<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/items/browse?collection=87&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=20" accessDate="2026-05-20T18:47:38+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>20</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>308</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="24238" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23846">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/259490347df078f7d75eb9c841a20069.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3a9fae6fea7c5dd2986d127471560e34</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242109">
                    <text>—

PISBIlfiM H i
| Ju l y

17,

1994

SUNDAY

. 75 Cents |

Sanford Herald
••mint Sanford, Laka Mary and Santlnafo County alnoa ttO O
86th Ysar, No. 262 - Sanford, Florida

N E W S

D IG E S T

□ Sport*
Stato tills In sight
LONGWOOD — The Longwood Babe Ruth
Bambino (11*12) All-Stars have advanced to this
afternoon's 1 p.m. state tournament semifinal
game with Kejrstone Heights at Candyland Park.

Female cops cry foul

Sex discrim ination
co m plaints filed;
senator interested

Dwofod to holplng othort
Terry Zaudtke is an engineer in Sanford who
volunteers his tim e with Seminole Work Oppor­
tunity Program, an organisation that helps
developmental^ disabled citizens realise their
potential for a bright ftiture.

•mm

officers declined to comment, citing the pending
nature o f the com plaint and departm ental
regulation* against speaking to the media.
U.8. Sen. Bob Oranam o f Florida has expressed
Interest In Sheafer'a complaint. In a July 8 letter
to Sheafer'a husband Ricky Sheafer, Graham
wrote he would look Into the matter.
City Personnel Director Tim McCauley said the
city was notified o f the complaints and re­
sponded. The content o f the complaints and city
responses are confidential and cannot be released
by the city. McCauley aaid.
In her complaint. 8heafer. 38. alleges:
•fche was denied a promotion In June 1993
and was passed over by a male with less Ume In
the department and leas experience.
•sh e was the only female In the Special
Investigations Unit and waa “ subjected to
unequal terms and conditions." Sheafer was
returned to the patrol division this year.
• male officers are given tailored uniforms, but
females are given men's uniforms which they
must alter.
• no females have ever been promoted.
•sh e la 1"constantly overlooked for promotions

Gender-bias
grievance filed
SANFO RD — In ad d ition to genderdiscrimination complaints by two Sanford
female police officers, a former Community
Policing Team female officer also filed recent
gender-bias grievance actions against Chief
Ralph Russell.
Robin Bemosky filed two Internal com ­
plaints with the city while she served as n
contracted police officer between May 17.
1993 and June 30. 1994. In them, Bemosky
alleged she was passed over for a full-time
position, and ultimately dismissed, because
she waa a woman.
City Manager BUI Simmons decided Russell

OUl crackdown
Sem inole County sheriff's deputies joih e
forces with the Florida Highway Patrol, all th
municpal police forces in the county, the C81
railroad police, the Department o f Transports
Uoti and state beverage agents In a "m assive'
drunk driving crackdown on Friday night.

Lakefront
proposal
ref ined
SANFORD — Members o f the Wsterfront Master
Plan Steering Committee w ill get their first
glimpse o f a composite proposal that could be the
model for development on the lakefront.
The main item In the University o f Florida
A rch itectu re S tu dio presentation la called
S r hams D. It la baaed on three,earlier master plan
aahaassa which wars p r in t e d to ths committee

s e e officials said they bslisvs that this Is tha
only planetarium la central Florida that w ill
"explain what la likely to happen during *****
once In a double lifetim e cosmic even t."
The "Cosm ic Wipeout in J u ly" program Is a
30-mlnute multi-media
open to the public free a
The shows w ill be on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at 8:30 p.m. and on Friday mornings
at 11:30 through July 29.
The show features music, slides, the planetar­
ium star projector and a live presentation.
The 8CC planetarium Is located in Building B

Ta ylo r found guilty
of friend’s murder

Music trip
SANFORD — The Sanford Senior Center Is
planning a special "Sanford Senior Travelers"
daytrlp Sunday. August 7. Supervisor Chris
Usry aaid the trip from 2 p.m. until 5 p.m.. will
be to the Daytona Beach Marriott, for an
afternoon o f food, dancing and entertainment to
the music o f Myron Floren. o f the Lawrence
WeUt Orchestra, and his accordian.
Ticket* are 826. including food. Reservations
are required before July 29th, at the Senior
Center. Phone 330-8699 for reservations and/or
additional information.

Longtime Longwood official resigns

Correction
In Friday's Sanford Herald, the name o f a road
waa incorrectly Identified in a alary about
septage trucks.. The road Identified as "Upaala
Road* is actually “ Monroe Road."

L O N O W O O D - C it y a d ­
ministrator W. Shelton Smith said
Friday he has not taken any steps to
fiU the position o f Public Works
Director Richard Kornbluth who
gave hla two weeks notice July 13.
A 15-year employee o f the city,

"restructuring" hs is working oo in
drawing up next year's city budget.
However. Kornbluth said he reunchUme July
position would

r^ -u .

5222$SBKlSf’UXSS'.’E! U R
don't want to leave, but I dor
to stay where I'm not wanted

Korabluth has worked at various
public works Jobs working his way
up from meter reader to director o f
tblic works, a position he has held
1/2 years. He has an A A license in
water treatment and leaches a class
on the subject at Seminole Commu­
nity College.
W hen K orn b lu th asked w ho
would perform the director's duties
if the position waa eliminated, he
aaid Smith said, "an engineer will
perform the functions."
Smith aaid the job has not been
eliminated because it la in the city

r

charter or city code. Under his
proposal, however, one Individual
will be "w earing two hats."
"T h e budget doesn't take effect,
until October." Smith said. "I'm
making changes almost daily on thebudget proposal, but it would he
premature for me to comment on
them until the commissioners re­
view It." He is tentatively proposing
one person perform the duties o f
engineer and director o f public
works, elim inating one manage­
ment position In Public Works.

The way it was: Ramamber those
good times at the Celery Cratal
o f loyal parents.
.•
And where was the C elery Crate located? It
mcompeserd the entire second floor o f the city hail, a
large room with a stage at one end. When you entered
toe door from the stairway, there was a snack bar,
restrooms, and a sort o f reading room stocked with
magazines and board games. The large main area waa
reached by walking down a couple or steps: placed in
this section were pool and ping-pong tables along with
other tables and chairs for games and visiting. There
was also plenty o f room for dancing. If you wanted to
play pool, you had to come early to claim a tabic as this
game waa very popular, even among the girls.
A student could buy a year's membership for a
nominal fee or pay a small cost at the door. Special
I&amp; 30 p.m

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

O F T H E NEWS, READ T H E HERALD

�■

M

N

H

W

M

- Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, Florid* - Sunday, July 17, IBM

N E W S FROM T H E R E G IO N AND A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

G litches slow work aboard shuttle
Paramedics fret man trapped In pool
LAKELAND — Police and paramedics made an early
morning call to a motel to free a man whose penis was caught
in a swtmmtng pool suction fitting.
A clerk at the Scottish Inn motel made a 911 call at 4:48 a.m.
Friday, aaytng the 33-year-old man was trapped In the
swimming pool.
"A s 1 approached the man.' a police officer wrote In his
report, “ (co u ld see his pants were down to his knees and his
penis was atuck In a auction hole located on the northsidc wall
o f the swim m ing pool."
A police officer identified the man as Robert Scott Cheuvront
o f Lakeland.
The pool's pump was shut o ff before paramedics arrived, but
the *naq still could not free himself because his penis had
beedfM sw oflen'ln the em air hoNTthatrervee as part* o f the
pool’s filtration system.
Paramedics Inserted a lubricant around the suction fitting,
and after about 40 minutes, authorities were able to free the
im ii

t

The man, who had rented a room at the motel, told police he
had gone swimming around 12:30 a.m. He was discovered
more than four hours later.
He waa treated at Lakeland Regional Medical Center and
released with bruised genitalia.

W IIM t’ elub tot ratal offtnslvt
W EST PALM BEACH - A atrip club performance by
convicted prostitute Kathy W dlets la not a form o f conatltutlonaHy protected expression, a judge has ruled.
Palm Beach County Court Judge Deborah Pucillo denied
Friday all defense moriona to throw out the charges o f lewdnees
and violation o f the county's lap dancing ordinance.
WlUeta' performance Included sexual acta with a flashlight
and having customers shave her. She waa ordered to be ready
for trial later this month.
Performances at adult entertainment centers that serve
alcohol do not enjoy the same protection as other forma o f
f jrnrrieinn Pucltto M id In her order.
W lilets' attorney. James Beniamin o f Fort Lauderdale, said
after the ruling. ''Obviously, the First Amendment does not
exist in Palm Bench County."
He argued that W llleta' actions were those o f a performer and

against prostitution charges. It became public that her client
list included Fort Lauderdale's vice m ayor and that her
husband — then a Broward County Sheriff’s deputy — sought

Ovfltftr
w
s F jV W I Indufttfv
lir a W H J H
wwffw
^^^Btintri
iW l
APALACH ICO LA— Apalachicola Bay has loot Its green tin t
Hugs dum ps o f water hyacinths usually found 70 miles

SPACE CENTER. Houston — Astronauts
used the weekend mechanic's rule o f thumb
when a stubborn pump Interrupted science
work aboard Columbia today: If at first you
don’t succeed, go to lunch.
It worked.
Astronaut Leroy Chiao tried four times to
switch on the pump that'a part o f a
protein-separating experiment In the apace
shuttle's laboratory. Each time, It started,
(hen stopped.
Oround controllers told him to take his
hour-long lunch break before trying again.
When he returned, the pump started up
without a hitch and experiments resumed.
"It looks like this will work out,*' Chiao
said.

"T h at's wonderful," replied a controller In
Huntsville. Ala.
NASA didn't Immediately aay what may
have caused the problem. The equipment
had worked previously.
The pump la part o f a French-built unit
designed to separate protein molecules as
they How through an electrical held. That
process Is known as electrophoresis.
Researchers hope the technology will help
In the production o f pharmaceutical drugs.
Three other astronauts spent most of
Friday working on another troublesome
pump.
The cooling pump on a trunk-sited
electrical chamber designed to separate cell
components, also through electrophoresis,
wasn’t working because o f bubbles In a
waterline.

The Japanese-made chamber Is to be the
site o f three experiments conducted by
researchers studying worm DNA, rat growth
hormones and mouse cellular secretions.
Scientists believe the extracted cellular
material w ill be purer In apace than on
Earth. That could help researchers studying
the treatment o f diabetes.
Columbia Is also carrying lots o f sealtfe Jellyfish, goldfish, salamanders and Japa­
nese Medaka fish are all swimming In tanks
— so biologists can see how they reproduce,
develop and adapt In space.
The spaceship and tta seven-member
crew, launched from Florida July 8, are due
back next Friday.

Arrest
made in
vigilante
snafu
JACKSONVILLE - A man fed
up w ith h la n eigh b o rh o o d
b eco m in g a cra ck co ca in e
marketplace picked' the wrong
time to take the law Into hlo own
hands.
prtiwMwg p U m U .1 12-gauge
shotgun at what he thought
were drug dealers. They turned
out to be actually undercover
detectives.
.
N ow . M oore la act to be
arraigned next week on two
I'm hoping they'll
Itam a lot about tha process Saturday and today
at tha Beok-to-School Expo, held at tha
Altamonte Mail.

that that, that was Just the only
thing |knew to d o."

_ /! bir-ltt-.? (4

suffered this year on its 82.9
billion W all Street Investment
program.
Other Investment firm s that
donated to the group and invest
money for the state include Duff
A Phelps Corp. o f Chicago and
Bear Bteama ft Co. Inc. o f New
York. Spokesmen could not be
reached Friday.
The five Arms Invested more
than 8948 m illio n o f state

MV* .IfW h WHH MWW— MMPWftW
with us. It's a dangsrous game
P«ui g
o f people don't realise
what they're getting themselves
Into,"
Brown said he la not pushing
for prosecution against Moore
but the case la still under review
by prosecutors.

Tha group, organised in De­
camber supports increasing the
sales tax aa much as 1 cent per
dollar to build more prisons. It
has raised 8979.000 aa o f June
30, according to state campaign
finance reports.
Am ong the contributors to
Cltlaena for a Bate Florida la
Piper Jeffrey tec. r f u iw iw iw U i
which gave 810000 In Febru­
ary, according to etate records.
Piper JaOray'a money manag-

THE WEATHER

to mid 90s, Winds from the
southeast at 8-10 mph. Chance
o f rain SO percent.
Sunday night: W idely scat­
te r e d e h o w e ra an d th u n ­
derstorms becoming fair with a
20 percent chance o f rain. Winds

&amp; T 'v

P

TUBgDAY
SUNDAY
MOMMY
WEDNESDAY
YMUMOAY
PUy steady 98-7S Ptlyet—8y 98-78 M y olowdy98-71 M y steady 98-78 M y steady 99-78

The h igh tem peratu re In
Sanford on Friday was 93 de­
grees and the overnight low waa
72 degrees as reported by the
University o f Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Ave.
R ecorded ra in fall fo r the
period ending at 1 p . r a . Satut-

Daytana ftaaeht Waves are 1
foot and glassy. Current Is
slightly from the north with e

Airport.

c o m p a n ie s g a v e ta n a o f
thousands o f doUaro.
Other contributors Include'
Waste Management o f North:
America Inc., a Port Lauderdale:
garbage hauler, which donated
880,000. Fto-Sun Sugar Co. o f
P a lm B ea ch C o u n ty g a v e
820,000.
Meanwhile, new financial reporta show the state's 82.9
billion W all Street investment!

�Sanford Hsfald, Sanford, Florid* - SurxHy, Jury 17, 1994

Dems attack Pizza
Hut, M cDonald’s
on health reform
Harr^JI &amp;. Beverly
counts o f fraudulent use o f credit cards, and grand
theft. W hile at the Jail, tt was discovered he was also wanted on
*or violation o f probation, on a previous conviction o f
ulCfl#

Disorderly conduct
Joseph R. Labrecque. 62. o f.2 ld E. First Street In Sanford,
was arrested by Sanford police Thursday. Sheriff's deputies
said Labrecque reportedly caused a disturbance at the sheriff's
department at the Central Florida Regional Airport, and was
sent home via taxi. The report said he then began to give the
i?*.1. dri* f r ,om e difficulty, and was stopped at W ylie and
MeUonvllle, where he was placed under arrested on a charge o f
disorderly conduct.

Shoplifting
Sheriff's deputies arrested Trevor Andrew Prtgg, 17. o f 708
Sun U k e Circle. Lake Mary, at a store in the 3800 block o f W.
Lake Mary Boulevard. Deputies said he had reportedly taken a
cartJuB o f unbagged groceries outside, and told security
•guards he was going to his car to obtain money. Deputies said
no money was found in the vehicle, and he eras arrested on a
charge o f retail theft. The grocery Items In the cart were
reportedly valued at $102.20.

Traffic stop
John W. Slater, 24. 137 Becket Lane, Heathrow, was stopped
by Lake Mary police on Lake Mary Boulevard Thursday. He
was charged with driving under the Influence o f alcohol.

Warrants tcvycd
• Bryan Joseph Mofaaaey. 22. 780 Tomlinson Terrace. Lake
Mary, was arrested by sheriff's deputies on
Park Drive
Thursday. He was wanted on a warrant for Calling to appear on
mcharge o f driving with a suspended/revoked license. Deputies
said during a search, they uncovered what proved to be
marijuana hidden In his sock. He was subsequently charged
w ith possession o f a controlled substance.
•W illiam C. Farley. 28.621 Wildmere Ave.. Longwood. was
arrested by Longwood police at his residence Thursday. He
was wanted on a warrant for violation o f probation.
•Raym ond Oaines. 44.1200 W. Eighth Street. Sanford, was
located at First Street and Persimmon Avenue by Sanford
police Thursday. He was wanted on warrants for falling to
appear on a charge o f disorderly conduct and failing to appear
to pay a fine on a conviction o f disorderly conduct.
• Lance D. Butler. 38. 109 Sanora Blvd.. waa arrested by
deputies in Longwood Thursday. He was wanted for violation
o f community control on a previous conviction o f grand theft.
•K ristian Begala. 22. 2444 8. Park Avenue. Sanford, was
arrested st his residence by deputies Thursday. He was wanted
foretelling to appear on a charge o f obtaining property with a
•Sandra Lee Presley, 35. 406 Beth Drive, was located by
deputies at her residence Thursday. She was wanted for

WASHINGTON - Democratic
lawmakers took on fast food
giants McDonald's and Pizza Hut
Friday, accusing them o f hypoc­
risy in the health care debate.
Unfair, responded McDonald's.
"B ogus." said Plaaa Hut.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D-Mass.. and Rep. John Dtngell.
' D-Mich., two o f Congress' lead­
ing voices tn health reform, held
a news conference to release a
report on the two companies by
the pro-CUnton Health Care Re­
form Project.
"W e have a qu estion for
them ." Kennedy said. "W h y do
they want to treat Japanese
w o rk ers. G erm an w o rk e rs,
Belgian workers, Netherlands
workers ... better than they treat
the American workers here at
hom e?"
The report contends that Pizza
Hut, a division or PepsiCo, and
M cD onald's are d oin g great
business In countries such as
Oermany. Belgium and Japan,
where they are required by law
to contribute to workers’ insur­
ance. They are fighting such a
mandate in the administration's
health care proposal.
The report says Pizza Hut —
based In Senate Minority Leader
Bob Dole's state o f Kansas —
does not con tribu te In this
cou ntry to coverage fo r Ita
hourly workers for the first six
months, and then only contrib­
utes to additional coverage, not
t h e b a s ic h e a l t h p la n .
McDonald's does not cover its
hourly or part-time workers, the
project said.
Rob Doughty, a vice president
for public relations at Pizza Hut.
called the charges “ bogus." He
•aid Pizza Hut does business in
87 countries and knows horn
e x p e rie n c e th a t m a n d a ted
employer-paid coverage hurts.
"It doesn't serve the customer
because it raises prices, and It
d o e s n 't serve th e com pan y
b e c a u s e it r a is e s c o s t s / ’
Doughty said. He said growth la
stagnant In O erm any. where

Transmissions

f

\

(A 1 V

A

n n o u n c e s . ..

FALL REGISTRATION
Classes Beginning A u g. 22

^ r l

Professional Instruction

■

■

(For children, adults and seniors)

•

w

From Beginning to Advanced
Scholarships and Private Lessons Available

Programs Include:
BALLET •POINTE •TAP •JAZZ •DANCE EXERCISE
•BODY CONDITIONING (based on Pilate technique)

t I'Hii JfliHe-rnSrt
&gt;vii tujiKjrnol la &lt;
.iMmm stU n t
A
located by deputies on Sand Pine Road Thursday. He was
wanted on warrants far aggravated ■■■■nit. Intent to com mit a
felony, shooting a deadly weapon Into a building, and carrying
a concealed weapon.

IneJdwnts .
•S h eriff's deputies are investigating the reported theft
Thursday o f a 22 caliber handgun from a vehicle parked near a
business in the 900block q f Hickman Drive.
___
•Sanford police said between 84.000 and 88.000 In power
tools was reportedly stolen Thursday from a building in the
2400block o f8. Park Avenue.
.
_ .. .
• A VCR valued at 8200 was reportedly stolen Thursday
from a residence in the 200 block o f w . 16th S treet

quarters saying it eras unfair to
compare Its health insurance
pr&gt;l i f jf t abroad out o f conte xt "M cD on a ld 's supports im ­
provements in our health care
system, but improvements that
preserve lobs and don't Inhibit
small business’ ability to grow
and provide these Jobs," the
statement said.
The’ Health Care Reform Pro­
ject said it would run full-page
advertisements in The New York

Film at 11, but gore no more:
Local TV news out of violence

"W e're out o f the body count business," said
Pahl Shipley, news director o f KOBT in Harl­
ingen. Texas, which has been using the new
approach since April. "W e're aa aggressive as
w e've ever been. Just better focused."
The stations offering "fam ily-sensitive" or
"fam ilv-friendly" news generally avoid sensa­
tional images o f violence and gore, eliminating
them entirely from the afternoon news and using
them sparingly in the late news.
“ It's about having the courage to step beyond
tudunnw and colorful video that is. on the
surface, seem ingly good local television." aaid
John Lansing, who as news director o f Min­
neapolis' WCCO is credited with coining the term
"(am ity-sensitive.” if not inventing the form.
He aaid violent news video was scaring people
and distorting their perceptions o f their communltv and other*.
The trend to not without it* critic*.
"Unfortunately, the news is often disturbing by
Ita nature, and to avoid disturbing the audience Is
ill-serving them ." said Dave Bartlett, president o f
the Radio-TdevM on News Directors Association .
"W e have to be careful that in our seal to be
family-sensitive. we don't lose sight o f the tact
that we edit have to be doing news.
Brie Braun, manager o f consultation and
research for Frank N. Magld Associates Inc. o f
Marion, lows, a media consulting company, said
he. too. is troubled by the development.
"I'm Just' real nervous about aaytng to the
viewers that we are going to censor what you're
* t n J 4U u uu &gt;.Sycra, the top-rated station in the
nation's 14th-btggeat m arket became the first to
identify and promote* us newscasts as family-

A t a later meeting. Lansing said, a participant
said that the problem waa not T V news violence,
but that TV did a bad Job at covering crim e issues,
in particular, and. in general, a bad Job at putting
the world into context.
"Th at eras a defining moment for m e." Lansing
said. .
In addition to eliminating violent video from the
8 p.m. newscast. WCCO created a new beat
system to look at more com plex issues, and
added two full-time staffers to research crime
databases for trends and statistics that, would put
a story in context.
The station also established a "b ill o f righ ts" for
victim s o f crime. Am ong other things, reporters
covering crime stories cannot put microphones in
front of people's faces without first asking
in 11n1m inn Lansindsaid.
CBS-owned W CIX has used familysensitive news since May 9 to counter top-rated
W8VN, an Independent known for Its fast-paced,
sensational coverage. W CtX's 4 and 6 p.m.
newscasts were changed with children In mind.
"Th ere are certain graphic im ages — not Just
body bags, but also medical stories, in terms o f
blood — where children c a d i interpret visual
data aa w ell as adults can. where they can't put it
into con text” said news director Sue kawalerakl.
"O ur aim is not to put gore on T V to begin with,
but there are some stories where a picture does
tell the story." she added. "T h ey air at 11 o'clock,
where you do have a principally adult audience."
O th er station s u sin g a fa m ily -s en s itiv e
approach Include KRQE, in Albuquerque. N.M.i
W L08 o f Asheville. N.C.t WMAR. in Baltimore:
WCNC in Charlotte. N.C.t WB1R. in Knoxville.
Tenn.i KW TV o f Oklahoma City: W TAE o f
Pittsburgh; KXTV o f 8acramento. Calif.: K1RQ o f
Seattle: and KG UN In Tucson. Arts.
Kawalerakl. Lansing and Shipley said that their
fh o ig M have not significantly affected ja tln p .
bu t th a t com m u n ity re a c tio n h as been
overwhelming approval.
"It leads us to believe w e're hit a hot button in
the community, something that’s been needed for
a long tim e." Kawalerakl said.
W O X actively promotes its family-sensitive
approach, o fferin g explan ation s w hen the

Tim Chwtar Review Commission wil be conducting the last of IIv m required Public Hearing*
for the purpose of taking public Input and cxxnmant on the toilowing proposed amendments to the
Seminole County Home Rule Charter at 7:00 P.M., or as soon thereafter as possible, onThursday.
the 28th day of July, 1094, In the Commission Chambers, Room 1028 of the 8eminoi« County
8ervioos Building. 1101 East First Street Sanford, Florida:
(1)

Shall the Sem inole C ounty Home Rule Charter be am ended to provide for partisan
election ofschool board members of SeminoleCountyand requiring acandidale's
party affiliation to be shown on the baNot?

(2)

Shan the Seminole County Home Rule Charter be amended to require the Board
of County Commissioners to perform an economic Impact statement as • pre­
requisite to taking any legislative action that may have an eoonomic cost to the
public or taxpayers in 8eminoie County?

(9)

Shall the 8emJnole County Home Rule charter be amended toatdhortzathe Board
of County Commissioners, kom time to time, to hire an AudMor vrtHoh shal report
to and be responsible directly to the Board of County Commiaelonsre end assist
the Board inconducting continuing studMeintte operationofCountydepartments,
programs and services?

(4)

Shall the'non-interference'dauee of tie 8eminoie County Charter be amended
to clarify the rights of Individual oommissionere to make inquiry of the oounty
administative staff in the pertormanoa of the commissioners1reaponsibilitiee to
the citizens of Seminoie County «id provide tu t the fuN Board of County
Commissioners shall be the «nai arbiter for questions arising under the •non­
interference* clause?

(8)

8haN the Seminole County Home Rule Charter be amended to create the OfRoe
of County Attorney, which shat report end be taeponeibie directly to the Board of
County Commissioners, to rapiaoa the present legal department wrftich reports
and is responsible to the County Manager?

Citizens we encouraged to provide written comments to tfieCharter Review Commission either
prior to or at the Pubiic Hearing. Written materials may be mailed to Charter Review Commission.
cA) Mary Mantzarts, Administrative Aide. County Services Buldkig, Room 3020,1101 East First
Street, 8anford, Florida 32771. Citizens having questions regarding trie public hearing may
telephone Mery Mantzaris at (407) 321-1130 ext 7211.
Persona are advised that, ifthey decide to appeal any decision made at thispubiic hearing, they
wM need a record of the proceedings, end. for such purpose, they may need to Insure that a
verbatim reoord of the proceedings is made, which reoord Includes the testimony and evidenoe
upon which the appeal is to be based.

�I *

Sanford Herald, 8anlord, Florida - Sunday, July IF, 1994
Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - 8unday, July 17, 1994

Editorials/ Opinions
(litPS MI-290)
Area Code 407-322-2011 or 831-9993

Lacy K. Losr •Editor

“

SUBSCRIPTION RATE;

EDITORIAL

W e all make
m istakes
W e a ll m ake m istakes.
Som e draw m ore atten tion than others. And
som e are even fun n y, depen din g on you r
perspective.
E veryon e know s about the gaffe b y the

.

An elementary school child darted in front o f a
car and was hit. The driver Immediately leaves
his car to determine the extent or her Injuries. He
is beaten, robbed and shot to death by a mob.
According to news reports the little girl in
question apparently only received bruises on her
forehead. Actually, the child ran In front o f the
autom obile and created the situation that
resulted In the driver's demise. The driver acted
responsibly and this cost him his life. The
paradox is. that If he had acted Irresponsibly and
sped away, he might be alive today.

.

s ___ s___ #1 a

---

development. Their differentiation
and fantasy may be ha*y. Conaeendy diet o f life that glamorises
LURLENE
and material possessions are not
SWEETING
ositive values. Movies that have
illy violent where death seemed to
theme were: "T otal Recall," 74
________ ___ jo co p ," SI deaths, "Ram bo IB ,"
icldes in the period[betw een* a. 106 deaths and *'Die Hard," 964 deaths,
creased accordingly for males;
140 percent; 10 year olds. 217
,t|fl lnconce|Vsbte that there is such a dearth of

In another part o f America an elementary
school child writes to the president expressing
concern for his life. Shortly thereafter, he Is the
Innocent victim o f a shooting episode. Are we
approaching anarchy In this country? Policemen
can't be everywhere and what are the rest o f us
doing?
The FBI reported that there had been an
unprecedented level o f Juvenile violence during
the 1900s with violent crime rate for minors
rising by 27 percent. Juveniles account for a
disproportionate percentage o f the growing
number o f both homicide declines and offenders,
tn 1991. over 4.300 o f the 24,578 murder
offenders were under 20. Between 1982-1991.
Juvenile arrests rose 92.7 percent. A study by
Northeastern University noted that arrest rates

T h ou gh school o fficia ls lo st qu ite a b it o f

sleep o ver the m atter.* m oat o f th e rest o f the

JOSEPH SPEAR

Let reason dictate
the tax system
I never thouMU I'd see the day I would be

Contract negotiations

b ills and for fla g ­
b u r n in g a m e n d ­
ments and I am an
lllllM

I'ititnnnir
lia ve'bfctfuh.1Representing-the PGP Union were
with several other POP members In attendance.
Three people that should've been there, but took a
powder and wimped out were city managrr BUI
Simmons. C hief Russell, and his rideklek, Dillard.
Since these meetings are open to the public. I
decided to sit In on It. I was disappointed that I waa
the only representative o f the citizenry. Still it's
always a good Idea to cheek up on who nine our
city just to see what they are up to.
The first thing that the citizens should realize la
that Mr. Conulch la not here to negotiate with the
FOP for a contract. He la here to try to kaep a
contract from ever being signed. There waa great
surprise by one o f the objections Mr. Qornrich
made as to the right o f Sanford's poliee officers
being entitled to the aame constitutional guaran­
tees as all citizens. This gives you the mlndaet o f
city management If you aU remember in some of.
my previous letters 1 compared the city leadership
to u bunch o f communists: as you see. it waa a
point well taken.
Something that all o f our citizens should be
uware o f is that the last tim e the city went outside
the city and hired an attorney to oppose the union,
it coat us taxpayers over 970,000. God only knows
Ituw many additional police officers that could've
gotten us. The city can aheU out hundreds o f
thousands o f dollars to keep their little ftefdom
intact, but they can 't aeem to find the money to
hire enough pottos officers to adequately protect
the citizens. It kw&gt;k t like the city is going to sink
another $100,000tnto a losing effort.
Supposedly the city is already represented by a

dignity and professionalism displayed by
attorneys.

we

began

Faye Ashley lives In Grants
Pass. Oregon with her husband,
Charles Selby, who I believe Is a
minister. Rochelle Eubanks Is
married to retired Navy Chief
Paul W hitley, and they have two
grown aons. Although they live
In Lake Mary, since retirement
they spend part o f each year In
North Carolina.
As you can Imagine, I have
many more Celery Crate memo­
ries and 1 know that you do. too.
I had planned to research Its
beginnings, but this column
became long enough without
that Information- Do contact me
if you know how and when the
Celery Crate was begun and also
with your own memories o f our
youth center. And I'm sure
you'll let me know the present
whereabouts o f the other people
mentioned here, I'm also open to

. Mulji.

s' -n yr sb w i

I Ol Jl.MllM.’ &gt;

Jjuuju
it . iowviun

fButwhenit
comaato
mattaraof
economic*, Did
Armey and i
spsakttwaeme
language.J

ELLEN GOODMAN

care: Do unto others
BOSTON — Over the years, the United Slates
Congress has developed a nasty habit o f
passing tews that apply to everyone except the
people who paas them.
To this dey. they uphold a double standard
that .frees them from their own tears about
workplace safety and discrimination. And this
summer. If no one notices, they may devise a
health care policy that leaves them equally
untouched. Someone has to tell these folks
that what's good for the governed Is good for
the governors.
In that spirit, allw me then to present a
modest propoaaL
As the arcane and Incomprehensible debate
about health care reform cornea within the
normal range o f human hearing, the .biggest
difference to emerge la between (hose who
want health care to cover every American
sooner and those who want it to cover moat
Americans sooner or later. '
In the 8enate especially, this has become a
struggle between "unlvcraaltets" and "in ­
crementalists." Right now. senator* who favor
covering about 90 percent o f us have won the
coveted political title o f "m oderate."
The Five Percent Difference sounds* like a

Berry's World

sedentary work life punctuated by months
spent in the ultimate Type A activity; running
for office.
There are enough pre-existing conditions
among this cohort group to fill a medical te x t
We don't know how many are staying tn their
jobs because they don't want to lose their
health Insurance.
‘
Faced with the requirement o f
names, senators c '
“ '
league* by age. Th
oldest members o f
the 01-year-old Strom Thurmond and the
et — Howell Heflin. William Roth, James
, Jeaae Helms — born tn 1921.

poaal — Ben. Ted Kennedy's — offers Con­
gress* plan as one o f our choices.
Under m y proposal, however, senators who
are w illing tn aettle for the 90 percent solution
for us must ateo apply U to themselves. Before
voting agalnat a universal plan, they w ill be
required to present the names o f five col­
leagues — exactly five percent — who will
Immediately lose coverage.
Consider the health care profile o f the
Senate. If this High-Risk Hundred were looking
for an insurer o f tlteir own. they'd be rejected
faster
n The American BungeeJum ping
Association
As it to now. the Senate constats o f 94 men
and 0 women with an average age o f OS. The
majority are lawyers by training who lead a

amendment to the Constitution and ao do I.
H ew anteaQ aitexeyotem andeodoI.
Regular readers w ill recognize the flat tax
teaue aa one we have visitedoften, end that's
the creaky bandwagon I refer to. There are
about a dozen people on i t by m y count, and
half o f them are usually over the side pushing
the decrepit thing.
In a nutshell, a flat tax system would look
like this:
Generous personal allowances would be

allowances were set at $0,000,
figure, a fem ily at four making I

Sanford Cbfunber o f
Commerce. The proposals had
previously bean fine-tuned from
10 schemes presented in May
and early June, and revised after
review and discussion. r
This new step has Involved
putting committee and public
input together into an Initial
composite scheme which may
represent alLof the concepts.
Briefly, the Scheme D outlines
a number o f proposals which are
to be considered and discussed
at Wednesday's meeting. They
Include the following: *
• Housing — New higher de­
nsity housing in the form of
townhome* and mid-rise (3 to 0
stories) structure should be en­
couraged alon g First Street
across from (Fart Mellon) Park
and on the adjacent blocks, (new

county courthouse should be
configured to create a civic plaza
which would ateo Include com­
mercial development along the
eastern and northern sides to
provide life In what can some­
times be a "dead" government
centreRequired parking to support
(the facility would be located in a
parking garage to the west,
across Park Avenue on the
existing City Hall parking lot.
• Hotel/conference/con vention
c
e
n
ter — 200 room hotel, and
00.000 square foot conference
center. This facility would be
located between City Hall and
Sailpotnte Condominium, using
additional tend derived from the
closure o f Myrtle Avenue. The
hotel would be oriented to Lake
Monroe and the conference cen­
ter. connected directly to the

violated no city
policies in the actions.
Bernoaky said she was consid­
ering taking further action with
the complaint, but declined to
comment further.
B ern osk y, 23, p revio u sly
served as a Winter Spring police
officer between February 1992
and the time she was hired by
the tlty to patrol Sanford Hous­
ing Authority properties under a
Jointly-funded SH A-city pro­
gram.
The program was funded last
March using a federal grant.
When the money ran out this
M arch , c o m m iss io n ers a t­
tempted to continue the pro­
gram out o f general revenues,
but when the money didn't
come through, the program was
discontinued.
On May 30 this year. Bernosky
filed a city grievance, alleging
she was passed over five times
for a permanent position with
the city because she was a
woman. On June 3. she filed a
second complaint, stating she

preference Is always given to
m en."
In her complaint. Webber, 41.
declares;
• she was subjected to un­
equal terms and conditions In
January 1994.
•sh e Is the only female in her
unit.
.
•sh e was denied a transfer to
the Criminal Investigation Divi­
sion.
.
• females are Issued men's
uniforms which aren't the corrent size and must be tailored to
fit.
• she was passed over In
February by a man Russell
preferred because he spoke
Spanish and “ had more street
con tacts." " I was given no
reason as to why I was subjected
to unequal terms and condi­
tions." she wrote.
•sh e was "constantly passed
over by men that have less
seniority and experience."
According to Sheafer's com-

his daughter’s had
&lt;*n t a j T i U r . hu
w ife an d m o th e r
ipnreniore. ^
have both had breast
— —■ ■
cancer. Is there a senator who to willing to cut
the Macks o ff the rolls?
Maybe It's easier to triage by Ufostyte.
Kentucky's Wendell Ford aUU m okes. Ohio's
John Olenn still flies small planes. Oregon's
Bob Packwood — no. lunjpng at women
(lunge-IUs?) is not a pre-existing rendition —
admitted a problem with alcohol.
Those are the easy calls.
If this proposal sounds much too personal,
that's the point. A senator who can't cut fhre
colleagues (see-to-face shouldn't be cutting 10
m illion conatltutenta anonymously. Health
care to about real people.

On June 16. Ernest Cavailaro.
chairman o f the city’s C ivil
Service Board, responded saying
because as a member o f the
CPT. she did not have full civil
service rights and the CSB
would not take up the com­
plaint.
When she was hired, person­
nel records Include a document
signed by Bcmosky May 17.
1993. The document declares
her CPT position was funded by
a grant agreement between the
city and SHA and "should the
afore-m en tion ed agreem en t
and-or funding terminate for any
reason, I understand that my

plaint, she was passed over for a
promotion in June 1993 by male
Joe Ort. Shcafcr describes Ort as
having "less time on the Job and
less experience" than her.
Sheafer's personnel file shows
her law enforcem ent career
began with Sanford when she
was hired Jan. 6, 1983. The file
shows she applied for the cor­
poral's position on June 19,
1992 and Jan. 18. 1994, but was
not promoted.
On July 30, 1993, Joseph Ort.
5 5 , w a s p r o m o te d fro m
patrolman to corporal. Personnel
records show Ort began work for
the city on Dec. 6. 1985, nearly
three years after Sheafer was
hired. Ort applied for the cor­
poral's position four times since
1989 before he was awarded that
position.
But Ort's file also shows he
had police experience outside of
Sanford. From June 1979 to
April 1981, Ort was a police
officer for the tiny Miami suburb,
North Bay VUU^c. ^ ro m June
1985 until he was hired by

position would be terminated
concurrently."
On June 7. Slm m ona re ­
sponded by stating the city had
no obligation to transfer her at
her request and that seniority
was not the sole factor for
promotions. Further. Simmons
stated gender was not a consid­
eration In city personnel actions.
Simmons concluded Russell had
complied with all city policies
and procedures.
In a June 21 response to her
second com plaint, Sim m ons
wrote the adm inistrative de­
cision to cancel city funding o f
the CPT program was made on
or about May 12. Sim m ons
wrote the complaint and term i­
nation were separate Issues.
In response to her genderd is c rim in a tio n a lle g a tio n ,
Simmons wrote "A male was
also terminated for the same
reasons and In the same manner
as you."
The male has not been rehlred
by the city, said Personnel
Director Tim McOauley.

Sanford, Ort was a policeman for
the University o f Central Florida
Police Department.
Webber's file shows she was
hired by the city on Jan. 10,
1986. Webber applied for cor­
poral once in 1993 and once this
year 1994. She was not pro­
moted either time.
According to current personnet records, the Sanford Police
Department currently has 53
sworn non-adm lnlstratlve o f­
fic e rs , In clu d in g the th ree
women. None o f the women are
ranked abovq the police officer
level. By comparison, the Lake
Mary Police Department, with 19
sworn officers, has one female.
She is a sergeant. Longwood,
w ith 31 officers, has three
women, one a sergeant.
The Sheriff's Office has 201
non-admlnlstratlve sworn depu­
ties, Including 27 females. One
female is a sergeant. There are
161 corrections officers, includ­
ing 43 females. Tw o o f the COs
are sergeants.-

II »l •• I
opting*.
, m , * inn. /•
Born in Dawson, Ga. on March
6, 1901. she was,)! grader for a
canning company. She moved to
central Florida tn 1020 and was
a Baptist.
Survivors Include her daugher
Estelle Dudley o f Longwood.
seven grandchildren. 14 greatg r a n d c h ild r e n a n d th r e e
great-great-grandchildren.
Gaines Carey Hand Garden
Chapel Funeral Home, Long­
wood in charge o f the arrange­
ments.

i

l
1 ,
i i.i

. 1 ! 1 T - * * .]
1. \ i 1 •(
*

' '

.

$20,000, they would pay only

r$do not charge Interest on
Instillment payments- most oihart do,
We refold 100% of $11monies paid,
at any time, for any reason-motf
othira dp not. •
We do not charge salea tax on mer­
chandise- most others do.

disease. They could go over the quota by
ch oosin g sen ators ------w ith a h istory or
heart ailm ents, or
y
they could disqualify
q l i'
the quintet — Intton. Bob Dole — ■ h f l U ' . J U l
whose "pre-existing
c o n d itio n " Is pro­
state cancer.
-The Senate, like
/tefL
the country, has Us
share o f families that
would be virtually
untnaurable. Flor- ' w
K„
Ida s Connie Mack B E t u E S M S .
runs down hte femlSCSI's0 * *

was terminated because of the
complaint. Bcmosky wrote the
day after she met with Russell to
discuss her complaint, she was
directed to return and termi­
nated.
" I feel I was not hired full-time
because I am a woman (not
because the CPT program would
not be funded) and that I was
wrongfully terminated due to the
last grievance I filed," she wrote.

.-•homemaker and a member In
' 'm a n y o rg a n iza tio n s at S t.
13th 8 tre e t, S an ford , d ie q l Augustine Catholic Church.
Survivors Include her husband
Monday. July l i t 1904 at Cen­
tral Florida Regonal Hospital in Augustin; her daughters NUss
Rclchmsnn o f Rrnngrove. Calif,
Sanford.
and
Sonia Rosario Zapata o f
Born Jan. 4. 1902 in Orange
CUy. she was a lifelong central Santa Monica. CSllf.t her brother
Florida resident and a home­ Anthony Montanez; her sisters
Frances Quinones o f W inter
maker. She wasa Pentecostal.
Survivors include her aona Park. Maria Tompkins of Cassel­
berry. JovIts Marrero o f Puerto
Marlon Q. o f Night. Korea and
Rico and Jennie DeMaria and
T im o th y o f S a n fo r d : h er
daughers Alice. Frsntanshla Bemsmds Otero Badillo, both o f
Stafford. Sabrina Stafford. Rob­ New York.
Oalnes Carey Hand Garden
erto. Tanlsha. all o f Sanford, and
Chapel Funeral .Home. LongFelicia Brooks o f Mima; her
wood, In charge o f the arrange­
brothers Eddie Stafford of Or­
ange City. Freddie. Gregory E. ments.
both o f DeLand, Albert Gibson of
Daytona Beach, Tyrone Stafford. LULU WILLIAMSON
Lulu Williamson. 93. South
Reginald Stafford both o f San­
East Lake Street. Longwood.
ford and Vendul Stafford or
Cocoa; her slaters Cassandra died Wednesday. July 13. 1994
at Life Care Center In Altamonte
Henry o f DeLand. Linda Gibson.
Debra Olbaon both of Daytona
Beach. Mary Ruth Terrel o f

S

Rttttfiss *«£&lt;*•

"By the way, this is also our L A T E 8 T P O L L

m o rn in g

•cleaning out that area which was
'a major undertaking as I don't
think anyone had even been
under there for years. We had a
great time creating "horrors" for
our victims and It was a huge
success that evening. Also that
night we had a fortune teller,
games-and square dancing led
by Bob Crumley, and our annual
ghost story related by Principal
During my sophomore year I
was elected secretary o f the crate
and Ray Davis was president.
O ther officers w ere Barbara
Cassube and Rochelle Eubanks.
The following year. Ronnie An­
derson was president and he
appointed &gt;me as reporter, thus
began my writing career for the
Sanford Herald! I began writing
a weekly column about hap­
penings at the crate, and by
November 19. 1909. &lt; had my
own
pay. buyprgit,

LETTERS

a n orrig^H lpH h Head and J e ff W eiss, FOP
pA*sfd£m 8 2 f Brewer, kite president BgL Presley,

•My m other. Mrs. J. Martin
‘ Stlnecipher, was a PTA sponsor
that year and for the two follow­
ing years she was PTA chairman
.o f the C elery Crate. Homer
! Osborne was finance chairman
; during those years while his
•wife, Helen, was stationed at the
idoor to make sure that we
1signed In and out. Other parents
'h e lp in g included Mrs. J.P.
•Holtxclaw, Mrs. J.N. Azzareilo.
•Mrs. Rupert Strickland, Mrs.
(Henry Dees. Mrs. W.W. Tyre.
^U
m ' C.A.
n A Anderson
Avtrissrmnn and
onH Mrs.
Ura
;Mrs.
D .S. W hldden. T h ere w ere
•many, many other parent* Who
I helped out during each year.
! As president of my freshman
class, I found that one o f my
duties was to serve on the Celery
C rate student com m ittee. I
.selected two creative people,
j Billy Park and Sandra Dunn, as
other representatives from our
•class. Ann Whitaker, a Junior,
(w as president that year and
jo th e r o ffic e rs w ere JoA n n
Strawder, Ronnie Anderson and
' Sammy Jacobson.
| We immediately got busy and
(planned a big Halloween party.
; Sandra. Billy. Ronnie and I were
! put In charge o f the spook house
! which are decided to place under
the stage. Bright and early that
S a tu rd a y

com m u n ity had a little g ig g le and no one
seem s the w orse fo r the exp erien ce.
T h e school d istrict em p loyees w h o m ade
the error sh ou ldn 't fret.
Even the Herald m akes em u s. In the v ery
n ew s b rie f th at con tain ed the o ffen d in g
telephone num ber, w e transposed tw o letters
and called th e In form ation lin e "D a ll-A S ch ool.”
No, w e w e re n 't ta lk in g about th e lo w er
house o f parliam en t in Irelan d !
W e hope th e sch ools d o n 't w o rry too m uch
about the erroneous nu m ber th at sent people
blu shin g from th e phones.
It's OK.
Laugh about it.

The opening round In the contract negotiations
(between the cky represented by attorney David

active in church and community
affairs.
Billy Park Is a noted Interna­
tional cartoonist qrhoae panel
appears In this newspaper. He
and his wife, the former Evie
Kratxert. have lived in Alta­
monte Springs for many years;
they have three grown children.
Sandra Dunn lives In Orlando
and is married to David Parke, a
r e t ir e d M a rtin C o m p a n y
engineer. She recently retired
after 24 years with Orlando
Utilities as assistant superin­
tendent o f customer relations.
Ann Whittaker was graduated
from Stetson University where
she m et her husband. Don
R e y n o ld s . S h e ta u g h t at
Pinecrest Elementary and was
an English teacher at both Sem­
inole High and Lake Brantley.
She and Don are both retired
and live in Enterprise.
R onnie Anderson liv e s In
Ormond Beach and is recovering
from heart bypass surgery.
8ammy Jacobson is an attorney
in Jacksonville; he married Judy
Irvin, also o f the 1903 class. His
sister, Sara, manages RoJay's,
has an antique shop, and also
has her fingers In several com­
munity projects.
Barb Cassube is married to
Bert Haynes and they live in
New Orleans. Her three daugh­
ters have presented her with six
grandsons. Her dad. Roland
Cassube, the genial former man­
ager o f the Winn Dixie, died in
1993 and Mrs. Cassube now
lives with Bert and Barb.

* My first encounter with the
Celery Crate was as a freshman
In the fall o f 1990; my diary

TV, movies and violent acts related

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771

Grievance

Stlnecipher

many ora not.
Rfegtf now local and natkinal
dtaaaicr vtcthnu txxxl *&lt;***•
ckuhkui and a place u&gt; foci *uft*
Your m oney w ill tr ip . *

Afraid not. Bobby Britton doesn't play much these duys
He*f back at work at Brisson Funeral Home.

905 LAUREL AVE., SANFORD
A am ber of Dw Carey Hand Funeral Home Tradition -Eat. IBVU

r

f

iilr*'.

i\

r •-

�SO - Sanford Hsrsld, Ssniofo. Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1004

right to life or choice

IN B R I E F

'• iJ •i ^' % •*j r

School board mootings
SANFORD — The Sem inole County school board w ill be busy
over the next month or so.
Here’s a list o f the meetings they have scheduled for the rest
o f this month:
□Tu esday. J u ly 10.3:45 p.m. W ork session on the additions
and renovations to Lake Howell High School
□Tu esday. July 19. 4:30 p.m. Work session on the county
wide com m unications system
□Tu esday. July 19, 7 p.m. W ork session on the five year
capital outlay plan
□Thu rsday. July 21. 4 p.m. Board meeting to reveiw draft
and approve for advetislng a tentative budget
□Thu rsday. July 21. 7 p.m. Regularly scheduled board
meeting.
W ith school back In seaaion the school board hasa lot to do.

'Let u » know
The Sanford Herald wants to know what is happening at
your school.
If you have an event com ing up at your school, or If you want
to tell us about some o f the great things the students at your
school are doing.
Send the Inform ation to the Sanford Herald, 300 N. French
A vc.. Sanford. 32771 or fax It to us at 407*323*9409.

FOP CULTURE™ by Stew McGarry

II

*

-

-•. ,j J■ , .,'i4

A y o u n g p e r s o n lo o k s at a co ntro ve rsia l s u b je c t
Speolal to the HerAid
SANFORD - W ith all the
controversy over abortion aris­
ing. I have been thinking about
the rights that I have through
the la w i and the righ ts o f
women listed in the Constitution
o f the United States or Am erica.
The supporters o f the right to
choose have been fighting for
this right for decades.
In the early 1970s. most states
forbid the right o f abortions. The
only exception was In the case o f
special medical situations.
In 1973, Roe v. Wade was
d ecld ed b y the Supreme Court.
It ruled that states could not
forbid women from having abor­
tions during the first trim ester o f
pregnancy. During the second
trimester, states m ay regulate
abortions.
The fourth amendment o f the
Constitution allows women the
right o f pravacy and to make the
choice for an abortion for herself.
States m ay ban abortion o f a

v ia b le fetus except when the
a b o rtio n In critical to protect the
H e a lth or life o f the woman.
I n 1980 W e b s te r v. R ep ro d u ctiv e Health Service* re­
s u lte d In a verdict that slates
m a y re q u ire p h y sic ia n s to
p e rfo rm tests to determ ine If a
fe t u s Is viable on a woman
p r e g n a n t fo r m ore than 20
w eeks.
States carry the tight to out­
l a w abortions In public clinics
a n d hospitals and to prohibit
p u b lic em ployees from taking
p a r t In abortions.
O n Oct. 1. 1992. the Bush
A d m in istra tio n put the "Q ag
R u l e ” Into effect. T h is ; rule
fo r b a d e clinics from discussing
a b o rtio n . The ban waa lifted by
t h e Clinton Adm inistration Just
d a y s after President BUI Clinton
w a a inaugurated.
C lin ton also gave the right to
p e r m it the use o f fetal tissue In
federally-fu n ded research.
I can not tell you that you
m u s t believe In the rights o f
w o m e n or In the rights o f the
u n b o rn fetus, but I can teU you

about the nation’s struggle to
keep these rights alive for to­
day's women and the women In
years to come.
I have three examples o f Inci­
dents where the woman's rights
are essentia].
The first: when the woman's
or chUd’s mental or physical
health Is endangered, the pre­
gnancy should be terminated.
Parents should not have to bring
the baby Into this world to
suffer. They should not have to
w atch th eir ch ild su ffer an
excruciating life or dealth, only
alive because o f the breathing
and the heartbeat o f a machine.
A woman should not have to
have a child If she decides she
can not properly care for the
chUd.
1 do. how ever, agree that
abortion is not a form o f birth
control.
The second Incident where a
wom an's rights are essential: If
the pregnancy is the result o f
rape or Incest the woman should
have the right to an abortion.
The child would be a constant

reminder o f the man and may
cause the woman to physically
or mentally abuse the child.
The final Incident: providing
the woman the option to have an
abortion eliminates some Illegal
abortions perform ed by unskilled people under unsanitary
conditions. This could result In
the death or the perm anent
Injury to the woman.
Providing the option for abor­
tion prevents unwanted births.'
This lowers Infant and child
abuse, neglect and death rates. ■
The Consltutlon which mu'
forefathers wrote, guarantees the
right for the women o f Am erica
to choose.
Abortion has saved the lives o f
many Americans. It has helped
to eliminate the pain for many
women.
Do you wnat to be the one to
take this right away? W rite your
Congressional representative to
voice your opinions.
! ti s
Uw Itm mSswUrS.

In hlfh

Are girls smarter than boys?
| Y d

Born in London In 1032. Elisabeth Taylor studied dJbdng
with the great VeceonL dance teacher to tile British royal fam ily.
W ith the outbreak o f W orld W ar D. she moved to California
with her art dealer father and actrsaa mother.
Following an Inform al chat between her father and producer
Bam Marx. T a ylo r waa s te e d b y MOM and attended the U ttle
Red School Houaewtth M ickey Rooney and Judy Oartand.
Through movies hke
V elvet" ‘ ‘
to 1
"G at on a l
.. .iM iju.; a
i
V. i iffaa .wM l
a id Taylor win her two
Awards?
2. .Who waa h er first husband?
S.’On w M dtabapdM ahs star fo r one week In 1901?

* **uv M ta.

jt j

Y

i

3 Science Writer

Fourth graders rereiving the
c ertific a te were Matt Bowling,
'A rittady De'WXWumo,-'~isicnoias Em erson
T y le r FW »ton.'Fred Onmth. Matt
M a b e rt. E r lc d fo w e lla . K e lli
M c L a u g h lin . J a c k ie N ancy,
B ria n Peters, Carlos Ramos and
. F re d d ie Harmlnaon.
F ifth graders receiving the
c ertific a te s were Simone Sheets,
A h s h a Young, V alerie Kugc.
B rittn e y Brown. Donnie Buth.
B ra n d y Olaapey, Diane Gregory,
• fu d y Ktem pner and Charity
O u tla w .

□ A t Lake Brantley sad
1 jm aahtfheshsalu
T h e Longwood/Wlnter Springs
C h a m b er o f Commerce recently
a w a rd e d 92.000 In scholarships
t o fou r local students and 92,500
atu d en ts to nine students who
sm s continuing their college edu­
c a tio n .
T h e four new students are:
From Lyman: Rebecca Oaaaett
a n d Jennifer Wqjclk.
From Lake Brantley: Jesse
P a n e k and Allison Bloom.
T h e sch olarsh ip ren ew als
w e n t to: U nda Aiello. Tim othy
A s k e w . J effrey Bouley, A m y
E llin g to n , Stan O oykhm an .
N ic o le Hawkins. Rhawnda How1. Rose Montalvo and Jeffrey

Seminole County School Board

W hat'g fo r U m okf
. t .i&amp;

•V .‘.4

.July It, 1M4

or Chef's Baled or Rag Lunch
Low Fat Milk
Tuesday.** 11.1104
Managers Choice
or Chef's Bated orBag Umeh
Low Fat Milk
Managers Choloe
or Chef's 8eled or Rag Lunoh
Low Fat Milk

te# mm-api F

'tsys&amp;s?

W ASHINGTON - Estrogen,
the female hormone that can
protect older women from brittle
bones and heart disease, may
also help make the mind keener
and the m em ory sharper, a
researcher says.
Though estrogen does not cre­
ate sudden genius. Dr. Uriel
Halbretch o f the State University
o f New York at Buffalo said there
la a clear and significant im ­
p ro vem en t In m en tal teats
am ong older women who take
the hormone.
*
“ W e showed that estrogen
replacement therapy la not only
g o o d fo r o s te o p o ro s la an d
cardiovascular disease preven­
tion. but also It can Improve the
eoapttlvai function." Haibreich
1said Thursday.
\
/:l.v
T h e scien tist presented a
paper on his researchJfcto week
at a national meeting o f the
A m e r ic a n C o lle g e o f
Neuropsychopharmacology.
Dr. Lon 8. Schneider, an
associate professor o f psychiatry
and neurology at the University
o f Southern C alifornia, said
Halbreich’ s research Is consis­
tent with other studies that have
suggested estrogen helps some
patients think better.
“ Estrogen In general w w t to
ba a cognitive enhancer." said
Schneider. He said there have
b ean ran d om re p o rts th a t
estrogen seem s to aid the memory o f Alsbeim er's disease pa­

tients and that one study sug­
gested that estrogen therapy
among older women lowered the
risk o f Alsbeimer's.
W om en n atu rally produce
estrogen until menopause. An
artificial version o f estrogen now
ts often given to women after
m e n o p a u s e b e c a u s e th e
h orm one h elp s p reven t o s­
teoporosis,' the brittle-bone dis­
ease. and lowers the risk o f heart
disease. This to called estrogen
Jbretch said he tested 30
poet-menopausal women before
and a fte r th ey started th e
estrogen therapy, giving each
one a battery o f teste that
tr­
end the ability to learn
new Information and apply it tc
aw otjlem ;,

iinAftM'yMw,.

In the mental "rf&amp;orea o f thi
patients.
Halbretch said that the dlf
ference m ay not be evident It
day-to-day, routine ttffe but the
the mental
dearly evident In the laboratory
'T h e more complex the teak
the m ore it to lik ely to lx
by esi
by
Haibreich.
He M id a larger study o f tbi
Intellectual effects o f estrogen 1 &gt;
bring organised how.

One eventual result, he said
be to help cM er worn
keep up with younger women.

Don’t forget to go
to schoof tomorrow
SANFORD — Believe It or not,
school wlU start tomorrow for

in Kindergarten through eighth
grade on the year round caien-

students la Seminoto County.
Ytkesl
The district has completed Its
four year plan to put all students

pick out
plenty

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1004 - 7A

Health/Fitness
IN B R I E F
A child overcomes adversity
Living with a ‘complex seizure disorder’

Taking control of dlabataa
SANFORD — Central Florida Regional Hospital In Sanford
w ill be offering a diabetes education course on Thursday, July
This Is the first In a six-week course.
. Th® •‘•■■sea are held from 3 to 4 p.m. on Thursdays In the
n o tp u l •clM troom .
T h e p c y a m educates diabetes and their families about the
d toM M ^T te daas also serves as a support group for people
The course covers topics ranging from self blood glucose
monitoring to diet and medications and Includes an appoint*
ment with a registered dietitian.
..........
In addition, a consultation with the registered nurse to
discuss other aspects o f diabetes Is available.
For more Information, course fees or to register, call the
Central Florida Regional Hospital at 331*4500, ext. 5607.

PrtnatalolMs
SANFORD - The W omen's Center at Central Florida
Hospital la offering a free series o f classes for
r*-----------^
. -------------be.
-—The
i classes
are designed to give an overview o f
pregnancy, labor and childbirth.
In addition, rlaesee on Caesarean section, breastfeeding.
baby oars and parenting are offered.
Au classes meet on Thluraday evenings from 7 to 0 p.m.
The series la ongoing and participants can pick ft up at any
tin
as a
many
classes
—™y and
’ ■1■■ take —
aswaaaj vian
t ■ as
mm they
uicy like or Just the
individual classes o f special Interest to them.
Registration is requested, however.
« - ? ,S f l i ntere#ted •h
may call the Women's Center at
331*4500, ext. 5766 for more Information and to register for

Infertility hop*
ORLANDO — Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children and
Women w ill sponsor a free seminar on Infertility on Thursday,
July 31 nt 7 p.m. In classrooms 3 and 4 o f the hospital.
Drs, Sharon Jaffe and Frank Riggall w ill present a lecture on
the causes o f Infertility and the possible solutions In a clear and
easy to understand format.
For more Information or to make a reservation, call the
Chtondo Re|tonriHcalthcare System 's HealthLlne at 646*7690

N tw mothers return to efearatfet
Pregnant women may be getting the message about the
dangtrs o f smoking, but the m ajority o f them return the habit
One hurdle for pregnant women who quit
change in attitudes
les o f those around them once th
thee re b y is
bom , said Dr. Marianna Sodtrider, a pediatric pulmonologist at
Baylor College o f Medicine In Houston.
•
y, people are sensitive- about sm oking."
it smoke around the pregnant woman or
offer her cigarettes. But once the baby ts bom . the pressure to

■yt

Herald Columnist

DEBARY — A t the tender age
o f 4 years, Courtney Simmons o f
DeBary, has medically experi­
enced more In her young life
than most adults could even
begin to Imagine. On a day-today basis, Simmons has to live
with a complex seizure disorder
and cerebral palsy.
Simmons appeared to he
normal healthy little girl for the
firstt year o f her Ufe. Right after
she started to
her first birthday
b
have seizures. She went first to
Central Florida Regional-Hospi­
tal In Sanford. They in turn sent
her to Arnold Palmer Hospital In
Orlando. She stayed there for six
weeks and was In a coma for a
little more than one week. Dur­
ing this hospital stay Simmons
was having constant seizure*.
Since there were no signs o f any
type o f Improvements, the de­
cision was made to move her to
Shands Hospital In Oalnesvllle
for frirther testing.
A c c o r d in g to S im m o n s
mother. Angle, "T h ey expert*
men ted with several different
k in d s o f m e d ic a tio n s an d
managed to stop the seizure."
Initially, however, they were still
not quite sure Just what exactly
was causing Sim m ons' p ro­
blems. Simmons was sent home
with the seizures under control
provided that she stay on two
m e d ic a tio n s , T e g r e to l and
Klonoptn which are both an­
tico n vu lsa n ts. T h ese dru gs
worked for approximately two
months when Simmons started

to have the seizures once again.
"H er setoures were anywl
where
from petit mal to grand mal and
this ts why her condition Is
referred to as ‘Complex Seizure
D is o rd e r"' accordin g to Dr.
Orady Bernard and Dr. Michael
Bell, who have been treating
Simmons since her return from
Shands. They also put her on a
th ird m edication called D e­
p ak en e. T h is d ru g Is a lso
another anticonvulsant.
Through all o f this over the
past few years, Simmons had
also lost the ability to hear.
However, through the Easter
Seals program, sne was taught
how to speak through sign
language. She has since re­
gained her hearing but It fuw left
her with a speaking deficit. Still
there remains little doubt In
anyone's mind that Simmons as
they know this little angel, w ill
overcom e this obstacle too.
A s Simmons has grown older
her seizures are atlll a part o f her
Ufe but on a much smaller scale
considering that she started out
having as many as 300 seizures
a month. Now. she has more o f
the petit mal seizures and she Is
also on a fourth m edication
called Fllbator. Fllbstor to a
relatively new (about two years)
anticonvulsant drug. She to recetvlng this medication along
with
h the other three. However.
the Fllbator la given to Simmons
by tw o doctors who recently
became Involved with her case.
Dr. Hendrik Dinkla and Dr. John
McCormick are neurologists In
DeLand. They at one point felt
that Simmons m ight be able to

;

Courtnsy Simmons, a g t 4, with har favorite stuffsd animal, Bamay,
the one and only purpla dinosaur, enjoying a sunny day togathgr.
outgrow her seizure disorder.
However, they’re more Inclined
at this point to aay that "brain
surgery to definitely a part o f
Simmons’ very near future."
With all o f these problems and.
o f course, s very restricted and
limited lifestyle, one would abso­
lutely melt If they looked Into

No more greasy kid stuff
Keeping fat out of your diet is no game

those big brown eyes o f Sim­
mons because you’d never guess
that this little girl has had. and
w ill continue to have, such
struggles. She hugs her favorite
stuffed animal. Barney, and goes
about her day knowing how to
say " I love you ." through her
beautiful brown eyes.
Florida Hospital Altamonte
recen tly recognised 131
employees for outstanding
years o f service.
L a u r a B a ld w in , an
employee on the surgical
unit at Florida Hoaptt
*tal Altamonte was recognized fo
40 years of service. Ellas
Breown, s linen Inspector,

a n d J erry IrWtM. «&gt;lau n dry

iq

em ployee, were recognized
fo r 30 years o f service.
Lin en fnapebttfr" M ildred
Harlan waa recognized for
29 years o f service.
In addition, nine workers
received aw ards fo r 30
years o f service, and 33
employees were recognized
for 15 yearsof service. Eight
employees received awards
for 10 years o f service.
F lorid a H ospital A lts
plc
monte• em
employs
more than
1.060 people.

Jallti*ju.

They eg &amp; iM s o a ^ the cooperation o f«

Ctiang** In HRS communications offio*
SANFORD — In an effort to more effectively serve their
is, the Department o f Health and Rehabilitative
(HRS) baa made tom e changes In the department's
The department feels the public can be better eenred by
having a ^dearinghouee" telephone number where clients can
call for Information and source materials.
According to the department, client services have been
decentralised and arc handled at the district level, primarily by
ns managers,
_____ Information
about HRS and HRS
g general
inf
__________________
•600*343*0635. Calling that number w ill
call 1
1*600*341
automatically routs l l w " to the client relations manager

EYE
E X A M

Learning about food lobolo
ORLANDO - The new food labeling system that to now
required on all foods has some Important Information, but not
everyone knows how to interpret the information.
h r ■ «— »». "fa t free" doesn't mean free o f (at, it means It
must have leas than M gram o f (at p a rja w in g. "Cholesterol
&amp;roe" means th* item has fees than 3 mg. o f cholesterol.
A program to help consumers read the new food labels and
Is now offered at Orlando Regional
lake wtoe food chol
CaUad "O o for Food," the course la taught by registered
* on
-----------'m
in label reading.
rtHKfewa and includes hands
experience
ce--------------an tn*houee grocery store tour, and access to a nutritional
be dam es on July 19 and 36 and Aug. 4 .1 6 ,3 5 .
Im held at various times.
610 and preregtotrmilon to reaulred.
i—faMi and reservations call the ORHS

leant to bsM M rtivs
LOMQWOOO — A women's forum called "Learning to be
■•arrive" w ill be presented on Thursday. July 31 at South
— *— *- **—
Longwood.
•
. . . .
.tan 7 to 9 p.m. in Classroom 103.
r w ill be Pst Barter, MS. LMHC.
l and to register, call 646*7699.

— There w ill be two classes offered at South
In Longwood this week that deal with

S

50”o OFF FRAMES
O ra c le csurW y ml

O s W tw OrmMa. Inc.

W hile we may Joke about It.
bslai
keeping your diet balanced
with
an acceptable amount o f (at is
nothing to laugh ai. Keeping
your Intake at leas than 60
grama o f fat a day la something
you should take seriously.

It'a OK to eat a lltUe fat
because it gives you energy, but
you don't nqed to eat too much.
Help secret agent T A F (that's fat
1backward) solve the &lt;
■peEcSl
hidden (at. Follow the path
or the hi
through the grocery store and

circle the foods you think most
contain hidden fat. Clue: foods
Uke pork chops or chicken lega
have Cat surrounding them that
you can sec and easily remove
before eating. Foods that are
fried, gooey or greasy have Cat
hidden inside that can 't be
removed.

THE*EYE6*HAVE*IT
OPTICAL
L*k« M a ry -333-ZT40

WILUE B. NEWMAN, MD
Board CwtliM
Obstetrics, Gynecology 3 Infertility

Honor the memory
of
a loved one with...

Mrs. R o m M. Coolldgo, ARNP
Ofl/GYN Nurse Practitioner
• Ntw Pattente Welcome
•SomaSam# DayAppointment
•Moat ktauranoaa, Medicaid, Medicare

■21 W. SR 434
Suit* 200

1403 Madioal Plasa Dr.
Suita 214
Sanford
(407) 224*2300

IF T O F

103 and w ill be from 6 to 10
rinfonnabon and to register, ca ll679-4377.
saM d am ...............
Is the Labor and
1 Delivery
-------dam
*— ‘(part
a n iw
two
i of
t d am oa childbirth and infant care). The dam w illI be
I

FRANCE

CONTACT LENS PACKAGE
SPECIAL

Include*! 1pair daily wear soft contact lenses • bum,
3 months o?follow up care • Starter Kit
Or. PamelaHeipie. O.D.. CertifiedOptometrist
t

Pmil/BaiSBnaM kHW OM CENTRE (aaar W al-M art)

A
MemorialProgram
Makeyourdonation today by calling 1-800- 741-5698

M o n d a y - Friday 9 a m - 6 p m
S atu rd ay IQ a m - 6 p m

wvj euaatwwTwp: ^ 1’

$ &amp; **&amp; *,

&lt;1
-T -

�i&lt;ww

Arifc

Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1094

Longwood

Arlitld# retreats from position
WASHINGTON — Deposed Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide is retreating from categorical opposition to use o f
m ilitary force to restore constitutional rule to his homeland.
"It'a up to the International community to do what they have
to do to restore dem ocracy." Aristide said when asked hla
views on m ilitary Intervention.
He made the comment during an appearance on CNN’s
"Both Sides with Jesse Jackson."
In a separate recorded message broadcast by U.S. military
planes flying over Haiti, Aristide vowed to his countrymen
Friday: "T h e day o f my return Is hot far o ff." But he didn't say
how he would return
Aristide had said late last month that he would "never,
never, never" agree to the restoration o f democracy through
m ilitary Intervention.
That statement Irritated some supporters who believe he will
never be reinstated without military intervention. He made the
new comments after coming under heavy pressure from those
backers. The Clinton administration's position Is that such
action la an option but that, for the time being. It will rely on
economic pressure to force the surrender o f the Haitian regime.

Gromtpan talks aconomica
WASHINGTON — The economy Is "experiencing the Ideal
combination o f rising activity, falling unemployment and
slowing Inflation" but that won't last unless Congress and the
president truly curb the budget deficit, Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan warns.
Although the worst deficit Increases won't occur until after
2010 when the Baby Boom generation starts to retire, the
expectation o f a rising sea o f red Ink already has exacted an
economic toll, Greenspan told a commission o f top government
and private leaders.
"Financial markets have a way o f bringing future problems
Into the present." he said. "Long-term interest rates are higher
now because markets are anticipating rising deficits In the next
cen tu ry.... We are already paying for our failure to come fully
to grips with our long-term budget problem."
Greenspan was first to testify Friday before the 32-member
Bipartisan Commission on Entitlement and Tax Reform, which
began meeting last month and aims by December to offer a
no-nonsense plan for reining In the deficit.

Since the commissioners plan
to keep the mlllagc rate the same
and not raise taxes, Smith said It
la hla understanding that work
can continue on the budget
through September If necessary.
"It hos to be done October 1 or
you wouldn't have money to
operate on." he added.
Kombluth's resignation may
be discussed at Monday night's
commissioner meeting.
In other business, the cleanup
o f the city's Public Works Facili­
ty will be brought to a close with
the paym ent of 915.450 In
penalties to the Florida Depart­
ment o f Environmental Protec­
tion.
Over a 5-year period the city
paid over $250,000 to clean the
site o f hazardous materials In­
cluding paint, acid, pesticide
residue, fertilizer and caustic
material.
Payment o f the assessed fines
will be considered a final settle­
ment. according to a memo from
the city administrator.
C o m m issio n er Pau l L o vcat rand Is slated to discuss a
possible change In the city's
comprehensive plan which calls
for the four-lanlng o f Rangellnc
Road. A standing-room -only
crowd turned out at an Informa-

businesses will also be consid­
ered. The original six-month
moratorium has expired and the
commissioners want to fill the

gap until the ordinance Is in
place.
The commissioners meet In
Longwood City Hall.

Continued from Fags 1A

a neighbor's apartment In Semi­
nole Oardens on June 28. 1093.
the defense attempted to con­
vince the Jury Taylor was a
v ic tim o f b a tte re d spou se
syndrome and lashed out after
suffering years o f abuse at the
hand o f Grace.
"T h e relationship was not
mutually abusive." Flggatt said
In his closing argument to the
Jury. "It was abusive on one side
and my client got abused."
Countering Stone's description
o f Grace as "not a very sympa­
thetic character" In his closing.
Flggatt said, "She was a de­
m on!" The defense presented
evidence o f at least ten incidents
where Grace slashed, cut or
stabbed Taylor during their 3year relationship.
"D on’ t damn my client with a
guilty verdict far something he
had no control over," the
‘
'
de­
fense attorney added.
Im a W alker was pleased with
the guilty verdict for her daugh­
ter's killer but questioned a legal
process which did not allow the
ju ry to hear about Taylor's
record.
"W h o's on trial? Is Derrick on
trial or Is Kimberly Grace on
trial." W alker said. "A ll the facts
should have been on the table
and I think the Jury would have
returned a guilty verdict like
th at." she said, snapping her
fingers.
Taylor was fingerprinted and
returned to the John E. Polk
Correctional Facility to await
sentencing.

•
much
as 27 years. Taylor’s record
Includes four prior felonies and a
m isd em ean or a ll In v o lv in g
Grace, Including battery, two
burglaries, aggravated stalking
and criminal mischief.
"H e's looking at a good chunk
o f tim e." Stone com mented,
expressing some disappointment
the Jury did not find Taylor
guilty o f first degree murder as
charged. Stone added because o f
the nature o f the offense. Taylor
will not be eligible for control
release.
Judge Newman Brock ad­
judicated Taylor guilty after the
The commissioners are also Jury returned Its verdict, ordered
scheduled to review the pro­ a pre-sentence Investigation and
posed 55-pagc adult entertain: scheduled sentencing for Sep­
ment ordinance at a 0 p.m. work tem ber 28. Defense attorney
session and conduct the first James Flggatt said he plans to
reading o f the ordinance at the 7 present mitigating evidence at
p.m. regu lar’ meeting. A new that time.
Although Taylor adm itting
moratorium on Issuing licenses
for adult entertainm ent-type stabbing Grace while she was at

Toxic spill forces hundreds
to flee fumes, two dead
sp illed , In clu d in g Isopropyl
alcohol, methanol, acetic acid.
sulfuric add. glycol ether and
sodium hydroxide. O'Brien said.
E vacu ated resldenta w ere
taken to h a s tily o rga n ized
shelters In Ontario. 35 miles east
o f downtown Los Angeles.
Ardell Major was one o f dozens
n t t lv relderly
lH r r lv residents
rrulHrnlit o
n ff the
th r
o "f m
mostly
Rancho Ontario Mobile Home
Estates to huddle In a city park
at dawn listening to news re­
ports on car radios.

Antitrust lawsuit ssttlsd
WASHINGTON (API - AT&amp; T Corp. Is a step closer to
completing Its $12.8 billion leap Into the cellular telephone
business with the settlement o f a government antitrust lawsuit.
The Justice Department on Friday announced settlement o f
Its lawsuit that challenged AT&amp; T's purchase o f McCaw Cellular
Communications Inc., the nation's largest cellular company.
The complex agreement Is designed to assure the merger
would not harm other cellular telephone companies and
customers.
A key provision requires the AT&amp;T-owned McCaw to
guarantee that Its customers can get long distance service from
other carriers as simply as with AT&amp;T.
That ability, known In the telephone business as "equal
access," has been required o f the cellular operations o f the
regional Baby Bell companies, but not firms such as McCaw,
United States Cellular or others.

Highoourt nomlnM h$$d« homo - '

tlonal meeting about work on
the road last week. Some realdents expressed a concern that
the county was trying to man­
date work in the S800.000 pro­
ject which would lead to widen­
ing the road.
Mayor Steve Miller assured the
crowd the city commissioners
were firmly against any widen­
ing pf the road. After the city
e n g in e e r p oin ted out that
widening was Included in the
city's own plan for the road.
L oveatran d la p ro p o sin g a
change In the comprehensive
plan. He la also proposing the
city commissioners recommend
that the State Department of
T ra n s p o rta tio n put an in ­
terchange at Grccnway Boule­
vard at Lake Emma Road In
Lake Mary to help eliminate
some o f the traffic on Rangcllne
Road. Traffic funnels from Lake
Emma to Longwood Hills Road
onto Rangellnc Road.

"W hen I came out my door I
smelled something real acldy. It
made my nose bum ," Major
said.
The truck driver was taken to
Chino Valley Medical Center.
Nursing supervisor Terry Rudd

wouldn't specify his Injuries,
A three-mile stretch o f the
h ig h w a y w a s c lo s e d an d
expected to remain closed In
both directions for most o f the
day. O'Brien said,

£

1*10x13
(Wall Photo)

^
ip

M

1* 8x10
2* 5x7
\ V
2* 3x5
16* King Size«W$ll$ts
8* Regular Size Wallets

99* D tp o s it
t »1J0g.Dueet

$6.00 P ic k u p
(plus ta x)

.

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Stephen ,G.
Brqyer htadfd home to Boston Saturday, knowing he la lik dy
to win Senate Confirmation as early as next wreck.
Breyer and hla family remained in Washington but kept a
low profile Friday as the Senate Judiciary Committee
concluded Its four-day hearing. Breyer completed three days o f
testimony Thursday.
A survey o f the com mittee's 18 members late Friday turned
up no one intending to vote against Breyer.
Chairman Joseph Blden. D-Del., said the committee may
vote as early as Tuesday, and no later than Thursday.

HortMtro dying
W HITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE. N.M. - The decaying body
o f a foal bleaches in the hot desert sand, yards from the water
troughs that are filled daily. The severed, skeletal leg o f another
horse lies nearby. Vultures flap overhead.
W ild horses are dying on this 3.200-equare-mtle military
reservation, victim s o f overgrazing and a vicious dry spell.
Furrow'iuUd* * **u^e P*°bleM ,” White 8ands spokesman Larry
The ftrsiBO bodies were discovered July 6. By Friday. 104
horses w ert dead, some o f starvation, others shot by military
officials anxious to end their misery.
Three o f the four major herds seem to have adequate food
and water, but the Mound Springs herd, which numbered
about 400 before the recent deaths, has overgrazed Its land and
finds itself facing barren ground and starvation.
Rainfall for the year la 20 percent below normal, and

^ QOMA. Zaire - Lines o f weary refugees stretch for miles
nom makeshift camps in Zaire, where hundreds o f thousands
o f Rwandan Hutus have fled as rebel forces make their final
push west.
Overwhelmed U.N. officials, trying to stanch the desperate
flood, were to meet Saturday with Hutu military leaders to try
to work out i cftBe-flfc in Rwanda's three-month civil war*
Relief workers say they already are seeing slgna o f disease In
the campa, where little food, water and shelter la available.
It • even worse than our worst-case scenario." aald Panoa
Mourntzla. a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner on
Refugees In Goma. "It's tjje largest exodus In a short period o f
time. The needs right now are extrem e."
W ith crossing galea Into Zaire thrown open. It was
Impossible to count how many Hutu refugees had arrived since
Wednesday. But It likely was well over 500.000. making It one
o f the largest flights In history.

Nun sues
m other
superior
MINEOLA. N.V. - A nun filed
a lawsuit claim ing ahe was
molested by her mother superior
at a convent 26 years ago.
Sister Jean Patricia Hennlnger
aald she kept silent about the
alleged abuse for years and was
transferred to another convent.
But In 1989, when Hennlnger
le a rn e d th a t S is te r G lo ria
Czam lewicz was to become her
superior again, ahe reported.
Czam lewicz to Ute order, said
H en n ln ger'* law yer, Michael
Montesano.
Hennlnger’■ accusations were
ignored and she went on leave.
Montesano said. She accuses
Czam lewicz o f sexually abusing
her three times In 1968.
Stephen Donahue, attorney for
the Monroe. Conn.-baaed order
Sisters o f the Holy Family o f
Nazareth, didn't Im m ediately
'return a telephone call Friday.
The lawsuit aald Czamlewicz.
then 40. went into Henninger's
room while she was asleep and
fondled her.
Hennlnger. who was 20 at the
time, aald Czam lewicz told her
after the first alleged incident:
"You didn't feel anything last
night. Who could you ten? No
one would believe a postulant
over a mother superior." Mon­
tesano said.

Developmental Toy$,
Books &amp; Games For All
Ages
Home Demonstrations
Catalog Orders
Part-Time &amp; Full-Time
Career Opportunities
THE NEW BOOK OF
KNOWLEDOE
Encyclopedia Set
C e ll N o w
fo r
"S u p e r S u m m e r

Group ehargs

99* psr parson

TE R E S A N O LE8

Educational Consultant
225 Witcomb Drive

Genevt.FL 32732

A ll First Quality Carpatl
Philadelphia.

CHICKEN WIRE
M ALL

ladssr ■M y Air Cssdkimi

lot WattIsTheDal

Best DEAL IN THE WORLD

2913 H w . 17-92 •(Orlando Drhn), Sanford
(2 Blocks North of Airport Blvd. Between ~
&amp;ABC Liquor)

�Sanford Herald

SUNDAY

Beating up
] Host Longwood in Bambino state semifinals today
Forest Hills
Hills was to have played
B u nie*
a Saturday.
aaiuraay. forest

Htrald 8 ports Writsr

Punris drives to easy ARCA win
LONG POND. Pa — JefT Purvis took the lead
halfway through the race and cruised to victory
In the 9146,930 Associated Financial 150 ARCA
Supercar series race Saturday at Pocono
International Raceway.
His Chevrolet led for the final 32 laps over the
2.5-mlle track and was never seriously threat­
ened. He was not pressed at'the end because o f
an accident on the 58th o f 60 laps.
D ick T rick le, who failed to qu alify tor
Sunday's Miller Oenulne Draft 500 Winston Cup
race, finished second in a Chevrolet.

LONGWOOD — The Longwood All-Stars con­
tinued to play rude hosts, rolling almost
untouched over two more opponents to advance
to meet Keystone Heights In today's winners'
bracket final o f the Babe Ruth Baseball Bambino
Major A State Tournament at Candyland Park.
Longwood'• pitching has been outstanding. On
Friday. Kevin Qraves tossed a two-hltter In a 5*1
victory over South Lakeland while on Saturday.
Kevin Mellllo tossed a Tour-hitter as the locals
clubbed Tampa-Forest Hills. 1 M .
Also on Prlday, Keystone Heights topped
Flagler 7-3: Forest Hills beat Boca Raton 9-2: San
Soucl from Jacksonville ousted Perry 4-2; Scott
Carrtgan from Ocala knocked out Flagler 0-8: and
South Lakeland eliminated Lake City 7-2.
to other games Saturday. Keystone Heights
whitewashed Latino Americano from Miami 8-0 :
Scott Carrlgan took out San Soud 5-1: and South
Lakeland sent Boca Raton packing 12-1. to late

... today
luuays
games. Keystone Heights
Helgl
In
’s games,
and
Longwood play at 1 p.m.: the Forest. Hi
- Jflls-Scott
Carrlgan winner faces the Latino Americana*
South Lakeland winner at 3 u
.„ . «and
.,u the
„
p.m.
1 p.m.
...
• o *r w ill Play the 3 p.m. winner
at S p.mL
Sunday's winners w imeet
l lIn the
•
champion*
^
Monday,
with the " If
_ .*P
_. &lt;*rne
.. at^ 9^
. a.m.
7 --- -------j , with
n «T «sa ry game being played at noon.
D ote*
.. -T0!
" * r 16 h&lt;»lng for Longwood against South
S , EppeT* on (,ln « lc- ™n. RBI).
Matt Main, J.T. Williamson and Ryan Bono (one
■tagle e ^ h ). Jeff Halbert (two RBI) and Graves,
and Ricardo Montalvo (one run each).

.

A *T A T 1 rO U R N A M IN T
X CASPYLAW D SARK, LOWOWOOO
L O n o W O O O II.F O R M T M IL U l

.

m « * - II 11

i

............. . . ^ OWOOOm Shitm I a k RLAMO
M I’N - I f

t

r»m&lt;Hirn

lil!. 10 —T South
T f - Lektiond.
,
S?* m S30
» W—Wnone.
.
_O r ^ S r ,LR#,f,D
BlKon.
Dlyorlo.
MR

J U S 2 T 2 L ^ U.b,r ,. ln Jim Kl,b°m - who had
Rtogled, for South Lakeland's lone run.
i nrlT l ? . h id * monster day at the piste for
Longwood Saturday, going 3-for-4 with a home
run. double, two runs, and three RBI.
. . J " contributing w ere Chris W estervelt
(2for*3. double, run, two RBI). Jose Rosado

O vie d o J rs . I
beat back
A lta m o n te
fo r 14 title

Lat« Mod#l pilot dloo In raeo
^
“ Race car driver Rob BieUier
o f W illard. Mo., suffered a heart attack and dir t
Friday night while competing at Speedway

h much 'Coach
Central Bronco

Ift M g r W fr o W t *
* * • 4-1 teas. In thair

OCOEE — It wasn't the way
that O viedo L ittle League
Ju n ior A ll-S tar coach Pat
Metcalf wanted to see his team
win.
Up 10-0 through four in­
nings In the District 14 finals
against Altam onte 8 prlngs,
the Oviedo squad got a little
loose and started to enjoy their
championship ever, though It
the giune was three Innings
from being over.
Altamonte Springs, on the
other hand, kept plugging
away and made things .inter­
estin g .
against a pair o f ,relievers
before starter Kenny. Maims.
who returned to the modnS fo r

Offense abandons Seminole Central

straightaw ay during practice for Sunday's
Toronto Molaon-tody.
taken, said the 24 year old tody-car rookie
suffered a fracture to his right femur and two
rnmprr saton fractures to his pelvis. Herts, who
drives for A J . F o y t was scheduled to undergo
surgery later In the day.
*
The accident apparently occured after H erts's
speeding Lola came upon a alow-moving safety
vehicle on the tight 1.78-mile temporary circuit.

FIVE POINTS — No hits, no wins.
The 8 emlnoie Central All-Stars’ bats went cold after
an excellent opening game win and lost two straight
games to finish third In the PONY Baseball Bronco State
Championship at the Seminole PONY Baseball Complex
at Five Points Saturday.
Seminole Central was held to three hits to each o f Its
losses, a 4-1 defeat to Gainesville S.O.C.K. on Friday

from ‘niinsday'a loss to 8 .O.C.K. to oust West Palm
Beach Lake Lytal. 11-7. and then also oust Seminole
f? 9 ®t to the finals.

ard V lre o q iitliih w k a i reread ylsos.

S

w

ia',or'3, &lt;toubl' 1, s" v,' Pra

Upsets few in Playtime Darts semifinals

a
ALM , France — Miguel Indurain received a
■ped al 30th birthday present Saturday as the
Tour de France rider billed as his toughest
rhsllsngrr. Tony Homlnasr. quit the race.
Barely able to stay wtth the pack, tha Swtas

"W e started to celebrate too
early." said Metcalf. "W e were
up by 10 runs and we started
to celebrate. Olve Altamonte
Springs credit. They didn't
quit. They stepped It up and
made us earn It.'1
Oviedo now advanaces to
the section al tournam ent,
which will be played at North
Tampa Little League begin­
ning next Saturday.

and Tony C om o (one single each) and Justin Hawarah
(RBI).
Pacing the Seminole Central offense Saturday against

S

SANFORD — A ll but one o f the regular season
champions in the Playtime Darts Spring League won
thetr eemlflnal match last week.
The one exception was Mixed B League season
champion Taaai Ha. S. which Buffered a 7-4 upset at
the hands o f the No. 34) seed Q-Bls BuUsbseters.
T ia a t Ha. S advances to the finals, where they will
meet second seeded T aaai Ha. 4. also out o f O A t .
id the fourth-place l i a l n Baas from Bamboo
7-4 in their semifinal contest.

Indurain g*ts birthday •gift1

two mote outs, and reliever
Jorge Hcmandes dosed out
the game.

MtXSO ALIAOUC

The regular season champs — Nice A Easy's Tha
Pataushsblss — and runners-up — Bamboo Cafe's
Taaai Mu. S — w ill meet far the title this week.
T h a Pateashablsa advanced by beating Bamboo
Cafe's Batata B Da 7-6 while Taaai Ha. a eliminated
Baa's Bids out o f Uncle Nick's, also by a 7-6 count
I 1HMW A I »1 (U M
Tha only other upset saw the No. 4-seed B i a l i i
M from the Bamboo Cafe oust
TaD rftnm Uncle Nick's 7-3.

Is te k s a M agla will face the regular-season champi­
on Bamboo Can W aotabsss, a 7-6 winner over Score
At Touchdown's No A n sw er to their semifinal match.

LAMBS? SlBAOm
Both the top aeeds advanced to the championship
match, the too-seeded O upredtetakl— from Quivers
outthrowtog Whiskey River's le a th a t sa d Laos 7-5
while No. 2 -seed Team Hu. S -o u t o f Score At
Touchdown bested Tim e Out's Bad to th e B aoe 7-6.

M W S A IS M M
Own ers' M a d D arts and Os as from Q-Bis. who
finished first and second, respectively, in the regular
eeaaons. have advanced to the championship match.
M a d D arts eliminated Bamboo Cafe's BBJ 7-2
while O eaa ended the eeason for the Bad A ttitu d es
from Bamboo Cafe with a 7-2 setback.

MBM'SBLIAQUK

It waa dose, but regular season champion 9.O .L. out
o f Nice A Easy survived Us semifinal match with Nice A
Easy's B aal Easy, squeaking by 7-6.
M X . will meet No. 2-seed S M g. 1 OM o f the
Bamboo Cafe, who beat Score A t Touchdown's W ar

Penalties severe for gender equity noncompllance

checkmarks . . . w e'll try just
anything to catch and hold soi

Uke the Teak Force on Equity to
Athletics, created by the 1993
enactment o f Houre Bill 999. attract
and hold the attention o f the entities
that they're auppoeed to be re­
gulating?
‘
Simple: wave dollar signs.
"Th is la not a dollar and cents
Is s u e ." said R ep. M ary E llen
Hawkins. R-Naptes. the primary
sponsor o f HB 809 and a member o f
the Trek Force.-"But it's unfortu­
nate that people won't start follow­
ing laws until you say that you're

• By July 1 o f this year, each
public school — middle, secondary,
and post-secondary — had to con­
duct a self-evaluation and submit to
D e p a rtm e n t o f E d u c a tio n a
"three-year plan o f corrective action
needed to attain substantia) com pli­
ance."
,
a Any school not completing that
task would be |frohiblted from
participating to any athletic pro­
gram.
a The Department o f Education
and Board o f Regents should create
a "comprehensive notification plan"
□ S aa E quity. Bags SB

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 EA , READ T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D D A ILY

�IB - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, IBM

S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
at tamlaat* Part
Friday atfbt
Flrtlra ca — 14Ni Oi 11.71
5 Bob't Rtfaacca
1110 I N
4 40
1 SM Talladega
«*o 140
I RJ I lay Bitty
1.00
a (1-5) 4*.*4/ P a All) N .M i P (All-7)
14.7*i T (0 7 4 ) M M *
Second raca — 1.45*1 Bi 71.71
11.40 4.40 4.40
1 J t u Good
l Builar Braara
4.C0 140
7 AOK Or. Spot
5.N
Q (1-7) l7.Nl P (1-1) 17.H i T (7-1-771*t.Mi
DO (07) 714.44
Third race - 1*4*, Di N41
4 Wright Alina
104 *10
5.40
IJatlaFaw n
5(0 340
1ML High Command
340
a (0*1 *14*1 P (07) *TN| r ( 01 - 1, 17
tic h t) 11I.N
Faurlh raca - 14Mi Ci 11.M
4 R k k t Knight
li.M I N
5.40

5 Dovt'l Honar

ION

4 40

(R O ’t Fancy Dell
I N
a (OS) 41J t i P ( 0-AII) 11.1*1 P (All 5) 7J*|
T (Ot-4) m M i Carryavar 7**J*
Fifth r a c a -1 4 M i D :ll.4 i
IMalcom Who
11.40 4 N
3 00
1 JO ’t Norm
IN
4.J0
• Grayhound't Lev*
7.N
O (7-7) M.M| P (0 7 ) MS.Ml T (11*) 714.4*
Slrlh raca — U M i Ct 11.4*
1 Data Event
5.40 I N
IN
1Ml tty Wind
II.N 4.40
• Builar Fag
4J0
a ( i - i ) i».N i p ( o i l 7 i.N i T ( o i d ) ita.oti
(O O l. 7*f S I N N
M r t ntb race— I4**i A i M44
7 M L Chtaftan Dan
I N
l.H
I N
SPliNaaky Ray
IN
IN
IP a w tF u P u
IN
a (07) « N l P (7-1) 15.4*1 T (7-011 t l N i S
(7-01-717M*
E ig h t h r t c a -14*4/ B: 114*
!MgaDv*tn
IO N ISO I N
1 Borlln Denial la
SN
SN
5 Wayna't Prtl*
SN
Nhdhraca— I N I i Ai M J7
• J ’tBrawtay
_ , 1-70 4*0 1.00
• Ohaten Khan Man
1140 4.00
1 Pomona Pomp
*.**
a 104) I t N i P (O t) PSNi T (04-7) N .N i
O D 11-7 4 * 4 ) **4.7*
I t t b r a c a -14*4/Oi 1140
« Omni Bl« dad
71.40 IO N *44
4 lea Simulator
* 70 440
7 Malnaway Bunoaa
11-00
O 1*4) H M l P (04) 1114*i T (04-7, 1
aacbt) 747*4*
tllbraca — lAM i Oi 11.11
IT H O a rlh
44.00 IIJO *0*
1Botank la Bobby
4.M 140
1 Tat* U Batch*
. 14*
O (1-7) 77-Ni P (1-1) 7*40i T (7-1-7) 4fl.4*i
(Carryavar) M**J7
iTtb race - M * * » * i *1J7
I Tatk Tapknlt Tip
540
*.40 440
5 Plana Sant*
*J0 *40
• LltttaJaycaa
140
O (54) tSJ*i P (O I) 77.0*1 T (0 0 4 ) 177J*|
S (O O O I) 4*14*
ITMraca — U M i At 71.17
4Urban'tStaal
*40
440 140
iScaalthad
* M *40
I I Am A Character
14* 4.40
Q (04) I I M i a (74) I14«i P (01) 4«.1Si P
(07) 77.Nl T (0 0 1 ) M J Il T (0 0 1 ) 744*
ittkraca — I4*ti Ci 7*4*
SSpeedySN
1140 54* 4.10
• Pay W m Tkkat
'
440 14*
7 Enchanted Malady
44B
a (0 4 ) 7*4*1 P (04)7*4*1 T (0 0 7 ) 7M4*
1Mb race— 74*ti Oi t o l l
4 Hatred N let y
114*
14* 14*
• Ha* Part Sara
44* 44*
1 Ocala Cured
74*
O (441 414*1 P &lt;M ) 1J7.Ni t (0 0 0 4 )

.V'*

lOlaa Arraiola
IO N 5 N
IN
t Barra Beltran
*00 S.N
4 Pitt Erklaga
* -»
0(7-*) 17.Ni P l i d ) M I N I T (T d d ) 4*7N
lath gam*
1Beltran
IO N
IN SN
7Mandl
7.N 11N
1 Arraiola
4N
a (1-7) 17.Nl P (1-71 71.Ni T (1-7-1) I N N
ilihgama
■ Caie-Arraiola
1SN 11.N IO N
IMandlbe Coltli
4.N l . N
* Barra Uraldt
(N
a ( I d ) 4 4 N i P (t-1) N N i T (00*171 I N
17th gam*
5 Saluca Beltran
I1 W
7.N 4.N
1 Berra Aiplrl
*.N 1.N
1Aremeye Don
IM O
a (O il N N i P (01) 1N .lt! T (07-11
M 7 N i OD ( I d B OM I) H7.M| OD ( I d *
OAIII771.N
isihgam*
• Uraldt
1*N
f .N 1 1 N
7 Aramaye
4.N S N
1 Beltran
*N
O ( I d ) I I N i P (0 7 ) 1*7M i Tri-Sag (OS-7)
H i N i Trl-Sug JackgatMf.N
1«1h game
5 Erklila Arraiola
l* N
*N IN
SOteeAtpl'l
« . . . N .N
SN
I Napa Bab
4N
a (7-5) «M*| P (07) 1*4.1*1 T (01-1)
M t N i S (07-1-4) l .f M N l OD (OS) M S N
A - N4| H - M l,715

(Cummlngt 1-7), 4:M p m .
Datrail (Oahr 7 1) at I
1 t-4 ),l:M p .m .
Toronto (Stewart O t) at
1P4),B:05pm.

71 ^

Cincinnati
Momtan
Pltttburgh
St. Loull
Chicago
Lot Anyatvt
Colorado

W
51
50
41
41
77
Woof DlvMan
W
47
44

Pci.
N t
N7
.4*7
.4*7
.4*1

® W if r#o
H
1 1 . 11 m . k A ^ . k l m I
T*aI ittm ^winiai
Mark Rm
Sandy LyN
Craig Ronald
LanniaClamantt
BanCrenthaw
Oardtn Brand. Jr.
Slava llklngfon

Mika Sullivan
Brian Hennlnger
OuyBaraa
ScetIHach
Chrlt Dlmarco
Dava Stockton
Tammy Armour III
Dicky Prldt
Stan bitty
Bobby Clampatt
rti im k lt i
■ fp w i u
t im o m
Curt Byrum
EmItOarualai
O u lt fe rry
Mika Brlthy
John Flannery
Hal Sultan
Leonard Thamatan
Ettaban Toteda

as

Pci. OB
N* —
.SM l i t
,4N fVt
.4M *W
4N IIW

L
47
N

Pet. a a
NS 471 4

» 71-71-717
77 4* 71-117
N T S 71-117
T I N 71— 111
N 71-70-717
71-70-71— 111
7073 70-111
774070-111
71-7170-711
707171-117
7147-74-117
717171-114
74N-71-1IS
717177-115
71 77 71-1IS

n-TI-Tl-llS
70 7173-11*
7171-73-11*
71-7171-11*

OepeaH Ovaianty C U u k
MADISON, M lu . — L N d m and te a m
aff*f Saturday'! rain-delayed tacond round el
the *700.000 Dtpotlt Guaranty CIO*tic an tha
7.117 yard, per 77 Annandalo Oelf Club
caurta. Due ** rain, the laumamani hat boon
*
t *
^
t— i—
s n o ii W T W o to m n o w *

—
—
11Vh
tit*
11

L
7*
N
41
44
11

David Fratt
Domingo Haapllal
John Daly
Craig Parry
C U M tu n
CM H O I HIM
Nlc Hanning
Wayne Rllay

iligiWAMrflV

lin tiiA L L tTn rtm n iTI
N ATIO N AL L I ABU I
All TIM M I D T
le t l Otvltten
L
W
»
74
Atlanta
54 IS
Montreal
41 M
Florida
Philadelphia
a 47
41 N
Now York

City (

...... ..
ormmHT

tta t— ITS
I7 U -IU
*007— 11*
*0*7-11*
7 0 « a -iit
*0*7-11*
71-**— II*
71-44— 117
*7 70— 117
*•40— 117
*4 77-11*
**-77-11*
M 7 0 -1 M
*•70-11*
«• 71-11*
•*71— 110
70*0-110
714*— 110
7140-110
7140-14*
*•77-140
•071-14*
7147-140
7140-140
7 0 7 0 - 140
*0 77-141
•071-141
7740-141
7140-141
7 0 7 1 - 141
•071-141
71-70-141
7 7 4 0 -U I
71-70— 141
7140-141
•077-141
7077-147
7770-141
7171-147
71-71— 14*
7077-1477*40-14*
7077-141
7440-147
7077-147
7171-147
7171-141
7077-147
77-70-141

Tim RtlntB Ib • Sanford nathn and Samlnola MIqH School
jraduata now playing for tha Cfilcapo Wtilta 8ox. Hie state art
'or tha 1994 aaaaon In fha first column, personal-beat season
totals In tha sacond column and currant carter totals
(Including 1994 gamaa) In t h a t h ir d column.
On Friday night, Raines was O-for-3 with a walk as the White
Sox lost to the Cleveland Indiana 3-2 and fall Ijito second place
(by percentage points) behind tha Indiana In tha American
League Central Division standings.

t

RAINES GAUGE
*94
Category
OamBB............ 80
At-bats............ 298
Runs............... 62
Hits................. 80
RBI................. 40
Doubles........... 11
Triples............ 4
Home runs....... 8
Stasis............. 10
Average........... .288

bast earaar
160 1,897
647 7,178
133 1,273
194 2,131
747
71
343
38
104
13
131
18
781
90
.297
.334

Tim Rainaa

AUTORACINE
1 p.m. - W TBS, NASCAR, Millar Oanutna,
Draft NO. IL )
I p m . - W IS H 1. IndyCer. Molton Indy
Tw ohfo.IL)
-&gt;
7 N p m ., 1 a m .' - SUN, SCCA Molten.
Indy
1a m . — ESPN jiM jU g h t t Champlanthlp (
1 p m . - W INS H. Florida Martina at,
Attanta Brava*. (L )
«
7 p.m. — WON, Chicago Cuba at Cincinnati'
Rad*. (L I
I p m . - ESFN, DM roll Tiger* at K e n t*
City Royal*. (L )
BOX I NO
/
S p m . — S C Pro Botin* Tour
-*
7:10 p.m. — SUN, Flywglfhf*: Humbert*
O a n u lttvt. CartotEM aia
4 am . ESPN . Junior Plywalghlt:'
Mlchati C#rbt|al vt. Jetu* Camacho
'*&gt;
BOWLINS
4 p m . - SUN. ABC Wbrtd Team Chaltangt
CYCLI NO
•:10p.m. — ESPN, Taurd* Franca
1
17:10 a m. - ESPN, CaroSlalM Champion :
N ip

■OUISTRIAN

r

Mldnlghl — SUN, Shall Cup Darby

•'

t . X a m - W FTV *. Brltlah Open, final,
round. (L)
t p m - S U N . Ball't Scotflth Open
4 p.m. - WESH I, LPOA. Big
Clattic. (LI
4 p.m. - WCPX A Amgrlltch Senior &lt;
ID
O YM N A STIC !
17:70 pm. - SUN, USAIOC NatlenaL-

ChemplontMpt

“

SOCCER
7:N pm. - W FTV *, U N I, World Cup.
Championship match :^Haly vt. Brarll, (L ) ,g
17:30 p.m. - ESPN, Davll Cup: USA v(.‘:
Ntthtrlandi
«,
7:10pm . — SC. U.S. I

•A,- it * N i N . - * m 4 M

AtiroaaafMidv
TUIItan.
_
-

’

4 pm. — WCTO AM (1
Gtnuina Orth ISO {

utu.Ti,

I. NASCAR.)

17:1S pm . - W O TO A M (141), WWZN-AM
(1440), Florida Marl Ira M Altanla Oravat
.y
7:10 p m. - W TLIOAM (IM S). Sauffwr^ *
Laapua: O la n N CubtPf HunlavMI#
I p.m. - W CTO-AM (S N ). DaffWt T lp trt);

‘“" “"a *,

■"

• pm . - WWNZ-AM (7 N ). Arana Leagued
In Tour Fact Llv*
^
1
/ a l / v v. / \ &gt; i n v&gt;
r .l

T A W A V S

1 ^ *
im ox!

hi

i 11

i

N • i'l S O RT

P A R A D I S I i . i . i n i* «
MANAMA\
A n w.

a m n o

1

' •' 0

•A 11 M 1
......................................
1 D U O 4 '» 4 l U M I
,1
! 1 1 O J ISM

Sanford Paint A Body
A Wrackar Sarvlcaa Inc.
r—

EmBBBSSa
24 H O U R ^ H .U R G E N C T

T O W IN G

^HMy t Butpana I (atlart Ruther

i : *:u jh M it - i - n ii c

Bratll I, Sweden0 (atPaaedane. Calif.)

Calif.. 1:1*

S Q IU L IH B

laaLJss
£□□□819

GaaaBB

la a L iB H

mmm

!□ □ □ !■

■

IU L IL IIB

■ □ □ □ kb

BoaniBfij
!□ □ □ &amp; ■
BQaauni

E D a n s D

Non

.

21

f£L

Hies^iic
is h m

mmm
mm
*□□□*■
es s b
tm taaiH
■ m
g u l iTiI h ibb mmm

Lab* Wait

Mod

ea

sir

o fis e * j

EGULiMB

flBar-.lE

K U U IU &amp; B
[□ LJU TS s

B
mu
SIEfelSii

a a L iu is

mmm
RAM P IR A TE* -

Called up

V

�Sanford Hsrrid, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1994 - as

Area W MAs described, predicted
Following ia the 1994-93 Cenral Region W ildlife Management
trea Forecast:
Sem inole Ranch WMA ia a
5.000-acre area which borders
he St. Johns River In eastern
Grange County. It is primarily
nade up o f river marsh, open
mature land, hardwood and
abbage palm hammocks.
The squirrel and hog popula­
tions are good. Deer and turkey
xrpulatlons are fair. Camping is
inhibited. Bird dogs may be
ised during sm all game season,
md leashed dogs may be used to
rail wounded game. The taking
&gt;f fox squirrels la prohibited.
hiring the modern gun season.
&gt;n!y shotguns are permitted.
O cala W M A in portions o f
J a rlo n , P u tn am and Lake
bounties has 382.408 sprawling
teres o f w ildlife habitat that
ange from dense sand pine —
icnib oak communities to wet
ind d r y . prairies to longleaf
&gt;lne-pa]metto flatwooda.
Pox squirrels and turkeys are
protected. Hogs are considered
trespass livestock and may be
tp k en d u rin g a n y h u n tin g
season without regard to size or
bag limits. The hog population la
poor.
C a m p in g a t d e s ig n a te d
campsites is permitted during
the general gun season. Hunting
deer with doga la permitted In
the Pipeline Unit only. Deer doga
may be trained Oct. 20 through
Nov. 7 In the Pipeline Unit only.
T o o o k a tc k o o W M A la a
28,000 acre tract In Orange
County near the community o f
Christmas. The habitat Includes
areas o f pine-palmetto flatwooda,
oak hammock, creek swamps
w ith hardwood bottom s and
extensive river marsh.
The turkey population la fair.
The deer and hog densities are
good. There la no small game
season. Camping la prohibited.
Hunting with doga la prohibited,
except during the special wild
hog season, out doga may be

swamps.
Deer, turkey and squirrel pop­
ulations arc good. The hog
population Is fair. Camping is
p e r m it t e d a t d e s ig n a t e d
campsites. The campsite In the
dog hunt area ia open only
during (he general gun season.
S t ill and d o g h u n tin g o p ­
portunities are available. Fox
squirrels are protected and may
not be hunted.
used to trail wounded game. Fox
squirrels are protected and may
not be hunted. A ll hunters are
required to have a quota hunt
permit, no exemptions.
R eek tp rta g s R an W M A lies
In Orange and Lake counties.
Habitat on thla 13,910 acre
parcel la diverse. There are
pine-palmetto flatwooda. scrub
oak-sand pine com m unities,
hardwood hammocks and creek
swamps.
Camping, handguns and doga
are prohibited. The deer and
squirrel populations are good.
Fox squirrels are protected and
may not be hunted. All hunters
are required to have a quota
hunt permit, no exemptions.
S ea ria els F s rs st W M A In
Lake County Is a 7.198 acre
parcel. The habitat ia composed
o f pine flatwooda. sand pinescrub oaks and creek swamps.
The deer and gray squirrel
populations are excellent; The
turkey population la good and
hog populations are poor to fair.
Cam ping la prohibited. S till
hunting only.
The mobility-impaired general
gun hunt is scheduled for Oct. 8
and 9. Several black bears In­
habit the area and may not be
hunted. Blackwater Creek and
Sulphur Run bisect the property.
A ll hunters are required to have
a quota hunt permit, no exemp­
tions.
In Volusia and Brevard
counties has 52.180 acres o f
dense pine-palmetto flatwoods.
c y p r e s s h e a d s an d c re e k

SNUFFS SCOOP* *
Scent control la a major con­
cern for deer hunters who are
serious about fillin g their tags.
Deer have an Incredible sense o f
smell, and will avoid any areas
that even hint at the smell o f
man.

FISNINQ FORECAST
Freshwater angling la tough at
beat. Bream and cattish are the
only two species that are biting
with any regularity. Anglers who
want to catch baas had better
plan to (lah at n igh t when It Is
cooler and bass are moat active.
Action at S ab aatlaa lata
been good for snook (season
closed), redflah. flounder, tack
crevalle. blueflsh. and ladyflsh.
Tarpon are active back in the
S eb astian R ive r. Live finger
mullet or live shrimp are the top
baits.
C a p t a in J a c k a t P a r t
C a n a vera l reports that bar­
racudas are thick offshore due to
cold currents on the bottom that
arc forcing them up to the top.
Bottom fishing has also been
slow due to the thermocline.
In side the P a r t, look fo r
sheepahead and flounder to be
hitting. Redflah are rated as
good, and trout are rated aa fair
on the fla ts o f the Bans ms and
S h eepah ead. dru m , sm all
blueflsh, Jack crevalle, and red­
flah are keeping anglers busy at
P a a o a In le t. L iv e or dead
shrimp Is the bait o f choice.
Trout and redflah are rated aa
good back in M saqn lts L ags SR.

Pins fall with regularity at BA
SANFORD — The tim e o ff between the spring
and summer leagues at Bowl America-Sanfbrd
evidently did the bowlers a lot o f good as high
■cores were the rule last week.
Seven different Bowler* went over the 800

derson. 422; Olen O. Welsh. 418; JUltan Smith,
352.
-------- 1— Paneratz, 178; W elsh. 163; Shawnn
Anderson, 157; Barron Anderson. 152.

W1DNKSOAY MITIOftS (YOUTH)
JULY*

______ — Joshua Knight, 184; Devarta OranL
169; Sarah Johnson. 165; Christopher Pulghum,

fou r-gam e W t.

a rtla t i i a s t t
a 925 In the -aamteh Trio League on J iu ifT T .
T h e top three-game series was a 097 rolled by
tfle k N sw a a B In the Men's 700 League on June
28. His effort topped a field that saw the top
tc four
*—
■eLarry
men go over 000. Also posting SOO'a were
id Dtek
B a w l (689), P a t Jefcasaa (600) and
^^Thettop^romenJa series.^b^a wide margin, waa
_ Friday Nlte Mixed
g568 by
_ on _________
_
|
came closest with a
July 8. Ms
17In the IMcQulre'ai
aa tied Do r r s u p m
ror me iu iik m
(dual gam e am ong the women aa they each
a 21SL IU a a rolled her big game In the
xe'a canvas League, while l a y er s ' ! came
.S cratch T rio League on July 11.
SCRATCH TRIOS
J U N ItF
m 's S e rie s (fe a r gam es) — Curtis Slnnott.
&gt;; Jason Everiy. 897j flames — SlnnotL 270;
Parker, 257.
■
m ea 'a S e rie s (fe a r gamma ) — Debbie
,. 796; Jean PorotU. 787;
fewman. 228; PoretU. 225.
JULY11
i'a S eries (fe a r gam es) — BUI Slnnott.
— Curtis
&gt;5: Curtis Slnnott. 849; C
;t. 268; Bill 8lnnott. 258.
_ j ) — Nancy
■ « « ' . R arlaa (fe a r
—
&gt;hnson. 750; Donna Lepore, 747; “
epore, 212; Penny Smith. 210.
MENw 760
JUNE a*
______ — Nick Newman. 697; Larry Howd.
B 19; Pat Johnaon. 080; Dick PoretU. 640.
Oam aa — Newman. 259, 238, 200; Johnson.
2 15. 213.202; PoretU. 243, 214. 183; Howd. 237.
a 17.225.
*
OENIRATIONS
JUNE a t
. — Tim Pete. N/A; Brian MUlla. N/A; Rick
,*N/As Kile Pete (youth bowler). N/A.
is — Tim Pete, N/A.
JU LYt
— John PancrsU. 465; Barron An-

a ll adm inistrators "u n .—and the Importance o f prod in g e q u a l a t h le t ic op -•••nlUes.1'
P en a lties to be le vie d
at transgressor* would be
■Justed In severity to reflect
level o f aoncom pltancc."
I The Department o f EducaTvould expand "electronic
___ t data bases to allow for
altering and reporting pro­
as" at district schools and
ununtty colleges.
» The Board o f Regents would
ittnue to m onitor the effort* at
Institutional level.
&gt; Both regulating agencies Department o f Education
Board o f Regents - would
tded "adequate . . . refor m onitoring compUiwklna also suggested that

— Knight. 81; Pulghum, 66.
i-8 y e a r o ld a

WEDNESDAY

JULY6
.
vM aa'a B erios — Mike Vtahneaky. 687; Ruck
Benton. 619; Oam aa — Benton. 211; Vtahneaky.
201; Carl Moyer. 201.
W ea w a 'a S eries — Barbara Richard*. 519)
Helen Dechelle. 503; fla m es — Richards, 193;
Mary Bangs. 161.

MeQUIRIt CANVA3
JULY 7

M ea 'a S a risa — Doug Burnell. 643; A1
Denman. 585; Osam a — Burnell, 236; Dick
Mlnick. 235.
■,___
W sm aa's S eries — Rose Koas. 537; Deborah
Govocek. 494; Oam aa — Koea. 212; Oovocek.

l ®1*

FRIDAY NITS MIXED
JULY a

S eries — Dave Marietta, 813; Dan Marietta,
600; Dennis Ryan. 572; Nancy Norris, 586.
Oamaa — Dave Marietta, 257; James Evans,
257; Dan Marietta. 252; Norris, 202.

FRIDAY SENIOR CITIZENS
JULY a
M aa'a S eries — Mike Vtahneaky. 538; Buck
Benton. 526; Oamaa — Don Bangs. 202; Gene
Rogcro, 198.
aaasa'a Sartos — Mary Bangs. 484: Helen
D e c h e l l e . 4 6 0 :
— Grace McConlgle. 201: Lucta Weaver.
172.

BUMFERE
JULYt
B erios — Christina Cole. 122; Mike Hlghamith,
116; Joshua Higdon. 110; Sarah Terrazas, 101.
Oamaa — Cole. 76; Hlghamith. 66; Higdon. 56:
Terrazas, 54.
Natst 3-4 year olds
_____

MONDAY SENIOR CITIZENS
JULY 11

’a S eries — Don Bangs. 618; Elmer
stufllct. 578; Osam a -— Harold Herbat. 230;
Stufllet. 222.
W aam a's S eries — Helen Dechelle. 494: mary
Bangs. 465; ftom M — Dechelle. 199; Bangs, 172.

the publicity being created by
individuals demanding public
Institutions provide more gen­
der-balanced athletic programs
and the resulting public aware­
ness also w ill play a role In
monitoring and enforcement.
"Allegations w ill lead to com­
pliance. said Hawkins. "P ro­
grams w ill have to show history
o f attempting to achieve gender
equity or face the poaalbUlty o f
b e in g p e n a lis e d in th e
withholding o f state and national
funds."
According to Ms. (we don't
normally use courtesy titles un­
less there Is some confusion aa
to gender) Nancy Benda, director
o f the Department o f Education's
Equal Education Opportunity
Program, the task force simply
followed what la already on the
books when making recommen­
dations concerning penalties.

"T h e penalties are already
written In to 'la w ." said Benda,
"T h e department can withhold
funds, not only from the school
or program, but from the school
district or institution pa well.
The legal entity to run schools la
the local school board. I f a school
in a given district la not In
compliance, then the district to
not In compliance aa well.
"A n d it's not If any portion o f a
school's funds la earmarked for
specific programs. It's one large
pot. The second section o f avail­
able penalties Is to not allow a
school or Institution to apply far
d is c r e t io n a r y fu n d s . T h e
penalties are fairly aevere
That should get
attention.

An update on the
status of the reoommandstiona
mad# by the teak force to the
commissioner of education.

�I

HWSHPHHHI

Sanford Hsrald, 8so(ord, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1994

Beginning to see the light
Smith eorttfM
SANFORD — Michael A. Smith haa earned a Master Service
Technician Certification from Briggs ft Stratton. Smith la
reportedly the only such certified person In Seminole County
and one o f only 2 1 In the slats.
The certification came following an extensive training
session and testing elsewhere tn the state In early June.
Smith, along with hla w ife Connie, have one o f Sanford's
oldest businesses, still using the original name at “ Smltty'a
Snappln' Turtle Mowers, Inc. atfiSOS Park Drive tn Sanford.
"It'a not easy keeping up with Improvements In this
business," M id Connie Smith. "W e are required to attend
service schools every year, and work very diligently to keep on
top o f all naw equipment anddevelopment.”
Although not In the exact same location. Sm ltty’a haa been

y 23 through 27.
and Winter Park
tiers.
Best," with guest
:ft Development at
1, Philip B. Crosby.

speakers Judt P. Daley, director o f Tn
the Dtaney University far W alt Disney
author pa quality control, phis several &lt;
The .convention agenda also inch
workahon. Also, the Secretary Mart a
Monday and Tuesday with 60 booths
acroaa the nation.
For sitm tw iai information on the PSA or convention, phone
Lin da O su ld ln D o g g cU a t (8 1 6 ) 891-0600. eat. 244.

In Orlando contact Debbie Elfert at the Winter Park Chapter,
(407)629-1909.

ItrM lb u tlM M
ORLANDO - An event called "BualneM With la n d ." is
being planned for the Oovem or Hotel at Lake Buena Vista, on
Tuesday. Aug. 9. from 7:30 a m . until 4 p m .
The purpose o f the event ta to pursue buatneaa opportunities
between Ffortdalan Hi-Tech companies wtth therein Israel.
Interested companies should contact Misty McLennan at the

• SANFORD - 11 didn't take
long for a vacant Sanford plant
to have a new owner. The former
W analey United Moving and
Storage building at 300 N. Holly
Avenue. Is now the home o f
Spencer Fabrications, Inc.
Oeorge Spencer Is president of
the new company. His wife.
Patricia Is secretary.
" I started metal work when I
was In the Navy,*’ the former
A v ia tio n M eta la m lth c o m ­
m en ted. "W h e n I go t diec h a rg e d , 1 Joined a m etal
fabricating company In Orlando,
and obtained over 30 years

well, as management o f this type
ofbualnesa."
W hile at the Orlando firm,
Spencer was Involved In creating
decorative but utilitarian light
fixtu res and poles for such
places as Universal Studios,

Sgrnrsgdft&amp;s
tlonal Airport building.

A t the time Wi
• If you go to the auto rental Its new locatlor
desks at the airport and look Lake Drive. Q&lt;
upward." he said, "you ’ll see Bob Welch had a
some of the work I have done."
m anufacturing
"Spencer Fabrications w ill be Indicated an tnt*
m aking s p e cia lise d custom
ing the building
lighting fixtures," he said. "M ost mentioned at 1
of the work la metal, but there Is th e re w a s co
often some wood Involved. If W elch’s use o f tl
someone comes to us with a which Is genei
design on a new type light with "llght-tndu
fixture or some type o f pole or al manufacture

Security National Is the parent
of Security National Bank, a
commercial banking operation
with six offices in the Orlando.
_
.
_
million. The value at the stock
awap was not disclosed,
The deal to to be completed in
May 1905. and Security National
w ill be m erged Into a new
entity.H untington Bancshares
Florida Inc. The company w ill
have 13 banking offices and
about 6430m illion In assets.

camlet
I don’t expact

"T M * acquisition to a very
good ftt w lth H u n tin gton ’ s

y P ~ cm’ * f&gt;a OUlcr
fk ^ . w if i also remain- ; ____
Mlke fc u rm&gt; to president of
T * _
bJ
S
TS ”
T * . 1? “ * * * * , &amp;
■.
f u y*?i W?” ¥*•
^
board oCMreetam. aaa to aiwwrin

I ’ m v e ry hai
forward to wor
years to com e."

f

Porter to lead Rotary; annual awards presented
Ruth and Earl Sm ith are
finally getting back to normal
after observing their 40th wed­
ding anniversary.
The couple’s celebration In­
cluded a dinner party for 24 at
the Holiday House In DeLand.
and an exciting and fun-filled
7-day Caribbean cruise, pres­
ented to them by their children
and Bari’s father. Oeorge M.
Smith.
The Smiths were married May
11. 1954 In Apopka. They are
the parents o f eight children and
have 16 grandchildren who are:
D e b b l M u s s e lw h lt e . h e r
h u s b a n d , G a r y , an d tw o
children: Jonl Altem ose. her
h u sb a n d . T h o m , and tw o
ch ild ren : N annie Ruls, her
h u a b a n d . J e r r y , an d tw o
children: twin daughters. Anita

and look
here In the

WtKM

ShefTey said eventually, the
only changes may be to the
name of the bank and signs.
"T h a t will be happening." he
said, "but right now. I don’t

MAITLAND - Security Na­
tional Corp.. baaed In Maitland,
will be taken over by Huntington
Bancshares Inc.
No chan ges In the basic
o p e ra tio n o r s e rv ic e s are
expected. Mike Sheffey. presi­
dent at Security National commen ted. "In tact, they have
some additional services which
w ill be o f benefit to our custom*
ere once the takeover to completed."
"W e are pleased with this
a c q u is itio n ." S h effe y said .
"T h ey are very simitar to us In
that It's a decentraltoed operaphnosophy. y d

lures was not immediately re­
vealed.
.
After taking over the building
in e a rly M ay of. th is year.
Spencer launched a major renovation project on the 20,000
square foot building's Interior as
well aa repainting Uie exterior.
A n u m ber o f fa b ric a tin g
machines are presently In place,
with more expected to arrive In
the near future.
"Although I’ve spent most of
my business life In Orlando," he
c o m m e n te d . " I 'v e a lw a y s
thought Sanford would be a
good place in which to a e t ^ a

even a pole to he
we can general!
get It Underw:
approved as well
someone c
t .. he - ^4 ^
J J g L , the light

Security National Corp.
taken over by Bancshares

Cruise marks Smith anniversary

Alaka Mary troop on a earn;
for tNe fait If you Join aooutlrtg,

for Girl Scouts,
tale of two cities

_

■ L iS

know when It m ay b e."

fa J B

QUft Scouts has begun recruiting
far the 1994-99 school year. Year
round school la n6t the only
rM eon far early recruitment.
This fan. the Stardust Service
Unit win 'have its first ever
Camppme. Oemporee to when all
the troops from one service unit
f a camping together. Activities
planned for Camporee include
swimming, canoeing, singing,
crafts ana more. Any girls inter­
ested In Joining Girt Scouts can
oaB local school coordinators.
For Lake Mary High, caU Sherry
F ta c h e r a t 3 3 2 -7 4 3 6 : fo r
Ormnwood Lakes Middle, call
Palty Shawley at 330-4151; for
Lak# M ary Elem entary, call
Connie Flanigan at 321-1967: for
H eath row E lem en ta ry, c a ll
idftda Parks at 3334779: and for
W ilson Elementary, call Cindy
Stump at 324-9993. If you are
unable to get In touch with the
c o o rd in a to rJ ta te d fo r you r
trhin l. you e f f call Mary Rowell
at 321-1499. Adults wishing to

■

SfiS-HSSk
W o tal. h
IS
tlngton chairman and chief execuUve officer, said Tuesday.
Huntington said the trmnsacUoo
w ill hurt profits
somewhat next year.
Huntington haa assets o f $16.5
billion with 351 banking offices
m Ohio. Florida and ata other

had a wonderful marriage. Absolutely. I would do it again and so

would my husband,”

The Smiths credit their strong
Christian faith and their love for
each other for their successful.
happy marriage and "o f always

MARY
ROWELL &amp;
SHARI
BRODIE

the
[fill
md
iutind
re-

The Fun World amusement
park to next to the Flee World
complex, and opened in 1990.
It has o ver 40 rid es and
attractions, including a new
6,000 foot pavilion for enter­
tainment which w ill open on
July 30.

Sanford, enjoys fish in g snd
boating and Ruth, always a
homemaker, likes nshing snd
boating also. They are acUve
m em b ers o f th e M arkham
Woods Seventh-Day Adventist
Church.
*’ ! like the outdoors," Ruth
said. She also said she enjoys
sewing and reading, but her
favorite pastime is spoiling her
grandchildren.
Earl was co-founder and presi­
dent o f CobU Boats. Sanford,
from I960 until 1968. He owned
Star-Line Enterprises. Sanford.

... not taking things for granted
... snd treating the other one like
a friend," Ruth concluded,
_ .
,

Rotlfy Install*

T h e. Sanford R otary Club
....................
ended
the club year —
wtth a
memorable Installation banquet
presentation o f awards and other
club acknowledgements.

1 __
:

..

,

Vv - .

;

'

^

The Longwood Police Department and the
crew from the W XXL-FM 1106.71 played a
bhkrtty aoftbaff game at Candyland Park oh
Sunday, July 10. They bad a great turnout.
M proroatto from the gama a rt to be used to

a.m.-noon. If you need to go to
the senior center but cannot
make tt during the hours they
are open, they w ill schedule an
afternoon or evening appoint­
ment for you.

nan ana nun snwn ovqwywa a O M N Mr mow O N R ia n a j.
founded by Paul Harris In 1906.
Rotary haa been defined as "an
organisation o f busiM M and 1
p rofession al persons un ited
worldwide wbo provide humanltartan service, encourage high
ethical standards tn aJI vocations. and help build goodwill
and peace tn the w orld."
. Jln» f* * * • ‘ T *1*
tary Club haa long uphold this
proud tradition."
O ffic e rs fo r 1994-96 an d
directors Installed by past Die-

secretary: "D o c " Potter, asalstant secretary; Rick Gray, treesurer; John Mercer, club service
chairman: Chris Cranlaa, corn­
munlty service chairman; Stan
R osier. In tern ation al service
ch a irm a n : an d B ob K u h n ,
vocatooal service chairman,
M em bers o f the board o f
am: Charles Kampf.
Chris Cranlaa. Alan Dickey and
Bob Kuhn. 1994-96; Qene Qlssi,
Andy Roberts, Scott Larson and
Stan Rosier. 1995-96; Rocky

’ K iO I/ .ti

*

d a n c e * o c n t a r T N l g h t * 1 1* Dona
Lane.
According to Dave Deemer, dlractor at
promotions o f WXXL-FM. the Longwood
Police Department players are tough competitora who captured the.laad carry tn the
game and never gave U up. The final score
Foye. Amc
w m 15-7. a police victory.
Not only to Assistant Police Chief Baker anaccomplished softball pitcher, he to also an
eloquent public speaker aa he formally
puronano
presented a plaque to the players o f the
HOfNOW
WXXL-FM radio station for the support and
publicity that they have given the city o f Homcowne
Longwood'a teen night club.
a to disc
Present and cheering their Police Departproposed p
m ent to victory were Sean Wilson o f
voluntary.
Longwood and hla friends. Yuieyma Otero,
announced
Krista Clar. Shari Brown and Catherine
drive. BUI I

Crooms graduate named teacher of the year in Georgia
Tlmaouan In Laha Mary want on tha auction Meek In a
ortind forantoaura
aM
t MW
tt&gt;# "IMII
front wwW
door» w*
of M i tm
IM WMW* V i i i i ^
County eourthouM. Jana Jaeewle, toft, foroctoauro
and m a young boy. W hite saya
hla dartre to become a teacher
w m to ha hla Ufa's career. After
g r a d u a tin g fro m C ro o m a
Academy, Whit# furthered his
edu cation and racelved hla

K n oxville C ollege. K noxville.
Tenn.
W hite has taught for over 25
years tn the G eorge School
System. He haa taught music
and hla greatest Joy la teaching
students with specific learning
d is a b ilitie s and e m o tio n a l
b eh avioral disorders. These
students give o f themselves and
wtth the talent given White, he

draws from them the ability to
become active, learning, useful
students, and they go on to be
active persons tn their commu­
nities. White saya that working
with sp-ci*l students ensures
him o f never Laving a boring day
because It to amazing to see
yo u n g p eop le d evelo p s e lf­
esteem as learning takes place
b o th a c a d e m i c a l l y a n d
b eh a vlo ra lly in coop erative­
learning situations.
White said that he will teach
aa long as he haa the strength to
teach and It la that positive
attitude that earned him the
honor o f being named Teacher o f
the Year o f Early County.
W hite's mother was elated to
witness her son's honor. Ruby L.
White o f Sanford was all smiles
aa her oldest son received this
special honor while she waa
vacation in g In B lakely, O s.
where her aon Uvea.
Congratulations to White from
hla fam ily and many friends.
This active Christian young man
c a n b e s e e n o n S i^ n d a y
mornings tn church tn the com­
munities o f Georgia as nuialcian/choir director lo r a number
o f churches in Georgia. When
White la here at home in Sanford
be can be seen and heard al the
organ/ptono at bis home church.
Allen Chapel AME Church.
W hite's love o f teaching and
for young people becoming good
ciUsens will see him sharing hla
God-given special talent with the
students he teaches dally. In
Early County middle and high

Housing authority grods

O Velabrtna Campbell, Lake
Monroe Terrace, to a graduate o f
Sem inole H igh. She to the
daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. WiUto
(Delores) Campbell. Velabrtna
aaplrea to atten d S em in ole
Community College and major
In mass communlatlona.
ft Per* "T o n y " Hayes. Lake
Monroe Terrace, la a graduate at
Seminole High. He to the aon o f
Luthcnta Hayes and aaplrea to
attend Sem inole Com m unity
College.
ft Yvonne Beasley. Castle
Brewer Court, to a spring gradu­
ate o f Bcthune-Cookman Col­
iege, where she received her
bachelor of science degree.
ft Carolina Freeney. Edward
Higgins Terrace, to a
1 -aK* Mary
___ ............ ........ ........ Freeney Clark Court, to a gra
and aspires to attend Seminole S em in ole H igh . Bhi
Community College.
granddaughter o f An
ft Bernard Mitchell Jr.. Lake Roker. She wtU attend i
Monroe Terrace, to a graduate at Avon Perk, Fla.
Seminole High. He. to the first
born o f 11 children o f Mr. and
__ .____«
Mrs. Bernard (Geneva) Mitchell ■H M * •UIWHH
Sr. He haa Joined the United
"J o y In Jcaue" to the
States Marines and has left for this year’s Bible aehoe
boot camp.
Mt. Calvary Baptist

Sanford Housing Authority’s
1994 graduates honored for their
achievements are:

■ ■ ■ ■ ■
!»w i\
- ••# ,■».

.V .

v;u /'V -

\ •; U'Z

1

__

Cops and radio locks take to the field

la k m m a x y

The Lake Mary chapter o f
AARP wtR not be meeting during
July and August. Monthly m eet­
ings w ill resume Tuesday, Sept.
SOT Una «t*nf*ng w ill also be
closed uhtil September. Clssers
staying In session for the sum­
mer Include wood earring on
Mondays from 9:30 a.m.-noon.
the W oople sew ers and art
cleeses, Tuesdays from 9:30
am -noan and art classes on
Thursday from 9:30 a.m.-noon.
Beginning Thursday, July 20.
Job Counseling w ill resume at
the senior center from 9:30

where he manufactured am­
bulances from 1970-1965.
Sanford Rotary-Breakfast Club
honored Earl aa a Paul Harris
Fellow. He la a charter member
o f the club where he served for
many years until he had a heart
attack.
According to a daughter, the
couple's success for a happy
marriage has been. "Iota o f
caring, affection and respect for
each other."
Would Ruth marry Bari all
over again?
"Y e s," she beamed. "W e have

The Stardust Service Unit o f

KM

DORIS
DIETRICH

The First Central Florida Gos­
pel Music U frtgftc Achievement
Awards. Saturday. July 23. 6
p.m. at the Sanford Civic Center.
There J* a dotation o f 916 for
the faUM uerProcccda go toward
the Music OuUd Scholarship
Fund. The achievement awards
w ill be nrarented to Evelyn R.
Clark. ZMa M. Mggona. Sylvia
Stallworth. Earl iT B tn ort. Mary
H - W h it e h u r s t . L o r e t h a
W jIH a m e -O e b y . G e r tr u d e

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida • Sunday, July 17, 1904 - 7B

c o lle c tin

w ic k e r baskets 3 Engineer volunteers his time to build future for others
i akc u ad v
W ork O onnriiiniTu
(SWOPl
?
■,

a
. .
8Dcm ln ole
J , l* ! * ! "
■erv4f ® ‘ °

R &lt; * h a b i l i s u ^ r \ n
8WOP
? S ^ h ? h a t S fs ^
b voS
d L b L ld lL ^ ^ .7 2
y
Hnn n w *K ^i t^ u .? ntmlM,TUrd* ’
cpUeP*y or
h
a
l
l
“ *c**cd ,n
S jj®
c°m P 'un,c«t o n in ^ h u n ^ S ^ ^ h
v
r
d*.‘
S T S f f ^ w i k ^ i l S S and
V Ue? i.*re
rtlc n ta V S ff m . 2?.L-V-iPm
l ow
H1* 1
.[“
"I
and the vocational skills that are

w xn n u m ra io
wlfe Linda for I? yeare. They
hi*,v'L ? ncr ch,Jd*
* years
?Jd. The family has lived In Lake
f ? ryi 0r 2 a yZmn. *nd ■Uend*
. 5t,cP hen ■ Lutheran
C,hureh &gt;*» Longwood. His wife
^ao works in the Volusia County
schools with disabled children.
Hta devotlon to the program
stemmed from previous expertence ^ lth thc d t a b w * " I n*ve
seveml cousins that have dlsabUi&amp; S U he " Ud- ,p ro «m m s like
?S ?rP i" * .
r}CCC*W l and
he,P y * ‘ * ,so “ new that I
wanted to
actively involved in
“ y 'b p S ln ^ e community
that helped others besides Just
engineering organizations and
,ngut0 better " V career ”
? * 'fdtke shared an editorial he
^ d ° " ? ~ n . "A priest did th i.
edtfaffa1 once that talked o f how
n* ^ to not th,nk ^
° the? “ i * 10* dfashled but as
people without disabilities being
temporarily abled. You never

S t o £ ^ t yT h !J c^i°r^nP»?JhlV e
■n
have
■Lx ^
/hn^ 0l , ; i di&lt;mUr:,th
Iu ccefs s fu n v re S in T J lX lJ
!m n V ,2 ™ !ly ,n ,u P P o rte d
%p|fyn^**l1;...
.
___ •
I erTyJ ^ dtke *“ • he®0 «n
JotJd
?C‘
voted volunteer with SWOP for
over six years. He is senior vice

,knOW when J 00 “ Jdd » * sick or was anoSS- topic o f convSHT
in an accident then you are tion. "O ur goal is to make clients
fahd” 1 to°- We as a society have more capable to be hired in a
w h it e w a s h e d e v e r y t h in g competlUve environm ent." he
because we are so politically s a id . “ T h e o f f i c e h a s a
co rrect. W e’ ve d esen sitized workshop. It handles extensive
ourselves."
m ailin g* They make
condi.
^ u d jk e spoke o f how the tionirSj n e*dl7valves M d th fj
poeple In the organization keen do a lot o f oackaxina for
him interested in helping. "T h e and other hotel^Sains." Disney

A v e n u T f o C * ! ^ ^ . . Be,,e
I d e ! S a ,a h S t£ S b2 2 k « w ? n‘
i

z y ik M i

S— — B - A - B

—A -

^ —

a

S i— -»

ocsjcr noOwtCw w e n u tnivcun^i

Jazz music and bhies, and a
back to nature" sray o f living.
Brumley always finds the time to
be on the lookout for more

named u the state of her birth.
‘ T ve been in Sanrord for eight
years.” she said. ” 1 Just love It
h e r e . ” B r u ml e y h i s t wo
children. Brian and Jerry, two
g r a n d d a u g h t e r s and f i ve
grandson* "I m very proud of
all o f them ." she said. " I love my
kids and m y grandkids." In fact.
she described h erself aa, "a
hotueUMly^ and very family or•“ fad- After a hard day o f work
^ _ : , , Nur~ r'_ i? a° y !0t0LM
the daytlly manager. Brumley
y
&lt;! eoot* tta* ’ p^tnttnj . sketching,

2 S

married March 20 . IB M . 0 p.m.,
Philadelphia P.B. Church, Talla­
h a s s e e . T h e R e v . C h a rle s
Serivena peribwaad the tradi­
tional cerem ony.
..
The bride la the dm tfbM r o f
Mr*. Edwins Martin o f fa R a h tt-

* nd
working wtth m y bands.
H er w icker basket collection
began over 10 y e a n ago. " I ’ve
always been Interested In sreavin g s tts w s ," she said. " I ’ve
never m ade a basket but I like to
dtooratc aoroe o f the ones I have.

•J
goS

'

■

eeno,e

- ___ .... ^

noma mr T8VO

j really er^Joy looking at them ."
Her baaketa range In size from
one by two inches to one foot by
two feet. "I'd even have bigger
than one by two, but m v house
wouldn't hold them ." There to
everything from baskets in the
shape o f a duck, an elephant, a
heart and a watering can. although she mentioned that her
elep h an t b asket la " fa llin g
apart." Baskets that are short,
round, long and oblong, all have
a place In BrumleyTs home,
Materials such aa pine needles.

served are: H airy Robson. 29:
Freeman Bagett. 25; Tony Rusal.
24: and Robert Gregory, 23.
The prestigious "Rotarian o f
the Y ear" award went to Scott
Larson for his dedication to the

rattan, twisted paper, twtga and
wicker also arc made Into many
different style baaketa. " I even
have a basket from one o f the old
churches." she said. " It’s one
that waa used Tor collecting
money In. It must be about 25 to
30 years old ."
She spoke o f one o f her
favorite baaketa that to hung
close to her front door. "It's a big
heart tw ig wallhanging." she
said. " I wouldn't part with It for
the w orld." It to decorated with

founder. The sum o f •1,000 In
each o f their names was donated
to the Rotary foundation.
Mike Qood o f the Briar Corpo­
r a tio n w aa p re s e n te d th e
“ George Touhy Aw ard" for hto
fairness and honesty In business
practices.
«
.
Just for the record, past presi­
dents o f the Sanford Rotary Club
In the order they served from the
tim e the club waa organized in
1921 to the present are: Harry R.
Stephens. David L. Thresher.
Oeorge W. Knight. Robert J.

berries and bells. Her neighbor
waa cited aa a source o f many
baaketa In her collection. She
has also made a few o f her
baaketa useful with additions o f
sea shells or candles hanging
from them.
Brumley concluded by saying
that her dream to to one day own
a lot o f land. Chances are those
plana may also include a bigger
house for all the extra baaketa.
Another goal was "to make my
own baskets, some day."

O s o rg e B a b co ck ...M o rtim er
Glover and Birdsie L. Maitbie.
Also: Sidney J. Gary, Randall
Chase. Paul J. Stine. O.W.
Spencer. W illiam A. Lefller.
H erbert J. Pope. H om er H.
Roiiina
iiu riV
^or^ ! ,u n lty' M ary p S S c h !
Coleman, rOeorae
**
oeorge ~
Rollins,
Martin Junior vice commander o f the
Bram, James L. Ingley. R.W,
Buprccht, Holland J. Dean,
H om an j . Lehman and Roy
Holler.
. AI * ° ! „ A ,g y 8 Peer- Lee R.
Lasher. Gordon Brtoaon, Oeorge
BUne. Oeorge Touhy. Orville
hS

S uw
B£^1l Ckerlfea

tejte&amp;vtss

w\r*py#?*7 / w crw w w
* ’ ' JVti-wfw.V'y'Sii1

Tony Rusal, Speed Moreland.
Tom Hunt. John Morris. Pete
Knowles. Jack H orner. Ken
8 andon, R eg H ow e. H arold
Hunzlker, Alan Dickey. Ralph
Larson. Robbie Robertson, Dar­
ryl McLain. Bennie Arnold. Jim
Quinn, Rocky Ford. Randy Rob­
erts and George Wallace.

T h e S anford V etera n s o f
Foreign Ware, Post and Aux­
iliary members. 10106, celebrat­
ed July 4, at the home o f Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer. R o s e # , Jp Lake
Helen.
The group enjoyed 1f i ll e d hot
irgera and covered
-11 aa viewing the
fireworks from the front porch o f
the hosts In this neixhborlnfl

dl**bled clt° p?rmt“

uiiu m e ou ice m ey are a
friendly that 1 almost feel dli
ruptlve to their work. The
realise they are getting so muc
out o f this. We are awing ther
as productive citizens that ca
contribute. U'a a positive wor
with poeiUve resulta/ He eat
that his "prim ary Job as a boar
member is to oversee the nei
addition being built. I also wor!
toward promoting the organize
Uon. Ifa an organlxatin that sib
back and carries on In thi
com m unity without a lot o
notice." Zaudtke said they try U
also involve parents and othen
like banking, accounting anc
engineering groups to help with
the operationa!"TTiere,a alwayi
* rteed for dedicated workers/
Another example o f Zaudtke'a
help e . a volunteer and boi!rt
member has been to make a
presentation to the United Way
for additional funding that has
been needed,
The organization and Its work

’|

V
{i
:
"!

Ruae Oermaln and Pres. Bleanor
Oermaln are at the helm to steer

faroor

Friendship has gone to the dogs
D B A R A B B T t O ur son .
daughter-in-law and grandson
accepted our Invitation for a
M em orial Day cookout/pool
party. They live about a 45minute drive from our home.
.
Our daughter-in-law agreed
somewhat reluctantly to leave*
their dog home, knowing that
my wife and I are not "pet
people.”
Memorial Day morning, our
daughter-in-law telephoned to
say that she was sorry, but she
Just couldn't leave their dog
alone all day. Then she gave me
a "lo ve me — love m y dog"
ultimatum. Indicating that the
dog waa a member o f their
family. She expected me to cave
in and say. "W ell, all right ...
bring the dod."
In s te a d ? ! said. "I'm sorry
your're not coming, but 1 un­
derstand yopr feelings. Perhaps
another tim e."
She sold. "W ell gpgdbye." and
then ahe hung up.
Abby. neither she nor m y son
has communicted with us since.
Waa I wrong? Or waa ahe?
D IT T O DOQMOtTBB
D BAR NAMBLSBBt Who was
right' and who was strong to
unimportant. You had the right
to ban pets from your home, and
ahe had the right to decline your
invitation because she couldn't
bring the dog. The important
Issue here to m aintaining a
friendly relationship with your
aon and hto wife. I urge you to
break the alienee now. before It
escalates Into a perm anent
breach.

turn around? Or do I sit there
and get more and more upset
worrying about getting home-

r

Daniel and I am 11 years old. I
am traveling north in August,
and I w ill be staying for six days,
I am sure I am going to get
homesick, so I am not looking
forward to the trip. You are
usually able to answer people's
questions, so hopefully, you can
answer mine.
What happens if I get bored on
the bus ana want to go home?
Do I go and tell the bus driver to

w“ “ *“ “ d j ; ■fcn5£
n ^ r ° ^ . W
1^ R5 h^
R o b trra *
^ St***1*? Ll
D o m S ^ J o M ^ R n h ^ fUJn cy'

lUa-bunilng ceremony and Boy
8couU « * America. Troop *852^
will give a presentation on drug

Alao: J.S. "R e d " Clevaland.

i W f u n a i Z / ^ ' W ew orkand

^ b^ ho^ ksss; ssEdSiisyr*ura'“
2Sjrs£e,R'M S t s
owners o f the home but U had
faUsa into disrepair. W hile much
o f the apace waa. o f course, given
over to the dally functions o f thc

Mi.
■y

rated with oeriod pieces, os well
i y * 01* °* ^ onSnfal furnish-

I

'"The coincidence lies In the fact
that CUrua Council or Olrl

1

S
4F
M
in

June 22 — Bare
M ichael O alvsZ. &lt;

SSfcnJTC S S
berry, boy; Brenda
Ferguson. Maitland.
June 23 — Mary
selberry, girl: Chris
- i d Derek G
refs. Id
and
Gregs.
boy; T ools a n d D t f s
D e lto n a , b o y : P a m i
M ich ael
S p rin g e , f l i l i r » a i

Csntrai Ftoi£?moreS fotothS?
MW tocillties in May. The re­
y t o d two story office buildi # fooatad on North
Mills

Avenue In Orlando, replaces the
cramped quarters the council
had occupied for the past thirty
ywus. to W inter Park. The new
Citrus Council headquarters In­
clude meeting rooms, training
rooms, office and it council shop
w here uniform s, books and
badges are aold.
Citrus Council services Or­
ange. Seminole. Volusia. Flager.

Brevard and Osoeoia counties.

Olrl Scouting started In Hawaii'
Just five years after It waa
formally organised by Juliette
Low in Savannah, da. Queen
LUiuokalani sponsored the sec­
ond troop.

0
J;
*
*i
*

"T h e original Oahu council
* “ or«antoed in 1918 and first
ch arted b v N a tio n a l H eadQ uw tersInM ayaf lB 1 9 .Itls o o e

.1
]

1

J

serving
B ln *P 8
station

N avy Seam an A p p ren tice
Thomas E. Lee. aon o f Hattie J.
Lee o f 1706 Persimmon Ave..
Sanford, recently completed the
crypotologic technician mmintenance course.

During the course at the Naval
. ..
' T ec h n ic a l T ra in in g C en ter.
e n tic e
station. Pensacola. Fla..
-kfar ° f s tu d en ts are ta u gh t b aale
e le c tr o n ic m a in ten a n ce o f
cported equipment used for coding and
jo jjo n
deciphering coded messages.
i7vv in
The 1993 gmduate o f Semiy
nole High School, Sanford Joined
the Navy in June 1993.

T h e H aw aiian council has
Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class
Maurice V. Holloway, a 1981
gradu ate o f Sem inole H igh
School o f Sanford, recently re­
ported for duty at Fleet Training
Center, Naval Station. Norfolk.
Va.
He Joined the Navy in Decem-

mors than 30 years o f sendee in
the various chuichaa and choirs
o f this community. This aflair
w ill highlight their contributions
to ths world o f music,
-The guest speaker w ill be the
former Sanfordite, Dr. Audrey F.
Branson, who grew up In the
Sanford area and to the founder
and pastor o f the Sanctuary
Church o f the Open D oor,
Philadelphia. She has always, aa
a child in the Sanford area, had
the tremendous desire to bring
about changes In the Uvea o f her
fellow man. and In the faith o f
hto ability to help himself.
D r. Bronson has received
many outstanding asrards for
her educational and Christian

County
JJ“ derd
Whatlej
cvnthto
iwr ^ r
m - .___
n iM
* . 47'
a J S lS
.J - V J
'

�M - Santord Herald, Sanford, Flortda - Sunday, July 17, 1M4

by Chic Young

" YOUR BIRTHDAY
Sunday. July 17,1 N 4

BEETLE BAILEY

T¥0 AM., XM E1ARVIN# AMP
THfKfV MOTHMAfUTACAN

THEBORN LOSER

b y A rt tan aom
P U K M O E S O rc T H IN b
O R A B lW N O U .

PKYOIER
p ia n !

j£ T ?

|

rr*i

by Cbartos M. Schulz

AS TEAM MAMAttMW
I ASK YOU SOMETHING?

E m m ®&amp;

Recognition or advancemei
that haa been denied you In yoi
chosen field o f endeavor cou
come through In the year ahea
Keep up the good work, becaui
It will be acknowledged.
CANCER (June 21-July 2
Don’t take life too seriously
today. In fact; think or It aa a
game, but play to win. This can
be both fun and productive, If
you follow the rules. Cancer,
treat yourself to a birthday gift.
Send for your AstroGraph pre­
dictions for the year ahead by
mailing S I.28 to Astro-Graph,
do this newspaper. P.O. Box
4469. New York, N.Y. 10163. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today
you could have a great deal o f
Inner resolve upon which to
draw. This strength o f character
will serve you well and be an
Inspiration to those who observe
you.
VIKOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Something In which you became
Involved recently has greater
potential than you may have
anticipated. Fortunately, today
you might become aware o f Its
total value.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Base
your Judgment pertaining to
material matters on things you
know work from your own past
experience. What was a winner
previously can be one once
again.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your leadership qualities are
accentuated today. Others may
wish to please you. not because
o f your commands, but because
you'll Inspire them to do so.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Things you unselfishly do for
others today could produce un­
sought benefits for yourself as
well. The wheels are set In
motion by the goodness o f your
heart.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
10) T ry to spend your day with
friends In whom you can con­
fid e . S o m e th in g m u tu a lly
advantageous could result from
an exchange o f confidential In­
formation.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
You have a manner about you
today that makes others feel
com fortable In your presence

and easy to work with. Those
who sense this may help you
achieve something you couldn't
do on your own.
1
R A C E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
Y o u 're In a good cycle for
developing social contacts who
could be o f help to you In several
areas o f your life. Make the best
Impression you can when meet­
ing others for the first time.
ARIES (March *1-Aprtl 10)
You could be extrem ely adept
today In helping others sort out
their problems. Usually a arise
course o f action (s to avoid
butting In, but today may be an

exception.

. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Oo
ahead and take a firm stance
today on Issues you know more
A b o u t. than you r peers do.
Eventually those with whom
you ’rfr Involved w ill see the
merit in your move.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Someone who needs skill or
knowledge you possess m ight be
w illing to pay a fair price for
your talents today. Be reason­
able regarding arhat you ask for
vour services.
C op yrigh t 1004 NEW SPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
J .

E y —

expect others to fill In the gaps

rw i

sensitive today and cause you to

M o n d a y . i B r H l t M •P tnuM on* tnc ■nunet •ana tryb y T .lt ftyan

In the year ahead, you might
be luckier In ventures or enter­
prises Initiated fay others than in
those you originate yourself. Be
on the lookout tor a productive
pirtn enh lo.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
allowed to establish your oam
pace today where your work Is
concerned, your tndustriousnesa
might run at a low ebb. Be a
self-m otivator. Major changes
are ahead for Cancer In the
com ing year. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mall 01.28 to Astro-Graph, d o
this nearapaper. P.O. Box 4468,
New York. N.Y. 10163. Be sure
to state vour
elan.
LBO (July 2 3 - A u * fi) Usually
y o u 're a p erson w h o g e ts
reasonably good mileage out o f
the dollars you spend. Today,
however, you might have blind­
ers on where real values are
concerned.
M O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
do not believe in your
today, don't

again and again if necessary.
LIBRA (8eptw&lt;2M&gt;ct: 23) T ry
not to let vour emotions dom i­
nate your thinking today. If your
fed Inga pervade your Judgment,
you m ight end ig&gt; making poor

D on 't nurture unreasonable
expectations.» v • PIECES (Feb. 20-Maich 20pln
endeavors today that require a
collective effort, don't take fall
credit for th irty others help
bring about. Leave room on
stage for everyone to take a
curtain call.

(O ct 24-Nov. 22)
Your assessment o f others is
questionable today. There Is a
possibility you might cater to the
(March 21-April 10) Do;
undeserving and Ignore those
who warrantyou r full attention.
today to subordinates with queer
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. ' i n IiN * oN H iifi. The product
21) In order to ach ieve an
they produce may be up to their
standards, but not yours.
Important objective today.' you
must be both assertive and bold.
TAURUB (April 20-May 20) Be
If you're not properly motivated.
carefal regarding your romantic
It could Just turn Into a practice
Involvements today, tt you tres­
pass down forbidden paths, you
(Dec. 22-Jan.
could end up with a headache,
10) Keep all o f your dealings out
as well as a heartache. '
In the open today- If you attempt
OEMDn (May 21-June 20) In
to do something coy. regardless order to placate somebody you
o f how harmless it might be. It like, you might fed obligated
cou ld produce n eg a tive retoday to make a commitment
without your heart being In t t
AQ U AR IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 10) C o p y rig h t1004 NEW SPAPER
Your feelings^ might be unduly “
------ASSN.

V . V 'i

. i

•

are many instructive

hi "Kosher Bridge 2 " by

- W tU

x c / V / r * r/ w e
W TH O J* N O S T

U TTt*

0 * 0 tO fliTf!
D ayU
•«
N

MM.

Au stralian Ron K lin ger
E n g lis h m a n D a v id E
p u b lish ed b y O ollan cs. M y
particular favorite Is the one In
today's diagram. The correct
play la easy to overlook.
'a lour no-trump was
n Key Card Blackwood.
Roman
North's reply sheared either one
ace or the heart king. So the
rabbi, sitting West, knew that
hie partner couldn't have the
club ace. South wouldn't have
bid the slam miming both an ace
and the trump king. Therefore,
the rabbi led the spaoe 10.
Declarer won with dummy's
king and played a heart to his
queen, which held. He returned
to the dummy with a diamond
and led a second trump, but
when East discarded. South
couldn't recover. He won with

the ace and played a third
trump, but the rabbi Just exited
with a diamond. South had to
play dubs from his hand. And *•
when South saw that the club
working all along, he
about his bad luck,
to you think?
The rabbi played very well to
duck the heart king. If he wins
trick taro, the contract is easy to
make. But after returning to the
dummy in diamonds at trick
three, the declarer should have
cashed the spade ace and dis­
carded his diamond ace. Now
when West wins the third round
o f hearts, he la endplayed.
Whichever suit he leads, de­
clarer can
winning club
I V
fin w as and discard hia two tow
4 NT
clubs an dummy's spade Jack
and

* 7 1 4 1 1

97

•
174
*K II 4
SOUTH
•Q

VAQJlIII
•AI
*A 7 1 1

•V

H ig

T h e book ia available for
016.48 from The Bridge World.
30 West 04th Street. New Yack.
NY 10028-7124.

'SMir

NEWSP

by Lvoqsr#
voO &amp; rop
fO TU S/N

^jam
a's?
JftfS S rS fiS J

S r .- .'3T * ? P
S -^ V « 5 t !S t

1

i

/

�Sanford HtraJd, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1904 - M

ongress eyeing ways to
ombat dom estic violence
IPrtGGWritor
WASHINGTON — Publicity surrounding the
&gt;-J- Simpson c u e to giving new impetus to ■
in Congress to make police, prosecutors
I Judges more sensitive to the problem or
nestle violence.
No FBI agents would be dispatched to arrest
Ife-beoten under provisions o f a pending crim e
&gt;111* But in addition to training for taw enforce-lent people, there would be money for new
lelters, public education program s and a
victim s' hot-line.
"T h e Judicial training, the law enforcement
training. I think that would have sensitised the
law enforcem ent people who were called
to
check out emergency calls by Nicole
Simpson, said Rep. Connie Morelia. R-Md. "U
would hatve sensitised the judges.'
About §1.8 billion o f the 830 billion, six-year
crime bill would be devoted to this problem under
the proposal being pushed by the heads o f the
House and Senate Judiciary committees. Rep.
Jack Brooks. D-Tesas. and Sen. Joseph Blden,
D-Del.
A key benefit In the eyes o f Blden — who
launched a lonely effort for the measure four
years ago — Is the Incentive it provides to local
Jurisdictions to encourage s m ore hands-on
approach toward domestic violence situations.
Such a policy change would require police
officers to make arrests If* they find probable
cause that a woman was beaten, regardless o f
whether she wished to press charges.
"N inety-five percent o f the tim e, there's a man
standing there and a woman bleeding, there’s no
arrest." Blden said. "T h e reason there Isn't to
because the cop turns to the 112-pound woman
next to the 220-pound man and says, 'Are you
going to swear out a complaint?’ "
Knowing the man w ill likely be out o f Jail
quickly, only to take out his anger on her all over
-again, this typical beating victim declines to press
c n irle t. the —
Mi d.
"lu th e cop has to arrest, she's o ff the hook."
&gt;^Biden said. "S h e can turn and say, 'H oney. 1
/didn't do thia."*
• The legislation that emerges from the HouseSenate conference committee likely w ill authorise
n up to $128 million for Jurisdictions with pro11arrest policies In domestic disputes, a Senate side
■aid. Such policies are in place In about h alf o f the
080 states.
l'° Although the language In the draft Mil would
^ n o t make spousal abuse a federal crime. It would
I.* make protective "sU y-aw ay" orders effective
•'across state tines;
1J And Blden said the final crim e bill w ill likely

Include a Senate-passed provision letting victims
o f gender-based violence flte federal civil rights
lawsuits against their attackers — a change
apposed by those fearful o f clogging federal
courts.
Husbands or boyfriends assault an estimated 4
million women per year, said Rita Smith or the
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence.
FBI statistics show husbands or boyfriends killed
at least 1,432 women tn 1992.
Advocates o f stronger legislation to combat
violence against women take Issue with people
who say the legal system in Los Angeles gave
special treatment to O.J. Simpson.
"Th e failure o f the system to respond adequate­
ly " to Nicole Brown Sim pson's cries for help "to
the rule, not the exception," said Eleanor Smeal,
president o f the Fund tor the Feminist Majority.
"T h ey call and they call and they calf for help
and nothing happens," Smeal said. "P olice
frequently think their job to just to cool o ff the
moment, walk them around the block."
To Rep. Pat Schroeder. D-Colo.. the bill's
passage would send the "unequivocal message
that police, prosecutors and Judges ... con no
longer cast aside domestic violence and stalking
as personal problem s."
A relatively Inexpensive yet highly touted
proposal to the provision in the pending bill that
would provide 82.8 m illion to finance a national,
24-hour, toll-free hot line for domestic abuse
victims.
" I believe most victim s o f domestic violence feel
they are rem ote." even those tn big cities, said
Morelia, a sponsor o f the bill. "T h ey feel like
they're hostages."
Although the House and Senate crime bill
conferees may adjust the numbers, Blden has
proposed, among other things:
—81 billion to train police, prosecutors and
Judges to Improve their treatment o f violent
crimes against women, finance more officers and
prosecutors for such cases and expand victim
services such as rape crisis centers.
—8328 million for battered wom en's shelters.
—8220 m illion for rape and fam ily violence
education, starting In Junior high school, and
other public awareness programs.
—82.8 million for the hot line, which would be
accessible to the hearing Impaired and those who
speak languages other than English. The House
bill sought 8700 million.
Crime bill deliberations had stalled before the
Fourth o f July recess over an unrelated con­
troversy. Sponsors hope major headway can be
made before Congress takes its annual summer
break In early August.

A n d now, live from deep space,
jlhe Ju p ite r comet, collision
P H IL A D E L P H IA - W h a t
Lj,pigh t be the greatest e xplosion
[■ tn human history to expected to
* occur In the next few days, when
huge chunks o f s com et slam
.ijn to the far side o f the giant
,i.olanet Jupiter,
lC1 And ItB b e on livetefevtoloo.
L P h ila d e lp h ia PBS sta tio n
[W H Y Y -T V w ill televise Images
| from the Hubble 8|pace tS e *
to Illustrate the epochal
m &gt; o f the comet — called
t -Shocmaker-Levy 9 — with the
solar system 's largest planet*
Lr Jupiter, which to 917.S times
J m ore massive than the Earth, to
|i about 390 m illion miles from our
I , planet and 483 million m iles
(.distant from the sun.
"It's remarkable that we can
s h a re s o m e th in g th a t's a
M illion m iles aw ay." producer
lean Holsten m id. "I'm tn awe
Lof It a ll."
"T h e Great Comet
LCraah" sire live tn eight o f the
(T o p 10 markets at 10:90 p.ro.
I E O T Wednesday, July 20. ac­
cording to a PBS spokeswoman,
. It w ill air live or delayed In about
140 percent o f the country.
i . --------o f the planet taken
r Impact w ill be relayed
I from NASA by com puter and
■t r a n s l a t e d

In to

te le visio n

|pictures by W HYY. HoMen said.
|The T V station then w ill beam
|the pictures across the country
I b v — tr ill t r

T h e a p e c la l w ill fe a tu re
m tiuy from adcaos fiction
Arthur C. Clarke, who
about a com et hitting

Earth ln 'hto.movel "Ham m er o f pweep past Neptune In 1989.
ABC. CBS and NBC have no
G od." He’ll speak by videophone
sp ecia ls schedu led, but are
from his home in Sri Lanka.
It also w ill Include interviews expected to cover the event
with astronomers around the th ro u g h d a lly n ew a c a a ta ,
world, including the three who network officials said.
CNN plans to uae Hubble
discovered the comet, Carolyn
an d E u gen e S h oem a k er o f Images In "extenalve, live coverFlagstaff. Aria., and amateur age'T beginning Saturday, with
scien ce correspon den t M iles
David Levy.
The com et, a massive "d irty O’ Brien at N A S A 's Ooddard
snow ball" o f dust. rock. Ice and Space Center In Maryland.
Astronomers w ill be watching
ash with a tail an estimated IB
m illion m iles long, baa broken the giant planet to aee whether
In to ab ou t 20 Tiuge p ieces the Impacts cause a long-lasting
expected to begin pelting Jupiter storm or perhaps another blem ­
ish to the planet’s surface, sim i­
oo Saturday.
Just what w ill happen then to lar to the swirling vortex o f
Jupiter's famed Great Red Spot.
uncertain.
Producers plan to spilt the TV
Somp scientists predict the
screen Into three segments, one
s ix -d a y b om b a rd m en t w ill
carrying reaction from experts In
punch holes the site o f Texas
the studio, another the latest
Into Jupiter’s atmosphere, kick
Image o f Jupiter, and the third a
up dual showers, and radiate
flashes o f light that w ill be scrolling, on-line commentary by
v is ib le am on g the p la n et’ s astronomers around the world
hooked up through the Internet
computer
network.
Other scientists believe that
Scientists have predicted that
Jupiter, a "gas giant" 317.8
tim es m ore massive than the the collision will unleash a blast
between 200 and 20.000 times
Earth, m ight absorb the Impacts
the e x p lo sive pow er o f the
without even a belch.
world's entire nuclear arsenal.
Although view ers won't be
On th at sca le, the bom b
able to see a motion picture o f dropped on Hiroshima, Japan,
the event, still pictures and during W orld W ar II would be
analyses w ill be provided within comparable to someone striking
hours o f Impact. Holsten said.
a match, said Derrick Pitta,
" It’s Just like any other, pro­ co-h o st o f th e sp ecia l and
gram aa for as bow we’re putting d irecto r o f the Franklin Init together." Holsten said. "It's stitute'a Fels Planetarium.
the content that's so wacky. We
"T h e Earth would be d e­
have our Angers crossed."
stroyed If we got hit with 20
W HYY also produced "N ep­ fragments at this force," Pitta
tune A ll Night, a live, seven- ■aid. "A t Jupiter. It's not that
big a deal."
hour broadcast o f Voyager 2 *

Lggil Notices
FICTITIOUS
NAMEy
u
—
s

19

y

L tg tl N o tlc o
a

mm I

am tngapod m kusireu si MS
Somoren I M M is tot Cm
oolfeirfy. FL X V , Somlnoto
County, PIorMs, ywSor too
FkttttoMNamoof
ALL CERAMICS, on4 IM I
IntonS to rootFor oold m
with tfw PMolon of Carp*
Hans. ............. Florida. in
of mo f kimono Homo
To-Wit: Section SUSS, Piortao
ItohSootftl.
TofotoToumour
Publkh: July 17, f*t*
DBT-IS1
IN TNI CIRCUITCOURT
POR SXMINOLK COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
INNS: I t TATEOF
CHARLES I. ALLEN. JR.
NOTICEOF
ADMINISTRATION
Tito oSmInitiation of mo
octoto at CHARLES I. ALLEN,
JR., docoeooA Fllo
M-Mf-CF, la saneinf In mo
Circuit Court lor iomlnolo
County, PlarMo, Puboto DMHon, tho iSSrtn of wWch Mlit
N. Fork A*o„ Sontore, FL
11771-ttM. Tho nomoo one

NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUSNAME
Noltco h herehy given met l
em engaged In buolnio* et Mi
Sprint Leho Hill* Drive, Alls
monte Springs. FL St7tL* Bern
IneN County, Florida. undor M*
FietlHou* Nome el COURT
REPORTING ANO DEPOSI­
TION SERVICES, one Met I
1*m| h w h 9

§■,
IMP

ii ■ m ■
^T^^srl^w

wtfh Me DivHkn el Corpora­
tion*. TeMeheteee, Piertee. In
occorOewc* wtm Me prevision*
el Me Pteittteu* Nome Statute*.
To-Wit: Secllan •**.«*, FlerM*
SteMo* trei.
JulioMeLochlan
•NOTE: Physical peer*** In
Altomonto I* used only lor
*1 physical
PuhfNh: July IT, 1f*4
OETtM

fesMeefe^m n l o l j s a

nsriny l ie iiiie

on whom s «JX,«
' Si m*
notlea H
Noof Iho tint
publication el MN notice meet
file their claim* with MN Court
WITHIN THE LATIN OF
THREE MONTHSAFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST FURLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAVI AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COFV OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All othor craeitor* el Me

INTNI CIRCUITCOURT
OFTNRIMNTEBNTH
JUDICIALCIRCUIT,
INANOFOR
•IMINOLECOUNTY,
FLORIDA
CAMNOifMMS-OR-M-P
IN RE: ThoMerriesto f ^ H
JIRROLO KENNETH REED.

NOTICEOFACTION
om ouinoN of marriage
TO: REGINAA. FOOARTV
REED
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED Msl an edHn Nr BHaotv•tenet
« copy el your
If“ 6HV* 1I*
6ItIten
66
JIRROLO KENNETH REID.
P*ItHanoi, when oSOreo* it 14
STONE QUARRY TRAIL.
ORMONO BEACH. FLORIDA
MI74 on or Mere Auguot ta

WMim

the ctork of MN court
mer or
. II you tell le
im s
'* ““
*_
-_
■
Vmslw
fV—
TM8i
WITNESS my h
reel a( MN Court on July I*.
(SIAU
MARYANNI MORSE
CLIRKOFTHECOURT
ByNencyR. Winter
DeputyCtork
i/Mwi: July 17,14114

AuuuWT,

OETM7

cleimt or

tile Iholr
. wtlHtM
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUSLI
CATIONOF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS
ANO OOJICTKMtt NOT SO
FILED WILL El FOREVER
BARRIO.
Tho isN ol mo tint putotci
m el mi* Notice le July IT,
HN.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF T N I RIOM TIINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND POR
SEMINOLE COUNTV.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CAMNO.SMMCA
DIVISION HD
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTOAOE ASSOCIATION.

•TtHkhary KneMCt.
Apapka.PLI
Attorneytor I

HANS HOLOtAUSER, Ot

FAITH K.STALNAKBN
Att*m*yol Low

TO: RAaiARAC. HOFKI
LASTKNOWN RISIOINCSt
SSI Morfeor City Perhwoy

: July IT A M , HO*

OIT-tM

CUNNINT RESIDENCEt
rent le

YO U A R E N O T IF IE D Me* on
ecttre N Nreriree e

iPTCRNUtPFElWI
MHS
SFMFDDWVA

TTPorB
«7Buke
mmmwm
aitar
MUmtoe 1MOCAMMJJ6Mf2i
Tho Auction *M bo koto al
il:SB pm on Mte Soto* ohovs.
McCowwII Towtog a Recovery,
nm. Proopocttre
•el*. Tons* are
Cartlllee FonBo. McCownoli
Me right N
FuMIth: July IT, ISM
DET-tto
O F T N E B ta N T E B IfT N

SEWUN0LECel3y,,|
L O T S. BLO CK N . L A K E
M ILLS SHORRS. ACCORDING
T O TH E F L A T TH E R E O F AS
R IC O R O C D IN F L A T BOOK
I I . FA D ES M AN O I L O F T H E
PUBLIC RECORDS O F SE M I­
N O L E C O U N T V , F L O R ID A .
LESS AN O E X C E P T A L L
RIOHTS, T IT L E AN O IN T E R ­
E S T O F G RANTOR IN AN O T O
A N D F O R T H E U SB A N D
B E N E F I T O F E R A N TO R
UPON LO TS S A N O 4 BLOCK
A , L A K E M ILLS SHORES. AS
F E E F L A T R ECO RO CO IN
F L A T BOOR It. F A O E 14 O F
T H E P U B LIC RECORDS O F
SEM INOLE C O U N TY , F LO R ­
IDA, G U A R A N TE E D B Y DOC­
U M E N T E N T IT L E D D E C LA ­
R ATION O F RESTRICTIONS,
WHICH WAS f t lC O A M D IM
O F F IC IA L RECORDS BOOK

see,
FLO R ID A
• C A S IN O .
H IG H L A N D S ___

ASSOCIATION, INC.

pag e ess. ano r e ­
recorded in OFFICIAL

as*

RICHARDT .S M I
ANNS M gHOWHe
n o t ic e o f s m b

toyhas •
el Fbwl JuBpnesl m
MtodJtdy 14 NBA
NME CCR L el
. Court M aetf Nr
County, Ftortie. In
which HIGHLANDS HOMEOWNERS' ASSOCIATION.
INC.. I* Me PtoM
ARDT. BROWN I
BROWN are M e________ .
etW (ON Is Me NgRoMone heel
htodtrtoremholtoo Stool b ml
sf

C O U N T V . F L O R ID A , R E ­
SERVING SUCH E IG H TS TO
G R A N TO R H E R R IN . A N D
G R A N T E E B V E IC O R O IN O
T H IS O R EO DOS I H E R E B Y
W AIVE A N Y AN O A L L R M H T
O F ACCESS AN O USE FOR
IO N O R O T H I R I
M BS T O SAID LO TS I
A N D 4, B L O C K A . F O R
O E A N TE E AN O G R A N T E E ’S
H U E S , ASSIGNS AN O
G R A N TE E S . P U R SU AN T TO
SAID D O CUM EN T. F U R TH E R
W A IV IN O F O R G R A N T E E
A N O G R A N T E E 'S H U E S .
ASSIGNS A N O G R A N T E E S ,
A N Y A N D A L L R IG H T T O
E N FO R C E A N Y R IG H T OR
• B M iF it G R A N T E D G V SAID
D EC LAR ATIO N O F N E S TE 1C-

of 11;to *jn ., an /

M FM M

Sell your
unwanted items
fry calling and placing an
urr Classified D ept today!
ad w ith o u

. 4.
•"
FW jk
AMERICANS WITH HSAEILITIESACTOF HN
I
Ne.to«

Sorrow &amp; ■
P la intiff’ * a lterney]

ver4 SuNe TO!. Tempo. FtertBe

*en* w tM e i

s

fell
of M l N . For* Arenue, SuNe N.
SSI. SeeN rA Fleriee M m e*
Drier N Me
B it. MW/’ IM s ie M w i
CTO Q I, W IM G M S W N (V I. H e

_ I fee.
i he two
In M e Sen lore

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

: July it a seme
D E T IM

■ H M a H H iip g M

P roposal Bocum tnl* or*
avolltbk, at no cast. In ttw
offlc* of Purchotine, Room M l
farB. PlortBo MTT1. (SOT) JJ0M ll. It I* monBatory Mat you
roc* 1vo nroaoiol Becumont*
prior to w m [ftlnf a preeotal.
S e a l o B p r o a o t a l t or
oaprowlsn* ot Intorosf ore Bi
In Mo ONka ol Purchrelnf, I
N. F o rt Arnnuo, Room M i,
SontorB, PtsrtBo 33T71, no lator

Man t:M pm. on
July 17. me. Let* offort will b*

CtfyolSentord
F.O. Dm 1no
SenfWBLFtltm-ITM
D FerheoBOeMreryi
FurthetlneApwiI,
RoomMl
City of SontorB
IM NorthPert Avenue
SontorB, PI HT71
Proporel* will he ovelueteB
uolnf the tofocflon crltorie ref
termIntheprepreel Bocumonf*.
The City el SontorB reform
the rlfht le accept or r*|ect any
or ell proporelt, wrthor wllhout
como, le waive toctwiicilltl** or
to accept proporel* which. In It*
luQpomint. boot wrvo* M* intorrettf MoCtfy.
Parson* with Blteblllll**
to porikl
(r^ft* (n
of (tre *roc**Bn*f
thouIB contact tho City Paraannol Dopertmont ADA CoorBlnotor M hour* In eBvanc* ol Mo
meoflnf *1epT/HOMM.
CITYOF SANFORD
wvnvr mfdwwiwi
Purchotine Aponf
PuOllsh: July IT, 1?M
OET-Ut
N O TIC E T o V h I P tiiL IC
Notice I* herehy pi von Mot tho
BeorB *1 ABIuotmont ol tho City
*1 SontorB will hole a refuiar
mootlnp on July I t t m In M*
City Hell Comm M e n CTiemher*
et fltlS AJM. In erBortecenoiBer e r e m i t lor vorlonca In Mo
In n In* OrBManco re It porioln*
lie* yore roeulramont* In a
SR-ietttrtcton:
Lot 1S4 San Lent* SrB Soc. P I
I I F O TS of Mo Public RocorB*
» i i*nHiw n w U nrft r perm.
Dome mere ipecincelly Bo• crib o B e* l ec et eB: U S I
VelendeCt. I .
PlenneB ure ol Me preperiy I*
to erect on eBiltlen onto e

oMpie-femilyr

Lorry Rlelr,
“
‘ AMi
AD V IC E T O T H E PUBLIC: II
e person Bretote to eepeel e
BKItlen modi with retpect to
/ matter conilBoroB et Me
above mootlnp or hoorlne,
ho/oho will nooB a vorhotim
record ol Mo
Bonce, which record I* not
proviwe by Mo City at SontorB.

tP IH M M I

PERSONS WITH OISADILIT it* NIROING ASOISTANCR
TO PARTICIPATE IN ANY OP
THEIR M O CEIOING S
SHOULDCONTACT TNE PER
OONNEL OFFICE AOA COOROINATOR AT MO-MI* 40
HOURS IN ADVANCE OF THE
MEETING.
PuOMre: Jvtyrh it, tree

O ET-S t

IN T N E C IR C U IT CO U RT
O F TN R E IG H TE E N TH
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
FO R SEM IN O LE COUNTV.
FLO R ID A
CASE NO: n -llM -C A -l* -E
HA R O LD K. S W IFT and
A L V IR A A . SWI F T . Me WIN.

Plaintiffs.

F R A N K S E LB Y and NAVY
O RLAN D O F E D E R A L C R E D IT
UNION,
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
m et purs went to the Order
tMg Fared wore Sato onen ttw TM Bay ef July, ire*

In Me ceuoe ponding In Me
CVcult Court, In and tor Semi­
nal* County, Florida. Civil
Cauaa No. n-llMCA-M-B. Me
Clerk will tell Me
property shuetad Int*M Caunfy
at *
ft . North el ’
nor el Section 14 Teomhlp I*
South. Range I* Beat, tor Me

fPffl wl i|^H^^^V§sM
pagpai rfa§n

Snue le ru n Tfe rM IH tt„ M m
ret R M S It. Thence run
l i t tt„ Mence run Beet
N . to eolnt el keglnnlng
M fl. tor *w right-of-way

■ EXCLUDING THE FOLLOWINO OESCRIUO PERSONAL
PROPERTY: HN Menatoa 11*
n O t. while with brownish-

cl* Idontltlcellen Number:
geeeeii***/ Title Number:
at Public tele to Mo hlghott and

Bni 9f98Br war cawi awarung
the hour of ll: M o’ctoch a.m. an
Mo *m el Auguot, IW 4 in Mo
' b h y e l Semlnelo County
urthouM, Clark's Othca, M l
N . Fork Avonuo, SentorA SomlnotoCtuwty. Ftorldo.
In occordonre wHh Mo Amer­
ican* WIM DtsaMlltfa* Act, par«• wIM BtoMHHN* noodtog o

m to eertlcipeto In this pn•eroding
•houie canted Court Admlnto
tootlen el Ml North Fork AveSuito NMI. SentorA Fler
Ida am , toiephen* lean
Sot. m t. net letor
aevee 171 Bays prior to Me
“ .IT
' ‘
TOOl I
(V) l-M
EMeySl
OATfiiO Ml* TM Bey ot July,
MARYANNS MORSE
Ctorke*MeCourt
Ry: JeneE. Jetewic
OoputyClerk
Pwbltoi: July 17414 IM*
OBT-ll*

Legal Nollcts
IN T N * C IR C U IT COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN AN D FOR
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A

CASE NO. W-1M4-CA-1AE
LEAOER FEDERAL RANK
FORSAVINGS.
Plaintiff.
JAIME R. RODRIGUEZ, of *1..
Dofondnnllt).

NOTICI OF ACTION
TO: JAIME R.ROORIOUEZ/
MARIA D. RODRIGUEZ
R**M*nco: Unknown
Lett KnownMailing Address:
HI PohVoiNy Court,
LongwooB, PLton
Any unknown hoir e , Stvlreet.
grenlee*, etslgneo*. Honors,
creBIlore, trusloo*, or othor
claiming by, through, under and
a g a i n s t J A I M E R.
RODRIGUEZ and/or MARIA D.
RODRIGUEZ
Rothhnco: Unknoum
YOU ARE NOTIFIED Mot an
action ta tori clwo o morigogi
on tho Mlowing praporty In
ammummV8Wijrt rerm .

Condominium Unit IM , Build­
ing 14 ot H ID D E N SPRINGS
CONDOMINIUMS, according to
the Declaration of Condominium
recorded on November 1L IM*
in Official RocorB* Rook ISM
page* 0M thru res and omondod
by first onwnBmont MorsSo r *
cerdod on March 14 IMS In
Official RocorB* Book H13,
Pago* *71 thru ag4 further
omondod by omonWnonf Morefo
rocordoB February 14 ItM In
Olficlal RocorB* Book t m ,
p o g it 77 th ru 17, f u r lh t r
amondsd by amendment Morefo
record** Pth ruory M, IMS In
Official RocorB* Book 1711
pig** N * thru *74 further
mswoMeAl^l « T iM
e^^^rehtotoe^^^reE1E
G^^^reS^a
amvnOTI
BrllilWIIMHI
HNTVIU

** - * ---------— - wre
gu
|_
racoreM rcaiw
y w, &lt;liet
in
Official Record* Reek 1711
peee* f71 thru M4 Public R*cord* et temlnoN County, Flor­
id*, Ngithor wIM all eppurte-

n a jiM a
mm
nmUME
lUVrYm 8119 W
ET WwRVNVV

Interest Inth* commonMoments
ot said Condominium a* ret
torlh In said Declaration.
gamer wIM: Fireplace. Pad­
dle Fens, Mirrored Closet
or, P upoiei. Rang*, Waaher,
Dryer, mcr^reeve,
hoe been filed against you and
•Mere end you ere rogulred le
vo e copy of your wrtttan
WN04 II any, to It on SM ITH
A SIMMONS. F A ., Plaintiff*
attorney*. I l l West Adam*
eel, SuNe 1114 Jacksonville.
Florida SUM . no mere then
thirty (M l Beys from the first
puMlcetHn dare et IhN notice ot
ecttan, and tile the ertglnel wHh
Iho Clerk et mis Court either
before service on Plaintiff's

eftorj eMerertie, a Betoull will
■NkkflHPHtol AUMMlPba* uiui fobW T
|b
m
T^N
p
M
N
w
nandsB
In
the
com
■ la t a i
u a illu

P*8wlfMpiTlllBna
m

Notice: American* WIM Dlieb l l l t l o * A c t Of It*#, ABnlttrotlvo Order No. **-M.
Person* vriM a disability who
id a modal
to partldpeto
in Ml* i
------* * w . ---- ^
pmm cpiiKi
iisOT—,r __
dlnetor at Ml North Fork Avo­
nuo, Sulto H.301, lentorA FtorMo M771at toool fhmday* prior
t o ^ e g wr e a t o A Wo ^ e :

iy Patricia P. ttoom
OoputyCNrk
PiSfili July WAIT, tree
oar-7e
IN T H E C tN C V IT CO U RT
O F T N E ItT H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, NS A N O FOR
SEM IN O LE C O U N TV,
FLO R ID A .
CASE N*. C l M -HM -CA-I4-L
U N IV S R U L AM ERICAN
M O R TO A O E COMPANY,

PtoMtlft

JOHNS. HARDY, JR..otal..
N O TIC E IS H B R E G V O IVR N
pursuant to a Summery Ftoal
Jla^MHfeMBil
1“
J * *

FMruery II,
•d July I I , tt*4 l
in Care No. C l n -u e p C A -ts-L o f
Mo Clrcuft Court ol Me ISTH
Judicial Circuit in and tor IB M I N O L E County, Flo rida ,
whoreln U N IVER S A L A M E R I­
CAN M O R TO A O E COMPANY,
Plaintiff, and JO HN A HARDY,
JR ., ol el., ore dotondonts, 1will

at Me Woof Front Door ol
the Semlnelo County CourtFlorida, et Me
hour ot HiM are., on the MM
doy ot August. Ito4 Me follow
Mcrlbed prepotly OS sot
la
s RLasjijgl :|JLHEUN4avW vPlftlkl
wl1
MfPMi

Jvdgminl.towH:
LOT IIS
ML TH E

V ILLAS OF
CASSELB ER R Y PHASE TWO.
ACCORDING T O T H E F L A T
T H E R E O F . R E C O R D E D IN
F L A T BOOK SA FA G S H . M.
AN O SI O F T H E P U B LIC R EC ­
ORDS OF S EM IN O LE
C O U N TV , FLO R ID A .
D A T E D this MM doy of July,

ClorfeWMo Court
E y iE u M U o R
AtOonByCtorh
P u h m h Ju ty l7 A M .n o *
D E T IM

ti

.

CUT YOUR
ADVERTISING
COSTS
DOWN TO s a t

Advertise in our new
LEtSUKE M A G A Z IN E

faronly O o 9 V pet wetkl
MARYANNEMOOSE

ms

.Circuit Court
Gyi JeneE. Jaeewlc
Ooputy Clark
Publish: July &lt;7414 Iff*
G E T 117

W ITNESS m y ______
reel of ae* Court re Brit

F6rtgii6plirvk§

D A T E D : Je w u . m e
M A IV A M IA I MCNIiAr
Cterh •&lt;Cow ry Court
•y: Je e e E '
*

INSTRUCTOR FOR
STAINEOGLASSCLASSES

_____ ^FLv___

NOT»CBOP

*3PorB

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
EFFNattreM*
• Tho City of SontorB I* reoklne
re*lot prep— ot* from auellttod
flrmt/InBlvIBuolt to preuMt tho
tolleorlna:

follow*:
A. Formal DotIvoryi

RIOINA A. FOGARTY REID.
ALL INTIRISTIO FRRSONSARE NOTIFIEDTHAT:
All
nones I*
to oorvoe she hew ohfaction* mot cholbngo Ss valid­
ity of Iho will. Rio guoflflcattono
of mo pononof tspreowitoiuo.
yarns or lurtodlttNw ol
Court an regulrad to flit
ohloctlono with mu Court
WITHIN THE LATIN OF
THUS MONTHSAFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST FURLICATION OF THIS NOTICS OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All erstfton ol Mo eocaSanf

L#o«l Notices

Call fo r d etails
W

;

2 6 I I

�"W-W *-*•

s ,

JS

HWWMWWSSwfwB w w

1 0 0 - Sanford Herald, Sanford, F lo rid a - S u n d a y, J u ly 17, 1994

Legal N o t lc f
IN T U I C O U N TY COUNT
O f T N I IIO N T IIN T H
JU D IC IA L CIN CU IT
IN AN D FO N
SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
FLORIDA
C A IC NO. W -JJff-CC-IM )
HIGHLANDS HOMEOWNERS'
ASSOCIATION, INC..
PlAlollll.

NOTICE OF ACTIO N IN E M IN E N T DOMAIN IN T N I
C IR C UIT COURT O F T H E R IO M T IIN T H JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N D F O R SEM INOLE CO U N TY. FLORIDA
CASENO.Oe-tlT-CA-IS-l
SEMI NOLE COUNT Y, a political tubdlvttlon of fhe State at Florida.
Petition r-

v

SOUTHLAND E X E C U T I V E C E N TE R . L.C ..0 Florldo Limited
Liability Company; OOUOLAS J. M ILN E , as Trustee; FLO RIDA
POWER CORPORATION, a Florida Corporation; IL O O N O.
KNOTTS; JU A N IT A Z . KNO TTS; HA R LA IN V E S TM E N TS .a
Florida General Partnership; W .L. K IR K ; O E R A L D IN IC . K IR K ;
F RE D WALLS. JR .; KATH E RINE W ALLS; OEO R OE W. ROYAL.
JR ..a t Trutlee of the Faye Carolyn Royal Revocable Tru tl dated
the Nth day ot February Iffl; B A R N E T T BANK, l/k/a. United F In i
Federal ol Saratota; LEONARD L. BUCY.a/k/a, Leonard Leon
Bucy; E L L A M. BUC Y, a/k/a. Ella M. Buey Say let; F R IO E R IC K
W. BE RENS. INC , a Delaware Corporation; JO S E ' SANTOS
FRANCO FRANCO; M ARIA D E L PILAR D E FRANCO ; B A R N E T T
BANK OF C E N TR A L FLORIDA, N.A.i PR INCETO N FIN AN CIAL
CORPORATION, a Delaware Corporation; R AY VALOR Sat Tea
Collector ol Seminole County. Florida; and the unknown ipevaot ot
the above. II any; their heir*, devisees, m ipntat, grantee*,
creditor*, lessees, •neuters, admlnlitrotera, m srtgagill. judgment
creditor*, trutteet, lienholder*, pareane In peoaeetlan and any and ell
other penont having or claiming to have any right, title er Interett
by. through, under or again*! the above named Defendant*. or
otherwlte claiming any right, title, er Interett In fhe reel pregsit;
deter Ibed In ftila action.
T O ; THOSE ABO V E -N A M E D D E F E N D A N T S AND T O A L L
PAR TIES CLAIM ING IN TE R E S T B Y , THR O UO H , UN D ER OR
AGAINST TH E NAM ED D E FE N D A N TS ; AND T O A L L PAR TIES
HAVING OR CLAIM ING T O HAVE AN Y R IO H T. T IT L E OR
I NT EREST IN TH E P R O PER TY DESCRIBED BELOW.
An Eminent Domain Petition, together vllh It* Declaration ot
Taking he* been Hied In the above styled court to acquire certain
property Interett* In Seminole County, Florid*, described as fettows:
PARCEL H O .

103

MONTGOMERY ROAD
P E E S IM P L E

A LLAN D. BERM AN.
D AV ID C . KR IVAN. Mel
FIR S T UNION N ATIO N M - * " *
BANK OF FLORIDA.
Creee-Plelntlft,

OaSOOBfCE A T I N I S O U TH E A S T CORNER O F T H E S O U T H N U T QUAR TER O F S E C T IO N 1 0 , TO W NSHIP 11 S O U TH ,
RANGE I B E A S T , B D tIN O L JI C O U N TY , F L O R ID A .
RUN
N 0 0 * 1 » ' 1 4 * R ALONG W E E A S T L IN E O F T H E BWfc O F
S A ID S E C T IO N 10 ( A . K . A . C E N TE R L I N E O F N O H T OORERY
R O A D ),
ld ll.3 4
FEE T;
TH E N C E
Nlt*40*lC'N,
B O .00
FEE T TO
TH E
S O U TH EA S T
CORNER O F S A ID L O T 171 AND T H E N E S T R I O H T - O F MAY L IM B O F NONTOOHERY ROAD, T H I 8 B E IN G T H E
P O IN T OP B E G IN N IN G
FDR T H I S
D E S C R IP T IO N ;
TH E N C E ALONG S A ID W EST R IG H T -O F -W A Y L I N E ,
R 0 Q * l t ' 1 4 * I , S B . 37 F E E T T O T H E N O R TH EASTER LY
CORNER O F S A ID L O T 1 7 1 ; TH E N C E ALONG T H E
N O R TH EA STER LY
L IN E
OF
S A IO
LO T
171,
N I1 * 1 0 * 4 B * N , B . 7 1 F E E T ; TH E N C E LE A V IN G S A ID
N O R TH EA STER LY L I N E , 8 0 0 * 1 3 *14*N, 7 0 . S 3 F E E T T O
T H E S O U TH E A S T L I K E OP L O T 1 7 1 ; TH E N C E ALONG
S A ID S O U TH E A S T L I N E , W f 4 * l l ' l B * I , 3 . 3 3 F E E T T O
T H E P O IN T OP B E G IN N IN G OP T H I S D E S C R IP T IO N .

tiled in the Circuit Court of
Seminole County, et the State et
Florida on tatti day ot March,
1004, by D A N IE L R. CASH, the
stepfather et the miner child

M

to it on PAULA P. L IO H T S IY ,
E S Q U IR E, ol Wlndsrwoodle.
Hemet, Ward 4 Weedman. P A ,
Plaintiff's attarneyt. whata
address It Poet Office So* 13*3,
Orlande. Florida 11331-1 H I ,
within n days after the first
publication end file the original
with the Clark of this Court
either betore service on Plain­
tiffs attorneys or Immediately

T H A T P O R TIO N OP T H A T C E R T A IN T R A C T OP LARD
D E S C R IB E D I N O . R . BOOK 3 1 3 4 , PAGE 3 1 3 , O P T H E
P U B L IC RECORDS O F S t X I N O L I COUN T Y , F L O R ID A ,
B E IN G MORE P A R TIC U L A R L Y D E S C R IB E D A S FOLLOW SI
COMMENCE A T T H E N O R TH EA ST CORNER O F T H E NORTH­
W EST QUARTER O F S E C T IO N I S , TO W N 8 H IF 11 S O O TH ,
RANGE 13 E A S T , S O U WOLE C O U N TY , F L O R ID A .
NUN
800*34 *3S*W ALONG T H E E A S T L I N E OP T H E HN% OP
S A ID S E C T IO N 13 ( A . E . A . C E N TE R L I N E O P N O R T GOKERY R O A D ), B B 7 . E 4 F E E T ; TH E N C E R t 3 * 4 Q * l « * N ,
1 3 . 0 0 F E E T T O A P O IN T ON T H E NORTH L IM B O P T H E
SE*i OP T H E 8Sfc OP T H E NE% O P T H E NN% O P ER ZD
S E C TIO N 13 AND A P O IN T ON T H E W EST R I O N T - O F WAY L I N E OP NONTOORERY R O A D , T H I S E S IN S T H E
P O IN T OP B E G IN N IN G
FOR T H I S
D E S C R IP T IO N ;
TH E N C E ALONG S A ID NDNTH L I N E , N « 3 * 4 0 ' 1 S ’ N ,
I S . O S F E E T T O A P O IN T OR A N O N -T A N G E N T C U R V E ,
CONCAVE N O RTH W ESTERLY; TH E N C E L E A V IN G S A ID
NORTH L I N E , RUN S O U TH E A S TE R LY ALONG T H E AR C O P
S A ID
C U R V E,
H A V IN G
A
C E N TR A L
ANG L E
OP
0 1 * 1 3 * 1 3 * , A R A D IO S O P 7 B B B . 4 4 P E S T , AND A
CHORD BEAR IN O OP 8 0 I * 3 0 * 1 B * S , FOR A D IS T A N C E
OP 1 4 4 . 4 9 P E S T T O A P O IN T O P T A N G B f T J TH E N C E
S 0 3 * 0 a ’ 1 0*w, 4 S . 8 S P E S T T O A P O IN T O P CURVA­
T U R E OP A CURVE CONCAVE S O U T H E A S T E R L Y ; TH E N C E
SOUTHW ESTERLY ALONG T H E A R C O P S A I D C U R V E ,
HA VIN G A C E N TR A L A N G LE OP 0 0 * 4 1 * 1 1 * . A R A D IU S
OP 7 3 3 3 . 4 4
P E S T,
AMD A CHORD B E A R IN G O P
8 0 1 * 4 7 * 0 4 * 0 , FOR A D IS T A N C E O P 0 4 . 1 4 F E E T T O
T H E SO U TH L I N E O P T H E SS% O P T H E SS% O P T H E
HE* OP T H E NN% O P S A ID S E C T IO N 1S| T H E NC E
L E A V IN G SAXO C U R V E , BtSI ALO N G SAXO S O U TH L E N S
S E t * 4 1 * 0 1 * E , 3 4 . 4 3 P E E ? T O T H E A FO R EM EN TIO N ED
N E S T R X Q N T -O P -N A Y L I N E O P NONTOORER Y H O AD ;
TH E N C E
ALONG
S A ID
R IO R T -O F -N A Y
L IM B
MOO*B4*3B*B,
3 1 0 . 1 0 P E E * T O T H E P O IN T O P
B E G IN N IN G OP T R I E D E S C R IP T IO N .

•Mtoe-en
Sentinels County Beard ol
County Commissioners requests
Interested parties to submit
I,.■
a a i l a r i lelaBw. law * B4m r a J w s t M
lormsi
HGfBlI Ul«» TOY THE EUuVf
referenced Invltetlen to EM.
Bid packages will be available
et the County's Purchasing Ol-

_» Trie ■*._a
at
m M *---*
II WflI

o
•a'f Mte'
If™

Seminole County Cowrthouto In1
Sanford. Florida, at 11:M a.m..
on August it. ifM. the fallowing
oeicrioed pr sparry ear w i n in
theOrdwof Final Judgment:
Lai 14, and covered parting
"P**. CYPRESS V ILLAO E 1RD
RE P L A T T R A C T C-PHASE 1,
(7. Public Record* ol Seminole
County. Plerlde.
N O TICE
AM ERICANS W ITH
D IS A B ILITIE S A C T OP ITN
Administrative Order No. 0337
Perten* with a disability who;
need a ipaclal accommodation
to participate In this p roceeding
should contact A O A Coordinator
at 301 N . Park Avenue. Sulla N.,
331. Senlord. Plerlde 3*771 at,
least five days prior Id the
proceeding, Telephone: (M l)
stsdns e m . a rti i - m - n w m
(T O O ), er 1-333YSM77IIV!, vie

r mnmmmmwyw&amp;ma
D A T E D : July 14. TtM
M AR VAN N E MORSE.
Clerk el County Court
By; Jano E . Jasewle
Deputy Clerk
Publish: Juty 174*4, tt*4
DET-14S

may be made by calling (437)

ni-1IJ3 esfenslen 7114. or via
facsimile at (437) noose*.
A Pre-Bid Conference will be
held et 1:33 p.m . an July »■ Wto
at the lemlneie Civsty Servtcee

Case fee. n -m a -C A ie S of the
Circuit Court el the 1333* Judicial
Circuit in and tor Semi note
County. Plerlde wherein C IT IZ B N I F ED E R A L BANK, A
F I D E U A L S A V IN O I BANK fe
the Plaintiff and E N C IL R.
BROHARO. at et. are Deton-

|M hn | 1
jH w e re
M
W
f k tqtonv Aswutl t, It h , end te tlW
W e m ^ ^ p s to e a n and any rspustt Hr burin* on
M M R I r F a k t e e with the Clerk of this Court

r

r '

D AVID C. KRIVAN .M e L
Croat-Detondentt.
NO TICE O F
F O E E C L O IU E B S A L B
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y O IVEN
purtuent to a Summery Final
Judgment of Ferecleeure dated
June M . m i . In lever ol
Crou-Pleintiff, Flrtt Union Na­
tional Bank of Florida, end
e n t e r o d l n C a e e
No.*l 140 CA-I4-E of the Circuit
Court tor Seminole County, Flor­
ida. I trill tell to the hlgheet and
bett bidder ter caeh et the Watt
Front Doer ot the Seminole
C tu rfy Courtheute. Sanford,
Florida, at it :te a.m. an the Ind

Defendant.;
N O TIC E O F SALE
Notice It given that pursuant
to Order of Final Judgment In
Ferecleeure dated July 14. Itfe
In Cate No. t l J4W-CC-I0Q, ol
the County Court In and for
Seminole County, Florida, In
which HI OH LAN D S H O M EO W N ER S ' ASSOCIATION.
IN C .. It the Plalntlfl and
A L LA N D . BERM AN It the
Defendant. I wilt tall la the
highest and bet) b lidt r tor cath,

N O TIC E O F SALE
Notice l* hereby given that In
accordance w ith the Final
Judgment el Ferecleeure en­
tered an July U . 1104 In civil
dcflen no. M -cn -C A -M R In the
Circuit Court tor lemlneie. Pier-

County. Senterd, Florida at
11:33 e'eteek A J A an tbs toh day
at August. tees. Ibe 1sttowing

r whaf right, ttffe, Interest or 14m you er any ef you
w
dto the praperty
described in eeld Petitton end to
nj .uwm
-d ——a
I^^Nn VvBVGi ’ ^Asr
R^.y told
ewlw p^w|WtTy -4-----4
eNDwIN
OOl DS
i veae and purpaees ee m l term In sold Ptflllan. If
wl
m au
u a L u S feMtai
—i s - a
W
PVlwjp ^Ntl^w^RNw^SBVHBV
HMT YFM&gt;*-W
*MPf

C L E E R O F T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
IN AN O FO R SEM INO LE C O U N TY , FLO R ID A
then seven 17) dayt prie r to toe

iTO M N H iw i! eTveJee
(V ) IM Se«4 «77e. vie Plerlde
D A TE D el Santord. Plerlde
NdeMhday o4Juty, !f04.
M ARVANNE MORSE
Clerk, Circuit Court
Sam mate County, Florida
By: Ja n e t. Jeeewtc

O F T N E I8 T M JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D POR
SEM IN O LE CO U N TV.

733 Yeungetewn Forkwet
Altamonte S. F L 11714
Oetod: Juty 14,1*04
M AR VAN N E MORSE
Clerk ef Circuit Court
By; Ja n e t. Jeeewtc
As Deputy Clerk
Publish! Juty 17414. t«M
O E T -U t

CELEBRITY CIPHER

W T M f C IR C U IT CO URT
RP T H E N T H JUDICIAL

id have to loam to

(Ripper) Chuck 0.

(•u k i d u « s , o i f ’ i R ' e i ' e , i i . o o f e s t ;
Le a v in g
e a io
n o r th
l im e ,
run
room
3 0 1 . 0 1 P E S T T O A P O IN T O P CURVATURE OP
CONCAVE N O R TW W ESTIR LY; T H E N C E E 0 U IN I
ALONG TH E ARC OP S A ID C U R V E , H A V IN G A
ANGLE o r 0 0 * 1 3 * 1 3 * , A R A D IU S G P T B G B . i
ANO A CHORD REAR ING O P M I « G I '1 B * N ,
0 f 1 4 ' 08 r t t T
« ■ V O IN T 0|
IIIIIG 7OH T H U 0 E 8 C R IP T I0 H ; T H E N C E E Q U TI
“ C W *
CONCAVE HOI
E R L Y , HAVING A C E N YH B L A N G LE OP 03*11
RADIUS OP 7 3 3 3 . 4 4 P E N T , AND A CHORD M B
S 0 1 * l t ' 0 4 * N , FOR A RENTR NCR O P 4 S . G
THENCE
LE A V IN G S A ID C U R V S . ROB M 3 * 4

Oon McCoy tpowsd RRch ottwr in tha dtv

vs dsy, snd ths oM blood loud began again,

I

i

I

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17. 1M4 - 11B

CLASSIFIED ADS

K IT 'N* C A R LYLE ® by Larry Wright

Seminote

Orlando - Winter Park

322*2611

831-9993

71~HtlpWtntU
In Sanford need* hard working

dependable Maple far

CLASSIFIEDDEPT.
HOURS
MO AJL* 1:90P.M.
MONDAYthru

•mpleyment. Jab require*
traveling. Mutt have at laatf
date " D " COL llcanea. Drug
tael and phyelcat required.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

14conaacutfve times______S7&lt;
7 conaaeutiva times....____70)
9conaacutlvatlmes______I1&lt;

ftn e v

M AIN TEN A N CE HELPKR/POATER for apartment
complea needed Pleate cell
M l »ee» for Appointment

4 fl

CLOSED SATURDAY
SSUNDAY

R apacy Pari N a n ia i Center
A 1M bad luparlor reled
facility need* CNA'S with e
Love of People end detlre to
do their bet I

NOWACCEPTING

It TM t Detcrlbet Yeu, Apply

^ days your ad n » » at tate earned
wteefeet weutlr ^ S e a w e ^ S I m S”*9**6** &gt;ypo'

enced Individual tor (reefer
waratMuee. Mutf be able to lift
*0+ lb* and drive itenderd
ihlfl truck. U par hour.
Mavarateal

IR
STRAY tot
R M PLOVM SN T
HRS Uc.fSff7

tallan. cavneallng, private
docter glue living ae p naae.
Bar rs n s il Clearwater Attenwy
Jtba P r t t b a r - ^ ^ ^ E j a t t

Apply at tU T C N 'S T M N N O ,
n w t t . P in t Street, Sawterd

M H m miCirt
CMA/HMA. Carttted cPR,

Part time wanted, call Joyce
orMetadvaiM iraai_________

OCCASIONAL B A B Y S ITTER In
HitlerIc Olitrlct, for If A I
year ofdt. Ha housework,

a CONSTRUCTION a
a T R A IN IIa
To I I hr I Parson needed lor
Immediate opening I Hurry I
p r i i r r o i s t I a t io n
AAA IM P L O Y M IN T
m w .f w b s t .N M ir t

Low est Priest!
Short-Term Financing!
Low Down Payments!
No Auction Cars!

JEFF H. KELLY S
FAMILY A U T O S INC
e P R IN T IR M IL P f R e
Train completely! Loam all
phases of printing) Benefit*!
P R I I R IO IIT R A T IO N
AAA IM P L O Y M IN T
m W .H t h S t .W -H M

PENNY

S-E-L-L-I-N-G? S-A-V-E $ $ $
FULL MLS SERVICE O NLY
31/2% COMMISSION
1/2% IFOWNER HNDS BUYER
Fenny Broken H*s Sold Over 800 Homes
SeQen Have Saved Over 2 Million Dollars in Real Estate C o m m issio n s

Studios Fumisiwd i Unfurnished
BicWc FumWnd In Studios Only
1A 2 Bedrooms AveSiUe
Singh Story Design •no ons below or ibovi

STELTENKAMP REALTY
203N. PalmettoAvt. (NexttoPoetOffice)•Sanford

•Sparkling Pool •Largs Floor Plans

Discover
the Enchantment,

• Eietdae Center • Energy Efficient
• W/D Connection*
HOunsM-PM.saLM.Bun.it-*

100 Wllmof Circle » Sanford
U K A L Ih T illliU K N U A K
M u ftlflo cM 9/2
ly N ew I m l do I
H ardw ood floor*, Ttoully

2 DJrm /2 bath V illa w/Oem
H aw Roof, N e w Palm, etc. Seller lotivaicd

r4,4*VB CAN330-3230
SAVE YOV THOUSANDS.
$ $

S -E -L -L -I-N -G | C A LL TODAY! $ $

Mo. *

RMR) 1 1« MonthLarm

l/t Off Om m M* ONLY $1001

•Leke Front •Spariding Pool
*Newly Renovated - Volleyball

Mention This A d k Pay No Application Feel

S t Croix Apartments

Country Luke

131*7101

Country Living 'zzz
City Convenience
c
NEAR HWYS.
17-92 and 417 -------

5 K a ) affordability!

IB d rm e n d

Ijyb) space I
(Jy c) great location!

I Bdrm. Floor Plain Available!

BKd) fu n !
(p/e) a ll o f the above!

1 Months Rent FREE
1g

1$ 1 ]
__ Tjkl
P .H r
11

1
fear
gajtaml

Lent Mon. -Fri. 9*7 3 2 2 - 9 1 0 4 1
MOW, Airport Mvd.
p R H S u tlM
Sanford

C oevilla

APARTMENTS
2960 Ridgewood Av«., Sanford

390-1431

paetr Hanelne*
KTi BSSIBS/painti

�a. &gt;. r . ItY
i

•

a

’C

«

t1

%

%

^

r

■

**

*

•

*

•

»

•

»

a

»

%

*

«

«

' '
t

s'
t

«

1
,

. •

'

*

i

.

f t t f in S S s M
t
,

ii

• ‘ - -.v
•

IfiHfei

• &gt;J i

»’

«

V ili i4
\
1i

4

%

«

' a

a ' *

♦ ' a * • ' a

4 s

•

•

r

a

a

a *\

.

a

t

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, July 17, 1M4

71-HtlpWtirttd

i l l —AfyMIsnets

117-Osrs— l » t s

BRACNPBONT STUOIO

meeeuaerpaaiMti

F u r n i t u r e . appliances,
n n it w it tiava and fraaiar.
Teats, clettws. flthln* tackle,
laps, plus surprise Itarns I sari
OM Court/ as at, Sanford.
SAM till tf rains. Hurry I

sacuatrY w a a i N o u s i

Oams wardens, security,
maintenance. ale. Ho sap.
nacassary. Haw Mirin*. Par
into ceil
eat.
m r SAM to tePM. leave
M A U T O AUCTION D R I V I R I
N t R D R D i Must have valid

(mi-resdaie

V E N T U R I ! P RO P ER TIE S

bulanca aspartonca are an
ca u ra p a d la a p p ly. Par
appllcallan/dacumanlatlan
aracadieaa. appllcaltons may
•a picked up at Seminole
C a u n ly D e p a r t m e n t ol
Emptoyse
Ratattans.
ta t aaIa.
a e ^ ^ i
a
_ a.__ ^
■ W

W

i

tfT W fa

N n iV r V

r L

Still. ANNOUNCBMNET
CLOSE* J U L Y If . H»a. I:ta
&amp;m. T H O U WHO APPLIED
N O f R A N N O UN C EM EN T
eaa-iaa a m s t i l l u n d e r
CO NSIDERATION AND
N E E D NO T RBAPM .Y. Sam
•nata Cswnty Is a drupfree
wsrkplsca and Is ■mmlttad
taadtoaraawarfctorm._______

i/Ni/ssmiap.

Ilf—OfHct
full hausapfv.pl-3 l»t

stf n s t r o m
B

t t t t i i

33B3E
city sea-m-asu.

aananra

I f f —N t t f ItfflitE
C

T

U

- y

v

t .

PrspEflv /fait

• CADILLAC O fY IL L B .
iPOROTNUNOERSIEA,

All artalnall Needs i

MWTMS 4 1I P i i a N S i '
• e r ja R . Wk.
EAlatHPt M e R R i.

i

S T T i l U U l i . 'i i i l L l JL-.
Ready S a r ^ tf lt’ Plant in* t

L

— ^^^t

a w '

W U U f

W l.

a s g
S H B S S

• y cRA**^ION La Salto.
Opaa A, Otavy a»a. IT. I new
MichelIns. roar hr, awnIn*s.
-PR ml. MINT. SPaeSSNICT

A N A C A r tl. w . « " n eftehera,

JB B U P g B M

B u ild e r C lo s e O u t
IN PRIVATE POOL COMMUNITY
SOS Krtder M ., Sanford •Sanora SubdivMon

LOAN ARANGER
RIDES AGAIN!

aS&amp;sSF
323-5774

!) -\ mi n i voo v . 2 i i ‘\ iii

I ORl.ISS

IR
Hl.NI Ift(
f W

J Mo. P.I,

EO Eflm oO EEFO flO UW FB BUYERS*
MTOOPAYSClOUGCOSre

Aff^WIIDMaOOTOMOVEII

A.P.R. S.75% FIXED FOR 30 YEARS
40COLOR AND OPTION CHOICES!
•EtMt 8.KI.P. program

ri

C**an«ret.

R
1

1
1

1

44

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242021">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, July 17, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242022">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242023">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on July 17, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242024">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242025">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, July 17, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242026">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242028">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242030">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242032">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24237" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23842">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/0f85cf2c7ac419fcf30e73f6d84fbcff.pdf</src>
        <authentication>40711936ccaf2db34089f093b341b0d7</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242068">
                    <text>Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Samlnola County alnoo 1S08
Bfllh Yoar. No. 239 - Sanford. Florida

NEWS DIGEST

Buyer be aware...
"A s Is" mrans "n o warranly" when buying a
used car. The lemon law doe* not apply m all

Julian Stenstrom dies

Violence
in
schools
M e d ia tio n program ‘e x tre m e ly su ccessfu l
SANFORD — Student* In Seminole County
lutvr been learning about how lo reaolve ihrlr
differences quietly and without the use o f force
for some lime now.
The concept I* beginning lo cnlch on around
Ihe stale.
*
Recently, a group of middle-school atudent*
laughed al a vldrotapr on conflict resolution thai
showed two youngster* patrhlng thing* up aflrr
un argument In a schanl hallway.
The aludenla. who were participating Wednes­
day with Gov. Lawton Chile# In a television show
on school safety, «u d lhal was a real-life example
of how youths usually handle volatile situations
al school

■ W e w a n t to g e t to th e s e
y o u n g s te r s as q u ic k ly as
p o s s ib le . W e m u s t e d u c a te
th e m e arly as to ho w to resolve
th e ir d is p u te s w ith o u t reso rtin g
to a g g re s s io n . J
-Sam ara Kuhn
Barbara Kuhn, chairman o f the Seminole
t ounly school hoard. Is u munagrmrnt consullain who has worked with teachers, counselor*
and aiudrnl* around thr district at both Ihe
middle and elementary achool level* on the
concept » f dispute mediation

Painting the town

H om eless
population
grow ing

SANFORD - Julian
Stenstrom. columnist
for Ihe Sanford Herald.
f
.
\
died this morning at
J l ____
South .Seminole lloapl'd Jjd —^ M W
lul In Longwood He
J
'"j
h a d r e c e n t l y unA J w k
^
■
d e rg o n e e m e rg e n c y
I ; M aM p
surgery and did not
I
recover.
I ,
Stenstrom wrote the
w e e k ly " W a y Hack
IW
W hrn" column which
j
has appeared Sundays
* * -SIMs.
.a S
In Ihe Herald.
Julian Stenstrom
A complete atory pertaining lo Stenstrom will
appear In Sunday‘* Herald

.....
........ ...... v-u.il rc.in iu
tun. entertainment, food and plenty of sweri
com. Gates open al 10 a.m.. meals served from
I I a.m. Gates close at fl p.m. Free parking.
Country star Louise Mandrell will perform on
Saturday, and Ihe Kentucky Hrarinuntrr* on
Sunday.
• Monday - May 30 — MEMORIAL DAY
HOLIDAY — Mrm oiul Day parade through
downtown Sanford. 1049 a m., from 400 K.
First Street, west to Park Avenue then north lo
Memorial Park. Ceremonies at (hr (lag pole at 11
am .

Jail &amp; Ball profitable
This year's Jull and Hall lund
SANFORD
raiser In Ihe Sanford and Lake Mary area set a
new record. Approximately $13,000 was raised
during the event.
Proceeds for the annual charity fun-day go lo
the American Cancer Society.
Kuthlcrn Reynolds, past unit president
commented. "That figure I* brad and shoulders
over what we have raised beforr."
Jail und Hall Chulmtun Don Moore added.
"W ith such experienced bunds us John Mercer
und T y Dedman heading the so-called "Parole
Hoard." and Edith McNeill, current president
and volunteer coordinator, we quickly filled Ihe
coffers."
Moore continued. "T h e law enforcement
officers from Ihe Sanford and I^ikc Mary police
departments, along with Ihe sheriff's dejmlles.
did a terrific Job us did (he lawyers who acted as
Judges under the coordination of Joe Rosier.
For the first time, the unit added a Lake Mary
site which wan provided by Hardy und Calluwuy
Reultv Grmio at the Lake Murv Center.
Moore also prulscd the tcurn that broke Ihe
rrcord of giving this year, with contributors
Including UcllSoulh Mobility. Vlstu/Unltcd
Communications. Cellular One und Cafe Jakes.
Volunteers Moore listed for special commenda­
tions Included Joe Akins. Darryl Kirkputrlck.
Hill Hush. Martha and Ned Yancey. Kathleen
Reynolds. Harbura Moore. Leslie Higgins. Dec
Lamur, Churlcnc Towe. Kuy Ihirtholomcw and
Evelyn Bales.
_________________

T h r r e y e a r s a go . Kuhn w o rk e d w ith
CableVislon of Central Florida (now Time Warner
Cable), lo make a training film with aludenla at
Jackson Height* Middle School.
"W e iihc the film lo demon»tra(e the con­
cept*." *he explained. "T h l* I* aomethlng Hut
can lie done al any age."
While atate effort* arc concentrating on middle
achoolera. Kuhn aald Seminole County I* putting
more emphaal* on elem entary achool age
students She nuld ahe had originally targeted the
program at middle achool atudent. hut they are
finding that the younger atudent* rrspond well lo
the program anil lienrnt from II.
“ We want lo gel lo lhr*r youngster* a* quickly
a* poaalblr." ahe aald "W e muat educate them
early a* to how to reaolve their dlaputea without
Rea M ediation. Paga SA

■ v SANDRA ELLIOTT
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Families, old men. )ohlrs* men.
even teenager* who are having dllllrully adjust­
ing lo other m* Ul programs but who can't go
home, make up the hoineles* (Hipulallon wlro
seek shelter al the Sanford Rescue Outreach
Mission.
Mother Hell lllani lie Weaver who operate* the
mission on I3lh Street aald shunt 400 |teople are
nerved i-«e«W dally, up (rum .'too a short lime ago
On any given day last year. 40.000 people In
Florida bail no place to call home. * IS percent
tin lease over Hie previous year, the slate reported
TtiurwU,.
Most of the new homeless were single men

S tu d e n ts d is p la y a rtis tic
ta le n ts in a g ran d w a y
■ y VICKI DsBORMIEB
Horald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Look* like everything's com ­
ing up roses.
And sunflower* und |H-onles and daisies...
The fourth and (Kilt grade students al All
Soul* Catholic School In Sanford spent
Tu esday busking In tlie sunshine and
splashing paint on a wood wall al EPCOT
Center In create a colorful mural.

"ll was un exciting experience for the kids,"
said art teacher Linda Moore. "T h ey had a t»ull
out there."
According to Moorr. a representative from
EPCOT called about two weeks ago and
Invited Ihe aludenla lo parllelpulc In n mural
palming project In celebration of the Floral
Festival ul Ihe Ihcmc park.
The students' painting experience. Moore
said, had been limited to small scale rendl-

Bee Mural, Page BA

Illness, according lo Ihe fifth annual study of
hnmrlrs*n&lt;-%* by Die f&gt;r|Ntrlmriil of Health and
Rehabilitative .Services
Fewer of Ihe homeless are families. A Ihlrd of
the homeless were In family group* In fiscal year
IOi)2 U3, down front 40 percent the year earlier.
"Many of thrse families contain al least one
l&gt;erson who Is working but they still can'l afford
Ihe down payment ami llrsl month's rent It takes
to get Into a house.” said Michael Poole, president
ol thr Florida Coalition lor the Homeless.
Only about 25 percent ol Ihe homeless who
come lo thr Sanford mission are affected by
problems such as drugs, alcohol or menial Illness.
"I got families. I got old |x-oplr. sick people,
older men you know. Il has Increased because
Oils Is ihe only mission in the county so this Is
where they come lo." Mother Weaver suld. "They
arr Jobless I would say maybe 25 percent have
problems but most of them are just lookin' for
Jobs."
The mission has operated since 1087. She said
she bus heard some of Ihe local churches have

See llomeleea, Page SA

W aterfro n t co n cep ts on display
SANFORD — As o f today, drawings of the way
Sunford's lakcfront area could look In Ihe future
urc being displayed downtown. They will Ikplaced In the front windows of Touelitnn Drugs.
121 E. Firs! Street.
During Its May meeting, the Lake Mouroc
Wuterfront Master Plan Committee had the firs!

opportunity lo see druwlngn depleting what
Sanford's waterfront area could become.
A|)j)roxlmulcly a dozen separate plans were
submitled by aludenla of Ihe University of Florida
College of Architecture Summer Studio Project.
The Waterfront committee has entered Into a
contract wllh the university students to fine-tune
jilans and |&gt;ro|M&gt;sals which have l&gt;cen made as Ihe
result of past meetings and discussions.
Since that lime, the drawings have been on

public dlsjilay In Ihe second lloor hullway at
Sanford City Hall.
Yesterday, Kay Bartholomew of the Sanford
Historic Downtown Waterfront Association re­
ceived permission lo remove ihe drawings and
lake (hem downtown.
"T h e members of SHDWA have been asking
u b o u t h a v in g th e m m o r e a v a i l a b l e . "
Bartholomew said, "so I got jjcrmlsslon to move

□ See Waterfront. Page 6A

F ro m s t a ff rep o rta

Protest centers on
alleged discrimination
By J. MARK BARPIILD
Herald Sonlor Staff Wrltor

Rain should be com ing soon

Today: Partly sunny.
High ncur 00. Wind
west 5 to 10mj&gt;h.

P a rtly
C loudy

SANFORD — Area blacks begun u
protest today of a Koreun-run store,
saying employees there discrimi­
nate against their clientele.
"T h ey need us Just as much us we
need them," suld Johncll Juckson.
organizer of the protest. "W e want
to make the community aware that
wc urc targeting these Koreans by
letting them know 60.00 perernt of
their business comes from Ihe blnck
community."
Early this morning, only Jackson
was In front of the store, setting up
signs. Jackson said he anticipated
more people would attend tommorrow morning.
Jackson said an April 10 Incident
at the store paints to a greater
problem between Korean store

owners anti the black customers
they serve. State owners treat the
black customers wllh disdain, even
w h en b la c k s r e p re s e n t th e ir
primary market, lie suld. Black
residents have relayed slmllur expe­
riences at olher Korean-run stores
In the community. Jucksoh said.
The protest stems from un April
10 Incident Involving a bluck Gee
Zone customer. Rev. Wllllc Mae
Lowery, pastor of First Independent
Free Methodist Church In Mldwuy.
Lowery suld she wns denied use o f
the store restroom and assaulted by
an employee. Further, when Lowery
called the police, she wus Issued a
trespassing warning. If she enters
(he store again, she faces arrest.
Lowery has filed a complaint
against the officer and hus hired an
uttorncy to Investigate the matter.

DSee Protest, Page 0A

HoitM Phots by Tommy Vlneonl

Johnoll Jackson protests this morning in front of Gee Zone.

TH E SANFORD HERALD FOR TH E BEST LOCAL NEWS COVERAGE. Call 322-261.1

1

4

�I A - S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd . F lo rid a - F rid a y, M a y 21 , 1004

NEWS FROM TH E REGION AND ACROSS TH E S T A T E

Celebration of Service

.

Junior W oman's Club salutes dedicated law enforcement officer^}
M ath, reading tests scores decline

OITIcer Richard Poovey of the
Sanford Police Department was
chosen as the Officer of the Year
at the Junior Woman's Club of
Sanford's 7lli Annual Offierr of
the Year Salute.
The event, which was held ut
the Juniors' general meeting on
Thursday. May 19. honored law
enforcement officers In Seminole
County who were nominated by
their supervisors as officers de­
serving o f spec Ini recognition.
Cindy Guiles, public affulrs
chntrmun, nwarded the officers
with certificates In appreciation
o f their service as outstanding
officers In the community.
The nominees were: Officer
Jam es A. Rick, Casselberry
P o lic e D ep a rtm en t: O ffic e r
Stephen Shea, Lake Mary Police
Department; Corporal Johnle
Gibson. Oviedo Police Depart­
ment: Sergeant Billy R. Lee Jr..
Seminole County Sheriff's Office.
A plaque for Officer of the Year
was later presented to Officer
Poovey who was unable to at­
tend the ceremony.
Officer Poovey wns nominated
for ttctng un all around "good
police officer" because of his
entbuslasni and good attitude,
rcudlncss to accept assignments
and responsibilities, and his ac­
complishments In educating the
city's youth through projects
a n d p r o g r a m s , I n c lu d in g
D.A.R.E.
Cindy Guiles admitted that the
committee had a difficult time
m aking a decision. All can­
didates are In tie commended for
Ihclr community Involvement
and achievements.

TALLAHASSEE — Math and reading test scores declined
slightly among Florida's 10th graders taking a three*ycar-old
national test Ixinatlng tougheracndeinle standards.
The stntc results were a point below last year's tests In the
1994 Grade Ten Assessment Test (GTATJ but that didn't
disappoint stntc education officials.
"This assessment is helping guide Florida's school Improve­
ment effort by developing higher expectations for Florida's
students." Education Commissioner Doug Jamersan said In n
statement Wednesday.
Florida's students were slightly t&gt;clow the national average In
reading comprehension and were equal to the national average
In advanced ninth skills, the stntc Department nr Education
said.
Almost 100,000 students took the test, which was Introduced
In 1992. The test Includes two 40-mlnutc multiple choice tests,
60 reading comprehension questions and 48 math questions.
Jamcrson said the national teat Is designed to be more
difficult than past assessment tests and he expected results to
Improve In the future.

C renshaw takes aim at health care plan
TALLAHASSEE — A leading opponent or the governor's
health care plan has started what Is expected to be a bruising
political fight when lawmakers meet In special session next
month.
Sen. Andcr Crenshaw, a Jacksonville Republican running far
governor, said the governor "Is going to be In for a big surprise
when the Legislature hits town for the specln) session.
"T h e more that people understand tils health enre plan the
less they like It." he told a news conference Thursday.
Gov. Lawton Chiles will call lawmakers back to the Capitol
from June 7-13 to consider Ills health-care reform plan, which
did not pass during the regular session.
Crenshaw, a leading Republican opponent, said he would like
to sec the governor's plan debated, but Chiles has not yet
released any specific legislation.
The governor has been traveling the state to build support for
his reforms.
Chiles has said the biggest obslucle to reaching agreement
was the level o f income eligibility for uninsured people who
could qualify for government subsidies to buy private
Insurance.

C hiles vetos com prehensive plan bill
TALLAHASSEE — A bill that was supposed to comply with u
1992 constitutional amendment on budgeting methods could
have undermined regulation o f growth and development In
Florlda.Gov. Lawton Chiles said.
Chiles said In a letter vetoing the bill Wednesday that It
fundamentally altered and weakened the role of the state's
comprehensive plan.
Linda Shelley, secretary of the Department o f Community
Affairs, which oversees growth management, asked Chiles to
veto the bill.
It raised alarm s by the League of W om en Voters,
environmental groups and former community affairs secretary
Tom Pelham, who helped establish the state's growthmanagement program.
They objected to language that said the plan would provide
"guidance" rather than "direction" for the regulation of
development, mining and the like, and wouldn't supersede any
other state statutes.
Chiles also objected to portions that wbuld have deleted p&amp;rt
o f the law that makes the governor the stale's chief planning
and budget officer.
*

TAVARES — A murder defen­
dant got sick when prosecutors
described the death of one of the
two young girls he ts accused of
killing,
But Richard Henyard Ur. de­
nies killing the girls, though he
admits to raping and shooting
the girls' mother after kidnap­
ping the irto from a Winn-Dixie
store purklng lot. the defense
said Thursday.
For the first time since his
first-degree murder lrial began
Monday, the Euslls resident
showed emotion Thursday. He Is
accused of killing Dorothy Reid
Lewis, und her two daughters.
Jamilya. 7, and Jasmine. 3.
" H e 's re a l u p s e t . " suld
Hruyard'a court-appointed at­
torney. T. Michael Johnson.
"H e's showing a lot of remorse."
A ssistant Public D efender
William Stone hinted In opening
arguments that the killer of the
girls was co-defendant Alfonza
"Junior" Smalls, Ihcn 14.
Smalls Is to be tried separately
on ch n rg c s o f fir s t-d e g r e e
murder, kidnapping and rape. A
Judge has ruled Smalls was too
young ut the lime of the crime to
be su b jected to the death
l&gt;cnalty.

