. at tha W att Iron! door
of lh a S E M IN O L E C ounty
Courthouta. Sanford. Florida
Clark of tha Circuit Court
Haathar Brooke
Publith January l . l . I f f !
DEA 10

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF THE STATE
OF FLORIDA,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL 0IVISI0N
CASE N O .fi m t CA 14 0
FORD CONSUMER FINA N C E
COMPANY. INC .
Plalntlfl.
vt
LEE C BURGESS AND M AY
H BURGESS. HIS W IF E ,
Dafandantm
NOTICE OF SALE
Nonet It hereby given lhal.
purtuant to a Final Summary
Judgment ot Foreclosure an
fared in lha above ilyled cause
In lha Circuit Court ot Seminole
County. Florida. I will tall the
property situate in Sammola
County. F lo n d a.d aicrlb e d at
Lot 4. O O M M E R IC H WOODS
U N IT TWO. according to lha
plal inereol a t recorded In Plal
Book I ) . Pagt 100. ot tha Public
Records ol Seminole County
Florida
A /K /A 1145 Holly Ridge Trail.

Maitland. FL 17751
at public tale, to lha highest and
belt bidder, tor ca»h AT THE
WEST FRONT DOOR SEM I
NOLE COUNT Y COURT
HOUSE. SANFORO. FLO R ID A
at 11 00 A M . on January 71

mi
(SEAL!
M A R Y A N N E MORSE
C LE R K OF
C IR C U IT COURT
BY Cecelia V Ekarn
Deputy Clerk
Publish January l . i . m i
DEA*

Need Help With
Consumer Problem s?
Call:

�•A - Sanlord Herald. Sanford, Fjoflda - Friday, January 1, 1993

Hcto&lt; purchase o» $100 or more A xtatement m l to genereled. to
no payment w * to too Tit Apr* A to f Ito 0% lnt#r**l period. tto
remaining account tolanca m l to tub|ect to a finance charge at a
rata up to 21% APR. depending on your elate &lt;A residence (*5 0
minimum monthly hnanca charge) "Rata* to your McDufl Purehaee
Pow er* account agraamant tor mora dataiit Ottar vaM on
quaMytng purchases mada between Dacamtor 30. tM 2 and
January 3 .1M3

No

DownPayment and No Payments until April 1993 On any Total Purchase o f '100 or More

INTEREST'
UNTIL APRIL 1993

19" Color TV with
nanoom Access
Remote Control
IIMITED q u an tities

Projection TVs

LIMITED one

Camcorder

Big Tube TVs

Rack System

p er

|

Refrigerators

|

Washers/Dryers

U M t t lB Q U A tflfT lfi

Priced |
From &lt;
Console Color TVs

Streakers

Dishw;ishers/Ranges

we will beat any local store’s price on any identical item we sell, anyday ...even during their sale days
In WMt IMboum * Shop McDuff at:
MeDuff SuparContar
Hwy. 1792 Seminole Cooler, 3705 Orlando Or.

.407-321-6993

McDuff Elactronlca
Altam onte M ai, ARamonte Springs....................
O rlando Fashion Square M ai, O rlando.............

2400 W Now Haven Ave.................... .................................... 407-951-3881

McDuff Electronic*
.407-834-3400
.407-895-6064

Molbourn# 8quaro M a i...........................................................407-725-8200
Maaear-FrMay II AM- • PM; lahNdmr • AM -I PM; Saaiay 12 Nom . I PM

P o licy lo r A dvertised Moms: The products in this ad were selected tar in advance of this ottenng. therefore.
L I I i&amp; I S iS S liL Z J U S S E i
situations may occur where ail products may not be available a all stores II lor any reason an advertised item is out ol stock, we w ill otter you a raincheck or. il
desire, a comparable item, il available (‘ Closeout,
‘ Special Purchase' and ‘ Limited Quantity* Items excluded) We reserve the right to lim it purchases to one item per customer. All stores may not stock all Items
are not responsible for pictorial or typographical
errors We appreciate your business and understanding
• • le w m w W e O M fla w o e M o '...w o w W O o e l o * r lo c o /o lo rw 'o p ric e ew # e y iW w
lo w P ric e O — t h f lo w e d — *: ■ B c te re y — to y : M cD ufl w ill beat any verifiable price
tern we sell ■ Alter yen toy: II w ithin 30 days
you fin d a verifiable lower price from any local store, including our own. on the
he identical item , we
wt w ill R o tu n d 1 1 t% Of
C opyright 1992. M cDufl. Fort W orth. Texas

“Sflwsir ES ■
A ll TV screens measured
Stated wattage based on
power ratings.
McDuff Purchase Power I

�Sports

B
C o u n ty had g o ld e n *92

LOCALLY

By T O N Y D e S O R M IE R

Herald Sports Editor

JCC offering classes

ami l In n l In s ss 11ki up
I oi Si uiluule &lt; minis spoils I.ms
ldd'2 ss.is ,i bun.i lull d o .iiii s• .11
( humpionslups'1 \\ ' bail ' III .Mil"
slum s ’ H' l olds'* Similises'* Its
nasties''You iiauu it I d d 2h a d i l
l o In qm ss 1111 Si uunoli ( minis
lui&gt;h si bools eollei ii d l m
si,in
• b.uupmnships dm mu de Iasi 12
mouths Tin I si i i .in Ilii-li Si boo!
Hills s u i i i i team ss tin h lust .ill ul
om
uaiiu iluiuiH |d'*2
kn k&gt; d
ilniiHs nil nl sun II I.ii his • dn pun
bs ss 11111111h Us si i nml inn •• u f iv •
• l a s s |A si a l i i i uss n
Si seral ssi i Ks Ian i ilu (i sui l u
II lull S ' liunl I . l u l l s s t u l l t l i d
• seivulli
bi l l Iln nisi |yi s 11 \
kumkiuH nil Miami Si mm in tin
f lass |A buys
b.isl.i lb.ill sian
• liampluuslnp i;.um
Si inmuli I beb Si liunl sum mu
uni
but tssu si.in iiilis ssniiin ,
2 1 bum pi |lull III Mas las IIII - la ill i

M M II A\l&gt;
(Tiildten s lennis .nut eym
nasties i l a s s e s ss ill In iillen d beeiumne Sun
•las .l.mu.iis lid al the .lessish ( m n u u m i l s
&lt; ' nli i n| i . till a I I Iiii ida S al \niih M.ml.uni
\yemii imi iln i oi i i i i ol Maul.mil \ s n m r and
Maiil.mil linen b.meel
I' linis lessons ss ill In as.ul.ibli m Iteeium i
Nds.uii ed Heeinm i and I'n Si hnol i lasses
( iS Itlll.lslle lessons ss ill lie ollered lm elltlilteu
•IIIee seals ol a nr and oldei As.ulabli i lasses
lm 1111 1• l'ii i e a m W m k i m i
Ss in hi oni /ed
Ininblme
b .1111
Heei ui ui a nd Ad s . l i n e d
Heeinilei skill i lassi s. ui di heel lead me
Ui eisti,iinin lot these and olliet ploeiaius is
noss as.ulable
I'm mine mlorinatton. m to
11 e 1stei e.lll &lt;• I a
I l I I \n I|S||III 7.r*

Racquetball league planned
• )\ 11-. IH )
| In &lt;Is'ledo Ueet e.lt ion and I’ai ks
Dcp.iinm us ts ollei mu r.u|tieitrail !• aeties lot \
Ii.null ley el play e |s beemumu III I.llllt.IIS
I i aem plas ssill tie on I nesilas Wednesday
and I Innsdas i s i nines
Ui eisit.uioii ss 1 11 In as.ulabli limu Monday
Dei i i i i tie t Mill Iliumeh Monday
l.mu.iis lib
I III lei III nei sl el IS S'Jn lol I Is II do Ills
i• sulenis amt SJ &gt; lot non i us u snli nts
I ui iiion mlin 111.11ion i uni.n t i'oi s i l.ii K. .11
'. 11• it a &gt;11

lu l i e
till

Reason to celebrate
Seminole County high schools won state champion
ships m live different sports during the 1992 calendar
year Claiming stale crowns were the Lyman girls'

soccer learn (above loft). Oviedo boys' basketball squad
Lake Mary boys' tennis team and Seminole baseball
(right) and boys' track (bottom left) teams

Individual accomplishments
While achievement in team sports generally is the result
ot a group effort, the efforts of individuals will stand
out During 1992, Lake Mary High School boys' soccer

coach Larry McCorkle (left) notched his 300th win while
Seminole High School graduate Jeff Blake (right) led
Fast Carolina University to victory in the Peach Bowl

Seminole Softball registration
I'lVK POI NTS
Seimnnle Soil ball ( tub lioliie
ol die 1 I and I ’udrr Naljunal Champi ons ss ill
be buldine resist rut tun lm iln Sprmu uirls
slusspliiTi season In emmne Saturday .l.mu.iis
d a n d luimlne throueli Sunday, .Jamiais 17
(.ills aeesfi IK may rt'Ulstei al llle I'ise Polnls
Si mmole Sollhall ( lull i mnple\ un Sian- Uuad
l i d (belsyeen 17 02 and .111-1 lie.il Wtnlet
sprmesl b u m o a iii in :t p iii on Saturday's. I
put to -I p in on Sunday s and limn fi p m to H
p m Monday dimueli Friday,
la aeue play begins on Sill unlit y. Fr hi u.it y fi.
I oi mure Inliiiiiiiilluu. rail 1121 -I0H5 d m m e
ti eisttaiimi limns

I In It ssi Ii also a tail aiumml nl
iudit idu.il ai i mii piis|t11it11 its dm me
I 1f *2
I ui i \ a ill pb
Si nil liuli
&lt; uuill iuuits f nib H&lt; b a s k ' tball
pi,i s i l III lan Nason ss as uaim d lie
Mid I lm id,i ( mil' i- m • plas i i nl lie
s i ai
I Im ida &lt; un i mi in it s ( n||i h*
pi.i m i u| lie seal and a thud n am
N a I In ii a I I ii ii i n i i u 111 h '
VII
AnU'i ii an
Seuilliuli l minis allili n s Htahhi d
d u e l III | | imhsidll.il l u l l s a l III!
( lass |A stall ss 11 si 1111h im i I Iasi
la Inn.us
I.s m a l l s \\ ilh. ( .uupus
ssnn Ills si i nml si,m ■ llainpimishlp
w h i l e l.aki
llnssi II s Hi" ml . in
Hin kles a n d i is l u l u s N a t h a n
Mu//mi' i at Ii rapped l i e u p u p
• .lleers ss llh -.lali lilies
Lake M. iis llinli Si liunl buys
siii eei euaeli l.arrs Mil nikl&gt; ■ • Ii
braled die dOOih ss m ul Ins ■an &lt; t
SSlilt'll imTilded sl mls al Si uilllnli
and Bishop Muon limb si bunts
SpeaklliH ul dream seals Issbiih
sse were smile ' lHh I pal.iHtaphs
.ll&gt;n| Seminoli 111Hh Selinnl Hiailtl
ale .Jell Itlaki had ss h.il many ss mild
emisldei a I.i111asy seal II In nan
ss illi lilake ipiai Ii i Ii.ii klliH I'.asi
Ca r ul i ua I ’n i s e r s u s to a r u m
i-l iom lielund s leims i i si i Nmili
( aiulma Slate in die I'em Ii Buss I
lu die spiuiH- Blake ss.is dialled
and sinned hs die Ni ss York dels
Iii made die team ill tall anil saw
smile plas mu lime i Ii ui i i h dn u h **
lai season
"Vlsu m.iklliH dn I i .i l isi l ii &gt;n limn
liiHhls ii'H.iided amateuis in iln
piulessinn.il ranks ssen Semmnli
( ' mnmuuils ( 'nllem- s Si.mles 1. sails
and Child Kppeisun Lake M. iis s
Mike Mellllle and (fsiedii 111h h
Sehnul's Hu k Wet m i . all ul ss hum
S S e tr seleeled II I llle baseball spiuiH
lire am-lit (trail Iasi .June

Yarilek .mil I l nur
both limn
Alliiininiir S p rin g s. s |m‘ 111 iln
summer in liairelnua. Spain as
members ul tin- Culled Stai rs
Olyiupie Irani
\'arllrk was iln
l i ar k- up e a l r he t lot iln I S
baseball team wlnle Hi ni i w as a
llieinbei ii| |lie wnillen s HS'lilliasIli s
team
Then- are a l ways eiiinintis ami
Hollins (llllinu I III i muse ul a seal
Hill I'ayne sl ipped i I i i w i i as iln
men's basketball euaeli ai Semmnli
( 'i&gt;111111111111V Collin' w 1111• Hill Si i il I
rellletl as the luiilball euaeli al
I.small I bell Si IiiiiiI

I I a in
KSPN. enllei&gt;e. II.ill ol Filllle Howl
Huston ( olleee s s Tennessee'. II.I
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WCP.X Ii i olleee. Him khlistel
Buss I Peon Slate ss St.mlmd ll.l
I Id p m
WKSII 2 eulleee, Fiesta liossl

Amiine tile
mss I a n s
ssin
bails H.lki-r (ssllii lepl.ieed Si nil .it
I.sm.ml. Hein.ml Merlliie liakine
user lur I’as in al S( C| Hub l l ama
lllle m ss Seiilimilf limb Si liunl
boys' basketball eo.n III anil Hill
&lt; .III el tell (SS tin i .line ns el bu m l.aki
Mats' I Hell Selinnl In laki i i si i llii
Seiilillule ssiestlme pluei-mil

S\ i .a 11si \s ( olorudo. |l.|
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W K I V U. eolleee Hose liossl
'hi lue.m ss Washington, ll.l
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WK S I I 2 eulleu.
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• hi asku v» I lorlilii Sian ll.l
H id p m
WI-'T V O i olleee Sueai Howl
M a i ..... . s s Miami ll.l

Saturday

C o m p le te lis tin g s on P a g e 2B

un

Then there syne till- eyplolls ol
.llllt Courier. .Jason Vuiiiek and
Wendy liruee (mi ll et
a loitiiei
restdent ol Saulord. ss.is tanked die
No I melt's lennis plaset til the
wot Id b l u s h e d Hie S e a l tanked No
I and ss.is iln- top money svititn t on
die AT P T urn

F O O T B A LL
Today

I- in put
W I ' T V d Ni l. N I C I'l.isoils
• 1 ■ iLUmi Bed skins ai Mlnnisoia \'ikme'' ll.l
I p ill
\V I r v II NIT. A H PI.noils Kansas
lm ls.il Salt Dle^iuChaiitrrs. II.)
I.Sl'N i olleee Pe.tc-h liossl Nmih
1 aiolinass Mississippi Slate ll.l

t e n t- tit),

• \ pi i I ■ 11 II i SS III 111' S' at In 11 &gt;|.

Seminole PONY registration
l-TVK POINTS
Si'm iiiu Ii PONY Baseball will
in n uisietme players tor its sprtne leaeues un
i uusi-i iilise Sat iirdavs l.mu.iis ‘ l a n d Hi altln
Seminole p o \ Y i umpli \ on stall Uu.ul l pi
Ueeislrallnu
SSllli'li w ill be euildueted be
I Wet'll HI a in and 2 pill earli day ss ill be
asallable to players lielssei u tin ae&lt; s ul a and
If.
Players lllllsl be IIn* desieil.lli d ai*«- by Alie I
Pt'M Pi out ae' is iei|iitled it tin plaset is ness
to I lie lenem
I'lie reulstiallun lees .lie by b aeue Shellaud
laees a and fil - $.'15 Pllllu |7 H|
$55
Must.me Id lot — Slid Kronen 11 1-121
$f&gt;5.
Puns 11 t-1 il — $7f&gt; and ( oil 1 1a Hi)
S7.r&gt; An
addltluiial timdlalsei lumillltllllillt ul 821 ssill
In reipilled al llle time ut reeistr.ltluil oil all
li'etslei me players
I'm mure liilnrmatfuii eall :t'2lt 5570 amt leasi
a im ssai*e

l.\ b u y s

and ill Ii .11in :■ I attlpa Jesuil
dll
I lass
IA slab
I i.i s i b a l l

■ loss II ti l l III M a l i i i U l H i l i
l.aki Mai s I (lull S ' liunl - b u y s
n mils 11 .mi II ll.l Its put lls lull, i ns.
bands on tie si,in tit|i il was

Umpire clinic planned
SANHIHD
I In Sautuid l lllieiatme Assin i.i
H"li lias s. In duled an uinplli s i him loi tin
ssi I'ki'tid ol
I.mil.us Mill and 11H11 al tin
Downtown Youth I I lltet losset |eSi I ol s.mluid
i lls Hall ti hi \oi lli pat k As • line
I In limit
ss h ii 11 ss ill In em at * a m hull)
days is tut .msmm inleiesied in beenuime all
\ 1111 in an Sntthall \ssi Mi.i i ii iti i i nun d mi i pu i
| III I I1st Is SJ| I
I'luspiittvi 11 iii pites iu ii si attend liniti days
Sat ill das s session w ill di al w n It situations and
on held traitniie Sunday ss ill In used lot
un i hr111H s and tukine die test Yetei.m umpires
bum ihiouetioiil &lt; eiitial I'linida will i|u tin
ii.mime
I ui umi e uilui mat inn i all Duane l.nlulletie al
T2J H02l&gt; or 1 11e S.mluid Uei leaMuti Depall
un m ai ;t;t&lt;&gt; .'tl»‘ »7 bi-lssim tin hunts ul s tti
a m ami ~&gt; Tii p m Monday Ihruueh ITidas

I lass

1'nd.lS

Leading the way
Every good team has a good leader Over the last 12
months. Leon Lowman (left! earned Most Valuable
Player honors at the Class 4A state basketball
tournament while leading Oviedo to the state title

Jason Appel (center) was the No 1 singles champion
while helping Lake Mary to the Class 4A team crown,
and Seminole Community College's Brian Nason (right)
was named Florida Junior College Player of the Year

What else li.lppelled III Hl'f2
l.aki III.miles s Dais I Hush ss.is .1
III St Ie, ill I sell I I lull In III' I lass i \
slab Inuthall leaili
l.aki Mats
and Seiilillule played in iln lilsi
• ipiuuisi Buss I luuib.ill e.mn
S.mluid I'al ks .mil lb i 11 a Ilull lli
p.l I I llle III slip! I l III e mb III Mlk&gt;
Kirby svuii his seeund ennsi i iins i
Aiuerii an lllslnrii Ka&lt; me Mniuies
i|e A ssih i.i Imil llalinli.il ib.illipluti
ship
Allil Iln dli am • nlitillin s

�IH H H B IH H a c t V B H P M M IH P

STATS &amp; S TA N D IN G S
T. Thomat. But.
Whlla.Mou.
0«an,Ctn.
Warren, tea.

B A LT IM O R I ( I I - Ra g l*w f# Rich
Svtciitta, rhp. la a t t mllllan. ana yaar
contracl! tlgnaO HaraM RtypalOe. lb . teat
i la. la a HAS million, one year contract
BOSTON I I I - Rationed Billy Hatcher. al.
le a H.4 mllllan. twe year contract; » &gt;nod
Scott Fletcher. B . Mihoaubaa. la a B14
million, two-year cantracii aigoed Scott
Bankhead, rhp. Cincinnati, la a 114 million,
two yaar contract.' eigned Andre Dawaan. at.
CMcafo. to a ta .l million, twa year cantracii
eigned Bab Melvin. e. Kanaaa city, Sr a IIJ S
million, twa yaar contract.
CALIFORNIA t l) - SI«noa Chill Davta. Of.
Minneaeta. to a S l.tJ minion, ana yaar
contract; rationed Rana Oenaalea. Jh. la a
lito.ooo. ana-yaar cantract.
CMKABO I I I - tto n ai Oa«a SHeb, r t* .

OW fc of. to • SI million. ana yaar contract,ra-ol|no4 Mitch RMhatar, al, la a IM million.
c o n tra c t; re llg n e d Roger
McOmmN. Hir, H a tl mllllan. twayaat
c w rtm t! t i m
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 1, 1M3 - 38

ll

New trends to share

IN B R I E F

1993 brings on many changes for the better

foMMfoJMPMMm Sjfo
p m gp
pTugmii
vo ponray OOailjfcJfoWui
nvavcoim Va
SANFORD — A free program featuring a portrayal o f the life
o f IBSO'a black leader Malcolm X w ill be held at 10:15 a.tn.,
Jan. 13, at Seminole Community College Fine Arte Theatre.
SchoMr/performer Charles Everett Pace w ill portray the
controversial civil rights leader, now the focus o f a m ajor
m otion picture directed by Spike Lee. P ace's on e-scl
monologue, entitled "X : Firebrand o f Freedom ." la a vivid
reenactment based on the writing and speeches o f Malcolm X,
w ho w as assassinated In 1985.
The program w ill conclude with a question -and an sw er
period In which Pace stays In the Malcolm X character, giving
the audience a simulated opportunity to talk directly to one of
the civil rights movements most dynam ic personalities.
Funding la being provided by the Florida Humanities
Council, with coordination by Florida A&amp;M University's
Department o f Visual Arts, Hum anities and Theatre.
Pace has been a classroom teacher for nearly 10 years, the
last seven at the university level. He has performed the role of
Malcolm X for the last taro years In many states, and is
currently pursuing his doctorate In Am erican Studies at
Purdue University In Lafayette, Indiana.
The program begins at 10:13 a.m . and Is free and Is open to
the public. Because seating is limited call 323-1450, extension
630 or 623 to assure seats. For special needs accommodations
or for more Information about this program or about the
Florida Hum anities Council, please call (407) 333*1430,
extension 438.

Al«Anon group gathara
Serenity W on. an Al*Anon group for M ends and family of
w ill meet each Monday. Tuesday and Thursday
night at 6 p m . at the Sahara C lub. 3387 S. Sanford Ave.,
Flora at 349-5376 for more Information.
Sanford. Call 1

Narcotic* Anonymous moots in Sanford
Narcotics Anonym ous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
o f Goodwill, 317 Oak Ave., Sanford.

Posts to talk vsrso
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a m . every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.

Sanford Rotarians to most
Rotary C lub o f Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Clvfo Center,

Happy New Year! A new year to change
for the better, strive to be healthy and
happy, and renew commitments to family
and m ends.' I love January first because I
alw ays feel a new chance has been given to
me. I heme 1993 brings all o f the readers
good health and much happiness!
I also Uke to find new trends to share. W e
ore living In an Incredible erat
Floats to Rsplsss Plasties? Fibers from
flax, wood, a n d cotton could one day take
the place o f conventional reinforced plastics.
Researchers at the University o f W ales are
chem ically altering such plant fibers Into
environm entally friendly "btocom posites."
The advantages are the lightness and low
costs o f the natural composites, as well as
lower enerygy Input and easier disposal.
Plant fibers can be as strong as glass and
carbon fibers, but they tend to absorb water
— a problem that the researchers have
developed a patented process to solve. One
result m sy be a new, renewable, high-value
crop for farmers.
■ m o o M od s Proas T ra sh . The next
shoes you buy might be m ade out of
garbage. W alking shoes designed and dis­
tributed by Northwest Quality Innovations
o f Lake Oswego. Ore. are m ade from scrap
plastic from diapers, tires and foam rubber,
as well aa saw d u st paper bags, and coffee
filters. The DeJaShoe hit the market running
last spring and may make It 'to stores
throughout the United States In the near
future.
Other recycled shoes com ing out soon are
called A ir Escape, and It's the new recycled
shoe from Nike. The atletlc shoemaker, no
stranger to Innovation, has designed an
athletic shoe that uses as much aa 20
percent "fille r" material from used, de­
fective, and worn-out shoes. Research and
field testing at the Nike Chem istry Labora­
tory in Beaverton, Ore. have devised a
to grind up old Nike athletic shoes,
pulverise the resulting shreds Into a fine
powder and separate them into basic fiber
(fluff) and rubber (filler) elements. Filler Is

cu ff Inflation level according to that user's
systolic blood pressure and arm alee):
Fisher's FVC-770 cam corder (fussy logic Iris
control for more perfect Im ages): plus many
other applications In cam eras, electronics,
and appliances. The "F u tu re" appliances
that were only speculations |n the confer­
ences and publications o f the '70s ahd '80s
have arrived in th e ‘90s!

Japanese

then mixed with rubber resulting in a
durable compound for the outaole of new
shoes. The fluff material has value too — as
a stuffng material for futons and as padding
for leather briefcases. The A ir Escape,
scheduled to be released In spring 1993, is
an outdoor cross-training shoe for women
and men.
W ashing Machine Analyses Dirt. A
fu s s y T V on th e m a rk e t in J a p a n
autom atically Increases Its brightness as the
room grow s darker and increases the
volum e when the viewer moves father from
the set. Appliances programmed with fussy
logic are designed to react to changing
conditions much Uke people.
Although fussy logic Is often referred to as
a new technology, you likely already own
appliances using a sim ilar concept. For
exam ple, In a dryer, a moisture sensor
d eterm in es w hen the tow els a r d ry:
m icrow ave ovens can use weight and
m o is t u r e c o n t e n t o f th e fo o d to
autom atically determine cooking time.
A p ro to ty p e w a s h in g m a ch in e by
Matsushita analyses the degree o f dirt in the
wash and select the degree o f washing. If
their fussy logic washer-dryer gains suffi­
cient Interest Matsushita plans to set up
m anufacturing faculties In this country.
Other applications o f fussy logic Include:
Natlonal-Panasonlc's rice cooker (continu­
ously monitors rice and water levels and
adjusts the cooking temperature): electronic
digital- blood monitor (determines the Ideal

Incinerators

Use

A sh . Tokyo-Mlcrowsve energy not only
cooks foods faster, but also Incinerates the
refuse left after dinner In some Japanese
households.
First marketed about four years ago.
m icrowave incinerators are gradually gain­
ing acceptance In Japanese homes aa an
efficient and odorless w ay to dispose of
household garbage.
T o save on disposal cost, m any homes
here are equipped with com posters that
em ploy a fermentatlon/decomposition pro­
cess to reduce kitchen trash Into compost.
But, those devices give off unpleasant odors
that m ake them undesirable in condomini­
um s and other high-density housing.
T h e new Incinerators, how ever, use
m icrowaves to heat garbage from the Inside,
thus drying it quickly so that It can be
reduced to ash In only l/20th to 1,000th Its
original volum e. The m achines require
about three hours to reduce 1.5 kilogram s of
garbage — a typical product o f the Japanese
household — to ash.
About the size o f a com pact refrigerator
(slightly larger than a U.S.-m ade trash
compactor), the m achines are usually In­
stalled on ou tdoor v e ran d a s an d are
operated at night when electrical rates are
lower. A full trash-to-traah operation costs
about 60 yen (48 cents) per night, say s a
iDokeuoeraon for M itauahlti Electric.
However, m icrowave incinerators remain
costly. The most popular Matsushita model
has a 64.000 price tag. substantially more
than the 680 cost o f the most expensive
com poster.

Take it one day at a time for a happy year
Oddfellows schedule meeting
Lodge No. 27 o f the International Order o f Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday o f every month, except July and
August, at 8 p m . at 101 Magnolia Ave., Sanford.

Canoer support group meets
Support. Hope and Recovery. 8.H.A.R.. meets every Monday
afternoon at 8 p m . at Central Florida Regional Hospital In the
for corner o f the dining room. This Is a s d f help support group
for a ll cancer aurvtvors. whether In treatment now or finished
with I t C ell 324*8737 o r 333*7785 for more Information

Marine Lance Cpt. Elbert 8.
W illiam s, son o f W an da W .
Brewtngton of 1813 Strickland
Ave., Sanford, recently partici­
p a te d In a c o m m a n d p ost
e x e rc ise w ith H e a d q u a rte rs
Battalion. 2nd Marine Division.
Marine Corps Base. Cam p Le*
Jeune. N.C.
During the exercise conducted
Oct. 15 to 21 at Fort Bragg. N.C.,
W illia m s p a r tic ip a te ? in a
high-level field exercise designed
to test the - deploym ent and
employment of the command,
con trol an d com m un ication
system/structure o f the Division
com m and post and supporting

The following births have been
recorded at Florida Hospital,
Aliam onte Springs:
Altam
~
Dec. 30 - Bridget and Gary
oy
Stripling. Sanford, boy
Dec. 21 - Linda and
an Maurice
Cotey, Altamonte Springs, boy:
1Shelly Fnlcy» Longwood. girl:
Helen and K), tngho Bo. Alta­
monte Borings, girl
Dec. 32 Alice and John
B o n a ta k ls. L o n g w o o d . g irl:

security element.
The 1990 graduate o f Sem i­
nole High School. Sanford Joined
iC orpalnD cc. I
the Marine!

DAVID W . KUEHN
Marine MaJ. David W . Kuehn.
son o f Ernest E. and Jane D.
Kuehn o f 4550 C ana) Drive.
Sanford, w as recently promoted
to his present rank while serving
with. 1st Battalion. 3rd Marines.
1st M a rin e E x p e d it io n a r y
Brigade. Marine Corps A ir Sta­
tion. Kaneohe Bay. Hawaii.
T h e 1976 g r a d u a t e of
Edgcwater High School Joined
(he Marine Corps In April 1977.

Linda and Johnathan Boston.
Oviedo, girl: Dianna and Robert
H e n d r ic k s o n . A lt a m o n t e
S p r in g s , g ir l: B onn |e a n d
F ran k lin B a rk e r. A ltam on te
Springs, boy
Dec. 23 — Tam l and John
Hush Jr.. Sanford, girl: Sharon
Anthony and Michael Finley.
Oviedo, boy: Zoila and Luis
Panora. Casselberry, girl

My New
Year's column has become an
annual tradition since 1973.
These N ew Year’s resolutions
are based on the original credo o f
Al-Anon. I have token the liberty
o f using that theme with some
variations o f m y own:
J u st for today I w ill live
through this day only, and not
set far-reaching goals to try to
overcome all m y problem s at
once. 1 know 1 f f n do som***hlng
for 24 hours-that would appau
m e if I thought I had to keep it
up for a lifetime,
Just for today I w ill be happy.
Abraham U n w in said, "M ost
folks are about as happy as they
make up their m inds to b e ." He
w as right. I w ill not dwell on
thoughts that depress me. I w ill
rh sar them out o f m y mfod ^
r e p la c e th em w it h h a p p y
Just for today I w ill adjust
m yself to what is. I w ill race
reality. I w ill coreect those things
that I can correct and accept
l&gt;W B thing * I i^n nn . w »rw »l
Just for today 1 will Improve
m y mind. 1 w ill not be a mental
loafer. I w ill force m yself to read
som ething that requires effort.

clean ( Hel closet or straighten
out those dresser drawers.
Just for today before I apeak I
w ill ask m yself "la it true? Is It
kind?" And If the answ er to
either d f those questions is
negative, t w on't aay it
Just for today I w ill make a
conscious effort to be agreeable.
I w ill look as good as I can, dress
becomingly, talk softly, act cour­
teously and not interrupt when
someone else is talking. Just for
today I'll not try to improve
anybody except myself.
W e know so m uch more about
nutrition and how exercise and
sensible living p* n extend life
and make It more eqjoyable so

Just for today let's all take good
care o f o u r equipm en t and
debrate m any m ore happy New
Years.
Just for today I will have a
program . 1 m ay not follow it
exactly, but, 1 w ill' have it.
thereby saving m yself from two
pests: hunry and tndecMon. 1
Just for today 1 w ill gather the
courage to do w hat is right and
take the responsibility fo r m y
ow n actions.
T o one and a ll: a happy,
healthy new year!

veterans' hospitals and nursing

H a tad for a girt to reach the
ft
W h e n , m e n c o n s id e r h e r

W hen the wom en consider
him harm less.
At

LOVE, A M T
P.8. Ood bless o u r men and
wom en in uniform in every
corner oc inc w ono wncrc out
flag Is flying. And let us n o t.
forget those patriotic Am ericana
who are serving their country in
the Peace Corps, aa w ell a s those
in

Beauty Salon Introductory

Just for today I win do some­
thing posture to improve m y
h M t th .lfrm a s m o k e r.n ii
*
an honest effort to q u it If I'm
overw eight, 1*11 eat nothing I
know to be fkttenlng. And I will
force m yself to exercise — even if
It’s only w alking around the
block or using tH* stairs insti-art
Just for today I’ll do some­
thing I've been p iW|w| off for a ■
long time. I’ll finally write that
letter, m ake that ph°fy* call.

Column to rotumo
Mary Balk is oh vacation. Her
D rug C ounselor colum n w ill
resume next week.

martin short ,

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LET US REPLENISH THE SEED OF FAITH THROUGH

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T o A d v e r t is e
D in c t o r y

To List Your
Church Sarvloas
On This hlga
Contact Tha
Advertising

T h is

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Expand parish visions for 1993

A ‘Joumty Tima m t bkm t
LAK E M ARY — First Baptist Church Markham W oods. 5400
Markham W oods Rd., has begun a “Journey Thru the B ible"
evening
study, beginning in the book o f Genesis, e a c h Sunday
!
at 7 p.m . In the sanctuary o f the church.
For Information, call 333*2065.

St

•■a . -.

honors pwfthlorwrs

LAK E M ARY — St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. 700 Rinehart
Rd.. elected Pat Connolly, DeBary: Mary Ann D uxbury,
Sanford: John Mtlkmig. Lute Mary, and Bud Moughton, Lake
Mary, to serve on its Vestry for three year terms. W ayne
Culver. Longwood. w as re-elected aa Senior W arden for 1993.
The Rev. Beverly L. Barge presented each m em ber o f St.
Peter’s Altar G uild with an Altar Ouild Croaa/Pln during the
service o f Lesson and Carol recently. Me expressed the
congregation’s appreciation for the guild’s service to the
ministry. They are responsible for the care o f the church’s
altar, linens, vestments and preparation for each worship
service.
Those honored were: Barbara Chapm an, directress; Alice
Orant. sub-directress: Em m a Frederick. linen chairm an; Anne
Barge. Peggy Billups, Shannon Connelly. Sherrie Culver, Dr.
Marlon Dailey. Sally Oreen, Delores Morrissey. Alice Moughton
and Ruth W lssner.
Also recognised were trainees Jean Arm strong and 8u W ells.

Epiphany Sunday eaM ratad
LAK E M ARY — Christian Fellowship Church. United Church
o f Christ, w ill celebrate Epiphany Sunday, Jan. 3, with the
Sacram ent of Holy Communion.
Pastor A. Arthur Arvay w ill preach on the topic, “The New
Y ou ."
Visitors are welcome. W orship services are at 10 a m . at the
Lake Mary Com m unity Building. 260 N. Country C lu b Rd.
For m are Information, call 323*31 IB.

K M p u t Informed
The Sanford Herald welcom e* Religion new t and announce­
m ent* of event* available to the community.
For publication o f local happening*, following suggestion*
are recommended to expedite publication!
' A ll Items should be typed o r written legibly and Include the
name and a daytime phone number, o f a person w ho can be
contacted to answ er any queatlona w e might have.

In Septem ber 1991. m y opthalmologlat
ran his yearly tests on m y eyes and reported
the reason for a grow ing num ber o f eye
strain problem s as follows, “ well. Father,
when you turn 40 your eyes begin to make
som e changes. T o sum It all up, you need
bifocals...” It didn't surprise me. but I
suddenly felt a little older. I got fitted for
standard bifocals and began w earing them a
week later. It truly helped my reading, but
working at the com ptuer and celebrating
Eucharist with the Altar Book continued to
ient some problem s. There w as this line
the m iddle o f m y vision that kept
^ TIim B mm * ---- * — » -» U mmm
• vnv n W i riv u v iiv R wvinn
fracturing the scree n and the book page.
This w as clearly unsatisfactory.
1 consulted m y optician friend, w ho has
their call to share the blessings, they looked
fitted me with glasses over the past severs!
only at themselves — keeping the law.
m aintaining their trandiUons and protecting
She suggested progressive
the purity o f what It meant to be born into
ich lenses go from the full distance
their community.
prescription to the reading prescription with
literally hundreds o f minute changes along
The gift Qod gave In Jesus was. In some
the way. W hat results la a smooth transition
like getting progressive lenses. It
provided the H ebrew people w ith an
that aa closely as possible represents the
w ay the eye itself works In focusing on
expanded vision o f all that Ood had desired
objects at various distances.
and Intended in the creation o f mankind. It
The lenses take som e getting used to. The
brought the full vision o f the Kingdom Into
focus as w e lla a the minute details o f being
eyes must adjust to the curvature o f the
fully hum an. It also provided an opportunity
lenses. After two weeks o f adjustment,
to catch the vision of how the world could be
w earing m y ' ’progressives'* Is a shear
changed and shaped beyond thetr commu­
delight. There are no m ore lines, and I see at
nity. The presence o f Jesus gave us the
all distances with little movement o f m y
fullest possible picture!
head. My vision has literally been expanded
to fit m y every n e e d ..
It seem s as though original sin did more
than separate us from Ood by our w illfulT his little Journey Into vision optica la by
i. It gave u s a bad case o f “laxy eyes." In
w ay o f Introducing the m eaning o f the
our vision tends to rest in only one
Chrtstmas/Eplphany season. Prior to the
optical range and m akes focuatng on objects
In another range difficult and painful. The
birth o f Jesus, the Hebrew people had fallen
Into som e rather short-sighted practices
church still tends to suffer from the sam e
regarding their relationship with Yahweh.
"b u y e v es" that the Hebrew people experi­
The original Intention w aa that the Hebrew
enced. in the local pariah, w e tend to remain
people — literally wanderers — would be
focused upon w hat w e want for ourselves —
gathered together as a unique community
ou r rules, traditions and protecting the
under G od and then take that m essage to
purity o f the “ w ay we have alw ays dooe It.."
the entire world. The “ taint" o f original sin
W e tend not to conalder how w e interface
could be abolished by the testimony and
with brothers and slaters w ho serve Christ
Uvea o f these people called.
In other communities. A a a church In
general, w e so often seek to protect our own
However, the Hebrew people began to
turf that w e foil to see the larger Implica­
tions o f the Ktngdom that are right before
spend their time looking only through the
our eyes. W e becom e so consum ed with the
“bottom lens” o f this experience. Rather
H u n seeing1the fullness o f the K ingdom 1|U^
“One prin t" that w e foil to get the “big

r

(T h e gift Qod gave In
Jesus was, in soma sense,
like getting progressive
leneee. It provided the
Hebrew people with an
expended vision of ell that
Qod had desired and in­
tended in the creation of
mankind. ■

picture."
Priests are no less susceptible to this
ailment. W e can become so' parochial In our
bou n daries that w e fall to grasp the
Implication o f our vocations for the church at large. On the other hand, w e can get so
caught up In the forger church that focal
needs are overlooked. In both cases w d still
miss the larger picture o f the Kingdom,
which. Jesus enlightened, Is truly at hand.
Another thing m y optician friend shared
with me waa the fact that over helf the
people who try progressive lenses go bock to
traditional bifocals within the first two
weeks. The adjustm ent to the progressives
is so bothersome that they do not allow the
time necessary for the eyes to adjust.
Again, the analogy points toward what
happens to ils in our faith Journey. W hen we
encounter the Living Christ in our Uvea, the
change la radical and total. It takes some
getting used to. However, the pain o f that
transition is such that a num ber o f people
run aw ay from It before the adjustment Is
complete — or they sim ply stop the i
filled
by digging In their heals. Churchesi are
(
with people who have never completed that
adjustment to a life In Christ andv yet,
cannot understand w hy the church does not
have the power and dynam ism o f the New
Testament Church.
If St. Paul were olive today, he might
change his fam ous teaching. “ Put on the lull
arm or of O od ..." (Ephesians 6:110). He ,
m ight, instead, say, “ Put on the full
progressive lenses o f G od ..." Ood w ants us
to have a full expanded vision In order to see
ourselves, the world and the kingdom aa it
truly la. If we could enter Into the experience
and have the patience to endure the
discomfort o f being reshaped, I believe the
church would, once again, be a powerful
and dynam ic tool for evangelisation.
This is an Important time In your life as a
pariah. Don't get m yopic nor sim ply try to
look elsewhere without understanding what
God Is doing In your m id st He wlU bless you
Im m easurably during this thus o f transition.
You are alw ays In m y prayers.
THaftav. F raM rtck t
laraasN at Haty

VWDBVwT|F» BV W

PfiiAathy ftatlayiNAIiaiiali

COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

PofMt iktaftmmm Pw

Cy a My»-

** *

S S ^ u J S J T o S r t a jy p M ^ fo tt N: 2 * £ 2 *”
—m m Om ASwStel Ohureh. M H IM t a ., W f f g l t t f W
D w A ^ w W O w ^ M S .M w W .

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Allan'* A M I Church, OUm A 11th
Bm r w i Awnua HoMnaaa Chapai. SaartaS Am .
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Church o! Jaaua Chrtat o&lt; Latter Dw Bate!*, U V Fate Am .
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ra n ll* Church ChrtMlan Canter, 1144 S*m lw*li B M ., O a m U n y
First horn Church of I ha Lhrtef M , Hwisar
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ofl J d k a ^ l't
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CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole '
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9093

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�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 1, 1993 - TN

230—A nttqos/C lasslc
C a rt

KIT *N* CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
O CAJ.A N A T ' L C O IIM T
Wn M M il U.WO M d i . IM
moneydawnl 17141 monthly.

a iM a a a

nonce

All ra n la l and rMl a tla t*
adverfioamant* a n m e|od h
Federal F air Homing A d .
wfctch m aka* ll iila g a i t*
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HAFFY START FUFFY CLASS
Far pup* up to II wkt. Bade
tra M n a -iria a iri b m iu

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ORLANDO
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B a ylrw in . kitchan equipped,
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SANFORD

L A R I MART. I bdrm., w/w
carpal, C/H/A. tailing lam ,
lencedyd. peed area. S3H7W

H i SFIC IA L

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M ak e you r
Nevy Year's
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a hom e

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—

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241— RtCTMltoMl

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- Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Friday. January 1, 1903

b y .Q iic Y ou ng

• L O M D IK

w v jw w s

Dietary supplements
may not be harmful
In my experience, surgery (to.
D E A R DR. Q O T T : Several
people I know are taking green remove the cyst and close the
leaves of barley with ground defect) Is the o ily permanent
brown rice and kelp for more answer. The operation Is stan­
energy, better deep habits and dard fare for m a t surgeons and
Improved respiration. W hat do Is curative.
Check with a surgeon to get
I don't know why your ac­
you know aboutthls remedy?
answers about what procedure
DEAR READER* This sounds quaintances' sirge ry w as ao
would be appropriate In your
lik e a r e a s o n a b le d i e t a r y ' painful and had to be performed case. Ita approximate cost and
supplem ent, rich In vitam ins more than onae. This U very
the estim ated convalescence.
unusual. Perhaps they had more
and fiber. However. I doubt that
Then go for It.
•
It will lead to the beneficial than one pHonlddcvst.
effects you mentton.
People perennially hope to
discover a magic combination of
LJLIMIJLJ U L J M U ll
roods that will cure m ankind's
jJ llllU IIM
IIU L IM k iU
allm enu . The barley/rice/kelp
JL»J MI1LJ1 IML JWA L-Jl'J
com bo won't do I. However. It Is
UJJL-J lll-J U U M MLIM
not. as far as I know, harmful.
JJUJJM HUl'J I'J lIlll'j
DEAR DR. QOTT: I have a
.J lH J lll.il I
p ilo n id al cyst that recently
U lil'J
Ml'JU
beckm e infected. My doctor
.•ju u r.u J i i
. . ji H i m
JU
lanced It and he now feels It has
Jl-JL-JU M U I I M il LHJ
to be surgical^ .removed. I've
l! H U L 'lLllllJU H U U
talked to peopfc who have had
cysts removed more than once,
L ill H U U k il II 111 U N
and they suffered for quite some
IJLJLJIJLJIJ LJMI1111 JU
time following die surgery. I'd
M M I . l l I 1-) k i l . l l l l J l l
really like to inderstand the
situation better before I have the
procedure done.
DEAR READER: A pilonidal
cyst Is an Inherted abnormality
Involving the skti over the lower
spine. The condtlon Is marked
by a dimple or opening In the
akin that Is connected to a cyst
In the deeper tlaues. Ordinarily,
this causes no symptoms.
However, on crcaston. bacteria
can enter the defect, work their
way Into the cyst and cause an
a b s c c a s that Is e x t r e m e l y
p aln ru l. T ypically, the area
around the coccyx becomes hot.
swollen and tender. Pus and
blood may leak from the akin
opening.
These Infectk m are usually
treated with hot compresses and
antibiotics. S u r£ on s sometimes
open the a b ao ss to promote
drainage. Nonetheless, even If
the Infection hods, the potential
for reinfection la high because
bacteria can enter the akin
defect and begti the process all
over again.

QOTT.M.D

by M o rt W aNtor
rtX J*E

M M EM M P/YOU

NUMBER O N E *

pa

KI4HT

RA1PY0U A L W V *
lo o k 0 ut fo r
.

b y A r t Sonaom

T H E SO R N LO SER

I THINK (VC JUST O D D
n OH FOOTBALL!

by C bortot M . Scbutt

PEANU TS

I'M SORRY. BUT YOUR CAU.
CANNOT 6 0 THS0U6H..PLEASE
HAN6UP, A N P P O N O T
P IA L A 6 A IN ..
^

DO YOU LOVE
ME, CHUCK?

HI, CH U CK..JU 5TCALLIN6

TO W ISH YOU A HAPPY
NEW YEAR...
_

v— ^c

by M o n b S c h M W n

E EK A M EEK

NO MATTER
HOW OD tHSV
ARC...'

'm
PEOPLE ASE
FASTER THAU OTHER

TVCWIIsP-CHlUL
FACTOR MAWS THEM
SEEM OLDER

YOUR BIRTHDAY
Jan. a. IM S
Planning your moves well In
advance could be o f critical
Importance for you In the year
ahead. A sound blueprint will
enhance your possibilities for
success, ao don I run a hit or
m iss operation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
10) You will be more successful
gathering Information today if
you ask Indirect questions In­
stead of blunt ones. Piece by
piece the m osaic will come
together. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
A stro-G raph M atchm aker In­
stantly reveals which signs are
rom antically perfect for you.
Mall §2 p l us a l ong. selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, do this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 01428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your wit could he nuor-aharp
today, yet no one Is likely to
label you glib. Those who listen
and observe you will be aware
that what you say comes from
your heart.
(Feb. 20-March 20) If

tJ

(7 )

.

$

I

you are making a choice today
between profit or pride of ac­
complishment. It might be best
lo select the latter. Self-esteem
could outweigh silver.
ARIRS (March 21-Aprtl 10)
Don't be alarm ed today If a
friend pokes his or her nose Into
your affairs. Your pal wants to
help and might be able to make
constructive suggestions that
aren't obvious to you.
T A U R U S (A pril 20-May 20)
Patience Is essential today if you ‘
hope to derive benefits from a
Joint endeavor. Your ally will
have things under control* even
though he or she operates at a
slower pace.
O BIONI (M ay 21-June 20)
You are already aw are of every­
thing you know, ao It behooves
you to listen to what others have
lo say. especially when you are
In a discussion with a person
whose mind you respect.
CANCBR (June 21-July 22)
Success Is within your grasp
today, provided’your objective is
In proportion to the assets you
deploy. Be realistic regarding
y o u r c a p a b i l i t i e s for a c ­
complishment.
,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) W hen

dealing with others today, make
It a point lo see that all are
treated equally. If you follow this
rule, each In turn will behave
sim ilarly to you.
"
'
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An
arrangement you have with one
of your friends should turn out
to be m utually rewarding today,
even-though the role you are apt
lo play won't be as significant as
his or hers.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Pals
wUl welcome your company to­
day. hut try to keep your visits
brief, whether you are putting in
a personal appearance or merely
chatting on the phone.
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
you feci Inclined to add some
artistic touches to your sur­
roundings, this Is a good day to
do It. Your creative Instincts are
strong and the results should be
pleasant.

BAOITTARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you are confronted by a
testy development today, main­
tain your demeanor. Your com­
posure might wince Inwardly,
but those with whom you arc
dealing will never know It.

PRANK AND IR N E IT

I4TS iTAfiT OUr 0 *N *0VfR *M **7,
^ v v ^ f urn* io » m n
(

s rw n

\

ttm^

* (S t
iiv J jf f ln

+t Hit*

m o n ey

to oo
’ Hn P"

t$
17/
.-1 -9 }

Ry JJm 0 &gt; r t f

B A R F IE L D
O O M R TO KPr

fV U * tt*K£

ON

TN IM

By Phillip A lta r
First of all. a very happy,
healthy and successful New Year
lo a ll my readers.
Today sees the Introduction of
(he new International Law s of
Contract Bridge, which govern
rubber bridge. There are three
m ajor changes. If the rubber Is
terminated early and you have a
part-score below (he line, you
receive 100 points, not BO. The
.other two m irror the changes
I naugurated In tournament
bridge in 1987. If you make a
redoubled contract, you receive
100 points “ for the Insult." not
BO. Il you go down In a doubled
contract when non-vulnerablc.
the penalty-poi nt sequence
starts as always: 100. 300. BOO.
But then II accelerates: 800.
1100.1400. and soon.
The new Law s book Is avail­
able from the American Contract
‘ r 8 6 . BO
B r l d g t L e a g u e fo

A N N IE
by Jim

SSBtiff*
1 W AP TWIN* Of-

(800-264-27431.
Today's deal would be, a nice
way lo end a rubber — since you
are a careful declarer.
Against your four-heart con­
tract. the defenders begin with
three rounds o f spades. East
ruffing Ihc Iasi. He exits with a
low club to your ace.
'
At first glance. It looks as
(hough you need the diamond
finesse to work. But you should
em bark on a mission of discov­
ery. After draw ing (rum ps, not­
ing that West began with three,
cash the club king. Next, lead a
trump lo the dummy and rulT
the club seven In hand.
At this point, you know 12 of
W est's cards. You must hope
that his last card Is the 10 or
uccn of diamonds. Lead a low
lamond from hand. Wheft the
|0 appears, win with dum m y's
king and (Incase the diamond
Jack through Easl.

3

4 m i
f AMII
4 KJ •
&amp;

7 6. i

�</text>
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Jan u ary 3,

SUNDAY

1993

75 C e n t s

S a r v l i i t S a n f o r d , L a k e M a r y a n d S a m ln e la C o u n ty s l n e a 1 S 0 S
86th Year, No. 111 - 8anford, Florida

incom e tax tim e!

NEWS D IGEST

Blitz of IRS forms in mailboxes by Monday
Annual language 'downslalng'
SAULT S T B . M ARIE, M ich. - T h e
“associates’* who compile an annual list of
Words Banned from the Queen’s English “went
ballistic’’ In 1B92. "downsizing" the language lo
cut out the fat.
T he L ake S u p e rio r S ta te U n iv e rsity
wordsmlths, who released the list Saturday, aald
they weren't trying to get “In your face” by
listing words that are misused, overused and
generally useless.
They Just wanted lo keep the language on Uie
“cutting edge" and provide the T‘moat com­
plete" attempt to get down to the “ honest truth'*
about the jargon that fills the vocabulary of “the
American people."
Some sentences that drew their special acorn:
—The “arm ed gunm an" found that his
“eoeonsptralor’s” "high-powered rifle" was
“completely em pty." They moved quickly to
locate a "safe haven" before thetr ‘‘victimless
crime" waa "m ost complete.*’
—The "associates" "went ballistic’’ when
they learned or the "definite possibilities” of
"downsizing."
The list was drawn from suggestions mailed
last year by at least 800 people. It was compiled
by the school's three-member public relations
department and whittled by a committee.
The school has been compiling the list since
1076.

Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Local residents began receiving
federal Income tax forms Saturday, with most
ex p ected to be d eliv ered by M onday, a
spokeswoman for the U.8. Post Office In Sanford
aald. A form will - be delivered to all local
residents.
Nationwide, 107 million tax packages will be
Most taxpayers will see little change tn the
forms, which coat $18 million to print and

another 810 million to mall. That’s 30 cents a
package.
By the tim e the April 15 filing deadline rolls
around, the IRS expects to have received 116
million returns. Including 00.5 million from
taxpayers using Form 1040. It expects another
18.5 million to use Form 1040A and 10.8 million
to return Form 1040EZ.
The post office In Sanford haa the basic 1040
and 1040A forma tn the lobby. Other forms can
be obtained from the Sanford library.
"The library has a book of them and can run
c o p lea o f th e m ." s a id th e P o st O ffice

■ yM M M M m eA N
Herald 8tsff Writer
SANFORD — A you n g m an
walking along a roadside was San­
ford’s first traffic fatality of the year.
The accident occurred a t 0:48
p.m. New Year’s Day.
According to the Florida Highway
Patrol, Alfredo Hemandes Beptnoea.

LAINOSBURO. Mich. — A woman who heard
angry, accented voices coming from her living
room called police to say her husband was being
held hostage.
She was right —In a way.
Her husband was captivated by the television.
Police aald the woman hid In a bathroom
closet and called police from a cellular phone
Thursday morning, saying she heard noises in
the basement and strange, ominous voices
coming from the living room.
"She was petrified, whispering on the phone."
said state police Sgl. Larry Dalman.
. Sheriff's deputies ana a state trooper sur­
rounded the house as the woman stayed on the

Thieves dial Mil for $11,000
TAMPA — Somebody swiped Bliae Miller’s
long-distance calling card num ber and she waa
left holding the bill —an 811.078 bill.
"I went through it and Just got disgusted."
Miller said of the 78-page tally of mare than 900
calls to place* Including Sri Lanka. Morocco.
Tunisia, the Netherlands and United Arab
Emirates.
The good news la that OTE Florida won’t
make MUIcr pay for the calls that weren’t here.
Miller first noticed a problem last month when
her bill Jumped from the usual 865 to 870 a
month to 8387. She Immediately contacted the
company, which credited her account and
canceled her calling card.
.
"I cut It up In little tiny pieces.’’ MlUer aald.
But the thief got in 811.000 worth of calls
before the cancellation made Its way through
the computer system. So this month, the
company adjusted her bill again and will try to
catch the culprits, aald John Slrickllng of OTE
Florida.

— ,,w " / ■
•" « «" mu ia« |« ]rcn use the
— complicated Forma 1040A or 1040EZ. or an
electronic filing format.
Earlier this month, the IRS mailed more than
1 1 million postcards to farmers and aetf-emptoyed
noooT ox.P ogaS A

Local man killed
in New Year’s Day
traffic accident

Man hakf 'hostage' by TV

**.tTHe officers looted through a window to sec a
man In his underwear on the couch. They
entered the house, guns drawn, and startled the
man. who was watching television. Alone.
The police dispatcher had to tell the woman to
come out of her hiding place after officers and
her husband couldn’t find her.
"She was pretty em barrassed." Dalman aald.
Police didn’t release the woman’s name.

spokeswoman. "T hat’s particularly valuable for
residents who need an odd tax form."
The IRS anticipates that 14 million taxpayers
w ill use tax p rep arers who re tu rn form a
electronically, rather than by mail. And it’s
* u
— •
io n

Chiles has plan to keep
violent criminals jailed
TALLAHASSEE - Gov. Lawton
Chiles plans to unveil next week a
package of criminal justice Initia­
tives targeted a t keeping violent
crim inals behind bare, despite

Tom Slayton, Sanford, may be 77, but you’d never guess It to aae him
smash a Iannis bail over the net Into hie oponent’e court. Slayton
played mixed double# at Ft. Mellon Park In 8anford Saturday with
partners who rangsd In aga from 21 to 77.

C h iles' ~NeW Y sar’s b a y a n ­
nouncem ent follows an opinion
Issued Thursday by state Attorney
General Bob Butterworth, who aaid
an estim ated 140 killers who were
released from prison early to relieve
overcrowding may be rounded up
an put bock In prison.
Butterworth also said that 1,550
other killers currently tn prison may
have early release credits revoked.
The issue eras brought to a bead

earlier this week when Budarworth
is su e d an o p in io n th a t k e p t
37-year-old Donald MrfTmipll from
being released 84 years early.
5-yearoid Ursula
In 1963 tn Altamonte Springs, m ust
^ M snii a t lu O tk m m ,
D w n S d X S ik n s . - T he o rig in al o pinion denied
McDoufkU's release — ...............
been act for Thursday
four others — beceuae tt i
committed a eex act along
child abuse aiyf
murderer.
D epartm ent of C orrections of­
ficials estim ated thV Ihifleiw orth's

Sanford site for state celebration
honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
By VICKI I
Herald Staff Writer

Celebration at a pianos

How to got to
‘Death Valley’

Education page on hold
Because of the achoot holiday, no Education
page will be featured in the Herald today. The
weekly page will resume next Sunday. Jan . 10.

Test helps doctors here thwart heart attacks
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - HCA Central Florida Regional
Hospital haa become one of only two hospitals In
the slate and nine In the country to offer the
latent teat to aid In rapid diagnosis of a heart

Variable cloudiness
and fareesy w ith a
a lig h t c h a n c e o f
showers. High* near
80. Wind east 16 to
30 mph. Rain chance
80 percent.

CFRH now offers the m easurem ent of serum
myoglobin, a protein used for the evaluation of
vcty early heart
,iv w « j|p | to Robert
McCord. M.D.. Ph.D.. director of the laboratory.
This test la helpful In emergency situations in the
diagnosis of persona with acute cheat pains.
A simple blood test from an at risk patient Is
Introduced to the computerised Stratus 0 Im­
munoassay System, manufactured by Baxter. In
only 90 to SO m inutes a complete chemistry
profile. in*-|tH&lt;ing the myoglobin reading, la
printed out for the physician to evaluate.
"This test is purely (or diagnosis." according to

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . C a 11322- 261 1

�8«nford Hersld, Sanford, Florida - 8unday, January 3, 1983

____

Sting and band to tour
MIAMI - Rock star Sting am
The tour, scheduled to start In May. will be the first for the
former front m an for the Police since his Soul Cages tour more
than a year ago.
Stiilc win play a i the Ouaman Center Feb. 23,2$. and 34 to
get his b a n d tn gear for the sum m er tour In support of an
album due out later this month. It will also be the cerebral
rocker's only winter dates.
'
.
"The tour win emphasise intimacy, so this Is keeping with

MIAMI - Florida's economy felt the brunt
of the national recession this past year, but
the good news for 1993 la that consumer

An Seminole County sheriff's deputy spotted Jim Stotxenburg of Lake Mary Road In Longwood driving treat In an
eastDound rest lane stop on State Road 400, according to police
reports. Stolxenburg told the officer he did not have his license
with him. although a check revealed he had a suspended
driver's license and had been classified os a habitual offender,
according to police reporfi.
Stolxenburg was placed under arrest and taken to the John
B. Polk Correctional Facility.

8$ In
by an
Florid

not reach the giddy heights of the bullish
1990a, bu t the state may be In for a pleasant

meat
De

" o a r td Denslow, a University of Florida
economist who tracks consumer confidence,
aaya the results for December scheduled for
release next week, show a healthy rebound.
'i t 's not the best It's ever been In
Florida." said Denslow. "but It's really quite

the*i
rtc,
labo
Hr
marl
The

PA L executive director

■

that have begun to develop potentially
criminal tendencies. Eallnger will look to
school officials to refer children to the
SANFORD - Sheriff Don Esllnger an­ program.
Lisle will be paid $18,000 annually for the
nounced Thursday he had hired Jerry Lisle position.
Salinger said the funds were
of Lake Mary to become the first executive
available from $40,000 in savings resulting
from a management reorganisation that

leagues.
Lisle has lived In Seminole County for IB
years and Is currently a business Instructor
at the Lake County Jail. Lisle also owns a
sports product marketing company. Profile
Sports Inc., which has developed and
marketed several sporting good Inventions,
He previously manufactured sporting goods
from 1972 to 1976.
Lisle Is married to Evon Lisle, a teacher at
Lake Mary High. The couple have five
children.
Lisle could not be reached for comment.

Donm Uo disputes tesd to arrts ts
•K lousm ars HafexL of Lake Mary, was arrested and charged
with battery after a domestic dispute, according to Lake Mary
Hafean had escalated into physical violence. She told police he
had slapped her and hit her with his fist during the argum ent
according to police reports. She told officers she wanted him to
leave and not to return. , T
*
Officers notice several titfurtee on the girlfriend. Hafexl was
place under arrested and transported to JMI. according to police
reports.
a Edward Ware, of Sanford, waa also charged with battery In
the wake of a domestic dispute, according to Sanford police
reports.
His wife told police th a t during an argum ent he became
violent and tried to choke her. accordlnj
placed under arrest and transported to Jail.
with battery,
•B eroy S co tt of Sanford, was chi

Ex-boyfriend
k ills woman;
then se lf

mouth, according to police reports. Scott adm itted there was a
verbal bout with his girlfriend but denied hitting her.
However, officers noticed several lacerations on the
girlfriend, according to reports. They arrested Scott and
transported to the Jail. according to reports.

boyfH snd, w ho police sh o t

DUI charged

In d ia Creek oubdtvMon when
Daniel Oliva showed up. police
aald. They apparently let him In.
an d he opened fire w ith a
■IMMwIlber revolver, they said.

Ben Hampton, of the 1000 block of 17th S treet in Sanford. Is
charged with DUI after officer stopped him for running a stop
sign, according to police reports.
After stopping

Avenue
fed with

father of miaalng boy llttla peace
be said. “Anything A
n to h a lp ish rd ld r .is? r
-t:

‘J f l'jjf i

Grand theft
charges filed
SANFORD — Two women ar­
rested T hursday by Sanford
shops in the Sanford, Altamonte
Springs and D aytona Beach
V erorS afriln. (tfU ^M o n ro e
Terrace in Sanford, and Regina
Davis, no address given, were
arrested after they entered the
Florida Sportaw are Store in
Sanford and allegedly took
$1.780 from the owner*e purse.
According to police reports ,
the women entered the elore and
w h ile I r v in d is tr a c te d an
employee, Davis went behind
the counter and removed the
mooey from a purse.
According to
reports.
Davis confiaaed to
the

Today, 8unday, Jan . 3
12 Noon to 5:30 P.M.

TAKE A ^ W d k B I
EXTRA

•A ll Red Ticketed
M erchandise $torsw ldel!l

v jlt

&gt;yw»w&lt;

w hen the skeleton
ran owned to 1874
t Pais, who died
s ago and left the

deputies and Sanford police:
•A 12-year-old Sanford boy reported to deputies a Sanford
held a |u&gt;tut| |H&gt; to Ida head and took a w rlstw atchiiu&lt; a
of cookies from ******a t 6 p.m. Wednesday a t a residence In
the 1900 block of Bunuwa Lane In Midway.
•A 27-year-old Fort Worth, Texas m an staying a t the Super
$ Motel on West State Road 46 reported two men entered his
unlorhad room shortly after 9 p m . Wednesday. One man held
a gun to Ids bead and damanded money, while the -Hhrr -*y"
i«i«»« to the floor and took hie w aist bag containing credit
cards and $S0 In cash, the m an reported.
•A 17-year-old Longwood girt reported four men tried to
abduct her from the parking lot of a convenience store at
Wektva Springs Road a t 2:16 a n . Thursday.

s e p a ra te d from M a tth e w 's
m other. Virginia Aired, who
Uvea In C onnecticut
__ ____
_____ _

Avenue to Sanford

60L U N A R T A llB i Min
lti&gt; 5 a m .. 12(40 p.m.i MqJ
a.m .. 3:18 p.m.: I
9 d 4 p m.: Mow I
highs. 3.06 s c
lows, 9:32 s.m

Thcce's something new lo remember. From now on, when you
make long distance calii within the 407 area, dial 0 or l ♦ 407
and then me number you're calling.
Florida's tremendous growth has created a ritortage of »
telephone numbers. By mating the area code on evety long
dirtanoe call, numbers aw freed up for new businesses and
gaturday's early morning low
waa 6$. as recorded by the
National W eather Service at the
Orlando InternaUontl Airport*
Other W eather Sendee dotal

So remember, when you dial lohg distance, be sure to use the
like Speed
even a FAX machine, now's the time lo reprogram them.

•c a r

. V v , ...... A.

•*&lt;&gt;. / hi.

.
-

aN**"&gt;* !■*

■

�EDITORIALS

Kudos to sheriff
for reorganizing
his department

The pundit* predicted th at IM S would be a
h is to r y - m a k in g y e a r . T h e e v o lv in g
circumstance* and the &gt;eeda of change had been
planted prior to 1999. The event* that treiwptred
dramatically emphasised our Involvement aa
world citizens.
In America, th e 1903 national election*
absorbed our Interest. The num ber of female
candidates and the talk show ' format were
significant addition* to the process. Talk shows
effectively provided Instantaneous dialogue with
American voters. This format apparently served
both the electorate and candidates well. Fbrme*
Governor of Arkansas M l Cttnt on was slsctsd
president and former Senator Albert O ort of
Tennessee becam e our vice p n e ld e n tT lie
youthful vitality of the newly elected nations!
was evety where In

LURLENE ,
SWEETING

so co n tin u al to jem atti a t th s
•r
iw,i
My as R jgfetea tp race to an
tow In America. The Rodney
to the catalyst th at sparked
In Los Angeles. Conversely,
\ a natural d toaster that
nm tda. brauM t peopteof all
n to oombat the devastation.

W e Issue k u d o s to 8em lnole C o u n ty 's
sheriff, Don EaUnger, fo r h is p lan s to s ta rt th e
new y e a r w ith a m ore com m unity-focused

1
1
1

U scene has brought the
M otor stage. As the world
umanKy to mon llt,*&gt;H fi the
f o e p fo i to relieve suffering
ohabty the acenes that have

A s E alinger say s, crim e-fighting to a sh ared
responsibility. O ur neighborhoods w o n 't be
safer u n le ss w e w ork w ith law enforcem ent to
resolve problem s. Sim ilarly, law enforcem ent
-.officers s h o u ld view c itse n e -a t-la rg e a s
p a rtn e rs In crlm e-flghtlng, n o t obatacles.
T o th is e n d . S alinger h a s p u t Into m otion a
h ig h e r fo c u s o n v ictim p rev en tio n an d
c o u n s e lin g . H e h a a c r e a te d a g a n g
sup p ressio n u n it to w ork w ith school officials
a n d w ith in com m unities to Identify an d
c u rta il th is risin g th re a t before young crim i­
n a ls gain co n tro l o f o u r schools an d streets.
He h aa even proposed creation o f a C ltlsens
Police A cadem y to give citizens first-hand
experience In law enforcem ent fun ctions.
. E alinger h a s also proposed creation o f a
Police A th letic League. T he youth-law en ­
fo rc e m e n t s p o rts o rg a n is a tio n w ill b e
o p erated oy a Doera ot oirectora cocnpneea oi
com m unity leaders. T h is board w ill be tasked
w ith developing th e PAL program an d raisin g
fu n d s for It.
t
i
f
[■
A PAL can be a g re a t Idea, to b rin g youth*
:
p a rtic u la rly tro u b led youngsters, to g e th e r
!
1&gt;■
w un law cm orccm em o tn ceri to oeveiop
&gt;H&gt;
R f f resp ect In a fim , sp o rtin g settin g . B u t th e PAL

n w h o ris a r - s j f l i a

! * t . r
f1 : i ( f

1

,T/i

r

1 i

tmEFmZk u

1 c FI

i fe
■ , ! In

‘*1

after year.
We enom irags Sheriff rsllngrr to divorce
taxpayer’s mousy from this commendable
pursuit quickly, nest year. If the PAL to to be
an autonom ous organisation with taxexem pt, fund-raising abilities, then a
director's salary a b o u tfte QMBMd through

a diverse

In praise of Nicholas
In the post few weeks there have been several
article* run tn your newspaper th at have shed a
very negaUve light on the Semlotos County School
M aintenance Department. 1 would Mkr to give you
another point of view. I am a m aintenance
employee. As an employee I am seeing the harm
th a t a handful of frustrated people can do. Because
of their frustration they choose 16 take It out on
their supervisors, and more to the paint, the
director of m aintenance Mr. Don Nicholas.
Here to a m an who has lived his life tn Sanford.
He attended and graduated from Seminole County
schools. As a life profession he haa chosen to be In
a very public position.. He haa derided to promote
and, support our school system. This to a very
| difficult job) Mr. Nicholas carries the weight of this
position very well. He dsps an outstanding J°t&gt;. He
. has brought the maintenance departm ent to the
standard It to today, This task has been brought
about by very hard wtofe* He works very Hea d y

On a more personal note, Mr. Nicholas, with his
• open door policy, will lend a helping hand In any
way he can. He will help with civic needs and a
; personal Involving one of his employees. Many a
tfme this man to called at home bu some employee
needing his assistance, When enlisting help or
advice from Mr. Nicholas you can always expect,
the truth. He Is a man who to very'canskferete of
other peoples' feelings- Never, to my knowledge
, has be refused to help with a problem that has
; arisen, big or sm all, personal or school-related. He
Is a dedicated hard-working m an. The people of
; Seminole County should take notice, we need more
t people like Mr. Nicholas, to be there to support our
; public schools. If Utq small group of people who are
&gt; spending so much Ume trying 10 discredit this man
. would put their efforts Into more effective (earn
I work they would come to rrakze and appreciate
the' efforts that Mr. Nicholas puts forth for them.
. IT* tim e to wake up and smell the roses! Mr.
). Nicholas to exactly the kind of pcrqen we need to
have a s director of the m aintenance departm ent.
W ith hto continued leadership we can m aintain the
high quality of work we produce. Let ua not allow s
few bad apples to spoil the whole group. Let us
keep our focus, on the betterm ent of our Schools
and tab* Will done. Mr. Nicholas Is. the well-.
Qualified c mfetolf l that can help us reach our

&lt; 1993 has been quite a year. S
feeling perm eates one's oooset
almoot too much to happening
comprehend and react to w ith a
clarity. Do we have sufficient
anything to — t* informed dwto
rate. 1993 will have a great deal o
history books. 1092, w haiayeari

JACK ANDERSON

WASHINGTON - By the time Caspar
Weinberger formally requested a pardon in a
Dec. 18 note to the White House, the ease for

‘ i i f
u
i

Another trubtod snot to 8arievo
Serb w m m u b of "ethnic clean
M u sk m a n d ^ a ta to a complex pn
United Nettone continues to atruj
devise some method for am dloral
tkm.

Prosecutor Walsh Is
his own worst enemy

s u m

t

11

m ost heart rendering. The question posed Is how
could warring fractions reduce their country to
rubble? The fact that the world la responding to
Somalia through the United Nations to conim endable. Form er President Jim m y C arter
noted th at help should hare been gtven Somalia
long before now becauee the dire situation baa
existed tor several years, tresjoent ucorge Busn
will be visiting Somalis to view the situation for
himself. American servicemen have assumed

But before ws put atods
on with ths poUriss, one It
the way we divvy up Amir
With aU due rw gaet h
who let off stoam at tb s ’
people "playing quota

W* Uat: Warren ‘

this country, but tn

k 's a p rrtty interesdng bean

%fro
« A jf"
r. All letters
□flbe writer

�,?.. . itTcv,- -;•

t

ri :&amp;

\ . •,

County garbage and yard
waste recycling dips again
?• Harald8taff Writer
.SANFORD — Recycling took another dip In
November, dropping nearly 1 million Ibe. from
October collections.
A total! of 4.9 million Ibe. of garbage and yard
wdate w as collected for recycling during Novem­
ber. according to the monthly report released by
the bounty recycling office. The amount was
down from the 9.8 million lbs. collected during
October and 8 million Ibe. collected in September.
The totals can't be compared to 1991 because
most areas of the county were not separating
yard waste from regular "w et" garbage.
The largest reason for the reduction was the
' amount of yard waste collections made

• - /,•/•

&gt; #w.. •.. &lt;

November, compared to 3.1, million in
______. Curbside collections dropped all
from 1 2.1 million to 9.0 million lb*. &lt;
Wl '.
1, l ............. ...

m

recycling categories dropped from 1.6 million to
1.4 million lbs.
Unincorporated curbside recycling bln collec­
tions remained constant at about 1.1 million lbs.
Yard waste collections dropped slightly from
461,290 lbs. in October to 385.130 lbs. In
November.
In Sanford, curbside bln collections Increased
from 127,300 lbs. In October to 169,780 lbs. In
November. Yard waste collections dropped from
438.960 lbs. to 409.960 lbs.
In Lake Mary, curbside bln collections also
Increased, tn November, a total of 54,806 Jbs.
were emptied from bins, compared to 51.683 lbs.
the m onth before. Lake Mary yard waste
collections dropped significantly from 107,680
lbs, Ip Octobfr to SP,9Q^l^p. in November,.
In Longwood, bln collections dropped to
104,319 lbs. last month from 110.429 lbs. In
October. Yard waste collections dropped from
294.880 lbs. to 109,120 lbs.

. «i j

hjs Mnelnlo •mfoid'e LakaMonros, hoping fora
Mgostoh.

Manor. Born July 10, 1900, In sister. Linda Simms, Longwood. ‘
Joseph Bliss, 66. of 1268 Olenwood, Os., she moved to
C a re y h a n d C o x -P a rk e r
Fountainhead Dr.. Deltona. died Sanford In 1946 from there. She Funeral Home. W inter Park. In
Thursday. Dec. 31. at Florida w as a h o m e m a k e r a n d a charge of arrangem ents.
Hospital. Oriarido. Bom April 19. m em ber o f F irst C h ristia n
1926. In Woonsocket. R.I.. he Church of Sanford,
moved to Deltona'tn 1978 from
_
, , .
.
Anne Tabone. 68. 560 Mystic
Miami. He was a wholesale
Surv^ors nclude daughler. W ood, C a s s e lb e r r y , d ie d
p ro d u c e d i s t r i b u t o r a n d Donna Mae Hfckson. Gainesville: Thursday, Dec. 31, at her resi­
dence. Bom Dec. 22. 1926. In
Catholic. Mr. Ellas was s Navy
*5“nl*k.,l ,,drpn' 2J • re,u
g r a n d c h ild r e n a n d e ig h t
veteran of World War II.
ushlng. N.Y.. she moved to
great-great-gran dchUdren.
mtrSI
1988. She was
Central
Florida In 1966.
S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e so n s.
a homemaker and a' member of
Joseph E. Jr.. Deltona, John C..
Brtaaon Funeral Home. San' S t. Mary M agdalen C atholic
Gainesville: stepson, Freddie R.
Church.
Forehand. Miami: stepdaughter. ford, in charge of arrangements.
Survivors Include husband.
Beverly Baybcrry, Cedartown.
Anthony: sons. Stephen. Winter
Ga.: brothers. Sard and Johnny,
Steven S. Klenker. 28, of 2801 Springs, Robert. Portland. Tex­
bo th of M elbourne, L ouie.
Miami: sisters. Ruth EMen. Im­ Sunlake Loop, Lake Mary, died as. Christopher. Salem, Conn..'
perial Beach. Calif;, Mary Nlnott. W ednesday, Dec. 30. a t his Joseph. Stanhope. NJ.t doughresidence. Bom Aug. 10, 1964. te rs. Anne N ardone, Farm*
Woonsocket.
G ram kow F u n e ra l Home. In Orlando, he was a lifelong Ingdale. N.Y.. Theresa Valley.
Sanford" "in" charge of m b £
of C m lral ITortda. He Brockport, N.Y.. Tony Olaas;
mentB
was a member of the firs t P ensacola: Bisters. D orothy
___ ’’
____
Presbyterian Church. Maitland. S m ith . A lyce P a p a d o p o lli
TM1LM A A. M1WSOII
and of the National Rifle Aaaocia- brothers. Stephen Krelocher.
Herbert Kreischen 23 grandThelma A. Hinson. 92. 110 Hon.
Sunset D rive.' Sanford, died
Survivors Include p arents,
a ro u s.
Thursday. Dec. 31. at DeBary Dixie 8. and
Maitland;
Baldwl
Irchlld un er
m m ijL
a a iJuouiioifriii umi-j-je i
*

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VIsH Our 8towroom To Vl»w Those &amp;Many Other Fins Products Today... at:
•W here

jn a iaca - sevauAnoa
■B SU SSSSSSSm

�OA - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Ffortdi - Sunday, January 3, nwa
*v -

King
C ontinued from Page 1A
eommltirc to; help
bring Ihc state event to Sanford,
said that I lie people of Sanford.

"Jf! - .t*ift v»&gt;f,AvMwjSli

t

:iWT

*A7 v&gt; -'w
,w

m

’*"

im

K- }•j *w■i vip?
, ;•. ■. •• &lt;3 a s

:* $iiW&amp;t

a

■i

"From the mayor to the volun­
teers to the students In the
schools, everyone Is working
hard to see. that this comes oil
well."

* .

S tA n o tfA n iM M
C oatlnuod from Fags 1A

'l.'Ah

.

•

regardless ol rare, have worked
together (o make the event
possible.
"There’s a very strong coali­
tion there In Sanford." she said.

part of the highway from Five
Points south to Sheppard Road,
R em em ber, th e highw ay in
those days was not a four lined
divided road like it is today.
in 1932, three well (mown
Sanford young men were Involved in a .head-on collision,
Killed were Billy Morse and
Roeco Wallis. Seriously injured
was Ford Harrison. The Herald
reported the next day over 3,000
people visited Reel ft Sons
garage on W eal’ Fl*W "Slrfcet
(across
fromm the
present Semin,
a ___a s s _ . a*
*_
nole First Federal Building) to
view the completely destroyed
automobiles.
N ot lo n g a fte r th a t tw o
Catholic priests were Involved In
another head-on collision. Both
were killed. As a result of these
two accidents which took the
Uvea of four people, local folks
around here dubbed the area as
"Death Valley." These were not
the only lives loot on that stretch
of highway before it was four
laned and divided.
Even today Mould you ask an
old tim er In Sanford how to get
— let's say, to "Big Tree Park,"
u’re likely to be told to take
S. 17/92 south, pass Five
Points, and in the middle of
"Death Valley" hang a right on
Qeneral Hutchison Parkway.
Oh, yes, one m ore thing.
Everybody around here knows
that the particular road In ques­
tion la U.S. 17/92. But do you
know what the state designation
for the highway is? You'D know
now because I'm going to ten
you. It Is State RoadSOO.

S

According to Martinez. Ihe
state hopes to take the Sanford
celebration and use It as a model
for other eelebratlons around ihc
state when they move Ihc stale
evenls to another location.

Local events Include an orator­
ical, poster and essay contest, a
tree planting ceremony, a play, a
prayer breakfast, a parade, an
Intcrfailh religious service and a
commemorative banqlid.

artllaeis and other Items that
IM-rtaln to Amcrlra’s civil lights
struggle from 1955 to 1909. The
items will pul a special emphasis
on ihc llfo. the activities and the
deuthof King.

The exhibit f» being prepared
The events will also Include an
nlty celebrations." Martinez exhibit of magazines, corre­ by the Black Archives at Florida
s p o n d e n c e . p h o to g r a p h s . A&amp;MUnlvcrstly.
guilty and sent to prison, w asn't been erected at the entrance of sald'
oaniora s veterans mux at tne
,.
—— —
■u . i M n H w
geated he resign his position northern foot of Park Avenue. He LM «I NOtlCftS
U f lll NOtlOM
L t flil NotlCAS
L t flil WOtICti
was given a 19-gun salute.
*
C i .....
-------- ----------------- -—
with the City.
Before cioUng this part of
There was never any evidence
that DeCottea was involved In to d a y ’s c o lu m n , have you
the Lakegate scandal. In re­ noticed th e algns Sem inole
spouse to The Herald. DeCottea County's Road Department has
eeM he was a Odd grade officer put up to designate the parkway
with the 124th Infantry of the name for the general? The -signs
Florida N ational G uard and read "HUTCH." There's other
wasn’t accustom ed to people verbiage up there but It can't be
telling him w hat to do or not to read unless you come to a deadstop. Previous signage spelled
do.
___
.
At that tim e DeCottea held the out the general's name.
■
•
,
rank of major and was comRemembering
the
deaths
of
&gt;*77?
wianding
officer
of
the
124th*s
JIaMkS k a t l a l l A t t
*Fhs
U a lt a llA H
the two Catholic priests earlier In c,mm Cmrt m
today's story rem inds me
Are th at ‘
"D " Company w as located Episcopal Church Nov. 27.1923.
h e re tn S an fo rd . It w as a I was Just a toddler but I can
macltfna gun urtft. In th at com- recall my tether taking m s by
party was a aeoond hsu tenant. the hand aa we walked from our
Before World W ar I be joined the bouse on Laurel Avenue to Park
National Guard a s a private. He a n d F o u r t h t o .e e e , t h e
cam e out o f th a t conflict a smouldering ruins,
second
Any of you
I don’t recall m uch about the
old tim ers remember who h e . fire th a t engulfed All Soule
was?
Catholic Church «Jan. 2 4 .1 9 3 2 .1
Hla nam e w as Jo aep h C. believe that happened during
H utchison. By. th e tu n e the the year o r so ourtem lty welded
te T tM T R t
124th Intently was tederaltsed in ro d Pierce,
R IT P lie u
"*r t e t e it e M Bl
tn Nov. 1940, M ger DeCottea
Both Holy Croaa and AU Souls
N o n ce o r
m jm s O w n m b m sm sm m,
jr r s s n ta
IM .
had becom t a hsutenant coteosl In thoaa days were wood frame
(CIRCUIT CO U R TM A U
But Bscond L ieutenant H ut- bulldtwm,
M ARVANW M ORSI
AtCNrliM M M Csurt
chlson bad becom e a briftutier
I reause that church Area are
Syt ft! JsycsCNcfclW
general. Later, aa a m ajor gener- nothing to laugh ab o u t But I'm
AstepiRyCN H i
al. Hutchison .accepted the but- reminded of a lighthearted story
M IM l: OsCMfWr M. V, IW»
A January &amp; W, IH9
rcncscr cn ioc wunuicm in m s 1 dquu m m y roooro
OtU-tlt
P h ilip p in e s a n d m ak in g It
A church caught on Are. A.
M TM t CIRCU IT COURT

•CMIMM.I COUNTY SOARDORAOJUfTMl NT
Januarytu rn

•&gt;« MX

Do y o u r e c a l l In m y
."Lakegate" aerial , th a t p art
which dealt w ith George A.
DeCottea suing The Iterate for
libel? DeCottea, a lawyer for tbs
Seminole County Bank as weU

TO WHOM IT MAY CON CIRN:

_____ t

____ ,

MOTtCI IIHISKBV 01VCN THAT R» InmlnnH Caurty S tart

AMMtiMNl MM rwWuct a suM k SMTUU H ean»l*r ttw M Hw las:
CO N M N TA M N M
A. VASIANCCS

I. AOTHue a m t KIIUL - ean-i-av - m« h u

NWWnal AwraMMMlM
AU1ITTAJ. RUCKSR
iMib .** stujA&lt;
iptill -

a testing site for this
iocy instrument.

adding Central Florida Regional
esad atasite.
"He stressed the fact that it
was being placed, in research
h o sp ita ls/' said McCord. "I
stressed the feet that we are the
real world, a community hospi­
tal. Ultimately he added us to
Ihc list and now it Is here."
Because the system is still in
Us infancy, (here is no cost to the

McCord to also the

P e t e r P u e l o . M .D ., a
cardiologist horn Baylor College
of Medicine and Ben I tu b Hospi­
tal in H ouston, one of th e
country’s leading researchers of
CPK Isoforms, spoke a t ihe
m eeting. He noted th at ihe

"O ur first concern alw ays
1,390 second- and m ust be providing maximum
third-degree m u rderers who protection to the people of Florhave received o e d ite .toward k te / 'aald Chiles,
early retoaar and between 90
Chiles acknowledged the Florand 140 who were released since ids Supreme C « m ultimately
J*£y to esse overcrowding,
may have to decide whether the
ChUca on Frida y aald he would Department of Corrections has
unvetl the'MtIUet Ives neat week, the pow er to keep o r reincallin g th e s la te 's crim inal carcerate Inm ates whose rejustice system "in critical need leases were based on provisional

Jacksonville, the Mayo Clinic.
R ochester, M inn,: University
Hospital and Case Western Re­
serve Hospital. Cleveland. Ohio;
W ashington U niversity, S t.
Louts, Mo.; Northwestern Univarrity. Evanston. 01.: Jew ish
llBepttal, Louisville. Ky.t Meth­
odist Hospital and Ben Tattb
H ospital. H o u sto n :. H artford
H ospital Hartford. Conn.: Uni­
versity Cincinnati Medical Cen­
ter. Cincinnati, and HCA Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford.

tim e" is awarded for inm ates'

II

1 A l . I . lU lT IL

TwfvwlV'lMiVVTOTUPVm
w ncsaacuuM oaua

w rite circuit

(actors. **Vrt&gt;,W ° r&lt;****r ,UP^

...
t
,
’He's dealing wMh a problem

No provisional crodtu have
been awarded since Chiles took
office in January 1991.
Chiles said hla 1993-94 fiscal
budget request Includes th e
construction of 3,600 additional
prison beds and 700 new com*.
munUy based beds Mi alternative

ha, "He
the total
tim e."

public defonders. as w dl aa new
criminal investigators and crim e
lab analysts.

taxpayers who used a
at th e '
,
scene. FHP reports aald.
PhW preparer last year. The
S a tu rd a y a fte rn o o n , ho f M c
charges had been filed, but the h W

I

c a u i - sau-viv - siaa e msu wu
K t w w s H w s r .s s r .t m w w
■Mr, SIMM II, N a N IMK IScMtn
T rw C w rt, US II. I a t SMIhrMW Drtvs an*
ET11
SAMTW NUOSON
A^
S m a , pa t, p i «, iis s r js s ii ■ **

?

A'SStiLKrSSS &amp;

lion, occordini
Highway Patrol
The Florida Highway Patrol
reports nine traffic folsllltes Mi
the state.
And a Hialeah woman who
hud warned her children about
New Year's celebratory gunfire
died alter a rrVeter's random
build came through an open
window In her home.
|
Earlier, in Dover. Fla., three
people apparently leaving a New
Year's Eve parly were killed
when the driver lost control of
his car and struck a tree, officials
sold.
A 14-ycar-old girl and two men
were killed early Friday morn­
ing. Wilder Mid.

The . haste rate for upper In­
come bracket taxpayers le 31
percent. The rates for the lower
brackets retaatns 28 percent and
19 percent, although Ihe Income
range* covered by Ihe brackets
have been adjusted to reflect

moat Interest payments
mal debt, such as credit
card borrowing and auto loans.
Home mortgage interest con­
tinues to be tfeductlbfc. however.
The personal exemption has
been raised by 9150, to 93.300
fo r m o st ta x p a y e rs , th e ir
high Income cam era may have
to reduce (heir eionD tiom If
th eir adjusted gross income
exceeds a certain amount.
Fourteen million more highIncome earners will be able to
uae the tax table in Form 1040.

M's 96.350, up from

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

- -

�I I I B H R b RM IRM m n N H su —V vK M BM ieRiw ipieflafil

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 3, 1903 - VA

A ID S viru s d efinitio n revam ped

SN B R I E F
Hearteaver CPR elate offered

A o ao o lfd Prase Writer________

SANTORO — HCA Central Florida Regional Hoapltal, In
cooperation w ith CPR for Cttlxena, la offering Heartaaver CPR
claaaeio n Monday from S-10 p.m. In the hoapltal'a daaaraom.
The Heartaaver class teaches the participant one-peraon
rescue and first akl for chocking victims. In addition, the class
provides Information on prevention of heart disease add how to
recognise and cate for a heart attack vktbn. Participants who
pass the course will receive Heartaaver CPR cards from the
American Heart Association.
The coat for the d a ta la 915 per person, 914 for seniors, and

ATLANTA — The num ber of
people diagnosed with AIDS will
climb dram atically when a new
definition of the disease went
Into effect Friday, raising de­
mand for treatm ent and dollars.
Under the new definition, an
estim ated 00,000 Americans will
be diagnosed w ith full-blown
AIDS In 1993. according to the
Centers far Disease Control and*

States spend
less on AIDS
prevention

A d e c a d e of A I D S

Atsoclaled Press Writer________

prevention. T n n • tunoit oou*

ble th e c u rre n t average of
50,000a year.
Since 1981, about 949,000
Americana have been diagnosed
with AIDS and 190.000 have
The new definition could make
It easier for people infected with
the vim s to collect disability
b e n e fits a v a ila b le to thoae
diagnosed w ith AIDS, it would
also enable them to take pert tn

^
of People W ith AIDS,
ic CDC’s c u rre n t,
leflnttfon, people Inthe AIDS virus are
s having AIDS when
p certain blood in*
I h . ,k l&gt; c » « r

and drug users w eren't receiving
the help they needed because
m any of the diseases they got
w eren't included on the list.
The new definition, approved
e a rlie r th le y ear, ad d s
pulmonary tuberculosis, recur*
rent pneumonia and Invasive

cervical cancer.
In addition — and more Im*
portant. according to the CDC —
the agency approved a new
the level of the
j—r ,_______
mmune cells,
called CXMs. to 900 per cubic
millimeter, or one-fifth the level
o fa healthy person.
Up to 190.000 of the 1 million
Am ericans Infected w ith the
vtrua have CD4 counts below
900 and n o « don't tow * they
are Infected or have never had a
CD4 count, said Dr. Jam es

be tum ble under the new deflnition. However, the act haa never
been frilly funded, leaving AIDS
Htntcs understaffed and many
Americana who can't afford the
9900 CD4 tests.
"People are seeking these tests
and being told they have to wait
six m onths for the next clinic
opening.'' Rappers ssid. "T hat's
six m onths they could be tsking
medicine to prolong their life."
t im AIDS clinic a t O n d y
M emorial H ospital. A tlanta's
only chnlc for Indigent patients.

of the CDC'a Afi)S division.
"We hope the definition wM
drawattention to the Importance
of testing." he eald.
T h T lfra n W hits CARE Act
distributes federal AIDS (undo to
d tlc s according to the num ber of
AIDS cases, so more d ties may

“ “
«*rectw cu ttle Monies,
“This le contrary to everything
w« know a b ^ tH IV O U re sa ?
treatm ent le most ef*
festive In the early stages,"
Monies said.

Study finds some obese people
eat twice as much as they think
vt

ah; l' o*&lt;3u

.

SANFORD - The
Hoapltal la m o m

No cure for
a hangover
iff

'^feAMBMa
AFSotenoai

Hiflf *

IrnnTfTTI

hfonlr

ATOM S W 4 W ; ARBS' 'MnK6t
&gt;fW0k# SOmS genetic oauM M

genea or their metabolism s actually foil to lose
w ^ fo tb a o a u M they cat too much, a study
The researchers said those who «**•&lt;«« they
simply cannot take off pounds may be foottaf
for more - and e^rercMe

th #

O flly

• X p I lf lS tiO f l

fo r

th s lr

obesity. The main reason they
are overweight is that they ere,
O V e re e tln Q . L e ft 00t blame It 00
something that it tan’t. |

Uem cannot entirely
minted U f ♦ people's
the am ount they eat
their
p an
TrtftJf

i B.
Ual's
fives
food
w."
»opie
t leas
fo re
m al.
they

their fc-t***—, caretakers, or others who a n Inter—ted in
nrfng m ore about being victorious over stroke. No
ACSsQiSttftOft
* •
Vetoes of Victory music therapy m eats every Thursday a t
li3 0 p jn . Those stroke victors and others who etdoy singing,
fun and fellowship are Invited, fowadsrsy United Methodist

WASHINGTON - Local-and
stale health departments across
the country may have lo scale
back Iheir AIDS prevention and
education programs In the face
ofa spreading epidemic.
Slate officials were warned Iasi
month to expect cuts In the
amount of federal money avail­
able to finance state and local
health departm ent programs on
AIDS prevention, education,
counseling and testing.
D r. J o y c e l y r i E l d e r s of
Arkansas, president of the Asso­
ciation of Stale and Territorial
Health Officials, said that stale
and local programs will be forced
lo cut back on prevention and
surveillance unless their budgets
receive additional money.
"if we are sincere about trying
to do som ething about the
spread of AIDS we m ust begin lo
fund educational activities that
will make a difference and re­
duce the num ber of people who
are becoming infected." said
Elders, chosen by President-elect
Clinton to become the next
surgeon genera).
But right now. she said, "we
are not reaching the majority of
our citizen*. ... We don t reach
our young people, our poor
people, our uneducated people.
And that's where we're seeing
the greatest spread, where we're
seeing the epidemic grow. Every
day 3,000 people become In­
fected with HIV and ff you
prevent Just half, look at how
much money you'd aave."

th at Is critical

In Thursday's
along with an

The study was baaed on 10 overweight people
_ nine women and one man — who complained
of diet reeletsnrr Some had failed 90 serious
sH stn n f s s t

f V f n i t f th e i m i l l QUXnbCf•

the reeeereher* said they t t t safe generalising the
experim ent's findings to . other diet welatsnt
people. This w ss both because they measured the
study subjects In such m inute detail
because
their results were so dramatically different from
the comparison group's,
The 10 were compared with an overweight
group of 67 women and 13 men who eald they ate
more than 1,900 calories a day and never felt
losing weight was lmooealble.
Those who claimed to be diet resistant eald
they at* 1,088 calorie* a day. In feet, they
svrregul 9.081. They believed they burned up
1X129 calories a day through Physical activity,
whfft they actually exercised off 771 calories.
The people In the comparison group ate 40
percent more than they thought ana exercised 13
p ttw irt M B
"This Is something that a lot of us have
suspected far a long time. gam e people Just don't
§ fot of fiy» foods they e a t.'‘ commented
Dr w ilte r Willett of Harvard Sch ool of Public
Health:
how much their energy expenditure rose after
eating, how much they burned while eaerrialng
and how much they used up over the course of a

Researcher knew of taxol'e benefits years ago

,;vN.V. — Even If
you're tn no condition to
read this, you probably
know that aspirin won't
cure It and water won't
prevent It.
It'a the hangover, and ll'a
Inevitable If you drink too
much alcohol,
T he h ead ach e, u p set
stom ach and bad aftertaste
th a t acco m p an y a
hangover come from the
toxic byproduct of alcohol,
a c h e m lc a l c a lle d
acetaldehyde, said Russell
M snkes. asso ciate p ro ­
fessor of toxicology and
p h a r m a c o l o g y a t th e
Albany Medical College,
D ehydration can resu lt
from the excessive urina­
tion alcohol induces.
Borne typical folk re­
medies —eating cold p u ts,
taking aspirin before bed or
drinking another cocktail
— may do more harm than
good.
Aspirin and tbuprofin are
bad for the stomach lining
and popping one when the
stomach la already Irritated
from drinking dramatically
Increases the risk of an
ulcer. Mankeaaald.
The acetam inophen In
Tylenol w on't harm the
stomach, but It can strain
the liver, which Is already
being dam aged by the
alcohol. Mankes said.
Drinking water while Mill
intoxicated won't help ei­
ther. Because alcohol In­
duces urination, all the
water that cornea tn. goes
out. taking with It minerals
and salts.

CHIROPRACTORS

M O S I I N J U R I E S I RE ATI 0 W l l U
Li ! I LL O R N O C O M
I &lt;' YOU'
• DAYS

322-4762

m

�'*1

t

&gt;

ii

B•
•A - 8tnlord Herald, 8anford, Florida - 8unday. January 3, 1993

F lo rid a p o litica l
TALLAHASSEE - I t . took
months and cost millions of
dollars, but the bitter redistricttag battle that dominated Florida
politics in 1992 produced re­
sults: more blacks. Htspanlcs
and Republicans were elected
than ever before.
Even as voters were making
history, they signaled their dis­
satisfaction by amending the
constitution to limit the term s of
state and federal officeholders to
eight years.
The nasty business of drawing
new c o n g r e s s i o n a l a n a
legislative district lines tied state
lawmakers In knots for the first
half of the year, dashing the slim
chances Gov. Lawton Chiles had
for an ambitious, unpopular $2.5
billion tax reform proposal.
Despite the best efforts of the
Democratic legislative leadership
to hold their traditional grip on
power, the maps that finally
were approved by federal courts
gave a boost to Republicans and
elected the most minorities In
history.
For the first time since the
post-Civil War era. Florida has a
black m em ber of C ongress.
T hree. In fact: Reps. Alcee
Hastings, Corrlne Brown and
Carrie Meek all won seats de­
signed to elect an AfricanAmerican.
Rep. Lincoln Dlax-Balart
becam e th e second CubanAmerican elected to Congress
from Florida. Joining Incumbent
Deana Ros-Lehtlnen.
The redlstrlctlng year gave
Florida four new seats in the
U.8. House because of popula­
tion growth for a total of 23. But
alx veteran representatives re­
tired, taking with them 132
years of Capitol experience.
Calling It quits were Demo­
crats Charles Bennett. Dante
FaaceU. BUI Lehman and Larry
Smith and Republicans Andy
Ireland and Craig Jam es. Ben­
nett had served 44 years and
FaaceU 38 years.
In Tallahassee, the elections
left the Senate with 20 Demo­
crats and 20 Republicans, the
first time that's ever happened.
Senators spent three conten­
tious November days trying to
select a president, deadlocking
on tie votes nine times before
coming up with a unique solu­
tio n : R e p u b lic a n A n d er
Crenshaw of Jacksonville will
serve the first year. Democrat
Pat Thomas of Quincy will take
the reins In Year 2.
Crenshaw, who may run for
governor in 1994, is the first
OOP Senate president in 118
years.
House Speaker BoUey "Bo"
Johnson of MUton got a solid
Democratic majority but found
himself embroiled in controversy
over a bridge project in his
Panhandle district and a De­
partm ent of A griculture Job
carved out for nis wife, who

T he w in d s o f H u rric a n e
Andrew destroyed dosena of
polling places In Dade County,
delaying a September primary
for a week. Chiles spent two
weeks In the hurricane gone,
raining his poUtlcal viaiblUty and
renewing his enthusiasm for the
Job.
Florida voters overwhelmingly
approved the eight-year term
limtta Initiative, brainchild of
W inter Park businessman PhU
Handy. It bars a atate or federal
officeholder from appearing on
the ballot after eight years In
that office.
U.S. Sen. Bob Oraham eaaUy
won re-election over Republican
BUI Grant, but not before he waa
nearly selected aa Democratic
p r e a t d e n t l a l n o m in e e Bill
Clinton's running mate. Oraham
reportedly finished second to A1
Pore In the vice presidential
Clinton campaigned hard In
the Sunshine State, forcing Pres-

ipt the atate In the Republican
rfumn, but only by a whisker.
After winning the election.

Clinton tapped Florida Depart*
ment of Environmental Regula­
tion Secretary Carol Browner to
run hta Environmental Protec­
tion Agency. Browner had been
a top aide to Gore in the U.S.
Senate.
Abortion foes and tough-oncrime groups led a high-profile
elTort to remove atate Supreme
Court Chief Justice Rosemary
Barken, the first woman to hold
that Job. But Barkett won a merit
retention vote rather handily.
Florida's best-known sheriff.
Nick N a v a rro of B ro w ard

County, lost a shocking primary
election.
As 1993 dawned. Chiles was
still being cagy about his plans
for re-election aa he proposed a
new lux refonu plan to the
Legislature.
Depending on w hat Chiles
does, the 1994 flld could Include
D em ocrats Lt. Qov. Buddy
MacKay and form er Orlando
Mayor BUI Frederick and one or
more of these Republicans: Insu ran ce C om m issioner Tom
Q allagher. Handy, Crenshaw.
and Secretary of S tate Jim

Smith. Education Commissioner
B etty C astor w as eyeing a
challenge to U.S. Sen. Connie
Mack.
Both state political parties
looked to new leadership In the
new year.
Jacksonville's Terrle Brady
was chosen by the Democrats to
replace Simon Ferro of Miami.
who was counting on a State
Department Job under Clinton,
Tom Slade, also of Jacksonville,
was the favorite to replace Van
Poole of Tallahassee at the
Republican Party.

Horrtll 4 fcvtriy
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Doing it the hard w ay
LOCALLY
UCF upset
ORLANDO — Lou Johnson scored 23 points to
lend the University of New York at BufTalo to a
72-68 upset victory over Central Florida and
helped snap his team’s 20-game losing streak.
For the Bulls. Johnson's 23 points led the way
and Brown added 14. Darryl Davis led the
Knights with 25 points.
; The victory was the first for BufTnlo since
• January 25. 1992, when the Bulls beat
I Delaware State 71-68. The Bulls arc now 1-8,
*while UCF. which surrendered 29 points on a
: season-high 25 turnovers, falls to 4-6.

AROUND T M IS T A T H
Stewart’s heroics down FSU
TALLAHASSEE — Scott Stewart hit a 3-polnt
shot to give Florida the lead with 3:36 left and
added three free throws In the final minute to
preserve the Gators' 89-86 victory Saturday
over 18th-ranked Florida State.
Florida (6-3) led for most of the game and
survived a 26-7 Florida State run late In the
game, falling behind 75-72 with 6:06 left on a
3-polnt shot by the Scmlnolcs' Sam Cassell.
The Gators rode the first-half performance of
Stacey Poole to a 45-37 lead at the break. Poole
scored 17 of his 25 points and grabbed eight of
his game-high 13 rebounds.
Cassell finished with 30 points — Ills third
straight game over 30 — and hit 4 of 5 from
3-polnt distance.
Doug Edwards, who missed Florida State's
last two games with a dislocated finger, added
19 points and freshman Derrick Carroll had 12.
Stewart. Craig Brown and Marti! Kulsma
finished with 16 each for the Gators.
It was Florida coach Lon Kruger's second win
In as many tries at FSU (8-4) and marked his
first road victory over a ranked opponent since
taking over the Gators program In 1990.

Florida Tech trims New Haven
MELBOURNE — F re s h m a n S h e rm a n
Hamilton erupted with a career high 25 points
and Peter Walcott added 24 to lead Florida Tech
past New Haven 85-81 Saturday.
FTU (4-5) trailed 43-36 at me half and 60-53
In the second half. But the Panthers then went
on a 12-4 run to take control of the game.
New Haven (3-5) was paced by Dwane
Crawford (16) and Jason Williams (13).

Lyman co m es back tw ice
in Pizza Hut title match
From Staff R eports
ORLANDO — Sometimes learning
something the hard way Is the best
way.
The Lyman High School boys'
soccer team, ranked No. 2 In the
m ost re c e n t F lo rid a A thletic
Coaches Association's Class 4A
state poll, learned that they have
the ability to come from behind by
doing It not once, but twice In the
finals of the Pizza Hut Invitational
on Thursday.
Playing the Lake Mary Rams at
Edgewatcr High School Stadium,
the Greyhounds trailed 1-0 during
regulation and 2-1 In the second
overtime period before pulling out a
3-2 victory ond winning the school’s
first Pizza Hut Invitational champi­
onship.
In o th e r g a m e s T h u rs d a y ,
Clearwater Central Catholic bested
Tampa-Chamberlatn 4-2 In the third
place game while Lake Brantley
k n o ck ed off D ay to n a B eachSeabreeze 3-1 for fifth place.
"As a coach, you always want
your team to play Its best, but you
know that's not always going to
happen.” said Lyman coach Ray
Sandldgc. "But we have confidence
In ourselves. We believe that we will
find a way to win.
"I’m very proud of the way we
played. A lot of teams would have
quit, going down twice with only a
little time left to play. The main
things Is, we played together and we
played very hard. Nobody got Into a
panic and we didn't work against
each other. We hung together and

pulled out a win."
After a ‘scoreless first half. Lake
Mary took the lead late In the
second half when Keith Baranowskl
scored during a scramble In front of
the Lyman goal following a Ram',
free kick.
.
Lyman came back almost Imme­
diately. creating several solid scor­
ing opportunities. According to
Sandldgc. All-Tournament selection
Dan McAvoy came within Inches of
netting the equalizer.
"We came back battling." said
Sandldgc. "We weren't quitting."
With Just under eight minutes leff
In regulation, L ym an's Frank
Clpolla received the ball In comer of
the Lake Mary penalty area. He beat
two players and launched a shot
that, assisted by a fake by team­
mate Mike Sells, beat Lake Mary
goalie Lakl Travlos.
"Mike made a move like he was
going to go for the ball and that
froze the 'keeper." Sandldgc said.
"When he did that, the ball went
right Into the goal."
Lake Mary again took the lend In
the second of the two mandatory
10-minute overtime periods. Mike
Dcaver took the fllck-on of a
throw-ln and blasted a shot from
point blank range at Lyman goalie
Chris Lewis.
The defensive Most Valuable
Player of the tournament. Lewis
was able to block the shot but
couldn't hang on to the rebound.
During the ensuing scramble, the
ball found Its way to Kevin Murphy,
who headed It home with seven
□B m ttoccsr, Fags SB

FMePtiolo
Midfielder Dan McAvoy (No. 19, above), defender John Bernard and
goalkeeper Chris Lewis, who helped Lyman win its first Pizza Hut
Invitational championship, were named to the all-tournament team.

Tide made
believers
of ’Canes

Lake Mary girls
extend county’s

AP Sports Writsr

Knight goes for 600
INDIANAPOLIS — Bob Knight's next victory
'. Is always his most Important, so what's so
special about this one?
In his 22nd season at Indiana and 28th
overall, he needs one more win to reach 600 for
his stormy and storied career.
It could come before a national television
audience today when the No. 4 Hooslers play
No. 3 Kentucky at Louisville's Freedom Hall.
Knight would become only the 15th NCAA
Division I coach to reach 600. The late Aldolph
Rupp leads the list with 875 victories.

Defending champ alive
MINNEAPOLIS — Washington returned to the
Metrodome. site of last year's Super Bowl, and
left one game closer to defending its title.
T he R e d sk in s s p ru n g fo rm er o p tio n
quarterback Brian Mitchell loose on the Vikings
and he ran for 109 yards In a 24-7 victory.
Mitchell, who had only six carries during the
season, carried 16 times. He also returned a
punt 54 yards and ran 38 yards on a fake punt.
The Redskins also rediscovered a few old
stand bys: Mark Ryplen hitting open receivers;
the Hogs clearing the way for 196 rushing
yards, and a smothering defense that held
Minnesota (11-6) to 148 yards.
The Redskins (10-7), who Improved to 16-4 In
postseason play under coach Joe Gibbs, will try
to Improve that mark next Saturday at the San
Francisco 49ers, whose 14-2 record was the
NFL’s best.

Chargers bolt Into ttm i’s ’
SAN DIEGO — Marion Butts, who fumbled on
the Kansas City 9-yard line on the game's fifth
play, scored on a 54-yard run with 5:53 left in
third quarter to lead the Chargers to 17-0
first-round playofT victory In rainy San Diego.
The AFC West champion Chargers (12-5). who
are 12-1 after a 0-4 start, will play the AFC East
champion Dolphins next Sunday at Miami. San
Diego, under rookie coach Bobby Ross, won Its
eighth straight game since a 16-14 loss at
Kansas City on Nov. 8.
San Diego had lost six straight games to
Kansas City (10-7).

BUT

TV

FOOTBALL
□ 12:30 p.m. - WESH 2. NFL. AFC playoffs.
Houston Oilers at Buffalo Bills. (L)
□4 p in. - WCPX 6. NFL. NFC playoffs.
Philadelphia Eagles at New Orleans Saints. (L)
Complsta listings a«i As— IB

fo r

NEW ORLEANS — Alabama said
It could stop Miami's offense and go
through Its defense. A lot of other
teams said the same thing this
season.
So. how was Alabama able to do It
In the Sugar Bowl?
"We knew we had to run the
football, stop them from running
and be In the plus In turnovers,"
coach Gene Stallings said Saturday,
a day after Alabama won the
national championship by beating
then-No. 1 Miami 34-13.
The Tide did more than beat
Miami. It humbled the Hurricanes,
making them look like the Temples
and TCUs they overwhelm during
the regular season. Alabama did to
M iam i w h a t th e H u rric a n e s
routinely do each New Year’s Day to
even highly ranked teams like
Nebraska and Texas.
A shifting scheme of coverage
patterns caused Miami to make four
turnovers. Including three Intercep­
tions against Heisman Trophy
winner Glno Torretta. Alabama's
top-ranked defense became the first
team to hold the Hurricanes without
an offensive touchdown since Sept.
22. 1984. when Florida State beat
them 38-3.
The Hurricanes' only touchdown
came on Kevin Williams' 78-yard
punt return In the fourth quarter.
The loss was Miami's worst since a
38-7 beating by Tennessee In the
1986 Sugar Bowl.
Alabama extended Its winning
streak to 23. It also ended Miami's
29-game winning streak and Its bid
for a second straight national title.
□Dm Cham pions. Pago SB

TITUSVILLE — Seminole County high schools
asserted their dominance In girls basketball over the
holidays, capped by Lake Mary's romp to the Lady
War Eagle Holiday Classic championship on Thurs­
day.
Eight different players contributed points as the
Rams employed a balanced attack to defeat host
Titusvllle-Astronaut 68-34 fom the championship.
Lake Mary Joined Lake Howell (second In the
Evans tournament). Seminole (fifth In the Polk
Holiday Classic) and Lyman (sixth In the Lady
Wildcat tournament In Ocala) In helping county
quintets earn recognition around the state.
Karen Morris led the Rams with 16 points while
Diane Duber added 12 In a game In which Lake Mary
was never threatened. The host War Eagles were led
by Amanda Rhodes with 11. Only two other
Astronaut players scored over three points.
"It was a good tournament and two good wins for
u s." said Lake Mary head coach Anna Van
Landlngham. "I felt we played a lot better Thursday
than Wednesday (In a 43-39 victory over St.
Petersburg-Lakewood). I'm pleased with the results,
not Just because we won. but because or the way we
played In the two games."
In addition to her points. Morris also finished with
four rebounds and four steals. Those totals, along
with 13 points In Wednesday’s game, earned the
senior guard-forward the Most Valuable Player award
for the tournament In a vote of the coaches.
□B m B asketball, Fags SB

Thursday afternoon as Lake Mary romped to the
championship In the Lady War Eagle Holiday Classic.

L A M MARY (M)
.........
Ready JM 4 ,M errick 4 I I *. Ferguton 2 2 4«. Reguccl 241 a. Docker 2
M 4 . Seltei 204)4, MorrltlOO 14. Duber40-112. Grelitlng2 I 21. Total*:
JS1-1244.
AITRONAUT (24)
Dttodclg 2 1-2 7. Zermeno I 00 2. Carter 0 12 I, Lewi* I 00 2. Rhode* I
1-2 It, Bellamy 22 71. Swenn 0 2 4 2. Total*: 12111 24.
if * * * * ?
17 If II 1 7 - 4 4
Aitreaaet
a n
g
„
Three-point field goal* - None. Totel tout* - Lake Mery 17. Aitronaut
14. Fouled out — None. Technical* — Non*. Record* — Leke Mary 11-2.
Aitronaut S-S.

Tale of two teams: Marlins set, St. Pete sunk
By JAMBS MARTINSS
Associated Press Writer
ST. PETERSBURG - The Florida Marlins
finally got players to go with their uniforms and
renovated stadium. In 1992. But across the state.
Tampa Bay's high hopes to land a team suffered
yet another crushing blow.
"SAY IT AIN'T SO." demanded the headlines
after the National League nixed a $115 million
sale that would have brought the San Francisco
Giants to the vacant Florida Suncoast Dome.
It was only the latest disappointment In the
area's 15-year quest for a franchise that has also
Included close-but-no-clgar courtships with the
A's. Twins. White Sox. Rangers, a NL expansion
franchise and the Mariners.
Backers of the effort fought back In court,
launching a blizzard of lawsuits they predicted
would eventually ask for $3.5 billion In damages.

Jilted Investors claim baseball executives
misled them Into believing they had done
•everything necessary to relocate the team, but In
the end forced Giants owner Bob Lurie to Mke a
$100 million bid from a competing group.
Defendants Included baseball top officials and
National League owners. Including Marlins
owner H. Wayne Hulzenga. who Is accused of
working "behind the scenes" to help keep the
Giants out of Florida. Hulzenga repeatedly
denied speculation that he battled to keep a
veteran team from moving to Florida to compete
with his expansion-stocked franchise.
"Baseball let us down." St. Petersburg Mayor
David F ischer said. "They dam aged us
spiritually and they damaged us financially.
We're not going to take this lying down."
As San Francisco fired back with its own Its
own flurry of suits. Florida U.S. Senators Bob
Graham and Connie Mack fought the battle on

another front.
They succeeded In holding U.S. Senate Judici­
ary Committee hearings on baseball's unique,
70-year-old exemption from the nation's an­
titrust laws, an exemption they believe allowed
baseball to scuttle the Giants deal.
"By preventing the Giants from moving to
Tampa Bay. major league baseball has shown It
Is more interested In preserving its sacred
monopoly than allowing the free market to
work." said Mack, who conceded getting the
exemption revoked would be a longshot.
In tfie end, Tampa Bay baseball fans were left
with a legal battle that could take years, dim
prospects that baseball will expand anytime soon
and a taxpayer-financed dome that still sits
empty.
Meanwhile, the Marlins began putting together
the pieces of the team that will make its National
□Baa B aseball, Pegs 3B

TH E B E S T C O V ER A G E O F S P O R T S IN YOUR A R EA , READ TH E SAN FORD H ERALD DAILY

�2D

S.vtlotd Herald. Sanlord, Florida

Sunday. January 3. 1993

T S ^ S T A N D IN G S
NBA STAN DIN GS

DOGS
a tS A N F O R D O R LA N D O
F r ufa y iitghf
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5 16 B 31 24
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J 70
7 80
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7 Add Low
5 70
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Fifth race - 7 /U . C 44 I t
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5 80
1 40
7 40
2 Sweet Bounty
J 40
7 40
8 Gold Tooth
3 40
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5 1 6 A 31 49
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35 40 73 70
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J R v C athy Lee
J 20
O (4 8) 95 40; P (0 4) 104 20; T &lt;1 4 7)
59) 00, S (8 4 2 6) 1.714 00
Eig h th race - 5/16 D 31.35
5 M y Rodeo G al
8 40
3 80
3 00
4 D ory %A rm ad illo
6 00
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3 00
0 (4 4 1 1 1 80. P 15 4) 55 80. T (5 4 1) I t ' 70
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4 80
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7 60
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5 80
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6 Loud L is a
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4 00
Q (4 6) 5) 00; P I t A ll) 13.80) T (6 4 5)
566 60; P (A ll 4) S 10; O O (7 5 A 4 4) 1.194 00
14th ra c e - J / |. A ; 38 t t
* D e v * S h ik a ri
14 70
4 60
3 00
5 Pear U of Skill
5 70
? 70
2 le v a * Hand
3 60
Q IS 7) I t 40. P (7 5) 51 80. T 17 5 71 5)0.48)
S ( 7 5 2 31 2.753 40
H
5171.472; A — 1,586

JA I-ALA I
.it OR t AN DO S E M I N O L E
F rid a y night
Fir si ga m e
4 40
300
J P ita
13 80
4 80
3 40
t M a rc e l
4 70
8 G a b io la
O (3 t ) 41 40. P I ) 6) I U 70) T l i t i t 371 .70
Second gam e
5 70
3 60
j P d a Mend*
•
7 60
3 40
3 80
\ P in so n Andy
3 70
2 M a rte l F o ru riA
O (1 3) 31 80 P &lt;M&gt; 99.40; T (3 1 7) 307 00;
DO (3 3) 71 70
Th ird gam e
? P it a F o r u r if l
’ 00
6 00
4 20
5 E rk tfto E n riq u e
M B0
4 80
1 O le * A rra io lti
3 *0
O (2 S) 34 30. P (2 SI 13 40; T (2 S 1) 711 00
Fo u rth gam e
iG a h t o f *
'6 0
S 00 8 60
6 P in so n
73 00
A §0
2 P ito
3 40
Q (3 6) 47 60. P (3 *1 ISO 40; T (3 6 21 570 *0
Fifth gam e
l Pinson Q y .iri
11 00 12 00
4 00
4 Cole A rriw o lil
&gt;0 00
4 20
6 P ita M end)
4 00
Q (1 4| 73 40; P &lt;1 4) AS 40; T (1 4 4) 407 80
S u t h gam e
4 Ar.im rtyo bob
6 80
3 20 5 60
7 Z ug a/ii AAendi
4 80
4 60
1 D urango O y ar i
4 60
Q (4 7) 33 60 P (4 7) 78 90. T (4 7 U 2SI 60
Seventh gam e
7 E r b i;ia
16 20
10 20 S 60
3 P ita
4 40
3 20
2 Cole
4 40
Q 13 7) S3 80; P (7 3) 80 60. T (7 3 7) 800 60
Eig h th gam e
4 N ap a O y a r i
14 60
12 40 4 00
/ D urango G o itil
’ 00
6 60
I A ra m a y o M endi
J 80
O (4 7) 39 60; P f4 711 33 SO; T (4 7 I) 177 80
Ninth gam e
6 70
3 70 3 80
I P it ,i A r r a lu la
3 70 7 80
6 f r k if ia O yar i
7 lr i go yen G o d i;
7 60
Q II 6) 77 80. P I 6) 48 00. T (I 6 7) 186 70;
TT 14 7 I A I 6 2 1 3 758 SO
101h gam e
5 R u .*fd o
4 7,5.kt I
7 lr iqoyen
O (4 5 ) 71 10
172 80

7 70

P IS 4) IS1 SO.

S 60
17 20

4 60
H 40
11 40
T IS 4 A ll)

11Yh gam e
7 80
4 60
J Durango O y a fi
2 1 00
4 60
3 70
i M ike) Mendi
3 80
i MencMa* Bob
Q 17 3) 77 80. P 13 2) 71 40; T (3 7 4)767 00
12th gam e
6 80
J 80
n Af a n 1,i i cr J g v
70 70
V 60
4 40
4 R ic a rd o Hub
4
40
2 / u g a ra F or ui i «r
Q (4 8) 53 40. P l i t ) 133 50. T &lt;• 4 7)
511 60. Q D (7 J 6. 1 A ll) I I I tO. Q D 17 3 A
4 A ll) 41 40
1llh g,
J 70
5 00
6 Napa
17 00
) Wti .irpa
6 40
5 80
4 40
/o g a m
U U t l tt 70. P It 1 ) t t to. 1 I t 3 1) 704 to
U th gam e
( Zugtt/rt E n riq u e
7 60
4 70
i P a rd o Uob
3 80
r 7 , 5 , J l iK u f &lt;«l
O 11 J) 26 46
P (1 1) 71/ 70. T I I
5w» CO S (I J 4 A ll) 6/1 60 DO 16 1) 231 00
A
1 OfS. M
168 111

ISO
3 00
4 00
3 6)

All T im e s E S T
EA ST f R N C O N F E R E N C E
Atlantic D ivision
W
1 P ci
GB
N r vs Yg'fik
18 t o
64 J
Ness Jersey
2
S
71
16 17
Or lando
547
11 11
3
Boston
12 J7 414
6 1.
P h ilad elp h ia
8 17 370
01
M iam i
9
8 10 308
R 70
206 t o
W ashinglon
Centr.it D ivision
C hit ago
;
71
750
C leveland
17 i?
S86
4‘ .
Detroit
14 17 530
6
Charlotte
14 13 519
6’ ;
Indiana
464
13 15
8
Atlanta
1? 15 444
8' .
M ilw au kee
9
\\ 15 473
W E S T E R N C O N F E R E N CE
M idw est D ivision
W
L P ci
GB
Utah
18
8 697
Houston
14 11
560
Vi
San Antonio
14 17 530
4
Denver
7 19 70’ tt
M innesota
5 19 700 17
D a lla s
7 77 083 15
P a c ific D ivision
Pfiaemn
4 040
71
Seattle
18
0 697
3r /
4
Portlan d
17
8 680
LA La k e rs
IS It
6'
577
L A C lip p ers
6 1.
16 17 571
Golden Stale
7' i
15 13 516
Sacram ento
10 16 305 U ' j
F r id a y s G a m e s
No g a m e s scheduled
S a tu rd a y 's G am es
L A C lip p e r s ’ 8 New Y o rk 9? OT
M ia m i at W ashington. In )
Detroit at O rlando. In )
News je r s e y at Chartotte in )
L A L a K e r s a t C le v e la n d in)
M ilw au kee at A tlanta (n)
D a lla s a» M innesota (n»
lnd&lt; anaal C hicaq o &lt;n»
U tah at P o rtlan d in )
D enver at s e attle in*
Houston at Golden State in*
P h ila d e lp h ia at Sacra m e n to m l
Su nd ay's G a m e s
L A C lip p e rs at Boston 7 p m
Phoenix at San Antonio 8 p m
L A L a k e r s a t M ilw au kee 8 3 0 p m
Houston at P o rtlan d , 10 p rn
M onday's G a m e s
No g a m e s scheduled
T u e sd ay 's G a m e s
C le v e la n d at New Y o rk 7 3 0 p m
New Je rse y at O rlando. M O p m
Detroit at M ia m i, 7 30 p m
Boston at C harlo tte 7 30 p m
W ashington at A tlanta 7 30 p m
L A C lip p e rs at In diana 7 3 0 p m
L A L a k e r s at C hicag o 8 p m
M innesota at M ilw au kee 8 30 p m
P o rtlan d at D a lla s 8 ) 0 p m
P h o e n n at Houston 8 30 p m
San Antonio at U tah 9 p m
Golden State at SeatMe. 10 p m
D en ver at SA cram ento 10 30 p m

CO LLEG E BASKETBALL
S»tur&lt;r»y'i C o ll.B * B » tk * tb * ll Sc o re .
EA ST
Boston College s ,. H oly C ro s s 63
Bridgeport ) IS. V irg in ia Union IW
Brow n 70, A rm y SS
Colgate 84. V erm ont 80
H a rv a rd 79. Boston U 55
M a ss L o w e ll 76. N T T e c h 43
M assa ch u se tts 7S, N ew H a m p sh ire 61
N ia g a ra 94. R id e r 8?
P enn 78. Leh ig h 68
W heeling Je s u it 85. G e n e v a 78
SO UTH
A la H u n tsv ille « . M on tevallo 47
Buffalo 72. Cent. F lo rid a 61
C o a sta l C a ro lin a 90, S C a ro lin a St 75
F lo rid a 89, F lo rid a St. 84
G e o rg ia St 9t, A la b a m a St 74
G eo rg ia T e ch 78. V M I 5}
M ichig an S1 80, £ Ten nessee St 69
M u rra y St 124 P I .e v llle 71
N C C harlo tte 88. A p p a lach ia n St 80
ShippensburgtO . T a m p a 70
V irg in ia 92, W lnthrop 68
V irg in ia T e c h 76. E a s t C a ro lin a 67, O T
M ID W E S T
D e P a u w 5 4 . H anover 51
In d ian a Southeast 101, B e r e a 90
K a la m a io o M , Purdu e C a lo m e l a;
M ich ig a n 88. E M ich ig a n 58
M innesota 74. A la B irm in g h a m 59
M ontana 65, N E Illin ois 59
S. Illin o is 15. C re ig h to n 64
SW B aptist 92, D ru ry 78
South D akota 68, M ornlng sld e 59
Southern C al 77. N otre D a m e 74
Spring A rb or 80, St F r a n c is . Ind 75
W M ic h ig a n !), Saginaw V a l St 50
W ich ita St 73. In d ian a St 69
W Is M ilw au ke e 75. F a lr lle ld 59
W ittenberg 45. C a se W estern 57
SO U TH W EST
O klaho m a 109. L a m a r 92
FA R W EST
A rlio n a 87. Rhode Islan d 79
Illin o is St 6A. Sf M a ry 's, C al 44
Oregon S I. 97. U C San O iego39
P c p p e rd m e 69, D r e .e l 56
R e g is 93, C on co rdia. Ill 80
F L O R I D A 89, F L O R I D A S T . 86
F L O R I D A U 1)
Stew art 5 7 3 4 16. B row n 5 8 3 4 14. D e C lerq
4 7 0 0 8. K ulsm g 6 8 0 0 16. Poole 12 24 1 2 25.
C arlto n 2 4 0 0 4. G rim s le y 1 2 2 2 4. C ro ss 0 0
0 0 0. Thom pson 0 0 0 0 0. H ill 0 0 0 0 0.
A n d e rso n 0 0 0 0 0 T o ta ls 35 609 1489
F L O R I D A S T . (8 4)
Su ra 4 14 2 4 10. C a s s e ll 11 17 4 4 30. Dobard
4 7 2 4 10, E d w a r d s 8 IS 7 3 19. W ells 1 7 2 2 4
C a rro ll 4 4 2 2 12. H ands 0 1 1 2 1 . Robinson 0 0
0 0 0 T o ta ls 32 62 15 21 86
H a lltlm e — F lo r id a 45. F lo rid a SI 37
3 Point g o a ls —F lo r id a 10 16 (K u ls m a 4 5.
S le w a rl 3 5. B row n 3 6). F lo rid a St 7 16
(C a s se ll 4 S, C a rro ll 3 3. Sura 0 6. E d w a rd s
1 I. H ands 0 M Fo uled out — Su ra Rebounds
— F lo rid a 36 (Poole 13). F lo r id a St 26
(C a s se ll 7) A s s is ts — F lo r id a 17 (G rim s le y
4). F lo rid a St 9 (C a sse ll 7) Total touls F lo rid a t l. F lo r id a St 16 A — 9 099
B U F F A L O 77. C E N T . F L O R I D A 48
B U F F A L O (1 8 )
C h a m b e rs 0 2 2 2 2. Johnson 8 12 7 7 23
R o e ls 5 9 0 0 10. C ro s s 0 2 0 0 0 B r o w n s MOO
14. T ro w e rs 0 1 0 0 0. Con 5 6 2 2 12. R osser 0 0
0 0 0. W ilson 4 8 1 2 9. G e n aw a y 12 0 0 2
T o ta ls 79 53 12 13 77
C E N T F L O R I D A 14 4)
P h illip s 0 6 7 2 2. H ard ing 0 2 0 0 0, W alker
3 7 3 6 9, D a v is 10 16 4 6 25. S a ilo n 2 4 5 7 9
C a rte r 1 2 2 4 5, Fo ste r 4 7 6 7 14, H arper 0 7
0 0 0. V a nD eusen 1 2 2 2 4 To tals 21 48 24 34
68

H a ltlim e — B u ffalo 31. Cent F lo rid a 28
3 Point go als — Buffalo 2 8 (C h a m b e rs 0 I
C ro ss 0 I, Brow n 2 5. T ro w e rs 0 1). Cent
F lo rid a 2 11 I P h illip s 0 6 D a v is 13 C arte r

I 7 Fo ste r 0 II
Fo uled out
None Re
bounds
B u ffalo IB iC ov 41 Cent F lo rid a 37
(W alker 91 A ssists
B u lla lo 9 (C h a m b e rs
31, Cent F lo rid a 13 iD a v is 61 Total touls
B u lla lo 24 Cent F lo rid a 13 A
526
S a tu rd a y ’s W om en’s B a sk e tb a ll Scores
EAST
Boston Colt 63, SI John s 57
Connecticut 78 S y ra c u s e 50
Georgetow n 88 V 11Ionova fi 1
tow s 97 O ucknelt 37
M a n h a t ta n !? Rhode Is la n d 61
M assa ch u se tts 59, Cent Con necticu t St 45
M a ss Lo w ell 91. A m e ric a n InM 71
M organ SI 75, Long Islan d U 60
P enn St 107 N e b rask a 66
P ittsb u rg h fit. P ro v id e n ce 67
R u ’ g e rs 80 W V irg in ia 68
SI Joseph s 57, D e la w a re 38
V a le 66 H a fllo rd 5 «
SO U T H
A p p a la ch ia n SI 94 Tenn M artln 6 7
J a m e s M a d is o n 84 St P e te r ’s l l
F lo rid a 8t, A la b a m a 75
M l M e rcy Iow a 101 Q u inn ,p iac 87
N C W ilm ington 7B. D avidso n 70
S C a ro lin a 6 6 L o u isia n a Sf 56
M ID W E S T
B a ld w in W a lla c e 79 B lu llto n a ?
Cent M lssour I 89, C e n tra l Colleqe 57
C reighton 75, K a n s a s 6 0
M ortungside 86 S D akota 70
N Illin o is 85. U t a h 69
Ohio S ta le 91. V irg in ia 84
W ittenberg 77. C a s e W estern R e se rv e 43
W ooster 74, Kenyon 38
SO U TH W EST
A rk a n s a s 73 M ississip p i 7?
TO U RN A M EN T
A C C Big Ten C hallenge
F ir s t Round
M a ry la n d 73. P u r d u e 69
B a sk e tb a ll B e ach B last
F ir s t Round
K a n c a s S t 69 New H a m p s h ir e 60
Moss’s Reed F la s h C la ss ic
F ir s t Round
To w so nSf 48 A m e ric a n 47
O uquesne86 St F r a n c is P a 76
La d y B la ie r In vitation al
F ir s t Round
A la B irm in g h a m 86 A la b a m a S late 68
La d y E a g le C la ss ic
C ham pionship
Southern M iss 75, Tn C hattanooga 70
T h ird P la c e
G ra m b lln g Si 89, M u rra y St 80
R ic e C la stic
F ir s t Round
R ic e 71, C olu m b ia 6t
A rm y 67 T e v a s P a n A m e ric a n 57
Sun And Fu n
F t r s l Round
Colorado 64 Tem p le 35

NHL STAN DIN GS
All T im e i E S T
W A LESCO N FER EN CE
P a trick D ivision
W L T Pts O F G A
76 9 4 kA 177 134
P iltib u fg ti
71 16 4 46 166 143
W aih lng lon
19 IA 4 47 164 158
N Y R a n g * )*
10 17 1 37 119 176
Ne«* J er%ey
16 18 4 M 151 147
N Y Is lu n d e n
13 10 5 31 139 148
PhllacTelptiio
A d am s D ivision
77 17 6 50 178 148
Quebec
77 14 4 40 163 (35
M onlrpol
71
14 7 44 1ST 135
Boitor.
10 IS 6 38 185 134
B u lla lo
11 73 3 25 115 168
Hflf llo rd
011.1*8
3 31 3
9 87 186
CA M PBELL CO N FER EN CE
N o r m D ivision
W L T P it O F GA
77 &gt;4 5 49 137 109
C hicag o
71 17 3 45 170 147
Detroit
19 13 5 43 179 177
M innesota
IS 16 6 36 119 IIS
Toronto
13 19 5 31 178 144
St Lo uis
14 7) 2 30 I l f U i
T a m p a B ay
Sm yth e D ivisio n
74 10 4 57 1S3 116
C a lg a ry
73 10 3 49 169 109
V ancou ver
70 14 4 44 M l ISO
Lo s A n geles
15 19 3 33 131 147
W innipeg
13 71 S 31 HO 156
Edm onton
6 31 1 13 116 194
San Jose
F r id a y ’s G a m e
W ashington 9, New J e rs e y 7
Sa tu rd a y's G a m e s
C h icag o 2, W ashington 2. tie
V a n co u v e r at San Jose
H a rtlo r d a t Boston, (n)
Detroit at Q uebec, In )
M innesota at New Y o rk Islan d e rs. In i
New Y o rk R a n g e rs at P ittsb u rg h . In)
W innipeg at New J e r s e y . In)
P h ila d e lp h ia at C a lg a r y , (n l
B u lla lo at O ttaw a, (n)
St L o u is at Toronto, (n)
T a m p a B a y at Edm onton, (n)
M ontreal at Lo s A n geles, (n)
Su nd ay's G a m e s
M innesota at H a rtlo rd , 1 lOp m
St Lo u is at B u lla lo . 7 10 p m
P h ila d e lp h ia at Edm onton. 8 lOp m
W innipeg at C hicag o, 8 40 p m
T a m p a B ay at V a n co u v e r. 10:10 p m .
M onday's G a m e s
N ew J e r s e y at New Y o rk R a n g e rs. 7:40
p m
Toronto at D etroit. 7 40p m
San Jove vs, M o n treal at S a cram en to ,
C a lif . 10. lOp m

NHL L E A D E R S

•*, n r c i v t o t a l p o i n t s b o s t &lt;1 o n 75 p o i n t s t o r .1
first p la c r vein through one pomt tnr a 7Mh
p la t v votn and pri-vim is ran kin g
Record P is P v*
1 A la b a m a 1671
1 3 0 0 t 550 7
7 F lo rid a St
I I 1 0 1.470 1
1 M ia m i
11 1 0 1,410 t
i Nalri" Datm&gt;
10 t 1 1 J75 S
S M ichigan
1 766 7
’ 03
0 Syracuse*
10 7 0 t 70’ 6
" Te*»a% AA M
1? 1 0 I 16/ 4
H G ihu rf' a
to 2 0 t, 159 8
9 Man lord
10 10 1 050 11
10 F lo n d a
940
9)1 14
U SA T O D A Y CN N T o p IS
Th e i ” ? U S A
T O D A Y C N N lo o tb a i
ro a ch e s national c hamptcm ship poll a ith
first p la c e voles in p a re n th e se s
recor d \
through Ja n 1 total po int* b ased on 75 points
tof a first place* vote through one point to» .1
7Sih p lace vote and p re v io u s ran kin g
Record P1S
Pv%
1 A la b a m a 160!
1 )0 0 1.500
7
7 F lo n d a Stale
1 1 1 0 1 477
4
3 M iam i
1 1 1 0 1.350
1
4 N oire D am p
5
10 1 1 1 176
5 M ichig an
r
9 0 1 1 2J)
6 Te * a s A&amp;M
17 1 0 1 157
1
r S y ra c u se
9
10 7 0 1 IJB
8 G eo rg ia
10 7 0 f 179
0
9 Stanford
10 3 0 VA6 13
'0 W ashington
’ J 0 055 11
11 Flo rid a
044 15
940
17 1 en ness in *
9 )0
010 17
i l Colorado
6
’ 7 t 00)
M N e b raska
9 ]0
749 10
15 Nor fti C a ro lin a State
’ J 1 57? 17
16 M ississip p i
9 10
5J7 19
17 W ashington Stale
9 1o
501 10
&lt;0 Ohio Slate
0 3 1 4/0 14
19 H a w a ii
444 74
1170
70 Nor ih C a ro lin a
165 70
0 J0
71 Boston College
0 J 1 JI5 16
77 F resno Stab*
719
9 J0
73 K a n sa s
0 40
701
74 M ississip p i Stab
7 40
147
75 Penn State
119 71
7 50
O th ers re ce iv in g votes W ake Fo re st 9»
A ri/o na Si how ling G re e n 47 h a y lor 30
h» iqhdm Young 2* Illin o is I I Southern C a ' •
Southern M ississip p i V V irg in ia 4 RulQerN ational th a m p ro n *
Annual w inn ers of the A sso cid le d P re ss
1 oileqe •00 tball poll s top ran kin q
1910
.Minnesota
19)7
Rl.fi burgh
19J8
T e ■as C h ristia n
1919
Te ■a* A AM:
1940
M innesota
1941
M innesofa
1947
Oh«o Sf
t94j
N otre D a m e
I94J
A rm y
A rm y
1945
1946
Notrp D am e
1947
N oire D am e
1940
Mtc hrgan
1949
N oire D am e
1950
Ok tohom a
1951
T en nessee
1957
M ich ig a n St
1953
M ary land
1954
O hio Si
1955
Ok 1jh o m a
1956
O s tohoma
(957
Auburn
T950
Lo u isia n a St
T959
Sy ra c u se
I960
M innesota
A la b a m a
196)
190?
Southern Ca
T
e ■a y
196]
1964
A lab am a
1905
A la bam a
I960
N otre D am e
1967
Southern Cal
I960 - Ohio Si
1909 — T e if li
1970
N e b raska
1971 - N e b raska
197?
Southern Ca»
N otre D am e
1973
1974 - Ok tohoma
1975
O klahom a
1976
P ittsburgh
1977
N otre D am e
1970
A la b a m a
1979 — A la b a m a
1900
G eorgia
1981
Clem son
1982 - Penn St
1901 — M iam i
1904
B rig h a m Young
1905
O klahom a
1986
Penn St
1907 - M iam i
1900
Noire- Dam e
1909 - M iam i
1990
Colorado
199) - M iam i
199?
A la b a m a
Bowl G am e R esu lts
A ll T im e s E S T
F r id a y Dec 18
L a s V egas Bowl
Howling G re e n 35 N evada J4
F r id a y . Dec ?4
Blue G ra y C la ssic
At M ontgom ery. Ala
G ra y V B lu e 17
Aloha Bowl
A1 Honolulu
K a n s a s 73 B rig h a m Young 20
Tu esday, Dec 2D
Copper Bowl
At Tucson, A m
W ashington State 31 Utah 28
Freed o m Bowl
At Anaheim . C alif
F resnq S la te 24 Southern C a l 7

NEW YORK |AP) - NHL scoring leaders
through D e ce m b e r 31:
P la y e r , Te a m
L e m le u *. P it
L a F o n la in e , Bui
O a te s. Bos
Sundln. Que
Sakie. Que
R e c ch l, P hi
Y r e rm a n , D el
Turgeon, N Y I
K u r r i. L A
Stevens P il
R o b itaiile . LA
G ilm o u r. Tor
M ogllny B u i
B u re . Van
R oberts. C a l
Roenick C hi
M e ssie r, N Y R
M utler, Mon
T o cch e l, P it
Ju n e au . Bos
Selanne W.n
B ra d le y . TO
D u chesne, Que
Ja n n e y , S IL

GP

G
A
38 3 7
37 74
37 77
40 75
40 78
36 73
41 79
77 71
38 17
30 30
38 30
37 13
31 33
36 37
38 74
40 70
39 18
39 13
36 74
37 13
37 78
39 78
40 17
37 8

P T S P IM
64 101 28
43 67 41
41 63 16
36 61 30
37 60 22
37 60 38
79 58 19
37 58 16
41 SS 16
21 57 72
75 55 30
47 55 42
&gt;1 54 74
71 53 78
79 53 107
33 S3 41
35 53 38
40 53 40
78 57 97
38 SI 73
7? 50 33
71 49 48
37 49 76
7
4) 49

C O L L E Q E F O O T B A LL
A ssociated P re ss Top 10
The Top jo t e a m * of the fin a l 199?
Assoc Mb il P re s s colleqe football poll with
fir s t phut* votes m p a re n th e s e s
season

W ednesday, Dec 20
Holiday Bowl
At San Diego
H a w a ii 27 Illin o is 17
T h u rsd a y, D ec. 31
Independence Bowl
At Sh revep ort, La
W ake f o r e s t 3’ Oregon 31
John H ancock Bowl
At E l P aso . T e * a s
Bay lor 20. A n ;o n a IS
G ator Bowl
At Ja ck so n v ille
F lo rid a 27 North C aro lin a State 10
Lib e rty Bowl
At M em phis. Tenn
M ississip p i 13 Air F o r c e 0
F rid a y , Jan 1
H all of F a m e Bowl
At Tam pa
Te nnessee 34 Boston C ollege 23
Cotton Bowl
At D a lla s
Notre D a m e 28 Tea a s Afl,M J
C itru s Bowl
At O rlando
G eo rg ia 2t Ohio State 14
B lockbuster Bowl
At Fo rt La u d e rd ale
Stanford 24 Penn State 3
F ie s ta Bowl
At Tem pe, A m

Syr.it i|*•'

Second Q u arter

C o lo ra d o ??
Rose Bowl
M P asad ena C ah l

No scoring
Third Q uarter
SD
SD

M&lt;&lt; h iq .in tn W a s h in g t o n j l

F G C a rn e y 34 11 27
Fo u rth Q uarter
S D - H en d rick son 5 run IC .li ncy

O range Bowl
At M iam i
F lo rid a Slate 27. N ebraska 14
Sugar Bowl

S a tu rd a y . Jan 3
P each Bowl
At A tlanta
N orth C aro lin a . h ) i vs M ississip p i Stale
»7 4) &lt;nt
Saturday Jan t
Japan flnwi
Tokyo
1ESP N

Saturday Jan tc
Senior Bowl
Mo hi If Ala
2 p m iF S P N t
Muto Bowl
At Honolulu
ip m ' N IP •

1p

Sunday Jan 74
F a s t West Shi me Classic
At Stan lo rd C ain
ESPN

mi

kick i,

10 03
A 50,770

At New Or leans
A la b a m a j l , M ia m i 13

10 p m

Butt% 54run (C a rn e y k ic k ). 9 07

KC
XU
17
18
i) nr si downs
19
61
IS
P9J
G' i »%h #*•! ward*
190
T50
P a t s mg
5
70
R etu rn Y a rd s
16 34 7 14 ? j 0
Com p AM Int
7 43
5 49
Sacked Y a r d s Lost
0 45
6 44
Punts
7 1
7 1
Fu m b te s Lost
7 07
4 44
P e n a ltie s Y a rd s
30 14
79 16
T »me of P ossession
IN D IV ID U A L S T A T IS T IC S
R U S H IN G
K a n s a s C ity , W illia m s t2 15
M rN a ir 3 18 K n e g 2 * W ord ? 4 San Diego
B u lls 15 119 B icm em y 13 38 H arm o n 4 ?7
H end rickson t 5 B e rn stln e 1 3, H um phries
t0
P A S S IN G
K a n s a s C it y . K rie q 16 36 2 2)3
San D'eqo H u m p hries 14 73 0 199
R E C E IV IN G
K a n s a s C ity , (Hrden 4 78
M c N a ir 4 35 D a v is 3 30 H a rq a n 2 46
M Sm ith I 28 W illia m s I 11. C a sh t 5 San
Diego H arm on 4 ? l W alker 3 60 M iller 2 58
B u tt s 2 17 N L e w is t 39 B r e n n a n 1 t
H ipniem y • i m inus 41
M IS S E D F I E L D G O A L
San D«**qo
C a rn e y 52

lo p IS I a red
ttir* A s h k i .d r d
P *ess t *nie-ge i w |t:M''i pph t-lieci ir bowl
gam es
I M iam i ( I t I A) 'ns' * N&lt; . *’• ai .e ’ 1
14 D m Suqa’ B o w 1 Jan 1
? A la b a m a
1 u ; 1 *,*» No
M ia m i ti 1
ut Suga* h o w ' J a n
t
F lo r id a State ( I t t 01 beat No
NetPrisk a J7 U h O t iie q r R q a i Jan *
4 1 1&gt;• a s A,\M 1 1.
»o\t to Nn 1 Nob*How

th e top ?5 tea fins m

O .r i v c / j

i &gt;n 1 iit fo n B o w i J ,m

5 Notre D a m e

'

)0 1 &gt;' treat No

A A M 28 3 in Cotton Mew * Ja n l
fi Sy ra c u se t to 20* I mmi N o
76 22 m * testa how J-it
M

1m

g ,in

*

c '

*0 Co "'-tde

b e ,if N 11 v »*. • ■» i .p

IB 11 in Muse But,** J f
8 Georg*.* M0 2 0 i . »* No
21 14 in C If us Bowl jiiit 1
V W astu rig to M iv I

4

' •

r la s t tn N u

-

‘»ta'»

V th -q a *

is J 1 in Wove Bow
10 Color a ltd -■* i
ue.t 1fi No *
.*• . ■
.*=
■
76 72 ui t testa Bow
'an
II N eb raska v ■ m\f fp Nn S Flo rid a
State 7* ' 1 Or i-n- Hnw • • 1
17 Nor Hi '■,»f'
ft
N
4 F lo rid a
u t‘ * t* w
IJ Stanford
e 1 1 t • a ’ tin ; IS ’
74 I m B iocM jusb * lb ,%1 Ja n
:
F lo rid a 1 *4 01 t . *♦ No
. Nm”
L a r it |iM*» ‘iSd*'i ," fiatpr t*o»%
15 Ohm State ► *
«■’ b Nu « t*« &lt;■i «
2 i U in C itru s H i m * J.n
16 ttustOM Co 'r'Qr
B ,1 • I IfHt tp Nn ' '
Tenru-v.ee j R 2 J n H a I pf f am e Bnwl Ja n I
it Tennessee * j q i tj**at No t6 Boston
C ollege
7J «n H al o* I am i Bpwl Jan )
18 W astunglpn
9 i
!»*.*! Utafi Jl 78
m Coppe» Bow i t)r
2?
IV N orth C a r o lin a
8 3 0' vs No 2l
ASiVScSS'ppi State n Pern Ci Bow « Jan ;
20 M s s t s s p p
Y J (3 t v , »* A t f o r , .
I 0 "
l itwr 1y Bow &gt; Dm J ’
Penn St a h
' ' o i lust fti Nti M Stan frucl

**•

7 4 I -n B lo t * tiuS-Vt B . i .v |

*•&lt;

Jin

1

22 A t i / o n a ' 6 S i
i p s l la - B a y m e 20 i s i n
J (»hn H a *tc Oi 4' B O'w 1 tt •-1 11
23 Sou'h‘if*rci I ,11 ■
f- -i i lint *‘o f * esnu St.»t«74 7 tn f te«-ifore Howl Dec 2 ’
74 M lS‘- SSipp Mate ' 4 "
Nn IVNticfh
C a c o lm a 'b P i ai fi BiiWi Jan ;
JS B rig lu im Young H S Di Ue.t if, ►
.
7 1 2C *' Aloha howl
7*

N FL P L A Y O F F S
F ir s t Round
Sa tu rd a y. Ja n 2
W ashington 74 M innesota 7
San Diego 17, K a n s a s C ity 0
S u n d a y ,J a n 3
Houston at Buffalo 12 30 p m
P h ila d e lp h ia at New O rle a n s 4 p m
D iv isio n al P layoffs
S a tu rd a y. Jan *
B u ffa lo M oulton w inn er at P ittsb u rg h ,
*2 30 p rn
W a s h in g to n a t S a n F r a n c is c o 4 p m
Sund ay, Jan. 10
N e w O r le a n s P h ila d e lp h ia w in n e r at
D a lla s , 17 30p m
San Diego at M iam i. 4 p m

In ju ry Report
N EW Y O R K
Ttie updated N ation*
Football League in ju ry report tor tod*, 5
w ild ca rd playoff g a m e s as provided by Ihr
league
H O U STO N AT B U F F A L O
- O ile rs D f
J e l l A im (k n e e ) is d o u b tfu l. W R Fa*
Colem an |kni»e) is questionable W R WFbsfe*
Slaughter iS n e e i G Doug Daw son (kn ee, .^r,probable B ills Q B Jim K e lly Ikn ee) is Out
W R At E d w a rd s Ith lg h ), W R Don Beebr
(head) L B C o rn e liu s Bennett (h a m s trin g )
M att D a rb y (th ig h )
C B K irb y Jack so**
lh a m strtn q ) WR Steve T asker (k n e e l *»»
questionable
P H I L A D E L P H I A AT N E W O R L E A N S
E a g le s G E r ic F lo y d (shoulder a n k le i T
Ron H eller la rc h knee)
L B Seth Joyner
i shoulder), G M ike Sc had (g ro in) T D a ry e
Sm ith (kn e e sh o u ld e r) , C B S O i l ! Smift
i shoulder i. L B W illia m Th om as (should**a re q ue sl &lt;o na b le S R i c fi M la n I a r rn I D ^
M ike P itts (h ip 1 K Roger R u ie k (kn e e ). ()(
C ly d e Sim m o ns iq ro ln eye) a re probat »•
Saints Derek K e n n a rd Hoot) it doubt 11. '
K eith Taylor Iham strtryg) l B P at Sw
r&gt;&lt;hand i S Gene A tkin s (a n k le ) L B Ja rre*
W ilb a m s (q uadricep ) a re p ro tia b ir

TRA N SA CTIO N S

1)1 TROM

Pro Bowl
Sunday, Fe b 7
At Honolulu
W A S H IN G T O N 24, M IN N E S O T A 7
W ashington
3 14
7
0 - 24
M innesota
7 0
0
0 — 7
F irs t Q u arter
M inn - Allen 1 run [R e v e l/ Sick j, 4 SS
W ash F G Lo h rm llrr 44 14 07
Second Q u arter
W a sh
0 y n o r 3 r u n I L o h m ( H e r k I c k I , S 37
W a s h - - M 11t h e 11 8 r u n
[ L o h r n * ll I e r k . i c k l
13 04
Third Q u arter
W ash
C l a r k 2 1 p a s s f r o m R y p le n
t Lo h m llle r k ic k ). 14 4J
Fo u rth Q u arter
No scoring
A 57.353
W ash
Minn
24
9
F ir s t downs
47 196
17 73
R u sh e s yards
P assin g
167
74
34
Retu rn Y a rd s
120
Com p A lt Int
16 25 1
6 70 2
Sacked Y a rd s Lost
1 to
4 38
7 43
3 37
Pun ts
00
I 0
F u m b le s Lo sl
P e n a ltie s Y a rd s
2 15
7 53
4? 43
T im e o l Possessio n
17 17
IN O IV ID D A I S T A T IS T IC S
R U S H IN G — W ashington. M itchell 16 109
B y n e r 20 67 R G reen S 17 Monk 3 7, Ryplen
3 1 FWlnnesota
A lle n 10 48 C r a ig 5 23,
Johnson I 7. S a lisb u ry I 0
P A S S IN G
W ashing loth R yp len 16 24 I
172, B y n e r 0 1 0 0
M in n e so ta
S a lisb u ry
6 20 2 113
R E C E IV IN G
W ashington. C la rk 6 91.
Monk 3 35. M itch e ll 3 16, B y n e r 2 6 Middleton
I 19, Sa n d e rs 1 5 M innesota, C C a rte r 3 77.
A lle n 2 11 A C a rte r 1 25
M I S S E D F I E L D G O A L S - W ashington
Lo h m llle r 58, 27
SAN O lE G O 17. K A N S A S C I T Y 0
K a n s a s City
0
0
0 0 — 0
San Diego
0 0 10
7-17
F ir s t Q uarter
No scorm q

Spur Is T ran sacfio n s
B A SEB A LL
A m e rican League

TIOFRS

A-tfi Tony Ph-nips

A g re e d hi t* * *

in)i*‘tde» on .1 three f .

-

«o n t r a t t
National League
C IN C IN N A T I R I D S
N am e d D « * .
Johnson mam * league consultant and Bobl .
./ale nl me ad van ce scout and a d viser 'it*
play er per sonnet
BASK F T B A LL
Naticmal B a sk e tb a ll Association
N IIA
f rf'1-d C r 1;«9 If r&gt;.*f 1*■-f fir vk * ■■
-•
K rile s* forw ard 1 10 000 and Oah* D d .
Ii'dtan.i Pa« e rs fo rw ard 1 7 500 tor tla q ra 1 '
touts r urnrmted in a ga m e Dec JO
A TLA N TA HAW KS
W a v e d Mo*
»Viiey guard Signed Ak*« Stivr ms turw*«rij
C L E V E L A N D C A V A L IE R S
P la t e d J
»V. &lt;ams t e n ir f farw rird on the injured s'
A; t(v.»*ed J ■*, G u idm q pf
r i*nff*r fflr A ,e d
Ir rim t»»»* injured list
FO O T B A L L
National Football League
H O U STO N O IL E R S A ctivated Doug
Sm ith d efensive ta c k le from Injured n
s e rv e R e le a se d Jew* C am p b e ll, running b *• ►
IrniTi five p ra ctic e squad
H O CKEY
N alional Hockey le a g u e
H A R TFO R D W H A LERS
R e ta ile d J-r*
Day (.enter and M a rio G oSW lin goal fen tier
Irorn Spr.ngfie tl of the A m e fita n Hockey
League
T O R O N T O 7 A A P LL L E A F S
Sent t . 1 .
i * o f w rn 1 g o a 1t e n d r » . a n d G u y L a r o * e f o r w .« * d
*1 St Jo tin %ol the Amt*»«. an Hoc key LeagM#"

TV/RADIO

Conference C ham pion ship s
Sunday. Jan, 17
Super Bowl
Sunday, Jan 31
At P asa d e n a . C alif

j

7 pm
Series

Televisio n
A U T O R A C IN G
TNN Sb£k 50 Sprint C ar Wuriq

C O LLEG E BA SKETBA LL
17 30 p m
SU N W om en T e * a s Teih
W ashington
pm
W C P k 6 Ind-ana vs K enf,,i * P
IL )
1U )U p m
SU N Houston at UC LA
'a m
SU N Sr John s .it Boston Collegr
N BA
8pm
TNT P h o e t n Suns at San Antoniu
Sp urs 1 1 )
B O X IN G
V p ro
F Sf*N L iq-htwerqhl O sca r de nn
H oya vs F#ar is Ale z a n d e r, | L |
FO O T B A L L
Noon
W E SH 2 NF L L iv e
17 30 p m
W F SH J N F L P lay o ffs
Houston O d er s a l B u lla lo B ills 1 L 1
3 30pm
W C P X 6 N l L Today
4 pm
W CPX 6 N IL
P la y o ils
P h ila d e lp h ia E a g le s at New O rle a n s Sain ts
&lt;L i
7 p m
SUN A re n a Leagu e Delft/d
(J t »v v s Of lando P re d a to rs
Jam
SU N Independence Bowl Oregon
vs W ake Fo rest
GO LF
4pm
USA P ro Stake* Cham pionship
H O CKEY
J a re
SUN C ollege W estern Michigan
«.t A la sk a Anchorage
SO CCER
fe a m
SU N N C A A D ivision 1 Tourne
in e e l se m ifin a l D avidson v* San D&gt;ego
T A B L E T F N N IS
il JO p rn
SU N U S N ational C h a m p 1
unship*
T E N N IS
J p m
ESPN
O range Bowl Junior
C la ssic
V O LLE YBA LL
7 JO p rn
SC M id Continent C h am p 'in
ship W estern Illin o is ill N orthern Illin ois
Radio
E OOT B A L L
I? 15 p m
W G T O A M (540)
N IL
P lay o ils Houston Oder s a t B u lla lo H ills
J 45 p m
W G T O A M (5401
Nf I
P la y o f f s
P h il a d e l p h i a E a g le s a t New 0»
leans Sain ts
H O CKEY
’ 45pm
W G T O A M 540t N HL Tam p..
Ha» Lightning at V ancouver C an u ck s

G ram bling uses same ‘ready sheet’ in second rout of F A M U
B y C H A tO

W A LK E R

Assoualocl P ie s 5 Writer
I A l.l.A llA S S K Ii — U f.im b lin n Sluto U niversity
(■(taeli Ktidle Kutiiiisun s 5 0 ye a rs nl experience
have iaur&gt;hi him not lo m ess vvilli a ^ood tiriiifj.
T h e college luothall eoaeli vvilli (he most career
w in s used i he sam e (jam c plan iu Sa tu rd ay 's
■15-15 lle rlla r’e Howl win over Florida A&amp;M I tint
he used w hen (lie T ljje rs heal (tie H au lers 27 IO
hack on Nov. 11
"O ld co a ch e s don't change m u e h .” Uoldnsou
said *'l told tile couches (hat our 'ready sheet'
w as (lie sam e a s Iasi lim e "
F u llb a ck E rie CJaut lu sh ed 20 lim e s lor 12H

yard s to lead the l itter ground game. Il w as Ills
second lIM Jyaid plus per forma nee ol the season
against Florida A&amp;M I lie l&gt;-2. 255-pound G au l
scored curly on a 55 yard run, p u llin g G ram lrlin g
ahead to stay on lire gam e’s liliii pla\ from
scrim m age
"H e (G aul) made som e great plays lo day." said
H au ler coach Ken Hilcy "H e w as Jusi howling
over some ol our people."
T h e T ig e rs (10 21 had 277 yard s rushing,
hacked by (|u arlcrback Alex Perkins' 224-yard
passing day. Perkin s, a senior, went 14 ol 27
without throw ing an interception.
Florida A AM |7-5| goi held goals ol -12. -14 and

22 yard s by T im C a m ro n to keep it close early in
the third epiarier. T h e H au lers I hen closed the
gap lo two points w ith 9 .4 8 left in the period,
w hen G ram h llu g 's Norm an Hradtdrd fumbled a
kickoff at Ills own 18 and Florida Aft M's Arthur
Hightower returned it for a touchdown T h a i leh
G rum b lin g ahead just 17-15 alter a two-poiui
conversion failed,
Hut that's as close a s the H au lers would &lt;om&lt;
G ram h llu g 's P e rk in s passed to Hon Iiy so n lor
an 18-vard score, then to Dexter Hun her lot a
28-yard strike to m ake It 31-15 .itn-r three
quarters. Hrudlord scored on a 13-yard run and
G ant had a one-yard plunge to com plete the Tiger
scoring

H auler quarterback To ny k u c k e r went 11 lor
27 and had I wo tntereepied alter being a surprist
st.u lei in place ol Junior T ra cy Weldon
The t iger went into the game as the numberone team in the Sheridan Hl.u k College rankings,
while Florida A AM w as ranked tilth
Kobitison has com pleted Ids 5 0 lh y ea r as
G ia m b lm g s head couch, com piling a 3HO-136-15
record At 73 he m entions retirem ent only when
someone else brings It up
He sculled at the suggest ton alter Saturday game, saying
I &lt;an I leave all these good fool hall
p layers."

�Sanford Horald. Sanlord, Florida

Sunday Jamjar/ 1 199.1

30

C o o p e ra tio n the go al of C o m m is s io n ’s n e w e s t m e m b e r
J u lie Morris. the G am e and
Fresh W ilier F ish (Com m ission's
newest nu*mIx-r. hopes lo spark
it new spirit of eooperiition to
unite hunters, fisherm en, and
en viro n m en talists its Joint stew ­
ard s of Flo rid a's wildlife.
She said there has been a
long-time perception that the
C o m m issio n Inis a better'w ork
inn relationship with hunting
and fishing groups than e n v i­
ro n m e n ta lis ts . S h e ho p es to
eu ltlvale ii sense of team w ork
am ong all the groups and In d i­
vid u als who take iin active role
In eonservation.
Ms. Morris said the various
groups have ii lot of eom mon
Interests, such its habitat co n ­
s e rv a tio n . lan d m an a g e m e n t
p r a e tle e s . p o llu tio n c o n tro l,
outdoor recreation and the pro­
tection of endangered sjiccles.

" T h e biggest problem Flo r­
ida's wildlife Is facing Is the loss
and fragm entation ol habitat."
she said. "W e need to support
program s that ad dress this pro­
blem ."
A s coordinator ol the e n v i­
ronm ental studies program ill
the U n iversity ol South Florida
at Sarnsota/New College, a poslt lo n s h e s h a r e s w it h bet

husband, .lonn Miller. Ms. Morris
sit id s h e w i l l b r i n g t h e
perspective ol an educator Into
the a g e n c y 's p o lic y - m a k in g
process Sh e said that am ong
lie r s k ill s is th e a b ilit y lo
"translate scientific data Into lay
language."
T h e outdoors a lw a y s has held
ii sp ecial im p o rta n ce to Ms
Morris liven w hen she w as a
child in W iscon sin , her recre­
ation Incused on thill section ol
the co u n try's w ealth ol lakes,
rivers and sw am ps. Her lasclna
Hon with lile h u m s followed hot
its ii college student. Sh e m a ­
jored In biology and studied
M vakka R iver's aiguille llle. As
iin adult, she has been active In
the Sierra ( lull and other con-'
scrvaltun organizations
S h e Is president ol M vakka
C o n scrv a n cv Inc. anil w as a

charter m em ber ol the Com
m issio n 's N'ougamc W ildlife A d ­
v is o r y C o u n c i l , w h ic h sin*
chaired lor three years.
In ii recent new s release, the
G o v e r n o r 's O ffic e s a id Ms
M o rris' ii|&gt;|)olntment re fle c ts
G o v e r n o r ( lilie s ' e ll o r ls to
broaden the |&gt;arllcipiitlnu ol
wom en and m inorities In gov­
ernm ent.
M s. M o rris Is the s e c o n d
w om an ever lo serve on the
C o m m is sio n
T h e llrs t. M rs.
Gilbert W. H um phrey, w as a|&gt;
p o in t e d b y G o v e r n o r H ob
G rah a m in IftK-l and still Is
s e rv in g on th e liv e -m e m b e r
board.
SH U P E'S SC O O P
T h e bass fishing Is poor the
Itrst day or two im m ediately
following ii cold front, as Itsii
move Into heavy cover or deeper

w ater as they go Into a mild
shock and Iced verv little
FISH IN G FO R E C A S T
On the Ircsh w ater scene, bass
and speckled perch w ill cooper­
ate eag erly. Hlg sh in e rs will
produce lim k e r bass in area
lakes and in the river S h in ers
iire most effective w hen fished
near fl o at in g m a t s of wa t e r
h y a c i n t h s In .'i to 5 loci ol
Wilier
Speckled perch w ill readily lilt
M isso uri m in n o w s d rille d in
Lake Monroe Look lor co n ­
centrations ot boats tor the best
S|)OlS.
W illi the clo su re of snook
llshlng. S e b a s t i a n Inlet Is less
crowded Hlg w inter flounder are
h ittin g lin g e r m u lle t s lo w ly
bounced acro ss the rocky bot­
tom H luclish In good num b ers
are striking a wide variety of

a riillciiils
(' ii p I ii I II .1 a i k a t P o r i
C u n n v c rn l lias h lilc to report u
the wav ol otlshorc a&lt; tIon due i •»
high se a s
In sid e the Port
f lo u n d e r , s h c e p s h e a d a n d
h lu clish .ire providing stcad\
action Trout and redllsh art
hard lo locale In the Dnnnnn
and Indian r i v e r s os they movi
In and out ot the lla ls a s cold
fronts conic and go.

P on ce Inlet Is rough tills Hint
til year, but som e heavy wlntei
shcepshead ait- being caught on
live shrim p around the ti p of
th e north J e t t i e s Hordes ol
bluefish are also invading tin
Inlet and devouring anythlnc.
tliiit vaguely resem bles a hail
fish. Som e good flounder an
biting linger mullet on the s o u t h
s i d e of th e s o u t h j e t t i e s

S o c c e r ----------C on ti nue d from IB

llllllllle s i&lt;-11 |o p|,i\
*»ni i .main S e lls helped bring
iin &lt;i i e \ bounds b.n k T ills Him*
lie did I In liotiois as lie look a
pass lim n ( had ( ourilicv ill lit
bit d h\ two ham d ctcn d cis i ill
bin k and ham m ered a shot |usi
nilTies inside I 111 post at !Mi 17
S e lls who w as It-ll oil All
I out ll.illlcut team plaved a loll
hi iin gat in w inning goal when
In w as taki n down outside ol
I lie l.aki M.ll V pi'tl.lllV .lien
( Ipollu who m issed most ol tin
to u rn .m ifill with a hndlv bm ised
Instep, look III! lice kit k lot lilt
( in vhouuds
ll w as 22 \nrtls out |usi to
i lie right suit o| tin goal
Sandldgc said
l iankn j u s t did
w llill lie alw aVs does lie |nsl
belli the shot llllti the t unit I ol
t he goal
W hile I. v i i i .in plat i tl three
p i.i\e is on iin ,\|| I o iiru .m ifill
team Idcletitler
lolm Item .ild
w as selci leil along with Mi \v ov
and Lew is) Sandldgc w as unit
ih.it Sells had In t ii snubbed
We don't win ib is toiiina
iin til w 111it hi I Mike
said Sail
tlulge
Lake Mary sirik e i loth J)eH i i i i i i w as ilie to u rn a m e n t's
olteiisiM Most Valuable I 'In vi I

B a s k e tb a ll—
Continued from IB
Also being nam ed lo lilt* All
I’o u rii.iiiii lit ic iim In m i the
h a m s w as leu m lcr Dui ker, who
had an in 11&gt;ii sslv c tournament
oil the b&lt; in h lot the w inners
i it hei pinvci s w ho coin rlbilled
lo the outstanding team cllorl ol
i In* h a m s w e re
D u lle r 112
|ioiiits live reboim dsl. I.aShaw n
M errick limit |*omis nine sicasl.
six a sslslsi. I.n in .i h.lgueel It iglll
points, live lebtuillds. six Steals,
lo u t a s s i s t s ) a n d . I&lt;-ii ii 11•*r
(fic lssllig (live |iolllts. live I T boimds)
l.iikc M.irv im proves in I I -2 on
the season and will return to tin*
m u ll I'ucsdav lor a game ni
l.aki Hrauilcv I In game is set
lor a 7 :ttI |i in s i i i r i .
A siion.iu* !* !l to "&gt; t

f tie Photo

Rampaging Rams
Lake Mary High School's athletic program
made quite a haul last week as the girls
basketball team won the Lady War Eagle
Holiday C la s sic while the boys' soccer
team finished second in the Pizza Hut

Invitational Along the way. Lake Mary
lunior Jody DeBruin (left) was named the
Pizza Hut's offensive MVP while senior
Karen Morris (right) w as the Lady War
Eagle C la s sic MVP

F lit Photo

Continued from IB
League di-hill l Ills A|&gt;rtl in it
renovated Jo e Kohhic Slittlium.
F ir s t c a m e th e h ir in g ol
h ii s e l&gt;it I I v t i e r it n K «* tl e
l.iiehem aiui as m anager, and Ills
c o a c h in g s t a ll in c lu d e d h is
b ro th e r M a rc e l a s |iltc lH n g
coach. He also lahticd Cuban
born Cookie ho|as and Varla
I'liisou. who is black, as coaches
am id criticism ol tin* Marlins'
lciidctshl|&gt; lor not relleetm g
Su u ili Floi Ida's f ilm ic rhvcrsttv
T h e n w ith th e N o v c in ln i
e x p a n sio n drill l . tin* Marltlts
m ade their Itrst |tick minor
league o tllllfld pnispeet Nigel
W ilso n
T h e y added A ll-Star
closer Bryan H arvey. liMM) All
S t a r s t a r l i n g ji i t c h c r J a c k
A rm strong and a lot ol link
known plavt I n
I i w.is a collection iliai hail
soiiu Ians si rati lung their heads

Nightly 7 30 p m
Matinees t 00 p m
Mon . Wed . Sat
Dosed Sunday

.m il wondering il they would
challenge I lit* l ‘ M»2 M els lair
I tililily .
Hut general m anager Dave
D o m b m w sk i m oved q u lck lv
trading lor A s sliurtstup Walt
W eiss and signing tree a u d its
Itrst basem an O restes Destrade.
a Cu ban jil.tx&lt;*■ m in in g home
Irum .liijiait. h a r d h it t in g in
Itelder Dave Magad.m Iroin the
M d s . iig liig k n iie k le h iill a n
( b a ilie Hough ll anil the W illie
Sox and. as a llo m ish . lo iirTlu ie
All-Slat catcher Hemto Saiiltiigo
Irum Sail Diego
A s the team w a s c o in in g
together, it s u llc rc d Its lu st
tra g e d y w h e n h a rd -w o rk in g
team |»rcsldcni C a rl liarger collapsed and died at baseball's
winter llieellllgs
T lie Marlins' HUM lineup -n il
won't make tails h i iith d cities
envious K.xccpl loi those III Hie
I auijra Hnv area

We laked b ill/ i s ill id i hop|ied
two and tliiee deep conicrh.it k
loiim iv J o I i i i s o i i said. "| iliiiik
We gol Into Tot I f Hit's bead.''
J o I i i i s o i i |iicked oil Torreita s
lllsl
p a s s o| Ilia* second hall,
se llin g iqi a short touchdown
tun by Lassie th«* game s MVP
Alter the kit koll. George league
iiile re e |tle d lo rre tta oil llrst
down and returned It 31 v.uds
lo r a n o t h e r s c o r e , g i v in g
A labam a two ID s in Hi seconds
and a 27 Ii lead
O il tile in xi series. Teague
made Iin* pliiv ol the game
l o in Ha Iin Liini.it riio m as with
a short | m s s , and T h o m as shook
.1 t.H kti .Old liluki loose down
the sideline.
league not only overlook the
Minim spcedsiei Irum behind
•d ie t an K 2 - v a id g a in
Ion
stripped Hie trail hum Tho m as a
lew sli ps 11o i 11 the goal hue and
relu m ed il upheld. The play,
ho w e ve r, w as brought h ack
because ol ail o llsid es pehaltv
against Alabam a
” I bat was oiu ol the most
s lijie ib e llo rls a C u tveislty ol

Alabam a loot ball player Inis ev er
made. Stallin gs said.
And. il wasn't bad lor someone
w ho d id n 't si a n the gam e
Teague w as scheduled to Ire In
there, hut lie lost Ills shoe on the
klckoll and sat out the Itrst
series.

POMPANO HARNESS
RACING
W-SAT. 7 :3 0 PM

SANFORD ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
S o rry You M u st Be 18
North of Orlando, just off Hwy 17 92
301 Dog Track Rd , Longwood

831-1600

All-Americ a defensive end Kric
C u rry cam e strutting oil the
Meld, w aving h is arm s lo Hie
c r im s o n - e l.id c ro w d , a lt e r
Alabam a stopped Miami on three*
plays to start the game.
C u rry wasn't credited with a
single tackle all evening. Jo h n
C o p e la n d . A la b a m a 's o th e r
All-Am erica dc te nsive end. had
|nsi three tackles, and the* Tide
had only one* sack
Hut their constant pressm e
won* down the lliirrie an e s. And.
alter a week ol trash talking,
there w asn ’t m uch lot M iam i's
|&gt;l.iv c rs to sav at t lie end
"T hey showed a lot ol cla ss."
L a s s ie said S a tu rd a y . "T h cv
shook o i i i han d s and said we
plavcd a gn-ill gam e T h cv said
we hii hard and ran good

• A*1 *n*r&gt;ce ct A jv e
wtrvn p*&lt;j u • / • * ]
• Mtrvrrvtin montWy PAym«r&lt; r#qurf*j
Open

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FUEL INJECTION CLEANING
Rog $49 95

SALE *39.95*
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Ih uikd tfy iiiy til’ S tflliji U li/c u k
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Wed. thru Set.; Noon
on Thur. &amp; Sot.;
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185/70R13 $44
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185/G0HRl4-$63
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ROAD KING COURIER RADIALS
43,000 MILE STEEL BUTID WHITIWAU
155.BOR13
165.BOH13
175,BOH13
185BOH13
18575RI4
19575R14

S36 20575R14 S47
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*42 21575(115 *5t
*43 22575(115 *54
*45 235.75R15 *56

l&gt;
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RADIAL BAJA RAISED WHITE LETTER
LIGHT TRUCK RADIALS
K lW A lS
1IXI35CRIS *194
32X115CRU SOI
31X1250RI 5 *123
31X1950A &lt;65 *03
33XI 2WR 165 *03
tM iru r:

122575(1160
236X850ICE * " * B i Z y
24576R I 6E * i i *
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26575A 16C *113
25566(1160 *125 ^*&gt;71
21565(1160 *97

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NOTATION A Nf bALAMINC. IPPClUDtO

BIG T TIRE &amp;AUTO SERVICE

HWY. 17-92 &amp; 436 (407) 331-9191

BET CALDER HORSES TODAY 1P.M
A dm iuton f torn } I

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ACTION! THRIfLS! WINNING!

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T IR E R O T A T IO N

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CHECK OUR SALE
PRICES ON CUSTOM
W HEELS &amp; RAISED
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FRONT END ALIGNMENT • $10.95
FOUR WHEEL ALIGNMENT- $30.95
MOST CARS
Ask About Our 3 Year &amp;
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BET MIAMI HORSES

DAYTON TIRES
goal to keep then o l l c u s e oil
die held and run the d o c k ."
S t a ll in g s s a id
" W h e n von
o iii

"I knew they were good."
Turret hi said "W e needed to run
the ball s u c c c sslu lly and we titrow. obviously sometimes hud
didn't."
i lungs will hu|)|H*ii."
Miami tan lor only I I yard s on
Turretti i . who had thrown Hi
12 a t t e m p t s th ro u g h th re e to u ch d o w n |ia s s r s and oulv
quarters, and finished with |usi seven interceptions this season
•1M rush in g yards.
cnm |)lctcd Just 2 1 ol fili passes
On offense. a s nil defense,
"I think we contused him a lot
S t a l l i n g s u s e d th e lo u g h , I clellllltely think he got rattled.''
s t r a l g It t ■a It e a d a |&gt;|&gt;r o a c It siild safety S a m Shade, who
ciu|)l(iyed by Ills mentor. Hear m ade iin iiilcrcc|itlo ii.
There
Hryaut.
were tim es lie thought we were
T h e mailt |ul&gt; lor quarterback m man coverage and we rcallv
J a v lia r k e r. now 17 0 its a were lit /one."
s ta rte r, w as to hand oil to
At tim es, the Title brought all
D errick Lassie, who ran lor I lift I I players tin its defense to the
v a rd s and tw o to u ch d o w n s
lin e. S e v e ra l lim e s . T o rn tin
Darker coiu|&gt;lclcd a mere *1 ol Hi In m tifu lly tried lo jiniiil mil
|).isses lor lb yards with two blocking asslg u tu ciils. and then
w as Inrccd lo call timeout when
iu icrcep ilo n s
"W e kt-|&gt;i the Itiill 12 m inutes lie couldn't audible because ol
longer Ilian Miami did ll was crow d noise.

B a s e b a ll---------

High Paving
Twin Trifecfa

UP TO 22 MONTHS TO PAY

C h a m p io n s —
Continued from IB

lb
w a s |t it in tl on i In A ll
I o iii 11a 1111 lit s q u a d liv h a m
goaln ( iicg W llio . who plaveil in
l.aki Mat v s w in s iivci ( ot omit
( reek and ( Ic a iw a lc i C e n lia l
( ailioln
In lilt 11 11 Ii | &gt;1.1 • i ga in i
liiiu sd n v Mikt .lo h lislo u . lull
Melt Hulls and Hi inn I avlot cat Ii
scored a goal lo Ixtosl Ih• l.ilkt
Hrauilcv I'.u rio is to a t l tl.
i ision o u t the iltTcudlng ( l a s s
:1A Stale I h a itl|llo ll D.lV lo il.l
Hi . ii h Seabree/i Sal lile rails
l.vuiiin 112 o 11and l.iikc Mat \
i s t il w ill both p lay ag ain
W. dllesdav l.v in.ili plavm g at
Scm lnolt w Ink l.aki Mart hosts
I )&lt; Land

Children WeCam* With P a n e

*

(407) 321-0920
2408 S FRENCH AVE
• HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

(904) 775-7971
1C95S. VOLUSIA AVE.
HWY. 17-92
ORANGE CITY

(904) 789-5038
IB84ELKAM DLVD
DELTONA

�centhr approved the rr eortnf of
C haiien|e m e.
for Tom Challenge waa Kathy
autl aald the ta an a ji d tu l rehab

w m t a t K an &gt;% do.
H f tM o M v i.
luraday. Jaa . 7. a t ls90
e chamber wUJ bold a
cu ttin g for Prleeleee
t|»i* Tha eeramoay arlK

-

7 .4 5 *
Cbnwtf VMM*

o ttm you both.
1 3 i » *

Calltoday for a fewbtocbaiot

U£

* ;\ -^L
r .r

j ;_
1 ib .

, j

-

:.i

�J

1

4 ,

Santord Herald, 8an(ord, Florida - Sunday, January 3, 1993 - SB

People

She’s a Gator Pazzler

S H S grad in second
year on dance team
SANFORD-* Shanan Stewart. 30.
a 1900 graduate of Seminole High
School, has come Into her own at
th e U niversity of Florida. The
vivacious co-ed is In her second year
as a Gator Daxxler and is co-captain
of the dance team which performs
at many of the student activities,
Gator Growl, and the basketball

Andrea M. W ait

C sn ttr nam ts director
Andrea M. West Has been named executive
director of ihe Parent Resource Center. Inc. of
Orange and Sem inole counties. Her re ­
sponsibilities Include overall management or
administration and operations for the not-forprofit *s programs and services.
As past director of the Orlando Day Nursery'.
Went holds a bachelors of science degree In
business administration from the University of
Central Florida and Is pursuing a masters of arts
In youth and child care administration from
Novo University. ,
One bf the Heart of Florida United Way
agencies, the I’arent Resource Center. Inc. (PRC)
Is a non-profit organization which serves more
than 75.000 parents and children every year
through family support and parent education
programs. Its mission Is to strengthen and
empower families, foster Ihe optimal develop­
ment of children, and enhanre the capabilities or
parents. For more Information abut Ihe PRC and
Its programs und services, call 425-3663.

The team consists of 16 lovely
girts selected from the student body
who have had previous dance and
cheertcadlng experience. The team
la d i f f e r e n t i a t e d f r o m t h e
cheerleading squad in the foot that
this team performs choreographed
dance routines at basketball games
during time-outs and the halftime.
Tryouts are held every year, but
being a veteran from the previous
u m s ^ i l a a m
•J - - - - &gt; A - - - - - - - - - f t u
year s team doesn’t
seem to m be a
factor in returning to the team . The
tryouts were hard. Shannon relates,
"This is my second year on the
team. Last year, my first year, there
was probably about a little over a
hundred girls who tried out for the
team and they picked 14 girls. You
tryout and during
the week three cuts were made.
They made one cut the very first
day which left about 60 girls.
Another cut was made in the third
day down to 40 and than the final
day the cuts were made down to the
filial 14 girls.''
'S h e added, ''T h is y e ar the
tryouts were again a week long, but
mey were a k x m iner, m ere were
360 girls who tried out this year. We
had three cuts again. Not only did
are have to learn the dances they
taught us. but also they Just played

any music and we had to have
already made up eight counts or
eight and perform It Individually to
that music they played. I think that
waa the real difference on who made
Itand who didn't.*'
Shanan* did not know if points
were given for being a veteran
Dander. "We did put it on the
application, but out of the 14 from
last year, there were 1 1 of last
year’s Danders who tried out and
only four of us are on it again this
year. They did pick 16 girls because
so many tried out,"she said.
Shanan feels that this year the
qualifications for the team have
changed somewhat. It seems like
the adjudicators picked girls with
more dancing skills and slimmer
bodies. She explained her feelings
this way. "Last year five of the 14
Danders were from an awesome
high school dance team In this area.
But this year none of those girls
made the team even though three of
them tried out. I think some of them
h ad tro u b le c o n tro llin g th e ir
weight."
Practice geta going but three
weeks before Gator Growl. Because
their routine runs six to ten m inutes
a t the Growl, they begin Intense
three to four hour practice sessions
every single day of the week for that
three week perld.
Gator Growl is a huge comedy
and dance production staged by the
student body the night More the
University of Florida Homecoming
football game. The team has a
professional coach whoae back*
ground *»ypf lien^e has been in the
d a n c e w o rld a n d p e rfo rm in g
halftimes at NBA basketball games.

Parent, child co*opt planned
SANFORD — The Parent Resource Center ul
Seminole Community College will have three
children and parent c%ppe focusing in developmenial needs and dlaclpffne. I h e program*1will
4&gt;c at SCC In Ssnibrtf miHFlUm *4hlhBgh- Feb,
M . 1903.
J ,a j’j f
V
In addition to the day programs. the parents
are required to attend one evening parenting
class per week.
*
For more information, call Mary Hunger! at
Ihe Parent Reaource Center al 331*4683.

Ntweonrere plan coffaa
WINTER SPRINGS - The Newcomers Club of
Central Florida 'trill be boating a membership
coffee at 773 Cold Stream Court in Winter
Springs on Thursday, Jan. 7 at 10a.m.
The club consists of new arrivals to the
community and others who want to make them
Teel welcome.
t
For more information about the club or the
coffee, call Greta at 365-9683.

Schapkar to actress DAR
SANFORD — The Sallic Harrison chapter nr
the National Society or the Daughters of the
American Revolution will meet an Friday. Jan. 8
at 3 p.m. at the Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
Gretchcn Schapker. principal of Seminole
High School, will be the guest speaker. She will
talk about education.

Stood drlvo of FIm World
SANFORD — The Central Florida Bloodmobllc
will make (is first stop of the new year at Flea
World and Fun World on Sunday. Jan. 3 from 3
to 5 p.m.
The drive Is co-sponsored by the Seminole
County Harley owners group and the Seminole
chapter or ABATE.
Fun World will donate u Tree game of
miniature golf on the newly-remodeled Dodge.
City course for each blood donor who given
during this special drive.

-Sifter arrival
SANFORD - Ron McMillan
arrived In Sanford 39 years and
one month ago. He started to
work a t Senkarlk’s on Dec. 7.
1963 and has been working
there since with no plans for
retirem ent He lives in Sanford
with his wife G arnet and his
daughter Angela.
McMillan explained. "W hen 1
first came down here I stayed
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mitchell.
At that time he was a mechanic
for the Dodge garage which waa
down on First Street where the
Bram Towers Is now.
He continued, "1 had m et the
couple the year before when 1
waa down h ere du rin g the
winter. At that time Senkarlk
Glass and Paint Company was
doing a lot of automobile repair
work, glteswnrh you know. Bob
was a mechanic and he came
home one day shortly after I
arrived in Sanford and asked me
If I wanted a job. 1 told him I
d idn't know whether or not I
wanted a job. 1 had Just got here
and I waa still on vacation.
had told Bob about the job over
a t Senkartk'a.”
"I went In and talked to Mr.
Senkarlk senior (John Senkarlk.
founder and- owner). For some
reason be Just took an autom atic

tike okl home week aa we talked.
He wanted me to go to work
right then. That waa In the
middle ot the week and I started
working on Saturday m orning."
Today, Bd S enkarlk. p a rt
owner and manager, said, "He
(McMillan) la very dependa­
b le ...v e ry h o n e s t...a n Ideal
employee."
iL u iih n has aeen a lot ci
changes since th at ttate. He can
re m e m b er th e th riv in g
downtown district before the
Plata was built. He talked abut
taking In a movie a t the Rita and
stopping off a t the bowling alley
for a small
t it home. He
continued, "W hen I lived with
the Mitchells, on Tenth Street,
we used to walk down to town
two or three nights a weak. We
never locked a door in the home.
quite a btt since then."
"1 remember the days of the
Navy. I lived In a bouse on the
corner at Sanford Avenue and
36th Street right next door to the
tnorting gnn*fi, store. It seemed
like every night they would start
taking off early. I couldn't sleep.

spoke with a feeling of con­
fidence about what Is happening
in downtown Sanford today. He

Taste of Sanford coming Jan. 9; Ballet Guild turns 25
The Woman's Club of Sanford
will be putting on a big feed.
Saturday, Jan . 9, at the quaint
clubhouse, 309 8. Oak Ave..
Sum 6 to • p.m. Last year, the
d u b Inaugurated the first annual
"Taste ofSenford" which turned
out to be a big h it
The sam e concept w ill' be
repeated this year aa patrons
turn out to taste the very beat
Sanford businesses and cooks
have to offer. Jean Metis, club
sa y s "c o sta $60 a p o und"
frimtitlng »n
expenses ininured Before it reached the
cooking stag e ). O ther club
members will bring their cull-

of the d(ning patrons will be:
Buck's Catering. Park Avenue
Catering. Soup to Nuts. Golden
Lamb. El-Sar Tex-Mex, Plxxa
Hut. Napoli's, Galleria and Ot­
ter's Riverside.
The cost for this exciting Taste
of Sanford la 95 per person, the
DORI8
as last year. Upon leaving
DIETRICH same
the event last year, a local doctor
commented that the only thing
wrong with the meal waa the
the clubhouse they were greeted price • It should be more for such
by tablet of food in a colorful and a dinner.
Others on the com m utes with
festive setting. The bountiful
buffet received rave review s Fat are Jean Metis, F raa Morton.
Viola Frank. Jeanette Padgett.
from the line of critics.
Chairman Pat Bowen is op- Jan e t W illiams and D tLores

�7

Florida - 8undsy, January 3, 1993

‘Reach Out and Touch Som eone’
Crooros High School Class of
1963 held Its 30th year reunion
last weekend. The them e "Reach
Out and Touch Someone" waa
shown throughout the celebra­
tion. Classmates gathered from
New York. W ashington, D.C..
South Carolina. Atlanta, Oa.,
Florida. Rochester. N.Y. to wit­
ness and reminisce with their
former classm ates.
T he three-day celeb ratio n
began with a get-acquainted
evening on Christmas. The
social affair aaw the gathering of
great m inds of the Cbsa of 1962
talking about the good life of *63
and smiling about the many
things they got away with as
children.
On S aturday morning the
d a is gathered for a mid-morning*
breakfast and some more re­
m in isc in g . T h e c la ss th e n
boarded the Rlverboat Romance
to ei\Joy an evening of sailing,
fun and food, as they danced and
sailed In the moonlight with that
special one. After the fun-filled
evening, the festivities continued
late Into the morning.
The Sunday morning worship
service to give praise and thanks
from the Class of 1963 began at
10:30 a.m . when the class
marched Into the sendee to carry
out the business of the Master.
The sendee waa held at the
Second Shiloh Missionary Bap­
tist church. The theme "Reach
Out and Touch Someone*
e x p r e s s e d th r o u g h o u t th e
worship service aa the Class of
1963 carried out the service of
praise and thanksgiving for
allowing this class to meet and
reminisce once again.
Dr. Linda Tripp Thompson
presided over the service with
th e prayer being offered by
Henry Brown , scripture by Mary
Jelka Lee and response reeding
red a n d w h ite flowers In ­ by Ernest Whitby. Missionary
terspersed with greenery and offering waa presided over fay
stream ers of white satin ribbon. Flossie Butler Cardwell and Oary
She wore pearl earrings and W i l l i a m s , o f f e r t o r y b y
bracelet.
classm ates John Knight, Joyce
Bridesmaids were Terry Cole. Byrd. W tllle Brown HI.
I. The
C h ristin e Couts and Linda momenta of remembering for
Selman. all of Longwood. Their those rlaaam stfs and teachers
gowns and bouquets were iden­ who are deceased were contical to the honor attendant's.
Alex De La Hos of Altamonte
Springs, the groom’s brother,
served as best man. Ushers were
Cory Sm ith of T allahassee, Guild of iantozd-i ta atacto — it*
brother of the bride: Danny
anniversary. The Guild
C antrell and Charlie "D oc" ■liver
waa founded In 1968 and has
Nelson, both of Montgomery, survived
beautifully for 33 years.
Ala.
.
M ichael De La H o s .• th e .are* oance. troupe n*s new a
groom 's i :son. served, am: ring l u n c h e o n ' f o r I ts a l u m n i . '
■nearer. &gt;,
vj,
. n r i.
The m other of the bride wore a ■poiisbred a fob* drive. held a
sheer navy chiffon dress with golf tournam ent, a Halloween
bowling party, and entered a
jewel neckline and fitted long float
In S anford's St. Lucia
sleeves. The bodice of the dress
parade.
w as em bellished with seed
The frosting on the cake will
pearls. She wore a wrist corsage
be
th a an n u al b allet to be
of white flowers and greenery.
presented
April 34 and 35 at
The groom's m other wore a Lake M ary
High School. A
coral chiffon dress with Jewel num ber of former
will
neckline, and fitted long sleeves. Join the company dancers
dancers
for
The bodice featured an overlay this celebration.
of sheer chiffon, embroidery lace
Future BOS plans Include a
and sequins. She wore a corsage February
auction, the Sanford
of white flowers with greenery.
Aria
Festival,
and a Silver Anni­
Following the ceremony, a
versary
Gala
la
early April.
re c ep tio n w as held In th e
The
of the
"A n tes Room". Sheraton Or­ Ouild
Include,
from
Sanford:
lando North, Maitland. Music
helly B arbour, Kim B eck,
provided by "Back Spin," S
Heather
Bril. Jeanne Box, Owen
and Kathy Register. Family and Butler, Katie
and Sara Byers,
•slated. The three-tiered
Ja
c
ly
n
F
o
ster,
an d M ellsaa
wedding caka was a pound cake,
Garris.
flavored w ith Am aretto, and
Also from Sanford are i
topped with rtra wbt fries,
C
lam
Oroom, Heather Hardin,
After a wedding trip to the Julia Higgins,
Lanier.
Florida coast, the newlyweds are K lm m le L o uJennifer
w a m a , A p r il
making their home In Altamonte W fhrit, Laterica Q&gt;«i— , Tiffany
Springs. The bride to a recovery Tinsley. Amanda Wall. Natalie
n u rse a t H um ana H ospital,
Meredith Whlgham. and
Lucerne. In Orlando and the Weld.
the
Twfltoagndancers, includ­
po em to the owner of T. and T.
Enterprises, a Rainbow distribu­ ing
tor.
in­
clude H eather Kauffman, Cindy

Sandra A . Sm ith,
Michael De La Hoz
exchange vows
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS AFTHtrn L. %r**tH ***** Mirft—i a .
De La Hoe mb announcing their
m u r ta f a today. They w ere
m arried to a double fine cere­
mony Sept. 96. 1908. a t 7 p.m..
a t S t Stevens Lutheran Church.
Altam onte b rin g s , w ith the
hrtdegnmw wearing hta great,
grandfather'* ring, fnacrlbed
with the year. 1906.
A rran g em en t* of Q ueen
A n n e ’a la c e , a n a p d ra g o n a .
c a rn a tio n * , a ta tlc e and
a l a t r o m e r la d e c o r a te d th e
church.
The bride la the daughter of
Ann Smith .of
room la the

S
* 'S
tZ S Bpring*.
tS iF 1*4iueI
Hoa
of Coral
. \ ** U
G iv e n 'in m arriage by Iter
father and aaeletrd by her unde.
Harry Sm ith, the bride cboee for
her vow* a formal Ivory eattn
gow n fa sh io n e d w ith a v*
neckline and NnHf* w ith overlay
Of
lOM ***** Hny
pearl*. The large puffed sleeves
lac a n d aatln
o f A lenconn lace
tapered to the wrists. The gown
featured a dropped w aist and full
skirt w ith a scalloped
of
Alencon lace and aeed p*jy|*j A
large satin bow wao caught at
th e booh of th e gow n. H er
three Quarter inch luualoci veil
&gt;caught by an open crown of
1peart*. She carried
bouquet of white
red roses, white m ini
c a r n a tio n s . sto c k , lilie s,
stephanotls. and baby's breath
Brenda rv**«****** of Apopka
aerved the bride as maid of
honor. She wore a th ra sh dress
of garnet red. fitted to the waist,
|*****ffgifig to a &lt;*f|ly scalloped
pephimT The ftiil-lenath dress
featured a v-neck with a large
Ivory lace co llar an d fitted
elbow-length sleeves. - She car*
ried an arm houqurt of mined

ShstsWMamHh IM
message will be remembered by
those In attendance for many a
year.
Hampton la employed In the
educational system of Charles­
ton Heights. S.C. He has re­
ceived a specialist degree In
education from The Citadel, and
Is presently employed at Trident
T echnical College. His a d ­
m in is tra tio n d e g re e s have
helped him to excel In his field of
endeavor. He has served 23
ducted by Jam es Hampton and
ears In the U.S. Air Force where
Susie Stewart Robinson with the
e s e r v e d aa I n s t r u c t o r ,
lighting of a candle and a evaluator, supervisor and man­
moment of silence.
ager. Among a few of his special
T h e In tr o d u c tio n o f th e recognition awards are the U.S.
speaker of the hour was made by Air Force Humanitarian Medal.
Freddie Bush. The speaker for Charleston Air Force Base Senior
th e o c c a s io n w a s J a m e s Non-Commissioned Officer of the
Hampton, a member of the class Year, Outstanding Young Man of
of 1962. Hampton, a dynamic America, and award for sugspeaker, spoke on the theme gested Improvements In flight
"Reach Out and Touch Some­ operations,
one.” He encouraged the class
The message of the speaker
and those at the worship service enlightened the hearts of ail. The
"to remember our families, see classmates of 1962 Introduced
that our children are educated their families and the closing
and trained in the bible way of remarks were presented by Pres­
life." He reminded the audience id en t H arry H arvey to th e
"of the olden days when the chairpersons Ju an ita Adams
community was involved in the Golden and Grace Butler Melton.
rearing of the children and that These women are to be com­
neighbors could and would dls- mended for their dedication and
clpllm
service to the 30th year reunion.

E

The Class of 1962 and their
families adjoined to have dinner
for the closing activities of this
historical event In their lives.

King fstss sst
The historical celebration of
the Martin Luther King J r.
observance Is coming up. TickPir a y e r
e ts fo r th e U n ity P
Breakfast to be held at 8 a.m..
Saturday. Jan. 16. are available
by calling 322-5418. 322-6310
or 322-9476. The Florida Martin
Luther King Commemorative
C om m laalon U n ity P ra y e r
Breakfast speaker will be Willie
E. Gary. Esquire. Donation Is $5
for adults and 62.50 for children.
The City of Sanford MLK
Steering Committee and Florida
MLK C om m em orative Com­
mission Invite you to attend the
7th Annual Commemorative
Banquet, Monday. Jan. 18, 7-9
p.m. Donation of f615 for adults
and 67.50 for children 12 years
and under.
These two official affairs will
be held at the Sanford Civic
Center. All proceeds are for the
MLK Scholarship Fund. Speaker
for the banquet will be attorney
Jessie McCrary.

Dietrich

Kristine Sumner bride
of Wilburn P. Penick

r p|n lilies
LONGWOOD - Kristine Marie bouquet of white i
and
red
roses.
S u m n e r a n d Wilburn P rice
C harlotte G auss served, the
Penick were married Dec. 33 at 0
p.m .. a t Northland Community bride aa honor attendant. She
Church. Loogwood. The . Rev. wore a cranberry velvet ofOrlando Rivera performed the f-the-shoulder floor-tenth gown.
Bridesmaid was Camille Puffer
formal, private ceremony.
The bride le the daughter of •who wore an off-the-shqulder.
Mr. and Mr*. Ell Mitchell of floor-length, black velvet gown.
Nick Caatelio served the groom
Knoxville. Term, and Mr. Tom
aa
beat m an. Groomsman was
Sum ner of Hendersonville. N.C.
The g room to the son of Mrs. Michael Brooks.
Following the cerem ony, a
Myrtle L. Penick of Sanford and
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Penick of reception was held at Embassy
Suites, Altamonte Springs.
The newlyweds are presently
Given In m arriage by her on th eir honeymoon at Key
father. Tom Sum ner, the bride West. The bride to a bridal tour
chose for her vows a formal coordinator and the groom la
w hite satin and tulle gown, chaplain’s assistant serving In
long-sleeved, and detailed with the U.S. Army Airborne Divi­
elaborate pearling. She carried a sion.

CMttl'

Baltot Guild alumni returning for annlvoraary production
Whan "Something Old to New Again" premiere*
In April, the audience will te e a dazzling return
of aavaral Ballet Guild of Sanford-Saminoto
alumni danoara, many of whom have their own
families today. Returning to Join tha 1962-63
•G S company dancers in tha April 1093
extravaganza are front row (from toft: Qeralyn
Jones, Joanna King, Sandra Orwlg and Margo
(from toft) Robin Scott,
Lao Roberts Smith, Holly

Lundqutot. and Tiffany Win­
chester,
Q attl Fft** ******* liVff f*f
from D ritona, p ^***1*1 Ftotda to
from Lake Monroe, end Jill

the many BOS dancers who
have, for 33 years, brought the
n S S to the reakfcntaof
beat 'In dance
Central Florida.

From DeBary come Dam Kern,
ny and Krista Simmons.
and Amy
Vanessa Heaton to from Sor­
rento. Kelly Mann from Long­
wood, Jennifer Button from Os­
teen, and Heather Zem from
Geneva.
T h i s S ilv e r A n n iv e rs a ry
season has been, and will con­
tinue to be a celebration of dance
as an a rt form, and a tribute to

Mabel Chsjmtan Thomas to a
woman for all seasons who has
her own brand of community
service. To hear Mabel tell 1L It to
no big deal to be a blood donor.
Many people give one or two
pints during a lifetime. But not
Mabel. In early December. Mabel
had completed giving 30 gallons
of blood, that'* 160 pints which
m eant 160 trips to the Seminole

Dazzler

C m itlaasd from Page SB
the entire
huHkrtball season by two to
three hour praellec sessions at
least three times u week.
"My previous training has
h elp ed me tre m e n d o u sly ."
Shannon explained. "Our dlrelor
- Is really good In the visual stuff,
lik e p o m -p o m s, fo rm atio n
elianges and things like that,
Stice doe* a lot of that but us
co-captain I use my training in
the traditional Jazz to help the
learn. We have other girls who
teach dance camps over the
summer who are up with the
funky moves. So It is kind of a
etimbinuilon of all of us tliui

Pomolt blood ohamp

makesthe leant look so good.
"1 think buek to Hie tryouts.
One of the dunees had u funky
duner but two of the other
iIuiuvh had u lot of Jazz In them
ItceuiiM' Ihey Jltsl want lo see
you move and see If you ran
dunce. The funky stuff looks
great hut wlieii you ure In such a
large group somelitm-s the haste
dui}(T steps have proved to be
the most effective lo excite tile
audience. Some of the funky
stuff is very suggestive and Just
not fit for the audiences we
dunce to. My strong training in
the traditional Jazz makes me
slund out and11I feel
fei that is one of
the reasons I am hark on Ihe
team lor ihe second year. In

Kurtmai Ricker and Suaan Largan Hicks. Back
row (from toft): Debbie Pharto Jenkins, Unde
Whalehel Walker, Vickie Shelly, Maureen Kelly
Maguire, Qlna Hattsway Williams and Francis
Echols Lundqutot, Alumni dancer* who will
perform but are not pictured a n : Sarah Williams
Small, Sandra Vlltottl, Monica Row* Clements,
Sharon Stewart, Steel Shannon, Jan Rathel,
Jotone Meinke Brown, Lisa Clontz, Alison La*
Aten and Vickie Boot!.

County Blood Bank over the
yean. 1
She has the distinction of
being the highest female blood
donor In Seminole County.
Congratulations are definitely
In order.

an d th rill waa . see in g her
10-year-old granddaughter sit­
ting with Linda Spencer Courier
at the Davit Cup a t they wat­
ched Jim Courier play with the
team on live television.

Christmas abroad
Jackie Caolo has been in The
N etherlands for nearly two
months visiting her ctoughter
and family, Suaan and
Boot who live In a 300-year-old
farm house.
Of course. Jackie has had a
marvelous time. A big surprise

In a recent column, we men­
tioned Isabel W ilson aa a
Christmas angel. It has been
called to our attention that
several others had Christmas
birthdays Including: Jim Estep,
Taylor Patrick Grantham, Stacie
Elizabeth Metis and Gussle
Ryals.

other woids If you lean: the
trudllloiiid jazz the rest of the
oilier variation* come very eusy
when you have to leum them."
Shaiiau Is lit Ihe Alphu Della
Pi sorority and lives off rumpus
next door lo her closest friend
l.lsu Clontz. She Is vrry active In
u loi of the volunteer activities
sponsored by her sorority. She Is
also working ui a local hcullli
club leaching uerobies. Even
wllh all her uetlvllics her grades
ure excellent. She docs admit
now she bus lo study a lot more
tliun she did in high school.
Being uwuy from home Is
growing on her. When asked If
she liked Is-lng away from home
or did she leel more ul home in

Gainesville she replied,'*'
seems like this semester ai
over the summer, now ihut
have a Job and Guzzlers at
Alpha Drllu PI and school II
like I liuvc only been home twl
this semester."
She udded. "1 wus very hotn
sick when 1 started school,
fact. 1 came home a lot and it
mom and dad (Dr. Roger at
Mrs. Gall Strwurl) came to *
me when the Gators played
home, Everything Is starling
change now and it serins III
my home is more In Gaincsvlll
Most of my friends in Sanfoi
are gone and I have made mat
nrw friends ul the University
Florida."

Happy birthdaya

9

�Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 3, 1993 - 78

Hospital to honor auxiliary
at awards luncheon Jan. 24

M ilitary veteran
ta lk s p o sitive
about g ay s
DBAS ABBYt All the negative my name, but If you use this,
i
hype about gays in the military sign lt.„
AOAT VETERAN
Is nonsense. Alexander the Great
IN MEW T O W CITY
was gay. Julius Caesar was gay.
DEAR VETBRANll think you
Legendary Greek warriors were
gay. And gays have died on all are probably tight. Because so
the battlefields of A m erica's many gays are still In the closet,
there are no reliable statistics on
wars.
Straight men have been show­ how many gays are serving
ering and going to the bathroom honorably In the military, but a
beside gay men all their lives.
I've worked in the theater for 40
years. Heterosexual actors work
beside and change clothes beside
gay actors. Straight stagehands
use the same restroom as gay tlon for "Cheated In Memphis,"
men. There has never been a the little boy who was bom on
Dec. 28.
problem.
Many years ago a famous
Of course, the theater was
racially integrated long before writer ft believe It was Robert
the nation's churches, schools, Louis Stevenson) gave h is
and military institutions. U has birthday to a little girt who had
always judged people by their been bom on Christm as Day. I
character and talent, rather than remember the publicity when
that "little girl," who had grown
by the superficial.
up and reached a venerable age.
Furthermore, If gays are not bequeathed the famous author's
asked to state their sexual orien­ birthday to another child whose
tation. they will most likely keep birthday was on Dec. 28.
It to them selves and reveal
I have had so many birthdays
themselves only to those who that I feel I no longer need one.
are likely to be sympathetic.
Although I am not a famous
The legal admission of gays writer and my birthday la not in
Into the U-S. military will be as June or July, I will happily give
easy or as difficult as Oen. Colin my Jan . 27 birthday of'C heated
Powell and the Joint chiefs of In Memphis."
Staff want it to be. I'm signing

ft, r

DBAS M M . OFJOHN: What
generous — and charming —

_________
CONFIDENTIAL TO
“AFRAID DVWAMDNOTON,
DAL” t Heed the arise words of
Dorothy Foadick:
"Fear Is a basic emotion: It'e
part of our native equipment,
and like all normal emotions, it
" S n r tin ,.

tineas

S C

Marybelle Duckett and Dottle
Ruppert are volunteers with the
South Seminole Community
Hospital Auxiliary and they have
donated 8,700 hours to the
hospital since 1984. The volun­
teers of the auxiliary have given
a total of 21.392M hours for the
year which averages to 1,900 a
m o n th , according to Carol
Jentsch, president of the aux­
iliary for 1992. The hospital will
honor the auxiliary with an
awards luncheon on Jan. 24,
1993, at the Embassy Suite. *
Mrs. J e n t s c h s ta t e d th e
membership has a total of 87
volunteers of which there are
four seasonal members, five in­
active members, four life mem­
bers. and the other 74 members
are active within the organisa­
tion. Seven of the members are
men. The four charter members
are Margie Patchett, Inez Wilson,
Caroline *Bistline and Lux Stella
Gomez. Twenty of the auxiliary
members were volunteers the
first y ear the hospital w as
opened.
T h e - u - n i Mrv h a s b e e n
e s ta b lis h e d w ith b v-law s
the hospital. The volunteers

ProvWe “ “ F

at the

thl?wrontffb u tto n
hospital. The members can be
w
found
Information desk. In
or^ tn*"d *■" “
the gift shop, providing clerical
sShould
h e be
r nafraid
i d Is
b good
e r sense.
f r a i d ■ervtnif
wor k*vo,untecrtnf«
» tn e flo
u "float*** Imr—r
n i omrs,
l

-—,

THOMAS E. O'DAY
Marine CpI. Thomas E. O'Day.
son of Thomas E. O'Day or 307
Tucker Drive. Sanford, recently
received a Meritorious Mast.
O'Day was cited for outstand­
ing service while assigned with
Marine Fighter Attack
S q u a d ro n -115. 2nd Marine
Aircraft Wing. Marine Corps Air
Station. Beaufort. S.C.
A Meritorious Mast Is an of­
fic ia l r e c o g n i t i o n from a
m arine's commanding officer for
superior Individual performance.
It Is issued in the form of a
bulletin published throughout
the command, and a copy Is
entered in the m arine's perma­
nent service records.
The 1989 graduate of Boone
High School, Oriando. Jotned the
Marine Corps In November 1989.

fbt HdbWBb tBMM •t

| 1 1 00
11 30
[ L jM j A » J

i

Skura, Kccordlng Secretary
Dorothy Ntcholaa, and Corre­
sponding Secretary Doreene
Fish.

Trw pickup Ml
Longwood residents may put
their Christmas trees on the
curb for regular pick-up on
Thursdays, for the next two
weeks. IWS will not require that
the trees be bundled.
or in the emergency room. Two
new services were added this
year. In April, photographs of
new babies was started and in
July, shuttle service in the
panting lot from the hospital
door to your car was added.
Approximately five years ago
the auxiliary took a meditation
room at the hospital and turned
It Into a chapel. The chapel was
dedicated for Jan e Coleman,
who was the auxiliary founder.
The auxiliary has also provided
scholarships to Seminole Com­
m unity College for the school of
nursing, donated to BETA House
and the Shelia Ryan Foundation,
and once a month, the auxiliary
publishes “ The G rap ev in e/'
which is their monthly newslet­
ter. The gilt shop is owned by
the auxilary.
During the awards luncheon,
new officers for 1993 will be
Installed. The slate Is President
Lee Spumey. President-elect
Anna Hllna, Vice President
Jeanne Schafer. Treasurer John
Reid, Assistant Treasurer Hallle

wotnan accomplishes. I have a
feeling, will determine Just how
the downtown grows."
"Sanford is continually changlng. A lot of our new paint
business is people who have
b o u g h t t h e h o m e s In th e
downtown district and are restoring those homes. Most of
them are working In Orlando but
have decided to live in Sanford,
They have really done over
m any of the hom es In this
section." "If we could ju st get a
few more key stores In the
downtown area It would help out
tre m e n d o u sly . I th in k a
hardware store would do nicely
or maybe a m en's shop and a
food departm ent store. 1 guess
the biggest problem downtown
Is there Is not enough places to
park. It seems like no one wants.
sm

Congratulations, Sandy
Belated congratulations are in
order for Sandy Lomax. Sandy
was appointed Parks and Recre­
ation Coordinator for the City of
Longwood on Nov. 9'. Sandy was
employed by the Longwood
Police Department the past two
years and prior to the Police
Department, was the recreation
supervisor with Casselberry for
10 years.

Softball, anyona?
Mrs. Lomax Is taking team
rglstratlons for the Polar Bear
Softball League for ages 16 and
over. There will be a "C "
League, Super VC" League,
Co-Ed League, and Over 80
League. The season will start
Jan. 11, 1993. There are still a
few openings and interested
parties may call Sandy at 2603400o r339-2796.
M iranda M allh arsk l la a
■ a a fs rd H e rald c e rre -

the roof problems. The new
owner would have to spend more
money than he could take In Just
to get a permit to open the
theater. "It Is Just a shame. Such
a wonderful landmark and we
will probably never see it open
again," he exclaimed,
McMillan is hopeful that the
next five years will see a lot
more changes than what has
occurred since he started to
work many y ean back. His Job
in the store puts him In contact
with many of the new people
and builders and he feels that
Sanford Is on th e brink of
realizing lta future potential,
.*■—

M A ^ - o T ^ n o iM

« • * fr n l a n

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iia L jM S k

J w a l k I n t h a a lm w a H

w o n HmXmsuon,

BRIAN S. FOSTER
R AMS T E I N AIR B A S E .
Kaiserslautern. Germany —
B rian S. F o s te r h a s been
specially identified for early
promotion to senior airman In
lhe U.S. Air Force.
The airman was awarded the
new rating ahead of other Air
F o r c e m e m b e r s by a
"below-thc-xone" promotion
board which considered Job per­
formance. military knowledge,
bearing, and self-improvement
efforts.
Foster, an inventory manage­
ment specialist. Is the son of
Karon D. Mixon of 3007 St..

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�Sanford Herald, 8an»ord, Florida - Sunday, Januaiy 3, 1003

71—H lp W lW tti
IN TMR C IRCU IT COURT
O FT N ttlO M T ItN T M
iU M C IA L CIRCUIT
i IN AN# FOR
•tM IN O iC COUNTY.
FLORIDA
c a s in o , a t k t -c a ia o
F IR S T UNION N ATIO N AL

m ana ma m m . Fun time,
benefit* and betlday*. A w l*
K a r ry P a c k a g in g , list
Chart#* I I , acraa• (ram

naiaCaunty, FlarMa.
Tha albra*ald aala will ba
mad* yurwant la Me Final
Judgment af Iha Feredeeure In
CNtl Na. W T r CA tAO, new
landing In Iha Circuit Caurt In

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IL O R R L Y CAR

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•P T IR w IV LW T T y i r i r n i a i .

O A TID January M, Ifm .
(M A LI
M ARYANN! MORM
Clark at Iha Circuit Caurt
Sy.CecatlaV. Cham
AaDaputy Clark
FuRlim: January X JA tan
OR A M___________________________
TOWI NO AND ITO R A O I

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a/h/a OCOROIAM
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY/
SANFORD tU T L IR i
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KIT ’N’ CARLYLE® by U rry Wright

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O C A LA N A T 'L P O R K tT .
Wooded M tl U.fJO each, no
money downl 171.41 monthly.
ttoom soM
O V I I O O ■ORNRVA
CHULUOTA. Baoutllul vocanl
lolt. Framl11.fW tU.000.
MocMvt Realty........ ...M A U N
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OR LA NDO &gt; Tymbortkan On
The Lake • l/ i, nice carpeting,
rang*, rafrig. air. goal. ate.
*14,W0, W IN TIR IPR IN O t •
Baylraa 1/1, kitchen equipped,
vertical bllndt. nice carpet. Ig.
porch, pool, etc 147.HO Owner
will finance both. JJM7I1

aacurfty. C all M U SS*

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•

PN O TICR i Florida Statute
ISI.1I tla le i that ell dog* and
. cal* told In Fla. mutt be el
leeit 1 week* old. have an
official health cW tlflcale.
proper (hot*, and be tree el
Inlettlnel/eiteme 1paretllet.
B LIIA B IT M BAUOH
Dog
training! is y n . e«pl Privet*
or Group. Cell H in t s
POOOLR • S month*, male,
apricot. Shell, houwbrokon.
tTSCall 17IJ41*

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203— L iv e s t o c k a n d
P o u lt r y

• BUICK C IN T U R T • INI,
auto. PS, A/C, runt good
Atfclng II.C0B m i l W M U m

LAYINONBNS Mixedbnodi
Hooch
Call H I MH
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cargo!. C/H/A, colling font,
lanced yd. geadaraa t)i47M

321-2297

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C A S S IIK IW , I S S N DORR
1 bdrm.. a x i l Kroon porch,
above ground pool, rooted
patio aroai on 7IX M l treed
lot. Price M .W . Payment
UH.14 m. PI tor IS y n ., 11%.
Can Rimer BokeMe Inc.
04-7047
WHY PAY R BTA ILI New 1ft]
mobile hornet 1 14X70 ttW/mo.
14X70. S17S/mo. MS470*
If lf PARR Modal, turn., tix u .
w/end. PL rm. 10XH. all exc.
cond Mutt (ee to appreciate 1
11 Oaki Campground. Ready
to move Inl 111. HO U l lTfl
for appointment.
m i OBL. WIDB. tumlihed 1 /1 .
two porcho*. thed. Carriage
Cove. IILftO Call !» 7 tt7
1 BDRM., U It., tumlihed. large
petlo. Kitchen appliance*. 1441
P tlk D r.d 7 R 4 B M

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Income, M hr. per night,
aplt./condo*. C attelb erry
area. Mull w ill Sacrifice,
1 10.000 coth.su SM*
1A5— D u p to x f o r S a lt
SANPORO OUPLBX • 1 bdrm.
etch , pood neighborhood.
SIM M Will finance.
Call 407 174 *044

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Coot tWN. Sell tW i. S t -Mil
ecO PPBB table and matching
end labtew. ttSeech. in 474*
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with glow lap. 1 d raw n .
Very good condttten. m ceih.
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taver, wort* good. ITS HM7M
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*B A S BANOB - Teppen. green.
with deck end timer. Clean,
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111— A p p lia n c e s

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• BASS BOAT, IN * IS ft. 40HP
Mercury, trolling motor, trollor, extra*, good cond. HIM.
Cad................ ..............m e e t)
• COBRA PISH 'N SMI • f t . t*
ft. w att ». IN HP outboard
w /b u than 10 houn. many
•xtra*. Purchewd ntw In 4/*l.
Taka over paym ent* ol
UH/mo. M l *700. Jo*
a PONTOON ST P IIST A . M‘. 70
HP Marc, w/powar llll/trlm .
*4N0C«t1417477-11*4
P S K IIT IR bait boat. tN I.
Mercury IIS, U .**J; IF II.
StaroraH. IS HP evlnrudo.
H 4*S; NMP BvMreN. S4N;
Call 1117*40
• I* ft. BOWRIDRR
l«S HP
I/O. About IS br*. Immacu
latt.w /trallar-co var. Mott
Sw l lt04M OBO 11745}*
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Marc., w/trallor. Run* gnat.
MHO...........................4*17*0*
IN I IRVRTTR. II ft.. IN HP
I/O with trollor. UNO OBO
Must w ill HI-74S* attor TPM
ON S K R B T IR Tovmamant
B a ll Boat. More X R l IM.
w/cowr, one. cond. U400
m is w
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A tro llo r. IS HP -m ore.
AM/PM caw., flth A depth
finder, troll m tr.. l Dole*
bottartoi. gaugai.
ONLY IN N .
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gelled, n In cut. Dyne M ark
14 HP Briggt A ItretW n. IN .
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Runt good, it vinyl log. Noodt
tin t ONLY P H . S11-MM

♦trot. WW Car Craty. HSS441

CsertssfUssACm, 323-2123

6 IG M T K
4 W IIL T T M D 1 A U
Today. tS I Couch and lev*
wot. 1 office datfct and choir*,
tooti. cloth**. many many
houwhold Horn*. NTS CM 417,

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CMRVSLBR

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Inaort thin Mack border
•4A M 6C SALE AO M M AIN
Call In your garage wlo ad by
11 noon an fuoaday and taka
adyantaga of our tpoclal
garage tat* ad pric*ll Call
Claotillad now Mr d*tall*l
322-2111
Maori thin Mack bard*
2 2 1 - O o o d T h in g s
It Sot
N A Y IL ORANOtS. Rod Orapafrutt, U akfc-Wa pick. Open
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AWO Merry Haw Yoorl 1U
H w yi CfWR P§w*.......lUAJM
• P B S T IV I red/black trunk,'
s r x i r x t r d*w- u m d
&lt;
with tray. SM H I SOM
aPO O O PRO CESSO R glut
.
Mender. OR. like now. with I
book. Coot 1117. Mtl I n IN
OBO Call ISAM SPM. 13S-NN
1
4A CU IX I. w att 4. Maroon
merMolIko. auto Hmar-flet*. ,
w/wwd cab.SMM. OBO iaiw
peymenta/ceah. H U M
i
•ROW IHO MACHIN I • Spars
Lite*tyler MM. like newl
Make* exerclw (uni New,
SIM. sell tor STS. US4SH
TONHSR T A B U S ID - Suntene.
s#*y sw rciw . ................ U W f
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P-O ., m iner rw»t, complete
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(or other motor vehicle)

A n d O u r S p e c ia l O ffe r
W ill H a v e Y o u L a u p h l n o
AH T h e W a y T o T h + B a n k .

M ak e y o u r
N e w Y ear's
1 r e so lu tio n
a hom e
at
C o u n tr y L a k e
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
w hile ad is running except for price. Non-commercial only.

C all 322-2611 Ibday!
Newly Renovated!

2714 R id g e w o o d A v e
S a n fo rd

330-5204

i

�Sunday, January 3, 1003

mow AM

you*

CM lLO fffN

By R tr s k a M a Osol
TOUR BIRTHDAY
Jan. 9 . 1BSS
Things In which you placed
considerable stock In the past
might not be all that Important
for you Ip the year ahead. These
c h a n g in g v alu es will work
towards your benefit and give
you moregratlfylngobjectives.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
19) Subdue urges lo gamble or
spend beyond your means Inday. In situations where you feel
you are lucky, you might Just be
kidding yourself. Capricorn,
treat yourself to a birthday gift,
Send for C apricorn’s AstroGraph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing 91.25 plus a
long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure lo state your zodiac sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Proper timing Is essential today
In the management or a delicate
situation. If you try lo force
things ahead of schedule, you
could Jam the machinery.
PtBCBS (Feb. 20-March 20)
An associate of yours who Is
quite artful at being able lo
manipulate others might try his
or her wiles on you today. If you
are watchful, this person will
have to find another “patsy.*'
A R B S (March 21-Aprll 19) If
your bank balance Is a bit out of
whack In this cycle. It’s lime to
think of ways to revise your
budget. Upon close examination.
you should be able to see where
the fat can be trimmed.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Objectives must be cleurly de­
fined today or else you might
strive for targets that could later
prove to be counterproductive.
Don't be •■|(Ty" about your alms,
lx* certain.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20)
Sometimes It Is wise not to make
strong statements about things
that arc on your mind. This In
one of those days where you
might make comments that
you'll wish you could retract.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Today a friend might come to
you for some business or flnanclal advice. Before telling him or
her what to do. be doubly certain
that you know what you're
talklngabout.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Usually
you are rather adept at making

AMP/ IN CLOSING. t P
LIKE TO LEAP THE
CONGREGATION IN
a p e r io p o f

^

outer

MfPITATION

FIANUTt
|'M THINKING MAYBE WHEN
1 GROW UP. I'LL BE A
BEAUTY QUEEN..
_

0 0 YOU HAVE f
^
TO BE REALLY ( PROBABLY
BEAUTIFUL? X L
^

M L OUR

CCKJOOS
P A sseu

THCEI.S.
TEST ,

Improvements In your finan­
cial base are Indicated Tor (ho
year ahead. However, what you
receive will be due to your own
sfrong efforts and not come from
donations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Although you might be
Justified Iq reacting harshly lo a
sticky social situation today. It
could do your Image more harm
than good. Bite the bullet and
d o n 't m a k e w a v es. Mfcjor

HEALTH

tr

tAYt svtrr mowpxy

m aw * * *

FooO

TMCUSLN
AFrtAMOON

W W AMOKK

Today’s deal took place Iasi
year at a rubber-bridge club In
London. The stakes were about
91.50 per point.
The bidding was frisky. East, a
Pakistani International, opened
with a strong, artificial and
forcing two clubs. South, a
London businessman, contented
him self with a-quiet overcall.
Wesl. another Londoner, was
underweight for his two-heart
response. North, a New Yorker
domiciled In London, was happy
lo raise diamonds, although a
sacrifice was unlikely at the
prevailing vulnerability. When
South Jumped lo six diamonds. I
think he was hoping that East or
West would bid six spades,
neither expecting South to hold
two aces.
West led a low spade. South.
Howard Cohen, ruffed and
cashed the diamond ace. Now.
rather than settle for one down.

decisions under pressure, but
this might not be one or those
days. Don't let a forceful Indlvldual coerce you Into making
. any Impulsive judgments,
VtROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Someone with whom you may
be closely Involved today might
foul up a situation that affects
you. Cover yourself In developments where you could be held
a c c o u n ta b le for a n o th e r 's
mistakes.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Items or merchandise that appear to be good bargains today
might not hr so great nnre they
_____
ACROSS

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are closely scrutinized. To be on
the safe aide, use your magnify-.
Ing glass.
' .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It
Is beat that you and your male
don’t discuss Issues today where
you hold strongly opposing
views. Conflict could result
where you are hoping for a
compromise.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
21) If you are too difficult to
please today. It could quickly
discourage people with whom
you’re Involved from trying lo
please you. Be pollle and ac­
knowledge their efforts.

_

_

_

”
_

------ — - I V — — .
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avoidable unpleasantness.
A R BS (March 21-Aprll 19)
Subdue Inclinations today to
lake undue risks where your
career or finances are concerned,
Appealing long shots might turn
out lo be merely blanks.
TAURUB (April 20-May 20) Be
careful today in challenging the
c o n v i c t i o n s a n d v ie w s o f
associates. Picking apart their
beliefs could create an unwanted
nasty Incident.
OBMIRI (May 21-June 20)
W hen th e boss h a n d s ou t
assignm ents today therp Is a
chance you might get the tasks
others are trying to evade,

with the lack and tw itch to
clubs, collecting a 500-point
penalty. But Is (hat the right
defense? It would cost an un­
dertrick — and 9450 — If East
had the K-Q doubleton of hearts.
Even worse. If his partner had
the singleton heart ace and
declarer the d u b ace. It would
coat the contract. After some
consideration. Wesl played the
heart two.
Now Cohen claimed his con­
tract! He discarded one of
dummy's clubs on the last heart,
gave up a d u b and ruffed a du b
In the dummy. He waa plus
1540 points (Chicago four-deal
scoring) and some 93.000 better
off than If West had played the
heart Jack at trick three and
switched lo clubs.

have no control could delay you
today from achieving an obJectlve that Is Important to you.
Be patient and wait for calmer
seas.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
you assume your ways of doing
th in g s are su p erio r to the
methods of persons you're In­
voived with today, a rumble may
result. None are perfect, but
each have some good points,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
extremely alert In any ncgotlations you have today where
money changes hands. If you're
Indifferent or careless, a loss
might result.

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January

4,

1993

S

a n fo r d

H

e r a ld

Serving Sanford, Lako Mary and Samlnola County alnea 1008
85th Year, No. 112 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□ Paopla
Christmas plants live on
With proper care. the Christmas plant you
arrived an a (&lt;111 ran stay attractive for weeks.
Tricla Thomas tells yon how In her (&gt;ardenln(i
column today.
See Page SB.

Smith featured at luncheon
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Florida Secretary’
Slate Jim Smith will Ik * the guest speaker at
the monthly luncheon of the Suburban Re*
publican Women's Club Jan. 20.
The luncheon will Ik*held at at the Altamonte
Springs Hilton Hotel beginning at 11:30 u.m.
The cost is 815 per person. Reservations must
Ik* made by Jan. 15 by railing Alice Weinberg.
330*2144.
of

Road work resumes
Lake Mary construction could
begin within hours of meeting
Businessmen say the barricades and rain washouts
have
deterred customers from their stores. The same
Herald Staff Writer
obstacles make traveling along the road a bit of a
challenge.
LAKE MARY — County Manugcr Ron Rabun
At a 1:30 p.m. meeting Wednesday In the com­
anticipates construction could resume on Lake Mary *
mission chambers, commissioners will meet to award
Boulevard within hours of a special county commission
the rem ainder of the project to a "completion
meeting Wednesday afternoon.
"I really think they can be out there within hours of contractor." The name of the company has not been
our approval." said Rabun Friday. "The bonding announced by the completion bonding company.
Insurance Company of America. But Rabun said
company asked us for a list of (state-approved) names
and we told them we wanted a local company. There's bonding officials are negotiating with the company that
quite a bit of supplies out there, so they won't have to submitted the lowest of several bids received on the Job.
Negotiations are expected to be completed later today.
wait for deliveries. They may wait a few days or a week,
Whoever takes over the Job will have to hustle.
but I think they can be out there the next day."
Mohoncy's
original contract completion date of June
The county's Lake Mary Boulevard widening project
14, 1993 remains unaffected by work stoppage. Failure
has been a bone In the craw of local businessmen and
residents as well as motorists since mid-July when a to meet that day will result in a $1,000 per day penalty
contract dispute brought the construction to a halt. The for the completion contractor, said county purchasing
county's contractor, John Mahoney Construction sub­ director Barry Hastings.
"We wanted to play hard ball with them," said
sequently withdrew from the Job leaving behind a
Bee Road, Page BA
swath of dirt, rough pavement and barricades.
By J. MARK BARPIBLD

Reservations open for market

TALLAHASSEE — The Florida Lotto Jackpot,
worth an cstlmutcd 86 million, rolled over to an
estimated 815 million this weekend after no one
correctly picked ull six numbers.
Lottery Secretary Marcia Mnnn said 271,321
tickets matched at least three of the numbers
picked Snturduy night. That Includes 299
tickets worth 83.035.50 each matching five
numbers. If one ticket had drawn all six
numbers It would have been worth 86 million.

SALEM. Mass. — When the Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court first convened in Salem
300 years ugo. Its first act was to hall the witch
hunt hysteria.
The stule’s highest court planned a special
session back In Sulcm toduy to commemorate
Its distinction us the oldest uppcllatc court in
continuous existence In the Western Hemi­
sphere.
The court stopped the witch trials, which hud
resulted In 20 executions. Immediately after
convening Jan. 3, 1693.
The five uppcllalc cases It was to heur toduy
involved more pedestrian matters: a challenge
to leud paint regulations, a medical insurance
dispute, check forgery, physician liability and
the admissibility of a Juvenile's statemcnls lo
police In a manslaughter cusc.
From staff and wire r$port$
•-

INDBX
Bridge..............
C lassifieds....... ,4B,$B
C em ies.............
C rossw ord.......
Dear Abby.......
D eaths..............
Dr. O ett............
Editorial...........

; . ...... *frrts-m Vy*»
.

Florida...........
H sreso sp s.....
M evles...........
p«llee.............
........

W eather.........

Skies begin to dear

*
P

P er

/TFartly
( Cloudy

Partly cloudy und
hreexy with u 20
percent chance of
showers. High neur
80. Wind cust 15 lo
20.

weather, see Pa— 8A

Herald Staff Writer

LAKE MARY - City officials
welcome a resumption of con­
struction on Lake Mary Boule­
vard. The project however, will
be closely wulchcd.
The next move by the city will
be to launch Into a $300,000
companion boulevard
beautification project. "We huve
been waiting to learn who the
new prime contractor Is." said
City M anager Jo h n Litton.
"Then we will have to coordlI J Bee O fficials, Page BA

Lakeview, Lyman
selected for drug
free education

Jackpot rolls over

Oldest appellate court celebrated

Bp NICK PPIIPAUP

State taps
2 sch o o ls
for h o n o r

GENEVA — Spaces nt the Jan. 16 Hubble
Country Flea Market may now be reserved. The
event will Ik* held from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at
the Geneva Community Center.
Community lenders are holding the flea
market to raise funds In their efforts to protect
the Geneva Hubble, the community's isolated
underground drinking water supply. Proceeds
from the space rental and the "Save the Hubble"
booth will go to the efforts.
Spaces are 815 each and nmy t&gt;c reserved by
paying In advance. A few lublcs are available for
85 each. Call 349*2195 for Information.

Another 14.566 tickets hud four correct
numbers, worth 891 per ticket, und 256.456
tickets with three correct numbers arc worth 85
each.
.
T h e w in n in g L o tto n u m b e r s w e re
2* 10* 12*30*37*44.

Officials
welcome
startup

By VICKI OoBOfIMIBR
Herald Staff Writer

•

Pierre Abularrage, left, a social worker, reads
over the papers that Leslie Qager needed to

H—MMetefeya—

Hack—

sign to oet repairs started. Jack Morotta from
the County Development Office looks on.

Home, sweet home
County to renew centenarian’s home
This past week. Gager went to the County
Development Office to sign the paperwork to let
Herald Staff Writer
work begin on the house. After more than a
SANFORD — Ada Dennis will be starting ofT year of trying, the wheels have been set In
motion that will renew Dennis' home and allow
the new year with a new outlook on life.
The 113-year-old woman, who shares a home her to continue to live there.
A spunky centenarian, Dennis has stub­
in the Goldsboro section of Sanford with her
76-year-old son Leslie Gager, has been trying to bornly Insisted that she wants to remain at
get the county to help her affect some basic home as long as she can. With the assistance of
repairs on her home to prevent the rain from visiting nurses and social workers. Gager has
l Bee Home, Page BA
coming In.
By VICKI DeBOfliaiBR

SANFORD — Lukcvlcw Middle Ac Ium&gt;I In
Sanford and Lyman High School In fomgwood
arc two of the 11 finalists cltoscn stale-wide In
the Drug-Fret* Schools Recognition Program for
the 1992-93 school year.
The schools were chosen bccuusc of their
exemplary drug education programs.
Both Lakeview und Lymun. like many other
schools in Seminole County, have incorporated
the drug-free message Into many aspects of the
curriculum so that students heur the message
throughout their day.
The schools huve made It a point to reach
students not only drug awareness strategies hut
they huve also put a strong emphusis on self
esteem.
"We leach the students to respect themselves
und others." said Linda Sltukur. assistant
principal at Lymun. "If they respect themselves,
they will not do drugs."
Strong disciplinary programs ul the schools
have ulso ensured a lower Incidence of drug use.
"We try to send a strong message lo the
students lhut drugs will not Ik* tolerated here."
said Lawman Oliver, usslstanl principal ul
foikevlew said.
Peer pressure also pluys an liu|M&gt;rtani role In
the anti-drug messuge ul both schools.
"It's |usl nut un accepted thing with a lot of our
I Bee Schools, Page BA

Longwood dispute heats up again
Mayor loses
confidence in
administrator
Herald 8taff Writer

LONGWOOD • After the recent
rash of accusations and memos,
both City Administrator Jim
McFellin and Mayor Paul Lavrstrand say it may be difficult
working together.
Lovcslrand said hr had "Inst
all confidence" in the city adu Bee M ayer, Page BA

By OBOROB DUNCAN
Herald 8taff Writer

LONGWOOD • The dispute between City Ad­
ministrator Jim McFellin and Mayor Paul Lovestrand
has heated up again with both men issuing memos
charging the other with lying and abuse of office.
In his Dec. 22 memo on city stationery. McFellin said
he threatened to call the police to have Lovestrand
removed from his office during a Dec. 22 meeting.
Lovestrand. in his six-page reply, acknowledges a
heated conversation with McFellin but says he was on
his way out when the city administrator picked up the
phone "as If to call the police."
In the six-page Dec. 30 response. Lovestrand lists 11
complaints about the city administrator Including
negligence, stubbomess. lawlessness, lack of Judgment
and mismanagement.
In a Dec. 30 memo reacting to the Lovestrand
response, McFellin charges it "contains many inac­

curacies, Innuendos, misstatements and pure fabrica­
tion."
The written exchanges apparently stem from the Dec.
22 meeting the two men had in McFeltln's office. Both
men agree Lovestrand was In city hall when McFellin
asked him to come into his office. At that time, McFellin
told the mayor the stormwater fund was not considered
an enterprise fund, but a special revenue fund. At a
prior commission meeting, there had been some
question as to what type of fiscal category the
stormwater fund was In.
The two men then disagreed about whether the
stormwater fund should be changed Into an enterprise
fund.
According to McFellln's first memo, "Mayor Lov­
estrand stated In words to the effect that. 'We have two
members on the commission and two seats are up next
year; all we need Is one more seat. And. when the
hatchet falls, you won't be the only one to go."
B et D ispute, Page BA

Fine dropped iff property owners clean up mess
By J. MARK BARPIILO
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — Art Lane dumper Frank Subotka
has agreed to a settlement agreement with
Seminole County to allow him to avoid his $1.1
million Illegal dumping fine.
The agreement calls for Sobotka, and fellow
property owners Rodney S. and Carolyn R. Laval,
to clean up the property along guidelines
established by the the county. State Attorney's

Office and Florida Department of Environmental
Regulation. In return. Sobtka agreed to withdraw
a lawsuit against the county and to dismiss any
claims for reimbursement of legal fees.
Whether the settlement will accomplish the
county's six-year goal of forcing Sobotka to clean
up the property when a $1 million fine did not Is
uncertain to county leaders.
"I would certainly hope the agreement will
accomplish something." said Bob Sturm, chair­
man of the county commmission. "But I have to

admit the same thing crossed my mind when I
signed the agreement. But I guess If one thing
doesn't work, try something else."
Neither Sobtoka. nor his attorney, Mike Jones,
returned calls Thursday.
Kevin Carden, county Code Enforcement Board
attorney, said the agreement signed by Sturm
Monday finally stopped the fine from ac­
cumulating. The county's code fine has been
running at $500 per day since Oct. 22. 1986. By
Bee Pine, Page BA

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . C a ll 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�•A - Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Monday, January 4, 1003

NEWS

FROM

THE

REGION

AND

ACROSS THE

MIAMI — Some Haitian detainees have
staged a h u n g er strike in protest of
Inequitable U.S. immigration practices and
vowed not to eat until they are released like

barely escaped Haiti with
their lives, but they are
being summarily dismissed
as economic refugees. |
-Chary! LHtle
Associations receive their income primarily from unit owners.
, Both parties decided that they would rather come to an
agreement among themselves than risk the Judge's decision.

west of Miami.
On Dec. 19, Orestes Lorenso, a former
Cuban Air Force malor who left Cuba 21
m onths ago In h it Mia fighter le t borrowed
a plane and returned to the island for his
wife and two young sons. Since then, he has

New Year's eve gunfire kills woman
HIALEAH - A woman who had Just warned her non to stay
Inside and her husband to shut the door was killed during the
New Year’s barrage that is a dangerous tradition In th is heavily
Latin Dade County city.
At 12:03 a.m . Friday, a random bullet to n through a barely
opened window, passed through a beige lam p shade and hit
Marla Fernandez in the heart.
Hialeah police w eren't surprised by the tragedy. Officers
themselves halt patrols and seek shelter right befare m idnight
"Everyone who has worked here a while knows to take
cover." said Hialeah homicide detective Lorenao TrqJlllo.
Police figure the killer was probably a neighbor from
Fernandes's blue-coUar community near Hialeah Hospital. The
only clue: the slug taken from the wom an's heart.
"You have thousands of people shooting a t the same tim e all
over town." Trqjillo said. "We tell people not to fire their
bullets in the air because everything that goes up m ust come
down. But every New Year's Eve. we have shootings. It never
falls. It's a real bad tradition."
When the dock struck m idnight Merida popped open a
bottle of cider. The Cuban National Anthem was playing oo the
radio. Surrounded by Ms family, he toasted to health, family
togetherness an d a free Cuba.
Fernandes told her eon. Dtonldo. to w att until the barrage of

STATE

pilot Carlos Cancto diverted an airliner from
Its scheduled run to the Cuban resort town
of Varadero and landed in Miami. Of the 52
peqpte aboard, 48 asked for political asylum
and were quickly paroled Into the communl*
ty from Krocne.
Meanwhile, many of the hunger strikers
have been detained for months, even though
they m eet the criteria lor parole, Little said.
•*We have Cubans arriving saying that
they are fleeing economic circumstances
but being labeled political refugees by INS
when they get here." she said. "And we
have Haitians who are clearly political
refugees, who barely escaped Haiti with
their lives, but they are being summarily
dismissed as economic refugees."
The difference. INS officials say. Is the
Cuban Adjustment Act of 1906. It renders
communist Cuba eligible for
those fl&lt;
polities!

Hospital. Wilson, who has

The ft* Louts Zips, a baskOtbail team comprisad of young man
a m 13*18, tapped the Wast Sanford Boys and Olds Club with a
adore of 17*40 during Its annual visit to th t Csntral Florida. The
Ups,'W ho travel throughout th t United Slate*, Mao played a
fow l from the Orlando Soya and Girts Club white In the area.
Hambire of the local dub, above, enjoyed the competition and
look forward to the day whan they can participant In tha

Some spring breakers have humanitarian mission
H M r iM r iP N I i
"
*
FORT LAUDERDALE - When
teen-agers descend on South
Florida for spring break this

JNmrfay.
j
win apead a week in south Dade of Homestead.
The largest crew wtH belong to County.
When about 78 students
H a b ita t for H u m an ity , th e
Brenda Oegsbeek. 21, an aoo* rived last week, their first t
non-profit o rg an isatio n th a t nomica major a t the University was to build their beds ui
plana to build a t least 200 homes of W ashington In Seattle, eald leftover plywood. One cal

churches and local universities
will spend working vacations in
Dade County, the Sun-Sentinel
of Fort Lauderdale reported

These are unusual holidays far
many a i the students, who left
beh ind friends eqjoylng more
typical vacation pursuits. Moat

but oomfortaMe a t the makeshift
student cam p behind an Interfatth retreat center on Krocne
Avenue, about Are miles north

THE W E A T H E R

!
it

MONDAY
P tly e ld y 71-80

k

breesy wkh a 20 percent chance
of showers. High near 80. Wind
east 18 to SO m ph. J) Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
Low In the mid to upper 60s.
Wind southeast 8 to 10 mph.
Tuesday: Variable cloudiness
with a good chance of showers
a n d th u n d e rs to rm s . H igh
around SO. Wind south 10 to 18
mph. Rain chance 80 percent.
Extended forecast: W ednes­
day: Partly cloudy with a chance
of showers. Low in the mid 60s.
High In the lower to mid 80s.
Thursday and Friday; Partly

D aytsw a B sasbt Waves are
3-8 Icel and rough. Current ta
strong to the north with a water
temperature of 62 degree*. Now
Sm yrna Beach: Waves are 3-8
feet and real choppy. Curreni Is
to the north, with a water
temperature of 60 degrees.

WEDNESDAY
P U rto v Y H l

**
'
THURSDAY
PU yetdy 78-88

SmaU c ro ft ad v iso ry Is to
o ffset.
Tonight: Wind southeast 20
knots. Seas 6 to 9 feet. Bay and
inland wafers rough. Scattered
showers.
T uesday: W ind so u th 18
knots. Seas 3 to 8 feet. Bay and
Inland water* choppy In exposed
areas.

F ^"4
FRIDAY
P tljr oldy 78*68

The high tem p eratu re tn
Sanford Sunday was 78 degrees
and the overnight low was 68 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and education Center. Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded rain fall for th e
period, ending at 9 a.m. Mon­
day, totalled .08 of an inch. The tem perature h t 9 a.m.
today was 69 degrees and
Monday's early morning low
was 68. as recorded by the
National W eather Service at the
Orlando International Airport.
Other W eather Service data:

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 4, 1993 - SA

Protesters target tourism
Suspended l(c «n t« Itadt to arrest
Local police arrested several county residents over the New
Year's weekend Tor a variety of traffic offenses. Including
driving while under the Influence.
Robert Adams, of Sanford, was arrested In Longwood by
Seminole County Sheriff's deputies when he did not stop at a
stop sign, according to police reports.
When stopped, Adams told officers he did not have his
driver’s license with him. After a computer check, officers
discovered Adams’ license had been suspended, according to
police reports.
He was arrested and taken to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility, according to reports.

Man arraatad for ataallng boar
An 18-year old was arrested after taking a 12-pack of beer
from the Champ Store on South Sanford Avenue, according to
police reports. Sanford police arrested Brian Townson, no
address given, after an employee said she saw him taking the
beer without paying for It, according to reports.
Officers found the beer In the alley In back of the store,
according to reports.

DUI arraat
Russell Adkins, of Sanford, was arrested In Winter Springs
on a charge of DUI after officers observed him weaving on the
road, according to police reports.
Adkins was driving on State Road 434 when a Winter
Springs ofllcer observed him crossing the center line on the
road, then weaving in his lane, according to reports.
When Adkins was stopped, he told the officer he had had
three beers, but his speech was slurred, according to police
reports.

Wltnass tampering brings arre a!
John Slgman Sr., of Creekwater Terrace In Longwood, was
arrested Friday and served with a Seminole County warrant
for witness tampering. He was served at his address and taken
to jail, according to reports. No other Information was available
about the charge.

Domaatic vlolanca chargad
An apparent fight with a girlfriend led to an arrest on a
traffic offense for Sanford resident Daniel Penaloza. according
to police reports.
Sanford police were called to Penaloza’s address on South
Sanford Avenue In regards to a domestic disturbance.
According to reports, the caller said the female had left but that
a man was following her In a gray Toyota, according to reports.
A Sanford officer spotted the car and pulled It over. After a
routine check, he discovered Penaloza had had his license
revoked, according to police reports.

Sanford January maatlnga aat
SANFORD — Commissions, Boards and Agencies have
scheduled five meetings for the month of January. Alt meetings
are open to th« central public.
The following m eetings were established as of the beginning
of the month:
• T i m , J m , g — c ity Commleeloo Organlsattonel Meeting,
City Commission room, 1 p m .
• T i m . J a n . • — Seminote Towns Center Community
Redevelopment Agency meeting, (during the City Commleeton
meeting) City Commleeloo roam, shortly lite r 7 9 4*.
• F r L J a * . • —Board of A4JustmeaM$eetlng. l l t B S a A
L ^R egdlar meeting, dtycam m lem on. 7 g m ,
i - l$ —-* Cede ■" * tsw ent iBoard meeting T
v -uj|0 ship boa c \v t vfmolic r . t.
i Mm fan ■■ i R ^ iiIm iiismmg m jn —imterten g p w
Other m eetings may be eatled as required during the month.
Regularly scheduled City Commleton m eetings m ay be
precluded w ith workshop m eetin g If the commission believes
they ere needed. The workshops are held beginning a t 5 p.m..
in the city m anager's conference room on the eeoond floor of
the Sanford City Hall, 30 0 N. Perk Avenue, Sanford.

McFellin sets 1993
goals for Longwood
: Herald Staff Writer

LONGWOOD • If the dust
■' settles down In Longwood, Jim
McFellin. city manager, hopes to
finish the renovation of existing
. city hall buildings and working
. with the county to correct the
flooding between CR 427 and
Fairy Lake In 1993.
O th e r goats th e city a d ­
ministrator has are finishing the
downsizing of city government
and working with the city
: commission to set meaningful
' goals and objection for the new
year.
The latter goal may be the
I roughest as the disputes erupted
• between McFellin and Mayor
Paul Lovestrand In the last days
of 1992.
However. McFellin listed those
four major goals he hoped to
achieve in 1993. The flooding.

particularly after the heavy
ratnfull during the season,
caused a flurry of complaints to
d ty hall.
As for long term goals for the
d ty, McFellin listed a number of
Items Including the resurfacing
of paved streets.
Another long-term goal was
Improving the dirt streets by
asphalting and correcting storm
water drainage, specifically on
Second n ic e , Relder Street and
Oak Street.
Other long-term goals Include
storm water drainage Improve­
ments. particularly In several
specific areas of the dty: Lake
Wayman/Longdale, Grant Street
Swales. Loch Lohman A MeCllntock Culvert and the Mudd
Lake dam with gates.
Various other small projects
are also port of the long-term
goals for the city, according to
McFelltn’allst.

Local rappers get
shot at stardom
l y VICKI I
Herald 8taff Writer

SANFORD — A rap group
comprised of seventh and eighth
graders from Lakeview Middle
School will be among the stars
who will entertain at the Rap
Against Drugs competition on
Jan. 5.
The Mustangs rappers, along
with a team from Robert E. Lee
Middle School In Orlando won
the competition last year and
have been asked to return to
kick off this year's contest.
The Rap Against Drugs com­
petition will help deliver the
anil-drug message to nearly
90,000 students from 62 middle
and high school students from
Seminole. Orange and Osceola
counties.

The Lakeview students and
the Robert E. Lee students will
conduct a press conference that
will Involve rep o rters from
across the state.
They will also help unveil the
"Rjsp Against Drugs" billboard
and a Lynx bus that will be
decorated with the anti-drug
message.
The Rap Against Drugs groups
will consist of three to eight
students.
The students must create orig­
inal lyrics and may Include
Instrumental with their rap.
The winning rap groups from
each county will have the oppor­
tunity to audition for Star Search
and perform In a CableVlslon
special. The top middle school
rappers will perform at the NBA
“Stay In School Jam " In March.

■y DAVID POSTBR
Assoc Istsd Press
W hen p ro te sters ch an tin g
"Save the wolfl Boycott Alaska!
were marching in a dozen U.S.
cities last month, they knew
Alaskans would pay attention:
Tourism Is a bllllon-dollar-a-year
Industry there.
Activists of all stripes are
dusting off the time-honored
tactic of the boycott, but raising
It to new heights as they target
not Just corporations or In­
dustries. but entire states:
•G ay and lesbian groups are
boycotting Colorado, urging
vacationers and conventioneers
to stay away until the state,
reverses an antl*gay rig h ts
amendment passed by voters In
November.
•Abortion rights supporters
called boycotts In 1901 against
Utah and Louisiana over those
state's strict abortion laws. The
Greater New Orleans Tourist A
Convention Commission said
last March that 17 groups had
canceled meetings, costing the
city 8116 million in lost busi­
ness.

ficials planned to reduce the wolf
population by shooUng more
than 300 animals from helicop­
ters — until last week, that Is.
when the hunt was canceled In
the face of a tourism boycott
p ro m o ted by a n im a l-rig h ts
groups.
PolltK
Political and business leaders
In all three states cried foul,
saying boycotts unfairly punish
the Innocent along with the
guilty.
The boycotters' response: If a
state wants to profit from Its
Image as an attractive tourist
d e s tin a tio n , It h a d b e tte r
measure up to the values held by
those who would visit.
"We’re not Instilling the out­
rage in people. We’re merely
channeling It," said Wayne
Pacelle, director of Fund For
Animals, a leader of the Alaska
boycott. "You can’t motivate
people to boycott If they’re not
appalled by something."
Boycotts have a long history as
a tactic to protest injustice, but
many famous ones were more
narrowly targeted.

T h e b o y c o t t of t h e
Montgomery, Ala., bus system In
• In A rizo n a, c o n v en tio n the 1950s cost the bus company
promoters Just now are recov­ money, and California grape
ering from a five-year boycott growers were hurt In the 1970s
that cost the state at least $300 by boycotts supporting the Unit­
m illio n In c o n v e n tio n an d ed Farm Workers.
But targets
tourism business. The boycott, of the recent boycotts point out
prompted by the state’s refusal that victims often Include those
to declare a holiday honoring who support the boycotters'
clvll-rlghts leader Martin Luther goals. In Alaska, eco-tourism
King Jr., ended last year when companies sensitive to the envi­
voters approved a King holiday.
ronment were among those most
• I n Alaska, state wildlife of­ likely to lose business from

wolf-lovers canceling reserva­
tions.
The C olorado boycott,
meanwhile, has divided that
state’s gay community. Many
activists warn that the boycott
could cause a backlash by
straight Coloradans and hurt
efforts to rescind the anti-gay
rights amendment.
"It's going to alienate what
support we have," said Terry
White, chairman of the Aspen
Gay and Lesbian Community,
which Is defying the boycott by
going ahead with its annual
"Aspen Gay Ski Week" next
month.
There are gay business people,
too, White said. "Why punish
them?" he asked.
Boycott supporters say pro­
tecting human rights should
override economic concerns.
"We want to send a message
that bigotry does not pay." said
R obert B rlggs-D anlels,
spokesman for Boycott Colorado,
a Denver-based group. "The
boycott will continue until civil
rights In Colorado are guaran­
teed to all Its citizens — no
exceptions."
A boycott's success often
hinges on who Jumps on the
bandwagon. In Arizona, the Na­
tional Football League's decision
to pull the 1993 Super Bowl
from Tempe brought widespread
attention to the boycott, and a
wave of convention cancellations
followed.
The Colorado boycott was
endorsed last week by two na­
tional gay-rights groups, and

several major conventions have
been moved from the state since
November. Including the U.S.
Conference of Mayors, the Na­
tional Organization for Women
and the American Association of
Law Libraries.
Now all eyes are on Aspen, the
exclusive ski resort where the
u s u a l h o l i d a y p a r a d e of
c e le b ritie s has becom e
politicized.
Some stars are staying away
— Barbra Streisand, Liza Min­
nelli and W hoopi Goldberg
among them. But overall, the
Aspen Resort Association says
reservations are running 12
percent above last year, am fbars
and restaurants are jumping.
Richard Davis, president of the
Salt Lake Area Convention and
Visitors Bureau, said a survey
done Just after abortion-rights
a d v o c a te s called th e Utah
boycott two years ago found few
people who said they would
avoid the stale because of it.
"We lost a convention of the
Unlversallst Church, but the
Southern Baptists then asked for
a proposal and we won the
convention In 1998," he said.
A survivor of the Arizona
b o y c o tt sa y s th e t r e n d to
statewide boycotts should con­
cern tourism officials every­
where, since there's no telling
when a skeleton might start
rattling In their closet.
"You can take exception to a
particular political position In
any one of the 50 states.” said
Dave Radcllffe, head of the
convention and visitors bureau
In Phoenix.

City reschedules meeting on mall
By NICK PPIIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer____________

SANFORD A meeting planned
for last week, has now been
rescheduled tomorrow evening.
The Sanford City Commission
will consider a redevelopment
agreem ent for the Seminole
Towne Center Mall.
"The City Commission cannot
e n te r Into a redevelopm ent
agreement by itself.” explained
City Manager BUI Simmons, "so
the commission dons another
hat, and sits as the Community
Redevelopment Agency."
"Of course the Agency cannot
approve any official set on behalf
Of tM dty." He sold, "so both the
XUy~and,the- Agsncy would-be
Twjmrea to aMreobn the redevel­
opment. ana each group, even
though It'a the same people, will
have to approve and sign sepa­
rate documents."
The third party Involved in the
agreement will be Melvin Simon
and Associates, developers of the
Mall, or their designated repre­
sentatives.
Each of the entities m ust agree
on all aspects of the talks.
The City Commission has
previously studied the wording
of the redevelopment agreement,
but the document to be pres­
ented Tuesday night contains
several changes.
During this past week's d ty
commission workshop meeting,
uestions were raised regarding
ie need for Information on what
specifically has been changed
since the original document was
presented.
City Manager BUI Simmons
indicated he would have the
Information In the hands of the
commissioners In time for the
meeting.
Jam es Willard, an attorney
with Shutta A Bowen, Orlando,

Is scheduled to he on hand to
represent the Simon organiza­
tion. Simon officials may also be
on hand.
The redevelopment agreement
deals with the legal reaulrements needed In order to obtain
financing for the maaalve con­
struction project, building of
new roadways and widening of
some existing roads, establish­
ing contracts with contractors
and bonding agencies, and other

necessities.
Simon and Associates Is the
holder of a contract to purchase
approximately 130 acres of land
within the city limits. Plans call
for construction. In phases,
which will Include an enclosed
regional shopping center con­
sisting of 1,250,000 square feet
of space for the retail mall.
Simon has Indicated In the
latest proposal that it. “...shall
use its best efforts to proceed In

good faith to commence con­
struction of the project as soon
as reasonably possible.”
The special meeting dealing
with the mall project wlU be held
In the commission meeting room
of the Sanford City Hall, begin­
ning at 7 p.m., Tuesday night. It
will also include a city organiza­
tional meeting.
The next regularly scheduled
City Commission meeting will be
held Monday. Jan. 11.

That’s ths w ay ths ball bouncss

a

Tony Qonzalsz, 72, and Norms Adamczyk, who
says shs's ovtr 50, startad off tha naw yssr with a

hsarty gams of mixsd doublts at ths courts at Ft
Motion Park on Saturday.

The King
lives for
birthday
By WOODY SAMD
Assoclstsd Press Wrltsr

MEMPHIS — Elvis lives!
Or rather, the master tape
from a 1973 conecrt survives,
which Is enough lo allow him lo
perform this week with the
Memphis Symphony.
Whether he really passed
away In 1977 or Is touring
Midwestern fast-food restau­
rants, Elvis Presley will wiggle
again In his hometown us part of
u three-day celebration of bis
58th birthday Friday.
The hoopla Includes the re­
lease of an Elvis postage stamp.
The 29-cenl commemorative
stamp goes on sale ut 12:01 u.m.
Frlduy ul Grace la ml. the king's
former residence. Nationwide
sales begin ut noon.
F o r th e f i r s i - d u y s a l e s .
Gruccland has 35.000 stamps
ullaehed lo special covers Baying
"I was there." They'll go for $5
each and cun be bought only ul
Gruccland.
Gruccland. where Presley died
Aug. 16. 1977. draws more than
650.000 visitors u year.

January

UMlWtbl
T h e Discovery and Descubrimiemo games officially end on January 4 , 1993.
Th a r means all winning rickets must be redeemed by March 5,1993. So claim your
prize soon o r kiss your winnings goodbye.

£

�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 4, 1W3

NAT H E N T O FF

Mark Twain himself is censored

EDITORIALS

The dilemma of
criminals in jail
h as being tak en to keep
child k iller D onald M[cDougall
cDougall In Jail. Now th&lt;
th e
root,
latate legislators m u st ad d ress th e ro
o t nnot
ot
Ju st th e sym ptom s o f th e problem s th a t w ould
■nave let him o u t o f sta te prison a t a n
outrageously early date.
M cDoudall7 3 7 * tortu re d and k ille d

There hot been a merger between the Greater
Hartford Community College and the Hartford
State-Technical College. The committee charged
w ith wiggrating a name for this new Connecticut
Institution of higher learning put forth a llat of
three. One was that of Mark Twain, who lived
long and productively in Hartford where his
large,
hom
e rem ains open
to
dLIEJild-J*com
11*/.: ■'fortable
'•
•
--4T
FllltOlS,
The prospect of Mr. Twain being so honored1
greatly displeased Robert S. Holloway, head of
the Black Student Union at the community
college. The Chronicle of Higher Education
reports th at Mr. Holloway claim s that students
khould have been consulted about the nam ew tth
which they would henceforth be associated: and
th a t some were troubled that Mr. Twain, In the
way he wrote about Macks, showed himself to be
a ra c ist
Furtherm ore, said Mr. Holloway, "when I think
ot Mark Twain, it sounds like a name for a little
kids' school."
Mr. Twain was accustomed to having his books
attacked, but this would be the first tim e he
himself would be censored as unfit to have his
nam e attached to a school.
For a long tim e, however, such an honor would
not have even been imagined by Twain himself.

on fastidiously excluding the book from Its
shelves — had this to
say about the book
and its writer:
“ I t Is r o u g h ,
coarse, and Inelegant, dealing with a
aeries of experiences
not elevating, the
w hole book being
more suited to the
slum s th an to in*
telllgent. respectable
people."
O f a ll T w a in ’s
works. It is "Huckle­
b e r r y F in n ,” o f
books
course, that has been
attacked, but
the target, during all
this would be
th e s e y e a r s , o f
the first time
p aren ts who have
he himself
often succeeded In
would be
banishing the novel
censored as
from school curriculuma and libraries.
Decades ago, the book outraged Southern whites

(all the whites In the book, except Huck. are
bigots, hustlers or much worse). In recent years,
blacks have been Infuriated by the abundant uae
of the word, "nigger," In "Huckleberry Finn."
In "W hat Johnny Shouldn't Read: Textbook
Censorship In America" (Yale University Preis),
Joan DelTattore notes that In this passionately
anti-racist book, the stave owners are shown as
"Ignorant and hypocritical.... Realistically, what
should students think such people would say?
'Invite the African Americans to come in from
the fields.’ ... Deleting the slave owners' racist
comments would, Ironically, make slavery look
more benign than it actually was."
It would seem that during his secondary school
education. Robert Holloway, who scornfully
objects to having his school bear the name of the
alleged racist. Mark Twain, never had a teacher
tell him what "Huckleberry Finn” Is all about.
And why Mark Twain — who a t 19 wrote of his
own "Ignorance and intolerance" — created this
book to show how Huck too had grown out of the
bigotry In which he had been reared, where
Twain also was a boy.

JACK

constitutional. In abort, the Judges said the
Inconvenience of a 'Donald MrOougall' was
moire important thab tl* death of an 'Ureula

HODDING CA R TER

What about ‘The Average Citizen’?
' ---------------- » - A - J

—p

_

_ _ J — S ------- A .

wno a convicted oi a violent
aofua a t least 75 percent of the
r ooa who la convicted of kUUafi
id not be eligible for any "g rin

iloua aad the progw ettoaboae almost un- proliferating dlatlnceeresfoy nprimtsrir, In othW words, It's lio n s ? O u r g re a t
usual a t the news manudnes. strength os a nation
Mck a ra a 't to the tin rin m of making the up until yesterday
orid'e m sat powwftd ooupfc or their readers w as th a t we were
ihappy P ith s Brat days of a new preslrts nry.
bound out of vast
B ut Basra fe a more M tiag eo y sralM y en d s d i v e r s i t y b y a n
are sppreprtalii symbol fo r the New Year overarching set of
a n the CMntaos, for whose laadecahlp t have principles and preXMng but hope and for whose skills I have c e p ts. E P lu rlb u s
ithing but adm iration. W hat would speak Unum. it says on the
not directly to tb s president's and the national seal — One
id e a 's probable future would bs better From Many. Do we
ipreesatsd by the outline of a figure labeled, agree it's tim e to
f i t Average Cttteen ." la the middle of the d ro p th e im p lic it
leak figures em pty fooe would be a large counter-motto. From
Motion m ark.
One, Many?
This Is. altar all. a democratic republic. The
W hat ab o u t o u r
repls get to choose, and they get to choose on role in the world? Do
w basis of nows and opinion that are we need a monstrous
isntifiiUy available. Tbere is no way for any of enem y or a new Cold
»to complain th at "we don't know" o r "they W ar w ith someone
ao't tag us" about the fundamental dilemmas e l s e - p e r h a p s

M

parties' political
t of the economy
is up to us to

com m itm ent to Involvem ent beyond our
borders? Are we willing to take the Ume to sort
through the confttcttng evidence about the

In a city w here m f i
drug-related violence
is rampant, and the
A n
annual murder rate
Is c lim b in g e v e r
JL
closer to 500 (with
g r
650.000 residents),
the Secret Service
Uniformed Division ■
■ ’
Is not allowed to In- H
te rc e d e u n le s s .lt ^
takes place In gov*
€ Moat polica
em inent buildings or
* departments
foreign embassies.
might have
T o rla k le ap p ar*
pinned e
en tly
should have
medal on hie
called O il. like any
cheat. But not
other
resident and
In
m
taken
h is chances
Washington. J
that the circuits to
------------------------ —
the emergency help number didn't ring busy
as they have been known to do here.
B aaed on in te r n a l S e c re t S e rv ic e
memoranda, here's how events unfolded that
June morning:
It was 11:30 a.m . and Toriskie was on duty,
driving a Secret Service patrol car. Some local
residents approached Torlakle and revealed
"drug activity" occurring In a nearby play­
ground.
After Informing two fellow Secret Service
officers. Torlakle turned the car over to them
and proceeded to Investigate the incident on
foot. Torlakle then "gained access to the roof
of an apartm ent building near the park."
where be used his binoculars to scout the
playground. The tip proved accurate. The
young man the locals described to him was
spotted pulling "a clear plastic sandwich bag
containing a greenish-brown substance" from
htsw U ithandim d h*odingit to ynnihw im n
Torlakle radioed his fellow officers In the
patrol car and told them to move In for the
arrest. He then left his p etition to Join them.
The suspect Injured the hyo officers during
the arrest but was eventually detained.
According to TorisUe's letter of reprimand,
reviewed by our aaaorlatm Dean Boyd and
Ja n Moller, 'T h e U.S. Secret Service manual
... provides In pertinent p art th at 'the
USSSfUD will be preventative In nature, not
Investigative, ana will not replace MPDC
(Metropolitan Police of the District of Col­
umbia) in any m atters where the MPDC has
primary Jurisdiction."'
Although a drug deal was taking place
before bis eyes, Tortakte was punished for
responding in a way that Is Instinctive to
most law enforcement officials. “Officers
should not make unit-to-unlt or poat-to-post
transm issions. Most radio communications
should be directed through the appropriate
#Vu*ftsw*l Aonlwp ** glam fl«nrsi Bsmlm ------Sendee's Uniformed Division is to be a
“preventative" force, a Job description for
IK
m iO O a a ta
------------- »
«
___
ToriaUe's position
suggests
otherwise.
Under
th e h e a d in g , "M ajo r d u tie s an d r e ­
sponsibilities," the description reads in parti
(An officer) enforces laws, statutes, ordi­
nances of the United States and the District of
Columbia and prevents, detecta and Inm

Mi Isaiisrehlp, hot force. In all
I depend on the good sense,
length o f the people. He and
• asking for
support and
th at it Is fort hcoming,
mnie situation. Which of us Is
to Improve the

but be optimistically expectant. But the nation
Is us aad Is ours. What we choose to support or
oppose, how setftahly o r unselfishly we decide,
will define Us future. Just as w hat we will do for
the next Ifi m onths will define the New Year.
T hat's the real cover story.

l e t t e r s t o e d it o h
be absorbed only by
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
i forced by circum stances must be signed. Include the address of the writer
w repeatedly?
and a daytime telephone number. Letters should
How much Anther Is each be on a single subjret and be as brief as possible,
loua. racial aad -"-fpir** The letters are subject to editing.
jo

ANDERSON

s

m

i

suspects, gathers and com piles evidence and
appears In eourt."
A spokeswoman for the Secret Service
would not comment on the incident, or
w hether officers are routinely suspended
when infringing on local police Jurisdiction.
The Torlakle affair Is more than a dally
chapter In this city's battle against crime and
druih. It exposes a secret of one of America's
d h e law enforcement sgrnrtns U Is often an
arm y without a war to fight.

�Sanford Horald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 4, itW - iA

Bush, Yeltsin offer treaty
as ‘Joint New Year’s gift’
«il■&gt;
Ataooiatso l^kAA
press Ilf
writer

MOSCOW - President Bush and R raslan
President Bods Yettato, clinking glaaera In a
farewell to u t Saturday, offered the world a "Joint
Hew Year’a gift" — a treaty sharply reducing
their moot threatening nuclear weapons.
"The two powers that once divided the world
have now come together to make it a better and
safer place," aeld Bush a t the start of a lavish
KiemUn dinner launching his 24-hour treaty
signing summit with Yeltsin.
Seeking to calm Russian concerns that his
departure Brum office could alow the burgeoning
cooperation between the two countries. Bush
prornieea ictcstn u n i n n w c n iT ic ci vunion
would be a " 100 penent partner."
The 100-degree temperature drop Bueh expertenced u he arrived here from hie two-day vM t to
Somalia was in m alted oontraet to 'th e warm
rcccpuon no itocitcq oo tnis&lt; in® m ini aski fttK
summit with Yeltsin since Russian independence
In December 1091,
"On this momentous day, may I express our
sincere gratitude to the preaktent of the United
States. Mr. Oeorge Bush, who h u contributed so
m uch to the developm ent of the Russiansen partnership," aaid Yeltsin, u he
i Bush With vodka
of the Hall of Facets.
The historic START n treaty, he aakl. la "i
Joint New Year's gift to the people of the earth."
The-treaty
i
B WWJlfTn^fTf nF tlr BH
history ea a
control president. Me has

rsathsd th ree major
__ agree*
mem* wiui nokow itrvcf m u jiiu ii ofnee four
ynfBMD.
The dinner. wtth He promise of a aafer world in
the hihire, w u u much an event of nostalgia.
Bueh waa Joined by hie chief of staff. Jam es
Baker, who negotiated the first two arm s
agreements in his capacity as m
"Aa I prepare to leave the
farewell to a man Ibr whom
heads home Sunday after a
wtth Yeltsin, a signing
conference, and a Parts stop
wtth
iruNoem rrsncijM Muicrrmna.
The 30 page Strategic Arm
D will reduce the number of nuclear warheads to
their lowest levels sinew the United States end
Soviet ynloa escalated their arm s race in the
1900s.
Ten y ean from now, qnder the agreement, the
two aides should have about two4htrda less
nuclear warheads than their current 20,000
stockpile,
The treaty has something far each, a result of
comprom ises U J. o fficials said would have been
Inconceivable tf the Soviet Union had not

Homebeen able to
care' for Her. The odty problem
has been the Hooding which
forces Oager to call In the fire
department to carry hia mother
upstairs to escape the water.
"T hat's not going to happen
any more." aakl Pierre Abularrage, a social worker wtth Para­
gon Health Care who has been a
liaison beteeer\ the county and
Dennis In getting the work done.
"They have come through wtth
a great package."
The development office has
designated 84.000 for repairs on
Dennis* house.
According to Abuiarrage, the
work wlU Include Installing new
prehung exterior doors wtth
dead bolts, replacing seven
windows, Installing a door at the
back of the house, Installing an
apron around the outside of (he
house to drain water away from
the house, installing locks on all

Gene A. Bess, 62, of Margo
Drive, Longwood, died Friday.
Jan .. 1. at St. Mary's Hospital,
Huntington. W. Va. He waa bom
Aug. 31. 1930, In Branchland.
W. Va. Mr. Best was a postal
worker and a Protestant. He waa
-a member of the DAV and an
Army Veteran.
Survivors include m other,
Mildred Lusher. Barbouravtfte,
W. Va.t wife. Jaunleta, Longwoodi daughter. Andrea V.,
Longwood. Martina L. Baca,
Ridgecrest. Calif.t son. Thomas
G.. Palm Bay; sister. Donna
M iller. Newark. Ohio. Marie
McComas. Salt Rock. W. Va.:
brother. Clyde L. Jr.. Oeorge E
w
- - i. as
.., grmnoenuaren*
sx sm ln lrilttrn n
KOCft;
live

B aldw in-Falrchild F uneral
Heme, Oaklawn Park Chapel,
U k e Mary, ttf charge of arThomas Lee Douglass. 80. of
Oakdale Avenue. P rLand, died
S a tu rd a y . J a n . 2 . a t W est
Volusia Memorial Hospital. DeLand. Bora Jan . 12, ,1942. in

a member of Saoford American
Legion Post *83.
Survivors include daughter*.
T erl M alcolm . F a rt Pierce.
T am brcy. G ainesville: son.
T ravis. C arrboro. N.C.: one
grandchild.
Laqkford Funeral Home. DeLand, ia ch arg e-o f — ^

Some of the thousands of birds that ham flown
south for the winter and settled in Sanford,

* Officials

"It was a fascinating tttne far all of us, to work
wtth an much nprnneee. as m uch cand
much a te en defers on the part of *the two
to find
Un-

Mayor
1A
m inlalfstar because of the 11
reasons outlined In his six-page
letter.
"That doesn't mean I'm get­
ting rid of him. It means I've lost
confidence in him. I'm sorry for
the letter but 1 hope when he
It, he can't castigate me
without a reply, that we can lay'
down the hatchet and work
together." Lovestrand aaid.
For hia part. McFellln mid. "I
do not see a professional rela­
tionship with the mayor of the
city."
The two have been continually
at odds since Uovestrand's elec­
tion as mayor. However, dis­
putes have escalated Into verbal
and written accusations only
recently.
McFelUn sakl he would provide
Loveatrand "w ith the sam e
courtesy 1 provide every other

Southern oxpotum

IA
nate with him as well as the
c o u n ty , to be c e rta in th e
beautification and w idening
work won’t be interfering with

A j t n l k n i t t m a Of
v8cn
oincr*

commission.'"
Lovestrand added he hoped.
The city adm inistrator said he "We can get this behind us and
would continue to carry out the Moback to work."
policies of the city commission.
•

.

"I believe he (Lovestrand). has
an agenda he la going to follow. 1
will follow the wishes and de­
sires of the commission, whether
he a g re e s o r d isa g re e s o r
whether I agree or disagree. I
will follow the directives of the
commission." McFellln aaid.
Loveatnuid insisted hia sixpage letter waa only a defense of
his actions after a page-tong
memo faom McFellln.
*1 am not going to m ate any
mottott (to lire McFelUn). I have
no ptons to m ate any motion.
I'm only letting the other comnshow lfcd."hesald;
the windows, installing a hew
rear on the rear of the house.

Road
1A
Rabun. "We
wanted them to get In there and
get done with It once and for all.
Apparently, it's enough tim e
because (the bonding company)
. to negotiating with somebody."
Hastings said Mahoney was
d a total of 94.1 million of the
.8 m illion c o n tra c t. T he
county will pay no more than
the approximately 82.7 million
re m a in in g in th e c o n tra c t
amount, aaid Rabun. ICOA will
be' required to pay the balance If
(he tow bid Is for a greater

K

Schoolsef gr*
neer• IF*----—
nresaure."
w
WAccording
to - the

T am very, very happy they
are doing th is." Oager aaid.
"Thia means so much to us."
/Gager afed that his mother Is
very excited and happy that the
work will be done ana that she
will continue to be a h lt to live at
home.
In Y*au«a*» to the money that
. th re e anonym ous
given 180 apiece to
that la begin*
nlng to buy a piano for Dannie.
Her p*»"" waa ihfeinyiwl last
jf w by flood waters in the
"She loves to play her goapei
m ualc an d sin g , h e r to n
explained. "A new piano would
be a dream come true for her."

Lyle P. Fletcher. 61. of Woodfire W ay. C asselberry, died
Tuesday. Dec. 29. at Martin
A e few n Hoapicc House, Or­
lando. Bora April 3. 1931. in
Morend. Mich., he moved to
Central Florida In 1998, He was
a computer program salesman
and a member and elder of the
Sw M uiim d Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints., Mr.
Fletcher was also a member of
th e P ro fessio n al In su ran ce
Agents and an Air Force veteran.
Survivors include wife. Dianna
J.t son. William Hostetler. Blue
Springs, Mo.: stepson, Raymond
.....................
-*— "
E.
Walker J r.. Dcnvc
Denvcn daugh­
WiP, Deverioe
________________
_
ters.
Kaye Hargrove,

Litton had earlier said he
wants to get the beautification
work com piled by the end of
construction, to avoid any con­
tinuation of traffic delays.
"If the work really gets back
underway." Litton aaid today,
,"M would be a great way In
which to start the new year."
"I'll be happy If work starts by
next week, and even lumpier if It
gets underway before the end of
this week," said Mayor Lowry
Rockett. &lt;
"W e'll have to continue to
closely monitor the construction
progress to avoid any potential
cost over-runs." he added. “A
construction delay such as we've
had in this project often leads to
possible overruns, and we will
be watching the work to be
certain this isn’t
Rocket said he was pleased
that local firms would be used to
do the actual work. "When they
use Florida people." he said,
they, are much more familiar

.

state De­
partm ent of Education, no other
district in the state had two
schools named among (he top
schools In the state.
The state has passed along the
applications from Lyman and
Lakrvtew to the Untied Suites
Department of Education for

iy. the
fine reached 1,138.750. the larg­
est. code One tn the county's
79-year history.
A county Inspector, in August.
1998, found paint cans, tires, a*
car framd and other
had
property
been dumped on
without a coun
the county
In October 1
Code Enforcement

. D.C.
over the day for violations of the county 's
landfill and borrow pit ordl*
winners will be announced In
____ found Sobotka had
•day. *
____ to comply with their orRepresentative* of the national dem to remove the illegallywinning schools will be flown to placed material*. Although the
Washington. D.C. for an awards property Is Jointly owned. In­
spectors and law enforcement
ceremony in June.
officials found ffnhrHhw utilised
Judaea
wlU vtatt the

Woodlawn Funeral Home and
Memorial Park. O rlando, In
«
Edith McGrath. 93. of Sander Lane. Casselberry, died
urday. Ja n . 2, at Florida
H ospital. Altam onte 8prlngs.
Bora Dec. 3.1899. In Cincinnati,
she moved to Central Florida in
1998. S te waa a homemaker.
Survivors include daughter.
Marjorie Ryan. C— ritoeny; one
grandchild, one great-grandchild

K

B aldw in-F alrchild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in

b ro th e rs . A llan S tra tm a n ,
Sonfeta. Aria.. Omar Stratman.
Kodiak, Alaska, Jim Stratman.
Mac Stratm an. both of Gun­
nison. Colo.: sister. Ardsth Rich­
ards. Palmer. Alaska. Margie
Nelson. Olathe. Colo.
B aldw ln*Falrchlld F uneral
Home. Ootdenrod. in charge of
arrangem ents.
Shirley Jean Yonkln. 42, of
Eighth Street. Chuluota, died
Friday, Jan . 1, a t Florida Hospi­
tal. Orlando. Born Feb. 8. 1980.
In Denver, she moved to Central
Florida In 1984. She waa a
homemaker and a member of
C h u rc h o r C h ris t. W in ter
Springs.
S urvivors. include husband.
Larry: son. Dale, C huluota:d a u g h ter. B haneen Y onkln.
Chuluota; sisters. Tammy Sue
Lopes. Lineto Perry, both of
Ocoee, Cheryl Lou. Longwood:
brother. Mike Perry. BrookavUle;
parents. Burton and Mary Perry.
Ocoee.
B aldw in-F alrchild F uneral
Home. Golden rod. in charge of
arrangements.

A U CSW .l________
Alice W. Morgan. 86. of Ha­
cienda Vtflagr. Winter Springs,
died Friday. Ja n . 1. at her
residence. Bom Oct. 13,1908. In
Jersey City. N J.. she moved to
Central Florida in 1988. She waa
a receptionist for a motel and
hotel.
- All Faiths Cremation Service.
Casselberry, in charge pf ar­
Harold E. "Gene" Hatey. 89. of rangements.
ometl Drive. Sanford, died 8aturday, Jan. 2, at hia residence.
Bom Jan. 7. 1923. in Kokomo.
Jennie Ellen Murray. 81. of
to 1987. He was owtter of MFC 1740 Brumtey Road. Cttuhtota.
IHrorsI wrvuw tv Mr. tw s A tew. m
died Friday. Jan . I. a t Winter
Survivors include wife. Norma
J.t son. Tom. Ocoee: daughter*. Fsb. S3. 1931. to Kadoka. S.D.
mm mm ssmr O M H W s
Marlene Smith. Feradate. Debra. she moved to Central Florida In
A ltam onte S prings: brother. 1973. She was a homemaker
irwuerhSM tasaSM
H ohrlt Connecticut; (oui* jenuicl* and Catholic.
Survivors Include husband.
. Fwwei
c h i l d r e n q n d fiv e g r e a t L l o y d R o b e r t . C h u l u o t a : Marr-UI mtSicharfial

________________________ , _________ _ ___________

1 *

' *

■

“

W alter. Taaipai parents. Russell
and Florence Fletcter. Morepct:
brother. Neil. Tallahaaare:-----Doris VanWagner. Tecumaeh
Mlch.t nine grandchildren.
B aldw in-Falrchild F uneral
Home. Forest City. In charge of

Dispute
McFellln stated he then told
with construction needs and the
availability of supplies, ft will Lovestrand to leave his office.
help the project move more "He said In words to the effect
that TU go when I want to.' 1
rapidly.
Ken
ten M cDonald and Jo h n (old Mayor Lovestrand to leave
Emanuel, of The Eyes Have It my office or I would have the
Optical. In Lake Mary, have lead police chief remove him. He
a boulevard m erchants' drive to reluctantly left my office."
In his response. Lovestrand
get construction resumed. "It
would be great to see the work said the two men disagreed
back In progress." McDonald' about the storm w ater fond as he
aaid this morning, "but I won't favored making It an enterprise
fond.
believe it until I see It."
A ccording to L ovestrand'a:
He added. "I lust hope they're
telling the truth thia time, and m em o, "T h e next response
that the work wlU still be done shocked me and may have
by Ju n e 14th a s originally caused me to overreact. He i
"You don't have the votes.' I
scheduled."
In September. McDonald and replied. ‘Well, IT I don’t have
Emanuel had urged merchants them now. I will after the next
and persons using the boulevard election. If you don't listen now.
to Join In a letter writing cam­ It may be too late next yenr and
paign demanding that action be you may not be the only one to
taken as soon as possible to get go."
Lovcsirand's description of the •
construction back underway.
A num ber of people responded conversation continued. with his
wtth fatten to Seminote County
He replied, (by this time the
Manager Ron Rabun. Almost all
of the tetters were copies, that conversation waa heated). 'Why
required only the signature of don't you act tn the Interest of
the sender. Copies were to be lltc pcoptc of Lontfwood ftnatetd
sent to Governor Lawton Chiles, of nit-picking/ I aaid. 'I
u
interests
by wat­
and the Board of County Com­ acting In their m
ching their fonds.* Kls reply.
missioners.
f.|,f I * ft,
Y ouW n o t' you're acting ih
1
your own interests, you1 and
Jim m y Roan and Stem MUIer.'
* *i "* * ■* W
lb s -p rop erty lo dum p debris (Why waa this nummary? He
collected by his company. JCL
I*
Lanucleating Inc.
McFelUn. tot hia Dec. 30 reSobotka was charged w ith aponse to Lovaferan
the name of
littering by the Florida Game stated
■uuasi ssA
dakaS Isa.
u u u iM u lte a
uaco
in uic jrnnvfraeuofi
and Fresh W ater Fish . Com­ never,
mission In 1991 and subse­ referenced."
Accordins to Lovestrand. both
quently convicted Jan. 2. He
waa sentenced to a year proba­ men told the other th at he
tion and 100 hours of communi­ should resign from their post,
then McFelUn ordered him out of
ty service.
Assistant State Attorney Beth theofftoe.
L ovestrand. In hia memo,
Rutbcrg aaid Sobotka has been
released from hia probation elated. "On reflect ten. I probably
because he-completed the com­ sh o u ld have le ft hia office
munity service requirem ent and eoottefs I |u m I wee eo stocked1
removed several dumploads of by his actions that I was a bit
debris illegally dumped at his started. I do not. however. In­
tend to take any m e n of this
-property.
Richard Tetter, wtth the DER type of abuse. I was lured In,
solid waste section in Orlando, baited with rash accusations,
aaid regulatory officials are con­ and responded accordingly. I did
sidering ordering Sobotka to not intend to twrthff the city
p lace se v e ra l g ro u n d w a te r rommteaion w tth this...Mjr obth a t ha aaid &lt;
m onitoring wells arouhd the
'property to determine If any in front of his subordinates in an
contam ination la s t the fete. • ■ effort to em barrass bad belittle
m e."
If Sobotka falls to comply.
Lovestrand concludes his re­
Tetter aaid,focal DER officials sponse by agying. "If h e (the city
would call In "a state inspection m imintstrstort chooses to lanore.
learn or Inspectors from the ridicule and subvert the actions
federal Environm ental Protec­ of com m issioners ftfcsu tr he
tion Agency.
feels they "do not have the
"It's frustrating.” aaid Tetter. votes," he plays the game oi
"It's hard to know what lo do politics and thus risks the con­
sequences if th a t "m inority"
when nathling gets done."
majority.

�• A - Sanlord Herald. Sanford. Florida - Monday. January 4. 1993

Lake Mary
Hom e for the holidays

IN B R IE F
Elders Affairs Commission sets meeting
The City or Lake Mary Elders AITnlrs Commission will be
holding its monthly meeting at 100 W. Lake Mary Blvd., City
Hall Chambers, on Jan. 7 at 10 a.in.
The special guest speaker will be Pam Sanders from Hospice
of Central Florida.
Hospice of Central Florida Is one of the oldest and most
experienced hospice In Florida. The organization Is known
most of all for the caring professionals and volunteers, bringing
hope and comfort Into the homes of those facing life-limiting
Illness.
The Elders AITnlrs Commission welcomes the general public
to all Its meetings. We would like to Invite all Interested parties
who wish to Interact with the commission and our guest
speaker.

Camera club monthly meetings
The Seminole Lake Mary Camera Club meets the second
Wednesday ever)’ month In Old I^ike Mary City Hall. 158 N.
Country Club Hd. at 7:30 p.m. For more Information, call Grace
at 321 -4723 or Scl at 323-8691.

Club takes the lead
L.E.A.D.8 to Success, a newly formed club to share business
connections, will meet 7:30 n.m. Wednesday at Pebble Creek
Apartments clubhouse. 780 Crcckwatcr Terrace. Lake Mnry.
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 Marcia Kurtzc 646-0609.

Rotary meets early
Rotary Club of Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings. 8 to 9
a.m. at the Tlmacuan Country’ Club, on Rluehnrt Road. Contact
Paul Osborne, president, at 321-4764.

Lake Mary Optimists meet weekly
The Optimist Club of Lake Mary meets every Tuesday ut 7:00
p.m.. at 109 E. Crystal Lake Avc. (corner of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors are welcome.

Families and friends gather to make the season special
On Dec. 18, Nancy and Evert
dc Boer held a pre-Christmas
party In their exquisite home In
Heathrow. Nancy, who Is from
Columbia, and Evert, from
Holland, make an extremely
charming couple.
Their two adorable children.
Michncl nnd Patricia were fast
asleep when the guest began to
arrive at 8 p.m.
The hors dc ouerves were very
tasty with some being of the
Spanish origin. The four desserts
were heavenly nnd were made
. by Nancy and some of her lovely
neighbors. Peggy Pyle. Nena
Shldcntantlc, and Mirynni del
Toro.
There was an awesome choco­
late mousse cake, a rum cake, a
cheese cake und a very unusual
cake called "Better than Sex
C ake." Both a fruity n on­
alcoholic punch and the creative
alcoholic punch were terrific.
A select group of people came
from nround the world ns well ns
from Heathrow and the general
Lake Mary area. Some of the
guest Included Thelma and John
S tc r r c tt; N ena an d Dnvid
Shldcmuntle; Peggy and Terry
Pyle: Shelly and Roger Pynn:
Gerrl and Grant McEwnn nnd
Fay and Anton Bulsing, among
many others.

LAKE M ARY
H EA TH R O W

The B u ssllc 's hom e was
beautifully decorated for the
holidays.
Christmas drive helps needy

The City of Uikc Mary laun­
ched its 1992 C om m unity
S A R A B E C C A Christmas Drive.
ROSIER
Originated nnd financed by
Police Chief Harry Benson In
1975, the event became popular
In
Lake Mary and the most
T h e re was an e le g a n t
Christmas tree as guests entered successful of all cities In Semi­
the lovely home nnd In the nole County.
family room was a chlldcn's
Because of the strong commu­
Christmas tree decorated with nity support, organizers had
Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck been able to reach out to many
garlands:------------------------------ of the needy and less fortunate
people of Lake Mnry. providing
Christmas cheer
food, toys, games nnd other
On C h r i s t m a s e v e n i n g , Christmas items.
another congenial group of peo­
If not for the genuine spirit of
ple gathered nt the elegant home giving from the community,
of Marianne nnd Anthony Basile many children would not have
for coffee und a luscious array of had a Christmas. It is during the
outstanding desserts.
holiday season thnt these fami­
Mnrlnnnc und Tony were lies realized that others really
wonderful host and hostess did care.
along with their very pretty
daughter. Ginn.
In an effort to Increase the
Some of the guests enjoying number of new. quality books In
the camaraderie nnd calories the media center nt Lake Mary
were Mary and Al Sculto; Marion Elementary School, the school
and Robert Good: Mary Jean nnd has created the Book Garden
Thomas Walker and Dr. Wayne Club.
Rahmlng. among others.
With the money from Its last

Book Fair, they purchased a
group of very special books.
Instead of putting these books
directly on the shelf, the school
will use them as seed books to
get Its library garden growing.
And they need the community to
help plant the books.
To plant a seed book on the
shelf, think of someone spcclnl
to recognize, remember, or for
any reason appropriate. Then,
for $15, choose a favorite title
from the seed book area. A
special book plate will be placed
In the book noting why and for
whom the book was planted and
the persons planting It. All
money received from the sale ol
these books will be used to
purchase additional books for
the seed selection area. The
family planting the seed book
will have the opportunity to lie
the first to check out the book.
The first seed book has already
been purchased. It was planted
by the Peters' children in honor
of their mother's birthday and
her work as a Dividend In the
media center.
For those who arc Interested In
Joining the Book Garden Club
and planting a seed book, please
contact medlu specialist Kaye
Warner at 322-5218.

Reminiscent holidays

Woman’s Club to meet
Lake Mary’ Woman's Club meets the fourth Wednesday of
each month. Contact Sheila Sawyer at 321-7947.

Historical Commission gathers
The Lake Mary’ Historical Commission meets Monduys nt Old
City Hall. Contuct Mary Wolff at 321-5666 for more
information.

Clogging group to have classes
Dixieland doggers hold classes from 7-8 p.m. each Monday
at the old Lake Mary fire station. First Street and Wilbur
Avenue.

Weight Watchers meet on Thursdays
A local chapter of Weight Watchers meets at the Lake Mary
Community Building every Thursday from 4:45 to 6:45 p.m.

Dividend volunteers, left to right,
Cheryl Taylor, Laurie Mealor,
Donna Gillespy, Marie Braddock,
D e n i s e P o w e l l and Bet t y
Whitney, helped students make
family wishes come true during
the Holiday Boutique. Students
shopped to fill their Christmas
lists.

Youth Center open on Friday nights
Every Friday night, the Lake Mary Community Building Is
transformed in a Youth Center from 7-11 p.m. Area youth are
welcome to participate in the fun.

Sunbelt Daylily Club to meet
Sunbelt Daylily Club meets the first Sunday of the month at
2 p.m through April at the Old City Hall. Highway 15A near
Lake Mary Boulevard. Lake Mary.
The club educates members on daylily growing through slide
showB. guest speakers and trips to daylily gardens. A May
flower show and plant sale Is planned. There are no club dues.
Call 886-3196 for more Information.

HtraMPhoto*bySatabacca floaiar

Let us know what’s going on
The Sanford Herald welcomes announcements about social
activities and club news for publication In the Lake Mary pages
each Monday. There Is no charge.
1. All Items should be typed or written legibly and Include
the name of a person who cun be contucted und a daytime
phone number.
•
2. The deadline is 11 a.m. Thursduy before publication.