From A fso clatad P rats raporti

Cash 3
9-2-0

Play 4
9-0-3-3

m ___

Booond Class Poatag* Paid at Sanford,
Florida and additional nulling
Poatmaatan Sand addraaa changaa
to THE SANFORD HERALD, P.O.
Sox 1M 7, Sanford, FL 32773-1M7.
•ubacrlption Rataa
(Oalty a Sunday)
Horn* Dallvary
Mall
3 Month*
tie. so
ua .00
• Montha
S3S.00
M0.00
t Yoor
mOQ
tffl.00
Florida RaaManta moat pay T% aataa
lax In addition lo ralao abov*.

NT
iS
ujr.V
iO
■F. (Ml ™
'ir
W

Cindy Guiles presents (he officer of Ihe year
award to Officer Richard Pdowy of the Sanford

LrvraawO

Police Deparlmonl. as Deputy Chief Joe Dillard
looks on.
1
I

Six weeks later, state budget
still not on governor’s desk
By ADAM VBOMANS
Associated Press Wrltor
TALLAHASSEE — The slate spent over $2,000
to express mall copies of the $38.6 billion
1994-95 budget to lawmakers this spring so they
could pass the spending plan In time to finish
their regular session.
Six weeks later, that stale budget M i l l h a s n ' t
gone to Gov. Luwlnu Chiles for his signature
making II law.
Some Republican lawmakers and a government
watchdog contend Ihe delay Is an attempt to give
the govern or m ore levera ge lo force Ihe
Legislature (o puss his health cure reforms during
u special session set to begin June 7.
"W e work us hard as we can to puss a budget as
quickly as we can. and then Ihe governor holds li
hostage so lie can pass other legislation." said
Sen. Andcr Crcnnhuw of Jacksonville, an oppo­

nent of the governor's health care plan — and a
GOP gubernatorial candidate.
"It may be smart politics, but It's bad public
policy," charged Crenshaw.
Others say that, ul the very least. It's had public
policy lo lake so long to approve the only piece ol
legislation thal lawmakers are required lo puss
each year.
"There seems lo t»c some deliberate reason and
deliberate action lo delay transmission of the
Mate budget," suld Dominic Cnlubro, president ol
Florida TaxWatch, a government watchdog
group. "It's a disservice lo Die citizens, to the
voters and to the taxpayers."
Officials*in the governor's office and Ihe House
denied ihe governor would delay the budget and
thrcnlcn to veto certain projects In order lo sway
support for his health care reform plan.
'I think the days when vou could ihrenten
C Bee Budget, Page 5A

Tonight: Fair. Low In the
upper 60s. Light southwest
wind.
Saturday: Partly cloudy with
w id e ly scu ttercd a ftern o o n
showers and thunderstorms.
High near 90. Wind west 10
mph. Chance o f rain 20 percent.
Extended forecast; Sunday
through Tuesday: Partly cloudy
with u chance or mainly after­
noon und evening showers und
thunderstorms. Lows In the
lower 70s. Highs in the upper
80s to lower 90s.

FLORIDA TKMFS
City
HI
Daytona Btach
Pf. Laud Batch
Fort Myart
Calnaavllla
Homtdaad
Jacktonvlll*
Kay Watt
Lakeland
Miami
Orlando
Panaacola
Seraiota
Tallahataaa
Tampa
Vtro Batch
W. Palm Otach

La

Ptf
17
M
*0

ft

M
W
M
H
&gt;7
»l
la
u
»i
w
M

as
70

71
sa
M
ao

7t

a7
74
aa

a7
as
at
41
70
70

|NATIONAL TBMFB

BXTBNDSD OUTLOOK

Friday, Msy 27, 1994
Vol. 66, No. 239
Pubdah*d OaUyand Sunday, sscspl
Saturday by TS* Sanford Harald.
Ino. 300 N. Frtncfi Avo., Sanford,
Fla. 33771

flWWITwl

T H E W E A TH E R

Fantasy 5

17-08-26-13-20

Itlore, Lake Mary; Steve
Johnle Gibson; Chlel
end Cindy Guiles, public

By A ssociated Press_________

SOUTH DAYTONA — Half the body of a Florida woman was
found two days before her husband reported her missing. New
York authorities said.
The rest o f Kimberly A. Gugllelmo's body was found earlier
this week at a separate location, police said Thursday.
Her husband. Mark Alexander Gugltelmo. surrendered to
South Daytona police Thursday on a charge o f tampering with
evidence, according to statements by local authorities and the*
District Attorney's Office o f New York's Westchester County.
He was released on S25.000 bond.
The 20-ycar-old woman's death was "homicide-related."
authorities said.
Police said the woman left her apartment on May 10 and had
not been seen since.
The lower portion of her body was found In Tarrytown, N.Y.,
four days later in a riverfront park next to a hammer, hatchet
and knife. The upper half was discovered over the weekend In u
Bedford. N.Y., reservoir about 10 miles northeast o f Tarrytown,
authorities said.
Detective Eugene Buononno o f the Tarrytown. N.Y., Police
Department said Qugllclmo. 24, Is accused of Illegally
removing a mattress, linens and carpeting from the couple's
South Daytona apartment.

MIAMI * Here are the winning
numbers selected Thursday In
Ihe Florida Lottery:

Shea, Lak
Dennis Pol
affairs chslrmsn

Defendant
becomes ill
after hearing
testimony

Severed body In N ew York Identified

LOTTERY

Nominees In enenaence tor ino coromony wum,
from left to fight, Tine Lee, president ol the club;
Sgl. Bill Lee, Seminole County Sheriffs Olflce;
Steve Harriett, Seminole County Undersherltf;
Chief Durbin Gatch. Casselberry, accepting for

SATURDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

SUNDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

M OOS PHASSS

!?: I

o d
e

FULL
M «y38

NEW
June9
00
SI
T
00
M
00
.00
.00
.IS
00
00
.00
00
.00
oo
,77

r

J

LABT
June l

FIRST
June 16

•RACK CONDITIONS

MONDAY
Ptly cldy 69-70

r \ p \ ----------TUESDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

T ID B S
SATURDAY)
SOLUNAR TABLEi Min. 9:00
a.m.. 9:30 p.m.i MaJ. 2:50 tt.m.,
3:15 p.rn. TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 11:25 a.m.. 11:5(1
p.m.; lows. 5:15 a.m.. 5:20 p.m.:
New Smyrna Beach: highs.
11:30 u.m., 12:01 p.m.; Iowa,
5:20 u.m., 5:25 p.m.; Cocoa
Beachi highs. 11:45 u.m., 12:16
p.m.: lows, 5:35 am .. 5:40 p.m.

BOATING

St. Auguatlne to Jupiter
Daytona Beach) Waves are 1 •
Inlet — Today: Wind southwest
foot and glassy. Current is slight
15 knots. Seas 2 feet near shore
to the north w ith a w ater
and 5 feet offshore. Buy nnd
temperature of 78 degrees.
Inland waters a moderate chop.
New Smyrna Bcacht Waves
Scattered showers und thun­
are 1-2 feet and glassy. Current
d e r s to r m s . T o n ig h t- W in d
Is to the south with a water
southwest to west 10 to 15
temperature of 77 degrees.
knots. Seas 1 to 2 feet near shore
and 4 feet offshore. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.

Phona (407) 323-3411.

t

WEDNESDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

STATISTICS
Th e high tem perature In
Sanford Thursday was 93 de­
grees und the overnight low was
64 us reported by the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Ccnlcr, Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded rainfall for the
p e r io d , e n d in g ut 9 u.m ,
Thursday, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature ut 9 a.m.
today was HI dcgrct-H and
Thursday's overnight low wus
66, as recorded by the National
Weather Service al the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Wenther Service data:

[ Thursday's high............ 92
□Barometric pressure,30.22
□Relstlve Humidity....71 pet
□Wlnds......Nnrthwest B mph"
□ R a in fa ll........................ 0 In.

□ Sunset................ 8:16 p.m.
□Sunrise........... ...8:29 a.m.

Tamporelura, IndJcAlt pftvlout day *
high And ovtrnighf low fo • « m EOT
City
HI
La
Of Ik
Fr«
An&lt;hor*g«
sa 44 03 «lr
Allan)*
• ) 41 .11
Or
Allanllt City
■1 SO S4 Or
Balllmort
Or
It S3 01
BiMIrtgi
M 17
cdy
Birmingham
17 41 04
dr
Bltmarck
77 47
cdy
Bo in
91 14 0)
dr
I*oil on
61 49 .17 dr
Buffalo
IS M 13 cdy
Catpcr
l i 4;
cdy
Charlatlon.S C
10 74
cdy
CharltUon.W Va
49 44 .11
clr
Chgyonn*
47 41
cdy
Chicago
W J]
clr
Cincinnati
77 43
clr
Clavatand
14 34 .19 clr
Concord.N M
s» u
77 cdy
Delia, FI Worth
*0 47 .IS cdy
Danvar
clr
44 44 .os
O tt Moinmt
71 47
clr
Detroit
43 X
clr
Haul Ion
It 71
cdy
Indiana poll.
*7 4S
clr
Junaau
S3 43 04
rn
Kama, City
73 41
dr
Lat Vtgat
13 44
cdy
LI III* Rook
7t 11 03 cdy
Lot Angalt,
73 40
cdy
Mamphl,
71 40 .14 clr
Mllwaukta
SI 31
cdy
Mpl, St Paul
44 43
cdy
Nathvlllt
70 SI
1.37 d r
Ntw Or loan,
It 70
Ntw York Clly
73 49 .13 d r
Oklahoma City
71 40
clr
Omaha
71 41
clr
Philadelphia
II so .30 clr
Pliotnli
M 73
cdy
Plllthurph
73 40
dr
Portfand.Malna
13 44 .71 cdy
Setramanlo
77 m
cdy
SI Louli
70 41
dr
Salt Laka Clly
17 SI .11 cdy
Shr#vaport
14 41 .17 cdy
Wathlngton.D.C.
U S3
clr

�POLICE BRIEFS
Traffic stops

Kirby honored
with program

• Eduardo O. Rodrigue*. 24. 4220 Orlnudo Drive. Sanford,
wai* nlupped by Sanford police on U.S. Highway 17-02 and
KHh Street Tucxday. He was churned with driving without a
license, ixiMrnxjon o f un altered tag, unlawful use o f u
lrni|Kjrary tag, and no proof of Innuraiirr,
•Jam es Allen Cross, 21. 014 Magnolia Avenue. Sanford, was
slopped on 2Hlh Street by Sanford police Tuesday. He wus
charged with driving with a suapended/revoked license.
• Cheryl Lynettc Mcdlock. 31. 0340 Carter Hoad. Lake Mary,
wus slopped by Luke Mary |x&gt;llce on W. luike Mury Boulevard
Tuesday. She was charged with driving with a suspendrd/revoked license and resisting arrest without violence.
• David Lee Brown. 22. 524 Boss Street, Sanford, wns
stopped by deputies at Airport Iknilevurd and U.S. Highway
17-02 early Wednesday. He was charged with driving with a
Muspcndcd/rrvokrd license.

A farewell dinner and pro­
gram was held Thursday night
at Tlmacuan Country Club for
Croom s School o f C hoice
principal Barbara Kirby, who is
leaving the school to becomo
principal of Tuscawllla Middle
School. Kirby (center) is con­
gratulated
by her former
assistant principal, Don Do
Plorro (loll) and Sidney Pollock.
H*t*M Pbato by Mart Han't

Incidents reported to the sheriff
• A gold and diamond ring valued at •1.400 wus reportedly
stolen Tuesday In a residential burglary In the 7300 block of
Sylvan Drive.
• A man reported all four tires on his I OHO Dodge station
wagon hud been punctured Tuesday. In the 1400 block o f
North Cove Ulvd.. near Uingwood.
• A TV/VCR was reported stolen early Wednesday from a
business In the 100 block of S. Press view Avenue in Long wood.
An estimated S20O In damage wus reportedly made during the
burglary.

Ruling: No
sex with
minors

Incidents reported to Sanford police

■y A i i m Ii M Pros*

• •400 In Jewelry and other llrins were reportedly stolen
Tuesday during a residential burglary In the 2500 block of
Polnsetta Drive.
• A vehicular burglary was reported Tursday In the 2700
block of Kldgrwnod Avenue. A compact disc case, radar
detector und other Items valued at »203 werr said lo have been
taken.

Aggravated battery
Daisy Bell White. 42. 2321 Slpc* Avc.. Midway, was arrested
on an aggravated tiattery charge by a Seminole County deputy
early Wednesday morning. A woman re|mrted White attacked
her with a knife during un argument, culling hrr side. The
woman rrported she threw u brick at White to defend herself
White told the deputy the woman had attacked her with a pipe,

Drug-related charges
Kaymond H. Ragsdale. 36. 2616 El Portal Drive. Sanford, was
arrested on drug-related charges try Sunfnrd |K&gt;ltce Wednesday
afternoon IVilice report slopping Ragsdale for walking in the
area of 10th Street and Park Avenue, un area with a high level
of drug activity. When uskrd to empty Ills pockets, police
report Ragsdale produced a home made smoking devlre and
two "rucks” of cocaine in a pack of cigarettes Kugsdalr wus
held on charges of |&gt;ossrsalon of cocaine und drug parapherna­
lia.

Dom estic violence
Troy Anthony Calhoun, 22. 1000 S Park Avc.. Sanford, was
arrested on a domestic violence huliery charge Wednesday
night after a woman reported hr hit hrr hark, causing hrr drop
her two-year-old son,

M arijuana possession
'ksymunil Gulur*. 4 4 . M2 laikr Monroe Terrace. Hanford, w a s
arrested on a marijuana {tossr-sslon charge by Sanford police
Wednesday iilghl Police S|teclal Investigation* Unit agents
report seurcblng Gaines and finding two plastic hugglrs
containing marijuana In bis clothing Guinea was Identified as u
suspect In drug deal, agents report.

D rug c h a rg e s
David Calvin Cleveland Jr., 30. was arrested on a charge of
sale and delivery of cocaine by Sanford |&gt;ollcc SprcUil
Investigations Unit agents Wednesday night. Agents report a
"bu gged" Informant bought “ crack” cocaine from Cleveland
near the cornerof Fourth Street und French Avenue.

Sexual battery
Llnwood Allen Woolord. 30. 2020 Exuma Way. Casselberry,
was arrested on u sexual battery und domestic violence charge
by Casselberry poller Wednesday night. According to reports.
Woolord's girlfriend reported be dcinunded sex from her after
they urrived home from an evening out. Stic refused und be
struck tier on the mouth, threw her onto a tied und begun
tearing at tier dollies. She freed herself, but Woolord cuught
tier In another rcxim und ripped off her doiblng The woman's
son rnn for help at u neighbor's home.

Shoplifting
Diablo Dcwayne Washington. 20, 100 McKay Blvd.. Sanford,
wus am-sird on a shoplifting charge Wednesday after the
manager of the Winn-Dixie store on South French Avenue
reported seeing Washington put two packages of batteries In
bis |&gt;ockcl und leave the store without puylng for them. The
batteries were priced ut #10.08,

W arrant arrests m ade
The following wanted jiersons were taken Into custody:
• Wultrr James Nunley. 25. 4220 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford;
on charges o f fullurc to npjicnr In court to answer to a credit
curd fraud charge and u probation violation charge for a
worthless check conviction.
•Jam ie Driscoll. 27. 1166 Rulum Brooke Circle. Longwood;
on two charges or failure to appear In court to answer to earlier
charges of iHisscsslon of cocaine and robliery.
• Bonita Huff. 32. 1408 W. 11th St.. Sanford; on a charge of
failure to appear In court to answer to n probation violation
charge fora shoplifting conviction.
• Tina Easley. 31. 301 W. Fifth St.. Sanford; on n charge of
failure to appear In court to answer to un earlier prostitution
charge.

Crim es reported to police

TALLAHASSEE - Adults In
Florida sllll cannot have sex
with minors — even If the
minors consent to It. under a
Florida Supreme Court ruling.
Justices on Thursday upheld
an appculs court decision that
Florida's statutory rape law is
constitutional.
The stair has "an obligation
und com pelling Interest" to
protect minors by outlawing
rorisensual sex, Justices wrole.
"Sexual activity with a child
o p e n s th e d o or to s r x u a l
exploitation, physical harm, und
sometimes psyrholnglrul dam­
age, regardless of the child's
maturity or lark of c h a s tit y th e
jUHtlrrs wrote
The derision Involved Ihree
ernlnil Florida ruses In which
teen-age girls — iwo 14 year-olds
and a 15-year old — said they
willingly hud sex with adult
men Prosecutors invoked i he
sialutory ra|&gt;r law.
But State Circuit Judge Jerry
Lockett of Tuvurrs threw out
ru|&gt;r law In July 1*192. saying
the state Supreme Court's 1980
ruling abolishing abortion re­
strictions for minors extend the
right ul privacy to minors luiving
consensual ass.
T h e H ii p r e m e C o u r t ' *
landmark uborlkin ruling came
U] the rase-of a Lake County
icen-ugrr who nought an abor­
tion without parental consent.
The court said teen agers and
adults enjoy the same privacy
rlghla In Florida
L o c k e d concluded that ll
privacy upplled lo the tight lo an
abortion. It must apply lo the
right lo have sex.
Th e 5th District Court of
Appcul In Daytona Beach re­
versed Lockett lusl year, saying
people under 18 aren 't re­
sponsible enough to "cope with
the consequences" o f sex. The
lower court then asked the
Supreme Court to review the
decision.
Thursday's Supreme Court
ruling means statutory rape
c h a rg e s w ill be rein sta ted
ugulnsl Erik Rodrlquei. a St.
Cloud resident when charged,
and Steven Wtlllums. then of
Eustls.
Also, the convldlun of Quarry
Jones, then of Orange County,
will stand. Jones hud received u
-Ufj-ycar prison sentence
State prosecutors bulled the
ruling, but critics denounced It
us on Infringement of privacy
rights o f young people.
"T h e whole purpose of the
statute is to protect young.
Im pressionable people from
older adults who could take
udvuniugc o f their Immaturity."
5th Judicial Circuit State At­
torney Brad King said. "I think
It's an appropriate role for the
slate lo take."
But Nlnu Vlnlk. legal director
of the Florida chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union,
argued that consenting sex be­
tween two people of any age
"should be none o f the stale's
business."

The following crimes were reported to Sanford police:
• 1900 block Adam Drive: unlisted property reported taken
sometime Wednesday between 0 u.m. and 4:30 p m.
• 100 block Golf Club Circle; two bicycles, tools and other
possession valued at $825 rcjxirled tuken sometime between
7:30 p.m. Tuesday and 7:45 a.m. Wednesday.

PLEASE
RECYCLE.
BECOME A N EYE D O N O R .
CALL 407-422-2020.
\ It (//(&lt; il I \ &lt; / •&lt; i i i L' i 'I I l» 'i h L i

r

We Keep Our Turnovers to a Minimum.
That's why we treat you right the
first time. Think about it...If one
builds a strong fence to begin
with... There W ould Be No Need
of M ending! Why not visit us
soon?

K aiser
PO N TIA C -B U IC K -G M C TRUCK
1590 South Woodland Blvd., DeLand
DELAND 904-734-6682 • DAYTONA 904-257-6540 • ORLANDO 407-629-0549
'LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY 17-92 A HWY I5A"

a tC E HARDWARE a iC E HARDWARE liCJE HARDWARE

°GREAT©
GARDEN

M A S I
S a n fo rd Store O n ly

a«i« o*u» 5 it

An *

PROPANE TANKS FILLED EVERY DAY
WHILE YOU WAIT 20 Lb. Tank $ J 7 0 ^
l mm

Sarvlng AMYour Hartaara Naads Shea 1971

SANFORD CASSELBERRY

LONGWOOD LAKE MARY
Mi

Hwy 434 A 427

PuWU S t a f f * Caatar i

339-4113

5

A C I?

330-9599

n e fu W flf6

Wtotar Park Dr.
339-7365

297 L 25(9 St
321-0115
Jii-vw
a

q

HARDWARE xtG Ir HARDW AAM j^ C E HARDWARE M X HARDWARE a\CJE HARDWARE

JCPenney

MEMORIAL
*★ * D A Y * *
FO R M EN
[3 F O R C H IL D R E N
F O R W O M E N f1
31.99 !SALE 6.99
25-33% OFF NOW
Reg. $8.99. BUGLE BOY®
HAGGAR® WRINKLE-FREE

ALL SWIMWEAR

30% OFF
SUNGLASSES

COTTON SLACKS

TEE FOR BOYS

NOW 24.99

SALE
8.99
Reg. 10.99 &amp; 11.99. SE­

HAGGAR® WRINKLE-FREE
COTTON SHORTS

25% OFF
ASSORTED BELTS

LECTED BOYS AND GIRLS
PLAYWEAR SETS IN
INFANTS

25% OFF

SALE 19.99 SALE 6.99
Reg. 27.50. STAFFORD®
Reg. 7.99. BOYS SHORT

FABRIC AND STRAW
HANDBAGS

FO R H O M E

EXECUTIVE SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRT

SALE 14.99

2 f o r $32

Rag. $19.99. PRINT SHORTALL FOR JUNIORS.

BUGLE BOY® SHORTS

WHITE SALE
SAVE ON

It purchased aaparalaly, S22 aach.

SALE 21.99

NOW 24.99

Reg. $30. CAPACITY* RAYON
ROMPER

LEVIS'® 550TM RELAXED FIT
5 POCKET SHORTS

SUMMER
SANDALS
ON SALE

SET

W IN D O W C O VERING S.
M ADE-TO-M EASURE.
SELECTED BEDDING,
AND BATH.

SALE 12.99 20% OFF
Reg. $18. WEEKENDS®
DRAWSTRING SHORTS

sm
RMul*[rt»i*«o*twTOp&lt;K.ior*v
ixxk«y«
Wit KO\ UMI otfwwt* not*d

8m
ott INMM

u n m .o n rn i« p rice .g &gt; o n g n a lIn tw m tU M m ju k d o n n .iiv *y h a » « tw w iI i I k i w w *
Ml pnead
B«Ju«»«n» on 0&gt;Vn4 p&gt;K0d
\r»J .lo t . I

MlMMWMXPvMySMitViM. -Wow-pruti*»w rtiw nn«i.»ai»&lt;w

JCPENNEY BATH COORDI­
NATES.

D O IN G

lH J R t O H T '

Sanford Plaza
Hwy. 1 7 -9 2 » Sanford

�4 A - S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y , M a y 27, 1W 4

Editorials/ Opinions
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 3277)
Aren Code 407.322-2011 or 831-9003
Wayna 0. Doyla, Publlthar and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATS:
3 Month*............................8IB.S0
0 Month*............................$30.00
1 Year................................$78.00
Florida RaaldanU muat pay 7% aala* I n In
addition to rata* above.

EDITORIAL

Kudos to
school board
The Seminole County school board has
mudc a committment to help those students
who are at risk of dropping out of school
before graduation.
There Is a new commitment o f energy and
financial resources to students, especially
those In the Sanford area, w ho might not’ be
motivated or prepared to meet the challenges
of school.
The district has adopted a mission state­
ment that says they believe every, student has
the capacity to learn. From the handicapped
student to the gifted student, everyone Is able
to learn something.
The renewed commitment to those stu­
dents w ho are nt-rtsk Is a confirmation of that
belief.
W e believe the Sem inole County school
board Is heading In the right direction by
designating $1 million to those students w ho
might need a little extra help In being all they
can be.
Throw ing m oney at a situation can never
be the total solution to a problem . The
commitment to a lower class size and to
involve teachers, administrators and parents
In the education of these students Is the real
nnswer.
At-rlsk students might be heading toward
dropping out because of a lack of Interest In
school or because of disciplinary problems.
There m ay be a lack of Interest on the part of
parents to encourage the student In educa­
tional pursuits.

CHUCK STONE

Am erican politics sheds its shame
With apologies to "Guys and Dolls," politics
has become "the oldest established, permanent,
floating soap opera In the U.S."
It’s not hard to appreciate why. The art of
governance has replaced the pageantry of
theater.
Who would believe that a television series
would feature a woman accusing u Supreme
Court nominee of sexual harassment: another
woman accusing the president of the United
States of Inviting her to perform oral *ex; a U.S.
senatorial candidate and former Marine colonel
convicted or three felony charges after confessing
that he lied to Congress: and an ex-convict,
cocaine-using former mayor o f the nation's
capital announcing he will run again for that
office?
Have Americans no shame?
Obviously not. National shame evaporated In
the canonization o f a president who slnglehondcdly tried lo destroy the Constitution. Richard
Milhous Nixon left office In disgrace and was
resurrected with amazing grace.
The controversies swirling around Anita Hill,
Paula Jones. Oliver North and Marlon Barry all
prove that shame Is a function o f Ideology,
political party, ethnicity and gender.
Republicans and their allies have never

wavered from their conviction that Anltn Hill lied
about Clarence Thotnns. And now they’re reeling
from the ecstasy o f
their redemption by
Paula Jones.
B a r r y ’ s announcement o f his
m ayoral candidacy
will shock many po­
litical purists who
aren't shocked by the
b e s m ir c h e d R e ­
publican senatorial
c a n d id a t e O liv e r
North's lead among
Republican delegates
In Virginia.
Despite denuncia­
tions o f North by
fo r m e r P r e s id e n t
Thoartof
Reagan, former Joint
governance has
C h ie fs o f S t a ff
roplacod tho
C h a ir m a n C o lin
Powell nnd Virginia
Pheater. ^
Sen. John W. Warner
- as well as polls
predicting that North will lose - Virginia's
Republican faithful are hanging lough with

JACK ANDERSON

P a tie n t w a s n ’t told
of e x p e rim e n t’s risk

While the school district can not change all
things In the youngster’s environment, It can
the schools the Idcad place to leant.
The Seminole County school board- has
---- ---------------o ..rst
t e p ........
° s,r?,&gt;2
nr8t s8,eP
In helping Improve
the future o f those students at rls

met

ju s t

LETTER

Chance to excel
What happens to high school students who have
been expelled from school? Should they be
readmitted to school, be turned away and on the
streets, or be given alternative forma of education?
There Is un educational alternative for students
who have slipped through the cracks o f traditional
school systems: Project XL.
This alternative school Is co-sponsored by the
Seminole County School system and the Private
Industry Council.
Imuglne a school where at-rlsk students go to
school, receive Job opportunities, do their work on
computers, receive Individual counseling and
mentoring, get rewarded for their achievements,
und graduate. It's not a dream: It's happening at
Project XL.
Unlike traditional schools, X L operates tike a
business. Rcsponsbllllty Is placed directly on the
students. Passing or falling Is the students’
d ecision . T h e y draft th eir ow n Individu al
behuvloral contracts. Failure to live up to the
contract means students lose their last chance to
be educated.
At XL. Instead o f hearing, ’’You won't succeed."
students hear, "You will learn here." For every
month students attend classes, PIC rewards
achieving students. It's like going to a Job and
receiving a benefits package.
The school board and PIC share the philosophy
tliut students need to learn a fourth R —
responsibility. It Is a better Investment o f taxpay­
ers' money to fund short-term eeucatlon rather
than fund long-term Incarceration.
Traditional education does not meet the needs
and learning styles o f all students. Schools of the
future must adapt to meet Individual needs and be
willing to try alternative methods If students arc to
be given the chance to excel.
Adriana Rendon
Seminole Community
College student
Fern Park

Berry's World

■ w

• NM W MA.M .

North. He's going to Ik * nominated, und hr Just
may beat Virginia's hol-to trot Democratic In­
cumbent. Charles Robb.
Does Barry's candidacy occasion surprise?
Probably no more than the recent nationwide
poll of 1.200 blacks, which found a majority of
Plucks - 33 percent - now favor the establish­
ment of a black political party.
The (toll is a (millleal electric shock, coming ns
It does nt a time when black electoral officials
huve never been more Incorporated Into
America's political mainstream.
Even with blacks ns mayors o f major cities,
c h ie f Ju stices o f sta te S u p rem e C ou rts
(Pennsylvania. South Carolina), speakrrs of
stntehouses (North Carolina. California) nnd
members of Congress - 39 In total, the largest
number ever •• black voters still feel alienated.
Barry, a shrewd street polltlclnn. is tapping
Into this discontent. The odds are still pro­
hibitively against him D.C.’s while minority.
IMirndoxIcally. like the South African while
minority's estranged relationship with the Afri­
can National Congress demands a more rigorous
standard than ethnic aifectlon
But D.C. black voters are frrllng more than
estrangement. They are disgusted with their
Incumbent mayor. Sharon Dixon

x m

i? * ,

DONNA B R ITT

Understand, it’s a black hair thing
WASHINGTON — It's a black hulr thing —
you wouldn't understand.
At least I didn't when the calls started. One
woman was In tears, crushed by the "terrible
Insult to black women" described by the
newspaper article. Others angrily suggested
that the piece's subject had "sold out."
Then again, some callers were miffed only
that the article hadn't told them exactly how to
reach the so-called "sellout" so they could do
business with him.
The powerful reaction was "a shock and a
surprise" to Barry Fletcher, the subject of an
April 8 Washington Post story. Fletcher
thought he knew how serious black folks are
about hair — he has a national reputation for
styling African American heads, Including
those of Tina Turner, Sen. Carol MoseleyBraun and, most recently, Halle Berry, who
apears on the cover of the June Essence.
Still Fletcher. 38, owner o f the Avant Garde
salon In Scat Pleasant. Md., for 12 years,
practiced his craft In relative obscurity — until
the "H a ir O ly m p ics ," a biennial world
hairstyling competition that concluded in
London last month.
When Fletcher won a coveted spot on the
U.S. team In March, he was thrilled to be the
first stylist to win the competition — and the
right to represent his country In London —
using a black model. He celebrated when the
team's couch, Randy Rick, approved another
black model, stunning Kember Kane, for the
finals.
Then Rick, after visiting Europe to discern
International Judges' taste, nixed Kane. The
coach, whom contest rules state has the final
say. told Fletcher to use u model he'd chosen
— a white one. Why the change?
"M y understanding from working with
African American hair is If you bleach It out,
you get a lot o f damage,” Rick, who la white,
said at the time. Because one contest phase
required bleaching, the hair "has to have the
right density. The model Barry showed me Is
Just not going to work."
Despite Fletcher's Insistence that Kane's
healthy hair could withstand bleaching. Rick
was adamant. That left Fletcher with a choice
— use the white model or withdraw from the
contest, on which he says he'd spent 812,000.
After much angst. Fletcher opted to compete.
The resulting controversy, he says, forced
the hair Industry to confront for the first time
Its assumption "that (white people's) hair Is
superior" — an assumption bolstered, he
admits, by so many black women, and some
men "relaxing our hair, bleaching it, dyeing It
light colors.”
And It forced Fletcher, whose own hair Is
often relaxed, to confront certain Issues. A
nou-polltical guy. he once produced a fashion
publication on "African American Images"

featuring models In Krnte print clothes — not
one o f whom hud natural hair. The mag's
sponsor had no Interest In such styles, he suys.
" I don't make my living doing natural hulr. so
It's not something I'm going lo fight for.”
This time, he paid a price. Though most
people he knew applauded his going to
London, one longtime customer dropped hint:
another rushed to the salon to confront him.
" S h e s a id sh e
worked with youths
who thought of me us
u role mode. ...And
this role model Just
goes on and uses u
white model — giv­
ing kids the message
a w h ite m odel Is
better.
"That's when It re­
ally hit m e," he says.
"Whether I liked It or
not. I was either go­
ing to be seen as too
C One woman was
black or not black
In tears,
enough. Because 1
crushed by (ho
rea lly want to be
'terrible insult
accepted on an In­
ternational level, I
to black women'
c o u ld n ’ t le t m y
described by
personal beliefs stop
the newspaper
article J
me from entering the
mainstream."
So he worked his best magic with the white
model — and saw his team finish 22nd. among
34 nations. "1 would have been u better
competitor If I Imd stayed with the texture I
was familiar with." he Bays.
But today Fletcher sees the whole flap as
valuable experience. "W hat happened In
London (could) help me win in 1996 — with a
block model."
So Fletcher's happy, I'm not, because I do
get this black hair thing and the racism that
fuels It, and see so much that's Irksome:
That In 1994. an educated hair "exp ert" like
Rick would still think all African American
hair la the same — actually, It ranges from
kinky to curly to straight. Thul though I too
fee] frustrated about being Judged "too black"
or "not black enough." I wish Fletcher had
stood on principle — perhaps forcing Rick lo do
the right thing.
Some black women — and the men who
Influence them — have u ways to go,
self-love-wise. While many straighten their
hair as a fashion option, others arc still
ashamed of the lively texture o f their natural
locks — a shame that must be overcome If we
are to be whole.
It's enough to mukc a sister tear out tier
(permed, braided, drcadlocked, natural, never
simple) hair.

WASHINGTON - When Greg After tried In
hitch u ride to Washington In 1990. hr
planned to assassinate the president with a
canister ol poison gas This week hr arrives In
Washington us an rx|&gt;rrt witness
After Is scheduled to testify In congressional
hearings that will examine the risks Incurred
by sometimes unsus|&gt;ecUng patients who
participate to medical ex|&gt;crlmruls After sers
himself as a volunteer-tunicd-vlctlrn.
D ia g n o s e d us a
schizophrenic, After
hud ke pt his
s y m p t o m s In r e ­
m is s io n w ith th r
drug prolixin. Six
years ago. he ugreed
to become a subject
In a University of
C a lifo r n ia ut Los
A n g e le s r e s ru r r h
p r o je c t In w h ic h
d o c t o r s t r ie d to
s lo w ly w ean him
£ W ho n G reg Allnr
from prolixin. Alter
trlod to hitch u
rv h o w a s b e I n g
rfcfo to
treated us an outpa­
W ashington In
t ie n t . s u ffe r e d a
1990. he
severe relapse.
planned to
After claims that he
assassinate the
was fo llo w in g the
president with a
orders of alien voices
canister o l
only he could hear
poison gas. J
when he tried lo kill
his parents nnd embarked on a trip to
Washington to assassinate thcn-PrcsIdcnt
George Bush. After was stopped before he
reached Washington and resumed hiking
prolixin. Earlier this year, a report try the
Office for Protection From Krscurch Risks at
the Nntlonal Institutes of Health criticized the
UCLA experiment on the grounds that It
"failed lo comply wllh the requirement* of
Health und Huinun Services regulations" try
not Informing patients about the level of risk
they were running.
UCLA officials claim Ihut the re|iori merely
criticizes the university for not pulling more
pullent Information In writing rather than
providing It verbally.
After's experience will Ire fculured (Ills
week tic fore u House subcommittee chaired
by Ron Wydcn, D-Ore. Although he signed a
consent form, which stated "m y condition
muy Improve, worsen or remain unchanged."
Alter will testify ihut he did not realize all the
risks o f the study.
An udvunccd copy of Allcr's testimony
rends: "I would never have consented lo
participate If the researchers hud presented
the real facts about what happened over the
previous 10 years to those participating In
this experiment." He quotes UCLA doctors
who said that most patients withdrawn from
medication had to go back on medication.
"That means that everyone gol worse." After
added.
After, who has a lawsuit pending against
UCLA, declined lo be Interviewed. A UCLA
spokesman declined to comment on Allcr's
case specifically, citing patient confiden­
tiality.
The Office o f Protection From Research
Risks, which Is within the Department of
Health and Human Services, Is designed to
safeguard patients. It oversees HHS-funded or
sponsored clinical research projects Involving
human subjects. Such research is taking
place at more than 1.000 medical Institutions
performing 15.000 to 20,000 studies a year,
costing approximately $5 billion.
To deal with the workload, the Food nnd
Drug Adm inistration and the Office of
Protection From Research Risks delegate
most regulatory oversight to each medical
center's Institutional Review Board. Critics
charge thut this patchwork policing requires
reform. The mentally III, the poor and the
disabled are often preyed upon by these
programs, according to experts.
"It's just not right lor some o f the most
vulnerable Americans to lie put at risk,"
Wydcn told our associate Andrew Conte,
while not specifically commenting on the
UCLA study. "These arc really sad. tragic
examples o f people being exploited — Ameri­
cans without political clout.

'-J J J

(USPS 411-MO)

TJV

S an ford H erald

�S a n fo rd H era ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y , M ay 27, 1004 - BA

Budget
C o n tin u e d f r o m

Legal N otices

Page a A

tM'opIr In thin prorcnn arr Juat alxnil over.” eald
I)nvl(i Cobum. the governor'll budget director. "I
don't think It’s really very productive."
In 1090, volern approved moving the 60-day
regular h c m Io i i from April to February to give
ncnools, male iigeucim and olhern who receive
ntate money more time to plan their yearly
hudgrtn. which take effect each July 1.
Thin year, the Male Lrglnlaturc panned the
budget April 15.
Iluiise Speaker Ik) Juhnnou, D-Mlllon, wan
nuppotw-d to nlgn the npemllng plan first and then
send tt to Senate 1’rrnldcnt Pat Thomas, DQuincy, for bin signature. It would then go to the
governor for final action.
Johnson, a former Chllrn aide, helped steer the
governor's health care reforms through the
120-mrmber lower chamber In the regular
session. The Senate, where Hepubllcunn und
Democrats each have 20 seats, did not iuke up
the plun.
Chiles this week called lawmakers back to
Tallahassee for a special session on health care.

And he has promised to keep them In the Capitol
until they pass a reform package.
Kathy Putnam, the speaker’s spokeswoman,
said Johnson simply hasn't had a chance to sign
the budget because o f other commitments outside
Tnllahnssce since early May.
Johnson plans to sign It when he returns In
Tallahassee on June I. she said. After that, the
governor will have 10 days to take action — a
period that will run during the special session.
" I know what folks are saying out there.”
Putnam said. "It's a bunch of baloney.”
Of 606 bills passed In the regular sesalon, only
the budget and the budget Implementing bill
haven't gone to the governor, according to
legislative records.
Calubro said It's been at least a decade since It's
taken this long for the budget to get signed.
" It 's clear that there's an ngreement or
understanding that he (Chiles! doesn't wnnt to
receive the budget until he has 16 days to hold It
over legislators." Calabro said. "T h e problem Is
It's playing politics with the state's most
Important public policy document.”

Mediation
Continued from Pag* 1A
resorting to aggression.”
Kuhn said that It Is also Important to educate
parents as well. She recounts the tale of one
elementary student whose mother had packed a
knife In the girl’s lunch box for "protection."
Kuhn naked. "How are we going to tench the
students pro|&gt;er behavior If they are learning the
Inappropriate responses nt home?”
She noted that the Seminole County peer
mediation program has been "extrem ely suc­
cessful" In getting youngsters to resolve their
■problems creatively and without resoning to

violence.
The students who are Involved get a sense of
satisfaction of having found a solution on their
own. without adult Intervention.
"A n d It gives them a sense o f status." she said.
"It can literally turn a kid around."
Meanwhile, "Safe Schools and Von" Is a
50 minute show produced by the Florida Cable
Television Association and Sunshine Network. It
Is scheduled to run on the Sunshine Network at
9:30 a.m. June 4. 9 a m. June 6. 5:30 p.m. June
9. 7:30 p.m. June 14. 9-30 a.m. June 26 and
5:30 p.m. June 2B.

Homeless
I Continued from Pago 1A
■started serving meals to the homeless, but she
I does not know of any that pmvldrs shelter. There
jure about 35 or 40 people living at the shelter.
"T h ey ^tay here until they get relocated,
rspccially families," Mother Weavrr said "The
rumen stay until they ran gel AFDC (Aid for
r|&gt;endent Children) or whatever they're trying
|ngel nr get Job*."
The older men stay until they can be placed In
home or placet! by another agency She noted
Ihe housing authority does not have any
ifnrdablr, subsdlzed housing available
"W e are In a crisis here. I have to let people stay
rrr overtime, because they have nowhere to go.
kperially If they have Hide children." Mother
/raver said. She added that scImmiI uge children
|nto school from theshrltrr.
A women and children's shelter Is scheduled to
|e com pleted In October to help relieve
irerrrowdlng at thr mission. Mother Weaver Is
eking donations of building materials for thr
oject at the mission, telephone 321-8224.
There are emergency shelters for only 17
cent of florlda'a homeless.
''"W e must work on ull fronts — from the

emergency shelters and soup kitchens to translitonal housing, health care and Jolts training — If
we are to break the cycle of homeless." HRS
Secretary Jim Towey said.
The number o f homeless tn Florida has more
than doubled In the last five years.
In fiscal year I9H8-89. an estlmatrd 10.000 to
20.000 people were homeless. Thai grew the nrxt
yrar to an estimated 17.000 to 28.000 homeless
and the following year to 31.000.
Some of thr leading causes of homelessness are
unemployment, poverty, alcoholism, shorutge of
affordable housing, hralth problems, dnig abuse
and menial Illness, according to HRS.
Florida spent nearly $57 million on the
homeless helwrrn July 1992 and last June. The
amount of money didn't Increase significantly,
all hough an a d d lllo n a l SIO m illion was
appropriated for homeless youth and another
$300,000 for w om rn In domestic violence
shelters.
The data was compiled from information
provided by 17 local homeless coalitions, repre­
senting more than 1.300 agencies, organizations
and governmental bodies
Information from tho A moc lotos Sr#** utoA lnthl»r#

^

*V*H

V *

DEATHS
FAMES If. BELLAMY SR.
M am et II. Hcllumy Sr.. 63.
gltona. forinciIv ol Sanford,
Bd Wednesday. May 23. 1004
. Central Florida Regional HosHal, Sanford. Horn Sept. 9.
10 In W oosier, Ohio, hr
to Central Florida In
h He was retired from (he
, Air Force, lie was a member
Church of Christ. Sanford,
was a member of Sanfurd
lie Lodge 62 FA AM.
f f v l v o r s In c lu d e w ife ,
tet daughter. Martha Reid,
i t son. James H. Hcllumy
Bltona; sisters. Francis
l and Virginia Scolt. both of
i a ; brothers. Cecil and
y both of Ocala: two grand­
er
la m k n w Fun eral H om e.
Trtl. In charge of arrangeIts.

[ANV1LLE
lOWN

JEROME

jranvllle Jerome Drown. HH,
H o tn b a y A v c .. W in t e r
^rlngs, died Thursday, May 26.
94 at Sunbelt Living Center.
|popkn. Horn Oct. 21. 1906 In
nltimorc. he moved to Central
Jlurlda tn 1958. He wus u

production supervisor for Martin
Marietta. He was Catholic.
Survivors include daughters.
Katherine Slamerro. Maryland.
Puttl Jones. Casselberry; son.
Granville II. Case Iberry; seven
grandchildren.
Orlando Cremation Service.
Orlando. In charge of arrange­
ments.

LELANDO. rOQOIN
La-land G. Foggln, 77, of Os­
teen. died Thursday. May 26.
1994 at Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Horn May 25. 1917 In
Akron, Ohio, he moved to Cen­
tral Florida In 1988. He was a
heavy equipment operator. He
was a Navy veteran o f World
Warll.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife .
Mildred: daughters. Curol Wilson
and Martlynn l-arsen. both of
Deltona; brothers. Forest. De­
ltona. Harold. West Virginia.
Kenneth, Winter Park: three
grandchildren.
G rnm kow Fun eral H om e,
Sanford, in charge of arrange­
ments.

CARMEN J. NUCCI
Carmen J. Nuccl. 78. Orange

Drive, Altamonte Springs, died
Thursday. May 26. 1994 ut
Stanford Center. A ltam onte
Springs. Horn Aug. 14. 1915 In
Rochester, N.Y.. he moved to
Central Florida In 1971. He was
a receiving clerk. He was a
member of the Church of the
Annunciation. He belonged to
the Over 50s Club.
Survivors Include daughter.
Undo. Altamonte Springs; son.
Alan, Uuffalu. N.Y.: several
brothers and sisters: five grand­
children.
Ualdwln Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

1 ! tririfi
M *iikinl
ilto—

_J

BELLAMY. JAMES H. SR.
G riv iild * luntral M rvlctt lor Jim*# M
Bellamy Sr. 4) ol Dollona. formerly ol
Sanford. Mho dlad Wednefdey Mill b# 10 a m.
Saturday morning al Evergreen Camalary
with Rtv Tony Bletk oflidellng
A rran ga m tn li by Gramkow Funaral
Noma, Sanlord
FOOOIN, LELANDO.
Gravtildo funaral tarvlctt lor Ltland G
Foggln, 77, ol Otlaan. Mho dlad Thursday.
May N. will bo Saturday. I) noon, al Da IIona
Memorial Gardena with Ray Ban Marlin
officiating.
A rran ga m tn li by CramkoM Funaral
Homa, Sanford

IN THE COUNTY COURT,
IN AND FOR
S IM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M-WS CC
OAKLAND VILLAOE
H O M E O W N E R S A S S O C IA ­
TION, INC.,
Plelntllf,
va
W ILLIAM S DAVIDSON, at al..
Defendant!#).
NOTICE OF SALE
Hoi lea It hereby given that
purtuant lo the Final Summary
Judgment ol Fereclofurt and
tala anfarad tn the cauao pond
Ing in the COUNTY Court In and
for SEMINOLE County. Florida,
being Civil Number tlZHSCC.
the underalgned Clark will tall
the property aIturned In SEMI
NOLE County, Florida, do
u r ibed at
Lot l i t . O A K LA N D V IL ­
LAGE. Mellon Four, Phare III.
according to ,lhe Plat thereof
recorded In Plat Book » . Page
&lt;0. ol tho Public Record# of
Seminole County, Florida
al public u io . to the higiwti
bidder tar cath at 1I;M a.m. on
the tlrd day of Juno. Ufa. al the
We#l Front door of tho SEMI­
NOLE County Ceurthou*#. Son
lord. F lor Ido
DATED Ihli m il doy of Moy,

me.

(SEAL)
MARYANNB MORSE
C4rk of tho Circuit Court
BY: JonoE Jotonlc
Deputy Clerk
Publi#h Moy 1) A June 1. Itte
DER 77*
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE SIOHTIENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE N0.i T1-IM1 CA 14-L
BROAO NATIONAL BANK.

PlOJnfllf.

STEPHEN! RACHLIN;
NATIONSBANK FLORIDA.
N A : UNI TED STATES OF
AMERICA: SPECIALIZED
LAWNMAINTENANCE. TIM
E SIMPSON. CONSTANCE
RACHLIN
Defendant |#|
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H EReBY GIVEN
the' purtuani to an Amended
Summary Final Judgment of
Forecloture deled May IS. I**i
In Cate No »&gt; IU1 CA u L. In
Circuit Court In and tor
Seminole County. Florida In
Mhich BROAD N A T IO N A L
BANK l# Iha Plalntltt and
STEPHEN I RACHLIN. at al .
are the Defendant#. I Mill tell lo
the highetl bidder tor cath al
Ihe W ell Front door of the
Seminole County Courthoute.
Sanford. Florida al II 00 am
on Ihe Ulh day ot June, tftr m#
lot lowing detcrlbed real proper
ty at tel form In the Summary
F mal Judgment of Forecloture
EXHIBIT “ A "
Begin f t ) leet Eatt ol the NW
corner of the NE la ol Section
M. Tdwnthip 10 South. Range It
Eatt. told point being on Ihe
B itte rly right el way ol the
Longw oed M arkham Hoadi
thence Eatt lit * leaf lo Ihe NE
corner al the NW to ol tho NE to
ot tho NE N of told tectum U.
Ihence South l ) d tiro tt W eil
t i t I# l*et, Ihence Wetl SSI SO
teel more or let# lo Ihe SC
corner of tho property dttcrlbed
In Dead Book 1*0. Pope lie. of
the Public Rocordt ot Seminole
County. Florida,■ Ihence North
MO teat; thence Wetl lie 7* teel
more or lett lo Ihe Eetterly
R igh t ot W ey ol Ihe Long
wood Mar them Road, 'hence
Northerly along tald right o!
way lo Ihe point ot beginning, ell
lying and being In Seminole
County. Florida
From a point on Iha Eatltrly
boundary ot Ihe right of wey ol
M ark h am Lon gw ood Road
where the North Section lino ol
Section 14, Townehlp 10 South,
Range I t Eatl crottet tald
right ol way. run Southerly SO
laet along tald right ol way lo
tho point ol beginning, run
Ihence Eatl lor a dlilence ot
11* 71 tael along a common
boundary with thote certain
land! detcrlbed In Olllclel Ret
ordt Book t i l l . Pege 1110.
Seminole County, Florida; run
Ihence South along a common
boundary with Iha .foremen
Honed lor a dlttanco ot 7M 00
laet; run 1hence North HPTYIl"
Watt for a dlilence ol 171.n teal
lo a point on tho aforementioned
Eattarly right-of-way Una ol
Markham Longwood Road; run
Ihtnce North l l ’ eO'OO'" Eatt
along tald right ol way line lor a
dlilence ol IS10 0 leel lo tho
point ol beginning, all lying and
being in Seminole County, F lor
Ida
DATED Ihit Ulh day ol May,

lt*4
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: JanoE.Jatawlc
Deputy Clark
Publlth: May 171 June ). 1H4
DER 177

Legal N o tices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF THE STATE OF FL0R I0A
INAND FO R
IEM IN0LRCOUNTY
Cato Not T t-im -C A U (E )
G e n e ra l J w r lt d k lt e n
S T AN D AR D PG O ER AL
S A V IN G S B A N K .
P la in t if f ,
vs.
A L B E R T W . T U R N E R , a t ua..
•tat.,
Defendant!
AMENDED NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
■YC LE R K OF
CIRCUIT COURT
N o tic e It h e re b y g iv e n th a t th e
underlined Maryann* Morte.
Clerk of the Circuit Court of
Seminole County. Florida, will,
on Ihe ie**i day of Juno. 1*04. at
11:00 a m . at Iha Wetl Front
Ooor ot the Seminole County
Courthoute, In the City of San
ford. Florida, otter far tale and
•all at public outcry to Iha
highett and bett bidder for cath,
the tallowing detcrlbed property
tlluelad In Seminole County,
Florida, lb wit:
Lot M . GROVE ESTATES,
a c c o rd in g ta Ih a p la t th e re o f a t
re c o rd e d in P la t B o o k I I , P e g #
10, of Ihe Public Retards of
Sammate County. Florida,
pursuant to Iha final decree at
lorecloture entered In a cate
pending In tald Court, Iha ttyle
of which It: STANDARD FED
ERAL SAVINGS BANK vl.
ALBERT W TURNER, al u i .
el el.
W IT N E S S my hand and of
tidal teal ot told Court thli Itlh
day at May. l**4
IS E A L )
Pertont with a dltabflity who
a ipedel accommodation
to participate in Ihlt proceeding
thou Id contact ADA Coordinator
at Ml N Park Avenue, Suite N
Ml. San lord. Florida 17771 at
leetl five dayt prior to the
proceeding Telephone teOtl
17) 4)M eat 14117; la o o m
17)1 (TDD), or I IOO *51 0770
IVI. via Florida Rflay Service
By JeneE Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publlth May 10. 77. I*»4
DER 100
CITY OF
LAKE MART. FLORIDA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by ftv* City CommltUon ot Iha
City ot Lakt Mary Florida, that
tald Commlttton will hold a
Public Hearing on Juno 14. 1**4,
al 7 00 P M . or at toon thereat
tor at peitlbla. la contlder a
reqweii tor minor tubdivltton
approval with variance! to the
Land Development Cade to ellm
Inate paving and tidewelk on
Wood Street, to reduce the
required lot area lor propoted
loll 1 and 4 to lett than one
acre, to reduce Iha TOO tool
tetbeck lor tapllc lankt Irom
wellandt to f l tool: to reduce
the building tetbeck from 71 teal
to IS teal horn the comer vet ton
eetemenl tor prapoiid tott 1 and
4. on the toltowlng detcrlbed
The Wetl t# ot Iha Bait to of
Iha SW to of Iha SW to ot Section
14. Town imp M South. Rang# M
Eatt. Seminole County. Florida.
LESS) North toe f t toet at the
Eatt 70S TS leet and the Voum
MS IS toot of tho Eatt Mb.71 tool
and me Norm tai.sa tool of me
Eatl 147 S* feet of the South
S li le leel; more commonly
detcrlbed at the northeetl cor­
ner of Humphrey Road and
Wood Street
The Public Hearing will be
held In Iha CommltUon Cham
ban. IOO N Country Club Road,
Lake Mery, iha Public It Invited
to attend end be heard Said
hearing may be continued Irom
lima to lima until a llnel de
cltlon It made by the City
Commlttton.
A TAPED RECORD OF THIS
MEETING IS MADE BY THE
C IT Y FOR ITS CO NVEN
IENCE THIS RCCORO MAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN AOE
OLIATE RECORD FOR PUR
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOINO MATTER. ANY
PERSON WISHING TO EN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPE LLA TE PURPOSES IS
A D V ISE D TO M AKE THE
NECESSARY ARRANOE
MENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE.
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS
A B IL IT IE S N E E D IN G
ASSISTANCE TO PA R TIC I
PATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO
ORDINATOR AT LEAST 4k
HOURS IN ADVANCE OF THE
MEETING AT (407) M4-M14.
CITY OF
LAKE 7AARY, FLORIDA
Carol A. Fotter, City Clerk
DATED: May 14.1»»4
PUBLISH: May 17.1*T4
DER II*

Legal N otices
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
•BMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. *1-111 CA 14 B
C E N TR U ST M ORTGAGE
CORPORATION.
Plalnllff,

v».

W ILLIAMS. FOXWORtH.
• ta t,
Delendanllt)
NOTICE OF SALE

mill

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuant to an Order Scheduling
Forecloture Sato entered In thlt
cate now ponding In tald Court,
tho ityle ol which It Indicated
I will tall to tho hlghoit and
bell bidder tar cath In Iha
SEMINOLE County Courthoute.
M l Norm Park Avenue, San
lord, Florida, between n oo
A.M. and 1:0D P.M.. on Iha Nth
day of July, Ift4. Iho following
detcrlbed property at tot forth
In tald Order or Final Judg

monl, tovHI:

LOT 4. BLOCK D. CAME LOT
U N IT 1. ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F . AS RE
CORDED IN P LA T BOOK M.
P A O fil N AN D tt. PU BLIC
R E C O R D ! OF IE M IN 0 L E
COUNTY FLO R ID A.
O R D E R E D a t Sam lnala
County- Florida, ihlt 14th day of
May, t**4
MARYANNE MORSE
At Clark. Circuit Court
SemlnotoCounty. Florida
By: JanaE. Jatawic
At Deputy Clerk
Publlth May 171 June ). 1*14
O ER-Ilt

Legal N o tices
PUBLIC NOTICE
To: All Seminole County Auto
Dealert
From: Private Indutlry Council
Of Semlnoto County. Inc.
Subject; Requetl lor Propotal
For Leated Auto
The Private Indutlry CdumcII
Ot Seminole County, Inc It
tollclllng bldt lor a leated auto
The auto It tollclled Ior uta by
aitcuflve pertonnel and mutl a
minimum contain:
— a V 4 or larger angina.
— automatic Irentmltilon.
with overdrive, 4 tpeed parlor
mence,
— four door t preferred, two
door model may bo coniidered.
— tulllctont tooting capacity
for a minimum of lour odulti
comfortably.
— anti lock braking tytlam,
power,
— d r iv e n tide air bag
required, dual preferred.
— power it ter Ing required,
other power accttiorfet pre
ferred.
— crude control, end.
— Ih e a u lo m u t l bo
manufactured In Iha United
State# (a minimum ol *0% of
manufacturart tuggetted retail
value),
— Recreational vahlclal
(Van i, JWDS) not accepted.
Tho lee to ottered mutt be
available al a two year, U.COO
ml let per year opllon Current
leate car to be returned It a If* !
Pontiac Bonneville. Sf.000 mile*.
Qvettlont thouId bo directed to
Oery Earl. Eiecullve D'rtclor.
al (407) i l l Mir Propotal mutl
bo rectlved by l oop m May )!.
I**4.
Publlth May 17,1**4
DER 111

N O T IC E O F T A X S A L E
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN THAT ON THE l l t l DAY OF MAY.
IW4. 10.00 A M AT THE COUNTY SERVICES 0UIL0ING IN
SANFORD. HOI EAST FIRST STREET. ROOM 101*. COUNTY OF
SEMINOLE. STATE OF FLORIDA. TAX SALE CERTIFICATES
WILL BE SOLO ON THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LAND TO
FA Y THE AMOUNT DUE FOR TAXES HEREIN SET OPPOSITE
THE SAME. TOGETHER WITH ALL COSTS OF SUCH SALE AND
ALL AOVERTISINO SALE WILL BE HELD IN THE COUNTY
COMMISSION CHAMBERS
NAME LEOAL DESCRIPTION

....... .
SUID
•**•••••71 7 f t 47
I I III D JOTCl
4)1 LA1I AVI RORTN

TAX COST
MMMM
• M IM M

781.91
6468

ADO TO 1**) ROLL rOl 1**1 TAItl
lot ir ( lie s i )io rr or * i f )

m

m at

o jo ic i
4)1 U l l 4VC NORTH
ADO TO I f f ) ROLL 701 1**1 T4IIS
LOT 17 (L U t i sio i t or i m

}B2. ;•
6469

rt)

•*•••••• roc a m kHLU&gt;
................ i i k s io t ti
church n a r r l o n t i
tiuiiuH voooj lac
ado to i t * ) kou, rok m i t a i u
LOT I
CHUICX rtkJT IA7TI5T
HANIHAN WUU05 INC
ado to it*) kou. roa m i taim
lot l
............. ...
or iJxrotD
........ .
i re j*
RIU.1 ROHALD V
ro w x koe
Lie LOT to u u * * tt .a n t

IU44.4)
4470
104*.)7
4471

40).44
4471

m i n t

****e**teoc..'ik iu io
.........
1 re t
»OCU* DANIIL t t 1VTH1I N
tl*
tUVLAND Da *
Lie u rtt * * *
••••••••cotmrey clu» h i k .h u unit i
• • •• • • • •* » I ) *c t l
rum i a m o e o iA k
I I I CLTDk AVt
LIC LOT 11 ILX C
--------etc jo rv r jo act u -------• ILL4 aOHALO V * LILLIAN C

IIM E M t
411,01
447)
M M a t t i

a c k

of

B B Q

R

Ltd SIC )0 TV* IDs aci U I
t to r .a i r t o r u D o t n i or
IT *D 4* (L U I ID)
--------kkC 10 TV* 10 Rdl 11-------U O L I RONALD L A ItAAIk C
1**1 TAN Tk
m i ii-ta w o oa
Lie iz c io Tvr io i il l m
ate i t c o i or t i/t or nv i/t or nl
1/4 (UN V Uk.kO r t » 440 n N I t
dec i t mu i t t i c i ) ) * . * ) r t %
t t i . 4 i rr to iz c is .o i ac )
kAkNIS RONALD L k HA*I I C
m i RI-UOOO Dt
l ic t ic io tv * io * act m
l i e i t coa or i i/ t or nv i/t or i t
l/A I UN V Uk.kO 17 k 440 n N 46
Die i t n h it aic i U 6 . » ) rr a
*61.41 rr to l i e (s .o i aci
••••••••UOODIIIDCI AT THI irilNCS
........•••UNIT )

............ u res 4) t **

11.1VARAN1 HA! LAN 4 I ARYANIN
TO IOI 161700
LIC LOT I t
• ••tMttRUJlHCTON 7*11

•*••*•••71 1 ) res i) a it

••••••••IUILDINC ONLT
SANLANDO ASSOCIATII LTD
CIO UAL 1ST TAX SUV1CU INC
LIC IUILOINCS ONLT
rt lots i n disc as lie n i coi
LOT 6 RUN S 141.7* 71 W 64) IT NLT
ALONG C/L U V II TO ILT I/W SI 4)4
ILT ALONG ILT l/W IP- 4)4 TO ltd

I n r . l u / l n s ' &lt;v’ l « j i k I r u t s : . Coin s ’ l . i w .
W .« i« ;l R o lls - . i m ( f ’ r ee. D e s s e r f B .ir

Qui
FAMILY STEAKHOUSE
*ei|0!M \ KujMinr (

1‘ kV-A • ■'•

U0.07
447)

1410.1*
6474

ill.*)
*47)

M ia m i
M 9 7 . ll
9478

•*•*••«*
41,116. 13
6479

PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES NEEDING ASSISTANCE TO
PARTICIPATE IN ANY OF THESE PROCEEDINGS SHOULD
CONTACT THE EMPLOYEE RELATIONS DEPARTMENT ADA
COORDINATOR 41 HOURS IN AOVANCE OF THE MEETING AT
J ll-m o. EXTENSION 7*41.
RAY VALDES •
TAX COLLECTOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
Publllh: May k. 11,10,17,1»»4
DER kl

ib s

‘I'?.*.'

*474

ro aox ko*

PlATVfeR
/'z R

tll.ll

�&lt;»

:

8* - Sanlord Hsrald, Sanlord, Florid* - Friday, May 27. 1W4

W e ll d o n e

•

wmcHUAmnsm

Christina Ando non was among
thn many S e m in o le High
School students to bo honored
with awards and scholarships
Inst ovenlng at the school's
Awards Night. Tho annual
ovont honors students who
have achieved academic or
•ilhlutlc successes throughout
ihe school year. Anderson was
presonted with the Xerox Cor­
poration's Achievement Award
by Kon Brauman

i k U v i l ' v..

.

V -.

-

VFHY MAflluSS
A BQXSPRING

■

FLORIDA SLARGEST

Ik

S O F A S P F C IA L TY S T O R F 1

RflN *«•»• MyUn I Hint!

■'' ? ’ : - r

Twn

(iHlil»f r|flUMS

1 mi
f 1r t
11i J

Protest
"I was very rmbarrnsaed by
Hie whole thing." said Lowrry.
Her attorney, Julius
"A l first. I'wus very upset, very
• ’ William*, said hr is looking In to
upset I left and I lust started
. • the matter but declined lurthrr
crying I didn't ihlnk there was
• comment.
anything I could do. bul then I
Poller Chief Mulph Nussrll
decided, yes Ihrrr Is. so I railed
.
iTMlIlniinl a complaint was lllrd
an attorney."
il' iiiim lire potlccman who in­
L o w e r y s a id I h e m a l e
. wsttgated the incident. Olllcrr
Ronald Salallanir Musarll de­ employee Injured her ann "lly
night. I started having pains In
clined in comment further until
my shoulder I wrnt lo South
tin complaint was rrsolvrd
Srmlnolr (Community) Hospital
fhih -a*11did comment he t&gt;rlievrfl
and Ihey said I had a sprain
Jin Kson was urging l.owery to
They gave me an Injection It's
pursue the matter.
t he accounts of the April IB slid giving me some problems "
Kim Itongsun. a sturr clerk
Incident differ, although all
present that day. said Urwery
agreed it occurred, larwrry said
was unreasonable
n w is shopping m ihe siore
"T h e restroom It s only lor
amt setting aside Items for
purchase when she drvrlo|ied a em ployees," said Itongsun "It's
In Hie stockroom We cannot lei
••'•••I to use the restroom .
|&gt;roplr use It Irecause we have let
I.ou • ry said shr upproached a
people use II Irefore and we had
I' ” &gt; clerk near the front of the
t h i n g s m is s in g Ir o m ih e
tolrl tier shr nrrdrd to use
stockroom. There is a door to ihe
tin restroom , ih en w alked
outside."
loam ils ihe rear of the slorr
Mougsun said she pointed lo
w lirrr I lie- toilets wrrr located.
an "em ployees O N LY" sign on
I owery Mid l(*e clerk followed
the door lo Ihr storeroom and
her to Hie rear of Ihe shop and
•old her she couldn't use Ihr
. into the stornuom where Ihe
fa c ilit y
Itongsu n said Hie
t I' stMHims are located As she
woman Itevame angry when told
k rra c lird tlie restroom door,
she rouldn't use Ifie restroom
I -owery said ihe woman told her
and threw a since wig she wus
' Mn- i mild mu enter tiecuuse the
wrurlng lo the ground "She was
F-irllttjr was lot the sole use of
so upsel."
tin plovers.
*1 tell ttrr rntm down. WinnI loir! tier please. | really need
D ix ie has b a th ro o m s
We
&lt; I"
It I don't. I'll go right here
couldn't talk lo her She had her
* • ‘ *ii Iht Ilnur." said l.owery. "She
bands up like shr was going lo
• , ••aid If I do. I II clean II up.”
hit me. She wus terrifying us I
l.owery said she continued
left her lo calm down I didn't
, low-unfa Hie restroom and us she
. &lt;ntrrrd. a man pulled ihe door even call Ihr poller, she did."
Itongsun said there were two
, up' ii and pulled tier out by Ihe
female clerks on duly thai day
atm and oulerrtl her lo leave.
and she did not recall a male
Lowery sold she wrnt next door
there
• to use the public reslroom.
itongsun. who said she Is of
Afterwards, she
called Ihe
Korean descent, said she (reals
. ’ inford P olice Departm ent
all customers with respect, while
When puller arrived. Lowery
aid the officer wouldn't talk to or black.
"Ninety perernl arc bluck cus­
I ' i and Instead, listened only (o
tomers.
said Itongsun. "W e
, Ihe story nl thr store employers.
I.owery mild ihe police officer cannot ireut black customers
any differently. We huve lo ireal
■'■•Led Ihe employees If they
them the same. We I real l he
wanted her arrested anr' they
customers I lie way we have lo
•aid "No. fix II so she can' come
In here." She was Issued a no do. She didn't want to un­
derstand. What she Is trying lo
trespass warning.
do. doesn't mukc sense lo me.

;

Both pet

Continued from Page 1A

KLAUSNER
STYIECRAFT
SEHTA
REALISTIC
PIONEER
NATIONAL
CRAFTMASTER
REGAL
FRANKLIN

SIMMONS
BEAOTVREST
WASHNOTON
McKEEAN CHAIR
PRIVA1E SOURCE
TOM BARKLEY
LEATHER MC.
CARLYLE
RELAX-A-CUNER

and many mote

*499

Tha Rav Wlllla Maa Lowary
Tilt* sinrr I a for them."
Slorr owner Oroge It Dnlsrnhe
of Jacksonville said hr was
tllsuupolnied lo hear of Ihr
p r o te s t, hut d r lr n d r d his
em ployer's actions Dolsenhr
said any claim o f tacism was
"absurd and cra/y."
If you go into a 7 Eleven of
Circle K. which don't have
public bathrooms, chances are,
•bey'll deny you Why should we
lie different? We can lose pirrr
by piece In the display area, bul
In Ihe alockemom. we lose case
by case We've trad whole cases
go out ot Ihr back. A lot of
(iroplr use lids race thing for
anything dial happens Trial's
sim p ly nol true. If unyonc
should lie upsel. It should lie
us "

Handle Action

OVER 10 DIFFERENT SECTIONAL
STYLES TOCHOOSE FROM

Rocker
Reclmer
Big Man's
Chair

If you don l need 2 of tho
i ham im f s c t m u
famous rediners, bring a
sectional
friend and share the savings l n i n n

PRICE GUARANTEE

102* x 102’
Compare at
*998
D ESIG NER S IE E P SO f A A
L D V E S fA I
S C O

688

Need Help With Consumer Problems?

-L O R ID A L O T T O 6 T H A N N IV E R S A R Y !

KEYS TO THE CAR

Waterfront—
Continued from Page IA
them, and
(ili'im Mr Call said wr could pul
lln mi up In Ihe front windows of
I m ichlon's."
Itiulholomcw, who Is also a
member o f ihr Lake Monroe
Waterfront Master Plan Commlliec. said they will rcmuln on
display at iliul location for
(NMSlbly several weeks.
the students In this program
arc due bark urmmd the second
nl June," she commented, "and
at ibis time we don't know If
Hu y will waul these back, or will
be adding more lo them at Dial
lim e."
Musi o f the drowlngs ore In full
color, and descriptions of special
concepts are gnicrully Included,
depending on Ihe extent lo
which the architecture student
made Ihr presentation.
Some drawings show another
street going out onto Ihe water

from ihr urea of Hie Civic Center,
und circling the present marina
area lo Memorial ParkOthers show where such Hems
as wuicrfronl shops or public
facilities may lie Installed Some
propose the |MiHNlh||||y o f a
bundshrll lo be returned lo Hie
wuicrfronl urea, ns had existed
In the !050's.
Some plans luivc suggested
the development o f pedestrianorlenled amenities Including a
waterfront sldrwulk or bike trail,
additional overnight boat docks,
und food, beverage or fishing
supply shops.
Eventually, once additional
Input la made on the various
d r a w in g c o n c e p ts , m o re
drawings will be compiled de­
pleting more advanced plans for
d c v e I o p m c n I a lo n g th e
waterfront, and In the urea
between the waterfront and
downtown historic district.

Mural
Continued from Page IA
lions
on paper.
"T h e y ’d never done anything
this big before." she said. "1 bad
to keep reminding them to do
everything big."
For (heir efforts, Ihe students
were rewarded with a day ofT
from school and an EPCOT
T-shirt.
Moore suld that wus more than
udequnte recompcnce for the
budding artists.
"Th ey had so much fun." she
«M'd "T h e y ’re silll talking about
II."
The 57 students were guided
through ilii* project by a Disney
animator. The students learned
about using bright colors and

painting on u granu scale.
Schools from across Central
Florida were Invited to paint
pictures with u floral theme for
the celebration.
"W e didn't tell them whul (o
draw or how to do It" Moore
said. "W c Just let them go out
there and be creative. It turned
out beautifully."
The mural was painted on a
wall surrounding u construction
area at EPCOT. While the sur­
face la merely temporary. It will
rcmuln • in place for several
months at Irust and will be seen
by hundreds of thousands of
visitors lo the Disney park.
"I Ihlnk (he students learned
so much from this and had such
a good lime that It wus a great
thing." she said.

Win One Of 50 New Mustang GTs.
I / V n r/ \ To
nf Florida
FlnrirJn Lotto,
I niin w e're giving aw ay 5m0 new Ford M ustang GTs.
To celebrate
celebrate six
six vnnrx
years of

Just purchase a $ 5 or more Florida Lotto ticket between M a y 27th and July 2nd,
, and y o u 'll receive a "Lottom obile" coupon. M a il your coupon in one o f the
s p e c ia l p in k "L o tto m o b ile G iv e a w a y " envelopes a v a ila b le at your local
Florida Lotto retailer and you could end up behind the wheel of a 1994 Ford Mustang GTI
fc' • * * * *

’ M W 4 * - ' 1~ d“ l—

^

Yovmuiib. I I ^ i m o L W io - v . Com

PCMHMM

hr ,0u&gt;holwl

^

^

^

^

^

�I

••

Sanford Herald

F R ID A Y

May 27, 1994

orts
IN BRIEF
SYFA registration set
SANFORD — The Sanford Youth Fnoitiull
Association will conduct registration for football
players and cheerleaders on Saturday, May 28.
at the lot on U.S. 17-92 across from Sanford
Middle School.
Registration will be available between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m. Hoys and girls ages 7 lo IS are
eligible lo participate.
For details, call Tommie Thompson. 321*

2012.

A ge group track m eet
WINTER PARK — This Saturday's IHth
annual Golden South Classic track meet at
Sltowalter Field will feature un age group track
meet for elementury and middle school alhlrtrs.
Hcglnnlng at 7:30 a m.. Ihe young athletes
can compete In the lOO meter dash. 400-mrlrr
dash. I.OOO-meter run. und the long jump. The
age categories are H and Under. 910. I M 2 , nnd
13-14, Competitors will participate In Ihe age
category based on their age the day of the meet.
The enlry fee Is $3. payable at Ihe gate. All
running events are finals Athletes can enter
any or all events No spiked shoes will he
allowed on Ihe track for Ihe age group meet.
Ribbons will t»e awarded to the first through
sixth-place finishers. All competitors will receive
parllrlpatkm ribbons

D eer Run hosts fund raiser
CASSELUERHY — Derr Run Country Club
will l&gt;e the site of a charity golf tournament this
Sunday. May 29. for 9-yrar-old Danielle OHrlrn.
who is suffering from u rare form of cancer
Entry fee for the I p.m. tournament Is $!M) per
person, whlcti Includes greens fee. cart, soil
drinks, and an awards buffet dinner ut 8.30p.m.
Proceeds from Ihe event will go lo defray
O'Urlen's medical expenses OHrlrn has been
fighting rhabdomyosareoma. a form of cancer,
since I9f)0 She has had two major o|&gt;erutlon*
nnd several typr* of chemotherapy. Presently,
the cancer lias returned and she ll lie seeking
treatment at a research clinic In Houston
For reservations, call Dennis Mcllrlde al
Windetnere Country Club. 870-1112. or Ihe
Deer Run pm shop. 099-0502

Sanford m an ’s hoop league
SANFORD — Regisir.ilions are now being
or or pled by Ihe Sanlurd Recreation Dcjiartinrni
lor-its summer men's baskeihoil league at llie
&lt; rooms School wf Ounce •
Gomes will be played Monday and Wednesday
nights. A church league Is planned (or Fridays.
Rosters must have a minimum of six players
und are limited lo a maximum of 12
For Information, call 330-5697.

G reenville trim s 0 -C u b s
ORLANDO — Tim Gltlls went 2-for-4 with a
homer and three Rill to lead the Greenville
ilravcs to a 4-3 Southern League victory
Thursday night over Ihe host IngOrlundo Cutis
Greenville’s Royal Thomas |3-2I picked up the
win In relief. OttlsSmith |0-1) took the loss.

AROUND THE STATE
FSU opens regional w ith win
TALLAHASSEE - Pitching dominated firstround play at the NCAA Atlantic II rcglonul.
Florida State's Phil Olson threw 2Mi Innings of
I-hit relief us the Scmlnolcs held off Central
Michigan 8-6 In Thursday's (Inal game.
Earlier In Ihe day, Ohio Slate's Matt Beau­
mont f i l l) (rimmed Brigham Young 0-1 und
Jacksonville's Mark Gucrru (14-41 slopped
Kansas 7-2 with relief help from Chris Ferguson.
Florida Stute (40-20) and Jacksonville, which
split two games during the seuson. meet tonight.
Kunsas (39-17) will try to stay alive Friday In
the double-elimination event against top seed
Ohio Stale after BYU and Ccnlrul Mlchlgun meet
In an elimination-round morning start.

Thursday night high jinks
Roinco
'i^ H H H E E E H lH liH H E lH N H H H H H iE i
m anages to
stay perfect
From SUN Nagorts
SA N FO R D — S om eh ow , un­
defeated Rolneu/Florldu Sportswear
escaped tin tmesrupuhlr situation
Thursday night und pnllrd out a
12-9 win In eight Innings over
Slltley's Affordable* to stay on top
of Ihe Sanford Recreation Thursday
Men's Softbull league at Chase

Park.

In other action. Mutiny Silvia's
Imists loaded single In the bottom of
the seventli scored Dave Daugherty
with Hip game winning run. giving
The Touchdown Pub a 3-4 decision
over M A Erectors 3-4 Ken Hum
mrl Chevrolet picked up a forfeit
win ovrr Desk-Male.
Holnco/Florlda Sportswear (5-0)
now has u two game edge over txilh
■■
The Touchdown Pub and Ken
Ruinmrl Chevrolet (tied for second
al 3-2|. They're followed by M A
Erectors 12 31. Desk-Male (13). und
Sllfley's Aflordublrs (0 41
Next wrek. Desk-Male Is sched­
uled lo lake on M.A. Erectors al
6:30 p.m Sllffey's und Ken Hummel
will play at 7 30 p.m. before The
Touchdown Pub gor* up against
Rolnro/Florlda Sport swear In the
H30p.ni game.
Sllffey’s and Roinco luittled hack
and forth After one liming. Roinco
led 3 2 Al Ihe end of three Innings.
Roinco had a 3-4 advantage. The
Ryder MLS's Tony Bcilltssimo found himsalf In no man's
score was tied 6 0 alter through five
land whon his bass coach attempted to tend him from
Innings.
(
first to third on a baao h(t to loft against Mobtlite last
Roinco * again took the lead,
sc oring three runs in the lop of the
seventh, hut again hlllley s t ame
back, tying Hie score on Randy
Smuttier*' three-run home run with
none out In tfie home hall ol the
F ro m Staff Reports
seventh.
SANFORD — Wayne Dense li's llud Men struck lor six
Tom Stlfley then reuehrd on an
runs in llie first Inning and went cm to hand llerr: 3U Us
rrror, John Scott singled, and Dar­
Itrst lose ol the season. 9 6 . in the Scuilord Rec (ration
rell Rudd wulkrd lo load the liases
Tliursctay Men'sS oIIIm II la-ague al I'lnrhmsi Park.
for su ite)'*, suit with mine mil lint
Ihe n u l lu a w struck nut wml the
Thing* am underway with Mntitllllr- la-allng Hydrr
MLS 15-3 for lls llrsl win of the srnsnii In the mglitcwp.
following inner bouiirrU into an
the lie.ir t'orp nutsluggrd The UltrrGuys. 22-13.
liming rmltng double play
Ttir llud Men and llerri 30 (both 4-11 share (list plac e
Roinco won llie game by scoimg
In Iron! of llrtar Corp. 13-21. Mobllllr and The U llrr Guys
three runs In the top of the eight
(both 1-3). nnd Ryder MLS 1141
and retiring Sllffey's In order In the
Next week. Ilrlar t'orp. nnd Beer 30 will open the
hoi tom half of Ihe Inning
sec und half of the season with the 6 30 p m. gamr
R a n d y R a w l i n g s led
Mohllltr takes cm 1 hr Utter Guys ut 7 30 p in while Ihe
Holnco/Florlda S|K&gt;rtswear by going
Ihr llud Men scpiare oil with Ryder MLS al H 30 p in.
4-for-4 with a double, three single*,
Daniel Mowrry collected u triple*, three singles, and
one run scored, and four Kill Steve
live RBI lo highlight Mobllllr'* IB-hll attack. Tim
James contributed three singles,
Martin collected a double, single, one run. and four RBI
two runs, and an RBI. Mitch Burke
Jamie Herring doubled, singled, nnd scored three runs.
doubled, slnglrd, scored a run. and
Hob Markosadded two singles, two run*, and three Rill
hud two RBI. Steve Woodley singled
Angel Figueroa tripled and scored twice. John
twice und scored a run.
Curnlolu tripled and had un RBI. Tc-d Sc hwartmun hit
Dave Noble hit a single and scored
two singles and scured once. Killer l.ashlry singled and
three runs while Brantley Brumlcy
•cored twice Jim Bedow had a single, run. and an RBI
had u single und two runs. Randy
Freddie Howard and Paul Wallace each scored once.
Yates had a single, run. and un RBI.
Hill OsiMiurne Jr. hit two singles und scored a run lo
Jerry Brussell singled und scored a
lead Ryder MLS. Steve Sparks doubled and scored a
run. Rick Yules and Steve Donovan
run. Don Mac-loud hit u single Ui.it drove In OsiMiurne
each till a single. Dave James had
und Spark* In Ihe first Inning. Crulg McMlckrn also
an HUI.
scored a run. Mike Augellm had un RBI. Tony
Smuttier* had a triple to go with
ftelllsslmo and Bill Osbourne Sr. both slnglrd.
Ills home run. scored two runs, and
Dun Wlslh paced the Bud Men by hilling two double*
had three RBI to lace Sllffey's
and a single, scoring one run. and driving In another.
□See Ptnehurst, Page 2B
Josh Seward chipped In with three singles, two runs,
nnd two RBI. Gary Cline had a double, single, one nut.
RMm p FIp . I f i rM e
und an RBI. Doug Drier doubled and scored twice.
Sllllsr’t AMsrSsbUi
Scnll McLaughlin had a single, run. and two RBI. Dan
M A. Irtctort
Mrllo also had u single and Iwo RBI. Terry Hart added a
TswcMswn Pub
single, one run, and an RBI. Gordon Spencer singled

Hs«sM PSMp t f Mirk Msecs

night at Plnehursl Boillssimo tried to retrace hit steps
but the throw reached Mobillte second basemen Freddie
Howard before Bollitttmo got bock to the bag

Bud M e n d eal firs t lo ss to Beer: 30
•rSwMit
M
'll
(O P

and scored a run
Hpctn rr Ituggn ripped sn Inside the-p*irk home run
amt n triple, worrit twice, uud liad an Kill for Beer. 30.
Tim Alltwin chipped In with a double, single, ami one
run. Jerry Camus bad a double, single, and an RBI
Mlkr Miller added two singles. two runs, und an Rill
( buc k Cornet Io bud two singles and two RBI Red
Garner singled twice und scored u run. Jim Held lilt u
single und drove In a run Hob Garner also lilt u single.
Don Baldwin powered Briar Corp.’s 24 bit assault
with u home run. triple, two singles, four runs, and four
RBI. Allan Truskauskas collected two triples, u double,
one single, four runs, and four RBI. Tom Ryan had an
Insidc-thc purk home run. one single, two runs, and
three RBI. Budd l.ennon doubled, singled twice, scored
a run. und drove In two more.
Duke Ferralo added three singles, two runs, and four
RBI. Beau Myers and J.J. Jlles both hud iwo singles and
a run. Ruben Gurcln contributed a single, three runs,
and Iwo RBI while Berl Burgess had u single, three
runs, und one RBI. Grover Marks singled, scored u run.
und had an RBI. Anton Massey singled.
Tom Glllun led The Ullcr Guys with a double, tvyo
singles, two runs, and (wo RBI. Todd Morgan udded a
double, two singles, one run. and two RBI. Wayne
Walker tripled, scored twice, and hud two RBI.
.j
Frank Turner had two singles, u run. and an RBI. Ri)n
Cardrlt also singled twice and scored a run. Torn Luntyy
added u single, one run. und two RBI. Rick Jnhn.sqn
singled In two runs Rich Hemmlngrr and Donate
McCoy both singled and scored a run. Mike Nolo sco^d
twice. Frunk Van Pelt scored a run.
'l

Apopka clips |
Dodgers again f

Daly leaving N ets

From Staff Reports
•:
APOPKA — Scoring runs In every Inning iQit
the first. Ihe A|&gt;opku Blue Darters thumped tjje
Lake Brantley Dodgers 12-5 In u NatloifwI
Am ateur Baseball Federation ‘ A* Su tn nvr
League game Thursday at Apopka High Schools*
It wns Ihe second win In as many days flir
Apopka (2-0) over Lake Hrunlley (0-2). The tflrn
teams will pluy again this afternoon ut 4 p.m.£t
Lake Brantley High School.
£
. Steve Harrclson led Apopka by going 2-foCs)
, with a double nnd two RBI. Todd Smith nddccj'u
double (his fourth In two days) and n single*.
Albert Colon hit two singles.
For Lake Brantley. Brian Grassing wus 3-fo(&amp;
, with u run. Nick Cheek went 2-for-2 with tOK&gt;
' runs and un RBI. Malt Dcsnrt doubled und scorthd
n run. Andy McAllister hll a single nnd drove Ijn
two runs.
Jeff Hall added a single and un RBI. Molsfpi
-2SL2.tr m also hll a single. Nell Castnldo had f y
RBI. K.T. Sluwson scored a run.
&gt;
Starting pitcher Nate Blake (0-1) suffered tl)c
toss for the Dodgers.
_________ *;■

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. - Chuck Duly,
resigned us cos
o f the New Jersey Nets with
one year rema
„ on his three-year. $4 million
contract.
Daly. 63. said lie would stay with the team for
two more years to work on broadcasting projects
and ulso has signed a four-year contract with
TBS us an analyst.

W ilkena voted N B A ’s best
A T LA N T A — Lenny Wllkcns. who guided the
Atlanta Hawks to their first Central Division title
since 1987 and surpassed 900 career victories
this season, was selected NBA Coach of the
Year. Chicago's Phil .Jackson was second.

□7 :3 0 p.m. — ESPN. Eastern Conference flnuls,
New Jersey Devils at New York Hangers. (L)

Com ptaf HsMnga on Fa«a « ■

HtrtM Photo by MIt hoot SJodilntkl

Kick o ff the holiday w eekend
Tonight's spring football Jamboree at 8emlnole
High School will feature returning players like
Lake Mary rising junior Tyrant Davla (No. 24),
who hope to use tonight as a means to earning
..........

for th e

IW • — A IA
Ml 0 - t It

UNUNofOtfft

AROUND TH1 NATION

NHL PLAYOFFS

m 61 - I A
Ml It - II A*

„

starting lobs noxt yoar. Play kicks oil at 7 p.m.,
when Oviedo (aces Lake Howell In the first two
perlode. Alter that, Lyman and Lake Brantley
will tangle before Seminole takes on Lake Mary.
, ..

..

BLUE OARTERS I], DO DOERS I
lAkp Bnntl«r
S t 111 I - I IS ;•
Apopka
t i l i n i - II
I
Bioko. Child It). Dotort (SI. Andorton III tnd Slowton. EdfB.
Snood IS). Smith « ) . Boovor (h tnd Klrklond. Horrolton. W R "^
Edgo (10). I P — Bioko (0-1). Sovo — Mono IB - Loko Bronlloy,
Dotore Apopka. Smith and Horrolton SB — Nona. HR — Nona.
Rocordt — Lako Bronlloy 0 1. Apopka 10.
.

.

BEST COVERAGE OF SPORTS IN YOUR AREA, READ, TH E SANFORD HERALD DAILY

M HMM

•* .

-

0AM

�a B - S a n fo rd H a ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y , M a y 27, 1004

S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
Doat
____ I
At Seminole Perk
Thurtde y night
First r a c e - 1414. D: 11.11
1 Bobbin Robin
J 40 ) 00 &gt;10
) Larry* Toothpick
4 M &gt;10
lOmokloHonoy
&gt;10
O I1 II II M P U M M .N T O A t )l).)4
Second race — IlH . Ci &gt;1,11
1Brinks HI Brow
7K &lt;00 I N
40 00 440
4 Somewheresemehow
) Beck On Track
140
O (1 41 44 44 P (1 All) 4.M (Alt-4) 14.)* T
II 4 111)7.44 DO 111 111 44
Third race — n u . o i n . i f
1 Roy Boy
7 90 4 40 1 10
IO k l*R ac*y
SM 110
4 Midwest Misty
1 10
O (1 4) l l . H P I I *) 140.14 T I I 4 4) 74 44
Fourth race - -14M .Ctl1.il
1 Oreal Sllenls
*00 S 40 110
iHuskev Echo
700 n o
IRSHobert
ION
Q 1)41 M.M P *14) M.M T (14 4) 144.44
(All A ltW ill*1.44
Filth r e t * - 1UI. D: ll.St
1Princess Debb'e
S40 3 M 140
SC's Boss Men
1340 400
1 Key J See Shelly
140
O n o t M l f P Il f ) h i m T 114 I ) M4.M
it it h r f C f - U W . C iN . t l
I Blckf Mcknrf
f ) 0 &gt;M &gt;40
I Omni Patty Clin#
t.10 1M
&gt; RM’iO oc Ling
MO
Q (t I I 14.N P ( M l It.M T ( M i l l l t U
(M lllfllp fM t n .N
Seventh r tc f — UW, Oi &gt;1.4)
40 Evvy
14 40 4 00 I N
3 Clint Cannon
4 00 4 44
1Dream O Meekers
AM
O (A t) *1 ee P (41) I7I.M T (41-11 344.44 S
(41-1 All) 1444 04
llg h lh re c*'-l4 S 4 .B iM .il
1 Bnns Lne Blh
144 I N 140
1Dynamic Blend
100 7M
4 ML Rapid Feel
440
O (1 I ) 17.40 P (4 II 34.40 T (41-4111* 40
Ninth r a c o - liM . A iM * *
1 Franks Jill
4 40 1 40 1 40
) Happy Hero
1M 140
1 Tenn s Don Price
100
O &lt;1II ll.M P (411 M M T 1111) IM.M OO
(1 I A )I| 4 * 1 M
Itlhrece — I4S4. 0:11.44
STnns Ady Grl
14 N S40 I N
4 Nekste Buckskin
ISM JM
4 Butler Fog
IN
O (14111.4* P lt d ) 144.14 T (4 4 1 ) 174 M
11th race - I4M.B) 11.11
4 Judy's Dog
400 4 M S N
• Omni Hot Fare
7 40 1 00
IR C High Spirit
140
O (411 5444 P (441 144 *4 T (4 4 1 ) IMAM
C A rrrfvtr 4411.*4
l&gt;th r«c * — IU4, Ai 11.11
7M C PH ene
1100 1 00 I N
4 Rare Bare
17 N 1 fO
&gt; Coming Event
J 03
O (4 71 f i l l P IP AIII » I f ( A l l f l MO r
ii f &gt;i i i i m i n a iii &gt;oot tt
llth rtc t — I4M. Oi &gt;1.0
4 Ryl Bf A On
&gt;00 S to S 40
I M 't Tlkl Jay
1 10 4 40
J Oonct O f tit
1 10
O U 41 &gt;4 40 P (4 1) M.M T ( t i l l H IM
H t h r t c t - N f f . O ilt .lt
4 Budt La dr
4 N &gt;00 } K
4TM Donovan
44 N f 00
1 Guilt Jake Ruby
&gt;40
0 (4 41 41 M P It 41 XJl.N 1 (4 4 )1 ) NS M
A —473; M—ttt.WO

Boston (Cltm tnt l » f t T i m (Fa|*rdo
O O l.l U p m ,
i f tu rd s f \ O f m o
O fk le n d f t C lfv o lo n d . I 01 p m .
C f l l t o r n lf f t T o ro n to . I . J l p m
B a ltim o r e f t C h ic a g o , 7 : 0 i p m
i o f t t l f f t M ilw a u k e e . I OS p m
D o t r o lt « t M i n n o e t f , 1 : 05 p m .
N f w Y o rk f t K a n s a s C ity . 0 0 ) p m .
B o ito n a t T o i f i . I l l p m

SOUTHEBNLEAOUE
First Hall
Eastern Dfvlslen
W
L Pet. OB
Carolina (Pirates)
N
17
43* —
Greenville (Braves)
1) M
44* 1
Knoivltle (Blue Jays)
11 14
4M •Is
Jacksonville OVUrlMf!) n
It
.44* II
Orlando (Cubs)
If
1* .1*4
Wtstem Dfvlslen
Huntsville (Athltcs)
N
II
411 _
Memphis (Royals)
17 1*
M7 i
Nashville (Twins)
IS 11
Sal 4
Birmingham (WSos I
14 1)
111 X )
Chattanooga IRedst
17 1*
I N 1)
Thursday's Demos
Greenville 4. Orlande 1
Jacksonville 4. Carolina l
Memphis L Chattanooga 1.111nnings
Birmingham 4. Nashville 1
F r id a y 's O o m a t
Oreenvlllt at Orlando
Carol ma a I Jacksonville
Birmingham at Nathvint
Chattanooga at Memphis
Huntsville at Knaiviila
FLORIDA I
First Hell
Eastern Dfvlslen
w
L
Brevard (Marlins)
14
M
SI. Lucie IMetsI
14 1)
Ver* Beech 1Dodgers)
11 n
17 7*
Osceola lAstros)
Daytona tCubsl
14 1*
W P Beech lEeposI
13
D
Western Dfvlslen
ClMrwttor (Phllfltt)
1* IF
Tempo 1Yankees)
&gt;4 IF
Fort Myers (Twins)
V
i»
SI. P e lf (Cardinals)
3* N
Lakeland (Tigers)
14 11
Charlotte (Mangers)
T3 14
Dunedin (Blue Joys)
71 1)
\7 Ft
Seresola (RedSeal
ThtfrtdAy'i O
Dunedin 4. Lakeland 1
Clearwater 1. SI Petersburg 0
Tim p i 7.
Port Myers 4 Dayton. 7
Osceola S. Charlotte 0
St. Lucie).B revard)
V#fO
4. Wett p«lm
h3
Friday's Of mat
Ounadlp at Lfka land
Cltfrmator at it P flfftb u rg
iaratota ft Tampa
Port M ron ft O f rteno
Chf rlottt ft Otcoolf
Brevard ft it Lucif
Watt Palm Baach at Vfro Baach
i f torda r 't Of mat
L fftlan d f t Charlottf
it Ptlartburg at Port M rtrt
Clearwater at iaratota
Dunadmat Tampa
Otcaolf f t Daytona
it lu c if f t Brtvtrd
Watt Palm Baach at V«ro Baach

Pel.
701
Sl)
III
IN
1)4
M7

0&gt;
—
4
t
1)
If
N

4H —

IT3
S47
MS
113
4FI
444
SN

ts
1
1
« '»
F
Ms
If*

NBA PLAYOFFS
BASEBALL STANDINGS

1
t
*
|
•

NATIONAL LEAOUE
All Tlm ft (O T
E ft! Division
W
L Pet. OB
04 —
Allanla
n
u
Montreal
» l
&gt;&gt;t
&gt;4 tt
Pltr Ida
■tff 4
»
»
&gt;&gt; 1)
.4f» 4Vt
Now York
n
14
474 )
Philadelphia
Canlral Oivltton
Pci. o e
W
I
Cincinnati
M&gt; —
»
I'
&gt;4 N
S4S
SI Loull
14)
Moutlon
li
It
4)1
Pilttburgh
»
&gt;4
411
It 1J
Chicago
Watt Dirfiron
w
L Pet. OB
F6 11
SU —
Los Angeles
444 3
Sen Francisco
33 14
444 1
F0 1)
Colorado
177 13
13 34
San Diego
Thursday's O f m tt
San Francisco S. San Diago )
Pllllburgh It, Now York 10. Illnnlngt
Cincinnati 14. Colorado 4
Moutlon I. Atlanta )
Friday'iOam ti
Colorado (Paintar O il at Montraal (While
001,1 l i p m
Moutlon (Rfynoldt I I ) at Phllodflpnia
(Botkia I II. &gt; D p m.
Cincinnati (Pugh 111 at Ntw York (imlth
1 » . &gt;;40p m
Chicago (Morgan O il at Allanla (Meddui
&gt; I I . 1 40p m
Pllltburgh (Lltbar I II al Lot Angaltk
(Martino i ) )|, 10 OSpm
SI Loutk iTtwktbury I I) f t San Dlfgo
(Sandart I 1). 10 OSp m
Florida (Weathers i l l al Ian Frandteo
IT trr tt 111, ll.flp .m .
Saturday'! Of mot
Colorado at Montraal. I :D p m
Cincinnati at Ntw York, l.fOp m
Florida at San Frandtea. filSp.m.
Moulton at Philadelphia. 7 0S p m.
Chicago al Allanla. 7:10 p m
Pllltburgh at Lot Angtltt. 10 OS p m
SI Loult a I San Dltgo. 10 OSp m
AMERICAN LEAOUE
All Tlmtt EOT
Eat! Dnrlitan
W
L Pc*. OB
n
.4*4 —
New York
N
14
414 &gt;W
Boiton
N
17
405 4
Baltimore
M
44* 4
n
Toronlo
n
445 10
N
11
Detroit
Central Dlvltien
W
L Pet. OB
MS —
14 17
Chicago
1) 11 41) K *
KansasCIty
Cleveland
n
11
111 4
SCO 4W
n
1)
Minnesota
17 74 .174 10
Milwaukee
West Dlvltien
L Pel. OB
W
14
434 —
California
D
.444
IS
W
N
Seattle
.411 1
1* U
Teias
1)
1
u Ml
Oakland
Thwrtdey't Oemtt
California 7. Detroit S
Kansas City). T t ia t l
(lotion I). Cleveland S
Friday'! Oe met
California (leftwlch 1 41 al Toronlo (Latter
1 1), 7 l ) p m.
Oakland (Van Poppel 141 al Cleveland
IMarllnai 1 4). 7.0Sp.m
Saatlla IBotlo 141 at Milwaukee (Eldred
1 4 ).I OSp m.
Baltim ore (M uttln e 7 1) e l Chicago
(A lverei 7 0). 1:05p m.
Detroit (Belcher 1 7) at Mlnnatota I Tapani
4 )1 ,| OSp m.
New York (Key 4 I) at Kamat City (Cone
I D .I OSpm

All Tim atlD T
CONPERENCI PINAL1
(O fIt f t &gt;|
EA1TIRNCONFERENCE
Thwrtdf ». M ff 14
N fw York tt. Indiana &gt;t. Now York Nadi
tor If 1 10
iatwrdar, May I I
Ntw York at Indiana.) N p m
Monday. May N
.
Now York at Indiana, t i f f m
W fdnttdf y, lunt I
Indiana at Now York, t p m . it nucattary
Friday, lunt I
Ntw York at Indiana, f p m . lln tcttiary
iwndf y. Juno I
India &gt;a at Now York. 7p.m., 11nvcrttafy
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Houston leads ser les 1 0
Friday. May 17
Houston at Utah, *p m
Sunday, May IS
Houston at Utah.) H p m
Tuttday. May SI
Utah at Moutlon. f p m . It ntcfttary
Thurtday. June 1
Moutlon al Utah.« p m . it ntcattary
Saturday, Jvnt 4or Sunday, Jvnt i
II Saturday. Utah al Moutlon. 1 M p m . II
ntcfttary
II Sunday. Utah at Moutlon. 7 p m . II
nocattary

NHL FLAYOFFS
All Tlm tt EOT
CONFERENCE FINALS
(B e lie f 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Now )trto y vt. N.V. Rangtrt
i f f If t litd S I
Friday, May 17
Now Jersey et N Y. Rangers. 7 U p m
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Vanctwvtr at Toronto
Vancouver wins ter let 4 I
STANLEY CUP FINALS
(Bestel 7)
Tuetdoy, May II
Vancouver el Eettem Conlerence chempl
on. lime TBA
Thurtdf y, June 1
Vancouver el Eattorn Conlerence chempl
on. time TBA
Saturday,June 4
Eatlarn Conlerence champion at Van
couvtr, lima TBA
Tuatday, June 7
Eatlarn Conference champion el Van
couver, lime TBA
Thurtdfy, June t
Vancouver at Eettem Conference chempl
an, time TBA, llnecettery
Saturday, Junall
Eatlarn Conltranca champion f t Van
couvtr, time TBA, It nacfttary
Tuttday, June 14
Vancouver at Eatttrn Conference chemplon, lima TBA, ll ntcattary

_
NASCAR Coca Cola 44*
CONCORD. N C - The lineup lor Sundey't
Coca Cole too el Charlotte Motor Speedway,
with driver, residence, type ol car end
qualifying speed In mph (potlllont I N were
tilled In qualifying Wednesday nlghl and the
remainder oi the Held w et Ml In e second
round ol time Irlelt Thursday):
I. J e ll Gordon. H u n torivlllo, N.C.,
Chevrolet lumlne. I l l 4)1 mph; 1 Joe
Nemechek. Mooretvllle, N C . Chevrolet
Lumlne. 110.13)
J. Gaol) Bodlne. Julian. N C . Ford Thun
derblrd. 110 0)4. 4 Ken Schrader. Concord.

N C , Cherolel lumlna 17*111.
S Brett Bodlne. Harrisburg. N C . Ford
Thunderblrd. 171 DO. 4. Ortg Secki. Winter
Perk, Ford Thundtrhlrd, 171 D )
7. Rick M ail. Rockbridge Betht. Vo.. ForJ
Thunderblrd. 171141; I. Word Burton. Scot
llburg. Vo., Chevrolet Lumlne. 171 440.
I John Andretti. Indlenopollt. Chevrolet
Lumlna. 171 Sel, 10. Terry Lebonle, Trinity,
N C . Chevrolet Lumlna. 171 SN
II. Mark Martin. Je met town. N C . Ford
Thunderblrd. 171 SOI; I) W illy Ofllenbech
Jr . Greentb.ro. N C . Pontiac Grand Prlt,
1(1 401.
I). Ricky Rudd. Lake Norman. N C , Ford
Thunderblrd. 171 004. 14 Ernie Irvin. Con
cord. N C . Ford Thunderblrd. 171400
II Jell Burton. South Boston V o . Ford
Thunderblrd. 171114. 14 Dele Jarrell. Hick
ory. N C . Chevrolet Lumlne. I l l U t
I). Morgen Shepherd, Conover. N C , Ford
Thunderblrd. 171000 I I Harry Ganl.
Taylorsvllle. N C . Chevrolet Lumlne. I l l 4D
II. Jeremy May Held Nashville. Tenn..
Ford Thunderblrd. 177441. 10 Chuck Bewn.
Athboro. N C.. Ford Thunderblrd 177 414
II Rusty Wallace. Concord. N C , Ford
Thunderblrd. 177 SU. 11 Oerrike Cope
M unlertvllle. N C . Ford Thunderblrd.
177 SOI
11 Bobby Hamilton. Nashville. Tenn .
Ponllec Grand Prle. 177 M l. 14 Dele
Earnhardt. Meoretvllle. N C . Chevrelel
Lumlne. 177 1*1
1) Bobby Lebonle. Trinity. N C . Ponllec
Grand PrU. 177 744. M Rich Blckla. Con
cord. N C . Ford Thundnbird. I l l On
17 Randy LaJoie. Concord. NC.. Ford
Thunderblrd. I l l OH; X. Steve Orttaom.
Liberty. N C . Chevrolet Lumlne. 114141
11 Darrell Watlrlp. Franklin, Tenn .
Chevrolet Lumlna. 114 1)1. 10 Michael
Wellrlp. Lake Norman. N C . Pontiac Grand
Prle. 174 Oil
11 Todd Bodine. Charlotte. N C . Ford
Thunderblrd. Ite tU ; 17 Sterling Marin.
Columbia. Tenn , Chevrolet Lumlne. 174 4M
1) Jimmy Spencer, Meeretvlllo. N C ,
Ford Thunderblrd. 174 SO). 14 B illy
Slendndge. Shelby NC . Ford Thunderblrd.
174 17)
D Mike Wallace. Concord. N C . Ford
Thunderblrd. 174111; S4 O tk Trickle. Iron
Station. N C . Chevrolet Lumlne. lie 1)0
J7. Ley Alien. Retetgh N C . Ford Thun
derblrd 174 100 St Bred Teague Johnson
City. Tenn . Ford Thunderblrd 114 074
It . L tk t Speed. Concord N C „ lo rd
Thunderblrd. 114 Off 40 Hut Stricklin.
Ctlert. Ala . Ford Thunderblrd. I l l U t
41. Kyle Petty. High PoMt, N C . Pontiac
Grand P rli no spot ii provisional. 41 Ted
Mutgreve. Troutman. N C . Ford Thun
derblrd. no speed provisional
eI Bill Elliott. Bleirtvllle G o. Ford
Thunderblrd. no lpearl provisional
ClMHipAd M
CONCORD N C - Retullt Thursday from
qualifying for the Champion Sport Plug HO
NASCAR Butch Grand National roc# at
Charlotte Motor Speedway, with driver,
residence, make et car end qualifying speed
in mph (remainder et 44 car sterling grid ter
Saturday's race to be tot in e 10 lap
qualify Ing race F r iday I
I Mika Skinner, Rendlemen, N C .
Cherrolet. 17) 440 mph ) Horry Gem.
Taylorsville. N C . Chevrolet 1 7) 447
I Ellon Lawyer Chesapeake Ve Ford
171 I f 7. 4 Joe No macTie! Mooretvllle N C .
Chevrolet. 17) S70
S Tim Bander Concord. NC
Pontiac
t il t i l . 4 Mark Marlin. Jamettown. N C .
Ford. I ll t f )
7 M ichftl Wfllnp. Lake Norman N C .
Ponllec. I ll 7U I Jell Purvli. Clarksville.
Tenn . Chevrolet. I ll H I
f Dele Jerretl. Hickory. N C . Chevrelel.
1117)4; 10 Mlkt McLaughlin Charlotte
N C .Chevrolet. I l l 71*
tt Randy Porter. G reen ville. S C .
Chevrolet. I ll Ml. II Phil Portent. Den.or
N C .Chevrolet. 171*11
1) Roy Peyno. Concord. N C . Chevrolet.
tlO teii 14 Hermte Sedwr. Emporia. V e .
Chevrolet, ir o e r i
I) Kenny Wallace Concord. N C Ford,
iro n *. 14 Tracy (elite. Asheville N C .
Chevrelel. I l f I l f
17 Slenlon B errell, lllshop Cent .
Chevrolet, 170 4 )) t l Terry Lebonle.
Trinity. N C . Chevrolet, iro *}t
tl Larry Pearson Spartanburg $ C .
Chevrolet. ItO &gt;07; 30 Robert P rettify.
Asheville. N C . Chevrolet, 170 III
II Bobby Lebonle Trimly. N C . Ponllec.
•70 04) 11 Randy LoJote. Concord N C .
Chevrolet. I l l 1)4
1) Chad Lillie. Charlotte. N C . lord.
14111], 14 Star ling Merlin. Columbia. Term.
Chevrolet. 14* H I
IS Derrike Cope. Hseilertville. N C . lord.
IH IS *. 14 Jim Sown Atheboro. N C .
Chevrolet. If* I II
17 Denntt Seller. Newton. N C . Chevrolet
14* 7M 10 Rodney Combs. Concord. N C..
Ponllec. 141 Vt*
11 David Green. Trimly, N C . Chevrolet
no speed, provisional, H Ricky Craven.
Concord. N C . Chevrolet, no speed, pro
visional
11. Bobby Doller. M ooretvllle. N C .
Chevrolet, no speed, provisional 1) Tim
ledowe. Charlotte. N C , Ford, no speed
provisional

French Open
PARIS - Results Thursday ol the U )
million French Open el Roland Carrot
Medium (leadings m parentheses I
Man
Singlet
Second Round
Aaron Krlcktloln. Grotto Poinie, Mich .
del Michael Sllch 111. Germany. 4 1. 4 ). 4 4;
Ronald Agenor. Haiti del David Prlnotll.
Germany,4 7 14 71.4 711 11.4 1.4 4.14 I)
Michael Cheng III. Henderson. N e v . del
Jordl Arrtse. Spain. 44. 40. 44. 41; Jaime
Viege. Peru. del. Jared Palmer, Tempo. 7 4
(1 31,4 e. 4 4 . il.
Radomir Vitek. Ciech Republic, del.
Dimitri Poliakov. Ukraine. 4 4. 14. 7 S. 4 1.
4 t; Jecco Elllngh. Netherlands, del David
Wheaton. Eacelslor. Minn , 41. 4 4. 1 4 (141.
4 7(4 71.4 4.
Amaud Uoeisch. France, del. Karol
Kucera. Slovakia. 41. 41. 4 ); Mendflk
Dreekmann. Germany, del Cerloi Cotie
(IS). Speln.741141.44.41
Magnus Lartton . Sweden, del. J ell
Tarengo. Mantsfltan Beech. Call). 41. 4 4.
4 ); Richey Reneberg. Moutlon. del. David
Rlkl. Ciech Republic, 74 (1 7 ),4 1.47,41
Alberto Beretategul. Spain, del Cedric
Plollna lie ), France. 44, IS. 4 ). Andrea
Oeudenil, Italy, del. Bred Gilbert, San
Ralael. Calif.. 7 1,41,4).
Javier Frani. Argentine, del Henrik
Holm. Sweden. 44. 4-4,4 4j Goran Ivanisevic
(SI, Croatia, del. Bryan Shellon. Atlanta. 14.
41.41,44.
Todd Marlin (1). Liming. Mich., del
Francisco Clevel. Spain. 40. 4 0. 41; Alik
Corret|a, Spain, del. Alia O'Brien. Amarillo.
T f eat. 4 1 .4 4.4 1,4 4.
Yevgeny Kallinikov. Rustle, del. Bernd
Karbachor, Germany. 4 1. 14. 41. 41; Mark
Wood lor da, Australia, del. Richard From
berg. Autlralla.41. 7 S.7 4(7 II
Doublet
Flrtl Round
Bred Peirce. Provo, Uleli. end Dove
Randall. Birmingham. Ale., del. Rovce

Deppe. South Africa, and Laurie Warder.
Australia. 4 0.4 0; Tom NI|tton. Netherlands
and Cyril Suk II). Ciech Republic, del
Mlkoel Tlllttroem end Nlcfclek Ulgren.
Sweden. 41.4 4
Darren Cahill and Jehn F llig e re ld .
Australia, del Oary Muller, South Africa,
and Patrick Reiter. Australia. 4 ). 44; Alois
Beutl end Stephana Hull. France, del
Fabric* Santoro end Oererd Solves. France.
44.41
Jen Ap«il end Jonet Biarkmen (ID .
Sweden, del Chrltlo Vers Rensburg end
Oenie Vluer. South Africa. 4 7 IS (). 7 4 17II.
4 4; Juan Ignacio Oeral. Argentine end
M aurlra Rueh. Vetseiuele. del Henri
L tc o n le . F ra n ce, end M erc R o t te l.
Swilierlend. 74144).44.
Guy Forget. France. •••J Jakob Miesek
Swltrerlend. del John Sullivan. Mil (thorough
Beech, end Kenny Thorne. Smyrna. Go . 7 4
1741.4)

Round

Shaun Stafford. OaMsesvIlle. del Anna
Smashnova Israel 44 4 1 Marrle Gressi.
Italy, dot Sllke Frankl.Germany,a L A I
Lindsay Davenport 1*1. Murrlttl*. Cent .
del Keleryna Nowet Poland. 4 4. 4 ).
Brenda Schvltl. Netherlands del Marianne
Wecdel Pale Alto. Cell 1.4 4. 74 ( 11*1
Anke Huber III), Germany, del Malta
Babel. Oermany. 7 4 (7 SI. 4 ) ; A lu la
Dechauma Ballard. Franco, del Wlltrud
Probsl. Germany. 7 4 (7 II. 4 I
Julie Helerd. France, del Petra Rogerew
Germany. 7 S. 4 4.4 4. Ann Grossman. Orove
City. Ohio, del Petra Lengrova. Ciech
Republic. 1 4 .4 4 .4 )
Barbara Rlttner. Germany, del Sandra
Dopier. Austria 4 ). 4 ). Arantsa Sanchei
Vicar i* (11. Spam, del Moeiie Van Lottum
France.4 t.40
Lille Matt hi. Georgia del iersdra Ceric
Bradenton, re 17 )1. 4 4 7 1 Cenchl'e
Martinet 111. Spam, del Ginger Meigesnn
Alpine Cell! 4 1 4 )
Aleianetre Fusel Feence del 7eng Ll
Chlfse 40 4 1; Shi Ting Waesg Taiwan del
Sllke Meier. Germany. 4 4.4 1
Seb'ne Meek (III. Germany del Eleesa
Brsoukhovels UkreMe 4 7 ) 4 4 1
Flrtl
Catherine Barelas and Kerry Anne Guta
Audrain INI Joanne Fault Australia, end
Teste Price, Seu«h Atrtce 4 4. 44. 144. Petty
Fondles. Sacramento C e ll!. end Meredith
McGrath 111. Midland Mich del Katerina
M elee,4 end Mepdaiena M a'ee.e Bulgaria
4 1 .4 )

TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
Amec lean league
BOSTON R IO SOX - Signed Peter Murero
pitcher
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Signed John
Coppmger pitcher
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Purchased me
contract el Ruben Airuro outfielder from
Charlotte ol the Iniornetionel League Op
honed Herbert Perry, lirst basemen. Se
Cho'io'le Recalled M rli Turner, pitcher,
tram Charlene and placed him on the SOday
disabled list
DETROIT TIOERS - Placed Milt Cuyier
pwtlieidrr on me ttdey disabled list Re
called Danny Bautista. euHieldar. from
Toledo ol the Interna'rcral Loaguo

MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Activated
Darryl Hamilton, outfielder Irons the IS day
disabled list. Optioned Troy O le a ry out
Holder, to New Or leant of th* American
Association
Htalienel Uogue
CINCINNATI
R E D S - Signed Kevin Meet,
ATI Al
outlieIder Inllelder. to a minor league con
tree! end ettigned him to Indianapolis ol Ihe
American Association
FLORIDA MARLINS - OpHerted Ore*
CHellartn. inllelder. I* Portland el the
Eeiters League.
•AS K ITB ALL
Net lent I Oestetball Association
NEW JERSEY NETS - Announced that
Chuck Daly, coach, hat resigned but will
continue working lor (ho learn in an un
specified rapacity
Continents) basketball Assoc (alien
ORANO RAPIDS - Announced Ihel riser
ere changing Ihelr nickname from Hoops to
Mockers

7p ns. - SC. Slate Championship Oamo
7 p m - WGN. TBS. Chicago Cubs
Allanla Braves. ID
NBA PLAYOFFS
I X p m - WCSM L New York at India
(L )
BOXINO
Midnight — SC. Pro Dosing Tour
OOLF
) p m - ESPN. Ball Atlantic Clastic. I l l
4 pm
WCPK 4. Soulhwetlern Colome
ILI
4pm — WF TV*. LPGA Skint Gam*
I pm
SUN. College women. NCA#
Championships ILI
LACROSSE
N eon - SU N. C t llt g * . N C A !
Tournomenly, (LI. also el 1 H p m
TENNIS
* a m. - USA. French Open. (L )
Noon - WE SM t. Fronds Open
TRACK AND FIELD
Ip m — TNT. Oruce Jersner Invitational

TVIfkADIO

BASEBALL
4 41 p m
W TLNAM 114201 Southern
League Greenville el Oipndo
7 pm
WWN/ AM 114401. Chicago tl
Allanla
* H pm
WGTOAM IS4SI. Florida 41
Sen Francisco
FOOTBALL
4 p m - WWN/ AM ( 7401. Arena League
Or Undo el Milwaukee
M IS C IL IA N IO U S
t p m - W GTOAM &lt;4401. Pel Williams
Shew
4pm
WGTO AM (4401. The Press Bos
7 p m — WGTOAM 11401. Talk Sport,
With Peso Rote
7pm
WW N/AM 1740'14401 The Sporty
Nul
I# p m - WWN/ AM 17401, Floe Ida Spot's
I s change
I* p m - WGTO AM IHO). Sporlt Bylme

BASEBALL
7H pm
WGN. TBS. Chicago Cubs al
Atlanta Braves. ILI
7 H p rn - w on Cexlnnell el N Y Melt
ID
l*p m - la Florida el Sen Irene is&lt;e. (LI
NBA PLAYOFFS
t p m — TNT. Moutlon el Utah. ID
■OWLINO
Jem -S U N LPBTOmahaClettlr
FOOTBALL
I H p m - SUN Arena League Orlando
Predators el Milwaukee Mut'engt ID
HOCKEY
7 H p m - ESPN New Jersey el N Y
Rangers. ID .e ls e e D N a m
Saturday
AUTORACINO
tp m
IBS NASCAR Spart Plug HO
tp m
IN N NASCAR New England
Chevy Dealer1 7t0
I M p m
SUN NASCAR Oeody I
Sportsmen 130
10 H p m
SUN Goody t Pole Night
I) H e m
SUN. Summer legends Soviet
lo r n - SUN SCCA Metpari Orend Prle
BASEBALL
I p m - SC Slot# Clett A Championship
Game Miami Westminster Chnthan vt
L et eland Senle F e Ce'hohC
4 pm

— 14

Florida

Marlins

at

USA

I# pm

WWN/ AM 114401 tkxult Far

Tonight
Saturday

BASEBALL
I p m - WGTOAM (Sell Oakland el
CUveUnd
t p m - WGTO AM (440). F undo t l Son
Francisco
I Hpm
WWN/AM (I4H I. Chicago t&lt;
Ahenie
4 4) p m - W TLNAM M IN I Souther*
League Corel me el Olende
BASKETBALL
111 7 "
- W O BO AM (COOI NBA
p'atolls. New York el Indiana

San

FrancitceOiantt. I D
4 M p m - SC. SlaN Clast AA Champion
th,p Gamp. Bishop Vorot vt Tallahassee
Fkeride High. ID

► HAVEFUN

C tN C
M a trice s M on

W ed

A S/ll tp m

NqhO y al 7 30 pm • C loser) Sundays
Som ors F ree it) &lt;U M atinees

GREYHOUND PARK

(407) 6 9 9 *5 1 0

2000 SBfTWX&amp;i Bfvd. CasMiDdiry

i« 400110k 10 11*1 DOC M C IK Wl 07I lk WACMIkG VIA SAIIUITI 0k
JACKSOkVIll I A IAMFASI F i l l OOC RACIkC FI US MIAMI nMMBBWMBMBS'

m @ rp
Come In And Meet

M r. B o b B e lle w

NBA Medalist,
3 Time Participant In ABF Grand Prix
Bob will bo In Sanford's W al-Mart

Saturday, M ay 28th from 1:00 - 5:00 PM
Sunday, M ay 29th from 1:00 - 5:00 PM
T7w* event It mode possible by Ouch K/Mvpg. SUwvMagnj This Tru Turn (lapel Insect
RepgEonl. Wolei Oigmhn. Baitmal* Fish AtUbdaol. Norm ark E/a Lap Sharpnars Tha
Brinkmann Corp . Power Pack JoriniorVMitcheMrLan Kola. CoQhiwvs

Siren Kavlar
Prcminum Braided

Line

T Z MINN KOTA

8 .9 6

10

p

$3

5

/ A

6 &amp; 0 $4.74
12. 14. 17 lb $5.57
2 0 . 2 5 lb $6.87

6" FILET KNIFE

30 LB. THRUST
42 IN.
REQ. $449.96

M

Clear Blue
2 5 0 yards

70 lb lost, 100 yd.

TR
TROLLING
MOTOR

Siren

Genuine Leather Shooth,
Polished Homed Edge

o

8

.

9

6

^__E vor^D dyLow Price___

BUCK KNIFE

TRU-TURN

WATER GREMLIN

FISHLOCKER

HOOKS

SPLIT SHOT

Every Day Low
Price

Every Day Low
Prico

#

1

9

.

9

6

MDL 649 QY
Every Day Low Price

2

BAfTMATE
GAME FISH

CONCENTRATE
Every Day Low Price

.

8

1

7

.

4

7

SHAD RAP

MITCHELL
REEL

RAPALA

MODEL #430

Every Day Low Prico

Evory Day Low Prico

Pinehurst
Continued form IB
Affordable*. Rudd finished with a
double, two slntflcs. one run. und three Kill.
St 11Icy hud a double, single, two runs, und an HIM.
Chad tiruden singled twice und scored twice.
John Scott tilt two Mingles und hud un HIM. Hrud
lluwrcr tripled und singled. Chip Crider hud a
single und two runs. Larry HIM singled In a run.
Don Green u Imi lilt u single.
Kevin Julian's two run home run started the
scoring for The Touchdown Pub. Silvia finished
with llircc singles, u run. and an HIM. Craig Spill

hit u double. Duughcrty singled and scored a run,
Stu Scllock und Dill Doyle each had a single and
un HDI. Tom Szabo lilt a single. Dill Marino and
CHIT Conner each scored u run.
Leading M.A. Erectors was Octavio Torres, who
hit a double und tw o singles. Joe Clark
contributed o double, single, und two runs while
John Hugan had a double, single, one run. and un
HDI. Paul Kodrlgucz also doubled und singled.
Chris Dullock hud a single &lt;jnd (wo HDI. Qlenn
Stewart singled und scored a run. Darryl Williams
and David Ealon each lilt a single.

3

.

7

4

6

. 4

8

1

5

.

8

4

W A L-M A R T
Store Mom H &lt;im 10 pm Mon Sat • 9 am

S to r e l o L d llo n

S I M IN O l L C E N l l I b

I 'H I C E S G O O D

(

• MWY

T H H U AI/JV

9 pm Sun

t / 92 • S A fil O M U, I l A

A 2 li

�jflH T

"■wig*
PHIMpBVHPHpul

p*W|i

S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y, M ay 27, 1994 - 3 B

People
Used car inspection suggested

IN BRIEF

Lemon Law does not apply for all purchases

Tricycle race planned
'Hir flrai tricycle race for the Ix-tirfli o f the Arnold Palmer
Hospital for Children and Women will be held at Lake Mary
Hlfili School on June 12.
t he event will lake place from 1 to 5 p.m. It la preaenled by
IheCourtcny AntoGroup.
Admission In S2 or a new toy.
For more Information, call Shelby Hlccinto at 707-2070. ext.
360.

Lyman students honored
LaToahn Thomas, duughlrr of Linda and Willie Thomnrt and
Benjamin Overby, rum of Hobble and John Overby, were
recently honored with atudent recognition awarda by the
Rotary Club of Longwood.
The club prrerril* the awards monthly to nludenla at Lyman
based on their personal, academic and communlly-related
achievements ns evidenced by grades, school attendance,
school and community activities and rnn|&gt;erul!ve spirit.

The following Information I think will be
o f interest In many of you. Cars seem to be
no expensive that many are deciding to buy
used cars. As Is the case with uny product,
the more you know, the smarter decision
you can make which cun navr you money
and heartaches! Thanks to the Florida
Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services for sharing this Information with
me which In turn I am ablr to share with
you.
Americans spend billions each year buy­
ing used cars, Only about half o f all used
cars sold by dealers come with a written
warranty. The rest are sold “ as Is" — which
meuns there Is no warranty and If any
mechanical problems turn up after Ihe car Is
sold, the purchaser Is responsible for Ihe
cost o f repairs.
The Federal Trade Commission Used Car
Rule can help consumers who are consid­
ering the purchase o f a used vehicle,
whether car. light duly van or llght-duly
truck.

CALENDAR

•

Art association m eets Saturday
Sanford Seminole Art Association meets on the fourlli
Saturday o f each month, at I p.m., at Shoney's In Sanford
Those Interested In art are welcome to attend.

Blood Bank seeks donors
Central Florida Wood Hank Is asking donors of all types of
blood — especially O-typr donors — to dnnale at Its Sanford
branch. 1302 K Second St. For Information, call 322 0822

Poets to talk verse
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a in every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome
For more Information, please call Hob Shrlford. 904-7360 4 10. or Virginia Martin. 904-775 8909

Sanford Rotarians to m eet
Notary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Civic Center.

Bridge club m eets every M onday
Lake Mary Seniors Invite anyone 55 years or older to play
jrarty bridge. The Party HrtdKc Club meets every Monday
Iretweeu 1-3 p m at the Lake Mary Senior Center at the Old
City Hall. 158 N. Country Club Road.

C ancer support group m eets
Support. I I o |m* and Recovery, S It A.R.. meets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p in. at Central Florida Mrglimiil Hospital In the
lar corner ol the dining room. I bis Is a sell help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatment now or finished
with It. Call 324-8737 or 322-7785 for more Information.

H elp for gam blers offered
(Inmblrrs Anonymous and Gam-Anon for family and Irlrmls.
meet separately Monday and Friday (non-smokers) at 7:30
p in . Church of the Good Shepherd, 331 Lake Avc.. Maitland
For more Information, call 230-9200,

Al-Anon group gathers
II you urr troubled by the alcoholism of u frelml or relative,
there Is help. Serenity Won. an Al-Anon group for friends and
family of alcoholics, will meet each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday night at 8 p.m. at the Sahara Club. 2587 S. Sanford
Avc.. Sanford. For more Information, call 332-4122.

Narcotics Anonym ous m eets In Sanford
Narcotics Anonymous meets Monday at 8 p.m. at the
Presbyterian House of Goodwill. 317 Oak Avc.. Sanford.

Eliminating alcohol
is not the solution
DKAR MARYt W ere finally
getting smart about smoking
and Its effects on health. I think
It’s great anti personally I hope
that In my lifetime all tobacco
products will lie Illegal In the
United States. Now. why aren’t
we doing the same thing with
alcohol? Everyone knows how
much damage It does to society
and how many lives urc lost
because of It, but there Just
doesn't seem to he the push to
get rid of II thut there Is for
tobacco. If alcoholism uml Its
c o n s e q u e n c e s as w e ll as
sm okc-relalcd Illnesses were
wiped oul. I’ll hel everybody
could afford medical Insurance
again.

LET’S CLEAN UP OUR
COUNTRY
DEAR LET'S CLEANt Surry.

I'm not with you on this one. It's
c e rta in ly true that tobacco
ca u ses sm ok in g -rela ted Ill­
nesses, but alcohol Is no more
the cause o f alcoholism than
sugar la Ihe cause o f diabetes. If
It were true that alcohol causes
alcoholism, nearly 100 million
people in the U.S. would be
alcoholics — the same number
who drink at least occasionally.
The fuel is thut there arc proba­
bly ubout 10 million Americans
who are addicted to alcohol to
some degree. Most experts agree
thal the addiction Is caused by n
combination of mental, physlcul
and environmental fuclors. Peo­
ple most often use alcohol as un
escape from problems or an
attempt to relieve Intolerable

DRUG
CO U NSELO R

MARY
BALK

-ST'

tensions, us well as u way to feel
less Inhibited and more "social."
Since wc will never eradicate
stress from our lives, people will
certainly find ways lo attempt to
medicate the associated uncom­
fortable feelings. Add to this the
fact that problems with addic­
tions seem (o "run In families."
eith er through genetic p re­
disposition and/or family pat­
terning. and we come lo the
reluctant conclusion (hat while
getting rid o f tobacco will elimi­
nate smoking-related Illnesses,
getting rid of alcohol would not
have similar brnrllls.

(Mary Balk la a Cartiflad
A dd ictio n Prevantlon Pro­
fessional and counselor. Write
her at the Sanford H arald, or call
the Seminole County Schools’
Drug Prevention ofllce. 323-5710.)

This rule require* all used rar dealer* to
place u large slicker called a Huyers Guide
In the window of each used vehicle offered
for sale. The Huyers Guide should state: •
Whether the vehicle come* with a warranty
and. tf so. what spec ific warranty protection

DEAR ABDYt W hile rum ­
m a g in g th rou g h som e old
|iuprr*. I found a Dear Ahby
column a 1stit l crowing inoslcrs
that I dipped. Intending lo
respond. Here it is, finally.
The writer claimed that If u
rooster can't raise Ills head and
stretch hi* neck, he cannot crow.
On our small Island, we kept
rooster* and chickens In the
back yard of our (Nirsonngc.
Hr cause of other fowl In thr
neighborhood. crowing was no
problem
my Ipishumt died, my
miii and I moved lo an a|Mrti,tru&gt;
with two chicken* and a rooster.
In Ourhuirr dosed environment,
the rooster became a problem so
ut dusk, we put the rooster In a
box and placed H In the closet.
Promptly at 3 x.m.. Ihe rooster
crowed! Naively thinking, us
your reader did, that a rooster
needs to raise tils head and
stretch his neck In order to crow,
we modified the box so the
rooster could not stretch his
neck.
You guessed It! The next
morning, the rooster crowed at 3
a.m. In the very low cardboard
box In a dark closet.
We finally gave the rooster
awuy. and we still do not know
what can keep a rooster from
crowing. Abby. does anybody
really know?
AUW1NA 8. WEED,
KEY WEST. FLA.
DEAR AUWINA: I am sure
among my readers Is an expert
on fowl behavior (no pun In­
tended). and when I hear from
him or hcr.1'11 Icl.youknow.

DEAR ABBYi My sister und I
arc very close. Recently I Invited
her to accompany me on o
shopping trip lo purchusc u new
desk.
A fte r b ro w s in g In a few
fu r n it u r e s to r e s . I suw a
beautiful rolltop desk that I
really liked and decided to
purchusc It.
My sister, who wasn't even In
the market for a desk, suddenly
decided that she wanted one too.
so she ordered the Identical
desk.
- 7 \ _ W c V \ \ U i\ 0 k

_

FLtNTSTONES

1 0 0 3.00 ft 00 7:00 0 0 0

WITH HONORS

1:183:18 8:10 7 :1 9 9 :1 8

’ N0|

NO PASSES

3

the dealer will provide, • Whether the
vehicle comes with no warranty — "us Is.”
The Huyers Guide must reflect any
changes In warranty coverage thal the
consumer negotiated with the dealer. Il also
become* part of the sales contract. If "A s Is
— No Warranty" Is checked on the Huyers
Guide hut the dealer has made orul
promises to repair the vehicle under certain
circumstances, the consumer should get
those promises to writing He wury If a
dealer won't write down promises. While
oral contracts urr supposed to lie binding,
they usually are very hurd to enforce.
Some peoplr mistakenly believe that
Florida iuw glvrs them three days to change
their mind after buying n vehicle. The
so-called “ coolIng-ofT' period of 72 hours
they probably are thinking of appllrs In

Before buying a used car. consumers
should have the vehicle Inspected by u
reputable m echanic or one personally
known to them. The following are some
arras thut should lie checked: • Engine. Is
there excessive oil leakage? Are the bells In
good shupe? Is the block or head cracked? Is
the oil clean? • Transmission. Is the
transmission fluid level where It should be?
Is the drive shaft In good shape? •
Electrical system. Does the battery leak? Do
the altrrnnlor. generator, battery and starter
work properly? • Drake system. Do the
wurnlng lights work? Check the hoses,
drum and lining for soundness. • Steering
system. Is there too much free play In the
steering? Are Ihe front wheels aligned
properly? • Tires. Check Ihe tread for wear,
lie sore sizes match.
When buying a car take the time to read
the entire contract, ask questions and get
the answers In writing!

(fO-11)

3NINQAS KICKBACK

1:30 3 30 8:30 7:30 9 30 |PO(

JURASSIC PARK
2 00 4:40 7 0 0 9 40

A D V IC E

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

B eta Sigm a Phi o fficers presented
Th* Santord chapters ol Beta Sigma Phi sorority recently held
their Founder's Day luncheon at the Deltona Inn.
At that
luncheon, which also honored long time members, the 1984-85
olllcere were presented. They are as follows: (from lett) Helen
Hamner, president; Betty Jack, vice president; Pat Provau,
recording secretary; Jackie Dymond, corresponding secretary.
Not pictured: Eleanor Anderson, treasurer.

I was quite annoyed, but t
didn't say anything A few days
later, the suh|ect ol the desk
came up. anti I calmly (old tier t
was raitier upset Itrcminr she
bad ordered a desk exactly like
'mine! She hemme defensive uml
told me that I was (wring child­
ish. since we Jive In different
towns and have a different circle
of frlemls.
Abby. please don't tell me I hat
imitation I* the stnceresi form of
flattery

MIFFED IN
YPSILANTI. MICH.
DEAR MIFFED: Why are you
"m iffed"7 Your slslrr lives In a
different town — and even If she
lived In the same town, why
should her having a desk like
yours minimize your pleasure In
owning a hundsome desk?
I uni reminded of a letter I
received from a woman who
came to church on Easter Sun­
day and encountered not one,
but two women wearing hats
exactly like hers! One woman'*
nose was completely oul o f Joint;
she gusped and marched out of
the church without looking left
or right. The other women broke
up laughing.

NOW OPEN

3 D's No. 2
Bakery •Restaurant • Lounge
Serving Fine
Jamaican
Caribbean
&amp;
American
Cuisine
Serving Breakfast, Lunch &amp; Dinner • Open 7 A.M . until...
110 South Palmetto Ave.
R o o m A va ila b le
Sanford, FL
lor G ro u p D ining

(fO -U I

Vldalla
Onions

3 .* .., 1 .0 0

Vine Ripe Ruskin
Tomatoes
Cucumbers

8 io r ^ 1

Florida JUMBO
Cantaloupes

m

Bananas

1

a

'7 0 0
■ 3 Lb- Owner • Cal Clemons. Daughter • Marie Betgert
Tree Ripened
£ f )0
e O O
?™ouna Peaches D 3 Lb.
!9 0

Lb.

BEVERLY HILLS COP 3

,

1 0 0 3 :105:18 7:20 9 .3 0 |RI

THE CROW

1 :1 0 3 .20 8 2 0 7 :3 0 9 40

•
M

MAVERICK

tO O 4.40 7:18 9 60

4 tb s .io r

» 0 0

Bell Pepper 4 i 0, $ 1 . 0 0
White Seedless Q (
Grapes
5 K ) 0 L ft

IS)

4 WEDDINGS AND
A FUNERAL
2:10 4 4 8 7 :2 0 0:48

3 2 1 -6 9 3 3

fresh picks:

t«i

CalsProduceExchange

ID

WHEN A MAN LOVES
BEVERLY ILLS COP III
DEMOLITION MAN Q 10:40

BARBARA
HUGHES/
GREG G

Rooster still
crowed while in
tight quarters

2:20 4 30 7:10 9:20

Ihry.lJ-a.Swfcml
8:49

other types of sales and solicitations. It docs
not apply (o the purchase of motor vehicles.
Some people nlso mistakenly think Flor­
ida's Lemon Law applies to used molor
vehicles. However, the Motor Vehicle War­
ranty Enforcement Act — the Lemon Law —
appllrs only lo new or "d em o " cars, vans or
trucks purchased or leased In Florida.

(B)

ipfli

C M OH A l l M0 VU S 5 T A IH IM Q

Quality You Can Bank On!
2990 S. O rlando Ave., Sanford
(corner of 17-92 and A irport Blvd.)

lit [V V U N - I io a

»

r

�H H H W

H N H

-

Sanford Harold. Sanford, Florida • Friday, May 27, 1M4

S s n lo rd H erald, S s n fo rd . F lo rid a - F rid a y , M a y 27, 1994 - SB

Religion
Assembly 01God
One house
divides Bobble

Catholic

407-u&gt;aaaa

O H tetH ow n M
Paeiev Nandad Haawskar
Sunday
Cnnalian
[due alien cikai
1000am
Morning Woranip
1100am
Iv n m g ia rr tca
(0 0 p m
u
ut fin ..Han Hia m-nk
yf*tetePW|
BMMa Study
POO pm
Monday through
Friday Prayer
100 to 300 pm
NurtaryProtMad

IMiapemc ( i

CENTRAL BAPTIST CHUNCH
3101V* laid.S anford
323MI4
OonHMka
Paalor
•te-y Pupal#
AMCC Paalor
Jack M. Timmaa MiMaiar or Mate
Sunday School
(3 0 a m
Morning WovahipO lS S ItO O am
(.anlng tVortfup
(0 0 p m
Wad FrpyprSarvicp
030pm

;"

“

"

v

^
L m
I ■

FIMT CHUNCH OF C H M T
•CHUTIST. L0440*000
ITS Markham Wood* Nd
Comar o i l ( wunameon Nd
tday Church l erm a*
nd Sunday School
1000am
Onoaday
dOOpm
uraary A.MalHa At AS la m e r .

W om en’s Day Convention planned
OVIEDO — TI ip public Is Invited to the Mission Koad Church
of Ood In Christ for Its First Women's Day Convention with (tic
following schedule of events:
Friday. May 27. ut 7 p.m.
Saturday. May 2H, 8:I5-H:30 u.m. registration and continen­
tal hrrakfust. 8:30 t» a.in. praise und worship, and 0 u.m. to
U:50. two workshop*. “ Behold I Will Do a New Thing. Now It
Shall Spring Forlh" und “ Building Women of Excellence In
IkMly. Soul and Spirit."
Sunduy, May 29, Worship service 11 a.m.
This grand event Is sponsored hy Use Women of Mluion Hd.
C O.O.I C.. 191 Mission Hd . Oviedo.

M
■

&gt;
Lto fc 'v l
R ty fy
L

About 2.900 Iny and clergy the bishop's State of the Church
drlrgatra will meet ut the la k e ­ address: and a variety of busi­
land Civic Center for the 192nd ness mailers. Including setting
ncBttlon o f the Florida Annuul the 1999 budget und voting for a
Conference of The United Meth­ re s o lu tio n o p p o s in g ca sin o
odist Church June 2-9.
guinbllng In Florida.
D elegates represent about
During the conference clergy
.'M9.000 United Methodists In members who are retiring this
H ip
conference, which spans year will tie honored June 4 at
from I hr A|tulnchlrolu Hlvcr rasl 7:30 p.m. und a memorial serv­
to J a c k s o n v ille und south ice for clergy and spouses who
through the Keys. There are 739 huve died this (Mist eonferenre
churches In the conference.
year will be held ut 1:30 p.m..
H ig h lig h t in g th is y e a r 's June 2.
session will lie u retrhrallon of
Ordination o f elders and con­
the 190th anniversary o f the secration o f deacons will be held
conference, two special tnld-yrur June 9 at 10 a.m. and Bishop
sessions bring the total to 192; Hughes will “ ilx " appointments.

G overnor C hiles
to visit conference
The reading of a proclamation
hy Oovcnor Lawton M. Chiles
will be a highlight of the 190th
Anniversary Cclcbrutlon of the
Florida Annual Conference here
June 2.
Chiles will be In the procession
w ith F lo r id a A re a B ish o p
llasbrouck H. Hughes. Jr., when
the sesqulccntennial celebration
begins at 7 p.m. on the opening

duy of the Florida Annual Con­
ference In Lukclund.
The celebration theme Is "190
Years In an Endless Line of
Splendor."
Among Ihc highlights arc: A
1.000 voice Sesqulccntennial
Choir, the largcat mass choir
ever gathered for u United Meth­
odist event.

Presbyterian

S y p ^ J
P g J iJ
^
'

:
S

,

0

of his friend, war is
no fun at all. There is no "See ya later!"
For over a century, American men and women have
fought for our freedom. Family and friends have been
separated by the ravages of war and the finality of
death. This Memorial Day, as we honor those who are
no longer with us, let us pray for peace, for war is no
game. Death is "for keeps".

ChristianScience

COUHTNTSIOI SAFTIAT
CHUNCH
Country Club Hoad. Laka Mary
Arory M Long
Ptaloi
Sunday Schoor
»a » g m
Praacnmg 4 Worampuig 104* am
SiMa Study
03 0p m

L J jp ^ { v^

Methodist annual conference set

IN BRIEF

LONOWOOO
CHVaCH OF THIMAZARINE
TOOWavman S I. longkood
T.l ()1 (M 4
AIQroan
Pi ,
Sunday School
IB ,
Morning Wovtlup
10 44 a
Chrtd'an • Church
IQ 4) «
Taulh
600p
Ivomog Woraiup
4 DOa
Wad WdFup ta m e *
POOR

I f l

;

and Billy ..friends
all their lives. They
like to play war.
"Bang, bang...
you're dead! I
w o n l " W h e n th ei r
m o t h e r s call, t h e y
run h o m e
to ge th e r, l a u g h i n g
a s t h e y g o , “T h a t
w as fun S e e ya
later!"
Years later.,.
death divides
Bobbie and
Billy...friends all
their lives They
wont off to war.
" B a n g , bang"...
B o b b i o is d o a d
N o o n e really
"wins". W h e n his
m o t h e r cri es th e r e
is n o a n s w e r , a n d
for Billy, s t a n d i n g
s a d l y b y the g r a v e

STARUOHT (APTU T CHUNCH
Independent. Fwndamante Church
•Whwa HPPiPfl And turn
Join Hand*''
HO Hp44 Nd . Winter Spring*
( ( M l 10
0&gt; Olpn C Rlgg*
Paaloi
Sunday School
(1 0 p m
Morning Worah'P
lO X im
Evanmg WoraMp
IB p m
Thmedey Evomng
730pm
HyfMry Provided and Nua Itm t p

m o • Orlando 0*. (a n te d
(OM Zeyra Pteal

fy -g 6

i

United Church
Of Christ

Food, fun and fellow ship
Ovsr 100 members of First Prasbytsrlan Church
of Sanford enjoyed a perfect picnic with lots of
gam es, including so ftb a ll, h orsesh oes,

CHRISTIAN PIllOW SMIP
CHUNCH. U .CC
Nrr Arthur Array
Paali
Sunday Worship
1000 a r
ClMpbSchoal
lO lt a r
PaNpvaMp
ncoar
"CO M ! ONOW WITH USOUN TEMPORARY WORSHIP
LOCATION M
LMM Mary Cowuv umly Puhdlng
MON Country Club Note
Late Mary

volleyball, basketball tor adults and board
games lor some of the elderly members, food
and fellowship Families contributed a variety

of dishes to compliment the chicken, corn ol
the cob, rolls and beverage provided by church.
High school and collego graduates will be

recognized during the worship service on June
5 along with Honoring Sunday school toachora
and fourth grade students.

PMilpptans

1:1100

The Rev. Shea to retire
SANFORD — The Rev. Darwin and Mrs. Shea will be retiring
(ruin Upsulu Community Presbyterian Church. Upaula Road.
Sanford, after serving 20 years at the church.

FINbT b APTNT CHUNCH

OPLOHOWOOD

M i l I N 434
Lungwood f i l l riO S3P4
(40T)33P3dlT
Sunday
b.pra Study
S30am
Worship
10 43 am
Worship
§00 pm
Wadnaaday Worahlp
/ 00 p m
Nuraary • Ail aaryicaa i
Oaal Ministry

Church Of Christ

CONONIOATIONAL
CHNISTIAN CHUNCH IMACCCI
3401 S Part A m
333-4SS4
Nay Thomaa P Tkachuk Miniate*
Church School
0301030 am
Worship
1100 am
Faaowahrp limchaon 1 30 p m . aaar,
3nd Wadnaaday
Ivory laal Saturday. 100 am Mans
Club Braaaiaai

Church of God
Nay . Donald I Wrggmi
Sunday School
Morning WonniR

tungarillic Samoa
Family tnrtchmanl
SorvlcaWadnaaday

FURNITURE FACTORY
LIQUIDATORS ”
Quality Fumllura 6 Dtpcounl Prkct
4050 Hwy. 46,1 Mila East o tM

I
|l
101

go

TX

Women of Qod

Foursquare

HOLT CNOSS
TmpC OPAL CHUNCH
401 Fan AMT.ua
Sanford Florida
Tataph«nol40T| 3334411
Nay C Aihad Cora. Jr
luchansl
r*
Chiidran I Chapat
pot
Svnda, School
bt!
CAorai luchansl
tool

luetfey

tgndsff

HotyCwchenei
1 00 am
Ctwistien CdvcaltCFO
• All Ages
000am
Holy luchand
1000 am
Chddran a Church
1000 am
IlduealKxi wmgi
Nursary Cara Nagini at b oo • m
Tnrowgn 1000am Saryica
Wadnaaday
Hotyluchanat
TOOpm

Seventh Day Adventist

Eastern Orthodox
ST. JOHN'S (AST IAN
ONTHOOOX CHUNCH
IT43Country Chib Hoad

LUTHINAN CHUNCH OF
THI M O tlM IN
lUitaouii Bynodi
343S Oaa A m
Nay timer A Nauschai
Paalor
Sunday School
(Ite m
Worahlp Same*
1030 am
Nuraary Prowdad
Waakday Kindergarten and
PioHindarganan Piogram
For mtemaHon Can 333 3SA3
or 3330410

SMITTY 8 MOWERS
M ike

Connie Smith

2506 S. Park Dr„ Sanford

The S ta ff OS

HUlhaven
Health Care Center

To List Your Church Services
O n This Page C ontact The
A dvertising D ep t. 3 2 2 * 2 6 1 1

BRAM BEAUTY SALON
519 E. lgt St. • Sanford
3 2 1 -8 5 8 0

322*366

BUCK'S RESTAURANT
S e a fo o d B u ffe t

322-2611

Friday &amp; Saturday 5-9PM
1220 8. Sanford Ave., Sanford
3 2 3 -0 9 6 3

O V C r.
A F u ll S ervice Shop

J IM R O W E
PEST CO NTRO L

5 0 0 Laurel Ave., Sanford

UXALLY OWNED AND OTtRATED
RON RUSS) i. STAfT

2626 Iroquois Aue. • 322-2070

H A R R E LL &amp; B E V E R LY
T R A N S M IS S IO N S

Famous Recipe,
COUNTRY CHICKEN
“ I T 'i H O N IY DIPPED "
1(05 F M N C H A V I.
*»

BETTY WEBER

*A Beautiful New Direction for Windows'

7 5 0 Wylly Ave., Sanford
3 2 1 -3 6 0 1

323-3040

The Lake Mary Church with
a Charismatic Distinctive

C

o rnerstone
*|t-//daui//A
LMIUAmtCUNSOU**!

Hat aid F te la hy Ae#y1 M r ta te i

S u n d u y W o r s h i p - 10:00
L a k e M a r y U lc m o n tu ry S c h o o l
L u k e M a r y lllv d . £Jc C o u n t r y C lu l&gt; ltd

WHIGHAM S’SS mS S S PA.

OSBORN'S
B O O K Sc B IBLE
STORE

2599 Sanford Ave.
B u r lin g to n .
Sofa co.
a O N D A l LARGEST IOTA IflOALTTY STOW

410 Stiver LakeDr., Sanford

David Beverly and Staff

This Space
Available
Call

209 W. 25th St.

322-2611

C tM tu a y And Fu n a a I H o &gt; «

e wm enr f u n .

• I Nd 44A at NMnatert Nd. lakd tery

3 2 2 -4 2 6 3

f t e r o dk. Po . 4M
kWd M • (urtePA (Mg
. . 300 Waal Fail Hr**

&amp; m ir r o r

303 S. LAUREL AVE., SANFORD

CARS &amp; TRUCKS

SEE

Dlce m^p.l^o NCBR*
a iHbt
yees
M
1ZI 299)

flW U

IlOf • FRENCH AVE.

V

T H E M c K IB B IN
A G E N C Y
INSURANCE

1 V U J J U U

RAYS APPLIANCE
3 2 3 -6 6 8 4

114 N. Park Ave,, Sanford

C arl Bergm an S Em ploy»oa

D«An Ray L Kenneth Ray, ManAeos
Sales 4. Service
Washers • Dryers • Stoves • Refrigerators

318 S. French Ave., Sanford

0 KdJUunuil

ucuvt io%orr
When You Mention You Saw
Their Spt»iKxiNp in me Herald

3108 Sanford Ava., Sanford

M20 froquel* Av*.
Sanford 32773

330-1660
TRANSFER A STO RAG E
P h il &amp; A A a r l o R o c h e
A L L IE D V A N LIN ES
307 S. Pine Ave,, Sanford

| _ F H A » I GAIL FOR PtBCI FtFOAMST10N

Herb Stenatrom and Staff

■ R ia S O N
FU N ER A L HOMK
Warp srMAAa. Bcrwui Da^Cam M i Y ib *

1

LON QWOOD-787-8101

O R •Shorty Smith and
Dili Watborn

8th 81. and Laurel Ava.
Sanford 322-2131

11001. French Avonoo

This Space
Available
Call
322-2611

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

ATTOMNIrs AT LAW

l
u S n S L a ...
H®J&gt;J**11*

ftaaiauranl ana Food Samoa
Equipmani and Suppllaa
Party Qooda and Papar Qoodt

w M wsk!

There will be a covered dish dinner following the IO a.m.
worship service.

8TE * ? 7 F O M . m c in t o s h

BAldwiFi •FAiNcftlld O aIUawn P anK

Residential L Commercial

KEN KERN'S
TRANSMISSIONS

M AftSNUl ft D A CHUHCM
•00 ( ?nd
. Isnford
333SS44
Setoem Schuoi
p it a "
[Anna Worytup
11 00 a n
Faaiur
Ciaranta L W-grSOT 313 P40P
A iiecistiP aslor (d u s r d l Our*..
SOT STS -AM
Commumcanoni Sacrtiiry
AIQrpayas
304 TPPS3M

Friend* In the community are welcome to J0 |«j vylth the
members In a farewell celebration on Sunday, Muy 29. ut thc
t ftw tfb

3 2 3 -8 9 0 0

M ILLETT A SONS
LANDSCAPING
A LAWNSERVICE

201 N. Maplw

• l i h f * M IU T V Ih lA N ClhiK
I I I Assua IfttN fe ter*

Nuisory thoyMOd

■ T P IT IN S
EPISCOPAL CHUNCH
TOO Rwahen Hoad
Laaa Mary. FteKla
(40T|*44 LORD
Tha Hay B L Saiga
Naclor

322- 2811

This Space
Available
Call

-tp-i *•/»! t
j.
Historic St. James A M I .
Church, Ninth Street and
C ypress Avenue, Sanford,
wrapped up lla monthlong
Women's Day celebration this
past weohond with a Black Art
Show and celobration ol Afri­
can-American Women Build­
ing On Their Heritago With
Courago and Confidence In
Qod. Fannie Miller, coordina­
tor ol tho steering committee,
left, and Pat Turner, a con­
sultant with Porsonal Prefer­
ence, Inc., helped with the
many displays during the art
show.

•tsirn

Eplscopsl

CHUNCH OF OOO

Ml W 33ndSlraal

FIN IC N U T BAPTIST CHUNCH
SOI A- Airport (tad., Oanlord
Noy Jamoa Kmlatn
Pm i
Sunday School
IX li
Morning Worship
11:00*1
Evening Wovahip
TOOpi
Wednesday
Prayer Mailing
TOOp
Nuraary Proyidad For

Eplscopsl

Congregational

A IR CO NDITIO NING

COMPUTE SYSTEMS . ADOOMs
FRCSUTIMATM • SERVICE ALL QHAf
A W COUUIRCIAL

323-3517

ALLUNCI CHUNCH
Commumt. amenta Cftetn. 4411 (a4t laka Dma. W&gt;nla&gt; 8p»ing»
HeigtibortvMd Amenta Ouich. JOl Martham Wood* N d. long .o od
»anlo&gt;d Alliance Cnmih 1401S Fvk A*a. Banted
ASSEMBLY OF 0 0 0
Emmantte AaaamUr ol Ood, MO Commercial S I. Banted
Famii, Worahlp Canlti ITTOW Airport Bird . Sanlord
Ftaadom Ataamw, ol Ood. 1 * 0 Orlando Or. Sanlord
Waana Aliam bl, ol Ood. 1ETS Ihion * d . lon g.ood
BAPTIST
Antioch Bapliil Church. Oriado
Cahrary Baplikt Church. Cryltal Laka Ara 4 Jrd S I. Laka Mary
CaaialOarry Beplitl Church, TTOBaminoU Bird
Central Bapliil Church. 1101W 14181
Chuiuota Firat BapHat
Claaroate Miaironary Bapliil Church. Soulhoatt Nd
Counirjuda Bapliil Church. Country CtgB N d. laaa Mary
Pint Bapliil Church, B it Park Are
Fuel Bapliil Church el Altamonia Spring* Hi 0 8 . Altamonla Spring*
Firtl Baptitl Church ol Forakl City
First bapliil Church ol Oanara
Finl bapliil Church. Markham Wooda
Flut Bapliil Church ol Laka Monroa
FlrU Bapliil Church ol long.ood. *01 [a ll 8R 0 4
Flrit Bapliil Church ol Oltaan
First Bapliil Church ol Oriado
First Bapliil Church ol Sanlando Spring*
Flral Sh'ioh MitUonary Bapliil Church. 1101W 1llh 81
Fountain Head Bapliil Church, Oriado
Hope Bapliil Church. Foretl City Community Canlar. Foraal Cily
Independence Bapliil M ilt . Cldc League Bldg . long.ood
Jordan MilUonary Bapliil Church. B20 Uptaia Nd
Llghihouaa Bapliil Church. I«S Longerood • Laka Mary Nd
Lake«ta« Bapliil Church. 11* Lakariaw A r e , Uka Mary
Macedonia Million Bapliil Church. Oak Hill R d. Oalaen
Million ary Bapliil Church. North R d . Cntarprlie
Morning Olory Bapliil Church. Oanaya Hary
Ml Moriah Prlmlllta Bapliil Chuich. 1101 locual A ye. Banted
__
Ml OUve Miaaionary Bapliil Church, Sanlando Spring! Rd . lon g.ood
Ml. Sinai Miaaionary Bepliat Church. 1*00 Jarry Aye
Ml Zion Million ary Bapliil Church. Slpaa A*a
N t « Balhal Miaaionary Church, Olh Bl 4 Hickory Ava
N e « Ml Canary Miaaionary Bapliil Church. 1109 W IZlh 51
N a . Salem Primitive Bapliil Church. 1800 W IZlh 81
Haw Tailamant Bapin' Church. Oualily Inn. North Long.ood
N a* Ml. Zion Bapliil Church, ITZO Pair Are
N a . Ufa Fallosknip. 49*1 E Laka Dr. Caaaaioerry
Norlhklda Bapliil Church. Chuluola
..............
Paacalul Ztei Bapliil Church. 1194 Pina B t. Allamonla Springe
Paopla'a Bapliil Church. 1301W. tat S I. Sanlord
Plnacraal Bapliil Church, M l E Airport Bird
Pralrla Laaa Bapliil Church, Ridge n d , Fern Park
PrograMMiulonary Bapliil Church, Midway
- .........._
Providence Miaaionary Bapliil Church. 4S9I Doufllaa A re, Bookarlo.n
Second en.ron Miaaionary Bapliil Church Waal Santetl
Smyrna Bapliil Church. ZSO Orartuoo* Or. CaaialOarry
Slariighi Bapliil Church, 190 Bahama Rd
SI Jamaa Miaaionary Bapliil Chuich, SR IIS. Oalaan
81. Johna Miaaionary Bapliil Chuich. 000 lon g.ood A ra.
Allamonla Bpringa
__
■I. Luka Miaaionary Bapliil Church ol Cameron City. Inc

81 Paul Bapliil Churcn, i l l Pma Ara
Bt Mailhaaa Bapliil Cnurch. Canaan Hgt*
SI John i Miaaionary Beplitl Church. 9Z0 Cypraaa SI
Springfield Miaaionary Baanal Cnurch. IZlh SI 4 Cedar Ara
Palmetto Ara Bapliil Church. ZSZBPalmallo Are
Tampia Bapliil Church, Palm Bpringa Rd . Allamonla Spring*
Victory Bapliil Church, Old Orlando Rd at H ailti Ara
W a n n a . Bapliil Church. I lOOPaoiaRd |IBA|
William Chapel Miaaionary Bapliil Church. Mara 4 William I I .
Allamonla Spring*
Zion Hop* Bapliil Church. TIZ Orange Ara
CATHOLIC
All Soul* Cal none Cnurch. 90Z Oaa A ra . Sanlord
Church ol Ih* Nallrily. Laaa Mary
Our Lady ol Iha Lakaa Catholic Church. 1)10 Marlmliian. Deltona
SI Ann a Catholic Church. Dogwood Trail. SaBery
Bt Auguann* Catholic Church. Sunaal Or. near Button Rd . CaaeaiOairy
Bl Oara Catholic Comrrmnilymaataal Oalaan CNie Cantar
SI Miry Magdalen* Catholic Church. Maitland A ra . Altamonla Spimga
SI Mary*a ukranlan Catholic Church, Z45 McCoy O r. Apupka
CHRISTIAN
First Chrlallan Church. I60T S Sanlord Ara
Flral Cnrlilian Cnurch ol long.ood. I400EE Wlinamion Rd. Long.ood
Caleb*anon Church Laka Mary, IZ* W la a a iia . A ra, Laka Mary
Oraca Cnnalian Church. Wilaon Elamamary School iPaolal.
99S Orange Bird . Sanlord
lakatriarr Chrlilian Church. Bear [aka Rd aljamikon
Sanlord Chrlilian Church, T)0 Uptaia Rd Sanlord
South Sami note Chrlilian Church, 300 W SR 4)4, Oriado
CHRISTIAN BCICNCI
Flral Church ol C h ill Sciential. STS Martham Woodi R d. Long.ood
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Church ol Chilli, ISIZS Park Ara
Church ol Chrlal al Laka Elian. U S Hrry IT 9Z N , Caiiaibarry
Church ol Chnal, 400 Palm Spring* Dr. Allamonla Bgringi
Church ol Chilli. Oanara
Church ol Chrlal, Longwood
Church ol Chrlal. W ITthSI
Norlhilda Church ol Chnil. Fla Haren Or . Midland
South Saminola Church ol Chnil, S4I0 laka Ho.all Nd
CHURCH OF 0 0 0
Church ol Ood. SO) Hickory Ara
Church ol Ood. SO) W ZZnd Bl
Church ol Ood. Oviedo
Church ol Qcd Honnaaa. Laka Monroa
Church ol Ood Minion. Entarpnaa
Church ol Ood. 140ZW tSIhBI
Church ol Ood In Chrlal. Oyiado
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy. ZS09 8 Elm Ara
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy, I TO* 8 Paralmmon Ara
Church ol Ood ol Prophecy. IB* S Canlral, Oriado
Church ol Ood (7th Oay). Danone Community Canlar, Danone (Sun Room)
flaacua Church ol Ood. 1700 W. DlhSl .Sanlord
Ttut Church ol Ood. Z700 Ridgewood A re . Sanlord
CONONIOATIONAL
Congregational Chrlilian Church. Z40IS Park A ra , Sanlord
EASTERN ORTMOOOX
Eatlam Orlhodoa Cnurch. 81 Oaorgo, ZOOI Dylan Way. Midland
Eattain Orlhodoa Church, 81. Blaron a ol O C A ,
IMS la ta Emma R d. longwcod
Eaalam Orlhodoa Church, 81. John Onnodoa, ZT43 Country Dub R d.

Sanlord
EPISCOPAL
Ail Ssnit [p u copal cnurch E OaBary A ra . Cnlarpnaa
Chnil Epracopal Church, long.ood
£put opal Church ol Iha N a . Coranart. ITS Tuatewiiie R d . Winter Spring*
Ipricopal Church ol tha Raturraclion. ZS11 laaa Brantley Or. lon g.ood
Holy Croa* (p ile opal Church. Para Are al llh S I, Sanlord
SI Palara [pucopal Church. TOORinehart N d. laaa Mary
SI N«chard'a Church. 8IS1 LaaaHo.all Rd. Wmiar Park
The Church ol Ih* Ooud Shephard, M l laaa Ara . Maitland
FOURSQUARE
Comaratona Chrlilian Fallow thip. Laaa Mary Elementary Be hod. Comar
lata Mary Bird A Country Dub R d . Laka Mary
INTERDENOMINATIONAL
Calrwy Cnrlllte! Canlar, 600 W llh SI .Sanlord
N a . Harraal Chrlilian Falio.ahip. ZT90 Country Dub R d. Sanlord
Northland Community Church. 630 Dog Track Rd. lon g.ood
Oulrtach Delivertnca Canlar, ZZ3I Slpaa A ra . Sanlord
JEWISH
Bain Am Synagogua meeting al corner ol Band Lata and
County Lina Hd . Wall 1-4
Tampia Shalom, IT4S Eltham Bird. Oaltona
LUTHERAN
Aacanaton Lutheran Church, Ovarbrook Dr, Caatalberry
aood Shepherd l uthat an Church. IlC A . Z9IT Orundo Or (Hay M U ).
Sanlord
Holy Croat lutharan Chuich ol laka Mary. T60 Sun Or. laka Mary
Lord ol Lila Lutheran Church. 39* Tuakmllia R d. Wlnlar Spring!
Lulhaian Chuich ol Providence. Oallona
Lutheran Church ol Ih* Radaamar, ZSZS Oak Ava
MaiUah Lutharan Church. OddanDaya Or 4 H «y 1 TSZ. Caaaal berry
SI Lukaa Lutharan Church. Rt IZS. Siavi*
81 Slaphan Lutharan Church. 1)1 lull W ol 14. lon g.ood
METHODIST
Bamall Undid Memorial Church. E OaBary Ava. Entarprtaa
Oaar laka United Mai hod'll Chuich
Bainal A M E. Church. Canaan Haighta
Caaaalbarry Community Unilad Malhodial Chuich. Hwy 17 9Z al
Pinay Ridga Rd . Caiiaibarry
Chnil Unilad Malhodut Church. Tucker Or. Sunland Eilataa
OaBary Community Malhodial Church. W Hlghbanka R d. OaBary
Full Unilad Malhodial Church. 119 Park Ava
Firal Malhodial Church ol Qanava
Flral Malhodial Church ol Oviedo
Oiaca Unilad Malhodial Church. 199 N Country Dub Rd. lake Mary
Qranl Chapel A M E Church. Oviado
Oakgrove Malhodut Church, Oviado
Oalaan Malhodial Church, cor. ol Carpenlar S Murray S I. Oalaan
Pionaar Malhodial Church, c d ol Wilbur Ava 1 Country Club R d,
LAM Mify
Sanlando Unilad Malhodial Chuich. SR 1)4 and 1-4, longwood
SI Jamaa A M E . 9lh al Cypraaa
SI Luka M 8 Church ol Cameron Dly, Inc. Betrdall oil SR 19 E.
SI Mary's A M E Church. SR 415. Oalaan
St Paul’a Malhodial Chuich. Oilaen ltd, Enlaiprlaa
Sira!lord Memorial Church. 8 OaBary
NA2ARENI
Flral Church ol lha Najarana. ZS41 Sanlord Ava
Oaneva Church ol lha Naiarana, 8R 18, Oanava
Laka Mary Church ol lha Nararana. 1M ( . CryilN Lake A va, Laka Mary
longwood Church ol lha Naiarana. Wayman 4 Jaktup A va. Longwood

Maraham Wooda Church ol lha Naiarana. SR 14. )1| milk* W
o il 4*1 lha Waklv* River
PRI44TTIAIAN
Oallona Praibylanan Cru.cn Holland Blvd 4 Aualm Are . Gallont
Flral PratOylanan Church ol Laka Mary
Firal Praabylanan Church. Oak Ava 4 3rd Si
Flral Praabylanan Church ol OaBary. E Highland
Markham Wood* Pittbyttritn Church, SZIO Markham Wood* Rd .
Laaa Mary
SI Andrew* Praabylarrtn Church. 991Z Bear lake Rd
SI Marta Praabylanan Church. 1031 Palm Spring* Rd . Allamonla Bpringa
Tuacawllia Praabylanan Church. 3*00 W SR IZS Oviado
Upaaia Community Praabylanan Church, Uptaia Rd
WakivaPraabylanan Church 211 Wativa Springe Lana. Longwood
yVaalmlnialar Praabylanan Church, Rad Bug Rd. Caiiaibarry
SEVENTH OAY ADVENTIST
Foraal l* k * Seventh Oay Advanliil Church. Hwy 4)8. Foraal Cily
Mara Hill Savanlh Oay Advannai Church. *01 E 2nd SI Sanlord
Sanlord Savanih Oay Advanliil Churcn. 6*16 N Hwy IZT
Savanlh Oay Advanliil Church. Midland Av* , Allamonla Spnnga
Winlar Spring* Savanlh Oay Advanliil Church, SOS Mo** Nd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Finn Chapel. Camp Saminola Wakiva Park Rd
Allan a A M E Church. Ollr* A IZlh
Baardail Avenue Honnaaa Cnapai. Baardail Av*
Chuiuota Community Church
Church ol Jaaua Chnil ol lallar Oay Simla. Z)IS Park Ava
ECKANKAR. TTOB&gt;g TraaOr .Sulla 100. Longwood
Family Churcn Chrlilian Canlar. 1644 Saminola Blvd .Caaaalbarry
Flral Born Church ol tha living Ood. Midway
Flral Church ol Chrlal. Sciantttl. Elkam Blvd 4 Vanua S I. Oallona
Flral Panlacoalal Church ol Longwood
Flral Panlacoalal Church ol Sanlord
Full Ooapal Church ol Ood In Chrlal. 1ST* Jarry Ava . Sanlord
Full Ooapal Tabernacle. ZTZI Counlry Dub Rd
Oraca Bibla Church. Z*aa S Sanlord Ava
Holy Trimly Church ol Ood In Chnil, 1611 Mangouillna Ava
Kingdom Mall ol Jehovah a Wilnata. Laka Monro* Unll, I6SZW 3rd St
laka Mary Community Cnurch. 101 N Counlry Club Nd . Laka Mary
Ikkk Monro* Chapel, Orange Blvd . Ilka Monro*
Ml Diva Holman Cnurch. Oak Hill Rd . Oalaan
Neighborhood Alliance Church. )0I Markham Wood* Rd . Longwood
Paola Waalayan Church. 6460 Waylid* O '. Sanlord
Panlacoalal Open Bibla TaDarnacia. Ridgewood Ava oil ZSlhoppoaila
Saminola High School
Raitealloo Community Chuich. 6*16 N CR4ZT. Sanlord
Rolling Him Moravian Churcn. SR 4)4. Longwood
Sanlord Alllanc* Church. 1401 S Park Ava
Sanlord Bibla Church. 3460 Sanlord Av*
Second Church ol Ih* Living Ood, 342* Baardail Ava . Sanlord
Si. Palka Serbian Orlhodoa Churcn. 1990 Laka Emma R d. longwood
Tha Full Ooapal Church ol Our lord Jaaua Chrlal. Waihmgion S I .

Canaan D ly
Tha Salvation Army. TOOW Jam SI
Tilumph. Tha Church ol tha Naw Age. IOC* W BlhSI
Unilad Church ol Chnil. Allamonla Community Chapal. Allamonla Spnnga
Unilad Chuich ol Chrlal Cnnitlin Failowahlp, 2*0 N Counlry Club nd .
IfitO Mify
U C 8 S Spiritual Canlra 12S A 8 Voluala Av* . comer ol
Drava* 4 Voluala A va . Orange Cily

J

�8 8 - S a n lo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y , M ay 27. 1094

INTHBCIRCU IT COURT
OF THK 1ITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. 4) 1744 CA It l
THE FIRST SAVINGS DANK,
FSB, lormarly known *| P in t
Federal Saving) and Loan Alto
viallon of South Carolina, n/k/a
&gt;oulii«rn National Dank ol South
Carolina,
Pialntlll
VI.

DALE E FOWLER.at a l ,
Defendants
AMENDED NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgment ol Foractoture dated
November II. IN I. and Order
dated May &gt;4. IW4. and entered
In Cate No I I I F I I CA 14 L ol
the Circuit Court ol the IITH
Judicial Circuit In and tor SEM
IN O L E C o u n ty. F lo r id a ,
wherein THE FIRST SAVINGS
BANK. FSB. lor marly known at
Flrtl Federal Saving) and Loan
Attoclallon ol South Carolina.
n/k/a Southern National Bank ot
South Carolina. Pialntlll. and
DALE E. FOWLER, al al.. are
defendant). I will tall lo the
hlghetl bidder lor cath at the
Weil Front Door ol the Seminole
County Courlhoute, Sanlord.
Florida, al (he hour ol 11:00
a m , on June II, Itf4. the
following detcrlbed property at
tat forth in told Summary Final
Judgment, to will
Lot Tf. CAST CAMDEN, a
tubdlvltlon according to the plal
lhereof at recorded In Plat Book
70. Paget 17, ae, and It. Public
Record! of Seminole County.
Florida
DATED thlt » l h day ol May.
Itt4.
Mary anne Marta
Clerk Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jetewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish May 17 A June 1 Itt4
OER Tit

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA.
C A lE N O .tM IIIC A '1 4 -B
CITIZENS FIO ELITY BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY, a
Kentucky Banking Corporation,
d'b/a PNC MORTGAGE
COMPANY,
Plaintiff.
vt.
JOSEPH FIELDS. E T A L .
Detendantltl.
AME NO ED NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
purtuant lo a Summary Final
Judgment ot Forecloture dated
October 11, ttt4, and Order
dated May IT, 1114. and entered
in Cate No t ] I Its CA 14 E ol
lha Circuit Courl ol the llth
Judicial Circuit In and lor Semi
note County, Florida wherein
CITIZENS F ID E LIT Y BANK
ANO TRUST CO M PA N Y, a
Kentucky Banking Corporation,
d/b/a PNC MORTOAQE COM
PAN Y. and JOSEPH FIELDS.
ET AL.. are Oelondentt,’ I will
tell to the hlghetl bidder ter
cath at the W et! Front Door ot
the Seminole County Court
houta, Sanlord, Florida, at 11.00
o'clock A M on the 14th day ot
June. 1)04, the tel lowing do
tertbad property at tat forth In
tald Summary Final Judgment,
lo wit.
Lot U. ACAOEMY MANOR
UNIT TWO. occsrding to the
Plat thereof at recorded In Plot
Book la. Page 14. Public Rec
ordt ot Seminole County, Flor
Ida
Together with all tlruclurai
and Improyamenlt now and
hereafter on tald land, and lha
rent), Itiuat. and prolllt ol lha
above detcrlbed properly, and
all fltlu rtt now or hertaller
alleched to or uted In connec
lion with Ihe premltet herein
detcrlbed and in addition lo any
houtahold appliance), which
are. and lha 11 be deemed lo be
Datum and part ol tha really
OATEO thlt llth day ot May,
1444
MARY ANNE MORSE
Clerk, Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: May TO. IT, 1*44
DER III

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INAND FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NOi 44 lif-C A 14 E
C E S A R V O C A M P O and
PE RLITA OCAMPO, hi) wile,
Pialntlll),
vi.
ANDREW LENIIARDT, JR ,
Defendant
NOTICE OF ACTION
ICanttrectlve Service!
TO ANDREWLENHARDT,
JR.
lsao Tutcaloeta Trail
Mallland. Flor Ida 11TII
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
FIED Dial a Complaint to Quiet
TltN hat been tiled and com
menced In thlt Court and you
are required to terve a copy ol
your written antwer and da
lentas. It any, to II on Pialntlll).
C E S A R V. O C A M P O and
PE R LITA OCAMPO, hit wile,
w h o t t a d d r a t t l i TSOI
Woodglede Cove. Winter Park.
Florida H7T1. and lo Ilia lha
original with lha CNrk of the
above ttyled Courl within 10
day* alter the lin t publication
tth arw lM a datault will be
entered lor Ihe relHI prayed lor
In the Complaint
Thlt notice shall bo published
one* each week far fwo contac u
fiv e w e e k ) In Ihe Sanlord
Herald
WITNESS my hand and the
tael of u id Courl af Sanford,
Florida, on lha llth day ol May.
1444
(SEAL)
M ARY ANNE MORSE
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Ruth King
A ) Deputy CNrk
Publlth: May TO, IT. 1444
DER I f f

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
O FT H B E IO H TE IN T H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA.
CRIMINAL CASE NO.i
L44-II44-CPA
ICSO INCIDENT NO.,

sxieseaei

IN R E : FORFEITURE OF
«MM HANDGUN. FABRIQUE
DENATIONAL 44X771:
11.570 00U S CURRENCY;
117100U S CURRENCY
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
FROCBIDINO
TO: Ivan Cabrera .
541 Northweitarn Avenue
Altamonte Spring).
Florida » ? 14
and all othtrt who claim an
I n la r a t l In th e fo llo w in g
properly
IM M HANDGUN. FABRI
QUE DENATIONAL 44X711;
11.570 00 U S CU RREN CY
U7100U S. CURRENCY
Donald P. Etllnger, ol the
Seminole County Sheriff) Of
Ilea. Seminole Counly. Florida,
through hit oil leer i. Invasttg*
ton or agenlt. tatted the above
property on April If, I f f ) , al or
near 541 Northwettern Avenue.
Altamonte Spring). SemlnoN
County. Florida, and I) pret
antty holding told property tor
the purpoaa ol forfeiture pwrsu
ant to Section) o n toi 7*4. Flor
Ma Statute), and will REQUEST
that on Honorable Judge
C irc u it Court.I. E igh teen th
J u d icial C ircu it, la m la a l*
County, Florida, find probable
ceuie that lha above property
thould be lor tailed to the above
agency. You will be ten I a copy
ol tha Order finding Probable
Ceute once It I) ilgned by the
Judge and It will advlte you how
and whan to retpond lo thlt
requetf lor lorltilurt
I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy ol (hit
Notice wat tent to the above
nam ed a d d r e t t e t by U.S.
certified mall, return receipt
requetled, thlt 17th day ol May.
1F04.
M AR YAN N KLEIN
LEGAL COUNSEL
Florida Bar No.: 4!)*Jt
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'S OFF ICE
114) llth Street
Sanford. Florida 11771 t i f f
Telephone: («7J 1)0 4471
Car tilled Receipt IP544 1 0 1 »)
Publlth: May 11,17 1 June 1,1.
me
D E R -1 7 1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cefetnfy C«h*x cryptogrime we creeled Item quetekone by lamsut

people pact and preeeni Each tetter n r e ctphet stands lor tnotwr

redeye due J equate K

‘ YD

A KZ

AKYOCE,
QBZ

DHA

V8A

A KZT

AP

EWKZOZ

OT

XBHFZWAE

YOXHBAQDA
(BZAYBZZ)

71—

Legal N o tices

Legal N o tices

HL

YOXHBAQDA,
OBZ
AH

OZ.‘

—

WKQBRZE

J I 8 B Q D A.
P R E V IO U S S O L U T IO N : "I’d Ilka to work a llttla lo s t
‘ c r u m l‘m ggtlJng tlrad, but I don't qulta know how to
•lop." — W hoopi Goldberg

O FF T H E LE A S H ® by W .B . Park

323-5176

Seminole
Orlando - Winter Park
322-2611____________ 831-9993
HOURS
8:00 A.M. ■ 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
8 SUNDAY

_______
744W. lifts St.
ADO TO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL 1114*14 e r l l M W

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
14 c o n s tc u llv t l

i

m

n

AGENTS-NEAL ESTATE!

57* a lint

7 co n ttc u llv e t lm a i----------------70* • lint
3 c o r a K u llv f llm t i
81* a llna
1 lim a _________________________ 11.18 • Una
R o ftt a n par M tut, h t f f d on 3 tints
» 3 U n t « Minimum

Nothing tucceedl Ilka luccm .
We’re well Into our Vd itecedo
ol training tucctttlul agentt
No license I ........... W ellhelp!
WATSON REALTYCORP
realto rs
m im

A ll POSITIONS
Apply In person Ills Orlando
Ave Dunk in Donutt 11am 7pm

_____ 2 1 — P e r s o n a l s

ADOPTIONS
Free medical care, trenipor
tallon, countellng. private
doctor plut living eapemet
Bar 41)7111 Claarwater A Harney
JehnFrttkc t.....I *5* 417 MX
OENTLEMEN. Looking tor re
taxation? Looking tor tight
touch body rubtT Dating?
Per nett Look no further Call
Diamond Mina Enterfalnman!
X7 1417)40 Now Hiring

23— Lo s T a~ F ound
OFOUND DOO RULE Pari
chow, Sankerdarea » i m

55—Buslnen
Opportunity
PAPER ROUTE Sentinel. Sen
lord area No collection)
Orowth Mutt toll 111 MI4QVQS
TAKE CONTROLI You can be
In charge of your future! Sal
your own goal), work your
own hour), earn at much at
you want t i t Billlcn. Wall
etlebllthed W ttl Coett com
pany Hare') your chance lo
gal In early I'll ihow you how
Call today. Sheryl
_________ IX7IM4YI54
VENOINO ROUTE: Tired al
get rich qukk dealt? Wanl a
goad, tedd. real butlnett T
We tot HI priced la tell

APPUERSS11 HR
We train local work
__________ 41147) 4771_________

ASSEMBLERS
Longwood company teaks
hand mall processors No *■
per lens e necessary 11 par
hour
Never a leal

Hdip Ptnoangf, 1H K U
AVON predectvIAM Earn to
»&gt;
No door'door P T/ F T
lend! l i t 1141/14804401140

* DRIVER WANTED *
Fell lima Melt ham tala
modal econo vohtcfe tee local

voONto. C*ftB5H401 »H

CARVER

~ 2 3 ^ ~ S p e c la l N o t lc a s
FEMALE Id help with driving
and g a l from Sanlord to Tenn
Rat ) Leaving */IO M l 4141

27—Nurttry 4
C h ild C a r#
CHILD CARE Laka Alary Bird
area M alt or femala. I y n A
k O .M frfttld fltl.M l 'to)
DBBARV AREA. F/T opening)
tor 1 Ini./I tod In a loving,
Itarnlng, imoka frae env
Fenced yard. pet). Near I 4
Real rale* Rail upon rgg
Call evei 407 eat raja_________

45— L a fla T S a r v Ic a t
a LEOAL PNOTOORAPHY a
Reaionabie rate)
c * » n in e s

47— T r a v i l
WANTED; Oheili and Oebtint
Join U) for a Haunting gaod
lima an our I night Halloween
crulie on the Zenith itarttng
Oct i f
Call Jackie at
G o Travel 407 1)1*411

Legal N o tices
Heliceel Sheriffs Sale
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtue ot that cartam
Writ ol Eiacullon timed out ol
and under the leal ol lha Circuit
Court of Seminole County, Flor
Ida. Cava m ifO tC A U L upon a
IInal jwdgmtnl rendered In the
atortsald Court an the 1III day
ol March A D
I f f 4. in that
certain cate entitled ANN B.
HAYNES. Pialntlll w FIRST
B A P T IS T CHURCH M AR K
HAM WOODS. INC and W
ROBERT PARKER. Defendant
which atereietd Writ ol Cu cu
Han wat delivered la ma a i
Sheriff al Seminole County.
Florida and I have levied upon
oil the ilp il. title and Intaratl ot
the defendant. FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH MARKHAM WOOOS.
INC . in and to the (allowing
detcrlbed property, tald proper
ty being located In Seminole
County. Florida more perllcu
lerly detcrlbed at follow)
ALL RIGHT. TITLE AND
INTEREST OF THE DEFEN
DANTS IN THE FOLLOWINO
DESCRIBED REAL PROPER
TY
TOWNSHIP 10 SOUTH.
RANGE I f EAST RECORDED
IN PLAT BOOK 4. PAGE 41. OF
THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLOR
IDA STREET AOORESS 5400
M AR K H A M WOODS ROAD.
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
and tha underiigned a t Sharllf
ol Seminole Counly, Florida,
will at 11:00 A M . on lha loth
day ol June A D 1*44, oiler lor
kale and tall lo Ihe hlghetl
bidder, FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY ANO
ALL EXISTINO LIENS, al tha
Front (W ettl Door, al tha iltp t.
ol tha Saminolo County Court
houta In Sanlord. Florida, Ihe
above detcrlbed property.
That told tala I) being made
lo talltfy the term) of thlt Writ
of Elocution
Donald F. Etllnger. Sharllf
Seminole County, Florida
NOTICE REOARDING THE
A M E R IC A N S W IT H DIS
ABIITIES ACT OF IffO. PE R ­
SONS WITH A D ISABILITY
N E E D IN G S P E C IA L AC
COMMOOATIONS TO PARTIC­
IPATE IN THE PROCEEDING
S H O U L D C O N T A C T TH E
C IV IL D IV IS IO N OF THE
S H E R IF F 'S O F F IC E . E N ­
FO R C E A B LE W R ITS SEC­
TIO N , 1141 IIT H STREET,
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A AT
LEAST FIVE DAYS PRIOR TO
THE PROCEEDING. TELE
PHONE: 1407} 1)0 5440. TTD
14071
DU.
Publlthed; May 10. 17, Juno 1,
10. SALE DATE JUNE »th .

DER-in

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IH AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NOi 44-1541 DR n F
IN RE: T H E M A R R IA G E O F :
M ild r e d O . C o o k )
Petitioner/Wile,
and
J o h n E . C o o k ). S r.
Ratpondanl/Hutband.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: JOHN E COOKS. Sr.
Rftpondanl/Hutband
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lor Oltiolullon ol Mar­
riage hat been Iliad again)! you.
You are required lo terve a copy
ol your written defantet. II any,
lo Ihe action on Palillonar't
attorney, w hole name and
addratt It Richard O. Oavlton
140) Haa Avenue, Tallahaiiee,
Florida )1)Q), on or before June
14, I f f 4, and Ilia lha original
with the Clerk ol Ihit Court,
either before tervlce on PollHonor') attorney or Immodlalely
thereafter; olherwlta a lodg­
ment will be entered for lha
relialdamandfd In Iht petition.
WITNESS my hand and lha
teal of thlt Courl on thlt 14th
dayofM ay. Iff4.
Mary anna M o r te

CLeRKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT

Famed for their aurefooledness in the Alps,
mountain goats have trouble on
the Arizona flatlands.

EMPLOYMENT

C L A S S IF IE D A D S
CLASSIFIED DEPT

Help W a n t# d

B y : S h a ro n d a Laved W y n n
D e p u ty C le rk
Publ
u b llt h t May 17 A June 1, 10,
1ff4
DER 111

WANTED Partner lo mvatl in
the awning A canopy huqlneti
L o w m o n ey lo r a v a r y
lucrative but met) 40*1*4 tua

T o t e r m m e a t lo c u s to m e rs a t
b u t t * l W ill tr a m A p p ly 1
4 P M . H o lid a y H o u se R e tte u
r a n i, H w y 17 41 n e a r L a ta
M a r y A d r u g tre e w o rk p la c e

41— M o iw y lo L w d

CASHIERS

KEEP DRIVING M O STILL
GET THE MONEY!

A ll s h ifts a v a lla b ia E s p e ri
tn c a p r e fe r r e d A p p ly
Fuse E ■p re s s M a r l
lo o t S F t in c h A v e

All you need It your title Jack
Diamond for appointment

71— H e I p W a n te d
WANTED ttt people lo lota
weight now I No willpower
r e q u ir e d )00X n atural
Doctor recommended I4BX
guaranteed__________ 15) WO)

ADVERTISING M U S
IMMEDIATE OPENING
The Sanlord Herald ft now
hiring for (ha petiMen af
Classified Display Account
Representative Duties will
include servicing current ac
Count) and tat'cltlng new »&lt;
count) Salary plut com
minion, mileage end health
benefit) Prior M tales and af
layout taper lance a plut
prior eaperlence calling on
car dealership) desirable
Please tend or lae resume to
n o H French Ave IHwy 17411
Sanlord. F L )17M F a t.
407 i n *401 or c a ll tha
A d v e r tis in g M a n a ger
407 ] » M il

IN THE CIECUST COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CRIMINAL CASE NO.:
OO-ltoOCPA
SCSO INCIDENT NO. i
44411)5040
INRE FORFEITURE OF
lff4CHRYSLER LCBARON
VlN rlOnCSfClGGlIUTO
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
FROCEEOINO
TO Thao A Henry
40 Avalon Court
Cettelberry. Florida &gt;7707
and all olhart who claim an
In te r e s t In the fo llo w in g
properly i
1M4CHRYSLER LEHARON.
VIN(1C1BCUEIGG111170
Donald F. Etllnger. of the
Seminose County S h eriff) Ot
lice. Seminole County. Florida,
through his officers. Investig*
tort or agent), telted the above
property on April I f . Iff), al or
near State Road 415 and Anchor
Road, Al lemon le Springs, Sami
note County, Florida, and It
presently holding tald property
lor the purpose ol forfeiture
purtuant to Section) 4H.7BI-704,
Florida Slalutai. and will RE
QUEST that an Honorable
Judge ol Ihe Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
Seminole County, Florida, find
probable causa that lha above
property thould bo forfeited lo
the above agency. You will bo
tent a copy of tha Order finding
Probable Cause once II It signed
by Ihe Judge and II will advise
you how end when lo retpond lo
thlt request tor forfeiture.
I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy of this
Notice wat sent to the above
nam ed a d d r e t t e t by U.S.
certified mall, return receipt
requested. Hilt 17th day ol May.
1ff4.
M AR YAN N KLEIN
LEGAL COUNSEL
Florida Bar No : 5 t » l f
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'tOFFICE
1141Xlh Stroel
Sanford, Florida 11771 O f f
Telephone: (407)110 5571
Cert Ilied Receipt (P15J 4 » 110
Publlth: May li, 17 A June t, 1.
1444
DER17I

Saturday A Sunday
Corner ol 3rd A Elm

ESTATE SALE
Furniture, appliance), tool),
cloth e), household Iftm i.
Friday and Saturday, ilarts al
7am. 114 Cllrut Drive, Sanlord

GARAGE SALE
AND CHICKEN BARBECUE
S a tu r d a y , l:1 0 * m - l: 1 0 p m .
K l d t c lo th in g , o d d i a n d t n d i .
a n d lo t a o f H u f f . F lr a t
N a t a r e n * C h u r c h S a n fo rd ,
1511 S t a n f o r d A r e .____________

WE NEED WORKERS
Dally work, dally pay Report
I X Am, 1*0) Park Oftv*.
Sanford, or celt I X 7X1. ask
______ tor Bob alter 1 Pm

HOUSEKEEPING SUPERVISOR
M utt have housekeeping
'supervisor experience in a
healthcare tailing Knowledge
ot O R R A and OSHA ra
quiremants highly desirable
Drug free work place Apply
within
Dthary Manor
44 N. Hwy 17 41
D5hary.FI
__________ X 75X4415_________
LABORERS NEEDED Skilled
and unskilled Day)
Call between l )
S P R IH T S T A P F IM O .W X II

LANDSCAPERS
Futl time

SPRINKLER STS. INSTALLER
Experienced

S00 LAYERS
He experfence required
CALL W H IM ________

LAUNDRY ATTENDANT

' DCMTAL ASSISTANT
Experienced erpended dui-es
Assistant needed tor mult!
ditclpllnary surgical and pro
a t h o llc r e c o n s t r u c t iv e
practice Energetic individual
with strong Individual and
team skills, willing m go lha
astro mile, a mutt Salary and
benefits commensurate with
o »parlance 40477)4)15
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
Dynamic eiperlenced. indi
victual needed tor multi dis
Opltnery office Scheduling,
collection, insurance phone
Skill), recall, patient relations
and comupter literacy a mutt
Those with denial experience
need only apply Salary com
mpnturate with experience
Availabia immediattaly
)P4 m urn

DISHWASHER

1 4PM, Holiday House
Hesleurenf. Hwy If tj near
Lake M ary A drug tree
workplace

DISPATCHER WANTE0
Fell time tor h
petit. Matt have I
area. Cod44MWI________

DRIVERS REEMD
A 0 CARRIERS. Tavaret. FI,
a wed ettehiished OPd drew
mg CerWnss PSerewe**ee#d
company oilers you:
P lie lo 14c per mile
*
# Up 10 11.000 ml per mo
• Stop OH Pay
o Unloading Pay
O Vacation Pay
O Safety A Performance Bonus
e Spouse Riding P-ogrem
a Average T rip ) ?Deyt
o Late Model Conventional
Tractors
II you have 1 year) tractor
trailer, o r It and snow and lea
a spar tone a pi ut a good dr 11 mg
record, call:
_________ 1444*7440)0________

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

71— H E i p W a n t t d ____

SHEET METAL MECHANIC

MAIDS

Pottlbl* training avallabia
Call 774 X14_________

Join S*rvk*M*ld and be hare
every day with high quality
work end you can earn tha
right lo work Iror.i home Our
lenders average 1700 plut *
week II you have worked lor
other maid service) call today
and you can start tomorrow I
111 5141

SUBWAY/HANOYWAY
Exporienca gtiwth with us as
a H andy W ey/S u bw ay
associate Patt/Full Tima
potiliont avatlebl* Customer
oriented Individual) are *n
tour aged lo apply In perton at
tha Handy way located at 4111
Orange Blvd . Lake Monroe or
mall rasume'apphtAUan lo
Handy Way. I l l Semoran
Commerce PI . Suita !4t,
Apopka FL »7 0 )
_ E E O M / F / H / V _________

M E D IC A L

HELPI

E * p a r l* n c * d w p h a lit ir y
person Call tor appl M l a**4

LPN
11PM fAM thltt Tull Hm*
Apply in parson At Lakevlew
Nurni'g Center *14 E Second
Sheet, tan lord

PANEL SAW OPERATOR

TELEMARKETERS

For computer Il*d panel saw
Experience required Im
mediate opening 114*144 ___

At Olan M ill) Portrait Studio)
Great opportunity tor Mnlor
cltiiens. homemaker). 4 )*u
dents Pert lima hours, tarn
IJpm 4 4pm epm It you have
personality plus 4 you Ilka to
talk on tha phone you're the
person we're looking tori
Call Meryl i l l ) ) 4141
______ _
FOE M/F

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR
Some experience preferred
Send return* to Blind Box
1100. C/O Sanlord Herald PO
Box leaf. Sanlord FL 11771

RECCPTIONIST/SECRETARY

TELEMARKETING

P/T In attic* mgmt req
10am 4yvn
511) hr

YOUTH COUNSELOR

National Mtg hat several
opening* on III aggressive
totomarkefing staff W* otter
lull training and benefit)
Starling pay Is 57 M per hr
Experience preferred Call
Ms Baker.
Man Frl
45
(X 7I5IM 75I

Needed lor summer camp
program Saturday) *amlpm
Sand remma and i s f l t e i STA
Learning Canter, lac., PO

■ta IX, laniard, FI W77141X

SAUS TRAINEE/
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP

TRUCK DRIVER WANTED

A I um In m um and v i n y l
* . huttorn Lax Screen Cam
pany )44 Silver Laka Drive____

OTR experience Produce exp
Claw A COL Call 777 d »7 ____

WELDER

S IC U N ITY O FFIC E # J 4h
training Armed k unarmed
&gt;r antty t Aseat Be 4X4

Purged, p ip * and tubing
M ild e r needed C*IIUI44M

MAI'S UPHOLSTERY
MEDICAL

CNA
Openings lor all thilts Ptoata
apply In person
HMIhaven HeeHhcar* Center
4ia Mellenvill* Ax*
__________ lantord___________
M E D IC A L

Old CoiKstry I

NEW RESTAURANT
OPENINCJ
StaiUnn W ujjc* U p T »
$6.25 A n H o u r
S in c e I‘ Xx'J C ra c k e r il a n v l has been

NURSING ASSISTANT
All shifts Full time and part
time Only Ihexa having tape
xtoxtc* at a Hurlmg Astttlent
in tong to m car* and being
able ta show proof ot rogittre
lion to take the course ox
c h a lle n g e Ihe le st upon
appn&lt; etnm theu&gt;d epp'y Mutt
be certified no later than *0
dart alter hut Drug Ire*
workplec*
Dxbety Manor
M N Hwy I f * )
D*bery. FI
__________X I 4*5*415_________
MEDICAL

RN MANAGER
Full time 7 1 thill weekends
X I Experience in an acute
car* letting and management
highly drtirabto Cam* and be
a pert X the changing irond m
long to m care Salary da
pendant uponaxpertone*
J*YfYN EtVSft# t d

ile d ic a ie d to p n iv u lm K the h if(h esi
q u a lity Itknl and g ift m e rch a n d ise
In ou r restaurants and g ) f l shops
W e rcssard (te o p le w h o take pride
in b e in g the best.
• f t it it k w c / S a la is A rts a n te m e m IT xn
• IlcxIitvl ilr/ lV n u l Insutamr
x f*4hl W a tliY i
• Krtltnncitt/Sav myv fT*n
» l-jhptnye* Assistanct I’fc’jttarri
• I mptoyre Meal Diwriunt
• l)t m will I’u i i h i K I’tali
• i:m p4o)t« Suck ITuvluvr lie n
Im m e d ia te F u ll/ llm - lim c O p e n in g s
• H u il/ I Im fn i

f i r i n g p r o p e r I I ) f o r 1 -9 F o r m

LPN

t

hx#gtl lime and part time I and
II hour thlftt available Good
leadership skill) e mutt ON »
and G P N 't with previous
leadership experience alto
tnceuraged lo apply
Drug fra* workplace
Apply in per ton
Dxbary Manor
50 N Hwy 17 SI
Dxbary. FI
M l 544 4414

• C ooks

• W a ile r/W a llrtn • D bhw ashtn
• C ashkr/C Ift Shop • Nighl Porter

S A N F O H I)
1-4 At S l u l c IL t iu fc 4 6
C a l l (4 0 7 ) 3 2 4 -1 0 2 0 In d u y
f o r a n a p p o in lin i'n l.

MON. - SAT. 8:30 AM •5 PM
A n IU|u a I O pportunity L m p lo&gt; rr M;1

“ DRIVERS WANTED
Qstalllsed eep produce hauler
Long distance COL required
Clean MVR Call lor apptka
Hon- 407 D0H40 SAmSPm

DRYWAU PATCH PERSON "
Experienced only need apply
FatlCPth lor right person
IH 4M5 leave message
e a r n taam/iaaae Per. Month.
II yea have tear age call)
741)714 )4hr, rec. msa.

EXP INDUSTRIAL SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
Mon Thurt. 4k) hr work day)
Pd holiday A vacation Apply
ali 5ais Dal. liae Old Lake
Mary Rd., Sanlord 111X14

FLOOR CLEANER
Slrlpper/waetr, Pari lima
Lola hours liPm-AAm.
Apply In per tom
Debary Manor
50 N. Hwy 17 41
Debary, FI
__________ 457-5544414_________

FRONT OESK '
Doctor with two olflcet, De
none and Daland. hai an
Immediate opening. Position
raqulrtt al feetl I yrt. In GYN
off lew. with toper lence of Iron!
desk and Insurance billing.
Good salary. Call tar an ap­
pointment to t spiere this ep
pert unity at 447-174 511■

FUN JUNK
717 Bavlar Rd., Sanlord.
Thurtday Frldey-Saturdey. ■

•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garage tala ad by
11 noon on Tuetday and laka
advantage ol our ip tc la l
garaga tale ad prlcall Call
Claitlllednow lor dalallil

322-2611

ESTATE SAU
RAINOR SHINE
L o t t o l a n t lq u a t and
glatswara, plenty el other
furniture., houthold llemi, oflice aqulp. Including cumpular, cm kitchen appll't.,
children llem i and lot) more.
47, Saturday and Sunday
1400 Holly Ave., Sanford

Far com m ercial cleaning
company Downtown Sanlord
arte. Good salary. Call be
tween 4AM 5PM
M ) &gt;171

N ee ds d e p e n d a b le p a rt tim e
h e lp S e v e ra l p e tit io n ) a v a il
a b le C a ll lo r a p p o ln tm e n l
_____________4)41141_____________

CLEANED H0USEI
A EH al Everything |
Saturday only, 4am.
Rear ol 4)1 S. Elliott Avg

~ f u u t im T supervisors

Caewartial UeeRry Sank*

______ laniard H I ASM ____

TH IS W EEK 'S

A MOVING SALE

EXPERIENCED COOKS
Need lor Sanlord area AM l&gt;
PM shifts Institutional
Apply at:
IMS. Hally Av*.
S a n lo rd » &gt; 4114

P a r i lim a fx p a r la n c a d
Wash/Dryr Fold Apply
Seminal* Canter Laudramat
(Welmart F la t) I
• 15*1 Otfaada Or, Saatord

Apply

Legal N o tic e

7 1 - H e lp W a n te d

SiturdiT'Sundijf-Mandiy
S a n fo rd , H id d e n L a k e s . )04
T a ll P in e L a n g . 4-7, P la n e ,
a n tiq u e ), i p o r t t c a rd s , b a rb e d
w ir e , h o u th o ld lle m i , lo y t ,
b o o k ), a le . M o v in g a lt e r I )
y e a rs a n d n e v e r h a d a t a to I
Something lor everyone.

SATURDAY ONLY
Nice clothing, lewlery, purttt.
utility Irallar. mltc lltmt. 1004
Washington Av*. Sanlord 4-7.

YARD/F0RCH SALE
414 Magnolia A ve. Friend M . .

Nolle#
FLORIDA STATE RBOUIRES
all contractor* be registered
or certified To verify a stata
c o n tra c to rs llc a n ia c a ll
I loo &gt;41 7)40 Occupational
License) are raqulrad by tha
county and can be verified by
calling n i l IX. ext. 74)7

A d d itio n s A
R tm o d tlln g
RES./COMM. Vinyl Siding .
Alum. Fram ing, Drywall,
Doori, Rooting, Concrete.
n )4 t n
5.0. Eellnt, CECJ1XX
RESIDENTIAL RIMODBLINQ
Carpentry, painting, aluml
num soffit work. CGCAO5I10
m t lM b e le r e 4pm

Air Conditioning
SHERMAN'S AUTO REPAIR
Coldail air In town. Auto 4
truck air conditioning system*
repaired or Initallad. Fra* *)t.
M y ri experience
)H 7004

BUILDERS ol custom eanoples,
carports, windows 4 patio
awnings. Highest of quality.
Fra* ostlmat*). X 7 144 SIX

C a r p tt/1 n«t# N ation
CA R PE T-M ILL DIRECT
Rig Disceunls Famous Brands
First Ouallty, Tap llna.
S la in m a s to r, S axonies.
Trackless. Sculptures i f at
Installed. Commercial level
loop* 5) 44 yd. x r 11*4444

W L' S H O W U P

QUALITY CLEANINO Indiana
businati relocated to Florid*,
IB yr» exp Excel, red. Very

nL eWt To hr kta FDoler Yp tao uy...A l t '1

^ rrt^tb\rjnm tn nttto_
C o n c re te _______

CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Weyn*
Beal. I Man Quality Opera
ttor USb 1114/415-1541________
QUALITY CONCRETE WORK.
15 years axp. Reasonable
Lie./Ins in -ta x

E le c tr ic a l
M A S T E R E LE C T R IC IA N .
Rapalr-addltlon, comm/rei.
Llc/lns IER000414] Jll 4471

2E!E

HARDWOOD FLOORINO
Instill Sanding Finishing

TOM OLSEN

C a ll C ln e .m e .1

? 3 2 2 ^ 2 6 t1 i
Lawn S a rv lc a
R A N O Y’ I Q UALITY LAWN
Comptel* pro cara tinea lfM
Clean ups, hauling 1110714
TOM 4 JEFF'S LAWN CARE
Rat /Comm., dependable, lov
rates I Fra* est......... .1)0 TON

P a in tin g
* DAVIS4 SON PAINTINO.
Free estimates. 10 yrs exp.
____________&gt;1544*1 _________
P A IN T IN O , paper hanging,
pressure washing and dry wall
repair. Free est M l lire

I lt&gt;-414 m 7

P re s s u re C le a n in g
H o m e Im p r o v a m a n t

AMICK Custom Woodcraft 4
D n ig n . S p e d a lliln g Ini
Shelving, Cabinets. Furniture.
Reconditioning, Rollnlthlng. 4
General Carpentry 774-MU
CARPENTER All klnde ol home
repairs, painting 4 ceramic
lilt. Richard Gross..... 7)1-14711
S 4 O Bnltrprlset Trim, paint
log, handyman services Llc'd
4 Ins'd. For lha host quota In
town call today! 471-4)41

ABSOLUTE Carpentry: trim,
metal studs, restoration work,
drywall, doori. tiding, dseks,
porch*)
Llc/lns
I11-X47

£ # r p # t C lE anlng

RITE-WAY ...............

G a in in g S a rv lc a

(S#rp#niry‘

S A M ’ S C A R P E T C L E A N IN G
ptui stria and hull Hears.
Rstldenllil/com m arclaf 14
hr). 7141141, beeper 4X0541

H o m e Im p r o v a m a n t
AFFORDABLE HOME Raped
Dependable All phasas Call
tor Freeest Michael H i riot

AL DOES IT ALU
F ix It r ig h t a t a p r ic e y o u ca n
a ffo rd . L lc 'd / ln s . F r o m t l a r t
to lin ls h C a rp e n try , p lu m b ­
in g , o ls c lr lc a l. a n d ru o lln g
iv e s 1 ) y r s o l o ip e r ltn c a . N o
|o b to o b ig o r s m a ll. C a ll
114-MMar m -4 iii 14 haurs
HOME 4 OFFICE REPAIRS.
E le c tr ic , p lu m b in g , A /C r e ­
p a ir s . D o o rs , w in d o w ) ,
s c re e n s , c o ll , ta n s , w a t e r
h e a le r s , c a r p e n t r y , d o c k s ,
c u s to m tu rn ., w o o d w o rk . A ll
a t afford*Mo prlcoil X4-1U5

DUN RITEi Clean drlvwways,

roots, pool dock), w olks,
houses. Free est. &gt;]| e in

p tfo lo g ra p K y *
■ B A C H , S p o rts i n d W edding s.

Ahobll equip uniquepricing.
For Intocall » 4 400)
S w im m in g Pool
S e r v ic e /fite p a lr

W EEKLY SERVICE from ||J
mo. Cham flit*pool Sarvlco
««:777l
RobartShoam.*.,

TreeS e rv ic e "

InT

*VC- Lie s,
L *l the ProlHlIonals do If '■
Fra* estimates.......... &gt; »

Ad ver ti se Your Business Every Day
F o r As L o w As $ 4 5 P e r M o n t h .
Cal l C l a s s i f i e d , 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�S an fo rd H a ro ld . S a n fo rd . F lo rid a - F rid a y . M ay 27. 1994 • 7 B

71— H e lp W a n te d
W ANTED CARPENTERS *r
Carpenter Helper*. Mutl have
own Irentporlellon No coll*
Atlor »P M 74* **St
WAREHOUSE AND OENERAL
LABOR H E LP NEED ED )
Bonu* tor driver* All thill)
evAllobto Doily pay. no It*
Report ready to work S-Ram.
Indutfrlal Labor Svc.. I t l )
FronchAv No phono call.

91— A p a r tm e n ts /
H ouse to S h are
HOME TO SHARE. Otlaan.
lurnuhed Single or older
couple. tlOtwk i n 4IM

9 3 - R o o m s fo r R e n t
A QUIET, CLEAN RM in Son
lord Kitchen A phone uw.
coin laundry 171B up ) ! « e tll
CARLE TV, pten*. kil prlv
Non drinking, mature mol*
pref S7lwk IM depIJi lr*e
CLEAN BOOMS, tingle tlerlln ,
SM/wk K itchen, phene,
laundry, video gem **, oil
lire#! parking
274 44))
FU RNISH ED ROOM, aloe.,
A/C micro, hot pieto. doubt*
•ink. lobto. ted. felling Ian*
All util turn 1*1* Magnolia.
Sanlord Call M l 47*1
PRIVATE ENTRANCE, refrtg
eretor. mi&lt;row*e*. color hr.
*fl tlreol perking, ond mold
M fvko
»)* a a t
ROOM FOR RENT Light kileh
•n prleiliog, 1*1 and loti
Mature edullprel 774 1***
1 ANFORD LAKEFRONT Ciom
to La** Mary Mature lemai*
p rele rra d M atter bdrm.
prtrale bath tllcten priy
cable B pten* Furnnted or
unlurni*te d 77P01H
1 4N F 0R 0 W o/drg people
Why pay M much lor e room
•ten you can have teller tor
te 'l ite p rK e f Check iloufi
Ml «*••
IAN*OROQu&gt;*i /lee- .cr-.r•ent MnIIary, tecurt detir*
b-r &gt;eom tf| ****

f7 - A p a r t m e n t s
F u rn ish e d / R e n t

dona
An rental and real *«■*•*
e j.e rl,Mmeni, art tubleel to
&lt;te Federal Fair H*u*.ng Act
•hith m ate* It Illegal la
ed.erliM any preference Irm
'etien or d iierlm ln e tio n
t «es#*l or rate c»4or. r«ifft«ft
M i.
t#mii Ai itafut
pr
or i f ‘Vs

9 9 -A p a rtm e n ts
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
SANFORD, Oak Aea. 1 bdrm. 1
bath t41)/mo. Itfandlatt
170144! tr *41 1)7!
VILLA 1/1. 1car gar. w ' opener
Screened room, wetter,dryer
Inc S4M *04 T7) 7S4I alter tom
SANFOXD 1 BDRM 1171-mo
plutdepoill Nopal,
in m m
1 BEDROOM FREE MONTH
SPECIALI 7 bdrm, B attic
evoll
Cell Jerry. Ml 44)0

1/2 MONTH TREEIf
I Bdrm./I Bath 1 1 ) }* )*
SHINANOOAH APARTMENTS
1 BDRM | BATH 4pl available
!/t|/*4 CHBA, tlackable
waiter and dryer oil kltcten
applloncot
147)
M l 1011

103— H ouses
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
ATTRACTIVE M l w/Flo rm .
Iplc heel'olr Avail 4/1 447)
plu4dep *4opo*t Ml 04*4
COUNIY CLUB Ibdrm j bath
tom rm . Iplc , C/HA. carpal,
fenced yard U71/me 17) 7747
OONT RENT when you con
ownl MUD homo* bonk loro
doture,. and more A* low a,
4)00down All area,'
Alllton Molro Grove 74) 1771
LAKE HARNEY
WATERFRONT 1 bdrm. 1
bath manufactured houM For
M l* **) ♦** or root *4)4/mo
447 71* 4447
RENT WITH OPTION Pitecr. , 1
1/1 pool horn# fenced M l) mo
'll lot* Ac. 171 Oil*
IAN/ONO 2 bdrm, ) h b«th
Uhttronl house US0 mo
121 fOOi
SANFORD 7 bd&gt;m 1 hath rent
H/A. carpal l.k , wovel 1 yr
too«dS4IS/md*g»l4S ) « t l
SANFORD 7 BDRM 1 ' , BATH
S47)/m* plu, depotil
Nop**, OT 1 UJ
S t e n s t r o m R e n ta ls
dSUNLAND 1/1 • lemily rm.
pool CMA I4&gt;l rn oU U uc
• SANFORD l/l epl * - trr
porch Iplc M il mo * 1 1 1 uc
• 1ANFO RO l/ l 1 7 tlory
duple, C/HA 14)0 ma I I U i k
Slawttrom Raalty. Irx
We Manage you* Weme.
IT) )**) AWercPM II* i ***
1 BEDROOM. | bath rent ri A
family rm Only 1)00 down!
Alu» l bdrm I bam a .ail able
A m ateuf our HUOhomotl
Why rent? THE MILKMAN
GROUP INC Rarlter Ml t i l l
1/4 BOMM HOMf loot'** *or 4
pood femnp e»i»n re f«fth (»t
C HA fem up »uur*i lemed
yard
1144 mo
It ) M l)

iF f i c iI N C V . (BFpff bitadt.
sppn L e»9»9r ^4-d 1390 mo

105— D u p le x T r lp lo x / Rent

I AORM. kitchen porch **) wk
UW dep 1 kodroom *74) mo
1700 dep Pel* oo 174 47U

O U P IIX
7 bdrm
1 bam
R 'dgtw ood Aro
Sanlord
M IS’mo
7*0 07*4 aro.
SANFORD. 7 term
carport,
tocurlly ty ilem . lull All
71* tt 14d! Mounted 141)
1 BORAL 1 BATH 14) • * *700
tecwflty Reference* Coll
7M He* * " » » tpm before tern

A p a rtm e n ts
U n fu rn is h e d / R e n t
9 »—

aaiDOEWATER APTS
Son
'ord Lt Mary Win a month*

1 0 7 -M o b ile
H om es / Rent

C001 Off!!
Ong Afdroom Aparlmenfi
. im O IA l
Mo«!»&lt; xkJ Ap»t 21/ t m
W H H [[£[IW W I
'
H IS T O R IC A L DOWNTOWN
1ANFORO Very deon Ibdrm
1 bath Kitchen, dining room
appliance* Fenced ye'd good
neighbor* KJl mo IDO dep
MUOe»
41)1)0*

MARINER'S VILLAGE
lake Ada 1bdrm. DM mo
Ibdrm. *a 10 mo and up

3231570
1ANFORD. 1 Bdrm *700/mo
plut tocurlfy AM utilltio* poid
axcopUloc
M 7 *t«l
SANFORD t bdrm garogo apf
In downtown hltforlcal dit
In ti *700 month plu* *700
depotil 777 *17*

1 BDRM Per* A ,* Mobil* Park
Quiel are* C'ota lo (hop
ping but route * 1 77) 7*41

114— W a re h o u s e
S p a c e /R e n t
IO N O W O O O / L A K I M AB Y
Mid t i &lt;9 public i l o t i g e
eirefXMM t 800 400 O' &gt;900
%q ft ipe&lt;M Nut. M (uri.
• 4%iif eccetitb 'e location
F ro m lU lp erm o MI4M1

115— In d u s tria l
R e n ta ls
OPFICI/W9r9b9M89 ipdCt &gt;* »
|q || Prim # location at
90 tram a lo Can*rol Fla Ro
gtonal Airporl 40/ 221 /40/

Breeze
We make renting a

K IT 'N ' CARIrYI.F.® hy Lurry Wright

117— C o m m e r c ia l
________ R e n ta l!
IDEAL LOCATION lor antique
mini mall. High vliiblllly and
Irafllc count. I.TOO tq II build
log on large lol UOO'month
pluatoc Hall H o A ftrH U lM
SANFORD: For laate. toned
C&gt;. &gt;70* Country Club Rd
Approi 1)00 tq II Large
paved, lanced and lighted
parking lot or itorege arte
11)0 plu, fa* Call Olck Joyce
c o rn ; aaio

NEW Sanford office* end-'or
warehoute* 4001.100 tq It
Spatial. a w / m * . m n u

SANFORD. Office tpace. MOO
tq 11 building lolal. 1700 tq
n per cilice unit Ml 7004
M4 M P U T for l*at* on If tl.
tuccettful e n d in g anchor
butmetcet Good parking and
lighting O real v ltlb lllly
AtkinglcOOmo 1M A444 nor X

• W O O D E N T A B L E FO R
SALE. 4 cliairt Old wood
tab**, tolid wood Very heavy
*100
274 17*7

141— H o m e s fo r S ale

S E P A R A T E c o m p o n en t*
Kenwood raitatto deck Sharp
CO player. Pioneer receiver.
F ilter I wey ipeater* Over
ITM Sell ler US* *04 774 711*

183— T e le v is io n /
R a d io /S t e r e o

AF F O R D A H l 2 H O M f S

FNA/VA leer a* 4to% a n o *.
n n » r Nuance lew at Moa/mel
Oev't Feraeletvrti. Rapetl
ternInet*. Orange. Valvttal
ite.reel t/ll Liv. din. f*m rmi.
eat In k it. tecurlfy. total Ilf* I
COIV CUSTOM tom Dining
fa m ily rm t A p p lia n c e !,
garage, fenced yd 144.«00
POOL HOME I J J. 7000 tq ftl
l l v . din., fam ily, ga m *
'don't Scr porchlM.tOO
Landtcaped 171. l/l acrel Appl.
llv. din. fom rmt M l )00
S U N K IN F A M IL Y RM A
cemm peel LI*, dn. fern
r m t . eppl . ter porch, tecurl
ty tytltm end garage! *4 *00
■ RICK V I tom. II*. dm. lam
rmt. tec. tytfem. Mr porch,
fenc *d yd . garage i |*t. MO

141— H o m n fo r S a lt

141— H o m e s fo r S a lt

187— S p o rtin g G o o d !

•FINALLVI Thi* 7 bdrm i n
bath fe e tiery tend* he* greet
location and greet conren
lane* All ler the law price at
Sit MSI A d n pw ll
■A R IA L MONEY MARIIIO
TRI P L IR I Convenient Iota
tlonl Grot*, »* il'm o Price,
sn.eoo with i u ooo a n q f h a
mortgage C A LLTO tE C l
«1—e rej*

■ XCHANOE OR SELL y*ur
property loceted anywhere I
Iwvettor, Re*tty, f74M I)

• B A S K E TB A L L HOOP Heevy
d uty m ounted on m e te l
bockboerd with brace* 11)
___________ H I A llt___________
• E X E R C I S E BI KE Good
condition t » M ) 0**)
• It S P E E D B IC Y C LE
Mai* or Famal* In aicallant
condition. U ) M Call 111 7744

R e a l e s t a t e , in c
322-749*

W M NO W 11H N1

ASSUME NO QUALIFIES!
CUSTOM nr'ipiu bdrm plant
Dining, family rmt. appi.
treed yard Sett mo SM MO
PRC F O R IC lO tU R f 1 17 tol l
ll* . din. eat m kifch fenced
• garage U 4 )m # tu *00
CUSTOM buftt 17 g ill, II* .
din . eal in k ifc h . appl .
garage 1141 /mo |e7 too
P A U L

IANR FORECLOSURES, COin
FORECLOSURES, LOR DOWN
ASSUME NO QUALIFIES
AVAILABLE IN SfMINOU
VOUISIA 4 OUNCE COUNTY
SUNLANO
I bdrm rvlth
le p e re le recreation bldg
Completely fenced. *4* MO
■ STATE SALE I Hlttencal 1
bdrm with I car gereg#
Apprailed at tie 000 A t'eal
at *42 000*
Cell ter detail*!

O S IIO IIN E

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
3 2 1 -4 7 H 4
ALTAM ONTI 1 trd'm | oam j
lei on cu ld etac. Branliey

A A Cam**, lo c - m i n e

BATEMAN REALTY

LA K E M A R Y B LVD 1/1
loaded with tpeoel feature*
Living room. d&gt;nlng room,
lemily room 14*0 tq It Need*
logo now' Deduced 7i *7* *M
_____________R S U H ____________
LONOWOOO lli Mary Schaalt
&gt;7 w pool t)A7 tq ft ItM
L an gw o od Lk M a ry Rd
STt.wg Owner. *17*414
NEED OWNER FINANCINOf
WE'VE GOT SEVERAL NICE
HOMES TO CHOOSE F ROMI
Call Dtana a The Caiman Oreup
m * * 4 l *r I t ! *7*4

Lk Reel EHole Broker
7440 Sen lord A&gt;e

321-2297

BELOW APPRAISED PRICE
ZONED COMMERCIAL
ranletlic hltleric home with
greel peienliel lor in home
preletiionei tludie. maybe
Bed end Breaklatt. many
other pott'blllllet 7 000 tq II
• raomt. 4 belht plut office,
utility im. and dbl garage on
double let A real charmer)
•OX financing available
c u. 000
VIN TU R C I PROPERTIES

S t l i 1*44. •
AAV!

\J OOO

$ 1 0 4MR*

l » l 44741 V IIII4 )K » N S
I i d' * 9 *M1 M*

*• •

a Oev't. Saak lecec letvret a
a
A name M* Oaallty
a
a Hem** wetk U ** DOWN! a

M A R Y E T O D IM
7 7 4 - 9 4 0 0 O f 3 2 2 -7 U U O

•

•

• la n ia rd H ftterK O u t r u n
• Cut* |/1. groat speculative

CAfttCLBC BB Y Beautiful J
UJ/m t*i tMtti N r* («rp rt.
pa*n» V « * t lifca a mod*If
U 4 voo
m w

•

•

HALL REALTY

V4 lu 4 .

Debar* 7/1. big loll Fem rm
c b contlr . country I *47 MO
I bdrm corner lei. c/h/e.lovr
dn and monthly I Only 141*00
SI iehn 'i River e c c e n l 10
acre*. I0K down! *7) 000

..

•
•

I I I .H i a

•

• Labe Marr l&lt;hao»»l

•

• n condo, lu it t l A fN I I
• AllBSDl W O IS 1.H 0

•
•

•
•
•

•
•
o

•

312 W. First St., Sanlord

Gov't Down Paym ent I I I
llm ifad Call Today!

•

STELTENKAMP
REALTY • 330-3230

323-5774

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
HUD ■ VA FORCLOSUKES
Low down I Stmlnol*. Orange
end Volutla Countlat
Call tor datallil
aLach Arbar. unlqu* lake
tronl horn*, large lot M*.M0
Seth Othern*
Venture I Prepetllet

01 BARY
lekelronl 2/7. can
Iral H/A. plutextreit &gt;40 000
W. Mallciewtkl, 1117*01
DELTONA only ItOO down.
K M mo Choote from ] home*
lobe remode&gt;4d by builder
Greet opportunity
Metre Orgop *44 ISIS

330-0273/774-9400

HOMES
SW EET H O M E S

pring Savings

1Single Story Design • No One Below or Above
1Energy • Efficient Studio, t &amp; 2 Bedroom
Affordable Apartments
1Friendly, On-Site, Dependable Management
f Attic Storage, Private Patio &amp; Morel

On 1 ,2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartment Homes!

S c u tfc v u t

Geneva Gardens

s 4 fu v tt*H e K &amp; i

1505 W 251ft Street • Snilford

3301 S. Sanford Ava. • 323-3301

3 2 2 -2 0 9 0

H O U R S : M on-Bat »-B :30 C lo s ed Bun

l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l
M a n a g e d B y A n g a ra G o rd o n P r o p e r t y ______________

BRAND
NEW!
• 1 B ed room . . . . $ 3 9 9

1 BedroomSEABREEZE

9BIO,'
St. Croix Apartments
MtaltorTtWl M C Pit Ho AppHcallow Feel

3 * 1 - 7 3 0 3

O n Lake Emma Rd.* Lake Mar*
0 • 6 • Sat. 10-5 • Sun. C losed

'

i)^Ft&gt;&lt;81

"

• 2 B ed room . . . . $ 4 7 7
• 3

B ed room
* May

S T E N S T R 0 M

MM

r a le s

$ 5 4 8

m o .*

subject to change

O N E M O N T H FREE
P R E - L E A S E

R E A L T Y ,

IN C .

1 8 9 - O f f ic e Su pplies
/ E q u ip m e n t
• T Y P E W R IT E R

B roth er
P e r t e b l * E le c tr o n ic Cor
rectronic 140 Full lino cor
rectlon Two pitch Automatic
relocation after correction,
1000 c h e r e c t o r m e m o r y
dor age Proto,,lonal rotult,
Ideol tor homo or office Cotl
U l ! U new My Ml ling price
SMOO C a ll 1*07) 17117*7

Evening,or W o o mattog*
• T Y P E W R I T E R . IB M
Selectnc II. Eiceilent condi
Hen i l l or bed otter Mutt
Mil 77) 7*40

193— L a w n A G a rd e n
FOR SALE WOOO MULCH
Bring ihovell 110 pick up load
Yaw load 111 1447
__ _____
T R UCK , t r ai l er , mo we r ,
weedeat er. blow er, edge
trimmer, edger. 12" tree
chipper and more 17)1401

SELURStl BUYERS!)

I f f — P e te A S u pplies

We LIS T ■ SELL more
Properly than Anyone
in Itw G R E A TE R SANFORD/
LA K E M AR Y Areal I
Call ut A N Y T IM E !

■ EAOLS PUPPIES. • wk, old
110 1 tomato, and I mole
1101017____________________

322 2420*321 2720
SANFORD • LABE MARY
•In 0 « f 3Bth f u n
M l) SUMMERLIN STREET. 4
bdrm . I bath, garage, central
H/A. new paint m ■ out.
owner financing tte.*00 Day!
»** 01** evening * ID M il

133— A c re a p e Lots/Sale

DELTONA AREA 10 ACRES
10041 I *
mafcll# Kom« or
Horn# lift. horses CaHIf.
iBfminQ. or nurtofy Zoned
agricultural IJ 000 per #crt
Small down payment with

157— Mobile

H o m e s / S a l*
BY OWNER. 1/1. double widt.
family park, carport. Mreen
room , tlo ra g e E ic t llt n l
cond Priced below value
Ph M l &gt;147 lam 17pm

CARRACE COVE SANFORD
HANDYMAN SPECIAL. 12’ ■
40\ 1 bdrm 2 bath Need, TIC
S l.lt) Catli
VERY NICE CONDITION. 14' a
70- 1/1. C/AC. Mreared patio,
lanced yard. Ig *h*d 17.1*1
___________ 1114414___________

CARRIAGE COVE
MOBILE HOME COMMUNITY
11*11 1/1 SO Nobility C4ntr4l
H/A 11. M0
14&gt;44 t/1*a I I F ltelw ood /
Clarem ont Central H/A,
carport, railed Mreen rm
I*. M0
I4*M 1/1 U Skyllne/Jefrl. All
• I t d r l c . cen tral heal. 1
window A/C unlit. SII.M0
14(41 1/1 tplll U Ptarton Can
Iral H/A. carper! I11.M0
14(14 l/lta (1 Champion/ Sun
vlaw . C e n tr a l H/A.
gat/*la&lt;lrlc. tcraanad rm
11*000
14(4* 1/1*4 I I Skyline. A ll
electric. Central H/A, relied
Mreen rm. carport. 117.100

Cell 323-1 ISO or 831-3703

FREE - LAB MIX. noulered
Good with kid, I yr old
Neod, room to room )}4 714)
• F R E E K I T T E N S 'Po7l77l
Mona PIoom coll otter 1
177 1701______________________
• FREE TO OOOO HOME. *
month old femeie cot Gray
color Col i n ) 71*0
• FREE TO O M D HOME
t
cel. I kitten, both tamale
*07 174 0 04 otter 1PM Alter
10dark will go to pound
P R E ■ TO OOOO HOME S.
Pupplot end deg*. Shop
herd/La* m l. Good watch
dog* I Coll 177 701*___________
GOl Off N RETRIEVER PUPS.
AkC Reglttered Ready to go
DM **7 111 7174

PITBULL PUPPIES
For to to____________ 774 t7M

•

POT BELLY PIGS

* week* old Ottoen 1)0 each
___________ 177 4110___________
P UR E B R E E D R o ttw eiler
pupple* lor tale All tholt and
medical cartlllcata* H I W7*
PURR FECT FET CARE. Inc
At horn* pal car* E.p in
Oomotlic B E.otlc pat* He
B Bonded Experienced In
Zoolpglcal and Vattrlnary
car* ol animal* Wt provld*
tte hlgtett qualltr and par
tonallttd pel car* at your
hom o.................. 407 MAII47
________ or *04117 141)_________
OSKV KENNEL. Ammel travel
cog* Very nice Heevy con
ttructlon. Medium to »m*ll
»ll*. 170 Cel 1777 14*4_________
YORKSHIRE TERRI ER PUPS.
AKC. Bluo/tan. mel# Phono
777 Y777 leave m«,L *9*

203— L iv e s to c k an d
________ P o u ltry ________
oLIVESTOCK. Pig* lor tale I
wk*. old Yorkthlr* SIS aach
721 704

R A IN O R SHINE
* T. Saturday and Sunday
7400 Holly A ve . Sanlord
P R I V A T E C O L L E C T O R It
t a ilin g T e a m P in n a c le
BaMball card* A lio. 2 P la tte
a r l l t t t ' p r o o f, and R y n *
Sandburg ■* ol book Call
*04 774 XI SB___________

/ ANTIOUES*

D ia m o n d *
F in * | a w tlry
P o c k *) and w rltl w atch*,
T llla n y H a m ,
F u rn itu re
Quill* Slot m achine. Toy,
Ivory Mutlcal lla m . Sword,
K n lva * Anythin g antique
Cath paid Braadway Jewelry
and Pawn, 1177 W Braadway

Sf.-Hwy

S P E C IA L

' ( I n S i: lt ! i. li: il l| t , , l * . ' N u A | i | i ! h . li m it ! r &lt; '
• ll M O N I I I S 7 ( I L L C A U L f c l

• Sparkling Pool • Large Fluor IMtni*

• Excrcltc Center • Energy Hidden!
• W /D Connection*
HOURS M F S B. Sat B S. Sun Clotad

100 Wlllner Clrcla - Sanford 3 2 2 »8 6 9 6

230— A n tiq u e /C la s s lc
C ars
• C A D ILLA C O E V IL L E , It 70
A LL POW ER ! Only 11*40 or
betloltof. PI**M call IU 0U4
• FORD THUNOEREIRO. 1*44
All orlgln ell Need, lorn*
work 11,4*5 OBO U 1 01)4
• 1*44 FORD Pick up. 1/1 Ion.
retlored 1*74 Lol, ol edra
part* A Beauty M.400t»0477

2 3 1 -C a rs
C H E V Y Manta Carl*. 1*4) I
owner. 44.000 ml. 4uto. A/C.
V4. Nlcel S7.410 O BO UP 0101
• CHRYSLER IM PERIAL f )
Like new Mu,I Mil Only
*7)100 Call 1407) 11) **14
• L E B A RON Convertible. 44
Red. loaded, dig doth, new
lop, new lire* 14,100 4*1 7404

414 O v i e d o

215— B o ats a n d
A ccesso ries
OCANOC. 17 II Soar* Good
condi lion I UOOOBO 111 470*
• HOUSEBOAT, llv* eboard * r
Neutallne. Iwln angina V
drive, 170k Dr Quam 4*11141

I SOLO MY BOAT
ON THE FUST PHONE CALL!
THE FIRST DAY MV AO RANI
Joyce Cettldy't bool tor tale
od , farted In Monday'* paper
By M onday tv a n ln g . her
phone wet ringing and her
bool wo* Midi
Piece your od In Ite Sanlord
Hereid'i dettiliod ad, and
you'll be cruitlng on your way
lotuccetii

SANFORD HERALD
322 2111
131 9993________
01*44 SKI/PISH BOAT. *0 HP
Mace . w 'lraiier Run* greatl
1) OOP Partial tmanca 4*1 7404
*77 FI O R A D Y W HITE. OMC.
Inboard - outboard, lap tir e
model te oon OBO 77) 1114
*14 FT PONTOON t e a l All
libergla**. 140 H P Eylnrud#
Very 1**11 Many e ilr a t. Ilk*
newt Only &gt;* 4M i l l *0*0
* ‘•1 G L A U T R f AM I f boat.
Ira'ier. lonp JonnMn Never
In t e ll wafer. * , c condition

*1 400____OBO
*04 71**71*
a i e X I N K E N 70 cuddy cabm
omc. I/O. 1*0 hp. low hr*
motivated MeeiTee tlte Ernie

219— W a n te d to B uy
F IN E JE W E LR Y
O'em ond,
R o le a 't Gold Tool*. TV*.
V C R* Go!I Guitar*. Siereo,
C am ara,
A n llq u e ,
Buy
Pawn Soli Braadway Jewel
r y * ■ • • a w n . 1111 W
Braadway *i Mwy ela. Ovleda
Plata. Oviad* 14* 441*
W A N TE D to buy m ilitary r*Uc*.
G erm a n y. J a p a n ***
US
P a t c h * ,, m eta l*, d a g g e r*,
tw o rd *. u n ifo r m ,, h e lm e t,
and llighl |*cktt» Call Bill or
Chou o l A d en C leaner, U l
r e e a d a y u M e e e iio v o ,

221— G ood T h in g s
to E a t
U PICK. Black ayad pea, M
Jlppercreem pee, 110 end
Okra
171040*
U PICK B L U E B E R R IE S 421
GuiM Rd . Otleen 407 ) » 2212
All day Sal. B Sun____________
W H IT E CORN FOR SALE
Meriwether Fa rm ,
leal Celery Av* . Sanlord

223— M is c e lla n e o u s
O B A TH R O O M S E T 70 Inch
Vonlly. Sink. Faucet. Com
mod* Topper Cablnol. 4 Glob*
Light Future While trimmed
In gold Good Condition
SlflO 00 Call U l 5411__________
a FOR SALE
Super Highway
Power King N EW I ply 4 7)
14 5 L T Rang* 0 Tuboloti on
4 hoi* rim Single &lt;» duel u m
S4S 00 Call M l 474*___________

OLD CHICAGO BRICKS
1)00 C l Nol Solid
usa
___________ 1U - 4IS4___________
• P LIE R S . Hutky U S A make
$'' 4“ •4" Slip |olnl pller, lor
do II yourtlle r. Mechanic,.
Good gill Hem to all male* in
your lemily. Carton ol »l« 14).
For only 14 00 worth S14
12) 4744

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY OOWN
•Kept le*. leg. Mil*.etc.
C A D IL L A C S E D A N D l V I L L E • I f l ) . two Ion*.
cetMlto. ell power option*.
Mil. crulM Only S ill 04/mo
Coll M r Poyn* lor appointment
m iiiio r f in e t s
1*7* C J I J E E P Rebuilt 4 cyl
Inder 11.000 or bail oiler
____
407 M l *7)4__________
• 1*71 PORSCHE. *11 Target
low m lloag*. thowt Ilk* now
110 000
OBO
M l 1114
#77 C H E V Y El Comlno. no
eng or Iron* . A/C. P/S. P B.
cowl hood. SS grill* MV)
lee ))* l_____________________
*41 C H I V Y Ctevoll* 4 dr. 4
tpd. now lire*, dootn'l burn
oil Good 7nd car I MP M l 7141
U P L Y M O U TH Cerivtll*. 4 cyl.
4 dr. low mil** Auto., air
Nlcacarl 11.100 OBO M4 4) 1*
• ’ 44 CHE VROL E T Caprica
C la tiic. 4 dr
runt good,
loaded
K 000 O BO and
‘ 11 Ctevrelel Balalr. 2 dr , runt
good 14.000 OBO &gt;74 M77
*4 BRONCO II E icalN nl condi
tlonl Low milotl Runt groat!
U 000 Call 77* MJ4
*4 FO R D TAU R U S A I condf
tlonl A/C rwodt If eon Bargein
*7 400 or trade all 4774________

233— A u to P a rts
/ A ccesso ries
• &gt; M IC H E L IN T IR E S S lit
P lt )/70 R It Very good con
dltlon! Only *70 407 M l »*14

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B u s e s /V a n s
OCHEVV EEAUVI LLE VAN
7 *. I Ion. PetMnger ran.
dean Loaded! Too much lo
M*l. mutl mo lo appreciate
Only *7,4*1060
H I * 700
•F O R D RANOER. LTX M.
P/S. crulM. A/C. tloroo. 4.700
mllo*. I yr or M.000 ml 1*11 on
warranty.________ C o l l M ll l l )
OMC CAROO/WORK VAN.
Runt greall Lock* greet!
Mu** Mil S U M 1140071
• JEEP PICKUP TRUCK. 1*7*.
4(4 with topper MOO OBO
Need, a lol o) TLC 777 1*1*
P JE EP PICK UP 4*4. 1*74. V4.
aulo Engine and Iran, re
bull! (about 20.000 m llo ,)
Newer interior 12.000 &gt;71 TOO*

tonford Motor Co.
t**4 CHCVMOLE f C l) PICK
UP 44.000 mil*,. V 4. 1 (peed
Cleanatoplnl 110.**)
_______ Call M? 4147__________
1*74 RND MAIL JEEP. Appro,
*0.000 mile* Near new Mr*,,
t ho c kt . mo t o r , bat t er y,
alternator, (leering boi Doe,
nol run Need, IrantmlMlon
work taOOOBO
M7 1114
7 * CJ1 JEEP. 714* cyl. 4 wd .
radio, vinyl lop. black. 1 »pd
17 2SO
Excellent condition
M l 4147 alter a Pm

241— R e c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le s /C a m p ors
• 1*47 COACHMAN M.H. 24 It .
UK ml Many axlratl Incl
generator. Vary taty lo drive
*17, *00
777 4410
1*44 EXCEL 1* It. Air. queen
bed New awning Excellent
cond 11.0001301411__________
• 74 MOTOR HOME Run, great
Will trad* tor travel trailer ol
comparable value M l 74*1
• ’*1 ALLEORO motor horn* 27
It, awning. Iwln bad,, genara
lor A tv. U7.MOOBOHI 07M

Builder Closeout
IN PRIVATE POOL C O M M UNITY
308 and 310 Krider Rd. Sanford • Sanora Subdivision

$5 ,0 0 0
MOVE IN
NOW!
• $453 P. I.

• B a t e d O n 8 .2 9 % A . P . M .

DUPLEX. SANFORD. 1 bdr. I
be. 1400/mth rani, owner IInance. *44 000, ID 7***_______

a AAA RAY'S APPLIANCE *
H IS French Av*. Santerd
R e f r i g e r a t o r , Stovat,
W itter* Dryort. Free J yr
labor warr. 0*1. avail. HS-00AI
BUNK BED SET with two
matching drottort Include*
mallrtttat. Excellent cond.
1700. 7 PieCE dining room tat
Sill. FULL SIZE BED with
the*It SM AMANA wither
and dryer *700IIU M I
oDINETTE SET wood grain
table. ! » W ' * ItW " with I ”
drop In loot and two chair*.
Only SM Call M l T V *__________
ODINETTE SET. Oval labia
14" * M " and 4 chair*. S4)
Candtllver. 171 «0W_________
ELECTRIC HOSPITAL BED
lor tel*. Call bolora T:J0am or
att*rlpm l»0 1&gt;7 ____________

'HAIRDRYER

Salon proletHonel. Zolot
tet Firm i n 41)4
• JO H N S O N S 4H F B O A T
Motor I f ) Call 110 040*

Ptaia/Ovled* 1410474

M O IILE HOME FOR SALE. 1
bedroom 10*41. Good condi­
tion. 41,100 407 MY-UM
WINTER S PR INO S.l bdrm. 14'
( 40', C/HA. Mreened porch,
carport, 1 util. rmt. Socrlllco
*14.000_______________ M 7117*
1171 MOBILE HOME. 1 bdrm. I
both, tcreened porch. Need*
tomo tmoll repair*. Family
park. IS.000 111 410S

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e

T

211— A n tiq u e s
C o lle c tib le s
ESTATE SALE

IAS— D u p le x fo r S ale

Town Centre Apartments

B e a u tifu l 1 , 2 &amp; 3 B e d ro o m
A p a rtm e n t H o m e s A v a ila b le

SANFORD Lovely 1/1. M7* tq
f t . IW acta* Den dining rm.
Mr parch, new peml Pombie
leetepurchet* III1K * t* 7t*S
Fala* Aadern a Prep., lac.
SANFORD
cawhlry living,
d ata la now main Oraal
iiertor. 1/1. e*n. eal m bllch.
beautiful Ire** *47k eel Tte*
Fala* Aadern a Prop ■lac.
SANFORD 1 bdrm. I bath
Great location I Now petnl and
cerpot
ue.MS
g ii a m
SANFORD • M AYFAIR
MEADOWS 1/1
I*k air onI
•ppi.aryce* Mrapnad parch,
com pool Near dropping A
gellcaur** *47 000 111 le ft

Isnst Mamlitld. 321-7271

Schoeit i m e w n N

321-4799

SANFORO/LK M ARY 1 bdrm. 1
Item. | car gar MIK/er I*at*
option el 44)&gt;/mo m i f i n
SANFORD *** *** 7 bdrm. 1
both NIC* ere* 14(1 Orange
A** Real nice home I can
me*a you the owner 471)144
SANFORD Brand new hem*.
1/1. C/HA. big lot Nice quiel
area laclade* body thap with
large parting area Only

•

OW ED O INO OOWN: Elegant
V in ta g e lu ll length gown,
champagne color. Irom Ihe
S0'». Gown fia t u r t t . high
neck, beautiful lilted be, Jed
bodice and long tilled tie*ve t
with tatln button. Immaculate
condition Sit* 17 Mutt tea to
appradatal gtoo Call l i t t o n

W 1N I I O

VENTURE I F’HOPf RTlf S

223— M is c e lla n e o u s

209— W e a r in g A p p a ra l

F U L L B O X S F R IN O A N D
MATTRESS 140 A S ET S UP
L A R R Y ’S M A R T
7114111
H OM E A P P L IA N C E C E N T E R
Over to year* In Sanlord
Salat New and Uted Service
all maka* B pari*. 704 E
Commercial SI_______ 177 3*4]
K E N M O R E we,her, very nlctl
Free delivery and warranty
■MWI-A+ Bed, M4 M il
MOV I NO I Sot*. lov*M*t Like
new. Traditional M im Item*
177 4*44 day* 7M 0471 evei
M U S T S E L L I Rich Plan Indu*
trial treeier uprlghll E«c
condition I
m illl

1 I B - O f f lc e
Sp ace / R e n t

CASH IN ON

■&gt; i W .

181— A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e

• Three Bedroom . 2 Bath
Split Dan,
1600 Square Feet
• Vaulted Ceilings
• Spacious M aster Suite
W ith Deluxe Bath

• Screened-ln Patio
• Tw o-car Garage
• Professional Landscaping
• W alking Distance To Pool.
Clubhouse. Tennis fk
Basketball Courts

D IR E C T IO N S : L a k e M i r y U lv d c a m a c i o d 1 7 - 9 2 . 1 0 L e d o n S A n fo n t A v c .
1 / 2 m ile lo R ig h t o n Sa / t o ia B lv d . . p A it p o o l &amp;. c l u U k iu v r l o I r l t o n K i ld r t Rd

PAUL R. SCHWAB
CUSTOM HOM ES
699-0962 - Office
321-8631 - Model
lie I RG0O44I66

M M w a ro
|-SVl0«A
M
i

1
UWUMYR.W

�y
Wv/.V/'.l.

Sanlofd Hstsld, Sanlord, Florida - Friday, May 27, 1094

How much hydrogen
peroxide is safe?

I N M D TO BCIILO
r

QUICK

u p mv e n e r o y

BEETLE BAILEY
WHAT PO
YOU CALL

T H IS f

" I F YOU HAVE TO
ASH HOW MUCH A
YACHT COSTS, YOU
C A N T AFFORP I T '1

WHAT P O B 6
THAT HAYE TO
PO WITH WHAT
T H I5 16 CALLED?

NOTHING,
I JU ST
ALW AYS
LIKE D
THAT

QUOTE

NC&amp;
(O U « 2 8-27
THE BORN LOSER

W e ttF W fc E , I HAVE SOME

b y Art Sanaom
^
nfco TU KNOVJ
30UT
L fVE K ll
kl/F TD / mLUl .

FVDA

ADVICE FORYOUOR i--------

now

HOW TO IMPROVE
YOUR O A i6
RAKTKlPATlON... P

UK£ YOU V J

'/ f t

C

ID SOP

)AC\

AMO THINK, i
ABOUT WHAT
YOU WANT TO
SAY BEFORE
YOU SPEAK!

-------- ^ h y d
—
^ ^ ■ 1
W
|
_______ I ^ ctt H

PEANUTS

DEAR DR. GOTT: My non sent
me lltcralurc on hydrogen perox­
ide. At Drat I begun luklng five
drops, three times n day and I'm
now up to 100 drops dully. A
friend suld she rend one of your
article* Indicating that too much
hydrogen In the body Is hard on
the kidneys. Am I exceeding the
Intake limit?
DEAR READER: No valid
s t u d ie s h a v e s h o w n th a t
“ hypcroxygen atlon th ern p y"
(the use of ornl hydrogen perox­
ide! Is effective In trrullng or
cu ring uny serious dlsrase.
Hydrogen peroxide Is a great
antiseptic when uppllcd to cuts
and scru|&gt;es. but It should not be
consumed by mouth.
I don't believe that I ever wrote
a c o lu m n In d ic a t in g that
hydrogen Is "hard on the kid­
neys." Hydrogen Is one o f the
most ubiquitous elements in our
environment. Sometimes It Is
associated with on acid rnndlHon In the twdy. but this Is
ordinarily neutralized by normal
chemical reactions stemming
from metabolism.
I a d v is e a g a in s t lu k ln g
r o g e n
peroxide because.
with all dor respect in your son.
H l» a useless waste of lime and
money.
DEAR DH. GOTT. I've suffered
,rom varicose veins for years.

curried to the lungs, causing
chesl pain, shortness o f breath
and the risk o f death.
Most people with varicose
veins can successfully be trruted
with elevation and clastic sup­
port stockings. In my experi­
ence. I he use o f hormones does
not uffed this condition. Howev­

12Arrow poison
13 B le a t* handed

U W a ta M
18 Landing placo
18 Unlocked

tSHarvoat

goddaas
l i a s far-------88 Prtvatv pupil
know
30 Brlstts of grain Sf Psychiatrist
23 Wne entrance 80 Formerly
28 Huston

DOWN
1 Drummer

37 Lout
38 Nooses
40Baeu‘a country

PETER
Q O T T.M .D
er. when the varicose veins
progress and cause symptoms
m ore a gg ressive therapy in
warranted.

nranmra
nranaa
nnnnmn mnnmnn
Ginnnnn iiaramnH
□man
p i D 0 n _ nnranmn
H m n
nmrar i rmnmn
nnaiii
•v •—v r—v
=■
ranmn
a- m
nnnmnn nnmnam
□nnnnn mnonrin
nnn
nnmn
□nmn nnmn nna
u rn n n n
m ram ci
□nannci nanninH
□ □ n m n nnmngg
nnnnra
rannrin
□ n o M n

7 Wyett

by Charles M. Schulz

LOOK AT THIS. MARClE!
SHE SAVE ME A FAILING
GRADE ON MY THEME.'

IM TOTALLY CRUSHED!
I WAS SORE I WAS
GOING TO GET A
6 0 0 0 GRADE! .

THIS IS A
BLANK SHEET
OF PAPER

BUT THE POTENTIAL
U A S TH E R E !!

E E K A MEEK

by H ow ie S chneider
IT MUST O E U K f A
coiAJG

c l t o p b u sin e s s '

SALE FOR RESTTSURAwn

'6 0 HOG
ro tted
SALE

TUMBLEWEEDS
P E M M lC flN

BURGERS
CAiuwtr
. ifto.

A R LO AND JANIS

I TOLD YOU THEY
WOULD DO IT' .

THERE6 JU6T M RCTHll

DIDN'T I TELL YOU
THEY’D DO ITT &gt;

ABOUT THE 60UUD
OF 6llVCf?WARE BCATlk
l Ok) A WATER GLAbb

tVERYOUE Ik) THE

PEGTAURAUT LOOKED
v
APOUUD'
^

B y P h illip A ld er
showed true courage, raising
We all know the story of David
lilmself in game. Note that four
and Gnllalh. when little David
s(iades la Ihe only game contrai l
used u stL.nr thrown from a eJlng
with any chance of surcraa.
10 dow n :.\J
ihe giant
...r Goliath.
________
*“
Mouth won llie heart lead with
Today* deal reminds me o f litis
his ace and Immediately played
11 Is one o f my ravnritc leaching
u trump East won and led a Ion
deals, beruunr Inexperienced
heart, forcing the dummy In ruff.
player* havr trouble believing
Itul d rd u rrr happily played
dial length la-fore strength Is another round of spades When
valid They would much prefer they hrokr 3-2. the hand was
to bid an A K Q suit than u under control. Declarer played
0 5-4-3-2 suit
on diamonds until an op|Minrni
Alter a predictable llrsl round
ruffed In. losing only three
to Ihe auction, many Souths trump tricks.
would pass, refusing lo bid u suit
True. It Is easier on Ihe nerves
as weak as 5-4-S-2. Hul Ibis lo have longer and stronger
South knew that uny (our-card
trumps than these. Hut If you
suit Is bltlduble. c*|»eclally on the enjoy u Ihree card majority and
second round of the auction.
Ih e o p p o n e n ts tru m ps arc
West applied Ihe pressure with dividing 3 2. which they will
a pre-emptive raise lo three
more thun two thirds of the time,
hearts. However. North had suf­ ihe contract will usually be
ficient distribution In Justify his playable. The many dwarfs will
Ihrcr-spudc bid. Now South overpower Ibe few giants.

By Bernice Bede Otol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
May 28.1094
JOHUtfO
FRANK AND ERNEST

THAT TH/N6 Hi ALLY MOULD *
Bt f IX t D . T H tY 'tt O V tW O N t
IN TH t NUDDLt AND FfiOZtN
^ m ^ O N BOTH

M V RATHER SWIM IN PIRANHA
INFESTED WATERS PRXSSEP AS
'— i r ■
m e at l o a f ,
I'LL BET *
MOO WERE
A CLOSE
. SECOND _

ANNIE

ROBOTMAN*

SO TERRANCE, SW,KEVIN, WHO'Rt
YOU TALKING TO?
DO YOU WANT
TO PLAY CATCH
OR SHOULD WE
READ COMIC,
v

Books ? . . &gt;

In Ihe year ahead you might
place greater emphusls than ever
before on your abilities to origi­
nate and leud. Instead of luklng a
back seal, you'll now feel Im­
pelled to direct events.
QEMINI (May 21-June 20) If
you’re required lo make a de­
cision In a Joint cndcuvor today
which could affect others, be
sure to consult with your coun­
terparts. Chances for success ure
magnified when all urc In ac­
cord. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker In­
stantly reveals which signs arc
romantically perfect for you.
M ull 82 and a lo n g , se lfuddressed, stumped envelope to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per, P.O. Box 4465, New York,
N.Y. 10103.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Today it might be necessary to
take u calculated risk In order to
advance an endeavor that has
been a bit sluggish lulcly. If
y o u 'v e stu d ied the m a tter
thoroughly, go for It.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Some­
thing about which you've been

ready lo give up on can be
concluded lo your sallsfacllon In
this cycle and produce Ihe lypAs
of benefits you Initially untlclpatrd. Work on ll loduy.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 An
usslgnmrnl you've always found
distasteful may reveal Its real
Inner self to you today and you
could discover it's not us bad us
It originally seemed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Bargains for which you've been
harking could be out there today.
Yet ll might lake considerable
Investigating to uncover them,
but If you'll persist, you'll be
pleased.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
An appropriate opening might
present Itself today that'll enable
you lo get something serious off
your mind you've been reluctant
broach, but anxious lo discuss
with a valued friend.
8AOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Tills could Ik- u profitable
day for you. but It might require
expert financial gymnastics to
moke It happen. Ifyou use your
Ingenuity and resourcefulness,
desirable results arc Indicated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
10) Someone you helped pre­
viously might request u loan

'M Y

prienv,

HOWCVJTC.'MT

IN'CAW N

fe in

and

,

jerrahce

r

weu . A

lWUlPHTPOY I'M BEGINNING

THAT IF II/IERE. \ TO UNDERSTAND
YOU-TERRANCE
KEVIN'S NEED

\SA250-\b.

W lN W olN A W "

G\IA MONSTER ^ .F R IE N D S .
WHO HATES

YOUR GUIS
... .S106NAW
UKcSTO
6NAW
.TERW&amp;E' ON HAROS WilH
GLAD TO
HIS RANCIO ,
MEET
POISONOUS
L YOU.1 j K SALIVA- y ,

^
U T T )

WK8T
* KJ lo
VJMS4

KART

* V332

♦•4
AQJI4

a AQ
* K U1 0 S 7

* 10

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer South
South
I*
I a

4a

West
Pass
iv

North
I »
J a

Kail
iv
Past

Pan
Paaa
Pail
Opening lead: v 5

from you again today. In this
person's cose. It may be better lo
say "n o ", because this Individu­
al nerds lo learn lo be Indepen­
dent.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 1U)
Your Innalc klndnrss won’t let
you exclude a hard lo gel along
with Individual from an event
toduy. His/her gratitude may
undergo u surprising (wist.
PI8CB8 |Feb. 20-March 20)
Y ou can a c c o m p lis h you x
purpose today by not retaliating
In u similar fashion lo harsh
Individuals. This might cause
them to soften to a point where
they arc actually amenable.
ARIB8 (March 21-April 19)
You're Ihe one who can gel
things back on track again In
situations where good Ideas have
been mired down. Take It upon
yourself to show others how to
refine their raw concepts.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Because you won't give up on
Individuals wllh whom you're
closely associated, they, in turn,
won't give up cither. It's your
persistency (hat Inspires the
transformations today.
C opyrigh t 1994 N EW SPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

by Leonard S tarr
..HE WILL 9t MTtAMirtiP pO
TO PAIN* M19. BAO&lt;, 1 MU WHAT

ITOP/SSMt# YOU
fASOM... r-f^H A V t

��</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242010">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, May 27, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242011">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242012">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on May 27, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242013">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242014">
                <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;, May 27, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242015">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242016">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242017">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242018">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24236" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23839">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/c59fed6d88928f4cca4fa2abdc4173bf.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a7a45c701f7a200c67b301496ee2eb48</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242040">
                    <text>June

20,

1994

Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Seminole County eltioe 1008
66th Year, No. 259 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports
Church losgus crown's two
SANFORD — The Sanford First United
Methodtat-Plames and Sanford Aaoetnbllea both
clinched divlaion tltlea In the Sanford Church
Softball League Saturday at Chaae Park.
B aa P ag# IB .

Restoring th o river
$$ approved for St. Johns River projects
SANFORD - The U.9. House o f Repre­
sentatives approved $4.6 million for SI. Johns
River studies and restoration projects last week.
A Senate vote la expected later this year.
Congressman John Mica. R-Fem Pork, who
sponsored the funding, said ihe projects will go a
long way towards returning the river system to
Its natural state. The results will be more
drinking w ater for grow in g com m unities,
especially during droughts.
Of the money. $4 million will be used to
continue Ihe *177 million restoration of the river
basin south of Lake Harney which serve us
heudwaters for the river. The first steps to the
effort began In 1088 and are expected to cost

• 177 million on completion by Ihe end o f this
decade. Land purchased by the Si. Johns Hlvcr
Water Management for the project has cost §100
million since 1080, said Maurice Sterling, project
manager.
The Upper St. Johns River llnsln Project seeks
10 return 195 square miles o f former farmland to
11 natural stale prior to drainage In 1066 under
congressional approval In 1054. Through flow
control, farmland flooding and other restoration
efforts, water tnanugers hope lo reerrale Ihe
natural ebb and Bow of Ihe river while Improving
water quality and drinking water quantity.
The area extends from Florida's Turnpike near
Vero Reach lo U S. Highway 102 near Melbourne.
One well-known phase of the project Is the
20.000-acrc Fort Drum Marsh Conservation Aren
In Indian River County, Another restoration

effort Is the 0.3OO acre Farm 13 near Fcllsmcrc.
where sport fishermen boats now float over
former croplands.
The $600,000 will be used to complete studlrn
necessary to crenlr a physical and chemical
model of the St. Johns beginning south of
Jacksonville. The estuary serves as the river's
outlet to Ihe Allanllr Ocean. The project Is Jointly
financed by the St. Johns Hlvcr Water Manage,
ment District and Congress.
The slx-yeur, $2 million effort will be com­
pleted by 1908. said Hill Watkins, overseer o f the
project. The study Includes an analysts of river
sediments und stormwater drainage to the river.
Watkins said the model will be used to study the
effects of wastewater und slorniwuter discharges
to the river.

Military
observes
signing of
Roosevelt signed
bill 50 years ago
8ANFOHD -

Officials at

the

US.

Army

N oOTUIII i i M o ilie r In Su ntu ril l i s v r u n iim in r n l d ia l

H«f*MStwtaky

MiVtlan

Judith Buckley, a guidance counselor st Sanford students, Including 8tacey Aten, who will
Middle School, looks over the lists lo check In attend summer school for the next two wooks

Hundreds register to
attend summer school
only at Sanford Middle School In Ihe north end
of the county and ut Mllwrc Middle School In
the south.
The high schools offer a chuncc for the
students to get ahead as well us lo mukc up
work the students may have failed during the
regular school year.

Lotto ticket claims $29 million
TALLAHASSEE (AP) - The Florida Lottery
Department on Sunday said one lucky ticket
matched all six numbers In Its Lotto game and
can claim u $29 million Jackpot.
The Lottery computer records showed Ihe
winning ticket was sold In Ocoee In Orange
County.
In addition lo the grand-prize winners, 071
people won $026 for picking 5-of-6. and 30.065
people won $48 for picking 4-of-5. There were
also 514,316 winners who matched 3-of-6 and
can claim a $4 prize.
The Jackpot for next Saturday's drawing of
the Florida Lotto game was estimated at $7
million, lottery officials said.
The winning numbers for Saturday night were
03-12-15-24-28-40.

From stair and wire reports

B dltoruM .......... .......... 4 A

T a le v isio n

Florida....................t A

Wo$th#r...

Summer shower pattern

Variable cloudiness
with scattered even­
in g s h o w e r s and
th u n d e rs to rm s
likely. Low In (he low
70s.

□ Bee Bchool, Page SA

on June 22 they will celebrate the 50th
anniversary o f President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt‘a signing of the original 0.1. Illll. along
with olhrr military services.
According to Sgt. 1st Class Wlza. s ta tio n
commander. “ This Is a very historic occasion.
Over the past fifty years, rdurutlon benefit* have
liecome a prime enlistment Incentive.
The current 0.1. Hill, named because of
congressional sponsorship by Rep. O.V. "Sonny"
Montgomery of Mississippi, went Into cfrcct July
I. 1085. The Montgomery Hill requires a
contribution by the scrvlccmrmbcr of $100 jx-r
inomth for the first 12 months o f enlistment. The
bill then allows payment of $10,500 for a
two-year enlistment und $14,200 for a threeto
four year enlistment.
The Montgomery bill plus the Army College
Fund, pays $20,000 for a two year enlistment,
and up to $30,000 for a four-year enlistment.
"For fifty years. Wlza said, "the 0.1. Hill has
been giving Army veterans the edge on life that
they need as they reenter the civilian communi­
ty.

Meanwhile. Washington Is cautioning young

□ See Bill, Page SA

Adult fun, gam bling, car lots on agenda
LONGWOOD — Adult entertainment, casino
gambling and car lota might seem like an odd
mix but they arc all topics to be discussed by the

Longwood City Commission Mondny night dur­
ing Its regular meeting.
The first reading of nn ordinance meant to
regulate adult businesses In the city Is planned.
A copy of the ordinance was not uvullablc nt
press time for review. Out-going mayor Paul

Lovcstrund requested work on an ordinance
when three body scrub businesses opened In
rapid succession. Lovrstrnnd Is stepping down as
mayor June 30 but will complete his term as
commissioner. He has announced lie will run for

□ Bee Longwood, Page BA

Lake Mary police get
new radio equipment
LAKE MARY - The Lake Mary
police department Is Improving Us
police radio equipment. The City
Commission has authorized spend­
ing $38,180.06 on the project.
P o lic e C h ie f R ic h a rd D eary
commented. "W e have had con­
tinued problems with our current
radio system for several years. In
fact. In 1003, the police department
employees were surveyed to Identify
their concerns. The number one
concern was our radio system."
He continued. "W ith continued
growth In the city, we expect an
Increase In calls for service which
will Increase (he use of our radio
system. Expansion capability o f our
current system is limited and will
not likely meet our future needs."
During discussion o f the request.
City Manager John Litton explained
that the equ ipm en t w ould be
purchased according to bids ac­
cepted by Scinlnole County. Lllton

and Bcnry had worked with Ihe
county In arranging for this new
system.
Rather than the present system,
the new radios would broadcast on
800 megahetz. "That's the same
range now being used by Sanford,
Longwood, Seminole County. Or­
ange and Brevard counties," Beary
explained. "By upgrading to (his
system, while Lake Mary would
have Its own channels, If we have
need to work In conjunction with
other agencies, our radio equipment
would be able to be transferred to
their frequencies or theirs to ours,
and It will provide belter com­
munications which results In better
law enforcement.''
In response to a question from the
commission, Deary sold the new
system would be well suited lo the
growth potential expected In Lake
Mary.
L itto n said $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 o f (h e
purchase price would be token from
the fiscal 1994 budget, which had

Ticket to ride

» * * * * * * ,* * * * * *

Sanford Elka Club provided a bus ride and llcketa lo the Florlda-Qeorgla
All Star game for members of the Seminole High School football loam
thlo weekend. Jack Kenner, at tell center, chatted with Seminole coach
Ernie McPherson about ihe trip beforo Iho group loll for Jacksonville on
Saturday morning.

□ See Radio*, Page BA

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

�N E W S F R O M T H E R E G IO N A M O A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Food vendor accepts
‘queer’ dollar bill
Hospital report cards cause complaints
ORLANDO — Albertson's grocery stores have pulled from
their shelves "report cards" that compare Florida hospitals on
specific procedures ranging from heart bypass to baby delivery.
The Florida Hospital Association told Albertson's there were
problems with the data used In the comparisons and that
consumers might be misled.
Dun flr Brndstreet created the guides In part as a marketing
tool to sell a data processing system to hospitals and hcnlth
maintenance organizations.
Albertson's top Florida executive. Ronald Dennis, said the
guides had not been cleared for distribution through him but
had been arranged by Dun fit Brudstrcct through n third
company specializing In grocery store displays.
They hit the stores last week and hospitals startrd
complaining.
The hospital association said the guides used the same
flawed data that the state had used earlier this year In putting
together a draft report cord.
The Agency for Health Care Administration has ugreed to
work with hospitals to clean up some o f the data and come
back with a revised edition o f the report card later this year.
Dun A Brndstreet officials, who new to Orlando to meet with
hospital association officials earlier this week, stand by the
guides, although some small changes may be made In future
presentations, said Curtis Wilbur, vice president for Dun A
Brudstrcct Healthcare.
“ We feci very strongly that the Information was accurate and
useful to consumers, purchasers and providers." Wilbur said.

By VICKI DeSORMIIR
Herald Stall Writer_____________
SANFORD — Apparently she
never heard the saying "A s
queer ns a three dollar bill,"
because one vendor nt Flea
World recently accepted a $3
note In payment for a food
order.
Management at the Sanford
market was amused that the
vendor had accepted the bogus
cash, hut they hope she and
her fellow sellers are a bit
more careful In the future.
It Is regular practice nt Flea
World for the vendors to check
$20. $50 and $100 bills with
electronic scanners or coun­
terfeit pens. The market finds
phoney money almost every
weekend and marks It as no
good before rejecting It,
"W e tell them to check the
$20's, $S0's and $IOO‘s ."
exp la in ed public relations
director Dick Thnlcher. "But
apparently we hadn't given
them all the Information about

counterfeit money that wc
should hnve."
If the picture of President
Bill Clinton blowing a whistle
weren't enough o f a hint,
Truman Capote's signature
and the Identifying murk from
"T h e Disgruntled Slates of
America" and "Queer Reserve
Note" should hnve given It
nwny.
It didn't.
When the hill showed up In
her cash drawer at the end of
the duy hut Sunday. Thatcher
said, the collector was shocked
and asked for «n explanation.
"She (the vendor) told her
‘ You didn't say anything about
$3 bills, and It had President
Clinton’s picture on It. Are you
sure Us not good?' We were
amazed," Thatcher said.
Syd Levy, owner o f Flea
World, was also amazed.
"W ith 60.000 people going
through the m arket each
weekend, you get lo expect a
lot...but $3 bills?"
Levy was told that one of the

m

IM M &gt;lUV\TtJKn S T A tK -S U f .O U O IIC A

w $ m r-,

Ijalp y f o T -r j^ a ,

other vendors was selling the
funny money, but he was
unable to Und any In the
market. He wanted to buy a
few of the bills for himself.
The bill, which bears the
scrlnl number "OOICU812."
also shows n For Sale sign In
front of the W hile House and

bears the Inscription "In three
dollar bills wc trust...NOTt"
The person who paid wllh
the counlcrflt money got a frre
meal out of the deal, but he
should be aware that Flea
W o r ld v e n d o r s a re n ow
checking $3 bills ns well.

Common Cause director quits
TALLAHASSEE —■ Good government has lost one of Its
biggest proponents In Florida.
With his 350-pound frame. Bill Jones was an Imposing figure
In the halls of the state Capitol, where he has fought to clean up
and Improve state government.
After nearly 10 years of pushing open government meetings,
tougher gift restrictions on lawmakers, election financing
reforms and other public policy Issues, Jones has left as
executive director o f Common Cause o f Florida.
"H e's kind o f been the watchdog conscience that Is really
good for the system ." said Sen. Ander Crenshaw of
Jacksonville, a OOP candidate for governor who has supported
and opposed Jones In the post. "H e's been a great ally and a
worthy adversary."
After spending so much lime working Inside government.
Jones wants to teach others how It works. At 41. he is
returning to Florida State to earn his master's degree. He then
plans to teach high school and eventually become a professor.
Jones leaves the Florida Legislature after helping open the
process to Increased public scrutiny.
"There Is really no body In the world — I mean In the world. I
mean democracy — that’s as open as that place 1s." he said.
With Common Cause, a public interest group. Jones earned
$44,000 a year, well below the six-figure salaries mode by
many special-interest lobbyists.
Sally Spcner, former news director for the National Public
Radio station In Tallahassee, has replaced Jones. She said his
efforts helped build credibility for Common Cause In Florida.
"T h a t's not the case In every state." she said. "BUI has really
paved the way to make my Job easier."

Shoppers enjoy
arts and crafts
Lisa Gilford (left) and Dalo
Uvlno look over the wide
variety o f Incense burners
displayed by Nancy Wachter.
Wachtor was participating In o
wookond long sidewalk arts
and cralls show sponsored by
Ihe merchants ol Lako Mary
Centro.
HwtMFhol* by A»ryl Ktntilon

Americans1
PORT-AU-PRIffcfc Haiti — Americans Would rally in support
If U.S. troops lnv§dcd Haiti lo topple a military dictatorship and
restore democracy,'Senator Bob Graham predicted.
"Sanctions hurt, dictatorship kills." the Florida Democrat
said Sunday at a news conference concluding his weekend tour
o f the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation. He called for
quick U.S. Intervention If international sanctions full to restore
democracy.
Graham traveled to Halt! to assess the effectiveness of the
U.N. sanctions, designed to pressure Haiti's ruling military lo
return power to elected President Jean-Berirand Aristide,
ousted in a September 1091 coup.
Earlier Sunday, the Haitian army refused to let Graham
travel to the Dominican Republic border to see If banned
gasoline Is getting through.
At his news conference, Graham challenged President
Clinton to use Haiti as "a place where he can demonstrate his
resolve" to counter charges he Is Indecisive on foreign policy.
He said the United States should not tolerate a democracy near
Its borders being taken by force.
Other reasons for Invading Halt), Graham said, could Include
the country's extreme poverty and Us role as a shipment point
for drugs.
If Americans die In a Haiti Invasion, Graham said, people
would be "distraught," but "one of the realities of responsibili­
ty Ib to put the lives o f your people at risk."
F ro m A s s o c la ts d P ress re p o rts

■OTTBIIY

1

MIAMI — Here arc the wlnnlni
lumbers selected this weekeni
n the Florida Lotto and Lottery:

■ y A ssociated Prose
TALLAHASSEE - The How or
cash from spcctul Interests lo
p o litic ia n s inuy h a ve been
diverted, not stopjK-d, by cam­
paign financing reforms passed
three years ugo.
"II may look different on the
surface, hut underneath I think
things arc still pretty much the
sam e," state Sen. Curt Kiser
said.
The cosh gup created by new
limits on contributions was filled
with money sloshing In from the
political parties or from Interest
groups merely enlisting more
"contributors" and sending In
bundles o f checks.
"Money, unfortunately, Is ihe
mother's milk o f publics," said
Tom Slade, chairman o f Ihe
stale Republican Party, " I f you
could get money out o f politics

1000.
The political parlies gave more
than $2.2 million to help their

Ceeh 3
7-1*0
Play 4

2-5-21
i

m

Tonight: Partly cloudy with a
chance o f scattered afternoon
and even in g
show ers and
thunderstorms. Low In the low
to mid 70s mph. Chance o f rain
30 percent.
Tuesday: Partly sunny with
scattered afternoon showers and
thunderstorm s. High in the
lower 00s. Winds from the west
at 10 mph.
Extended forecast:
Partly cloudy with scattered
afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. Lows in the lower to
mid 70s. Highs in the upper 80s
to mid 00s.

1
TUESDAY
Ptly sunny 00-73

WEDNBDAY
Ptlycldy 80-73

Florida Raildania moat pay T * aalaa

THURSDAY
Ptlycldy 80-73

v \j*a;
FRIDAY
Ptly cldy 80-73

SUNDAY:
BOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 2:50
a.m., 3:10 p.m.; MaJ, 9:00 a.m..
0:30 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Beech: highs. 5:26 a.m., 6:15
p.m.: lows, 11:29 a.m., —• p.m,:
New Smyrna Beech: highs,
5:31 a.m., 6:20 p.m,; lows, 11:34
a.tn., —■ p.m,: Cocoa Beach:
highs, 5:46 a.m., 6:35 p.m.:
Iowa. 11:40 a.m.. p.m.

BOATINQ

Sacond Claaa Pottage Paid at Sanlord,
Florida and additional mailing
offtoac.

Mall
U4.00
140.00
IM.OO

and those dollars have to come
from somewhere." said Talla­
hassee lobbyist John French,
whose clients Include tobacco
giant Philip Morris USA, the
Florldu league of Hospltuts amt
Sears.
In Ills 1002 re-election cam ­
paign. Kiser refused to accept
any contributions greater than
$100.
The Palm Harbor Republican
w anted to show he w asn't
beholden lo blg-moncy special
interests. It ccrlulnly mude him
look good. But II also made him
ripe for defeat.
The week before Election Day,
the Florida Democratic Party
(lumped $50,000 Into his oppo­
nent s campaign, bankrolling a
series o f blistering TV uml radio
ads attacking Kiser for accepting
a free ski trip from a lobbyist.

NATIONAL T IM M

T ID M

PubttsfMd Dally Slid Sunday, ixcapt
Saturday by Th. Sanlord Harald,
Inc. MO N. Francs Aye., Sanlord,
Fia. Jant

Homo Dallvary
SIAM
MS.00
17100

f VJ'A.

b Vj'JT"

Monday, Juns 20, 1004
Vol. 68, No. 259

Poatmaalar: Sand addraaa ehanota
to THE SANFORD HERALD, P.O.
Boa tSST, Sanlord, FL M 772-1MT.
Bubacrlptlon Rataa
(Dally A Sunday)

candidates win. Ihe highest
amount ever.
At least 10 candidates for the
Legislature received $50,000.
the legal limit from the parlies.
In 1092. Tw o years earlier, only
four candidates received that
much.
In total. Florida's legislative
candidates raised more than $20
million In 1002. Of lhal $14
million came from organizations
or contributors affiliated with
political Interest groups, u study
by Florldu C om m on Cause
showed.
Nearly $4 million cninc from
th e In s u r a n c e In d u s tr y ,
health-care Interests and lawyers
— all of whom had millions or
dollars ut stake In (lending
legislation lo rrfonu Florida's
w o rk er's com p ensation und
health cure systems.
"Pollllcs Is fueled by dollars

rjL' ’tvvi. ‘JVjj"1\ t SVi11]

S X T S N D IO O U T LO O K

3-12-1B-24-28-40

3 Months
S Monlha
1 Year

thol would pleusr Ihe hell out of
me, hut you can't."
T h r e e y e a r s a g o . th e
Legislature cut the amount of
money that could be contributed
lo candidates from $1,000 per
election to $500.
The new limit made some
changes In the 1002 legislative
races but It didn't lower the
money spent on campaigns. The
Tampa Tribune reported Sun­
day.
Among the candidates for the
state House and Senate, In­
cumbents raised $3 for every $1
raised by their challengers, ac­
cording to un analysis by the
newspaper.
And despite the new $500
limit, campaigners raised $1.4
million more than they did In

T H E W E A TH E R

Lotto

m

Despite campaign reforms cash still key

Not available at presa time

Daytons Beach: Waves are
1-2 feet and semi-glassy. Current
Is slightly to tltc south with a
water temperuturc of 82 degrees.
New Smyrna Bescbi Waves
ure 1-2 feet and semi glassy.
Current is to the Bouth with it
wutcr temperature of 81 degrees.

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Tonight and Tuesday, wind
west 10 knots with an onshore
breeze near the coast Tuesday
afternoon. Seas 1 foot. Bay and
Inland waters a light chop.
Scattered thunderstorms.

V
SATURDAY
Ptlycldy 80-73

STATISTICS
T h e high tem perature In
Sanford Sunday was 90 degrees
and the overnight low was 72 as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center, Celery
Avenue.
R ecorded rainfall for Ihe
period, ending at 0 a.m. Mon­
day. totalled 3.66 o f un Inch for
(he weekend.
The temperature at 0 a.in.
Monday was 78 degrees. Mon­
day's overnight low 73, ns
r e c o r d e d by th e N a tio n a l
W eather Service at Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□ Barometric pressure.30.05
□Relative Humidity....85 pet
□W in ds.....Southwest 3 mph
□Sunset................ 8:20 p.m.
□Sunrlee fmm*m****hm«6:28 a.m,

T.mp*r.lur.i Indict, pr.vlnul day‘»
high undovtrnlghl lowtols.m. EOT.
City
Hi Lo Prc Oitk
Amarillo
1) It
tdy
Anchorag*
41 14
rn
Aihevlli*
17 44
cdy
Atlanta
91 n
cdy
Atlantic City
Cdy
w 70
Autlln
94 72 33 Cdy
Baltimore
w 71 .13 Cdy
(lotion
91 63
cdy
Buffalo
cdy
11 50
Burllngton.VI.
•0 14
rn
Caipar
9} 11 04 rn
Charlatton.SC
14 74 04 dr
Charlatton.W Va.
n 67 01 rn
Charlot!.,N C
93 71
dr
Chayanna
U 17 .21 rn
Chicago
14 66
dr
Cincinnati
9* 71
cdy
Clavaland
91 66
cdy
Concord.N H.
V M
dr
Corput Chrlitl
M 72
cdy
Oaltai Ft Worth
91 71
cdy
D«nvar
90 16
rn
Oat Molnot
90 73
dr
Detroit
ctr
n 73
Honolulu
u 76 .04 clr
Houilon
cdy
w 71
Indianapoll.
91 73 .57 cdy
Jun.au
57 69 .11 rn
Kama. City
91 71
tdy
LaiVtgaa
101 71
cdy
Llllla Rock
91 71 .04 cdy
Lot Angola.
75 19
cdy
Mamphli
93 71
Cdy
Mllwauk*.
71 63 .33 dr
Mpl. SI Paul
M 71
cdy
Nathvlll.
rt 73
cdy
Now Orlaan.
M 74
Nt*r York City
99 70 02 cdy
Oklahoma City
M U
cdy
Omaha
91 73
cdy
Philadelphia
too 71 02 cdy
Pho.nl&gt;
104 14
cdy
Pllliburgh
97 69 .01 rn
Pori land,Main.
01 M
clr .
Sacram.nlo
94 m
dr
St Loul.
97 79
cdy

�Sanford Herald, 8anford, Florida - Monday, June 20, 1994 - IA

The future of art

POLICE BRIEFS

The 8anford-Semlnole Art As­
sociation recently presented
Us annual scholarships to the
top art students In the public
school systom. One w ln net
was selected at each of the
district's schools by the art
teachers and a 1150 scholar*
ship was given to each. At a
recent meeting of the assocla*
lio n , ad m in istrative c o u n c il
mem ber Joseph E. M alhleux
(from left) congratulated wln-i
ners Amy Lovlngfoss of Lake
Mary High, Angellque Bender
of Oviedo High, Kelli Holiday
of Lyman High, Marla Tierney
of Lake Brantley High and
Leonard Boule of Sem inole
H igh. Dawn Dlbarl of Lake
Howell High was not present.T h e a s s o c ia tio n has been;
a w a rd in g th e s c h o la rs h ip s :
since 1959.

Jealousy prompts bumpsrcars
A woman who was upset because another woman was
nrlvln# her boyfriend's car engaged In bumper cars In the
Siinrord Police station parking lot Friday night and ended up
!&gt;elng arrested for resisting with violence, aggravated assault
with a motor vehicle and battery/domeatlc violence.
Faye Redd. 32, 1505 W. 25th St. was arrested after a Sanford
policeman saw her vehicle strike another on the rear bumper
ns he left the station. Redd reportedly got out of her car and
began punching nt the windows of the second vehicle.
Both vehicles left the station and were seen again on Eighth
Street. Redd told police she had reconciled with her boyfriend
after a long separation and was very upset to sec the woman In
his car.
The "boyfriend" wus called to the station to help clear up the
sltuutlon and told police he was living with the woman who
was driving his car and he did not want to see Redd. Redd
Jumped from her chair, throwing a right punch and kicking
him. She was wrestled to the floor according to the report and
arrested.

Stop leads to arrest

H«r*MriWMSf

Ronald W. Drown, 28, 1718 Sunset Drive, Longwood, was
arrested by Longwood police for driving with a suspended
driver license and fullure to drive within a single lane Friday. A
computer check during the traffic stop revealed Drown's
license had been suspended five times. He was arrested and
taken to Jail.

Driving under the influence
Peter George Dcbas. 47. 4065 Shoreline Clr., Lake Forest,
Sanford, was arrested for DUI following a traffic accident at
state road 400 by Luke Mary Police. Debas was advised of Ills
rights and spoke with an attorney before he wus arrested at
11:30 p.m. Friday night. His blood alcohol readings were .233
nnd .237.

Domestic violence charged

Suspect
asks to
interview
victims
By Associated F f a a ___________

• Paul Laurence Shortall, 40. 104 Holderness Drive.
Longwood. was arrested by a sheriffs deputy following a fight
with his wife at their home. The couple were hitting each other
when police arrived. She was Issued a capias and told to report
to the stnte attorney's office.
• Torrle Morris. 21. 1115 W. Second St., Sanford, wns
arrested by Sanford police Friday night for battcry/domcstlc
violence ufler she began punching her boyfriend when he drove
home to talk to her.

Arrested for obstruction
Gregory Williams. 21. 2035 Williams Avc., Sanford, was
arrested by sheriff's deputies for obstruction by disguise after
giving officers a false name when they questioned him at 11
p.m. near a fence at a locked food store. Williams said he did
not have any Identification then gave another name.

John Doe arrested
A John Doc wus arrested Saturday by Sanford Police for
burglary nnd resisting without violence at a locnl lumber store.
The man was found near the rear of the building on Maple
Avenue after |&gt;ollce discovered a portion of fencing pushed
down to gain access to the area. The man did not give Ills
name, age or address nnd was charged with resisting an officer.

Arrested for trespass
hooker T. harrlner. 31. 2501 Crawford Drive, Sanford, wus
arrested by Sanford Police for trespass after wnrnlng after he
was found Inside n food store In the 1500 block of Prcnch
Avenue, lie had t&gt;ccn warned to stay out of the store after l&gt;elng
ch a rged earlier with retail theft.

Fleeing arrest
Juun Manual Guzman. 30, 356 Morning Glory Drive. Lake
Mary, was arrested Friday for fleeing or attempting to flee after
he failed lo obey a deputy's order. The pollccmun observed
Gusman hit a curb In the Lake Mary Centre, but lie left the
scene alter the policeman yelled ul him to slop. The suspect
traveled cast on Lake Mary Boulevard at a high rate of speed
pursued by the pollccmun. He wus stopped near the Crossings
on Greenwuy und cited for careless driving and open container
violation for a can of beer on the console.

Theft arrest
Jimmy Dcval Snell, 20. 1400 W. 14th St. Sanford, was
arrested for (heft and burglary to a dwelling nfter he pawned u
cassette player stolen from a Holly Avenue residence In April.
Snell pawned the equipment for $40 cash. Snell claims he
purchased the merchandise for an undisclosed sum from an
unidentified male subject, then pawned It.

Warrant arrests
• Rogello Gomez Martinez, 21, Grovevlcw Apartments. San­
ford. fullure lo appcar/throwlng a deadly missile.
• Burburu Ann Crosby. 29, 115 S. French Avc., violation of
prohutlon/grand theft and two counts of obtaining property by
worthless check.
• Burbaru Ann Dotson, 29. 119 French Ave., three counts of
oblulnlng property by worthless check.
• Candice Ann Hackney. 25. 1092 Cheltanhum Court.
Longwood. VOP/drlvIng under the Influence.
• Alisha Dlnnnc Harris. 20. 4 Higgins Ter., Sanford.
VOP/posscsslon of cocaine.

MIAMI — The man authorities
have dubbed The Gentleman
Bandit wunts to meet Ills victims
face to face — at taxpayer
expense — to convince them lo
attend Ills trial.
Everett Forties says he's In­
nocent and testimony from the
five people he Is arcuscd of
robbing might help Ills ense. lie
wauls to fly to meet Ills victims,
claiming a constitutional right lo
face his accusers.
P rosecu tors hope to take
advantage of airline fure wars If a
Judge grants a motion to allow
Forbes. 23. lo travel to southern
California und New Jersey at
taxpayer ex|x-nsr.
But prosecutors would rather
keep Forbes from travelin g
period. Instead they want to set
up a v id e o t e le c o n fe r e n c e
estimated to rost ubout $3,000.
Forties Is charged with robbing
the victims at knife-point last
yeur while they vucutloucd In
Dude County — then apologiz­
ing. Ills courteous demeanor
landed him hlftilrkniiuic.
"H ere's a guy who purposely
picked tourptis lo victimize, then
lie wants to cu|iltullze by flying
nround the country at taxpayers'
expense." sn a p p e d Dude Assis­
tan t S ta te A tt o r n e y V ic k i
Brennan.
Forbes Inis already been con­
victed of robbing a Brazilian
couple
But he Insists he must go to
Los Angeles und New Jersey to
bring t&gt;ack his accusers lo his
(rial.
Dade Circuit Judge Celeste H.
Muir hears the motion on Mon­
day. with prosecutors arguing
(hut a vid eo teleconference
would protect Forbes' rights
while permitting him to confront
his ullcgcd victims.
"You'd be able to do unylhtng
with that person as If you were
In ,the sam e room , ex cep t
scpjtk-zc their hand or give them
soptd coffee," said Mark Levy,
vlrxiqircsldrnt of Accurate Video
Services.
Using video In court cases Is
not new.
But the Forties case Is unusual
because video testimony would
be used In lieu of victims coming
lo South Florida and testifying In
court.

Police warn parents to be alert for
molesters on computer networks
By -

slats

ORLANDO — On-line com ­
p u ter n e tw o rk s g iv e c h ild
molesters a new way to seek out
victims, warn police, who arc
also using the In form a tion
superhighway to try and truck
down pedophiles.
Molesters can chat amicably
on the electronic bulletin boards
until they find a young person
they wunt to converse with more
through private electronic-mall.
The Orlando Sentinel reported
Sunday.
"T h e y ’ve got to go to other
places where kids of the '90s
play." said Mike Brick, head of
the Orlando office of the Florida
Department of Law Enforce­
ment.
Lust week. FDLE agents ar­
rested Donald Harvey o f Merrlmuck. N.H., as he arrived In
Orlundo. Harvey wus charged
with six counts, Including at*
te m p te d and s o lic it e d In ­
tercourse with a child.
Agents said Harvey traveled to
Orlando to huve bcx with a
14-ycar-old boy to whom he had
sent obscene pictures and pro-

positioned via America On-Line.
But the 14-year-old actually wus
the computerized creation of
FDLE special agent Doug Rehman.
Large services like America
On-Line, Prod igy and C om ­
puServe require Identification
from those who want to use their
services. They verify the Infor­
mation.
B u t s o m e p e o p le h a ve
managed to register with fukc
Identification, according to Nick
Battaglia, a sergeant with the
police department In San Jose.
Calif.
The San Jose police urc con­
sidered leaders In the Investiga­
tion of high-tech crimes running
the gamut from tax fraud to
child pornography.
The department Is working on
about 15 cases Involving child
pornography and pedophiles
trying to lure victims through
the computer. Police now cruise
the on-line services dally posing
as youngsters and pedophiles.
There Is no central control on
the Internet und small bulletin
boards run by Individuals don't
always require users to Identify

themselves.
America On-Line und Com­
puServe have rules against
obscene language and monitor
their public bulletin boards nnd
chat ureas A lthou gh C om ­
puServe doesn't have rules
against obscene language on Its
forums, they arc monitored by
the people who run them In­
dependently of CompuServe.
But once two people decide to
correspond using E-mall, there
arc no rules and no authority
figure to observe who's saying
what. E-mail can be Intercepted
only with a warrant.
Law enforcement officers, on­
line services and com puter
groups agree on one thing:
Purcnts need to pay more atten­
tion to the people their kids urc
meeting on the computer.
Parents can lock their children
out of certain bulletin boards
und chultlng roams and monitor
their children's computer activi­

tyMost of all, parents should
encourage their children to be
careful when they're on-line,
experts say.

JMMMMMMMbt

KtnMMA

This Is a Half-Ads Illustration.
We simply didn't have room for it
in its entirety... So Come Visit
Us. With our low prices and top
service... We'll Help You to See
the Whole Picture and TestDrive the Real Thing!

K aiser
P O N T IA C -B U IC K -G M C T R U C K S
1590 South Woodland Blvd., DeLand
DELAND 904-734-6802 • DAYTONA 904-257-6540 • ORLANDO 407-629-0549
“LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY. 17-92 &amp; HWY. 15A"

Hiis Could Be Your Hcket lb
A Million Dollar Drawing.
As! .rrn
WIN UP. 10 SI00 INSIAMII f
WIN UP 10 1 [IMIS ON IMIS IKMI*

Tile Final Grand Prize Drawing is Being Held In October 1994. But You Can
Still Win An "EN TR Y’ With Millionaire Madness, On Sale Through July 11,1994.
The hrut Honda 11 »iurv Million I lollar ( .und I'rtxc ( )rjw ing lor j l l H ondj Lottery million d o lljr K rjtc h olf garnet w ill be
held in October |9»M Hut &gt;1 Birr Mill eligible to win an' I NTR Y with Mitbonjire Madnrw Tickett will remain on u lrth n ftig h
Inly II l'J*M A n d have until September I'FM to itiirem ytair tnKcu Valid l-N T U Y ’ ticket* for a preliminary Grand l*nxc
I hawing mint he p'ntnurkrd no b irr than September 9 l*FM lint till in the information on the hark of the ticket and m aijjo
Florida Lnttcty, Capitol (u m p ire Tallahassee I I 12V I5M *)I Ins elopes should he no larger than 4 ' T** 9 ' V l
SUBMIT ( )NLY O N I ENTRY I'l K I N V l I ( )|‘I I i x i drawing time and place lo b e announced at a later date
I'rclim irvi^ drawing date* arc lunc A luly I luly 22. Augtnl 5 Augint 19. September 2 and September 31.1994 I
I)v
H'L«v*re I kvt
\UUtfn&lt;4ts.u0y rrd lunr I W U’r w f
titbit fct tSuc *■»’»&gt; rn$i le wxkmrd \«|Ai l'» I 'M iVwn ifi $&gt;
rtvy Nr mkTmnl
x &gt;&lt;»j I W»b li-iwrv rtuJu IVunuwv $Winuu N mkxtnrd u ilkmU Lurry dnouiuftnt

Become A
Successful Seller
In One Easy Step

M aster C«

You can get sales quick with the help of your
Visa or MasterCard. Just call us at
322-2611 with your card number and expiration
date, and we'll be glad to help you write an ad
that's a sure sell.

Sanford Herald

�4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 20, 1994

Editorials/ Opinions
S a n f iir d H e n d d
(USPS 4at-3B0)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Aren Code 407-322-2011 or 831-0003
Lacy K. Loar • Editor
Odeaca H. Pugh • Oualneaa Manager
SUBSCRIPTION HATE:
3 Mouthi............................910.50
0 Moiilli!............................930.00
1 Yenr................................978.00
Florida Reeldentt mual pay 7% aaloe tax In
addition to ratee above.

EDITORIAL

Get involved in
new program
CPTED, pronounced "sep-ted" Is coming to
Sanford. It's a project In which every
downtown business owner and operator can
become involved.
C P T E D stands for Crim e Prevention
T h r o u g h E n v ir o n m e n t a l D e sig n . It's
sponsored by the National Main Street
program and the National Crime Prevention
Institute. The Icing on the cake Is — it's not
going to cost a great deal of money.
Judging from the concepts CPTED pro­
poses, we believe It will be well worth the
time and effort. If proven successful, It will
not only help reduce downtown crime, but
Increase the economy of the entire area.

NAT HENTOFF

Pied Piper visits Yale Law School
Before the graduates o f Yale Law School
received their degrees this year, they were
confronted by the Insistent challenge o f Justice
Hugo Hlnck:
"Under our constitutional system, courts stand
— against any winds that blow — as havens for
those who might otherwise suffer because they
arc helpless, wcuk. outnumbered, or because
they arc non-conforming victims o f prejudice and
public excitem ent."
Underlining Black's words — at a time when
the legal profession Is being charged with
pursuing mammon more enthusiastically than
Justice — was commencement speaker Stephen
Blight. Appointed a J. Skclly Wright Fellow and
Visiting Lecturer In Law at Yale. Bright's course
materials have encompassed "Capital Punish­
ment: Race and Poverty."
Bright teaches from experience. He has clients
on death row and In prisons where conditions are
such that even Justice Clarence Thomas might
take anolher look at the Eighth Amendment.
This sometime law school lecturer's main Job
Is director of the Southern Center for Human
Rights In Atlanta, where the salary for every
employee — whether the director, other at­
torneys or secretary — Is 923.000 n year.
Supported by foundations, churches and Indi­

viduals hooked on Justice, the center receives no
government funds.
Operating mostly
In Alabama. Georgia
nnd M i s s is s ip p i,
Bright — and ills
field staff of nine at­
to r n e y s and fo u r
p a r a le g a ls
a ls o
works In Southern
p rison s w h ere In ­
mates are practically
non-persons.
Although Its bud­
get Is sm all — it
s p e n t 9 8 5 0 ,0 0 0
during Its last fiscal
£ S u p p o rte d by
rear — the center
fo u n d a tio n s ,
c h u rc h e s and
ins won n number of
In d iv id u a ls
significant Supreme
h o o k e d on
Court derisions set­
ju s tic e , Ih e
tin g aside cap ita l
c e n te r re c eives
convictions or sen­
no g o v e rn m e n t
tences. as well us
fu n d s. ■
lower court orders
obtaining equal edu
rational and vocational opportunities for women
Imprisoned In l,us Angeles and Alabama.

{

JACK ANDERSON

Most people travel. When they look at a city
or town for the Hrst time, they often
comment, "Isn't this a clean town." or. "Isn't
this a dirty looking town."
Some however, may not be bad enough to
be considered dirty, or clran enough to be
spotless. Where Sanford stands In that graph
Is closer to the "clean" side, but there Is still
much that can be done.
CPTED believes that by cleaning up ureas,
downtown Sanford will become not only
better looking, but safer. CPTED suggests
better lighting, better landscaping, signs,
fencing, exits, artlsic designs, and window
displays.

Jones lawsuit is
battle on 2 fronts

W ith expanded lighting, persons with
criminal Intent may be less apt to try
breaking into a shop.
With Improved landscaping, criminals have
fewer places in which to hide, to avoid
detection by a passing police officer.
Signs and window displays must be done
attractively, but with enough open apace to
allow police a clear view of the store interior.
CPTED and Sanford Main Street will have
not only these suggestions, but a host of
others to share with our downtown business
community.
There are also plans to expund this Into the
historic residential ureas of Sanford us well.
Sanford Main Street has designated Bob
Kuhn and Sharon Brown as co-chairmen for
the CPTED project. They will be visiting
downtown merchants seeking support.
When they approach you. take the time to
listen to what they have to say. Consider how
these concepts will not only improve your
business appearance and safety, but that of
the business next door.
CPTED. if properly executed, is a good step
forward for downtown Sanford. W e urge Its
support.

LETTER

Paying homage
1Just how difficult will it be to pay homage to a
gentleman I never met and did not know other
than through his many words found every Sunday
In the Sanford Herald within his column "W ay
Back W hen"? I don't know. Let's proceed and find

o(it.
I've never met Mr. Julian Stcnstrom. Never
shook his hand. Wish I had. He had a gift that few
men or women attain, that of truly sincere
friendship os came forth In his weekly writings.
Not only did Mr. Stcnstrom live through a large
amount o f history, both locally and elsewhere, he
d|d, without a doubt, create a goodly shore of It
himself.
He possessed another wonderful gift. His ability
to detail what might be considered collections of
cold facts and figures about people, places, and
events o f yesteryear and da it In a totally
comfortable and Interesting way, shined brightly
on a weekly basis. Did I. or do I. know much about
what he wrote? No. I'm afraid not. You see. I'm a
relatively new kid on the block. Got here In '78. No
— not 1878. The next one — 1978.
I truly marveled at Mr. Stenstrom'a ability to
relate people and place happenings that occurred a
decade or two ago and make them sound so dam
interesting that one might think they happened
only yesterday. Yes, he had a way with words. A
truly great and fine geneleman and writer.
There we arc. It wasn't the least bit difficult, at
least from my end o f the pencil.
Lucky Tullar
(AKA Nelson B. Tullar
Winter Springs

L E T T E R S

T O

E D IT O R

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

Also, as Stephen Bright notes, the center
secured "an order correcting numerous un­
constitutional conditions, and setting standards
for virtually every aspect o f life In all of South
Carolina's 27 prisons."
When not trying to bring the radlcnl news of
due process nmi equal protection o f the laws to
Southern Judges and wardens. Bright lectures ut
law schools, ills aim Is to show luw students how
badly their skills are needed beyond corporate
boardrooms.
During his commencement uddress at Ynle
Law School. Bright looked at the graduates and
saldt "There are 72 people languishing on Texas'
death row * h o do not have a lawyer — even
though they have legal avenues of review of their
cates.
"Think of It. They cannot even confer with n
lawyer to find out the status of the cases In
which they were condemned to dlr. How can n
system that claims to be one o f Justice allow such
a thing? And year after yenr. many others with
urgent legal needs In both civil and criminal
matters have no access toon attorney at all."
Bright realizes that some o f the luw students
he tries to enlist may worry about how much
money they will make. Virtue Is not necessarily
negotiable.

AT - w e U N K N O W N T H K M S

HOODING CARTER

A pathy th reaten s dem ocracy
The m ultiple Indictments o f Rep. Dun
Rostenkowskl offer an opportunity to take a
second look at the widespread American
disenchantment with politics and politicians,
and therefore with the nation's political
system.
The cosy way — the traditional way — to
explain It Is to blame the men and women who
hold public office. They are unworthy com ­
promisers, while we arc pure Idealists. They
arc corrupt, while the system is clean.
It is state of mind with deep roots. For a
people who proudly claim parentage o f the
longest lasting constitutional democracy In the
world, we have been almost perversely con­
temptuous of our elected representatives since
the earliest days of the Republic. As Groucho
Marx so famously put It. a club which would
have him as a member wasn't worth Joining.
The American people's vnriation on that theme
has been that anyone who can win our votes
Isn't fit for office.
But there Is more to today's deep malaise
about politics than traditional populist dis­
trust. Also. It Is not true that politicians arc
less honest today than in the pust. While more
congressmen have gone to Jail for various
misdeeds over the past 50 years than In the
preceding 150 years, virtually all political
scientists and historians agree that there Is less
overt criminality on Capitol Hill now than at
any time In history. Tougher laws and better
enforcement, rather than more law-breaking,
are the explanation,
Given U.S. history, the plain fact Is that
corruption alone could not be counted as a
believable explanation for the decline o f public
cdnlldence. More complex factor* are Involved. •
Their cumulative Impact has been devastating
to the people's confidence, not only In the
democratic process but In the civic enterprise
that keeps our multicultural society from
flying apart at the seams.
Start with the question of scale. Just how
well can people know their representatives or
their Institutions in the vast Impersonal
clusters which house-most Americans? The
teeming population centers such as Southern
California or the Boston-to-Washlngton corri­
dor are no longer communities so much as
dormitories for people In dally transit to and
from somewhere cIbc. America's cities are fast
becoming holding pens for those, usually other
than white and native born, who are unwanted
or unneeded outside their limits.
The Individual's sense of connection and
relevance are sharply diminished In both
settings, though in different ways. It Is
difficult, If not impossible, for the city-dweller
or the suburbanite to discern what difference
their lives make to unyone else, and what effect
their wishes or actions have on their repre­
sentatives — who arc more television Images

and slogans than flesh and blood people.
Loom ing Just beyond these Immediate
realities Is a more shadowy but no less
significant one. This world of over 5 billion
people Is now so economically Interdependent
that the fate of millions o f people In one land
cun be settled by the decisions of a handful of
financial specialists or corporutc leaders In
another. What Is more, those decisions and
decision makers are
usually unresponsive
to d ir e c tio n from
W a s h in g t o n . T h e
people may not un­
derstand every detail
of this new order, but
they understand its
Im p lic a t io n s and
their powcrlcssness.
These factors taken
to g e th e r b reed
anom ie, which In­
vites demagoguery.
It Is a respecter nei­
I T h e easy w a y —
ther o f race nor class.
Ih e tra d itio n a l
Louis Farrakhun and
w a y - t o e x p la in
A ! S h a r p t o n a rc
it Is to b lam e
black hustlers, pre­
th e m en and
ying on the alien­
w om en who
ation o f their follow­
h old p u b lic
ers. Oliver North and
o ffic e , j
Fat Robertson are
white hustlers, doing
exactly the same thing within different com­
munities.
Not everyone feels helpless before the forces
o f blind anonymous fate. The timely applica­
tion of big money Is a cause which produces
effect, In marked contrast to the weak
connection between the Individual's vote and
political results. That contrast feeds and
justifies the widespread public cynicism about
the political enterprise.
These arc large matters, not easily en­
capsulated In a slogan or handled by a single
law. Throwing out the rascals and convicting
the felons arc Mr. Feel Good solutions of
fleeting, though necessary, utility. If Dan
Rostenkowskl turned out to be guilty of every
single charge leveled against him, the Illinois
Democrat's fate would be o f little lasting
consequence to the alienated voter.
What is required are large reforms and
far-reaching adjustments. The power o f big
money must be curbed. Our political subdivi­
sions which represent them should be reduced
In site and made more approachable by, and
responsive to. the people. T h e Interna­
tionalization of the economy must be matched
by International institutions which allow
nation-states to demand and enforce standards
o f behavior on the transnational giants.

I

WASHINGTON — The sexual hurusunrnt
lawsuit (lied by Pnuln Corbin Jones against
President Clinton Is two fights within one: a
legal battlr that Is likely headed for ihe
Supreme Court, and a street fight ihut In
already under way. Clinton may lime thr
second and will the first.
For Ihe legal fight.
Clinton's lawyers ure
studying the Federal­
ist Papers and othrr
w r it in g s by th e
fo u n d in g fa th e rs ,
looking for constitu­
tional corroboration
th a t u p r e s id e n t
should enjoy Immu­
nity from civil suits.
Parallel to this schol­
arly pursuit Is the
less &lt;11 unified hut no
less decisive street
light — who plays ^ This Is probably
Ihe flrai tim e In
hard boll heller?
history that a
Clinton's lawyers
sitting president
h a v e la u n c h e d a
has ponlod up
full blown investiga­
for a private
tion — including Ihe
detective
hiring of a private
detective — lo delve
Into Jones' past for
derogatory personul Information, ucconling to
While House sources. Past American presi­
dents have unleashed the FBI and CIA on
their political enemies, but this Is prolutbly
the first rime tn history Ihut u silting
president has ponied up for u private
detective.
Clinton's motivation Is self-defciiBc. He may
tie the most powerful leader In the western
world, but It's almost Impossible for Clinton
to defend himself against charges such as
those In paragraph 22 o f the lawsuit ("There
w ere d istin gu ish in g ch a ra cteristics In
Clinton's genital area that were obvious lo
J a n e s ") without com pletely dem eaning
himself and the presidency. White House
sources believe this paragraph was a clever
gambit by Jones' attorneys, who know
Clinton can't call theli bluff. Thut's why
Clinton may have to go nuclear In the street
fight.
" I f this woman realizes that she's not going
to get a trial for a couple of years... and If at
the same time (Clinton attorney Robert
Bennett) convinces her and her lawyers that
■he's going to get
trashed when that day comes, she may
decide all of a sudden to drop the case and go
on and do her talk shows and get paid for
them ," one White House source explained.
"She's doing her national media tour now,"
said a second White House source. "Her
credibility keeps seeming to go down rather
than up as more facts come out.... It's clear
that the far right has adopted her and they're
going to use It politically."
A battle royale of the P.I.'s Is In Ihe offing. It
was recently reported that Jones' lawyers
plan to hire private Investigators of their own
to round up alleged turgets o f Clin Ion's sexual
advances, with the money coming from u
defense fund set up by a GOP fund-raiser.
Jones' lurid claims often sound like lines
from a tawdry screenplay, yet they may
prove difficult for Clinton lo shoot down
outright. Jones' credibility Is even challenged
by members o f her own family, and by the
fact that she waited three ycare before filing
her suit. Nor Is she helped by her association
with Clinton’s political nrch-encmlcs In
A rkansas and oth er righ t-w in gers na­
tionwide. As Bennett claimed during n press
conference, her lawsuit was "tabloid trash
with a legal caption on it" and was designed
to "rew rite" the 1992 election results. Jones’
attorneys did not return our calls for
comment.
Last year a survey found tliat 56 percent of
Americana agreed that the country's pro­
blems make the presidency too much for one
person to handle. In our already litigious
society, declaring open season on a U.S.
president would turn the Job or commandcr-ln-chlef Into a part-time profession.

I

�.

Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Monday, June 20, 1994 - BA

School-------Continued from Page IA
At Sem in ole, t i l i n g went
sm oothly the first m orning,
principal Urelchcti Schnpker
Mild.
"W r had about 2CX) to 300
kids show up thin morning who
were not prr-reglstcrcd, hut we
got them mulched up with
dosses and teachers and had
them Hquared away without any
problems." Schnpker said.
In ull there are about (XX)
students at Seminole Tor the hrnt
sem ester o f summer school,
which runs through July 7
Most o f the students arc Inter­
ested In getting their Physical
Education requirements out of
the way. Schnpker explained,
adding (hat the students would
rather take the class In the
summer so they ran Just go
home and get cleannl up ruther
than have to try to rush through
showers between classes.
Shnpkrr said that six PE
[teachers were hired to handle
|the load during the summer.
Another popular subject Is
(driver education. Sttidrnts who
[complete I he rlass not only gel

credit for an elective, they also
earn a discount on their utilti
Insurance.
But there are other ulTcrliigs
for those wanted to challenge
their minds and talents during
the long, hot summer.
Many o f the A cadem y o f
Health Occupations students are
taking a Geometry Honors elans.
The Economies and American
Government Is another one that
students are eager to "get out of
the w ay" In the summer.
"W e have a myriad o f class
offerin g s for the summer.**
Sehapker said. "W e ’ve added a
photography class this summer
thut Is very |M&gt;pular as w ell."
Summer school In the district
high schools, runs Monday
through Thursday from 7:25
tun. through 1:20 p.m. for the
first semester.
The second semester, which
begins July 11 and runs through
July 28 will also be Monday
though Thursday, but the times
will hr from 7:25 n.m. through
12:50 p.m,
"W e ’re very pleased with the
way this summer Is shaping
up," Sehapker said. "T h e kids
are well-tiehaved and everything

Is running smoothly."
At Sanford Middle, principal
Hill Moore said things there were
going well too.
"W e're a few students short «»r
where wc thought wc should
lie," he said, "but more could
show up later."
Moore explained that they had
expected, based on past experi­
ence, about 150 ntudcnls and
only got ubout 120. Hut. since
m any o f the students were
coining from Lakevlcw Middle, It
was difficult to be sure how
many students to expect.
He noted that they are offering
n full complement o f classes
from all subject arras during the
two week session.
Summer school Is short this
year, he cxplulnrd. b e c a u s e all
district m iddle schools will
chunge over to the year round
calendar this coming school
year, which for them begins on
July 18.
" It ’ ll lie here before you know
It," he said.
High schools will rcmuln on
the traditional calendar. Their
1004-05 school year will begin
on Aug. 22.

roup says tired truckers
hould get off the road
I

l VICTORIA M I T T
IBQClatod Press Wrltar_________
DelSHON. Maine - Not much
changed In Jeff l/er's room,
jn t lia ll t r o p h ie s g lis t e n ,
iw-ln-lhe-dork stars cover the
celling Scribbled on untrttook*
«rc tern-age drawings of hearts
with "A n g ie " written Inside.
Neatly slacked In lhe corner
are |tiles ot condolence letters,
,i "J eff was saving up lo buy a
ring for Angle." said Strve 1/rr.
as he walks quietly through his
son's room. "I wish wr had
known her better."
Jeff and Ills girlfriend, Angela
Dubuc. bolh Hi. amt two of Ihelr
Biends were killed last October.
A trurkci apparently dozed at
the wheel and his 80.000-|miuikI
rig smashed Into Jell's disabled
&gt;'ord Escort, parked In the
eukdown lane on the Maine
Turnpike.

k

The trucker neither swerved
fo r braked..,
*—
■■■&lt;
A fifth leen-agcr csclfpcd with
Injuries, as did ihc (m ajor. who
yanked her (tee ol Did U-n-ck.
Phoios o f the dead Veens cover
walls and the coffee tattle at the
Ucr house, where parents and
Blends ot the victims gathered
recently with lawmakers for one
of the llrsi meetings of l‘ A.T.T.
— P a r e n t s A g a in s t T ir e d
,TA u e r s .
P.A.T.T. Is determined to gel
the7m e s s a g e oul that proregional truckers must Ik- held

it responsible Tor uccldenls caused

When they nod otr behind the
Wheel because they failed to lake

w

required breaks.
"Truckers who drive drowsy
should tte held to thr same
standards that drunk drivers are
when they kill someone on the
r o a d ." said Donna Morgan,
rluilrwoman o f P.A.T.T.
"This Is a way to honor our
kids. If we eon make some
ch a n g e s here,** said .Jeff’ s
mother. Daphne Izcr.
Trucker Hubert Hornharger,
■18. o f C le a r v lllr . Pa., .had
shopped all day with Ills wife
Iteforr he cllml&gt;ed Into Ills rig to
haul a Wal-Mart load from
Pennsylvania to Maine.
"Il up (tears that when he camr
to his truck that day, even
though he did nni (eel tired, hr
had a very busy, active day."
said Maine Atlornry General
Michael Carpenter "There are
federal rrguluiloiis that require
him lob e rested."
Although Hombarger. u veter­
an of 20 years on the roads, tiud
not yet driven the maximum IO
hours a How c l. inycsilgalnr* say
I k tiad not ale pi enough unit was
fatigued.
In December, the teen-agers’
parents were shtx-krd a second
time when a grand Jury failed to
Indict Hornharger for m an­
slaughter In their children’s
deaths.
Hornharger pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor charge of lulslfyIng his logbook and will be
sentenced this summer. He faces
a minimum penalty of 9340 and
a maximum of a S 1.000 fine and
six months In Jail.
Federal law requires tractor-

trailer drivers be rested when
Ihry start driving and that they
lake an eight-hour break for
every 10 hours they spend on
the road.
There nre gotal reasons for this
law. said Dr. William Dement of
the Sleep Disorders Center al
Stanford University and chairmun of the National Commission
on Sleep Disorders Research.
"Driving drowsy Is no different
from driving drunk. It is Just
more poorly understood.** he
said. "Once people are Ik-lter
educated ubout strep depriva­
tion. they'll view It with the
sam e' seriousness as drunk
driving."
The problem Is not Isolated lo
any region.
On a Florida hlghwuy. Donna
Ik-rger of Fairfield. Conn., saw
her husband and three young
children burn to death alter a
truck plowed Inin (heir parked
car. In Missouri. Jerry Ferguson
lost his wife and two daughters
when n drowsy trucker drove
Into their car. In each case, the
trucker wascqckiArgctf with a
misdemeanor!__1*
P.A.T.T. Isn’t out to |&gt;cnallxr
Individual truckers doing their
Jobs, Morgan said. Inn docs
protest conditions within some
companies ihut encourage or
force truckers to drive sleepy
utul falsify their log books.
About 93 percent of long-haul
truck drivers arc paid either by
the mile or the load, a system
critics say encourages iruckcrs
lo drive as many miles |&gt;osslblc
In the shortest time possible so
Ihry can pick up another load.

Longwood Commission agenda!!
The lolltm lng I t the agenda lor the Monday
night work u n io n and reguU f mooting o l Iho
Longwood City C om m lnlon
WORK SESSION
I. Coll la Of dor
2 Rovlow propovod doporlm ontol budgoft (or
F Y ’21
A. Portonnol doporlm onl
B Planning and Building Service* Do
partisan).
C City A d m ln ltlra lo r
D City C om m lnlon
3. Ad|ourn
REGULAR SESSION
1. Call lo ardor.
2. Sllonl m odllatlon followed by tho Pfodg* ol
A iiogianr*
3. P r o t o n l a t l a n t / R o c o g n l l l o n i
/Com m * m oral Ion*
A P row ntatlon (o tho c ity co m m lnlon by
R ich C h lc h ttlo r. p r tild o n l. Baba Rulh
Batefcell
B Commanding Alan Montgomery lor
having achieved (ha tla tu to l Eagla Scout
C An o ip ra n lo n o l lym pathy in Iho death
o lP o rcy While
O D istrict 44 nomination (or tho b v tln a n
perton at tha month award lo r July. I t t l
a Boo'd appointment*
A Appointment o l a c llllo n to tha C lllia n t
A d r lu r y Committee (CAC) o l tha Orlando
Urban Area Troniportotlon tludy
B. O u trlc t I t appotntmant to tha P ark* and
Recreation A d rito ry Board.
1 Public participation
4 Content agenda
A Pay approved b ill*.
B Approval o l minute* Of June 4, Itte work
u n io n and Junaa, Itte regular moating
C Award ot bid #7J te. Longwood drainage
protect I He - p h a u I
0 Dec U r# *urplu* autom oblll** for auc
lion

Longwood

Continued
Continuedfrom
fromPale
Page1A
1A

state
representative In thr (all and Is
giving up Ills mayoral duties to
tie vole more time to the cam­
paign.
The comrnlssloii members will
a lso c o n s id e r a resolu tion
expressing firm op|&gt;osllluii to
any pnqioxnl dial would ullow
rlverbo.il gambling or casino
activities In Seminole County or
any abutting county. Sanford
and Lake Mary commissions
have also expressed opposition
to those ly|H- of gambling activi­
ties.
A conditional use request
which would permit another
unloniobllr sales and leasing
facility on Stale Hoad 434 Is on

Radios
Continued from Page 1A
been ullocatrd lo
build a eaiport/siorage type
stiucturr al tlie public safety
com plex. " W e ’ ve determined
Ihut we can wait on this." U llon
said, "but Ihc radio equipment Is
much more Important."
55, 180.06 will Ik- taken Irom
the Police Impact Fee. and
83.000 had already been bud­
g e te d fo r rad io eq u ip m en t
purchases. The total amount will
he sufficient with which to
purchase the rudios.
Included In the purchase will
Ik - 14 Model I portable radios,
two Model II portable radios,
nine shoulder microphones, one
Spectra E-9 radio, and a Spectra
desktop station.

E A w ard ot b id 120 *e, w a le r/ie w e r
m aterial*.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
7. Ordinance #24 1202. emending the budget
lo r In te l year beginning October t, 1222 and
tndlng September 30. 1224. providing lor
(re n tie r* and providing tor amendment ol the
manning document
4 Conditional uta requetl lo locate an "Auto,
marine, recreational vehlda. truck tale*,
mobile home* (new and uted «a&gt;e and rental
la c llllle t and lo ll (tee te d lo n eoei Location
E SR 434. e a tl of Grant Street requeued by
M lke tta tle w a y
2 Hequetl for approval to charge pa rllcl
pant* adm Illlo n to "B am bino II 12 lla ta
tournam ant”
Rich C hlchetler. preilden t
Babe R uthBateball
10 deque i t to reduct occupational licenia fee
charged for doing b u tln e tt a t an "autom obile
broker ”
11 Site plan — Crawford building Lot 21,
Baywood In d u ttrla l Park
12 Site plan — W ilm a Street Commerce
Center oftlce warehouse portion ol lot* * It.
block 2. Glenrote Lea Addition to Longwood
FIRST READINGS
12 And l l r t t public hearing, ordinance no
U 121. amending ordinance no 244. the
comprehentlve plan and future land uta plan
tor the C ity of Longwood Florida, amending
the fu tu re la n d u te Iro m re tid e n tla l
p rolettlon al to medium d e n tlly retidentlal
Location
112 W Pina Avenue (public
hearing 7 1124)
T4 Ordinance no 24 1204. amending orfll
nance na 421. the comprehentlve lomng
ordinance o l the City o l Longwood. changing
the toning from C 1 to R J Location 112 W
Pine Avenue I P H I 1124)
1$ and l l r t t public hearing, ordinance no
24 1/01. amending ordinance no 24*. the
comprehentlve plan end future lend ute plan
lor ihe C ity of Longwood Florida, amending

(lit* agenda. The request comes
from owner Mike llatiaway In
order U&gt; develop .42 acres east of
Ihe DOT m ention pond across
from Utke Evergreen near Grant
Street.
According to in formal inn from
city planner AJmul Jatnl. there
are five iiM-d car lots/leaslng
furtltlles between county road
427 and Grant Street. The city
planning stalf recommended de­
nial of the request stating "It Is a
use I hat dors not prom ote
managed growth, lax base and
economic diversity without dis­
turbing the existing growth
pattern, Furthermore, it is a use
not permitted "by rights" and
can only he allowed by condi­
tional use.
The Land Planning agency by

the future land ute from re ild e n lla l pro
le ttlo n a l lo medium d e n illy re tld e n lle f-*•
Location 140 W Pine Ave (PH 7 14 24)
14 Ordlnence no 24 1204. emending ordinance -.
no 421, the com prehentlve toning ordinance j
of the City Of Longwood. Florida, changing ;
Ihe lonlng Irom C l to R 3. Location mo W ;
Pina Avenue (PH 7 14 24)
17 Ordinance no 24 1207. amending ordi j
nance no. 244, Ihe comprehentlve plan and ■
land* uta plan ol the City o l Longwood. ;
Florida changing the future land ute of I
c e rte ln te r r ito r y Iro m r e ild e n lla l pro j
lettlo n a l lo general com mercial. Location '
447 W W ilma Street (PH 7 14 2/1
II. Ordinance no 24 1)04. amending chapter
3 1 am uiem ent end entertainment, e rllcle II,
nude entertainment of Ihe code ot ordinance*
of the Clfy o l Longwood. Florida In III ;
entirety I PH 7 i t u
12 Ordinance no 24 1702. amending the I
budget lo r fltc a l year beginning October t, j
1221 and ending September 20, I2V4. providing
lor budget tra m te r* (PH 7 5 241
__j
RESOLUTIONS
70 No 24 770. a corporate account re to lu tlo n ;^ ,
21. No 24 771, author lung the uta ot f*c» lm lle ;J
tignature*
22 No 24 772. evp re itln g llrm oppotlflon To'*
any propotal that would allow gambling or
catlno a c llv ltle t on w alarw ayt abutting o»,
w ithin Seminole County, or ellow Ihe opera J
lion catlno* w ithin Seminole County; rmt f
quelling |u rl*dlclion be granted lo local
government* thould Jegltlatlon be enecled
eu thorllln g Ihe a c llv llle io p p te d herein.
*-f
22 Sidewalk project*
]4 Monthly llnenclel report
21 City a d m ln ltlra lo r’* report
24 City a llo rn a y 't report
A 0 **n n e« *tlo notp or1io notH w y 17 22
27 Mayor and c o m m lttlo n a r*'report*.

DltlHctt fS. 41.42. II. 44
74 Ad|ourn

a 3 lo I vote approved the condition use request, llatiaway •
made Ihe request for "au to.;
marine. rrcreJitlonnl vehicle, ,
truck sales, mobile homes (new
and used sale and rental faclll- _
ties and tots." Haltaway told Ihe
agency members May 11. he d id '
not know what type of vehicle
facility the project would be
C ity c o m m is s io n e r s m ay
approve nr deny the request.
A number of changes lo tin: &lt;
city's comprehensive plan and. j
/oiling ordinance will also be
considered on first reading
,i
Prior lo the regular meeting at*
7 p.m.. ihc commissioners will t
con tin u e r e v ie w in g dcp a rl/ t
menial budgets for next year.
The budget work session begins ,
at 6 p.m. al city hall

Bill
Continued from Page 1A
m en that
while the dralt lias nut lK-en In
effect for 21 years, they are still
r e q u ir e d to r e g is t e r w ith
Selective Service System. SSS.
The reminder comes lolluwlng
President Clinton's signing on,
May 23. nl a hill to i millmir lilt
reipilreinetil lor all men in rcglsitTupon reaching age i h .
Federal law requ ires that
within 30 daya ot his isth
b irth d a y,
quired

registra tion

Is

re­

Each man (Ills out a short form
tn provide SSS with Ills name,
date of birth, address, phone
number and Social Security
number.
Lest they forget, most men

receive a notice of the registra­
tion requirement u few months
prior to tlu- 18tli birthday.,t
Through this paperwork, men
may register hy mall.
Men wo don't register arc tn .
vlhiilim nl Frdm.il law. can he
prosecuted, mid uic lnc.ltglide lo r.
Federal student financial al&lt;!,.:
itimM Federal Jobs, and Job
training.
Tile law applies lo male Irti*’’
migrant aliens. !H through 25
years old, as well as male
Cltl/CIIS.

For Information on dralt regis­
tration. phone (708) 088-0888.
,.
For Inhumation on Ihe Sail- '
ford Army and Army Reserve/
r e c r u i t i n g p r o g r a m , ph one'
323 6404.

EATHS
[All ELLEN JONES ANiRSON
N Sarah Ellen Jones AnderMin.
7 3 , Holmes Hoad. Altamonte
iprlngs, died Friday. June 17.
1994 at Florida Hospital. Orundo, Horn In Talludegu. Ala.,
jh c moved to Central Florida In
1905. Slit- was a homemaker.
Shu was a member of First
Presbyterian Church, Maitland.
Survivors Include duughtcr,
Angela Dotson. Kingsport. Tn..
ste p -b ro th e r. Hull O lg cs b y ,
L I bu rn . O n.; th ree g r a n d ­
children.
Bald w ilt-F airch ild Fun d'll!
Home, Altamonte Springs, In
churge of arrangements.

|WILLIAM HENRY BLAND
W illiam Henry Bland. 71.
W illo w A v c ., Sanford, died
Sunday. June 19. 1994 at Merid­
ian Hcalihearc Center. Horn Jan.
27. 1923 In Logan. W.Vu.. he
t moved to Central Florida In
1978. He was a retired produc­
tion engineer for General Motors
' Corp. He was a member of
Central Uuptlst Church. Sanford.
He belonged lo the Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 10108. San­
ford, Musonlc Lodge Free A
Accepted Masons 02, Disabled
Am erican Veterans. Military
Order of the Purple Heart, Nollonal Order of Ihc Huttlefleld
C o m m i s s i o n s a n d A n/.lo
Beachhead veterans of World
War H. He wus an Army veteran
o f World W arll.
• Survivors include wife. Helen
Jane: sisters, Mary Fury. Menduwhrldgc. W.Va., Louise. Elyria,
Ohio. Margaret Nicholes, Alkton,
Md.
G ru m kow Fu n eral H om e,
Sanford, In churge of arrange­
ments.

ROSALIND M. BRUNO
H o h u H i h ! M. Bruno. 80, Hollz
Drive. Casselberry, died Satur­
day. June 18, 1994 al her

residence. Born June 13, 1914
In Hcdbnnk. N.J., she moved lo
Central Florida In 1985. She was
a h o m e m a k e r She w as a
m e m b e r o f St. A u g u s tin e
Catholic Church.
Survivors Include daughters.
Beatrice Blltcra. Liberia, bolh of
Casselberry; five grandsons; five
great-grandchildren.
B u idw In-F airchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge o f arrangements.

WI LL I AM COMPTON
HALBACK, JR.
W illiam Complou llalbnck.
Jr., 73, Forest H ills Drive,
Wittier Springs, died Saturday.
June 18, 1994 at Ills residence.
Born June I I , 1920 In Dallas.
Texas, he moved lo Central
Florida lit 1958. He was a
plumber and chemical engineer,
and owner or Wall Plumbing and
Heating. He was n member of
Klwanas. Elks, founder and past
president of Clvttan Club in
Snnford. He was a member of
Seminole County Planning and
Zoning Commission.
Survivors Include wife, Joanne
If.; daughter, Susan Elizabeth
Cooke, Tampa: sons. William
Bruce. OulncsvHIc, Robert Lee,
Winter Pork. Frederick Edward.
Orlando; daughters Lisa D.
Rutledge. Burlington. Texas,
Leila Lee, Gainesville; 11 grandc h i l d r e n ; t wo g r e a t grandchildren.
B ald w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Home, Orlando, In charge of
arrangements.

ELIZABETH M. JOHNSON
Elizabeth M. Johnson. 74. E.
Church A ve„ Longwood, died
Saturday, June 18. 1994 at
Florida Hospital, Orlando. Born
Nov. 2, 1919 In Jacksonville, she
moved to Central Florldu In
1992. She was n retired assistant
vice president for Voyager Life
I n s u r a it l- c C o . S h e w a s
Episcopalian.

Survivors Include son. Robert
C., Jacksonville; daughters.
M ary S te e le , J a c k s o n v ille .
Sharon Peacock. Mulllund; sis­
ter. Lee Miller, Bradenton; seven
grandchildren.
C u r r y H an d C o x - P a r k c r
Funeral Hume. Whiter Park, In
charge o f arrangements.

BHUPENDRA PATEL
Bbupcndra Paid. 44. Wymorr
Hoad, Allumontc Springs, died
Frlduy. June 17. 1994 ul Florldu
Hospital, Altamonte Springs.
Born June 4. 1950 In India, he
moved lo Central Florldu In
1990. He was owner and operator of a sandwich shop. He wus a
member of the Hindu Temple.
Survivors Include wife. Lata;
sons. Sunny, Aimlk, bath of
Altamonte Springs: brothers,
Mahendru, Navln, Doth of New
York: sisters. Piishpu. Kunta.
bolh o f New Jersey; parents. Mr.
and M rs. R h ojlb h n l P a tel.
Tampa.
Bald w in-Fulrehlld Funeral
H om e. Seinoran/Forcst C ity
Chupcl. In charge of arrange­
ments.

DELORES J. WICKS
Delores J. Wicks. 91, Ouk
Lane, W in ter Springs, died
Monday, June 13, 1994 at her
residence. Born Oct. 19. 1932 lit
Fairmont. W.Vu., she moved to
Central Florida In 1907. She was
a waitress. She was Protestant.
Survivors Include husband,
Richard A.. Winter Springs;
dau gh ter, Joanne Hancock.
Waldorf, Md,; sons, Gnry D.
Bowlin, Casselberry. Larry D.
B o w lin , Totns R iv er, N .J .;
brothers James Johnson. S.
Joseph Johnson, bolh of Pit­
tsbu rgh . Pa,; seven g ra n d ­
children.
Uuldwin-Falrchtld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, In
charge of arrangements.

THERESA MARIE WILLIAMS
Theresa Murk.- Williams. 02.
W olf Trail, Casselberry, died
Saturday, June 18. 1994 at her
residence. Born Jan. 30. 1932 In
Camden, N.J.. she mnved to
Central Florida In 1974. She was
a retired packugcr lor the gov­
ernment. She was Catholic. She
wus a member o f VFW Aux­
iliary, Fleet Reserve and Ameri­
can Legion.
S u r v iv o r s In clu d e sis te r.
Madeline Strlunese, Fori Myers;
brothers. Michael Hurcscluno.
W llllam stow n, N.J.. Aiithon
Hurcscluno, Codings Lakes. N.J.:
sisters, Concettu DIMuttlcs.
Wllllamstown, N.J.. Phllomena
Dalton, CussdbciTy.
B ald w in -F airch ild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

FUNERALS
BLAND, WILLIAMHENRY
Calling hour* lor M r. W illiam Henry Bland,
age 71, ol Sanlord. who died Sunday w ill be
from 2 4 and 4 4 p m . Tueiday. al the
Gramkow Funeral Home Chapel Funeral
te rv lc e t and Interment w ill take placa at a
later date In Ralnella, W Va
Gramkow Funeral Home. In charge ol
arrangement*

V

F o r m illio n s

HALBACK, WILLIAMCOMPTON JR.
A memorial tervlce tor W illiam Compton
Halback, Jr., who pataed away on Saturday
w ill bo held on W»dne*day, June I), m e a l 1
p m . a l the Ivanhoe Chapel, w ith Reverend
John C h rltlle n to n officiating. In lieu ot
llo w e rt, memorial contribution* may ba
mad* to tha American Lung A ttoclallon. 2/3/
S Fern Creek. Orlando. FL 22*04
Baldwin Fairchild Funaral Home*. Lake
Ivanhoe Chapel. Orlendo. In charge ol
arrangement*
KINO, REV. L * 0 FLOYD
Funeral ta rvlce t lor Rev King w ill be
Wednetday, June 22. m e el I t a m . In the
F lr il United M ethodlil Church ol Sanlord
O ttld a lln g w ill be P atlor Clifford Melvin
Friend* mey cell i t the church on Tuetday.
June 21st Irom 2 until 4 p.m., and 4 until I
p m. Interment w ill be prlvele following the
te rvlce on Wednetday For Ihote w lthlng.
contribution* may be made lo the Florida
M a lh o d lit Children'* Home through their
locel church In Leo'* name
A rrengem enl* by G alnet Carey Hand
Garden Chapel FunerelHoma. Longwood

o f k id s ,
d oors o p en ed
tun s x. t.iitLb a t m

w h e n th is
o n e d id .

HOYS Ifc O ltlLS CLOUS
0* c w h s iio-uc* wc

SUPPORT TUB CLlJli THAT
HEATS THE STREETS

�»•«

•

*•-

.

• A - Sanford Hsrald. Sanford, Florida - Monday, Juna 30, 1004

It seemed harmless enough
. . . but it ended with murder
■ y J IW D O N N
Associated Press W riter

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Pocketing easy cash
from on Insurance company and Its faceless
policyholders may have seemed like a victimless
crime.
But Robert Wojclk Jr. and hla uncle. Stephen
Wojclk. were convicted of murder and sentenced
to life In prison last week for their Insurance scam.
The driver of the car rammed by their rented
truck was killed.
Insurance Investigators say they are surprised
more people uren’ t killed In accidents staged by
sophisticated fraud mills that often Include
corrupt doctors, lawyers and auto repair shops.
Such Insurance scams have become more
common In recent years as economic hardships

and Illegal Immigration provide a ready supply of
desperate accomplices.
"T h e fraud schemers have really targeted the
poor and uneducated." said Steve Clndrlch. n
senior manager with the National Insurance
Crime Bureau, an Industry trade group.
There are no national figures on the number of
staged accidents, according to the trade group.
Investigators estimate about 10 percent o f all
accident claims are fraudulent.
From 1991 to 1993, the number of accident
complaints In California alone rose 64 percent, lo
12,786. And people Involved In those accidents
made $127 million worth of Insurance clnlms.
according to state regulators.
"There’s generally so much money to be made
that It Just kind of feeds on Itself," said Larry
Stanford, Who Investigates staged accidents for
the California Department o f Insurance.

Kina’s ransom
for King’s stuff

Homosexual marriages
are really nothing new
■y ■m aim ■■■■■■■■a

attention, due In part to car­
toonist Oarry Trudeau, whose
" D o o n e s b u r y " ch a ra cters
discussed Boswell's findings
earlier this month.

Assoclsled Press W rlttr_______

NEW HAVEN. Conn. - In
the Middle Ages, men who
loved each other were com*
monly united by priests In
Christian cerem onies much
like weddings between men
and women, a historian says In
a new book.
In 12 years of research that
look him to the Vatican library
and elsewhere In Europe. John
Boswell o f Yale University says
he found liturgies that Joined
male couples with Invocations
to God, the clasping of right
hands and kisses to signify the
bond.
"In almost every age and
place the ceremony fulfilled
what most people today regard
us the essence o f marriage: a
perm a n en t rom a n tic c o m ­
mitment between two people,
witnessed and recognized by
the c o m m u n it y ." B osw ell
wrote In "Same-Sex Unions In
Premodern Europe."
Other scholars dlspule the
findings, saying the ceremo­
nies blessed friendships, not
gay love, and should not be
confused with Christian mar­
riage.
Boswell acknowledges It Is
Impossible to know whether
the same-sex relationships In­
cluded sexual activity, but
c o n c lu d e s th e t ie s w e r e
stron g er and d eep er than
friendship.
His book carries a June 30
publishing date but has been
rushed Into bookstores. It has
ulready received considerable

"What he's trying to do Is
change the Catholic Church. I
think that was his whole
p u r p o s e , " s a id V e rn L.
Bullough. a professor emeritus
o f history at the State Universi­
ty of New York at Buffalo.
Bullough. who has written
several texts exploring human
s e x u a l i t y , c a lls B o s w e ll
brilliant but said Boswell's
personal background — ns a
gay man and a convert lo
C a t h o l i c i s m , from
Eplscopallanlsm — may have
colored the research.
Ralph Hextcr. a professor of
comparative literature at the
University of Colorado and a
longtime friend o f Boswell's,
said Boswell would not allow
his own beliefs to cloud his
research.

■ » Asa— latad Frsss
LAS VEOAS — If It belonged
to Elvis Presley. It has to be
expensive. Even his chipped
guitar pick cost $800 at an
auction at the Las Vegas Hilton.
Other Items sold Saturday lo
fans and collectors Included:
• E lv is ' p e rso n u l g u ita r,
$30,000:
• I lls e x p i r e d A m e r ic a n
Express card. $36,000:
• h is b i r t h c e r t i f i c a t e .
$60,000.
O ther Item s Included the
K in g 's sequlned Jumpsuits,
Jewels and a Mercedes limousine
with six doors.
About 2.000 people attended
the auction at the hotel where
Elvis appeared In 700 sold-out
concerts before his death In
1977.
The uuctlon featured the col­
lection of Jimmy Velvet, former
recording artist and friend of
Elvis.

Chaplain killed
riding with cop
■ y A s s o c ia te d P roas

"Know ing him the way I do
and his Integrity and his deep
lo y a lty to the In tellectu al
pursuits, he would not write
this unless he thought that was
where the truth lay," Hextcr
sold. "N o one can deny, look­
ing at this material, that It
celebrates the love o f two men
for each other."
What Boswell m ay have
unearthed. Bullough said, were
so-called sealing ceremonies
swearing loyal brotherhood be­
tween men.

Legal Notice

1*8*1 Nolle*

CAKSON, Calif, — A mail
being driven home from a bur
fight grabbed a deputy's gun
and wounded the officer, then
killed a chaplain who was along
for the ride, police said.
Deputy Terrence Wenger was
In critical condition today after
surgery on his right eye.
lim e# Bryan. 40, was killed
early Suiurday. Police said he
rode with officers two or three
times a week lo help defuse
domestic disputes, console crime
victims and counsel deputies
and suspects.

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

CITY OF
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
L A K I MARY. FLORIOA
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
NOTICI OF
FLORIDA
PUBLIC HEARINO
FROBATI DIVISION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY OIVEN
F it* Number M i l l CP
by th* City Commits ton of tho
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN * * * * * VAM-,‘
IN RE: ESTATE OF
City ot Lok* Mery, Florida, that
c
PL' A« TAKE NOTICE that th* Board ol County
OANIELLI CORREA
told Cammltalon w ill hold a
Deceased
Public flooring on July 7, Iff*,
a ? M i v f t ' . * 0 - - 1* 4?*"-))* 5 0M"!» C om m ltuonerf Meeting Room
NOTICE OF
ot
7:00 P M or os toon thorool
*1 th* Seminole County Service* Building in Sanford, Florida, w ill
ADMINISTRATION
tor o t possible, lo consider
c U f v ^ i i * '’I ? ' 1
, "8 ^ consider and dater mine whether or not th*
Th* adm inistration of lh *
Second Reading and adoption ot
o f 0?*? *
vac*fa, abandon, discontinue, cloeo, renounce and
oaloto of OANIELLI CORREA,
an Ordinance entitled
docooaod. F lit N um ber
folfo^ «
01
l"d " * pgfe0&lt;
to m*
ORDINANCE NO. 701
ta-SlI CP, la pandlng in th*
AN OROINANCE OF THE
Circuit Court tor SEMINOLE
CITY
OF LAKE MARY, FLOR
EXHIBIT " A "
County, Florid*, Prebal* Olvl
•DA, AMBNDINO SECTION
aton. Its* address of which I* M l
DESCRIPTION
“ ETCHOFOBSCR.PTIOft
007 OF THE CHARTER OF
N. Pork Av*.. Sanford, PL M77I.
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY,
Th* namot and addresses of lh*
#v*f w *• howell
F LO R IO A , P R O V ID IN O A
poraonal representative end th*
Record!
r P^ ! #? £ 4*: P* * " • *«d * of fh* Public
O
ATB POR C O M M E N C E ­
peraonol
representative’s
*1d £ r t £ d £ w E S T * C0U0' r ' ' * * * •
m° r * PAHICularly
M E N T OF T E R M S POR
forney ore sef forth folew.
M EM BERS OP THE COM
•^Begirt at the Southeast comer of said Let li thence South at-U TT
A L L INTERESTED PER­
MISSION; PROVIDINO FOR
West along th* southerly boundary of Lot S tor IM *0 feel to Itw West
SONS ARB NOTIFIED THATi
S U B M IS S IO N O F T H IS
boundary of Lot S; thane* North OPtroi" West along told west
A ll portent on whom this
CHARTER AMENDMENT TO
^
^
tor lM OO toot to th. northerly b a S S IrjT F a ^ O llS E
nolle* It served who have ob
THE ELECTORS OF THE
F°?**!'V4,.l0n Easement; thence along said northerly boundary lh*
|eel Ions that chailango in* valid
CITY OF LAKE MAR Y AT THE
following 1 court**: Run South AJtoTS*" Eat! for *471toetitfinc!
ify of lh * will, lh* quollflcatlons
NEXT O EN IR A L ELECTION
North *7*ll-|4" Eat I for 14.47 feet to the eaTtorl,
of lh * poraonal rtpresenlallve,
TO BE HELD ON NOVEMBER
aforesaid Lot 41 thence South MMTtoT" East atong sakMMttorfy
vonua, or lurladlctlon of fhla
S.
It»4, FOR AP PR O V ALi
boundanr tor 14.41 feet loth* Point of Beglnnlr«
1
Court or* required to file their
Containing 0.14 acre*, more or lest.
PROVIDINO POR THE FORM
o b le c llo n t w ith th is Court
OF B A LLO T ; PRO VIDINO
W IT H IN THE L A T E R OF
FOR EFFECTIVE OATB OF
THREE MOHTHS AFTER THE
THE AMENDMENT TO SEC­
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
TION 1 09 OF THE CHARTER
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
OF THE C IT Y OF L A K E
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
MARY, FLORIOAi PROVID­
? AJ S 0 8 SERVICE OF A
INO FOR CONFLICTSi SEVCOPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
B R A B IL IT Y i AND E F ­
THEM.
FECTIVE DATE OF THIS ORA ll creditors ol lh * decedent
OINANCE.
*nd other person* having claims
The Public Hearing w ill b t
or demands against decadent's
hold In th* Commltilon Cham
sstato on whom a copy of this
bora, 100 N. Country Club Rood.
notice It served within Ihro*
Lake Mary. Th# Public It In
months oftor th* daf* of th* first
LOT
vltod to attend and b* heard.
publication of this nolle* must
Said hearing may be continued
III* tholr claims with this Court
from llmo to 11m* until * (Inal
W IT H IN THE LA T E R OF
decision It mads by ths City
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
Commission. Coplot ot th* Ordi­
OATS OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
n a r y In full or* available In tho
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
City Clork't Office tor rovlow.
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
° a TB OF SERVICE OF A
MEETINO IS MADE BY THE
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
C
IT
Y POR ITS CO N VE N ­
THEM.
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
A ll olhor creditors ol lh *
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE­
docodont end persons having
QUATE RECORD FOR PUR­
claims or demands against th*
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
dKadant's atlato must III* their
DECISION MADE BY THE
claims with this court WITHIN
CITY
WITH RESPECT TO THE
THREE MONTHS APTBR THE
POREOOINO MATTER. ANY
DATE OP THE PIRST PUBLI­
PERSON WISHINO TO EN­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE.
SURE THAT AN AOEQUATE
A L L CLAIMS. OEMANOS
RECORD OF THE PROCEEDAND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
INOS IS MAINTAINED POR
PILED WILL BE FOREVER
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
BARRED.
AD V IS E D TO M AKE THE
Th* date of th* first publica­
NECESSARY A R R A N G E ­
tion ol this Nolle* It Juno 70.
MENTS
AT THIS OR HER
ltS4.
OWN
EXPENSE.
Personal Representative:
P E R S O N S W IT H D IS Mildred Correa
BILITIES NEEDING
NOTE: BEARINGS ARE BASED ON THE SOUTH LINE OF LOT
111) Roaacllll Circle
ASSISTANCE TO PA R TIC I­
4 AS BBINO S t t * l i '7t"W ACCORDING TO THE PLATE FOR
Sanford. FL M777
PATE IN ANY OP THESE
"HOWELL CREEK PARK PHASE I".
Attorney tor Peraonol
P R O C B B D IN O S SHO ULO
Per ton* with disabilities needing assistance to part ldp«to In any of
Raprosonlatlvoi
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO­
thote proceedings should contact th* Employe* Relation* Depart
Gary 0. Vaaquoi
ORDINATOR AT LEAST 41
men I ADA Coordinator 4* hour* In advance of the mooting ol
M i Ann I* Slreol
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
M M IM .*atonalonr*4l.
Orlando. FLMSO*
MEBTINOAT (407) 334-3034.
Parson* ara advitad that II thoy docldt to apptal any daclston*
Telephone: (*07)4MMM
CITY OP LAKE MARY,
mad* *1 these meeting shearing*, they w ill noad a record of tho
Florid* Bar No. : 0tS)M)
FLORIDA
proceedings end tor such purpose, they may naad to Insure Rial a
EsbUahi Jun*M,l7,lW4
Carol A. Footer, city Clerk
verbatim record of lh* proceedings I t mod*, which Includes th*
ois-in
OATEOi June 17, ISM
testimony and evidence upon which lh* oppool It bated, por section
Publlth: June 10, ISS4 O ES-llt
7*4.0104. Florid* Stoluto*.
PERSON! INTERESTED MAY APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE SPECIPIEO.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Publlth: Juno 70th. IW4
DES IM
THE GREAT AMERICAN INVESTMENT
NOTICE OF PROCBBDINOS FOR THE VACATINO.
o » i ? i ? S i * ^ £ a C0MT,HU,N0' A N 0 CLOII NO
OF RIOHTS-OF-WAY OR DRAINAOE EASEMENT
FOR i

U.S. SAVINGS BONDS

■MBMMDHI

&amp;

1hr'., .

Legal Notice

CITY OS
L A K I MANY, PL0RI0A
NOTICI OF
PUBLIC HtANINO
NOTICI IS HEREBY OIVCN
by I t * City Commission of th#
City of Lake Mary, Florid*. Ihol
M id Commltilon w ill hold a
Public Mowing on July 7, I f t 4.
* 1 1.00 P M , or * • toon Ihoroollo r o t p o tilb lo . lo conildor
Mcond reading tnd adoption ol
an Ordinance entitled.
•
Ordinance Ma. m
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLOR
ID A , A M E N O IN O O R D I­
N A N C E N O . IS O , A t
AMENDED BY OROINANCE
NO l i f t AM ENOINO THE
FINAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
OF TIM AC UAN PLANNED
UNIT OEVELOPMENTi IS
TABLISHINO FRONT. REAR
AND SIOE SETBACKS FOR
OETACHEO SINOLE FAMILY
LO TS ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
CONDITIONS OF APPROVAL!
PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS.
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.

EUGENE B. RICOS. JR.i and
U N K N O W N T B NANTS/OWNERS.
Defendant!
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice I* hereby given, pursu­
ant to an Order Rescheduling
Foreclosure Sal* entered In this
c*u m . In th* Circuit Court of
Samlnoto County. Florida. I will
ta ll th* property situated In
Seminole County. Florida d*
scribed as
U N I T N O . l i t A . OF
S P R IN O W O O D V IL L A O E
C O N D O M IN IU M . AND AN
UNDIVIDED I/7S4 INTEREST
IN THE LAND. COMMON EL
B M B N T S A N D COM MO N
EXPENSES APPURTENANT
TO SAID UNIT. ALL IN AC
CORDANCE WITH AND SUB
JBCT TO THE COVENANTS.
C O N D IT IO N S . R E S T R IC ­
TIONS. TERMS AND OTHER
PROVISIONS OF THAT DEC­
LARATION OF CONDOMINI­
UM OF SPRINOWOOO VIL­
LAOE, A CONDOMINIUM. AS
RECORDED IN O F F IC IA L
RECORDS BOOK 11)1 PAOE
I0*t. PUBLIC RECOROS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLOR
IDA
and commonly known a t: 1*0
tp rln g w o o d C irc le . #1*1 A.
Langwood. FL I f f to at public
tale, l* th* highest and best
bidder, tor cash. *1 the west
fro n t deer e l the Seminole
County Courthouse. In Sanford.
F lo rid a *! II 00 * m . on July If.
t*»4
Dated this tth day of June.
ff*4
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of th* Circuit Court
By Jane E. Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish June IS, }0. I**4
DES l i t

Cagle* ol the Ordinance In full
are available In the City Clork't
Office.
A TAPED RECORD OF THIS
MEETINO IS MAOB BY THE
C IT Y FOR ITS CONVEN
ISNCB. THIS RECORD AAAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN AOE
OUATE RECORD FOR PUR
POSES OF APPEAL FROM A
DECISION MADE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOINO MATTER. ANY
PERSON WISHINO TO BN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INOS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES I t
A D V IS E D TO M AKE THE
NECESSARY A R R A N O E MENTS AT THIS OR HER
OWN EXPENSE.
CITY OF LAKE MARY,
FLORIDA
Caret A Fetter, City Clerk

Legal Notice

1 CHARLES CLAYTON IPZ*4-tl) A rogues! to Retene frtm C-l
Commercial and PCD Planned Commercial Development to PUD.
Planned Unit Development - That portion ol the East to of th*
North »* of tho Northeast 1* *1 Section 71. Township 71 South. Rang*
II East. Semlnei* County. Florid*, lying easterly of State Read No
aM^Loe* the South IM feet. Further dotcrlkod at 7 4* acre*, located
an the east tide ol SR 4M. norm at Dean Read
Dtttrkt f I
*
DEVELOPMENT INC. IP ItO d ll A regue.f to a e n n*
Induefrlol, to PCO Planned CemmercUl Oevetop
menf. See Attached tenant - A " Section 70. Twp to. Rn* so
• * NB quadrant * f I 4 end 4R 4*. Best end West
of Hick man Drive end North o tIR es
District#)
it
ATTACHMENT A
(provided by Gordon Survey)

» i ’5 0 A ‘' Dk ICPIPTION: LOTS 4. 4. 7 k I). 14 INDUSTRIAL
PARK - 7rd SECTION. AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 77
COUNTY* FL^ORm^ ™ E PUBUC
OF SEMINOLE
LEOAL DESCRITPION OF PARCEL A THAT PART OF
SECTION 7* to 70 AND SECTION 70 I* X BEING MORE PARTIC
AS FO&gt;-LOWS COMMENCING AT THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST U OF SECTION 7t.
TOWNSHIP I* SOUTH. RANGE 70 EAST. SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA. RUN S 00 I I I* " E.. *40 44 FEET ALONG THE EAST
LINE OF SAID NORTHEAST U; THENCE S I t TOtoT' W 7 14*0 41
C S S I n P I ” ! EASTE"&gt;-V RIOHTOF WAY OF INTERSTATE 4;
N n i r 4 r ‘ 6 ' ALONG SAID RIOHT OF WAY 707 04
FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNINO. THENCE N t t TB'Ol" E
™ E* “
"O N SOUTHWESTERLY ALONO THE
« . CURVE CONCAVE TO THE SOUTHWEST HAVING A
? ^ n i n l 2.P.J J. ? ’/ . EET' A CM0R0 « A « IN O OF S 17 17 04 ' W , A
CHORD DISTANCE OF 1710 FEET. RUN ALONO THE ARC OF
SAID CURVE 1107 FEET TO THE POINT OF CUSP; THENCE N.
SJ OJ IS B . )44 77 FEET TO A POINT OF CUSP) THENCE RUN
£ EVrERI’ V A L0N 0 ™ E A«C OF CURVE CONCAVE TO
I 2 ? n ^ S MI . MAVIN0 A RA0IU* o f &gt; * « f e e t . A CHORD
5 S i5 ‘
11 M'44" W ' A CM0RD DISTANCE OF U.J4
RUN THROUOH A CENTRAL ANOLE OF SOOOOO". A ARC
0P ” ” PEET TO ™ e F O '" 1 OF TANOENTj
i 4’44" W" “ 00 FEET TO THE POINT OF A CURVE
R,0MT MAVINO A RADIUS 100 00 FeET, RUN
THROUGH A CENTRAL ANOLE OF M OO'OO" A ARC LENOTH OF
' • ' » FEET T O T H * POINT OF TANOEN t ! THENCE H w ' i r
E^. 100 00 FEET TO THE POINT OF CURVE CONCAVE TO THE
rS u ^D a '^Vi ,!!,n.A« R A 0 ,U , 0P * * ■ " FEET. RUN THROUGH A
CENTRAL ANGLE 7I*I4'00", AN ARC LENOTH OF H 14 FEET:
THENCE N 00*10'44" W.. I7S4 SI FEET; THENCE N. )4*00 0 0 'W ,
« j ' PEET T0 ™ E WEST r 'OMT OF-WAV OF INTERSTATE 4,
THENCE S. 71*J 7 '4 t" W „ 1714 SS FEET ALONG SAID
R .°nHv-T. ? Pv . ^ V T 0 ™ B FOINTOF BEGINNING.
. LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PARCEL B: COMMENCING AT THE
T C° RNBR OF THE NORTHEAST to OF SECTION^7t.
TOWNSHIP to SOUTH. RANGE JU EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY
f l o r io ^ r u n s . oo i r i s - e a l o n o THe e a s t l in e o f s a id
NORTHEAST U 4*0.44 F E E T ; THENCE S IS M 'O l" W it s x

rSSTa

ow
T 0 ' THENCE
,r 2 S 2 I-- NANOf
THENCE
c o n t in u e T ss
*s®
_ J- rw- &lt;0 ^“ 0^700FlH
FEET)
N.00 1**44"
W.. 77.4*
FEET TO A
ftfio

fA

tUa rP M T B A f'^ B
s . I ? J n ? RI0HT' « AVI NO A RADIUS
n . f J ' . i 5 I K I RAL AN0LB OF a 10*00", RUN ALONG THE
ARC A DISTANCE OF 140.*) FEET TO THE POINT OF TANGENT,
TH«NC« N -M M -M " B., 4)147 FEET) THENCE S oo i r x r B,!
40).MFEETTOTHE POINT OF BEGINNING.
.. LEOa L DESCRIPTION OP PARCEL C: COMMENCING AT THB
NORTHEAST CORNER OF THB NORTHEAST to OF SECTION 7t
1 ° ^ F
toSOUTH. RANGE » EAST, SEMINOLE COUNT?!
SnD?L°nA; . RTU^ * ’ 00• ,• ' ,4' , ■ - a LONO THB EAST LINE OP SAID
U 440 44 FEBT i THENCE S. OrtM'O)" W „ I07S 40
FEET TO THB WESTERLY RIGHT OP-WAY OP HICKMAN

o r x a v 'Z *
5S2LNnNJ NO' THBNCB CONTINUES
* ^ . ? , r , 5 f . T 'I MENCB N’ 00 u ' 14" w - F E E T ;
TMBNCE S. « « •]• 03 1 W „ 345.f l F EET TO THE EAST
a . v»*I|OF-WAY OF INTERSTATE 4, THENCE N. ))*S)'4S" E
ALONO SAID RIOHT OF WAY )S}.44 FEETi THENCE N lt*7»'0)’;
B., 171.17 FEET TO A POINT ON A CURVE SAID CURVE
a n ? Y u a ! S K T! i ! &amp; T! R'! ’v HAVIN0 A RAOIUS OF ? s «
FEET, THENCE FROM A TANOENT BEARINO OF S II*1PIA"
iiriD , l iA,JS0 Bnn5,E* TERLY AL °N 0 THE ARC OF SAID CURVE
FOR 1170 FEET AND THROUOH A CENTRAL ANOLE OF
4l»4roO" TO A POINT OF REVERSE CURVATURE WITH A
n A n m « Cn n CAVE T 0 ™ E N0RTHWEST AND HAVINO A
2 5 ? m u n ° n » I 40 00 P B e T ' THENCE FROM A TANOENT
BEARING OF S. S )*0 )'lt" W., RUN SOUTHERLY ALONG THE
ARC OF SAID CURVE FOR 777 40 FEET AND THROUOH A
T u e u r n L ^ N£ i E 0P W**0,00" T0 THE END OF SAIO CURVE)
THENCE S. 00*17*44" E „ 77 40 FEET TO THE POINT OF
RECOR oT 0 &lt;SA,° PR 0P BR TV O B J E C T TO EASEMENTS OF
m * t7« U? lI« LtarNM2 ,i S ° &lt;P-I -t t 1.,&gt;. * FbRussf to am tnd th * final
m a ito r plan tor lh * Oraanwood L a k ti Planned Unit Development.

t o S S S T ^ T ? h im *
' • • IAS0 • * » Panned Unit Development
»hk aogfh tide ol Leke Mary Boulevard, east ol Lak#
emma Rood. Th* roq u ttl la to amand th* final m atter plan by
allowing a personal mini sloraga facility a t a permitted us* In Tract

INTHECIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL CASE MO.i
S4444-CA 14-L
CRIMINAL CASE NO.i
LM -m C FA
SCSO INCIDENT NO.i
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF
INS NISSAN PICKUP
VIN IINONDOISfFCUMIl
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHBRIFF'SOFFICB
PLAINTIFF
VS.
MARKR.CARSTENSEN
OEFENOANT/CLAIMANT
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: Mark R. Carstensen
TSOI Conller Drive
Winter Para. Florida
MTfJJOJ*
and
A ll parties or claiming to have
any right, title, or Interest In th*
property herein described
YOU ARC NOTIFIED that an
Action for Forfeltur* on th*
following property m Seminole
County, Florid*: I N i Nissan
P l c k u * T r u c k , VIN
flNSNDOlStFCUMIt ha* been
(Hod against you m tho Circuit
Court In and for Seminole
County. Florida. Yau are re
qulrod to servo a copy of your
written detent**. If any, to it
upon M ARY ANN K L E IN .
P la in t if f '* a tto rn e y, whose
a d d re t* I t 1)41 Ttth Street.
Sanford. Florida M77) 070* on or
before th* *m day * f July. IPP4.
and III* the original with the
Clerk of mis Court either before
service on Plaintiff'* attorney or
Immediately thereafter, other
w it* a default w ill be entered
against you for th* relief d*
mended In th* Complaint tor
FInal Order of Forfeltur*
Dated on May 17,10*4
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
a t Clerk o lth * Court
by * / t Cecelia V Ekern
as Deputy Clerk
Publlth May M A June 4, 1), 70.
1*04
OER 741

Legal Notice

O E S IIF

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO
Th* Seminole County Board ot County Commissioners w ill hold a
p«All&lt; hearing In Room 107* of the County Servket Building
Sanford. Florida, on July IT. lees at 7 00 P M . or a t toon thereafter
as possible, to consider th* following
A PUBLIC HEARINO FOR CHANOE OF IONINO REOULATIONS
I RANDY EFFRON IP Z * * * f| A rogues! to Reren* Irem C l.
Commercial to PCD, Planned Commercial Development ~ Section
74. Twp 71, Rng 70 Lot ». Red Willow Plata, according to Ihe plat
thereof recorded In Plat Book 71, Paget t t end 100. Public Records ot
Seminole County, Florida Further Described at a 14 acre lot.
locaied on th* east tide ot Tutcawille Road, north ot Red Bug Las*
Road
District II

Lfqal Notice

INTHE COUNTY COURT
OF THE BIOHTBBNTff
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
case no. n-iifs-cc-n-o
A L A F A Y A WOODS HO M E­
OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC .
Plaintiff,
vt.
ARLENE MARIE SMITH AND
HARRY W. SMITH, SR .
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 41
Notice Is given that pursuant
to Order of Final Judgment In
Foreclosure dated Juno 14. If*4.
In Case No n-tl7SCC » Q . of
th* County Court In and
Seminole County, Florida. In
w h ic h A L A F A Y A WOODS
HO M EO W NERS ASSOCIA
TION. INC.. Is th* Plaint Ilf and
ARLENE MARIE SMITH AND
HARRY W SMITH. SR. are th*
Defendants. I w ill sell to th*
highest and best bidder tor cash
at th* West front door of th*
Seminal* County Courthouse In
Sanlord. Florida, at 11:40 a m .,
on July 14. 1*04, th* following
described property set forth In
the Order *4 Final Judgment:
Let l i . ALAFAYA WOOOS.
PHASE I. according fo th* Plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
» . Pago* *« through ft . of th*
Public Record* of Seminal*
County, Florid*.
DATED: Juno If, 10*4
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk of County Court
By: Jan* E . Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
AM ER IC A N S W ITH OIS
ABILITIES ACT OF l**0 |AD
MINISTRATIVE ORDER NO
t i V I Persons with a disability
who need a special accam
modetion fo participate In mi*
proceeding should contact ADA
Coordinator at lo t N Park
Avenue. Suit* N M l. Sanford.
Florid* MW I at least five day*
prior fo th* proceeding Tel*
hone (4071 )77 4))0 Eat 4M7:
IO O S 1 IS 7 7 I (T O O ), o r
1(0071)1770 IV). via Florida
Relay Service
Publish: June » . &gt;7, l»*4
DES IN

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE BIOMTBBNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA,
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
CAIBNO.i f l ’M flC A
DIVISION) M B
MORTOAOB FORECLOSURE
F E D E R A L H O M E LO A N
MORTGAOE CORPORATION.
Plaintiff.

Tho Public Hearing will bo
hold In th* Cammltalon Cham
Sort. lOt North Country Club
Read. Lake Mary The Public It
Invited to attend and bo heard
Said hearing may bo continued
from lime to lime until a final
dKltien It mad* by the City
CommlMlen.

OATEO: June IT. 1*04
P ubllth June JO. Iff4

Legal Notice

CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
a ^ r . n . .. . " O T , c , OF PUBLIC HEARINO
* * ! ' « « HEREBY OIVEN by th* City Commission of the City
ol Lake Mary. Florida, that said Commission w ill hold a Public
Hearing on July 7. 1*04 *1 7 00 P M . or as loon thereafter as
e n t'llid ' 10 t 0 r *ld* , S* &lt;ood
a«d adoption ot an Ordinance
AN ° » ° ' NA"CE OF THE CITY OF LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
™ E VACATIN0 OF A PORTION OF THE PLAT
? I « T* T £ S n t N w
PMAi * ■' LOCATEO IN THE CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIOA. AND MORE PARTICULARLY DE
uy% V oV ffect% e dT ,tbD'N0 F0" CONFUCT1 SEv£RABa
vacating that portion ot the Plat ol Tlmacuan Unit 14. Phaso l as
shown In th* attached legal description
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
A TRACT OF LAMO LYING IN SECTION 4. TOWNSHIP 70

UnVt Mu pm1 c£ 1° f r r n n 8 E ,N 0 A P0RT|0N OF TIMACUAN
^H IT 14 PHM E |. ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS
P u a ? ir ° o ? rn o P« nS0 ? .44, P A 0 E l 44 THROUOH i t , OF THE
DE
SClflBED AS FOLLOWV ,fM ,W O L '
FL0R' DA’
± 1 ™ B n o r t h e a s t c o r n e r o f s a id sec
^ O N * FOR A F p l NT OF REFERENCE) THENCE RUN NORTH
™ B NORTH l in e o f s a id s f c t io n 1
A OWTANCE OF 444 t t FEET TO THB NORTHEAST CORNER OF
i U ! v S f ! I . MALP OP THB NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE
NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SAIO SECTION t. THENCE RUN

l , ni op m , d wbit
2 5 i5 r° F P0 T,M
^ , r . R. T.HvBV J e S « ARTBR ° F FHB NORTHEAST
J
7,. PB8 Tj fHBNCe RUN NORTH t r s r i r WEST.
TMEN|?nli^u^?aTT^ ,M L » ^ 0P * AID NORTHEAST QUARTER OF
111^ 1
eTrM'r u V u r 2 AJ !
? „ ° 2 ,e C T ' ON •- A DISTANCE OF
444 47 FEET) THENCE RUN SOUTH 00*170*" EAST. ALONO THE
EAST LINE OF THE WEST HALF OF THE NORTHEAST
?M £RB ^ 2 r 0£ r1 S f.CT,0N 1 A DISTANCE OF SIOOO FEET TO
I 2 . E, P?., - T. 0/ b b O'NNINO) THENCE RUN CONTINUE SOUTH
00*170* EAST. ALONO SAIO EAST LINE OF THE WEST HALF
OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SAIO SECTION t AND
ALONG THE EASTERLY LINE OF SAID TIMACUAN UNIT 14
^ A. ? 1 '- 2 . 0ISTANCB 0P " J “ FEET, THENCE RUN NORTH
I t * * ) TO" EAST, ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF THE SOUTHEAST
? u m RJ 5 R 0F SAID « C T !O N I AND NORTH LINE OF TRACT
H . OF SAIO TIAAACUAN UNIT 14 PHASE I. A DISTANCE OF
' W ' 44 FEET TO THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH
EAST QUARTER OF SAIO SECTION I, THENCE RUN SOUTH
00*0t )7 " EAST, ALONO THE EAST LINE OF THE SAIO
*O y TMBA* T QUARTER AND THE EAST LINE OF SAID TRACT
E,T,‘
B N„C8 RUN * ° UTH • f O T t r - WEST. ALONG
I ” E * ° y .T» LINB 0F ™ B n o r t h q u a r t e r o f t h e
*®UTMJ5'tiT. 9 i* ARTBR 0 8 iA | D SECTION * AND SOUTH LINE
OF SAIO TRACT "H ". 7447 t t FEET TO THE WEST LINE OF SAID
J® OT HE AST QUARTER ANO THE WEST LINE OF SAIO
I i ^ E“ AR
'* PMASB '• THENCE CONTINUE NORTH
Ai-ONO ™ B WBST LINE OF SAIO SOUTHEAST
QUARTER. 4SE 47 FEET TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAIO
i? « L « E2 * T QUARTBR' THENCE RUN NORTH 00*14 )7 ' WEST.
L,NB 0F ™ B A FORESAID NORTHEAST
?.Uo A T.E- R 0F ,BCT,ON • ANO WEST LINE OF TIMACUAN UNIT
' ‘ PHASE I. A DISTANCE OF 70S4 47 FEET TO THB SOUTHWEST
PF L0T 100 ° F *A |D TIAAACUAN UNIT 14 PHASE I;
RUN N0R™ W W W ' BA»T. ALONO THE SOUTH LINE
OF LOTS 184 THROUOH SAID LOT I0E. A DISTANCE OF S74 14
F J BT TO A POINT ON THE WESTERLY RIOHTOF WAY LINE
OF * 8«&gt;NORA STREET OF SAID TIMACUAN UNIT 14 PHASE I;
THENCE RUN SOUTH 7I*J4'I4" EAST. MOO FEET TO A POINT
? vNd LH E E A IT E R LY R|0HTO F WAY LINE OF SAIO SEMINORA
o a s r lli J
RUN NORTH ll*7S'44" EAST, ALONG SAID

n?SrM?urTMpP«OF WAV L,NBj ll04J FBBT TO ™ B FO'NT

?M«CSirBVtT ^ ,R! J?F A CURVB CONCAVE SOUTHEASTERLY.
I!t? ,N-5B RUN NORTHEASTERLY. ALONO SAID EASTERLY
L E k in rS
,A ,D CURVB- HAVINO A RADIUS
FEET, A CENTRAL ANGLE OF I0*00’00". AN
a u n aVJSvTnH^OF * “ FEET, A CHORD LENOTH OF U M FEET.
0F N0RTH “ *“ 44 EAST TO A POINT
? « , , I » l i ° u ™ BRLV r io h t o f -w a y l in e o f m u s c o s a w

OFUTaTs iftI^ l? l IAi A.C,UAN UNIT I* PHASE I ANO THE POINT
?* 1
fvJjM.LMBNCB RUN SOUTH 7S*)4'I4" EAST. ALONG
PO M T ^ u \ «, « n « . H.T0F'WAY L,NB 10000 FBET TO A
UN TT|4° PJasa A: 0RE‘ A' ° EA*TERLV LINE OF TIMACUAN
Pirn t
u
.!LJ?i ! N&lt;Le ALONO SAIO EASTERLY LINE.
THENCB RUN SOUTH
f , Bf Tl THENCE RUN SOUTH 04*07 04 '
V io l'
RUN *OUTH 0 t* 4 1 'ir EAST. IU W
THENCE o fi^ S n P P P J ? U™ , I ***'M " EAST. t7 )7 FEET;
WEST' U 0 ° FBET; ™ e NCE

itto M - n r ^ A tr
BA JJ ' 1,000 F B B T ' THENCE RUN NORTH
EAST0* i i M A2 I « r ,T « F.EIL I ' T H E NCE RUN NORTH 7t*70'7S’'
CONCAUf J ^ S f A 1NT 0N A NON TANOENT CURVE
L v a m i n u m n n S f 7 . B2 i V ' TH B NCB RUN NORTHEASTER
FEEAT°ANCE*NT O*C|U
LN° A R A 0 IU * LENGTH OF MOO
a 1 *1 F A C
T e " TR A LA N . ° L B 0 F
AN ARC LENGTH OF
B S A n m ftTo £
l B N 0 ™ OF 77.SJ FE E T, AND A CHORD
M^4A7PU "°B A S T N? v TP
EAST' ™ b NCE RUN NORTH
r A S T ^ J U n f p B B T ' T u £ E f I '» THBNCE RUN SOUTH 00*17 04 ’
FBET)^^THENCE TaiIk?E)Im?»2UM S° U™ *, *47' ,4 “ W EST, 47 01

THBE^E™ ReUNCESOR
UTH ^

^

"

^

h^

V

b e ' V the T

e

M * J rW ’UTSHASTU |M M
^ FEET' THENCE RUN SOUTH
EASTERLVAl m f d u u F.E^ ^ , TH6 N c E, DEPARTING SAID
THENCE RUN M u? M oni?v TH
EAST, 7)10 FEET,
RUN NORTH
EAST, TS.tl FEET) THENCE
WEST R?O M T?i i l v ' ^ J i ' ^ / E B T TO A POINT ON THE
^ C U A N Mui?!T uAL * « N«H. ° ^ C-0SUMA STr BBT OF SAID
WESTC Jl 7Ni FFPT T u S in S ''T H E N C E RUN NORTH 00 1104
FEET TO THEE BA S T ^ in w r 2 e ^ i ‘9 R™ W47 S4 ’ EAST. MOO
STREET? TH L e a * a
L,NB OP SAID COSUMA
EAST RIGHT OF Wa S V ? ! ! ^ ? ^ ^ 04" BAST. ALONG SAIO
F f* 1
.
" A t LINE# 10.00 PEET j THENCE DPPABTiNr*
SAIO EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE# RUN NORTH
fac t
,4° * FEET TOTHS POINTOF BEOINNINO0 " TH
“
EAST'

! £

S

S

S

“ =

-

s

District #7
S !H
4nd written commsnts may b*
Hm. ih*.F Ufr*fl . P *2 " 08
4
may be continued
.** ,?und n4C4,MrY Furlhar details available by
calling771-IIX, Enlentlon7444.
. - N° J Bi lP* r “ n* with dlsabllltla* natdlng a ttlito n c* to porllclpot*
*howLd conUc' ,h» Employ** Relallont

ML^IX a«lentJonTOU^ ^ ^ -

,dv•nt, °*,h*

••

at^hfri!!Lr(uL,*dik i* d 'rn ' 11 !!*** wl4h 10 *FF*41 • flY decision mode
et lhl t meenng. Wsoy w ill neod * record ot th* prxoodlngt. and tor
1 ty " S i *
,h* l a verbatim record of th*
^

FtorMoStsduteiT**

,h*

’ ! cord lrvtlud«» th* lo tllm o n y and
PP* * * ,0
b4“ d’ p4r * ^ "0 0 7*4 0105.

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIOA

P u h L HB.!,
u5 .*30#
A ^Itf4 N' MANA0BRCURRBNT PLANNING OES-1f7
rUDIItftt
Juo#

S S S

i K f i " . « M c i &amp; J 'a K M

m

-

' ™

n oli
IS ADVISED TO MAKE THE NECESSARY A R B A N O fu e u T . . r
THISOR HER OWN EXPENSE
" T ARRANOE“ ENTS AT
CITY OP LAKE AAARY,
FLORIOA
Carol A. Fotlar, City Clark
OATEO; Juno 17, !tt4
Publish: Juno 70. ISS4
DES-ISO

,

�MONDAY

S a n fo rd H e ra ld

June 2 0 ,

1994

Sports
Church championships
Assem blies of God, M ethodist Flam es take titles
Men’s basketball tonight

P rom S ta ff fta p o rta

SANFORD — The Men's basketball league at
Croonis plays Its games on Mondny nnd
Wednesday night's starting at 0 p.m., not
Tucsdny and Thursday as reported last Friday.

SANFORD — Savin# the best for last.
Tw o of the three division titled In the Spring
Season of the Sanford Church Softball League
were decided on the Inost competitive day of the
year Saturday at Chase Park.
All four of the games played (two games were
forfeits) had a bearing on the division races with
no more than two runs separating the comba­
tants. Three of the games were derided by one
run. with two of the winners scoring the deciding
run In the bottom o f the seventh Inning.
The day opened with the Sanford First United
Methodist Flames clinching a tie for the C'ompcil
live Division title by holding on for a 4-3 win over
Sanford Central Baptist.
Central scored three runs In the iNiltom of Ihr
seventh Inning and had the tying run on second
base and the winning run on first base when the
game ended on n diving catch by the Flames'
shortstop ltol&gt;ert Smith.
The second game found Majesty from Deltona
Trinity Assembly o f tiod carrying a 3 0 lead Into
the sixth Inning. But the Crusaders from Uikr
Mary Nativity Catholic scorrd two unearned runs
In the sixth nnd took a 4-3 lend on a two-run

Gooden halts Martins
MIAMI — Dwight Gooden allowed tlirce hits
over eight Innings to lend the New York Mels to
n 6-1 victory over Die Florida Marlins.
Gooden (3-3). who missed nearly two months
because of ligament damage to Ills big right toe.
picked up his first win since April 10 against
Houston. He walked one nnd struck out six.
Tam pa's Gooden, with his father. Dun.
watching him pitch for the first time In six
years, looked like (he pitcher who hus won at
least 13 games six times In Ills career.
Greg Colbrunn accounted for Florida's only
run off with a home run In the second Inning.

Mots ink Wilson
MIAMI — The New York Mels signed the top
pick In this year's amateur draft — pitcher Paul
Wilson from Florldn Slutc. the team announced.
Wilson, a 0-fnot-5 right-hander from Orlando's
Boone High School. sports u 93 mph fastball and
produced belter than one strikeout per Inning
while going 11-5 with a 2.10 ERA last season.

111 United Mcthodut F i lm .,
C .n tn l BipOtf

M l 100 0
004 •00 1 -

4 ii
i l(

N it lilt , Cj IIm IK C ru tid tri

000 M l
100 I N

4

Trinity A iw m b lf M f |»,ty
N rlivU r Cf (SfIK D U d p l.t
LtftNfd A iu m b lM ,

III

O r*c* Unlltd M fttw dltt
i f nt*fd Chrlitlrft Mr. 1

til
(II
m

1
1

i

»
II

III 1
i
111 1 — i i

II
II

Ml
III

It
II

1
4

t
k

single by Mike Fratrlk In the top of the seventh
Inning.
Majesty came back to collect their sixth
straight win as Bon Stcudle doubled In two runs
with no one out In the bottom of the seventh
Inning to eliminate the Crusaders and hand the
Flumes their second straight Competitive Divi­
sion championship.
The standings In the Competitive Division have
the Flames on top at H-l, with the Crusaders and
Majesty tied at 0-3 and Central Buptlsl ends with
a 4-0 mark.
,
The third game wns the championship gumc of
the Fun Division. The Disciples from Nativity
Catholic — the defending Spring champions —
took an early 4-1 lead, but Sanford Assemblies of

God (In thetr first year In the league) scored In
every Inning to rally for a 10-8 triumph.
The Fun standings have Sanford Assemblies
Icudlng with an 8-2 record (Including a non­
division loss to Sanford Christian No. 1), the
Disciples finished with a 7-3 mark. First United
Methodist ends with a 3-7 record and Sanford
Christian No. 2 standing I -8.
The final game of the day wns a Fellowship
Division battle between Lake Mary Grace United
Methodist and Sanford Christian No. I. SC I. still
In the title chase, look u 3 0 lend In the first
Inning but found Itself trailing R-3 In the fifth
Inning and on the verge elimination.
Sanford Christian No. I still trailed 0-0 entering
the bottom o f the seventh Inning, but live
strulghl hits, capped by Mike Milligan's two-run
triple, allowed SC I to pull out a 10-0 win.
The Fellowship standings have Sanford First
Nazurcnc leading at 0-2 and Sanford Christian
No. 1 Mill alive with a 0-1 record. Including a
noil-division win over Sanford Assemblies.
Oviedo South Seminole Christian (2-8) and Grace
Methodist (1-9) have finished their seasons.
The league will wrup up Its Spring Season with
four guinea next Saturday. First Nuzarcnc will

□See Softball, Page 2B

Lake Mary’s
track series
starts today

A R O U N D T H E N A T IO N

F ro m S ta ff fta p o rta

Playoff In U.S. Open

Tough week

OAK MONT. Pa. Ernie Els and Loren
Roberts bogeyed the flnul hole Sunday to force a
playoff today In the U.S. 0|&gt;cn with Colin
Montgomerie at the Oakmont Country Club. It
will be the first thrcc-wuy playoff since IU03.

LAKE MARY — On for two weeks,
off for one. and buck on for two
more.
That's the pattern that the 1994
Lake Mary Truck Series will lollow
this summer, beginning this evenlog ut Lake Mary High School's Don
T. Reynolds Stadium. The other
three Installments o f Hie four-meet
scries ure June 27. July I I . and
July 18, all Mondny nights.
The series will take a week off for
Ihe4lh of July.
Once again. Hie meets are open to
h letca fro m , 8-aiid-U ntler to
50-AH(i-Ov4f'.1Tile age classes bethe .two extremes are 9-10,
14-18. 10 29. 30-39. and

Depending on how you want
look at II, Jay Roynold9 and tho
Lako Mary Mudcats had a
coss rato ol .500 or .333
week. 01 the six games
Mudcats had scheduled,
only were able to get In
games because of rain ant
grounds, giving them a .500
on the week. 01 the three
did play, their only win was i
rout of Lake Brantley, pulling
thorn at .333. Lako Mary will try to
got Its summdr boason bSfCk On
track, weather permitting,
Tuesday night with a 5:30 p.m.
doubleheader against tho Juice of
the Chet Lemon Baseball School.

NBA goes to a seventh game
HOUSTON — Kenny Smith's horrible scries
turned terrific with one flick of a wrist that sent
In u 3-polntcr nnd helped the Houston Rockets
tie Hie NBA Finals ut three games uplece.
His shot with 3:19 left and New York fighting
lmck spurked the Roekots in an 80-84 win with
Game 7 set for Wednesday night In Houston.
Smith launched his shot from the tup of (he
key and gave Houston an 84-77 lead.
The Knlcks bad the ball and u final chuncc
with 7.0 seconds left, hut John Sturks' 3-polntcr
ut the buzzer was blocked by Hakeem Olnjnwon.
Olujuwon had 30 points und 10 rebounds,
while Curl Herreru added 12 points.
Starks finished with 27 points und Patrick
Ewing hud 17 points und 15 rebounds.

Httfld Photo by Marti Nffll,

Tigers tie homer record
DETROIT — Mickey Telllcton homered In
Detroit's 3-1 victory over Toronto as the Tigers
lied the New York Yunkccs' 53-ycar-old record
with a home run In 25 straight guinea.

Walraven helps Florida All-Stars forge tie
F ro m S ta ff fta p o rta

Three in a row for Wallace

DAYTONA BEACH Another
yard or so and Jason Wulruvcn
would huve done for the Florida
‘All-Sturs what he routinely did for
the Seminole Fighting Semlnolcs
the lust two seasons — pull out a
win with Ills strong right leg.
Making Seminole football history
us the school's first player to be
selected to play In the FloridaGeorgia All-Stur Game, Walraven
converted an extra point and kicked
u 33-yard field goal to help Florida
rally from a 10-0 halftime deficit for
a 10-10 tic Saturday night ut
Daytona Beach Municipal Studlum.
With 20 seconds left In the game,
Wulruvcn lined up fur u potential
game-winning 51-yard attempt but

B R O O K L Y N , M ich . R u sty W u lla cc
overcome u near-disastrous pit stop In Sunday's
Miller Genuine Drufl 400 ut Michigan Interna­
tional Speedway for his third straight victory.
Wullacc wns Icudlng and uboul to make his
final scheduled pit stop when u caution (lug
came out. The extru lap was nearly Wullucc's
downfall as the engine In his Ford Thundcrblrd
coughed und died ns he rolled onto pit road.
Wullacc reentered the race In 11th and It took
him Just 15 laps to slice through the truffle nnd
rcguln the lead, pulling nwuy to beat Dale
Earnhardt by about three car-lengths.
The victory marked the first for u Roger
Pcnskc-owned race car since the silver-haired
"Captain" bought the facility In 1973.
Mark Martin finished third, followed by Ricky
Rudd. Morgun Shepherd. Ketl Schrader, Lake­
land’s Joe Ncmechck. Michael Wallrlp, Ted
Musgruvc and Darrell Waltrlp.

came up just short, his kick fulling
Just under the cross bar.
.
It wus the second tic in the
10-ycar history o f the event.
Walruvcn, a second-team selec­
tion to the Florida Sports Writers
Association's Class 4A All-Stale
team In 1992 und 1993. was sixth
In the county In scoring last season,
kicking 24 extra points and 12 field
goals for 60 points. He wus ulso
second In the county In punting
with a 30.3-yard per kick average.
As u Junior, Walruvcn kicked 10
field goals (five from 40 yurda or
more out) and 10 extra points for 40
points. 10th best In the county. He
ulso averaged 36.0 yards per punt.
Walraven hus not yet announced
whut school he will be attending In
the fall.

E v e n ts fo r a th le te s In th e
8-and-Under and 9-10 age groups
Include the long Jump. 50 meter
dush. 800-meter run. 200 meter
dash, und 4 x lOO-meter relay.
Available to the 11-13 division are
the long Jump, triple Jump. 100meter dash. 800-meter run. 400meter dash, and 4 x 100-mcter
relay.
Tile rest o f the age classes will
compete In the long Jump, triple
Jump. 100-mctcr dash. 1.600-meter
run. 400-mclcr dash, and 4 x
100-mctcr relay.
All events In all age groups will
feature competition for male and
female participants.
The entry fee Is SI per person per
meet. Each competitor Is limited to
four events. Ribbons will be pres­
ented to the first, second, und third
place male and female finishers In
all age groups.
Competition In the long Jump and
triple Jump will begin at 5:30 p.m.
The running events ure scheduled
to begin at 0:30 p.m. Athletes are
ullowcd to compete In shoes with
1/8-lnch or 5-mm spikes.
For more Information, contact
Mike Gibson (333-2370) or Lionel
Bonck (321-8854).

Athletes: OK heroes, inappropriate role models
On Futhcr’s Day. role models, and
the potential fall o f an American
hero.
When most of us would ruthcr be
occupied with the NBA Finals, the
World Cup (In spite of the tired
bluthcrings of other local mcdlu
types), or anything else o f positive
entertainment value, we’ve been
deluged with the sorry story of O.J.
Simpson.
Short of (he Challenger accident. I
can't recall a news story In the lust
20 years that has rutiled the
collective consciousness o f the
American public. Even at a time
when we have become Jndcd due to
constant exposure to violence, the
Simpson sugu takes our breath
uwuy.
How could It have happened? I
don't know. Is lie Innocent or
guilty? That's for the courts to
decide.
What we're fuced with as sports
fans Is the ugly und unwelcome
realization that professional athletes
are human beings and arc subject to
human fallings. Pete Rose, Sieve
Garvey. Darryl Strawberry, and
others have served as poster boys
for professional athletes' "W e're
Only Human" campaign.

Giants sign Strawberry
SAN FRANCISCO — Darryl Strawberry signed
with the San Francisco Giants, six weeks after
the outfielder was released from a drug
treatment center and four weeks uflcr he wus
waived by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Hurst retires
ARLINGTON. Texas - Bruce Hurst, struggl­
ing In Ii Ib comeback attempt with the Texas
Rangers, retired Sunday. Hurst, 30. wus 2-1
with a 7.11 ERA In eight slurts for the Rangers.
He was 145-113 with a 3.92 ERA In 15 seasons
with Boston. San Diego, Colorado and Texas.

O N TV

BASEBALL
□ 8 p.m. — WON. American League, 'Texas
Rungcrs at Chicago White Sox. (L) .
C o m p le te lis tin g s on F o g # SB_________________

The trap lies when we contuse
athletic nblllty as personality traits.
Being n great football player doesn't
make someone a great humun
being. It's nice when It works out
that way. but there's no correlation.
The distribution of Jerks among
athletes Is proportlonul to their
distribution among the general
population.

Charles Barkley Is right. They're
not role models, they're professional
uthlctc9. paid to a Job. No more, no
less.
How Ironlcnlly perfect that this
happens the week before Father's
D a y. w h en c h ild r e n w ill be
celebrating one o f the two Individu­
als that should serve ns their
primary role models.
It's Important for us. child or
udult. to have heroes. At one time or
another, we ull dream of being the
best. And we attach those dreams to
the Individuals who, through the
blessings of tulcnl and/or the result
of hard work, arc the best. They
become the personification of some
of our most sacred hoj&gt;cs.

There's no denying the media's
role In the deification process. We
make heroes fast and cheap, turn­
ing them out like an assembly line.
The only qualification Is that they
be able to till, shoot, or run with a
bull.
Once upon a time. Hie sports
media would go to greul extremes to
protect their creations, regardless of
how false the pretense may be. Now.
we play both sides of the line,
building godly personas for athletes
on one hand and being the first to
scream "T h e emperor's wearing no
clothes" on the oilier.
In drama, there's a tragic side to
being a hero, a price to be paid or a
sacrifice to be mude. When we view
sports figures as heroes, we (end to
focus only on the rewards, the fame
and fortune. For many, that's the

measuring stick of a modern duy
hero.
,
The American Heritage Dictionary
of the English Language defines a
hero as unyonc "noted for feats of
courage or nobility of purpose:
especially, one who has risked or
sacrificed Ills life." And maybe, In a
given context, athletes do earn the
right to be called heroes.
Physically, they are able to do
things on a dally basis that we
accomplish only In our wildest
(lights of fancy. Most have given
their lives to perfecting those skills
und execute them under the Intense
scrutiny of funs nnd mcdlu. half
demanding that they succeed und
hulf hoping they fall.
But they can't lie role models.
Such u miniscule percentage of
uthlctcs ever reach that level that
no-one can realistically use them as
a pattern for his or her life.
In "Angry Young Man," Billy Joel
sings ", . . just surviving Is a noble
fight." For many purenls. the dully
grind of earning a paycheck Is the
embodtement o f that "noble fight,"
of trying to provide the best lire
possible for their fumllles.
Those people arc heroes. They arc
role models.

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 IL Y

^

ffT, M

gif

(%

�A

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, Juno 20, 1004 • SB

19 - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 20, 1004

Offense, raucous fans
mark U.S.’s World Cup

STATS &amp; STANDINGS
IP

^ llAM lAIJL tTA N P W fl
NATIONAL L IA O U I
A ll Tim e* ID T
■••1 B v ltto n
W
L
Atlanta
4)
n
Montreal
40 V
Philadelphia
IS &gt;4
4 tor Ido
54 J)
New Yerk
n
54
Cootrai O lvliton
W
L
. , Cincinnati
M
2!
, Houiton
51 X
*&lt; SI. Loull
u
))
■&gt;, Plftlburgh
74
51
• Chkogo
)7
X
W ill Ofvllton
W
L
•’ - Lot A ngel*!
15 11
,» Colorado
17
)l
X
Son FrandKO
1!
- &gt; SonOtogo
74 47
Saturday's O am t*
Chicago !. San F rtn d K O 4
New Y s rt I I. FtorhUS
Cincinnati 14. Atlanta 0
Philadelphia A. Montreal 4
St. Louie*. Pittsburgh 0
Colorado ♦, L o t Angotot)
Houiton 4. ta n Otogo I
tends y‘ i O areri
Cincinnati a Atlanta 4
Pittsburgh ] . St. Louis t
l o t Angotot 7, Colorado ]
. ta n Otogo S. Hoot ton I
Chicago 14, ta n Francltco 4

r.

OB

Pel.
457
5F7
Ml
.m
471

—

7.1
tv»

tow
1)

Ot

Pci.
5*7
55!
.500
.441
.40!

—

to

4to
7
itto

OB

Pet.
.111
454
.415
742

—

4
Sto
!

Philadelphia (W illiam s 1-4) at Pittsburgh
f i t (Wagner a t ) , 7.33 p m
New York (Jonas 7-1) at A tlanta (M archer

■rt-n.rieopjii.
” (1

M o ntre al

(AAarllnet 4 11 a t t l .

L o u ll

* ,&lt; (Sutclltto 1 )). I:13p m
II
Houtlon (Orabek P S) at Colorado (H a r rli
I; S 4),4:0Jp.m .
* •» L o t Angotot (K l.O ro tt 40 ) at ta n Otogo
(HamlttonS-1), 10:44 p.m

lij
Vet
* ** New York
I' l B altim ore

O tlro ll
Toronto

M
— Cleveland
-£ »» M lnnetota
,&gt; Chicago
K a n ia iC Ity
Milwaukee

»'r.
j , 1 T o ta l
“ • v Seattle
V , . C alllornla
■t l Oakland
, , ‘

• L
T»h'
•»( ,
,V
•* »

i_3

A M IR IC A N L I A O U I
A ll T im et ID T
■ e it M vltto n
w
L
17
X
17 2!
14 »
14
»
11 15
Central B ritto n
W
L
40 U
17 ?!
X
1)
1) 12
21 14
Woe! B ritto n
W
L
11 M
74
X
X
40
42
it
Saturday's Oamet

Pel. OS
x\ —
.541 2
.SI)
5
445 7
.420 1
Pci. OB
.415 —
541 7to
.5)0 5
4
sn
44) 10
Pet. o a
44) —
.411 i
.42!
ito
544 4to

Ctovelandl. BotlonI
New York 4. Milwaukee 4
Btlllmore II.MInnetolat
Otlroll 4. Toronto 4.11 Innlngt
Calllornla 4, Chicago 4
Seattle4. KaniaiCIty I
Oakland II, Teiat 10

Sunday's Oamet
Cleveland 4, B o tlo n t
D etroit 4. Toronto 1
M lnnetota IX B altim ore 4
Milwaukee 10, New Y ork 4
C hicago), C alllornla 1
K a n ia iC Ity 14. W attle I
I. Oakland L Tenet 4
, ,
Monday* a Oamet
, M lnnetota ( B r k k tt n A l l at
York
H Abbott A t) , 7 .0 4 p m
Cleveland (Nagy 54)1*1 D e tro it (Moore
M llwauSlS* (Wegmwi 4 0) at Baltimore
' (M oyer 4 4), t : 44p.m.
Botlon (H etkelh 441 at Toronto ( tlo l
I tto m yret-4), 1:44 p.m.
T e ta t (Brown A t) at Chicago (McDowell
&gt; 4 ) , 1:0 4pm .
- Seattle (Johnton 44) a l California (Ma
g re n e ) 4). 10:04 p m.
tO U T H IR N L IA flU C
Second Hall
■ a ite rn D Ivlito n
W
L
. • Carolina (P lra lo t)
0
0
G re e n rllto lB ra e e t)
0
0
K n o iv llto (Blue J a y !)
0
0
Orlande (Cab!)
a
•
Jackie n rlllo (M o rln o rt) a
1
Wet torn Otrtiton 1
N a ih rllto (T w lm )
1
0
. M e m phli (R oyal!)
0
0
- . Birm ingham IW Soi)
0
0
i Chattanooga (R adi)
0
0
a H u n lirllto (A th ttci)
0
1
• clinched lire ! half division title

Pci.
000
.000
.000
.404
.M i
1.000
000
.000
.000
ooo

oa
—
—
__
__

to
to
to

i

Sunday'! Oamt
N a th v llle l, H unltvllle 4
Manday't Oamet
Carolina a l Orlande
Oreenvllto et Jeckteevlto
M e m p h lta l K not villa
N athvllle a l Birmingham
Chattanooga a l Hunttvlile

FLORIDA tT A T I L IA O U I
P in t H all
■attorn Dtvhton
w
L Pci. OB
t'k Brevard (Marlint)
42F —
44 24
r- «St. Lucie (Melt)
4
40 M
.171
VeroBeachIDodgert) ) l ) /
454 11
. 'Daytona (Cubt)
&gt;2 »
.411 I4to
■ Otceola (Ailroil
24 4)
.150 live
.'•«W.P. Beach (C&gt;pot)
»
4)
.144 1!
&lt;!.„
Wettem I r It ton
• • Tampa(Yankeet)
44 2)
.457 —
ForlMyert (Twlnt)
41 17 .40) ito
St. Pete (Cardinal!)
X
11 .517 ato
Lakeland (Tlgert)
14 I t
.140 i
iSlearwafer (Phllllet)
7* 22 .12!
ito
•jL^unedln (BlueJayt)
77 U
.415 iit o
jrjharlotle (Rangert)
X X
.415 i i
^rearaiota (Red toil
M
X
.400 17
■ clinched flrtl-h a lf d lv ltlo n title
tatorda y'a Oamet
Charlotte 4, Lakeland 4
Fort Myera 4. Clearwater 4
Tampa t , I t . Petersburg 0
Dunedin 4. la ra to ta 4
r Brevard I I , Daytona 0
*■ SI Lucie X V e ro Beach t
» W rit Palm Beach a, Otceola 0

§
&gt;&gt;

L
•'*
•"
a

lu n ^A v'i Q am ii

ChariotteO, Lakeland 4,11 Innlngt
Ci«ir water 4, Fort M y e rt 4
Sareiota H, Dunedin 4
St P stsreburgX T am paJ
Brevard i Daytona I
Vero Bead, 1, i t . Lucie 0
Wait Palm Beach 4, Otceola 4
I n d t F irs t H all

[4A041AU.BORBB
/

L
M « T t t , M AR LIN S 1
^tlW YO R K
FLOR ID A

Telelt 44 a 14 4
NewVerk

ab r h bl
Carr cf
40 0 0
Browne 4b 4 0 10
Shlfleldrf 4 0 10
Conlne If 4 0 10
Clbrnnlb 4 111
Brberle4b 4 0 0 0
Tlngleyc 4 0 0 0
Snllagoc 10 0 0
KAbbtl tt 4 0 0 0
Houghp 0 0 0 0
RLewItp 10 00
Carrllloph 1 0 0 0
Mlhewtp 0 0 0 0
Mgdanph 0 0 0 0
Drhmnp 0 0 0 0
Jffcoalp 0 0 0 0
TataIt AO l 4 1
4M tea t i i - t
no taa tea - i

F tor Ida
OP - New York I, Florida 4. LOB - New
J- 4B - V ltcalno ( ) |, Segul
a ‘ ., 4I- HR - Colbrunn (4). SB - O rtulak (4),
W Hundley (|). Sheffield (4). t - Gooden SF Ortulak

I
/

4

f

I

Sundaynlghfi game

—rllM
VinaII
4 10 0
Cnglotl If 10 10
Vicalnott 4 14 0
Ortulak rl 4111
Bonilla)b 4 1 4 1
Kent )b 4 0 10
Seoul lb 4 1 1 1
Bogar lb t o i l
, Hodley c 40 4 1
\V,RyTptncf 40 0 0
MSocxtonp ) | |o
Hare ph 0 0 0 0
Lndmnph 10 0 0
JMnilop 0 0 0 0

1
1

72 3
2 1)
)
1)
11

)
1
4
1
0

R A IN E 9 O A U O l

T — 4 14 A — 47.014

Saturday nlght't game
METt It, MARLINS 1
N fW YORK
FLORIOA
a b rh M
AbrhM
Vina If
110 0
Carrel
410 0
Here It
t i l l
Browne Sb 4 0 4 1
V ic a ln o tt 4 0 11
Shlfleldrf 4 0 11
O rtulak r l 4 I I 0
Conlne It 4 0 0 0
Bonilla Jb 4 110
Mgdanlb 4 14 0
Bog or Jb 0 0 0 1
SnliagOC 4 0 2 0
K e n l»
4 111
KAbbtttl 4 0 0 1
Sogul lb
4 11 )
BrberleTb 4 0 0 0
Mndley c 4 14 4
Rappp
10 0 0
RyTpsncf 4 14 0
Mutltp
1000
Sbrhgnp 1 0 1 4
Carrllloph I 1 i o
Linton p
10 4 4
Fraterp 0 0 0 0
M a tonp
00 0 0
Tvriph 10 00
Rivera ph 1110
Tetalt
44 4 I 4
404 140 111 - II
011 400 IM -

Tim RalnBS la a Sanford natlva and Somlnols High School
graduate now playing for the Chicago White Sox. His stats aro
for the 1094 season In the first column, personal-best season
totals In the second column and current career totals
(Including 1904 games) In the third column.
Raines had two hits, Including his sixth double of the
season, and a sacrifice bunt Sunday to help the White Sox
whip the California Angels 7-1. He didn't start Saturday’s game,
which California won 4-3, but did pinch hit.

RAINES QAUQE

All Timet IDT
NBA FINALS
Wednetdey. Junes
HouttonSS. New York 74
Friday, June It
New York FI, HouttontJ
Sunday, June 14
HouttonFt. New YorktF
Wednetdey. June IS
New York FI. Houstontl
Friday. June 17
New York FI. Houtton14
Sunday, June IF
HouitonM. New York 44. tertot lied 41
Wednetdey, June44
New York at Houtton. Fp m.
Sunday nlghf-t game
ROCKITIM.KNICKSM
NEWYORK (tt)
Oakley SII 11 14. C.Smlth 5-10 II II,
Ewing I N SS 17 Harper 4-10 St 10. Stark!
F II 44 27. Meton i t 14 7, Anthony 04 to 0.
Wllllami00gtt. Totall: 4040102114
HOUSTON (tt)
Horry 110 44 II. Thorpo 111-4 4. Olaluwon
1141 Ot 30. Maawell i l l 12 IX K.Smlth la
X0 7. Cattail 2 4as t, silo 11 OF 4. Herrera
t-40011. Total!: 144417 11M.
New Yerk
II II N It - N
Heettan
11 It IF II - tt
4-Point goala —Now York 4-U (Starkt X*.
Harper 14), Houtton S17(Horry 04. K.SImth
l-X Cattail l-X Meiwoll 1-4). Fouled out None. Reboundt —New York 47 (Ewing IS),
Houiton 44 (Olaluwon, Thorpo 10). Attlilt —
New York 44(Harper M). Houtton II (Thorpo
4). Total loull - New York 44. Houtton 41.
Technical! — New York Illegal detente 4,
Meton. Houtton Illegal detente. A —14.411

OraM Prbt, iSjaatojaSaM, IftlBB; 44.(IF)

J im m y H e n tle y , R idgew ay, V i . ,
Thunderblrd. 4. o il preteure. 17.tt0.

F ord

Tim e of race: 4 hourt, I I mlnutoa. 47
tecondt.
M a rgin of v lc ta ry i 0.74 tecondt (4 car
length!)

bed
180
847
133
194
71
38
13
18
90
.334

'94
Category
Games........... ... 59
At-bats.......... .... 218
Runs............. .... 43
Hits.............. .... 55
RBI............... .... 22
Doubles........ .... 6
Triples.......... .....
2
Home rune.... .... 7
Steals........... ....
5
Average........ ....255

career
1,876
7,093
1,254
2,106
729
338
102
130
756
.297

Ceuttonflegti 7for la lapt
Lead changet: II among 7driven
Lap leader!: Allen 1-7; T.Labonte 111;
R.Wallaco 2440; T. Labonte 41 44; Martin 41:
J Gordon 4440; J Oordan 41FS: Irvan N 101;
J Gordon 104 111; Irvan 111114; R.Wallece
114-174; Earnhardt 177 III; Marlin 111 It).
Earnhardt 114IN: R Wallace IF7 700
Serial pelnl leederti Irvan 4.244:
Earnhardt 4.144: R Wallace 4.040; Martin
t.Fll: Schrader I.F14. Shepherd I.7U. Rudd
1.741; M Waltrlp 1.710; J Gordon 1.441: Petty
l.aili Mutgrave 1.414: Speed 1,1410;
D Waltrlp 1.444; (Martin 1.444. T.Labonte
1.404

NBA H A Y O m

NASCAR M ille r taa
BROOKLYN. M.uh - The order ol tln lth
Sunday o l the M ille r Genuine D raft 400
NASCAR tlo c k car race at Michigan In ­
ternational Speedway, w ith tte rtln g p o ll I Ion
In parenthetet. retldance. type o l car. Iapt
completed, reaton out, money won and
w ln n e r't average tpeed In mph:
1. (4) R u tty Wallace. Concord, N.C.. Ford
Thunderblrd, 400. t44.N0. 144 044: 4.1441 Dale
E arnhardt. Doolie. N.C., Chevrolet Lumlna.
400. 444,401; 4. ( I ) M ark M a rtin. Jamestown.
N C . Ford Thunderblrd. 400. S44.440
4. ( t ) Ricky Rudd. Lake Norman. N.C..
F ord T h und erblrd. 400. 141.440 , 4. (14)
M o rg a n Shephard. Conover, N.C., Ford
T h u n d e rb lrd . 400. t i l , 015; t . (41) Ken
Schrader, Concord. N.C., Chevrolet Lumlna.
400.141.400
4. (14) Joe Nemechek. M ooretvllto, N.C.,
C hevrolet L u m lna. 100, S40.440; I . I l l )
M ichael W a ltrlp . Davldton. N.C.. Pontiac
Grand P r li, 400. W M O l t . (40) Ted M u i
grave, Troutm an. N .C , Ford Thunderblrd.
400.444.400
10 (44) D a rre ll W altrlp, F ranklin. T e nn.
Chevrolet Lum lna. 400. S24.FS0; I I. (4) B ill
E llio tt. B la lrtv llle . Go'. Ford Thunderblrd.
400. 140.440: 14. (4) Jett Gordon. H untortvllle.
N.C., Chevrolet Lumlna. 400. t44.l)S.
IS. ( I I ) Rick M a il. Rockbridge B alht. Va..
Ford Thunderblrd. IFF. 411.741: 14. (44) Dale
J a rre ll. H ickory. N .C , Chevrolet Lumlna.
IFF. 124.4)4; IS. (40) Bobby Labonte, T rin ity,
N.C., Pontiac Grand P rti. IFF, 414.044.
It . (M l Bobby H lllln Jr., H a rrltb u rg , N.C..
Ford Thunderblrd. IFF, 410.400; 1). (41) Kyle
P etty, High Point. N .C . Pontiac Grand Prl»,
IFF. t2l.274i II . (44) Ernie Irvan. Rockwell.
N.C., Ford Thunddrblrd. IFF. 444.440
IF. 142) Kenny Wallace. Concord. N.C..
Ford Thunderblrd. 1M. 4F.441: 40. 14) Terry
Labonte, Archdale, N.C.. Chevrolet Lumlna.
IF). 440.410; I I . 144) J e ll Burton. South
Botlon. Va.. Ford Tnunderblrd. 1F7. SI4.SM.
42. (4F) Hut S tricklin. Calara. A la., Ford
Thunderblrd. IF7, 411,074; IJ. (41) Jim m y
Spencer, M o o re tvllle . N.C., F ord Thun­
derblrd . IF), 11X174; 24. (1) Loy A llen Jr.,
Raleigh. N .C , Ford Thunderblrd. IF). 114.044
44. (IS) Jerem y M eyfleld, G oodlettivllle,
Term., Ford Thunderblrd. IF), SXF4S; 44. (47)
Steve G rltio m . Libe rty, N.C., Chevrolet
Lum lna. IM . 411,141: 27. (14) Jett P u rv ll.
ClarktvlHe. Tenn . Ford Thunderblrd. 174.
Ira n tm lu lo n , 41.744.
I t . (41 Geotl Bodlne. Julian. N.C. Ford
Thunderblrd. I7t. engine (allure. SIS.FtS; 4F.
( I t ) W ard B urto n. South B o tlo n , Va.,
Chevrolet Lumlna, 144. engine failure. 44.111,
X . (44) Rich Blckle. Concord. N.C.. Ford
Thunderblrd. 144. radiator, ll.re o
41. (41) Todd Bodlne. H a rriib u rg . N.C.,
Ford Thunderblrd. I l l , cra th. 410.440; 44.
(10) B rett Bodlne, H arrltburg. N.C.. Ford
Thunderblrd. 144. crath, 414.4M; 41. IF) Oreg
Sackt. W inter Park, Ford Thunderblrd, l i t ,
c ra th , Slt.414.
44. (20) Sterling M arlin. Columbia, Tenn...
C h e v ro le t Lu m lna, n o . engine fa ilu re .
41X140; 44. (47) H arry Ganl, T a ylortvllle,
N.C.. Chevrolet Lumlna, M, engine failure.
414.070; 44 ( 44) John A ndrelll, Indlanapoilt.
Chevrolet Lumlna, F4. head gatkel. 412.021.
47. (141 D errlka Cope, H untortvllle, N.C..
Ford Thunderblrd, FI, handling. IF.4M; St
(St) Robby Gordon. Orange, C alll.. Ford
Thunderblrd. SF, e r a * . 47,M l, 4F. (4F) Tim
Sleale, C oop e rtville . M ich .. F o rd thu n­
de rblrd . t l . cra th, t l I.S40.
40. (St) Lake Speed. Concord. N.C., Ford
Thunderblrd. 44. ro c k tr a rm , S17AB0; 41. (44)
Bobby Ham ilton. N athvllle. Term., Pontiac

■ y BARRY WILN
AP Sports Writer

Tim Ralnea

4

E - Browne (tl. KAbboll (t). OP - New
wnrk I. Florida 1. LOB - New York 14.
Florida 7. 4B—Kent (141. RyThompton (10),
Browne (10). Sheffield (10). Santiago (F). HR
— Segul (10). Hundley 4 (14). SB — Browne
14). Carrillo 12). S-Linton 2 SF-Bogar.
IP
H R IR BB SO
New Yerk
Seberhegen
114 4 I I 0 4
LintonW, 4 4
SIS 1 2 4 4 1
Meton
114 0 0 0 0 I
JManienlllo
1
0 0 0 0 1
Florida
Rapp L. 44
444 F a t 4 4
Muflt
114 4 I I 2 4
Frater
4
4 4 1 0 1
HBP — by Akaton (Conlne). by Rapp
(Hundley).
Umpire! — Home. Davit; Flrtt. Vanover;
Second. Olbbom; Third. Davldton.
T - l 04. A-41.440

AUTO RACINO

L

*i i.

1
1

to

HBP — by Hough (Vina), by Hough
(RyThompton). PB —Tlngley 4.
Umpire! — Home. Vanover; Flrtt, Olb
bont. Second. Davldton: Third. Davit.

J M n ito p 4 4 0 4
Tetalt
41 I I I t I t
New York
Florida

NowYork t, Ptortda 1
Philadelphia IX Montreal 0
Osin##

?.t

Now Y trfi
Gooden W, 5 3
JM a nianlllo
Florida
Hough L, 3 1
R Law li
M a ltw w i
Drahman
J tf fcoot

Ru

H

Romania
Switierland
United Statet
Colombia

1714 War Id Cap
All Timet EOT
FIRST ROUND
OROUPA
W L T OF OA PH
1 0 0
4
1
4

t
t

0 1
t I

0

1 0

I
t

I
I

1

) 0

Saturday. June It
Al Pontiac. Mkfc.
Swltrerland I. Untied ilatet I. tie
At Patadena. Calif
Romania 4. Colombia I
Wednetdey. June 41
Al Pontlac. Mich
Romania vt Switierland. 4:04p m.
Al rtiidtni- Calif
Colombiaat United State*. 7:14p m
Sunday, June 14

1
I

A| P a i n a . fa|H

Romania at United Statet. 4 04p m
At Stanford, Calif.
Switierland vt Colombia. 4 04p m
OROUPB
W L T OF OA Pit
0 0 1 1 2 1
Cameroon
Sweden
0 0 1 &gt; 1 1
0 0 0 • 0 0
Braill
• 0 0 0 0 0
Rustic
Sunday, Jeno 1!
Al PawdoM. Calll.
Camerooni, SwedenL lie
Monday. June 14

At Stanford. Calif.
Braill vt Ruttla. 4 04pm
Friday, Jena 14
Al Stanford. Calll.
Braill vt. Cameroon. 4:01p.m
At Pentlec,Mkh.
Swedenvt. Ruttla. 7:44p m
Tuetday, June tt
At Stanford. Calll.
Ruttla vt Cameroon. 4 01p m.
At Pontiac. Mich.
Braill vt Sweden. 4 0Sp m
OROUPC
W L T OF OA PT»
1 0 0 1 0 7
0 0 1 1 7 1
0 0 1 7 7 1
0 1 0 0 1 0
Friday, Juno 17
Al CMcage
Germany I, Bolivia 0
At Dallat
Spain2. SouthKorea 2. lie
Tuetday, Juno41
At Chicago
Germany vt. Spain. 4:(Bp m.
Thurtday, June 24
At Fetbore, Matt.
SouthKorea vt. Bolivia. 7:)Jp.m.
“ * ‘ 147
Al Chkaga
Bolivia v* Spain. 4 05p.m.
Al Dallat
Germany vs SouthKorea. 4:05p.m

Germany
SouthKorea
Spain
Bolivia

Argentina
Bulgaria
Greact
Nlgtrla

OROUPD
W L T OF OA PI*
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0

Tuetday, June 21
Al Fetbere, M att.
Argentina vt. Oreece. 12: IS p m.
At Dallat
Nigeria vt. Bulgaria. 7:14p.m.
Saturday, June IS
At Feahere, M att.
Argentina vt. Nigeria. 4:01 p.m.
Sunday, June 44
At Chicago

Bulgaria vt. Greece. ll:)Jp.m.

Thurtday, Juna 4*
At F oibore.M ati.
Oreece vt. Nigeria. 7:24p m.
A l Dallat
Argentina vt. Bulgerla,7:)Sp.m.
OROUPE
W L T OF OA PH
t o o
I
0
4
1 0
0
1
0
)
0
1 0
0
1
0
0
1 0
0
0
Saturday, June I I
Al Eatt Ruthertord, N.J.
Ireland I, Italy 0
Sunday, June IF
At Washington
Norway I.MealcoO
Thurtday, June!)
Al C u t Ruthertord, N.J.
I laly v t . Norway, 4;04 p m.
Friday, Juno 14
At Orlando
Maalcovt. Ireland, l l )Sp m
Tuetday, June 21
At S a il Ruthertord, N.J.
Ireland vt. Norway, 12:)J p.m.
At Wathlngten
Italy vt. Mexico. I4:)$p m.

Ireland
Norway
Italy
Mexico

OROUPF
W L
OF OA
Belgium
I 0
I
0
Netherlandt
0 0
0
0
Saudi Arabia
0 0
0
0
Morocco
0 1
0
Sunday,June I !
Al Orlando
Belgium 1, Morocco 0
Monday. Juna ) t
At Wathlngten
Netherlandt w Saudi Arabia, 7:Up.m.
Saturday, June IS
Al Or (in d t
Belgium vt. Netherlandt. 14:41p.m.
At Rati Ruthertord, N.J.
Saudi Arabia vt. Morocco, 11:41 p.m.
Wednetdey, June 2!
At Orlande
Morocco vt. Netherlandt. l4:U p.m .
At Wathlngten
Belgium vt. Saudi Arabia. 14:)lp.m.

golf
U.t. Open
OAKMONT, Pa - Top lln lth e rt and
money wlnnlngt alter Sunday's Ilnal round ol
the U S Open poll championship on the
4.F44yard. p e r il Oakmoot Country Club
course (a w ill compete In I t hole playolf
Starting Monday at 10a m E OT I

■ Loren Robert!
744! 44 70-77!
4! 7144 7)-27!
■ Ernie Ell
7145 7) 70-47!
« Colin Montgomerie
Curllt Strange. 410X444
70707070- 240
JohnCook. 174.740
7) 45 7) 71-747
Clark Dennlt. 14417!
71 71 7071-44)
Oreg Norman. 144.14!
71 714F 74-44)
TomWatton, 144X70
M 7) M 74-24)
Frank Noblto. S40.I4)
4! 71U 74- 444
Duffy Waldorl. 140.141
74M 7) 44- 444
Jeff Megger1.140 147
7IM 7570-444
Jell Human. 140.11J
744! 74 71-244
JimMcGovern. 141.St)
7)4! 744F-24)
Scott Hoch.t4l.4l2
74 7270 71—24S
David Edwardxlll.MI
7) 457574- 445
Fred Couplet. 177.400
74 714! 74- 444
Steve Lowery. S47.100
71 71M 74-444
Hale Irwin, in ns
4! 4! 71 74-417
77 717075- 247
Save Balletterot. 14) US
Scott Verplank. ijj tj)
707275 70- 747
SamTorrance. 120.SF)
72 71744F—744
Steve Pate. 110.St)
7444 71 77-744
701171 77- 24!
Kirk Triplett. 114.444
Bernhard Langer. S1I.D4
74777) 74- 74!
74 727I7I-4W
Mike Springer. SIS.MS
Craig Parry. 114444
74M 71 75—7!0
Chip Beck. SI4.44S
7) 7) 7074—7!0
Bell leu* Classic
NASHVILLE. Tenn — Top finishers and
Koras after Sunday’s final round ol the t l 05
million BellSouth Classic on the t.74) yard,
par 74 iprlnghouu Golf Club course
Lee Trevino. 4157.500
Oeve Stockton. 144.000
Jim Albus. 144.000
Olbby Gilbert. Ul.OOO
George Archer. SSO.eOO
Ray Floyd. S4!.!00
TomWargo.iie.S 00
Larry Etogtor. 1)417)
Or ahem Marsh. 424.471
JimDent. 124.471
J C tn e o d . 14X4)4

Mike Hill. S44.0S0
-Rocky ThgitipgufC

Waller Zembrltkl. t i t . 1
Terry Olll. l i t . !C0
Bill Hall. II4.FO0
Calvin Peefe.t 14.400
KermltZarley. 114.15!
Larry Gilbert. 11 0 5!
Ben Smith. 114.15!
Bob Charles, tie .) !!
Jerry Megee.110.7sa
Chariot Coody. tto.fee
Tom Weltkopf. tIO.ree
Tommy Aycock, SlO.lfb

Jimmy Powsll.S10.7sa
Bob Bruo. SI0.7*t
ItaoAekl. 14.505
Tommy Aaron, ta.501
Orville Moody, 10.505
JimColbert, 11505
Gary Player. 57,407
Jim Farroo. 17,40)
Oeve Hill. S4F»
Al Kelley. 14.110
Dewitt Weaver. S4.t»
Harold Henning, SS.tTO
Gaylord Burrowt. tJ tJOSimonHobday. SS.I20
Jay Slgel. SS.IJO
Dick Rhyan. SS.tJO

OF47 I

47 I F ;

707047­
4444 71­
444! 74-107
71444F—204
707444- 210
7144 71-210
7441 70-710
44 7072- 710
70 7)4a-2ll
70 774F-2II
71 7140—711
4! 7171-111
71 7070-211
4! M 74-211
71 7240—712
744170-212
4! 7271-212
44 7074-211
74 704F-2I1
74M 70-112
7) 744F—214
7) 74S4-)I5
74 744F-1IS
747471-41$
74 7174-414
71 71 7)—214
71 717)—414
4F 7474-414

LPOA Recheifar International
ROCHESTER. N Y. - Top fln lih e rt.
K oret. and money wlnnlngt alter Sunday'!
Ilnal round ol the SSOXOOO LPGA Rocheller
International on the t.U2 yard, par 7) Locutt
H ill Country Club c o u n t:
Lite Klggent, 174.000
4747 7144-47)
Dawn Coo-Jonet. 444. VU
4747 7147-274
Betty King, U),M4
444A724F—474
Patty Sheehan. 424.411
47 7247 71-477
Kelly Robblnt.4IF.4FF
4X47 7)47-477
K rltll Albert. 41F.4FF
474447 74—477
Tammle Green. ID .M )
71 7047 70- 270
Michele Redman. SD.to)
4447 71 74-410
H olllt Stacy. SI0.4SF
71-7071 4F—441
Helen Allredtton. 410.44F
47707072-241
Barb Bunkowtky, 1 10.457
7247M 74-441
Marla Flguerat Dottl.U.14I 477447 74-241
Laurie Brower, 44.741
44 7) 71 72-442
Nancy Ramibottom. M ) 2t
44 714F74-247
Oale Eggellng. 44.F02
704! 7) 71—24)
Joan Pltcock. M.F02
44477) 7)-44)
Dotlle Mochrle, 44.702
47704774-44)
Nancy Lopei, SS.FJi
71-74 7447-444
Jane Oeddet. 41.7)4
744! 744! -744
Sutie Redman. tl.FJt
44 7) 74 71-744
Colleen Walker, S).F)I
44 71 7471-444
Leigh Ann M lllt, U.07F
71 7074 74-241
M lttle Me George. SJ.077
74 70M 7)-24)
Rotle Jonet, S4.077
74-7I-47-7S—445
Heather Drew, 44.444
714F71-71-444
KlmCathreln, 44.444
72477) 74-744
Sally Little, S4.4S4
744! 707)-244
Amy Alcoll. S4.444
70 7174 71-244

ITRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
American League
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Activated (Mark
McOwIra, lire! beteman. Irom the lld a y
dlubled Hit. Optioned Eric Helland. catcher,
to Tacoma of the Pacific Coatl League.
M ill# fu l Lm i i n
NEW YORK M E T ! - Signed Paul Wilton
and Bill Sentamarla, pl'chert. and Terrence
Long, outltolder-llrtt beta man.
SAN D IIO O PADRES - Signed Dustin
H e rm a n to n . p itc h e r. R e ca lle d M ike
Campbell, pitcher. Irom Let Vegat ol the
Pacific Coat! League. Designated Keith
Lockhart. Inllelder. lor assignment.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS - Signed
Darryl Strawberry, outllelder. lor the re
m alnder of the teaton. Pieced M ark
Portugal, pitcher, on the IS day disabled list,
retroactive to June II. Activated Bud Black,
pitcher, Irom the IS day dlubled lilt.
MMsretl League
ROCKFORD ROYALS - Activated Eric
W alll. outllelder, Irom the dlubled list.
Reassigned Paul Vlndlvlch, outllelder. to
Eugene of the Northwest League.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
MINNESOTA VIK IN O t - Signed Roy
Barker and James Harris, defensive ends;
Lamar M cGrlggt. u le ty ; Esera Tuaolo,
defensive tackle; Harlan Davit, cornerback;
and Andrew Jordan, light end. Waived
Ronnie Watt, wide receiver.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Agreed to
le rm t with Eric Martin, wide receiver, on a
one-year contract.

Alrrndy. (lie World Cup detnit
In America hits a bltf edge on Hit
predecessor.
During one o f the buttlcM
sports weeks In recent memory,
the world itoccer chumploiinhlp
enme to the United Staten for the
first time. It brought pntuilon and
prrclatoii. controversy and cclc*
o r a t i o n , g r e a t g o a ln and
tt|)eclurulnr nave*.
So much of (hat was missing
In lluly four years ago, when
tennis went Into defensive shells
utmost from (lie outset.
Sunday's action emphasized
the dcttlre to open up (he game.
Although the scores were l-O,
1-0 nnd 2-2, there wns almostcontinuous action nnd little of
t h e r e t i c e n c e b y uI •
traconservnllvr coaches that
plagued Itnlla ‘OO.
The crowds, sizzling almost us
much ns the pluyers In the
90-plus teni|&gt;erntiires. certnlnly
seemed to like It. And that
rublwd off on the players.
"T h e crowd was delightful."
said Francois Omam-Hlylck, who
scored one of Cameroon's goals
In a 2-2 tie with Sweden nt the
Hose Howl. "There are not too
many people from Cameroon
who came to the United States.
Hut the people here appreciate
good soccer."
As they did In Washington,
where Norway edged Mexico 1-0
on a goal In the Hfith minute by
KJetll Kckdal. And us they did in
Orlando, where Helglum's Mure
Dcgrysc connected In the I Ith
minute and Ills team barely held
on ugalnst Morocco
The roars In those stadiums
were nearly equal lo the dill at
Giants Slndlum on Saturday,
when the Irish fans chanted,
sang and vigorou sly roolcd
home their tram In a 1-0 upset of
Italy. The Italians were nup|M&gt;sed
lo have the home-field advan­
tage In New Jersey, but they
were outnumbered 3-to-l by the
Irish.
"W e were expecting an allllallan crowd, but II fell as If wc
were playing In Dublin," said
Kuy Houghton, who scored (he
Irish goal.

IN BRIEF
Hurricane awareness

The United Slates felt right al
home, loo* under I he dome in
I’onttnc. Mich. Eric Wynalda's
perfect free kick Into the left
corner o f the net gave the
A m e r ic a n s a 1*1 tie w ith
Switzerland for their first World
Cup point since 1950.
Using Ihc Sllverdome as a
tournament site apparently went
over well.
" T ills was a fantastic a t­
mosphere." said Georges Hregy.
who scored for Switzerland. "I
think It wasjusl great to play In
here and I enjoyed It very
much."
In the other weekend game.
Romania stunned Colombia. ,1
prelournamenl favorite. 3-1 on
Saturday.
Today, two other favorites
were on the schedule: llruzll vs.
Russia at Stanford. Calif., and
the Netherlands against Saudi
Arablu at Washington.
Norway, which already has
hud a great ytJar after Hinging .1
superb Olympics and lending lhe
medals count, lo boot, returned
to the World Cup for the first
time In 5(5 yeurs. For nearly a
half-hour after II won. thousands
of Norway fans cheered, waved
flags and danced In the aisles
T h e p la y e r s , m e a n w h ile
bnrrly had enough energy lo
make It Into the air-condlllonrd
dressing room.
"Som e of (he players couldn't
stand on lheir feet after llugam e." Norway coach Egll Olsen
said.
The Helglans also complained
u Ik h iI
the Ileal, bill, like the
Norwegians, they survived —
and prospered In the standings.
Dcgrysc knocked In an outstand­
ing header, then goalkeeper
Michel ITeud homme made II
hold up.

Providing the offense for Cen­
tral Baptist were Richard Walker
(Iwo singles, run). Tom Holland
Jr. (iw o singles). Mike llartmun
and Doug Luce (one single and
one RBI each). Eric Luce and
Tom Holland Sr. (one single und
one run each). Bill Tcrwllllgcr
and John Lamer (one single
cacti) and Eddie Coggln (RBI).
Doing the damage for Majesty
were Ike Mcndo/u (four singles,
tw o runs). Stcudlc (double,
single, three RBI). Toody Rosas
(two singles, three runs). Lane
Trnwlck (two singles, RBI). Jeff
Pandoff (single. RBI) and Stan
Immlch and Tony Colon (one
single each).
Doing the hitting for the
Crusaders were Mike Frutrlk
(two singles, run. two RBI). Art
Bcsch (two singles, two runs).
Paul Mlolkowskl und Don Basil
(Iwo singles each), Brooke Laggner (sin gle, run) and Ben
Frutrlk (RBI).
C o n tr ib u tin g fo r S a n fo rd
Assemblies were Joe Santoru

American Association o f Retired Persona (AARP) Invite* the
citizens o f Lake Mary, the Forest, the Crossings, Heathrow.
Grovcvlcw and Hidden Lakes to the June 21 meeting at 1 p.m.
ut the Lake Mary Community Building. 260 N. Country Club
Rd.. Luke Mury.
The meeting will feature an open forum on hurtcane
awareness, with questions and answers and meeting the people
In charge: Ken Roberts. Emergency Management coordinator
for Seminole County; Capt. Sam Belffore, Lake Mary Police
Department; Chief Duane Mehl. Lake Mary Fire Department.
Brochures will be handed out with Information about
evacuation and how to prepare you home and pets with
suggestions for supplies and first aid kits.
AARP meetings, held every third Thursday at 1 p.m., at old
City llall, 158 N. Country Club Rd., are free and open to the
public.
Annual membership dues are 93.
For more
Information call Delores Lash at 323*1142.

Kaleidoscope
Creative Interior album and phot design will be offered by the
city o f Lake Mary Recreation Department Saturday, June 25
from 10 u.m.*l p.m. at the Lake Mary Community Building.
200 N. Country Club Rd.
(.earn how to orgunlzc your pictures Into a photo-safe album
meant to tie passed down for generations to come.
Cost of the program Is 912.50 and pre-registration la
requested. Bring scissors and 6-8 recent photos o f one event
(vacation, holiday, etc.). Call 324*3097.

1984 class reunion
The Seminole High School class of 1984 la planning their
10-yrar reunion for the weekend o f July 15*17. Activities will
Include a "get-rcaqualnted party," dinner-dance banquet and
fumlly picnic. The coat Is 945 per person for all events and
rooms are available at the Sheraton Maitland, site of the
tNinqurt. at a special reunion rate but all reservations must be
made by July I. For more Information please contact Sue Mohr
nt 332-0477.

CALENDAR
Al-Anon group gathers
If you ure troubled by the alcoholism of a frelnd or relative,
there Is help. Serenity Won. an Al-Anon group for friends and
family of nlcohnllcs. will meet each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday night at 8 p.m. at the Sahara Club. 2587 S. Sanford
Ave., Sanford. For more Information, call 332-4122.

Oddfellows schedule meeting

P roper soil pH
What is it and how does it affect our plants?
I | f A U R A B O A R A A »R O aiU .O

Samlnols County Master Qardanar___________
We all hear this lerni pH whenever soil
becomes the topic of gardening conversa­
tions. Some of us ure quite familiar with this
term while others wonder — whatever are
they talking about?
Soil pH — what Is It? To gardeners soli pH
Is the gauge that they use lo determine
whether the soil that they are preparing to
uae for planting has the proper alkalinity
(aweetneas) or acidity (sourness) for the
proper growth requirements of the plants
they are going to place In It.
Soil pH though derived by a complicated
technical formula results In a simple
numerical scale which la used to express
H. The scale goes from 0.0 to 14.0 with 0.0
Ing most acid and 14.0 being most
alkaline. The halfway value on this scale, or
7.0 Is neutral, that Is. it Is neither acid nor
, alkaline (see pH scale below). Soli acidity
7 Increases as the pH value decreases from
' 7.0 to 0.0 and soil alkalinity Increases as the
pH value Increased from 7.0 to 14.0.

c

Acidity laerssssa
Lemon Juice pH 2.4 (acid)
Orange Juice pH 3.7 (acid)
Sour milk pH 4.7-(acld)
Fresh milk pH 6.7 (acid)
A lk a lin ity lncrsasas
Human blood pH 7.3 (alkaline)
Sea water pH 7.9 alkaline)
Soap solution pH 9.3 (alkaline)
Pure water pH 7.0 (Neutral)
So what does this have to do with plants
and why Is pH so Important?
Sol) pH Is Important because It Influences
several factors In the soli that affect plant
growth such as: 1) soil bacteria, 2) nutrient
leaching. 3) toxic elements. 4) nutrient
availability, and 5) soli structure.
A pH determination will tell whether your
sol) Is within a range that produces good
plant growth or whether It will need to be
treated to adjust the pH level.
For most plants, the optimum pH range Is
from 5.5 to 7.O. but some plants will grow
best In more acid soils und some nt more

nlktullnc level.
pH Is not nn Indication of fertility for the
soli, but as pointed out above, it docs affect
the availability of fertilizer nutrlcnls In the
oil. A soil may contain adequate nutrients
yet growth mny Ik* affected or limited by a
very unfavorable pH. Likewise, under rer*
lain conditions builder's sand which Is
virtually devoid of nutrients, may have an
optimum pH for plant growth.
Hoar la pH co rrected ? While you must
keep In mind the Importance of soil pH. It
should be noted that concern about Its
Impact In the typical landscape situation Is
often exaggerated. Consider correcting soli
H only when It Is appreciably higher or
iwer than the Ideal for the kind of plants
that you arc growing. Tills can be de­
termined by having your soil tested by u
responsible Inb. Remember that If your soil
pH Is wllhln 0.4 of a pit unll of (lie Ideal
range, adjusting the pH will probably not
Improve plant performance.
How la pH raised? Once a lest has been
run on your soil — which should determine
your soil's buffering capacity and tell you
how much lime you need lo apply, then you
can apply (he prescribed amount o f agricul­
tural limestone. Always lest before liming.
Don't Just assume that lime Is needed. Many
Florida soils already contain excess lime.
Such soils will typically have pits between
7.0 and 8.2.
How Is pH lowered? When soli pH Is high
because of naturally occurring lime (like
limestone, marl or sea shells), there Is no
practical way of lowering the soli pH. There
Is sim ply loo much lim e present to
neutralize. This Is also often true near new
m ason ry b u ild in g s nr hom es w h ere
excessive waste concrete and mortar fell on
Ihc soil during construction. Under those
circumstances prepare yourself to select
those plums which are tolerant of high pH
conditions and you will save yourself a lot of
grief and ut the same time avoid continuing
plant nutritional problems.
Is (here anything then, thut can tic done to
help ucld loving plants to grow In high pH
soils?
Be prepared for u never-ending, up-lmttlc.

E

Elemental sulfur added to soil will result In
a lower soil pH. This Is because soil bacteria
will transform elemental sulfur to sulfuric
ucld. The acid In turn will neutralize any
ulkullnlty with which it comes In contact.
Ilowevci do understand that as soon as the
sulfur Is "used up" soil pH will return to its
orglnal value. This cycle of pH dropping and
then rising again varies In the amount tt
lakes to occur, depending on the rate and
the method of sulfur application. If you try
to get around this cycle by putting on high
rates of sulfur, or If you should make
applications to frequently, you run the risk
o f damaging your plants. Never apply more
than 5 to 10 pounds o f sulfur per 1,000
squurc feet per application. And — I stress
to add — observe your plant's performance
carefully If you embark on any program of
sulfur addition.
Wliul nboul other compounds that can be
used — l.c. sulfate sulfur? Please note that
sulfate sulfur does not affect soli pH. Some
sulfate compounds have soil acidifying
properties — however, there are many other
which do not acidify soil such as calcium
sulfutc (gypsum) — magnesium sulfate
(epsom salts) and potassium sulfate.
Heavy applications of organic matter auch
as manure, composted leaves and peat do
help some landscape plants overcome the
adverse effects o f alkaline soil pH. but since
these materials decompose with lime, annu­
al or even semi-annual applications are
usually required.
The best advice Is "don't try too hard" for
any predetermined pH and — definitely —
don't act firsthand. Ask questions later
when II comes to applying lime or sulfur to
udjust (lie pH In your soil.
You cun use the fa cilities o f your
Cooopcnitlvc Extension Service where for a
small churgc (91.50 per sample) they will
process a sample of your soli and determine
Its pH and. If you like, the amount of soluble
sails ($1.50 per sample) In It. They will also
extend advice on how to proceed. For
further Information In this regard call the
Cooperative Extension Service In your local
area.

Uwlge No. 27 of the International Order o f Oddfellows meets
the first and third Monday o f every month, except July and
August, ut 8 p.m. at 101 Magnolia Ave., Sanford.

Pilot’s Club
makst bookmarks

Modelers Club announces meeting

Softball
Continued from ID
pluy a doubleheader agulust
Sanford Christian No. I al H:3G
a.m. and the Crusaders at 9:30
a.m. Nazarene will clinch Ihc
Fellowship title with a win In
either game, bill SCI can gel a
tie In Nazarene drops both
gumes. which would force a
playoff.
The other two games will have
Majesty taking on the Flames at
1 0 :3 0 a . 1 1 1 . a n d S a n f o r d
A s s e m b lie s fa c in g S a n ford
Chrlsllun No. 2 at 11:30 a.m.
The site for Ihc games will be
decided today. The games will
have lo be played at I’lnehurst
Hark If Chusc Hark Is needed for
tilt* U a b e R u I h b a s e b a l l
tournament Ihal will be played
next weekend.
Leading the Flumes were Tony
Hlnlle (triple. Iwo singles, run.
RBI). W.L. Graccy (triple, single.
ROD. Chris Dnporc (two singles).
Brian Burke (double, run), Rob­
ert Smith (single, run. Rill).
Murk Blythe (single, run) and
T o n y D eSorm lcr and Bruce
Dunlllu (one single each).

People

(double, single, run. (wo RBI).
F e r n a n d o C o n c a lv e z (t w o
singles, two runs. RBI). Justlno
Rolon (two singles, run. RBI).
Juslo Avilas (two singles, run).
Dandy Cnrrudem (double, iwo
runs. RBI). David Suarez (single,
three KHtl. Juslo Delgado Sr.
(single), Adrian l.ucu (Iwo runs)
and Juslo Delgado Jr. (run).
Getting (he tills for the Dis­
ciples were John Sofurelll (three
s in g le s , ru n . R B I). A n n ie
McGowan (two singles, Iwo
runs). Rich Schulz (single. RBI).
J a s o n C r e 111 c tl o , F l o y d
Westcrvclt. Bill Quinn and Jim
Mowlnskl (one single and one
run each), Chris Bacon (single).
Mike Baling and Jim Greco (one
RBI each) and Randy Reed (run).
Powering SC No. 1 were Kevin
Driscoll (triple, double, single,
Iwo runs, two RBI). Milligan
(triple, two singles, run. three
RBI), Barry Segroves (three
singles, two runs). Joe Ruiz
(triple, double. Iwo runs), Keith
Brlllon (two singles, two runs.
RBI). Duane LaFollcttc (double.
RBI). Eddie Hunt (single, run.
RBI), Carl Relchenbucli Sr.
(single, RBI) and J.D. Segroves
(single).

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

Sewing club gathers
Every Tuesday from 9:30 a.m. to noon, the WOOPIE Sewing
Club gathers at the Lake Mary Senior Center. 158 N. Country
Club Road, lo make baby clothes, and Items for nursing homes
as well us Items for the Christmas Store. The Items made by
the club are donated to preemle babies, nursing home residents
und gifts for the annual Christmas store.

Weekly Hone Club meeting
The Sanford Lions Club meets every Tuesday at noon at the
Colonial Room In downtown Sanford. For Information, call
321*0700.

Seniors meet Tuesday
The Sanford Senior Citizens Club meets the llrst and third
Tucsduy, at 11 a.m., at the Sanford Senior Center. Seniors are
welcome.

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

Pacing Grace Methodist were
Jim Llllo (four singles, three
runs, two RBI). Scott Carter
(three singles, run. RBI). Auron
Tokosch (two singles, run, two
RBI). Carl Rclchcnbach Jr. (two
singles, RBI), Dave Graincr
(double, two runs). Gary Carter
(single, run. RBI). Dave Rlmbach
(single, iwo RBI). Chip Langton
and Herb Brown (one single
each) und Curl Towers (run).

Legalized drugs won’t relieve crowded prisons
D B A R READERS) When I
published my opinion ubout the
egallzutlon of drugs (May 3), did
I net letters? The following arc a
sample from readers who dlsagreed;
D EAR ABBYl You should be
ashamed of yourself for endors­
ing efforts to legalize drugs, ff
you r con cern Is to reduce
crowded prisons, why not go all
the way and legalize burlary.
rape and murder? It would
reduce the prison population
considerably.
Of course, this would lead to a

&amp;
W

ADVICE

-«4

A B IG A IL
V A N BUREN
-

great deal of unemployment —
particularly among the defense
attorneys and those attorneys
em ployed by the "Am erican
Criminal Liberty Unton."
Maybe under you plun. those
bratn-dead and braln-dumuged
druggies could pick up a dally
welfare check every morning
when they get their dolly fix.
with Just a moderate Increase In
government employees.

OENE RILEY, BAN ANTONIO
DEAR ABBYt How can you
a pprove the leg a liza tio n o f
drugs? Who will be responsible
for the effects of secondhand
m arijuana sm oke that may
cause a car accident?
Are you willing to board a
plane with 200 passengers,
knowing the pilot and crew were
snorting "cok e"? Or get Into a
taxi with a hopped-up driver? Or
allow an eye surgeon who hus
had a drag or two of grass to
perform laser surgery on you?
Abby. perhaps you should
visit the hospitals (and graves) of
those maimed and killed by the
m oderate use o f drugs und
alcohol. Ask any pollccmun.

BILOXI BELLE CASINO
l&gt;f fARf St )Rl AM(&gt;« S|)AFf&lt;5FIA J1Ml list
iHIlRMiAV 11jfa| m •
f ftIS- |f!• |I|(»|-,
•*' l*,, ■•»'!• As* i|. t. ||,g „
, I, ,
**■'*■ '* *" Al' If l'|Al
$ 9 9 .0 0
Jn.tbfU .f
ss iun
ATA IN T I ft N A T IO N A L
I BOO 454 IIO O

On May 27. Doris 8laln (latt)
and Marlon Rethwllt visited six
s e c o n d g ra d e c la a s a s at
Hamilton Elementary and dis­
tributed patriotic bbdkmarks
w ith red, w h ite and blue
ribbons. Pictured with the PI lot
Club m em bers la principal
David Scott. The bookmarks
were made by th club members
end gave data* on which the
A m e ric a n fla g sh o u ld be
dlplayed In front of our homos.

The Sanford Aero Modelers Club meets every third Monday
o f Ihc month starling al 7 p.m. with the "Model of the Month"
competition ut Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce, 400 E.
First St. All phuscs of K/C model aircraft are represented. The
club's dying field Is located In Sanford. For more Information,
contact Lee Darguc at 574-4732.

I BOO 77 1 0 7 7 0

LL, FAIRFAX. VA.
DBAR ABBYtAs both u police
officer and attorney. 1 have hud
the opportunity to examine the
different sides of the drug Issue.
Drug-related crim e Is not

►HAW HIM

E2ZZZ

Matinooa: Mon., Wed., &amp; Sal. 1pm
Nightly: at 7:30 pm
Seniors Free at an Matineos

|m -TZT ’ i ,fTMir r K

GREYHOUND PARK
2000 Sominola Blvd., Casselberry
IN1UI0IIIIIN 11111VT mil. IIACINIi Wl III 11II AAIUHINI. VIA SATI11III
iin iHiiiiiiiir,iiuHin mohsi mai ini. rhum laiuiii in miamc

[fog toil~

------- ir m g m ltMni’

limited solely lo Ihc dealers. The
user must support his/her habit.
To expect the user to be able to
hold a steady Job is nonsense.
Those In law enforcement will
tcll you that drug users obtuln
their m oney by victim izin g
others. T h e person w ith u
9200-u-day heroin habit must
steel $2,000 worth of merchan­
dise to support his/her need.
Multiply thut by the number of
people currently addicted, and
you cun see bow drug use affects
ull of society.
Drug use Is a common factor
In child abuse, domestic vio­
lence. sexual assault und other
violent crimes. By supporting
the legalization of something

that has caused pain to so many,
wc send the wrong message to
society.
Instead, we should let those
who engage In the use o f sale of
drugs know that, os a nation, we
will continue to enforce the laws
that arc designed to protect the
Innocent.

JOHN O. LANNARBLLI,
BAN DIEGO

(Problems? Writs to Dear Abby.
For a personal, unpublished

reply, sand a sall-addrsssad,
•tamped envelop# to Dear Abby,
P.O. Box 89440, Los Angela*,
Calll. 90069. All correspondence
Is confidential.)

Litd.(i* M T L - .ti

iKidEunMo.'
Carnival of Movies, PopcornandCoca-Cola
Plan* on taking lhapa lex oof 8umm#f KWFunMovta, IuCSinS.1
day ol movla tun and ixcilimirfit to tha cfitldian of Laka Mny and
unoonding aioa uaef. wook all Surnmaf long.
Our Dfogiam this year w.a Indud# many apadii
. . e dcoloring
g i n g contuitt
conluit. lor Iha chlKXm.wfe.P«ti«a,and glflahom
at,
.ome of
ol Ih
m il aiaa
area minuiwiia
. aTur ' Z
P jL
^ . izr. ^;
£
•onio
.’
couito, havo a tpociol taiactlon of Q-RRl#d moviaa mol
oitaln lo ploaso.
T h * KldFunMovlu will b« th o w n # a d i Tuesday at JO-00 AM *

�4B - Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida • Monday, Jun* 20, 1994

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

INTHB CIRCUIT COURT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATI D IVItlO N
F i l l NO. M-S1SCP
In n :
The Es ta ll el
NORMANS CHRISTENSEN.
SSIS41 n a ir .
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th« Adm inistration ol lit*
E i l a t * o f N o r m a n S.
Chrlitanian. Dacaatad. FIN No
I t 111 CP. It pindlng In th*
Circuit Court In and tor Saml­
nol# County, Florida. Probat*
Division. th* a d d rtti ol which It
P O Drawer C. Santord. FL
l i r n . Th* nam* and address of
Ih * Partonal Raprasanlatlv#
and h it attorney herein a rt tat
forth below. All Intarattad partont a rt required to III* with
th lt Court WITHIN THREE 111
MONTHS FROM THE DATE
OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION
OF THIS NOTICE: ( I I a ll
claim * agalntt th* a tla l*. and
( I) any ofc| action by an Inter**!
ad parton that challenge* th*
Qualification* at th* Partonal
R a p r a ta n la tlv * . va n u * o r
lurltdlctlon ol tho Court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARREO.T
Data of th* Tirol publication of
Ih lt Nolle* ol Administration:
June II. Iff*.
N STANLEY CHRISTENSEN
Partonal Rapratanlatlv*
Apt. 4-W, SS4 Stratford PI.
Chicago. IL 40417
RICHARDR. BOOTH.
Attorney tor Partonal
Rtpratanlatlv*
• IllS W im d P I.
Miami. FL 11104*41
Phon* JOJ/174 *0 4
Fla. Bar r r m
Publlth: June II. » . ItH
DBS 11?

IN THE COUNTY COURT.
INAND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. H -1M M P
ALWAYS IN THE BLACK INC
DBA ITB A FLORIDA CORP
PLAINTIFFISI
VS
LILLIE MCCLOUO AKA
NICOLE MCCLOUD
OEFENOANTIS)
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: L ILLIE MCCLOUD AKA
NICOLE MCCLOUD
1041 NORTH ST
LONOWOOO FL U?SQ
You a rt hereby notified that
an action hat bean fllad agalntt
you In th* County Court. Sami
nol* County, Florida, Summary
Claims Division
You a r* required to appear
before HONORABLE DONALD
L MARBLESTON. a Judge ol
th lt Court, at 01:00 AM on JULY
X 1114. Samlnot* County Courthouse. COURTROOM B. San
lord. Florida, t* answer th*
statement of claim (Hod heroin.
Arty written answer or other
pleading* m utt b* fllad with th*
Clerk of th lt Court and capiat
thereof furnished to the Plaintiff
at P IT E R J CORRENTI ISO.
14* N WESTMONTB OR STI
MS ALTAMONTI SPRINOS FL
u ru .
Upon yewr I allure to appear en
th* above-Indicated date, a de­
fault may be entered agalntt
you tor th# relief demanded In
th* statement of claim.
W ltnatt my hand and th*
Official Seal of th lt Court in
Santord. Samlnol* County. Flor­
ida Ih lt Mth da-/ ol MAY. 1114.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY
BY Delorlt A. Tonda
Deputy Clark
Publlth: May 10 A June*. II. » .
1*14
OERHS

IN THB CIRCUIT CSu AT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
FROBATB DIVISION
F ll* Number 14-441-CP
IN RE: ESTATEOF
LEO LARIVICRE.
Deceased.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration at th *
estate o l LEO LARIVIBRE,
d e c e a s e d , F ile N u m b e r
14 441 CP, It pending In the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida. Prubai* Olvlilon. th*
addratt of which It Pott O tllc*
Drawer C. Santord. FL U771OSH Th* names and addrattat
ol th* partonal representative
• n d t h * p * r t * n a l r a p ra ta n la llv * '* attorney a r* M l
forth b* lew.
A LL INTERESTED PERSONSARE NOTIFIED THAT:
A ll parsons on whom th lt
nolle* It tarved who hav* ob
lecllont that challanga th* valid
Ity ot th* w ill, th* quel Ilicet lont
ot th* personal ropratanlatlv*.
v*nu*. or lurltdlctlon at m il
Court ar* required to III* their
o b |* c tl* n t w ith ih l t Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OP
THREE MONTHS APTSR THE
DATE OP THB PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OP I I R V I C I OP A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
A ll creditor* at th* decadent
and athar person* having claims
or dtmandt agalntt d*c*d*nt'i
•sla t* on whom * copy ot th lt
nolle* It served within thra*
montht attar th* data ot th* t in t
publication of th lt nolle* m utl
III* their claims with th lt Court
W IT H IN THE L A T E R OP
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OP THE PIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OP THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
A ll other creditors at th*
d*c*d*nt and p *rteni having
claims or demands age In ti tha
dacadanl’t a tla t* m utt h i* thalr
claims with mis court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THB FIRST PUBLI
CATION OP THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS
ANO OBJECTIONS NOT SO
FILEO WILL BE FOREVER
BARKED
Th* dal* of Ih* l l n l public*
lion ol mil nolle* It June IX
11*4.
Partonal Rtpratanlatlv#
CONNIE JANE LEESEBERG
m i Austin Av*
Deltona. F m r M
WILLIAM A OTTINOER
Attorney For Pollttonor
Florida Bar No ooadlti
Landtt. Graham. French.
Hut la Id. Sherman 4
Ford. P A
1111 it . o n Boulevard. Sulla Me
Oaiiona. p l n n t u n
Telephone (401)114 1441
Publish: June 11.10.1114
OEM!

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
BIOHTEENTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO.i n-iait-CA-14-R
J . l . K IS L A K M ORTOAOE
SERVICE CORPORATION, a
F lor Ida corporation
Plaintiff,

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
PROBATE DIVISION
FILE NUMBERi 14-141 CP
DIVISION: Prebat*
IN RE. ESTATE OF
HARRY HECHT.
is s n tio lA ire rj,
Oat aa tad
NOTICE OF
ADM INISf RATION
Th* adm inistration ol th*
a tlat* of HARRY HECHT. d t
caatad. File Number *4 141 CP.
It pending In th* Circuit Court
tor Samlnol* County. Florida.
Probate Division, th* a d d rtti ot
which It Room JOIN. 101 North
Park Avenue. Santord. Florid*
u r n . Th# namat and addrattat
of th* partonal rtpratanlatlv*
and th e p e rs o n a l re p re
tentative’! attorney a r* tat
forth below
Any Inter at tad par ton upon
whom th lt nolle* It tarved who
Inland* to challenge th* validity
ol th* w ill, th* qualification* ot
tho partonal rapretanlaltve,
venue, or jurisdiction of th*
court, and all person* having
claim* agalntt th lt a tla l* who
a r* tarved with * copy *1 th lt
nolle*, a r* required I* h i* with
Ih lt court such ab|*ctt*n or
claim within tha later ot three
(1) month* attar tha data at the
t in t publication ol th lt nolle* or
thirty (10) days alter th* data of
tarvlce of a copy of th lt nolle*
on that parson.
Parsons having claims agalntt
th* aetata who ar* not known to
th# partonal ropratanlatlv* and
who** name* and addrattat ar*
not reasonably atcarlalnabl*
m utl III* all claims agalntt th*
atta t* within three 111 months
a lta r th * data o l the l l r t t
publication ol th lt nolle*.
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVERBARREO
Tha data of Ih* llr t t publica­
tion ot th lt notice It June 30.
1114.
PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE
Olann* Finger
111 Hander ton Place
E atl Wlndtor, NJ 0*110
ORACB ANNE OLAVIN. P.A.
Attorney and Personal
Representative
1140 Tutfcawllla R d . St*. 104
Winter Springs. FL U N *
Telephone: (407)4111110
By: Or ace Ann Olavln. Etqulre
Florida Bar No. 110*01
Publlth: June 10.71,1114
DBS-111

v*.

JASPER WILKERSON. JR i
MARY WILKE RSON.
Datandantt
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that, purtuant to a Summary
Final Judgment ol Foroclotur*
entered herein, I w ill tall th*
property iltuatad In Samlnol*
County. Florldadttcrlbadat:
Th* Watt to of th* Northwatt
U of th* North***! to of ttw
Soulhwatl la of Section It,
Townthlp 10 South. Rang* U
Eatl. Samlnol* County. Florid*.
Sub|*&lt;t to an *alament over th*
Watt IS leal and th* North IS
teallhereof
Together with an aatamant lor
In g rttt and agratt dater Ibad a t
follow*: Th* North IS laat ot th*
South Vt ot th* Southweit to and
th* South IS teat ot th* North to
ol th* Southwest to, lying Bait
ot Slat* Road a*; and th* Watt
IS teat ot th* North***! (a at th*
Southwatt toi and the Batt IS
feat ol Ih* Northwatt la at th*
Soulhwatl I* and th# South IS
teal ot Ih* North t* ot Ih*
Soulhwatl w .'la tt In* Watt t* ol
th* Soulhwatl V* thereof, all
being In Section 14. Townthlp 10
South. Rang* U Eatl. Samlnol#
County. Florida: and last that
part ol told Soulhwatl '* lying
South and West ol Slat* Road a
end last road right ol way
TOGETHER with that certain
mobile horn*. Serial Number*
IOLISOJX and I0LIS4UU. Year
I t t l. Maka "L ib erty".
TOGETHER with any and all
right. 1111* and Inter**! lo any
and all aatamanlt which may be
a p p u rte n a n t to th * abovadatcrlbadproparty.
at public tala, to th* hlghatt and
batt bidder tor cash, at th# Watl
Iro n ! door ot Ih * Samlnol#
County Courthouse. Sanford.
Florida, at 11:00 o'clock a.m. on
July 14. l i f t .
WITNESS my hand and of­
ficial teal ol tald Court on Jure*
1,11*4.
(Court Seal)
Maryann* M ort*
d a rk of th* Circuit Court
By Jana E. Jaaawlc
A t Deputy Clark
Publlth: June t l. 10.11*4
DBS-111

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Calabrey Cph#« cryptograms are creeled Irom quoSahona by t
people past and prater* Each tenet n It* ephar tlendt lor
rode/1 c4r* E squab K

* B V Q A

Z ’ N

W C N Q i

JA

ND

R I C D Z A W

L J A L Q A H P C H Z A W
D J T

L J T I F

U J N U
U J H V Q P

C A F

X Q H
ZH

N O . ’

B Q I I ,
B Q I I ,
J M M

C

B J T I F A ' H
—

H J N

E Z H Q .
P R E V IO U S S O LU TIO N : ‘ F a th e r* a r * what glva
daughter* away to other man who aren't neatly good
enough* — Paul Harvey.

T

“I'm sorry, sir, B ut you'll h a v e to le a v e y o u r
a tta c h e c a s e b e h in d — w e ju st hit o u r
m a x im u m w e ig h t a llo w a n c e ."

CITYOP
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
NOTICE OP
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by th* City Commit!Ion ot th*
City of Lako Mary, Florida, that
tald Commit!ton w ill hold *
Public Hearing on July 1, 1114.
at 1:00 P.M . or * t toon thoroaftor o t passible, to consider
Second Reading and adoption ot
on Ordinance entitled i
ORDINANCE NO. 1*1
AN OROINANCB OP THE
CITY OP LAKE MARY. PLOR10A, TEMPORARILY WAIV­
ING THE PROVISIONS OP
S E C T IO N I , E N T IT L E D
“ ENFORCEMENT” OF AP­
PENDIX I, THE SION COOE
OP THB CODE OF O R D I­
NANCES OF THE CITY OF
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA. FOR
A L L N O N -C O N F O R M IN O
SIONS LOCATED W IT H IN
THB CITY OF LAKE MARY
F O R A N IN E M O N T H
PERIOOi PROVIDNG THAT
BMPORARY WAIVERS SHALL
BE DBBMEO AN EXTENSION
OP THE A M O R T IZ A T IO N
PERIOOi PROVIDING FOR
CONFLICTS. SEVERABILITY
AND EFFECTIVE DATE.
Tha Public Hearing w ill ba
hold In th* Comm It*ton Cham
bar*. M l N. Country Club Road.
Lak# Mary. Tha Public I t m
vltod to attend and b* hoard
Sqld hearing may ba canllnuad
from tlm * to tlm * until a final
dacltlon It mad* by th* City
Commission Coplet ot th* Ordl
none* In full a rt available In tha
City Ctork’t Office tor ray tow.
A TAPED RECORO OP THIS
MEETING IS MAOE BV THB
C IT Y FOR ITS CONVBN
IIN C E . THIS RECORD MAY
NOT CONSTITUTE AN AOE
QUATB RECORO FOR PUR
POSES OP APPEAL PROM A
DECISION MAOE BY THE
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
FOREGOING MATTER. ANY
PERSON WISHINO TO BN
SURE THAT AN AOEQUATE
RECORD OP THE PROCEED
INOS IS MAINTAINED FOR
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
A D V IS E D TO M AKE THE
NECESSARY A R R A N G E ­
MENTS AT THIS OR HER
OWN EXPENSE
P E R S O N S W IT H O IS B IL IT IE S N E E O IN O
ASSISTANCE TO PARM CIPATE IN ANY OF THESE
P R O C E E O IN O I SH O U LD
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO
ORDINATOR AT LEAST i t
HOURS IN ADVANCE OF THE
MEETINO AT (4*11114M 4
CITY OF LAKE MARY.
FLORIDA
Carol A Fatter. City Clark
DATED: June II. 1114
Publlth Juna 70. 11*4
DBS It*

IH THB CIRCUIT COURT
OF THR EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
CITY OP
FLORIOA
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
case N O i M m - a i i s
NOTICE OP
c h a r l o t t e m a o u i r i and
PUBLIC HEARINO
RAYMSR P.MAOUIRE. JR.
NOTICE IS H IR B R Y OIVSN
**C » T rw tto ***f !ha
th* CHv OpmmSssian at Ih*
R.P. MAGUIRE TRUST,
ly ot la k e Mary. F tor Ida. that
}- "
Plaintiff*,
• taid CammiinaR .vviu hour a
v.
Public Hearing or\'Juiy 1. 11*4,
STEWART TITLE OUARANTY
at 1 00 P.M.. or a t toon Ihoraaf
COMPANY. ETC. BTAL.
tar a t possible, te consider
Datandantt
Second Hooding and adoption of I
NOTICE OP ACTION
on Ordinance entitled:
TO: Richard Belgerd and De­
ORDINANCE NO. It *
light Balgard. trading and d/b/a
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
Panlhout* Claanan. Valeria
CITY OF LAKE MARY. FLOR
Brower. Stanley B. Bylhar,
IDA. AMENDING SECTION
trad in g and d /b /a Orepory
401 OF THE CHARTER OF
Specialists. O W. Cotoman d /V a
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY.
Cotoman Drywall Service. Ewell
FLORIOA. INCREASING THE
Concrato. Inc., P lrtt Fidelity
LENGTH OF TERMS FOR
Saving* and Loan Association.
M EM BERS OF THB COM
Individually and a t Trutto*.
MISSION FROM TWO YEARS
Julian Myrlck
TO THREE YEARS BEGIN­
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
NING WITH THE REOULAR
action to “ qutot tllto " an th*
CITY ELECTION IN I11S FOR
tallowing property In Samlnol*
SEATS 1 AND 4 ANO WITH
County, Ftortda:
THE REOULAR CITY ELEC
Lot f, W llth lr* Plata, ac­
TION IN 111* FOR MAYOR
cording to th* Plot tfwroof o t
ANO SEATS I AND 11 PRO
recorded In Plat Booh U . Pag*
VIDING FOR SUBMISSION OF
10 and O.R. Book 1410. Pag* IV .
T H IS C H A R TE R A M E N D ­
Public Record* *1 Samlnol*
MENT TO THE ELECTORS OF
County. Florida.
THE CITY OF LAKE MARY AT
hat
boon filed agalntt you and
THE N e X T O E N B R A L
Stowa rt T ill* Guaranty Com
ELECTION TO BE HELD ON
pony, R. Blair Kltnar, Kltnar
NOVEMBER *. I114i PRO­
Surveying. Inc.. Comptot* Inte­
VIDING FOR THE FORM OP
riors. Inc., Linda Clark Mead
BALLOT) PROVIDING FOR
owt a/k/a Linda C. Maadowt.
EFFECTIVE DATE OP THB
Individually and a t Ca-Trutto*.
AMENDMENT TO SECTION
David M. Maadowt. Individually
a.M OP THE CHARTER OF
and a t Cp-Trutta*. Abtand, Inc.,
THE CITY OF LAKe MARY.
American
Capital Invatlmanlt,
FLORIDA) PROVIDING TOR
Inc., Barnet! Bank ol Winter
CONFLICTS) S E V E R A B ILI­
Park, N A . California Federal
TY) ANO EFFECTIVE DATE
Bank. City of Cattolborry. Flor­
OP THIIORDINANCE.
ida. Caait Federal Bank. Fad
Th* Public Hearing w ill ba
aral
Saving* Bank, Richard
held In th* Commission Cham
Colbart, CS, Inc., CS ot Tax*!
bar*. 100 N. Country Club Rood,
Inc., Federal Deposit Insurance
Lak* Mary Th* Public I t In­
Corporation, Al Gottllab. Inc.
vited to attend and b* hoard.
d/b/a Th* Voyager, Amerada
Sold hearing may ba continued
Hast Corporation, Kuykendall
from lima to tlm * until * final
Inturonc* Agency. Inc.. Nancy
dacltlon I t mad* by th* City
Pattorton. Plata Contort. Lid .
Commission. Coplot ot th* Ordi­
Slmklnt Industries. Inc., W.M.
nance In lu ll a r* available hi th*
Invottmanl Carp., Schrlmthar't
City Clark'* OffIc* for rtvtow.
Plumbing A Heating. W ttilie id
A TAPED RECORD OP THIS
F in a n c ia l C o rpo ra tio n and
MBBTINO IS MADE BY THE
W llth lr* P lat* RBO IV. Ltd,
C IT Y FOR ITS CO N VE N ­
a /k/a W llthlr* P la t* REO IV.
IENCE. THIS RECORD MAY
Ltd., and you a rt roqulrtd to
NOT CONSTITUTE AN ADE­
MTV* a copy of your written
QUATE RECORO FOR PUR­
datontat.
It any, to It an SCOTT
POSES OP APPEAL PROM A
J. JOHNSON. ESQUIRE, th*
DECISION MADE BY THE
P la ln tlft'4 a tto rn e y, w h o t*
CITY WITH RESPECT TO THE
addrau It l SOUTH ORANOE
FOREGOINO MATTER. ANY
AVENUE.
ORLANDO. PLORPERSON WISHINO TO EN­
I0A 73tOJ. within X days alter
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
th* llr t t publication and til* Ih*
RECORO OP THB PROCEED­
original of th* detonta t with th*
INGS IS MAINTAINED FOR
Clark ot th lt Court, Samlnol*
APPELLATE PURPOSES IS
County Courthouse, P.O. Draw­
A D V IS E D TO M AKE THE
er
C. Santord. Florida m i l 041!
NECESSARY A R R AN G E­
♦Ithar bifora to rv lc t on Plain­
MENTS AT THIS OR HER
t i f f ! attorney or Immodlatoly
OWN EXPENSE.
thorooftor. It a defendant falls
P E R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
to do to. a dafault w ill b*
A B I L I T I E S N E E O IN O
tn
to rtd agalntt that dttondant
ASSISTANCE TO PA R TIC I­
tor th* relief demanded in th*
PATE IN ANY OP THESE
complaint.
P R O C E E D IN G S SH O U LD
OATSDOn May 4.1114.
CONTACT THE CITY ADA CO­
(SEAL)
ORDINATOR AT LEAST 4*
MARYANNE
MORSE
HOURS IN ADVANCE OP THE
CLBRKOPTHB
MBETINGAT(40?)U41M4.
CIRCUIT COURT
CITYOP LAKE MARY.
By: Ruth King
FLORIDA
A t Deputy Clark
Carol A. Potter, City Clark
IN ACCORDANCE W ITH
DATED: Juno II. 1114
T H E A M E R IC A N S W IT H
Publlth: Juno30. 1114
DISABILITIES
ACT. PERSONS
DES-IM
WITH DISABILITIES NBEDINO A S P E C IA L ACCOM­
MODATION TO PARTICIPATE
IN T H IS P R O C E E D IN G
SHOULD CONTACT COURT
ADM INISTRATO N AT P.O.
D R A W E R C, S A N T O R D ,
FLORIDA. 111110411. TELE­
PHONE (401) 311-4130, NOT
LA T E R THAN SEVEN (?)
DAYS PRIOR TO THE PRO
CKEDNO. IP HEARINO IM ­
PAIRED. (TTD) MOO-tSSini
OR v o ic e (V) i to o -m in o .
VIA FLORIOA RELAY SERV­
ICE.
Publish) Juna 10,17 A July 4. It,
1*14
D B S -Ill

«

71— H t lp Wanted

Ltgal Notices

CLASSIFIED ADS

V E N O IN O -L O C A L ROUTE
Established. Immediate SatouptoUOO/wk FREE INFO

Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

________ (w a irs a ia s i________

322-2611

031 -99 93

VENDING ROUTE: Tlrad *1
gal rich quick dealt! Want a
good, solid. real b u tln tti! W*
gal III Pr lead to tall.