Sanford Herald
Is s proud member of the "Welcome
Wagon11Fam ily In Seminole County
&amp; &amp;

S W i

Fagirhatk B»»k B ttkaagt

of Altamonte Springs

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

Arvida presented Heathrow's 1992 Holiday Light­
ing Ceremony to the delight of the community.
Residents enjoyed entertainment from local

328-7774

EVCHYMYIS
irn W M M V

THELASTOF 1:1S
1:Mi
kTHEMOHICANS 7:001

PURE(pUNTlff

If You Live In One Of These Areas, Please Call

-

S H O P P E S O F LA K E M ARY
(Comer of Country Club Road &amp;
Lake Mary Boulevard)

For More Information, Call:

Let your Welcome Wagon representative
answer your questions about the area and
present you with free gifts.
Sanford
Lake Mary
Longwood
Winter Springs
Altamonte
Casselberry
Oviedo

NOWOPEN..

schools, gift distribution and of course a visit
from Santa. Valerie Williams, left, and Mellanle
Bartlett give a door prize to Michael DeBoer.

323-5265
321-6660
869-8612 or 774-1231
777-3370
339-4468
695-7974
695-3819

f w
[

MIGHTYDUCKS

a d u l t s

)

KiMimanua , B /

J

^ H A N C E I lS I S
v H ER O
d **J

O r Anytime Day O r Night Call 646-9644

r m n « 5 7 ®
V ittie tm iia e
The dance group Destiny from Seminole High School was featured
at the lighting ceremony.

t

J

1:1SS:lN
S:1ST:1S|
(a ra u N R O N Sell
ta y

f

M r.
1 B a s e b a ll

i* m iN
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�January

S a n fo rd H e ra ld

Sports
IN

B R IE F

Getting back to work
Greyhounds open ’93
with quadrangle sweep

Umpire clinic planned
SANFORD - The Sanford Officiating Associa­
tion has scheduled an umpire's clinic for the
weekend of January l) and 10 at Sanford City
Hall. 300 N. Park.
The clinic, which will bcf(in at H a.in. both
days. Is for anyone Interested In becoming an
American Softhall Association-certified umpire.
The cost Is *20.
For more Information, call Duane latfollelle.
322-9026. or the Sanford Recreation Depart­
ment. 3305097.

Seminole PONY registration
FIVE POINTS - Seminole PONY Baseball will
Ik1 registering players for Its spring leagues on
consecutive Saturdays. January 9 and 16. at the
Seminole PONY complex on Stntc Road 419.
Registration, which will he rondueled be­
tween 10 a.m. and 2 p in. each day. will be
available to players between the ages of 5 and
16. Players must Im- the designated age by Aug.
1. 1993. Proof age Is required.
The registration fees arc. by league: Shetland
(ages 5 and 6) - *35: Pinto (7-8) - $55:
Mustang (9-10) - *60: Bronco (I M 2) - *65:
Pony (13-14) - *75: and Colt (15-16) - *75. An
additional fundraiser committment of 924 will
tie required at the time of registration.
For more Information call 323-5570 and leave
a message.

Seminole Softball registration

aboum p

Tw m m — i

Miami women upset
SOUTH ORANGE. N.J. - Scion Hall took the
curly lead and coasted to a 73-59 upset victory
over 22nd-ranked Miami in a Big East contest.
Jodi Brooks nulled 19 points and 10 rebounds
for the Pirates (7-3) with Shamona Marable
adding 14 points and 15 rebounds.
Miami's Vicki Plowdcn led all scorers with 24
points and nabbed 12 rebounds, while Holly
Rllltngcr added 15 points and Carla Harris hud
14 for the Lady 'Canes (5-3).

Bills win wild one
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. - The greatest
comeback In NFL history was no big deal for
Frank Reich. He's dope this kind of thing before.
With no Jim Kelly and no Thurman Thomas,
and In a 32-point hole (35-3), the Buffalo Bills
turned to their miracle man. Reich, who
engineered the biggest rally in college history In
1984 while at Maryland, hit Andre Reed with
three touchdown passes and Don Beebe with
one. then Steve Christie kicked a 32-yard field
goal 3:06 into overtime to win ft 41 -38 Sunday.

Eagles also comeback
NEW ORLEANS - It was a game that history
said no one could win. between two teams a
combined 0-7 In postseason the last 12 years.
So naturally, the losers were the New Orleans
Saints, who have NEVER won a playoff game.
The Philadelphia Eagles scored 26 points In 8
minutes. 20 seconds of the fourth quarter
Sunday, overcoming a 13-polnt deficit and
winning 36-20. ending their own playofTJlnx.

Jackson shoula mako Hall
NEW YORK - Reggie Jackson, one of
baseball's all-time best postseason performers.
Is expected to liccomc the 24lh played elected to
the Hall of Fume In the first year of eligibility
when results are announced Tuesday.
Jackson, Steve Garvey and Phil Nlckro arc
among the 14 first-time candidates.

H M W IM W S n
Bfoys’ Baakatball
□Sprue* Cr**k *1 Lak* Brantfsy. Junior varsity
at 6 p.m. with varsity to follow.

Frashman Baakatball
□ Lak* Mary *1 Lak* How*ll, 7 p.m.

BASKETBALL
I ,9 p in. - ESPN. college. Okluhomu at Duke.
(L)

1993

B

LOCALLY

FIVE POINTS —Seminole Softball Club, home
of the 14-and-Under National Champions, will
be holding registration for the Spring girls'
slowpltch season beginning Saturday. January
9 and running through Sunday. Janunry 17.
Girls, ages 6-18 may register at the Five Points
Seminole Softball Club complex on Slate Road
•119 (between 17-92 and 434 near Winter
Springs) from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday's. 1
p m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday's and from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Monduy through Friduy.
League play begins on Saturday, February 6.
For more Information, rail 321 -4985.

4,

FM* Photo

Lyman High School 119-pounder Nicky Samero (top) ran his 1992-93 prep
record to 94) with three victories at Kissimmee-Gateway Saturday afternoon,
wlnnning two of his matches with first-period pins.

KISSIMMEE - There arc two
ways to remove rust: work It ofT
slowly or grind It off In a hurry.
Lyman High School wrestling
coach Rick Trlblt chose the latter
method to get the Greyhounds back
Into the swing of things after their
winter holiday, scheduling his team
to participate In a quadrangle meet
at Klsslmmce-Gateway High School
on Saturday.
Except for a few menial lapses,
the Greyhounds picked up where
they left off In 1992. sweeping
through West Orange. Gateway, and
Lake Weir to run their dual meet
record to 6-0.
"We didn't look too bad,” said
Trlblt. "We looked a little rusty
because of the holidays. Most of the
guys didn't have a lot of competition
over the holidays. We looked pretty
good considering that we had a
two-week layoff."
Dallas Simpson, Jason Nutt and
Nicky Samero each extended their
Individual perfect records with three
wins Saturday.
Simpson. Lyman's 189-pounder.
Improved to 10-0 by scoring a
technical fall and a major decision
before picking up a forfeit win
against Lake Weir. Nutt (9-0) won
his matches In the 160-pound class
by decision, technical fall and 55second pin. Samero (9-0) notched
two pins and a decision at 119
pounds.
Samero was involved In one of the
day's best matches, out-pointing
West Orange's Kenneth Revell 3-1
in a rematch of the finals of the
Lyman Christmas Tournament.

LYMAN a WIST 0R A N 0I17
• 103 - Flora* (L) by forMlj 111 - Huntor (U
tach. toll William* IF4; Ilf — N. Samoro (L) dat.
Xavail J-lj IIS - AIIIrtr (L) plnnad Cappotto
J: It; IJO - Strlngfltld (WO) tacti. tall Guatln IM :
IIS - HI icon (WO) dac. Glummo t i l l ; 140 Bugara (WO) dac. Portnoy 4-4; I4S — V. Samoro
(LI plnnad Sondrutl:S7; lit — Dafailo (L) ma|or
dac. McFarland 77 10, 140 - Nutt (L) dac
Schwari if f , 171 - Malvln (LI plnnad Scott 1:4S;
Ilf - Slmpton (L) toch. loll Corrao IS 1; 770 Oloi (L) plnnad Kannody :J4; HVY — Oonlal*
(WO) by (orfall.
Jantor va ratty i Lyman 74. Watt OrangaO.
LYMAN 41. OATIWAY74
101 - Raad (0) plnnad Flora* 7;«; 117 Hunfar (L) by tortaltj II* — N. Samara (L)
plnnad O'Nall 1:04; 17S — Altliar (L) by torfalt;
110 — Guttln (L) molar doc. Lafoura 10-7; US —
Marcado 10) plnnad Olummo 1:40; 140 — Portnoy
(L) ma|or dac. Jomoon H I; I4S — Santo* (O)
dac. V. Samaro 04; in — Johnton (0) dac.
Oatatlo 11)1; t*0 - Nutt (L) tacti. tall Parat 17 7;
171 — Mattot (G) plnnad Malvln 1:71; 10* —
Slmpton (L) mo|or dac. Coutlnt 11 1; no — Dial
(L) plnnad Donawa :!); HVY — Martallla (0) by
torfalt.
•
Jimtor vortMyi Lyman H. Gotowoy 0.
LYMAN 70. LAKIWIIRO
101 — Flora* (L) plnnad Mltot :H; 111 —Huntor
(L) plnnad Hlgglnt 4:47; II* — N. Samara (L)
plnnad Campball :I7; ITS - Altliar ID plnnad
Sutadytd 1:SI; ITS - Guttln (L) plnnad Hama*
1:1*; IIS —Glummo(L) by torfalt; 140—Portnoy
(L) mo|or dac. Ivay IS!; 141 - V. Samara IL)
plnnad Dodga
IS1 — Dafailo (L) plnnad Coto
1:14; tIO —Nutt |L) plnnad Bott :1S; 111 —Malvln
(L) toch. toll Dalay ISO; 10* - Slmpton &lt;L) by
fortolt; 710 - Mlitoll (LW) plnnad Dial
HVY
—Hannah (L) plnnad Kllcraata 1:10.
*
rvanity: Lyman 14. LaAaWtfrO

"It’s always a good match when
Nicky wrestles Revell." Trlblt said.
"They see each other sq much.
They wrestle each other all the time
at tournaments and during the
season.”
Isaac Hunter (8-2) and John
AlUzer (9-1) were the only other
Greyhounds to win all three of thetr
□Be* W reatU ag. Page SB

Polar bear
softball
cranks up
tonight
By DEAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer

SANFORD — The Sanford Recre­
ation Department is wasting no time
In gelling Its 1993 sports schedule
underwuy. Tonight at Chase Park,
the top teams in Sanford, the Super
C’s. kick off the Polar Bear Softball
League season with three games.
The Super C League opens a Polur
Bear season Ihul will sec the
Rccrcutlon Department conduct six•leant leagues on Monday. Tuesday.
Wednesday and Thursday nights at
Chase Park.
Tuesday nights will belong to the
women's leugue while men's C
leagues will Ik* pluyed on Wednes­
days and Thursdays.
There will also be a men's C
league on Tuesduy nights once
Improvements arc finished on the
Fort Mellon Softball Field. The men
are tentatively scheduled to start
play the first week In February,
when Ihc women move lo Fori
Mellon.
Tonight's season opener not only
brings softball back to Sanford after
□Bee S oftball, Page 2B

Chicago While Sox outfielder and local resident Tim
Raines (above) is expected to return to Sanford softball

wars as a member of TRC in the Monday 8up*r
League, which begins play tonight at Chase Park.

Local preps show no signs of slowing down
To paraphrase Joe Namath, we
can't wait for tomorrow because you
keep getting better every day.
Aa previously documented. 1992
was a phenomenal year for Semi­
nole County high school athletics,
local schools collecting five state
championships during the previous
12 months. If you wish to go back to
the beginning of the 1991-92 school
year, that total grows to six cham­
pionship* In 16 months.
,
Supposedly, only Dade (metro
Miami) and Duval (Jacksonville)
counties topped Seminole's total.
And it's not as If one school were
carrying the rest of the county:
Seminole, the only Class 3A school
of the group, captured two (baseball
and boys' track) state crowns while
Lake Mary (boys' tennis), Lyman
(girls' soccer). Oviedo (boys*
basketball) and Lake Brantley (girls'
swimming) copped one each.
While the school didn't have a
team state champion. Lake Howell's
Brendan Buckley won an Individual
state crown at the Class 4A state

TO N Y
D «S 0 R M IE R

wrestling tournament.
There's no reason to expect 1993
will be any leas rewarding.
While making predictions la best
left to psychics, recent trends and
current track records indicate that
the New Year will enjoy a very
successful start. For example, Sem­
inole County schools were competi­
tive to the point of domination
during holiday tournament play.
• To begin with, the Lyman
wrestling team romped to the team
title in its Christmas tournament.
Oviedo tied for fourth while Lake

Mary finished seventh. Lyman
coach Rick Trlblt also took half of
his team and several wrestlers from
Oviedo and finished fourth at the
Sunshine Open In Tampa.
• County girls' aoccer teams
compiled a 13-6 record In tourna­
ment play. Lyman. Lake Brantley
and Lake Howell were each 3-1 in
the Burger King Classic while Sem­
inole went 2-1 in the Flagler-Palm
Coast event.
• Led by Lyman, county boys'
soccer teams were a composite 15-8
during the break. Lyman went 4-0
to win the Ptxxa Hut Invitational,
beating Lake Mary (3-1) in the
finals.
• In girls’ basketball. Lake Mary
won the Lady War Eagle Holiday
Classic. Lake Howell took second at
the Evans tournament. Seminole
finished fifth in the Polk Holftlay
Classic and Lyman placed sixth in
the Lady Wildcat Invitational. As a
group, the four teams were 11-4.
• At the Central Florida Classic
boys' basketball tournament. Lake
Rrantlrv took second and Semlnnlr

came in eighth.
Not a bad way to end 1992 or start
1993, depending upon your point of
view.
We won't have to watt long to aee
how accurate an Indicator the
holiday tournaments are; the winter
sport playoffs begin the week of Feb.
1. when the girls' aoccer teams will
play their district tournaments.
Seminole County schools have won
the last four Class 4A girls' soccer
state championships.
The boys' aoccer and wrestling
district competitions will take place
the following week. Girls' basketball
district tournam ent play begins
Feb. 18 while the boys' basketball
districts Up off Feb. 25.
By then, the high school baseball,
alow-pllch softball, track and field,
tennla, golf, and weightlifting
seasons will have begun. Last year.
Seminole County won three state
championships In these sports and
came within a game of winning a
fourth. Who knows what thrills
those seasons may hold.

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

�STA TS &amp; S TA N D IN G S
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�Christmas gifts need care
AI*Anon group gathers
Serenity Won, an AKAnon group for Mend* and family of
alcohottca, will meet each Monday, Tuesday and Thursday
night a t 8 p.m. at the Sahara Club, 3887 S. Sanford Ave.,
Sanford. Call Flora a t 349*8876 for more Information.

Narcotics Anonymous moats In 8anford
Narcotic* Anonymous m eets Monday at 8 p.m. at the House
of Goodwill, 317 Oak A m , Sanford.

HW p TOTQ lm D I lf l OTTVvvU
Oambters Anonymous and Osm-Anon for family and Mends,
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smoker*) at 7:30
p.m., Church or the (food Shepherd, 331 Lake Ave., Maitland.
For more Information, call 238-9308.

Oddfellows sohadula moating
Lodge No. 37 of the International Order of Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday of every month, except Ju ly and
August, a t 8 p.m. at 101 Magnolia Ave.. Sanford.

Csnoof support group moots
Support Hope and Recovery, S.H.A.R.. m eets every Monday
afternoon a t 8 pan. at Central Florida Regional Hospital in the
Car corner of the dining room. This is a s d f help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatm ent now or finished
with It. Call 334-8737 or 323-7788 for more Information.

Toostmastors moot ot SCC
Seminole Community College (SCC) Toastm asters Club
*8681 will meet every Tuesday. 7:30 p.m., a t Seminole
Community College. Contact Rosdla Bonham at 333-8284 for
more Information

Flowering plants can remain attractive for weeks
The flowering plants that you may have
received as Christmas gifts (hopefully, per
my suggestion) will need some care if they
are to last as long as possible.
Flowering Christmas plants can be en­
joyed not only during the holidays, but will
rem ain attractive for into January and even
February if cared for properly. Careful
attention will add days and even weeks of
life to the many popular Chrtstm aaplants.
Temperature has Important iiifluence on
the length of tim e a flowering house plant
will remain attractive. The poinsettla is
especially sensitive to chilling: the plants
should be placed In the coolest part of the
room t but not In a cold draft. This means
away from radiators and other sources of
heat. A tem perature of 88 degrees at night Is
satisfactory, but 80 degrees Is better for
most of the flowering potted plants. In fact,
cyclamen like a 60 degree night tempera­
ture — these tem peratures may seem a little
chilly for us hum ans.
W atering methods can determ ine the life
of m ost plants. Many draw on their plants
by watering at regular intervals, not con­
sidering w hether the plant needs I t Plant
roots need air as well as w ater, and
excessive w ater does not allow space for air
in the soil. Overwatertng literally smothers
the plant roots. Water should be applied to

easily altered plants will do best in an area
of the house where the hum idity is the
greatest — this Is usually In the kitchen. If
often helps If plants a it set on pebble-filled
saucers with water m aintained at a level
Just below the base of the spot so that It
doesn't touch water.
Most potted plant problems can be easily
detected by common symptoms displayed
by the ailing plant. If detected early enough
the situation can be remedied. The following
is a list of the moot common symptoms or
foliage plant troubles.
thoroughly soak the soil In the pots and not
more given until the soil approaches
dryness again. Plants should be checked for
dryness dally but not watered If the soil Is
still moist.
Remember that most holiday plants have
been out of a«greenhouse for a short period
o f tim e. T h e dif ference b etw een a
greenhouse environm ent and a typical
Indoor room Is usually considerable. In the
home, provide as much natural light as
possible. A dark bedroom, hall, entrance
foyer or living room will not provide
optimum growing conditions. Place your
plants where they receive the morning sun.
sor tight will cause leaf drop.
Although the hum idity in a house is not

Brawn tipped se burned margin sf
leaves — caused by too much fertiliser,

plants dried out temporarily, or wlndbum If
plants are outside the house.
Tsllowiag and dropping s f leaves—can
be caused by chilling, overwatertng, or poor
drainage and poor aeration.

Wank growth or light grata or yellow
Isaves — indicates too intense tight, tack of

fertiliser or a poor root system. Wilting —
too m uch h e at lack of water, o r root Injury.
•gladly grow th aad s a in leaves — too
little light or too high tem peratures.
By giving your Christmas pot plants the
beat environmental conditions of proper
tem perature, adequate w ater and good Hght.
they wtll furnish an attractive display for
m onths to come.

Klwanls Club of Cossolbony moots
Klsranis Club of Caasrlbcny m eets every Tuesday at 7:30 son.,
at Village Inn, corner Dog Track Road and US Highway 17*93
in Longwood. For information, call 831-8648.

sSFsEi:4!

Wsskly Lions Club mooting
The Sanford Lions Club m eets every Tuesday a t noon a t the
American Legion on South Sanford Avenue. For information,
call 331*0700.

Lako Mary Optimists moot wookly
The Optimist d u b of Lake Mary m eets every Tuesday at 7:00
p.m .. at 109 C. Crystal Lake Ave. (comer of Crystal Lake and
Country Chib Road). Visitors are welcome .

Tako off pounds sensibly
Members of Take Off Pounds Sensibly, TOPS, invite the
public to Join them on Tuesday evenings from 7 to 8 p.m. at
Church, 1807 Sanford Ave., Sanford i
_
haa a private room to weigh people between
6:16 and 6:48 pan.
Bach week a rfufcrent prep lan on weight loss will be
conducted.
For more information
the (dub. call 333*7883 or
3334884.......

Ptnlo Attiofc pro up to in o t

Fiancee should do the back-out

Agoraphobia/Panic Attack Support Group m eets each
Tuesday at 8 pan. a t West Lake Hospital, 589 W. State Road
484, Longwood. The support group Is far those who are afraid
to go out of their house aod be active in public.
missed the mark. Abby, this Is
not about dancing. U'a about
compromise.
How many tim es In b et m ar­
ried life will she be required to

Tuesdays a t 7:30 pan. a t Florida Power and L ight 301 Myrtle
Ave., Sanford. For more Information, call Carol at323-08B7.

NarAnon to offer help
Nar-Anon, a self-help group for relatives and friends of
addicts, will meet Tuesday at 8 pan. a t Orlando General

The Old Hickory f o t y p p offer free beginner

organisations. While I was tap­
ping my toes to the rhythm of
tb s |**|“* music, roy husband
sa t there with a stony-faced
frown, hating every m inute of
tb s evening after ms belly was
full
Have you ever dressed to the
hilt on New-Year’s Eve and sat
watching everyone dancing aod
having a good time, while you
count the minutes before mid­
night so you can go home? It's
pure torture!
Have you ever ta k e n a
seven-hour car trip and couldn't
even turn on the radio because
"elevator m usic" gave your
husband a headache? Well I
have, so now you know why we

I am frustrated by your advice
to "Frustrated." Dancing la not
tbs Issue. Refusing to even try In

sporting events that she has no
Interest tn attending?
And Utia selfish m an can’t
even take 10 dancing Irsslns to
make her happy? T hu marriage
will never work — and It w on't
be her foult.

"Frustrated should use the
money she offered to spend on
itn y &lt; n | lemons for bar (lance
and treat him to a «*H*pi* of
acaaions with a psychiatrist. He
doesn 't like to dsnos. It could be
symbolic of why be isn 't com­
fortable ex-iwg her ~ o r getting
ctoae to her — or'enjoying
■n—nsiiifig that requires him to
be in unison with her.
C hancre are. if be doesn't
eqjoy dancing with his fiancee,
he probably w on't eqjoy doing
anything more intim ate with

W l VI G O I
YOU C O V l k t D

SE MI N OL E

�40 - Santord Harold, Sanlord. Flortdt - Monday, January 4, 1993

“Aladdin” tops
box office hits

CENTURY It ALL AMERICAN
REALTY MONT., INC
PLAINTIFF
HEATHEN SCARR AND
RODNEY A PAULA
VERMILLIO
DEFENDANT
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: HEATHERSCARR
IOMMARINE DRIVE
ORLANDO, FL SMB
You at* htrafcy notllMd Nm I
an action hat batn IIM a«alntl
you In tha County Court, Sotnl
nolo County, Florida Summary
Cialmt Dl vltion.
You or* roqulrod to in p n r
botor* MARLENE M. ALVA, a
Ju ta sst Mill Court, at t«:S0AM.
FEBRUARY 1, l»»J, SomlnoN
County Courthouw. Courtroom
E. Sanford, Florida to orawor
Mm itatomont ot claim filod

m M m

Y'_ . ; ■ ■ :i.. ■ I
/
/
■JwSy*AiY;tf*■

KSfi

Loqal NoMoaa

SHARON J. SHANK. ETAL..
Dotondonl(t).
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE MLR
•V CLERK OP
CIRCUIT COURT
Notico it hortMy gluon that tha
undtrtlfnad Maryanno Marta,
Ctertt ot lha Circuit Court ot
SomlnaN County, Florida, will,
on Mm l t d day ot January, 1f*L
at H:0l a.m. at ttw W*»l Front
Door ot Mm Somlttola County
CautMwuao, In tha City ot San
lard, Florida, otter tor ta lt and
tall at public outcry to Mm
M$wtt and bait biddir ter coth,

oPPP

Orlando - Wintar Park
831-0993

N0WACCEPTKG

i^R0MMNp4hui

Utuoted In Sam InoIt County,
FtorMo.tr *11:
LOT 0. ALOMA BEND
TRACT IV, ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF AS RE­
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK a t
PAOBS I* THROUOH SI,
PUBLIC RECORDS OF SEMI­
NOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.

l i - I H e r t y Cepe

71— H r t » W llW t f

Publlth: Docambor It. IW A
January a, I0M
OEZT7I

Ala. governor
gives sermon
VESTAVIA HILLS. Ala. - OoV. Guy Hunt
didn't refer directly to hla recent Indictment
during the sermon, but he did preach about
honesty and righteousness.
"The Lord says we are to have no fellowship
with unrighteousness." Hunt told more than 200
people at Ihe Sunday morning service at Vcatavla
Primitive Baptist Church.
"Religion should involve things of honesty and
integrity right down the line." he said at another
point during the t&amp; mtnute sermon, the first
since his Dec, 28 Indictment. ,
.
And 'O iW 'A b u lb are made to soar above the
cares or this world."
Hunt. 59, was a Primitive Baptist preacher long
before he became a politician.

8 amtnola
322-2611

CASINOitMMMIRtti

LOS ANOELES - "Aladdin" granted Wall
Disney Co.'s wish for u profitable weekend and
earned first place In Ibe box-ofTlcc sweepstakes,
lopping ofTu strong liolldny season at the nation's
theaters.
**
"Aladdin" was pmjecled In cam $16 million
over the New Year’s weekend, displacing "A Few
Good Men" as the lop money-earner, said John
Krlcr of Exhibitor Relations, which (racks box
office earnings.
Aladdin rose to Ihe No. 1 spot In lls eighth week
of wide rclcnsc. buoyed by legions of young
moviegoers on u ius( fling before returning la the
classroom.
"It's ihe kids oul of school," said Krlcr.
Theaters showing "Aladdin" hud "very big days
the past week."
Between Christmas and New Year's Day the
movie grossed E32.2 million, a record for (he
period.
The previous mark of E29.1 million was held by
the original "Home Alone." said Dick Cook,
president of distribution for Disney.
Movie Industry earnings for 1992 were
expected lo reach about E4.9 billion, up slightly
from 94.8 billion in 1991, said Kiier.
Final 1992 earnings will be released later this
week.
Over the weekend. "A Few Qood Men," took (n
about 1 14.2 mill Ion over the weekend.
"Home Alone 2" was In third ptace with EIO.2
million.
Other movies projected to be among the
weekend’s top 10 films were "The Bodyguard,"
E8.9 million: "Forever Young." 98 million:
"Hoffa." 99.4 million: "The Distinguished Gen­
tleman," 94.5 million: "Leap of Faith." 94
million; "Toys." 93.3 million; and "Trespass." 93
million.
The projected earnings are baaed on Friday
receipts and estimated Saturday and Sunday
earnings.
Final figures for weekend earnings are sched­
uled to be released today.

uM

CLASSIREDADS

IN COUNTY COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA

aCOON*
ANTHONY ROBERT
ROORIOUEI. It IIrina, ot al.,
Datendantli).
NOTICE OP
FORECLOSURE M LB
BY CLERK OP
CIRCUIT COURT
Notlca It horaby flran Miot tha
undortHnod Maryonni Marta,
d ark ot Mm Circuit Court ot
tomlwoto County. Ftertdo. will,
on January SI, IWJ. at 11:00
a.m. at Mm w att Front Door ot
tha Somlnola County Court
houao, In Mm City ot Sanlard.
FMrida, otter ter talo and tall at
public awkry la Mm Mahaat and

a

W
AMMO
• CvsTORMEASOVICI

A mart. MOQte. MS-SSS*
I f —T ra M o f

BE A PARALEOAL

IN TUB CIRCUIT QOMT

M IIM M O ilC M M IY i
INRBtRITATI OF
WILLIAM WLUVAH RfRK,

Logoi NoMoaa

PSOBRAI
MORTOAO*

U.S. M VIN M EONOE tQ ,
THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

kTSS. and Btat wo M
ipMaF told aama wMb
cratory
Stato.
mb. Florida. M oa-

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*1

PRINCIPAL MUTUAL LIFE
IMUftAMCf CQM9 AMV
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SPWOSOVOXE
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K I R I P P l

■XV

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dabna with tbit court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
OATS OP THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE.

C R M ,
9 X I I C O P P

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I P I A C B J V O R I
C P I P PL. *

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Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 4, 1M3

KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

71— Htlp Wanted

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Cfftvn ftr m * -- &lt;r le tn
CAkH#&lt;&gt; ft*
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I/O, Ahevt 11 art. Immecu
late.w /trallercever. Mott
Seel iio.iQOOBO w a n t
Lavely 4/1,1,07 ap. ft. Owner

•MWTt*wcnQROfr

Taking bid*. Oeua Hkfierdton
SunFlerMamalty
ns-Miersts-ira...... jik ia

lSI-Acraag*

Far buey orthopedic omc
Call lharan, IWIIM

Lots/Salt
O C A L A N A T 'L F O R IS T .
Weeded M t l U * tO aath, na
money dawnl W M I monthly.

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parcfi. paat, ate. ta/.iao Owner
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2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

330-5204

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- Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Monday, January 4, 1903
fey Chic Young

fey Atari Walker

B I1 T L .K M I L K Y
tffffTLC.
AAf you fio iN d
k f f UP»/

WHEN ISWUR
ffJLISTMENT
U P ?/0_

JA N .R " *
IM S /

.

fey Art

p#«TiTot..

m sroo
o f*

!

fey Chortat M. SchtHi

“ W ill y o u m is s
me w h ile I’m gone?"
he ask ed .

“ W hy ? Hshe
said. Where are
y o u g o in g ? ”

s'*
•

/

•

“ Don’t you remember?”
“ I'm so rry ,” sh e
he s a id . “ I’m going on s a ld .“ l g u ess I
a n e x p e d itio n ,a n a . j
Wasn’t listen in g ”
I’ll be g o n e f o r
tw e n ty -fiv e y e a rs.” j

w

m

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iiiiiiiis.
LEST W T H T O A J THE
BAS t' BOOM tRCUr
WJfTH THE BATH ILWTER

BUT TH£V REALIZE THAT
IT IS A VtRS1 COMPLEX
FflOOLEAA AMD MUST BE
APPROACHED WITH EXTREME
CAUTIOO...
.

GOALS OF THE aUOTOO

ADMlUSTWCnOM.. ^

Is low energy level
a sign of illness?
DEAR DR. OOTT: Do all per­
sons have the same am ount of
energy and drive? I’m constantly
criticised because I am unable to
do the am ount of work that
many my age or older are able to
perform.
DEAR READER: Energy levels
are highly Individualised and
may vary from time to time
within the same Individual. For
example, some people who are
bored at work experience a loos
of energy: at home, however,
when they're Involved with an
Interesting project, their energy
levels return to normal. This Is
all very subjective, but I raise
the Issue In hopes that you will
analyse your work patterns to
discover If Interest or boredom
plays a role.
you honestly feel “pooped"
all the time, you should see your
doctor for an examination. You
might be anemic or have an
u n d e ra ct iv e thyr oi d gland.
Perhaps you're not sleeping well,
so you're tired a lot of the time.
Could alcohol conaumptkfh play
a part In your loaa of energy?
Perhaps you're depressed and
feeling emotional strain: this can
be very draining.DEAR DR. OOTT: Please pro­
vide Information on proteinuria.
What Is the cause, treatm ent
and w hat type diet should 1
follow?
DEAR READER: The kidneys
were designed to filter out waste
products from the blood and
eliminate them In the urine. The
reverse of this Is that the kidneys
also conserve many substances
and prevent them from being
excreted. Protein Is one such
substance. It should not be
present In the urine.
When proteinuria Is discov­
ered. during a routine urinalysis,
doctors worry about the possibil­
ity of serious medical conditions,
such as nephritis. A ctually,
proteinuria may reflect a whole
host of medical ailm ents that
affect the kidneys, ranging from
.-rrrf
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19*
fey Jim m y Jafewaan

A R LO AMD JA N IE

S a 5^

By Phillip Aider
Laurence J . Peter once said,
“An economist is an expert who
will know tomorrow why the
things he predicted yesterday
didn't happen today."
W ell, at the bridge table,
experts are usually able to anti­
cipate what will happen tomor­
row (the next Tew tricks) — It Is
part of the art of winning at the
game.
Take t o d a y 's deal as an
example. How would you have
p l a n n e d t h e p la y In five
diamonds. West leading the
spade king?
North's bid of three spades
was Minor-Suit Staymnn. which
is often played In conjunction
with transfer bids. However. It Is
unusual to employ the conven­
tion with only Tour high-card
points. But note that here three
no-trump Is hopeless after the
spade-king lead. R egardless.
South showed amaxlng restraint
VKT,Fi*v'e

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cancer to lupus.
A person with protein In the
u rin e should be thoroughly
tested with blood analyses and
X-rays to determ ine the cause of
the problem.

fey RafeTfeam

4rA*f*Ar

1

fey Jim Davit

jf»»

In passing over five diamonds.
If you take the trum p suit In
Isolation. It Is normal to lead low
toward the queen on the first
round. Here, though, that line of
play contains a hidden risk. If
East can win the trick with the
diamond ace and switch to a
heart, you will go down If the
heart finesse rails and you lose
another trum p trick.
There Is a virtually guaranteed
line of play. After winning with
the spade ace. ruff a spade In the
dummy. Then lead a trum p and
make the strange-looklng play of
finessing your 10. West Is wel­
come to win with the jack If he
has It. because he.cannot attack
hearts. After driving out the
trump ace. you can discard your
heart losers on dum m y's d u b
suit. With the given layout, you
even collect an overtrick.
Always treqt each suit within
the context of the deal as a
whole.

II m

as _

a gregarious, sociable mood to­
day. you still might not feel
YOUR BIRTHDAY
comfortable around certain
Jaa. B, IM S
In the year ahead don't quit If groups. Be very selective re­
the objectives you're striving for garding companions.
A H nS (March 21-April 10)
aren't achieved on your Inlllal
try. Adversity Is a character There la a possibility today that
builder and you will eventually you might use poor Judgment In
a career m atter that calls for
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. boldness and Imagination. Don’t
itful and
19) In order to arouse the spirit be Impulsive: be thoughtft
deliberate.
of cooperation in your compa­
• (April 20-May 20) If
nions today, you m ust first set
the proper example. If you're you have to (leal with an Indi­
self-serving, don't be surprised ir vidual who is rude and petty
they are as well. Know where to .today, don't respond 1o his or
look for romance and you’ll find her Infractions in a like manner.
II. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker It will make you look as bad as
Instantly reveals which signs are the offender.
OBMDfl (May 21-June 20) In
rom antically perfept for you.
business
dealings today, strive
Mail 92 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to to bargain from strength, not
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­ insecurity. If you believe your­
per. P.O. Box 01428. Cleveland. self to be strong, the other guy
will perceive you as such.
OH 44101-3428.
CARCMI (June 21-July 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Don't
behave In an unbecoming
. If It is your lot to provide others
' with Instructions today, be cer­ m anner toward someone today
tain they are explicit and de­ Just because you think be or she
tailed. ir your commands are might treat you similarly. Pre­
fussy, undesirable end results judging people could get you In
(rouble.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) Per­
arp|BCBS (Feb. 20-March 20)
Although you are likclv to be In formance. not appearance. Is

19
»♦

what will. Impress your peers
today. Conversely. If you are all
show and no go. you w on't have
much o fa fan club.
1
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
conniving antagonist might try
to em barrass you In front of
m utual friends today. Take the
target away from this Individual
by not responding to what he or
■he says.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-O ct. 23)
Upon occasioh we can bluff our
way through situations to our
advantage, but. unfortunately,
this might not be one of those
days. Be prepared to back up
your position with (acts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Sincerity serves a constructive
purpose today while evasion
offers no benefits. Say what you
mean and mean what you say
or. If you can't do this, say
nothing.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23 Dec.
21) Be careful in Joint ventures
today, especially where there Is
money Involved. The odds may
not be Ulted In your favor and
carelessness could be cosily. '
(0 1 9 0 3 . NBW8PAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.
fey I i m i M S ta rr

—
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&gt;\•
.n u a ry . 5, 1993.

. •jl'l*1|* f

\

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; ji

-

30 Cents

Sanford Herald
S e rving Sanford, Lak# M ary and Sam lnola C ou n ty alnoa 1008
85th Year, No. 113 - Sanford, Florida

NEW S D IG ES T

Violence crackdown
Chiles toughens jail time, plans summit on crime

D Paopla

By NICK PPKIPAUP
Herald Stall Writer

Couple live for others
Ilnrham and Hob Richey have round llirlr
nti'lir In llirlr golden years. The eouple, who
raised 25 rosier ehlldren aiming llielr own.
entertain In nursing renters and other facilities.
See Page 3B.

Governor Lawton Chiles announced Ills "Safe
Streets" program ibis morning. Il Is Intended lo
reform Florida's criminal Justin* system and keep
the most violent nlfenders In prison longer.
The governor also announced a major criminal
Justice summit lie will convene later Ibis mouth
lo discuss a comprehensive approach to preven­
tion and punishment Issues with sheriffs. |mllrc

chiefs, prosecutors, public defenders. Judges,
victims' advocates, lawmakers and others.
"T h e law-ahtillng people of Florida deserve lo
live In a stale with safe streets where violent
offenders receive punishment llinl Ills the crime."
Chiles said Ibis morning. "T h ai requires some
major repairs lo a system dial is close to
gridlock."
Chiles detailed major elements of his "Sale
Streets" program. Included is construction of
3.600 new prison beds for violent criminals. "W e

must build more prison beds so violent criminals
are kepi from society." he said, "not scl free on
II."
Ollier points o f the “ Safe Streets” program
would Involve conversion of non-vlolenl offenders
Into community-based alternative programs,
elimination of basic gain time, reforming of Ihe
stale's sentencing guidelines, and strengthening
of Ihe Juvenile Justice system.
For Ihe basic gain lime changes. Chiles has
See Crim e, Page 5 A

□ Sports

Stop the world

Super C ’s open season
SANFORD — Mudfish. Ken Kuininel Chevrolet
and TRC were the winners Monday night as the
Super C Polar Ik-ar Softball League opened.
See Page IB.

Lake Mary Chamber meeting
LA K E M AR Y — T h e G re a te r Lake
Mary/Heathrow Chamber of Commerce will hold
Its first breakfast meeting o f the year tills
Wednesday morning. Guest speaker will he the
newly elected Mayor o f Lake Mary. Lowry
Rockett.
The meeting will he held at Heathrow Country
Club, beginning at 7:45 u.m. The cost for the
breakfast Is $2 for members, or $5 for
non-members. All persons are Invited to utlend
the meeting.
For further Information, contael tile Chamber
at 333-4747. .
HtftW Photo* by lUehord Hop*In•

Stoned bunnies
EL PASO. Texas — A man found out he had
accidentally fed marijuana to his pet rabbits
uftcr flagging down a police officer to say the
animals were sick.
The man. whom police rcluscd to Identify, on
Sunday askul jiullcc Sgt. Andres Yslus to help
the rabbits hnirrpn In his hack yard.

Calvin Thompson, right, directs traffic at Celery Avenue and
Mellonvllle where Hamilton Elementary School students hurry home to
the neighboring community. Thompson maintains safety with a smile.
Above: Other Hamilton students disembark from their stopped school
bus on their first day back at school after the Christmas holiday break.

"T h e rabbits were behaving unusually. Jum­
ping uround a lot. and he was worried uboul It."
Yslassald.
"I usked him what he had been giving them,
and he said he had fed them some grass he
found In the trash. It was grass, all right — the
smoking kind."
The officer said the man often went through u
nearby trash bin for lettuce and other discarded
vegetables to feed the rabbits. But whul he
found Suturday was u 50-pound stash o f
marijuana. Yslas said. The animals had alreudy
eaten a significant amount when the officer got
there.
T h e man was not charged with drug
possession because he didn't reullzc what he
had. As for the rabbits. Yslas told the bewildered
pet owner not lo worry.
" I Just said the rahhlls will Ik- doing OK. as
long as they drink u lot of water." he said.
Police speculated the pot. with un estimated
street value or 850.000. was left by drug deulers
to be picked up for distribution.

M CAD sets meeting
Midway Citizens Against Drugs will hold lls
regulur monthly meeting on Wcdncscday. Jan.
6. at 7 p.m. ut the Midway Community Center.
The agenda will Include discussion on the
annuul election p f officers. All regular members
und Interested citizens nir Invited to attend.

— ----------------- ------------- -

From staff and wire reports

INDBX -r ;

;C.„ *'V

t '

-

■

•;
•

Brldga............
Classifieds..... ..4B.SB Movies..........
Comics..........
Crossword.....
Soar Abhy.......
Deaths...........
Dr. Oott..........
Bdltorial.........
Florida...........

Warm and wet

Partly
Cloudy
For nw rt weather, m

Mostly cloudy with u
70 percent chuncc of
showers and thun­
derstorms. High In
the mid lo upper 70s.
Wind south lOmph.

Pag* t A

Longwood commissioner calls
mayor’s actions 'embarrassing’
By OBOROI DUNCAN
Herald Staff Writer
LONGWOOD - The "d u elin g
memos" flap between Mayor Paul
Loveatrand and City Administrator
Jim McFellln may be quieting down
but not before Commissioner Rex
Anderson told Lovestrand Monday
night that his actions were embar­
rassing and unprofessional.
A lth o u g h A n d erso n said he
nominated Loveatrand for mayor of
the city after the November election,
he warned the mayor last night that
he might request other commis­
sioners to remove him from the
post.
Addressing the mayor, Anderson
said, "Som e o f the memos you have
written since that time (o f the
mayor’s election) have been rather
embarrassing to me. In my opinion,
you have been unprofessional and
have attempted to Interfere with the
administrator o f this c!ty...Are you
servin g you r own agenda and
misusing the trust I placed In you
by nominating you and the rest o f
the commissioners that unanimous­
ly supported you?"
In replying. Lovestrand said his

Boards
gain city
officials
ton ight
By NICK PFBIFAUF
Herald Stall Writer___________

M ayor Paul Lovaatrand

C om m laalonar Rax Artdaraon

memo was public record and could
be read by anyone interested In It.
He added he would have no further
comment on the matter.
Anderson noted the chairman o f
the com m ission serves at the

commission's discretion.
"I'm not asking this commission
to replace you. However, if you
continue to present yourself In the
manner that you have demon-

□Baa Longwood, Pago BA

SANFORD - The Sunford
City ConimlHHlon will bold Its
first meeting o f 1993 tonight.
Commissioners will be named
lo serve on various urcu boards
und committees.
The first order of business
tonight will Ik - the swearing in
o f Muyor Bcltyc Smith. Com­
missioners Lon Howell and Bob
Thomus. All three were re­
elected lo new four-year terms
In the December city elections.
Following the swearing-in,
the commission will udjourn
Ihe forniul session and Imme­
d ia te ly re co n v en e fo r the
purpose o f orgunlzutlou. which
assigns city representation to
oilier organizations.
One of the choices lonlghl.
Bee C ity, P age BA

Local legal pros G ro u p re c o m m e n d s p o s tp o n in g
vie for Court of
p la n s to b u ild n e w h ig h s c h o o l
Appeals position
B y v ie K iD a s o m a iin
Herald Stall Writer

By J. HANK BARPISLO

Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD - Chief 18lh Circuit Judge
John Antoon II and Seminole County Bar
Association president Thomas Freeman arc
among the several legal professionals who
will be Interviewed toduy for a position on

Baa Judge. Page BA

SANFORD — A com m ittee charged with
making recommendations to Supt. Paul Hagcrty
and the school board regarding the addition o f a
new high school in Seminole County met this
morning to put the finishing touches on the
proposal they will present during a Jan. 14 work
session with the board.
After (hat time, a new committee will be formed
to help Implement the recommendations that are

accepted by the board.
Committee members said they will recommend
three thlngs:
• The school board should commit to the
further study o f postponing plans for a new high
school because there Is a viable solution which
will meet the capacity and educational needs o f
students through the 2000-01 school year.
• The study should Include, but not be limited
to. the Input o f those who will use the school
facility. Including students and teachers: visiting
□ B a a School. Pago BA

S U B S C R IB E T O T H E S A N FO R D H ERALD FOR T H E B E S T L O C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . Call 322-26 11

*

�7

WmmSKmKmm

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday. January 5. 1993

NEW S FROM T H E REGION AND A CR O SS T H E S T A T E

Chiles* promises coverage for all Floridians by 1994
Mall carriar shot; man gala 21 yaara

OyCUBTANOOROON
Assoclatad Prats
, . . t . - . n u u ------------1— 7 — ~ ~ ~ --------TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Lawton Chiles un*
veiled a plan Monday to provide access to health
care for every Floridian by the end o f 1994.
Including the 2.S million working poor who have
no health insurance.
Chiles, a Democrat, said Florida cannot wait for
President-elect Clinton to design hla promised
national health care overhaul because medical
costa, estimated at $88 million a day. are eaUng
away government budgets and business profits.
“ If we don’t restructure the system( b y the end
o f the decade the salary o f working people will
seem like a fringe benefit, because their main
compensation will be health benefits." Chiles said
at a news conference.
Chiles' plan could foreshadow that o f Clinton
by proposing a system called managed competlUon, which seta up govemment-bualiteas cooper*
stives to act a i purchasing agents for employers
and others who buy health Insurance and

TALLAH ASSEE — A Massachusetts man was sentenced to
21 years In federal prison for shooting a Florida mall carrier
during an attempted robbery (n Montlcello.
Thomas Dwayne White. 20. o f Boston, was convicted on Oct.
27 o f charges he assaulted James McDaniel, Who was wounded
in the leg. and used a gun to com mit a violent offense. The
sentence was imposed Monday by U.S. District Judge William
Stafford.
Testimony showed that McDaniel was driving his mall truck
on Nov. 0. 1991. when he was flagged down by White, who was
visiting friends. W hite pointed a 9mm pistol at his head, struck
him In the face and attempted to take the mall truck's keys.

Those cooperatives, set up in several areas
around the state, will seek the best price on
health care plans and contract with insurers.
health maintenance organizations, government
and independent networks to provide the scrvices. No one would be excluded from fcoverage.
“ Every mat), woman and child In Florida —
everybody — is entitled to basic health benellts."
C hiles said. “ Health care has becom e an
expensive luxury for too many people and
businesses in our state today."
Congressional aides working with Clinton's
transition team say the Incoming president Is
likely to offer something similar as a first step
toward bringing down health care costs and
providing access nationwide,
"W e just can't watt, given what the costs are."
Chiles said. "O ur greatest War Is thht the federal
government will come out with another top-down
plan, like Medicaid and Medicare are now."
So far. Chiles’ "Healthy Homes” plan has
drawn broad support from business groups,
hospitals and doctors.

I nsur ance gap
Wbmtn lacuna IrtManm,
by marital status, 1999

E a gle e g g
h a tch e s
after fall

"A m erican people generally don’t p ay too m uch attention to
their tterary figu res." Merrill aeid. "People ristt Hcm tngway’e
houee beeauee n*e Uke e fertility shrine.
"T h e y g o there aa a place to get recharged, rather than
*t*T *m h a w eek great w rlirr “ M rm ilealil
T he Jan . 7*10 Key W est Literary Sem inar w ill focua on
Bishop's w ork and Include sem inars m oderated by 1990 Nobel
Prize-winner Octavio Paz. Merrill, and Putitxer w inners Richard
W ilbur and Anthony Hecht.

99,721 for eMbral palsy victim a eomputorfsod whaalchalr
Tha Modem W oodsm an o f Amarica, In cooperatton with the Sanford WAL-MART, recently told
raffle tickets for a television to benefit Kenneth
•app, a young man with cerebral paieey. Anita
apd Don NeW. who apaarheaded tha raffia sales

on. Schw arts, Hash and fWocfc after evaluating
5. announced last year that hla 19th term
South D ade a d d Monroe counties In District 19
teat H la tsn a expired at noon Sundayt he began
idayi «!•••■«".o ii'uv-t.o
k&gt; jujin rfat-vtiu y&amp;.nwo , i,
'BsJsH-zaaBgsBD
W9w8* ay
d credibility," he Sfdd. "T h is ie an opportunity to
jertcnce-aaiped'dM dRg m y .political career into a

the 19,721 check was presented to Sepp'e
mother Carol Schallar by Richard King., president
o f tha Modem Woodsmen, and Mary King. The
m oney w ill b e used fo r a com puterized
wheelchair for Sapp.

experience
water failed Monday, flra officials aay they m ay have to let the
fire bum itself out — a process that could taka three o r four
days and w as continuing Thesday m orning. •»
Glenn Domen. a fire spohtsm an. said officials plan to pum p
fuel out and water thto the tank, which bolds som e M .0 0 b
barrets or 2.3 million gallons o f gasoline.
About 128 Jacksonville ftreflgbtets continued to fapttk 'tbt
blaze which began Saturday afternoon at a ftteuait Petroleu m
Co. tank form. A com pany term inal operator w as killed w han
the tank erupted Into flamea.
The cause o f the Ore has i

■ ' 1*. ;

M IA M I - H a ra a r t th a
w in n in g -n u m b a ra a ala cta d
Monday in tha Florida Lottery:

o « A ssign m en t o f
• rsoaotiy voted 8-7 to

■* *,*m '. !*

different from aviation in general, and what
makes it different la landing aboard aircraft
carriers," Wooldridge said.
He said some women have the skills to fly with
the B lu et but cannot apeak with the full
understanding o f combat carrier pilots.
"T h a t's exactly the way 1 feel." said Cmdr. Bob
Stumpf, who recently took command o f the
squadron after Wooldridge finished his tour. " I
think U'a a credibility Issue as much as anything
else."
That argument doesn't wash with Lt. Liz
Btetnneoker. one o f only 44 female je t pilots in the
Navy,* who serve In non-combat roles such as
Instructor* and lest pilots.
" I don't know what carrier aviation has to do
with the Blue Angels." said Stelnnecker. pointing
out the team doesn't fly o ff ships.

M A I T L A N D A fuzzy, gray
eaglet has hatched from an egg
that was Incubated by a pair of
captive, adult bald eagles after It
fell 40 fret from Its nesl in Ihc
wild, wildlife officials said Mon­
day.
The newborn Is In good health.
A member o f an endangered
species, the’ chick Is about three
inches loll, weighs less than n
quarter o f a pound and doesn't
yet have a name.
Biologists who refer to It as
"h e ." won’t know Its sex for
several months, if ever, but the
bird Is lucky lo have survived.
"H e's lough. He came from Ihc
wild and he is entitled to return
to i t . '' s a id ’ R eese C o llin s,
director o f Ihc Birds o f Prey
C en ter run by the F lo rid a
Audubon Society. .
She said the birth in captivity
o f a bald eagle's egg laid in Ihc
wild had not been carried out in
Florida since ihc 1940s. Many
The egg pas found on iKe
ground along with remnants o f
its nest alter a tall pine housing
the nest was cut by a chain saw
on Florida's west coast Dec. 28.
The egg was brought to the
M aitlan d c e n te r a fte r teals
showed tt contained a living
embryo. II was placed with the
foster parents, who incubated it
since last Wednesday, said Ms.
Collins.
,
The chick began pecking at Its
shell Saturday, and the process
was recorded on videotape for

THE W EATHER
Today: Mostly cloudy with a
7,0 percent chance o f showers
and thunderstorms. High in the
mid to upper 70s. Wind south 10
mph.
Tonight: Cloudy with a chance
o f showers and a possible thun­
derstorm. Low In the lower to
m id 60s. L igh t w ind. Rain
chance 40 percent.
W ednesday: M ostly clou dy
with a good chance o f showers
and thunderstorms. High In the
mid tp upper 70*. W ind south 8
to 10 mph. Rain chance 80
percent.
Extended forecast: Thursday:
Partly cloudy with a chance of
showers or thunderstorms. Low
In'lhe low to mid 60s. High near

■

1

Wy i'w

•
"fW B O O A Y
M aly , s id y TB-BO

W BDH BSO AT
J d slyatd y 78-BO

TH UR SD AY
P t ly s M y 79-BO

highs. 6:12 a.
lows. 12:31a.m.

•JJ

m
m

“

m
v
M
oi

D a y ts a a B saeh i Waves arc
3-4 feel and choppy. Current is
to th e north w ith a w ater
temperature o f 62 degrees. Haw
Bm y r a a B aacht W aves are 3 feet
and choppy. Current la to the
south, with a water temperature
o f 62 degrees.

F R ID A Y
P tly e ld y 79-BO

r N-s
Saturday
P tly e ld y 75-BO

T h e high tem peratu re In
Sanford Monday was 76 degrees chryw*
and the overnight low wus 64 as ewes**
reported by ihc University o f
Florida Agricultural Research o« iim Fi Worth
and Education C en icr.‘ Celery D o w
AVCllUC.
Ootrelf*"**
R ecorded ra in fa ll for the Honolulu
period, ending al 9 a.m. Tues- Mwaton jlay. totalled .45 o f an inch.
jortllSSta.;
The temperature ut 9 a.m. komm Ch,
today was 69 degrees and l*» v*» m
Tuesday's early morning low
was 67, as recorded by the
National Wealher Service at ihc M ilyM y
Orlando International Airport.
ifn r w id t v OH**-Weather Service data:
i s « ortoom
D Maud ay 's h igh ................ 79
city
A d ^ IS r e il a □ la r a m a t r ic prasamra.30.18
n ferid S o w
C R a to U v a H a z s id ltr -iO O p c t
ittered snow
n W in d s..... S a n th v a s t 9 m ph Ftwni*
erslorms.
D iu ia fa ll........... . . i t © X a a fa !
□ T a d a y ’aau n sat.....8 t«3 p-a*. stLoCEl
Bt Min. 2:80
|- 9 0 0 a.m..
&gt;1 Da]Ttana
I a ju .. 6:12
i l l a .m ..
m • ■ V 1? ?
’ a.m.. 6 jl7
: 16 a . m . .
a * a Baaahi
6:32 p.m.:
—-JP-nv

r

�■W H H H I

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•A»v&lt;-*ipif&gt;*-^ r,MA- i.-V-V.» -U~

Sanford Herald, 8enford, Florlde - Tueedey, January 5, 1W3 - tA

New Year’s
DU I arrests
DUI arrests
•D a v id Lawrence Sroufo. 90, o f Longwood. w aa arrested by
S h eriffs deputies on Highway 17-92 near Orange Avenue In
Longwood Sunday. In addition to driving under the influence
o f alcohol, he w as also charged with driving with a suspended
license,
•D a n Charles Donahoe. 37. o f Altamonte Springs, waa
arrested by sh eriffs deputies on S.R. 43$ near highw ay 17-92
Sunday.

Drug arrest mad#
Sanford police arrested David Alan Beaucheane, 29. 243$ B.
Myrtle Ave. Sanford, on Friday, at W . 3rd Street and Pecan
Avenue. Police charged him with two oounta o f possess ion o f a
controlled substance, and resisting arrest without violence.

TWo bufgtartts InoMtfty
T w o separate burglary incidents were reported in the railroad
yard area at 600 Persim mon Avenue on Saturday. The first
incident waa reported at the Am erican R ailw ay Service W heel
Shop. Police said entry waa m ade through a fence. They aald
desks, cabinets and the refrigerator were ransacked, but the
only Items Immediately determined mtsalng w ere $4 In snacks
from a vending machine. The second incident, reported the
sam e day, w aa aald. to have occurred in the drivers shed at
Am trak Autotrain. Police aald Items taken Included seven
yellow raincoats, five orange hard hats, and two T V sets.

$y w o k p fiin u r

Herald Staff Writer
A total o f 12 persona were
arrested for driving under the
Influence oT alcohol on New
Y ear's Eve and New Year's* Day
: In Sem inole County. The follow­
ing arrests w ere reported to
Sanford, Lake Mary, Longwood,
and the northern portion o f the
| county:
•S tev e n Allen Michels, SO.
236 Maureen Drive, Sanford,
w as anested by S h eriffs depu­
ties on Rinehart Road, near S.R.
i 46-A Thursday night.
•T y b e riu a Byharry. 50, o f
Apopka, w as arrested by the
Florida Highway Patrol Thurs­
day night on 8.R. 43$.
•J a n ie s Franklin Whitehead,
18, o f Clermont, w aa arrested by
Sheriffs deputies on highway
17-92 near S.R. 436 early Friday
morning.

Domestic vtoltnot
•D a v k l W allace Vick, with no local address listed, waa
arrested by S h eriffs deputies at a motel at 1905 S. Highway
17-92 in Longwood Sunday, follow ing an altercation with a
female. He w aa charged with battery, domestic violence,
•K toum ara Hafexl. 30, 040 Blrgham Place, Lake Mary, waa
arrested by S h eriffs deputies at his residence Saturday,
following a light with a female. He w aa charged with domestic
violence, battery.
•E d w a rd McDonald. 96. 9411 Bevter Road. Sanford, waa
arrested at hla residence toy S h eriffs deputies Sunday. He w aa
with hla wife. He w aa charged with

battery,

• L u la Zapata. 39, o f Orlando,
w aa arrested b y Lake M ary
Police early Friday, on Lake
M ary Blvd. near 4th Street.

i

• R u ssell Lee A d k in s. 33,
1609 W . 25th Street. Sanford,
w as arrested by W inter Springs
Police on Tuecawtfla Road.

■&gt;- « - *

-J -

^ — *—

H»wMHUU v WlSke Mwl l—

n a iiro o w o p ru m iE V
Tha appaaranoa of a rainbow over Lake Monro#
erttey heralded In brighter .weather for at

e

nature's colorful palette to splash soothingly
toward the hortaon.

I a Wtle while. Rains parted briefly for

..... 11iai|i W)ih
Consumer
Problems?
Cell:

•B e n Ham pton, 30, 1000 W .
17th Street. Sanford, w aa ar­
rested by Shertfb deputies at
17th Street and M ulberry Ave! nue Thursday n igh t

.

-&gt;■

t?. h

n./

i .''

9090 A lexan der Avenue In Sanford
epoited that one o f the m en s w u n g *
ucfchim in tha h ead .H e vaatreated for
ral Florida Regional Hoepttml.
wmreportedly etolen Thursday from the

■ign aaytag “ Beware o f the Dog,” valued at $1.

Incidents reported to Sonfoed polloo
• A color T V eet w as reportedly taken from Reecue Day Care,
1315 8. Sum m erlin Ave. Sunday. M ic e aald an attempt waa
m ade to take the m icrowave oven aa w ell, but It w aa (bund
tKf H illdfoM
•P rop erty In exceea o f 9306 w as reportedly etolen Friday
from the reatdenoeafLlnda Marie D a v t o lO t t W . 10th Street
• A n autom atic washer valued at $150 w aa reportedly taken
Saturday from M ac'a Electric Service. 414 W . 13th Street
• A n automobflc wae reported etolen from the parking lot at
Bram Towers, on Friday. Police eakl the vehicle w aa recovered
p »Hnrf f Inyt | «t»f
rtght H n riw ■ w y
•Ite m s valued at $$9 were reportedly taken Thursday from
the residence o f M aw Rnbtnaon, W O W . 11th Street.
• A n estimated $4,000 In currency w as reportedly etolen
over the holiday period from the home o f Virginia Burney, 101

Washington killer
executed In first U.S.
hanging since 1965
W A L L A W A L L A . W ash. -

A

sex Mayings o f three boys and
warned b e w ould kill again waa
executed on the gallow s early
today in the nation1* first bang*
ing since 1966.
Weattey A llan Dodd. 51, waa
pronounced dead at 19iOQ a jn .,
tour m inutes alter the hooded
dropped through a trap
door and M l the foil length o f hla
7-foot. 1-tocb rope.
G iven tha option o f .hanging or
u t iu i mu ffing , Dodd had asked
for h a irin g because, he aald. he
o g t h T tbody o fAone
H fo
i lf f lhie
U
victims and wanted the same
treatment. He had dropped all
. jijim u
osked to be allowed
to tfie. warning, "1 w ill kill and
rape a ga in an d epjoy every
minute o f It."
L a t e M o n d a y , th e s t a t e
Suprem e Court cleared the w ay
for the execution when It laeued
a m il em ttni------ “ ~ g
tod by
to h a lt _______ _____
The vote
___ 7-1. '
i U w as W aehim goo state's first
e T $ ? 5 S eh S lp a g B ln tha Unto
# d S tates w ere In 10S5 In

^

put to death. Am ong them
Richard E u gm e ittc k o ck
Perry E d m
Smith, the
o f T rum an Capote'a
"In Cold S tood."

xitfclt*-:a* A

&gt;1•

xjgxj&amp;mtL*

body, | don 't rem em ber who. if
them w ae any w ay eex offenders
be etopped."
said in
hip final etatem ent " I aald no. I
•1i
is no hope, no peace. Thera Is
hope. Thera Is peace. I found
both In the Loro. Jesus Christ
Look to the Lord and you will
And peace."
After D o d d d rap p e d through
the trap door, there w aa little
movement iHh*r ****** the g m tl*
sw in gin g.o f the body before a
curtain w aa d raw n across a
and
Death penalty foes had held
p ra y e r m eetin g*, v ig ils and
dsm oaatreUons across the state
In the hours before the execu­
tiv e
th ey clim b ed a sn o w y ero
banam ent near a guard tc
They arere In Jail early today
of
About ISO people to favor
lav
I's
tha p rieo a an d ch eered his
h a n g in g .

Aij3
*SEUi»J3*£tt3MGttt$1

ttrjmtumi

auauklagpteuu*

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$

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S a n f b rd H e r a ld
322*2611

�Sanford Herald, 8anford. Florida - Tutaday, January 5, 1983

Unholy war over Dead
The Dead Sea Scrolls oontlnue to provoke
m uch sound and fury. The latest eruption w as
occasioned by release o f a p ew volum e by tw o
re s p e c te d u n iv e rs ity p r o fe s s o r s . R o b e rt

CIKIUnid IDO MlCflWI W wfi WHO im icu pUDUBfl
without the bteastags o f the titty eobol o f scholars

EDITORIALS

State salutes
Sanford’s M LK
celebration
D u e to the su p e rio r w o rk o f the S an ford
M artin L u th e r K in g S te e rin g C om m ittee In
w o rk in g w ith th e state, th e city h a s been
■ elected a s th e first site o f th e F lo rid a
C o m m em orative C om m issio n celebration on
J a n . 12-18.
T h e people o f S an fo rd sh o u ld com e ou t In
force to su p p o rt th e ev en t th at w ill b e
atten d ed b y state d ign itaries, In clu d in g G ov.
L a w to n C h iles, w h o w ill tak e p in t in the U n ity
P ra y e r B reakfast.
In past y ears, w h ile the com m em orative
b a n q u e t th at la th e c u lm in a tio n o f th e
celebration h aa b een so ld ou t, th e oth er
even ts h av e not d ra w n th e k in d o f sp ectato r
su p p o rt they d eserv e from th e com m u n ity.
T h is is a c o m m u n ity w id e e v e n t th a t
c ele b rates a n d reaffirm s th e Id ea ls o f freedom .
Justice a n d op p ortu n ity fo r a ll. It la not Just
tim e o ff from th e Job.
T h e peop le o f S an fo rd , re ga rd less o f race.
c r eed o r color, sh o u ld m ake It a poin t to take
p a rt In th e S a n fo rd celebration o f D r. K in g 's

texts. H alf the texts w ere hkhs rta JjnpriM lshed .

The other half w u previously available, but not
com piled In a single returns. T h e authore alao
Include BngUah tranalattona o f the texts from the
original Hebrew and Aram aic, which, for the first
time, m akes the scroll m aterial accessible to lay
readers.
T o m any m inds. Bfeenman and W ise have
perform ed a valuable public service. But in the
covetous m lnda o f the three dooen o r so echoiais
w ho have Jealously withheld the stroke from

scholars thought the authors should have
included m ore o f them In their volum e, crediting
the work o f others.
,
It 1a all a tempest In
^ r ,
a teacup, says
E lse n m a n , a p ro feasor of Middle East
M
, K
religion at California
State University at
m
i l
L on g B each . You .
M
don't do this thing
w ith o u t ta k in g
i

I n g to t a k e t h e
k n ock s, he say s,
because he believes
that It is w rong for a
tiny group o f schol­
a rs to m on opolise
access to the Dead
B a a S c r o lls . T h e
sam e p eo p le h ave
oocupied all the beat
c h a irs sin c e v e ry
n e a r the tim e the
ecroBa w ere found,

T he scrolls generally are consider
m anuscript discovery o f the century. Thi
stum bled upon by a Bedouin shepherd
1047 In caves northwest o f the Dead Sea. They
date from roughly 900 B.C. to 100 y e a n after the
birth o f Christ.
The scrolls comprise 800 m anuscripts and
10,000 fragm ents. M ore than 100 o f the
m anuscripts are biblical texts. Including all or
part o f every book o f the O ld Testament extiept
Esther. O ther m anuscripts are thought to
provide important Insights into the development
Judaism
o f both Ji_
_ ,____ .end
. . RChristianity.
H .
R IP
For the past 40 years, the scrolls have been
under the tight control o f a sm all team o f editors
(which presently num bers 13). Scholars like
Elsenm an have asserted over the years that this
cosy coterie o f editors has treated the scrolls like

Line-item veto
isn't the answer
T h a n k s to fo rm e r P resid en t R on ald
Reagan's persistent calls for a line-item veto
during M s tw o term s In office, the proposal
haa become a pet cause for most con­
servatives. Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
support U. Ocorge Bush wanted U.So w hy do such flam ing liberals as Sen.
Paul Sim on. D-UI.. and Sen. Edward Ken­
nedy. D-Maas.. also think It's a good idea? I
suspect It’s because they're rood poker
players who recognise a good bluff when they
see one.
------ :------------------------A b rie f prologue:
_
C o n g r e s s
appropriates money
like a Cajun cooks.
t
■ ,y j O
U 's a big medley of
m —
things, and the rules
W '» ■
say the president has
* •■

In bringing the aUta ocfobrollon to Sanford.
We urge the community to support this
effort and show the atate we are Joining hands
in malm ntir BOmmuBlty e f n i w r .

th e g o v e r n m e n t s
involved.
O a t thorn In the
m M tary'aeide la that
tt.h at found H c a n t
m ove ahead on the
Job as fast a s k w ants
to. Forty percent of

re d u c e w a a le a n d
trim coats.
T h a t 's w h a t a
( I suspect It's
line-item veto would
bacauaa
do: give the president
thay’rapood
the power, to strike
pokar players
Individual expen di­
whoraoognlzs
t u r e s fro m th e
a pood bluff
m e g a -m e a s u re s
wnanthaysaa
passed by Congress.
Then: would be no
on#. ■
m ore general vetoes
---------------and no more threats o f government shut­
downs.
Those are the alleged advantages. There
are also a few shortcomings. It would wreak
havoc, lor exam ple, on the separation of
p o w e rs d o c trin e b y w h ich w e govern
ourselves and hand the W hite House a
fearsome advantage. Every time a m em ber of
Congress opposes one o f the president's
muUlbUUon dollar protects — an excursion to
Mare, aay — the chief executive could sw ing

bein g w t m u d in
p ro lo n g e d stu d ie s

‘—Vf-

•s W orld

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. A ll tetters
must be r g s a L m rhuu* tbs addrras o f the
writer s a d a daytim e telephone num ber.
Letters should b e on a single subject and be
as brief as possible. The letters are subject to
editing.

that pile up year after year. This la
m anifest nonsense. O n budget m atters.
Congress fellow s where presidents .lead, and
It has been SO years since any o f them
oversaw a budget with a bottom line written
In black.
The bulk o f the budget, moreover. Is
dedicated to untouchable entitlements —
S o c ia l S e cu rity ben efits, food 'stam ps,
pensions — and Interest on the national debt.
Only 40 percent o f the budget would be
vulnerable to the line-item ax. and nearly
two-thirds o f that goes for defense and foreign
aid.
in short, pork-barrel waste Is peanuts.
W hen Ronald ReaMan dramatical] v lifted ud a
43-pound om nibus M ending bill during his
19SS State o f the Union speech and com ­
plained about the money being spent on
cranberry research — money that he could
not excise because he didn't have line-item
veto powe r — he w as talking about $30,000.
That w as .0000038 percent of the budget.
An nrgsnlrsllon dedicated to cutting the fist
from the federal budget. Cttlsens Against
Government W aste, recently added up the
m oney that goes down the drain because the
Internal Revenue Service fells to collect
delinquent taxes, and because the Defense
Department buys too many spare parts, and
because bureaucrats m anage their money
Imperfectly, and because the military haa too
m any obsolete haw s , and because the Forest
Service subsidises logging roads, and because
o f a lot o f other things — and came up with a
grand total o f $380 billion that could be saved
over a five-year period.
That would pay the 8300 billion annual
interest on the $3.1 trillion national debt for
about three months and 13 days.
I believe the Une-ltem veto w as a hokey
nothin the day It w as dreamed up. It Is Juat
one more form o f the baab-G ooffess gam e.

�niT-inM

Sanfonl Harafd, Sanford, Florida - Tuaaday, January 8, 1003 - I A

Student, financial info
released to districts
Associated Prest Writer_______
TA LLA H A SSE E - The state
has sent school districts the
student performance a n d finan­
cial data that w ill be Used to
grade their progress, as they
assum e more local control over
program s. Education Com m is­
sioner Bitty Castor said.
A s districts release the reports
over the next two weeks, parents
w ill get some Information, such
as com parative truancy rates
and "m obility" rates, for the first
time. Castor said Monday.
The school reports are part of
the state's effort to decentralise
control over schools and give
districts more power. The de­
mographic, scholastic and finan­
cial Information will be used to
m easure their progress.
The department produced In­
d iv id u a l re p o rts fo r 2 .8 7 6
schools, totaling 25.977 pages
w,.l.ll.!® '77.a ,n&lt;1*vl&lt;fu®l graphs.
W ith these reporta In hand,
parents, teachers and business
leaders — working as school
advisory c o u n t s and school
Improvement teams — can begin
to m ap out a road to even better
schools." Castor said.
"T h ere aren't any schools In
H onda that I'm satisfied with,
and I think that w ill be the
response o f the parents." she
Castor discouraged using the
reports to compare Individual
schools, sa;tying different groups

o f pupils require different types
o f program s.
Parents arm be able to com ­
pare their chlktren'a schools to
the statewide average In dozens
o f areas such as class sixes,
graduation and dropout rates
and teachers' pay. she said.
And Castor said parents and
state officials w ill use the infor­
mation to track each school's
progress from one year to the
next.
Som e figures m ay be adjusted.
An Orange County report re­
leased as a sam ple said the state
reported the coun ty's public
school graduation rate as about
74 percent, while county school
officials estimated It at more
than 82 percent.
The report Included a memo
saying the difference w as being
investigated. It said the state
didn't Include 072 people who
completed graduation requirementa outaide regular classes.
and m ay have overlooked one of
the board's com puter files In
m aking the calculation.
School districts w ill add their
own Information before releasing
the reports. The target date Is
Jan. 18. though some districts
m ay release them before that.
Data ranged from the general,
such as graduation rates, to the
particular, such as num bers o f
students using each
m icrocom puter In com puter
Statewide, the average gradua-

tlon rate w a s 78.3 percent.
Stu den ts p er m icrocom puter
used for Instruction averaged 11
In high school, 13 In middle
school and jun ior high, and 15 In
elem entary school.
The "m obility" rate, compiled
fo r the first tim e, takes In
transfers as w ell as dropouts,
counting the percentage o f stu­
dents enrolled In a school In
Septem ber 1091 who weren't
enrolled In the sam e school In
May 1092. Across the state, that
averaged 17.8 percent In high
schools, 14.8 percent In m iddle.
and junior highs and 14.0 per­
cent in elem entary schools.
•Parents w ill also get figures for
their schools in areas such as:
•A ttendance, which averages
nearly 02 percent In high school
nearly 93 percent In
school and ju n io r high, and
nearly 95 percent In elementary
school.
•P u p ils per teacher, averag­
ing 19 In high school. 20 In
m iddle school and Junior high,
and 18 In elem entary school
statewide.
•P u p ils per "achool-based"
adm inistrator, m eaning officials
such as principals but not dis­
trict officials. The average w as
326 In high school. 295 In
m iddle school and jun ior high
and 398 in elem entary school.
• T e a c h e r s a la rie s , w h ich
a v e r a g e d $ 3 1 ,4 3 3 In h ig h
sc h o o ls. $30 ,1 62 In m iddle
schools and Junior highs and
$30,008 In elem entary schools.

Confederate fla barred
from Alabama dc
Judgey

Associated Press Wrftar
MONTGOMERY B la ck
legislators have won a court
right to remove the Confederate
battle flag from atop the state
Capitol dome.
In a defeat for Oov. O uy H u n t
Circuit Judge W illiam Oordon
ruled Monday t
allow s only the
can flags to fly there.
" I am very, very happy and
thankful to all the people, b lack
and white, who *
led :th e

of racial
oppression and should not be
flown atop the seat o f state

state's Image.
"W e don't see It aa a blackwhite Issue. W e see U as an Issue
to usher the state Into the 21st
c e n t u r y ." sa id J o h n n y
Hardwick, a law yer who helped
argue the - f t ** for the legislators.
T h e fla g w ent up on the
Capitol dom e during the 1061
Civil W a r Centennial
ntcnnial and again
during pro-segregationist Oov.
Oeorge W allace’s first term In
1963 In an act o f defiance Just
before a visit by then-Attorney
General Robert Kennedy.
At the time, the state eras
locked in a court battle over
Integrating the University of
In recent years the banner flew

below the U.S. — J state dags,
but no flags have down
spring, w hen a ll three
rem oved d u rin g bu ild in g re­
n o v a tio n s. T n e b u ild in g
reopened Dec. 12, f i d the govplanned to hoist the Con*

a c q u ire d

t h e .p r o p e r sa fe ty

i'a ruling w aa the drat
flying the
battle flag f
the
first takan to court In 197$.
Hunt press secretary Terry
Abbott said the governor w as out
o f town and had no i«w m w tu»»
comment. H uat has sold that the

w ant It atop the Capitol.
Lawsuits -H »n»«g*T »g the flag
were filed twice before In federal
cou rt and both were rejected.
Holmes said the Legislative Re&gt;faQ uncove
the 1806 law , giving him new
grounds to return to court.
H unt's attorneys had argued
that the legislators could not
em ploy the 1696 law because
they aid not mention It in the
two federal lawsuits. But Oordon
rejected that argum en t
H unt's attorneys also argued
t h a t t h e 1806 l a w d i d n ' t
expressly prohibit the flying o f
the Confederateiflag.
f
The rectangular red flag con­
tains a diagonal blue cross with
13 white stars. It waa flo w n 'b y
the Confederate Navy. A square
version o f It eras unofficially
adopted b y the C onfederate
Arm y aalta battle flag.

the Fifth District Court of
Appeals.
T h e se ve n f in a list s were,
am ong 17 applicants for the
position, which will be created
March 1 with the resignation of
appellate Judge Joe A. Cowart
Jr. Cowart. 64. notified Oov.
Lawton Chiles o f his resignation
In Novem ber after serving more
thsn 12 y ears on the D C A
bench. Cowart previously served
as an 18th Circuit Judge for

labor In other places, she noted.
In other matters, the commis­
sioners approved an ordinance
ra is in g the re sid e n tia l an d
commerica! sewer fees In the
city. The Increase comes due to
Ihe county hiking rates to
Longwood by approxim ately 15
percent. C om m issioners p ro­
tested the rate in crease by
county commissioners, who ref­
used to roll back the increased
fees.
After a brief verbal exchange,
commissioners agreed to decide
whether most city employees
can continue to drive city cars to
a n d from their residences.
Commissioner Steve Miller ob­
jected to the practice, saying

Following the swearing-in cer­
em onies and board appoint­
m ents, the com m ission will
focus attention on the Seminole
Towne Center Redevelopment.
8immona as well as City At­
torney BUI Colbert are slated to
explain the cU y's portion of the
tri-party agreem ent which is
required in order for the devel­
opment o f Ihe mall to get
underway.
T h e a g r e e m e n t m u s t be
a p p r o v e d by S im o n a n d
Associates, developers o f the
m all, the Sanford City Com ­
mission. and the Redevelopment
Agency. The m em bers of the
commission serve aa the rede­
velopment agency, which Is re­
quired by taw to be a separate

have already been on a year
'round schedule for more than •
two years.
.
The committee believes that!
the two years between now and
Ihc'tlm e the high schools would
begin the transition would be
sufficient planning time.
The committee believes that If
the board does not accept the
change to YRE a new high
school w ill need to be built in
time for the 1996*97 school year.
If the change Is made, a new
high school can be postponed
until the turn of the century.
Regardless of the decision, the
district high schools will have to
be re x o n ed to accom o d ate,
growth patterns In the district.

year's or a 34 year sentence'ftfr
the brutal m urder o f a 5-year o|d
girt in Altamonte Springs.
At the last minute, he had five
years additional prison time re­
lum ed to his sentence, although
he will still be released after
three years because o f additional
time earned.
In making the decision which
kept McDougall in jail. Attorney
General Bob Butterworth also
tackled prisoners who have al­
ready been given early releases
since July 8.1992.
He wrote. "I am o f the opinion
that an Inmate who has been
convicted of m urder and Is In
custody on or after Jply 8. 1992.
is no longer eligible for release
based on an adm in istrative
calculation of provisional credits
re g a rd le s s of w h en such
calculation was m ade."
A s for those already released,
he wrote. "T h e early release of
an Inmate without statutory
authority does not excuse the

Ihihdt6 fhSnf serving the balance
o f his or her sentence, and he or
she m ay be recommitted by
prison authorities."
“ W e haven't been contacted
about rounding up any earlyrelease prisoners yet." said BernIn o le C o u n t y S h e r i f f 's
spokesman George Proechel this
morning. “ Most o f that will be
handled through the DOC. (De­
partment of. Corrections), but I
imagine we w ill eventually be
called In to assist."
Proechel said he did not know
at this time If Any o f the persons
released during the jpast six
months were In the Sem inole
County Jurisdiction. ''I Imagine
there are some here." he said,
“ but we w on 't know for certain
until we hear from the D O C ."
The m ajor crim inal Justice
summit announced by Chiles. Is
to be held before the legislative
session. A ides report It w ill
address both short and long­
term crim inal justice Issues.

F reem an, an A lta m o n te
Springs lawyer, is serving as
p r e s id e n t o f the S e m in o le
County B ar Association this,
year. Freeman represents the
18th Judicial Circuit, which
includes Seminole County, on
The.Fforida Bar Board o f Gover­
nors and serves on the board's
executive committee. He has
served on num erous Bar boards
and committees.
Freeman served as Seminole

County attorney from 1975 to
1977 and as County utility at­
torney from 1975 to 1976.
Freeman previously served as
m unicipal Judge In Lake Mary
and w in ter Springs. Freeman
has also been In private practice
in Seminole County since 1065.
Freeman has served as past
president o f the Sanford Lions
Club. United Cerebral Palsy o f
Central. Florida and United Ce­
rebral Palsy o f Florida.
w«&gt; iMtilnn jiv &gt;• »-&gt;

C rim e—
C eiitU m ed from Pfcge t A
aw arding only Incentive time for
&gt;ehav|or. Currently,
good behavior,
currently, prlsp
oners receive u to 15 days off
their sentences for every months
served. Just for being there.
T h e n o n -v io le n t o ffen d ers
would be placed In community
b a se d a lte rn a tiv e p ro g ra m s
which Include operation o f a
tri-countv. (M arion. Sum ter. Cit­
rus) work cam p currently under
construction.
Chiles said he believes that the
infam ous McDougall case has
g e n e ra te d n e c e ssa ry p u b lic
support for overdue crim inal
Justice reforms. "In feet.” he
a d d e d , " t h e 1993 F lo rid a
Legislature has an opportunity
to build a legacy for providing
residents with the safe streets
they expect."
The governor w as referring
Donald M cDougall. scheduled to
be released on New Years Eve.
after having served only 10

'P

JHH

the Brevard County Bs
tlon In 1983. He h at served on
the 8th D CA JN C and the 18th
C ircuit grievan ce com m ittee.
An toon currently teaches a ju ­
venile specialty course for the
F lo rid a J u d ic iary E ducation
Once, when a Melbourne city
lire m arshal warned An toon of
crowded conditions In his court­
room. he conducted
outside for about an hour.

has not disclosed a reason for his
resignation.
Three names w ill be selected
from the seven Interviewees,
said Orlando law yer John H.
W ard, chairm an o f the 5th D CA
J u d ic ial N o m in a tin g C o m ­
mission. The three nam es w ill
not be ranked, but sent to Chiles
in alphabetical order for his
selection.
The nom inating commission Is
com prised o f three gubernatorial
Bppoi
appointments,
three Florida Bar
aopo Intm cnts an d three' appoint
^
'A m on g the seven applicants
selected for Interviews were Antoon and Freeman.
Anloon has served as a circuit
Judge for nearly eight years,
chief Judge since July 1901. He
previously had a private practice
In Cocoa for 13 years.
Anloon served as president of

only five officials should have a
full-time use o f city vehicles.
C o m m is sio n e r H arvey
Sm erilson requested a list of
current em ployees who were
authorised to drive city vehicles
and lor what reaaona. Then, he
s a id , c o m m i s s i o n e r s c o u ld
"m ake a determination whether
, it’s cost savings or a vendetta
type o f thing."
Smerilson also asked for an
insurance com pany analysis to
see If the city would save any
money If It adopted a new policy
on the matter.
'• I . l i k e C o m m l a o l o n e r
Sm erilson 's statem en t." said
Anderson. "Benefit or vendetta. I
like that."

entity in o rd e r to ap p ro v e
varioua agreem ents that w ill
allow far financing o f the mall
project.
A s a follow-up to tonight's
meeting, the m all development
will also be the main subject o f a
workshop meeting o f the city’s
P la n n in g a nd Z o n in g C o m ­
mission. sch ed u led fo r th is
Thursday at 6 p.m.
PA Z wUI be discussing such
aspects aa parking apace sizes,
and landscaping for both on site
and adjacent areas.
Tonight's City Com m ission
O r g a n i s a t i o n a l m e e t i n g is
scheduled to begin at 7 p.m.. in
the commission cham bers o f the
Sanford City HaU. 300 N. Park
Ave.

Irm W . BeaU. 79. o f 110 N.
V irg in ia A ve.. Sanford, died
Friday, Jan. 1. at Orm ond Beach
H e a lth c a re C en te r. O rm on d
Beach. She w aa bora In Jack­
sonville and moved to Sanford In
1080. She owned and operated
Mary HaU
in JackaonvUle for m ore than 30 years. Mrs.
BeaU w as a m em ber o f Holy
Cross Episcopal Church. San­
ford. and the Oarden C lub o f
Sanford.
S u rv iv o rs In clu d e slaters..
Helen Miller. Frances Miller and
Marjorie Palam ar, aU o f Jack­
sonville: num erous nieces and
nephews.
V olusia Crem ation Society.
Daytona Beach. In charge of
arrangements.

L o u is J osep h O e n try . 66.
Biscayne Drive. W inter Springs,
died Sunday. Jan. 3. at W inter
Park Memorial Hospital. Bora
June 25. 1926. In Boonvtlle.
Ind.. be m oved to Central Florida
In 1067, H o -w a s a retired
^
for
Motors and an d a member o f St.
J o h n E v a n g e lic a l L u th e ra n
Church. Mr. Gentry waa a Navy
veteran o f W orld W a rfl,
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife.
Oeraldine K.: con, Mark Joseph.
H artford . C o n n .: d au gh te rs,
Susari O . Jackaon. W inter Park.
Pastor Sally O . f Vwk i Tam pa:
sister. Betty R. Visher. Tulsa.
Okla.i brother. W aUy. Titusville:
five grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lr c h lld F u n e ra l
Home. O ddenrod. In charge o f
arrangementa.

Maxine 8t. Ocrmaine. $5. of
Pine Tree Drive. Casselberry,
died Sunday. Jan. 3. at W inter
Garden Healthcare Center. Born
Dec. 1. 1007. in fleituate. Mass.,
she moved to Central Florida In
1962. She w as a homemaker
and a Baptist.
Survivors Include son. W .
Henry. MainevUle. Ohio: daugh­
ter. Marily O . Pickup. Orlando:
fou r grandchU dren and four
greatgrandchildren.
C arey H an d C o x -P a rk e r
Funeral Home. W inter Park. In

..

• ■■

yv .-^ vr

think there's a belter solution."
The YRE sub-commlttcc of­
fered the so lu tio n that the
committee as a whole thought
was the best solution to the
district’s woes.
The committee believes that
Lym an and Lake Howell high
schools, both or which have
already reached their maximum
student capacity, should be put
on the year round calendar by
the sum m er o f 1995. Other high
schools w ould follow by tne
sum m er of 1997.
By the 1995 sum m er session,
all the district elementary and
middle schools w ill already be on
the YRE calendar. Some elemen­
tary schools In Seminole County

Jill

U

t-M.ll

* C ow art's judicial * aide Joan
Socha said he did n ot^glve

City
b e th e s e l e c t io n o f r e p r e ­
sentatives to the Greater Sem i­
nole County Cham ber o f Com ­
merce committee dealing with
improvements to the Highway
17-92 corridor. The cham ber has
announced it is revitalising its
task force dealing w ith Im ­
provements to the highway.
Tw o city appointments have
been requested by the chamber.
They Include a representative to
the Government Relations Sub­
committee, and a representative
for the Design/Regulatory Sub­
committee.
City M anager BUI Simmons
has recommended City Planner
Jay Mender be named to the
latter.

1A
high schools
that-are using the year round
calendar (YR E): and the study of
plans which would better use
curricula and technologies.
• T h e study should begin Im­
mediately and be concluded by
June.
The Ideas o f the extended
school day (double sessions) and
the modified collegiate calendar,
where students take day and
evening classes depending on
l heir Individual needs, were re­
jected by the committee.
"W e didn't think either idea
was great." said chairm an o f the
f l e x i b l e s c h e d u l i n g sub?
commltee Darvin Boothe, prin­
cipal o f Lake Brantley High. "W e

I

Longwood*
strated thus for. I will
have no choice but to request
action from my fellow commis­
sioners at a later lim e ." An­
derson said.
At the earlier public participa­
tion part o f the meeting, several
citizens requested commission­
ers stop aU the verbal lights.
Deborah Spleae tola commis­
sioners that Longwood has a
"horrendous" reputation due to
past problem s. AU commissionlers should work with the city
adm inistrator to solve the pro­
blem s of the city, she said.
For city administrators, seven,
months in Longwood could be
compared to live years of hard

School

.

Central Florida In 1076. He w as
a chief o f stores for Pan Am eri­
c a n W o rld A i r w a y s a n d a
m em ber o f Pathw ays Christian
Center.
Survivors Include wife. Lillian:
daughters. O loria Barclay. Alta­
monte Springs. Darlene Koch.
H y d e P a rk . N .Y .. E lis ab e th
M ark tse llo . Q u e e n s . N .Y ..
Dolores Hutson. Baltim ore: sons.
H ow ard. V alley Station. Ky..
D a n ie l, C a lifo r n ia : b ro th e r.
Jam es, Baltim ore: staters, Laura
L an d on . T h elm a M ennlnger.
both o f Baltim ore: 20 grand­
c h ild r e n a n d a lx g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Funeral
Home, Altam onte Springs. In
charge o f arrangem ents.

R e g i n a l d M aa te ra . 0 2. o f
Sw eetw ater Boulevard. Long­
wood. died Saturday. Jan. 2. at
Meridian Nursing Center. Long­
wood. B ara Oct. 6, 1000. In
Manrhaator. England, he moved
to Central Florida In 1070. He
w aa a tailor and a m em ber of
Church o f England.
Survivors Include eons, Barrie,
L o n gw o o d . Philip. England:
daughter, Marie Christine Abel.
S rtL an k a: staters, MoUie. Rene.
grandchildren and four great­
grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld F u n e ra l
Home. Altam onte Springs, In

Eltaahoth M. Mcthven. 71. of
Hoiderncsa D rive. Longw ood.
died Sunday. Jan. 3. at Florida
H ospital, Altam onte Springs.
Bom Jan. 30. 1021. in SuUlvan,
IimL. he m oved to Central Florida
In 1076. She waa a homemaker.
Survivors include husband,
H arold: sons. Robert Jam es.
O sp re y . Kenn eth R aym on d.
Cleveland. Steven Bruce. Long­
wood: five grandchildren and
one great-grandchild.

Home. Altam onte Springs.
charge of arrangements.

In

Hubert “C h ie f' L. Shelton. 50.
of Rochelle Avenue. Sanford,
died Sunday. Jan. 3. at the
Veteran Adm inistration Hospi­
tal. Tam pa. Bora Feb. 26. 1033.
In Huntington, W . Va.. he moved
to Central Florida In 1060. He
w as a B ap tist a n d a N a v y
veteran of the Korean W ar.
Survivors Include wife. Judith:
sons. Halley V.. Jam es C.. both
o f Tam pa. Hubert "D a le " Jr..
Sanford. B rian K .. L an d O '
L a k e s : b r o t h e r s . H o ot O ..
Tam pa. Bunk. Weiakia. Harry,
W est Virginia: staters. Helena
Hattcn. w est Virginia. Heddy
Shelton-WhUe. St. Petersburg:
one grandchild.
B a l d w ln -F a l r c h ll d F u n e ra l
Home. Oaklawn Park Chapel.
Lake Mary. In charge o f ar­
rangementa.

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, January 5, 1983

Syrian Jew s flee, leave homes, jobs
B y L O U I I - M I I X L I R
A sso c ia te d P re s s W riter__________

NEW YORK - The Syrian
government gave the Jewish
doctor and his wife a choice:
they could leave, but they would
have to abandon everything —
good Jobs, their home, even their
daughter's big toy car.
ejndidn't hesitate.
They
W ith Just 92.000 In their
pockets, the fa m ily fled to
Brooklyn, Joining a modem day
exodus from Syria, whose harsh
anti-Israeli stance has produced
a climate Of fear for US own
Jews.
"W e lost our home and our
money and I don't know when
we will be able to work again,"
the doctor's wife said. "B ut we
have our lives and the life o f our
daughter."

The family, which spoke on wishing to leave, must purchase
conditlqn It not be Identified, a round-trip (light ticket and
benefltted along with more than have a tourist visa Issued by
2,500 other Syrian Jews from another country. Travel to Israel
President Hafex el-Aaaad'a at* is forbidden and as tourists the
tempt to polish his harsh reputa­ Jews may only take 92,000 per
tion by easing travel restrictions person out o f the country.
on Jesrs.
Life In the United States hasn't
State Department officials, in­ been easy for the doctor and his
cluding former Secretary o f State wife.
They, traded their spacious
James A. Baker III, had Joined
Jewish leaders in urging Syria to Damascus house for a cramped
ease restrictions on Jews, said one-bedroom apartment above a
Malcolm Hoenleln, an American noisy street. They speak little
English. It could take the doctor
Jewish leader.
" I think the U.8. has made It two years to qualify for a U.S.
d ea r they consider this a critical medical license so that he can
test o f Syria's human rights again support hts family. The
policy." said Hoenlln, executive family must also apply for per­
vice-chairman o f the Conference m anent residence, although
o f Presidents o f M^jor American most Syrian Jews have had few
problems gaining such status.
Jewish Organisations.
N e v e r th e le s s , th e d o c to r
Officially, there Is no emigra­
tion. Jew s, lik e all Syrians grinned as he recalled the day he

Ltqal Notices

Ltqal Notices

NOTICIOFCODR
■NFORCCMINT BOARD

You art hartby formally not)(M Hist a Fubik Haarins will
So canSucfoB In Ibaabava Hyfoa
cauaa by tbs CsSa tnbrcaMnf
Basra sllba City si tartars an
lbs mb Say a* January, m a t
7:M R.m. In tbs City Cammlasisn Cbambara. Roam 117,
tartar* Ctty Hall. MS N. Fart
‘ Fionas, can-

Plan Now F o r Spring
o r Sum m er Wedding

Refugees
Principal nationalities of those who flee

learned his family was free to go. U was the seventh day o f
Passover, the celebration o f the
biblical exodus from Egypt. The
doctor had Just left the morning
prayer service at synagogue
when state-controlled radio an­
nounced that Jews traveling
abroad no longer had to leave
behind a family member.
"People began to congratulate
each other," the doctor said.
"W e were so excited In our
hearts, but we couldn't really
show it. After all, we were In
Syria."
As soon as the holiday ended
the doctor applied for passports
to travel abroad. He used the
ficticious excuse that his wife
was sick and needed foreign
medical treatment.

NMrty 9 mMon Afghans wars listed ki

1999 as refugees. Thsy ranked first
I*™*1? * * 10 n*hw&gt;M9laswttfi the most refugees — over 13 mHUon ppopts

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�Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tueeday, January 5, 1993 - TA

Challenge to Hastings’ election denied
l ..
~ A Judge refused to
block Alcee Hastings from taking his seat In
Congress today, rejecting a law student's conten­
tion that the former federal judge was disqualified
by his 1989 impeachment conviction.
Hastings, from Altamonte Springs, was the first
person ever convicted through Impeachment to
be subsequently elected to Congress. Chief U.S.
District Judge Norman Roettger said Monday the
challenge was "particularly fascinating" because
such arguments had never been made In court In
U.S. history.
Jerry Don Waggoner, who said he Is a 20-year
Arm y veteran In nls second year at nearby Nova
University law school, went up against Terence J.
Anderson, a University o f Miami law professor
who has represented Hastings since the judge
was accused o f bhbety in 1981.
"Mr. Hastings has been burdened too much
already and ... he may not properly be burdened
further." Anderson argued, saying Waggoner's
suit came too late, lacked standing and went

stafT and 300 supporters w ere already In
Washington for today's ceremony, and he added
that blocking Hastings would "Irreparably harm"
him and his constituents by putting his seniority
behind that o f 100-plus other freshman repre­
sentatives.
Hastings, a 56-year-old Democrat, handily won
election in November from Florida's 23rd con­
gressional district.
"V ery clearly the young man ... created at what
best can be described as an annoyance," Hastings
said from Washington on Monday evening. He
has said he has been assured by congressional
officials that there will be no challenge to taking
his seat.
Anderson said he would take a copy o f the brief
order to Washington to present to congressional
officials.
He told the Judge that the Constitution left
disqualification from future office as a possible
penalty, but was worded to leave that to the
discretion o f the Senate. There was no Senate

vote on whether to disqualify Hastings from
future office.
Anderson also noted that Waggoner. 41. didn't
live in Hastings' district, that citizens can present
such grievances In petitions to Congress, and that
any o f Hastings' electoral opponents could have
challenged his candidacy before his election.
"Thla la an issue that the voters In the 23rd
District get to decide ... and they have decided."
Anderson said.
A federal judge in Washington last September
reversed Hastings’ conviction.' saying he was
Improperly tried by a 12-member panel Instead o f
the full Senate. The Judge stayed the ruling
pending a Supreme Court decision, not expected
until summer, in a similar case.
Waggoner, who says he la a political indepen­
dent who voted for Rosa Perot, told the Judge he
probably could have used some legal help.
"I'm In this alone." said Waggoner, who carried
his legal briefs In a $1.10 manils folder.
The courtroom was packed with Hastings
supporters who were cautioned by Roettger for
audible responses to Waggoner's arguments.

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in latest fad
SPRINOFIELD. Mass. *— Yesterday’s rebel
without a cause wore a leather Jacket and white
T-shirt, James Dean-style. Today's sucks a
pacifier.
In the tradition of bobby sox. madras shirts or
" X " hats, pacifiers arc becoming the Intcst teen
craze In some places. The pacifiers are worn on a
string or chain around the neck and arc traded
like class rings or friendship bracelets.
Some educators worry the baby accessory Is
really a way o f advertising gang tics or drug use.
Others sec it as a harmless — and largely
pointless — craze.
"Th ese kids need to create symlrols or a
belongingness to a social ... group, and this Is
another one o f those." said Jim Peters, principal
o f Greenfield Middle School. He said about 20 of
the school's 590 students tote pacifiers.
Am ong them is sixth-grader Colin Drbuln. who
said the mouthpiece helped him kick a park aday smoking habit.
"Y ou have something In your mouth. It Just
does It." Drouln said.
Some are alarmed by the fad. which developed
after the release o f the movie "B oyz N the Hood."
The film about Los Angcles-area gangs includes a
character who sucks a pacifier.
Sage Valley Junior High, School In Gillette.
Wyo., banned the pacifiers last year and sent out
a notice saying: "Pacifiers are associated with
drugs, gangs and Infants. None o f these associa­
tions is appropriate for Junior high school."
" I t ’s just a distraction in class." said Principal
Dan Espeland. "You're trying to get a questlon-and-answer session going, and you have
students with pacifiers In their mouths."
Some aficionados say pacifiers help them relax.
Jon Unaltls. an Il-^year-old at North Parish
Elementary School in Greenfield, was quoted In
the Springfield Union-News as saying he Just likes
"how It goes ’cheet.chect." when you suck It.
Daniela Alloro. a psychologist who counsels
teen-agers In the Los Angeles suburb o f Downey,
said pacifiers among teen-agers arc "a regression
and a way to be cool" at the same time.
"T h e youngster ... needs to separate from (lie
parents emotionally, but It's a transitional phase,
so he still needs to go back to the parents for
emotional support.'* she said.
" I think this fad o f the pacincr reflects tills
ambivalence: When there is a problem o f stress,
the adolescent regresses to earlier bchnvlor." she
said. "But he can be cool.”

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LOS ANGELES - Hollywood had Its third best
year on record In 1992 — In part because movie
tickets cost more than ever.
The 1992 season grossed an estimated 85
billion, according to figures released Monday. Hut
the number o f tickets sold appeared to be down,
at fewer than 1 billion In North America. At (he
same time, the price o f admission has reached
about 85 on average.
A string o f blg-budget Christmas disappoint­
ments — Including "T o ys ." "Leap o f Fallh."
"HofTa" and "Chaplin" — suggested that au­
diences need compelling reasons to part with
their money at the theater Instead o f wulling for
the movie to come out in video.
"W hen the economy Is tight, you're going to be
more careful about how you spend your m oney,"
said Martin Shafer, co-dwncr o f Castle Hock
Entertainment, producer o f " A Few Good Men."
“ People are still going to the movies, but the more
margina! movies are not doing us well as they
were 10 years ago."
The year's list o f the top-grossing movies was
led by "Batman Returns," with an estimate*}
• 163.7 million. It was followed by "Hom e Alone
2: Lost in New York." "Lethal Weapon 3 ." "Sister
A c t" and "W ayne's World."
Th e most profitable films were modestly
financed movies such as "Sister A ct." "T h e Hand
the Rocks the Cradle" and "W ayne's W orld."
Several Independent films — especially t'Enchanted April." "Th e Player" and "Howards
End’’ — were hugely profitable because they* wcre­
made on the cheap.
Final 1992 sales figures are released In late
January.

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9A - asnfofd Herald. Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, January 8, 1SS3

103rd Congress opens amid
high turnover, bare offices ;
Associated Press Writer
W ASH IN G TO N - The 103rd
Congress that convenes today
brings reoord num bers o f blacks,
wom en and Htspanlcs to the
Capitol at a time when m any
lawm akers, new and veteran,
are pledging action and change.

PESTER

Albert Holt paused briefly on hie bike ride
yesterday afternoon. Holt was going to the

market to do som e shopping when he took a

Loan guarantees for farm exports
said to carry risks, few benefits
years under GSM 109.
USD A argued that o f the 940.9
billion In guarantees extended
since 1981. the government has
only been required to cover 93.8
billion.
But O A O Investigators said
A gricu ltu re's calculations are
m isleading and that the actual
cost to taxpayers is much higher
and w ill mount every year the
program Is In operation. The
O A O said the coat to taxpayers,
had the program ended June 90.
1992,w o u ld b e 9 8 .5 billion.
Stephen L . Censky. acting
adm inistrator o f U SO A'a Foreign
Agricultural Service, argued that
the program s' history does not
bear out the O A O 's estim ates o f
ftiturc losses.
H e sa id Ira q Is the o n ly
country that h as refused to
repay Its loans: only Russia la
not current srlth Its payments:

sartly Increase total U.S. agricul­
tural exports." the report said.
R ep . B ob W is e . D - W .V a . .
chairman o f the House Govern­
ment Operations subcommittee
on agriculture, said the fact that
taxpayers could be stuck with a

as m em bers o f both the House
Bkwisic were to be sworn
into office.
But the real work w as to start
alm ost Immediately. Law m aker*
prepared to do everything from
holding early hearings on Prealdent-elect Clinton's new Cabinet
to considering the new chief
executive s stllJ-evoMng plans
fo r revitalisin g the lan guid
et®**®,ny*
.. . ,
It s o f critical Importance to
C o n g r e s s a n d the n ew ad ministration that we move fast
on addressin g ou r econom ic
problem s." Sen. Jam es Sasser,
b-T enn., chairm an o f the Senate
Budget Committee, said Monday. "T h e Am erican people are
expecting th at "
The ne

right to vote on the House floor.
office. Talent replied, "T h at Just
But Democratic leaders Monday
m eans m y A A . (administrative
endorsed a w atered down
assistant, or top aide) Is a better
version o f the plan that. In effect,
thtof."
would deny the five delegates
This Congress win have lift '
power to play a deciding role in
new House m em bers — more!
closevotea.
than one-quarter o f the 435-:
The compromise plan would
m em ber body — and 13 new;
mandate a new vote whenever
senators out o f 100. A 14th will
the votes cast by the delegates
be appointed to succeed Sen.!
determine passage or reL l o &gt;yd
yd B
e n tse n . D -T ex a s.:
Be
Jectlon o f any issue on the House ' Clinton's nominee for treasury;
floor*
a
rr t i t k
secretary.
A ll five d eten te* ere DemoBut change Is evident not Just­
crats. Besides the capital, they
in the overall num bers, but In'
represen t G uam , the V irgin
the people w ho w ill be serving In
Islands. Am erican Sam oa and
Puerto Rico,
Both cham bers w ill have re­
Despite the
for action, a
cord num bers o f wom en: six In
lotofV elebratln g and a little int the Senate and 47 In the House.
o f chaos were the order o f the
The House also w ill have 38
day Monday.
blacks and 17 Hispanics, records
Mem bers' families, friends and
In both categories. The Senate
constituents flooded the Caoitol w ill have Its first black m em ber
com plex, searching for offices,
In two decades. Democrat Carol
restaurants and restrooms,
Moseley Braun o f Illinois: and its
The visitors nicked their w av
first Am erican Indian In more
through c o r r l d w s t h a t often
than 60 years, Ben Nlghthorse
were Uttered with furniture and
Cam pbell. D-Colo.
flies, and offices with few desks
W ith C linton's Inaugurationand bare walls. The reason - a
lust IS days off, Democratic
massive num ber o f office moves.

M ra y g K g s

J E u I as
jS hidebound
hSdbound T alen t R-Mo., stood shoeless on
widely perceived
and unresponsive.
his desk, hanging mementoes o f
In one attempt at change, his home state on the empty
Democrats were hoping today to w a l l s . W h e n he w a s c o m -

president
office. The first.'
hearings bedln W ednesday.
:
A n o t h e T e a r l y p rio rity ls :
Clinton's economic revival plana'

f f l s s 's t e t r v 'S

*■ - — i

C lin to n w ill subm it ow n budget
One m ajor item still unresolved, transition*
aides said Monday, w as how big a short-term !
"stim u lu s" Job-creation plan to propose In !
addition to the regular budget for the fiscal year!
that begins next O c t 1.
Clinton has called his top economic team to*
Little Rock, Ark., on Thuraday to dlqcuaa the!
" matters. H e!
i agreed to meet In Little Rock with the chiefs;
o f the Big Three autom akers and the president of*
the United Auto W orkers union.
Although Clinton's nominees for top econom ic '
ently talk by phone, It w ill be the first |
have gathered In one place since th e ;
t-elect’s economic conference In Little-

B p TOM
L avoro scan dal. T h e "Italian
ban k's Atlanta branch lent Iraq
millions of dollars with U 8D A
guarantees before the Invasion o f
K uw ait: Investigators believe
som e o f the money w as used to
help Iraq create Its m ilitary
arsenal,
U SD A estimates B N L claim s
for payments la default srlll total
9410.5 million, although none
has been paid. The matter la
under Investigation by U SD A

"H e (Clinton) w ants to get an update on th e .'
options before them and the choices that the |
econom ic team faces as w e head tow ards*
Inauguration and taking o ffic e ," tra n sitio n '
a * George Btephahopbdfce
said Monday.The pr esident-elect most likely win not be able
** Imposed dradllnr for

h a s sp u rred

e u r r e d , th e e x t e n t o f a n y
m e a n in g f u l b e n e fits la u n «
know n." the mngreealnnel in­
vestigative agency eald.
It said the credit guarantees
m ay Increase sales In som e

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IN BRIEF

Lions repel Warriors

LOCALLY

Late score gives Oviedo boys 2-1 soccer victory

Ram frosh roll
WINTER PARK — A trio id Rams scored In
(limlilc figures as tin* L ik e Mary freshmen
bounced laiko Howell 58-33 at l.akr Howell.
Jason Wlngenback paced Lake Mary, now 6-1
on the season, with I(i. while Wesley Jackson
and Casey Winn added 10 points each. Areeno
paced the Silver Hawks with 14.
The Rams will he at home lids alternoon to
host Lake Brantley al 4 p m . while Lake llmvell
will host Seminole also at 4 p m today.

UCF edges visitor
ORLANDO — Darryl Davis scored 22 o f Ills
gillie-high 20 points in the second hall to lead
Central Florida (5 0) to a 72-00 victory Monday
night over North Carolina-GreenslMiro.
Central Florida improved to 5-0. while North
Carolina-GreenslMiro fell to 2-7.

Steston wins second straight
DELAND - Donell Grier scored 22 or his 28
points In the second half to lead Stetson to an
80-82 overtime victory over Hnflalo.
Itnlfalo (1-0) forced overtime on a Kris Rods
short Jumper with 43 seconds left. Koets paced
Hnflalo with 22 points.
Ehren WallholT had 21 |Miints and Hryanl
Conner Lester 20 for Stetson (2-7).

AROUND T H I STA TE
Jones to leave FSU
MIAMI — All-Am erica Junior linebacker
M anln Jones was uncertain he could,stay
healthy, win the Hetsmun Trophy or help FSU
finally capture a national title next season.
So he opted for the sure lhiii|&gt; — a lucrative
NFL contract.
The announcement of Jones’ decision to skip
Ills senior year and turn pro came at a news
conference Monday In his hometown of Miami.
This season’s winner of the Hutkus and
Lombardi awards is projected as a polcnll.il No.
1 draft pick by the New England Patriots.

Ward ready for roundball
TALLAHASSEE — Orange Howl MVP Charlie
Ward chunged uniforms Monday and Joined the
Florida Slate basketball team which he has
helped, lead to successive NCAA tournaments
the last two seasons.
Florida State coach Pat Kennedy said Ward
would accompany the team to Virginia for
W ed n esd a y’s ACC op en er, but probably
wouldn’t play until Saturday al Wake Forest.

I AROUND THB NATION
Cassell earns AC C honors
CLEMSON. S.C. — Florida State guard Sam
Cassell was numed Atlantic Coast Conference
player of the week Monday after scoring at least
30 points In three straight games.
The senior scored 31 points In a victory over
Maryland-Haltlmorc County, then added a
career-high lying 34 points against South
Florida and 30 In u loss to Florida.
Cusscll also grabbed 20 rebounds und handed
out 20 assists In the three-games.

Boys’ Basketball
□ W ln tir Park at Laka Howall. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.

Freshman Basketball
□ Laka Brantlay at Laka Mary, 4 p.m.
CJOvlado at Lyman, 7 p.m.
□ Samlnola at Laka Howall, 4 p.m.

Girls’ Basketball
□ Laka Mary at Laka Brantlay. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□ Laka Howall at Samlnola. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□ Lyman at Oviado. Junior varsity at 6 p.m. with
varsity to follow.

Prom Staff Reports
OVIEDO — The Oviedo boys’ soccer team can’t
get a break.
Despite almost totally dominating the game at
John Courier Field the Lions got a late second
half goal to break a 1-1 tie and then sweated out
the final minutes to pull nut a 2-1 victory over
the visiting West Orange Warriors Monday night.
"W e can’t gel any breathing room no matter
what we do." said Oviedo head coach Dave
Jckauoskl. "W e played three games In the Pizza
Hut Tournament and all three games were 1-0
scores (one win. Iwo losses)."
The Lions got on the scoreboard first 15
minutes Into the game when Midfielder Scott
Thclen look a pass from Defenseman Sean
Crcnsmnn and nailed a beautiful shot past the
West Orange goalkeeper from 20 yards out.
Five minutes later, however, the Warriors got

the tying goal off the foot o f James Harris and the
teams went to hnlftlme with the score tied 1-1.
"That (Harris’ score) was the first real shot
they got In the gam e." said Jekanoskl. "W e had
played great defense up to thul point."
The second half was u duplicate of the first half
as Oviedo dominated the majority of the action.
The Lions got the ultimate winning goal when
Midfielder Hrad Franz was knocked down as he
was moving through the box by the Warrior
goalkeeper, who grabbed the senior’ s leg,
resulting In a penalty kick.
Midfielder Josh Itkor took the penalty shot and
rifled the ball Into the goal for the score.
"W e dominated nbout 75-percent o f the action
in the second half." said Jekanoskl. "A n d we
could only score one goal. W e’ ve got to find a way
to finish better."
Oviedo outshot the Warriors 19-6 and had four
corner kicks to only two for West Orange.

Lions goalkeeper Darren Ockwlg had a good
game, turning away six shots.
Oviedo Improved lo 8-4-1 with victory and will
play a Seminole Athletic Conference contest at
Lake Hrantlcy Friday night at 7:30 p.m.
West Orange fell to 2-5-3 on the season.
An Impressive aspect of the victory was the
fact that the people doing most of the damage for
the Lions were underclassmen. Tliclcn, Cresman
and Ockwlg are all sophomores, while Itkor Is a
Junior. There arc 11 other Juniors on the squad,
which gives Jekanoskl a positive outlook not
only for the rest of the season, but for next
season as well.
"Our four losses have come at the hands of
state ranked teams (Coconut Creek. Lyman,
Tnmpa-Lcto und Lake M ary)." said Jekanoskl.
"W e ’re 8-0 ugnlnst everyone else. We feel real
good about ourselves, but we Just wish we could
finish better. It’s frustrating."

New, old collect
wins in Super C
From Staff Raports
SANFORD - And they’re ott.
The 1993 Sanford Recreation De­
partm ent Polar Hear slowpitch
softball season opened with a bang
Monday night at Chase Park, as the
heavy hitters o f the Super C League
combined for 43 runs and 74 hits.
Including 10 for extra bases.
Carrying the biggest bats were the
newly formed Mudfish team, which
rapped the ball for 22 hits and
s c o r e d 18 r u n s in an 18-0
whitewashing o f Sunchase. another
new team to the Sanford leagues.
Mudfish made Its presence fell
Immediately as Rich Cobb followed
Rob Kerr’s leadolf single In the
bottom of the first Inning with a two
run. home run und the winners
went on to have 10 different players
get nt least two hits each.
In the other games, TRC (Tim
Rnlnes Connection) made its return
to the Sanford diamonds a suc­
cessful one. overcoming a slow sturt
to top Coaches Locker Room 9-2
and Ken Rommel Chevrolet picked
up where It left ofT In the Fall
League by whipping Cafe Sorrento
9-5.
The 10-week season will continue
with three more games at 6:30 p.m..
7:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. next
Monday at Chase Park.
The Women's League will take
center stage tonight at Chusc Park,
while Men’s C Leagues will play on
the Field on Celery Avenue on
Wednesday and Thursday night's.
Each league will have three games a
night, starting at 6:30 p.m.
Contributing to Mudfish's 22-hit
offense were Cobb (home run. two
singles, two runs, four RUI), Charlie
Miller (triple, two singles, two runs,
two RBI). Robbie King (double,
single, two runs, two RBI). Chris
Wargo (double, single, two runs,
base on balls, RBI), and Rocky
Campanalc (double, single, two
runs, sacrifice fly. RBI).
A lso con tribu tin g were Mark
Huaman (two singles, three runs.
RBI), Jim Chalmers (two singles,
two runs. RBI). Joe DcLucIa (two
singles, run, three RBI). Kerr and
Bobby Miller (two singles, one run
and one RBI each) and Chris Wire
(Sacrifice fly. RBI).
Doing the hitting for Sunchase
were Mark Stlmmel (double, single)
and James Lopez, Wayne Reaves
und Kenny Morris (one single each).
Tim Raines drove In three runs
with a triple and a double to lead
the team that bears his name, but
his three brother's. Sam, Ned and
Levi, as well as a strong defense led
by pitcher Tom Graccy were also an

Integral part of the win. Sum Rulnes
started TRC on Its winning ways by
driving In two runs with a two out
single In the third Inning to erase n
1-0 deficit.
Doing the damage for TRC were
Tim Rulnes (triple, double, run.
three RBI). Dale Peters (two singles,
run). Ned Rulnes (two singles. RBI).
Mike Edwards (singles, three runs).
Tom Graccy (single, base on balls,
two RBI) and Sam Raines (single,
two RBI).
Also hitting were Keith Acrce,
Mike Mcrihlc and Robert Stevens
(one single and one run each), Levi
Rubles (single) and Billy Griffith
(run. busc on balls).
Doing the hitting for Coaches
Locker Room were Shane Lcttcrio
(two singles. RBI). Bob Suserud and
Steve Arthur (two singles and one
run each), Dave Morcton (tw o
singles). S teve Shakar and Al
Mucklcwlcz (one single each) and
JcfTBelle (Sacrifice fly. RBI).
Ken Rummcl Chevrolet was one
o f the hottest teams In the league
when the Fall League ended back In
November and they continued to
play well as the new season opens.
Tied 1-1 after four innings, the
winner exploded for eight runs on
eight hits In the fifth to blow the
game open. A two-run double by
Chris Nlckle and a triple by David
Golds!Ick were the big blows In the
Inning.
P o w e r in g th e K en R u m m c l
Chevrolet offense were Nlckle (dou­
ble, single, two runs, two RBI). Mike
Marshall (two singles, run, Sacrifice
fly. two RBI). Jim Smith (tw o
singles, run, base on balls) and
Brian Curtis (two singles, run).
Also Goldstlck (triple, run. RBI),
Cary Keefer (single, two runs. RBI),
Kelly Denton (single, Sacrifice (ly.
base on balls, RBI), Tom Wilks
(single, run) and Keith Denton
(single).
Pacing the Cafe Sorrento attack
were Bill Marino (two singles. RBI),
Jay Johnson (two singles, run. RBI),
Dave OakcB (two singles, run),
Barnle Dallay (single, two runs.
Sacrifice fly, RBI), Rick Moreland
(single, run), Stu Sclock (single,
base on balls), George Porzig and
Andy Rltchcn (one single each) and
Manny Silva (Sacrifice fly. base on
balls. RBI).
K*n Rummcl Chevrolet Me in • Cato S o r r e n t o I I I

III

I -

S u n c h o i o O S t t O
M u d l l t h i e i r s

—
—

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Tim Ralnet Connection M i i l l I — » is
Caachoe Lacker Room )M M l • — I to

1

New Season
Ken Rummel Chevrolet got the
Sanford Recreation Departm ent
Polar Bear Softball season off to a
flying start with a 9-5 victory over
Cafe Sorrento. Helping Rummel to
victory were David Goldstlck (top
photo) with a triple,
Jim Smith
(center photo) with two hits and a
run scored and pitcher Kelly Denton
(left photo), who scattered 11 hits.
Hoiald Pholot by Konjo Zobulungi

Girls’ Soccer
□ Bishop Moora at Laka Mary. Junior varsity at 5
p.m. with varsity to follow*
□ Lake Howall at Edgawatar. Junior varsity at 5
p.m. with varsity to follow.

Dolphins’ offensive line to get stress test

Wrestling

AP Sports Writer

□ Samlnola at Cocoa. Junior varsity at 6:30 p.m.
with varsity to follow.
□ University at Laka Mary. Junior varsity at 6:30
p.m. with varsit/to follow.

MIAMI — The Miami Dolphins’
pass blocking and ground game,
sources o f concent for much o f the
season, will undergo a stress test
against San Diego In the AFC
playoffs Sunday at Joe Robbie
Stadium.

Basketball
1 8 p.m. — TNT. NHA. Los Angeles Lakers at
Chicago Hulls. |L)
Com plete listings an P a g e SB

By BTBVBN WINK

The Chargers’ much-improved
defense led the conference with 51
sacks, while Miami quarterback Dan
Marino was sacked a career-high 28
times.
San Diego tied for the AFC lead In
run defense. Miami ranked thirdworst In rushing yards, and leading
rusher Mark Higgs will miss the
game with a knee injury.

Those matchups could spell trou­
ble for the Dolphins. The last time
the teams met. In December 1991,
San Diego needed a fourth-quarter
rally to win, 38-30. The Chargers’
defense appears unlikely to give up
that many points Sunday.
“ It seems like every week they
have a different player stepping to
the forefront." Dolphins guard Keith
Sims said Monday. "T h eir defensive
tackles are getting a good push
upflcld. and it seems like they’re not
having breakdowns or giving up
that big play like they did last
year."
In 1991, the Chargers ranked
19th among NFL teams in defense.
This season they ranked fourth.
Coach Don Simla, who uses the
"superstar" label sparingly, applied

It lo two Chargers — defensive end
Leslie O’Neal and linebacker Junior
Seau. But he said the bulk o f the
credit for San Diego’s Improvement
belongs to first-year defensive coor­
dinator Bill Arnspargcr. a former
Shula assistant.
"H e hasn’ t lost It." Shula said.
"T h eir defense Is playing well, and
Bill certainly hus to be the main
reason. He hus given them the same
thing he gave our defense. They
have stability, and they don’ t make
mistakes."
j
The Dolphins' defense also stiff­
ened this season, rising to sixth-best
In the NFL aguinst the run, com­
pared with second-worst In 1991.
But the Chargers, eager to establish
ball control, will still try to move on
the ground.

"T h ey pass If they have to."
Miami defensive end JcfT Cross said.
"O u r d efen s e has Im p ro ved
ugalnst the run." Shula said. "But
this Is going to be a big test. You
can’ t let them play kcepaway on
you."
A potent defense and running
attack helped the Chargers beat
Kansas City 17-0 In a wild-card
game Saturday for their eighth
consecutive win.
"T h ey're on u roll, no doubt about
It." Cross said. "But they have to
beat us In our back yard. And we
haven't been playing too badly
uursclves the past few weeks."
Miami won its final three regu­
lar-season games to eum the AFC
East title and a first-round bye.

�IH H H IIIH B H M p p H H i

STATS &amp; S T AN DI NG S

TatotailanN
Cant. Ptartda
II. Akfcaari 77, Prankim PMrca 71
Wayne. Mkh. 71. Oermen 71
William B Mary MJLa^dla. Md. as
AaaamaNaa at. Barry M

Banarmmaat. Laniati

Call, at Chartaatan 44. North Carolina AIT

Aaeumytton M. lacrod Moart ll
Bucfcnall 71. Layata. Md. t*
Camayia MeltonTS. Ottrabury 71
CatanWIa 44. Manhattan
Dartmouth 77, New HamaaMra 47
OetawaraTf.NavyM
E. Connecticut 4S. AWartuaMadnua 14
Edmfearaai. Pairmant It. 74
ForWiam 44. Hatatra M
LatayatN W. Vtrmant 71
Ml HMIlMM.Bt.Ua 44
N.V. TacRM. OaaanaCatt. 41
NYU *7. John Jay 71
Narth Central 7f. WeyneaBur* 71

m

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Tonnaaaaa 7f, Natro Dome 41
Traylt.M,Auvuala44
Union, Tam. M. Arkanaaa Call. 4S
Woke Paratt 7». Appalachian II. 4S
M lD W ItT
Ayulnaa 71 Orand Vallay « . 41
BovHlny Oman IM. Cincinnati 71
CrotthtanHW. tlimalatt
Detroit Marcy 77. Mkhlyan 71
Daana 74. Nahraaka Keamay 7S
llimaialt.t*. lawalt.U
Mlaaaurl l autham iae.OcotBWirti 44
Daytan4t.OhioU.4S
Tabor 7*. Bakar 17
TatadaM.Ctavat4ndtt.44
OiBBOMIH 1041It'll
teeaame y M M I*. Multan a tl M t. Nadya
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miner (rovfhlnt). 7:Mi tendlak, Van
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Sanford HaraM, 8*nford, Florida - Tuesday, January S, 1999

Couple bring joy to others
Parents of 25 foster children live for others
SANFORD - Barbara and Roy
Richey have a w ay with people.
Since they moved to Deltona
■even yeara ago. they have given
of themselves to the community.
They spent SO yeara In Chat-*
tanooga and another SO y e a n
near Detroit where they raised
two children o f their own, 25
foster children and two adopted
children.
Today, they are spending their
retirement yeara bringing Joy to
the elderly.

CUnton dub to mMt
The Sweetwater Oaks Garden C lub w ill meet on Jan. 11 and
invites all o f its m em bers to attend. The meeting win be at the
W eklw a Marina at 9:30 a.m.
A speaker from the Nature Conservancy wtU present a
program about the importance o f their work and goals.
There win be a scholarship fundraising card party and
luncheon on Jan. 18. For m ore Information crul 009-9120.

and Thursday
Sanford Ave..

Ktormto Chib of Csn sibffy un its
Kiwanis d u b o f Casselberry meets every Tuesday at 7:30 a.m .,
at Village Inn. corner Dog Track Road and U S Highway 17*02
taLongw ood. For information, call S3 1-6545.

For six years, they have visited
nursing homes to entertain and
cook for the residents.
Regularly, they visit Hilihaven
Healthcare Center and make
their rounds. In October, they
m ade homemade doughnuts lor
the residents while In November
th ey p re p ared old -fash ion ed
potatoes an d onions. D uring
U v iC I llD c i

IDC

lU C D C jl

•cTVcQ

the residents bean soup and also
b ro u g h t a lo n g a display o f
beautiful dolls and a dob house
they made.

rasldtnti at Hilihaven Healthcare Canter where

and Sylvia Icttnani activities director.

Most o f the cooking is done on
She enjoys quilting, cooking
the prem ises at Hilihaven so that and m aking doila whSe he likes
the residents can eqjoy the f i s h i n g , w o o d o w r k i n g a n d
arom a o f good country cooking.
gardening.

According to a s p
residents o f HHlh
look forward to a t
Richeys.

Horse sense makes no sense in fire
rn te t

WMklv
Lions
Club
www n i j M
v iv e v
i w imMflna
iv w iv f

ABIGAIL
am m m p m
VAN
a n BUREN
D U t itn
»'

The Optimist C lub o f Lake M ary meets every Tuesday at 7:00
p.m ., at 100 C. Crystal Lake Ave. (corner at Crystal Lake and
Country C lub Road). Visitors are welcome.

take h er
id those who
.** W hat she
• to keep her
_
,
ted In some
(1818*1093)

Tales off pounds Mnsltoly
Members o f .Take O ff Pounds Sensibly. TOPS, invite the
public to jetn them on Tuesday evenings from 7 to S p.m. at
the First Christian Church, 1607 Sanford Ave., Sanford.
The group now haa a private room to weigh people between
OilS and 6:48 p m .
Koci^ week a different program on weight loss w ill be

had

never seen

anything to

did not circulate to chat with the ueelangua
g u e * , u m custom ary at moat
I am V &gt;
w ed d ln ga. W e w ere te rrib ly
never g rtu
dleappointed. but w e didn’t feel
tt w as our place to go around
M AM 4
and introduceourselves.
divorced si
■W hat do you m ake o f this,
■ nurse s
Abby?
hospltsi j
W IM H O I W W
thepeooie
The w eddin g, w h o lm a :
m ay have been "posh and very
Not mat
e x p e n siv e , bu t so m eb o d y
know that

For m ore information about the club, call 323*7502 or
333*1064.

Panto Attack Qfoup to maat
Agoraphobia/Panlc Attack Support G roup m eets each
Tuesday at 0 p.m . at W est Lake Hospital. 500 W . State Road
434. Longwood. The support group Is for those who era afraid
to go out o f their hom e and be active to public.
D M A S A B S T t My husband
and I recently attended a very
expensive, posh wedding. Every*
thing w as first class all tbs way.

name.

K IL B O U R N E

KASERNE.

close-order drill, naval history

T h is m ay aound picky
to S c h w e ts in g e n . O erm a n y — and first aid.
some, but tor vrnntn (and their
Arm y Spec. Deborah E. Adams
husbands) w ho chooaethto op- hasarrlVed for duly here.
O 0 C A S M S S T M I*
the t o m "m aiden n a m s "is
The soldier. ■ programmer ana
Marine PFC Oscar Merthie. son
offensives It U npU es th at a lyst. is the daughter o f Emma M. o f Bernadette Merthie o f 136

'

Colley of 4090 Nebraska Ave.. Carver Ave.. Sanford recently
Sanford.
completed the personnel clerk
8he 1b a 1980 graduate of course.

South Plantation High School.
Fort Lauderdale.

^
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I W f B T I P t flffr r
INCIRLIK AIR BASE. Adana.
Turkey — Air Force Airman 1st
Class Robert E. Pearce III haa
arrived for duly here.
Pearce, a weather specialist, la
the son o f Robert E. and Ronda
S. Pearce o f 230 Lak evicw
Driver. Sanford.
He graduated from Loch Lowe
Preparatory School, Lake Mary.
in 1989.

C W D TA .D A T
OSAN AIR BAS!!. Songton.
South Korea — Air Force Sgt.
Cindy. A. Day haa arrived for
duly here.
Day. a m edical service
specialist, la the daughter o f
Raymond R. and Elisabeth T.
DUlman o f 1520 /Avalon Blvd..
Casselberry.
She la a 1979 graduate o f
Seminole Adult High School.

Navy Seaman Recruit Richard
S. Young, aon o f Carol J. Allred
o f 440 W. !9th St.. Sanford,
recently completed basic train*
Ing at Recruit Training Com­
mand. San Diego. C a lif.'
During the cycle, recruits are
taught general military subjects
designed to prepare them for
further academic and on-lhe-Job
training in one o f the Navy's 05
occupational fields.
Studies Include seamanship,

mat

During the course at Marine

Corps Service Support Schools.
• Marine Corps Base, Camp Le*
Jeunc. N.C.. students receive
Instruction on the preparation
and maintenance o f officer and
enlisted service records. Pre*
parailon o f all personnel docu*
menta which Include idcnliflca*
Hon cards, promotion certlfl*
cates. Individual evaluation re*
porta and leave authorUaUons
are also studied.

�M

p p p p p m

i

7 1 -B t + o W n H O

CLASSIFIED ADS
sminole

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Sanford Hamid, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, January 5. 1993

by.Qhic Young

Hair loss in women
may reflect illness
D E A R DR. G O T T : I'm an
active, healthy 53-year-old with
no health or thyroid problem *,
yet I am loalng all m y body hair.
W hat could cauae thla? I'm too
em barraaaed to dlacuaa thla with
m y doctor and w ill value your
opinion. ,

abuse) w ill eventually progress
to chronic Inflammation that la
m arked by diabetes and poor
digestion, as w ell as shrinkage
and calcification o f the gland.

by Ntort Walktr
Z HAVE A PN SA M
O F 9WCOMNG A
FAM OUS GENER AL
LIKE M V FATHER &gt;

by Art Sansom

THE BORN LOSER
TWtkfcSA PROBLEM
VkTHOURCHRttDWS
1 O K «u

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DEAR READER: You don't aay
whether you're m ale or female.
It m akes a difference.
Aa men age, they lose body
hair - and scalp hair aa well.
Thla la probably due to wither­
ing o f the hair follicles and
thlnnlng/drylng o f the skin.
Age-related decreases In male
hormone probably play a role.
W om en do not ordinarily lose
body hair aa they age to the
extent that men do. (Perhaps
because they have leas to begin
w ith.) Thus, hair loss In women
m ay reflect an Ulnesa, such as
anem ia or infection, of which
they are unaware.
See your doctor. Or. If you
wish, pass O O and proceed
directly to a dermatologist.
DEAR DR. G O TT: Please tell
m e the facts about chronic and
acute pancreatitis. I had a C T
scan last week and w as told my
pancreas Is gone, shriveled and
calcified, yet I’m not a diabetic.

by Chariot M.

PEANUTS
YES. M A'AM ..I BR0U6HT MY
006 TO SCHOOL TODAY.. WELL,
SOMETIMES HE 6ETS LONELY...

m
a

sV

NO. MA'AM ..HE WON'T
CREATE A DISTURBANCE

M AYBE

n 4

liw U oiuU t ^ iB f liA y ^

EEK I MEEK
HMHDMXJRDriJUeftCKlE
iwnn THE MCI PRKIDCOT OF
BLUE a m 00 IASTUOHT?

SO HE SAID W MONGER tt!6
A P&amp;VOOSLV ttfSITMOG
COWDmONAWDWOTHISWS R »S B IU TV AUDHCIXFT

U P IIO D H IM I
HAOWT £ATEK) MJL
DAY A U D I WAS |

IT D ID O T .

'D E A R READER: The pancre­
as. an organ located near the
stom ach , m an u factu res
digestive Julcea and Insulin.
Because It Is connected to the
liv e r b y a tube, a n y liver
blockage -- as can occur with
gallstones - w ill also affect the
pancreas, usually leading to
acute inflammation. Over-use o f
alcohol also causes pancreatic
Inflam m ation: this and liver
problem s account for more than
8 0 p erce n t o f h osp ital a d ­
missions for acute pancreatitis.
R e p e a t e d b o u t s Of a c u t e
pancreatitis (o r, m ore com ­
m o n l y , c o n t i n u i n g a lc o h o l

B y P h illip A ld e r

by T.K. Ryan

by Jimmy
WHYSHOULD

ARLO AND JANIS

S&amp;&amp;S8RK

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V"

FRANK AND ERNEST
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BARFIELD

Tw av # *

*

by Jim Davit

-

However. South w a s' Eatee
Griffin, a board m em ber o f the
Greater New York Bridge Asso­
ciation for over 30 years, who
died lost November. She asked
hcraclf why East, ah expert, had
w o n t r ic k t h r e e w i t h th e
diamond king. The normal play
would be to duck. Orlffln con­
cluded that he wanted her to
know he had the king. Backing
her Judgment, O rlffln ImmSdlaicly played a apade to her 10 —
and it won! Declarer ruffed her
heart loaer with dum m y's spade
Jack, cashed the spade ace and
led a low club. The contract was
aafe.

It could prove to your advan­
tage in the year ahead to func­
tion aa Independently of others
as possible. If circum stances
require you to form an alliance,
do so with care.
C A P R IC O R N (D ec. 22-Jan.
10) Strive to be self-sufficient
today, because allies upon whom
you can usually depend might
not be there when you most
need them. C apricorn, treat
yourself lo a birthday gift. Send
fo r C a p ric o rn ’s Astro-G rap h
predictions for the year ahead by
m ailing $1.25 plus a long, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o thla newspaper.
P.O. Box 01428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your sodlac sign.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
Make play out o f your work
today, but don't play and avoid
your work. The form er will make
things easier, but the latter will
create complications.
PM C R B (Feb. 20-March 20)
Try not to be loo dem anding of
friends today, because they wlU
resent it If you make them feel

they must be held accountable
to you for their actions.
A R IB S (March 21-Aprfl 10)
Unfortunately, others might be
resistant to your m ethod* and
procedures today and not do
things the way you want. There
Is a chance thla m ay unduly
trigger your .anger. G uard your
temper.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
U 'a not like you to deliberately
put someone down In the pre­
sence of others, so don't do It
tod ay. A painful lesson could
resu It
lt!if you do.
O B N O fl (May 21-June 20) Be
prudent In the managem ent of
your resources today, even If
people with whom you'll be
Involved a re n 't Set your own
standards Instead o f being a ‘‘me
lo o " oerson.
*
C A N C E R (June 21-July 221
Even a harm less rendesvous
could be seriously m isjudged by
others today. Don!t step out of
line In the romance department.
W alk the straight and narrow.
L B O (July 23-Aug. 22) It may
be a serious .mistake today to
play favorites where ftlends are
concerned. If you do something
for one pal an d Ignore the

A N N II
ROBOTMAN*

AuffiSjfe

*

TY*."JKTjwrri,
...Vv.
8

v.*-- nr.r&gt; i F T - 'i .Sp .'TV?

Now South had to And the
spade queen, and all the indica­
tions pointed to W est. A s he
hadn't led a top club at trick one.
It w as clear East had a club
honor. Apparently that left West
needing the spade queen for his
opening bid.

A rgu a bly the grcalcat-cver
advertising coup occurred when
person A. as I shall call him.
persuaded person B to buy a
T-shirt with person A 's company
logo on 11. Person B had paid for
the privilege o f advertising
person A 's company.
In bridge. It usually doesn't
pay lo advertise your cards. But
o c c a s io n a lly you reveal a
particular honor-card In an elTon
lo mislead an opponent about
l he location of another honor.
In today's deal, the bidding
w as bizarre. North might have
made a lake-out double over one
heart. And South entered the
auction with a skeletal twospade ovcrrall.
West led the heart queen and.
when It held the Hick, continued
. with a low heart lo the king and
ace. Declarer took a diamond
llncaae. but. It lost. Back came a
diam ond to dummy's queen.

request o f another. It could cost
you the good w ill o f both.
V IR O O (A u g. 23-Sept. 22) Do
not presum e that -you are the
sp o k esp erson fo r y o u r peer
g ro u p today. U n le ss y o u 're
elected by the nudortty. your
reign could be short-lived.
(Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
realistic regard in g w hat you
hope to achieve today or else you
might trip over your ow n limita­
tions.' Keep objectives within
your capabilities.
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
you talk too m uch today there'*
a chance you m ight be forced to
defend positions about which
you know little. T o be on the safe
aide, focus on listening Instead o f
expounding.
BAC M TTAR ItlB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Be reasonable regarding the
terms and conditions you hope
to get today In a business deal. If
the specifics are too harsh, the
endeavor could fell apart in front
o f your eyes.
(0 1 9 9 3 . NEW 8PAPR R
TERPRISE ASSN.

EN­

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                    <text>January

6,

1993

W EDNESDAY

30 Cents

Sanford Herald
Serving Sanford, Lako Mary and tomlnola County alnoo 1S0S
86th Year, No. 113 - 8anford, Florida

: Lake polluted

NEWS DIGEST

Sanford fined for contaminants in Lake Monroe

________

□Opinion

B yN IC K P P B IP A U P
Harald 8taff Wiitar

Don’t drink and drive
Arrn residents take heed lo drunk driving
warnings over the holidays.

See Page 4 A

□ Sports

SANFORD — The Environmental Protection
Agency has announced It Is penalizing the City o f
Sanford for polluting Lake Monroe. The fine has
been set at 827.113.
According to the EPA, the city Is being fined for

"...discharging pollutants from Its wastewater
treatment system Into waters o f the United
States. In violation o f National Pollutant Dis­
charge Elimination System perm its."
The specific area Involved Is the reclaimed
water discharge area. Into the St. Johns R iver
from the wastewater treatment system at 300 N.
□B aa N m . P ag • 0 A

LAKE MARY — Lake Mary lied University In n
wrestling match Tuesday night. They think.

See P age IB .

□Pooplo
‘A Taste off Sanfford'
Members of the Sanford W om an’s Club arc
getting their recipes In order and Sanford'
businesses are deriding whnt heavenly morsels
they will serve nl the sampler of (lie season, " A
Taste of Sanford."

B y KICK PPBIPAUP
Harald Staff Writer

Bee P age 3B.

LAKE MARY — A new prime
cohtractor for the Lake Mary Boule­
vard widening project has been
aelectcd. T h e Sem inole County
Commission is expected to approve
the choice before the end o f the day.
Hewitt Contracting Co.. Inc., o f
O kahum pka. F lo rid a has been
selected by the bonding agency,
Insurance Company o f Am erica.
T h e s e le c tio n h as n ow b een
forwarded to the commission, and a
motion for approval Is scheduled
during a 1:30 p.m. m eeting today.
H e w it t 's lo w b id w a s fo r

________ ^

Starks ffllts suit in shooting cast
ORLANDO — A legislator has Died a civil suit
against a political opponent charged with
attem pted m urder by shooting Into the
lawmaker’s house and wounding Ills wife.
The suit tiled hy Slate Rep. Bob Starks against
Erie A. Kaplan asks compensation for medical
expenses, pain and suffering, menial anguish
and Inconvenience. No spcclflr amount Is cited.
Kaplan, who has denied tiring Into the
Starkses’ home near Maitland and Injuring Judy
Starks., hasn’t been tried on the criminal
charges.

By i
Harald Staff Writer

Kaplan. 28. a property manager in Altamonte
Springs, remains free on 0100.000 ball.

SANFORD — Consideration o f the
Sem inole Towne Center Redevel­
opm ent Agreem ent was postponed
again last night. The Sanford C ity
Commission tabled U until at least
Jan. 11.
"W o were In phone conversations
with the m all developers as late as
today." C ity Manager BUI Simmons
said last night, "b u t the tri-party
agreement Is stlU not ready for
official presentation."
Simmons said he was hopeful the
a g re e m e n t w o rd in g c o u ld be

Mrs. Starks was shot once In the left calf as
she slept when the assailant fired five times Into
the house. Her husband was not home.

Lotto lump sum payoffs pondarad

State Rep. Steven Faren. D-Sunrisc. said
elderly constituents sometimes object to the
current method of paying lottery Jackpots in 20
annual Installments.
"One of the questions wc hear Is ’Why should
I buy a lottery ticket?’ They’re not going to be
around that long," Fcren said Tuesday.
Lottery Secretary Marcia Mann said she’d
supply the Lottery and Pari-mutuels Subcom­
mittee with a list of probable costs and also a
compilation of facts about the average lottery
ticket buyer.
Rep. Jim King. R-Jacksonvlllc. suggested a
test program lo determine whether making
lump-sufn Jackpots available would boost ticket
sales.
Mann said the Department of Lottery has
turned up no evidence that lump-sum payoffs
wbuld either stimulate or reduce sales.
She said It Isn't known If sales could rise
enough lo compensate for the extra money It
would cost the department to pay a lump sum
Jackpot, rather than Invest the smaller amount
necessary lo pay the winner over 20 years.

I IN D E X

. ..+

Philip Jonas o f Wildwood, was riding hard through Ft. Motion Park
racantly on hla trusty stood. Whlla tha youngatar didn’t gat far, ha
•prang Into action on a warm wlntar day and got raady to rtda Into tha
•unsat along tha lakafront.

Convicted off
m olesting girl,
youth minister
to be sentenced

On tha right traek

By O B O IIO I DUNCAN
Harald Staff Writer
SANFORD — George Wayne Clyatt. the youth
minister who a Seminole County Jury convicted of
engaging In a sexual act with a child, will be
sentenced Thursday morning.

•&lt;-

•■

Clyatt was accused or molesting an Altamonte
Springs girl who was a member of his congregation.
The victim said Clyatt molested her when she and
another member of the youth group stayed over
night at his house in preparation fbr a candy sale the
next day.

However, prosecutors brought an expert witness to
the stand who testified that the young girl did show
emotional and psychological signs of sexual abuse.
Dr. Barbara Mara, a clinical psychologist who
specializes In treating victims of sexual abuse, said
the victim did show symptoms consistent with
sexual abuse. Including an anxiety disorder brought
on by a Iramaullc event In her life.

Variable cloudiness
with a 30 percent
chance o f showers
and thunderstorms.
High near 80 with a
light wind.

A second woman, who was 20 years old at the time
of the trial, told Jurors that Clyatt molested her
several years before, when she was a member of a
Holly llllls church where Clyatt served.
Assistant Stale Attorney Stewart Slone, who
prosecuted Clyutl. said the defendant is looking "at a
good number of years." for his offense.
Clyatt will be sentenced by Judge Alan Dickey.
Stone, who Is also handling the case of former NFL
football player Lewis Billups, said his office Is still
Investigating the matter but that charges will be
nied.
However, some Investigative work still needs lo be
done before official charges can be filed, he said.

N r

JuU,(7aQ.4 1•

The County has been holding the
remaining contract fund o f 82.8
m illion , w hich Includes m oney
withheld during the original con­
tract. The difference o f 8228,650
would be forwarded to the bonding
agent.
According to the proposed con­
tract. Hewitt w ill be required to
com plete the widening project by
the original completion date o f June
14. or pay a penalty o f 01,000 per
day for each day o f work required
beyond that date.
Early this week. County Manager
Ron Rabun had expressed the

finalised in tim e to have It by this
Friday, for commission study, prior
to M onday's regularly scheduled
meeting.
"E veryone Is in agreement that
we want to get this righ t." he said,
"w e all want to m ove it along at a
good pace, but In order to do that,
all o f the details must be com pletely
finalized."
Simmons explained that the de­
v e lo p e r . M e lv in S im o n a n d
A s s o c ia te s , w a n ts to g e t th e
agreement In place before closing on
the financing and land purchase.
The tri-party agreement would be

6,000 fulMime
SCC students
back to books
B y VICKI DaBOfUUBA
Harald Staff Writsr

Clyatt had claimed the teen-ager had made up the
story.

Skiss cltar, tsmps rise

-Public Works Director Paul Moore

Mall agreement details
still being ironed out

He withdrew from the District 34 race in
Seminole and Orange counties shortly after his
arrest In September. Without Democratic op­
position. Boh Starks, a Republican, won the
race.

TALLAH ASSEE A House panel asked
Florida Lottery officials to estimate costs of
letting winners collect Jackpots in lump sums
rather than 20 annual payments.

i

Contractor set,
Lake Mary road
project resumes

Ride 'em cowboy

Is it a tie, or not?

I This can probably be paid by
ust trimming a few other items,
t won't produce any problems
or reductions in service.}

Whlla tha toy trains sra baing packad away from undar
tha Christmas trsas, rtal locomotlvss still maks thsir
way across tha tracks that criss-cross 8anford. This
train, near Park Avanus, brings sllva tha draams o f travel
and adventurs that many ksap tucked sway with the
tlnssl and the garland for most of tha year.