CLASSIFIED 0£PT
HOURS
8:00 A .M .-8 :3 0 P.M.
MONDAY thru
FRI0AY
CLOSED SATURDAY
ft SUNDAY

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
14 c o n tK u th rt l l m a s 5 7 i a Noe
7 c o n tK u O v t ttm a s _____ ....7 0 * a lin t
3 cofwacuthfE l i m i t ____...8 1 8 a Una
1 tlm * . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11.19 a lin t
R a n * a r t par ia iu a , b a n d on 3 Unas

BchtdiAng may nrkxM HafakJ Advarktaf ai tna cost ot an adrttonal day
Cancel whan you gat rands Pay only tor days your ad new al tala earned
Ut# LA deaenpbon tor toatott raaidtt Copy m utt to*ow acceptable typo
grapiucal form •Commercial kequency ratot are evadabie
DEADLINES
Tuaaday thru Friday t&gt; Noon Th* Day Bator# PuMcakon
Sunday 11 Noon Today • Monday 5 N P U Frday
ADJUSTM ENTS ANO C R ID fT E : In Ih a rv a n t o l an a rra r In an
ad. th o to n fo r d Harald w M bo rooponaftofo to r I h * Brat
In o oftlo n o n ly and o n ly to t h * o x ta n t o f t h * c o a t o f that
Inoord pn. PIobbb choch y o u r o d t o r oc t u ro c y lh o flra f d a y H
run s.

13— B I h q o

L IO A L A D V IR T IIIM IN T
■ID 1I/M 44
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
•hat th* City at Santord. Florida
w ill racWva tea led btdt up to
1:90 P M. an Wednesday. Jun*
It , 1114 In th* Purchasing Ot
tic*. Ream 141 tar th* to)lowing

FREE Trantparlatton to Tampa
S a m ln o l* Bingo. 4 A ca t
Charter 4 Tourt 1 100 447 1141

oat at Ih* City.
P a rta n t w ith d l t a b l l l l l t t
n iUHtg ataktanca to p a rfk l
p*ke In any of that*
hat* pracaadsng*
Ih* Personal o t
1414.
ta r ty a-ig- h- t------*
h e u rim \ in
---. --------- —A . .
EoVBv*CE QE ITto nvEwfth^

City af Santord
Walter Shear In
Purchaalng Aganl

21— P tr s o n a li

ADOPTIONS

Fra* medical car*, trantpor
tallan. counseling private
dec tor plus living aepantat
Bar 1117III Claarwator Attornay
F ritte r
t MPH7 MW
O E N T L IM IN . leaking tor r *
la ia lta n t Looking tor light
touch body rubef Doling?
P arttotf Leak no further Call
Diamond Mm* Entertainment
487 1417*40 Now Hiring
N IC ! LOOKING Oanttoaiaa.
IO*ah. looking tor nan tmek
m g/d rin kin g , nice leaking
lady, lea M l with Similar in
torests to #n|#y music, aul
door activities, travel, movtot.
good wholesome tun Recent
photo 4 PH « to P O B o b
11*. Santord. FI W t t Oil*
23— L o s t A F o u n d
LOST DOO by Hh and 1711
Pomeranian, geldan brown
’Tiny ” REWARD H I *4**
27— N u r s t r y A
C h ild C a r *
•AB IBS Is I i n Pr* K das***
Summer tun. Intercession and
aftor school car*. HRS ragit
torad Call Evelyn M l aaq
MARTA'S DAYCARE Infant la
pre Sschool
ch ool HRS L k» M 4 7
Lak# Mary

41— Hoftltti 4 F l i n t s
a a tM A F * TOUR BOOT Fra*
par tonal IlSnat* training with
Club Metol 4 wk program No
contract* Call »7t *041

Jun* I I, 1114
P ubllth: Jun* 10.1*14

3 3 — B u s in e s s

OES-iai

O p p o r t u n it ie s

IN THB CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE tITH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA
IHAND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
OENBRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASE NO. 1} UTtCA-14-B
METROPOLITAN FEDERAL
BANK. lib .
Plaintiff,
VS
DAVIO A. DAWSON and JOAN
M DAWSON, at at.,
Oalandantt
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE M L B
Nolle* It hereby given that,
purtuant 1a that Final Judgment
of Fortctotur* dated Jun* 1,
1114. and enterad in civil cat*
number HH75CA U E . of th*
Circuit Court af th* ttth Judicial
Circuit In and tar Samlnol*
County. Florida, wherein METR Q P O L IT A N F E D E R A L
BANK, FSB. It Plaintiff and
DAVID A. DAWSON. JOAN M.
DAWSON. I t / * r t Oatondantltl,
I w ill ta ll to th* hlghatt and batt
bidder tor cash at ttw w ist (rent
door at ttw Samlnol* County
caurthaut* In Santord. Seminal*
County. Florida, at 11:00 A M .
on th* 11th day at July. 1H4, ttw
following described property at
tat forth In said Final Judg
mant, to wit:
L o t IS . G R E E N W O O D
LAKES. UNIT X according to
th* plat tharaof a t recorded In
Plat Book n . Pages M and II ,
Public R tco rd t el Samlnol*
County, Florida.
Datod th* Hh day ol Juna,
IBEi
MARYANNE MORSE
Clark a! Circuit Court
By Jan* B. Jatawlc
Deputy Clark
Publlth:
Jun* t l, 10.1114
•ublfshij.
DBS-114____________________
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT
OP THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INAND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CASE NO. S4-11II-DR-U-K
IN RE : Tha Marriage of
MICHAEL DAVID KEMP,
Husband.
and
KATHY LEE KEMP,
Wit*.
NOTICE OP ACTION
DISSOLUTION OP MAERIAOE
TO: MICHAEL DAVIO KEMP
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI­
FIED that an action tor dissolu­
tion el marriage hat bean fllad
agalntt you and you ar* re­
quired to larva a copy ol your
written datontat. It any, to It en
Kathy La* Kamp. P tllllo n tr.
w h o t * a d d r a u I t 1410
0 r4 n d v ltw A v tn u t, Santord.
F lorid * 11771. on nr btfora
JULY It, 1H4, and f i l l th*
original with Ft* d ir k ol thlt
court b tto r* tarvlc* on PallHonor or Immodlatoly Ih*real­
tor. It you fall to da to, * dafault
w ill b* antarad agalntt you for
th * r t lla f demanded In th*
pitlllan.
WITNESS my hand and tael
of th* Court on JUNE 1,11*4.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERKOPCOURT
By Nancy R.WIntor
Deputy Clark
Publlthi Juna IX M. 17 A July 4,
11*4

DES -tit

IN T IR E S T ID IN PURCHAS
INO AMWAY Products ar
starting your own business
Cal] I t * 47M Fee &gt;11 !&gt;**
LAWN SERVICE Truck. trail
ar. equipment and accounts
N ils In STO s Growth poton
llal

SIIK

71—H tlp W in ftd
* O f ITER WANTED *
Fall tins* Mast hav* 1*1*
madal teats* vehicle far fecal
deliveries winning personal
vehicle Call *4111*1411
AODTO YOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL I11-41U a r m * * * *
AOVIRT1SINO

I8WCDMTE OPENINGS
1. INSIDE SALES. I full tlm*.
I part lima i n Whrs)
S. SALES ASSISTANT, pari
lima i n W hrsl
Musi hav* writing W ill* and
basic photograpy ability

Legal Notices

Spaclfkaltont and th* proper
bid torm t ar* available, at no
cott. In th# Purchasing Otllc*.
Room 141. TOO N Park Avenue.
Santord. Florida ( a l l 110 M il
Foctlmlto ar telegraphic bids
w ill net ba accepted
Th* City at Santord rater vat
th* right to accept ar rt|#ct any
ar all bidt. with or without
cause, to waive tochnlcallttot or
to accept th* btd which in it*

KEEP DNIVING AND STILL
GET TMC M0NEYI
A ll you naad I t your till*. Jack
Diamond far appointment.
___________________ N » m * ___________________
STOP • AVOID BANKRUPTCY
Fra* Dabf Consolidation with
Credit Services I M a t t ! 17II

* 3 L in t* M inim um

NOW ACCEPTING

FLAIL MOWER
All bids than be addr#taad at
tot laws:
A Far Mall Delivery:
Purchasing Aganl
City *1 Santord
P.O. B«i treat
laniard. PL 11111 I1M
B Par Head Delivery i
Purchasing Agant
City at Santord
100 North Park Avanu*
Santord. PL H i l l
T h* t a ile d b id t w ill b*
publicly opened later mat tarn*
day al 100 P M In th* City
Cemmlttton Chambart. Room
111. la n ia rd City Hall Lata
attars w ill be returned to tender

81— M oney hi Lend

U1 *4*0

All 1 positions raqulro on
Ihwslasm and good cam
m un lca llan s k ill* Haurly
w a g * p lu s c o m m is s io n ,
b o n u s * * and c o r p o r a t e
benefits Apply In person,
m all/fas resume
Fens Raynor
D O Seminole Famysavar
*t* N they 1711
Langwaad. FI tl7M
F an 4*7 IH-SAM

AGENTS-RCAl ESTATE I
Naming succeeds Ilk* success
Wa r# wall into aur }rd dacada
of training successful agann
N* Hears**?........... W# ilhalpl
WATSON REALTYCORP
REALTORS
W W f

A PPU ER SSI1 HR
W s tr a m iK il work
________ in i? t? T T *________

ASSISTANT MANAGER
Two year* minimum las! toad
aeaarlanc* Salary v a r lt*
Horn 1171 la SS00 par wees
High school dipiam* raqwirad
Resvma and appNcalSan tot
L a a ’ S Famaas Ra clp *
Chick an. Saalsrd. m i n i
AVON arstosKts ia a * Earn to
X \
No door door PT/FT
Sandi m lin n soo e** u s e
BARN SMM/SMM fo r . Meath.
II yea have caurapa call l
MH7MMhr.raa.niSB.

CAR DRIVER
P/T ar F/T. Mato ar tomato
Musi hav* goad driving record
m in t

CAIf ENTERS ft OtCXERS i
SUB CRRW4HEEDBD
Call after fpm M l law

CARKNTUS

Apply a ll We* hra Park, an *•

Welch R d . Apopka Mon Frl.
see Richard ar #87 44* 4111
a CAR RENTER T R A IN ! ■ a
I I yau can raad a la p *
measure Yaw can start today I
FREE REGISTRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
7S* W llt h II m 111*

CASHIERS
A ll shills available Eepari
once pralarrad Apply
Fine Express M a rl
1407 S French Av*

Santord t i l OSU

71— H t l p W i n f t d

CLERICAL
Freni dash typ* Soma com
putor • spar tone# needed
________ 407 141 TIM________

COMPUTER PR06RAMER
/ANALYST
I ep and degrat required
407144 m t ________
a DELIVER V DRIVER a
This busy compay needs you
to keep stock shaighii Oai
behind llto wheal hare now I
FREE REGISTRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
&gt; *s w .is ih n .iix » i&gt; «

OENTAL RECEPTIONIST
Dynamic, aspartancad. indi
vidual needed tor mutll dis
dpllnery afflc* Scheduling
col lac Hon. Insurance, phon*
skin*, recall, pallant raiallons
and tomu*&gt;let literacy a must
Thai* with denial « «per tone#
naad only apply. Salary com
mensural* with aeparlanc*
Available immadialtoly
________ sg a riM M *________

DENTAL ASSISTANT
Experienced #■pended duties
Assistant needed far mull)
disciplinary surgical and p r*
Slh allc ra c o n s lru c llv #
practice Energetic individual
with Strang Individual and
team skills, willing to go th*
aetra mile, a must Salary and
banaflts cam mensural* with
a spar tone* SO* 771-CMS

DOG GROOMER
Eiparlancad only naad to
apply At laatl 4 yrt
DOO BATHER AND COME
OUT PERSON. Al least 4 yrs
aeparlanc* ra q u lrtd Call
l&gt;447Mker*ppsla)miaf
__

DRIVERS NEEDED
A G CARRIERS. Tavares. FI.
a wall established and grow
log Canlrel Florida based
company altar s you
a lie to Ms par m il*
* Up I* I I 000 ml par mo

a Hop o n P#r
0 Unloading Fay
* Vacation Pay
* Solely 4 Par tor mane* Bonus
aSpauea hiding Program
* Avar eg* T rip * 7 Days

a Lata Modal Canvaniwnal
Tractors
It you hav* | years Hector
Haller. OTR and mew and Ha
aeparlanc* plus a pood driving
racard. call

i tea *7* sis*

DRIVERS WANTED
Ouallllad. #«per tone ed pro
due# hauler Lang distance
COL required CtownMVH
Call M7 IS* 71*0
EARN UP TO IN * * per wees
processing FHA/HUO Gov •
refunds No esp necessatf
I I I I 4SS IM P Exl IM.fShrs

EUCTROMECHANICAl
Stomans. sirombarg Carlson
has r*1*m*d TRANSWOH l O
SERVICES GROUP to Hall
many *1 Ihalr alaclram c*
posilions Musi hav* aspari
one# In same *&lt; Ih# tallowing
areas Commercial SeMating.
R a w a r k / Touch Up.
EtocHamactsanlcal Assembly,
and W lr* Wrapping POH
I M M I O I 4 T I CONSIO
■ RATION CALL: 444SS7S

K IP IN O U nB U U . UW 1RG

MACHINE OPERATORS
A L S O N IID IX P IR IIN C ID
IP R E A O IR /C U T T IR

Mon Thor*. Sis hr work days
Pd holiday h vacation Ap*iy
i f : Sea Del. 77*0 Old Lake
Mary R d . Saatord H I M l*
a FRONT OFFICE ASST e
Fun |obi Assisi In all araast
Plenty ol variety to seep you
happy I Compay hiring now!
FREE REGISTRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
7 W W .U lh S I.m ilM

N o lle*

C o n c re te

Lewn Service

FLORIDA STATE REQUIRES
all contractors ba registered
or certified Te verity a slat#
c o n t r a c t o r s Means* cal l
1 M0 141 7*40 Occupational
Herns** ar* required by Hi*
county and can ba varlltod by

CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Baal. I Man Ouellty OperaHon i u a -m a /ts M iM _______
QUALITY CONCRETE WORK.
IS years asp. Raasanabla
L ie /In s SU-IM4

A d d itio n s ft
R tm o d tlln fl

MASTER ELECTRI CI AN.
Rapalr-addlllon, comm/ras

HAROLD 4 HOWARDS Lawn
Mowing Sarvlca. Looking lor
l a w m lo mo w l Edgi ng,
trimming, tortlllilng (II ra
quastodl. also Hash hauling
407 141M70 :#**# mas saga, or
#07 U1 54M Licensed/Inswrad
RAINBOW LAWN SIRVICE
No |obs la big or small
Rtildtnllal/Commlrlcel.
Llcansad/lnsursd 407 U4 M il
RANDY'S QUALITY LAWNi
Comptot# pro car* since IM0
Clean aps. hauling. U l 0714
SOUTHERN Lawn m a in !*
none*. Quality work *1 a lair
prlc* Fraaasllmatas U14I44
TOM 4 JEFF'S U W N C A R II
■Rs* /Comm , dependable, tow
ratosl F ra *a il............U0 7070

calllnaKllMIJOjiiMin^^^

KES/ COMM. Vinyl Siding .
Alum . F ram ing. D ry w tll.
Doers. Roofing. Cancrato
I t t a t l L O . Ballet, CBCai ts*a
RESIDENTIAL REM ODIUNO
Carpentry, palming, alum,
soffit. CGCA04110 U t SIM
iln g
Air dondlllonH
eT a T
SHERMAN'S A ljV o TRBPAIR
Coidasl air In town. Auto 4
truck air conditioning systems
repaired or Inslallad. Fra# ail.
lO y rs a im a rla n c r^ U H O O t

Electrical
UcdnrlBROOOainjlHm^
flo o r in g
HARDWOODFLOORINO
Install Sanding Finishing
TOMOLWNi J d 1 M lH ll?
H o m e Im p r o y m e n l*
A » tO L U T E C iH p *3 ry ? T B m !
matal studs, rastoratton work,
drywall, doors, siding, decks.
Lie/1 ns t!S-M*7
AFFORDABLE HOME Rapalr
Dxpandabl*. All phasas. Call
tor Free asl. Michael UI710*

A utom otive

AL DOES IT ALII

AUTO Btdy R spalr/TIntlag.
Hama/alflca. W ill wva you 1.
Licensed Fra# B it. M74S4S

Fix It right at a price you can
•Herd. Llc'd/lns. From start
to finish. Carpentry, plumb
Ing, electrical, and roofing
ivet. S3 yrs el txparlanc#. No
ob too big or small. Call
ISf&gt; **«a r rn-4 I I I H Naurs
HOME 4 OFFICE REPAIRS.
Etoctrlc, plumbing. A/C ra­
p a l r * . Do o r s , w i n d o ws ,
screens, call, fans, w alsr
haaftrs, carpanlry, decks,
custom furn.. woodwork. All
at affordable pricesi &gt;41-111!

C a r p tn lr y
CARPENTER All kind* 0« home
rapalrs, painting 4 ceramic
Ilia Richard Grass..... U 11171

C B r p B t/ln s tB ila tlo n
CARPET-M ILL DIRECT
■Ig Dfscaunts Famous Ersnds
First OsMlIly. Tap Lina.
Slalnmastsr, Saxonies.
Tracktau. Sculpture* 11.11
Installid. Commardsl toval
loops U t l yd. M7-U4-MW

DAVIS ft SON PAINTING
A PRESSURE WASHINO
F rsatsl. ISyrtssp. U I417I
Pressure Cleaning “
AQUA CLEAN. Ho u m i . patios,
driveways. All work dona by
pratosstanal Itrsm anU I-ttfS
DUN RITBl Clean drlvsways
raals. pool dacks, walks.
h e u sas.F rM M t.ni 4IU

Photography
• EACH. Sports and Waddings
Mobil aqula-unique pricing.
For Info call U4 WO!

C a r p o t C le a n in g

S c re e n /Repairs

SAM'S CAR F IT CLBANINO
plus strip and buff fleers.
Rasldanllal/com m srclal S4
^ ir r U 4 3 M I J b j* p s r i4 * ^ 4 ^ ^

PRAOER Builders Scraan rm i,

vinyl windows, rapalr*. Low
pries*. CECOU007 *17 *471

C le a n in g S e r v ic e
W ILL clean heme* and office*.
Vary reasonable rata*. Fra#
e stlm a lttl 10 years sxparlanc*. Call anytime. U0-11S4

Painting
CUSTOM PAINTINO by Jtflray
Power. I n l a r l o r / Exl a r l o r ,
Llc'd/lns. PraaEsl. Ut0143

DBC LAWN 4 TREE SVC. No
|ab toe small or big. Rssld/
Coml. SIS off 1st cat ar prana
Fra* M l. llc ./ln « . U4-1HS

T r t * S trv Ic B
ECHOLS TREE SVC Lie's. Ins
“ Laf th* Protoulonali do It.''
F rM M flm a lM ........... UJ 1771

Advertise Your Business Every Day
For As Lou) As $45 Per Month.
Call Classified , 322 26 H

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Monday, June 20, 1W4 - SB

±
71—Hslp Wanttd
CHILDCARE CENTER
t e a c h e r /a i o e

m m ;

HAM AND EGG DELI
t « i u w ol Increased u i &lt; i
!M«d help! H I end 2nd t h l l l t
available B « tttr men aw ragv
pay E ,p In m aking dall
sandwiches helpful Apply In
l '* n o n : AMACO 4,1111. SR 44

H u ln if T im m d P reducti
H a t an opaning lor
D E LIV ER Y /W A RE MOUSE
PERSON
M u il ba I I y r t ol ago. dapoo
dabl*. c loan cut. (loan d riving
record with no DUI convlc
Horn In la tl Ihrao yaa rt and
good altondaiHa razord
Apply In p a r s * Mon Erl.
I l l Cammorc# Way. la n ia rd
( n a i ia n l l » r i a M t p a n a g a

"S u b stitu ta ” P ip it C a rritn
Noadod lor rowlot In Saminolo
County C onlazl Tracy a l
SAN FORDHERALD I I I M il

HOUSCCUMERS
Par TIOY MAID ! dayt »k
a im pay and bonalllt &gt;» I&gt;t4

S E C U R IT Y O E P IC E R Job
training Armad A unarmad
B rantly A A tto c M4 07RR

TRUCK TIRE TECHNICIAN
1TITMR

TYPESETTER
F u ll lim a opaning In buty
Longaood p rin t thop Mac
ftp
raq Scanning. Adoba
photo thop. Quark and othar
pro g ra m t rOnpm m tO«l
WAREHOUSE A N O O IN E R A L
LA EO R H E L P N S E D E D I
Bonut lor d riv e n A ll t h l l 'l
avallabi# Dolly pay. no loo
Roport roady lo work } X) am.
In d u tlrlo l Labor Sue. 1011

FrtnchAv No phone fill,

WAREHOUSE PERSON
Eap prolarrod CDL llconta
raq Apply In par ton 10 a. HOI
Clark St . Apopka llo c h h a rl
Araa o il Over land Rd )______
aY A R D FO R E M A N a
S* hr Keep araa In running
ordarl Malnllnanca A lo rk llll
ta p halpt Full banal. It I
FREE REGISTRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
mw. nth si r i i i h

Pull lima petition Typing and
phono at par i anr a a p lu t.
Ploata apply In par ton at tha
SANEOROHERALD
MR N FrenchAvtave
laniard

LA R O R ERI NEEDEO laina d
and u n ttIlia d Dayt
Call between I )
SPRINT S T A fF IN O .llt M il

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
Naad a tam raat |oRI M u tt
he.e eaperience w ith naad
aatar and id g t r P I a m
LANDSCAPERS
P ulMIme petitions I TT *111

MACHINE OPERATORS
Longaood m a il m a rta im g
company ta o tt experienced
m all ntartar or to ria r Par
anant pout ion M a ra ra la a i

ip P tfsonnai, ( 2 5 ( I I I

ROOM FOR RENT. Famala
pra l W ill thara homa with
pool SRQ/nt Call m IHR

93—Rooms ter Rsnt ~
A QUIET. CLEAN RM in lan
lord Kitchen A phono use
com laundry 173 A up I I M b l
CLEAN ROOMS, tingle Heeling
STS/tak
K itc h e n phono,
la u n d ry , yidoo gom at. o il
tlro a l parking_______ m a m
IN P R IV A T E LONOW OOO
homa Stoady amployad only
too nk tie dap
Coll Ma TIM
ROOM FOR RENT. Light titc h
on privileges i , t «nd lo ti
Matura adult p ral 114 m e
SANFORD Stoepimg room in
p r lr o lo homo llo u ta p n » ,
nnthar dryo* JRVwkJTalaea
I PRIVATE RMS ool In titc h
on. I 1/1 both I/O nk. | I M
dap
Part Ok
n o a ll)

105— D uplexT rip le x / Rent
L A K I MARY

NTENANCE ASST.
I|PH« po iltton H V A O
lin g R i p i r l i f t c a r#
.
op#oirvg
j C fM lb R fltM lI
Apply *n psruyi
‘ pSlNlR ARdTlmsMl
1W W m lfw U ttv tf
m Its I

RINA ATTENDANT
t l c u tla m o rt a l gat doct
9 (loan up tfwliat. launch
ra lrtara cutfomer boa It
anant n o rttn g conditions
S aturday and Sunday ra
qunad Can
i«to
M e d ic a l

CNA

CD/

Energetic ta il ila rta r CNA
naadad la a t t it l in carrying
out p ro g ra m i lo r our Ra
h a b illla tlra R actoratira Da
partm ant M u tt ba certified in
lha Halo ol Florida
Apply oith in
D tbary Manor
to N H ay I I t l
Dabary, El
M l ta t t u t

MEDICAL ASSISTANT
P ari lim a
Inlarnal madi
etna,cardiology bock olllco
du lio t. knowiadgo ol ERG,
Sigmoid, t l r o t l lo ti and X
Ray lach halplul Compaliliya
salary Sand ratum a: PO Bar
l*ta . SanHrd. F L IT /II
PART TIME

RELIEF COOK/DIETARY AIDE
Part tlm # E e p *f« n c t a m uff
Drug frv# work placa Apply
»n porters. 1am )pm, Mon Frl
D tbary Manor
44 N Hwy I I 11
D tb a ry .F I
401-440-4410
_____
PART TIME

B uilding M iin ltn in c # Pa non
F la a lb lt day H rt
No
a w fc w d f For apt l i t 4000

PETITION CIRCULATORS
Up lo SISe hr Galharing
c a iin o p t f llio n i A pply In
p«r«on
S4S D tlany Av« flA
Orlando I 100 100 1W4

PRODUCTION WORKERS
Larga graanhouta naadt par
torn In our Shipping A Pro
d u c tlo n O t p lt
Eap
PIECEWORKERS lor Prod
Dapl A w ill train PACKERS
lo r Shipping Follaga Dapl
P L A N T P U L L E R po sitio n
alto avail Apply a l 41/0 W

Slat# Road aa Santord_______
.PR O D U CT M O V E R .
Kaap pr d u c t In ordar and
a t t it l with thlp pingl D atlra lo
laarn w ln tlh lto n a H urryl
FREE REOISTRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
TRRW. MIA St. IT H I M

RESTAURANT MANAGER
ASST. MANAGER
E.parlanca raqulrad Dagraa
a plus___________ 40? 14S MSI

' RN
Naadad lor buty community
clinic. Must bo a g radua l! ol
an accroditad RN program
and llc tn ta d In Iho H a lt ol
F lo rida Submil ratum a lo
Tho Control Florida Commu­
nity Clinic. 1471 S. Park Avo..
Santord, F L 11771___________

SALES NEW CAREER'94
S I,000 11.000 w to k ly . Make
Im m odlalo Income, torvlco
hundred! of re tail accounts.
• ■ citin g m u tlc end v ld to
p ro d u ct! Waakly rto rd a rt.
honuta t ColHIR 7R1 m a ___

SECURITY OFFICERS
For Sanlord araa location IIS
noadod). S lorl 14 M /h r with
advance lo SS M o llo r TO days.
A ll shifts. Apply Socurai. al
Job Services. 114 Lake M ary
Qlvd .
J j n a ll.
10am 1pm

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
10 Im m odlalo openings lor
•■porloncad Sawing Machine
Operators, sa 71 par hour plut
Incantlvat. Craal opportunity
w ith b o nalllt. Day th ill. '
Contact TRANSWORLD
SERVICES CROUP444 MM

ctM#s 1 bdrm
4llr. « « !h |P d rye r

C in tfll
hoo»

up

N fir

L A K E M A R Y D U P lC X
BA. if o v t
p • f p fg

; HM »
A C

frA tft'd ry hook sjq b g y#rd
m o &gt;990. iioo d tp m t u t

NOTICE
A ll FRfffRl «nd r t i l 9 |l« l9
M j. f iliM f W iU i n %ut|R&lt;f 9o
Iho F F d o n l f a if Housing Act.
« h i( h m o lt s 19 IH »g*l to

Mfvorflso son p F fltftfy s Hm
if b Hon or ductIm inofioo
band on roco color. rt(»g»ort.
SOB. hondKOp fomtliol IfOtwt
or notipnoi origin

LARG E

m o d e rn

1 /1
ne#
(#rp4» M Sh«r d#r e# PSOOM up

pel* /fro o t U IQ /m p W *4 io
SANEORO I

BO R M . t b#m .

v#p f n k « noighticrhocid very
(1440 A y j t l J s itft__740 0744
SAN FO R D Good #&gt;## cl#4n 1
b d rm . A C p # r p#» u A y#&gt;d
P tH O A
im p iu t
149 0044

I

BORM

D U PLEX

perusn only &lt;01 114 Oft;

I BORM Parb A ra Mab.la Park

Qui«f 4#«C C&gt;OS4 to Shop
pmg bin Pouf# 4 1 111 m i

114— W a r e h o u s e
Space / Rent

■ RIOOEWATER APTS
San
foEd l e l e M ory Coll fod#r
About our iippso SoocMIl Only
4 fOMlOffl D»tx»4* 111 9104
CONVKMIENT TO downtown

LO N O W O O D /LA M E M A R Y
M id t i f * p u b lic t f o r o g *
w4'ehautes 400 100 O* 1400
sq ff i p 4 ( t i Ntco s o u r*
04»ily 4&lt;C#S*ib'0 l0C4t&lt;On
From 1141 p»f mo 111 t i l t

On# B edroom A p a rtm e nt*

117— C o m m e r c i a l
R e n ta ls

llt t O I A L
V-O* snood A p lt n t m 4

BEAUTY SALON

cool

om t

WHHEEEEEWWI
EFFICIENCY on W etiva River
a l K atiat Landing A/C No
p a ll Fro# canoe uta 9110 mo
__________ 1M447&gt;__________
H IS T O R IC A L DOW NTOW N
SANFORO Vary claan 1 bdrm.
I bath Kllchan, dining room
appliances Fonetd yard, good
neighbors t a l l mo SIM dap
HUOOK____________ RSS-ISRR

MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lo ta Ada I bdrm, SJ40 mo
1 bd r m . 1410 mo and up

3234470
* MOVE IN SPECIAL *
Convenient I and 1 bdrm a p lt
t i t * Slat. S1RR deposit I year
leata N o p a lt llaM R a______
P A R K A V I : I b d rm A Ig
efficiency, fu ll kitchens, ra
modeled A/C. L o ft of space,
on but line Monthly S)M or
waakly rates avail 111 *0*0
CP Rental RatutH
PARKSIDE APTS. 1 bdrm . I
b a lh . w o hook u p t. 1400
M O V INSPR C IAL IW R tll
SANFORO I Bdrm. SMO/mo.
p lu t security A ll utilities paid
a n a p ta la c._________ 1URM1
SANFORD. I UDHMUOO mo
p lu td a p o tll N opa lt
__________ 111 1141 ________
SANFORO. Near I a 2 bdrm. I
balh «7S/m onlh rani. S1IS
to cu rlly. Call M l HIO_______

1 /2 MONTH FREEH
1 Bdrm / I Balh 111 1MR
SHENANOOAHAPARTMENTS
1 BDRM 1 BATH A pl CHAA.
stackable wathar and dryer,
a ll kllchan appliances Sail
111 IQSI

103— Houses
U n fu rnished / Rent
CUTE A COZY I Bdrm Homa
Cant. H /A
Shaded Lol SIM
mo h S IM tec.dep
1/1 BDRM Vary Larga Homa
Cant. H /A Fans - Shaded Lol
SSIS/mo
Call tar mere Intai Wat Leutma

W jL

PROPERTIES

111471T. P a te r a a s m a
DELTONA CLEAN. 1 bdrm. 1
bath. Ilv.. lam , garaga. quiet,
C lot* to tchoolt. Lease option
avail. SSIS/mo. I l l 001/m tg
FOR LEAS'E OR R ENT i l / l
houta at 1711 Sanlord Ava
Fenced yard 14M p lu t S4M
dapotll. Call MS OSH________
HIDDEN LAKE N lc a lb d r m .l
balh, Ig screen porch, tread
lol. Laata/OpHon Owner ll&gt;
nandnq S4M mo t«S SMt
H ID D E N LA K E V IL L A S . 1
bdrm , 2 bath and unit 1 car
g a ra g a . P r a th ly p a in te d ,
tp a clo u t. SSSO month. Call
C a ro ly n I v a n t , S tra lla r d
P rap artlatlll-M *lo rT a a-tS 71
HOME IN TH E COUNTRY,
noar tha St. Johns. 1/1, w /tplc,
big k llc h a n . On S a c re t
Hor lo t OK. 1900 mo liaO Tal
LAKE M ARY. 1/2, cornar lot.
te r patio. C/HA. No palt.
S47J/mo.. p lu t dap
1171M0

• LOVELY ANTIQUE SINGER

141— Hom es fo r Sale

1 4 1 - n o m as (o r S a lt

C ASSELBER R Y H a a u tllu l 1
bdrm. I ' i balh I tew carpel,
paml Shews like e modal!
&gt;*4,W0
,
* * * 202*

S TENS TROM

HALL REALTY
312 W First S I . Sanford
B4nil

F tre d ftiw re t

}

Fully equipped Vacant fo r
Lease M U P a rk O riv e
Former Beauty Boutique
CF Rental BoactWt
»&gt;1 ****

B drm

V I CMitem tewilt ho#h« on 1 1
#&lt;res F e m itf rm . Iplc.I h a
tq ff living ##*4 f i l l 100

323-5774
D O W N T O W N H IS T O R IC
HOUSE 1 tto ry I? room t. S
tvalhi SS7 00011* 7*11
O Y N AM IT E i Bdrm Low Ootvtt
Call Diana a The Cannon Group
_____ r n eaai or 171 &lt;79*______
GOOD AREA Lg Room, A lol
fr o th paint A carpal m out
nan root
IM 000
111 4101

^

f 2

l

BANK FORECLOSURES, GOV’ T
FORECLOSURES. LOW DOWN
ASSUME NO QUALIFIES
AVAILABLE IN SEMINOLE
VOLUSIA (ORANGE COUNTY
•A N K

FO R E C LO S U R E

C lt t B ib r r if
4 1 s p ilt eaifr
k m n e d poo&lt; Ho (3oenp4r
for Q&gt;&gt;4lilied bu*er ' f
O r lr U 9 900

Janet Mansfield, 323 7271

SANFORD Plnaddga Club. 2
b d rm . 1 b a lh . ) r d llo o r
9S2S mo Immed occ Makada
Corp Real E tla la
*** **00

141— Hom es fo r Sale

AFFORDABLE HOMES
VENTURE I PROPERTIES
FH A /V A tow a t tW k ANQ't.
owner llnanca law a t taoo/mol
Oov’l F a ra d a tu ra t. Rapatl
Seminole. Orange, V alutlal
saa.taai a /n L iv , dm. i* m rm»,
aal In k i t . ta cu rlly, ta la lllla l
COZY CUSTOM spill Dining
f a m ily r m t A p p lia n c e s ,
garaga. fenced yd laa.tOO
POOL HOME I 1/2. 2.000 tq III
L ly ., d in . la m lly , gam e
rooms Scr porch I la i MO
Landscaped 1/1. l / l a a e l Appl,
lly. din. lam . rm t S41S00
S U N K E N F A M IL Y R M . 4
comm pool Liv, din. lam
r m t , appl . te r porch, tecurl
ty ty ite m andgaragal It.tOO
BRICK V I split, Ilv. din. lam
rm t, tec system, ter. porch,
lanced yd., garagal SR4.M0

ASSUME NO QUAUFIESI
CUSTOM w /tp lll bdrm planl
D ining, la m lly rm t. appl.,
Iraadyard S atl/m o SSe.SOO
PRE FORECLOSURE! 1/2 split
Ilv., d in , aal In kllch. lanced
w/garege is a j/m o IM.fOO
CUSTOM b u lll 1/1 tp lll. Ilv.,
din ., aal In k llc h . appl ,
garaga SSai/mo. saj voo

P A U L O S U O I1 N E

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
3 2 *

- 4 7 0 4

ALTAMONTE 1 bdrm 1 balh, Ig
lot on cul da tac. Brom ley
School!
tat.OOO
1W7I70

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real E tla la Broker
2*40 Sanlord Ave

3 2 1 0 7 5 9 ................... 321-2257
OEBARY
Lakatronl 2/2, can
Ira lH /A . p lu t a a lra tl 1*0.000
W. M a llc io w tk l, 1117*91
O ELTO N A, only t»00 down.
S4M/mo. Choose Irom 1 hornet
lobe remodeled by builder
C reel opportunity.
M *tro Oroupeaa isoi

SELLERS!! BUYERS!)
Can A n yo lO u r A gen ltl
They're all
P R O tA F U L L TIM E I
So Call A N YTIM E I

322 2 4 2 0 * 3 2 1 2720
SANFORO • LAKE MARY
• In 0 « f 3&lt;th Y u i*
’ THIS I BORM. 1 BATH heme
ha t a large fenced yard end
w ill have new centre! heel/elr
for your summer com tor It
iaue locus! Ave ta/.eoo
-NEAT 2 bdrm homeon corner
let lu tt rig h t tor darter or
tm a ll fam ily Includes new
to o l' t i l too
iL a m ru a

"* E
Ri

al

B

&gt;

Estate , inc

322-7491
M il SUMMERLIN STREET 4
bdrm . J both, garaga central
H /A . new paint In A out,
owner financing MS WO Dayt
t t t 034* Evening, 113 901?

DELTONA AREA 10 ACRES
COULDN’T BEUEVEITI

HOUSE SOLD IN
ONLY 3 DAYS!
He# O dell of t»«4 M tA d o m t
G roup fcne* th e ertx/HJ h#*e
l u c t e i i w ith I M S a n fo rd
Her #!&lt;f ClOMif#ed4. b t/f th #
COtridrt I believe bor tskfi eehoft
fho b o u t* to ld 4 Her be»r*g
4 d v o r tn e d in fb o S # n fo rd
H e r# id for only J rt* r %

Do you need 4 quicli 'etponte
on your borne for %#ier Cad
♦be Senfertf Mereld C taiiiliedv
end piece yewr ed tedeyl

372 2611
131 9993

OSTEEN, MINI RANCH
I acres. I l k cleared. M O* tq
tl p lu t barn w ith hydraulic
lilt Hoc room, thop end of
lice. 1 w o llt. Irrig a tio n . I
bdrm I bath mobile w ith new
satellite and separate laundry
Much much m oral Won t la tl
at U? 300 407 171 alia, owner
I PLUS ACRES Paved rood
Iro n ta g a , ne ar St Johns
River Sal OOO SI Johnt Realty
Company 1114111

CARRIAGE COVE
MOBILE HOME COMMUNITY

323-3200
LONOWOOO
L iv e ly peal
hemal 2 at 2 td rm
larga
g r a il room w ith fireplace
L a rg a w ooded lo l L a ke
M e ry Lo n g w o o d t c h o o lt
SRI.W0 Cell EIHe Spivey lor
appl E vet. 112 * lt»
LONOWOOO
g re a l room .
Ilraplaca. lacun ty ly ita m )
bdrm 2 balh larga screened
porch o il dining and living
room Neighborhood park with
boat ramp and picnic araa
Only S II4.no Call E ltle Spivey
lor appl E vat. I l l * } * *
W IN T E R P A R K
F e rm tr
medal hemal A ll vaulted and
a a la n d a d c a llin g s
S p ill
bedroom plan 1 bdrm. 2 balh.
beautiful m e tier tu lle with
walk In tnower and garden
lub I I 14.*CO Call E ltle Spivey,
avat. ID *}* (

H a ll 1/1 M Mobility Central
H /A S3.SOO
la a lt 1 / m I I F littw o o d /
C la re m o n t C e n tra l H /A ,
carport, ratted screen rm
I* . 300
14,40 1/1 U S kyllno/Jelrl. All
a la c lr lc . c a n lr a l h a a l. 1
window A/C u n lit, t i l . 300
14,31 1 /IN 12 Champion/ Sun
view. C ontrol H/A,
g a t/a la c lr lc , screened rm
11*000
1 4 i4 l l / l t , I I S k y lln *. A ll
alaclrlc. Canlral H /A . re lie d
screen rm . carport tl/.W O

Call 3 2 3 - ll6 0 o t 131 3703
160— Business
F o r Sale
S A N F O R D C O N S IG N M E N T
SHOP E lto b lllh o d . Clean
Call i n m i o r n i tci?. . m e o

M A Y F A IR M E A D O W S
A ltu m a no quality. Io w a ,I
price d 1 bdrm 2 balh In
subdivision! Great room, aal
In kitchen 174 *00 Call M ary
S lra u tt Evot. 740 372* _____

209— W e a rln g A p p arel

231— Cars

OUR MOTHER'S CLOSET hat
relocated to 40* W. l i t SI.
M -P io a ,
sat: a i . m o o n

L IN C O L N TO W NCAR. 1*11.
M in t Condition. * !K . Landau
roof, w ire wheat covert, *7.100
_________ 4&lt;7*ie«*4*_________
MERCURY SABLE WAOON 'I *
V * . moonrf. P W /PL, cru lta .
Icy air, ta a lt 1*1,100 H I *101
N IC E . C L E A N , dapandabla.
cold A/C c a rt for tala.
LOW down payments and
LOW waakly payments
FUES AUTO S ALE* 1171**2

215— Boats and
_____A c c e s s o rie s ____
OLASTON 17' BR.' 04 I I ! Merc.
B lm lnl w /tra lle r Graal cond.
vary t a il
11*30
111 4130
a SAIL lo r S unllth sailboat
Special "S ta rt and Stripes"
design 1*3 C a ll* * ! n i l
• 12 FT w / tra itor. *S HP Marc .
24 lb tro llin g m otor. Ilth
finder, b lm ln l lop E a lro tl
shoo i i r m ................. n i aooi
• I *94 SKI/FISM BOAT. *0 HP
More . w /tra llo r Runt fro a tl
SI 000 P artia l llnanco t*3 7*0&lt;
aitas REOAL Medallion. 17'
10” . a cyl In/oulboar motor
w /d rlvo on Iro llo r 14 300 OBO
*30 4004 or *4* 4)01 avat
__

•n

PT ORADY W HITE. OMC.
In b o erd/ou lboard. lap l i r a
modal
1*00 OBO
11)1114
• 1* FT PONTOON boat. All
flb e rg le tt. 140 HP Evlnrudo
Very la t t l Many o a lra t. Ilka
nawl Only 1*110 111 ROM

217— O a r ig e Sales

•GARAGE SALE AO BARGAIN
Call In your garogo tala ad by
t l noon on Tuesday and la k t
a d va n ta g e o l ou r tp o d a l
garage tala ad p ric e d Call
C le ttlf led now lor d o fa lltl

• T R A S H COMPACTOR.
SEARSKENMORE 1100

m «n»

322-2(11

117—Sporting Goods
PROPESSIONAL Volleyball Nat
A accessorial Now In bo,
O rlg cost SIM w ill ta ll 130
t a t - m - i l i e _________

191—Building
Materials

WONDERFUL!
E W w at a aatramaly
southed customer whan the
caned to cancel her ad on
Friday m orning Not only d-d
tho to ll lh« ta w tha had
a d vertised In tho Santord
Herald classified section on
tha f l r t t day her ad ran but
lha had a poctet full of a itr a
spending money tool

219— W a n te d lo Buy
FIN E JE W E LR Y . Diamond,
R o le a 'i Gold Toolt. TVt.
VCR, Goll G u ila rt. cam orat.
Storaot Cameras Antiques
O u.it, Old pocket and w rit!
w atches Iv o ry c u l g lo t t
H u m m o lt S lol m a c h in a l
1 words. Knives Toyt Wicker
Tilfeny lle m t Oil pointings,
dockt
B ro n /a t S ta rlin g
Item t Oriental ru g t Inttant
Cath Broadway Jewelry and
Pawn Oviede Plata. I t l 4474
V IN T A G E WRIST AND
POCKET WATCHES. Role,
La Coullre Movado Plagal
Cartier
P a t a k P h lllip a
H am ilto n E lgin Longm et
r i l l a n y and Co l l l l n o l t
V o ch o ro n Any o ld moon
photo or chronograph wet
chot Paying up to &gt;30.000
In tta n t cath 1*3 4474

Placa a ad today tor those
unneeded Items and make
tom# money tool

MAKE NO DELAYS!
ADVERTISING PAYS!
322 2(11
131 9993
193— L b w n 4 G a r d e n
FOR SALE WOOD M U LC H
Bring move 111 to pick up toad
Yeu load n i 3*47
LANOSCAPI NO PLANTS.
Lowguttrum and o lfte rt I 4 It
•all Wbetoseto P rice ti
m oon

195— M a c h ln e ry /T o o ls
a w o o o JAW CLAMPS
Craftsmen, to inch capacity
wood, to lld oak L IF E T IM E
GU A R A N T E E 4 only C otl
sao ta ll tor t i l 323 a/aa

199— Pets 4 Supplies
AKC DOO SHOWS A ll breads
and obedience Canlral Flor
Ida Fairgrounds * 3 Juno 14.

IS. It .

Information *71-744*

Pedigree* brand food tor dogt
CHOW CHOW P U P P IE S . I
lom a lo/Z m ale Father on
prom ito*. n a m a __________
MARMALADE Tabby Female"
1130 Cream P artlan Mala. 1100
10 wk*. paper i/ t h o t t 34*3411
a PET TRAVEL or tra in in g
cage Heavy molded plastic
Medium to tm a ll ilia . Vary
nice. UP C a llf f l 3**a_______

• POT BELLY PIGS
4 weeks old Osteen 110 each
__________ m a n * __________
PROP E SSIOHAL 0 0 0
TRAINIMO Individual train
ing Group d it t o s forming
now I Call n a - * iit__________
1 SIAMESE KITTENS. I w k t . I
mala. I tomato. Iltlo r bo,
trained SH each n a IN I

221— Good Things
to E a t
P R O D UC E FOR SALE
S I L V E R Q U E E N CORN.
PEAS Call 111 I t t l ________
U PICK BLUEBERRIES 431
G u ll* Rd . Ottoen 407 330 n i l
A ll day Sal A Sun

223— M iscellan eo u s
• BASEBALL CAROS, appro,
1)00 car d t '1 7 ' f t In albums
__ ___ t I0OCall 1)4 O tl*______

*

HAIRDRYER
Salon professional. Zolot
173 F irm 371^130______

•W r o u g h t

ir o m ' swino

SET, appraitad a l IMO A tk
Ing 171 F ir m

222 2*22

230— A n t iq u e /C la s s ic
C ars
• CAOILLAC O E V II LE. 1*70
ALL POWER! Only 12000 or
best o llo r Ptooie call I I 1 4 W
• FORD THUNDERBIRD. I***.
A ll o rig in B lI Need* l o m i
work
i t . i n o b o j ;» o m
rM NOVA. Show Car ISO cu In..
J tpd. L o tt of chrom * M u tt
i M i u k i M w ! u r n j ?) m u

2 3 1 -C a r s
TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
e ic e p tla ,. lag. Iltla. ale
GEO METRO X F I l**0. A/C.
tta ra o c a t t a il, o ve rdrive
Only SU7 21 par month Call
M r Payna lor appointment
Courtesy Utad C art, in 1111
• CHRYSLER IM P E R IA L '«!.
Lika new M u lt ta ll. Only
t n . 300 Call 140/1)13 **34
DODGE COLT, 1*71. 4 cylinder
Runt but naadt carb rebuilt
1)00
_______ Call 111 13*1
HONOA CIVIC OX - '*1 .1 tpd. 4
door. • / c. new liras. Good
condition! 1* 200 *34 1)11
• LE BARON C anvtrtikla. U
Rad. loaded, dig doth, new
lop. new liras 1* 300 4*3 7*0*

• SUPER B E IT L E . ' l l . Now
In te rio r , naw p a in t. R u n t
good
*1,171
Call n i 1411

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
•acopt l a i. tag. title, ate
OODOE A R I ES
1 *1 7 .
automatic. A/C . PS. PB. till.
A M /F M ttarao Only *1*1*1
par month. Call M r Payna lor
appointment
Caurtaty Utad C art, n i l l l l
WE OFFER USED CARS. Low
prlcat. Low down paym anlt
You w rit# your own deal
C. la n e Automotive Inc 1*11
S. Orlande Or l* H 22**002
Came In - Let** make a deal I__
• 1*71 PORSCHE, t i l Targa.
tow mileage, show* Ilka naw
110,000
OBO
n u n *
• '71 C H IV Y E l Camlno. no
•ng. or Iran* . A/C. P/S. P/B.
cowl hood. $S g rille . S410
14* 11*1___________________
• '71 VW B EETLE. 1400 eng
R unt good, took! good, priced
good W ith radio ll4007n*141
I I PONTIAC TRANS AM. Vory
clean and ru n t groetl 4 tp d .
A/C. S1.0QOOBOHI 479*
' t l BUICK SKYLARK. 4 dr
New llro t/w lro t/p lu g t Runt
good SIIQOOBO f04 74**334
• II OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME. T Tops, now paint
and lira *. 110. oicallant con
dlllon
12*00
n i 4001
• ‘ I t C H E V R O L E T C tp r lc a

C U tllc . 4 d r., run t good,
loaded
14 000 OBO and
'11 Cltovralet Balalr. 1 dr . ru n t
good 11.000 OBO 17* in ?
'17 DOOGE Caravan, auto . A /c.

4 cyl. Claan. runt (icaltont
_______ *4130 n i i t a *
__
• '(7 FORO BRONCO II. r* d '
4,4. V*. S tpd over drive. A/C.
P/S. P /B . A m /F m ca tta lta
alum inum whaolt w /o va rtiia d
tlra t Good condition M u tl
ta ll
11400
Iia f4 l7

235— T r u c k s /
B u s e s /V a n s
• CHEVY B EA U V ILLB VAN
‘ t*. 1 ton. P attangar van.
claan Loaded I Too much lo
list, m u tl too to opprtclato
Only U .4*1 O B O ......... I l l 1700
• FORO RANOER. LTX *1.
P S. cru lta. A/C. tloroo. 4 200
m ilo t. 1 yr or 11.000 m l lo ti on
w arranty________Call i n 1111
• J EEP PICK UP 4,4, If? *. V I.
auto Engine and Ira n i to
b u lll |a b o u t 10.000 m llo t l
Nowar Inter lor t l OOO311 200*
M IN I Von Plymouth Voyager,
ta. Great condition, low m ile
•go U3QO OBO 914 9*20 ____

S

Sanfovd Motor Co.

!* * • CHEVROLET CIS PICK
UP *4 000 m ile ,. V 1 .1 tpaad
Claan a t a p in l Ip o iie l-lia .a a i
________ Call 222 * 2*2 ________
• 1*00 OATSUN PICKUP. 4,4
A /C St.S00or bat! offer
_________Call 312 *12*________
'74 FORD VAN. 4 cyl. auto . naw
t lr e i/ b e t t o r y G re a t w ork
tru c k __1700 OBO 222 » l l
' l l OMC WORK VAN. auto. IIK
m l E ,c cond W lth o a lra ,
12300 O il 4134 a lt 4 or wkond t
• • • BRONCO II E a co lla nl
condition I Low m llo tl Runt
qrvat l 93.000 Call 129 7U4 .

241— R e c re a tio n a l
V eh icles / C am p ers
• C H IV Y Motor homo. '74.
Clean, runs g r a il Full bath
A/C . Genera lor Naw awning
Good lir a * ....................n I 71*1
_____ Naadt naw p artnltl_____
• 1*9? COACHMAN M.H. 14 II .
U K m l Many o a lra tl Incl.
generator Vary aaty to drive
*l«.*00...........................2224*30
• ’ l l W INNEBAOO. 1* ft. Naw
angina A ra d ia to r........ te.000
n i 3«i« or m o m
*4 PACE ARROW. M ‘. 7K ml.
on Chevy 414. Awning. A/C.
gon , vac . tw in beds, dinette,
m lcro /ovtn . lu ll bath, d rlv a rt
door. 2 a a ty c h a in , to la .
tlo o p tl
121K
407111 1111
'17 CHAMPION La Sella. C la tt
A , Chevy 4S4, 21’ , 7 naw
M lchellnt, rear br, awningt.
17K m l. M IN T. SH.StO *7* 5777
• ' ( I ALLEGRO motor homa 17
tl. awning, tw in beds, ganara
lo r A tv. *37.300 OBO 211 0711

W e il advertise your car or other
motor vehicle until it's sold.

LONOWOOO 4/2 tp lll. 2300 ♦ tq
ft Lg lam rm . w/fptc. ter
pool.goodtchool. «*K 747 1 0 *

SELLING?
SAVE $2,000 - SI 0,000
PENNEY BMOKEM5
&gt; t a * .ru n

Saw ing m a c h in e C abinet
modal Only M l ORO Call
__________ l i t 5*11__________
M A P L i BEDROOM SUIT, to lld
wood Bad. d r ttto r . m a ltra t* /
b o , spring, 1300ni M i l
• MICROW AVE OVEN Only
Sail Pleata call H I a m for
d a ta llt____________________.
R tP R tO E R A T O R , E acallan l
c o n d i t i o n | M A N Y TO
CHOOSE FROMIIIOO/SIM
APT. SIZE Wathlag Machlnat
Your c h lc o |7 I______ m M il
R E FR IO
Kenmora. tid e by
side. I f cu. f t . Vary good
cand Guaranteed m o n o i n i

Ideal tar m obile heme at
home t ile , h o rte t. ca ttle ,
term ing or nursery Zoned
agricultural 13.*00 per acre
Sm all down paym ent w ith
owner llnancinq OR* 7*7 1771

157— M o b ile
Hom es / Sale

Space / R ent___

121— C ondom inium
R entals

I IM G .

IS 3 — A c r e a g e
L o ts/S ale

Cell for details'

118— O ffice
NEW Sanlord oHicet end or
warahoutat aOOl.MO tq II
Special S ltl/m e 1H11S4
SANFORO Otlica space, saoo
tq II building total. 1700 tq
t l par ottlca u n it I I I 7004
saa SO FE E T tor leata on 1/ 91.
tu c c a ttlu l e d it in g anchor
b u tin e tte t Good parking and
lig h tin g O ra a t v is ib ility
A cting SaOO mo njaaaa work

R E A L T Y .

Mous#. Treev i l l 000

1 0 7 -M o b ile
H om es / Rent

99— A p a rtm e n t*
U n fu rn ish ed / Ren!

Sonford 1 b d rm . 1 botn. quie*
SAlS m o ntfi
M7 ISF1

P U L L BO X S P R IN O A N D
MATTRESS tao A SET A UP
LARRY-SM ART
m a ill
HOME APPLIANCE CENTER
Over n years In Sanlord
la le t Now and Utad Servlet
a ll makes t p a rti joa E
Commercial St______ i n 3443
J A A DISCOUNT RCDDINO
Queon i n * . Full »l»». Twin
114* 101 French Ava n a 4*7/

Cdrport.

tllf(fs«n 4ppH4#H4i hOfH ups
Nop4&lt;S
S in
044 7947

(P P IC IK N C Y A ll w fiiifiospo'd
V o v t ro lrtg . etindOBE unit
u o s /m o N o p o tf n o
SMALL I I D AM Fwrnithod
• p iftm o n l U fililio s included
CIOSO In U n fo rd ft/»»#**fclr I

a AAA RAY'S APPLIANCE a
111 S French Ava, Santord
R efrig era tor. Slovot,
W atho rt D ryo rt Fra* 1 yr
labor w arr. Dal, avail 11* M*1
• D IN E TTE S IT . n lc * labia
a n d a ch a lrt.sts. W ill deliver
__________ m i o f o _________

tc h o o lt

S410 dtKOunff C4Hn o * '
Invest*#* R#4lty. 774 14 I J

MAINTENANCE TECH
lor largo apt c tm m y
M u tt hara a rp In all
M V m cludng A C Moat
ale Call between 19 and
' F h W1RIR4

A -f BEST A P P LIA N C E h a t
Kenmora w a tlta rt Free do
llvary. W arranty. 22* IK S

Stenstrom Rentals
R H IO O E H V I L L A O E . L k
M ary, |/&gt; condo, ml I p l . CHA.
a ll applt la w mo . la w tac
aSANFORO l / l apt m&gt; ter
porch. Iplc STM/m o no dap
R S A N P O R D 1 /1 .1 , I K o ry
dupia. CHA *410/ma S4M tac
aSANFORO A 14. M S . dbl
garage Iplc. Ig yard, wall A
taplic SASR/moMM tac
R OELTONA A 14. V I. w-dbl
garaga. Ig ta r porch. Iplc.
claan U U m o taoo tar
aSANFORO 1/1 Apt trr paho
CHA. *400 mo SNOwc
Slantlram Raally. Inc
"Wa Managa yaur Ik m i.
Ilka II w at aur awn.” Jon Day la
111 la tt A lla raP M Da iat»
S BORM ll y BATH. ftlv a to on
tm a ll laka **30 mo I I I mo
and to c u flly dopotil RSR MIS
I BEDROOM, | balk, cant H /A.
la m lly rm Only |M 0 down I
A lto a bdrm I bath avanabia
A lt about our HUD homo11
Why rani? THE H ILLIM A N
OROUP, INC R a a lto rH IR H )

9/ -A p a rtm e n ts

Furnished / Renf

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

LAKE M AR Y t BORM. I Bath
Rani SIRS/mo plu t ISRS/dop
n iw i
L A K E F R O N T c o lle g e . l / l ,
C /H A , new ly renovated. 1
acrot Oulol county ta ilin g
Daltanaayea
taRS i n ERA!
RENT W ITH OPTION P lnacratl
) / l pool homo, lane ad ISM mo
H I, la tl, A toe T il DIM
SANFORD. I BDRM. IH BATH.
Sa}S/mo p lu td a p o tll
No p e lt ITT lla ?
SANFORD. &gt; bdrm. |V| balh
lakatronl houta UW mo
________ hi ;ooa
SANFORD. 1 bdrm T bath
C/HA. te r porch. Ig yard
Clota lo tchoolt. w /d hook up
laYS'mo • dap 2V 2**2 or
wa s » m i
SANFORD I I. lantod yard
s a il/m o . work with dap Sao
a l 111 Elm Ave , San lord

E iparlanca naadad Apply

91—Apartments/
Home to Share

RECEPTIONIST

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

71— H tlpW anfsd

m i *, h i

a Oov't. Bank F o ra clo tu rtt,
a
A ttum e No Quality
a Hornet with MM OOWNI
a
a Hidden Lakes Best Dealt
a 2 bdrm . villa, garage, new
a root, new paint, ale ta i.tM
a
a Laka Mary Schoolll
a 2/2 condo, low atl araa St.
a a ll appl , W /D U l.tM
a
a Santord H ltlo rlc D iU rid l
a Cute l / l , great tpeculallve
a value..........................»3M M

Y o u pay for the first 10 clays and
if your car doesn't sell, call us
and renew it for FREE! Phone
number and asking price must be
included in ad. No copy change
while ad is running except for price.
Non-commercia). only. Call 322-261 I today!

a
a
a
a
a
a
a
•
*
a
a
a
a
a
a

STELTENKAMP
REALTY • 330-3230
STAIRS PROPERTY

Your transportation ad works best when it contains
‘ inform ation the buyer wants to know:

M AN AG EM EN TA REALTY
407 111 7H3/333 9170

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
HUD A VA FORCLOSURES
Low downl Semlnolt. Orange
and V olutla Counties
Call lor d e la lltl
a Loch A rbor, unique lake
Iron I home Larga lol.. tlt.tOO
Balh Ot borne
Venture I Properties

330 0 2 7 3 /7 7 4 9400

• Make and Model
• Year
• Power Features

M

Mechanical Condition
Body and Finish
Transmission

• Mileage
• Previous Use
• Aecessorics/Intcrior

SA N FO R D H E R A LD CLASSIFIEDS 3 S M 6 1 1

I M

�• Sanford Harald, Sanlord, Florida - Monday, Juno 30, 1094

I f *H*T PO
18 AMAZIM*J&gt; VCXI

AWO Y8T. S&lt;--3 I'M A

u

you s rA v to ) p*oean\on&gt;

calm, COOLS CAteaiir*.
mo
&lt; TMaraiS?:
C O U U T t O } My r j T j ,

___ M8AM?

Faltering balance
has many causes

A A (jG H

r W S ? Q iO R .* »/ 2 K 3

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

LOOKS COLO. WHO

H £ L L 0 ,M I6 S BUXLEY

WANTS TO TRY IT
w FIRST?
^

T H E B O R N LOSER

by A rt S a n s o m

7WHAT DOS IT F£AR TO BE A

ITS THE FIRST DAT OF
SUMMER VACATIOH AND tVE
G O rT T C C H lO X H P O K ...

O i T e a roo w hat

60RH LOSER?

IT MEANS...

THATS WHAT IT WEAWS!

by Charles M. Schulz

PEANUTS
THE 0 U 5 IS
5T0PPIN6..THIS
M UST BE THE
w CAMP...
^

ARE YOU SURE YOU HAVE
EVERYTHING? I T H 0U 6H T
YOU W ERE 6 0 IN G TO BRING
YOUR B O W LIN G BALL..
.

EEKAMEEK

b y H o w l* S c h n e id e r

1 REALLY COWT SEE HOW
Wt CAM COAJTIMUE ID VO

SOU TALKING
ABOUT CHIUA

THE TCCACCO
COMRAAJlE!)

BUSINESS WITH AAh'eaV
WHO MSSUCH A CAD HISTORY
OF MISTREAT/Mo PEOPLE

'

BAN, AN | &gt;

m p i .an i
FADYl AN I
PSYCHED! &gt;,

A R L O A N D J A N IS

MARYLOUS DAD SAID
m 'D BE HERE TODAY/
_ ICAA)T WAIT/
r
III

Qf&amp;&gt; j
(\
o

\

/ \

m

r 1

H

p&gt;smo»s

G A R F IE L D

EXERCISE \
I WOULD GIVE 1
VOU MORE 1

denly.
So. In summary, some degree
of unsteudlnrss Is Increasingly
common ns we age. However,
many of the contributing fuctors
can be Ireutrd.

ACROSS

44 Tsar
48 High card
1 Attorney's dag. 4 7 Paving malarial
4 Dxngkox native 50Jal —
8 01 vs up
8 4 0 flh a d a w n
Sarsaalnsss
85 R o d g e rs*
4 Beasts of
Mammarataln
burden
creations
8 Noblewoman
M Division word
8WWI olane
59 November

r - r - J
T7~

■

1 Close securely
3 Animal that
roars
3 Color
4 Powerful
eiplostve
(abbr)
8 TV'S - Haw
6 Aide (abbr.)
7 JapaneseAmerican
r -

n

□
n
□
n

ra n
n n n m n
raa
m nm nn
□ □ □ ram ran m
n n n n n
n
□ n n
n n n
H n on m
n n n
□ n n n
nm n
□ □ n
nm n
□ ra m H H n n
n

n m n
□ n n

□ n m n n n m n Q
n n n m n
□ □ □

□ n n

□ □ □ □ □

8 Russian
cavalryman
8 Skill
10 Transaction
11 Conclusions
13 Not competent

15“
v r

TOO1RE
HOT
THINKING

ABOUT
sm s,

ARE
x TOU? ,

\ \S \T MSPYIHGU\F I
JUST HAPPEN TO BE.
COOME/IN HER NEIGHBORHOOD

,0T.' J AND ACCIDENTALLY
v - M WEDGE fMSElF BETWEEN
\ the Bushes in fr o n t
G r S k OF HER CONDO m
c o in c id en ta lly

f

7/7 \
y y f

f e b r in h e r .
window -*

A M lU i.

□ □ □

34 Dairy product
25 California
county
36 Draw a
boundary on
37 Underground
excavation

IB

Roosevelt
34 Dry, as win*
41 In addition to
43 Respond
4} Titled women
47 Chicken
chow —
48 Flrstrste
(3 wds.)
49 Stubborn
snlmsl
81 Reclined
S3 Medicinal
plant
53 Doesn't exist
54 Series of

Jl
TT
II)

rA
r,n '
60

□ □ □
nm n
n n a
n n n n
n
n n n n
□ □ □
□ □ □ □
m m nn

C 3 ra n n
□ □ □
m ra a n n
□ □ □ ran m

J

*•*■•»*• West's d|&gt;enlng

More substantial opportunities
than usual might come through
close friends In the year ahead.
Mukc the most o f each one.
because If you don't, you could
regret It later.
CANCER (June 21'-July 22)
Lady Luck might supply you
with the buslc opportunity to­
day, but from that point forward
It will be up to you to produce.
Your free ride will only take you
so far. Know where to look for
romance nnd you'll find It. The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker In­
stantly reveals which signs arc
romantically perfect for you.
Mull $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspuper. P.O. Box 4465, New
York, N.Y. 10103.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In
unfamiliar soclul circles you
should be u good mixer loday.
However, your basic assessment
of strangers could he erroneous.
Be careful regarding your In­
volvements.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22) A
partnership arrangement might

turn out to be more of u liability
than art asset today, especially If
each of you Is depending on the
other for some spec ial Informa­
tion or talent that both of you
lack.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Disappointment Is likely loday If
you are dependent on others or
Lady Luck to do something for
you that you should Ire doing for
yourself. Be self-sufficient.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
T h ere's a chuncc a shrewd
manipulator might take advan­
tage of your generosity today.
Even thou gh y o u 'll re a lize
you'rc being had, you may still
allow him or her to do so.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Strive to be selective today In
what you attempt to do. Your
staying power Is questionable,
and you muy sturt things you
might never finish.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) On occasion you urc Inclined
lo reward (he undeserving while
Ignoring the worthy. This char­
acter flaw might be prevalent In
your behavior today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

Any proposals that require a
cash Investment on your behalf
should be scrutinized In every
detail loday. even If Ihc offering
Is from a well-intentioned friend.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
O b je c t iv e s o f tre m e n d o u s
significance lo you today might
not be so to others. If you focus
on your Interests alone, you
could appear to be extremely
selfish.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 10)
Worthwhile Ideas and concepts
co u lj be subdued or abandoned
today If you view things from a
negative perspective. To suc­
ceed, think positive.
TAURUS (April 20-Mny 20) If
your budget Is u bit fragile ut tills
tim e, H's best to avoid an
extravagant friend who has a
knuck for getting you to spend
more than you can ulford.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
Today you and your mute might
bold strong, opposing views re­
garding a mailer of extreme
Importance. If neither yields,
gridlock could result
C opyrigh t 1903 NEW SPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

A N N IE

ROBOTM AN1 CWVT STAWD NOT
'KNOWING WHAT UlY$
UP TO -'I'M GOING
Y CNER THERE.

1,1

JO W O O % &gt;

all

PETER
GOTT.M.D

By Phillip Alder

By Bernice BedeOsol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
June 21, 1994

FRANK AND ERNEST

N o w

Finally, many m edications
used for hypertension can cause
u nsteadiness, because th ey
prevent the blood pressure from
normally rising when u person
stands. As a result, blood Is not
forced to the brain ugnlnsl gravi­
ty. trading to lightheartedness
and Instability, a consequence
w e 'v e a ll e x p e r ie n c e d o c ­
casionally upon standing sud­

entry.
NORTH
Have you seen the key play?
You must hope West bus the
lr&lt;,&lt;1 rrvri|l» a •'»« shout both his
H B B H jH m B H
b an d an d Ills plan fur d r fr a lln g
heart Jack. At trick (brer, lead
(,ie roniracl. However, It Isn't
th e h e a r t u cc, s q u a s h in g
dummy's king. Cash the heart
bv T K Rvan
Immediately upparent how Hie
* * y
declarer can thwart West's evil
q u e e n , d is c a r d in g o n e o f
schem e. And even then an
dummy's diamonds, und con­
Ice-cool West m ight thwart
tin u e w ith Ih c h e a rt 10.
■------ South's thwart.
Assuming West covers with the
( II SHOULD A
Defending against four spades. Jack, dlscurd d u m m y's lusi
diamond When you regain the
I M «7uJl® *
West leads the club ace: three.
Irud. play the spade arc and u
,0 ' ,,e " w,u'bes to the
spade to your 10. East never
diamond nine, two. to. How do
sees the Irad. so West never gets
you. South, continue?
Ids mlf.
Given North's opening bid,
Vulnerable: Both
T" '
'
West must have led a singleton
However. If W es! bus the
Dealer: North
TV
club ace. So you must win Irlck
courage lo pluy low smoothly on
.South
West North East
the
heart
10.
you
might
be
\
two. lo Slop Hie fatal club ruir.
dcllcctcd lo defeat. Thinking
/
However, even If It Is u singleton,
East bus the heart Jack, you
by J im m y J o h n s o n
West's lead is unattractive. So
might decide your only chuncc Is
CCL\S r )
yott run place West with kingOpening lead: * A
to rulf nnd play the ace und
third o f spudes: some measure of
a
n
o
th
er
spade,
h
op
in
g
the
^
P%
trump control. If llils Is Ihc
Irumps arc 2-2.
J f
r
po^hlon und you attuck trumps
Copyright 1004. NEWSPAPER
now. West Is bound to score u
If un opponent wants you lo
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
j club ruff. East having u diamond
play a particular card, don't.
^

TUM BLEW EEDS

DEAR DR. OOTTi Several o f
my elderly relatives have trouble
keeping their balance when
walking. Otherwise, their health
remains good. Is this caused by
aging only or because of other
reasons?
DEAR READER: Th e un­
steadiness o f the elddrly has
many causes: poor vision, arthrltls , w r a k e r m u s c le s , and
d im in ish ed coord in a tion , to
mention a few.
As we nme, we become Increas­
ingly unable to process Impulses
r e a c h in g o u r b ru in s from
muscles und tendons.
Thus, the elderly urc less
efficient ut making s|&gt;ontuncnus
and reflexive corrections In body
|H&gt;sltlon: Older folks stagger nnd
list because by the time they
sense that a correction needs to
!&gt;e made, It's a major chnnge,
not the subtle and Inconsequen­
tial alterations so characteristic
of the young nnd uctlve.
Also, nerve disorders, such as
I'urklnnou's disease nnd others,
cause the elderly to have less
fluid movements. These condi­
tions should Ire diagnosed by a
physician. Of course, ns I men­
tioned, the problem Is accentu­
ated by fulling vision, muscular
weukness nnd arthritis.
The unsteadiness o f old age is
less of a problem In men und
women who remain physlcully
uctlve. Thus, the major therapy
In most Instances Is to maintain
a high level of activity, such us
walking, swimming, bicycling,
amt other sports. For obvious
reasons, other health problems ••
such as defective vision and
arthritis - have to to- simulta­
neously addressed,
Hemcmtn-r. too. that proper
functioning of the Inner ear Is
necessary for good bulance.
Therefore, pallents who experi­
ence vertigo or poor spatial
orlentullon should Ik- examined
by otolnryngologlsts, because
s o m e fo r m s o f I n n e r e a r
malfunction are treuluble with
medicines

OK.OK - CALL IT " SPYINS*
IF '(OO WAYTT - I'fA NOT
SOIHQ TO FLAX
w SEMANTICS WITH YOU/

b y L e o n a rd S tarr

HA h a / ir
WASN'T YOUR
0ACKEDOFF t ROM DEAuTUUl
JACK |»„ AUNTlfiPCT P'G t \ ( i f
P-C'LLE i f THEY
2

..TrtATS WHY THOSE
STREET HAPPKS

tm o uo htj h a p

AN U Z / : V

Jm

EVEN

THEY s|YX*EP MCAuse
YOU'RE 4 kIP.'WAPMT

THOUGH
I'M Just WITH AN AUTOMATIC
A K U &gt; ,V WEAPON C0ULP Gfc'T IN
TWOol^le ntAH/

W h il e ,..
--------- ------ W Ai

..IT WAS A HE.

ANOTHER WPWITh A n ’ HE MAP A
Gun digger's
THE LITTLE 61 m i
HE WAS"
ANP s h e WAS

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242000">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, June 20, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242001">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242002">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on June 20, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242003">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242004">
                <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;, June 20, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242005">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242006">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242007">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="242008">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24235" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23837">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/483a252e67ff99215bfffa101e386361.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4c33a7a7062304aa9b95f4f60cadf354</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242020">
                    <text>FR ID AY

3 0

C e n t s

Serving Sanford, Lako Mary and Somlnola County alnoa 1®08
86th Year, No. 215 - Sanford, Florida

N EW S D IG E S T
□ Sports
S e m in o le k e e p s d is tric t c ro w n s
SANFORD — The Seminole High School girls'
track team won Its I7lh straight and the iMtys'
team Its 11th consecutive district llllca Thorsday night at Ihr Buddy Lawson Memorial Track.

□Bee Page IB .

.

SANFORD — The Lll* Champ convenience
Store was held up by n ski-masked man at 10:30
p m. Wednesday, who got away with $167 In
cash. According lo u store clerk, a black male
wearing black clothing and a black mask
entered and al gunpoint, demanded money,
threatening to shoot the clerk. IHdlce rrport Ihe
serial number nr l wo of Ihe hills were recorded.

M o b ile h o m e d e s tro y e d in fire
SANFORD — The mobile home of Debra and
James Jenkins Jr., al 01 Excler Court. In
Carriage Cove, was totally destroyed by Ore last
night. Tw o firemen were Injured.
According lo Sanford Fire Department In­
spector Richard Cohen, the lire broke out al
approximately 9 p.tn. Tw o cliy engines, and two
county units were dispatched, as were iwo
rescue units.
,
"One of Ihe county firemen. David Hllc. was
Injured when he reportedly fell through a fl*»or
area and hurt Ills leg." Cohen said. The other
county fireman Injured was Identified us John

Children
Florida not listed as a distressed area
By NICK PPBIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Florida may rank at or nrar Ihr
lop on various lists. Including levels of crime. It Is
not. however, listed as having Ih r worst
neighborhoods In which lo raise children.
The "Kids Count Dnln Book." an nnnunl study
paid for by Ihe Annie E. Casey Foundation, has
Just been released. Il Is based on a study of
neighborhoods across the nation.
Locally. Seminole County Sheriff Don Esllnger
says this urea doesn't have major metropolitan
neighborhood problems, but should lix»k more
closely Into families In which children are raised.
"We can’t look ul Indlvudual neighborhoods."
he commented. "Neighborhoods consist of Indi­
vidual families, and It’s Ihe fumtly which
determines Ihe wny a child will grow up. We
have lo slress family values more or we urr going
lo see a continuing problem here."

I W e can’t look at indlvudual
neighborhoods. Neighborhoods
consist of Individual fam ilies,
a n d I t 's th e fa m ily w h ic h
determ ines the way a child will
grow up. W e have to stress
fam ily values more or we are
g o in g to s e e a c o n tin u in g
problem here. J
-Sheriff Don Esllnger
The Casey Foundation reports nearly half the
3.9 million children living In Ihe nutlon’s worst
neighborhoods reside In six stales.
A1h .ui half the children living In severely
distressed neighborhoods were In California.

Chamber Secretary of the Year

W e e k e n d to -d o g u id e
• Friday. April 20. The Sptrltuul Jubllators
will be In concert beginning at 7 p.m., at the
Sanford African-American Academy of Arts
(Star Theater) on West 13th Street. The
Splrltuul Jubllators. from Rochester. N.Y.. will
present a vnrlcty of musical sclrcllons. The
group Is under the direction of K.C. Baker.
H ,r,U Sholo by Tomm, Vloc»nl

Marla Post, Harry Q. Reid Ill's secretary

C o rre c tio n
The meeting day of Ihe downtown Sanford
Ktwunls was Incorrectly reported In Jul
Julian
Stcnstrom’a column Sunday, April 24. \
group meets Wednesday at noon, not Monday

Fromstsll reports

Crossword
Dear Abby.
Deaths......

0B,7B
..... BB
..... SB
...... SB
.......BA
...... 8B
...... 4A
...... 2A

Horosoopa
Movlsa.......
Nation........
Paopla.......
Polio#........
Religion
Sport#.......
Waathar

M u c h o f th e s a m e
Partly sunny. High In
the mid lo upper 80s.
East wind 15 mph.
Frlduy night: Fair.
Low In the upper
60s. East wind 5 to
10 mph.

S U B S C R IB E

L See Children, Page 5 A

Armed robbery
suspect held on
nine charges
By J . MARK BARFIBLO
Herald Senior Stall Writer

cause of Ihe blaze." Cohen said. "Il Is so
extensive, we have asked slale lire Investigators
to work with us on the cuso. und they will be out
there most of today."
The structure and Its contents were classified
as totally destroyed.
County fire olllcluls said both firefighters were
treated and released al Florida Hospital. Allamonic Springs.

Monroe In Sunford. Registration for various
classes of sailing vessels will he from 8 u.m.
until 11:30 u.m. Saturday, wllh races scheduled
for both Saturday and Sunday.
For additional Information, contact Ihe Holi­
day Inn In Sanford, at 323-1910.
• Suturday &amp; Sunday. April 30. May I. The
Easier Seal's 8th Annuul Softball Challenge will
be held at Merrill Park Softball Complex In
Altamonte Springs. Teams will lie competing for
prizes In this fund raising event. Proceeds
benefit Camp Clutllengc. the 63-acre wheelchair
accessible fuclllly, serving over 2.300 persons
each yc-ur. and the Early Intervention develop­
ment program for children with disabilities from
birth to age three.

IIIIihiIh. Michigan. New York. Ohio and Texas
according to the report.
Dehtile Harris. area director with I IKS. said
Individual neighborhoods are no! given close
cxamlnlatlon In the Seminole County area. "We
don't look nt specific neighborhoods for our
work." she commented, "we huvr to look at tinoverall picture."
Harris said she hud not seen any recent studies
on children based on neighborhood conditions.
The Casey study used five Indicators lo
determine whether a nelghborhcMwl was In crisis
One of them was lo find a high school drop out
rate. If II was ubove 23 percenl. the area near I he
school was considered a dangerous area In which
In raise children.
Local school offlrluls In Seminole County
estimate the drop out rate locally Is well below
that critical range.
Olher Indicators used by the Casey study

SANFORD — One of the men
charged with the March 29 armed
robbery of Check Cashing Easy was
charged Wednesday with the March
10 holdup of Ihe Highwuy Oil
gasoline station and was arrested by
Sanford poller Wednesday night.
Jessie Dudley Lewis. 20. 102
Anderson Ave.. Sanford, was held
on nine charges. Including at­
tempted murder. Police are still
seeking lo Identify the second sus­
pect In Ihe holdup where three
shots were fired.
Lewis has been held since Murch
29 when he und two others were
arrested near Ihe 211 French Ave­
nue check cashing business. Ncurly
$9,000 was taken during the hold­
up. All but $500 wus recovered.
Sunford |&gt;ollcc say Lewis and
another man entered the gas station
al 2425 S. French Ave. shortly
before 10 p.tn. They pointed guns at

assistant manager Clarence V an
Cleve and employee Ernie Ollen
berger and demanded all of the
money (hey had and In the safe.
The victims reported the two men
pointed handguns directly at them
and threatened to kill them.
During Ihe robbery. Ihr vltlms
reported the mask worn by a
suspect later Identified as Lewis
slipped down to his chin, allowing
Van Cleve lo see his face. During the
confusion. Van Cleve pushed the
gun away, but Lewis tired, ntrlklng
the safe but not the vltlms. The two
suspects lied from the station, one
firing another shot al the victims,
hut missing.
Police Cm dr. Dennis Whitmire
suld the pair took an us-yct un­
determined amount of cash.
Oulsldc. customer Billy Nelson
drove Into the station and seeing
what was happening, attempted lo
chase the fleeing suspects In Ills
vehicle. One of Ihe suspects fired a
I See Robbery. Page SA

Attorney: She’s a
self-starter with
superior skills
By NICK P P IIFA U P
Horald Staff Writer
SANFORD - Marie Post, sec­
retary for Harry G. Reid. III.
Sunford uttorncy. bus been
selected us the Orcutcr Sunford
Chamber of Commerce Secre­
tary of the Year for 1994.
T h e a n n o u n c e m e n t was
scheduled to be made during u
noon luncheon today at the
chumbcr office, with Post In­
troduced to members und guests
at a chamber gathering.
A tto rn e y Reid personally
nominated Ids secretary. In his
letter submitted lo the chamber
earlier tills month he wrote.
"Marie has worked with me for
over eight years. She begun with
the Shlnholser firm os a clerk
typist and courthouse runner. It
did not take long for me to notice
that her abilities placed her well
beyond that position and thnt
she had the potential to go much
further."

Retd continued. "I quickly
asked her lo fill the position ns
m y secretary. 1 liuve never
regretted having made Ibis de­
cision. She has proven lo possess
superior secretarial skills. Is a
s e l f - s t a r t e r n e e d in g no
supervision. Is honest, depen­
dable. und has the highest
ethics."
Reid said when he opened his
own office last year. Post went
with him. and usslstcd In re­
solving the myriad of problems
Involved In the move and transi­
tion to his sole practice.
"She has sacrificed her home
life nnd worked long hours
without complaint." he wrote.
"She has worked many days
when she should have been
home on sick leave. In order to
prepare und assist with cuses
und closings which were critical
to clients und my practice."
The Secretary of the Year
selection was made by members
□ See Secretary, Psge 8 A

^

CO N SBW /m O N FAR M
Htfdd Shcto b , Tomm, Vlnctnt

Furlong ‘humbled’ by ballot signatures
------------------------------■ ■— -------------------------------------------------------- "When 1 was thinking about doing this, I had people
By &lt;1. MARK B A R P IILD
advise against It, saying II could hurt me If I dldn t
U
n r o l / i Senior
C n n l n r Staff
Q l nf f W r i t e r ________________________ _
.
. . . . .
_
i I l . i . i . m l I n tlif* n n l t l l U M lf T P I
Horald
muke
It. But by.#.the
end.
I Just got lo Ihe point where
stopped asking people lo help. R wus the sinurlcst
SANFORD — Seminole County commissioner Lurry
accident I ever made."
Furlong said he was humbled by the effort of up lo 125
Furlong Is seeking u second four-year term on lltc
volunteers who helped him raise the necessary
Seminole County commission. No other Democrats
signatures needed lo get Ills name on the bullots this
huve announced a bid for the District 4 sent, but two
year.
Republicans have begun campaigns. Former Cassel­
County elections supervisor Sandra Gourd said she
berry mayor Andrea Dennison will face Altamonte
approved 2.009 names of the 2.102 submitted. Furlong
Springs businessman Winfield Adams Sept. 8.
needed 1.575 registered Democrats to uvold paying the
Furlong said he hoped each precinct-walker would
S3.450 qualifying fee In July.
□ Bee Furlong, Page 8A
"1 was really humbled by this effort." mild Furlong.

^

D a m
ih llP S n
f iG p U D IIC Q ll
* -

.

.

hopefuls to
A L T A M O N T E -S P R IN G S The two GOP hopefuls fur the
District 4 Seminole County
commission seal will lie avail□ See Republican, Page a A

T O T H E SAN FO R D H ER ALD FO R T H E B E S T LO C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . Call 322-2611

�2 A • Sanford H erald, ban fo rd , Florida - Friday, April 29, 1994

NEW S FR O M T H E R EG IO N AN D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

FLORIDA
BRIEFS

Consumer confidence drops
will slow the economy without stopping It."
Denslow said the drop from March to April
Is Insignificant.
"More puzzling Is the four-point decline
since January, especially since It contrasts
with rising optimism nationally." he said.
"Over the same period, a widely rrj&gt;ortrd
measure of confidence hy the Conference
Board rose by 15 percent."
Part of the gap between the Conference
Board's national Index and the Florida Index
can be explained by comparing survey
questions.
The surge In the Itoard’s Index was
heavily lulluenccd by respondents saying
that morr Jobs arc available. The UF Index
does not use questions nlxiut employment
conditions.
Changes In employment tend to Ing other

Jail

Husband held for assisting in suicide
ORANGE PARK — A former Orange Park man was being
held on a llttlc-uscil charge of assisting self-murder following
I lie suicide of Ills wife In 1991.
Steven Gamble was being held In the Clay County Jail In
Green Cove Springs on $75,000 bond Thursday for handing Ills
wife the gnu she used lo commit suicide, said Sgt. Dan Smith,
a spokesman (or the Clay County Sheriff's Office.
The second-degree felony Is punishable with n maximum of
15 years In prison.
Gamble was arrested this week In Kossv|llc, On., where lie
had moved shortly after Judith Gamble, 27. shot herself In the
mouth on Oct. 20. 1991. The mother of two children died two
days Inter,
Although the medical examiner’s report listed her death as a
suicide, the ease was reopened recently nfter police discovered
new Information.
"We are still looking at It as a suicide," Smith said, declining
to elaborate on what police learned recently.
State Attorney Harry Shorsleln said he was not famlllnr with
the assisting self-murder statute being used, though he said It
Is rarely Invoked.
Police said the Gambles were arguing at the time of the
shooting.

GAINESVILLE - The reported gain In
consumer optimism nationwide did not
extend lo Florida, a University of Florida
economist said.
The Florida Consumer Confidence Index
dipped to 89 In April, down from IK) In
March and 9-1 In January.
The decline In the Index suggests that the
economy will continue lo grow, but at a
more sustainable juier than during the (Inal
months of last year, said Dave Denslow, a
research economist with U F’s Bureau of
Economic and Business Research.
"Barring surprises, history will record
1994 ns a year when activity rose without
generating Inflationary pressures," Denslow
said. "Th e recent escalation of Interest rates

changes, rising or fnlllng only after changes
In output. Denslow said, adding the Jump In
the national Index Is merely n reflection of
an Increase In production in the second halt
of Inst year.
Businesses interviewed for the UF survey
were slightly more guarded In their outlook
In April than In March. Only 49 percent said
they rx|&gt;ccl sales to rise, down from 5-1
percent In March, while 37 percent said they
expect sales to remain ut the same level, up
from 33 percent In March.
Hiring plans were llltle changed from
March, with 33 percent of the businesses
expecting to hire more |K-ople over the
coming year ami only 0 iwreenl planning to
cut payrolls.

Jam aican stow aways sought
TAM PA — Federal agents searched for six Jamaican
stowaways who were discovered aboard n freighter and
managed to escape from a guarded ship’s lockup.
Crew members had found eight stowaways on the freighter
Repulse May and locked them In a room on the ship. Even with
security guards, leg Irons and handcuffs, they managed to
Jump olT the ship In the Port of Tampa early Thursday.
"The y were locked In a room that had tools In It." said U.S.
Border Patrol MaJ. Larry Arthurs. "Th e y pried some of the leg
Irons apart with n screwdriver and used pieces of hacksaw
blades to cut chains and the handcuffs.”
He added that the stowaways even used the tools to pry open
a porthole on the ship to make their escape.
Tw o of the stowaways were captured later Thursday, one of
them still with a sawed-off handcuff on his wrist. A search was
on for the other six.

Y e a rs o f
d e d ic a te d s e rv ic e
Leila Ross, a Hamilton Ele­
mentary kindergarten toacher,
Is retiring of tor 14 years of
private and 20 years of public
school teaching. Ross re­
cently stopped off at Ft.
Mellon Park with her class, on
tho way back from a field trip
to tho zoo, for lunch and
playtlmo beforo returning to
the school to hit the books.

Pitot killed in crash

H ttiU Photo by Tommy Vlncont

JA C K SO N V ILLE - The pilot of an F A -18 Jet. killed In a crash
after takeoff from the nlrcraft carrier USS Saratoga In the
Adriatic Sea. was assigned ton Jacksonville-based squadron.
Lt. Scott C. Bubeek. 30. from Hclmond, Iowa, was assigned to
VFA 83, based at Cecil Field Naval Air Station. Navy
spokesman Bert Byers said.
The Jet plunged Into the scu Thursday shortly after It wns
launched by the Saratoga. The pilot’s remains were recovered.
The aircraft was flying as part of the N A TO mission Deny
Flight to monitor and enforce n U.N. ban on military flights
over Bosnia.
There will be an Investigation of the crash. Byers said.

Three held in prim ate-sm uggling case
MIAMI — Three defendants In a prlmatc-smuggllng case
pleaded guilty In a case In which a federal agent wore a gorilla
suit to break the case.
pleqjjaigA guilty Thursday .were Jose Luis Alccrreca. u
-tfl year-old wildlife dealer..Murla Eugenia ytllnda, a 31-year-old
employee tor tho (innneo department of the Interior state of
Mmtfu&amp;..«ftu 42-ycar-old Margarita Barrera who-worked In tits
*• zoo department there.
All three pleaded guilty to a single misdcineunor count of
attempting to export an endangered species. The defendants
were arrested In January 1993 after trying lo buy primates In
Mluml for the zoo department In Mexico.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Guy Lewis will recommend at the
time of sentencing that they be sentenced on "the lower end of
the guidelines."

Volusia deputies testify
DELAND — Volusia County deputies were given a drug
courier profile In 1989 and a caricature of a drug runner posted
al the department depleted a black man with exaggerated
features.a deputy says.
Deputy Richard Forrest made his comments during
depositions being taken by the NAACP In a civil action lawsuit
against the county and the sheriffs office.
Forrest’s statements Wednesday basically supported testi­
mony by two other officers who have spoken out against the
tactics of a drug squad created by Sheriff Bob Vogel. The squad
seized drugs and more than $8 million from motorists stopped
along Interstate 95 around Daytona Beach since 1989.
Vogel (old reporters he had "no knowledge about any
caricature. It’s not a practice supported by this administra­
tion." He said his officers had never used a drug runners’
profile to stop vehicles.
From Associated Press reports

LOTTERY

1

M IA M I - H oro aro tho
w inning numbors selectod
Thursday In tho Florida Lottory:
Fantasy S
8-B -10-16-6

Cash 3
0-8-0

S a n f b n l I I c n t ld
Friday. April 29, 1994
Vol BO. No 213
Published Dally and Sunday, aacapl
Saturday by Tha Sanlord Harald,
Inc. 300 H. (ranch Ava., Sanlord,
Fla. 33771
Sacond Claaa Poataga Paid al Sanlord,
Florida and additional mailing
olllcaa.
Postmaster: Sand addraaa changaa
to THE SANFOHO HERALD. P.0.
Box 1687. Sanlord. FL 33772-1667.
Subtcrlpllon Raise
(Dally t Sunday)
Horn# Delivery
Mall
3 Montha
619 30
634 00
6 Montha
639.00
649.00
1 Vaar
676.00
696 00
Florida naaldanta muat pay 7% aalaa
tax In addition lo raiaa above.
Phono (407) 332-3911.

Supreme Court
upholds public
campaign financing
BtfABAMVEONfMlt ’ -

/ftsdcim d prslsyyjltqr ;

*’

*

^ T A L L A H A S S E E - A stutrlqw
that allows cnndldufrs for gover­
nor and Cabinet to spend tax
dollars on their campaigns Is not
unconstitutional, the Florida
Supreme Court has ruled.
The justices Thursday unani­
mously rejected a slate Re­
publican Party bid to overturn
the 8-ycar-otd public campaign
financing law.
Gov. Lawton Chiles, who Is
s e e k in g r e -e le c t io n , a n d
advocates lor election reform
applauded the ruling as a major
victory.
•
" B y upholding the public
campaign financing law. the
Supreme Court today reaffirmed
that the people — not the special
Interests — should own the
political process." Chiles said In
n statement.
The decision left Republican
leuders fuming. They said It will
put any Republican challenger
at a serious financial disadvan­
tage against Chiles In the gener­
al election this fall.
"It Is n Lawton Chiles reelection act." wild stale GOP

•
Chairman Toni Slade,,"It Is pu
|
absolute sham. '
. ~m . -.
Slade said the law would •
(.b^qef|t (,’hllcs, biqpusc lie. docs
not face as much competition In I
the primary as Republicans and
consequently would have more
money left for the general elec­
tion.
"It Is nothing more than un
Incumbent protection plan."
Slade said.
But some Republican guberna­
torial candidates such as Talluhassce lawyer Ken Connor said
he would ucccpt the public
financing.
Miami businessman Jcb Bush,
who leads ull GOP candidates In
fundraising with about $3 mil­
lion. rcmulncd opposed to the
Idea.
"I think It’s wrong to take
government money to run a
campaign," Bush said. "Th e
people who tukc It will be held
accountable for their actions.”
Secretary of State Jim Smith
was reconsidering his decision
last year not to accept public
financing, said campaign man­
ager David Rancourt.

Women’s attorneys
oppose claims by
insurance plans

■ . ■. ■.......... ............. ............
B y C A T H E R IN E W ILSO N

AP Business Wrltor
FO R T LAUDER DALE - In­
surance companies refuse to
pay for breast Implants re­
movals and so should not he
ullowcd lo claim a share a
record settlement lictwccn re­
cipients nnd breast Implant
manufacturers, the plaintiffs’
attorney says.
"This settlement was not
put together (or the tienc-flt of
the Insurance Industry," at­
torney Stunlcy Chcsley said
Thursday. "We will oppose
any Intervention by the health
cure companies."
Blue Cross/Uluc Shield of
Alabama and Minnesota und a
group of health pluns have
filed motions to Intervene In
the cusc to avoid missing a
chance nt the funds.
Chcsley denounced the
com panies for "c la im in g
quuck-quuck. we want our
money back."
He called the companies*
request preposterous because
not only have they not paid

for removal of the Implants
but also have refused medical
benefits for related lllnrsses.
Tho 94.25-billion settlement
— the biggest ever In a
product-liability case — Is
Intended to cover the pain
and suffering of women with
silicone Implunts. not their
medical expenses, he said.
Attorneys for the Insurers
said they wanted to protect
the companies’ rights as the
class-action case covering as
muny as I million women
moves toward resolution.
Attorneys for manufactur­
ers said the Issue wus pre­
mature. nnd U.S. District
Judge Sam Pointer, visiting
from B irm in g h a m . A la .,
agreed, d rillin g a decision.
He said he took the request
se rio usly but added. *'l
assume what they want Is
money."
Pointer gave preliminary
approvul to the settlement
this month, and women with
Implunts face u June 17
deadline If they want to
pursue Individual lawsuits.

T H E W E A TH E R
w

LOCAL

Today: Partly sunny. High In
the mid lo upper 80s. East wind
10 to 15 mph.
Tonight: Fair. Low In the
upper 80s. East wind 5 lo 10
mph. Saturday: Purtly cloudy.
High In the mid (o upper 80s.
Wind east 10 to 15 mph.
Extended forecast: Sunday:
Partly cloudy with u chance of
mainly morning showers cast
nnd iiftcrnoon und evening
llmnderstorms west. Lows In Ihe
70s. Illghs In the upper 80s.
M on d ay th ro u g h T u e s d a y :
Purtly cloudy with a chance of
mainly ufternoon and evening
thunderstorms.

[FLORIDA TIM E S
cay
Daytona Uaach
FI Laud Beach
FortMyert
Gaineivllle
Homettead
Jecktonvllle
Key Weil
Lakeland
Miami
Peniecola
Seratote
Tallabattaa
Tampa
Varo Beach
W Palm Beach

HI
61
n
69
64
mm
11
64
67
11
13
64
44
II
13
64

Lo
71
73
N
40
73
St
74
44
74
47
41
40
41
74
74

Pet
00
00
00
00
mm
00
.04
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00

NATIONAL TBMPB

BXTBNDBD OUTLOOK

----------1

---------FRIDAY
Ptly cldy 86-88

SATURDAY
Ptly cldy 88-68

MOON PHASES

LA8T
May 2

c

FIRST
May 18

NEW
May 10

o

FULL
May 2B

["b e a c h c o n d it io n s
Daytona Beacht Waves urc
2-3 feel and choppy. Current is
to the north w ith a water
temperature of 75 degrees.
New Smyrna Beach: Waves
arc 3-3'A fed and choppy. Cur­
rent Is to the north with a water
temperature of 70 degrees.

t

vr^

SUNDAY
P tly cldy 86-08

^
MONDAY
P tly cldy 80-68

TIDES
SATURDAY)
SOLUNAR TABLE! Min. 10:15
a.m.. 10:55 p.m.; MaJ. 4:05 n.m..
4:40 p.m . TIDES) Daytona
Beach) highs, 12:18 a.m.. 12:38
p.m.: Io w h , 0:31 u.m.. 0:38 p.m.;
New Smyrna Beach: highs.
12:23 U.m., 12:43 p.m.: lows.
0:30 a.m., 0:43 p.m.; Cocoa
Beach! highs. 12:38 a.m.. 12:58
p.m.: lows. 6:51 a.m.. 0:58 p.m.

BOATINQ
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Small craft exercise caution.
Today: Wind east 15 to 20
knots. Seus 4 to 0 feet. Buy and
Inland waters choppy. Isolated
showers. Tonight: Wind cast 15
lo 20 knots. Scus 4 to 0 fed. Bay
and Inland waters choppy.
Widely scotlcrcd showers. Sat­
urday: Wind cast lo southeast 15
to 20 knots. Seas 4 to 0 fed.

y
TUESDAY
P tly cldy 80-08

STATISTICS_________
Th e high temperature In
Sanford Thursday was 85 de­
grees and Ihc overnight low was
00 as reported l&gt;y the University
of Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
|&gt;criod, ending at 9 a.m. Friday,
lolalled 0 Inches.
The temperature lit 9 u.m.
today was 77 degrees und
Frlduy's overnight low was 60,
as recorded by the National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
□Thu rsday’s high............. 88
□ Barometric pressure.30.20
□ R elsttve Humidity 9#9969 pet
□ W in d s............. East 10 mph
□ R a in fa ll........................O In.
□Sunset.................7tB9 p.m.
□Sunrise................6i46 a.m.

high and overnight low lo I p m EOT.
City
HI Lo Prc
Anchorage
JO 15
Atlanta
66 11 37
Atlantic City
77 66
Baltimore
71 40
Billing!
37 71
Birmingham
II 43
Bltmerck
16 V
llolte
4) 34
Boiton
43 47 04
Uurllngton.VI.
47 14
Charleiton.S C.
75 69
Chxrleiton.W Va
m 55
Charlotte,N C
16 40 04
Cheyenne
34 34 07
Chicago
44 16 40
Claveland
47 37 04
Concord.N H.
57 60
Dallai FI Worth
70 60 .01
Denytr
46 30
Dai Moinet
44 14 .21
Detroit
44 19 .34
Honolulu
II 71 .17
I tout Ion
14 71
Indlanapollt
40 52 .37
Jackton.Mlit
I I 44
Kantai City
44 44 a.33
LeiVegei
47 53
Utile Rock
13 71
Lot Angelei
17 so .03
Memphlt
64 47 .11
Milwaukee
31 31 .11
Mpli St Paul
»
13 .37
Nathville
64 41 .04
New Or leant
69 71
New York City
76 SI
Oklahoma City
44 47 .30
Omaha
44 37 .43
Phlladtlphla
74 40
Phoenix
71 51
PlIHburgh
73 44
Portland Maine
64 49
SI Loult
71 53 3.10
Sell Laka City
63 37 .66
Saallla
42 47
Wathinglon.D C
63 44

Ollk
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
rn
rn
dr
cdy
rn
cdy
rn
cdy
rn
clr
rn
rn
cdy
rn
cdy
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
clr
cdy
cdy
rn
cdy
rn
rn

�t

rr

Sanford H erald, S anford, Florida - Friday, April 29, 1094 - 3A

Black community crimes
C o c a in e p o s s e s s io n c h a rg e d
Durryl Bernard Williams, 24, 1011 Strawberry Ave.. Sanford,
wns arrested on cocaine possession and open container charges
’ ' - x . v M t y 1M
IVI M i n in , A
as Sanford
W U I H U I U police
p u l l V V Wl|/LV.
|U| IIIT
1
^
Wednesday
afternoon.
Special
Investigations
Unit agent reported seeing Williams
mis holding
holdlm an open "can of
.Iwer outside
, j ir- ...........grocery
West 13th Street
igr and
. arrested
----------- him on an
o|wn container charge. When he was handcuffed, Williams
dropped a container found to contain cocaine, the agent
reported

Armed burglary
Damien Wayne drown, 10. Tumpu, wus arrested on armed
burglary of a conveyance and grand theft chhrges Wednesday
evening. Sunford police report finding a $1,380 Heckler and
Koch .40-cnllhcr semi-automatic handgun In the room where
he sometimes stays. The gun had been reported stolen from a
Iruck Monday by die father-in-law of an acquaintance.

Burglary, grand theft charged
Michael Scott Greenwood, 10. 113 Glendale Drive. Longwood. and Iwo youths were arTrsled on burglary and grand
theft charges hy Seminole County deputies Wednesday
morning. Undercover ngents report seeing Greenwood, along
with a 17-year-old and IS year-old youths driving through
Severn) Weklvn urea neighborhoods. When one of the youths
entered a garage and removed a fishing rod and edger valued at
$380, agents arrested them. The 15-year-old was found to have
marijuana and LSD, agents report and was additional held In
I he Juvenile Detention Center on charges of possession of those
drugs.

‘Crack’ possession charged
Jerry Kelth Parker. 26. 017 Holly Ave., Sanford, wusurrested
on charges of jKisscsslon of "crack" cocaine with Intent to
distribute It and |&gt;ossesalun of marijuana by Sanford police
Wednesday morning near l l l h Street and Maple Avenue. A
Sanford police Special Investigations Unit agent reported
seeing Parker loss away n hag found to contain cocaine.

Burgiarly suspect arrested
John Milton Furman J r., 26, 301 W. 10th St.. Sanford, was
arrested Wednesday on a burglary charge. Sanford police
re|Mirl ail 11-year-old buy arrived at Ids South Oak Avenue
home Wednesday afternoon to find two men loading household
tPossessions into two garbage bugs and a pillow case. When
confronted, the hoy said the pair told him (hey were friends of
Ids mother and they'd be back In 20 minutes before fleeing
with the hags. Acting on a (Ip. Furman was named as a suspect
and arrested h half-hour later at a South French Avenue gas
station.

Shoplifting charged
Charles Rosa. 46. 2706 S. Orlando Drive. Hoorn 8. Sanford,
was arrested on u shoplifting charge after a E-Z One Discount
Liquor clerk reported seeing him place u bottle of wine Itt his
trousers and attempt to leave the store without paying for It.

Dom estic violence arrests:
• Michael James Ifocrinecsler. 29. 327 Tcrtuis Court, Lake
Mary; arrested on a battery charge uflrr his father reported
lloermeester struck him.
• Darryl Dewuyne Williams, 29. 1608 Cedar Creek Circle,
Sanford: arrested on a buttery charge after an undisclosed
victim re|Hir(ed he grubbed the victim's neck.
• Hevcrly Ann Williams. 28. 3000 Dixon Ave., Sanford;
arrested on an aggravated assault churge after her brother
reported she swung a tire Iron at him.
• Hotter! Thomas School, 22, 611 Park Ave., Apt. 2, Sanford;
arrested oil a buttery charge uflrr his wife reported he punched
her fare.

Parole violation
Leroy Sylvester Cody, 31, 1202 W. 12th St., Sunford, was
taken Into custody Wednesday on a probation vlolutlon charge
for a burglary conviction.

Crim es reported to county deputies:
Burglaries and thefts
• 100 block Habersham Drive in the Wcklvu urea; two
adjuccnl homes reported burglarized of shotguns and other
possessions valued at 82.220 Wednesday. One home was
reported burglarized between 11 u.m. and 12:45 p.m„ The
olher was reported entered between 7:20 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
• Pebble Creek upartment; 8200 gold chain and $120 In cash
reported taken from a vehicle In the parking lot sometime
between 11:30 p.m. Monday and 10:45 u.m. Tucsduy,
• 1800 block of Dixie Way, Midway; $100 television reported
taken sometime between April 19 at 9 u.m. and Wednesday at
9a.m.
Violence
• A Longwood woman reported a man riding In a pickup
truck tried to grub her purse as she walked across the parking
lot In front of a store on International Parkway In Heathrow at
6:30 p.m. Wednesday. The woman reported she fell to the
ground and the men In the truck left without the purse.

Crim es reported to Sanford police:
Burglaries and thefts
• Auto World. 4274 S. Orlando Drive; two tires and rims
valued at 81.000 reported taken from a vehicle sometime
between 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 8:45 a.m. Wednesday.
• 400 block Summerlin Avenue; Jewelry und cash valued ut
$876 reported taken sometime Wednesday between 9:10 a.m.
uml 3 p.m.
• Thrifty Etc., 419 E. First St.; .357 magnum valued at $600
reported taken sometime 0 p.m. Tuesday and 9 a.m.
Wednesday.

Police say rape suspect
held on unrelated charge
VEHO BEACH A drlficr
arrested on charges of buying
beer for three under-age boys ts
a suspect in the abduction and
rape of a 7-year-old girl, police
say.
Bobby Huy Cornett. 45, pro­
vided the boys the beer at a park
shortly before the girl was raped
there. Haiti Police Chief James
Gabbard. Cornett Is charged
with child ubnse and delivery of
alcohol to a minor.
"He Is certainly u suspect,"
Gabbard said at a news confer­
ence lute Thursday. "He was In
the area where Ihc crime oc­
curred. ... We have not elimi­
nated anyone us a suspect as a
result of Ills arrest."
Gabbard also spoke about the
arrest to 75 residents who
Jammed a city meeting room for
u crime watch session.
• “ (Cornett) Is the person a

number of you said was the guy
who has been hanging around
the park."
The girl was taken Saturday
night from her bedroom to a
water pump at Charles Park, and
molested and left there, police
said.
The girl made her way back
home, climbed through her
bedroom window and fell asleep,
police Lt. Hay Barker said.
In the morning, the victim was
In pain and told her mother "a
man look her away," he said.
At the Thursday night session,
residents quizzed police about
how a child could be plucked
from her bed without anyone
noticing.
"W hat brought this Individual
to her house?" asked Max Col­
eman, who lives a few blocks
from the park.
"He knew she was there,"
Gabbard answered.

Police chiefs brainstorm to stop violence
By JAMBS MARTINEZ
Aaaoclafd Press Writer
S T. PETERSBURG - Blg-clly
police chiefs stressed communi­
ty policing techniques as they
brainstormed on how best to
fight the inner-city epidemic or
black-on-black crime.
"You have to talk to people
about how they are going to be
policed," said Perry Anderson,
p o lic e c o m m i s s i o n e r In
Cambridge, Mass. "Until we do
that, we arc not going to be
successful,"
P len ty of Idcus em erged
Thursday In the National Con­
ference on Preventing Crime In
the Black Community, though
participants admitted there are
no easy fixes.
Blacks, who make up about 12
percent of (he U.S. population,
were the victims In 50 of every
100 homicides committed na­
tio n w id e In 1992, federal
statistics show.
Black males face a five times
greater risk of dying violently
than whites. Homicide was the
leading cause of death for black
men ages 15 through 34.
“ Absolutely everyone has
gotten fed up with It," said
Joseph Wright, director of the
Natlonnl Organization of Black
Law Enforcement Executives.
"We're not going lo allow a few
folks to terrorize neighborhoods
anymore."
Los Angeles Police Chief Willie
Williams, who assumed office
after the riots In 1992, touted hts
system of com m unity police
advisory boards where citizens
help set crfme-flghtlng priorities
for officers.
"We have to have a way for
our customers to Interact with
their police department — we
can't wait until (here's a crisis,"
said Williams.
The boards are "formed from
men and women of all wulks of
life who live in the community —
anybody who has an interest In
the policing of (heir urea." he
said.
"We have current nod former
gang members oil some of these
Imards. We have a lot of young
people In Ihclr 20s und 30s.
maybe who don't weur a suit
and tic ... but If you're not part of
the solution, you're part of the
problem."
In the nation's capital, where
70 percent of violent crimes
occur around public housing
projects, police chief Fred
Thomas said he has started a

Homeless
wait for
services
&gt;lat&lt;
FO RT LAUD ER D ALE Browurd County look u giant
step forward last year In helping
the homeless: A task force i t c ulcd plans for u host of services
that would be avullublc for Un­
less fortunate.
Four centers across the county
were to he built to take some of
(he 5,000 estimated homeless off
Browurd's streets. Food, health
and long-term care were lo be
offered.
Uut bickering between city
und county governments, and
growing community opposition
to the promised plans have kept
any such services from being
delivered.
Meanwhile, the homeless arc
waiting.
" T h e f r u s t r a t io n has
q ua d ru p le d ." said Cam m ay
Gibson, a member of the execu­
tive board of the Broward Coali­
tion for the Hom eless, an
advocacy group. "Th e level of
ungcr Is becoming such that It's
almost Impossible to deal with."
The homeless have been living
In a downtown tent city which
was erected to house who had
congregated In Holiday Park.
Lust year, us conditions there
continued lo worsen, advocates
began pressuring Ihc county to
come up wllli solutions.
The county created the Home­
less , Tusk Force, which was
comprised of government, busi­
ness, community and homeless
representatives. T h e group
druflcd a plan lliat was modeled
after successful programs for
short- and long-term help. Il won
the support of social service
agencies and gave (he homeless
hope.
"A t this point, wc arc very
comfortable with the plan,"
Gibson said. "Unfortunately, the
city and county have gotten
caught up In a game or scapegoal."
Gibson said the Tusk Force
proposed six sites for the first or
the four centers, and all were
refused by ihc city.

■|u| MSM

program based on o Japanese
concept in which officers and
Iheir families live In the projects
they patrol.
Another Washington program
takes control of children who nre
expelled from school. Instead of
going home and out on Ihc
streets, troubled youngsters nre
taken to n center where police,
social workers and tutors try (o
help turn the youngsters' lives
around before It's loo Intc.
In Atlanta, Fulton County
Sheriff Jacquelyn Barrett Is
starting u program to teach
conflict-resolution and selfmunagement skills (u (he more

unemployment, drug abuse, und
I l l i t e r a c y m u s t a ls o be
addressed, they said.

than 2,000 Inmnlcs In Jails.
"If we don't do something
about rehabilitation, they're go­
ing (o come hack." she said.
“ Doing the time alone Is not the
answer."
The chiefs stressed that such
measures were only part of the
solution. Social Issues affecting
(he black community such us
CRAFTS •FOOD,

INCREASE
YOUR CHILD'S
LEARNING)
SKILLS!
One-On-One learning Envlronmenl

FUN • HISTORY

STALEARNINQCENTER

OIDE LAKE MARY DAYS
(Cornar of Ik Miry DM A Country Club)

P.0. Box 320, Sanlord, f t 32772-0321

SAT.. MAY 7 *10 AM To 4 PM

(407) 324-1350 Of 323-8731

fa CornpM* Manukoi:

S h o r ts to p s a n d S h o r tc a k e s ... B u t S h o r t F a c e s ?

Why do our customers leave here
with big smiles and short faces?
Simple. With our great selection
and affordable prices... No One
Ever Leaves Here with a Long Facel

K a is e r
PONTIAC-BUICK-GMC TRUCKS
1590 South Woodland Blvd., DeLand
DELAND 904-734*6882 * DAYTONA 904-257-6540 *ORLANDO 407-629-0549
■LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY. 17*92 &amp; HWY. 15A"

SC£HARDW ARE AC5 HARDWARE ziCC HARDWARE
9 A o t f i e r ’s

* D c iy S p e c i c i C s !

yC oraC

*

Hardware

HANGING IMPATlENTS
BASKETS

•*DOUBLE IMPATlENTS
Reg. S1.28
NEW GUINEA BASKETS
Reg. S5.88

$4.99

Sale Dates 4/29/94 - 5/5/94

880

$488

Sanford Store Only
$ 3 ® ®

Serving All Your Hkrtfwif* NmcJi She* 1978

§ LONGWOOD LAKE MARY

SANFORD CASSELBERRYI

A J\ jr

Mj Hwy 434 &amp;427 Publix Shopping Center
330-6589
Hardware
Si 339-4883
33n-fiSflq

207 E. 25th St.
321-0885

Winter Park Dr.
339-7365

J

ziCJ? W A n D W A n E zlC f M A R D W A n EzlC C H A R D W A n E z iC F H A R D W A R E iiC E H A R D WARE

EM ERGENCY CLEARANCE
&amp; 0*

&amp;

Broyhlll Bedroom Suites
Broyhlll Dining Room
Broyhlll Sofa
Broyhlll Love Seats
Broyhlll Headboards All Sizes
Broyhlll Dining Table or Chairs
Broyhlll Recllners
Broyhlll Sofa &amp;
Loveseats w/Recllners
Sealy Bedding 1/2 Price Starting @

0 ^ 0 0 °
Retail 1795
Retail 9Q9T
Retail 104#
Retail 94ST
Retail 399*
Retail 129**

1/2 Price &amp;

Less

.

1/2

P ric e

&amp; Less
*1 1 9 per set

HURRY •HURRY •HURRY
LIM ITED Q U A N TITIE S
HUDSON FURNITURE

_______________ H W Y 4 6 (2 .3 M IL E S E A S T O F I-4) ■ S A N F O R D

�&gt;•V f4,

T™ T

Sanford H erald

CHUCK STONE

(U S P 8 481*200)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Aren Code 407*322*2011 or 831*9003
W ayne 0 . Doyle, P u b llih e r end Editor

SU BSCR IPTIO N R A TE:

3 Months................................ $10.SO
0 Months........... .....................$30.00
1 Y esr..................................... $78.00
Florida Residents must pey 7 X sales tax In
addition to rates above.

EDITORIAL

Do you really
want a job?
D u rin g S n n fo rd C ity C o m m is s io n d is ­
cussion M onday night about Job availabilities
at the Seminole T o w n e Center Mall. M ayor
B cttyc Sm ith made an Interesting observa­
tion.
In reference to city efforts to keep people
Informed of Job opportunities, the m ayor
com m ented. "U nfortunately, we can’t force
local people to get Involved."
Sadly. It’s true. M any people huve become
so dependent on welfare handouts or even
crim e, that they have forgotten how to
honestly earn a living. Possibly Instilled
through their parents’ actions, they find It
easier to hold out their hands for a free ride,
rather than use those hnnds for labor.
T h e city plans to use a glass-enclosed area
near the elevator in the bottom floor of city
hall, for an Information center.

M i s s i s s i p p i d e s e r v e s a f r e s h lo o k
JA CKSO N . MISS. — Southern dialect has n
neologism Hint Is exquisitely logical If "you" Is
singular, how can "you" also he plural?
Not to worry. Southerners plunillze "you" with
" y ’nll," and everybody In the roam gels In the
act. They also have an affinity for stretching «
one-syllable word Into two. "Here” becomes
"hc-yah."
Prepositions become a feast. When a Southern
mother discovered her son hiding under the
(nblc after he had eaten a whole pic, she
bellowed: "You Ix-tter come on tip and out from
In and under there."
Down here, as a speaker for a conference on
the Europcun perspective of World War II, I must
have met the wrong people, went lo the wrong
restaurants nnd lunched with the wrong groups.
Haw else can you explain the lovely profusion of
warmhearted hospitality?
Crowing up In Connecticut. I not only despised
Mississippi, but the whole South. (And that
region wasn’t exactly ecstatic uboul me. either.)
The antebellum words from a popular song
drove me iqi the wall — "When your mummy
falls upon her knees, It’s sleepy lime down
South."
But In the Intervening years, both of us
changed. We even matured. The South Is riding

an economic and |Killtlnil roll. Mississippi Is
smack duh In the middle, laboring (o shrd (Is
Image us the Saudi's prototypical had "good oF
boy” Image. Byron
dc In B e c k w ith 's
conviction for the
n ssn ssl not Ion ol
Mrdgur Evers Is a
nice start.
Bui one conviction
dot's not signal the
millennium’s arrival.
A new era begins
with (he changes In
names. Yesterday
segregationists like
Bilbo and Rankin
became synonymous
( B u t In the
with racial animus.
Intervening
Totlny the Magnolia
years, both of
us changed. We
Stale's first black
member of Congress,
evon matured.
M i k e E s p y , Is
The South Is
riding an
Clinton's secretary of
economic and
a g r i c u l t u r e . Ills
name Is synonymous
political roll. J
with racial umlly.
I hud been Invited lo speak here through the

In my speech about army air corps' racial
segregation during World War II. 1 extolled a
system that al least hud one benefit. It kepi me
from going overseas. "We can make u Joyful
noise unto the Lord far saving my life." I told the
mostly while Bible-loving audience. 1 always
knew' we'd end up on the same side one day.
Still, chuugc doesn't come as swlllly ur. the
heurt may desire. The legacy of the past and the
shibboleths of our prejudices transform all of us
Into victims. Mississippi especially has liern held
hostage us the pit of America’s racism. Nina
Simone cvrn recorded n song with a two-word
title. Mississippi Is the first word, an expletive,
I hr second word.
Bui eventually, the past recedes Into the
cobwebs of time. Toduy Mississippi's ruclal
progress Is plagued l&gt;y slullstleul fastness — the
lowest median family Income and the lowest
A C T scores. Il docs much better, however. In per
capita expenditure* far education — IHth

JACK ANDERSON

Lott’s own bones
begin to rattle

T h e city Is w orking to ensure local people
have as m uch opportunity as possible to find
em ploym ent. T h e C ity Com m ission however.
Is not going to go out and forcefully drag
someone to a Job Interview.
For those w ho have com plained about the
lack of Job opportunities In the Sanford area,
there Is now a challenge. W ill It be accepted
or will the com plaints continue because a
person is not w illing to do an honest d a y ’s
work?
T h e Individual in need of a Job must answer
that question.

LETTER

H um ane S ociety
president responds'
This letter Is written In response to u n u m b e r ol
recent letters to the editor (complaints) regarding
the "living" conditions at the Humane Society. Yes
— 1 agree that the conditions at the society shelter
are less Ilia n Ideal. I will not debate that issue.
However, I would suggest that there are only two
avenues — courses that the members of the
Humane Society cun follow rrlulive to this issue.
T h e first proposal — cu lhun usiu nr no
cuthanaslu. The Humane Society should rchisc to
accept any more animals until the new dog
kennel-runs are constructed.
The first solution (which may be the position of
some of your recent "letter to the editor" writers) Is
the most simplistic. Under this scenario, the
society should smply "turn away" the majority of
animals (hat arc brought to the shelter. This would
case the overcrowding and make the shelter more
presentable to the human eye. The drawbuck to
this proposal Is thut for the most part, these
unwanted animals will be "redirected" to the
government unlmul shelter and unfortunately will
be destroyed. One of the realities of a burgeoning
animal population Is that animals which are
"dropped ofT’ al government animal shelters have
relatively short life expectancies. Population con*
tro) dictates thut an animal’s life Is gauged by time
limbs and space. Dy law, animal control as the
agency of the government, cannot refuse to accept
un animal, the net result being that old "arrivals"
must make way for new "arrivals." There Is no
question that our government shelters arc quality
institutions that huve been unable to devise a
solution to this problem, other than the one that
has been mandated and thrust upon them —
euthanasia. As a volunteer-citizen group, the
Humane Society of Seminole County, has opted for
u different route. Tills leads me to the second
alternative-proposal.
The second proposal — Is there a reasonable
alternative to euthanasia?
The second alternative is for the shelter to accept
(and care for) as many animals as can be
reasonably accmmodated, while awaiting adop­
tion. Certainly, this second route poses difficulties,
since at the present lime the shelter has no fixed or
permanent dog kennels. Under these circum­
stances many of the dogs are kept In small cages
pending dally exercise — walks etc. A positive
return from this process Is that a strong percentage
of our animals arc adopted — generally In a short
perod of time. Simply stulcd. If you had a choice
would you rather cage an animal under the current
"conditions" with the hope that it will be adopted,
or would you rather "redirect" It and case the
overcrowding problem by having it euthanized. As
president of the Humane Society, Is Is my
responsibility to adhere to the bylaws established
by the society’s membership which mandate a
"low kill" policy, 1 do not mean to debase or "cast
stones" at those Individuals who support proposal
one. There Is no question that they both have
merit. The distinction is not one of morality, but
one of philosophy. It would be far better for all of us
(o come lo terms with this distinction and focus
our energies towurd "rebuilding" the shelter,
rather than criticizing "conditions” which under
(he circumstances ore the best that can tie
expected. I am open to any reasonable suggestion
as to the care of the animals, pending county
upproval, Issuance of permits, and construction of
the new shelter.
Steven O. Mason. President
Humane Society of
Seminole County

intercession or « very dear friend, I’rofessur M.
Dennis Jackson, a wlilte Mlsslsslpplan who Is my
olficlnl biographer.

DONNA BRITT

The w orld looks just right
The stunning purple of spring's first herald,
the crocus, bus fang since faded here In
Washington. With each successive llowcr,
wc'vc grown more used to a world filled with
color — daffodils in full, yellow bloom,
candy-colored tulips, (he million green leuves
outside our office windows.
It fcelsjusl right.
Last year, the flowers mude no sense. On
April (/, I'd left a largely barren landsru|&gt;c lo
drive to (he suburban Philadelphia hospital
lied of my grandmother, who’d had a stroke.
T w o weeks later, when 1 returned after her
funeral, the world had changed. Spring’s
riotous palette felt disconcerting. Insulting.
Just stepping outside felt like a slap.
How could nature throw a parly without me?
Without her?
Last year’s grnyncss descended again Iasi
week. A woman hud bought my grandmother's
house, which I part-owned with my mother;
m y presence was required In Media, Pa, I hud
to decide which mementos to keep, and lo sign
papers at the settlement, which was originally
scheduled for the anniversary of MomMommy's death. We moved back the settle­
ment date a week: changing m y feelings about
saying goodbye lo the house on Olive Street
wasn’t as simple.
I wonder at how quickly we are supposed to
get over such things. In the past year.
President and Mrs. Clinton have had parents
die — perhaps the most devastating human
loss other than that of a child. Nobody ever
mentions It, considers II. 1 think about ibc
Nixon family and how the now-caring public
will soon move on, too busy to really
remember.
I rem em ber. I remember m y brother
screaming. "Hey. Donna, we’re here," snat­
ching me from sleep In (lie hack scut of the
family Dodge, announcing the end of the
overnight Interstate trip from our Gary, Ind.,
home lo Media,
1 remember stumbling from the car, seeing
Just-delivered milk bottles glistening damply
on Mom-Mommy's porch. I remember seeing
her emerge from the kitchen — flushed,
stylish, always glamourous — grabbing us up,
calling us old-fashioned things no one else ever
did: "Angel." "Precious," "Darling." I remeber
bouncing at the table us she fried scrapple and
eggs far us to cat; bending over double as I
changes clothes In " in y " room because
Mom-Mommy's lace curtulns afforded no
privacy.
The house smelled like summer and Cluru
perfume and breezes redolent with roses.
Steeped In grayness Inst week. I decided that
If the room at the real estate office smells like
anything, It Is codec, new carpet and the scent
of moving things along.
The deed before me begins with the words

"Tills Indenture" In Olde English script. Il
details the transfer of ownership of my
summertime heuven to the woman across the
table, u pleasant-faced nurse named Helen,
with graying shoulder-length hair and un
Improbable ring In her nose. I decide the ring Is
cool.
"Together with all
and s in g u la r the
buildings and im ­
p ro v e m e n ts ." the
document reads, "to
huve and to hold said
lo t o r p I c e d o f
ground...'
A few strokes of the
pen and It Is over.
"You are," Helen's
real e s t a t e agent
announces. ' ‘a
hom eowner!!''
C l e a r l y
overwhelmed. Helen
grins.
Then she smiles at
me. "If IPs all right
w ith y o u ," Helen
says, "I would like u
p ic tu r e of y o u r
grandmother, your
family. Input up In
the house. ...As part of Its history.”
Wllh u few hours to spare before reluming lo
Washington — and before Helen’s relatives
arrive for a champagne housewarming — 1
return lo Olive Street. Circling (he house's
perimeter, 1absorb detail after detail.
The stately, burgundy-and-whlte-Btrlpcd
metal awnings. The sheer drop from the porch
that my brothers, and later my sons, loved
diving from. The apple tree draped over a
cement-filled well.
Rounding the corner, I sec Helen, who's
pumping my uncle for local color. The house,
Uncle Pop Is saying, was designed by a local
black architect — whose daughter, he adds,
happened to be "the first girl I ever had a crush
on. Helen tells him that she's heard thut this
largely bluck neighborhood was once part of
the Underground Railroad. "Isn't (hat won­
derful?" asks Helen, who's while.
Il Ib — und so Is she. Hours later, my mother
calls (o tell me about the housewarming:
Helen's relatives spilling onto the porch,
friends exclaiming over the house. Kids
fighting far turns at climbing the apple tree.
Sighs Mom, "II was as If they'd been here all
ulong."
Headed home In my rented van on Interstate
05, I am surprised fa find myself singing:
showluncs; obi Motown; "In the Garden," one
of Mom-Mommy's favorite hymns.

W ASHINGTON - Sen. Trent Loti. R-Mlss..
the GOP gumshoe who searches for skeletons
in the closets of Democratic appointees, has
one rattling In his own closet
Loll confirmed to us that his tics lo Isadora
Hyde, a political friend who was convicted
Iasi year of defrauding (he federal govern­
ment, has been Investigated "b y NASA
olllt lals. by the FBI and by others." Loll
claims he was cleared, lull some government
Investigators m ain­
tain lha t (he In ­
vestigation didn't go
as Tar as It should
have.
In 1984, Hyde's
c om pa n y w a s
a w a rd e d a N A S A
contract lo provide
security services ut
(he Slcnnls Space
Center In Mississippi.
NASA Invesllgutorn
eventually uncovered ( Some
lhat Hyde and Ills ■ government
wife, Cclestinc, hilled
mvostlgators
N A S A for 24 u n ­
maintain that
allowable expenses
tho
from 1083 lo 1980 —
Investigation
amounting (o ovrt
didn't go as far
$188,000 thill the
as It should
Hydes diverted loi
havo. J
personal use.
NASA’s probe led lo a grand Jury In­
vestigation. In April 1993. Isadore Hyde and
Ills wife were sentenced lo prison for
conspiracy to dt-hund the federal govern­
ment.
NASA Investigator Jo hn Batson, who
bended the Hyde Investigation, has come
farwurd to tell us (hal NASA Inspector
General Bill Colvin blocked his Investigation
once Batson began looking al Lott's lies lo
Hyde. The General Accounting Office Is
currently conducting a special Investigation
of Colvin, bused on allegations dial lie has
shut down sensitive Investigations. Colvin
refused to comment.
Batson hud been pursuing leads furnished
by former Hyde employees — including
allegations that Hyde used NASA resources lo
do political favors far Loll. One farmer Hyde
employee Ink! Batson thul Lott's campaign
headquarters In Moss Point, Miss., was
provided free by Hyde.
Several other farmer Hyde employees told
Batson that on one occasion, three Hyde
employees parked cars and provided security
far one of Lott's campaign functions. The
Incident allegedly happened during a normal
work day, which would mean ihui Hyde
employees were being paid with taxpayer
funds from the NASA contract lo do poll ileal
work far Lott. "Thai's absolute news lo me,"
Loll told us. "I know nothing about Hyde
providing people lo park cars, and nolhlng
ubout security people."
Hyde may have felt that he was In Lull's
debt. Hyde received the NASA contract after
then-Congressman Lott and his Bluff made
persistent Inquiries on Ills behalf. Less tlum
two weeks before Hyde officially won the
contract. Hyde put Lott’s mother, who was 71
ut the lime, on the company's payroll. An
April 1090 five-page memo that the IRS
submitted lo the U.S. Attorney's office
delating Information obtulned during a grand
Jury Investigation or Hyde, explains how Iona
Lott got the Job.
H yde created u Job of public relutlons/personncl director for Mrs. Loll hi 1984,
even though she had no experience In these
arcus. Mrs. Lott did not resign from her slate
Job wllh the Southern Mississippi Planning
and Development District until Aug. 31.
1084, which meant lhat she was on (wo
payrolls far several months.
"Lou's services to HSSI (Hyde’s company)
were minimum und meaningless ns the HSSI
personnel files Bhc kept were duplicated and
also kepi" by several other employees,
according (o the memo. Mrs. Lott was paid us
a full-time employee for her first two ycurs,
even though she only worked 20 hours per
week, and she received perks other
employees did not enjoy — Including use of a
company car.

�Sanford H erald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, April 29, 1994 - BA

Troubled Social Security
pays $32 million in bonuses
W ASHINGTON - The Social
D u n n in g , the senior Re­
Security Administration paid out publican on the House Ways and
$:i2 million In employee bonuses Means Social Security sub­
lant year and gave the Inrgrst committee, called the bonuses
single award — $9,250 — to an outrugeous and criticized the
executive who find been on the agency for giving Thompson
Job for Iona than three monthn.
such a large sum after such a
Two-thirds of the agency's short time on the Job.
05,000 employees got the cash
"T o gel $9,250 for 2Vi months
Ikuiiim ch In 1993, according to of service In the Social Security
Social Security spokesman Phil Administration, that Is an out­
Gamblno.
rage tliut we all ought to be
Records obtained under the made aware bf." Dunning said.
Freedom of Information Act
R e p. R ic k S a n t o r u m of
show that the biggest award Pennsylvania, thr senior Re­
went lo Lawrence Thompson, publican on a separate Ways and
who w oh named the agency's M eans s u b c o m m itte e thnt
second-ranking executive by oversees part of Social Security,
Health and Human Services Sec­ said an agency that admits to
retary Donna Shalala on Ju ly 19.
serious problems In Its disability
Ills bonus, recommended by programs should not be re­
Social Security Commissioner warding "the people In the
Shirley Chater and approved by system."
Shalala. wan for the fiscal year
"The money we gave them to
that ended 73 days later, on clean It up shouldn't Ire going to
Sept. 30, Gamblno said.
bonuses." he said.
Thompson's annual salnry Is
The awards come at a time of
$120,594.
g ro w in g p ro b le m s for the
Social Security ts not unique agency.
am ong federal ugencles In
A record number of people are
uwardlng employee bonuses.
applying for disability benefits,
Out the agency's decision to severely straining the agency's
spend $32 million In striking ability to oulckly evaluate their
because Social Security lobbied cases. Applicants have waited n
Congress last year for additional year or more to learn If they will
money to process a growing receive disability payments.
backlog of disability claims.
Callers huve often complained
Congress gave the agency un that they cannot get through on
extra $200 million and Hep. Jim
the agency’s toll-free hot line or
H u n n ln g , It -K y ., questions th u t te le p h o n e s r in g u n ­
whether Social Security would answered.
have been able to finance Its
Federul Investigators have
txmuses without that money.
uncovered abuse and fraud by

Immigrants, drug addicts and
alcoholics who receive Social
Security disability payments.
And the ngcncy has virtually
abandoned all reviews of disabil­
ity recipients to determine
whether they have recovered
and should be removed from the
rolls.
Th o m p s o n served as the
agency's acting commissioner
from the date of Ills appointment
until Chater took over In Octo­
ber.
G a m b l n o a r g u e d that
Thompson's bonus covers lioth
Ills work nt Social Security and
Ills lust nine months ut the
General A cco u n tin g Office,
where lie served as assistant
comptroller general for human
resource programs.
The money to pay for the
bonus, however, came out of
Social Security's budget. And
Thompson, had he stayed at
G A O , would have not have
received a bonus because the
congressional watchdog agency
didn't have the money for any
uwards.
Gamblno said the bonus re­
wards Thompson for his "out­
standing. high-perform ance
work at GAO and tils excellent"
tenure as acting commissioner of
Social Security.

Hillhaven has fun, gives thanks

Leading the fun

Herald Photo* by Herman Schrooder

At the monthly barbecue at Hlllhavon Health
Care Center In Sanford, the staff and volunteers
cooked up a good time for tho residents. Master

chef Jim McCathran, acllvltes director Julie
Erlksen, musician Grog Pratt and Matthew Taylor
were In charge of the exciting event.

Thanks for the help
The volunteers who glvo of
their tlmo and talents lo make
life a little more enjoyable for
the residents of Hlllhavon woro
given certificates for thoir
work.
In the front
rowworo
RyanBush, Kara
Bush and
Eileen Helms; behind them
Mary
Jones, Lisa Bush and
Rita Cooper; and In tho back
row,
Joseph Jones, Jeanne
Bush, Susan Bakor and Rogor
Hughes.

According to Gamblno. the
agency nwarded bonuses to
2.H9I high-level managers total­
ing $3.1 million dollurs. or an
average of $ 1.060 per person.

Children-------Continued from Page 1A
Include: a poverty
rate atrove 28 percent: more
than 40 percent households
headed by females: more than
■17 percent of males "unutturhed
to the Inlxir force"; and more
than 17 percent of families on
welfare. A neighborhood with
four of the five Indicators was
rated "severely distressed."
The rcjtort says every slate
e x c e p t I d a h o has s u c h
neighborhoods. It states. "A l
though many of these troubled
nrlghlMirhnods are In neglected
Inner-city areas, there ure signif­
icant numbers of such coininutittle s In r u r a l A m e r ic a ,
especially In IheSouth." ,
"Ilecause the choices children
mukc ure often circumscribed by
peers and n e ig h b o rs , the
neighborhoods that children live
In oftrn exert a powerful Influ­
ence on their life chunccM," said
the study released Sunday.
'Y "Decisions ntxmt staying In
school, studying hard, becoming
a parent. Joining a gang or

a
',
I

tx-comlng Involved In drugs are
a ll I n f l u e n c e d h y l h e
nclghtMjrhood environment."
"W e can no longer Ik - sur­
prised hy the terrible outcomes
experienced by young people
who grow up in environments
where drugs, violence, welfare
and teen pregnancy are far more
prevalent than safe schools, high
school diplomas and good Jobs,"
said Douglas W. Nelson, the
foundation's executive director.
"These nclghtiorlinods offer no
real choices: we need lo change
that "
Nelson suggested overhauling
human service programs and
locating them In the communi­
ties they serve.
Among the report's other find­
ings:
— Oue-quurter of all children
under age 0 live In poverty —
and more than half of those In n
family headed by a female.
— One out of every four black
children lives in u severely
distressed neighborhood, com­
pared with one of every 10

Latino children anil one out of
every 03 while children.
— Dlrlhs to single teens were
up In all but three stales —
Maryland. New Jersey and New
Yo}k.
— The teen violent death rale
rose 13 percent between 1985
and 1991. While deaths of 15 to
19-year-olds caused hy accidents
decreased by 15 percent, deaths
due to homicide doubled.
— The Juvenile violent crime
arrest rule lor youths age 10 to
17 Increased 50 |ierceiit In-tween
1985 and 1991. In 1985. It was
305 |»er l(K).tXK) youths: In
1991. It rose lo457 |k t 100.000.
The Annie E. Cnsey Founda­
tion'was established In 1918 by
Jim Casey, one of the founders
of United Parcel Service, and Ills
siblings, und named for their
mother. The organization says It
Is the nation's largest |ihllunlb ropy devoted exclusively to
dlsadvuntugcd children.
Information from A llo ca te d
included in !hl$ report

Pr»t% it

DEATHS
N. AGNES BAUER
N. Agnes Duucr. 75, handover
Roud, Longwood. died Wednes­
day. April 27. 1994. at Meridian
Nursing Center. Longwood Dorn
May 20. 1918, in Glcnmorc.
N.Y.. she moved In Central
Florldu In 1974. Mrs. Dauer was
u secretary for a retail tire
company. She was Catholic.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e s o n .
F re d e rick D .. C a sse lb e rry:
daughters. Judl Gilman. Virgin
Islands. Karen Mlklos. Jcnncrs.
Pa.; sisters. Lillian Schoff. Rome.
N.Y.. Mary Paddock, Tennessee:
eight grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.
D a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral
Home, Goldenrod, In charge of
arrangements.
BRIAN DAVID CAMPBELL
Drlnn David Campbell. 19.
Turtle Rock Court. Longwood.
died Tuesday. April 20. 1994. In
Orlando. Dorn Oct. 30. 1974. In
El I'uso, Texas, he moved to
Central Florida In 1994. Mr.
Campbell was a salesman. He
wasChrlstlun.
Survivors include parents.
David and Sandra Campbell,
Longwood: sister. Lisa. Eagle
River. Alaska; pu ter n aI
grandparents. Mr. nnd Mrs.
Duncan Campbell. Laurel, Md.;
maternal grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Chitwood, Long­
wood; greut-grand mot her. May
Relic Chitwood. Nichols, town.
Plnc-Custlc Memorial Chajjcl
Funeral Home, Orlando, In
charge of arrangements.
CHRISTINE J. HABECK
Christine J . llubcck, 60. West
Alrj&gt;ort Boulevard, Sanford, died
Wednesday, April 27, 1994. al
South Seminole Hospital. Long­
wood. Dorn April 21, 1934, In
Mlneolu, N.Y.. she moved to
Central FLorlda In 1984. Mrs.
llubcck was o homemaker. She
was Presbyterian.
Survivors Include son. Crulg.
Hickory, N.C.; daughters, Tina
Caldcronc, Longwood, Kim. Sun
Diego. Calif.; brother. Ruymond
I Dunn, Halesltc Heights. N.Y.;
j two grandchildren.
Gaines Carey Hand Garden

Chapel Funerul Home. Long­
wood. In charge of arrange­
ments.
HERMAN R.McNABB
Herman R. McNabb. 88. East
First Street, Sanford, died
Thursday. April 28. 1994. at
Orlando Regional Medical Cen­
ter. Dorn Dec. 30. 1905. In
Grayvllle. III., he moved to Cen­
tral Florida In 1981. Mr. McNabb
was a retired steelworker. Ho
wus a member of Holy Cross
Kjilsrojiul Church. Sanford.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e sons.
Herman Jr.. East Polnte. Mich..
Edward D., Sanford: daughter.
Irene Brooks. East Polnte; sister.
Mary Logan, Mount Clemens.
Mich.; 15 grandchildren and 15
great-grandchildren.
G rn m k o w Fu n e ra l Hom e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.
MARY OUZOONIAN
Mary Ouzoonlan, 77. Sutter
Loop. Longwood, died Wednes­
day. April 27. 1994, al Meridian
Nursing Center. Island Lake.
Dorn Dec. 20. 1910. In Boston,
she moved to Central Florldu
from M iam i In 1989. Mrs.
Ouztxmlnn was a retired residen­
tial real estate sulclsj&gt;rrsan for
Keyes Co.. Coral Gables. She
was Armenian Ajtostollc. She
was a member of Coral Gables
Dourd of Realtors.
Survivors Include daughter.
Kerri Zell. Longwood; sister.
Anne O'Neil. Boston: four grand­
children; one niece; one nephew.
Deacon Direct Crcmutlon Serv­
ice. Orlundo, In charge of ar­
rangements.
JUAN D. RIVERA
J u a n D . HIv c r a , 55.
S|)rlngwood Court. Longwood,
died Wednesday, April 27. 1994.
ut Florldu Hospital. Altamonte
Springs. Dorn June 23. 1938, In
the Philippines, he moved to
Central Florida In 1985. Mr.
Rivera was u food server ut the
N u v y E x c h a n g e . He wa s
Catholic.
Survivors Include wife. Fran­
cisco; sons, Juanlto, Philippines,
Jeff, Longwood: duughters.

Deanna. Davenport. Gu.. Emily
Ann. Longwood; brother. Rudy.
California; sister. C arm cllla
Espino. Philippines: two grand­
children.
D a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral
Home. Allumonlc Springs. In
charge of arrangements

BROWDY, LEILA
Funeral urvK et ler M m Ltlla B rowdy. 77.
ol »J Avtnu# 0 Oviedo, who died Sunday.
April 14. IW4, will b) ] pm Saturday *1
Grent Chapel A M E Church. Oveldo. with
the Rev Jack William*officiating Interment
lo follow In Botton Cemetery. Oviedo
Frlendt may call at the church from It e m
until funeral time
Marvin C Zander* Funeral Home. Apopka,
the people *choice
HARDY. THEODORE
Funeral tervlce* fur Mr Theodore Hardy,
70. ol Ml E 4th SI. Sanlord. who died
Thurtday, April It. I**4, will be held 1 p m
Saturday at the Sunrlte Funeral Home
Chapel with the Rev Arthur Greham ot
floating Interment lo follow in Evergreen
Cemetery, Sanlord Friend* may call at tha
funeral horn# thl* evening (Frldayl Irom J*
pm
Sunrlte Funeral Homa, WO Locutl Ave .
Sanlord. In chare# ol arrangement*
McCLOUD. JAMES WESLEY
Funeral tarlcat lor Mr Jama* Wetley
McCloud, ot 1417 S. Lake Aye . Sanlord, who
dltd Tuatday. April 1*. I**4. will bo hold It
a m Saturday at Houta ol Rtfuga Mlnlitrle*
with tha Rev Ell|ah Rlchardion officiating
Servlca* will alio be held In Quincy at 11 a m
Sunday al Shiloh Prlmlllva Bapllil Church
with the Rav, Philip J. Hannah officiating
Interment will follow In the SI Mark
Cemetery, Quincy. Frlandt may pay Ihalr
retpecl* al tha lunaral homa from 5 * p m
Friday.
Sunrlto Funeral Home, WO Locutl Ave .
Sanlord. I l l 71*1. In charge ol arrangement*

Furlong
Continued from Page 1A
generate
15 to 20 names, hut found
several (traduced more than a
hundred.
And the elfort was Ixtlstered
hy Republican support lie said
Furlong said Ills two top name
getters. Dob and Maryaune
Campbell, are Itoilt Republicans.
The couple collected 150 names
lor the effort. Republican Frank
Shelton, long-time Markham
Woods Road residential activist,
generated more than loo names,
said Furlong.
Furlong's 1990 toppling ol
G O P c o m m is s io n v e te ra n
Sandra Guard was aided by
Republican efforts and votes.
Before starting the pelttion
drive earlier tills year. Furlong
said he gave d o o r-to -d o o r
knocking a try The folks on Ills
street readily recognized him
and signed, lie said. The next
block over, a lot ol lolks weren't
home, but those that were home
rcs|iondcd with a "Oh yeah,
you." he said.
By the the third street, 'll was
'Who are you again? Are you In
now?'." he said. "It was a real

in M E M O R Y O F

MABLE WASHINGTON DIXON
April 1 ,1906 to April 27,1993

P h eo b e H arden
G eo rg e &amp; G loria R obinson

Secretary—
Continued from Page 1A
of the chamber board.
In 1990, Joyce Thompson.
Attorney Jim Darks’ secretary
received the honor. In 1992 It
went to Dr. Roger Stewart's
secretary Gloria Burke, und last
year, the awatd went to Debbie
Whitehead, secretary for Judge
Alan Dickey.

Robbery

Republican—
Continued from Page 1A
able to meet the public at the
May 5 meeting ol the Young
R e p u b lic a n s ol S e m in o le
County. The 7 p in. meeting will
be held In tin- county GOP
offices In the Village Shopping
Center, located two blocks west
of Interstate -l on State Roud
430.
Form er Casselberry mayor
Andrea Dennison and Ajtumonti
Springs businessman', wlnllclt!
Adams will i-iiq tm r^ -^ eight ■
minute presentations, then re ­
spond to questions." ttyiljl YR
president Dave W d lls The
public Is Invited.

Continued from Page IA
shot at him and he
slopped the pursuit.
Van Cleve Identified Lewis
from a photograph lineup.
Lewis wtis held on three
charges each ol attem pted
minder and aggravated assault
with a firearm. Lewis was also
held on churgcs of armed rob­
bery. use of a firearm during the
commission of a felony and use
ol a llrcarm bv a convicted felon.

T o m o r r o w 's
A g r ic u ltu r e ..

ONE DAY ONLY!
SATURDAY, APRIL 30TH
EARLY OPENING 9:00 a.m.
S A LE S A L E

MEN'S S U ITS

S A LE S A L E

T o d a y 's

FFA

S A L E S A LE

25*0FF

UNDERW EAR

SA LE SALE

ANY SINGLE REGULAR
PRICED PURCHASE

Enjoy a 25% Discount on any single regular
priced purchase throughout the store.

HANDBAQS

Sp o r t s w

ear

11 ONE DAY ONLY! SATURDAY, APRIL 30,1994
SALE SALE

C H IL D R E N S
McNABS. HERMANN.
Funeral torvlce* lor Mr. Harman R
McNabb. who dltd Thurtday, will be al 1
p m Monday, tyay 1. al Holy Crott Epltcopal
Church, with tha Roy. Father C. Allred Cole.
Jr. officiating Frlendt may call al Gramkow
Funtral Homa, Sunday. Irom 5 7 p m. For
Ihota who with, memorial contribution* may
ba mode to Holy Crott Epltcopal Church
Memorial Fund
Arrangement* by Gramkow Funtral
Horn*. Sanlord

eye opening experience."
Furlong added he did have
u I m m i I a 90 percent or belter
recognition among people In his
neighborhood.

S A LE S A L E

•' -o '

25%OFF

! ANY SINGLE REGULAR PRICED PURCHASE*
Bring In this coupon and present it at time of purchase
Regular prlcos are ottering price* only Sales nm y or may not hove been
m ade al regular price* Sale p rice * ollecllvt* through April 30tti. unless
otherwise noted. Percentages o il represent savings on regular prices or
original prices In leim odlale m aikdow ns m ay have been taken on original
pneed m orclinndise R eductions on otiginal priced nuirchondiso olfi-clivo
until slock Is deplolod A ll sales o s dude JC P onney Sm art V alues 'N ew *
prlcos roprosonl savings on regular prices

sale

sale

ES' D R E S S E S

SA LE SALE

�i
. *

T T

• A - Sanford H erald, S a n fo rd , Florida - Friday, A pril 29. 1994

Wisconsin law calls for
teachers’ criminal checks
■ y MIC H A I L C . B U IL O W

Associated Press Writer
M ILW AUKEE - Wisconsin's
more than 00,(XX) teachers will
have to undergo background
checks under a new luw to keep
c h i l d m o l e s t e r s o u t of
classrooms.
"We have so many outstand­
ing teachers In Wisconsin. They
don’t need their reputations
tarnished by a few bud apples."
Gov. Tom m y O. Thompson said
Thursday after signing the bill.
The bill was drafted after a
1993 Associated Press In ­
vestigation found that the state
had rcpentedly licensed a teach­
er who had been convicted of

J /4 € K - T H R

V
Herald Photo by Busan Wetvser

Along for the ride
Popoyo, B a m - B a m and Buddy don't soom
particularly Intorostod In the rldo Justin Burch Is

giving thorn on his skatoboard, but thoy nro
going along tor tho rldo just Iho samo

Daughters seize the
day in the workplace
attention." said Marie Wilson. Hcllcvue. Wash., rclused to par­
Ms. Foundation president.
ticipate, saying the program
From the While House, where wasn't fair to boys.
Appropriately enough. It was a they ate sandwiches on the
"We trelieve it would Ik- fairer
9-ycar-old girl who may have South Luwn. to a suburban to s|M&gt;nsor events that would
best captured what the Take Our Denver firehouse, where they welcome tdl children to explore
Daughter* to Work campaign wrestled with fire hoses, girls (K&gt;1 Akireer o p t i o n s . " C h r y s l e r
a peck ut the world of work
was all about:
■kopm 1spokeswoman Karen Stewart
"In the olden days, the troys to them.
■Will.
Hally und 20 other girls u l A r
were raised to do ull the work,
•other employers did Just that.
and the ({Iris were raised to Ire la w f i r m of D c h c v o l s c A
Inviting troys and girls.
housewives." Hally Hlalr said. Plimpton mok part In a seminar
"There's hern a lot of Interest
"Now the parents und grown­ c a l l e d " T h i n k i n g hi k e a expressed try sons, and they've
ups. they want the dlrls to do l.awycr." On the Delaware River asked ter Ire Included," said
near Philadelphia, a half-dozen Jennifer Wold at ABB Environ*
what we want to do."
Hally, who spent Thursday ut daughters rode aboard a Coast mental Services in Portland.
her father's New York City law Gunrd patrol boat. At the Cleve­ Maine. "W e have tried lit broad­
firm, was part of a spirited dale l a n d h e a d q u a r t e r s ol HP en trur approach."
of dlrls that blew Into the America Inc., girls mixed chemi­
Organizers said they would
Amcrlrnn workplace for Take cals to make slime.
keep tlie emphasis on girls.
Our Daughters to Work day.
"It's goopy and It's fun." said
"W hen troys and girls arc
10-yenr-ohi Stephanie Wynne, together. In lire classroom or on
T h e second annual event
proved even more popular than rolling the slippery gel between Held trips, hoys get more atten­
the first. Involving thousands the palms of her hands. "I'm Just tion.'' said Nell Mcrllno ut the
more employers than lust year's having fun today, trying lots of Ms. Foundation. "Until we figure
debut, despite objections to Its things."
nut how to huluncr that, we do
glrls-only focus.
It wus more than fun. said HP need to periodically separate
Sponsored by the Ms. Foun­ engineer Nuncltc Smith. It was a girls und Iroys for cxjrcrlcnccs
dation. a women's advocacy way to encourage girls to pursue like this."
group, the day was designed to scientific careers. In which men
Studies have shown that from
boost girls' self-esteem and fur outnumber women.
ages 0 to 15. girls' self-esteem
"I baslcully want to show them drops In comparison to boys',
expose them to male-dominated
careers they might not otherwise that science Is Involved In their and I heir sense of competence In
everyday surroundings, and that m utli and science erodes.
consider.
"These girls are so different science cun be Interesting and Psychologists blame a society
when they know we're focusing fun." Smith said.
lhal emphasizes a woman's ap­
on their dreams, when they're
A few employers. Including pearance and quiet demeanor
not competing (with boys) for Chrysler Corp. and the city of rather than ability.

By DAVID POSTIR

Associated Press Writer

Prudential says whistle
blower had been right
■y Tha Assoolatad Brass
NEW YORK - Prudential
Insurance Co. admits a former
executive fired for whlBtleblowing was correct all ulong.
The New York Times reported
In Friday's editions.
Prudential offered to rein­
state Mark Jorgenson to Ills
position us a portfolio manager
and demanded the resignation
of two current executives, In­
cluding the chief executive of
the division where Jorgenson
worked, the Times reported.

.-1

I

• Prudential admitted
• Jorgenson wus correct when
1 he accused the Insurer of
i Inflating the values of certain
• properties In real estate funds,
• the Times said, citing a memo• rundum Issued to the com• pany's employees.

iiiiiSiib

! The exuggeruted fund per­
: formunccs mude them more
: attractive to new Investors,
who ended up paying more
than they would have, the
Times reported.
Jorgensen told the newspa­
per he would nol accept Ihc
company's ofTcr because he
planned to move to California.
The company also settled,
for an undisclosed amount, a

lawsuit filed by Jorgenson
after he was dismissed.
There wus no unswer at
Prudential's Ncwurk, N .J..
headquarters Thursday night.
A message left for Jorgensen's
attorney wus not Immediately
returned. It was not Immedi­
ately known where Jorgenson
could be reached for comment.
In the memo, Robert C.
Winters, chnlmum und chief
executive officer of Prudential,
extolled the "courugc and
conviction" of Jorgenson, who
for months had been portrayed
as bitter because of u company
reorganization.
W i n t e r s urged other
employees to follow the lead of
Jorgenson, who "look a risk
and stood up for what he
believed In."
"I exhort ull of you to follow
Murk's cxumplc If you come
across any conduct unworthy
of our values,” he said In the
memo.
Jo rg e n s o n reported Ills
allegations of Improprieties to
two senior executives Iasi
summer and they began an
Investigation. After It was
finished, Jorgenson was trans­
ferred und he filed u lawsuit,
claiming he hud been retali­
ated against.

C ra c k lab fo u n d
at d a y care
By Assoolatad Press
M A D IS O N . W Is. Police
found a crack lab In the base­
ment of a day care center.
Deb West bury, a -tO-year old
woman who runs (lie center and
pleaded gullly to cocaine posses­
sion In IBHH, was nol arrested,
lull stale officials suspended her
day care license.
Hctwecn S'J.O(H) and $3.(XX)
worth of cocaine was confiscated
In the raid Tuesday, along with
plastic hugs and scales.
Police raided the day care
center and a nearby apartment
alter receiving lips In recent
daysaboul drug activity.
Three people were arrested In
the apartment mid. and all were
expected to be charged with
drug-related olfcnscs.
One of those arrested, Stacey
Miller. 21. rented a basement
room In (he house where the day
care center Is situated. Most of
the drug-related materials were
lound In lhal room, police said.
Wesibury was placed on a
year's probation for the cocaine
offense. In 1990, she received a
stale license lo care for up to
eight children In her home.
Ap|illcanls are required to fill
mil background forms, bill the
Information Is not routinely
checked, said Putty llammcs,
director of registration and
licensing for Ihc stale Depart­
ment of Health and Social Serv­
ices.

molesting u child In California.
The teacher. Charles Oaynor
Anderson, later was convicted of
molesting a Wisconsin boy nnd
sentenced to 20 yenrs In prison.
T h e only objection m any
teachers hud lo III*
he law wus that
the Investigations will be paid for
by raising Ihc cost of a five-;
rive-yenr
tcuchlng permit from $75 to
$100.
"Some people who become
teachers now have a past. We
don't do enough to make sure
these people arc well enough to
be around children,” said fifthgrade teacher Edclmlrca Wlgen.
"But It's not fulr to make
teachers pay for It," she said. "I
think the state should puy. We
don't earn enough money, und

L e g a l N o tic e s

L e g a l N o tic e s

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at fil
Osprey Nest P t . Unford 12/T).
Seminole County. Florida, under
the Flctltlooi Name ot HOAG'S
DESKTOP DESIGN, and that I
Intend to register said name
with the Division of Corpora
llont. Tallahassee Florida. In
accordance with the provisions
ol the F Icllliout Name Statute!.
T o w n Section M S09. Florida
Statute! 1991
AndriaHoeg
Publish April 29.1994 DEQ 244

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC AUCTION
Notice It hereby given
McConnell Towing will tell al
Public Auction tor Ulvage for
Cath on demand to highest
bidder, the following detcrlbed
vehicles
9 4 94
45 Dodge
IBJBVJlGlFGlOetCl
MM
im tfW io tH f
49 Chevy
5 1194
79 Volks
irtim ttc
5-17 94
FI0HLN9444I
72 Ford
5 1494
IG1FP2JFJNL100197
92 Chevy
47 Jeep
IJCMR7447HT102054
The Auction will be held al
12 00 pm on said dates above
McConnell Towing B Recovery
2400 Unford Ave Unford Fla
12771 Prospective bidders may
Inspect vehicles One hour prior
lo ta'e Terms are Cash or
Certified Funds McConnell
Towing reserves the right to
accept or reject any and all
bids
Publlth A p rils. Iff4
Q
2
4
a
D
E

IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT
OF T H I t I T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN AND FOR
I IM IN O L I COUNTV.
FLORIDA
CA1I NOi 95 5I52DR41B
IN RE TheMerrlageol
ARTHUR L GIVINS. JR
Husband
•nd
JE N N IFE R C GIVINS

WIN

NOTICE OF ACTION
DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAOK
TO Arthur L Glvlns Jr
Address Unknown
YOU ARE HER EB Y NOTI
F IE O that en action lor dissolu
lion ol marriage Sot boon Mod
ogolntt you and you art ra
qutrod to sarve a copy ol yout
written delenset. II any. to It on
JE N N IFER C GIVINS. Poll
Honor, whose address It toil
Bartlotl C l. Oylodo. Florida
liras on or before MAY 9. ISt.
and Ilia Ibo original with tho
Clark ol Ihlt court olthor boforo
torvlco on Potlllonor or Imme
dlatoly thoraaltor II you (all lo
do to. a default Mill bo entered
agalntl you lor the relief do
mended In the petition
WITNESS my hand and tho
tool ol title Court on MARCH X .

i**a.
MARYANNE MORSE
C IE R K O F T H E COURT
By Nancy R Winter
Deputy Clerk
Publish April t. IS. 22. IT, 1994
DEO St
IN THE COUNTY COURT
O F T H E IIT H
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
case no

ssiaarccno

W EKIVA RESERVE HOME
OWNERS ASSOCIATION INC .
a Florida not lor profit
corporation.
Plaintiff.
C LIF FO R D T CHARLTON.
Defendant
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE IS HER EB Y GIVEN
purtuant lo a Final Judgment ol
Forecloture dated November It.
Ittl. and entered In Cato No
t ] Itar CC » Q ol tho County
Court of tho llth Judicial Circuit
In and lor Seminole County.
Florida, whoraln W E K IV A
R E S E R V E H O M EO W N E R S
ASSOCIATION. INC It Plain
t i l l , and C L I F F O R D T .
CHARLTON It Defendant. I Mill
toll lo tho hlghetl and belt
bidder for cath on the Welt
Front Slept of tho Seminole
County Courthouse. 301 North
Park Avenue. Sanford. Florida,
al 11 00 o'clock A M on May If,
1904. Iho follOMlng detcrlbed
property at to I forth In laid
Final Judgment, Io m II:
Lot 111 of W E K IV A R E ­
SERVE UNIT FOUR, according
lo Iho Plat thereof at recorded
In Plal Book 41 at Paget II and
21 ol Iho Public Record! ol
Seminole County. Florida, a/k/a
ISfl Lancatler Court, Apopka.
FL UT01
D ATED April IS. 1994
MARYANNE MORSE,
Clerk Circuit Court
ByJaneE. Jatewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: April 22. 29.1994
DEO H I
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
IN AN D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.. 94790 OR I I K
Florida Bar No. 1 1loose
IN RE: The Adoption ol
SHANNON V IC TO R IA -----------a minor,
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: BILLY RAY STAOOS
1114 North ltd Street. I l l
Cocoa Beach. Florida
YOU ARE N O TIFIED that a
Petition for Adoption hat been
Hied In which you ere the
alleged Folher ol the child to be
adopted, and you ere required to
terve a copy ol your written
defentet. It any, lo It on Pellllonert' attorney. G AR Y E.
MASSEY, whose addrett It: II]
Watt Cltrut Street. Altamonte
Springs, Florida 12714 2577
on or before May 24. 1994. and
file Ihe original with Iho Clerk of
Ihlt Court either boloro service
on Pollllonert' attorney or Im­
mediately thereafter! otherwise
a default will be entered agalntl
you for the relief demanded In
the Petition.
DATED : April II. 1994
MARYANNE MORSE
Clerk ol Ihe Court
By: Medelyn Crane
At Deputy Clerk
Publlth: April 22. 29 1 May 4.
I). 1994
OEQ204

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE E IG H TE E N TH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT.
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 94 799 CA 14 A
C ITY OF SANFORO
POLICE D EPAR TM ENT.
Plaintiff,
vs
PATRICK ROBINSON.
Defendant
N O TICEO F FO R FEITU R E
FROCE EOINO
TO: PATRICK ROBINSON
401W SEMINOLE B LV D .
1129
SANFORD. FL 12/21
and all others who claim an
Interest In the below detcrlbed
property
Chief Ralph Ruttell. ol the
Sanford Police Department,
Seminole County, Florida,
through hit officers, Invetliga
tort or agents, tailed the lub|ecl
property, to wit:
190S SAAB MODEL 900.
VIN 9YS1AH1SJ2F20I492S
S44SOOU S CURRENCY
on March I. 1994. at or near
Seminole County, Florida, and It
presently holding laid properly
lor Ihe purpose of forfeiture
purtuant to Sections 911 fOI fOf.
Florida Statutes, hat RE
Q U ESTED that an Honorable
Judge ot (he Circuit Court.
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit,
Seminole County. Florida. Ittue
a Finding ol Probable Cause
why the above property should
not be lor felted to the above
agency You will be tent a copy
of the Finding of Probable
Cause once It It signed by Ihe
Judge and It will advite you how
and when to respond to Ihlt
request for forfeiture
I HEREBY C E R TIFY that a
true and correct copy ol Ihe
foregoing hat been furnished lo
Ihe above named addresses by
U.S registered mall, return
receipt requested, this 19th day
ot April. 1994
NORMAN R WOLFINGER
STATE ATTO RN EY
BY: Anne E.
Richards Rulberg
Asti slant Slate Attorney
Florida Bar #247401
Office of Ihe Slete Attorney
100 East Flrtt Street
Sanford. FL 12/71
40/ 122 7514
Publish: April 22. 24. 29 A May
1.1994
DEQ 211
NOTICE OF ACTION
B EFO R E TH E CONSTRUC
TION INDUSTRY LICENSING
BOARD.
IN RE: The license lo practice
construction of
Bradley George Burt
D/B/A American Eagle In
dutlrletol Florida Inc.
1011 Sunshine Lane
Suite 102B
Allamonle Springs,
Florida 12/01
CASE NO : 91 14904
LICENSE: RP0O4I757
The Department ot Butlnett
and Professional Regulation hat
filed an Administrative Com
plain! agalntl you. a copy of
which may be obtained by
contacting, Attorney G.W .
Harrell. Department of Butlnett
Bu
and Professional Regulation,
1940 N. Monroe Street. Tellahat
tee, Florida 32199 0712. (904)
444 0042.
If no contact hat been made
by you concerning the above by
May 27. 1994. Ihe matter of the
Administrative Complaint will
be presented el an ensuing
meeting of the Construction
Industry Licensing Board In en
Informal proceeding.
In accordance with Ihe Amer­
icans with Disabilities Act, per
sons needing a special accom
modal Ion lo perllcipala In Ihlt
proceeding should contact the
Individual or agency tending
notice not later than seven days
prior to the proceeding al the
addrett given on notice. Tele
p h o n e : I9 0 4 )2 5 7 -4 0 9 7 |
I- 400 915 17 7 I ( T O O ) or
I MO953 1770 (V I. via Florida
Relay Sarvlca.
Publlth: April 22. 29 A May 4.
II, 1994
DEQ 75

• ‘ '-'I

i

7V-------------- -

........Y‘ -r

this Is a hlgh-strcss Job.'
Hackground checks on In-state
applicants will be made by the
slate Justice Department. Those
from out of state will be screened
by the FHI.
The bill sailed through the
Legislature with only one dis­
senting vote. Assemblywoman
Shirley Krug said she was con­
cerned the bill would lead to
background checks In other
professions.
Wisconsin Joins seven stales
and the District of Columbia In
requiring background checks for
teachers. The stntcs are Alaska,
Arizona, California, Colorado.
Florida, Nevada nnd South
Carolina.

L e g a l N o tic e s

Leg al N o tic e s

CITVOF

UNCLAIMED
VEHICLE AUCTION
The below described vehicle
repairs were conducted In com
pllence with FS 711 545 Notice
that Woody's Auto B Marine will
tell said vehicle at Public Auc
Hon tor cath on May 12. 1994 at
10 00 am al 1122 Celery Ave.
Sanford. Florida We reserve
the right to withdraw said veto
de from Public Auction
1944010194 40
1011G1CW44B9GI12099I
Vehicle may be viewed one
hour prior to sale U le begins
at 10 00am
Publlth April 29. 1994
DEQ 251

LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
NO TICEO F
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HER EB Y OIVEN
by the City Commission of the
City ol Lake Mary. Florida that
laid Commission will hold a
Public Hearing on May 19. 1994
al 7 00 p m . or at toon thereat
ter at possible, to consider an
appeal ol the Planning and
Zoning Board's denial al a
request from McDonald I Cor
poratlon tor a variance to Chap
ter 114 04(A)(4) Lake Mary
Code el Ordinances to allow a
reader board with changeable
copy on the ground tign located
el 4JI0 W Lake Mary Boulevard
and more particularly detcrlbed
at follow!
Lot 2. Plat ol Sun Bonk
Property. Plat Book 14. Page 37.
Public Records ol Seminole
County. Florida
The Public Hearing will be
held In the Commission Cham
bars. 100 N Country Club Road.
Lake Mary The public It Invited
to attend and be heard Said
hearing may be continued from
lime to lime until a final de
cltlon It made by the City
Commission
P E R S O N S W I T H D IS
A B IL IT IE S N E E O IN G
ASSISTANCE TO PAR TIC I
P ATE IN AN Y OF THESE
P R O C E E D IN G S S H O U L D
CONTACT THE C ITY ADA CO
ORDINATOR AT LEAST 44
HOURS IN AOVANCE OF THE
M EE TIN G AT (4071 114 1014
N O TE
PERSONS ARE
AD V ISED TH A T A TAP ED
RECORO OF THIS M EETIN G
IS MAOE BY THE C ITY FOR
IT S C O N V E N IE N C E TH IS
R EC O R O M A Y N O T CON
S TITU TE AN ADEQUATE RE
CORO FOR PURPOSES ST
APPEAL FROM A DECISION
MADE BY THE C ITY ANY
PERSON WISHING TO EN
SURE THAT AN ADEQUATE
RECORD OF THE PROCEED
INGS IS M AINTAINED FOR
A P P E LLA TE PURPOSES IS
A D V IS E D T O M AKE THE
NECESSARY ARRANGE
MENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN
EXPENSE
C ITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
Carol A Foster. City Clark
DATED April 14. 1994
PUBLISH April 19. 1994

QEQi)?

COUNTY COURT
DADE COUNTY
CASE V021141CC24
PAN AMERICAN
NATIONAL EMPLOYEES
CREDIT UNION
vs
MALACHI WALTON
COUNTY COURT
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE 4911419 SPH
B AR NETT RECOVERY
CORPORATION
vs
MALACHI WALTON
Nellce al SherIll's Ule
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN
that by virtue of that certain
Writs of Elocution as styled
above, and more partlculary
that certain Writ ol Elocution
Issued out ol and under the seal
of the County Court ol Seminole
County, Florida upon a final
ludgment rendered In the afore
said Court on the 4th day ol
August A.D. 1991. In that certain
cate entllled: Barnett Recovery
Corporation, P la ln tlll vs
Malachl Walton. Defendant
which atoresald Writ ol Eiecu
tlon was delivered to me et
Sheriff of Seminole County.
Florida, and I have levied upon
the following detcrlbed properly
owned by Malechl Walton, said
property being located In U m l
note
’ County.
*
r. Fir
Florida, more par
tlcularly detcrlbed at follows:
ONE 1964 TO YOTA PICK UP
VIN:JT4RNS0RIG0I24141 BE
ING STORED A T BUTCH'S
TOWINO. SANFORD. FLOR
IDA
and the undersigned at Sherlll
of Umlnole County. Florida will
at 11:00 A M. on the lied day of
May A D. 1994, offer lor tale and
tell lo the highest bidder, FOR
CASH, and lub|ect lo any and
all assisting liens, at the West
Door, on the steps, of the
Umlnole County Courthouse In
Sanford, Florida. Ihe above de
scribed personal property.
That said tale It being made
to sallsty Ihe terms of said Writs
ol Eaecutlon
Donald F. Etllnger, Sheriff
Umlnole County. Florida
NOTICE REGAROINO THE
A M E R I C A N S W IT H D IS ABIITIES ACT OF 1990. PER
SONS W ITH A D ISABILITY
N E E O lN O S P E C I A L A C ­
COMMODATIONS TO PARTIC­
IPATE IN THE PROCEEDING
SHOULD C O N TA C T TH E
C IV IL D IV IS IO N OF T H E
S H E R IF F 'S O F F IC E , EN
F O R C E A B L E W R ITS S E C ­
T IO N , 1141 2ITH S T R E E T .
S A N F O R O . F L O R ID A A T
LEAST FIVE OAYS PRIOR TO
T H E PR OCEED IN G . T E L E
PHONE: (407)110 4440.
Published: April 21, 29 A May 4.
B I). 1994 with the tale on May
23.1994.
0EO2I3

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
O F T H I EIG H TEEN TH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AN D FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO : 94 491 CA 14 B
GALE ASSOCIATES - REAL
ESTATE ONE. INC . e Florida
corporal Ion.
Plaintiff

vs.
WILLIAM W AUSTIN. ANNE
V A U S T IN , K A T H L E E N
G A LE BROOM and BRIAN
GALE, at surviving children
and heirs ol TINA C GALE,
deceased, and ALL UNKNOWN
N A T U R A L P E R S O N S . IF
ALIVE. ANO IF OEAD. OR IF
NOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR
A L IV E . T H E IR S E V E R A L
A N O R E S P E C T I V E UN
KNOWN SPOUSES. HEIRS.
0EVISEES. GRANTEES ANO
C R E D IT O R S . OR O T H E R
P A R T IE S C L A IM IN G B Y.
T H R O U G H . U N D E R OR
AGAINST THOSE UNKNOWN
N ATUR AL PERSONS. ANO
ALL CLAIMANTS. PERSONS
OR PARTIES. NATURAL OR
CORPORATE. WHOSE EXACT
L E G A L S T A T U S IS UN
KNOWN. CLAIMING TO HAVE
ANY RIGHT. T IT L E OR IN
TER E S T IN ANO TO THE
LANOS HER EIN AFTER DE
SCRIBED
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: ALL UNKNOWN NATU
RAL PERSONS. IF A LIVE.
ANO IF DEAO. OR IF NOT
KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR
A L IV E , T H E IR S E V E R A L
A N D R E S P E C T I V E UN
KNOWN SPOUSES. HEIRS.
DEVISEES, GRANTEES AND
C R E D IT O R S . OR O T H E R
P A R T IE S C L A IM IN G B Y.
T H R O U G H . U N D E R OR
AGAINST THOSE UNKNOWN
N ATU R AL PERSONS. ANO
ALL CLAIMANTS. PERSONS
OR PARTIES: NATURAL OR
CORPORATE. WHOSE EXACT
L E G A L S T A T U S IS UN
KNOWN, CLAIMING TO HAVE
ANY RIGHT. T IT L E OR IN
TE R E S T IN AND TO THE
LANDS H E R EIN A FTER DE
SCRIBED
YOU ARE HER EBY NOTI
F IE D that an action to quiet
title hat been Hied In the
Umlnole County Circuit Court
on the following detcrlbed prop
erty.
Com m ence at Ihe West
quarter corner ol Section 14.
Township 31 South. Range X
East. Umlnole County. Florida:
thence run North 00 degrees. M
minutes East along the West
line ol the Northwest quarter ot
said Ucllon II. a distance of
497.91 leaf to the Northwest
corner of Lot 415. Altamonte
Land Hotel and Navigation
Company as recorded In Plat
Book I, Page 12, Public Records
ol Umlnole County. Florida:
thence run South 49 degrees. 51
minutes East along the South
line of Altamonte Avenue (SR
414). a distance ol 501.40 teat lo
Ihe POINT OF BEGINNING:
then conlnue along said Uulh
line South 49 degrees. 51 minutes
East, a distance of 179 10 feel,
thence run South 02 degrees. 21
mlnulet. 31 seconds West, a
distance of 134 74 feel, thence
run North 49 degrees. SI minutes
West, a distance ol 170 94 feet to
a point being 499.73 feel East ot
the Uuthwetl corner ot said Lot
41J. Ihence North 00 degrees. 57
minutes, 41 seconds East, a
dltlnce ol 124 50 feel to the
POINT OF BEGINNING
and lhal you are required to file
your written defentet. If any,
with Ihe Clerk of Ihe above
styled Court and to tarve a copy
thereof on Oregory J. Kelly,
Esquire, Akerman. Unlerlltl B
Eldton. P A , P.O. Bos 211.
Orlando, Florida 32402 on or
before Ihe llth day of May, 1994
If you tail to do to. Judgment
by defaull may be entered
against you for the relief de
manded lit the Complaint,
WITNESS my hand and teal
April 19,1994.
(SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
C LE R K O F TH E
CIRCUIT COURT
SEMINOLE County
Florida
BY: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: April 22. 29 B May 4.
II. 1994
DEQ 205

Don't M ill A Single luue!
LOCAL NIWI •LOCAL IPOATI •LOCAL EOfTOMAU
PEOPLE •HEALTH I FITNESS* EDUCATION •BUSINESS
s 4i i if t»141 lit m M

jooncmimmuncma . i

samohduw ni

. l . 'a f - J U l

�i » * •

T J

••••

r

•T »t

f

FR ID A Y

S a n f o r d H e r a ld

April 29, 1994

B

S p o r t s

Another Tribe waltz
S e m in o le girls, b o y s rule district again

LOCALLY
S c o tt, P a c e rs tip M a g ic
OKLANDO — Uyron Scott ruined the Orlando
Magic's debut In the NBA playoffs Thursday
night, hitting a 3-|&gt;olnt shot with two seconds
left to give Indiana an HU-88 victory In (he
opener of I heir bcst-of-5 series.
Scott scored on the Pacers' fourth shot In one
Irlp downcourt ufler Shuqulllr O'Neal's rebound
lip put Orlnndo ahead HH-HU with 25 seconds lo
go. Rlk Smlts missed u 12 foot Jumper, there
was a missed tip Inside und Reggie Miller
misfired on a 3-polnlcr before Scott made Ills
game-winning basket.
The Muglc. who led by as tnnny as 17 points,
watched Nick Anderson's desperation 3-polntcr
sail over the tlm ns time expired.

STA T I
M a rlin s rally b y R o c k ie s
MIAMI — Alex Arias singled with the bases
loaded and nn error by left fielder Kills Murks
rapped a five-run rally Thursday as the Florida
Marlins Item the Colorado Rockies 8-7.
Colorado lost despite homers by Murks. Dante
Bichette and Roberta Mejia. Andres Galarraga
tied a National League record with Ills 29th RMI
In April.

B u c s o p e n a t C h ic a g o
TAM PA — The Tampa May Buccaneers open
the preseason pluylng host to the ClnchuuAl
Bengal* and begin the regular sruson at
Chicago, according to Ihc team schedule
announced Thursday.
The Cincinnati game on Aug. 0 Is the first of
four preseason games for the Buccaneers. The
regular season begins Sept. 4.
Ollier highlights of Ihe Buccaneers coming
season Include home games against NFC
Central foes Detroll (Oct. 2). Minnesota |Ocl. 30)
and Chicago (Nov. 0);

S h u la s to m e e t on O c t. 2
MIAMI — Miami Dolphins coach Don Simla
will go head to head with Cincinnati Brngals
coach Dave Simla In an Oct. 2 game believed to
represent the first father-son • Niching matchup
In pro s|Mirts.
Other highlights of Ihe Miami Dolphins 1994
season, released -Thursday, ure home games
against tlm Los Angeles Raiders on Oct. 10. the
Chlcugo Bears on Nov. 13. und the AFC
champion Buffalo op Dee. 4.

AROUND THE NATION
R ic e le a d s H e a t u p s e t
A T L A N T A — Glen Rice tipped In a missed
shot and added two free throws In the final 33
seconds as Miami won Its first playoff game In
franchise history, upsetting the Atlanta Hawks
93-88 Thursday night In the opener of their
lM'sl-of-5 series.
The Heat held the Hawks without a field goal
In the final seven minutes and erased a 77-09
deficit In the (Inal 10 minutes.
•
Steve Smith led Miami with 22 points, and
B I i i i Ik i Coles scored 17.
Kevin Willis led the Hawks with 17 points and
u personal pluyolf high 10 rebounds.

W HAT’S HAPPENING
TODAY
B a s e b a ll
□ Semlnola at Oviedo, 7:30 p.m.
□ Lake Mary al Lyman. 7 p.m.
□ Lake Howell al Lake Branlley, 7 p.m.

S o ftb a ll
PSA-Dlatrlct 4 lournamenl al Lake Mary Sports
Complex: Lyman vs. Spruce Creek, 7 p.m.

T e n n is
□ Seminole at 4A-Dlslrlcl 3 tournament, Single­
ton Tennis Complex, Titusville

T ra c k a n d F ie ld

■p TO N Y DsSORM IIR
Herald Sports Editor
SANFORD — Employing a ''Let's gel the Job done"
attitude, the Seminole High School truck teams
dominated Ihc 4A-Dlstrlct 6 meet Thursday at the
Buddy Lawson track In Thomas E. Whlghum Stadium.
The Seminole girls claimed their I7lh consecutive
district title by outscorlng second-place St. Cloud
119-79 while the boys won their 11th straight district
crown, outdlstunrlng St. Cloud 14914-109.
In the process, the Semlnoles loaded up for next
Thursday's 4A-Rcglon II meet at Clearwnter High
School. To qualify tor Ihc regional meet, an athlete hud
to finish In the top four of his nr her event.
"Everything's going according lo plan." suld Nate
Perkins, coach of the Seminole girls. "Tonight, we Just
worked on getting cvcrylrody through."
Shnwann Montgomery and Katina Perry led the Tribe
girls by winning two Individual district championships
apiece. Montgomery finished first In Ihe long Jump (17
feet. 3 Inches) und Ihe 100-mcler dash (12.3 seconds)
while Perry won Ihe discus (111-11) and shot pul (38-5)
competitions.
Also winning district titles for the Tribe were Bellnder
Morgan (triple Jump. 37-fl). Tennell Mersey (300-meter
Intermediate hurdles. 40.5). Mildred Davis (800-meler
run, 2:34.5), und Mlndcc Hampton (200-mcter dash.
25.1). Morgan added a second-place finish In the long
Jump(16-2M).
Montgomery. Morgan. Hampton, and Kersey also
combined to win both the 4 x 100-meter (48.4) and 4 x
•100-meter (3:59.6) reluys.
*
Wymeikn Davis qualified for the regional event In Ihe
triple Jump (third. 30-11), lOO-metcr dash (second.
12.9). und 200-meter dash (second. 27.1). Danielle
MucPhrrson qualified In both the triple Jump (second.

Seminoles
top Creek
SANFORD — It may have been
ugly, but Seminole's 8-7 come-lrom-behlnd will over the Spruce
Creek Hawks Thursday afternoon
should have been enough for the
Tribe to clinch the No. I seed In
next week's 4A-Dlslrlcl 0 baseball
tournament.
"W e had to win al least one of our
last three games this week lo gel the
No. 1 seed." said Seminole coach
Mike Powers. "Th is should do It."
After digging themselves 0-0 hole.
Ihc Semlnoles came up with six
runs In the bottom of Ihe fifth lo lie
Ihe score. Spruce Creek Immediate­
ly regained (he lead with a run In
the lop of Ilia sixth hul Ihe Trllic
rallied (or two runs In ihe bottom of
ihe seventh lo pull out ihe victory.
Deoil Daniels, who was named Ihe
Class 4A Player of Ihc Year In
District 9 earlier this week, led of
the seventh with a single and stole
second. Mike Meadows then singled
Daniels lo third and look second
himself on Ihe throw to the tilule.
An out luter. Corey Goclicc hit a
high hopper that a Spruce Creek
Inflelder lost In Ihc sun. allowing
Daniels to score the tying run and
sending Meadows to third. Gochcc
then stole second.
With ihe Infield In. Tom Holland
hit a ground ball. Spruce Creek was
able to come up with the ball, but
Meadows beat the throw to the plate
and scored the game-winning run.
Gochcc led Seminole's 11-hit at­
tack by going 3-for-t with a double
and four RBI. Daniels was 2-for-4
with two runs scored and an RBI.
Jamie King hit (wo singles and
scored u run.
Seminole (16 12) will close out Its
regulur season with u 7:30 p.m.
game tonight at Oviedo.
iEM IN O LE S I. HAWKS 1
Sprue* Crttk
110 III t I J I
S«mlnol*
000 MO } - I II 0
tlr«nch. Mowry IS). Luk* U ) nnd Yunolln
D«nl*lt und Goch**, Youman* IS). WP — 0«nl*l&gt;
( 1 4) LP — Lull*. S«v* — Non* III — S*mlnol*.
Oanldt and Goch** SB — Non* HR — Non*
Ntcordi — S*mlnol* I* l&gt;

B a s e b a ll
L'J Lake Mary al

Boone, 1 p.m.

T e n n is
□ Seminole at 4A-Dlstrlct 3 tournament, Single­
ton Tennis Complex, Titusville

BASEBALL
□ 7 p.m. - WGN. Chlcugo White Sox at Detroit
Tigers. (LI
Complete listings on Page 81

Hffild Photo by Apryl Koniilon

Somlnole's Aawad Duval won tho
district championship In tho 400meter dash In 51.6 soconds.

P H ’Hounds, Hawks
advance to finals

From Staff Rsports

□ SA-Oistrlct 4 mael at Lake Brantley, 4 p.m,

SATURDAY

33-4) and long Jump (third. 15-2 W|.
Scoring for the Semlnoles but not quallflylng for
rcglonuls were Emily Jarrell (fifth. 800-metcr run) and
M. Foster (sixth, shot put). Wymelka Davis also had a
fldli place finish In Ihe longjump.
The Seminole boys wlli lie sending a squad of 15
Individuals and both reluys to Ihc regional meet.
"We qualified 15 of Ihe 20 who competed tonight,"
said Seminole boys' coach Ken Brauman. "Overall. I
think we |&gt;erfonnrd pretty well."
Andre Scolt and Bemurd Sparrow did what Ihe 'Nolrs
expect them to do. Scott winning the triple Jump
(52-414) and longjum p (23-7) while Sparrow swept the
discus (155-14) and shot put (61-314).
Seminole's other district champions were Julian
Wimberly (I IO meter high hurdles. 15.3). Cory Wilson
(100-mcler dash, 10.6). Aswud Duval (400-meter dash.
51.6). and Ansel Davis (200-meter dash. 22.4).
Scolt. Wilson. Derrek Swain, and Charlie Farmer won
Ihe 4 x 100-mcler relay In 41.7 while Davis, Duval.
Bryanl Moore, and Swain |&gt;osted a winning time of
3:26.6 In Ihe 4 x 400-meler rrluy.
Seminole domlnulrd four events by sweeping al least
the top three spots In the 200-meter dash, the Tribe
claimed ull four region berths, Davis finishing Just In
front of Farmer (22.41). Wilson (22.5). and Moore (22.6).
In Ihe triple Jump. Donnell Williams (44-914) and
Robert Ruffin (44-514) took second and third behind
Scolt. The top three spots In the shot put were filled by
Sparrow. Terrance Moran (48-14). and Klkl Hill (46-10).
Wilson. Farmer (10.9). and Davis (11.2) finished first
through third In the 100-incterdnsh.
Multiple qualifiers for Seminole were Williams
(second In Ihe high Jump. 5-10). Ruffin (fourth In the
longjump. 21-1). Hill (third In the discus. 125-1). Swain
(second In the 400-meter dash. 53.0). and Wlmberlv
□S ea Track, Page 2B

■y DEAN SMITH
Horald Sports Writer
LAKE MARY — Lake Mary n|&gt;cncd llte door |usi a
t ruck and l.ymun lumped Itirough with Ixitlt feel.
With two out and no one on base In die boinuu &lt;&gt;| the
llrst Inning of Ihc Lymun-Lukc Mary semifinal lit the
fiA-Dlstrlct 4 softball tournament ill Ihe Lake Mary
S|Kirts Complex, the Greyhounds' Carolyn Crager
reached on u throwing error.
•
Seven batters und five hlln later. Lyman bail a 5-h
lead and for Intents und purposes, llte untmr Wun over as
Ihe Greyhounds cruised to a 10 0. live-liming victory.
In the other hull of Ihe bracket. Ilic upset hug
continued lo bile as the No. 7-seed Spruce Creek scored
six runs in ihc lop of ihe seventh Inning In oust
sixth-seeded Lake Howell. 100. and advance lo ihe
flnuts opposite Lyman.
The chumplonshlp conical will be held tonight al 7
p.m. at (be Lake Mary Sports Complex on Rutilntil
Latte.
"Th e girls nluycd Ihe game nl ih d r lives tonight."
said Lyman ftrud coach Christy Tlhhllls. "The girls
crushed ihc hall loulghi. W r scored in every lulling but
one. You can't do much heller."
Pitcher Michelle Bishop was outstanding lor ilir
top-seeded Greyhounds as she ran her record to 19-1 on
the season. The senior gave up Just two lilts, one of the
Infield variety, walked no one anti got I I ground ball
outs.
( ]Ree Softball, Puge 2 U_____________________________

H*i*M Photo by Apryl K*nltton

Deslgnatod hitter Karon Kallcak contributed a slnglo and
a run scorod lo Lyman's 10 0 win over Lake Mary In tho
SA-Distrlct 4 tournament aomlllnals Thursday night.

GREYHOUNDS 10. RAMS0 |
Lake M*ry
MO 00 - » I 1
Lymjn
til 0 1 -1 0 * 0
Camradow and Daodton BUhop and Ac*y WP
Bithop tit II IP
Camardota l* 10). S*»* - non* IB - Lyman. UltSop. Cragtr IB
Lyman.
Crager HR — non* Record! - Lake Mary II 14. Lyman 10 1

Cubs, White Sox notch Little Major wins
From Staff Rsports
SANFORD — It took u bascs-loadcd walk In the
bottom of the sixth Inning, bul Ihc Railroader Cubs
managed to remain undefeated In the Sanford Rccrcutlon Little Major Baseball League with an 8-7 win over
the Marlins Thursday night at Roy Holler Field.
At Lukcfront Field Thursday night, the Stulrs Realty
White Sox blasted the Fisher. Laurence. Dccn. and
Fromang Blue Juys 22-6.
The Cubs lead the Nntlonnl Division with a 10-0
record. They're followed by Ihc Rlnkcr Material Dodgers
(8-3). Marlins (0-5). Freddie Howurd Plrulcs (3-7). and
Ihc Expos and Fun World ut Flea World Cardinals (both
2-9).

In the American Division. Ihe Sunnllund Red Sox
(11-0) lend the Disabled American Veteran Royals (7-31.
White Sox (7-4). Cook Construction Orioles (5-6). Blue
Jays (2-8), and the First Union A's (1-10).
All 12 tcums will be In action Saturday. Al Roy Holler
Field, the Dodgers challenge the White Sox at 8 u.m..
the Marlins battle the Royals at 10 n.m.. und the Cubs
tangle with the Red Sox at 4:45 p.m.
The schedule for Lnkcfront Park has the Expos nnd
Orioles playing ut 8 u.m.. the Pirates meeting the A's at
10 a.m.. and the Cardlnnls taking on the Blue Jays al
4:45 p.m.
With thc.scorc tied 7-7. Ihc Cubs loaded Ihc buses in
the bottom of (he sixth on a walk lo Robert Woodward
□ S ee Baseball, Page 2B

Fireworks, rainout highlight Thursday openers
Chase provides
night of 101 hits
From Staff Reporta
SANFORD Defending Polar
Bear champion Floridu Sport Wear
nnd new co-sponsor Rolnco, came
up with 27 hits to highlight an
opening night In the Sanford Recre­
ation Department Men's Thursday
Night Spring Slowpltch Softball
League at Chase Park Hint saw the
six teams combine for 101 safeties.
Rolnco/Florlda Sport Wear trailed
Touchdown Pub 5-2 before plating
eight runs In the fifth Inning and
five runs In the sixth Inning to pull
away ton 17-8 victory.
In the other guinea. Ken Rumntcl
Chevrolet scored ut leust three runs
In every Inning to whitewash Stlf-

Rolnco/FI SportW**r
Touchdown Pub
Ktn Summit Ch**rol*l
lllllty ’i Altordobki

M3 OM i 01) 110 0 -

1

11
14

33) SO - 10 11
OM •l — 0 0
101 040 3 OM 330 0 -

M.A. Er*ct«n
0*tk Mot*

II

11 II
I 11

fey's Affordnbles. 20-0; and M.A.
Erectors broke a 5-5 tie with four
runs In the fifth Inning, then added
three Insurance runs In the seven to
post a 12-7 triumph over Desk Mate.
Contributing for Rolnco/Florlda
Sport Wear were Randy Yntcs
(double, three singles, run. two
RBI), Jerry Brussells (four singles,
two runs. RBI). Bab Britt (double,
two singles; three runs, two RBI).
Gordun Clark (double, two singles,
two runs, four RBI), Rick Yates
(double, two singles, two runs, two
RBI) and Steve James (double, two
□ S ee Chase, Page 2B

Sprinklers douse
Pinehurst play

Ryder
Budm«n
Betr 10
Brlor Corporehon

Ml 01 313 S3 -

401 101 0 — 7 14
000 000 0 - 0
1

From Staff Reports_______________
SANFORD — Oh my goodness, wc
got ourselves u natural disaster.
During the third game of the
evening on the opening night of the
Sunford Recreation Department
M en’s Th u rs d a y Night Spring
S lo w p ltc h Softball League at
Pinehurst Park. It started to rain,
und there was not n cloud In the
sky.
With The Utter Guys leading
Mohtiltc by ihe score of 1-0 after one
Inning of play, the sprinkler system
suddenly came on and forced the
game lo be suspended until u later
date.
In the other gumes, Bccr:30

scored four runs In the first Inning
und Brlur Cor|x)rntlon was limited
to one single as Dccr:30 posted a 7-0
shutout: and (he Dudmcn scored In
every Inning In lopping Ryder. 14-2.
Contributing lo the Rccr:3() of­
fense were Spencer Bagged (triple,
single, three RBI). Tim Allison
Idouhle, single, run). Chuck Cornetto (two singles, Iwo rims, RBI).
Dave Coss (two singles, run. two
RBI). Jerry Camus (iwo singles,
run). Mike Miller and Rodney Curry
(one single und one run each). Todd
Pagcl und Jim Reid (one single
each) and Bob Garner (RDII.
□ S ec Pinehurst, Page 2B

FOR T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R T S IN YO U R AREA, READ T H E S A N FO R D H ERALD DAILY

fm

3 1)
14 17

�It

- Sanford H erald, S an ford , F lo rid a - Friday, April 39. 1994

Baseball

S TA TS &amp; STANDINGS
•w
Thursday night
Flrtt race— S/i).Ct1l.)4
3 Omni Shy lock
10 40 4 K I K
1Whispering Lady
I K 3 JO
* Pay Mark Scot
4»
O ( H I 40.4# P I M I I I . H T 0 141101.44
Second raca -1/14. B: 11.41
3 Dork Swoot Lady
10 H 100 110
IOmnl RabaMat
7 40 14 40
4P a m Fu Fu
IK
Q O i l 11.00 P (1 11 77.44 T 111-4) 141 44 DD
&lt;1 I I 41.N 111 I 4 All) 414 40
Third rata — 1/14. C: 11.44
1 Coming Evtnl
7 40 4 00 1 40
I Judy'I Johnny
4 10 4 40
7 Aaron O'Mollty
0 00
O 11 1) 17.44 P 11 1) 114.00 T 1147) 414.40
Fourth raca — 1/14, A 111.44
4 Sunn I# Air*
10 40 4 H 4 40
4Our Mr Tw illtr
4 40 1 40
IW a tM yF la lr
140
Q 14 4174 04 P 14 41147,70 T &lt;4-4 71141.44
Filth raca-S/I4. Ci 11.74
4 Hondo Snokomo
17 10 7 70 J 10
) Task May I Magic
4 00 1 00
I Glanwood Clover
J 40
O 14 1) 41.44 P 14 II 70.40 T &lt;411) 717 44
Uathraca-1/14. B i ll. 74
4 kryp*o Flak
1010 4 K 140
I $| Cantarlold
4 40 1 10
I Wat By Moaat
140
O i l 4) M.44P 44 11 114.44 T (41 I I 444.40
Sevenlh rata - i /i , Oi 14.17
1Pay WlnTIcktl
140 1.10 3 K
I Summ Dispenser
3 40 1 10
3 Danny’s Almoo
4 00
a II I ) 11.44 P II I ) 11.44 T II I ! ) 44.44 S
&lt;141-4)414.44
■Mrth race -1/14, ■: 11.41
IHaavanly Way
7 40 110 9.10
111 Varna
f .K 1.10
11'm No Saint
1 40
O (1-1) 14.44 P t i l l II. 44T &lt;1-111144.44
Nlnthraca— i /14,Ci 11.14
*S| Clndorolt#
t|M 7.10 ) K
I Paach Jam
140 4 40
IHuflar
im
Q &lt;1-41 N .M P (01) 141.44 T (411) 144.14
14th r a c a - 1/14, Di 11.11
I RvMutlang Sally
14 40 I I 40 100
7Ml Royal Palm
4 70 140
1 Cagin Oabychalal
IN
O 11 7) 44.44 PII-7) 114.14T (1-7-1) lll.M
llth raca-1/14. Cl 1U4
7 Untoen Handl
4 10 I N 140
1 Omni Hoi Air#
a to 1 to
4 Shadow Forca
3 to
Q &lt;1 71 44.44 P (7-1) 41.14 T (7-1-4) M1.44 T T
(1-7-1A 71-414.14 Jarkpol 44*1.44
llthraca — 1/14. Ai 11.14
IT a tk King Pin
70 00 0 00 *40
I Jd't Dig Jail
IK 7K
4 Vibrant Coddatt
JK
0(1-1) 17.1* P 41-1) 11.44 T 111-4) 171.K
11th r a c a -1/4. Ti 14 41
1 Sunny land Slim
5 00 140 4 10
I Edward H
4t0 I K
4 Speedy SI,
100
Q l l - l l 14.44 P 4 M ) 43.*a T 11-141 1110400
(M I-1 1 71.14
14th raca-1/14, A ! 11.11
ID anl’t Knava
1 30 I K
110
tSmllay Pattern
U K 4 40
1Kattu Sapporo
1 10
O (14) 41 40 P O N) 41 44 T (1 1 1) 171.44 S
(14 I 71 444 10
A — 4101 H— 144,114

JAI-ALAI
Thurtday night
Flntgame
7 Enrique
111 70 4 K I K
I Beto
3 70 7 K
a Cole
3 10
O il 7M4.M P it 1)44.44 T U -l-4 ) 174.M
Second game
1 Ricardo Jot*
3 00 10 40 4 10
3 Ota Aiplrl
1 10 3 40
* Col* Agulrr*
4H
Q 11 1) 44.14 P (1-9) 111.14 T 11-14) 744.4* DO
&lt;7 1)4.00 &lt;7 All) 11.14
Third gam*
1 Arlach* Jot*
77 40 10 40 4 00
1 Pllo Royot
4 10 I K
7 Rlcordo Don
IK
O (1 11 74.00 P (1 11 (11.74 T 11-1-7) 4-44
(11-A ll) 4I.K
Fourth game
1 Irlgoyen
1070 S K 7 aO
1 Ricardo
7 40 I K
4 Ota
3 00
O (131 77.K P O i l 373.34 T 17 1 4) 744.40
Filth oame
1 Plla Chlmela
100 4 00 1 40
I Dalo mend I
7,00 4 00
4 0nalndla Reyet
4 40
O il 7)14 K P11 I) tllOO T I M 4)114 74
tilth game
4 Onalndla Mondi
17 10 4 K I N
1Aiplllaga Joto
3)30 II K
lOlea Odrloiola
4*0
O II 4) &gt;1 K P (* l M7 04 T (4-1-4) 144.14
Saytnlhgamo
2 Mendl
I K 1 40 7 10
J Crklaga
4 70 1 40
SGolllt
140
Oil-1111.K P 4111 *4.44 T ( M i l 114.04
Eighth gama
iMandlb# Arraiol#
H R S 40 l.ao
1 Napa Aiplrl
H O 4 40
' | Ran* Don
1K
O (14) 44.14 P (4 I ) 111.K T T (4-1-11114.4*
Ninth gam*
- lOlea Erklaga
37 K I K 0 00
! I Aramayo Bob
4 40 I N
- 4 Irlgoytn Victor
*20
: Q (I I I 13 *0 P I I I ) 1*70 T (4-141 344 44 T T
( I I II 1447.44
Itlhgam*
3Mendl
SOM 30 40 4 K
* 3 Arraiole
M K 14 40
lUralde
410
0 111)41.44 P 111) 1*7.10 T (3-9-1) 111 44
llth gam#
7 Aiplllaga Mendl
4 40 7 40 14 40
3 Said Arplrl
I K 4 40
SMandlbaDon
3*0
Q U O 11.44 P (7-11 141.11 T (7-9-11114.11
11th gam*
SZugaia Don
30 40 11 *0 0 00
1 Kan* Erklaga
4 00 4 10
IB trro U ra ld t
IK
O (1 11 71.14 P (11) 1M.H T (1-1-1) S01.40
OD 11 1 A (-All) 144.10 OD I M A 1 All) 111.00
llthgam*
lUralde
13 30 I K I K
lA n m o yo
( I K 0 00
4 Said
3 00
Q ( M ) 77.K P ()-!&gt; 0.00 (I All) II.K (All 7)
II 00 TS 11 7 4) 343.44 Jack pal 7347.40
loihgomo
3 Ran* Erklaga
3* K 10 K 0.00
4 Mtndlbt Aiplrl
11.00 ll.K
1 Said Btllran
*K
Q (»•«) 141.44 P 114) l l l . N T (3-4-9) 117.44 S
(I 4 1 All) 741.N DD 11-All) 14.11
A - M h H— 111,144

NATIONAL LEAOUE
AIITImat EOT
fa tl Dlvliian
W
L Pci. OS
ts
4
714 —
Alltnt*
li
10 374 4
Montreal
Florida
II
II .304 4V,
10 10 soo 4I»
Ntw York
Philadelphia
1 17 311 7
Ctntral Division
w
L Pci. OB
M
700 —
*
Cincinnati
J
432 UK
SI. Louis
13
374 3*4
1
1
1
0
Houston
10 10 soo 4
Pllltfaurgh
200 1
4 14
Chicago .
W ill Dlvitlon
W
L Pci. OS
11 to .324 —
San FrandKO
1
0
474 1
II
Lot Angolti
9 17
424 7
Colorado
1 IS .314 414
San Ol*go
Thurtday't Oamat
Florida I, Colorado 7
Atlanta at SI. Louis, ppd. roln
Chicago!. Houtlonl, II Inningt
Cincinnati If, Pllttburgh 7

Frtoy'% Qiintt

Colorado (Nlod 17) at Chicago (Trachtal
1 11.3:10pm
C lnd nntll (Browning 14) at Flarlda
(Hammond l-II.Irllp .m .

San Dlogo (Bartat 14) at Montreal IRueter
101.7:11pm
San F ra n d tc o IH Ic k a n o n I -01 at
Philadelphia (Rivera l-ll,7:3Sp m.
Allanla (Avery 10) ai Pllttburgh (Cooke
0-1), 7:11p.m.
Lot Angelet (Candlottl 3 1) *1 New York
(Saborhagonl 1).7:40p m.
SI. Loull (Arocha 11) *1 Houtlon (Swindell
30).4 0)p m
Saturday'i Oamat
San Olego at Montreal, 1:31p.m.
Lot Angola! at Now York. 1:40pm.
Colorado at Chicago. 1:10 p m
Clndnnallat Flarlda, 7:41p.m.
San Francltco at Philadelphia, 7:03p m
Atlanta ai Pllttburgh. 7 03 p m
SI LoullnIHouiton. * 01 p m
AMERICAN LEAOUE
All Timet E D I
Eatl Olvltlon
W
Pel. OS
l
Boiton
7 447 —
IS
Bollimoro
7 447
14
N*w York
13
• 414 1«,
Toronlo
a .341 7
13
Dolrolt
A M
300 4
Central Divltion
W
L Pel. OD
C1*v*lond
1}
• 400 _
Chicago
13
*
Stt —
Mllwoukt*
4
471
13
•»
f
K onui City
10 474 2&gt;,
Minn«iot*
3*1 S',
• IS
Wait Divliton
W
L Pel
OB
$4*111*
9 12
424 —
—
T*«*»
1 11
421
Calllornla
9 14
341 1
Oakland
7 IS .314 2'j
Thwnday’i Oamat
Doiion a. Oakland l
Chicago S. Cltvtland 3
Milwaukee 13. Mlnnatola 3
KantatClly II. Oalrolia
Toxatl, Toronto 0
Belli more 4, California 1
Stalllt 4. Naw YorkO
Friday’* Oamat
Taiai (Read 0 01 al Cleveland (Nagy 1 0),
7 04p m.
Chicago (Bar* 101 at Detroit IGullIckton
0 11. 7 03pm
Toronto (Gutman 1 1 ) al Mlnnatola
(Tapani I I I . I 03pm
Milwaukee IBonai 11) al Kantai City
(Gordon M l , I OSp m
Boston (Sal* 2 0) al Calltornla (Lallwich
0 1), 10 03p m
Naw York (Abboll I I I al Oakland IWalch
0 21.10 01pm
Balllmora (Moyer I I) at Saatll* IHibbard
1 I), 10 33p m
Saturday'i Oamti
Te,#» at Cleveland. I OSp m
Chicago*) Datroil. 1:13p m
Naw York al Oakland. aOSp m
Toronto«lMlnnatola. I tip m
Milwaukee al Kama* C lly. * 01 p m
BotlonalCalltornla, 10 Dip m
Balllmora alSaalll*. 10:11p m
SOUTHERNLEAOUE
Ftrit Hall
Eatlarn Civilian
w
L Pel. OB
Groonvlll# IBrovot)
13
)
704 —
Carolina IPlrol*,)
t
S34 3
10
JockMnvillt (Marln*r,t 11 11
SOO 11,
Orland# (Cubt)
10 11
4SS 4't
Knoxvlll# (Blue J*v&gt;)
a 1)
744 1
Wttltrn Qivmon
Hunttvlll* (Alhltci)
13
7 .420 —
Memphl, (Royal,1
10 10
SOO J
Chattanooga (Rods)
10 10
soo 3
Navhvill* (Tw in,)
» 10 474 314
9 11
Birmingham IWSoa)
4S0 4
Thurtday’t Oamat
Chattanooga 1. Orlando 4
Carolina I, Jacktenvlll* 1
Birmingham*. Huntivlll*4
Frtday'iQamei
Chattanooga at Orlande
Carat In* at Jachtamlll*
Memphis at Oraanvllla
Knoevlll* at Nathvlll*
Birmingham at Hunttvlll*
Saluturday't Oamat
Chattanooga at Orlando
Carolina at Jackianvlll*
Mamphn at Oraanville
Knoavlllaat Nathvlll*
Birmingham at Hunttvlll*
FLORIDA STATE LEAOUE
PlMt Hall
Eastern Dlvltlen
w
l
Pci. OB
Brtvard (Marlin,)
16
S .747 —
7 447 J
14
SI Lu e ltlM tl,)
9 11
r'v* o l» (Attrot)
430
Voro U*#ih |Dodg«rt)
9 11
4SO
Dayton# (Cub!)
a 13 341 4
W P. Boach &lt;E,pO!l
3 IS
7S0 10',
W tittrn Division
Fori Myers (Tw in!)
14
7 *47 —
Laktland (Tlg tri)
13
• *00 l'»
Cltarwalar (Phllltot)
11
f
SK 2 ',
9
SI Pal* (Cardinal!)
11
4SO 2 ',
Dunedin (Blu* Jays)
*7* 4
10 11
Tampa (Yankees)
9 11
430 4 ',
Charlotte (Rangers)
1 13
111 4
7 13 3S0 * ' ,
Sarasota (Rod So,)
Thursday’! Garnet
Cleerweler 1, Vera Beach 1
FpftM yert). Dunedin I
Well Palm Beach 4. Laktland 4
Otceole 7, St Petenburga
Charlotte 7. Daytona I
Brevard). SaratolaO
St. L u d tl. Tampa I
Frida y'l Oamat
Vero Beach al Clearwater
Fort Myert at Dunedin
Weil Palm Beach al Laktland
Charlotte al Daytona
Sarasota al Brevard
SI Petersburg et Osceola
Tampaal St. Lucie
Saturday’* Games
Cleerweler al Dunedin
St Lucie at Laktland
SaraiolaatDaylona
St Petersburg at Brevard
Fori Myert al Osceola
Charlotte al Vero Beech
Tampa al Welt Palm Beach

M ARLINSI, ROCKIES7
COLORADO
FLORIDA
ab r h bl
ab r h bl
Went at
3000
Carrel
Sill
Kngeryll 4 1 1 0
Browne lb 3 1 ) 0
Burkicl
a 31 I
Shllleldrf 1 I I I
Glrrga lb
30 11
Conlnoll 4 0 0 0
Bchelltrl 3 114
Dilrde lb 4 1 1 1
H a y tllb 4 0 0 0
JHrndip 0.00 0
Glrardlc 4 0 0 0
Snllagoc 4 111
Me|lalb
1111
Urberlelb 3 7 10
Jhntonph 0 0 0 0
A rla itt
4 111
EYngpr 0 0 0 0
Bowtnp
100 0
G rH rrtp 1 1 1 0
Grdnerp
0 0 00
Blair p
0 00 0
Rnltrlaph 10 0 0
BRuttlnp
000 0
Ntnp
0 0 00
VndrWIph 0 0 0 0
CarrilloII 1 0 0 0
Tofall
II 1 4 7
Tolalt
1) I 4 7
Colorado
IM 111 000 - 7
Florida
110 0M 01, — I
E - Burkt (II. Nen (1) OP - Florida 1.
LOB — Colorado 3. Florida 3 IB — Burkt (7),
Arlat (4). HR - Burk* (4). Blcholl* II),
M*|la II). SB - Blchatt* 141. EYoung ID .
Carr 1 (41, Shtllltld (4). CS - Klngary (I). S
-W e lt i SF-G alarraga
IP
H R ER BB SO
Colorado
GrHarrlt
7IJ 4 4 4 1 3
Blair L, 0 1
0
1 1 1 0
0
BRullln
13 0 0 0 0 I
Florida
Bowen
4 13 1 4 4 I
4
Gardner
&gt;13 1 I
I
I
I
Nen W. I I
1
0 0 0 1
1
JHernandei S. 1
I
0 0 0 1 0
Blair pitched lol ballen In the 4th.
HBP - by GrHarrlt I She! Held)
Umpires - Home. Wendetiledl. First,
Hirtchbeck; Second. Relllord: Third.
Hernandei
T - 1 . J 7 . A -11.114

■ABBBAM. UAPBNB I
Burk) Cal

NATIONAL LEAOUE
O AB
R H
70 71 24 13

Pet.
440

Tim Raines la a Sanford native and Seminole High School
graduate now playing for the Chicago While Sox. His stats are
for the 1994 aoason In the first column, personal-best season
totals In the second column and current career totals
(Including 1994 games) In the third column.
Raines was 1-for-5 with a single and a run scored Thursday
night as the White Sox defeated the Cleveland Indians 5-3.
Tonlghl, the White Sox will play at Detroit In a 7 p.m. game that
be seen on cable television station WGN.
RAINES GAUGE
Category
'94
Games........... .... 18
At-bats.......... .... 75
Runs............. .... 14
Mils................ .... 20
RBI................
Doubles.........
Triples.......... .... 0
Homo runs........ 5
Steals........... ....
2
Average......... .... 267

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

Gwynn SD
Jailer It* SIL
K*fll NY
Alou Mon
DSander, All
Ctdtno Hou
Lanklord SIL
Blchall* Col
Pendleton All

*33
10 47 IS 24
344
14 47
4 74
313
20 II
13 31
3K
1* 71 10 77
3*4
71 17 17 37
3*7
If K
7 72
341
70 11 17 24
17
34*
1
1
3
1
71
34*
7t 1* 11 31
Run, Scored
B u r k t , C o lo ra d o , 24: D y k t l r a .
Philadelphia 21,- Shtllltld, Florida, ttr
RSandart. Cincinnati. II: Flnlfy. Houtlon.
II: Blrhalte. Colorado. II,- Wallach Lot
Angela!. II
Runt Ballad In
Galarraga. Colorado, 14. K*nl, Naw York.
IS. Blcholl*. Colorado. 72. Bagwell. Houtlon.
I t : S h tllltld . Florida , 24| Daulton,
Philadelphia. 14: Wallach, to* Angtltt. It
Hill
Burkt. Colorado. S3. DSandart. Allanla. 12.
Kanl. Naw York. H i Blchalta. Colorado. 21:
Pandltlon, Atlanta. 21: Lanklord. St Loull.
24. Gwynn. San Dlago. 74
Oaublat
Bigglo. Houtlon, II: LWalkar. Monlrtal. 4.
Kanl. Naw York, I ; Alou. Montreal, I:
Dichttlt, Colorado. I, Clanlrocco. San Dlago.
7, Crdano. Houtlon. 7: Morris, Cincinnati, 7.
Burkt. Color ado 7; Gwynn. San Diego. 7
Triplet
RSandart. Cincinnati, 1: Sandbarg,
Chicago. 1. Butler. Lot Angelet 1, Martin,
Pllttburgh. 7. Cordero. Montreal. 1. OI
ferman. Lot Angelet. 1: Finlay, Houtlon. 1.
Burkt. Colorado. 7: RbThompton San Fran
cltco, 2: WWIIton. Chicago. 1
Ham* Runt
Burkt, Colorado. 4: MaWllllamt. San
Francltco. 4: Galarraga. Colorado. 4; Ktnl,
New York. I : Shellleld. Florida, 4: Blchall*.
Colorado, 4: 7art Had with 4
Slot*n Betel

DSandert. Allanla. 10, Clayton. San Fran
Cltco. 7: DeShttldt. Lot Angtltt. 7: RSan
dert. Cincinnati. 4; Carr, Florida, «:
Grltiom, Montreal, 4 Puller. Lot Angela*, a
PITCHING
1 Dtemont
Wohler*. Atlanta. 3 0. I 000. 1 at: Swindall.
Houtlon. 10, l OOQ. 1.141 Ttwklbury. It
.Louis. SO. I (NO. 1.14. KHIII, Monlrtal. 4 1.
7AK. 171: GMaddue. Allanla. 4 1. IK . 44.
Carrasco. Clnclnnall, I I. 730, 43: BJOnoo.
New York, 11, 710. 3 14: Weather*. Florid#,
Sr), .734, 1.741 ZSmlth. Pittsburgh I I, ,7M.
j 14. Condloltl. Lot Angelet. 3 1. 730. 4 &gt;1
Strikeout!
PJMartlnei. Montreal. 13: Benat. San
Dlago. IS: XII*. Houtlon. j 4i Ginvlne,
Allanla. 14. GMadduv, Allanla. 17: KtGrott.
tot Angelet, II: Smllay, Clnclnnall, 30
li r a i
MParar, SI. Loult. 4, Harvey, Florida, t:
McMichaal. Allanla, S: Ro|*t Monlrtal. S:
While. Pittsburgh. 4. MJackton, San Fran
cltco. 4: Franco. Naw York, 4
AMERICAN LEAOUE
0 AB
R H Pel,
444
O Null NY
»; 59 13 37
19 n
It 71 .3/1
McRae KC
70 63 13 33
Berroa Oak
304
2J 65 20 31
3*4
CDavIsCal
19 so 21 29 .347
Lotion Clc
RAIomar Tor
3*0
71 66 32 21
i;
56 10 20
RamlroiCI*
33/
77 W 73 33
Mniilor Tor
3SS
MVaughn Bot
77 •2 14 24 334
70 79 17 21
334
Ball* Cl*
Runs Scored
While, Toronto, IS: MolHor, Toronto, 13:
RAIomar, Toronto 71: Carlar. Toronto. 12;
Lallon, Cleveland. 21; GrlHay Jr. Saalll*. 21,
Thomat. Chicago. 20; Javier, Oakland. 20:
C Davit. California. 20
Runt Balled In
Carter, Toronto, 20; Franco. Chicago. 23;
O’Neill. New York. 22. Ramlrar, Cltvtland.
2t; Puckett. Minnesota, 21; Delgado,
Toronto, 20: Hamtlln. Kansas City. 70:
Cooper, Botlon. 70. Thomat. Chicago, 70;
Ventura, Chicago. 20
Hilt
Puckett, Mlnnetota, 34: Molllor, Toronto,
33; RAIomar, Toronto, 31; While, Toronto.
31; CD avlt, California. 31: Palmeiro.
Baltimore, JO; Lollon, Cleveland, 24:
MVaughn. Botlon. 24, Javier. Oakland. 2*.
CRIpktn. Baltimore. 74
Doublet
Puckett, Mlnnatola. II; Fryman. Dtlroi*.
4: Knoblauch. Mlnnatola. I ; Olerud. Toronto.
4; Palmeiro. Balllmora. ■; 7 are lltd with 7.
Triplet
ADiai, Milwaukee, 4; Lollon. Cleveland, 2;
Grlltey Jr, Saalll*. 3; I are Il*dwlth7.
Hemt Runt
Delgado, Toronto. I; Thomat. Chicago. I;
Carlar, Toromo. I: Palmeiro. Balllmora. 7;
Sierra. Oakland, 7; Fielder, Datroil, 7:
Franco. Chicago. 7
Stolen Betel
Coleman, Kantai City. 14; Lotion. Clev*
land. 12; Hulte, Ttaos.9. LJohnton. Chicago.
7: McRae. Kentat City, 4: Polonla, Naw
York, 4: Javier, Oakland. 4.
PITCHING
I Decisions
McDonald. Balllmora. SO. 1 000, 2 43;
Alvarei. Chicago. 10. 1 000. 2 0J; BIAn
derton, Calllornla, SO, 1000, 3.41; Slot
llemyrt. Toronto. 30. 1000. 3 4); Plunk,
Clayaland, 10, I 000. 3.14: M uttlna,
Balllmora, * I. 100. 3 14; Darwin. Botlon, 4 1.
100.3.17
Strikeout*
RJohnton, Seallle. 31: Gutman. Toronlo,
30; Appier, Kama* City, 30; ALelltr,
Toronlo. 30; Clement, Botlon, 30; Sltwerl.
Toronlo. 74; Henlgen. Toronto. 24; BWIII.
Oakland. 24.

Say**
LaSmlth, Balllmore. II; Rutiall. Botlon. I:
Aguilera, Mlnnatola. 3; Gratia, California. 4;
Farr, Cltvaland, 4; XHtrnandti, Naw York.
3: Henneman. Dolrolt. 3: Hank*. Texas, 3

NBA PLAYOFFS
AIITImat EDT
FIRST ROUND
(BostolS)
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Allan!* vt. Miami
Miami Itodttorltt 10
Thursday, April 71
Miami 4). Allanla I*
lilu rd i v. Aar 11ifl
Miami at Allanla. I p m, I TN T I
Now York vi. Now Jortoy
Friday, April 14
Naw JortayaINtw York, I p m. (TBS)
Sunday* May I
Now Jtrtey •( New York, II 34p.m (NBCI

carter
1.B-T5
8,951
1,225
2.071
716
336
100
128
753
.298

Tim Raines

Chicago**- Cltvtland
Friday, April 14
Cleveland*! Ch&gt;cago. I p m (T N T I
Sunday. May I
Cleveland al Chicago. 3p m (NBCI

Continued from IB
and uln flic’s by
Aaron Richardson. With iwo
oulft, Willlnm Cleveland drew a
wnlk lo force In Woodward wllh
Hie giimc-wiimlng run.
David Brock led Ihe Cubs with
a double. single, two runs, and
two RBI. Danny Brock added
three singles and two runs.
Cleveland finished with two
Hlngtrn. three runs, and two RBI.
dared Fcdder and Rlchnrdson
cacti till a single. Woodward
scored a run.
Travis Jones hit » two-run
home run for the Marlins. Ryan
Sprudtcr added a double, n
single, and an RBI. Brandon
Bryant Imd a single, h run. and
ail RBI. Nick Ireland singled and
scored a run. Will It* Dolllcr
singled In a run. Robert Lowe
scored two runs. John Killlugsworth scored one run. Rleky
Wells hud an RBI.
Lead -ol f hi t t er D o n o va n
Daniels was 4-for-4 to highlight
Ihe While Sox's M-hlt attack,
co lle ctin g two trip le s, two
singles, four runs, and two RBI.

Continued from IB
Bishop's hlggrsl supporter was
Cragcr, who collected u triple,
double, three runs, and two RBL
On defense, she hud one pul oul
uud five usststs from her position
ui shortstop.
W ESTERNCONFERENCE
Saatll# vt. Denver
Also contributing for Lyman
Saalll® lead! tenet 1 0
(20 -11 were Jodie Behind |2-for-3,
Thurtday. April 31
run). Bishop (double, two rutin),
Seatll* 104. Denver 17
Saturday, April H
Jamie Behind 11-fur-2, run, Iwo
Denver al Saalll*. 10 30P m (T N T I
RBt), Jonnle Behind |l-for-2, run,
RBI). Knrcn Kaltcnk (l-for-2.
Hautlon vt. Portland
Friday. April 14
run). Stacey Rlltcr (single. RBI)
Portland#!Houtlon * 30pm, ITBS)
and Wcndl Aery (run).
Sunday. May 1
Joylu Cupo and Dlunc Duller
Portland#! Houston. 4p m (T N T )
were IjoII i one-for-lwo for Lake
Ph**nla vt. Ooldtn Slat*
Mary ( 11-14|.
Friday, April 14
SPRUCE CREEK RALLIES
Golden Slat* al Phoanli, 10 30p m (T N T )
Sunday. May I
Spruce Creek (1H-12) look
Golden Slat#*1 Phoonla. 3.30p m INHCl
advantage of a Bring Roscann
Fry lo rally for lls second upset
San Antonio vt. Utah
San Antonio leads ter let I 0
of the Inurnumciit.
Thurtday, April 1*
Fry (0-4) allowed four runs,
San Antonio 104. Utah I*
only one of which was earned, In
Saturday, April 30
Utah al San Antonio, I p m (NBCI
I lie top of the II i si Inning. Imt
(lien settled dawn to shut out the
Hawks over the nrxl live In­
nings.
PACERS44. M AOICI*
But the freshman, who pitched
INDIANA (44)
six Innings in u victory over
McKay I I I I 2 S. O Davit 3 7 00 4. Smllt
7 17 7 3 14. Miller * 14 4 4 74. Workman 3 1)77
Drl.imd on Wednesday, started
I, Connor I 7 00 7, D Scott 4 0 7 2 17. A Davit
to lire in the lillli Inning and ran
3 1441. Thompson I 30 I 7. Mitchell 0 2 3 7 2,
out of gas In the seventh,
Fleming 7 30 0 4 ToiaH: 34 47 17 73 14
ORLANDO (44)
walking three consecutive hal­
Krytlkowiak 7 ) 00 4. O Scott 3 1)44 tl
iers without throwing a strike
O’Neal 11 20 3 * 34. Anderson ( I I 11 1],
and forcing head couch Glen
Hordewoy 4 11)4 17. Rolllnt 3 1 00 4. Sklltt
I 7 00 7. Royal 4 0 * 0 14. Bowie 00 DO 0
Artcrburn to iiuikC u pitching'
Tolalt: 13 74 17 24S*
change.
Indian*
7* 77 74 I ) - It
Christy Golding Hlngled lo cot
Orlohdo
34 71 70 14 - 44
3
Point goals — Indiana 4 11(0 Scolt 7 7. the lead to 0-5 and. after a pop
Miller 1 7, Me Key 0 I. Workman 0 I], Orlando
up. Jamie Clarke singled In iwo
3 17 (Anderson 3 10 Hardaway 17 D Scolt
runs lo put Spruce Creek ahead.
14, SktktO 1). Fouledoul — Non* Rebounds
— Indian* )7 (McKey. D.Davit 101, Orlando
Leah Nelson then put Itie game

II, 5*2

TVIHADIO

111 Ml -

1 I

Cub*

7*3 - l i t -

•

I

LAKE FRONT F IE LD

Whit* 1*1

liutJiri

III 1 - 7 7

tl

in « — * 7

Nick Solllcn had a home run and
two RBI. Joseph Blake added a
home run and two runs scored.
Michael White tripled, singled,
scored twice, and had two RBI.
Aaron Hubbard contributed
two singles and three runs.
Danny Wcgh had a single, two
runs, and an RBI. Billy Hubbard
scored three runs and had un
R B I. M ark H ic k s and Lee
Frederick each scored two runs.
Byron Hubbard scored a run.
Jacob Lunge tripled, singled,
and drove In two runs for the
Blue Jays. Jason Turner ndded
two singles, u run scored, and un
RBI. Ed Jones had a single, a
run. and un RBI. Cedric Bryant
and Chris Freeman bath singled
and scored a run. Brian Shannta
and Tuyler Burke each scared a
run. Steven Evans and Carl
Ward both had an RBI.