SANFORD — Classes at Seminole
Community College began ycatcrday with little change from last
semester.
A ccord in g to school officia ls,
enrollm ent figures remained nearly
the same at about 6.000 full-time
students.
The number o f part-timers fluctu­
ates a great deal from semester to
semester, officials said. The official
enrollm ent figures on part-tim e
students are not yet available.
"W e w ill com pute the official
numbers after the students arc
through with the drop-add process
next w eek." Dr. James Sawyer, vice
president for student Information
services st the college, said this
morning.
Students, who were able to com ­
plete registration as classes were
about to begin yesterday, may alter
their schedules through Jan. 11
without penalty.
Tuition at all state two and four
year colleges was raised last year.
The cost at Sem inole Community
College for a semester o f work went
up about 10' percent to 833 per
credit hour. Most classes average
about 009 for the semester.
College officials said that the rise
In tuition costs did not affect the
enrollment at SCC at all.
"W c arc still the best post­
secondary educational value." said
Sawyer. "It Is much more cost
effective for the local student to
come to school here, close to home,
than it would be to go lo a four year
institution."
Sawyer said that the school has
□B aa C ollage, P age I A

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Call 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1
l

t

■M H

�m

NEW S FROM TH E REGION AND ACR O SS T H E S T A T E

Blood supply erittoftlly short
MIAM I — South Florida's supply o f bloc
In the afterm ath o f Hurricane Andrew -

ningsaald.
taken from the plane
what he aald was a
ahve. It waa pretty
Id.

S E Z 5 &amp; 2 X
the moat serious o f

than a ooe-day supply ofO -negattve and B-negsttve. W e Uke to
keep a three^o-ftve day supply here at the center In M iam i."
F ID O 9 U Q tlU tt OIOOQ COUCCtlOnB IO T P f O rC O IM f BD Q U B C O D D c r

were about 30 percent below what w e would hove Weed.

Airport mid Anns

urownmg vionvn • p w n ii bum pant
TA M PA — T h e parents o f a boy who drowned' at the
Adventure blan d w ater them e park have filed a lawsuit
alleging the park and Its lifeguards w ere negUfent.
Chance Keels. 10. o f Port St, Lucie, had gone to Adventure
Island on July 20 wtth Ids u n de. H e rented an Inner tube to
hobx in i wave pool, ana ettner juxnpea or icti on.
T h e lawsuit
v *» several swim m ers notlcsd Charles
&lt;inHw| below tb s water, but * * * lifeguard b ils d to — until he

bum ps, then suddenly
without erathclts w ere w
the ceding.
"W h en w e h it the
flyin g
for a few seconds
m is m# mhaAwi] tl 'sum
fedi ^
feaaig‘
out
oi oom rot m m
ra
O ne w om an w h o a p p aren tly w asn ’ t
d artftglM r seatbelt "Just dew up through

onto the armrest and msde It through. ^
The Boeing 767*300, carrying 214 pasaengera and nine crew m ember*. returned
to the airport Just after 3 p.m. BST and nine
ambulances were sent to the. acerw, aald
a ir p o rt flre*res c u e d isp a tch e r C a rlo s
R o jlS u e *

the pUne h*d m ore than

70.000 pounds o f Jet fuel aboard but landed

without Incident.
-j
,
T h e pilot reported the turbulence about
40 m iles northwest o f the rural Hendry
County town o f LaBelle. wheh he waa, flyin g
a t31.000feet, o ® d *ls said.___
It occurred ju st aa the National W eather
S e r v ic e Issu ed h e s v y th u n d e rsto rm
w arnings for .the area, which was hit
Tuesday by unseasonably hesvy rains. But
M ^ B k u td le said she could not sey If the
bad westher caused the problem.
S h ortly a fte r the p ilo t reported the
turbulence, be said the plane would be
returning about 3:48 p.m ., aald Rodrigues.
But the plane showed up early at 3 p.m,.
sen d in g fire en gin e* and am bulances
scram bling to the scene.
Ms. San . Pedro said maintenance people

walker out
for record
ORLANDO — Tw o hundred
days on s high wire: that's the
m ark J o rg e O jed a O u tm an
wants to w rite Into the Outnness
Book oT W orld Records.
Outm an, 38, began his at­
tempt on New Year's Day, 30
feet above the ground In a
tourist-commercial atrip n ear the
OrtamkHuea theme parks.
" I know I can do it." he
shouted down from hls perch
Monday.
Outm an wants to break the
record o f 185 days set In 1973
by Frenchman Henri Rochetain.
And Rochetaln m ay com e here
to help publicise the stunt, said
spokesman Ernie Pappas o f the
O rest Am erican Bazaar, which la
pnovkUngthealte.
O u tm an .p e rfo rm s s ev era l
« /Unman d a y - . w alhlng.jum ptng
rope, doing handstands.
busm an,"who's appeared with
circuses around the world, w ill
sleep and rest In a 3-by-3-foot
wooden enclosure with a canvas
top. He Is using a sm all portable
toilet, which he lowers to the
ground for cleaning.
. And he raises hls dinner to hia
perch In a basket. Hls wife,
Vicki, assists on the ground.
H la In s p ir a tio n w a s h ls
8-year-old daughter. Grace, who
read about Rochetsln'a exploits
tw o years ago In a newspaper.

rewsra; aTsavs

to t t » country who have A IM . But

"S h e said. ‘H ey daddy, you
a*
ang
agio
aa
I #4
ou
hA
t In
t o . tAsu
r y fit,
t h flat
i s ***
." ' s
a id
Gutman, who moved hls fam ily
to Orlando last year after com ­
pleting a yearlong tour o f Japan.
A s id e fro m th e o b v io u s
challenges. Gutm an w ill not be
totally deprived, o f modem con­
veniences.
He has a m i n i a t u r e
black-and-w hite television , a

;S ?
y**'*'
li ® .

R ecord ed ra in fa ll fo r th e
p e r io d , e r id ln g a t 9 a .m .
W ednesday, totalled M o f an

„ ■
IMI

H ie temperature at 9 a m .
today was 87 d egrees and
W ednesday's early m orning low
M an mR
|u| |||&amp;
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B .hU r Mi IW w m WI Uj MIC

7V1

7tM p.M t

IVM W W «7 U p IW lfw lR J
o f h o rid s Agricultural Research
and Education Center, OsAery

�HMNHNI

Authorities probing
attack a s hate crim e
Car theft solved
Sanford police arretted Daniel Lee Collins, 30,3807 Georgia
Ave.. Sanford, on Monday. He waa charged in connection with
the theft o f an autom obile on Dec. 30 from Petrtna and Nevtne
Slmmona, The vehicle waa recovered shortly after the theft In a
wooded area In Volusia County. Collins has been charged with
burglary and grand theft, auto.

Failure to sign
Sanford police arrested Thom as Lee OUchrest, 45.131 Scott
Drive. Sanford, during a traffic stop at P in t Street and
Mangoustlne Avenue on Monday. He was charged w ith driving
w ith a suspended license. Police said he refused to sign his
elu tion , and they filed an additional charge against him o f
failure to slgn/accept a summons.

Habitual offender
Sanford police arrested Luke Allen Criswell. 31.141 Country
Club Drive in Sanford on Monday. Police said he was Involved
In an auto accident at 1908 French Avenue. A com puter check
revealed his license had been suspended a number o f tim es In
the past. He was charged with being a habitual traffic violator.

Warrant anaata
•W a yn e La van tlx Pace, 39. 1808 W . 13th Place. Sanford,
turned him self In at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility
Monday. He was wanted on tw o warrants for violation o f parole
on a conviction o f p ossesion o f m ore than 30 grama o f
cannabis, and violation o f parole on a conviction o f sale o f a
controlled substance, cocaine,.
•F ran cis Earl Lewis, 49, o f Deltona, waa apprehended by
Sanford police during a traffic atop on Highway 17-93 and Lake
Mary Blvd. Monday. He was wanted on a warrant charging him
with violation o f parole on a conviction o f driving under the
Influence o f alcohol.
•D en n is Richard Lam bert. 39,109 Lakevtew Drive, Sanford,
waa apprehended b y Sheriff’ s deputies near 8. Galt Avenue In
Sanford. He waa wanted on a warrant for failure to appear on a
charge o f battery. During the arrest, Lam bert waa also charged
with possession o f cannabis, resisting arrest without violence,
and driving w ith a suspended license.

Domottle violMtot
•B ria n Keith K n igh t 36, 1018 Bay Ave., 8anford, was
arrested Sunday by Sanford police. He was charged with
dom estic violence. In connection w ith a dispute w ith a fem ale
at his residence.
• Leroy W hetstone, 30, 1119 W . 13th S treet Sanford, waa
arrested by Sanford police early Tuesday. O fficers said he waa
involved in a dispute w ith a fem ale at his residence. He waa
charged with aggravated battery/domestic violence.

Incidents reported to tht Sheriff
•8 1 3 8 in electric tools and hand tools were reportedly stolen
Monday from a shed owned by Clarence Jerom e Thom pson, at
3790Celery Avenue. Sanford.
•C h ecks and credit cards w e n reportedly rem oved Monday
from the unlocked vehicle o f Scott Stone, parked near 787
Minerva Lane, Lake Mary.
•N o rm a Lee Macks, o f Sanford, reported an attem pted
armed robbery at a convenience store a t 4800 W . S.R. 46 early
Tuesday. She told deputies several persona approached her aa
she was walking to her vehicle. She said one man pointed a
gun at her and pulled the trigger twice. W hen the gun m isfired,

TAM PA — Authorities released
sk etch es and c a lle d on the
public to help find three white
men they say kidnapped, robbed
and torched a black man In a
ra n d o m a t t a c k b e in g In ­
vestigated as a hate crim e.
Surgeons spent three hours
Tuesday grafting skin to cover
second- and third-degree bum s
on Christopher W ilson's arms
and chest. T h ey were pleased
w ith the surgery and said he
lik ely w ill have another pro­
cedure within 10 days.
"T h e surgery was successful'
and Chris Is doing w e ll," said
John Bishop, physician assistant
at T am p a G en era l H ospital
w h ere W ilson w as listed In
serious but stable condition.
W ilson, 31. o f New York, has
been hospitalised since the New
Year's Day attack when he was
abducted at a suburban shop­
ping center where he had gone
to get a newspaper. Tw o armed
men forced him to drive his car
to a rem ote area 18 m iles away,
robbed him, shouted racial slurs,
poured gasoline over him and set
him afire w ith a cigarette lighter,
police said.
A third man follow ed In a
white van. When the m en fled,
W ilson ripped o ff the burning
clothes, rolled In the dirt and ran
to a house nearby for help.
“ W e a r e a s k in g p u b lic
a s s is ta n c e In t h is c a s e . "
Hillsborough S h eriff Cal Hen­
derson said at a news conference
Tuesday, catling It a hate crim e
and a horrifying attack.
"T h e victim , w ho m iracu­
lously survived this vicious at­
tack. was unable to give com ­
plete details to our detectives
until late yesterday," he said.
W ils o n 's m o t h e r . E n id
Plummer, had been critical o f
investigators for being too slow
to react to the racial epithets.
“ I am r e lie v e d th a t th e
fUUsborough County Sheriff has
confirm ed that it waa racially
m otivated. T h e on ly th in g I
really wanted everyone to know

"S in ce this has been elevated
to a hate crim e under the Florida
aU tu tes, w e are p roceed in g
toward a full-blown civil rights
In v e s t ig a t io n ," s a id O s ca r
W esterfletd, assistant head o f the
Tam pa FBI office.
Wilson, a brokerage clerk who
works in Hollywood, Fla., and
N ew York , w aa v is itin g h is
girlfriend Joan Benoit in Valrico
when the attack occurred.
The police com posites made

brown collar-length hair and
mustache: the other w ith short
black hair and facial stubbie who
was last seen w earing a maroon
a h l r t e m b l a i o n e d w it h
"M iaaouri."
W lla o n d id n ’ t g i v e In ­
vestigator* enough inform ation
for a com posite on the third man
in the van, deputiea said.
Florida's hate crim e law allow s
stronger punishment for crim es

kidnapping and robbery, the
enhancement would have little
effect since attem pted m urder Is
a first-degree felon y anyw ay,
Henderson said.
W esterfleld said the FBI la
investigating the case under the
n ew fe d e ra l c a rja c k in g la w
w h ic h p r o v id e s t o u g h e r
penalties than cfvtl rights vk&gt;-

A K ri
D o o is

LHM* bitty bytss

— —

Krystal Cain, a third g ra d e r*! Idyttwilds Elamantary School In
Sanford, drasaad as a computer to rspresent |ust ona form o f
communication during their musical play "L et's Communicate."
The school presentation Is given throughout the year.

‘&gt; \ Y r . u s
1 l ose* l o i

of

Ihisinrss

( a&lt;xxl

|«tn.

I ‘&gt; t h

14K Gold Chains, W atches

AAMLSL
I U l&lt; t ( h i m
warrant for violation o f parole on a conviction o f petit th e ft
•P a trice Nicholson, 34, *8 8 Shenandoah V illage. Sanford,
waa arrested at the John E. Folk Correctional Facility
Thursday. She was wanted for failure to appear on a charge o f
retail th a t.
•E von da Johnson. 33. 1008 W . 11th S treet Sanford, waa
arrested at 13th Street and Southwest Road by S h eriffs
deputies on Thursday. She waa wanted for (allure to appear on
a (marge o f theft.
•J o se Oullea, 35, o f Orlando, was located at 100S.R. 434 by
Longwood police Thursday, during a traffic! aoddent investiga­
tion. Qulles was wanted on a Sem inole County warrant for
failure to appear on a charge o f child abuse .
•R on ald Lee Pratt, 39,358 Evanedale Rood, Lake Mary, waa
arrested by S h eriffs deputiea at the jaU Sunday, fallow ing his
extradition from Lebanon, Va, H e waa wanted for violation o f
parole on a conviction o f battery, disorderly con duct violation
o f parole for aggravated battery, and violation o f parole on a
charge o f robbery.

r s

In s u r u rn t

K lt c h s n A ld
Built-In Appliances

If you wunt your Mohan applianoos to do M i r Jobs... m d o
foam aupartaHvaiy... without

House holds seminars
on sexual harassment
TALLAH ASSEE - The state
House Is holding sem inars for
lawmakers and staff on sexual
harassment, tw o years after a
scandal In v o lv in g a lead in g
in d •
foraw r
aide.
"T h is body w ill not condone,
nor w ill w e tolerate, sexual
harassm en t." House Speaker
Bollcy "B o " Johnson, D-Mllton,
said Tuesday. 'T h e r e la no
Justification for p 1**!" ! up with
buch

nrnavwr.

The three arm Inara are In­
tended to m ake crystal d ea r
what sexual hara— nrnt is and
what victim s can do about It.
F lo r id a S t a t e U n iv e r s it y
p sy c h o lo g y p ro fe ss o r J o y c e
Lynn C aroon al and
8am*

S e n s it iv it y a b o u t a e x u a l
arasament increased m arkedly

•O M A N
•TO* fr a * * *

•twfrailttar
•MTtffWT*
WMvCftgMff

the styling blends in, the quality stands out

�4A - Sanford HtrsW, 8antord, Florida - Wednesday, January •, 1993

Editorials/ Opinions
BEN W A T T E N B E R G

Renaissance: Something old, not blue

EDITORIALS

Hazard of drunk
driving: Citizens
are more aware
L aw en forcem en t o fficers w e re ou t in fu ll
force last T h u rsd a y n igh t. N ew Y e a r's E ve has
trad ition ally b een con sid ered a h azardou s
n igh t becau se o f d ru n k d rivers.
T h e c itize n s h o w ever, a re b eco m in g m ore
a w a re o f th e d a n g e r s a a w e ll a s th e
co n s eq u e n ce s . T h e y e ith e r a rra n g e d fo r
d esign ated d rive rs , d id n 't d rin k , o r exercised
m axim u m cau tion an d rem ain ed a t hom e.
T h e S h e riff's d ep artm en t. In a coo p era tive
ven tu re w ith a rea p olice, m ade a D U I sw eep
th rou gh S e m in o le C ou n ty la s t T h u rsd a y
n igh t. T h e g o a l w as to ap p reh en d dru n k
d rivers w h o are a h azard to o th ers aa w e ll aa
th em selves.
D epartm en t fig u re s sh ow th e con cen trated
e ffo rt produ ced o n ly 12 arresta In th e en tire
cou n ty. T h e n u m b er w as h igh er th an last
y e a r's N ew Y e a r’s E ve. b ecau se o f th e bad
w eath er th at k ep t m an y p eo p le h om e at th e
b egin n in g o f 1092 com pared to th e e x c e llen t
w eath er th is y e a r.
S h e riff's spok esm an G eo rge P ro ech el aald
th e n u m b er la lo w e r than cou ld b e exp ected ,
but added th a t e v e n 12 a rrests a re 12 to o
m a n y.
In SanToTd, a c tin g P o lic e C h ie f R alp h
R u ssell w a s p leased w ith th e red u ctio n In D U I
in cid en ts, n o t Just d u rin g th e h o lid a y, b u t fo r
th e e n tire yea r. H e hated a to ta l o f 87
w ith in th e c ity lim its d u rin g 1001, but o n ly
35 In 1902.
L o n g w o o d P o lic e C h ie f G r e g M a n n in g
com m en ted th a t th e N ew Y e a r's a rrests w ere
p robably fe w e r th an on th e a v e ra g e w eek en d .
H e a ttrib u te d "It to an In crea se In p u b lic
aw areness o f th e p rob lem . J '
. . .
The
H ig h w w
s a fo
arresta o v e r th e noU oay w ee k e n d w e re no
m ore th gn on a n o rm a l tw o -d a y w eek en d .
Lak e M ary P o lic e C h ie f R ich a rd B e a ry aald
he la con vin ced th a t th e a w are n es s p rogram s
lau nched b y th e m ed ia an d la w en fo rcem en t
a gen cies are b e g in n in g to w o rk . H e aald th e
pu blic Is b eco m m ln g m ore In form ed o f th e
d an gers o f d rin k in g an d d riv in g , as w e ll aa
th e con sequ en ces.
A firs t D U I co n victio n co u ld lead to a
suspension o f a d riv e rs licen se. A d d itio n a l
con victio n s co u ld resu lt in a Jail term , an d th e
w orst p u n ish m en t o f a ll, a fa ta l a c c id e n t
For th e p eop le w h o m ig h t h a v e p artied w ith
a lcoh ol b u t refra in ed , w e com m en d y o u r
con tin u in g con cern . F o r th ose w h o tip p led
but arran ged to g e t h om e b y som e o th er
m ean t, th an k s fo r s h o w in g con sid era tio n fo r
a ll o f ua.
It's d ifficu lt to k n o w h o w m a n y a re a liv e
today becau se o f th e p ro tectio n o ffe red b y o u r
law en forcem en t agen cies. B u t w h eth er w e
know o r n ot, ea ch o f ua sh ou ld g iv e th em a
round o f ap p lau se.
R egard less o f w h eth er p eo p le a re b eco m in g
m ore cau tiou s, o r m ore frig h te n ed o f th e
con seq u en ces, th e m o to ris ts o f S em in o le
C ou n ty d id q u ite w e ll o n th e N ew Y e a r'a
h oliday.

Florida

H ILTON HEAD, S.C. — The annual weekend
retreat to called "R enaissanc e ." It's where B ill
Clinton and hte fam ily repair for a New Year’s
break. It’s enjoyable: endless off-the-record panel
discussion*, bike-riding on the beach, g o lf and
tennis. And this tim e " renaissanc e ^ — or
"rebirth '* or “ revtva l" — to the righ t them e to
con sid ers! w e m ove In to a new year.
W ill w e begin an Am erican renaissance In
1983? M igh t It b e m atched b y a g lo b a l
im ilt f iin m
Am erica has a lot goin g for I t
Flint to the soon-to-be new president W atching
him now one senses a man who to wearing hte
new m antle w ell, and who w ill w ear w ell as the
yearn go on. There was som e reflexive hagio­
graphy and presidential m yth-m aking tn the air
Uon. Hto
here, but it w asn't com ing from Cuntc
i attention and to
iton to a forceful
that m any
conservatives m ay end up' pleasantly surprised
by som e o f her view s,
Am erica to also on track because w e don’t have
some o f the problem s that Clinton ran to solve.
T h e econom y to com ing out o f its ninth cyclical
recession o f m odem tim es. Each one to scary,
and yet the m agic o f the m arket — not the m agic

o f any specific president — keeps the fluctuating
line on an ascendant course.
After all. w en the
" b a d s c e n a r io "
yields the portrait o f
a nation that has
achieved the highest
standard o f livin g tn
h istory, goin g still
h ig h e r , b u t a t a
slow er rate than It
wishes. (The opera­
tive words are “ still
h ig h e r")
T h e global situa­
tion to turbulent, but
for the first tim e In
h a lf a century the
( I t 'e n o t
t u r m o il Is s u b "s o m e th in g
a p o c a ly p t ic . T h e
now. It's a
signing o f S TA R T II
bettor way of
to grand news, but
doing
th e h a w k s w e re
something
right: The big pro­
old.
|
b lem w as not the
number o f missiles
but the fact that there were bad guys who m ight
threaten to use them. T h ey've gone away.

JACK ANDERSON

Will trade pact
bring democracy
to Mexico?

Ife DUI
ELLEN GOODMAN

Tim e right to free Jean Harris
N ow . a lter n early 12 years In prison,
81-O-OOM has been granted clem ency by the
O ovcm or w ho bad refused It three tim es
before. Aa eh * was ** » » '4&lt;r&gt;g into coronary
b yp a ss s u rg e ry , M ario C u om o set th e
88 year old wom an on the path to freedom . He
attributed b is a ct to her health and to
som ething etoe: her “ above average behavioral
record during her Incarceration."
The irony to that Jean H arris'becam e a
m odel prisoner by fighting the prison model.
The irony to that aba was "reh ab ilitated." Not
by the syirtem. but In opposition to It.
"O ne fights to stay whole In prison." she
w rote from her e d l. Indeed, the self-esteem
that eroded In lon g years o f her destructive
tower was, remarkably,
to prison's attem pt to
rebuilt In

w i i c o n v ic t e d o f
k illin g " O lo t d o e " .
MMFQMKII
fcQ
tba vrktUr o f I N I , ;
wa hadn't oven Ag- J

In one o f the three books she wrote, prisoner
81-O-OOM deanrlhrit, In unsparing, unself*
pttyfng detail, the petty tyrannies o f "correc'
tfon offloars." She described the o
e, the
aa m any as l5
routines o f w etting
locked doors on each

LETTERS

W ith
life Mound bar In society's warehouse far the
crim inal, the Im onc, the abuaed and abuatve
who were allow ed ooe M eans courtesy — to be
celled “ lad les." “ How do you teach anything to
a human b ein g stripped o f a ll peraonal
dign ity?" abeaaked.

Thoughts
on
coverage
h
.
,
- *’ - ■
t

Recent articles In both the Sanford Hentd and
Orlando Sentinel seem to indicate that m y efforts
as a new school board m em ber in Sem inole County
are creating aomewhat o f a credibility problem for
fellow board m em bers and staff. One m ight even
infer that I can expect little cooperation.

Yet, th e found an answer. In prison she also

Although I w ill agree that m ore questions are
being asked openly o f both board m embers and
staff. I feel that everyone la w illin g to have open
dialogue an these Important Issues, In feet, the
decision In Novem ber to further evaluate the need
for a seventh high school was m ade by a 0-0 vote o f
the school board.
School Superintendent Or. Paul Hagerty Imme­
diately put together a com m ittee to evaluate
year round education. Through open dialogue and
exploring all aliem aUvcs. I truly believe the board
w ill make the correct derision baaed on the
educational needs o f our students and fiscal
responsibility to our taxpayers.
W hatever the decision, the support o f all
stakeholders Is cxlrcipely Important. These groups
include all school system em ployees, parents,
students and taxpayers. Education la too Impor­
tant to allow divisiveness or political agendas to
lake over. I believe that each school board m em ber
la open to new ideas and is wlUlng to change from
tradition I f It w « l enhance education. I encourage
the m edia to report the issues aa accurately aa
possible realisin g their impact on public opinion
le c t ou r chUdren's education.
Larry Strickfer
School Board Member
Sanford

leaving Am erica as "3 -S " — the Sole Surviving
Superpower.
The Idea that "A m erica w ill not be No. 1 " has
gone from w rong to stupid. It's not Just that
Japan and Germ any are taking their turn In the
econom ic tank. The Cold W ar victory waa
cultural aa w ell aa geopolitical: it certified that
the Am erican w ay o f life to the accepted
revolutionary global Ideology.
The G u lf W ar show ed that Am erica can
continue to lead, after the Cold W ar. when our
national Interests are at stake. The current
expedition to Som alia tells us even more: that we
are Invited to lead even when our direct national
Interests are unthreatened. In Somalia, we have
been asked to take hum anity to a better place.
Such an International asking has little parallel In
human history.
So w hy do we need a renaissance?
There has been an erosion o f some o f that
revolutionary Am erican way o f life, which has
been rooted In the idea o f self-reliance. Clinton
properly dw ells on the need for a renaissance o f
"peraonal responsibility.” Hto cam paign theme
o f "n o m ore som ething for n othing" gets to the
heart o f our most obvious problems, like crim e,
w elfare and education, and some less obvious
ones as well.

dage to m e ," a te aald once. "It's like another
skin, and I tie to and I alw ays w ill."
It’s 1883 end tim e to free Prisoner 81-Q-

It

M on (t|&gt;&gt;
herO uilty
in to Life,
that Jean
id too writ

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to th e editor are welcom e. A ll k tte ri
must be signed. Include the address o f the
writer and a daytim e telephone number.
U tters should be on a single subject and be
as brief as passible. The letters are subject to
editing.

W ASHINGTON - Historically tainted by
allegations o f election fraud and voter Ir­
regularities. local elections In the city o f
Chicago — where the slogan "vo te early and
vote often " was bom — m ight nol seem the
best classroom for a foreign observer to watch
dem ocracy In action.
But for Javier Livas, a prominent Mexican
law yer affiliated with his country's con­
servative opposition party, the National
Action Party (PAN ),
la s t N o v e m b e r 's
C h ic a g o c le c tlo n a
featured a degree o f
openness he m ight
wish for Mexico.
"1 w a s g ra n te d
access all o ver." he
told Us. "W e visited
the board o f com m is­
sioners. W e had ac­
cess to the votin g
precincts and talked
to th e e l e c t i o n
Ju d ges. W e co u ld
Local Mexican
make com m ents on
elections were
how things were go­
once of little
ing. Everything was
concern to
lota) transparency....
average
This is a right we
Americans,
don't have in Mex­
but today they
ic o ." Llvaa points out
have
that the United Naimportant
_
Ilona and Organtoa
Implications, j
Uon o f Am erican
States (OAS) observers are banned from
m onitoring Mexican elections.
than a week after Ihe ballot in
Chicago. Llvaa waa back In M exico for three
state elections that M exico's ruling party,
known in Spanish by the Initials PRI. had
pledged would sound the death knell for
long standing election fraud south o f the
border. However, the elections turned out to
be a page from Chicago's corrupt past, and
w ere even bad by Mexican standards, Livas
told us.
"T h is was the most blatant fraud In Mexico
since 1985." he claim ed. Aa usual. Ihe PRI
claim ed huge victories In all three stales and
denied charges o f voting irregularities.
Local Mexican elections were once o f little
concern to average Americana, but today
they have Important im plications. The North
Am erican Free Trade Agreem ent (N A FTA ) to
hailed aa 21st-century gold rush. But much o f
Mexican society, at least politically. to still
stuck in 19th-century custom, in which fraud
and corruption are the rule rather than the
exception. Up to now. any effort to raise the
subject o f Mexican dem ocracy during Ihe
N AFTA debate to shot down as an effort lo
sabotage the trade pact.
This poses an early test for President-elect
BUI Clinton, whose endorsement o f N AFTA
was belated and half-hearted. Clinton will
have to explain how hto new emphasis on
dem ocracy and human rights squares with
M exico's tawdry track record.
And If he doesn't have enough hot spots to
w orry about. Clinton may be forced to
address the problem soon. A fter last Novem ­
ber's m ayoral elections In the quiet border
tow n o f M alam oros. a crow d of. 2.500
gathered in the town square to protest the
PRI victory that the crowd claimed was
fraudulent. A fter violence erupted, the crowd
waa dispersed w ith tear gas and rtflc-bult
blows. Dozens were arrested.
W h y is the PR I lig h ten in g Us grip ?
Observers say President Carlos Salinas is
reacting to a backlash within hto own party
over a recent pattern o f accommodation with
the opposition. Since Salinas assumed office
In 1968, four o f hto party’s governors have
agreed to step down amld charget o f election
fraud. Prior to 1988. the P R1I!had not given up
a single suite governorship to opponents
since U came to power in 1829.
Rather than risk undermining their politi­
cal base In the years leading up to the 1994
presidential elections In M exico, "th e gov­
ernm ent relum ed to the old system o f fraud."
says Ricardo ViUa Eacalara. an unsuccessful
FAN g ubernatorial candidate in the state o f

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, January 6, 1903

Home alone

nonet of
FICTtTtOOINAMt
Netlea la hereby ahwn that I
am eneaaad In burnets a» W
Wbfclva Far* Dr., tanHeri, FIarIda a n ti Seminal# County,
Florida, under the Fktmewo
N a m e at C U S T O M
CARFENTRY FRAMING BY
RICK TAYLOR A CRIW. and

Illinois case highlights plight of
many kids fending for themselves
The case o f two young Illinois girls left home
alone w hile their parents went to M exico on a
nine-day Christmas vacation has drawn howls o f
outrage from parents everywhere.
Children's advocates say It's Just one mare case
— albeit an extrem e one — In an epidem ic o f child
neglect In Am erica.
State qhlld-welfare agencies received 1.2 m il­
lion reports o f neglect nationwide in 1991, and
investigators substantiated neglect in about 40
rcent o f them , according to the National
immlttee for Prevention o f Cmlld Abuse.
Reported cases are "Just the tip o f the iceberg."
ad d ed P e te r B erlin er, spokesm an fo r tn e
Children's Alliance, an advocacy group in Seattle.
Alcoholic or drug-addicted parents regularly
neglect their ch ildren ..h e eald. Poor working
parents, especially single parents, often leave
their children alone because they can 't afford or
find day care.
"W h ile the Illinois case m ay be dramatic. It's
only In d egree," Berliner said. "K id s get left alone
m ore than w e’d like to ad m it A large number are
essentially raising them selves."
Joy Byers, a spokeswoman for the National
Com m ittee for Prevention o f Child Abuse, said
child neglect "crosses all the lines — social,
econom ic, racial."
David and Sharon Schoo lived in a com fortable,
Tudor-style home in S t Charles, a suburb o f
Chicago. The home has a pool, swings and a
playhouse in the bock yard.
The Schooa w ere arrested Dec. 38 on their
return from Acapulco. Their children, 9-year-old
Nicole and 4-yesr-old Diana, were discovered at
home Dec. 21 after they celled 911 because a
smoke alarm went o ff accidentally.
T h e p a re n ts w e re c h a rg e d w ith c h ild
abandonment and cruelty to children and freed
on $6,000 cash ball each. T h e children w ere put
In a footer home. T h eir lawyer. O eraid Kepple,
sold that when the facts were known, the cose
would "turn out quite differen tly" from people's
Impressions.
It wasn't the on ly holiday tale o f alleged
abandonment or neglect:
—In Austin, Texas, on 6-year-old boy who
authorities oak! was abandoned by hie father

S

—In Rochester, N.H., • m other was charged
Sunday with endangering her three children,
ages 3 and under. Police said ahe left the sleeping
children around 9 p.m. Saturday and was
arrested when she returned five hours later.
—In Reno, N ev„ a casino security guard on
Saturday heard a IB-month-old baby cryin g alone
In a hotel room. The father was arrested when he
showed up SO minutes later. T h e m other was
arrested at a slot machine.
Just what constitutes neglect? Som e states set
a minimum age for leaving a child unattended,
usually between 10 and 13. w hile others do n o t
state, for exam ple, “ It’s a
ju dgm cai’ J P H | l _ .
physical harm or risk to the ch ild ," skid Gordon
Schultx, spokesman for the state Department o f
Social and Health Services.
And what constitutes risk?
Consider the case o f Brian Irish and Stephanie
Hamilton o f Puyallup, Wash. Their tw o children
were asleep, and the parent* figured tt was safe to
go out to buy some beer.

WnlUITnnVr It VNVi HM
AMERICAN OENIRAL HOME
EQUITY, INC., m t THE INDEFENDANT SAVINGS FLAN
COMFANY,
OiNwSerittel.
NOTICE OF SALS

County, FlerMe, SeecrWeSet
Let Sane the North Hot Lett,
WEST HAVEN, octorOInt to the
Met them# ee recerSiein Flat
Seek tt. sasa ft, at the public
recaret et Seminole County.
Tnothir with: aseeeiher, well
towell carpet.
at publicam, te the hishaet ans
boat MSSw ter caHi. at the Wwt
treat- Seer at the Seminote
County Ceurtheuee, Sanford,
Ftartda. at tt:SS a.m. on Janu­
ary tt. tin.
WITNESS my hand and oftidal tool at eald Court thle Hit
dayof December, tftl.
(Court Seal)
MARYANN! MORSE
Clerli OftheCircuit Court

NOTICE ll

W hen they returned less than an hour later,
their m obile home was ablate, and their children,
11-month-old Alisha and 5-yeor-old Nathan, were
dead. A Jury con victed them In March o f
m w fH ftTifM **
There ore risks for school-age children, too, said
Joyce Johnson, spokeswoman for the Child
W elfare League In Washington. D.C.
Lack o f child care has forced many parents to
turn their-children Into "latch key k id s" who
spend tw o or three hours alone at hom e each day
while waiting for their parents to return from
In a study o f 447 children ages S to 9,
Johnson's group found that 43 percent were left
alone occasionally or regularly. But m ost o f the
children did not know basic precautions such os
not opening the door to strangers.
"W h en you leave children alone, you place
them at risk ," Johnson sold. "W e think children
m ould never k ievi movie* irn o o t
Even if nothing bod happens Im m ediately,
leaving children alone can violate thalr sense o f
security. Dyers said.
"It's terribly frightening for children to think
they m ight be on th eir ow n.” she sold. "C hildren

• WITNESS mv bone ape the
tool etSRe Court ostbo m e Soy
of December, Htt.
(COUNTSEAL)
M ARYANN! MOOLI
Ae Clerk of m M Court

eCremation
•Local Burial
• Pre-NeedPlanning
•Outof StaleTransfer
Maricen&amp; Monument*
*Burial InAll Military

Yvon n e 8&lt; M urray, 76, o f
O ra n g e D r iv e , A lt a m o n te
Springs, died Thursday. Dec. 31.
at Florida Hospital. Altam onte
Springs. Bom Dec. 13. 1917. in
London. England, ahe m oved to
Central Florida in 1993. She was
a homemaker and Catholic.
S u rvivors Include son. Dr.
R o g e r M u rra y . A lta m o n te
Springs, and four grandchildren.
A ll Faiths Crem ation Service,

MTNJUmOAL

T, IN AMSFOO

tweO to Co m No. W -tW CA MF
el tbe Circuit Court el Sis
temleelo Count* Jueiclal
Circuit, Is s s i O r •emMete
County, Fieri*#, wherein
CITIBAN K, FBDBOAL
SAv in o s SANK, speeasetsMap

IN REt ESTATEOF
HELENE M.E0WE, _ ...... ^
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION

The edmlnlitratlen at the
■data at Helena M. Bewe.
deceased, File Number
fl-SevCF, It panama In the
Circuit Court far Seminole
Cewrty. Florida. Frebete DM-

�6A - Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Wednesday, January 6, 1993

Budget may show deficit increase
By ALANFRAM
Associated Press Writer__________
WASHINGTON - Republicans
ami Democrats arc fencing over
new estimates try President
Hush showing that President*
elect Clinton will Inherit federal
deficits even worse than the
Hush administration projected
during the presidential cam­
paign.
Hush was releasing Itls final
budget today. Just two weeks
before leaving office.
One lop GOP congressional
aide said the document would
show red Ink exceeding $3(X)
trillion In each rtf the coming two
years, worse than administration
projections made only last
summer.
The reasons: Congress' delay
In providing money to rescue
crippled savings and loans,
meaning the money will he

spent later rather than sooner;
and growing health care costs.
Republicans said the new fig­
ures would show Imw hard II will
he lor Clinton to honor his
campaign pledge of cutting bud­
get deficits In half In four years.
Democrats said they feared the
outgoing president might un­
derstate the problem, thereby
shilling the blame lor unex­
pectedly high deficits to Clinton.
"W e'll end up here In another
dispute." said one Democratic
aide who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
Sen. Lloyd Hentscn. D-Texas.
who Is Clinton's choice for
treasury secretary, said the lat­
est deficit projection "reinforces
the administration having to
work to cut that deficit." lie told
a news conference-that trimming
the deficit was "not going to be
without pain."

College
Continued from Page 1A
experienced a great ileal nl
growth over the last lew vears
while some oihci ccinuiumiiv
colleges and lour year liistlm
itons across the state have re
in.lined stagnant
"W e re doing prolix well. In-

RoadContinued from Page 1A
possibility that work might
resume on the boulevard by llie
day alter the eoiiltaetoi was
approved lie said with local
sub coniraciors In he tilih/ed
I lie re -si a r I eon Id lie at
eomplislled quickie
Tlie wording nl the motion to
he recommended at today s
meeillg s. i vs a Notice to 1'ioeeed
"...effective this dale,
will lie
expedited It s a y s the Notice will
allow llexvlit. " to otttciallv
start to mobilize their man
power, equipment, subcontrac­
tors and material suppliers "
Assistant County Attorney
Henry Ihnwit said tills morning
that he douliis construction
could immediately resume
"Hewitt was only tnlnitiled early
yesterday that they had suit
milled tin- low hid." he said,
"and I know they have already
assigned a project manager, hill
it will probably lake a lew days
|or ihem to gel all nl the
sub-eon tract or arrangements
Itiiull/cd."
According in an agenda iiieinnraiidtim lor the m eeting,
county officials have learned
trom Hewitt's bunding agent
that the company has no current
delaull claims against it.

Continued from Page 1A
Poplar Avenue.
The KPA said Sanford was
I s s u e d a p e r ill I t I o r .
..disc harges into Lake Monroe
which empties into the St Johns
River. Sp ecillcally." it con ­
tinued. "the city exceeded Ihe
diluent limitations ol the permit
hv tailing to meet the Chronic
Whole Kllluent Toxicity IWKTI
limitations."
It adds. "T h e laellily also
lailed to pcrlnrm additional WK I
tests m the llmelramc recpilred
by the permit, lor the iiliaceeptable chronic toxicity lotuid In
the January and March 1992
WET tests."'
The Itliug states that the
ellluent limilalioii for ammoiiia
nitrogen was exceeded lor Ihe
period January through April.

I!»!I2.
City Manager Hill Simmons
said most ol the- problem cen­
tered on the testing procedure.
"W e tested It when we should
have In January ol '92." he said.
"And we were given two weeks
to submit the results."
"Thai particular lest came
hack with the- wrong results."
Simmons said. "And we we re to
have retested the area within
two weeks."
He continued, "lint when wi­
sent the lirst te sts to the- lah. we
didn't gd the* results hack for
lour weeks, which was already
too late to satisfy the- KPA and
from that point on. it just
snow-balled."
He added that subsequent
tests had proven both lavorahle

Mall
Continued from Page 1A
h e t w e i'll S i in o u a u d
Associates, the Sanlord City
'omnussion. and the mcuihcrs
il the commission acting as a
separate hotly under the title ol
Seminole Town Center Commit
illy Redevelopment Agent \
The matter was previously
scheduled during the Dee. 27
-oiiimisslon meeting, hut was
allied at that time when Sim
lions reported that Ihe linal
l ia n g e s I i o i i i an o r i g i n a l
Igrcfiuent draff issued on Dee.
nil had not been completed It
,vas h o p e d the matter could lie
nought up last night, during a
,pedal reoigaiilzational met Hug
il tilt i o m n u s s i o n

said.
SCC pi esidetit Karl Weldon
sai d that I lie second tellll III the
SCC seal is expected to he a
good one
" W e 'r e looking loiw.ud to
greater successes
W eldon said
ibis moi mug

Hush's $1.5 trillion spending
plan for fiscal 199-1. which
begins Get. I. was to propose no
new policies, said aides who
demanded anonymity. Instead.
It Is a relatively slim document
that provides eight dilfereiil
scenarios showing what the
hudgel would look like for the
next five years under differing
assumptions about the economy
and federal spending.
I he- deficit for fiscal 1992.
which ended Sept. JO. was a
record $290 billion.
.lust last
July, the* Hush administration
said II expected the budget gaps
to he $27-1 billion In 1994 and
$ 2 IH billion In 199f&gt;. Those
figures assumed the savings and .
loan bailout funds would lie
provided in 1992.
Clinton will submit Ills own
budget lor fiscal 1994 within
weeks ot taking office.
rite* annual budget used to In­
due In mitl-Jununry. making It
the responsibility ol tin outgoing
president every four years to
meet the legal obligations ol
producing a complete budget.

However. In 1990, Congress
changed the law making the
budget due the lirst Monday in
February.
Thus. Clinton becomes the
tlrst Incoming president recpilred
to almost Immediately produce a

budget — a pressure that Hush's
submission might help alleviate.
For Clinton, the higher Ihe
actual deficit, the tougher It will
be for him to find enough tax
Increases and spending cuts to
reduce the deficit. Clinton and
many economists say whittling
record shortfalls Is crucial to
reviving the still-lame economy.
Clinton's campaign pledge to
halve the deffell ill four years
relied mostly on strong econom­
ic growth, plus cuts In defense
spending, lax increases on the
rich and other savings.
At the time. Clinton said that
without any deficit-reduction
action at all. lie- expected the
shortfall to dip to $2HH billion
next year. $212 billion In 1995
and $199 billion In 199(1. liesaid the- numbers came from the
Congresslon.nl Hiidgel Office.
Hut Republicans called those
llgures unrealistic-. They said
Hush's new figures showed that
Clinton s plan would never
work.
"It's obvious Clinton's plan
won't cut the budget deficit In
hall." Sen. Pole Domenlel ol New
Mexico, senior Republican on
the- Senate Hildgcl Committee,
said Tuesday. "It's going to be
liiemiibeut on the president to
b-ll us what Ills changes In Ills
plan will he-."

BILOXI BELLE CASINO A RESORT
MID-WINTER GAMBLING BASH Biloxj-MS
Jan. 15th-17th-3 Days, 2 Nights

Package Includes
• Double Casino Packago
• Match Play Money
• Buffet Tickets
• Includes 2 Night Hotel

• R/T Bus Fare/
Luggage
Handling

R r s c r v e Y ou r Seat Nou&gt; Lim ited S/xicr AcolkiM c

JO ANN TOURS

32

WHEN IT COMES T O INSURANCE
WE GIVE Y O U MORE FOR LESS.

Kim
KARNS
INSURANCE AG EN CY, me.
413 W. First St.

Ph. 322-5762

Sanlord

William H. "B ill” W ight C.P.C.U.

President

Serving Central Florida Since 1946

1lie road project came to a
complete hall in .July when llie
original prime eoiitraetor. -lolm
Mahoney Construction
an
nouneed that Ituanelal problems
pievenled it bom i ompleltng the
J 1j miles ol w idening between
Couniiv Clnli Road and 111
lei stale 1
I he problem ot hulling a new
prime eontrai tin subscqucnlly
tell into tin- hands ol iIn- bonding
company which was toreeil to
delay ie bidding until all original
agreements weie broken with
Mahoney
Lake Marx citizens and huslness owners meanwhile, eontllllle to send signed copies ot a
|ile printed IctlCI to Ralillll.
urging him to get the stalled
project hack Into operation The
letter a c c u s e s llie C o u n ty
Conuiiissinn ol being "...very
negligent m their responsibilities
regarding this matter, and have
m lad displayed a very arrogant
and careless attitude about the
w hole issue."
Hrowii said this morning.
"Gelling the paperwork com­
pleted with all ot Ihe legal
rei|iiiremeiits took time, hut we
want to lie certain all areas ol
this contract are closely exam­
ined and properly dialled belnrc
vve take lormal and linal action.

and unfavorable. "It's a pretty
strenuous test." he said, "one
that wasn't recpilred when we
lirst received our pe rmit from
llie Department ol Kiivlroimic-ntal Regulation. The KPA made
quilt- a few c hanges in early
1992. and I understand nut only
Sanlord. hut cither cities are al so
g e t t i n g h 1 1 wi t h s i m i l a r
charges."
"W e have several choices." he
loltl llie i-ciiumlssiiiii. "One ol
1 hem Is 10 appeal and lake this
to a hearing, bill we still have In
determine which allernalive we
may lake."
Should the i lly decide in pay
llie $27,113. Simmons said Ihe
iniiney would have to he taken
I i o i i i the Utility Fund.
"At le-asl llie KPA's charge is
lower than xvlial they lirsl
wauled." Simmons said. "When
they originally Hied this com­
pl a i nt . t hey w a n t e d o v e r
$38.(XX). It we disc uss it further
with them, maybe we can e ven
get the-amount reduced."
Public- Works Director Paul
Moore explained that ihe money
taken Iruiu the Utility Fund
would not cause any Increase* In
water hills. " W e have a $(&gt;
million dollar budget for (lie
department." lie* said, “and this
can probably he paid by just
irimniing a few oilier Hems, h
won't produce any problems or
reductions In service."
Moore* added. "II llie elly pays
the line. Il would probably lie a
great deal less expensive* Ilian II
we have lo take II Inter ail appeal
and pay lor legal charges."

N'u representatives nl Ihe de­
veloper were on hand (luring Iasi
night's mccliug.
Tile mall develnpmeul Is st ill
scheduled Im this Thursday
night's wnikshop mceilng ol the
Planning and Zon in g C o m ­
mission. P&amp;Z Is lo discuss re­
quired parking stall length,
width and angle requirements,
parking drive aisle widths, land­
scape holler and tree require­
ments Inr (ill-street parking and
vehicular elreulallnii areas, and
Lmdsr.iptng on property adja­
cent tu streets and parcels.
The IVx-Z workshop meeting is
o p e n in the public-. Il will he- hel d
hegiimlug ai ti p m in the city
e o u i u i i s s i o n l o o m ol the Sanlord
( "llv Hall 3(X) N Park Avenue
.

JUST SAY

FA R M E R S F U R N IT U R E

IT!

A P P L IA N C E S and E L E C T R O N IC S
j r ?

2440 S. French Ave.f Sanford

HOB

Ph. 323-2132 1

M-THUR. 9 AM - 7 PM, FRIDAY 9 AM • 6 PM, SATURDAY 9 All • 6 PM I

EASYm
PAYMENTS!

�I

Sanford Herald

Ja n u a ry 6, 1993

IN B R IE F

Now that’s an ugly tie

LO CALLY

Fans change result of Ram-Cougar match twice

Magic nipped again

Prom S ta ff R oports

OULANIK) — This lime, experience was on
Ihe side or l he New Jersey Nels.
" W e 'v e been together lo n g e r ." Drazcn
Pelrovle sold after a 102-99 victor)' over the
Orlando Magic. which has lost four of Its last five
Haines. Including three straight.
Pelrovle finished with 29 points. Derrick
Coleman had 28 points 16 rebounds and a
season-high four blocked shots, while Kenny
Anderson contributed 13 points and lOussIsls.
Shaqulllc O'Neal led Orlundo with 29 points.
12 rebounds and five blocks before fouling out.
Scott Sklleshad 13 points and 12 assists.

LAKE MARY — Contributors to countless
victories In the past, the home crowd very nearly
cost the Lake Mary High School wrestling team a
loss Tuesday night.
After 220-pounder Paul Clayton won his match
by pin. securing a 34-34 tic for the Rams with the
University Cougars (7-1-11, Lake Mary fans
mobbed Clayton, lifting him Into the air.
The referee thought the celebration Inappro­
priate and penalized Lake Mary a team point. In
efTect. giving University a 35-34 win.
But as the referee explained his ruling to Lake
Mary coach Doug Peters, a University supporter
left the stands and began berating the official,
earning a onc polnt team penalty against the
Cougars, retying the score at 35-35.
"It was unfortunate.” said Peters. "It was a
match between two very good teams. Randy
Jesse (the University coach) and I have coached
against each other for the lost 10 or 12 years.
Usually, being at home was the difference.
Tonight. It was a big difference.”
Peters actually meant that the Lake Mary
crowd helped the Rams wrestle their way to a

Rollins upset
WINTER PARK — George Karageorgos scored
22 points and Rrntlcy hit 11 3-polnters to upset
Rollins 72-69 Tuesday night.
The Falcons (8-2) took a 35-32 halftime lead
iK'hlnd eight points by Karageorgos and John
Saraglno. Bentley led the entire game except for
a brief 10-9 Rollins lead after a Brian Nason
3-polntcr with 16:39 logo In the first hulf.
Derek Thurston led the Tars (7-2) with 19.

LA K I MARY It. UNIVKRSITY It
'w ~
Lo»»« J:*»; 111 - Dons (LM) m«|or
Sec. Mayfield 141: Ilf - Mllch.ll (LM) pinned R.mot J;4J; 113Cullln* (LM) pinned Gannon 4:30; i » - Doti (U&gt; loch, fall O rr.t
1:11; US — Parol In* (LM) doc. Woldman 97; 140 — Crml &lt;U)
plnnod Borgman 4:44; 143 - Collin* (U) ma|or doc. Rood? 193; 151
- Inlrterl (U) doc. Fo*tor 194. 140 - Worgo (U) doc. Monollo 1 4:
,
"* ~ Momtby (U) plnnod
y y * * ' - Clayton (LM) plnnod Mayor 1: 11; HVV - Collin*
(U) by forfeit.
lantor vanity - Uni veralty 47, Laka Mary 14.

34-34 tie. With several key wrestlers out for
various reasons. Lake Mary was going to give
away quite a few points. Including six because of
a forfeit In the Heavyweight class.
The Rams quickly built a 22-0 lead as Rich
Bradley (103 pounds). Nate Mitchell (119
pounnds) and Corey Culling (125) each won their
matches with pins while
Kevin Dunn (112
pounds) scored a major decision. But then
University started climbing back Into meet,
winning five of the next six contests.
While It may sound awkward, several of the
younger Rams played a huge role In keeping
Lake Mary from suffering a loss by not losing
their Individual matches too badly.
Because a team gets three points when a

member wins by a declson,- four by major
decision, five by technical fall, and six by a pin. It
was Important for the Rams fillin g In for the
regulars to keep their matches as rlo^p.
"U n iv e rs ity 's stron g su it Is the m iddle
w eights.” explained Peters. “ Aaron Reedy (145
pounds). Chris Foster (150 pounds) and Jam ie
Orras (130 pounds) did well not to get pinned.”
Their efforts, along with wins by decision from
Pat Paroline (135 pounds) and Jean Pierre (171
pounds), helped Lake Mary forge a 28-28 tie with
two matches to go. Because the Rams knew they
were going to forfeit at Heavyweight. Clayton had
to pin his opponent to give Lake Mary a tie.
"C layton had beaten the kid In the Christmas
Tournament, but this time, he had to pin him ,”
said Peters. "C layton had him on his hack twice
In the first period but couldn't get him.
"W hen they got to the third period, both
wrestlers were exhausted. I didn't think It was
going to happen, but Clayton reversed out and
pinned the k id."
That's when things really got Interesting.
Lake Mary. 4-0-1. w ill host Colonial Thursday.

Hawks topple Tribe
Heat edge Pistons

By OBAN SMITH

MIAMI — Harold Miner came off the bench to
score 19 points. Rony Selkaly had 16 points and
17 rebounds nnd Glen Rice udded 17 points as
the Miami Heal bested the Detroit Pistons 89-83.
For Detroit Isiali Thomas scored 25 (mints and
JoeDum ars 19.

Tampa whips Mass.-Dartmouth
TAMPA — DeCarlo Dcvraux scored 28 (mints.
Including five 3-pointcrs. as Tampa defeated
Massaehusetts-Dartmouth 93-82 Tuesday night.

FIU wins squeaker
MIAMI — Dwight Stewart scored 16 (mints
and Florida International held olTa furious rally
by Cleveland State to win 74-73.

Jackson In Hall
N EW YORK — Once again. Reggie Jackson Is
ulonc In the spotlight.
Jackson, whose clutch hitting, charisma and
controversy elevated him to a level ull his own.
was the only player elected to the Hall of Fame.
Jackson was named on 93.6 percent of the
ballots cast by members of the Baseball Writers
Association of America, the lOth-hlghcsl total In
history. He became the 29th player to make It to
Coopcrstown In his first year of eligibility.

Bears fire Ditka

*

LAKE FOREST. III. - Mike Dilka's 11 years as
coach of the Bears ended In an emotional firing
that lasted less than six minutes.
The 53-year-old Ditka. who led the Bcurs to
the 1986 Super Bowl title, was dismissed nine
days after the end o fa disastrous 5-11 season.
Ditka. who will remain with the team as a
consultant, had a 106-62 regular-season record.-

r rTT TT "'T—

iw.JLl

-t*.

'«&lt;*&gt;1. 4*ie&lt;.*NI&gt;lfi3^&lt;,^ 4 eJLs*

1

Men’s JU C O Basketball
□ S am ln o ls Community C olloga at Florida
Community Colloga at Jaekaonvilla, 7:30 p.m.

Boys' Basketball
□Laka Brantlay at Doltona. Junior varsity al 5:30
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□Laka Mary at Daytona Boaeh-Malnland. Junior
varsity at 5:30 p.m. with varsity to follow.
□O vlodo at Unlvorsity. Junior varsity at 6 p.m.
with varsity to follow .
□Sam lnola at Daytona Baach-Baabroaaa. Junior
varsity at 6 p.m. with varsity to follow.

Girts' Basketball
□ DaLand at Laka Mary. Junior varsity at 6 p.m.
with varsity to follow.
D8pniea Crook at Bomlnola. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.

Boys' Soccer
U Boons at Laka Howoll Junior varsity at 5:45
p.m. with varsity to follow&lt;
□ DaLand at Laka Mary, Junior varsity at 5:45
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□Lyman at Bomlnola. Junior varsity at 5:15 p.nf.
with varsity to follow .

B A S K E TB A LL
I 19 p.m. — ESPN, college. Florida Slate ul
Virginia. (L)

Herald Sports Writer
SANFORD — Saving the best for
last.
For 34 minutes Tuesday night,
the Lake Howell girls’ basketball
team stayed close to homestanding
Seminole during their Seminole
Athletic Conference contest at Bill
Fleming Memorial Gymnasium.
But Just when It seemed like the
Silver Hawks might not be able to
catch the Tribe. Lake Howell's Kelly
Kohn went on a long-range scoring
binge, nailing three 3-polnters and
putting back a rebound to score 11
straight points and tie the game at
36-36 with 4:04 left.
Seminole regained the lead twice
more, at 38-36 and 40-38. but each
time the Silver Hawks would an­
swer Immediately.
Finally, with 0:35 to go. Deanna
Graves made her only basket of the
evening, a "th ree" from the left
comer that gave the Silver Hawks
their first lead of the game. 43-42.
Seminole was unable to come
back and Graves hit a free throw
with 0:01 left to make the final score
44-42.
.
The Junior varsity game also went
to the Silver Hawks by the score of
50*28.
•

Rams,
Hornets
settle
for draw

LARK H0W IL L 44, ICMINOLC41

\ itowgtl (44)

L. Morctil*oll* 1 1 ) 7, Bourn*r 0 00 0. Gontoloi
00-10. Kalin * 0017. Barmor 1004. Clark* 0 717.
Grav** 11-4 4. Boneventur* 0 00 0. Stanley 17 7 4.
Jam** 7004. Total*: 144-1744.

lomtaolo (*})

Satan 5 00 10. F*y*on 0 00 0. Gllllnt 0 00 0.
Morgan I 00 7. Hampton 7 1-1 4. Wadilngton * 70
70. Baono 700 4. Mull In* o I 41. Total*: 1*4 1347.
Lab* Newell
7 0 0 71 - 44
Somtnot*
17 » 11 II - 47
Thro*point tlold goal* — Lak* Hawaii 4 (Kohn
5. Grave* 1). Team tout* — Lak* Howell 14;
S*mlnoto 17. Fouled out — Laka Howell. Barmer;
Seminal*. Eaton. Technical* — non*. Record* —
Lak* Howell 10). 70 SAC; Seminote II 7. 0 ) SAC.
Junior vanity — Lak* Howell SO. Seminole 71.

Sem inole took the quick lead as
Nikki W ashington dominated the
first quarter, scoring all 12 points as
the Tribe went up 12-7. Sem inole
continued to build its lead, lealng
32-23 at the end o f three periods.
But poor shooting and even poorer
shot selection kept the lead from
being much larger.
.
"P oor shooting and bad attempts
killed us tonight.” said Sem inole
head coach John McNamara. "Even
the shots that went In were poor
attem pts, we were lucky to be
ahead.
" I told the girls yesterday that we
needed to beat both Lake Howell
and Lake Brantley if we wanted to
win the conference. But we played
□B aa Lak a H aw aii, P a g * 2B

LAKE MARY - Turning In a
air-tight defensive effort but
hampered by a unproductive
offense Tuesday night, the
Lake Mary High School girls'
soccer team had to settle for a
1-1 tic with the Bishop Mobrc
Hornets at 1-1 Lake Mary's
Don T. Reynolds Stadium.
"It's frustrating to stand on
the sidelines that long and not
score,'' said Lake Mary coach
Bill Elsscle. "It was our first
match since the Burger King
tournament, so wc were a little
rusty.

Christina Jamas (No'. 50) scorad six
points Tuesday Laka Howall In tha
Hawks' 44-42 win ovsr Samlnola.

'Balanced' Ram s roll over Patriots
Hsrsld Sports Editor
ALTAM O NTE SPRINGS - Sometimes a balanced
attack Isn't what It appears.
On Tuesday night, for exam ple, all nine players on
the Lake Mary High School girls' basketball team
contributed points during a 64-43 win over the Lake
Brantley Patriots In a Seminole Athletic Conference
confrontation.
W hile having all players contribute to a victory Is
every coach's goal. It was more o f a necessity Tuesday
night for Lake Mary coach Anna Van Landlngham, who
Juggled her lineup constantly during the contest.
"W ell, we won. that's about all that can be said about
this gam e.” said Van Landlngham. "T h e good news
was the play o f our bench. They were ready to play and
they provided the spark we needed to get goin g.”
Van Landlngham lauded the play o f reserves Karely
Beltel. Laura Raguccl, and Jennifer Ore lasing (nine
points, a team-high eight rebounds, and six steals), who
contributed quality minutes for the Rams.
Lake Mary point guard LaShawn Merrick had a
team-high 13 points (Including a pair o f three-point field
goals in the final tw o minutes to ice the gam e) to go
with seven assists while Karen Morris and Dawna
Ferguson each added 11 points.
" It was a really positive way to com e back from the
break," said Van Landlngham. "T h e girls did what they
had to do to win.”
Leigh Ann Penney, who finished with a game-high 23

L A K I MARY (44)
Reedy 91 7-7 7, Merrick 95 14 I). Ferguoen 4* ) -l 11, Rogucd 3-19* 04.
Owckor 7 3 99 4. Belle) 1) 90 3. Morrli 9111111, Dufeor 914 94 4. Grelteing
&gt;9910. Total*: 14-1914-1444.
L A K I BRANTLEY (0))
Chomafc 39 13 3. Rodgort 13 90 3, Gardner 91900. Troat 7 3 914. Millar
99 090. Udke 93 1-13. Penney O il 79 3). Vendor Weld* 17 3 3 4. Moorefleld
94940. Pltt*91990. Total*: 14 3411-1*4).
LsMM*r»
14 M 10 1 4 -4 4
LoboBroaMey
I) 4 14 10 - 47
Three-point Held goal* - Lak* Mary 3-4 (Morrlcfc 3-L Morrli 91). Laka
Brantley 91 (Ctwmok 91). Total foul* — Lak* Mary 10. Lak* Brantley 10.
Fouled out — None. Technical* — Non*. Rebound* — Lak* Mary 7*
(GrelMlng 0). Lak* Brantlay 7* (Udk* 7). Awltt* - Lak* Mary I) (Morrlck
7). Laka Brantlay * (Chomak 3. Udka )). Rocordt - Lak* Mary 113. 39
SAC; l ik* Brantley 7-7. 1-1 SAC.
.

points, scored the first basket o f the gam e to give Lake
Brantley the early lead. Midway through the first
quarter. Lake Brantley led 8-4.
O ver the next 12 minutes. Lake Mary outacorcd the
Patriots 32-9 to take a 36-17 lead at halftime. Included
In that stretch was a 22-3 run.
According to Lake Brantley coach Karen Szewczyk,
the Patriots w eren't physically ready to play, having
been Idle for most o f their winter break.
"W e 'v e been back since Dec. 28, but h alf o f the team
was gone during the break,” explained Ssewcsyk.
"W e 'v e been working on conditioning, but w e're not
game fit. The fatigue from being out-of-shape Is part o f
what caused our 30 turnovers tonight.”
Lake Mary also won the Junior varsity contest. 40-24.
The Rams (12-2 overall. 2-0 in the SAC) host DeLand
DB m B a sk etb a ll. P age 2B

"W c had ample o p p o rtu n i­
ties to score, but we Just didn't
finish. Our defense shut down
a ll o f th eir sh o o tin g o p ­
portunities. but you still have
to put the ball Into net to win."
Bishop Moore (8-5-5) struck
first as Stephanie G rlnger
scored 18 minutes Into match
olT of the Hornets' only corner
kick of the game.
Lake Mary equalized 14
minutes later when Adrlane
Hemmcrly played a beautiful
cross from the right side to
Angle Snow, who knocked the
ball home from three yards out
In the game's 32nd minute.
That was all the scoring In
the match as Bishop Moore
goalie Corl Valleau made I I
saves to thwart the Rams, who
launched 15 shots on goal and
look six com er kicks during
the contest.
By comparison, the Lake
Mary defense limited Bishop
Moore to Just two shots on goal
and the lone corner kick. Ram
goalie Michelle Rovlto had to
make one save.
Now 7-3-4. the Rams will
play at Lake How ell thin
Thursday. The Junior varsity
will play al ff p.m. with the
varsity scheduled to lake the
field at 7 p.m.

Returning teams open Polar Bear with wins
SANFORD — Experience helps.
The opening night o f the Sanford
Recreation Departm ent W om en's
P o la r B ear S lo w p ltc h S o ftb a ll
League at Chase Park found the top
three finishing team s from last
season posting victories.
Fall league champions G reenleaf
Landscaping came on late to upend
O ff The W all 7-2: fall runnere-up
Beer:30 bested O ff The W all 11-6
and the third place team from the
fall league. Hopkins Meat Packing,
hammered V icky's Perm it Service
15-3.
Pacing the G reenleaf offense were
Lida Kenny (four singles). Lisa Clark
(three singles, tw o runs). Estelle
Novelle (tw o singles, two runs),
Mary W ilson (tw o singles). Jennlfer

073 70 -

11 73

•31 030 0 113 3M s -

4 70
II 33

•10 70 ONTReWoM
Boor130
ONTboWM

3 0

001 13* 3 - 7

110 MO • - 3

Forston (double). Debbie Ziegler.
Kgthy Tollefson and Terri Mann
(one single and one run each) and
M ary B eth M cC u llou gh . C in dy
Campbell. Robin Baggett and Diana
Sauers (one single each).
G etting the hits for O ff The W all
were Jackie Tolfa (tw o singles, run).
Chris Tipton. Nancy McGInty and
Sue Bagley (one single earh) and
Diana M ontgomery (run).
Doing the damage for Beer: 30
were Sue Mangham (three singles.

three runs), Lannfe Mulhollen (three
singles, two runs). Lori Poe and
Bobble Mosley (three singles and
one run each). Carol Dick (two
singles, two runs). Leann Tutchton
(tw o singles, run). April Flowers and
Terry Bam er (tw o singles each).
A n gle W ltton (sin gle, run) and
Sandy Reid and Janice Ritchey (one
single each).
Doing the hitting for O ff The W all
were Carol Cranick (three singles,
two runs), Nancy McGInty (three
singles), Diana Montgomery. Anna
Morse and‘ J‘ a c“k ie
____ ________
m__
) Toua
(tw o singles
and one run each). Chris Tipton and
Beth Hundleser (tw o singles each).
Teresa Flnck (single, run) and Lynn
Pell. Tina Gay nor and Sue Bagley
(one single each).
Contributing to a 25 hit Hopkins

Meat Packing offense were Katie
Barbour (double, three singles).
Renee Lanza (four singles, three
runs). Vickie M iller (double, two
singles, tw o runs), T ori Quick (three
•Ingles, two runs). Terri Hlrt (three
■Ingles, run). K elly Barthalow (home
run. triple, tw o runs) and Jam ie
Hart (tw o singles).
A lso con tribu tin g w ere Cindy
Perry (single, tw o runs) and Joy
W eaver, Jennifer Ingram and Gina
Bukur (one single and one run
each).
.
H itting lor V icky's Perm it Service
were Lynn Moore and Patrice Motle
(tw o singles and one run each),
Cynthia
ila _____
Porter (tw o singles). Leah
.
Sparrow (triple, run) and W endy
Getman and Gina Mullinox (one
s(ngle each).

FOR T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R TS IN Y O U R A R E A , R EA D T H E S A N FO R D H ER ALD D A ILY

�inVliftW

- Sanford Htrsld, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, January 6, 1993

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
Seattle
Portland
LA Lekart
Golden Slate
LAClIppert
Sacramento

70
11
u
14
14
17
Twtdoy'iOomet
New Vork1S.CIevelond11
New Jartay 111, Ortanda It
Miami W, Detroit 45
Boston 107, Charlotte 103
Washington 107, Atlanta loo
Indiana 114, LAClIppartiM
LA Lakart 11. Chicago N
Milwaukee 114. Minnesota 100
Portland IN . OelleitS
Phoenli IN , Houston 104
Utah 111. San Antonio 17.
Saattloiit, Golden SI aft 104
Sacrammlo 174. Denver 104
Indiana al Boston, 7:10p.m.
New Jartay at Philadelphia. 7:J0p m
Chicago al Cleveland. 7:10pm.
LA Clippers at Detroit. 7 : » p.m.
LA Lakart al Mlnnatota, 0 p.m.
Thursday's Garnet
Atlanta al Milwaukee, I :JO p.m.
PhoenlialDeliat.1:Xp.m.
Portland al Houston, 1:10 p.m.
Utah al Son Antonio, 0:10 p.m.
Miomi at OotOsn State, t t:»p .m .

NEW J E B IE T (It!)
Cotoman 1011 I f II, Morrl* 7 11 13 0,
5.Bowto TO I I S . Pitrovlc 10 17 01 II.
K.And*r*on 5 14 31 II. Gaorga 0 4 frO 0.
Robinten 7 7 00 5. Dudtoy 17 14 5. Mahorn
0 0 OP 0. Brown 14141. Total* 1410 7414107.
ORLANDO (11)
Tolbart 41 OS 0. Scott 4 IS 1-4 11. O'N m I
tl-lf 5-11 11. N.AndorMn 417 11 14, Skltoi
5 11M 11. Royal 1 ■ 4 4 10. Calltdga 114 4 0,
Klto 0 0 0-0 0. A.Bowlo 1 4 7 1 I .Total* N U
11-1411.
Now f o r m
II N X H - m
Orlando
11 11 N H - i i
1 Point goolt— Now Jartay 10 (Roblnton
1-2. Potrovlc 1-1, Colomon 0 1. K.And*rtan
0 1. Goorgo P I), Orlando t-M Ittlto* 1-2.
Scott 14. Tolbort P I. N.AndtrtonPI). Foutyd
out— O udloy. O 'N o o l, Collodgo. Rofaoundo— Now Jo m y 41 ICotomon 14), Or
londo 41 (O'Noal 117. A itlita-N ow Jo m y 11
(K.Andoroon 10), Or londo 77 (Skltot 111.
Total fouli— Now Jortoy M. Orlando 10.
Toch nlco l— Now Jo rto y coach Doty.
A— 15,151. .

Itllnott
74, PrlnclpU 47
John Carroll U , Capital U
Marguotto (t, Mlnnatota 17
Marycratl M, NW Iowa U
Mo. KantatCllytS. JackMnSt 41
Momlngsidi 17, Briar Cliff 74
Mount Union 74, Ottarbaln M
OOutklngum J4, Marlalla 41
Nabratka II, Wit. Oraan Bay 71
Bio Oranda 71, Walth 45
ShoumoaSi. 71. Tiffin S3
Wayna, Nab. l7.Chadronlt.44
SOUTHWEST
Incarnate Word 74. Schreiner M
Midwestern SI. 10, T a u t Wetleyan 57
Oklahoma SI. ai. Arkantat 47
Southern Math. 7S. Stephen F. AutMn at
Tarlatan St. 71. T o u t Lutheran 54
Way land 104. E. T a u t SI. 70
PAR WEST
Anita Pacific 74. California Baptltl 41
Brigham Young 71. Idaho SI. 70
Colo. Colo. Sprlngt 17, McKondreo 44
E . Montana 40. N . Montana B
Portland tl. Portland St. 77
Simon Frator 14. Pugot Sound 50
Stanford 17. T o u t 44
UC Sonta Barbara 74. UC Irvins SI
W. Washington 71. Saattla 51
Washington M, Goruaga 44
Wyoming U .S . Utah 57

Banilay 71. Rati lot *4
Char It* Ion Soulharn II, Laat M^Raa 77
Curnbarland, Ky. 14. Baraa 7S
Oalta SI. 71. Ala. Huntavi ito 57
Cmbry-RMdta H . Rkada Itland Call. If
Faulknor ill. Fraad HardamanT}
Forrum 107. Elmira 107
Fla. Intarnattonai 74, CU aatand tf. 71
Gaorgla Sovtharn 44. Citadtl M
Gaorgla Toth 05. Maryland 75
Kontucky 74, Gaorgla M
LeMtryna Owan It , Fort Vallay It. 77
•LIvIngttonoTT, 00110*70
a
lou Itlana Coll. 74, E . T a u t Baptltl 45 ■
Md. E . Shora 47. Dalawaro SI. 55
Mittlttlpp! Col. 44. Abllana Chrltllan 44
Mlttlttlppl SI. 110, Tannattaa Toth 45
N.C. Control 10. JohntonC. Smith 74
N.C Wilmington 17, Campball 70
Nortilk St. 00. Wlntton Satam 71
North Alabama 101, Baplltt Chrltllan 14
Nava 71. WhM toon
Spring Hill 75. MontavalloU
St. Thamat 71, DamMe on, N.V. U
Tam pan. MattOarfmawlhH
Va. CommonwootW 00, Llbarty 75
MIDWEST
Augutlana.III. 41. Talkyo Marycratl SO
Butlar 01, Valparalto 41
Cant. Iowa 00. Coo 44
Oa Paul M, Loyola. 111.71
E. Haw Matlca 11. Nabratka Kaarnay 77
Gracatand 1U. Otiiavua ill,O T •
Grand Valtay St. 71. Ollvat Naiorono 71
Hatllngt W. Kan tat Wattyn 74
Kantat SI. 71. La Salla 51
■ Luthar It.W It. LaCrotta04
Manchattar 47, Andarton. Ind. 41
Nabratka ISO, I.U Ia K ll
Plttaburg St. 71, Camaron ■
SE Mluouri IN . Oakland City 41
SI Polar’i 71. Youngitown SI.47
Wayna. Nab. 74. Bamld|l SI. 71
WllbartorcaW, TlttlnB
SOUTHWEST
Arkantat Baptltl IN . Ouachita 17. O T
Arkantat Tach 71, Gaorgatown. Ky. 70
BaylorH, Tu lia t)
Cant. Arkantat 04. E . T a u t St. 41
R Icoll. T a u t 07
T a u t AAM11. Brawn 51
Wayland Baptltl 101, Mary HardlnBay lor
07
PAR W EST
Adamt St. 104. Colo. Colo. Sprlngt 41
Arina Pacific 14. Pomona Plttar 04
CS Nocthrldga Si. Loyola Marymount O
Poppardlna 10. Quincy 40
Portland 70, Montana SI. 47
San Otago til. Oral Robert! 70
San Francltco 17. Sonoma SI. 47
Santa Ctara 11. C S Slanltlaut N
Saattla Pacific 7J, Cant. Wathlngton41
W. Oragon IN . Concordia. Ora. n
Wobar St. 47. Lawlt Clark St. S4
TOURNAMENTS
Budget TW ON Th t Mm Yoar ToaroamaM
Franklin A Marthall 01, Jartoy City SI. M
Thkd Place
S. Maine 17, Old Wattbury 10
EXHIBITION
Iowa St. 17, Marathon Ol* 44

Mortal OS, Falrioigh Dlcklmon 47
M0440cfM0ttaW.B04tonU.41
Morcyhurtt M, Rio Oranda 71
OOonmouth. NJ.44, St. Frond*. Po. U
Mount St. AAaryta.0M.15. Long Itland U . 04
Niagara 0L FskfloM 11
OhlaSt.71.PonnSt.M
Richmond It. Army 71
RidarNt SI. Pranclt, NV4I
Rwlgari M Prlncoton 47
St. JOhn't 04. Provldanco 74
Tronton St. tf, PDU-Modtasn tt
Wagnar OS. Rabart Marrlt N
Waynotburg ig. Val. Porga Chrlitlan Tt
SOUTH
Alabama M. 70, Ptortda AAM57
Alka LtoydtN, AtburyW

Taatday't Waman't Scam
EAST
Bahrond 70, Watlmlnttar 10
Clark 41, William* *0
Delaware 44. Princeton 41
Fairfield 44, Fordham 40
Florida 44. Woof Virginia W
Hunter 11, Mo dgor Evert N
Kama St. 71, LaMoyno tt
King*. Pa. S4. Lebanon Vallay 40
Kutllown 45. Bowie St. 44
M M M ta.*avidM &lt;ets
Mlllertvmt S t Houghton 54
Niagara ii. Robert Marrlt 70
Pltttbvrghto, Satan Halt 40. O T
St. Banavantwra 77, Lang Itland U. 47
Wilmington, Del. 114. Eat tarn 14
SOUTH
Alabama M. Xavier. Ohio 74
Arkantat St. 45. South Alabama &lt;1
Arkantat Tach 70. Oalta St. 41
i; Dalawaro St. 44, M d.-lettem Shore II
Florida ABM IS. SNtaee M
ftarlda Teih M Itaaekltl W
Fori Valley SI. 14. LaMeyneOwen 54
Oeergia Tech n . North Caroline 41
Oroentboroll. Pfeilfar 71
LSU to. SW Loultiana 41
Louitlana Coll. 47. Cant. Arkantat 4
Loultiana Tech 71, New Or leant 41
Navy 71, Howard U .N
W
ttewUe A
A
Weu.i—M
BN
P
Tu lane 44, tana 41
• Vanderbilt 11, Memphis SI. 57
MIDWEST
Baldwin Wallace 45. Hkam 14
Codervllle 44. Ml. Varnan Netareno 70
Dana 74. Dakota Watlayan M
Or and View 104. Oubusuo 44
Haldtlborg 41, OMo Northern 40

Plttaburght. Button 7
Qutboc 1, Now York lilondor* t
It. Loultt. Edmonton 1
Wlnnlpog 4, Calgary 7
Montreal 1. Son Joto 1
Wodnotdoy't Oomot
Buffalo at Hartford. 7:40 p.m.
Ottawa at Now York Bangor*. 7:40 p.m,
Mlnnowta at Now Jo m y . 7:40p.m.
Vancouver at Toronto. 7:40p.m.
Tango BoyatUoAagotobtOiN p.m.
Tbortdoyta ^Od^dot
Q&gt;wboc at Bolton, 7:40p.m.
Wothtngtonol Phlladalphlo. 7:40 p.m.
Mlnnowto at Plttaburgh, 7:40 p.m.
Edmonton at Chicago. 0:41p m.
Calgary at SI. Louts. l:4lo.m .

COLLEBE BASKETBALL
7 p.m. - ESPN. Miami at Plttiburgh. IL )
7:10 p m — SUN. Ooorgo Wathlngton al
JamoaMMtton, (L )
Ip .m .— CV, 51,54, Florida al Auburn, IL)
1 p.m. — ESPN, Florida ttoto of Virginia;
(L I
.
1
NBA BASKETBALL
7 p m — WON. Chicago Bull* at Clovoland
Caualtor*. (L I
g O tP
1a m . — SUN, WarId Chan
1 a.m. — USA, Pro Slaka*
"pi*

Weaver notches first
win on asphalt track

On the final restart, Pow ell. •
Britts and Guy Thom as were*

‘ T in real pleased with our*
perform ance," said the 26 years
old Brltta. who has been racing
for six yean . "O u r plan was to
be patient and not abuse the carJ
Some o f the guys made some
bad Judgment calls and took
UiemBelveB out o f the race,
"W e kept our line, waited Tor
the right tim e and made our
move. Even though we raced ori
old tlrra we w ere able to B ta y
close to the front all night. I'm
happy It w a s a good n e e . "
Thom as was another driver
th at w as sa tisfied w ith his
showing.
"T h is la still basically a new
car for u s," said Jacksonville
resident Thom as. "W e really
only have tw o races on It. The
lost two hundred-lap race here
we crashed with eight laps to go.
W e're still trying to get the car
sorted out. We.'rc d ose to the
set-up we want an d , w e'll be
ready for speed w eeks."
The race took SB minutes to
com plete w ith eigh t caution
periods. O f the 24 c a n that took
the green, 10 were still on the
lead lap. W eaver took home
•2,000 for his w inning effort.
One o f the c a n to finish on the
lead lap. In ninth place, was Bob
Clark, W eaver's car owner.

Basketball
(h is
evening. Luke Brantley (7-3
uvcrull. l-l in the conference)
plays at Seminole Thursday.

LYMAN 51. OVIEDO 31
OVIEDO LaTlsha Smith
netted a game*high 13 points, to
lead the Lyman Greyhounds to a
91-31 victory over the host
Oviedo Lions in a Seminole
A lh lc t ic C o n fe r e n c e g irls*
b a sk e tb a ll contest T u e sd a y
Smith also hud nine rebounds
for Lyman (12-3 overall. 1*0 in
the SA C ), which snapped a
two-game losing streak.
Freshm an C arolyn C ra ge r
added 12 points and a team-high
12 r e b o u n d s . F e lic ia K lcp
chipped In six points and 11
rebounds while Sara Wood came
off the bench ^contribute seven
tats and live assists, Janet
iwtlng compiled four blocked

Orr opens

S

Warren tangled while battling Dwayne Palm er and Mark Miller,
for the lead In the Lim ited Late
BanJbrd'a John Ripley led from
Model feature. Howard Osteen green to checkers to win the
Inherited the lead and went on to Sportsman feature, trailed by
claim hia first e ve r Orlando Date Howard. Bill Loomis, Ouy
Speed W orld win.
McRoberts and Jbn Kinsey.
Following the Lakeland driver
The Bomber win went ot O reg
The aame scenario took nlace
in the Mini-Stock D tvtakm aa
race lead en Bobby S ean and
D am n Jackson tshgled, handtag the lead and the win to K elly
Jarrett.
•
Following Jarrett were: Gene
VanAlstine, Law rence Usher.
Richard Newton and Sears.
Bruce Thompson was a firsttim e winner ta the Modified*.
leading all the way to win ahead
o f John Lovelady. Dave 8avlckl.

In a Tog tonight.
W henever I went to substitute,
we would get confused as to who
was supposed to be where In the
lo n e and they (Lake HowelD got
easy shots. I guess we can start
concentrating on getting ready
fo r the d is tric t tournam ent
n ow ."
The loss dropped Seminole to
11-7 overall and 0-3 in the SAC.
w hile Lake Howell improved to
IB-3 and 2-0. with both wins
com ing against Seminole.
The Tribe w ill be In action at
hom e again ton igh t against
S pruce C reek w ith the jv 's
starling at 6 p.m. The Silver
Hawks w ill host Lym an in a big
SAC contest Thursday, with the
jv 's tipping o ff at 6 p.m.
Kohn ted the Lake Howell
offen se w ith 17. w h ile Lori
MarrhiseUa added seven points
and 10 rebounds and Christine
Jam es six points.
Washington was the gam e's
high scorer with 20. Tennishla
Eaaon chipped In with lO dcsplic
sitting out a large portion o f the
flam e In foul trouble,

s r - ’ vxr'

Oould com pleted the top five.
D T o * ^ L h * | tn ° , to P P *d
K un-Ab ou ts. o u tfa c in g J od y
Chuck
PM M M B B ^^^m aa^^^
I
I
J s -P A s S a l
|
I
1

K f/ fT
- V

.s M
9Q |g
O ^ggE l

• A ll *39.95

shots.
U sa Lilljcnqulsl was the high
scorer for Oviedo with seven
points.
Oviedo won the Junior varsity
game. 45-36.
Lym an visits Lake Howell
Thursday night while Oviedo Is
off until Saturday, when the
Lions W ill visit Spruce Creek.

LystM
tt to it tt - tt
Ovtodo
4 1 1 11- 11
Throo point Hold goolt - Lyman l
(Brown), Ovtodo 1 (Richard*. LllllonguUt).
Total* foul* - Lyman 5, Ovtodo H . Foulad
out — Ovtodo. Noltoui. Tochnkali — Nona.
Aocord* - Lyman 111. l-g SAC; Ovtodo I T.

�santord Herald, Ssnlord, Florid* - Wsdnaadsy, January 6, 1993

Cooks of the Week
Esglos plan yard aala

Culinary specialties offered at ‘A Taste of Sanford

SANFORD — The Eagles Ladles A u xiliary o f Sanford w ill
hold a yard sale at 408 W . 20th Street In Sanford on Friday and
Saturday, Jan. 8 and 8 from 8 a.m . to 4 p.m.

Herald Correspondent

National praaldant to visit LAFRA
SANFORD — The National President o f the Ladles Auxiliary
o f Fleet Reserve w ill be visitin g the Sanford Ladles Auxiliary
(Unit 147) at their general m eeting on Jan. 11 at 8 p.m.
For this special m eeting only, the ladles o f the Navy W orld
Unit 117 and th eir spouses have also been Invited to attend.
Everyone Is encouraged to bring their favorite dish for a
covered dish dinner before the m eeting.
For m ore Inform ation, call 323*8576.

Hospital hosts Nsr-Anon
Nar-Anon, a support group open to fam ilies and friends o f
addicts, m eets every W ednesday, at 8 p.m., at W est Lake
Hospital, 589 W . State Road 434, Longwood. Phone: 280*1900.

Asioblcs offarad
The City o f Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays. W ednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 10 a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Cost Is 83 per class.
Instructor ts Debbie Black, board certified w ith over 10 years
experience.
Call 330-5697 for m ore details.

Dancing for aanlora
The O ver 50 Dance Club dance is held every W ednesday,
from 2:30 • 4:30 p.m. at the Sanford C ivic Center. L ive music
by the Deltonlans 11-piece band. Donation 82.00.

8anford Woman's Club members getting ready for
a Taste o f Sanford Saturday night are (from left)

NarAnon to moat

serted halfway between center
and edge com es out clean.
Chill and serve w ith whipped
cream or serve warm .

Nar-Anon m eets every W ednesday at 8 p.m. at W est Lake
Hospital, 589 W est State Road 434, Longwood. Nar-Anon Is a
support group open to fam ilies and friends o f addicts. Dally

■WSST POTATO CASSSKOLB
(J e a a e tta Padgett)
3 cups mashed sweet potato
(40 ox. can)
Vi cup sugar
Vi tip . salt
2 eggs, beaten *
Vi stick margarine
Vi cup m ilk
Vi tip . vanilla
Combine all o f the above and
put in casserole.

She learns losing
lesson on winning

Tapping!
Vi cup brown sugar
Vi cup flour
1 cup chopped nuts
Vi cup soft m argarine (1 stick)
Com bine these and put on top
o f casserole. Bake at 350* for
35-40 minutes.

D E A R A M Y i I am a senior
citlxcn livin g on a fixed Income. I
did a very foolish thing — 1 gave
m y Visa number over the phone
to a person who was callin g from
Las Vegas about a "co n test" I
had entered. T h e prise was
85.000.
I did not ask. nor was I told,
what the product was, and how
much It was going to cost m e to
win the 85,000. (T o a pensioner,
that kind o f m oney looks pretty
good, but I should have known
The man told me that the
product eras a vitam in program
that would do much to im prove
m y health. The cost was 880011
Im m ediately asked hra to cancel
i t as I could not afford that kind
' o f money. He was very Insistent
and asked If 1 w as the recipient
&gt; o f the 85.000 award, could 1 not
afford it then?
H e harassed m e o v e r the
. phone for a week, after which 1
handed the phone to m y daughj ter — who told him that I was
• not Interested. He still would not
» take no for an answer. I then
t h a n d e d th e p h o n e to m y
2 husband who also told him no.
» H e still Insisted.
*
W e tried to stop paym ent on
'm y Visa, but they could do
\ nothing about I t This person
; also had a girl telephone our
; hom e and ask fo r m e. W e
t recognised her voice from pee*
! vtous phone calls. M y fam ily
i Anally told him not to call again,
; and thank God. he hasn't so far.

Abby, please warn others to
find out what they are paying for
before they give any numbers
over the telephone. I learned the
hard way. You m ay publish m y
letter, but please do not use m y
name, as I fear it w ill cause me
further problem s with this com ­
pany. Just sign me.,.

V id a Frank, Pat Bowen, Jean Matts, Fran Morton
and Audrey Roush

QUICK COMPANY CAKE
1 bottle (12 os.) chill sauce
(A s t r a y R aash )
1ja r (10 os.) grape Jelly
1 can cherry pie fillin g
Mix ground b eef and next 8
Ingredients. G ently shape into
1 15V4 os. can crushed pineapple
1-lnch balls. M elt shortening In
1 box lemon cake m ix
large skillet. Pour o ff fat after
2 sticks m elted butter
b row n in g m eatb alls and re­
1 can coconut, shredded
m oving. Heat chill sauce and
1 cup pecans, chopped
Jelly in sk illet un til Jelly Is
In a 13x9x2-inch pan, spread
m elted. Add m eatballs and stir
cherry pie fillin g and pineapple.
until thoroughly coated. Sim m er
Sprinkle on dry lemon cake m ix.
Pour melted butter over this and
add cocon u t.
S p rin k le w ith
chopped nuts. Bake at 325* for 1
hour.
COCKTAIL MEATBALL#
Cheddar
cheese
(P a t B aw sa)
2 cups (8 os.) shredded Mon­
1 lb. ground beef*
terey Jack cheese
Vi cup dry bread crumbs
Combine in bowl and spread
Vi cup minced anion
h alf In 9x9-lnch baking dish.
V4 cup m ilk
Vi cup Mexican salsa
? «IP
B lend togeth er thoroughly.
Pour over cheese In dish, Tbp
with rem aining cheese. Bake at
Vi tsp. W orcestershire sauce
350* for 30 minutes. CUt, into
squares. Serve on chips. „
Vi cup shortening

(Jean Matts)
1 Venison ham
1 pkg. dried onion soup m ix
Vi cup soy sauce
Sallees bacon
2 cups water
Line large baking pan with
heavy foil. Place venison ham on
another large piece o f foil. Place
In baking pan. Sprinkle dried
onion soup m ix over entire ham.
W et m ix with soy sauce. Place
bacon slices across ham. May
add sliced raw onions across
ham If desired. Add 2 cups water
around bottom o f ham. Seal
tightly, cook at 250* for 7 hours.

"HAD" Dt TORONTO
DBAS HAD! t am publishing
your letter as a warning to other
u n su spectin g readers. N ever
give your credit card number to
stra n g ers; you are a t th e ir
m ercy. Remember:
(1) It coots no m oney to enter a
legitim ate con test
(2 ) N e v e r — u n d e r a n y
circumstances — give anyone
your credit card w ith whom you
have never done business.
(3 ) N ever give your credit card
num ber to anyone o ve r the
telphone unless you have done

M icrowaw Magic
M idge M ycofT s M icrow ave
Magic column w ill be published
Thursday.

my) and are absolutely
he or she is legitim ate.

U JN G ASSOCIATION

—

mtimhmJ^.TflVT*HWN Vm

they’re blocks.
lb your child, they’re patience, aesthetics, learning
to balance, and a skyscraper bigger than the whole world.
At KinderCard* child care centers, wooden blocksare more than imaginary

ta
For 24-hour TV UatbiQa, aoo LEISURE magarins of Friday, Jon. S

.

�Sanford H tfld . Sanford, Florida - W d n — dRy, January s, 1993

CLASSIFIED ADS
R ID tO L IC ITA TIO N N O TIC I
I n M bid* will to received In fba Dowmtalra Conform* Roomof
th* Dlitrlcl Ottlc*. Department *T Trantporletion. rid Sauth
Woodland Boulevard. DoLand, Florida SOTO until 1:M PJW (Local
Tima) on Wednesday, the m b day of Jarmory, 1*01 for lb* followtnf
work. II th* bid amount I* greater than ttt0.000.00. th# Contractor
mutt bo prequallfled ao required by Florida Slatuto 117.14(11 and
Rul# Chapter 14-tt.
■ lO P A C K A O IO R D K R t
All work It to b* don* In accordoac* with lb* Fiona, Specification*,
and Ipoclal Provltlana of th* Itafo of Florida Dopoilminl of
Trantportatlan. Ordort for Plane. Special ProvlUan* and/br lid
Docvmont thouId bo dlrocfod to Mr. W. 4. Irolai, OfohM Ciafioi l

Seminole

Orlando - W inter Park

322-2611

831-0993

Tailahat***, Florida. In ac­
cordance with lb* prevltlan* of
lb* Fktltlov* Nam# Slatuto,
To-Wit: taction au.o*, Florida

Rotlauranl A Ralall. Man
agomonl Job*. U1K dart
F*o, BBC Mamnt *44 0071

Uabitoottr.

Wayno Parker
Oaerg* Wilkin*
PuMMi: January*, lf*l
OCA-41

PACKER/INSPECTOR
12— Elderly Cert
E LO fR LV CARE, m
M l llm*. Loving car*.
_________Call m 0117

C irc u it Caurt of tornlnolo
County, Ftortda, wtR on Jw uary

M F HRS/ttC r*g. M I MR
LAKE M A R T
now In aroaT
Want quality choldcaroT Alt
ago*, all thltt*. Ml » * c ? ___

ii, t*ra.ani:«Rctocfc AJULaf

Orowlng platllct company
looking lor motivated Individ
ualt lor th* moulding dnart
monl. Eiporlonc* helpful but
will Iraln. II hour thlltv 7 7.
Drug tro* workplac*. Apply
1000 Sand Pond Rd. Lakt
Mary........... EOE/M/F/V/H

PRECASTCONCRETEPtAlrt
Procait concrot*
werfcor/torklllt operator with
oip. Pro omploymonl phytlcal
and drug tcroon required
Apply *1, Mon.
Frl., 1410
Dolgnor PI, Port ol Sanford

Exit 17at I 4

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Fre* medical care, Irampor
teflon, coun*ellng. prlvale
doctor plu* living expantet.
Bar 133151$ Call Attorney John
Pricker............. lOOOWJM**

t* and 17,-ef R » Public Racerd*
of l omlnofo County, Pfortd*.
purwant ta Am Pinal Judgment
enfoted bi a €•** penens in wdd
court, the otyto of vmMh la

For bu»y orlhopodlc oflie**
Call Sharon, 7*7 tttt

CHILDCARE Center. Exp A
Early childhood Ed. A MUST.
Call Renee:................ 1114*41

•aMRifrfairtMM

W1TNISS my band and of­
ficial aaal af odd Court M e tint
deyef December, tan.
(COURT SCA D
M A R Y A N N ! MORSE
CLERK OF TN C
CIRCUIT COURT
•yi Jo n o l. Jaaaudc

For Ottollt: I *00 4114154
Ftortda Motory Ai*octotfon

We are looking lor mature
protection*! career oriented
people lor lull lime work.
Creel benefit* end no experi­
ence neceuery. a* we train
you to anure your tuccatt
Call Dale Myeri at 133 &lt;3*1
CLSRK/WAREHOU1E 110 hr
Will train. M* 0400 Employ
mont footwork, only 111*
train Call***0*00
.
Employ men! Network, only 111*

SECRETARY
Typing, computer and word
procettlng tklllt required.
Sp e lling, gra m m a r alto
ettenllal Reply In detail to
P O . Bo* 1*43, Sanlord, FL.
11771 1*45__________

Sscrttny
Only Ihoto with vary ttrong
people end computer tkllli
(Lotut t n end WF 1.1) need
apply. To apply coll i l l 7444.
Clotlngdate: January II, Iff]
_________EEOE/H/V_________

SECURITYOFFICERS NEEDED
laniard. Florida, offer tor take
and tell *t public outcry to the
Mghaet and batt bidder ferceth,

DRIVERSWANTE0

OltMto In laminate County,
Ftortda:
U t A Block 1, ELDORADO,

Qualified etp. produce hauler.
Long dltalnco. COL required
Clean MVR. Call for appllca
Hon, &lt;0? 110 33*0,1AM 4PM

Part lima, day*, night* and
weekend*. Exp In military
pel Ice, low ontorcomonl or
batlc tecurlty holptul. Clot* D
or lomparary I leant# r «
qulrod. Apply In porton ol
Flea World Security Dept.
Irom Tnur* Sunday. I AM
1PM. Hwy 17 *7. Sanford.
Aik tor tame*, 444 7117

SucurityOffictfi
EXECUTIVE DIRCCTM
For County Board Homing
Prolect. Enfhutlatllc, people
oriented perton. Property
management experience
needed. Salaried potllion.
Flexible hour*. Pleat* tubmll
return* to PO Box 110*33.
Cowlborry. PI. 1171*0*0

penonel repretenlatr
tomey &lt;t* *et farfb bat^h

trantpartatlan, 4*7

pa*****ion,
uvrvnamTB,
NOTICE OF SALK
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y OIVCN
that, purtuant to a Summary
Final Judgmanl In Faroelotwr*
entered In the ebovo-ttyled
caute. In Ibe Circuit Caurt of
Samlnato County. Florida, I.
Clark af lb* Circuit Court af
Samlnato County, Florida, will
M l that certain property *1fuel
ad In Samlnato County, FlerMo,
mere particularly daecrlbad a*:
Lot 11, W R K IV A O O L F
VILLAS SECTION TWO. *C-

**822221*
M fltH N M M lR
B*
- i^a"w
f*^a
ro q u lra m a n t* af Section
4 K -1 JH , FJk.C , may obtain an
Admlnlktretlve Hearing. All
tt-Hwl|f TIE^V
f^Mt ^MlVLTMata
will bn nm awfod to Mia beard
CUItoliWfSTrWVaaIfR^MtoUfU”
ittoi P I ^ P t o W t to w IP Itto

avollobto. Oally pay, no too.
Report ready to work S:Mem.
Industrial Labor Svc., 101*
French Av. No phene call*

FACTORYWORKERS
Itl and Ind thltt. Full time,
benefit* and holiday*. Apply
K a r r y P a c k a g in g . 1110
Chariot St. acre** tram
Lyman High School, Long

Mary Alyd. S71 wk. 110-1744

BeatoMttottitoiM-item
praf. liberal meto naki

youhr

TR AHIAM BB tCAH S IL P IT O R A M , LTD* A T a n « IlmHad

M O T IC IS P IA L I

*5 3 5 5 8 ?

Oatontonto.

foOTIC* I I H I R I B V O IV IN Met purtuant to An Amended Pinal
Judgment of Paru ltouw entered an the January t l, l*to In the
•Rato fafomneed action, R » Cfort af Ma OrcuR Caurt m M af li m
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P A R C IL At FROM THR NORTHWEST C O R N IR OP LOT A
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ACCOROINQ TO THR P LA T TH IR B O P AS RCOORORO IN P U T
ROOK 7, P A M I AMO A OP T H I PUBLIC RECORDS OF
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lid
mmfewIwMponumi li baMAmsp^hHli f*tad JinritpirMNYld

Sanford. FlarMA affor for aafo
and aaM at MfbHC outcry fo tba
MMfodandbaiillltoir forcaejL
tiluafo In Samlnafo County,
Fieri*#:
L it II. L0N C F IN B A accardbw ta Ma P W Maraaf at
recartod in Plat Saak 11 Page

meeting in Winter Park, call
Peggy Roman* before Janu
ary INb. 1080 717 tttt

handle a variety el lath*
timullaneoutiy, mutl be an
above average typitf. Ac
cetmling back round preferred
Excellent g*y and benefit*.
Apply: &gt;N7 High St, Lang
wood, ar cell Ml t i l l

WtTtMSS my band and aaal af u ld Court an lb* ttn* day of

THE GREAT AMERICAN
INVESTMENT

�M

11

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Sanford Herald. 8anford. Florida - Wednesday, January 6. 1W3 - i i
K IT ’ N ’ C A R L Y L E ® by ta rry W right

O i l ] Bdrm. Townhomet
0 Sparkling Pool
OE*«lllng Clubhouse
o Large Bat In Kitchens
0 Sell Cleaning Ovens
0 Wethert/Dryert Available

a SANFORD t/t with den.
carport. Ig. roome. 1413/m o.
HOO ircurlty.
eSANFORD l/l garage apt.
1373'mo 1331 tec
• t/t Flnertdge Cleb. pool,
tennli cl., all applt., wash
dryer. 1533mo. 1100tec.
P SA N F O R O • l/l duple*
w/llvlng rm, porch, new pelnt,
blinds. tlVS/mo. MOOsac.
eSANFORD. 1/1 duple*, with
garege. CMA. Ig rm»., *tra
storage Saaemo. * 1300sec
OLK. MARY. VI w/cerport,
outtlde storage, comer lot.
New point A carpet. Clean.
MM mo. MOOtec.
O MAVF AI R VILLAS. 1/t.
Prlvatel dbl. garage, all
a p p lt..o u ts id e patio
w/privacy. Ig. rmt. SS7I mo.
uoasec.

O U IIT l/l'* townhouse. ItOS
Park. Sanlord Adult commu
nlfy. Water/garbage Included
Cell Barb,'M F. 371 M41

ANFORD
1 bdrm. house,
complete privacy. I block
from new hospltel. SI 10 per
week plus 1130security.
Call 773 m s ~

CLEAN I bdrm. apt., upstairs,
private, w/tlreplace, S7S0/mo.
.ptusdspastt.............. 417 m s
LAKE JENNIE APARTMENTS
Roomy aparimentsl Free

Lake Ada I bdrm. SJ4Smo.
1bdrm, SMS mo and up

____ m * y »
RENT for eetl)
l/l condo
Plnerldge Club. Washer,
dryer,pool.tennlsl 311 Olai

SANFORD • 13 000 plui doling
movti you tnl Owner llnanc
Ing. 1 bdrm, completely
renovated, new root, doort,
window, deck, carpet, counter
topi. etc. Central air. Indudoi
ad|acent k&gt;l. Only 117.0001
' Invsifori Realty, 774S4tS

with tray. SM Ml-MM

STENSTROM

REALTY, INC.
We list «nd sell
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/Lake Mary area.

lienstram Realty, toe.
Property Mgmt. Mm Deyte
m -stw Atter i f m i m-tew
N IC ! 1 bdrm. I bath, control
H/A. Ig. fenced yard. 1300/mo
plus security CalmUSSt

SANFORD 1 or 4 bdrm. 1 bath,
lanced yd. quNt street across
from ball park. 1373/mo.
I 4F 1S4Qafter SPM
S4fS/mo. with discount, plus
deposit. 74V S400or 313 4140
OROVBVIEW ) bdrm. 1 bath
New carpet 1 paint Family
rm., appliances, garage.
SASO/mo. SANFORD •1 bdrm.
I bath, lanced, carpeted. S433
Caldwell Realty Svc. 7SB-17SS

DOUSLR BOX Spring-matt.
sets. Big selection taiAup.
LARRY*! MART........ J j M j j j

• H IV MOM I M iV DADI Re
treat In your master bdrm.
suite w/slep down silting rm.
Complete w/tplc.t Kids have 1
other Ig. bdrms.l Cat In kit.
CHAOnly........... .......141.300

230— Anfkjot/Classic
OREFRIOERATOR with top
door freoiar. White, frost free,
very nice. SMS11S47It

OBUICK LESABRE CLASSIC
ISS4. runs good. UNO 060
Call Ml 7414

a LAKE MARY SCHOOLS. 4/1
w/lamlly room , fireplace,
convenient to 14, lanced yard.
Only.......................... S70.000

WE NEED,Seminole County
homes to rontt For tree quola
lion - HO REALTY, &gt;M Mil
WINTER SPRINOS
704 S.

• NEAR THE Wteklva River 1
minutes from I 4. This 1
bdrm., I** bath home Is on •&gt;
acre 1 has stras galorel
177.500
N I C E C O N O O . w/appls..
wash dryer. Plnerldge Club

» i u rant plus dsp. H I'1144

117-Spofting Goods

OASSUM E NO OUALIFYI Cute

) bdrm., 1 bath w/great rm.,
Ig. equip, eat In kit., cathedral
callings Amoral......... 177.000
Asking h a m m jm rm jB *

m — P tts a Supplies

1OS— DuplexTHp Irx / K*wt

ANFORD 100 N. Elm Avo.
10.709 eg. It. with offices.
Brick truck hi. sprinkled.
440V 1 phase service. Lt&lt;
manu. or distribution ctr.
M.IOH. i n ISIS____________

Gov't Foreclosures, Re*
pos/Assume No Quality
Homesl Owner financing.
Seminote. Orange. Volusia.

ARE AAARV. 1 bdrm.. w/w
carpet. C/H/A. celling tans,
fenced yd. good area. Oil 4799

PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION a
EVERY FRIDAY liM PM
DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION

Make your
N ew Year's
1 resolution
a home
at

icapt tax, tag. vttta, ate.
isae MITSUBISHI • 4 dear,
aula, air, ttarea. ONLY
SiaMIprmanthl
Call Mr. Payne

CwNttBi

Country Lake

O u r S p o o la l Offm r WIH Havm
Y o u L a u g h in g A ll Thm W a y
To Thm B a n k .

M lanU

Cats, 123-1121

. ty m M S T S ;

1st Month s Rent
Coevilla Apartments

2714 Ridgewood Ave
Sanford

Newly Renovated!
tseoNooawooo avs, sanforo

aCHBVY LUV •*7A net
Wtttl M Butck 14 Vd
HeAey4barreLSl.7M l

330-5204

PAPER R O U rl •Orlande

final. Orculattan m dam

OENEVA •Cute 1 bdrm. I bath
In fawn. Iliad family ream,
new roof/carpet,. ssa.voo
I Sea-llll, leave mat iape

•all Murry I B. S

VALITT HatJalasaravemeMs

2if—Wanted*9uy

PlbiftBINO R R P i l A AND

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TaX Rafuad» N o Q u rg g » Rapid T ax llefaad* N o C h arts'R ap id T ax R a fte d

MR I b PAIR A
&gt; • Insursd.
ded. 497 $74 4311

AOOI T I DNS, Remodeling

T s ^ T w yC s

# m »A P K

W * D N / 34l"'a » e 7
I T T O YO TA PtIL

Nights M W V7

fW iN tm lM I Pool

Service/*—air
|S4M down. I 4M4 I/ma. far M
yrs. I bdrm. I bath. C/H/A,

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�Ask for second
opinion on A LS
by M trf Walter

B E E T L E B A IL C Y

b y A rt ia m a m

LO SER

TNK

DEAR DR. Q O TT: Are there
any diseases other than ALS
that can cause fasclculatloni?
My father has been diagnosed
with ALS. yet w e have some
doubt because as long as he
remains on antibiotics, he con­
tinues to grow stronger. A ll
testin g perform ed w as done
during -a bout o f the flu and
pneumonia, and w e are won­
dering if we should obtain a
second opinion.
D EAR READ ER: Fasclcula*
lions are brief, visible, random,
Irregu lar m u scular tw itch es.
They can occur in healthy peo­
p le , e s p e c ia lly th e e ld e rly .
Pasciculationa are also a con­
sequence o f low er m otor neuron
diseases: that is, any disorder or
disruption o f the nerves leading
from the spin e th at govern
movement.
iltiple
Such diseases Include m ultiple
r l ni g o m y e l l a .
s c le r o s is .
am -yotrophic
latera
sclerosis
EBBl sell
(also known as A LS or Lou
O eh rig's disease) and others.
These disorders are serious and
are alw ays associated with obvi­
ous neurological signs (in addi­
tion to fasciculations). including
weakness and difficulty m oving.
TO m y knowledge, antibiotics
w ill not affect ALS. If your father
has been diagnosed with this
condition and is im proving on
antibiotics, som ebody m ay nave
goofed. By all means obtain a
second opinion from a neurolo­
gist as soon as possible, at a tim e
when your father Is not suffering
from an Infection, such as flu.
which can throw o ff the testing.
OKA* M L QOTTi I've had
athlete’s foot for nine months.
My doctor prescribed Nizoral,
Loprox and I had a shot o f
cortisone that didn’t help. Do
you have any suggestions?
DBAR READER: A th lete’s
fo o t a fungus infection o f the
skin, is alm ost alw ays cured by
anti-fungus drugs, such as the
ones you mention. However, this

you

w oe

;

mom

RMJPH...TNtS SiOC*
MMX COULD USA.
A B f T R O K S N J lj

by Cterlaa M. Schulz
A LITTLE PROBLEM,MAAM..|
THERE'S A FOUNTAIN OUT
THERE. BUT NO WATER PI5H..
00 YOU HAVE A WATER PISH?

MAAM7 MY 006
WANTS TO 6 0 OUT IN
THE HALL FOR A
DRINK OF W A T E R ^

m

0 0 6 5 ARE WORTH
IT. M A'AM ..
“ U ----------

'

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LtJl ______
I 8 K I M EEK

MO

A lOTOFftOfUARt

W BGUECT

fO NU G L) AFFAIRS

O D w e a e w to w c u m o M

com m on foot Infection' som e­
tim es becom es chronic when
bacteria cause a double Infection
or If there is an underlying skin
disorder, such as ecsema. In
such cases, additional medicine,
such as antibiotics, must be
em ployed. I suggest you see a

derm atologist for a definitive
diagnosis because nine months
is too long to suffer from such an
annoying condition.
.

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Wilt DEWOTt ALLOT H(5
A n w n o o x T i c B c a W i '.

By Phillip Alder
If you bought and enjoyed
"T h e Best o f Robert Gray. Book
One,” you arc sure to want Book
Tw o ($5.50. The Bridge W orld,
39 West 94th Street. New York.
NY 10025-7124).
Gray, who lives in Scotland,
wrote many excellent articles for
The Bridge W orld m agazine.
The material Is advanced, but
the text Is lucid -and entertain­
ing.
Today's deal com es from the
chapter entitled "T h e Ace o f
Spades Woman.” Against four
hearts. West cashed his top
diamonds, showing a doubleton
in the process. (A ce from A-K.
when not doubleton, is tradi­
tional in Britain.) Then West
switched to the club 10. How
should South plan the play?
T h e on e-h eart o p en in g Is
stan d ard In B ritain , w here
four-card majors and the weak
no-trump reign supreme. The
two-spade rebld was aggressive

by T.K . Ryan

mm
ARLOAND JANIS

YOUR B1KTBDAT
Jaa. 7. IM S

•sisia*
PRANK AND IR N IS T

W
k

I

k

by Bab Tliava«

THfM

m

pominion

over

5fA

/«A. /4NP rtOHT Av/1Y THtY j
faitT T H t t H t L . THt TITAHIC An O A

------

—

T &amp; H N O tM U ItO .

•ARPIEIO
mo

ir r o a t

-wSfift

Your problems in the year
ahead might be due to excessive
opportunities rather than too few
options. U w ill be up to you to
evaluate each one carefully so
you don't waste tim e on the less
(D ec.
19) It m ight be wiser to take a
firm stand today instead o f
tryin g to be all things to all
people. This could turn out to be
the least com plicated o f your
choices. Tryin g to patch up a
broken rom ance? T h e AstroQraph Matchmaker can help you
to understand what to. do to
make the relationship work. Mall
92 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmak­
er. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101*
3428.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 90-Feb. 19)
Duties or responsibilities that
dem and im m ediate attention
should not be ignored today.
g your activities could
l your problems.
&gt; (Feb. 20-March 20)
There to a possibility a friend

] ANNIE

Declarer won the club switch
In hand and drew trumps. Hav­
ing placed East with the spade
ace. South planned to lead a low
spade through East and duck a
spade on the way back, hoping
to bring down the ace. But Just
In case the ace was singleton,
declarer decided to elim inate the
clubs first. Then, when In with
the spade ace. East would have
to concede a fatal ruff-anddiscard.
Everything looked prom ising
for a Southerly victory, but on
the third round o f cluba, East
discarded the spade ace. Now
d ecla rer c o u ld n 't avoid tw o
spade losers: one down.
D eclarer was gu ilty o f not
counting. Once East followed to
three hearts and two clubs, 12 o f
her cards were known. Declarer
had to assume the 13th was the
spade ace, and should have led
the suit after the second round o f
clubs.

m ight disappoint you today by
not Including you in a social
involvem ent. Don’ t blow this out
o f proportion, becauae it to Just a
careless oversight.
ABIBB (March 21-Aprtl 19)
You are the type o f person who
isn’t afraid to tackle more than
one endeavor sim ultaneously.
However, if you attem pt to do so
today, your adeptness m ight
desertyou.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
extrem ely careful today about
repeating secondhand Informa­
tion. Don't pass a story tooth ers
unless you know for sure it to
predicated upon (acts.
OBMOtl (May 21nJune 20) A
friendship could be placed in
Jeopardy today if there to too
m uch em phasis on m aterial
things. This could arouse self­
ishness in you. as well as in the
.pal involved.

CAMCBR (June 21-July 22) If
you have to negotiate an im por­
tant m atter tod ay.-d on ’t un­
derestim ate the person with
w h o m y o u ' r e . d e a lin g . T h e
trump cards you think thfU you
are holding could be In his or her
hand.

• QIZI

V J M II
♦ Ml
+ KQS

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’re
not likely* to be very effective
today working under pressure.
T h e re 's a good chance you
m ight impose these conditions
upon yourself by the way you
handle things.
VtmOO (A u g. 23-Sept. 22)
Under most conditions you tend
to b e w e l l - c o n t r o l l e d an d
practical, but today these line
q u a lit ie s m ig h t be h idd en
b eh in d Inclinations to take
rather foolish risks.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you fail to do your own thinking
today, there's a chance others
will m ake decisions for you
which might not serve your best
interests. When you com e to this
realization it m ay be too late.
BOORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
T ry to avoid someone today with
whom y o u 'v e had a recen t
disagreem en t. This situation
needs a bit more tim e to heal
before you can be true buddies
BAOITTAR1UB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Suppress Impulses today to
take physical or financial risks.
Don't let boldness or brashness
take precedence over common
sense.

By U tiw r i Starr

b y J im
• NMHNHIk

■ A IM
1

TW*'4F
y uj

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                    <text>torvln v Sanford, Lako Mary and Somlnola County alnoo 1SOS
*

NEW

DIGEST

88th Ysar, No. 129 - 8anford, Florida

‘Adult’ fun law eased?
County may relax prohibition against lap dancing
SANFORD — A proposed revision to the
four-year-old county adult entertainment ordlnance would relax the prohibition against
’’straddle dancing," but SherifT Don Esllnger said
he doubts adult entertainers will avail themselves
of the changes,
"I’ve never seen it." said Esllnger. “It’s not
been an enforcement problem."
The changes are offered in an effort to comply
with recent court decisions since the county
adopted Its adult entertainment ordinance In

Murdsr trial btglnt Monday

1

*

-Assistant County Attomsy Harlan Wright
- ■
1988, said Assistant County Attorney Harlan
Wright. The changes are
being proposed to
deter the spread of Infectious diseases, such as
the HIV virus that has been shown to cause AIDS,
by limiting contact between performers and the
public,
The proposed changes, which will be placed
before Seminole County commissioners Tuesday

In a discussion session, maintain the current
prohibition against straddle and "lap" dancing
between performers and customers, but would
allow two performers to put on such an
exhibition.
Straddle and lap dancing Involves the clothed
or unclothed contact of genital areas, breasts or
buttocks. Typically, a lapdancer squats In the lop
of the customer.
The ordinance still prohibits fondling or other
"erotic touching.’*
Wright, who drafted the proposal, said the
changes were made in response to a U.S.

Adult, Fags BA

Abortion ruling
affects county
health clinics

SANFORD — The first degree murder trial of
George Bellamy Jr. is scheduled to begin
Monday. Bellamy is accused of shooting to death
Islah Cohen and dumping his body In a Midway
parking lot in February. 1991.
By Ilate Friday, prosecutors and defense
attorneys had chosen 12 jurors and one
alternate to serve with one alternate Juror
remaining to be chosen. Jury selection began
Wednesday with attorneys choosing from a Jury
pool of approximately 50 people.
Assistant State Attorney Stewart Stone is
seeking the death penalty In the case. Bellamy Is
being defended by attorneys Jam es Flggatt and

8ANFORD - On Friday after­
noon. President Bill Clinton lifted
the "gag order" on federally funded
health clinics that had been tinFederally funded clinics, includ­
ing the Seminole County health
deartment’s health unit, were pre­
vented by the order from discussing
abortion as an option in a pre­
gnancy.
"That won’t be the caae any
more.” said Dr. Jorge Deju, director
of the Seminole County health

□ O sta to n
Erasing blight
What does the county's resolve to tear down
abandoned houses ripe to become "crack
houses" mean to neighborhoods/

‘Dallas’ based on
local entrepreneur

Ufa la a draam
At age go, Sanford's Jenny Oruby has ret
a career goal most people only dream about.

Rams awaap 'Hounds
LONQWOOD - Led by Karen Morris and
Jim m y Newberry, the Lake Mary High School
varsity girts and boys basketball teams won
both endsbfa doubleheader at Lyman Friday.

Vatican blaata Clinton
VATICAN CITY - President Clinton's de­
cision to eliminate abortion restrictions is a
"humiliating defeat” for humanity, the Vatican
said Saturday.
"Those who hoped that Clinton's first acts
might be towards renewal,' Involving above all
the protection of human rights, have had a
strong disappointment." the Vatican newspaper
L’Osservatore Romano said in a brief article.
On Friday. Clinton ended restrictions on
abortion counseling and medical research in­
volving fetal tissue. He also permitted abortions
at military hospitals and pledged to review a ban
on the French abortion pill RU-486.
Shortly after Clinton's election, the newspaper
praised formrr President Bush's anti-abortion
stance and warned Clinton not to let liberty turn
into "license to strike at the most weak."
Including "unborn babies."
On Saturday, the newspaper said: "It is not
ess fo r... humanity that once more It has
forced to undergo a humiliating defeat of

PtlfftfftT-TttMmtTTtT^ ttgA
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department. "We will now be able
to give more detailed advice to
women who cotne in seeking i t "
The county health department is
federally funded with additional
funding from the county.
During the time in which the "gag
order" was in effect. Deju said that
women who came to the clinic
seeking advice were told that "there
are a number of clinics in the area."
They were told, Deju said, to look in
the yellow pages to find the loca­
tions of those clinics.
"We could not even tell them the
nam es or show them the yellow

the participants

Oood morning! Last Sunday we
to ld you a b o u t T e x a s m u lti­
billionaire H.L. Hunt creating the
industrial park in Sanford and
establishing the canning toctory In
the 1900s. It later became the
Cardinal plant.
Late in 1909 Hunt dosed his
cannery. Inspectors from the UA.
Department' of" Agriculture found
mlnufgfc oorticlca
vegetables. It was determined the
foreign objects cam e from the
asbestos ceding used under the roof
when the plant was built. U8DA
people told Hunt to remove the
asbestos celling before the plant was
to resume operations in February
1970. Hunt told the USDA to forget
i t He was going to close the plant
anyway. And. be did.
I was told by several sources who
knew the whole story behind the

JULIAN
8TEN8TROM

of the canning operation to pay the
tab foe the "Lifeline" radio pro­
grams. Hunt felt, I was told, he had
gotten his message to the people
and particularly to the Internal
Revenue Service.
In 1971. Hunt leased the factory
to a mobile home manufacturer out
of Alabama. The company was
known as Winchester Homes. As

SANFORD — 4C. the Community Coordinated
Child Care for Central Florida, will be taking over
operation of the Head Start program from the
county school system. The official announcement
will be made Monday morning.
Congressmen Bill McCollum and John Mica will
be on hand for a press conference to announce
the change that will affect thousands of people in

Msinstreet Program

Cloudy and warm,
SANFORD — The Historic Sanford Association
has awarded a contract to begin applications for
Mainstreet Program grants. The money is to be
used in a refurbishing of the historic downtown
Sanford area.
According to HSA Chairman Chris Cranlas.
"We have hired Nell Frits of Winter Garden, to
prepare paperwork on the applications for the
grant money. We expect the Anal draft will be
completed by sometime In June, and we will be
able to send them In for approval around
August."
Cranlas explained that Frits was employed in

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Cal l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�•

•

N E W S F R O M T H E R E G I O N A N D A( : r o s s t h e s T A T E

_

Small KmisIm

m m and ln«urano« ftfomw
TALLAHASSEE —Bmnloyera are taking advantage of anew
law designed to make health care tnsurance available and

maximum annual benefit of #1 million

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

aspects at signs that are or could

During discussion of the farreaching ordinance, Commlsstoner Oeorge Duryea asked
about the to e of Oafs. "What
■bout tbs alas of an American
Hag that can be used?"
West responded, "The ordl*
nance says U.S. flags with a
maximum site of SO square fleet
can be used as a display of

H lS R S f S S ir

tauM dlnU to Italy."

'
LAKE MARY — The Lake
Mary City Comm ission began
steps to approve a new sign code
Thursday night. The proposed
ordinance passed unanimously
on find reading.
*'Dp dntll now," explained
City Planner Matt West, “the
codes arc have been using were
cdten difficult to understand,
2 W 5 *
p een atneaen ana others
added or amended to the point
often oonl^Mng
or unclear.
"What we are doing here," he
said, "Is putting dvoythtng Into

The new ordinance was ere*
ated by the city 's Business
Advisory Board during many
months of work last year. Lowry
Rockett, who now serves as
mayor of Lakt Mary, chaired the
board during that time.
When the oronoaal was first
presented to tnecttycommiseion
early this month It was tabled
pending” some r e w o r tin g b y raJck."
’ '
Clty Atto™«y * * Julianr and
The new sign oode wtO coma
several changes. "The two main un Ear second readbig and Baal
items in the «»h*ngf* were the adoption a t t h s n a s f la h s Maty
sections defining awning signs. C ity C om m ission m eetin g ,
and the modifications to tempo* scheduled for Peb. 4.
r a r y s ig n s fo r p ro fit a n d
During the sama meeting, the
nonprofit events ao they would d ty commission also approved

temporary waiver of sign regula*
tiona along Lake Mary Boule*
vard.
"The city passed an ordinance
last year giving tjra jw ra w w y
waiver,*' w est said. "But It was
to run out at the conclusion of
co n stru ctio n , or Dec. S la t,
whichever came first"
"Aa you know, construction

Skybus service expands in Florida
' said Rick A scott,
dent of Marketing. "We
there Is a tremendous
demand for low cost
tween these d tles that
&gt;people leave their oars
isk In the stelae."
pending schedules will

"We are very encouraged by
the growth of the Skybue opera*
tloo, It'D have some benefits for
trav el In b u r c o m m u n ity ."
All fares betw een a n y o f
Skybua* Florida dtiee are either
860 or STB. Skybue tickets do
net cany any stay-over ‘

However. Sanford A irport

"Skybua also expects to atact many business people travwith
traveling to

real coat saving flues to the
Florida population, this was a
great next step for Skybus'
growth.*'
For Skybus, tickets can be
purchase at an airline counter or
through on advance reservation
purenase ucxeta up to iou aayi
in advance. C u rren tly , th e
airline serves Ft. Lauderdale.
New York and Tampa/BL Fete In
addition to Sanford.

ly contractors for
betialtwrof r Descent
1
*. . •

oruttoy of MU paying

T A MF A j - A p a t i e n t

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f

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v

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fS S S ?

In n to A Y
POyddy 76*58

PtJyddy 75*58
v»8*

J a c k s o n v ille .
r&gt;sa««dfa in the comptroller's
office say th sy usually cu t

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 24, 1NS

Ju ry award hailed aa
hemophiliacs’ victory
TAMPA — A verdict against a
drug company in the death of an
AIDS-infected hemophiliac boy
was hailed as a victory for other
hemophiliacs who believe they
too contracted the virus from
tainted blood products.
Parents of Jason Christopher,
who died of AIDS last February
at age II , were awarded more
than $2 million Friday In their
federal legal b attle ag ain st
Armour Pharmaceuticals.
They claimed the company
knew for more than two years In
the early 1960s their products
could transmit the deadly virus
but failed to issue warnings.

charged with driving under the Influence, poeaeiefon of an
open container, fkllure to possess and display a drivers license,
failure to display a registration and having no proof of
insurance by Caasetbeny Police on Thursday.
Police said he was stopped for driving erratically. When he
was stopped, he was unable to And his license, his registration
and hla proof of Insurance,
They said there was an open beer can on the s e a t
They said he felled a road side sobriety test.
He was taken to the John B. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on WOO bond.

Disorderly Intoxication alleged
Sidney Ray Qore, 26, 300 Airport Bhrd., was charged with
disorderly Intoxication by Seminole County ahertfTa officers on
Friday.
Deputies said that they were Investigating an Incident of
criminal mischief at the Poettime Bar near Longwood. They
said Qore became uncooperative and began to raise his voice.
When he refused to calm down, after repeated warnings, he
eras placed under arrest and taken to the John B. Polk
Correctional Facility where he was held on 6100 bond.

6 Panonal Excallancs w

Battery charged

8arah Jtannc,Counselor,Teacher,Hypnothcra
plat, presents classes In a New &amp; Delightful HeaRns
science on how to Create Joy &amp; Abundance, Be
Youthful &amp; Vital, Gain Self-respect ft Confidence,
Change Mental Attitudes A Emotional Patteme. Be

Joseph Billy Bob Solomon. 40. 1603 W. 11th 8 t . Sanford,
was charged with battery and domestic violence when he was
arrested by Sanford Police on Thursday.
Police said he and his girlfriend were havtng a verbal dispute
when he slapped her across the Moe, causing some redness.
He was held without bond at the John B. Polk Correctional

held on 61.000bond.

Resisting arrest charged
Dalton Joseph Jason. Jr., 35,1018 Maple Ave., Sanford, was
charged with disorderly Intoxication and resisting arrest with
violence.
Police said they arrived a t the residence to Investigate “an
unknown problem" when Jason became betigerent and that he
got Into the officer's face and began cursing atnlm .
Officers reported the
on ” l»n
th»t he tried
to pull away from officers as he was being arrested.
He was taken to the John B. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on 63.500bond.

Warrant arrests
Donnie Jackann, 31. 1965 2nd Dr., Sanford, was charged In
connection with a warrant
Htm trtth failure to »p f—&gt;
In court on battery charges. He waaheld on 61.000bond.

“ Justice was done for all
h e m o p h llla c a ," S te v e n
Christopher said outside court.
"They Infected people with AIDS
knowingly and they let It go an
so they could keep* m aking
money off their products. “
Christopher and hla ex-wife
Brenda Walla were each awarded
61 million plus 67.200 to defray
costa of their son's funeral.
Some 20,000 Americans have
hemophilia, a hereditary condi­
tion that prevents the normal
c lo ttin g of b lo o d , an d , a n
estimated half have tested posi­
tive for the HIV virus that causes
acquired Immune deficiency
syndrome.

*- w
5-year-old
forgotten
at school

w

a

r f

JC P e n n e y A F T E R

DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. - A
5-yea^old forgotten by h lr
teacher and classmates was lefl
at school after he was sent to
nap In a storage closet for
misbehaving in claas.
Terrell Lewis’ family became
frantic when the klndergartner
failed to come home from school
and employees at Deerfield Park
Elem entary Insisted he was
gone. “1 thought somebody had
abducted my child." said Ter­
rell's mother, Annie Lewis.
T h e fa m ily s a id s c h o o l
employees told them to search
th e neighborhood, instating
Terrell w asn't in the school

STARTS MONDAY 1/2510:00 AM TO 0:00 PM
Wo will bo dosed today 8un. 1/24 to taka Invsnt
and to prepare for our Bid Altar Inventory Sal

rir-fn -.ih
usoui
imhi-i” .brills ;&lt;•- in’ '

December recycling
efforts rebounded

but the custodian refused?' aald
M u d Clark, a cousin who went
to look for Terrell. The custodian
lo c a te d th e boy a b o u t 10
minutes later.
The handling of the incident
by 30-year teaching veteran
Maggie Harte has been turned
over to the Broward. County
school Investigators, but prin­
cipal.Carolyn Eggelletion aakl It
was an honest mistake.
" T h e te a c h e r w as v e ry
apologetic." Eggelletion said.
"She did not do It intentionally."
That was no consolation to
Terrell’s family or him.
•Tm mad," Terrell aald Fri­
day. ''Everybody left me."
The Lewis family consulted
attorney Johnny McCray Jr.,
who aald, "if It did happen the
way they say It did, that form of
punishment la barbaric In to­
day's school system."
Terrell's mother agreed, say­
ing she would have been reported to the state social service
agency If she did the same thing.

recycling croons rroounaea in

pnd recycling by Seminole
C ounty residents an d bust*
neaamen last
up from
th e 4.9 million lb. lull InNorea*

»

i : \ ]*-•’

■

�■•"■• ■• ?rfj-Y;ir,-.Vffl* rr&lt;:,to

8und*y,

January

24, 1M 3

The Martin Luther King Jr. oelebmtloo bald In
the city of 8anford Jan. 12*16, 1003 met
expectation* resoundingly.
The Martin Luther King Celebration Choir was
comprised of m any of the m embers who
participated In the very Drat MLK Celebration
Choir. The choir performed outstandingly under
th e ' direction of Mary W hitehurst Assisting
Whitehurst were directors Faye Williams, Gloria
Williams and Vincent Smith.
Governor Lawton Chiles attended the Unity
Prayer Breakftst and gave autographs and waa
photographed with many of the children and the
assem b led g u e sts. T he s p iritu a lity th a t

EDITORIALS

LURLENE
SWEETING

inicr*fwin kcumioiui uovcivwicc gnu uve looi*

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. CommemoraUve
CommlaaIon waa Ita first historical com­
memorative edition. Sanford waa the flrat city In
this state selected to launch the state's com­
mitment to the philosophies of Dr. Martin Luther
King.
Members of the Florida Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. Commemorative Commission are: Professor
Jam es Baton, chairperson: Phyllis Berry, Larry
Ellis, Commissioner Havert Penn: Ed Holt.
Celestlne Lewis, Senator Carrie Meek. Oerri
Thompson, Reggie Coachman, Regina Faison,
Roosevelt H arris. J a m e s H uger, Shaurle
Mathews, Marie Palmer and Elisabeth Wesley.
Nina Martines is the staff director.
Members of the 8tate Commemorative Com­
mission esm^feom cities throughout the state.
The advent of the MLK Steering Committee
came about accordingly. Commissioner Robert
Thomas Jr. had advocated that the city of
Safiford have a Human Relations Advisory
Board. This board was established by the city
commissioners. Later Mayor Bettye Smith com­
municated her desire for the city of Sanford to
celebrate MLK's birthday; yours truly was
serving as chairman of the Human Relations
Advisory Board. It appeared to be a natural way
to promote positive race relations. Hence mem­
bers of the Human Relations Advisory Board
members desiring to become members of the
first MLK Steering Committee volunteered along
with other community members.

JACK ANDERSON

Australia acts on
skin cancer woes
X ■■i
11' m 1, 1

\

K

of the problems with decaying neighborhoods
In Midway. Sanford and southern ahraa of the
county are abandoned, decaying buildings
These structures scar nelghbamooda. They

and criminal. Often in these havens, crack
li&gt;

j-

7 A
■■

nj
y

3 O D fV\ A N

for repair by
icy. rvwnmfred one such
on McCarthy
way. Good- We hope the
the county and some houa*
l agency can work together
log positive from aomathlnai
•erne of the other nuisances
ty scrutinized before the
y process of review
to free land for new
Neighborhood re-

SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA - Halfway across
the globe, this nstlon of sun worshipers Is
undergoing a 1990s version of a polio scare.
Just as children In 1940s America were
warned to stay out of public areas for fear of
catching polio. Australia has altered Us
national agenda to cope with Its moat serious
bJte health threat In decades: sktn cancer.
citizens have become living guinea pigs for
a disease that is growing to epidemic
proportions as the
earth's ozone layer
depletes.
,
A u s tra lia 's s k y ­
rocketing cancer rate
has spawned a minor
cultural revolution
here, where nearly
everyone lives by the
i&gt;coast.ti«nd beaches
mead -mdee to : the
local culture than
' shopping mall*!do u&gt;
American suburbia/
A p ersisten t bgtnpaign by local and
national government £ This nation of
*un
as well as non-profit
worahiperals
g ro u p s h a s been
undsrpolnaa
spreading me worn
1990s version
about the dangers of
overexposure.
As s result, the
scara. m
beaches today are
■
r ----------clotted with sunscreen bottles, with sties up
400 percent In the last four years. The
lifeguards wear hats, long-sleeved shirts, and
long pant* to shield themselves from the sun.
Hat sales have increased ISO percent In' the
last year alone,
"We’re trying to change a behavior that’s
been around for SO to 70 yean.” Susie
Murray, a spokesperson for the Cancer
Institute here, told our associate Melinda
Maas. "In a decade we've done a W to tum
thing* around."
Partly as a result of these efforts, school
children are now required to wear hats
outdoors, practice limes for sports team*
have been moved from midday to the late
afternoon, and the buhlon magazines counsel
Australians on hoW to look and feel beautiful
without a tan. Ultraviolet radiation levels are
announced on the local news in the same
manner that American* are told about air
quality. Cancer checks are available for free
on many local beaches.
Researchers now predict that two out of
three people who spent their childhood and
adolescence In Australia will develop some
form of skin cancer during their lives. It has
the highest rate of skin cancer In the world
with 140.000 new cases diagnosed each year
About 1.000 people die from the disease
annually, nearly four-fifths of whom have
melanoma, the most dangerous form of sktn
cancer. Melanoma cases have doubled In
Australia In Uie past seven yean.
The skin cancer epidemic has put Australia
at the cutting edge of the ozone controversy,
which blew up In 1963 after scientists
discovered a large hole developing In the
ozone layer over Antarctica. The hole was
tra c e d -to th e global p ro liferatio n of
Ctdorafluorocarbons. After year* of doubt
about the merits of the ozone studies, the
evidence in Australis appears to seal the
argument that the sun's ultraviolet rays can
be deadly tf not filtered through the ozone
layer.
Environmentalists and scientists do have
some hope. The new White House team of BUI
Clinton and At Gore promises to breathe new
life Into the battle to reduce the world's
dependence on CFCs and other "greenhouse
gases."
While George Bush scored some lastminute campaign points by referring to Vice

. This Is not to ray that what Zoe Betrd did

g g mmmnir\*\mmm mm m naytowg ticket.
Moreover the story addb to the perception that
there are rules far the ----------------------------rich and rules for the
.

f||

jBMMM:;#onttttutlona] amendment

B 5 t 2 S L T . £ £ E meenl u

af the measure. Amendment 2,
•y ve not acted negatively against
r,cMtaa that antidiscrimination laws

f p iclsl protection,above all others.
m and they know ft. Such laws
la* that my* all too often are singled
d uafehty because of who they are.
at dtenrimlnatlon aren't adopted to
&gt;, but to ensure that V
everyone else takes
t an apartment, the
l other ways treated

B

to deny gays their
Christians, like Pat
i see people who call
hields and spears to
do britora homosexuality to sinful.
adSrrad d^Uto

Letters should be on a single subject and h r
m brief as possible. The tetters are subject to

square mites. Though much of this was due
•o the eruption of Mount Ptnatubo in the
Philippines, it's'm ostly the result of CFOs
released tmo the atmosphere, some as for
buck aa the 1960a,

�P W W w lt9

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florid* - Sunday, January 24, 1983 - IS

Stenstrom
long as I live I
will never forget the first mobile
home to come out of the plant.
After a brief ceremony. San­
ford Mayor Lee Moore was
handed a bottle of champagne to
"christen" the Initial unit Moore
hit the comer of the mobile
home. The bottle didn't break
but It left a half moon dent In the
comer of the home. Moore tried
It again. Same result! Finally.
Moore bent way down and
smashed the bottle against an
Iron rail under the mobile home.
About a year and a half later
W inchester moved back to
Alabama.
tn 1974. Austin Oulrllnger.
after getting his Cardinal factory
In Columbus. Ohio rolling, de­
cided to do In Florida what he
had started so successfully in
Ohio. He hired a young man.
Paul Jarvis, as his ssslstant. He
directed him to find a vacant
building that could be used as a
plant or a site where a factory
could be built.
Jarvis and Oulrjlnger spent
s e v e ra l m o n th s s e a rc h in g
Central Florida. It was Jarvis
who "discovered" the Hunt
f lant. They continued searching
tor a couple more months but
K
always came back to the Hunt
plant. While all this was going
on Cardinal had established a
small office In DeLand.
Finally. OulHlnger decided the
Hunt plant was the best move
for him to make. He contacted
Hunt Oil folks in Dallss. Hunt
officials took s night flight to
Orlando. Early the following
morning Hunt and Cardinal
came lo an agreement and put
the plant under contract. In
September the deal was closed.
In October Cardinal moved Its
offices to the little brick building
In front of the factory.
It took Cardinal two years to
get the factory ready. It went
Into production In October 1970
and s ta rte d m an u factu rin g
modules for the company's first
Florida project — Sanford Court
Apartments. A grand opening of
the first apartment project was
held in December and Cardinal
took off like a shot from the
Cape.
Most of you know the rest of
the story. You realise that when
Congress enacted the Tax Re­
form Act of 1906 It did away
with tax shelters that "clipped
the wings" of the "redbird" and
the Cardinal could fly no longer.
you a questions
it nighttime
the
TV?
tlvated audiences
and half the nations of the world.
Have you figured it out? It

Adult
"Dallas!" It turned out "Dallas" on the Hunt family before the
was a take-off on the Hunt patriarch died. Everything went
well. About eight months later
family!
Hunt OH Company was based Hairy Reasoner. now deceased,
in Dallas. TV's Ewing Oil Com- did a CBS-TV documentary on
was baaed In Dallas. The the life and times of H.L. Hunt.
mansion was 19 miles out Everything went well until the
final second*. Reasoner sum­
of Dallas. Ewing's "Southfork"
ming up the shows- asked "Can
ranch was 19 miles out of Dallas.
The H unt m ansion was In you Imagine a man with all that
Braddock County. "Southfork" money broWn-baggtng his lunch
wss In Braddock County. Hunt to his Dallas office?"
had three sons. Ewing had three
It's said Hunt went to hla
sons. The H unt sons were g r a v e w it h o u t f o r g iv in g
Bunker. Lawrence Edward and Reasoner for his offensive re­
Lamarr. The three Ewing sons mark. ,
were J.R., Bobby and Oary.
Two of the Hunt sons lived In
So. folks, when you look at
Texas. Two of the Ewing sons that old Hunt plant on South
lived In Texas. One Hunt son. Sanford Avenue and Silver Lake
Lamarr, resides in Kansas City Drive you now know there's a lot
and owns the Kansas City Chiefs of history behind It.
of the National Football League.
During the first part of this
One Ew ing son re sid es In two-part yam we told you that
California and plays the Oary products canned at Hunt's plant
carried the "Saxet" label. 1
Ewing role on "Knots Landing."
Not long after Hunt died the wonder how many of y o u figured
actor who played Josh Ewing, out where the name "Saxet"
(the father) passed away. The came from. Good for you ff you
Hunt brothers you will recall did. If you didn't "Saxet" Is not
started oil explorations in Libya a thing In this world but "Tex­
which were confiscated by Colo­ as" spelled backward.
nel Qaddafl. Meanwhile. Bunker
tried to comer the silver market.
On TV. •J.R. got involved In
trying to comer oil production In
the Far East and nearly lost the
Ewing fortune.
C se tla a sd from Pag* IA
After Hunt's death a woman In
pages where they were
Shreveport claimed her son was listed." Deju said.
fathered by H.L. Hunt. She sued
Though a federal court order
Hunt's estate tn a federal court signed In November prevented
in Atlanta and was awarded the federal government from
several million dollars. After actually enforcing the "gag or­
Ewing's death It came to light der." Deju said that the order
that before Josh married "Miss was enforced here In Seminole
Elite" he had an affair with a County.
woman who bore him a son —
Abortions can not be done at
Ray Krebs, the foreman of the the county health unit as there
Southfork Ranch. Ray then are no surgical facilities at the
became a stepbrother .to the unit.
Ewtngboys.
"But now (that the "gog or­
As I teamed more and more der" has been lifted) we will
about the Hunts I began to see a probably be able to give them
similar situation between the more detailed advice." Deju said.
real Hunt family and TV's Ewing
He added that he Is glad the
family. I wrote letters to nears "gag order" has been lifted.
organisations. One morning the
"There will be lea* limitations
papers carried a story that on what we will be able tell the
Lorimar Productions admitted women who come to us." he
"Dallas” was a "take-off" on the, noted.
Hunt family.
Women will be able to find out
This yam would not be com­ what an abortion entails, to
plete without this: When Bunker team about the c o s t s and to find
out what their other options
committee to testify about the might be. Deju said.
silver scandal, the chairman at
‘i t makes things easier." he
one point posed thla question:
explained. "And I believe that it
' i t Isn't necessary for you to to offers more options to the
answer but would you tell us women we see.*'
how much you’re worth?"
On Friday. Clinton also rolled
. "Mr. C h a irm a n ,, Bunker, re­ back restrictions on medical
plied. I don't roaflf know. Daddy rcvegrchusingfelaUiMUe.
would tell us If s roaqknew what
Clinton alan, gave.perm
he was worth, he'w asn't worth for abortions a t ittOttary
very much."
;
tala and pledged to review a ban
Finally. NBC's Edwin Newman on Importing the French abor­
did an hour radio documentary tion pill RU-406.

K

Abortion-

Sybil Myrlm ofAugusia. Ga. and
Lena E. Hammond. 98. 171
Lake Ave.. Longwood. died Fri­
day. Jan. 22 at Better Living
Center.
A homemaker, she was born
in Worcester. Maas, on April 8,
1894. She moved to Central
Florida In 1938.
She was a member of the First
C o n g re g a tio n a l C h r is tia n
Church of Sanford. She was also
a member of the Civic League of
L o n gw ood, th e Longw ood
Qardeh Club. Seminole Chapter
2 of the Order of Eastern Star
and the Ladies Auxiliary of
Campbell Loosing American
Legion of Sanford.
Survivors include her sons J .
Russell of Longwood and Robert
FTedric of New Smyrna Beach: four g ran d ch ild ren an d 10
Oalnes Funeral Home. Long­
wood, In charge of arrange-

Mary M. "Pinkey" Harrell. 80.
170 Woodridge Trail. Sanford,
died Thursday. Jan. 21 at home. .
A lifelong resident, she was
bom in Sanford on June 14.
1930. She was a homemaker.
She was a member of the
Church ofOod of Prophecy.
Survivors Include her husband
Duane: her daugbtera Mary
Blaine Panke and Deborah
LaDonne Jordan, both of San­
ford: her sons Gregory D. and
Oary A., both of Kissimmee: her
b ro th e rs Earl Holcombe of
S a v a n n a h . G a. an d Leslie
Holcombe of Bath. SC: her stater

r »

Iram kow F u n e ra l Home,
tn charge of arrangeOwen Pittman. 04. Shepard
Court. W inter Springs, died
Thursday. Jan. 21 at his home.
Bom tn Miami on April 28.
1927. he was a consultant In the
m en’s clothing Industry. He
moved to Central Florida In
1978. A member of the Blgna Nu
fraternity of the University of
F l o r i d a , h e w a s a ls o a n

Margaret Pietrefesa of North
Brunswick. NJ. Helen Fisher of
Jamesburg. NJ. Irene Doll of
Edison. NJ. Elsie Normant of
Edison. NJ. Eleanor Perkowski
of Fairbanks. AK and Sister
Joann Sinko of Oakland. MD and
his brothers Ernest Sinko of
Stuart and Eugene Sinko of
Hockesain. DE.
Oramko Funeral Home. San-ford. In charge of arrangements.