Softball

Orlando vi. Indiana
Indiana leads tar let I 0
Thurtday, April I I
Indiana 14. Orlando II
Saturday, April 34
Indiana at Orlando.) tOp m INBC)

34 (O ’ Ntal 14). A it lt ll — Indian* 7)
(Workman It), Orlando 27 (Hardaway (01
Total loult — Indiana It, Orlando It A -4
15,741
HEAT *7, HAWKS 4*
MIAMI ItJ)
Long 4 4 I I 4. Rico S 14 7 7 II. Salley 4 1117
14. Shaw 0 4 0 0 0 Smith 4 IS 4 ) 71. Seikaly
3 )1 3 4 I). Colei / 10 3 4 17, Miner I S 3 4 S,
AtklntO 10 00. Tolalt 34 40 14 244]
A TLA N TA 114)
Manning 4 13 2 3 10, Willie 4 1) 34 17.
Koncak 3 10 17 It. Augmon 3 7 4 4 14,
Blaylock 3 IS 13 9. Ehlo 6 1/ J 4 I). Whatley
1 2 00 2. Ferrell 1 4 2 74, Keel* 2 3004. Lang
0 0000 Totals 34 *4 11 23*4
Miami
22 24 It 31 - 4)
Atlanta
SI IS IS 14 - I*
3 Point goad - Miami 3 4 (Smith 3 3, Rico
13, Colei 0 1. Shaw 0 1|. Allanla 2 14
(Blaylock 2 7, EhtoO 7). Fouled out - Salley
Roboundt - Miami U I Hite 10). Allanl# SI
(Wllllt 141 Attltlt - Miami 1) (Coles 5).
Atlanta 2) (Blaylock 41 Total loult — Miami
22. Allanl* 20 Flagrant tool — Salley A —

ROY HOLLER F IE LD

Marlin*

HAWKS 1*. SILVER HAWKS4
Spruce Creek
4*4 *4* 4 - 14 II
I
Lake Hewell
444 42* • - 4 I
2
Hacked. Bltnler (2) and Larson Fry, Roll
|7| and Mendel WP - Blenler ( i l l ) I P Fry (4 4). Sovt — non# IB — non# 30 Lok* Howoli. Mack 7. Dowling MR — Sprurr
Crook. Notion Rorordt — Spruce Crook
II II. Lika Howoli* II.

out of reach wllh a booming
three-run home run Into deep
teftcenter field.
After falling behind 4-0. the
Silver Hawks (0-11) Bed the
game with four runs of their ownin ihe second Inning. The big
blow was a bases loaded triple
by Rhlannon Mack, who later
scored the tying run un a wild
pitch.
Lake Howell look the lead with
» pair of runs In Ihe flflh Inning.
With one out, Melanie Waters
singled and scored on a triple by
C urn lcr D ow ling, who then
scored on a sacrifice fly by
Michelle Rosso.
Pacing the Hawks' attack were
Michelle Glngrus (2-for-3. run.
two RBI). Golding |2-for-3. run.
RBI), Clurkc (2-for -l, two runs,
two KUI), Alison Baylor (2-for-4.
run, two RBI), and Nelson (home
run, three RBI).
,
triples, run.,three RBI), Dowling
(triple, ru n , R B II. C y n th lu
Mendez and Waters (both with a
single and a run), Fry and Klin
CowpcrBiwaite (one run each)
and Russo (RBI).

Chase
Continued from IB
singles. Iwo runs, two Kill)
Also contributing were Milch
Burke (double, two singles, two
runs), Steve Donovan (two
singles, two runs. RBI| and Sieve
Woodley (two singles, run. RBI).
D o i n g l li e h i t t i n g f o r
Touchdown Puli were Manny
Silvia (two singles, two runs,
RBII. Bill Marino (Iwo singles,
run. two Rill), Jim Troxcll and
Dwayne Towcry (two singles,
one run and one RBI each). Brian
Jones |lwo singles). Stu Seloek
(double, run. Iwo RBI). Dan
Daugherty (double, run). Tom
Suhv and Don Cuveiuiugh (one
single eueli) and Kevin Julian
(run).

BASEBALL
7 p m — WGN, Chicago Whit# So« al
Dolrolt. (LI
7:30pm — SUN. Clnclnnall al Florida, ILI
Powering Ken Hummel were
7:30 p m - WOH. Lot Angolet o! New
Jeff Alen (double, (wo singles,
York Melt. IL)
NBA PLAYOFFS
three runs, three RBI). Brian
7 p m , — TISS. New Jertey at Now York.
Curtis (double, two singles. Iwo
(U
ru n s ), C h r i s Wu r g o (three
I p m. — TNT,ClovelondalChicago, IL)
f;30p m. — TBS, Portland at Houtlon. |LI
singles, four RBII. Jeff Futrclt
10:10 p m, — T N T , Goldon Slot* al
(triple, single, run, Iwo RBI|,
Phoonl*. (LI
Cnry Keefer (Iwo doubles, two
HOCKEY
7:30pm — ESPN. NHL playoff*. Monlrtal
runs, RIB). Chris Nlcklc (double,
Canadians at Botlon Brulnt, ( LI
single, three runs. RBI) und Jeff
TENNIS
Davis (double, single, two runs,
II p.m. — SUN. ATAT Challenge, alto al 3
am
two RBI).
Saturday
AUTO RACINO
Al so h i t t i n g were K irb y
1p m. - ESPN. ARCA Serial Rate
S
p.m - TNN, NASCAR Grand National Swlnchurt (double, single, two
Rote
COLLEOE BASEBALL
1:30 p.m. — CV, SC. Georgia at Florida,
(L)
3 p.m. — SUN, Tannotto* al South
Carolina, (L I, alto a ll am .
Continued from IB
M AJOR-LEAOUE BASEBALL
Allan Truskuuskas had the hit
2 pm — WGN. Colorado al Chicago Cubt.
(L )
for Briar Corporation.
7 p m. — SUM. Cincinnati *1 Florida, (L)
Providing Ihe offense for the
7pm. — TBS, Atlanta al PIMtburgh, (L)
Hodmen were Seoll McLaughlin
NBA PLAYOFFS
Ip m. - WESH2, Ulahal San Antonio. (L)
(two doubles, single, two runs,
1:10 p m. — WESH 1. Indiana al Orlando.
four RBI). Muck Johnson (dou­
(L )
ble. two singles, run. RBI). Brian
I p m. - T N T . Miami at Allanla. IL)
10:30p m — TN T. Denver al Soattl*. (L )
Parent (triple, single, run. three
OOLF
RBI). Doug Drier (two doubles,
4 a m. — SUN. Bryant Gumbo! Wall Disney
(wo runs. RBI). Conlen Spencer
World Celebrity Pro Am
l p m . - W FTV f, Wonderful World ol (double. Hlnglc, two runs, two
Golf: Jack Nlcklaut vi. Arnold Palmer
RBI) and Rlek Labanle (Iwo
l:30p m. — W FTV 4, Houtlon Open, (L)
4 p m — WCPX 4, LPGA. Sprlnl Chempl
onthip, (L)
4:10 p.m. — ESPN, Lot V*gat Senior
Clastic
HOCKEY
7:30p m. - ESPN. NHL playollt. TBS, (LI
TENNIS
Continued from IB
I pm - SUN. ATAT Challenge. (L ), also
at II p m
(sec­
M IICELLANEOUS
ond in the 300-meter Intermedi­
4:30 p.m. - W FTV 4, Wide World ol Sports
ate hurdles. 41.4).
Radio
BASEBALL
Chauiiccy Rickard also quali­
4:43 p m - W TLN A M IIS70), Soulhorn
fied for the regional meet by
Loagu*. Chattanooga al Orlando
4:SS p.m. - WWNZ AM (I4K I, Atlanta al finishing third In Ihe 110-meter
Pllttburgh
high hurdles!I A.6),
7 p.m. - W O TO A M (SKI, Clnclnnall al
While he |us( missed quali­
Florida

Pinehurst—

runs). Seoll Murphy (two singles,
three runs, four RBII and Duvld
Goldsllck and Mark Aten (one
single, one run and one RBI
each).
Sonny Eubanks led Stlffcy's
Affordables wllh two singles,
while Bobby Krlenbrlng. Tom m y
Stlfrcy and Gary Muse added one
single each.
Leading M.A. Erectors were
Octavio Torres (home run, dou­
ble. Iwo singles, run. five RBI).
John Aagan (four singles, two
runs, three RBI). Chris Bullock
(three singles, two runs), Paul
Rodriguez (double, single, run.
RBI). B.J. Holt (two singles), Joe
Clark (Blngtc. run. RBII, Glenn
Stewart (single, four runs). De­
nnis Gleeson (single) and Russel
Davis (run).
Hitting for Desk Male were
Doug Carpenter (Iwo doubles,
two runs, two RBI), Dave Sowers
(two singles, run, HU1). Tim
Davis (two singles, two runs).
Scolt Baker (two Blngles, RBI).
Rlek Blanchard (single, run.
RBI), Wes Spake (single, run)
and Mark Morgun, Wayne Kelley
and Matt Altcmose (one single
c n c h ).

Hlngles, run. RBI).
Also contributing were Terry
Bart (double), Dan Wlrth (single,
three runs. RBI), gary Cline
Istnglc, run, RIB) and Robert
Grover (run).
Ryder was led by Quinn Bur­
rows (double, single, run). Bill
Worrell (two singles. RBI), Tank
McMIckcn (two singles, run).
Mike Anglin (single. RBI) and Bill
Osbourne Jr.. Oerry Dyer. Mike
Luster. Bill Osbourne Sr. and
Dan Moore (one single each).

Track

fying. Anion Grooms scored In
iwo events for the Semlnoles.
finishing fifth hi both the triple
Jum p and 400- met er dash.
Bernard Smith came In fifth in
the long Jump. Sylvester Bran­
ford was fifth In the 800-mclcr
ran. and Greg Stafford took sixth
In the 400-meter dash.

�a r t ifK Mm3

" r l

11- hL *1

*

I T

•» #■■■!f **'r *»* •**wr

T '

.-

Sanford H erald, S anford. Florida - Friday, April 29, 1994 - 3B

____

— —

• •:
&gt;.» ‘ aAlt itr

•■

Sweet onion, Florida-style

IN B R I E F
R d ti^y C lu b to otlebrate 73 years
President George Wallace, the olTIceni and directors of the
Sanford Rotary Club, ore Inviting all the post presidents of the
club to be their guests at the celebration of the club's 73
anniversary.
The celebration will, be at the Sanford Civic Center on
Monday, May 9 at noon.
The Sanford Rotary Club was chartered May 10. 1921.
Thoae who wish to attend are asked to coil by May 2 to make
reservations at 323-3660 or 322-9484.

Spring Fling sat
The Chuluota Spring Fling Is set for Saturday. May 7.
There will be politicians on the campaingn trail, good music,
garage sole Items and arts and crafts.
Music groups and vendor* are encouraged to call Pam
McSachem at 369-B360 or drop by JoAnnz Hair We Are In the
Circle K Plata in Chuluota to choose a space,

JL — i *

Ife &amp; X nB ife M f t A m H N

Trakktos meat Sunday
The US9 Genesis, a chapter of the Federation (A Star Trek
Fan Club) meets every other Sunday, at 4:30 p.m„ at Bowl
America on Airport Boulevard. Those Interested In a program
that helps people are Invited. For Information, call Vickie,
321-7336. The next meeting is May 8.

Sunbalt Dayllly C lu b to meet

Move over, Vidalia, for St. Augustine Sweet
Georgia and South Carolina for ihc next two
weeks. Brown said.
Ths year Puhllx ran handle all onions
produced, hut next year they'll hopefully
iiave the brand name established to the
point where people will he request log I hem
in stores everywhere.
Putnam County grower and exchange
president, Greg Bernard, who grew up in
Vidalia Onion country, said both states havo
n good, sweet onion to offer. The dlllerenee
Is Georgia growers have done an excellent
Job marketing Vidalia onions.
"I've been growing these onions small
time for years, and I still have family up
there In Vidalia. Ga„ who I’ve been sending
ihem |o, and they say these onions are
comparable lo. If nol belter than the
Vldallns," Barnard said.
Grower Frank Johns J r . of Hastings,
exchange vice president, said the sky's the
limit for "St. Augustine Swecl." given
Florida has loads of sunshine and soil types
henelielal to growing awet-1 onions.
Florida sunshine certainly makes our
oranges sweeter, so we re hanking that It's
going lo make our onions sweeter. Next time
you're In the store you might want to try
this new onion. Supporting our own Florida
ugrlculturr will help keep the money where
It belongs!

Make way Vldnlla. Florida’s sugary "St.
Augustine Sweet" hus arrived, and these
onions have gol Georgia on tlirir mind. I
CONSUMER
know ihls column Is usually on con­
FOCUS
sumerism but this onion has Just lilt ihc
marketplace and I wanted you to know
about it! You might not he aware that
BARBARA
marketing new food Items, especially fruits
H
U G H ES/
or verge Iales Is as demanding and marketGREGG
intcnslvr as markrilnga new earl
They were expected to reach southeastern
markets by Saturday, April 10. The sweet
onions developed nt Ihc University of
Florldu arc long In Ihc ninklng and kissed by
lion. Florida's earlier planting cycle allows
tlic Florida sunshine, says Dale Hcnscl fo these onions lo reach market two to three
weeks txrforr the Vldnlla, a key advantage In
U F ’h IFAS. who’s worked for 30 years lo
perfect ihc flavorful harvest now jxilsed In , bath Introducing the onions and In gaining
market share,
give Georgia’s Vidalia onions a high-profile
run for Ihclr money.
This will Ik * a relatively small venture
trying lo rstablsh an Identity with con­
"T iic Vidalia Is a good onion, there's no
sumers. and they arc very aware of the fart
two ways about It. but the ’St. Augustine
SweeF lasles Just ns good, or better." said
they've got to produce a quality sweet onion
Hcnscl, who’s helped form a North Florida
and maintain that quality which will
growers eoopernllve Dial hopes lo ship -100 jkis IIIon us In the marketplace for a long
time.
tans of onions In the next two weeks and
The exchange has u one-time, exclusive
grab a share of tlir sweet onion market long
agreement with Puhllx Supermarkets to sell
dominated by the Vidalia.
the onions, which features a logo of a
Tlte S I. August i ne Onion Grow ers
Spanish conquistador thrusting out a large
Exchange won’t lake on Vldnlla head-to"Si. Augustine Sweet” In his right hand.
head, said exchange manager Reggie Brown
They'll lie available In stores In Florida.
of Ihc Florida Fruit and Vegetable Assoclu-

Sunbelt Dayllly Club meets the first Sunday of the month at
2 p.m through April at the Old City Hall. Highway 13A near
Lake Mary Boulevard. Lake Mary.
The club educates members on dayllly growing through slide
shows, guest speakers and trips to dayllly gardens. There are
.no club dues. Call 8 8 6 -3 IB 6 for more inform ation.

WITH HONORS « « '
1:00 4:10 TOO 9:10

(PCI

MIGHTY DUCKS 2

Blood Bank aeeka donors

2:104:30 7:10 030

Central Florida Blood Bank is asking donors of all types or
blood — especially O-type donors — to donate at Its Sanford
branch, 1302 E. Second St. For information, call 322-0822.

IPG)

M AJOR LEAGUE 2
2:107:10

(PG)

THE PAPER

g

4:30 *30

Poets -to talk verse

COPS &amp;

First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday ut the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets arc welcome.
For more Information, please call Bob Shrlford. 904-7360416. or Virginia Marlin, 904-775-8909.

W r
ROBBERSONS O

2:1*4:107:1**10

WHITE FANG 2
2.00 4:1* 7 00*1*

(PQ| k D
(PC)

P.C.U.
2'304:1) 7.30*1* |PQ11l

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

w

MONKEY TROUBLE

---------------- U S L lffl________ J21

Bridge club.ffifets every M onday
Lake Mary Seniors invite anyone 53 years or older to pluy
rty bridge, The Pony Bridge Club meets every Monday
tween 1-3 p.m. at the Lake Mary Senior Center at the Old
City Hall, 158 N. Country Club Road.

w

S

C ancer support group meets
Support, Hope and Recovery. S.H.A.R., meets every Monday
afternoon at 5 p.m. at Central Florida Regional Hospitul in the
far comer of the dining room. This is a self help support group
for all cancer survivors, whether In treatment now or finished
with It. Call 324-8737 or 322-7785 for more Information.

S2 73 FO fl A IL MOVIES STA8TINQ
DETWEEN 4 TO #
H trrid Photo by tommy Vlnconl

G arden o f the M onth
Tho homo and Qrounds of Matlhow and Fiona
McDonald, 305 Larkwood Drive, Idyllwilrio, havo
boon selected by tho Garden Club of Sanford for
the April Garden of tho Month Award. A llower
bod run9 horn Iho house lo an orango Iroo In Iho

front with beds of azaleas accenting the front.
An oak troe and a palm Ireo add lo Iho attractive
landscape. The McDonald garden was choson by
Mary ChlldBrs ol Mimosa Circle of the Sanford
gardon Club.

Con man outsmarted by ‘smart lady’
DEAR ABBYi I saved a col­
umn you wrote dated Feb. 10.
1990. Although It’s more than
four years old, It should be
repeated every few yean*.
I can vouch for Us Importance
because I was one of those
people who got stung. I'm sign­
ing my real name, but please
don't print it. Sign me...

A SUCKER Of OKLAHOMA
DEAR SUCKERi I agree.
That oolamn la well worth
repeating. And hart It 1st
. DEAR ABBYt The following
Incident Just happened, and It
occurred to me you could
publicize It to worn others:
One recent afternoon, a man
phoned and asked If I was "Mrs.
Q ." living at (my address). I
verified the facts. Then he said
he handles my account at the

ADVICE

£
ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

bank and asked me If I would be
so kind as to get my Visa und
Mastercard so he could check
the numbers and expiration
dates, as the bank Is Issuing new
cards and he wanted ihc infor­
mation to be correct.
I laughed and (old him tic
must be out of his mind lo think
I would give that kind of Infor­
mation over the telephone. Then

I hung up.
I culled Ihc police department
and reported the Incident, and I
was transferred to the bunco
squad, who hupplly look all the
Informal Ion mid said I was a
"smart lady" because, since ihc
caller already had my name,
address and telephone number,
all he needed were my credit
c a r d n u m h e r s to m a k c
purchases by plume.
Abby, please let people know
dial If they ever get a telephone
call (supposedly from n bank
employee) asking lo "verify"
Ihclr credit enrd numbers, they
should gel the person’s name
and call the bank lo verify It.
JUNE O, IN DEL MAR, CALIF.
DEAR JUNE Q.t You arc.
Indeed, a "smart Indy" — and
thanks for a valuable tip! You

deserve a lot of credit.
DEAR AB B Y: Concerning
your article on escalators my son
once got Ids sneaker caught In
the broken steps of a poorly
maintained escalator, and was
caught there while the escalator
slowly chewed up Ills sneaker
and threatened lo Injure his foot.
Luckily, he was not Injured,
und we learned ut dial lime that
all escalators have an emergency
shut-off button located nt the top
and bottom. They arc mostly
colored red and are located
below the handrail close lo the
floor. I think It would he a good
Idea lo notify your readers of this
safely Item.
CHARLIE LOMBARDI,
PORT ST. LUCIE, FLA.
DEAR CHARLIE: Thanks for
the tip.

Smart teens not too wise in areas
I

DEAR M AR Y) Teen-agers to­
day, Are al^k of hearing all the
scare ' tactics about drugs, sex
DRUG
and AIDS. I think It's really
COUNSELOR
about aduita trying to control ua
and moke ua live like they did 50
r!
years ago. Well, It tan't going to
MARY
happen. We're smarter than any
up of people our age haa ever
BALK
n and we1 have more op­
p o rtu n ity. W hy don't aduita
Juat get It through their heada
that we're going to make our
own decialona about what we do While having a couple beers will
with drugs and sex, to atop not automatically make you
trying to make ua think we'll self-destruct, yo u r clouded
aelf-deatruct If we have a beer judgment following those beers
now and then. Also, I've never could well prove fatal.
known anyone with AIDS and
You may already know all of
I’ll bet this whole business is
blown way out of proportion by this but let's review some of ihc
conservative aduita who think AIDS-related dangers you face
all teen-agers are sex-crazed every day. You ennnot tell If
druggies, r il be checking to ace someone has the HIV virus by
If you Have the nerve to print looking at them. A blood test Is
the only way lo be sure.
this.

K

SMART KID

DEAR KIDt We do agree on
some things! kids today are
smarter than ever before and
certainly do have more op­
p o rtu n ity than any other gen­
eration in history. That's both
the good news and the bad news.

■,y
*

__

_r&gt;

Indeed, you might very well
know several people Infected
with HIV right now. More than
20 percent of the people who
have AIDS are In their 20s. Since
It takes up to 10 years for
symptoms to appear, It’s obvious

that many gol infected In llielr
teens.
Also. Ihc number of reported
AIDS cuses among teen-agers
Increased 96 percent between
1088 and 1990. Finally, re­
member thnl A IDS Is fatal.
Therefore, since as you say teens
toduy are smarter than ever
before. It seems obvious that

using or doing anything thnl
causes you to forget whut's
Important niul distract you from
real i t y must d efin itely he
avoided.
(Mary Balk Is a C srlllisd
A d d i c t i o n Pr svsnt l on Pr o­
fessional and counselor. Write
her al Ihs Sanford Herald, or call
tho Seminole County Schools’
Drug Prevention office, 323-5710.)

MOVIELANO on,, in 322 121*

Mental illness
has warning signs, too.
For il free IxMiklrl
nlHHit m enial Illness, rail
I 800-433-5959

Wurj (7-0, Sirtord
SO PASH*

rnn bjs

NO ESCAPE

UGHTNINGJACK[mini10:29

W elcome
N ew com er!

Learn lo see the sickness.
A m rrlru n M enial llr.illli Kutitl 5 !!

^
^

•'Florida's own Newcomer
service" * dedicated to
welcoming new residents.
It is our desire lo make you feel
welcome and f o acquaint you
with ourcily.
If you are new in the area, or
kn w ofa family who is, aphone
call will bring a prompt visit
from our representative. She has
brochures, civic Information,
maps; and (o help with your
shopping needs, cards of inlroductiun and gifts from local
merchants.
Local merchants ure also en­
couraged to inquire about the
availability of our services.

SANEQBB
GRACE M. STINECIPHER

m
m
0 m

322-4381

LAKE MARY
r»*&lt;

Sanford Woman's Club

czA/lay

FLORENCE O'CONNOR

323-

4983

aij J B i unefi

A Foust For The Entire Family
Ilomcbukcd Goodies For Side
Entertainment

Sunday, May 1 from 8:30 a.in, to 1:30 p.m,
Sunford Civic Center

Children$1.50

Adults: $3JO
14ft i

Qjteeling Stance ^gc.
Homo Office
004-734-6031

&amp;

�f «

4 t - S a n fo rd H e ra ld , S a n fo rd , F lo rid a - F rid a y , A p ril 29, 1994

—

LET US REPLENISH THE SEED OF FAITH THROUGH ...

Regaiar Church Attendance
Baptist

PAMR V WO WHIP C IN 11B
if row Airport fil'd
Senloid Fl&gt;jr73

n u t BAPTIST CHURCH
OFLONQWOOD
M l E SR434
Longwood. FL » 7 W W94
1403)3303,17
Sunday
BibU Study
» 30 a m
Worthip
1Q4Sam
Woryhip
S 00 P m
Wadnaaday Wotyhip
700 p m
Nunary •All aanicaa A
Daal Minlllry

T«r &gt;77*777

Paiior Jail Krafl
Sunday School
9 30 a m
Worthip Sanrlca
10 30 am
Wadnatday Service
700 p m
Communiiy Prayat Samcaa

CyaryFriday

330pm

ACTS loo
Every Friday

IJO p m

Prayat Maaiino
Nuraary Proddad For
All Sarylcai

“W h a t if I acce p t this
position and find I c a n ’t
ha ndle the responsibility?"
"W h a t If 1 m a rry a n d c h o o s e
the w ro n g p a rtne r?”
“W h a t If I fly to Paris a n d m y
p lane cra s h e s o ve r the Atlantic
O cean?”
W h a t if I ga ve you a solution
to the "w hat ifs"? A s long as
w e continue to function, w e
m ust m ake decisions
dally. M a n y decisions
ca rry little risk. O th e rs
m a y c h a n g e the c o u rs e of
o u r lives.
H o w e ve r, de cision s
need not be stressful or
frosted with negativity. G o d
is o u r S o u rc e of positive
pow er. In M atthew 2 1 :2 2 , w e
are p ro m ise d ... “w h a te v e r y o u
ask in prayer, yo u will receive, if you
h a ve faith." T h o u g h o u r p ra ye r m a y or
m a y not be a n s w e re d a s w e e x p e ct...o u r
p ra ye r is a lw a ys h e a rd a nd a nsw e re d as
G o d wills it.
Visit G o d this S a b b a th . Talk with
H im a n d trust H im with you r
dally c o n c e rn s . Let go of your
“w hat Ifs”. W h y not?

TOOpm

PALMETTO AVENUE
BAPTIST CHURCH
3S3S Palmatio Ave
Ray Ronald D WllUama
Paalor
Sunday School
B4Sam
Morning Wonhlp
11 00 a m
Cvengeliilk: Bervtcel
*00pm
Wad Prayar 1
Si M l Study
730pm
Independent MltHonvy

FREEDOM
ASSEMBLY Of 0 00
WORSHIP CENTER
79*06 OrlandoUr.Banlord
(Old layra Ptaja)
407 333 SOM
Oltica Moura BS
Paata Ranoall Hall We. tar
Sunday
Chriallan
CducalKW Ciaai
10 00 am
Morning Woramp
1100am
Evening Serrica
*00 pm
WadntadayMidWaak
niobia Study
700pm
Monday through
Friday Prayar
100lo300pm
Nuraary Pro'tdad

WESTVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
4100 Paul* Road (4«A)
Sanlord. Florida
Or BoOOy M UcFaiii
Paato*
Sunday School
*00 am.
Morning Worahlp
1000 am
Draciplaahlp Training
•00 p m
Eyamng Worahlp
700 p m
Wad Prayar Sardca
700 p m

Baptist

Catholic

CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH

3101WIdSl .Sanford
3332*14

Don Hicks
Pallor
dairy Pugala
Attoc Pallor
jackM Thornai Mmiiterol MuHc
SundaySchool
*30 am
Morning Worahlp S IS * 1100 am
Eyanlng Worship
*00 pm
Wad Prayar Sardca
8 30pm

ALL SOULS CATHOLIC CHURCH
*03 Oak Ava .Sanford, PL
Faihn Ricnard W Trout
Paalor
Sal Vigil Matt
SOD pm
Sun Mail
7 49 am
(HltpamcBOOam)
10 30 A 1300
Contusion. S*l
4 004 43 pm

Christian

COUHTRVIIDB BAPTIST
CHURCH
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Country Club Road. Laka Maw
(Diaclpl** ol Christ)
Aiary M Long
Paalor
1607 S 6*n1ouJAvs
Sunday School
* 4S pm
S
Edward
Johntoh
Pastor
Praaching A Worshiping 10 4S a m.
day School
945am/
0iblaS1udyu.it
&lt;*£#«*» |0L„ i„i 610pm
ship
1100am
&amp;h*'W&gt;g 4 Frowiw nd^ _T30 P m
Wsd1 Pray §rW % *\
*"? 30 p ifl* *
Tuasday 6*b*a Stirty
1000 a m
Nyrt#nr PffJYtdttd
All Am Walcoma Hata .,
Nuraary A vatlabia

519PamA*s,Sanford
W*vFloydfit***,Jr
Pastor
Par JrrnComaii MirtularofMusic
Htr fiicfntjr(Jf&amp;ekMinialarofYouth
Mra CathyPMlilo
P'a-School/Chiidran*Miniifhat
SundayWorship 013110JOam

Sunday School
OllCipitiRIp Training

0 15am
6 15 pm

EvtningWorship
300pm
Wad PrayarBanica
613pm
Nursaryf*»ovida»T

' t #i U
VI -T

k . '

A*

P IU T CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST. LONQWOOD
*73 Markham Woods Rd
Comar of E E Williamton Rd

To List Your
Church Services
On This Page
Contact The
Advertising
Dept.
322-2611

1:1-13

Church 01 Christ
LONQWOOD CHURCH OP CHRIST
1011 Huy 17 S3 1 ml NIO Hoy 434
333 3 A » 6900633, *04 7363170
Sun Worahlp 1030am A B P M
You are inyited lo riall, tludy. and
eoiihip with ua In lha near future A
Blandly graaling Mwayt awailt

C h u rc h of G o d
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
CHURCH. U.C.C.
Ray Arthur Array
Pallor
Sunday Wonhlp
1000am
Church School
1019am
Fallow IMP
ItOOam
' COME QROW WITH US"
OUR TEMPORARY WORSHIP
LOCATION IS
Laaa Mary Communiiy Budding
3B0 N Country Club Road
Laka Mary
Mailing Addrtil
Chriallan Fallowihlp Church.

Herb Stenstrom and Staff
MINCER MOTORS
CARS *t TRUCKS
S EE

D IA N A M IN C E R &amp;
EM PLO YEES

ucc

Charismatic

USED CAR8
BANK FINANCE OR BUT HIKE A PAV HIRE
H IE B. Highway 1743. tankard
Sanlord (407) *3*1121 Orlanda (407) ttS-MBS

A.J. LOSSING
tANSFER 8, STORAGE

nil &amp; A A a r lo R o c h a
A L L IE D V A N L IN E S
07 S. Pine Ave., Sai\ford

NuraaryCaraItgini uii 00'•m
Through1000amSarvica

Wtdnasdar
Holy Euchafiat

f 00 p m

SM IT TY 'S M OW ERS

M ike 8u Connie Smith

2 0 9

W

2 9 th

S t.

JIM ROWE
. t

Hardware
Stores

This Space
Available
Call
322-2611
AUTO FARTS

322-3213

f4

FIRST PRESSTTSRtAN CHURCH
OP BANPORO
Phone 177 7*67
Ray Burra 0 Sr OH
Patti*
Chuich School
1 30 am
Morning WorlWp
1000 am
Nuraary
BoniorHighFaiiooiMp
Sunday
3 30 p m
Wadnaaday Firmly Night
Suppar
3 30 p m
Youth Oiowpa
voyagan |K 4 Qiadaa)
High Voltage |S*Ofodee)
Juii Erianda"
Singna Group
700pm
Pallor a Rida Study
700 p m
FIRST PRCSBTTIRIAM CHURCH
OE LAKE MARY
ITS W WUbutAra. taka Mary
Ray AP Slarant
Pair.*
Church Prayar Mailing
BI3am
Church School
* 41 a m
Momma Wonhlp
HOOim
Youth Oroui
* (JO p
Wad ChotiPiaclIca
700pm
Thun Youth Choir
E30pm
MARKHAM WOOOS
PRE SBVTIRIAN CHURCH
3310 Markham Wood! Road
Laka Mary
pno*aU&gt;X)V&gt;
Or Don T OaBarolia
Pan *
Sunday School. AM Agaa * 30i m
Church Barricaa
■ 13 A 10.30 am
Nunary Provided
Youlh Oroup, Sunday
1 00 p m
Pra School Mon IhtuFrl
Mlo 13
Monthly PamMy Night Suppar
Third Wadnaaday ol
Each Month
*30 pm

Friday
Rovolation
21:9-27

22:1*17

SPECIAL ORDERS
DELIVERY SERVICE

210 S. French Ava. 321-7169

O S B O R N 'S B O O K
A N D B IB L S S T O R S

2599 Sanford Avo.

Lutheran

LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED
RON RUSSI 6 STAFF

2626 Iroquois Av. 322-2070
CINTRAL SYSTEMS
fl*«r*u7«nr and Food S»nica
Equipment and Supplies
Parly Goods and Paper Goods

2420 Ifoquol* Ava.
Sanlord 32773

330-1660
SEMINOLE TRINITY CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL and DAYCARE
PraatfwglBvu &lt;3grad*

‘A ternary at Ctudi ck 0M or SanAnP

AbaKi Currtoikrm
Bafoya and AAay Bdwol Oay Cara M l Vri.
OSori* Rurrtsf Prtncftud
SO I W . 22nd 8 L , S a n fo rd • 321-2723

D O N 'S G L A S S
&amp; M I R R O I i

303S. LAURELAVE., SANFORD

321-2360
in * *

UPRAIA PRESBYTERIAN
W 73in A Uptata R d, Sanlo'd
Ray. Danain Shaa
Paalor
Sunday School
9 am
Church Banlca
ID •m
OH*a Study
Tuaa
9 a m 4 7 30pm

WERIVA PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
FIRST UNITED
711 Wtliva Springs Lana
METHOOIST CHURCH
m*
419 Park Ava
Mai Samuat ft 0 Maasay Pastor
327-43/1
Church Sarvkas 0 30 and 1100 a m
Clifford Maivin
Pastor
Sunday School
Oamal Sahara
Chqp Dtraclor
(Ail agatl
9 45 A M
Morning Worship 0 30 41100am
Nurtary Providad
Coffaa Fauowthrp
9 30 am
Sunday School
9 45 a m
Youth Fallow ship
430pm ABUNDANT LIFE CHURCH
(Evangalteal Prasbytartan)
Woman s Falldwlhip
105 Commarca S t, Laka Mary
fit Monday
It 00am
(40713336070
Woman * Clfda
IWHBkjr
PasfJ*
2nd Monday
Sunday Sc hool
930 a m
Morning Worship
10 30 a m
Man * Prayar Braakfasl
1st Thursday
030am
Man's FaMowshtp Dmrw
3rd Thursday
630pm
Nurtary Providad For Alt Sarvica*

Longmood, Phona

LUTHIRAN CHURCH OF
THE REDEEMER
tMitaouri Synodl
7526 Oak Ava
Ha* Elmwr A Rauichar
Pastor
Sunday School
915 am
Worship Sarvica
ID 30 a m
Nursary Provtdad
Weak day KlmSargarian and
Pra Kmijaigartan Prugrun
For Information Cad 322 3557
or 3230610

HOLY CROSS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH

*01ParkAvanua
SanfordFlorida
Rav.CAlfradCola,4t

RIVER OARB
PRESS VTERIAN CHURCH. P C A
&gt;331W lake Mary B M .
Laaa Wary
•Tndrtwnal Vafuai
Coraamporary Style'
Worahlp
ItOOam
Or John Montgomery Same* Paalor
330 9103

CHRIST UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
aot Tuckar Orht*
(Comar Tucaar Dr A CM 437)
Ray Larry Armbruil
Paalor
Talapnona 333 7*00
Sunday School
B 30 a m
Inter Million
10 30 am
Morning Wonhlp
1100 a m
Wadnatday B&lt;bta Study
7 00 p m
Chddnn ■ Tana included mVtoeriup
Nunary provided lor
Bad.aI and Small Chudian
1Small Enough To LOyatou Growing In Chrlir To Sana You”

iXau.

ST JOHN S EASTERN
ORIHOOOl CHURCH
2743 Country Club Road
Ray Donald Bahdt
Paalur
Church Phone
33141*3
thyme Liturgy
1000am
SundaySchool
1000am
Conlattloo By Appointment

WINN-DIXIE STORKS
and Employees

C A B

. Complata Punarak Sarrica* •Cramallon '
&gt;Maikan ( Morrumanli • Prinrangamanli

^

CONQREQATIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH (NACCC)
3401 S Park a&gt;a
133 4364
Ray Thomae P Tkachuk Mimilar
Church School
9 361030 am
Worahlp
ItOOam
Fallowtrap Luncheon 6 30 p m . m i ,
3nd Wadnatday
Erery leal Saturday 6 oo a m Many
Club Braaklatl

HARRELL 4 BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION
David Beverly and Staff

BRAM BEAUTY SALON
BETTY WEBER

*v

Eastern Orthodox

2506 S, Park Dr., Sanford
3 2 2 -2 8 1 1

i U

Preebyterlen

OOOOSHIPHCRO EVANGELIC AL
LUTHERAN CHURCH
OESANTORO
ELCA
3*17 Orlando Or (MwylTOT)
Phorva 322 7313
Palncia P Johnaon
Paalor
Sunday School
AdullBibia Study
*30 am
Wonhlp Saryica
1030 am
Nuikary Proyidad

Congregational

1uallty Furniture
Discount Prices
4050 Hwy. 48,1 Mila East of M
Sanford, FL
3 X 1 * 9 9 0 0

ISO* 8. FTJINCH AVI.

3 2 1 -8 5 8 0

v*

pHAY

9T PETER S
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
700 Rinahtrl Road
Laka Mary. Florida
(40/1444 LORD
Tha Rav (1 L Oarga
Hactor
Sunday
Holy Eucharist
0 00am
Christian Education
-AIIAgas
900am
Holy Eucharist
tOOOa m
Chlidran's Church
10 00 a m
(Education Wing)

DOVE’S WAV FELLOWSHIP
470 Liva Oaks Bird .
Castalbarty, FL 37716
Phona 40/3396433
Frank 4 Char loll a Droan
Pastors
Sunday
1000am 4630pm
Wadnatday
/30pm

321 29*1

519 E, 1st St. • Sanford

Informal Ion on Church Funcfioni od
Bpdilual CounaaHng
Call 7*04 T7S 7722

Lutheran

Episcopal

, CHURCH OP OOD
SOI W 72nd Slraal
Her Donald E Wtggmi
Paalor
Sunday School
* 43 a m
Morning Wonhlp
to 30 a m
Eyanoellilic Santee
6 00pm
Family Endchmanl
Banlca Wadnaaday
700pm

PO Bor *60666
Laka Mary, FL 337D30S6*
Telephone 32331 IS

STENSTROM
REALTY

Tholiday Barrica
TOO P u
MadilallonfMint Claaafand

HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN
CHURCH OE LAKE MARY
7*0 Sun Drlru. LaM Mary
Paul Hoyar
Pallor
Sunday Wonhlp
Barrica
BE 1030am
Saturday Barrica
3 30pm
Sunday School*
Adult BitlaCiaai
B IS am
Holy Croaa Blory Hour Praachool
For Information Call 3330 7B7

S c n p tu rts S t le t l r d b y Th« Amarcen DtYa Sooefy Copyright 1994. Koilier WJlwm* Nentpeper Sen, itat P O Dot 800S. Chartotlainlla VA 3390B

Sunday Church Sarylcai
1000 a m
and Sunday School
Wadnaaday
8 0 0 pm
Nunary Ayaiiabia hi All Samcaa
Reading Room Mon Wad
Fn -Sal
10am 1pm
7SB-7706

Lvanlni Struct
000pm
Wadnaaday S*mc*
7 00 p m
OldTruth*loraNa« Day

lo out tarrieaa
erviee
1030 a m
M adtl atlorVHMMnBrt.ec I urn and

SHOWER DOWN OP BUSSINQS
201 Elm Aranua Sanlord
311 BIBB
tmolhy Hudaon
Paalor
SundaySchool
1000am
Morning Wonhlp
110 0 am
TuaadayPiayar
7 13pm
TueedeyBiMeSludy
743pm

Tuosday Wodnesday Thursday
Revelation Rovolalion Rovelation
7:9-17
5:1-14
21:1-8

M onday
Mark

Isaiah
'86:1-24

[

United Church
* Of Christ

U C S S apMEiMl Centre
U S A South Voiuna Aya
Coma, ol Ofaval and Voluala Am
Ray Wargo at Ann Schmwi Pett.tr

Methodist

Christian Science

JOROAM BAPTIST CHURCH
WO UptsJ* Rd . Sttnford
3234072
Qtorg* Slvdd
Paitor
fcundty school
1000 am
Morning Sthfica
1100 am

FIRST CHURCH
OP I H I NAZARENE
M l Sanlortf Ay,
John J Hinton
Paeiur
Sunday t&lt;Mol
B4S am
Morning WofkWp
10 4# a m
Voulh How
• 00 » m
Evangalial flarytea
BOO pm
MidyyaaA Banrtca Wad
7 00pm
Nunary Pro.wad tor all Berrien

OUTREACH 0ELIVERANCE
CENTER
3331 Sipaa Ava . SerVotd
334 1010
Joiephme Ba&gt;ilngton
Paato.
Mol hat HowWI
Co PaaIoi
*
Mini
|lay
Hobart Kay
[ran genii
Brother Die let ion
MoihafByfd
Mi, nonary
CMriaaHayt
Deacon
S u m Plan 0 Kay
Secretary
S u m Dk l x yon
Drier Board* *
SundaySchool
1000am
Sunday Banrtci
II 00am
Tuaaday Eyanlng
Bit*! Study
B00 pm
Thuitday Evanutg Pmta
and Worahlp Saryu a BOO pm

jJ i . u

^ v8unday

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF SANFOAO

CILEBRAT10N CHURCH
LAMB MART
ITSW LekariewAve
Laia Mary. Flood#
Ov Kerin Chubb Pallor 331 0310
Sunday Morning
Caleb, illon Service
10CO am
Wadnaaday Nigni
Bible Study
700pm

T h e “W H A T IFs?

PINECREIT BAPTIST CHURCH
SOI E. Airport Blyd, Banlord
Ray Jamaa Kinlim
Pallor
Sunday School
g x )a m
Morning Worihlp
1100 Am
Eyanlng Worship
TOOpm.
Iltta
niWimmrl
r*tLJin*itMY

EMMANUIL
ASSEMBLY 07 QOO
330 Commarclal Slraal
(Ac rota from lit* Orlc Canlar
Sanford. F L 13771
Telephone 1407133V17I9
Pallor Dadd DaCan
Sunday School
•
IX im
Wwthip SanrtCO
1030 i m
Mid Waal
Homy FatloyyWup Oroupt
(Call lordalariil
Viailora Walcoma
Nuria ry Provided

Nazarene

Interdenominational

Assembly 01 God

1606

1000*mt700pm,730pm

Seventh Day Adventist

Talt phona (40 /) 377 4011

Interdenominational

Eucharist
7 30am
Childran i Chapaf
9 00 a m
Sunder School
915am
CALVARY CHRISTIAN CENTER
Choral Euchariil
10 00 a m
.
M ow am st
Nurtary Sarvica* Providad
J
San lord
Mar * Suita Poole
Pnlof,
Wadnaaday
10 00 am
Sunday
7 m
Morning Sir vice
1000 am
Power A Pfalia '
9 00pm
Wadnatday Saryica
7 OO p m '

Tuasday
Thursday

700am

30p

THE F O LLO W IN G FIRM S
E N C O U R A G E YO U TO
A T T E N D YO U R H O U SE
O F W O R S H IP TH IS W E E K
■ARNBS HEATINO A
AIR CONDITIONING
COMPLETE SYSTEMS y ADD OHS
FREE ESTIMATES • SERVICE ALL BRANDS
RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL
HEAT PUMP EXPERTS'

ORACE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
4*0 Country Dub Road
laka Mary
□arid A. Liddell. Jr
Pallor
Morning WoriMp *306 10 30 am
SundaySchool
910am
U MYF
*0 0 pm
Monday Bible Study
TO00am
Nurtary Proridad For All Banlcat

Hillhaven
322-8500
n a sMfuctTv p u n -.
« . Rd. 46A ai Shlnakart Rd. laka Mary

322-4263

I INTERNMENT | |CREMATION| | BHPPBW | ADCOCK ROOFING&amp;SHEETMETI
800 F R E N C H A V E .

322-9558

LONQWOOD • 767-5101

O R ■Shorty ' Smllh and
Bill Walborn

9th SI. and Laural Ava.
Sanlord 322-2131
K IN KERN'S
TRANSMISSIONS
323-3040
500 Laural Avo. Sanford

J#*
Famous Recipe.
C0UN1RYCHICKEN
'■IT'S HONEV DIPPED”
1905 FRENCH AVE.
321-MS0

324-4015

STENSTROM, McfNTOSH
J U L IA N , C O L B E R T

C iM s m y wad F im r a I Hoaw

915 W. 2nd 81. 323-3517

BRISSON
FUNERAL HOME

2927 S. Orlando Or., Suits J-10 •Sanford
OPEN TO PUBLIC
Mon-Frl9to5‘ Sal9to t

BAldwlrv-FAlRcIlltd OaKIawn P ar(l

■ryt, cinrrcrcuwn

. ,0f
GARDEN CHAPEL
funerala
t PLEASECELL FORPUCE ^FORMATION

AaZ Janitorial
Supply Co.

The Staff O f

Health Care Center

This Space
Available
Call
322-2611
2650 S. Orlando Drive, Sanford

323-6684

MAR* HILL S.D A. CHURCH
BOOE. 2nd St Banlord
333964*
SabbaihSehool
911am
Oirina Worthip
1 100 1 m
Pallor
Dnance L Wright
407 327 *400
Attoc Itie Pallor Edward E Doitrj
107 974 9(74
CommunicalKini Sacral try
AIGratyat
*M 7*9 (273

^

iQHW c ^ « a M8‘ p-A

j407)»2 2171

Pbal OSlca Boa 4*4*
auRaZE.aunbwWBM*
too Waal Flrtt (Mat
Bardord. Flertdi 137714*4*

J iO n » 4 9l1*

This Space
Available
Call
322-2611
M M A P P U A N C V C P t n A IN C
■gjPfydM ill t M4AM MMAP#*
M N M A A (LIOTRtO a MATT AO a C ARMSR
B R n ttM t,,

3 2 2 -3 8 8 3 ■
LIT

TM I MoKISSIN AQINCY
Insurance

Carl Borgman * Employees
COLONIAL
ROOM

H

I l f i f ire A l \ i i y v l

RESTAURANT
N lri.e a e a .y rn
323-MU*

u i(.n q t T jT , tfaraaa

1100 A Ifpaneh Awnua
Sanford •322-7M3

w

s

M

a

a

�R e lig io n
'

■

”

; . . . _ ; ,‘t .:' *

1111

r

~

.......

_•
__

■

Talented teene trek to Tampa

Irx E m B
*

Sanford H erald, Banlord, Florida - Friday, April 29, 1994 - SB

“ *■

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

B a n q u e t, R evival p la n n e d fo r M a y
SANFORD — The II ourc of Refuge Mlnlalrlra, 1001 Cclrry
Ave.. In sponsoring a Mother's Day Banquet on Saturday, May
7. at 0 p.m. at the Holiday Inn downtown Sanford.
The speaker Is Evangelist Ruby Brown of Kissimmee Church
ofOod In Christ.
For more Information, cnll 32 1-3790 or 324-4711.
On May 8 through 11, Evangelist Janet Moran, of Cocoa, will
conduct a four night Crusade at the House of Refuge sanctuary.
Corlcttn Harris Vaughn of Detroit, pastor of Holy Ghost Full
Gospel Baptist Church will minister on May 12 and HI.
These powerfully anointed women of Clod travel worldwide
ministering dellvenuice to God's people.
Service time is Sunday at 6:30 p.m. and May 0-13.7:30 p.m.
The Rev. Elijah Richardson, pastor.

Brian McIntosh, left, James
Walker and Karl Keith sent out
an alert to motorists ol a car
wash at Taco Boll to benefit
the Sanford Church of God
Youth Group recently. The
young people worked hard the
entire day to raise money lor
the Church of God state Teen
Talent competition In Tampa
this weekend. The local teens
will be performing their entry
"The Pledge" In hopes of
bringing home the top prize.

Vjk p 1
i

i

L* ■
'U

I

M o m ’s M o rn in g O u t P ro g ra m to b e g in
LAKE MARY — Holy Cross Lutheran Church. 760 Sun Dr.. Is
beginning a Mom's Morning Out Program, a play group wllh
age appropriate toys and games.
It will start May 6 from 8:45 to 11:43 a.in. and continue each
Friday. A donation of $6 per child, per session will lie collected.
Children 18 months to 6 years old will be accepted. The
child's Immunization record Is required fur enrollment and
must be up to date.
It will run on a first come basis however, you may make a
reservation for your child In advance or for more Information,
cnll Bonnie Hrmlngcr at 321-8013.

M u rillo to a p ea k at W e k iv a A s s e m b ly
LONGWOOD — Mario Murtllo, nationally known evangelist
and author of the best seller on Christian Revlvnl. "Fresh Fire."
will speak at Wekiva Assembly. 1675 Dixon Rd.. on Sunday,
May 15 through Tuesday, May 17. Sunday services are at 8
and 10:30 n.m. and 6 p.m. Monday and Tuesday evenings
services start nl 7 p.m. There Is no admission charge.
Murillo Is a native of San' Francisco, where he founded a
campus ministry, called Resurrection City In the Seventies. He
ministered to both campus students and anti-war de­
monstrators. Since 1080. he has traveled In America as an
evangelist und Is recognized as one of America's most gifted
speakers.

L ad ie s L u n c h e o n c o m in g
SANFORD — The Ladles' Ministry ol First Baptist Church,
will be having Its 3rd Annual Ladles Luncheon on May 7 at
11:30 n.m. In the Suulord Civic Center annex. A lovely day Is
planned for the attendees. Including a presen la l Ion by Judy
Uyrum. area director of Beaut Icon trol. Make-up, colors and
tmugc will Ire Included In the presentation, nod two ladles will
recleve makeovers.
"From the Heart," a trio from Clermont, will be making their
third appearance at the function. Twenty hostesses sire
decorating their tables In vurlous themes. The day will end
with door prize drawings, the grand prize being an AAA plus
membership.
Chlldcn three and up will be .entertained by Puzzles I Inclown, a Christian entertainer, Nursery Is provided for under 3
years of age.

J u n k ya rd s a le n e x t w e e k e n d
SANFORD — Sanford ft Daughters Junkyard Sale at First
Christian Church. 1607 S. Sanford Ave.. will Ik - held May 0 and
7 from t)u,m. to 5 p.m. at the church.
Sponsored by the CWF. the event will Include a bake sale,
plunts and lunch served from 11 a.in. to 1 p.m.

Youth W riting C ontest underway
LAK E MARY — Christian Writers Instlluc announces a
Youth Writing Contest forages 15-18.
The writer of the 25 best essays on the theme "M y Writing
Dreams and Goals” will be Invited to attend the Youth 1rack at
CWI's 46th Annual Writers' Conference In Whcnlon. III.. June
2-5.
Submit a 700-to 1.000-word essay on your writing goals.
Wrtle and tell us your dreams! All entries must he typed,
double-spaced, on 8Wi x 11 Inch paper. Include name, address,
telephone number and date of birth.
Mali entries to: Christian Writers Institute, 177 E. Crystal
Lake Ave.. Lake Mary. EL 32746. For Information, call
324*5465,
CWI and Strung Communications, publisher of "Charisma."
arc sponsoring a student newspaper contest lo Identify
excellence In high school journalism.
Entries must be newspapers published by students. Deadline
Is May 2. Mall entries lo Christian Writers Institute.

H w U m o lo by Roger H m nek

Jones in concert for
Friend Day service
LAKE MARY Local Jazz
artist. Jacqueline Jones will
appear In concert at Crossings
Community Church, 390 Longwood-latkc Mary Rd.. this Sun­
day. May I. during the 10 u.m.
service.
The community Is Invited to
share In the celebration of Friend
Day at Crossings. There will tie
clowns, games and fun for the
kids.
•
Jones Is u well-known artist In
ilit* Central Florida nrcu. By the
age ol 19. Jones already had |5
years to her credit as a pro­
fessional gospel singer. Today

her performances are a spirited
blend of Jazz, rhythm and blues
und contemporary top 40.
Between performances In
Atlantic City. Washington and
New Orleans, she draws au­
diences In her home town of
Orlnndo. Throughout the year,
she generously contributes her
time and talent to local benefits.
Including the American Cancer
Society. United Negro College
Fund und AIDS fund raisers.
For more Information, contact
the church at 324-5433.
As always, nursery will be
provided during the service.

Jacquslln Jones

W hat gives in today’s churches?
Are churches now finding tlial charily
begins at home?
Church people today arc not contributing
as much as they used lo for their lessfortunate neighbors. This Is leading to feurs
lfiat we arc tired of giving, no mailer how
good the cause.
Th e hlbllcul "Love thy neighbor as
lliyscll" lias been replaced as a guide for
living land glvlngl by Ihe worldly "Look out
llrsl for No. I."
Ii may not always appear (hat church
people arc selfish. Total dollar giving lo U.S.
churches i.h up. But pruportlonul giving Is
down - tram an average of 3.1 |&gt;crcciit of
family Income In 1968 to 2.6 |&gt;crccnt today.
More disturbing to some, however. Is how
the money Is being spent.
The bulk of It stays In the local purlsli lo
provide services for the parishioners who
contributed the money. In effect, church
people are spending more of the money they
give on themselves.
"Young churchgoers particularly," says
one religious olTIclul, "arc more likely to
choose a church bused on what benefit they
can ex|H-ct from It - such as fumlly oriented
programs or even a good handball court."

ItBLIOION

Georg•
Plagenz

Therefore, less of the money being
dropped Into collection plates an Sunday Is
going to programs outside the walls of the
local church.
C h u r c h s p e n d i n g on c h a r i t a b l e
benevolences - "everything from soup
kitchens lo missionary work •• Is shrinking
compurcd wllh spending on ministers'
salaries, building drives und programs for
members." sayB a nonprofit research orga­
nization.
One current report focuses on giving
pntterns In the Presbyterian Church In the
United States and the Reformed Church in
America. It was done by Roger Nemeth and
Donald Luldens. sociology professors at

Hope College tn Holland. Mich. Th e y
condole: "A consumer mentality towards
chunff membership Is now common" in
both denominations.
The two rescurchers say It goes back to
the post-war era when ‘Thousands or
families with young children flooded the
religious markelplacc. searching for u
church by using the same strategies
employed while looking for other consumer
goods and services. It created u heightened
demand for specialized services und pro­
fessionally staffed programs."
These sort of things cost money and that
left the local parish church with even less to
contribute to denominational headquarters
for charitable programs und benevolence.
To da y $4 out of every 85 given by
Presbyterians to their church stay In the
local parish.
Something thut has added to the cost of
running the local church is the loss of
volunteer workers. Many Americans Und
themselves Just too busy lo contribute their
time as freely as did previous generations.
The primary victims at tills self-centered
turn tuken by locul churches urc the (Kx»r.
the needy and the homeless.

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
A U U N C I CHURCH
Community Amine# Church, M l 3 E*H lak# Dtire. Wlnlar Spring,
Neighborhood Alliance Church. 301 M*Hh*m Wood, fid . longwood
S tn lord Attune* Church, 1*01 S. ParhAta, Bmlord
ASSEMBLY OP QOD
Emmanuel AatamWy ol Ood. MO Commercial S t, B»ntord
Family Worihip C,nt,r. I770W Alrporl Bird ,8»nlotd
Fr,*dom AiMmbly ol Ood. 2900 Orlando D r. Banlord
Wall Ira Ataambiy ol Ood, IBIS Dr,on Rd. Longwood

■APTIII
Antioch Baptlil Church. Orlado
Calrary Bapillt Church, Cryttai lake A y* 4 3rd B l. La** Mary
CaiMtbarry Bapllal Church. 770 Bammou Jird
Central Baplltl Church. 3101W HI Bl
Chuluota Plral Bapllal
Claaroaler Mlaaionary Dapirat Church. Boulhrtatl Rd
Countryalda Bapllal Church. Country Club H d, La** Mary
Plral Baplltl Chuich. BIB Park AY*
Plrll Baplltl Church of Allamonl* Bptlngt. Rl 434, Allamonl* Spring,
Plral Baplltl Church ol Foraat City
First Baplltl Church ot Qan**#
Flral Baplltl Church. Markham Wood,
First BaptlilChuich nl La**Monro*
Flral Baplltl Church ol Longwood. SOI [a il SR *34
Flral Baptlil Church ol Otlaan
Flral Baplltl Church ol Otiado
Flral Baplltl Church ol flanlando Bptlngt
Flrt I Shiloh MIaitonary Baptlil Church, 1101W 13th Bl
Fountain Htad OapMal Church. Otiado
Hop* Baplltl Church, Foratl City Community Canlar, Foratl Cily
Indapandanc* Baplltl Mlu.. Clrlc Laagua Bldg. Longwood
Jordan Million ary Baplltl Church, 920 Up tala Rd
lighthout* Baplltl Church, BBS Longwood - Lata Mary Rd
Lakavlaw Bapllal Church, I HI lakavlaw A rt . Lak* Mary
Macedonia Minion Baplltl Church. Oak Hill Rd, Otlaan
Mlaaionary Baplltl Church, North Rd, Entarpria*
Morning Qiory Baplltl Church, OanaaaHwy
Ml. Moriah Prtmlltr* Baplltl Church, 1101 Locutl At*. Banlord
Ml.OUrt MIt nonary Baplltl Church, Banlando Spring* Rd . Longwood
Ml. Binai Million ary Baplltl Church, I MO Jar ry At*
Ml. Zion MltiMnary Baplltl Church. Slpat At*.
Nan BalhatMItalonary Church, BlhBi A Hickory Art
Nan Ml. Calvary MUtlonary Baptlil Church. I IDS W 17th 61
Ha* Salem Primlllt* Baplltl Chuich. 1JOB W. 17th SI
NawTtalamant Baplltl Chuich, Quality Inn, North Longwood
Naw Ml. lion Baplltl Chuich, 1770 Paar At*
Natt Lila FMoarahip. 4BBI E. Lak* O r, Canal barry
Northaide Bapftlt Church. Chuluota
Psacaful Zion Baplltl Church. I IB* Pin* 81, Airamonla Spring*
PaopH't Baplltl Church, 1701W. 1il Bl , Banlord
Plnacrail Baplltl Church. «01 E. Airport Bltd
Praia* Lak* Bapllal Church. Rldg* ltd.. Fain Park
prorttat MUtlonary Baplltl Church, Midway
PreWdanoo Mlaaionary Baplltl Church. *Mt Douglaa A t*. Bookarlown
Second Snrton Mlaaionary Bapllal Church Waal Banlord
Smyrna Bapllal Church, 7S0 Otarbrook Or. Caaaalbarry
Blartlght Baplltl Church. IBO Bahama M .
Bl. J*n*a Ml talonary Baplltl Church, flR 415, Oil tan
II. Johnt Mlaaionary Baplltl Church. MB Longwood At#..
Allamonta Spring*

J

SI Luka MUtlonary Baplltl Church ol Camaron Clly.lnc
SI Paul Btpntl Church. *13 Pin# At*
Si Mallhaw, Baplltl Church Canaan Hglt
SI John i MUtlonary Baplitt Church, PTOCyprati SI.
Cprlngllald MUtlonary Baplltl Church, 171h SI. A C*da&gt; At*
Palmetto At* DaptUI Church. 7B7B Palmetto A rt
Tempi* Baptul Church, Palm Spring! Rd , Alumonlt Spring!
Victory flipllit Church, Old Orlando Rd *1 Hatlar At*.
Wttltlaw Baplltl Church. 4100 F*ola Rd &lt;*SA)
William Chapal MUtlonary Uiplul Church, Mark A William 81.
Allamonl* Spring*
Zion Hop* BaplUI Chuteh. 717 Orang* Aw.
CATHOLIC
All Boult Catholic Church. B07 Oak At*. Banlord
Church ol Ih# Nallttly, Lak* Mary
Our Lady ollh# Lakaa Ctihoilc Church, t310Maalmlli*n. Otllona
Bl. Anna Cal hoi ic Chuich. Dogwood Trail, StBaty
Bl. Augutlin* Calhoun Church, Bunt*! 0 -, naar Button Rd , Caatalbarry
SI Clara Calholic Community mean ai Otlaan Civic Canlar
St Mary Magdalant Catholic Chuich, Mallland At* , Allamonl# Spring*
SI. Mary* Ukranlan Catholic Church. 245 McCoy O r. Apopka
CHRISTIAN
Flrtl Chtltllan Church. 1B07 S Sanlord A rt
Flrtl Chrltlian Churcho! longwood, 1*00 E E Wimarnton Rd. Longwood
Calabratlon Church Laka Mary. I7BW Lakavlaw At* . Lak*Mary
Oraca Chtltllan Church, Wilton Clamanlary School IPaoH),
U63 Orang* Bird . Sanlord
Lakavlaw Chtltllan Church. Btar Lak* Rd *1JamUon
Sanlord Chrltlian Church. 730 Up tala Rd . Banlord
Boulh Samlnola Chrltlian Church. 300 W SR *34, Otiado
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
Flral Ghuich ol Chritl Sclanllal. B75 Markham Woodt Rd, Longwood
CHURCH OP CHRIST
Church ol Chilli, 1312 B Park At*
Church ot Chritl al Lak* Elian. U B Hwy 17 77 H . Caitalbany
Church ot Chilli. BOO Palm Spilngt D r. Allamonl* Bpringa
Chuich ot Chilli, Oantta
Church ol Chritl, Longwood
Church ol Chritl, W 17th SI
NorthHda Church ol Chritl, FI* TUitn D r. Mallland
Bou Ih flamInol a Chu rch oI Chilli, 8410 Lak# H Owall Rd
CHURCH OF 000
Church ol Ood, 503 Hickory At*
Church ol Qod, 803 W. 22nd SI
Church ol Ood. Otiado
Church ol Ood Hoi Inti I. Laka Monro*
Church olOod Million, Enltiprlt*
ChurcholOod. 1*02W lOlhSI
Chuich ol Ood In Chritl, Otiado
Church ol Qod ol Prophecy, 2509 S Elm At*
Church ol Qod ol Prophacy. 1708 0 Ptralmmon At*
Church ol Qod al Prophacy. 4&lt;MB Cardial. Otiado
Church ol Ood (7lh Day). Oallona Community Canlar. Oallona (Bun llooml
Rttcut Church ol Qod. 1700 W 13th St .Sanlord
True Church ol Ood, 7700 Ridotwood At# , Banlord
CONQRIOATIONAL
Congr# git tonal Chrlillan Church, 2401S Park A t# , Banlord
EABTIRH ORTHODOX
£attain Orthodot Church, 81. Oauiga, 7001 Dylan Way, Midland
Eitiarn Orlhodot Church, 81. Blatan i ol O C A .

1803 Laka Emma Rd, Longwood
Eaalam Orlhodot Church. SI John Orthodoi. 2743 Country Club Rd.
Banlord
EPISCOPAL
1
All Sainta Epl tcopai Church, E DaBary A r t , Enttrprtu
Chritl Epr tcopai Church, Longwood
Epracopai Church ol lha Naur Cotaram, I7B Tuakawili# R d, Wlnlar Spring*
£pi tcopai Church ol Ih* Raturracllon, 7511. lata Brantley O r, Longwood
Holy Croaa Epracopai Church. Park At* *14lh 81, Sanlord
Si Palara Epracopai Church, 700 Rinehart Rd , Lak# Mary
St Richard'tChurch.SISI Lak* Howail Rd, Wlnlar Park
Th* Church ol Ih# Qood Shephard, 131 Lak* At*., Midland
INTERDENOMINATIONAL
Calrary Chrltlian Canlar, S00 W 4lh S I, Banlord
Ntw Harvatl Chrlillan Fadowthlp. 27BOCountry Club R d, Banlord
Northland Community Church, B30 Dog Track Rd . Longwood
Ouliaach Dtlltaranc* Canlar, 2711Slpat Art., Banlord
JEWISH
Bath Am Synagogue meeting al comar ol Sand Lak* and
County Lin* Rd , Wail I*
Tempi* Shalom, 1708 Elkharn Bltd,Dalton*
LUTHERAN
Aacanilon Lutheran Church, Otarbrook D r. Caatalbarry
Qood Bhaphard Lutheran Church, ELCA. 2917 Orlando Dr. |Hwy. 17971,
Banlord
Holy Croat Lutheran Chuich ol Lake Mary. 7M Bun D r, Lak* Mary
Lord ol LIH Lutheran Church. 39S TutkawdH Rd. Wlnlar Bpringa
Lutheran Church ot Providence. DaIlona
Lutheran Church ol I Ik* Redeemer, 1525 Oak At*.
Matilih Lutheran Church. Ooiden Bay* Ot. B Hwy 17 92. Caatalbarry
St Lukaa Lutheran Church, Rl 42B.BJttla
SI Sttphtn Lutheran Church. 434 lull W. ol 1-4. Longwood
METHODIST
Barnail United Memorial Church. E DaBary At*, Enltrprlt*
Btar Lak* Unllad Malhodltl Church
Hal hi I AM C Church, Canaan HaighH
Cattaibarry Community Unllad Malhodltl Church, Hwy 17 92 at
Pi nay Rldg* Rd . Cat tal barry
Chritl Unllad Malhodltl Church. Tucktr Dr.. Sunland Ettaltt
DaBary Community Malhodltl Church, W Hlghbanka Rd . DaBary
Fir at Unllad Malhodiat Church. ttBPark Art.
Flrtl Malhodltl Church ot Qanat*
Flrat Malhodltl Chuich ot Otiado
Oraca Unllad Malhodltl Church, 499 N Country Club Rd. Lak* Mary
Orant Chapal A M E. Church. Otiado
Oakgrot* Malhodltl Church. Otiado
Otlaan Malhodltl Chuich. cor ol Carpanlar A Murray S I. Otlaan
Ptonaar Malhodltl Church, cor ol Wilbur At*. A Country Club R d.
LaX* Miry
Banlando Unllad Malhodltl Church. 8R 434 and 1-4. Longwood
SI Jamat A M E , 9th at Cyprtii
81. Luka M B Church ol Camaron City, Inc .BatrdaJl oil SR 401.
Bl Mary'a A M.E. Church. BR *15, Otlaan
81 Paul * Malhodlll Church, Otlaan Rd., Enlarprtia
Blrallord Mamortal Church. B OaBary
HAZARINI
Plral Church ol lha Nuarana, 2S41 Banlord Art
Qtntta Church ollh* Nataran*. SR 40, Qtnata
Laka Mary Church alth# Nuarana, 171 tCryalal Lak# Art., Laka Mary
Longwood Chuuhol I he Haitian*. Wayman A Jttaup A r t . Longwood
Markham Wood! Church ol Ih* Nararan*. BR *0, I H mine W

ol 14 at Ih* Wtklta River
PRESBYTERIAN
Deltona Pratbylarlan Church. Holland Bltd A Auttm A t* . Oallona
Flral Pretbyltnan Church ol Laka Mary
Flral Pratbylarlan Church. Oak A n A 3rd Bt
Plral Pratbylarlan Church ol DaBary, E Highland
Markham Wood* PratbyttFlan Church, 5210 Markham Wood* Rd.
Laka Mary
81 Andrew* Pratbylarlan Chuich. 9913 Btar Lake Rd
Bl Mark* Pratbylarlan Chuich, 1021 Palm Spring! Rd Allamonl# Spnngt
Tutcawilla Pratbylarlan Church, 3B00 W BR 420. Otiado
uptala Community Pratbylarltn Chuich, Upiaia Rd
Wakita Pratbylarlan Church, 211Wtklta Spring* Lana. Longwood
Watlmlnlalar Pratbylarlan Church, Rad Bug Rd. Canal harry
SEVENTH DAT ADVINTIBT
Foratl Lak* Savanlh Day Adiantm Church. Hwy 430, Foratl City
Mara Mill Bavanlh Day Adtanllil Church, B01 E 2nd SI .Banlord
Sanlord Bavanlh Day Advantlal Church. SBIS M Hwy 427
Savanlh Day Adrantiat Church, Maitland At*. Allamonl* Spring*
Wlntir Springe Savanlh Day Advantlal ChJrch, SOS M on nd
OTHER CHURCHES
All Ftllh Chapal, Camp Samlnola, Wakita Park Rd
Allan* A M E Chuich, Oliva A llih
Beardall A vanoa Moimeia Chapal, Baardall Ate
Chuluota Community Chuich
Church ol Jaaua Chritl ol Lallar Day Sarnia, 2315 Park At*
ECKANKAR, 770BigTra#Dr .Suite 100,Longwood
Family Church Chrltlian Canlar. 1544 Stminoi* Bltd .CaittiDarry
Flrat Born Church ol th* Living Ood, Midway
Plral Church ol Chrlal, Sclanllal, Elkam Bltd E Vtnut 81. Oallona
Plral Panlacoatai Church ol Longwood
Flral Ptnlaeotttl Church ol Banlord
Full Ooaptl Church ol Ood In Chrlal, tB20 Jerry Ate . Banlord
Full Ooipal Tabernacle, i J U Country Club Rd
One* Bibi* Church, 2044 B Banlord At*
Holy Trinity Church ol Ood In Chitat, ISM Mangoutlln* At*
Kingdom Hail ol Jahotah e Wllnaia. Lak* Monro* Unit, 1502 W 3rd 81
lak* Mary Community Church. 101 N Country Club Rd. Lak* Mary
Lak* Monro* Chapal, Orang* Bltd, Lak* Monro*
Ml Ollta Hollnan Chuich. Oak Hill Rd,, Otlaan
Neighborhood Alliance Church. 301 Markham Wood* Rd .Longwood
Paola Waalayan Church. SOSOWayildt O r. Banlord
Panlacoilal Open Bible Taoarnacla, Ridgewood At* oil 2Sth oppotil*
Samlnola High School
Rail oration Community Church. 5413 N C R 477, OantorU
Rolling Hill* U or atIan Church. BR 434, Longwood
Sanford Alliance Chuich. 14018 Park At*.
Banlord Bibi* Church, 2400 Banlord At*
Second Church ol Ih* Living Ood. 342S Baardall At* . Banlord
Bl. Pttka Serbian Orthodoi Church, 1990 Lak* Emma Rd . longwood
Th* Puli Ooipal Church ol Our Lord Jaaua Chrlal. Waahington B l,
Canaan City
Ih* Baltallon Army, 700 W. 74lh Bl.
Triumph, Th* Church ol Ih* Ntw Aga, 1000 W. Olh Bl
United Church ol Chrlal, Allamonl* Community Chapal, Allamonl* Spring*
Unllad Church ol Chilli Chrltlian Falloarahlp, 780 N Country Club Rd
U C S 8. Bpirllual Can Ira, 12S-A B Volutll Ava. corner ol
Qravaa A Voluala Ava, Orang* City

�OB - S anlord H otald, B a n lo rd , Florida - Friday, A pril 79, 1WM

NOTICK

UNCLAIMED
VEHICLR AUCTION
Removal of lh* below da
icrlbed vehicle wai conducted
In compliance wltn F.S. 7U.7I.
Nolle* that Butch’* Towing will
■all *ald vehicle at Public Auc­
tion for cath on May 17, l**4 at
10 00 am. at 1707 W. ttt Street,
Sanlord. Florida. W* rotary#
the right to withdraw tald vehl
cle from Public Auction
1*71 Yamaha MC ID4IJ7774111
Publlih April It. tt*4
DEQ 740

TH E SCHOOL BOARD OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y t i l l
M E L LO N V IL LE AVE . SAN
FORD, FL 72771 TH E EXECU
TIV E DIRECTOR POSITIONS
ARE TO BE DESIGNATED
FOR THE SENIOR MANAGE
M E N T S E R V IC E C L A S S
(SMSCI E F F E C TIV E JU LY I,

l**4

Publlih; April 77. 1*. IWl

DEO 1____________________
I.OTICKOF.
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* h*r*by given that w*
or* engaged In butlntit In
Semlnol* County, Florid*, un
d*r Iho Flcllllou* Namo ol
S Y N E R G Y SER V IC ES, and
that w* Intend to raglitor Mid
narn* with tho OlvIHon ol Cor
poratlon*. Tallahatie*. Florida.
In accordance with th* provltloni of th* Flctlllou) Nam*
SlaluKt. ToWIt Section 4*5 0*.
Florida Stalut** l**l.
Gloria Mltth*ll
Mare Schwarti
Publlih; April 2*. Ittt

DEQ 1*2
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
OF TH E E IG H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CRIMINAL CASE
NO.i L f t m CFA
SCSO INCIDENT
NO. i *44*24*411
IN RE: FO R FE ITU R E O F
lit ) HONDA MOTORCYCLE
VINfJHJPCISMNMIOlIJO
W ITH A N E N G IN E
CONTAINING
GROUNOOFF
IDENTIFICATIO N
NUMBERS
NOTICE OF FO R FEITUR E
PROCEEDING
TO: All parton) who Claim an
Intaratl In lh* following proper
lyt
Ittl Honda Motorcycl*, bear­
ing VIN »JHJPCM04NMKITIJO,
with an *ngln* containing
ground oft IdaMItlcallon num
bar*.
Donald P. E»llng*r,of th*
S*mlnol* County Sh*rltf‘t Of
tic*. Samlnol* County, Florida,
through hit olflc*r*. Invatttgatort or *g*nl». t*ll*d th* abov*
proparly on March 4. Iff*, at or
near tJJ Wedgawood Orly*,
W inter Spring*. S*mln*l*
County. Florida, and It pr*t
anlly holding laid proparty for
th* purpot* of torNItur* puriu
anl lo Section* *H 701 *H 704.
Florida Statute*, and will RE
Q U E S T that an Honorabla
Judge of th* Circuit Court.
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit.
Seminole County, Florida, find
probable cauia that lh* above
property Ihould be lor lei ted lo
the above agency. You will b*
lent a copy ol th* Order finding
Probebl* Caul* once It It t-oned
by th* Judge and It will advlte
you how and when to retpond to
tht* raqueit lor lorfoltur*
I HER EBY C E R TIF Y TH AT
a true end correct copy ol thl*
Notice wet tent lo Thomai
Fortune, *77 Wedgewood Drive.
Winter Spring*. Florida 7770* by
U S. certllled mall, rtturn re
ctlpt requeued, thl* ISth day ol
April. I*S4.
MARY ANN KLEIN
LEOAL COUNSEL
F lor Me Bar Ho ; *17*11
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF’S O FFICE
1741 Ttth Street
Sanlord, Florida 77777 *7*f
Telephone: 1407) 120 4472
Publlih: April 77, 7* A May I. 7.
1*74
DEO 117
UNCLAIMED ~
VEHICLE AUCTION
64/17/N
70 Bukk
431770H777774
71 Chevrolet
IH4*UIS12»*57
7/Chevrolet
CCD 117U1*4170
77 Chryiler
FH4IG7G1I9175
17 Fold
IFA0PO437CTI7I771
II Honda JHMSM517XBC155512
74 Mercury
411041(512404
17 Nliian J N*NO IIS7H W01107I
71 Oldimoblle
7G0*FIM504574
77 Oldimoblle
JM17R 10774**4
01/24/**
11 Renault lXMDCe404FKH4041
15 Jeep
IJCWB7147FT15M40
*»Chryiler 1C1XJ45E1JG44I4*5
N Dodge
ZL44AAD7I1411
•0 Honda
SME107HII
MOatiun
HSIJOmTOt
7* Pontiac
7E77VT717II7*
71 Ponllac
2J17YIAI4M71
*0 Toyota JT2VMl»W1L0O44*17
*1 Honda JH2PC120*FM104»II
Altamonte Towing
117Marker St.
Alt Spgt
Sale begin* at 10iH AM
View 1hour prior
Publlih: April}*. l**4
OEQ7S4

fN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IO H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NUMBER]
*1 l*4l-CA-14-E
THOMAS T. TUCK and
DOROTHY TUCK,hltwlle
Plaintiff
VS
JOHN R GUKTLER.ot.al
Defendanti
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y OIVEN
mat purtuanf to a Summary
Pinal Judgment of Mortgage
Foralcoture, I will tell lh*
following deter Ibed property Ip
cafed In Seminole County, Flor­
id*:
Lott 1 and ) and Lot 77. Block
SI, TO W N SITE OF NORTH
CHULUOTA. according le th*
Pl*f thereol recorded In Plat
Book I. Pag* 14 ol th* Public
Record* ol Seminole County,
Florid*
*1 public eal*. to th* hlgh**l
bidder toe cash, *1 lh* welt front
door of lh* Seminole County
Court Home. Sanlord, Florida al
11:00* m.onMayM. leer
Per torn with a disability who
noed a tpeclal accommodation
lo participate In th* proceeding
Ihould contact ADA Coordinator
at 101 N. Park Avenue, Suit* N
M l. Sanlord. Flortte 77771 at
lee*17 dayi prior le th* proceed
Ing. Telephone 407/12247M let.
4117] I BOO H i 1771 or 1100 *11
I770IV), via Florida Relay Serv­
ice.
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK. CIRCUIT COURT
JaneE.Jaiewic
Deputy Clerk
Publlih: April } f 0 May I. IM4
DEQ Ml
IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IO H TE EN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
OOMESTIC RELATIONS
DIVISION
CASE NO.t *4-4*4 OR-M-P
IN RE: TH E MARRIAGE O F:
DONNA L.M CCLESKEY,
Wit*/Petitioner,
ind
RONALD L.M CCLESKEY,

Huiband/Retpondenl

AM ENDED
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: RONALDL. McCLESKEY
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D the! an
action lor Dlttofutlon ot Mar
rlag* ha* been filed agalntt you
end a prayer contained within
th* Petition requett* the Court
to *ward that certain property
owned by you end your wile,
Donna L. MeHotkey, at tenant*
by th* entlritle*. located at 471
N. DIvltlon Stro«l, Oviedo. Flor
Ida. and more particularly daicrlbed at:
A|
North 1*0 ladWof Lot* G, H. J
A K, Survey ol John Ada ml
Etlelei. according lo Oeed Book
ft. Peg* HI. Public Record* ol
Seminole County, Florida,
to your wilt, a* lump turn
alimony, and you art required
to Mrv* a copy ol your written
detente*, It any. lo It on IKE B
ROSS, JR , P A , Wll*/P*1l
tlonor’i attornoy. whole addrett
li 1771 Slrallord Road. Mall
land, Florida 77711, on or be lore
May 71, 1**4, and III* lh*
original with lh* clerk ol Ih li,
court either before tervlca on
Wife/ Petitioner'* attorney or
Immediately Ihoroeltor; other
wlte a default will be entered
egalntl you tor th* relief da
mended In the pall lion
Thl* notice then be publlthtd
once a week lor four 141 corner
utlv* week* In the Sanlord
Herald.
D ATED ON: APRIL » . I**4.
at Sanlord, Seminole Counly.
Florida.
MARYANNE MORSE
Ae Clerk ot th* Court
BY Nancy R. Winter
A t Deputy Clerk
Publlih: April 1* A May A, I],
20. I**4
DEQ Ml

C E L E B R IT Y

C IP H E R

cweorilr Cipher cryptoyami ere (retted liom quoittiofti by temout
people, pelt end preieni
tech letier n the cipher ttenOi lor
another rpdey i caw 1 ague* V.

’ Z G

Z

D T D X E

LP

U P H P H L P U P E
C K S J R Z K Y ,
J T

LP

CA

CK

O T U
Z' E

X Z V P

U P H P H L P U P E
C B J T U ' A

E Z U P B J T U . ’

7 1 — H e lp W a n t e d

L e g a l N o tic e s

L e g a l N o tic e s

—

B R U Z A

B T X D H L D A .
PREVIOUS 8 0 L U TIO N : "I want lo try bung*b-|umpfnq.
It’s part ol my plan to ov*rcom* my radical fear ot flying?'
— Barry Corbin.

OFF THE LEASH© by W.B. Park

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando ■Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
8:00 A M . • 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSEO SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

14consecutivetimes -------- 57*■ lln*
7 consecirttv*tlm*s.........70*■Un*
3 conBMUttvg tlmts — Oil ■Hn*
1tlm*•teetf*••*####*•*-ttimtu eeeeMe11.10a l»n*
R*t*s art p*r l*»u*, baitd on 3lln**
•3Un** Minimum

NOW ACCEPTING
Scheduling may mctod* Herald AdverMei at the coat ol an nddihonal day
C*nc*l when you g*4r**tM Pay orty tot dayi your ad run* at raw earned
Ut* U dotenpbon tor t**t*«t faauna Copy muel foaow acceptable typo
grappeal form -Commercial kequency talee are evwiabi#
DEADLINES
Tueeday thru Friday t l Noon Th* Day Before Pubkcahon
Sunday 13 Noon Friday •Monday S 30 P M Fnday
A D J U S T M E N T S A N D C R E D IT S : In lh* event o l an error In *n
ad, Iha Sanford Herald will b# responsible for th* fir*I
Inaartlon only and only to th* extent of the coat ot that
Inaartton. PI#*** check yo u r ad for accuracy the first day It
run*.

CLERKS
Hiring In our Sava A Lot
llor# Apply In per ion:
2701 Orlando Av*
Sanlord. fAm IPm

DRIVERS CUSS A COL
FORKLIFT O f ERAT0RS
UptotlatoilertTTfllM

DNIVERS WANTED
Qualified t i p produce hauler
Long dlffanC*. CDL required
Cloan MVR. Call lor applica

Iton

40177077*0 SAmOPm

■ ARNS4MWIMM Poe. Month.
Ily*ukavec*er*a*c*lll

74U 7W l4ito.rtc.m kg.
ELECTRICIANS AND HELPERS
H — E ld e r ly C a r t
ADULT CARE In Our arlvaf*
horn* Sanford area. Lot* ol
loving car* lor your loved
Oh** Contact Holly 171*147

4 1 -C e m ttT V L o ti
EVEROREEN CEMETERY
CHOICE LOT »M0

PlaaM call 711 l i n e n
5 5 — B u s in e s s
O p p o r t u n i t i e s ____

3 1 — P e r s o n a ls
ADOPTIONS
Fret medical car*, Iranipor
lotion, coumellng, private
doctor plu* living eipomat
Bar *717*19 Ctoarwator Attorney
JeM Pricker.
I ***777 741*
FEM ALE wanted lor frlendlhip.
potilble reletlomhip Writ*
PQBOe 114. Unlord FL 77771

17— N u r s e r y &amp;
C h il d C a r e
A TTE N TIO N SECOND SHIFT
P A R E N T S ] R e lia b le
chlldcae* with hot meal*
LIcenMd daycare facility Cell
forreto* 7 H 7 ) ) ) l k 47*7 10

W ANTED Parlnot to Inyett in
lh* awning A canopy bumett
Low m onoy tor a ve ry

L e g a l N o tic e s
IN THB CIRCUIT COURT,
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.l 01-1*11 CA 14 L
IN R E : M O R T G A G E
FORECLOSURE
BOBBY M. SHARP and DAWN
M ACHULI*.
, i Plalnllllt.
v».
THEODORA MAE TURNER
Defendant
NOTICE OF SALE
Nolica I* glvon that purtuanf
to th* Final Judgment ol For*
cloture entered on April M. 1t*4
In C i v i l A c l l o n N o :
»J 147* C A U L ot the Circuit
Court ol tho Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit, In end lor Semlnol*
County, Florida, In which
THEODORA MAE TURNER l&gt;
lh* defendant and BOBBY M
S H A R P end D A W N
MACHULES are th* Plaintiff*. I
will tall to Iha hlghett and boil
bidder lor cath at th* Weil
Front Door ot th* Semlnol*
County CourthouM In Sanford,
Florida, between lh* hour* ot
II 00 a m and 2:00 p m. on May
If, 1W4. the following d*icrlbed
real property:
Lot II. Block C. COUNTRY
CLUB H EIG H TS U N IT ONE.
according to th* plal thereof at
recorded In Plaf Book I). Peg*
f*. of Ihe Public Record* of
Semlnol*County. Florida.
D ATED Ihll » t h day of April,
lf»4
MARYANNE MORSE
Cletkof Circuit Court
By: JanoE. Jaiewlc
A t Deputy Clork
Publlih: April 22. If, lf*4
DEQ Ilf _____________________
Malice of Sherllf’i Sal*
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
that by virtu* of that certain
Writ of EitcuHon luuod out ol
ond under th* ta il of lh* Counly
Court of Semlnol* Counly, Flor­
ida, Cat* m l i m p If F upon a
final ludgmanl rendered In th*
eforeuld Court on lh* uth day
of November A O. IffJ, In lhal
certain cat* entitled: Dee
Capoilon, Plalnfllt vt. Dennl* *
Laura Sloltel, Defendant* which
aloretald Writ of Elocution wet
delivered to me at Sheriff of
Semlnol# County, Florida and I
hay* levied upon *11 th* right,
till* and Inltroil of th* dolendanti. Donnlt A Lour* Stotfol, In
and lo lh* following d*icrlbed
property, u ld property being
located In Somlnol* Counly,
Florid* more particularly doicrlbed at lollcrwit
LO T 1M, U N IT 1 OF MOUNT
GREENWOOD A l RECORDED
IN PLAT BOOK 40, PAOBS 0
T O f, M O R E C O M M O N LY
KNOWN AS 171 CELLO CIR­
C L E . W IN T E R IP R IN O S .
FLORIDA.
end th* undertlgned ae Sheriff
of Somlnol* Counly, Florida,
will al 11:00 A M. on Iha IJrd
day ot May A.D. Iff4, oiler for
Ml* ond toll to lh* filghotl
bidder, FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY AND
A LL EXISTING LIENS, al th*
Front (Weill Door, at th* ttepe,
of th* Somlnol* Counly CourthouM In Sanford. Florida, th*
above detcrlbod property.

Thai Mid Ml* I* being mod*
lo Mtlity th* form* of Ihl* Writ
of Execution.
Donald F.Etllnger, Sheriff
Somlnol* Counly, Florida
NOTICE REQARDINO THE
A M E R IC A N S W I T H D IS ABIITIES ACT OF IffO, P ER ­
SONS W ITH A D ISAB ILITY
N E E D IN G S P E C IA L A C ­
COMMODATIONS TO PARTIC­
IPATE IN TH E PROCEEDING
SHOULD C O N TA C T TH E
C IV IL D IV IS IO N O F T H E
S H E R IF F 'S O F F I C E , E N ­
F O R C E A B L E W R IT S S E C ­
T IO N , 1141 1ITH S T R E E T ,
S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A A T
LEAST FIVE DAYS PRIOR TO
TH E PR O C EED IN G . T E L E ­
PHONE: (407) 120-4440. T T D

(407) n i u n .

Pufallthod: April 72, I f A May 4,
* IX Iff 4 with th* Ml* on May
H , ttf4.

OEO-I1S

EXPERIENCED COOKS
Fullllm# Apply In perton
PERRY'S RESTAURANT
Upper level. Allomont* Mall

FIBERGLASS UM INAT0RS
I yr tip. Apply aft 1411
Oefgner Pi, Sanford 7114144

61- M o n e y to L e n d
KEEP DRIVING AND STILL
GET THE M0NEVI

With rltontol*. Full or pari
lime Coll H I 0114___________

luc^a^wbuxmett^JOMTl^Hia

All you noed If your till* Jock
Diamond for oppolntmtnl
340 7*71

71— H e lp W a n te d

EMPLOYMENT
323 5176
7*0 W. ISth If.

ACCOUNTING CLERK

Good typing Mill). manual
polling ol payablei and re
calvabtot Mu*' have eapen
one* Call 1114*01_______ _
ACCOUNTING/DATA ENTRY

Full compultriied accounting
tvclem Experience in A-P.
A R, Bank roc , and G L
through finance italement
req Full lime Pleat* vend
return* loi
Pertonnel Depl
1471S Park Av*
Sanlord. FI 11771
ADDTOYOUR INCOME
SELL AVON MOWI
1•CALL 577-00*or 1714771
AGENTS-REAl ESTATE!

Nothing tuccevdi Ilk* tuccen
Wo re well Into our 3rd decade
of framing lucceillul agenti
Nollcentef
We ll help!
WATSON REALTYCOHP
_ REALTORS _Til 1)00
AVON product) 1.00*. L*rn lo
50% No door,door PT/FT
Sandlin 11*1/1 100*M1IM
CREDIT COLLECTIONS CLERK

Manufacturing co ttakt
period with account! recolv
abletip Apply Inperion
Environmental Air
501Cadlico Wiy
Sanfordor lai relume
_____ 407121H44

0EUVERY/WAREH0USE

40 hn + Paid Inturanc* and
bonatll) Clan D Lie req
Clean driving record KnowI
edge ol Orlando area a plut
Inquireal
15*11. Sanlord Av*.
___ Sanlord______

HAJNSTYUST NEEDED

MEDICAL

WE NEED WORKERS

TELEMARKETER

LABORERS NIROED Skilled
and unik11led Dayi
Call between I 1
SPRINT STAFFINO, IW WII

E x p o r lo n c o d lo r b u iy
orthopaedic oltlce, Call
Sharon at 747 5515
FRONT O FFIC E I Mtadt A 4
leg* lor Sanlord Chiropractor
T ypo/comp /In* Pep. 7X0740
MEDICAL

Opening* tor *11 thill* Pleat*
apply In perton
Militia van Healthcare Center
*54 Mellenvllto Av*
Sanford
MEDICAL

ILaiynaednel apply!

I I I H II________ __
MEDICAL

NURSING ASSISTANT
All ih llli Full lima and pari
lime Only Ihot* having tip*
rtonct at a Nvnlng Aiililanl
In long term car* and being
able to thow prool ol regulra
lion to lake lh* court* or
challenge lh* le it upon
application ihould apply Mull
tie cerlilled no later than *0
dayi alter hire Drug tree
workplace
Debary Manor
40 N. Hwy If *7
Debary. Fl
4&lt;f 44*4414
M EDICAL

RN MANAGER
Full lim* 71 ihltt. weekend!
oil Eipertonct In an acut*
car* telling and management
highly deniable Cam* end be
o pari ot lh* changing trend In
long term car* Salary d*
pendent upon #iper lent#

1 BEDROOM F R II MONTHS
IP IC IA L I 1 bdrm* &lt;v attic
a.kll
__ Call Jerry, 7 H 4450
1/2 MONTH F i n n

I Bdrm./i Bath Hi-me-

appl lancaa S4757721051
103— H o u s e *
U n fu r n is h e d /R e n t

93—Rooms for Rent

OFFICE CLEANERS
Day and nlghl Need own
tramportalton and be depen
debit Call between tend 5

_________ HI471I_________
PLASTERERS AR0 LABORERS
N E E D E D IM M ED IATELY
Call BUI al 717 0*10
THIS BOSS REWARDS
HARD WORK
Merry Maidt peyi lor nerlor
mane* every Friday) Day
h n only, no mghli Iniured
car required, paid mileage
Call Merry Meldi 111114*

M75/mo

97— A p a rtm e n ts
F u r n is h e d / R e n t
JANITORIAL
Experienced cleaneri and tu
pervtiori Nucnerout location!
Day /even Ing houri P/T, F/T.
Seminal* Counly are*
Call m 77*7

NOTICE
All rental end real tilal*
adverlitemenlt are tub|*cl to
lh* Federal Fair Homing Ad,
which make* II Illegal to
adverllM any preference. Ilm
lla llon or d licrlm lna llo n
bated on race, color, religion.
m x . handicap, familial Halm
or national origin

SALES
For replacement window! In
home SomeappH lurnlthed
lfff0*5 CaiMtberry
S E C U R IT Y O F F I C E R Job
training Armed A unarmed
Brenlly A Anoc DIOTM

NICE 1 IIOMM APT C-HA.
quiet neigrtoorhood. carpeted

Retponilbto p i'u w lor ihip
p in g , ro co lvln g /g o n o ra l
worehouM dull*! Pari lime.
4 hr per day
Call 7700701

S77I*month......... 77175*1
PRIVATE * UUIEI. I bdrm
SIX) month. 1150 depotll, 5/5

pat deposit Call 770 *777
SANFORD I BDRM A STUDIO
*11 *l*c, a ir. re t are*
SlSA/mo , up Novell 177 *01?
SANFORD I BDRM Complete
privacy, I block Irsm ttetpllal
SKTO/wk plus 1X70 Me Alio 1
ROOM E F F IC IE N C Y with
private bath 111 7*71

SOCIAL WORKER
E ip MSW wanted lor hotpllal
dltcharg* planning on a con
•r*ctu*l bam Sand return*
lo Contullanl Servlcei. 45*5
CaiUu* SI . Orlando 17411

SPRAY PAINTERS
K ip . evle/merln* pelnlen
needed. A p p ly a lt 1414
Polgaee P I, tantMd 1714144

ALL UTILITIES PAIDI Sanlord
2 bdrmt 1100 per week with
lecurlly depotII
2242444

Pari and lull lime Hall needed
In childcare center!
_________ apt H I *415_________
WAREHOUSE AND O IN S R A L
LABOR H R LP N C t D E D I
Bonui lor driven All ihllli
available Daily pay. no It*
Report ready 10 work 5 70 am,
Induttrlal Labor Svc . 1011
French Av No phone calls

COOL OFF!!

On* BedroomAperlmenli

CalUIMm
SANFORD
ID 1 bdrm. Cyprat*
Are all Cetory, Vary nlc*
modern UIQ/me H70*7|
SANFORD Oufot rtofhborhoed.4
7 bdrm. I bath, hardwood
floor*, ceramic III* 4521/mo
5200' tac Itl A l*«t 244*147 t o
H I *T25 AvailableSJ1I
SANFORD Hamilton Otitrtol
REN T TOOWN
L I U new, in . *k , wether
dryer, tec lyt.. dbl carporlLMOOdn ,5500/me *** 7747___

Stenstrom R in tib n
oSANFORD V\ ml Kr. porch.
CHA Clean! S471/mo,SaM*oc
OlANFORO A 1-4 1/1.5 w/db(r
car garag*. *cr. porch, tplc ,
well A keptIc 1050/mo5450MC
OSANFORD 1/1 DUPLEX w/d
hookup. CHA. UHlI toINN t t t j
ilemlrem Realty, la*.
-’We Man*#*yone Hama,

likeit w*» evr own." Jim Oeyfo
77214*5After 4FMi U4-14S5

I PLACED THE AD ON
THURSDAY AND •
RENTED THE HOUSE
ON SATURDAY!
Mr

W illia m * a i l

* »ry

M lliltod by the way hi*

?

worked tor him In lull 2dayi,
#
Receive lh* Mm* owlck to
lultt with a Sanlord Herald
Claulltodadtodayl

322-2611

51** OEAL

Motlwcod Apti 12/7/24

831-9993

WHHEEEEEWW!
LARGE I BDRM

WAREHOUSE

From and back porch Park
view Oil ttreel parking
t l t S / mo Al Chladl
Breker/Owner I «*Q5414M1

S*nfo#d. Third ihiH N«tioo«l
food L6)«1 comp ne#ds pmrxon
for rvarwhowM OT rtq P#r
mjintnl poll Iion IS/hr Up
w a td

______ Tff.FM*

R EN T W ITH OPTION Plnecrest
1/1 pool home, tented 4571 mo
1il.la il.A M C H H I5 *
SANFORD. 7 bdrm. IIS bath
leketronlhouMtaSO/mo
«
m w o * __________:»
IAN FORD 1 bdrm. t bath. COM
M/A, carpal Lfoa newt I yr.
leaea aall/mo *aa-M*-(fU
SANFORD. 1 bedroom. I bath
with carpet. Fenced. A4SI.
Caldwell Realty Service
SANFORD i n , J cor gaeaaa.r
Very nlcal 1421/m#
ALTAM ON TE V I. small lake,
country otmoiahaco. 1750/mo.

SANFORD HERALD
CLASSIFIED A0

U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t

TEACHERS

;

C LE A N A Q U IE T . 1 bdrm
mobile hem* In Oeneve ,
C/HA. wether end d rytr.

A Q U IE T, CLEAN MM In San
lord Kill hen 1 phone ut*
coin laundry . S75 A up 124-4fSI
CLEAN ROOMS ungl# ilartmg
571/wk Kitchen, phone,
laundry, video gamei. oil
ilreet parking
1)0 4417
FURN RM. pvl home, kll pH* ,
A/C. cable, W/O Nonimoker
Ili/wk. |75/d*p HO 5471
NICE P54C*‘ Furn rm Prel
t#m4to Water, etot , A/C A
heat. I7twk.su dee 1110544
ROOM FOR REN T S40 per week
Private entrance end yerd
Call 774 H»4 tor detain
ROOM FOR R EN T t » per week
plut ipllt electric Kllchen
privileges Call H I 727*
SANFORD old hovta Cabto
phone, kllrhen prlv . private
rm 140 wk incI util 7*1 70*4

DENTAL HYGENIST

n

SHENANDOAH A P A B TM «N Tt
1 BDRM I RATH apt available
5/l5/(4. C H A A. ilackabta*
wether and dryer, all kitchen

F E M A L E P R E F E R R E D lo
■hare 1 bedroom hem# In
Sanlord Call 174 174)

Immediate opening available
lor dynamic Individual J 4
dayi per week Strong perw
ikiiiv a mull *04 775 4)00

111 Franch Av*.

» 7 1' me. ,5 100 tec 4 » 4455

91—Apartm enli/
House to Share

CNA

LAWN MAINTENANCE

Full lime, mull have a neat
appearance, oiporlonco,
Irantporlellon. bedependable

parch

AIDE/Carsf'**'- to cat* lor
e ld t r ly at hom* D a y i.
week end i. tome evel 770 5412
I I YEAR OLO moltwr at I
r e c e n t ly lo c a te d Iro m
Northern Virginia detlre*
entry level tier leal work
Call Suian 7 » 4711

SHIPPING/RECEIVING

Potllron open lor on tiperi
trued telemarketer Evening
houri 4PM 7PM. Monday
through Thurkday Apply in
per ion Sanlord Mould, 700
N French Av*. aik lor Tracy

and 2 bdrm, air. SH4-SHS *
t loo dec,
in u n o r m m ?
7 BDRM . Ilv. rm. kit., both, and

Wanted

RECEPTIONIST

HELPI

Dolly work, doily pay Report
5 JO Am. 7*07 P*r« Drive.
Sanlord. or coll H I 74(5. aik
lor Bob alter 7 Pm

SANFORD4II S. Pif* AvO. II

7 3 -E m p io v m tn t

GOOD WORKERS NEEDED
D AILY WORK/OAILY PAY
Report Mm
1205 S Hwy 17 f l Longwood
Call ff* 1111 ottor 1pm

3 1 — P r iv a t e
______I n s t r u c t i o n s______
1W1M L E llO N l. SANFORD FL
Will return* May TCIh
111 7771 Jackw Caato

Commercial (If* to UCF area
Ben* BI* package
ANBCO INC. 44*4431
EOE/Oruafret workpiece

9 9 — A p a rnt nm e n t *
U n t u r n fih td / R e n t

54 AUTO AUCTION DRIVERS
N EEO EO I Mull Have valid
Florid* driver* llcfni* end be
able to drive tllck
Call between I 7
SPRINT STAFFINO. 11*1*11

LONG DISTANCE DNIVERS
Mu»t have CDL " A ” with
clean MVR. Produce expert
enc# end good reference* re
quired. Call or apply
MSC Trucking, Ifll W tH St.
Sonterd. FL 4*7 111 7547

DRIVERS NEEDED
A O CARRIERS. Tavarot. FI.
a wall otlablithed and grow
Ing Central Florida batad
company ollors you
* 17* to If* per mil*
• Up to IJ.OOOmi per mo
a Slop Off Pay
a Unloading Pay
a Vacation Pay
a Safety X Performance Bonui
a SpouM Riding Program
# Average Trip 5 7Dayi
a Lalt Model Convent lorcal
Tractor*
II you have 1 yean tractor
traitor, OTR and mow and ico
tiper tone* plut a good driving
record, call:
________ T*SM74f*S«________

71- Help Wanted

7 1 — H e lp W a n t e d

MARINER'S VILLAGE

L«ht A&lt;Mi bdrm, iMOmo
Tltdf m, $J10moAndi/p

motilflfy And morwtwry

gfuwlh C lot#
N«v«r a f««t
Mtlp N r w n m U f f m i

323 8670
MOVE IN SPECIAL. Convtn
lent, charming, I bdrm apt
S2**/mo pluiSItf'dep 1 year
l**i* Call H4 714*__________
SANFORD, i Bdrm. 5700'mo .

WORKING DOCK FOREMAN
Pari lime, evening! and Sal
urday________ Phone 710 *744
144 PEOPLE to low weight I No
will power reql 100% nalurall
D i r e c t Col lean 40/ 77* HI 4

plut lecurlly All ullllltoi paid
•iceplelec.
1121*47

W IN TER IPRINOS 2 bdrm ,.I
be. 0 lot. garage, wether/
dryer, tlreplec*. 5450/mo
Rent/toaia/eptlonM* 1154
1 B D R M I In v a ry q u la l
neighborhood 5204 dtp ,
57*Q/mo Call oiler 1 11110*7
2 BEDROOM, carport, fenced
yard. Sanlord 17*2 lo Loko
M a ry B ird , lo Art Lana
(K lndarcirt) lurn right I*
Flrtl Street (Meadow Slreel)
lo third houM on toll 1)41 pID*
fltOdepoeiltor Into call
*044*3 7*1/

DRIVER TOR VAN

Pari llmo Monday Friday.
S415 per hour Mull potvan
CDL llcent* and good driving
record. Apply between t:H
and 1PM al Semlnol* Counly
Belter Living lor Senior*, 4M
Florida Central Parkway.
Lcngwood FL________ EOi
★

DRIVER RANTED *

Full tlm*. Mult have lal*
model ocena vihldo lor local
delivtrlti utIdling porMnal
vehicle. Call Ml 2101Ml

LPN
Full lime and pari time I and
II hour ihllli available Good
loaderihlp iklllt a mull G N ’f
and G P N ’i with prevloul
loaderihlp experience alio
encouraged to apply.
Orug fro* workplace
Apply in perton
Debary Manor
H N H w y lf tl
Debary, Fl
4*7 *4* 4424

T H IS W E E K 'S

ESTATE SALE
Saturday and Sunday, 1:1GI.
Ml ic, houMhold Item*.
IDT Mayfair Circle

ESTATE SALE
Collectable* ond turnltur*.
Friday A Saturday. I I . 110
Lamorak Lane, Mallland,
Horatio E. of 17 f l to Thlitto,
S. to Klngf Row Subdlvlllon.

FRIDAY 6 SATURDAY
Starling 7Am. 700 Drotdan
Cl., Sanford. ComobfQWMl
GAR AO E le l*!T Why bothorTf
WE BUY-PAY TOP PRICED
______
407 TJO-filF

HUGE GARAGE SALE
U t t CR 417. Friday and Sat'urday, f-4 No early bird*I

SATURDAY ONLY
1200 W. 20th St,. Sanlord Big
yard Ml*, I •1. Couch, houi*
hold Itom*, knlknockt, etc.

SATURDAY ONLYI
fam-4pm. 1411 Summorlla
Av*. Flihlng polo*, bike, booty
board, dlihet, clolhei, baby
Itemi. meloltholvlng.olc.

SATURDAY APRIL 30
Oeiki. credent*, mlec. houM
hold, lay* ond cloth**.
411 EAST LANE
Wilton Place olfWeyilde Dr.

S UN U ND ESTATES
Yard Sal* Frl, Sat. A Sun. 201
Fairmont Dr, Elect, motor*/
pump*. A/C't, houMhold. Ev
ory thing you can Imagine!

YARD I BAKE SALE
•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garage Ml* ad by
II noon on Tuotday and lake
advantage ot our ipoclol
garage Ml* ad priced Call
Claulfled now lor dotollil

322-2611

LAKE MARY
111 S p rln g h u n l C lr., off
Country Club Rd. Saturday
only I T, Rollowoy bad, lawn
mower*, dikhof, knlck-nackf
LO TS O F O UOO U S A B L E
IT E M II 1M Sycamore Ct.
Friday A Saturday, I 4_______

MOVING SALE
Saturday A Sunday, 101
Palmira Rd., Dobary. I S.

Oood Shepherd Lu lh o rn
Church, If 17 Orlando Dr.,
Sanford. Clothing galore A
more. Saturday, Mey 7lh, f l

YARD SALE
Sat. A Sun., lem lpm. Ill*
Paloma Ave., Sanlord (near
20th A Sanlord Aval. Anllqu*
crank totophono*. 40'i radio A
record ploytr, eel tkln leather
good*, hand mad# cherry
wocdtobloplutMOREI

103 E. WOODLAND DR
Sanford. Saturday A Sunday,
1 :24A M -4:17PM Som*thlng
lor everyone Como browM I

157 LINDA LANE
Furniture, clothing, book* A
mltc. Saturday A Sunday *-T

2432 Tali Am . Mufti Fsmihr
Sat. only, I S. Toy*, turnltur*.
ga* »tov*. cloth**. exerclM
equip., onllquo*. much mor* I

t

N o t ic e

C le a n in g S e r v ic e

L a w n S e r v ic e

FLORIDA STATE REOUIRES
all contractor! be raglitarad
or cartllled. To varlly a tlala
contractor* llca ni* call
1 400 742 7*40. Occupational
Lkernel are required by lh*
county and can b* verified by
c a llin g H M l», ait. 74H

HONEST DEPENDABLE

TOM A JEFF't LAWN CARSI
Nat /Comm , dopendabto. low

Ptrum lo cloan your ftout*
|U)I lh* way you llko It at a
price you lurocanallord.
Call Varm* 1M4444

C o n c re te

A w n in g s

H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t

frh o to g re p h y
.
REACH. Sparta and WaddlngT
Mobil oqulp-unlquo pricing.
For Info call 174 *403
Raatonabla rate*

Fix It right al a price you can
altord Llc’d/lnt From tier)
lo llnlth. Carponlry, plumb
Ing, electrical, and roollng
tvet 12 yrt ol oxporlanco. No
|ob loo big or tmall. Call
1141tta or 121 4771 24 hour*
R ES TO R A TIO N , DRYW ALL.
rnalal atudt, doort, Irlm, did
Ing. porch**, dock), gaiobot
Uconaad/lnaurod
121-2017

CARPENTER All kind) ol homo
ropalrt, painting A ceramic
tlto RichardOroM......H I 5*72

C a r p e t / In s ta lla tio n

" "
sn o w ui*

Cell 721-75*4
R o o f in g
:
DYSRERS HOME REPAIR A’
R O O F I N D ; Pai nt i ng, ;
carpentry. Bond/Int/LIc;
RC004424S
Call i74-411«
S w im m in g P o o l
S e r v lc e / R e p a fr
w e e k l y iiR v ic e tram sail

R IT E -W A Y

C A R P IT M ILL D IR ECT
■Ig Dhcount) Fameut Irandt
Flrtl Owallly, Tap Un*.
Stalnmaiter, Saxonlt),
Tracklat), Sculpture) 14.** yd
Com marc lal level loop* U t * yd
ln)i*iialton 4*7-214****

w e

rj/'Lol T t l U D la p lu y A c f V
f
W o rk F o r V o 5 «
J

l

y

s

y

L a w n S e rv ic e
RANDY'S Q U A LITY LAWNi
Complato pro cart tine* l**o
Clean up), hauling H I 0714

I

* LEOALRHOTOORAPHY* !

AL DOES IT ALII

C a rp e n try

SAM’S C A R P ET CLEANING
plu) atrip and bolt flaert.
Realdentlil/commardal 14
hr*. H4 2541, baapar 4440541

M A S T E R E L E C T R IC IA N ,
Repair addition, comm/ro*.
Llc/lnt lEHOOOaif] H I 4475

DUN R ITKi Clean driveway*,
root*, pool docki. walki,
houM*. Fro* oil. H I a m

AFFORDABLE HOME Repair
Dependable. All ph*M). Call
for Froo oat Mkhaol m 710*

BUILDERS Ol cuilom canopto),
carporlt. window) A patio
awnlngt Hlghatt ol quality.
Fro* tallmaltt. 407 *54 5544

C a r p e t C le a n in g

P r e s s u r e C le e n ln g

E le c tr ic a l

RRS./COMM. Vinyl Siding ,
A lu m , Fram ing, Drywall,
Door), Roollng, Concrete.
211-4472 . s.O. Ballnt.CRCaifue

P a i n t in g
paper hanging,
prtwurt warning and dry wall
rtjMlr. Fra* ait. 251-5174

p a i n t i n O,

CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayno
Deal 1 Man Quality Optra
tlonl 27*-2229/414-5*42

A d d it io n s A
R e m o d e li n g

ratal I Fro* t it ............ 120-7070

j

mo. ChamRIto Pool Sarylca
240 2274
Robert Shoamakar

T r e t S e r v ic e
■CHOLl TREE IVC- Lie'a,
"Lat th* Prolatttonalt da
Fra* aallmato*...........H X |

ow
w Repair
R e p a li
Windo
a n d C la a n ln g

WINDOW I SCREEN REPAIR;

4*7ID-Till

/lt/uerTise your Business Every Day

For As Low'As $45 Per Month.
Call Classified, 322-2611

�r

f t'* .r r

T

Sanford H erald, S anford, Florida - Friday, April 20, 1994 • 7B
10 3 — H o m e s
I. U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t

118— O f f i c e
S p a c e / R ent

/ I, appliance*. hookups,
garag*. carpal, bllndt. cant
haai/air. M K w m aaaitaaa
m i o i t O O M , 1 hath, canl Hr A.
family rm Only 3300 downl
Alto 4bdrm,} balh available
. Aik about our HUD hometl
Why rand T i l l HILLIMAN
OROUP.INC. Raaltar 11M i l l

SANFORD. Ottlca tpaca. iaOO
tq It building total, 1100 tq
II parolllctu n it Ml root
toe SO F E E T tor laata on 17 T7,
tuccattlul M illin g anchor
butlnattat Good parking and
llghllng Great v lllb lllty.
AtklngMOO/mo B H U M a r li

105— D u p le x *
T r ip lex / R e n t
(IC E I bdrm, &gt; bath. U K
Hickory II, tantord MOO/mo
laOQdap.iaaaaoaoriMKaa
INFORD. 1 nlca wn apft A/C,
I appn Avail 3/01/44 ii/o a
1 3330 plut dap________ i n JIM
SNFORD 1 br. canl H/A,
I laundry rm, carport. Convan
I lent location UOtt/mo HP Mi l
[• D E M 1 BA. E i cal araa. oil
tlraal parking, naar daycara.
Itl/ l/ m o 1100 set B l w __
[BEDROOM. I EATH. Canlral
[H/A, yard, tcraartad back
rchm a a M orna ya a i

1 0 1 -M tffiT
H o m e » / Ren*
(FORD. nlca nalghborhood.
■ yard, 1 bdrm, I balh
^jcj&gt; lu tj* e p ^ 3 7 jjro ^ ^

11 5 — In d u s t r i a l
R e n t a ls
(eiCE/ararabaata tpaca. 1100
II. Prlma location at
ranca to Canlral Fla Ra
alAirport W i l l 7407

117 — C o m m e r c i a l
R e n t a ls
BWOOO l.OR) iq ft ralall or
‘ akionalollicalcM/mo
Call lia OtOI_________
(F O R D R ETAIL/O FFIC E.
17 t&lt;| It Covarad lidawalks,
traffic araa 1700 plut
I taa/mo Itenstram Rral
Inc. Jim Day la n i 1«ai
BRE/OFFICE, 1700 tq It
E/HA. carpatad. good loca
n, clean. tr»/m o m ait*
I I I SO F T A V A I L A B L E
00/tqff Tangal Square. HOC
&gt;anth_A*a_Call_UI7n04^^

la T ^ C o n d o m in iu m _________ R e n t a ls _________

* GKEAT LOCATION *
individual olllca
Stanford
tpacal Starting at l7M mo
100 llO iq It tach n i 1110
EW Sanford olllcat and or
.warehouMt tOO 7100 tq It
Special. t&gt;43/me. i ll m i

323-5774

AffOnOAOLE HOMES
VENTURE I PROPERTIES

OELTONA 1 bdrm H i bath,
lamlly rm. a.lrat! t i l .100
W. Mallciawtkl, 111 It ll

ASSUME NO QUALIFIES!
CUSTOM w/tplll bdrm plant
Dining, lamlly rmt. appl ,
traad yard MFl/mo tSI.MO
PRE FORECLOSURE! 11 ipht
llv , din , aal In kllch tancad
w'garag* 3513 mo tla too
CUSTOM built 1/1 tplil. llv ,
din . aal In kllch . appl ,
garaga tMI/mo 141*00
P A U L

O S IIO IIN E

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
ALTAM ONTE. 1/1. naw carpal
/palnt/rool. tprlnkltr Walk lo
Dranilay Khoolt Quiat Slraal
V A / t x 37*300 ta in c i
HUY OWNER Gorgaout 1 bdrm.
H i balh. canl air and haat,
tancad yard porch, doubla lol
A much moral Pmacrttl araa
334*00
m oan

Town Centfe Apartments
•1 Bedroom....$ 3 9 9 mo.*
•2 Bedroom....$ 4 7 7 mo.*
•3 Bedroom....$ 5 4 8 mo.*
* M a y talus subjoct lo chariQo

MAY PRE-LEASE SPECIAL
* N o A p p lic a t io n F e a l

* 0 MONTHS FREE CABLEI
• Sparkling 1’ixil * Large I Un&gt;( I’luns
* like reive Center * linetg) I tits inn
• W/J) Connccliottv
n o u n s M F 9 e. Sat B5, Sun doted

1800 W. tit Street•Sanford 3 2 2 * 8 6 9 6

jj

’Ttta&amp; e P
‘ aruzdU e
'ty w i /4&lt;lcO te44,. a.

187— S p o r t in g P o o d s
■ BICYCLE, M ”boyt troll blkt.
Good condltlonl Now 310,
4tk Ing 330 Coll 330 4113

18 9 — O f f i c e S u p p lie s
/ E q u ip m e n t
Q U A LITY O FFICE Furnllur#
lor Mle. Excellent condition
Ofllco couch and 1 chair*. 1
tiling cabinet!. 1 *torage unit,
l eiecutlw datk. } tmeller
detkt Call 3 » t*ll

•F-lt
A&gt;F/»-t
i*/«.'uw1

DELTONA, l bdrm . 1 balh. 1
car, naw carpal, palnl In'out.

c/ha.

O lawayftta w

tatooo aorawwia

DUPLEX
IANFORO Good
neighborhood. good rorsdilion
t li *oo Call altar S 00

141— H o m e s f o r S a le

_ srttatt

ONLY II.M4 DOWN. StlO Mo 1
bdrm. t 1/1 balh Naw palnl
MalraOroup
007 431 0741
O S T E EH/LEMON B LU FF. 3
bdrm, 1 bath horn# Appro.
1.000 tq It SI Johnt Mlver
frontage S4*K llrm At It No
conllngonclot. By owntr
007 477 7174

EXCHANGE OR SELL your
proparly localad artywherol
tmratlart Raalty, 174 tail

hi %
bam

SANFORD HISTORIC HOUSE
♦IIM Y R T L E AVENUE
BeauHlully rettored 4 bad. I ' l
tialh homa with pool 7.000 tq
II all naw heat and air Yaw
have la tea III f 110 000
Call ownar t74ttl I
SANFORD Country living, (lota
lo naw mall Great tlartar
horn# l/l, den, aal In kitchen,
beautiful tree* 347.000
PA IN E A N OE R SON 4*1 71*4
SANFORD 3 bdrm. I bath
Grtal location! Naw palnl and
carpal
3H 000
4441f f l
SANFORD/LK MARY 3 bdrm. I
ba&gt;h, 1 car gar 34)K/or laato
opIloo a! 14M/mo. 311 *710
SANFORD Hamillon Oniric I
Like now, 3/1. air, wathar
dryer, tecuflty tytlam, dbl
carport 34* *00 14* 7147

MORGAN REALTY
SANFORD
Itlh SI and Myrlla Ava

3216762
OELTONA
taa 77t tara

Q n tu ^
BANK FORECLOSURES, GOV’T
FORECLOSURES, LOW DOWN
ASSUME NO QUALIFIES
AVAILABLE IN SEMINOLE
VOLUSIA i ORANGE COUNTY

STAIRS PROPERTY

Call tar dalailil

M ANAOEM ENT A R EALTY
447 III 7177/i n 4174

la n d Mansfield. 323-7271
AA Carnet Inc . Ill lilt
L A K E M A R T A R I A 1/1,

STENSTROM

gorgaout oakt. naar goll
court# tre *00 Call for appl

111 MM
LA K EFR O N T B EAU TY
gorgaout panoramic view ot
Sylvan Lata. boathouta, dock
baacb AND ipadout and lovt
ly 1 bdrm homa Mutt taa lo
appraclatat Prlcad 110.000
under appra'tal lor quick tala
Call China a Tha Cannon Giaup
m a a tie r i n i /jm
LO N O W O O D / LA K E M AR Y
SCHOOLS 1/1 By Ownar 1147
tq It 1*31 Long wood Lako
Mary Mil 37**001)7 *014
MODEL HOME LIKE. 1/1. Lfl
Irncad yard w/dack. formal
din and llv r m , prly lam
rm Fplc. and skylights add a
touch ol alagance lo Ihit
almotl naw homa Communlly
pool, lanntt and park Frathly
p a ln la d In / o u l Q u l t l
neighbor hood1 Jutl mova In
Wonl latl Raallort com
minimi 17* *V)Call ))0 1*10
N O R T H R IO O E . 3173.400, 1
S to ry, 4 /1 'j, lam rm .
W'lplc , tgp lor mat llv/ dm
rm . Economical tolar hoi
water, caramic Hla. intercom,
lawn sprinkler ty t. huge
mailer tulle w,roman tub A
tap thowar Day /It 0**0
Hotalyn ava'wkami 1*0 70*0

R E A L T Y ,

IM G .

FIRST TIME HOMEBUVERS!

Ltl Our Full Time Wet Stiff
Show YOU ho* Eaiy It it to
0*n a Home of Your Oarnl
Call any of our EtperFenced
Agrnlt AN Y TIM E !

322 2 4 2 0 * 321 2720
SANFORD • LAKE MARY
»ln Qur 3Slh Ya«t*
4/1 BLOCK HOME v t i CMA on
100 ■ 121 lo l
24x 24 b U
leundry/*ortthop
1/ K r
rm Very clow to Pinecretf
E ltm 154 000 J7 1 2444

153— A c r e a g e L o l s / S a l e _______
DELTONA AREA 10 ACRES
Ideal (or mobile homa or
home tile, hortat. cable,
larming. or nurtery Toned
agricultural I3.VQO per acre
Small down payment with
owner llngnclng 404-747-1771
•la* A C R E3 ~N EA R LEM ON
BLUFF In tacura communi­
ty! 343.*00 with teller lermt.
"BUILDING LOT dote lo Semi
nole High, 310.300
•4-f A C R E! with 414 It lronl4ge
on SR 44 e4lt Super buyl
33*.*00 hurryl
iL w / w r

VENTUREI PROPERTIES

LooMing lo buy A home? W«
heve homei in ell oredi ol
Seminole. Orange Volusia

Cownhet! Cell for detail*'
e 3/2 with firaplact neeter
carpel and hie, 164.900
• Foreclosure! 4/} on I 52 acres
Fireplace 1104,900
• 4/2. 2700 tq If . fireplace, ig
icr porchl 1104.900
Belh Osborne
Venture I Propertiei

real

Estate, inc.

322-7498

3 3 0 0 2 7 3 /7 7 4 -9 4 0 0

Wv H a ve

EG G S-AC TLY
IV/k i / Voii N ee d !
• StfHjlO Story Of'Siqn

Beautiful 1,2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartment Homes Available

1 Bedroom SEABREEZE

014 F T BOWRIDEA IIS HP
Mercury, o/b, low hourt, with
trailer 11.000 3110114
a l l F T Bowrldar Naw canopy.
*0MP Everrude w/llll A trim.
Drlva on Irallar. Lila lackals
a teftly equip Heavy anchor.
Boat cover. AM FM cast. Nlca
boat rtady lor water. Register
A ride M uti tall lo pay
funeral bill. 34000 Firm
111*474
01*44 SKI/FI1H BOAT. *0 HP
Marc , w/traller Runs greall
33.000 Partial finance. 4*3 7104
41*43 REOAL Medallion, 17'
10". 4 eyl in/outboard motor
w/drlve on Irallar 35.000 OBO
•30 *004 or 14* 4301 evet
IM4 CONROY 14 It tkl boat
Top *0 HP Yamaha, yraller,
etcellenl 33**3 407 311 17*7
414 FT PONTOON boat. All
liberglati. 140 HP Evlnrudt
Vary latl I Many tatrai. Ilka
_ newl Only 310.130 111 4444
417 FI ORADY W HITE. OMC.
inboard/oulboard, lap tire
m odeI I*,000O BO 313 3154
0'71 OLASTRON. lilt V hull,
131W. 740 Volvo. Ilth/tkl, loll
ol a.lrat 37300 OBO 114 13t3
0'I7 OLASSTRE AM. 13' boat,
Irallar, 50hp Johnton Never In
tall water, etc. condition.
33.400
OBO
104 73**73*
'*« RENKEN, 10' cuddy cabin,
ome. I/O. 140 hp, low hrt.
motivated U**314»*11*Ernie

185— C o m p u t e r s

1 4 1 — H o m e s t o r S a le

tta.taoi t/11 Llv. din. lam rim.
aat In k it, tacurlly.ialatlltal
C01V CUSTOM tplll Dining,
lam lly rm t A p p lla n ctt.
garaga. tancad yd U t .r o
POOL HOME! 1/1. 1 000 tq Ml
L lv ., din., lam lly, gam t
roomt Scr porchl taa.SOO
Landtcapad l/l. 1/1 acral Appl.
Ilv.dln, lam rmt 141.300
S U N K E N F A M IL V RM. A
camm paal Llv din. lam
r m t . appl . ter. porch, tacurl
ty system end gar egel It.*00
BRICK 1/1 tplll. llv, din, lam
rmt, tac tytlam, ter porch,
loncadyd , garagal taa.SOO

■ II INCH ACA contola TV Rich
dark wood. Mini condition
1100 or bait oiler.
Cell 311 4313allar 4p m

A M S TA A D word procettor
com pul tr, PCW41S4 Workt
porloctl All monuelt Included
m o ............ r n 4417 alltr 1PM

1 bdrm, 1 balh. Air. lanca. FMA/
VA tpaclall Sia.000 A Jawal
Datlrabla J/ th . canl H/A.
lanca Family rm SS7.SOO
Duplat, 1/1 A l/l. c/h/a. tancad.
taoo/mo Incoma I IS/.000

FHA/VA low at H ,N AND s
owner llnanca low at S*0«/mol
Oav’l Foreclosures, Rtpatl
Samlnola, Oranga, Valutlal

2 1 5 — B o a ts a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s

CASSELBER R Y Beautiful 3
bdrm. I'v bam Naw carpal,
patnl. Showt Ilka a mcdall
sac.too.........................ata itna

312 W Fltfil SI., Sanford

N d G fiip (IH ow

155—Condominiums
Co-Op/Sale
SANDALWOOD 1/1. Ilka naw.
weened porch, too*# option
■vail. 3430/mo 1*44331

193— L a w n a G a r d e n
■ AQUATIC LILIES for pondi
SH A LL COLORS PleaMcall
___________313 4340___________
FOR SALE WO~OD M U LCH
Bring thovtll 310 pick up load
You food 111 3447___________
"W H E E L HOASE” tractor, 34"
cul, 11 Hp Kohler, elec, start,
fiYdro-tlatte drive. E«c cond
S M jj o e o is a m t

195— M a c h i n e r y / T o o l s

1 3 7 -Mobile
Hom tB/Sxle
CARRIAGE COVE
MOBILE HOME PARK
!4i4l 1/1 tplll 'IS Paarson,
canlral H/A. carport 113.100
Call33Mltaart3117a3
CARRIAGE COVE 1 bedroom, t
bath mobl la homa 31.000
1114311

IB l-A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e
e AAA HAY’S APPUAN CS a
111 S French Ava. Sanford
H • I r Ige r e lo r . S lo v e t .
Wathert Dryert Free 1 yr
labor werr Dal avail 114-4443
APPLIANCES. FURN., T V ’S,
Naw Salalllla Sytlamt at low
at 31.4*3 C H IE P O DEPOT.
Ill* French Aye
3111344
a BED. tlngla tut, clean loam
m allrttt and boc with metal
fram e on ro lla rt B ra tt
headboard US Can deliver
___________311 ant___________
e CEILING FAN. 31" Brown,
workt good Only IIP Call
330 040*____________________
e COUCH, w/milchlng chair
Traditional tlyla. du*ly rote
color, rounded ermi k back
Zlpout cukhfon*.... .......... 3100
_________Call 3117174_________
COUCH, J notching chtirt, 1
and labial A 1 tempt. In good
condition All lor &gt;1*0 1730104
F U L L BOX SPA IN O AN D
MATTRESS 340 A SET A UP
LARRY’SMAHT
&gt;314113
I 0 ( MIC ROW A V I . Large,
good condition. 310 call 130
43*1_______________________
HOME APPLIANCR C I N t l l
Over M y*4rt In S4ntord
Salat Naw and Utad Service
all make* A perl*. 304 E
Commercial St.
m 1443
KENMORE wathtr, vary nlca I
Frta dallvary and warranty
John •A-f Bail, 114 1141
O K EN M O R E M IC R O W A V I,
large, lookt good, workt
great. 330 Call 117 1470_______
a LOVESEAT. blue with rutt
pillow* attached Good coredI
Mon 330111 1743 lymtg_____
MOVINO SALE I Bdrm lull.
PVC patio turn, living rm
lull, dble rtcllner lovateel.
computer datk. waihar/dryer,
Mutt Mill 171IUI___________
a RE F R IO E R A T O R . while,
(roll Iree. door opent loll tide,
clean. Plugged In end cold.
1100 ............................ 34* 1171
■ R IF L E RACK, tolld wood
conilruclkon. ' The old lady
teld Mil II" 330. Il'totleol.
__________ 111 *03*__________
O SIN 0ER Sewing Machine;
Allracllve cabinet, model
l*40't. Only 143 407 311 3*13
SOFA A LOVESEAT. doubla
racllnar, earth Iona*, aicallent
condition
3130.
113 0101

183— T e l e v i s i o n /
R a d io /.S te r e o
■ STEREO, record player, and I
track lap# playar. A ltd place
lo plug in headMl In pood
thape. 330313 3/3*___________

231— C a rs

1B3— T e l e v i s i o n /
R a d io / S te r e o

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

123 — W a n t e d t o R e n t

NOW
LEASING!

..

INVESTORSII Don’t m itt thlt
onel 4urtll Apt. houM 1111.000

HALL R EA LT Y

3 2 1 -4 7 0 4

111— O f f i c e
S pa c e / R e n t

BATEMAN REALTY

SANFORD Sandalwood Villat.
Quit! araa, 1/1, S471'mo plut
tac Nancy 111 Sail altar t PM

CHRISTIAN lamlly with pall
and kldt naadt homa lo rant In
tanlard/Laka Mary araa
tot m iwaor tor m iaaa

K I T ’ N ’ C A R L Y L E ® by L a r r y W rlR h t

1 4 1 — H o m e s t o r S a le

■ SLIP JO IN T HOUSEHOLD
PLIERS by Crticenl Tool
USA. Cotton ol lit 141 utility
pllert I Inch tire All alike (or
many chorot around Ihe
houta Practical g ill lor
do II yourMlIor. Store coil
314, Sacrifice 37 M l 4744

19 9 — P e t s a S u p p lies^
#11*0 CAOB, tall on floor
•lend Great lor perekeett 4
tllckt end accettoriet 311
Call 313 40*0________
F R E E Shephard m l. I yr
lama la, kpayed. tholt Good
wllhchlldran 111 1131_______
4 F R E E T O GOOD HO M E,
English Bull dog. 1 yrt old All
tholt Grtal with kldt Call
altar 3 30
311 U K

2 1 1 — A n t iq u e s /
C o lle c t ib le s
A N TIQ U E S /E tla la t/O u lla ri.
wanted Anything ol value
Topcath FI Native t i l 43*0
• B E A U TIFU L large antique
wall mirror. 3100 value will
Mlllor 330 113 473*
CASH REGISTER. NCR.
(Clettlc) 71114. bran, mod
ernlied lo tleclronlc. lid edl
lion
SISOOOBO
131 4074
S O L ID C H E R R Y D IN IN G
TABLE l * » ‘t. 1 letvtt. 4
chain 3*00 OBO Cell 374 1417

21 3 — A u c t io n s
KUaiON WORLD
Tenfghl, 7 PM. Preview, 1
PM. I l l N CR 417, Lengwood
Anllquet, modern lurnlihlngt,
glattware. collecllblet. TV't.
VC R ’l, appllanctt. colnt.
loolt, pottery, boa lot*. 1*74
Rolls Royce Silver Shadow
LWB, IMt Plymouth Ralianl
wagon. Even a knight In
thlnlnq armor Aocllonoert
noloi EvaryboO* It welcome
to the bet! auction In Florldal
Something lor ovoryono.
PIoom plan to attend io X
Buyart Premium Cath/Local
Checkt/Ma|or Credit Cards
HowardC Richmond.
Auctionoor AUIllt/AB*II
Call t il 7111

TRASH OR TREASURE
AUCTION
Friday, April l*th, 7PM Our
traih could bo your treasure
Como tool Cleaning up
merchandlM tall Irom pra
vlout auction Need loll ol
room lor our May llh aucllon
Don't m ilt ill Bring big trucks
and llllla money I Bo. loll.
coNee and and tablet, tola*,
labia loll, glattware. re
dinars, tempi, loll of loolt.
yard loolt. wheel barrow, loll
end lots and lot* more I
10X Buyers Premium.

STirrEV’S AUCTION
1441 W. Hwy 44, Sanford
407 330 4113
AUII/ABI It*

2 1 5 — B o a ts a n d
A c c e s s o r ie s
HOUSEBOAT. 40'. lltel hull. In
water. Lots ol possibilities.
33300
Firm.
3714314
■ HOUSEBOAT, live aboard *3'
Hautallno, twin angina V
drive. 370K Dr Qutm 4*3 1113
■ SAIL FOR SUNFISH Sailboat.
Special "Slart A Slrlpot” do
llgn.
17*
C a llu i n i l

2 1 9 — W a n t e d to B u y
JUNK CARS W ANTED Great
Southern Auto Wracking pay*
cath lor unwanted vehicles
running or not. Monday
through Saturday V am 4pm
Wa ll Mndtruck 407 *44 M il
USED CABINETS Wllltakaout
your old cabinet! and haul
away lor no charge ail 714*
WILL buy aulogrephad leltart,
photo*, ale ol famout peopit
decaatod/alive
407 147 3034

22 1 — G o o d T h in g s
to E a t
STRAWBERRIES U Pick: Open
Itm . m i Celery Avt. 3 ml E
ol Senlord. 1 ml N ol SI Rd
tt
3.14 e pound.
3117144

2 2 2 — M u s ic a l
M e r c h a n d is e
aCLASSICAL LP RECORDS
All lamout arlltts. Llberace,
Bing Crosby, ale. All LP"! In
covan Appo. 10 30 albums
3100
Call i l l 1734

2 2 3 — M is c e lla n e o u s
A COLLEGE DEOREE you con
ellord Thlt book tavet time
and money at any college
Grool gilt 37 lo Touch dowl
Bo« 731, Senlord 3*771
0 BILLY JOCL/ELTON JOHN
llckelt "Lower” 173 PiatM
call l i t l/lt
OQRAC0 CAR S EAT; Like
newl Paid 340. atk Ing 340
374 4041 lymtg
• NUTONE Inttrcomm tyttem
New Compltle kit In boa. w/3
tpeekert, amplifier, tlereo.
•Ic For home or butlnen.
Coil 3173 Will M il lor 3100
Cell m 174*________________
e SESAME STR E E T school but
•oythetl Like newl Only m
Phone 133 **34________
• T Y P E W R I T E R , IBM
Seleclrlc II Works Period
Good cond MO Cell 313 7**0

230— A n tiq u e /C la s s ic
C a rs
• FORD THUNDERBIRD, 1**4
All original! Nteds tom*
work 1I.4J5 OBO_ 111^013*
1*43 O T MUSTANO. Eicellenl
condltlonl One owner 17,000
OBO____________ Call 311 *174

•1 9 7 0 DEViLLE CADILLAC
IMOO OBO All power. I l l 0134

2 3 1 -C a rs
• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL 'tJ.
Like new Mull Mil Only
373.300 Ceh 14071333 **34
• L I BARON Cenvtrllbla, M
Red. loaded, dig dash, new
top, new Hret 34.300 4*3 710*
tP L Y M O U T H G rind Fury,
white A ) cond. thru out
Goodmllaege tl.OOOOBO
_________ 323 »*O0__________

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
•*capl lea, leg. title, etc
CHEVY C E LEB R ITY • 1*41.
automatic. A/C. tllWcrulM,
power window* end locks,
stereo cassette Only 317*71
per month Cell Mr. Payne
lor appointment.
Courtesy Utad Cart, 111 1111

■ R EN A U LT ENCORE, 1*13.
Eacalltnl condltlonl 31.300
llrm 130 113aallar *pm
4 T 0 Y 0 T A SUPRA, Itlt.
Matalllc blue, loaded, power
everything, tunrool. Well
melnlalned. aicallent condl
lion I Garage fcepl 31.110
_______ Call 407 374 1*44
4 TO YO TA COROLLA wagon!
• «. Aulo. V c - r,d 13K.
warranty. !* ,* » I l l MM
41*71 PORSCHE. *11 Targe,
low mllaga, thowt Ilka new
310 000
OBO
311 5134
• '44 CHRYSLER ImptrUI 4 dr.
all power, body In good thape
Runs great, 31300 311 1141
•71 CHEVY El Camlno. no eng
or Iren* . A/C. P/S, P/B, cowl
hood, SS grille. 3430 344 » * l
• '71 VW B E E TLE . 1400 eng
Runt good, looks good, priced
good With Radio *1400 313 *143
• '77 T-BIRD; Beautiful green.
Greet shape Needs *ngin*
work
3300
317 73*4
'l l CHEVY P/U, new Irantmlt
lion, good llrtt. naadt minor
work___ 1300 a m
H0U41
'41 BLACK Camera. V). aulo .
good body, eactllenl running
cond
I I 100 OBO
311 4334
• 43 CHEVY ChevtHe 4 dr. 4
tpd, new llr«i. doesn't burn
oil. Good Ind car 1400 317 1111
'U HORIZON. M L . 4 dr . hatch
back, aulo, p/i, p/b depen
debit. 3130080 4071141143
'41 PONTIAC iaaa. I ownar.
perfect cond., gar. kapl, A/C.
auto, Am/Fm 310001114140
'U DO DOE DAYTONA MUST
SELLI 4 cylinder, nice, owner
meyllnenctl.. ............H f -U H
' I t C H E V R O L E T C aprice
Cleillc, 4 dr., runt good,
loaded 34.000 OBO end
'S3 Chevrolet Eelelr, 1 dr., runt
oood 31.000 OBO 374 3117

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
B u ses/ Vans
• CHEVY B EAU VILLE VAN
'74, I Ion, PatMngtr yen.
clean Loededl Too much lo
lilt, must tea to appreciate
Only 11.441 OBO
311 1700
• FORD RANOER, L TX *1.
P/S, crulM. A/C, llereo. 4.MO
mile*. I yr or 11.000 ml Ie11 on
warranty._______ Call 111 1&gt;51
• ISUZU P/U *1 Red. IK. A/C.
am/lm can. lull bedllner,
raer window **,430 m 4434
• JE E P PICK UP 4*4. 1*74. VI
aulo Engine end Irani re
bull* I about 10 000 mlletl
Newer interior 31,000 111 loot
• JE E P PICKUP TRUCK, 1*7*
4v4 with topper 3100 OBO
Need! • lol ol TLC 111 1*3*

fps. Sanford Motor Co.
’*1 FORD RANGER PICKUP
Auto. air. power steering and
brake*. 11.000 ml Like naw!
Special 3t.*H Call 311 4341
• 1*71 CHEVY 1/1 Ion p'u. 330
VI. Hunt good Engine and
Irani strong 31300 113 3311
• m i SUBURBAN OMC. t IL
diesel, hall Ion. mechanically
tolld. new red./brake rotors 4.
caliper t/hetd liner. Very good
lire* end taw pkg. 33.300 OBO
_________ 007141 1444_________
• 1*43 CHEVY CUSTOM 1/4 Ion
van Hew lire*, good working
cond. 4 ce p le ln c h a in .
couch/bed 33440 343 13*0 k in
• latl F IO BLAZER 4 dr. lull
power. Tahoe package. I3K ml
air.aoorirmmaeoeelterk
'44 FORD Ftaa flat bed ~
LOOKS AND RUNS GOOD I!
3*0get.
31300
3114334

241— R e c re a tio n a l
V e h ic le s / C a m p e rs
a 1(47 COACIIA, IN M M 14 It
U K mi Many eiiratl Incl
generator Very easy lo drive
11*.*00.......... ........... 371 4430
•'74 MOTOR HOME Runt great
Will trade lor travel Irallar ot
comparable value 111 74*3
• '77 CRUISE AIR. 57K ml . 4*0
13 H, 3 KVA, balh, micro. Tv
anlanna, awning, auxiliary
fuel Vary good cond 1*.2S0
111 4147 allar 4 Pm
• 77 SOUTHWIND motor homa.
13 It. Eacallanl condition
Generator 33.000 311 *11*
’14 FORD. VI. attended van,
high lop. 1 bunckt. tlnk. potti
EkC. cond, S4.t*3 321 17*7
• ’•I ALLEGRO motor homo 17
ft, owning, twin beds, genera
lor kIv. 437.300 OBO 111 0731

243— T r a ile r s
HEAVY DUTY, till bed. tingle
•tie, 4.000 lb cep. Etc. cond
1134OBO Geneva 14* *1)1

nr A I ioum
•

I flu 4**&lt;it SluflHI

1 A ? H»'(|&lt;nnth

AffoMfritjli.* A |.,iiTnif f i l v
• f FM'FMlIy O f! Sill? O ' '| l« *M41. il i Ib•
fv1.lh.|()l’((IMIl|
• Alin 'itm up- f’nvri!** f ' tln» \ Mnr*^

mO/

1100 sillljDcjJrtk

TUitlion TKIa AJ C Pay Ho ApplkiUon Fed

St. Croix Apartments
3 X 1 -7 3 0 3
O n L a k e E m m a Rd.* L a k e M a ry
HOURSi

M-r. 0 - 6 ■ Sat. 10-5 ' Sun. Closed

SANFORD COURT
APARTMENTS
3.101 S SiinfOrcf Avo. • Siinford

W e'll advertise your car or other
motor vehicle until it's sold.

3 2 3 -3 3 0 1
Mt&gt;o»s Mon S it ‘t '3 lO C lu u v l Sufi

We make renting a
.
*
*

CASH IN ON
S pring S avings
O n l , 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartment Homes!

Better Than Ever Rates On
Beautiful 1,2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Homes!
• W n s h o rs /D ry o rs In A ll U n its
• S la lo -O I- T h o A rt F lln o s s C o n to r
• P ilv a to E x lo iio f S to ra g o
• E n c lo s o d P a tlo s /D u tc o n lo s

Geneva Gardens

STONEBROOK
APARTMENTS

3 2 2 -2 0 9 0

322-9556

I 505 W

2511) S lr u o l • S iin f o r U

HOURS: Mon. - Ffl. 8:30 - 5:30
Managad By Angaka Gotdon Pioparty Managemoni

Y ou pay for the first 10 days and
if your car doesn't sell, call us
and renew it for FREE! Phone
number and asking price must be
included in ad. N o copy change
while ad is running except for price.
Non-commercial only. Call 322-261 1 today!

An Apartment
Community
That Stands Apart.

1000 Stonebrook Dr., Sanford

Y o u r tra n sp orta tion a d w ork s b e s t w h en it c o n ta in s
in fo rm a tio n the b u y e r w ants to k n o w :
Make and Model
• Year
• Power Features

•

U S

Mechanical Condition
Body and Finish
Transmission

Mileage
Previous Use
A ccessorics/lnftrior

SANFORD HERALD CLASSIFIEDS 32X46X1 8 ©

�•at
• I

« » 4 "■

t 1 «

4 ;,*

f f W

T v n TT

r

“‘r n

• &lt;

™

n

»

4 V

• . &gt;

OB - Sonlord H e ra ld , S anford, Florida - Friday, April 29, 1994

by Chic Young

B LO N D IE

Drinking can lead
to impotence
DEAR DR. O O T T : My husband
*ay« rlini drinking a six-pack or
more of l&gt;ocr a day Is not Ihc
reason Tor Ills Impotence. He
feels It's because he’s 02. I don’t
know how lo handle the pro­
blem.
DEAR READER : While It’s
true Hint Impotence Is associated
with age (Itccause of Irss efficient
circulation and oilier factors),
alcohol can certainly aggravate
the situation.
Heavy drinkers of any age
often experience sexual dif­
ficulties. In pnrt because alcohol
affects the liver, Ihc organ that
neutralizes the small amount of
the female hormone estrogen
that every male produces. When
tills estrogen Is not altered by
the liver, the hormone circulates
In the bloodstream and can
afreet potency. It can also lend to
enlurged breasts, a common
component of cirrhosis that re­
sults from alcohol abuse.
Although your husband may
lie partially corrccl, the amount
of alcohol he consumes dally
could clearly Ik ? adding lo his
problem. A six-pack a dny habit
Is considered hy many drinkers
to be a "norm al" amount: how­
ever, from a medical standpoint.
It Is clearly excessive. As a
general rule, the liver cannot
handle more than four ounces of
spirits u day, or (he equivalent In
l»eer (two or three cans) ami wine
(two or three glasses).
You're probably going to fall In
yo u r efforts to make your
husband moderate his l&gt;eer In­
take. He’ll view your pleading
merely as "fussing" or harass­
ment. So. I suggest that you
focus on yourself. Ask yottr
doctor to help you or nltend an
Al-Anon meeting In your com­
munity. Al-Anon Is a support
group for people whose loved
ones are alcoholic, as I suspect
your huslrand Is ( I k - c o u m - he Is
unwilling to modify his behavior
In the fare of a probable physical
effect from the alcohol).

f t

Also, your Inrnlly physician
may wish to cxum lnc your
husband, test Ills liver and
address Ihe alcohol Issue.
To give you more Information.
I am sending you free copies of
my Health Reports "Impotence"

ACROSS
t Butter p ia c a i
9 O b s is
B A c trs n —
Partisan

12
13
14
15
19

Oliva ganut
Falaahood
Btrlkaa
D aiarva
A c tra n —
Markal
17 Abomlnabla
snowman

10 Chawlng-gum
brand
20 Baluddlad
(2 wds.)
21 A llan o i
22 Eaclamatlon
of dlaguat
23 Facilm lla
machlna
29 Artificial
awaatanar
31 Staogar

33 Tint thing
34 F ro tla
35 Taro-load
Doth
7 — T ~

tl

39 Mothar
37 Acclaim
38 Darlvatlon of
a word
41 A d ra a a Mary

&lt;A'aL

and "Help II: Mcntnl/Subslnnre
A b use ."
Anaarar to Pravloua Punta

u u i j u a

L j u u a u u u

□ □ □ □ UUU u u u u
U U U U UUU u u u u
UtfUUUUU u u u u u
UU UUU
U U U U U U U U UUU
UUUL9 UlUUU UUU
U U U U U U U UUUUH
aarari ziunriuLunri
9
7
8
9
10

1 Varaa arrltar

2 Wlngllka

3 Aclraaa —
Oarr
4 A d raaa —
Duncan
5 Servile
am ployaa

DOWN

T ~ W 7r

7r

r

ll

”

ir

it

m

R T

m

a

51“

: . v , i

u

39

u

37
39

41

„
u

j

44
45
49

I 43
„
14

i t "

!S

f

?!

J

ir

47
48
49

IT

,
L

32

£
■

r

ir

11
19
20
22
23
24
25
27
28
29
30

„

PPp p

PETER
GOTT.M.D.

□U11LJULJ13L1 UIUULJ
□LJHUUUUfl L1LJU12J
□LIU UbJULl LJUiUll
UHU UUU U U U U U
u u u mu

42 Kin of mono
43 Fam ala
tandplpar
45 lu n e n and
dinnar
48 A c tra ia —
Langa
52 C anlar of
ahlald
53 Aviation
•g ey.
54 Ba aarara of
55 Placa
59 Flaur-da- —
57 Author —
Slantay
Oardnar
58 Cloth
m aaiuraa
59 Spanlth
ehaar
9 0 Claara (of)

H

M E D IC IN E

50
51
S3

19
1

Am not (al.)
Bavaraga
Metrical
H aeteni
Diminutive
auffla
A continent
Every
Muslim title
Laal mo.
Organ pipe
U nde'o wife
Medical
picture
HI or bya
Legal-aid org.
Rip
Princely Ital­
ian family
Of thick
doudo
1,051,
Roman
Looka at
Cricket
oelllono
ubheate
Qlaclal ridge
Horse'e kin
Actor —
Jannlngt
Son of Adam
Prlaon
C roat
Inacrlptlon
Icy
Ovarwhalmt
Mr. Ziegfeld

f

WIN A T BRIDGE

II
1 .

by Bob Thavet

FR A N K A ND E R N E S T

a

YOU*
* ’

MY C U t N T PLtAPi N O T
6U H -TY
5
tY

U tA S O H

Of A
p o w f*

g

By Phillip Alder
I ' . G. W ode house w r o t e ,
"•Judges, us u class, display. In
the matter of arranging alimony,
that reckless generosity which Is
found only In men who are
giving nwny someone rise’s
cash."
Well, on today's deal, you la­
the J udge. Sout h was the
husband. North tils wife — and.
yes. they are still married.
Alter an auction In which
neither side knew who could
make what. South ended in lour
spades doubled West led a heart
lo Ills partner's king East swit­
ched to the club six Dcelurer
won with tile ace, unblocked Ihe
diamond king, rolled a heart In
Ihe dummy and discarded a club
on dummy's diamond ace. The
club king was cashed and the
cluh lour rolled In hand. Howev­
er. disaster struck when West
overruffed. And a moment later.

when East got In witli Ihe spade
are. another club lead promoted
West’s spade queen as the set­
ting trick
"H ow unlucky van I be?"
asked South. “ Why should East
have five c I i i I js and only one
spade?"
■'You m ls p la y rd ." replied
Nortli. "There is no hurry to
discard your club loser. After
winning trick two wit li the d u b
ace, roll a heart loser In the
dummy Play a diamond to your
king and roll your last heart In
Ihe d u m m y
T h e n lead a
trum p."
Sooth |lldged his Wife lo lie
tight Willi Iter line, everything
Is as much under control as it
can lie II East plays low on ihc
trump. South puts up the king.
East being marked with the ace
from the auction. Here, though.
East wins with the ace and
returns a club to dummy's king.
South discards Ills remaining

club on the diamond ncc and
loses only one more trump trick

By Bernice Bede Oeol
YO yR BIRTHDAY
A p ril 30, I0B4
Yo u r chart Indicates you
might he more adventurous Hum
usual In Ihe year ahead. There's
a possibility you may become
seriously Involved In a very
progressive endeavor.
TAURUS (April 20 May 20)
Your present assessment per­
taining to something you've
been evaluating und reevaluat­
ing In your mind looks like It Is
now on target. Base your de­
cisions on the knowledge you've
acquired. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find It. The
A stro-G raph Matchmaker In­
stantly reveals which signs urc
romantically perfect for you.
Mall 92 and a l ong, selfaddressed. stamped envelope to
Matchmaker, c/o Oils newspa­
per. I’.O. Box 4*105, New York.
N.Y. 10103.
QEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) It
Isn't necessary for you to avoid
responsibilities or dodge crlllcul
Issues today. If you have the
courage to face tilings head on.
tilings should work out to your
ultimate satisfaction.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
You might need some help today

In getting a llx on someone
w here c i r c umst anc es have
brought you together about
whom you know little.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Some
constructive changes cun he
made at tills time that will
lM-ncfll you as well as others In a
collective endeavor. Make the
moves yourself. Instead of letting
events dictate them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) You
need lo do something con­
structive today In order lo gratify
your restlessness and feelings of
self-worth. Make It an endeavor
that will attract others to partlcIpatcus well.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Som etim es our mental ami
physical faculties arc better
tuned Ilian usual and Hits makes
It possible for us lo he very
productive and effective. Today
Is your day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
your plans for today Include the
participation of another, don't
assume tills person Is Idly
awaiting your call. Get In touch
with the Individual as early as
possible regarding a commit­
ment.
8AOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your possibilities for materi­

al gai ns look good today,
especially for enhancing your
Income or earnings through
traditional methods and sources.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
IB) You might not yet feel
comfortable with some new
Ideas you've conceived. Howev­
er. If you talk them over with a
friend whose opinions you trust,
you'll realize they are pretty
good.

NORTH
III-14
♦M l
44
♦ AI 7S41
♦ K41
WEST
♦ 0 10 5

EAST
♦A
♦ A K J 10 7
♦J »
♦ J 9M S

♦ q to • i
♦ q to

SOUTH
♦ K J 741 2
4S 4 2
♦K
♦ A 72
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer East
Sm II

Writ

Norik

1♦
44

24
Dbl

:♦
All pass

Kail
14
44

Opening lead: V 3

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Desirable results are Indicated
toduy If y o u ’re ullnwcd to
perform at your own pace. Your
productiveness could he damp­
ened. however, ir others look
over your shoulder.
PISCES (KeB. 20-March 20)
Someone has been filling the
head of a close friend of yours
with a lot of baloney lately.
Today you might have Ihe opjMirtunity for which you've been
hoping to pul this person In
his/her place.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) A
hit more self-discipline and an
additional touch of assertiveness
should lu* all you need toduy to
put you In front of the puck.
Don't let yourself drift off course
through Indifference.
by L to n a r d S ta rr

no.

rr*d 50

gpftcttur

IT C0t*\tRT&amp;
THE WASTE
IVAEK INTO
W ffO Y ...

»A&lt;o’r

You’Re
HOT ,

loos, rou*e rksht to be.

NtRVOLH Will A 5fUAN&lt;3fR.

POT IN THIS CASE YOU’RE
j/Yri-rN WITH
w i n MM THAN
in n ON
SAFER
MfOOT? THE ROAO AT NlOHT,
I d I in .
teTTiN1

^ 0 “

YEAH? IU-HAKE

AtYOKW P'OSiOh I
APOOT THAT/«

�DATAPLEX
C O R P O R A T I O N

C E R T IF IC A T E O F A U T H E N T IC IT Y
T h is is to c e rtify th e m ic ro im a g e s a p p e a rin g on th is film ro ll N o . _
s ta rtin g w ith

f i f e / 2

2

/ ?

%

?

&lt;

3

/

-2 % / 9 9 /

a n d e n d in g w ith

a re a c c u ra te a n d c o m p le te re p ro d u c tio n s of th e re c o rd s of
P

as

d e liv e re d

in

O

th e

It is fu rth e r c e rtifie d

/2 J )

//c

z

re g u la r c o u rs e
th e

e n tire

o f b u s in e s s

fo r m ic ro film in g

m ic ro p h o to g ra p h ic

p ro c e s s e s

to

u se d

D a ta p le x .
in

p ro d u c ­

in g th is film w e re c a rrie d o u t in a m a n n e r a n d o n film v h ic h m e e ts all c u rre n t
re q u ire m e n ts

of

th e

A m e ric a n

N a tio n a l

S ta n d a rd s

In s titu te

and

th e

R e v e n u e S e rv ic e fo r p e rm a n e n t/a rc h iv a l m ic ro p h o to g ra p h ic c o p y .

D a te P ro d u c e d

J*
Yr

D a ta p le x C a m e ra O p e ra to r

P la c e
City

State

In te rn a l

�/•»

Q U A LITY CO NTR O L DENSITY TA R G E T J
DATAPLEX

P O B O X 1 4 9 75 , J A C K S O N . M IS S IS S IP P I 3 9 2 3 6

(6 0 1 ) 9 7 7 4 0 0 0

C O R P O R A T I O N
&lt;:

s t o m i; m n a m e

C IT Y . S T A T E

M A C H IN E O P E R A T O R

S/pv

d .X

Z IP

ACTION TAKEN

X

3

R O LL N O

z
;

r

V O LTA G E LEFT ON

VOLTAGE

EP.TULSION N U M B E R

F IL M B R A N D

F IL M U N IT S E R IA I N O

CAMERA TYPE AND MODEL NLIMRFR

c h e c k e d by

r

DATE

In te rn a l R e v e n u e P ro c e d u re 81 -46, S e ctio n 5.01.1 th ro u g h .11, p ro v id e s g u id e lin e s fo r film in g of p a p e r d o c u m e n ts . T h is p ro c e d u re re q u ire s th a t the
s ta n d a rd s set fo rth b y th e A m e ric a n N a tio n a l S ta n d a rd s In stitu te , N a tio n a l M ic ro g ra p h ic s A s s o c ia tio n , a nd N a tio n a l B u re a u of S ta n d a rd s be met.

STEP TEST

SETTIN G
VO LTS

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

X

4R
—r i •(

?

1033

3 -9 2

9

10

i

_ _ _ __ j

____________

D O N O T W R IT E B E L O W T H IS L IN E

8

T O BE U S E D F O R D E N S IT O M E T E R R E A D IN G S

w.

�1 ^

□BB DATAPLEX m
Information Systems &amp; Services ||||| l.l
IN D EX A N D RETRIEVAL S Y S T E M
START O F R O LL/Q .C . TA R G ET

O P ER ATO R
C H E C K L IS T
1. Prepare microfilmer
for cleaning by remov­
ing all accessories.
2. Dust the lamps and
check for proper
positioning.
3. Remove, clean, and
reinstall glass guides.
4. Dust off all mirrors.

1989 COPYRIGHT

DATAPLEX CORPORATION

DX #1377

5. Clean the feeder
using a water
dampened cloth to
clean the rollers if they
have a build-up of dirt
6. Reassemble the
microfilmer.
7. Check the feeder for
proper document
separation.
8. Check the endorser
for proper date and
verify there is adequate
ink.

2.8

Li.

3.2

Z 5

2.2

2.0

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241985">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, April 29, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241987">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241989">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on April 29, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241991">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241993">
                <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;, April 29, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241995">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241996">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241998">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241999">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24234" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23840">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/6fc7b1f507afbed9f6200338277d8758.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4b0c68726b9252208def1deada6b4309</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242048">
                    <text>Mth Year, No. 304 - Sanford. Florida

Are you safe at work?

NEW S DIGEST

Death toll up, tougher enforcement of laws pledged
□

S p o rts

Half ths way thara
SAN FOR D — One game got In but r*
the Sanford Recreation Senior Baseball
it last night.

SAN FO R D — Labor Secretary Robert Reich Is
pledging tougher enforcement of workplace safety
laws, as the number of work-related deaths rose
0.9 percent In 1993.
Increased awareness of on-the-job crime is a
also of major concern locally. The Seminole
County Sheriffs Department Crime Prevention
Unit has special deputies assigned to deal In
workplace crime.

The unit s director, Lt. Matt Stewart says Ray
Stacey Is the department's Crime Prevention
practitioner. "He Is fully licensed by the state
attorney general." Stewart said, "and among
other projects, he Is currently working on a
special crime-prevention plan dealing with the
hotet/motel Industry."
Stewart says the project Is aimed at Increasing
and Improving the communications link between
the sheriffs office and hotel/motel owners and
operators, In efforts to help reduce crime In that
Industry.

Meeting to plan July 4th

Homicides. Including shootings and stabbing*,
caused 17 percent of the on-the-job deaths
state-wide last year, the same share as In 1992.
Killings at the workplace have become more
prominent In Central Florida recently, with the
Seminole County sheriffs Violent Crimes Section
looking Into the murder of 47 ycar-ld Betty Foster
on Jan. 31, 1991. A suspect has recently been
named. The woman was found stabbed to death
at the My Comp Computer Store near Altamonte
□Baa Safa. Page B A

Murder

' SA N FO R D — Th e Sanford Historic Downtown
Waterfront Association. SH D W A . will hold a
meeting Tuesday morning at 8 a.m., at the
Colonial Room Restaurant In downtown San­
ford. President Rod Layer says one of the main
subjects to be discussed will be whether
S H D W A will sponsor the J u ly 4th fireworks and
holiday event In 1995. SH DW A has already
announced support of the return of fireworks
displays, but has not officially declared Inten­
tions of being the main sponsor.
In addition to members of SH DW A. the
meeting Is also open to the general public and
any persona Interested In pursuing plans for
next year's Independence Day event.

update

Motoreyelt daputy Injured
LO N O W O O D — A Seminole County motorcy­
cle deputy received m inor Injuries In an
accident with a tractor-trailer truck this m orn­
ing. Deputv John Thomson was taken to Florida
HoapHal-Altamonte for treatment of cute and
a b ra s io n s , said s h e riffs spokesm an E d
McDonough. Thom son eras eastbound on State
Road 434 shortly after S a.m . when he
attempted to pass around a Une of vehicles in
front of the Springs P lu s , said McDonough. As
he moved around the vehicles, the truck driven
by an Apopka m an struck the right side of the
‘ , knocking him over. T h e motorcycle
motorcycle.

SANFORD — The attorney who defended Anion
Daryl Meyers on a first degree murder charge In
the disappearance of a Lake Mary leen has
the case**&lt;0 Wlthdr*w

rsy BsmsiiBfif Sohool laaobars.

Former Midway s: udent shares
strategies to help other kids

of the Year
- B rm lnols County Public Works
y Sail era was named "Florida
m Year o f a Rural C ounty" by the
by County

Rabun for his efforts In
ny for Roads" referenI. Th e sales tax will
B300 million during 10 years to fulfill
‘a highway needs for the foreseeable
lUara also played a key role In
the county's solid waste program,
d under the 1968 Florida Solid Waste
s has worked for the county since
1863, first as asMatant county engineer, deputy
division manager, department director and
acting deputy county manager before Rabun
toted'him to hta current position In 1991
Rabun was hired.

6 C A SSELB ER R Y — Congressional candidate
E d Ooddard will hold a town meeting for the
public Saturday at the Seminole County Central
at 10 a m . Ooddard, a Longwood Democrat, will
face Republican District 7 incumbent John Mica
SLO N O W O O O Th e Sanford Womens’
(publican C lub w ill hold "T h e Elephant
•raped#" Saturday. Aug. 13. from 3 until 4
m., at Alaqua Country O u b . Admission la 310
r adults. SB for children 3 1 3 . and free for
lOdran under two. Hors d'oeuvres will be
read and door jrtass given. Candidates for
sethre affioss will be on hand for the event.

S A N F O R D — Th e re are always those
students In a classroom who don't seem to
learn as easily as others.
Teachers know the students aren't stupid or
that they don't have learning disabilities.
What they need are strategies forleamlng.
Maime Bingham, principal of Midway Ele-

,he Penalty phnse of

Meyers was convicted In June or murdering
14-year old Kathy Engels In 1987. The penalty
phase of the case is set for later this month. The
state Is seeking the death penalty. The other
sentence possible for conviction of first degree
murder Is life In prison without parole Tor 25
years.
In a motion filed last month. Meyers' defense
attorney Ed Leinster lists four reasons the court
should allow him to withdraw from the case.
Mayers has Instructed Leinster not to develop or
present mitigating evidence on his behair for the
penalty phase. A hearing on the motion Is
scheduled Aug. 33 before Judge Alan A. Dickey.
In a pro ae motion. Meyers has set forth specific
Instructions about the evidence which Leinster Is
to present, according to the attorney's request to
withdraw from the case. The evidence, in
Leinster's opinion, la not germane to Issues In the
penalty phase.
□■•a M u rd e r, Paga B A

Grant money
would provide
‘Safe Haven’
SAN FO R D — Educators and d vlc leaders know
communities need a place where children can be
occupied and where they can be cared for.
In some communities such a haven can be
found in a place of worship. In others it is to the
home of a special person. But to some places,
there is no such heart
Where crime is rampant ion the streets and
families are often shattered, the schools of
Seminole County are hoping to serve that
purpose to the children.
Th e schools and the Orove Counseling Center
have Joined forces to apply for a 6100000 grant
roent of Education end the Department of Justice.

Vlnco. played by UCF Polio# offlcsr k.tchas
Rosignoi, slammed across the floor with Scott
while Larry, played by fallow UCF offcar Joa
Rodriguez, crashed gracefully Into Freeman.
Below. Larry showa the financial conse­
quences of not wearing your seal bait. Buckle
up and enjoy the ride.

h J S iS S d !S .£ £ " c tm p o n e a ta c « * « .
According to grant writer Jeanne Moon, eligible
applicants must present a "collaborative effort
4

C

□See Haven. Page BA

Birthday bash to
be tons of fun
Partly cloudy with
a chance of mainly
afternoon and even­
in g a h o w e ra a n d
thunderstorms. High
to the upper 80s to
low 90s. Winds will
be from the east at
S-10 mph. Chance of
rain 00 percent.

SAN FO R D — It will be a g*^"ttp birthday
party, and everyone is Invited. Maude the
elephant, at the Central Florida g«*«L»gical Park,
will turn 20 on Saturday. August 30.
Marketing Director Andrea Fanner says It will
be a gala event, adding a variety of entertainment
and educational activities to Uw giant birthday
celebration.
Visitors will each receive a piece of the large
cake, designed snd donated by Kaah n Kerry In
Orange City.
. Maude, and Mary, the soo's other resident
elephant, will have a cake of their own r&gt;mnar«ig
however. It will consist of hay. apple eUceldng.
and carrot candles.
Far young and old alike, there will be a apodal

F O R T H E R E S T IN E D I T O R I A L S , O P I N I O N S A N D A N A L Y

S OF T H E NEWS, READ TH E HERALD

�N E W S FROM T H E R E G IO N AN D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

C h a n g e s in h is to ric black s c h o o l noted
Taxi drivtrs will try to block new rules
MIAMI — Striking taxi drivers said Wednesday they were
heading to court to stop an increase In fines as Miami tries to
sharpen Its Image. Meanwhile, officials said the strike seemed
to have minimal effect In the tourist mecca.
The United Taxi Drivers and Owners Association said Its
attorney would file a request for a temporary Injunction in
county court on the new rules that to begin on Thursday.
Fines, which had been $25 for about 20 years, will Increase
up to $1,000 for drtvlng without a county-issued taxi license.
$250 for overcharging a customer. $100 for refusing a
passenger.
Cabbies say the overriding concern should be safely. Instead.
"T h e y (county officials) don't realize the cab Industry is the
worst Job-related Industry there is as far as safety goes," said
Martin Stlner. the union's vice president. "Th e police have a
safer Job than we do. T o go out and work on a dally basts and
have this hanging over your head is ridiculous."
Drivers are also upset by a long-standing dress code that
dictates drivers wear dark pants or skirts, closed shoes and
collared shirts. It's an issue, Stlner said, because of Miami's
sweltering heat. Shorts should be an option as they are for
some police, he said.
" I don't think there la another Industry that has the amount
of rules and regulations and fines that we do." he said.
Th e new fines, Stlner said, resulted from Dade County falling
to enforce existing standards.

OR LANDO - While Tusltegee's alumni
pay their respects to history in an annual
reunion this week, they are also enthusiastic
over the changes at the black university.
From Tuskegec Normnl School of Booker
T . Washington's dny to today's Tuskegec
Institute, there Is a world of difference, Its
teachers and alumni say.
,.v
Today's graduates are engineers, business
leaders, doctors and lawyers. No longer Is
the school content to produce merely
teachers, farmers and bricklayers.
Its alumni Include Air Force Oen. Daniel
"Chappie" James and actor Keenan Ivory
Wayans. It Is noted for George Washington
Carver and the Tuskegec Airmen, the group
of black World War II aviators.
Although officials say they are faithful to
Washington's original vision, Tuskegec
began changing almost as soon as It opened.

(They worked the dickens
out of us, especially in
engineering. J
"It simply grew," said Frank J . Toland, a
professor at the Alabama university.
"So we don't offer brick masonry for our
college students, but we offer a program In
building and construction. We don't offer
any programs In drafting, we offer degrees
In architecture."
Th e school late last century followed the
guidelines of early leaders such as Washing­
ton: that blacks could get ahead by learning
a vocation, not challenging Southern society
by agitating for the vote.
Changes began in the early 1900a. Toland
maid, ss public schools started educating

black students. Tuskegec shined to higher
education, becoming an Institute In 1937
and a university In 1985. It accommodated
no one during the civil lights struggles of
the 1950s and 1960s.
Radical student groups had chapters on
campus, and professors were Tree to get
Involved.
"Its role as a university was simply to
leave the faculty members alone, so the staff
members who wanted to get Involved In It
(could)," Totand said.
Today's emphasis Is getting students to
excel.
•
Julius C.’ Cobb of Orlando, joining several
hundred other alumni In toasting their alma
mater, knows the changes firsthand.
"Th e y worked the dickens out of us.
especially In engineering," Cobb said as the
reunion got underway Wednesday.

exodus

Ordtr didn't shtold woman
F O R T PIERCE — A restraining order a woman received last
week against her husband didn't shield her from his bullets.
Mary Duce was gunned down In the parking lot or her church
Monday night. Police found the restraining order In Johnnie L.
Duce's car barring Duce from threatening his wife. Mrs. Duce
had a copy In her purse.
.,.
Moments before the shooting, Duce offered hts wife a bouquet
of flowers. She said she didn't want the (lowers and reminded
him of the restraining order. That's when he went to his car
and got a gun. witnesses said.
" T ill death do us part,” witnesses heard him aay.
"D on't do this Johnnie." she cried.
Duce shot his wife twice In the head, once in the neck and
once In the shoulder with a ,357-callber Magnum, police said.
He then used the gun on himself.
The couple, married 15 yean, died In the parking lot of the
Johnson Temple Church ofOod In Christ In Fort Pierce.
Their 9-year-old daughter was In the church at the time of
the shooting.
. ..
"She told me... ‘Daddy said he was going to lull m y mama,
said Mattie Rlgglna. a friend of the family.
The girl wasn’t the only one who heard the death threats. At
church on Sunday, parishioners said, Duce stood before the
congregation and claimed he was possessed by the devil, and
the devil wanted him to klU hia wife.

Products will ssrvs ths wtiols household
ORLANDO — Tupperware Is on a campaign to take over the
kitchen, and go on from there Into the closets, bedrooms and
the average household's largest storage area of all — the
garage.
Th e 50-year-old company known for Its plastic bowls and
containers has begun the long-term diversification campaign
with a new line of potato peelers, tee trays and other everyday,
kitchen tools. "
They've been redesigned for more efficient usage and
convenience, codipany officials say.

T A L L A H A S S E E - Th e wel­
come accorded to Cubans who
come to Florida as part of a mass
exodua w ould be more like
Imprisonment under plans that
Gov. Lawton Chiles and other
atate officials are fine-tuning.
Federal deputies would round
up the new arrivals in "recep­
tion" areas at local Jaffa or other
p u b lic b uildin gs, under the
la n t reviewed W ednesday.
Nthln hours, Mate prison buses
and vans will take them to a
p rocessing area te n ta tive ly
planned for Homestead A ir Force
Base.
From there, federal authorities
will take them to military bases
outside Florida to be held until It
la determined whether they can
stay United States.
Also Wednesday, Chiles ques­
tioned Washington's readiness
to do Its part, though the U.S.
Immigration and Naturalisation
Service has prepared contingen­
cy plana.
" I used to believe In the tooth
fairy," said the governor. At.
least, he said. "I think we've got;
a commitment from them that
they will take these people out”
of Florida.
Chiles urged federal officials to
hurry up with exercises to teat
their emergency plana.
"W e are exercising oura," he:
said. "T h e y are talking about;
next February. Tha t may be;
after the fact.”
The governor announced the:
review of Florida's plana after
Cuban President Fidel Castro
raised the threat of a repeat of
the 1980 Marid boat lift. T h a t :
exodus poured about 125,000:
Cubans Into the United States In :
five months.

S

Praaant at the recent cheek presentation waa
(from left) Andy Roberts, Rotary Cftibef Sanford;

Philip Qunatar, Klwanis Club of Sanford; Doris
Jennings, principal of Pina Croat Elamantary;

able to be involved In the
federal program RIF (Reading
la Fundamental).
T h e Rotary Club of Sanford,
the Kiwanis Club of Sanford
and and the Seminole Sunrise
Klwanis Club combined their
efforts to provide the funds
needed to get the program off
the ground at Pine Crest.
M id w a y Elementary has
been Involved In the program
for ten years. Because the

and Or. Hobart Loldnar, assistant principal of
Pina Croat Elamantary. Unabta to attend the
presentation waa Brueo MoKIbbln of the
Seminole Sunrise Klwenla Club.

R I F s c h o o l a ro s e . “ T h e
purpose of R IF la to encourage
reading and literacy in young
children, especially In low In­
come and educationally dis­
advantaged areas." according
to Dede Schaffher. Seminole
County School Board Com ­
m unity Involvement Coordina­
tor.
According Schaffner. who
coordinates the program at
Midway, for every dollar raised

W om an chalnedito courthouse in protest

i
I

1

|

!

During the night, she some­
times moves to the shelter of an
overhang directly In front of the
courthouse doors.
Ma. Rlngoringo, who went on a
hunger strike for 34 days outside
the Harris County Family Law
Center In Houston until she was
hospitalized, came to Green
Cove Springs In support of a

MIAMI - Horn art thb
winning numbers selected
Wednesday in ths Florida
Lottery;
S ? lC T $ Bi* 1 4

Houston man who la seeking
custody of hts 6-year-old son.
The man la concerned that hla
son Is being neglected and
abused by hla ex-wlfe who Uvea
In Orange Park. Ms. Rlngoringo
said the la upset with Judge

TH E W EA TH ER
Tonight: A 30 percent chance of
widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms, ending.late this
evening. Winds will from the
east at 5 mph. Temperatures In
the low to mid 70s.
Friday: Partly cloudy with a
chance of afternoon showers and
thunderstorms likely. High in
the low 80s to 90. Chance of rain
00 percent. Winds from the cast
at 5-10 mph.
E xte n d e d forecast: P a rtly
cloudy m ornings w ith moat
cloudy afternoons with scattered
to n u m e ro u s sh o w e rs and
thunderstorms. Lows in the low
to mid 70a. Highs in the low to
mid 90s.

T*mpstWu tm M taa* t w i e w
m t •vwitifM tew» ■ s j s . tO T .
Amsrlll,
f

THURSDAY
Ftlyclgy 0S-71

r
FRIDA*
Ftlyclgy $8-7$

r
SATURDAY
Ptiy eigy SS-7S

9

H

SURDAY
Ftlyclgy St-7S

T h e h ig h tem perature In
Banford on Wednesday was 89
degrees and the overnight low
waa 72 degrees as reported by
the University of Florida Agri­
cultural Research and Educa­
tional Center. Cdenr Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
period ending at 9 a.m. Th u rs­
day totalled .53 Inches.
Th e temperature at 10 a.m.
T h u rs d a y was 77 degreea.
Thursday's overnight low waa
73. as recorded by the National
Weather Service at Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

FULL
Asg.ai

Daytona Beath i Waves arc
1-214 feet and choppy. Current la
from the north with a water
temperature of 82 degrees.
Raw S m y rn a Baaehi Waves
are 1-2 feet and scml-choppy.

MONDAY
Ftlyclgy S$-7t

Tonight, wind southeast 15
knots. Seas 4 feet. Bay and
inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms. Friday, wind ae 15
knots. Seaa 4 feet. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.

□Barom etric prsssars.eO.18
□Relative Hem Uity....SO get
□W ings-......southeast g mph
□Rainfall......inches
5 NUMMBflU&gt;*e4 s• *#*#***#* • • •BtOS g J U .
□ • • a rise •••s••##••t###e••• iB S a .m .

0

Atlsnlk City
A m *In

Mllwsufcw
Afeta-M Pawl
NMhvilt,
NswOrtMiw
N w Ysrfc City
OkLahsm, CHy

■w T U

*

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 11, 1904 - SA

Marijuana cultivation
Tw o brothers were arrested by sheiKTs deputies and Lake
Mary police Tuesday In connection with drug cultivation
charges. Lake Mary police first responded to a call at 239
Shady Oaks Circle in regard to a domestic dispute between the
brothers. During their Investigation, they reported seeing
marijuana plants In the house In plain view.’Sheriffs deputies
were then summoned, and with a search warrant. SIU officers
entered the house. The arrest report Indicates five marijuana
plants were being cultivated In the garage, with others found
elsewhere In the house. Thom as James Daniels, 29. and his
brother. Tim othy James Daniels. 34. were both arrested on
charges of cultivation of marijuana, and possession of
marijuana. Thom as was also charged with possession of drug
paraphernalia. Lake Mary police charged Tim othy with battery
In connection with the reported fight with hit brother.

Drug stop
Winter Springs police arrested Avery Malone Qrace, 16. of
109 Cumberlln Circle, Longwood. following a traffic atop on
S.R. 434 Tuesday. Police reported finding a knife under the
scat, and four baggies of a leafy green substance in Orace’s
shoe. Grace, the driver of the vehicle, was also found to be In
possession of two credit cards which had been identified as
being stolen. He was charged with possession with intent to
distribute, possession of stolen property, and having a
concealed weapon. Another man In the vehicle was not
charged.

Sanford wrack
Sanford police have charged Catherine Med cans Riggall, 17.
of 2529 Yale Avenue, with failure to yield to a vehicle
approaching a crossing. Th e woman was Involved with a two
car colllsslon Tuesday afternoon near the Intersection of-27th
Street and South Sanford Avenue. The driver of the other
vehicle, a 1986 Pontiac, Identified as Dorothy Th ura u Blcknell,
was not seriously Injured. Riggall was transported to Central
Florida Regional Hospital for treatment of her Injuries.

Two In fonco
A passing deputy reported seeing two men in a fenced
compound Tuesday, near a business on U.S. Highway 17*92
south of Sanford. After the business owner was summoned,
nothing was Immediately believed to be missing. Fred Thomas
Werk. 19, of Shady Lake. Longwood. and Kris Clay Jenkins,
18, of Geneva, were each arrested on charges of loitering and
prowling.

Child abuM
Jo y L. Bennett. 27, of 1041 Wentworth Court, Longwood,
was arrested by Longwood police Monday. According to the
arrest report. Bennett reportedly had hurled her two-year old
daughter approximately four feet to the floor, during an
argument, and fled from the home, Police called In a K-9 unit,
and tracked the woman first to Longwood Hills Road, then to a
wooded area off Lake Em m a Road, where she was Anally
apprehended. She has been charged with child abuse and
resisting arrest without violence. Although police said the child
was slightly Injured, she was not transported to the hospital,
and was turned over to the child's father.

Man flaaa
Members of the Sanford police Special Investigative U n it
SIU, conducted a survellance for narcotics actlvles Tuesday.
They said when one man waa approached for questioning, he
fled from the area and was pursued Into a n alley In the 1 100
,0S l c » k W ^ l o v ^ y t a u e before being appfehendedt.William
fm
crim e Boone, 3 ( . 6 f l 9 l 2 Mellonvllle Avenue, waa arrested on
a charge of resisting an officer without violence.

Blkarrobbad

Retail (haft
Patrick V. Robinson, 27. of 912 Pine Avenue, Sanford, was
arrested by Sanford police Tuesday at a business in the 3100
1block of S. Orlando Drive. Th e arrest report said Robinson
apparently took clothing, batteries and sports equipment
valued at $163.35, and attempted to write a check for his
purchases. Th e check was determined to be from a closed bank
account. Police arrested him on a charge of retail theft.

Ronald S. Tatum . 18, 805 Palmetto Avenue, Longwood. was
arrested by Longwood police Tuesday. Tatum was charged in
connection with a home burglary on August 2. at which time
approximately $200 in items were taken. He has been charged
with unarmed burglary, and petit theft.

Domestic case
Rick Franklin Fisher. 30,101 Edgewater Circle. Sanford, waa
arrested by Sanford police at his residence Tuesday following a
reported altercation with his wife. He was charged with
battery, domestic violence.

Warrants served
• Booker T . Barringer, 31, 2591 Crawford Drive, Sanford,
was located by Sanford police at Airport Boulevard and U.8.
Highway 17*92 Tuesday. He was wanted on warrants for
falling to appear on a charge of trespassing, and foiling to
appear on a charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.
• Kevin Lance Murray, 34, of Melbourne, was transported to
the John E. Polk Correctional Facility from Brevard County
Tuesday. He waa wanted for violation of probation on a
conviction of driving under the Influence of alcohol.
•Joseph Williams. 38, 2420 Lake Avenue, Sanford, was
located at the Jail Monday. He was wanted for foiling to appear
on charges or driving with a suspended/revoked license and
fleeing and attempting to elude.
• David Ear! Crowe, 40, 401 Katie Street, turned himself In
lo deputies at his residence Tuesday. He was wanted for foiling
to appear to pay a fine. It waa later discovered he was also
wanted for violation of probation on a conviction of dealing in
stolen property.
•Hubert Edward Em bry J r „ 21.904 B. 10th Street, Sanford,
was located by deputies at his residence Tuesday. He was
wanted for violation of probation on a conviction of aggravated
battery.
•Michael Tim othy Murphy. 27. 115 Anderson Street.
Sanford, waa arrested by deputies at the State Probation Office
Tuesday. He was wanted on a probation office warrant.

Incidents reported to tho shoriff
• T w o glria' bicycles with a total value of $220 were
reportedly taken Saturday from a residence In the 800 block of
RoseclllT, In Sanford.
• A n estimated $100 was stolen Friday In a burglary in the
2800 block of 8. French Avenue.
• A 12 horsepower motor and other Items valued at $1,500
waa reported stolen Friday from a construction site near
Seminole High School.
• A pool table, cash register and other Items valued at $490
were reportedly stolen Tuesday from a business In the 2100
block of Brisaon Avenue.

H IL L S ID E . N .J . F ra n k
Baiun pointed to the scene of the
crime: the tomato patch where
he bashed his victim lo death
with a broom handle wrapped in
newspaper.
" I killed a rat and I'm a
crim inal." he aald.
Th e 69-year-old gardener was
charged with animal cruelty
after He killed a rat that had
been eating his tomato plants.
Baiun whacked It as It tried to
escape from a trap he had set for
the rodent.
U n io n C o u n ty P rosecutor
Andrew Ruotolo J r . has asked
local officials to dismiss the
charges, saying the matter is
beneath the legal process.
"Fra n k Baiun was a World
W ar It veteran. He doesn't have
to be a rat m artyr." Ruotolo said.
But Hillside's prosecuting at­
torney. Christopher Howard,
said Wednesday that he'll have
to ask the Judge to dismiss the
charges when the case comes up
for shearing Aug. 24.
Baiun Is looking forward to his
day In court.1
.................
I'm so -tiled I'll be able to
o to court i id tell people th a t!
id rat out of hatred
idn't kill
lun said. ‘T m a
or anger,"
good person. a quiet person. I
wouldn't hurt anybody."
Baiun, whose only previous
b ru s h w ith ] the law was a
p a rk in g ticket, hopes state
lawmakers corne to the hearing
so they can see why animal
cruelty laws should be changed
to exempt rodents.
. T h e A s s o c ia te d H u m a n e
Societies Issued B aiun two
summonses, each carrying a
penalty of up Ito six months In
Jail and $1,250 In fines. Baiun
had called the association to
come get the tat after killing It
late last month.
Lee Bernstein, the associa­
tion's executive director, stood
by his decision to Issue the
summonses.
"It was not the fact that the
animal was killed." Bernstein
said Wednesday. "It was a mat­
ter of how s trapped animal that
could not escape was mutilated
.and died a horrible death. No
one has the right to take the law
Into their own hands."
Municipal'Court Judge Albert
Parsonnet. Meanwhile, says he
wants to hear from Baiun before
d e c id in g w he th er the case
should be dropped.
"T h e defen(font has the right
to say 'I want a trial.' and It's the
law In our country that a Judge
hears both sides of the argu­
m ent." Parsonnet said.

S

Faulkner
undaunted by
Citadel coif

America’s Supermarket*

WE WILL N O T
KNOWINGLY BE
UNDERSOLD

SERVICE
PHARMACY...
1
11
\

ifM

ly M U O IN M T H
Associated Press Writer

■
■'
i
C H A R LES TO N , S.C. - Losing
her long brown locks won't
weaken Shannon Faulkner.
“ I'm not backing out. Th e only
thing that can happen to keep
me out 1s a court stay," Ms.
Faulkner said Wednesday after a
Judge ruled for a second time
that The Citadel may shave off
her hair when she becomes its
first female cadet.
U.S. District Judge C. Weston
Houck said there to no tow
barring the all-male military
school from giving Faulkner (he
buxs cut required of all first-year
cadets. He ruled the same thing
last week, but was asked to
reconsider.
Faulkner, who fought In
court for 18 months lo Join the
corps, to expected to receive the
cut when she reports on Mon­
day.
"1 have said before I. will have
m y head shaved." said Ms.
Faulkner, who admitted she
wouldn’t like It.
Th e Citadel argues the haircut
strips sw ay Individuality as
cadets begin life in the corps.
But lawyers for Ms. Faulkner
and the Justice Depsrtm enl
argued It would add to her
Isolation as the lone woman In
the corps and doesn't mirror the
requirements for women Ut the
military.
Houck ordered Th e Citadel last
month to admit Ms. Faulkner
Into the corps, ruling Us all-male
adm ission s policy unconstitu­
tional. Th e school has asked the
4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
to block her entrance.
T h e Judge said there was no
evidence Ms. Faulkner was In
danger of being harm ed or
sexually harassed. He also asked
that U.S. marshals make sure
his order admitting her to canted
out “ fully, fairly and peace­
fully."

10

III
★

j

Sanford
Middle I 8
^School |

•

E
•
;■

415 C elery Ava l

i|
1

*L

j

Theft

Assoolstsd Press Writer_________

WiNN[@DiXiE

Airport Blvd.

Sanford police arrested Anthony Edwards, SO, of 412 S.
Sanford Avenue, near Eighth Street and Sanford Avenue
Tuesday. Police said he reportedly had approached an elderly
man riding a bike near Fifth Street, and demanded money or
the man's bike. Th e arrest report says Edwards grabbed the
man's wallet containing $12 and fled from the area. He wae
found three blocks away by police and arrested on a charge of
robbery.

Rat killing:
Gardener
charged

1514 S. FRENCH AVE.
PHARMACIST: JERRY LIGUORI
PHONE: 407-321-6626
* State-licensed and registered pharmacists
* Convenience: have your prescription filled
while you shop
* We accept PCS, PAID, BC-B8 MEDIMET and
MEDICAID
* Computerized prescription records
* We carry a full line o f FDA-approvod
quality generic drug!
* Prescriptions are easily transferrable. Just
bring In your refutable prescription and
w e ll contact your physician and take care
o f all the details.

�Siiiiflinl IlfliBld

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

' (Utl&gt;S 4S1*Stfl)

300 N. FR EN CH A V E.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407.322*2011 or 831.0093

Will Big Government ever go away?

EDITORIAL

Ignorance
isn’t bliss
A re g u la r e x a m in a tio n o f the Police Briefs
published o n page 3*A of each laaue of the
Sanford Hermkl pro ves that the m in d of a
la w breaker m a y n o t be as developed as It
m ig h t be.
M a n y tim es, w e read o f traffic stops m ade
because o f a busted tallllght o r speeding,
w h ic h result In m u ltip le charges bein g m ade
againat the d rive r, often for d riv in g w ith a
suapended/revoked license, falling to appear
In co u rt, o r d riv in g u n d e r the influence of
alcohol.
L a w enforcem ent officers m a y not appreci­
ate this type of advice to lawbreakers, b u t is
should be obvious. If a person la w anted on an
outstanding w a rra n t, o r d rivin g Illegally. It's
' d u m b to speed, d rive w ith o u t proper lights ~
g o o n a d rin k in g spree.
B u t rather th a n Judge the lawbreaker's
reasoning for not ca rin g about autom obile
m aintenance, let u s look at the law -abiding
citizen.
Y o u are not exem pt from trouble. D riv in g
w ith Im pro pe r e q u ip m e n t ca n also cause yo u
a great deal of Inconvenience, e m barrasm ent,
a nd even m oney. Y o u find yo u rse lf stopped
b y a patrolm an, and try to exp lain w h y y o u r
tallllght doesn't w o rk . Y o u m u s t get the lig h t
fixed a n d p a y the traffic One. w h ich is not a
m in o r a m o u n t o f m o n e y .
' If there are e no u gh traffic slops a n d fines,
y o u co u ld end u p losing y o u r license. G e ttin g
tp w o rk , the gro ce ry store o r d octor's office
w ill be Im possible unless y o u find
else to d rive . T h a t Is often ex p snMve as srefi.
O f course. If y o u d riv e yourself, a n d are In
tion of the la w , y o u h a ve reverted bock
the DQAl
lawbreaker
r
•• .
o r tat
changed.
ln d s h ie ld , o r o th e r
a b ro ken w in
ca n 'b e costly. Not as m u c h how ever,
i h a v in g to d o so p h is h a v in g Ip p a y a traffic
iW e suggest m otorists realise th e ir vehicle
playa a m a jo r p a rt In each day. T a k e care of
11^ and It w ill h r ip take &lt;
I A v o id tak in g ca re o f 1L a n d It w ill aauae y o u
problem s aa w en a s m o n e y. A n d . w h o k n ow s.
m a y som eday rea d y o u r o w n n a m e In the

33£

One of the complaints forever being heard In
conservative circles la that Ronald Keagan
"failed" to turn Big Government around. Some*
times it’s said critically, sometimes sadly, but
the point Is always the same: Look at how huge
and Intrusive government Is today, after Reagan
— and It's still growing!
In the June laaue of Commentary. David From,
one of our brightest young conservative Journal­
ists. has an article to this effect, excerpted from
hls forthcoming book. "Dead Right." He correctly Identifies the fundamental problem! the
deterioration of the old American virtues
(prudence, thrill, hard work, self discipline, etc.)
In a liberal welfare state:
•Why be thrifty any longer when your old age
and health care are provided for. no matter how
profligate
youth?
u
t u iiig a iv yyou
u u m ay be in jyour
w
+
— ------ W hy be
prudent when the atate Insures your bank
deposits,
your . flooded-out
U
C I M W I S i ireplaces
v » n « .v «
. w — . w - — — - —house, buys
w
all the
you can qgrow?
Oil
u iv wheat
w iiv w s y
*- — • Why be diligent
w
•* your earnings
* ~ are
—
*-*—
when -half
taken fit---------—
from you and
given to the Idle?"
.
Foreseeing a backlash and the collapse of the
welfare state under the ever-growing burden of
Us benefactions. From counsels constrvsUve
Intellectuals (he knows better than to tell
politicians) to "(discard) all consideration of what
the public at the moment wants to hear, in d (try)

I C TTC D C

of

s tra ig h t. D o n 't

Daniel Sperry

LETTER S T O EDITOR
Letters to the editor arc welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the addrew of the
: writer and a daytime telephone number.
: Letters should be on a atpgfc subject and be
as brief aa possible. T h e letters are subject to

But be (1 will use the word once more)
practical. We must and can And ways to cut
welfare without precipitating mass starvation.

Right still rails
at Foster’s grave

G UEST COLUMNIST

I had so m uch trouble getting off m y
soapbox when we discussed "freedom of
■perch" lest week that I never did get to
"freedom of the press." Just as well. Those
four Utile words are Just as Important aa
"freedom of speech," at least to me and every
newaman/woman in the country — whatever
the media — and deserves Just aa good a
coverage by this old duffer. I shall try.
"Freedom of the press." Very, very few of
you food people out there In LaLaland have
the rainiest Idea what life would be like
without that precious commodity. You've
always had U. A t least, you've always had it
here In the M o d old U jB' of A. Not so for the
thou
hundredsI of thousands
— perhaps millions —
of Oerman citizens back In the days of Adolf
Hitler and the Nasi 8B. over In Oermany.
Back then, the dtlsens didn't read "news" —
they read exactly what the Th ird Retch wanted
them to read. Nothing more. Nothing leas. It
was called a totally controlled press _ in
Oermany — under Hiller. If you disagreed at
all (that's called freedom of speech) It wee a
midnight requisition — stonewall - bang —
you’re It. Need I eey more — or have most of
you got the point?
Do I agree with and like everything I see.
hear and read dally? No way! Especially the T V
newa on a hot breaking story. By the time I ’ve
heard and eeen the fourth or fifth rerun of
supposedly the same story. I've heard and
at least three or four drastically diflcrag
versions of a singular happening. Actually it*
than e young baby with a bad case c
die

welfarism. I think moat voters would vote, today,
to Jettison the whole shebang and return, as a
nation, to the old American virtues If they could.
But there’s the rob. As a practical matter It la
Impossible to run modern America the way It
was run (say) a century ago.
__________ ______
tvely Journal of the
In Chronicles,
the tlv
paleoconservatlves," one can read every month
long dithyrambs to the America of the 1890a. or
even to remote regions of the West today. As
exercises In nostalgia these essays are com*
mendable, but as practical prescriptions for the
nation's future they are about as useful aa liver
pills.
America today la a nation of upwards of a
quarter of a billion people of widely varying
ethnic and cultural backgrounds, staggering
under the burden of a government whose
leaders* only dependable Impulse Is to pile more
straws on the camel’s back. The public Is not
j from a reluctance to change things, but
bom a bewildered and total Ignorance of how to
get from here to there. And that. It seems to me,
It Is the Job of conservative Intellectuals to tell
them.

JOSEPH SPEAR

at freedti

y»

l
ri

to prepare Its mind to respond Intelligently to the
crista ahead.... Copy
rightonservstlve In
teUectuals will have
to care leas about the
Immediate electoral
prospects of the Re­
publican party and
more about telling
unpalatable truths —
In the hope of mak­
i n g th o s e tr u t h s
prevail to the point of
becoming the conve ntlon a l political
w i s d o m o f th e
future."
In s nutshell. From
■ Looks! how
hugs and
b e lie v e s th a t the
pub
Intruslvs
iblic still "rather
Ilk*
govsmmsnt Is
te a " the liberal
today, aftsr
programs, but
Reagan. J
that If they are told
the grim troth about
them they will, over
W ith all due
time, tu m againat DigI Government.
Go
, I disagree on 1
both
I believe that the American public understands
full well the balefol consequences of liberal

Newspapers! Now there's a horse of a
different color. For the moat part, newspaper*.
they are very
alamed. get It right the (Irat time. Please take
_ - "heavily." All news media
to one extent or another, reflectlafl
the editor* the owner* or controlling (action*
viewpoints — but you'll h a vee to
---------------admit, the)
generally get the facta sorted out and reported
correctly — most of the time — the first
attempt.
Dedication to accurate reporting and •
healthy dose of investigative toitiaUvc are whai
makes a "good paper*1 a "g
"great paper." TIN
m ark of a truly greet paper is
Is 1
when
---------------,
they ■MWW
screw
up — will admit It — and then fix It. Oh. ye*
one more m inor Item. T h a t I don't get skipped
-n y mo— ~ ------Stop
where we. as a country,
might be back In the Nlxon-Watcrgate days H
no one
little peep about all thoai
federal shenanigans with the top legal beagk
— Jo h n MitchcU and company. Governmental
coverups are aa common as fleas on a bad!)

press

NELSON
TULLAR

First thing I want to say la. If the more
responsible members of the Republican Party
had any sense of decency, they would Issue
an ablect apology to the Vincent Poster family
and then retire to the Washington Mall for a
recantation ceremony featuring the con­
sumption of barrels of cathartic substances.
Second thing I want to aay la. the scruffy
collection of politicians, pinrachers. radio
blabberjocks, scribes and sleaxolds who have
tormented the Fbater
family for lo these
m any months with
t h e ir r e le n tle s s
c ru s a d e to m ake
something sinister of
t h e p o o r m a n 's
su icid e are d a m n
;.« i • &lt;
lucky this la a de*
■socracy; If it were A
dictatorship and !
were, El Jefc, I would
strip these creeps to
their BVDs and lock
them In pillories on
th e W h ite H ouse
lawn and let them
£ I would strip
these creeps to
bake In the summer
thwJrBVDa and
sun until Labor Ohy.
lock them In
Th is motley crew
pillories on the
hasn't shut up since
W hite He
louse
J u ly 20, 1993. the
lawn. J
d a y th e d e p u ty
counsel to the pies!
dent drove to a Civil W ar fort on the banks of
the Potomac and fired a bullet into hie brain ~
and the media have led the way. Th e New
York Poet raised the ominous specter that
Foster had been murdered or, at minimum,
his body tampered with. The Wall Street
Journal and Washington Tim es fell Into step
behind the Poet, as did Rush " T r u t h
Detector" Um baugh. who repeated an Ir­
responsible allegation that Faster had died In
s f y y h r fo ritfon and that hls body had been
taken to the pork where It was discovered.
T h e n G od 's self-appointed prolocutors
weighed In. "Suicide or m urder?" caked Pat
Robertson on hie television show. ‘T h a t ’s the
om inous question... concerning Vincent
Foster's mysterious death." Je rry Falwell
posed atm ltsr questions on hls "O ld Tim e
Ooepd Hour*' broadcast. Indeed. Falwell took
the disgusting campaign a step further when
he began hawking avioeo augpatlng that BUI
Clinton waa involved In a string of murders.
T h e narrator of thia naaty bit orconspiratorial
bilge is Larry Nichols, the farmer Arkansas
state employee who first accused Clinton of
being a womaniser. In recent months, he has
been welcom ed to the microphones by ISO
radio talk show hosts to air hie unfounded
charge* On Capitol Hill, he was escorted
around like a visiting panjandrum by Rep.
Dan Burton. R-lnd.
Robert Flake, the special counsel for whoee
a p p o in tm e n t the C lin to n c ritic s had
ployed five physicians and
its. Interviewed 128 witnesses.
D N A and laser teats
on the evidence and concluded that Foster
killed himself. SUll the critics wilveied.
O n the ennlveraary of Foster's death, the
femlly Issued a statement denouncing the
"despicable" rum or campaign, especially the
etortao spread by "thooe caling themselves
Christian m inisters" and the "shameful
statements on the House floor by a f»gl*l« t" who, in our view, is purposefully employing
outrageous Innuendo and speculation for
‘itical e n d * " The ir "fervent hope." the
-**- said, la "that this matter now will
from public view and that the family
will be left alone."
But the ellmebaUere who dally gather
beneath the Capitol dome would have none of
that. O n Ju ily
ly 29. Senate banking committee
Republican* led by Alfonae D*Amato of New
York. Connie Mack at Florida and Lauch
Faircioth of North Carolina, probed the Foster
Maybe I would pillory t h e m _________
street In Lafayette Park, lest the meltln
grease destroy the White House lawn.

�■

Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 11, 1094 - IA

Murder

Safe
C M tln a l(t« iP a |i 1A
Springs
Addlt
Additionally, Sanford resident
Bette Shea was murdered at
Silk, Silk, Silk, a floral shop
where she worked In Orlando.
In another case, a 28-year old
Sa n fo rd m an was rece n tly
charged with first degree murder
In the death of a local cab driver
in 1986.
T h e r e have also been a
number of armed robberies in
the Sanford and Lake Mary area
as well as other parts of the
county recently.
"Robbery was the primary
motive for homicide at work/'
the report said. "Workers In
retail establishments, such as
grocery stores and eating and
drinking places, made up about
half of the homicide victims.
Taxicab drivers also were at
particular risk of being shot
while working."
Officials have aaid the larger
percentage of female homicide
victim s la due to the . large
number of women exposed to
crime by working late at night.
E lg h ty-tw o percent of the
1,063 homicide victims were
men.
"B u t homicide was, by far. the
moat frequent manner In which
women workers were fatally
Injured, accounting fo r‘39 per­
cent of their 481 fatal Injuries,"
the report aald. "B y comparison,
homicides were 17 percent of the
5,790 fatal Injuries to men at
m rk."
Statew ide, the num b er or
work-related deaths rose from
|6,217 In 1692 to 6,271 In 1993,
the latest figures available from
the Labor Department. Highway

C o n tin n e d f r o m P age 1 A

accidents and homicides were
the leading causes for a second published Inlhe fell of 1995.
Forty percent of all on-the-job
straight year.
"T h e workplace Is still a dan­ deaths were transportationgerous environment." Secretary related. In addition to highway
Reich said In an Interview accidents, these Included ofTWednesday, "Tra g ica lly, the road Incidents such as those on
more traditional accidents and farms or at factories, workers
being struck by vehicles and
many others were preventable."
Reich contended his depart­ Incidents Involving air. water or
ment has substantially Increased rail transportation.
The survey found 20 percent
enforcement of workplace safety
laws, "w orking closely with of the deaths resulted from
employers who want to do the objects striking workers or from
right thing and coming down falls, while electrocutions and
very hard on employers who "equipment entrapmenis" each
accounted for 5 percent of the
don’t."
•'We're determined to use total.
Besides the disproportionate
every tool of enforcement and
training at our disposal to sec difference between male and
that fewer of these accidents female deaths, the study found
anothe r a n o m a ly: the selfoccur," he said.
The department’s Bureau of employed and those working In
Labor Statistics found that 92 family businesses accounted for
percent of the 1993 fatalities 21 percent of the workplace
were men, far more than their fatalities — double their share of
55 percent share of the nation's the nation's workers.
"One-fourth of the fatal Inci­
Job holders. The disproportion
was attributed to the differences dents occurred on a street or
In the Industries and occupa­ highway, primarily the result of
highway motor vehicle Inci­
tions In which they typically
dents. and about one-fifth oc­
work.
curred at a construction site,
H ig h w a y accidents killed
1.232, the largest number of warehouse, factory or other In­
on-the-job deaths. They repre­ dustrial premise." the report
said.
se n ted 2 0 p e rc e n t of the
"About one out of every seven
fatalities, up from 18 percent In
occurred In a public building,
1992.
such as a grocery store or other
Half the fatal accidents In­
retail store, restaurant, office
volved collisions between two or
building, or school, the majority
more vehicles including trucks,
of which were homicides," It
delivery vans and cars driven by
salespeople. Ninety percent of added. "O f special note are the
roughly 200 fatalities occurring
the victims were men.
In a parking lot or garage, about
In an efTort to trim highwayhalf of which were homicides."
related deaths, Reich said, the
Inlormttton from Ateocltted Prtu &lt;• Indepartment Is working on pro­
clud*dtalbl*raport.
posed rules that he hopes will be
• •;
i 1'

M .M A V I
Dorothy M. Brave. 79. Royal
|Palm Drive. Casselberry, died
[Tuesday, Aug. 8; 1994 at Florida
[H o s p ita l N o rth , A lta m o n te
[Springs. Bom Oct. 29, 1614 in
New York, she moved to Central
Florida In 1965. She was former
owner of a recording studio. She
was Episcopalian.
Survivors Include son, James
; Barry. Orlando; brothers, Robert
Morton. Babylon. N.Y., William
Morton. Vero Beach; sisters,
E le a n o r C la rk , B a th , N .Y .,
Beatrice Clark. Sun City West.
Arts.. Constance Oortnan. Hobe
SounflTOtX TpkndchlltWM; three
great-grandchildren. T '■
Woodlawn Funeral Home dt
M em orial Park, Orlando, in
charge of arrangements.

Anthony Ralph Calogero, 71.
rc S tree t. S a nford, died
rcdneaday. Aug. 10. 1994 at
uth Seminole C o m m u n ity
Ital. Bom May 17. 1923 In
klyn. N.Y., he moved to
I Florida In 1988. He was
mechanic for the Department
Sanitation in New York City.
He was Catholic. He was a U S.
A rm y vetem of World War II.
- Survivors include wife, Shirley
R.: sons, William C „ Orange.
Calif.. Todd Husted. Marietta.
Qa.; daughter, Gina D. Husted.
M a rie tta ; b ro th ers, D a n ie l,
Brooklyn. Rocco. New Jersey;
mother. Caroline, New Jersey;
four grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n eral
H om e-Oaklaw n Park Chapel,
Lake Mary, in charge of ar­
rangements.
Robert W illis Draughn. 51,
: Sum m erlin Avenue, Sanford,
died Tuesday, Aug. B, 1994 at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal,- Sanford. Bam Aug. 9, 1943
in A rm a th w s lte . T e n n .. he
moved to Central Florida In
1670. He was Protestant.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e so n s.
Edward WUlla. Sanford. David
Scott, Portsmouth. N H-: daugh­
te r, H e ld ! M a rie , S a n fo rd ;
mother, Virginia Cote, Winter
S p r in g s ! b r o t h e r , R o y c e ,
Phoenix, N .Y .; slaters, Ethel
Reynolds. Fulton, N.Y.. H a u l
M cG ee , P o rts m o u th . Sadie
Klrkendal. Liverpool, N.Y.
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fu n eral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
M A U E D .O M A 1 W IL L E
Marie D. Granville. 78, W.
Broadway Street, Oviedo, died
Friday, Aug. 6, 1994 at her
residence. Bom June 12. 1616
in Plnehurst. G a . she moved to
Central Florida In 1923. She was
retired from Winter Park Memo­
rial Hospital. She was a member
of Fountainhead Missionary
Baptist Church. Oviedo.
Survivors Indude daughters,
Helen M. Brooks, Lakeland. MaJorie T . Turner. Winter Springs,
Ida M. Smith. Oviedo; brother.
Oscar Davla. Oviedo; slaters,
Maudie, Ciaudie Turner. Rose
Henry, all of Rochester. N.Y.: 13
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : 23 g r e a t ­
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; e ig h t
great-great-grandchildren.
Wllaon-Elcbclbeiger Mortuary.
Inc., Sanford, in charge of ar­
rangements.

grandson.
D A L T O N J U S T IC E H IL T S , Q
B a ld w ln -F a lrc h lld Fun eral
Dalton Justice Hilts II, 30, E.
Celery Avenue. Sanford, died Home, Orlando, In charge of
Thursday, Aug. 4, 1994 at Cen­ arrangements.
tral Florida Regional Hospital. H O t B P S T T O N
Bom April 14. 1964 In San
Rose Peyton. 81, Palmetto
Diego. Calif,, he moved to Cen­ Court. Longwood, died Tuesday.
tral Florida In 1994. He was a Aug. 9, 1994 at her residence.
retired cosmetologist. He was Bom Ju ly 6, 1913 In Milwaukee,
Baptist and a member of Metro­ she moved to Central Florida In
politan C o m m u n ity C h u rch , 1988. She was a homemaker.
Jacksonville. He Is a veteran of She was Jewish.
the U.S. Arm y.
Survivors Include daughters.
S u rv iv o rs Include m other, Sand! Hlrachbela Corona, Calif.,
Shirley Miner. Jacksonville: sla­ Cookie Shechtman, Longwood:
ters, C ind y Maurer. Sanford, “*^rr,\Marion Brill. Spn Diego;
Pamela A sm Gandy. Augusta, %
'-grandchildren; one greatlaU Shirt Lee OaAdy. Jaekson- g m m ch lld .
1114; brother, Fred Rick Maurer.
Beth" Shalom Memorial Cha­
Spokane, Wash.
pel. Orlando, tn charge of ar­
Beacon Direct Cremation Serv­ rangements.
ice, Orlando, In charge of ar­
rangementa.
Hubert D. Smith. 73. Palmetto
Ave.,’ Sanford, died Wednesday,
Andrew C. McCormick. 92. A u g . 10, 1994 at Lakevlew
Sumter Court. Winter Springs, Nursing Home, Sanford. Bom
died Tuesday, Aug. 9. 1994. Feb. 1. 1921 in Anderson. S.C.,
B om In Ohio, he moved to he moved to Central Florida In
1925, He was a railroad con­
Central Florida In 1991. He was
a retired grocery store manager. ductor for Seaboard Coastline.
He was a member of Sanford
He was Catholic.
Survivors Include son, Frank Church of God. He belonged to
B., Lexington, Ky.t daughter, R ailroad T ra in m e n &amp; C o n ­
J a h a la M . W ille tt. W in te r ductors Brotherhood and Penny
Springs; six grandchildren; five Pinchers. He was an A rm y
veteran of World War II.
great-grandchildren.
S u r v i v o r s In c lu d e w ife .
B anfield Funeral Service.
Winter Springs, In charge of Thelm a Whitten: sons, Larry D.,
Richard D., both of Sanford;
arrangements.
d a u g h te r , D ia n e W a tk in s .
Titusville: brothers, Clayton C..
Deltona. James. Daytona Beach.
M arilyn Elaine Moore. 34.
Castle Brewer Court. Sanford, Carl. Sanford; sister, Frances
died Sunday, A u g 7,1694 at her Hall. Jesup, Ga.; seven grandresidence. Bom Ffeb. 22. 1960 In c h i l d r e n : t h r e e g r e a t ­
Sanford, she was a lifelong grandchildren.
Brisaon Funeral Home. San­
resident. She waa Baptist.
ford, In charge of arrangements.
Survivors Include son. Eric
T y r o n e J e n k in s . S a n fo rd ;
D O M A U O D S L o C llO T V A N N
mother, Dorothy Mae Moore,
Domarioua LeCroy Vara. 83,
Sanford; father, Willie C. Moore. Fln ly House. Columbia S.C.,
Sr., Sanford; brothers, Willie C. f o rm e rly of S a n fo rd , died
J r ., Tim othy W „ Anthony W.. Wednesday, Aug. 10, 1994 at a
Cornelius C.. all Of Sanford; Columbia Hospital. Bom Aug. 5,
s la t e r . L e k is h a . S a n f o r d :
1911 in Lowndes County. Ala.,
maternal grandparents. Henry
she recently moved to Columbia
and Olie Byrd. Sanford: paternal from Sanford. She waa a home­
gra nd p aren t, Easter Moore,
maker. She was a member of
Sanford.
First United Methodist Church.
. Sunrise Funeral Home. San­ Sanford, where she was a Sun­
ford. in charge of arrangements.
day School teacher and past
president of the Womens Soci­
ety. She was a Girl Scout leader,
Eunice Drentier Norris. 85.
and a member of the Story
Grant Street. Longwood. died
League and United Daughters of
Friday, Ju ly 29, 1994. Bom In
the Confederacy.
Manchester, Q a , she moved to
Survivors Include son. C. Rob­
Central Florida In 1945. She was ert Jones. J r.. Columbia, daugh­
a h o m e m a k e r. Sh e w as a ters. Joynle DcForr. Jackson­
member of First Baptist Church
ville. Margaret Parko, Atlanta:
of Manchester.
six grandchildren; four grand­
Survivors Include daughters. children.
Jea n Young, Orlando, Mary
Brisaon Funeral Home. San­
Wines. Ocala; sons, Joe. Apopka,
ford. In charge of arrangements.
Jerry. Larry, Jack, all of O r­
lando, BUI, Little Rock. Ark.; 16
------------ta7 T % —
g ra n d c h ild re n : eight great­
grandchildren.
IMITM, W R IST O.
Lakeland Funeral Home in
Furwrsl MrviCM t v Mr. Smith will tw
charge of arrangements.
FrtSsv, Auf. I t *1 H a m. In ttw Britton

S

Beatrice Hair Page. 86. Erik
Court. Altamonte Springs, died
Tuesday. Aug. 9. 1964 at her
residence. Bom Sept. 4. 1907 In
Barnwell. S.C.. she moved to
Central Florida In 1955. She was
a dietitian. She waa a member of
College Park Baptist Church.
Survivors include daughters.
J o a n n e P rin c e . A lta m o n te
Springs, Nancy Herring. West
Palm Beach: sister. V ivia n
D ozier. Th o m so n . G a .; one

Funeral Chapel with Rev. Rich Smith
officialIn*. Informant will follow In Oehlewn
Memorial Fort Cemetery. FrienSt may call
at the funeral homo Ttwnday. (today) from a
pm. until Sp.m.
Arrangement! by Brliaon Funeral Homo,

Leinster states It Is his opinion a conflict exists
between his duties to follow his client's Instruc­
tions and his duty to develop evidence and (he)
"respectfully requests the court enter an order to
withdraw."
In another development In the Meyers' case,
prosecutor Chris White notified the court that
twice since the guilty verdict was rendered
against Meyers, Engels' grandmother, Marie
Hooper, has Inadvertently come In contact with a
member of the trial jury.
"Both occasions resulted In conversations
'which this court may want to hear about from
the two people Involved,'" White’s motion states.
"Unfortunately, Mrs. Hooper does not know the
name of the Juror Involved, only that It was one of
the lady Jurors from the first row with dark hair."
The Jury on the Meyers' case was comprised of
11 women and one man with two alternate Jurors.
The alternates heard all of the evidence In the
case but did not deliberate to reach the guilty
verdict.
White said he will propose an alternate Juror be
scaled to complete the penally phase of the case.
Jurors will recommend the penalty in the case,
but the ultimate decision rests with the Judge.
White declined to comment about where the
vlctlm-Juror contacts took place. Despite the
contact, a new trial will not be necessary, the
prosecutor said.
"The worst thing that could happen," White

Haven
C o n tin u e d f r o e i F o g * I A

and establish the program
to divide a wide range of educa­
tional, social and recreational
services for youth and adults."
The proposal calls for a Safe
Haven to be established at
Midway Elementaty School.
The goal, according to Moon.
Is "to enable neighborhood
youth and adults to become
heal dry. productive, law abiding
citizens, free from drug and
alcohol abuse, through the es­
tablishm ent of a neigh bor­
hood-based multi-service center,
located in a safe environment."
The district proposes. If they

receive the grant, to establish a
center at the school within a
year.
They said the center would
Implement programs aimed at
personal health and fitness,
nutrition, substance use and
abuse and mental and emotional
health.
One of the goals or the pro­
gram Is to strengthen collabora­
tion among public, private and
community groups In develop­
ing and Implementing services.
Th e services at the "Safe
Haven" would be provided by
the Grove, Seminole County
M ental H ealth, the co u n ty

Health Departm ent and the
schools. The services would In-''
elude nutrition classes, health
screenings and referrals for serv­
ices to other agencies. G E D and'
literacy classes.
The "Safe Haven" Is hoped to
be another aspect of the Full
Service Schools program that
tries to address the needs of the
community In one location.
"We need to be sure that we
can serve the whole community
In order to ensure that we can
help our students be all that they
can be and to ensure that we can give them the best education we
can," said Moon.

Bingham said, "and he called
the school to have a look around
and to offer his services to the
school.
"He came by and told me
about his techniques and I asked
h im to share It w olth our
teachers," Bingham said.
Teachers met with Kendrick
Wednesday to learn how he was
able to learn despite frequent
moves.aaid that many stuway
. are classified as
" ‘d is a d va n ta g e d " a nd often
l e a r n i n g d i f f i c u l t i e s a re

explained away by that term,.
She believes Kendrick shows,
that "disadvantaged" students
can learn if they are given an
opportunity.
"H e 's a great example o f1
that," she said. "1 believe all our
students can learn. We must-equip them to learn."

Learn
Continued from Paga I A
the
teachers how to help those
students.
Dr. Joseph Kendrick Is not a
teacher, though he was always a
successful student.
"He did very well In school
a nd has been su cce ssfu l."
Bingham said.
A c c o rd in g to B in g h a m .
Kendrick was part of a migrant
family that
(hat came to Sanford to
work the Helds.
Despite tho^artol
th c ^a h o b illty , he
finished school'and went on to
complete college and go to veter­
inary school,
A successful veterinarian In
Knoxville, Tennessee these days,
Kendrick has been volunteering
his services in the school system
there to help students do better
In school.
"He had Just come back to
Sanford to visit his parents,"

'M b

HOUSEOF
401 8. Sanford Av#.. Sanford

P h o n R 3 2 2 -2 9 12
FA X 407-322-0801

W H O L E S A L E • R E T A IL
H O UR S: 7 D A Y S •6am-«pm

Bash

SpedMlIilng In
• D O N U T S * M U F F IN S

C o a tia a td fr a a r o fa 1A
elephant game
show, "Zoo You Know" which'
w i l l pit a d u l t s a g a i n s t
youngsters in a test of elephant
knowledge. Children will also be
able to make elephant handpuppets, have t h e i r faces
painted, receive a hand-made
elephant tall, and m uch more.
Admission to the zoo. includ­
ing the Maude 20th birthday
party, is |5 far adults, 82 for
children 3-12 years. 83 for se­
niors 60 and alder, and free to
c h i l d r e n u n d e r a ge t w o .
Zoological Society members arc
admitted free,
For additional information on
the zoo, Joining the Zoological
Society, or other facts, phone
323-4450, ext. 149.

LOOK WHO-9 BACK
\ mAMHWUOMMVITO ITIU . COOKM

A

CHICKEN WIRE
MALL

ladoor •Folly A k CoadlUoocd

Best World to H e Dal*
Best DEAL IN T H E WORLD
-®

■ T h r il
.yO tO O Q gACEAVUAO U*

til ExtfMSMWaleM m N M
LocaUd MvSmnM Afefrts
H
3 2 4 .7 5 1 9

■ Has the name
OF YOUR BUSINESS
CHANGED? O R
have

YOU R B C lN Tiy

married? Did
YOUR ADDRESS
CHANGE BECAUSE
OF EMERGENCY

P o s t O f f ic e
RENUMBERING?

IJSUl

Frank'
Tex-Mex
on the Lake

* A»

9-1-1 SERVICE OR
VARN, DOMARIOVS UCR0V
Funeral tervkot lor Mrt. Vam will be
Saturday. Au*. IJ. of 1 p.m . In the Flrtl
United Methodltt Church of Sanlord wlfh
Roy. Cliff Molvln officiatin*. Interment will
follow In Qahlawn Mamortal Fart Cemetery.
Friend* may call at the funeral homo Friday
from* pm. until* p.m.
Arrangement* by Brtieon Funeral Horn*.

commented, "Is an entirely new Jury would have *
to be seated for the penalty phase."
A trial transcript could be read, or key
witnesses recalled If an entirely new Jury Is
seated, he added.
Engels disappeared from a friend's home May
24. 1987 and was last seen with Meyers. Meyers
told police Engels asked him for a ride to her
grandparents Lake Mary home after she left a
friend's house In the Carriage Cove mobile home
park In Sanford. Meyers lived In Carriage Cove at
the time. Meyers bought beer and spent the
evening drinking with Engels and two of her
young friends. Meyers told the teens he was 19
but was actually 27 years old at the time.
Meyers told police Engels disappeared from a i
convenience store where the teen-ager asked to j
stop to make a phone call. However, he gave
conflicting stories about which store the palr&gt;
allegedly stopped at and that the store was opcn£
when It was not. Tw o women who Meyers claims*
he went swimming with on the night Engels.disappeared never came forward.
\
Several Inmates testified Meyers described:1
killing the teen after she resisted sexual
advances, then hid her body In a wooded area^
near the mobile home park. Meyers made the?
statements while Jailed on unrelated charges. Her
body was never found. Family members and
long-time friends testified Engels has not con-',
tactcd any of them since the night she disappeered.
•

IrEMLYVEBtfECUU1*!
I js N M M V Q N V -S M B

I

t ir in iu ip i.

[MFA//MS
TIMM ONLY

[j
CHCKENORBEEF
! EARLY 8PCCWL PUCE KJS
I l«0UW tP«CE _ J M 5
tfnWMtOAL'IOKMiFOOO!
T040
PrwktOrlfMTa
0 * «r Hows:
Thus.-M .11! -S FU &lt;

S Z

\

O O I O

�• A - Sanford H t r ild , Bsnford, Florida - Thursday, A u q u s I 11, 1904

Abortion foes support ‘justifiable homicide’
»

National Writar

Henry Fcltsonc says the three
FBI agents who came to his door
were brief and polite.
“ They asked me about Paul
Hill, and I told them I didn’t
know anything," says the New
York C ity electronics technlclan-tumed-preacher.
Hill Is the fervent abortion
o p p o n e n t a c c u s e d In last
month's slayings of Dr. John
Bayard Britton and his escort
outside a Pensacola. Fla., abor­
tion clinic.
Fellsone la among 30 anti­
Abortion activists who signed a
petition H ill had circulated,
starkly declaring deadly force
Justified In defense of the un­
born.
Not surprisingly, the signers
are now the targets of an FBI
Inquiry, a congressional hearing
set for next week and the
vilification of abortion foes and
supporters alike. Yet they re­
main steadfast and mostly un­
repentant.
i "M y feelings haven’t changed
one bit." said Donald Spits, a
longtime abortion opponent In
Chesapeake, Va.
i " I believe If an abortionist
walking into the abortion mill to
kill babies is killed by force. It’s
Justifiable homicide." Spits said
In a telephone Interview. "Th e
fuitl-abortlon groups who con­
demn Hill are cowards who are
Condemning the babies."
Th e statement H ill passed
around and mailed out over
several months said. In part:

"W e proclaim that whatever
force la legitimate to defend the
life or a bom child is legitimate
to defend the life of an unborn
child."
It further stated that the first
shooting death of an abortionist,
that of Dr. David Qunn In March
1903, also. In Pensacola, was
"Justifiable provided It was car­
ried out for the purpose of
defending the lives of unborn
children."
But Spits and others who put
their names to the statement
Insist they themselves are no
threat.
" I ’ve been telling people It’s a
statement of belief rather than
an endorsement." said Michael
Dodds, a Wichita. Kan., activist.
"I would never consider doing
anything like that myself."
Th e reassurances are scant
comfort to the pro-choice mov­
ement. Its members recall Hill
used very similar language In
recent months as he made the
rounds of television talk shows
and print Interviews to promote
his view that killing doctors who
abort fetuses Is Justifiable.
Hill debated his position at an
April meeting of anti-abortion
groups In Chicago — and by
some accounts split the confer­
ence Into two camps, for and
against violence.
"There's a clear and present
threat to many doctors. People
who say they believe In lethal
force are roaming around,” said
Eleanor Smeal. president of the
Feminist Majority Foundation,
w hich trains abortion clinic
workers how to deal with pro-

testers.
.
Smeal and other pro-choice
activists are demanding action
a g a i n s t t h e ’ ’J u t t l / l a b l e
homicide" adherents. FBI agents
have visited the petition signers,
and federal marshals were dis­
patched to protect clinics specif­
Ically In towns where the signers
live.
_ „ „
Rep. Charles Schumer. D-N.Y.,
has scheduled a hearing before
the House Subcommittee on
Crime and Criminal Justice next
wee)(c
" T h e Ju s tic e Departm ent
should Investigate anti-abortion
groups that advocate violence In
the same m anner that they
Investigated the Ku Klux Klan In
the 1960s." Schumer said. ’If
there Is collusion between these
groups to instill terror and do
violent acts, they should be
prosecuted."
Those who signed HUI • peti­
tion stoutly Insist there Is no
conspiracy. The y say Hill In­
tended the statem ent as a
fu n d -ra is in g In s tru m e n t in
su pp o rt of M ichael Q rlffln ,
charged and later convicted in
G un n ’s murder.
M a n y of the si g ne r s In ­
terviewed by Th e Associated
Press this week say they’ve
never met Hill.
"H e got m y num ber from
someone." said Dodds, who was
Jailed 40 days In 1991 as one of
the leaders of six weeks or
protests outside Wichita abor­
tion clinics.
" H e w as l o o k i n g for
strategically placed leaders In
the pro-life movement. I said.

'Hey, I’ll make the sacrifice.'"
Most of the names are anti­
abortion activists well-known In
their local communities, whose
past activities range from pub­
lishing anti-abortion tracts to
ults on clinics.
Michael Bray, a Bowie, Md..
minister convicted of conspiracy
and other charges In the 1985
bombings of six abortion clinics,
is on the list. So is the Rev.
David Troach, an Alabama priest
who prints a cartoon on his
personal letterhead that shows
an abortion doctor about to be
shot In the operating room.
"If 100 doctors need to die to
save over 1 million babies a
year, I see It as a fair trade."
Troach has said In earlier In­
terviews.
Also on the list is Dave Leach,
a Des Moines. Iowa, music store
owner who publishes a modestly
circulated m onthly newsletter
on abortion.