Fwwral wrvtCM tsr m i. Mary M.
He is survived by his artfe
Busan S.t hla step-daughter ly u tu r " HamN. M. at Iw t o * wto * M
iFwm
P WWrOt
fi* , p. u* i i p rapnvey wim
u. mt
!?[
Buaan Abel of Loo Angeles: his m
,•RIBPi
Balsilaa IsUnsasi
ill
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•fiKiaiinp.
*nrwrnmn w
win
mother Rosemary of Miami and
In M|M||||
llpuititiwiL
of Coral £» rMa. FrianSi may call at Oramkaar
his sister Carol

B aldw ln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of the arrangements.
Joseph Michael Sinko, 67.
3291 8. Sanford Ave.. Sanford,
died Wednesday. Jan. 20. at hla
Bom In New Brunswick. NJ on
Feb. 8, 1928. he moved to
Central Florida In I960.
Retired from the UA. Navy, he
wss the manager of the Loyal
Order of Moose Lodge 1051,
Sanford. He was also a member
of the American Legion Post 53.
VFW Post 10108 and the Fleet
Reserve Branch 147.
He served tn Walrtd War 11, In.
the Korean Conflict and In Viet
Nam.
He ia survived by his sisters

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“

Caatlaasd from Page ig

4C observes week
for working parents

Supreme Court decision In 1991
that determined local govern­
ments could not target specific
behavior or performances simply
because It Involves nudity.
"Expressive conduct Is pro­
tected by the First Amend­
ment." said Wright. "One lower
court raised the question of how
could certain kinds of activity be
prohibited In one establishment
when a person could go next
door and see essentially the
same behavior being conducted
between people dancing the
lam bada.'1
The Lambada Is a LatinInfluenced dance where the
couple often dance with thighs
tightly together.
Wright said the changes arc
being recommended to assure
the ordinance can withstand a
constitutional challenge.
Another change sought by
Esllnger drops the current per­
mitting of adult entertainment
p e r f o r m e r s , b u t r e q u ir e s
establishment owners to main­
tain records of their employees.
Including photographs. The rec­
ords must be kept not only on
performers, but management,
stockpersons and tellers.
Esllnger said the change was
needed In response to court
decisions prohibiting permits as
a condition of employment. The
case Involved the city of Palm
Beach which required photo­
graphic Identification cards for
all d o m estic la b o re rs th a t
worked on the Island.
Another change to the ordi­
nance would require non porous
flooring and seating In adult
movie theaters and regular
c le a n in g w ith " in d u s tr ia l
strength cleaning agents." As he
knows of no adult movie thesters In Seminole County. Esl­
lnger said the provision would
have no Immediate effect.
Wright said other cities and
counties have found adult movie
theaters have often harbored
unsanitary conditions not found
at movie houses frequented by
the public a | large. Such a
provision would assure the
health, safety and welfare of the
public, he said*

Seminole County.
The press conference will be
held at the Hopper Head Start
Program office at 1101 Bay
Avenue In Sanford. Among
special guests will be Phoebe
Carpenter, president of 4C.
The event will also launch the
beginning of "W eek of the
Working Parent." a celebration
conducted by 4C to pay tribute
to parents and employers In the
Seminole. Orange and Osceola
County areas who rely on child
day care In order to become
Involved In financial support for
families.
Carpenter explained 4C. "A
com m unity-based, non-profit
services coordination agency. 4C
is dedicated to Improving the
quality of life for children In
Centra! Florida by forming link­
ages between agencies, services
a n d fa m ilie s w ith y o u n g

Grant

Arbor
1A

the same capacity by
city of Winter
as wcl^as two others, in
sue
ifuJjfiyfegftlhlng fupds
be paid 0 !O ,« » for Ms work.
"It’s a-co n tract agreement."
Crania* said. "It's not an hourly
salary or 1United to a specific
time period for work. It’s for
getting the work done."
B ernal months ago. the City
of 8anford granted 810.000 In
matching funds to the Historic
Sanford Association to be
in helping get the
ms tiled. The money was to be
matched by the 8HA.
Cran las has previously com­
mented that the matching funds
came in the form of a throe year
free rental of an office at 10141
W. First Street, which will be
used as a Welcome Center, and
as Frits'* base of operations In
Sanford.
"We haven't finalised this
yet." Crania* said, "so we don't
know what hours he will be at
the center. That's something we
will still have to discuss tn the
near future."
The Florida Mainstreet Pro­
gram is part of' the national.
Mainstreet Program which pro­
vides money for Improvements
In downtown areas, based on
many requirements.

dent. "Employers make U
possible for parents to earn a
liv in g an d s u p p o rt th e ir
County commissions have children."
s
declared next week as "The
During next week, each of
Week of the Working Parent" the 4C facilities will hold open
In Seminole. Orange and Os­ house every day. Employers
ceola Counties. Special ob­ are encouraged to distribute
servances will be held.
"Week of th* Working Parent"
One of the big events Is flyers to their employees. Each
planned for Friday, Jan. 29. features a cut-out paper doll
when 4C. the Community Co­ for parents to wear to work on
o rd in a te d C hild C are for Jan. 29 In support of the
Central Florida will hold an event.
awards ceremony at Church
"We are hoping that parents
Street Marketplace tn Orlando, will take the dou home, have
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. The their children decorate It and
event will pay recognition to write the child's name and age
employers who provide child on It, then pin the doll to their
c a r e b e n e f i t s f o r t h e i r lapels,” Carpenter explained.
employees through 4C.
Employers who wish to dis­
"W orking parents and a tribute the flyers may obtain
good economy guarantee the them by c o n tac tin g Debt
future for our children.*
W eltsel, 4C a s s is ta n t, a t
Phoebe Carpenter. 4C presi­ 894-8393. e x t 114.
Harald Staff Writer

Start
1A

children.
. J£
She continued. "With our fi­
nancial assistance, over 13,(
children In the tri-county' i
receive child day care that their
parents rapid not otherwide af­
ford. This means, of course, that
the parents of these children are
able to remain In the workplace,
knowing that their children are
taken care of In their absence.
Regarding the future of Head
Start. Carpenter has said, "Head
Sum must be expanded to reach
all eligible children for whom It
was Intended. Expansion of
HRS-subsidlxed child care for all
eligible families must occur as
well, with technical assistance
and resource development of the
private Industry."
Specific details cm taking over
the Head Start program are
expected to be announced dur­
ing Monday m orning’s press
conference.

be a lasting m em orial th a t
everyone can enjoy."
T r ls h T h o m p so n , o f th e
county, extension ..servios,^ proskied • over- thftipkiariagl'ufHa
M iktr'M artln. the county's if laurel oaktreeon,theessU prie of
u than 7 forester., spbke' briefly theBanfordMufgHtp.iiiiMK •»
...
—-&gt; «i»..■ ..h
4h*-types of uses that do .
She spoke about how to oars
, tn the unique Central Flor­
ida climate and soil.
for trees during the Aral year
Several examples of the trees transition period, which Is the
beat suited for the area are found most critical to their survival.
, Thompson Invited those who
throughout the city park and
Martin pointed them out. Many are considering a landscaping
more will be planted over the pngect on their property to visit
course of the next few y e a n In the county extention service to
take advantage of the computer
the city’s new memorial grove.
"I love the opportunity to program which w iU 'hdp select
come out here and td l people Uw JMet trees fo r/th e area In
about the trees that can be which they will be planted.
"It's a- useful program." she
grown successfully in this area."
said- "It's free and we're excited
Martin said.
* lit."
.•
"It’s a wonderful concept."
la .planning another
said Howard Jeffries, mainte­
ireness Day on Feb. 0
nance coordinator for the city.
"These trees, which can be which will also be at Fori Mellon
purchased through the city, will Park.

1A

estlng program."
Her daughter was more intermeeting the famous

�MIm 8H8

For Personnl
&amp; Commercial
Insurance

competition
|)Ktm Hurah,
Watt Disney
f W&lt;kW 1M3 Ambassador, chats
raeantly with Halan Nteola
Lemon, a candidats for Mlaa
1 Sam Inolt High School. Tha
Mlaa 8H 8 o o m p atltlo n la
aponaorad by tha PT8A to
racognlza and reward hard
work and achievem ent by
fa m a la s t u d e n t s a n d to
showcase young woman from
aoroaa tha campus eommunlty.
Lemon was aponaorad by Kay
Club. Hurah la advising con*

New search foe attorney Qoneral
WASHINGTON — President Clinton Is beginning a new
search for an attorney general to replace controversial nominee
Zoe Baird, but administration officials say he Isn't looking only
at women candidates.
“ The president Is going to look for the best person to All the
post." George Stephanopoulos, the White House communica­
tions director, aald Friday.
Baird, who withdrew her name early Friday amid a political
storm that erupted when she admitted hiring two Illegal aliens
to work In her home, was the first woman nominated to be
attorney general. And women's groups are urging that another
woman be appointed.
Vice President A1 Qore. asked If the next nominee would be a
woman, said Clinton would choose “the moat qualified
candidate."
. Those mentioned, aa possible nominees included: U.8.
District Judge Patricia Wald, who turned down the Job In
November; New York State Appeals Judge Judith Kaye; 2nd
U.S, Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Antalya Keane; and
Stanford University prefeasor and former Carter administration
Justice Department official Barbara Babcock.

t t i f n

( h i

fit r \

! n *■t t r u r / t f

Black man torched, white woman
killed: Could race be the motive?
NORTH CHARLESTON. S.C.
— People can't atop talking
about the crimes, partly because
of their brutality — a woman
here gang-raped and murdered,
a man tn Florida doused with
gasoline and set afire — but also
because of a question th a t
makes folks shudder.
Were the victims singled out
because of their race?
In the Tampa caae, the victim
was Nf**fr ™ all three
white. Here, the victim was
white and all eight suspects
black.
"I'd like to know what they
were thinking." said Mike Kelley
of North Charleston , who Uvea a
few trailers down from the scene
of the rape end knew some of the

Stroock &amp; atroock A Levan. was
part of a U.8. Supreme Court
brief In defense of a Wisconsin
law increasing penalties for
hate-motivated crimes.
In some ways, the Florida and
South Carolina crim es were
mirror Images, with numerous
eerie parallels but the raoes of
victim and attackers reversed.
Both victims, authorities say,
vrere
n fn A m i
C hristopher Wilson.- 81, a
black New York tourist was
abducted at gunpoint from a
Tampa-orea
ren ter on
New Year's Day.'Police any he
was driven to an Isolated area,
robbed, doused with gasoline
andsetablase.
Burned over 40 percent of hto
bogy, he remains hospitalised,
Three white men whtf worked tn
_
u m 1tu m
. ■■mi i - . -— .
Ju rn tw o d g m esattre In North
C h a r le s to n ? n o lle # a n y .
tin tto f (to l U t o s
■ u ih iiu ftK i wbtts welkins

crimes are assaults, the rest neighborhood, workplace, school
being against property, more — is being invaded, or because
than a third of hate crimes are of a sense of losing social or
aseaults, according to Brian economic status. McDevitt said,
Levin, a lawyer ana bias crime “People look for somebody to
researcher In Loa Angeles.
blame," he aald.
And re s e a rc h h a s show n
Other triggering lectors cited
bias-motivated assaults are more by Levin include the Rodney
brutal, their victims three times King case In Loa Angeles, conas likely to require hospitalize- tinulng negative racial stereotion.
types and a growing acceptance
of violence to settle disputes.
4/ ' !
for
Data Indicate about two-thirds
that: With this crime, the violent of hate crime offenders are white
*ct ia not the byproduct but the ^
one-third black, McDevitt
i* n n ia id .
sold.
.B ending n message is the
"People want to believe this la
j***”?11** something we've left behind, but
» crlmlnologtot a t Northeastern w ehavenV ’hesald.
,n
Florida and South
the FBI ta in ponce- in Caroline cases, the victim s'
ha ndling hate crimes. When parents spoke out bu t were
victims are chosen at random h m m , to r e i " sense of Mv
hrraiisc of thHf race, he said. * Crimea.
“Tha message to to »***¥««» in
———
that group:'7ou don't bekmg.'"
ED ITO R 'S NOTE Hate crimes are' moat often Christopher Sullivan to the AP’s
cow m tttsd by people who feel S outheast regional reporter,
that their ''tu rf*
based In Atlanta ■

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nop by your
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W arAwfe

Sanford
SEMINOLE CENTRE
(star Wal-Mart)
323*5000

m day-Friday 9 A J*.-C R M .
SafamUy 9A.M. • 5 RM.
•poadant Doctor o f Optometry

boon sold in 10 days, call us
whila ad ia runninn axcaat

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Sanford Hsrald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 24, 1W3 - 7A,

IN
Lmtti

" presslon: A treatable Illness

B R IE F

Impaired concentration, low
slf-eiste e m , c ry in g s p e lls , &lt;
self-e
w i t h d r a w a l fro m f o r m e r ;
pleasures such as social con- !
tacts, hobbles, and sex and even
suicidal thoughts.

a tC FR H

SANFORD — HCA Central Florida Regional Hospital
Women's
‘ Center
~ - la
* presenting
T§wrr‘ ~ a class
‘ on "Baby
Baby rcare,”
“ aa one
of a series of free prenatal classes offered at the hospital. The
d a te will be held Thursday from 7:9(Hfc90 p.m., In the hospital
classroom.
, The class will answer questions for parenta-to-be and those
who have recently become parents. The class will cover the
characteristics of the newborn, bottlefeeding, bathing, temper­
ature taking, and will feature a visit from one of the hospital's
pediatricians. Sibling preparation wlH also be discussed.
For more information or to register for the classes, call the
hospital a t 931-4000, ext. 6607,

a t aome point In their liven. It
differ* from other depresalve
disorder^ In that patlenta have
significant mood awing*, rang*
tng from deptewlon to mania,
usually with perlodo at normal
and back within a few day*,
Without Interval* of norm al
mood a n d are called rapid
cycten).
Bipolar disorder usually appears before age 38 and the
disease is known to run in
families. In certain population
groups, such as the Old Order
Amish, genetic markers have
recently been Identified which
can cause the disease.
Symptoms of the manic phase
In which elation or euphoria are
present Include unwarranted
optim ism an d d elu sio n s of
grandeur (a person feds he or
she has a special connection
with celebrities, political landers
or has extra-ord|pary powers
such as the ability to fly).
Hyperactivity and excessive
plans or participation In activt&gt;
fies that are often impulsive and
have a good chance for patnftil

l1ih¥Elgfof
fiftiifa
nfffoffort
wWWWI W
lflw w w
llw lw vi
ALTMAONTB SPRINGS — CPR for Citizens la offering a
on Thursday from 6:90 to 10 p.m. at Florida
te. The dace will be held In the Conference
Center, rooms 109 and 104 a t the hospital. 001 E. Altamonte
^Babyaaver le an American Heart Association training course,
taught in two sessions, which covers CPR and the choking
maneuver on both Infants and chllden, aa well aa home safety
and first aid Information. Cto '
To register, call 679-4277.

flgnlnr
nm
iw illih li
wwfoww W
V WhVlc
I fvi ^BWBVBHBW
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — Florida Hospital Premier Health
offers low-impact aerobics for senior citizens at The family
Resource Center a t Florida Hospital Altamonte. 601 E.
Altamonte Drive, Altamonte Springs, on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at 8:90 a.m.
The ooat Is 634 for 24 r lease ■.
For more information, call 897-6670.

Dudley the Dinosaur to visit local
schools to promote healthy teeth
Local school children will be making posters
about bow they can get on the path to a
healthy smile a s they take part in the Florida
Dental Association's Children s Dental Health
Month Hooter Contest in February.
W ith a toothbrush toting dinosaur as
inspiration, children in schools throughout
Florida will make posters during February
depicting the theme. “Oct on the Path to a
Healthy Smile." The statewide event, com­
bined with local dental health month activities,
is designed to help children team how to keep
their amlles healthy. • .
During the month-long National Children's
Dental Health Month Celebration, children,
and their parents, will also be Invited to attend
dental health fairs and dental screenings and
.ifoke.part In activities such aa skating parties
jin d a Smile Mile Ain run. Dentists and dental
hygienists will also bd going into etementaiy

Bipolar disorder
Jtlly appears be*
usually
fora aoa do and the
dlaaaaa la known to
run in
in T
families.
w n in e s.
-Alan fr. tarn*, M.O.

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consequences, such as spending
sprees , reckless driving, and
sexual behavior which la unueual for the person can be presen t
Many patients complain of bavIng a c c e le r a te d o r ra c in g
thoughts, decreased need for
sleep and food (allowing the
sufferer to go with little or no
sleep or food for days until

Often Illnesses such as multi­
ple sclerosis, thyroid disease and
use of steroid* and stimulants
(such as amphetamines and co­
caine) can mimic manic de­
pression. Treatment of bipolar
disorder usually consists of
medications such as Lithium
C a r b o n a te . T e g r e to l a n d
Valproic Add In combination
with psychotherapy to reduce
stress which can trigger recur­
rence of the illness, with proper
psychiatric treatment, the vast
majority of sufferers can obtain
relief from their symptoms and
have normal and productive
lives.

Alan 8. Baras. M.D., la associ-**
physical eshauaHon often sets ated with Florida Psychiatric.
In), dtatractibiUty and sudden Associates, with offices in Lake-!
Irritability, rage or paranoia. An Mary, Oviedo, Winter Park, Sand-!
untreated manic phase can con*
throe for as long as thrse months
on the svrrsgi if not treated.
The health column i* provided’
The depressive phase has the as a community service by the;
some symptoms as major de­
County Medical Soci­
preaeton such as sleep and ety. Inquiries may be directed to
appetite disturbance, fhtlgue, the medical society.

Volunteer program provides
hope for abused children
CA SSELBERRY - T he
P e r in a ta l P ro g ra m o f th e
Children's Home Socetty of Flor­
ida (borides an opportunity for
caring, committed women to do
something toward preventing
Incidences of chUd abuse and

long term medical problems are
more difficult to care for and
comfort and are more likely to
be almarrt and nealected. Onlv
through the early intervention
and education of teenage at-risk
mothers can we help ensure that
these babies have a healthy
start. Without providing supp o rt many a t the babies of teen
p a r e n ts b o ra In S e m in o le

to learn about prenatal and
p o s tn a ta l c a re . In fan t a n d
toddler care and positive parenm m

.

aiend library and Information
pamphlets, m sgsrines and video
dkeep a mothers store, contiering of community donated
Infant toddler and maternity
Items.
i
support to youn
m o m s'W h o nee
T talah q r wfU-.bo •

iioh)|n*&lt;M l

one with pregnant teens to
provide emotional end practical
support In preparing for the
birth of their baby and nrT tnM
with the demands of an Infont
during the first years of life.

SfPfoA

vtdstTfy SSfvSunteer and*tbs
Perinatal Program Staff, the
teens have an improved chance
o f completing their fdurarivn
and becoming productive,
supporting members of sock
Low birth weight babies
babies born to teen mother

to play in heart disease

[SSSKr

-V '

Sam::
mm-

• p ro v id e o p p o rtu n ity for

N O W A C C E P T IN G

i In the cor- The virus la probably not a
nurture the causative factor. It's probably
hflBtl Altiflfll - I a*assal asms! ftslas sea* • • aflap

a t high risk of heart disease.
But Hqgar said the findings
auggnst that people who get cold
a o r t a m i g h t w a n t to b e
especially w w ftil ahwit cotitrol­
ling their heart disease risk

to form.
He reported the findings at the
American Heart Association's
annual conference for science
writers.
Dr. Edward S. Cooper, the
heart association’s president,

H m iireprtU M dtob.
coMldmd major surgery*
Today.lt can fatal Mania
as a on*day "wafetn, wife
out" procedure. Prompt
and coat effective.
For a new or recurrent
hernia, we use a mesh
technique that speeds
recovery, Htttrnt pain
recurT ie W est study was con­
ducted by Dr. In p n ir fikoog and
colleagues from fiehlgrtaska
S « fI*sL In O o th e n b u r g ,

■ M M

of Central Florida la open
ated by Surgical Associate#an established team of
•Idgad surgeons who have
practiced hi centra rmnaa
since 1973 and have per­
formed literally thousands
of hernia operations.

land and Oviedo. Foran
.callus at
(407) 647-2727.

(4 t7 ) €47-2727

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'in i

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S O N Y
TANDY

Washers and
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C anon

Home. Car. and
Portable Audio!

EU REKA

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Computers.Printers
and A c c e s s o rie s !

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�Sa n f o r d Heral d

SUNDAY

January

24,

1993

IN BRIEF

Softball tourney planned
CASSELBERRY — Men's softball teams are
blng sought to*play In a tournament at Red Bug
Lake Park the weekend of Feb. 6.
The entry la 9130 per team. Play will follow a
double elimination format and a 4*3 count. Each
team will be allowed one homo run hitter. Any
home runs hit by any other player will go as
singles.
—
Entry deadline Is 6 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 4.
with the draw to be conducted Immediately
afterward.
For more Information, contact Rod at 767*
2476 or Todd at 383*3183.

Boating olaat o fftrtd
SANFORD — The Seminole County Flotilla of
the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary will offer s free
safe boating class at the Seminole County Port
Authority building, located at 1810 Kastner
Place.
Classes, which will be conducted on Monday
and Thursday nl
inlng at 7 p.m.. will
be offered *
Feb. 11. through
Monday. March 8.
Instruction covers boating skills and safety.
Included in the class will be skills practices and
an on-the-water practical and safety demonstra­
tion.
Class site Is limited. While there Is no cost for
the class, books and materials cost 938. .
For regfstrakm or more information, contact
BUI Binkley at (904) 7894073 or Charles Hoeck
at (407) 831.3109.

Tulant ovtrtaktt II8 F
TAMPA — Tukute's bench, led by Carlin
Hartman's 17 points, spurred a second half
surge as the Green Wave rolled to a 71-83
victory Saturday over South Florida.
The victory was Tulane'a ninth straight and it
improved their record to 14-3. South Florida
(3-10) lost Its sixth in a row.
Tulane's 3-3 rone defense held South Florida
to Just six field goals and 38 percent shooting,
while the Green Wave offense nit 63 on percent
of It's second-half shots.
*
The Bulls took their Baal lead. 40-39. on a
Chucky Atkins 10-foot Jumper early in the
rhalf. But then, a 19-3 run gavc TtthMe a
second!)
81-43edge;—
w*
SouthFlorida got no dibeer than five points
the rest of the why.
The Bulls were led by Jesse Balters' 13 points
and lOrebounds.',

Stamp to baar Bryant?
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tuesday Is the 10th
anniversary of Paul “Bear" Bryant death, and
his longtime friends are campaigning for a
postage stamp honoring him.
The U.8, Postal Service requires that anyone
pictured on a stamp be dead a decade.
Robin Mlnard. a spnhrswnmsn for the U.8.
Postal Service, said postal officials have already
received letters requesting the late Alabama
»honored srlth a stam
stamp.
“I think It's an excellent Idea." Alabama
coach Gene
i said. "It would be a very
a man who deserves It
any coach I can think of."
The decision on who Is honored on stamps is
made by the 13-member Citfsens* Stamp
' Advisory Committee, which makes Us an­
nouncements once a year. Only the president
and postmaster general can override Us de­
cisions, but they rarely do.

would still have to win three more If he la

regelnthetlttehecnptmodlnl66»andl9&gt;7.

•wasp of the gutsTboys' varsity doublsh—Her. OaWftma Bad (No. 34,
right) aoorad 14 potato for Lyman, whleh waa whlattad for 31 fouls.

Rams take two
Lake Mary cagers sweep Lyman
LONQWOOD - As ye sweep, so shall ye be
re p t
The Lyman High School varsity girts and boys
taketbsU teams, who won both ends of a
jublehesder with AcmtaHr on Wednesday,

Lyman was
for 91 fouls while Lake Mary
was whistled for 16. fo u r players (three from
Lyman) fouled o u t
“They pressed i
eone,Msaid Lake I
“We did some traj
aamuch they di. It 1

E g a*

luflMdnlns............... ...

the Lake Mary gtrie held on foraS7-49 victory.
by Ready.
Tfr*
»■&lt;&lt;«*—&lt;t WMaaia — fe apphre to
Up until the third quarter, U looked like the
baMutbafi aath e Lake Mary boys con verted 37 of .Lym an boys would give the Greyhounds a spilt
48 fret throws to beat the Oreyhounds 63-38. _ O Ses Sweep, Page Ml

Daniels leads
Arrow Force in
upset off Oviedo
By MAM g a rn i
Herald Sports Writer

Pats grab
share of
SAC lead
ByBVAMI
Herald Correspondent________

:

LONQWOOD - In a de­
fensive duel, little things make
the difference.
The Lyman Oreyhounds.
ranked No. 1 in the Florida
Athletic Coaches Association's
Class 4A state soccer poll,
found this to be true as they
saw their undefeated ****“*
vanish at the feet of the Lake
Brantley Patriots In a 1-0 loss
Friday night.
Lake Brantley's win creates
a bit of a logjam at the (op of
the Bcmlnofe Athletic Confer­
ence standings. Lake Brantley
(1 4 -1 -6 w h e n c o u n t i n g
s h o o to u t lo s s e s d u r in g
to u rn am en ts aa ties) a n a
Lyman (14-1-3) share the top
spot at 8-1-1 with Lake Mary
(13-4-1) a game back at 4-3-1.
After dueling defensively for
most of the first half, the
Patriots finally found the goal
with 9:34 left In the opening
period when Bean McCtafferty
drilled the shot up the middle
past three Lyman defenders,
including Orty hound ’har per
Chris Lewis, who saw the ball
Just sail post his teach.
"You really don't have to get
them motivated to play
like Lyman and Lake Mary."
Lake B rantley coach Jim
Brody said of his team. "We
lost to them (Lyman) 4-0 at
our place earlier In the season.
T h e y ,w a n te d to sh o w
everyone tonight that what
happened earlier in the season
was a fluke. They came out
played I
Istand uo."
goalstai
Earlier in the first half. It
like Lyman had a goal
of its own when Brantley

SANFORD — It was like the storyline of s bed movie;
a star suffers an injury and Is not supposed to play, yet
comes off the bench to lead his team to upset victory.
Seminole High School's Deon Daniels, who hurt his
hip late In Thursday night's game against the Alumni,
was not expected to play against Oviedo in Friday
night's Seminole Athletic Conference contest.
But the Junior forward entered the contest leas than
two minutes into the game and scored 38 points In
helping Arrow Force One edge (he defending Claes 4A
Mate champions 68-68 at Bill Fleming Memorial
Gymnasium.
"I told Deon that 1 would watch him In warmups and
see how he did," aak! Seminole head coach Bob Trains.
"He was holding his aide all through warmups, ao I told
him to just ait down and we started someone dae.
"But a couple of minutes later, he comes running by
me. wanting to know who Ke should get. eo I told him to
give it a try. His (Daniels') game la ao dependent on
what kind of mental state he is In. When his mind is
right, he dominates the game."
Daniels came off the bench to hit seven of 11 Held
goal tries. Including three of four from three-point
range, for 19 points in the first half as Arrow Force One
built a IGpotnt lead. 43-33. at the intermission.
But he was far from the only star for Seminole in the
flrst half as the home team played a near-flawless first
16 minutes. Travis Perkins ran the Arrow Force One
offense to perfection as the senior point guard had five*
of Seminole’s 11 first 'half assists and the team only
committed two first half turnovers.
The defense also played well, forcing 10 Uon_

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SAC
IB

‘keeper Sean
Beaver appeared to take the bail into the goal
after a Brantley player kicked it back to him.
However, no goal was called by the officials.
The Oreyhounda outahot the Patriots 18-7, with
moat of the Lyman shots Bailing over the top of
the goal.
Lyman controlled the ball for much of the
second half but the Patriot defense was able to
weather the onslaught, rejecting shot after shot.
The O reyhounda also had m ultiple op­
portunities to score on comer kicks as well,
taking seven while the Patriots had Just two. But
once pgitn. the Lake Brantley defense proved up
to the task.
"This* is a team that wants to go real far." said
Brody. "We have a lot of seniors, a lot of
experience, and they want to show what they
really have.
“The season has been great so far. These kids
have realty done a great job. and It ain't over yet,
We're hoping to go as far as we can and make it a

really long season.
The Patriots will travel to Lake Mary High
School to play the Rams In a key SAC contest thta
Wednesday night while the Greyhounds travel to
Oviedo on Wednesday.
LAKE MARY MEMINOLCO
SANFORD — Three different players scored two
goals each as the Lake Mary Rama romped, to a
0-0 win oVcr the host Seminole Fighting
Semlnoles In a Seminole Athletic Conference
boys’ soccer match Friday night at Thomas E.
Whlgham Stadium.
Keith Baranowkal. Jody DeBruln. and Brandon
Mahaha were the multiple goal scorers for the
Rams (13-4-1. 4-3-1 In thrf SAC). Mike Deaver,
John Martin and Aren Cook each added one goal.
Defensively, Lake Mary limited Seminole (4-8-2.
0-7 in the conference) to Juat a pair of ahots on
goal.
Lake Mary will host Lake Brantley In a key SAC
contest this Wednesday night. Seminole will also
be at home Wednesday, entertaining the Lake
Howell Stiver Hawks. .

Sweep
on the evening, building a
30-22 lead by hallUme. But In
the third quarter, the Rams went
on a 23*11 binge and followed
that up with a 19*17 fourth
quarter.
'
Who knows, how bad it may
have been had Lake Mary not
missed 18 free throws. Including
the front end of four one-and-one
o p p o rtu n ities In the fourth
quarter?
"We always find a way to keep
a team in the game and we did It
again." aald Richardson."We
didn't shoot free throws well, but
some other things came together
for us.
"1 feel pretty good about the
way the kids played. They're
learning what they can do and
what they can't. It was ugly, but
U was a good effort after the
drumming Lake Howell gave Us
on Wednesday. This win was a
confidence bulkier for us."
Jim m y Newberry led Lake

Mary with 18 points. Kent Prit­
c h a rd ad d ed 14 w hile Ian
B aundera added 13. Taylor
Joregnaen had nine rebounds for
the Rams with Truck Wakefield
grabbing eight caroms.
The girl* game wasn't quite
so dramatic, Lake Mary Jumping
out to a 19*10 lead and protect­
ing U the rest of the way despite
losing Morris and Karely Bettel
to fouls.
"We Jumped out ahead at the
beginning and Juat held our
own." said Lake Mary coach
Anna Van Landtngham. “Every
time theV would make a run at
us. we'd get our heads back
together and play good, tough
defense. The gills did a good Job
of staying focused and getting
the Job done.
"On offense, we kept working
hard. We know that Lyman tries
to control the boards, so I told
girts that we had to work for
rebounds."
Diane Duber added 10 points

and six rebounds for the Rams
white LaShawn Merrick collec­
ted nine points, alx assists,
seven steals, and- three re ­
bounds. Morris also had three
rebounds, two steals and four
For Lyman. LaTIda Smith had
10 points while Carolyn Crmger
.added 10,
"Karen Morris did a great Job."
a a td L y m a n c o a c h S te v e
Carmichael. "Lake Mary Just
outplayed us from the get go."
Now 16*3 overall and 3*1 In
the Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence, the Lake Mary glriawiU
host Seminole this Tuesday
night. The Lake Mary boys. 3-10
overall and 1*1 in the SAC. play
a t Sem inole o n W ednesday
night.
Lyman's girts. 16-5 and 3-2 in
the conference, play at Lake
Brantley Tuesday night while
the Greyhound boys, 34) and 1*1
In the SAC. travel to Lake
Brantley on Wednesday.

Up88t

remaining but both rimmed out and Arrow Force
One had the upset.
turnovers, keyed by three Matt Parker steals.
"We have to carry on from here," aatd Trains.
During halftime the crowd was treated to an
"We've been up and down, which is not entirely
dance exhibition by "Hot Mix," a group of young
the kids' fault. We thought we Were ready to win
ladies th at includes Seminole High School
and Matt (Parker) and Andreas (Key) get hurt on a
student JUl Oruhy that recently was a 8100,000
freak play In which they didn't even touch one
winner on "Star Search.”
another. But Parker had to miss two games and
Oviedo outacored Arrow Force One 164 over
Key breaks his leg.
the first six minutes of the third period to cut the
"We're not even worried about winning and
lead to two, 00-48. But Daniels came up with a , losing, we Just want to take it one step at a time.
dunk and a layup and Neville Fuller scored on
The longer we stay in the game with the good
another layup, to .fiv e Seminole .a 06*41 lead. h tesm swtfl help us build confidence fend1building
entering the final q*antff,
-*4• Ui*_.it*A &gt;,'j7our confidence Is how we w fll.g etto the .next
With the momentum bp for grabs, the Llotfe i step."
.&lt;* &gt; • • •
■’■
went to their senior center Chris Braxton. The
The night ended up on a positive note all
64bot, 9-inch. 380-pounder dominated both ends
around for the home team as the Junior varsity
of the floor as Oviedo outacored Arrow Force One
won its fifth straight fam e, 80-53.
13-3 to take Its Ural lend of the night. 61-39. with
tn addition to his 28 points Daniels also had a
4:18 remaining.
team high six rebounds and blocked two shots.
Aim haying good night's lor Arrow Force One
But Parker, a senior who had missed the last
were Parker (110 points, three rebounds, six steals,
two dunes with an Injury. keyed a defensive
ana Roberts (10 points, four steals.
four
stand by Seminole as he scored a pair of baskets
off steals and oopboaaore Eric Roberts hit a pair of
Oviedo was led by Its three senior returnees
free throws after coming up wtth another steal to
from last year's championship team. Braxton.
.make the score67-60with 6:21 left.
Devon Oreen and Randy Wright, plus sophomore
The Lions had a chance to Ue the score on sn
Ben Boos. Oreen had 30 points, 13 rebounds, two
in bounds play after time out, but the ball rolled
bioHred ahots, three
and taro assists:
off the rim and Parker wan fouled after collecting
Bran* ton had 16 points. 11 rebounds, three
the rebound.
blocked ahots and two steals: Wright had 11
Parker bit the front end of the one-and-one with
points and atx rebounds and Boss had 11 points
Oj 19 on the dock to make the score 86-60. Oviedo
and three assists.
got a pair of three-point attempts off in the time

C h ristia n, G able top ho nor roll
SANFORD —
and
posted the week's top women's and m en's aeries
In action reported by Bowl 8 m arina BaoHeri.
C hristian, bowling with the High Wasn srs .
turned In a 086 to top the wornerrs honor roll
while Oable rolled a 671 during Bna Bank
league play to lead the men.
Trailing C h ristian among the U g h N ssnsra
were M ardoUG onterm an, who registered a 506,
and the 008 effort of O attla Kagan.
t i n Mrtta a n trailed Oab is among the Sum
B an k men. turning in a 830 total. B a th
B ndrtgusa and Haney Jo h n so n paced the
league s women with series of 086 and 065,
league,
pasted a 018 to lead the way.
Dayana rolled a 479 and Jo a n J im
473.
had the top aeries In the I
league last week, putting

together a 631, Kay Ja a sb a was next with His
836 while Bakby Mayor turned in a 61Beffort.
Bd J a c k s an rolled a 814 to lead the men in the
Bolt ond Chain league. He was trailed by P en n y
PfeUUpo. who came In at 808. Da b o s s paced the
women with her 437. M ariaau to n d a ln g backed
her un with a 433.
In P o r a lg Boalfty league action*. P o t t
Cam pbell and Doralno H arrington had the top
aeries, Caaspbsll besting the men with his 80S
while B irv ln g tan led the women with her 043.
Trailing the leaden were D anny Cotton, who
rolled a 083, and Caooy Ateheeon. who posted a
016.
B egar S parks put together a 802 aeries to lead
play in the Baaehtima Teague. Pot Johnson was
next in line with a 648 total.
Two pina separated the (op two women's series
In the Thnrodny N its Mixed League. J oo tta
Wool led the way with her 030 with JU l H arper
dose behind at 533. Among the league's men,
Maaafteld rolled a 070 while Bleh
)put together a 006.

Keep new bass rules In m ind

allowed to keep only ooe fish 22
Inrl w or loafer in an effort to
restore the quality of Florida's
baas Ashing.
The beats tor the rule change
la that trophy baas have become
Increasingly rare, said Scott
Hardin* a Commission fisheries
b io lo g is t. T h e s e b ig fis h ,
primarily females, need to be
protected.

JIM
SHUPE

-i the way
wi ofoflkhore action due to
high teas. Expect plenty of
cobla. grouper and snapper on
ta a h e re w ra ak a and re a fa
When seas subside. There will
aim be some king mackerel on
P e lle a a P la ta . Wahoo and
dolphin will be in short supply.
Inside the Port, expect mainly
flo u n d e r, e h e e p a n e a d a n d
blueflah. Trout and redflah are
n U fe ^ a ^ o d ^ n H ^ flamiof the

• m m inlet has been active
R iver. (The S a n ta Fe a n d
Wlthtacoochee riven'In Madison with big aheepahead at the ftp of
and Hamilton counties, Alapaha. the a e r th J e ttie s and with
New and Ichetucknee rivers and bluefteh everyw here.
Oluatee and Swift creeks are
tributaries of the Suwannee
River).
• Fish may not be filleted, nor
their, heads or tail fins removed,
until after the s«gW boa comftsliln mA
m
m QlVi
■
j4— .'
DICICQiiiiiiiii
2O
s (I
[HE
IW lf f f tM W F

the spring spawning season
when anglers seek large female
haps Ih.shallow wainr “
Hardin said it's Important

iI B

m e e t m in im u m q u a lify in g
weights. Anglers who
a
la rg e m o u lh b a s s m 10 pounds

If you ward to catch a really
big baas, concrn tfate on the
period of taw* immediately be*
fore or immediately after the ftill
moon. Big bam are on the move
gjtthfe time, and they gravitate
towards shoreline structures for
spawning arltvitjcs.
■ If you catch a trophy, take a
picture, measure the length,
then carvftilty release the h k

PW W W
m _ T _

r w T n V B

iw a n

im v c r a

ca mounts are much more d u ra
bid than actual skin mounts,
» FtSHIWQ FORECAST

Aim, special recognJ
MiYvll Ola i nff ClUUMjll VO
for
releasing th e irI f flsh~unL u n u l
a
o in ra .

r o r lu o ic

m

iTtfUi ■■m Tion

on the program contact the
Cotnmleslon'a regional aflloea.
Other new flahing regulations
Innliutai
lUGntOCl
'.B 'A statewide ftve-flah daily
b a g jt m lt

■'g ‘A 14-Inch minimum length
. limit for all waters south and
eartrof the Suwannee River.
8. A 12-inch minimum length
limit for the Suwannee River and and blucflahare in and out of the
its tributary rivers: creed and Inlet on a regular basts.
streams and all other waters
C a p ta in J a c k a t P a r t
north and wait of the Suwannee.

N l&gt; &lt; )
M N N I I

(. I I J H

Once prime game, squirrels now mainly pests
l ■

im

u

l - S J —i s — -

n n ie f

IsaT Utter or in
i hollow tress.
I some wsaf u
t big mounds of
I will light any
w t tries to get too
r. Weiglaafcl,
tm tn .n l *"--- -

Brunswick stew" which orqpnaily w as made with squirrel.
because of raids on their bird
feeders. Wdgl said.
Soma squirrel-proof feeders
work, som e d o n 't, he said,
a apartment with type and IocsMhL.

The fen squkiei lived aloog

the edge of the prairie, w j i
•old. and when m an moved

w est, building sh elters and

s e m m l

CV JOINT BOOTS

* 3 u tj

8 F

*59.95 S&amp;

H
f.

mm

�4 8 - ftsnlord Herald, Sinlord, Florida - Sunday, January 24, 1M3

'a

Business
IN B R I E F

Push for better business m ath
By NICK PF9IFAUF
Herald Staff Writer

E b o m o t io n s
BallSouth namas Fullar
Veteran communications administrator N. Mark Fuller has
been promoted to director of sales and marketing for BellSouth
Mobility's Orlando region.
Previously BellSouth'a Orlando general manager, Fuller will
oversee all BellSouth regional cellular communications opera­
tions, administration and marketing in the company's Orlando
region which Includes Orange. Seminole, Lake and Osceola
counties.
Fuller previously served as general manager for BellSouth
Mobility's Dade County office. He has been with the company
since 1973.

In all. five questions are being asked of
area business owners and/or operators.
SANFORD — The Seminole County Public They seek Input regarding the type of
School system Is planning to revise the business, level of math skills needed, skill
m ath c u rric u lu m from k in d erg arten levels of present student age employees, and
through 12th grade. The changes will be examples of math problems employees may
designed In keeping with the changing face during the average work day.
The Greater Sanford Chamber of Com­
workplaces.
In order lo help facilitate the changes, a merce has sent copies of the questionnaire
questionnaire Is being sent out throughout to Its membership In Ita January publication
of Liaison. The Longwood/Wlnter Springs
Seminole County.

area Chamber of Commerce has also
Included copies in Its January newsletter.
Responses are to be sent to the Seminole
County Public Schools administrative office,
1211 Mellonvllle Avenue as soon as possi­
ble.
For further information, or for business
leaders who are not chamber members lo be
Involved In this mathmatlc course' determi­
nation, contact Bob Falattc at the School
Board, 322-1252. ext. 340.

Ribbon cutting
The Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce welcomed ■ new
business and new member
Thursday. C enter, holding
scissors during a ribbon cut­
ting at the chamber office, ie
Nancy Price, owner of Price­
less Laminating. Price will be
operating the business from
her home. In attendance at the
event, left to right, welcome
c o m m itte e and c h a m b e r
m e m b e rs P a tty M e s s e r,
Margaret Wlrlh, Lori Feseler,
Tina Carter, Beth Belden, Rob
Moore, honoree Nancy Price,
Cham ber President Bobby
Douglaas, members Buzz Ma­
nses, Andrea Krazelee, Andrea
Farmer, “Sam'' Sllvernell and
Meta Brooke.

lOOOP YEAR
Plzzutl sate record
Plzxuti Realty reported commercial brokerage sales of 9111
million, with 157 transactions during 1992. BUI Jones,
president and chief executive officer reported the amount was a
new record*
“Sides for 1992 more than doubled 1991 figures of 550
million and 106 transactions," he said. Transactions Include
leases and sales.
One of the major transactions handled during the year by
Plasutl Included the Lake Mary Retail Center, at a coot of 65.9
million.
Another major acquisition was the 300 International
Parkway building In Heathrow. The 96.3 million purchase
Included 14.5 undeveloped acres In Heathrow's International
Business Park, adjacent to the AAA building.
Plasutl, headquartered In Columbus, Ohio, owns and
manages shopping centers and other properties In Orange.
Seminole and St. Lucie Counties.

Barnett hat excellent year
Barnett Banks. Inc., has reported 1992 earning*, consoli­
dated with First Florida Banks, Inc., of 9275.1 million, or 92.68
per share before the special restructuring charge arising from
the merger of the two companies.
Excluding First Florida’s results and the restructuring charge,
Barnett earned 9221.6 million, or 92.77 per share.
“The year was one of the most significant In Barnett
history," said Charles E. Rice, chairman and chler executive
officer. “Our earnings recovery accelerated, credit quality
Improved significantly and we completed the largest acquisi­
tion In our history."

Computer board
focus is business
Herald Correspondent

CtafflbarfsMiiMM mMttns
■Kkrefc BoAt’.-marketing director and property manager for
Trammell Crow Company, will be special guest speaker at the
January?m eetlng of the Longwood/Wlnter Springs area
Chamber of Commerce. Scott will discuss creativity and the
changes she has brought to the Longwood Village Shopping
Center. She will also be leading a discussion on ways other
businesses can use creativity to Increase sales and Improve
tlnlBBS.
1
eting trill be held at Quality Inn, Longwood,
lnterstate-4 at 8.R. 434, Mon. Jan . 25. a t 12 noon.

WWdwa Springs talk
Park Manager Jim Murrtan trill speak to the Citizens for
Wefctwa Springs State Park. Thursday. Jan. 28th at the Youth
Camp Meeting Hall at the park. Dave Bukkert. the group's
president. Invites the public to the meeting for an update on
the proposed land acquisitions along the river basin, which
could create a Central Florida park system of statewide
■Igntfirancr.
The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m.. Jan. 28. Refreshment*
will be served prior to the meeting. For further Information,
ct Shirley Lippi, 682-2600.

was recently honored by United Parcel Sarvtoe tor
completing 20 years of osrvioe with the company. M l , who Is •
dsUvsry driver with the UPS operation In Longwood, wss cited tor
M s loyal service contributions to UPS. Ha began his career as a
delivery driver In 1972. M l and his wife Ruth live In Ceesetbcrry.

will advise on problems Inuerred. Poplock said FAB la an
excellent source of business
contacts, end often results In Job
laccment between participants.
Ie d isco u rag es gam es and
messaging for social purposes,
he said, and concentrates on
business needs and solutions.

Hewle Poplock operates FABulous BBS, at FABulous PC's, and
shares faculties with Jim Daly at
TSD In Longwood. Poplock first
d e v e l o p e d h i s b o a r d In
Clearwater whUe employed In
the Food and Beverage Industry,
hence the FAB anagram. When
he retired, he kept his logo by
Somewhere among Poplock's
devoting his board to Finance t h o u s a n d s o f a v a i l a b l e
and Business, and moved his shareware programs, (which In­
board to Longwood In 1987.
crease on a dally basis), a
For business devotees, Poplock business can find comments
provides programs and informa­ from commercial programusers
tion on business in general, as to a specific program's value
tracking stocks and invest­ and/or ease of use. And the
ments, real estate Information, business can find the program
wordprocessing, spreadsheet, that does exactly what needs
and uUllty programs, and con­ doing at about one-tenth the cost
ferences devoted to business.
of a commercial program.
“A business might call FAB to
find out how to make a program
Any business considering a
work properly, or to seek an computer Investment’ can save
indlvtdallzed modification of a both time and money, Poplock
program specific to their needs,'' said, by first consulting with the
Poplock said.
experts on the FAB board. The
A business also might call FAB program needed could well be
If It wanted to obtain computer readily available, along with the
program s called sharew are, expertise to implement it.
which are programs written by
Poplock can be reached a t 625
Individuals who first provide Oxford St., Longwood, 331them for “testing" before mak­ 0130.
ing any charge to the public.
One of the programs available
o n F A B , A 5 E A S Y , Is a
spreadsheet program which has
been reviewed as superior to
Lotus 1,2,3. A user who picks up
ASEASY, or other programs
from FAB, would ultimately pay
what Is called a registration fee
of anywhere from 915 to 935.
A8EA8Y has recently come out
with an updated version and la
enacting a 950 registration fee.
but the uaer now receives an
Instruction manual for his fee.
etlU a considerable savings over
the 9696 the user could expect
to pay for the Lotus program.

E

Remember to heed
recall of safety seat
By NICK FFEIFAUF
HaraldSTaff Writer________
Florida A griculture and
Consumer Services Commis­
sioner Bob Crawford Is con­
cerned over child safety scats.
Recalls to repair defects have
not proven successful.
Crawford believes possibly
over 8 million children could
be at risk because free re­
commended repairs to correct
automobile safety seat defects
have not been made.
The National Highway Traf­
fic Safety A dm inistration,
NHTSA, has reported that re­
sponse. from 11 of 16 safety
recalls, has proven to be less
than 10 percent.
"The recommended repairs
are free," Crawford said, "but
owners of the seats are either
unaware of the hazard or do
n o t view th e p rlb lem as
serious."
He continued, "I urge all
owners of child safety scats to
examine the products, de­
termine If they are Involved In
a recall, and take appropriate
action." He added. "Dton’t take
chances with child safety."
According to the NHTSA. IB

models of child safety seats
produced by seven companies
were determined to have de­
fects. The 16 recalls Involve
over 9 million seats, but re­
pairs have been made on only
420.000.
M anufacturers with o u t­
standing recalls Include the
following: Evenflo Juvenile
Products. 4 million seats:
Fisher-Price, 3 million: Centu­
ry Products, 2 million; World
T o y s . 7 2 0 s e a t s ; V lrco
Manufacturing, 298 seats.
The problems vary from
latch defects and unclear di­
rections for threading shoulder
h arn esses to flam m ability
hazards and risk of Injury from
parts broken during accidents.
"P ro p erly designed and
m anufactured child safety
•eata are extremely effective
and their use is required by
law In every state." Crawford
said.
Crawford's departm ent Is
the state's main agency for
consumer matters, and serves
as a clearinghouse for Inqui­
ries and com plaints from
consumers aa well as regulat­
ing certain businesses.

Another benefit to a business
that seeks Its utilities programs
from FAB, la the ability to Join a
conference devoted to th a t
une program, where he
it readily encounter the
___ of the program. If there is
glitch, the programmer who
rote the program is available to
wist In working It out. If a
wctfic modification Is needed,
w same expertise is available to
w user. Commercial programs
enerally provide some support
wlstanre via an 800 number,
ut users aay speaking with the
nogrammer via BBS Is both a
ister and easier solution.
Poplock cellm ates he has
a b o u t $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 Invested in
equipment, and 35,000 pro­
grams on line for downloading.
A side from g e ttin g new ,
perhaps belter programs for
business use at nominal cost,
the average business can expect
to find numerous conference*
devoted to each type of software

W « now occopt MasterCard and viaa

Sanford Herald

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 24, 1993 &gt;

People

Star-studde&lt;

IN B R I E F

m

For dancer, New York was
a direct leap from Sanford
■y ID KOftOAN
Herald Correspondent

Dazzler ol the W o k
Elena Gussow. an eleventh-grader at Seminole
High School, has been selected by the Dazzler
Daner Team as Dazzler of the Month. She has
been a member of the team for a year.
Elena enjoys swimming, danrlng and singing
nnd is a member of Pizazz.
She said. "I wanted to Join the team for the
discipline and hard work and what I would
receive from the hard work."
Elena's goal Is to attend college and train for
the medical profession

SANFORD — She Is leading a life
every girl dreams about. At age 20.
her goal Is no longer a dream. She's
made It. She's Jenny Gruby of
Sanford.
Jenny, a 1990 graduate of Semi­
nole High School and daughter of
Marsha and Jam es Gruby. got the
chance of a lifetime last March when
the officials of "Will Rogers Follies'*
called and Invited her to New York
City for a second audition and a
chance to dance In the very popular
Broadway show.
She had already auditioned In
Orlando In January and had made
the second call back. She felt like
the had had a fun time and her
dancing seemed to please the audltloners. While talking with the
audltionera they had told her that
they were possibly looking for
dancers to replace dancers who had
left the New York show.
Jenny aald, "I had pretty much
fo rg o tten a b o u t th e a u d itio n
because It was kind of a big dream.
You know It la something that you
always want and you always see but
It is something like ten steps down
the rood. I was just starting out In
professional dancing and I kind of
could ace my way up to New York
but I never dreamed of a direct leap
from Sanford to New York. I also
had many other things happening
to me at that time Including work­
ing at Disney World."
"And then I got a call. The day
after Christmas last year. What a
Christmas present! Actually It was
so weird because I was at work

when the call came In. So my mom
called me at work and she had to
tell me. I remember I was so excited
I ran until I found a phone to call
, these people. It was the casting
agency asking me If I could come up
for another audition In New York. I
told them okay, sure I can."
Jenny continued. "I flew up last
year on the first of January and
auditioned on the second, which
was a Thursday. When I was asked
to go up there I didn't really know
what the situation was so I planned
on staying through the weekend
with a couple of friends and Just
playing around. They hired me on
the spot and 1 had to be back In New
York to start rehearsals Monday
morning. Within a matter of an
hour I had gone through all the
nerves of getting ready for an
audition and auditioning for all
those people including the musical
composer and the people from the
casting agency, hmmm. There were
about eight people out then
through the singing, the
walk used by the company,
kicks. Then they aald 'okay, you’re
hired.' I was going like 'whoaaa.
okay, alow down, world."
"Five minutes after that I was In
their office. They were trying shoes
and hats on me and doing all my
measurements. The same time I
was calling my mom to tell her I got
the Job." Everything went so fast
and Jenny was so excited tn what
was happening to her. It was like a
dream come true, she said. She flew
back home on Friday but returned *
Monday to begin rehearsals and was
put tn the show the following Friday
d S ss Jen n y , Page 7B

Vans stopped
Revolt (from loft, Pool# ond

RSVP vehicles absorbed
over, half annual budget

Winning toastmasters
At a rcrcnl meeting of.the Seminole Commu­
nity College Toantmaster* Club. Daniel Peele,
president, presented the following awards:
George Revolr. best speech: June Ann Cox. best
evaluator: and Herman Schroeder, best table
topic.
The club meets every Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.. In
Room 231. B building, at SCC. Visitors are
welcome.

lyRD RO M A N
Ha raid Corrsspondant

THBATRR
Art advsnturs plsnnsd
MAITLAND — The Jewish Community Center
will begin Us second season of An Adventure In
the Aria on Sunday. Jan. 31 with a performance
of •Tcter and the W o lf by the Florida
Symphony Youth Orchestra.
Other performances throughout the year.
Inrludc the Amrrican Family Theatre's version,
or "Beauty and the Beast", mime artist Trent
Artcbcrrt and the James Best Theatre for
Children's "Golllocks and the Three Bears."
For more Information, contact the Jewish
Community Center at 645-5933 or call Lynn
Warner at R3I-IR84.

n o ra w

n u n

^0 7 gw a tt
s o

Bovorty W0M0 axpJoJno why RSVP van# woco dlooontlnuod.

if in

In December. Beverly Wells,
director of the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program
(R8VP),
Seminole County, regretfully
announced the discontinuation
of the van service which pro­
vided transportation for senior
volunteers to volunteer Job sta­
tions throughout the county.
She said It was the culmination
of a 3-year conflict between the
board of directors. ACTION and
her.
In 1975. w hen 8 em ln o le
C om m unity College discon­
tinued sponsorship of RSVP. a
corporation was formed for the
sole purpose of sponsoring
RSVP. The corporation. Semi­
nole C om m unity V olunteer
Program. Inc. and Its board of
directors became the governing

body of RSVP.
County businessmen and resi­
dents and stt-in meetings are
held once a month. The board's
position on the transportation
problem had been slowly de­
teriorating for the past three
years and finally In December
the tHittTm was
to dis­
continue the van service.
ACTION, a federal agency,
operates but of Washington and
provides approximately 23 per­
cent of the funding received by
RSVP. In the last site visit by the
state program officer based In
Orlando, the officer again urged
RSVP to eliminate the vans
because they were costing too
much to operate. It was pointed
out that over one-half of the
general funds was being spent
on the transportation problem.
□ •as

T h e S e c h re s ts h o n o re d on
g o ld e n w e d d in g a n n ive rsa ry
Mr. and Mrs. Jam es Sechrest
celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary on Wednesday. Dec.
23. 1992. Jam es and the former
Oertls E. Hutchins were married
In Miami while he was stationed
there with the U.S. Navy.
They were honored at a dinner
party at Shoney's on Lee Road In
Orlando when 17 family mem­
bers and close frtendg gathered
to help the couple celebrate.
The Sechrests have lived In
Sanford since 1965 where he
worked for Shoem aker Con­
struction until his retirement. He
has a home workshop ahd his
hobby Is woodcrafting. Oertls
has always been a homemaker
and kept the home fires burning
for h e r h u s b a n d a n d four
children.
T hey a re : L inda B arb er.
Midland. Texas; Nancy Spears.
Sanford: Ellen Gibson. Orlando:
and Jim Sechrest. Sanford.
There are 12 grandchildren and
one great grandchild.

8tar-studd«d trip

Epsilon Sigma Omicron Society, a raadlng
sorority affiliated with the Florida Fadarallon of
Women's Club, met Wednesday at the home of
Vida Smith, right, chairman. Charlotte Knowles.

left, Introduced the guest speaker, Bunnle
Logan, center, who presented an interesting
program on poetry to the delight of members.
The group meets monthly.

DORI8
Marsha Gruby was on Cloud
DIETRICH
Nine this week tn anticipation of
traveling to San Francisco, along
with other moms and
chaperones, to see "Hot Mix" Marsha's daughter!m m ?
perform. The dazzling dance San Franciso to entertain at a
troupe recently won the top convention of the National Asaohonors of 0100.000 In Star clatlon of Television and Film
Search competition.
Producers.
T h e d a n c e r s . In c lu d in g
Marsha said. "It's going to be a

lot of fun...a wonderful opportu­
nity to perform and be seen."
The entourage expects to re­
turn Wednesday after an excit­
ing trip — compliments of Star
Search.
Jill will arrive
from San Frandeco after daugh­
ter and aistcr. Jenny, opens In
O rla n d o . In “ W ill R ogers
Follies.” They will miss np^n lng
night (Tuesday), but will proba­
bly ca tch at least two perfor­
mances to aee Jenny strut her
stuff.

�Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florida - Sunday. January 24. 1003

Charline Morgan Allen turns 100
special baby girt was bom to
Charlie and Nellie Morgan In the
town of Plymouth, Fla. She waa
Charline Morgan Allen who cel­
ebrated her 100th birthday with
her liunllv and frtendaat a gala
affair held at the Sanford Garden
Club.
Mrs. Allen, the oldest of eight
children and the only child
living, moved to Sanford In 1905
when she was 12 years of age.
The Morgans moved to (Canaan
Ctty), a part of Bast Sanford
where Mrs. Allen said there were
only three houses at the time.
Her schooling as she recalls
began In Plymouth and then she
attended school In Midway.
Mrs. Allen's mother was the
first schoolteacher In Midway
where there were no schools or
churches but the children were
ta u g h t a t th e home of the
M o rg a n s. D e a c o n C h a r lie
M organ, fa th e r of C harllne
Mocfui Alton, founded the Itret
church tn the community or
M atthew M issionary B aptist
Church Is still serving that East
Sanford community which has
grown tremendously.
Mrs. Morgan—AUen met and
married the Rev. E J . Allen and
they celebrated BO years of
marital Mias before his death In
1968. Throughout her many
years she waa a lovable, smiling
*- -v

, M- •

&lt;

j1

f
i f)IMB

Couple reaffirm
vows on their
2nd anniversary
COCOA. Fla. - Cynthia J.
Flanders and Loran F. Smith
were married Dec. 1 9 ,1 9 9 0 ,
a t San Angelo. Texas. The
bride Is formerly of Sanford
mttA the
if from
Geneva.
As an Army reservist , the
bride waa fWimitiwg f military
specialty school In Texas.
When she graduated In De-

Wilkins whom she loves dearly.
Over SO children's lives have
been touched by Mrs. Allen's
Christian h e art Over 200 relattves and Mends attended this
grand celebration of the honoree,
Charline Morgan Allen. Quests
cam e from N orth C arolina,
Rochester. N.Y.. Philadelphia,
West Palm Beach, Belle Otade
and Jacksonville,
Many more happy birthdays
are wished this groat lady.
M udlO dl p r o g r a m M l
tlie Dencoocec Boerd eetohmtkm of Zion Hope Missionary
Baptist Church. 8th 8t. and
Orange Ave., will be held this
afternoon at 3 p.m. The annual
anniversary sendee will feature

K b o n y F M N o n F .tr
age of 100. still remembers the
The 35th Ebony Fashion Fair
very active life she lived with her wfll be presented hy the Orlando
minister husband srho served as Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma
pastor of Macedonia Primitive Theta Sorority. Inc. The fair will
Baptist Church. Sanford.
be held Saturday, Feb. 8. at 8
She haa food memories of her p . m . I n t h e B o b C a r r
life as a minister's wife, the Auditorium,
m any churches, associations
Tickets are 824 and 828 for
and conven tion s she attended, reacrrcd seating and 820 for
She aays her life haa been ooe of open seating- PProceeds from
dedication and love toward her this event sdll be given to local
three nieces she reared: Ludlle charities and high school acholWalker who lives with her and aiehlp recipients. For Informscares for her dally: also h e r' tton contact Mercedes Clark at
nieces Cora Lee Morgan. Millie 843*2552 or Kitty EUleon at
Jones: and grandson Rickey 4234240.

run four vane and be
coveted by Insurance
►yearly.
of drivers was broken
follows: Salaries for
thing approximately
L r~ r *
« • “«&lt;
annually 828.600. Workman's
Compensation Insurance for the
drhrers -cost 812 per 8100 of
M isty or annually 83.500. Qas
[of fhe vans waa averaging
81.300 per month which figured
annually to be 815.600.
The combined figure for the
cost of the vans totalled 855.700.

Loran and Cynthia Flanders

Chartsna Morgan oslsbratsd her 100th birthday surrounded by her
family, her grandeon Rickey, great granddaughter Klndra Wilkins,
nleoe Lucille Walker, cousin LonTe Morgan and great great
granddaughter Krystal Wllkens.

The history of Black music will
be presented this morning at the
9:30 a.m. Sunday School service
at the historic St. Jam es AME
Church, 9th Street and Cypress
A v e n u e . M rs. B la n c h e R.
Hammond, head of the Cordosa
High 8chool, Washington, D.C..

service because It waa free
transportation directly to the
door of the work station,
An 86-year-old man was asked
how he felt about the problem,
He was riding the van to go to
lunch, every day and would
occasionally help at the senior
dtlsena center in Cased berry,
He had no hard feelings about
the discontinuance of the van
because he found another bus
that would pick him up and take
him to the center.
A woman member of RSVP
said her group that got together

Omlln m nWr ilrBI WvOGinf)
ooramony, Dec. 18,1M0.

f- w h lts b r id a l ro s e a In*
tersp eraed w ith greenery,
pearls and Ivory boars.
Bridal attendants were De­
b o ra h T h o m p so n , T eresa
H a n c o c k , C o ral L a n d ry ,
Jessica Ctaadotto and Cheryn
H a ll. A lso , T a m m y a n d
Danielle Smith, daughters of
the groom. All wore black,
off-the-shoulder. knee-length
d re s se s w ith w hite pearl
necklaces and white pearl

having trouble financially."
The RSVP T ran ap o rtatio n
system h a s becom e a very
expensive Item and mooey was
the determining factor tn the

Flower girls were Amber
vette and Charmaine Cynthia
landers, the bride's nieces.
A reception followed the
m were "So
Carolyn Mc­
CteUan, "Unforgettable" by
Lester Smith and "Love In
Any Language" by Mary Kelly.

Cook, son of Susan L.Orkngsr of
144 Cleartake Circle. Sanford.
recently deployed with 22nd
M arine E x peditionary U nit,
Camp Lejeune. N.C. for six
months to the Mediterranean
Sea as part of the U8S Ouam
a__ ______ ___
n -------Amphibious
Ready
Oroup.
C o o k wf l l v l a t t p o r t a
throughout the Mediterranean, .
The 1989 graduate of Oviedo
High School. Oviedo, and a
graduate of the University of
Central Florida. Orlando with an
associate of arts degree. Joined
the Marine Corps In March 1991.

OUNTER AIR FORCE STA­
TION. Montgomery. Ala. — Se­
nior Master Sgt. Richard L.
Triplett haa graduated from the
T h u rsd ay s, 2/4-2/25. l f t l B nine-week UJl. Air Force Senior
a . m . -2 :1 5 p .m . B a s ic to Noncommissioned Officer (NCO)
advanced techniquM with cm- Academy here.
Graduates of the Air Force's
highest professional military
s c n o o l fo r N CO s s t u d i e d
can fer a list advanced m anagem ent tech­
o f s u p p lie s? C ost: 6 4 0 /p e r niques. communication skills,
and behavioral science.
Triplett. n p - TW n d f nt of the
AFT AC Mission Inform ation
System Support Branch. Is the
Saturdays. 2/6-3/13, 9-11 a m
Dssigned to hslp pffifetpvn*1 son of Densll B. and Je a n
Triplett of 2642 Myrtle Ave..
Id en tify p re s e n t d ay . non
Sanford.
The sergeant la a 1973 gradu­
alternative aasertiveneas com­ ate of Seminole High School, and
m u n icatio n tech n iq u es and a 1989 graduate of Rollins Col­
lege. Winter Park.

According 1
argsnlasr. fi|d
was woo by Si

high by Audn
byEmy Bohol,
The next bt
hold Feb. 10,

itree.
Those who wish to attend may
lace their reservation by sendg a check far the appropriate
nount payable to Ballet Oulld
. to: BOS.
rtoftahfotri-Rfmlnotf
Ken Doktor. PO Box 1381,
mford 32772-1381. Ptesse Intide your name and address
sd Indicate your choice of
Mree.
This event Is the climax to the

and the minister of music of the
Greater First Baptist Church,
Washington, will be the pres­
e n te r o f th e B lack M usic
Workshop. The community Is
Invited to attend. The Christian
Education Department Is the
sponsor and 8ylvla Hammond
Stallworth and Glorida Jones,
chairmen.

Wella stated. "It seems that
some dissatisfaction came from
those who have been going to
sewing groups. Essentially that
is all they have to do. They have
centered their life around that
group. 1 am sorry socialisation is
not |he purpose of R8VP..I am
afraid many of our members
think RSVP will fold without the
vans. Of course that la not true."
RSVP's budget for the year Is
approximately 8130.000. The
vans had been budgeted at
approximately 880.000 for the
year. RSVP owns the vans. Two
were purchased from money
from the foundations. One came
from United Way and the other
came from Seminole County.
The van from the county will be
turned back to the county and
two of the other vans will be
sold. RSVP plana to keep one
van to carry supplies back and
forth from homes and to assist In
the big project the Christmas
Store.
Seminole County provides

BOS silver anniversary year
which will conclude with the
silver Anniversary Ballet on
April 24 and 25.
na n .u
D iy
Save the day • Feb. 13. That's
when the First United Methodist
Church will hold Its annual Do
Da Day. There will be a variety
of Items for sale as well as a fish
fry. from 4 to 7 p.m.. for 85.

--------- «- «!..

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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, January 24, 1093 - 78

Some old flames never die;
the embers keep on glowing
DBA* ABBYt Can you stand
another "lost love" story like the
one about the woman and her
American airman? (She signed
her letter with the name of a
popular aong of the '40s. "It's
Been a Long. Long Time.")
She asked if she should try to
locate her old love whom she
had not seen since World War II.
It was about the same time I was
involved In a very Intense, but
brief, relationship. It ended
because I had a commitment
that had to take precedence over
our love.
For the next 40 years, my old
love was never very far from my
mind, even though I had no Idea
whether he was dead or alive.
• Then recently. In an u n ­
believable stroke of fate, we met
face to face, and all the intensity
of ur feelings for each other
came flooding back!
Sounds like a happy ending,
right? Wrong! We are still
committed to others. Neverthe­
less. we are both aware that the
old flame never went out com­
pletely.
No city or state, please. Sign
me with the name of another
popular aong of that era...
•THAT OLD PSSLOfO"
DBAB OLD PBBLDVOt This is
the stuff of which dreams (and
nightmares) are made. Read on:
DBAS ABBYt "BUI" and I

— the poor woman probably was
alone and reminiscing. You can't
blame a woman for Inquiring.
N othing v e n tu re d , n o th in g
gained.

DBAB ABBYt Your "Opera­
tion Abby" Is a big hit here in
Korea. I have picked up several
letters that your readers have
sent, and I am currently corre­
have been married for more than sponding with 10 people from
40 years. About two years ago, the U.S.A. 1 am even writing to a
he received a long-distance tele­ class of schoolchildren.
phone call at home. It was a
voice from out of the past! It
Without Operation Abby. it
seems a woman he had known would have been a very lonely
had been recently widowed and holiday for many of us. I am a
was calling to Inquire about 32-year-old single man, and this
Bill's marital status — maybe isn't my first time being far from
hoping he was also alone, and home during the holidays.
they could take up where they
I want to let the folks back
had left off many years ago. Can
home know that they can sleep
you imagine the nerve?
soundly at night because there
Bill -was practically tongue- are a lot of dedicated men and
tied, but he told her politely that women here who are willing to
he had been very much married lay down their lives for their
for a good many years.
country.
I realize that tim es have
And I want to express my
changed, and women are much
more aggressive these days and heartfelt thanks to you and wish
anything goes, but calling a man all the caring people of the
at his home not knowing the greatest nation on earth a Happy
circumstances is a little too New Year. Thank you. Abby.
from the bottom of our collective
much, don't you think?
u p t r r o n l o n o is l a n d hearts.
OBATBTUL Of KOBBA
DBAB UPBBTi Don't be upset

Jenny
C o a tla u d from Page SB
night.
Nrw York was so grrat, Jenny
said. She continued, "While I
was there I took many, many
dance classes. It was really great
because I could get Into different
programs with different leach*
crs. Our show was at night so I
had many days to do anything I
wanted. If there was an audition
I was Interested in. I would do
the audition Just to get myself
seen and everything. It Is so
Important. It takes a good two to
three months to start getting
seen and getting noticed and
then to build a name and a
reputation. It takes a very long
time. I was actually at the point
where I think I was building a
name and reputation and getting
myself known a little bit more
when lien."
Jenny Is so excited when she
talks about the famous people
she has met so far. She worked
with Mac Davis before she len
New York. He Is the male lead In
the Broadway production. The
male lead In the traveling com*
p a n y Is K eith C a rra d ln c .
Through the many parties and
benents she has attended she
has met Donald Trump. Cyd
Charlssc, Tommy Tune and
many others. She exclaimed,
"They are all Just such won*
derful and beautiful people. I am
enjoying every minute of this
dream."
Jenny left the New York com­
pany because she was only
contracted for six months to
replace an Injured dancer. When
It came time to cast the road
company she was Invited to Join
that company as one of the
swing dancers. She wanted to
stay In New York but there were
so many more advantages to
going on the road. It was a tough
decision for her to make.
Jenny related. "They asked
me. ' Would you prefer to stay
here or would you like to go on
the road?' I didn't know. That
was a hard decision to make! In
New York I was doing so much
and I was Just seeing a lot of
different things. I ‘could defi­
nitely tell my dancing strength
was getting better and every
show I improved on the stage.
But there were so many cities 1
had never been to and known
really nothing about and ao I
decided It could be pretty much
fun if I chose the road show,
‘The show opened In San
Francisco which Jenny said was
great, "We have been In Florida
since Christmas, week and We
are here, until the end of Jan u ­
ary. So even though I am not
actually home I can come home
on the weekends. I have been
coming home on Sundays and
s ta y in g th r o u g h T u e s d a y
morning."

Jtn n y Qruby shows off har Will Rogsrs Folllss Jacket while visiting
at har Sanford home before the show opens Tuesday In Orlando.

Traveling has taken her to
many different theaters. Jenny
finds them fascinating. She said,
"It Is very interesting, playing In
all those theaters Is one of the
neatest things about this Job.
They have some really old ones
In St. Louis and Memphis and
they are Incredible. Just the way
the house Is built Just fascinates
me.
"Oh! They are so neat. You
|ust go Into the audlener seats
and look around you and not
even see the show. In those
places when you get out front
and In the lobby everything Is so
□mate and beautiful and so
huge. Even the people who have
worked In those theaters for
years and years are interesting,
They tell us ghost stories and all
the. rtlfTssanl-thlngs that have
happened in the theater.
" -They even talk about the
different stars who have played
there in the past. It is Just so
exciting to meet those people.
The biggest disadvantage in
playing there is when you get

backstage. Everything Is so
crowded. In Florida we have new
theaters and the backstage area
■»Just as large as the front or the
house. It's like some weeks we
Just have the width or our bodies
I® dress and some weeks you
can Just spread out."
The show Is also scheduled to
play In A tlanta. Nashville,
R ichm ond. P ittsb u rg h urid
Raleigh for ihc next months. Il is
scheduled until July 1003 and
will play the final three months
In Los Angeles. Jenny will then
get another chance to further her
career as she is planning to look
around before she finally decides
In what direction to go. You can
bet the movies are in this girl's
mind.
"Will Rogers F©Ikes’! opens in
Orlando. «v.Jam »^8i and - nuns
through the J a n . 31&gt; at Bob Carr
Performing Art«J3hinfcr.&lt; Tuesday thrugh Saturday evening
performances begin at 8 p.m.
and Thursday, Saturduy and
Sunday matlncec performances
begin at 2 p.m.

Optimists plsn
golf toumamsnt
Dais Coppock, center, of (he
8anford Optimist Club wel­
comes two local visitors to a
recent meeting. Tim Raines,
left, has been playing major
league baseball for 12 years,
the last two with the Chicago
White 8ox. Jeff Blake, right, is
a quarterback with the New
York Jets. Also visiting was
Blake’s father, Emory Blake,
football coach at Seminole
High School. Tho club plans a
golf tournament to be held
soon at the DeBary Plantation.
For Information, call Coppock
at 324-1277.

The following births have been
recorded at Florida Hospital.
Altamonte Springs:
Jan . 7 — Jeff and Robin
Johnson. Longwood, boy

and Jeffrey Knlpe, Oviedo, girl:
Li nda atid William Bogle,
Oviedo, girl

Jan. 8 — Annette and Brian
Thomas, Sanford, boy: Darlene
and William Wood. Oviedo, girl
Jan. 0 — Ana and Harris Lo.
Lake Mary, girl: Cindy Groekey
and John Braddy, Casselberry,
boy
Jan. 10 — Mario and Charles
Moore. Longwood. boy: Faith
W ig g le s w o rth . A l t a m o n t e
Springs, girt

•*Tj|

Jan. 12 — Vanessa and Albert
Cain. Altamonte Springs, girl:
Cheryl and Kenneth Reeves,
Sanford, boy: Dora and James
Cyphers. Sanford, girl
J a n . 13 — M a r y B e t h
Szczcpaniak. boy: Daphne and
Seth Clayton. Altamonte
Springs, boy: Jane and Thomas
Crabb. Longwood. girt: Debra

i

SCHOOL a
oTIES

�TOUR IWTHOAT
. J U . &gt;4, IM S

m p**
*-'"IS

l'M t t t t f TO U*/K
TO UE MffUr FORTH
M5T OFMTUFf..

Opportunities* might develi
In the coming year which will
enable you to disengage yourself
from two situations that re*
strlcted you tn the past. Once
y o u r b u rd e n s have been
lightened. It'll enhance your
probabilities lor success.
AgtTAftnm (Jan. 20-Feb. IB)
There are two ways or doing
things today, the right way and
the hard way. Unfortunately. If
you choose the latter, and you
might, the results could be
disappointing. Aquarius, treat
yourself to a birthday gilt. Send
for Aquarius' Astro-Graph pre*
dietkm* for the year ahead by
99
mailing 81.25 plus a long, self*
as
addressed, stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
H
P.O. Box 91438. Cleveland. OH
99
44101-3428. Be sure to state
your jeodlac sign. .
PiaCCS (Feb. 20-March 20)
Today there la a chance you m b
might repeat an old mistake that P I
turned out to be a painful M -j
experience. Profit from the paat. I I
Inatead of letting It penalise you.
A R IM (March 21-Aprtf IB)
There la a possibility today that
your Inquisitiveness might draw
you Into another's troubled af­
fairs. This could be an unwise
move. Remember what curiosity
did to the cat.
TAUSDS (April 20-May 20)
An obstacle that you might have
to contend with today may. be
c o n stru c te d by a vengeful
adversary. Instead of attempting
2 HwLfWte'
to scale It, backtrack and find a
9 9 -^
new route.
I I I
W „ |, * *
I | I Mm MM
OBMtNI (May 21-June 20)
I
Q *
You are not apt to be too I v 4 — f —4—^
j
—H
at jC T L m
successful today In converting P I • I
I I
I I I i f —RmsSe
another to your way of doing-.
M Vssaaiaw
things, even If your methods are
" ■ ■ ■ ■ “
superior. The more you push.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 82) could Inconvenience others. This*
the greater resistance you could
Strive to be forgiving of co- is no way to win a popularity *
experience.
workers today if their errors contest.
CAMCRR (June 21-July 22) create extra work for you. ReBAOITTARIVS (Nov. 23-Dec.
Someone who lacks the creden- m em ber, no one is perfect. 21) You will fare'better today ir
tlals to do so might try to wield Including you. One day you may you let go of an old grudge,
power over you or your loved need the same consideration.
Being vindictive will only serve
ones today. Don't let this tndiLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) to create greater dissension,
vidual accom plish a selfish Something you're presently
In- Turn the other cheek,
purpose at your expense.
votved with might require add!LRO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even- Ubnal expenditures Just to keep
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
tbally you're going to have to ft afloat. Think carefully before IB) Be careful at this time that
resolve a volatile domestic Issue putting good money after bod.
you do not become Involved In a
that keeps arising from Ume to
R O O M O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In non-essential activity that could
time, but today is not the day. It order to further your own Inter- cost you more than you antlcl■could last cause more problems esta today, there is a possibility pate. Restrict your spending to |
'without a resolution.
you might do something that needs instead of wants.
tion/,;.
’ N S .I M V I I
Unusual developm ents are
Indicated for.you In the year
a h e a d p s r ta ln tn g to y o u r
earnings and Income. There Is a
chance you might make money

n l n,

« » « « * . lr*

.wioo. ,'uv. .i .ji1

3iortUcouldWo iE ^ xT spS iS

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£ .p , Wo ttl.y .M -., wiry "A
D»BU«I.|I1_ OlWreM." W btn | | l h « M | | .

U D . xW'TS
L - . J i ’ ’ Hi

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bounce ,it ofrijm

e-whose judgment you
W or she could prtrride

U m A m c g J 2 S £ c L 23) Give
advantages. Be ' a ' team player your ambitious objectives the
instead5 one who stands on the respect they deserve today. If
sidelines
you make them priority goals.
9 m m ttla y 21-June 20) ypur ohsnoes for achieving them
Material motivation te the driv- k u h g o o d ^
n v
tnd force that will supply you
RCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
«mh tbs greatest t m p ^ t o d s y . Your greatest asset today to your

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-

Chiles take center stage in session
^ ^ ^ S 5 d ^ ^ “ a ^ S to p S r i r l3 f ,| S S
Wovertor^ race sa Republican Senate President Ander Crenshaw epare wtthjfcmocmt*
tc Ckrv. Lawton Chiles over taxes and the
budget.
The two ,are among the major players at
the CasttoLwhich finds ttaelf wtth a Senate
underRepubUcan management for the first
time In 118yearswhenlawmakeisconvene
Feb. 8.
The Democratic-dominated Houae la led
by Speaker Bolley "Bo" Johnson, D-Mllton,
and a boat of freshmen In both chambers
will be more prominent than usual because
of the huge turnover rate last year.
In 1903, Crenshaw led efforts to block
Chiles’ Sa.B billion plan to end dosensof tax

^C hilesw illcounterw tthab™ d-new team oJm !
of aides: Chief erfStaff Tom Herndon, Budget
Director David Coburn, CommunicaUotia to "S
Director Ron Sacha and lobbyist Bebe
^
Blount. Former Chief of Staff Jim Krog has
returned to the private lobbying ranks with
the Steel, Hector and Davis law firm.
o ,.g
Crenshaw, eonslderetl a likely 19S4 OOP
candidate tor governor, lost a major ally tougL.
when veteran Sen. Richard Langley of
Clermont was defeated for re-election.
oy^
There are tour senators Crenshaw wants
in the room when he makes a major
Sto
decision! Rules Committee Chairwoman never
Toni Jennings of Orlando. Appropriations dorm
Committee Chairman Jim Scott of Fort «dml)
Lauderdale. Finance and Taxation Com-

Gov- Lawton Chiles spoke In Sanford recently at the Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Unity Prayer Breekfaat.

wnticiacur

P0II IBMfMNafll
FLORID
• c m i. ACT

Write A ^
Want Ad
That Sells!

H. BRAXTON O R IIK , JR j

aaeNDAJOoaeiNjtNT

IH f i l l ClwCIHT H H IIT,

« lima

aal

net B a rm s* w t
Santa'S. FlarM* a m
S IM MUST as N ic stva o IN TMS FUSCHAIIMO DIVISION.
IN I CAST 1ST S T M tT . TNISO FLOOR. ROOM MM. SANFORD.
FLORIDA, NO LATtR THAN OAT OF BID OFININO AS
iN O K A Tto Aaova. aios a ic u v a o a f t i b t h a t t i m i
WILL NOT M ACCSFTIO. NO IX C I FT IONS WILL BS MAOS.
NO FACSIMILS OB T8LI0AAFHIC BIO FROFOSAL SUA
Ml ISIONS WILL S « ACCSFTIO.
FOR FURTHIB INFORMATION CONTACTt JACOUI FCRBY,
BUY SR. &lt;4W) M ill* . IXTSNSMN 7114. SID FACNAOtS A A I
AVAILASLIINTHC RURCHASINO DIVISION AT MO CHAROS.
HOTS! ALL FROSFSCTIVS SIDOSRI A R I H IR S S T CAU­
TIONS D NOT TO CONTACT AMY MSMASR OF THB SIM INOLI
COUNTY SOAAO OF COUNTY COMMIUIONSRS RSOAROINO
THSSS FROJSCTS. SUCH CONTACT SHALL BS CAUSS FOR
DISQUALIFICATION. ALL CONTACTS MUST M CHANNSLID
TMROUOM T M I a ilB f llf INfl n i u l i m
TRa Ctw tf m ar«M Bn rNRI M rwact aav at Ml altar*. «Hh ar
wWRawl c a y . N nalw taNMftaiatai.a'taacianllAaaNa' aauiila
IN tad InSpiRIM had ttrvM BN M anM afB ii Caw*. C m N
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WITNSSS aw haai aaS Of-

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MARYANNS MORSC
CLSRK. CIRCUIT COURT

This Is • graat opportunity for you to enjoy the same great result* ss
our rsgulsr olssslfltd customer* st no cost to you. Just follow thsss
Instructions.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Ads will bs scheduled to run for 10 days.
Price of Item must be elated in the ad end be $100 or late.
Only 1 1tem per ed end 1 ad per household per week.
You should cell end cancel ee soon as Item sell*.
Available to individual* (non Commercial) only. Does not
apply to rental* or garage A yard sales.
6. The ad must be on th# form shown bsiow and'either be
mailed In or prseented In person fully prepared to the
Sanford Herald Classified Department.
7. Ad will start as soon aa possible.
i. Classified Managements decision on oopy eooeptebillty will
be final.

&gt;-1 ‘•'V
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THE GOAT AMERICA* INVEST!

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bright and tpactout. Scraantd
porch overtooki1tlihlng Iaka.
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caro........ .................. .U7.P0

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OLD SANFORD •] barm. &gt; bath
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beautifully renovated. U N +*
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High school report
SANFORD — Starting tomorrow, the Pine Arts Gallery at
Seminole Community College will be featuring an exhibit of
recent works by New York Thomas Oermano.
The exhibit will be from Jan. 38 through Feb. 38.
Oermano will be teaching aeveral or the art daaaee a t 8CC
through this Wednesday.
On Tuesday. Jan. 38. he will be presenting a slide lecture at
7:30 p.m. In the Fine Arts Building, Room 0*106. The lecture la
free and open to the public.
There will also be a welcoming reception for Oermano
tomorrow from 3 to 8 p.m.
For more Information, call the Fine Arts Oallery at 333*1480.
ext. 438.

Tatent show plannad a! Midway
SANFORD — The students at Midway Elementary School
will be presenting a cornucopia of talents at their annual talent
show on Thursday. Jan. 38.
Beginning at 6:30 p.m. In the school auditorium. 10 students
wlU show off what they can do. At Intermission there will be
additional entertainment as well.
There la a 61 donation required at the door.
The money raised will be used to help pay for educational
programs at the school.
For more Information, can the school at 333*1791.

MIm 8H 8 contest cot
SANFORD — The annual Mias Seminole High School
competition has be scheduled for Jan. 30.
The 7:30p.m . contest Is designed to select an ambassador for
the school from the senior girls who have qualified as superior
in talent, leadership, service and academics.
Jon Land, senior representative o f ’Walt Disney World
community affairs. wlU serve as a judge at that competition.
The contest Is open to the public and will take place In the
school auditorium.

londsy, Jan. 28,166*
Chicken Patty Sandwich
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli Normandy
Tuttl Fruittl
Milk
M e d e y .Ja n .lt, 166*
Italian Lasagne
Tossed Orson Salad
Steamed Green Beans
Garlic Roll
Milk
Hot Dog or Chill Oog on a Bun
Crispy Cota Slaw

Winter Stand Vegetables
Garden Salad
JutaeBar
School Roll
Milk

May,J«. tt,ltSI
Naohoe, Chill and Cheeei
S easoned Pinto Beane
Mexicali Com
Freeh Fruit
School Roll
Milk

Rams debate team
roll on to success
LAKE MARY - Adventur­ coaches, but the effort Is
rewarded by trophies and
ous bus trips all over Florida,
eating o u t Jucy gossip, argu­
ing all weekend and sweet
victories.
These words sum up the
last three years of forensics
competition at Lake Mary
High School. Lake Mary's
debate club Is on a roll, this
year especially, as the popu­
larity and Intent in forensics
c o n t i n u e s to sp re ad
throughout Florida. In addi­
tion, LMHS debate has also
become a member of the
National Forensics League, 'emerged with the'm ost victobringing honor to both the
lies,
school and the community.
T h e t e a m of Dave
And what Is forensics any* Carmandy and Chris Johnson
way?
took first place In the team
Forensics consists of many
debate, Nikki Fenne captured
different forms of Intellectual
first In the Llncotn-Douglaa
an d a rtis tic com petition.
Debate and Marcy B o u t took
From team debate to oral
third place In the Oral In­
I n te r p r e ta tio n , s tu d e n ta
terpeetatiou division of Indlcompete against one another vkhial events,
and are Judged against one
Lake Mary High School
another and are judged based
debate will be hosting the
on technicality and speaking
next statewide tournament.
•“ 2 ^ .
_
Anyone who la Interested In
This takes work, effort and
finding out what forensics are
tim e on th e p a rt of th e
all about Is welcome to atc o m p e tito rs a n d th e ir
tend.
.

Busy week ahead
at Seminole High
SANFORD - Exams are
the job fair wtn be coming to
over for this semester,
town, so to speak. On Jan. 38,
goodness! Studenta all during the EngUah classes,
over 8emlnole High School
representatives from 30 dif­
w e releasing a sigh of relief.
ferent companies will be a
part of the fetr. They will
Soon. Jan. 36, to be exact
report cards are coming o u t
provide the students with
For some studenta it's a good Information about various ca­
thing, for others, a not so good reers. Information Includes
thing. With the beginning of a
s k ills n e e d e d fo r th a t
new semester, though, many
p articu lar career and the
exciting and en tertain in g
b e n e fits th a t com e w ith
events are scheduled.

a

To begin with, the Seminole
music and drama department
will be presenting I M m .
The Contemporary Ifusfoal.
This present-day version of

promlalng-to-bc enterig and enjoyable play, it

School goes into the future
as well as back to the basics
LONOWOOD’ - P au l
Cave said that the studenta
at Rock Lake Middle School
a re well b e h av e d , r e ­
sponsible and academically
He's lucky, yes. But the
school also promotes such
qualities in their studenta
through a variety of activi­
ties that teach the students
to respect themselves and
one another.
“You walk around this
faculty and you see that U'a
for a campus that Is not
that new." Cave said. “The
studenta are very aware of
that sort of thing and have
aanl .nnl
lot of respect
for the
*
anlwwil ••••
BLDOQl.
.The studenta are in ­
volved in a num ber of
Incentive programs at the
school that help
their behavior and their
self-esteem.

Specially trained s tu ­
n t s sit down wtth other

Goldsboro kids
loam economies
SANFORD — Junior Achieve­
ment will be training volunteers
lo present programs introducing
the economic system to first,
second and third grade students
at Goldsboro Elementary School
In•Sanford. '
«
The focus of the presentations
will be helping the studenta
understand the connection be­
tween learning In school and
p a r t i c i p a t i o n In t h e U.B.
economy and the contribution of
Individual workers and con­
sumers within our economy.
The training will be held at
Wal-Mart. 3683 Orlando Ave..

’Quality 8m et 1970"

‘ For more information about
how to be a pari of the program,
call the Dividends office at
S34-82H.

fiQ*OS&lt;t Nbl 11779

M

n R M

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                    <text>T

January

25,

NEW

MONDAY

1993

D IG E S T

3 0 C ents

Report
State compares progress of Seminole schools

A rote it t rota...It a rota
Roses are grown quite successTuly In Florida
with minimum care. The secret to a blooming
rose garden Is pruning. In her gardening column
today. Trida Thomas suggests to stary sanitary
pruning now followed by major pruning in
mld-February. In eight weeks, watch the
rosebuds appear.

Drop out rat*

□Opinion

81.18%

Condomt in echool
Are condoms distributed In area schools the
best alternative In the light against AIDS?

O rap otrtn t.

24 white m*J*t
22 wM t$ tematea
i btaok lamate
4.786

94.26%
84wh»tam*tea
87 white femates
2 block mates
S N tp a n lo m a iM
2 hiapanic temates

Plaudits
CFRH Auxiliary presents
awards; Smith top volunteer
raid Staff Writer
—SANFORD —
extern doesn 't
HCA Central

During 1992. the HCA Central
Florida Regional Hospital Aux­
iliary, Inc., contributed 39.415
volunteer hours to the hospital,
an Increase of 1,148 hours. The
133 acUve members saved the
hospital $411,810 In salaries
they would have otherwise bad
to pay for. according to Roy
Vinson, hospital adm inistra tor.
"We certainly could not work
wing. Marshall often had vowed to ouUlve
Republican presidents so his replacement could
be chosen try a Democrat. It was a promise he
could not keep.

No big wlnnor
TALLAHASSEE — Florida's Lotto Jackpot
Jumped to an estimated $12 million Sunday
when computer checks showed that no one
ticket had all six of the numbers needed to win
the $8 million prise up for grabs last week;
The num b ers draw n la te S atu rd ay —
6-S-25-26-27-47 — did produce 335 tickets with
five of the six ,'a n d those tickets are worth
$3.799.50each.
There were 13.089 tickets with four of the
correct num bers, and they are worth $103.50
each, while 333,358 tickets with three of the
num bers can be cashed in for $5 each.
Florida Lotto Jackpot estim ates are based on
funds from any rollovers, expected ticket sales,
long-term investm ent rates and 30-year payouts
to a single winner.

without you and may have even
got* b ro te ^ V ln so n skid, u
Mii|««
pride shone on each

Uon la to give aervtea to the
hospital ana its petfontSi and to
aastot In promoting the health
and welfare of the community in
with the philosophy
and m ission of the Hospital
CorporaUon o f Am erica, ac­
cording to the group's by-laws.
The services the auxiliary ||“
provided since 1865 have In­
creased, ju st as its membey h ip
has. and spans each departm ent
of the hospital.
When * patient or visitor of the

City commission meets tonight
Airnort mad

lUglonal Airport

I Access-93 proposed: An outreach program
SANFORD - Sanford City Planner Jay Marder has
suggested the city become Involved In a project called.
"Access-93." "It's a good idea." City Manager BUI
Simmons said.
The proposed neighborhood outreach program Is
scheduled for discussion during a workshop meeting of
the Sanford City Commission tonight.
"The Intent and purpose of the Access 93 program la
to after a custom er service approach for the city's
services and program s," Marder said."
The plan calls for m embers of the commission and
city staff to hold separate m eetings In various areas
around the city, in order to obtain a better Input from

In hla proposal. Harder explained. "Many local
governments are recognising the need to communicate
with, listen to and respond to dtlxen needs In a more
proactive m anner than ever before."
He continued, “Often, holding open house meetings
In neighborhoods provides an opportunity for dtlsens
to overcome a natural reluctance to travel to city hall
and attend a formal m eeting."
He haa suggested. ",«a team of departm ent heada and
eupervlaors would bold shop In various neighborhoods
of tb s city over a period of several m onths."
H arder has gone well beyond the Initial suggestion.
He haa also determined which neighborhoods m ight be
considered for the meetings, and the subjects to be

Sanford man invents
Playhouse for Cats
Cloudy, windy and eoolor.
W indy and rain y .
Cooler with the high
In the mid to upper
80s. Wind northeast
30 mph and gusty.
Chance of rain 90
percent.

SANFORD • A Sanford resident Is
hoping that his Invention to bemuse
cats wUl eventually land him In
financial dog heaven.
Percy cTMcDanlel of 1306 Cedar
C reek h a s J u s t p a te n te d h is
"P la y h o u se for C a ts ." an d a
Massachusetts company hopes to
m arket It In the future.
The cat playhouse consists of
toys, carpets so th a t cats can
scratch their daw s to their hearts
con tent, fording places for dinner
dishes and places to stretch out. It
can also be easily converted Into a
s to re s box.
"It eras my first invention but I

the nation.
C o rp o ra te h e lp w as n eed ed
becauee obtaining a patent can be a
complicated process.
"It's a long, drawn-out process. I

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Cal l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�.

NEW S FROM T H E REGION AND AC R O S S TH E S T A T E

M O M E M —i—r-rs ■ K P H ^ H n S
ft
Mi

tourist
to set

identify the men
Wilson is in serious but stable condition
covering from burns to 40 percent of tdi

ttt
r W K jjw U - .U *

o f th e a tta c k . In w h ich he d e n ied
g g J P M &lt; ■ * •* * -■ -* •« * * « »

(K ohuta^Ftourk)!

But Ober said such a statem ent would be
cooMdared hearsay and could not be used as
evidence against Kohut and Rourk.

th n o n v ata Jan. 11

.

Longwood, v u charged with the unauthorised uee or
possession of i drtver’sTlcenee by Altamonte Springe Police on
Police eald they were im pending to a disturbance and that
they had asked several people a t the scene. Including Thomas,
for Identification.
,
Police found that his license had been altered, they said.
They found the date of birth had been changed.
He was taken to the John B. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on $100 bond.

8utpsn&lt;M lletnMehaigsd
Matthew Ross Ssafhui. 30. 4S6 Queenabridge Dr., Lake
Mary, was charged with driving with a suspended ficense. ’ _
Seminole County sheriff's officers he was stopped after

He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on $100 bond.

Rttill thQftehargod
Nouha Rifai, 38,131 Slade Dr., Longwood, was charged with
retail theft when she was arrested by Longwood Police on
Friday.
Police said that she attem pted to leave the Pic and Save store
on State Road 434 in Longwood without paying for $13.43 In
merchandise, including lingerie and towels.
She was take to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held on $100 bond.

Bp The Aa— io isd P reae

Man hits poHe« dog. It arretted

MIAMI - The Haitian army
and elite have lost powerful
friends in the United States with
the change in adm inistrations,
the Rev. Jesse Jackson said after
a visit to the island nation.

Willie Choice. 30. 1031 Stra wberry Ave.. Sanford waa
charged with burglary and battery on a law enforcement officer
by Sanford Police on Saturday.
Police report they were responding to a burglary In prom saa
In the 1600 block of W. 8th Street when they saw Choice
running from the scene. They said he was confron ted by a
police dog when hejum ped over a fence. .
They said he refused to cooperate and struck the dog several
times.
He was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional Facility and
held in lieu of $3,000bond.

Sunday after a weekend trip to
H alil. T he Reagan-Bush ad­
m inistrations had supported
H aiti's m ilitary dictators, he
said, but President Clinton and
S e c re ta ry o f S ta te W arren
Christopher had no intention of
continuing to comfort the army
and the nation's elite.
"T hat's why the military is so!
afraid." Jackson said. "It Is now!
on a boat without a compass." ;
He said his visit was private.:
and it w asn't Immediately clear,
how, If at aU. he represented the
C lin to n a d m in is tr a tio n .Christopher did brief Jackson'
before he left.
:

Ossie Lee Smith, 48. 1018 Pine Ave., Sanford, and Ksnny
Lamar Mills, 33,1018 Cypress Ave., Sanfcrd. were arrested on
drug charges by Sanford Polioe on Friday.
Smith was charged with purchaing cocaine. Mffle waa
charged with the sate and delivery of cocaine and pomarelon of
cocaine with Intent to eeU.
Police said they were observing drug acttvtty near Celery and
Locust avenues when they m w Mills flag down Smith and sad
him $0 worth of crack cocaine.

bershlp: Dorothy Floray. records
and awards, and Jane Back,
pubUslty^- « • &gt;
• -•
Those In charge of scheduling
volunteers are: Miriam Askew.
day deskt.Shlrley Dietrich, night
desk: Stale Querry, day shop:
Carol Boston, night shop: Jane
M cKIbben, S u n sh in e; C arol
Boaton, emergency room: Dossie
D eO an ah l. re c o v e ry room :
Barbara Sigler, surgical waiting
room: Margaret Wright, library

* V?*'*«,+* C,V

;■irm'*'*
■vgtfilff'
m w ■

/ 11 r j*

y

Reports
High School, "ft' is &lt;
peripheral view."'
D avid S c o tt, p rin t
H am ilton Elem entary
"We are not getting the whole
picture," Scott noted.
He also noted that some of the
statistics on which the schools
were oem g. grtoeu were ir*
relevant or baaed on things
which are beyond the achooFs
control.
Scott pointed out that the
18.33 percent student mobility
rate at bis school (compared to
11.63 percentage rate district­
wide) is something out of his

punched her in the chest and she scratched him and hit her
with her puree.
They were both taken to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility and each held on $3,800bond.

Warrant arrests
•D ustin Lee Hnlltca, 18. 358 Snowfleid Run, Heathrow, waa

S c h a p k e r a g re e d . T h a t
statistic and the drop out rate
(4.78 percent at 8eminole). for
exam ple are m isleading, she

r

(b) pat­
entable and (c) martketabte at a
reasonable price for consumers.
Officials at American Inventors
thought McDaniel’s Playhouse
for Cats met all three criteria.
Currently, co m p an y officials
are trying to find a manufacturer
w h o w ill p r o d u c e t h e c a t
Diavhouac.

^Sm #M u V a i l u Q|
IO1O8 V m ' V o iw 'p j n :
3 i4 $ a * ..4 :l5 p .m .t
O assaB saatohiJm . 10£ J
lO&amp; Bpjn.: tows. 4 0 4 a jp .

Querrv, of Osteen, president
Jane Back. Deltona, presidentelect: Dorothy Floray, Deltona:
vice president: Edith Avenel.
S anford, tre a su re r: T helm a
Sm ith, Lake Mary, recording
secretary: Marietta Bragg, DeBary, corresponding secretary,
and Miriam Askew, Sanford,
pastpresident
Under the board, there are
committee chairs th at help make
everything run smoothly. They

Drug ehargtB filad

Aristide became Haiti's first
freely elected president In 1BB0.
He left the country following a
bloody coup in September IBB 1. ;

high tem p eratu re |n

for working over 800 hours:
E lsie Q u erry , 800: S h irley
Diedrich. 733; Jane Back. 000:
Dottle Floray. 050: Vivian Farmer. 088: Dorothy Oatchel. 017:
E sth e r L enslng. 610: D oris
E lliott 001; Betty Bandage, 807:
Jack Btmer, BBS. and Jewell
Smith. 833.
One hundred hour pins were
presented to Bruce S cott Helen
Williams and Oeorgla Stump.
Vinson also had the honor of

Miriam Askaw, volunteered over 1,000 hours each
In lS tt.

Frank Dale Thomason, 38, 1848 Longwood-Lske Mary ML.
Longwood, was charged with battery by Seminole County
sheriff's deputies on Saturday.
Deputies —u ffraf Thomason «wi his girlfriend had been
involved in a verbal argum ent when he began to hit her. The
report that she had severe bruises uner her eye. on her chest
and on her Up. She also had a Cut on her thum b.
Thomason was taken to the John E. Polk Correctional
Facility and held on $2,500 bond.

Raoul Cedraa, Jackson said the
general adm itted exiled Presi­
dent Jean-Bertrand Aristide Is
stlU very popular and probably
would win any new election.
:

TUid to return." said Jackson,
referring to A ristide by hid

Sunshine cart to brighten their
days with newspapers, magssines, toiletries, candles and
num erous other Items.
F o u r m e m b e rs re c e iv e d

Four members of the auxiliary, from left to right.
Edith Avonel, Qiaos Smith, Marietta Bragg and

Battery ehargad

on $5,000

As pari of a Sunday sermon in
the Haitian capital of Port-auPrince. Jackson urged the proA ristide p arish io n ers of St.:
Gerard Roman Catholic church
to usher In Aristide without
seeking reren # t against soldiers

m em bership w ith a total of
$ 1 0 W paid out.
The auxiliary can also be

.

McDaniel said he built the
original cat playhouse for his
own pet. However, when a friend
saw It. he told McDaniel. "You
ought to patent th a t" McDaniel
took his advice.
McDaniel invents In his spare
time. His full-time job Is as a
cu sto d ian for th e Sem inole
County School System.
Although McDaniel has several
other ideas for inventions, he
said he may "waft to see how
well this one goes over In the
m arketplace."

» ■*'

-T.

'

*
^ tr r r r »»
*
Lakevlew or Sanford (middle
schools).'' she said.
Roger Gardner, a n ' assistant
principal a t Sanford Middle
School, said the parents at his
school wUl be receiving their
reportsaUtUelate.
"We’re adding some additional
information that helps clarify
some of the statistics, we think/*
said Gardner.
A dm inistrators all agreed,
however, that the report serves
one important purpose.
"It's making us take a good
lo o k a t o u r s e l v e s ," J o e
Monserst. registrar of Lake Mary
High School, said.

uK C A I-

GAR DIE f

�NAT HENTOFF

The fading legacy of Clarence Gideon

Tell governor:
No condoms in
local schools
We urge the Sem inole County School Board
to vote Tuesday In opposition to giving
condom s aw ay at high schools. Prompt action
tanecesaary.
The suggestion for free state-w ide distribu­
tion at high schools, waa proposed early th is
m onth by a Red Ribbon com m ittee set up by
Governor Lawton C hiles.
C hiles said he intended to review the
c o m m ittee reco m m en d a tio n a th is p a st
weekend, and m ay give h is com m ents on the
proposal th is w eek.

A Supreme Court case th at accm a to particularty stay in the minda of m any schoolchildren ta
Otdeon v. Walnwright. Those f have talked to are
Impressed that this convict — w ithout any
mooey, without a lawyer — wrote • handwritten
petition, In pencil, to the Supreme C o u rt and tt
waa actually read by thoee d ista n t mysterious
figures. More than that, they said he waa right,
and his name from then on became part of
American constitutional law.
Charged with thievery, Gideon had asked a
Florida state court judge to appoint a lawyer for
him. The, Judge said he couldn't under previous
Supreme Court rulings. In 1983. Justice Hugo
Black, speaking for a unanim ous Supreme C ourt
said th at Otdeon and other Indigent defendants
are indeed.entitled to a lawyer in felony cases.
(This right has since been expanded to tndude
misdemeanor cases that involve Imprisonment.)
In his opinion, Hugo Black noted th at "any
person hailed Into co u rt who la too poor to hire a
lawyer, cannot be assured a (sir trial unless
counsel la provided for him. This seem s to us to
be an obvious tru th ."
✓
Thirty years later, it la also obvious that
Gideon is n 't w orking for m ore and m ore
defendants with no other resources than an old
Supreme Court decision. 1 have, for Instance,
seen enormously overburdened public defenders

meeting their clients for the first time only IS
m in u te s b efo re a ----------hearing. As the JanjU M L
uary/February 1003
issue of The Ametican Lawyer details in
B
a series of appalling
:
case histories, there
is much worse evidencet th ro u g h o u t ^ B ' a
' JmU
the country, that a
great deal needs to
be dpw "to finish the
Jo b t h a t ... a
ne’er-do-well drifter
feom the backwaters
of Florida set In mo*
tion ... more than 30

a s T he A m erican
trial aftar law
Lawyer points out.
school w aa a
"nationwide, approxcapital tr ia l.)
imateiy 80 percent of
* -----all felony defendants are represented by publicly
paid defenders compared to48 percent in 1982."
Not only are more hinds needed to share the
caseload, but also more lawyers who — as

JACK ANDERSON

Addressing safety
in the workplace

The School Board m eets Tuesday. If It
p astes a resolution against the give-away, it
should send a copy to the governor im m edi­
ately,
8everal other counties. Including Orange.

WASHINGTON - Joseph Kinney Is not
what Bill Clinton would call one of the "facea
of hope" who are looking forward lo his
adm inistration. As founder of the National
Workplace Safety Inatiiute, Kinney fears that
C linton m ay not have th e answ er to
America's workplace safety woes.
The NWSI ranked Arkansas dead last
among all 80 states in worker aareiy in 1991.
"We looked at a couple dozen different
criteria and Arkansas
.
w asn't last because
of one or two things,
it was substantially JjflT .
' W iA
last," Kinney said. I W l .. .
J s J
"In the general elec- m g R i.^ ^ A I J
tion. there was no
mention by Clinton I I
about anything to do \ »
with worker safety.
g /I
so It's not clear what
M
kind of priority he w V
will give the I s s u e . ”
■
Arkansas’ AFL-CIO ■
■
P re sid e n t, J . B ill ^
B ec k e r, h a s a lso
blasted Clinton in the
■ K ln n jy fa irs
p a st fo r co d d lin g
th at Clinton
corporations and de(9*y not h«Vt
v e lo p e r s a t th e
th o tn tw tr to

e efforts o f School Board
Kuhn, th e resolution w ill be

PfcjT11g^XPBotfl****Yf

parents cannot be expected

Stephen Bright keen* saying when he'a naked to
■peak at law schools — "will not commit Juat a
few years to learn a t the expense of the poor, but
who will commit a lifetime to legal services,
public defender and otheTprograma,
Bright has done Juat that. After working as a
last-chance lawyer In Appalachia and W ashing­
ton, he became director of the Southern Center
for Human Rights in Atlanta, where everyone,
Including support personnel, receives the same
salary. Bright la fam iliar w ith death rows
throughout the South and he has sometimes had
death sentences reversed,
Since movies are hardly made anymore on the
order of "Mr. Smith Ooea to W ashington" or
"High Noon." a television documentary on Steve
B right's Journeys and cam paigns could be
powerfully
1|f
*“
“
stories of the ram psnt Incompetence of many
court-appointed lawyers In states th at do not
consider public defenders’ work Im portant
enough to pay these lawyers decently or to Insist
that the courts examine their qualifications.
. In a talk a t the University of MissouriColumbia. Bright told of a Georgia case in which
the court-appointed defense lawyer "did not put
on evidence to seek to avoid the death penalty.
The Jury that sentenced the youth to die waa not
even told that he suffered from schisophrenic."

WKW mi
lu -...v
•1 Mtv*e*

HODDING CARTER

Missteps bode ill for president
deadly serious and all of them worrisome, that
is not a failure lob s tightly dismissed.
ft cannot be repeated enough: Presidential
micro-management la a deadly Mn. And there
are w anting sig n s everyw here th a t th e
A logjam la Indicative rather than
aal. Tnia la a president who loves the
id m ire of governance no leas than of
He likes to "get his hands dirty." aa
ig goes, and for the m ost part that fa a

him this county Isn’t willing to «tt Idly by and
accept the free distribution of condom s
nfonnfsd by a com m ittee that certainly
not epenk on behalfof our local parents.

o f Candidate Clinton's promises, we win fell
over and play dead,

rather than
a u th o rity .

work-related issues.
M isty woe*. M
Bui Clinton has
---------------------------taken office at a time when reform of the
Occupational Safety and Health Administra­
tion is high on Congress' priority list, and he
could see the upheaval as an extension of his
battle against the health-care crisis. After all.
some 10,000 workers die each year from
accidents In the workplace and tens of
thousands more die from occupational dis­
eases. A recent Rand Institute for Civil
Justice study estim ates the cost of workplace
injuries alone to be 833 billion a year.
Kinney's brother, an electrical engineer,
was killed in I960 While working for a
Colorado company plagued by safety pro­
blems. 08HA responded by slapping the
company with eight safety violations and
Issuing an $800 fine — or less than some
penalties for fishing without a permit.
Although 06HA has fewer than 1,200

Uon g o v ern m en t's
actually,

Initially treated aa an

tt on rastdty shifting sand. Campaign
on such diverse m atters as Haitian
and gays In the m ilitary were altered,
v re vs read. If only temporarily, while
■Mlntahiwl that |uwh in | had
problems. In September 1992 OSHA was
forced lo return to the same bridge after
another Campbell worker plunged to his
death. The owner of the paint company was
unavailable for comment.
"We c an 't he everywhere ail the tim e," said
Andrews. "(But) my concern ta this la the
second fatality on the same Job. the same
contract, by the same contractor... 394 days
passed from the first fatality to the second
« * * * £ « * w «enoK »H A ) Inspections on

�Sanford Hm M, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 28, 1903 - 9A

Airport
ComUm m S from Sags 1A
has already been approved. The
airport has obtained some funds
and Is seking additional grants
from the Federal Aviation Au*

around the southern area or the
airport, and then turn north and
reach 8.R. 415 toward Daytona
Beach and New Smyrna Beach.
Sanford City M anager Bill
Simmons explained, "That conntruction project is programmed
for late tn this decade."
•The object of tonight's dls*
cussion Is to establish funding
for approximately 3.000 feet of
roadway that would connect the
Silver Lake extension to the
airport.
Airport Director of Aviation
Steve Cooke said. "When com*
pieted. the new access rood will

area w ith the new E astern
Beltway, via 8llver Lake Drive,
and be a major contributor to the
economic development o f our
com m unity."
What Cooke has requested
from the City Is approval of a
resolution of support for the new
3.000 foot roadway and money
to assist In the engineering
design phase.
In his presentation for to*
n ig h t's com m ission m eeting.
Simmons has suggested that
money be committed,
"...to
providing accelerated funding In
the amount or 910.000 (from
Local Option Oas Tax funds
received by the city) to assist In
the engineering design."
Sim m ons Is recommending
that the commission endorse the
concept of acceleration of the,
project by early funding on a
wot* basis.
"The concept for funding of
both design and construction."
be said, "is to borrow from
available sources, probably local
option gas tax money on hand,
with repayment to occur from
the one cent sales tax proceeds
*t the time the funding would
normally occur under the exist*
biglnteriocalagreem ents."

workshop discussion late this
afternoon, and. Is on the agenda
for tonight's'regular city com*
mission meeting, beginning at 7
p.m., In the commission chant*
Park Ave.

ACC
CsmUaas
1A
Ihours to help insure
participation
by working Indlpartlcipoi
vidiuds.
;
vtduals.
"tn
“In order
ord to prevent the pro­
gram fror
from being turned Into a
gripe set
session about specific
properties." he suggests, "clU*
properties
sen response
form s will be
reap
utilised toto encourage ettisens to
utilised
complaints rather
write down
dm
than voicing
site-specific pro­
volt
blems sue
such as trash accumula­
btems
tions and &lt;
code violations."
lions
While subjects
that might be
s
discussed at the meetings would
be determined
through cltlren
detern
contacts and staff and com­
suggestions, Marder has
mission st
proposed a subject Hat. U In­
cludes
end ‘
eludes crime
ert
blems. d r
walks, his
If approved by the city com*
ilesion. H arder suggests the
leetlngs could begin as soon as
schedule and meeting places

State
many

A discussion of the Access-93
but project Is scheduled for the
o r commission workshop meeting
beginning at 5 p.m. this after­
noon, In the city m anager's
conference room.
percent of patients' leaving Ha t*
The regular scheduled com*
m ental hospitals move Into mission meeting, will begin at 7
fmah h o o ts te r tha elderly, The P*m. tonight, In the commission
Gainesville Sun reported Sun* chambers of Sanford City Hall,
dav.
SOON. Park Ave.

Memorial Hospital. Bom Aug.
38, 1939, In Elmira. N.Y., he
moved to C entral Florida In
1958. He was a maintenance
supervisor for Control Laser
Corp. and a member of South
Seminole Christian Church. Mr.
Connelly was a charter member
of the Church of Christ of Lake
Ellen and past president of the
Central Florida Seam en. He was
a Navy veteran of World War II.
S u rv iv o rs In c lu d e w ife,
Jeanlne S.: daughter, Connie,
Deltona: sons, Oarry, Polk City.
G arth and 8hertnan, Texas:
brother. Darwin C., W atkins
G len; N.Y.j s is te r. Audre;
u d rey
Lampman, Elmira; seven grandConceits R. Buchan to, 74, 15 children.
Cherry Laurel Court. W inter
B aldw ln-F alrchild F uneral
Springs, died Saturday. Jan . 33. Home, Gotoenrod, in charge of
at South-Seminole Community arrangem ents.
Hospital. Longwood. Born Oct.
39. 1918. In Milford. Maas., she
moved to Centra) Florida in
Robert A. Frits. 71, Stone
1993. She was a-hom em aker Creek Ct., Longwood, died on
and a Catholic.
Friday. Jan. 15. at South Semi­
Survivors Jncludc husband. nole C o m m u n ity H o sp ital.
Nicholas A.: son. Richard J., Longwood. Bom on Ju n e 5.
Winter Springs: daughter. Carol 1931. in Wisconsin, he was the
Ann- Ooodson. Miami Lakes; owner of R.A. Frits Associates In
brothers. Daniel Nior, MUford, Longwood.
Anthony Nior. Phoenix, Arts.:
He is survived by his wife
s la t e r s , R o se M u c c tro n t. Anne: daughter. Linda Moore;
F ran k lin . M aas., Jo sep h in e son. R obert J r .. Longwood:
Teaches, Carmelia Cagllandro. brother. Alois and five grand­
Margaret Taft, all of Milford. children.
Angle Terragroasa, Providence.
Schram aka Funeral Home,
R.I.: seven grandchtdren and one Milwaukee. Wls., in charge of the
great-grandchild.
arrangem ents.
Carey Hand Garden Chapel
Home for Funerals. Longwood. CHARLES E.rOMCK HI
In charge of arrangements.
Chkries B. Funck III. 88. of
530 C ranes Way. Altamonte
Springs, died Sunday, Jan. 34.
Oerald M. Connelly. 63. of East at his residence. Bom Aug. 15,
Mead Drive. Oviedo, died Satur­ 1938. In Roanoke. Vs., he moved
day. Jan. 33. at Winter Park to Central Florida In 1963. He
Mildred E. Armlnger. SO, of
Windmeadows Road. Altamonte
Springs, died Saturday. Jan. 16.
at her residence. Bom July 35,
1913, In Baltimore, she moved
to Central Florida In 1957. She
w as a h o m e m a k e r a n d a
member of St. John Evangelical
Lutheran Church. Winter Park.
Survivors Include husband.
John E.; slater. Eunice Orem, Bel
Air. Md.
B aldw ln-F alrchild F uneral
Home. Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.

was a salesman lor a furniture
company and a Methodist. Mr.
Funck was a M arine Corps
veteran..
Survivors Include wife, Grace
P.i son. Barry C.. Geneva; sister.
Doris F. Angel. MaltlAnd: two
grandsons.
C arey h a n d C o x -P a rk e r
Funeral Home. W inter Park, In
charge of arrangem ents.
JOYCE LIT W1WCEUK
Joyce Lltwlncsuk. 66. of Poll­
en Palm Drive. Casselberry, died
Friday. Jan. 33. at her residence.
Bom July 39. 1936. In Mendon.
Ohio, she moved to Central
Florida tn 1960. She was a
homemaker and a Catholic.
Survivors Include husband.
Job a w daughters. Kim Pope.
C larence. N.Y.. J ill Hogan.
Schenectady. N.Y.. Kathy Far­
rell. D anbury. C onn.. Mary
Tooies, Mesquire, Texas, Tracy
and Kelly, both of Winter Park,
and five grandchildren.
B aldw ln-F alrchild F uneral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangem ents.
Mildred Reitter. 95. of Orients
Avenue, A ltam onte Springs,
died T hursday, Ja n . 31, at
Florida H ospital. A ltam onte
Springs. Bom July 39. 1897, in
Bridgeport. Conn., she moved to
Central Florida In 1945. She was
a clerk for the city of Orlando
and a member of Emmanuel
Episcopal Church. Orlando.
She Is survived by a sister. 1
Josephine B lrks, A ltam onte
Springs.
B aldw ln-Falrchild F uneral
Home. Altamonte Springs, In
charge of arrangem ents.

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•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 25, 1993

Women Karaoke the night away
Women’s club plans clothing drive
Marjorie Dale or the Lake Mary Women's Club Is requesting
help from the Central Florida Federation of Women's Clubs In
District 7 and the community to help In collecting used
clothing for the Miami hurricane victims.
Items needed are: clothing for men. women, boys, girls and
Infants to 3-years-old.
•
Each group of Items should be packed in a seperate box and
marked "Hurricane Rellcl" and the name of the Items
contained In them.
.
Items may be sent or delivered to the Old Fire Station, 195 N.
First St., north of Lake Mary Boulevard and cast or Country
Club Road.
Donations will be accepted through Frb. 10.
CORRECTION
,
The telephone numbers given In last week's brier were
Incorrect.
For anyone wanting to donate Items listed, please call:
333-8271 and ask for Chief Stoddard or call Marjorie Dale at
323-5042.

Lose pounds by belly dancing
If you haven't made your New Year's resolutions yet — here's
an idea that might be appealing. Light aerobics belly dancing
classes are starting at 5:15 p.m. on Mondays at the Lake Mary
Civic Center on Country Club Road. Ages 18 to 80 are
welcome. The classes will be taught by Diana with over eight
years experience; the cost Is $20 per month. For further
Information, please call Terry at 324-3097.

Students discuss foreign policy
Lake Mary students will discuss foreign policy at a luncheon
on Thursday. Jan. 28. The luncheon will be at the Quality Inn
on 434 and 1-4 In Longwood In the Garden Room. The cost Is
$7 for a buffet with three hot entrees, salad bar and
refreshments. Social time at 11:30 a.m.. buffet at noon, and the
program begins at 12:30 p.m. The Lake Mary debate team will
present the topic. "The United States Should Reduce Pollution
Through Its Trade and Foreign Policies." You won't want to
miss this lively discussion of the pros and cons of this thought
provoking topic.

On Monday. Jan. 11. the
Heathrow Women's Club held Its
seco n d an n u al Karaoke
Showtime Evening. It was such
a blast last year that they
wanted to do It again. Karaoke Is
Tun. exciting and habit formlngl
Ouests chose their song from
the list of hundreds of favorite
hits from yesterday and today. A
request card Is given to the
emcee and at the call of your
name, you "step Into the lime*
light." Each song Includes fully
orchestrated background music,
voice enhancement and easy to
read color shading lyrics dis­
played on television monitors.
First, the members and their
husbands, friends or guests
finished club business post haste
so they could quickly partake of
the bountiful Mexican buffet
dinner and desserts. The display
of foods was encfianccd with
Mexican decorations such as
plnatas and sombreros, colorful
paper decorations and the aroma
of the multitudes of food Items.
After dinner, the emcee for the
e v e n t , Sam Wright, ca m e
forward to introduce the au­
dience to the world of Karaoke
for those that had not attended
last year's event and to warm
everybody up to volunteer their
"lalent." Sam Wright Is cer­
tainly the right person to do so;
he was charming and has a voice
that Is simply beautiful. He Is a
graduate of The Juilllard School
of Music, so he knows his
business!

vYM'i . W-

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On Saturday. Feb. 6. Polk County League of Women Voters
will host a regional workshop focusing on ways non-partisan
groups can spur action on critical Issues. Representatives from
other groups with similar agendas will be guest speakers. The
League of Women Voters of Seminole County will try to
carpool. Participants must register by Feb. 1, Call Carol Maler
or send $10 to LWV Polk County. 1115 U.S. 98. South
Lakeland. FL 33805.
The workshop will be held at the Polk County Library In
Lakeland. Registration Is at 9:30 a.m. Speakers from 10 a.m.
until noon followed by lunch and facilitated discussions. The
cost of $ 10 Includes lunch.

Camera club aata mattings
The Seminole Lake Mary Camera Club meets the second
Wednesday every month in Old Lake Mary City Hall. 158 N.
Country Club Rd. at 7;30 p.m. For more Information, call Grace
at 321-4723 or Sel at 323-8691.

Club takastha Isad
L.E.A.D.t to Success, a newly formed club to share business
connections, will meet 7:30 a.m. Wednesday at Pebble Creek
Apartments clubhouse. 780 Creekwater Terrace. Lake Mary.
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 Marcia Kurtze 646-0609.

Rotary maata aarly
Rotary Club of Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings.
7:30-8:30 a.m. at the Tlmacuan Country Club, on Rinehart
Road. Contact Paul Osborne, president, at 321-4764.

Laka Mary Optlmlata maat waakly
The Optimist Club of Lake Mary meets every Tuesday at 7:00
p.m.. at 109 E. Crystal Lake Ave. (comer of Crystal Lake and
Country Club Road). Visitors are welcome.

Woman'a Club to maat
l-pk- Mary Woman's Club meets the fourth Wednesday of
each month. Contact Sheila Sawyer at 321-7947.

Historical Commission gathara
The l*k» Mary Historical Commission meets Mondays at Old
City Hall. Contact Mary Wolff at 321-5666 for more
Information.

Clogging group to hava claaaaa
Dixieland Cloggers hold classes from 7-8 p.m. each Monday
at the Lake Mary Volunteer Fire Station *33. First Street and
Wilbur Avenue.

The Lake Mary Woman's Club
luncheon meeting will be held at
the Tlmacuan Country Club at
10 a.m. on Jan. 27. Alice
Moughton. a member of the
club, will Introduce the speaker
who will show a video on
“Young Life." Young Life Is
about an exciting organization
that has been developing In our
area. All communities talk about
getting kids off the street by
providing quality activities as an
alternative to the boredom many
teens feel. Young Life gives this
o p p o r t u n i t y . Y o u n g Life
encompasses all the high schools
In Seminole County. Not only
does It provide good, healthy
activities for children, It also
h el p s foster friendly re la ­
tionships between schools. In
the past 10 months, for example,
membership from Lake Mary
High School alone has gone from
zero to 70. Other high schools
are responding with growing
numbers.
If you would be Interested In a
presentation for your organiza­
tion on Young Life, please con­
tact Fred Franz, chairm an,
Young Life of Seminole County,
2 6 1 1 P i c k e t D o w n s D r. .
Chuluota FL 32766 or call (H)
365-1678; (W) 366-2225.
Seniors to laugh It up

Margaret Wesley, vice presi­
dent of the Lake Mary Seniors, is
proud to announce an Important
program of Information, fun and
music to be held Tuesday, Jan.
26 at 10:30 a.m. at the Lake
Mary Seniors' meeting place in
the Old City Hall, located at 158
N.Country Club Road.
The program will Include an
Illustrated program given by
Pam Sanders of Hospice followed
by a sing-along and humorous
skits. A shared finger food lunch
will fellow at 11:30 A.M. The
public is Invited. For further
Information call Margaret
Wesley at 323-3915.

a

m m m

HeraMShew, br S*sbeeea Setiw
Steve Elker, Fran and Eleanor Mitchell. Jerry and
Rosalie M lcell and Jo an Elker aw ait, In

anticipation, the first Karaoke victim and
entartalnmant.

\1
'
T tji I
i |i j j

W oman's club to meet

Women voters plan meeting

»

* f ir*

’California Gifts,

SARABECCA
ROSIER

Nancy Crawford attended a
leadership summit on Dec. 11 at
Laurel Oaks H ospital. The
summit Included a review of the
Vote Kids '92 Campaign and a
discussion of future plans. Some
of the Ideas talked about were:
What Is the campaign message:
where will the money come
from; and how will the manage­
ment be organized. Jack Levine
and the staff took back an
enorm ous am ount of Input
which will be disseminated in
January as to what do we do
now.

Join the fight
against lung
disease
Call yourlocal
AMERICAN ±

LUNQ ASSOCIATION

Emcee Sam Wright, right, haa Judy Wlmblah Join him In a song,

Lsagua reviews campaign
Evelyn Bales. Carol Maier and

(or other motor vehicle)

(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.

CaU 322-2611 Tbday!
Four brave ladies, left to right. Gerd McEwan,
Nancy de Boer, Nana Shidemantle and Peggy

Pyle, at the microphone, billing themselves as the
"Nuts and Berrios," sang La Samba.

I

�Sanford Herald

January

25,

1993

That’s just round No. 1

IN BRIEF

’Hound, Ram grapplers go at it again Wednesday
Lake Mary baseball signups
SANFORD — The Lake Mary Llltlc League
will hold a rcglslratlon/orlcntallon session al
Hamilton Elementary School on Celery Avenue
Tuesday night from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Children between the ages of six and 12 are
eligible. Proof of age and residence Is required.
Registration fee Is $20.
For Information call Rick Shlarla at 3 3 1&gt;4960.

in: \

mm

.Ban

FSU pulls upset In OT
TALLAHASSEE — Reserve Byron Wells hit a
3-polnter with 3.6 seconds left In overtime,
giving FSU an 89-88 upset of No. 6 Duke.
Florida State (13-5. 5-1) has won five straight
ACC games since* Charlie Ward returned to the
starting lineup from the football team.
Wells, a senior who scored the Semlnolcs*
final five points. Intercepted a pass by Bobby
Hurley with 20 seconds led and Duke up 88-86.
When FSU's Sam Cassell was unable to shake
loose for the final shot. Wells got the ball deep In
the left corner for the game-winning shot, which
dropped after rimming the basket once.
.
Wells was In the game as a replacement for
Douglas Edwards, who fouled out late In
regulation with 21 points and 12 rebounds.
Bob Sura and Rodney Dobard each had 16
points for FSU. while Cassell added 15.
The Blue Devils (13&gt;3. 3-3| were led by Grant
Hill (25 points). Hurley (22) and Cherokee Parks
(14 points and 11 rebounds).

Heat keep Meve winless
MIAMI — Glen Rice scored 31 points for the
second straight game In leading Miami to a
122-106 win over Dallas, extending Its road
losing streak to a season-long 17 games.
Rony Sclkaly added 22 points on B-or-9
shooting, and had 12 rebounds for Miami.
Derek Harper scored 24 points for the
Mavericks — losers In 18 of their last 19 outings.
Steve Smith added 15 points, and Bimbo
Coles had lOasslsts for the Heal.

Lightning tla Stars
TAMPA — Rookie Rob ZamiAicr's goal at 2:34
of the third period gave Tampa Bay a 2-2 tic
with Minnesota, the Lightning’s first point In
. five meetings with the North Stars.
Minnesota (24-17-8) had defeated Norris
Division rival Tampa Bay (16-32-3) four times.

Barry bury’t Yashiva
MIAMI SHORES — Julian Rodriguez scored
24 points and grabbed 11 rebounds to lead
Barry to an 83-58 victory over Yeshlva (N.Y.).
Mark Wilson added 14 points for the Bucca­
neers (10-4). and Rolando Medlca chipped In 13.
Daniel Aaron led YeshIVa (7*4) with 19 points.
Mike Danan added 17.

Vandy holds off Florida
GAINESVILLE - Rhonda Blades scored 22
points to lead undefeated and top-ranked
Vanderbilt to a 69-63 victory over Florida.
The Lady Gators dropped to an 11-5 overall.
3-3 In the Southeastern conference, while the
Commodores Improved to 17-0 overall and 5-0.
Also scoring In double figures for Vanderbilt
were Julie Powell with 13 and Shelly Jarrard
and Heidi Gillingham, with 12 each.
Florida’s Merlakia Jones had 20'points and
LaTonya McGhee added 10 points.

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS - Now that they’ve
gotten past their first major confrontation, they
can concentrate on the next one.
This Wednesday night at Lake Mary High
School, the Lake Mary and Lyman wrestling
teams will bang heads for the second time in five
days. This p u t Saturday. Lyman overcame Lake
Mary to win the Seminole Athletic Conference
tournament championship. 176V4-165.
“If you had asked me last week which one w u
more Important. I would have said the confer­
ence tournament w u more important.” said
Lyman coach Rick Titbit Sunday night. ’’But
right now, Wednesday’s dual meet is more
important. If they win Wednesday, they could be
seeded ahead of us in districts.
”!t's important to us, No. 1. because it’s Lake
Mary and Lyman and. No. 2. it h u district
Implications u well.”
For Coach Doug Peters and the Lake Mary

Rams, the close decision at the conference meet
w asa moral victory of sorts.
"We wrestled real well, we Just came up one
man short,” said Peters, adding that the Rams
lost one of their mainstays to grades on Friday.
“Lyman h u some great kids. They have six kids
that are going to be awfully tough to knock out at
districts or reglonals.
“The SAC tournament Is always Important for
us. To get the program back to where we want It
to be, winning the SAC was an Important
stepping stone. We came up short, but the future
looks real bright. The dual meet could be
Interesting.”
Trailing by 19 points entering the champion­
ship round Saturday night at Lake Brantley High
School, the Greyhounds won seven of their nine
matches. Including all four against Lake Mary
opponents.
Adam Portnoy started things for Lyman by
scoring a 19-6 major decision over Rich Bradley.
At 119 pounds. John Altlzer bested Lake Mary’s

Improved Raiders
still fall to CFCC

KNOXVILLE. Tenn. - Craig Brown scored 19
points and Scott Stewart hit 13 free throws In
the last five minutes to lead Florida to an 80-68
Southeastern Conference win over Tennessee
Stewart hit Just one field goal, a 3-polnter. but
finished with 16 points as the Vols fouled him
repeatedly In Ihe waning minutes. Florida (10-5.
4-2) also got 10 points from Andrew DeClercq.
Tennessee (9-7. 1-4) got 20 points from Steve
Hamer and 15 from Allan Houston.

Girls’ Baksatball
□ Dalton* at Late Brantley. Junior varsity at 6

------- ...

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

p.m. with varsity to follow.

Boys’ Soeear
. □Lake Hawaii al OtUnd. Junior varsity at 5:30
p.m. with varsity to follow.

□ 8 p.m. — TNT. NBA. Phoenix Suns at Detroit
Pistons. (L)

Thomas,
Rovito
lead Rams
past CCC

By OBAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer

OCALA - This is Florida, right?
If you're one of those people who moved here from
the basketball hotbeds of (he Midwest and Eastern
United States and miss the roar and exeltcmcnt of a
gymnasium full of rabid fans, you should have been ul
Central Florida Community College in Ocala Saturday
night.
Playing before u hostile full Itouoc on Homecoming
Night, the Seminole Community College m en's
basketball team gave the homcstandlng Patriots all
they could handle before succumbing 111-95 In u
Mid-Florida Conference routes!.
“It was great.” said Seminole head coach Bernard
Mcrthlc of the crowd. "It was a great atmosphere to
play In. The kids rose to the occasion and didn't let the
crowd Intimidate them. I think they enjoyed playing in
front of all those people.”
The game was the nightcap of a doubleheader that
saw the CFCC women, who finished second In the
nation last year, pounding Its chief MFC rival. Florida
Community College al Jacksonville. 97-50.
The Raiders played one of their best games In weeks
In hanging tough against the conference co-leaders that
were considerably taller and heavier than their
opponents.
Behind the play of Phillip Williams und Mike Burrh.
SCC matched the Patriots shot for shot and trailed Just
30-28 with 5:14 remaining In the opening period when
Ihe old doldrums struck the Ruldcrs.
.
Keyed by a questionable call that became a six-point
play. CFCC outscored SCC 15-6 the rest of the half to
lead 45-34 at Intermission.
□BaaBCC, Pag* 2B
• CINTRAL FLA. C.C. Ill, SIMIMOLK C.C.W
In s huts Community C U h s IN )
Homolln 3-4 14*. W lllU m tf 14 1-214. Bruoning 4 11 2 2 12. Phillip* 2 ) I I S .
Hall 14004. Pothard 14 12) . FottiMOOOl 0. Marrall 01000. Walkar 02
000. Burctit 14* 1323. Hammond 31000II. Total*: IS71 IS 2S*S.

i ContraI Florida Community CoIlogo (III)

Roynetd* I I 114. Whltflold 11 14 *4 20. Sandort 4-12 2-114. Niblack 00 00
0. LoGardy I I 00 2. Illc 4 13 2 4 IS. Butt* 3013 ». Bolmor 14 14 *13 31. Norrl*
04*00. Totals: 4241 22 33 III.
Throo point Hold goal* - Control Florida 43, tom Inolo 34. Team foul* Somlnol* 2*; Central Florida 23. Fouled out - Seminole. Burch; Central
Florida. LoGardy, Technical* - none. Rebound* - Somlnol* 32 (Burch.
Hammond 1); Central Florida 31 (Illc. Bolmor 10. Butt* *). A td tit —
Somlnol* II (William* 1); Central Florid* It (Butt* S. Whllllold. Sandort 4 ).
Record* — Somlnol** IS. I 3MFC; Control Florida 141, S-l MFC.

All in thv family
While his father, Tim "Rock” Raines, was playing in
the Seminole High School alumni basketball game
last Thursday, Andre "Hawk" Raines wore a shirt
slating his fraternal pride In Ihe accomplishments of
his brother, Tim "Rock" Raines Jr.

Favorites grab Sanford rec wins
Frees W ell

Gators bash Vols

Mike Laurent In a 12-2 major decision. Vlnnlc
Samero pinned Kyle Bergman In 1:33 at 140
pounds and 160-pounder Jason Nutt declsloncd
Greg Menello 10-4.
Also winning conference championships for
Lyman were Nick Samero (112 pounds), Charlie
Defuio (145), and Nelson Diaz (189). Secondplace finishers were Dan Melvin (152) and Nick
Popek (220). Alex Hannah finished third at
Heavyweight while Isaac Hunter (125) and Josh
Portnoy (135) placed fourth.
le wins of Adam Portnoy. Altlzer.
While the the
Vlnnle Samero. and Nutt over their Lake Mary
opponents were the obviously crucial matches
for the Greyhounds, Trlblt said that the con­
tributions of Popeck. Hunter and Hannah
shouldn't be overlooked.
“ Nick Popek Is a freshman that's been
wrestling at 189 on the Junior varsity,” said
Trlblt. "With Dallas Simpson (Lyman's varsity
□Baa W raatliag, Paga 2B

SANFORD — Saturday waa not a day to be the
underdog In the Sanford Recreation Department Youth
Basketball League.
The decision went in the direction to the team with
the better record in all nine games that were (Hayed at
the Banford Middle School OymAtortum.

In Junior Boys' play. Calvary Apostolic Temple (3-1)
nipped the Sunnlland Juniors (1-3) 21-18; Christo's
Restaurant (3-1) bested the Fleet Reserve Ladles
Auxiliary (1-3) 30-23; Hardee's (3-1) beat Sanford Ace
Hardware (2-2) 33-23; Sanford Electric (4-0) topped
Sanford Antiques (1-3) 40-29; and Rich Plan (2-2)
clobbered Sanford Paint A Body (0-4) 29-11.
In the Senior Boys’, A.B.B. Power Distribution (2-2)

Pram Staff Ha p arts_____________
LAKE MARY — Shaync Thomat
assisted on both goals in Lake
Mary's 2-0 win over Clearwater
Central Catholic In a high school
girls' soccer match played Saturday
at Lake Mary's Don T. Reynold's
Stadium.
After a scoreless first half. Thomus set up Angle Snow, who netted
Ihe eventual game-winning goal In
the 47th minute. Allison Robinson
converted a pass from Thomas Into
a goal In the 63rd minute.
Goalkeeper Michelle Rovito made
two saves on the five CCC shots to
register the shutout.
"It was an excellent match.” said
Lake Mary coach
"CCC
Is In the top 10 of Its elasslflcattoit.
They always have a good program.
"Our defense playF(&amp;$£ccpllnnally
well. We were able to shut down
their big scorer. Robin Comfort.
Late In the match, fitness became a
factor."
Lake Mary finished with 12 shots
on goal, forcing the CCC keeper to
make five saves. The Rams also had
u 3-2 advantage In corner kicks.
The Ram junior varsity also won.
beating Deltona 5-0.
Now 10-5-6. Luke Mary will play
at Lake Brantley on Tuesday night
before finishing the season with
matches pgalnst Oviedo on Thurs­
day and Deltona next Saturday.
LAKE BRANTLEY 10
VALRICO-BLOOMINQDALE 3

VALRICO — Elena Ruhonu und
Marci Stark each netted a hat trick
Saturday afternoon In power the
Lake Brantley Patriots tou 10-3 rout
of the Valrlco-Bloomlngdule Bulls In
a Class 4A girls’ soccer mutch.
Nicole D elahoussayc, T ania
Torres. Stephunle Combs, and Kim
Shrum each scored one goal for the
Patriots (13-3-3).
Lake Brantley outshot BloomIngdalc (9-3) by a 27-9 margin.
The Putriots will host Lake Mary
Tuesday night In a contest that will
decide second place |p the Seminole
Athletic Conference.

Did Lake Mary do what’s best or what’s easiest?
Handed a golden opportunity to
do so m eth in g excitingly ' c o n ­
structive for the youth of its city, the
Lake Mary City Commission did
nothing.
In its meeting Thursday night, the
commission opted to give first
choice use of its soon-to-be com­
pleted baseball fields at Its new
ports complex to the Seminole
*ONY Baseball Inc., passing over
the requests of the newly-formed
ke Mary Little League and the
Longwood Babe Ruth League.
By going in this non-direction, the
commission has turned its complex,
for the next year, at least, into a
repository for the overflow of Semi­
nole PONY Instead of seizing the
chance to create a league the city
can call Its own.
This la not a debate over the
ihilosphlcal differences that the
three leagues have — to anyone but
those immediately Involved, those
differences are largely Inconse­
quential. Rather, it's a question of
xeaa and accessibility.
Seminole PONY (which stands for
’r o te c t Our N a t io n 's Youth)
Baseball already has its Five Points
complex, one of the two finest
facilities In the county — the City of

•PO R T S

TONY
DaSORMIER
»

A ltam onte Springs-m aintained
Eastmonte Park, home of the Alta­
monte Springs Little League, being
the other.
What does 8emlnole PONY want
with the Lake Mary fields — actual­
ly, the point of contention is the one
field that is to be equipped with
lights — when it has a complex of
its own?
According to Rod Fergerson. who
addressed the commission on behalf
of Seminole Baseball Inc., which
m an ages the Seminole PONY
leagues. "We don't want exclusive
rights . . . but we do want first
choice over the use of the fields."
Supposedly. Seminole PONY will
choose which nights It wants to
schedule games at the Lake Mary

complex, leaving Lake Mary Little
League and Longwood Babe Ruth to
dlvy up the remaining nights.
Rick Shlarla. president of Lake
Mary Little League, said he un­
derstood that Seminole PONY origi­
nally wanted the fields on Monday.
Wednesday. Friday, and Saturday.
Shiarla's group would like to have
the facility on Friday night and
Sunday.
Unless the leagues cooperate in an
Unprecedented fashion, this knot
may require the wisdom of Solomon
to unravel. The frustrating part is.
It's a knot that the Lake Mary City
Commission created.
You'd think that the city com­
mission would prefer to have a
league that bears the city's name to
be the primary resident of its new
recreation complex rather than be a
subsidiary or Seminole PONY.
Admittedly, that's a terribly flimsy
reason on which to base such a
decision, but it's a start.
*
Perhaps the most uncomfortable
part of the decision is the financial
arrangements. According to Lake
Mary City Manager John Litton, the
organizations will not be charged a

fee for league play, a magnamous
gesture considering that the use of
the one lighted field is the primary
point of contention.
What makes it uncomfortable Is
that Seminole PONY has a $65
registration fee for its Bronco
League (ages 11 and 12) and a $75
fee for Pony (13 and 14) and Colt (15
and 16) leagues. There is also an
additional fundraiser committment
of $24 required at the time of
registration.
Lake Mary Little League's regis­
tration fee is $20, which Is waivable,
according to Shlarla. Oeorge Knal.
district administrator of Little
League Florida District 14 (which
Includes Seminole County) said that
the $20 registration fee is standard
but added that most leagues have
some type of yearly fund raiser.
As a result, the city commission
has given the right of first choice of
its new fields to a league not
iarily situated in Lake Mary, a
ue that has its own facility, a
league with a financial requirement
of $89 or $99 per player, a league
that will not have to pay to use the
facility.
At least the city kept the con­
cession stand rights.

K

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

mvp m m '

�M rm*. t Wtt

*V

Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 28, 1M3

S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS
OaHaa
* n * n — *M
Ortasd*
* * M 0 -1 0
l-Falnt goal*—Della* 17 (Haryar I I.
Maara 11, Ban* 01, Iw m d n a tl). Orta n *
04 (Talbert Ol, Karr Ol, SUM 01). FavM
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m m ti. QHawda * te n * * *&gt;. awn*

Haw York
Now Jersey

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17 It * N M 10
17 1 1 * 0 1*4 171

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(Bradley, Sargavln), * t * L Ta*nye' Bay.
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Dalta* * (Haryar It), O rlan* * (Ifeitn t t.
T atal l a u l i - D a l l a t 11, O rlando I t .
Technical*- Dalta* lllayal dafan**, Davtt,
Whit*, yiayrant * * l—OavH. I Indian—
Whit*. A-1*. Ill

14 17 • 1* 17} HI
0 It 7 0 1*4 IM
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it * * a hi m
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S * B * - Ian Ja*. Irta, &gt;44 &lt;fc tbaft-H
11 II * M 117 1*1 •a**). Tamye Bay. JebfwMLOIOl (*■*).

Chicago
Clavaiand
Charlotta
Indiana
Atlanta
Detroit
Milwaukee

14 »
0 *
17 n
*41

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7
1

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it i n m
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14 114 07

r^.tti t.iinU
Michael Itk h (14), Germany, * ( . 10
Brayaara III), ly a* . t-l, *4,74 (7-1), •
Fair * o r * (7), Cfach BiyUWIc. tat
Oamar, Bay V a n . N.Y., 71,O* Ol.
Ovy Varya) (ID, Franca. Oaf. Bally
Etcondl*. Calif.. OS, 74 (71). 74 (04).
M a aamyrat (I), Brain aBa, del. X
WaddngHa (ID, M t n Craek, MM

John Fltrgarald, Aut Itall*, and Andara
Jarryd. Sweden (41. dot. Glenn MlchlbaU,
Canada, and David Fata. La* Vaga*. 74
17 0,4-4.

Indiana*. Oh* I f . *
MHaaurin, Oklahoma Si. 41
■OWTMWIST
Rhadn 4*. Trinity. Tea. n
FAR WRIT
CantarMe N*. UCLA ■

FLORIDA IT. W.DUKIM.OY
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Duffy WHdert.i
Jeff Human.*,
Neal Lancatier

Dohard 40 44 M, Rdwarda ION M 0 .
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Mark Kratimann and Wally M atur.
Australia (0 , daf. »tatan Cdbary, Swadan.
and Jan Uamarlnk, Nathartand*. default.
John Flttyarald. Auatralla. and Andan
Jarryd (4), Iwadan, daf. Jocco Elllngh and
Faui HaartwH (II), Netherlands. 71,04.
aPIV
^ ^IV
^f

M
el^M wlUa SnB
b y i t**H
•SISIlFHIti
•OBH

MahHIM, lan Mdtlna, Cant., daf, Omar
Cant* raw. Italy, and Bldiard Brat leak.
Nathartand*. 44,7-1.01.
Gary Muller. South Africa, and Javlar
S anchai, ly a in , daf. Kant B lnnaar,
Oroowwood, Ind.. and Ivon lalwmaa (14).
Btoornmatan. Ind.,07 (04).44.01.
Brot Garnett, Columbia. 1C,, and T J.
Middleton, Atlanta, daf. Have Oovrta*.
tulwn. Calll.. and David MatFhorion (4),
Auihallo.O*, 74(71).

•wfi fTNfwf*nii

Willie Weed, *1.

AuafraMo and landrin* Taatad. Franco, 07
(071,7101.
TMrd Blond
U rtta Netland, Latvia, and Jana Novotna
(11, Catch Republic, daf. Und*y Davenport,
FdMa Varda*. Calif., and Chanda Rubin.

^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ -S h d W

*

(I), Auttrglla. daf. (no* Garrachategui.
A rganfina, and L inda H arvey-W ild.
HawNarna Wbado III., o l 74 (M l.
' Fam Sbrlvar, Bafbmare, and lllubafh
Imytl# (Ml, Auatralla. daf. Katrtna Adam*.
Chicago, and Manon B allagraf (7),
Nafharlanda.4l.ol.