Ing as the conclusion Is, I could
not Justify turning him down."
Leach, arrested three times for
trespassing during anti-abortion
demonstrations, said FBI agents
had visited him.
" I gave them some sound
reasons w hy I wasn't a threat,
other than m y deadly word
processer." he said.
A num ber of the signers were
In Mississippi this week with the
A m e r i c a n C o al it ion of Life
Activists, a new group whose
protests are aimed at running off
the state's only registered abor­
tion doctor.
A m o n g them was A ndrew
Burnett of Portland, Ore., who
said he signed Hill's statement
as a m a t t e r of p r i n c i p l e .
Burnett's Life Ministries maga­
zine recently described how Hill

"Somehow I got on his list,
and he asked If I would allow m y
name to be added." Leach said.
" If you'll look at how carefully
crafted the sentences are. the
logic la irrefutable. As distress-,

Sm okers on international
flights face a flam eout
Assoclatsd Press Writsr________
W A SH IN G TO N — Smokers on
International airline (lights to
and from the United States may
be facing a flameout.
A House subcommittee voted
Wednesday to ban smoking on
International flights that begin
or end In this country. Smoking
has already been snuffed on
domestic flights of six hours or
less.
.
i "T h is Is long overdue, particu­
larly for the flight attendan ts."
Rep. Peter A. DeFaxlo. D-Ore..
said after the voice vote by the
House Public Works and Trans­
portation aviation subcommit­
tee. The bill now goes to the full
committee.
: Th e measure was strongly
backed by airline flight atten­
dants who work International
routes.
• "Flight attendants are sick,
diseased, dying and dead from
Illnesses caused by tobacco
pm oke." Patricia Young, an
American Airlines flight atten­
dant. told the subcommittee at a
hearing May 18.
;■ "T h e easiest, the fastest, the
cheapest way to improve air
quality on International flights •••
la to stop the smoking." said
Rep. James L . Oberatar. D-Mlnn.
; Rep. Bob Clement. D-Tenn.,
said he would prefer to see the
rule take effect J u ly 1, 1996. the
Bate the International C iv il
{Aviation Organisation has urged

all air carriers to ban smoking.
" I think that’s too long to wait
for something we can handle
now." said Oberatar.
Th e A ir Transport Association,
which r e p r e s e n t s t h e airline In­
dustry. has said It supports
e f f o r t s to eliminate smoking on
I n t e r n a t i o n a l flights as long as
all airlines are included.
T h e Transportation Depart­
ment. meanwhile, has sought to
negotiate airline smoking bans
with individual countries when
It works out air travel agree­
ments with those nations. A
fo u r-w a y agreem ent to ban
smoking on nonstop flights be­
t w e e n t he U n i t e d S t a t e s ,
Canada. A ustra lia and New
Zealand was recently proposed.
T h e bill proposed by sub­
committee Chairman Oberatar
would require the Transporta­
tion Department to ban smoking
In the cabins and lavatories of
airliners entering and leaving
the United States. It would take
effect within 130 days of the
bill’s becoming law.
Asked If the United States
could limit smoking on foreign
airlines. Oberatar said it would
be the same as a ny o the r
aviation regulation — airlines
that want to fly Into the United
States must obey U.S. rules.
T h e ban would cover only the
leg of an International flight
originating or ending in the
United States — not flights
between two foreign locations. It
would not be limited to U.8.
airspace, though.

Inanclal markets anxiously
iwait latest Inflation signals
advancing issues outnumbered
Associated Press
* i w o Writsr
w iiiw v
, W A S H IN G T O N Inflation
m ay be accelerating, and finan­
c ia l m a rke ts are a n x io u sly
awaiting the latest government
figures that could signal the coot
or living Is heading upward.
Th e first of back-to-back re­
ports on price trends was due
out today with the Labor De­
partment's announcement of its
Producer Price Index measuring
wholesale prices for Ju ly . The
Consumer Price Index, which
gauges costa at the retail level,
trill be released Friday.
• Th e Commerce Department
also was releasing retail sales
figures for J u ly today.

&lt;

Inflation has been moderate,
but many analysts predicted In
advance of today’s PPI report a
modest upswing for both price
barometers. Even a small rise
could unnerve investors and
traders who anticipate that any
increase In Inflationary pressure
will prompt the Federal Reserve
to move quickly to boost short­
term Interest rates.
" I think the prices are going to
own* |d on the high***aide," said
economist Robert Dedertck of
the N o rth e rn T r u s t C o . in
Chicago. "T h a t will give them
the support they need for the
pre-emptive actions they are
seeking."
Wc
On Wednesday.
Wall Street
sSemad to shrug off interest rate
worries temporarily. Th e Dow
Jones Industrial average posted
a moderate 11-point gain and

R ob ert B ru a ca . chie f
economist for Nlkko Securities
Co. International in New York
City, said he expected the PPI to
be up O.B percent in J u ly and
the CPI up 0.4 percent, primarily
because of energy costs and
soaring coffee prices.
"These are not terrible num ­
bers," Bruaca said. "B u t given
(Federal Reserve Board Chair­
man Alan) Greenspan's anUInflation rhetoric. I presume this
will make his life uncomfortT h e Federal Opeh Market
Committee, the central bank's
p o lic y -m a k in g b o d y , m eets
Tuesday, and m any analysts
expect It to boost the target rate
banka charge each other for
overnight loans. Th e Fed has
raised rates four times since
February to Hid** inflation, in­
creasing them from 3 percent to
4.35 percent.
Greenspan offered no hints
about the F e d 's Im m ediate
c o u r s e w.hen he t e s t i f i e d
Wednesday before a House Gov­
ernm ent Operations subcom ­
mittee.
Th e theme of his remarks was
that the government's forecast­
ing data was imprecise at beat,
and that cost-of-living figures
a m id exaggerate inflsl l°fi
Nonetheless. Greenspan has
m a d e It c l e a r before t hat
tightening credit too m uch to
on inflation is a wiser
course than m oving too slowly
and letting inflation get a head of
steam.

Avoid Delays W ith
SunBank’s Shortcut
M ortgage.
G etth* i mortage a n be a long ind difficult process,
full of false Ram , stops, d e fy m d nmirounds. fortunately,
SunBank knowi the neighborhood. And we know the
ihoctcuti to help you avoid all the red lights
on the wiy to your new home.
In fket, well even guarantee in arrival time. With
SunBank, you’d know by the end of the next business day if
your mortgwe»&lt; the peenligbt Guaranteed. And we
guarantee to be ready to dose on your loin In 24 business
days. How aerious are these guarantees? If we miss
either deadline, weH pay you $300.
Don’t net stuck in delays that can try your patience. Come
to SunBank for our Shortcut Mortgage Prognm. We offer a
variety of other montage plans with different rates,
terms and options. So to deckle on the i
is right for you, see your realtor or call us for more
information. And take the shortcut home.

7.71
1 -8 0 0 -2 -S W IT C H

Peaceof MindBanking*

and other activists circumvented
pro-choice groups to learn the
identity of the doctor who would
replace G unn at the Pensacola
abortion clinics, then tracked his
movements.
T h a t doctor was Britton, killed
J u ly 39.
A t this week's Mississippi
protests, coalition leaders re­
quired protesters to sign pledges
of nonviolence.
"D o we look like terrorists?"
R oy M cM illa n , head of the
Jackson-based Christian Action
Group and a signer of Hill's
statement, asked as he demon­
strated outside a Gulfport clinic.
"Maybe we look confronta­
tional, like Dr. (Martin Luther)
King. He was willing to make
things uncomfortable for soci­
ety.'7

�THURSDAY

Sanford Herald

11,

1994

Kids getting their kicks

IN BRIEF

r

August

.■

Lak* Mary softball registration
LA K E MARY — Returning teams may now
register for the Lake Mary Parks and Recreation
fall adult softball leagues.
Men's CLass C leagues arc planned for
Tuesday. Thursday, and Friday nights at the
Lake Mary Sports Complex while a women's
Class C league Is scheduled for Monday. Each
league will play a 10-week schedule beginning
(he week of Sept 5.
Registration will be open to teams new to the
Lake Mary leagues beginning Monday, Aug. 22.
T o register a team, a completed roster, all
player cards, and all fees must be turned In.
Registration packets, may be picked up and
fumed In at Lake Mary City Hall between 8 a.m.
and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The team registration fee Is $280. There Is
also a 812 A S A team fee. Non-Lake Mary
residents must pay a 83 non-resident fee.
For details, call Terry Dlederlch at 324-30B7.

I Two programs offered by
| Florida S 0 CC6 T Le3QUeS
LONOWOOD On e or the
toughest tasks facing youth sports
leagues Is attracting parent volun­
teers. Often, games or practices
conflict with work schedules, mak­
ing It all but Impossible for some
parents to participate.
The Florida Soccer Leagues may
have found a way to deal with that
problem.
T h is fall, the Florida Soccer
Leagues are offering two leagues
that are Identical In scope, expense,
and age spans. The only difference

Is when ihc teams practice.
Teams In the co-ed Weekend
League will practice on Saturday
mornings with games scheduled for
Saturday and Sunday afternoons
between 1:30 and 5 p.m. By com­
parison. Ihc Weekday League teams
will conduct their practices during
the week and play games on
Sunday afternoons.
In another attempt to Increase the
convenience of participating In the
leagues, players will not tryout but
be assigned more or less to neigh­
borhood teams.
Since the Weekend League will be

more convenient for more families.
It'll be the larger of the two.
Additional parent volunteers are
welcome to participate In this
league.
Th e Weekday League will be
offered In selected areas only and Is
In need of parent volunteers.
Both leagues will be divided Into
two-year age groups. The season Is
12 weeks long, Including eight
scheduled games. Registration In
either league Is $59. which Includes
a uniform T-shirt, shorts, socks,
accident and liability Insurance, and
administrative fees.
All players In both leagues will
receive a certificate at the end of the
season. Members or the first and
second-place teams will be awarded
trophies.
Also, a T in y Tot League Is being

1
ofTercd for beginning players only.;
Children bom between Aug. I,’
1990, and Dec. 31. 1991. are
eligible for this Instructional league.
The registration fee Is 849.
.,
With league play scheduled to*,
start Saturday, Aug. 27. registration-;
Is now being conducted by the'
Florida Soccer Leagues. More In-1
formation Is available by calling'
260-6004.
T h e r e are a v a ri e t y of op-1
port unities for parents to be In?,
volved. Volunteers are needed Re­
serve as a coaches, assistant',
coaches, referees, team mothers.,
fund raisers, equipment managers,,
field managers, and concession*
managers.
Individuals may sponsor a team,
for 8178.
„

Romp has

T. Willie’s

O llv a m toads Cardinal rout

in midst of
title chase

MIAMI — On the mound and at the plate.
Om ar Olivares Ignored the distraction of a
looming strike.
Olivares pitched seven Innings and hit his
third career homer Wednesday, helping the St.
Louis Cardinals beat the Florida Marlins 12-4.
"Distraction? What distraction?" Olivares
said. "1 was there to pitch. I wasn't thinking
about what Is going to happen Thursday. There
was no distraction. Just baseball."

Toucan W llie'a collected 33
MfMteo In just five Innings of
• w k Wednesday night, rom­
p in g to a 2 3 -8 w in over
Hethallte Sales In the Winter
S p rin g s lie n 's Class C

Chattanooga ovartakas Sunt
JA C K S O N V IL L E - Eric Owens' sacrifice fly
delivered the go-ahead run. leading the Chat­
tanooga Lookouts to a 6-4 victory over the
Jacksonville Suns on Wednesday.
Jacksonville led 4-3 and reliever Jim Meclr
(6-4) had retired six Chattanooga batters In a
row going In the ninth.
But consecutive singles by Chad Mottola, Tom
Houk. Brian Koelllng and Pokey Reese tied the
game. Owens' sacrifice fly made It 5-4. Mark
Merchant's groundout scored the final run.

Panthors sign Boughnar
F O R T LA U D E R D A LE - Th e Florida Panthers
signed free agent defenseman Bob Bdugh nQf to
a multi-year contract Wednesday.
Boughner. 23, scored eight goals *nA 14
assists for 22 points while recording 292 pertMTy*
minutes In 72 games for the Adirondack Red
Wings of the American Hockey League.

Dllfar, Rhatt to play Saturday
TA M P A — Rookies Trent DUfer and Errict
Rhett will make their debuts for the Tam pa Bay
Buccaneers In Saturday nlght'a exhibition
against the Seattle Seahawlu.
Neither will start the game, but coach Sam
Wyche said DUfer will take a limited number of
anaps at quarterback and that Rhett will share
playing time with three veteran running backs.

Marino to start this waak
D A V IE — Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan
Marino will start In Saturday’s exhibition game
against the Green Bay Packers and play the first
i quarter, coach Don Shula said Wednesday.
Th e team also announced the signing of
fourth-round draft pick Ronnie Woojfork.
Shula was pleased with Marino's performance
last week against the Pittsburgh Steelers and he
Is expected to play about three series.
Marino Is continuing his recovery from a
ruptured Achilles' tendon.

Bagwoil bvoaka ha nd.
H O U S TO N — Houston Astras first baseman
Jeff Bagwell, who has a major-league leading
116 RBIs, will miss 3-3 weeks with a broken
hand after being hit by a pitch In a game against
the 8an Diego Padres.
Bagwell was hit by a pitch from Andy Benes.
X-rays revealed he has a fracture of the fourth
metacarpal bone of hla left hand, and he was
placed In a splint.

Forgman-Moortr fight off
W E S T P A TTE R S O N , N J - George Foreman's
scheduled fight with Michael Moorcr for the
W B A and IBP heavyweight championships is off
because the W BA refused to sanction the fight,
promoter Dan Duva said.
Duva said the W BA would strip Michael
Moorcr of hla title even If be fought the
45-year-old Foreman only for the IBP title.
Foreman and Moorcr were scheduled to fight
for both belts on Nov. S.

ila wnBi J f jj.t- • a

1**4"

Jsrsmlah Clint (No. 9) hit a triple to help tt* |Cline's
Painting-Good News Gang Royals take a 50 fir l-lnnlng
laad over tha Aviation Blsda Sarvicas Marlins It night

at Sanford Memorial Stadium. But Tony Lewis (left)
the Merlins rallied for a 6-6 win and a berth in tha finale
of tha Sanford Ssnlor Baseball League Tournament.

Marlins in finals; opponent TB A
Pram I
SANFORD — Kevin Whittington's sacrifice flj in (he
sixth inning scored Anthony Alameda wl h the
go-ahead run and gave the Aviation Blade S rvlccs
Marlins a 6-5 win over the Cline's Painting/Ooot News
Gang Royals In the Sanford Recreation 8enlor B iseball
Tournament at Sanford Memorial Stadium.
While the Marlins and Royals were able to co npletc
their game, the contest pitting the undefeated Noble
Constructions White Sox against the Metro Sewfr Red
Sox at Zlnn Beck Field was stopped by ralti and
darkness with the White Sox leading 9-4 with one out
o in
the top of the fifth Inning.
There was no word on when the White Sox-Rod Sox
game would be completed and when the finals will be
played. Originally, the consolation game was scheduled
for 10 a.m. Saturday morning at Zlnn Beck Field with
the championship game to follow at noon.
After the Royals (4-6) scored all five of their runs in
the top of the first Inning, the Marlins (5-5) started
chipping away at the lead, scoring single runs in the
bottom of the first, second, and fifth Innings.

Otor'i
Mtwt
W
WW • PftnNai/Oito
I ..........
W
WW* I ia | to yik

Ml M

• — 1 ij

Aviattaa MaW h nrtrn MsrtWi

at XI

ns ii - t •

n m ra m u .r______
#11 *» - «
Play stoppaS ty rain, darknan with ana out In tha lap el tha tilth Inninp.

I

The Marlins' game-winning rally began when Tonv
Lewla hit a one-out single In the home half of the sixth
inning. After Fred Badke walked. AUm eda rintfed
home Lewis. Chris Denman then hit • •bi«le
scored Badke with the tying run and set the stage for
Whittington.
.
_
...
Alameda led the Marlins' seven-hit
of singles, two runs scored, and an RBI. Uf*“iian
Singled twice and drove In two runs. Lewis and Steve
Sperry each hit a single and scored a run. Mario
Alexander also hit a single.
Whittington and Jason Thornton each had an RBI.

WUl!ara attack last night with a
triple, three singles, six RBI.
and two runs scored. Harold
Hitt contributed a double, two
singles, four runs scored, and
three RBI.
K e n n y T u ttle h it three
singles and scored four runs.
Lance Abney also hit three
singles and a sacrifice fly.
driving In four runs and scor­
ing a pair. •
Billy Btrtpp tripled, singled,
scored a run. and had four
RBI. Rick Tribit had a double,
single, two runs, and two RBI
while Doug P q p i chipped In
with a double, single, and
three ru n s scored. B ddle
Norton added two singles, two
walks, a sacrifice fly. and three
runs scored.
W i n n in g p i t c h e r K e l l y
Klukls aided his cause by
scoring a pair of runs.

‘Luck’ gives Balough win in C row n’s second leg
8poclal to ths Hsrald
SAM 8ULA Q ary "H ot Shop" Balough
needed a lucky finish to best a star-studded field
and win the second leg of the 100-lap Late Model
Triple Crown run last Saturday night. Aug. 6. at
New Smyrna Speedway.
Balough, who won the Triple Crown's first race
on Friday night at Orlando Speed world, started
the race on the pole and led every circuit to
secure the victory.
But after racing uncontested for 98 laps.
Balough's car blew a power steering hose
heading Into the white flag lap. He was able to
avoid the wall and manhandled the car to the
checkered flag,
"You talk luck. I was lucky tonight.'
Jough. who picked up hla 34th win c .......
j. "Not only did I draw the pole, but when
the hose blew, I slipped In m y own oil and I was
headed right for the wall.

□ 8 p.m. — ESPN. Thursday Night Thunder. (LI

wu

"Going into turn four. I was trying to steer the
car. but it Juat kept going straight. I was
thinking. *1 lead the whole race and now I’m
going into the wall.' At the last second, the
wheels caught and I straightened out."

On the start of the race. Daniel Keene — who
wt the evening's fast qualifying time — and Mike
Filch tangled going Into turn four. After flagman
Johnny Baaa sent both drivers to the rear of the
Held for the restart. Balough Jumped to the lead
on the new green flag with David Russell. Ricky
Wood, and Ronnie Burkett In tow.
Russell would remain In second place for the
entire race, pressuring Balough for the No. 1
•Pot. By lap 39. Keene had worked hla way from
the back of the pack to third place and stayed
there until Rogers overtook horn on U p 68.
With each restart, brought about by alx caution
(tags. Balough would pull away from the field to a
comfortable lead.
"We raced our plan." explained Balough.
"Mash the gas to get In front, then run hard
enough, without abusing the car or tires, to keep
the rest of the guys behind us.
"I have a good situation with Griffin Racing.
Pee Wee (Ortfllnl. the car owner. Is a long-time
driver. The crew U real experienced so when we
go to race, we're really ready."
By U p 76. the top five positions - the only care
on the lead lap — of the race were established.
Balough riding the point with Russell. Rogers.
Keene, and Burkett trailing.
"I had Qary set up for a pass when he dropped

the oU." said Russell, a lour-Ume FA SCAR Late
Model champion. "I backed off. waiting for a
caution flag, and It never came. By the time I got
on the gaa.lt was too Ute to catch him ."
•
Baaa felt a caution wasn't necessary since the
fluid dropped was minimal, causing no danger or
threat to tne drivers.
.,
"I'm tickled to take third tonight, but U would
have made no difference where we finished."
said Rogers, the wlnnlngest Late Model driver at
New Sm yrna Speedway. "I've been racing
Volusia (County Speedway) lately because I'm tn
the hunt for the Sunbelt Region championship,
but we've been rained out there for the last three
weeks.
"I needed to race. I had to have a racing fix.
When we got rained out there tonight. I said to
the guys. ‘We're leaving here and heading to
Clyde's Place.' I'm sure glad we made the trip. I
feel a whole lot better now."
The race took 65 minutes to complete. There
were alx cautions and no Injuries reported,
Balough collected $2,000 for the win.
Other feature event winners were Dave Savlckl
(Modlfleds). Bobby Sears (Mini-Stocks). Allen
Rhodes (Limited Late Models), Barbara Pierce
(Sportsman). Chuck Vola (Bombers), and Tin t
Nicholas (Run-Abouts).

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

'

•

y a a a g A g i

�SB - Sanford Harald, 8anford, Florida - Thursday, August 11, IBM

Miller, O ’Neal lead
romp over Puerto Rico

STATS &amp; STANDINGS

.1 1

I tOoo-Royea
**"*7N U N
i IRkardeOyert
*N
• f Arfecho-Forurfe
IN
I • (1-4) BAN; F (SB) M AN) T O -M I
&lt; M AN , DO (1-1) MJ*

Q (1-1) U N ; F (a i)M N ; T U -IB ) MSN

j 4 lete-FerurM

II N

&lt; 11
i
) *

) SAcplllaga
) I Ota

l" « N

j 4IriiMW)

ON
IN

4N
IN

141
441

• T i b I M N ; F j a i I M A M ;T (A M )M I N
1Saluca Goitli
A N 11N A N
• Md-Baltran
IN
IN
a NMo-VkSar
4N
( M i l l M N ; F (IB ) T I N ; T T (IB B )
!1*N; Taaba-Tri JatbpNAMN
7 SaW-Uraldd
* * " ^ »N A N I N
4 Napa-Dan
4N IN
1 Krkltla Chlmel*
4N
• (A T) U N ; F (T B tM N i TI7 B B ) M SN

r-JSSST

1 IN

IS N
7N

IN
7N

f'BOattli
R U B ) N N i F (A 4 )M A M ;T!A 4 4 )M * N
IHBgaaw
I 4 Ron* Goitli
l| N I N
4N
AZugaxa Victor
«N
4N

• (04) *1N; F (04) AM; F caa*. (SB «)
. M N ; F cam. (ARBI U N ; T (0B4) I N ; T
cam. (04-ARIUON

ISM mow

4 Irklila Don
U N IS N I N
4 Barra-Oaltlj
SN I N
2 laid-Bab
4N
• (4B) 4A44; F (04) ISAM; T (04-1)
M IN ; DO (SB B a AH) ISSN; BO (04 A
BA ID 4M N

t

* Beltran
IS N 11N A N
SOan
ISOM
IN
0 (SB) SAM! F (4-1) MAM; Tri-Sup (A P I)
I N N ; Tri-Sup JMkpto ASSAM
4 Barra Victor
I ErkUla-Battran

7N
»N

SN
IS N

O MB) 44N; F (A l) ISSN; T (A04)
StSN; S (AAAAH) MSN; Na. I
fevrtb I N ; DO (44) MAT*
A - 111; N - M l,77*

\

ii.

La* Angola*

TerentoM New Yark, 7:M p.m.
Milwaukee at Ctovefend. H I p.m.
Calltomleel Dehart. TiMp.m.
Botfen at eattlmarfe 7:M p.m.
MlnnetatastChkagblNp.m.
Taxat at Kan*a* City, *:M p.m.
S*attfe (1 Oakland. lA M p m.

Greenvllfe (Bravo*)
JadmauBto (Maria**)
Knoxvllfe (Slut Joy*)
x-Carolina (FlraM*)
1(CdB*)

W
17
M
11
N
N

L Fct.
It J41
M J it
14 N *
V
N*
I
J l

OB
—
Ife
Ife
Ife
H

W
74
*7

M
*1
SI
w

L Fct. BB
1* 411 —
41 J R
7
S7 N I Mfe
41 441 life
R
N
IM

«
St
tl

L
47
44
*1
*1
*4

Fct.
414
47*
NS
AM
AM

W

L
M

Fct.

tt

17

BB
fe
14
t*
17
M

L Fct. BB
tt .717 IT J7I *Vt
U MM *W
U
477 11
7* 470 H
M J U life

n
ii

17

iCArtfW)

11

■
u II 5*1 M » .Ml Vi
14 M .541 2
U I* JS7 Ife
II U 4 H 1Vk

11Rad Sax)

tt. Fofe (Cardinal*)
Fart Mydn (Turin*1
a-Tampa (Yanbaat)
OunwRn(BlwJayt)
(Rangart)
ir (PMIItot)
d(Tfeort)
tlrethall tltfe

I* 14
1* U
II U

441
4U
41*

4Vt
7
m

DwnodlnAOwrtrtfea
Lakeland al Saraaala, pad., rain
St.Faferaburgat TSmpa, ppu. rain
Brevard A Daytona A camp, at auap-gam*
Daytona A BrevaidO
Waal FNm Beach A Otcaala 1
Dunodlnot Charlotto
Cfearwafer i t L akd md
Saraaala at SI
Fart My ra M Tampa
X . Luck* at Daytona
Brevard at Otcmie
Watt Falm Beach at Vara Beach
Friday'* Bama*
Dunedin at Charfetfe
O iarwaferat Lakeland
Bt. Foferaburg at Saraaala
FartMyvr* Tampa
tt. Lucia at Oajffena
Brevard at Otcaala
W a il Fa lm Saach at Vera Btach

T T ^ T T
CARDINALS B, MARLIN! *
ST. LOUIS
FLORIDA

a b rb b i

a b rb b i
Lnktrdct * 1 1 1

OSmlMaa

list

JftoriMlb
CtoughiB
lalfeN
WMtonrt
Ollkay If

It I I
M il
4 111
4 l •*
S 111

111*

Carrel

4 110

Shrttoldrt S i l l

AlkaaM t a t s
Ogmdato
Fgm m c
Oivarotp
Duckafep
Firry ph
Habyanp

Stt*

4 s 11
11I I
dSt*
14*0
ttto

100
383
At-bats..
60
Runs....
Hits *********•#•***«ere** 102
RBI MMIMtlMtMMttittt 52
15
Doubles....
5
Triplet ««•*•••■
10
Home runs
13
Steals.......
.268
A v e ra g e ......

bast csrssr
1,917
160
7.263
647
1,291
133
2.153
194
759
71
347
38
105
13
133
18
764
90
.296
.334

Tim Raines

MSP - by Olivant (Calbrunnl. WP Ollvam, W*ath*rt.
Umpire* — Horn*. Hlrtchb*ck; Flrtl.
Vanover; Second. Wmdtltfedf; Third. R*
lltord.
T — 1:11. A — MJ7I.

FITCMNO
Htfedtiam
• f* . Chlcaga, 11A J » . M l; Kay. Naw
Ytrk, 17-A JM , 1.17; MClarfc, Cfevaland. I I A
•7SAI N ; Muttina. Bartlmor*. 141, .7*1144;
Cana, Kama* City, MS. .7*1, I.S4; MFarat.
Ntw Yark. *4, a m , 4.01, Me Dana Id.
Bammw*, 1A7, A47. a m ; RJahman. Saattfe,
’7A AST, A ll; Wagman, Mllwaukw, 4 A N T .
4Jtf tandarwn, Chlcaga. AA AST. SO*

NATIONAL LKAOUI
O At R
TOwytm SO
IN *1* 77
BagwellHou
IN 4M IN
AlouMon
IN *11 D
MorrltCIn
1)1 4M 40
Mikhail Cln
« M* 57
J*ft*r tot SIL
10 1*7 I I
Plana LA
IN 401 44
L Walker Mon
M 1*5 74
Conlno Fla
114 444 I*
Robert* SO
N4 1*4 II
Galarraga Col
N1^4I7 77

—
I t Ortll. W*; Ctoman*. I w fen.
’*•' Rtofey, Callfemla. 14B; Appfer, Kama*
City, 141; Hentgan, Taranto, itli Can*.
Kent** City, m i Bara, Chlcaga, 117;
07.

N Pet.
141 Jtl
147 J47
1*1 ■**
14d M l
IM -M7
IT* 715
IT* M7
177 .177
H I .It*
117 Jl*
ID Jl*

Bagwoll. Houtton. «M; Grltaom, Montreal.
N i Bond*. San Francfeco. N ; Lanklord. St.
Loult, I t ; Biggie, Houtton. Mi Alau,
Montreal.lit Buffer. LoaAngafet.7*.
RomSWMdla
Bagwell. Houtton, 111: Mowmiamt, San
Franc Itco. Mj Blchotfe. Colorado. Ml MeGrill, Atlanta. *li Ftatia. Lm Angafet. Mt
LWalktr, Montreal. M Galarraga, Colorado.

LWalkar, Montreal, 44; Btoato. Houtton.
41; JB4II. Pltttburgk IS; TOwytm. San
Dlago. IS; Blchotfe, Cbferodo. H i Bagewii.
Houtton, » ; Carder* Mentraal. M; Alou.
Montreal, M; Morrlt. OncfendH, M.
OLowk. Ian Frandtco. fi — ------- —
Angafet. I; RUnder*. Cincinnati, I ; Klngtry.
Colorado. I; Buffer, Lm Angtfea. Ii Clayton.
San Francltca. 4; Sat*. Chicago. I;
TF*mend*i. ClncbmoB. A

Blggfe. Houtfen. J»; DSandert. Cincinnati,
Mi Orfeaam, Manlraal M: Carr, Fferld*. n,
DLawl*. tan Francfeco. St; Sand*. San
Francfeco, |*; Pel hldd*. Lea Angafet. jj;
Butter, La* Anfdfet. 17.
FtTCMNG
II Dad! feat
Freeman, Caleradt, le t, .11). i H;
Sabirhagin. Haw York. 14-4, .77*. 1.74; KHiti.
Mentraal. U-A .74A I N ; GMaddui. Atlanta.
1AA 7IA I N ; OnJtrtaan, Fhlladaiphfe. it*.
.TtA I N ; Nferd u r. Allant*, » a. an. 1 u ,
FJMartlnat, Mentraal. 1l-A 4*7, i d .

KnaavtlfeeM

M

RAINES QAUQE
Category
*94

Lalmltb, Ball Imar*. 11; Mantgamary,
KtofeM City, 17; Aguilera. Mlnnmot*. II;
Bckaratoy, Oakland. l»; Ayala. Saatife, Mj
Hall. Taranto. 17; FWtort, Mllwaukw. 17;
Ruwall. CtovaMnd, 17.

vl
OSAKA. FU BATON ICO 11
UIAI1M )
Wilkin* 1-11 1-1 It, K*mp 4-4 1-1 *,
Maumbw M 11 14. K J t tm m m 4-4 i ,
MHfer A l l M M. Cafeman 0-0 44 0, O'Neal
IMO a t If, Fried 1-0 SO 4, Mafarfe OB M 17,
Smith I S M I, L W n a i 1-1 S I I. TMMl:
11-11 U-1VIJ4.

FVIRTORICOCM)
I S M S , Mlncy F it SB IS, Ortll 14

—

a# a

a n n m , carter a u m it .

(A fsasat 11. Loen V iI a
1 i 4, Lapai l ) M L

R.Ceton I t 04 % Alloto*
‘ H M 4 , Foret M

0-04. Total*: I I 474-11II.

- USA 4A Fuarfe Sic* IS. IPolnf
gaol* - USA taw (MHfer a n .
WWkbfe 5 A Fried FT. *nl*
Bnlfh 11.0'Na*l*01l.
Futrfe Rko 1ST
H Mlncy FA
Yoga u Cartor
1-A Ortll l-A

Loot* a i). Fgtdb

— USA I I (Kempt (KNbol 7). Fuorto Rico If
(Mlncy 7). Aatittt — USA V (Kamp. Frtc*
“ Fuarfe Rice 11 (Carter 4). Total feufe 11A Fuorto Rice N A — M N I

X

Francfeco. 17;
n.-rOetarTQS*. Caferade.
Inclnnatl, M; Blchetfe, Cd

Knoxvllfe al Oroonylife
Carolina at Neahrilfe
Birmingham at Hunfevllfe

w
u

■y BILL M ftN M O
AP B ab hoIball Wrlttr

Tim Raines Is a Sanford native and Somlnolo Hloh School
graduate now playing for the Chicago White Sox. Hit atata are
for the 1904 season In the first column, paraonal-baat season
totals In the second column and currant career totals
(Including 1994 garnet) In lha third column.
Ralnaa suffered an 0-for-4 game Wadnaaday afternoon but
the White Sox still managed (o pull out • 2-1 win over the
Oakland Athletics.

|£||
TGwynn. San Ofege. 141) Bagwoll,
Houtton. 147; Bichette. Colored*. H7i
Morrlt. Cincinnati, 1*4; Ctfdae. Ffertda, tali
Alou. Montreal. M3; Grltaom. Montreel, 117;
Biggie. Houtton, 117.

i.psd .iti*
lAJSdlNNWRfet
Birmingham A Knaavllfel

W.F. Reach (Rupaa)
Daytona (Cuba)
II. Lucie (Mata)
u-Brevard (Marlin*)
Vaco Beach I Da apart)

■

45.

SOUTMIBN L I ABU I

Commit

a s 11

Clbmnlb
intiagac
KAbbrttt
Drbwfelb
RLawfep
Carrillo ph
Mttwwtp

1**4
ill*
44 40
Jtl#
00*0
0*00
000*

1IJJ
a ISIS

RnferiaN I t SO
Tatoto
M **t
MS SU IM - 11
M. Lault
Ml MS MS - 4
E111). Canto* (4).
ID.
DF - St. Laui* ). Ffertda I. LOB - St. Leufe
7, Fferld* A IB - OSmllh I (M l. Ollkay (U ),
Shaftfeld (I*). SB - Lanktord (SI, Barbarfe
(t ). HB - Fagnaai Ml. Oliver** (I),
IM). IB - Ollkay III). S -

Totofe

NATIOMAL LBABUB
“
I BBT

Fltfeburgh

Cleveland 4. Terentol
Chicago 1. Oakland!
Ootrott A Milwaukee 0
Salllmor* I. New York I
MlMfeMf 11, So*ton 7
Soattfe 1. Toxat 7. )• toning*
California I, KantaoQty I
Thuredeyi dam n
Toronto IHtntgon IBS) at Now York IPorot
(-4), liM p a i.
Milwaukee (Wagman S4&gt; at Oalrolt
(M d d N lM t). Iillp.m .
Bakfen (Safe 4-7) at Baltimore (Rhode*
1-1), T ill PM .
Soattfe Oohnton 174) at Oakland (Darling
tS-W, WiMpm.

FLORIDA STAT1LBABUB

UN
AN IN
• 1 Bato-Farurla
1 TOaa-Agutm
I I H I FMRN ; P IM M M N i T (O a t lM I N

si.r •

Fct. OB
454 _
.411
to
.a t Ife
.40* ife

Birmingham a) Hunfevllfe

1 Ricardo
TSaluca
5Oi#S
0(1-7) S IN ; F (1-7) S7N; T (A7B) 07N

Cincinnati

Fct. DB
.5*3 —
5*4 1
JS7 4
.44* 14
.4M life

114

IFHo-Roydi
1 Ford*O y art

Montreal
Atlanta
New York
FMIadalphla

OB
—
7
17
17fe
II

■-Hunfevllfe (ANdfet)
i (Radi)

O (a n M N ; F ( » l ) *AM; T O H ) l* »N

i

Fct.
415
.141
.474
.470
.445

I

»TTtrr

AMIR1CAN L IA B U t
All Timet ID T
Kttf Mr ItIan
W
L
70 41
NtwYarh
Baltimore
41 4*
Toronto
S4 40
Bo*Ion
54 *1
Detroit
SI *1
Central Dvltfen
W
L
47 4*
Chlcaga
44 47
*4 SI
Xante* City
51 40
Mirufttefe
Milwaukee
n *1
WwtDtvtoton
L
W
a at
Taxa*
Oakland
si ss
40 *i
Saattfe
47 St
Callfemla

I
u

at temtoafeFarfc
aa*NyntoM
F m t ra cit-W
i Ot
- u «f&lt;e 0
i 4a .n
i Wat Talk
m o ajo n o
1 Sporty Batty
11JO S N
t Omni Barbarian
i n
Q (I D 4S.Ni F (IA S ) 0,111 P (AIM ) A N ;
T (1-1-1) 1.TN.N
Sk m S raca - 1AM; Mi 11J1
a MJ Straakindanny
S40 }.ao 4 to
1UnctoH
1.40 1.40
1 Doubt Not
140
’ Q (1-4) 14N; P (4-1) t7.Nl T (4-1-1) WJOi
DO (1-4) M M
T N r d r t c * -IN 4 iC i4 * jf
'iG R tB rk n To
14.40 10JO 14.40
' S RJ Gold Wonder
7.00 7JO
7Wright Alina
I JO
. O (1-1) 11.Mi P US) SOJOi T (M-7, 1
eicht) S71.N
Faartorata — I AM; Bt 11.44
( J Data Evant
4 40 MO M0
, 1Meg* Oavatlation
5 00 i n
*1AOK Mitt Diamond
t jo
O (l-l) I4J0I F (1-1) tS7J0i T (4-1-1) 1MJ0,
« (Carryover) 7A04J1
Fifth raca— 1444; DiN.74
' 4 f ranch Chic
(JO l.N 100
-IGanava'tBaavty
4J0 l.io
JM 'i Howard Caa
170
‘ Q (40) H.M i P (4AK) t.Mi P (ADO) f.N ;
,1(40-1)177JO
"
Sixth race— 1AM; Ci 11J1
.‘ JSceLdyBdgf
17JO l.N 4 K
•ISJChtvy
S.N l.M
v lLo(tTravalenlt
MO
Q (1-7) MJOt P (M ) IttJOt T (7-1-1)
i 170.1*1 (4-4-7,S N D IIU O
Savaotkraca — M M i A i l i .l l
1TM Chain taw
IMO 4J0 I N
rtJamtattlc
MO S.M
’ 7 twaat Pattion
IN
- 0 (1-4) M J tl P (to ) 14.Ni T (10-71 lll.M l
J l (10-70) 1.IS1N
01(0*01» U — 1J44) Ci 40J4
1 Brltvt Katay
11.N 4 N A N
4 Boxanhl* Bofeby
AN 4N
*0 Woodland Blfbott
4N
a (M )M N &lt; P ( l O ) U N | T ( I O 0 ) M » N
• Matorac* — 1AM; AIJ4J7
IM 'iBIgM an
ON I N ON
4 M‘i Fancy Nancy
* N 7N
I Gin'* Bounty
4.40
O (M ) U N l P (44) ITIM i T (10-1)
44*-Mj OD 1)0 B FAN) « N | 0 0 1 )0 B AIM)
IN N
llfhraca — IA44; Bi 11.17
7 B ln 1* Fry
D N 7N 4N
1Eyati Loner
IN IN
' 4 Foxy Dorothy
IN
O (1-7) SSA4; P (M ) N N i T (M O . 11
txcBt) 47.4*
llthrace— M N i D ill.N
lMlghltcewwr
*n
in
in
1 Fabian
IN ' IN
1JO'aMarm
IN
Q ( M l M N i P IM ) M M i T (M -1) IM M i
(Carryover) f J t l .44
tltb rac* — M M i A i MJ*
7 N 'l Mercury
7N 4N I N
1 Foxy Crultar
4N I N
2 Hurttf Amandl
iJO
0 (1-7) M N ; P ( M ) * I N i T (7-1-11 MONi
&gt; (7-M O) I N N
U N ra c a -l* «t i T i M.tl
I Right AfEae*
4.M I N
IN
1 Rlpiay Z*4
IN IN
ICaro'iBlo Bay
in
DM-SMAN; F (IO )4 * N i T M O O IIB N
M N ro c a -lN O i AiM.(7
iCWho'iLaughto
AN IN
AN
IF a w tF u F u
IN IN
3 Buffer BtoaM
• IN
0 (1 0 ) M N i P d O )4 4 N i I d O - M I T K N
A - M il H - B U M

San Francltca
SI *0 .47* 1
Colorado
51 41 .417 Ife
44 70 .1*7 life
San Diego
WadiHtday'i 04 mat
San FrancItco 1. Chicago 1
Montreal 4. PltttburRi 0
Now York 4, Phlladefehl* 1
tt. Lault 1), Ftortda*
Lot Ang*to««, Cincinnati 1
Houtton 1. San Dlajo I
Colorado 1, Atlanta A A Inning*, rain
TfegMda^i Qm m i
Lot Angola* (Marttiat 11-7) at Cincinnati
(RI|o(0). 11:11 p.m.
San Dlago (Hemlton 14) at Houtlon
(Swindell* I). 1:11p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 144) at Colorado (Painter
41), 1:45pm.
It. Loafe (Ttwhthvry 11-14) at Ffertdo
( Rapp 7-7),7ittp.m.
Now York (Jacam* 4-1) at Phlladtipnia
(Vafeniutla 1-1), 7111p m.
Montreal (Hanry 1-1) al PIHtburgh
(ZSmllh M ), 7:11p.m.
Friday! Garnet
PtttiborgAatFfertdb7illp.nl.
ttow Yerfc at Montreal, 7; IS p m
Houtton at Atlanta, 7N p.m.
Philadelphia at St. Lault. 1:11 p.m.
Cincinnati at Colorads. I M p.m.
Chlcagaal Lm Angafet, 10:05 p.m.
San Frandtco at Let Dlago. IO N p.m.

Ian Dfegt. »N; Rl|o. Cincinnati.
If*; 0 Maddux, AHarta. Ill; Sabarhagan,
Now Yark, 141; FJMbrtlnai, Mentraal. u);
O la vln o , A tla n ta , 140; DnJackion,
Fhlledrtphl*. II*.
France, New York, Mi Back. San Francltc*. Mi DJanat, Fhlladaiphfe. v ; Watfelartd, Montreal. U ; McMichaei. Aiiania, i i ;
Myara, Chicago. 11; Hartman, tan Dfego, i*.
AMBRICAN LKAOUI
0 AB R H
102 141 47 m
O'NtlllNY
«4 411 ft 147
BaUaCfe
Thoma* Chi
111 If* 104 141
' Lofton Cto
111 41* 105 IM
Molllor Tor
IM 441 tl 154
Boat* NY
« 141 41 12)
WClark Tax
IN M» 71 IM
Or 1(toy J r Sea
IN 41* *7 IM
Falmairo Bal
111 414 11 IM
Franc* Chi
in 411 71 111
Bamltartd
Thoma*. Chicago. ■*; Lofton. Cfey*fend,
Ml; Orltfey Jr, Soattfe, (1; Boll*. Cfevaland,
*0; FMIIIp*. Detroit, M; Canwce. Ttiat. Ml
Knoblauch. MtmwoalA IS; Moll tor, Toronto,
Rum Bolted In
Fuckatt. Minnaiota, ill; Certtr, Toronto,
1U; Thome*. Chicago, ioi; Ball*, Cfeniand,
Ml; Franca, Chicago, to; Sferra, n u p M .
*1; Canaaca. Taxa*. to.

iin

Lotion. Cleveland, fed; Molllor, Toronto.
1S4; Bello, Cleveland, Ml; Them**. ChicapA
141; CHIpkan. Balllmor*. IJ4: Knoblauch,
Mlnneteta. IM; Bawga, Cfewland. IM;
Falmairo. Balllmor*. ii*; Fuckatt. MM---------‘ ‘ .IM .
Knoblauch. Mlnnamla, «S; Bali*. Cleve­
land, IS; Thorn**. Chicago, U ; Fryman,
Ootralt, U ; Lofton, Cfevotand. H. Blarge.
Cfevaland. U ; Falmairo, Baltimore, m
Fuckott, MlrawMia, U.
Trfeto*
LJohmon. Chicago. U; Cafeman. Kama*
City, tt; Lallan, Cleveland, t; ADial,
Milwaukee. 7j McRat, Kanu* City, 4;
Fafenia. Now Yack,*; Whlfe. Toronto.*
Griffey Jr, Soattfe. Mi Thomai. ChlcaaA
M; Ratio. Cfevotand. M; Canaaca. TataA I ) ;
Ffeidar. Ootrott, M; MVauahn. Bottaa. M;
Carter. Taranto. MiCOBvto. Calltornl*. |A
Laffen. Cfevotand. » i Cafeman, rffeiia*
City, M; Niton. Baden, a ; Knoblauch.
Mlnmwia. U ; RyAndwwn. Baltimore, t il
ACafe. Minnow*a, Mi McRae, Kantat City,

T O R O N T O — Dream Team If
Ib really Btartlng to get the hang
of International basketball.
After lackluster victories in
two of Its first three games at the
W o r l d C h a m p i o n s h i p of
Basketball, the U.S. team of 12
N B A All-Stara now has two
consecutive fiO-point blowouts
against Australia and Puerto
Rico.
Th e Americana, who earlier In
the t o ur nam ent took turns
showing off their Inside and
outside games, displayed both In
a 134*83 rout of Puerto Rico,
which la coming oft a gold-medal
performance at the Goodwill
Games,
"Team s are trying different
ways to play us," said Reggie
Milter, who hit eight of 11
3*pointers and scored 26 of his
28 points in the first half
Wednesday night. "Th e y now
know they can't try to alow It
down and they can't run with
us. We didn't have a Tourna­
ment of the Americas to prepare
for the different styles. Now
we’re ready to play any way."
T h e T o u r n a m e n t of the
Americas statement by Miller
was a pointed reference to the
pre-Olympic event played by the
original Dream Team In 1092.
Dream Team II, whose perfor­

Players poised to strike
SSports Wrltar
N E W YO R K - Baseball's most
exciting season In years will
almost certainly come to a hatt
after tonight's games.
Talks between players and
owners broke oft Wednesday and
no further meetlnga were sched­
uled before F r i d a y ' s strike
deadline.
Management negotiator Rich­
ard Ravltch still Insists on a
salary cap. and union head
Donald Fehr says players never
will accept one.
"W e will continue to hope that
maybe, as Don put it in the
m eeting, that lightn in g w ill
strike and one of us will have a
good Idea that can bridge this
gap In the next day-and-a-half,"
Ravltch said after a 2V4-hour
meeting. "I'm not opUjnUtic.
F e h r.

CMICADO W M ITl BOR - J
tfev* Worrell and Tim Metro. pFc
Prince william 0 R» Carolina
% 5 w &lt;Yolsx Y ^ S ^ - 'o J i h f e n o d Star
i Htkhcack. pOdmr, fe Calumbu* *4 Hw
RAIMA* CITY ROYALS -

Dan

A TWINS - optfened Dave
pltdfer, Id Soli Late City #1 Itfe
Pacthc Caort Laagua.
TC X A t RAJ4BIR1 - Cfetfened
' m i LM^yfa
Hunt, pitcher, to Tula*el tha fexa*
U
CINCIHNATI RISK - Optfened Kevin
Jarvia. pNdwr, la Ind anapallt al tha Ameri­
can Aaaaclpffen. Calfed up Red Dibbfe.
■||fbar Flln|BJUB^N|a
PRHRVv*
&gt;nWmPPIet
RKW YORK M K TI - (Mfemd Jeremy
Bum lit. avtffetdar, and Fernanda Vina,
btlfeldar. fe Narfelh al th* Infernatfenal
Latjiue. Ac)l»afed Kaartn McRtynald*. awlMe Knight- Inffeldar. from
IfeSasr, and Jort
■

Mall

[T¥fWimn

3

AUTO RACISM
Naan— SUN. Summer Lopwidi Sarto*
•pm . - KIFSA Thunday Night Thunder
1:10 am . - S tF ft IHRA Summer Na
*:M am . - E IF N . SODA Chavrafet Spring
H U p.m. -

CY CLIMB
ESPN, NORBA National

EOUESTRIAN
1 a.m. — SUN, Fuller Intornaltonat
i — WTBA FOA Champion*hl», Ural
____. (L)
1I:M a m . — WCFX A FOA ChampfenahI*.
flf-fei
fpifeid
nrw *
wr* fi^p^^wa
SOCCER
Naan - SUN. U.A Roys' Under-17 National
TENNIS
I p.m. - BSFN. Thrlftwoy A TF Champion

(U

TRIATHLON
Tpjh . — SUN. Qatarado Iprtntmon Sarto*

a
4)M p m . - WWZN-AM 11*44). National
Laagva. Allanto Bravotat Colorada Rackfe*
4:4* p m . - WTLN-AM (ISM), Southern
League. Chattamagaial Orlande Cub*
7p m - W0TO-AM (it*). Natfenal League.
Si. LauitCardtoatoai Ffertda Morilna
S p.m. — WOTO-AM (S4S). The Sport*
Ortva
*pm . - WOTDJUW (SM), The Frew Rea
7 p m . - WWNZ-AM (741). WWZN-AM
&lt;U4t).Thelparfe*M
USA Pm ”
( M I ' *Forfe Bylin*

reminds him of
of 1961, was eVetftfttN Vkttny
“ A t this point. I see no reason
to b e l i e v e a n y t h i n g o f
significance will occur today or
a n y tim e soon.*' F e h r said.
"Nothing else is scheduled."
A walkout would Imperil the
final 52 days and 668 games of
the regular season as well bb the
World Series, which has been
played annually since 1905.
B o t h B i d e s s p o k e as if
baseball's eighth work stoppage
since 1972 already had begun,
but neither was willing to predict
when talks would resume or
w hen the $1.8 bllllon-a-year
Industry would restart.
“ A strike isn't the end of the
process — it's the midpoint,"
Ravltch Bald.
Fehr said there wasn’t any
neccaalty to have additional ne­
gotiations right now.
"There's no reason to have a
meeting just to say you had a

IF

N

L .A II

4
S
S

H IM
7
IM
4 S
IM
* S

i

1 I 1
• 1 S
* 4 1
7
•
t

t 4
1 I
I t

ea o a o

offering'a'50-50*
split of the.iKyenue In exchange '
for a cap. say they won't accept
an agreement that doesn't fix
labor costa. T h e aides seem
poised to test each other's will
until a sign that either aide will
crack.
Fans ore disgusted with both
sides. Fehr said he's received
harassing telephone calls In re­
cent days and Ravltch said a
man started arguing with him in
a New York City restaurant,
saying there had "better not be a
strike or else."
In Jacksonville, a bar owner
filed suit In state court Wednes­
day. seeking to stop a walkout.
T h e lawsuit, filed In Duval
County Circuit Court by lawyers
Ellis Rubin and hla non Mark
Rubin, seeks an emergency
hearing and an order ‘'requiring
owners and players to conduct
and play the remaining regular
and poatacaaon baseball games
aa scheduled."

Baseball--------

t /•*4 -4 V ; » l &gt;

M p m . - WWNZ AM (74*7, Ffertda Iporit
*'tspm * -

WWZN-AM U 4 « i, Spark Fan

*

7

^

it

.ji# '

1 s t

H o r s a a

‘

1
B o t

J a L A I a l

Wad to u Sat. 7 30 p m
Thur. B 8aL NOON

R B B BB 10
*
t
S

meeting." he said.
Nothing new was said during
Wednesday's session, attended
by a dozen players from the
Baltimore Orioles, New York
Yankees and Philadelphia
Phillies. Lawyers Involved In the
talks said Yankees pitcher Steve
Howe and Phillies pitcher Curt
Schilling got Into the most
heated exchanges, challenging
management lawyers who insist
the Industry Is losing money.
"Make no mistake, this l a .'
primarily a dispute between thef
ow ners." Fehr s a id ."T h e f
l a r g e - m a r k e t o w n e r s and*
small-market owners could not 1
agree on how to change their L
agreements, so they agreed to
take It from the players."
When owners adopted new
revenue-sharing rules in Ja n u ­
ary. they said they wouldn't take
effect until players agreed to a

C s a lln M tn m IB
scored, and two RBI to hla credit.
A n t o n G ro o m s wal ked and Cedrick' Williams doubled and
scored two runs. Adrian Mitchell
Rcoredarun.
For the Royal* who collected also has a double. Dee Quinn
13 hits, Jeremiah Cline led the .singled, scored a run, and drive
way with a triple, single, one In a run.
Waller Bryant scored two runs
run, and two RBI. Calvin Butiar
chipped In with a double, single, a n d h a s a n R B I . A n t o n
one* run. and an RBI. Martin Caaaanova. Tom m y Raines, and
Cicero also doubted, singled, and Mar cus J o h n s o n ( wh o was
coming to bat when play was
scored a run.
Van U n hit two singles. Nat suspended) have scored one run
Cline and Ronnie McNeil both apiece,
For the Red Sox. Lawrence
singled and scored a run. Alvin
Sm ith singled in a run. Kal Maaon has hit a double and a
G odw in and Jason Compton single. Ivan Byrd singled and
scored two runs. Albert Harris
each hod a single.
Th e White Sox (94)) have five si ngl ed in a r u n . R i cha rd
hits ao far in their game with the Quinones also hit a single. Don
Kramer scored a run and drove
RedSox(l-6).
Craig Merkeraon of the White in a run. Don Harrison had an
Box has a double, single, one run RBI. Mike Hawkins scored a run.

to 11 H II

M. leufe
Oil vara* W, 14

mances are constantly compared
to Its predecessor, had two
exhibition games before the
world tournament.
Milter personally outscored
Puerto Rico 26-25 In the first
half as the United States opened
a 62-25 lead. He went to the
bench early In the second half,
and Shaqullle O'Neal took over.
O'Neal had 10 monster dunks
and scored 25 of his 29 points In
the garbage-time second half for
th e U n i t e d S t a t e s , w h i c h
established a tournament high
for points. Its previous high was
132 against China, while Dream
Team I had no more than 125 In
the 1992 Olympics.
"W c had fun and we hope to
do the same against Russia on
Friday." O'Neal aald.
Th e second-half highlight was
the 7-foot-1. 300-pound O'Neal's
rebound, coast-to-coast dribble
and slam-dunk, bringing his
teammates oft the bench In
celebration.
The one-sided victory gave the
Americans a 5-0 record in the
tournament and assured them a
spot in Saturday's semifinals
against undefeated Croatia or
Greece. Croatia la 5-0 after
winning 92-61 over Canada.
Dream Team II finishes Its
quarterfinal round-robin Friday
n i g ht at S k y D o m e against
Russia, which also la undefeated
In five games after w inning
103-76 over Australia.

Sun. 1 p.m .

A l s o

O n

T V
Minors 39* Ta l
Amitfed With Parent

ST,

H w . 1 7 -tf*4 3 B

(4 0 71 &gt; 3 1 -9 1 9 1

�¥f
Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 11, 19W - *•

P e o p le
IN

Hobby: Creating life-like ceramics

BRIEF

Arthritis Foundation spooks to AAftP
T h e W inter Springs Chapter *4949 of the American
Association of Retired Persona, Inc. (AARP) will meet Monday,
Aug. 15, at 1:30 p.m . at the W inter Spring* Senior Center, 400
N. Edgemon Ave. Speakers wlU Include Chrteta San toe,
executive director and Rhonda Jackaon-Moaeley, program
director of the Central Branch of the Arthritis Foundation.
Santoa will discuss the foundation and upcoming community
events and Jscksoo-Moseley will describe programs end
services offered by the Central Branch.
For more details, contact Ernie Battee, president, at
605-1183.

Work hlks
The Florida Trail Association invites you to join them on a
trail-blazing work hike for the purpose of recreational
enhancement of Central Florida. No experience la required and
there Is no charge for the event,
Borinas Reserv e entrance
he Cassia
Meet at the
gate 3 5 0 0 9 State Road 48, P ly m o u th a tT s o a .m ., Saturday,
Aug. 13. Bring lots of water, lunch and Moves.
For more Information, contact Wiley Dykes a t380-4560.

PlMSur* hlkt
Th e Florida Tra il Association will hold a Weklva Springs Day
Hike, Thursday, Aug. 18, beginning at 8:30 a.m. Th e
seven-mile hike will allow you to picnic and esrlm sfteward.
Th e fee Is 83.38 per ca rt to enter the p a rt. Hikers are asked
to meet at the Albertsons, 3381 W . State Road 434. Longwood
at 8:30 a.m. Bring plenty of water and a lunch.
For more information contact Van Taylo r a t375-8507.

S w e llin g for alumni
Th e Lake Mary High School Marching Rams Alum ni will
perform for the school's homecom ing October 14. All Flags,
Marionettes and Bend alumni are Invited to participate in this
third annual event.
For more Information call Linda Ellis at 333*3139. Carol
Cohn at 332-5799 or Abby Klein at 330-78M .

Hollywood East clogging d f ot
Hollywood East Dancers conduct rtngglng classes every
Thursday. Beginners from 8:30 to 7:30 p m . and intermediate
from 7:30 to 8:30. at Mdodee Skating Rink. W . 38th Street
near Airport Boulevard In Sanford.
Th e cost la 83 per dees, ages 5 and up. Parents free with
paying child.
For Information, call Marty at 333-8781 or Dawn, 904-7380370.

Painter uses
a soft touch
S p SUSA99 WB9999M
Herald Correspondent___________
SAN FO R D - Barbara Ball and
h e r h u s b a n d of 4 8 year*.
Burnell, came to Florida In 1956.
T h e y have t w o daughters.
Sharon and Carol, and a grand­
daughter, MicheUe. Ball began
her nobby of ceramics about 10
years ago as a pastime. “ After
the kids grew up I decided I
wanted to try it/' she said. “ 1
went to Orlando and took a dry
brush course, then I went on to
muted finishes."
Ball Is well known In Sanford
for her ceramics. Many pieces
the gives aa gifts and some she
sells. 8he actually haa quite a
following in this area, especially
since she and her husband were
discovered b y W a lt Disney
World. “ We had a booth at Flea
World m any years ago." she
said. “ A buyer from Disney
came and liked our work and
asked If we would supply the
com pany w ith some of our
i. Th e y used some In the
Country Bear Jamboree. Most of
the pieces were used at Lake
Buena Vista, some hotels and
Mickey's Christmas Shop. We
worked for them for about seven
ye a n but It Just got to be too
m uch." Now m uch of her work
Is for fun and friends. Ball has
begun a class to teach othen her
apodal style of muted finishes.
Ball spoke of the tricks of the
trade. “ I use a lot of .pinks and
blues,’’ she said. “ Th e y make
the piece look soft. I dry brush
until It softens the look of them.
Th e trick Is the brush being very
A n , It
ary.
■taniy of Ball'a creations were

1

a church.
A team effort was how Ball
described the ceramics en­
deavor. “ My husband docs the
pouring." she said. "He does the
base coating and antiquing, and
I do the rinish. He tells me that
he doesn't do eyes. 1 couldn't do
this without him. l also do the
music boxes and lighting."
Ball spoke of the time Involved
for each piece. "Th e average
time to complete a piece Is about
73 hours." she said. "Th a t Is If I
were to sit and clean the
greenware." Ball said that she
makes her own glitter. Th e kiln
used for the ceramics was
"bought by the kids from a lady
In South Carolina. Bum cll re­
vamped It and reworked lt.“ Ball
also said she relies on "Studio
Stains” for most of her painting
needs.
She Joked about the room used
for her ceramics and the small
a p a c e . " W e h a v e to a s k
emission to move around In
ere," she said. "W hen m y
husband and 1 work together we
have to stay In our own area."
Ball did mention that she
enjoys attending ceramics con­
ventions on a yearly basis. She
HOPS mm *&gt;*»«■« Wssiwr gets a lot of new Ideas for work
and Information on models to
M any of Barbara Ball's craatlona a rt Chriatmaa-ralatad.
use.
She concluded by sharing a
Christmas scenes and settings. said she really likes to pul
comment that her granddaugh­
H er pieces Include Nativity emphasis on the lashes and add
scenes, Mr. and Mrs. Claus, Old some special touches. The Nativ­ ter likes to make. "M y grand­
daughter saya If you don't do It
World Santas, Santa asleep with ity scene has a blue tint with
(ceramics) like grandma then
elves surrounding him, Santa In baby Jesus, ducks, rabbits,
a chair sewing a little bear, sheep, chickens, donkeys and a you’re doing It wrong."
angels and a skater's pond. Keep horse. They all look so real It's as
Beautiful work by a wonderful
In m ind the paints were not the If the room was filled with their and friendly person added a
typical reds, greens and blues of breat hing, and. yes, those touch of Christmas In August.
Christmas. Her ceramic teddy gorgeous eyes and eyelashes. Even a little "fairy dust" aa Ball
bear by a reindeer seemed to She spoke of how many of the called It was left on hands that
come alive before your eyes. scenes may take four to five touched her works of art. The
They are truly realistic. Even the molds to make the effect of the glitter on the hands only ac-'
eyelashes are painted with such whole group. Her small anow- centcd the glitter left In the eyes
detail that one could almost covered town Included a bakery, after admiring her breathtaking
sense an occasional flutter. Ball candy shop, home, toy store and creations.

E

East-Wost KiwanlaCkib maata Thursday
1
East-West Kiwanle Chib of SanfordI meets every Thursday
at
7 p.m., at the Friendship It Union IdOd^E building, comer of
are
L V &amp; t t n g Klwanlana
Klw
Locust
AvenueJ and
Street.
______ |_______
H . Seventh
.
X fi W n m lif f i
welcome. For information, call Robert
889-6043,

Ovtm afrrs Anonymoua maat f waakty
Overester* Anonymous
at the Com m unity United
and U.S. 17-93,
333-0657.

*ir'***»

■ 17 :3 01
Carol.

American Legion, Unit moot Thursday
American Legion Boat 53 and Unit meet the
Thursday, at 8 p.m ., at the poet bocne, 38748. Sanford Ave.
For information, call 333-1653.

Sunrisa Kiwanls masts Friday
Th e Seminole Sunriaa Klwaata C hib meets every Friday, at 7
a.m., at Bhooey’s, U S 17-03, south of Airport Boulevard.
Visiting Klwanlana era wsloom* For Information, call Bruce

McKlbPln. president, 333-0331,
SA FE, Substance Abuse Fam ily Education, la conducting n
"Families In Crisis” outreach p r o y am . Interested organiza­
tions wanting to contact the U fo Savers C lub of S A F E nitty cell
Libby Kuhateke a t301-4387. .

Blood Bank Saaks donors

T 9 w 1 » m s m k s rs s f A w Sound o f S u rm M iw o h o n ie are tra m s l x C s n t r t l F lo rid a c o u n tie s.

Chorus set for international competition
C a n y o u r e c o g n i s e Bar ber sh op
Harmony? T h is four-part harmony haa
attracted both men and women for more

StST

Th is form of acappella singing started
In barber shops, when men would
harmonise while waiting their turn to get
their hair cut.
As yearn passed they formed choruses,
because the popularity and Interest
became apparent. Soon choruses began
to compete w ith one another for the beat
quartet o r outstanding chorus.
In Tulsa, Okla., women became very
fnteraatod In this form of harmony and

the first chapter of Sweet Adelines was
formed in August 1945. Today there are
almost 700 chapters all over the world.
Every year competition la held In each
region. First place choruses are given
eighteen months to prepare music and
costumes for the international compel!T h e " S o u n d of S u n s h i n e Sh ow
Chorus" will be representing Florida
(Region 9) at the International competi­
tion of Sweet Adelines International. In
Reno, Nev„ In November. This chorus
r m iriiti of 120 members from six area
counties. Nancy Lewis, director, storied

the chorus In 1977. with 34 members
and has won the regional championship
twice.
On Sunday, Aug. 21. (he Sound of
Sunshine chorus will present a benefit
concert at 3 p.m. at Lake Howell High
School. Proceeds from the concert will go
towards the chorus’ travel fund. In
addition to (he chorus the program will
feature several other choruses and
quartets from the area.
A 910 donation is asked and tickets arc
available by calling Florence Korgan at
322-6254.

Even the strong can use help
ft For some time
--------------------------------now.
ft
that; hatemongei
have become more outspoken
than ever In the areas of race,
ethnicity end religion — and the
news media have given them
plenty of exposure, but very
little in the w sy of countercomments.
1 finally reached the limit of
m y own complacency end de­
cided to apeak out. I remember
reading a Dear Abby column in
the Oaineavtlle Sun. which I had
saved. 1 am enclosing a copy for
you. Please run it again. You
have m y permission to use my
name.

Thank you for sending it. Even
though it Is dated Sept. 3, 1963,
the message is ageless:
D B A llA B S Y i I have become
sickened by all of your refer­
ences to the "Lord" and praying
In your answers to people who
are in trouble.
Did you ever stop to think that
some of these people whom you
tell to "p ra y" and to "keep faith
in the Lord” might be atheists?
I’m sure these references would
offend them, as they do me.
Remember that there are people
In this world who are strong
enough to need no Imaginary
deity to which tocU n ^
ft John Stuart

c-f-fiyrs

—With aloha...
A D V ie a

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

Mill (English philosopher, writer,
member of ParUamcnU said, "It
la conceivable that religion may
be morally useful without being
Intellectually sustainable."
If your strength sustains your
atheist convictions, fine. But
others may need help from a
higher power.
PEAR ABBY: Upon reading
the letter about the-lady Ph.U.
who wished to be addressed as
"Doctor." 1 was reminded or i HIb
limerick, which I heard many
years ago:
A young theologian named
Fiddle.
Refused to accept his degree.
"For," said he,
"tia enough to be Fiddle,
Without being Fiddle. D .D ."

LESTER A. ROBB.
KAILUA. HAWAII

(Problem*? Write to Dear Abby.
For a personal, unpublished
reply, send a self-addressed,
alauuMil
anuabuia
in IWae
iKhir
• w iTip a y a
iifa ia p a A
10
m b i A
^B fi

P .O . Box 88440, to e An ge la*,
Calif. 80088. All oorreepmwanc*
I * confidential.)

THE LITTLE RASCALS
ANGELS IN O UTFIELD

?&lt;»

&gt;004:107:10

■ LACE B EAUTY sao
LASSIE a oo *
IT COULD HAPPEN

W

THE UON KING

1:10 3:10 5 10 7:10 S 10

CLEAR 4 PR ESEN T DANGER
ICO 4:1« 7 .0 0 *«0

+

*0 .1 *

T H E MASK
1:10 3X0 5X0 7:30 *4 0

AIRHEADS
1X0 3X0120 7.30*30

TRUE LIES
1:30 4 20 7:13 3 SO

THE CLIENT
1 454 18 7 20 B 45

FO R REST GUMP
1004OO7OOS 4|

�4B - Santord Haraid, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, August 11, 19M

yi-HtlpWinttd
IN T H I CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CAIRNO.SS-im-CA-14-L
RESOLUTION TRUST
CORPORATION (RTC), at
Receiver for Amerlfirtl Federal
Savlngt Bank.

IN TUB C IR C U IT COURT.
EIOHTRRNTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR
IIM IN O L IC O U N T Y ,
FLORIDA
CA S IN O .iS M I1 -C A |lt

BARNETT MORTGAGE

COMPANY, a corporation,
Plaintiff,

W M FT OF THE NORTH SI
AND THE W ft F T OF THE S S
FT OF LOT a. PLUS TH E N
IIJP FT OF THE W ft F T OP
LOT f. BLK I TR 4. E.R.
TRAFFORDS MAP OF SAN­
FORD, AS RECORDED IN P I I
PG M M OF T H E PUBLIC
RECORDS OF SEM IN O LE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
Balng mora (pacifically da
ter Ibad at loci lad: an Oak
Avenue.
Plannad ute of the prepatty It
to tract a detached parapt.
Larry Blair. Chairman
Beard at Adjuttmenfi
ADVICE TO TH E PUBLIC: If
a parton dtcidtt to appeal a
dacition made trim reaped to

Compliant!. The lataphana
number and addrata will alto
remain the tama. Thanh you.
Sincerely,
Dan R. Dlckarten, M.O.
Radiation Oncoteplil
Publlth:Auputt 1,4. L f , a. S, » ,
11, I*. 14. II, M. 17. IS. IS, 11,
n . n . la, m , st. m . is. is, i i a
September 1, L 4, S a 4. ISSt.
D IU -IT

Circuit Caurt af Semlnele
County, Flartda, will an Iha tat
day at September, tfto. at 11;«
o'clock A M . at ttw Wool Front
dear at the laminate County

tn laid Pinal J udpiii i nt :
LOT IS. WESTLAKE MANOR
UN IT ONE. ACCORDINO TO
TH E PLAT THEREOF AS RE­
CORDED IN PLAT ROOK If,
A T P A O IS I THROUGH I,
INCLUSIVE, O f TH E PUBLIC
R IC O R D S OP SEM IN O LE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
WITNESS MY HAND and ftw
teal at mit Court an Auputt a.
ISM.
(SEAL)
MARYANNS MORSE,
Clark at tha Circuit Ceur*
Ryi Jana E. Jettwk
Deputy Clark
Publlth: Auputt It A ll. ISM
DEU-S1

RICHAROVEOA and MARY
ELLEN VEGA, hit wltoi
FRANKLIN R EA LTY FUND,
LTD .alimitedpertnerahip;
and WEST ENTERPRISES.
INC. adlaaelvedcorporation,
d/b'a WEST BUILDING
MATERIALS. INC.
Dolandanlt.
NOTICE OF SALt
Notlea It horoby given mat,
purtuanl to an ardor or a
(Inal ludpmant
ludsmant at
tummary final
fortefaaur* antarad In the above
captioned action. I will tall tha
perparty ittuetad In tarn mote
County, Florida,datertoad at:
Lot I I . Black " C " , IA N
SEBASTIAN HBIOHTt. UNIT
*• &lt;ct*rd&gt;np to ttw plat thereof

Seminole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

Orlando - Winter Park
8 3 1-9 9 9 3

ninw /issm sTiM

AIROOMOmONINC

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

CLASSIFIED OEPT.
HOURS
1:00 A.M.-S:10MI.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
* SUNDAY

ACT NOW I AVON Earn la *0%.
No daor/daor. PT/FT Sandl

Inttallar ra ided tor commar
clal a ratldwitlal project*

NPP0MT1IE1IT SETTERS
Enthutlattlc, cudamer tarv
lea or Iantod, tlrans phono
volca, (ip . helpfcl. AM and
PM thrift avallebb. U JQ/hr.
Novara tail

Hstsf i m u il. S IM M S
NOW ACCERT1NG

Experience net nacaltary.
Mutt be cvttonwr oriented.
Apply In perton, at Saminok
Ford Service Department,
earner at If-ff and Lake Mary
Blvd.
________________

•* racarM In Plat Booh fa. at
Pm s TI* •*the pubtk racardt af
^J^ C o u n ty . Flartda.
TOGETHER W ITH: Tappan
Range. Tappan O ltp e ta l,
Tepoan Head. Carrier Fumaca,
Carrier Air Conditioner, oith
wathar. Wall to Wall Carpaling
at pitolk tala, to Iha Mghaat and
bait bidder tor caeh, at Iha watt

CLEAN R ffifl
Man- Prl, Day heurt. SSlf
par/hr. No nlahti or halfdayt.
Car needed. Call M arry
Maldt......................U i n t a

P R IR P R IY A TB ROOM a
BOARDI tor a tpocief lady to

iratt five day* prior to Iha
preceedlnp. Tafaphena: (aof)
» m w Sat. m ? i taepssMffi
i t o o i . or t-aoa-sss-tffo tv i, via
f &gt;«Tda Relay larvka.
WITNESS my hand and teal
o' tafd Court Shit ism day at

Bat h b i l i n g u a l
Enallth/Spenlih patlllant.
Daft Ilad poop I* with pood
phone valcat, willing to learn.
Good pay and banaflft.
Coil m n a u m

Juty.ttN

ISEAL1
MARYANNS MORSE
Clark at Circuit Court
By: JanaE.Jatawlc
Deputy Clark
Frederick R. Brack, Require
Florida Bar No Ite m
Cartoar, Brack Allman
'M l PrwdMftal Drive
Suitam
P-O. Pei MOST
Jacktanvllla, Florida JB47-0itf
Pitoltth: Auputt 4B1I. TSS4
OEU-JP

fla m a

323-5171

1miw
i

Plaintiff.

C L A S S IF IE D A D S

THIS
j

n

H

W EEKS

O' \n©4r»-

A R TM U R O . A U D I O 1
RISALINOA F. RUOtO
Circuit C d trt af tod"
Judicial Ctrcuri In and tor

MUW-MMILT
Ml W IMt St Sanford. Baby
llama, wathar/dryer mite
Itamt Saturday. H . _________

toll Myrtle Ava.

T H A T C IR T A IN CONDOMINUUM PARCEL COAL
P O U D OF UN IT MM AND AN
UNDIVIDED t.ttSMI IN TER­
E S T OR S H A R E IH T H E
COMMON E L E M E N T S A PPU R TIN TA M T THRRRTO IN
ACCO R D A N CI W ITH , AND
S U B JE C T TO . T H I COVE­
N A N TS. CO N DITIO N S. RB• TB IC TIO N I. EASEM ENTS.
T E R M ! AND O TH ER PRO­
VISION f OF T H I OECLARA-

■ XM IEITS A T T A C H ID

THROUGH MS. INCLUSIVE,
O F T H E PUBLIC RBCOEOS
OR S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .

m u r # ssx

IN O E O U IR M B N T R A N EE
O V E N . O IS R O S A L, D IS H ­
WASHER. CENTRAL. H I A T
AND AIR M O R I COMMONLY
K N O W N A B S I 4
WINOAtf AOOWS DRIVE. AL­
TAMONTE SPRINGS, FLOR­
IDA MMI

SS3SSS

\ ( 1

[ t
l . i i

1 {

1S l
is

I

it

|{f

/ » *J s 1 fM

1

s

K

f i »

1 n

*i i * ! 1

(i s s | i 1 1

i !

I h t

* #)

i/

�Sanlord Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Thureday, Aupuet 11, 1004 - ao

; i —W l p W i i r t x l
K u vm /n Q D PK p

ALIO N IID IX P E R IB N C B D
BPRIADIR/CUTTBR
Mon-Thura, »vt hr work W yt
Pd holldey 4
* '

TERMER

att ton M

PfNtlan School nooda High
School Snglith Toochar. Alta
to naod of a Computer and
Typing Toachor. Call tor ap
polntmant. *04 71* 4515.
•xtenttenJU

M trr Rd., SditBarOMf-MIB
F.U.M.C. It ttoklng a ptrttn
who tovot children to work
with N uraary/Praichoal
children primarily on Sunday
morning*. Apply tti ttf I.
Pork Aytaot t r taw ItM ITI

REGENCY PARK
AJI.O.R

G000 RMMCftS M E M O
Oolly work-Dally pay
Rapid 1: Mam MO Park Dr.

S u x rla r ratad facility la
•taking an aacopttonal RN
dua to a prom oil on from
n. LTC aipar tone* and
ar tha aldtrty la
aaaanttol. KnowU dga ot MtH.
Care Plana. Intocttan Control
and Inaorvtco plant It a mutt.
MaadX It a trtendty. Itetibte
partenallty with an amphatlt
on auallty retldanl care.

m -m t
HEAVY EQUIP. € K U T M S

Mu*t X aMt to wark In tha
hoot. Apply In partani Briar
Carp. AMP Oranpa Bird. Lakt

For TID Y MAID I dayt/wfc
with pay and Xnaflte. W-I744
LABORIRI NBIDRD. Skilled
and untklllad. Day*.
Call Bahrein 13
iPRINT tTAFFIMO. m -M lI

Apply to partx tot Dana ( Kalb)
M10 Entorprlta RaX
“DaBary.FLl
“
■97U
Equal O x ir l unity

ALL POSITIONS
tad Laying
Drlmrt
Irrlpatlwt
Full lima m m t

Ona part
cook noadtd. Mud X noat and
oxptrtoncad only. Apply at
Day* l x , 1-4/4* Sanford or
cal IMf-toaS

U W N IM M IE R A IIC t
1 yaare Commorela1 axparl
anre.Callue-1441__________

Par property ^nanegement
flea to Santord. Mutt X
axparianca and Bnawtadga o«
conttructlan Indwtry, and
profletent uaa of Ward Parted
I t add Lahia I I i. Sand
retuma to: Bltod Box B . e/o
Santord Harold, P Q Box 1M7,
Sanlord FL 9771
S B C U R IT Y O F F I C I R Jab
training. A m o t 4 unarmtO.
Brentty 4 Attoc. 9 4 4 X
WARIHOUSB AND O IN IR A L
LABOB N I L P N I I D I D I
Ivor*. All thifla
avaiiabte. Dally pay,
ready to
“Bapart
------------tgorfci
l . l l am,
Indwtrtol Labi Svc.. ion
French Av. No phono call*

LEASIM C0RMM.TMT
Looking tor onthutlatlc txp*
rltnred looting cantullant tor
lorg* Iaka Mary apartmant
community. Prantlca Holt
tumt to St. Crete apto.. 79
Sacral Harbor Larwr Laka
Morr.wrotorFanfMI 7*47.

MAINTENANCE
Saiipolnta Apartmant Com­
munity. Exparlanre required.
Full tlmt. great Xnafitt. tot
W. SamInttoBlvd.m-— I.

MAI NTENANCE ASSISTMT
apt. community. Mull hare
A/C and atoctrtcH knawtodga,
E kpartoncad only rtaod apply.
St, Croix Apt*. 91-791

V I—A p a r t m tirtt/
F I M A L I P G IP IR R ID . Homo
With pool, g rearm • taa/wk
end Btea/wk. Call If r W i

In
conditioning and atoctrical.
Call WAJtO ar apply D
Inn. oaiQW. SROLSantord

fS —M— m » ter m u

MAIRTINANCI PERSO N*

A OUIBT, CLEAN RM.
Kitchen, phana. _
g7S4uq.Apto.aiaa
, aingto atarttog
B7l/wk. Kllchan, phana,
laundry, vldaa gome*. oft
ateaai parking....
SANFOWD' ___
ctaan. quial. ir lv d t i
calim toto
UPSTAIRS
•ceaptod SM/WK.
tu
S7S dapaait.
caung-am .

Conaral ctoanlng fire day* a
wtak, DM hour* par day. Call
ID U H IM
*
" ‘

ten/ton,

Clttt B SOL required. Inquire
In partdn, Outtafton Dairy
ltoo French Are. Sanlard FI.
State Parmara Marfcat RM a .
PH. (007)MJdM7. Atk tor
Tommy Call Man-Prl. X twren tamltpm or lam Oam.

f 7 — A p f t r t w w ti
C litfttlM A rf J MnwA

P/TSCHEBM U
Food X I Ivory to hamaa In
Florida. Hour* S t M-Th. I I
Frl. Prey, offlca and computer
ii* . nareittry. Nan-amoklnq
offlca. Aaplyi RkB Flan, tot
W .iX S t .le n

* ;a m

.t r s a » '

•tof a x MB-ilMdr W M tn .
■ FFICIIHCY-AII UHUttoa, A/C,
BUB

PIPE LAYERS

• A R A M BFFK IBN CY UWIttea lum. aacapl atoettoS/ma.
tat 4 lait Ownor/Brakar.
9 S IM Ia r 93-IH7

In
haat. Apply in panan:
—
i Btvd.
LakeMenrea

STUDIOS

F U R N IS H E D and U N F U R N I S H E D ^ U U ^
EMetrto Fum W ili In M uS m Onljf * E r m i ^ r R M r I s M to i
• Slngli Story M m • no m i M d r i t rto w
a
AftKii AL
uam
•nbk
Morigii
n n w i r m • m v ii

• 1 1 2 M o o n s MURt

cat

-----

Al f 0F10ABLF HOMI S
VENIUMt 1 I'H O I’I HTI tS
FHA/VA tow X B1/IR ANOa.
cwxrftoanxfow x e404mo,i
OgvT Fort Ha aura*. R a p M
Bamtoola, Ofinga, Vduala

area. No patol not/mo up.
UntumltXd avail. m » 1 »
SANFORD - axe. area. I bdrm.
apt.. I bdrm. reteaga 1*0/wk.
plut tJO* tocurltyi I ream
afftetoncy. STS/wfc. 7P7V77
SANFOWD Outet nolghborhood
Ibdrm/lbath. tna/mo. ttao
damage WMiiit.m-toto
SMALL AFARTMBNT alt utllllire fumlthad. ITS/waok No
drink lx .

l/S an S acrat. Pool, pond,
tencad X hortat. 141.100
ESTATE ON l.tl A C R ID 4/lte
tplll plan, aver 1.000 tq- H-.
tencad X hortat. f llt.tOO
COUNT RY HOME ON 1.41
A C R ID 1/1. Ilv. dn. lam.
r mt , tancad for hortat.
Carport. STa.WOI
CUSTOM BUILT 4/11 Llv, din,
lam. rmt, **t In kit., tacurlty,
tatelllte IM.M4I I
I ar 1 Bdrm, nawar carpat 4
Mint. C/H/A. carport 141,100
■RICK V i tplll. llv. din. lam.
rmt, tac. tyttem. ter. porch,
tencad yd . garagal 144.500

w —A M i t m w d s
U n fu m ish o d / R e n t
BRIDM W ATBR APTS • San
terd/Lk Mary Call today
about Aogoat I padttel Only a
tow toWI OeXrohIM f i x
upttolrt.
CL RAN 1 bdrm.
uao/mo.
a
mutt 11
CLRAN 1 bdrm., Fla.
blind*, carpal, calling fan*.
117J/mo. plut a x . No pot*.

co o u wvn
Ona Badraom Apartmant*
tlto D IA L
Motlw aX Apt*. 97-7714
L A K I VIBWI I M m . I ba-lh
apt. Fancad, clean I guo/ma.
Calint-ITTP
Laka Ada I bdrm. Site mo.
1bdrm, WM mo and up

32S-M70
SANFORD nowty remodalwi 1
4drm/l Bath. Mutt teal 11455
par/month. PLua aacurlty.
Call 14*WOOor » * 1154.
SANFORD ■ I b*m. I bath,
waahar, dryer, aertan p&gt;tlto.
pool, tomtit court*. aaevrity
gate. 111! plut x c u r lly .
« 7 m a t u r e iXTapgtM
Satan t BDRM Cattogi Control
H/A partly fumlthad. Uto
monthly, IIM recurIly . No
pate. Call m tiin o / a m u|pm.
S F R C IA L I f i l e O F F 1ST
MONTHS R IN T t I 4 1 tidrm.
apt*. Now carpal and 'rtoyll
Starting at (MO/mo. IIM FtorIda St, Santord. SOtoto ____
I BDWM APT, qulat x l^jhXr* hood rotecencet rtg a tt ad. No
l. 071/mo plut SIN recurlCalim -W 7»lv.m td._____

E

i/ i north m m
l Bdrreyt Rato go-iDto
SNBR4N004NAR4RTMRRTS
ftAreRaagttolA^to^ §
V n T V ilillV IV S F W ffTT

m t Im m a u L n
S A N F O R D t / t • 14*1
Palmate*. Ixtra W..447S/m*.

U 1 4 7 H ....................t a - n o
COM FO RTABLI. can rentent,
t/tW, A/C. paddta tana; near
achaala. eaM/rna. plu a tocurlto. ire, teat*. SM7SBH
D IB A R Y -C O U N T R V B B TT IN O I S Bdrm. vr/lamlly
rman l/S acre, tot* /ma. plu*
tac. H X M atty, W K OH
tel DORN L A K I • Santord/Lk.
Mary. S Bdrm. I X Ih. Mead
yd.|MS/ma.ptotdNi.M-fm
ID V L L W IL D R S C H O O L
RAY IN N A PARR 4/1.
yd. CHAA, nice
claan ham*. aBwPutoly x
patol BUS ptoa a x . Raf. Raq.
S I M I M a lt a r l u g or
naiBin to Or H4-IPH7I1.
IO V L L W IL O I t a Pot to kit.
Oto. rm. Living m i Pam. rm,
lg. yard with a x * , d x k ,
privacy tonco. No Fatal
gtes/rx.iaao dari. Call tor
appalntmant SSS dM-IStt re
jgptM tod________________
IN YNR COUNTRY Small M X
avallaBto to rent. Far dotalIt
atoatacaHni-SSri
LAROB HOUSB *ut to t X
country whore It % wutotl Call
M i » a i U r to X r naiten.
PROFISIIONAL R d n M t o R
Xm a to L a X Mary. «tm paal
4 apt. t t J N par rnredB. soSARPORO V \ Near b u m *.
I s m i # psls i h i M q, PsnesS
yd, anerparth. ■Stto m -* n t
Bt &gt; Barm, l i t Bath
Xure Itto
MI-RIM
l

117—Com m ercial
______ Rantaie

103—Houses
Unfurn ish ed / Rent
SARPORO. &gt; BDRM. 1to BATH.
las/mo.pfuatopreit.
_______ 14apate. i n iM i
SANFORD • axtra largt living
rm, I bdrm. 1to bate, lg. tat In
kllchan, back x*to, tanevd
backyard. SJaO/mo., ISOO tac.
4B7-I74«7S. call Otter 4PM

HISTORIC dawntown Longwood
M il to too roam. OH lea re
retail. BTee/ma. t » Tire

SANFORD
RIN TTO O W N
S bdrm,, air, S4M dawn.
ssee/ma..............- .....tat rm

MODERN. NO tquara ft. with
cant. H/A. Carpat and tlx.
Includat S tterag* bay* ot 470
tquara ft. with tacurlly roll up
door*. Far mort Into. M ld tll
NEW Santord olfleat and/or

S tM S tra m Rftntils
•SANFORO clean 1/7 duplex,
Ip. tenon porch, cant. H/A.
S47S/ma„ s*7l tocrei ty
WNORTHLANB VILLAOK 1/7
aptlt plan, tplc. peel.
’/dryUU/maStt5t*c
W N O R TN LA R I VILLAOK
t/t. tplc., lakatront. pool,
weight rm. SltS/ma, SSM tac.
• SANFORO t/S aph Wathtr 4
dryer, potto. SClSmatMOiac
• SANFORD 1/1, dm. Carport,
fenced yd. *440/mo., ICO tac
• SANFORD 1/1 apt. C/H/A.
patto. tm/irrn.. ISM rec.
i Rxtty, lx .
Year X m a Ilk*
M tax are awn." Am Dayla
m-t**t Attar 4PM, o t -im
1 ODRM HOUSB Quiet ntlgh
berheed. UtO/mo. t— dam
axax.en-tM Tattorlpm
I BORIN, I BATH Large family
ream, daubto garai i . tcraan
patto. Xytlghto. flraptoca. ap
pUanca*. Avallabto Aug 17.
i/pre month plut aago tacu
JiHdapaNt. CalldDOtt-1100
1 BDRM Ito betel In ground pool.
Cant. A/C quit* cul-dt tac.
SNB/ma., ax. topaiit m w .
Call i
I RIOROOWL S M L cant H/A.
family rm. Only SJW dawn I
Alta 4bdrm, I X th avaltobto.
AXabdutaurHUOhamatl
Why rente THB H IU IM A N
••o u p , iw c .R i4 X r t n a » i

No Application Fee Witti This Ad

Mto tac. Raft-M4444-ICT
RBNT TO OWN •itto 14x441/1.
■ ^ ^ ■ ^ ■ r t a m , A/C.
W M t e a r lt H W N h

114—W erahouso
■ to o c o / R a n t ■
SBCURITY WARIHOUSB •« A
and Old L a X Mary Blvd.
*i . i m • !,eee *a. it. oi•FtoMwd ot
t a x aval law*.
, 1-eee-mi
WORKIMDP X w m ii to mtdiurn t in Butlxat. Starting at
tow re t u * a tq tt. Ixatoant
i________Caw m a m

I IS —IndustriAl

Reeielt
l ANF ORR. Iniuaiteal. M i l tq
ft - If.tse x *• Overhead
aprtoktore. H/ h *. Jim DayI*

f^H O IC I camm*r«lal. Hwy
t r a n t a g a . I Bl ack* to
Orareway Bapraaaway. High
VtoJMNtyl IJW x ft- build
togI MeB/ma-ptuatacurtty.
_
^Iit: paMm rer — *

w •' *

Come
elebrate!
: •• Z .

*i ,

great tor aftlcae x until
retail. Late el freflk, law re­
ft. central H/A. call Waa
• WJL Prapamta

7 M «4 e

B e d ro o m s f o r

W h a t Y o u 'r e P a y i n g f o r

^

1

Saactat. iMi/ma. sm ss? ’
SANFORD. OHIca tpaca, 5400
X - ft. building total. ISM tq.
^ t jr e a t f lr e u t e L N ij g x ^
1 2 !— C o n d o m in iu m -

______ Rantaie______
Fin* Rldga O X -Mrparl Blvd.
Sanl or d. Sbdr m/l bat h.
watXr/dryar, r*lrlg*r*lor,
dlihwaahar. Panthoure with
vaulted calling*. Ovtrlttkt
it SIM/month.
UM recurIty dtp. tie appllcaflon tea). Call NS-474S
SANFORD - 1/1. I mite from
SCC and Xltwayl USO/mo.
Pool, nautllut. n c k tl and
tennlt. Newly redecorated I
CX Taw w w r.N M Itl

141—H e m M fo r Sale
VENTURE : PROPERTIES
HUD A VA FORCLOSURIt
Low down! Seminal#, Orange
andVofuelaCauntia*.
Califredatallil
a Lack Arbor, unique lake
Iron! homo. Larg* tot....—

m eni/THtm

n

n

(a lR i

H A M . K I-.A l

I Y

n ; w *■ t

.'■)

»

.

HORSBFLAYI S JI qcretl Love­
ly cuttom built I bdrm. Xma
an prime real aetataI Great
potantiall Daub la paraea.
tcmic tto x gardan. dttacXd
building-AH torrefy en.N 0

323-5774
DILTONA - S bdrm. ito Xth.
lamlly rm. axtrail 111JM
“
twtkL m-iaai
D ILTO N A. rely BfBB down,
S4M/me. CXaw Bam S hamat
fobe rtmedated by Xlldre.
Greet appartuntty.
M ilr v ir ia iiM lR

3 Bedroom Townhomes

V

S
v C

323*3200
WHAT A O IA L I 4/1 with brew
ream, updated kltehre, new
P*Ini, naw carpal, iprlnktor
tyiiam. Walk to Pliwcrett
Elam. A d now and pick your
naw aaterlar cater. All tor
•44,IW
PO ICI RE DUCT 104*1 1/IVb.
nice camar tot with rear
•ccatt, move to eredlllre.
Central H/A. garaqw reduced
latte,tog
OENIVA • • ACRES ■ S » H.
Irentaga, O tc x H Rd. Prevlowly cleared. Ownar I Inane
IX will help with cate at wall.
FOR M O RI INFO CALL

DOUG M IC H , ASSOCIATE

1224471

Pa&gt;u u U a c
/4
c
U
0
t4 4 . . .

r

r o o t 7-aeia tan lew i two ie

S a ;

ik t o

d
Herbreiawdea»BX N Ma»vtog r ndey BnOam - lOOpm
m e e t -m o m .
^ r -t ix x .t jjo p -

I II N K A M11
t id

f.* 10

a Oav't, X X Feraeteruret. a
a
Attuma X Ouallfy
a
• X m at with U N DOWN I •

•

a

a Hidden Ltktt Bait D*alt
a
a Ibdrm. villa.garage.new a
a roof, new paint, etc. S4t,tol •
a
a
a Lika Mary Schaaltl
*
• 1/1 condo, lowatt area tt,
a
• allappl..W/DUl.tac
a
•
a
a Sanford Hltteric Dtdrictl a
a Cute l/l, great tpaejaflva a
avalw ........................— tot*
•
a
‘ .t I l If4i ,
‘t A V l t , ’ m il) ^ i fii
1“I Nf J v |&lt;m n&lt; | j ♦*,
M , In . I 7**, S i l l
PINECRBIT.S/l, Family room,
large homo 4 tot In good
neighborhood, Otey *4.7541
Venture I, Dawn, BO-7451
RBOUCBDt 1/1, Laka Mary
achoolt. many upgtdn. Huge
tencad X . Pool 4 decking. 1
car garage 1*4.400M l-Hit
M HFOBD • 1 bdrm. lit Xth
Florida cottage, wood floor*.
canIra I H/A, IM.OCO 1M-71B4
SANFORD RE N T TO OWN
SISW down contract. IS11 S.
Em ot.ibtd.iw rea________
SANFOWD 1 ttory, 1 bad/lto
X th howa. 4 l bad. garaga
apt.ttedOO 407*02 1417.
SANFDBD S/l withatfica tpaca
Need* tome repair. H it B.
Elm AvatHOtO0401*0-1278
SANFOWD-

:p
s l f e
Call CXrlto,Baa-7»7________
Santord. UJWary A NO U 7 ,m
S/t w/lre. M atXbdrm , Great
Wm.watoBaaKftHBS*
M U L L Immaculate Xma. naw
X to t In tlX and out. S/l.
walking dlttanca to tchool.
Cant. H/A, tencad backyard.
Baautllul landcaxd back
v a rd ltte .te a m x i________

STAIRS VROfERTY
M A N A O tM IN T 4 R IA LTV
4 &gt; 7 -m -7 »W g ilB

ST EN ST R O IV I
R E A L T Y ,

IN C .

UNIQUE FAMILY NOMEII

322-2420 • 321-2720
SANTORO • LAKE MARY
•In Out 38th Veef
W A N Ttot
.
Call Wattaa Rrelty Carp.,
REALTOR!......... t t y t m
l/l, L llltb a a t
M cDi. Zomd RC-I. Naw inr#
rlor. Good lor oil lea/Xma
rental. *40.000 OBO Fin. Avail.
I l l 1414or avat. CT4101

lM -A c r M f# L o t s / S jl*

157—M o h ilt
H o r n ** / S i l t

221—Good TYiinfti
to E ft*

CARRIAGE COYE
MORILI HOME COMMUNITY

M A R T'I RITCHBN X m t m t X
Coktt, etc. Coll to order
- eaXtliS jn X d ; » 2 1 1 —

Beautiful 1,2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartment Homes Available

l

E state, w c
I2 2 -7 W ______

44- A C R ID an SR 44, Oanava.
tte.tOB Will llnanre ar IraX
115.000 equity X HV or any
J J it o y lv a lw jO M IM O ^ ^

1SJ—CondBm Inium s
|*t &gt;•&lt;/!(* M I \ I I 1
I n / \ t i f tt. / n

I

II
I
|
|

St. Croix Apartments
U I*7 )O S
O n L a k e E m m a R d .* L a k e M a r y
H O UR S: M -7. 0 - 6 » Sat. IO -S • Sun. P o re d

tlX U ■ l/l, 'to Nobility, cant.
H/A...............................55.500
I4XS4 ■ l/l tplll, 'S3 Skyline,
cant. H /A ..................... tt .000
I4XM •1/1, 'l l Skyline/Jtfrl, all
•loctrlc, control hoot, 1
window A/C unlit........ I ll JM
14X45 ■ 3/1 tplll, U Ptorton.
conlral H/A................ .111.500
Coll Ml-aitO or Ml-SIM
CARRIAOB COVE- IH7 14x51
l/ l. Central X a t end air.
Extra*, IIX Mwl Mwt twill
tt, *00Call BM-14S4__________
IER FINANCINO Claan 1/1
Carriage Cove. Only 11,000
down, Includat late* tax, l x .
Iltla 4 Inturanca. Mlt/mo
covert X rent, w a X , tower,
troth 4 how* payment.
Ceiiut-N tt

T

111—A p p ilt nets
/ F u m itu r B
A + B I S T AFFLIANCK X l
Kanmore wathen. Free da
livery. Warranty. 114-1145
a AAA RAY'S AFFLIANCB a
SIB I French Ave, Santord
R a t r l g a r a t o r , Stove*.
Iryart.
labor werr .Dei.aavail.
F U L L BOX BFRI NO A N D
M A T T R B II *44/1 I T AND
UP- LARRY*! MART, 11B-4U1
HOM I APPLIANCI C IN T IR
Over M yeert In Sanford.
Satet New and Utod. Service
all makot 4 part*, xu I .
Commartial St.______ m m i
O A K F IN IS H B B O R O O M
FURNITURB ExcelXI con­
dition. Full bod w/mattreu 4
X x tprlngti 1 X t k t w/t
chelrt; 1 ChetIt w/1 hutch**;
1 mirror* ( 1 nlghltlendt.
Djaatorenterewfl m j m
•OLD WOODKN MIRRORS
Set ol two. Each X va _ _
Sin It"tong t r ' wlda. Both
X &gt;41. Call----------TNIPLB DWI t tan w/mlrror,
•rmolre, 1 night tlanda. tolld
dark wood MOO. Double dreae•r *75. b e c X X chat! *40.
Fual lank, too gal. w/10
Ballon* of korotarto-Fre* H
r*« ntave H. Typawrix-larea
Mantory Wrttor. Ig. offlca tin.
Good buy Itoe. Call »B I7 7
• W a x Bad Maftrata King t in
Soml wovetot* w / X « X SM
Phoxm-BB»
115— C O m p u f T B
COM FUTIR - Ptntlum ML M
mhi., LB 4 mg ram, 14 bit
teund card w/tpoakart. SJ
flaepy, 14 Inch SV OA ,
keyboard, mow*, 4M mg hard
drive. DOS 4.1. Window* VCR
1.1. Obi. (peed CO ROM with
Infat C.P.U. chip- Syalam rely
1 month otdl W/tremXabto
warranty. M JM 411-MM

117—Syorlinft O o o d t
•A TT I NT ION BASKIT BALL
L O V R R S t of f l c a l alto
backboard w/Xop a X poto.
MB Call M4-MM____________
•GOLF CLUBS full ate wtWi
baa ■ All X only ttel Ptoaw
call-----------

BAROLKWOOOCONOO
Ibdrm/Ntoth, Croat candltanl
Great Local tonI Great Prkal
dafy i n aa*
S A N FO R D -~ f T n K R ID O B
CLUB. Larga i tidrm. 1 X th
conda. aman 11tea Includad.
Plw many aitrat. t4l.no
Call 144 I4IS

222— M u t lC f t l
M f tfd lg i
N IW I Piece DRUM BtfT with
CymXIt IIM call 4S7 SUP411

%

223— M isCGllBftGOUB
• CHILDS R O L L IR B tA D tl
Black with neon yellow and
i. Gantty worn by
•even year old girl. Only III.
________ Col11454140,________
C T C L I CHAIR •Etodrlc Mobil
Ity. Now X tX to t. tic . condl
Honl Rata 11 Sl.tel. atklng
B U M ....................... ..H44B4B
• H O S P ITA L RRD - hand
operated type, very good
condition. Can X tean at n w •
E. Airport Blvd. (MO yardi
bolero anlarlng Sanlord
Airport)....................Only tW
MOVING B A LI Furniture A
to manttonl Meat X I ovary
ttang quick I coll *M 4H4
SHORT RBD TOFFBR
for
•mallar typo truck. All
_ f lb £ £ la M jj» »r 4 I2 L ^ —

2*0—Afttiq u G /C iB M ic
___
C ars

7

W CADILUC D IV IL L I, IFTt. 1
ALL FOW IRI Oaty BUM or
Xttatetr. Plata* tonm -M M
\
WFORD THUNDBRBIRD, Ift*.
All arlplnalt Naadi x m a .
work, S U N OBO H1-B1I4 .
m a CHRVY IMF A LA hM IIM
m i x an original rabulll V I
•nglM. Oarage kept, many
•xlrat. runt gaad, took* good
U . X 0 40 574-10411Poltone)

231—C a r t
ACCIBI
G O V IR N M IN T
B I I I I D V IH IC L IS
Forot little ot MMI
M l RCHAN DIIB alto available
ethugedlicountel
FORD, JAGUAR, CH IVY.
ILICTRO N ICB, FURNITURE
i-aM-in-aais
_________ i d g a m
4BUICK StotX wagan • itoi.
Mi. auto, MW A/C toll power.
&gt; IJM a rB X o fta r.n «-H P
• C H R Y S L IR LoBaron con
vartwa. m red, laadad, dg.
dath, naw tap/tlret. tt.ioo
• C O R V IT T I - IMS. T-topt,
maroon. New grey f
Law m l X I I I J M lb-1
a c o n v E T T I I f T-TOP Good
rend. Naadt owner who can
give TLC jLTM/tredt M R W
LINCOLN MURK VII. white,
red leather, loaded, wall
molntolnad. now tire*, took* 4
run* I X now, I owner, I X .
only m ml, M JM . Call X MWaflarlpm
LINCOLN MARK V I I X 4 door
Run* good. D M 040. toe at
1114Randolph St.»1-457*
d LINCOLN TOWNCAR *M Mint
candttlan, garaga kapt,
laadad, tlawlaaa body,
mechanically perfact. MK
m iX B t g jM O G O lD -X t .
• MIRCURY
Waqaa. ftSB, V L auto, air,
naw parte. N X carl
ar Xaf aMar...... Jtt-i t tt

— r

3

OLDS TORNADO B ROUGII AM

t^rsr^rfigVi'iV/

• S M I T H CORONA WF
T Y P IW R IT IR LIKE N t W ported X ctelag*, omalf butlnoaa ar
chrltfmat
M JM
characa
_. a» --- — gift.
a. -a----a----------a
H f IWmSfy I® IreflTOPT 1WT«
Trlpto pitch 10/11/11. Auto
•raturn/cantar/undar Una/
Bald. IB characX L ID dllplay. Dictionary, Autotplll.
tofIII. Call MB-11M

i w —La w n * w w w
B IA U T IP U L BAMBOO ao2
HARDY FBRNS. Vm Dip I
att tha maM&gt; I m-*P4
q i Uh i t m f•srav “
I
ft.of x ta . shp'B ria n
ip. Ixxcalltnt
i
H Y F R O pump
condltX. Selling
at

M

Central D1M74 call any time

1W— P lt l ft tuftftli—
• F R B I TO 4 0 0 0 I S H
Adorable 7 wk oto puppto*.
Lab 4 Chow mix, I Week 4 1
tflvor, Mofhor- toll btoadad
Lab. Alta mala toll btoadX
Chow H1M44_____________
F R I I to tote homo. Mite
Lab/mlxad pup. Alta tomato
SXphord, reared. BM. Unabto
to X op dw to mere m -lI N
F R I I TO GOOD HOMI Ivr.
old black L X . gead with
children, call 111-Mil.
XX G

n u vP M rm vn
•xrepf lax, tog, tttto.atc
O O D O I A R T I S • 1*17,
automatic. A/C. PS. P I. tm,
AM/PM atoreal Only S14J M
par month I Call Mr. Payne X
..JBB-11M

T U I UP W TVEVTI
xcapf tax, tag, N Xa,, &lt;
etc
NDA P R IL U O I • IW ,
A/C, ttoraa caiaiX, «upar
claanl Only SII1.44 par
manthl Call Mr. PayM X

•
i

m m i •
Cara...
a i m PORSCHE, *11 Targe,
tow mileage, ahawt I X naw. p a jM
OOP
»IIH
•71 CHBVY Kl Cemlno. no '
ang. ar Irena., A/C, P/S, P/B,
‘ '
IS grille. X tllto.

_______

r.

q 'M C H B V R O L I T Caprice
Ctattle, 4 dr., runt goad,
toadad. S U M OBO. end
71 O il II tilt Batoir, I dr., run*
r e lt e J M O B O lS74-MM

*
;
v
&gt;
i

ft

222—A u l t P a rts
/ A e e e u e r le t
■ a r part*. MM

2 *1—T r u c k s /

ilnittolbM

ARABIAN m M with p q n t .
Gontto and greot X trail
BB1D-IMI

O ELTON AAR U II ACRES
Ideal for mobile X m a or
X m a tit*, hortat, c att la.
farming, or nunary. Zoned
agricultural. u.fOO p*r acre.
Small down poymont with
rflMnclM.a04-747.im
TWO tit A CR I LOTS, tot* ot
treat, near St. JWm't Wlvor.
510.000 and i n J N 111 Mt SSM
p r ill M l DM______________
•I B U ILD IN O LOTS. Loko
Mary. Rare of DB.WQ oachl
M LAROB BUILDING LOT,
Ootaan.iB.WI
•t+ ACRES tail ol Ottoan.
125.tat
•44 ACRBI BKCLUDID but 1
mltoaway trem Beltway I
*SmmltM

Re a

324-4334
! h

M l

HI Al I Y

2 STORY HISTORIC HOME!

Sparktlny Pool • Prteata Clubhouse • Mat4n Kitchen

V

IM N f J Y I I I K i h l II*,

4/1 Good condition, hardwood
floort. detached workthop
145.500

A

Club • Separate Privattt Entrances
• Aroundrthe-Clock Maintenance

&gt;i / 1, &lt;i

4/1 w71 M a tX Suite*-Block*
from LaX Monro* ti I1MM0

New Spacious
2 Bedroom Apartments and U

;iv i

PrcpartlMl HUD VA. RTCatc.
LltTINOBXyaurarea .
FINANCINOavaltebte,

F I T S W O O O ID A C R IS A
LAKR Sbdrm/IXIh, adOllan.
P a r t i a l l y furnlahad,
watXr/dryar, AC, relrlg,
W lh t e . lat 4 taal. m u p .
PRIVATB l/l, an ig acre*.

o s tin iiN i

TSSSSSLINMEOUTEIY

SAMFQMDj t btom. carport!
•acutely ayttam, lull kit.,IB H iia dlacaurrtodMI*
V i. CN/A, aew
.
dlahwaahar, lacmdry ream,

1f7-MaMl0

•7.5*4 DOWN I m tplll llv.. din.,
eel In kltch. lanced w/garag*tS*5/ma 154.*00
H K M t B t DOWNI 1/1 tpm.
llv., dlrv, aal In kltch.. appl„
garage. tS4t/mo. *42,wo

VENTURE I PROPERTIES

Acctee
F O a iC lO f lD
OOVIRRM tNT

^cagwrt^mjtyeedgWfrtoi^

ASSUME M QUALIFIES!

f'A tn

11 1-O H Ic o
Spa c o / R a n t

10 5 -D u ffta x Trip iO K / R o n t

11 7 —Cftwmiftrclal

R e n t 2

EXCHANOC OR SELL your
proparty located mywXrel
Inverter* Realty. 774 N il
F I R E S A L K I At It. 1/1,
C4ntractar* Spactoll Mtka
otter. Sanford JWteao

v ^iu . A l w a y s f i « d ^
\
T*
S i - w r e f T ^ ---------------------------- ---------- 1

All rental and real relate
adrad totmonte are tub|ad to.
I X Padtral Fair Mooting Act.,
which makat It lllagal to.
m _*■——^^
4. prvivrincii s
tare&lt;
•ovtniiR
Rny
nmItalian ar dltcrlmlnaflani
i cater, reUglan,,
familial atatwii

PNESCNQOl TERMER
Pull lim a with COA or
— Ivalancy, tor MAC YC
accredited cantor. Call:
to rs n a to .......... „........... e o f
PROFBISIONAL

EXP IHOUSm H SCWIIM
MACHINE OfOUTOCS

a

A

•' I t C I W r St—
Mall,
_Santord.Orcalim.7ito

EARN I
Ilya* have teeregareRI
M i t m M B r . r x .w -.

141—Ho me s for Sale

P u m ls h a i/ R t M

A W IL T O N 4 STYUST

Pert tin**, 1 hour* M r i i
Mon Frl lunchtime. Mutt
ownc*rlM 4-tm afXft»M

I K IT ’ N * C A R L Y I .K ® by U r r y W H r HI

07—A fR T tm W tB

71—H o l&gt; W ontod

M IN I FOR IA L IIM B A C N I
Lutnar Farm*iemawla.FXMe

215— B f t f t t t a n i
Accm m Hm
BAVLINBR cabin crvttar, I/O,
19, M ft, depth Under, tralX .
merlMredto. MJWm-BM*
OLASTROM RASB BOAT - IfN.
Lire wallt and pump*.
tralX .
HOUSB BOAT Runt partoctl
Excellent rendllX I M4J
By umolntmententy n*-H
• II F T **/ tra lX . *1 HP Marc.,
1* lb. troll Ins m a X . flah
linear, blmlnl tap- Kxtrael
SIMB llrm..................J D • I X SKI/FISH BOAT. M HP
Marc., w/traix. Ru m freatl
t U M Call tOt-7MB__________
w n F T GRAOV WNITB. OMC.
Inboor d/outboard. l x ttra
medal. H JN O B O U t l S 4
O H F T PONTOON boot All
llborglaat, 140 HF Bvlnrudo.
Vary let) I Many oxtraa. (IX
Only!

2 1 f—W ftW ftoM W M V

.C H k v Y 4 1 A Q Y IL L I VAN
t
'7*, t ton, Faaaangar van, ).
clean. Laadad I Tea much to r
IW. muat taa to apprectoto. '
Only s u m OBO.........Hi-area .
F O R D t fan truck. i*7i. 1
•rertlMd X d . Oaad work &gt;
truck. B U M OOP M U S H
o j i i f p ic k u p ana, i m . vt.
I
auto. InIngina
g iM and tr.
trona, re­
built ( • iw t *0,ere mltaal
1-1
G7BTM S-M PICKUPS S7k/41k.
tuaauaae 7* FORD larert *
G T MtM. T t CHBVY Cevelter
„M M M a H a rff* 4 K I

tii

jig*--------- 1—
■ iM Iilk f t B

;

t m XR NBNGA m dirt M uT ;
BBM Firm. Ftoare call 1M-4IU 1
•War 11

2 4 1 -1
V ftW d ftt/ C iu p o r t
7*.
osnor
Full Xth.
A/C Oanar,
Gaad Area.

JD-7MS

I

q SHASTA m * X ham*. I X .
■xreXnt candHX. M JM ml.
AaklnqSIMMaW-Ml-IMl
IM? CR UISI-AIR /G IO R O IA
BOY, t r , aalt rentalrwd RV;
naw -aluminum a x X X , X I
Xtoa. refrlg - many axtraal
M .X O G O call m a w
• I W COACHMAN M H . 14 ft.,
SSK ml. Many axtrrel Incl.
ganaraX. Vary M ty to drive.

pijaa................... JM x a

buying • gold Hirer,
diamond*, calnt. 1117 W.
WOOOCN LURCB and tackto
boeet. anllguo real*. Catk
Paid! Orlando 1M14U

•71 WINNBBAGO. M ft. ftow
• n g X A ra d le X ......
Ml-MMarMIdlto
• 71 ALLBB40 m * X Xm a V
ft. awning, Iwte bad*, gwwraX 4 tv. SU JM ODOM 1479

�i -

T T T

I

,

by Chic Young
TTrn n r

■mi

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY
WHAT 13 TH IS

A FAT
GUVS

HANGING ON
GAUGES WALL?

FULLLENGTH
Ml « W R

by Art Sansom
DAUGHTER, T H ER E IS
f/ NOTHING GOODTD SAY
ABOUT GROWING O L D !

0K,C0M £0N...I5HTlT NICE
TO SIT BACK. AMD REMINISCE
ABOUT THE.

OLD DAYS?

iV e h a p a l o t

HI, CW UCK..50RRY TO
W A K E YOU UP, BUT I
COULDN'T SLEEP..
.

ON M Y M I N P
, LATELY...
.

U M W S T O REMINISCE*

• NWENYOU CANT
REMEMBER. ANYTHING

0 '\

An y m

ore?

____ _

I L IK E TO T A LK TO
YOU BECAUSE YOU'RE
ALW AYS A 6 0 0 0
L IS T E N E R ..

by Howie Schnaldar
I iH SOMEWHAT OF AU

A VERY

e x f lS R ro n H e b a c k s

LC h ELY

DEAR DR. G O T T : I iiuffer from
l&gt;oliion Ivy three or four times a
year. Is there a shot I can get to
keep me from getting covered
with this annoyance?
DEAR READER: Some people
exhibit a s t o u n d i n g
hypersensitivity to poltton Ivy or
poison oak. Even with minimal
e xp o su re , th e y e x p e rie n c e
severe reactions, with marked
swelling. Itching and dlncomrort.
For such persons, dcuensltlza(Ion Injections are avalla ble and I
have used them with titunnlng
success. The most widely sola
product Is Ivyol.
Initially, three Injections are
given about three weekn apart.
Each year thereafter, one booster
shot (in the early spring) should
maintain Immunity. AsU your
doctor about this.
This therapy Is not necessary
for the average person, w ho may
experience mild poison lv.y reac­
tions. such as rash and itching
over the hands or legs: these
trivial cases can be prevented by
wearing appropriate protective
clothing, and for the average
poison Ivy sufferer, topica l
agents, such as Caladryl, will
relieve symptoms.
DEAR DR. O O T T : I hove a
problem with m y fingernails
splitting and peeling. I've been
told that folic acid might help.
Since I'm In m y 70s and there's
no chance of m y getting preg­
nant. I wonder If this Is a
possible remedy.
DEAR READER: Splitting or
the nails com m only a cco m ­
panies old age. The condition Is
annoying and difficult to treat.
Traditionally, protein supple­
ments (such as gelatin) have
been used to strengthen the
nails.
I am not aware that folic acid,
a necessary nutrient for normal
cell metabolism, helps cure split
nails. Folic acid d eficiency
causes anemia and malnutrition
d u rin g pregnancy. T h e R e ­
commended Dietary Allowance

Is 400 milligrams per day for
adults.
The substance Is completely
safe and la routinely prescribed
for expectant mothers; folic acid
toxicity has not been reported to
occur. If you want to try a folic

PETER
G O TT.M .D

add supplement, do so
me know the results.

n
n
n
n

o
n
n
n

n
n
n
n
n n n
n n r o
m n n

n n n
n r ? n
m i m
n
u n

n n n n n
n n r a n
n n n
n o m n n
n o
m n n n n
n n n
r
n n n
n
n n n
n

n
n
n
n n
n n

n
n
n
n

o
n
n
n

n
n
n
n

m n n n o n n
n
n
n
n

n n
n n
o
m
n
i n n n
n n n
r c m n

u
n
n
n
n
n

u
n
n
n
n

n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n

n n
n n
n n
n
n
n
n

n
n
o
n

11

OF ILQMEWS HEADS

BACK-Of-THE-HEAD

by T.K. Ryan

by Jimmy Johnson

SlUYME)/IU SAY/
-----v&gt; 7

7 Y

HOT
AIL THAT

(

NO,
|

ro ru iA r.

JUST5LIP

( MEA FEW

M O W

STOtt

Poison ivy: Is
there protection?

B y Phillip Aider
A former British P rim e
Minister. Benjamin Disraeli,
said, "T h e secret of success la
constancy of purpose." In other
words, determine your goal and
keep plugging away until you
reach It.
.

East might have competed
with two hearts, but without an
honor In the suit, he didn't want
10 encourage West to lead a
heart.
Pladng West with the spade
King for his overcall, South
called for dum m y's queen. How­
ever. East won with the king and
switched to ahekrt. W ith this lie
of the cards, South could no
longer make his contract
T r u e , the lead looked as
though It was away from the
king, but suppose South rises
with the spade ace, plays a club
to hla ace and continues with the
10. planning to overtake with
either dum m y's jack or king,
How can he go down? He ca n 't
Whatever the layout, at the
worst East wins with the club
queen 'and the defenders cash
three spade tricks. South always
wins at least one spade, one
heart, two diamonds and live
clubs.

Only finesse when It Is safe or
necessary.

w ays to add to your Income or
holdings. Lady Luck la willing to
help.
A«g. 12,1RR4
B C O W I O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Even though you might have
to overcome some obstacles, Endeavors you create or manage
substantial material growth la today have excelent chances for
Indicated for the year ahead. success, but don't expect Rome
Keep trying and don't settle for to be built In a day. What you're
dealing with could have long­
second best.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) As you term possibilities.
iftAtMTTAWUB (Nov. 23-Dec.
approach the fulfillment of your
expectations today, your luck 21) Friends might request favors
could be significantly magnified. of yo u today they dare not aak of
Be determined to produce de­ others. Th e y know you're a
sirable results. Get a jum p on life compassionate person who will
by understanding the influences help If at all possible.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
governing you In the year ahead.
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­ 10) Your popularity among your
dictions today by mailing t l.2 5 peers la tracking upwards. Even
to Astro-Graph, do thla newspa­ thouc who have recently treated
per. P.O. Box 4468. New York. you with Indifference may do an
N.Y. 10163. Be sure to stale your about-face and shower you with
zodiac slan.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Your beat aaael today la your
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
ability to Improve on the Ideas of F o c u s y o u r e f f o r t s o n
associates. Even If what they meaningful goals in thla cycle.
have to offer is good going In, Th e more significant, the better.
you can make It better.
Big expectations can be gratified
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In this Ume frame If you have
Conditions look extremely pro­ the de termination
mising for you at this time, as far
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
as your financial interests are Strive to maintain a philosoph­
concerned. Keep searching for ical attitude today, regardless of

what develops. If your outlook is
positive, negative situations can
be comfortably reversed.
AMUR (March 21-April 10)
To da y your moat significant
benefits might come from ar­
rangements that are not of your
making but still provide advan­
tages uniquely suited to your
character.

In bridge, the goal la to make
all the contracts you declare
(unless you are sacrificing) and
to defeat all the contracts you
defend. It la Impossible to do this
all the time, of course, but your
constancy of purpose should be
to succeed whenever possible.
West leads the spade five
against your contract of three
no-trump. How would you plan
the play?
Many Wests would produce a
weak J u m p overcall of two
hearts. But If North-South buys
the contract, that bid would
make It easier for the declarer to
read the cards.

eifWNIWSPAPBS ENTERPRISE ASSN.

No r t h

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer South
Iw U
West Nartk
East
IS
IV
aA
Pass
aNT
Pass a NT
Allpsas

Opening lead: *8

TAURUB (April 20-May 20) If
you have to make a difficult
decision today, return to a friend
who has offered you wise advice
previously. Th is person has a lot
m o r e s o l u t i o n s I n his/her
storehouse of knowledge.
O B M IR I (May 21-June 20)
Adequate help should be avail­
able today to assist you In
handling a difficult development
you thought you 'd have to
manage on your own.
CANCBS (June 21-July 22)
Because you're rather bold and
enterprising today, others might
feel you are taking risks you
should avoid. However, you'll be
well aware of your limitations
and govern your actions accord­
ingly.
CtfMNIWSPAPBR IN T IR P R IM AMN. •

b y Lsonard Starr

M HEU..AT
ItY START TALKIN'
I\KC THEY HAYt
k A W E N D # SOMETHING- •.

VTSEitS?

T CRACK! ME
.H6H...1T..

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241981">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, August 11, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241982">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241983">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on August 11, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241984">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241986">
                <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;, August 11, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241988">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241990">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241992">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241994">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24233" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23838">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/a3e5c9691214d7b5e20283b6fee34792.pdf</src>
        <authentication>857c39ff4900b1bae06cf8fddd572d0b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242019">
                    <text>m

?•* j .ily,-,

v .-&gt;•

:

,.

-

’ .■■’ ■
Jt7*ji\,
: J &gt;^t,
S w ^ t v v i yfft

^4X w ‘

.

.vi-JV,

r
• ••
i
WiA; U'V'.' •*;

V *f t

r*/B tV '

' _________

wv 1

«

I_n Um
Ml
Im
ppi ■

J J iJ C L '

rM MM

F 'V
H

— fc y

r* 4t

1 «

»

V

. Y *
k H «V

•

-v -

•-

t s

i

« « &gt; . . M &gt; -V &lt; ■ V

Au

-1

j

«

Q

f

l |

j

*

&gt;

i L

i a

i f

&lt; , t*
i

a fc filli to tx o tra I

�N E W S F R O M T H E R E G IO N A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Evidence sealed in tourist murder
Media denied access to lineup photos, videos!

Flood taking emotional toll on victims

By ADAM YEOMANS
Associated Press Writer

CARYV1LLE — Some residents of this flood-ravaged Florida
Panhandle town have kept their sense of humor, but others are
not In a Joking mood.
"Floods hold the population down: we like small towns."
cracked David Bnllry during a break In clean up-efforts
Thursday.
Mayor Ocorgc Anderson said his wife. Doris, has switched
from tears to anger.
*'She‘a already cried and cried until she doesn’t have
anything left," he said, “so now she’s more or less spitting It
out."
Flood waters had receded from most of the town and people
were busy removing debris or trying to dry out possessions
they hoped to salvage, although scattered showers hampered
those efforts.
When the Choctnwhatchce River was still In their homes
Saturday, four flood victims In a community north of Caryvllte
were arrested on misdemeanor charges after on altercation
with Holmes County sheriff's deputies.
Residents had refused to cooperate with limitations on boat
visits to their homes designed to prevent looting, said Chief
Deputy Joe Roberta. Some witnesses accused Roberts of using
bullying tactics. Roberts denied reports that punches were
exchanged, saying officers Just wrestled one man down.

MONTtCELLO — A Judge denied the news
media access to police lineup photographs
and videotapes in the case against four
teen-agers accused of killing a British tourist
at a highway rest atop In North Florida.
Circuit Judge F.E. Stelnmeyer handed
roeeculors another defeat Thursday when
c denied (heir motion to switch the trial
dales of two defendants suspected of being
the triggermcn in the murder of Gary jColley
during a botched robbery at an Interstate 10
rest slop Sept. 14.
L ast m o n th . C o lle y ’s co m p an io n .
M arg aret J a g g c r, c o u ld n 't Identify
17-ycar-old John "Billy Joe” Crumble In a
police lineup. But she picked Aundra Akins,
15. from a lineup. Jaggcr was wounded In
the attack.
In trying to suppress evidence In the case,
prosecutors said they wanted to prevent the
news media from obtaining photos and
videos of police lineups conducted with
Jaggcr. She returned to Tallahassee from
her home In Yorkshire. England to help with
the Investigation.
Lawyers for a group of Florida newspapers
objected to the move. They said the state

K

Five dolphins to go to sanctuary
SAN DIEGO — Five dolphins used for Cold War surveillance
but now no longer needed will likely be turned over by the
Navy to a Florida animal-rights group that hopes to retrain
them to live tn the wild.
The agreement has not yet been finalized, and both groups
cautioned that the Sugarloaf sanctuary near Key West
currently has no permit to release the bottle nose dolphins or
even prepare them for the wild.
For .now, the sanctuary only has a permit to display the five
young males, much like n marine park permit.
The National Marine Fisheries Service would have to approve
any attempt to return them to the wild.
The Navy has expressed reservations about such an attempt,
citing fears the trained dolphins could not survive In the wild,
or would spread disease among wild dolphins.
“You basically have to train the animal to again think of Uaelf
as wild — to get them to be competitive with the herd, to fish,
to deal with things like sharks.” said Tom LaPucza.
spokesman for the Navy’s command, control and ocean
surveillance renter.
“Then you have to track them to are what’a happening." he
added.
The Humane Society of the United States, which Thursday
announced the agreement, has called the Navy dolphins
prisoners of war who deserve honorable discharges from
military service.

hadn’t proven the evidence would make It
Impossible for the suspects to get a fair trial
in rural Jefferson County, where the killing
occurred.
"There's no serious or Imminent threat to
the administration of Justice by keeping
.these public records covered,” said lawyer
Gary Williams, who represented The Miami
Herald, The Palm Beach Post, The Orlando
Sentinel, the Tallahassee Democrat and the
Florida Society of Newspaper Editors.
Lawyer Gregg Thomas, who represented
The Tampa Tribune, said the public "de­
serves to know the state’s conduct in this
case. Just like they deserved to know the
conduct of the policemen in the O.J.
Simpson case.”
The St. Petersburg Times also opposed
the motion.
Assistant State Attorney Ray Marky
argued the media didn’t have a right to
pre-trial evidence.
"This Is not a circus," Marky argued.
"That (video) being played so close to trial
that has been scheduled would make It well
nigh Impossible to secure anything but
Jurors who lived under a carpet.”
Stelnmeyer said prosecutors waited too
long to make their request given the amount
of publicity the case has already attracted.

Faculty
pay 42nd
nationally
By J A C K I E H A L L IP A K
(Uaoclatad Press Writer

Boy arrattod In mob killing

Serious crash

MIAMI — A 16-year-old boy has been charged with murder In
the slaying or a man police said stopped to help an accident
victim.
A car driven by Charles Bells. 44, hit a child who darted Into
the path of hit car. When he got out of his car to check on the
slightly Injured girl, he was beaten, shot and robbed by a mob.
The boy In custody "was part of the crowd that was there. He
participated In the robbery,” Metro-Dade police Detective Gary
Smith said Thursday.
The teen-ager was charged with -armed- robbery, and
first-degree felony murder. Tips from the community led to the
•rrrst.
____
Smith said the boy had been arrested previously on charges
of assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest and “an
assortment of similar stuff."
Bells was beaten with fists and a bottle Tuesday evening and
was shot In the front seat of his car as he tried to get away,
police said.

Last averting about 10*0, three ears were
involved In a eertoua crash on State Road 46
near Summerlin Avenue. According to Sanford
Police, a 1964 Ford driven by Loretta Lee Young
of Geneva waa travelling eastbound In the
westbound lane of 46 when she sldeewlped a 92
Ford driven by R o b ert. Jo h n D euso of

T A L L A H A SSE E - T h e
average pay for faculty at Flor­
ida’s public universities dropped
teas than 9300 tn a year, but that
was enough to push the state's
national ranking from 35th to
42nd.
"We have tried very hard to
sell our sunshine and no state
Income tax. but a lot of the
young faculty members are
saying ‘Hey. I can't take that to
Publlx," Chancellor Charles
Reed said Thursday.
The rankings were calculated
earlier this month by the state
based on data compiled by the
American Association of Univer­
sity Professors, which annually
surveys pay.
r. "Florida fo ln,i

»*«****«•»■.
Orlando. No chargee have yet been filed In the
accident, but the Investigation Is continuing.
Blood alcohol testa will be done on Young and
Sheml. they are In stable condition at Orlando
Regional Medical Center this morning. Deuso
waa not Injured. Young, who is seven months
pregnant, wMt be transferred to the Arnold

Podge van driven by Zlad Naxft Miami of: -precaution latar today.
- ~~ "
- . - I ’ -- ■ ■- : i ..................................
‘ ~

ns flag from seal
resented a nose-thumbing to
federal civil rights legislation.
TAMPA - H ills b o ro u g h
"If it offends anyone, it should
County has chosen a new county not be on the county seal," said
seal after nearly three decades, Frank Klmbell. husband of
replacing one with the Con­ former county commissioner
federate battle flag.
Sylvia Klmbell. who led the fight
By a 4-3 vote Wednesday to change the seal until her
night, commissioners selected a death last month.
oral featuring a drawing of the
Those seeking a new flag were
c o u n ty ’s lOO-ycar-old brick well outnumbered at the hearing
courthouse, which waa knocked by supporters of the Confederate
down In 1952.
flag, who addressed the board
Supporters of the old flag during a 2 W hour bearing.
Insisted It stood for the heritage
Som e Invoked a n c e s to rs
of Southerners or all races and among hundreds of thousands
r e p r e s e n te d H ills b o ro u g h who died fighting under the flag.
County's participation in the
"You're going to stomp on
Confederacy.
their graves by changing that
umI and
aft It
fl hurts.
liitrtk It
It fitiriw^1
But critics said the flag’s ■
seal,
hurts? kfllH
association with slavery of­ Scott Alford, a member of the
fended blacks. Some sold its grassroots group Preserving Our
adoption In the mid-1960s rep­ Heritage. Alford wore a T-shirt

Cabfntt Mays bridge action
TALLAHASSEE — Gov. Lawton Chiles and the Cabinet have
delayed action on a controversial bridge proposed for Pensacola
Bay, though local officials say opposition to the span cornea
from "armchair quarterbacks."
Though the bridge has long been supported by House
Speaker BoUey "Bo" Johnson. D-MUton. Santa Row County
Commissioner David Kessler told the group Thursday be
disputed "the myth that this la a one-man bridge, namely Bo’s
Bridge."
"It has been a dream of residents for several decades," said
Kessler, adding that since he waa first elected commissioner tn
1965, "The need for the bridge was an Important proposal.” .
Several dozen people wearing yellow "Unite Santa Rosa
County” stickers applauded as Kessler urged the Cabinet to
Ignore “distant media armchair quarterbacks who appear to
have been lied erroneous Information by special Interests."
From At tod f d Prta* reports

LO TT1 BY

Crumble is scheduled to go on trial Aug.
22 for first-degree murder; Akins' trial
would follow.
Stelnmeyer denied the state's request to
try Akins first. Prosecutors made the move
In an apparent effort to improve their
chances of gaining a conviction.
Stelnmeyer said he was concerned swit­
ching the trial could give lawyers grounds to
appeal the case If Akins was convicted. He
said he didn’t believe there was enough time
for Akins’ lawyer, Mark Olive, to prepare for
an August trial.
”1 simply don't believe it’s reasonable at
this time to change,” he said.
The other defendants, 17-year-old Deron
Spear and 14-year-old Cedric Green, will be
tried later; no dates have been set.
S te ln m e y e r a g re e d to a p p o in t a
psychologist to evaluate Crumltle at his
lawyer's request. Attorney Dwight Wells
said he wanted an expert to determine
whether Crumltle waa competent to stand
trial but declined to discuss the request after
the hearing.
Last month, the Judge barred lawyers for
the defendants from talking about evidence
In the case with the news media.

depicting the flag and the words,
"I'm Proud."
The new seal, tike its pre­
decessor. is s decorative one.
used on coffee cups, water
trucks, letterhead and T-shirts.
The officials county seal, used to
emboss originals of county doc­
uments. has no picture.
Commissioners also approved
5-3 setting up an historical
exhibit In the County Center
lobby to display all flags that
have flown over the .county,
in c lu d in g th e C onfederate
banner.
Official use of the Confederate
flag has generated Intense de­
bate In several Southern states
recently. A march is planned tn
Myrtle Beach. S.C., to protest the
flag flying atop South Carolina's
statehouse.

ping to 42nd makes us
competitive." Reed said.
"It also makes It hard to
on to the outstanding focu!
members that we already have/'
he said.
The average pay for faculty
members at Florida's nine state
universities waa 943,581 for the
current school year, compared to
943.879 last year, according to
the AAUP survey.
The national average waa
949.504 this school year com­
pared to 948.130last year.
A decade ago, Florida had
been gaining an the national
average but has slid steadily In
the rankings tn recent yean.
"We went a period of three
years without giving any raises
to our faculty members and
everybody else was giving some­
thing." Reed slid.
Last year. Florida gave unlver-,
ally faculty an average 1Vh ♦
percent pay raise and a 4 f
percent raise to scheduled fo r!
this foil. Apparently not enough i
faculty got raises to keep the !
average from foiling.

T H E W E A TH E R
I
Tonight; Wldelv scattered show­
ers and thunderstorms becom­
ing fair with a 30 percent chance
of rain. Winds will be light from
the south. Temperatures In the
Iowtomtd70s.
Saturday; Partly sunny with
scattered sAcmoon showers and
thunderstorms. High In the low
to mid 90s. Winds from the
southeast at 5-10 mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Extended forecast: Partly
cloudy with mainly afternoon
and evening scattered showers
and thunderstorms. Lows In the
mid to upper 70s. Highs In the
low to mid 90s.

•TODAY
P ity aloadySg-yg

rlS -71

][

SATURDAY
BOLTOAB TABLEt Min.
a.m.. 12:30 p.ou MaJ. 6:10 a.m..
6:40 p.m. TIDES; D aytona
Beach; highs. 1:59 a.m., 3:46
m.: lows. 8:33 a.m., 9:13 p.m.i
•w Baeyraa Beach; high*.
3:04 a.m., 3:53 pm.; lows, 6:37
a.m.. 9:16 p.m.: Om m Bm Mu
highs. 2:19 a.m.. 3:08 p.m.;
lows. 8:44 a.m.. 9:33 p.m.

J u ly U

O
Jto ly a a

6

&lt;9

LA b t
J u ly g o

][
.v
.tr

to i

)

Waves are 1
foot and glassy. C urrent Is
slightly from the north with a
water temperature of 69 degrees.
New Sm yrna Beach; Waves
are 1 foot and glassy. Current Is
slightly from the north. Water
temperature Is 69 degrees.

Tonight: Wind southeast 10
knots. Seas 2 feet. Bay and
inland waters a light chop.
Isolated showers and th u n ­
d ersto rm s. Saturday; Wind
south less than 10 knots. Seas
leas than 2 feet. Bay and Inland
waters mostly smooth. lad
showers and thunderstorms.

s t a t is t ic s

]

The high tem perature in
Sanford on Thursday waa 93
degrees and the overnight low
waa 72 degrees as reported by
the University of Florida Agri­
cultural Research and Educa­
tion Center, Celery Ave.
Recorded rainfall for the
period ending at 9 s.m. Thurs­
day totalled XMInches.
The temperature at 9 a.m.
Friday was 61 degrees. Friday's
overnight low was 72. aa re­
corded by the National Weather
Service at Orlando International
Airport.
Other Weather Service data:

□
a

□
□

»«*feet•••*•!

**#*«*«**»*#•'

I

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday. Ju ly 15, 1994 - J A

Murder and marijuana
Terrence U m ar Sheppard. 21, 3073 Bungalow Blvd.,
Sanford, warn arrested on a loitering and prowling change by a
Seminole County deputy Wednesday morning. A deputy
reported when he arrived seeing Sheppard run from him and
attempt to hide behind a house.

Trespassing
Daryl Craig Tate. 30. 110 W. 13th SI.. Sanford, was arrested
on trespassing and criminal mischief charges by Sanford police
Wednesday morning. Police report Tate entered a William
Clark Court residence and damaged property. Tate was Issued
a warning against entering the premises In February,
according to the report.

Drunktn driving
Gregory George Chitwood, 32. 114 Woodfleld Dr.. Sanford,
was arrested on a drunken driving charge after a Lake Mary
policeman reported stopping him for speeding on Rinehart
Road early Wednesday morning.

Burglary, grand thaft
Terry B. Ziegler, 37. a transient, was arrested on burglary
and grand then charges at the Seminole County Jail
Wednesday. Longwood police say Ziegler was repsonsible for
the burglary of JAB Diversified. 60S Wilma Bt.. sometime
between May 20 and 23. Police report seeing Ziegler carrying a
power tool on May 21, but the burglary wasn’t reported until
two days later. Ziegler was already In Jail on a train burglary
charge which police were Investigating when they reported
seeing him with the tool.

Domestic violanc#
Joseph William Manuel, 46, 490 Cochrane Road, Geneva,
was arrested on a domestic violence battery charge Wednesday
evening. Manuel's wife reported he threw toys at her and
pushed her when she tried to retrieve their 16-month-old child
In his arms.

Shoplifting
Leon Smith, 4B, 802 Orange St„ Sanford, was arrested on
shoplifting and trespassing charges at Winn-Dixie grocery store
on French Avenue Wednesday evening. 8tore employees report
seeing Smith In a restroom with a $4 bottle of wine and placed
him in a room until police arrived. Police report on entering the
room, they found him drinking a bottle of wine. Police report
Smith was Issued a trespass warning last August.

Burglary charges
Steven Williams,' 30. 74 Redding Gardens, and Ross Lee
Holiday, 36,921 Locust Ave.. both of Sanford, were arrested on
burglary charges early Thursday morning. Sanford police
report seeing the pair on the premises of an Bast Second Street
residence. When searched, Williams' pocket contained a piece
of cocaine and he was charged with possession of the drug,
police report.

Warrant arreata mad#
The following wanted persons were taken into custody:
• Randall Edward Boston. 20, 458 McLain Lane. Oeneva; on
charges of eapltol sexual assault and lewd and lascivious
assault on a child.
‘‘‘'•SthHMH^tfctonell'VMMifclin. 30, 8371 Cantor at., Sanford: on
'S/'^Hsigt!' cff*‘WllunFjttt‘ appear In court to answer to a prior
marijuana possession charge.
•Victor Atraiony Pinto Jr.. 31. 2403 SttveBAAfVa.. Sanford:
on a marijuana possession probation violation charge.

Feds link Sanford man to Mexican drug suppliers
Florida from the Texas border.
Federal and Seminole County
ORLANDO — Federal drug d ru g a g e n ts c o n d u c te d a
agents arc Investigating whether nine-month probe of the Central
the slaying of two Central Flor­ Florida group suspected of sell­
ida men may have been the ing up to 500 pounds of Mexican
result of debts owed to Mexican marijuana each week. •
marijuana suppliers.
In a phone call Intercepted by
Four associates of the dead the agents. Douglas Cox, 22, told
men. Including a Sanford man. an acquaintance the day before
were charged Wednesday by his shooting death that he was
federal prosecutors with dis­ going to cause trouble for Mex­
tributing marijuana, and court icans who were harassing one of
records disclosed the group his brothers over drug debts.
bought quantities of the drug
Cox an d h is ro o m m ate.
from Mexicans who drove It to

Timothy Ebcrlln. 22, were found
shot to death In their DeLeon
Springs house June 5.
Agents then wiretapped a call
In which Allen Hunter of Sanford
told an associate he feared for
his safety.
"K they killed Doug over a
817,000 pot debt, what do you
think they will do to me owing
them 375.000." Hunter said,
-according to an affidavit by
federal drug agent Russell Wise.
According to the complaint,
the case began when agents In
McAllen, Tex., seised 600

pounds of marijuana In March
1993.
Being held w ithout bail
Thursday were Allen Hunter. 24:
his brother. David Hunter. 25.
Carlson Cox, 27: and Anthony
Terrell, 25.
Also being held without hall
were two men arrested In the
slaying of Douglas Cox and
Ebcrlln. Bobby Allen Raleigh,
19, and Domingo Pasquul
Figueroa. 24, were charged with
first-degree murder.
Authorities would not discuss
details of Ihe case Thursdny.

B a ck -To -S ch o o l
Expo this weekend
■3 VICWDaSOMUm

Harald Staff Wrltar___________

SANFORD — School Is about
to start again for ail of Seminole
County's elementary and middle
school students.
District officials are groaning
(with a smile) that the loose ends
from the last school year are just
finally being tied up and a new
year Is already begun.
Teachers returned to work this
past Monday morning and stu­
dents will be back In class next
Monday.

Members of the school board
w ill J o in t e a c h e r s , a d ­
ministrators. and school person­
nel will be on hand to answer all
the questions students and their
parents might have, Including
Inquiries about Intersession
programs.
While the expo Is going on
Inside, students will nave the
chance to board a bus and take a
spin around the parking lot.
That treat Is especially helpful
for the first time students who
might be a bit apprehensive
about the big yellow busea that
will take them to school.
On Monday morning, over
39,000 students will cross the
th re sh o ld Into classro o m s
around the county.
For most of them It is the start
of a second, third or fourth year
of year round classes. For some,
including the middle schools In
Sanford, It Is the first time they
have had to return to school In
July.
The expo, officials hope, will
make the transition easier.
Regardless of the calendar, the
return to school always brings
questions. The school district
hopes they can provide the
answers this weekend before
classes begin.

To help students and their
parents get ready for the start of
yet another school year and to
help them understand the year
round calendar which Is now
fully In place In Seminole
County, the district has orga­
nised an event at the Altamonte
Mall this weekend.
No. the district Is not having a
back-to-school sale.
The d istrict Is hosting a
Back-to-School Expo on Satur­
day. July 16 from 10 a.m. to 8
p.m. and Sunday. July 17 from
noon until 5:30 p.m.
School peraonnel will be avail- •
able for Information about the
programs being offered In the
schools and with bus schedules
for the elementary and middle I
achoola.-There eiin w iM W ta »
tion about exceptional student
e d u c a tio n p ro g ra m s , p rekindergarten programs, , gutdvolunteer
pnopems and opportunities.

fey Katfey Mm

*v&lt; But Y o u Muat Take the Ftret
Step by Visiting tlal. Browse
through our selection of new and

Crfm## reported to d#putt—

Yes... we're open convenient
hours, Yee... we're open
eveninge, Yee... we offer
attractive financing. Qee... See
How le e y It laT

Crimes reported to Seminole County deputies: •
•3 5 0 0 Mock of Sanford Avenue near Sanford: 10SS Dodge
reported missing sometime Wednesday between 7:45 p.m and
11 p.m. The vehicle was later recovered at the scene of an auto
accident.•Cumberland Farms, 2300 State Road 434 near Longwood:
15 cigarette cartons valued at 3303 were reported missing and
3300 in damages were reported sometime Wednesday morning
between 2:30 a.m. and 2:00 a.m.

K
aiser
PONTIAC-BUICK-QMC TRUCKS
1590 South Woodland Blvd., DeLond

Crlm## reported to Sanford polio#

DELAND &gt;04-734 3—8 • DAYTONA M L 2 I 7 4 M 0 • ORLANDO 407429-0549
"LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY. 17-02 A HWY. 1SA"________

Crimes reported to Sanford police:
•Parking lot In 100 block East Airport Boulevard: 3350
Mercedes hood ornament reported taken from car pometime
Wednesday between 8:30 p.m. and 11:30 p.m.

30

%

TO 60 OFF
%

SELECTED MERCHANDISE
THROUGHOUT THE STORE
I OR W O M E N
•LADIES' SWIMWEAR
•LADIES* TOPS

I*I ###»»##■&gt;| V

KENNEDY'S ROCKEFELLER'S H U N T'S

•LADIES* DRESSES
•LADIES' NATIONAL
BRAND CAREER
COORDINATES

FOR W OM EN
•FINE &amp; FASHION
W ATCHES
•14K GOLD CHAINS,
BRACELETS, &amp;
EARRINGS
•HANDBAGS
•SLEEPWEAR* ROBES

tAVb

* »-

F OR C H IL D R E N

f OR MEN

•BOYS AND GIRLS
COORDINATES AND
SEPARATES

•SWIMWEAR
•SHORTS
•SPORTSHIRTS

FOR H O M E

•DRESS SHIRTS

BEDDING

30 % to 6 0 % off

Now you loo can afford this protection!

ON SHOES FOR T H E ENTIRE FAMILY

8 Protects assets from Personal Liability problems
3 Foregoes costly inheritance taxes
• Avoids costly and time-consuming Probate process
3 Provides vehicle to "Judgment Proof* assets
3 Maximizes privacy
8 Complete Pure &amp; Holding Trust set-up for $300.

Invest now to save and protect your future.
Orlando area: 834-4161

•VT

I A M U Y S H O t Cl l A R A N C E !

have used Trusts for years.

A pure, irrevocable, common law trust provides protection
via the United States Constitution...

h

m i i v n w a y u i u tn w y y v r
A pair of faatharsd frtanda who live along tha shores of Lake
Monroe spent tha afternoon watching some of their human
companions on the water. One duck looks to tha east, tha other
to tha west in eaareh of tha action. While they watch the people
come and go, the birds always have one eye out for the gators
who would dine on them g««en the ohanoe.___________________

Long Distance: 1-800-533-4161

&gt;yr

�RWCmHiP

wJ&amp;iSSIw

te&amp;iAwlnte'wwFlrai

4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday, July 15, 1094

CHUCK STONE
(UtFt 4S14S0)
N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407 322 2811 or 831 -0093
Lacy K. Lear * Eritor
0 4 m m H. Fuoh ‘

Clinton gets a front man on Haiti
_
.
. ...
*
t. a—
“
aIi U h m*J im i
A. .line from
Charles Dickens'
"Dorabey
and^
to to th e r punutt
of fetth’s U
Haitian
policy.
Son" exquisitely sums up both O J, Simpson as Prey declared that Haitian refugees (unlike
a national hero and President Clinton ss a C u b a n re fu g e e s )
w jw M te ^
formulstor of Haitian policy: "He's tough, w ould be tu rn e d
ma’am. tough... and devilish sly."
back and sent to
If one quality epitomises BUI Clinton's first 18 "cafe havens."
months In office. It's toughness. Standing tall
As George Bush,
with almost regal grlttlness, he hss survived trial B ill C lin to n an d

ley puppet prove,

EDITORIAL

Conflict over
widening roads
The proposed widening of Rangeline Road
north of S.R. 434 In Longwood to causing
conflict. Citizens say they don't want it
widened.
Rangeline la one of an Increasing number of
roadways In Central Florida which have
become problem areas. The problems are In
direct proportion to a person's relationship
with the roads
People who m ust drive on narrow but
jam -packed roadways want them wider.
Narrow lanes mean traffic tie-ups and delays.
They also become extremely unsafe during
rush hours. We can see their paint
People who live In subdivisions or -homes
along the busy roads naturally don't want
them enlarged. We can also see their po in t It
will m ean more traffic, and probably toiler
speeds. Turning out of a aubdtvtolon onto
such a major roadway becomes a
problem, m aybe a t times. Impossible,
In the case of Rangeline, ft was
along the road who turned out ea maces a t
the commission meeting to otgect to thtf
widening.
We suspect most people who drive on

have perfected the art of bring sly. Bill Clinton
takes that art one step further to r'devilteh afar."
How else to describe the appointment of BIO
Pray aa hla Haitian special adviser, a poll
survivor who matches Clinton In toughness, but
surpasses him in devlllah slyness?
. Clinton appointed Gray for only two reasons: 1)
Gray Is black (as are Haitians) and 2) to take the
heat olT of hla foiled, policy that Randall
Robinson's fast had exposed.
At s White House press conference last week,
Oray announced a fourth policy shift on Haiti.
The shifty nature of the policy was stlD Intact,
but now a black face was the interlocutor.
No military Invasion was discussed, but a
military action was "on the table."

biractal.
But stand by for
more. The very next
day " th e Clinton
administration" (not
Oray) retreated from
Its "safe havens" pol­
icy based on proof by
a n n o u n c in g th a t
Haitians need Only
d eclsre they fear
persecution to be ell*
gUdefor the havens.
By the time you read this, we may already
have Invaded Haiti and be r— *
----------------North Korea.

Congressional
pension is
a sweet deal

street* for people to go to and from thetf

u - it

bl'drit *l

ft

LETTERS

vesting ‘nss&lt;T Are you an active
any sT oiur city Improvement
or civic chibs? Hew many city
ttMttfeup'hev* you attended this

G overnm ent officials m u a t.b e thick*

WASHINGTON - The ’^lendor of the
membereonly Senate dining room — with its
large chandelier. stained-glass window de­
picting George Washington and mosaic of
Abraham Lincoln — Is a strange setting for
Igniting a revolt against the congressional
pCTUuoo *yiem *
1 Yet that's the scene that played out when
Sen. Alan Simpson. R-Wyo.. recently handed
Sen. Bob Kerrey. D-Neb., a document moat
secret.
politicians• would guard as
"Here's
"Take a look a t ----our conundrum."
Kerrey scanned the
d o eu m en t, which
7;t*nia rtlflM -'/I
‘ Sinipaontiaa
I(*r tw o
contributed to the
pU c o n g r e s s i o n a l
fs *
nston p lsn and
w much he will
collect tn retirement.
Kerrey was in a state
of disbelief.
C ongressional
pensions are such a
b o n a n z a t h a t If
Simpson retired In C Simpson and
1998 he would begin ■ Ksrrsy cam* to
•conclusion In
collecting 866,940 a
the Ssnats
year, even though
dining room
he's contributed only
that m ost of
8170,000 to the plan.
thair colleagues
In three retirement
will find quits
years Simpson would
unappetizing. ■
et\)oy more benefits
than he paid into the
system for 18 years. If Simpson reached hts
life expectancy, he would collect at least 81.7,
million.
The "conundrum" for Simpson la the fact
that as members of the Bipartisan Com­
mission on Entitlement and ‘nix Reform, He
and Kerrey are preaching sacrifice for seniors
whlls senators' own pensions are soaring out
of control. "If this to the moment of truth for
the American people. It's the moment of truth
for all of us," Simpson told us.
Simpson and Kcrrey came to a conclusion
la the Senate dining room that most of their
i will And quite unappetising: Cooentitlements must also be on the
cyttittX hlflefc
"You're not going to get people to follow
uni— we teao," Kerrey, the commission’s
chairman, told our associate Ed Hairy. "And
it's not leadership If we ask everybody rise to
t’b" Kerrey remembers,
traduced a spending
writer this year, h* triad
and fcftsd to oonvtoo* hla colleague* to bite
tiw kuttet "Ws had a pay cut and a panaloa
cut la tM amendment and wa got a lot of
ito it," arid Kerrey.
I'a Interest In the Issue was sparked
“I knew when I began talking
about pension* and entitlements that you
have to start talking about your own." be
me guy lumped up at a town hall
. a n d arid. What the hell do you

K

.. .

skinned. In addition to homeowners, they
m ust alio hear from motorists. No m atter
w hat Is decided. It wlU result In applause front,
one group and booe from the other.

Yet choices m ust be made. Decistona to
widen certain highways may not be popular*
but unless we start to be conoemed about our
transportation needs, ws wtll drive people
away and rather than booming upward, we
will start to crash downward.
There Isn o easy solution to the crowded
rood problems. We believe however, that It’s
time our citlsena started working together on
this as a community. Oive consideration to
what the m ^ority of peopto need. Our county
and cities aren’t here to serve shy single
person, regardless of what some may believe.

R.
Wharton, Jr.
But Oray’s case la different. He la greedy. Oqe
of American history's moat successful and
conniving black elected officials, Gray, aa the
mriortty whip, was on the fast track to becoming
the first black speaker of the House. Unex­
pectedly, he announced on June 20, 1901. hts
Intention to resign from Congress tn September.
Even Congressional Quarterly reported that tt
was "rare for a member to leave at midterm."
But like Clinton. Oray had so many financial
problems, gossip about hla personal conduct and
Justice Department Investigations swirling
around hla staff that he opted to cut hla potential
losses by quitting.
When Gray resigned, he left hla 8125JXX)
congressional salary for a whopping 8175.000 aa
president of the United Negro College Fund. I m
giving up political power," he declared with a
straight uce. "to have a very big impact on the
. . ----throughout this
education of. . black
people
decade."
Three year* later, Oray Is devoting all of his
time to Haiti's problems. So much for this
avaricious politician's "very big Impact on the
education of black people throughout this

JACK ANDERSON

tw orka
They live outakk the city ton Its, As such,
they have no say on w hither or not It should
be widened.
It would be nice If we could start all over.
Qo back to th e tim e when there was
absolutely nothing built in Central Florida.
T hen build roads to be used as audor

That would be Ideal, but It la tmpoaatMS.
Even ITit were, there may be objection* from
the wildlife which want* to travel on hoavUy
used pathw ays, versus the gusher tortoise*
which Just w ant to be left done In their
surrounding*.
.
t,
ftve,
l
a
IB
years
, 1 ,.* • .
ago, th at such rood* ss , n f c » n t
Rantoul, and Red Bug. (do they all start
Rl? would be faced with h l0 i traflle
blems? These were rural roads and Idsaf tor
residential communltlca.
Tim es have changed. Our rapid growth hse
created a monster which we m ust now
control. Not by Ignoring itvia tt to tight on top
of us. Not by rallying agslnst the monster
because It won’t go away.

IraHItlnn
t.Ant Oulnier
C lutnier and
find C
lift
tradition rtf
of scuttled Lent
Clifton

fireworks. If all those who
this, we could easily pay fe
July ... remember, this ea

Berry's World
WHAT

T&lt;

griT"

.He J ust sam
HlS LAWYERS'

Otvsup? You

Simpson promptly telephoned the Secre­
tary of the Senate's office and asked for a
projection of his pension. He was "bemused"
when tiw results arrived: |’I mean here we are
talking about these other (entitlements) and 1
said, 'what really Is curious Is to see what
each of us will receive under civil service and
then realise that everyone else on civil service
receives this s u m kind of heavy, heavy
contribution alter retirement.’"
Lari year, the taxpayers shelled out
Hit 865
billion in benefits for 2.2 motion federal
^
retirees. "Then you add mUtiqry (pensions)
and you're into heavy stuff." says Simpson.
Shortly after the Simpson-Kerrey pow-wow,
however, both blinked when confronted with
a vote on that "heavy stuff." By an aa to 12
vote, the 'Senate voted to accelerate 8376
million worth of coat-of-Uvine increases tot
military retirees despite budget provisions
that require Congress to finance such an
Increase through tax hikes or spending cu ts.'

lO

�» .*
Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, Ju ly 15, 1994 - BA

Tourism
ida Commerce Secretary Greg lay off up to 2 percent of Its work
Fanner told a Senate subcom­ force, or about 700 employees,
by summer's end because In­
mittee on Wednesday.
Other reasons for tourist de­ ternational tourism was down.
Seminole County Tourist De­
velopment officials were not clines are the strong dollar and
Up to one-fourth of Disney
. available for immediate com- better marketing by other tourist visitors are foreigners.
! roent on the situation.
desUnatlons, Farmer said.
Sims, who Is president of
In O rlando however, the
Gate receipts are soft at the Florida Leisure Acquisition
tourism drop is said to be largely state's top tourist lures such as Corp.. said the company's Silver
due to Europeans staying home Walt Disney World. Sea World Springs park near Ocala had a
because of economic woes In and Universal Studios Florida, 10 percent drop In attendance
their own countries and fear of Farmer, Sims and company of­ over the holiday compared to
crime In Florida.
ficials said. This despite the fact last year.
Tourism la down despite the Orlando was hast site for five
At Universal Studios Florida,
World Cup soccer tournament World Cup games for three
spokesman Jim Canfield said
games at Orlando.
weeks In June and July.
park attendance was higher both
Attendance at theme parks
"In Miami, the (International)
and other attractions Is not has numbers of arrivals are up," year-to-date and over the Fourth
high as had been projected, and Farmer said. "The only reason of July from a year ago. Howev­
the outlook .la not good for the Miami's numbers are up Is that er, attendance has not met
projections, he said.
rest of the summer.
they have so many Latin Ameri­
Sea World officials said there
"Someone needs to wake up cans
who are coming In that It's had been a '.'softening" during
and see that the No. 1 industry compensating
for the loss of and since July 4, although
that generates significant tax Europeans.
overall attendance Is higher so
dollars for this state is hurting,"
said BUI 81ms, chairman of the
"Central Florida hasn't had far this year than last.
Florida Commission on Tourism. that compensation. It Is abso­
Farmer, undersecretary of
"Business Is extremely soft."
lutely European driven."
commerce for tourism, said the
Europeans have economic
Disney officiate would not U.8. share of the International
problems at home and they are c o m m e n t on a t t e n d a n c e tourism rriarket has declined for
still cautious about traveling Thursday, but the state's largest the past three years.
here because of crime against tourist complex announced InUnwsWn tram Am m M «
tourists In Florida, former Flor­ earlier this month that It- would lainsuinvrvwewgroar
_ 1A
have more famfllea visiting the

Guidelines give nature chance
to cure the fluid in kids’ ears
■vMin.men

AP Science Writer

ia

they live...at their
backgrounds," said Beth Kl­
inger. a tin t grade teacher. "It
helps us be more sympathetic to
their needs."
The teachers were surprised st
the diversity of the areas they
serve at Id yU w U d e. The students
who attend Idylwllde come from
sresa like Academy Manor, the
Hills of Lake Mary, Ravenna
Park and Tlmacuan,
"1 w as surprised at th e
diversity of the neighborhoods,"

iManager
IA
excellent job, and with
their work along, we are going to
continue progressing even
though we may not have a
manager temporarily."
He said many of the project*
which have been undertaken,
such as the awnlng/canopy
downtown Improvement drive,
’off snd running. "YouTl
be seeing many improvements
in the downtown area In the near
future," be said, "and they are
all a result of the work our
tbs nation, including 29
in Florida, and is credited with
having created almost 92 billion
in rrinveadnent and tens of
thousands of Jobs In designated
cities. •
Main Strset dtiss In Central
Florida Include DsLsnd. New
Sm yrna Beach, Ocala and
Tltusvtite.
"I'm sorry to ass Faye teava
Sanford." Crairiae mid. "But If
we are to hrop moving, wo have
to always look ahead with the
Sanford Main Street program,
and I feel oertrin it to going to
Fulton could not be reached

Royal tytham Court. Daytona
Beach, toed Thursday, July 14.
1994 at Vsteraaa Administration
Jtily 10, 1934 in
BroohtaL N.V.. he moved to
Central Flertds to 1970. He
e
H e ______
member of A n ti nan Legion.
Near York Cky, Sprues (Saak
H om eo w ners Assoc ia tio n,
Daytona Beach, and waa at the
nomMnay in m o o h w m m
Beach during World War 0.
Survivors tadud* wife. Marie
Louis*) sons. Donald P.. Winter
Sortnife ItoMtoi Aftklat dttlMh*
ter, T in a Louise Pierson,
L . , __ and. C a t h e r i n e
Quid tot. both of Brooklyn i
brothers, Nicholas. Brooklyn.
August Laanto. HJ.i six grandchUdran.
tee. Orlando, to charge of ar-

1934 at Manor Care
Dealer. Winter Park.
3. 1913 to New York
moved to Central
to 133*. She waa a
with
New York
i of America. Central Florida
. Chi

■3
ForirM ^Cttyf^aevea
c h T f d r ta : tw a g re a t*

chairman ol a federal panel of
experts and a professor at the
University of Washington, said
that In most cases, the condition
disappears within three to six
months without medical treat­
ment.
"Thla fact ... gives weight to
the use of observation or wat­
chful walling as an acceptable
way to manage (the disorder)
within the first three months,"
he said.
Antibiotics are of uncertain
value In treating OME, Berg said.
The best studies found the drugs
help only about 14 percent of
children with the condition, he
said, and this modest benefit
comes at the risk of aide effects,
such as the allergies suffered by
Andy.
"Antibiotics are a valid option
for treating OME. but they are
not ... the preferred option in
early stages of the condition,"
Berg said.
If OME persists after three
months of "watchful waiting,"
the new guidelines say children
should be given hearing tests. If
the testa show normal hearing,
then observation or antibiotics
are appropriate.
In cases of hearing loss after
three months, the guidelines call
for a choice between antibiotics
or surgery.
Should the condition continue
for four to six months, with
hearing loss, the preferred
treatment then Is surgery, Berg
said.

W A S H I N G T O N - New
guideline* for treatment of inner
eas fluid could have made a
dramatic difference In the life of
a 5-year-old boy In Arlington.
Va.
Eileen Putman, mother of
Andy, said her son has had two
operation* because of fluid In hi*
Inner ear, and at least one of the
procedures was the result of the
long-term use of antibiotics.
That * less likely to happen
under new guidelines Issued
Thursday by federal health of­
ficials. The new recommended
treatment calls for a period of
"watchful waiting" Instead of
the Immediate use of antibiotics
for otherwise healthy children
between the ages of 1 to 3 who
have fluid In the Inner ear.
The new approach Is for a
condition called otitis media
with effusion, or OME. Experts
who drew up the guidelines
found that OME d e a n Itself In
90 percent of the cases, and they
said speech pathologist Dianne
"We saw a few peeking out recommended that doctor* and
Brewster. "Some of these lrida go from behind the curtains, but parents give nature a chance to
to Europe during the breaks. when we waved they quick cure.
Some of them go to...Sanford. closed the curtains." said teach­
Putman said that when Andy
There's a trig difference."
developed OME at age 2, antibi­
er Anna M11bum. "ft waa cute."
The teachers who have been
were the first thing out of
The teachers are excited about otics
doing the visits for several years
the doctor’s treatment hag.
are now familiar with the homes the start of the school year,
"He (the doctor) Just about
of many of their students from which gets underway on Mon­ always gives antibiotics when
day.
past years.
there Is lluld." asld Putman. "He
Calls of "th ere's Bobby's
"We can’t wait to see the does Uto be cautious."
house" and "there's Susy's kids." Mary Ann Maasoll. a third
When the condition didn't
house" were common on the grade teacher asld.
dear up. Andy underwent sur­
bus.
gery. Plastic tubes were Im­
The tour lets the teachers have planted In his eardrums to allow
Teachers said the students
were "thrilled" to see the bus a brief background look at the the fluid to drain,
rolling through their neighbor­ s t u d e n t a . H o m e v i s i t s
The tubes last only about nine
hoods. They followed the bus on throughout the year will help months and, at age 3, Andy
bicycles and on foot, waving and them know the kids and their again developed OME. Again he
parents s little better.
cheering.
was put on antibiotics. This
time, though, he had side effect*
and developed allergies to some
of the drugs that were tried.
tended.
Eventually, Putman said she ByJBAMMMAVMSA
But some consumer groups
IA
stabbing. Taylor had been and
her husband approved a Assoclatad Press Writer_______ contend the system Is not
view drtnklngand watched the movie, second
tube operation for Andy
the relationship as normal and Menaceff.
WASHINGTON - Hours after working and that cable custom­
"Just to get him off the antibiot­
federal regulatoft released a ers are not seeing significant
Although Taylor waa abused
passively submit to abuse.
survey on cable television rates, drops In their bills.
Taylor moved out of the during nla relationship with
“I doubt the average cable
they had to fix It, But the new
apartment the couple shared Qrace. Dr. Ralph Ballentlne
figures are better for consumers. customer could buy a Happy
each time he was cut or slashed, testifying for the prosecution,
but would be coaxed to return said the defendant did not fit all
Cable TV rates in the nation's Meal at McDonald’s with the
iP o g o lA
25 largest cities have actually savings they get from rate regu­
by Grace. Taylor's childhood the criterion for battered spouse
mixed with time to declined an average 8.49 percent lations." said Richard Kessel.
trauma of watching the suicide syndrome.
" I n b a t t e r e d s p o u a e kill bacteria and render the since last August. Instead of the executive director of the New
of the man he thouftt of as his
so lu tio n su ita b le for land 6,93 percent the Federal Corn- York State Consumer Protection
step fath er also shaped^ his s y n d r o m e , " B a l l o n ‘
___________ tto*' ;F©fc'a 'system
ty of
Us survey found makes it difficult to aaeess what
powerless th ey are Inclined to having n
been happening lo rates.
liman average of has
come under'ttfe Influence of an wouMfTt b s 'a give
The
FCC does not regulate all
14
Park
owner
Dr.
Jam
es
938.33
a
month
to
323.80.
The
Individual, Gutman situ a tio n ." Other wltneaaaa
system* the same way. Small
testified Taylor dished out abuse Hickman told commissioners figure la for all regulated cable systems
and those with low
last month he didn't want the systems to the 28 dries and
i generally do as wetiaa received Ufrom Otaoe.
Battered
prices don't have to move their
3,7
million
sub­
eeptage
trucks
driving
past
the
The doctor mid Taylor conrates all the way down to the
new Cracker Barrel restaurant.
scribers, or about 84 percent of new
regulated levels. And some
their-act of retaliation _____
Fryer said rarely more than the subscribers covered in the can seek
to lustily higher rates If
when tbs perpetrator la fearing, sent O nce into a HlgA ouch m five
or
six
trucks
visit
hla
survey.
they show they are produced by
such aa a sleeping aitur
lO.OOO-gallon-per-day
facility
The
decrease
coven
equip­
to the
business costs.
"Catchine the room
now. Fryer Bate be will have a ment — converters and remote legitimate
F ur the r complicating the
life In a resting position
50,000
gpd
permit
at
the
Lake
controls
—
and
cable
program
Outman said, "they (rictkna) do pcrice th ed ey al
services other than premium process Is the fact that systems
Taylor waa going to kill her. At Monroe facility.
It"
services:
like HBO. which are not may be adjusting rates baaed on
Although
the
trucks
will
pass
one or both FCC-ordered rate
Outman said at the time of tha times, both Taylor and Grace by homes, county planners re­ regulated.
The first cut, of 10 percent,
stabbing there was not physical had court tolunettona ordering c o m m e n d e d the p ro p o s a l
But the decrease may actually cute.
took effect last September and
Imminence of tfmger for Taylor the other to stay away.
because
they
are
located
In
a
u
n
d
e
r
e
s
t
i
m
a
t
e
c
o
n
s
u
m
e
r
The Jury wil begin deliberat­
but there waa a psychological
tone marked for future Industri­ savings because the category the second, 7 percent, took effect
imminence of danger from the ing after being Instructed on the al and other intensive land use*.
Indudes some regulated systems In mid May.
unarmed woman. Prior to the law.
The survey looked at 43
that have yet to adjust their
systems In 25 cities, covering 8
rates. FCC officials said.
If the Industry had continued percent or 4.5 million of the
to raise rates at an annual nation's 58 million cable sub­
pre-regulation rate of nearly 6 scribers.
The 25 cities are: New York:
percent, subscribers' average
Sanford. Brenda Willard. Hat- children.
monthly bills would have been Los Angeles; Chicago; Houston;
tisburg. Mis*., Audrey King.
Gaines Carey Hand Garden 326.89, rather than 323.80. the Philadelphia; San Diego; Detroit;
^ a J S l ^ c S i r y Hand Oarden
Dallas: Phoenix: San Antonio;
Chapel Funeral Home. Long- FCC said.
Chapel Funeral Home. Long- Lake Helen.
Wilson Etchelberger Mortuary. wood, in charge of arrange­
The FCC said It had to revise San Joae. Calif.: Baltimore: Indi­
wood. in charge of arrange*
' Inc., in charge ofarrangements.
ments.
the calculations after finding anapolis; San Francisco; Jack­
that one unidentified cable sys­ sonville, Fla.: Columbus, Ohio;
JAMBS R. B IC U I
tem had provided the wrong Milwaukee: Memphis, Tcnn.;
Jam es R. Hickey. 37. Oak
Washington. D.C.; Boston; Seat­
information.
Harry J. Harper. 33, Pern Park Avenue, Sanford, died Tuesday.
Chriatlahnna Loire RosenB hX rern
died Wednra- July 12.1894 m ar WiltietonTn.
The cable Industry and the tle; El Paso, Texas; Cleveland;
day. July 13, 1994 at Florida Born June 4, 1387 In Buffalo. quie t, infant. Lake Lotus FCC said the survey shows rate New Orleans and Nashville.
e
n
n
Hoatotsl, Altamonte. Born Oct.. N.Y., ha moved to Central Flor­ Parkway. Altamonte Springs, regulation is wonting as In­ T
10. 1930 In Orlando, he waa a ida to 1906. He waa a retired died Tuesday. July 12. 1994 at
All C hildrens Hospital. St.
lifelong Central Florida resident
.He waa Christian.
Petersburg. She was born May
Survivors Include sisters.
....o re include wife. Helen: 28.1994
In Orlando.
Wendy H aro * . OalneavlUt. ____C u t Douglas J „ US. Air
Survivors Indude parente,
P atricia Oil Iff, P lan t Cltyi Ftaroa. Onto. Scott T„ Oviedo:
.brother*. David, Jphn, both of, d d u g h t d r s . Dr. K a t h r y n Dennis and Loree Rosenquiat;
Gainesville, Douglas. Michael. Hickman. Maitland. Jennifer H. brother, Nathan. Altamonte
bothofCreedmoor. N.C.
Smith. Oviedo. Maters. Kathryn Springs; sister, Courtney, Alta­
Oramkow Funeral Homo. H. Hickman. Maitland. Lots m o n t e S p r i n g s : p a t e r n a l
F o rrest and
Sanford, in charge of
Himes, litiktoo.Coto.: brother*. grandparent*,
Rosenqulet. Pine
William. Helena, Ohio, Robert, Courtney
Island: maternal grandparents,
Hulkster Into a multlmllllonM A B T A U M STAFFORD
H o m e . L.R. and Jeanne Blackstock. By RATH
Brownwood, Texas: maternal
dollar marketing phenomenon.
great-grandmother. Emogene Asaoolatad Proas Writer_______ The trial began a week ago.
Mary AUce Stafford Harrell, U^EilemaS*
*” Ch“ *e
Browning, Houston: maternal
After taking the oath under his
42/w ; 13th Street. Sanford, died *rnm*cl"
’
UNIONDALE. N.Y. - He was
g r e a t - g r a n d m o t h e r . R u th presented as s role model to real name of Terry Bollea, Hogan
Monday. July II. 1964 a t Cen- CARMBWROSARIO
tral Florida Regional Hospital.
Carmen Roanrto. 39. 8unrise Solomon. Brownwood.
thousands of young fans, a admitted that for 13 years end­
Baldwin-Falrchlld Funeral chiseled
Born Jan. 4. 1332 to Ormige D r i v e . C a e e e l b e r r y . d i e d
300-pound wrestler who ing to 1969, he Injected and
City, she was a lifelong resident Wednesday. July 15.-.1394 at Home. Semoran/Forest City urged the kids to "eat their swallowed steroids.
T he federal go v e rn m e n t
of Central Ptertda. She waa a her residence. Bora Ju|y 13. Chapel. In charge of arrange­ vitamins and aay their prayers.''
hom em aker. She was Pen- I9M to P u ^ ^ e h e m o r o d
ments.
But Hulk Hogan ate more than banned steroids In 1991 for all
to Central Florida to 1979. She
hla vitamins — he also took but therapeutic uses. They can
Survivors include husband. was a homemaker, tow*belonged
steroids.
And, he says, most of dam age the liver, kidneys,
Herman H- Walletrom. 90, the World Wrestling Federation testicle*, heart and bones.
Robert: sons. Marion O. Night. to the Si. Auguttoe Catholic
H ulk m a in ta in e d that
Korea. Timothy. Sanford: Church where Mw served a* a Seminote Ave.. Lake Mary, died also was chemically enhanced.
McMahan
never ordered him to
daughtera. Alice Fratanahla member of the Parrish Council, Thursday, July 14. 1994 at
in a courtroom packed with
Stafford. Sabrina Stafford. Rob- as a CuraiUists. M tn ^T of the Central Florida Regional Hospi­ autograph hounds and teen­ take steroids, but he testified
Eucharist, and U ¥ H *r of the tal. He waa barn July 6, 1904 in agers. Hogan admitted tt for the that he sometimes ordered them
lick.
New York City. He waa a wat­
Ume Thursday: "1 used through McMahon's personal
Survivors include husband. chmaker. He waa Protestant. He first
secretary at the WWF*s Stam­
brothcra. Eddie Stafford. Orange
steroids
to get big."
Cky. Freddie, angary B. Staf­ Augustin: daughters, Nllsa belonged to the Masonic Lodge
In the past, Hogan sskl he had ford. Conn., headquarters.
“
" Calif., In New Jeraey.
"! would go by the office and
ford. both of DeLsndi Albert
only used steroids to treat Usu­
pick up the steroids Along with
Survivors include etepaon, ries.
Otbaon, Daytona Beach. Vendul
Calif, i broker. Anthony Mon- James C. Crewe. Lake Mary:
Hogan was called by the pro­ my paycheck and Ian mall.” said
tanea; sisters.
alatcra. Francos Quinones, stepdaughters. Mary Catherine, secution and testified under Im­ Hogan, who now appears on the
Reginald Stafford, both of San- tones:
Winter Park. Marta Tompkins, Tennessee, Betty Jane Burch. munity to the steroid conspiracy syndicated television show
fori; MM
Casselberry, Jovita Marrero, M l r l m a n s e v e r a l s t e p - case
against WWF head Vine* "Thunder In Paradise."
Puerto Btoo, Jtotote DeHarts.
McMahon,
hla former boas and
McMahon faces up to 11 years
New Yarii Cky. Barnard! Otero
the
man
who
transformed
the
to
prison If convicted.
Now York: two grand- ford, In charge of arrangements.
DUooya Matoor. both of
1m Ifo k s

Tour

ics."
Doctor*, said Putman, "make
It seem like the surgery Is no big
deal, but It Is a big deal for kid*
and for parents. It requires a
general anesthetic and not many
parents enjoy seeing their child
go under."
The guidelines also will
change the thinking of many
pediatricians, says Dr. Fuad
Beroody, an assistant professor
at Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine in Baltimore.
Beroody said he will not
abandon antibiotics, but will
probably wait at least two
months to aee If his patients
become free of OME.
R ese arch leadi ng to the
guidelines found that OME Is the
reason for 6 million to 8 million
doctors' visits annually. About
650,000 children annually un­
dergo the drainage tube Inser­
tion. making It the moat com­
mon surgery on young children.
OME Involves a buildup of
fluid behind the ear drum In a
child who has no other health
problem, tt la different from
acute otitis media, an inner ear
Infection that can cause severe
pain and la generally treated
aggressively.
I f allowed to continue for
many months, OME can reduce
the heating of children s t an age
when they are learning to speak.
For this reason, the condition
has been treated aggressively.
But Dr. Alfred Berg, a co-

After FC C goofs,
survey still finds
lower cable rates

Debate

Route

Terry Bollea admits
steroids helped
make him Hulk

�iwieitwWewOwlrnmi

W IN TfR PARK LAND COM­
PANY, PO*T O F F IC I BOX A
W IN T IR FARR, F L StTH.

AWjcMMnlfrnwSJmmtnrn
STnmSo'X!&gt;r^ o*wax« r

FROM TN « FLORIDAN AO
U IF IR via O NI IX IITIN O
W ILL Mr CITRUS* M r* I M
k t m In Sam*** C m ly Red*
ad In NM M U OF S I M OF IW
ll OF N R it SaeWan V,

(RnMMCMrt WN lIR Nr

K M iy A D . i m m i W w i i K i
CM* antlttadi Flrtt FlarMa

il'i1
1
.

MAIN STRIRT
COMPANttU*

SBSttL

410 8Mvtr Late Road
8«nford, FL 38739

(407) 324-80FA (7032)

CXir Profeiitonal Ad Mpm entrtmi
WIHBe HappyTo AmM YouIn Any
OfYour aitUOed or Cttptoy
A o v e n iiin g iyM o i *

�9 f r r F f f f f

S a n fo rd ' H e r a ld

IN

UMlil W M B B

1

Ju ly

F R ID A Y

15,

1994

Successful homecoming

BRIEF

Sanford contributes run, save in sweep of ‘old team’
No-T«p at Bowl Amarlea

WINTER PARK — Even though It was just a
summer league game, Dwayne Sanford enjoyed a
successful return to Lake Howell High School
Thursday night as a member of the Lake Mary
Mudcats.
’
Scoring a critical run In the first game and
pitching IV* perfect Innings or relief In the
second. Sanford helped the Mudcats sweep the
Bucks 3-2 and 4-2 In NABF Pat Torre League
action.
One of the top hitters on the Lake Howell
varsity team last spring. Sanford will spend hts
senior year at Lake Mary.
In the first game, the two teams were tied 1-1
through six Innings before Lake Mary took the
lead by scoring two runs on an Infield error In the
top of the seventh. Luis Rivera gave up a run In
the home half of the seventh but was able to
close out the contest and notch the complete-

SANFORD — Bowl Amerlca-Stnford will
conduct Ita weekly No-Tap Tournament this
evening beginning at 9:30 p.m.
Strikes are awarded when a bowler knocks
down nine or 10 pins. Play Is handicapped as
following: bowlers with avenges under 140
begin each game with strikes In the first three
frames: 140-159, strikes In the first two frames:
100-179. a strike In the first frame: 180 and
over, no handicap strikes.
All players bowl three games of qualifying, the
top 50 percent bowling a fourth game to decide
the cash winners (hopefully down to six places).
Including the top three bowlers who will
compete in a TV-style roll-off for the top money.
The entry fee la 015.
Two strlkepots also will be awarded during
the course of the evening.
For more Information, call 323-7542.

I lire fHiry
Li ImHawaii
Rivera and
Johnson. So
HR—Nano.

M UOCATt 1. BUCKS I

•M «H I - ) | |
tee im i - i « t
Johnson and OKI. WR - Rivera. LR Nona. IB —Lake Hassell. Lemleui. IB —None.

game victory.
Rivera, who allowed two runs (one earned) on
four hits while striking out six without Issuing a
walk, came out on top In a pitchers' duel with
Lake Howell ace Mike Johnson, who gave up
three runs (one earned) on three hits.
Jason Yero led the Mudcats with a single and a
run scored. Jay Reynolds and Mike Buky each
hit a single. Nick Boss and Sanford each scored a
run. Rene Perex contributed an RBI.
For Lake Howell. Lemleux doubled and scored
a run. Matt Houston hit a single and scored a
run. Bowen and Johnson each hit a single.
Buky's two-run single In the third Inning of the

USoManr
LakeNess
Patter).
Nona HR—

MUOCATt4.SUCKI I
’
•at iti i — 4 i 4
•44 N4 4 - ! I S
(4) and Vara, la w and Old. WR- Oafforl. LR
- laniard Hat). IB - Lake Hassell, Crw. IS Racsrdi - LakeMary IM, II I Tans Laar*.

second game put starting pitcher Rob OafTert and
the Mudcats ahead to stay. But OafTert ran Into
some problems and was lifted In favor of Sanford
with two outs in the bottom of the sixth. Sanford
retired all four batters he faced, striking out two
and getting the other two to pop up.
Perex added a single and an RBI to the Mudcat
attack. Yero also hit a single. Rivera. Reynolds,
Robert Vessey, and Carey Hobbs each scored a
run. Scott Bryan had an RBI.
OafTert worked 54* Innings to earn the win,
surrendering tiro runs (both earned) on five hits.
He struck out four and walked one.

SYFA registration avallabls
SANFORD - The Sanford Youth Football
Association will be registering boys and girls for
Its football and cheerleading programs every
Saturday through August 6 at the lot on U.S.
17-92 across from the Sanford Middle School.
Registration will be available between 10 a;m.
and 2 p.m. each Saturday. Boys and girls
between the ages or 7 and 15 are eligible.
For details, call Tommie Thompson, 321­
2012.

A L IT O R

Qlrit’ softball clinic

m

#

- /liuf
Tfci'i

SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation &amp; Parka
Department announces a weekly softball clinic
open to girls ages eight to 16 on Saturdays from
through August 6 from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at
Lakeside Field in Fort Mellon Park.
.
This Instructional program will focus on the
fundamentals of softball such as fielding,
batting and pitching. Cost Is 610.
For more Information, call 330-5697.

S T A T E T O U R H A M E N T8

PONY Broncos

B a b e R u th

No-hitter
advances
Seminole

Late night
yields win
for L’wood

■yMAMNMTN

Herald Sports Writer

Herald 8ports

LONQWOOD — Forgive the
Longwood All-Stars If they're a little
bleary-eyed today. *
♦ When a torrential thunderstorm
moved through the Longwood arcs
at 6 p.m. Thursday. Longwood'a
opening game in the Babe Ruth
Baseball Bambino Mqjor A Bute
Tournament at Candyiand Park had
to be pushed back to a 9 p.m. start.
It was after I I p.m. before the
locals walked off the field with an
B-2 victory over the Scott Corrigan
All-Stars from Cfeabu... mw,
.
Now tbs Longwood All Stars have
to turn around slid play South

FIVE POINTS - Thank goodness
fora good grounds crew.
Most people who were at the
Seminole PONY Baseball Complex
i t 6 p.m. Thursday afternoon prob­
ably never expected to see a game
played after a severe thunderstorm
dumped a torrent of rain and
flooded the field.
But hard work — and a lot of
Sped I-Dry — by the volunteer
grounds crew got the field playable
by 1p.m .. the first game of t h e .

Magic rsitass ttiraa
ORLANDO — The Orlando Magic released
three players from camp for free agents and
rookie* Wcdpcaday,
Bryan Edward#, a 6-foot-3 guard who plaited
with the U SB bY Connecticut Sky Hawks:
Anthony Reed, a 6-foot-9 forward’who played In
' “
and Joey. WHght. a e-root,3
It

L f r J iJ K S C 1

-1
3
■iWj
Mark
of the Arena I
Duper. SB, was released by the Dolphins prior
to last araeon. then waived last month by the
• expansion Shreveport Pirates of the Canadian
Football League after being arrested on federal

B'

Panther's Fltapatrtck irrsstsd
ISLAMORADA - Florida Panthers
Mark Fitzpatrick was arrested after his pregnant
wife told deputies he kicked, grabbed and
shoved her during an argument.
He was charged with aggravated domestic
battery, deputies aald. He spent the night In jail
and was released after posting 115.000 bond.
•
t-V-‘“

3a

Martina hold off Bravaa

$

ATLANTA - The Florida Marlins got to Steve
Avery for four runs in the first Inning and held
off the slumping Atlanta Braves 5-3 Thursday
night for thtir fourth consecutive victory.
jw lth
run of the season and Benito
It with a tsro-run homer off
i seventh of the year.

QlanvHIo rallloa OCubt

•

MEMPHIS. Tenn. - Doug Olanvllle broke a
2-2 tie with a three-run double In the ninth
tuning u tty- Orlando Cubs beat the Memphis
Chicks 6-2 Thursday In the Southern League.
Two Walks by loser Rod Myers (2-1) and an
error filled the bases for Olanvllle.

HuntavlIJo dumps Sunt
HUNTSVILLE. Ala. - Huntsville pitcher Don
Wengert limited Jacksonville toooe run on four
hits over seven Innings as the Stars beat the
Buna 7-2 Thursday In Southern League action.
Chris WUger had a solo home run In the
second Inning for the Buna.

|&gt;c,»
it .

□7:30 p.m. — WIRB56. WTBS. Florida Marlins
at Atlanta Braves. (L)
—-

i

'

and buttt the load to 4-0 In the third
Inning and held on for a 6 -' ‘ '
over the Hialeah Athletic
tioo All-Stars.
Despite not getting started
almoet 10:30 p.m. ablg
an I1*"** for the nightcap between
the host Seminole Pony All-8tars
and the Lake Lytal All-Stars from
West Palm Beach.
This game was all Seminole as
they sent the fans home early,
relatively speaking, and happy with
a 12-0 victory in 4V*-lnnlngs.
Even though Seminole put a lot of
runs On the board. It was the
pitching of Paul Lubrano and Brad
Hoffer that was the real highlight as
the duo combined on a no-hltter.
Lubrano worked the first four
Innings, striking out six and walk­
ing three, to culm the win, while
Hoffer hurled the fifth Inning,
striking out two.
The Seminole offense scored three
runs in the first inning, then put a
six spot on the board In the second
Inning to put the game out of reach.
The winners added three more runs
In the third inning.
Pacing *&gt;«• Seminole
wore
Justin Hawarah (2-for-3, two runs.

In a oama Interrupted by a two-hour rain daisy. Jeffrey Marquez and the
Hialeah Athletic Association All-Stars dropped a 6-4 decision to the
Gainesville 8.O.C.K. All-Stars In the PONY Bronco stale tournament.
run, three RBI). Jonah Shipley
(single, run. RBI). Chris Osse
BSOMCOSTATSTOOaSAMXNT
St SSMINOLBRONVBASSBALLCOMRtSX
(single, three runs), Steve Pace
RIVS ROINTS
(1-for-l), Jeremy Meyers (RBI) and
SSMINOLB1*. LANSLYTAL*
LaSaLrNa
MS « - S i ?
Evan Btarcher (run).
SawMatO
Ml Si - II M •
Today at the Five Point Complex,
MawtaNa. Oiioaow (1), liana U), Ivan. II) ani
Dlllan, Marian (1). LuSrana. Honor (S) an* Hialeah and Lake Lytal will meet In
HawsraR. Rata (I). WR — LUrana. LR — an elimination game at 5:30 p.m.,
MantaMs. Sava -—none. IS ™none. IS none.
with Seminole and Gainesville
HR—lonMnoN, Correa.
squaring off In the winner's bracket
two RBI), Eric SchmooT^TTo^"
game at 8 p.m. The double elimina­
tion tournament will continue Sat­
run. three RBI). Lubrano (2-for-3.
urday and Sunday, If necessary.
three runs). Tony Carrao (home run.

Sfcfc1- .

■Lake City 3-2 and
HlUs outscored the team
San lo u d Athletic
Jacksonville, 4-2.
In the other evenk _
and Perry came tuck after the
rain-delay with the score tied at 0-0
In the fifth Inning. The score was
still 0-0 after the regulation six
Innings, but In the top of the
seventh Miami exploded for six runs
and a SO victory.
In other matchups today. Key­
stone Heights played Flagler at 9
a.m. and Forest HUla (seed Boca
Raton at 11 a.m. In winner's
bracket action and Perry will play
8an Soucl in a loser's bracket game
at 3 p.m.
□I
STATSTOWBNAMSNT
•*CANOVLAMSRAM. L0N0M000
lawmeAaaiaANi
MS S S - S S 4
Ml M l- • 4 4
(S. Ratar* (I) art Caviar.
_
X. Sana 14) an* WHitarvilt. WR Ratataiaki. LR—OrNwm. Sava —non*. (S —
ScMt Corrigan, Harr*; I wgninK. MWIIto. Kg

gorton. M — Langwaa*. Oravao.

First U.S. World Cup capped with dream finale
• Sports Writer
PASADENA. Calif. - The United
States' first World Cup will climax
with a truly grand finale, a match of
By the time afternoon shadows
begin to drift over the Rose Bowl on
Sunday, either Brazilians or Italians
can brag that theirs is the only
nation to win the World Cup four
times
Italian star Roberto Baggio, who
seems determined to play despite a
slight hamstring pull. said. “To play
In the final la a dream. To play
Brasil for the World Cup la the
la the best of all possible
------ - aald Pete, who ted Brazil to
all three of tta world titles, tbe last In
1970. “These are two great soccer
powers seeking to be the first
four-time World Cup champion."
T b e u p s t a r t s of t h e 1994
tournament — the Romanians.
Saudi Arabians, Americans — are
Anal, which
would b a v e b e e n applauded' by
and met by
yawns by
averted

when Brasil beat Sweden 1-0 and
Italy d ow ne d Bulgaria 2-1 In
Wednesday's semifinals.
Sweeten and Bulgaria will meet,
but In the third-place game on
Saturday at the Roar Bowl.
That leaves Sunday to Brasil,
which flaunts its flamboyant, relent­
lessly attacking style, and Italy,
which favors the more defined,
disciplined technique common to
Europe.
’
•
* ‘T h is Is a battle of big dogs.**
Brazilian midfielder Mazlnho said of
the match of teams that account for
six of the previous 14 World Cup
The gam e could be relatively
high-scoring, since both teams are

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

expected to press the attack, rather
than lay back on defense as so
many of their outmanned oppo­
nents have done during this World
Cup.
"We want to play the game to
win. and have the other team play
to w i n . " Brasilian midfielder
Jorglnho
"Italy
Italy Ifeels as good as Brazil, and
1“ Italian
coach
will play for victory/’
*
Arrigo
_ Sacchi said. We think we
can control their Impressive offense.
But there is a major difference
between strategy and Ita a c ­
complishment on the field. Cer­
tainly it will be another exhausting
game for us."
Baggio's Injury could spoil what
shapes up as a match of two of the
w orld's finest players and top
scorers In the tournament: be and
Brasil's Romario each have five
goals, one behind Hristo Stotchkov
of Bulgaria and Oleg Balenko of
Baggio, who scored five of Italy's
eight goals In the competition, la a
questionable starter, doctors sold.
“At the moment his chances to
play are 50 percent. He will be
rested for 48 hours. We hope for a
positive solution." Dr. Andrea Fer-

retU said Thursday.
Sacchi said. “We risk to lose
Roberto In the moment we had Just
recovered him. In the moment he
had reached bis peak condition.''
Olanfrsnco Zola, who has served a
two-game suspension, likely would
start If Bsggo can't.
The Italians will be without top
defender Alessandro Costacurta.
who was suspended after getting his
s e c o n d yellow c a r d a g a i n s t
Bulgaria, and Mauro Taaaotti Is also
Ineligible.
Brazil will be missing defender
Leonardo, who drew a four-game
suspension for elbowing Tab Ramos
In the game against the United
States.
Unlike Brasil, which has lived up
to ita favorite's role throughout the
tournament. Italy struggled early
and barely survived the earlier
rounds. Dtno Baggio carried the
team In the first round, and Rob­
erto, who la no relation, came to life
In the three latest games.
“A week ago. or two weeks ago. It
did not look good for Italy." captain
Paolo Makilnl aald. "But* we have
had perseverance aqd we have had
dedication, and now are are through
to the final."

A R E A , R E A D T H E S A N F O R D H E R A LD D A ILY

r*— ■

i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Friday. July 18. 1 W

S T A T S

&amp; S TA N D IN G S

Tim Ralnts Is • Sanford natlvs and Samlnola High School
graduate now playing for th t Chicago White Sox. Hla state are
for the 19S4 season In the first column, personal-bast season
totals In the second column and current career totals
(Including ISM games) In the third column.
Raines started the second half oMhe season on fire, going
3-for*4 Thursday with a run, two RSI, and his 10th stolen base
of the season to help the White Sox top Cleveland 6-3 and
reclaim first place In the American League Central Division.

O I M l ttJO: f 14-11 M.tti T 14-MI SOIJ i t
O D IM ISM O
TM rdract— m w &gt;Di It.io
I Bob'* Rival
0.40 4J0 S.40
I ARC#* W ill KM
I d MO
1 Summ Dam*
MS
a ( m i n o t , p (M i atJOi t n + i , m
oithtl 41.40 ,
Fourtkraca— 1J00» C: tt.lt
1Lerl't Arid*
14JO MO 44D
tOmnl Motoor
4JO 140
S Buck'i Lucky
4J0
Q 1(4) SM I: P (1AM) IMOi F (AIM )
S .IO tTd -M IttM O i (lodaaortllJtOJO
FMRraco — M00i 0 : 1144
4 Bob'* Boyta
440 1.40 400
1 Wording s*ng
140 140
SBucklklnOal
440
O ( M l MJOi F (441 M l.Hi T (444) 10140
BM RrM a— IJOOj C: 11.17
1Dery’i El Dorado
M 0 140 t.40
0 tmoklnf ttwll
440 M0
OBrttulWMt
M0
O ( M l MJOt F ( M l IM t i T (144) 7M0i
(14-1,10(1) SMJO
Sovtotk row -1444: OiH.17
1 Billy OrandW40 MO 4J0
STatkNoNtnotnw
M 0 140
SRaiMdMan
440
O (M l EMOt R (94) OOJOt T (S44) NOJOt
1(1111) MIAS
SNRAAHM— M O O tB UIJI
4 M‘« Fancy Nancy
1040 140 140
IBlttytCauBOr
M0 M0
iTH JIfS a w
. 440
O (4-1) OOJOt R (4-1) M JO t T (44-1)
1 JH J0 V.
NkRBreeo-MOOiAiM.il
STrueAmfeor
7J0 440 M 0
lOurDlemendBey
4JO 440
lINAShamo
440
Q (M l 10401 R (1-1) 10.101 T (V M 1 14*4*)
00(4-7 A RAH) IIL N iO O (4-1A l-AMI 10040
ion race — L4Mi C: 1141
llt t t * Grand
040 140 M0
7 I'm 74*Saint
440 M 0
I Omni Not Ak*
, M0
O (1-1) IMOt R (M l *0.00) T l ) H 00
tid M ) 4440
INkrpca — L4I0« Bt M40
7RayABundN
1M 0 M 0 M 0
1 C Audroyt Salty
IM S M 0
IT n a lh R i
I4B
O (0-7) IMG) P (7-0 47401 T (7-04) OOOJOl
(CamwimrlAMAM
t lllr o a o -U M i AiM.70
I KodlpUmar
1140 M i 140
IRayAHtntlan
M 0 &gt;40

SASKSALL
CLIV1LAND IN D IA N S - CMImoG Larry
Cation. pttdwr, of! walvon from lt » Min
nototaTwMa.
KANSAS CITY R O YAU - RtWaiaG HUM#
Brook*, outflow*. Adlvatod XoHfl Mill*.
WfloMor, and Wally Joynar. first bowman,
from tha *#• and Uday dliablad Milt,
rotpocllvoly. DttlfnoM Nolion Sonlovonl*,
eateflof, tor attlgnmofO.
MINNESOTA YW IM - RwalWd Mika
TrombWy. pH«•**- Iran Salt Lak# City ol fh*
Poelflc CaatlLaaow.
NSW YORK YANKS S I - Adlvatod Dan

TOSAV
AUTO SAC)NS

la.m.— SINN. ICO AS, Sa|a M
aa.m. — SINN. Trw VMM Oft-Raod tori**

y tir n u

7:JO p.m. - WIRB M. WTSI» Florida
Marllnt at Atlanta Srawt. ID
7:M p.m. - WON, Cfrkasa Cafe* at
Cincinnati Rad*. ( D

y.io pm. — WON, ion Olopt Radrot at
Now York Matt, ID
lo x i we
9 p.m. - ESPN. Junior RlywolgMt:
Michaol Carbalil vt. Jatut Camacho, ID
»:10p m.-IUN,WbrMCuypof Booing
c v a iw e
1 :» p.m. - SINN, tout do Prone*
POOTBAU.
7:10 p.m. - SUN. Anm* lotfM : Chorloflo
Hog* at Orlando FrodaNr*. ID
OOLF
» am., 4 p.m.. 7:30 am. — EIFN. Smith
Opon, tocond round, (u
4 p.m., 11:10 am.. 1 am. — KIN. LROA,
BIf Appl* Clattlc. (LI
TSW tll
I p.m. - I SAN. Davit Cup: USA vtJ

Doubles
T r lp li o

aaaaaatt

Homo mns.

UalKaalxwAo
IWiftSTIenw

i

SATURDAY
AUTO M O N O

II am. - SUN. Foane Sportsman 1M
1:0Spm. - TBS. ARCA IN. (LI
1:10p m .— THN, Owdortnek SW

;I
j

:I
!

5p m .-T N N , NASCAR Ford CrodM NO I
7p.m. — SUN,FormilallStf*rCup
.I
• pm., 1 am . - SUN. ASA/AC Ortff

CNaUonfoStdot

|
BASSSALL
■J
0 p.m. - WFTV A Florida Marllnt if
Atlanta Brow*. (L) ■
?
CYCUNS

1

1pm. - i»F N . Rta&lt;m attar ShoWoul j l
l:M pm .-E SFN ,Ta u rd t Franco
S
1:30 am. - ISAM. NOR BA. Nattanfl
OwmpNntMp Sadat
g
FOOTBALL
;
S p.m. — ESPN. Arona FaalfealII
MHwaukao at Mattad wtafrt. I LI
j

Calvin Janot, running bock, and Autlln
Rabbin*, dotarwlv* tackI*.
MINN BIOTA VIKINGS - Plocod Roborl
Smith and Amp La*, running bock*, and
Frank Reudrvavi. dtfrntlv* lackl*. an the
phytlcally-unablo-loporlorm 11*1. tlpnad
Dowoyn* Woihingfon. comorbeck. to a
fouryoor contract. l lgwd Al Naga, dtNnaivO
on*, to a onoyoar contract.
NOW V M M GIANTS - Signed Jtrvl*
William*. 4*t*ty: Brad Dolulio. placokkkocj
W illie Seaman, carnerbacki Kenyan
Ratheed. fullback: Carey W ldm ar.

4pm. — WOTO-AM1S4#), Oolltolk
M
5 p.m. - WOT AM (MM, Rat W IM A H
thaw
*
■j :'*p.m. — WOTO-AM 1140). ThoRraaoBMB

Or™ IWiWw^^N

W pm . - WWNI-AM ( M l , F N r t M i B B j
M p m !Tonight

WWZNAM (1441). (part* P d j

SATURDAY
BASSSALL
I
7:1S pm . - WWZNAM (MM), RNrtda
Marlin* at Atlanta Srawa
SO*a-Farurta
M S 04S
t RHe-lnriguo
Ml
S ( I t ) 4M*t R (AG) IGJG* ▼ (!+*) SSMG
RaafSiRIRW
7Kkorda
( M l A J i 44S
SRnrlgu*
U S 440
SSrfctile
Ml
a (AM S440: R (74) NGJOt T (7-R4) M M 0
RDM l i t
SRareoOOmota
H40 M l 140
40ta-Jo*a
OJO *J0
i c *ttAfutrro
440
Q («4 IM 4 lt RCM )44S40tT(R H)IM 40

ICalo-OottU
lOta-Chimola
s Rardt-lnrlgu*

*M % J I

M0
MO

140
140
440

AMNmukaa*
ToaaH.TWt
BaaNntOM
saMawraA
Now Verb IS
DgSrMHWM
City (S o riM
pm .
Clovoland
(McDwaaN 7-f
MllwGGbGO
( Brtckwn 17),
11).0:10 p m .
S*mmaro &lt;
(U N o rlckin.

dytand Parts.
Loofwopd got off so a super start so walks lo
Ricardo Montalvo and Kevin bldllo and hit better
In Matt Main loaded the bases. Chita Westervelt
singled In the Diet ran and Jeff Epperson doubled
In two more. Longwood finished the Inning with
live rune and the rout wae on.
Longwood added two more runs in the second
Inning to build a 7-0 lead, before Daniel Harris
doubled In s pair of runs Scott Corrigan In the

NHMoaSfeittAS
TNIRB PLACE

M s fra ss: Mon., W s d , &gt; 8 d t 1 p m
MgfhOy *17:30 pm

RBI). Hdllko (double, two rune). Jeff Halbeft
(■ingle, tiro RBQ. Main (two rune) and Montalvo
(run).
Doing tbo hitting for Scott Garrtgsn were Hsrrte
(double, taro RB). Bemie Rosario (single, ruit).
Jordan Csyior. Chase Heam and Scan Peters (one
single each) and Ryan Dougherty (run).

■ single and an RBI Nttee and
Uamie each hMa single- HsuMor
scored one run.

(Lyman), 44). ttenbeun
to win the nightcap. B-3.
Bryan Bchumaker wn

Mudcata a th r c iis m e win

three-run home run earlier In (he

ment next weekend,

MJ.

““i

�Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida -

Friday, Ju ly 15. 1094 - SB

People
Save resources, $$$, enviroment
***•)•
Wheels has an urgent need for volunteer driven In
Sanford. It takes only one hour, once a week to fill a meal route.
To volunteer, or for more Information, please contact Lynda
8emlnole County better Living for Seniors, Inc. at
S31«1631.

Play ball!
The annual Baseball Benefit for children, dedicated to the
memory of Nicholas Tollman, will be held Sunday, July 17 at
^^SJanford Memorial Stadium, Mellonvllle Ave., Sanford.
The game, sponsored by the City of Ssnford and Deltona
Little League, begins at 3 p.m. and features the New Symma
All Stars and the DeLand Athletics. There la a 82.80 admission
charge. Food and door prizes are avallble.
Nicholas Tallman passed away on June 30 awaiting a heart
transplant This event at the stadium la in support of the
community effort to provide the funding to defray the hospital
and related medical costa incured by his family.

W lnltr Springs A.A.R.P. insets
The A.A.R.P. Winter Springs Chapter *4949 will meet
Monday, July 18 at 1&gt;30 p.m. at the Winter Spring Senior
Center. 400 N. Bdgemon Ave. There will be a speaker from
Better Living for Seniors of Seminole County.
Volunteers are requested to donate to the chapter's new
group blood reserve account with the Central Florida Blood
Bank. For details, call Marian Dolin at 327-7334.

Po#f•to talk vtrM
First Florida Poets meet at 10 a.m. every Monday at the
Deland Public Library. Interested poets are welcome.
For more Information, please call Bob Shelford, 904-7380416, or Virginia Martin, 904-778-8900.

8anford Rotarfans to maat
Rotary Club of Sanford meets every Monday at noon, at the
Sanford Chamber of Commerce building.

Bridga club maata avary Monday
Lake Mary Seniors Invite anyone 88 yean or older to play
party bridge. The Party Bridge Club meets every Monday
between 1-3 p.m. at the Lake Mary Senior Center at the Old
City Hall, 188 N. Country Club Road.

Cancar support group moots
Support. Hope and Recovery, 8.H.A.R., meets every Monday
afternoon at 8 p.m. at Central Florida Regional Hospital in the
far corner of the dining room. This la a self help support group
for all cancer survtvore. whether In treatment now or finished
with i t Call 32441737 o r322-7788 for more Information.

Energy means more than electricity for
our home* and businesses or gasoline for
our cars. While energy fuels our economy, U
also shapes our environment. Smog, global
climate change, add rain, oil spills, mine
spot), nuclear waste, and respiratory health
problems are externalities associated with
energy use that are not paid for in the price
of energy purchased.
The USA with Just five percent of the
world's population, uses nearly 25 percent
of the world's energy. On average, each
person uses 8.4 gallons of motor fuel every
week. Heating", cooling and lighting our
homes cost us 8170 billion In 1992. Sixteen
percent of a household's energy use Is for
refrigeration.
In Florida, energy consumption doubled
between 1970 and 1990. Our 28 percent of

BARBARA
H U G H ES/
GREGG
this energy was used In residences, 43
percent for transportation, 19.6 percent In
commercial enterprises, and 8.3 percent for
Industry. This Increase In energy use
reflects a population growth of over 6
million people and an Increase In tourism.
Presently, Florida hosts more than 40

million visitors annually. During this same
time period, the annual per capita monetary
outlay for energy in constant dollars (1982)
Increased from 8878 to • 1187.
Fortunately, energy efficient technology
and life choices are available that can cut
energy use by one-third and Improve
environmental quality without sacrificing
lifestyle. These Involve Informed energy
resource choices, the use of alternative
fuels, dean burning fuels, improved build­
ing materials ana technologies, energy
efficient lighting fixtures, and the purchase

Confront problem,
make appointment
DEAR MARYi I'm still reeling
and I don't know whether I need
advice or Just to get this "off my
cheat." My daughter (age 18) has
been under terrible stress this
year. Her grades started falling
in ninth grade so I decided she'd
be better off in private school. It
was probably a mistake to make
her go to private school because
she’s obviously been miserable
and started taking tranquilizers
Just to cope. I know she was
taking Vallum because I found a
bottle under her mattress.
But that's not the worst part. 1
did the "unpardonable" and
opened her diary this morning,
hoping to find out what's been
bugging her. Here's what she
wrote about her date last Satur­
day] "He always wants us to
make It after we snort coke. I'm
afraid I'll get pregnant at this
rate."
My daughter looks so young
and Innocent it’s hard to believe
she's ever done anything wrong
In her Ufe. I can't confess th a t!
read her diary. I'm frantic —
what should Ido?

may use It Just to get high. Now
you've got to decide what you
are going to do about it. With no
Justification, explanations, o r excuses, klmply tell her what
you've learned and outline what
you're going to do about It. Right
now, the only thing you can
insist on is that she get drug
treatment. Be sure you have
your game plan Intact before you
open the conversation. Call the
doctor and make an appoint­
ment or get the treatment center
on line. When you tell her what
la going to happen she will
probably react in one at two
ways. She may become passive
and 'submit with no rel i a nce,
or she may explode , with rags.
Either way. Just keep firm about
the appointment add deflect any
fireworks aa calmly as possible.

jssrasrarassaas
potntment set up In advance.
_____ * ______m ____________ s a -

The feet that your daughter uaee
Vallum d o e sn 't necessarily
mean she's under stress - she

V ‘-ttOUMAJHOtft

• ‘ ________

It-Your
well as ,
stake. Yi

Big locks ;eep Iittie r
a o vio E

i
bottles, and I recently brought
om home that had the skull and
crombooes. My 3-year-old took
___I___L. .-H mmlA "fUi

*
ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

don't want tt.
A very good friend told me of a
she had read In the
Dear Abby column, that guests
o c n t r l b u t e l e t t e r s of r e ­
membrance to be placed in an
album Instead of gifts.

**

8cSAVE BIC

yffT A C T NOW

Inductest 1 pair dally w mt soft contact lenm •Exam.
3
siii
. Dr. Pamela H tlpla, O.D., CartUUd Optometrist

BUCKS $$$ ON LEGAL FEES!

Saturday IQ a m

tending to write this thank-you
Uar since 1988 - the year my
bttngs and I had a reception to
mor our parents on their 80th
adding anniversary.
Neither we. nor our parents.
t t-N A N D M tA K L ) O N IU H N U K&lt; *t&gt;iQ

'America'* tflpaf AUern*Uv**™

301 South MIIwbb S t
Longwood, Florida 32750

�iwi^ewIMweiieod
Sunday
Ma*

I
Mtoel

10:17-31

| W orth*
Vt Church
IWorth*
orW ttttrvteo

M

hM «
id i .

1049am
t o t s am
100 pm
tOOpm
700 pm

Tuaaday
Mark

12:28-34

John

13:1*20
Thursday

h«|w

U kH
jonn

010am
1000am

13:31-35

9»ph

700pm
700pm

woi MaaamauMChuncH
o t im iiu s y

1NW .W SM Aw.LJla Mary
r . t f . Hawn*
Patlor
m h h rtrtrU tM In g
tita m
arcTlOchOM
t41am
mlng W orth*
1100am
jthQrc**)
tOQpm
d. Choir Prtcltc*
700pm
jraToK h Choir
IX p m

In the game of golf, it isn't enough to aim a small ball toward an only slightly larger hole
so far down the fairway it can barely be seen, and expect to Bink it with one strike o f the
d u b . No, that’s not challenging enough for the golfer. Add some "hazard s'\.,santl traps,
lakes. tiees...aoything to get In the way. Now, that’s really challenging.
Life is really challenging. When you begin to think it’s almost manageable, something
geu in the way. How will you cope? Use the golfer's strategy...
Assuming a poaitive posture, keep your eyes focused ahead as
you visualize your “bole in one”. Attempt to avoid the hazards.
use the right equipment, and remember the rules. . .j
Warship this Sabbath. You will find a positive attitude and the
rules for success. Life's path may not be a telrway, but our
chances of winning improve if we live it God's way.

t

T W JMifm.
^ T^ i l i l l

To Uet Your Church Ssrvlcns
On This Pago Contact The
Advertising Dtp*. 322-2611

m u m v r T B U jo N

SUE. Id8t. •8u&amp;fd
3 3 1 -8 0 8 0
D O N 'S G L A S S
* M IR R O R
X 0 S .U im A V l.8 M m D

A Q EN CY
114N,PartAvi, Sanford

liM n lh j^

�H I

1I u
I
ji

R a n fn rri MofalM

H a n f o rd . F lo r id a - F rid a y . J u l v 15

1D0i .

mm

Rise Upl Sanford Celebration
Revival M l (or FreedomAssembly
Sanford - Freedom Assembly of Ood.290O 8. Orlando Drive
(Old Zayre Plata ).Sanford, will host a citywide crusade and
revival. The event will take place July 18-17, at 7:30 p.m. The
speaker will be Pastor Sam Hlnn. the brother of Benny Hlnn.
For Information call 323*8999.

Qosptl Sing planned
Sanford • Calvary Christian Center. 800*010 West 4th Street
(Comer of 4th and Laurel Avenue), Sanford, will present a
Saturday Night Oospel Sing. The program will feature the
Sweet Annolnted Singers. This presentation will take place on
July 16 at 7 p.m.
For further details contact Max Poole at 322-1819 or Jack
Cox at 387-1109.

Old timt gosp«l ting planned
Sanford - Christ United Methodist Church, 406 Tucker Drive
In Sunland Estates, will hoot an Old Time Gospel Sing this
Sunday. July 17. The members of the congregation will have a
potluck meal fellowship at 8:30 p.m. The singing service will
begin at 6:30 p.m.
Featured musician at this Old Time Gospel Sing will be
Chrikta Strauss from Colorado Springs. Colorado. Strauss has
been a featured soloist for several churches in the Colorado
Springs area. She Is also an accomplished flutist, having been a
member of the All New England Band In high school and la a
former member of the Concert Band at Southeastern College In
Lakeland, Florida.
The public Is Invited to attend. For information call 322-7900
or 321-1798. .

Hispanic Church revival sat
Sanford • The First Hispanic Church of Assemblies of God,
911 Palmetto Avenue. Sanford, announces their Evangelic
Crusade. The crusade will begin July 21 at 6:30 p.m. and
continue through July 24. Meetings on July 22-24 will be at 7
p.m.
For more information call 330-3024.

SANFORD — Rise Upl Sanford
presented Summer Youth Celebratlon on July 8*9. Over 150
youth were In attendance. It was
said that the "Devil was put on
the run" during the events of the
week.
Youth of all races and from
various churches In Sanford
shared their Christian expertcnees together in a week long
service. Young people who didn't
have hope, now do.
“Hope Is Alive" was the theme
for the celebration. Young people
ages 12 to 19 were present and
gave testimonies, praised the
Lord In their own way through
the m inistry of song or In
whatever way they were touched
by the Holy Spirit.
The ministers, pastors and
others who sponsored this
Christian endeavor were pleased
to report that the event gave
strength to the participants. A
great Impression was made that
helped to change the lives or
those who were hungry for the
word of Ood.
The speakers gave the young
people a great challenge and
reassurance. Topics discussed
were: "Hope Is a Person Who
Can Be changed." "Hope Is a
Word, the Word of Ood. "Hope
Is the Future, There Is Tmly a
Hereafter." And "Hope Is a
Process." Prayers are
slways

Church V B S a success
IfW M N V aM M
HeraldCorrespondent
SANFORD • First Presbyterian
Church of Sanford completed
their Vacation Bible School an
July 14. The event had some 70
In attendance each Evening from
tiny tots to senior cittsens.
The program began at 8:30
p.m.. Sunday, July 10 with a
covered dish style dinner. .
Classes for children 4 years.old
through fifU^.grade and adults
met to study-worn God's word
with the theme, "Parables of
Jesus."
Directors. Amber Lee and Art
Woodruff Included a group
■, assembly lime to present the
Heifer Project to those In atten.dance. "The Heifer Project is
'sponsored by the Church World
..Service." said the Reverend
Bruce Scott "People donate
money to buy a heifer. The
animals are then sent to those In
need that are located In Aftrida,
1India or the Appalachian Mountains of Kentucky. The receplents of these animals are
required to give away to first
•born of the litter to others In
need, it’s people helping peo­
ple." A presentation of tia work
' was made each night. Donations
were also accepted for the pro­
ject.
The Reverend Bruce Scott also
,- spoke about the reason the VBS

you accept Jesus Christ as your
savior, there Is change," said
Pastor Clark Adams, who taught
the message on Friday night,
"Hope" In action was shown
by the youth on Saturday as
they went Into the Christian field
of work. The youth carried the
message of hope to the city of
Sanford. The 16 churches that
participated In the summer
youth celebration will forever
remember this week of praise,
fellowship, fun In song and the
word a( Cod.
Special thanks goes to Pastor
Jefl Krall. Pastor Elijah June.
Pastor Dave Krasiese, Pastor
Clark Adams, and Mrs. Ollls.
Appreciation Is also extended to
the youth counselors and others
who helped make this celebraUon a grand week.
Churches supporting were
Westvtew Baptist Church, New
Mt. Calvary Baptist Church,
First Presbyterian Church, Sanford, Church of God. Sanford,
Family Worship Center. First
Baptist Church. Lake Monroe,
Upsala Community Church,
Faith Bible Ministries. El Bethel
House of Refuge Inc., Congregatlonal Christian Church. New
Life Word C enter, Rescue
Church of God, and Weklva
Assembly.
Anyone who would like to
become a part of Rise Upl

Holly Basehone, from Family Worship Center received the grand
prize of a bicycle from the drawings held each night.

THE FIRST ANNUAL CENTRAL FLORIDA

GOSPEL MUSIC
LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT
AWARDS
Saturday, J uly 23,1994
— ^ i30 jrm r Banquet
Sanfbnd Cfvte'Center
___ _
Woffcars invotvad in VBS pose by the church
Marlon Nichols, Wilma Sabastln, Art Woodr
Lae, S h e l f . Jordan and Barbara Hubter, Sot
Soott.
was planned for the evening
hours. "We wanted to be able to
accomodate thoecworking famllies. Many are not able to come
in the day."

Submit religion nowt
The Sanford Herald accepts
religion news from all area
churches. Please submit typed
or legibly handwritten copy by
noon Wednesday prior to the

All In a
beneficial
gave a w
relaxation
fordcomr
Friday of publication,
AU correspondence should
be a d d r e s s e d to S u s a n
Wenner. Sanford Herald. 300
N. French Ave.. Sanford. FIs.
32771.

Guest'Speaker: Dr. Audrey Bronson,
Philadelphia, PA
Music by:
Vernon 'Papa'Jones, Patricia
Hitchmon-Whatley, Cynthia C. Brown
and Hon &amp; Ingrid Nathan
Presented by the Sanford/Ccntra! Florida
Interdenominational Musicians' Guild
Sponsored by Wilson Ekhelltcmer, Strung

Tickets: $15

Attire Formal

Available at local churches, McCoy Cleaner*, Jays Fashions - 25tb

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
AU t*M * CpteeepS Church, I- DtSary Arc.. Enlarprit*
EMICOpM Churcl^rtM NM ^Oaananl. i n Tu«MMM Ad .Wlnlaf Spring.
CpUcopW Church Ot th* Aaaurractlon. 1S1C. MM Srwvllar Dr.. longwood
Hot, Croat E*l*copM Church. Pw* Arc. M *lh 4V, Sanlord
41. poter* IpWedpM Church, TOOAlnahart Ad, I S * Mw,
M NcMrd’i Church. 4111 U M Howad Ad. " W a r Pw»
Th* Church of IMOood «h*ph*rt. U 1U M Arc. MWIIand
CerMnA*Mciwt*S4h Pd4ow*hlp. U M Mw, EMmanlw, School. Coman

mtSsssSSSumSu? c-***"

CMrwrChriallwCarrier.400W «lh*l .SaMord
Haw Harrctl ChriWlan PodowaMp. 1N0 Country CUiO Ad, Sanford
Northland Command, Church. IM Dog Tr«ek Ad,. Longwood
Out reach Dodwranco Conlar. 1211 Up** A rc, Swifotd
■larirAm tynagogu* maahng w comat ol Swul LaL* and
County Um M .W m IM
Tamp** Ihatom. 1TW Okham S trd . Dariona
LUTNMAN
AM*nMonUilMrtnChu*ri.OrcitrorcDr.CMMtMny
OoodSMphprd LiriMrlnChurch. ELCA, KITOriandoDr.lHar, IT-SS).
HotyCrcwtulhwan Church ol U M Mary. 7*0 4un Dr*. LaM Mw,
Lord of Ul* Lutheran Church. MS TuMawUia Ad, Wlnlat Spring*
Lutheran Church pi PtoaldenM, Dariona
Lulhatan Church ol IMA* 4* »m* r.t4» o r c Arc.
Mat*1ah Uriharwi Church, Oiridan Day* D r4 H a , 17 W.Coaaalbari,
SI LuM* Lulharwi Church, A14M .4io.ta
WSupM«Lud«W*hChwch.414pMlW atM.Longarood
Swnott Unriad MamoriW Church. ( . D*Swy A rc, Enlarpn**
Saw l * a UnlUd M**h*4ril Church
SMMI AM X Church. CwwnHMfM*
C**a*rMrr? Coiai»wM p(M M dM *thor»»l Church.Ha, I7P1 *1
ChriMUnriad MMhMMtChurcXTiMMt Or.. Suoland Ealaiat
D*S*ry Cowuhunri, M*lhodl*l Church. W. MlghOwri* Ad. DaOa.,
FUM Unriad MMhoSM Church. 4l»Pw* Arc
FUM MMhodiM Church olOanoaa
FUM MMhodiM Church MOMMO
Draco (M M MMhodiM Omrch. 4MN. Country Club Ad, laM Mw,
Orwil ChapM AMX. Church, Oriodo
Oa* grove MMhodiM Church. Oriodo
Oalaan Mathod)at Church, cor. ol CwpoMor 4 Murra, 61 O.laan
Ptonaor MMhodiM Church cat ot Wllpur Arc 4 Country Club Hd
I gSf Miry
Swriandb Unriad MathodiM Church. 4A 4J 4and 14. Lrmg.uod
St LuM MJLCKurch M Camaran Cri,. Inc . SaaroaU oil SR ** t
SI Mwy* AM X Church. SM4IS. OMoon
SI. Paul* MMhodiM Church. OMoon rid. CiriMprit*
S lttllord MemortW Church. 4. DaSw,
FUM Church M * a Naiarcnd. M41 Sanlotd Arc
0 *n #»4Church Mlh*NdMrcn*,SA4S.0*"a»*
U M Mw, Church oltM NiM rana.ITI E CryMM LaM Arc. LaM Mar,
Lpngeeed Church MIM Ndiarcn*. Wrirmw 4 daaaup Aw* . Longwood
MukhriTwood* Church at IM Nrcwan*. Sri 44. 1&gt;, m ri« W

• * *

rW tllT T IMAM
DMIona Pra»b,t*ri*n Church. Holland Bhd. 4 AuMln A**-. DMona
Rt*l PiaabyUtian Church ol LaM Mw,
Flf»l Ptaab,tartan Church. Da* A»*. 4 ]rd St.
F ||» IftiM u m an C h u rch o f OdSwy.X Highland
... .
Maikrtwn Wood! Pratbylwtan Church, 4110 Mtrtham Wood* M .,
ummw ,
St Andrew* Pt**byl*tlan Church, M U Saw U M Ad_
SI. Marin Pr**b,t*rien Church. 1011 PMm Spring* A4„ Ariamonta Spring*
lUKawiu* Praabirlarlan Church, MOO W. SA 4M. O M o
Up**la Community PtaMhrioriwi Church, UpMl* Ad.
____
Waklrc PraMiriariwi Chute* i l l W oU M tprir^U hdaoriSW dod
Wh I kM M w PiaMrirtariwi Church. f M Bug Ad, Ca**4W*rry
M V f NTH OAT AOVENTIST
..
F0,111 LaM Saeonlh Da, Adr*nll»l Church. Hw, 4M, For**! C«T
Man lllll Sarcnlh Da, AdrcnllM Church. 401X M •« JM hlwd
San Ion) Sarcnlh Da, Adrcnll*t Church. 4411N. Mar,- 41?
Sevan) h Da, Adrcnll*t Church, MdHland A rc, Ahamorri* Spring*
Wml.r Spring* Sarcnlh Da, AdrcnllM Church, 10X Mo m Ad.
OTHER CMOACMCS
Ah Faith ChapM. Camp SamUHria.Iwrchu PW» NS.
Allan’* A MX. Church. OMn 4 tllh
Saw PaU Annua HohnaM Chapal. BaartUH An*.
Chutwola CeaianunH, Chiaeh
Church of J a iu t Chrial at LWIw Da, laM *. 1114 Pw* Arc
ECKANHAA. 770 Slg Ttrc Df., 4uHa 100,Longarood
___
FamM, Church Chriallan Cenlor. 14U SwnMol* SM-, CaaaMberr,
Flrtl to rn Church of lha Uring Ood, Mtdapr
F.rat Church ol Chrt»l. Octanllal. OMrc Had 4 Vanu*4J , Dariona
f ii HPanlacoalal Church p« Long wood
Fir M Paniacoald Church at Sanferd
FuM QotpM Church o« Ood hi ChrtM. 1411J*trr Aad.. Bantoad
Full OocpM TdMmaate, 1714Count r, C M Ad
Oiaca ApoatoMc Tempi*. ITU S o u t h s M . Awriocd
Or act BiW# Church. | 4M S- Sanlord Aw
Hoi, Trinri, Church &lt;ri Ood * Chrial, 1414 Mrcsauttlnd Arc.
Kingdom Had at Johoo«h’*tMtnaoi. LaM Mrairoe (M l. 1M2 W 3rd SI
I A a Mar, ConupuiMI, Church, 101N. Country Oub Ad, U M Mar,
laM Momoa Chapal, Orwig* S h d , U M Monro*
Ml OlrvaMoUna** Church. Or* HM rid . OMaan
_____
WrighborhoMAarwrc* Church. JOIMwthwn Wood* Ad. longwood
Par** WaHaran Church. *440 War*M* D&gt;. 4*&gt;*0«d
_____
Pantacoital Opwi 6*M TMarnacM. Rldgararced Arc. e#l 19th eppoall*
Seminole High SchoM
lllll oration Community Omrch. M l t N. Cri *17, Sanlord
HoUtng Mill* Motarlan Church. SA 414, Longwood
Sanlord AUianca Church. 1401S Par* Arc.
Sanlord SUM Church. 14(0 Sanlord Aw.
Second Church ol the Uring Ood. MM SaardaU Arc . Sanlord
SI PeiaaSaitnenttlhodoiChurch, 1M0UMEmm*Ad,Longwood
lh * FuN Qotpri Church ol Our lord d**u* ChftM. Wwnmglon SJ .
Canaan Cri,
Tli* SMrMlon Arm,. 700W. t«th SI.
Triumph. Th#ChurchollM NtnAga. 1004W MhSI.
United Church ol ChrtM, Aliwnont* CommunK, ChapM. Atlwnonta Spring*
Urnlad Church M ChrtM OulMlan FalloarMrlp. MO N. Country Club Ad,
Lake Mw,
U C S B Spiritual Contra. ItSA SV oluala Arc. comorol
Dr are* A Votutia Arc. Orange CU,

�. ,

’. ..

... . . . -1

I-

71—HolpWailtoM

71—Holp Wsntod

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Park

322*2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

ODOMETER MILES PAID
A ll STOPS PAID
VACATION PAID
DRIVER’S MEDICAL AND LIFE
INSURANCE PAID

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
14 conM CUths Bma*----------- 57i

••HOMEWEEKLY••

M0AJH.-fc70PJi
MONDAYthru
FRIDAY
CLOSEDSATURDAY
SSUNDAY

COMPANY PROVIDES
UNIFORMS

OVER25%OFOUR
DRIVERSWILLEMR
147,000+ THISYR.

NOW ACCEPTING

Hiring Full Tlmo O .T.N .
Drtvora. minimum « « I). I
y rv vorlflaWo O.T.N. exportonco.Claw'A'C.D.L.
Clean driving rreord. No moro

Full lime or part time avail
able on M l or M-f thlftt In
our tuperlor reled laclllty.
Apply wIMm DePery Manor
M N. Hwy 17-n DeNary, PL
ooT-eeoooe fa t ier d o n

M W W W PV V V V
CUR'S
Poe) lion* ovalioblo tor tpeclel
core CNA'I to care lor our
apeclet retldent*. Como chock
out our facility and moot II*
new edmknlttratlon. Excellent
benefit* peckage with medical
and dental Irwuranca and retlrement plan avallabla.
Apply: * » MeUonvIlle Are.
Sanford FI »T71

Ar» you looking »or o coroor
with a rapidly growing tom-,
pony with groat poNntlal lor
advancement! Than leek no__
furthorl Wo promote frame,
within. D IIC O U N T A U TO
PANTS N looking N r turd
w o rk in g , a n t h o ila a f lc ^
energetic new team member*.
Petition* are available far
FT/PT Mloii CaeNore, and
Manager Tralneet. Experi­
ence helpful but no! rebuked ’
We Otter:
a PaM Training
if
• Stock Purchaao Plan
g Team Memobor OleaMite
a Health and Life Ineurance
J
aasi IK) Profit Sharing Plan
a Bonut/Incentive Pay
a Paid Vacation
a Credit Union
a Tuition Netmbureement Plan

In the Held ot health nutrition
and tltna** t lra la g le * .
Phytic laI eupport and otflca
provided. A fortune JOO In­
ternational company It eeekIng amblllou* hardworking
loader*. Earning potential to
five Itguro* a month.

MTHBCINCVITCOUNT
OPTM NTHJUDICIAL

OAVCANN. Infant fa

P .U J A C N eaeklng a portan
who levee children I* work
with ■Mur»*ry/Pr**eheel
children primarily on Sunday
momInge. Ajgdy oft «i* t .

IkTUNCfCUITCOUNT
OPTNI EIOWTEMTW
JUOfCSALCfNCUtTOP
THESTATSOPFLOOIOA.

THIS WEEK'S
gONNgWJONNST*1
'VMmRVM iR IH Iri

OAVIOC. KftlVAMi

M A kO A N ITM . KAI

mlec.f/il-t/t.

a a r iitta
A C TN O C i’AS

!S

S

l

to■mm
LiCNNMiNC

procoedlng. Telephone!

tlf lt M Ill tat. dtSTi

t - M t - t s s - g f f i ( T O D ) ar

IDFINSTNANS,
IVINOS SANK, «

and yeu arm rogvlrod fo eervo a
copy at your wrtttaadakwwM. H
a n y . fa It aa O K N X.

OOLOSSNO, ■•QUINN, At

taraty far Piaiatiff, n g i
Nrlckall Avanua, Suita tae,
MfamLFHrtdBainendMeaw
ertgMal wNN the Oark of aw

v la la f la a
SwtJMbHa).

\

i

)

�I

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Friday, Ju ly 18, 1 W 4 - 7 B

KIT ’N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
'

71 cHf ov

iv n * ,

w vtfp* i f

e u it r ,

clsan a m

1 Mach, I ml xed Hear. SSMWt

MotWHT)
yo u H a d

t h is -

v ^ ’of *f*rcH ' y°°'°
a

1*1— investment
Property/*• lo

F*p

. lamer?

m sM
SANFORD Cioee in Cement
block t/1 hr, I be w/appu,
c /h /a . LevdSMamo m r o n
IAMPORD. »/», cent. H/A,

owner ttnantjnf. W H g M W

20f—Wea ring Apparel

HOP, mil ter SITS PRO
PINIRIO OR C lU b . t berm,™
OWVMMRL PIOU RIN I "Per
Mother" Met price StSS. will
I I tec SUS, Cel I tts n n

TJtKI UP PATMfRTS
NOHONfT DOM
except tea, tee. title, etc
oooai
colt • me, a/ c,
ihitl-iMirnfi in ninifc^ijt-ffjii

*IWn*Q CelWT !w, VvOnOflilvtli

llftbeck. Only StSI.31 per
month. Cell Mr. Payne ter
eeeelntment. Ceerdety (lied
c*m ........................... n t-iiM

117—Com m ercial
peel, tennta court*. wcurlty
pete. S i l l plot tecurlfy.
m&gt; new ts or M t-rieem

DOWNTOWN SANFORD.

■ I T A T I ON l.t l ACRISI 1/1W
ipllt pien, ever 1Mm e*. ft.,
toncee ter heree*. tilt,OH
C O U N TR Y N O M I ON t.M
ACRRSt l / l llv, am, torn,
r m i, fenced ter hereof.
Cenert.Vt.tOOl
R IN O V A TiO t New* cerpet
ip e ln t . C/H/A, cerpert.

wjeeoeop^cm

ta w

i adrw./t Bern m -irs t
SWtNANOOAII APARYMRNTS

U e d i coped in. I/Sewet Appt.
llv, din, tom. rmt. teitee
IU N K R N F A M IL Y RM . A
b o o . peel. Llv, dm, tern,
rmt., wpl-'. k t . perch, eecwrlty tyitwn endeeregel et.fOt
•RICK tn tpiit, llv, din. fern,
rmt. m c . tyttem, ter. perch,
fenced yd .te repeUbLM*

MM PA LM ITTO i n , extra let,
Avell. July tNh. urs/me.
•ATRMAN RSALTY Pit « P

APPLIANCR bee

IIlYWy,
IlMMWRrTBnTf,

LANS KATHRYN ltd • It., L«.

C O N V t U ih N T SN O PPIN O

7G SM «

e A A A R A V SA Pi

saw

Tl l r VAN

BSBSt
H

ALL NUOd ON SALS IN JU LY I

etacrw teeeesw
W
SUITS'

■
m b tu mi
r

,sviam

u u f m a i

•JUttcStongtpPrMR Piflol Hoof

114—W»

Sanford Court Apartments

• cibidM MtflUX

N01 t. tvrtwd Am , SM4MI

mauiw
eCMSVY Meier

323-5774
2 BATH

"

CMvese-rrse
TVfcA i i NST

Phase II

Country Living
'£££■
City Convenient*
c
NEARHWYS.
17*92 mO 417 --- ------1 Wrm.tnd

3 Bdrm. Root PlantAvailable!

l/20fTD*eaak • OM.V $1001
MsnBonThis AiTLFay No Application fsel

B u ild e r C l o s e O u t

S t Croix Apartments

IN PRIVATE POOL COMMUNITY

308 Krfdor Rd., Sanford •Sonora Subdivision

M I* W 3
Open: Mon. - Frt. 9*7
300 W. Airport Wvd
Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-4

I

W e make re n tin g a

sii
TownCgjjtra^MrtjMijts

S ummer S avings
On 1,2 &amp;3 Bedroom
A partm ent H om esl
OtJf

M O N T M 1 Ml

»

Geneva Gardens

ns

mom

3/2 Split Plan

•Vaulted Ceilingi
• Spacious Master Suite
With Deluxe Beth
• Screened-ln PeUo
•Walking Distance From Pool
Clubhouse, Tennis A
Basketball Courts
OnECTXMS:
lit HvyBMsalm i

if-fclostaSaMAa

UafctoMaSmsM,
patpdl&amp;fasitott
asSnt

PAUL R. SCHWAB
CUSTOM HOMES
6990962 ■Office
321-8631 - Model

card# •tsn fo rd

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241965">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, July 15, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241967">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241969">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on July 15, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241972">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241975">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, July 15, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241976">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241977">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241978">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241979">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24232" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23836">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/d73e3d285aa3aca32485650f4451e9c3.pdf</src>
        <authentication>994c9188b2e538b4cd9bf27c2c218475</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="242009">
                    <text>May 26, 1994

TH U R S D A Y

30 Cents

Sanford Herald
Serving Sanford, Lake Mary

anc

County alnco 1008

66th Year, N o. 230

oads to the future

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports
SSC getting down to business
S o f S i ’S J J l "
F™ n , h o “ « h ‘ h e S e m in o le
a o i m a n C l u b w ra p p e d u p le a g u e o lu v &lt; „ „ i

JjJ®*'**** if* d‘v,B‘0» » l champions earlier^In the
rnomh. the busiest pari of (he year In still in
front oflhrm . the tournament season
See Papa IB

□ P e o p le
G arden club Installs officers
Sanford Garden Club* offlrrr Installation ih ii
real stew"
C See Page 5B.

BRIEFS
G rant w riters unite
r A lfIOUp of l,ro"&gt;lnenl peraonn
experienced In seeking financial grants. haa
lolned (oKethrr Inloone organization
The new group I* called SIGN. Seminole
Interagency Grant Network
According to Suranne Reynold*, a member of
wUhgT i Pi SIG,V''
le tfllla m ™ , f KT

arp
,U ,d

"irengthenlle*
« W " m u n lr a lr to

S f. w \ n hC. lm,Wl ' of l,f'»l‘«‘^ « l legislation
lb t will effect v v i.il service*. education. and
rrlatrd programs "
i i . 2 . S.I? N b puI po*e " “hr continued, "to
* 'he n um lvr of gram, receive,I m
Seminole County, to share expertise in ihe art of
ii™ih.*7 Mni!.h,p- 4nd lo encourage und help
acllltatecollaborative resource development "
Reynolds Is a grant writer for' Seminole
Community College.
mmo,r

1"

ln,!,u‘ membership list include
persons who have had extensive experience in
lS |y v ! ! L “ |U' ' r f°r *Uch r ," " lr“
•‘‘hools.
X T '* *Street,
ihr ,&gt;r'va,r
C o u n c t l ^ U b r t Main
and the hiilustry
Centra.
Names on the membership list Include Debra
I louver, Payr Pulton. Kay llarlhoJnmrw. J r mnnr
Moon. Monte lllatr. Charles Rowe. Toni Roberts
Thelma Mungcn, Hulvrta Davis. John Hughes
and Reynolds.
"
For Information on SIGN and Us approach In
seeking grants, phone Reynolds at 32H-4722.
extension 3430.

Business after hours
L A K E M A R Y — T h e G re a te r Lake
Mary/Heathrow Chamber of Commerce will hold
Its business Alter Hours gathering this evening,
at Cheers Lounge, at the Komi Lion Shopping
Center on Lake Mary Boulevard.
Chamber meinbcts. guests, and prospective
im-iubcra are uiged to attend this nctwixking
mixer. The After Hours will be from 5.30 until
7:30 p.m.
For additional Information, contact ihe cham­
ber office at 333-4748.

Young bike riders w anted
CASSELBERRY — The Cussclbcrry Parks und
Recreation Department Is holding a Bicycle
Rodeo. June 4. for children age 6 through 12.
T h e event Is open to youngsters from
throughout the areu. There Is no charge for
participation but udvuncc registration Is re­
quested.
The event will ulso Include K-9 learn de­
monstrations. prizes for the best hike safety.
T h e event Is sponsored bv the City of
Casselberry, the Casselberry Police Department.
Longwood Police Dcpartmcnl and Seminole
County sheriffs office.
The Bicycle Rodeo will be from 0 u.m. until
noon, ut Secret Lake Parks Basketball Courts In
Casselberry For additional Information, phone
Andrea al 696-5189.

From lU ff reports

...... 48 Horoaoopa
88,78 Movlaa......

D a a lh a ....................... . . . . 0 A S o h o o l M e n u ,
D r . p e t t .............................4 8 S p a r t a
.....
■ d lto r la l..........................4 A T e le v is io n .....

Florida.......... ............8A Weather.........

Chance of rain tom orrow

Toduy: Partly sunny.
High near 90. Wind
west 5 to lOmph.

House OKs
funding for
missing link
ByJ. MARK BARFI8LO
H t r ild 8sn lo r S ta ll W riter

a g la n ce

£**•' Pbri4» Orwn*W«y. « * i n * , H

l? l* .,T.»7llmw&gt;*ry *••«»*» •*•«*&lt; kr
Cewhf

A*nisrl,y, rMsrtMa al

totrZH* E L S ? 4 * ** 11"oTwIfLd
?***• &lt;*/*•» It I *» nhKi,, MtM&lt;y

SANFORD — The U.S.- House of
Represenlallves nppmvcd 8fl m il­
lion to complete the Central Florida
GrecneWny •missing link" between
U S Highway I7 »2 and Interstate
•f.
The 80 million was the first cut of
et»« million bring sought for the
six tulle link Rep John Mira. RFern Park, who pushed the funding
through House comrnlttres. ts conndrnt the remainder of the funding
will be forthcoming during the next
four years.
CSee Link. Page DA

m ,*w*** M* M l p it;a f|, a u - M
" * « * * f M &lt; M U I,.
" r M M I t IM
■fWlMl MW n »«rl, 10 000 i M t l n loot

I l ' i T " ! ! ! * ' * ' ,h* ",,l •••»••*

M r llM iN M M iil

i»«# £r&lt;h * % £ ra*'*
-V*.
OlMnoon •• M « ,,9m
«,
•UIM Bunion
Tho Wirood oror 1*0, Jot** „
7 ,,,",kO»l m «**»»9» of u ooo

M y kr IB* on* 1 in , ft,„ yoar c
*• h»»l M y Ml* ooio
* • * P'aia. M U cart oaitoa r
)**•+ ky IBal » ruay noarly t aoc
* * '» M M n * Itwougn It* M l aUra

..f ill"
• M*ai ai n ooo
IraiM M an H m t aort«n 0I mo a.j
*** ^ f*My A M ai a&lt; MOW 1
►»
al IM

Memorial
parade
to honor
veterans

County approves 5-lane
design to widen CR 46-A
■ y d . MARK B AR PIILD
H arsld S enior S ta ll W ritor
SANFORD — Seminole County
c o m m ls s ln n r r s u n a n im o u s ly
approved a llvedane design t,» widen
County Rood 40-A between Riue
hart Road and Orange Boulevard
Tuevlay night.
Ihe $4 4 million project will one
day link to an Intrrrhnnge al
Interstate 4. hut when that ronneclion will actually occur Is uncertain
Unal federal approval of the in­
terchange is being piggy backed
with the approval application lor the
Central Florida GrrenrWay connec­
tion at 1-4. which Is being moved
through Congress by John Mica.
R fern Park
Until the federal approval is

CgUNTV c h a p :

By NICK PP8IPAUP
Herald Stall Writor
SANFORD — The military veter­
ans will march again. Monduy
morning, the annual Memorial Day
(MiruJe will wind Its way through
downtown Sanford In n formal
tribute lo their comrades in arms
who served to all tiritnehea of
military service.
The parade will begin ul 10 30
Monday morning, forming at the
G rc n te r S a n ford C h a m b e r of
Commerce parking lot, al 400 E.
First Street. The parade route will
Ik - west on 1 st Street to Purk
See Parade, Page SA

gullied, the design cun t be com­
pleted. About u quarter of the work
Is done. Mild Wayne Waters. Florida
Department of Transportation man­
ager of Ihe project.
Although county officials don't
know when the Interchange con­
struction will begin, they aren’t
waiting. Once work begins on Ihe
interchange, the state may have to
reconstruct a jxirtlon of the county's
roadwork, said Otis Gilford, inanug
er of the county road project.
Gifford said land purchases are
scheduled to begin In July 1093 and
construction will follow about 20
mouths later. The project will take
about a year to complete. Gifford
Mild. Widening of CH 40-A east of
the Interstate is scheduled lo begin
C See Widen. Page SA

r

STOP
dialing
w rong
num ber
By NICK PPIIPAUP
Herald Stall Writer

aanrora mayor tsotty# smith, canter, stoned an official Memorial Day
KSf. *S,*, '?m
^ *,r*y ^ *'•*
organization leaders Left to
Av*' v#l&lt;ran* Advisory Council Treasurer Cameron
Meant, VFW Post 10100 Commander John Prokosch. DAY Chaptor 30
Commander Joe Bennett, American Legion Post 53 Commander Jim Smith,
SCAVAC President Horace Paul (also with Fleol Rosorve) and VFW Post
10100 Commandorelect. Russ Gormaln

~

SANFORD - Spelling nut
STO P on a ton, tin,nr phone t*
not 7H07 It s 7H«7. And thrrr.
by llrs a tule
In a n effort I n h e lp f lu lu
crime, the Sanford putu-r t v
part men t has established u
spc-lal trlephonr with which lo
rrcrtvr atii&gt;riymoi,B calls on
crimes anil criminal activities
"In I h r first yru r." said Chief
Ralph Russell, "our rrcurds
(tee STO P , Page SA

Cops nab two growing pot in home
By NICK PPIIPAUP
Herald Stall Writer
SAN tO RD — Sanford Police discovered mari­
juana plants being grown In a Sanford residence
Tuesday. Two residents of the house al 1909 S.
Park Avenue were urrcslcd.
At approximately 7:30 Tuesday evening.

members of the r ,ltyfCoi»Mty Investigative
Uuteau. with a search warrant, entered p .and searched each of the rooms.
S h e r if f 's d e p a r tm e n t s p o k e s m a n Ed
McDonough Mild two room* ap|H-arccl to Ik - totally
dedicated to (he cultivation of marijuana.
In filing the arrest rc|xirt. officers described one
room as having "an elaborate marijuana growing

Mom petitions school
transfer for daughter

system." They located 38 plants In that room.
In another room, officers mild they found IH
seedling-. In still another room, they uncovered a
number of plastic hags containing what proved to
he marijuana.
Arrested were Tam m y Sue Singer. 27. and her
husband Edmund l-ance Singer. 30. Each was
See Pot. Page SA

Day in court on murder charges

Board OKs second move from
Sanford to Lake Mary classes
By VICKI OeSORMIBN
Horald S ta ll W riter
SANFORD — Linda Johnson bus
successfully petitioned ihe school
board lo huve her daughter Irunsfer
from Sanford Middle School In
Sanford lo Greenwood Lakes Middle
School In Lake Mary.
Johnson, who bus volunteered for
many years In Sanford schools,
petitioned Inst year to huve her son
make the same move. He was given
Ihe g o -u h e a d u n d a tte n d e d
Greenwood Lukes this year.
He will intend Seminole High
School In Ihe fall.
The Johnsons und another family
took an apartment In Luke Mary last
full In un effort to move their
children out or the Sanford Middle
School district.
Linda’s husband. Bill, still main­
tains that Lake Mary home. He lives
there with their son for now. In the
fall, their daughter will live there.
Meanwhile, the Johnsons’ San­
ford home Is for sale.
The Johnsons mode the move to
huve their children taken out of
Sanford Middle School when their
son was entering the eighth grade.
After two years of fighting Tor
Imoroved academic standards and a
safer school environment, they said,
they wanted out.
They huve continued to volunteer
their time and talents at the Sanford
area schools In order to make n

difference. Linda said. Still, there
hove not been sufficient Improve­
ments and they believed It would he
best In transfer their dutighlcr to
Greenwood Lakes Middle School.
"It is not. as many have accused
us. u raclul Issue," Johnson said. "It
Is a matter of educational stan­
dards."
She believes the needs of her
children cun lie better met ut ....
the
Luke Mary school. She wants, how­
ever. to be sure the school district
works to change thut situation. She
said she would like to see the
Sanford schools on an equal footing
with other schools In the district.
Johnson reported hostile actions.
Including uuonymous deposits of
dead animals on their doorstep and
"obscene materials" with u school
district return uddress. were taken
against her family ufter lust ycur's
trumfers. She reported, also, thut
her family wus "bad-mouthed" by
Sanford Middle School tcuchcrs and
administrators.
"Greenwood Lukes has been very
supportive (of the transfer)," site
said.
Board member Larry Strlcklcr
said that It was the transfer of
Johnson's son and the other stu­
dents that forced the school district
to take a look at the needs of at-rlsk
students In the Sanford schools.
"One duy the Sanford community
will sec that they owe them a debt of
□See Transfer, Page BA

John Valois, 20. m ado his llrst court appearance W ednesday at the
John E. Polk C orrectional Facility since a grand Jury Indicted him for
first degree m urder and aggravated child abuse.The A ltam onte Springs
resident Is charged In Ihe death of a tw o-year girl he w as babyslltlng.
Valois has been under house arrest since being sentenced In
Docem bor 1002 lo r his pari In plotting the death o l W arlock 3
m otorcycle club national president W ayne Sanzo. H e w ill be arraigned
on Ihe charges noxt w eek.

S UB SC R IBE T O T H E S A N FO R D HERALD FOR T H E B E S T L O C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . Call 322-2611

�1
w .

»A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 20, HUM

NEWS FROM THE REGION AND ACROSS THE STATE

FLORIDA
BRIEFS

Chiles to sign tobacco bill today
By Associated Press

M illionaire for a day
TAM PA — Howard Jenkins beenme an Instant millionaire on
Ills lunch break — but he didn't win the lottery.
Instead, the bank had a sweet surprise for him when a
computer error put 888 million in his account.
Jenkins, a 31-year-old promotional manager for a roofing
company, decided to hnve some fun and withdrew a cool &gt;4
million.
Jenkins' brief stint ns a rich man started when he lost his
checkbook. He called NationsBank and put a hold on the
account. When he went to make n deposit Friday, he was told
to check the automated teller machine outside to innke sure
the urrouut was working.
When he withdrew 810. the receipt said Jenkins' balance
wns 8889,437.
Incredulous. Jenkins went home and called the bank's
telephone system and got even better news. A computerized
voice told htm his account topped 888 million.
Jenkins returned to the bank and asked a teller for his
bnlunce. When she wrote eight digits on a piece of paper and
slid It to htm, "t almost fainted." he said.
"She said. 'Did you get an Inheritance or something?' "
Jenkins said. "Isold. ‘Or something.*"
He decided to ask for 84 million. "The y handed me 84
million and didn't bnt an eye."
He picked up his girlfriend for lunch and showed her the
money: 83,000 In cash and seven checks, one for 8997.000 and
the rest for 8500,000 each.

TA LLA H A S S E E - Wllh whnt Is touted as
the nation's toughest an ti-to b acco measure,
Florida will try to recover the high cost of
providing medical care lo poor people
suffering from smoklng-rclatcd diseases.
Gov. Lawton Chiles planned In sign a bill
Into law today that gives Florida new legal
tools to sue tobacco companies to try to
recoup the costs of caring for Medicaid
patients stricken by smoking-related Ill­
nesses. Statistics show that tlie stale has
spent 81.2 btlllnn In Medicaid funds irrallng
smnklog-related diseases since 1989.
"It looks like the governor Is going to take

the Marlboro Man to court." said his
s|Mikesmurt Run Sachs.
Hul Chiles also Is expected lo announce
Hull he will revise the measure during Hie
henllh-eare speelnl session In nil effort In
ap|K*»se Hie tolruceo Industry.
The measure, linked on lo a larger
Medicare fraud hill, passed Irolh Legislative
chnmtscra quietly In the waning days uf Hie
1994 regular session.
"Th e tobacco companies res|xmslhle for
causing these to burro-related Illnesses
should help pay Tor the treatment id those
Illnesses, rather than forcing Ihose costs lo
he bufuc solely try (he taxpaying public,"
Chiles wrote In a letler earlier this week lo
Associated Industries of Florida.

Associated Industries and the Florfl
Chamber of Commerce fritr that the broad
written measure could also upply to olhj
products such as dairy and phnrrnaccutlci
and arc pushing for Its repeal during t)
special session set to !&gt;rgln June 7.
The provision passed both chamber
unanimously largely beruusc lawmaker
were not fully aware of what they wer
voting on.
A number nr legislators also have called
lor a review of I hr measure during Hui
special session — partly swayed by argu^
mrnls trom the tobacco lobby I hut the
measure Is hound to provoke an "uvalnnehe|
of llilgallon "

Fire Investigated
Lt. Mork Hall ol lha Seminolo County Fire and Roscuo
station douses a lire In tho
woods, In the aoulhw eit
corner ol North French Ave­
nue and tho lakelront. A
witness reportedly told police
a woman had set the lire
Tuesday, at the campsite of
Victor Fontanoz, who lives In
the wooded area Sanford fire
Investigators are looking Into
tho blaze which was satingulshed before It could spread
to the surrounding woods

Law requires state program goals
TA LLA H A S S E E — State programs will have to pass muster
for coat und meet measurable goals under a bill signed by Gov.
Lawton Chiles.
The performance-based budgeting bill |HB 2497) also
earmarks 84 million for on Innovation Investment program to
help agencies pay for changes that save money or Improve
services.
Chiles signed the bill Wednesday at the state Department of
Management Services, where hearing officers save time and
money by using video teleconference equipment to reduce
travel In conducting hearings across the state.
Performance-based budgeting will be phased In over alx to
seven years. Some agencies. Including the Department of
Revenue, are starting with their next budget requests, said
House Government Operations Chairman Allen Boyd. DMontlccllo.
Boyd's panel, which worked on the bill for ahout two years,
adopted Ihc phased-lh approach after studying similar laws In
stales such us Texas und Oregon, he said.
"You can't do It all nt once." Boyd said. "Change la hurd to
come about, so we've got a lot of work to do."
The bill sets up a 15-membcr government accountability
panel to hold hcnrlngs on how state agencies perform and
recommend Improvements.
It also authorizes the governor and Cabinet to determine If
any state services could be done better privately.

O fficer takes 9hot at m otorist
ST. PETERSBURG - Hank Edwards says he Is alive today
only because the police officer who shot at him missed.
Edwards was on his way to a friend’s house when St.
Petersburg Police Officer Paul Klesel pulled him over. As
Edwards was getting out of his truck, Ktcsel fired at htm. The
bullet whizzed Inches away from Edwards' head, shattering the
driver's side window.
Klesel later said he thought Edwards' black metal cane wus n
shotgun. Edwards hus been using the cane since spraining his
ankle a few weeks ago by slipping while carrying groceries
home.
Edwards, a 43-year old plasterer, said regardless of what
traffic violation he had committed, “ you don’t kill somebody
for It."
"He wanted to kill me." Edwards said Wednesday. "He's Just
a bud shut."
The 10-year veteran officer Is on administrative leave while
police investigate the shooting.

S ettlem en t voids $6 m illion verdict
MESA. Arlz. — A Jury ruled a bar must pay 85.9 million In
damages for u death mused by a driver who was sold 38 beers,
but the award was voided by a settlement reached shortly
before Ihc verdict.
The suit agulnat Fair Lanes McRay Plaza Bowling Inc. was
filed by Ronald C. Polk, a Miami criminal lawyer. In the death
of his daughter, Rosalynnc Polk. 20, of Tempe.
She wus killed In a four-vehicle crash Oct. 13, 1990. triggered
by Luis E. Salcido of Chandler, who was traveling the wrong
way on Interstate 10.
Polk agreed to a 8300,000 settlement with the bowling alley
while the Jury was deliberating last week but said Wednesday
that he was satisfied.

From A ssociated Press reports

[L O TTE R Y
M IA M I - H e re a re (h e
w in n in g n u m b e rs s e le c te d
W ednesday In the Florida Lot­
tery:
Fantasy 5.
16-2-8-7-24

Play 4
3-B-1-8

H m U N » S by T i* * | Vmconl

Governor, education M A D D loses sales
chief hear students’ tax exem ption
concerns of violence for charities
By ADAM VBOMANB
Associated Press Writer________

TA L L A H A S S E E — A group of
middle-school students laughed
nt u videotape on ronlllct resolu­
tion that showed two youngsters
patching things up ufler an
argument In a school hallway.
T h e stu d e n ts, w ho were
participating Wednesday with
Gov. I^iwton Chiles In a televi­
sion show on school safety, said
(hal was a real-life example of
how youths usually handle vola­
tile situations at school.
But one student suld he wus
told to be more aggressive.
"M y mom always told me. if
somebody hits you. you got to
hit 'em back.” clghth-gradrr
Greg Hosendorf told Chiles and
Education Commissioner Doug
Jamcrson. "You do what you
gotta do until they leave you
alone. Otherwise. If you don't do
nothing, they Jusl gonna keep
messing with you."
The governor said he Iden­
tified with the student's feelings
but hus learned from personal
experience Hint fighting Isn't
olways the way to resolve dis­
putes.
"I used to gel lit a lot of fights
□Boo Violence, Page 6A

office*.

Poatnuwtar: Sand addraca ehangaa
lo THE SANFORD HERALD, P.0.
Boa 1SS7, Sanford, FL 33773-1SS7.
Subscription Rates
petty A Sunday)
Home Delivery
Halt
3 Months
S IA M
134.00
S Month*
13*00
*43.00
1 Yaw
IT*. 00
IM .00
Florida Residents must pay T% sates
lea In addition lo rated above.
Phone 1407) 333-3*11.

challenges
teen curfew

B y IK B P L O R I S

Associated Press Writer
ORLANDO — The American
C i v i l L ib e r t i e s U n io n is
challenging a midnight to (i a m
curfew for anyone under 1H in
downtown Orlando, The civil
rights group says n violates
Juveniles' rights of free speech,
assembly und privacy.
The curfew, which the city has
labeled a "youth protection or­
dinance." Is take effect June 1.
The ACLU. representing four
youths. Ihclr parents and a
downtown store, announced
Wednesday It has been granted a
circu it co u it hearing next
Tuesday to urguc lor a tempo­
rary injunction.
In March, the ACLU won nn
Injunction that prevented the
enforcement of Dade County's
curfew: the mallei is now tied up
In appeal. Teen curfews have
been declared Illegal In four
Sec Curfew, Page 6A

Associated Press Wilier
TA LLA H A S S E E - It's go­
ing to cost several chapters of
Mothers Against Drunk Driv­
ing a little hit more lo tiny
supplies (or Ihclr marches
and vigils and prom night
parties.
Six percent more to he
exact.
For years, MADD chapters
across Florida have been
exempt from the 6-ccitt miles
tax. Hut several months ago.
the stale Department of Reve­
nue took another look ut the
exemption law.
The agency concluded some
groups. Including M ADD.
were given exemptions even
though they don't fit the
definition of charitable In­
stitutions.
"Th e law Is so clear about
who Is entitled to li and who
Isn't we feel there Is no legal
authority to continue the
e x e m p tio n ." said L a rr y
Fuchs, executive director of
i hr Department of Revenue.
Attorney General Bob Butterworth asked Fuchs ubout

■ X T IN D B D O U TLO O K
Tonight: Pair. Low In the
upper 60a. Light southwcBt
wind.
Friday: Partly cloudy with
w id e ly acattcrcd afternoon
showera and thunderatorma.
High near Mo. Wind west 10
mph. Chance of ruin 20 percent.
Extended forcenut: Saturday
through Monday: Partly cloudy
with a chance of mainly after­
noon and evening showers and
thunderatorma. Lows in the
lower 70a. Hlgha In the upper
80s to lower 90a.

PubUahad Dallyand Sunday, aacapf
Saturday by Tha Sanford Mtrald,
Inc. 300 R branch Ava., Sanford,

Fla. *3771

By JACKIE HALLIFA*

the situation Tursduy. noting
some groups received Inters
saying ihclr five-year exemp­
tions would not be renewed.
the only group named by
Bultrrworth wus MADD. und
Fuchs' agency refused to
Identify other groups because
of taxpayer,confidentiality.
Hui agency spokeswoman
Donna O'Neal said Wednes­
day that 1 I organizations
have lost ihclr tax-exempt
status since the agency's
bureau of registration and
records got a new chief lust
November.
To quullfy for a charitable
exemption, state law provides
a checklist of services a group
can provide: medical aid:
basic necessities such as food,
clolhlng or shelter: prevention
p r o g r a m s I a r g c I c d at
alcoholism, drug abuse or
suicide and hculth problems:
child care, services for Ihc
elderly or adoption services:
medical research; legul serv­
ices; or food, shelter, cure and
other programs for animals.

T H E W E A TH E R

THURSDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

City
Daytona Baach
FI. laud Batch
Port M yirt
Galnatvlllt
Homaitaad
Jackfonvlllt
Kay Watt
Lakaland
Miami
Paniacota
Saratola
Taiiahaitta
Tampa
Varo Baach
W. Pa'm Baach

HI

U

la

It
it
M
IS

N
n
fO
mm

mm
to
IT
n
IS
M
14
n

ir

tO
IT

44
TS
14
T4
TO
to
SI
41
IT
M

Fcf

00
.00
.00
.00
.mm
.00
.00
.00
.10
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00

N A T IO N A L T I M M

r

J

y \j ^

FRIDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

SATURDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

r

O (i

FULL
M »y 28

NEW
Ju nes

LAST
June 1

c

FIR ST'
June 10

FRIDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLE: Mill. 7:55
n.tn.. 8:30 p.m.: MuJ. 1:45 u.m..
2:15 p.m. TIDE8: Daytona
Beacht highs. 10:33 u.m.. 11:06
p.m.: lows. 4:24 u.m.. 4:27 p.m.;
New Smyrna Beach: highs.
10:38 u.m.. 11:11 p.m.; lows.
4:29 n.m.. 4:32 p.m.: Cocoa
Beach: highs, 10:53 u.m.. 11:20
p.m.; lows, 4:44 u.m., 4:47 p.m,
B O A T IN G

Daytona Beach: Wavea are 1
fool und acml glassy. Current la
alight (o the north with n water
temperature of 76 degrees.
New Smyrna Beach: Wavea
are 1-2 feet and semi glassy.
Current la to ihc south with u
water temperature of 76 degrees.

----------- '

SUNDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

TIDBflf

Thursday, M ay 26. 1994
Vol. 66, No. 238

Sacond Claaa Poalagt Paid at Sanford,
Florida and additional mailing

ACLU

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Small craft exerclae caution.
Tonight: Wind southwest 15
knots. Seas 2 feet near shore and
up to 4 feet offshore. Hay and
Inlund waters choppy. Scattered
showers or thunderstorms soil Hi
portion, Friday: Wind southwest
10 knots. ScilH I to 2 feet. Bay
and Inland waters u light chop.
Scattered showers and thun­
derstorms.

F \J"'A
MONDAY
Ptly cldy 89-70

S TA TIS TIC S
Th e high temperature In
Sanford Wednesday was 91
degrees and Hie overnight low
wns 05 as reported by the
University or Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center. Celery Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e rio d , e nd ing ut 9 u .m .
Thursday, totalled O Inches.
The temperature at 9 n.m.
today w « h 7 8 degrees and
Thursday’s overnight low was
68, ns recorded by Hie National
Weather Service at the Orlando
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
IWednesday's high......... 89
□Barometric pressure.29.97
□Relative Humidity....62 pet
□ Winds..,,..Northwest 8 mph
□ Rainfall................ ..... 0 In.
□Sunset................ 8:18 p.m.
USunrlee............... 6:29 t.m.

TtmpBfdtufti Indlcata pravloui day’i
high Brxlovtf night tow to I p m EOT.
cay
HI La Prc Otlk
Anchor ag«
ST Jf
cdy
Atlanta
IT IT
cdy
Atlantic City
IS 11 54 cdy
Balllmora
IT 11 .13 cdy
Bill, ng t
TS SO
dr
Birmingham
14 It
cdy
Bltmarck
49 St 01 dr
Bolt#
«
SI
cdy
Botlon
Tf SS It cdy
Burling ton, VI
IT St n cdy
Charltilon.S C
IS Tl
rn
Charltilon.W.Va
It 44 01 cdy
Char lotto,N.C.
u IS
cdy
Chlyinna
II 43
dr
Chicago
TS ST 01 dr
Cltvdand
TO If IJ cdy
Concord,N.H.
44 49 If cdy
Dallai Ft Worth
IT tf JO cdy
Danvar
TS 41 .11 cdy
Dai Mol not
Tf SI ■tf
dr
Dalroll
Tf If 0*
rn
Honolulu
IT Tl
dr
Houiton
If if
cdy
Indiana poll*
Tl it .M
dr
Jackton.Mlii.
14 IS
cdy
Kaniai City
U if 04 d r
Lai Vtgai
IS 41
dr
Uttla Rock
IT If
rn
Lot Angtlak
IS Sf
cdy
Loulivllla
14 u 01 d r
Mamphlt
U Tl . » cdy
Mllwaukaa
1) SO 01 d r
Mplt St Paul
TO S3 M
dr
Nathvllla
IS M
cdy
Ntw Orlaant
u 11
cdy
Haw York City
M 11 04 cdy
Oklahoma City
I I to
cdy
Omaha
1) SS .01 clr
Phlladalphla
M ts If cdy
Photnix
TS tl .11 d r
Pllliburgh
Tl It .4T cdy
Port land. Main#
SS tl ■4f cdy
St Lout*
14 11 .11 d r
Salt Laka City
U so
cdy
Saatllt
Tl 51
cdy
Waihlnglon.D C.
If 14 .Of cdy

MM
*

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 26, 1094 • JA

POLICE BRIEFS
Six citations in traffic arrest
Angcllnc Eugenia Knight-Long. 20. 459 Sami Cove Court.
Sunf(»nl wna arrested by Altamonte Spring** police Just after 3
am . Monday on Interstate 4 and Issued six traffic citations
including speed lot; and driving under thr Influence.
Arconllng to ihc report, the woman passed the officer
eastbound al tbe entrance ramp from state road 430 travelling
103 nipli In a 58 mpli /one. Tile jHilkcman observed
Knight-Long's vrhlele leave tbe roadway into tbe median then
swervr back to the road. She was cited for unlawful speed, no
ftcuihclt, failure, to maintain single lane, no registration,
reckless driving and DUI. I lei Intoxlllzer readings were .205
anti. I H!». according to thr police rc|&gt;ort.

Disturbance call
Sanford police arrested Kenneth Dean E d e n . 21. of Dellary.
to Ihc 100 block of Qrovevlew Way. early Wednesday. Police
said they had liccn called to the area regarding a dlslorlianee.
They said when Eden refused to leave thr arra after being
given a fourth warning, he was arrested on a charge of
disorderly cond uct.

Retail theft
Jercl Patrick Johnson, 21. 1H 13 W. I Bib Street, was arrested
hy Sanford |&gt;nllre Tuesday. Officers said hr had attempted to
rrmovc two parks of meat from a sforr In Ihr 1500 block of
French Avenue He has been charged wllh rrlall theft.

W arrants served
• Jerry Alliert Murk. 10, 10723 Qrovevlew AfMirtmeiii*.
Sanford was arrrslrd by Sanford (Millee at bis residence
Wednesday. He was wanted on a felony warrant Issued In
Volusia County.
• Merle Eugene Parker. 70. 5415 bake Avenue. Sanford, was
arrested at bis trsldrnre by sheriffs deputies Tursday. He was
wanted for violation of prutuiilon on previous convictions of
aggravated assault and sending a written druth threat.
• Jonathan Calvin Curry. 25. 3201 S Sanford Avenue, was
arrested by depulles at his residence Tuesday. H r was wanted
for vfolntlnn ol prottaiton on a previous conviction nil purchase
of cocaine.
• ■fames I taker. 32. of Orlando, was served a warrant
Tuesday following a traffic stop by Lake Mary police on
Klnrhurt Hoad He was wanted on a war; ml for violation of
probation on a conviction of armed robbery.

Incidents reported to the sheriff
A woman at a business in the 54(XJ block ot llryunt Avenue,
reported a man was very abusive and threatened to do
unspecified harm to the business.
An auto dealer In the 4200 block ol Hwy 17 02 rrported a
woman look a Chevy S-10 truck for a test drive lint didn't
return (be vehicle. The woman who was accompanied by a
male passenger left an expired license at the dealership, police
could not locate the woman when they cheeked Hie address in
Orange City.
The manager of a Longwood auto broker In tbe JHOO block of
SK 127 reported a storage shed was broken Into over the
weekend and u buttery charger, tool box and tools and buffer
valued al $850 were taken
A resident in the 2000 block of Narcissus Ave.. Sanford
reported a rifle was taken from tits gun cabinet over the
weekend. There was no sign of forced entry.
A Sanford resident In the 2400 block of Granby Strrrt
rejHirled three fishing rods and reels were taken from a Ismii on
bis property over the weekend
, sfn'Wr* deputies recovered a stolen vehicle limn a luikn
Mary apartment complex parking lot on Lake Emma Hoad
Monday. A resident from Hie complex told police he found the
Mu*du rc|Mnicd stolen from Orlando and contacted the owner
using a bank receipt found Inside the unlocked cor.
A woman living In Canterbury at tbe Crossing reported shr
has received five harassing telephone calls on her answering
machine. She was told to keep a record of the calls and contact
the phone com puny.
Someone attempted to steal u 1994 Chevy lilazer in the UX1
block of Duncan Trail by prying open an exterior door and
breaking Ibe left side ol the steering column 111 an attempt to
hot wire Ibe vehicle.
A Longwood man In the 200 block of Duncan Trail reported
someone stole Ills Chevy Mazer from bis driveway sometime
Sunday night
A Longwood resident In the 1300 blink of Alberta Street
reported to police someone cut a screen on the kitchen door
and took Ills wife's purse containing traveler's checks, credit
card and some cash. The man said the hurglur might have
entered through an open garage door.
A man reported someone look a buffer from bis business in
the 400 block ol Andrews Drive In lutngwnod.
Someone threw a cement block through u rear window of a
law olflce on Dog Track Hoad. There were no signs of entry Into
the building. Damage to tbe window was $250.
A resident of Shore Drive. I-ongwood reported someone
entered Ills unlocked vehicle Friday and took the CMC Jim m y
1500 and a cellular phone.
Two factory Installed speakers were removed from a vehicle
parked at a business In the 1200 block of Hwy. 17 02 sometime
Sunday.
A woman In the OfXX) block of Lake Avenue. Sanford said her
landlord entered her dwelling without permission and took
some of her belongings. She had given notice she was moving
In one week, the landlord reportedly said she should be out In
two duys. The woman said she had not been served with
eviction papers.
The landlord reportedly told the woman's son, "Th is Junk will
be ul the dump If you want It."

Florida gets
lackluster
economic
report card
By BILL BBRQBTROM
A ssociated Press W riter
TALLA H ASSEE Though
Flo rid a manages to create
Ihousamls of Jobs each year. Its
rapacity for economic develop­
ment Is bam|ierrd by one of the
nation's worst high-sehool grad­
uation mtes and the lack ol
skilled Hclrtill*!* and techni­
cian*, a national economic re­
port card shows.
The Corporation for Enterprise
Development gave the state a D
grade In development capacity
and a C In economic perfor­
mance.
Florida ranks sixth in Job
creation, wllh 9.7 new compa­
nies being established for every
LOCK) workers, analyst Daphne
Clones, who helped prepare the
report. said. Wednesday.
but Florldu rank* 48lh In the
tuition In graduations, wllh only
01 2 percent of ninth-graders
finishing high school In 1991,
Clone* said Minnesota was first
with 89.5 percent, and Loulsluna
last with 54.3 percent, said
Clones.
Despite Florida's low marks,
the rr|Mirt shows that efforts to
diversify the stale's rronomy are
starting to pay off. sold Hon
Siirh s, u *|&gt;okr*imin for Gov.
Lawton Chiles
Development capacity was
Florldu'* — and the South's —
Achilles heel, the report said.
Ten of 12 Southern stales re­
ceived a D nr an F In that
category.
Ironically, as a region. Hie
South create* the most |obs. the
report said
"Th e Job creation powerhousc
l* also the land of the working
|&gt;oor. It Is still an area of poor
education and kiw-wage branch
industrial plants." Ihr report
said.
The South's technological re­
sources continue to tie relatively
s c a rc e , th o u g h F l o r i d a ’ s
aerospace Industry Is one of thr
few exceptions, the rrjKirt said.
On a brighter note. Florida
earned a C for business vitality,
an Improvement from tbe D It
got last year.
" I t cuinc up because of
rntrrprenrurlul energy und stgiitncuriily more new companies
being created.**Clones said

Clones said.
Only 53.7 percent of Florida
w o rk e rs were co ve re d by
em ployer health plans, she
added. The slute had un average
wage of $23.144.
Florida hud the nation's six­
th-best longterm Job growth,
wllh u 123 percent Increase In
Jobs from 1985 through 1993.
u n d 13 1)i best s h o rt-te rm
growth, with u 3 percent In­
crease from 1992 to 1993,
duties said.
The state Is taking steps to
Improve its health care system,
help defense contract or* und
Improve public schools. Sachs
said.
"T h is report shows strong
Improvement for Florida and a
great potential to do even bet­
ter." lie said. "G o v. Chiles
believes health care reform will
be one of the single most Im­
portant economic boons to the
state."
Colorado led the nation with A
grades In all three categories.
West Virginia ranked lust, earn­
ing F grades in all categories
from the Washington group,
which Is funded by corporations,
foundations and unions.

1 3 F l o r id a R e s id e n t ia l &amp;
C o m m e r c ia l PiioreRrrtKfl
AH Aafthms Co*4*rt*A Oa-SJt* 3

DOHALS
$1.19 PK.
$10.49 CTN.

WE WILL NOT
KNOWINGLY BE
UNDERSOLD

OUAMTTTY BKJMTS
MSfRVED

IMMtOua (TOM*. MC
COTYMOMT in.

FULL
SERVICE
PHARMACY...
REOULAft

PHARMACY. HOURS

OUR PHARMACIES
QLAOLY ACCEPT

MONOAY - SATUROAY

9 A.M. - 6 P.M.
C L O S E D SU N D A Y

i i*fi n . !'♦*■

♦«vr

1X
t’I.

1t

\

•*

-*#**#

'*i

415 Celery AveJ

&gt;

—1
T3
O

3-

-*1J
S
an
ford
CO
&lt; Middle
Q• l School j l\3
OD

i

\

_________

1514 S. FRENCH AVE.
PHARMACIST: JERRY LIGUORI
PHONG: 407-321-6626
• State-licensed and registered pharmacists
• Convenience: have your prescription filled
while you shop

SATHHDAY &amp; SUN D AY

GENERIC
BRAND
’
$1 39 PK
$12 4 9 C T N .
PREMIUM
BRANDS
$1 Of) PK
$14.99 CTN.

America’s Supermarket*

T h o u g h It Ih u is I s of other
Strengths such as good uverugr
pay, Florida Is weak In health
coverage amt the human und
technological resources essential
foi a vital business sector.

AUCTIONS
By Onfar ofMijor FinincUl Iratitulion,
CIGARETTES

W iN iM P iM

BUSCH'
MILLER

COORS
MILLER LITE
IMILLEB DRAFT
BUDWEISER

.

* 6 :liT u

*4‘199

|69

$Q 9 5

‘39

* 1 2 'I •Tm

X 7i 1ft*

•L I)*

W .T u

CASE

HEINEKEN

CASE

SCHLITZ
jMILWALKEE'S BEST
HAMMS

.. * (
4 PACK

*3"

12 PK.

ALL PRICES SUBJECT TO TAX
T.tO I ‘ i.nitsHtI Avo
11 till ‘ &gt;t K S aitliH il Ave )
S A M I &lt; 1111)

$ 0 4 9

&gt;ACK

l •!»■
12 PACK

12 PACK
Pi

3 2 2 -3 0 8 4

r.llCIIEI on

• J U N K 1 &amp; r. •
Saturday •Jus«4
. V »-M l HmOO* Drta. FX- Mr
I •l»1 Sk*J|Nm*
. mttMvntttf 1110«UfUl
Vmt.fitnalH
IK-129*.
Mtnull'iul l|HM| lulMil,
Dk 1 (« loth
X 1: Ip* .... IHamtAM' 471 LottOiVt.
r « i oi»t«
X I: lp&gt; arw vhw jof'ia i.Otpn r*w.

a

S/199

X t: 4ft*

»

XtO: I ft*
Kit! l f «
XII: 7ft*

M il WALKEE
•C -. $ 2 .0 S
11 I'- a $ 4 . OS
$ 7 .9 1

•cm ck c: a !»min&lt;s
t.CJVl ROM! N 1 CIII.CK‘j
OONt Y OMIM Hr
•»»mici s no no t
IN C L U O L l AX

Im rtiltu k
Sunday •J usi S
VKtmtM' lit 70. kiiU* IrWH,
M m Mat Jkwt*
f*mOsM m - U l fat Mitt (Ink,
IM 12 f . Vfii Itiik
S/H-1(90 ShiBy ItU iMi.
fl.fWni
Mw«.|l4H«rtfc I0t
I. flint
r«MbaMt* •H it f tW 947(
Im m n fit* oAs, n. rtiiii
Mtw Htamik Lint,
ft. faiti
KtikkttitUof 2HS S* CtoM
tM i.fw tH .U ia
for Urocpuiu ft Dbtailj

Xtli Ift*

Call

669-7004
------------M M m -----------AUCTION COMPANY

Ft Lie. fl.K Broltrt 4 Aucnomtn
H U t Ctnfnu A n .iu IM

• We accept PCS, PAID, BC-BS MEDIMET and
MEDICAID
• Computerized prescription records
• We carry a full line of FDA-approved
quality generic drugs
• Prescriptions are easily transferable. Just
bring in your refillable prescription and
w ell contact your physician and take care
of all the details.

�« A - Ssnlord H trald , Ssnford, Florida - T h u n d iy , May M . tW 4

_______________________________________

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanford Herald
(liSM 461-260)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2011 or 631-0003
W ayne D. Doyla, Publisher and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 M onth*...............................610.60

0 Montn*..............
1 Year....................
Florid* Raaldanta m ust pay 7% salaa tax In
addition to rata* above.

EDITORIAL

In support of
Main Street
Not every new bu sin ess open in g in
downtown Sanford In the past few months
lins been a direct result of the Sanford Main
Street program. There is no doubt however,
their existence helped.
A Central Florida man who luid not visited
downtown Sanford for over a year recently
came Into the city. He was surprised at the
new growth, especially the number ol antique
stores and small shops which have sprung
up.
An out-of-state visitor recently spent five
hours touring antique shops In the city, and
had not visited allot them.
Land clearing began several months ago for
the Seminole Towne Center Mnll. It had been
known for some time that the mall had been
proposed. It possibly required actual dirt*
moving for people to start considering what
approach to take townrd preserving the
downtown area.
Sanlord Main Street, (SMS) sought and
received official state and national recogni­
tion. Downtown revitalization efforts began in
crnesl.
Yesterday, SMS, held a membership tele­
phone blitz. As a result, a number of new
members have now been added to the
ever-growing roster of people interested In
Sanford's future.
W e commend these new members for
agreeing to work with SMS. More people have
been needed, and with larger numbers will
come larger projects and better results.
There may be a few who agreed to Join the
SMS but may not be able to take an active
part In the work. These people, along with
perso ns, w h o donate m o n e y to th e S M S are

WILLIAM A. RUSHER

South A fric a ’s future looks bleak
Nelson Mandela Is certainly entitled to navor
the triumph he lias recently enjoyed In South
Africa. To have lreen sentenced to life In prison,
as Mandela was, for acts of terrorism: to have
survived 27 years In prison: and then to lie freed
by his Jailers nnd promptly win election to the
presidency of his country — these add up. any
way you look at It. to a remarkable human
achievement.
It does not detract from that achievement to
note that many things had to occur In exactly
the right order, for him to bring It ofT. First nnd
foremost, the ANC had to be kept alive nnd
supplied with money and weapons by the Soviet
U n ion for a quarter of a ce ntu ry as a
pro Communist underground organization. Then
the Soviet Union had to collapse at exactly the
right moment, enabling South Africa's white
government to yield to the Internal nnd external
pressures agnlnst apartheid without Inflicting a
deadly blow to the West In the Cold War.
In addition. South Africa's white population
had to undergo, during the transition period, a
paralysis &lt;&gt;r the will that left It unwilling to curve
the nation Into a number of separate sover­
eignties genuinely representative of the people
inhabiting them: white. Coloured. A*u&gt;n and the
nine major hlnck tribe* Instead, lit t dominant
English-descended business interests made their

deal with the ANC, and prevailed on President tie
Klerk to ratify It nnd
sell out his own
Afrikaner lower nnd
m iddle classes In
return for one of two
deputy presidencies
under Mandela nnd
one-half of a Nobel
Pence Prize.
A s fo r S o u t h
Africa'* future, the
uniform experience
of the rest of Africa
makes It all too clear.
For a few years, the
euphoria will con­
tinue. Th e United
f Thoso add up,
States and other
a n y w a y you
Western nations will
lo o k at it. lo a
pour hundreds ol
ro m a rk a b lo
millions of dollars
hum an
into M andela's
a c h io v e m a n l. §
exchequer, and hr
_________ : _ J
will use part of them
to make a downpayment on tils reckless
promises to South African blacks one million
new homes In the next five years. 2 6 million
new |obs In the next decade, ID years of free

LETTER
I also agree with Mr. Leon Charles on hln letter
printed In the Sanford Herald. Sunday. May 1.
1994.
I am glad to hear and read about people that own
guns and know why we have them.
The United States Is getting to the point In time
Ihut we are paying the price for having compassion
with crime because some criminal had It hard In
life. We all have a choice for our own life. If we
choose wrong then It's time to pay the price and
the price for killing is your own life unless It's
self-defense,
But for bullies and people who steal because they
don't want to work ail week, then we need to raise
die cost on crime, even on caning or lashes or
whatever works. And a Jail should be a Jail — no
pleasures — doing what is called hard time.
I also think road gangs need to be brought back.
Prisoners need to earn their own keep — by work
turnips or farms or road crews.
The city has wooded areas that need cleaned and
work that the city employees don't do. Each city or
county employee can be matched with a prisoner
to do the day's work. Cut cost and get more done
than seeing city and county trucks Just sitting
uround parked or driving through the neighbor­
hood.
1 believe in Ood, and crime deterrents, and
working to receive food each day. No work, no
food.
John Adams
Sanford

Berry'sWorld

*Will you excuse us, Robertl I want to talk to
your computer In private."

The ra|Mctou*urss ol black African politicians
is legendary. There ts scarcely a single honest,
let alone genuinely democratic government
between South Africa and the Mediterranean
Sea. Practically all of them are despotism* in
whirh the acquisition of public office is simply a
license to loot. White (I e.. forcigul businesses
can deni wlih the dominant politicians, of course,
but strictly on a Imsl* of What's In It lor me?
(There are signs that Ihl* process I* already
under way in South Africa, wllh Mandela
demanding — and receiving — a slice of every
Important melon.)
But corruption is, relatively speaking the good
new* where the long term future of South Africa
Is concerned. Terrorism (by a reralrllrant
Afrikaner minority! will lierome a wav of life as
it is today In Northrrn Ireland

JOSEPH SPEAR

Hypocrisy knows
no boundaries
II you ran bring yourself lo took at ihl*
Paula Corbin Jones business as pure (Milmcal
thealrr. It might provide you wllh hour* ol
blissful amusement
With the |»M llilr exception ol Hill Clinton,
whose guilt or Innocence is tmdetermined
and whn may therefore tie suffering U llju s l
|iam. every party In tht* mess deserves die
notoriety and disrepute which has betallru
diem, or surety will tiefall them tieforr die
thing has run llaroursc-_______________ _
I II put h tn you
another way. If you
enjoy watching hyp­
ocrite* and poseurs
getting peeled like
rancid onion* to their
rotten cores, you are
tn die rtglil place.

also needed.

A few others may have been reluctant to
Join this organization. For them, we urge a
study of the many projects which have
already been accomplished and those which
arc planned. It may change your mind.
A majority of cities have some type of
organization which works on revitalization or
restoration projects. Unfortunntcly, a few of
them fall by the wayside. In a short time
period, some other group will form, and more
efforts will get underway.
Sanford Main Street has proven It works
und is here to stay. While some may have
questioned the need for such a group at the
start. SMS is making an important contribu­
tion to the city of Sanford.
If you weren't called yesterday, contact the
SMS office at 322-5600 and become a
member.

compulsory education, etc. Western business,
too. will 1m- eager las It always Is — witness
Vietnam nnd Communist Chibs) to trade with
tlte new regime.
Then In a few years Mandela will die or rrllre,
and the second generation of black politician*
will tnkr over That I* when the serious
despoiling of South Africa will begin, and It will
continue until there Is nothing left to despoil.

Tht*

“ IN H IN P J 6 H T , M A YB E TH EY SHOULD HAVE S P E N T
WORE O F THE STA TE B U D G E T O N E D U C A T IO N ."

MARTIN SCHRAM

Senate vote deals in small change
Bathed In the T V lights Ihut are now the
afterglow of Washington's dully news mo­
ments. Common Cause's Fred Wertheimer was
heralding the Senate’s vote to Iran members of
Congress from accepting freebies — gifts.
vacatloiiH. wlnlngs-and-dinings — from lob­
byists.
“This will lundumcntully change the way
business Is done In Washington and on Capitol
Hill." gushed tills ardent crusader for reform
after the Senate's 95-4 vote.
Whoa. Nelly. Fact Is. ihal the Senate vote
really deals In another sort of change — small
change, not big bucks. It tells senators nnd
representatives they can no longer lake
baubles, bangles and bright shiny brads But
ncur-brlbea arc still OK.
Make no mistake: These senators und
representatives now posing us populist re­
formers are still campaigning for re-election
under rules ihut permit (some would say
"compel") them to solicit (Borne would say,
"shake down") sjiccla] interests for contribu­
tions that are ns close to bribes ns payments of
money cun Icgully be.
Even on the duy the Scnulc voted to ban gifts
from lobbyists, members of Congress were In
their private oirices with their telephone lists
making their usual round of calls to lobbyists
from eor|X)rallons and labor unions whose
special Interests happen lo be regulated by the
committees on which the members sit and
vote.
It's a dully ritual that, in the spirit of truth In
labeling, should be called "Dialing for Dollars."
(Existing law allows PACs to contribute to a
candidate up to 65,000 for each election — that
can be $3,000 for a party primary race, 95,000
for a primary runoff election. 93,000 for the
general election.)
Here's how the sollcltatlon/ahakedown hap­
pens each day, according ta some of the
lobbyists who arc on the other end of the
phone culls. After brief pleasantries, the
senator/rcprcscntallve says: '*l’m having a
fund-raiser (a dinner or Just cocktails) can you
give 95.0007" Sometimes the member adds:
"And run you raise 910,000 or 920.000
more?" Or: “ Will you host a fund-raiser for me
at your home?"
Members don’t cite a specific (rending vote or
issue: they don't have to. What the lobbyists
say they arc thinking, throughout this ritual,
is: "How can 1 not contribute? If J don't, every
other lobbyist will, nnd then I'll be left out.”
Subtlety Is no requisite in the senators' and
representatives' traditional contribution
kabukl. Several lobbyists recall meeting on a
specific Issue wllh a senator known for his
nlcc-guy. non-political image — and the
senator opened Ills desk drawer, pulled out u
computerized list lo blatantly check Just how
much each lobbyist had contributed. And one

lobbyist rrrnlls a well-known liberal repre­
sentative will) responded lo Ihe lobbyist's
promise to contribute 92.500 by snapping:
"No. 1want the full 95,000."
And then there's the lobbyist who rioted (he
irony of a prominent Rrpuhllrun repre­
sentative who publicly refused to take PAC
money — hut called lobbyists mid asked them
lo host dinners of executives Iront companies
with Interests before
tils committee, with
each exec making
Individual contribu­
tions. "W hat's thr
difference If they call
me und shake me
down for a contribu­
tion. or ask me to
boat a fund-raising
d in n e r for execu­
tives?” the lobbyist
asked.
In the end. special
Interests invest In po
llt lr a i ca m pa ig n s
F a c t is , lh a l Ih e
b ccu u se they
S e n a te v o te
calculate they'll reap
ro a lly d e a la In
g ra n d p r o f it s tn
a n o th e r s o rt o l
s u b s e q u e n t
c h a n g e - s m a ll
legislative decisions
c h a n g e , n o t b ig
— a subsidy here, a
bucko, j
tax break there —
that cost us millions
more than they contributed.
There's only one way to end the stranglehold
money lias on our politics — by publicly
funding Senate and House campaigns up front.
We c o u ld n 't c o n s titu tio n a lly prevent
billionaires from bankrolling their own races.
But we cgn’ require that ail candidates who
accept public funding be barred from receiving
outside contributions.
That’s the one and only way to finally level
the playing field In House races, where
Dcmocrals have ruled for decades and In­
cumbents outspent challengers by four lo one
In 1092, according In u study by the Center for
Responsive Pullllcs.
It's u liberal Idea that Is the best — and
probably only — hope for the congressional
resurrection of the Republican Party

LETTERS TO EDITOR
Letters tn the editor arc welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the address of the
writer and a daytime telephone number.
Letters should be on u single subject nnd he
ns brlrl us possible. The letters are subject to
editing.

irsnilnl

I*

s w a r m i n g wi t h
charlatan* — smug
liberals, cruel con­
se rvatives. e xtrac h ro m o s o m e re ­
ligious lunri.im enlallsis — and It Is oh
( E v o t y p a rty in
m i sill Isfylug to see
th is m o s s
them cx]K&gt;Hed for die
d o s o rv o s th o
pliunlcs they arc.
n o to rie ty a n d
Start with die or­
d is r e p u te w h ic h
thodox liberals — die
h a s b o fa llo n
leftist politic Interest
th e m j
groups, tlte rabid
feminists, die
Victimization tubby. Three years ago. they set
u|Min Clarence Thomas and gouged out tils
eyeballs — all on die uncorroborated chargr
of one woman that In- bad "sexually
harassed” her.
Anllu Hill hud worked for Thomas for years,
hud followed him from one Job to die next
and hud kept In touch with him after she Irli
She Mimchow managed to suppress the
inemury of Ills pur|iorted off-color remarks,
hut when hr was nominated lo die Supreme
Court, well, then one had u duly tn speak up
T o thr fanatics, die mere charge was
tantamount &lt;n guilt. Thomas was accorded
no presumption of limner nee and barely
made It In the High Court, where liMlay he
sltscmblttcred nnd mule.
Now Paula Jones. sup|&gt;ortcd hy a phalanx
of right-wing nasties nnd Enemies of lllll. has
charged the president with making lewd
sexual udvnnrcs In a Little Rock hntrl room
three years ago. Hut Hill Clinton support*
ntUCh of the feminist agenda nnd Is married
lo the world a most famous liberated woman
So what do True Believers do about Paulu's
uncorroborated sexual liurassmrnt charge?
Nadu. They set the foolish precedent nnd
now they can do nothing hut stt and watch
Ihe worm turn.
And whut did rightwingers do during the
Thnmnn-Htll hearings? Well, they protested
the assault on the conservative Thomas,
(hut's what. The hearings, walled the Wash­
ington Times In 1902, "had little to do with
disenfranchised women or even sexual
Jiurussmcnt — nnd everything to do with
pollllrs,”
And whut suyclh the Times now that the
alleged culprit Is a modcrate-to-llbcral Demo­
crat? "The behavior Mr. Clinton is being
accused of," the paper says. "Is debased and
prejiostcrous: It speaks directly to the Issue of
the president’s character.... Whether n crime
was committed, und whether Ms, Jones'
complaint Is a legitimate one Is u matter for
the court to decide."
Perhaps one of the most curious develop­
ments In the Paula Jones affair has been the
conversion of prominent fundamentalist
Christians Into advocates of the feminist
cause. The Rev. Patrick Mahoney, executive
director of the Christian Defense Coalition
and national spokesman for the militant
nnll-nborilon group Operation Rescue, has
formed Ihe Pauln Jones Legal Defense Fund
und Is pushing women's rights organizations
to support her.
"Sexual harassment knows no political
boundaries." Mahoney told the Washington
Post with an apparently straight face.
This thing ought to be on the Entertain­
ment Channel.

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 26, 1994 - 8A

W iden---------Continued from Pane 1A
III I (MM), h r m ild.

T h e whole Iranspurtiillnn
picture north ol Lake Mary
Ikuilrvard linn yet to come Into
focus. A 11h on K &gt;i C o n g re s s
approprlalrd 811 million in
10H7 for I lie Cl&lt; 111 A Interchange. the project nlallrd.
Area properly ownern planned lo
donate lhr land needed for the
Interchange, hul In subecquenl
years. pro|&gt;rrty changed hands
and the projrd waned.
Interslalr Interchanges tniinl
Ik - approved hy the Federal
Highway Administration The
a p p llcn lln n for the 14 in

STOP

terchange with the OreeneWay
Includes a nhlfi of an CK 46-A
exit ramp.
Cierald Hrinton. director of the
Seminole County Expressway
Authority, said the package wan
delivered lo slate road officials
Monday. It In expected to Ik *
delivered lo the Federal Highway
Administration In aboul a week.
Th e federal review may he
completed hy fall, lie said.
The House I’uhllc Works and
T ra n s p o rta lIo n C o m m itte e
approved the first 81 million for
the OreeoeWay Interchange last
week said Sharon Pinkerton.
Mira's leglxlatlvealdr.
Also rnmpllrnllng the Srinl-

Parade
nolc County Interthange picture
Is the future of 1-4 Itself. The
FO O T In awaiting the results of a
84 million 1-4 study which will
determine the needs of the
highway Into the next century.
The study may call for 10 lanes
of auto and mnss-tmnslt travel
through north Seminole County,
said project manager Wayne
Waters.
The study Isn't expected to lie
complete until early next year,
said S te ve H o m a n . F O O T
n|M&gt;kesman In DeLand. The 46-A
and GreeneWay Interchanges
are designed wllh the assump­
tion 1-4 will cventunlly hr hull! lo
a full It) lanes

Continued from Page 1A
Avenue, then north on Park lo
Sanford's Memorial Purk. where
ceremonies are lo begin shortly
before 11 u.m. at Ihc flag pole.
The ceremony will Include uu
official m illing of the proclama­
tion by Sanford Mayor Heltyc
Smith. Guest speaker for tills
year's event Is Hill Hickman.
D A V Stal e S e n io r Veteran
Commander. .
The firing of a 21 gun salute
will climax thr otisFrvunre.
Each branch of Ihc rnllllary

Waterfront Association com ­
mented. "In walking around the
downtown area. I've seen rriuny
(teople looking at those signs,
and taking down the phone
number. I think tills Is a very
outstanding show of c&lt;K&gt;peralion, und I certainly hope they
will use that phone number
whenever they see a crime being
commuted “
Kussell said hr has also hern
handing out posters and pro­
moting the telephone line at all
of Hie Access fM meetings as
well us wherever he gives lulks
In groups of rlllrrriH
Kussell however, has now real­
ised that there Is u flaw In thr
(Misters "The 330 STOP Is cor­
rect." he said, "hul the number
7807 Is wrong. It should hr
7WI7. I guess thr posters w rrr

itlnued from Page 1A
irgrd with cultivation of marijuana. |&gt;ossession
Intent to distribute, possession ol marijuana
over 20 grams, and (tosACMUon of drug parapher
M ila

printed up wrong "
Kussell said he would Immedi­
ately look Into getting the post­
ers corrected and have them
changed wherrvrr they are lo­
cated.
"Th e way I ser it.” he ob­
served. "A police de|&gt;artnirnt Is
only us gcxkl as the community
which supports II We are giving
the citizens a lord wllh which to
help us. und (rersons who don't
wunl to get Involved can remain
unnnymoos "
"'.Vr have so many burglaries
and thefts In this area." he said
"If we are lo combat this pro
blent, wr are going to need
rveryone's help."
Whenever a crime or criminal
urt Is seen, phone 330 STOP
178671

McDonough rc|Mirted the conflsrated marijuana
would have had u street value of approximately
836.000
The two were In make their Initial court
appearance In the courtroom of ihr John K Polk
Correctional Facility yesterday afternoon

ATHS
L IU IK MAC HATHCOCK
Lizzie Mae IfalhciK-k. HO. d a y
A venue, W inter Park, died
Tuesday May 21. 1994. at Life
Care C e n te r of A ltam o n te
Springs Horn Feb I I . 1014. In
lWorth County. Gu . she moved
llo Central Florida In 1030 Mrs
llulchtm k was a homemaker.
She was Hupitst
She Is survived by a son.
Mantle II . Winter Park
Deacon Olseci Cremation Serv­
ice. Orlando. In charge of ar­
rangements.
P A C IT A L A O A D E
Paella l^igade. HO. Hnui|&gt;drn
[place. Winter Park, dlrd Tues­
day. May 24. 1004. at Lucerne
Medical Center. Orlando. Horn
April 3. 1903. In the Philippines,
she moved lo Central Florida In
1070. She was a member of St.
Margarel Mary Catholic Church
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e sons.
Vlegillo. Lnkr Mary. Victor Paclffco r , Philippines, daughters.
Adorn cion, Catalina, both Winter
Park. Joaeflna. A|K&gt;pku. Llgaya.
Dayton. N .J.. Marla Kossarlo
Lagade-Madariaga, Old Field.
IpLV.t sister. Ana Hlnetlu. Dallas.
)hl grandchildren.
jC u r c y H a n d C o x -P u r k r r
mcral Home. Winter Purk. In
large of arrangements.
kROARETANN NEUDAUER
Margaret Ann Neubuucr. 03.

l

Ellsw orth Street. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday, May 24.
1004. at Florida Hospital. Altamonte Springs Horn Jan 3.
1020. m Turtle Creek. Pa., she
moved lo Cenirul Florida In
I0H4 Mrs. Nrnbuuer was a
homemaker. She was Christian.
Survivors Inrlude husband.
Wallace F Sr . sons. Wallace F
J r . , C a s s e l b e r r y , Hr o r e .
Westmoreland City. Pa . Hrvun.
Mark Allan a n d Frank, all of
Allurmmle Springs, brothers.
Hotter I Henkel. Youngstown.
O h io . Mir hard H e n k e l.
Grealerford. I’a : six grand­
children.
Deacon Direct Cremation Serv­
ice. Orlando, In charge of ar­
rangements
MAKY MYERS
••BETTY" PATZ
Mary Myers "Hetty" Pat*. 50.
Ktdgewnnd Street. Altamonte
S|irtngs. died Wednesday. May
25. 1004. al her residence. Horn
Sept. 10. 1043. In Darhy. Pa.,
site moved to Central Flnrldu in
I OHO Mrs. Patz was a secretary.
She was Haptlst.
Survivors Include husband.
R ich a rd ; m other. Margaret
Myers. Texas; sons. Dennis. Al­
tamonte Springs. Scott.
A rkansas; sisters. V irg in ia
Simmons. Orange City. Margaret
H ilton. South Dakota. J a c ­

q u e lin e Myer s. A l i u mo n t e
Springs. Shirley Drt krr. Texas. •
Orlando Crrmullnn Service.
Orlando. In cltargr ol arrange­
ments.
ADELEC. SCOTT
Adcle C. Scoll. HO. Nancy
Avenue. Altamonte Springs,
dlrd Tuesday. May 24. 1004. at
tier residence. Horn Aug '2H,
1013. in Chicago, she niovrd to
Central Florida In ItSMI Mis
Scoll was a retired schoolteat tier She was a member ol
Annunciation Catholic Church.
She belonged to Retired Teach­
ers Association und Polish
Ro ma n Ca t h o l i c U n io n of
America
Survivors Include husband,
Emerson Russell, son. Jack.
Maitland: brother. Eugene lgnowskl. College Park. Md.
Ha Id w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Home, Forest City. In charge of
arrangements.

10:30, as time Is Important.
Veterans partlclpalIng must be
In |H)sltloti ul the lukefronl hy
Ihe hour of 11 n.m.
Memorial Day Is a legal public
holiday. It was formerly known
us Decoral Inn Day, and has l&gt;ecn
especially focused on honoring
those who huve died In battle.
Il Is one of the oldest holidays
In Ihe nation, having been ob­
served as far back as May 5.
1865. when veterans gathered In
Waterloo. NY. . lo pay homage lo
veterans and fallen soldiers of
Ihe Civil War.

Link
Continued from Page 1A

Continued from Page 1A
show a total of :K) rails corning
In. hul only two of them have
produced valid results.''
Russell said many of the oilier
culls were to report s|&gt;eedlng
cars, or suspected drug activity
''Whut we need." he explained.
’ Is s p e e lflr In f o r m a tio n ,
.especially If a (irrson connected
j with some type of criminal
activity can hr Idenllfled hy
Inum r."
Sanford (K ille r have dlslrlh|uted filers io various businesses
In the rlly. r«|iei tally In the
rwntown area. T h ry suggest
Uiivlduals cun help the (attire
tpartment by phoning JIW)
TOPI7H07I.
Hod Layer, president of the
inford Historic Downtown

services, und nil urea veterans
organizations arc expected to
participate In the parude as well
ns he In attendance at Ihc
lukefront ceremony.
Following Ihe event, veterans
will gather al Ihe DAV Chapter
30 building. 3812 S. Orlando
Avenue, hnsl for this year's
Memorial Day activities. The
hosting Is on a rotational basis
among Ihe various groups In Ihe
Sanford nrcu.
Persons planning In watch Ihe
p a r a d e a r e u r g e d Io be
downtown on E. First Slrrel by

Of Ihr 86 million. 8-1 million
will Ik - available on demand
from Ihe slulc. The remaining 82
million requires additional ap­
proval from Ihe Appropriations
Committee. The money will be
used to begin land puichases In
Ihe road corridor west of U.S.
Highway 17 92.
"We're making progress day
lie day." said Mira. "I'm gonna
do II hell or high water I'm
gonna doll.”

Transfer
Continued from Page 1A
gratitude," hr said
The board was divided on the
approval of Johnson's transfer
request. The approval was made
hy a 3-2 vole wllh Nancy Warren
and Je a n n e M o rris vot i ng
against the transfer
"I can't siqqMtrl this based on
Ihe court order.” Warren said,
referring lo the 1970 desegrega­
tion order that mandates thr
number of minority students
required lo attend each school In
Ihe district m order lo malntuln
racial balance
Morris suggested that a hear­
ing officer Ik- employed to hear
ihe matter Iwisrd on the racial
balance Issue

"How can one c hild uj&gt;set the
racial balance?*' ch a irm a n
Hartuiru Kuhn asked
Despite the objections of the
two hoard memlK-rs. Johnson's
rrqurst has iK-rn granted lor one
year- She will leave lo come to
Ihe Ixsard again und make a
request next spring as her

A pleased Gerald Hrlnton,
d i r e c t o r of t h e c o u n t y
expressway« authority, suit! he
was ready lo focus his attention
on Ihe Senate.
" I ’m very pleased, although
t hi s was expected.** said
Hrlnlon. "Th e next hurdle Is to
see how quickly Ihe Senate can
gel lu ll."
Thai may not Ire for a year or
more. Greg W illiam s,
spokesman for Sen. Connie
Mack. K-Capc Coral, said Ihr
Senate Is required lo acl on (he

Welfare card: Savings for
state, dignity for users
■y TOM S TU C K E Y
Associated Press Writer
ANNAPOLIS. Md. - Bobby
McKlnrty calls II the ‘ ‘poor
person's Masirrcharge Card."
and she loves II.
"It saves me money. It gives
me dignity," Ms. McKlnuy said.
She has one of about IHO.fMX)
"Independcncr*' cards Ihr stale
has given welfare recipients to
handle monthly food stamp and
welfare allotments.
One year allrr Ihe first cards
w rrr Issued, tile program has
accomplished most of Its goals,
said Dale Drown, the program's
manager ar the Department of
Human Resources.
The card. Issued to almost all
welfare recipients, has elimi­
nated a lot ol pa|K-rwork. It also
appears to have rcdueeil welfare
Irani! und the state's costs,
although Ms Drown acknowl­
edged the program Is so new
that stm ite s ol Its effectiveness
are Incomplete.
"Y

d a u gh ter | »r| M (r« in en ter l l i e ,

seventh grade.

road funding hill by November
1995. Although there's some
speculation constituent pressure
could bring about a vole by the
end of this year. Williams suld i
Ihr scenario was "unlikely."
Hrlnlon said even If the Senate
walls until (he end of 1995 to
vole, there won't be a holdup In
Ihe process. A number of Federal
Highw ay Adm inistration ap­
provals are required before land
purchases can begin. Ihe last
approval expected by June
1995.

um

tlo it'l tia vr m attin g coals,

costs of shredding

used

food

stamps. You don't huve to jtay
supermarkets to handle fond
stamps." Ms. Drown said.
The card operates like a bank
debit card. Instead of mailing nul
checks lo welfare recipients. Ihr
sl ntr el ectroni cal l y credi ts
payments to their accounts once
a month. People can then use
( h e i r c a r d s t o s h o p at
supermarkets and some other
stores, and to get money from
cash machines.
When a welfare recipient pays
for Iikk I at a supermarket or gets
rash from a m achine, the
amount Is deducted from the
cardholder's account. The transaction Is rejected If the Italanrc Is
too low.
The stale has a contract with a
r o m p u n y to h un d i r t he
electronic Imnslcr of 857 million
In bcncllts cueh month.

Pepsi
Pleased

LONG. WILLS I I I

Funeral *♦»«!&lt;»» lor Mr WHO* lee Long.
U. ol lilt W &gt;m VI . Unlord. &lt;*ho d »&lt;J
Monde, Me, Jl. Mill la II * m Selurde, «•
Now Ml Colvory M B Church allh Iho Re,
BcbO, Ple,ee ollklotinq Interment lo »ollo«
In Evergreen Cemetery Unlord Friends
m il coll el Sa lunerei homo on Fndey Irom

tip m

Sunrise Funerel Home. WO Loculi Ay*.
Sonlord J7J rtSJ. In cherge ol er rengemenls

C losing
C osts.
Save With A SunBank Home Equity Loan.
tax-deductible, which is a smart way to borrow money.
You'll be surprised how simple and fast SunBank
makes everything. You can apply for a homo equity
loan by phone or in person. So why
put off your dreams and needs
any longer? Call or stop by
any participating
SunBank office today.
tea ce o f Mintl Banking*

We rosorve Ihe right lo limit quantities (old.

A pply B y P hone 2 4 H ours A D ay, 7 Days A W eek .

Advertised prices good through 0-4-94.

TARGET

C all 1 t % l l 2 4 ' 1 -8 0 0 -3 8 2 -3 2 3 2 .

Rig h t .O n THi: M o n e y .*

•PrrotrlytAwriKt ituy U required

r*rjU* -

(

’
'
•
'.
,
.

»8s«&gt; &gt;l» Mj)t_____

P U M U IA L S

U«ob*r roic/o I0W S u t u k i lac A SueTnut Besk T o n ol Uu&lt;J Bukia|* it &lt; rrfutrrtu t m i auk krlomini utliontly la SooTnut Eu U Inc
AuiliUe u OfUfc. SenJuoU. On coll Ukt cal Hrmid cei*t*» ZA U H

•
•
.
.

The curd has worked well ,
enough that the Human Re­
sources Department ts letting
Hulliiuorc recipients use tl un u
trial basis for utility hills, pro­
duce ul a (turners ttiatkH und '
rent In public housing.*''
' '

No

There's never been a better time to get a home
equity loan from SunBank for home improvements, a
car loan, college education or any worthwhile purpose.
First of all. SunBank makes it convenient. We pay
all closing costs on home equity loans up to $50,000*
if you apply by June 30. So you’ll immediately save hun­
dreds of dollars. Plus. SunBank's interest rates are lower
than they've been in 15 years. And the interest may be

I

—

- — -■&gt;mmomm m im m m rm fm m t Longer Sunday Hour* 9 am to 9.30 ru Open Monday through Saturday 8 am to 9:30 FM?
SSO U t l m m m m m m To find ihe Target nearest you, call 1-800-800-8800
•rtuim*-yhourt.
\»ry

�\

■ A - 8«ntord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thuraday, May 2fl. 1804

Victim Of flesh-eating organism
Associated Press Wrltor

STROUD, England - When
I.ch Christie walked Into his local
pub, the regulars applauded. He
had survived n killer bacteria
and came to enjoy the one pint
of tieer Ills doctors now allow.
The local |&gt;olltlrlan Is one of
seven jieople In the Stroud area
this year to contract necrotizing
fasclttts. a virulent form of the
common throat germ strep that
feeds on flesh.
Tw o of liie eases were fatal.
Christie says lie doesn't know
whether to consider himself
lucky or unlucky.
"I went into hospital with
something simple and I'm now
scarred." he said Wednesday
n i g ht , hi s sweat shi r t and
trousers hiding the huge ban­
dages on his HlMloinen where
skin from the tops of hit legs has
been grafted to cover the
wounds.
Necrotlilng fusclltts Is not new
to medicine. Cases have been
reported from time to time In the
United States. New Zealand.
A u s tra lia . G e rm a n y .
Switzerland. Norway. Iceland
and elsewhere.
But rarely do so munv crop up
in thr same vicinity.
D r. C h ris to p h e r H arlless.
director of B rita in 's Public
Health Laboratory Service, said
the cluster was highly unusual
but that chance was the likeliest
explanation
While doctors are perplexed,
there were no signs of panic
Wednesday In this small leafy
town 100 miles west of London,
where a meningitis outbreak In
ih c 1080a also re m a in s a
mystery.
Restaurants and pubs were
doing their usual business.
Mothers said they were not
considering taking their rhtldrcn
out of school
At Christie's lavorlle pub. the
King's Head, a lew miles outside
Stroud, thr regulars reflected the
views elsewhere In town: Some
were concerned and some dis­
missed thr bug as a bit of

scarcmongerlng.
"It doesn’t worry me," said
Hugh Baxter. 4 2 . u landscape
gardener. "It’s more the media
that worries me than anything
else."
British tabloids have pumped
up the story with headlines like
"Killer Ifug Ale My Fare" and
"Dither And You Die."
In re m it, days news reports
have said 10 other people have
died from the genu this year.
Hut government scientists have
not confirmed nil the deaths
were caused by the hug
S ire n to c o c c u s I nf er 1tons

usually are easily treated with
antibiotics, but virulent forms
ran kill If not treated promptly.
Strep killed Muppci creator Jim
Henson III 1090.
Christie, a 68-year-old
engineer and local councilman,
went Into Stroud General Hospi­
tal on Feb. 4 for a routine hernia
operation. The nest day the bug
struck, and lie was fltflitlnr* for
his life, lie was saved by surneons who removed the skin and
fatly tissue eaten away from
most of tils lower abdomen.
H r believes the outbreak Is "a
wanting" (lust |*ople around the

world arr abutting nature.
••Don't tie frightened," lie lells
the young woman Irmllng bar.
•‘Whatrvcf II lx. w r have In live
w llli II."
Itnl he worrlr* the world may
one day run mil of remedies,
"Will w r gm lo the (Hiini where
we*ve reached the end of the
w arning, whrn there arr no
more conquerors?’*hr said.
In the HIHOh tnt-nlngiil% outtirrak. 77 cases were reported In
tlie Stroud area over a period of
el|(hl years and live were fatal.
T h e cause w as never d e ­
termined

1^ ^ !

Harrell &amp; Beverly
Transmissions

a0V *

L
I

Jto.
VmJ h mf i r

Curfew
Contlnnsd from P s| « a A
oilier cities, the A C LU said,
listing Pensarola. Bradenton
Beach. Palmetto and Jackson­
ville" - ’*'*"* ’&gt;

■At/iftM irf/

flu* Orlando law’ makes II
Illegal for those under 18 lo In- In
a I ^ -s q u a r e -b lo c k area ol
downtown during curfew hours.
Mayor Glenda flood profxrsed
illc c u rfe w In response to
downtown crlii|e ami violence
that (toller attribute to roving
bauds of rowdy youths.

Violence
Continued from Page 2A
when I was kid. The reason I did
Is because I was afraid some­
body would think that I was
air.ild." Chiles said. "I wasn't a
very good fighter, so I got brut
up a lot.
" F i n a l l y , that happened
enough tliut I decided to think of
something else to do."
Chiles and Jamerson fielded
&lt;|uestl ons f r o m a bo u t 30
Augustu Rau Middle School
students and teachers and
parents for a 30-mlnutc show
scheduled to air next month on
the Sunshine Network.
The two politicians touted
efforts by the Legislature this
yeur to address school violence
and prulsed programs to move
unruly students Into alternative
education, keep middle schools
o|ien longer und make parents
more responsible for their
children.
Augusta Ruu served us un
appropriate setting — while the
show was being taped In the
school's media center, a student
was lieaten by another youth.
The day before, a 14-year-old
youth was arrested for bringing
a gun lo rumpus.
Some students said they arc
concerned about weapons at
school. Hut telling school of­
ficials would only lead to more
trouble, they said.
"If u person has a gun, It's
must likely they urc probably In
a gang or from a different side of
town.” Bald Chlnycrc Solomon, a
seventh-grader. "If they catch
you at the mall, they're like,
'She squealed, let's get her.'"
Chiles and Jarncrson urged
the students to mnkc it clear to
troublemakers that guns und
knives didn't belong at school.
"You have to be taught how to
appropriately deal with peer
pressure, and to feel good ubout
yourself and not to allow yournclf to be dragged Into those
kinds of situations." Jamerson
said.
"Safe Schools and You" Is a
30-mlnutc show produced by the
Florida Cable Television Associ­
ation and Sunshine Network. It
Is scheduled to run on the
Sunshine Network at 9:30 a.m.
June 4. 9 a.m. June 5. 5:30 p.m.
June 9. 7:30 p.m. June 14. 9:30
a.m. June 20 and 5:30 p.m.
June 28.

All s h o r t - s / e e i r e d topa t
mart, womon o r chlfdroi
Chooso from our ontlro in-stock selection of
short-sleavod tops. 2 0 % O ff R o g . P ric o a

Bonum -paok Pop&gt;lco
Chooso from their
favorite flavors; somo
sugar-free. 20 per pkg.

Chofco o f aoda pop
Soloct from your fuvorito flavors In a
convoniont 2 -litor bottlo. Stock up for summor
picnics nhoadl * » ~ i t .
s ««&lt;m i « ik u h

toe***rtsgb&gt;4

Inflatabloa, p o o l toym
Solocted sprlng/summor toys in stock.
2 0 % O ff R e g . Prioom

Tw in -p a c k tramh ba ga
150 tall kitchon, 100, 30gal. or 60, 33-gal. bags.
Modo In the U.S.A.

W a te r mklm, voata
All In stock Including
fishermen's vests.
2 0 % O ft R o g . P rlo o o

C a p ri p a p o r towolm
85, 2-ply shoots por
roll. Stock up now and
savol Solo 3 4 e R oll

2 B -q t.
A must
picnics
chilled.

K -f l F o a a t d o g food
Hl-proteln dry-bulk
dog food In economical
40-lb.-net-wt. bag.

All blkom re g u la rly
p rlo o d 9 0 0 a n d up

IWstUw mty vary by ilw i

KV»iozr/KHio«p/xwio«r

your n ow patlont promcriptfon
rf you’ve never visited the Kmart pharmacy, bring
In ytxa new pratcnplion or raMI a prescription
from anothar pharmacy and gal SB O f F with this
coupon (Pharmacist wi* can doctor tor authoriza­
tion where required by law I If your proscription la
lass than SB. you gat it FREE with this coupon.
Subsequent laM s at our avaryday low pncaa.
Previously Mad prescrlptiona from anothar Kmart
not valid. One R« par coupon, one coupon par
customer. Not valid m combination with any other
offer or where prohibited by law. Valid only for
cuetomers over 03 years of age In N J LA state
law profvbits use of coupons for controSad sub­
stance prescrlptiona. Wl law protvtxts the sale of
merchandise below cost. Coupon nut valid In
Arkansas. Coupon not honored on every
third-party plan
tffO w
See your local Kmart pharmacist
SI r\M
for details. Sapiros J u n * 4 , 1SS4
WSCC,

B n a ok treatm
10-02.* Circus Peanuts
marshmallows In 16-oz,
reg., 9-oz.* coconut.

M
3

Hoatomo anaokm
Mini muffins, Brownie
Bites, others. 8-oz.not-wt. package.
O tM 4 Kmart* Ccrporabon

L im it e d t o s t o r e s t o c k , n o ra in o h e c k s

ZB
. 4

9

loo ch e a t
for summertlmo
to keep food
In blue.

1 /2
o fti

W o m o n ’m moloot
oa n vaa fo o tw e a r
Assorted styles and
colors. Rog. 6.09

Mac lion may vary by alars

�S a n fo rd H e rald

THURSDAY

fooling around

IN BRIEF

into tournament season

10 und Under fostpltrh division
on Saturday and Sunday at
Central Winds Park. T lirrr |* t
•hat there may I* some ........... ...
Ir
may play slowpitrh on Sunday and Monday.
AdrnlMlon la free to all game* at all the site*
. , ,
STARLINGS
Adult Medicine Sperlallsls. managed by
of «lie regular v&lt;i
schedule to finish in find place. The II
( nrporutlon. managed by Fred Tonibros. cam
aecond.

, U 1 H R J ~ ,W r
Country Club
» III be the site or a charity golf tournumrnt this
Sunday. May 29. for 9-year-old Danielle O ’llrlen.
who In suffering from a rare form of cancer.
Entry fee for the I p.m. tournament Is $50 per
person, which Includes greens fee. carl, soft
drinks, and an uwnrds buffet dinner at 5:30 p m
Proceeds from the event will go to defray
O Urlen a medlca! expense. O flrten has been
lighting rhabdomyosarcoma, a form of cancer.
•Ince 1990. She has had two major operations
and several types of chemotherapy. Presently
the cancer has returned and she’ll Ire seeking
treatment at a research cltnlc In Houalon
For reservations, call Dennis Mcllrlde at
Wlndemerr Country Club. 870-I I I 2. or the
Deer Hun pro simp. 099-9592.

w h ir h ^ ,..'0 . 'hr
All-Slur tr:
which will play as Ihe Warrlum. were Mr:
CluiiM. Shana Couraln. Kelly Cru*. Mi:
J ia'n*nt,h“ |,rrrpl1 Megan Oantl. Ku»i
wood. Sally Johnston. Tllfuny Kliunku. K
Lively, Stephanie Lnftln. Megan Miller. Cam
Noland, Michelle Solano, and Carter Woodall
HAWKS

Senior baseball league tryouts
SANFOHD — The second and final tryout
session for the Sanford Kecreatlon Senior Hoys
Baseball league has been set for 5 45 p m
Tuesday. May 3 1. at Sanford Memorial Stadium
T ‘,p !pa« up '* for Payers betwren the ages of
10 and 18 who will not Ire placing NAIIF or
American Legion this summer. Hoys who
participated In the recently completed Sanford
Her real Ion Babe Nulh Baseball League players
and are 15 years old may play In the league
For Info, call Jim Schaefer at 330-5097.

I onilac. which both swept to the title by winning
both league round. Flnl.hlng In a tie for aecond
« er e Accounting Unlim ited, managed by
Mermen Cru/. and White GM C T ru c k , or
Charlotte, managed by Hill Coode.
will firliriw ! % a,te °f ,hl* u*r *ro«p. Ihe SSC
will field two All-Star team*, one playing a . the
llaw k. and the other a« the llrave*.
Making up the Hawks are Keely Clark. Marie
Coode Katie Orlffln. Kelly Harbour. Julie
Kalauakaa. Heather Krwk. Melissa LeComle.
Lindsey Manz. Kene Nlcholaon. Melanie Pace
Samanlha Scales. Kristen Schrupp. Tiffany
Wiggins, and U u re n Wroten
V
Jill!? n?f f°f ,h~ ,,rnv5* wl11 f&gt;p ',n,n*e Anderson.
( r&gt;»»»l Campbell. Crystal Childs.
r l n . i ?° on,„ L!,.ure» Co°PPr- A|y » » Dontrtrh.
I . c ie Helm.. Kelly Manning. Cindy Murcette.
•legan McCarthy. Maura McDonald. Ovelda
Whhe J0,," r ftrr' L*uren S r - y&lt; «»«* Nicole
n s «a Softball. Page SB

Brow n’s triple eclipses Suns
ORLANDO — Brant Brown's two-out. two run
triple In the bottom of the fifth gave the Orlando
Cubs a 2-1 win over the Jacksonville Suns on
Wednesday.
Winning pitcher Derek Wallace |2-7| broke a
live game losing streak David Evans (1-41 look
Ihe loss

■y TONY D .S O H M IIA
Herald Sports Editor
A LTA M O N TE SPRINGS - It ap
pearsi that Lake Brantley s charge to
the Class 5A IniscIm II state semifi­
nals lilts spring has been both a
blessing and a bother for the
ruiriotft* Hummrr program
"It's great (lust the varsity went so
lar Into the state playoffs, hut that
only gave us two days to gel ready."
said Coach l.er McDermott, who will
guide tfie l.akr Brantley -A’ team in
the local NAIIF summer league "As
a result, we re going to have to play
ourselves into shape.

Fletcher, H ill stop M arline
MIAMI — Darrin Fletcher drove In two runt
and Ken lllll earned his eighth victory as the
Montreal Expos heat Ihe-Florida Marlins 3-1
Wednesday night
Rookie Carl Everrti scored Florida's run In Ihe
seventh when hr walked, look second on a
groundnut, stole third and corns home on Dave
Magadan's sacrifice fly,
____

But getting to the llnal lour has
created a lot of enthusiasm among
these kids. It gives them something
lit shoot lor They saw wltat their
future may hold ll makes It easier
to gel guys out and II makes It
easier to gel Ihe guys to work hard "

M erlins release Destrade
__ MIAMI — The Florida
Marlins parted
-------------.------,--------com pany
Wednesday with first baseman Orestes De­
al ra dr, who till the most homers and heard the
most boos In the train's Inaugural season.
Tills year Destrade was hilling 208 and bring
Jeered almost every time lie mode an out at Joe
Hobble Stadium.
The Marlins designated his contract for
assignment, which gives them 10 days to
determine his status. Options Include trading or
releasing him.

NL suspends Destrade
NEW YORK — St. Louis teammates Allen
Watson and Bernard Gllkcy, and Floridu’a
Orestes Destrade were suspended Wednesday
by the National League for participating In u
bench-clearing brawl
Willson wus suspended for eight gnmes for
Intentionally hilling Destrade with u pilch and
then throwing his glove ut Dcntrude after he
charged the mound Sunday during u gumr In
Miami. Watson hit Deslrudc In Ihe truck ufter
giving up three homers la Ihe Marlins In Ihe
second Inning.
Destrade wus suspended for four games for
charging Ihe mound and hilling Watson. Gllkcy
wus suspended for four games for making
contact with an umpire during the melee.
The three players, who were ejected from Ihe
game along with Marlins reliever Luis Aquino,
also were fined an undisclosed amount.

Dodgers dum p Strawberry
LOS A N G ELES — The Los Angeles Dodgers
once paid Darryl Strawberry big money In hopes
he would produce a championship In his
hometown. On Wednesday, they paid him to
simply go away,
Strawberry has not pluyed this seuson and Is
In un after-care program following a four-week
May In a substance abuse clinic. What’s next for
him Is unclear, although his ullorney said his
client will play buscball again.
The Dodgers said they reached u settlement
with their troubled outfielder, who was to be
paid $3 million this year und $5 million in 1995
to flnlah out the five-year. $20.25 million
contract he signed Nov. 8. 1990. The Dodgers
would not disclose settlement terms.

BASEBALL
□7:35 p.m. — W TUS, Houston Astros ul Atlanta
Braves. (L)

fe o m p lo f llsMnpa on l » n t I I

On We dn e s d ay nt ghl . Lake
Brantley opened the NAUK season
(tour days after Ihe Patriots fell to
Cooper Clly In Ihe Class 5A semtfl
Iialal with all 8 4 loss lo Ihe visiting
A|K&gt;pka Blue Darters

Wracking Craw second baseman Slava Coopar glvaa
Slava Woodley of Sportamart-Crazy Wings lha "thumbs
up" for his affort during their game Wednesday night at

H sM flM )t,IM IW lS
ChaM Park Coopar and lha Wracking Craw got back to
.500 with their 2-1 win over Sportsman Crazy Wings and
aro now Had for third with Sportsman Crazy Wings

With the Mine iled 2-2 through
five Innings. Apopka jumped on
reliever David Kl/kln for /nor runt

W ells dodges upset bid by D ee’s Nuts
SANFORD — George Por/lg’s two-run home run
capped a five-run rally In the bottom of the fifth Inning
that helped Wells Contracting gel by upsel-mlndcd
Dee’s Nuts 7-0 In the Sanford Recreation Wednesday
Men’s Softball League at Chase Park.
Trailing 5-2 heading Into the home half of the fifth.
Wells Contracting exploded for five runs on six hlls,
then hud to weather a sixth-inning comeback attempt
by Dec's Nuts to register the win.
In Ihe first game of the evening. Barrow Lane scored
on Dave Shlfflet’s sacrifice fly In the bottom of Ihe
second Inning to break a 1-1 He and give Ihe Wrecking
Crew a 2-1 decision over Sportsmart/Crozy Wings.
There was no report on the scheduled third game
between Dee'sNuta and Helllg Meyers.
Wells Contracting (5-1) leads the five-team circuit,
followed by Helllg Meyers (3-2), Sportsmart/Cruzy
Wings and the Wrecking Crew (both 3-3), and Dec’s
Nuts (0-4).
Next week. Wells Contracting Is scheduled to play
Sportsmart/Cruzy Wings at 0:30 p.m. The Wrecking
Crew has the doubleheadcr. taking on Helling Meyers In
Ihe 7:30 p.m. game and Dee’s Nuts at 8:30 p.m.
Craig Appel hit a double und a single to highlight the
Wrecking Crew's 10-hlt effort. Lane singled twice and
scored a run. Stacy Bllz bad a single and a run scored.
Shlfflet added a single and an RBI. John Poole also
drove In a run. Heath Short. Steve Cooper. Chip

IssrtimsM C m , WMfi
W w k M f Crtw
Dh ' i Mutt
Wtllt U fllrittin ,

Langston, und Mike Scrgtc each hit a single.
Gary Miller led Sportsmurt/Cruzy Wings with three
singles. Paul Rodriguez hit two singles und scored the
team's only run. Bob Pulugulno also till two singles
Donnie Miller. Don Macher, Darryl Miller, and Sieve
Woodley eac h singled.
Por/lg finished with u home run. single, one run
st ored, und three RBI for Wells Contracting. Rick Wells
contributed a double, two singles, two runs, und an RBI.
Bill Marino doubled twice, scored a run. und hud two
RBI. Jim Dawson doubled, singled, and scored a run.
Bob Wells Sr. added two singles und a run John
Reichert singled twice. John (llllmorc singled nnd
scored a run. Tony Mann and Randy Brown troth
singled.
For Dec’s Nuts. Duvld Lively collected u double,
single, one run. und an RBI. Kevin Simmons also hud a
double, single, and an RBI. Lonnie Tucker singled twice
und scored twlcr. Gene Astarltn hit two singles und
drove In two runs.
Glenn Stewart and David Smith both hit two singles
und scored a run. Tony Bclllsslmo also hit two singles.
Antoine Grooms had a single, a run. and un RBI.
Mlchucl Davis and Rulph Astarlta each hit a single.

•L U ( O A X T IR ti. PATRIOTS*
III W I - I II t
U k ,S r* n U «,
l«| Ml I - 4 , |
M ,«ll. Zatfli |JI and Narration. Lima. Etikin
and Craning. Slawton (»). WP — Zaflli (I 0). IP
- E ft Mo 101). Sava — Nona. IB — Apopka
Smith I. Colon. Harralion: Laka Branllov. Rolai
Cattalda IB - Nona MR - Nona Rtcordt Apopk^Po. Laka BrantlayO I

S e a rs c a tc h e s V a n A ls tin e , w in s M in i-S to c k m ain
Special to the H erald
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Bobby Scars ran
down early leader Gene Van Alstine to win the
Mini-Stock main event last Saturday night. May
21, at New Smyrna Speedway.
At the drop of the green (lag. Van Alstine
outduelled Scurs nnd went on to the point. Four
laps later. Scars enught up with Van Alstine.
After two laps of side-by-side racing. Scars seized
the advantage and managed to hold ofT Van
Alstine the rest of the wuy to score his ninth win
of the year.
Van Alstine was second followed by Ted
Vulptus, Kevin DIMeco, and J.D . Duncan.
A lap 13 caution opened the door for Allen
Rhodes to overtake front-running Michael
Williams nnd claim the top money spot nnd the
trip to victory lane In the Limited Late Model

division.
Williams bolted to the curly leud while Rhodes
and Dill Morris hooked up In a battle for second
plucc. By lap seven. Williams hud pulled awuy to
a 10-cur advantage over the rest of the field thut
he maintained until the caution.
With two laps remaining lo the checkers.
Rhodes clulmcd the advantage on the restart.
Williams chased him tn un attempt to regain the
lead but his cfTorts came up short und he hud to
settle for second In front of Wayne Lockett.
Claude Colllgnon. and Uubbu Martonc.
Art Chapman didn’t bother to wait for the rest
of the pack tn the Sportsman headliner. When
flagman Jo h n n y Buss dropped the green.
Chapman (who set the evening's fastest quali­
fying time) was gone.
By the end of the first lup. Chapman had a
5-car lead over second-place Duvld LcUcau.
Going Into lap five. Chapman already wus

lapping other cars In the 15-cur Held.
A lop seven caution bunched the field for a
restart with LcBcau lining up alongside
Chapman. But when the (lug dropped. Chapman
once again blew uway the rest of the field and
headed for victory lane. 11 car lengths ahead of
Jeff Rule and Tom m y Johnson, who had gotten
uround LcUcau with three laps left.
"Just because you have a big lead, you can’t
buck o(T," said Chapman, the current FASCAR
Sportsman points leader. "You race Just as hard
up front ns you do If you’re In the back of the
field trying to plat catch-up.
"In this sport, you take nothing for granted.
You rucc hard und rucc to win."
Bobby StcvenB took the early lead In the
Bomber division with Gary Frosh and Chuck
Vola in hot pursuit. For most of the early laps.
Stevens and Frosh raced whcel-to-whccl untli
□Bee Racing, Page 3B

FOR T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E OF S P O R TS IN Y O U R AR EA, READ T H E S A N FO R D H ERALD D A IL Y

�n 'H
»■ - Stnlord Hertld. SBntord, Flortdi - Thunday, May 30, 1904

S T A T S &amp; S TA N D IN G S
SeoHD
Tevoi
Oakland

A! I t ml n«l« Park
Wodnotdoy night
Plr»1 rtc t — 14S4, Mi 11.4*
3 Summ Damt
100
4 Loony Foe Tooni
1 Dicks hot Band
Q (14) 1S.40 P (14) (11.10 T (14 1) 111.40
*#c#nd rata -1044. Di 40.10
OMIllyWInd
11 40 40 40 1) 40
1 Spirit Song
0 00 1 00
4 Vs men* Kid
1 00
O ( H I II).00 P (0 II 114 M T (014) 111) 00
DD H A D ) 4.40
Third r a t a -H I0 . D i ll.I I
lA O K O r Spot
4 00 1 40 n o
1 Task Meal Melody
0 40 )00
0 M'a Rolando
4.40
Q ( M l 45.10 P 11 1) 11.10 T (! ) 0) 114.00
Fourthrata-I4M . C; 11 1)
1DMS Cindy Low
&gt;4 00 440
7 Souther rDipoourt
1) 40 JtO
4 Jortoy John L
1 70
Q IM ) 44.44 F 4111 141.44 T ( ( H I 4)7 44
Carryover 4144.74
FlltS roc*-I4S4, Mi 11.74
) Korrlgon
U00 110 no
I Bobby D Print#
100 140
almokla Vara
100
Q (11) 1.00 P 11 1) 17JO T 1114144.40
tilth rata- » » . Cl 11.14
1 I'm ALaadar
0 00 100 000
I Salam i BK
1140 140
1 Brian Star
400
Q ( I T ) M.40 P (M ) 11.14 T (M l) 340.40
&lt; )* -!) 10(1 paid 11.40
lavanth rata — DM. Di 11.40
0 Sporty Bat
10 40 4 10 110
) Boar Bailor
100 0.00
] Mika’i Gala
4 00
O ( M l 01.40 P (0-AII) 11.10 (A IM ) f.M T
(0-1-1) 1111.401 (O t-M I 1071.40
IlgM S rote — 1444. B: 11.1)
1 Bata Warrior
1100 5 10 1 40
OAR Ma|lc Man
1)40 1 40
IHutkyBrwD
5 40
O (A t) 101.40 P ( M l 117.10 T 11-4-1) 1)11.41
Ninth r a t a - DM, At 11.11
IT t k N IN G I
4 00 ) 00 &gt;40
IHIghlondEcIlpM
1)40 440
7 Oh*ton Khan Mon
140
Q (11) 14.44 P ( M l 44.74 T ti l l) 44.44 OD
&lt;4-11 A llA ll) 144.44
14th r*to— 14)4. D; 11.14
7 Nk#D H
10 00 1 40 430
1J Oney
) 40 130
)O J Red Allegli
100
a (7 4) 14.44 P (7-4) 77.14 T &lt;7-*ll 47.44
I1IS roc# -1 4)4. C; )l 44
4 PAID Ruby
10*0 7 40 1)40
3 JO 't Brick Top
i 40 7 40
1Kryplo Le#
440
O 13-4) &gt;4.41 P ( * » 44 44 T (4 1 11 141.44
CArryovtr 7444.3)
llthrAC* — 14)4. A; 14.47
3 Fowl Fu Fu
I0W 4 00 400
l Teit Randy Boy
110 &gt;40
1 Rod River Runner
4(0
Q (1-1) 4S.M P (I I) IIS.4ST (I 1 11 11)1 M S
(M I -4 ) 111)44
11thr#CO-1444. Si 11.04
1AOK Hillbilly
740 140 140
lUncloFronco
110 140
I Min B rondo
110
O 11 1) 11.10 P I M ) 1I M T (11-1104.M
I4lh roco — 1044, Cr 10.00
) Summ Vulcon
1) 00 0 00 040
0 Hurrlcono Pott
1 00 100
1Jom
440
O (S O) 11.00 P H OI 00.40 S (10-1-1) 4114.44
A -O M i H-141.414

■AtlBALL BTANKNNOt
NATIONAL LEAOUE
All Tlmot EOT
E a i I Ol vision
W
L Pel. OB
Allonlo
34 15 4)1 _
Monlrool
M 14 S74 S
Florida
n
1) JEt 4Vi
WO
New Yorb •
It 33
.art fVl
PhlD deW # .
Contra) DivltDn
W
L Pel. OB
)7f —
Cincinnati.
14 14
34 30 .541 V t
SI Loult
U) 1
Moulton
34 11
Pllltburgh
443 4
If 34
4)3 4«»
If &gt;5
Chicago
Wall Ofvltioit
W
L Pel. GB
}» —
Lot Ange let
&gt;4 &gt;1
471 V t
&gt;4
Sen FrenciKO
33
30 14
41) V t
Color erto
&gt;47 W t
1) 3)
Son Diego
Wodnetdoy'i Qemoi
Montroel). Florida I
Now York 4. Pllltburgh 7
Altonlo4,Hoution). Dlnnlngi
SI Louli to. Philadelphia s
Colorado ). Cincinnati 1
Son Froncltco ). Son Diego 1
Lot Ange lei 7, Chicago!
Thurtdoy'l Oomot
Now York (Gouo J 1) ol Pllltburgh (Cooke
1 4), 1;0)p m
Son Froncltco (Von Londinghom 00) ot
Sen Diego (Bonot) 01.4 OSp m
Cmclnnoll (Ropor 001 ol Colorado (Herrlt
11), S OSp m
Hoution (Swindell 4 1) ol Atlanta lAvory
S 11,7 40p m
AMERICAN LEAGUE
All Tlmol EDT
Eoil Diviilen
W
L Pet. GB
70 11 Iff —
Now York
37 14 034 1
Botlon
&gt;4 17 40) 4
Baltimore
444 4
11 3)
Toronto
474 4*I
30 33
Oetroil
Central Olvlllen
W
L Pet. OB
14 17 401 _
Chi tego
134 H r
33 10
CD vo lend
J 'l 4
y
31 31
VO 4V|
33
33
Mlnneiote
17 34 .174 10
Milwaukeei
Wtlt DtvilDn
W
L Pci. OB
447 —
11 34
Californio

io ) )
.444
14 »
.443
1) U
747
Wedneiday-t Gome*
Batlimora 4. Milwaukee)
Seattle 1. Oakland 0
Ciavalandal Boiton. pod . rain
Otlroltf, Cahlornla 1
Now Y ork ) Toronto)
Chicago I). Minnotot* I
Konioi City 4. Teaail
Thuridoy't Oamat
Calilornla (MogrenoOl) at Oalroll IMoort
4 )|, 1 D p m
Taaai IPav'ik 01) at KantatClty (Granger
0 D .l U p m
Cleveland (Tavarai 00) al Botlon (Httktlh

NAIMS OAUQS
Tim Ralnea is a S anlord native and 8 am ln o le H igh School
graduate now playing for tho C hicago W h ite Sox. H la a la ta are
for the 1994 season In the first colum n, personal-best season
to ta ls In the secon d c o lu m n and cu rren t career to tals
(Including 1994 gam es) In the third colum n.
Raines did not play In tho W h ite S o x’a 12-1 rom p ovor tho
M in n eso ta Tw ins W ednesday night.

3 31.4 01p m

tOUTHERN LEAOUE
Firit Hell
Eatlarn Divitlan
W
L ’ Fct. OB
Carolina (Pirolei)
»
H
411
GreenvilD I Brovot)
11 ;*
4M 4
KnoivllD IBIu* Joyt)
H
it
4)4 4
OrItnde (Cubt)
14 ) l
.444 H 'l
JocktonvilD IMorlnertl 14
144 &lt;)
Weitern Divnion
HunlivlID (Alhllca)
TO 10 41)
MtmphU (Royall)
14 10
170 ID
NothvilD (Twinti
1) JO U4 )D
Birmingham (WSoi)
&gt;7 1) MO 4
Chaitanooga (Radt)
II 10 111 1ID
Wadnaiday't Oa mat
Orlanda I, JockionvtlD 1
Graanvillaa. Knoivlila)
Carolina 14. HunlivlID 1. tomp o) tutp
gama
HunltvIHa II. Carolina 10
NothvilD I, Birmingham 1
Mamphit 4. Chattanooga I
Thunder's Oamat
Oraanallla at Orlanda
Caralina al Jatktanyilla
Nathvilla at Birmingham
Chattanooga at Mamphit
FLORIDA IT AT I LB A O U I
First Hall
Ecilern DtvIlDn
W
L Ptt.
Brevard IMorlinil
33 17
7)7
too
St LuCD (Mott)
11 1)
Vero Beach (Dodgeri)
33 &gt;3
M0
Daytona (Cubk)
14 &gt;4 MO
Ok tola (Ailrot)
34
M4
14
W P Booth (Eipot)
371
t&gt; )&gt;
Weltern DtvilDn
CDorweter IPSIIIDtt
&gt;4 17 Oil
Tompo 1Yonkeeil
37 17 410
F o rlM y trt(T n in i)
14 t*
174
SI P*D (Cordmoli)
30 14 &gt;74
Loktlond (Tlgert)
14 10 14)
Char lotto (Rongon)
444
73 31
Dunedin (Blue JOyil
4)7
&gt;1 &gt;5
Soreiota (Red Soil
17 17
M0
Wednetdoy'i Oemei
Lakeland ). Dunodm 4
St Potortburg «. Sorototo 3
ForlMyors I). Doytono )
ChorDHe*. Otceolol
Tempo 4. St Luctot
Brovord f. Woil Potm Botch 1
Thursdays Or mot
Dunodm ot Lokoiond
Cloorwotor ol St Potortburg
Sorototoot Tompo
Fort Myort ot Ooylono
Chorloilo ot Outoio
Brovord ot SI Lucd
Vtrp Booth ot Writ Prim Booth

OB
_
10
14
14
14
&gt;0

RAINES QAUQE
Category
'94

G a m e s ............. , 38
At-bals........... .. 144
Runs.............. . 31
H its ...................
RBI.................
.. 5
T riples.
.
6
S teals.
2
.264

Wednesday. Moy I)
Houston 104. Uloh 00 Moulton leads tor lot
10
FMd4y,M*r 11
Mou»ton 41 Uloh. 0 p m
Sunday. May to
Hoution41 U lJh .) M pm
Tuetdor, May II
Utoh ot Moulton. 0 p m . II norottory
Thunder. Juno 1
Moulton •• Utoh 0p m ,11nocetto' y
lotvrdoy. Arno tor Sundry. Juno)
(I Saturday. Uloh ot Hoution 1 JO p m It
notot lory
It Sundry. Utoh ol Moulton. 7 pm II
hocottory

iN H i W J Y O f F I

_
(t
1
3
ID
4
7*J
to-r

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

))

All T lm o tlD T
CONFERENCE F IN A L!
(B o ilo tll
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Now Jortoy v i N. V. Rongori
Wodnotdoy. Moy IS
N V Rongori 0. Now Jortoy 1 tortot Hod

Fridoy.Moytl
Now Jortoy ol N Y Rongort. 7 M p m
W ESTERN CO NFBRINCC
Vomouvot ol Toronto
Vancouver wini tor tot 4 I

STAN LEY CUP FINALS
(Botlol I)
Tuotdoy. Moy II
Voncouvor ol Eotiom Csnloronco thompi
on. hmo TBA
Thurtdoy. Juno 1
Voncouvor Ot Eoilom Contoronco thompi
on, llmo IBA
Solurdoy, Juno 0
Eoitorn Contoronco chomplon ot Von
cowvor. Hmo TBA
Tuotdoy. Juno 1
Eottorn Contoronco chompian ol Von
EXPOS 1. MARLINS I
couvor. Hmo TBA
M ONTREAL
FLORIDA
Thurtdoy. Juno *
o h r hhi
oh r h hi
Voncouvor ol Eotlom Conloronco chomp,
FroiiOfll 10 10
Brown# lb 4 0 I 0
on. Hm oTBAjInoctuory
JuBolIlt
4 110
Mgdon lb 1 0 0 1
Solurdoy. Jvno II
Or item cl 4 0 0 0
Shihold rl 4 0 0 0
Eoitorn Conloronco chomplon ol Von
Conmo lb 4 0 0 0
LW Ikrrl 4 0 1 0
touvor.
Hmo
TBA.
II nocotto'y
OFlchrc 1 1 1 1
Corrilloll 4 * 1 0
Tuotdoy. Juno 14
JHrndip • • • 0 .
Lntinglb 4 1 1 0
Voncouvor 01 Bottom Conloronco thorn*.
Wit
Floyd &lt;b 4 0 10
Stoo
o JtTO M ^llfro.t BA. II nocotw ry
Crdoroit t o i l
KHIIIp
Tyr« cl
1 0 10
10 0 0
YPoroi p 0 10 0
Wttlondp 0 0 0 0
BrberDTb 1 0 0 0
Grdnorp 1 0 0 0
Evorollcl 1 1 1 0
NASCAR COCO Colo 4M
Teteli
1 1 J 1 I)
ToDll
)) I 4 I
CONCORD. N C , — Qualifying rolulll
000 141 Ml — )
Montroel
Wodnotdoy
lor tho Coco CoD 000 NASCAR
040 440 IM - I
F lor Ido
Wintlon Cup tlock cor roco ot the I ) mil#
E — Looting (4) LOB - Montroel 7.
Chorion# Motor Speedway, tilling hometown
Florid# 4. IB — LWolktr m i. Cordoro 14)
moke ol cor ond ipeed m mph (Top 10
MR - DFDither ()). SB - Evoroll (D CS quality, additional quelilymgon Thurtdoy I
F ro ilo rd l. S Wollolond SF Magadan
l Jell Gordon. Pmibaro. Ind CtDvroiol
IP
H R 1R BB SO
lumlno. 141-470 mph, 1. Joe Nomochok.
Monlrool
Loktlond. ChovroDI Lumlno. IM.1S1
K H IIIW .I)
) Geafl Bodino. Chomung. N Y , Ford
Wollolond S .)
Thundorblrd, DOOM. 4 Kon Schroder,
Florida
Fenton.Mo
. Chevrolet Lumine. ID 471
4
Gardner L. 11
) 1 I )
1 Broil Bod-no Chomung N Y , Ford
YPoroi
1 1 0
1 Thundorblrd.
1I )
114)10. 4 Grog Seckt. Mot
0 0 0 0
JHtrnendel
1)
llluck, N Y . Ford Thundorblrd. 174 1)1
Umpirot — Homo. DuMulh. Flril, Hellion.
I Rick Moil. Rockbridge Boihi. Vo . Ford
Second. Kellogg; Third. Rung#
Thundorblrd. 174141 4 Word Burton. South
T - ) 4t A - l l M i
Sotlon. Vo , ChovroDI Lumlno. 171460
4 John JLndrtlli. IndionopoHi. ChovroDI
Lumlno. 174)41, 10 lorry Lobonlo. Cor pui
Chr ,11. Total. ChovroDI Lumlno. 174 177
II Mork Merlin. BoDlvIHo. Ark . Ford
All T,mot EDT
Thundorblrd. 174 M l; II Wolly Dellerbech
CONFERENCE FINALS
Jr., Bowl). Colo.. Pontloc Grond Pnk,
(Boil t i l l
174 447
EASTERN CONFERENCE
1) Ricky Rudd. Chowpooko. Vo Ford
Twetday, Moy 34
Thunderbled.
174 too. 14 Ernie Irvon,
New York 100, Indian* 44, New York DI
Sallnoi Colli. Ford Thundorblrd. 171 *00
tenet 10
1) Jell Burton. South Botlon. Vo . Ford
Thunder. Moy &gt;4
Thundorblrd. 174 144; 14 Del# Jarrell, Con
Indiana*! New York. Ip m •
Over. N C.. ChovroDI Lumlno. 174 IM
Saturday. Moy &gt;4
17. Morgen Shepherd. Conovor. N.C . Ford
Now York #1 Indian*. 3 70p m
Thundorblrd. 174 000. 14 Horry Gonl.
Monday. Moy M
Taylort-rllle. N C . Chevrolet Lumlno. 17711)
Now York *1 Indlon*. 170pm
If. Joromy Moyliold. Owontboro. Ky . Ford
Wodnotdoy. June 1
Thundorblrd, 177 40), 10 Chuck Bown,
Indian* ol New York, tp m . Ilnecetiory
Pori
lend. Ore .Ford Thundorblrd. 177 414
Friday. Juno 7
Foiled to Ouolily
Now York *1 Indlon*. 9p m . Ilnecetiory
Rutty Wolloco. SI Loult. Ford Thun
Sunday, Juno )
dorbird. 171.SIS
Indiana*1 Now York. 7p.m . Ilnoccitory
Derrlke Cope. Sponowoy, W eth, Ford
Thundorblrd. I ll SOT
W ESTERN CONFEBENCE
Bobby Htmlllon. Nothvlllo. Tonn , Ponlioc
Monday, Moy 1)
Grand Prl*. 177)47
Houston 100, UlohM

■ A S H A L L BOXBS

AUTO RACINO

J

NBA PLAYOFFS

earner
1.855
7,020
1,242
2,089
723
337
102
129
753
.298

Tim Raines

D o lt Eornh ordl. Konnopollt. N C .
ChovroDI Lumlno. 177744
Bobby LabonD. Cor put Chrmi, Totot.
Pontloc Grond P m , in 744
Rlchlo Die hid. Edgtrton Wit . Ford
Thunderblrd. 177 0)1
Rtndr LoJolo. Norwolk. Conn . Ford
Thundorblrd. I l l 0)1
SlOvo C'tttom Codtdon A lo . ChovroDI
Lumlno 114 441
Dorrtll Wollnp Fronklln. Tonn . ChovroDI
Lumlno. 114 4)1
Mlchool Wollnp Owemboro Ky . Psntioc
Grond Prto. 114 111
Todd Bodlrw. Chomung N V . Ford Thun
dorbird 174 4)1
S lorlln g M ortln. Colum blo. Tonn
ChovroDI Lumlno 174 474
Jim my Sponsor, Berwick. Po , Ford
Thundorblrd. 174 70)
Billy Stondridgo. Shelby N C . Ford
Thundorblrd. 174)7)
Mlko WoHoco. Si Lault Ford Thundorblrd
174117
Dick TrlCkD. Wttcontm Hop-dt W it.
ChovroDI Lumlno. 170 U0
Brod Toogue Johmon City. Tonn. Ford
Thundorblrd 170 474
toko Speed Jock ton Mitt Ford Thun
dorbird 174 004
Hul Stricklin. Coloro A lo . Ford Thun
dorbird 17)4)4
Tod Mutgrovo. Fronklln. W it. Ford
Thundorblrd, 17) 740
Bill EHiott DowtanvilD. Go Ford Thun
dor bud 17)47)
Bobby Hilitn. Mtdiond. T#«*i, Ford Thun
dorbird. 171)74
KyD Potty. RondDmon N C . Pontloc
GrondPrlo. 17) 704
Jimmy HeniDy. Rldgowoy. V o . Ford
Thundorblrd 111 041
Loy AlDn Jr RoDigh N C . Ford Thun
dorbird 111 014
Jim SouDr. Nocodoh. W it, Ford Thun
dorbird 114 414
Dove Merc It. Woutou W it. ChovroDI
Lumlno. ID 144
Oelmo Coworl. Sovonnok. Oo . Ford
T hunder bird, no tpood
Jerry ONeill. Auburn. N Y . ChovroDI
Lumlno. not

P AR IS
r '—i Roiulli
r itutD^VwXwMOy
Wodnotdtr el Ih o 'U f '
million French Open lonnlt chomp.onth.pt #•
RolondGo'rotilodium
Second Round
Fabric# Santoro Franco, del Jonathon
Stork. Modlord Ore 4 7 4 1. 0 1 Grog
Nutedtki. Coned# del ADiender Volkov
Rutile. 7 1.01.10 41
Androl Medvedev 14), Ukraine, dol
Nickloi Kulll Sweden. 4 4, 7 4 17 41, 4 4. 7 ).
Mikael Tlllilroom, Sweden, del Androl
Oihavtkly. RulHe. 4 1.141711.0 t
. Polo Sempret III. Tompo. del AkerceD
Riot. ChID. 7 4 (7 S). 7 0 17 4). 0 4. OHvDf
Doioitro. Front* dol Aguthn GariiiM.
Argentina **, 4 0 7 4 17 41
Paul Hoorhuit. Netherlands. dol Lon
Jontton. Swodon. 4 1 14 14. 1 ). 41
Richard Krolkok (D ). Nolhorlondi. dot
Th.orry Champion. Franc*. 4 ). 4 ). 4 4.4 1
Domol Vocok. Cloch Republic, dot Mognut
Gutlollton (1)), Swodon. 0 4. 0 4. 1 4 (7 4).
4 4. Sorgl Bruguor* (II. Spain, dol Chritlion
Ruud. Norway. 4 1.11.7 0 (7 })
Thornet Muller (H I. Autlrlo. del Andre
Agotti. Lot Vogoi. 41. * 7 IS 71. 7 ). 10. I S;
Jonoi Blorkmon, Swodon. dol Slave
Dotodol. Cloch Rtpubllc. * 0. 7 S. 4 )
Jim Courier (7), Dodo City, do) Sttfono
Potcotoildo. Holy. 7 1 4 0. 4 7 (14). 4 4;
Potrltk Reltoc, Autlroil*. dol Lionel Hour,
Franc*. 41.4 0, * 4.
DoubDt
F iril Round
Grant Canntll. Conod*, and Patrick
Galbraith H I. Tocomo. Woth.. dol SDIon
Kruger and Morcot Ondrutko, South Alrico,
4 1. 4 1, Lon Bole. South Alrico. ond Broil
Devon. Now Zealand. dol Brtl Cornell.
Comdon, S C . ond T J MiddDlon. Allonlo,
14(711.47
Pablo Albono. Argonllno ond Roger Smith,
Bohomtt, dol. Shtlby Cannon, Pool* Vodro
Botch, ond David MocPhorton. Auilrolla, 7 4
(7 SI. 4 4; EHIt Forroir*. South Africa, and
Mark Kell. Tompo. dol. Brian MetPhD. Son
Jot*. Colli., ond Bryan Shelton. Allonlo. S 7,
4 4.44

Mortln Domm ond Korol Novocek 114),
Cloth Rtpubllc, del Conoid John ton. United
SIODt, ond Kont Klnntor, Oroonwood. Ind.
14. 14 (1 4 ). A ll Vivgony Koltlnlkay,
Rutklo. ond Dovld Rlkl 111). Cltch Rtpubllc.
del Tomot Corbonoll, Spoln. ond Libor
Plmok. Bolglum. *1.41
More Goollnor, Gormony. *nd Jovlor
Sonchoi (111. Spain. dot John LottnD Do
Jogor ond Kovln Ullyult. South Africa. 14
( M l, 0 ). Wolly Mo*ur. Auklrolio. ond Dovld
Pott, lo t Vogoi. del Crltllon Brondl ond
FrodoricoMordogon. Holy. 7017 I ) , 14(7 II.
SorgD Cowl ond EmlHo Sonchoi. Spoln.
dol Monrlk Jon Dovldt. Netherlands ond
PD1 Norvol 14). South Air ICO. 4 4. 4 4. P4u1
Annocorw. Eoki Hampton N Y . ond Doug
Floch. St Loult. dol Froncltco Montono.
Mioml. ond Jim Pugh. Ro.nhn PoDt Vordot.
C o lli.04.0 4.4 1
Todd Waodbrldgo ond Mork Woodfordt (4),
Auklrolio dot ADa O Brian AmoMID. Too
ot ond DovD WIN, JocktonvilD. 41. 41,
Monrlk Holm ond Andort Jorryd (1). Sweden,
dol Mike Bouor. EmofyvIlD. C olli. ond
Byron Talbot South Atrice 7 0.4 7 4 I
Luke Jonton. Ludlnglon. Mich . ond
Murphy Jonton (ID . Norcrott Oo dot Ctrl
Oroide. Letvle. end Cork Wohlgrtn. Sweden.
4 ). 14 (11). Jeon Philippe FDurien end
SDphpne Simion. Front#, dol Jim Grobb
Tucton. Ark . ond Jorod Polmor. Tompo. 4 I,
41
Rodgiph# Ollbort ond GulHoumo Roowo.
Front#, dol Joimo One mi. Broiil. end
Froncltco Roig. Spoln. 10. 4 1. 4 4. Nkkloi
Kulll ond AAegnut Lortton. Sweden, del Kon
Floch. AlphortID. Co . end ScOil MolHlD
ID ), PonD Vodro Booth. 4 A 4 0
Byron Block, Zimbabwe ond J onethen
Stork III. Modlord. O o . dol JovDr Front.
Argentine ond Leantrdo LovtiD Moiko.
4 ). 14 (7 41; P4trkk McEnroe. CovO Nock.
N Y ond Richer Reneberg III. Hoution. dtf
Trevor Kronemonn. BrodonDn. ond Rkk
Leech, Loguno Botch C olli, 0 4.41.114
D&gt;ogo Ntrgiko Holy, end Polor Nyborg.
Sweden, dol Kelly Janet Son D&gt;ogo. ond
Jock Woilo. United SloDt 0 1,4 4

IM l

Ftftl Round
Koioryno Nowok. Paiond. dot Loo
Ohirerdl, Front#. 0 4 0 1. Me&lt;4t Bobo'
Oormony. dol Polty Fondkk. SocromonD
C o lli.4 1.4 4
LlndMy Dovonporl (4). MvrrDIa Colli .
dtl CHondo Rub.n LotOyo'D. 10 4 7 11 71
4441
toeond Round
Ludmlle RkhDtovo Crock Republic del
Ternl WhlHingor Noonoh. W it. 4 4 4 1
Mery Pierce ( I I I . Front# dol Mori#
F rone otto BenI &lt;vogue. Holy. 4 0.0 I
Korin Ktthwendi Gormony. dot Kimberly
Po. Rolling Mlllt tHelot Celt! Id *1.7*
Joonoho Kruger. SouOt Afrtto. dol Rodko
Z'ubekove. SDvokto 40. 7 1.1 )
Mir tom Orement Netn#»iendl dot Sob.no
Appelment Belgium, 4 1, 14 4 4. Inot
Oorrorhologvi Argentine, del Nooko
Sowomoltw. J ope— 7 14 4
SDth Orel (II. CDrmony. dol SDpnonD
RoII d t H#ih*. lendi 7 1 4 7 Lori McNeil
MoutDn. dol K ntlD hooperl Nothorlondt
0 4, 4 1.0 7
Melon# Suto.0 Mil Cloth Rtpubllc, del
Cloro Wood Or,i#.n 7 4 0 1.4 1 Mery Joe
Fornindoi 1141, Mioml. dol Angohco
Govtldon Mot Ico. 4 0.4 I
Ivo Mo|oH. Croatia dol litvl* Fonno.
H o ly, 4 4 4 1; Huaendro Drogem lr
Romania del SendeeCocchml Holy 41 40
0I
Morkolo Kochlo Gormony del KoD'Ino
M o D ovo Bulger to 44 4 ) 4 7 PoHo RHDr
Autlrlo dol Nolhoiio Touliol Front# 4 ).
41
Inno Spirit# Romomo. del .Korin#
Quenhec. Front#. I I 44 Amende CooUor
South A Into, dol Rodko Bobkovo. Ctoch
Republic. 4 4 4 4
F trill
l&gt;U&lt;fU, A uiiraK a, • M f M a
t &amp; m V ' koukh AND*, dol 4o»mo Hoc* end
CoroDno Schno.dor. Gormony i t 4 1 Ai*«
tadra Fuwl. France *nd MegdaDna MroJ
Poland dot Mole Muric, Yugoslav!#. ond
Bolty Nogoiion. Kopolu* Bor Hawaii. 0 1.
44
Oanieii# Janet. Auilrolla. ond Von*
Komio. Japan del Aklko Klpmuto and
Neoko KI|lmulo Jepon H r ) KrliHn*
Hertford Autlroli* and Julio Ricnordton.
Now /oolond del Michallo Joggord Loi,
Auilrolie and Mononn* Word*' Polo Alio.
Colli .4 1 7 I
Hololi* Modvodov*. Uk'Oin* ond Lorilt*
Noilond HO), Lofvlo, dol Boltina 4 ulcer
VllDII*. Argonllno. ond Rika Hirakl. Japan
4 1, 4 4. Eugenio Momokovo. Rutklo. ond
LollO Motkhi, Goorgio. dol Sophia Amioch
and Catherine Suiro. Franc*. I 4.4 1.4 )
WlHrud Probtl ond Chrlilin* Smgor.
Gormony. del Conchllo AAorlinoi. Spam ond
Judith Wioinor. Autlrlo. 4 4. 4-1. Oigo
Lugin*. Ukrom*. and Eton* Wagner
Gormony. dot Suwn Gilchrlet. Hoution. ond
Vicki* PoynDr, Bolon Roug*. Lo . 4 1. 7 4
(7 4).
Lour* Gol*rto. Holy, ond Morcodot Pol
11*1. Argonllno. dot Trocoy Marlon
Auilrolla. ond Kothoriyno Toodorowlci.
Poland. 4 1.41. Pom Shrlver, BoiHmoro ond
EHiobolh SmylD (SI. Auilrolla, dot Eton*
Brioukhavtli. Ukrtino.ond EDno Makarov*,
Ruiilo. t 0 .) 4.4 4
Sandy Collini. Odoiw T lio t. and Morloon
O* Swordt. South Alrico. dol Korin*
Hobiudovo ond Rodko Zrubokov*. Slovoki*.
1 ). 4 7. Kvolotlovo Hrdlickovo and Ev*
Mollchorovo. Cloch Republic, dot Catalina
Crliloo. Romania, ond Stophoni* Root*.
IndionopoHi. 7 4(1 11.41
Glgl Fornondoi. Atptn. Colo . ond Natalia
Zvorovo (I), Btlorut. dol Comlll* B*n|*mm.
BokorilDId. C olli. and Runondr* Orogomir.
Romomo. 4 I, 7 )

1t w a n b a c t i o n »
BASEBALL
Amorlton Loigu*
BOSTON RED SOX - Pieced Andro

Dowton. doiignotod hltttf. on tho
diiobled llll. Rocollod Lull Orlli.
botomtn, from Powtuckol ol tho Inti
HoneILttgu*
CLEVELAND INDIANS ~ Pitted
Nobholl, pltchtr, on IN* It day dltobDd I
Rocollod Julian Tovoril. pllchor. Ir
Chor lotto ol Iho InDrnoHonol Ltoguo
------------- - ~
#d To
TEXAS RANOERS
Placed
pllchor. on Iho IS day dltobiod Hit, rttrgl
live to Moy 17. Activated Bill Rlpkj
inlloldor. from Iho I) day dltobiod lilt
NltDnol UOfOt
NL — Sutpondod AlDn Wollon. SI. Lae
pllchor. tor tight gomot for Intentional
hilling Oral!** Doitrodo, Florida Hi
hetomon. with a pilrhi Doitrodo ter ti
gomot tor charging tho mound and Mill
Walton, and Bernard Gllkey, St loult li
Holder, lor lour gomot lor making conti
with on umpire during tho brawl m a gam*
Moy 71
FLORIOA MARLINS - Aclivtlod Ooi
StwIIDM. out ID Dor, horn Iho lid e y diukl
lilt. Doiignotod O roitti Doitrodo, lirkoiomen. D r Olllgnmont.
LOS A N O I L I S OO DOERS - Pl*ce&lt;
Darryl Slrtwborry. puttDIdtr. on wtivori
Iho purpoi# ot giving him hit uncondili
rolooto
P ITTS B U R G H P I R A T I I - RtcoHti
Kevin Yeung intDidor. tram ButtoD ot
A merle on Altec lot Dn OpIDnod Don Mic*li.|
pllchor. D ButtoD
BASKETBALL
Conllnontol Boikolbolt Altec lotion
CBA — Approved tho D D ond roDcotion ot
th* LO Crow* Cotbirdl D Pllltburgh ond th*
MochoiDr Renogodet D Horniburg Po
Approved tho W D ond rtiocolDn pi th*
Forgo Moorhood Fovor to Moklc* City pond
mg * follow up irupee hen of tho toeill Hot end
oroo
GRAND RAPIDS HOOPS - Announcod Iho
rotignotlon ol JoN Burkhomor. oil-Horn
cooch. D become men t boikotboii coach ol
Sonl* F* Commonity Collog*
SIOUX FALLS SKYFO R CI - Firod Mug..
Lyons, cooch
Untied Helot Boikolbolt Looguo
CONNECTICUT SKYHAWK1 - *
•
Corey T iy D r. forward from tho toil squod
Pieced WIIID SubDI. lor word on tho le.
MIAMI TBOPICS - Upwod Mottkow H&lt;t4&gt;
to linker
D r word Ploeod Motrin
Umon. torword ew
Ifka fail H x lf
M ISSISSIPPI COAST O A M B L ia S Relootod D o rtl Woihlngton. torword
Activated Loneor Burnt, torword. and
Loronra Duncan, guard, from th* l*n uyuod
Ploeod Grog Oonmi center, an th# in FOOTBALL
MetDoel Football Looguo
HOUSTON OILERS - Agreed D Drmt
with Korwiy Dovidton d t'o -l-v « ond on *
ihro* y**r contract
MIAMI DOLPHINS - TotmmoDd the
(entree! *4 Tom Thoyor, HwoOocker Weired
J'Korl BornoH and Leevory Corlngten
Hnebochorei JlmmH HeoOmi. OeDative end
ond loon Richardton. fullback
NEW BNOLAND PATRIOTS - S-gned
Ervin CollDr. ItCkD; Jon Bu»th cent#'
John Burk* light ond. end SDvt newt -n
toDty
IAN DIEOO C H A B O IR I - Signed Tow,
Mortm. wide recoivor D * two year cor Hoc*
eiDnsDn
Conedion Foeobol League
O TTAW A ROUOH RIDERS - Signed
M*gg&gt;* Thorwton. wipe rocolror. ond John
Will linebacker
SACRAMENTO OOLO MINERS - S-g»*d
K#v n O Brian ond Jorry Dillon. I.nobecktrt
end Molrolm Frank, cornor beck
HOCKEY
NolMnol Hockey Looguo
NHL - Sutpondod Joft BOukoboom. Now
York Rongori doDo tomen Dr Gam* t ot th*
■ otiorn Conloronco linoli for hilling
SDphant Michor. Now Jortoy Dovllt right
wing Norn bohmd m Gem* t end knocking
him lettonocidu*
B O STO N P R U IN t - tlg w »« M ikt*
OAoeol* Dttwtnp
i, |ol I to.
C O llfIS P
if 5
CALIFORNIA — Announcod that II will&lt;N4
wt&gt;m*n t golf At'* dub program
IM S
ond ot on inDrcoHogDD program In Iho 1*11
ol IH !
DELAW ARE - Named Oovld Cohon
attittonl ioniboil cooch
DILLARD — Named Jerry Loyd n w u
botkorboii cooch
GONZAGA — Named Kollo* KnowDt
women t batMtbell cooch

TV/RADIO
BASEBALL
l l l p m — TBS, Hoution Attroo ol Allonlo
Brovot. I D
BASKETBALL
•p m — TN T. IndDnool Now York. (LI
HOCKEY
7 X&gt; p m — ESPN. NHL ployoHt. Van
couvor ol Toronto, (Ll.oltool 7 M om
SOCCER
Midnight — SUN. World Sonot of Soccor
Saudi Arabia vt USA
VOLLEYBALL
J o m — SUN. Women t Prolottionol
VoiloyboH Attoc lotion
PeOD
AUTO RACINO
* p m - WGTO AM (SeO), Indy M0 Talk
Show
BASEBALL
4 4) p m - W TLN A M (1)101. Soulhorn
Looguo. GroonvilDolOrlando
7 pm - WWNZ AM (1440). Hoution *1
Allonlo
MISCELLANEOUS
4p m - - WGTO A M IM ], ThoProtl Boa
7 pm - WGTO AM 1)401. Talk Sport!
With Pol* Rom
7 p m - WWNZ AM |7(0'1440), Th* Sportt
Nut
10 p m - WWNZ AM 17401. Florida Sportt
E(Chong*
10 pm . - W OTOAM 0*0). Sportt Bylina
USA

BYU’s berth in regional play has coach singing
A t io o la lid P r a i i
TALLAHASSEE — Brighum Young’s Gary
PulIliiH was so happy his team (piullfled for
un NCAA regional baseball tournament (hut
he sang Wednesday for his fellow couches.
"About six weeks ago. our ballclub was
under .500," said Pulllns. whose ballad
about umpires lightened the mood on the
flnul day of tuncups for the Atlantic II
Regional. "T h is team Is hoi, they arc
persistent and they believe.”
BYU (35-18) opens the tournament
Thursday at 11 a.m. EDT with diminutive
lefthander Jorge Jaime going against the
top-seeded Big Ten champions from Ohio

State (48-7). Jaime, who is Just 5-foot-3. was
10-2 for the Cougars.
Buckeye couch Bob Todd hopes the
experience from playing in a regional for the
'car-will help his team get to
fourth straight year-’
the College World Series for the first lime.
"W e Just wanted the opportunity to play
for the right to get to Omuha," said Todd,
who added his team has experienced a lot of
good fortune during the season. "W c ’vc
been shaking that rabbit’s fool a little bit
trying to figure out haw we did It some­
times."
In other first-round matchups In the
double-ellmlnutlon tournament. Kansas
(30-18) m eets Jacksonville U niversity

(38-22) and host Florldit State (48-20) meets
Central Michigan (38-10) In the nightcap.
Kansas made it to the CWS for the first
lime last season ami lost seven seniors off
that team, but still made It back to the
regional!.
" W e ’re probably ahead o f where we
should lie ut this time," said Kansas coach
Dave Bingham. "W c ’rc so young they cun
lake cither direction."

GREYHOUND PARK

Two teams also will represent
the SSC In this age group, the
Bugles und the Savages.

On the Eagles’ roster urc
Melissa Barney, Jackie Crispel,
Megan Donlrlch. Marla Duvall.
Jennifer Gillespie, Melissa llufcr.
Holly Jordan, Becky Lctxkus,
Jcunnlc Manx, Miranda Schultx,
Jennifer Smith. Sarah Smith.
H e a t h e r W h i g h t m u n . and
Brlannc Van Swearingen.
The Savages will conslsl of
Lori Brosemcr, Jennifer Brown.
Mury Ann Brown. Jackie Hub­
bard. Meghan Lewis, Cussle
McCrue, Amanda Mtislakas, Lisa

Jacksonville will throw ace Mnrk Guerra
(13-4) against Kunsas senior Chris Com |0-1)
In the 3 p.m. game while Florida Stale sends
Jnnuthon Johnson (11-1) aguinsl Central
Michigan’s Jeff Slier (0-3).

Rowe. E. Schlcmncr. Danielle
S c qul no . Katie Shannon.
Sl i uni i on Si mps o n. A s h l e y
Webster. Jill Wolcott, and Jcsscc
Wright.
FALCONS
While the SSC didn’ t huve u
league for the 16-and-Under ugc
group during the spring (con­
flicting us II docs with (he high
school fustpltch softball scuson).
II has organized u traveling learn
Tor Ihc tournament scuson.
Representing the SSC will be

Caralcc Dowling. Roscunnc Fry.
Karen Kallcak. Rhlunnon Mack,
Maggie Majcwskl, Sarah
M cW cency, C.P. Porterfield,
Michelle Rosso, Ashley Scott,
Brittany Scott, Jamie Sharp.
Jessie Smith. Kaccy Snead.
Currie Woods, und Curol Wyler.
Katlcuk. Majcwskl. Sharp, and
Snead were members o f the
Lyman High School varsity team
that ndvanced to the semifinals
of the Class 5A fustpltch softball
state tournament.

&lt;407)69*4510

2000 Semlnola Blvd., Cassolborry
is AiiimoN (&lt;m vi uor. itacini; wi hiiih mahhhni. via saimiiii us
IACHS0NVIIIE ^ 1AMI-A.S1 »’( 11 1)11(1HAI.ISI. i*1IIS MIAMI HillLIIHHK.Hlll(IllsCZ/VZ A l A/X7 O

f J O U L A tg

Softball
C ontinu ed from IB
EAGLES
The only ugc group to require
a playoff to decide the league
championship. Charles Wayne
Consulting, managed by Jeff
Dlx, bested Scott Hafcr managcd
Bradbury Plumbing two games
to one al Central Winds Park to
claim the 14-nnd-Under crown.

Matinees Mon., Wed.. &amp; Sat. 1pm
Nightly al 7:30 pm • Qlosed Sundays
Seniors Free al a l Matinees

*

m

m

*

v *

-

Bet
Horses
Tus. thru Sun. 1 p.m.
Also On T V
Pompano Harness
Miami Jal-Alal

H w y . 1 7 *9 2 &amp; 4 3 6

Bet
Jal-A lal
Wed. thru S tl. 7:30 p.tn.
Thur. &amp; Sal. NOON
Sun. 1 p.m.
Minors 39* Tall
Amittsd With Parent
(4071 331 -9191

' .

. ,’ ■ * ' ^V*PrMN?

at

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 26, 1994 - JS

Andretti
qualifies
for second
Sunday ride
■ y J O l MACINKA

AP Sports W riter
C O N C O R D , N. C. - J o h n
Andrctll took n big step forwurd
Wednesday night in htn hid to
become the llrnl person ever to
nin In the Indianapolis BOO and
fhr Coca-Cola GOO on the same
day.
A n drew , who has already
earned the 10lh spot In Sunday
morning's Indy 500 starting
grid, assured himself of a s|xrt In
the 42-cur field for Sunday
afternoon's Winston Cup race at
Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Andretti, driving a Chevrolet
Lumlnu. posted u fust lap of
I7H.542 mph on Churlotte's
1.5 mile layout, good enough for
the ninth slurtlng position.
Andrew was greeted by yells
of "All right, muni" and "Good
Job!" as he drove hack into (he
garage, and he exelianged
high fives with his crew memtrers when he ellrnl&gt;ed out of the
ear.
"It's going to happen." a
treaming Andretti said, "and It
looks like we might even have a
pretty decent slurtlng spol
That's more than we could have
ever asked for."
Andretti had been hoping for
one of the top 30 speeds In­
stead. his solid qualifying run
meant he didn't have to worry
a b o u t w h a t h a p p e n e d in
Thursday's second round of lime
trials, whrn spots 21 through 42
were filled.
The run uiso meant he was
fire lo fly track to Indiana and
take (tart In Thursduv’t final
pre-race practice session at Indi­
anapolis Motor Speedway.
Hack In tlie garage area,
Andretti unbuttoned the top ol
fils driving suit and slid II down
to tils waist.
"Maybe now I can sell some of
these T-shirts." hr said, showing
(tff a shirt that lias an Indy ear
on the front and a Winston Cup
cur on the track. On Hie front, the
shirt says "John Andretti: Out of
the Day." and on the back. It
says "And Into the night."
Al t rr Sunday's Indy raec.
Andr et t i pl ans to bourd a
helicopter and fly to a nearby
nlipoit for a fiHuilmitr Itlglil lo
Charlotte. OhCe on’the ground In
•.North Carolina. Andrew Is lo
take u helicopter to the Infield at
the track at Concord, about 20
miles nortiieast of downtown
Charlotte.
Andretti hopes to tiave about
20 minutes to s|Kire between the
time he arrives at the Charlotte
track and the time the Coca-Cola
GOO begins. (

iM t la y w r c « ...lir M |

Havollnc
30H D , 40HD, 3W 30,
,1 0 W 3 0 ,1 0 W 4 0 , 80W 30
Kendall
GT1-40,
GT1-50,
10W 40,
90W 30

IRJINQINCE.
14 Os. Paste
Or 16 Os.
Liquid Was

Preston
Coolant

Racing
Continued from ID

4S M onth
Battery
40 M onth
B attery
71 M onth

32*

38”

S7S
Battery
700
B ettary

7 SO M ulti* H U M

Err

to o

w * ich

498s
&lt;*
15939

E fiO fi*

B attery 3 G » i »

I1.M MUOfAMT I I H H i AT SMItTta

1-4
O a rk rid g e Rd

P

0
Depot

IS O s

F ro th
grubbed the point ul the midway
point.
Wi t h F ro th In the lead.
Stevens and Vola balllcd to the
white flug for second place.
Coming out of turn four on the
lust lap, Stevens took sole
possesion of second. Vola
finished third followed by Drlan
Schllmmer and Doug Gould.
Mike Frltts. driving In relief of
Daniel Keene, dominated racing
action In the Lute Model division
to win his first-ever feature event
at the New Smyrna spccdplant.
Frills grabbed the lead from
Urucc Everett on lap three and
out-ran the 12-car "freight
train" on bis way lo taking the
checkers.
"Th e cur was Just awesome
tonight," said Frltts. "Not only
dtd I have a lot of powrr, I could
run anywhere on the track. Most
of th e time, you have to settle for
a rust cur or a good-handling car.
but It's great when you have
both."
Rounding out the top five
were, tn order of finish, Dill
Goody. Scott Laughlln. George
Murphy, and Ted Head.
A fender bender In the Late
Model heat race kept Joe Piazza
and Ricky Wood, the current
overall FASCAR Lute Model
points leader, from running In
the main event.
Dave Savlcki held off a hardcharging Greg Hughes and
Wayne Parker to win Ids seventh
Modified feature of the year.
Hughes settled for second with
Parker, the feature event winner
F r i d a y n i g h t at O r l a n d o
Specdworl. coming In third
ahead of Gary Salvatore and Joe
Middleton,
Dun M a cC a rrlck was the
winner of the Run-About mnln
event.

D is c o u n t A u to
P a rti Depot
5924 S . O range
Blossom Trail
859-6171 O p en 8-9

A popka
1201 E. S R 438
0 8 5 -4 4 3 3 O p en 8-9
C a s s e lb e rry
5 8 0 0 S . H w y 17/92
8 3 4 -0 3 4 8 O pen 8-9
C u rry F o rd &amp; 436
5887 C urry Ford Rd
2 8 2 -0 5 7 2 O pen 7-11
F o re a t C ity
1155 H w y 4 3 8 W .
774-673
739 O pen I
C o re &amp; 0 B T
9 5 5 S O r Blossom Trl
4 2 3 -0 1 7 1 O pen 8-9

W l 'H I SERVE 1Hfc H K .H t I n l IM lI O lJ A M litlf b

gUM M UM

One Veir
Guarantee

K is s im m e e
1606 N . M ain SI.
8 4 7 -9 0 7 7 O p en 8-9
L a k e M a ry
115 M iddle Street
3 2 3 -3 0 4 4 O pen 6-9
L e e R d &amp; E d g ew ater
4901 Edgew ater Or,
2 9 8 -1 6 4 8 O p en 7-9
Longw ood
2 7 5 5 . H w y 17/92
6 9 5-06 21 open 8 -9
119 Central Avo, N .
3 6 5 -9 2 9 7 O p en 8-9

Pine H ills
5410 Silver Star Rd
2 9 8-82 30 O pen 8-9
S an fo rd
2923 S. Orlando Dr.
3 2 1-18 99 O pen 8-9
S. O B T
10937 S Or Blossom Trl
859-3955 O pen 8-9
St. C lo u d
31 8 9 H w y 192
892-18 10 O pen 8-9
‘ Onion Park
1 1 6 0 0 E . Colonial Dr.
658-9438 O pen 8-9

vomsiACQ,

D ayto n a Bch
Bovillo Rd
322-02 22 O pen 8-9
D a y to n a B ch
Volusia Ave.
257-6144 O pen 8-9
D etand
Beresford/W oodland
734-3921 O pen 8 -9
E d g e w a te r
Ridgewood Ave
427-4 9 9 5 O pen 8-9

H o lly H ill
N ova Rd
252-1991 O p e n 7-11
O ra n g e C ity
E n lerp rlse/17-02
7 7 5 -1 9 8 8 O p e n 8 -9
O rm o n d B ch
US Hwy 1
6 7 6 -1 0 4 6 O p e n 8 -9
Pt. O ra n g e
N o va Rd
7 8 8 -2 9 9 5 O p en 8*9

.eesb u rc
7 4 5 N . 14 th St.
3 2 6*3927 O pen 8-9
E u stls
25 0 5 Bay St.
4 8 3 -0 0 2 2 O p en 8-9
C le r m o n t* ”
3 1 0 E. H w y 50
394-8611 O p en 8-9

C,A I I P R IC E S A C P I Y T O Q U A N T i n r s IN S i t u h

�' w ’viic*Mint' -*&gt;

-*T4

y

i

t

a

i

i

i

ijta iJ tx i

h

99hb BHb H«mSHHM bH b H

4 1 - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 24. 1W4

by Chic Young

BLONDIE

w s w iffa r 1

‘‘■a

by H ow l# Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK

CWfCH IS PROBABLY KWr
He (AWT SET UP ANYMORE

HIS SAYS HIS ROOTS &amp;ZE PJ
THE G ^EAT OLTTPOCRS. ..
•j

What is cause of
female facial hair?
D E A R DR. O O T T : Wh n t
causes u woman to get un­
wanted facial hatr? What arc the
treatment options available?
D E A R R E A D E R : Although
some women develop facial hair
an a result of hormone Im ­
balances or hormone-producing
tumors In the reproductive tract,
most cases have un unknown
cause.
Therefore, while I urge you to
check with your gynecologist (or
denimtologlst) for block) tests, I
suspect that you will lx* left with
the usual treatment options:
bleaching, shaving, plucking, or
waxing. A cosmetologist can
probably help you.
DEAR DR. O O T T : Please pro­
vide Information on Ewing's
sarcoma.
D E A R R E AD E R: Ewing' s
sarcoma Is a malignancy of bone
that most commonly affects men
between 10 and 20 years of nge.
The tumor usuulty appears In
the bones of the extremities, and
often causes pain and swelling.
The diagnosis is made by
biopsy: C T or MRI scans urc
used to define the extent of I hr
dlseasr. because the affected
bone Is usually more extensively
Involvrd than cun be seen on
standard X-niys.
Although Ewing's sarcoma Is a
highly dangerous cancer that
may spreud. more than tlO per
cent of patients cun be cured,
using a combination of surgery,
chemotherapy and radiation.
Thus, patients require the skills
of orthopedic surgeons, on­
cologists and radiation thera­
pists.
DEAR DR. O O T T : What are
the bcnrflts of taking natural
sulfur orally?
DEAR READER Sulfur is a
inacromlner.il (used In large
quunllty by the body! that is
necessary for blood coagulation,
bone and muscle development,
and growth mrtuboltsm. It Is
present In several vitamins, us
well os in the am ino acid
methionine.

Because It Is so prevalent In
foods (protein, beer. pens, beaus,
peanut butter, wheal germ, and
others), deficiency stales arc not
known to exist. Therefore, sulfur
supplements are not necessary.
T o give you more Information.
I am sending you n free copy of
m y Health Report "Fad s I:
3 / Separata
3 * Numbers
40 S a u ft-M a r ts
t Ttnnla piaysr
43 Strike with re­
Marla —
sounding Mow
6 Public vehicle*
44 Standard
t t — down
44 Musician —
(Inverted)
Cugel
13 Star cluilsr
40 Actor —
14 Mischievous
Estover
parson
1B Mildly sarcastic 41 Top point*
52 One who says
is Snick and —
no
17 Prims —
U Domesticated
IS P in d tb a total
54 Parent's
of
nickname

A R LO A N D J A N I3
hi; we cad come, ro m

PHODt RIGHT DOW' .

bv Jlm m v Johnson
50Y0O P0D TH A VE
TO WAIT FOR 1HC &amp;GEP
TO LEAVE- A M E W A G E /a

V

Being educated Is recognizing
ou have made a mistake,
experienced Is rccognlatug
you have inude the same
mistake again.
fey ,
Of course, ideally we compress
education and experience Into
one. never making the same
mlatnkr twice. Yet In the real
world It happens. And It Is
cs]&gt;eclully frustrating when It
occurs at the bridge table.
Norths three-heart cue-bid
showed at least a limit raise In
spades with three or more
trumps. South, despite being
worried ubout his heart holding,
bad to take a shot at the
vulnerable game.
West started with three rounds
of beurts. East echoing to show
Ills doubleton.
South, whb bad seen the echo
too. wan tn u dilemma. Should
he ruff with dummys spade 10,

Copyright 1094. NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

ACROSS

Anewor to Prevlou* Puxtie
n
□
n
□

M O n a -------lima
34 R egion

m n n n
n m n n
n n o n
n

□ m o n
rannn

□ □ □
n m o

n
n
n
n n

ra e n n
w in
n o g
m n n

nmnnnmn

n o o n
ranm a

1 PouchNke

nnn nnnnn mno

2 -------1

□ n o

1 Ancient chertol
4 Not natty
• Room In harem
4 Swiss capital
7 Oarman

turn

n
o
n
□ ra

n o o n
ra n n
m n ra
n a n m n n n
□ n o u n
c in n n n
n o n
m n n n
o n n

17 In addition

30 Mora aolla
31 Prsyar bead*
34 Kansas City

n
n
n
□

nnnn nnn onna

DOWN

11 Try
IS Was

n ra n o ra

aubmartn*
• Bright star
rata a
ova
tOAtgonquian

n o n

120 td
13 Bass ball taam
14 Dollar bill
20 Approach
22 Lamb’s pen
23 Close lalcon

!

*
IT

J

l

2 4 Pocky hills
24Tse
27 Cover (e

■

■ R SX.™

J

U
TIT*

J mf

IT

24Emperor Ivar )
30 Violated right*
Of
StEtectrtned
perllctes
32 Drain
34 Type of

17

Buddhism

34 More then
once
34 Seamen
40 Not hollow
41 Attempted
42 Georgia
university
44 Pey a Manikin
44 Columbus'
ship
44 Totem pole
47 Timber tree
44 Vigor
SO Club —

WIN AT BRIDGE
By Phillip Alder

Vitamins and Minerals."

;a

hoping Went had the Jack? Or
should he ruff with the queen,
hoping the spade Jack would
drop tn one or two rounds? Of
course, tr South had a trump
loser, maybe East would have
the club queen, so that Souths
diamond loser could be dis­
carded on dummys club ace.
Which way should South have
gone?
As the experienced among you
will know, declarer shouldnt ruft
high or low. He should discard
one of dummys low diamonds.
Then, as long us (he trumps
arent 4-0, the hand Is under
control.
Suppose West switches to a
diamond. Declarer wins wllh
dummys ucc and draws trumps.
Then he ruffs his diamond loser
In the dummy, when there Is no
risk of an overrulT. “
As Mark T wai n said. The
principle of give and take la the
principle of diplomacy - give one

and lake 10.
Copyright 1994. NEW SPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
—

R?w rn—
ns**
a Q 1042
*Q1
♦ A73
*A?42
WEST
EAST
a6
a JDS
e A K J 1014
¥13
• QI0]
• J ura
aqioi
*9454
SOUTH
a AK75S
0951
• K51
*KJ
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South
West North Ka»l
la
2t
3¥
I'asx
ta
Paia Pa**
Pat*
Opening lead: * K

. •
KSS$ v . ■

hS5

FR ANK A N D ER N EST

by Bob T h iv e a

ONCE, M T ONCt I ' P LXKt
TO 60 SOMtFLACt
H f l O M THE 0 P it A,
THE SYMPHONY,
O W I N G NlOflT A T
t h e t h e A t e *....
•II.

I* • ■.

O 1994MCA Inc 'TV-'h-r-'ty 3 'l(a

G ARFIELD

R O B O TM A N *
LOOK WWW l
FOUND t t THE

by Jim Davis

by Jim Meddlck

By Bernice Bede Oaol
YOUR BIRTHDAY
May 3 7 ,19B4
Joint endeavors could he profit
producers for you In the year
ahead. Your chart shows you
might find Iwo situations where
you can offer your service or
know-how for u participation In
the returns.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Today If you urc subjected to
financial pressures. It could
uwuken your resourcefulness
und ingenuity. Don't he afraid to
try something new and daring.
Get a Jump on life by un­
der st andi ng the influences
which arc governing you In the
year ahead. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today
by m ailing $2 and a long,
sc I f - a d d r e s s e d . B t a m p c d
envelope to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 4488. New
York, N. Y. 10183. Be sure to
stntc your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
wise friend might offer you some
advice today that can only he
helpful If you're truthful with
this person. Hc/shc nerds facts
os a base.

by Leonard Starr

A H - 6 0 BOOKER .: ahd
5EEKS TO AfOUe 0A1N6ING
HER HOMS
10M H&amp;
- WHICH

ptSASTSR.

'
£?;/ h m m , M 'o a &gt; . w f i S |

‘V «
'

- . ••

19) The way you Itundle mutters
will win you the respect of others
todny, Once you make a com­
mitment or a promise they'll sec
that you will follow ll through,
regardless of the Inconvenience.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Occasionally In commercial or
business situations your Inner
perceptions tunc you In on
things your logic Ignores. This
condition muy prevail today.
PISCES IFcb. 20-March 20)
Innately, you're not a showafT.
However, today will welcome
applause and arc apt to do better
In front of an audience than you
will when unobserved.
ARIES (March 21-April 19| If
you get Involved In something
Important today where you need
help from others lo pull It off.
don't he afraid to request aid.
Y o u r c ha n c e s for ge t t i n g
assistance arc excellent.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your best Ideas toduy might
coine from others rather thun
from your own creative process.
Don't let your ego reject outside
Input.
Copyright 1994 NEW SPAP ER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

A N N IE

V0ULPBEA

✓
*

M

L E O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 22)
Changes over which you'll have
little or no control could prove to
he very beneficial for you today.
Be alert for opportunities when
shills occur.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If
there is a critical matter you
want to negotiate today, do not
use un Intermediary. You should
do very well on u one-to-one
busts.
LIBRA ISept. 23-Oct. 23) This
could turn out to be a very
productive day for you. even If
you get ofT to a slow start. Once
you're on a roll, do everything
constructive you can lo pick up
momentum.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Fortunately, you have very good
m anagerial abilities today,
because you might find II neces­
sary to step in and ussumc
control of Bomelhtng your asso­
ciates have botched up.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) There Is something con­
structive you can do today that
could significantly enhance your
material security. It might not be
eusy. but It will be doable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

W wu..

..I OUMS HA.* FOR A BIT

It WASN'T THERE, JACK 0-

HARP V SOftS
THAT l WAS
r u n n in g

^

WAS AfRAlP
W V « WfASlH'

W h atrt g r o t T
t yY A tS r

Tip SHOWSR t f

ER... ACTUALLY

l WAS THlNKIN*

O ' A W MY

hair s l a c k ,.

TOO MUCH
TRO UBLE.

B lfA C H IS
EASIER- TRUST
M E — I'VE
Sw u n g b o t h
WAYS.

r

�■

nr

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 26,

1094 - S B

People
Garden club installs o fficers

IN BRIEF
Dancer tryouts scheduled
Semifinal tryouts Tor the Dannon Magic airl Dancers will lxhelrl on Snlunlay, June *1 from 10 n.m. lo 3 p.m, at the
Downtown Orlando Recreation Center, located at the corner of
Livingston rind I'arrmnore Strretn.
Serious applicant a, over the ugr or |H. with dance experience
arc Invited lo apply.
All applicants should wear comfortable dance attire. Knee
pads are permitted during the semllinul*. but not the finals. No
material need la- prepared as a routine will la- taught
Semifinals are closed lo Ihr public.
The finals will be on Wednesday, June 8 at 0 p.m. al Church
Strret Stalina's Orchid Oardrn.
Application* arc available at the Orlando Arena and the
Orlando Magic FnnAlllc.

Insurance opportunity
The Insurunre Institute nf Seminole Community College Is
o a rin g curcer opportunities to those Interested In the
Insurance field.
There are a variety of Masses offered in a flexible schedule.
Inrludlng continuing education classes lor Property and
Casualty license renewal and Life. Accidrril and llralth license
renewal.
Employee Benefit Trends Is u seven hour workshop that will
be held Saturday. May 28 from fl a.m. lo 3 p.m. al SCC's Main
Campus In Sanford
For more Information call the Insuranrc institute at
328 2125.

CALENDAR
Hollyw ood East clogging classes
Hollywood Kasl Dancers conduct clogging classes cvrry
Thursday Ik-glnnrrs front 6:30 to 7 30 p m and Intermediate
from 7,30 lo 6:30. at Mclodcr Skating Hluk. W. 23th Street
near Airport Boulevard In Sanford
the cost Is 93 fx-r Mass, ages 3 and up Parents free with
p ayin g c h ild
For Informal Ion, call Marly al 322-3701 or Dawn. 904-733
0270

The new o ffic e r* of Ihe Garden
Club nf Sanford were Installed
on Thursduy, May 10 al (he
Garden Club building. The In­
s t a l l a t i o n t h e me was “ A
Ragout". a stew recipe, with
each Incoming officer bring
presented with a vegetable rep­
resenting Ihr roll they will play
In leading Ihc ntrinhershlp over
Ihe coming Iwn years.
A green pepper was given lo
Pal Faster, Incoming treasurer:
potatoes for Isabel Wilson, secre­
tary. lo hold Ihr club together.
Barbara Bradshaw, vice presi­
dent. received a red lomulo and
Belly Akrrs. Ihe new president,
was given u container of spices,
which Includrd some hoi spices,
“ lo keep the d ub on Its toes,"
club member Mary MarTuvish
said.
T h r new slate of uillcrrs was
lusiullrd by District VII director
Gladys Howard. The 41 memIters and guests. Including John
Howard, husband of Ihe District
VII director, Gladys Huward.
then enjoyed u covered dish
luncheon.
Upcomi ng events for Ihe
Garden Club Include u "miniflower show", on Wednesday.
June 29 and three udvunrrd
floral design Masses, held III
conjunction wlih thr Tusrawillu
Garden Club The Masses will be
held at ihe Sanford Gurdcn Club
For more Information on ruber
of ihrse events, please contact
Mary MacTavIsh at 322-5343

K?

ft.

HsraM WWW Sr Tommy VMconl

Gladys Howard, District VII director, Installs
garden club officers (from left) Belly Akere.

president; Barbara Bradshaw, vice president;
Isabel Wilson, secretary; Pat Fostor, treasurer.

Daughters install
1994*95 officers

East-W est Kiwanls Club m eets Thursday

Beatrice Buck (from loti) in­
stalls the 1994-95 officer ol tho
Sallie Harrison Chaptor Daugh­
ters ot Ihe American Revolu­
tion as loUowa : Virginia
Ml ckl er , regent; Al ynno
Faughnan, vico regent; Esther
A n d e r s o n , chapl ai n; May
Fansher. recording secretary;
Batty Stations, corresponding
secretary; Sara Patterson, trea­
surer; Catherine Wiley,, regis­
trar; Emogono Hoismann, his­
torian; Grace Parks, librarian.
The meeting was hold Friday,
May 13 al thp Malson ot Jardin
in Allamonle Springs.

Eosl-Wesl Kiwanls Club nf Sunlord nieeis every Thursduy al
l p in., at ihe Friendship A Union Lodge building, corner of
Lnrusi Avenue and Seventh Street Visiting Klwanlans are
welcome For Information, call Hubert Whittaker, president.
889-6042.

Overeaters Anonym ous m eets w eekly
Overraters Anonymous meets every Thursduy, al 7:30 p.m..
a tm r e n m m utiny untied Meilxxllst Church. Pliiey lodge Homo’
and U S 17-92. Casselberry. For Informallon. cull Carol,
322-0037,

Sunrise Kiwanls m eets Friday
The Seminole Sunrise KlwuiilsCluh meets every Friday, ut 7
n.m.. al Shoncy’s, US 17-02. south of Airport lloulevard.
Visiting Klwanlans are welcome For Informallon. call Bruce
McKlbhln. president. 322 0 3 3 1

The following births have been
recorded al Florida Hospital.
Allamontc Springs:
May 9 — Donna A. Bujunc und
Shane U Connell. Sunfard. Itoy:
Beverly J. Slaplcr und Emil P.
Crumbllss, Allamunle Srplngs.
girl: Angela M. Anderson and
Jeffrey S. Wagner. Cusselberry,
girl; Kurcn C. ami Todd F.
Morse, Altamonte Springs, girl
May 10 — Mlrhellr E. and
Chad J . Wilson. Allam onle
Springs, hoy; Lcsu E. and Paid
W. Nadeau. Winter Springs, boy
May It — Murguret H. und

William V, Taylor. Sanford, boy
May 12 — Jennifer L. While,
Umgwood. girl
May 13 — Diane L. and Paul D.
Strain. Winter Springs, girl
M a y I -I — S o n d r a a n d
Raymond Luchupcllc. Altamonte
Springs, girl. Christina Sue
Ham ilton. Cusselberry, boy;
Karen und Terry Burk. Lake
Mary, l*oy; Debra A. Dulling und
David James Huhtcud. Altamonte Springs, hoy
May 15 — Diana C. Oilier and
Darryl V. Drlgglns, Altamonte
Springs, girl

H*f*M Photo by Tommy Vlncinl

Budding romance choked by smoke
DEAR A B B Y i Knowing
myself, und Ihe loving, stable
family 1 grew up In, I never
thuuglil I'd tie iwlce divorced ut
45, but ihal'sniiuthcr letter.
My present predicament Is
(hat I have met a wonderful man
who wants to marry me. t wotdd
marry him In u minute, hut
there's a problem: He's a heavy
smoker. He has asthma and
bronchitis, and when he lights
up he coughs, which makes me

THURSDAY’S PRIME TIME

i. i

| B 30 j 9 00 | 9 30 | 10 00 | 10 30 | I 1 00 | 11 30

A D V IC I

A B IG A IL
VAN BUREN

cringe. He keeps saying he's
going to quit, but he's Mill
smoking.
Abby, I feel as Ihugh lie's
killing himself, und (here's
nothing I cun do nboul It. Should
I continue to sec him and hope
he'll quit smoking'/ Or should I
go on like this, and fall more
deeply 111 love with him only to
watch him die an agonizing
death from lung cancer'/ He’s
54. So fur, I'm distancing myself
from him until I know whut to
do. Plcusc help me.
PERPLEXED DOWN SOUTH
DEAR PERPLEXED! First,
not everybody who smokes gets
lung cancer und dies an agoniz­
ing death.
Y o u coul d ( und per haps
should) tell this wonderful muu
that you've been distancing
yourself from him bccuusc you
feur that his smoking might
shorten his life, and the second­
hand smoke could have a nega­
tive Impact on your own health.
Don't give him an ultimatum;
give him an Incentive. Tell him
that the American Cancer Soci­
ety offers stop-smoking pro­
grams, and (here's also Smoke
Entlers und Smokers Anony­
mous. It could be the beginning
of something wonderful for both
of you. Please write ugalu and let
me know whut happens. Good
luck.
DEAR ABBYs My niece - I’ll
cull her Carol — Is a single
mother with a 4-year-old son.
(I'll call him Johnny.) Carol Just

— s*

turned 4U. Since the day Johnny
was born, lie has slept with his
mother In a single bed. They go
to bed between 8 and 10 o’clock
every night, und ulwuys have
snucks und drinks In bed. They
watch T V und cuddle until
Jo h n n y fulls asleep In Ills
mother's arms.
Abby. this child has never
fallen asleep alone. Carol lives
wllh her parents, und there Is no
shortage of beds in (heir home.
Recently. Carol and Johnny
visited me In my country home,
and 1 gave them the bedroom
with twin beds. The following
morning, I discovered thal Carol
hud pushed the beds together so
she and Johnny wouldn't he
separated. This really bothered
me.
I think Carol's emotional
needs arc taking precedence
over what Is best for her son. He
has

no

fa th e r,

and

h is

grandparents have no suy In Ills
upbringing.
1 would appreciate your as­
sessment of this situation. No
city, please, und sign me...
CONCERNED AUNT
DEAR CONCERNED! You
have good reason to be con­
cerned. You hit the nail on the
head — Johnny doesn't need to
sleep with his mother nearly us
much us she needs to sleep wllh
him.
You would be doing Carol an
enormous fuvor If you advised
her to get counseling In the
rearing of her son.
DEAR ABBYi The teller from
the girl who wanted her mother
to walk her down the ulslc
prompts this letter.
When my son was married, he
asked his Hlstcr to be his “ best

m a n ." She Is seven years
younger, and they have always
had u very close and loving
relationship.
Although the wedding was
formal. It was held outside, on
the California coast overlooking
the ocean. My daughter wore a
tux and, wllh her beautiful long
hair, she looked like u picture.
You are right. Alihy; there
should be no set rules for
weddings. They should he whut
the bride and groom want them
to be.
MOTHER OF FIVE
DEAR MOTHER! If every
mother of the bride — or the
groom — were as broadminded
und loving as you, my mull
would probably lx- reduced by
onc-thlrd. I don’t know who
decided that rules for weddings
cannot he nltcrcd lo suit the
wishes nf (he hrldc and groom.

-/VAVcA\V\e\d

V
•

y

•INI HA ' »
'•M. on* k
V no

MAVERICK

PUSES

&lt;PO&gt;

3:004:40 7:19 8 50

13 NINGAS KICK BACK
1
(PO|
3:15 4:10 7.00 900

CLEAN
SLATE
230 7:10
* WITH449
HONORS
9.19

(PQ-1S)
(PO-1J)

I BEVERLY HILLS COP 3 1
A

2.10 4 20 7:19 9 30

mi

JURASSIC PARK (PQ13)
2 00 4:40 7:00 9:40

f
l

4 WEDDINGS AND
A FUNERAL

2:30 4 30 7:10 9 30

i

("j

1J WHEN
A MAN LOVES 1
3:10 4:49 7:30 9 45
mi

l

THE CROW

230 4:30 7:30 9:40

m&gt;

u rS f O H ALl MOVIES SI Aft I IMG
B E IW E E H 4 1US

r-

�♦ •' I t

I

»

- Sanford Herald, Sanford. Florida - Thursday, May 20, 1994

Legal N o tices

Legal N o tices

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
■ IO H T IIN T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT
SEM IN O LI COUNTY,
FLORIOA
C A SIN O , f t 1414 CA-14L
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
MOHTOAGE ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
vs,
RAYM ONDJ J E N N Y ,•««!,
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: RAYMOND J JENNY,
unremarried
PATRICIA ANNE JENNY,
*/k/e
PATRICIA A JE N N Y .
UNREM ARRIED
Residence- Unknown
II oily*. II deed. II married,
•ny and all unknown spouse*,
haln, devisees. legeleei, gran
loot, creditors, and other par
torn who may claim against
Ihair at la ia, and all olhar par
son* having or claiming lo hava
tom# right, lllla or Inlarail in
tha raal proparty haraln da
scribed. whoia residence It un

propagation and maintenance ol
a healthy, wall balanced popula
lion olllth and wlldlll*
The propotad NPOES pamtll
modification wo* draltad In *c
cordanct wllh lha provlilont ol
lha Clean Water A d &lt;12 U.S C.
Section t ill at ttq I and olhar
lawful itandard* and ragula
lion*. Whan a permit It modified
only lha condition! tub|*d lo
modlllcallon era reopened lo
comment irom lha public. Th*
propotad modification will
change all ol lha parameter
umpla type Irom 14 hour com
poll I* to grab and lha umpla
f re q u e n c y Iro m " d a l l y .
I/woak". la "dally discharge'.
Th* parameter lor blochamleal
oiygen demand ISdayl I* pro
p o ta d lo b* c h a n g e d lo
carbanacaou* biochemical
oiygen demand IS day) and at a
r**ull ol lha dltcharg* going
Irom continuous lo inlarmiltant
lha tailclty tailing require
menti. Part IV. ol lha permit
will b* delated
Partont wishing to comment
upon or ob|*ct to any aipacli ol
a tpacllic permit rolttuanc* or
wishing lo raquotl a public
hearing, ar* Invited to submit
tamo In writing wllhln thirty
IN I day* of this nolle* to lha
Office Of Public Altaic*. Envi­
ronmental Protect Ian Agency,
141 Courlland Straat. N .B ..
Atlanta. Oaargla N M I. A T ­
TE N TIO N ) AM. Lana Icon. Th*
public nolle* number and
NPDES number should be in
eluded In lha first page al

YOU ARE H ER EB Y nallllad
that a Complaint lo foraclota a
Mortgage ancumbarad In lha
followtrig raal proparty:
Condominium Unli No. 103. ol
T H E A L TA M O N TE . A CON
DOMINIUM according lo lha
Declaration si Condominium lor
T H E ALTAM O N TE, A CON­
DOMINIUM. and Exhibit* an
naiad Iharata. Iliad lha III day
of Juhr&gt; IN I In Official Record*
Booh ITU Pag* U P . Public
Record* of Samlnot* County,
Florida, TO G E TH E R with an
undivided inlarail In lha com­
mon element* and llmltad
common element* declared In
»aid Declaration of Condominl
um to be an appurtenance to lha
abov* Condominium Unit,
hat bean Iliad agalnil you and
you art required lo terra a copy
ol your written defame*. It any.
to If on JOHN M McCORMlCK.
Etq. Ally lor Plelntllt. whole
eddro** It M l Eo*l Church Sir.
Orlando. FL m o t; and file lha
original with lha Clark of lha
abov* itylad Court wllhln M
day* altar lha lint publication
of lha nolle* an Plalntltl or
Plaintiff's Attorney, eiharwlM.
a default may be entered
agalnil you lor rallal demanded
in lha Complain!
WITNESS my Hand and Seal
otthli Court on May U. IP*
(SEAL)
MARY ANNE MORSE
Clerkof lha Clrcull Court
Seminole County. Florida
By Cecelia V Ekern
Deputy Clark
Publish: May It. M. 1444
DERI**

All cammant* received within
the N-day parted will b* coniid
ared In th* lormulalion ol a final
dalarmlnallan regarding the
permit modlllcallon Any Inter
tiled person may within th*
N day parted requatt a public
hearing. Where there it a ttgnll
leant degree ot public Interest In
a propotad permit modification.
Ih * E P A R e g io n a l A d
mlnlttralor will held a public
hearing
Altar cantldarallan el all
written comment! and th* re­
quirement* and pollclat In th*
Act and appropriate regulation*,
lh a E P A R e g io n a l A d ­
ministrator will make a deter
mlnaflen regarding th* permit
modification If th* determine
Hen it substantially unchanged
Irom that* announced by Ihlt
notice. Ih* EPA Regional Ad
mlnlttralor will so notify all
parsons submitting written
comment* II Ih* determination
Is substantially changed, th*
EPA Regional Administrator
will Issue a public nolle* In
dlcallng Ih* revised determine
Hon Request* lor evidentiary
hearing may be Iliad alter th*
Regional Administrator mokes
th* above described determine
Hons. Additional Inlor m* Iion
regarding an evidentiary hear­
ing i* available In to CPR
Subpart E. 4t. FR 1*121 (April I,
I f f ll. or by contacting th*
Office of Regional Counsel at th*
address abov* or at 140*1 U7
no*
Th* administrative record lor
oath, including application, toct
sheet or statement of basis,
draff permit, a sketch showing
th* ooact location at the die
chorge(t). comments received,
and additional Information on
hearing procedure* Is awailabi*
at cwsl Mr writing Ms* g p r

FUELIC NOTICE
U.S- Environmental
Protection Agency
Region IV
Water Management Dlvltlon —
Water Permit*
and Entorcamant Branch
J4! Court land Straat, N E
Atlanta. Georgia X M !
1*041 U f XjOI
Public Notice H«. tef L0O4I
S/34/94
HOT IC t OF P R O P O ltO
M ODIFICATION OF A
NATIONAL PO LLUTANT
DISCHAROB BLIM IHATION
SYSTBM
FRRM
B M FB
R M IT
bn T M U . I -Rovtrenatema
hey I BP At Inh

and copying at 141 Courlland
Itreat, N E . )rd lloor, Atlanta.
Georgia, between Ih* hour* of
•: tl a m. end 4 :N p .m , Monday
through Friday. Copies will be
provided at a minimal cast per

Sanford. )0 0 North Poplar Av*
nua. Sanlord. Seminole County,
Florida 11111, N P O ES No
P LM M I4 I. Thit wattawalar
Iraalmanl plant (SIC Coda 4*12)
dlichargat Irtalad domtitlc
waitawatar Irom on* ailtllng
outlall Into lha SI John* Rlvor
which It classified by the Slat*
ol Florida at Clatl III waNrt
lullabla lor racraallon. and

Pleas* bring ih* foregoing to
th* attention ol persons who you
know will be interested in this
mailer
Publish; May 14,1X4
DER 111

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R
Todsyecki* * eguabA

• p • u

H P L T

H P D D H T
P * B
PHD

OS

H T Q O

J T D D P C J
P

L C S O

D I C ' D
Z 8 O

O Z 8 8 I P

D 8

O 8 X L

K

' 8 K H O T
D P X T U ,
W H P D T
Q D 8 I . ’

—

J S H U P T X J .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: *Acton don't raUrt. Paopld
ual atop aaklng us to do things. That*o
l*1a all.’ — Wandy
Hiller.
O 10*4 by NEA. Inc

_____________________________ N

OFF THE LEASH© by W.B. Park

“Don't get me wrong— out ot season, some
ot my best Irlends are hunters."
'

*

Need Assistance
With Your Ads?
Our Professional A d Representatives
Will Be Happy To Assist You In Any
O f Your Classified or Display
Advertising Needs,

S a n fo rd H e r a ld
26 a n

Legal N o tices
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR ICM IN OLC COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE D IVItlON
FIN Number *4 4*4 CP
IN R E : E S TA TEO F
F R A N C E IR . CARLSON
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration ol Ih*
t t la f * ol F R A N C E S R
C A R L S O N , docootod. Fit*
Number f* 404 CP. It pending In
Ih* Clrcull Court lor Seminole
County, Florida, Probelt Olvl
sion. th* address ol which It K l
North Park Avenue, Sanlord,
Florida 11121. Th* name* and
address** ol Ih* personal repr*
tentative and lha personal rep
resontellve * attorney ar* sal
forth below.
A L L IN T E R E S T E D PER
SONS ARE N O TIFIE D THAT
All persons on whom this
notice i* served who have ot
lections that challenge Ih* valid
Ity ol Ih* will. Ih* quellflrallon*
ol Ih* personal representative,
venue, or lurlsdktlon ol this
Court ar* raqulrad to IIH their
oblecilom w llh ih lt Court
W IT H I N T H E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R THE
DATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY OAVS A F TE R THE
D A T E O F SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH E M
All creditor* of Ih* decoder I
and ether person* having claim*
or demands against decedent's
estate on whom a copy of this
notice is served within ihroo
month* after Ih* dal* el the llrtl
publication of this nolle* must
fIN their claim* with fhtt Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R O F
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R THE
DATB.OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F TE R THE
O A TE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
TH E M
All athar cradltort el th*
decedent and paetant having
claim* or demands against the
decedent's estate must tlN their
claims with this court W ITHIN
TH R E E MONTHS A F T E R THE
D A TE OF THE FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE
A L L CLAIM S. DEM AN DS
AND O BJECTIO N S NOT SO
F IL E D WILL BE FOREVER
BARRED
Th* date ot the first pubik*
lion ol this Notice It May 14
1X4
Co Personal Representative*
JO HN C CARLSON.JR
M il Kent Orly*
Melbourne. FL 12*11
DAVID A CARLSON
Jfl Crystal A venue
Oviedo. F L U !* !
Attorney lor Personal
Representative
MARGARET A WHARTON
US South Central A venue
P O Bos t i ll
Oviedo. F L U !* !
Telephone 401 It* 21*1
Florida Bar N*.: 1*1111
Publish May M b Junel. 11*4
DER 11)

IN TN B CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SIM IN OLB COUNTY.

FLORIDA

F B O M T B DIVISION
M O P t m m -c *
IN R E : ESTA TE OP
A. H ELEN BI1HENAUE R.
Deceased
NOTICE OP
ADM INISTRATION
Th* administration ol ih*
• s la t e o l A . H E L E N
BISHENAUER. Deceased File
If umber PR*a D ) CP. It pend
tng in the Circuit Court lor
Seminole Counly, Florida,
Probalt Dlvltlon. Ih* address of
which It P O Drawer C. San
lord. FL D i l l Th# name and
address ol the personal repr*
tentative and ol Ih* personal
representative's attorney are
tel forth below.
A L L IN T E R E S T E D PER
SONS ARE N O TIFIE D THAT:
All persons on whom this
notice I* served who have ot
lecllen* that challenge th* valid
Ity ol Ih* will, the qualifications
ol Ih* personal representative,
venue, or lurlsdktlon ol this
Court are required lo file their
objections wllh this Court
W IT H I N T H E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A F T E R THE
OATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
T H IR T Y DAYS A F TE R THE
D A TE OF S ER V IC E OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All creditors ol th* decedent
end other persons having claim*
or domondt against decedent s
otlolo on whom a copy ol this
notlc# Is served wllhln thrae
months altar Ih* data ol th* first
publication ot this nolle* must
Ilk their claim* with this Court
W IT H IN T H E L A T E R OF
TH R EE MONTHS A F TE R THE
DATE OF TH E FIRST PUBLI
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
TH IR TY DAYS A F TE R THE
D A TE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM
All othtr creditors ol Ih*
decedent and parsons hiving
claim* or demands against Ih*
oslal* ol Ilk decedent mu*I Ilk
tholr claims with this court
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
A F TE R THE DATE OF THE
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED.
Dok ol th* first publication ol
this nolle* el admin Itire 11on:
May 1*. IIff.
Parsonal Representative
Nancy Sue Leonard
Attorney Ior Personal
Representative:
W ILLIAM J. McLEOD,
ESQUIRE

Personal Representative
o! Me Lood, McLeod 4
McLeod, P.A,
P.O. Drawer *M
Apopka, FL 12104
Florida Bar No. 121014
Talaphona. 401/1*4 1100
Publlth: May If, 14, lf*4
D E R I* ]

M*llc* #1 War IIKi Sak
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN
that by virtu* ol that certain
Wrll ol Execution Issued oul ol
and under the seat ol th* County
Court ol Seminole Counly. Floe
Ida, Casa rfl l l l l CC upon a
llnal ludgmenl rendered In lire
aforesaid Court on the loth day
ot Jqnuery A O lf*4, In that
c e r t a i n ca se e n t i t le d
B AR N ETT RECOVERY COM
POR A T IO N . P le ln tllt vs
CHRISTINA M BLACKWELL.
Defendant which aloreutd Wrll
ol Execution was delivered lo
m* as Sharlll of Stmlnole
Counly, Florida and I have
’ levied upon all Ih* right, till*
and Inkrost ol Ihe defendant
CHRISTINA M BLACKWELL.
In and to th* following described
property. Mid property being
located In Seminole Counly.
Florida move particularly de
scribed as follows
ONE It!* M ERCEDES BENT
M O D E L 1 DOOR CO LO N
GRAY VIN •1010211200*!*] he
Ing stored at Altamonte Towing
In Altamonte Springs. F lor Ida
and Ih* undersigned as Sheriff
•I Seminole County. Florida
will at II 00 A M an the Kin
day ol June A D txa, otter tor
M k and Mil to Ih* highest
bidder, FOR CASH IN HAND
ANO SUBJECT TO ANY AND
ALL BKISTINO LIENS, at the
Front I West I Door, at th* steps
*1 th* Samlnok County Court
houM In Santerd. Florida, th*
abov*described property
That Mid MM Is being made
to utlsfy the terms et this Writ
el Execution
Donald F E simper. Sheriff
Semlnok County. Florida
NOTICE REGARDING THE
A M E R I C A N S W IT H O IS
AB IITIES ACT OF ItfO PCR
SONS W ITH A D ISABILITY
N E E O I N O S P E C IA L AC
COMMOOATIONS TO PARTIC
IPATE IN THE PROCEEDING
S H O U L D C O N T A C T TH E
C IV IL D IV It lO N OF THE
S H E R IF F 'S O F F I C E . EN
F O R C E A B L E W R ITS S IC
T IO N . 114! 1ITH S T R E E T
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A A T
LEAST FIV E DAYS PRIOR TO
TH E P R OCEED IN G TE L E
PHONE (M il UP *440 TTD
1401) m m i
Published May I*. 1*. June 1 f
Sak O a k JUNE )Oth
OER 140
IN TH E CIRCUIT COUR T
E IG H TE E N TH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO *1MI CA 14 (
B A R N E T T B AN KS T R U S T
COMPANY. N A as Trustee lor
the Florida Housing Finance
Agency
Pie mbit
vt
O AR R YLO WASHINGTON
et e l,
Oekndantls)
AM ENDED
NOTICE OF SALE
Not we Is hereby given that
pursuant to a Summary Judg
ment ol Foreclosure I will sell
the following described property
Isc sled in tem lnek County.
Florida
Lai 11. ST JOHNS VILLAOE
1ND REVISION, according to
the P k l thereat as rMerited m
Plat Reek to Pag** II and 11. el
the Puhttc Reseres el tom mew
County. Florida
at public M k . to the highest
bidder lor cash. #• the west front
door of the Seminote Counly
Courthouse, Sanlord. Florida.
II 00 a m on June e, lets
Americans With Disabilities
Act |AO A) Notice In ac
cordance with th* Americans
with Disabilities Act. persons
with e disability who need e
special accommodation to par
llclpate In this proceeding
should contact ADA Coordinator
at X I North Park Avenue. Sulk
N X I. Sanlord. Florida H i l l al
ka tl live days prior to the
proceeding Telephone ISOM
n i4 1 X Eel 4171; I 100 t U till
ITOD I or 1*00 m i n e (V I. .la
Florida Relav Servlet
WITNESS my hand and Seal
Ol this Court on May l». Iff*
(Seal)
M ARYANNE MORSE
CLERK, CIRCUIT COURT
By Jane E. Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish: May lf,M . Ittf
DER 1M

N e lk ttl Sheriff's Sak
NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN
that by virtue ol that certain
Wrll ot Eatculkn Issued out ol
and under lha seal of Ih* County
Court ol Samlnole County. Flor
Id*. Casa XUNOCCMU upon a
llnal ludgmenl rendered In the
aforesaid Court on the nth day
ot Jan A O Iffs, In that certain
cate entitled. Virgil a Brothers.
Inc., Plalnllll v». David Turnar,
Defendant which aforeMld Wrll
at Execution was delivered to
me as Sheriff el Seminole
County, Florid* and I hay*
levied upon all Use right, title
and Inlarail ol Ih* defendant.
David Turnar. In and lo Ih#
following described properly.
Mid properly being loceled In
Semlnok Counly. Florida more
p a rtic u la rly described es
follows:
t. C EM EN T MIXER, USED,
W ITH WISCONSIN ENGINE.
AAOOEL AENL2. SPEC 40tSl!.
SER irKHOW MAKE ESSICH.
M ODEL; 4 BAG. COLOR: RED
1. HOMEMADE TR A ILER .
S IN G LE A X L E . M E T A L 4
WOOD, t SPARE TIRE,
end Ih* undersigned et Sherllt
et Seminole Counly. Florida,
will et tligo A M on the IHh
day ot June A O. 1*04. oiler lor
Ml* end Mil lo Ih* highest
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
AND SUBJECT TO ANY AND
ALL EXISTING LIENS, *1 Ih*
Front (WetU Door, al Ih* slept,
ol the Seminole Counly Courthouu In Sanford. Florida, lha
abov* described property.
That Mid Ml* Is being made
to u tiity th* (arms ol Ihlt Writ
ol Execution.
Donald F, Etllnger, Sherlll
Semlnok Counly, Florida
NOTICE REGARDING THE
A M E R IC A N S W IT H O IS
AB IITIES ACT OF ItfO, PER
SONS W ITH A D ISABILITY
N E E D I N G S P E C IA L A C ­
COMMODATIONS TO PARTIC
IPATE IN TH E PROCEEDING
SHOULD C O N TA C T TH E
C IV IL D IV IS IO N OF T H E
S H E R IF F 'S O F F IC E , E N F O R C E A b L E W R ITS S E C ­
T IO N , 1141 1ITH S T R E E T .
S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A A T
LEAST FIVE DAYS PRIOR TO
TH E PROCEED ING. T E L E ­
PHONE: ( X ! ) 1X4440 T T D
( X ! ) 121111)
Publishedi May II. It, 24 4 June
1. Sale dale June 1311s.
DER lOt

71— H alpW an tad

47— T r a w l

Legal N o tices
Seminolo

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED D£PT
HOURS

8 ;0 0 A M .-5:30 PM.
MONDAY thru
FRI0AY
CLOSED SATURDAY
5 SUNDAY

DENTAL ASSISTANT

W ANTED: Ohotli and Oobllns
Join us lor a Haunting good
lime on our 1 night Halloween
cruise on th# lenllh sterling
Ocl If
Cell Jackie el
Go Travel X ! I l l 9413

CLASSIFIED ADS
PRIVATE PARTY RATES

F t par lew ad expanded duties
Assistant needed lor multi
disciplinary swgicel and pro
s th e llc r e c o n s tr u c tiv e
practice Energehc individual
wllh strong Individual end
kem skills, willing lo go Ih*
eilra m lk, a must Salary end
benefits tommenswek wllh
xi per ranee 444-111-4X0

5 5 — B u s in e s s
O p p o r t u n it ie s

14 consecutive llm #»____ ..57* a line
7 coniKullvg tim e*............70* a ting
3 coniK uttv* tlm ts....___ ..B it ■ Un*
t tim e.................................. 11.11 a Itn*
flsttg arg ptr lssua, bated on 3 llnas
• 3 Unas Minimum

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST

PAFER ROUTE Senl!n*l. San
lord area No collections
Growth Mull sell )1) MIC eves
VENOING R O U TE i Tired *1

Dynamic, frperlenced. indi
vlduel needed lor mulll dis
cipllnery othc* Scheduling,
tollecllon. insurent*. phone
skills, recall, patient relations
and comupter litorecy a must
(how with dental erperienc*
need only apply Salary com
menswek with t ■per lew a
Avelkbk Immedialkly

gel rich quick dean! Want e
good solid, real business 1
We got III priced to sell
_______ I B H I M I U
W AN TED Partner to Invest in
the awning 4 canopy business
Lew money for • ve ry
lucrative business X ! 1*4 lie*

NOW ACCEPTING

SchodiAng may mkata Haiakl W n -iU e i at lha cent ol an odd.tonal day
Cancel wtirnycM gel leiutl* Pay onty toe day* your ad iun* al lata earned
Use ft* detcnpbnt k» Lntett restits Copy mull tuanw accept*!*# typo
yrspCvral torm -Commercial frequency rates are avralabto

d is h w a s h e r

Apply 1 iPM, Halfday House
Restaurent Hwy l l f l neet
Lake Mary A drug tree
workpiece

41 - M o n e y to L e n d

KEtr DRIVING AND STILL
GET THE MONEVI

DEADLINES
Tuesday thru Friday 17 Noon The Day Betor* Pubkcaton
Sunday 12 Noon Ftrday •Monday S 10 P M Frxky

DRIVERS NEEDC0
A U CARRIERS. Tavares. FI
a well asiabiidrad end grow
mg Cenlrai Florida baud
company offers you
P IN ta m p e r m lk
O U p k tIB W m l per mo
P Stop Oft Pay
R Unloading Pay
dVPcatranPay
• la k ty 4 Pertormanc* Renus
P Spouse Riding Program
• Arerag* T ria l I D*yt
• l *to Mesial Canvantranal
tractors
It you have l years trader
traitor. QTR and snow and lc*
erper ranee plus a good driving
record, call
tttg*Mgg*g

All you need i* your tllk Jack
D i -wcvnl tor appointment

ADJUSTMENTS ANO CREDITS: In tha event of an ertor In an
ad, tha Sanlord Herald will ba reeponeible tor the Brat
In torsion onty and only to th * extent ol tha coat of that
Insertion. P le a t* check your ad tor accuracy tha llrat day It
tuna.

71— H elp W anted

MPL0YMENT

Legal N otices

31— Personals

Neflceel Iheritt's Sak
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
•hat by virtue of that certain
Wrll et Execution issued out at
and under x* seel ot me Counly
Court Of Semlnok County Fler
id*. Cate rtiu sS P U upon a
llnal judgmeni rendered in IN
aforesaid Court on IN 1st day et
June A D Iff' In mat certain
cat* enlilkd NU SASH OF
MIO F LON ID* INC Ptamntl
VI JOE DE PAUL IS Detendani
which aforesaid Writ et Eiecu
Ikn wat delivered k me ai
Sherllt ol Semlnok County,
Florida and I hare levied upon
all me right tilt* and infer el I ol
the defendant. JOE OEPAULIS
In and to IN toHowwg deter tied
properly M k properly being
loceled In Semmok Countr
Fkrid* more particularly de
scribed *% teltowt
All Right, Title and Interest ot
the OeNndanft In the knowing
described Real Property Lot 1.
Late Brantky IsNs amended
Plat Atcord.ng to Pl*r thereof
recorded m Plat Ores f. Pag*
al Public Records et Seminole
C o u n ly
F lo r id *
S tre e t
Address 2220 Poinsett* Drive
Lengweod- florid#
and tha underl-gned at Sheriff
OI Semlnok County. Florida.
•Ill at II 00 A M «n I N l)fh
day of Jim* A O I*f4 oiler lor
M k and sell to the highest
bidder. FOR CASH IN HAND
ANO SUBJECT TO ANY ANO
ALL EXISTING LIENS, at trw
Front (WestI Door, at th* skps
ol Ih* Semmak County Court
home In Sanlord Fkrid*. m*
above described properly
Thai Mid sal* is being mad*
k Mtlsty in* terms *1 this Wrll
at Esecutwn
Donald f tsIMger Sheriff
tomwrat* Counly, fkrid*
N o tice HfOAM DIhO THE
A M E R IC A N S W I T H O IS
AB IITIES ACT OF ISW, PER
SONS W ITH A D ISABILITY
N E E D I N G S P E C IA L AC
COMMODAHONS TO PARTIC
IPATE IN THE PROCEEDING
SHO ULD C O N TA C T TH E
C IV IL D IV IS IO N OF TH E
S H E R IF F | O F F IC E . EN
FO R C E ABL E W R IIS SEC
TIO N , 1)4! I I T M S T H E e T ,
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A A T
LEAST FIVE OAVS PRIOR TO
TH E PR O CEED IN G TELE
PHONE I X !) 1X44X TTD
IX D D 1 D l l
Pubilihed May II. If. » 4 June
1 Sak dek June llth
OER 10*

free medwet car* trentpor
IXlien counseling private
doctor plus living xvpenses
Be' l » ' H » Clear waist AHeine?
4eb» Fr wba*
I m f ll MX
O f N T L I M I N lacking to! r*
laeetiont Looting tor light
touch tody rubs! Dating!
Partlos! Look no twine* Cell
Diamond Mine Entertainment
X7 &gt;4*1*X Near Hiring.

323-5176
lexW D ib it

AOOHIONS

W ANTED It*
weight nowi Ne willpower
re q u lre tt IO tX natural
Doctor recommended I00\
guaranteed
Ml 140)
ADO 10 VOUd INCOMt
SELL aVONttOWI
CALI tl) setter &gt;n t il)

ORIVERS WANTED
Quolitraderp predsw* hauler
Long d‘ti*nc*. CDL required
Clean MVR Celt tor eppiice
Iran X ! I X X X lAm sPm

AGE NTS-REAL E5TATEI
Nothing succeeds like success
W* re welt mto eue *d dered*
et treirung successful agent,
Ne licenseWe llhekl
WATSON R EALTY CORK
REALTORS
H I IMS

H I I I I AM A. BEAD SHIFT
ten toil Re&lt;w&lt; &lt;e el wo«x

35— Special Noticvs

DRTWAU PATCH PERSON
C iperranced eniy new* apply
r ail cash tor righl person
i n 4IK k*ee message
EARN »Xtg/l*eM Per Month
H yea hove soar eges*HI
Ml I l k |dsr tec mtg

ALL POSITIONS
Apply m person 111! Orlande
Ar* O w e n Denu-S Ham )pm

HOST FAMILIES NEEDED
Viera me American dream
H ! evihenge students ernv
mg in August Can X ! to) ell*
er 111 4l*e eel SOP H U toe

EIP INDUSTRIAL SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS

APPLIERSSI1 HR

____

37— Nursery A
Child Caro

dr# hem racei were
gtisTi eng

Mam Thwt » s he work days
Pd holiday 4 vacation Apply
al Sa* Del Ilea Old Lake
Mar y id teatevd III M k

ASSEMBLERS
Lengoodd cempen, seeks
hand mail processors No es
poriowco necessary E) pehow
Never eke I

CHILD CARE Lose M e., tti.d
area Male er tomato 1 t o 4
i f It |i resident 111 tsdl
DEBART AREA F/T R d x d fl
tor 1 ml r l led m e loving
learning, smoke tree ear
Fenced ye'd pe't Near I s
Reas rales Rail upon ten
Caller*!X I 4*4 /Of

EXPERIENCED GRILL COOKS
Pyli lim# Arri or f*m iluttt
I'Rfff i P iiiiir I m U m i m
AIIr-y w H A U h U0P0R
H f i t&gt; i n n

H ttp P irs M iw i. 6?9 M I A
AVON predate Is I *M fern to
ION Me door door P T rf T
terXtMt ttf l't eooae* use

EIPERIENCEDC00RS
Need tor Iran'are are* AM 4
PM shitty Inyt Hut ram*I
Apply ai
m s Molly Ate
t* «k rd O N U S

ROOT PERSON

AdWtl Mw town to*** I ip in
h « i v f €0111117*** Aoffif In
parior AAan Ffl tAm
HOI Couh*f| C»wb Hd. Unions
III
t

4J— InvBitigotivo
_______SorvIcoB______
'» LEGAL PHOTOGRAPHY 4
Reasonable rales
___
CglUHL'ffl.________

FLOOR CLEANER
llripperm eter Pert iim*
LatohowstlPm sAm
Appl y In per S&lt;m
Debar y Manor
M N H w y ir ft
Debery. FI
e*i sa* esis

CARVEN
T# serve meal to tarskmere *1
butt*I Will tram Apply &gt;
sPM. ttoridar Howe* Nettau
rant. Hwy l l f l near Las*
Mery A drud free weespCec*

Legal N o tice

FULL TIME SUPERVISORS

Cl A55IF If D ADVERTISING
CONSULTANT

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO US NAME
rrelue is trarsasy given ttie* w*
*.* engaged id bukmeet et see
Or eng* Of fit, Altamonte
Springs. FL W S I, Seminole
County. Florid*, under in*
Fictitious Nemo Ol VISUAL
EYES STUDIOS end Inal we
Inland so register sold name
wllh Ih* Division ot Corpora
Irani TaHahaiw* Fk.HSe In
A&lt;(dfttoh(| Mlltl Wri piBYlliBhl

Far c*m m *rtl*l d**nlng
Qsefilees Lan'erd
area Grand ,**'»&lt;Jf. Call bn
Irerri SAM ai'M i” S44 2H I

Company

ffW Van«Bnf H«r*s0 i« now
^ iw a p«ii r «pp*iiiiiiB i in i* i
Aapi. D»qvt#0m«ni»
#&lt;• f/0log id w p m arm
«sc0i(0nt tailing arm
mtltatJ lAilit U ia i ai^a'i
#n&lt;a it pratarrwO
r piut
(ommiinan Apply in pansn
or sand ffSum* &gt;00 U f t tnt h
A y « (Hap U till Sanford
Applicant i * ill U
lor I n iff i^aebt

of IN I F k tit tout N tm c

To Wit W&lt;lton M l Of- Florid*
Sfetufet Iff!
Joh*W Wmfef
Jon0tfu»n O ft 7
PuWnh
h im
Of 8 JO*

CROUNDSPIRSON
Nwdtd »07 i#rgw *00rtm0pst
coTTsmypsitjf in (.it# M itv
Fulllim# iy#fsm#fonlg %*hr

SI. C fgii Apsrtmtnti

_ M m °3
HELPI

(0rif0&lt;i0tl

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

WE NEED WORKERS

Commticiil Laundry Service
N w di tkp«r-(UDi« pari Dm#
h«lp Wvarai po%i» on% 0*011
*6i« C0Mfoa 0ppoinfm0nf
IM IU I

Daily work, dally pay Rtport
t X Am. MO) Park Drive.
Sanford or cell &gt;1* lit), ask
for Bob otter ) Pm

NOTICE OF PROCEEOINOS
F O R TH * VACATINO.

ABANDONING
DISCONTINUING,
ANDCLOSINOOF
R IG H T! OF WAYOR
DRAINAGE EASEM ENT rORi
Seminole Ceuaty BCCVAfl 14
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE
N O TIC E lhal th* Board ol
Counly Commitiloneri ol Semi
nek County. Florida at I X pm
on Ih* I4tti day ol June, A D .
Iff 4. In th* Counly Commission
trt' Meeting Room al Ih* Semi
note County Service! Building in
Sanlord. Florida, will hold a
public hearing lo consider and
determine whether or nol Ih*
Counly will vacate, abandon,
discontinue, dot*, renounce and
disclaim any righl ol Ih* Counly
amt Ih* public In and lo th*
following rights ot way or
dralnaga easement running
through or ad|ac*nl lo Ih* d#
scribed properly, lo will
All ol lhal portion of Ih*
unplatted and Improved road
known as Donald A rt , lying
south ol Ihe actual plaited
right of way ol Donald Av*
according lo Ih* replatof Lots tl
thru It Inclusive ol Bloch 4 ol
Peail Lake Heights Plat Book I.
Pag* 17, wllhln any portion ol
Lol 44. McNeils Orange Villa.
Plat Book I. Peg# ff. described
ai lollowt: Thai portion ol Ih*
Improved road lying between
Ih* wesl right ol way line ol
Peel Lake Causeway and th*
southerly extension ol th* wesl
line ol (ol 24. Olock B. ol Ihe
sub|tc! rtplal ol Block 4 ol
Pearl Lake Heights, and lying
wllhln any portion ol lol 44.
McNeils Orange Villa, PB 1.
Pag* ff. Public Racordi pi
Sam .Co.
Persons wllh disabilities
needing assistance lo perlld
pole In any ol these proceedings
should contact Ih* Employee
Relations Department AOA Co
ordlnetor X hours In advance ol
Ih* m eeting at 1 1 I-II1 0 ,
extension 7f4l
Persons ere advised lhal II
•hey decide lo appeal any de
clslons made al Ihei* meet
Ings/heaiIngs. they will need a
record ol th* proceedings and
lor such purpose, they may need
lo Insure lhal a verbatim racord
ot Ih* proceedings Is mad*,
wlllch Includes Ih# testimony
and avldanc* upon which Hi*
appeal Is bated, per section
7I4.0I0S, Florid* Statutes
PERSONS IN T E R E S TE D
M A Y A P P E A R A N D BE
HEARD A T THE TIME AND
PLACE ABOVE SPECIFIED
OOARDOF
CO UN TY COMMISSIONERS
Publish: May 14. !*V4
DER 111

r

Notice
FLORIDA IT A T B REQUIRES
*11 contractors be registered
or certified To verily * stole
contractors license cell
l 100 142 If 40 0ccup4llan*l
Licenses er* required by Ih*
county and can b* verified by

^jcalllnj^lDJIXjMWSJ^^^^

Additions &amp;
Remodellno
RES./COMM. Vinyl Siding ,
Alum. Framing. Drywell,
Doors. Roofing, Concrete.
m a n .. .t o . Baiixi, C B ceifm
R ESIDENTIAL HEMODELINQ
Carpentry, painting, alumi­
num SOlllt work. CGCAO4II0

a

r

r

a

r

r

a

r

C a rp et/ln stallatlo n ~
CARPE7 MILL DIRECT
Big DiscaimIs Fsmeut Brands
First Guellly. Tap Lin*.
Stelnmeskr. Seionies,
Trackless. Sculptures|4ff yd
Commercial kvel loops *j ff yd
ln*t#ltotlon*tlJ14*4e^_

Concrole

M A STER IL IC T R IC IA N .
Repair addition, comm/res.
^LIc/ln rlE R O O O * 1 f^)M 4 M

Eleclrlcal

Awnings

F l o o r in g

BUILDERS ot custom canopies,
carports, windows 4 polio
owning*. Highest el qsMillfy.
Freeeillmeles X llf s SS44

HARDWOOD FLOORINO
Instoll Sanding Finishing

Carpet Cleaning
SAM'S CARPBT C LIA N IN O
plus strip end buff fleers.
Resldenflel/cemmercial 14
hr*. ]141141. beeper 444 0S41

l l /

j

Hom e im provam ent
AFFORDABLE HOME Repair
Dependable All phases Cell
lor Freeest Michael))) IIM

rxraionebkJllJtMW^lX

SHERMAN'S AUTO REPAIR
Coldest elr In lown, Auto 4
truck air conditioning systems
repaired er Inslelkd Freoest.
^HS^rsixjm rknc^
112100f

AMICK Custom Weedera ft 4
Design. S p e d a liiln g Int
Shelving. Cabinets, Furniture,
Reconditioning, Rellnlshlng. 4
General Carpentry H4-M1I
CARPENTER All kinds of 'frame
repairs, painting 4 ceramic
tlk. Richard Grew.... J11H11
S 4 O Knkrprlsti Trim. p«lnt
Ing, handyman services Llc'd
4 Ins'd For th* best quote In
lewn cell lodeyl 411 4341

M

Cleaning Service

A ir Condlitonlng

Carpentry

a

Q U A LITY CLEANING Indiana
business relocated to Florid*
10 yrs tip Cxcd rtls Very

CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Wayne
Bed. 1 Man Quality Opera
lion I I X - 1214/4)4-H41
Q U A LITY CONCRETE WORK.
) ) year* exp. Reasonable
Lie /Ins DM444

))S 1IS4tokf* -pm

r

~

1TOMOLSI!^^JMMD4jllfl

Lawn Service
H A N O T’S Q U A LITY LAWN:
Complete pro car* since IfW
Clean ups, hauling D t 8114
TOM 4 JIF F '* LAWN C A R II
Res /Comm , dependable, lew
retesl Freeesl............DO 7010

Paintln
e DAVIS A SON PAINTINO
Freetsllmeks lOyrstip
___________I14-4X)
P A IN TIN O . piper hanging,
pressure washing end dry well
repair. Fleets! D i m e

Home Im provem ent

P re s s u re C le a n in g

ABSOLUTE Carptnfryt trim,
m d d studs, reslorxllon work,
drywell. doors, siding, decks,
porches
Llc/lns
W -) H )

OUN R ITE) Clean drlveweys.
roel*. pool decks, walks,
houses Free esl. » l 4 m

RL DOES IT ALU
Fix II righl *1 • prlct you c«n
•fiord. Llc'd/ln*. From start
lo finish, Carpentry, plumb
Ing, electrical, and rooting
svc*. 1) yr* ot esptrlenc*. No
Iob loo big or small Call
IH -IIN I xr ID-4111 )4 hours
HOME A OFFICE REPAIRS.
Eltdrlc. plumbing. A/C re­
p a irs . D oors, w indow s,
screens, call. ton*, wafer
healers, carpentry, decks,
custom torn . woodwork. All
efe lkrdibk prices UX-1II4

P h o to g ra p h y
BEACH, Sports end Weddings
Mobil equip unique pricing.
For Inlocell I I I I K )

Sw im m ing Pool
S ervice/!
'R esi:p a lr
W EEK LY SERVICE Irom 14!
mo. Chtm Rife Pool Strvlct

Tree Service
■ C H O L S T R B E tJ c Lie's. In*.
"Lei Ih* Professionals do II."
Fre##sllm*fe*..........J i ) m t

Advertise Your Business Every Day
For As Low As $45 Per Month.
Call Classified, 522-2611
i

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Thursday, May 26, IBM - TM

71— H elp W arrttd

71-Heip Wanted

HOUSCHCCPINQ SUPERVISOR
M u il hava housekeeping
/•uparvlsor experience In a
healthcare sailing Knowtodga
of O B R A and O IH A ra
quiramantt highly desirable
Drug fraa weft plat* Apply
within i
Dabary Manar
M N .H w y i r t t
Dabary, FI

_ _ _ _ _ _ m-MBtog*_ _ _ _ _ _

P IT . In ofllct mgml rag
10am tpm............ .. . I U I hr.

YOUTH COUNSELOR
Nat dad lor tummar camp
program Salurdayl Itm Jpm
land roiuma and raft Mi IT A
Looming Cmtar, lac.. P.O.
Boa »»■ lantord, FI DD1-9D*
(A L II

LANDSCAPERS
Full lima

SPRINKLER SYS.INSTJUUR
(•par lanead

SOO LAYERS
No aipar tone* required
________ q U W M W

LAUNDRY ATTENDANT ~
P art lim a Experienced
Wash Ory.'Fatd Apply
tammala Carrier Laodramal
(Waimaal Plata)
1*91 Orlando Or. laniard

w in s

lAMN. VabnlaAvg.
Oraapa City
Wo art a drug fna work pioca
and a agual apgdrtypilty
I t C U B I T V O F F 1CI b Jab
•raining A/mad A imarmad
Brandy A Attac M4M04

SECURITY OFFICERS

upholstery

lantord Lata Mary Clatt D
guard iwanta rogwirad Hart
immpdlatatyl Caw IM d ill __

■ a p a n a n ta d u p h a ltla ry
I par law Cantar appt H I m *
P IO IC A L

SHEET METAL MECHANIC
Poakibto doming a,enable
____ Can m ant

cna
Opening* *ar all kMttt Ptoata
apprymparkan
Mmha.tn Haaltbcara Caatar
ttd Maltawvilla Art

SUtMAT/HANOT NAY
Ctgananca growth wibi ut at
a H a n d y W ay/|ubw *y
attacidtg PdttlFoll Tima
potlliant t iiiit b u Customer
ariantad inm*idu*rt am an
&lt;auragad M apply m partan at
tha Handy way tocatod a* till
Oanpa Bird . Lett Mesrea ar
mall rttvma'appHcatian ta
Mandr Way. I l l lamaran
Cammarca F I , lull# &gt;•!
Apapta FL Dtol
EEOM/F/H/V

IOICAL

HURSING ASSISTANT

■ All I/MI94

Full lima and part
Nma Only i m u having »&gt;pa
r la n i at a ttwrtlng AitHtaat
Id Nng k m car a and feting
BBto la thaw praat at ragittra
Han ta lata iha tours* ar
fh a lla ng a Iha la tl upon
ys• appi'taiwn trwuia appir Mutt
ba rartiliad no lalar man to
9 dart altar iw t Drug Iraa
w wartpiaca

miMAMETIRS
At Chan Mill! Fortran Hud-at
G'aat appartymitr *ar saner
Cititant hamamattrt. and
itudanlt Fart lima Aawry
tarn i Jpm and tpm tpm It ypu
hart par tonality piut and you
lika ta laik an tha pnanat you*
thaportan war# laaomg tori
Coll Maryl t« &gt;1) |)0)
BOB M 'F_________

ta N May It ft
Otbary.FI
9
i ________tat ttd t o t
rM IO ICAL

RN MANAGER
Full lima 11 thin waatanpt
aft (iparianta m an a&lt;wtt
&lt;art tatting and mandpamanl
highly datirabw Cama and fea
a part at tha (hanging hand m
long term (a rt Salary da
pandtnl upanarptriantt

LPN
Full Kma and part t.ma I and
II hour ttwttt a,aiiafeit G«od
wadarth-p sautt a m.-tr ON t
and C F N 'k wllh pravitut
laadtrthlp atpananta a io
anaour aged to apply
Drug Iraa workplace
Apply In pa*tan
Or fear y Manor
tt N Hw ytt Ot
DtAtry.FI
_________ ttl ttO ttN _________
M ID I CAL

LfN
U P M tA M tnttl Full lima
apply in Parian at Lakavlow
Nursing Cantor t it C lacand
ttr tat, laniard

PART TIME Office HELP
Light typing boaktaoping.
phono Call tto o m __________

PROOUCTION SUPERVISOR
lama otptrlonca prolartwJ
land ratuma to Blind Baa
i HO. C O laniard Itorald. PO
Baa IMF, laniard. FL a m

RECEPTIONIST
Entry level Vary haary phono
work lor law OflKO tarring
law Inioma comm unity Typ
mg t l WPM, compuker tap
pralarrad. but will Ina l (road
tpdlllng. writing and argenlik
lianal tklllt Bilingual iklllf a
plut li e banallttl Resumes
ta Control Florida Lagal larv
l i l t Inc 111 Magnolia A*a.
Unlord JJttI by Juna Vd

m in i
to t
SALES TRAINEE/
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP

A lu m ln m u m and v I n f I
•■trwoni Loi
Coro
ii*nf m&gt; Silvff L«At Drlvt

SANFORD Lovaly )/). 101* iq
I I . I'k oertt Don. dining rm.
itr porch, now paint Pottibi*
leak# pur chut* tlllK * tS /•*«
Fain*- Andarten Frag., Int.
SANFORD - country living,
clota lo now moll! Grtal
ilarfor, l/f, don. tol In kllch,
boaulllul treat u r x t t i / m
Pam* And*non Prop , Inc
SANFORD 1 bdrm. I both
Great location' New pain! and
carpel
SW.MO
Ml *101

NOTICE
All rental and root otlolo
odvorlltomonlt art tub|oct la
Iha Fodorol Fair Hauling Atl.
which makot II lllogtl la
advorllto any proftranca. Ilm
llallort or dltcrlm lnalien
batod an raea. color, religion,
tot. handicap, lamlllal tialvi
or nalMwal origin

SURER ) BORM in Catuiborry.
Brand ntw carpal Living
room, dining room lamily
room OWNER FINANCING
Only IW.TOO
Call Diana g Tha Cannon Group
i****ai or m i/oa
‘ THIS FIR UP IS A STEAL
Larg* ) bdrm homo on double
•ol All tonetd plu* double
Oarage Owner financing You
In and SAVE! /II Pirn A rt
1) 0*00
-LARGE 1 ROHM &gt; BATH on
larg* cornar lol larga lamily
room, larga and porch, large
toad* Iroet. SMALL PRICEI
14).*00 And owner will pay
cloning cot 11
ilww/IM

REPRESENTATIVES
latot par ton naadad far ttita
araa Thlt It • opportunity to
got In on tho ground Hoar with
• largo notional homo building
organliatlan adoring talary
p lu t iu c ra llv a Incanllva
c o m m lttla n B i c o lla n l
advanca mant lar thata
aiming to mava up tha man
agamonl laddtr Banalltk In
cluda. pratit that mg. Ilia and
hatpHalliatian Mutl hat#
hanatt i h a n d or good par
tonality, ba willing and abto lo
rttpond la pretpact inguirat
and ta took gut and lo talk ta
alhar homo building pro
•gaclt Apply In par tan

TIUCX DRIVER RANTED
OTB aiporionco Frwduta tip
CtoklACOL CoHH&gt;PM)
W A N T IO C A W F IM T IW I tr
Corpowtor Holpart Mutt hova
awn Irantparttlian No calls
aftor 4PMM9 M M __________
M tABBHOUll AND O IN IB A L
LABOR N B L F N I I O I O I
Ranvt tar Prtrart All thiltt
e.enabe Daily par nw toe
Rtpart rtady ta work I M am
industrial Labor Ivc . - i
F ranch Ay Wa phono cal It

WELDER
Furgad. pip# and tubing
Call IT) trot

♦) - A p a r t m e n l i /

House to Share
HOMS TO IMARR. Ott*a«
luinithad Singia ar aidar
(oupta 1)40 w* IT) H U

1 E M M , U k M A porch SOI wk
tlM dtp 1 bedroom IMS/ma
two dtp Felt ak Mb a m

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
BRIOOEWATSR AFT1
lan
lord'Lk AAary Win A menlht
h id ronlt Dvtwrah IT) HO*

COOL Off!)

One Bodraom Aporlmorti
U N DBAL
Mesewood Apit ) ) ) m i

NHHEEEEENNI
H IS T O R IC A L DO W N TO W N
IAN FO BD Vary (loan ) bdrm
I bath Rilchon. dining roam,
appliances Fenced yard good
naighbart SUl'm o U M dtp
HUP ok
*11 IM*

1IS—Industrial
Rentals

MARINER’S V IU M E

OrriCR/«ertf»wi« ipiff &gt;100

LakaAda I bdrm liaOma
I bdrm. 14*0 mo and up
SANFORD. I BOrm. DOB/m o ,
plut tocurlly AH utlllllot pa‘d
UCOpI 0H&lt; ________ U ) OH)
SANFOROall 1 Fork Avo I A
I bdrm air M )» M il * U M
dtp.arwoakty naOBM
(ANFORO I lid/m gtiagv »l ■
Ml downtown hitlorKOl d&gt;t
•net 1)00 month plut 1100
dvtw H W B*M
iANFORD. Oak Avt I b t * )
balh SOI mo Hi and latl
UAM BHOM I 111!
IANFORD I t'd 1 ld«m rpi.
lom# • uhidwt OH iirtor
parting From lu x a I 0J1J
V ILLA 1/1.1car gar w/ aptntr
Ltrtwrwd r##m wathor dryor
_ me StM*M Ml real aH*r ipm
I g*OROOA« F R I I MONTH
IP E C IA ll ) fedrmt A tThc
gygW
Call Jerry. D ) told

1/2 MONTH FREE!!
I Adrm /I Aalh 111 ItN
1 H IN A N O O A H A F A R TM IN tl
) BDRM I RATH -t • - i t . 1 .
»/!*/•« CHAA ilactabl*
waihar and dryer, ail titthan
aopHancat
14)1
IT) 'OH

1 0 )— H o u ses
U n f u r n is h e d / R e n t
ATTR AC TIVE I I - T i l /m
Ip'c haal/aM a , i i t i u n
plut dtp No poll )l I Ortt
OON'T R IN T whan ,au can
awni HUD hemat bant lart
ctoturat. and mart A ld a at
1100 dawn Aliartatl
Alittan MotygefQog M l m i
L A R I HARNBV
W A TIR FR O N 1 1 bd'm )
bam manulac lurad bout# Far
WH Ml.OMar rtwl MM'me
W nHM T
RANT yyiTH O P IIO N
)/i t&gt;ua4 Kama.'tmad tIJIm a
iiM o it Btoc n m u ____
IANFORD 1 bd/m 1 . bam
lettIrani hovte MM me
_&gt;12.to04
SAN FOR P I Bdrm. 1 BoRk, cowl
H 'A carpal Lika ntwl I yr
laaoa U W P m MAMA 1*11

Stenstrom Rentals

A OUIBT. C L IA N RM in U n
lord hi (than A phono uta
coin laundry It lb u p llt-O tl)
CABLB TV. phono, kit pr'v
Hon prink mg. moturo maw
prat . M l wk. I l l dap Ml laM
CLBAN R OO M ! eingto darling
IM /w k Kltchon. phano.
laundry, vldao gamut, all
drool park mg
»m &gt;
F U R N I1 H B D ROOM kite .
A/C. micro hot plait doubto
tin*. table bad. coiling lam
All util turn » » Magnolia.
laniard Call M l Bill________
FltTvATB ENTRANCE. fling
orator. mHrwwavo. color Iv.
off drool porting, and maid
karvlct.____________ mm*
ROOM FOR R IN T Light kllch
tn prlvlllogt 'll and lait
Matura adult prtl H I t w t __
SANFORD LAKE FRONT. Close
lo Laka Mary Matura tomato
p rtlorrod M atlor bdrm .
prlvalt bath, kltchtn prlv
cablo A phono Furnlthod or
unlurmthod DO 013)

O IUNLANO I ' l w lamily rm
pool CHA. M U mo MM tec
a IANFORD l/t *»' w ter
perch. IpItU Jl/m ollJltac
a IA N F O R D 1/1 I 1 tlary
dupiti C H A14M mo I4M tec
llawtlrom Rtally. Ik .
"Wo Manage yaw Hama.
Ilka II w it tur awn." Jim Oayto
n ) H H AHar *FM IM latl
I RBDROOM. I BOM. can! H/A~
lamily rm Only ttoo down*
Alto abdrm. 1balh available
Atk aboul Our HUD homttl
Why ctntT T H t MILLIMAM
OROUF. INC Rtallur III III)
1/4 BDRM HOMB loaning Mo a
good lamily wllh rtltrtncot
C/HA, lamily room, ttncvd
yard
1M0 mo
M l M l)

N E W R E S TA U R A N T
O P E N IN G
S ta rtin g W aged U p T a
$ 6.23 A n H o u r
Since l% 9 Cracker Barrel has been
dciiicuied lo providing the highest
quality (bod and gift merchandise
in our restaurant* and gift shops.
We reward people w ho take pride
in being the best.
•Poiliion/Salary Advancement Plan
•llealth/Life/Dcntal Insurance
•Paid Vacation
•Retiremenl/Savingt Plan
•Employee Aiiitlance Program
•Employee Meal Diwouni
•Discount Putchaie Plan
•Employee Slock Purehue Plan

T05— DuplexT rip le *^ Rent
CLEAN, QUIET 1 BDRM
thadtdoroo IMP'mo U i w l l
IANFORD, ) bdrm carport,
tacurlly ty iltm . lull kll..
DC f)l)diKOcinlvdUl&gt;
1 BDRM, I BATH. U l'w k . WOO
Itcu rily Holoroncai Call
ID lt d altar tpm. btlora Tam

107—M oblie
Homes / Rent
I ROHM Park Avo Mobil* Park
Quit I arta Clow lo thop

plnjJJUWOutoJMDTTML—
114—Warehouse
____ Spa c e / R ent
LO N O W O O D /LA K E M AR Y.
M id t i l t public tlo ra g t
warohoutot. *00. BM. or 1*00
tq II tpacot Nice, tccurt.
ootlly accoiilbl* location
From 11*1 par mo 1)1 MIT

R e n ta ls
IOCAL lOCAflOW for eniQue
mini m#M Mtqfc
traffic ctMnl. IJWJ tq ft bwrlt)
irrg on
'Of MOO mortts
, s v*/ MeM Beeltf )))
IAMCOAO For »4w , - m r
C 9. i m CovftfY* CM&gt;
Appro&lt; ' Wrt S'J M
P«vttf lonttd
flqHted
pDFhtfsq lot or %tor*9# e*M
im p lU tllR Colt 0»&lt;h JOftB

sat w eito

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

14T— Homes lor Sale
S L L L IM O T
B A V P S? OOO • SIO.OOO
I 'E H H I Y DIIOKETIB
I t ys r u u u. t ri r
• Oe» i Bsnh Fifttleietev •
•
Ait*** Ne Ovelilf
•
• Hemet »t9ft I M OOfVNf •

•

#

• likaM etvHheeltl
•
•
tq 1 2 finer &lt;nond •

• fhoort,
•

ni s#, u f| tp|i

•
I
iMftt ! L «f
t « 7 pe«&gt; p w d e /M lif 9M

* Cook*
* Dishwulien
• Night Porter
f u r 1-9 fo rm

SANFO RD

f o r an a p p o in tm e n t.
MON. - SAT. 8i 30 A M - 3 PM
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

g
#

• Gey I Down F ifm fR lH I

limited C«i(Tod4»fl

•

i

•

S T E L T E N K A M P
R E A L T Y

3 3 0 -3 2 3 0

1140 000

VINTUffC I P a O M R T l I f

M*ry E. To6m
774 9400 m 322 7Ut
C ASS B LB B R R T BoauTilul 1
bd'm. I 'i bam Now carpal
paml Stiowt lilt a modal*
ua too
ttt nut

Sanford

L«ftetfmf I 'lhomt I1MOO
I '
14) wo
If #r •trrflf Twrmftl Coupfr r 1
I/ l/ l f im

!/&gt;/&gt;

pip

im / W w

fenced W

MO

f * * v e i'| / » T O

323-5774
DELTONA
I to rn r i cam
lamily rm, atlratl 111.100
W Malictewtti. I ll -n i
O IL T O N A . only 1*0* down.
laM mo Chcma Irom ) homot
to ba ramodviad by bwildtr
Grtal opportunity
Mitre Grave etc III)
I k C HANOI OR 1CLL you*
proparly locatod anywharo*
Invottort Realty. IM toll

C H u

UNA fORECLuSURES. wOVT
FORECLOSURES, UMDONN
ASSUME NO QUALIFIES
AVAIUTBLE IN UMIROLE
VOLUSIA S ORANGE COUNTY
1UNLAND
) bdrm with
ttparala rtcraaHon bldg.
Completely lanced la* too
E1TATE 1ALEI Hittorical )
bdrm wllh I car garage
Apprarted at IM 000 A tiaal
a n a ) aoo1
Call tor dalailit

Jjn el M j/u fie ld , 3 2 1 -7 //1

AFFORDABLE HOMES
VENTURE I PROPERTIES
FHA/VA law at t 'r V ANQ t
awnar fmanca tow at 1400/mat
Gov’t Ftricloturat, Htpatl
laminoia. Orange Valwtlal
•to too* «/)l Llv d n *jm rm|
aal In k ll. Mcurlly tarniito*
COST CUITOM IpHI 0 ‘rung.
lam ily rm t Appllancat.
garage ttnead yd toe TOO
FOOL HOME I 1 1 1.000 iq tit
L l v . d in . lam ily, aame
roomi k ’ porchi tat WO
Landicaprd I 'l I/) acrtl Appl
llv. dm. lam rmt to) MO
1 U N K E N F A M IL Y RM 4
comm pool Llv. dm lam
rmt . appl . u r porch lacurl
ly tytramandgaregti tt TOO
BRICK V I tplll. llv. dm. lam
rmt, lac tytltm, ter porch
lanced yd. garagal IM MO

a C ffm . Inc., i n i w

LAK8 MARY. 4-7. ihedfd lo«.
f#rsc«| yvsrd Mf9*Rfd pj|f*o
Qsjf#f rs*4if tlcpm Nine c«rp«t

fit# bhodl Ml too n i t m
L A R I M A R Y I L V O 3/1
eeifti ftpdCUt f*«fuett
Llvinq room, dhning room,
fimily room, ledO ftq fl. N»#&lt;t»
fo 90 ooveI Redtxtd J* Iff.*SO

___ ___ m i f i t
LONGWOOO Lh M jry SchOdlft
J/I W
E pool IM) ftq tt Itif
Long wood Lh M e ry « d
tfV tOOOwnor, *1) M U

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
IIUD A VA FORCLOSUKES
Low down! Seminole. Orange
and Volutla Count***
Call lor dtlolltl
a Lech Aybar. vmqut laka
front hom* Large lol IW.tOO
Bath Ol borne
Venture I Froperlltt

ASSUME HO QUALIFIES!