M t . a a d D o a b l a e

FtralRaund
« ache) McOuiUan and DauW MacFharean.
Australia. daf. Sandy Coiltna. OR * * , Tasat
and Mark Kraftmann. Auatnlla, OO Ol.
RlHabadi SmytM and Jahn Flftyaratd.
Australia, daf. IM a Semnch. Saulh Africa,
and Fatrtcfc Galbraith (7), Tacama. Wadi.,

The Raiders h it 12 of their first

380-pound sophom ore w ho

B ruenlng, qrtth 13 poinis and
Bvon Haitimond with 11 points
end seven rebounds.

giving CROC six potato and a
seven-point lend without 8CC
touching the ball. . r ' ' ’

• dubbed the SunnUfind Be­
n to n (1-3) 30-16; /h e Fleet Dwww Branch
147 (40) tripped A-OK Tire (3-3) 31-23; and

Antiques faces Ace
Electric takes on Chi
Rich Plan welcomes
at lO&amp;O a.ra. Also
4 -^ * W ^ lh e g lrto ;
The Senior Boys.
Fleet Reserve Ladtoi
p.m.;

snd

the

dt &gt;t30 s.m .j Sanford
lard ware, and Sanford
yto 'sat 9:30 a.m .i and
Ihe Bunniland Juniors
wing played a t I0t30
Leag£tt*wUi have the
Auxiliary playing the
4 13:30 pm !: A B B

MVP Teneooc Psririna scoi
game-high IS potato IP s 1
q u itte r m Sanford IiD ftrtr

Video Vault

Tire at 3:30 p.m-

MVP Lsmetl Fayaon poured In IS potato
as Calvary took Bunniland.
Also scoring for the winners were Darrel
Redding (fourfand Frankie Alphln (two).
MVP dabriet Cacho (II). BuJ. Pratt (three)
and Undraye Blake and Chris Kltroy (two
each) did the scoring far SuatalRNd
Christo's erased ah 11-10 haMHmc deficit
i*L . i n 4 *LI^« _______ . . A I b J g
with
a 19-4 third quarter an d held on *Lb
the
Fleet to collect the victory.
MVP Jam ae MkBrti* topped the aearing
Chart for the winner'* with I I while Randy
Bcmore added seven. Mika Evans six.
Derrick Cooper four and Reggie Lawson
• I S n W b u U n , to U «

rji.-vk
if

t£iWUtA*

QhtvCtti,

never looked hack tn routing Sanford Paint

w
C satiaaed frees I I
180-pounder) taking the
SATs. we moved Popek up. His
8CC will start a three-game C ontribution was extrem ely
bom estand - th is W ednesday Important. That’s 10 points we
night when U hosts Daytona didn’t expect to get with DalUs
Beach Community Coifegs at the out.
’'Adam Portnoy u a Junior
whose been wrestling at 113
pounds on the junior varsity. He
decided wanted lo g o to 103 and
give It a shot. Isaac Hunter is
w restling two weight classes
above
weight. And Alex
Also scoring for A.B.B. were Lloyd Dixon Hannahhis
Is
doing
a great job at
(six), - Tony O uanctak (four) and Jason H eavyw eight since
we lo st
Crumpton. Zachary Prison, Robert Bmiw UDeryi Penney for the season."
Hnd Bop J i d t l t t (|yn&gt;iyffh);
Peters ssid that the Rams have
Bunniland waa led by MVP Sammy also
received key contrtbuttona
from nevflbces ln the lineup.
‘lAfopiit S freshman in at 330
and
he did a great Job." said
A-OK Tire SS
Peters,
"Rond Jum p waa In his
Balanced scoring was the key as the Fleet first varsity
competition and he
Reserve Branch 147 remained undefeated.
fin
ish
e
d
th
ird . A lex L o rie
MVP jsram y Whaley. T .J. Davis and finished second
at 171 in his first
Janisa Young (six each), Tony Lewis (live) varsity s ta rt Nate
MUchell took'
and M ifceft» &gt; n . Johnny HolUe, Mark third at 135 (dectstontag
Hunter
Watodn and Chris Foster (two each) did the
scoring tor the w inner's.
A-Ofts scoring waa led by Richard Badger
"Those are probably the kids
(eight). B ettayProetua and Kamelle Mullins who’U
make the difference in the
(four eaeh) and Tracey Baas. Addis Davis dual meet
with Lym an.".
and Qreg Stafford (two each).
Corey
Culiins
(130 pounds)
. A B arittsU fllM lC . Yldaa Vaatt SS
was Lake Mary’s only conference
The American Legfoti ran out to i ) M
pion w hile team m ates
lead In the first quarter and went on to bury cham
Bradley. Laurent. Pat Parotinc
Video Vaul.
■
MencUo. Lorie.
Doing the scoring for the American Legion (135). Bergman.
lyton (Heavyweight)
were MVP ROd mown (16). Kevin Brown
(13), Kenneth Mowttne (13). Derrick Jones
Twaunte Cannon (four). Author Mdn(three) and d reg Ryan and Henry
m(twoeach).
T Zack Michels scored 15 potato for
j Vault while Terry Rossell hour) and
tt Swain and Ivory Peterson (two each)
I4btti,sliutll * j laLkiHl. ■

**'►-Ih&amp; i

all had to settle for second (dace
finishes.
Kevin Dunn 1113 pounds),
Mitchell. Travis Crawford (145),
Chris Foster (153). and Jum p all
finished third In their respective
weight classes for the Rams.
Other conference champions
were Oviedo’s Craig Martin (135
pounds). Scott Oomrad (135)
and Brian Black (Heavyweight);
Jason Best hard (151) and Chris
S chlachter (330) from Lake
Brantley; and Seminole's Bemie
Mitchell (171),

�B H W i

1003 - SB

rose is a rose...is a rose...
Qullttrt guild to moot
SANFORD - The Central Florida Q ultteri' Guild will hold
their monthly m eeting on Thursday, Jan. 38 at 7:30 p.m. at
the Sanford Chamber of Commerce In downtown Sanford.
The program will be a Fairfield slide foahion show. Quitters
are encouraged to wear their quilted d othlnf.
VUitors and new members are always welcome.

Art atfrenture planned
MAITLAND -— The Jew ish C&lt;
Community Center will begin Its
second season of An Adventure in the Aria on Sunday. Jan. 31
with a performance of “peter and the W olf’ by the Florida
Symphony Youth Orchestra.
Other perform ances throughout
throufl
the year, include the
American Family Theatre's version of “Beauty and the Beast",
mime artist Trent A rtebent and the Jam es Best Theatre for
Children's "Golflocksand the Three Bears.”
Tickets are available a t the JCC. Regular seaon tickets are
840 per family, patron family tickets are 812S for the season
and benefactor family season tickets are 8330.
For more Information, contact the Jew ish Community Center
at 845-5933 or call Lynn W arner a t831*1884.

The queen of flowers needs major pruning, grooming
Growing roses successfully depends on
correct planting procedures, site selection,
fertilisation, pruning and a regular spray
program to produce the beautiful flowers
that grace onr gardens and vases. Roses
require "mq)or'r pruning and grooming
during the winter m onths to ensure they get
off to a good start for spring growth. Most
people do not prune roses enough because
" or rejuvenation pruning seems too
the rejuvenation process is a
necessary part of yearly maintenance. For
expert advice I talked with a member of the
O reater O rlando Rose Society, R usty
Nickels, a consulting roaarian. Rusty Nickels
a set of general guidelines for
pruning and grooming roses.
Sanitary pruning should start now: reiove all dead or damaged wood and

AlsMmBr’s retouro* group to mutt
WINTER PARK — The A!tbetmer*s Resource Center and the
Alshelmer's Reaptte Program will be co-sponsoring a seminar
on Jan. 39 from 8:30 a jn . to 13:30 p.m. at the W inter Park
Public Library. 46 0 1. New England Ave.. W inter Park.
The program will be presented by the University of Florida
Memory Disorder CUnlc In Oalnesvllie.
There la no charge to attend and preregistration is not

8H8 1873 class to plan reunion
SANFORD — The Seminole High School class of 1973 Is
planning Its 30th reunion this year. An organisational meeting
will be held Monday. Jan. 35 a t 7:30 p.m., at the West Sanford
Boys and Olrls Club.
Class members are encouraged to attend. For Information,
call Oary Mathews, 380-9383, between 9 and S p.m .,
weekdays.

Al-Anon group gathers
If you are troubled by the alcoholism of a fretnd or relative,
there is help .Serenity Won. an Al-Anon group for friends and
family of alcoholics, will m eet each Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday night at 8 p.m. a t the Sahara Club, 3587 8. Sanford
Ave., 8anford. For more Information, call 333-4133.

Nircoiioi anonymous mssis in ssnvoro
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday a t 8 p.m. a t the House
of OoodwtU, 317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.
O'AI abb I a * 0maawma Ianman tm33 iwam eB
n o i p vOv QVVVIDIViS OTTOfOQ
id Gam-Am
and Friday

8.H.A.R., m eets every Mooday
Torida Regional Hospital la the
hie la a ew b S p a u p p o it e o u p

later in February. Our long growing i
allows rosea to get for too large and
develop long branches that are similar to
fishing poles. Each flush of new growth Is
smaller and weaker than the one below It
Unless you cut bock the bush to sturdy
grow th, you will end up w ith flimsy
flowering stem s.
Normal pruning for a well established
hybrid-T rose (tang stem cutting types)
means removal of approximately Vi to Vi the
top growth and Oorfbundas (bush types)
should be pruned back to 4-5 ft. and shaped.
Pruning should be done during the second
week In February or after the danger of frost
All diseased or Injured canes that

were not removed earlier, In addition to
m inor tw igs or branches, need to be
removed at this time. Any canes that rub
across each other also need to be removed.
Prune plants back to canes the slxe of your
Index linger,
finger, leaving
leaving m3-5 i major canes for
index
newly planted roses and 5-7 canes for
well-established ones. Canes should be cut
to open the center of the plant to air and
light
This is the moot Important principal In
juvenation pruning — to strive to develop
Is open In the center. This helps
to prevent disease and promotes strong
growth. Whenever possible, Rusty advises,
cut back to a leaf that has five leaflets
otherwise terminal growth (without flower
buds) will be produced. Remember roses
have compound leaves that are composed of
leaflets and the number of leaflets per leaf
varies.
After the rejuvenation pruning Is com
feted and isigns‘of“ new growth are visible,
pfeted
apply a cup►
of fertiliser formulated for roees

or a sim ilar fertiliser, such as 6-6-6 with
minor elem ents plus Iron. Higher analysis
fertilisers (13-6-8) can be applied twice a
month a t Vi cup per application. Rusty says
that the area should be moist prior to the
fertiliser application. The fertiliser should
also be watered-ln following application.
Note that the fertiliser will not dissolve after
watering, but will be activated and dissolve
slowly over a period of weeks. Watering
after application also helps to wash oft any
fertiliser that may have landed on the
leaves. Be sure to keep the fertiliser at least
6 Inches from the base of the bush and
broadcast It out slightly beyond the drip line
of the p la n t Expect flowers In 8 or 9 weeks,
Grooming involves less major pruning,
but Is still a necessary step in proper rose
maintenance. After each flush of blooms,
remove the faded flowers. Leave at least 3 to
3 sets of five leaflet leaves on the stem.
Remember, It takes leaves to make flowers.
When cutting flower stem s, always look fo
the eye or bud that faces outward from the
center of the bush. Cut the stem W Inch
above a bud an a strong cane — index finger
atae, this helps prevent dleback disease.
Continue to fertilise every month according
to the procedure mentioned above. Rusty
ended her comments by saying that “proper
pruning, m onthly fertilisatio n , tim ely
w atering during drought sltutions and
regular monitoring for pests are all equally
im portant to properly caring for roses."
For more Information or specific questions
about rose culture, call the Agricultural
Center a t 333-3500, ext. 5558 orr the
1 Greater
O rlando Roae Society a t 339-1173 or
071-0614.

Angel lights up woman’s Christmas
D B A S A E B Y t I am a n
84-yearold lady, living alone. On
C hristm as Eve, I bought a
C hristm as tree. The lady 1
bought tt from said, “It’s not
very heavy" as she put it In the
trunk of my car.
When I got home, I tried to lift
tt out of the trunk. It w ouldn't
budge, so I used a pole for
leverage and flipped It out onto
my driveway. I tried pushing it, I
tried pulling I t It stfll wouldn’t
budge. I tried a "doUy,": then I
tried a rope, tt simply would not
b u d g e . 1 bow ed m y h eed ,

at holiday time. W ithout the U 6.
Foetal Service. I'd have to rely

8TATBN BLAND, M.T,

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

ft In reference to M am m a m lat "M 'tllum lno
your article concerning th e D'Immense* is,
a short
shortest poem in the world: We poem. But there Is another poem
would like to bring to your that Is even shorter. After Mrs.
attention that we have dtacov* Goldberg delivered her sixth
ered w hat is considered the child — all boys — Mr. Ooldberg
world's shortest poem, tt Is by exclaimed:
the Italian poet Ouiseppe Un“A boy?
g u ettl:
**Oyt"
inilumtno
"I am enlightened by
the

to help me.'
i heard s
eaw a Palm S p rin g Gas Co.
truck Dull ud and gtoo actom the
s tre e t. The d riv er got out.

'tar' - ;

“Can I help you? Where do you
want that tree?"
I said. "If tt'a not too much
trouble, I would like tt in my
house," so he carried tt into my
house, act it up and made sure It
w ii straight*
I asked' him, "Do you believe
In the power of prayer?" With
la my eyes. I thanked him,
I tkanhed God. Abby. do
m the power of

. and five where It will
undetprtvUcged aome

—

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WE VE GOT
YOU COVERED

S E M IN O L E

322-2611

to vW t her, e
1 wrote
her.
If-—
I
jl—
a*-,toaUk«pB■
, umS*6v
—
—
.—
» i n i f r f f |C—
ntt®
6 Igl
m ailbox before 5 p.m .. she
reoleved U before noon the
following day — aad tt only coat
S cents. Today tt coats 89 cents,
and you’re lucky If It takes less
than (bur days.
O U T * Yes. L too,
I give w hat I can to my church,
believe In the power of prayer , the Salvation Army aad the
You found an angel - employed United Way. and I suggest that
by the M m Springs Gas Co.
you advise your n

z r r m ii:

ITALIAN CLABB,

*:

g MOTTm o

B

�£3

40 . Sanford Hirald, Sanford, Flonoa - Monday, January 18, IMS

Lagal Notlcaa

Lagal Noltoaa

CLASSIREDADS
immoM
£2-8011

LAKI N U tirT tM lO A

w nw w Q ■ v f w ^ r r w *
S 31*9003

HoROtanOrSMMHRMMt
AN OROINANCI OF THI
CITY OF LAKR MARY. FLOR
IDA. A M IN D IN O ORDINANCt NO m . A t CODIFIID
IN SRCTtON tIA t OF THI
CITY OF LAKI MART I COD*
OF ORDINANCn. CITY FURCHAIINO FO LICIIIi FRO
VIOINO FOR INCRIAIRI IN
TH* MONITARV LIMIT! OF
FURCHAIINO AUTHORITY!
FROVIDINO FOR TH I AD­
DITION OF OTHIR FLORIDA
M U N IC IF A L IT II! A ! TO
CONTRACT! THI CITY MAY
UTtLISI IN FURCHAIINO;

FartMma. H-Hhour*waofciyReport* directly to patter. For
more Intormotton o il m m
• CURICAL/WARIHOUII a
Key YF*I WHS (M M n y .
Commart ten tt M year a r

“«{SR|X »

JAM*! L. HICKMAN, A ainalt
man, ami L.K.V. CONDOMINI
UM AUOCIATION, INC., a/h/a
LAKI KATHKVN VII. LAG*
CONDOMINIUM A t IOC IA
TION. INC., a Florida corporallan . JOHN DOR AND/OR
JAN* DOC. TOOITHIR WITH
ALL UNKNOWN TRNANTt
LOCATCO AT UNIT NO. T J.

Vf '

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• Average Trip U Dayt
• Lata Modal Conventional
Tractor*
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traitor. OTR and mow and lea
experience plot a pood driving
retard, calti

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A TAFID RICORD OF THIt
M ltTtN O II MAM IV THI
CITY FOR IT ! CONVINIwWDEa THIS WIOOmO1 OOAt
NOT CONtTITUTi AN AMOUATt RICORD FOR PURFOM I OF AFFIAL FROM A
? « C I ^ m a o riy n il
CITY WITH RRIFICT TO TH*
FORMONW MATTIR. ANY
PRRION WIIHINO TO RN

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- Sanford Htrald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, January 25, 1003

BLONDIE

Take caution when
exposed to colds

SB

DEAR DR. GOTT: How can a
peraon determine when aomeone
with a cold la no longer con*
tagtoua? Moat of our frlenda
think are cannot pass on germs
after three days; I question this
since a peraon can still be
coughing and blowing at that

BEETLE BAILEY

Ay M f t W a lte r

OVER, MOM, X tL
GAU YOU ADAM NMT TIME
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"*I^5AR READER: Colds are
probably not contagious once
symptoms begin to diminish,
usually in three or four days.
Nonetheless. I always urge cau*
Uon because once In awhile,
people continue to shed cold*
causing viruses In the nasal
secretions for longer periods.
Therefore. I agree with you:
Assume a cold-sufferer la con­
tagious as long as he or she Is
aneeslng. blowing and coughing.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I have a
Baker’s cyst on the back of my
knee. I understand this can be
operated on but since It is an
area with many small veins. I
am fearfUI. What Information
can you provide?
DEAR READER: A Baker's
cyst (named after William Baker,
a British surgeon) Is an encased
of fluid behind the knee.
fluid leal's from the joint
and becomes trapped In a sac
t h a t Is a d j a c e n t to th e
m em brane th a t encloses the
Joint.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I’m 73 and
have a growth that Is filling my
entire vaginal cavity. There is no
pain. What type of specialist
should I see. and what could my
problem be?
DEAR READER: You should
be examined by a gynecologist
because the "growth" could be a
tum or that should be removed.
On the other hand, you might
have an Innocuous condition
called uterine prolapse. Many
years after bearing children,
som e w om en e x p erien c e a
"dropped uterus": deprived of
Its supporting tissue, the womb
can sag Into the lower pelvis

MEDICINE

and, In advanced cases, actually
begin to protrude through the
vagina. This can easily be re­
paired surgically.

PETER
G O T T , M.D.

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ARLOAND JANIS

Ay T.K . Rvaa

Ay Jimmy
HOUR U U D W IilK
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Joseph Wood Krutch wrote.
"Cats seem to go on the princi­
ple that It never does any harm
to ask for what you w ant." It Is a
policy that 1 have exercised from
time to time. But at the bridge
table, as in life. It pays to ask lor
only as much as you need, not
more.
North's raise to four hearts
was frisky. But he had lots of
trum ps, little defense and favor­
able v u ln erab ility . The bid
would have worked beautifully If
only South had been a little less
prodigal In the play.
West led the diamond queen.
East, who should have ducked,
erred by winning with the ace
and switching to the club five.
After finessing the d u b queen
su ccessfu lly , d e cla re r drew
trum ps. He then played a spade
to dum m y's king, but East won
with the ace and the defenders

took two more spade tricks: one
down.
South started to m utter about
bad luck, but North was unre­
m ittingly unsym pathetic. He
had seen that the contract was
guaranteed once the d u b finesse
worked.
Declarer should draw trumps,
cash the club ace and diamond
king, and ruff the diamond five
In the dummy. Now South leads
dum m y's club Jack, and when
East covers with the king. South
discards one of his spade losers.
East wins the trick but doesn't
enjoy the experience. Whether
he cashes the spade ace or leads
a dub. which concedes a ruff-and-dlscard. declarer loses only
one more trick and makes his
contract.
Always bear In m ind (he
loser-on-loaer play, especially
when you have an unsupported
honor blowing In the wind.

Maybe an endplay will allow you’
to sidestep a finesse.
;

WOT
W

"

♦QJwas
♦#»««

n r^— r
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Ja n .
PRANK

Ay B«ATA bvm

The year ahead looks en­
couraging for you, especially If
you do things In accordance
with -your highest Ideals. In
order to be successful, proper
standards must be maintained.
_
(Jan. 30-Feb. IB)
Personal gains are Indicated
today, but how they come about
could be rather unusual and
mysterious. Who cares, as long
as they're honest and you're the
benefactor. Know where to look
for romance and you'll find It.
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which signs are
rom antically perfect for you.
M all B2 p lu s a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, d o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box B1428. Cleveland.
OH44101-3438.
.
H B O S (Feb. 30-March 20)
You might be In for a pleasant
surprise today when admeone
you thought w asn't too aware of
you goes out of his or her way to
show you how wrong you've
been .
•
(March 21-AprU 19)
who likes you Is re­

luctant to express his or her
feelings because this peraon is
unsure of your Inclinations. If
you feel Die same way. be more
obvious.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Friends can be swayed to your
way of thinking today, not
through hard argum ents or
assertiveness, but an appeal to
their finer Instincts. Soften your
presentation.
(May 21-June 30)
There Is a possibility you might
achieve something today that
will give you a sense of personal
pride and gratification, yet ob­
servers won't be aware of Its
Impact.
CANCER (June 21-July 23)
You could have an opportunity
today to clarify a position you've
taken which associates do not
fully understand. Put all of your
cards on the table and be as
frank as possible.
IMO (July 23-Aug. 32) Two
people with whom yop ll have
similar but unrelated Involve­
m ents may treat you In an
equally advantageous manner
lodsy. Neither will be governed
by the other's reaction.
(Aug. 23-Bept. 22)
Today you might be required to

make a decision that could have
far-reaching effects for others as
well as yourself. Fortunately,
your Judgment might be better
than usual.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
A ssig n m en ts o r ta sk s that
challenge your creativity and
Imagination are apt to be the
ones you'll find the most ap­
pealing today. They will also be
the ones you'll perform the best.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You c oul d be m u c h more
charism atic today than you real­
ise. What you do or say will
make a strong Impact on people
with whom you'll be Involved.
especially members of the op­
posite gender.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 33-Dec.
31) Concerns you have pertain­
ing to a m atter that afreets your
m a t e r i a l . s e c u r i t y may be
brought Into proper focus today.
You will realise there's a light at
the end of the tunnel.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan.
IB) You can get Important points
across today If you sprinkle your
resentation with touches of
C
Be both theatrical and
witty.
(C119B3. NEWSPAPER EN­
TERPRISE ASSN.

By

ANNIE

Harr

PfMm

c im n l y

• ■

■ n f l a m

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Sanford H erald
Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Seminole County since 1908
85lh Year, No. 113 - Sanford, Florida

.m a m
INSIDE

Murder
suspect
back
Extradited, man will face
charges in Sanford killing

□ People
Microwave a meat loaf
Everybody loves meal loot In today's
Microwave Magic column. Midge Mvcolf gives
readers slioii cots m prepatiug the all American
favorite
Sec Pngc 3B.

BRIEFS
Stowe featured at gallery
SANFORD
Noted MH-veai old Sanlord .ulisi
E 11 Stowe will be al Ins easel Saturday at die
First Street liallerv lb- util lie available to
dleuss bis style ol paintinu and n inlnlsce about
Ills many years ol w o ik m e with Florida
landscapes
Stowe, now eonlttied to a wbeelebair. lias
continued bis award winning paint11iu partlcu
larly ol St .Johns Klvei scenes lbs paintings
hang In many local businesses, numerous
homes, and even the Senate t in Ilet \ m Wash mu
ton. I).C
The public Is Invited to meet Stowe ibis
Saturday, anil view some ol bis work In the
present lenttired exhibit. Steamboat mu on the
St. Johns "
Stowe will be al the (iallcrv Itom III ltd a m
until noon. There is noebarue
The First Street (iallcrv Is located at 203 E
First Street to downtown Sanlord Foi additional
Inrormallon. phone 323 0I7H

Antoon nominated to fill vacancy
SANFORD — C'lilel .Indue John Antoon II ol
the Seminole-llrcvard Count\ circiill court is
amoiiu three names reeonutieiided to 1111 a
vacancy on the Filth District ( nurt ol Appeal bv
a nine-member panel Wednesday.
Also recommended by the 5th DCA Judicial
Nomlnatinu Commission were Orange Counts
Circuit .Indue Emerson R Tliompson Jr. and
Maitland lawyer William I) I'almer The un
ranked list was mailed to llov. Lawton ( lilies
yesterday. Chiles lias 60 days to select one
nsnnc to replace appellate |udue Joe A. Cowart
•Jr. Cowart notified Chiles In November ol bis
plan to retire March I. 11MM alter 12 vcais on
the DCA benc h.

Russian economic expert speaks
WINTEU PARK — Andrei Kolosov sky. a leadet
of Russia's economic retorm movement, will
speak at Rollins College next week about bis
country's economic recovery program.
Knlosovkv. deputy chief ol mission al the
Russian Federation's embassy In Washington,
led the presidential advance team lor President
Boris Yeltsin's visit to the United Stales in 100 I
lie will speak at the ('rummer School ol
Business scholarship banquet al the private
Winter Park college on Tuesday. Dean Samuel
C. Ccrto said Wednesday.

Next shuttle to feature toys
SPACE CENTER. Houston — Astronauts plan
lo sail a balloon helicopter. /Ip a car Inside a
looping track and set windup llsli and frog
bathtub toys swimming aboard the space
shuttle Endeavour, scheduled lor launch next
week.
The toys tire intended to demonstrate princi­
ples of science and math to students. !f(l ol
whom will participate In the plav Irom Earth.
The crew expects lo do a complex. •lO-mlmile
live hookup via telephone and television with
students at four IJ.S. elementary schools in I lie
astronauts' home towns. The astronauts will
answer questions posed by the students, who
have been studying the physics behind the toys
and want to know what they will do in
weightlessness.
If Endeavour launches as scheduled Jan Id.
the toy lesson will take place Jail If).
Endeavour's six-day mission also will Include
a five-hour, two-man spacewalk: the release ol a
tracking and data relay satellite: and experi­
ments with rats and lire.

B rld g * ........................... OB
C lassifieds........... 4 B ,5 B
C o m ic s ......................... 6B
C ro s s w o rd ...................OB
Dear A b b y ....................3B
Deaths...........................BA
Dr. Q ott.........................OB
Editorial....................... 4A
Flo rid a .......................... 2A

B y J . MARK B A R F IE LD
Herald Stall Writer
SANFORD — Sanlord police now
have tItclr man.
Nearly four years after the bloody
s l a b b i n g m u r d e r ol Mr. C 's
Southern Fried Cbleken owner l.l
Tcb Yu, murder suspect Merle
Colield is now In the Seminole
County jail alter Ids extradition
Irom North Carolina Wednesday.
"Il look its a while.*' said acting
Sanford Police Cltlel Ralph Russell.
"W e had a Int n| luck, loo."
Colield. -lit. faces a first degree
murder charge lor lhe May I. HIHH
slabbing death nl Yu. Colield Is
scheduled lo appear before circuit
Judge Don Marhlestone lodav In a
Jail courtroom hearing.
Yu's sister found the Winter
Springs man dead from 27 stab
wounds In Ids restaurant al 2 KM) S
French Ave. at about I a.to. on May

I. HIHH. The woman had tried lo
telephone him since about 10:30
p in earlier In the evening, acc ord­
ing to reports. Police found tlie
restaurant In disarray and the cash
drawer missing.
A bloody knife was found in a
nearby dumpster and the Mr. (" s
cash drawer, with about $200
missing, was also Inmid nearby.
Police say Colleld's finger|iriuts
were on the knife. Investigators also
reported some ol (he cash was used
lo buy cocaine within minutes ol
murder.
Cofield has been In custody since
Del. 2. 1002 when he was arrested
lit Willow Springs. N.C Colield had
been Identllied by a man who saw a
Florida Most Wanted Fugitive poster
In a central Florida police slalfou.
Merle Cofield
The man said lie had worked with
Colield on a North Carolina farm, S e m i n o l e C o u n t y s h e
said Russell. Colield has been
spokesman ( irorge Piocchel
lighting extradition since then, said
See Custody, Page 0A

Deadly
diagnosis
for cats
B y V ICKI DaSORM IER
Herald Stall Writer

Hti*ld Photo by Richard Hopklnt

Linda Bovan and her son Kenny stroke Sassy. The cat has an
AIDS-type virus much like human AIDS

Partly
Cloudy
For more weatt

&gt;P a g e 2 A

SANFORD — Alter admliilstr.iinis
rejected the recommendations ol
two special masters (one who heard
I he ease ol the Icachcrs and anolhri
who heard dial ol all die olln i
d i s t r i c t c m p I o v c c s |. s c h o o l
employees in Seminole Coiinlv have
negotiated with die district to re
celvea two percent raise.
The (listriel has also agreed not to
continue in seek a wage Irce/e
across tin' hoard lor all cm plovers
"I'm gkid It’s all over...linallv.'
siiid Nauev Wheeler, the employees'
clilel negotiator
Ken Bovin, rlilrl negotialoi Int the
district, said lie is also glad Ihe
rnutrael hits been settled
"Fill pleased with die atmosphere
at last night's meeting." Bovin said.
"There was nn bickering, everxnnr
c o o p e r a t e d v ets w e ll
I was
pleased."
The unions and the district had
been trying In settle Ihell (lit
lerenees at the negotiating table and
See Contract, Page 6A

Boulevard
contract now
‘a d o n e -d e a l’

A foggy day in Sanford town
j

,V

By N IC K P F E IF A U F
Herald Staff Writer

M»r*id Photo by tommy Vincent

Partly cloudy with a
chance nl showers
and thunderstorms.
High In tlx' upper
70s l.lgh wind. Rain
chance -III peieeut

SANFORD — A mail who
tried lo set up ii cocaine
la b o r a t o r y in a S e m in o le
County m old room was sen
I (‘ need In 10 years In |ail
Tuesday as a habitual fclonv
offender.
Jiinfnn Alexander (luy. 30. is
already under a lllc semem e nil
drug trallicking charges and is
a ls o la c in g o i l i e r le d e ra l
charges, according tu Assisiani
Stale Attorney Tom Ilasilngs
"Life should keep him in lor
life. For hiihlliiiii ullcudcrs.
I here's no giim lime lie had
See Drugs, Page 6A

By V IC K I DaSORM IER
Herald Stall Writer

H o ro s co p e .................. OB
M o vie s.......................... 3B
Nation........................... 5A
P eo p le ...........................3B
P o lice ............................3A
School M enu.............. 3 A
S p o rts.....................1B,2B
T e le v is io n ................... 3B
W e ather....................... 2A

Much of the same

ByQ EO R Q ED U N CAN
Herald Stall Writer

School,
unions
end pay
dispute

‘AIDS’ plagues loved family member

According to veterinarians It is
not any more prevelant than il has
been In the past. Inn more and more
eat owners are beginning to hear
about It and It's got them scared.
Feline luunuuodcllccncy Virus.
"They diagnosed my eat with
AIDS." said Linda Bevan of Longwood. w h o s e eal S as sy , was
diagnosed with the deadly virus on
Dee. 26.
According lo Dr. John Dyer ol the
Lake Mary Veterinary Clinic, the
virus Is not really AIDS as we know
it. Init It has many of I In* same
symptoms.
"W e are calling It AIDS, because
people understand lltal term and
understand how It Is affeellug their
animal." Dyer said.
Bevan said lhill the veterinarian
who treated Sassy explained lhill
the disease can not be passed from it
pet lo humans through scratches or
bites. Site was told, however, that it
is easily transmitted from cat to eat
through sexual contact or through
the exchange of bodily Holds during
[ See Cats, Page 6A

Prison time
for motel
cocaine lab

A thick cloak ol log shrouded downtown
Sanlord this morning, a condition Ihe National
Wealher Service says will be around lor

several mornings. Originating Irom conditions
over Ihe Atlantic, perhaps London is sharing
weather it s lamous lor

SANFORD — T'lte Seminole County Com­
mission lilialt/ed the contract yesterday nllei
noun dial ollicially allows the restarting nt
enlist ruction nn Lake Marv Dmilcvaid.
"It took only live minutes lot the eummlssiuu to
give Its unanimous approval." said Counts
Manager Ron Rahim. "It may have taken what
seems like a long time lo get lo this point. Inti It's
a done-deal now."
The contract, in the lorm ol a "Tcndci
Agreement", came Irom Insurance Company ol
North America, which held die sillily bonds on
iItemigiual $ 6 million project
The new prime cniitracior is Ileum Conn acting
( o . ol Okahiimpka. located just south ol
Leesburg.
See Road, Page 6A
Related Editorial Page 4 A

L a k e M a r y r e s o lu tio n w o u ld b e s ig n o f th e tim e s
B y N IC K P F E IF A U F
Herald Staff Writer
LAKE MARY — Business owners In Lake Mary
may soon have lo brush up on new rules lor
outdoor signs
II a new resolution is approved. Lake Mary will
have almost an entirely new sign ordinance The

measure is scheduled lor hist reading al tonight's
City Commission meeting.
Tile ordinance, developed through the Business
Advisory Board, would cllmtuulc the old sign
codes, and establish a brand new list ol rules and
regulations governing all signs dial might he
erected lit the city
The proposed ordinance deals with advertising

Hags, real estate and construction signs, subdivi­
sion signs. olT-slle directional signs, political
s i g n s , t e m p o r a r y s ig n s , n e i g h b o r h o o d
wan h/homeowner association signs, and chuich
and child care signs In residential zones.
The Lake Mary Planning and Zoning hoard lias
already unanimously voted lo approve all ol die
See Signs, Page 6A

�NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND ACROSS T H E S T A T E

3 w hite

Former Black Panthar acquitted
MIAMI - A federal Judge acquitted an anti-Castro actlvtst
and fanner Black Panther on charge* that he Illegally carried
weapons on his boat during a rescue search for Cuban rafters
last July.
Tony Bryant. 54. waa charged with Illegal possession and
transport of weapons by a convicted felon.
He testified during hla trial that he had been at sea in search
of Cuban rafters and didn't learn there were weapons on his
25-foot speedboat unUl he waa In Cuban waters.
The directed verdict by U.8. District Judge James Lawrence
King waa handed down Wednesday before the case reached
closing arguments. King ruled the government had foiled to
present sufficient evidence to warrant the case going to the
Bryant's defense attorney m is Rubtn had argued that the
prosecutor, assistant U.8. attorney Andrew Ooaterbaan, bad
failed to show that Bryant had knowledge that four weapons
were aboard the speedboat.

VENICE - Ringttng Bros, and Baraum A Bailey Circus
announced the birth of Juliette- 198-pound Asian elephant
The pachyderm, the first born at the Rlngllng's 90-acre
breeding form In Central Florida, measures 878 indam from
trunk to tall and stands 38.9 inches high.
"Juliette la In excellent health and mother and baby have
bonded well." said circus veterinarian Richard Houck. The
baby, bom Dec. 30, was named after thsfoysarald daughter of
Kenneth Feld, circus president and producer.
"The natural habitat for endanjpred spades aonttnuas to
dwindle, making captive breeding more Important than ever,"
Feld said Wednesday in the d r e w anaounosaeent

TAMPA — Three white laborers were Ut
custody today tn the torching of a black
tourist, and Investigators revested that a
racist note left behind at the soene was
signed "KKK."
"One less nigger — one more to go," read
the sm all, handwritten note, which
Hillsborough County Sheriff Cal Henderson
said was the key piece of evidence making
the case a hate crime, Inveatigttora did not
Immediately know the significance of the
statement
The arreats late Wednesday were at*
trtbuted to Ups that followed the release of
composite sketches of the suspects.
without bond was Jeff Ray Pellet 17, of
Plant City, along with Mkrk A. Kohut 28,
and Charles P. Rourk, 53, both of Lakeland.
1y
■i

-

1 V.

1 WH"
•1 H

Cost decreases to 99 cents
S iiV M a iS s S ^ M i
iw s u n w n m r
—
HEATHROW — O si prices
a re o e m ta g lower In mow
locatlonsaround Seminole
County
In some spots, the figure has
eveadtppedbetewadSterper
mUonarreJpilar unleaded gas
farthe first time In more than
avaarandahalf.
A c c o r d i n g to T o m
M m «te r . a spokesman'far
th&gt; American Automobile As*
prices have been
Showing e alight decrease

MAITLAND — What do you caB n held eagle chick who bast
the odds and hatched after the egg feu 40 feet from a tree that
vandals chopped down with a chain saw?
Egg Drop? Humpty Dumpty? Plunkett? Second Chance?
Timber? Lucky? Spirit of America?
By midday Wednesday, the Florida Audubon Bird of Prey
Center had logged 897 caBs In SBhoiirs from peopls around

The &lt;
pair of
days e

per gallon of regular unleaded,
though several Sanford stores
Hdd their price was at an even
91 per gallon,
“We try to charge our cuatomere a folr price andlatajr
competitive in the market/’
«*dd Barbara Poky, manager
of the-7-Eleven store at the
c o h w o f U S -M id w a y 1742
and County Road 427 hi Berntook County.
Her store Is currenUy chargmg 99 cents a gallon for the
regular unleaded. The other
grades are sUU shoves dollar.
According to Schroedcr, the

‘ Indeed only one station in a
sampling from around the
Seminole County area re­
ported a price of km than 91

I Any genuine promotion of fami­
ly veluee should encourage
public acceptance of this most
basic act of nurture between
mother end baby. |
-Hep. Miguel Oe Qrendy
DeOrandyeald.

iiS S S B

*r,thte w91 have on a
1

V

rro n a ls o o rd ered
cr to undergo seaider treatm ent

t
Ld l 1
1# 1

T H E
. •V-M

W E A T H E I
:

Today: Variable cloudiness
Itb a chance of Mtoweta end
lunderstorms. High In the uper 70s. Light wind. Rain chance

r.-a

Partly cteudy with a ’
m k l io u D o c r b Ob .
-

••

Agricul•••

r|

�.

Bsnford Hsrald. 8*nfort, Florida - Thursday, January 7, 1903 - SA

Cops nab Sanford rainfall totals remain
alleged
high over 12-month period

Multiple chargaa flltd
Lake Mary police arrested Richard Lee Simonton, 23. of
Daytona Beach on Tuesday. Police said he was aeen by an
officer running horn a convenience store carrying a 13-pack of
beer, with the clerk In pursuit. The officer saw the man
escaping In a car, and gave chase. After what police said was a
rapid chase, the car fiu)ed to negotiate a turn near Lake Mary
Blvd. and Palmetto Ave., ran off the road, and collided with a
newspaper box and several trees. They said the man then
attempted to escape on foot A K-9 unit from the Longwood
police department assisted In the search, and Simonton was
located in a nearby wooded area. Another person, under the
age of 31, not immediately Identified, was discovered still In the
vehicle. A subsequent search of the vehicle uncovered several
drug related Items. Simonton was charged with petit theft,
possession of cannabis under 30 grams, possession of drug
paraphernalia, giving alcohol to a person under 31, and
resisting arrest without violence.

Warrant arrests
•Sheriff's deputies arrested Jerry Parker, 25. 917 Hotly
on Tuesday. He was wanted for violation of
Avenue, Sanford, a
parole on a conviction of sale of a controlled substance.
•Tanya Lynn Miser, 33. 915 Maple Avenue, Hanford, was
located at her residence by Sheriff’s deputies Tuesday. She was
wanted for violation of parole on a conviction of possession of
cocaine.
•Randall Scott Henson, 39, 1003 E. 35th Street, Sanford,
was
He was
w iu apprehended
a p p r c n c n u c u by
u y Sheriff's
o n c r u i » deputies
u c p u u c s Tuesday.
• ucm mi
wanted for violation of parole on a trespass conviction,
convict
failure
to appear on a charge of theft, and failure to appear■on
&lt; a charge
ffshlna without ia "license.
of fishing
•Donald Brian Kemp, 35. 1701 8. Park Ave.. Sanford, was
arrested by Sheriff's deputies at his home Tuesday. He was
wanted for violation of parole on a conviction of burglary to a
dwelling, and grand theft with a firearm.

Domastic vtofanea
•Bobby Lee Cotton, 41S San Marcos Avenue, Sanford, was
arrested by Sheriff's deputies near North Street and Market
Street south of Longwood Tuesday. Deputies said he was
.Involved in an altercation with a female. He was charged with
aggravated battery.
•Longood police arrested Barbara M. Fanok. 48, 110
Sheridan Ave., Longwood. Police said she had been in a dispute
with her father at her residence. She was charged with battery,
domestic violence.
•John P. Galloway, 62, 3371 Jltway Avenue, was arrested
by Sheriff's deputies at his residence Tuesday following a
dispute with his wife. He was charged with battery, domestic
violence,
•Nelm a Skiver Graves, 38. and William Hollis Richardson,
38, both of 3801 Knudsen Drive, Sanford, were arrested by
Sheriff's deputies at their residence early Wednesday. They
were each charged with battery, domestic violence.

Incidents reported to tha Sheriff
•Barbara Lee Jenkins of Geneva, reported her purse was
stolen Tuesday, in the parking lot at a business located at 3500
E. 8.R. 46. She said a man approached her, took her purse with
850 in cash and 8130 in Jewelry, and fled from the area.
• A burglary was reported early Wednesday, at the home of
Clayton P. Stahl, 16 Green Lake Circle, Longwood. Items taken
from the garage Included tiro surf boards, wet suite and other
items valued at 8880.

i i f j u i i H
Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD P o lic e lo o k
prompt action in apprehending
three persons charged in the
robbery or a convenience store
Tuesday. Michael B. Jones, 20.
o f M S 2738 Ridgewood Avenue.
Sanford, was arrested Immedi­
ately following the Incident. Two
others were located a short time
later.
Officers said three men were
involved In the robbery at a
convenience store located at
1300 W. Airport Blvd. The police
report said one man. armed with
a pistol struck the clerk in the
head with the weapon.
A ctin g P olice C h ief Ralph
Russell said. "A n o th er man
Jabbed the clerk with a knife."
He added, "It wasn't a stabbing,
the man apparently Just poked
him with it."
Police said the men then took
money and food stamps and fled
from the a rea .1 T o assist in
locating lhe men. officers called
for support from a K-9 unit, and
the dog "Jam m er” was brought
lothescene.
Jammer located Jones In a
short period o f time in a fenced
compound at a nearby business,
where officers made the arrest.
He was charged wllh armed
robbery, conspiracy, aggravated
battery, and the use or a firearm
in the commission o f a felony.
Yesterday. Russell reported
that officers had apprehended
the two other men suspected of
being involved in the robbery.
They were Identified as Tony
Davis, 18, and a 15-year-old
juvenile whose name Is being
withheld. Russell said both were
fro m S a n fo r d , b u t t h e ir
addresses were not Immediately
revealed.
"W e were also able to recover
what we believe was all o f the
money and food stamps stolen
during the robbery." he said.
Charges placed against the
Juvenile and Davis are similar io
those placed against Jones.
All three are being held al the
John E. Polk Correctional Weill-

SANFORD — Sanford was the wettest place
In the 19-county St. Johns River basin after 13
Inches of rain feu here in November.
Rainfall totals monitored by the St. Johns
River Water Management District showed the
city received 9.88 Inches above the 3.12-lnch
normal November rainfall, almost a 600
percent increase. Virtually all of the 12-inch
total fell on Nov. 34, leavin g m any
neighborhoods under a foot or more of water.
Sanford has received about 18 inches of
above-normal rain during the past 12 months,
according to a district report.
The water district issues a monthly
"hydrologic conditions report" listing rainfall,

lake levels and underground water supply
Information for areas thorughout the 19county district. Although Sanford rainfall and
Oeneva and Longwood well levels are
monitored, no Seminole County lakes are
included in the monthly survey.
Groundwater levels in Oeneva remain high,
although slightly lower than October's record
of 21.49 feet above mean sea level. In
November, the district recorded 31.4 feet In the
well, nine-tenths of a foot below the recordsetting October level.
In Longwood, the groundwater level con­
tinued to improve. The district recorded water,
reaching a level of 41.96 feet, more than a foot
more'than the level reached in October.
District officials say there la not a mon*
th-to-month correlation between rainfall and
groundwater levels.
________ ________ _______

What’a for
Friday, Jan. 8,1889
Meatloaf wllh Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Totted 8alad
Baby Carrott
School Roll
Milk

START YOUR NEW YEAR WITH
GREAT VALUES AT
★ Port orange
★ New Smyrna
★ Daiand

iy-

lifGKMrlVS rvp o n V Q VO OW IIIM U pot ICO
at PublU»3609.
8. Orlando DrlvS. A^itore official told police * man had
telephoned the Mpre indicating a bomb with a remote control
had been placed in the store. The caller reportedly demanded
money be put in a bag and placed outdoors an the street
Sanford police investigated the incident and arere m w N * to
locate any device.
• A TV set was reported stolen Tuesday from the home of
Danny Owens, *A, 1717 W. 15th Street In Sanford.
•A n undetermined amount of property was reportedly
stolen Tuesday from the
if Brenda Hedley. 1805
Summerlin Ave.
•Sanford police located a stolen vechtde Tuesday. The car
was found parked in the north parking lot of the Sanford Police
Station. 815 8. French Avenue. According to the report, the
vehicle had been listed as stolen In Orlando.

Sanford announces Its
appointments to boards
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD - The Sanford City
Commission held It's annual
organisational meeting Tuesday
night Appointments were made
after the new commission terms
were formalised.
! Major Bettye Smith, Commie[ «|&lt;w r« Hn^ Thomas ***8' Lon
• Howell officially took their oaths
of office for new four-year terms.
! Smith won re-election In the.
! municipal election on Dec. 8.
|Howdl, laced by three oppo*
&gt; nents, had his victory decided in
Sa run-off election on Dec. 23.
; Thomas was re-elected without
(embers of the city com*
! mission normally serve one year
terms on various organisations
{In the county aa well as Central
{ Florida. Re-appointments or new
; represenutation is required at
‘ the beginning oft
announced the
stmente, with approval by
t the members of the commission.

Commissioner WhUey leka*
. tain will represent ths city on
CALNO, the council of local
governments comprising the
various cities within the county.
Mayor Smith will be the repre­
sentative to the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce, and the
p u nning Agency,
Commissioner A.A. "M ac"
MrTtanahan will serve on the
Baet Central Florida Planning
Council and the Sem inole
County Utility Task Force.
Commissioner Bob Thomas
eras fiTt'gr—1 reprrf^ntf 11^ to
the Police Department Ltaaon,
Pommlastonrr Lon Howell wlU
serve aa city representative on
the Henry Shelton Sanford Me*
mortal Library and Museum
Board and the Government Re­
lations Subcommittee of the
O re ater S em in ole C ounty
Chamber of Commerce,
In addition to commission
aooointmente. the mayor an*
pointed City Planner Jay Marder
to serve on the chamber's De*
algn/Refulatnrvfti *

Something Old,
8

4

9

- C

?

009$
There's something new to remember. From now an, when you
make long distance call* within the 407 area, dial 0 or 1 + 407
and then me number you're calling.
Florida'* tremendous growth hitcreated a shortage of
lekphone numbers. By dialing the area code on every long
distenoe call, numbers are freed up for new businesses and
residential curtomen.
So remember, when you dial long distance, be sure to use the
area code. And If you have a 407 long distance number on any
programmed tervk**, Uke Speed Dialing, Call Forwarding, or
even a FAX machine, now's the time to reprogram them.

@

1 --------SW—mm

9 0 M IM IID N

I

9

Something New

o

d E T lM lR R

C

�«

180888

:ti

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v«'vi ■- "i*1•■■■.'i

-i'-T

- ■!, ,■.-ji‘■■. . y,j 1

4* - ta r ford HaraM, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, January 7, 1003

Editorials/ Opinions
W I L L I A M A. R U S H E R

W h en sh o u ld

EDITORIALS

Problems with
boulevard
almost over
Road widening along Lake Mary Boulevard
haa been at a standstill since July and traffic
hazards have plagued m any. Progreaa cam e
to a halt due to the bankruptcy o f the original
contractor. John Mahoney Construction.
A restart contract waa approved by the
Seminole County Commission yesterday af­
ternoon. Hewitt Contracting Com pany will
n o w b e g in m o v in g la rg e co n stru ctio n
machines to Lake Mary within days.
Relief aeema to be in sight. But before
boulevard travel becomes better. It will gel
worse.
Even burger hazards than before are about
to enter the picture.
During the next alx month*, more motoring
caution than ever will be required on the
boulevard between Country Club Road and
Interstate 4. Motorists who have been dodg­
ing manhole covers, will now be circum ­
navigating bulldozer* and paving equipment.

Every so often a situation arises In which it la
clear how a problem could be solved, but the
solution Is impractical because the American
people would never agree to It In such cases, the
only thing left to do la grin and bear the
consequences.
One such case is the drug problem, which
could almost certainly be solved fay sufficiently
draconian penalties — death for major suppliers,
for one. But the American people probably
wouldn't tolerate such a solution, preferring
Instead to let the problem continue.
It begins to appear that the issue of America’s
role in the evolving world order la another such
problem. In pure theory we would be well
advised, and morally Justified as well, to reserve
applications of American military force to
situations that truly threaten global order Itself.
(Saddam Hussein’s 1BBO seizure of Kuwait, and
his designs on the rest of the Middle East’s oil
supplies, were a good example.)
As for distressing but not strategically
.threatening cases such aa Somalia, we would aa
always be quick with food and other humanitari­
an supplies. In ctvll w an like the one now
tormenting the former Yugoslavia, we could Join
in sanctions against Serbia, and set] weapons to
the Croats ana Bosnians if we so chose. But we

' in t h e t r o o p s ?

would draw the line at putting the Itvee ot
American soldiers. sailors, airmen and Marines
at risk.
-----------------------------------There would, of
course, be borderline
cases, and perhaps
Somalia Is one.
If V
!
food shipments are
hijacked before they
can reach their destlnstkm, it might —
\
,
again, In pure theory
V
— be acceptable
to .
do what President
M
B u s h h t i d o ne :
n am e ly , aend In
enough Marines
to f poopl*
make sure that the
■ orobablv
food feta through.
wouldfrt
But even that. as
totarats such
r *
qu^ .
• kolutlon,
leada to demands by
prtfarrlno
U N v to e ^ O e n ;
Inataadtolat
end Boutros Boutros
tha problam
Ohsirand others that
^ C
|
the Marines stay in
W
Somalia km* enoutfh
to disarm the warring dans, so that a U.N.

m

We have entered
the ‘Alibi Age’

m

Lanes presently open will be closed, while It
m ay be necessary to reroute aome traffic and
temporarily close aome roads connecting with
the boulevard.
Merchants w ill find construction areas
obstructing access driveways at times, or
even higher dirt piles obscuring their signs.
D uring this new period of construction, we
urge motorists w ho use the boulevard to
exercise extrem e caution. Haaards will appear
and lanea m ay be changed
from day to day.

II

n
ill

earn to taka forever, but tt is,
to last no longer than six m onths. :
stipulations have been placed in
the contract with Hewitt to indicate that all o f
the construction work will be completed as
originally scheduled, by June 14.
The City o f Lake Mary is also working
toward a final completion by that time o f the
companion boulevard beautification project.

W hen completed. Lake Mary Boulevard will
return to being one o f the m ain arteries from
Seminole Community College, Lake Mary and
points east, to Interstate-4 and the Heathrow
community.
{
It will have changed however.
It will be one o f the moat beautiful and
efficient traffic-movers In the area.
W e applaud this magnificent accomplish­
ment. Thla project shows how different
governmental entitles can work together for a
common Interest.
In the mean time, while dodging work
crew s and equipm ent, take cheer. The
problem s w on't last too much longer.

•ns

M A R T IN

SCHRAM

W hen our presidents don't trust us
For 18 of our last 94 yean, three o f our
their d
system of laws they
They were: (1) staunchly behind ki and (2)

Ultimately, their covarupa dgarted
Unes. That's what topplsdlUchard Nixon in
___
president, George frmh veritably p*u«g the
furniture a_
_ out
to us. in what loom* as his

they ftisrniasrl — but what else did they have
to talk shout?
never provided (until the other day) transcripts
of dally wcollacthms he dictated In
Sadly, we are left
to ponder why these
preaidenta. whom
(Jmb poocsio
wtth their
of*
* * * * *&gt; unwillk g to trust the peotruth.
simple
EPtLOQUE: Almost

LETTERS
CuMmatafy,
tfialM
the m w HapobHran
ta rty chairman. •
la e a n t , fr ie n d ly

of Florida's precious marine
unchecked for too long. The
organised commercial fishing lobby has sueosaaAilly resisted aach and every rule or regulation
which curtails their unlimited monopoly. We all
admire the proud heritage that allows an individu­
al to make his living Irom the riches of the sea.
Unfortunately, there is no longer enough to go
around.
Technological advance* which allow hundreds of
of monofilament SlU nets to be screed bv
speed boats have surpassed the ability of the
reproduce. We must restrict the ways that
the sea Is harvested before ^ju r prec1 ^ : ntulld ■
redfleh and snook go the way of the carrier pigeon.
The Marine Patrol is cither unable or unwilling to
enforce the laws on the books. The only way to
control the Indiscriminate fcll* *» by the ruthless
nets is to ban them. Comment, '-hermen have
long claimed that their nets do not ..urt turtles and
porpoises but have now eeen photographic evi­
dence to the contrary.
We should all help to save our Florida aeallfe by
signing a Save Our Sea Lite petition now. This will
put the proposed constitutional amendment on the
ballot and allow the citizens o f Florida to decide
whether their marine resources are worth protect­
ing from the nets.
Harold M. Stevens
Fori Myers. Pis.

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. AU letters
must be signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on a single subject and be
•a brief aa possible. The letter* are subject to

•ft

not In tile loop.1'
But Weinberger's n
the "V P " — v m not a
Oval Office on Jan. 7.
the plan to trade 4JQO
for five U A haatafli

So we will probably barge militarily Into
Bosnia — and also into every other future
hot-spot where TV cameramen and bleedingheart columnists can manage to bring tears to
American eyes.

JO S E P H SPEAR

c o is m K t iin m
t e

'peacekeeping force” will thereafter have no
prOMema.
In Bosnia, this country'la already on the verge
of agreeing to enforce with our fighter planes,
under U.N. authority, a "no-fly toneT’ designed to
hamper the Serbs. This, of course, la a first step
toward involvement on the ground, which would
almost certainly follow — if only because alt*
attacks would risk Serbian reprisals against
British and French ground forces already In
Bosnia as a U.N. "peacekeeping" contingent.
(The concept of a composite U.N. force actually
capable of lighting In Bosnia or elsewhere, which
I raised In a recent column, apparently strikes
the Pentagon aa Implausible and/or undesirable.)
Finally, we are being prepared to regard any
Serbian military Intrusion Into bordering
Kosovo, where Muslims predominate, aa a step
that would drag Greece and Turkey into the fray
on the aides of Serbia and Kosovo respectively —
thereby escalating the conflict to a level that
would demand American intervention anyway.

In an effort to be the first columnist on the
planet to define the ’90s. I hereby anoint tt
the "Alibi Age." We’ve gone from the "Me
Decade" to the "Not Me Decade."
OK. so Time magazine did a story on what
a bunch of crybabies we have become, but
that's a news magazine with a staff of
hundreds. I am the drat one-person shop to
spot this trend, and I Intend to claim credit.
The evidence is ev
e r y wh e r e . Sunbathers can’t be held
to account for their
bums: it's the hole in
the atm o sp h e re .
Smokers aren't re­
sponsible for their
habll: they are duped
by to b a c c o ad a.
D ru n k s c a n ’ t be
blamed for their er­
ratic driving: it's the
fault of the bar that,
sold them the booze.
E x c u s e s are
n o th in g n ew . o f
c o u rs e . H u m an s f W e'vs Qon*
have probably been
from tha 'Ma
b la m in g the fu ll
Docads' to tha
moon for their bad
'N otM a
moods since lizards
the size of rhinos
1
roamed the earth.
Favorites of the 30th century include
rumblcscats, movies, television and rock
music. Then there is the Super-Duper. Never
Fail. All-Purpose Alibi of the past 30 years —
The Media Did It.
But for creativity, none of these even
approaches some of the artful alibis now in
the development stage. To wil:
1. The Prozac. Some users have claimed
that the anil-depressant drug Prozac causes
suicidal and violent behavior, and the matter
will be decided in due time. But does Prozac
Incite lust? Kathy WUIets says It docs.
Willets is the Fort Lauderdale, Fla., woman
who waa arrested on prostitution charges and
whose attorney said she claims that Prozac
gave her an Insatiable Ubldo. Responded a
for the manufacturer, BU Lilly &amp;
i: ‘A lot of people have blamed Prozac for a
lot of things, but this is the moat bizarre yet.”
How tar can this be taken? Would you have
to be an actual Prozac user to claim a similar
defense? Could not Sen. Charles Robb. D-Va.,
accused of having a relationship with a
former Mias Virginia, claim he was victimized
by Prozac molecules hanging in the at­
mosphere around a pharmaceutical counter?
Could not Donald Trump, who parted wtth
Maria Maples after ogling the new Mias
America in Atlantic City. N.J.. argue that he
got excited after someone opened a prescrip­
tion bottle and let some Prozac particles
escape into the alt?
3. The Mary Hart. A neurologist reported in
the New England Journal o f Medicine lastsummer that the voice of Mary Hart host of
the television show "Entertainment TonUht." stimulated seizures in a woman In a
laboratory test. The victim, said Dr. Vcnkat
Romani, would hold her head and “look
confused and for away ... like she was for
array and out of it,"
There la no recorded use of this alibi so for,
but It will happen. It's the perfect excuse for
the California Board of Equalization, for
example, which haa been trying to interpret
the aute’s new snack tax and has de­
termined. for example, that popped popcorn,
granola bare
bora and imtUUon park rinds are
taxable, while unfpopped popcorn, granola
cereal and real pork
rk rinds are not. There is
now a quick answer to complainera; “We
watched too much ‘Entertainment Tonight.'"
3. The Rye Bread. A University of Maryland
historian has postulated that history may
have been Influenced by what people ate.
Hundreds of French peaaanU who went
berserk and terrorised the countryside in
1788. for example, may have consumed too
much rye bread. Weather conditions that
year were perfect for the growth of a fungus
known aa ergot, which thrives on rye and

�■, 'i-tf-

..

^ 'ir ■.-v- ,

I, -i .

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, January 7, 1993 - BA

Clinton summons economic
leaders for strategy session
g
WWWOTOTW
Associated Press Writ«r
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — President-elect Clinton
la racing increasingly troublesome deficit figures
as he crafts his first budget and fleshes out plans
for revitalising the nation's economy,
t Clinton said the new budget numbers President
Bush released Wednesday show the nation's
annual deficits could soar above 8400 billion a
•year if left unchecked and demonstrate the need
to "replace the legacy of debt with a new era of
,Investment-end fiscal responsibility."
The president-elect summoned leaden of his
-economic team to Little Rock today to
strategies for reworking the final Bu
Bush ad*
ministration budget and promoting long-term
economic might.
. At a briefing Wednesday, Clinton's spokesman
George Stephanopoulos was asked repeatedly
Clinton could make good on hts campaign
promise to halve the deficit in four years In light
of the latest deficit projections. Stephanopoulos
offered no solutions but said, "The governor
stands by his campaign commitments."
With less than two weeks to go until he takes
office, Clinton’s challenge la to mesh the latest
Meak forecasts with his campaign promises to
restore the economy's fundamental strength,'
Increase Bpending on education, public works
projects and other domestic programs, and slash
the deficit
! Among the questions Clinton must answer:
How quickly can he cut the burgeoning deficit
without hindering the economic recovery? How
much new spending should be Inject into the
economy to give it a short-term boost? Can he
afford the mlddle*claaa tax cut he promised
during the campaign? Should he boost the
gasoline tax to help cut the budget shortfall?
“We're lust trying to figure out exactly what
we're dealing with here." Stephanopouios said.
Today's strategy session comes a day after
Clinton conferred In private with leaders of the
Big Three domestic automakers and the United
Auto Workers, a critical segment of the country's
manufacturing base.
Meeting with Clinton today to review his

economic optkfos were incoming Treasury SecreS
tary Lloyd Bentaen and Incoming Budget Dir
trector
Leon Panetta. Also Joining the strategy session
were nominees Laura Tyson for the Council of
Economic Advisers and Robert Rubin for the new
National Economic Council, plus other top
economic advisers.
Stephanopoulos said the latest budget and
deficit picture "Just reinforces our desire to attack
the twin challenges of the budget deficit and the
Investment deficit, and that's what we're going to
do." ;
Clinton long has stressed that along with
cutting the budget deficit, the country needs to
erase Its "investment deficit" by spending more
on things like roads, bridges and new
technologies that will help create, high-paying
Jobs and spur economic growth.
But even CUnton .allies were among, those
pointing to the enormity of the task.
"Given the much larger deficit projections, the
president-elect will have a very difficult If not
Impossible task of cutting the deficit in half."
Senate Budget Committee Chairman James
Sasser, D-Tenn., said in Washington.
The latest bad news was not wholly unex­
pected: Clinton has warned about underlying
weakness In the economy and repeatedly has
cautioned against reading too much Into a recent
spate of positive government economic reports.

Legal Notices
NOTICE FOR MEARIHC ON
DECLARED PUBLIC
NUISANCE
IN RRi Lot IO. CANAAN, h e
lion SJ. Tewnehlp tf, Range II.
Riot Rook 01, Peg* tU. Public
Record* of Seminote County,
P lor Ido (1711 Mein Street).
Protenlly (thown 01 being)
owned by Emanuel L. Hlllery,
John H. Croon, Archie Croon Jr.
and Noncy P roc ho and oil
portlet having or claiming to
hove ony right, Hilo or intoroot

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE m i JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OP FLORIDA,
IHANO FOR
ORANOBCOUNTY
CASINOt ORfMMTO
DtVtIKMi ASStRNIDDtV. ■
Inrolhomorrlogoof
MOLLIE SlBBlfT POWELL,

Ifl TnlprOOVnyMNCrlwBtUVVV,

WHEREAS, I ho Boord ol
County Commlttlenert ol Semi
nolo County, did on tho lolh doy
of July, tm , find ond docloro 0
otrueturo locotod In Seminole
County, Florida. to bo untefe,
u n to n llo ry ond 0 public
nutooocoi thot tho owner ol tho
proporty (occordlng to tho prop*
orty rotordo In tho Somlnolo
County Proporty Approltor’ t
Office) on which tho otrueturo It
located to Emonuol L. HlHory,
John H. Croon, Archlo Croon Jr.
ond Noncy Prtcho ot 1110
Church Shoot/ thot tho public
nuloonco lo o rooldontlol
otrueturo locotod ot VIS Moln
St. ond furthor doocrlbod ot tot
forth Obi'iQ, ond thol eorrtdl vo
octlon It togulrod to abet# tho
public nultoncoz ond
WHEREAS, tho Boord ol
County Commltolonort found
thot tho following condition!
conolttutod 0 public nulunco:
( I I Tho building hot boon
•em oty domogod by tho eiam o n tt o f n o tu ro duo to
■bindwunint (I) Tho ttructurol
lytttm Including eiterlor tlolrt
oro impound (1) Tho otoctrkol

It was only lifting that Clinton — elected on a
promise to restore the country's economic might
— was studying that Issue Wednesday when his
election became official as Congress tallied the
vote* of the Electoral College.
"I was studying a paper about the economic
challenges before me, actually. Trying to get
ready to go to work and make sure that the
people who worked for the Clinton-Oore ticket
and the people that voted for us didn't exercise
their vote In vain." he said.
Clinton later set aside his deliberations for a
two-hour session with leaders of the auto
Industry, pledging a "fresh start” In cooperation
among government, industry and labor.
Both aides said no specific
•ought or offered.

| ORLANDO - Caatno gambl­
in g , an a n n u a l c u ltu ra l*
entertainment powwow s **h a
!historical pavilion a t a ^ Hpmo

property end ihe corrective ac­
tion of obotomont tpecifled In
the Notice ol Public Nuitoneo
ihould not bo token.
WITNESS my hand ond tool
thlt SOfhdoy of December, tm.
(U A L )
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark of tho Boord of
County Cammloolonort of
Sentktoto County, Florid*.
BY; londy Wall

state's kind of Ignorant of our
law*. . . It*s a question of
Interpretation of the law."
The tribe need* the revenue

■

annual tribal gathering, Bitte

copy of m r written defanee*. if
env, to H ot JAMBS R. OLUN,

MMWtWvf Ww ^wgPulU# WTlwwW
"W e're all In politics." Billie
said. "Qov. (Lawton) Chiles has
to fellow his Constitution. The

addrett te t i l l Bdftwator
Drive. Orlande, FL M Bt « or
betore February tl. tto) and Me
toe original tetto toe Ctert of

j

Bernard Garrett, 83, of Shady Hollow. Caasel; berry, died Tuesday, Jan. 5, at Florida Hospital.
; Altamonte Springs. Bom March 17,1900. in Blue
Ridge, Ga„ he moved to Central Florida in 1070.
He was a retired electrician and a Unitarian.
Survivors Include stepson. Hoyt Duncan. Cas­
ed berry; stepdaughter. Crlety Beghold, Cassel­
berry.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral Home. Altamonte
Springs. In charge of arrangements.
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT,

Drive, Sanford, died Tuesday. Jan. 5, at Florida
Hospital. Orlando. Bom June 14. 1087. In
Orlando, she was a lifelong resident of the area.
Survivors Indude parents, Leslie and Deborah,
Sanfordi brothers. David Magda., Sanford, Dean
Berecek, Mantua, Ohio: sisters. Kate. Christina,
both of Sanford: maternal grandfather, Roland
Wesson. Sanford; paternal grandmother. Mary J.
Manning. Btreetboro, Ohio.
Gramkow Funeral Home, Sanford, in charge of
arrangement*.
Ira Dean Mdton. id . of 1048 North Street,
Itamonte Springs, died Monday. Jan. 4. at
1000, In Orlando, he was a lifelong resident. Mr.
Mdton was a pipe layer for the construction
Industry and a member of St. James M.B.
Church.
Survivors Include parents. James and Geneva.
Altamonte Springe; sons, Marques D.. Jenny
Dwyett and Bryan: brothers. James Baron.
Charleston. S.C.. Melvin. Altamonte Springs.
Dexter, Orlando. James Jr. and Jeral, both of
California. McArthur. Baltimore: sister*. Lula.
Gainesville. Denise Lopes. Cayman Island. Bever­
ly Ann Powell. California. Sunobia Sima. Ohio.
Doris Johnson. Indiana. Cathy Marie Hines.
Detroit.
* Wilaon-Eichelberger Mortuary. Inc., Sanford. In

( Thwrt dey I tram M a m

toyOf1

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nollca It hereby given thal I
am engaged In butlnett at 70*
Turnbull Ave., Sle. 707, Alla
monte Sprlngt. FL 37701, Semi
note County, Florida, under the
Flcllllout Name ol SIERRA
THERAPIES, and that I intend
to regltter tald name with the
Secretary of Slate, Taiiahattee,
Florida, In accordance with the
provltlont ot tho Fktltlout
Nemo Statute, To Wit; Section
i0S.0t. Florida Statute! tM7
Jactlyn A. Young
Publlth: January 7, I ff)
DEAS1

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: KENNETH RAY BAUER
■YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
octlon tor Dlttolullon ot Mar
rlogo hot boon filed egalnit you
and you ore required to terve a
copy ol your written detente*, II
any. to It on BEVERLY ANN
BAUER, who** addrett It 00t
C O LD W ATE R , CASSEL­
BERRY, FL 17707 on or before
JANUARY IS. It*!, and flit the
original with tho clerk ol thl*
court before tervlce on peti­
tioner or Immediately thereattar; otherwite o default will be
" entered egalnit you tor the
relief demanded In the com
ptalnhor petition.
DATED on DECEMBER » .

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OP T N I ttTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND FOR
SCMINOLK COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASH NO. *t-Bl\-CA-l*0 ,,1
■t

Atlanta today wbSe a four-day
festival called "Dfeeover Native
America IM S'* began In Or*
lando.
The ahow bring* together
profeaalonal (Performers and
artists from 150 tribes pa*
tlonwlde and Is expected to dmw
more than 100,000 visitors. It

JltJO, Somlnolo County, F lor Ido.
under tho Flcllllout Nome ol
TIRE A WHEEL CONNEC
TION, ond .that I Intend lo
rogltlor told name with Ihe
Secretary ol Stole. Tollohattee,
Florida. In accordance with the
provlllont ol the Flcllllout
Nome Statute, To Wit: Section
MS.0t, Florida Statute* l»S7.
William Del Valle
Publlth: January 7, Iff]
OEASI
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby -given that I
am engaged In butlnott at laift
Tutcewllla Rd„ Winter Springi,
SomlnoloCounly, Florida, under
the Flcllllout Nome ol AUTO
MECH., ond thal I Intend lo
rogltlor tald nkm# with the
Secretary ot Stole, Tollaha**ee,
Florida, In accordance wilh the
provltlont ol the Flcllllout
Name Statute. To Wit. Section
MS gt, Florida Slaluiet m ;.
DANJAC, INC
1Danny E. Ander*on, Pret.
Publlth: January 1, Itei
DEASO

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OPTHE1ITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUITOF FLORIDA,
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLECOUNTY
CASE NO: 77-0711-DR-07-0
In relhe marriage of
■EVERLY ANN BAUER.
Petitioner,

Indian chief promotes gambling,
theme park attraction in Orlando
BUlie, who pioneered cominer*
rtei bingo on Indian
said
the Semlnolea would take their
(flu ili to iwgwitow casino gambl­
ing on Ha reservation to the U.S.
Supreme Court If an appellate
court rules against It.
i dc ocmtixMCi nave provoaeu
a major legal .debate involving
the 7power of the states In

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle# It horoby given Ihot I
am ongoged In butlnott ot no

Pi*mtm,

IN THECIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR
(EMINOLICOUNTY.
FLORIDA
Cate Net *l-m *C A I«-K
HARRY REIN.
Plalntltr,
REJECTED STONE FULL
MISSION MISSIONARY
RAPTIST CHURCH, ELIJAH
FIELDS; BENJAMIN ADAMS.
JR., WILLIE CORBETT,
MAYV. BAIN
BELLEMAR INVESTMENT
CORPORATION, end
JULIUS ETTINGER.
Dafendanlt.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: W illie C a rb a ll. 7154
Bung*Ion Boulevard. Sanford,
Florida
Ballamar lovatlmtnl Corpo
ration, 10504 Golh* Rood, Win
domore, Florida.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED thal an action he* boon
commenced to Foreclote a
Mortgage on th* following real
property, lying and bolng tltuot
*d In Samlnol# Counly, Florida,
more particularly detcrlbed a*
follow*:
Th* South SS f**t of Lot 57,
Blech D. Of SOUTH SANFORD
SUBDIVISION, at recorded In
Flat Booh I, Pag* *4. of th*
Public Record* of Semlnol*
County, Florida, log*th*r with
the Ipnprovamanf* thereon end
the llilurat and equipment
therein contained.
Thlt action hat baan tiled
agelntt you and you are re­
quired to terve a copy el your
written detente. It any, to It on
ROBERT E. M ILLER. ES­
Q U IR E . C/o M IL L E R A
ORACE, P.A.. whole addrett It
ttO Douglat Avenue, Suite 107.
Altamonte Spring*. Florida
U7I4, an or before the ttlh day
el January, im , and III* th*
original with Ih* Clerk ot thlt
Court either before tervlce on
Plaintiff* Attorney, or Immedl
etely thereafter/ otherwite a
default will be entered agelntt
you for the relief demanded In
th* Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and of
fldal teal ot thlt Court on th*
I Sthday of December, tm .
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of th* Circuit Court
•V : Heather Brook*
Publlth: December 17, 14, SI.
I H I I January 7, m3
DEI III

DeBary. died Saturday. Dec. 12, at Orlando
Regional Medical CenteJ. Bom Aug. 21. 1000. in
Tacoma. Wash., he moved to Centra) Florida In
1071. He w as* retired antiques salesperson and s
member of Sanford Christian Church.
Survivors Include son. Ronald Q. Swift. DeBary.

i

�•A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Thursday, January 7, 1993

Arts world mourns masters:
Nureyev and Gillespie
■yPOLLVANOEM ON
Associated Press Writer_________

■f

.•
1v

•4 •

)

Contract------Continued from Page 1A

I
~

■

They pursued their art with
I n t e n s i t y , g r a c e and
showmanship — Rudolf Nureyev
and Dizzy Gillespie, the master
o f ballet and the master "of Jazz
who died Wednesday.
Nureyev. who had been suffer­
ing from AIDS, died at age 54 In
a Paris hospital o f what his
doctor described as a “ cardiac
complication following a cruel
Illness.*'
Gillespie died In his sleep at
E n g le w o o d (N .J .) H o s p ita l,
where he was being treated for
pancreatic cancer. He was 75.
The Soviet-born Nureyev was
already the Kirov Ballet's lead­
ing dancer In 1961 when, at age
23, he made a sudden run for
freedom at the Paris airport
during a tour.
Within a short time, his skill,
Innovation and charisma on
stage — and his eloquence and
offbeat style ofT stage — made
him a celebrity. By the mld-60s
his fame rivaled that o f the
Beatles.
“ For me. purity o f movement
wasn’ t enou gh ." he told an
Interviewer In 1963. " I needed
expression, more Intensity, more
mind.”
On his defection, he once said
"a country Is Just a place to
dance. Your roots are your work.
Work Is sacred."
He made his first appearance
with Margot Fonteyn, 19 years
his senior, at the Royal Ballet In
London In late 1961. One news­
paper called his performance
"probably the finest piece o f
male dancing seen on the Covent
Garden stage in this genera­
tion." Their partnership became
legendary.
Ballet star Mikhail
Baryshnikov, who himself de­
fected from the Soviet Union 13
years after Nureyev. said, “ He
had the charisma and simplicity
o f a man o f the earth and the
untouchable arrogance o f the
gods. I will never forget him ."
K e v in M c K e n s le . a r tis tic
director o f the American Ballet
Theatre, said Nureyev was re­
sponsible for "not only bringing

'

trum pet and goatee became
trademarks.
"H e was a true leader," said
Jazz drummer Elvln Jones. ‘.‘ I've
always felt butterflies In my
stomach whenever I was around
him because I knew I was
around togreat person."
Gillespie turned Jazz In new
directions as a founding father o f |
the style known as bebop and
again when he collaborated with
Cuban musicians to give Afri­
can-American music a Latin
beat. Out o f that came such
albums as "Afro-Cuban Jazz
Moods," 1975.

The critic Leonard Feather
called him “ one o f the most
creative musicians o f the 20th
century."
•
Gillespie, born John Blrks
Gillespie In Cheraw, S.C., came
o f age during the Big Band era.
His early style descended from
L o u is A r m s tr o n g and R oy
Eldrldgc.

Drugs-

Custody-

WE WILL NOT
KNOWINGLY BE
UNDERSOLD

•T0MS.SC

OUR PHARMACIES
OLAOLY ACCEPT

■ t
SERVICE
PHARMACY,,,
PHARMACY HOURS

Continued from Page 1A

I

QUANTITY MOHTB

REGULAR

MONDAY. SATURDAY

cases out o f both Orange and
The man saw a “ Florida Most
Seminole counties with quite a Wanted Fugitive” poster distrib­
lengthy history. Including an ’88 uted by the Florida Department
conviction for robbery 111 Semi­ o f Law Enforcement In a local
nole County." Hastings said.
police station and Identified him
Hastings said the latest Semi­ as a co-worker, said Russell.
nole County offense came after
“ He saw that and said I know
Guy checked Into an Altnmonlr where that guy is." said Russell.
Springs hotel room, paid In cash
Proechcl said the man. who
and requested no maid service. was not Identified, was paid
However, vhen a maintenance $2,500 for providing Information
employee went in to check on a leading toCofleld's arrest.
malfunction, he saw that Guy
Colleld was In police custody
had "set up u crack kitchen." In the Old South once before, but
Hastings said.
was released before Sanford
The employee called the police police could contact authorities.
who obluined a search warrant Proeche! said a "Charles Dallas'
an d c o n fis c a t e d th e d ru g was arrested In Greenville, S.C.
utensils and equipment.
In August, 1991 on a petty theft
Ironically. Guy had already ciiarge. By the time "Dallas'
been arrested several hours be­ fingerprints were matched with
fore by Winter Park police on Cofleld's, the man had been
drug charges. Hastings said.
released, Proechcl said.

the recomm endations o f the
special masters because they
argued that the enrollment pro­
jection figures on which the
em ployees Were basing their
proposals were erroneous and
the the district would have
nearly $20 million less this year
thap the employees claimed.
According to Hovlo. the special
m a s te r s ' r e c o m m e n d a tio n s
would have cost the district
more than twice what this set­
tlement will.
In addition, he said, this con­
t r a c t g i v e s r a is e s to a ll
employees where the other rec­
o m m e n d a tio n s w ou ld h ave
given only those employees with
less than 16 years experience a
raise while veteran employees
would have eurned only a $300

America’s Supermarket*

He wrote or co-wrote many
songs (hat became Jazz stan­
dards, Including " A Night In
T u n isia ,*' "G r o o v in ' H ig h ."
"M a n te c a ," "S a lt P ea n u ts,"
"Con A lm a" and "W oody *n
You." *

Gillespie blew new life Into
Jazz with his speed, melodic
warmth and compositional skill
— topped ofT with a comic spirit.
His puffy-cheeked style, bent

Continued from Page 1A

wTnn &amp; pixie

annual bonus.
"T h is works out better for
everyone." Hovibsuld.
Last year, the slate reduced
financial assistance to the school
districts when It came time to
allocate money in their own
"reality budget."
District officials fear that tnuy
happen again tills year, but
Hovlo said that there Is enough
money in district reserves to
cover the mlses If that happens.
The school board will meet In
u special session tomorrow af­
ternoon ul 1:30 to approve the
contract. It is expected to pass
without question. The meeting
will be In lhe district boardroom.
1211 S. Mellonvllle Ave.. San­
ford. *

9 A.M. - 6 P.M.
CLOSED SUNDAY

N

"V
C

v
■
*•/•-

•

r*

1
\

★
S a n fo rd
M id d le
^School

1

415

C e le ry A v e .

17-92

through th e special
masters since before the school
year began in August.
The raise the employees re­
ceive Is retroactive only to Jan.
4. 1993.
Wheeler said the negotiating
team decided to accept that
option rather than take one
percent retroactive to July 1992.
"T h at (option) would have
given us more money light now.
but with lhe two percent raise,
we’re that much farther aheud
when wc begin negotiations next
tim e." Wheeler said.
The raises are expected to cost
the district an additional $1.6
million this year.
District officials had rejected

ballet to the awareness o f the
g e n e r a l p u b l i c but for
slnglchandcdly creating legions
o f dance fans."
Interest generated by his cel­
ebrity Inspired choreographers
to create more works for men
dancers, and programmers to
put dance on television.
Nureyev performed on stages
around the world until he was In
his late 40s, old for a male
dancer.
His super-high leaps that had
so amazed his audiences gradu­
ally faded, but his artistry re­
mained. He eventually turned to
choreography. He directed the
Paris Opera Ballet from 1983-89,
retiring to take the lead role in a
t r a v e l i n g v e r s i o n o f th e
Broadway musical "T h e King
a n d l."
N u reyev appeared haggard
and weak at a ballet premiere In
Paris In October. An American
friend o f Nureyev told The Asso­
ciated Press then that Nureyev
had AIDS; a British newspaper
also reported his Illness.

A irp o rt B lvd .

H

'

1

RoadContinued from Pags 1A
Rabun suld he and the mem­
bers of the commission were
pleased that the new agreement
was reached at a cost that did
not exceed the original amount,
and would still have the same
completion dale o f June 14*
1993.
The commission voted on the
matter during a special meeting
yesterday afternoon.
"W c had hoped the work

might be able to get underway
within 24 hours o f signing a
contract." Rubun Bald yesterday
afternoon, "but to be practical. II
may be late this week or early
next week before the heavy
equipment will lie moving In to
Lake Mary and the actual physi­
cal work Is underway again."
"It won't be long however." he
added. "T h e contractor and the
bonding agency are fully aware
o f the completion date, and time
is o f the essence In this situation.

so I would sus|R-ct they won’t
wustc any time in getting the
work moving."
Hewitt submitted the low bid
for the remainder o f the road

widening

project,

uI

$2,580,928.41. Th e contract
agreement calls for the project to
be completed on time, or a
charge or $1,000 per day against
Hcwctt for every day beyond
that lime If the work cannot be
fully completed.

1514 S. FRENCH AVE.
PHARMACIST: JERRY LIGUORI
PHONE: 4 0 7 -3 2 1 -6 6 2 6

Signs
Contiaasd from Pag* 1A
.revised sign regulations.
In November, an attempt was
made to establish an emergency
banner sign ordinance that,
would deal with problems suf­
fered by businesses on Lake
Mary Boulevard, hampered by
the stalled road-widening pro­
ject.
At the time, the matter was
tabled, because It Involved an
area coinciding with Seminole
County's Gateway Ordinance.

CatsC o a tin n e d fi

&gt; P *g «lA

a fight, for
example. •
"Sassy was not a wild cat. but
lie went out at night." Bcvan
explained. "N ow he's an Indoor
c a l."
Dr. Alexandra Sumcrlln o f the
Cat Hospital o f Orlando In Alta­
monte Springs said she doesn't
believe that the term "A ID S " Is
the best one to describe the
affliction because It tends to
cause people to panic.
“ People hear AIDS and It
conjures up the image o f HIVInfected humans." she said.
She said that FIV Is more akin
to Feline Leukemia than It Is to

/

C i t y P l a n n e r M a tt W e s t
explained that the county would
not agree to any similar ordi­
nance.

i

S in ce then, a num ber o f
changes have been made, and
the matter has been rescheduled
for commission action.
T his w ill not be the first
discussion o f the many sign
regulations for Lake Mary Mayor
Lowry Rockett. At the time It
was approved by the Business

Human AIDS.
Sumcrlln said that an accurate
test to diagnose the dlscuse has
Just recently been developed.
The disease has been around for
much longer, she said, but often
the cat was tabled “ sickly."
Cats, like Sassy, with FIV are
more vulnerable to colds and
other diseases, but they can be
expected to live nearly their full
lives If they are kept Indoors and
away from other cats.
"S a s s y w ill probably liv e
another five or six years." Bcvan
said. "Since he os already eight
years old. that Is pretty much Is
normal life expectancy."
She said that he will, however,
ultimately gel an Infection Ihul

Advisory Bourd. Rockett screed
as chairman. He mude many
suggested chunges In the proIwsill since it was first presented,
before voting In favor o f Its
upproval.
The sign ordinance Is listed as
the last Item on the agenda for
tonight's regular meeting o f the
city commission, scheduled to
begin at 7 p.m.. In the com ­
mission cluunbcrs o f Lake Mary
City Hall. 100 W. Lake Mary
Blvd.

will do him In.
Bcvan Is trying to find a home
for Sassy because she said she
can not care for him the way
that he should be cared for.
Sumcrlln said that cats af­
flicted with FIV ure not any more
difficult to care for than other
indoor cats, but that some peo­
ple who are used to letting their
cat outdoors might find the
restriction a difficult adjustment..
" I think some people need to
udjust to the terminology us
w ell." she said. "T h is Is not
AIDS, then- Is not an epidemic
und people will not be infected
by their animals. This Is a feline
retrovirus."

• State-licensed and registered pharmacists
• Convenience: have your prescription filled
while you shop
• •

• We accept PCS, PAID, BC-BS MEDIMET and
MEDICAID
• Computerized prescription records

!

%

• We carry a full line o f FDA-approved
quality generic drugs
m

• Prescriptions are easily transferrable. Just
bring in your refutable prescription and
we'U contact your physician and take care
o f all the detaUs.

..

�▼

THU R SD AY

Sanford Herald

January

7,

1993
.

|

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Unbeaten
’Hounds
roll
Sells scores twice in Lyman victory

Mainland topa Ram froth
DAYTONA BEACH - Despite a game-high 18
points from Wesley Jackson, the Lake Mary
freshman boys' basketball team dropped a
07*55 decision to Mainland Wednesday.
Jason Wlngenback added 15 for the Rams.
Lake Mary (6*2) will host Oviedo tonight.

UM's Williams coming out
CORAL GABLES — University o f Miami
receiver Kevin Williams, also the team's kick
returner, announced Wednesday that he will
forego his senior season and declare eligibility
for the 1993 NFL draft.

F8U woman fall
TALLAHASSEE — Dena Evans scored 24
points and Heather Burge added 23 points and
seven rebounds to propel No. 9 Virginia to a
78-66 victory Wednesday over Florida State.
Tla Paschal led FSU (6*3) with 18 points.

Florida Southern romps
LAKELAND - Chris Lee and Bill Drost led
F lo rid a S o u th e rn to a 78*55 d efea t o f
Massachusctts-Darimouth Wednesday.
Lee paced Florida Southern (9-3) with 15
points. Drost had 14polntsand 10 rebounds.

Buffalo runs down Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE Kris Roets scored 16
points and collected 12 rebounds as Buffalo
topped Jacksonville 70-63 Wednesday.
Jacksonville's Kent Shafer netted 19 points.

SANFORD — Despite playing with four new faces In
the starting lineup, the undefeated Lyman Greyhounds
rolled to a 4-0 win over the Seminole Fighting
Semlnoles Wednesday night at Seminole's Thomas E.
Whlgham Stadium.
The victory Improves Lyman's record to 13-0*2
overall, 4-0*1 In Seminole Athletic Conference play.
Seminole drops to 3*10,0*5 In the SAC.
“ We played well enough to w in ," said Lyman coach
Ray Sandldge. “ We played better In the second half
than wc did In the first. In the first half, we were
lackadaisical. In the second half, we played much
better.
"W e did have four new starters In the lineup, some
guys who haven't had a lot of playing time. But they
performed well. They did a good Job."
Jeff Smith gave Lyman a 1-0 when he headed home a
throw-ln from Dan McAvoy In the 17th minute. Mike
Sells made It 2-0 when he hammered home a rebound
o f a McAvoy shot five minutes before halftime.
In the second half. John Bernard converted a penalty
kick In the 55th minute and Sells added an unassisted
goal In the 60th minute.
Lyman outshot Seminole 22*3 and had a 9*1
advantage In com er kicks. Greyhound goalie Chris
Lewis had to make one save to notch nls seventh
shutout o f the season. Seminole 'keeper Jon Williams
made nine saves.
The Greyhounds also won the Junior varsity game
4-0.
Lyman, which was ranked No. 2 In the last Florida

Athletic Coaches Association Class 4A state poll,
doesn't play again until Saturday, Jan. 16, against
Miami Columbus. Seminole hosts Flagler Palm Coast
tonight at 7 p.m.

LAKB MARY 7, DsLAND 0
LAKE MARY — Aren Cook netted a hat trick and
Jody DeBruIn set a new school career record Tor assists
In Lake Mary's 7-0 romp over DeLand In a 4A-Diatrict 9
boys' soccer match Wednesday night at Lake Mary's
Don T. Reynolds Stadium.
DeBruIn, who also scored a goal, collected the 28th
assist o f his career, breaking the record set by 1992
raduate Justin W alker (now a student at the
nlverslty o f South Florida).
C hris Cam pbell. Brandon Mahana, and Scott
Feldman each scored a goal. Mahana. Stuart Anderson,
and Mike Deaver each were credited with an assist.
“ It was a real good gam e," said Lake Mary coach
Larry McCorkle. ‘'Sometimes In these kind o f games,
everybody puts his head down and tries to score a goal
when you know you have the gamne In hand.
“ But we really played well. W e showed a lot o f
maturity. W e stayed organised and wc didn't dribble
the ball too much. Some good soccer was being played.
There were some good combinations. W e played up to
our abilities.”
Lake Mary outshot DeLand 34*2 and took eight
com er kicks to the Bulldogs' one. Greg Velho, who
played the first SO minutes In goal for Lake Mary, made
one save while Brad Thompson, who played the final 30
minutes, did not haVe to make any. The DeLand goalie

g

Washington
leads Tribe by
Spruce Creek

Stars add
to mastery
of Raiders
■y M A N SMITH

Gators trip Auburn
AUBURN - Craig Brown hit a 3 polntcr with
55 seconds remaining to spark Florida to a
76*73 win over Auburn In the Gators' South*
eastern Conference opener Wednesday night.*
Florida's Stacey Poole scored 16 points.

Virginia bests 'Notes
CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va. - Cory Alexander
scored 11 o f his 23 points In the final 7:40
Wednesday night to help No. 25 Virginia to an
80-76 victory over No. 23 Florida State.
Bob Sura led Florida State with 19.

PITTSBURGH — Jerry McCullough scored 25
points as No. 24 .Pittsburgh ran Its winning
streak to seven games Wednesdsy night with an
85*78 victory over Miami.
Steve Edwards scored 22 points for Miami.

Lightning top Gretsfcy, Kings

i f if i trrtihrii

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Wayne Qretxky re­
turned for his first game of the season and
1,000th of his NHL career Wednesday night
with two assists as the Los Angeles Kings
endured their, ninth straight game without a
win. losing 6-3 to the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Brian Bradley scored twice for Tampa Bay.

pm. with varsity to follow.
□Lyman at lake Hawed.
with varsity to follow.

with varsity to follow.
_
□Labs M a r « l Uka Nowak. Junior varsity at 5
. Junior varsity at 5
pm. with varsity to follow.

Herald Sports Writer
JAC K SO N VILLE It doesn't
matter who the coach Is. Seminole
Community College can't seem to
win In Jacksonville.
The wlnless streak reached 12
years and 13 games Wednesday
night as Floridu Community College
humbled the Raiders 107*75 In the
m e n 's M id -F lo rid a C on feren ce
opener for both teams.
“ I will win In this gym before I'm
finished." vowed first-year SCC
coach Bernard Mcrihlc after the
game. “ Wc got ofT to a good start
tonight, but with only 10 players
dressed, we ran out o f gas.
“ I Just hope the guys don't get
discouraged. T h e y need to re­
member that FCC-J Is one o f the top
teams In the conference. This was
no rummy outfit we played."
The local squad was hurt by the
absence o f Mike Burch (knee), Evon
Hammond (ankle) and Sanford's
J.J. W iggins (back). Burch and
Hammond are two o f the team's
better rebounders.
The Raiders Jumped out to a 6*0
lead on a pair o f layups by Troy
Bruening and a Jumper by Dean
Poshard and then went ahead 8*2
on a dunk by Sanford's Jelf Hall.
But the Stars began to slowly
peck away at the lead behind the
play o f Mike Washington (12 first
half points). SCC stayed close until
the final live minutes when FCC-J
took advantage o f Raider turnovers
and used superior offensive re­
bounding to build the lead to 17.
45*28, at Intermission.
The Raiders kept the Stars In
sight for most o f the second half,
but FCC-J made a late run and hit
16 o f 19 free throws In the second
half to post the big win.
Washington paced FCC-J (11*5,
1*0 In theM-FC) with 21 points.
Sophomore point guard Phillip
Williams led SCC (5*11. 0*1) with a
game-high 25 points. Poshard and
Bruening chipped In with 10 points
each, while Hall. Anthony Phillips
and Lyman's Aaron Merrell added
eight points each.
The Raiders will finish a long road
stand (the last home game was back
on Dec. 8) with an M FC game at St.
John's River Community College In
Palatka Saturday night, before re­
turning home for a conference game
with Valencia Community College
next Wednesday. Both games will
have 7:30 p.m. starts.

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SANFORD — Niki W ashington turned In a
triple-double performance Wednesday night to lead
the Seminole Fighting Semlnoles to a 59*37 girls'
basketball victory over the visiting Spruce Creek
Hawks.
With starters Tennlshia Eason and Kay Kay
Mullins sidelined with foul troubles, Washington
reached double figures In points (a game-high 26).
rebounds (14). and blocked shots (11). She also had
seven assists and five steals.
“ It was a good team effort." said Seminole coach
John McNamara. "W e ran Into some foul trouble.
Kay May and Tennlshia had to sit out because o f foul
trouble, but we were able to overcome that.
"W e had a good defensive effort from everyone.
This was the first time In a while that we changed
defenses three or four limes. And It worked well. We
also had one o f best nights from the foul line
(converting 25 o f 41 attempts).*'
Despite foul trouble, Eason still managed to come
up with 10 points and four assists while Mullins
contributed seven points and eight rebounds. Cindy
Boone added seven rebounds. Defensively. Mlndcc
Hampton made five steals while Belinda Morgan had
four steals.
Zclda Morgan led Spruce Creek with 14 points.
Seminole (12*7) hosts Lake Brantley tonight In a
Seminole Athletic Conference contest.

LA K I MARY 88, OsLAND S4
LAKE MARY -

Samlnola'a Nlkl Washington recorded a triple-double
Wednesday, reaching double figures in points (a
game-high 26), rebounds (14), and blocked shots (11).

WasUng no time at all. the Lake

KattterTochmol*

Bamboo Cafe
SANFORD — Touchdown Pub rallied from a 6*4
deficit to beat Barebooe Cafe 7*6 as the Sanford
Recreation Wednesday Men's Polar Bear Slowpltch
Softball League opened Its season at Chaae Park.
In other games Wednesday night. Helllg Meyer
topped Craw Wings 11*2 ana Too Tuff Crew ripped
Been 30 9041 In a game stopped after six Innings
With one out In the top of the sixth Inning, Bryan
Hartman doubled for Touchdown Pub. Jerry DiBartolo,
Kevin Brubaker, and Rick Poore followed with singles.
Hartman scoring on DlBartolo's hit and DiBartolo
crossing the plate with the typing run on Poore's safety.
Kyle Brubaker then hit a sacrifice fly to delivered his
brother Kevin with the winning run.
Kevin Brubaker paced the Touchdown Pub with a
pair of singles and two runs scored. Hartman added a
double, run scored and one RBI. Jerry DiBartolo and
Poore each singled, scored a run and drove In a run.
Kent Brubaker and Joe Ferpes each singled and
scored a run. Joe DiBartolo and Vic DiBartolo both
singled while Kyle Brubaker contributed an RBI
sacrifice fly.
Bamboo Cafewas led by Jim Troxell (3*for*3 with
three singles). James Carter and Brian Jones each
chipped In with two singles, one run and two RBI. Mike
Rotundo also singled twice and scored a run.
Spencer Baggett had a single, run scored, and an RBI.
Billy Wamock hit two singles. Bobby Wells and Arole
Vansytl both singled and scored a run.
Tom Boyd collected two singles, three runs and two
RBI to pace the 15-hlt effort ofnelllg Meyer. Ned Raines
added a triple, single, two runs and an RBI. Wayne
Walker doubled, singled and scored a run. Donnie
McCoy contributed a pair of singles.
Robert Stevens doubled, scored a run and had an RBI.

Aaron Johns tripled and scored a run while Mike
Broderick doubted and scored a run. Mike Edwards hit
a double. Keith Acree, Ray Hardy, and Sonny Eubanks
—^ ungbut. Arthur Barnes and Joel Lipscomb each
scored a run.
Craig Appel had two singles and an RBI to highlight
Crasy Wings' nine-hit attack. Stacy Bill and Steve
Cooper each singled and scored a run. Carey Keefer.
Ronnie Wirts. Wes Woodley, Tim Winkle and Don
Macher each hit a single. Steve Woodley had an RBI*
sacrifice fly.
Pat Crawford ted Too Tuff Crew's 22-hit assault with
a home run. triple, two singles, three runs and four RBI.
Joel Detuda added two doubles, two singles, three runs
twice snd drove In three runs.
Other contributors were Jeff Aten (double, single,
three RBI). Oreg Jones (single, two runs, three RBI),
Chris Waigo (double, two runs). Mike Marshall (double,
one run, two RBI), Brian Sprinkle (single, two runs),
Keith Denton and Willie Ayala (each with a single and a
run scored). Kelly Denton (one run), and Jerry
Goveraate (single).

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

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LAKSMANTLIV1,BttHOflMOOM1
ORLANDO — It took over 60 minutes, but (he
U k e Brantley Falrtoto were able to climb out of
an early boie and forge a l-l lie with the boat
~ ' i Moore Hornets In a boys' soccer match
Wcdrwaday night at Bishop Moore MemoMark Harklna gave Use Hornets (8-4-1) a 1-0
lead when he scored l i minutes into (he game.
Lake Brantley didn’t come up with the equaliser
until (he 77lh minute, when brad Sampson
scored on an aaalat from lean Mc£ Utterly.
"W e did it to ourastvee," said Uke Brantley
coach ilka Brady. "W e didn’t pfoy snuff early In
the Muae and they scored a goal. Wc jus* kept
lighting back and fighting back. It finally took
Boaaoonr different to finish tt off.
"W e didn't play great and we didn't lose. Wc
were able In fltfil back and he Use game.Both (rams took 11 Msotsan goal. The
had ■ 4-3 edge In corner kicks. Lak
goalie Sean Beaver made three saves wl

Hfftfttftg|Hbchtv Ljmm
ARTtasasEft"'"
WALESCONFERENCE
nil lilt unritim
W L TPtt OF OA
SOCCER^
,
• » 1 4 W IN IN
Pittsburgh
*
A
m
e
r
i
c
a
*
f
J
S
S
^
h
S
r
T
S
r
t
n
te
1
1
1
4
4
4
*
1
4
4
1
4
3
Washington
M 17 S 41 Iff 144 Billiard have bean approved tor mambarshlp
NY Rangers
If 17 1 41 Ilf 1)3 beginning In ta* I f f ! season.
NawJsrsay
17 1* 4 M IU Ml
NY Islandsrs
ii t* a n i44 nr
Philadelphia
MILWAUKEE WAVE - Signed Paul
Adam* Dhrfllen
Wrlghl. forward. Walvad Lyle Yorks, mid
&gt;4 14 1 U 174 141 llaldar.
Montreal
7J II 4 a 1*2 MS
OusbffC
COLLIOE
It M 7 44 IU 14)
Beaten
S E N I O R BOWL - Ham ad Tad
1* 11 4 44 tit 141 Merchibreda el th* Indianapolis Colts and
Buffalo
11 IS 4 M 124 1*0 Bill Ballchlck of ta* Cleveland Browns head
rYfonvom
] M 1 1 tl Iff coachat tor ta* Senior Bowl.
Ottawa
CAMPBELLCONPERENCE
COLORADO STATE - Named Larry Karr
Harris Christen
dafenlive coordinator and Mick Dalanay
W L TPtS OP OA administrative asslstanl and special teams
» 14 1 SI 141 110 coach. Retained Tom Ehlars, asslstanl
Chicago
n 11 ) 47 171 ID llnabackors coach, and Vane* Bedford, de­
Dairail
If M * 44 \» M* fensive secondary coach.
Minnesota
li II M l 177 1S4 LOUISIANA STATE - Named Lynn
Taranto
14M 4 M Ml ID . Am sdas o l l a ns l v * coordi nator and
SI. Louis
is is i n ii* isa quarterbacks coach.
Tampa Bay
Smyth*Otvflton
NORTH CAROLINA STATI - Announced
as to 4 $4 in us that Bryant F*e#lnv baskatball forward, will
Vancouver
ti 11 4 S4 ID ID miss ta* ramalnder at ta* season white
Calgary
MM S 41 Uf 141 recovering tram a gunshot svound.
LoeAngola*
MM 4 M IM IU
Winnipeg
NORTH DAKOTA - Announced that Mika
14» 4 14 III IU Bergman, baskatball forward, is transferring
CurTWIlljn
i n i M im mi Irom Iowa Slate.
SanJos*
BuffaloXHartford l
NowYork RangersJ,OttawaI
StewJerseyXMinn*tola!
VancouverXTarantot
Tampa BayX LasAngelas»
Thursday’s(flaws
QuebecatBoston. 7:sep.m.
WashingtonatPhiladelphia, 7:40p.m.
MinnesotaatPittsburgh, 7:40p.m.
EdmontonatChicago. S:4*p.m.
CalgaryatSt. Louis.|;4*p.m.
Priday*sBowses
NewYorkIslandsrsat Buttle. 7:40p.m.
OttawaatNawJersey, 7:40p.m.
fanJaaaat Toronto, 7:40p.m.
VancouveratDetroit. 7:40p.m.
LasAngelas*1Winnipeg.0:40p.m.

TENNESSEE - Promoted David Cutcllffl.
quarterbacks coach. taoNanstva coordinator .
Named Klppy Brown assistant head coach
and receivers coach.

BASKETBALL
7:30 p . m. - E S P N . I l l i n o i s at
Northwaatem . (Ll
7:10 p.m. - SUN. Laultvlll* at South
Florid*. (L)
* : JO p.m. — ESFN, Cincinnati at
Massachusetts. (U
10 p.m. — SUN. Arliona Slate at Sautaam
Cal. (U
» : » p.m. - SC, UNLV at Long Beach
Slate, (L)
■ M flM tht-ESPN, Arliona al UCLA. (L)
NBA BASKETBALL
0:11 p.m. — TBS. Atlanta Hawks al
Milwaukee Bucks, (L)

OOLP

1a m. — USA. Pro Slakes Championship al
Oav* Canyon

TABLE TENNIS
1 a m. ships

SUN. U.S. National Champion

TENNIS

4 a.m.— SUN. Rikils Open
4:M a.m, — ESPN, Oranga Bawl Junior
Ciasafl

BASKETBALL

7:JO p.m. - WOTOAM (MS), Cattef*.
Central PNridaotSamlard

Bataroa —Oanfl Marti. Uoaaman - Dan

flkklM 1* PiPm rWyW.

W fo m u
Ira o o o M ra
tfoLMMvlSr

Itetlatal FaataiH Laipvi tJVFa
Tta NFL Moat VehMbta Pfcyara named By
The Ataactatad Praia ta Baflfttag By a

BASBBALL
IM
taN
kv ^
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HwI ^ Ibi U
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et
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andJa
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BALTIMOR|nOR
SoiSV
—'' - -Stoned
Marti
- aa .. i i
a_
- »
I, »i|^|

a* - «

a

■MBWPilBni# MWIUMlri *•' •

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Ifta BgrtStarr.OmswSsy

Racknflr al the Inflmatflnai Laapua and

ilM
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w
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dhi m
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P*

CALIPORNIA ANBILS, -

Signed Ban

U k e Brantley's junior varsity ran Us record to
9-0 with a 44) shutout
.
^
Now 10-1&lt;6. the Patrtote wUI host Oviedo In a
Urmtirffte Athletic Conference clash this Friday
tltwill .
LARS HOWKA1, BOOMS •
WINTER PARK - Mark DeOraflT converted a
pam from Kevin Yeartck into a goal at 3002 to
give the boat U k e HoareU Silver Hawks a 14)
deciBton over the Boone Braves In a varsity boys"
soccer match Wednesday night at Richard L.
Evans Field.
Lake Howell goalie Manny Toro came up with
four Bflvea on ate Boone shots on goal to make
DeOrafTs goal stand up. The Silver Hawks
launched IS shots and had a 4*2 advantage In
cornerltecfcs, forcing Boone goalie Randall Zuniga
htaLr^Sayetl well." said U k e Howell
tpopovtah. "It was a nice win. They
_______It We bad a disappointing (P lu s Hut
Invitational) tournament, but at kaot we teamed
omething and we can build on that.'
TbeNmior varakyJune ended in a 2-2 Ue.
LakeH ow dl(S^fow lU nlayagM n Friday night
at U k e Mary. Booom. Ike ddtebdlng 4A-Dtetrtct 10
champion, folia to 2-7-3.

•t i’fff'-i-

07. . 1 -• ■

g-YCMoiRkT’ )

TUEtA fn i i

H

it fim with Ri m

OtniMltt,

•AT.
IftJOFM

k\

Basketball
M ary Ram s

Bishop Moorecounterpart made lour.

IhraLofoENVE
-RooRfloflOWi
foofoffooy

BnMUMHOftMf

•fos—jwvu/nntraflfliiiii ra •

W. va. WaalynTA f lS r n W M .N
W VirpMa TacB 77, taata UBarty 71
WaynaaBurp 7A fltata fl.4twrt
Wm i Virginia OAOaauaanaJl
William B Nary N B jta y M

TtoeJunior vaiiMly Rams won O-O.
Now fl-S-1. U k e Mary will pUy afloin Ihto
Friday at home agalnal Lake Howell. DeLand folia
to44,

KANSAS CITT CHIEFS - Fired Jaa
Pandry, oft* tlvt coordinator; Bruce Arlans,
running backs coach and Howard Mudd.
attentive lln* coach.
PH ILAO ILPH IA EAOLKS - Placed
Andre Waters, strong safety, an tat practice
muid.

A -IJJO f.

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MIAMI (Sf)
•dwardl J-lS AT U. fl Uwranca l-l M A
flwa IdO-tA DertawMSId (7. Oardnar S-M
fl) tA MOfWN t-7 0-0 7. Ward Id Id A
A.UtaTWtaAJQdta. Ttatfl77MIAIt 70.

Soccer

fkldar. on a minor flagui c
invitadhimla spring Iraining N 0noni

P,TORONTOBLUE JAYS - Agreed1*farms\
with Mark Ekhhom, pitcher, on a ona-ygar j
cw’*r*e^‘
ssattaaial Laaaaa
CINCINNATI REDO - Signed Davfj
Cochran*, mlflldar-ooinaldar, to a cantroctj
with.Indianapolis al lha Amarkan AtaocflItan.
BASKETBALL
ll ftaokafkaffa ^
ATLANTA HAWKS - Activated Blair
Ratmvtssn, cantor, from the ta|ur*d list.
Waived Andr* Spencer and Aka SHvrlnt,
forward*.
BOSTONCELTICS - Waived Bari Kotaod,
guard.
DALLASMAVERICKS- ActivatedOoitar
C.am
amh
rldQ*. fo
forw
brldgt,
rv ard, from th* ln|ur*d list.
W
ValvadStephanIBarde, guard.
ISTATEWARRIORS- Activated
OOLDINSTA
A(lion
lton Lister, ca
canter, from th* ln(ur*d list.
W
Prastay,
guard.
Valvad
alvadPaul P
rw
PACERS - IActivated VarnsINDIANA PA
4, from
list. Placed
Flaming, guard,
Iromthe
th* ln|ured
ln|
ta* I
ln|und list.
drag Oralling, csnlsr. oni ta*
AP NFL MVP Voting
Walvad
Anthony
M
ILW
AUKEE
BU
C
K
S
1
NEW YORK - Voting tar th* Iff! NFL
Most Valuable player at taflcltd by a Putflrd. forward.
PHILADELPHIA 74IRS - Reflated
natlonwtdspanelof lit*madia:
StaveYoun*. SanFrancisco
|* Ktnny Payne, forward.
Continental BetktfBeHAsaacflttaa
Barry Foatar, Pittsburgh
11
RAPID CITY THRILLERS - Signed Chris
EmmlttSmith, Oallat
10
StarlingSharp*. Oratn Bay
1 Corchlanl, guard.
FOOTBALL
Cortai Karvwdy, SMltla
i
NatteMl Fastball League

TAMPABAYL LOSANflOLBS1
TampaBay
s I t -a
LaaAasetes
0 1 0 -1
Cardtaai StrlkhTl. St.AmOraaetl
First
P
arted
—
I.
Tam
pa
B
ay.
Bradley to
Cerreil, Mint.47.Loretta
(M
cRae,
Crestm
an),
4
:0
*1
I.
Tampa Bay.
MountMercyM. AvilaSI
McRae I (Tucker, Chambers), I S*. X
BOcBBuratat. M. TtamaeAautaaa
Tampa Bay. Mahals J (Cressman, Tucker),
BoaaryOAIII. BanadkltaaSI
If:St (pp). Panamas - Bradfly, TB (hook­
M. Franck, III.IA KevlarHOTS
ing). 1:44; Rychal, LA, malar-gam*
SI. Vincent07,M.tdiaflalkata
misconduct (spearIn*). tJ:N; Bamsgo. TB
VHarWOAM.Jaaaph'AMalnall
(itafhtao), I7:N.
laaaaa Parted- 4. Tamp* Bay. Bradteylt
HO.tVlBd4NtA7AFLM IOAIT.ta
(Croaaman, Chamfaarat, :« (pp); I. Lot
VIM Htldtfd)
A
n
getae. Stake 7 (Orattfcy, Cattey), S:N
■vena IM70-IU Baucakl-l SOA Haattar tap);
0. Las Angelas. Donnelly M (Toyflr.
Bww Nil Id IX HaMI Burap 1-11-tA ta b T
ompaan). 7:11; 7. La* Anpafla. Donnelly 17
OdId 7, OewaptaBOdOdAtamaty id M A (Bhlafca,
Orattfcy), 1J:N (pp); 0. Tampa Bay.
flttmar H i l l II, Ulafldt 0-1Od A Tatafl Heilman
t (Remaps). UiN. Panamas —
10070-11TA
Blafca, LA (hashing). ;M; Chambers. TB
FLOBIBA IT. (0-1)
J:N; Ramag*. TB (inMriaranca).
Oerflk o-M H IX Faaehal AM Od IA (baldBio).
:0a.
flaotcySdt-SAByonO-tlOd IXDflhman l-l IIT
h
ird
P
arted
— *. Tampa Bay, Boara 7
M A Amaldl l-l OdX Toyflr l-l l-l X Waada (Bradfly). I:N (pp).
Panamas —Craflhfln.
IINATotaflr-NAIllA
TB (tripping). :«; Granato. LA (sflahlng),
HaMHma—Vkotnfl N. Florida M. If. fl J:N;
Bureau. TB. maflr (lighting). 17:47;
Petal seek—Virginia j.y (Evant I X Oapfl
ThoO
m
paan, LA. miner-me|or-oam* miscon­
01. Somaoy0-A Laflfldl 0-1). Florida It.
J
ct (Instigator, fighting), 17:47; McSarloy.
(Darflk l-X Paarcy 0-1, Eyen i-A Amaldl du
LA. mlscandwct, 1f:SX
1-t). Pouted eut—HeWI Our*e Batawndf
i aa gaal —Tampa Bay U-4-0-N. Las
Vkftafl ta (Palmar M). Florida M. N
ifltflU—M.
(Dadafc. Wwda 7). Am)»1»-Virginia 10
i—Tampa Bay 1
(Baucah l), Flarlda M. 14(Darflb, Pwdfll. all; LasAnpoflsIef 1.
Paarcy 1). Total teuik-Virginia 17, Florida
Baatlat
—
T
am
pa
Bay.
B
arpsron. fll-0 IN
M. IAA-70A
thafl n save*). La* Anpafls, Hruday, tl-tl-4
(10-14).

^
. * ( ______
IMS ChoiN&gt;Canwly,NowTurkOianfl
UanaTAflarBBamN
l llpaaryBataOAflflatflarBOl
^WpJMaUMMMAO)

1fi7—JohnUnllax Bdllmero
If*#—COfIMorrill, Ooltlmon
if**—RemanOotorfll, Lit Ram*
1170— JohnBrodfl. SanFrancltco
1171—AlanPat*. Minnwota
1177—LarryBraum. Waihtagtan
IfTJ—O.J. Slmptan. Buffalo
1774—KanSlablar. Oakland
If7»-Fran Tarkmton,Mtamwta
117*—Bari Jana*. Baltlmor*
1*77—WaltvrPayton. Chicago
1770—TarryBradshaw, Pittsburgh
177t—Earl Campbell. Houston
H*0—BrianOlpa, Cflveflnd
INI—KanAndtnon. Cincinnati
iter—MarkMeatfly, Washington
if*l—Jo*Thatiminn,Washington
ifta BanMarina,Miami
l**J—MarcusAllan, L.A. Raldart
1*0*—Lawranc*Taylor, NowYorkGiants
1*07—JohnElway, Danvar
lf*a Bownai Eslaten. Cincinnati
IMf-JeaManlana. SanFrancisco
IffO—JaaMontana. SanFrancisco
IffI—ThurmanThomas, Buffalo
1117—Slav* Yeung. SanFrancisco

outacored the visiting DeLand
Bulldogs 31-3 In the first quarter
and romped to an 88-24 victory
Ui a 4A-btatrtct 0 girls' basket­
ball victory Wednesday night.
"The girls came out prepared
to play tonight." said Lake Mary
coach Anna Van Landlngham.
"I'm real proud of them. SN* had
real good bench play again
tonlgbl. Things really came
■as a team and wc had a
Iattack."
Diane Dubcr led the Rams
(13-21 with 18 points. Karen
Mortis added 17 while U u ra
BaUUSBtta)
) S fl* 7. Jscata t OJ A He(M OJ A
Htabaal

OSborN 100 A Stager 1OJ A WWflfsaas l
&gt;07. Tatafl: f*-14f4.

U M M A IV IB )

Baser I t-SA Mirrlcb S 1-t A Parsuais S
Al A Segued7A# tA Oucbsrtflt ABsmit
M A BflrrflSM 17. DutarSAJlA OmtaataQ
41-Jf. Tatafl: Nftata
*Jfl*aSta« BatagjJfl*—**Lata Btay"
(MarrkB). Tata) tads - OaLwta Mi Lab*
Mary It. Fades ad - OeLawB. HauAaa.
Taomicds - Nnn. BacurSi - OaUtd IA
LabaMtrylflA

Raguccl chipped ui with 14.
Each one of the nine players on
(he U k e Mary roster Bcored at
least four polnls.
The U k e Mary Junior varsity
team ran Ua record to 0-1 with a
45-17 win over DeLand.
Lake Mary will play again
Friday night al Euatis,

SANI OKI)

( *k | A N I ) &lt; )

K I N N I I i c i im

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, January

7,

1993 - l g

People
Microwave a quick

IN B R I E F
Ambles offtrtd
The City o f Sanford Recreation Department offers aerobics
classes Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 0 to 10 a.m.
and on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Coat Is $3 per class.
Instructor Is Debbie Black, board certified with over 10 years
experience.
Call 330-5697 for more details.

Omni Toastmasters gathar
The Omni Toastmasters Club will gather at 5:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the Old Lake Mary City Hall. 156 Country Club
Road, Lake Mary.
Call Sam Ryan at 671-2656 for more Information.

m u l u u u w i i i g u » i tins i m v t u t v i i

recorded at HCA Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford:
D ec. 12 — L a -S h a n t M.
Hawkins and Tramalne D. MeClary. Sanford, boy: LaShawn
Burnett. Sanford, boy
Dec. 13 — Jessica Brooks and
Horatio Roberson, Sanford, girl
Dec. 14 — Vasana and Roy
Burflcld, Sanford, boy: Kandlce
G room s and T e lly M edlocki
Sanford, boy: Cassandra James,
Sanford, girl
Dec. IS — Loretta Bradley.
Sanford, girl
Dec. 16 — Addle and Herculee
Rivers. Sanford, girl
Dec. 18 — Loretta and George
Watkins III, Sanford, boy

uer. i u — icrcsa u. and
Raymond G. Fenner. Longwood.
g ir l: P au la A . S o n g c r and
William C. Harley. Sanford, boy
Dec. 21 — Angela and Doug
Atkinson. Sanford, boy
Dec. 22 — Elisabeth L. and
Andrew Gordon. Sanford, girl
Dec. 23 — Jennifer M. and
William E. Hallam. Sanford, girt
Dec. 24 — Oneda Thompson
and JefTrey Green. Sanford, girl
Dec. 26 — Teresa Mathews
and Dennis Grooms Jr.. Sanford,
boy
Dec. 27 — Andrea Owens and
Kelvin Beasley. Sanford, boy
Dec. 28 — Erica N. Gray and
Kenneth R. Temple. Sanford,
boy

Meat loaf, always a family
favorite, can be cooked quickly
In the m icrowave oven. The
resu lts* are m oist, p erfe ctly
browned, and delicious and you
have saved con siderably on
household energy.
If you're new to cooking with
MIDGE
microwave energy, follow these
MYCOFF
simple directions. Become famil­
iar with the operation o f the
equipment (read all the direc­
tions, use tested recipes, un­
6 ox. pre-sliced pasteurized
dercook If In doubt (time can be. process cheese food (Velvetta)
added, allow standing time to
2 slices onion
complete cooking process.)
Combine ground beef, egg,
All recipes that appear In this oaU , m ilk. caUup, salt and
column have been tested In a pepper: m ix w ell. Pat meat
600-700 watt microwave oven.
m ixtu re on plastic wrap to
Lower -wattage ovens may need
8 xl2-ln ch rectangle. Arrange
some adjustment In timing.
c h e e s e s lic e s o v e r m e a t,
overlapping as necessary and
This recipe makes a large
meat loaf, but leftovers make • le a v in g e d g e s o f m eat u n ­
covered. Separate onion slices
great sandwiches.
Into rings and arrange over
OBMBBUBOBK LOAF
cheese slices. Using plastic wrap
2 lbs. lean ground beef
to lift meat, roll up starting with
1 egg, beaten
8-lnch side. Seal edges well.
cup quick-cooking rolled
Place in micro-safe loaf pan.
Cover with waxed paper.
V6 cup milk
M icrow ave on 70 p ercen t
V4 cup catsup
power. 23-25 minutes or until
V4 up. salt
center U no longer pink. Let
M Up. pepper

Everyone geU their own mini
sund. covered 5 minutes. Re­
meatloaf with this quick cooking
move from pan and slice.
M a n y fa m ilie s a re u s in g recipe.
ground turkey In their meal INDIVIDUAL MEAT LOAVES
planning. You 'll find ground
Vi cup soft bread crumbs
turkey, fresh or frozen, an eco­
Vi cup evaporated milk
nomical buy.
2 eggs, slightly beaten
TURKEY NEAT LOAF
1 Up. salt
1 cup water
Vi Up. pepper
2 Tbsp. margarine
1 small onion, finely chopped
2 cups saucepan type stuffing
Vi Up. ground thyme
1 lb. ground turkey or chicken
1Vi lbs. lean ground beef
1 egg
Vi lb. process American cheese
Vi Up. poultry seasoning
In m i x i n g b ow l, com b in e
Dash o f pepper
bread crumbs, milk, eggs, salt,
Vi cup cranberry sauce
pepper, onion and thyme. Add
Combine water and margarine meat; mix well. Cut cheese Into
In 2 - q u a r t b a t t e r b o w l . 6 cubes. Divide meat Into 6
M ic ro w a v e on 100 p e rc e n t equ a l p ortion s; form round
power. 2-214 minutes or until cheese cubes to make small
mixture bolls. Stir In stuffing loaves. Place in 7Vix 12-Inch
m ix until combined. Let stand 5
baking dish. Cover with plastic
m in u te s . A d d tu rk e y , e g g ,
w rap: cook b y m lcro w ve 4
poultry seasoning and pepper;
minutes; turn dish and cook
m ix w e ll. P ress Into 6-cup
another 4 minutes. Drain fat.
microwave-safe ring dish. Cover M i x c h i l l s a u c e w i t h
with waxed paper.
W orcestershire and mustard.
M icro w a ve on 70 p ercen t Pour over meat.
power 14-16 minutes or until
meat U no longer pink. Drain o ff
Vi cup chill sauce
Juices: Invert lo a f onto serving
1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
plate. Spoon, cranberry sauce
1 Up. prepared mustard
over loaf to coat evenly.

Deathbed promises may be harmful
n Your advice to
"T o u g h D ecision ." w ho had
made a deathbed promise to hU
brother. " R a y ." to tell their
grandparenu that Ray was gay

grandparenu by revealing some­
thing like that."

and had died o f AIDS, was a
bummer.
In the first place. If Ray had
w anted his grandparents to
know that he was gay and was
dying o f AIDS, be should have
told them himself; be had plenty
o f time. It was unfair o f Ray to
lay that kind o f burden on hla
brother.
Abby. you . told "Tough De­
cision,-" "You' made a deathbed
promise to your brother, and you
o w e It to him to keep your
promise. The truth never hurt
anyone — only Ues h u r t" Bull!
You came up with a trite parable
for an answer.
'T o u g h Decision" made hla
own best analysis: "R a y Is gooe
now, and revealing the truth
Isn't going to bring him back,
an d I h a te to h u rt o u r

Who said deathbed promises
are sacred and must be honored
at all costa? And where did you
learn that the truth never hurt
anybody? Deathbed promises
are made In times o f stress and
they are not necessarily binding.
Then you went on to say that
Ray had his reasons for wanting
his grandparenu to know that
he was gay. That is ridiculous)
W hat good would It do their
grandparenu to know? It would
only hurt them.

hundred other readers wrote to
tell me I blew It. But this U the
way I saw It:
R ay's grandparents adored
him. Ray was a decent, respectable, lovable young man, but he
didn’t have the courage to tell
his grandparenu that he was
gay because — as he said —
"th ey were old-fashioned" and
wouldn't understand that being
gay was not a choice. But at the
end. Ray w a n te d his
grandparenu to know that a
person could be decent, respectable and lovable — and also be

ay-

You blew it. Abby. Your really
blew It big time!
7.30
already.

You

All rig h t
and-several

Senior
Center
events
(HI NKIN D&lt; ) N U 1S IT S WORTH THf 1RIP

GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION

u
O

&lt;r
4

755 S. O R LA N D O A V E N U E
SANFO R D , FL.
SATU R D AY, J A N U A R Y 9,1993
25* D O N U T S - F R O M 6 A .M . to 6 P.M.

P R IZ E S JV ILLB E

B A F F L E D

L/"V

0
JO
4

T
-4

1
m
4

75* OFF
6i Muffins

►
4

N

W&lt; &gt;R f H THI

*1

00 OFF

Iki l

Tl

The Sanford Senior Center la
open io all aenlors age 50 and
over each weekday from 9 a.m.
lo 4:30 p.m. Aa always, they
continue to have a full weekly
schedule o f activities at the
center and they encourage you
lo atop In and pick up a January
calendar. The center would tike
10 announce special evcnU that
will be happening during the
month o f January.
• Tw o new Ballroom Dance
classes continue al the center for
beginner and Intermediate stu­
d en ts . T h e claaaea are on
Wednesday afternoons and there
Is a $2 charge per claas.
• A new beginner's Line
Dancing claas will start up on
Jan . 7 and c o nt i n u e each
Thursday morning at 10 a.m.
• On Jan. 7 al 1 p.m. there
will be a Free Investment Semi­
nar held al (he center. Michael
Fa ugh nan will be covering the
“ Basics o f Investing.*' Hla talk
will be very informative to new
or potential Investors and also a
good refresher course for others.
This program will launch a
regular schedule o f monthly
presentations by Edward D.
Jones A Co. The presentation la
open to anyone that is interest­
ed.
• On Jan. 25 from 9 a.m.
until 5 p.m. Ihe Mobile Mam-'
magram Unit will again be at the
center. The unit Is provided by
th e W o m e n ' s C e n t e r fo r
Radiology. Appointm ents arc
necessary.
• Make plans now to attend a
l-ong Term Care Seminar to be
held at the Senior Center on Feb.
11 at 1:30 p.m. This 1a a free
seminar open to everyone.
• The center will be closed on
J a n .18.
T o gel m ori information on
any o f the special events or
weekly events or lo set up a
mammogram appointment, call
330-5699.

Y o u th
B o w lin g
P ro g ra m
League starts
Jan. aa

U .g » S M V IN O t B O N D t

THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT

�« ■ - Sanford Hamid, Sanford. Florida - Thursday, January 7, IMS

CLASSIFIED ADS
Ssminoto

322-2611

IRENE P . SMITH:
MICHAEL SMITH. Unknown
Ipouoo of IRENE P. SMITH, If
anv&gt; and UNKNOWN TRNANTS/OWNERS. _ ^
Dotandont*.
NOTICE OF SALE
Not Id &gt;■IwroSy (Ivon, purtu
oni to Final JuPammt at FarocleMro tar FtalntiN ontarad In
ttw coma, In ttw Cirtwtt Court at
lamlneta County, Florida. I will

Orlando- WtaftsrPark
831-0663

Eihiidl

EBgmr

SAMUEL 0. OAVIS and LINDA
DALE OAVIS, SANK
ATLANTIC FEDERAL
SAVINOS AND LOAN ASSOC)
A T I O N O F , PORT'
LAUDERDALE, SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, STATS
OP FLORIDA DEPARTMENT
OF H E A L T H l i l HAEILITATIVE SERVICES.

oftnem S jw n o m

KIWANIS
l " TOTAL
FOR YOUR ENJOYM ENT
v a r so, o i o i i
SWEETWATER OARS I
T tO N i aaeardtaa M EN

K

C H . I t V lK * 0 .

REOULAR QAME8 WWS80 EACH
W $ s 9 ! S100«SIOO*SMO JACKPOTS AND

TWO WINNER 8PUTS

EVERY FRIDAY EARLY BIRDS AT 6 PM

Fna aatofEarly Blrda with this ad
r A666I HHHT lIN IO fl CBHTIfl
t o o N . L A K E T R N L E T D R IV E

SECRET LAK E PA R K

‘wU'N

•

C M d d l,R E R R Y , F L

�KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® by U rry Wright

NO BIRVICR CALL M I wl&gt;*n
rapalrt ara Rent. Warranty. M
yr». • *parlancaI John.
A+Batt AaaHaneat.m-mi

vryn lco . HOB W 4711

IIM Oonp condition. MSMM
WATBRBBO. Land and My.
klngtlia, compiait wilt) mlrrorad haadboard and wtvalaii
mattraaa, aic. condition f u »
o«o.................C aim rjM f

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

* GUN SHOW*
It’sThfBii One!
LaketeiidCMcCtf
Ibr. 11*17
MM-3PM
MaMMCtlJO
IddRSBrsO

W t list and sell
more property than
anyone in the Greater
Sanford/lake Mary area.

------* - i - «
M
ClnVTyVWPIWV«.

imparary Ilea

warn

•wont A o r ia t v i Cauda at
a sugar prtca. Baautlfuiiy dacaratad. Wathar-dryar In*
ctvdad. AWardatli l....UTAH.

SecurityOfficwi

with tray. IMOT 5004

TORINO T A B L It IT) - Suntana.
aaty autre Im ............... UAH
Call MS-040

» 0— Antiquo/Classtc

tktUnd R I P Club

• IMMACULATI V t m Maytatr
Maadawt. Aaauma na nuatl-'
tying. I quip. kit., grant m v.

W -P f ttR tu p p ita

n o o

H la A o n a J
2P Q -RHA H
t i f l r l l rW Tl

gtuaaacartty Can!

322-2420

•ALI OR LRAIII

OWILSH COROI. MaM. with
papart. I yr. old. Vary actjva.
Maying mutt aatl-naadt yard
tarunm.UH n « saat.

321-2720
l-aU-tna, JAWtQartd, taa.
WORKBRS RRROBOt

OCALA MAT’ k SORRIT

I R I N M II , mi

UTO AUCTION
iRIOAV tiN N

I4XTB, MTt/mo: MS-PO*

■■coat tea. tag. tltN. ate.
ItH MITSUBISHI • « daor.
auto. air. tlaraa. ONLY
t la*At par month I

Cay^giMUCaii m w

unai. Circulation SM dally, aid
Sunday. U0.000 piut par yaar
Incoma. I ) hr. par night,
apti./candat. Cattalbarry
araa. Mutt aalll Saerlllca,
StBAOtcaah.Ut-Uaa

117— O ir—

Solf
CddrtgH Uwi Cm, 171*1171

NWYHSHS^wa-HMOU
BORAL I BATN. Suniand

Captaln'a bad with I drawarv
4 thalvaa and If. ttaraga
tpaca. Oraat condition! IIM
___________MI-4H4___________
OOO. Brat* guoanalw. arthp

MTDUN REALTY

M ake your
N e w Year's
resolution
ehom e
D ur S p m o la l O f fa r WIH H avm
Y o u L a u g h in g A ll Thm W a y
Ta Thm Bank.

1 /2

Country Lake

O F F

1st Month's Rent
C o evilla Aportm e
Newly Renova

2714 R idgew ood A ve
Sanford

330-5204

/ H O G

eCMCVY LUV •7 J.
HallayabarraLtl.WSIP-i

B4M4t/ms. Nr M

i. B bath, cm/A.

a

�•

*

t p t

Sanford Htrsld, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, January T. 1883

Does therapy cure
ovarian cancer?
DEAR DR. OOTT: I'd like to
know m ore about ovarian
cancer. Eight months ago my
slater was operated on because
of a large tumor on both ovaries.
After chemotherapy she looks
and feels fine, yet keeps telling
me she will be lucky If she has
three years left to live. What Is
your opinion?

"cured." In any case, I admire
her attitude of cautious realism.
She seems to be addressing the
problem head-on. with great
courage.

PETER
GOTT.M .D.

(0 1 9 9 3 NEWSPAPER EN
TERPRtSE ASSN.

DEAR READER: I don't mean
to sound negative, but ovarian
cancer Is a serious problem from
which the outcome Is seldom
favorable.

by Art SaittMit

TH E BORN LOSER
r MEXT, EKCU&amp;VC HQKC video
OF THE 0RMW1C RESCUE Of
A AAR TRAPPED OR THE !C£
AT LAME PHOEBE*

A TRUE OR FALSE
TEST? YES. MA'AM

ITSASKHOF
THE TIMES...

00 YOU MIND IF MY

006 TAKES THE TEST,
TOO? YOU KNOW, JUST
FOR THE FUN OF IT...

THESE OAft, TREY 00 V "
r jr t h e w c o c mumk
— ( THEM CALL 911!

M

IT'LL GIVE HIM
50METHIN6 TO DO.

HOW 00 YOU
MAKE * T 5 *
A N D T 'S " ?

To begin with. It's difficult to
diagnose because It Is painless In
Its early stages. Therefore,
ovarian carcinoma often grows
quite large and spreads to other
abdominal organs before It Is
detected.
Second, there are no tests for
this specific cancer, as there are
for, say. prostate cancer. The
tumor Is usually discovered by
accident during a routine pelvic
e x a m i n a t i o n , w h e n t he
gynecologist feels the tumor.
Third, as you know, the larger
the tum or (and the more 1
extensively It has spread), the
harder U Is to treat. Thus,
therapy for ovarian cancer
(surgery, radiation and drugs) Is
rarely effective: At the time of
diagnosis, the cancer Is usually
too far advanced.

n

Finally, even If the Initial
treatment appears successful,
small nests of cancer cells
almost always evade therapy
a n d c o n t i n u e to g r o w ,
necessitating a cycle of treat­
ments that are Invariably de­
bilitating.
I am glad - your sister re­
s p o n d e d satisfactorily to
chemotherapy. Perhaps she will
be one of the few fortunate

MEV, U X * . . . l
BELIEVE TH AT*

A COOL Of FREE-

PEANUTS

f WOO! THE.
ECOUOMV
(V &amp; A X X S D
1UHUEDN8UP,

IG O E S S S O U O F U V h '
KUEUE G0NE5TRAQKT FROM
A (5CES5CAJ RIGHT INTO
R x m * C W T fNFLATTOAJ
There Is a small band of
enthusiasts who like lo pore over
double-dummy problems. These
arc problems In which you can
see all 32 cards. You must work
out how lo make (or. oc­
casionally. how to defeat) the
contract.
Most double-dummy problems
are complicated, but today's
Isn’t too tough — and It has a
slight twist. Olven the opening
lead of the heart ace, you have to
work out the result with best
play by both sides.
The deal Is taken from "The
Beat of Robert Qray. Book Two"
(95.BO. The Bridge World. 39
West 94th Street. New York. NY
10023-7124).
The bidding Is contrived to
make South the declarer,
because six diamonds by North
cannot be defeated.
If the opening lead la rafTed
low In dummy. East overruffs
and leads back his second

ft, p o W T

(0 1 9 9 3 . NEWSPAPER EN
TERPRISEASSN.

There's a possibility you might
get Involved in a development
today where there Is dissension

prepared to lend for yourself
today, because people who are
usually willing to do your bid-

s e l f - a d d r e s s e d , s ta m p e d cial ones from anyone to wham
envelope to Astro-Graph, do this you're already obligated. Your
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. request could evoke a negative
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be response.
sure to state your aodlac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You are likely to have a very
Be cartful today that you don't active imagination today and
make things harder for yourself this could be to your detriment,
than they actually are. You need especially when you are trying to
space to operate in. and if you make an Important decision,
reduce your wiggle room, you'll Don't be overwhelmed by too
also reduce your effectiveness.
many alternatives.
,
PIECE# (Feb. 20-March 20)
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be

could be unduly nfbn1**** and
aay things you shouldn't. Don't
let your temper get you In
trouble.
•
8A0ITTARIIIB (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) This Is not a propitious time
for you to assume new longrange financial obligations in
hopes that you'll be able to cover
things when the bills arrive. Live
within your available resources,
(0 1 9 9 3 . NEW SPAPER ENTERPR18EA88N.

VHHHTAN9

T s o *« /feW M W tr

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•

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                    <text>TUESDAY

January 26, 1993

30 Cents

Sanford Herald
Serving Sanford, Lako Mary and Samlnola County alneo 1908
85th Year, No. 131 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST

Murder: Boy, 13, jailed

mow

More arrests expected in Sanford shooting death

□ Sports

B y J. MARK BARFIELD
Herald Staff Writer

Harris In goal
LONGW OOD — The second leading scorer for
Lyman High School's two-tlmc defending state
champion girls' soccer team Is now the goalie.

See Page IB.

.

SANFORD — More arrests are expected today
in the Nov. 7 roadside shooting of Mark Edward
Marsh.
Monday afternoon, a 13-year-old Sanford youth
w as arrested by Sanford police. The youth was

CHis mother was with him at
the time of the arrest. 3
-L t. M ike Rotundo
arrested on a first-degree murder charge. The
name of the youth, a former student at Lakcview

Middle School, was withheld by police .this
morning pending formal charges as an adult.
Acting Police Chief Ralph Russell said one or
two more arrests may follow today.
Police spokeman Lt. Mike Rotundo also antici­
pated more arrests.
"W e took him to the John E. Polk Correctional

□See Arreet, Page BA

□Opinion

Witness:
Defendant
confessed

Crash course

Play ball In Lake Mary
Three leagues vied for use of a lighted baseball
field at the new Lake Mary sports complex. Lake
Mary commissioners chose one. Did they do the
right thing/?'

,, U

□ People
‘From Sun to Sun*
Area performing artists arc appearing in the
an n u al celebration h on orin g Z ora Neale
Hurston*

ByOIOROBDUNCAN
Herald Staff Writer____________________________

See Page SB.

SANFORD — A prosecution witness testified
Monday that defendant George Bellamy. Jr., told
him "that he killed a m an." the day after the
tmdy of Isfall Cohen was found In a Midway
parking lot.
However. Timothy Johnson only made the
admission after ordered by Judge Alan Dickey to
answer Assistant Stnte Attorney Stewart Stone's
question. Johnson, who udmlttcd he was a good
friend of Bellamy, initially said nothing even after
Stone usked the question three times.
Dickey then ordered the Jury to the Jury room
und told Johnson he must nnswer (he question or
face contempt of court churges. Johnson Is
currently serving u sentence In prison on a mutter
unrelated to the trlul. After Johnson returned.
Dickey cleared Ihc courtroom, except for court
personnel and media representatives.

Goodings proposal goss to P+Z
LAKE MARY — The Lake Mary Planning and
Zoning Board will meet tonight. The main Item
on the agenda Is a request for site plan approval
for a proposed oiTlce/warchouse. submitted by
Gooding's Inc. The facility Is proposed for 40
acres of land abutting Interstate 4 and Rinehart
Road.
The request includes planning for an access
road leading to the property. Gooding's is also
requesting reduction In the number of required
parking spaces from 258 to 170. elimination of
the need for sidewalks along the access road,
and allowing parking lot lighting to be Increased
from 25 feet In height, to 40 feet.
The meeting will be held beginning at 7 p.m.
tonight. In the commission chambers of Lake
Mary City Hall. 100 W . Lake Mary Boulevard.

MwaMFtieleSr Tww*r Vleeeiit

Lisa Davis, an earth-space science teacher at
8emlnole High School Is removed from her car
after an accident at the school yesterday
afternoon. Her car was struck when a student

lost control of his vehicle on the wet surface.
School administrators report that Davis is
doing fine, though she's not back at school
today.

Speaking softly and often only In one-word
answers. Johnson admitted he had seen both
Bellamy and Cohen on Ihc night Cohen was shot
and killed. Cohen was driving a friend’s car. a
green and white Oldsmobllc. Johnson testified.
Johnson said Bellamy told him he planned to

□Bee Trlul, Page BA

All aboard for L.A.
JACKSONVILLE — Amtrak's coast-to-coast
Sunset Limited, connecting Florida's East C o a s t1
with Los Angeles, will begin operation in early.
April and reservations are now being accepted.
Already, the first run on April 4 of the
threc-runs-a-weck train is almost filled to
capacity with train buffs. said Howard Rob*
ertson, an Amtrak spokesman.
The Sunset Limited closes the 680-mlle gap
between Jacksonville and New Orleans, com­
pleting Amtrak service around the nation's
periphery. East Coast passengers can catch the
new train by connecting in Jacksonville.
To help start the Amtrak service. Florida
pitched in 86.5 million for the project. 83.5
million of which went for track and signal
Improvement. Robertson said.
"Without the help of Florida officials and CSX
(Transportation Inc.), whose track we arc using,
we wouldn't have been able to get this done." he
said.

Ir

Amtrak expects the train to carry about
67.000 passengers a year.
Amtrak's transcontinental service now re*
quires passengers to change trains In New
Orleans or Chicago.
The new route will make the 58-hour crossing
of Florida. Alabama. Mississippi. Louisiana.
Texas. .New Mexico. Arizona and California
three times a week.
A double-decker See-Level car will offer
passengers feature movies, snacks, games and a
hospitality hour. Robprtson said.

Classifieds........ 48,88 8 # »l* i
&gt;8A

Osar AM»y.

.........18,88

Dr.OetL.
8dHartal.

■

-IA

8B

................8A
................ TA

Wet, wind advisory in effect
Windy with rain and
th u n d ersto rm s.
Some local Hooding
possible. Rain d e ­
c rea sin g by a fte r­
noon. Highs in the
lo w e r 6 0 s . W in d
north 25 to 30 mph
and gusty. A wind
a d v i s o r y m a y be
r e q u ir e d on a re a
lakes. Chance of rain
80 percent.

G O P : keep condom s out of schools
Herald Staff Writer
The Seminole County Republican
executive committee wants the
state government to keep out of
local schools and refrain from dls-

Residents
have access
to officials
By NICK PPBJPAUP
Herald Staff Writer_________________
SANFORD - City leaders will be
getting out more to meet residents
and listen to their concerns ubout
their neighborhoods since Access 93
won Sanford City Commission ap­
proval last night.
The project will take city leaders
out for neighborhood meetings.
City Planner Jay Marder brought
the concept up for consideration. It
would call for scheduled meetings to
be held In the various districts of the
city, to be hosted by the mayor and
commissioner representing the dis­
trict, as well as department heads
and city staff members.
The meetings would not replace
any of the regular clly commission
meetings, but be UBcd to obtain
citizen Input at the local level.
" W e could possibly determine
what problems may exist in a
particular district before we hold the
meeting." he said, "then be certain
we have the appropriate department
head on hand to rrspond to ques­
tions."
"F or exam ple." he added. "If an
area has drainage problems, we
would have the public works and
utilities departments represented."
"T h is should be an educational
process used to obtain input from
constituents." lie added.
In response to a question regard­
ing how many meetings might be
held during Ihc year. Murder pro­
jected eight to 10 per year.
Commissioner A.A. McClanahan
suggested holding one meeting per
district to determine their success.
"L e t’s see how It goes." he said. "If
they prove to be beneficial we can
schedule more of them."

□Bee Access. Page BA

tributlng condoms to students.
W hile a spokesm an for Gov.
Lawton Chiles said the recommen­
dations of tho-Red Ribbon Panel on
AIDS "m ade great healthy sense."
the governor has not yet studied the
recommendations with his staff and

is not yet prepared to comment on
specific Issues.
"W e are planning a staff work
group to study the panel's recom­
mendations," said Ron Sachs, the
g o v e r n o r 's c o m m u n i c a t i o n s
director.

Meanwhile. Doug Elam, chairman of the Seminole County Republican
Executive Committee, said his
committee Is not only promoting
family values by their opposition to
condom distribution in schools, but

[ ! Bee Condoms, Pago BA

Ja n u a ry drizzles
Power outages only problems from rain
By MICK PPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer
Present rainfall in northern
Seminole County has not been
unusually strong, but It has been
rather continuous. The Weather
Bureau expects the rain to con­
t i n u e p o s s i b l y in t o m id Wednesday.
The only problems reported by
this m orning Involved som e
power outages. Joe Coury of
Florida Power and Light said. "In
the Sanford area this morning,*
we had 11 customers offline." He
added. "O f these, nine were from
a transformer outage and the
other two were separate inci­
dents."
"In the total area we cover
which includes most of Seminole,
Brevard and Volusia Counties."
he said, "w e had 284 customers
with outages since this present
rainstorm started, and actually,
that's a relatively low num ber."
Florida Power Corporation also
serves portions o f the sam e
general area. FPC's Bill Warren
said this morning, "S o far. I
haven't had any reports of any
major power outages. If there
were some sm all ones, they
probably would not cover any
major areas, and we'll have them
taken care of as soon as possi­
ble."
The projected rainfall for the
Seminole County area through
early or mid-day tomorrow Is
expected to be three quarter to
one and a half Inches.
No reports of any excessive
Hooding problems had been re­
ceived by this morning In the city

f Baa Rain, Page BA

H#ft(g RReteBeTeeey Vteeeet

Neither rain nor...... A post office vehicle doesn't allow the rain-soaked
streets In Sanford to prevent It from making Its appointed rounds.

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Call 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�t a - i snlmd Hsrsld. Ssnfotd, Worlds - Tuesday. Jsmmy ta. H B

NEW S FROM T H E REGION AND A CROSS T H E S T A T E

FtoddavnanordBrBdhBMwithoutbond

YOUlh tO C O O p tfltl With f l d l j t88tlfy 8Q&amp;if1St 3 Oth8r8

MIDLAND — State District Judge John H yde has ordered a
Florida man accused o f killin g hls ex-wtfe near their daughter's
p a r e new witnout ootid tot jw q i t i &lt;

BmlUo Nunes, 34, was arrested in Fort Stockton . Texas, last
w eek after he fled Florida, heading for Loo Angeles aboard a
Greyhound bus.
Hyde ruled M onday the Jan. 18 shooting was a capital
o ffense. A n extradition hearing wtU be conducted after 30 days,

ORLANDO — Prosecutors
out a plea agreement’ with one o f four
youths charged with killin g tw o young
people and wounding a third ta a landmark

nyoc M W .

Last week, Nunes went to Queen o f Heaven Cem etery in
North Lauderdale to be interview ed about the death o f his
16-year-otd daughter, Yoandra. Nunes told a T V reporter
Yoandra com m itted suicide because her mother, kurttsa
W hen Ms. M arita showed up, the cam eram an caught Nunes
firin g 12 bullets at the wom an's head. H e then Bed.

others on state and federal charges, said
U.8. A tto r n e y R o b e r tW .O e n m ^ r * "’
“ T h e indictm ent represents the first
national prosecution In which defendants
are charged wtth s violation o f th e federal
arm ed carjacking statute where death has
resulted," said Q etu m an oa Monday.
The victim s w ere taken at gunpoint to an

i In Osceola County on Nov. 29,
forced to strip and then shot In the bead. A
fem ale companion was not Injured.
The m otive, prosecutors said, was the
theft o f their vehicle.

mechanical problems. The victim s were
targeted at s bar in SC Cloud because the
defendants wanted to steal their vehicle to
r e p la c e the pickup, prosecutors said,
A fter being driven In their vehicle to a

E

j t a i m u A " lb ,

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g

o

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!

‘ 7.

Henderson. A lf Catholic, 21, and Oerard

** * * ! « * &amp;
said.
M ichael Rcntaa, 20. waa wounded and a
fem ale friend. Tam m y Oeorge, 25, was
unhurt.
T h e fou r «**^«v ** »^ t allegedly were drlvta g a stolen rad pickup truck that developed

fttn n t

heard ■ shot fired and realised
F k ^ lS d b S ^ t
“ The second shot Rentas heard h it him ta
the hand and the bullet fragm ented. The
defendants assumed Rentaa had been shot
ta the head as intended rather than in the
hand, as they saw blood com ing from the
underpants over his heed.

4C leads
Head
Start
I y .v { -t ,,,• v •»*

SM UT

federal grant

‘ to her throat

m i l i p p i n V D n O i W if i* u y m M HVVVVM^MsV

SANFORD The non­
profit Com m unity Coordi­
nated Child Care for Central
Florida, 4C, based In Or­
lando, has been awarded a
8000.000 grant to fun Sem­
inole County's Head Start
- I I. mmm
procram.
The grant was swarded
by the Federal Q ovem m cn t
with additional funding o f
som e 81 m illio n , to be
obtained at a later lim e.

Or. Sammy Tomblln, dlraetor o f !
:r tbs Seminole County School
Congressman BUI McCollum.

m ade yeeterday during a
p rf M COlUvivifCO W Hl
office.

I i o f Bay1 Avenue!
em m ent decided it would
open up the Head Start
program lor bidding. S ev e r
al groups In Central Florida
made bids, with 4C winning
the contract.
4C. organised In 1009 by
United w a y and the Orange
County Commission, was

C o n g re s s m e n B ill M eC o M D U d J liM M k l. '
_ R e p re se n tin g 4 C w a s

tw.-A

a m T ^ c e ^ P ^ e ld e n T ^ f

established to provide ade­
quate affordable chUd care
services for working parents
ta the tri-county area o f
Orange, Sem inole and Os­
ceola Counties.
Ms. Carpenter has been
with the organisation since
Its Inception.

man

If!,'

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THE WEATHER
*

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Oaaaa Bs psh i highs. 10:57 am ..
lltlT p.m.i Iowa 4:40 am .. 6:10

-

1

■

T h e h igh tem p eratu re in
Sanford Monday ares OS degrees
and the overnight low was M a s
reported by the UniveraUy o f
Florida Agricultural Research
and education Center, Celery
Avenue.
R ecord ed ra in fa ll fo r the
period, ending at , a.m. Tuesday. totalled J a o f an inch.
t h e temperature at 0 a m .
to d a y w as 6 0 d egrees and
aaitrr s u m i ImM Iewe

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InmaAanatfAim'

�Sanford H«rild, 8*nfortJ, Florida - Tuesday, January 26, 1663 - 6A

Defender of death
row Inmates
blasts high court
The psssengcr In the vehicle, Metises Renee Leonard, 33. o f
the same address, was also arrested after officers said they
discovered cannlbus In her purse. She was charged with
possession o f less than 30 gram s ofcannlbua and possession o f
drug paraphernalia.

TALLAH ASSEE - T h e U.8.
Suprem e Court seemed m ore
worried about ending a case
than being sure o f the defen­
dant's gu ilt in a T exas case, a
Florida defender o f death row
Inmates said.
T h e S u prem e C ou rt ru led
Monday that death row inm ates
generally m ay not m ake new
c tu m i o i innocence in veoenu
court after exhausting all other

Shots walk out
Johnny Daniels, 39, 1706 W . 14th Street, Sanford, was
arrested by Sanford police Sunday a t a store In the 3000 block
o f Orlando D rive. Police said Daniels w ent Into the store,
apparently took o ff his shoes and hkl them , then put on a new
p u r, valued at S46, and left the store. H e w as charged with
retail theft.

Weapon is pipe

" I think It la rather ironic that
the U.S. Suprem e Court, on the
sa m e d a y th a t n ew sp a p ers
across the country headline the
death o f Th u rgood M arshall,
states that It Is m ore Important
to have procedural fin ality than
It is to Im plem ent Justice hi the
face o f an Innocence claim ."
Larry Spalding said.
S od d in g directs the Capital
Collateral Representative office
that represents Florida death
row Inmates.
E xecu tive clem en cy is the
"h istoric rem edy" to protect the
tru ly Innocent from being put to
death, the Justices said.

Sheriff's deputies arrested Jam es A llen Stephans, 81, 3340
Broadway, Sanford, on Sunday. Deputiea cam e Into contact
w ith Stephens as they w ere Investigating a separate Incident at
3191 D ixie A ve. In M idway. T h ey said he was carrying an
IB-Inch pipe in his car. Deputies said he Indicated he used the
pipe for protection. H e was charged w ith carrying a concealed
weapon, and having no d river's bcenac.

Unoovsrsd trucklosd

County warrant charging him w ith violation o f parole on a
conviction o f burglary.

Warrant arvaata

T h e court ruled on an appeal

&amp;y Mvonci ncTTcTif

•D on ald Lee K elly. S 3 ,4 33 0 8. Orlando D rive, Sanford, was
arrested on N. Edgrroon. b y W inter Springe Police Friday. He
was wanted on a Sem inole County warrant charging him with
th e ft '
•E lisab eth Anne Bennett. 33. 309 Coe V illas. Sanford, was
arrested follow in g a speeding stop an Rinehart Road b y Lake
M ary Police Friday. She was wanted for failure to appear on a
charge o f drivin g w ith a suspended license. FoOowtng the
discovery o f w hat officers said w as a leafy green substance in
her car, officers also charged her w ith poaseaston o f a
controlled substance.
• A 17-year-old fem ale w as arrested Friday near her
residence in n**1*1— Vo Gardena Jtpartmants, She w as wanted
for violation o f parole.
•C h ristian Lee Oayden, 33. 310 S. French Avenue, was

bciuciiccq to

death In the 1961 slaying o f a
police officer. In 1990, he filed a
new claim saying his brother.
Raul, who was killed In 1984,
had killed the officer. Raul's son
said he saw his foih er com m it
the crim e, and Raul's law yer
said his client confessed I t
In a dissent. Justice Harry A.
Blackmun called the execution

Innocent "p erilou sly close to
sim ple m urder."
T h e ruling doesn't affect any
in d in g F lo rid a cases, said
p a ld ln g and C a ro ly n
Snurkowsld. ■spokeswoman for
th e state A ttorn ey G eneral's
Office.
Innocence claim s w eren't part
o f the unsuccessful efforts to
stop the executions last year o f
Moute Lee Martin and Edward
Dean Kennedy.
Spalding said CCR defenders
did raise an Innocence claim In
the case o f Leo Alexander Jones,
slated to die In the electric chair
In Novem ber 1901 for the 1901
sniper shooting o f a Jacksonville
policem an.
T h e atate S u prem e C ou rt
stopped the execution and or­
dered a hearing by a circuit
Ju d ge. T h e Ju d ge w a s unconvinced o f Jones' claim that
another man shot the police­
man, and Jones remained on

r

Issue you are arguing Is whether
th e d e a t h p e n a l t y Is
appropriate."
Considering clem ency claim s
Is the Job o f the executive branch
and Isn't related to court ap­
peals. said Mark Schlakman.
assistant general counsel to Gov.
Lawton Chiles. Chiles and the
Cabinet hear Florida clem ency
"T h e governor w ill not sign a
death warrant until a clem ency
review has been considered, so
those Issues hopefully would

Stalking law
Six-month-old statute
survives challenge

I t d s fln e a a t a l k t n
‘wtUftiBy. mattctouMy an

"W h a t w e're talkin g about
hem ia due proceea," Tie said.
"T h ere are no guidelines for law
enforcem ent/ to determ ine If
haraaament haa occurred."
A s written, he aaid, the law
cou ld p ro h ib it a c tiv ity th a t
should not be oonstdarad crtml*

‘Battered neighbor9 no defense
urinated on the

.e g f b n i
• A N JOSE. C a l i f . - A

o f'

syndrom e" when he shot to death hto i
neighbor In an argum ent over pet
each oth er's belongings.
Michael C. Dedusts, 48, o f Santa C lam waa
convicted Mondsy o f m urder in the slaying o f
33-year-old Martin MyallnskL w ith whom hs had
had a feud.
Wi

shot Myatiaski as MysUnskl argued
srlfo at tbs sad o f tbs drivew ay S s y i

and
d up and
TTenarte

Urea, punctured gaa tanka.' buried pat

Well Advertise Your Car
(or other motorvehicle)

to
M m tiaakt'a w lfo, Monica, said the feud waa only
hi
"I

: seem s weird, but .we really did not
a te sold altar t t e verdict. "W e reaUy
to Ufa In

3 linos lor only

II.

hat baby, concocts subterfuge

TUSTtN, Calif. — A 17-yearId w ho w as too afraid to tod h er

m

| ’"battered

T b s dispute th at day waa o ve r w hether
MyaUneid's d og had urinate d on the B rils rises '
newspaper and whether the DeBariaas' cat had

Tnn

o f M ysllnekl'a

PuMqffwtir Nfttoshrfusemg|orgMm.YouMgpurchaseyourfetalrigfota otr
fltobusfetal oourtortiedv ofkavgorvoucmiratamacfcsnosIcM ourchiss
b9ycuing-*.ou«rtolIns
(600)
nmumber__‘
Mtossn
--—
^ ■amm
b _730
a__ami
_ aid
a 1130man.
aaQroupt

A s m oot young psosto. they
re o ta p ly a fru d t o t r t l t t e v
parents,
said D oug Franks,
P °*h * ch ief to this commuai
Storages smith o f te a Angriea.

offered to trsds t t e baby far
dru ga The baby, t o told notice,
w as wrapped to a d irty T-shirt
G arda said he offered 310
instead and waa given the baby.
H e took U to a church, and the
taken to a children’s

$ 0 1 2 4
m m

^P

(additional ktoas extra)

Ad mugtinclude phononumberand askingpries. If vehkls hasn't
beensoldin 10days, call us andwe’ll renewitfret. Nocopychange
while ad is running escept for pries. Non-commercial only.

Call 322-2611 Ibday!
a shopping
a n u n to a car

Fran ks said G arcia w ou ld
probably not to
any wrongdoing.

�Bush marches in the field of honor
Bush's watch are so enormous that only the
passage o f tim e w ill enable ua to fully appreciate
th e ir m a g n itu d e . ------------ -— -------------Consider that, In Just

IBS Ml»•««(•***••••••«••••*••
tfeSMtMHIH**•«*•*•*(••«*•*•**•I
SMHMH4imiMtMMMIM*MMJ

EDITORIALS

Lake Mary kids
should have first
choice of fields
T h e S em in o le P O N Y L ea gu e will have first
ch oice on th e use o f L u te Mary's sp o rts
c o m p le x b a s eb a ll fie ld s . T h e C ity C o m ­
m ission ap p roved th e req u est la st w eek .
T h e leagu e to p leased, b u t w e qu estion If
th is ju d gem en t Is th e b est w a y to serve th e
o rigin a l in ten t o f th e sp o rts com p lex , to

part o f m y young adult life aa a student editor.
Throughout the then-vice president's remarks,
he waa Jeered b y a gaggle o f protesters, who
view ed him as an unwelcom e representative o f
the con servative Republican adm inistration.
Despite It all, Bush delivered a stirring message.
Hto equanim ity in the face o f hostility, from
critics unworthy to latch the laces on hto
cordovans, left an Indelible Impression upon me.
In these w aning days o f the Bush presidency,
there has appeared a spate o f articles that
presume to assign him a place In history. As
Bush w o unfaxed by the small-minded pro­
testers at Howard a dozen years ago, I suspect he
la uacoocem ed by pointy-beaded opinion writers
w ho have om ntodently decided that hto term o f
office w ill be view ed u n fe v o ra b ly o tim e goes by.
Q eorge Herbert W alker Bush m ay never have
h is vtoage etch ed upon M ount Ruahm ore
a te ijr id c those o f W ashington, Jefferson, Lin­
coln and Roosevelt but he very w ell m ay be
remembered aa one o f the m ost successful
Intel nationalist presidents tn Am erican history.
T h e historic triumphs that occurred during

the last four years,
the Cold W ar came

abruptly to an end.
^ B
th e n u c le a r arm s
race was halted and
th e U n ited S ta tes
w o victorious at war
fo r the fir s t tim e
since W orld W ar II.
B u s h 's c r i t i c s
would m inim ise hto
r o l e In t h e s e
m om entous events.
But who would argue
that w ith o u t
Am erica’s influence,
w ith o u t Its p re s i­
dent's leadership, the
collapse o f com m u­
n is m In E a s te r n
Europe would have
gone so swim m ingly, --------------------------------th e break-up o f the form er S o viet Union
happened as peacefully, the defeat o f Iraq
accomplished so convincingly?

betw een th e P O N Y L eagu e. L a k e M ary L ittle
L eagu e an d B abe R uth L ea gu e, th e m ain go a l
w as to ob tain first ch o ice o n th e ligh ted field .
A fte r o v e r an h ou r o f dlacu salon . th e
com m ission v o ted In fa v o r o f the P O N Y
Leagu e.

iSMon?

Children o f Lake Mary residents comprise
only a small part o f the total number of
iyers In the'league. Membership is from
roughout Seminole County.

S

1

public education."
Wc ranted a few
m ln u t e a u n t il it
began to dawn on me
just who was decrylog this new perfidy
— the guy who went

,

Perhaps • hatter first choice would have
been the Late Mary Little League, which la
It Ydrnttd tjustthto^asr December, and nai no

The wbrta complex b n three baseball
fields, and baa for softball. Only one baseball
field Is tit for nighttime use. Eventually, when
Phaae 11o f the sports complex to developed, in
a year or two. there wlU be additional uniting
to serve more teams at night.

:^ ^ B

I

,

s c h o o l!

The L a te Mary Uttie League also does not
taige f a * for^hg o f the children, which
t e n for kte lgw ffie youth to benefit t a n
If tlw eomatfealon believes the PONY
L e ig u a ii the teat for Lake Mary, U should
require the league to form a separate Late
MarV POKY League, and utilise teams
com prised mostly o f that city's youth.

Who cares about
Chelsea’s school?

he said. "T h at's sure
some way to back

The league also charges as high as $09 per
player in registration and other fees.
' ?'

Bush's shortcom ings on the dom estic front
hardly make his presidency a historic bust or
Bush him self a personal failure. In fact. Bush
shares much In com m on with another successful
internationalist leader, who was turned out o f
office by hta once-aupportlve public, but who
since has been accorded a high place In history. I
refer to none other than W inston Churchill.

When I realised what I was doing, I had to
laugh. "H yprocriles 'R ' Ua." I told m y friend
over the phone.
The moment I'd heard the newa that the
Clintons were sending daughter Chelsea to a
private school after all B ill's talk o f Im proving
public education. I nearly broke m y dialing
finger punching thto friend's number. Seems
he'd heard the news on CNN a few minutes
earlier and waa already halfway to a full head
o f steam by the lim e ----------------------------I called. "Y eah, that's
how it hit me. too."
^

T h e P O N Y L e a g u e b oasts o f h a vin g 331
ch ild ren associated w ith L a k e M ary on Ua
m ater. T h e leagu e h as a lre a d y b een a c tiv e ly
p la yin g a t th e F iv e P oin ts fa c ility . Just fou r
m iles a w a y. It f t a la rg e leagu e, and has
lon g-estab lish ed p la y in g arran gem en ts a t th a t
loca tion .

V.■* ,J“»; ;■ ; f *

Actually. Bush's acuity In the foreign arena
m ay have proved hta undoing on the dom estic
fro n t Following the triumphant Persian O ulf
War, the Am erican people gave their leader the
highest approval ratings o f any president In
history. But when Bush failed to bring the same
deft leadership to dom estic m atters moat Impor­
ta n t the econom y that he so clearly dem on­
strated abroad, hia public turned on him.
In fairness to Bush It must be noted by
historians that he presided over a bitterly divided
govern m en t, u n lik e such predecessors as
Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, who
faced only token opposition to their sweeping
dom estic programs. Bush was able to exercise a
relatively free hand only In foreign aflklrs, and It
to not coincidental that It was In that area where
he waa most successful. Had he a Republican
Congress far four years, there to ho telling what
he m ight have accom plished at home.

care programs
PHOEBE
CARPENTER

The city should stick to its original goals
and give its own people first choice. It should
Insist Seminole Pony League form a Lake
Mary league with L ate Mary Teams consist­
ing o f L ate Mary youngsters.
The complex was built In and for f -»v»*

| B &gt; ii
|

LETTER8 TO EDITOR
Lettara to the editor are welcom e. AU tetters
■nut be signed. Include the address of: the
w riter and a daytim e telephone number.
Letters should be on a single sutgect and be
aa b rief aa possible. The k tte n are aidgeet to

through high school,
and. th e w o m a n
w ho's alw ays com ­
p arin g h er publicschool education to
hto and wondering If
s h e s h o u ld - h a v e
taken her dad's offer
In fifth grade to send

"Listen to u s." ! raid. "W asn 't It Just tost
week you w ere quoting some famous old dead
coot you’d studied In 11th grade whom I
hadn't bad In four y e a n o f college?"
- He started to laugh. "Yeah, by God. those
priests were hard, but 1 sure did learn
aom ethlng."
Our situations w eren't much like BUI and
H illary's — m y friend's parents were bluecollar Catholics determined their kids should
have the beat education possible. Church
policy and hard work allowed them to do It.
When he grew up, m y friend chose public
school for hto children because he liked the
school system tn hto city, and then he became
the moat devoted m ember o f the PTA.
I was the daughter o f parents who had
desperately wanted college educations, but
the Depression conspired against them. My
father even had to leave hto small Kansas
town and go to work In a larger city to get
through public high school. The preciousness
o f a good education waa. no doubt, why he
considered sending me to the beat school he
could aflfard.
My friend and I have had many conversa­
tions about education over the years, and had
never seen a conflict between a parent
championing our "fre e public education" and
sending a child to whatever school he or she
finds appropriate. Yet neither o f ua support
President Bush's education vouchers. W e
don't think a private-school education to
som ething other taxpayers should subsidise,
any m ote than taxpayers should help a
parent send a child to an expensive, out-ofstate school Instead o f the state U. a few m iles
away.
So why the visceral reactions when we
heard the Clintons' decision? W e weren't
sure. Perhaps it waa Clinton's "m an o f the
p eop le" stump demeanor, or the speeches
that made Voters believe thto president cates
enough about troubled public schools to truly
above the pendulum In the other direction.
T o hear that he had chosen a private school
for hto own daughter stung a little.
In the em otional sting o f the moment. I
forgot the English teacher in m y city who
borne-schooled her own children until they
reached high school. She taught In a public
school before they were born, she a back at U
again, and ahe's good. Her kids are wonders
to behold, t forgot the legion o f parents who
are glad our country offers free public
education , yet still send their children to
private schools. It’s a decision they make
because they believe U to the best they can do
for their children. Many o f them teach In

�Sanford HdraM, Sanford, Florid* - Tuesday, January IS, IMS - SA

Tech . Co cut jobs
fourth quarter o f l 991.
F o r th e y e a r , U n i t e d
Technologies reported a net loas
HARTFORD, Conn. — United of 9987 m illion, or 93.67 per
Tech nologies C oqi. today re* share, an im provem ent over the
ported a I D S m illion fourth* loos of 91.03 billion, or 910,33
quarter loos and said It w ffl per share, reported In 1991
elim inate m ore than 10,000 jobs when th e com pany took re­
at Its Pratt ft W hitney sub* structuring and environm ental
charges o f l 1.83 trillion.
T h e com p a n y blam ed th e
In a letter to Pratt f t W hitney
e m p lo y e e s , th e Jet e n g in e * fourth-quarter loas In large port
m a k e r s p re s id e n t, K a rl J . on the continued slump o f its
Krapek. said the dhrteton loot p o w e r s y s te m s s eg m en t —
about 1000 m illion in 1909 and which Includes Pratt ft W hitney.
R o b ert P . D a n lell. U n ited
would have to speed up Its
p r e v io u s ly a n n o u n c e d re * T ec h n o lo g ie s' chairm an and
chief executive officer, said there
H e aatd
ft W hitney now waA sUB " unprecedented turmoil
p lu n
_____ i its overall star* and financial looses in the com*
fin e from 40.664 workers at the m erctal airline In du stry" but
end o f 1999 to no m a n than Pratt's efforts to becom e mare
30,000 b y the end o f 1994. O f com petitive m u e nun connaent
the m o n than 10,000Jobe being that the com pany w ill do w ell In
cut, he said 6.700 would be In the Atture.
Besides the layoffs st Pratt ft
Connecticut and 1,000 in Plor*
W hitney. UTC said its Hamilton
'T h is action la being taken In Standard subsidiary w ill cut 700
response to the deepening re­ lobs over the next tw o years.
cession In dm aviation Industry H a m ilto n S ta n d a rd , w h ic h
suits and other
and stron g com p etitive p re­
equipm ent, has cut
ssu res," K rapek said In the
letter. “ Our goal Is to make 4.000Jobe since 1990
P « ih « h said t*u| UTC elim i­
nated
10,936 jobs In all o f It*
The fourth-quarter teas posted
dtvlstona since announcing the
by U n ite d T e c h n o lo g ie s
fra nslatr i to a per-share loss o f restructuring last January.
Pratt ft W hitney spokesman
93.77 and was actually down
from a loas o f 91.38 trillion, or Mark Sutttvan said about 60
percent o f the Jobs being cut
910.33 per ahare, during the
Associated Prase Writer_________

IBM
hunt

jt q u a n e riy dividend,

Arrest

new chief executive

Facility last
night. His m other was with him
at the tim e o f the arrest." he
said, "an d w e are now w alling
for what w e hope w ill be further
arrests In the near future."
R otundo said It has been
determ ined, baaed on evidence
gathered by Investigator Arthur
Barnes, that robbery was the
m otive for the South Park A ve­
nue m urder, although police
origin ally ruled out robbery.
When Marsh's body was found,
h is id en tifica tio n cards and
money were with him.
Acting C h ief Russell said there
*s evidence o f a struggle at the
, Just north o f n t h S treet
Police theorise the shotgun in
the youth’s hands w ent o ff,
m ortally wounding Marsh. The
robbers were frightened and ran
o ff without taking any o f M arsh'*

NEW YORK — IBM announced
today It w ill cut Its dividend
sharply and begin a search to
replace chairman John F. Akers
In a sign o f the deep troubles at
the w orld's leading computer
maker.
The decision by IBM 's board o f
directors to replace Akers com es
against a backdrop o f a U.8.
corporate record 95 billion In
losses In 1699 and a continued
failure to rebound deapue a
series o f deep restructuring*.
In a bid to save buttons o f
dollars. IBM said It would cut Its
quarterly dividend b y m ore than
half, to M cants Cram 91.31. The
cut was w idely cvpspUd.
it ib t
after

RH

rem ain ahead for IBM, w e are
confident that w e are on the
right path ," Akers said. “ W e are
resolved to do w hatever Is re­

Florida, Hawaii record
growth rates below
national inflation rate
which m arked the point na­
tionally when the production o f
g o o d s an d s e rv ic e s b y th e
econ om y ex c e ed ed th e p re ­

W ASHINGTON - Midwestern
states, relatively untouched b y
the com m ercial real a itM e bust,
show the etrongm t grow th to
personal incom e
the de­ . el rate of
pth* o f the receesiqn, the gov*
[«©

March 10 to —
a* of
Feb. 10.
I n t e r n a t i o n a l B u a ln a a a
M ach in es C orp . aald A k e rs
would remain as chairman and
ch ief executive w hile a
begins Its work, look­
in g at both IBM em ployees and
candidates from outside the
»y

qu ired to Improve the com ••
pony's financial perfn
The search should take three
months, tbs com pany said.

Meanwhile,, states h it b y last
year's h u rricanes," by defense
spending cutbacks and by real
ffm t f
HnmtMhi ihn
list tit areas w ith alow Incom e
growth, the Com m cro« Departm entaaid.
Nationally, i
annuel rate o f 4.4
the first quarter o f 1991 — the
eooalled trough o f the raecroton
— to the third quarter tit 1993.

set at an annupercent during the

SEKFbt&amp; s

T h ey w ere follow ed b y Con­
n e c t ic u t , 9 .9 p e r c e n t !
M assachusetts. 3 .4 p ercen t;
t!
941 percent!

Ruth Antoine. 64, o f 4995
Thom as Stable Road, Sanford,
died Monday, Jan. 25. at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. San­
ford. Born N ov, 1.1906. In W ebb
City. Mo., she m oved to Central
Florida In 1961. She was a
homemaker and a member o f
Christ United Methodist Church.
Sanford. Mrs. Antoine was a
member of. the Loyal Order o f
the Easter Star and a volunteer
for Retired Seniors Volunteer
Program. Sanford.
Survivors include daughters,
Carol Jeanne Driscoll. Vicki Lee
Young, both o f Sanford, Nancy
Kay Massey, Chuluota; eight
grandchildren and 10 great­
grandchildren.
Beacon Cremation Service o f
C en tral Florida, O rlando, in
charge o f arrange m enu.
Robert W. Brown. 48, o f 363
O range T erra ce Dr.. W in ter
Park, died Saturday, Jan. 33. at
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Bom
May 8, 1944. In Miami, he
m oved to Central Florida in
'1976. He was a bartender and an
A ir Force veteran.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e father,
Melvin M-. Chuluota; brother.
Kenneth M-. Chuluota: slater.
YvonncS. Betfiower. Geneva.
Brtsson Funeral Home. San­
ford, in charge o f arrangements.

Hom e. Deltona, In charge o f
arrangements.
C I A K I I I

W I L L I A M

XA
o f Sanford.
L a k e M ary P u b lic W o rk s
Director Bill Tem by said this
morning. "T h e amount o f rain­
fall w e've had so far hasn't given
us any problems, at least none
that have been reported."
A spokesman at the Longwood
Public W orks department said
no reports o f any major pro­
blem * had been reported a* o f 9
a.m. this morning.
Through this morning, one o f
the largest downpours was re­
ported In Jupiter, north o f W est
Palm Beach, where some reports
have indicated the rainfall yes­
terday totaled up to six Inches.
Sanford C ity Com m issioner
A.A. McClanahan was In W est
Palm Beach early yesterday, but
had to drive back to Sanford for
last night's C ity Commission
m eeting. " I don't think I've ever
driven through such continuous
rain." he commented.
"W h e n I drove throu gh
Jupiter, he added, "one street
was so badly flooded from the
rain that I saw ■ couple o f young
men driving Jet skis down the
street.".

help reduce Juvenile crim e, by
an Improved suitable home life,
and through programs such os
th e S h e r i f f s departm ent la
working on Including the Police
A th le tic Leagu e, w o rk in g
through school resource officers
and com m unity oriented polic­
in g ."

Access

r e Trial
ui»L ; u p " or rob

grandchildren.
B a ldw ln -F alrch lld - F u n era l
Home, Altam onte S prin gs in
charge o f arrangements.

Charles W illiam Johnson. 64.
Canto Irene
87, o f
o f North W ellington D rive. De­
ltona. died Saturday, Jan. 83, at
Monday, Jan. 35, at Dettona
Central Florida Regional Hospi­ Healthcare Center. Bom Dec. 1.
tal. Sanford. Bom Oct. 13. 1906,
1906. In Roanoke. Vs., be m oved
In Tularoaa, N.M., he m oved to
to Dettona IS y e a n ago from
D elton a 16 yea rs
from
N ew Cootie, Pa. She waa a
Elisabeth Town, Ky.
and a m em ber o f
self em ployed fanner in Ken
United Church o f Christ. De­
l u c k y f o r 50 y e a rs an d a . lto n a , M rs. O b erltn w aa a
m ember o f Deltona Lakes Bap­ m em ber o f the Order o f Kaetern
tist Church. Deltona.
Star. Martha Shrine *14. New
S u r v iv o f s In c lu d e w ife .
Caatie. and W orthy Prestiss.
D o r o th y ; s o n , R ic h a r d
Survivors in d u d t son. Robert
Brookshire. Stuart! stepdaugh­ L. Crawley, Deltona: four grandter. Ann Martin. Savannah, Ga.,
children, nine g r e a t ­
and three grandchildren.
g ra n d c h ild re n and one
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
great-great-grandchild.
Home, Deltona, tn charge o f
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral
arrangements.
Home, Deltona. In charge o f
arrangements.

A lice M. K elly. 61. o f Golden
Days Drive. Casselberry, died
Sunday. Jsn. 34. at Florida
H ospital, A ltam on te Springe.
Bom June 8.1931, In New York,
she m oved to Central Florida in
1967. She was a homem aker
and a m em ber o f Bethel El
Adonal.
S u rvivors Include husband.
John Q . Sr.; sons, John Jr.,
Deltona. W alter. W inter Springs.
M ichael, M astic Beach. N X .
D an iel, A lt a m o n te S p rin g e.
M a th e w , F r is c e lla . D o m in ic
'D.MOQAM
Robert D. Hogan; 80, o f West FrieceUa. both o f New York;
Flnalnd D rive. Deltona, died d au gh ters. Kathleen O 'N ea l.
Monday. Jan. 35. at bis resi­ Dorothy. Mary, a ll o f Mastic
dence. Barn Jan. 39, 1913. In Beach. Agnes Nelson. W inter
PrekskiU. N.Y.. he moved to Spring*. Ida Motto. New York.
Deltona seven years ago from Loretta Anoli, HtckavtUe. N.Y.,
Dort Roberto. ManorvtUe, N.Y.i
O rla nd o. H e was a re tire d
salesman for a hardware store sisters. Marie W awrxynskL Mer­
and a m ember o f the Sanford rick. N.Y.. Kathryn K niithoff.
Church o f Qad. Mr. Hogan was a W eal Palm Beach. D ottle W ells.
E ast M eadow . N .Y .. M argie
W orld W ar II Arm y veteran.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e s i s t e r . , Frtscello. Ronkonkom a. N X .
Lillian Risk; stepson. Ronald Terry Swanwick. Royal Palm
A c re e . A p op k a ; tw o grand* Beach, Loretta Brexinski. Shirley
NicoU. both o f Brooklyn. N X .
children.
Stephen R. Baldauff Funeral Joan Bcgar. Fart Lauderdale; 33

Rain

1A
manner than ever before."
M ayor Bettye Sm ith expressed
"H oldin g open house m eetings
concern about how to prevent in neighborhoods provides an
th e m e e t i n g s f r o m b e i n g o p p o r tu n ity fo r c l t l i e n s to
adversarial.
overcom e a natural reluctance to
"W e should emphasise that travel to city hall and attend a
they aren't gripe sessions," sold form al m eetin g." he added.
C ity M anager BUI Sim m ons.
Prior to each meeUng, Marder
“ T h e focus should be on things suggested forms be circulated to
o f general Interest rather than enable person* alten
the
personal situations."
neighborhood m eetings to
W e should also stress that we up specific items, andnave them
be there to . listen. 7 ;Me- directed to the department head
•aid. “ but that we |h§* n »«y be able to prov.ldftlpp
set pdttdies by ourselves- I t &gt;.bestresponse.
action by the entire com*
T h e m em bers o f the com ­
mi to do th at."
■**■th e i
mission gave a unanimous con­
bfoat in bis chest. Marsh
In m akin g h is suggestion . census vo te to ap prove the
token to Central Florida Re­ Marder observed. “ Many local project (luring the city com ­
gional
bm eras already governm ents are recognising the mission workshop m eeting last
dead.
n eed to com m u n icate with, night. The date o f the first
Steve Harriett, who was S an -. listen to and respond to cittsen m eeting and location remain to
ford Police C h ief at the tim e o f n eed s in a m ore p ro a c tiv e be determined.

Cohen. Bellam y1 ioakiednis friend
to com e alon g but Johnson

Rtmi Amours

the shooting said this morning,
"T h is points to the fact that we
need to be seriously concerned
with Increasing Juvenile crim e."
H a r r i e t t , n o w s e c o n d In
c o m m a n d a t th e S e m in o le
C ou n ty S h e r iffs departm ent
commented. “ I believe there are
many ways In which we can

would be salaried, white-collar
positions. He called it “ bitterly
u n fo rtu n a te,"

E lis a b e th S h a ro n . 77, o f
Robinson Road. New Smyrna
Beach, died Saturday, Jan. 33,
at Regency Gardens Nueslng
Home. Port Orange. Bom tn
Pavo, Ga.. she m oved to New
Sm yrna Beach in 1976 from
Sanford. She retired aa a teacher
tn the Sem inole County school
system after 30 years, where she
Mrs. Sharon waa a mem ber o f
First Presbyterian Church. New
Sm yrna Beach, and a form er
Sunday ttch w l &gt;, * f *&gt;* r at First
Presbyterian Church. Sanford.
She waa also a m em ber o f the
S em in ole M em orial H osp ital
Auxiliary. Alpha Delta Kappa'
Sorority. Sanford, and a volun­
teer for B ran n on M em o ria l
Library. New Sm yrna Beach.
Survivors Include son. Chan­
d ler H olm es J r.. A ir Force,
Q a rm a n y; d a u g h ter. M ary
Audrey Robert. Sanford, and
Settle-W ilder Funeral Home.
New Smyrna Beach, in charge o f
arrangements.

saw Bellam y the next day and
Bellamy said that "som ething
hod - u p " and that “ W ally
(Cohen) waa gon e."
A t that tim e he also saw a gun
In B ellam y's panto. Johnson
Under questioning from De­
fense Attorney Jam es Flggatt,
Johnson testified he had neen
drinking during the night In
question and was slightly intox­
icated when he m et Bellam y and
Cohen.
During his opening argument.
Stone said the green and white
pivotal In the
" T h a t 's

t t ilu l

The prosecution contends that
B e lla m y lik e d th e s te re o
speakers in the car and planned
to steal them from Cohen. H ow­
ever. som ething w ent w rong
during the robbery attem pt ana
Cohen waa k illed , the stale
contends.
Flggett maintained his client
w as g u i l t y o f n o th in g but
excessive drinking.
"A t best m y client was a very
Intoxicated individual but hie
had nothing to do with the death
o f laiah Cohen.' Flggatt told the
Jury.
The trial was delayed Monday
m orning when Judge Dickey
waa Inform ed that, during the
tong Friday session, one Juror
had suggested how to speed up
" s hearings.

rates sresunUar for AIDS cases.
Elam said that the condoms
that have been distributed In
New York, for example, are o f
the "anim al akin" variety, which
he aaid are contraceptives and
do nothing to prevent AIDS.
He noted that the Republican
Executive Com m ittee's resolu­
tion was drafted by three people
in i the com m ittee.
"T h ey w ere conservative and
m oderate," he aaid. "T h ere were
no special Interest groups who
presented this resolution/'
said that copies o f the
resolution hod been fa y ** to the
national Republican party, to the
state department o f education
and to Chiles.
W hile Bachs said the governor
had not yet seen the resolution,
he did note that Chiles would
take It and other public re­

The ju ror allegedly said, "W e
could Just bum him (the defen­
dant) n ow ."
Dickey questioned each Indi­
vidual ju ror about whether they
had heard the statement but all
said they hadn't. The Juror who
allegedly made the statem ent
denied IL
Flggatt requested a m istrial
but Dickey denied the motion.
However, using an "abundance
o f caution" he did dismiss the
Juror who allegedly made the
remark.
The state Is seeking the death
penalty In the case. Until the
c o u r t r o o m w a a c le a r e d b y
Dickey, the trial waa watched by
a p p r o x im a t e ly tw o d o s e n
spectators.

sponses to the panel's recom ­
mendations into consideration
when he and his staff study the
recommendations.

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tention? Looking Cor a fabulous local restaurant
that serves mouth-watering seafood dishes as w ell
aa speciality sandwiches and steaks cooked to
order? No need to look any further. The 'Buck*
s ta ts h erd
W eekends mean s l o t o f different things to s lo t
o f different people. To some, this is the tim e to kick
back and relax. Others engage In fam ily hobbles
and som e look forward to a\|oying more than a
hurtled up meal for dinner.
W ell, there’s no need to wprry about that any
longer. W hy not try our delicious seafood buffet for
that special Saturday evening. The seafood buffet
Is all-yau-can-eat for a special low price. Speaking
o f burnt*. Buck'aOiaa one o f the most delicious
food In town. Front Bar-B*Que Baby Back Riba to
macaroni and chedae, and the seafood buffet Is In
a class b y Its e lf
Tbs bu llet at Buck’s is g ^ a t because it can
satisfy the m ost hearty appetites. The buffet also
serves snow crab legs along with rice pUaf, hush
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frcshroUs a ll this for only $1 2.981 Buck's also has
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$6.09. This is no 'cham pagne* deal Just good food
and a relaxed casual atmosphere Just like home I
tf you are a regular at Buck's hut haven't been by
In * cou pic o f weeks, you may miss some "ole* faces
and see some "new* faces. Richard and Vivian
Buck, who have owned Buck's since it opened In
1074. invite you back to the same great food that
made their custom catering buamesa such a sue*
cess over these many years.
Buck's Is also open on Thursdays which they
serve Catfish, all you care-to-eat. for $6.06. Start*
tag ta February Buck's w ill be open for lunch
Tuesday thru Friday! So you don't have to watt for
the weekend to f ««p i* great acpfaod selections.
The 'Just good food* they are speaking o f in*
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For your convenience, Buck's is open for dinner
Thursday. Friday and Saturday starting at 8:009:00 p.m. We are located at 1230 8. Sanford Ave.,
Sanford. Take-out orders are available by calling
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�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, January 26. 1993 - 7*

Orlando Airport Shuttle
24 Tripe Body Ta/fram
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ByTSODiaWSYR
Associated Press Writer

322*2611

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p Premier Carpet Care, Inc.=^
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Hiring A Reputable Carpet Cleaner

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All Roads From Sanford Lead
To Orlando International
of-m ind knowing there is a fast and m i q k
easy shuttle service dally from the
Sanford areal W ell there la and this m
shuttle service is called D.O.T.S.
Daytona-Orlando Transit Service x t B P I
is commlted to offer quick and reli- v
able transportation to their cus*
tamers,
W ith eleven years o f continous
&gt;
round-trip service, Dave Cheese- „ *% &amp; &amp; &amp;
bro, president o f D.O.T.B, started X * ^ 8 ? 1
his business wtth only three vans O v ^
shuttling airline travelers to and ^
from Daytona, New Smyrna, De\ '
v
Land. Deltona, and Sanford as well 1 ^ ,
„ v
as the Orlando International Airport. W ithin only two years D.O.T.S.
,
purchased larger buses to accom- ***
modate the growing demand. Currently D.O.T.S. operates 13 round- m
trip or a total o f 34 trips daily. m
D.O.T.8. also provides transfers tor
A
Volusia and Flag fr county residents Q B e r
and tourists.
*
In addition to providing shuttle
S /
services, D.O.T.S. also tiaa ex- r /
&gt;
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panded to the travel-touring bust- e
ness.
Wtth our recent addition o f several 46 passenger touring busses.
backed up by our 36 passenger
«
busses, we have successfully coms ' ,
pleted m any one-day and multiv
day trips to exciting destinations ,
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throughout Florida.
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Our trips are designed for rest- L
dents, guest and customers o f travel OnandoAirpi
agencies, hotels, mobile home parka, condomini­
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tions. In addition, we have successfully assisted
our business community wtth their travel needs
tor com pany ventures tor their employees!
We would also like to infarro you o f another great
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ZAGREB. Croatia — No one knows Irow many
there may be.
Outwardly, they will carry no scarlet letter. Hut
a fear they may be stigmatized by lheir horrible
secret has sparked a scramble to save Innocents
from the sins of their fathers.
They are the babies of victims of rape — living
reminders of Its use as a tool of war In Bosnia.
Publicity has touched. a nerve and led lo
adoption offers from across the world. With the
first few of these children already born and many
more on the way. much is left to be decided.
But It Is clear many of their mothers never want
to lay eyes on them.
" T h i s crim e has h o rrib le Im plications,
psychological to existential." Marlin Raguz, the
social services minister of the Muslim-led Bosnian
government. “ I think we can project that a lot or
these children will be up for adoption."
Estimates of the number of women raped range
from 20,000 to 50,000, and It Is uncertain how
many became pregnant and how many might
have been able to obtain an abortion. Despite
making a special study, the European Communi­
ty says It cannot predict how many children will
be bom.
Many of the women are afraid to talk nboul
their ordeals, and still live In war zones or as
refugees In foreign countries.
One Muslim woman Interviewed In a Zagreb
hospital acknowledged her unborn child was
guilty of nothing, but added. "W h en I think of it. I
remember everything and blood comes to my
eyes."
There arc three known cases In Croatia of
babies abandoned by rape victims. Bui Dr.
Vcselko GrlzclJ. chief obstetrician al Zagreb’s
Petrova Hospital, believes ihcre will be many
more. The fighting in Bosnia began 10 months
ago.
"W e arc Just seeing the tip of the Iceberg." he
said.
There are many pockets of Muslim resistance
throughout Bosnia where decent medical care
and access to the outside world are Impossible.

y
.

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There are chilling allegations of rape camps set
up by Serb Irregulars. There also are reports of
Serb women having been raped, but most of the
blame has been placed an rebel Serb forces.
Many experts fear that women carrying these
children will not come forward. In patriarchal
Muslim society In Bosnia, there Is almost nothing
more shameful.

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There are nearly 300.000 Bosnian refugees in
Croatia, most of them Muslims who (led Serb
attacks. Some arc women who were raped.
Ivica Slmunovic. Croatia's minister of labor and
social services, says the children arc legally
Bosnlah. and their government must make the
decisions about their future.
One thing it could do in the meantime would In­
to authorize Croatia to arrange adoptions for the
duration of the war. he said. b1‘ "'1 ‘' " "
™ e p f (m a r y concert, said Raguz. the B p ^ ja n
minister who has two small children of hts Mvn.
Is to ensure all Bosnian children survive, not only
those bom fo'rape Victims.
............. "
Raguz acknowledged lhat dealing wllh the
babies of rape victims 1s a "special Issue ...
(which) can't be regulated by the existing legal
procedure. W e're talking about an unprecedented
war crime."
Nevertheless, he said laws cannot be Ignored.
That is problematic. Both Bosnian and Croatian
law require the signature of both parents for
adoption.
Many women don't even know where their
husbands are. or If they are still alive. In any case,
few want their husbands to know they wenraped. let alone pregnant.
Raguz said his ministry must give Its upproval
to foreign adoptions because priority is given to
Bosnian couples.
He suggested babies could be temporarily
placed with families wishing to adopt them and
the legal details sorted out later.
The Bosnian and Croatian governments have
set up crisis teams, but aircudy adoption offers
are flooding In.
"Almost no day goes by when people from the
whole world don't call," said Jt-lena Brajsa. head
of the Roman Catholic organization Caritas in
Zagreb. "W h at can I say. when the politicians
don’t know?
"M y hands are completely tied. I can't do
anything." said Brajsa. who for 25 years bus
taken In abandoned children, many laid at her
doorstep. "It's terrible, how long will there be
such chaos?"
Brajsa said it Is better that the children be given
immediately to adoptive parents lo give them a
good start "after nine months In the womb under
such hale."
But she raised another troubling question: wliut
lo do with women who choose to keep the babies?
She plans to open a home for them soon and two
or three women already have asked to be taken
In. she said.
Some women activists say that only hides the
problems.
Karin Landgrcn of the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees In Zagreb said that In communities
where rape Is considered worse than death,
"removing them doesn't help. It reinforces" those
attitudes.
Counselors should focus on educating the
community, she said, because "tills Is something
that will be a problem for years."

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�8A - Santord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Tuesday, January 26, 1993

Sears catalog, 50,000 jobs, history

W h a t a ils t h e m . ■ ■
T o ta l e s tim a te d n u m b e r o f o ffice v is its
In th o u s a n d s , b y re a s o n fo r visit, 1990,
p ro je c te d to 2 000; a n d p e rc e n t c h a n g e ,
1990-2000
R eason
D e p r e s s io n
B a c k p a in

1990

2000

3 ,7 8 3

4 .4 3 5

1 7 .2 %
1 1 .0 %

1 2 .4 1 3

1 3 .7 7 2

9 .7 1 6

1 0 ,6 3 0

9 4 °o

C a t a r a c ts

3 .0 8 0

3 .3 6 7

9 3%

Pap sm ear

3 .5 8 8

3 .7 1 3

3 5%

Acne

4 .4 1 1

4 .3 7 5

-0 8 %

2 7 .3 3 6

2 6 .9 9 3

•13%

4 .3 9 3

4 .2 6 4

• 3 .0 %

1 1 .0 6 8

1 0 .6 4 0

•3 9 %

A lle r g y
S k in ra s h

Source

AP Business Writer

Percent
change

H y p e r te n s io n

P r e n a ta l e x a m

B y D A V ID D I8 H N E A U

Service* Howariii Group Germantown. Ti*nn«»ss«*fl

NFA Graphc

Between 1990 and 2000. the biggest increase in oflice visits to physicians
is likely to occur among those complaining of depression and back pain

Mrs. Clinton gets an
assignment, draws flak
By M IKE FE IN S ILB E R
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - President
Clinton has come up with a
major job lor his wile — heading
a task force to draft an overhaul
of the health-care system — hut
some experts say he may he
Inviting trouble.
The president announced the
appointment Monday at the end
of an hour-long meeting with
health advisers. First lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton sat a
few feet away, hut made no
public statement.
She won't get paid as chair­
man of the Task Force on
National Health Care Reform,
hut she'll he the first president's
wife to hold such a key policy
Job.
“ 1 am certain that. In the
coming months, the American
people will learn — as the people
ol Arkansas did — Just what a
great first lady they have."
Clinton said.
Experts In the health care field
welcomed the appointment its
certain to give priority to their
issue.
"She's smart and her record
with the Children's Defense
Fund suggests she's very car­
ing." said Dr. Sidney Wolfe,
director of the Health Research
Group In Ralph Nader's Public
Citizen.
And Jayne Brady, program
manager for Health Care for
America, representing ubout 60
reform-minded health organiza­
tions, said Mrs. Clinton's suc­
cesses as her husband's adviser
on education reform In Arkansas
"Is a perfect example of what
she can do."
But Gary Bauer, who was
dom estic policy adviser in
Ronald Reagan's White House,
said Mrs. Clinton's very pro­
minence may hurt her — and
him.
"H ow does a secretary of
health and human services or a
budget director tell a president
that Ills wife's Idea is halfbaked?” he asked.
Bruce Smith, who taught
public administration at Col­
umbia University for muny
years, said It is always a mistake
to give such prominence to a
team trying to devise policy in so
difficult an area.

"You have to grind through
the options and make tough
choices and that's hard to do at a
high-political level." he said,
especially since any health re­
form plan Is likely to hurt many
people — cutting benefits and
increasing costs for sonic, rais­
in g d e d u c t ib le s , lim it in g
Medicare payments, reducing
doctors' Incomes.
Burton Pines, a conservative
analyst, said Clinton Is entitled
to appoint whomever he wants:
but. from a political point of
view, he Is taking a risk.
"The American public up to
now has never looked favorably
on first ladles who get Involved
in policy." Pines said. "The most
favored first ladles have been
Bess Truman and Barbara Bush.
They did nothing: they were not
threatening to other American
women. The others — Eleanor
Roosevelt. Jackie Kennedy.
Lady Bird Johnson. Kosalynn
Carter. Nancy Reagan — some­
how by their activity antago­
nized the public.”
The activist lirsl ladles have
been Informal advisers: none
had a lormal title or such a
specific assignment on a priority
Issue.
Bauer, now president of the
Family Research Council, a
conservative lobbying group,
said the appointment showed
Clinton was "d isin gen u ou s
during the campaign" when he
played down suggestions Ills
wife would have u prominent
role. "The truth obviously was
closer to what she said. 'Vote for
him. get me too." Bauer said.
‘
In Ills announcement. Clinton
called his wife "a first lady of
many talents" with a unique gift
for cutting through complex
issues and forging consensus.
He said the task force would
work In the Old Executive Office
Building In a crash effort to meet
Ills goal of sending Ills health
reform legislation to Capitol Hill
In his first 100 days.
Serving under Mrs. Clinton
will be Health and Human Serv­
ices Secretary Donna Shalala
and the secretaries of Treasury,
Commerce. Defense. Veterans
Affairs and Labor, as well as the
head of the Office of Manage­
ment and Budget and senior
White House aides.

Clinton faces a wary
Congress over ending
military ban of gays
Stcphanopoulos said.
Clinton "reiterated his com­
Associated Press Writer
mitment to ending discrimina­
WASHINGTON — President tion ugalnst homosexuals In the
Clinton still vows to end the ban military solely on the basis of
on homosexuals in the military, status and to m aintaining
but he faces congressional heat morale and cohesion In (he
that could prove even more military." the spokesman told
troublesome than the unani­ reporters after the meeting.
"The Joint Chiefs expressed
mous reluctance of Ills military
their concerns and difficulties
chiefs.
Clinton was to discuss the with the president's commit­
Issue today with congressional ment but also expressed their
respect for his decision-making
leaders of both parties.
On Monday, several Influential power as roinmander in chief,"
senators, Including Senate Stephanopoulos said.
Upon returning to his Pen­
Armed Services C om m ittee
Chairman Sam Nunn. D-Ga., tagon office after the While
criticized Clinton's plan. Nunn House meeting. Powell, who Is
said he will conduct heurlugs on Clinton's top military adviser,
declined to comment directly.
the Issue In March.
Senate Republican Leader Bob Through his spokesman. Col.
Dole of Kansas said there was William Smullcn. Powell de­
strong bipartisan support for the scribed the session as "very
ban and expressed doubt that productive."
The spokesman said none of
Clinton could overcome It now
the Individual service chiefs
or In the future.
The chiefs of the four main would comment publicly on the
meeting.
m ilitary services and Joint
Military officials have raised
Chiefs Chairman Gen. Colin
Powell told the president in a concerns aliout housing. s|&gt;ousal
nearly two-hour meeting at the benefits, discipline and requests
White House on Monday that for same-sex marriages. They
they opposed ending the ban. also have warned of the |&gt;otcntlal
of violence against homosexuals
but would respect Ills decision.
George Stcphanopoulos. the In the military.
Clinton thus Is presented with
White House communications
director, said Clinton told the the delicate challenge of fulfilling
chiefs he would lake steps a major campaign pledge while
within a week to end the preventing a backlash from
Congress and the Defense- De­
50-year-old prohibition.
"It's the president's declsloji." partment.

By ROBERTBURNS

CHICAGO — It look an outsid­
er to do what many believe had
to he done at Sears. Roebuck
and Co. — kill the Sears catalog.
For generations, the Scars
"hlg book" had a place next to
the Blhle In many American
homes. Hut its all-lhlngs-loallpeople approach has become a
money-loser. Scars has decided
the spring catalog will be the last
In 5)7 years.
In a drive to halt a decade-long
decline In Its retail business.
Sears also announced Monday
that it will eliminate about
50,(XX) Jolts by early 1994 and
close I HI stores. Some 2.&lt;XX)
catalog stores also will close.
Arthur C. Martinez, a former
Saks Fifth Avenue executive
hired hy Sears In August to
revitalize Its retailing unit, made
the tough choice to gel rid of the
catalog.
"I don't think that decision
could have been made by a
Sears person." said analyst
P h ilip Ahhenhaus o f A.G.
Edwards In St. Louis.
Although It had annual reve­
nue ol $3.3 billion. Sears' U.S.
catalog business had after tax
losses of more than S I55 million
ill each of the past three years.
Martinez said.

"A lot of older people like the
catalog rather than go fight the
crowds, sure." said Kenneth
Nelbarger. 72. who was shop­
ping at a soon-to-elose catalog
store in Tuscola. III. "But It's
going to be a thing of the past.
W e 'v e got to change with
change. I guess."
Many retail analysts have long
advocated shedding the catalog
business, but Sears Chairman
Edward Brennan resisted when
he doubled as chief of the
merchandise group from 19fX) to
1992.
"Brennan felt he had to bring
someone In from the outside to
effect such changes." said ana­
lyst Thomas Tashjian of First
Manhattan Co. in New York.
"Martinez historically has been
successful at such moves and Is
a smart man who probably
wouldn't have accepted the Job
without the ability to walk In
with a hatchet."
Sears said It would cut 16.(XX)
full-time Jobs and 34,000 part­
time Jobs within the merchan­
dise group, which runs the
eompany's H59 American stores.
Its catalog business and Scars'
credit operations. The unit
em ploys nearly 350.000 of
Sears' 435.(XX) workers.
The nation's thlrd-largest re­
tailer said the cuts would save It

Wal-Mart Stores and Kmart ran Nos. 1 and 2 lor the most sales by U.S. re­
tailers in 1991 — each sold about $32 billion worth ol merchandise Ol the
top 10 retailers, Macy's was the only one without net income Ior the year.

an estimated $300 million a
year.
The first edition of the catalog
came out In IHH6 but featured
only Jewelry and watches. The
first g en e ra l mer c handi s e
catalog came 10 years later.
For much of Its early history.
Hit* catalog had a clear mission
to deliver merchandise to mil­
lions of mainly rural Americans
living far away from stores. Its
role lessened as retailers started

s pr i ngi ng up all over the
country.
"T h e strategy of being all
things to all people has become
obsolete." said Denise KeaneGillette, vice president of mar­
keting ut Hammacher Schlcmliter Pi Co. of Chicago, which
sells electronic toys and other
gadgets by eahdog.
The elimination ol the Sears
catalog will lead to the closing of
most Sears catnlog stores.

�IN

B R IE F
yc i? &gt;'• *r—«

Pee-Wee’s registering
SANFORD The Sanford Rccrcallon Dcpartment Is registering players for Us Pec-Wee
Baseball League al the Downtown Youth Center,
located In the lower level of City Hall.
The Pee-Wee League Is for children who will
be 7 or not turn 10 before Aug. 1. 1993.
The registration fee Is $10 per player. There Is
also a once a year $10 non-residence fee for
(hose players who do hot live In Sanford. A
family non-residence fee of $15 that covers all
family members Is also available.
Returning players need to register but do not
need to try out.
&lt;
Players may also register the day of tryouts.
Tryouts will be held on Sal.. Feb. 13. at the
Fort Mellon Soft ball Field starting at 9 a.m.
For additional Information, contact the San­
ford Recreation Department al 330-5697.

Declaration no joke
Coach glad he listened to preseason boast
Herald 8ports Editor
LONGW OOD — Even though he’s the coach
and she's a sophomore, when Danya Harris
spoke. Lyman High School girls’ soccer coach
Qary Barnett listened.
"A t the beginning of the season, she declared
herself the backup goalkeeper (to starter Cheryl
Roberts)." recalled Barnett. "She came up to me
and said, ‘I'm your back-up goalie. Coach.'
"W h o was I to disagree?"
Had any other girls’ soccer coaches In the area
or around the state heard the exchange, they
would have thought the whole thing a put-on or
that Barnett was crazy. After all. Harris Is one of
the most dangerous offensive players on the
two-time defending Class 4A state champions.

But when Roberts was lost, possibly for the
season, to mononucleosis. It was no Joke. Barnett
tu rn ed to H a rris, w h o b a c k s to p p e d the
Greyhounds to wins over Lake Mary and Lake
Brantley — perhaps the two next best Class 4A
teams In Central Florida — In her first two starts
In goal.
Not bad for someone who's never really played
the position before.
"I've played goal for a few minutes In other
games when wc have a big lead," said Harris,
who Is second among the Greyhounds In scoring
with 12 goals and nine assists. "In practice. I'll
stand In goal and take some shots, but that's It."
You wouldn't have known It by the way she
handled Lake Brantley. After giving up three
goals In her goalkeeping debut against Lake
Mary. Harris w as nothing short of brilliant In a

2-1 win over the Patriots at Lake Brantley that
clinched the Seminole Athletic Conference
championship for Lyman.
"I thought that taking her off the field would be
In our favor, but she gave a tremendous effort,"
said Lake Brantley coach John Schaefer 'of
Harris. "1 can't ask my team for much more than
they gave tonight."
What had Schaefer and Barnett both shaking
their heads was a sequence during the second
half when the Patriots mounted a relentless
onslaught, only to be frustrated by Harris.
Despite her diminutive size. Harris punched
away two shots headed for the upper left comer
and made a kick save of another shot.
According to Harris, she mentally prepares
herself to defend the goal the same wav she

,■

□Bss Harris, Page 2B

Little Major's can register
SANFORD — The- Sanford Recreation De­
partment Is registering players for Its Little
Major Baseball League at the Downtown Youth
Center, located In the lower level of City Hall.
The Little Majors Is for children who will be 10
or not turn 13 before Aug. 1.1993.
The registration fee Is $10 per player. There Is
also a once a year $10 non-residence fee for
those players who do not live in Sanford. A
family non-residence fee of $15 that covers all
family members for the year Is also available.
Returning players need to register but do not
need to try out.
Players may also register the day of tryouts.
Tryouts will be conducted Feb. 13 at Fort
Mellon’s Roy Holler Field starting at 9 a.m.
For additional Information, call 330-5697.

Babe Ruth registration
SANFORD The Sanford Recreation De­
partment Is now registering players for Its Babe
Ruth Baseball League at the Downtown Youth
Center, located In the lower level of City Hall.
The league is for boys who will be 13 or not
turn 16 before Aug. 1. 1993.
The registration fee Is $10 per player. There Is
also a once a year $10 non-residence fee for
those players who do not live In Sanford. A
family non-residence fee of $45 that covers all
family members is also available.
Returning players need to register but do not
need to try out.
Players may also register the day of tryouts, y
On Sat.. Feb. 20. Babe Ruth hopefuls will try
out at Sanford Memorial Stadium at 9 a.m.
For additional Information, call 330-5697.

Girls softball registrations
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment Is registering players for Its Olrls’
Softball League at the Downtown Youth Center,
located In the lower level of City Hall.
Olrls who will be 9 or not turn 13 before June
1. 1993. can register to play In the Junior Olrls'
Slowpitch Softball League while the Senior
Olrls' League la for girls who will be 13 or not
turn 17 before June 1,1993.
The registration fee Is $10 per player. There Is
also a once a year $10 non-residence fee for
those players who do not live In Sanford. A
family non-residence fee of $15 that covers all
family members Is also available.
Both leagues will conduct tryouts on Satur­
day. Feb. 13. at the Fort Mellon Park Softball
Field. The Junior Olrls will try out at 11 a.m.
with the Senior Olrls' tryouts at noon.
Returning players need to register but do not
need to attend tryouts. Olrls moving up from the
Junior's must attend the Senior League tryouts.
Players may also register the day of tryouts.
For additional Information, call 330-5697*

Boys’ Bsskstbsll
□Daytona Roach-Mainland al Ismlnoto. Junior
varsity at 0:16 p.m. with varsity to follow.

Girls' Bsskstbsll
□llaka Hawaii al Ovtedo. Junior varsity at 6 p.m.
with varsity to follow.
□Lyman at Laka Brantley. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□Samlnola at Laka Mary. Junior varsity at 0 p.m.
with varsity to follow.

Girls’ Soccsr
□Laka Mary at Laka Brantley. Junior varsity at 6
p.m. with varsity to follow.
□Oviedo at Lyman. Junior varsity at 5 p.m. with
varsity to follow.
□Semlnple al Laka Howell. Junior varsity at 5
p.m. with varsity to follow.

Wrsstling •
□Samlnola at Deltona. Junior varsity at 0:30 p.m.
with varsity to fdllow.

B A S K E TB A L L
□ 7 :3 0 p.m. — SUN. TBS. NBA. Atlanta Hawks
at Orlando Magic. (L)

8am Raines (No. 28, Isft) and Mike Merthle (No. 4. right) helped the Tim
Raines Connection overcome the elements and Cafe Sorrento 10-2 In

8anford Recreation Department Man’s 8uper C
8oftball League action at Chase Park Monday night.

Polar Bear Slowpitch

Even wind, rain can’t stop Raines
SANFORD — Running roughshod
again.
Nothing seems to be able to slow
the rebuilt T.R.C. (Tim Raines
Connection) In the Sanford Recre­
ation Department Men's Super C
P o la r B e a r S lo w p itc h S o ftb all
League.
Not rain, not wind and certainly
not its ooDoeltion.
For tn e th lrd straight time this
season T.R.C. (which has reformed

after taking off last year) cruised to
an easy victory, trouncing Cafe
Sorrento 10-2 at rain-swept Chase
Park Monday night.
The game was the only one of the
three scheduled games that was
actually played. The first game was
declared a double forfeit after nei­
ther M udfish or Ken R um m el
Chevrolet had enought players
show up for the game. The other
game ended up a 7-0 forfeit win for
Coaches Locker Room when Sunchase Homes did not field a team.

Moorefield, defense
paces Patriots win
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS - Lysa
Moorefield scored a game-high 17
points Monday night to lead the
Lake Brantley Patriots to a 63-38
w in over the v isitin g Deltona
Wolves In a 4A-Dlstrict 9 girls'
basketball game.
Deltona earned a split of the
evening's activities, winning the
Junior varsity contest 45-40.
Moorefield also had eight re­
bounds and four blocked shots to
anchor the Patriot defense, which
limited Deltona to eight first-quarter
points and four In the third quarter.
"W e played pretty tough defense
and that really sparked our of­
fense." said Lake Brantley coach
Karen Ssewczyk.
Lelghann Penney added 14 points
and nine assists for the Patriots.
Jenn V ander W eide scored 10
points on 4-for-5 shooting from the
floor and a 2-for-2 effort from the
free throw line. Vander Welder also

T.R.C. Is now 3-0 on the season,
w h ile M u d fis h . K en R u m m e l
Chevrolet and C oaches Locker
Room are all 1-1. Cafe Sorrento 0-2
and Sunchaac Homes 0-3.
Next week. Coaches Locker Room
and Mudfish play at 6:30 p.m., Cafe
Sorrento takes on Sunchaac Homes
at 7:30 p.m. and Ken Rummel
Chevrolet challenges T.R.C. at 8:30
p.m.
The T.R.C. defense set the tone
for the game In the top of the first
Inning as after Cafe Sorrento's Craig

By DBAM SMITH

10.

SANFORD — And then there
was one.
In the high school basketball
polls released In Tallahassee on
Monday only Lake Howell's girls'
team was receiving votes.
But even with a 20-3 record
and two victories over Seminole
and one victory each over Lake
Mary. Lyman and Lake Brantley
In the tough Seminole Athletic
Conference, the Silver Hawks are
still getting Just five votes, the
same number that they have
gotten the last three weeks, and
would be ranked Just 13th In the
4A poll. If It went that high.
The only area boys' learn that
received votes was Class &gt;4ADistrict 9 competitor Daytona
Beach-Mainland, which got two
votes. The Buccaneers wUl be at
Sanford's Bill Fleming Memorial

LAKB S S A N T L IV 41. D IL TO N A M
D IL TO N A M l
Owon 4 11 14, Bunt In* JO-4 4. Grtqory 1 0-1 1,
Mscsn 0 04 0. Ahtto * 04 10. T*to*nhor*t 4 0 4 1,
Lord 004 0. Carte 0 040. Brand 0 040. Tot«l»: 10
1430
LAKS B A A M TL IV t il l
Portnoy 147 14. Mooroflald 4 S t 17. Lldka 1041.
Chontak 0 00 0. Treats 04 0. Rodgort 1 00 4.
Campbell 4 041. Gardner 1014. Vendor Welder 4
1-1 10. PHt« 0040. Miller 0 04 0. DiSolvatera 0 04
0. Tetalt: 1411-1043.
P i Mo m
o 14 4 i i - M
LeSa Broader
IS It 14 1 4 - 4 1
Three point Held goal! — None. Total toul! —
Ooflone 14. Lake Brantley 11 Fouled out - None.
Technical! - None. Record* - Lake Brantley

□Bss T .R .C ., Pags 2B
CMkrrMS
Tim Raloo* Coaoocttoo

Lake Howell girls get
votes in 4A state poll

had four rebounds.
For Deltona. Karen Owen scored
14 points and Vickie Abato netted
Now 10-6, the Patriots will play
again tonight, hosting the Lyman
Greyhounds In a Seminole Athletic
Conference contest scheduled to tip
ofT at 7:30 p.m. The Junior varsity
contest Is scheduled to start at 6
p.m.

Split and John Dunn both singled to
open the gam e. T.R.C. pitcher
Tommy Gracey Induced a short to
second to first to third triple play to
squelsh the threat.
After the big play. Cafe Sorrento
only had one runner get as far as
second base until the sixth Inning.
With Cafe Sorrento still In shock.

Herald 8ports Writsr

Gymnasium tonight to take on
Improving Seminole starting at
7:30 p.m. and will also make an
appearance at defending district
champ Oviedo on Wednesday.

TA L L A H A S S It - Mora I* tka Mat* M«k
KSool hoikotboll pMI I
M a* voted ky th
.
Auociottea. Toom noma* ora tettewod rocord!, first-ptac* vote* ta poroatkoM* aad I
SO Yt
00*4 4A
1. Jo*. Batch Flatctwr (111
it t
1. Miami High
It!
1. FWS Choclawtialchoo
Ill
4. Orlando Boon#
111
Itl
I. Laud. Laka* Boyd And*rtan
* Fort Laudtrdala Dillard
It 1
7. Miami North wetltrn
14-4
144
4. St. PMortburg Boca Cl*ga
t. Galnotvlllo Buchholi
t»l
10. Jockionvlllo Tarry Parkor
171
Alta racatvad vote*! Strata!* Rlvarviow 7,
South Miami t. Cioerwoter 4. Doyteno Botch
Mototead 1. Melbourne Palm Bay 1.

CtOMlA

I. GalnotvllloEaMMdt (tl

□Bss Polls, Psgs 2B

F O R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN Y O U R A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A I L Y

111 134

�STATS &amp; STANDINGS

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�Sanford Haraid, Sanford, Florida - Tutsday, January 26, 1993 - 3D

IN

From Sun to Sun’

BRIEF

Fras Piss WwM d re w set

'

SANFORD — The world-famous Liebei Fam ily Ctrcua win
begin tw o w eeksndsofsliow s beginning on Friday, Jan. 89.
t h e circus win be far the benefit o f the Humane Society o f
Sem inole County.
Last year the ctrcua brought acrobats, exotic animal acts and
the w orld's amalleat perform ing couple to Flea W orld. T h ey
return this year with an expanded show.
The circus w ill perform Jan. 2 9 ,9 0 and 31 and Feb. S, Oand
7. W ith shows at 11 a jn ., 2 p m .. 8p.m . and S p m . each day.

Play to highlight Zora Neale Hurston annual festival
Zora Neale Hurston's "F rom
Sun to S u n ," tiie Hurston play o f
a day In a railroad cam p In the
early 1830a. Is a story o f folk
tales and work sonar she heard
as sh e w o rk ed as an a n ­
thropologist around her native

There w ill also be children's exhibits at the A pril 17 and IS.
rrldng and admission are free.
Festival applications are available at the Maitland Cham ber

Lsfcs Mary OpHmtott mast wsskly

,“ JIJJ

Zllxabeth Van Dyke, Aurelia Mytas, Tsmaka

show
s has
Mon's
deep
writer

Tgjtrl Arts International; Alton
Lathrop, choreographer, who
has recently returned to his
h o m eto w n o f S a n ford a fte r
working in New York C ity the-

M oee and Alton Lauthrop.

noted dancer.
Sanford's m any talents can be
seen throughout the Jan. 28-3!
celebrations o f the Fourth Annual Zora Neale Hurston Festival

The Optim ist Club of Lake Mary m eets every Tim
p m., at 108 K. Crystal Lake Ave. (corner o f C ryi
Country Chib Road) .V isitors are welcome.

Tafct off pounds — m lbfy

Festival o f
Use and the
n erve th e

B alada L le w e lly n , p oet and
story-teller; T g M A rts Internatlo n a l ch ild a cto rs Jasm in e

Thursday. Jan. 38, ant
Jan. 38. Dr. Pearl Prkr
dancer, w ill be. the

ternational, Ashley Bryan. Saturday, Jan. SO. Master Class
workshops: Or. Pearl Primus, Dr.
Richard Long. « * H n g address
and matinee o f "F rom Sun to
A special session for children
and young adults; W alter Ince,
sto ry tellin g ; A k b ar Im h otep,
puppetry ; Margo Blake, dance.
S tre e t F e s tiv a l o f th e A rts:
"Jum p at the Sunt" Zora Neale
H urston and h er B a to n vllle
Roots (a m ultim edia exhibit);
Juried a r t "Ancestral S pirits,"
children's corridor, center stage
perform ances, aria and crafts.

L
!

W«»ul toT* v r *
pregnant w hile I have these
iniMants?
I have a 4-year-old daughter
a n d I am n o t c o n s id e r in g
Ig h b o r ln g p ro p e rtie s
■the
wants the

■ U IH K .IA U T
U A M ILITA R Y ACADEM Y.
W est Point, N.Y, - Arm y Cadet
Brian K. Barry has been ac-/
osptod Into the Corps o f Cadets
(d ess o f *00) here.
T h e acceptance cerem onies
culminated six weeks o f cadet
training. t.c„ m ilitary customs
and courtesies, drills
cere­
monies. physical conditioning,
exercises, and weapons
to m ilitary life with emphasis on

. *1 ■

and Connie L. Barry o f 1053
_ H e ta a 1 9 « graduate o f Lake
Mary High School,
you to run t t

Roostia M. Richardson
lived for duty here.
R ic h a r d s o n , a pei

th e c ity . T h e g la r e o f m y
n e ig h b o r 's s e a r c h l i g h t s Is
p ollu tin g m y p rop erty as It
shines through m y bedroom
and drapertsa
ug*»»»

never really
ddrsased when I m et with the
Imtic surgeon.
There Is a lot o f discussion
m i uiv fTTmn os wumcn wnu
have Implants R ight now, I am
. not having any health problems,
but I am concerned about the
ftiturs. H ow should I go about
researching fh u m atter,

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KEEP PUSHING, BUT BE CAREFUL
WHEN WE GET TO THE.,
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DEAR DR. Q O TT: I was told m y Health Reports "D iverticu lar
b y ra y d o c to r th a t I h a v e D isease" and "Irritable Bowel
diverticulitis and a apaatlc colon. Syndrom e." Other readers who
Pain begina In m y low er left aide would like a copy should send
and raoveo through m y whole . $1.25 for each report plus a tong,
atomach area until It becomes s e l f - a d d r e s s e d , s t a m p e d
unbearable. I’m on CUnorl! for envelope to P.O. Box 91 309.
abdom inal cramps. la m y doctor
on the right track or do you have
other suggestions?
DEAR READER: Diverticulitis,
Infected sacs in the Intestinal
lining, can. Indeed, cause re­
peated attacks o f abdom inal pain
that can be severe. Treatm ent
Includes antibiotics or surgery
(to rem ove diverticular abscesses
that cannot be cured w ith anti­
biotics).

ny

SNOOTY' YOU VE COME TO
RESCUE M E! YOU CAN PUSH
ME A lt THE WAY HOME..

Intestinal pain
deserves follow-up

----------------------- ^

PETER
GOTT.M.D.
Cleveland, OH 44101*3309. Be
sure to m ention the title!*).

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Spastic bowel - or. as It’s now
known, irritable bowel - is a
m ore benign condition, due to
malfunction o f the colon. T yp i­
cally. It causes distension, gas.
abdom inal cramps and diarrhea
(o r constipation). It la treated
w ith antl-epaamodlca, such as
Donnatal.
Your doctor has
chosen to treat your sym ptom s
with a pain reliever. I f the
CUnorll la effective. I see no
reason w hy you shouldn't con­
tinue it. However, based on your
question. I must conclude that
you 're not entirely satisfied with
your present therapy. Therefore,
I recommend that you return to
your doctor so that he can revise
your treatment. For exam ple. If
Infection Is present, antibiotics
would be a good choice. If bowel
spasm Is the source o f your pain,
Donnatal or Llbrax m ight be
appropriate options.

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able to bring you r Intestinal
alim ents under control, request
a consultation with a gastroen­
terologist for a second opinion.

IIK IM IK K

T o give you m ore Information.
I am sending you free copies o f

(af^L%%SS8Sf

------------II------ f OFMHK.XP*
"
I
«M Y H 0 C L
a a
l mow

By Phillip Alder
Some pairs o f sayings con­
tradict each other. For exam ple.
" B i r d s o f a f e a t h e r f lo c k
togeth er" and "O pposites at­
tract." Also, "A n y publicity Is
good publicity" and "H avin g the
critics praise you Is like having
the hangman say iyou’ve got a
pretty heck." There’s a cliche for
every flavor.
\

A
IlfliMiM
■ mf wmilHf

T h e same thing applies to
certain bridge deals. You are
trying to guess the location of.
say, a queen, but the evidence Is
contradictory. Looking at It one
way. you think — or hope — that
A hast*
•the queen. Looking at It
another way. you think W est has
her. How do you reconcile the
difference? Often you don’t; you
Just guess. But usually there Is
an Indicator available,
Today's deal fits this picture
like a glove — even though
pictures rarely wear gloves.

J u .S 7 .lM t

lAKliLAiUS!SS!I
how

r B |M |

curt—

ftP fi l l I S

In the year ahead you might
ta ke on a m o re a m b itio u s
challenge than you have at­
tem pted In the past. W hat you
decide to do m ight not be easy,
yet your possibilities for being
successful are very strong.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You are suited for the leadership
role today, because you 'll sec
things for what they are. and
your realistic approach to un­
planned developm ents w ill help
those who are working with you.
Aquarius, treat yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for Aquarius'
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by m ailing $1.25
plus a long, self-ad dressed ,
stam ped e n velop e to A stroGraph. c/o this newspaper, P.O.
B ox 9 1 4 2 8 . C le v e la n d . OH
44101-3428. Be sure to state
you rtodiac sign.
&gt;WCM (Feb. 20-March 20)
This could be a profitable day for
you. If push com es to shove.
you 're likely to.be able to drive a
than your counharder bargain
'
(March 21-April 19) If
la a new Interest you're

ANNIB
By Mm

A fter you have opened with a
weak two. your partner boosts
you I nt o si x h e a r ts v ia
Blackwood. West leads the club
three: four. king. six. Back
com es the diamond 10 from
East. W hat do you make or that?
When the dummy came down,
you w ere thinking that .you
would be taking a trump finesse
through East. But If East had
queen-thud o f hearts, why didn't
he lead the club ace at trick two,
thus forcing the dummy to rufl?
A s s u m in g E ast la n 't a
beginner, there must be a reason
behind his apparent madness.
He must know that If his partner
has the heart queen, It Is dou­
bleton. He has given you a losing
option: don't fall for It. A fter
winning trick two. play out your
tw o .top hearts, confident that
W est w ill drop the queen.
Readers are Invited to send
card-play questions to Phillip
Alder, in care o f this newspaper.

T h e y can be answ ered only
through the column.

looking to pursue at this tim e,
talk to the heavy hitters today.
T h ey are likely to be In a
receptive frame o f mind.
TA U R U S (A pril 20-May 20)
When talking to people today
with whom you 're not Intim ately
acquainted. It's best to do more
listening than conversing. Let
them discover who and what
you are a bit at a time.
(May 21-June 20)
There la. Justification today for
the optimism you fe d about a
new endeavor. II may have the
potential to be all you think U Is.
However. It must be tested and
worked out.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
com petitive developm ents today,
perceive yourself as the
don't pence
underdog. In
( fact, you have a
alight edge and your adversary
w ill recognise It even If you
don't.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) When
m aking critical decisions today,
try to Took ahead and allow for
probable contingencies. Take
the long-range view Instead o f
m erely the IIm m ediate.'
V U tO O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Things m ight Mart out slow ly for
you today In your com m ercial
dealings. However, don't be

Im p a tie n t o r p e s s im is tic ,
b ecau se yo u w ill d ev elo p
' momentum as you go along.
UBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Dc
not make any im portant com
mllmcnts today w ithout first
discussing them with your mate.
He or she could be aware ol
peripheral aspects that aren't
obvious to you.
•CORFU) (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You are still In a fortunate cycle
for an ability to finalise Im por­
tant developm ents to your satis­
faction. Keep the pressure on
until things are tied down the
way you want them.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) A firm hand on the tiller w ill
be required today If you are
m anaging or directing a project
o r en terp rise. Be sure sub­
ordinates understand you mean
what you say and say what you

OBacnn

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) 'Y ou r paramount financial
concerns at this time should be
dedicated to situations that a f­
fect the w elfare o f your fam ily.
You are In a position to do
som ething constructive In this
area.
,&lt;
,
(C l 1993. NEWSPAPER E N ­
TERPRISE ASSN.
*
t* - \* v

Alfi1i
k*i t s M s a J (ia a e '
■T
w^mwT

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                    <text>January

8,

FRIDAY

1993

'

•

■•■

eacher
found
guilty
Jury: Former Sanford dance instructor molested boy
" "

□

■

rn m
m lt t r H thp»the
naan
nit n n
committed
assault

Herald Staff Writer

Washington leads romp
SANFORD —• Nlkl Washington keyed a
fourth-quarter explosion that earrled Seminole
to a 61-29 rout of Lake Brantley Thursday night.
See Page IB
□ P e o p le

Exercise myths clarified
Don't believe It when in exercise terminology,
you hear, "No pain, no gain." Barbara
Hughcs-Grcgg elaarifies several exercise mylhs
In her Consumer Focus column today.
See Page 3B.
□

. ™"

By OBOftQB DUNCAN

S p o r ts

L o le u ro

TV, weekend guide

I^t

.

SANFORD — A former Instructor at a Sanford
dance school was found guilty Thursday by a
Seminole County Jury of lewd and lascivious
assault on a child and battery.
Prosecutors claimed Manuel "Jerry" Alicea had

___

Gas price update
After our press deadline yesterday, gas prices
at some local service stations began to Inch
upward again, contradicting our story. Prices at
the 7-Elcven on U.S. Highway 17-92 and County
Road 427. which had been under SI. rose again
to 81.02 per gallon of regular unleaded gas.

Unemployed rate lowers
TALLAHASSEE — The Florida unemploy­
ment rale In December dropped to 6.8 percent.
Its lowest level in a year, state economists said
today.
The December figure Is down from the 7.B
percent rate In November and Is the lowest since
u 6.3 percent rate in January 1991.
It's ulso the first time since December 1990
Florida's unemployment rate has been lower
than that of the nation as a whole, said
economist Rebecca Rust of the state Department
of Labor and Employment Security.
The national December Jobless rate released
today was 7.3 percent.
Ms. Rust said the unemployment figure Is
another Indication that Florida Is gradually
pulling out of its recession. ■
"All of our economic Indicators are showing
Improvements." she said. "For three months In
a row. we have seen some sustained gain. The
economy has begun to recover."
The 6.8 percent rate translates Into 449,000
unemployed people who could work, down from
488.000 in November.

1 11-year-old boy ...
l .
on an
who
was In one of his classes at the School of Dance
Arts.
The Jury took approximately four-and-a half­
hours to arrive at the verdict. Judge O. H. Eaton
ordered a pre-sentence Investigation before he
sentences Alicea.
Alicea now faces similar charges in Volusia.
Pasco and Orange County, according to Assistant

Prison for youth
pastor convicted
of molesting girl
By OBOftOB DUNCAN

The week's television listing. Including a
sports calendar, plus a compilation of events
and activities In and around the Sanford and
l.nkc Mary areas.
See L eisure M agaslne

30 Cents

Herald Staff Writer

SANFORD — George W ayne
Clyatt. the youth pastor convicted
In November of molesting an Alta­
monte Springs teen-ager, was sen­
tenced to 27 y ears In prison
Thursday by Judge Alan Dickey.
The sentence was applauded by
Assistant State Attorney Stewart
Stone, who had prosecuted Clyatt.
"It was a good sentence, a proper
sentence. It was the longest Judge
Dickey could have given and should
have given." said Stone.
Clyatt deserved the 27 years, the
assistant state attorney said.
The victim was a member of
Clyatt'a congregation when the in­
cident occurred. She and another
member of a church youth group

stayed at Clyatt’a home overnight in
preparation for a candy sale the
next day. Clyatt molested her dur­
ing the night, she testified.
.
Clyatt denied the charges, saying
the woman had made the story up.
However, Stone produced a sec­
ond woman who told Jurors -that
Clyatt had molested her when she
was a member of a Holly Hills
church where Clyatt had previously
worked. She told Jurors she had not
gone to police because church
officials persuaded her not to.
Clyatt'a defense attorney had
tried to get the second woman
barred from testifying but his mo­
tion was overruled by Judge Dickey.
The first trial ended in a mistrial
but the second In November pro­
duced the guilty verdict. Jurors
were out only about four hours
before bringing in the guilty verdict.

..

. . ..

OBss Verdict, Bag* BA

No ball for murdar suspoet

Meria Coflald, tha farmworkar accused of stabbing Mr. C'a owner U
Tab Vu In 1968. was ordered held without ball by Seminole County
Circuit Judge Don Marblestone Thursday In a Jallhousa hearing.

Parade plans
disappointing
By VICKI I
Horald8taffWritor
SANFORD — The Rev. Harry Rucker said that
If the state and the Sanford Martin Luther King
Celebration sice ring committee had approached
him before all his plans were made, he would
have gladly combined his parade with the state's.
While the state will having a parade on
Saturday. Jan. 16. which starts at city hall,
snakes through downtown and ends at the
Sanford Civic Center. Rucker has organised his
traditional parade for Monday. Jan. 18.
Rucker said the parade that he Is organising,
which he has done annually for many years, will
begin In the black community and move toward
city hall before culminating in a rally at Ft.
Mellon Park.
"Civil rights marches always started in the
black community and moved towards city hall."
Rucker said.
He said that he was disappointed that the local
'.I Baa Parade. Page BA'

Hot line number announced
LAKE MARY — City Manager John Litton
announced the establishment of a hot-line
complaint number for the city of Lake Mary.
The number is 324-3058.
The hot-line was suggested by Mayor Lowry
Rockett, during his successful political cam­
paign. He wanted a phone specifically dedicated
to receiving complaints, suggestions or commerits from residents and business owners
within the city.
Calls received will be noted In a written report,
und forwarded to Litton or necessary depart­
ment heads for consideration and/or action. "We
would have Mr. Litton supply the members of
the commission with a monthly list of the calls
and whatever action was taken." Rockett had
commented when he announced the move
during a December meeting.
'
The phone number and an explanation of the
type of calls wanted, will be sent to all residents
and businesses In next m onth's water bills, as
well us published In the city news letter.

. 1. .

State Attorney Michelle Heller.
Both Heller and Defense Attorney Claude Van
Hook acknowledged that Alicea had become a
father figure to both the victim and his older
brother, who also was a student at the studio.
At one time Alicea was well-liked by the boys'
mother who often Invited him over for dinner.

They’re here! Elvis stamps
cause a flurry of interest
hands on one of the long-awaited stamps that
commemorates The King.
While the stamp was sold by the thousands
at Oraceland at midnight, locals had to wait
They love him tender. At 29 cents each.
Fans of Elvis Presley have been clamoring □I
for the Just-released Elvis stamp at local post
offices for several months.
This noon philatelists and rock n' roll
fanatics alike were able to finally get their
By VICKI I
Herald Staff Writer

Lake Mary adds
more changes to
sign ordinance
By MICK PPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer

LAKE MARY — Lake Mary business owners
and future politicians will have to wait to hear If
the city will make them change the slgna they use
' to advertise.
A total restructuring of the city sign codes

Lunch
break

Variable cloudiness
with a 70 percent
chance of showers
and thunderstorms.
High near 80. Wind
south I5to20m ph.

J u n i o r K e lly H u rs t tak es
advantage of a cozy bench in
the sun during her lunch break
at Lake Mary High School. A
short siesta after her meal
leaves her revitalized for af­
ternoon classes.
n --- S^a|«

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r i f f p i r w W By n r w ia rg n e g a is B

S U B S C R I B E T O T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D F O R T H E B E S T L O C A L N E W S C O V E R A G E . Call 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

fl■
**

l

�NEWS FROM T H E REGION AND ACROSS T H E S T A T E

million In cuts before new taxes
Budget Director, David Cobum.
outlined the spending plan Thunday
--------------- B elli I#
before two House committees,
osld It w on't
be easy to olosh any more.
1flood luck," he aald of the .9300 million
Km '

TALLAHASSEE * Before they consider
The governor s proposed $34.9 Wilton
any new taxes. House Democrats want to budget V SecallIM S-94 Include* W W j
slice sway 9900 mttlton to pending mffifen in cuts. Chiles would eliminate 990
M a rty 9100 million more than th e cuts elate jobe and eeveral programs, such ee a
recommended hyOov. Lawton Chflas,
$ 8 J mllHon state m eat Inspection program
A ppropriations C om m ittee C hairm an and SB mttUon In Departm ent of Natural
John Long. D-Land 0 1 sires, said Thursday Resources operating coats,
tawmakers planned more stale govatam sat
The governor abo wants to scrap 14
trttm nlng before trying to drum up support exemptions to the aatoa tax. Including those
for Chiles' SSS1 mJUton tax package.
enjoyed by law yers, accountants and

P*T$x?dlfnculty Chile* flues In gaining
support for his tax proposal was illustrated
by the kinds of questions Coburn Bektfd.

the new doden would be spent on educe*
tiofL

Rep. Fred Llppman, e etounch supporter
o f Chiles* p a s t ta x p ro p o sa ls, aald
lawmaker* ihaiikl took i t the b if picture*
Senate President Ander Crenshaw, R*
-There are needs In this s S t e V ^ the
Jacksonvllk, has repeatedly sold his first Hollywood Dem ocrat "More bickering over
prtortty In the new budget would be to find these single Issues Is not S*ng to answer
more MOM cq cut Dciofi aoauiA tu e s ,f tnc people • pro Diem*.
Long said he and House Speaker BoOey
Lawmakers wlU consider the state budget
"Bon Johnson. DJdttton, agreed to seek the for the fiscal year that begins In July during
SIOO a g h a n In cuts a t a m eeting Wednea* the leglalatlve session that beglna Feb. 9.

a complaint
ORLANDO — Sharon Hen*
d sro o n ^ w a s a p p a rc n tly ^ s o
phone calls and unwelcom e
advances that she Sled a com*
p la in t u n d er F lorida’s anti*
staSdng law.
B u t n in e d a y s la te r , on
T h u rsd a y , th e I9*year*old
iummwmM motet ctcni tey oeeo

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| ra in fa ll fo r-th e
w a t 9 a.m . Friday,
fan inch.
Mature at 9 a m.
74 degrees and
y rooming low was

“To at

everybody,

___ _______

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 0, 1903 - SA

M e d o h i r g t d w ith i t t w n p M m iir d a f
A Sanford m an was charged with attem pted m urder after
witnesses report he drove Ms truck over one person and
attem pted to run over the same person a second time.
Lonnie Paul OrUftn, 33.3403 Stevens Ave., Sanford, was also
charged with reckless driving, criminal mischief, use of a
vehicle while committing a felony, assault with a motor vehicle
and driving with a suspended license. W itnesses reportsd to
8anford police Ortffln bached hla pickup truck over a m an and
attem pted to drive over him a second tim e near 10th Street and
Pecan Avenue shortly before 4 a.m. Wednesday. W itnesses
reported Griffin then drove through several yards while
chasing another m an In his vehicle, causing a "large am ount"
of property damage before hitting another vehicle.
Police report seeing Orlflln driving at a high rate of speed on
Ninth Street.

Woman reports M n g choired, robbed
Three people, Including a 16-year-old girl, were arrested by
Longwood police Tuesday night after a woman reported she
100.
was choked and robbed of SII
The woman reported she was riding with the other three
Individuals near ■ grocery store parking lot on U.8. Highway
17-92 when the passenger beside her began to choke her and
demanded 9100. The woman reported the passenger took the
money, 835 in food stam ps and s pager before pushing her
from the car.
Charged with robbery was Kevin D. Hardy, 33, Orlando.
Chandra K. Beckford, 30.439 Countrywood Circle. Lake Mary,
charged with being s principle In crime and
‘ ' girl in the car waa taken to the
marftuana. A 16-year-old
Seminole County Juvenile Detention Center.

Aoorevitfrd
bittsrv
f^»gP
rgP®WiWWiBWWmIW
EiwwwPiy
Dion Patrick Entires, 34, 383 Katies Cove. Sanford,
arrested on s charge of aggravated battery early Thursday
morning.
Entires' pregnant girlfriend reported he shoved her into a
brick wall.
Rttall thaftehatyad
Phillip Cosby, 37. 3711 Washington St., Sanford,
charged with retail theft by Sanford police Wednesday.
A convenience store clerk reported Cosby left without paying
for a bottle of m alt liquor.

Sanford cops’
drug sting:
Several busted
ByJ.I
I l a r a l d f iw E i llla tiw a
rMir«a
WnWi
SANFORD - Sanford Police
S p ecial In v e stig a tio n s U nit
agents arrested several Jndtvlduu i in m luC ci’icvti cocaine Mum
■tingWednesday.
Police report the individuate
■old
quantities of
io wuiUiOcniiai in"j®nimin** ocrorc
a rre st Each person was
taken to the Seminole County
Jell. Arrested were*
•Levory Hickman. 36, 1107
E. Ninth S t, Sanford, was ar­
rested at shout 0*15 p m . In the
vicinity df 10th Street and Or­
ange Avenue. *H ickm an waa
•N ear Ninth Street and Or­
ange Avenue, Columbus p frnr*i
33.904 E. 10th8t.8snford.W M
arrested a t about 9*15 p m .
Dempa was charged with eate

C o nvictio n
in Insurance
fraud sw itch
ByMARVI
Associated Press Writer

PEARL RIVER, La. - When
Jam es McElveen fell off a 30-foot
clifT while vacationing In 1000.
Qlrtfrttnd reports battory
his friends Benny and Tammy
Alvin R. Henderson, 33, 306 Palmetto Ave., Longwood,
MUIIgan helped pull his limp,
arrested on a battery charge by Longwood police
dice Wednesday
Wedne
broken body out of the chasm
night.
and race him by c a r to a
Renderson's girlfriend reported he struck her eye w ith his
hospital.
flat.
And then they did one more
thing they regarded as an act of
Woman ttys man punohsd hac
compassion — something the.
government said was baud, pure
Ronald Ross Skrumbellos. 51.3585 Grassy Point Drive, Apt.
and
simple.
100, Lake Mary, waa arrested on a battery charge by Seminole
Milligan sw itched Identities
County deputies Wednesday nig h t Skrumbellos girlfriend
with McElveen at the hospital to
rvporledhep»1k ^ l w tw lr^nd pnnrh rd «~ &lt;tlep p n lb fr
enable him to use the couple's
Insurance benefits. McElveen.
who worked for a painting con­
tractor. had no medico! tn su r
ance.
Ten m onths later. In May
lOBl. eU tk a a ^ M w convicted
by a federal Jury In Temwaaqc of
fraud and conspiracy to defraud
the U.S. government.
MrS. Mltligui. 38. la serving
four m onths under house arrest.
Her 31-year-old husband, who
was sentenced to nine months
behind bora, and McElveen. 33.
who got a seven-month term,
were to report to pruon loaay,
"T hey treated u s like we
murdered somebody Instead of
•D w ayne Fttsgerald Brown. 30. 3734 Washington S t.
saving somebody's life." Mrs.
Sanford, fum ed hlm eslf In to Seminole County jailers
MUIIgan said Thursday In a '
Wednesday. Brown was wanted on a grand theft charge.
telephone Interview.
•L ew is Richard Rhodes, 34. 3619 D hqjo Drive, Sanford,
Families USA. a Washington
was served w ith a w arrant at the Seminole County Jail
advocacy group, planned a de­
Wednesday after he was delivered there from Orange County.
m o n s tr a tio n o u ts id e th e
Rhodes was wanted on a charged of fottuie to appear a t a oourt
Milligans’ home In Pearl River.
hearing to answer tp a charge of driving with a suspended
30 miles northeast of New Or­
license.
leans, as MUIIgan left for the
F ed eral M edical C en ter In
Crlmaa reported to authoritlaa
CarvUle. near Baton Rouge.
The following crim es have been reported to Seminole County
"TO me. Benny, and Tammy
dcputlM Audi B inibid police;
are heroes, not crim inals." eald
•S everal Items, Including a diabetes machine, were reported
Ron Pollack, executive director
taken from a residence In the 3300 block of Sipes Avenue,
of Families USA. "The real crime
Midway, some time between midnight and 7 a m . Wednesday.
la a health care system that
forces good people like Benny
8A 1901 Toyota was reported taken from a residence to the
and Tammy Into this kind of
1000 block of West First S treet Sanford, at 5:30 a m .
moral dilemma. They had to
choose between Jam es' Ufe and
0 A 8150 riSe was reported taken from a residence In the.
their own future."
1000 block of Locust Avenue. Sanford, sometime between 8*30
Ernie Williams, the U.S. a t­
a m . and 0*42 p m ;
torney
in NaahvUle. rejected
. i«
nj i fnu ihyg found bun dng
vna
daim s that the three were un­
Ave., Sanford, a t 9:45 p m . Wednesday. No other
fairly punished. "The govern­
m ent of the United States viewed
rod bitten by two men In the
this as health care fraud." he
Avenue. Sanford, a t 10 p.m.
■aid.
The MUUgans and McElveen
were vacationing together In
Tennessee when McElveen fell
along the Matches Trace. With
another couple, the MUUgana
scrambled down to hla eld.
"We thought he waa dying."
Mrs. MUIIgan said. "He had no
N ^arro and Paguada I
K toe. hla face was gray and his
In a car parked on ai
a i m i iiQ nfM Tvnier
■ were blue. His hesd wss
road beside Miami's Julia Tuttte cracked open."
TALLAHASSEE - The state Causeway se Robertson and
Supreme Court set aside two
On the way to the hospital, the
death sentences Imposed on
other couDle Mid* they doubled
White they ft+htd,
Lavartty Robertson tn the 1988
McElveen would be adm itted
robbery and m urder of a
hw fu w | k |u d no insurance.
parked storm a UI,1&gt;&gt;1 causeway rifle from the i
"We were scared and Benny just
and ordered him sentenced four took tu rn s sh ooting a t switched IDs so Jam es could use
again.
objects In the wafer. Two of the his Insurance." Mrs. MlUlgsn
oourt
Robertson's group left after
convictions In the Nov. 8. 1988.
Mayings of Frank NRjarro and
M illig a n h a d in s u r a n c e
With hto gkEriond'o 13-year- th ro u g h h is em p lo y er, th e
‘1 think when the trial court old brother. Anthony Williams, aerospace co n tracto r M artin
■retake the dm im etanoss he In the c
Marietta Corp
tom life sentences,"
to the couple's1
attorney Robin G rscnc, who
"We shouldn't have done tt."
■aid McElveen. who fractured
from the h is back in 10 p laces. He
underwent nine hours of surgery
mw the
Circuit Judge Ralph 1
originally Imposed two
during which doctors put lour
guolttea
screws, four hooks and three
rode In hto back and fused same
of Um
Court Mid pro- demand. "(Mre m e the rings.*
He said ha beard the woe
He w m tn a lull-body cast for
to m e o f th s a g g r a v a tin g
th
re e m o n th s a n d m |i w f
Ttermn cited in
another three months of work.
sew the*

n
t

■■

a . - .i
. I . ' - 'WM

£• %

and delivery of cocaine and
•B ernard Hall. 37. 1011 W.
18th S t, Sanford, waa arrested
a t about 10*30 p m . In the
v icinity o f 11th S treet and
A vocado A venue. H all w aa
charged with sate and delivery of
c o c a in e a n d m a r i j u a n a
•N ear 13th Street and Pecan
Avenue, John Thomas White,
30, 34 Castle Brewer Court,
Sanford, was arrested shortly
before 8 p.m. W hite was charged
with sale and delivery of cocaine.
Aleo charged was Veronica Ann
Jackson, 38. 3000 Lake Mary
Boulevard, Sanford. Jackson
was charged w ith sale and de­
livery of cocaine and conspiracy.
Police report Jsrfceon arranged
the alleged deal.

a C ity-C ounty In v estig ativ e

F t Mslion swings
on 3 0 th S tre e t. H ines w as

Jennifer Lewis pushed her son, Rick Lewis III, on ths swing at
Ft. Mellon Park rscontly. Ths Lawless wars taking advantage of
tlw mild winter weather ws have been axpshencelng hers this
month.

Solar Prism Greenhouse
M ltyam.)

ISjrwr wwaaty
le t

•IW U m Ti I
SEE A n

D IS P L A Y A S A L E

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etatb ed . 44 w est - sanford
9UNMON TUB ONLY, JAN 18I I 13

3 D a y s O n ly

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Unzer $-|8B

H O U SE P A IN T

State Supreme Court
ordere resentencing

W A LL P A IN T

AC* m
1TM

B O -T E M K
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9N8WOOO LAKEMARY A g V C SANFORD CASSELBERRY!

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�I

CHUCK STONE

Bill Clinton’s seconds and thirds
people. Shelby 8tee!e.
The scholarly Steele serves a noble pui
conservative white males. By mercilessly
away at what S te e le ---------- -- -------- calls black America's
J jfflS !
" v ic tim is a tio n "
syndrome, he gives
j
right-wing antedllua
tfl
vlans a socially respectable rationale
tff T lo l
for opposing black
'f e /
A m e r ic a n 's u n fin ish e d fig h t for
VB2Z!
complete civil rights.
W
i¥

EDITORIALS

racists." they Insist
with peacock serenlty . " W e 'r e o n ly
condem ning black
people with the logic
developed by Shelby
S teele, a n a he Is
Mack."
Steele has come up

trotting out his favorite black authority on Mack

W *

W m /r f'/
Com pared to
O dysseus, Bill
Clinton had It
• a s y .j

b r illia n t, b u t u
tlm ately superficial.
argum ent

and ethnic minorities.
Steele calls It "the new sovereignty." These
groups have not earned a m eritocratic entitle­
m ent to positions of power. He contends that the
government conferred these positions on them
ex cathedra.
But th at's American democracy — our entire
history Is a history of "new sovereignties."*
Beginning with the colonialists’ separation (him
O rest Britain, successive presidents and Con­
gresses conferred several "new sovereignties" —
emancipating slaves, granting women's suffrage,
protecting labor unions' right to organise, giving
special considerations for war veterans and
guaranteeing civil and political rights for
minorities.
In 1BB3, for the first time, a president doesn't
feel he needs a 204-year-old w hite m ale
"sovereignty” to hold his Cabinet together. And
th at's what really threatens the George Wills, the
A rthur Schleslngers, the Pat Buchanans and the
New Republic magaxlne crowd — a loss of their
MrWMS (most favored white male status).
Two hundred and five years after the first
president. George W ashington, appointed his
Cabinet, the 42nd president, BUI Clinton, has

JACK ANDERSON

Rookie senator’s
lessons in the club
WASHINGTON - When Brock Adams.
D-Wash.. cast his final vote as a U.S. Senator
last October, the Democrat was d l» y with the
kind of emotion and noatalgia a retiring
baseball player might feci during his last
at-bat In the big leagues. Adams' career as a
consummate political player was coming to
anend.
There were no standing ovations — Just a
spontaneous tribute from a rookie Sen. Paul
Wellstone. D-Mlnn..
^
------who shared an clevator wllh Adams as
both men relumed to J fiL s
' m i
their offices after the W X - .
J

never used) In the first printing. It would
seem like a sm art move to print more. Besides
It’s the least the post office could do far s guy
who could tu rn s song shout mail — "Return
to Bender" —Into s classic.

Do we have to take It?
■ ,, ... .. .. . ■a . .

, r ■ \ ;... ■

,

i

'

The loot few weak* you tried to be a politician
and sow you are trying to be s dictator. In your
editorial lest-Monday you Inform ed the people of

"Brock. It's been V H f i f e M
really g r e a t."
W ellstone said.
\m
"Ever since the Orel
day — the Persian
Gulf War. fetal llaaue

ROBERT

WAGMAN

Rosty may be charged in scam
WASHINGTON — A death womb o f sorts has
begun on Capitol Hitt. House tesM ars now
b s lls v e t h a t I llin o is D e m o c ra t D sn
RnstonkowskL powsrftil chairm an of th s Ways

flU
s
■f

••rf, .Iff!

older, noisier planes. Gary Taylor of the Senrind
staff wrote on article Sept. 10. ISB2 stating that
th s Sanford Airport Authority will use a federal
grant of more than MOO.OOO to fond a noise study
and update a m aster plan for the Central Florida
Regional Airport. Now that la what I think we
would all call progress.
For newcomers who may not know about the
Naval Air Station. I would like for them to know it
woa a nightmare. I am putting it mildly when 1say
It was Iftte living In a war sone. Its noise was so
loud It orarhed many of the windows In homes end
no forced to get rid of all our pets because
nouldn't survive. Editor, bow in the world
you honestly put in your paper that during
Inw there ware very few complaints? Where
u Writing your statistics? There were mlllione
iptototo — wh at a rlissstrrt Ju st a s U is now.
residential developments were near and
Actually. I look bock and wonder how we
ourvtvod. I hove often wondered who made the
p o r e nrtatahr of putting on airport right la the
m iddle of o residential section (a historical
reoldenilol section). By law. an airport should be at
feast ftw mil™from a residential section,
dpeoklng of noise, the notac from the aircraft will
Offset more residences on the north-south runway
■than on the east-west runway brcsnsr ss I have
arid, the airport la directly In the middle of a
•nofflhhathood and the runway is next to a large
toridentlsl section. Whereas the cast-west runway
la b rib e r sway and. of course, m uch longer. I want
N dearly understood that all the homes are
btotaricol —none ore new.
It lo refreshing to read in tom e of the papers that
d rie s are passing ordinances to make their d rie s
gutotor. Oaah! It's so nice to know that some
oommtatoonere really care.
Reports have proven that the skybus doesn't
open p w p eaa for Sanford. It may receive a email
fetors from car rentals. However, U la some
progress for the airport. The director and the
authorily board of the airport have never screamed
a t uatoacoept the notoe. 1 have always bund them
Very pnoparstlve end willing to make adjustments.
Editor, please, polities and dictatorship are not
w i r a s d l n * ill—mi mnl it!
Dorothy MeReynolds
Sanford
P A Wo ora pr isoners In bur cars. We ore
p rim e rs In our hom es and everything that comes

by Minority Whip Newt Olngrich of Oeorgla,
staged a mini-coup that captured several
leadership posts. This gtves the fer right
effective control of the OOP leadership, and all

m i than exchanging th a n .fer cash at tbs
House Post Off**- Insiders also believe the
tr a n s a c tio n s . If p ro v s n . c o u ld la n d
Itostookowskl in bat w ater w ith the Internal

required to step soldo In

taiy respectively. Armey only woa by a scant

■ Capital HJB was fo o tty helped by the IBM
horiono.
,j t
W hen th e 102nd C ongress adjourned.

lobbyists and pollti
rUl give to candidates

LETTERS TQ EDITOR
Letters to the editor ore welcome. All letters
roust he signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on a single subject and be
oa brief as possible. The fetters ore subject to
editUta.

.v!M93

:

Y

you’ve been out In B
M l
front of. th e things S . ------— ^ = you've done. I just £
want you to know
■ Ths m ightiest
you've been a real
OSk Ires
inspiration to me. I
started out as
re a lly a p p re c ia te
a llU ltm it
having served with
th at held Its
you In the Senate."
ground. ■
As th e e le v a to r
W
doors opened lo
■ ■ —1
Wellstone'a floor. Adams relum ed the com­
pliment in his own way: "Well. Paul, always
rem em ber th is. The m ightiest osk tree
started out as a tittle nut that held Its
ground." It seemed to sum up Wellstone'a
11)Ung-ogalnsl-windmills first two years In Ihe
Senate. Though It seemed at one point that
Wellstone would never take root In the
world's most exclusive club, he has seasoned
and matured Into a respected member of the
upper chamber.
Por a while It seemed Wellstone would be s
one-term senator. His frothlng-at-the-mouth
style — he once referred to Sen. Jesse Helms.
R-N.C., as somone "I despise" — won him
few friends, and sent his poll numbers
plummeting In Minnesota. Wellstone hit
bottom after he used the Vietnam Memorial
ss s stage prop to condemn Operation Desert
Storm. He's ajmlogUed for the stunt, but no)
for the stance. Wellstone now is "senatorial."
and the political stuntm an reputation is
receding. In fact, Wellstone recently co­
sponsored a trade bill with Helms.
"Wellstone used to be a w restler." sold one
veteran Senate Democratic staffer. "I think a
wrestler understands leverage and points. I
think he realises that a scrappy little wrestler
hla else was never going to wrestle this place
and pin Its shoulders down."
Wellstone himself uses wrestling ss his
prime political metaphor. 'T h e wrestling
background is great for the Senate," he said.
"Getting ready for a debate and you're real
nervous. It Just reminds me of getting ready
for a wrestling match. You tell yourself that
you can do It. You Just have to keep your
confidence."
The new members of the U.8. Senate could
learn from Wellstone'a early wrestling m at­
ches w llh the Senate. It’s s freshm an
orientatatlon that might help them avoid the
early pitfalls, in a recent Interview with our
associate Ed Henry. Wellstone pontificated on
everything a new member should know, but
might be afraid to ask.
"If you rock the boot, people ore going to
get angry at you." he told us. "The best
example for me la that I didn't even realise
bow controversial It was to call for the roll call
votes on m atters of huge appropriations. ...
But there's another code around here that's
pretty Interesting." Wellstone describes that
code as hard work and sticking to your
convictions, despite the heat, as a way of
winning respect/
Wellstone recounts a converselion he had
wllh Dianne Peinstdn. who waa elected lari
November to the Senate from California.
Fcinstcin commented that she had been
studying the Senate manual, complaining
about Its complexity and thickness. *i told
her. ‘That manual Is your tool. Look at It tn
the o—Uive. «

�Binford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Friday, January 8, 1993 - aa

Most Haitians end hunger strike
MIAMI — There were conflictInfl reports about w hether a
hunger strike by detained Hai­
tian refugees was over or had
entered Its ninth day today.
O fficials said m oat of the
protesters a t the U S. Immigra­
tion and N aturalisation's Kroroe
DetenUdh Center west of Miami
eating. But advocates
discounted that and one relative
aatd male strikers were forced to
eat
"AH of the men except for four
ate the evening (06x1," said
W ayne J o y , a c tin g dep u ty
director for the Immigration and
N aturalisation Service office.
"We don't know about those
four."
- The Miami Herald reported
tbdky that moot of the women
who had refused food also ate
Thursday evening.
That* was news to the de­
tainees'advocates.
"(The hunger strike) has not
ended to my knowledge," aakl
Rolande O orancy, executive
director of the Haitian Refugee'
Center.
But Kelli Dunham of Florida

Elvis
1A
until the noon hour to purchase
their stamoa.
"We've been getting calls for
m onths." said Call Clements,
secretary to postm aster Pat
Brennan In Sanford. "People
have been calling asking us to
put stam ps aside and to save
them sheets of the stam ps.”
She noted, however, that the
post office could not honor any
of tl|0M WQ
"W ell be selling the stamps
on a first come, first serve
basis." she said.
In L a k e M a ry , p o s t a l
employees reported that they
have received hundreds of calls
over the last few weeks from
people who wanted to reserve
their stam ps aa well.
"We can't do that,*' Richard
Sherrill, postm aster In Lake

Mary said. "We have to aeU them
to people as they come In after
the stam p goes on sale."
Frank Saultx, an adm inistrator
at the Sanford post office, said
the stamps arrived yesterday at
the focal facility and he could
not even allow postal employees
to purchase the stam ps ahead of
time.
"We have to be fair about it,"
he said.
The stam p is expected to be a
big money-maker for the U.8.
Postal Service. Locally, poet of­
fices expect th a t they w ill
quickly sell out of their first
allotments of the stam ps, but
they promise to get more in aa
soon as possible to keep up with
the public demand.
"I'm sure this Is going to be
one of the most popular stam ps
we've ever bandied," Sherrill
said.

Rural Legal Sendees, which has
assisted the Haitians, told The
Herald male strikers had con­
firmed their protest was over.
"They were really relieved to
be eating. And they believe that
people have listened to them ,"
she said. "But they said they
didn't want the outside world to
forget them because they’re still
Inside."
Johnnie McMUUan, president
of the Miaml-Dade National As­
sociation for the Advancement of
Colored People, went to K rone
on Thursday.
"1 had an opportunity to go
today and talk to some of them
and their convictions are very
strong and the likelihood they
would end that hunger strike is
1,000 to one," she said. "I don't
know what kind of games INS is
playing."
A relative of one of the de­
tainees, who Identified himself
only as Lewis, told The Associ­
ated Press he received a call
from a relative who said the
male strikers were forced to eat.
"He told me they kicked them
to go to eat and forced them to
cat and say If they want to go (on
with the hunger strike) they're

1A
. rem ains undecided.
The Lake Mary City Commission
tabled it on first reading during
last night's meeting.
Although the lengthy docu­
m ent had p re v io u sly been
approved by the Business Advi­
sory Board with a unanimous
vote, commission members last
n ig h t su g g e ste d ad d itio n a l
changes and clarifications.
Some alterations will be made

to sections regarding political
signs, grand opening signs and
frags before bring II to a vote.
In the exemption, section, the
proposed code deals with the
frying of frags. It would allow a
maximum of one stale, federal
and local/county (lag per parcel,
each with a maximum of 80
square feet.
"Why limit the size for a
business frying our nation's flag
to only 80 square feet." asked

V erdict

D.C., Georgia showed worst
1990 Intent mortality rates

Parade-

1983. He was a retired radio both of California, McArthur, HexAe, Inc., Blackahear, Ga„ In
station owner and a Baptist.
Birmingham. Ala.: slaters, Lula, charge of arrangem ents.
Survivors include son, John C. Gainesville, Denise Lopes, Onuid
til. Altamonte Springs: daugh­ Cayman Island. Beverly Ann
ters, Helen E., Myra O. Wright, Pow ell, C alifo rn ia. S unobla
George Tokarsky, 64.
both of Winter Park: one grand­ Sima. Ohio, Doris Johnson, Indl- tania Place, Oviedo, died Tues­
daughter.
Cathy Marie Hines. Detroit.
day, Jan . 8. at his reaidenece.
Beacon Cremation Service of
Wilson-Etchetbcrger Mortuary. B o rn S e p t. 6 . 1 9 3 8 . in
C entral Florida. Orlando. In Inc., Sanford, tn charge of ar­ Wftmeiding. Pa., he moved to
charge of arrangements.
rangements.
Centra) Florida in 1990. He waa
a retired quality assurance In­
spector for Volkswagen. Mr.
Marie A. McMurrcr. 80, of R I C H A R D H O W A R D Tokaiaky waa a member of the
Wesiwlnd Lane. Fern Park, died t r b r ia u l t
VFW and the American UltraWednesday. Jan.' 6. at Florida * Rfchard Edward Theriault. 82. nlan Citizens Club, He was a
Hospital. Orlando. Bom Nay 9. of Waycross, Oa.. died Thurs­ Marine Corps veteran of the
1913, in Wald wick, N J„ she day. Jan. 7. at Stills Regional Korean War.
moved to Central Florida In Medical Center. Waycross. Born
Survivors include wife. Joan:
1971. She waa a homemaker In Nashua. N.H.. hie moved to son. Oeorge David. WUmerding:
Robert Alan Oarapic. '39. of and a member of St. Augustine Waycross seven years ago from daughters, Margaret N„ Hun­
Sanford. He waa raod m atter of tingdon, Pa.. Katherine Viola.
709 Shell bark Blvd.. Apopka, Catholic Church.
Survivors Include son. Dr. engines lor CSX Transportation O rlando; b ro th e rs, A ndrew
led Wednesday. Jan. 6 ,,at his
Mldeoee, Boro Sept. 14;* 1983. Jam es P. J r .. V ienna. ,V a.t lor 34 years and a .member of T okarake, M onroeville, P a..
Orlando, he was a lifelong daughter. Judith M. Winters, Grace Episcopal Church. Mr. W illia m , W all. P a .. J o h n
T heriault waa an Air Force Tokarska, Martinez. Oa.: two
enl of Central Florida. He Winter Park: one grandchild.
the owner and operator of
C a re y H and C o x -P a rk e r veteran and a member of the grandchildren.
.J by Max and a Protestant. Funeral Home. Winter Park. In Masonic Lodge *63, Scottish
B aldw in-P alrchlld F uneral
Rite of Free Masonry and Bahia Home, Altamonte Springs. In
Oarapic was a member of the charge of arrangements. *
Temple of Orlando.
-dda Audubon Society.
charge of arrangements.
Survivors include wife, Nova
Survivors Include wife. Lynn
Ire Dean Melton. 23, of 1048 Jean Smith Theriault: daugh­
1 mother. Jean L. Wynkoop
11, Osteen: father. Max J. North Street. Altamonte Swings, ters. Tina Bedard. Burlington.
. Sanford; sisters. Judy, died Monday, Jan- 4. at Florida Vl.. Heather, Nashua, Kimberly,
_ j . Penny Cruft, Missouri. Hospital East, Orlando. Bom W a y c ro a a i s o n a , S te v e .
F maral MrvtcM tor Bat Oarapk. as* *».
Heaton. Stuart: maternal Jan. 38. 1969. In Oriahdo. he Burlington, Chris. Waycross and ft * m IMtoar* « * « ., Asaph*. wM t »
tatwpay.
Jan. », at to a-m- to tot OatoM
Esther Wynkoop, was a lifelong resident. Mr. D a rrin . G erm an y : m o th e r.
Chreal wMS tot Mav. Oary
D
orothy
T.
L
teto
,
O
rm
ond
Melton waa a pipe layer for the
ta
Funeral Home. Long- construction industry and a Botch; maternal nmdi&amp;ochcr.
at Part. WbBwFw*.
In charge of arrange- m em ber o f S t. Jo h n M.B. M ildred W atk ln a. D aytona
Beach: sisters. Priscilla Bohl.
Church.
D eltona, S an d ra. A rlington.
Survivors Include parents. M ass.. J a n e t Levesque and
_____
(JR - '
______ ____ 1 Greene. Jr.. 86. Deacon Jam es and Geneva. Al­ Marilyn Betoft. both of N tthua.
B a st A lta m o n te D rive. tamonte Springs: sons. Marquez Pauline Button. Raleigh. N.C.:
Ita m o tn e S p r in g s , d ie d D.v Jerm y Dwyett and Bryan: brothers. Joseph W.. Raleigh
Sunday. Jan. 7. a t Winter Park brothers. Jam es Baron. Charles­ and David A.. Conway. 8 .C.1 four
emorial Hospital. Born June ton. S.C.. Rev. Melvin. Sr.. grandchildren and several nieces
r. 199$. to Durham. N.C., he Lawrencevtlle. Ga„ Dexter. Or­ and nephews.
Dtxon-Howen-Taytor Funeral
to C entral Florida In lando. Jam es Jr. and Gerald.

Archie Banka. 7 4 ,.of 3311
Ipea A ve.. S a n fo rd , d ied
Wednesday. Dec. 30, at Central
lorida Regional Hospital. San*d. Born May 38. 1918, In
ackaon. Mias., he moved to
anford 41 years ago from there,
le waa a retired building con-actor and a Catholic.
Survivors include daughter.
*thy, Orlando: stepson. Robert
fhitaker, New Jersey: brother,
drlan. California: num erous
randehUdren. '
Sunrise Funeral Home. Sanxrd, In charge of arrangements.

m ake a claim for p o litical
asylum.
As a candidate. President-elect
Clinton said he would end such
repatriation, but there were re­
p o rts th is week th a t he is
considering extending It
Florida's U.S. Senators, Bob
Oraham and Connie Mack, have
called on the government to
restore A ristide, by m ilitary
force If need be.
Moat oT the 383 Haitians who
arrived in Miami on a freighter
Tuesday were farmed out to
county Jails around Florida as
there wasn’t room for them at
K rone: 100 of them went to |h e
Lake County Jail In Tavares,
where INS is paying the county
$53 a day to care for each. The
Orlando Sentinel reported today.
fiqmc,of the refugees spoke of
the political persecution in their
homeland.
"If we go back, they are going
to kill us," 37-year-old Salntll
Jean Eric told the newspaper.
"T hat's why we left."
Meanwhile. Cubans continue
to come to South Florida. The
Coast Quard reported Thursday
it picked up 18 Cubans In a boat
and on rafts In waters off Florida.

S ig n s

little or no physical evidence.
according to testimony.
The 11-year-old had no reason to
H ow ever, th e ' p rosecution lie, to go through months of
claimed Alicea used his position depositions and questionings if
with the younger son to molest, he was not telling the truth, she
him on two occasions between
September and December 30.
"Mr. Van Hook would have
IB9I.
you believe we brought the
In his closing argum ent. Van charges because we need the
Hook told the the Jury that work," Heller told Jury.
vmolcstamania" accounted for
Oovemment officials-did not
the charge against his dlent. get together simply to frame the
th e boy's testim ony was vague defendant she said.
show ed th e n atio n al in fan t In regard to details of the crime
Van Hook had Introduced a
mortality rate a t 9.3 deaths per and there was no physical evl
Valentine's Day card from the
ie., Van. HflplC,
I
dence of any^crlnte,
&lt;youngster to thedefendant and
TfTT . 1,1.000 live births. ,
if! In- the state-by-etste rates, " Isaid It was proof that there was
I remarkable IS S teV countered by saying an on-going friendly relationship
Had tbs tiling the disparityf is
probably points to some­ that in such cases there to often between the two. He Implied that
in the
and u ,ln * the thing th at's important that we
n e e d to d is s e c t b e t t e r ."
Maine's rata of 6.3 deaths per Johnston, the foundation’s med­
IA
1,000 Uve births eras less than ical ■director and senior vice
He said that he only heard
and
state
president
for
programs,
said
one-third that of the District of
ab
o u t th e Sanford steerin g
committee
did
not
contact
him
Columbia's 30.7. and half of Thursday In a telephone in­ when they begad making their com
m ittee's plans for a parade
terview.
Oeorgla’e 13.4, according to the
about
three weeks ago when he
plana
for
a
parade
In
Sanford.
He
Moat of the 10 states with the
report from the March of Dimes
said that he has been organizing attended, aa a member of the
highest
mortality
rates
were
In
Birth Defects Foundation.
Sanford's Martin Luther King public, one of their meetings.
Infant mortality refers to death the Southeast That is probably acom
m em orative p arad e for
because
of
high
numbers
of
poor
Rucker, who Is pastor at First
within the first year of life.
many
years.
The
the people who have poor nutrition,
S
h
llo ah M issionary B ap tist
He sa id th a t h ts p arad e Church,
a lot of substance abuse and
said that the lack of
rates "so that each state
"touches base with the common com m unication betw een the
look at It and address where they little prenatal care, he said.
Carol Regan, director of the m an" while the other parade to steerin g com m ittee and the
are, and deal with the problem
divisioni &lt;
of the Children's geared mare toward "the Intel­ com m unity shows a lack of
in the same way that we're ____________
Defense
Fund,
which
also tracks le c tu a ls." He said th a t his unity in Sanford.
trying to do nationally," said
to for all people who wept
foundation official Dr. Richard B. state rates, said the foundation parade
to
participate.
&lt;
"I want (o see ua coming
list
of
the
10
states
with
the
vOQISouJll,
We have done the parade for together this year,", be said. "I
The foundation derived the , highest rates was similar to w hat years.*
said Rucker. *i don't want to aee more unity In the
1itate rates from new, final foder- her organisation had found for know
iw why they didn’t .contact Sanford community."
11I atatlatlcs for 1990, which 1969.

I. fKJHHb*

going to put each people in a
cell." he said. "I think It'a a
violation of people's rights."
C alls to J o y ’s office la te
Thursday were not returned, but
earlier he denied any m ishandl­
ing of the Haitian detainees.
~*We d o n 't condone such
treatm en t" he said.
The Haitians, many of whom
have been held for m onths,
began their protest soon after 48
Cubans were paroled into the
com m unity w ithin two days
after th eir arrival In Miami
a b o a r d a c o m m a n d e e re d
aircraft
Haitians have argued that 1
should receive the same cot
eration Cubans get under the
1986 Cuban Adjustment A ct
which assum es that all fleeing
the Island are political refugees.
Haitians say they are escaping
oppression1a t home that followed
I
the Septet
September 1991 coup in
which dem ocratically elected
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
was ousted. But the Bush ad­
m inistration says Haitians are
economic refugees and all dis­
covered on the high seas should
be returned home immediately,
without being given a chance to

putting up the signs.
In Business Advisory Board
discussion of the proposal In
October of last year, the re­
commended bond amount was
reduced from $250 to $100. A
candidate would post the bond
when obtaining a political sign
permit, and have the money
returned at the end or the
campaign, only If no sign code
violations are registered.
"I'm still bothered with this."
Brender said. "This may not be
appropriate in situations when
there to a hardship candidate.
trouble between the two came Would he or she still have to pay
only when Alicea rebuffed the the bond In oidcr to put up
romantic, advances of the boy's signs?".
m other.'
“ I d o n 't th in k we should
Alicea had denied the charges reduce the fees for anyone." said
when he testified and said he Mayor Lowry Rockett./'The city
made clear to the boy's mother pays an employee to remove
that he "did not want a wife and s ig n s fo u n d to be In th e
family."
right-of-way or otherwise pasted
Valerie Weld, co-owner of the Im properly.” he said, "and
dance studio, had no comment money we may receive tn such
about the verdict. '
c a s e s h e lp s o ffs e t th e s e
"He was not really an In­ expenses."
structor. He was a guest teacher
Another question was raised
passing through. 1 have no regard!
the length of time
comment." she said.
„.
Sanford Polide tpofcewhart L * *
or
Mike Rotundo said he recalled As currently proposed, the ordithe complaint against Alicia b u t' «&gt;ance'w°dW,typ* b&amp;fffokeea to
could not remember there being display the signs for a period of
any Other' complaints filed here no more than 10 days, while
against him.
non-prod! organization signs
“ it waa som e tim e ago," could remain displayed for twd
Rotundo said.
weeks.
Judge Eaton came close to
C ity A ttorney Ned Ju lia n
citing Van Hook with contempt suggested the difference was not
after an exchange during the proper. "This to not fair to both
atto rn ey 's closing argum ent. parties," he said. "I suggest the
Van Hook was reading from the requirements for profit as well as
victim 's deposition when Heller non-profit special event sign
objected. Eaton substained the limitations should be the sam e."
o b je c tio n b u t V an H ook
Rocket suggested Julian ex­
persisted in his argument.
amine the entire sign code doc­
T h e s o f t- s p o k e n E a to n ument, to Insure that there were
explained hte ruling, adding "I no Improprieties contained In
am speaking the English la n ­ the wording or Intent. Julian to
guage." as a warning.
to m ake any recom m ended
When Van Hook again ques­ changes to the commission by
tioned the ruling. Eaton said, "If the next regular meeting.
you argue with me anymore
Unless further problems are
about Into I will do something uncovered, the m atter could be
Claude Van Hook, that both you brought up for a first reading
and (don't want me to do."
vote on Jan. 31.
Commissioner A.R. "Doc" Jorc.
City Planner Matt West re­
sponded. "When that was dis­
cussed, we determ ined that
while displaying a flag Is a sign
of patriotism , some of those
huge flags are nothing more
than an advertising gimmick."
Political signs also came up for
discussion. Commissioner Gary
Brender was concened over the
section dealing with the re­
quirem ent of a bond before

l | h m j i N g j a t t o f t b i Jas g u t o l i t o i i s / V a u n i i i

w w m gon r m n m j m tm m m o m u u u n iy

If You Art:
Moving Into or
Around Tho At m
Dotting Marriad
Having A Baby

Lot your Wotoomo Wdgon rapraaontadvo
anawar your quaatbna about thoaraa and
proaant you with fraa gifts
HYou Uve In One or TheeeArain, Please CaN
o a iiiw u
Sanford
Lake Mary
321*6660
Longwooo
869*8612 or 774*1231
Wtnfar Sortnos
777-3370
ik s M M lS
9
339*4468
Anamoma
Cataalbarry
695-7974
Oviado
695-3819

�Support for theory that
universe began with bang
PHOENIX — Millions of tem perature readings
by a NASA satellite are giving strong new support
for the theory that the universe began some IB
billion years ago with a big bang.
Precise measurements by the Cosmic Back*
ground Explorer, or COBE. satellite o f rem nant
energy left from the big bang are giving results
that are exactly as the theory predicted, John C.
M ather, a National A eronautics and Space
Administration astronomer, announced Thurs­
day.
“This was the toughest test yet o f the theory,"
Mather said at a news conference at a national
meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
“The big bang Is still a winner."
First proposed in the 1920s, the big bang
theory states that all m atter In the universe was
once compressed Into an exceedingly small
center th at exploded, sending energy and
particles outward in all directions. At the moment
of the explosion, tem peratures would have been
trillions and trillions of degrees and have been
cooling ever since.
If the theory Is correct, astronom ers expected
tem peratures Just fractionally above absolute
zero to be evenly distributed throughout the
universe In an afterglow of the explosion.
Mather said a COBE Instrum ent called the Far
Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer has now
taken hundreds of millions of m easurem ents
across the full sky and has determined that the
primordial tem peratures are smoothly distrib­
uted. He said the uniform tem perature left from

Lagti N o tio t
NTNRCIRCUI

V S i'.’S S X Z Z

JUOICtAL CIRCUIT
'
O P T M ItTA TR
O f FLORIDA,
IN ADO P M
IIM IN 0 LIC O U N TY
CIVILOtVItJON
•• C A M NO. W MW CA H 0
PORO C O N IU M C R LOAN

the big bang la 2.736 degrees above absolute sere
—or about m inus 456.9 degrees F.
Because of the average therm al radiation la the
sam e In all directions of the universe, Mather
said, that shows It had to come from one source,
“th e big bang Is still the sim plest explanation
are have." he said.
'
Craig Hogan, a University of Washl
astronomer, said the new research “Is verifying
the textbooks" by providing powerful evidence
for the theory.
.
Hogan said the COBE results exactly match the
theoretical curve of tem perature energy decay
that would be expected In the big bang theory.
Some COBE m easurem ents were released In
1990, but M ather said those were preliminary
results. The research announced Thursday Is 30
tim es more precise and leaves little room for
other theories, he said.
The new data m easure tem perature decay back
to a point Just one year after the big bang. Mather
said. Beyond that, no m easurem ents now are
possible.
The big bang theory originated with the
findings In 1929 by astronom er Edwin Hubble
that' all galaxies were moving away from each
other at a constant rate, with those farthest away
moving the fastest. This Is exactly what would
occur In an explosion.
Im portant support for the Idea came In 1965
when Bell Laboratory scientists discovered cos­
mic background radiation, an unexplained source
of energy th a t seem ed to be d istrib u ted
throughout the universe.
This background energy could not be measured
precisely until the launch In 1969 of the COBB
satellite.

r n a f i N a Tinoi

*

TO : TW I POLLOwmo o r PRNDANTt, I f LIVING, ON If
D R AG , A L L UNKNOW N
P A R T U S C LA IM IN O RV,
T H R O U O M , U N O f R OR
AGAIN I T TMR NAMfD DCflN D A N T , WHO ARC NOT
KNOWN TO S I OSAO OR
A L I V I , W N I T H I R SAIO
UNKNOWN PARTUS CLAIM
AS H II R S . D I V I S I I S ,
O R A N T IR S , ASSIONRRS,
L IR N O R S , C R R D IT O R S ,
T R U S TR R S , OR O TH R R
CLAIMANTS AGAINST SAID
O R fIN D A N TS NAMRO AS
POLL0WS:
CARLOSNOOURRA
ADOARUUNKNOWN
MARLRNRI. NOOURRA
ADOAISS UNKNOWN
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Cagnty, Plarlta, a/k/a M4
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PAORt m ANO m . O f THR
PUBLIC RRCOROt O f IRMINOLR COUNTY. PLOAIDA.

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INANOfOR
tRMIMSLR COUNTY,
PLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION
CARR N O ft-INACA
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PON P IR R T P R O R R A L
IAVINOI ANO 1&lt;UM AtROCIA V IO N O f t R M I N O L R
COUNTY. P A ,

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PAUL w: ORURNINORR.
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aMweam artfa af PAUL W.
O R U R N IN O R R . P A U L W.
ORURNINORR, at TraaHa af

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B R IE F

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Lake Mary frosh win
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Snltllilll ( lull I I It 111ill -N nil St.Ill Rn.til I IM
I Ml \\ II II I 7 MJ .1nil I 111 III llll M .1 III III t 11 III
• 'll S.ll III fl.l \ s | I I I I |i III nil S lliu l.l\s .Hill I I I I I s
|&gt; III Mntiil.IV 1111 ni ml i I I id.l!
I i ii im ii i m ini i ii . 11inn • .ill .12 I I ms .

W H A T ’S H APPEN IN G
TODAY
Boys’ Basketball
Lake Brantley at Sem inole F r v sh m e n .il 4 i&gt; m
with |umor varsity anil varsity to follow
K issim m ee G atew ay at Lyman Junior varsity
at 6 15 p m with varsity to follow
DeLand at Oviedo Junior varsity at G p m with
varsity to follow

Girls’ Basketball
Lake Mary at E ustis Junior varsity at G p m
with varsity to tollow

Boys’ Soccer
Lake Howell at Lake Mary
5 4 5 p m with varsity to follow

Junior varsity at

Girls’ Soccer
Lyman at B ishop Moore
p.m with varsity lo tollow

Ju n io r varsity at 5

Wrestling
Flagler Palm C o a s t at Lake Mary Junior varsity
at 6 30 p.m with varsity to tollow

SATURDAY
Sem inole CC at St. J o h n 's River CC 7 30 p m

Boys’ Basketball
R ockledge at Lake Mary Junior varsity at G
p m with varsity to tollow

Girls’ Basketball
Lyman at Mainland Junior varsity at 12 15 p m
with varsity to follow
Lake Brantley at Or. Phillips Junior varsity at
5 3 0 p m with varsity to follow

Girls’ Soccer
Sem inole at Flagler Palm C o a st. 2 p m
Lake Mary at T a m p a L o to noon
Winter Park at Lyman Junior varsity at 2 p m
with varsity to follow
Daytona B ea c h-S e a bree z e at Lako Brantley
Junior varsily at noon with varsity to follow
Lake Howell at W est O range Junior varsity at
12 30 p m with varsity to follow

Wrestling
S em inole at K issim m e e G atew ay Tournam ent
Lake Brantloy. St. Cloud. Titusville at Lyman
Junior varsity at 10 a m with varsity to tollow
Deltona at Lake Howell Ju n io r varsity at 11
a m with v a r s i t / t o follow

K s l'\

□ y DE A N SM ITH
Herald S p o r ts Writer

SEMINOLE 61. LAKE IIRANTLtY
Late Brantley IJYI
Chvrn«th 0 )000 Modg»*rs 0 I 7 S ; G.iMtorr 0100 0 Irp.»t i ) u (j
7 Mtllpr 00171 Lldk** 0 ) 7 4 7
l ft 0 J a V.iruJfr **••&lt;).•
0 0 7. [)iv.ilvrtlorp 00 0 7 0 MoorrtiHd AIV 7 7 14 Pitts 0 7 00 0
Campbell 0 00 00 Totals M4i/lB?v
Sfmmolr (41)
f ayson 1 3 0 0 7 Gillms 0 0 0 0 0 Morgan 110 0 7 Hampton 7 4 7 A
A Eason 10 73 6 &gt;76 Washington 10 31 ) * 7 l honor I 7 0 n 7 Mullins
0 70 70 Totals 75 Aft 11 74AI
Lake Brantley
8 5 9 t
7«
Seminole
H t 10 74 41
Three point tield goals Lak* lirantley 0 7 &lt;Rodgers 0 i Penn»*y
0 II Semmole 0 I i W.i'.bmqtnn 0 II Team touts lake hrantley
71 Seminole 18 f ouled Out none Technicals none- Re t&gt;ounds
Lake hrantley 14 (Moocelirld I7i Seminole 4A Washington
Eason (01 Assists
lake hrantley f (Penney Ji Seminole IS
(Washington A Eason 41 Records
lak* fPantiey 7 4 I ? SAC
Seminole &gt;7/ * 1SAL Junior varsity Seminole 74 lake hrantley
71
________

SA N FO RD - Tin- l.a k r B ra n tle y Uhls' baskethall t r a m I r n m n l tw o Im p o rta n t le s s o n s l i n n s
tl.iv night Uteri' Is mi s u b s titu te Im i|U lekness
anil d o n 't get u p se t Nlkl W a s h in g to n
S e m in o le 's te tia e lo u s lull-court t l r l r n s r loreed
2F t u r n o v e r s anil r o l l e d rd IH ste a ls a s WaslililU
Inn a w o k e h o rn th e d o ld r u m s In dnruliliile a
M(i point l o u r 1 11 ip ia r te r In lire T r ib e 's 61 211 rout
ol tile P a trio ts ill a S e m in o le Atlllelle Colilereliee
i im te st al Hill F le m in g Memorial G y itu ia s lu m
l lie luiiim v a r s ity n a m e a lso w ent th e T r ib e 's
wav hi a s e m e ol 24 2 I
"Most people p ro b a b ly th o u g h t I look Nlkl out
m th e s e r o n tl q u a r t e r b e e a u s e s h e not h e r seemiil
Iniil
sa id S e m in o le b e a d ro a e li J o h n
Mi N .iui.ua
Hill I a e tua llv look h e r out h e e a n s e
s h e w a s p la y in g so harllv S h e |ust w a s n 't
lu m p in g
"Hoi alter s h e got Imiled late In llie third
q u a r te r , s h e s e e m e d to net m a d I d o n 'l know it
s h e not p u s h e d or II s o m e o n e sa id s o m e ih ln n to
her. bill II w oke tier u p a n d sh e pisi d o m in a te d

1lit* rest ill t h r g a m e "
W ith W a s h in g to n g o ing In the hi m h w ith In i
ililrd foul r .u l v in i Ik - t h u d q u n rh -i. Lake
H ra n tlrv m l a 2 5 13 lialttline delicti tn 2fi 2 0
w ith 2 IH till in t h r th ir d si a ii / a
Hui tIn* se nior pm ni g u a r d re e n i e i e d th e gaim
a n d I m m e d ia te ly luuk cniilrnl a s llie Im in r I r a n i
si nreil 2H n| th e next .'Ml p o in ts. Im h id in g 2 1
stra ig h t over th e h is t 5 :5 5 til th e fo u rth q u a r t e i .

New Nnlk Isl.mililN .ii

||.|

Complete listings on Page 2B

to hike a 5 6-22 lead w ith 2 :0 5 Icli tn th e g a m e
D in in g llie s tr e a k W a s h in g to n , w h o h a s sig n e d
w ith th e U niversity ot H o u sto n , sc o re d 17 points,
g r a b b e d six r e b o u n d s , blo c k e d th r e e s h o ts , h a d
lour s te a ls a n d t h r e e a s s is ts
l.ati lu llie g a m e , th e L ake H ra n lle y b e n c h a n d
s o m e ol th e Ia n s lu a t t e n d a n c e w e re w o n d e r in g
a lo u d w hv S e m in o le w a s si III in th e p re s s
I h e .u d th e people ve ilin g ." said M c N a m a ra
Hui I d o n 'l h a v e a n o th e r g a m e until a w eek
Itom iiexi W e d n e s d a y anil H ehnila M organ h a s
pisi |o ln e d llie te a m I ni Irv in g lo give th e te a m a
i h a m e lo gel H ere u is. J a n u a r y 7 lh . w e 'v e
pluved 2 0 g a m e s a n d o nly h a v e n in e g a m e s li lt
I’lus w ith lid s learn, g a m e s r a i l • h a n g e
a i o u n d so Iasi A c o u p le ol t u r n o v e r s a n d so m e
th r e e point s h o t s a n d th e y r a il he right ha c k in
llie g a m e And w ith o n ly eight girls d te s s e d . von
r a n only m a k e so m a n y s u h s tliiiilo n s W ho do
von leave on th e floor? Nlkl "
S o p h o m o r e s h o o tin g g u a r d T e m ils h ta E a so n
r a n t e d th e S e m in o le a tta c k u n til W a s h in g to n
look over a n d e n d e d u p th e g a m e 's high scorer
w ith 2 6 S h e a lso h a d 10 r e b o u n d s lout a s s is ts
Sec Semlnoles, Page 211

Clayton
delivers
for Rams
once more

Walraven helps
’Noles register
first home win
From Stnlf Reports
SANFORD — J a s o n W alra v e n . a s e r n n d - l r a m All­
S ta le seleettuu III fuotb.ill as a p la e r k tr k c r . led S e m in o le
High Si hoot lo a 2 0 will over Flagler P a lm Coast In a
3A-Dlstrlcl 5 boys" s n r r r r m a le li T l m r s d a y al Sem i
mile s T h o m a s F W h tg h a m S ta d iu m
Not only did W a lra v e n h a v e a loot In tintli ol
S e m l n o l e s goals. he a u e lio re d a d e te n s e tliat help e d
goalie J o n W illiam s post his lu st s h u to u t ol th e s e a so n
It w a s a lso th e Mist w in al h o m e lor S e m in o le 14-10)
I Ills se a s o n
I lie d e le n s e did a ureal Jo b ." sa id S e m in o le r o a c h
C a rlo s Merltno " J a s o n . Brian G rim e s. Daniel W hile,
a n d Hen Hrow n p la y e d well in from of J o n .
"H ut It's th e s a m e old p ro b le m . We d o n 't h a v e a n
e x p e r le n e e d pi i s o n u p trout lo put th e ball In llie net.
We also a p p e a r e d lo lie a little s l u t t i s h from p la y in g
b a e k lo b a e k g a m e s "

From Stnff Reports

W hile th e S e m ln o le s (who loss to l.v m n n W e d n e s d a y
night) m a y h a v e b e e n a hit slu g g ish , th e y d id n 't la k e
long to ta k e th e lead a s S a m Earl took a p a s s Irom
W a lra v e n a n d se o re d |u st | :4H Into the g a m e .
T he o t h e r T ribe goal c a m e w ith H:G4 left tn th e g a m e
w h e n J i m m y J o h n s o n corralled th e r e b o u n d nl a
W a lr a v e n hlasi a n d k n o c k e d It h o m e at 7 1:56.
S e m in o le o u ts h o t F la g le r P a lm Coast 12-6 a n d h a d a
7-2 a d v a n t a g e In c o r n e r kicks, forcing th e Flaglcr-I’a lm
C oast goalie to m a k e se v e n sa v e s. W illia m s h a d to c o m e
u p w ith five s t o p s to post the s h u to u t.
T h e T r ib e will p lay d e f e n d i n g C la s s 3A s t a l e
c h a m p i o n D a y to n a B e a c h -S e a b ree z e M onday night al
W h lg h a m S ta d iu m . T h e ju n io r v a rsity will play a t 5 :1 5
p .m . w ith th e v a r s ily c onte st set for 7 p.m .

H ara ld P h o to by Richard Hopklna

S am Earl (above) ga v e S e m in o le a 1 0 lead over
Flagler Palm C o a st T hursday w hen he s c o r e d on an
a s s i s t from J a s o n Walraven with just 1:48 expired.

G reyhounds begin new streak
From Staff Raporta

JUCO Men’s Basketball

HOCKEY
7 til | | | | I
Hlltl.ll.l S. llll I N

Washington ‘wakes up,’ leads Seminole romp

I.ONGWOOD — In the ir llrsl g a m e b a c k a lte r se e in g
th e ir 4 6 -g a m e w in s tr e a k s n a p p e d , th e L y m a n High
S chool girls' so c c e r te a m pic k e d u p w h e r e it left off,
b la n k in g S e m in o le 3-0 T h u r s d a y nig h t in a S e m in o le
A thletic C o n fe re n c e m a tc h .
L y m a n , w h ic h lost to D a y to n a B e a c h -S e a b re e z e 3-1 lu
o v e r tim e In th e finals of th e B u r g e r King C la s s lr o n Dee.
22. im p r o v e s lo 1 1 1 . 6-0 In t h e SAC. S e m in o le d r o p s lo
7-6 1 .1-5 In th e c o n fe re n c e .
"It w a s a good effort all th e w a y a r o u n d . " sa id L y m a n
c o a c h G a ry B a r n e tt. " W e w ere a little s h o r t o n th e
fin ish in g e n d . h u t th e n we d i d n 't w ork o n th a t very
m u c h o v e r th e b re a k . S e m in o le did a n ic e Job of
p r e s s u r in g u s o n d e fe n se a n d p la y in g th e offside tr a p
T h e y did nice u jo b a g a in s t us.
“ O n c e a g a in , we w orked on s o m e n e w t h i n g s over
C h r is tm a s . We im p le m e n te d t h e m b e g in n in g to n ig h l.
W e h a v e s o m e p la y e rs In s o m e n e w s p o ts a n d w e 're
try in g so m e different things. O verall. 1 w a s p le a se d w ith

w h a t 1 s a w ."
S a r a K a n e sc o re d tirsi lor L y m a n nil a n a ssist Irom
D anielle G a r r e tt at 15:16. In llie s e c o n d half, f r e s h m a n
Michelle St. L outs c o n v e r te d a p a s s Irom G a r r e tt in to a
goal at 5fJ:3H. G a r r e tt c a p p e d th e s c o r in g w ith a n
u n a s s is te d goal at 7 5 :0 7 .
L y m a n o u t s h o t S e m i n o l e 3 4 -3 a n d h a d a 4-1
a d v a n ta g e tn e o rn c i k ic k s G r e y h o u n d goalie C'hervl
R o b e rts h a d to m a k e Just o n e s a v e to n o tc h llie s h u t o u t
w hile S e m in o le 'k e e p e r C h r is ty Oliver w a s c a lle d u p o n
to m a k e 17 sto p s.
T h e G r e y h o u n d s a lso w o n th e |u u liir v a rsily g a m e .
6 -0 .

L y m a n will play al B ishop Moore to n ig h l a n d will
host W in te r P a rk on S a t u r d a y a lle r n o o n . S e m in o le
p la y s al Flagler-I’a lm C oast S a t u r d a y a f te r n o o n at 2
p in
LAKE MARY 5, LAKE HOWELL 5
W INTER PARK — lu .m u n c o m m o n l y o lle n siv c
S e m in o le Atlllelle C o n f e r e n c e girls' so c c e r m a le li. th e
t Sec Soccer, Page 2B

LAKE MART
t tin i . 114.1111 I’.ml
&lt; lax ton v\ a s 1 ni I lie spill
VNrest ling m iln 2 2 D p 'liu n l 1 I.ism
lit .lim n Im iln L.ikt Nl.ux R a ins
1 lax inn x\ a s |,ii i d xx 11 I1 a
nnisi
x\ in s i i u a lm il in Ills m alt h in k* &gt; p
I In R a m s 11 nu 1 losing a d ual 11 a el
A nd mil 1 a g a in In 1 a im ilim u g li
&lt; lax Inn xv lut xx.is a deli usixi l a p
lain lor iln R am Innthall t r a m
p i n n e d h i s o p p o n e n t in 2 h i
iioiishug l.akt Nl.ux IT O 1 1 in a
III 32 XXIII m i I I III X|s| I Dig &lt; nil MU. 11
t i i i u a d ii i s t i n I in *-i|.i\ niglii
f l a v i n i i w on 111n m a n h xxnli a p m in
In Ip L.lki Nl.ux poll out a 3 a 3 a la
wllli I Tux 1 1 Nil x
L ake Nl.11 v a l s o w o n llie |uillul
xarsiix d u a l in e r t I h u r s d a x night
17-30
" O n e r a g a in Paul w a s iln hi to
N.111I L ake Nl.ux r o a e li Doug I 'r l e l s
"lie's g one ll&lt;llll a toiilh.lll p l a n t
w re stlin g lo b e in g a toolh.dl plaxi 1
a n d a tr u e w r e stle r Ih h a d to win
Ills m a le li loi u s lo xv in a n d In did
It's mil like I III 1 es 1111 xx a s a gix 1 II
1 laxion w a s le a d in g pisi 1 2 a l i n
o n e period Ii. ix m g be e n lexi 1 si d bx
S a n t i a g o h c lu r e t h e e n d ol tin
pel mil Hill S a n t i a g o 1 h o se llie
d o w n p o s i t i o n 10 o p e n s e c o n d
perdtnd II n u ll look flaxT uii III
s e c o n d s lo gel llie pill llllll a
hall Nelson o v e r p o w e r in g N.uilingo
Also, s e x e ia l ol tla v o u u g e i R a nis
c o n tr ib u te d In lla le.uil XlelniX hx
k e e p in g llll ll III.Ih lies 1 lose a n d not
a llo w in g (T 1l11lll.il lo la c k lip e vli.i
te a m p o in ts w ith pills, tc 1 Ju lie .d
la llsn i 111.1 |i 11 d e c is io n s
()ui 1 5 2 -p o u n d e r. A a in n Reedy,
had lo la ri' o n e ol ih e ir h e lle r
w i e s i l e i s " s a i d P e le i's
A.n o n
XVleslled well lie looked Xe|\ good
in 11111 11 period We Ihouglit la
S e e W r e s t l i n g . P n g e '2 B
LAKE MARY 40, COLONIAL U
I0J Hr.Hitry i LM pmnfd bndges 7 00 (»7
Dunn (LM1 ptnnpcl W Ovtxirne 4 J9 11v W
Osborn*' (C i
d«*t M»tth»*liv l l?4 Cuiitns
LM) mdior dec Rtimsiiroof 10 0 IJ0 D«
iC) pmned Of»**v J 00 IJi
P«»ro(im* IM
pmned Muller 3 iV I4rt Bergman ilMi pmn«'d
Cornell 3 SO I4S Whttf (Cl maior dec Redlg
(7) IS7
Vele; (C( dei Rved» Ili &gt;60
Johnson iC)d*-c Menello (0a 171 Pierre (LM*
ft, tor let! 18V Crfrtipbi'll tC pmned Wrntli,
IS 770 Cl.i,ton (LMi pmned S««nftago 7 40
ifVY Ayotle (C I hr lorte.l
Junior varsity L.»*•• M.i* y 4/ Colonml 30

Fall champion falls, first- timers notch first win
From Staff Raporta

R E Ttmplelon
Miym Tree Service

3S0 110 J - 70 )t
00) 030 7 — 8 77

SANFORD — It w a s mil a good night for th e
Fall c h a m p io n s , h u t it xvas a n e x c e lle n t first
a p p e a r a n c e lor a n e w c o m e r a s th e S a n fo rd
R ec re a tio n D e p a r tm e n t M en's T h u r s d a y Night
C la ss C Polar B e a r S low pllch Softball L e a g u e got
u n d e r w a y at C h a s e Park.
G a to r 's , th e d e f e n d in g Fall e lia p m io n s . fell
b e h in d 10-0 a f te r th r e e In n in g s a n d Florida
S p o r ts W e a r w ent o n to win 10-3. w hile R E
T e m p le to n , m a d e u p p rim a rc ly of p la y e rs from
th e Fall C h u r c h c h a m p i o n C e n tra l B aptist te a m ,
h a m m e r e d M eyers T re e S ervice 20-8 in its tirsi
lor.ix Inlo th e r e c r e a tio n a l snlih.dl w a rs
T h e o t h e r g a m e lo u n d B.unhoo Calc b e stin g
S a u lo r d First B aptist C h u r c h 12-7
Next w eek. B a m b o o Cafe will play G a to r 's at
6 :3 0 p.m . First Baptist a n d R E T e m p le to n will
ba ttle at 7 .3 0 p m a n d Florida S p o r ts W e a r will
ta k e on M eyers T r e e Service at 8 :3 0 p.m .
C o n tr ib u tin g to a 31 till R E T e m p le to n a tta c k
w ere Ken Perry (five singles, tw o rim s|. Mike
McCoy (double, th re e singles, lour runs). T o m

Gelor’t
Florida Sporlx Wear

000 0)0 0 - 1 t)
708 000 ■ — to 14

Bamboo Calv
Sanlord Firtl Baplat Church

500 250 0 - 1 7 18
tl) 000 2 - / 18

H olland Sr. Hour singles, ru n l. T o d d C h r is te n s e n
(double, tw o sin g le s, th r e e ru n s). J o h n E a r n e r
(th r e e singles, fo u r runs). E d d ie C oggou (three
singles, ru n ) a n d Roy T e m p le to n (th re e singles)
Also. W a y n e Kelley a n d T o m H olland J r lixvo
sin g le s a m i o n e r u n each). Bill Rex (single, ixvo
r u n s ) a n d Dale Y ates Isingle. r u n l
Doing llie d a m a g e lor M eyers T re e Service
w e re Muse (lom singles, ih r c c rinisi. H im linplt
do u b le , single, runl. M arlin (th re e singles, m ill.
R y a n (three singles). S m a llic r s (two m i i u I i n tw o
ru n s). G re e n . P a rsh a ll a n d C a r te r lixvo sin g le s
cuclil a n d S im p s o n (single, r u n l
Lilting Florida S p o r ts w e re Lee Hood (double
single, run). W es T u n k s lc y a n d R.indx N.ties (two
sin g le s a n d iw o iiuin each). R.indx R a w lin g s a n d
S te v e D o n o v a n lixvo sin g le s a n d o m u r n e.n In

B r a n tle y B r m n le y a n d N o r m a n R o b e rts (one
d o u b l e a n d o n e r u n e a c h ). S t e v e W o o d le y
(double) a n d J e r r y D m s s c lls (single, ru n l.
H ittin g for G a t o r ’s w e re M ark C la llc r h u c k
(th re e singles), Mark A ten (tw o singles). C h r is
W a rg o a n d WII B land (one d o u b le a n d o n e r u n
cuclil. C h ris W ire (double). Mike M el.olian (single,
r u n l a n d T e r r y Russ!. D a n n y G r a e e y . Mickey
W est a n d Turn B ledsoe (one sin g le each).
P o w e rin g B a m b o o Cafe lo v ic to ry w e re Carl
S t e p h e n s (three sin g le s, tw o r u n s ) . S c o tt Meek
(th r e e singles, run). D a n n y S p lv ic a n d Kick
M o r d a u d (one d o u b le , o n e sin g le a n d tw o r u n s
cuclil. K c nm tli M orse (two sin g le s, ixvo runs).
K c n n v Collie a n d K e n n y S t e r n e r (two sin g le s
eaelii. J e r r y Dick (single, ixvo ru n s). B rian Poe
(single) a n d Mack T h o r n e (run)
P a c i n g llie S a u l o r d F h s i B a p tis t C h u r c h
n lle n se w ere Tunx Blair llriple. ixvo singles, ixvo
n in s). S te v e L a m e u e e (ilouhle. tw o singles, tw o
runs). J i m ( orncll a n d T o m m y G ra e e y lixvo
smglt s a n d o n e r u n each). T u n P a lm c i a n d It J
Holt (ixvo sin g le s each). R a n d y R o b e r ts (single,
r u n l a n d Sid Brock. -Jett B e th a n y a n d J o r d a n
Ifci klier tola single eat hi

�S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS

Warriors whip Heat
AlUatora-OrleaBe

TfeeraSayaNM
Writ ra«# - 9/1*. Ci 91.4*
1 Dedication
4*0 1.40 4.40
4Crown'l Fethton
10.10 4.40
7Cr'iGoMDigger
000
Q (M ) 11. m f IM» If JO T IS4-7) 411.10
iatanSrari If! ITinil
5Ml'*Samtwill
10.10 4.10 4.00
4Blachtyod Svrten
140 1.40
1LaoGator
4.00
O(4-1) 14.94F (M) 47J*T C9-4-1) 10140DO
M.W*(1-4-1-4)07444
TDMro*4—4/14. OilUO
SEaquIaltaTatla
0.40 4.00 140
tChtrokeeSguall
*40 4.40
4Lr'i Lori Lae
4.40
Q(4-1) 11410(44) 70.44T(4-4-1) 14444
Feurtfereca-4/M.BiS1.t4
IBoo'.Nkeneety
140 4.40 440
I RvDivineDaecon
140 140
4Kattu Telptl
1-40
Q(1-1) 1140P(M) 44JOT (1-7-4)10140
FHIfere**-1/14, Cl 1140
IMI'tOIngar
1140 140 1.40
3Whoeptlegoidfeorg
140 140
4MyRodaoOil
140
Q(M) 1140P(M) 11.40T(1-1-4) 14140
StiNi roc*— 1/14. Di 1141

Tterd h ic t

S4,W. Virginia St.
teAgvtaM f la k e If

Carroll, Mari. TO.*1. Sthole.Ilea44
II. Thomet Aquino*74. Clark*71
II. XavNf44. Mount MarcyII
VdortoTI. Rotary4f _
CaferMI4.ltonaHttokt4lS.OT
III. BewSkNne44. Leras 4t

II. Rata n . CerOlnaJ Itrltch 71
X s v lf e r, N O S ) . R o c k k u r t l 41

7Cm Patrick
1-40 440 140
1 Norma Bowman
440 440
lOull’i Locfclnvar
140
O (1-1) 1140 P (M ) 1040 T (1-1-1)14140 •

IAME0R047, CENTRAL ELORIOAII
CBNTRAt FLORIDA (4-7)

1Igfelferata —3/4. C:3SJ&gt;

I Mt'o Ballavor
li| IM y (0 M
iRclatayVar

Pacific Lutheran TV.Marian71
WffU| M s m
Concordia. Midi 70. Fllefeburg»
LadyCraaoiir Toumaawat
Pint Raw*
E. Central OklahomaM. Schnlnar SI
Wayland74. Tarlatan SI. 44
OklahomaChrlttlanST. SI. EdnardtU
Incarnate Word College V. E. T
apthtTi
National CalfeottcTournament
QaartarttaaN
Carroll. Mont.47. St. rrand*. III. 44
Mount Mercy *4. Cardinal Strltefi44
Rockhurtt 77, SI Vincent 74
Reaery00. Viterbo 17

DavisMM 4. lotion 4-114111. Walker 31
4-4 10, PMHIfet 4-14 1-4 11. Carter 44 SO0.
Melon II 444. HarOIng 13 40 1. Rosier 47
9-9 I*. Harper 44 41 0. VanDweten 44 44 4.
Totals344»113443.
4AM4OR0 (M)

044 4.14 140
440 140
440

O(1-4) 14.44P(1-9) 94J4TO-94) 144J4
NtMfersd —4/14, Oi 41J»
I Jiylayslttvl#
4.49 3J I 9.40
4Draw's Frlia
*-4® *44
74mCull*
44*
Q(44) HJ F (44) 44JIT (44-1) IS*SI
iMfersca-4/14. Bins*
1Red Burr
3Jans Ayr*
3SI 7-44
4LynnJm
*•■*
O(1*9) 14J4F (1-*&gt;1M9T(1-94) 194.44
1liferscs —4/1*. Cill.11
4Omni Itasca
"
7JS IS* 4-4S
«Prinkad
17-4* » »
7World LssSsr
_
*99

Imltfe 7-149-411. Eaton 34 M 4. Skeale 7 14
04 IS. Herman 14 44 3. Franklin 04 04 4.
Oavonporl 14114. Trust 04 04 4. Flaky 4 7
04 V. Hairs 01 04 O Janet 04 04 4. Matkews
9-4044. Totals944144 *4.
Halftime— lamter* it. Central Florida 11.
3 Fotm goals Central Florida 04 (Davis Ol.
FMIlIpe 09. Carter O t Melon Ol. Footer O I).
lam lard 7 8 (tmllk 44. Skeale 14. Harman
14. Do nonpar! Ol, Flsley 1-1. Hays O l).
Fouled out— Franklin. Refeoundt Cenlrel
Florida 31 (Waikar a Fatter l). lamlord it
Hasan V). Assists-Contra! Florida 4
irfeMllpt 9). lamlord V (Meets 4). Tele!
Seals Control Florida II. lamlord 17. A—

nJ.1lV .in TrTTi l __________ _
OAKLAND. C alif. - T he
Golden State W anton are havtag more tan these days, even If
the fans didn’t get free p itta .
Winning will do that to you.
The W arriors won for the sixth
tim e In seven games Thursday,
beating the Miami Heat 119*105.
Despite the comfortable margin,
Oolden State point guard Tim
Hardaway launched a three*
Quarter length shot at the bu ster
that went straight In the basket,
but didn't count.
If It had. the Warriors total
would have surpassed 190 In a
victory, meaning all the fans
could subm it their ticket stubs
for free plssa a t outlets of an area
chain.

*i th in k It*a a bad idea.
though." |U w g h « y * ^ "The
roore “"P0" " " than
P****The contest went the W arriors'
way for the U th time In their
^
14 primarily because they
outre bounded the Heat 27*13 In
the first half and made 15 more
foul shots than Miami. The Hpat
won the rebounding battle In the
Mcond half, but couldn't come
back from a 58*43 halftim e
deficit. Except for one brief
moment In the third quarter.
they never got closer than nine
points In the second hair,

The fans had booed as the
W arriors m issed a few free

S u n ^ ttau 'co n slsten tly win for
youTYou can't count on Jump

S T o &amp; S N E S S f f iS

^ ~ * * * ? r~

Hardaway deliberately fouled
Miami's Kevin Edwards with a

Taste of Sanford* faaturas door prlzss
SANFORD - "A Taste of Sanford" will not only be a
sampling of foods prepared by some of Sanford's best cooks as
well as numerous businesses, but It will also feature a variety
of door prises with drawings scheduled every hour.
The event sponsored by the Sanford W oman's Club, will be
held at the clubhouse. 309 S. Oak Ave.. Saturday. Jan. 9. from
5 to 8 p.m. The public Is welcome.
Tickets, at 95 each, are available at the door or from any
woman’s club member.

8H 81973 elass to plan reunion
SANFORD — The Seminole High School claaa of 1973 Is

" T h e y o u th u s tle d u s .
especially on the boards. Heat
forward John Salley said. "Re-

call Oary Mathews, 390*9383, between 9 and 5 p.m .,
weekdays.

Merchant Marinas, Guard to maat
SANFORD — U.S. Merchant Marines Veterans. World War I.
and U.8 . Navy Armed Quant, WW I. will meet Sunday. Jan. 10,
at 1 p.m.. at the American Legion, 2874 S. Sanford Ave.
Area veterans are welcome to visit
For Information, call Bob Swanson. 321*4723. or Fred
Fontaine. 323*7410.

Miami fom ard Qlen R teew as
“» re succinct: "They hustled.

Woodman of World moots Monday
SANFORD - Lodge No. 625 of the Woodmen of the World
will meet Monday. Jan. 11, at 6:30 p.m.. at 118 8. Park Ave.
The meeting will begin with a covered dish dinner followed by
the business meeting.
*
For Information, call 322*2628.
.

Sanford Roterlant to mret
Rotary Club of Sanford m eets every Monday at noon, a t the
Sanford Civic Center.

Artiste fo moot at oonter
SanJaw
4 93
ThunSey'iSawi
Quafeac3. BartonI, OT
PMIaSaUMaAWarnIngtant
Mlnmwti 4. Fltttfeurgh 3
■Smanlan
tia
■dmenten3. Chicago3. (la
SI.LauH3.Catgaryl.OT
FrtSay'i Oaow*
NawVark IrtenSmat 9wMeie. 7:4M-m
OttawaalNawJeroy. 7:40p.m.
SanJaw at Taranto. 7:44p.m.
Vancouver otOrtreit. 7:44pm.
LwAngatwatWvy a^J^gw i.
Calgaryat Pllttburgh. i|:40p.m.
Ntw York Ranger. at PMHWtphta.
in.
. '
Hew Jersey el Beslan. 7:1#p m.
QuafeacPt Herttar*. 7:49p.m.
ttn im fY hr.,.- &lt;

Mat* 14. QataRcy 9-19. Cat—

w 14. loRort

HLjkglklhlKEsfelaSfe*jj**.,JR4»;
FtartSe»(CitM&gt;SR»).Rl9N4l liiili'riltaM
(LaOraa9). leuRt FtarMe17(ASM 7). Total
fault—Laulivilla i*. BauHr FlarMa 19.

The Sanford Seminole Art Association m eets the second
Monday of each month at 7 p.m. a t the Cultural Arts Center In

Nureoo moot monthly

Sem lnoles
two steals and a blocked
shot. Washington finished with
23 points. 10 rebounds, five
blocked shots, seven steals and
six assists.
Also contributing to the Tribe
offense were freshman Mlndec
Hampton (six points, live re*
bounds, four steals, one blocked
shot). Morgan (tiro points, three
rebounds, th re e steals, two
assists) and Kay Kay Mullins (six
rebounds).
Lysa Moorcflcld paced the Pa­
triots offense w ith 14 points and
also collected a game-high 12

rebounds. Leigh Ann Penney
chipped In with six points, five
rebounds, five steals and three
The victory was the first SAC
win - for Seminole after three
losses and improved Its overall
record to 12*7. The Tribe will
return to action on Wednesday.
J e n . 2 0 . In a b o y 's -g frls
doublcheaderat Lyman.
Lake Brantley suffered Its sec­
ond consecutive loss to tall to 7*4
overall and 1*2 In the SAC. The
Patriots will play again Saturdaynight at Dr. Phillips with the
Junior varsity starting at 5:30
p.m.

I

from Angie Olson and scored in
the 59th minute.
Each team took 14 shots on
goal. Lake Mary goalie Michelle
Rovlto making six saves while
Lake Howell 'keeper Paula Yulis
rqadc three stops. Lake Howell
had a 5-4 edge In comer kicks,
The Rams were whistled for 13
fouls while the Silver Hawks had
three fouls called against them.
Lake Howell won the Junior
varsity contest. 2-1.
Lake Mary, now 7-3-5 overall
and 2-1-3 in th e Sem inole
Athletic Conference, will play at
Tampa-Leto Saturday at noon,
Lake Howell, 12-4-4 overall and
2-2-2 In the SAC. plays at West
OrangB Saturday afternoon In a
2:30p.m .contest.

The first month In the New Year I'll bet 70
crcent of you make the commitment to
ise weight! Here are some common
exercise m yths 1 came across that I hope
will be of Interest to you. I'm glad to know
these expressions I've heard most of my life
aren 't true —one leas hurtle to Jump!
IV* pal* , a s g ala. While It Is true that
competitive athletes m ust push themselves
beyond the point of discomfort In order to
reach a higher level of performance, for the
average person, this la not necessary. One
can become physically (It without overdotag_
It. In fact, the primary reason that people
quit exercising Is that they try to do too
much and they (tad the price Is too great.
O* fa r th * barm. Jane Fonda Is an
advocate of this popular myth.
The truth Is
.
that pain Is a warning f.........................
that the body has
been overstimulated. When you feel
* * pain
‘
you should ease off. Going for the bum Isn't
necessary to Improve fitness.

[

____
O O tM iM
FOCUS

should be met by Increasing the amount ol
food from the food groups In the diet
Contrary to popular belief, athletes do noi

BARBARA
HUGHES/
GREGG

that cellulite does not exist — It is ordinary
fat that can only be lost as part of an overall
w eight control program . Double blind
biopsy studies of fat were made from people
with dimply, lumpy tatty tissue and those
with normal appearing tat tissue. There was
no difference in the chemical composition of
the fat cells. The difference In appearance of
fat Is probably caused by an increase In tat
cell else which may cause tat compartments
to bulge and produce a waffled appearance
of the skin.
p a rts sftk a b w fy . Thm IsnoM K hU itagM
____________
spot reducing. You are bom with a profile Sauna suits are
to the point of
and you put on fat In certain places — being potential!
according to your Individual pattern and made out of rubberised material that does
your sex. The only way to bum fat Is with not allow air to reach the body. Therefore,
aerobic exercise. An aerobic exercise (short sweat does not evaporate and the body
bouts of exercise) bum s only carbohydrates, cannot cool Itself. Your Internal body
After 20 m inutes or so of seorbic exercise tem perature becomes too high for body
th e body s h ifts from u sin g m ain ly metabolism and vital internal organs to

different things. When you stop exercising,
your muscles grill atrophy, and tat may take
Its place, but muscles do not turn into tat.
OeUuUts. Cellulite Is the term used to
describe dimpled tat found on hips and
thighs of many women. Cellulite la often
promoted as a special type of tat that la
resistant to diet and exerctae. The truth is

to travel a mile. (The exact amount depends
on your body weight.) If both the Jogger and
the slow walker exercise one hour, the
Jogger will bum more calories since he or
she will travel a longer distance.
D rtakia g w ata r e r any P a id ^d a ring
p a in p**r perform m s . This Is not true.
Drinking water regularty before, during, and
after exercise Is essential to prevent de­
hydration. Dehydration can affect how you
feel and decrease your performance capabil­
ities.
■ alt ta b le ts a re n ecessary w hen you
sssra la e st r s a a o a sly and aw aat a la t.
Once It was thought that supplmentatlon of
salt through salt tablets was essential to
replace the salt lost through sweat. Howev­
er. most people obtain sufficient salt in their
diets to replace salt lost. The body adapts to
heat stress by reducing the salt content or
sweat.
people get older they tend to gain weight for
several reasons. They become leas active so
they burn leas calories than when they were
younger. But their food intake often says the
m am . As ip epfr1 age their
slows
down and their body requires fewer calories.
R Is estimated that for every decade after
age 90. there la a 10 percent reductlon ln
resting calories requirem ent If eating and
f
&gt;&gt;wti*«w go not |,tu&gt;" | &gt;, the extra

Pot-sm oking son
nseds boundaries
set by m other

Proud nurse educates
clods about her work
"X-ray Tech." who complained
that she wss tired of patients
who, while being positioned for
mammograms, make comments
such as: "Do you do this all day?
What a disgusting job; there's
t a t b . worid

OewtlMMdflrMB IB
Lake Mary Rams and
1-afrw Howell Silver Hawks battied their way to a 5-5 tie
Thursday night at Lake Howell's
Richard L. Evans Field.
"Otivlously. this was an offenaivc struggle, not a defensive
one like we've come to expect
when we play conference matches," said Lake Mary coach Bill
Bta*e!e.
j-aWw Howell scored twice In
the first tiro m inutes of the game
and the tgro team s were off to
the races.
Angle McComtck scored In the
first m inute for the Silver Hawks
and Holly Myers found the net In
the next m inute. U took only 10
m in u te s fo r th e R am s to

‘

The Ltcenaed Practical Nureea Association of Florida. Inc.,
m eets the eeoood Monday of the month a t 6:30 p.m. at
Kllaraey Baptist Church. 701 Formosa Ave. C.E.U. class

No pain, no gain not necessary for average person

to pay roe to do what you're
doing.".
1
relate to such comments
iw^uw* I
a nu n e. and I'm
tired of being asked, "How can
you standtow ork yrith terminal
patients? Isn 't U depressing
caring for people when you
w ^^w. ____
_J i .AH

».
B g M g g i • .•
A
OVW
AD
VietI
^
____________
~
H
jo i n a , i

cipllning. After my husband
died. I wss so overwhelmed that
I couldn't even do a kH of the
normal things like shopping and
taking care of the car, much leas
♦win, on the task of monitoring
and disciplining our son.
ABIGAIL
Now 1 have found out that
VAN
V A N BBUREN
UREN
Mark (not hio real name) has
H
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
•
been hanging out In a park ertth
older kids slier
mmiHnj
marijuana.
I
know
I
have
got to
Katy. Texas, was recently re­ get some control over him before
cognised for his donation of a things really get bad but I don't
totalof 75 gallons of blood,
know how I should go about
Hitt began donating blood in
1968 When he was active In the
tf fl iswswt Urn AANllaiiisd

BALK
;
m am ^m m am m m m a m a ^^m
an ow n. non-threatening gray,
and be very d e a r aa to what
consequence*, grill fallow a riolation of your expectations. If the
violation occurs, you m ust fallow
through consistently grtth the
consequence. Kids and teens
erdcome and need the structure
a parent provide*, even If they
don't outwardly ejqxea* I t .

A p p earin g

Picture the Seven
dsctds what you
w hat you can apj
don't know w hat "pheresia 1

Dwarfs without
a forest. ■ '
Oelg YouC—rW—1fend f—4.

you grill neithet' accept nor
p n p f r w n j |&gt;U h a n g in g n u t |g the

perk, and certainly not his Illegal

Q ta u ty S a lo n In tr o d u c to r y

__ _
•hJIT*

Jack (Marrta. Tar
o^

Co m Sm ! nvm

TamOtartaa. AN
Sarnr tsrfeiA. CM
OatmgTarUMAi.NW

might have a chancr
to come back, hut he did a real

m
g&lt;Rfeivwd B rsdkv (103 pounds).
wVa&gt;t Kevin Dunn (1121. Fst Parottnc
wV2 (135) and Kyle Bergman (140) all
grim their m atches with pins for
Lake Mary while teammate Cory
Cullina shutout his opponent
. fsu ,(M) for a major decision. Jean
Pierre (171) picked up a win by
Catta*#. forfeit.
Lake Mary hosts Ftagler-Palm
rasaaat C oast In a d u al m eet th is
evening. Weigh-ins are achedmttina, ulcd for 6 p.m'. with Junior
u
‘ varsity competition beginning at
6:30 p.m. ttnd the varsity meet
M “ T fet for a 7:30 p.m. start.

Of THE

shr

SCHOOL
□ T IE S .

322-7542

a|

�■

' M i l l l a n f t h i i i hiIa hl l mII If tI a
ni l li
M
&gt;191111h i 1 I f l l l l l I I I ”1111191111

rjy. •

i proud esergneen stands In defiance of winter, Unlike many trees, winter
t ravage her lush emerald cloak. She reifns supreme, surveying God's erefrom a lofty throoe, arms spread wide, standing elect in regal majesty,
when the snow coders her domain, the, too, bows to the earth, in deference
to the Creator, aa her branches bend with the weight of winter ...a n d she la even
Miff beautiful
Psalm 2229 proclaims, "Yea, to Him shall all the proud of the earth bow down.'

*

1

ftjhu v

�Sanford Horsto, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 8, 1803 -

IN

Countywide prayer breakfast planned

B R I E F

E n lo h s n v P
a n # M il Via
s n llVwlfV
t i o t i nIV
c eW
d
I m|pvVnil
SANFORD — Holy Cross Episcopal Church. 4018. Park Ave..
wttl hold an Epiphany Pageant on Sunday a t 4:30 p.m. In the
Pariah Hall to present the story of the birth o f Jesus and the
visit of the Kings. There will be a King's cake.

SANFOfrD — The second an­
nual Sem inole C ounty New
Year’s P rayer Breakfast 1993
will be held a t the Sanford Civic
Center on W ednesday a t 7 a.m .
I n v i t a t i o n * to th e In*
terd en o m in atlo n al b reak fast

have been sent out and an the shadow of the C oon family gather
ither to pray for elected ofestim ated crowd of at least 600 heritage.
ncials, families and the county
is expected to attend.
The Steering Committee of the as a whole.
The featured speaker for this event is made up of local busi­
Tickets for the breakfast are
year is Adolph C oon IV. He will ness men and women, and some 615 per person or 9105 for a
•peak on personal tragedy, great clergy, from the Sanford and table of seven. For information
struggle and successful living in Lake Mary area. Participants will call 3334)894.

EMter play in the works
SANFORD — Sanford Workshop Community Choir will
rehearse for the play "I Find No Fault" a program to be given
during the Easter season. Those Interested in being a part of
this play may attend a special rehearsal on Saturday at 1 p.m.
a t Oreater New ML Zion Baptist Church. Pear Avenue.
For more information contact Mary L. DeBose at 3234)106 or
Vernon Jones at 32241219.

Youth In action
The final Grace n* Grits for
1902 was held by the youth
g r o u p s of c o m m u n i t y
c h u r c h e s at H o l y C r o s s
Episcopal Church Fellowship
H all, 4th SIraat and Park
Avanua. Helping out In the
kltchtn, from lafl to right,
Janie Howland, Kathy Hanry,
Bonnla Schum acher, youth
minister for First Presbyterian
Church, Zack Carter, Gwen
Carter, Lite Mlllonlg, T . J .
Roazell end Eric Crltes, youth
minister at First United Meth­
odist Church.

Sisterhood sets next meeting
Sisterhood of Temple Shalom of Deltona will meet at 10 a.m.
on Wednesday. Jan . 20. a t the temple. The guest speaker will
be Dr. Clyde Meade on vitamins.
Exercise classes are held a t the temple every Tuesday and
Friday from 10 to 11 a.m . They are open to the public.

and
rally pDlinntd
rPanda
w iv ■
v n i eMssjf
n n m
SANFORD — First Shiloh MJaskmaty Baptist Church Is
for Its Annual Martin Luther King. Jr.. Parade and
in the park. This year we expect better participation in all
aspects of this event.
All bands, civic groups, schools, fraternities, sororities,
businesses and interested persons may subm it either a float,
car, walking group or all of the above in the parade.
Preparations have begun to m ake thia the best ever.
Call the Rev. Harry Rucker or Sheryl Jones at 322*5409 for
more information. There Is no entry foe.
Banov to be featured speaker

Pliaii by f£ao|o

Oviedo Ministerial Alliance sets MLK events
of the NAACP. Trans- those who wWh.
tee chairperson, at 349-5830
will be provided from
For more information, contact Stew art Atwater, committee a
the m arch arts to the church for Laity Miller, planning commit­ retary at 366-4096.

LONQWOOD - Oeorgtan Banov will m inister Wednesday at
7 p.m. at Weklva Assembly of God. 1675 Dixon Rd.,
Longwood. Born and raised in Communist Bulgaria, his
personal hiatory reads tike a novel of intrigue and adventure.
For directions or for more Information, ell the church at
7744)777.

Batfeafero In oonoort
Angelo Balkstero. a local m ustdal, will perform at Calvary
Assembly's youth service. Wednesday Night Fever, at 7 p.m. (n
Johnson Hall. Same of his releases include "The Wind Will
Carry Me." and "As the Deer."
Calvary Assembly is located off 1*4 between Fairbanks and
Par Avenue. For more information, call 644*1199.

Ministers asked to help with Invocations
All Seminole County M inisters available to give the
Invocation a t the Board of County Pommieston meetings held
on the second and fourth Tuesdays ere ashed to register thetr
nam es —J pvww num bers by f i f i ng Caryioo Cohen, pAVr of
county rnmmlmlon records, at 321*1 f30. ext. 7661.

Ro m Hill fedoing great things
LAKE MONROE - Rose Hill MR. Church is doing great.
tiiliuRi is Seminole county *
Rftth a vlatoo from Ood m 1992, the church was able to sen d '
help hi
fo r the post three years the m i l church has been reaching
out topw plvtn nvedotiChrftfmrrr
They readied out to the people In the community and gave
not Just for one day, but
at 1 0 1

rights and equality through
nonviolence . The them e far the
1893 Celebration let "W here do
we go from b e n ? te a m It. Live
It. Teach I t"
The celebration will include!
' OFun Day a t the Park on
Saturday. Jan . 16, from 11 a m
to 4 p.m. a t Round Lake Park.
C.R. 419. Oviedo. P v tid p o n ts
wlU eqfoy free food, hot dogs,
hamburgers, soft drtnka, etc.:
gam es, basketball, volleyball.
tennK relay races, board gemea:

a)

a

■ *

e n tertain m en t, cheerleading,
atep groups, baton twkfare. etc.,
and a free bike registration by

“■sKssrsr&amp;a.

Americano win be 4 p jn . Sun*
d a y , J a n . 17, a t A n tio c h

i Hill is asking other churches in the area to reach out to
people tn need. "Let Ood’a people make this a better world, 1
know we &lt;
The Rev. C. S. Slpitn, pastor,

Keep us Informed
The Sanfanf MeraW wdcomea ReUgkm news and announce*
P r a l M Quartet In concert
The Praise Quartet from Pensacola Christian
College-will present a program of Inspirational
music on Wednesday at 7:30 pm . at Victory
Baptist Church, Hwy. 427 and Hester Avenue

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
■aatamOrtSoSMChurch. SI John OfthoOoa, I74J CountryClub RoM.

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CLASSIFIED ADS
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322-2611

631-8093

B O B B IITJ.ALU tlotrt..

nonce of A m e fWK

TO: SANFORD— HIDM N
LAKB HOMBOWNIRS
ASSOCIATION, IMC,
• FtorMs corporation

ttotwo: Adh»

Lost m m f i C irp ifp i
Addraaa: JSmveOekBtvd.

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YOU A M NOTIFIBDNiatan
actian la tarvctaaa the merissst
ancumbarln| Ik* fsllewlnf
proparty In laminala Caunty.
Florida:
Let 101. H ID O IN L A R I
VILLAS. fHASC III. iria ra *

• Waahart/Ofyara Avallabia

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Make your
N ew Year's
1 resolution
a home
at

Country Lake

2714 Ridgewood Ave
Sanford

330-5204

Ring in

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�KIT 'N ' CARLYLE® by Iju ry Wright

ip a c io u

OSRSVA - Cut* t bdrm. t bald
to town. Iliad family room,
flaw reat/carpat, M a.tM
imillT.ttavantaaaaga
L I A l l PURCH ASE • 1/1
mat I la, m o do.. MM/mo.
Other term* avail. m M*1

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Cwrtmll»«&lt; Cm MI-1113

a rim u jU H io

* *NfT0 INSURANCE* *
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carpart, lg. room*, Mti/mo .
MHaacurity.
alANPORO l/l garaga apt
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a S A N FO R D • 1M duple*
w/llvtog rm. parch, naw paint,
btinda. MW/ma. MWaac.
* Lit. MARY! 1/1 w/carport,
out*Ida itaraga, comar lot.
Naw paint A carpal. Claan.
MMma.MMiac.
• M A V P A IR V IL LA S , 1/1,
frlvatal dbi. garaga, all
appta., patia w/privacy, lg.
rota.SOT m e.UN lac.

OROAT MOTOR • t«M Twin
Mercury. IS HP. Naada rapatra. Oead cempraealen. m

Comp/CottiVon full cav.avail.
CCONOMY IN W U N C I
m i.M W Y .if-n .

m -m t

STENSTROM
REALTY, I NC.
W t Kit and tell
fnoft property (Km
M w m bi
i f f (fit Greater
ms*a wwat^^ra

Sanford/lake Mary Are*.
i n — Appliances
/ Furniture
PAPtR ROWTI - Orlando San
final. circulation M dally, aw
Sunday. SWAM glut par y*ar
Income. I-S hr. par night,
apta./candaa, Caaaalbarry
araa. Muat aalll Sacrlttca,

iM iu r n m n im
HOHOMY DOWN
Except tax, tag. Ittla, ate.
i m POROISCORT O L 4 d r,
auto, atr, ataraa, powar
ataarlng- la* mil**. Muat aao
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dLAKIVIEW Plant Ralcanyl
Vary naat t/t condo Oraat
location En|oy pool, tannl*.
Inaido utility.............Alt AM.

carpet- C/M/A, colli

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bdrm. t bath w/femlly rm. an
atmoat 1ft acral Ralaad pal la
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LA R I MARY 1 bdrm. S bath
w/lamlly roam, cantral M/A,
tancad yard, garaga. walk la

Hatley abanat SUM m -i

Captain** bad with 1 drawer*,
a thalvaa and lg. itaraga
•pace. Oraat condition I tlOt

________m a tsa _________

PFORD FtMJILT• **#. 4 wd. A
cyi., 44K ml., naw tlraa, ant.
warranty, »,* M MMW*

H7—D W O ftllH P oods

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1»»—Pots A Supplies
a N O T IC It Plarlda Statute

BUY a S ILL* T R A M

HOSPITAL R IO - Carram,

Divorced?Ronkreot?

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CHIVY C O R Y IT Tt, M, T-

O u r Spook* o t f m r w m Havm
You Laughing AM Thm W ay
To Thm Bank.

If you're looking At a new c a t , take a look
• i SouiWYum’s car loans. W ith a nose rate of
825%; and with guaranteed service, SouthDust
can take you where you want to g a In style.
Efuat opportunity Under. Subject to normal credit
approval 01992 SontU tnit

N o w iy R n n o v a to d l
b a t. w ell psy you for
for details on all our m

•Limited time offer. Rate subject to change without notice.
Note role oftJS&lt;h available onto on new cor loom o f i t
months or less. APR reflects Ike following example only:
on o $10,000 loon fo r 49 months, with o tSO processing
fee. momtkfy payments trill he 924762 with o total
finance charge o f91,950.41. Amount o f downpayment
varies with automobile.

Available only atSontUYnst Book o f Oriaodo Ranking
Craters: Dowatomm Orlando M W Central Rlvd
2499000; 7400 Vnirerssty BlpdatOaidenrod Rd
H 9*090; 011 W. Lehr Mary Bird. 220-2900(2494000from
OrUtndo); Good Homes Rd $901 W Coloniol Dr. io Ocoee
294-ISIS; AUomomJe Crossing 13l N. Stole Rd dJd
7749999; Hunter s Creek 9900L Village Center Dr.
240-7912.
Member FDIC

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• * * * * * * ** • * w

Healthy lifestyles
pay off in time
DEAR DR. QOTT: 1 don’t these veins or the varices can
smoke, drink, use drugs or affect circulation, resulting In
caffeine.. I exercise and eat a troublesome skin ulcers,
balanced diet. I’ve Just been
.
„ .
diagnosed with breast cancer.
There Is no family history, but
, hp
LrJ
my father died of prostate cancer SSJSJSf 2S5BT
at the age of 71. What Improve
w‘l.JV * “* * , c rP? ‘J '
ments can 1 make In my life to
° f ^ J 5 * n2 S
mitigate the condition?
«i»nHins
DEAR READER: RegretUbly.
JJjJ®
£»h
bad things happen: III health can
lhogff associated with
befall even the most prudent
person. A corollary: Behaving
SS Approach
yourself does not Insulate you « (neorsl
..
from disease -• although, in my 4 l*M a
u t&amp; u J S l
experience, folks who don't take
care of themselves get sicker
sooner and die earlier, and that’s
Just the point.
You have evidently not abused
your health in the past. As a
consequence, you're probably in
exceptionally good shape, a
characteristic that may make an
e n o r m o u s d i f f e r e n c e in
overcoming your breast cancer.
For example, were you a smoker
and heavy drinker, you wouldn't
respond as well to therapy for
your breast tumor, which may
Include radia tion and/or
chemotherapy.

H ttS T IU .
IN MOURNING
&gt; FOR.
,
SUPERMAN!

Thus, your many years of
sensible living may now pay off
dividends. You can approach
your unanticipated breast pro*
blem with a healthy body and
mind. Follow your physician's
advice about what specific ac&gt;
lions you could take to beat your
breast cancer.

HOW ARE YOU PO IN G ?

r

NO
PEEKING!

THE PRESSURE A3 THE

aiwnx)

AJRWFCO)OMSr5MUSr
e e tw T E M x ...

v

IF THEY M A KE A
\
MISTAKE. IT GOULD
RU N (UTO TRILLIONS V

or OUAPS

THEIR. MAlRRACTKE
IMSURAUCE MUST COST
A BUNDLE.

DEAR DR. QOTT: I'm 92 and
all of a sudden am suffering from
varicose veins. Is there a good
healing salve I can use? I must
be active, so being abed is out.
DEAR READER: There Is no
topical tre a tm e n t, such as
ointments, for varicose veins. As
we age. the veins in the legs tend
to balloon and dilate, leading to
the unsightly varicose veins
we're all familiar with. In severe
cases, blood clots may form in

a t *nn*

■y P hillip A lta r
In the second half of the
1960s. Scotsman Hugh Kelsey
wrote two classic bridge books.
“ Killing Defence at Bridge" and
“Advanced Play at Bridge." I
reviewed the former last year.
The latter has just been re*
blished in a paperback edition
15.45. O olfancs. 212*866*
5860).
Not only do the deals live up to
the title, but Kelsey carefully
and lucidly explains the thought
processes one should go through
when planning the play. This
alone makes the book worth
reading.
Today's deal is the first in the
book. It defeated 13 “unlucky"
experts, all of whom “played too
quickly." How would you try to
win nine tricks?
You have six top tricks: three
spades, two hearts and one
diamond. There are three ways
to go for the extra tricks. Win

K

fc o N o m c \

PETER
GOTT.M .D

A HH4HT *T0W wuwa THAT
¥ YOU n A ttO AU.
- m kokom i
jf
fMp-ro-f
rntr *71u .

'f O M M t f '

•* * CQNUsiHON.

lap

Jam. S. 1SSS
People to whom you will be
attracted in the year ahead are
likely to be individuals who are
progressive thinkers and in tune
with the times. Your best new
friends are apt to be drawn from
their ranks.

trick one in the dummy and take
an Immediate diamond finesse.
Win trick one in hand and attack
either diamonds or clubs. The
“unlucky" 13 all led the club
queen at trick two. going down
when the suit divided 4*1 and
the diamond finesse loot.
The best line is to win with the
heart ace and cash the diamond
ace. If the suit splits 5*0. you
must revert to dubs, hoping for
a 3*2 break. But if everyone
follows to the diamond ace. your
contract is assured. Just con*
tlnue with a diamond toward
dummy's queen.
With the given layout. West
must duck his king. Otherwise
you have nine tricks: three
spades, two hearts and four
diamonds. Then, after winning
with dummy's queen and seeing
East's discard, you can play on
clubs. Your nine tricks will be
three spades, two hearts, two
diamonds and two clubs.

guilt for just wasting your time.
A U S * (March 21*April 19)
Although you won't be putting
on pretenses, your behavior will
have a dramatic flair that will
induce others to focus their
attention on you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Success is Indicated today In
altuatlona where you are
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. strongly motivated to oo good or
IB) Joint ventures could hold bring joy to people you love. Do
tore promise for you today than your good deeds and don't worry
independent endeavors. Howev­ about the results.
OBMOfl (May 2I*June 20)
er. you must be teamed with a
p a rtn e r whose co n trib u tio n This could be a fortunate day for
you to promote a cause that you
equals yours.
truly believe In. Even people
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) who are usually resistant could
Moderation la the key ingredient succumb to your persuasive
to success today, so try to play
(June 21*July 22)
everything down the middle. For
best results don’t be loo ag­ Material affairs tend to work out
to your advantage today if you
gressive or too passive.
are prepared to give in order to
PtaCSR (Feb. 20-March 20) get. ltrs Important that you
Lounging in a cosy easy chair prime the pump in order to
could have strong appeal for you generate the flow.
U O (July 23*Aug. 22) You're
not a p t to ahy away from

“SSt*.

challenges today.'In fact, you
might even welcome situations
t h a t a r e too t r y i n g or
overwhelming for others to deal
with.
VfROO (Aug. 23*8ept. 22)
Qreater gratification will be de­
rived today from being helpful
Instead of trying to feather your
own nest. Good deeds will be
rewarded.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
hopeful regarding the outcome
of events today, because you arc
presently In a luckier cycle than
you may realise. Of course,
optimism and positive thinking
help.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You are not likely to seek out
competitive situations today, but
you're not apt to duck them
either. Should one arise you'll be
a tough competitor with which
to contend.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) View things from a positive
perspective today and your faith
should work wonders in making
events happen Just the way you
envision. Qot the picture?
by L h u N H a rr

BARGAIN FpOKS

�W aking sleeping giants
Washington ‘wakes up,’ leads Seminole romp
Lake Mary frosh win
I M\1 \1.\KN

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Umpire clinic planned
s \ \ | i 3RD

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Seminole PONY registration
I l \ I |*i »|N I S
S i ' n mi nl i PltNN 11.1st Ii. ill will
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Seminole Softball registration
I’lVI. I ' l l l M S
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W H A T ’S H APPEN IN G
TODAY
Boys' Basketball
Lake Brantley at S em inole Frvshmen .it .t p m
with itimor varsity and varsity to follow
K issim m ee G atew ay at Lyman Junior varsity
at 6 15 p m with varsity to follow
DeLand at Oviedo Junior varsity at 6 p m wit"
varsity to follow

Girls' Basketball
Lake Mary at E ustis Junior varsity al 6 p in
with varsity to follow

Boys’ Soccer
Lake Howell at Lake Mary

Junior varsity at

5 4 5 p m with varsity to follow

Girls’ Soccer
Lyman at B ishop Moore
p m with varsity to follow

J u n io r varsity al 5

Wrestling
Flagler Palm C o a s t at Lake Mary Junior varsity
at G 30 p m with varsity lo follow

SATURDAY

Horald S p o r ts Writer

__ ______________ _

SANFORD — T h u l.a k e H rantley Uhls' b a s k e t ­
ball I r a n i le a r n e d tw o Im p o rta n t le s s o n s I'lnirs
d a y night th e r e is no s u b s t i t u t e lor ip ile k n e s s
a n d d o n 't net u p se t N'lkl W a s h in g to n
S e m in o le 's le tia e lo u s lull c ourt d e fe n se Ion i d
2*1 tu r n o v e r s a n d ro lle e le d IK s te a ls a s W a s h in g
ton a w o k e It oiii th e d o ld r u m s to d o m i n a t e a
2 b point tonrtli ip ia r te r In the I r l b c s ( i l -29 rout
ol th e P a trio ts lit a S e m in o le A thletic &lt; o n le r e n e e
c o n te st at Hill F le m in g Memorial G y m n a s i u m
l lte imitoi v a rsity g a m e also w ent tin- Tribe's
w av bv a si m e ol 2-1 2 1
Most people p ro b a b ly th o u g h t 1 look N'tkl out
in th e se c o n d ipt.trier Irceausc sin- got her se c o n d
to o l.
s a i d S e m i n o l e h e a d c o a c h &lt; lo h n
Mi N'amata
llut I at luallv look h e r out b e c a u s e
sh e w a s p la y in g so badly S h e Just w a s n t
lu m p in g
lint alter s h e got tooled late til th e th ird
ip ia rte r. s h e s e e m e d to get mail I d o n 't know It
s h e got p u s h e d oi ll so m e o n e sa td s o m e t h i n g to
her. tint it w oke her u p a n d s h e (list d o m in a te d

S E M I N O L E *1. L A K E B R A N T L E Y J*
l a k e Brantley 0*1
C lw rn ak 0 3 0 0 0 . R o d g e r s O I 7 S 7 G a r d n e r 0 1 0 0 0 T
I l"0
j M.llr-i 0 0 17 1. Lu ll '* 0 1 7 4 7 Pen ne y 1 1 1 ) 1 1 V.inde. *'*«J'* ' '
0 0 7 |3iv.sl va lo r.* 0 0 0 7 0 M oo relleld t l * 7 ? "
I’ m * 0 7 0 0 0
C a m p h e l ' 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 1141/ 187*
Semmole I t l )
I ayson I J 0 0 7 Gi lli n x 0 0 0 0 0 M o r q a n 1 1 0 0 7 H a m p t o n 7 * 7 6
« Eaxon 10 71 A / 76 Washington 10 31 3 » 73 llooni- 1 7 0 0 7 Mullins
0 70 70 Totals 7S 68 It 7461
Lake Br antley
«
S * r
7*
Seminole
•*
* 10 **
*'
Three point t ir ' d qoals
Lak e Itr anl'ey 0 7 (R o d q e r s O I I r'*'».y
0 It Seminole 0 1 iW as h mq to n 0 11 Te a m louts
I . " ' - llfantley
71 S r m i n o ' r 18 t o u lr d out
none Te chnicals
no '"- Mrtmunds
L .t k r Br an tl ey 14 ' M o o f r t i r l d 17» S r m i n o ' r 4* Washington
Eason 101 Assists
L a k r Br antley &gt; Penney II Sem m o'e IS
(Wastunqlon 6 Eason 41 H n o t d s
L a k r B ' a n ' i r y I t ' 7 SAC.
S r m i n o ' r &gt;7 7 1 I SAC Junior varsity
S r m i n o ' r 74 l ake I t ' a n l l r y
71
_________________________

t h e l e s t id t h e g a m e

With W a sliln g b in gtting tu tin he m Ii w ith In t
third I'tttl earls In llte th ird rptarlei
l.ake
Ifrantlev r u t a 2ft IT lialtitm e d e l" n n&gt; 2 b 2*»
w ith 2 IMlelt m th e th ir d s t a n / a
I tut t h e s e n l n r p ni nl g u ar t l re e n t e r e d t h e gar ni
atl' l I m m e i h a l e l v t o ok r o i t l i o l a s llte IliiUte l e a n t
s e u r e d 2H "I tin n e x t MO p i i l n l s hit h i d i n g 21
s t r a i g h t n ve r t h e Itisl 5 . 5 5 nl Iht- luiirlli q u a r t e r

Sem inole CC at St. J o h n 's River CC 7 30 p m

Boys’ Basketball
R ockledge at Lake Mary Junior varsity at 6
p in with varsity lo follow

Girls’ Basketball
Lyman at Mainland Junior varsity at 12 15 p in
with varsity lo follow
Lake Brantley at Dr. Phillips Ju n io r varsity al
5 3 0 p m with varsity lo follow

Girls’ Soccer
S em inole al F la g le r P a lm C oast 2 p m
Lake Mary at Tampa-Leto noon
Winter Park a t Lyman Junior varsity at 2 p m
with varsity to follow
Daytona B e a c h S e a b r e e z e at Lake Brantley
Junior varsity al noon with varsity to follow

Lake Howell at W est O range Junior varsity at
12 30 p m with varsity to follow

Wrestling
Sem inole al K issim m e e G atew ay Tournament
Lake Brantley. St. Cloud. Titusville at Lyman
Junior varsity at 10 a in with varsity to follow
Deltona al Lake Howell Junior varsity al 11
.1 in with v a r s i l / t o follow

IlsI'N

Ni w Yi »i k ls|. ill'll i«* at

Hull.ilu Satin ** l l.l

Complete listings on Page 2B

in la k e a 5 b 22 lead w ith 2 :0 5 lell III th e g a m e
l i m i n g tlie s tr e a k W a s h ln g ln n . svhn lias slgnerl
w ith tin U n iv e rsity »l lln u s tu n . senrerl 17 points,
g i .ilihed six re bnuiirls. Iilneked t h r e e slm ls. h a d
I i i i i i s te a ls a n d t h r e e a s s is ts
(.ale in th e g a m e , llte b a k e ItrantleV b e n c h a n d
slim e "I th e Ia n s In a t t e n d a n c e w e r e w o n d e r in g
al&lt;uni w h y S c m tn n le w a s still m th e p re s s
I heart) llte peo p le veiling.' sa id M c N a m a ra
Mm I d o n 't h a v e a n o t h e r g a m e until a w eek
b u m n ext W e d n e s d a y a n d Melinda M organ h a s
pisi (Mined t lie le a n t I'm li v i n g In gist th e te a m a
r h a n c f in gel Here ll Is. .J a n u a r y 7ih. w e've
plas ed 2&lt;i g a m e s a n d only h a v e n in e g a m e s lell
plus, sviili tills learn g a m e s r a n c h a n g e
a tu i i n d sn Iasi A &lt;u u p le nl t u r n o v e r s a m i s o m e
th re e point s h o t s a n d they c a n lie right bai k In
ll" g a m e A nd svltli only eight girls d re s s e d , you
r a il "Ills m a k e sn m a n s s u h s l l l u l l o n s W h o do
u n i leave o n th e Iktor’’ Niki
S o p h o m o r e s h o o tin g g u a r d T c n n ls h la bas«.n
r a l l i e d th e S e m in o le a tta c k u n til W a s h in g to n
look u s e r a n d e n d e d u p th e g a m e 's h ig h s c o r n
ssuli 2 b Stic a lso h a d If) r e b o u n d s lour a s s is ts
S e e S c m ln o lc H . P n g e 2H

Clayton
delivers
for Rams
once more

Walraven helps
’Noles register
first home win
F r o m Stall Report*

SANFORD — .Jason W alra v e n . a s e c o n d le a n t All
S la te srlet lion in Inotliull a s a p la e e k le k e r. led S e m in o le
High School to a 2 (• w in over F l a g l e r P a l m Coast tu a
. IA-I list r u i ft Itovs so c c e r m u lc h l l m r s d a v at S e m i ­
n o le 's f lin m a s F. W h lg h a m S ta d iu m
Not onlv dnl W a lr a v e n h a v e a foot In b o th til
S e m in o le s goals, lie a m h o r r d a rlelense tha t help e d
goalie Jon W illiam s post Jus lirsi s lm lm il of th e s e a so n
It w a s a lso ih e lu st w in al h o m e lor S e m in o le M-10|
th is s e a so n
T h e d e fe n se did a great Jo b ." sa id S e m in o le e n a e b
C a rlo s Met lino "Jason. Hrlait G r im e s . Daniel W hile,
a n d Hen Mrosvn p la v e d well In Iroul til J o n .
"H ul It's th e s a m e old pro b le m . We d o n 't h a v e a n
e x p e r ie n c e d p e r s o n u p Irtml to pul th e hull In flic net
We also a p p e a r e d to lie a little s lu g g ish Ironi pla y in g
b a c k-to-back g a m e s "

F r o m Staff Report*
L AKE M A K \

S e m in o le u u ts h n t Flagler Palm C oast 12 b a n d Itad a
7-2 a d v a n ta g e In c o r n e r kicks, forcing th e Flagler Palm
Coast goalie to m a k e s e v e n saves. W illia m s liad lo c o m e
u p w ith five s lo p s lo (lost th e s h u t o u t .
S am Earl (above) gave S e m in o le a 1-0 lead over
Flagler Palm C oa st T hursday w hen he s c o r e d on an
a s s is t from J a s o n Walraven with just 1 48 expired

G reyhounds begin new streak
bONGW OOD — In lh e ir tirsl g a m e b a c k a lte r se e in g
tltelr -lb-gam e w in s tr e a k s n a p p e d , th e L y m a n High
S chool girls' so c c e r te a m picked u p w h e r e it left off.
b la n k in g S e m in o le 3 0 T h u r s d a y night In a S e m in o le
A thletic C o n fe re n c e m a tc h .
b y m a n . w h ic h lust to D a y to n a U c a c h -S e a b rc e z c 3-1 In
o v e rtim e In th e finals of th e Murger King C lassic o n Dee.
22. im p r o v e s to 1 1-1. b O in th e SAC. S e m in o le d r o p s to
7 - b - l. 1-5 tu th e c o n fe re n ce .
"ll w a s a good effort all the w a y a r o u n d . ” sa id L y m a n
c o a c h G a ry H a rn e tt. " W e w ere a little s h o r t on th e
finishing e n d . b u t th e n we d i d n ’t w o rk o n th a t very
m u c h over th e b r e a k . S e m in o le did a nice Joti ol
p r e s s u r in g n s tin d e fe n se a n d p la y in g th e offside tr a p
T h e y did nice a Job a g a in st us.
" O n c e a g a in , w e w o rk e d o n s o m e n e w t h i n g s o v e r
C h r is tm a s W e Im p le m e n te d t h e m b e g in n in g tonight
We h a v e s o m e p la y e r s in so m e n e w s p o ts a n d we re
try in g s o m e different things. O verall. I w a s ple a se d w ith

Paul

A n d o i " ' a g a i n It* ' .uu&lt; l l i t o u c h
t l a v l o n . xx h n w a s a d&lt;-l&lt; usixt &lt;a p
l a i n lor t l " R a m l oo t ha l l l e a n t
p i n n e d h i s o p p o i i ' l i t in 2 I n
b o o s t i n g l.akt
Mat \ In l» 11 I " a
It t .t'2 xx tu ox i t 1 1" x i s i i m g &lt; "loni.i l
&lt; 1 1 1 1 1 ." l i l t S III) I III S't.tx n i g h t

T h e o t h e r Tribe goal t a m e w ith HO I left III th e g a m e
w h e n J i m m y J o h n s o n corralled th e t e b o u n d of a
W a lra v e n blast a n d k n o c k e d tt b orne at 7 1:5b

T h e T r ib e will p la y d e f e n d i n g C la s s 3A s t a t e
c h a m p i o n D a y to n a Heat h S e a b re e z e M onday night at
W h lg h a m S ta d iu m . T h e Junior v a rsity will p lay a t 5:15
p in. w ith th e v a rsity c o n te s t set fur 7 p .m .

»»u« &lt; u g . u n

&lt; lax t o n w . i s o n 11" s p t a
Wtt si h u g m tin 22&lt;i p o u n d i 'l a s s i
Ii i . tl toll lot il" l.ak&lt; M. iix Ram*,
i lax lot i xx.is l." • d \x tilt a
must
Will silt "It loll III Ills II l.l I' 11 I" k' • 11
1 1" R a m s 11 mi i l o s i n g a d u a l m&gt; • '

W hile th e S e m lu o le s Isvho loss lo b y m a n W e d n e s d a y
night I in.iv ha v e be e n a till slu g g ish , th e y d id n 't ta k e
long to ta k e the tr a d a s S a m Karl took a p a s s Irom
W a lra v e n a n d sc o re d |nsi 1:*IH into th e g a m e

From Staff Raport*_____________ __ __________________

JUCO Men’s Basketball

HOCKEY
7 .in p m

By D E A N S M I T H

w h a t I sa w .'
S a r a K ane sc o re d lu s t tor L y m a n n o a n .t**sisi Itoni
D anielle G a r r e tt at 15 l b In th e s e c o n d halt. Iri s h m a n
Michelle St. L ouis c o n v e r te d a p a s s Irom G a r r e tt into a
goal al 59:3H. G a r r e tt c a p p e d llte s c o r in g w ith a n
u n a s s is te d goal at 7 5:07.
L y m a n u u t s h n t S e m i n o l e 3 4 -3 a n d b a d a I I
a d v a n ta g e tu c o rn e l k ic k s U r e v liu u n d goalie C heryl
R o b e rts b a d lo m a k e Jusi o n e sa v e to n o tc h I b e s h u t o u t
w hile S e m in o le ’k e e p e r C h r is ty Oliver w a s called u p o n
lo m a k e 17 s lo p s.
T h e G r e y h o u n d s a lso w on (lie p u iio r v a rsity g a m e .
b-0
L y m a n will play at H lshop Moore to n ig h t a n d will
heist W in te r P a rk o n S a t u r d a y a fte rn o o n S e m in o le
p la y s al Flagler P a lm C oast S a t u r d a y a f te r n o o n at 2
p.m .
LAKE MARY 5. LAKE HOWELL 5
W INTER PARK — In a n u n c o m m o n l y o tle n slv e
S e m in o le A thle tic C o n f e r e n c e girls' soccci m a t c h , th e
F S e e S o c c e r , P a g e 21)

&lt; 'lax ii&gt;ii xx mi I n s m a n Ii w i t h a p m in
I" Ip l . aki Mai x pul l ou t .i l i C&gt; i"
xx ii Ii I nix rrsi t x
L a k e M.iix a l s o w o o lln pui l ol
x at sit x d u a l m i l l I l i m s d a x n i g h t
17 :to
I )ni &gt;■ a g a i n P a u l xvas t h e I" m
s a i d L a k r M. iix i o . h h D u n g lvi « i s
| | r s rjone l l ol l i a l o o l b a l l pi.ix • l
XXIi s l h l l g l o b r i n g a l o o l b a l l p l . i x i l
a ni l a l u n xvt es i l ei 11* h a d l o xx in
Ills m . i l r b " a n s l o xx m ani l I" ilnt
ll s IIOl llkr 11" Ii s o i l XV.IS a glX III
( lax i o n w a s l r. t i l i ng pisi I 2 a l n i
o i " pi n o i l I tax m g I" ■ n h x i i s« &lt;| hx
S a u l l . lgo b r l o l r ll l r r l n l ol ll"
pi - rl od
Illil S a n t i a g o i l i os i
lire
dnxvn ( i n s i i n m l o o p e n s r e m u l
pi i d i o d
Ii o n l v l o o k C l a x t o n 1&lt;&gt;
s r r o l l i l s l o g r l ll"
pill xxitll a
ball N e l s o n , ox i i p o w e i m g S a n t i a g o
A l s o si x i l.ll ot ll" X oil IIgrl R a m s
• o n t r l h i i i e d l o (In t r a m x n i o i x bx
lu i p i n g i lii’ii m a i l In s ■ lost . mi l noi
al l ow m g ( "liiin.il I " i . ii k u p e \ l i a
I r a n i p o i n t s xx 1111 p u i s
i rrl i t i " al
" i l l s oi m a | o l d r r l s i o i i s
( i m 15 2 p u u n d t i . A. 11 o n Rn- dx
bai l l o l a r r n u e ol ll irtl b rl t r i
xxrrsilris
s a i d I’r i r i s
A.n o n
x v i e s i k ’d xx i l l Hr l o o k e d X r i \ g o o d
ill 1 1111 41 pi ’i " ii I W e l l i o u c h l I"

See W r e s t l i n g . Page’ 211
L A K E M A R Y 40 C O L O N I A L 37
10J
B i . u l i f i I M p tn n td Bn dqi 'X 7 00 ' ' Z
D u n n 1 I M 1 pinm-d W O x b o t nc 4 J* II*
W
Osborne i ( •in.iiot de. M ' l t h e l l v I I7X
L . ms
, l M » inniot d«*v Rni nsu to ol 10 0 130
D ei.ine,
. L l pinned O o n s 3 00
UJ
H.I'Oln W iLA*
pmne d Mullet I X* 140
Berqmon l M i pm n .d
Cornell 3 SO I4S
W lu le i C i m.iiot del Reilly
&gt;7 3 IS?
Vele/ ( C l dei
Reedy 116 160
Jo h n so n t . d . . M e n e llo lO * t / i
P . m . LM
b r lo rlei l
10*
C a m p b e ll i C l pmne d Whitby
ts 770
Clayton i L M ' pm ne d Sant.ago 7 to

IIVY

Ayolle (C I by lot I. a

Junior yarsily I ■*■

. ' ' 1 " ' ” «■ ■
________

Fall champion falls, first- timers notch first win
From Staff Report*

R . E . T e m p le to n
M e y e rx T r e e S e rv ic e

3S0
003

110
030

J 7 —

70

31

SANFORD — ll w a s mil a good nig h t Inr ilu*
Fall c h a m p io n s , b u t it w a s a n e x c e lle n t llrst
a p p e a r a n c e lor a n e w c o m e r a s th e S a n fo rd
R ec re a tio n D e p a r tm e n t M en's T h u r s d a y Night
C la ss C P olar H ear S low pttch S oftball L e a g u e got
u n d e r w a y at C h a s e Park
G a to r 's , th e d e f e n d in g Fall c h a p m lo n s . fell
b e h in d 10-0 a f te r t h r e e I n n in g s a n d Florida
S p o r ts W ear w e n t on to win 10-3. w hile R.E.
T e m p le to n , m a d e u p p rh u a r e ly of p la y e r s from
th e Fall C h u r c h c h a m p i o n C e n tra l H aptlst te a m ,
h a m m e r e d M eyers T re e Service 20-H In Its llrst
foray Into th e re c r e a tio n a l softball w ars.
T h e o th e r g a m e lo u n d b a m b o o Cafe b e s tin g
S a n fo rd First lia p u s t C h u r c h 12-7
Next w eek. Ha til l&gt;oo Cate will play G a t o r 's at
b 3 0 p in . Flrsl b a p tis t a n d R.E. T e m p le to n will
ba ilie at 7 :3 0 p .m . a n d Florida S p o r ts W e a r will
la k e on M eyers T r e e S e rv ic e at H:30 p .m .
C o n tr ib u tin g to a 31 lilt R.E T e m p le to n a tta c k
w ere Ken Perry (five singles, tw o runs). Mike
McCoy (double, th r e e singles, four runs). T o m

G e to r’i
F lo r id a S p o rts W e a r

000
70S

030
000

0 a —

3
i-

13
14

B a m b o o Cali*
S a n to rd F l r s l B a p tis t C h u rc h

300
113

330
000

0 —
3

17

)•

Holland Sr. Hour singles, run). T o d d C lir is ie n s e n
(double, tw o sin g le s, th r e e ru n s). J o h n L a m e r
(three singles, four ru n sl. E ddie C oggon H hrcc
singles, ru n ) a n d Roy T e m p le to n (th re e singles)
Also. W a y n e Kelley a n d T o m H olland J r It wo
sin g le s a m i o n e r u n each). Hill Rex (single, two
r u n s l a n d Dale Y a te s (single, run)
Doing lb e d a m a g e lor M eyers 1 f e e Service
w ere M use Hour singles, ih ic c r u n s l. H u t Hripli
do u b le , single, run). M arlin (th re e singles, run).
Rvun (th re e singles). S m a l h e r s (ixx«» sin g le s iw o
ru n sl. G re e n . P a rsb a ll a n d C.iriei (two sin g le s
e a c h ) a n d S im p s o n (single ru n )
Lilting Florida S p o r ts w ere Lee Hood (double
single, m u ) . W es T .m k slc y a n d R a n d y Y ales lixvn
sin g le s a n d tw o r u n s eaelil. R andy Raxvlmgs a n d
Sieve D o n o v a n (iw o sin g le s a n d o n e r u n c a e h i

H ra n tle y H r u m le y a n d N o r m a n R o b e r ts (one
d o u b l e a n d o n e r u n e a c h ). S t e v e W o odle y
(double) a n d J e r r y B ru sse lls (single, run).
H illin g for G a t o r 's w e re M ark C la tte r h u c k
(th re e singles). Mark A te n (tw o singles), d i r t s
W nrgo a n d WII Miami (one d o u b le a n d o n e r u n
ea c h). C h r is W ire (double). Mike McLoluiu Ismgle.
r u n ) a n d T e r r y K usst. D a n n y G ra c e y . Mickey
W est a n d 'Turn H lcdsoc (one sin g le each).
P o w e rin g Ham boo Cafe to v ictory w ere Carl
S t e p h e n s (th r e e singles, tw o r u n s l. S c o tt Meek
(th r e e sin g le s, ru n ). Danny S plvlc a n d Rlek
M ore la nd (nue d o u b le , o n e sin g le a n d tw o r u n s
each). K cnnllli M orse (two sin g le s, tw o runs).
K e n n y Collie a n d K e n n y S t e r n e r (two singles
eaelil. J e r r y Dick (single, txvo r u n s ) . Hrlan Poe
Ism glcl a n d M ack T h o r n e (run)
P a c i n g t h e S a n f o r d First H a p tlst C h u r c h
olleiise xvcrc T u n y Hlatr (Iriple. iw o singles, tw o
ru n sl. S ie v e L a u r e n c e (double. Iw o stogies, tw o
r u n s l. J i m C o rn e ll a n d T u m m y G ra c e s (Iwo
s in g le s a n d o n e r u n ea c h ). T im P a lm e r a n d It J
Holt (txvo s in g le s each). R a n d y R o b e rts (single,
i nn) a n d Sid H rock. .Jell H eliianv a n d .Jordan
Met k n e r (one sin g le i .n hi

�7

. vii y ja w g i

-

SB - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 8, 1MU

S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
IS 17 .44* 5'*
f ll .133 f
10 X .333 f&lt;&gt;
f to Jto 10
At Santord-Orteato
Central Dlvhien
Thursday ntgM
Chicago
11 f .710 First roc* —1/1*. Ci 11.M
If 11 .1*4 J'»
3 Radicatlon
4JO 1.40 4.40 Cleveland
Detroit
14 11 SSI S
4 Crown’* Fashion
I0.X 4 40 Charlotte
IS 14 .117 *
rc r’tCoidDioe**'
too
Milwaukee
14 14 .447 7Vi
ODD 11.0 P(M)ttJ0T&lt;M-7&gt; 413.70
Indiana
14 17 JM 0
U towa net - I/O, Oi A M
11 17 .411 Hi
SMt'tSom Swift
10.10 410 0.00 Atlanta WESTERN CONFERENCE
4 Blackeyed Susan
3.40 1.40
MMwett Dlvlilen
I Lao Gator
4.00
W L Pet. OB
Q (4-St 11.10 P CM) 17.40 T (1-4-1) 10700 DD Utah
» * 4f0 10.00su-o-t-oimjo
San Antonio
14 tl JS3 4
Third ra c e -0/10. Oi 11JO
14* IS .401 4
5 Exquisite Taste
f.40 4.00 MO Moulton
Denver
7 11 .ISO IHi
4Cherokee Squall
M0 4.40 Minnesota
* 11 .10 11
4 Lr's Lori Lea
4.40 Dallas
1 IS .074 17
a (Ml 11.10 P (*+) 10.00T10+11100.00
Pacific Division
Peurtti ra c e - 0/10. Bill.tO
Phoenle
ll
S -.011 —
1Boo's Nlcanaaty
7.10 4.40 4.10 Seattle
0 0 .714 1
1 Rv Divine Deacon
7JO 0.00 Portland
0 9 4*0 I ' i
0 Katiu Taipei
1.40 LALakers
17 13 .147 7
0(11) 11JO P (1-1) 44JOT (1-1-0) IfMO
Golden Slate
17 14 .140 7ti
filth race —5/14, C: l i l t
LAClippers
14 IS .014 O'l
IMt't Ginger
11JO 1.00 1.40 Sacramento
11 14 .41* 11
1 Whoopilegoldberg
1.40 1.40
Thursday's Games
4 My Rodeo Gal
7.0
Atlanta 100. Milwaukee *4
0(1-1) 11.MP (M) 11.40 T (MO) 141.10
Phoenix ill, Dallas 107
Meta race —0/10. Di StJ t
Portland IIS. Houston*)
7Geo Patrick
0.40 4.10 3.0
San
Antonio 10*. Utah**
5 Norma Bowman
4.10 0.00
Oetdon Mate tt«. Miami 1*0
IGull't Lochinvar
7.00
Friday's Games
Q (0-7) 11JO P (7-0) If .00T (7-0-1) 10 JO
t4ewJersey at Boston. 7:10p.m.
UgMh race - V0. Ci 10.40
PMtadrtphta at Washington. 7:0p.m.
I Mrt Believer
0 40 4.10 1.00
LAClippers at Charlotte, 7:10p.m.
iSf Steady Eddie
0.00 I X
New York at Orlande, 0p.m.
SRcSattyVar
4.00
Atlanta at Detroit, 0 p.m.
Q (1-1) 7A0 P (1-1) 14.40T (1-1-0) IOOJO
Seattle at Minnesota, 0p.m.
Ntatb race -0/10, Dill JO
Milwaukee al Chicago. 1:10p.m.
OJaylayt Stevie
4jo MO 1.40
Houston at Denver,* pm.
SOrew’t Pr lie
f JO 0JO
Socramentoat LALakers. 10:10 p.m.
ISmCutle
4.00
Q (0-0) IM P (0-0) 4M0T (0-0-1) Iff JO
Washington at NewJersey. 7.-10p.m.
toMrace-S/U . 8111 JO
Chicago at Philadelphia, 7:10p.m.
I Red Burr
MO MO 1.00
iadteaa at Orlando, TiSOpjn.
IJaneAyre
MO MO
Minnesota at CNvetand. 7:10p.m.
0 Lynn Joe
1010
Goldin State at Detroit, 7:10p.m.
Q (1-1) 14.00 P (ID 10.40T ll-M1100.40
Utah at Dallas, 1:10p.m.
tlta race —0/10, Citl.11
Portland
at San Antonio, 0:10p.m.
4Omni Itasca
7.40 MO 4.40
Seattle at Denver, *p.m.
17J0 11.10
, tliMpm.
Q (4-4) OMOP (4-0) 1IJ* T (4+7) 4*1JO TT
Boston at MowYark, 0 a.m.
i p Jackpot SUOMI
LACtlgponat Miheauboe, 1:0pm.
llthrece —1/14. At W.44
Utah at Htutton. 1:10p.m.
aCr'sHIMoe
4JO M0 MO
Miami at LA Lahore. tliM p jn .
7 Boss Sonova
740 M0
4M*Bllla
M0
Q (4-7) tJA P (4-7) tl JIT (4-7-4) It JO
131brace —5/14,0:51.0
1 Total BIN*
M0'MO MO MIAMI (NO)
3 Pt Premier
Md MO
Rice A tl 1-1 0 SaNty M M 4 Satkaiy M l
4 Lady Scruples
MO
0 Cam 314441, Idward* 01104 0
Q (M) 1M0 P CM) 14.00 T H H I OMO00 4+
Burton 41 +4 4 Lang 1-1 + 1 + Miner 4 I I 1-1
(M) 440.00
14 Skew M 44 4 Oeiger M 44 4 Askme 40
t4Ni race—I/O, Bi MJ4
l l I.Tetak 07 70 1 4 MS.
1Km's Zodlak Tru
0.00 M0 1.40 G
0 4 M N STATB (IM )
- I Jim Tima
I JO 3-tt
47 t-t f. Mullln 4M 44 14 Alemotor
7Gull's Nbode
M0 4*Hilt
4111, Mordliidy 4M 4 4 17. Sprewell 7-14
O (ID IM0 P (ID t7J0 T (1+1) TU* I 041*.
GaNIng » 4 4 t t If. MerxMknH 1-4 I I I
(1+7-4) 114J*
*. Houston +s 4111, Greyer 4 1 M 4. Totals
A-1.Mli H-SttMM
0 7 4 0 0 IM.
Rotten
Philadelphia
Washington

Pint I

IMarcal
M l M l 0.40
4 Aguirre
MJO MO
4Jose
17.40
O (4+) *1JO P (Ml IMJOT (S4D 01.0

M 0 - 0 14 — 10
tt 0 0 0 - IN
l Pitot gaalt— Miami 4-14 (Cato* 1-4,
Edwards 1 + Rko 1-7). OoMw Stale 4M
(Mullln 4 4 Hardaway M . Sprewell 41.
MardvNonN 41). Fouled wd a k i. Miner.
Lang. Rebounds Miami 0 (lewety U ).
Golden Stale SI (H ill, Galling IS).
Assists— Miami t* (Catos. Edward* 0)..
Golden Stato U (Hardaway ID . Total
fouls— M iam i is , Oalden Stole 17.

11.00 I JO MO
I Mortal-Aguirre
MO 1.40
eOabtoto-Oypri
1Plta-Aicua
4jo
G (44) OMO P (4-4) 110.41 T (4+11 tH M
DOIMIMLM
4 Pile-Aguirre
1 OoMeia Ouanaga

*JO 7JO

' MO

QU-*)4M *P(41)*t.70T(4M )tl7J0

1*JO 1M0 M l
M l 4J0
IMarcal
4JO
O (14) IMd P C+l) Oil JOT C**l) 404JI

Olrkltla

I Martel Oyari
1 Plnton-Agulrre

)M0 4J0 4J0
Ml Ml

7otaa-Jasa

4 Durango-Bab
M l M l AM
1AramayeVictor
M l Ml
7PlnoenMendl
MO
a (14) It JO F (41) *MI T (41-7) 147JO
1M0 OJI M l
4J0 j

1Pinson
1Pardo

a ( I D tt J I P U D S U M (414) 447J l

4Napo-Jooo
SMI 1MB Ml
OZugataOyari
7JO Ml
t MlwTvictor
MO
a UDW JS P (04) 10440 TT (1+1) MJO
1Durango Agukrs
**** 14JO MO 1JO
7Pardo-Andy
, MO MO
1 Frias-Arraiola
MO
a (ID OMO P (1-7) 111.00 T (1-74) 471J0
Jackpot 11,WfJO
1 Victor
4
I

4JS 1 0
tM
a ( M l tt JO P (14) I O M IT (14-11IM40

t IN game

IPard+Mmdf
* 0 1 0 tM
iNapeOoitit
.
40 M l
IPtaeen-Cnrtque
00
a U 4 )0 4 0 P U4&gt; MO0 T « + * ) 4040

OAramey+Gottil
ttJ
1Zugaia-Forurla
a (411 0 0 P (74) I7AM T (7+1)

10

aO(*4B7-AM) M O 0 a a iS 4 G 4 A B )M 0

tl

t Napa
00 10 10
IZugaia
10 40
7Arrant*
40
a (t-l) 1 1 0 P H D 0 0 T1 1+7) I7M0
aZugaia Bob
l Rlcarde-lnrlgue
1 0 MS
IMondiba-Porurta
00
a ( I D 0 0 P (41) 0 0 T (4 1 D 0 4 0 s
(41+AN) 1*00 DO ( I D 0 0

NEW YORK - Baseball contracts with
average annual values et I I million or more.
Figures were obtained by The 4sootIHod
Ineema tram pelenilal Incentive Iwmwaai
Barry Bonds. SF
Cecil Fielder. Del
Ryne Sandberg. Cubs
Jaa Carter. Tar
Cal Rlpkan. Bai
David Cana, KC
Ken Orlttey Jr.. See
Kirby Puckett. Min
Bobby Bonilla. HYM
Crag Maddux. All
Mark McGwIra. Oak
Ruben Sierra. Oak
Jack Morris. Tor
Reger Clamant. Boa
Owtght oaadwL N YM
Tom Gtavine. All
Garry Larkin. Cin
Danny Tariabull.NYY

1*047 07.MMM
1*040 *7,
1 *0 0

1*00
1*00
1*00

1*00 _____

U 0 O J0
W 0M M
4M0OJM
4LIM JH
S i.IttJH
SS.IMJ0
01MMM

AM Time* B IT
EASTERN CONFERENCE
New York
New Jersey

17 14
11 11

(

CiiiaMMown 71 PreakUnG Marshall 70
Hofvfrt M, C d y n K i gg
Hunt* MA King* Fetat 77

Mlt9f
Mr FOil-MMlM gf
Mnt St. Mary's, Md. A St. Prencla. NY 71
flj
N' .r UkaUMM'IM
Jenna Hopkins 74
N YUM.
U 0 ,____
WsiyanfLOT
NatoreNLN.V.M,
w e e g m 07, tt, MtChoW'sM
RM r 40. Lane Island U. 00
Rab*rtMerrt*4AMMmetth,N-J.0
RutgorsfO.lt. BdMvonhm «7, « T
leered Neert IS. BpHngPoid 71
St. Anoolmf*, Baboon 71
St. Joseph's. N.V. 0 . N. V. Tach M
Wagner 7*. It. Francis, Pa. 00
BBVTN

Balmont u , Orand lUpldi BaptM 77
Bethel, Tttm. NO. WkbsNr 11
ChartooM Sltira 71, Montroat-Andonm 71
Cappta «t. 00,1. Cartttap St. 0
Bmory it, Sowonao t t OT
Fauiknor ML Athens St. 0
PNrMo l iothsra m, MoModNt M
GulINrd 4*. Hampden-Sydney M
Kentucky St. IMl. N, KentuckyOf
Nw•M
MaUuM**. Ind.-Pwr.-Pt.
Wsfeffpn
r.-Fi. Wayne44
■

M

l _____ J R M I

Mwcern.eeerttaSt.4t
MeblN R . Culver-Necktan41
—*---■»—fail r m t n p w m p i M
MwifTPia
w
NC LouNtandOLMcModoO St. 44
NWLeutstanaT*. NkhoitsSI. 71
North Alabamafl, Tuecuium X
North Cantata ML N. Carolina 0.07

1
ik

5 Colorado *7. N.Max.Highlands 0 . OT
Third Flats
Lake Suporkr SLU. Thomas More tt
Ryerten 0 , Ceneordi*! Mkh. 71
Htstortcaltyt Stack
Toe
Black Cai
Cellogo
toga Taernament

•
First Round
Bowl* SI. 0 . Johnson C. Smith tl
Norfolk St.fS, SI. Augustins'* 74
Virginia SI. S4 W. Virginia St. tt
MerrMt Ctottk
First Bound
lefcard 74 St. Andrew's M
Lincoln MemorIII 17, Enkln* **
Queen*. N.C. 07, Lees McRae Tt
St. Lea 0 Barton M

Carroll. Mont. To. St. Schotostka 44
SI. Thomas Aqotnot 71. Clark* 71
St. Xavier 4L Mount Mercy U
Vltorbe 71, Roeary at
Cabrtol 0 Stone Heights IS. OT
111. Benedictine *4, Laras 0
SI. Roto 0 Cardinal Str Itch Tt
X a v i e r , NO S3, R o c k h u r s t 51
SAMFORD47, CENTRAL FLORIDASI
CENTRAL FLORIDA (471
Devls 3 0 04 0. Saxton a ll 4 1 tl. Walker 3 5
a t 10. Phillip* 410 14 tl. Carter 4-4 04 0.
Melon *1 04 D. Hording t l 441. Fester 4 7
1110. Harper 0« 010. VenDueswi 00 00 0.
Totals 70-4*11X41.
SAMPORO (44)
Smith T-t* 1-411. Elion 141-30. ttw«f* 7-14
44 14 Herman 14 44 4 Franklin 44 44 a.
Davenport M 1-14 Truss aa fO f. Plxley 4 7
as a. Hevs 41 44 a. Jens* as Of a. Mathew*
1-4044. Totals MD44 It.
Helttlme—Somtord 31, Control Florida II.
3 Point goals—Central Florida oa (Davis 41.
Phllllge 43. Carter+t. Metonbl, Foster 01).
Somtord 7-TJ (Smith 44. Sheafe t-4. Herman
1+ Dovfnport 01, Plelay l-I, Hay* 41).
-Franklin.
Rebounds—
itod eut-Fr
'
' Central
---Ftortto It (Walker 4 Fooler 0). Somtord If
(Rosen 4). Assists—Contret Florida S
tPMmpi It, Somtord 4 (Sheet* 5). Total
touts—Centre! Ftortto D, Somtord 17. A—7M.
STETSON 0 BCTHUNI-COOKMAN 7*
STETSONOD
Blocksheer M l 41 11. Ortor O il 0* 14
Conner 04 44 0 Wilkes 44 1-7 M. Wxiiholl
14 IS 4 Them04* I t 44 4 Wood I I 40 I.
Overton S t B4 A Slaton 41 04 0 Totals 1451

m an.

SETHUNE-COOKMAN (1+|

Taylor S ll 141*. Strong7-10410 Steven*
1-7 41 0 Leonard 47 l l 0 Noth I S 4 5 io.
Robinson4 1 I I*. Smith 1-41-14 Plaskttt 1-1
*4 4 Otr+1S40. ToM oStD U -0 7*
Helttlme— Stetsmi 47, Bethune CookmonlT,
3 Petal geeti P it o t tt-tt (Stackshew 3 4
Connor 1 4 Wilke* 34. Wpltaott 14. Thome*
l-D , BethuneCeekmen 44 (Taylor 1-1,
Siring 1-4 teen ltd Vt. Smith St). Fouled
out None. Rebounds— Station 25 iWalHwtt
7), Bethune-Cookman M (Leonard 7).'
Assists— Stetson 14 (Wilke* •). Bethune
Ceekmen M (Steven* 4). Total touts— Stetson
t*. Bethune CNtomwi 0 Toehnfcel*— Stetson
L O W IV IL ltfG SOUTH FLORIDA 71
LOUISVILLE (44)
Smith 4* 41 It, Merton 44 11 n. Rwier
I I M 44 0 LeOreo74 4 4 4 Miner 414 7 4 71.
KNsr 14441. Regsrt 4144 4 Com 44400,
Grower 4440 0 W O k b 4 4 114 Hepgold 11
M 4To*NO 41-04tS0

TO 0 N 0 0 M -N 7 S ;
Hofftlme ' LeuNvIlto 41, Soukv Florid* tt.
4Petof iig N LamirfHe 7-l* (Merton 11.
doctor 41, Minor 4 4 KNOT 1-4 Regers 41,
Grower M l. leuth Fiertdi 7-0 (Atom* 1-4
Sharp 1+ Ootancy 4)1, Cetomen i + Setters
t-t, Polk 4 1 ). Fouled wri None. Rebounds-LeuUvIlN 41 (Rm kr ll), South
FNrtdo 0 (Cetomen *1. Applets-LouisviK* tt
(LeOree*), South FNrldo l l (Atoms 7). Total
fouls— Louisville 10, South' Florida 11.
A—4Jtt.

FAR W IS T

Abilene Christian 10. Adams St. 7*
California 7S, Oregon 43
t t . Mary's, Cellt. 0 Sen Jose tt. S5
San Diego St. tt. San Francisco 0
Southern Cel *0, Arltona S4
Texas *f, Santa Clara 0
UCLAIt, Arltona St. *3
W. WashktgNn M. Cent. Washington 73
Wyoming 71. WObartt.lt
TOURNAMENTS

Bahamat Oaamboy She*tout
Tiiifi i^ in
Pacific Lutheran 7*. Marian 71
PMth Piece
Concordia. Mich. 0 Fitchburg M
Lady Cruse tor Tournament
First Round
E. Central Oklahoma tt. Schreiner S3
Wayland 74. Tarleton SI. 44
Oklahoma Christian 17. SI. Edward* *3
Incarnate Word College 87. E. Texas
Baptist 71
Hattonat Catbetk Taumament
Carveli,Ment.47. SM'ianci*. 111.44
Mount Mercy *4, Cardinal Strlteh 0
Rockhurst 77, SI Vincent 74
Rosary 0 . Viterbo 13
Geitseletien Bracket
St. Ambrose *4. Avila 51
St. Jasaph's. Maine 17, III. Benedictine 57
SI. Thomas Aquinas 01, SI. Scholastic* X
Xavier, NO0 Loras 41

Huntar 0 Ruemll Sago tt
John Jay 0Medoar ftwrstt
Latayeftott. Dreoiue
M
i APmsi 0C0A4AA
0M000
0O0r ■•RttRPFlM.
I0m|M
Morey 0 OawNna0
Niagara 77. Catgaia oi
Paco 0 t t . RaseSO
Porntt-Nl.lllktoHn
Phlta. Teettto 71. Atotphl **
Point Park 0 Bethany,W.Va. 04
NYU 0 Johns Hapklno SI
Quoons Coil-0 SouBiomalan 40
n irtin n d ll. roirfNH if '
W H M uaiighB j Mtosn# Tt
tt. Mtohaol'o 0 OutaMptac IS
HofyCrotott
. 0 wiHtami
0047
. rtt,C.W. Poof*
* 0 Amherst 41

Untan, Twin. 0 . P a rk in
4. Payettavilta
FayettevtltolSt. 47
Virginia Untan 04
Wake Far ------------WMkredtf

&amp;

)M4St.Antoew‘s n
Ltoerty0Columhta Union M
^Tom. 74 Centre M
itt.M

Weetynta

Cedarvtlteft. Mount Veraan H iiorond 71
K.iiiinel*40.C rel^ta n e i.
Eureka *7. Llndewweadn
PfrrNSt.OtWtO. PdrtuMoTl
It
i Tick T t Tartar U
Indiana Wesleyan **,tt. Francis, tnd tl
T t Knee 74
01, Daemon 14
EtPurdueM
Vai.St.0
Teen 04
11,
N .Mkktaanl
Peru St. 44 TeifcyeWWtmer M
l.-Gradlord1S40yke71
S. indtano til, Ashland 74

THilfi IB*HwrrttMlBn fJi
HJbjwg
+A|,te
wwfm«fW
MLH.M UUMbIBII
_
NVTNP9IT

Arkiniw Cell. BE, Oeeddta 0
i TeckOt COM. A rtW R w T^ ^

Texas Cl PawELAlrPamM
T**a* tan Antontoll, Stephen F-AMllnd*
a ft MeOiAriu 0 Harding 0AOT
R WEST
FAR
1
ArtawtaOtUCLAM
AiuuPetWcfl.ClaremoM-MuddM
CS DemtaMBf HNN 74 Cai PWr+omeno 0
Cltoert»rld»0A Quincy Ft
Cal Si Ftttorten It. Nevada M
CaiNomtaM Oregon 0
Cetarade Si. 0 . Hawaii 44
Grace ttCettW atting ton II
Long Gael* tt- Ml. U44LV0
Liyeta MarymeuM0Oro4B0irN 74
N.AriieneTt SacramentaSi.il
New Mexico 0FrewwS4 M
Neet MeeioeSt. li.U C Santa Gerbere 40
■tt.T M
1 0 'W .1

RVNNtt.TB

1 0 W . Caroline M

l IfwhifhMlt i l
ll4 M cN e e 0 tt.0
iM4NtoheHott,7t
l t t . 0 FrencMMartanU
I0 L M 0

r 0 t t . Pouf's 41

n . Mississippi tt. 41
t t -0 &lt;CeaptosTo*
MN4 4t,Ata.-Blrmtogham 0
■0 L S U O I
i. KNileym 0 Union. Ky. 14
Tuecuium tt. Cemhortond. Ky.)»
Union. Twm. 0 Lambuto Ceil. 47
Vandwb4M0Ohtatt.Ol
Vkginta Union W, PayefNvIlN tt.lt
Woke Pereet ri,R .-------------------

Cent. M ,O h ie 0 Urban* 0
CMm bo « - 0 CS Nerthrldge M
' ,M.«.IIUROta01
IttM
so
- "^
00*
,0+
" ^
lt t.A p d iiw 0 O T
------------- ----- ttt
Midady 0MdNnaO7.OT
Meertwedtt. 74 Mary, N -O -.0

(Mount tt. Joseph's 0 , Marietta tt
**■'
i 0 Notre Dame.
meTLDeytonta

N.J«ckJMnlt 0

Ctt.AtolendttJ

+ 44. Rl|
w.»:Qrs«nBy 71,111.1

Wie-Mitwoukee k i l l
I VeunHewnW.0W.»iiuwts74

O A K L A N D . C R llf. - T h e
O olden S ta te W arrio rs a re h a v ­
in g m o re fun th eae d ay s, ev e n if
th e Tens d id n 't g e t free p l a n .
W in n in g prill d o t h a t to you.
T h e W arrior* w on for th e atx th
tim e In sev en g a m e s T h u rsd a y ,
b e a tin g th e M iam
Mi H
i ieat
r 1 19-l(
108.
D espite th e co m fo rtab le m a ig tn .
O o lden S ta te p o in t g u a rd T im
H a rd a w a y la u n c h e d a th reeq u a rte r len g th u iw l a t the b u z z e r
th a t w e n t s tra ig h t tn th e b ask e t,
b u t d id n 't c o u n t.
If It h ad . th e W arrio rs to tal
w ould h av e su rp a sse d 130 In a
v ictory, m e a n in g all th e fan s
co u ld s u b m it th e ir tick et s tu b s
for free pizza a t o u tle ts o f a n a re a
c h a in .

T h e fan s h a d booed aa th e
W a rrio rs m is s e d a few fre e
tot 1ST
th ro w s tn th e fin al m in u te s.
All Timet
I
WALESCONPININCE
W i t h O o ld e n S t a t e a t 1 1 9 .
W L TPt* OF OA H a rd a w a y d e lib e ra te ly fo u led
Pittsburgh
30 10 4 40 Ml 144 M iam i's K evin E d w a rd s frith a
3t 17 4 4* 140 151 half-second rem ain in g .
Washington
NV Rangers
X 17 5 45 175 140
NewJersey
I* 17 3 41 lit 10
"C o ach (Don) N elson d id n 't
NY Islander*
17 It 4 0 155 151
Philadelphia
ta tt 4 34 10 10 like th a t," H ard aw ay said . "H e
Adam* Otvtstoe
th o u g h t I w a s p ro lo n g in g th e
Quebec
14 t3 0 54 105 157
Montreal
74 14 5 S3 174 143 g a m e a n d e m b a r r a s s in g th e
71.14 I 44 IM 14* o th e r team , a n d I'm aonry a b o u t
Soslan
It IS * M Ml 141 th a t, b u t so m e tim e s y o u h a v e to
But
lab
■
»-a
-*
-*
'
MitfflBrll
It » 4 M 174 If* d o so m e th in g for th e fa n s ."
3 0 3 0 tl 10
Ottawa
CAMPBELLCONFERENCE
Before th e th ro w -in . H ard aw ay
W L T Pt* GP
to ld fellow g u a r d L a tre ll
73 14 4 51 1*4 m S prew ell to g et o u t o f th e w ay ao
Chicago
73 II 3 47 171 in
DoIron
Minnesota
M 15 * 0 10 tie h e could g et th e ball.
u it ; p in 134
"1 w as d e te rm in e d to g e t th e
15 10 I M 10 155 b a l l ," h e s a id . “ T h e p eo p le
SI. Louis
Tamp* Bay
1» M 1 MIN 10
w a n te d p izza."
Smythe Plvtslea
Vancouver
75 10 4 5* Id til
H a rd aw a y fin ish ed w ith 17
Calgary
U 11 4 5* 144 IN p o in ts a n d 11 assists.
Lot Angeles
X 15 4 45 14* Ml
T h e H eat p lay ers a n d co a ch es
Winnipeg
14 10 4 M Ilf 155
Edmonton
14 It 7 35 111
d id n ’t know w h a t w aa going o n
San Joe*
0 31 1 14110
Kes
u n til a fte rw a rd , c o a c:nh K
evin
Thursday's Geawt
Quebec 1. Boston 40T
Phllodeiphta 4 Wash Ington 1
Minnesota 0. Pittsburgh 1
Edmonton ]. Chicago 4 tla
St. Louis 1. Calgary i, OT

. t h i n k i t 's a b a d id e a ,
th o u g h ." L oughery said . " T h e
g am e la m o re im p o rta n t th a n
p lu s ."
T h e c o n te st w e n t th e W arrio rs'
w ay for th e 1 1th tim e tn th e ir
la s t 14 p rim arily b ecau se th e y
o u tre b o u n d ed th e H eat 37*13 In
th e first h a lf a n d m ad e 15 m o re
foul s h o ts th a n M iami. T h e H pat
w on th e reb o u n d in g b a ttle In th e
aecond half, b u t c o u ld n 't com e
b a c k fro m a 5 8 -4 3 h a lftim e
d e fic it. E x c e p t for o n e b rie f
m o m e n t In th e th ird q u a rte r,
th e y n ev e r g o t clo ser th a n n in e
p o in ts In th e seco n d half.
" T h e y o u th u s tle d us,
especially o n th e b o a rd s," H eat
forw ard J o h n S alley said. "R e ­
b o u n d in g a n d d efense are th e
th in g s th a t c o n sisten tly w in for
yo u . You c a n 't co u n t on ju m p
s h o ts going th e w hole tim e .'1
Miami forw ard G len Rice w as
m o re su cc in c t: " T h e y h u stled ,
a n d w e d id n 't."
C h ris M ullln sco red 24 (p o in ts
to lead O olden S ta te , a n d sec­
on d -y ear forw ard C h ris OatUng
sco red a career-h ig h 19 p o in ts
a n d tied T y ro n e Hlfl for th e team
h 10 reb
re beo u n d s.
h ig h w ith
" C h ris played g re at, a n d It waa
good to see h im sco re." M ullln
said.
G atling, av erag in g 6 .7 p o in ts a
g am e b efo reh an d , said, "I only
g o t to play sev en m in u te s (In th e
p rev io u s gam e) a g a in s t S eattle,
so th is w as m y ch a n ce a n d I
m a d e th e m o at of It."
K evin E d w ard s led Miami w ith
2 6 p o in ts a n d R ony S etk aly
co n trib u te d 2 0 p o in ts a n d 12
reb o u n d s.

Seminoles

Friday's Gemot

NewYork Islanders at Bvital*. 7:40p m.
Ottawa at NowJersey, 7:0p.m.
San Jow at Toronto. 7:40 p.m.
Vancouver at Detroit. 7:ttp m.
Los Angeles at Wtampea. S:ttp.m.

JMIBTM
mdUM
ax!)xulx
tlmiua
f 0 WD0V

Calgary at Pittsburgh, ll:ttp m
New York Rangers al Philadelphia, t :10
p.m.
NewJersey at Rattan, 7:Mp.m.
Quebec at Hertford. 7:tt p.m.
Vancouver at New York Islanders, 7
p.m.
Edmantenet Washington, 7:ttp.m.
Toronto at Montreal,* :10p.m.
Tempo Bay at Mtaneteta. lit* p.m.
Chicagoat tt. Louis. i:dp.m.
San Jeeeet Ottewe. 1:40p.m.
Mattrosl St Heritor*, 7: Mpm.
Calgary at Guttata. 7:10 p.m.
Etteenton el PMtatotphto, 7:Mp.m.
Pittsburgh el Winnipeg, I: ttpm .
Le*Angela*at Chicago, I: tt p.m.

C o a itla N G d fraott I B

(wo s le a ls a n d a blocked
sh o t. W ash in g to n finished w llh
2 3 p o in ts. 10 re b o u n d s, live
blocked sh o ts, sev e n ste a ls a n d
six assists.
Also c o n trib u tin g to th e T ribe
offense w ere fre s h m a n M indec
H am p to n (six p o in ts, five re­
b o u n d s. four steak*, o n e blocked
shot). M organ (tw o p o in ts, th ree
r e b o u n d s , t h r e e s te a ls , tw o
assists) a n d Kay Kay M ullins (six
rebounds).
Lysa Moorefleld p aced th e P a ­
trio ts offense w l l h 14 p o in ts a n d
a lso collected a gam e-high 12

reb o u n d s. Leigh A nn P enney
ch ip p ed In wllh nix points, five
reb o u n d s, five ste a ls a n d three
assists.
T he victory w as th e Orel SAC
w in for S em in o le afte r th ree
losses an d Im proved Its ovem ll
record to 12-7. T h e T ribe will
r e t ur n to action o n W ednesday.
J a n . 2 0 . i n a b o y ’a - g l r l a
d o u b lch cad er a t Lym an.
Lake B rantley suffered Us sec­
o n d co n secu tiv e loan to fall to 7-4
overall a n d 1-2 in th e SAC. T h e
P atrio ts will p lay ag ain S a tu rd a y
n ig h t a t Dr. P h illip s with the
Junior v arsity s ta rtin g at 5 :30
p.m .

S o cce r
COLLSGB SASKBTOALL
I am. — SUN. Arttana State at Southern
Cel
itaht — RSPN. Women, Southern

i Southwest Mloaourt Wat*. (L)
otto

4sat. - S U 0 Haws) l tt CoHrato State
• pin. - SUN. TNT, New Yark KMck* al
OrtantoMofic, (L)

FOOTBALL

4 pm. - SC High schooL Ctatt AAAAA
'
Manetae vs. DillarA a im at
mtanlght
HOCKEY
7:10 p.m. - BSPN, NHL. New York
Istantors at Guftole Setae*. (Ll, aHo at 1:10

SKATING
Ip m .—0 An Evenlnftt Champlenahlp*
AUTO RACING
1 p.m. — SUN, Macau Orani Prlx
COLLEGE GAMCITGALL
JO ttis - ESPN, Laulovllla at UNC

(U

5 2 3 M

Warriors whip Heat,
but fans miss pisza

HtckAV

C*N««n— SC.&gt;III. State at I D tte 0 ( U
1:0 p jn .— 11. Artuntoe At t. F 0 , (L)
1 pm. - ESPN, U . T acA At W. Kentucky,

teuthem MM*. S*. Vjrglnta Tack 0 IOT

1.(11. M. I!
Ilp cttorntt.

Stephen F. Austin N. Texes San Antonio *1
U. of ItwOterkt 44. Herding 4*

BAIT

AtortgMTi.W. Mery lends
0
BrtdgspwIN Pomlnicwi 0 V . 0
CenlT Connecticut tt. 0 tt.
I Prancta. N-Yl

Plainer 0 Parrum It
■om beto BtoR M
ReOtastl, Weetoyj
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Shaw 77, M. Pout's 1+

IW T e rn U 0 I * m Houston tt.W .IO T

1
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Atascem Jemkere*

... 411 41 7, Softer* 411 14 14
rS44«4 MfcbN4M4t 14 Sharp t-7
41 4 Polarity 41* 4 4 14 Rush 40 44 M.
Defier4444 4 AIUn'O-14 0 4 Peik 41 I t I.

****1*41 11.0 Ml

llrlpeyenEnrleue

Southern Cal 0 . Arltona St. If
Utah SI. 0 UC IrvIneU
Wyoming 77, Sen Diego SI. S4
TOURNAMENTS

1pm — SC Dayton MNetro Dame, (L)
I pm. - SUN. lewa Stato et Ka m m (L l '
1 pm. - WON. Memphta Stats et Kane*.

(L )

Ip m .— WON. Memphis tt. at DePauL (L)
1:44 pjn. - WCPX + Duke at Oa. TacA
(L l
4 pm. — SUN. Arltana at Southsre Cat.,

(U

7:M p.m. — SC, Sawttwm Mississippi at
■authPHrtAa.IL&gt;
MWp.m. - SC. VanBorWIt at Ftortto
N GAG AM ITGALL
7:11 p.m. - SUN. InAtana Pacer* et
OdantoMaBk, (L)
710 a m . - WON. Chlcage GutN at
PhiHtoGhlOTOar*. (L)
7 :» pm . - WON. Washington Guttots at
New Jersey Net*. (L)
3pm. — WPTVf, ACDeicaCtaulc. (L)

Fltotaa SKATING
4:0 pm . -

owr

WFTV A Duraeatt Wert*

Nam— WCtH i, NFL Live
11:0 pm . - W ISH A AFC Mmtttatt,
GeMWeatPttNSurgh, (Ll
l:M p m .— WCPXANFLTatoy
4 p.m. - WCPX A NPC MmtaliaAi.
Mtawtagton at Ian Practises. (L)
M pm .— ISPN. Japan Gaeri.(L)

• pm. — ESPN. Tegmsmont tt
oM.(L),aH*4ilam.
1am. - SUN. BNrM Champion* tt GoM
BAM CITB AU
•pm. - WOBO-AM IMS). NBA, Now York
tt 0 : 0
Knkfct It
H IB B ii
S A H IT S A L L
t am. - WMFO PM (0.0)
v*. Waha Peratt

1, FIU

1:0 pm. - WWNZ AM (7tt), CatH**.
VanAwbilt at Ftortto

7 :0 p.m. - WDBO AM (1 0 ), NBA.
tattona Pacer* al Orton* Magic, presame

M4J4am.

FOOTBALL

Ipm. - WGTOAM (Stt). AFC oemMtael.
Buttate tt PttNhurgh. iatae* Ini

hockey

S pm. - WGTOAM litti. Ta
Lightning tt Minnesota North Star*

IC M IB
L ake M ary R am s a n d
L ake Howell S ilv er H aw ks b a t­
tle d th e ir w ay to a 5-5 tic
T h u rsd a y n ig h t a t Lake H ow ell's
R ichard L. E v an s Field.
"O bviously, th is w aa a n of­
fensive stru g g le, n o t a defensive
o n e like w e'v e co m e to ex p e ct
w h e n w e play co n feren ce m a t­
c h e s ," H id Lake Mary co ach BUI
Elaaele.
L ake Howell sco red tw ice In
th e first tw o m in u te s o f th e g am e
a n d th e tw o te a m s w ere off to
th e races.
Angle M cC om lck scored In th e
first m in u te for th e Sliver H aw ks
a n d Holly M yers found th e n et In
th e n e x t m in u te . It to o k only 10
m l n u le B for t h e R a m s to
equalize. A ngie Snow sco rin g o n
a n a ssist from D a n a MUls in th e |
9 th m in u te a n d S tacl D enard j
co n v ertin g a p a s s from A driane
H e m m e rty ln th e 12 th m in u te.
B ack a n d forth th e tw o te a m s I
w en t. L ake HoweU ta k in g a l e a d '
a n d L ake M ary ty in g th e score.
T h e R am a a lm o st c a m e u p sh o rt
a a B ro o k e K e n t n e t t e d t h e
l e 's final g o al o n a n a ssist
Tom S h ay n e( T h ao m a s w ith a b o u t I
a m in u te left to p lay,
M yers sco red two
tw o m o re goals
fo r L a k e H o w e ll. A llis o n
S em o n es also h ad a goal, For
L ake M ary. T h o m a s scored o n
a n a ssist from A m le B radley to
s e n d th e g am e Into h alftim e 3-3
w hile H cm m erty took a p ass

from Angle O lson a n d scored In
th e 5 9 th m in u te.
E ach team took 14 sh o ts on
goal. Lake Mary goalie M ichelle
R ovlto m ak in g six ra v es w hile
L ake Howell ’k eep er P aula Yulis
m ad e th ree sto p s. Lake Howell
h a d a 5-4 ed g e In co rn er kicks.
T h e R am s w ere w histled for 13
fouls w hile th e S ilver H aw ks h ad
th re e fouls called a g a in st th em .
Lake Howell w on th e Ju n io r
v arsity co n test. 2-1.
L ake Mary, now 7-3-5 overall
a n d 2-1-3 in t h e S e m in o le
A thletic C onference, will play a t
T am pa-L eto S a tu rd a y a t noon.
L ake HoweU. 12-4-4 overall a n d
2-2-2 In th e SAC, p lay s a t W est
O range S a tu rd a y afternoon In a
2 :3 0 p.m . co n test.

Exciting
8—

0 k -J— 0 4 #

■wm

MMeBA

W restling

PnutiL+I

IBN0W

ntVwCTb

ta r
'B ttM f lM

h ttiapaJ

Cottila NGd iro tt IB
m ig h t h a v e a c h a n c e
to co m e bock, b u t h e d id • re st
good job.'
R ich ard B radley (103 pounds).
Kevin D u n n (1121. P a t P ara lin e
(135) a n d Kyle B erg m an (140) all
Wbn ih c tr m a tc h e s w ith p in s for
L ake Mary w hile te a m m a te Cory
CuU ina s h u to u t hi* o p p o n en t
104) for a m a jo r decision. J e a n
P ie rre '(171) p ick ed u p a w in by
forfeit.
L ake M ary h o s ts Flagler-Palm
C o a s t In a d u a l m e e t t h i s
ev en in g . W eigh-Ins a re sc h e d ­
u le d for 6 p.m*. wi t h Ju n io r
v a n ity co m p etitio n b eg in n in g a t
6 :3 0 p .m . a n d th e v a n ity m eet
* t for a 7 :3 0 p .m . start*

l

j

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, January 8, 1993 - aa

People
Common exercise myths

B R I E F

No pain, no gain not necessary for average person

Ta ttt of Sanford’ features door prizes

The first month In the New Year I'll bet 70
percent of you make the commitment to
lose w eight! Here are som e com m on
exercise m yths 1 came across that t hope
will be of Interest to you. I'm glad to know
these expressions I’ve heard most of my life
aren't true —one less hurtle to Jump!
No pain, no goto. While It la true that
competitive athletes m ust push themselves
beyond the point of discomfort in order to
reach a higher level of performance, for the
average person, this Is not necessary. One
can become physically fit without overdoing
It. In fact, the primary reason that people
quit exercising is that they try to do too
much and they find the price la too great.
Oo fo r tb s b a rn . Jane Fonda Is an
advocate of this popular m yth. The truth is
that pain is a warning that the body haa
been overstimulated. When you feel pain
you should ease off. Going for the bum isn't
necessary to improve fitness.

SANFORD — “A Taste of Sanford" will not only be a
sampling of foods prepared by some of Sanford's best cooks as
well as numerous businesses, but It will also feature a variety
of door prises with drawings scheduled every hour.
The event sponsored by the Sanford Wortian's Club, will be
held at the clubhouse, 309 S. Oak Ave., Saturday, Jan. 9, from
S to 8 p.m. The public Is welcome.
Tickets, at SB each, are available at the door or from any
woman's club member.

8H 81973 elatt to plan raunlon
SANFORD — The Seminole High School class of 1973 Is
planning Its 30th reunion this year. An organisational meeting
will be held Monday, Jan. 11, at 7:30 p.m., at the West Sanford
Boys and Girls Club.
Class members are encouraged to attend. For Information,
call Qary Mathews, 330-9383, between 9 and B p.m..
weekdays.

Marchant Marines, Guard to moat
SANFORD — U.8. Merchant Marines Veterans, World War 1.
and U.S. Navy Armed Guard, WW I, will meet Sunday. Jan. 10.
at 1 p.m., at the American Legion, 3874 S. Sanford Ave.
Area veterans are welcome to visit
For Information, call Bob Swanson, 331-4733, or Fred
Fontaine. 333-7410.

I f. There Is no such thing os
spot reducing. You are bom with a profile
and you put on fat in certain places —
according to your Individual pattern and
your sex. The only way to bum fat la with
aerobic exercise. An aerobic exercise (short
bouts of exercise) bum s only carbohydrates.
After 20 m inutes or so of aeorbtc exercise
th e body s h ifts from u sin g m ain ly
carbohydrates to using more fats.

Woodman of World maata Monday
SANFORD - Lodge No. 638 of the Woodmen of the World
will meet Monday. Jan. 11, at 8:30 p.m.. at 118 S. Park Ave.
The meeting will begin with a covered dish dinner followed by
the business meeting.
For information, call 333-3638.

w ill ta r n to to t. Muscles and fat are two
different things. When you stop exercising.
your muscles will atrophy, and fat may take
Its place, but muscles do not turn Into tat.
C eU alit*. Cellulite Is the term used to
describe dimpled tat found on hips and
thighs of many women. Cellulite is often
promoted aa a special type of fat that is
resistant to diet and exercise. The truth is

8anford Rotarfana to moat
Rotary Club of Sanford m eets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Artlata to meet at cantor
The Sanford Seminole Art Association meets the second
Monday of each m onth at 7 p.m. at the Cultural Arts Center in
Sanford. For information, call 333-4938.
The Licensed Practical Nurses Association of Florida, Inc.,
meets the second Monday of the month at 6:30 p.m. at
Kllamey Baptist Church. 701 Formosa Ave. C.E.U. class
provided each month. All meetings are open to LPNs and to
students and graduate LPNs, For Information call 299-4321.

you

M AH ABHTi When holiday
time rolls around again this
y e a r, p le a s e re m in d y o u r
party-giving readers to consider
people who are trying to watch
their cilortais
I can't count the tim es I've
gone to holiday g ath erin g s
■mere almost every oisn onerea
had a se m cheese or sour cream
in I t
My boyfriend Is allergic to all
dairy products, and I am trying
to cutmown on sugar and Cat in
my d ie t It's not easy to eqjoy a
party-when all you can Bnd to
eat is the parsley decorating the

Katy. Texas, was recently re­
cognised for his donation of a
total of 78 gallons of blood.
Hitt began donating blood In
1668 When he was active in the
U .8 . A rm y. He c o n tin u e d
donating blood until 1967 when
be became one of the blood
center's first pheresls donors.
Hitt’s dedication has been phe­
nomenal; he usually donates
twice each week, th e Blood
Center of Texas gave Mike a
plaque and a 78-gauon mug at a
reception in his honor.
Mr. H ltt'a
Is indeed lip*
press!ve. And for those who
don't know w hat "pheresls"
means (I didn't), my medical
dietionary describes it as the
procedure of draw ing blood,
after which the desired compo­
nents of the blood are removed,
and the remainder la re-infused
into the donor,

pectedly widowed last year when
my husband was killed In a
traffic accident. Our son eras in
8th grade at the tim e. He and his
dad were great buddies and my
husband did m oat. of the dis­
ciplining. After my husband
died. I was so overwhelmed that
I couldn't even do a lot of the
normal things like shopping and
taking care of the car, much leas
take on the task of monitoring
and disciplining our son.
Now 1 have found out that
Mark (not his real name) has
been hanging out in a park with
older kids after school, smoking
m arijuana. 1 know 1 have got to
S t some control over him before
lngs really get bad but I don't
know how 1 should go about
doing it. Please help,
aHXXVDfOMOM
DBA* MOM; You are absolute­
ly righL for your son’s sake It la
essential that you regain your
role as parent. Two very Impor­
tant factors In effective discipline
are consistency and settin g
boundaries. A m aslngly, kids
b o th w a n t a n d n e e d th e
sasurqprc that a parent can set
lim its and offer contra) when tt is
needed. For your p a rt you m ust
decide w hat you can accept and
w hat you can approve and
ciearty distinguish them for your
son. Let him know that you
accept the tact that he needs to
spend time with his friends, but
you erill nelthei' accept nor
approve of his hanging out in the
park, and certainly not his illegal
drug uae. Have this discussion In

• a ir s y a w perform ance. This Is not true.
Drinking water regularly before, during, and
after exercise is essential to prevent de­
hydration. Dehydration can affect how you
feel and decrease your performance capabil­
ities.
■ alt ta b le ts are aeceseary w han you
ex ercise stren u o u sly end sw eat a lo t.
Once It was thought ihal suppl mentation of
salt through salt tablets was essential to
replace the salt lost through sweat. Howev­
er. most people obtain sufficient salt in their
diets to replace salt lost. The body adapts to
heat stress by reducing the salt content of
sweat.
O alalag an d aging go h and to hand. As
people get older they tend to gain weight for
several reasons. They become less active so
they burn less calories than when they were
younger. But their food Intake often says the
same. Aa people age their metabolism slows
down and their body requires fewer calories.
It Is estim ated that for every decade after
age 30, there la a 10 percent reduction In
resting calories requirem ent. If eating and
exercise habits do not change, the extra
calories are converted to tat.

• IC

Saturday, Jan
T r
5:00 P.M. to 8:&lt;
^ J 's ln fo rd Woman's Club
*
3098. Oak Avenue

SampiatfwaptciaWMOfionwofOanlortfi
tost ooofcs Andfoodrettouranfofodudno
BuoftCMnaFHfcAveiM Gearing, 8oup

i i

Proud nurse educates
clods about her work

a One letter,
eak for many
In the health

Sauna suits are dangerous to the point of
being potentially lethal. Sauna suits are
made out of rubberised material that does
not allow air to reach the body. Therefore,
sweat does not evaporate and the body
cannot cool Itself. Your Internal body
tem perature becomes too high for body
metabolism and vital Internal organs to
function properly.
A t k l i t u u l o th e r y iv y la w ho
exereiae b n 4 m ts ta a t ao p plam eats. Re­
search shows that athletes don’t require
special nutrient supplements to Improve
performance. Balanced meals containing
milk. meat, breads and cereals, and fruits
and vegetables are sufficient to supply all
the necessary energy and essential nutrients
for athletes as well aa non-athletes. Athletes
have a high energy requirem ent which

Pot-sm oking son
needs boundaries
set by m other

Nuraaa maat monthly

DKAR ABHYt 1 am writing in
response to the letter signed
"X-ray Tech," who complained
that she was tired of patients
who, while being positioned for
mammograms, make com m enu
such as:~'Do you do this all day?
What a disgusting job; th e re 's,
not enough money In the world
to pay me to do what you're
doing.".
I can relate to such comments
because I am a nurse, and I'm
tired of being asked, "How can
you stand to work with terminal
patients? Isn 't it depressing
caring for people when you
know they are going to die?"
Instead of treating this aa an
Insult, or passing It off as
ignorance, I take a few minutes
to explain why I chose the
nursing profession.
Also, one should please tell
"X -ray T ech " th a t sh e'a a
"radiologic technologist" —* and
she should take pride in her
prnfr salon

that cellulite 3 5 not exist It is ordinary
fat that can only be lost aa part of on overall
weight control program . Double blind
biopsy studies of fat were made from people
with dimply, lumpy fatty tissue and those
with normal appearing fat tissue. There was
no difference in the chemical composition of
the fat cells. The difference in appearance of
fat is probably caused by an Increase in fat
cell site which may cause fat com partm ents
to bulge and produce a waffled appearance
of the skin.

should be met by Increasing the am ount of
food from the food groups in the diet.
Contrary to popular belief, athletes do not
require added vitamin, mineral or protein
supplements.
■ a a a la g a m ile b a rn s m ors calo ries
th a n w alltlag a arils. You will uae about the
same number of calories whether you walk.
Jog or run a mile. It lakes about 100 calories
to travel a mile. (The exact amount depends
on your body weight.) If both the jogger and
the slow walker exercise one hour, the
jogger will bum more calories since he or
she will travel a longer distance.
D rinking w ater o r any fla id d a rin g

T9 Nufo, QoUan limb, B - t e t e &lt; Me x &lt; ^
Pbz*Hut,f

f

o p o V B ,

?

MARY
BALK
non-threatening way,
very clear as to what
consequences, erill follow a vio­
lation of your expectations, if the
violation occurs, you m ust follow
through consistently with the
consequence. Kids and teens
welcome and need the structure
a parent provides, even if they
don’t outwardly express 1L .

•law 7 * * 1 4 “

D ave T oy s
P ong 8how

io u th iid e
•AMCMtTVCT

NOftSaNOOeO&amp;MT
'S m l &amp; f .

Picture the Seven

A le x - K in g
o f S lid e

Dwarfs without
a forest, -

«lsa I f *
W a s h in g to n

CU , Ym C m PW~J foml U

‘B eauty Salon Introductory

, - ^ - r r r r - ----------- -- ------------------------ .—

I N

* K m u m *To v d io p S IA M

WliCCt 'HI

. All I’m asking for is modera­
tion and variation in menus.
Your guests will appreciate I t
v STh i i m i t i
M A R M JL tO o o i
The fim alrtrratr ho
options. For thoec who are trying
to resist high-calorie desserts, an
assortm ent of fruit and berries
will be very m uch appreciated.
Remember, too. that It's un­
wise and unfair to encourage
guests to have "another drink"
or "one for the rend." Always
have pfeoty of soft drinks evaltdMs. A1*** never spike the
bawl with vodka or anything else
w ithout lettin g your guests
BYi 1 think you
that Mike Hitt of

Youth Bowling
Program

C O N SEN TIN G
A d u l t s

L to ^ e a U h iJ a n , 2 8

LASToftHt
lOHICANS

SCHOOL S g

O T IE S smSS B
™

*

A

STCVENStAOAL

\ M M MS ail

M®

322-7542

�LE T US REPLENISH TH E SEED OF FAITH THROUGH

Sunday School
WenNs Sanrtec

\v.dn»us«y h#nf*e*

• * »«.
tM lu t

TOOp.m.

It SO tin.

MSml
n o m i.

T he proud evergreen stands in defiance of winter, Unlike many trees, winter
cannot ravage her lush emerald cloak. She reigns supreme, surveying God's cre­
ation from a lofty throne, arms spread wide, standing erect in regal majesty.
Yet, when the snow covers her domain, she; too, bows to the earth, in deference
to the Creator, as her branches bend with the weight of w inter... and she Is even
mow beautiful.
Psalm 2229 proclaims, “Yea, to Him shall all the proud of the earth bow down."
As we bow in worship to our Maker this Sabbath, may we be aware that we are

Chswh Pitted

Tha StaffOf

Ml .

J k r-j

�. * •» ' \

' ' 1

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 8, 10«3 - SB

Religion
Countywide prayer breakfast planned

IN B R I E F
Fninhanu P afliM t IftnOUflMd

M P V Ifflm liJ p

rV M w S lV V

■ l l l v l i l l l l W

l I

SANFORD — Holy Croaa Bplacopal Church. 401 8. Park Ave.,
v d l hold an Epiphany Pageant on Sunday a t 4:30 p.m. In the
Pariah Hall to preaent the atory of the birth of Jesus and the
vtalt of the Kings, There will be a King's cake.

SANFOto — The second an­
nual Sem inole C ounty New
Y ear's P rayer Breakfast 1993
will be held a t the Sanford Civic
Center on Wednesday at 7 a.m.
I n v i t a t i o n s to th e I n ­
terd en o m in atio n al break fast

have been sent o ut and an the shadow of the Coors family
estim ated crowd of at least 600 heritage.
Is expected to attend.
The Steering Committee of the
The featured speaker for this event Is made up of local busi­
year is Adolph Coora IV. He will ness men and women, and some
speak on personal tragedy, great clergy, from the Sanford and
f.m ig g tr a n d successful living In Lake M ary area. Participants will

gather to pray for elected of­
ficials. families and the county
as a whole.
Tickets for the breakfast are
615 per person or 6105 for a
tabic of seven. For information
call 333-0594.

Easter play In thtworict
SANFORD — Sanford Workshop Community Choir will
rehearse for the play "1 Find No Fault” a program to be given
during the Baater season. Those Interested In being a p v t of
this play may attend a special rehearsal on Saturday at 1 p.m.
a t Cheater New ML Zion Baptist Church, Pear Avenue.
For more Information contact Mary L. DeBoae at 323-0156 or
Vernon Jones at 322-5210.

Youth In action
The final Grace n1 Grits for
1692 was held by the youth
g r o u p s of c o m m u n i t y
c h u r c h e s st H o l y C r o s s
Episcopal Church Fellowship
H all, 4th Street and Park
Avenue. Helping out In the
kitchen, from left to right,
Janie Howland, Kathy Henry,
Bonnie 8chum acher, youth
minister for First Presbyterian
Church, Zack Carter, Gwen
Carter, Lisa Millonig, T. J.
Roszell and Eric Crltes, youth
minister at First United Meth­
odist Church.

Sisterhood sots nsxt moating
Sisterhood of Temple Shalom of Deltona will meet at 10 a.m.
on Wednesday, Jan . 20. at the temple. The guest speaker will
be Dr. Clyde Meade on vitamins.
Exercise classes are held a t the temple every Tuesday and
Friday from 10 to 11a.m . They are open to the public.

Parade and rally plannad

Banov to bs teatured spsaksr
LONQWOOD — Georgian Banov will m inister Wednesday at
7 p.m. a t Wekiva Assembly of God. 1075 Dixon Rd..
Longwood. Born and raised in Communist Bulgaria. Ms
personal history reads Uke a novel of intrigue and adventure.
For directions or for more Information, ell the church at
774-0777.

BallaatafD In oonoart
Angelo Ballestero. a local m usidal, will perform at Calvary
Assembly's youth service, Wednesday Night Fever, at 7 p.m. In
Johnson Hall. Some of his releases include "The Wind Will
Carry Me." and "As the Deer."
Calvary Assembly Is located off 1-4 between Fairbanks and
Par Avenue. For more information, call644-1199.

Ministers Mlcnd to hslp with Invocations
All Seminole County M inisters available to give the
Invocation a t th e Board of County Commission m eetin g held
on the second and fourth Tuesdays are asked to register their
nam es and phone num bers by calling Caryton Cohen, office of
1331-1 ftO . ext. 7081.

Ross Hill is doing great things
LAKE MONROE - Rose Hill M.B. Church Is doing great,
thin Mi Iti ftemlnoto county,
With a vision from God In 1992. the church was able to send
ito

Oviedo Ministerial Alliance sets MLK events
The Oviedo Ministerial Alli­ Chapter of the NAACP. Trans­ those who wish.
ance will be sponsoring Its an­ portation will be provided from
For more information, contact
nual Dr. Martin Luther King the march site to the church for Larry Miller, planning commitCelebration In January.
Aa In the p a st the em phasis
will be on educating the youth
and reminding adults about Dr.
King and hia stand for civil
rig h ts and equality, through
nonviolence. The theme for the
1993 Celebration la: "W here do
we go from here? Learn IL Live
IL Teach It."
The celebration will include: •
' BFun Day a t the Farit on
Saturday. Jan . 10. from 11 a.m .
to 4 p.m. a t Round Lake Park,
CJL 419, Oviedo. Fartlctpanta
will enjoy free food, hot dogs,
ham burgers, soft drinks, etc.:
gam es, basketball, volleyball,
tennis, relay race *
‘
Police and Fire ~
e n tertain m en t, chearleadlng,
step groups, baton twtrisra, ate.,
and a free bike registra tion by

heipfc
For the past three years the sm all church has been reaching
out to people In need on Christm as.
They reached out to the people In the community and gave
o ut 19 baskets of food for Christm as, not Just for one day, but

Americans will be 4 p.m. Sun­
d a y , J a n . 17. a t A n tio c h
Mleaionary flaptlet Church, 311
E. Broadway 8 t , Oviedo. The
youth of Oviedo Will give dmpresentations on great

Hill
pfiqplf in need. "Let God's
know we can."
The Rev. C. S. SlpUn, pastor.

present There will afro be sing­
ing, modem dancing and poetry
rending.
•T h e Community March and

In the area to reach out to
make this a better world, I

Jan . 10, begins a t 00:30 p.m. at
the Village M arket Then a t 7
Road
p.m. at lilaalon R
om Church of
In C hrist
O viedo, W orship service to
com m em orate th e la te D r.
M artin L uther King will be
featured. There will be
Tom
president of th e Florida

PrelM Quartet In eonoart
The Praise Quartet from Pensacola Christian
College-will present a program of Inspirational
music on Wednesday at 7J O p m . at Victory
Baptist Church, Hwy. 427 and Hester Avenue

behind Fisa World. The quartet Is one of sight
traveling groups representing the college
during the month of January. They will hold
services In nearly 400 churches throughout the
month.

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

Roiling Mill* Moravian Church, SR 0 4 ,
Sanford AHianoa Church. 1401 a Oaf* Aw.

tsttssaagaat
Bf. Laha MS- Chinch of C— awn Cffy. lac.. SaarCafi off S Jt P I.
■*. MarYt AJ4.0. Church. St. S i 411, Otfocn
■r P a MathoOW Church. O ilu n SC.. Onfarprtaa
•
I Church, 0. DaSary

-v v. -V-.\

: *
rW7^7,»'.«'-'',7^ '-V*- ‘ v rr.V."V?Vvi

iCWjr
Tha OafuWan Army, ISO W. 04fS St.
Trfwnoh, Tha Church of tha Raw A«a. MOOW.Olh At
UniMO Church of Chrtct. AffarwoMa Oommunhy Chap*. Aiiathonia

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

SANFORD - First Shiloh
Church la
preparing for its Annual Martin Luther
Jr., Parade and
Rally In the pork. This year we expect better participation In all
aspects of this event.
All bands, civic groups, schools, fraternities, sororities,
businesses and interested persons may subm it either a float
car. walking group or all of trie above In the parade.
Preparations have begun to make this the best ever.
Call the Rev. Harry Rucker o r Sheryl Jones a t 322-5489 for
more Information. There Is no entry foe.

�- Santord Herald. Santord. Florida - Friday, January 8, 1983

n -w » w o i* i?

CLASSIHED ADS
O a i m Ia a Ia

ofitm iow

ln la f Q a «4#
unanoo •\A
w fin
w r ir K

322-2611

Siatue: Active
Lett Known Carparate
Addreee: tttUveOekOlvd..
Senterd. PL StmAtat
YOU A M NOTIPIKO that an
action to teratleaa the martfape
encumbering the following
property in laminate County,
Florida:
Lot I I I . H ID D IN L A K I
VILLAS. PHAM HI. t c a f e

831-9003

a min Mock border
APPORDALICIOUS HINTS

OlAlidrtti.Tewnhomet
• SptrhllnsPool

SANFORD

» barm. haute.
p r i v a c y . I block
tram near hetpilel. IIW per
week pluttlJS tecurlty.

conip.eh

• IlcmiwCluWWUW

• U f f t l a t In Kitchen*
• Sell Cleaning O v e n t
0 Wether»/Dryer* Available

Calimflit

number OtStae CA U O. at the
Oreutt Court at the Wh Judicial
V IT C w lf

Iff

M S

VOa

tS fn ln S U

County, F lo rid a . erheraln
A M IR IC A ‘ 1 M O R TO A O I
IR R V IC IN O , IN C . P/K/A

It whel 6 Caldwell pot when
he placed hit rental ad In the
Sanford Herald Clattllledil
He rented hit property In lett
than a weefcf Call ut today at
331 Ml I tor oil your real ottate
HM i F h m e d » -« H M I
■ P I N I I retired man

t L M R L V CARR, m
hdl Hma. Levtn* care.

Make your
N ew Year's
resolution
a home
at

MIAtlM-Ham

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Country Lake

NHnvptsi

2714 Ridgewood Ave.
Sanford

330-5204
m m

band. Part let. wedditut,
d e b t. LHp rack. Mata.

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Must bo able toj a w j s t y -

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RCORIN

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Sinford Hnnslrt. Sanford, Florida - Friday, January 8. 1993 - TO

KIT ’N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

plu»— curlty Call « I M M
SANFORD - 1 or 4 bdrm. t barn.

SPACIOUS 1/1, nice area.
M*»/mo. with dltcounf, plut
dapaatt. MFMOO ar IMaMO

O tA N FO a O t/l with dan,
carport, Ig. raomt, WtJ/mc.,
•4N security.
• IAN FOR O t/l garag* apt.
U U /m a a lu tllllta c .
• • AN FO R D • 1/1 duplet
w/tlvlng rm. parch, new paint,
Minds. MtS/me, DM tac.
• LK. MARY, 1/1 w/carport,
auttld* ttoragt. earner lot.
Naw paint A carpal. Clean.
MO mo. 1400MC.

• MAYFAIR VILLAI, 1/ 1,
Frlvatal dbi. garage, all
applt.. patio w/prlvacy, Ig.
rtns.lSTSmo.llMlac.

C H A M V A A I LOW AS 4%
Oov'f Foracleiurat, Rapoi/Attum * No Quality
Homes I Owner financing,
lamlnol*. Oranga, Volusia.

111— Antiques/
Collectibles

O IN IV A ■Cut* I bdrm. 1 bath
to town, N M family room,
n«w roaf/carpal, M M M
1-JM-W7, te*v* mn saga
L I A S I F U R C M A II
1/1
mablla, 1*00 dn.. HU/mo.

l aofsrd-toss toan U jm dawn
• Ftoecrort •renovated, carpet,
appliances, fancad yd. Mf .*00
• Ranavatod Ilk* naw l/i, fplc..
appl. naw paint. M U M
OFoel ttomsl In cut da «ac. i/l,
ranavatod. Oaraga. to*,*00
•l/l an la acra. tfO# sq. ft. fplc,
appl . dead and tfraaf u*.0M

Cswtiw Mud Csn, 313-1111
★ wwto insurance ★ ★
PIP/FO ISO Doom
P BOAT MOTOR
10M Twin
Mercury. IS HF. Needs re­
pairs. Good compression. M0
1714441

Comp/Colllttor. lull tov. avail.
ICOtoOMY INSURANCI

Nll.NWY.17ai.
m-7707

A i i m m a Rlto RCRPRFW
&amp; iA U I lw
IWat fl

• 1/1 aa 1/1acral Fancad. culd*
aac, daad and tfraal.lM.000
Additional homes avail. Law
than *7K down I
FAOLA. 4/1 on on 1.11 acrat.
Fattura with itabto. 1110.000
In The Cawrtryl 1/1 brick homo
an 1/1 acra, naw paint and
carpet, fancad yard 177,100

STENSTROM

REALTY, INC.
We Iht and Mil
more p roperty thin
Anyone In tbe Greeter
Sanford/lake Mary area.

payments. MM717

lit-Appliances
/ Furniture

On Ui. Namay-M. Jatow 3.400
s r . ft. 4/1. 1 acra. ter. porch,
pool, guatt houta W S M f
tahafrant cattom. cathedral
call. ter. porch, garage 171.100

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
HO
MONEY
DOMel
m
e M
w rO w S BIWY*

PAFBR ROUTS •Orlande Sen
tlnel. Circulation IN dally, 410
Sunday. M A N pfua par year
Income. 11 hr. par night,
ppti./candai, Casselberry
era*. Mutt Mill Sacrifice,
SWAM cash. H a g ________

Except tax. teg, mie. etc.
ItN FORD RSCORT DL •4 dr,
eute, air, stereo, powor
•tearing, lew miles. Mutt see
this oral ONLY t t t n per
month tor only 41 months o!
9.9%................Cell Mr Feyno

1*5—DuplexTrtpjex / Rtnt
LA R I MARY, 1 bdrm., w/i
corpot. C/H/A, colling lam
toncad yd. good area. OI-47N

★ CUNSHOW*
MTIm Mi Om I
1 RORAL 1 BATH •Cental air.
carparl, U N piwesecurity.

R AV IL ORANOtS, Aad Orapr

• SUY* S ILL* T R A M *
U U I. Fraud! Av*.
dPRSTIVR rod/Moch trunk,
it " X ir* X t r deep. Lined
w R M r* y.M lttM 04_______

FRIttiUL fuff

Dhronad? lonkrant?
WE CAN HELP!
V IV W IW III

PLOVSBIRO, Yellow w/poach
lac*. Fartoct health, w/ar

jjrM h a u te g g jN jlM itg ^ ^

w^S3 7

NoCradt? lad Cndt?
P W R U V V IO

THIS W EEK S

Lovely 4/t t.H7 ig. tl. Owner
I n # Ti *ANCTI0N Off*
Tehlno bids Doug RIchardMn
SunFlorlda RMlty
M l MNor S4H7W........1114,*N

TOwSuiSri

aMtohamaal IDDSSIN/l

ORUICK C IN TU R V • IN I
auto. FS, A/C, nfce gaad

UMNMeTorftM

O ur Spook* O ff or WAV Havm

You Lauohing a s rnm W ay
To
“ — **

1/2 OFF
1st Mon 111 s Rent
C o e v ill* A p a rtm e n ts
N o w ly R o n o v a to d l

hysrtv

e r f * iM LM . ApplyTor a SoutMhist new car
lo in end you're guaranteed an Answer by the
end of the nc u n i wincesd a y -o r you get IKXOO
Then poce ip p o w d , you c in chooK thc
convenience of h e v tiy pour loan payments
AutomaticAliy deductedfeom pour Fwi*WTYtigt
r lurfcj^i RTTPimt
f t p f | f | r y n « fn p l w i r r l i w t f a ^ n i n p n iN
m m * fnUw a o u to a a d xH fh C w tfN ltud** a m n n -

teed eervtce. n jam hapten to an Ices th in our
b w w ’U p iy ia ifo r
for details an allot

If you're looking at a new cer, take a look
at SoutHlhist’s car loans. W ith a note rate of
8.25%; and with guaranteed service, Soutlffiust
can take you where you want logo. In style.
Efuat opportunity Under. Subject to normal n r Jit
approval. 0 1992 SoutMhut

Available only at SoutUhul Bomb o f Orlando S m U h
Center*: Downtown OrUndo US W. Centre! Bird.
2466000; 7400 Univenity Blvd. mt Coldennd ltd.
24660U; 611 W. Labe Maty Blvd. 330-2X0(3466060from
I; Good Hornet 3d. *601 HE Colonist Dr. (n Ocoee
296033; Altamonte Crouing 131N. State IId. 434
7766969; H uuteri Creek 3900£ Village Center Dr.
240-7612
Member FDiC

on a t 10.000 loanfo r 46 months, with a S X practising
fee. monthly payments will be 6247.62 with a total
finance charge o f 61.63041. Amount o f downpayment
varies with automobile.

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8anford Hsrsld, 8«n&gt;ofd. Florid* - Friday, January 8, 1983

Healthy lifestyles
pay off in time
DEAR DR

w h y p o weHAVGTO

JTOMAKEMEN
HIKE IN THE RAIN? A OUT O f YOU/

e x c u s e m e , o\ k, * * jr
TIPPY MAR to PETTI HO WET

I don't
rugs or
d eat a
st been
— ___________ ______ cancer.
There Is no family history, but
my father died of prostate cancer
at the age of 71. What Improvements can I make In my lire to
mitigate the condition?
DEAR READER: Regrettably.
bad things happen: III health can
befall even the most prudent
person. A corollary: Behaving
yourself does not Insulate you
from disease •• although. In my
experience, folks who don't take
care of themselves get sicker
sooner and die earlier, and that's
Just the point.
.

i

You have evidently not abused
your health In the past. As a
consequence, you're probably In
exceptionally good shape, a
characteristic that may make an
e n o r m o u s d i f f e r e n c e In
overcoming your breast cancer.
For example, were you a smoker
and heavy drinker, you wouldn't
respond as well to therapy for
your breast tumor, which may
Include radiation and/or
chemotherapy.
Thus, your many years of
sensible living may now pay ofT
dividends. You can approach
your unanticipated breast problem with a healthy body and
mind. Follow your physician's
advice about what specific ac-

HOW ARE YOU P 0 IN 6 ?

breast cancer.
' NO
PEEKIN6 !

r 7HP PRESSUtt OU W
aiAJTOU AW YU 5 TRA710U!S
tfl/U K D U 0 MIST 5 MUST
e e w T E u x ...
v

IF THEY MAKE. A
MISTAKE. rr COULD
RU U lAJTO TRUUOUS
OF DOLLARS
r7 Z .

THEIR MALPRACTICE
in s u r a n c e

/ w e a r

A BUNDLE

.

DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm 92 and
all of a sudden am suffering from
varicose veins. Is there a good
healing salve I can use? I must
be act Ive. so being abed Is out.
DEAR READER: There Is no
topical t r e a t me nt , such as
ointments, for varicose veins. As
we age. the veins In the legs tend
to balloon and dilate, leading to
the unsightly varicose veins
we're all familiar with. In severe
cases, blood clots may form in

PETER

these veins or the varices can
GOTT.M.D.
alTcct circulation, resulting In
troublesome skin ulcers,
.
« general rule.
mhd/moderatc, uncomplicated skin ulceration, usually have to
varicose vr*
*- •*-- •
lfe a *fd w
*‘°^K|ngs,
and avo&gt;o
stand‘nS I
“ P^tally •
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ACIIOtl
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.***
second hair of the
1960s. Scotsman Hugh Kelsey
wrote two classic bridge books,
Killing Defence at Bridge" and
Advanced Play at Bridge." I
reviewed the former last year,
The tatter has Just been republished In a paperback edition
(915.46, G ollancs, 212-866, , . . , .
Not only do the deals live up to
the title, but Kelsey carefully
and lucidly explains the thought
processes one should go through
when planning the play. This
alone makes the book worth
rei d‘« *
. t
Today s deal ts the first in the
book. It defeated 13 "unlucky"
experta. all of whom "played too
quickly. How would you try to
win nine tricks?
You have six top tricks: three
spades, two hearts and one
diamond. There are three ways

A

n e t H T « r u p r tO U M »

V TOOALL

fpefwwtrljllC'

if

«T P

t m K O M O M im

ENP-rO-f

rm
W O VtPNT MACH
aconchmion .

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1 -8 -9 *

LL

trick one In the dummy and take
an Immediate diamond finesse
Win trick one In hand and attach
either diam onds o r clubs. The
"unlucky" 13 all led the dub
queen at trick two. going down
when the suit divided 4-1 and
the diamond finesse lost,
The best line Is to win with the
heart ace and cash the diamond
«ce. If the suit splits 64). you
m ust revert to clubs, hoping for
a 3-2 break. But If everyone
follows to the diamond ace, your
contract is assured. Ju st contlnue with a diamond toward
dum m y's queen.
With the given layout. West
m ust duck his king. Otherwise
you have nine tricks: three
spades, two hearts and four
diamonds. Then, after winning
with dum m y's queen and seeing
E ast's discard, you can play on
clubs. Your nine tricks will be
three spades, two hearts, two

People to whom you will be
attracted In the year ahead are
likely to be Individuals who are
progressive thinkers and in tune
with the times. Your best new
friends are apt to be drawn from
their ranks.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jsn.
19) Joint ventures could hold
lore promise for you today than
Independent endeavors. Howev­
er. you m ust be teamed with a
p a rtn e r w hose co n trib u tio n
equals yours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Moderation la the key Ingredient
to success today, so-try to play
everything down the middle. For
best results don't be too ag­
gressive or too passive.
PM C M (Feb. 20-March 20)
Lounging in a cosy easy chair
could have strong appeal for you
today, but If you fall 10 be
productive, you're apt to collect

ANNIS

BKRGAIN FDOKS

'

•otmt
♦ AKQ4
EAT
♦ A illl

Vulnerable: Both

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                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1993</text>
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                <text>The Sanford Herald, January 08, 1993</text>
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                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on January 08, 1993.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
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            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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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;, January 08, 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>Sanford, Florida</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
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