330 0273/7749400

CUITOM a tplll bdrm plan!
Dining lamily rmt appl .
Ireedyard n r ) mo 11a 100
PRE FORECLOSURE! 17 tplll
llv . din. tat In kllch Itncod
w/garagt tU l'n io IM TOO
CUSTOM built )/) tplll. l l v .
din , oal In kllch . appl .
garage IHI/mo 14)100

SANTORO'I K MARY I bdrm 1
bain. 2 car gar U)K/or Itato
option at MM/mo P I *710
iANFORD It*,*00 ) bdrm, I
bath Nlca arta tap Orange
Ave Rial nlc* noma I can
make you Iha owner t)J 11*1
IANFORD Brand new homo,
1/1, C/HA. big lol Nlc* qulfl
area Indudti body thop wllh
largo parking oroa Only
111 000 O BO 1)11*41

P A U L

O S B O R N E

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
3 2 1 -4 7 0 4
ALTAM ONTE 1 bdrm ) balh. Ig
lol on cul do lac. Branllty
School! 1*1,0001*1-TI Tt

BATEMAN REALTY

STENSTROM
R E A L T Y ,

IM G .

Lie Rtal Etlale Broker
Mad Sanlord Avt

SELLERSII BUYERSII

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

Call Any olOur Agtnlll
Thtyroall
PRO lA FULL TIM E!
So Call AN Y TIM E)

W a 4e P
‘ cvuzcU&amp;e
tyaovi s4 dc0ie&lt;i&amp;. *.

B e a u tifu l 1 , 2 &amp; 3 B e d ro o m
A p a r tm e n t H o m e s A v a ila b le

1100SeelrtqOcpo* I
Hwlkm This hi C Pay Ha AppBcallon Fttl

St. Croix Apartments
3 2 1 -7 3 0 3

On Lake Emma Rd.» Lake Mary

HOURS: M-r, 0 •6 ■Sa I. 10-5 •Sun. Closed

O P E O B O A R O , 1/4 « )* a
4) SI 00 H ARD W ARE IK
D l al*)

U PICK. Black ayad P**S U .
Zlpparcraam peas 110 and
Okra...........................D10409
U PICK B L U B B IR R III. D l
Gulsa fld . Os lean as) J » D I 1
All day Sat. A Sun.___________
W HITE CORN FOR SAL*
Marlwalhar Farmi
1*41 Calary Ave . Sanlord

1 93— L a w n 4 G a r d e n
FOR SALE WOOD M ULCH
Bring toovtll 110 pick up load
You load « l 5*4)______ ____
T R U C K , tra ile r, m o w o n .
w a td ta ltr, blower, td g t
trimmer, odgtr. I ) " Iroo
^ h ig p a ra n d m o ra ^ D ^ ja U ^
199— P o ls &amp; S u p p lie s
BEAGLE PUPPIES. * wkt old
1)0 1 tomalot and I mat*
U P M l)____________________
• F R E E K IT T E N S P arllal
Man, Pltato call alter 1
1)1 J )U _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
• FREE TO OOOD HOME. *
month old tomato cal Gray
color Call ) ) ) )l*0
_
• FREE TO GOOD HOME
I
cal. I k Ilian, both tomato
.01 Da 4)04 altar IPM Alter
10dayt will go to pound
F R E E T O OOOD HO M ES.
P u p p ifi ond dogt. Shtp
hard Lab mi&gt; Good watch
dogt I Coll ID )01«
O O LO IN R ETR IEVER F U F I.
AKC Raglilt'td Ready to go
S»4 *0) D I1 D 4 ____________

322-2420 • 321-2720
SANFORD • LAKE MARY
•In O u i 38th Ym i *

PITBULL rU P riE S

MIT SUMMERLIN S T N S tT . a
bdrm ) balh. garage central
H/A. new pa nl in 4 Out
owner financing l i t *00 Deyi
4*1 0)4* Evenlnga 1)1 bill

153— AcreageLots/Salc
DELTONA AREA 10 ACRES
lde*l lo* mobile home O'
home til*, horiat. callla.
(arming, or nurtery Jorwd
agricultural 11 *00 per acre
Small down payment wllh
rltnancing *04/4) IT/T

1 3 7 -M o b ile
H o m e s / S a le
BY OWNER. I I doub'e wide
lamily park, car por r tcroen
room, tlorag* E acallanl
toms Pr cad be*ow value
P h il) *14)lam II
WINTER IFRINOS ) bdrm la
• *o\ C/HA tcreened porch
carport ) util, rmt Sacrifice

l 'tooo__

_______a i

dj *

ITIT M O B IL ! HOMB. 1 bdrm. I
balh, careened porch Needy
wane email rtpt'M Family
part 1) goo ) ) ) two_______

145— Duplex lor Sale
OUFLEX
t&gt;4.

SANFORD ) bdr. I
rvnf. Owf^r fi

r&gt;4ir&lt;e $44 000 XI) }M4

181 — A p p lia n c e s
/ F u r n itu r e

For tala

•

D 4 t)»

PDT BELLY PICS

twovtiold Oittan DOtach

))) 41M

P U R E B R E E D Rollw ollor
puppiti tor tala All tool! and
modlcol corlllkatoi D l w/f
FURR F I C T F I T C A M , lac.
Al homa pal c*'* Erp n
Domatllc 4 Frolic pal! Lie
4 B o n d e d S t a lle d by
Vttorinanan and /ootogical
Fart trained pt'tonnol W*
p/ov id* in* highatt quality
and partonaliiad pat cara at
your noma *0/M t 114) ar

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo
S E P A R A T E com ponent*
Kenwood catMllo deck Sharp
CD player. Pioneer receiver.
Fltoor ) way tpktktrt Ov*r
1100 Sell lor 1110 *04)14) I to

197— Sport In g Goods
o B X E R c T s E B IK E Good
condlllon 1301)109*1
0)1 SPEED BICYCLE
Mol* or Fomal* •In tacolltnl
condition. U 1 00 Call D ) ))ta

189— OHIce Supplies
/ Equipm ent
O T Y P E W R IT E R
Brolhar
Portable Electronic Cor
roctronlc 1.0 Full line cor
rocllon Two pilch Automatic
ralocatlon altar correction!.
1000 ch a ra cte r m em ory
iloragt Proltillonal raiull!
Idtal lor homo or ofllct. Coil
1)1).TJ now My tolling price
110 00 Call 140)1 ))1 1)41
Evening!or leave mttiagt
O T Y P E W R I T E R . IB M
Soloclrlc II, Eirvlltnl condi
lion. US or bail oiler Mutt
M ill)) 2*40

Single Story Design •No One Below or Above
Energy &gt; Efficient StudlOy 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom
Affordable Apartments
Friendly, On-Site, Dependable Management
Attic Storage, Private Patio &amp; More!
S c u t^ y td &amp; &lt;xunt
s4fK xnt*H eH te'
3301 S. S a n fo rd A ve. • 3 2 3 - 3 3 0 1

2 2 3 — M is c e lla n e o u s
a BATHROOM SET- 10 Inch
Vanity. Sink. Fauc«l. Com
mod# Topper Cabinet. 4 Glob*
Light Fletura. Whlto trimmed
In geld. Geod Condition
HOB 80. Call l » 1411_________
a FOR SALE Super Highway
Power King NEW I ply I M
H I L T Rang* 0 Tubal*** on
I hoto rim Single or dual us*
14)00 Call D I 414*
a DRACO CAR S EAT; Like
new I PkldUO. aeklnglaO
_______ 174 48411* met

•

HAIRDRYER

Salon protoe*tonal. Joto*
______ iaa Firm 11) alto______
• JO H N S O N S 4 H F B O A T
Motor. ITS Call DBMOt

OLD CHICAGO BRICK3
I SOBCl. Nat Solid............ U M
________ D14I14___________
ePLICRS. Husky U S A. make
!'' *•' •'' Slip |olnl pftori far
do ll yo u nlftr. Mechanics
Good gill Ham to *11 male* in
your lamily Carton of ilk 14)
Fof only 1* CO worth 111
H U M __________
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
B ID S Naw C om m ire la l
Horn* U n its F ro m t i l l
Lamps Lollont A c c «ll«rl* s
Monthly payments low ••
H I OB Call Today F R I I NEW
Color Catalog I M8-4U FI9F

W 4TD I4D ________________

2 30— A n tiq u e /C la s s ic
C a rs

• SR V KENNEL. Animal travel
cage Vory me* Haavy con
tlfudien Madium to tmall
lira IM Lail ) D 1444

* FORD THUNOERBIRO, IH I
All arlBlnall Naade same
work 11*91 OBO D l BUI

203— Livestock end
Poultry _____

IXkMOBO All power JD 0114

• LIVESTOCK P.gt lor tala 4
w ti old Yarttoiro I D each
D l /IM

209— W e a r in g A p p a r e l
a WE DOING GOWN. Etoganl
vlnlaga lull langlh gown,
champagna color. Horn Iha
I I I Gown laaturai, high
nact. baaulilul litlad baadtd
bodII a and long tittod ttoavat
wllh taim button Immaculato
(onditian Sna I) Mutt tat to
tportciatolllOO C jl'P Ito a i

211— A n tiq u es /
Collectibles

P R IV A T E C O L L E C T O R It
a AAA RAY'S AFFLI4N C E a
ta ilin g Ta a m P ln n a c lt
111 S Franck Ava. lantord
Baiabali card* Alto. 1 Fiaua
R a T r lg a r a la r , S ie v a i.
a r llt t t ’ proolt and Ryna
Watoa'I Dryart Fraa 1 yr
Sandburg &lt;i ol boot Call
Jatoor warr Dalji**il DOOM)
toa lit ) i io
____ __
• AIR C O N D T T IO N IR . won
W A N T E D / A N T IQ U E S .
uni! Ito Firm Lv noma 4
Diamond* Fine |awalry
Number on machino D a 11/1
Puckal and wrltl walchat
B U k H tiA R O OiLi with Iwa
Tiffany llam t Furntlura
mnuti-wq » w m *i v Inc'udai
Quil't Stol machinal Toy!
mallrattat Racaltonl cond
Ivory Mut'cal llamt Swordt
U M I F lt C S d a v q room wi
Knlvat. Anything anllqu*
I U I FU LL H I E R IO with
Cain paid B/aadway Jawalry
itoalt 1)0 AMANA waihar
and Fawn. 1)1/ W Broadway
and dryar DOB DO Oia I_______
I T . H w y a i t O v la d *
Flara/Ovtad* lal 441*
a O IN ETTE LET wood grain j
labia D ' l " ■ Jt'1 " wllh O'* |
draw in '•*! and two chain
213— Boats and
Only l» C * I I W 1!)/l
Accessories
E L E C TR IC HOSPITAL BED
tor tala Can bafora * J0*m or | t CANOE. I) 'I Saar* Good
altar tpm DO 8 1 / 1 _______
condition! SloaOBOUl AIM
F U L L BOX S P R IN G AN D
a HOUSE BOA T, I,,a ir . ■!' 1 aj
/MATTRESS lad A SET 4 UP
Nautalino, twin angina V
LA R R TS M A R T
1)1411)
drive DDK Dr Qvam *91 I I I )
HOME A P P LI A NC E C * NT E R
I SOLD MY BOAT
Ov*r 10 yaan In Sanlord
Salat Ntw and Utod Sarvica
ON THE FIRST PHONE CALL!
all maktt 4 parlt M l E
THE FIRST DAY MY AD RANI
Commercial SI
)D 14*1
KCNMORE waihar vary meal
Joyce CAtiidy't boat lor Ml*
Fraadtlivary and warranty
ad started in Monday i paper
Jahn A a Ball. I l l Dal
By Monday evening, her
MOVING! Sol*, lontaal Lika
phone was ringing and har
new Traklilional Mite llemt
boat waiiold!
) ) ) a*tadayi m o &gt; H « » a i _
Place your ad In Iha Sanlord
MUST SELLI Rich Plan Indui
Harold i clatilllad adt and
trial Irooior upright! Etc
you'll ba cruising on your way
condition!.
).* 11)1
lo suicassl
* W O O D E N T A B L E FO R
SALE, a chain Old wood
labtt Mild wood Vary htavy
SANFORD HERALD
HOP
Da 1)4)

HOM ES
SWEET HOM ES

1 Bedroom SE/VUREEZE

1-4 St S tate R o ute 46
C a ll ( 407) 324-1020 today

c
*

*

•

doobfokof ArMpIcMrmorf
f0% flAorx »rsg wve*'wti'e

312 V/ F lfs tS l

N tw Lantord o*lirtt and o*
......... ..
MO) MO &gt;4 H
Lateral IMI/ma ) ) ) )lla
IANFORD Or*'* ice/* MOO
tq It bwUfeag ratal 1)00 tq
rt jw' l** ! * un.| )) MM
m SO FBBT Mr Mat* on 1/0),
tuCCtttfirl a ruling anther
fewtinwttat Good pa't.ng and
lighting Grval ultlbilily
A i. '^ ta X mo U l u U a t r l
------------------------—

Bed rnd Rrrahfitf,
offit# poift &gt;tp*f1fHP% ).0Q6 m ft
f roomi 4 tMiftii piwft offico,
utHitf rm. end dbf qoroqo on

HALL REALTY

n s -O H ic e
Space / R ent

221— Good Things
fo Eat

322-7491
BEL09F APPRAISED PRICE
TONED COMMERCIAL
fiu le iiK hittoelc Nomt wrifti
QPMfif po9»fifi«l to* In homy
prpNtftiOAftl ftfwdfO.

117— Com m erdR l

Immediate Full/Part-lime Openings
• Ilo sl/llo sttu
• W alter/W illreM
• Cashlcr/Glfl Shop
B rin g p ro p e r ID

r il m . E s t a t e , in c .

373-8870

t3 — R o o m s (o r R a n t ~

Old Country Stem

141— Homes fo rS ele

Sq 19 friffs# location «*
pnffjsrve #0
fid Cfn

19 1 — B u i l d i n g
M a t e r ia ls

141—Homes (or Sale

RECEPTIONIST/SECRETART

LA BOR B U I N I I O B O Ik Iliad
andwniklllad Oayl
Call batwaan I j
SPRINT STAFPINO, P9W H

Jam iarylcaMald and ba hard
ovary day with high duality
•ark and you tan torn tha
right la work tram ham* Our
Nadart avaraga I M piwa a
waak || you have warhad tar
othar maid karvkaa call laday
and raw tan ilart tamarraw I
___________&gt;11 am _________

K IT ’ N* C A K l.V r,h &gt; hy L o rry W rlg lit

97— Apartment!
Furnished / Rent

•1970 OCVILLE CADILLAC

231— C e rs
C H IV Y Manta U rla , IN ) I
owner 44.000 ml, auto, A/C.
V 4. Nice! 1) 410 OBO DO OKU
•CHRYSLER IM PERIAL tot
Lika naw Mult 4*11 Only
1)3. WO Call laom uve)*
• L « BARON Canvtvttbto. M
Rad. loadad. dig dash, naw
top, naw lira* 14. MO 49S HOI

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOYYN
•actpl l i t . lag. 1194a. ale
C A O IL L A C S E D A N O t
V I L L I • 1941. two Iona.
&lt;asset!* alt power options.
Ml. crule* Only H l l 04/mo
Call Mr Payne tor appointment
D iiiD o r e p ta e a
19/4 C J-I JE E P . Rebuilt a cyl
maser 11.000 or bell otter
* 0 / PI4M 4 ________________
• I9D PORSCHE. I l l Targa.
tow mileage, thaws Ilka naw
ito m o
obo
m ma
• ‘ n C H IV Y E l Cam mo. no
eng or Trans , Arc. P/S, P/8 .
cowl hood. SS grille 14)0
_ Me ue I
'
'
_______
• U C H IV Y Chavette 4 dr. 4
sard, new tiros, doesn't burn
ott Good tod tar 4440 P M IP
4) PLYM OUTH Caravalto. 4 cyt.
a dr. tow mttos Auto. air
NIC# car I 1/. lOOOftO 1)4 4)19
'14 C H E V R O L E T Caprlc*
Classic. 4 dr
rum good.
Ipadad
la 000 OBO and
It Chevrolet Belatr. 1 dr., runs
good 14.000 OBO 1)4 IM/
44 BRONCO II. Ekteltonl condi
nanl Low mllesl Runs groatl
D OW Call MB )U4__________
14 FORD TAURUS A I condi
Pont A/C needs freon Bargain
I ) *00or trad* 4)1 41/4

2 33— A u to P e r is
/ A c c e s s o r ie s
• REESE R B C BIV IR HITCH,
1000/10.000. C la il IV. Fils
most lull Ilia p/u truck).
1)1 W Call D l 941*__________
• &gt; M IC H E LIH TIRES. Slia
Plll/10 H-15. Vary good con
dlttonl Only 1)040/ U199M

322-2611
_________ 131-9993

*19*4 SKI/FISM BOAT. W HP
W*rc . w/traltor Runt gr« 4tl
13 000 Parfljl llnantr
7IOi
a t) FI ORAOT W HITE. &lt;W c.
inboard outboard, lap lira
jnodal 19.000 OHO 1)1)114
# » " » PONTOON boat. All
tibarglatt, lao HP Evlnructo
Vary (aill Many aatrai. Ilk*
new I Only 19.410 D144A0
•'•) OL A U T R E AM. II' boat,
traitor. Whp Johnson Navar
in salt water, ave condition.

ti aoo

obo

wa )i* m i

a 19 RENKEN. X cuddy cabin,
one. I/O, lao hp. low hn,
mot/valad 1499)149 9119 Ernla

2 1 7 — G a r a g e S a le s
ESTATE SALE
Furniture, appltancvt, tooli#
cioth»t. houithold
Friday «nd Saturday, tfarti at
7am 3U Cifrui Oflvt* Sanlord

FUN JUNK
7)7 U tv itr Hd . Sanford
Thursday Friday Saturday.

•GARAGE SALE AD BARGAIN
Call In your garaga tala ad by
I) noon on Tuesday and lake
advantage ol our special
garaga tala ad prlcall Call
Clattlltod now (or detail!!

322-2611

YARD/PORCH SALE
6U Magnolia Ave. Fri and Sat

219—Wanted to Buy
FIN E JE W ELR Y. Diamonds.
Rolen's Gold. Tools, TVs.
VCRs Goll. Guitars. Stortot
Camaras Anllquas. Buy.
Pawn. Sail. Broadway Jawalry a n d H a w n . I l l ) W
Broadway ll-Hw y 414. Ovltdo
Plai* Ovlada 11) 44/4
W ANTED to buy military relict,
Germ any. Japan*!*, US.
Palchat. metals, daggers,
swords, unllormt. helmets
and lllghl |ack*H Call Bill or
Chau al Aslan Cleaners. D l-

235— T r u c k s /
B u s e s /V a n s
• CHEVY BCAUVILLB VAN
‘)v. I Ion. Paiiangar van.
clean Loaded l Too much to
lilt, must see lo appreciate
Only 11.491 OBO..........D l *700
• FORO RANGER, LTX 91.
P/S, crulM, A/C, itarao. 4.100
mi las. I yr or D.000 ml. tail on
warranty,_______ Call P I ISU
OMC CAROO/W ORK VA N .
Rum graall Look* grtall
Musi n il H,HO 1)4 00)1
• JE E P PICKUP TRUCK, 1979.
4x4 wllh loppar 1404 OBO
Needs a lol ol TLC. DJ-09S9
• JE E P PICK UP 4k*, 1974, VI.
auto. Engine and Irani, ra
bull I (about 10.000 mllaa)
Newer Interior 11.000 D 1 1000

S

Sanford Motor Co.

1990 CHEVK O LET CD PICK
UP - 44.000 miles. V 1 ,1 spam)
C lean is ip ln llio . 991
_________Cal I P l o t ) _________
11)4 RHD M AIL JE EP . Approx
90.800 m llti. N»*r new llrai,
ih o c k i, m otor, b a lla ry ,
alt*rn«lor, staarlng boa. Doas
not run. Naadt Irammlsiton
work 1*00OBO...........DM51*
• 111) SUBURBAN OMC. 4.11
dlalal, hall ton, mtchanlcklly
■olid, naw rid /brake rotor* A
callpan/haad liner. Vary good
Ural and tow pkg. U .500 OBO
_________ 40) D I-U M _________
'l l CJS JE E P , 15*4 cyl. 4 wd„
radio, vinyl lop, black, 1 spd
13,150...... Excel lent condlllon
D ) *14) altar* Pm.

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Cam pers
• lit ) COACHMAN M.H. 14 II.,
DK ml. AAany aitrail Inet
ganaralor. Vtry easy to drlvg.
ID ,900......................... D14440
19*1 E X C EL 19 ft. Air, quaan
bad. Naw awning Evraltont
tond.U.0C0DBI9)|__________
• ’)* MOTOR HOME Rum grM l
Will trad* lor Iraval traitor ot
com p inbto valu« 1117)91
• '91 A LLE O R O motor horn* V
•I. awning, l*ln b*di, genera
lor k hr. *31,500 OBO 311 8)D

�4W*.

•

&gt;
f^R
n 1
:/2i

» i

• ••

8UU
1 "- Sanlord
Herald. Sanford.
Oirnuiu nviBlUi
gu m iU i Florida
» w »M* - Thuredoy.
.
■ M iy&gt; M , 1 W

. . .

,

■

Nine of 10 playgrounds
said to pose hazards

1

By CASSANDRA BURRBLL
A ssociated P re s * W rite r_____
W A S H IN G TO N Am ericas
playgrounds may look safe but
nine of 10 contain hidden haz­
a rd s that are (Mtrtly to blame for
a c c id e n ts th a t se n d som e
170.000 youngsters to hospital
emergency rooms every year,
two consumer protection groups
wild today.
Those dangers, such us hard
surfaces and equipment that Is
too high, also contribute to the
17 playground deaths that occur
each year on average, the U.S.
Public Interest Research Group
and the Consumer Federation of
America said In a joint report
urging government ucllon to
Improve playground safety.
• Unfortunately, the federal
g o v e rn m e n t ha s not d o n e
enough to Improve playground
n.ifrlv." the report said. "Th ere
arc no national standards for the
design and const met Ion of out*
door play equipm ent."
Falls accounted for 73 percent
nl lh»* nrarly 170.000 Injuries
resulting In em ergency-room
irrutm enl In 1002. the study
Mild Ninety-two percent of the
playgrounds surveyed neverthe­
less lacked adequate protective

l

Legal N otices

Legal N otices

IN TNI COUNTY cowar.

IN TN I CIBCUIT COUIT.
■io n t iin t m JUOICIAL
c is c u it . IN ANoroa
tIM IN O L I COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CAM NO *7 141) CA »♦ I
SASNITT MOSTOAGI
COMPANY, a rtoriOA

INTNE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNB ISTN JUOICIAL
CIRCUIT INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO M tt CA 14 B

IN TNB CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNB M TH JUOICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AN O FO R
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA

torpftrftlan

Vt

;9

PU.— ill

vV SON ICA McC a I A. a t *1.

OvtovMwMI*)

NOTICIOr M L !

P ia m tttt

n

G ro u p Inveatlgutors found
obstacles and other equipment
In "fall zones” - areus under
and around equipment where u
child might full - In 73 percent
of lite playgrounds examined.
I I I g h e r •t h a n - n e c e s s a r y
equipment was found In 57
percent.
In 70 percent of the .UK)
playgrounds with swings, the
num ber and sparing of swing
scats Increased the risk that a
child would be hit by a moving
swing, tbe report said. Swing
arols were mude of worst, metal
or other rigid material In 20
percent.
E q u ip m e n t posed a head
entrapment hazard In 53 percent
of all playgrounds studies, the
groups said.
There wus some good news
Th e num ber of playgrounds with
hard iu rfu cf« under and •round
equipment fell from 31 percent
In 1002 to 13 percent this yeur.
surveyors found.
"M a n y
playgrounds surveyed tills year,
however, have mixed surfacing,
with loose fill, shock absorbent
materials like hardwo«»d chq*s
under some equipment ami u n ­
safe hard surfaces like anil and
gra*« under other equipment."
the report said.

Legal N otices

JUDICIAL ctacuiT.
in ANoroa
tIM IN O L I COUNTY.
n o a io A
CAM NO mStaCCWZ
SOUTH! AIT SEMINOLE
CIVIC ASSOCIATION. INC ft
r io&gt;uta H at fa r Sr®*it
Cftfpftftlun. ft b ft CMULA
VISTA MOMFOWNEBS
ASSOCIATION

*

surfacing under and around
equipment.
Report findings were based on
an examination of 443 play­
grounds In 22 states and the
District of Columbia in March
and April.
.
Th e most common Injuries
also occur when children are hit
b y m o v in g s w in g s o r are
strangled. Children also hurt
themselves by running Into sta­
tionary equipment, sharp edges,
protrusions, pinch |*olnta. hot
surfaces and debris, the con­
sumer protection groups said.
"Slides are the most frequent
cause of In ju ry for children
under the age of six.” they said
"Superficial facial Injuries ... and
serious head Injuries ... are the
two predominant patterns of
Injury for young children on
slides, swings and climbers.”
Playgrounds that look safe to
parents may contain hidden
strangulation hazards, said Mary
Ellen Flse. a product safely
director for Consumer Federa­
tion of America.
"F o r example, children can
strangle to death when thetr
head gets caught In an opening
that Is big enough for their fret
to enter, hut loo small for their
head to get through." she said

Legal N o tlc ts
or TNI IIONTIINTN

—

Sm^£fc

ii

N c 'K ft •« Sft’ tfcY *'*•* P-ft*

PHILLIP A LAWS ftvWLINOA
l LAWS MrttoftAftft"*PIN.

ftw 'M 'H to ft U ^nm ar, J«M*

NOTICE OF SALE
Not-Cft N kftvftby giv*** *Wl PM
umMrtiftwa. Ihft Cto*k ft* *hft
C lf&lt; «ll Cftvrl tftf tftmmalft
County. f W I N ixftti an* ftf
vtrtuft •• Ihft r Mftl JuOgnwnt ftl
I v k Y w i twvfttatavft antatat
an th* jftNi Sftf ft* Mfty. USA. M
(hot (•«taw ( H r . pftneing M IS*
O x -x t Court at the t NiU rPSl
JwOKiat Cwtv* •* Fiona*. m
mta lar Sftmtaftta CfttaWy S « Y
Civil A«llftn Nft I W S C C a t . M
which t O U T H l A t T SEM I
N O L I CIVIC A ttO C IA TlO N .
INC • FtoHOft Hat far PraW
CftvpftrftUSh. ft/ft/ft CM ULA
VISTA MOMCOWNIS t ALSO
CIATION to Ihft PlftlnllN ant
PHILLIP A LAWS an* LINDA
L LAWS ata tarn Ofttovtaftnto.
will attar tar MW ant Mil ••
public oulcry lo ttw highest ant
twd b t t a r ta r cosh •• lh«
S«m.now County CftWthftuto.
Ml M Park Arftnuft. lentord.
FwrHta «• Ihft was* Irani Oaor,
nn nw | HI ta y at Jim*. It**.
balrraan Ihft hour* ftl II 00 ft m
ant 1 00 ft m , Ifw aamt M-ng •
togel m n ta t ant It* hoar Ihft
togel hfturt at MW. Ihft tallowing
(WKrlbftd property klluftW* Ml
Vrm.now Count*. Ftortaft
From Ihft SW Cftrrwr at Ihft
NN to at Ihft NW W at Section
77. TowntMp &gt;1 South Sang# n
ta il run North P U IT" CftU
1] loot ta Ihft Ka«l right el way
lino at Slata Rood IJ. Itwnca run
North 0 0 1 ) » ' Well fttang MX!
right at way IMft 1)11 taftl.
Inonce North P f U t t " Cat!
K i l l leel ta • curve cantata ta
•he righl tar • total canlral
angta tSMO’. Cftntinuft thane*
South*niterH Along the arc et
M-d curve Iftl It taftl ta* ft pftlnl
ftl twglnntng; thence continue
along the arc at tatd curve M 1
teat, thence North
Efttl no taftl ta Ihft center line el
• canel. meander (hence North
wetlerly along the center tin* ftl
Mid canal ta ft pftlnl Narth
1 )1 I M" (* i l ol ttw point at
b e g in n in g , thtneft tftulh
M i n t " Wftil ta ttw pftlnl el
beginning. Alio known ftl Lot t.
Dlock 1. unrecorded plat at
Chulft Villa. Sftmlnota County,
Florida
Ttw Mid property, together
w ith a ll lb* Iftfiftitiftnll.
hrrftdltamenli ant appurtftnancel thereunto belonging, or
In any way appertaining, being
told lo salltly Mid lodgment
OAT I D Hilt loth day at May.
Itw
MAR YANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jfttw E. JftMwIc
Deputy Clerk
NOTIFICATION
IN A C C O R D A N C E W IT H
T H E A M E R I C A N ! W IT H
01 SAB I LI TIE S ACT. pertoni
with dliebllltlei needing •
tpeclftl ftccemmodfttlon thould
contact COURT ADM INISTRA­
TION, at 1) North Orange Are
nuft. Suite DM. Orlando. Florida
UtOI. Telephone (40) I U m t )
not taler than SEVEN dayt
prior lo lh« proceeding It
hftarlng Im paired. ( T D D )
is o o ts s o ji. e* v o i c e i v i
I too t U t in . via Relay Sftrvlc*.
Publish: May M A Jun* 1. 1004
DER-111
________ _
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* ll hereby given lhal I
am engigad In buslrwti a) Fie*
World. U.S. Highway IJ/fl.
Sanford. Sftmlnota County. Flor­
ida. undftr Ihft FlcllUout Nam*
of TH E D ALTON CONNEC
T IO N S U R P L U S C A R P E T
O U T L E T , and Ihol I Intend lo
regular Mid n«m « with ttw
Division ot Corporations, Tall*haitee. Florldft. In accordance
with Ihft prevlelons et th«
FlcllUout Nam* Statulet. ToW ill Section US Of. Plftrldft
Slftlutftf Iff I.
Douglat Jay Barnftt
Publish: May H. m z
DER 704

lecfttad In tftminftta Cftwnty.
pi

•&lt; ItrK ftw t I ■xii Mil

let m BEL AIRE MILLS.
UNIT THREE. accerWng ta the
put there** et recerdftd « Plat
look U pages I) and M ftllhe
public rftCprd* •&lt; tftminftta
County. FWride
•I public MW ta Ihft hrghftkt
k ftpIt tar CftkA. •• Ihft wetI IrenI
•ear *t ttw St x - Xt w County
CeuTtheuM tantard. Ftarldft. ftl
tl Mft m on Jurwt. IF»*
Amerwan* With Ottftbtiitws
Act I A D A ) Nolle* in «c
tftrdftrwft with nw Amortcon*
with Dieabt'itw* Act, p n w i
with a disability who need a
twee-«I ftCCftmmftdfttwn ta a * '
llctpftta in IMS proceeding
thould tentact ADA CoordMuetar
tt Ml Norm Perk Avenue Sutta
N Mt. tantard FWridft ttTII at
Watt live days prior ta ttw
proceed-ng Telephone lea))
m e i M l t t *nt i m t s i t m
(TO O ) ft* I W t U V N IVI *l«
Ftarldft Reta* Sftrvtce
WITNESS my hand «nd Seel
at thH Court «n May U . I**e
I Seal I
M AR YA NNI MORSE
C L IR K .CIRCUIT COURT
By Jana E Jftwwic
Deputy Clerk
Publish May M A June I tf*e
Of B » »
IN T hT C IR C U IT D O U R T '
OF THE llth
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLONIDA
Co m Nft: M i l l CA IftK
NATIONAL M ORTOAGI
COMFANY
Flfttntllt.
»s
RONALD E KALISH, etwa,

etftl

Detendenti
RICHARO J LAPP. 0 0 . P A
Detendenl Cross Plaintiff.
VS.
R O N A LD ! KALISH.etui .
•Iftl,
Cross Dalendftntt
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO : NftUonsbftnk ol Vlrglnlft,
N A , c/o Mark Wilson. Esguir*.
P o s t O lflC ft
J 1 144.
Greensboro. Nerlh Carolina

van

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
F IE O the* an action has been
commftnctd to Fftrftdosft ft
Mortgage on Ihft tel toning reel
property, lying and bftlna sltuftl
td In Sftmlnota County. Ftarldft.
more p«r1lcul«*ly described as

a-it
. ..
IvllwWg
----- --

Lot 47. H O LL O W B R O O K
WEST, according ta Itw pUt
thereof os recorded In Flol Book
77. Pftges M through 14. PiAtlc
Records ftI Sftmlnota Cosmty.
Florldft.
This action ha* been filed
•galnsl you and you at* re
gulred lo sorvt o copy ol your
written defensft II any, lo It on
R O B E R T E . M IL L E R . &gt; !
Q U I R E , c/ft M I L L E R A
ORACB. P A.. whOM address Is
ffO Douglas Avenue. Suita 101.
Altamonte Springs. Plerldo
17)14, within X day* attar ttw
first publication and III* ttw
original with ttw Ctark ol This
Court either bftfore service on
Plolnllir* Attorney, or Immodl
ol*ly ttwrooltar/ olherwlso o
detault will bo ontarfd ogalnst
you lor ttw rtllel domondtd In
ttw Complolnt.
In occordftnco with Ifw AmorIcon* With Disabilities A d . per­
sons with disabilities needing a
special accommodation lo par­
ticipate In this proceeding
should contact Court Adminis­
tration al Ml North Park Ave­
nue. Sulla N Ml. Sanlord, Flor­
id* 117)1. telephone (40)1 171
41M E ll. 411). not later than
seven { ) ) day* prior to ttw
proceeding. II hearing Impaired.
(T D D ) I W f l H D l . or Voice
(V) 1SOO*J)I))0, via Flo*Ida
Relay Servlet.
WITNESS my hand and of­
ficial saal ol this Court on ttw
DrddoyolMay. Iff4.
(SEAL)
MAR YANNE MORSE
Clerk ol Iho Circuit Court
BYs RulhKlng
Publish: May H A Jun* I, lf»4
DER 714

gm ac

m o r tg a g e

RATION OF FA

corpo

pi«w tlN .

MARY T KENT. B » AL
Datandants
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE SALE
NOTICE It HEREBY OIVEN
pursuant ta * U rn .m a tt Final
Judgment *4 Faractaaur* * * we
May I. ire* and e»-w-ed ■ Com
No ** )l CA 14 B *4 (h* C-*«u&lt;t
Court at th* ISTM JwdHtal
Circuit us and l*» tamiwew
Casmty. Ftarid* wharam GMAC
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
OF PA Pt*m#iN and MARY T
KENT. ET AL . art
I will sell ta (he MERE ----ter cash at ttw West Front Doer
at th* tammeta Cawtty Caurt
hout*. tantard. F tarId*, at It 4*
• (tail A M on th* IWh day at
tuna tW4 the StMowmg dr
scr Wed property a* sot tarth In
••Id Summary FUsat Judgment
**LOf *1 IKY LARK IN THS
WOODS. ACCORDING TO
FLAT THEREOF AS RE
COROE0 IN PLAt BOOH M
PAGE ta PUBLIC RICOROS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FL0KI0A
TOGETHER with all strwc
lures and impravemants now
end here*'tar an M-d land a n t
fi,lures r 'itched thereto a n t
all rants, issue* proceeds and
protits accruing a n t ta acou*
tram M-d premises all at which
a ta -deluded within the tartg*
tng description and th*
habendum tnereel alt* all gas.
steam otactrw. water and other
hooting casting ratngeratmg
lighting, plumbing ventilating
irrigating, and power systems
machines appliances. Hrtwroe
end appurtenance* which *r*
now or may here*(ter partam ta.
a t be used with. In. or an M-d
premises, even though they may
b* detached a* detachable
DATED this 17th day at May.
Iff*
.
MAR YANNE MORSE. Ctark
Circuit Caurt
By JanaE Jasawic
Deputy Ctark
Publish May If. 7*. If*t
OCR iro

IN TN E CIBCUIT COURT
OF TH E E IG H TE E N TH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. f l H4FCAI4B
CROWN SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION.
..........
Plalrslilf.
FENTON i FR O O M .*I*I.
Oetandanllsl.
AM ENDED
NO TICEO PSALS
NOTICE Ik hartby given tpal
pursuant ta ttw Summary Final
Judgment ol Porectacur# and
Sale entered In ttw causa pend
Ing In Ihe Circuit Court ot ttw
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
and tor Semlnota County. Flor­
ida. Civil Action No.: T11I04
CAItB. ttw undersigned Clark
will sail ttw proparty situated In
M id Count*, dascrlbad as:
Lola, SWEETWATER CLUB.
U N IT 4. according lo ttw plat
lharaol 4* recorded In Plal Book
11, pogas JO and Fl. Public
Records ol Semlnota County.
Florida.
at public Ml*, to ttw highest and
bast bidder lor cosh al 11:00
o'clock A M ., on ttw Jtti day ol
Juno. ITT4. al ttw Was! Front
Door ol ttw Somlnola County
Courthouse, Sanlord. Florida.
DATED this 14th day ol May.
Iff 4.
(COURT SEAL)
MARYANNE MORSE
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By: JanaE. Jasawic
Oapuly Clark
AMERICANS WITH
DISABILITIES ACT
OF IfW NOTICE
In accordance with ttw Amer­
icans With OlMbillllat A d . par­
son* with dlsoblllllas needing a
ipedal accommodation to par
llclpat* In Ih lt proceeding
should contact Court Adminis­
tration ol Ml N. Pork Avanuo,
Sulla M. M l, Sanford. FL V W
laliphon* (40)1 71141M. not
laltr than seven (II days prior
to ttw proceeding II hearing
impaired. (TD D ) I 400 fJS IJJI
or Vole* (V ) I •00T1MJ70. via
Florida R«lay Sarvlca.
Publish: May If .» , Iff4

OER-IO

CASINO TIMM CA
SHIRLEY A CREOESN

pifttv** It

V*

LINOAKRCLL.ETAL

Petahdenis
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO MIKE *RELL
RESIDENCE UNKNOWN
LAST KNOWN M AI L I N G
ADORES! Ml) W -h Atlantic
Aranue. Unit 7*1 Oaytan*
Beach Shores F L Ml IS
AND TO AH partans Ctawn-ng
an interest by through under ay
•genet the atar ese-4 Oetanaani
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI
T IE D THAT m at Han ta tar*
cta*a a mortgage an mo tattaw
mg dewbod preparty taiatad
in SamMata County. Ftc* M*
That certain Condominium
Parcel known at llmt N* f l and
an &gt;mdi.id»4 *4*10 mtaroct m
the land, comwsan stamontt and

ta S*M Out. ad M accordance
wtrh and subject ta th* Cava
nan** CeW dcr* roolrwlwn*
•arm* end ewvev yrevismns at
m* Deciftrat-en at ( e di v -iu k
at U N O * COVE A CONDO
MINIUM, as ta c a rta t m Ott-Clel
Racarfts ta c (H*. papa 0*4 at
the Publ-c RecurOs at Sammeta
County Ftafde
TOGETHER with an th* lie
pv*cements now a t heveettev
evectad an ttw prepartr a n t *n
eastmants. rights, apputt*
rvaneee. rants. rey*M*es minor
* 1. an and gas rights a n t pretits.
water weter rights and water
stack, and *11 tidvros now a t
hersetter a part at the property,
including replacements and ad
ditians thereto
hat bean W ad agamst yau a n t
you are tegu-ted ta tarv* a cap*
at your written detects** it any.
to this action, an H RICHARD
BATES at ANDERSON A
RUSH. Atsarnays tar Plamtitt.
whose address Is 777 las* Can
tral Boulevard. Orlando. Florida
17401. and It ta Ih* original with
th* Ctark at the above styled
Caurt within thirty dayt altar
th* llrtt publication *1 th*
notifa otherwise a liMgnwnt
may be entered against yau tar
ttw rtlial demanded In ttw
CompUinl

WITNESS MV HANO AND
SEAL OF SAID COURT on this
IJthdeyolMey. tf*4
SEAL
MARYANNE MORSE
at Clark at Mid Court
By Patricia F Heath
as Deputy Ctark
Publish May If. 70. m t
OER 144
CIRCUIT COURT,
COUNTY OP SEMINOLE.
STATE OF FLORIDA
CASE NO. H-IM4-DR-47 K
IN R E : Ttw Mart lege 4l:
B E TT Y JEAN CAMPBELL.
Patlllanar.

Community effort
Fay Fullon, Ifom Ih# Sanford Main SIt m I
Program, ipooka lo Intareilea bu«ln«»B p«opla
and rMldcnta Wednesday night at lh« Sanlord
Chamber of Commerce ofllce. Mein Street

conducted a phone blitz campaign lo recruit
new membera for th# protect that will help
re|uvenate Ihe downtown bualnaae dltlnct.

Winfrey wins 2 Emmys,
‘All My Children’ best
AtBoclBled Pte»» Writer________

She wARn i nominated thlR year.
The ceremony war televtaed

other pmgnsme

on ADC

Th e E m m y for oulalandlng
animated children'* program
went lo N lcke lo d eo n 't “ Hug r a t a " "SeAame Street." on
f'llS. war named oulalandlng
children's oerlee

NSW Y O R K - Oprah W ln lrry
(• hrgtnulng to enjoy tM-rtkell.
W ln lrry wa» a double winner
at (h r J I ol Annual D a yllm r
K m m y A w a rd s , c n llr r iln g
irophlra lor lt*-*« &lt;«lk *how anti
Im-rI talk (show IhmiI
" T I i Ir Ir gelling to be lik e ."
W ln lrry am HI Wetlneaday nlghl
a* mtie accepted her fourth conn rru llv r brel-hoM awartl
She a Im i pretw-nlrd the eveningts premier award In A IK " »
• A ll My C h ild r e n " for b r « i
tlrama orrleb
S o a p o p e ra q u ee n S u r a h
L ucci. whoee rrign Iiar yel lo t»e
confirmed by an Kmrny. w a r the
III tRl

Lucrl. who livtR played Krlca
Kane on "A ll My Children" for
23 year a . Iiar hern nominated 14
Ilm rA (or O u lR la n d ln g Lead
ActrrtkR — and haa lt»Rl 14 limra.

I n c lu d in g p r e v io u s ly a n ­
nounced technical awarda. the
hlgget.1 wtnnerR were "SeAame
S ir r e t " wi th aeven awarda.
"G u id in g L ig h t" with five. "T h e
hold and Ihe Heautlful" with
five, and "One Life lo Live” and
Wlnfrey a ahow with four each.
Hillary II Smith war named
oulRtandlng lead arura* In a
drama RerieR, on AOC'it "One
Llle lo Live.” Michael Zaalow nl
C U S ' r "G uiding Light" won Ihe
oulalandlng lead actor award
.juatln Deaa, aloo of "G uiding
Lig ht." won Ihe beat aupporting
actor award. Th e Em m y for beel
a u p p o rtin g a c lre »e went to
Suaan lUakell of "One Life lo
Live."
D a y tim e T V pioneer D ick
C l e r k r e c e i v e d a l i f e t i me
achievement award for hit work
on "Am erican IMndatand" and

Shari LewU. of "L a m h Chop r
ITay-AInng" on PDS. was voted
oulRtandlng perfo rm e r In a
children a terleR. ll w m her 10th
Em m y award
Dob Darker of C D S ’a "Th e
Price Ir Righl" beal out Ihe only
other nominee for (op game
ahow hoal. Alex Trebek of Ihe
eyndlcaled "Je o p a rd y ." T h a i
award waa p r r v riled May 2 1"Jeopardy" won t n b n m y for
o u ts ta n d in g gam e audience
participation »how.
Winncra were determined by
peer panels ol Use Academy of
Television Arts A Sciences and
the National Academy of TelevlrIo ii Arte A Sciences.

CONGRATULATIONS
CLASS OF 1994 GRADUATES
0 /20%

A,

ou%

x c ic

U

l

The cop and gown. The diploma. The hugs and handshakes. Tears
and laughter. It is a time for dreams. Now the future begins. Honor
your graduate with a message on our Graduates' Greeting page,
in the classified section o f the Sanford Herald on June 8th and the
Herald Advertiser on June 9th. Your message will be a tribute to
make your graduates' proud moment something to cherish for a
lifetime!

D E A D LIN E S :

• Photo Greetings, Monday, June 6th at 3 P.M .
• Line Greetings, Tuesday, June 7th, 12 Noon

E ZB K IA H F ITZ CAMPBELL

RaSpandsnt.

NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: EiaklahFItlCampball
YOU ARE N 0 T IF IE 0 that a
Petition lor Dissolution ol Mar
rlag* ha* baan Iliad against you.
and that you ar* required to
sarve a copy ol your Response
or Pleediog to ttw Patltlon upon
Ih* petitioner's attorney:
William W Carpenter. 440 E.
Highway 414. Longwood, Florida
MHO. and III* ttw original RE
sponsa or Pleading In th* office
o( ttw Clark ol ttw Circuit Court
on or before Ih* llth day of
Juna. A.D.. iff4. II you 1*11 to do
so. a Default Judgment will b*
token against you lor th* rtlial
demanded In Ih* Petition.
O ATED at Sanlord. Samlnol*
County, Florida Ihlt 4th day ol
May, iffa,
MARYANNE MORSE
C L E R K O F TH E
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Diana K. Brummall
Deputy Clark
Publish: May II, IT. 74 A Jun* 1.

ma
DER III

VEHICLE AUCTION
This auction will be held on
Juno f, iffJ ot f :00 am . al TfSI
Alalaya Tra il. Ovlado, FL.
Prospective bidder* may In­
spect vehicle on Iho day before,
Irqm * 00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m.
Terms ar* cash or cortlflod
funds only. Tlbbltt* Inc/Atoma
Senior*n Towing rtMrvos ttw
right t o occopt or r*|ocl ony and
•II bids.
IfiaChavrolal Impel* Blue
N aVInl
Publish: AAay 74. If*4
DER 110

•E X A M P L E:
4" P H O T O
G R E E T IN G
$25.00

HMSMITH
TMUS*
DeuKia\
Toll* Third
Miablm*,
GoodLodi
Yowbudi,
jaiTuuiy

CALLEARLY
T O RESERVE
Y O U R SPACE!
(Payment in
advance required)

C
Sanford H erald
L itM L W iiP jtf f iM f l

1

•E X A M P L E:
3 Lines Minimum
$5.00
Each Additional
line - 50c
Add $2.00 for
Diploma Art
(Payment in
advance required)
*A rlw o r k o f
Graduate.1*
holding banner
u.h shown in
cxumplcs not
included in uctuul
greeting ads.

3 1 Z -Z 6 1 1

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241962">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, May 26, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241963">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241964">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on May 26, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241966">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241968">
                <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;, May 26, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241970">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241971">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241973">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241974">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24231" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23832">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/41ff84cc7ea8fd7fdce7d917a5ba0fb2.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b0c552959594398451b680e309194239</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="241960">
                    <text>W EDNESDAY

• • r v ln 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 ln o a I S O S
_______________________No. 237 - Sanford, Florida

qMotel’s ft

NEWS DIGEST

1 Local Holiday Inn
is suspended from
nationwide listings

□ Sports
Division rivals to meet
S A N F O R D - T h e Anterior
runner-up D.A.V. Royals earned tin
the division champion Sunnllund
jheSenfimrd Linlc Major clly champ

□ Pooplo

Herald Staff Writer

Cook of the Week
Today's cook of ihe week, F
divides her lime between worklim
maklriM crallsand rooking
C See Page 3B.

Valois makes first appearance
SANFORD

in court

e Springs man
arrest in one murder case will
court appearance this afternoon
d Jury Indicted him Tuesday for
irder In the death of a toddler he
was babysitting
.
John Valois. 20. was indicted for murder and
aggravated child abuse In Ihe death April M of
two-year old Tiffany Uorca Vatola was babysit­
ting Ihr toddler and her twin sister April 3.
while their mother. Sherry IJorcu. 28, rati
errands When the woman returned, the little
girl was unconscious She was taken to the
hospital where she died u lew days later
Valois was sentenced to two vears on
community control ihouse arrest) followed bv 13
years probation In December 1992. He pleaded
no contest to helping plan the death of Warlocks
motorcycle rluh president Wayne Satuo. Four
leenugets. Including Suruo's daughter. Tllfany
were sentenced for their roles In the case
In Hie case of Tiffany's death, assistant state
attorney Joe D Achllle said there Is a continuing
S S S K " reganllng other lludings made by
the C hlld Protection Team, although he declined
to comment on whether there was any Indica­
tion of previous abuse of the little girl.— . . .
Valois was arrested last week and remains In
Jail on the new charges
j

SA SfO H D — The Clly of Sanfor
und Resolution Trust Corixirutlor
IR K ), which holds the recelvershl
&lt;»n the Holiday Inn projierty. ar
going to court June 2 to settle th&lt;
motel's (ate.
The lease on the property hai
been declared to he In defuull. am
has been ihe subject of nutneroui
attempts to resolve the problem
The clly owns the pro|tertv on
which Ihe building Is located Somr

The Holiday Inn meanwhile, has
lo rn removed from ihe nationwide
reservation listings Holiday Inns
may l&gt;e txxikrd anywtiere in llie
nation by phoning I -800 HOLIDAY
A reservation clerk however
captained that ihe Sanford Holiday
Inn had been removed from the
national listing this past week
Jim Kettelle. manager of the
Hanford Holiday Inn. referred phone
calls regarding the situation to
Hank Fonde. vice president with
P re n tiss P rop erties P re n tiss
agency's representation for R TC
esplred on May 15. at which lime
Hie note and mortgage was to lw
transferred to RTC
"Our primary oblecttve ut this
8«e Motel. Pag# 5A
Tha Holiday Inn at Sanford

Fire
guts
home
C a t d ie s , s e c o n d
c a t, d o g in ju re d

Simon malls central Florida
SANFORD
The Seminole Towne Center
Mall, developed by Melvin Simon and Associates
w est of Sanford, has been touted aa being one of
the largest cornplrxrs of its kind In Hie area
This morning, area officials found Sanford Is not
ulune. A new Melvin Simon developed mall was
to be announced al a press conference at
Orlando City Hull.
Doth Ihe Seminole Towne Cenler and Hie new
mall were Identified as being 1.2 million square
foot enclosed malls.
The new Orange County mall will lx- devel­
oped In southwest Orlando. Hod llrrwer. who
handles Central Florida p'lbllclty for both of the
malls, said Orlando's new mull will lx- a. "...390
acre masterplunncd office, retail and enter­
tainment complex."
In Sanford, the Seminole Towne Cenler land
clearing project Is well underway, with building
construction lo start luter this yeur. The grand
opening bus already been set for Sept. 7, 1993.

McLain appointed to task force
SANFORD — Seminole County commissioners
uppolntrd fellow commissioner Daryl McCain lo
represent the county on Ihe Lake Jesup
Restoration Task Force.
McLain, who represents Hie district which
surrounds much of Lake Jesup. Is a past
member of llir Friends of the Si. Johns River.
The lG-pcrson tusk force was created by the
Legislature (his year to study ways lo restore
Ihe lake to Its former condition. Gov. Lawton
Chiles ullowed Ihe group to form last week.
Cleanup Ideas Include filtering the wulcr
through u swamp or reopening Ihe second luke
tic lo Ihe Si. Johns River lo allow Ihe lake (o
(lush Itself.
From staff reports

M*&lt;*W Fftew kf lin w t i VWWkAl

Samlnolo County Animal Control and hrahghlars were
on hand to contain a blare and rescue animals at 704
Baywood Circle this morning Jodi Ihe dog rests at a

(daughter's foal before baing transported to a vot lor
smoka Inhalation

HANFORD — Fire gutted a house
in KunUnd Fatales this morning,
killing one pet cat and Injuring
anothereal and dog
The residential hlare at 704
llavwood Circle was reported to the
Hanford Fire D e trim e n t at 7:37
a.m. Firemen said the blare was
considered contained by H:OS.
The home was reportedly being
rrfurhtshed. and construction was
See Fire. Page SA

Students at-risk get some extra help
O fficials com m itted to keeping kids in school
VICKI DoSOKMIBII
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — The Seminole County school
board has made n commitment to helping the
at-rlsk students In Scinluolr County reach
graduation.
Many of the programs they are proposing to
Implement starting Ihe next school year are
aimed at the rising number of at risk students in
Sanford.
In the preliminary budget rigurcs for the next
fiscal yeur, the district has set aside $1 million lo
finance programs for at-rlsk students. The Ixiurd
committed llsclf lo the expenditure of uboul
$705,000 of that money lust night.
After healed debutr over Ihe Inclusion of some
wording Hull may have hern Interpreted us
support for the uoe of homogeneous ublllly
grouping, the philosophy for addressing the
needs of al-rlsk youth In Ihe district wasudopied.
Concerned parents who have hern asking for
Ihe district lo Implement such a policy asked for
more details of specific pluns in the phlllosophy
statement.
Tom Marcy. executive director of high school

Polio*...............
School Menu...
•porta...............
Tola vision........
Woathor...........
W o rld ...............

educallon (or Hie district, mild Ihe philosophy Is
not designed lo lx- a cure for all Hie district's ills
Rather, lie said. It Is merely a statement of
philosophy.
"This Is a philosophy not a prescript Ion.” he
noted "The prescriptions huvcn'l been written
yet."
Sllll. Ixiurd vice chairman Sandy Robinson
supported those purrnls who spoke.

"We Just didn't want dial patient left m il." she
said.
After accepting the statement of philosophy.
Ibc hoard also upproved a number ol prn|x&gt;sals
made by Ihe staff.
Included In tlu* board's commitment to the
at risk program urc:
• An additional kindergarten teacher, above
the existing stalling formula, has been added al
Goldsboro. Hamilton. Idyllwllde, Lake Orlcnla
and I’lnerrrsl elementary schools. (All but Lake
Orlcnla, which Is In Allainonlc Springs, are
Sanford hcIkxi Ih). Tlu* Increased teacher will allow
the schools lo lower Hu* sludcnt-lo-leuehcr ratio
In those kindergarten classes.
• An additional guidance counselor lias been
added In Ibc staff al Hamilton Elementary School

In Sunlord.
• An additional social worker has been added
to Hie district staff lo work with families of at-rlsk
students In Sanford area schools
• The board will pay for bulf of a University of
Central Florida |M)slllon dedicated (o developing
and Implementing strategies for assisting at-rtsk
students al Goldsboro Elementary School. They
have also committed Hie resources to ullow for
proper slall Involvement In the strategies.
• The Ixiurd has allocated $7,500 for the
purchase of materials for summer school transi­
tion classes (or those at-rlsk students making Ihe
move from middle In high school.
• Tlu* hoard hus agreed to allot $30,000 for
eonlracllng with outside agencies dial will assist
with program design and evaluation of the at-rlsk
programs.
• A commitment hus been made to provide
transportation for at-rlsk students during elemen­
tary and middle scliixil tnlersesslon programs and
high school transitional summer classes.
• Three "icaehcr-coaches" will be hired to help
Icuchcrs expand their repertoires of methods and
strategies for helping at-rlsk students.
T See School, Page BA

Seminole County attorney throws
hat in ring for retiring judge’s seat

High temps, low humidity

■ f J . m a r k B A R FIILD
Herald 8enlor Stall Writer

Mostly sunny. High
In Ihe upper 80s.
Wind southwest 5 to
•Omph.

G$n$ 8t$ph$n$on

LONGWOOD — Markham Woods Raid resident Gene
Stephenson will seek Ihe IHlh Circuit Court bench seal
being vacated tills year by the retiring Judge C. Vermin
Mize,
.
Stephenson, 39. hus lived In Seminole County for 34
years. Stephenson currently conducts Ills own practice
In Casselberry. Previously, he worked for Ihe Cleveland.
Stephenson and Mize Low Firm In Seminole County
and Ourncy. McDonald and Handley In Orange County.
Longwood lawyer Carmine Uruvo and Altamonte
Springs lawyer Dean Mosley are also seeking the Group
12 scat.
Stephenson was admitted tn Ihe Florida liar In In
1960 after studying law at Stclson University College of

Law. St. Petersburg. Stephenson Is a graduate of
Stetson University. DcLutul. Stephenson Is admitted lo
practice before Hu* U.S.-Supreme Court. U.S. Court of
Claims, U.S. District Court and Florida Supreme Court.
Stephenson served ns president of the Seminole
County Uur Association In 1973. Past service includes
municipal Judgeships for Altamonte Springs and
Lougwood and us clly attorney for Longwood.
Stephenson also served on the Altamonte Springs clly
commission In 1963 and 1964.
Stephenson has also served on Ihe 18th Circuit
Grievance Committee. Is a founding member of the
Williams' Inns or Courb a member of Hie Florida
Academy of Trlnl lawyers. Stephenson has also served
us a member of Musonlc Lodge 62 In Sanford.
Stephenson Is married lo the former Grace Hulbert.
The couple have four girls.

S U B SC R IB E T O T H E SAN FO R D HERALD TO R T H E B E S T LO C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . Call 322-2611

�1

■A * Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, May 23, 1W4

N EW S FROM T H E R EG IO N A N D A C R O S S T H E S T A T E

Education policy stirs debate
■y IKIPLOR99
Associated Press Writer

Legislator may be graffiti culprit
MIAMI — Proserutoni Irellcve male Rep. Carlos Vuldcs Is the
man who scrawls graffiti al a condominium complex and have
filed criminal mischief charges.
Valdes, R MIaml Lakes. Is the unsmiling, mustachioed mail
caught on videotape whh marker In hand. Dade County
prosecutors say.
The man with slicked back hair looks to the right, then to the
.left. He whips out a black marker nnd begins scribbling on a
wall at the Pnrkslde of Fount nlneblcau Condominiums.
de
Valdes, a legislator since 1988, owns a first-floor condo al thr
complex and Is involved in n civil lawsuit against the
condominium's owners association.
"There's no question at all as to his Identity." said William
De Polio, president of the owners association, who says he has
viewed the tape many times.
Prosecutors filed charges agninsl Valdes. 43, on Tuesday.
Criminal mtochlcf. a second-degree misdemeanor, Is punisha­
ble by six months In prison and a *500 fine.
Valdes could not be reached for comment. His mother, who
answered the door at Valdes' condo, said the charges are
ridiculous.
"Th a t’s the most absurd tiling I've ever heard." Luisa Valdes
said. "Tha t's a childish thing. He wouldn't do anything like
th a t.... I've got gralTUI on my kitchen window. Am I to believe
he did that, too?"
The grafllll artist was caught on tnpe May 7 by a video
camera hidden In a fire extinguisher box. The Incident took
less than a minute and there was no sound except for the
man's clicking heels.

TA V A R E S — Angry over n new school
board policy that requires schools lo teach
students Hint American culture Is "superi­
or" lo any oilier. Annu Cowln has decided to
send her teen-age son to private school.
She's not alone. Other parents upset
enough to pull their children out of school
fear that the policy and other Lake County
srhool iMianl rulings will Inhibit students
seeking a well-rounded education.
" T h e hoard's m ajority has made a
mockery out of education In my county."
said Mrs. Cowln. who has taken her son out
of Leesburg High Schuol In favor of a private
school In Connecticut.
The policy has divided the fast-growing
central Florida county of small towns and
rolling hills — nnd prompted u lawsuit
Tuesday by a group of teachers nud parents.
The suit Is the latest In u string or
controversies since Ihe latke County School
Hoard became dominated by members
pledging to further conservative. Inidltlonnl
and Christian values.
However, where some see evil and say
"the majority" on the board have gone
beyond their election promises, the policy
has Its defenders among the region's

^The board’s majority has
made a m ockery out of
education in my county. J
-Anna Cowln
165.000 people
"We need someone lo look out for thr
Christian view, particularly In our schools
will) our children," said Constance Older, a
former South Dakota teacher who retired lo
Leesburg.
At Woolen Park, near the county court­
house In Tavares. Louis Wllll-uns said Ihe
b o a rd w as a c t in g lu re s p o n s e lo
"imilllpullurallsm that Is being rammed
ilown our throats."
The 1.400-member laike County Echuu
lion Association sued Ihe county's school
board on Tuesday, saying the board violated
the U.S. Constitution and Florida law by
adopting the policy
The lawsuit asks a circuit court Judge to
prohlhll the txrnr&lt;t from tiuplemenllng ihe
policy.
"The board's majority wants to start from
a conclusion — that America Is superior to
all other nations — and then work utrkward
to sup|Mirt It." union I'rrsldenl Gull Hurry

said. "That's not education. It’s Inducing
lion."
The lawsuit maintains that the poll
"requires teachers lo suppress Ideas
IKirlruy certain minority groups ns InfcrE
and lo Indoctrinate students to a partlculT
viewpoint.” consequently violating the Fir
Amendment freedom of expression.
The suit says the policy also vlolnt*
students' rights to effective education an^
teachers’ rights to academic freedom.
The school Ixianl voted 3 2 on May 10
adopt the onc-paragraph jxillry rcqulrin|
Irarhem lo “ Insllll In our students ar
appreciation of our American heritage umi
culture such us our republican form or
government, rapllallsm. u free enterprise
system, patriotism, strong family values,
freedom of religion nnd other basic valors
that urr superior to other foreign or historic
cultures."
Florida Education Commissioner Doug
Jamrrsnn has said Ihe policy violates stale
law requiring multicultural education that
fosters "appreciation and respect for people
of other rlhnlc. gender, socio-economic,
language and cultural background."
T h r board members who volrd for thr
policy — Chairwoman Pat Hart, Claudia
Ramsey and Ju d y Pearson — hove drown
U all criticism and support across the stair
und the nation

House rejects Haiti invasion
W ASHINGTON — The House Is on record against Invading
Haiti to restore ousted President Jean-Dcnrnnd Aristide.
The 323-201 vote Tuesday, which Is not binding, came amid
heightened tension In the sea around Haiti. U.S. warship have
fired warning shots al two ships under a tightened embargo.
Including one that slipped through with contraband fuel.
The no-invasian proposal by Rep. Porter Goss, H-Flu..
received House endorsement after tuwmakcrs rrjected a
compromise amendment by Reps, Ronald V. Heliums. O-Callf..
and Lee Hamilton. D-Ind.. House Foreign Affairs Committee
chairman.
Their amendment, dcfenled on a H i]-236 vote, was similar
but did not Include a plan to use a Haitian Island as it base for
Aristide and "safe haven" for refugees seeking to flee the
country.
Both versions. Introduced as amendments to a 9262.7 billion
defense bill, opposed U.S. military action unless there Is a
"clear and present danger to U.S. Interests or citizens."
President Clinton has said the use of force remains an option In
dealing with Halil, but he backed tightened U.N. sanctions as a
preferred step. The sanctions went Into effect Saturday.
The Senate version of the defense spending bill Is still In
committee, and no similar vote has yet been taken In the
Senate on military action In Haiti.

A reason
to celebrate
T h « restdonis of Hlllhavsn
Healthcare Center, Sanford,
enjoyed a monthly barbecuo
al ham burgait, hot dogs,
baked beans, salad, and
watermelon In Ihe warmth of a
spring day For desert, a cake
to celebrate National Nursing
Home Woek was cut and
served to each participant
with the help ol, from left to
right, Julie Erlkson, activities
director. Marie Pierce, a reeld e n t , and J a a n n a t l e
Villalobos, a volunteer at the
conlor.
H*« Md Ftiete fey H n m in IklwwHlMNr

From Associated Prass reports

J

Chiles: Health care
special session
will be June 7-13
By J A C K M HALLIPAX
Associated Press Wrltor
TALLA H ASSEE Florida
lawmakers will be back at the
Capitol working on health care
reform starting June 7. Gov.
Lawton Chiles has decided.
C h ile s c o u ld n 't get the
Legislature to pass his proposal
to subsidize private healttn In­
■ surunce fo r h u n d r e d s of
(thousands of Floridians tn the
regular two-month session that
■ended In mid-April.
&lt; So he has called them back lo
•work for a week-long special
•session that could cost up to
•940,000 a day.
• The money for the subsidies
•would be raised by making
jwclfare recipients on Medicaid
•go into health maintenance or­
ganizations and other managed

LOTTERY
M IA M I - H ero are the
w inning numbers selected
Tuesday In the Florida Lottery:

care programs. Medicaid recipi­
ents traditionally have chosen
their own doctors, which genera lly cost s m o r e t h a n a
managed-care system.
The plan also needs the goahead from Washington because
Medicaid Is a Joint federal-state
program. Chiles has said he
expects that approval soon.
He has had more problems
with the Legislature.
The House passed a version of
his subsidy plan during the
regular session. But the Senate,
s p lit e q u a lly betw een Re­
p u b lic a n s and D e m o cra ts,
balked.
Minutes after the regular
session ended, the governor said
he'd cull lawmakers back to
town, probubly In June, to tackle
health care reform.

P lay 4
4 -8 -6 -0

tit Oii*

By BRIHT KALLE9TAD
Associated Press Wrltor
TA LLA H A S S E E - For the
first time In nearly 13 years, a
Florida governor bus gone to
the private sector for u
Supreme Court pick.
Orlando attorney Charles T .
Wells was named Tuesday to
the state's highest court by
G ov. Lawton Chiles, who
bypassed two Judges In mak­
ing the appointment.
F lo rld u B ar P re s id e n t
Patricia Seliz praised the gov­
ernor's selection and called
Wells a good fit with the
sit ting Justices.
"He Is not afraid to tackle
hard work or hard Issues."
said Seitz, a Miami attorney.

Tonight: Fair. Low In the mid
to upjicr 60s. Light south wind.
Thursday: Partly sunny. High
near 90. Wind wcsl 5 to 10 mph.
Extended forecast: Friday:
Partly cloudy. Lows In the lower
70s. Highs In the upper 80s to
lower 90s. Saturday and Sunday:
Partly cloudy with a chance of
afternoon thunderstorms. Lows
In the lower 70s. Highs In the
upper 80s to lower 90s.

■ X T IN D ID OUTLOOK

V \j m :----------WEDNESDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

o

Wednesday, May 23. 1994
Vol. 86, No. 237

Second Claes Postsgs Paid at Ssnlord,
Florida and additional mailing
oltlcaa.
Postmaster; Sand address changes
to THE SANFORD HERALD, P.O.
Boa ISS7, Sanford, FL 33773-ISS7.
Subscription Raise
(Dallyt 1i tSunday)
Home Dallyary
MeU
3 Month*
SI I.SO
134.00
S Months
13900
$44.00
t Year
171.00
m.OO
Florida Residents must pay 1% sales
Isa Inaddition to rates abovs.
Phone (407) 333-3411.

F L O R ID A T S M P S
City
Daytona Bssch
FI. Laud Bssch
FortMyorr
Galnatvllla
Homsltsad
Jacktonvllla
Ksy Wsit
Lakaland '
Miami
Ptntacola
Sarasota
Talloholiea
Tampa
Vrro Bsach
W PalmBsach

HI

mm

90
14
90
92

92
IS
92
11
(9
$4
92
19
W
11

Ls
Pci
00
11
00
41
00
44
14
.00
.mm
mm
.00
*2
71
00
.00
41
.00
7t
44
.00
.00
M
.00
11
.00
41
41
.00
41
oo

THURSDAY
PUy eldy 89-70

NEW
June 9

PRIDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

r

i

LAST
June 1

€

FIRST
June 16

M A C H C O N D IT IO N S
Daytona Beaehi Waves are
1-2 feet and semi glassy. Current
is slight to the south with a
water temperature of 76 degrees.
New Smyrna Beach: Waves
arc 1 foot and glassy/Current Is
to the south w ith a water
temperature of 76 degrees.

------------ *

SATURDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

T ID E S

MOON P H A M S

FULL
May2S

Published Daltyond Sunday, aacapt
Saturday by
I The Sanford Herald,
Inc. MO M. French Avs., Sanford,
Fla. 33771

"He !*• very thoughtful, very
thorough, and curing "
Wells, 54, Is scheduled to
begin bis new duties June I
He fills the vacancy created
by the retirement of Justice
Parker Lee McDonald, who
reached the mandatory re­
tirement age of 70 on Mon­
day.
"I was very hopeful the
g o v e rn o r w ould appoint
someone that spent a career
111 private practice." Wells
said Tuesday m u telephone
Interview from his Orlando
office.
T u e s d a y 's appointm ent
marked Just the- second time
since 1975 a Florida governor
went to the private sector lor
u Supreme Court appointee.

p re s id e n t of the F lo r ir
Audulxm Society, told a net
conference.
"We are going to give serloi
TA LLA H A S S E E II
lawmakers tire willing to rewrite consideration to vetoing the b
It. Gov, Lawton Chiles may veto for a number of reasons." sa
a hill that environmentalists say Chiles' budget director. Dav
threatens growth management Coburn,
Coburn questioned that l
In Florldu. an aide said.
Alter meeting with environ­ Impact on growth manugrmn
mentalists Tuesday. Department would tie tiiat serious but sa
of Community Allairs Secretary Ihe governor's office had oth
Linda Shelley said she will urge concerns. bucIi as inadequa
('Idles lo veto thr bill, comparing control by the governor ovi
Its writers to someone tracking Judicial spending.
Chiles' decision will depei
Into a cactus.
"It s tier feeling that tills jrartly on whether luwmakr
legislation has serious unin­ arc willing lo revise the bill
tended consequences.'* said the special legislative session s
Shelley's spokeswoman. Toni to open June 7. rather tin
discard all Its provisions.
Rlordan.
"It will cut the legs out from
If Chiles doesn't sign or ve
under Florida's growth man­ the trill before Saturday. II w
agement process If It becomes b e c o m e la w w it h o u t h
law." Charles Lee. senior vice signature.
By BILL B IR 0 9 TR 0 M
Associated Press Wider

TH E W EA TH ER
LOCAL POHKCAST

Fantasy 6
1-18-9-12-0

Orlando lawydt
named to Florida
Supreme Court

lEnvironmentalists ,
say bill guts
growth management

THURSDAY!
SOLUNAR TABLE: Mill. 6:50
a.m., 7:20 p.m.; MaJ. 12:35 u.m..
1:10 p.m. TIDESt Daytona
Beaohl highs. 9:39 u.m.. 10:14
p.m.; lows. 3:3-1 a.m., 3:36 p.m,;
New Smyrna Beach) highs.
9:44 a.m., 10:19 p.m.: lows. 3:39
a.m., 3:41 p.m.: Cocoa Beach:
highs. 9:59 a.m., 10:34 p.m.I
lows, 3:54 a.m.. 3:56 p.m.
B O A T IN G
St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
Tonight: Wind variable 10
knots. Seas 2 feet. Hay and
Inland waters a light chop.
Thursday: Wind south 10 knots.
Sens 2 feet. Hay and Inland
walcrna light chop.

y \ j^
SUNDAY
Ptlycldy 89-70

IS T IC *
[fSThT Ae Thigh
temperature

lit
Sanford Tucsduy was 90 de­
grees and tin- overnight low was
60 us reported hy the University
of Florida Agricultural Reseurch
anil Education Center, Celery
Avenue.
Recorded rainfall for the
p e rio d , e n d in g ut 9 u.m .
Wednesday, totalled 0 Inches.
The temperature- ut 9 u.m.
today was 74 degrees and
Wednesday’s overnight low was
65. as recorded by the National
Weather Service al the Orlnndo
International Airport.
Other Weather Service data:
Tueedey'e high......... ...........89
( Barometric pressure. 29.98
['Relative Humidity 79 pet
:: Wlnde,.....Northwest 9 mph
[ Rainfall...........«.............. 0 In.
C Sunaet....
........ 8 tl5 p.m.
□ Bunriae..................6)30 a.m.

N A T IO N A L T I M M
Ttmptrsfurst Indicate prsulour day's
highendovtrnlght kw to1p. m EOT
city
H La Prc Otlk
Anchorsgs
14 40
dr
Allants
90 41
cdy
Allsnllt City
(2 17 .11 cdy
Balllmors
If 40
cdy
Billings
79 11 01 dr
Birmingham
17 17
rn
Bismarck
71 11 14 dr
Bolts
14 10
dr
Borton
42 11 12 rn
Burlington,VI
74 41
cdy
Charlsilon.S C
44 70
cdy
Charlsiion.W Va
•7 41
rn
Charlotte.NC
90 44
cdy
Chtysnn#
71 41 01 dr
Chicago
79 17 .11 cdy
Clavsland
71 4
rn
Concord,NH.
77 47
cdy
Dallas FI Worth
tf 41
cdy
Danvsr
79 4 .11 cdy
Dai Molnat
11 40
cdy
Datroll
71 14 .04 rn
Honolulu
17 71
dr
HourIon
17 41
cdy
Indianapolll
It 44 .12 cdy
Jackron.MIli,
17 19
cdy
Kanut City
U 41
cdy
Lai Vagas
94 70
cdy
Lltlla Rock
14 44
rn
Los Angslss
71 40
cdy
Loulrvllla
14 44
cdy
Msmphli
17 44
rn
Milwaukee
74 13 .09 cdy
Mplr Jl Psul
71 40 .17 dr
Niihvllle
17 19
rn
Nsw Orisons
« 42
cdy
Now York City
a 41
m
Oklahoma City
*4 41 ,01 cdy
Omaha
44 41
Or
Philadelphia
u 44 .03 rn
Phoonlx
H 49 .» cdy
PIMrburgh
14 M .» cdy
Poriland,Maine
u 49
cdy
11 Loult
44 47
cdy
Sail taka City
M 4
cdy
Seatlla
74 49
cdy
Warnington,DC,
90 44
cdy

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wedneaday, May 25. 1994 • 3A

Historical Society thinks Irish
SANFORD - The Seminole
County Historical Society Is
looking Into establishing an
"Irish Connection" along with
the history of Seminole County.

open to the public.
Uirrnlnc Whiting, prrsldrnt of
the society Is asking any cfccendunts of ancestors of Irish
descent, lo contact the county
museum anil relay such Iden­
tification and any Information
which may Im*known.

The project Is being conducted
to coincide with the Irish Soccer
Team's selection of the Seminole
County Sports Training Center
for practice prior to World Cup
Competition.
The Irish team will be starting
practice on June 7. with sessions

Whiling said residents with
Irish ties are asked to report on
w hen th e y, th e ir p arents,
grandparents or any other rela­
tives came from when moving to
this area, (rrmcmbcrlng that
Seminole was purl of Orange
County until I913|. and where

■yNICK MIIFAUF

Drug arrests

Herald Slaff Writer__________

• Samuel Puller, 38. 10 William Clark Court. Sanford waa
arivaled by clly police for possession of cocaine with Inlent to
distribute and possession of drug paraphernalia. Agenla of the
S|&gt;rclol Investigations Unit aerved a search warrant on Fuller's
residence Muy 21 where they found folded folia containing
cocaine, plastic bugs, razor blades with cocaine residue and
uurrotlc cutting agrnts. according to the police report. Fuller
waa not In the apartment when the warrant was aerved and
was arrested at 815 S. French Avenue on Monday. Ilia bond
was set at $5,000.
• Jerry Dewnynr Adams. 34, 0353 Markham Woods Hoad,
Lake Mary was arrested Monday by Oveldo Police for
(Missesslon of cocaine and possession of drug paraphernulla.
After u traffic stop on Stale Hoad 420. Adams told the officer he
was not carrying uny weapons and said the policeman was
"welcome to take u look." During the search of the van, police
found two pieces of crack cocaine and a small pipe and Adams
was urrraled.
• A John Doc was arTrslrd by Sanford Police Monday at IOth
and Olive for possession of crack cocaine and resisting without
violence, lie refused to give police any Information. The man
would not slop for a minor traffic offense at Oth and Pecan.
When hr sloped. [Miller asked him lo get out of the cor. Tw o
pieces of crack were found during a patdown. according to the
report, und the man had $130 In hla right front pocket.

Arrested for trespass
• Steven Iluutuu krr. 21. no address listed, was arrested by
Sanford notice at a supermarket In the 1500 block of French
Avenue for trespass after warning. He had been warned not to
enter the store again after hla May 15 arrest for shoplifting.
• David Odell Dillard. 20. 100 Willow Drive. Lake Mary was
arreslrd by u sheriff's deputy for trrspaaalng at the high school
after warning to stay off school grounds He was Issued a
warning Sept. It). 1903 and was arrested Monday after he was
seen near an auto mechanics class
• Hanford jMillce arrested two people for trrspoaslng on the
grounds of Hanford Middle School Monday. David Andrew
Smith. 18. and Linda Kay Warren. 32. both of 1001 Laurel
Avr were arrested about 0:30 p.m. Monday after police saw
them Inside the fenced compound near the environmental
renter

Traffic stops lead to arrests
• Hilly H Filer tree. 20. 200 Dorchester Square. Lake Mary
was urresled by Lake Mary police for driving with a suspended
license und u lag vlolutlon A computer check following a traffic
slop showed five llrense suspensions and thr tug on Kllerbee s
vehicle wus assigned lo another car.
• Albert Zenvelous Sprawl. 25. 2527 Polnsetta, Sanford, was
arrested by Sanford poller Monday after a computer check
during a traffic slop revealed he had a suspended llrense.
Sprawl's license wus suapended/rrvoked In February 1093 as a
habitual offender, the arrest re|iort states.

Incidents reported to Sanford Police
A woman In the 100 block of Cedar Creek reported u kicker
speaker was stolen from her curovrrnlght Sunday.
A woman In the IOO block of Saba I Palin Court, reported
someone threw a concrete stepping stone at her door,
unsuccessfully attempting lo gain entry Saturday.
The foreman of a construction site In the 1400 block of Mara
Court reported $800 worth of roof decking and P T lumber was
taken over the weekend
I'ollce^jixiivrrcd a vehicle stolen from Orlando in the
S e rn iro ^ ( ^m niU iittf 'Cotlegr' Adult High School parking bit
Monday
A resident In the 1)00 block of Hprlngvlew Drive reported a
11*87 Ford was taken slier the keys were left In the vehicle The
cur wus recovered ut I Ith St. and Pine Avenue In a drainage
ditch
A 1080 Chrysler New Yorker was taken from an apurlmcnl
complex In the I loo block of Florida Avenue Sunday night.
The steering column of a 11180 Oldsmoblle was broken In an
uilrmptcd cur (hell at an a|iurtinrnt In the 900 block of Georgia
Arms Monday night
A 1990 llutck Urgency wus stolen In the 1200 of Mellonvlllc
Ave. sometime Motulay afternoon.

Domestic battery
Jesus Reyes. 24. 2025 Sanford Avenue was arrested (or
baltrry/domcstlc violence after [Millce were called Monday
about u fight between the man and his llve-ln girlfriend. The
woman. Ellen Lynn Weaver. 22. same uddress. refused to
cooperate with officer* and wus arrested for resisting without
violence. Reyes allegedly Is not a citizen and the txirdcr putrol
waa notified, urcordltig to u [Millce report.

DUI arrest
A Winter Springs man wus arrested by Lake Mury [Millce Just
after midnight Tuesday for driving under the Influence. Carl
Arthur Olson. 49. 208 Wllllums Hoad was urrested on Lake
Mary Boulevard after field sobriety tests were recorded. The car
was towed und u passenger arranged alternate transportation.

Warrant arrests
• Juan Rivera. 30. 150 Burns Ave.. Longwood, turned himself
In on a warrant for obtaining property by worthless check.
• William Wallace Presley. 30. 405 Beth Drive. Sunford.
vlolutlon of probutlon/burglury und grand theft.
• Robert Dean Johnson. 38. 14509 Little Oakley Court.
Orlando, failure to uppcar(FTA)/ driving while license suspend­
ed or revokrd (DWLSR).
• George Waller Jollcocur. 22. 580 Trade winds Dr.. Deltona.
Vlolutlon of Probatlon(VOP)/ sale cocaine and VOP/Dcallng
stolen property.
„
.................
• Kenneth Kent Chisholm. 33. 2410 Center St.. Sanford, two
wurrants. burglury to a dwelling and VOP/burglary to a
dwelling.
.
. . . .
• Melissa Evonne Ren. 23. 356 Sun Oaks Court. Lake Mary.
FTA/tug not assigned.
.........................
• Steven Vincent Mlnott. 38. 2821 Sunlake Loop. Lake Mary.
Orange County warrant/uttcrlng forgery.
• Huy Charles Swcut. 39. 1046 S. Hwy. 17-92. Longwood.
FTA7DWLSR.

Casino group:
Voters’ OK
means, jobs,
tax revenues
■ylKSPLOMS
Associated P rsu Writer_________
ORLANDO - About I S mil­
lion more tourists would pour
Into Florida each year und gen­
erate an additional $5.8 billion
over five yeurs If Floridians allow
ruslno gambling to take root In
the state, a group says.
T h r Proposition for Limited
Casinos Inc. released an econom­
ic forecast Tuesday that also
showed casino gambling would
create 67,700 jobs and $686
million In annual tax revenue.
The group Is proposing a
statewide voter referendum on a
m axim um of 47 casinos in
Florida and ts barked by hotel
developers, casino rompanlrx
and member* of the parimutuel
Industry.
The proposal for a constitu­
tional amendment would ullow
operating raslnas at u dozen
large hotels and free-standing
facilities In the slate's largest
counties It also would [lermlt
existing pari-mutuel operators to
build on-site casinos, while pro­
viding (or five casino river boats
"Limited Casinos Is un eco­
nomic bonanza for Florida," C.
Patrick Robert*, chairman of the
voter 1-ampalgn. told a news
conference In Orlando "It will
provide more jobs and lax reve­
nue."
When asked about urgumenis
against casino gumhllng by law
enforcement authorities, re­
ligious gmups and others. Hobrrts said: "^rtip r Is In Florida
now. You can't tie crime issues
and law enAirrrmenl Issues lo
gaming now, ... T h r Image lias
changed "
Ja c k Praschnlk of W K FA
Group, an economic forecasting
firm In llala Cynwyd. Pa., said If
the expanded gumtiling amend­
ment Is approved, site prr|»uralion and mnsirucllon of new
gumlng facilities and hotels
would begin In 1995. with de­
velopers spending $2 5 billion In
1995 und $2 2 billion In 1996
The 67.700 jobs forecast Is for
all sectors of Florida's economy,
not Just casino operations.
fTuschnlk said.
Roberts said forecasts by
proponents of u rival constitu­
tional arpendment for rtverboat
gambling estimated an annual
Incrruse of 31.000 Jobs. But hr
said that was u gross figure and
does not take Into account thul
most of tile 36.000 people
employed In the pari-mutuel
Industry would lose their Jobs.
Floridians. Roberts multitulned. do not wunt a "rlvcrbo.it
alley" like Biloxi. Miss., or u glut
of casinos like Las Vegas and
Atlantic City.
Campaign ofilcluls said they
have 220.000 petition signatures
of the 345.000 they need to gel
the Limited Casinos referendum
on the ballot this fall.
The Limited Casinos pro|Misul
would have one cuslno each In
Duval, Escambia. Hillsborough.
Lee, Orange. Palm Beach and
Pinellas counties; two casinos In
Broward; and three casinos In
Dade County.
It would allow cuslnos In
existing pari-mutuel facilities
such ns racetracks and Jul-ulul
frontons In up to 30 locutions,
and It would uuthorlzc five
flouting casinos.

Our Success Wasn't Pulled from a Hat.

£!!!!?£. "i

M E M O R IA L
*★ * D A Y * * *
FOR MEN

FOR WOMEN

ask of you.

I

PO NTIAC-BUICK-G M C TR U C K

a

1590 South W oodland Blvd., D eLan d

i
u

ft

■FOR CHILDREN

25-33% O FF NOW 31.99

SA LE 6.99

HAGGAR® WRINKLE-FREE
COTTON SLACKS

ALL SWIMWEAR

30% O FF

R«g. 88.99. BUGLE BOY®
TEE FOR BOYS

NOW 24.99

SUNGLASSES

S A LE 8.99

Reg. 10.99 &amp; 11.99. SE­
LECTED BOYS AND GIRLS
PLAYWEAR SETS IN
INFANTS

HAGGAR® WRINKLE-FREE
COTTON SHORTS

25% O FF
ASSORTED BELTS

SA LE 19.99

25% O FF

S
A LE 6.99
Reg. 7.99. BOYS SHORT

Reg. 27.50. STAFFORD®
EXECUTIVE SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRT

FABRIC AND STRAW
HANDBAGS

SET

FOR HOME
W HITE SALE
SAVE ON

S A LE 14.99

2 f o r *32

Reg. $19 99. PRINT SHOR
TALL FOR JUNIORS

It purchased aaparataly. 12] MCh

S A LE 21.99

NOW 24.99

Reg. 130. CAPACITY* RAYON
ROMPER

LEVIS'® 550TM RELAXED FIT
5 POCKET SHORTS

W IN D O W C O V E R I N G S ,
M A D E -T O -M E A S U R E ,
S E L E C T E D B E D D IN G ,
AN D B ATH .

S A LE 12.99

20% O FF

Reg. 818. WEEKENDS®
DRAWSTRING SHORTS

JCPENNEY BATH COORDI­
NATES.

BUGLE BOY® SHORTS

SUMMER
SANDALS
ON SALE

DO IN O

'O J R I Q H T ' *

S a n fo rd Plaza
H w y . 17-92 - S a n fo rd

, •$$•—*&gt;wi mmmm* $®*^g$o*&gt;$» »■page

CONGRATULATIONS
CLASS OF 1994 GRADUATES
d

onoz

The cap and gown. The diploma. The hugs and handshakes. Tears
and laughter. It is a time for dreams. Now ihc future begins. Honor
your graduate with a message on our Graduates' Greeting page,
in the classified section o f the Sanford Herald on June 8th and the
Herald Advertiser on June 9th. Your message will be a tribute to
make your graduates' proud moment something to cherish for a
lifetime!

DEADLINES:

•
•

Photo Greetings, Monday, June 6th at 3 P.M.
Line Greetings, Tuesday, June 7th, 12 Noon

* EXAMPLE:
4" PHOTO
GREETING
$25.00

‘ EXAMPLE:
3 Lines Minimum
$5.00
Each Additional
line - 50c
Add $2.00 for
Diploma Art

KIMSMITH
•LMHS*
Dm Kim,
TotheThird
Musblm*.
GoodLudJ
Yourbuds.
JOJ&amp;Timmy

CALL EARLY
TO RESERVE
YOUR SPACE!
(Payment in
advance required)

W h y not visit us, browse our
inventory, meet our sales crew ...
and Compare. Th a t Is all that we

DELAND 904-734*6882 •DAYTONA 904*287*8840 •ORLANDO 407*829*0549
•LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF HWY. 17-92 &amp; HWY. 15A*

JCPenney

~\

No...It Came with Hard Work!

Kaiser

to Gen. Henry Sanford, when lie
they came from In Ireland.
Also of Interest. If known. Is established the clly In 1870.
Flncgan Is being researched
w h y the d e s c e n d a n ts left
further with the goal of mount­
Irclnnd. what business they were
ing an exhibit ut the county
In uftcr arriving, and whut
museum concerning tills Con­
special skills they may have
federate Arm y officer's colorful
possessed.
Whiling also said that If rela­ background, particularly here In
tives no desired, they would be Central Florida.
welcome to bring any family
The county museum Is located
Items representative of Ireland lo at 300 Hush Boulevard. It Is
loan for a d is p la y at th r open Tuesday through Friday
museum.
from noon until 5 p.m.
As un cxnmplc of the Irish
Those wishing to participate
heritage. Whiling commented on can leave their phone number at
the role played by Gen. Joseph the museum by phoning 321Flncgun, who sold 12.000 acres 2489.

(Payment in
advance required)
Artwork of
Graduates
holding banner
us shown in
examples not
included in actual
greeting ads.

Sanford Herald 322-2611
£ s4MRIj||V

u

r -

~ rr- •

�4A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, May 25, 1W4

Editorials/ Opinions
Sanford Herald

BEN WATTENBERG

(USPS 01-280)

300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2611 or 831-0003
Wayne 0. Ooyle, Publisher and Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATE:
3 Months.............................. $19.50
6 Months.............................. $30.00
l Year...................................$78.00
Florida Residents must pay 7% sales tax In
addition to rates above.

EDITORIAL

Let’s eliminate
trash spills
Have yo u ever followed a truck loaded w ith
trash? If so, you have possibly seen some of It
falling olTonto the highw ay or roadside.
Su ch a sighting will give a new opinion of
where Utter originates. It Is not always a
passing motorist w ho tosses out nn em pty
can o r lun ch bag.
T h e larger problem not only occurs with
private trucks and trailers, but w ith com m e r­
cial garbage haulers. It's not a pretty sight.
T h is is causing a big headache for cities and
the county, os well as people w ho become
Involved In various types of A dopt-A-Road
cleanup groups.
Cities such as Lake M ary, w hich regularly
reports on citizen com plaints, has had n
n u m b e r of calls regarding trash spilling from
vehicles traveling Its streets. In this case, a
phone call to the refuse collecting com pany
•generally results In an Im m ediate pickup.
Th e re arc laws governing trash falling from
m o vin g vehicles just ns there are laws on
littering. W e hardly ever see any arrests or
charges being made in connection w ith this.
Private citizens and trash hauling com pa­
nies m ust be made aware of these laws (If
: they don't already know ), and m ust be forced
ilo obey them . Som e cities require a ny such
load to be secured and covered. Others
require only a tie-down.
A n y such roadside littering, w hether nn
i em pty soft d rink can from a car, or an entire
bag of trash from a truck, Is giving visitors a
■bad Im pression.
W e aren't messy people. Those w h o spend
\hou rs each week or m on th picking u p other's
I trash arc a testament to this.
It w ill take everyone's cooperation however.
W hen hauling a load, m ake every effort to
avoid spillage. W hen m oving that load, be on
the lookout (b ra n accidental drop-off.
Individual motorists also need to be more
cuutlons. C a n y a trash bag in the vehicle.
&gt;You m a y need it more than you expect.
Let's eliminate littering.

LETTER

Swift punishment
Well, here we go agalnl Another "early released"
felon according to local news media releases
allegedly murdered and raped up near Ocala.
Another Idiotic decision by an early release board
or possibly a parole board and once again we — the
law abiding, hardworking, tax paying "grunts" —
pay the price — again...and again...and again.
Will the time ever come — hopefully within my
lifetime — that those people responsible Tor the
early relcasc/parole release of the convicted and
Incarccraled felons just might get their heads out
of their cans and smell the coifee? Let's face It. it's
"our lives and our safety" that's on the line here
and that linn is getting thinner and thinner.
There seems to be a "broken-one groove record"
response to the ever-increasing complaint from the
population In general about early releases. "W e’ve
got to release early to eliminate overcrowding. It's
the law." ShuuunTC It Isl
Is It really? Is It really the law or is it simply
some fat-hcaded federal appeals court Judge's
opinion stated as a "Judicial edict"? And Just how
many decades ago did the Judiciary start "making
the laws"? I kind of thought that "making the law"
’fell within the Jurisdiction of the Legislature.
And If It "Is" the law, It's long overdue that that
type of law — specific or general — was revised,
rewritten totally or repealed.
There is another "hue and cry” surfacing. The
popular 85 percent of any and all criminal
sentences "m u s t" be served. What In hell
happened to 100 percent? Granted. 85 percent Is
milch better than the current 10 percent. Thirtythree percent, but It's still 15 percent short of a full
deck. If the criminal clement knew for absolute
certain that they "would" (not "could") serve on
absolute 100 percent of sentenced time, they just
might think three, four more times about "not
doing It."
There's really only two basic things that keep
people honest and law abiding. One Is the simple
desire for honesty and Integrity and most people
rcully do have that. They really do practice that in
their dally living. The other Is the fear of applied
punishment for "going over the line." When that
punishment is applied haphazardly or not at all,
there is no Incentive for abiding by the law. A "cal
of nine tails" creates a very, very strong Incentive
only when It is applied — with vigor. And, If that's
not enough, apply vinegar after the vigor.
The Jails, prisons and pentitentlaries may be full
(and I really doubt that) but there la plenty of room
"In the ground" for all those convicted child
rapists, violent murderers and the like where death
is one of the punishment options avuilable for
1 Imposition. And I'll make you one absolute and
Irrefutable guarantee: If the child rapist-violent
: murderer and the like is convicted today and
. burled tomorrow, he or she will not repeat that
offense day after tomorrow. Chew on that one for a
!! while.
Nelson B. Tullnr
Winter Springs

How a publisher changed America
Th e way It usunlly works, editors and editor or publisher often establishes u serious
publishers end up mildly nnonymous. although market value.
sometimes wealthy. On the oilier hand, authors
But real I m ­
who write good books go on tnlk shows, and do portance lit publish­
their stunts, trying to convince potential readers ing Isn't Just about
that their new work will change the world, or market value. The
save the reader, or both, Sometimes It even serious food chain Is
happens. When It works out that way. the about Influence In
balance of glory Is In the author's fnvor.
the larger world.
But there are Important exceptions to this
The hierarchy. I
formula. Consider Erwin Ollkcs. my friend, my sense, goes some­
Editor and publisher at The Free Press. He died of thing like th ir If un
a heart attack on May 13 at ngeSO
editor or publisher
Erwin, at least as much ns his authors - nod has good authors
more so when you add everything up - made who will stick with
them , that's nice.
change happen.
For example. Just a few years ago. a Free Press They deliver bonks
editor working under Erwin's direction contacted about sewing, sex or
t Theaorlous
n young writer named Dlnesh D'Souza. The scuba, about piddle
food chain Is
result was n best-selling book called "Illiberal allairs, blngrnphy or
about inlluenco
Education" Hint tore a gaping hole In the cuckoo fiction, and they earn
In Ihe IflfQor
part of the "Politically C o n rct" movement. Not hard earned dollars
world.
Almvr that In the
for the first time, something changed brcuuse
chain are editors or
Erwin touched It.
An editor's Importance In the Industry, hut not publishers who have
In the world, frequently flows from the devotion "schools” of writers who stay with (Item Thrse
of his authors. If an editorial hlg shot considers are writers who see things from a somewhat
moving Tram one firm to another, and Important similar jxilnt of view oil some general subjects ■authors are prepared to move with him. that sometimes trivial, sometimes not, non fiction or

fiction, left or right, on public or private matters.
The authors gain strength from knowing they
arc not alone, even In unpopular causes, making
both ihelr books and Ihclr souls stronger.
Higher still are those editors and publishers
whose schools of authors deal with weighty
Issues and make change happen
At The Free Press. (Hikes put together such a
school, usually called "neo-conservallve" or
"conservative," hilt actually more complicated
than that. H r published .Judge Robert llork's
"Th e Templing of America " lie was George
Will's editor. He published Fntnrls Fukuyama’s
"Th e End of History and Ihe Last Man." He
fought like hell to give David Brock's "The Heal
Anita Hill" Its day In Ihe sun. Earlier he had
signed Allan Bloom's l&gt;est-seJllng "Th e Closing of
the American Mind " He recently published
.lames 0 Wilson's magisterial "The Moral
Seim -." Ills llsls Included counter-cyclical books
on homelessness and music. The Free Press was
a major jiubllshrr of books on business
There Is a hlg change going on In American life
and jKilltirs. In tMtth jiarltr*. all over Heal trig
it's ItapjM-nlrig hrcuusr Ideas have ronsrquem rs.
and because people like Erwin (.likes cam!
enough to purvey lough Ideas, civilly.

JACK ANDERSON

Rose sets sights on
House speakership
W ASHINGTON - With a passible Indict­
ment hanging over his head, and |*rrsldcnt
Clinton counting on him to shrphrrd health
car e th r o u g h the H o u se . Hep Dan
Hoslrnkowskli D III., recently found time to
arrange a Chicago fundraiser for Hep Charles
Row. D-N.C
In Introducing the
12-trrm veteran to
some of tits hljyjnl
c o n trib u to rs , who
gathered at the home
of th r hlltlo n ulre
P r t l z k r r la m i l y .
Hoslenknwskl Jolted
Democratic leaders
In W ashington by
touting Hose as "Ihe
next Sjwakrr of the
House." It's not us
f ar - f et c h ed as II
C r o s o has all bul
sounds
announced thnl
Hose has all hul
ho will run tor
announced that he
speakor. selling
will nin for s|&gt;euker.
up
what could
s e t t i n g up w hat
bo the bloodiest
c o u l d he t h e
leadership
hloodtrst leadership
battle In recent
ha111e In r ec e n t
memory. J
memory. It's not the ____________

ELLEN GOODMAN

Jackie O always did it her way
BOSTON — She went home to die. There
would be no strangers coming down her
hospital corridor, whispering outside her dour.
No paparazzi angling to get at her bedside.
The spokesman for Ihe hospital hud said, us
spokesmen have said so many times before,
"Mrs. Onossls and her family have asked that
her privacy be respected at this time." The
reporters, the curious, the well-wishers were
kept at arm’s length for one lust time.
Jacqueline Bouvlcr. Jacqueline Kennedy,
Jackte O. It was a malignant cancer that killed
this most private or public women at 64 years
old.
The woman’s Image was scared Into our
national photo album half her lifetime ago. She
was 34 years old — only 34 — on (hat duy
when she flew back from Dallas, still dressed In
a pink suit stained with Ihe blood of her
husband.
In the dayB that followed, Jacqueline Ken­
nedy became the Icon of national mourning.
She set a standard for the stoicism we call
dignity In the face of dcuth. She did this us she
did everything — with courage, In public,
under a veil.
Jacqueline Bouvlcr. The daughter of Black
Jack. The 18-ycar-old who was chosen the
Debutante of 1047. The diffident Vassur and
George Washington student who became the
"Inquiring cumera girl" for Ihe old Washington
Times Herald. The wife of the young senator
from Massachusetts. The first lady.
At times, she looked like u deer cuught In the
Kennedy headlights. She hadn't voted before
her murrlage, didn't care much for politics,
was more attracted to urt than policy, and.
liked shopping more than touch footbull.
We thought we knew her. We thought she
belonged to us. She has been on more
magazine covers than Madonna. We followed
every move, every hairstyle and lifestyle
change. We knew her favorite diet dinner —
baked potatoes with caviar — and her favorite
designers.
But It was a compliment that she didn't
return, an Intrusion she lived with but didn't
welcome.
As a single mother, the most famous widow
of the most famous children In America, she
chose to raise Caroline and John as well and as
far from the spotlight as possible.
"I was reading (essayist Thomus) Carlyle."
she said once after Jack died, "and he said you
should do the duty that Ilea nearest you. The
thing that lies nearest me Is the children." She
did (hat duty and had that pleasure.
Years later, when her Bon John made a toast
at his stater's engagement, he said. "There
were always Just the three of us. Now there will

be four."Aml now there will Ik - one less.
Americans wanted Jacqueline Kennedy to
remain frozen In time, circa 1003, circa 34
years old. When she married Aristotle Onussls
the country reacted as If seme marauding
Visigoth hud made oir with America's trophy
widow. But she did wliut she wanted.
When she went to work us an editor, she was
criticized ns a rich woman who hud gone
slumming at the workplace. Lint she made her
own coffee, xeroxed her own pages, rdlted her
own books. She made her own life.
The world changed
enormously In the
years uftcr Jackie
was first lady. Grad­
ually the zone of
p riv a c y we allow
p ub lic figures
became smaller than
u stall shower.
Judith Exncr and
the girls showed up
In Camclot revisions.
T It c p r c s I d l- n I ' s
widow became the
extravagant wife of a
ship magnutc feud­
ing with her stepchildren. U n ­
fi She set a
authorized biogra­
standard lor the
phers came along
stoicism weoall
slinging Ihclr stuff In
dignity In the
Hie name of open­
face of death. £
ness and the right to
know...the worst.
N ow p s y c h o b io g r u p h lc s w ritte n in
jtsychobubble fill the shelves and lurn lives
into mlnlscrles. Fame means living long
enough to have an actress pluy you In someone
elsc's script about your life. Jackie Oh.
In the 1600s even politicians arc expected to
reveal their childhood traumas to talk show
hosts. Wives urc called upon to do confessional
Inlcrvlcws abut their Inner feelings about
everything Including their marriage. Everyday
jieoplc line up for the chance to discuss
dysfunctional families and 12-step horror
stories In the name of "sharing."
But Jackte didn't "sha re ." Jacqueline
Uouvler Kennedy Onassis remained the most
famous and the most private of women. She
didn't comment. She didn't write her memoirs,
or do interviews about her dlsupjtolntmcnts.
Call It distance. Call It shyness. Call It
reserve, aloofness. Choose your word on the
continuum of privacy. May I suggest dignity?
At this very end of an era, Jacqueline Bouvlcr
Kennedy Onassis did It her way. She died with
dignity.

Hist time Hose lias

threatened to nut. tail this time nobodv is
writing him off — jiarilculurly not the
Congressional Democratic Icudcrshlji
Talk of the Hose rebellion lain hern a recent
topic In the jtertodic "Cabinet meetings" held
by House Majority Leader Hlchard Gephardt
D-Mo.. with top Democratic Uwmukrrn As a
precaution. House Speaker Tom Foley, l&gt;
Wash., Is grurlng up for Hie challenge try
hosting small-grouji dinners with Democrats
"I have counted fully 127 mcmliers ol the
Democratic caucus who arc either llrmly
committed or almost firmly commuted to
vole fur me for speaker," Hose told us "I still
believe (hut Tom Foley may well change Ills
mind and decide not to run for speaker
again." House speakers must tie elected hv
their colleagues at the tieglnnlng ol each
Congress.
Hose believes conditions urc rljx- for a
changing of Ihe guard, Democrats arc In
danger of losing up lo 25 seals during tills
year's midterm elections — raising the
specter nf Rep. Newt Gingrich. H-Ga„ being
the next dc facto sjicakcr of the House.
Hose thinks lie's the Democrat who can
unify conservative Democrats and moderates
who now feel ahundoned — and the "80
percent of the Democratic caucus (that) feels
left out."
During otic recent leadership meeting.
Democrats discussed the damage Hose could
do to the status quo If he successfully cohhlcd
together u coalition of dtsuffcclcd con­
servatives. moderates and new members.
"Half the (Democratic) caucus, when wc
come hack here next January, will have no
loyalty," said one senior House Democrat.
Thai figures to rebound to Hose's advantage.
Hose has been vying for thut "loyalty"
through Leadership America, u political
action committee he launched to help
Democrats win office and re-election. Thut's
why the Chicago trip was so Important. A
spokesperson for Rostcnkowskl confirmed
the event but denied U was for fundrnlsln
and said Rostcnkowskl believes there thoitlu
be competition for the speakership Just llke
any other Job. The spokesperson added that
Rostcnkow skl supports Foley for the
s|)cakcr'Bjob.
Hose says Leadership America has already
showered candidates w ith more thait
$100,000 in campaign contributions, but
charges that his donations get one-upped by
sim ilar PACs controlled by Foley and
Gephardt. "1 joke with some of my Mends
that If they lei me give them $1,000 from my
PAC, Mr. Gephardt and Mr. Foley will each
give them #2.000," Rose says.
The Rosty-Rosc alliance has ungcrcd Foley
loyalists. They point to the loyalty Foley bus
shown Rostcnkowskl even as other Demo­
crats deserted him during u criminal In­
vestigation of his office and payroll dccounts.
Theories abound that attempt to explain
Rostcnkowskl's motivation.

�%

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, May 25, 1904 - BA

aV

Handy Way request for
gas pumps hits a snag

,.

4% * L

therein I91KJ.
Com m issioners were con­
cerned u Ik u ii Ih r possible con­
SANFORD Faced with a tamination of (he nearby river.
Davis said Miller needs gaso­
new obstacle to build a Handy
line sales to assure the success of
Way convenience slorr on Stair
Road 40 west of Interstate 4. the store.
Frustrated. Miller turned Its
Miller Enlrrprlsrs may light lo
have a store gasoline service atlentlon to the Lake Markham
across from Ihe l.owcr Wrklvn Road property, although Ihe
westerly site is more preferable,
River Stale Prrscrvr,
"We haven't decided whni lo said Miranda Fitzgerald, Miller
do with either site," said Don attorney.
"It's the first sllr Inside Lake
Davis. Miller's rnunagrr of rrul
County;
there's more developed
estate. "We'd prefer Ihr Longrooftops lo the area: It's better all
wood-Markhnm site."
Blocked In their efforts to build around." said Fitzgerald.
Fitzgerald said Miller may de­
a Handy Way with gasoline
service at Long wood-Markham cide to submit a new develop­
Road. Miller sought permission ment plan for (hr Longwoodlo Install gasoline pumps at their Markham Road site. If turned
store site at Ihe corner of Lake down. M iller may chose lo
Markham Road u mile nr so east. challenge Ihe county.
Now iheyTe finding complica­
"It looks like wt-'rr going lo go
tions ut that site ns well
through the dog and |Kiny show
County development review­
lo do anything out there." said
ers told Miller officials thrtr laikr
Fitzgerald "Miller Is thinking it
Markham Road properly lies
might as well Ik- for Ihe site they
within Ihe Wrklvu River Protec­
want."
tion Area and must inert Ihe
The Friends of the Wrklvu
requirements of Ihe slate law
River has joined thr fray. In a
Under Ihe law. development May 10 letter, president Philip
must have no greater Impact on
Wick wrote the store projK&gt;sal
thr surrounding areas than u
represents "creeping urbaniza­
home.
tion at its worst." Wick wrote
Miller's gas pump request,
originally scheduled for thr there Is already a Handy Way at
Orange Boulevard at the edge of
Monday night meeting of thr
Board of Adjustment, was de­
layed to next moot It lo allow
Mlllrr to respond, said Olnny
Markley. county zoning coordi­ Continued from Page IA
nator.
• Teat her student ratios will
It was a similar low-impact
Ik- reduced during tnlcrsrnatons
requirement which forced Miller
ai elementary schools, thus
to turn away from thnr Long
eliminating the practice of cowood-Mnrkham Road site After
successf ul l y fendi ng nlf a mlngling students of different
grade levels and Increasing Indi­
challenge from Ihe slate for
p&lt;-imission to build a conven­ vidual attention to students
ience store on Ihr property,
• Die district will pul aside
commissioners blocked their
enough m m irv lo ensure a
request to install gas pumps
■ y J. MARK BARFIELD
Horald Senior Slaff Wfilor_______

Flrtflghltra anltr th# hom# at 704 Baywood, gultad by flra this morning.

[Continued from Page 1A
underway at tlir time
Nn |M-op|e were In tfir stnieturc
rhrn I fir fire occurred
When firemen arrived, they
r|x&gt;rird finding a number nf
knimal* tn the structure, and
Dlionrd for assist.litre from Sent
jlr Courtly Animal Control

Animal Control offlerr Mike
Wittliter said one cat was killed
In the fire. A dog and a setond
cal. troth Irelieved lo Ik- aulfertng
from smoke Inhalation, were
taken in Murphy Veterinarian
Clinic to lie treated hy (he lo&lt; a!
veterinarian.
llrrnnrn Murphy. DVM, said
such smoke Inhalation ran ohen

Ik- deadly to small animals

"Hut at the prrsent time," hr
said at 0 30 this morning, "it
appears us though both of the
a n im a ls are going to p u ll
through."
Fire Invest (gators meanwhile,
were still at I h r scene of the fire,
to determine the cause, and
estimate the extent ol damages

ain Street membership
litz, open house begins
■ y N IC K P P tlP A U P
Haraid Staff Writer
BAN POP I) - ‘Today is II
Day for Sanford Main Street,"
•aid Main Street manager Faye
Fulton "Our phone hill/ started
this morning and will continue
off day, rndlng with an u|&gt;eit
house this evening."
The event Is the third phase ol
Main Street's second annual
membership drive Three com­
peting trams, headed hy Helen
Stairs. Charles Rowe and Mike
Scores, will man the phones all
rfay requesting troth huslnesses
and rrsidenis lo heroine a

’member ol the organization drdlealed to revitalization of Ihr
downtown area.
hill Marwick, chairman ol the
MS food drive said. "This entire
lour-step drive demonstrates
what community spirit is all
ii Imhi! A s a fairly new m rm lirr of
the business communlly here, it
warms my heart lo see so many
volunteers giving their lime and
businesses donating material
and services, showing I hat they
care about this community."
Fu lto n com m ented, "O u r
concent ruled effort today could
not have taken place wlthnui the
help of C om m ission er, l.nn

Howell. DellSmith Molality and
Ecklrr Communications.**
"Those wishing lo Join the
Main Slrrei (cam lo help tiring
alfoni a vibrant, economically
healthy downtown, can call In
their membership lo the MS
office. 322-5600," she added.
Following the membership
drive today, Sanford Main Street
will I k * holding an open house
party from (1 until H p in., at the
G rru icr Sanford Chamber of
Commerce building. •UK) E. First
Street, with the public Invited to
attend, and new members urged
to I k- on hand.
O’* ft*

L ■*

Th re e found g u ilty o f

MT1- -

■

m u rd e r in stu d e n t beating
l y A — o o la fd P r a t s _________

been convicted of three prior
felonies.

FO R T LAUDERDALE - Terry
Jomersou burled his face In his
hands and wept as a Jury
returned a guilty verdict ugulnst
him and two others tn the
beating dcalli of a Vietnam. eM-Am r 11&lt;un student

Since they were not charged
with first-degree murder, which
Involves premeditation, the de­
fendants can only be sentenced
lo a maximum of life lo prison
and do nut face the death
penally.

J a m c r r ii n . 2 2 , a n (I
Christopher Anderson. 20, both
•A Cornl Springs, and William
idalonc. 23. nf Tamarac, were
Hid gullly of second-degree
Rurder Tuesday In the slaying
ofLuyrn Phan Nguyen.
W
The stair will recommend lliut
Anderson and Jatncrson be
jecnlcnccd to between seven and
;22 years In prison, said Pro[aecutor I'cler Magrlnn.

Family members of the three
defendants repeated "Oh. no."
and held hands, weeping as each
gullly verdict was read.

Hut If the stale has Its way.
Madalone would spend life In
prison without parole. Pro­
secutors plan to osk a Judge to
use Florida's habitual offender
luw against Madalone, who has

"I think that the verdict Is
despicable," said Anderson’s
attorney, Ross Zim m erm an.
Like the other attorneys, he
promised a quick appeal.
Nguyen's mother. Thong, and
brother. Long, were quickly
shepherded out of the Fori
Lauderdale courtroom.
"We lost f.u forever." Tliang
Nguyen said later. "We have no
emotion."
Nguyen, a 19 ycar old Unlvcr-

Many Of Our Elderiy Have To Stand Still
For Abuse And Neglect. You Don't.

tK

-=*

m

m»

•

m \ il

i

*

J#, *
1-800-96-f:
Lab arila hahto it:
|FloridaFlxMctitv Services System

M flM H M

stty ol Miami pre-med student,
was at a parly Aug. 15, 1992,
when someone culled him racist
names. Nguyen objeclcd.
Prosecutors said Anderson
came down from the secondfloor apartment and confronted
Nguyen, then started the melee
hy siapplng Nguyen.
Jamcrson pushed or punched
Nguyen in the chest, then was
seen walking away from where
the student lay. Several other
youths then Joined In beating
and kicking Nguyen. Nguyen
died two days later.
Magrlnn reminded (he Jury of a
witness to (he beating who said
lhe defendants were like animals
preying on u hapless victim.
But defense attorneys con­
tended that (heir clients did not
heal Nguyen.
District Judge Richard Eade
scheduled lhe defendants'
sentencing June 2H.
Eade earlier sentenced another
man cnnvtclcd In 1992 In
Nguyen's murder, Bradley Mills,
to 50 years lit prison.
Three other defendants In the
heating — Derrick Coima, Chris
Madelonc and Michael Uarychko
— are scheduled to be tried for
second degree murder June 20.

DEATHS
E L IZ A B E T H ANN
CH ORPENIN O
Elizabeth Ann Churpenlng. U4,
Edltha Circle. Sanford, died
Monday. May 23. 1994, at her
residence. Born Ju ly 30, 1929,
In Newark. N.J.. site moved to
Central Florida In 1956. Mrs.
Chorpcnlng was a retired school
bus driver. She was a member of
Lutheran Church of the Re­
deemer.
Survivors Include sons, Murk.
Leesburg, R andy. Deltona:
daughter, Susan Szubo. E.
Brunswick, N.J.: sister. Sandy
W eldon, Los Giitos, Ca lif.;
brother. Howard Gugen,
Hampton. Vn.; three grand­
children.
G ra m k ow Funeral Home,
Sanford, In charge of arrange­
ments.
N A N C Y LO U IS E FIR IO S
Nancy Louise Flrios, 40,
W oodllng Place, Altam onte
Springs, died Tuesday. May 24.
1994. at her residence, Born

ihe protection zone.
Wick said while the Lake
Markham sllc poses less of a risk
lo ihe environment, lie would
not rescind opposition lo the
Longwood-Markham Roatl site
over Ihe other.
“The Lake Markham site Is
preferable liecause It's further
from Ihe river." said Wick. "But
ft might be helpful lo hear It In
court. The merits of the other
case were never heard."
Wick also wrote Hie Lake
Markham Road slip could con(amlnatr the Wcklvu River by
way of Sulpher Creek. The
si ream bed leads from Yankee
L uk e I h r o u g h the c o u n t y
wastewater trrntmrnt facility m
thr Wrklvn River. Yankee Lake
critic Art Davis challenged the
trcatuirnl plant construction
permit, in part, saying Sulpher
Creek might allow pollution lo
flow lo the Wcklvu River.
James Bible, former deputy
county administrator, said the
Issue was dismissed because Bit­
stream hud not Mowed in recent
memory. Davis dismissed the
complaint and the Friends did
not object.
Wick said while ihe stream
doesn't Mow routinely. It might.
"If we ever rclurn to normal
rainfall. It could llow," Wick
said

School

Motel

te a e h e r-to -slu d e n l ratio ol
l-to-15 al Ihe Alternative High
School al the Grooms School of
Choice In Sanford. The district
has applied for a grant that
should cover those costs, hut
they have made a commitment
lo the plan regardless ol the
receipt of that grant

EDITORI

Continued from Page 1A
time." Fondr Mid. "Is lo try to
protect the Holiday Inn franchise
here to Sanford."
Beyond that. Fondr said he
would uol make liny comments
pending the outcome of tt&gt;«
court's decision next week.
On May 2. Sanford C ity Man­
ager Bill Simmons received a
statement from Foode caution­
ing thul the future of the Holiday
I tm In Han fort) m a y he tn
Jrnjuirdy. "In the event that, for
whatever reason, the hotel Is
dr-franchlscd." he wrote. "It will
be extremely dlfltcult and prob­
ably Impossible lo reflag as
another brand, or bring back
Into thr Holiday Inn system until
someone buys the hotel."

He concluded. "The potential
exists for the hotel to be forced
to operate as an Independent.
Without a reservations system,
the business could conceivably
fall."
Simmons said the conMIct be­
tween the city and motel Is
nothing new. "Th is has been
going on since before I came to
Sanford." Simmons Mid there
were many complex |K&gt;lids lo
(be overall situation. Including a
bankruptcy by u former operator
of the Holiday Inn. a mortgage
foreclosure ugulnst the former
lender which was subsequently
taken over by B T C . and a
continued disagreement over
resolving these matters.
Several limes since (lie begin­
ning of this year. Hemic Sandler,
r e p r e s e n t i n g R T C . Ii a s
addressed city commission work
sessions and conferred with
Simmons und City Attorney Bill
Colbert.
Also on several occasions,
drafts of u possible resolution

i-'
___________ i_____________________

Feb. 9. 1949. In Wuycross, On.,
she moved to Central Florida In
1980. Mrs. Flrloa wus a home­
maker. She was a member of
Orlando Christian Center.
Survivors Include husband.
John N.; daughter. Buftlc Gibbs.
Winter Park: sons. Ryan Rich­
ardson, Dcwaync Gibbs, both of
Al l an la: sisters, Ja n Fein.
Atlanta, Shirley Casey, Car­
rollton, Ga., Peggy Carlton.
Tu lsa , Okta: mother, Melba
Alexander, Smyrna, Ga.
Woodlawn Funeral Home h
Memorial Park. Orlando. In
ehurge of arrangements.

have been made, only to have
one side or ttic other find
sufficient objections to turn
down the oilers.
jD n T f a n b tl, as an example.
Jtupnmietl one ol several
suggested drull leases lo the
city. Simmons and Colbert re­
viewed Ihe contents, and dis­
agreed with a number of Items In
the proposal. T h r matter was
thro in he resubmitted
to
Sandler lor additional changes.
To date, no agreement toward
resolution lias tx-en agreed upon
by all parties. As a result. It goes
to court next week.
Sim m ons said he doesn’t
expect the court hearing will
produce any Immediate solution
to ihe dilemma.

KATHYENGLES
MARCH 1, 1973 - MAY 39,1967

It has been 7 years since
our Kalhy was taken from
this earth. Our thoughts
are of her on this day of
remembrance and of her
love of life itself.
May Justice be served
and punishment due.
We love you and miss you.
With Love,
Charles, Marie C Ruth Hooper
John C Timothy Engles

Subscribe Today I
Don't Mist The Excitement.
. 322-2611
S u n fo ril
I vO a '

H e r a ld

1For Personal
&amp; Commercial
Insurance

TONY RUSSI, JR.

TONY RUSSI
INSURANCE
2575 S. French Ave.
Sanford

322-0285
A u lo -4 h m r r s
Lilt: I k imo i n Hummus '.
‘liic ‘N o lS tM u n IiofJ c

G A IN ES

CdMAj, cAdriUcL
Garden Chapel Funeral Home

Fulfilling a
Service to
Our Comtu unity
In Time
O f Need.

CHOHPININO, 1LIZAS6TH ANN
Funtr.l M fv k H lor Mrt. Etli.btlh Ann
Chorptnlng, it, ot S.nford, who dl»d Monday,
will ba 10:30 Friday morning al Lu1h*r*n
Church ol tha Hadaamar. with Pa»tor Elmar
A. fltuKhar officiating Infarmtnl will b* In
Hlllcr.it Mamorlal Oardtn*. Ft. Plarca, Fla
For thoM who wllh, mamorlal contribution*
ar* luggatlad lo Luthoran Church ol Ih*
R*da*mar. 1H1 Oak Aw.. Sanlord, FL 31773
Arrangamanli by Gramkow Funaral
Homo. Sanford.

A* aw lakaa loot al tlw many nawtpapat
enroponama. awdon't aaant to taagat om
■dtonal tUS Evaryona laaaopvuont and
tdaaa. and tha purpoaa of rvrwtpaoar
adaonaMla lo ana/* mamon avanaty ol
loptoa Fromlamay &gt;iua, and (oral
arwraa toWacaon campion* and poMicsl
dacwiona You canraad a*about (hamin
Vtt Sankxd Harakfa adrtutiaM

FREDERIC F. C .A IN ES . |R.

335 E . S R 434
(Across from W hile Mine)

L O N G W O O D • 8 3 4 -8 5 5 0 o r 7 6 7 - 5 1 0 1

�•A • Sanford Harald, Sanford, Florida - Wadnaaday, May 29, 1W4

Tim e is the new enemy
Adults: Today’s kids don’t care about D-Day
By ILAINBOANt.lv

Rostenkowski deal held up

Associated Press Writer

W ASHINGTON — Hep. Dun RoatenkowBkl would plrrnl guilty
lo n felony nnd probably resign from Congress under an
agreement being negotiated with prosecutors, legal sources
say. Hut disagreement over the description of the lawmaker's
conduct Is holding up a deal.
The sources, speaking Tuesday only on condition of
anonymity, said there's still only a "50-50 chance of nn
agreement before U S. Attorney Eric II. Holder Jr. obtnlns nn
Indictment. No charges have been filed. Rostenkowski. D ill.,
lias repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.
Negotiations are likely to resume today on the fate of the
I louse Ways nnd Means Committee chairman.
"In the event of a plea agreement. It Is Inconceivable that
Congressman Rostenkowski could remain as chulrman of the
committee and Ills continued representation In Congress Is
most unlikely." sold a source close to the negotiations, who
s|N&gt;ke only on condition of anonymity.

AR G EN TA N . France - Allied forces that
swept over Normandy touches 30 years ago
In a hcllflrc that freed France from Nazi
German occupation face one Iasi enemy:
time. Each year more French people forget It
ever happened.
"In Normandy today you ran dig In your
garden nnd sllll find n b om b." suld
Sebastten Jarquelln. 23. of Argentnn. "But
for most kids It's something in a book.... W r
learned about It kind of stupidly, to j&gt;ass
tests."
Most adults concede that the 50th com­
memoration of D-Day on June 0 will be Ihe
last grrut hurrah.
"In 100 years It will tie history with a big
H ." said Monique Begum, director of Ourst
France newspaper's office In Argrntan. 40
miles from the Normandy roast. "Th e
young today don't rare."
Argrntan. liberated on Aug. 20. 1944. was
one of the most devastated towns In
Normandy.'Morr than 1.300 buildings were
leveled or badly damaged. Only 21 homes
remained Intact. But none of the youngsters
at (hr local rale knew that.
"Young people here don't care about their
roots." Mid Turkish Immigrant Tuncay
Toket. 24. "Today, ull they're talking about
Is (race driver! Ayrton Senna's death."
School classes visit Normandy's military
cemeteries and the Invasion beaches, but no

U.S. Japan negotiations alive and well
W ASHINGTON — U.S. und Japanese negotiators have
breathed new life Into the moribund effort to open Japan's
markets to American goods. Now comes the hard part —
reaching specific agreements.
While both sides Insisted they had scored u major
accomplishment by Just getting back to the bargaining tuble.
neither country was underestimating the work that lies ahead
"Th is agreement breaks the logjam but there Is a lot of
negotiating left to do." said one senior U.S. trade official, who
briefed rrportera on condition of anonymity.
A Japanese official, who briefed on same condition, said both
countries had finally gotten past the "metaphysical debate"
over the rules of the game und could get down to the
nitty gritty bargaining over specific market opening packages

World Trade Center bombers sentenced
NEW YORK — Four Muslim fundamentalists convicted In the
World Trade Center bombing drew 240 years behind tram from
n merciless Judge who arrived at the sentence by adding up the
victims' lost years of life.
U.S. District Judge Kevin Duffy angrily rejected the
defendants' defiant claims of Innocence, saying they robbed u
nullon of Its sense of security.
"Prior to February 20th. 1093. this country was a much freer
place." Duffy told Mohammad Salnmch. N'ldal Ayvud. Mahmud
Abouhallma and Ahmad AJa) on Tuesday. "Now we have
guards. Now we hnve an Identification curd mentality. It's not
cptlle us free."
The explosion at the 1IO-slory twin lowers — the world s
second tallest buildings - killed six people. Injured more than
1.000 and caused $500 million In damage.

Home shopping-the X-rated version
NEW ORLEANS — Forget the cubic xlrconlum. Skin s In.
The fledgling Adam &amp; Eve Channel and Cupid Network
Television are using cable's telemarketing techniques to sell
sexy garments, books, videos, unguents, oils, games and toys.
Very discreetly, of course.
"W e are very much In the mainstream." said Offer Assls.
president of lh a C u p id netw ork, w h o w as d ru m m in g up
tiusloesa at the 4 3rd a n n ua l National Cahte Television

Association ronvrnllon this week.
Cupid's fomint Is like that of any home shopping channel. At
the left ol Ihr T V screen Is the Hem's ordering number,
description ("Teddctle. lace with Venice edge and gurlers.
Black. Red. While. S. M, L ") and price. Underneath are the
HOO-numbcr and credit card options.
It's aiming ut Ihc married couple, those people who alter
live. 10 years of murrlage are losing the spark." Assls said.
"We think sex is nice, und Ihc (teller you have sex at home, the
more chance there Is to keep your marriage ullvc."
Between 15-mlnutc commercial blocks. Cupid has twominute "erotic vignettes" of attractive people engaged In
grown-up behavior, bul nothing hard-core. Bare bosoms and
bottoms are as explicit us Cupid gels.
"We arc more conservative than Playboy." Assls said. "We'd
rather be Introduced us u ‘love und romance' channel."
Cupid Is talking with five major cablr systems nnd expects
about 3 million subscribers (o start.
Adam A Eve Chunnel. which began Feb. 1 und has 1.9
million cable subscribers, lukes a different luck. It puls 13
minutes of sexy merchandising between 73-mlnute adult films
wllh the hard core stuff edited out.
The advertising has hlgh-gloss production values and looks
more like music videos than home shopping.
"Th e first day we were up we got a thousand subscribers on
Ihc sutclllle dish." said Bernlc Oakley, vice president of Adam
A Eve. "W r know we're going to make It."

IBM uses single ad agency
NEW YORK CAP) — In one of Ihc biggest shifts In Madison
Avenue history. IBM has decided to let a single agency handle
nearly ull Its advertising.
The computer giant stunned the advertising Industry
Tuesday In announcing that Ogllvy A Mather Worldwide would
luke over work now hundled by more than 40 agencies around
the world.
IBM said Ogllvy would help It efficiently deliver a clear,
consistent message.
IBM. which Is based In suburban Armonk. refused to say how
much It spends on advertising, but sources estimated II Is
between $400 million and $300 million a year.
The switch could mean layofTs at some of the agencies that
lost IBM's business. IBM accounted for more than half of some
agencies' billings.
Ogllvy Is bused In New York and has 270 offices In 59
countries. K b clients Include American Express, Juguar nnd
Maxwell House. It also docs work for Microsoft In Ihe United
Slates and Compaq Computer In Europe.

. . .
....
nutlonnl program exists to bolster the
collective memory. Some schools arc Ig­
noring Ihe cornmemorutlon.
In today's Normandy. It Is the fulurc that
counts. Billboards advertise a golf course at
u key site of the D-Day Invasion. Omaha
Beach. German nags fly alongside those of
Ihe Allies ut local memorials. Dozens of
Norman towns are "twinned" with towns In
Germany.
"In 50 years, there will l»e no more
witnesses and It will lie us though we are
talking ntxnil Charlemagne," said Isabelle
Bounder, who heads the educational service
at the Caen Memorial Museum, consecrated

Sofres polled 1.000 people IH and over. Il
provided no margin of error, bul In polls of
that size It Is usually 3 percent.
Aimer Morel. 85. Is saddened by the

forgetting
Mrs Morel, of Aunou-Le Fnucon. took |&gt;art
to a film nnd met with students to recount
her war yrars. dwelling on her 12 days In a
basement bunker In Argrntan la-fore being
freed by ItveGIs
"Certain things must to- remembered. Wr
must Ire faithful lo Ihr memory And work
so these things don't hopjren again." she
said.

Chemical attacks during Gulf War confirmed
By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Pross Writer
W ASHINGTON - Strong evl
drner rxlsts that Iraq attacked
U S. troops wi t h che m ical
wrupons during the Gull War.
spreading contaminants that
have slckenrd thousands of
Americans, according to a con­
gressional reporl.
The I GO-page report, released
today by Sen Donald Rleglr.
D-Mlch . lists more than a dozen
I nci dent s wher e A me r i c a n
troojis appear lo have been
rxposrd to chemical agents,
rnalnlv from rocket ultacks.
It disputes Pentagon conten­
tions that there Is no evidence of
Iraqi chemical attacks during
the 1991 war. und criticizes Ihe
Defense D e p a rtm e n t for not
•havin g the capability lo confirm

whether troops were rxjKiscd to
hlologlral agents.

"Symptoms u|&gt;|reared simulta­
neously with alarms going off
l and) Patriots I nt ercept i ng
Scuds."
Klrglr Mid Ids yearlong In­
vestigation Included Interviews
with (MM) American troops, many
•if whom corroborated rejxirts of
chemlcul exposures.
One Mildler stationed In Saudi
Arabia reported a loud explosion
early In ihe morning of Jan. 17.
1091, followed by a sounding of
alarms und a buttling sensation
on Ills face. Ol the unit's I It)
soldiers. 85 now sutler Irom
medical problems
Tw o days Inter. In another part
of Saudi Arabia, witnesses re(xirted a sliurji odor ol ammonia
alter a “ real fold explosion" and
more alarms going off.
Al another location Ibal day. a
nuvul construction workrr Mid
Ills mouth, lips and lace became
numb ufler a loud explosion.
A soldier based near King
Fuhd International. Alrjxirl on
Jan 20 Mid lie saw wlinl he

The report also says thut,
contrary lo Pentagon clulms that
nerve agent levels delected by
Ihe Czechs und other allies
d u r i n g I he wa r w e r r not
harmful, monitoring equipment
only picks up nerve agents when
levels arc 1.000 limes higher
than what Is deemed lo be
hazardous.
Penlugnn und Intelligence of­
ficials will have an opjxrrtunlty
lo rrspond to the report at a
hearing today of Ihe Senate
Banking Committee that Rleglr
chairs.
The report Includes testimony
from 30 Gulf War veterans who
say Ibal apparent Iraqi missile
utlucks were followed by Ihe
sounding of chcmlcul agent de­
tectors. the air filling wllh fumes
und burning seiiMlIons on their
skin.

410 84vsr lafcs 0(

SsstoaJ.n. 32733

(407) 3 2 4 - S O F A (7632)
From 17-$2. go fast on L*k» Mary Start, for IV*m»sa - go untMU*s Mary BM. changes name to Sttm LM* Or.
(They are the asms flreefcotWyihe name changes.) Biaere orgy2 Mocka fromIhe Ozaenewey lake Mery ezJt
TE TcTTtsTn C
‘U f rtf ltr

90 INCH UATHCH SOFA

BUY ONE
GET ONE
FREE

UAtINAJUMIOTOUU

AUtUIUIMMWrlO I
SNSClONtOACOAl
CMASTOUIWIXXIO
men WMA( rus«c
MSIUmCSAlONGTO I
ax CUSTOMAS

EVERY MATTRE SS
A BOXSPRING

1/2OFF

2 For

BUY MOWI
SAVE Biot

iwFLORIDA'S LARGEST
SOFA SPECIALTY STORE
Covered
In Velvets
&amp; Your
Choice
of Colors

"There are multiple witnesses
to what appear to be best
explained ns chemical or mixed
agent attacks." Ihe report suld.

llvn Willi Sul,is luvt'smls Slwims
llvn hllll Hut Inm Uni Am Ch.iiis

(ta la ,
r iftOM nravar

WOfiiOSIHlUAnutSS Twin

1
7
1 7
7 7

2 For

$499
Handle Adtion
Rocker
Big Man’s
Chair

2 For

/
.

STYLECRAFT
SERTA
REALISTIC
PIONEER
NATIONAL
CRAFTMASTER
REGAL
FRANKLIN

BEAUTYREST
WASHINGTON
McKEEAN CHAIR
PRIVATE SOURCE
TOM BARKLEY
LEATHERING.
CARLYLE
RELAX-A-CUNER

PRICE G U A R A N T E E

MmiiiMjlofl Sot.i ( (i
lVI Wilt HOI III IINIII IISOl II

M ^ s ljl9a M
#apc
0
Pe

80FA&amp; LOVESEAT
Compare al ‘ 9 9 9

p jj1

and many more

OVERIt DIFFERENTSE1

Handle Action
Rocker
Recllner
Big Man's
Chair

If you don’t need 2 of the
famous recllners, bring a
friend and share the savings

* 9 9 s a .p t

WESELLONLY F t §M410ve8eat
FAMOUS BRANDS: Compare at *999 Both pea.
KROEHLER
HUKLA
&lt;688
KLAUSNER
SIMMONS

&lt;499

It

iraozLiyawM
POSTunEPEDIC

llvn SIlO M.iltrrssrs ,S Hm Su'iiK/s

Plus 100 s ol other items

HELP
STOP TH E
KILLING

Every month a million unwanted
dogs and cats across America are
put to death. Help stop this needless
killing. Spay or neuter your pet.
SPAY USA has programs sup­
ported by veterinarians and clinics
In over 400 cities and towns. For
help in finding affordable spay/neuler
services, or to And out how you can
help, call us today. 1-#00-24$-8WN

which act In a manner similar to
the actual agent
— Con tin uin g contact wllh
Iraqi prisoners of war.
The Pentagon and the Veter­
ans Affairs Department have
launched several programs to
register sick veterans, study
their symptoms and search for
treatment Hoi while they ac­
knowledge that Hie Illnesses un­
real. they M y there Is no evi­
dence ol a single cause.
Rleglc's rc|xirl recommends
declassification of all Informa­
tion on Iraq's chemical and
biological warfare programs, a
thorough epidrmtologtc.il study
of all Gulf Wur veterans, u study
of the Impact of nerve agent
vaccines uud a presumption of
service-connection so sick vetcruns ran receive medical treat­
ment.
R l e g l c ' s c o m m i t t e e hue
jurisdiction over Hie JhXfMrwAd­
ministration A d . under which
Ihe government jxillces ship
incuts of sensitive materials.

Sofa co.

Almost all are now suffering
from (lie debilitating symptoms
of what bus come to be known as
Persian Gulf syndrome.

'■£

lielleved lo lx* n Scud missile
shot down by a Patriot missile.
He experienced "u very strong
raunrliy taste, like very bitter
burnt toast" In his mouth, lie
now suiters from bleeding, diz­
ziness. hair loss. Joint jialu.
insomnia and blurred vision,
symptoms common to many
returning from the gulf
Despite the numerous chemi­
cal alerts, troops were told by
their commanding officers thai
the explosions came from sonic
Imhiiiis
The report said that In addi­
tion to direct attacks, there
appear to lx- Hirer other primary
sources of exposure:
— Fallout Irotn coalition bom­
bing of Iraqi chemical and bio­
logical warfare plants. Visual
and thermal M le llllr Imagery
confirms that fallout during Hie
ulr und ground wur moved lo Ihr
s p u D ic u s t. toward American
forces.
— The administration of nerve
agent vaccines to lrix&gt;ps. some

Burlington

Getting in shape may damage hearing

From wire reports

A poll by Ihe Sofres firm taken In Ajirll
Indicated u descending scale of Interest In
ttir D-Day commemoration by ihr three
generations concerned — those who lived
through Hie war. Ihclr children and thrir
grandchildren.
Elghly-lhree percent of Ihe war generation
were Interested In ihr 50lh anniversary
events. Of Ihc grandchildren. 42 percent
were Interested.

' Th e ^museum draws about 150.000
youths u year and strives to keep the
memory of D-Day alive. But the tost
sources, families nnd schools, have some­
how failed.
"II hap|K*nr(l a while Btfo. I f i « lltlle old.
•wild Sophie Allan. I« . of Argcnlnn. nddlng
she feels "some concern" because she Is
Jewish.
"We must not forget, but we must think of
the future." she sala.
In nn effort to bridge past und present.
0,000 schoolchildren have torn Involved In
u special project culminating with an
elaborate Memorial Day ceremony ut the
Brittany American Cemetery In St. James.
•Wr don't have Ihe right lo forget." Mid
SI. James Mayor Michel Thoury.
The children, aged 8-12. have been

Reclinor
W ICHITA. Kan. — The body may benefit at the ears’ expense
during ucroblcs classes.
Professor Raymond Hull, director of Wichita Slalc Universi­
ty’s Spccch-Lunguagc-Hcurtng Clinics, measured sound levels
nt randomly selected health clubs In five states and found that
almost all Ihe music consistently was louder than 90 decibels,
und about two-thirds was above 110 decibels.
Some even reached 124 decibels, Hull said.
Rcjiealcd exposure to 100-declbcl noise can enute permanent
hearing damage, and Just a few minutes at 120 decibels can
cause dumage. he said.
"It's very Insidious." Hull said. "It happens Blowly over time,
and eventually It's too late."
Hull presented his findings last month at a conference of the
American Academy of Audiology.
Hull, who measured Bound levels at clubs In Colorado.
Kansas, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming, said the Idea for the
study came from personal experience. He was enrolled In
classes at his health club that Included extremely loud music.
“ When I asked the Instructor to tum down the music a little,
she looked at me strangely." he said.
He suggested earplugs If the music cannot be turned down.

i,.r lor
n vrnr
iii lo
nrenurr
(hem
I lo
studying
a year
prejiarc
them
observe nol only June 0. 1094, but also
D-Day's 100th anniversary, when they will
l&gt;c 38 to 02.
. . . .
.
SI. James epitomizes Ihe dual reality of
Normandy today. Il contains Ihc second
largest American military cemetery, down
Ihe road from a German graveyard. The
town has been twinned for 20 years wllh u
German town. Erkrlrnz.

"

w h o m

"
Compart at
w o

D ESIG NER SLEEP SOFA &amp;
L OVE SE AT
$ C Q

688

�American’ clash

IN BRIEF

D.A.V. Royals
to face Red Sox
In L.M. finals

SYFA registration set
SANFORD — The Sanford Youth Football
Association will l&gt;e registering boys and girls
Interested In playing football or cheerleading
this Saturday, May 28. at the lot on U.S. 17-02
across from Sanford Middle School.
Registration will Ire front 10 a m. to 2 p.m.
Boys and girls ages 7 to 19 are eligible.
Call Tommie Thompson. 321-2012. for de­
tails.

Prom Staff Reports
SANFORD — Till* year's Sanford Rrerrallon
Lillie Malor Baseball League City Championship
Series will be an "All-American" ulfnlr.
On Tuesday night ut Roy Holler Field. Alex
Anderson loosed u three-hit shiiioul lo lead ihe
Disabled American Velrrun Royal* In a 4-0 win
over Ihe Rallroudrr* Cul&gt;* und earn u lierth In llie
championship series.
Tfie Royals, who finished *eeond In Hie
American Division, advance lo play Ihe Ameri­
can Division champion Sunnllund Corporation
Red Sox for Ihe city Idle The Ivstof-thrce series
will Ik *played this Saturday, next Tursduy. and a
week from Saturday (if necessary).
The Red .Sox ( 180) swept the Rlnker Material
Dodger* In two games of their semifinal playoff
while the Royals (14-41 advanced by winning
their series with Ihe Cub* |13-3| 2-1.
Dwayne Tillman led ofT the game for the Royals
wllh u single. Anthony Ratonamng followed with
a double and Jeremiah Jenkins drew u walk to
load Ihe base*. After Anion Anderson fill Into a
fielder's choice, forcing Tillman ul the plate.
Ralonurong was able to score on Juson Shef­
field's ground luill.
Culis' pitcher David Brock then shut down Ihe
Royals until the sixth Inning, when the Royal*
exploded for three runs on four (ills
Anton Anderson led olf the sixth inning with a
See Royals. Page 20

Deer Run hosts fund raiser
CASSKLHKHRY — Deer Run Country Club
will Ik* the site of a charity golf tournament this
Sunday. May 20. for 0-year-old Danielle O ’Brien,
who Is suffering from a rare form of cancer.
Entry fee for the I p.m. tournament I* $90 per
person, which Includes green* fee. curt, soil
drinks, und an uwar.ls buffet dinner at 9:30 p.m.
Proceeds from the event will go to defray
O'Brien's medical expenses O llrlen has been
fighting rhalKlomyosarcttmu. u form of cancer.
»lnce 1000 She has had two major o|K*rutlons
and kevcrul types of chemotherapy. Presently,
the cancer has rrturned and site'll I k* seeking
treatment at a research clinic In Houston.
For reservations, call Dennis McBride ul
Wlndemere Country Club. 870-1112. or the
fleer Run pro shop. 090 0502

O Cubs take two from Suns
ORLANDO — Ed Smith's three-run home run
In the bottom of the seventh lilted the Orlando
( ulis to a 5-4 win and a doublrheadcr sweep of
the Jacksonville Sun* In S m t h e r n League
action Tuesday night.
The Cub* won the first game. 6-9. snapping a
nine-game losing streak. Klimts Pledger went
3-lor-3 with u two run home run for Orlando

CirVCMAMPIONOHIPtlMIFINAlt
ll SOf MOLLIS lltlO
SOVALft 4. CUM I

H w o M F S o lo tf Mart Mo t *

Just as David Qrock (runrnno) just mlssod
reaching baso on this play, the Railroader Cubs'
bid to reach the City Championship Serieo was

Sheffield pleads no contest
ORLANDO — Florida Marlin outfielder Gary
Sheffield pleaded no contest to a reckless driving
charge and was sentenced to nine inonihs of
proliatlon und ordered lu perform 40 hour* of
community service.
Hhefileld also had been charged with drunken
driving on Dec. 3 after (Killer *top|ied him for
driving more than 110 mph on Intrrsiuir 4 in a
Ferrari Tesiarossu.

dasher) by Anthony Ralonsrong (No. 5) end Ihe
D A V Royals, who boat tho Cubs 4 0 Tuesday
ntght lo win tho semlhnal playoff sorles 2-1

D iu iW W A s t t M M
U i k i i S n C apt

Itilli

IM M l — 4
m
W I

Propane falls,
Flames sweep
doubleheader
From Staff Resorts

Expos unload on Marlins
MIAMI — Darrin Fletcher drove In a careerhigh five runs and Hutch Henry pitched 60s
shutout Inning*, leading the Montreal Expo*
past the Florida Marlin* l i t Tuesday night
Montreal tied u National League record with
four sacrifice llles. Including two by Fletcher. He
also hit a three-run double In the ninth.
Henry (2-11 retired the first 10 halters Itefore
Dave Magadan doubled. That was Florida's lone
hit until Jeff Conlne reached on an infield single
In the seventh.
Rookie Carl Everett hit his second homer of
the season. In the eighth Inning.

More upsets at French Open
PARIS — One day after Martina Navratilova's
shocking exit. Stefan Edberg. Ivan Lendl.
Gabrlela Sabatlnl and Jana Novotna were all
eliminated In the first round of the French Open.
Sixth-seeded Scrgl Hrugueru of Spain, who
l&gt;cut former Sanford resident Jim Courier In last
yeur's final, edged Martin Damin of the Czech
Republic 6-1. 0-1, 7-0 (7*3). Courier, seeded
seventh, bent Jean-Philippe Fleurlan of France
61. 6- 4, 6- 4.
Edberg. seeded third, lost to fellow Swede
llcnrlk llolm 7-9, 7-6 |7&gt;1). 6-7 (7-2). 6-7 (10-8).
6-4. Amuud Uoetsch of France beat Lendl 6-4.
6-3.0-4.
In women's play, second-seeded Arunlxu
Sanchez Vlcarlo of Spain beat Florcncla Labat of
Argentina 6-4, 0-1. Anna Smashnova of Israel
defeated No. 5 Novotna of the Czech Republic
0-4, 6-2 and Silvia Farina of Italy beat No. 8
Sabatlnl of Argentina 2-6.6-2,0-4.

nO TM Photo b| M M Morrlo

Hood (sophomore MVP), Shawn Barkley (MVP, sprints
and hurdles); (back row) Latlsha Williams (MVP,
throwing events), Jennifer Stuckey (booslor-toam
player), Julio Wobor (scholar athlete), Amie Bradley
(MVP, jumping evonts), and Brenda Moll (Burgor King
Coach's Award).

Sullivan posts wire-to-wire Mini-Stock wir
a

Olajuwon voted NBA MVP
HOUSTON — Hakeem Olajuwon, who led the
Houston Rockets to the Midwest Division title
and the best record In franchise history, was
selected the NBA's Most Valuable Player.
The 7-foot center received 880 points and 66
first-place votes from a media panel. San
Antonio's David Robinson was second with 730
points and 24 first-place votes, followed by
Chicago's Scottle Plppcn with 300 paints.

NHL PLAYO FFS
□ 7:30 p.m. — ESPN. Eaatcm Conference flnaln
New York Rangers at New Jersey Devils, (L)

SANFORD — lll-Mooiii I'rupunr'*
llrsl loss of tfir season uml a
douhtrhruder sweep by the Flames
lightened the standing* lu the
Sanford Recreation Wednesday
Men's Slowpllrh Softball League ut
Chase Park
The Flames o|M-nrd I tic evening
by outlasting Gager I'est Cunttol
8-5. then came tt.u k and kum-ked
olf Whclchel and Howard 12-9
Whcl chcl and Howard turned
around and did tlie rest of Ihe
leugue u favor by handing Dlsrounl
Propane Its first loss. 11 8.
With three weeks left In the
six-week campaign. Discount Pro­
pane (3-1) Is a half -game III front of
Ihe Flumes |3-2). They're followed
by Whelchcl and Howard |2-3) and
Gager Pest Control 11-3).
Next Wednesday. Discounl ProRams salute team leaders
(time and Gager Pest Coiilml un­
Lake Mary girls' Hack loam honored its lop
scheduled lo play doublcheadcrs.
performers during Its soason ending banquet Tuosday
Discount Propane will lake on the
nlghl at Iho Quincy's rostaurant In Sanford Rocoivlrig
Flumes ul 6:30 p.m.. then play
accolados were (Ironl row, from loft) Mansela Navarro
Gager Pesl Control ut 7:30 p.m.
(freshman MVP), Amanda Robortson (most Improved
Gager Pesl Control will come hack
freshman), Katlo Sims (MVP, dlotanco ovonts), Nakela
lo face Whelchcl and Howard al
8:30 p.m.
Mark Whitley led ilir Flames In
tlielr win over Gager Pesl Control by
going 3-for-3 wllh three singles, a
run scored, and an RBI. Robert
a
» m mam mm m
mm
m mm
Smith ulao hud three singles und an
By PAUL MAR8EQLIA
RBI. Mark Blythe singled twice and
Special the Herald_________
scored two runs while Bill Gracey
hit two singles und scored one run. .
ORLANDO — Orlando's Dink Sullivan weathered
Dean Smith udded a single, one repealed challenges by Kelly Jnrrctt lo win Ihe
run. and an RBI. Brian Burke and
Mini-Stock feature last night Friday, May 20. al Orlando
Tony DcSormler both singled und
Spccdworld.
scored a run. J ck* Benton und Chris
At Ihe drop of Ihe green (lag. Sullivan pushed Ills
Duporc each hud u single und un Central Clutch/S A S Racing Pinto out In front of fellow
RBI. Tony Hlullr scored a run and
pole-sitter Jarrell und went on lo lead every circuit to
drove In a run. Tom Ornery singled.
secure his second feature win of Ihe season.
Rick Tubh collected a double, (wo
"The cur was Just outstanding tonight und luck
singles, a run scored, und an RBI to seemed to t&gt;c going our way." said Sullivan, who
highlight Ihe 10-lilt attack of Gager currently Is In second place In Ihe FASCAR Mini-Stock
Pest Control. Tom Clark contributed
|Kilnt standings.
three singles, a run. and an RBI.
"Th e last race we won was on April Fool's Day. Since
Donnie McCoy singled twice and
then, we've had all kinds of bud luck. Either minor
scored n run. Ron Curdcll had a things broke or wc got caught up In accidents.”
single, run. und an RBI. Mike Nolo
Trailing Sullivan und Jnrrctt lo victory lane were
also singled and scored u run. Rich Jared Allison. Bobby Scars, and Karl Pcrmun.
Hcmlngcrhadan RBI.
Current FASCAR Laic Model points lender Ricky
Benton pul the Flames ahead In
Wood bested some stlfT competition to win Ills fourth
the game wllh Whclchcl and How­ Late Model main event of the season.
ard wllh a two-run home run In the
Wood, who Ntarlcd ihe race from flit* sixth position,
first Inning. He also hud two singles,
charged through the field and overtook early leader
another run scored, and another
George Murphy on Ihe (bird lap and stayed In front (he
RBI. Whitley tripled, scored a run.
race of the way.
nnd had an RBI. Tom Gnircy added
three singles, two runs, und an RBI.
Wllh Wood on the point. Murphy hooked up wllh
Hlullc hml three singles, a run,
rookie sensation Tuffy Hester In a battle for second
and one RBI. Duporc also hud three
place. After several laps* of door-to-door racing. Hester
singles and n run. Burke contrlbmoved Into second. Tw o laps later. Joe Piazza moved
around Murphy for third place.
□See Softball, Page 2B
The race wllh Ihe top four still In (hat order. Bruce
Flomoi
341 Ml • — 0 14
Everett came In fifth.

;

0 o(or Poll Control

000 m

1-

l ( 10

Flomoi
Who k hoi ond Howard

&gt;14 440 1 010 Ml • -

11 It
s 11

Wlwliltol ond llo .o rd
Oltcount Propono

ICO 040 0 - II II
010 0 » • — 1 II

a

" I ’ve been racing for 11 years and (Ills Is the best
season I've ever had," said Wood, who has four feature
wins at the Orlundo oval. "I have a real low-budget
operation and despite all the hlgh-dollnr ears In onr
division, I'm still In first pluce In points.

" ll
lllu (
I
l l l u w l I I I K il 111* I I tl &lt;( r &gt;l&lt;t &gt;f n t t i l I &gt;&lt;•
" llr e lreally
feels
good lo be an underdog und Ik * on1 top
of the pile."
hk

u

m

Rlek Johns, who also led every circuit, dominated
racing action In Ihe Sportsman division (o notch Ills
eighth win of the year. Johns took the checkers 10 ear
lengths ahead of Dave Martlny. Finishing third through
fifth were Scott Wood, Jim m y Johns, and Wall Logglus.
Tim m y Todd went green dug lo checkers to win his
seventh Limited Late Model hcudllner of the year.
Trailing Todd to victory lane were Michael Williams,
Billy Pratt. Gary Schllchlcr, und Glen Carter.
Rick Schllmincr look the lend on the second lap of Ihe
Bomber feature nnd held off some seasoned veterans (a
win his first-ever feature event In the division.
"II took a lot of work nnd liurd raring lo gel here, but
now ll's nil worth It," said Schllmmcr, who got his start
In the Run-About division.
"What makes 11 really exciting Is all the good drivers
who were chasing me. I really had lo make sure I didn't
make any mistakes or do anything stupid so thut I
could keep them behind me."
Completing the lop five were. In order'of finish. Mike
Peppier, Bobby Stevens, Doug Gould, nnd Dee Nuplcr.
Wayne Parker, who edged Dave Savlekl al (he flag
stand In the Modified main event, also nolchcd his
first-ever feature win. Trailing the lead pair were Jon
Compngnonc Jr.. Greg Hughes, and Eddie Shcdd.
The first-ever school bus demolition derby hosted al
the Orlando spcedplunt took about 45 minutes before a
winner wus declared.
After seven of the nine competitors were knocked out
In Ihe first 25 minutes, Tim Cordell und Don Pierce
spent Ihe flnul 20 minutes hammering on each oilier
until Cordell's mount died with u final puff of smoke.
"Mun. that wus some work." said Pierce, who Is u
mechanic for Frlto Lay. "M y arms about to give out
from shifting and steering that big thing around."
For his winning effort, Pierce picked up $1,000 while
Cordell pocketed $790. Kim Ireland, a school bus driver
from Osccolu County, was third.

FO R T H E B E S T C O V E R A G E O F S P O R TS IN YO U R A R EA , R EAD T H E S A N FO R D H ER A LD D A ILY

�.ylV/wA

SB - Sanlord Hamid. Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, May 25, 1094

S T A T S &amp; S T A N D IN G S
Baltlmort
Toronto
D tlroll

11 17
11 n
it
ii
C tn lrtl Olvlito
W
L
Chicago
1)
17
Ctovtlknd
11 10
Minn# wta
11 11
KanvaiClly
If
11
17 If
Mllwauk**
Wtkl Olvliitn
W
L
Calllornia
11 »
Taaai
It
11
Saaffl*
1* 1)
Oakland
tl
ii
Tuesday’s Oe met
Cleveland s. Boston 1
New Yorks Toronto I
C aillornlJl Detroit)

D O O t
Al Seminal* Perk
Tuaiday night
Flrkl r*c* — 14M, D: 11.S4
1 T B Util* Hawk
4 40 1 40 100
TBob'kZunl
4 10 4 M
1 Summ Bruliar
IM
O ( I D U 44 P tl All) 1T.T4 (A ll 1) l l . f l T
11 11)41 44
S*t*ndrti* — 14)4. C: 11.1)
TTikW h o oW n
1140 I M 1 »
) Bab# Dari
I M 140
1 Whltparlng Lady
140
0 (&gt; n U N P (A IM ) 1.11 T IP -S I) M t.M
d d o d im *
Third n i t — U H , Di 11.41
1 Bam* Tyrone
II tO 140 I JO
t Summ Donna
I M 1 00
1 H V Shady Lady
J*o
Q 11 1) 14.M P II-A ll) II.SO (A D D 17* T
Fourth race — MM. Bi 11.St

1100

I Bob tBoo

0

) 40

o (1 4 ) M.ee p (e -i) 1M i t T ( e i e i sie te
Carryover IIIJ.S I
Fltlh race - 1U4, Di 1I.4S
4 Summ Baal
140 S40 140
IDawayLaann
1140 140
4 Wary Keeper
1410
0 (1 -4 ) l l . t t P (4-1) 111.14 T (4-1-4) 414.14
S li1 R r a c t -n M .B ilt .ir
4 111 A Shame
410 110 140
I RV Honor Student
4 10 4 I f
1 Kalsu Jutlln
4 00
O (1-4) 11.41 P (4 11 11.14 T 14-1-1) 114.44
(4 4 4)10(111.44
Seventh r a n — I4S4, C; 11.14
4Tulla La|it
1100
4 00 1 40
IM 'a Aliens Beit
1110 4 00
• Hot Foot Bing
I «
0 (1-4) 11.41 P (4 All I 11.41 I A IM ) I t .N T
14-1-1) 1114.41 S 14-1-4-1) 1114.11

Klghthrace - me. D: 14.11

1 AchtungLady
1100
4 00 110
IK a ty Kan
1110 4 00
4 FullO t Go
400
O ( l t ) 11.41 P (41 ) 14.14 T I I 4 4 ) 1)444
Ninth rate - 1414. Bi 11.41
1 Marla Bonita
4 00
4 40 4 00
I Omni Meteor
4 10 410
1 Guilt Jan Ruby
4.10
O 11 1) 11.11 P 411) 14.40 T (1 1 1) 144.M QD
(1-4 A 1-A ll) 41.14 QD 11-141 All) 1 II.M
llthrace — 1414. C) 11.14
1 RV King Mecca
4 )0
410 110
I Bob'! Leebo 11
H O 4 40
U e n n a ’tM Itteni
4N
0 (1 11 I t .lt P (I-A ll I 4 40 (All-1) 4.41 T
l l - l - l l 41.44
H t h r a c e -l 4 1 4 .D i I I .i l
IW im e t O lr l
1 10 440 I N
I N 140
IDetpot
1 Carmel Tie
IN
O 1141 14 M P (14 ) 1141 T (1-4-11 i n to
Carryover 4114.11
11th race — 1444. Ci 4414
1 Lightning Feet
I M I M 140
110 1J0
1 Queen Ot Dental
4 Right Karen
4N
Q 11 1) 11.41 P ( I D H I M T (1 1 4 ) 1M.14 S
&lt;114-AID M l 11
IM h ra c e -1 4 M . At I I .U
1 R M t M m rym kr
14 M 11 40 4 N
4 PodiodAwesome
4 40 I M
1 Gager Draw
4N
Q 111) 44.14 P I I A l l ) 4.N (A IM ) 4.44 T
114-1) IS44.M
1 4 th ra c e -1044. Tt 1411
1 Riot Stalin
IM 4M IN
■ P a n Vetter day
4 40 1 40
1 Yield Right Sue
4N
Q 11 1) 11.44 P ( M l 11.441 (T-t-t A ll) IH.14
A -IT li H -lit .IN

N A TIO N A L V E A O IIE
Alt Timas E O T
Bast Division
W
L
Allan)*
11 II
Montreal
If
1)
Flar Ida
11 11
Philadelphia
»
U
New York
ii
n
Canfrat Drvltran
W
L
Ctaclnnal!
II
M
flout ion
14 »
Sf Louli
1J 10
PiHkburgh
1* 1)
Chicago
It
24
Wtkl Dtviiion
•
W
L
lo t Angela*
1) 11
SanFrancitco
11 14
Colorado
1* 14
SanOlago
11 M
Tuesday’s Gamrs
Montreal It, FlarIda I
Houston I. Atlanta 0
Phlladolphla4, St. Louis0
New York 4. Pittsburgh 1
Colorado I I, Cincinnati 1
Chicago!. LosAngelesO
San Diego 4. San Francisco)
Wednesday's Oames
Montreal (Hill 1-1) at Flartdo

1-11.1:110 m.

Pci.
441
M4
■III
4*4
4*4
Pet.
HI
)4)
SJ)
til
Ul

OA
J
ih
i* )
* '»

Pet
&gt;f&gt;
114
111
100
1*4

OB

Pit, OB
411 mm
4)1
1
4J1
1*4 1*1

I)

RAINES GAUGE

1.1 lip m

Cleveland (Nagy l i t al Boston I Darwin

II)

.! Hpm

Toronto IHentgen a l l al New York (Abbott

) ll.l 01pm

California (Farrell 10) at Detroit (Doherty

111. 1:01pm

M innesota (P u lid o 1 I I at Chicago
( Fernanda! 4 I I . I 01p m
Teiss (Brown 14) at Kansas City (Appier
1 )1 ,1 01pm .
S O U TH E R N L E A G U E
First Hell
Eastern (Mvlstecs
W
OB
L Pel
Carolina (Plratok)
4)4 —
1* i )
Knot villa (Blu* J a y ll
441
n
»
Green,ill# (Btavak)
it
441 t ' l
N
Jackkaavlll* (M arlnart) 14 It
.4*4 1l«*
Or land* (C ubil
ti
11 .1*1 II
Watlarn Drv‘vi*n
1!
Hurvtkvilla (Athlfctl
i*
4)0 —
14
Mamphik IRoyalkl
i)
Ml
1
Nakhvlll* (Twin*)
14 10
14) 4
Birmingham (WSoal
n
n
ill
I 'l
Challanooga (R adii
tr
tot 11
1!
Twetdey'i Oemet
Orlande 4. Jechtenvllle I. li t game
Orlande I, Jechtenvllle 4. I l l game
Greenville 4. K n o ivllie l
Carolina 4. Hunltvlllo 1 lit tame
Carolina 4. Hunltvllle 1. Ind game
Nethytlle 10. Birmingham 1
Wednesday'1 Oames
Jachsanvllle al Orlande
KnoavlUe at Greenville
Huntsville at Carolina
Nashville at Birmingham
Challanooga at Memphis
FL O R ID A I T A T t L R A O U E
First Hall
Eastern Division
W
L Pel
OB
Brevard (Merim sl
11 tl
111 It Lucie IMetst
I
III
11
Vero Beech IDodgersl
11
n
V0 4‘ t
Daytona (Cubsl
14
11
1F) II
Osceola lAstrosI
14 11
111 II
W P Beach IEaposl
11
It
114 I I
Western Division
Clearwater iPhili,at)
1*
I)
4M
1
Tam pa I Yankees)
It
it
Ml
Fort M y » ri I Ta in t &gt;
Jl
it
Sal 1's
SI Pete (Cardinals)
11
It
U4 ) ' i
Lakeland I Tlgertt
1111 10
10
111 4
Char tolle (Rangers)
I I 11 411 i ' l
Dunedin (Blue Jays)
II
14 4el
1
Sarasota I Red Sot I
I!
14
m
10
Tuesday’s Oames
Vero Beech 1. Clearwater 1. &lt;1 Innings
Dunedin I. Lakeland 1
St Petersburg e Sarasota 1
Daytona 1. Fort M yert 1
Char lot lo f , Osceola 1
Tampa I . SI . Lucie 1
Brevard 4.Watt Palm Beach 0
Wednesday’s Oames
Lakeland al Dunedin
I I Petersburg el Sarasota
For I Myer s e I Do y lone
Char loll# al Osceola
Tampa el SI Lucie
Brevard al West Palm Beach

»

IM 1 1 M L L IO X M

2
2‘ ?
*
4*1

EXPOS II. M AR LIN S I
M O N TR EAL
FLO R IO A
eh r h hr
eh r h hi
Losing)b 4 1 1 1
T v r ir l
40 00
Ju B e lllb
4111
M gdenlb 4 0 10
Grssomct 1 1 1 0
Browne lb 4 0 t 0
LW lk rrf 4 1 1 1
Conlnell
4 0 10
Aloulf
1100
Dttrdo lb 10 0 0
Roles p
10 0 0
KAbbttst 1 0 0 0
O FIch rc 1 0 1 1
Tlngley c 1 0 0 0
Spehrc
0 00 0
RLewItp
000 0
Floyd lb 1 1 1 0
Evereltcl 1 1 1 1
C rd ero tt 4 1 1 1
Houghp
00 00
Henry p 1 0 0 0
Aguino p 10 0 0
Frailer It I 0 D 0
Carr ph
10 0 0
Mulls p
000 0
O’HlIrnc 10 0 0
Totals
14II 14 II
Talalt
14 t ) 1
Manlreal
l|] 444 t i l - II
Flar Ida
M4 004 I I I I
E - KAbbott 141 OP - Montreal I.
Florida 1 LOB - Montreal 4. Florida 1 IB —
Grissom tt l. DFIatcnar 111, Magadan 111
MR — Cordero (1). Evsrell |}|. SB —
Cordero (41 CS - Lansing la). SF - JuBril
LWelker. DFIelcherl
IP
H R ER BB K )
Montreal
Henry W. 10
411 1
0 0
1 1
Roles
1111
I I
0 1
Florida
Hough L ,4 1
1 1 ) 1 4
1 1 1
Aquino
1111
0 0
I
1
Mulls
1
1 1 1 0
0
R L tw It
I
4 1 1 0
1
MBP - by Hough ( Aloul WP - Hough PB
- Tlngley 1 Balk — Hough
Umpires - Home. Runge; First. OeMulh;
Second. Hellion; Third. Ktllogg
T - 1 : 4 ! A -14.141

Pci. OA
S41
44)
441
1*1 11*7

(Gardner

A M E R IC A N L C A O U E
All Times C O T
East Division
w
L Pcf. OB
New York
it
1)
*fl —
Boston
u
1*
411 I ' l

|

Brldgeitone

FR EE

EXTENDED
WARRANTIES
Warranty

* Re Balancing* Flat Repair * Rotabon * Road Hazard *
* Afcgnirwnt Chock * Shock. Brake &amp; Air Chock

They aren't at the compeM/on/
0

9

9 -

ffls rn

S O Q 9 9 -

as

a in s f lt a

lo t*

1BBSR13
173/70(113

IB M
IM S

J0S/T03A14
108/BOSnU
igaroosms
22STO0HRI9
24VS0MH1B

$

40 04
4e.ee
M
si.ee
iT .f i
iie .e e

S1B-7SR1B
235/73HIS

atitosoflis

T4.BB

COUPON

InWHEEL ALIGNMENTI
I.
• 1 2 * 9 c. s!
6 Mo Warranty
8
Wwn

1 Fads* Sates/Ter*
■ a
ears)

I 9 t l

!■■■■■■■■!
fk

M B jB

_

_

vvm’dvi 'F; -D

'yT/
E

Goodyear

C h riitia n Ruud, N orw ay, del. Gilbert
Schellar. Auktrla, 4 4,4 4.4 1
Jim Courier (1), Dade City, del Jten
Philipp* FNurlan, Franca. 4 1. 4 4.4 4. Lionel
Hou«. Franca, dal GabrNI Markuk. Argen
line. 1 ). 4 1,14(111
Denial Vacek. Ciacb Republic, dal JavNr
Sanctwi. Spain. 14 (111. 04 41. *4. Bernd
KerbectNr Germany, dtl Tom ei Carbooatl
Spain 1 1 4 1.14. 44 40
Patrick Haller, Autlrelia. del Franco
Devin. Argentine, 4 1 I ) II, 4 4, 14, 4 4. I )
Yevgeny Kalalnikov. H utile, drt TSNrry
Guard,ola. Franca. 4 4. ( l * 4.4 4.4 4
Stoleno Pvtcotolido. Italy, dtl Karttm
(Iraatch. Germany. 44. 14 114). IS . 41;
Brad Gilbert. San Rala*l. C a n t. dt! Crik
llano Car etn. Italy. 4 t 4 1.4 1
Alberto B«rat4tvgui. Spain, dal Wayne
Ferreira. South Air Ice. 4 ). rflirvd JavNr
Frene. Argentina, dal Mali**! Wtlhington,
Panto Vadra Batch. I 1 * 1.41
David aikl, Crech Republic, da* And,a
CSatnokov. Rutki* 4 I. ) I. ralirad. Hanrlk
Holm, Sweden dal Slflan (dbarg (1).
Swadtn. I S, 14 (1 11.41(11). 4 f | » 101.44
ANa O ’Brian, Amarilto. treat, dal Marc
Rottet. Switrtrland a l. a ! 1)11 a ! I I II.
4 ) *4. Arneud Botkch Franc*, dot Ivan
Ltndt. Greenwich. Com . 4 4.4 1.4 4
Andrea Geudann. Italy, dal Pair Korda
M il. Crach Rrpubik. a 1 1 1. 4 1 (4 1). 4 1.
41; Karol Kucera. Stovakia dal Maurice
Huah Vtcwruaia. 4 1.4 1.4 I
Cedrk Plglina (141. Franc* del Jakob
Hlatok. Swift*'land 4 4 1 4. 4 # 4 1 Richard
f r amber g Auttralt*. d#t Byron Black,
limtiabw* 14(1 II. S I. I 4 ( 1 11.4 t
Hendrik Oraakm ann. G erm any dal
Adrian Vexnee Romania a t &lt;4. I I . 4 4
Aaron Krtckttain. Great* Pom,* M ‘cn del
Horae &gt;0Da La Pan* Arganl.na 4 1. 4 4. 0 I
Carlo* Catt* I I I ), Spam. dal Gutitoumo
«a»oui Franco 4 1 14 I M I . 4 1. Jordi
Arrat*. Spam, dtl Hwto'ph* Gilbert Franc*
44 4 1.4 1.4 )
Mkhaal Sikh lit Ga'many, dtl Rtnto
f uflan. Ilaly. 4 1 M 4 &lt; Ma&gt;k Woodtordt
Auk"eiia dal Lari Wantg'an loader. 4*
41. 4 1.14 1! II

Tim Ralnos Is a Sanford native and Sominole High School
graduate now playing for |ho Chicago Whlto Sox. His stats are
for tho 1994 season In tho first column, porsonal-bost season
totals In tho second column and current caroor totals
(Including 1994 games) In the third column.
On Tuesday night. Ralnos was 0-for-1 bul scorod a pair of
runs to help tho White Sox knock off the Minnesota Twins 5-3

Category

GO

Haw York tSaberliagen 411 *1 Pittsburgh
(Wegner 1 1 ),1 ;H p m
Houston (Kile 1 1 ) el Allenla ISmoltl 1 4).
1:40p,nv
Philadelphia (Williams 10) al St Louis
ISutclllfol l ) . l 01p m
Cincinnati ( R l ( o l ) l al Colorado ( R H i 0 0 ).
♦ 01 p m
Chicago (Trechsel 4 1 ) at Los Angeles
ICendlolll4 I), 10 11 p m
San Francisco IBurkell 1 1 ) el Sen Diago
(Ashby 0 41.101) p.m

»

1
J 't
4
t

Wednesday’s Games
Baltimore I Moyer 111 ot Milwaukee (Ig
naslek I 01,1 01 p m
Seattle (Johnson 4 II ot Oakland (Darling

40 t00

14)0 ttO

IPan'lDarlln

4
•

Chicago 1. Minnesota1
Teiasl. KansasCltyO
Baltimore II. Milwaukee 1
Oakland 10. Seattle I

(Mi) iti.ee

aCrcA.ngr

ns
M0
44)

'94
Oames............... 38
Al-bats............... 144
Runs.................. 31
Mils.................... 38
RBI..................... 16
5
Doubles.............
Triples.............
2
0
Home runs........
Steals..............
2
Average............. .264

best career
160
647
133
194
71
38
13
18
90
.334

1.855
7.020
1.242
2.089
723
337
102
129
753
298
Tim Ratrwa

ID BA

playo ff

*

~ 1

All Times E O T
C O N FE R E N C E FINALS
(Best e l ! )
E A S TE R N C O N FE R E N C E
iedieaa *S. New Verk
Teesdey. May 14
New York IN. Indiana 14 New York Neds
series I 0
Thursday. May 14
Indiana at New York 4 p m
Saturday. M ay]*
New York at Indiana ) Jf p m
Men dry. May M
New York at Indiana 1 V o m
Wednesday. June I
Indiana at New York, t p m . it necessary
Friday. Jane I
New York at Indiana 4 p m . ilnecaseary
leader. Jane I
Indiana at New York. 1 p m . tl necessary
W E S TE R N C O N FE R E N C E
Utah vs. Heusten
Houston leads ser tes I 4
Wednesday. May II
Utah at Houston. 4 p m
Friday, M et I I
Houston el Utah, 4 p m
Sunday. M e tis
Houston el Uleh. l H p m
Tuesday. May II
Ulan el Houston t p m i l necessary
Thursday. Jena 1
Houston el Utah. * p m it nacre very
Saturday, June ear Sunday, Jewel
II Saturday. Utah at Houston, 1 to p m . It
necessary
II Sunday. Utah al Houston I p m . II
neerssary

NBA AW ARDS
NBA Mast Valuable Players
I4M - Bob Pettit, St Lewis Hawks
141! — Bob Couty, Boston Celttoi
n i l — Bill Russell. Boston Celtics
14*4 - Bob Pettit. SI Louts HewSs
1440 - Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia
Warriors
H *1 - Bill Russell. Boston CotlKS
ISOI - Bill Huston. Boston Celtics
tS41— BUI Russell. Boston Celtics
1444 — Oscar Roberlton Cincinnati Royals
H41 - Bill Russell. Button Celtic s
1444 — Wilt Chamber lain. Philadelphia
Jeers
144! - Wilt Chamberlain. Philadelphia
lle rt
1444 — Will Chamberlain Philadelphia
leers
1444 Wet Unsold. Ballimore Bultelt
1410 Willis Reed New York Kmcst
H it — le w Aklndor. Milwaukee Bucks
l i t ! — Kareem Abdul Jabber. Milwaukee
Bucks

lf H 1414 Bucks
14111414
Lakers
141! —
Lakers

Dave Cowrnv Boston C4ttks
Kareem Abdul Jabber. Milwaukee
Bob Me Adoo Bulteto Breves ,
Kareem Abdul Jabber. Los an**tos
Kareem Abdul Jabber Las Angeles

lf l» - Bill Walton. Portland Trail Bleters
1 4 !* - Move i Me tone Houston Rackets
1140 - Kareem Abdul Jabber. Las Angeles
L4kers
14*1 — Julius Ervta* Philadelphia leers
1411— MosesMatone. Houston Rockets
I M l — Motes Me tone Philadelphia ike's
11*4 - Larry Bird. Boston Celtics
14*1- Larry Bud Boston Celtics
1*44- Larry Bud Boston Celtics
14*1- Magic Jehnson l os Angeles Lasers
1144 - Michael Jordan Cbkage Bulls
11*4- Magic Jehnson Loe Angeles lasers
iwo­ Magic Johnson. Los Angelas lasers
rn i— Michael Jordan Chke*e Butts
1W1 — Michael Jordan. Chicago Bulls
1*41 ~ Charles Berkley. Phoenie tuns
IW l - Hakeem Oleiuwon. Houston Rocsrts

Richey

il

W tS T E B N C O N FE R E N C E
Vancouver at Taranto
Tuatday. May I I
Vancouver 4. Toronto ). lO T. Vancouver
w m tiaaw te 1

1ranch Open
PARIS - Results Tuesday et the M S
million Franch Open tennis chemptonshtps ot
Helena G an as tied um
Mm
Si-dFki
a
FkSI (Sound
Olivier Oeleilre. France del Lull Matter
Brain I t Ike). I t 14 kl retired Jared
Palmer. Tampa, del Amos Menwtorf Israel
4 4.4 0.4 1
Sergi B'uguere 141. Spain del Merlin
Oemm Ciech Republic 4 1. 4 1, re l i t ) ,
Jaime Yjage, Peru ckrl Petritk McEnroe
Oyster Oar. N Y 41. A t , 41
Magnus Gutlelsson (111. Sweden del
Jordt Bvrtllo. Soeln. 11 14. I S 4 1.

Softball
Continued from IB
uted two alngi™. a run.
uml two RHI. Robert Sm llli
added (wo ninglcv a mil. and an
Kill. DrSonnirr had n slnglr.
run. uud an RHI. Hill Gruecy
singled and seored u run. lilythc
hud a run and an RHI.
James Thompson tilt a triple
and u single for Whelchc! and
Howard. Vince Howard added
three singles and a run. David
G oldstlck doubled, singled,
scored a run, and find an RHI.
Eric Johnson had two singles
and an RHI. Terry RiihsI and
Sonny Eubanks both singled
and scored a run. Don doodling
and John Stewart each hit u
single.
Thompson also led Whclchrl
and Howard In (lie win over
Discount Propane wlili a triple,
single, two runs, and lwo RHI.
Mike Mclohon chlp|&gt;cd In will) u

Royals----------Continued from IB
single und
scored on a double by Jason
Sheffield, who was thrown out at
third trying to stretch the hit
Into a triple. William Kirby (hen
doubled and scored an out luter
on Dontucy Majors* double. Ma­
jors came home on an error by
the Cubs.
Alex Anderson retired Hie first
five Cubs he faced (striking out
four In u row) before William
Cleveland singled with two out
In the second. Anderson (hen set
down another six hitters In a row
until Aurori Richardson and
Robert Woodward tilt l&gt;uck-to-

double, two singles, a run, und
an RHI. Russ! douhlrd. singled,
and scored a run. Chris Wurgo
and Kuhunks each hud two
singles, two runs, and an RHI.
Howard added I wo singles, a
ru n . und an RHI. Johnson
singled, scored a run. and had
an RHI. Slrwart hit a single und
drove In two runs. Goodllng
scored a run.
Roger Klnnurd tripled, singled,
scored a pair of runs, und had an
RHI to lead Discount Propane.
Kev i n J u l l u n also tripl ed,
singled, und scored twice. Juek
l.c-wls had a double, u run. and
(wo RHI. Manny Silvia hit two
rlnglcs und scored a run.
Allen Prlmku contributed a
single, u rim. and an RHI. Chris
Grissom. Paul Ingumclls. und
David Kline curb had -a single
und un RHI. Sieve Woldc hit n
single. Tom Szubo scored u run
uud drove In a run.

Shi Ting Wang. Taiwan, dtl Ata Carlt(
Sweden 1 ). 14 d i l l Petra Hagan
Germany, dal MertdUh McGrath Midi*
Mich , 4 1.4 4. * 1

T R A N S A C T IO N S
BASEB A LL
American League
BOSTON R E D SOX - Called up G&lt;
nito n mile Idee from Pawtuckat at
International League Sant Lu ll Ortlr, th
Gaia man. to Pawtuckal Devgnated Ji
Malander, pitcher tor raekklgnmanl
D E TR O IT T IO IR S - Placed Eric 0 »,
outlNidar, on the llttoy dikabtod Hit, rat
active to May I I Activated Junior F.i
Outliaidar liom the II day dikabiadlitt
National Laegua
NL — Impended John Smaitr An*.
Btavak pitcher tor tight gamat and to
him an undiKtotad amount tor throw ing
John tang*tot. tl th* Nan to rt Malk du'.
4 gam* May U and impended Cange-ov
tour g*m*» and imad him an undikctot
amount tor charging th# motmd
SAN O IEO O PA0RES - RaNatad Mi
Davit pitcher Purchatad th* canned
Joey Ham.lton. pitcher from Lay Vagat
it* Pacific Caakt League
■A S K ETR A LL
National BeckyNatl Akkaculton
TO R O N TO RAPTORS
Hamad Ip
Thomei vice pr*kd*nl
Cantinaatal Rakkatball AikactatNn
CBA — Announced that th* La Ct*t
Catoirdt hay* bean pvachawd by Hubert
Murphy Jr and w’ll mava »* PiHkburgh
th* like tt leave,’
t H I C I T Y CHINOOK
I gnod C* ,
Duncan, coach ta a two year cent,,
a itoniwn
United llela. BaekatbaM laegua
C O N N E C TIC U T SKYN*W KS
Ig Ph.l Wilton contor and pJacad *&gt;,m on &lt;
ta*i tqued Aclivatod La m b ott I n
tomard lr«m th* ran tguad Ptacod Car
TayNr. forward, on tho leal tguad
LONG I I I aNO SURF
Signed ,
aclivatod Carl Bockatt guard A d . n
Drag R itlar c*m*r and Michaai I t ,
torward tram thn tavi igue4 Placed l*r
Worthy guard and Matt Stuart coatoin* ton wyuad
M EM P HIS F IR E
RaNatad Jatt Ci n
torna'd and loKfiO i Hvmphray g v
Stoned Anthony Dougiott ctaiyt and , ,
him on tho la ii tguad
FO O TB A LL
National Football laagao
O B E E N BAY PACKERS
R a t,
M.aa Moii'waaihar imabork*,
JA C K S O N V ILLE JAGUARS
Named t
Bakar manogar *&lt; Natoall *#** atwok
M IN N E S O TA VIKINO S
Agreed to •*
with Amp loo rgmn.ng bock on a on* »•
can tr act

T V /R A D IO
A U TO RACING
It H p m — SUN SrfTimor | agond* S*
la m
SUN
N A S C A R Gaai
Spot liman 140
BASESALl
I JO p m
SUN Montreal E apo
1 lav Ida Marlin*. ILI
19 to p m
ESPN Chicago CuCiv ot
AngoNkDodgori i l l
NBA
* p m - TN T NBA pi*yo!lt U'ai
Haul ton IE I
HOCKEY
F » pm
ESPN NHL ptaro'tt I
R angary at Now tor w y I I I a lto o tla m
Radio
B AS EB A LL
k 41 p m
W T i N a m uttot, SauH
Loaguo. JackianviiNaiOriand*
F p m . WO IQ AW IU0I
Monlrv*

Florida

4

S

1pm
WrWNZ AM neaoi H o v i'u
Atlanta
M ltC E LLANEOUk
kpm
W G IO AM I *401, Th* Prayy Bo
Ip m
W A N ! AM I too Ityg. ft* la,
Nut
10 p m
WWNZ AM I Ito) FNa id* Ip.
E achango
10 p m
W O TO A M (l40&gt; Iporty Ba
USA
10 p m - W AN/ AM 114401. Sportl I
Tonight

raailThCNcVyvt ttk k Tv o iu tu a v L t*44Elj2131?uti
NWYtyg*
o n croi
tJUNfCMfl

Essi^J

fiaiikftE ifirr*

D lL lW A

h »to l . u w k N . S E O £

90
DAYS SAME AS CASH
a a ^ » a g a s g ja r a »T x r jr s a a w s 8 n ;y ^ . ™ r i
DAYTON
HOROBRED

BEST VALUE
FOR IMPORTS!
/ % l l a g l o n 1 1lia
D A TTO N A
A S B V K IC R A O I A 1

•Mileage guarantee

Pf»

Sif*

P"ca

ISStOAt) $ 3 4 . 2 9
’ tsseoRii $ 3 6 . 2 5
trsacnti $ 3 7 . 6 5
1 ISMOfll) $ 3 9 , 6 3

•Strong steel belled
polyester body radial
construction.

•Aggressive rib tread
MAS rated
•FuBdepth sipes

ttersflia $ 4 0 . 8 8
1051W1U $ 4 2 . 6 7

K »is n ij $ 4 6 .0 7
its iin ij $ 4 8 .5 2
i D u n u $ 5 0 .9 7
2»7SR1S $ 5 3 . 3 1
W d l'..
1 ______

FU EL
f
INJECTION
CLEANING
Rag. S49.es

|

SALE

|

*39.95*1

1 %vitn -

DAYTONA 9 RADIAL S/R
' Mllgau g u a r a n i a o p l « n
• All-bwc* o n Irw a d d o a ig n

MUFFLERS
LIFETIME
W A R R A N TY

From 36*95
CATALYTIC
CONVERTER
From 1 2 4 .9 5

&gt;■

Jooon

1111.41

BIG T TIRES AUTO SERVICE

u s is n u $ 4 7 .3 3

■

dot

Crach i
dot El
Huber &lt;
Franco.

Buy D.iylon tiro* and car service on rovolvfng charge.

w a rs n u $ 4 4 . 5 5

hack singles will) two out In tile
fourth Inning.
The only Cub base runners
nfler lhal reached via n walk and
an error by the Royals. Anderson
finished wllh eight slrlkcouls.
Kirby led the Royals will) iwo
doubles and a run scored. Shef­
field finished with u double uud
two RHI. Majors laid a double,
one run. und an RHI. Ralonarong
doubled und scored a run.
T illm a n finished wi th I wo
singles. Anton Anderson singled
und scored u run. Alex Anderson
also singled.
Rlchurdson. Woodward, und
Cleveland hud the only hits for
ihe Cubs.

Hove ion

S*a*toc
Ftrtl Ravmd
Amanda Coatrar Souta Atrrca. drt Kim ilo
D*N 14) Jap*" 4 1 4 1 Inet GorvarhoNgui
Argentina dal Michali* J a g g e r d la i
Auttraua 4 14 1
Silvia Forma IteN drt Gabraia Sabatmi
ill Argentina 1* 01 4 1 Sandra Cacihrn,
Italy dot Amy t r a it* HochoyNr Hillk
Mien 14 4 1.11
Markota kothia Germany, oat Tracy
Aurtm Redondo Beach Ca'.t 44. 4 t. Lon
M c N e il M oviton dal C aro lina V it
Name# iendt t * 4 I
Arantaa Sanchar Vo ana (11, Spam. d*t
Ftoroncta Cabal. Argentina a A 0 I; Sitka
I rank) Germ any, dot ( i n r G e rm a n
Jack ion i III, Moutton a 1 4 k * I
Na'haii* Ta u lla l Franc* dal Boot#
Remtladwr Authi* 1 ) 0 ! HoNna Sukata
11)1. Crach Republic ikl Ltucanca Caurtoik.
Be gium t ). M
No*Ha Van Lotlum Franr* del L&gt;nda
Ftrrando Italy. * 1 . 4 ! Iva Maiai. Craatia
0*1 Demin.quo Monam. Halg'vm. 4 1.11
Hydra Oobkove Crach Republic. d*&gt;
Rachel Main,man Auttr*i&gt;4. 4 ) 1 1, I l
Pat** R UNr. Auttnct dal Lite Raymond
Wayne. P a . 14.4 1. It 4
Natalia Zvereva 111 Beierut dal k m e a
Tediekutuma inOanayia 4 4. 4 1 liika
Ma-ar Germany, dot Yana Kami*. Japan
* 1.4 1
Marianna W ar Pal Pal# Alto. Calif . dal
Pam Shriaor. Beitimere a 1. 41. Kortae
Ouentrnr France, dal Eva Memncove
C tech Hapvblk. 4 1 .1 4.4 *
Petra Langrova Crach Republic, dal
Baltina Fuk o VilNita Argentina. M l t t I
Alavia Dathaum* Ballarat. Franca, dat
EmanualaZardo Sw it tor land k i t I
Mary Ja* Fernanda* 1141. Miami, dat
Karina Habtudora Stovakia 4 t J A 4 1,
Call* Matfchi Georgia dat Cala'ma Criitay
Romania 4 1 .4 4 4 t
Ju lia H a la rd Fra n ta dat P atricia
Tarebim Argentina t i t ] Judith Wiaknar
Auktrla dal Patra Kamttra Nathariandt
M at
Brenda Schuitr. Nathariardk. dtl Paota
Suarar Argtnt.no 4 1.41 Anna Smethnov*

N H L PLAYO FFS
All l i m t i E O T
C O N F E R E N C E FIN A LS
(B a d *111
E A S T E B N C O N F IR IN C E
N a w Ja rw y a t N Y Bangtrr
New Jar ray Node te n e t) 1
Wadnatdar. May tt
N Y Rangartal New Jerk* v F t o p m
Friday, May 11
Ntw Jar iaT al N Y N anger t ! M p m
natettery

R tnaber*

Stoitenborg Auitrau* 14. &gt;4. * ». * V I I .
Dimitri Poliakov Ukraine dtl Grant Slat
hud. South A f r ic a * ! 14(1 4). 4*
Michael Chang III Hander urn Nar drt
Jim Or abb Tucton A n t *1 14 I I I) i t .
Radom'r Veto* Crech Hapublk * 1 r r u o i
E l Aynpoui Moroccb 4 1. 4 4 14 144)

Ikreel. dtl Jane Novotna ( I ) ,
public. 4 4.41
Shaun Stolferd. Oalrwirlll#,
Makarov*. Ruklla. 4 ). * tf Ank*
Gar many, dtl Sandrln* Ttitv d .

INSTALLED

Whllw LMIar
20B70R14
aiBTORU
22B70R14
22970R1S
33B70R1S
2BS70R1B
21803(113
243807113
27360013

$ 5 6 .4 0
$ 5 0 .4 0
$ 6 2 .0 2
$ 6 4 .4 6
$ 6 6 .5 6
$71.81
$63.12
$ 7 2 .1 4
$ 7 8 .7 8

c

v

JOINT
BOOTS

74.95

*

INSTALLED
MOST CARS

A/C R E C H A R G E

*24.95

INCLUDES ONE CAN OF FREON

m

xpress

Broke

B.F. Goodrich
a

SpeciaNsts
IN .MlllllllN Ml MV» milt MAi.INI* *V) UM I H WWAl.l HINI* VIA 1A M IIM I l)N
IAI UMINVIHI \ I AMl*A SI n n OIK. HACINI. I'llis MIAMI iHIIIIMOlHsHKHI US'

From

49*95

PtotoikJoncd

Wheel
B d a n c fn g

x i « d f c 2 5 l L S if if i.

M il.

i Lube &amp;
Oil C h a n ge
j f l i w

s

s

�Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Wednesday, May 25, 1094 -

jb

People
Cook of the Week

IN B R IE F
Two women study with master artists
SANFORD — Tw o Sanford residents arc participating In an
unusual culutural program llila spring at the Atlantic Center
for the Arts. In New Syninia heat h.
Debra Wllk. a free-lance tlesklop publisher, and Sonlu
ureenlee. a free lance writer, are working with poet Diane dl
I rtnm and Journullst/novellst Hebe Moore Campbell, respective­
ly, tn .1 Hirer week residency, through June 4.
Wllk. who has licrii published loeully and won several
first-place writing awards at Seminole Community College, and
Urrrnler will join other associate artists to work with dl Frlriia
and ( ampbell on built Individual and collulMirullve projects.
I heir rfforls will tx- presented in u public program June II.
Atlantic Center for the Arts is a non profit. Interdisciplinary
community foundrd In 1062 to allow mid-career artists to work
with Master Artists.

Learn more about fiber arts, weaving
— Audrey Smith will presenf u program on
Treadling Methods •Expanding the I'nsslbllltles of Tradlllonal
Weave Structures" at the Maitland Art Center. 231 Pack wood
Avenue, on Saturday. June 4. at lOa.tn.
The program Is being presented by llie Weavers of Orlando,
for more Information conlact president liernu Lnwenstrln at
831-3 194.

CALENDAR
Alanon gathers
If you know, or live with on alcoholic, thrre is help.
Al anon Is an anonymous, non profit organization, open to
anyone who is a relative or frlrnd of an alcnhollc
Serrnlty Won Afanon meets each Monday. Tuesday and
Thursday. (Thursday non-smoking) evening at 8 p.m. Meetings
are held In the back room of the Sahara Club, 2857 South
Sanford Ave . Sanford.
For additional meeting times and locations In the Centra!
Florida area, or for more Information, call 332-4122

Rotary meets early
Itotary Club of Lake Mary meets Thursday mornings.
7:30 8 30 a m at the Tlmacuan Country Club, on Rinehart
Hcwd Contact Hill Moore, president, at 323-1192

Weight Watchers meet on Thursdays
A local chapter of Weight Watchers meets at the Lake Mary

Community Hulldmg every Thursday from 4 45 toll 43 p m

Omni Toastmasters meet at Heathrow
The Omni Toast masters Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. every
Thursday at the AAA building. IOOO AAA Drive. Heathrow
Coll Sam Ryan ut 0 7 1-2050 for more Information.

Avid cook shares recipes from war, crock pot

i . a L
-IY
•-**
V o l un t ee r Ua
wo
r k , m a k i n g 6»
crahs. working In her beautiful
yard to name Just a Tew of the
endless Jobs Cook of the Week
Fran Morton does.
Murton and her husband C.E.
I Mur11 came In Sanford In 1902
when he was transferred tn this
urea by the Navy. They huve 2
children — Michael. who cur­
rently works (or the laike Mury
Elementary school system and
Michelle, a dental assistant In
Sanford. She Is also the mother
of Jayson, the Morton's only
grandchild.
Morion Is a retired technical
eng i n e er . S h e wo r k e d for
Deerbourn Sprague for 18 yrars
before she retired. Now she
enjoys life doing more of the
things she likes to do. One of her
biggest pleasures Is the volun­
teer work site does with the food
volunteer program In Sanford.
Crafts ure yet another big Interesl to Morion *'l make these
little kinds of ornaments." said
8
rssrs &gt;y Sssss ttsaa
Morton. Maybe something for
the Christmas tree, or something F r a n M o r io n Is h a p p y In Ih s k l l c h t n a n d th a y a rd .
made from a pine cone or even a the war and some wonderful cook on low setting for 6 lo B
cute little refrigerator magnet, rrrlpes that she will pre|ture In hours (on high selling for 2 to 3
whatever It is. she'll make || up herrrork pot.
houral.
for you.
Chicken Spectacular Is Just
Ser ve wi t h hot but t er ed
Morton Is also the lady Hun fine of the many rrr lpes for the
many of us see In our local food crock pot that Morton lias collec­ noodles, spooning sauce over
markets giving nut those free ted ovrr the years. “ It is such a top.
4 to 0 servings (about 2
samples and coupons. " I ’ve been tasty dish and. of course, when
quarts).
doing "couponing" for 10 years you can use the crock pert. It
•Turkey may be substituted
now/' Morton said.
makes It that much caster to for chicken.
Morton really enjoys spending prepare "
as much time us she ran out in C H I C K E N D I V A N A LA CHICKEN SPECTACULAR
3 cups cut up. cooked chicken
the yard will) C.E. They both CROCK POT
1 ran ( 1(1 n/.| cut green brans
work estremely long and hard
2 to 3 cups cooked, cut-up or peas, drained
on their yard and there Is no chicken* (largechunk*)
2 cups cooked rtce
doubt us In their perservunre
14 small onion, chopped
I can f 1044 oz.) condensed
once you get a look at the
1 ran (10 V, ojt.) condensed cream ol celery soup
loveliness of their yurd and cream of chicken soup
Mr cup mayonnaise
Dower tied*.
14 cup mayonnaise
1 can (0 nr 814 o/J water
Morton, who is an avid rook m
3 rt.sp n«ur
chestnuts,
drained and sliced
her own home, owes u lot of her
2 stalkscelrry. thinly sliced
2 Tbsp chopped pimento
ifxiklng skills to the early days
I
package l it) o/,| frozen 2 Tbsp finely chopped onion
of World War II and her growing broccoli spears, thawed and cut
C o m b i n e all I ng r ed i e n t s
up years at Imine In Logunvllle.
Into l-lnch pieces
thoroughly. Four Into greased
Ua. Morton likes to stay within
14 tsp curry powder
crock pot. Cover and cook on low
so many fat grams and watches
I Tbsp, lemon Juice
setting for 4 to 8 hours.
the cholesterol when she pre­
Hot buttered noodles
4 servings (about 2 quarts).
pare* the meals for herself and
In medium howl, thoroughly CHICKEN CURRY
ter hustiurul. However, today, combine all ingredients except
2 whole chi cken breasts,
she will share some of her noodl es. 1’iiu r I nto l l ght i y
boned
rerl|M-s that came about during greased crock pot. Cover and
14 cup butler or m argarine

--

COOK OP
TH IW E EK

RENEE
K E IT H

W cup flour
IV4 tap, salt
Dash pepper
214 cups milk
14 cup dry sherry
2 green onions with tops,
finely chopped
I tsp. curry powder
Fluffy rice or saffron rice
Cut chicken Into small pieces:
set aside, tn saucepan, rnrlt
butler: blend In (lour, salt and
pepper until smooth. Gradually
■tlr In milk. Cook and stir over
medium heat untl thickened and
smooth. Four Into crock pot. Stir
to chicken, sherry, green onions
and curry powder. Cover and
cook on low setting for 4 to 8
hours.
Taste for seasoning. Before
serving, thicken with a
Dour-and-water paste. Serve over
hot rice.
4 servings (about 114 quarts).
Double recipe for 5-quart crock
pot.

POOR M AN’S PUDGE C A K E
.2 cups sugar
3 cups flour
6 Tbsp. (heaping) cocoa
14 tsp. salt
V» cup vegetable oil
1 cup cold water
1 tsp. white vinegar
1 tsp. vunillu
Mix dry Ingredients together.
Make a well In middle of mixture
and udd oil. water, vinegar and
vantllu. Mix with wooden spoon
(not electric m ixer).
Make In baking pan at 350*F.
for V4 hour.

(Rtn«« Ksllh Is a S a nford
Harald correspondent and ,Cook

ol the Week columnist. Plsass
submil nomlnallons lor tbs
wsskty texture to 321-0744.)

Zucchini soup, with hot sausage, can be a meal in its e lf
In the vegetable alpliuhrt " Z "
ts for zucchini. If you ever had n
few plants growing In your
garden you know that this
squash plant Is u great producer
and once It start* there seems lo
be no end to the number ol
zucchini you will have. He pre
pured lo serve them In many
different way*. The versatile
squash can tie used for soup,
jams, breads, cakes and endless
dishes If getting your zucchini
from produce stundx or local
grocers, select small, dark green,
unblemished squash.
Soup that contains zucchini
enchanced by Italian herb* cun
be a meal In Itself. Just udd
bread sticks and a light dessert.
ZUCCHINI SOUP
1 lb. hot sausage*
2 lbs. zucchini squash, finely
chopped
2 cups celery, chopped
3 cults |10 oz.) tomatoes,
chopped
1 cup onions, chopped

MICROWAVE
MAOIC

M ID G E
M YCOFF

1 tsp. sugar
I tsp. oregano
1 tsp. Italian seasoning
1 clove gurllc. minced
I green pepper, chopped
In 4-quuri casserole, break up
sausage. Cover with wax paper.
Microwave on 100 percent power
5 minutes. Drain. Add remain­
ing Ingredients. Recover und
microwave 20 minutes on 100
percent (xiwer, stirring once or
twice.
•You can substitute mild
sausage or ground beef for the
hot sausage In this recipe.

A vrgetable casserole Is always
a tasty addition In a meal
ZUCCHINI CASSEROLE
3 slices iiacon. rooked and
crumbled
4 cups thinly sliced zucchini
I egg
1 ciqi sour cream
1 Tbsp. sour crrain
1 Tbsp flour
&gt;4 c u p s h r e d d e d s h a r p
Cheddar cheese
14 cup buttered toasted bread
crumbs
Mlcro-rook baron on u paper
plate with paper towels 3-4
minutes on 100 percent power
or until ertap. Set aside to cool,
then crumble Into small pieces.
Rinse zucchini and cut Into
even pieces about 14-Inch thick.
Flare In u 114 quart casserole
with 2 tublesjxKins water. Cover
with plastic wrap, vented.
Microwave on 100 percent
i t 0-7 minutes, stirring after
3 minutes. Mix bacon, egg. sour
I k &gt;w

cream. Dour unit cheese evenly
together. Stir Into drained zuc­
chini Microwave on 100 percent
3 minutes. Sprinkle buttered
bread crumbs and cheese over
top. then microwave 2 more
minutrsoii too percent power.
A strata ts merely layers of
bread, grated cheese, vegetables,
herbs, topped wllh eggs and
milk. It can he served for
breakfast, lunch or dinner. Be­
fore conking It needs to chill for
8-24 hours so it Is moist und
creamy throughout.
ZUCCHINI-CORN STRATA
2 Tbsp. oil
t cup thinly sliced mushrooms
14 cup chopped celery
3 grren onions, thinly sliced
6 slices whole grain bread,
crusts removed and cut Into
l -lnch rubes
2 cups (8 oz. ) shredded
Mozzarella cheese
2 cups thinly sliced zucchini

1 cup Irrsb nr canned, drained
eorn kernels
4 eggs
2 cups m ilk

2 Tbsp. Dijon mustard
44 tsp black pepper
14 tsp. salt
14 tsp ground nutmeg
In a 3-quart casserole, com­
bine the oil. mushrooms, pepper,
celery, unions. Stir well to coat
with oil. Microwave on lOO
percent power 2 minutes. Trans­
fer the mixture to u small bowl.
Add uddlllonul oil to Hie casse­
role tf necessary so thut the
bottom und sides ure lightly
greased.
Fluec about half the bread
cubes In the bottom of the
casserole and sprinkle half the
cheese on top. Spoon the
mushroom m txturr over the
cheese, then arrange the zuc­
chini and the corn on top.
layering l cup of the zucchini,
all the com. uud the remaining
zucchini. Cover wllh the re­

m a i n i n g b r ead c u be s a n d
cheese.
In u medium bowl brut the
eggs. milk, muslurd. suit. pepper
und nutmeg until blended. Ladle
over the casserole. Cover tightly
with a lid or plastic wrap und
refrigerate for 8-24 hours.
Uncover the casserole and
microwave on 70 percent power
lined.-high) for 30-35 minutes,
or until set and heated through.
Use a rubber spatula or fork and
gently Insert It around the edges
to release the egg mixture for
even cooki ng. Let stand 5
minutes before serving.

(Midge Mycofl Is • csrtlllsd
horns economist snd coordinator
ol the Single Parent Displaced
Homemakers Program at Saminola Community Collage. Sand
quaatlona about microwave
cooking to her at the Sanford
Harald, 300 N. French Ave.,
Sanlord, 32771 or phone: 3231450, exl. 360.)

Famous kiss, couple unknown

|WEDNESDAYS PRIME TIME

■

6 00 I fi 30 I ; 00 I MO I B 00 | B 10 I 0 00 I &lt;) JO | 10 00 | 10 30 | 11 00 | 1I 30

hETUTtTRJ

DEAR ABBYt Al the end of
World War II. someone took u
p i c t u r e that appear ed on
newsreels. It showed a sailor,
wearing his sailor's suit, kissing
a nurse, wearing u white un­
iform. on the dock of u ship.
As I recall, the sailor hud Just
gotten off the ship, it was Aug.
14. 1045 - V -J Day - marking
the end of the wur with Jnpun.
Docs anybody know the name of
the ship?
M.E.C.. SEAMAN
FIRST CLASS, WW It
DEAR M.E.C.t The picture of
Hie sailor enthusiastically kiss­
ing the nurse wus a random-shot
tuken by Alfred Elscnsludt, u
photographer with Life maga­
zine. He Is now 95 years old und
Is still with Life.
According to Paul Artxir, syn­
dication malinger of Life Picture
Sales, that famous picture was
taken In Muuhuttnn ut Times
Square, not on u dock. Life
published this photo In a scries
of M shots Inside tlic muguzlnc.
llowcvcr.it wus ycurs Inter be­
fore the picture was selected for
a cover.
Arbor said It Is now one of the
three most famous pictures
published In Life. Believe It or
not. Life muguzlnc docs not
know the name of the sailor’s
ship — or the names of the sailor
or the nurse.
DEAR ABBYt Tell "Dick In

™

ADVICI

f

f n ** tlsss m t l r i U/l
gestion
for the man who wanted
to know how to get marbles In
the medicine cabinet. Mukc a
"Jar" out of Ice; fill It with
marbles and place It tn the
cabinet. When the Ice melts you
have marbles loose In the cabi­
net.
STEVE FROM CENTER CITY
DEAR STEVEi How do you
make a "Jar" out of Ice?

.in n iln t i

t
ABIG AIL
VAN BUREN

_/ \_\lcY\Y\4i\t\
Walnut Creek. Calif." to empty u
shelf In his medicine cabinet and
hold a piece or cardboard ugulnst
the space to make a pocket Into
which he can put marbles. Close
the door on the cardboard, then
pull the cardboard out. Be pre­
pared for some laughs.
I did It once to see If I had any
snoopy guests, and It paid ofT. A
guest was in the bathroom when
my wife and I henrd the racket of
marbles hitting the sink!
The guest came out with a red
face and walked right out of the
front door. Wc couldn't stop
laughing.
RICK M„
WEST CONCORD, MASS.
DEAR ABBYt I have a sug­
' MOV 11:1 A HO r r r T r r
i
8r ■. rs
-----*kr/.17-«.Strt&lt;H j j

8:30
BEVERLY ILLS COP III
DEMOLITION MAN [910:35
NO PASSES

1

■ TH O I
f

*

ru m

M A V E R IC K

700 4:407.100.50

(POJ

1 3 N IN G A S K IC K B A C K
215 4:10 700 700

C LEA N S LA TE
2307.10

*

|
I

(PC)

(po-in

W IT H H O N O R S
4:45 0:15

(PO-IJI

I B E V E R LY H IL L S C O P 3 1
*
210 4:30 7:15 0 30 ("1
JU R A S S IC P A R K
3.004:40 7:00 7.40

(P01J)

4 W E D D IN G S A N D
A FU N ER AL
230 4:30 7:10 430
TO
W H EN

A M AN

LO V ES

210 4:45 730 7:45

TO

TH E CROW
2304.30 7:308:40

TO

SJ IS f OH All MOVIES St AMDUG
Ut TWLLtl -1106

�T T™ V i

- Ssnlord Hgrsid, Sanford, Florida - Wadntaday, May 25, 1B94

Study: Genes
may promote
aggression
AP Selene# Writer
PHILADELPHIA — People who habitually get
Into argument# and fight# or throw temper
tantrum# can blame some of It on their genea, a
atudy of twins suggests.
Genes may account for 27 percent to 40 percent
of a person's tendency toward Irritability and
several kinds of aggressiveness, according to the
study. The rest comes from childhood and
current experiences, researcher Dr. Emil Coccaro
said.
The genes believed responsible have not been
Identified yet. but they may act by reducing the
brain's supply of serotonin, which acts as a brake
on aggressive responses, he said..
If so, drugs that help the brain keep up Its
serotonin supply might help In treating people
with aggressive tendencies, he said. Some
preliminary evidence already suggests such
drugs might work, he said.
Coccaro Is director of the Clinical Neuroscience
Research U n it at the Medical College of
Pennsylvania In Philadelphia. He presented the
work Tuesday at the annual meeting of the
American Psychiatric Association.
He and colleagues surveyed 182 Identical twins
and 110 fraternal twins, drawn from a registry of
male twins who had served In the military. Their
average age was 44. and nearly all were white.
Researchers often study twins to ferret out
genetic Influences. The reason Is that Identical
twins share all their genes, while fraternal twins
share only about hair their genes on average. So
when Identical twins are more alike than fraternal
twins In a certain characteristic. It can be taken
as a sign of genetic Influence. Researchers can
use results to estimate the strength of the genetic
Influences.
The twins filled out a questionnaire that asked,
for example, whether they bang a table when
angry and whether they respond to shouting by
shouting back. Thetr answers were then tabu,
luted Into scores for Irritability and three types of
aggression.
Th e analysis suggested that Indirect ag*
gresslon. which basically means taking out one's
anger on objects or throwing tantrums, had the
strongest genetic Influence. An estimated 40
percent of this trait was attributed to genes.
Irritability was second with 38 percent, then
direct aggression, which means hitting people,
with 33 percent. Last came verbal aggression,
which basically means screaming and cursing,
with 27 percent.

A new way to
plug Into
computer services
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS — Not many months from
now. people will be able to plug the cable
television line Into the back of the family
computer and get faster, cheaper access to a
range of services.
Several companies are developing powerful
devices that link personal computers to cable T V
lines, called cable modems, to bring this about.
They're showing them off at the National Cable
Television Association’s convention here.
The cable modems can move text, voice and
pictures 1.000 times faster over cable T V lines
than standard telephone modems, which people
currently use to send and receive Information
from their personal computers over telephone
lines, executives of companies developing the
cable modems said Tuesday.
Those devices have more horsepower because
cable television lines can carry more Information
than telephone lines do now. "Th e cable pipe Is
falter," said Avram Miller, vice president of
corporate business development for Intel Carp.,
which Is developing a cable modem with Oeneral
Instrument Corp.
Digital Equipment Corp. also Is developing a
cable modem and Zenith Electronics Corp. has
one completed.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
poopta. pad and

(nPreMgm M M tot m o w

' L P0 I PZ

A 8 T *•

w o i w u o

v k z i

LZVMTI
IIMTIZ.

KZ

FOIMFO,
z a e w

BB

I I L I

AB
Z

LUU.'

OOTAX
BMUUOF.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ‘The price one pays for
pursuing any profession or calling Is an Infimais
knowledge of Its ugly skis* — James Baldwin.

OFF THE LEA8H® by W.B. Park

Legal Notices
NOTICE OP PUBLIC AUCTION
Notice li hereby given:
McConnell Towing will Mil at
Public Auction tor Mlvogo for
ceth on domond to high**!
blddtr. th* following detcrlbed
vehicle*:
TOBuIck

4J47AAGIJ071S
0-11-04
MOidt
iu ? R A E »tm
0-1004
70Chevy
I44J00U IW JI
Tho eviction will bo hold ot
11-00 pm on Mid dottt obovo.
Mr Conn*11 Towing S ttocovory
MOO Sanford Avo Sanford Flo.
m i l Prowoctlvo bidder* moy
Ifttpoct vohktoo on* Naur prior
to m i * Tormt or* c*«h or
cortlflod (undo. McConnel Tow­
ing rotary** th* right to accopt
or rotoct ony and all bid*.
PubllUc'May 21. 1004
o e r tot

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando •Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

CLASSIFIEDDEPT.
HOURS

831*9993
PRIVATE PARTY RATES

KcoragcuHvgttmw_____ S7tsNn«

AJL-B .-3 0 P .il.
MONDAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A SUNDAY

7 consecutive tom _____ 70s a Unt

3eonsgcuUv* timo*._____H illing
Ittms______________11.19s ling
Rates art pmIssue, based on 3 Kras
* 3 linos Minimum

NOW ACCEPTING

8efto»Mnq moy ektudo Herald AtfiotbMisItw coilol an eddwonol day
Cancof whonyouget toeUtt Poyonty lor O*,# your id haw at rato earned
Um W daocrlpOon to* taetMl roorttk Copy mutt toaow acceptable typo
grepTvcat form -CorntnercMl koquoncy fatM are ovartobto

IM R I: F O R F IIT U IIO F
ONUS HANDOUN. F ABRIOUI
oiNATtoMAL r u t m ,
U .170M U.S. CUR RIN C Vi
t m n u s currency
NOTICR OF FORFEITURE
FROCIIOINO
TO: IvenCobrora
Ml Northwottom Avonut
A Moment* Spring*.
Florid* J im
end ell othor* who dolm on
Intorott In th* following
p7 m m y h a n o o u n .

PAERIQUE OSNATIONAL im iT ti
12,177 00 U.S. CURRENCY!
*77100 US. CURRENCY
Donald F. Etlmgor. of the
Seminole County Shorttr* Ot
Ik*. Semlnato County. Florid*,
through hit ottkor*. invottfge
tor* or agontt, Mltod th* obovo
property on April l*. 1*04. at or
n*«r Ml Northwottom Avonu*.
Alternant* Spring*, Somlnoto
County, Florid*, and I* pro*
ontly holding Mid property lor
th* purpoM ot l*rt*ltur* purw
ant to Socttoxta OH 701 70*. 7 lor
Id* Statute*. and will REQUEST
that an Honor*bi* Judge ot th*
Circuit Court, Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, lomlnol*
County. Florida, find probable
Chiu that lh* above property
thouid b* torf*n*d to the above
agency You wilt to Mnt a copy
Ot tho Order finding Probable
Cave* one* It I* ttgntd by th*
Judge and tt will advlM you how
and when to rotpond to thli
roquet! lor tor tellur*
I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy ot tfui
Notice wo* Mnt to ftw above
named eddretiet by U .l
certified mall, return receipt
roquettod. thl* 17th day *1 May.
10*4
MARYANN KLEIN
LBOALCOUNSEL
Florida Bar No.: f iz*3t
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHIRIFF'S OFFICE
IMS Mth ttroot
tanlerd. Floridanrneoee
Teteehanoi i « h uoaati
Cei ntiee Reei lei epgeg tot t n
PubUW M a y t^ tl S June*, a.
1004
DER I7J f, | , ,, ,

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR IIM INOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PRORATE OlVIIION
FILE NUMRIE t4 4*» CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
CRETE LUClOdeCOROOVA
*/k/aCRETHE deCOROOVA
*/k/a GRETA LUCIO
deCOROOVA
NOTICE OF
A DMINI1T RATION
Th* edmlnlilrattan *1 the
otfato ot CRETE LUCIO do
CORDOVA a/k/o O R C T H I
doCORDOVA a/k/a GRETA
LUCIO deCOROOVA. dacaatod,
File Number 74447 CP, It pend­
ing In the Circuit Court tor
Semlnela County. Florida.
Probale Division. Ih* addrett ot
which I* lomlnol* County
CourthouM. Sanford. Florida.
12772-S7I 7. Th* name* and
addro**** Ol th* portonal repr*
tentative and th* portanol rep
rotontatlv*'* attorney are Ml
torth below.
A LL IN TE R E S TE D PER ­
SONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All perton* on whom thli
notice It terved who have ob
lectloni that chellong* Ih* valid­
ity of th* will, th* qualification!
of tn* pertonal repretantatlvo.
venue, or |urltdlctlen ol thli
Court or* required to III* Ihelr
ab|ecllone with thl* Court
W ITH IN T H E L A T E R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
OATC OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE
D ATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All creditor* ol th* decodont
and othor poroent having claim*
or demand* agalntl docodenl't
ottat* an whom a copy ol thl*
nolle* It torvod within thro*
monthi oltor th* data ot Ih* tlrtt
publication ol thli nolle* mutt
III* tholr clalmt with thli Court
W ITH IN T H E L A T E R OF
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OP THIS NOTICE OR
THIRTY OAYS AFTER THE
DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All other creditor* ol ih*
decedent and pertorn having
clalmt or demandt agalntl th*
decodenl't ottoto mutt fit* tholr
clalmt with thli court WITHIN
THREE MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLI­
CATION OF THISNOTICE.
A LL CLAIMS, DEMANDS
AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO
PILED WILL HE FOREVER
BARRED.
Tho dal* ol th* flrtt public*
tlon of thli Nolle* It May li.
1704,
Portowl RoprMentally*:
WIOGOMELVIN JOHANSON
Tent* UlrlkkM Vol 44 B
Otto, Norway 07*4
Attorney (or Pertonal
Repretonfatlvo:
THOMAS R. ALLEN ESQUIRE
THOMAS R. ALLEN. P A
HONIOMAN MILLER
SCHWARTZ AND COHN
P.O. Box 1471
Orlando, Florida m o l 2471
Attorney lor Pertonal
Reprttenlellv*
Florida Bar No. OMSK
Tolophono: 407/4440300
M iy 111 June 1,1774
PuWSS‘•«.l
DER-30S

Tuoeday thru Fndoy 11 Noorf Th* Day Brtbro Pubkcahon
Sunday 13 Noon Friday -SAondayS 10 P M Truey

ADJUBTMBNTB ANO CRBOhV: Inthe strant of ansmr Inan
ad, tha i sntorB HsrsM w* be roaponrtSU lor m* first
inssrSon only an# onty to «w eassnt of 0*» cost of that
Inesrtien. Pteeee cfweb yeur e«l Ssr e s e u n ty tfw flrst Bey It

11—F f i e w i t s

15-tp e c U I Notices

Fro* modi cal cars, tn
latlan, cownMiing. private
Sector plut living oiponeet
Bar r r o tll Clearwater Attorney
John Prftkor..... 7-77»nM*77
O C N TLIM IN . Looking tar re
taxation? Looking tar light
touch body rubtt Doting?
Part lot7 Leak no further Coll
Diamond Mm* intortammwnt
40/ 33774S Now Htrtng

Share th* American dream
HS *■change itudenti arrlv
I. Call Ml 743H U
tag M Augutl,
•r 331 714*7* I (07 III 1147

HOST FAMILIES NIEOCD

WILLIAM A BRA0SMN
contact RoSocca at wort

Ltgal Notices
IN THS CIRCUIT COURT.
BIONTBBNTN JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT. IN ANO FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
ProSota Dtvltten
CASS NO. 77777 CP
FLORIDA BAR HO. IM777
In Re- Etlata el
JAMESM WISDOM.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Th* odmf nit trot ion *1 Ih*
Mtat* ot JAMSS M WISDOM,
d e fe a te d . Ca t* N um ber
01 777 CP. It pending In th*
Circuit Court tar Seminal*
County. Florida. Probata Olyl
tlon. th* addrett at which It 301
N. Park Av*, Santord. Florida
33771. Th* namot and addrettot
of th* pertonal reprttenlellv*
and th* pa rta na l roproMntatlvo’t attorney are Ml
All Interettod portent
required i* rue with tntt a
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THS FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOT ICE i III *M 4l*tm*
eeelnel lbs aetata and ttt any
•Election b e .a n inter**'**
perton to whom tali nolle* wa*
mailed that chalkngot the &lt;*iid
ify rt the wilt, in* quailtkettan*
ot lh* portonal ropretenlelivo,
venue, or |urltdJetIon ef in*
court
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ot tnit None* hat
begun on May 3 1 1f*4
Pertonal Repretantatlvo
Nor In* Motion
n « Lagoon Drive
Oviedo. Florida33741
Attorney tar Portanal
Rtor Mental iv*
J. William Matter*, tl
3143 Curry Ford Read
Orlando, Florid* 3271J
Telephone (4071 (73 1*4*
Publlth: May H S June 1.1774
OER 171

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE B IO H TIIN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CRIMINAL CASE NO.:
741747-CFA
SCSO INCIDENT NO.i
747117(747
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF
1M4CHRYSLER LEEARON
VINIIC3BC3SEIG01I337S
NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
PROCBBOINO
TO: TtwaA. Henry
*( Avalon Court
Cottolborry. Florid*33707
and all other* who claim an
inla ra tl In th* (allowing
17*4CHRYSLER LEBARON,
V IN I1C3BCSIE IOC) 13370
Donald F. Elllngtr, of lh*
Seminole County Shorlirt 04
flea. Seminole County, Florida,
through hit officer*, Invotllgatort or ogonti, toliod Ih* above
property on April 17, 1774, at or
noor Slat* Read 434 and Anchor
Rood, Allamonto Spring*. Semi­
nole County, Florida, and It

'■nsietif'

•or th* purpot* rt tartaftur*
purtuont to faction* 731.7*1-7*4,
Florida Statute*. and will RE­
Q UEST that an Honorabla
Judo* ol th* Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit,
Samlnoto Caunty, Florida, rind
probable caute that th* above
property thouId be forfeited to
th* afaov* agency You will be
torn a copy *( th* Order Hr
Probable Caute one* It It tl
by th* Judgo and It will *&lt;____
you how and when to rotpond to
this roquMt tor torloltur*.
I HEREBY CERTIFY THAT
a true and correct copy ef (hit
Notice wet tent to th* above
named addrettot by U.S.
certified mall, return receipt
roquMted, this 17th day of May.
1774.
MARYANN KLEIN
LEGAL COUNSEL
Florida Bar No.: ami?
SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'SOFFICE
1WJ Jllti Street
Sanford, Florida 33773-7377
Tatapfienai (407)3334473
Certlltod Receipt IP34J 437310
Publlth: MayOl. 17 i Juno I, I,
1774
DER-I7I

2 7— N u r s e r y *
C h ild C e r e
CHILO CARE Lak* Mary Blvd
area Mato ar tomato. 1 yrt S
u&gt; 31 yr fMldent 337 14*1
DIBARV AREA. F/T epaningt
tor i mi /* tod m a taving.
learning. tm*a* Ire* env
Fenced yard, pet* Near l a
Real rata* Reft
Call 0100 4774** 7077

97—T r a v e l
WANTED: OSoett end Oobitot
Join ut tar * Meimlmg good
time en our 7 ntfM Haitowoew
crwtt* on Ih* tewlih ilartmg
Oct It
Call Jacktoet
G* Travel N i r o H U

"U ^ B u s in e s s
Opportunities
VINOINO ROUTE: Tired *1
get rich qukk dealtt Want a
good. tend, real butawti'
Wegetittprkedtaieit
________10*0 *3047(7________
WANT ID Partner to tovett in
the aweung 4 canopy buwneti
Law manay far a very
lucrative bwtinee* D ! Ttt »■**

4 1— M o n e y to L e n d

KEEP0B1Y1B6 AMDSTlli
CCTTW MOBITI
AM you newd I* your title Jack
Dt*m*nd lev kpgetntment
NS 1017

T i~ H s le W s g ;

M A N T ID '^ N ^ to T rS :

weight newt No willpower
re q vlra lt I 00\ natural
Decter recommended lOOta
guorentaed_________ 3*3 loot
AGO TO TOUR INCOME
SELL AVON NOWI
CALL 333*41? or t i l 4331

KOYEKm iNC SALES
tmmodleta opening! (II In
lid* tatot. hourly plut com
mitt ton 111 N hourt weekly |
Setot or cuttamer tervica etp
detirabto III Quttld* tatot
Salary plut cemmlwton Ad
tatot eep/knowledge detlra
bla. Require* anthutlatm.
good cammunkallen skillg
Carporet* benetltt Apply In
perton. mail ar lea return* to
Pam Raynor, Seminole Pen
nylover. 40? N Hwy 17 71.
Longw ood 3377* F e e .
4*7474 JAM

For commercial cleaning
company. Downloam Santord
area Oood utary. Call b*
tweonTAM SPM.......1*3 7131

Commercial Laundry Service
Hood* dependable pari lime
help Several potlliont avail
abto. Call lor appointment
337-1141

Full lim* Am or Pm odiltt*.
Porry't Family Rottauraat
Altamonte Mail, upper level.
Next to N o g --------------

CeHsrsd MirWs Msnilsc.

HAIRSTYLIST NEEDED
With cltontele. Full or pari
dm*. Call 3317114

WE NEED WORKERS
Gaily work, dally pay. Report
S 30 Am. 7401 Park Drive.
Sanford, or can 177 74( 1. i U
tor Sab altar J Pm

HOUSEKEEPING SUPERVISOR
Mutt have heutekeeping
, tvporvitor eiperienc* In a
healthcare telling Knowledge
el OBRA and OSHA re
qulrementt highly dotirabi*
Drug tree work place Apply
within
Oebary Metier
MN Hwy 17 (I
Oebary, FI
Mt tea m m _______

Apply 3 4PM. Hobday Howto
RMtpuraol. Hwy 17 71 near
Lak* Mary A drug tree
workplace

DRIVERS NEEOCO

LANDSCAPERS
Fulltime

S p r in k l e r

LAUNDRY AnENDANT
Part time Experienced
Weth'Ory'f o'd Apply
Semtneto Center Lavdremal
I Maimer I Plate t
3771 Ortaade Dr, St alord

MAIDS
Jem lorvkeMato and be h*r*
e ve ry day with high quality
work and you can oara tha
right to work tram ham* Ar*
toadert average WO p&gt;u* a
■eat It you hay* atoakad far
ether maid earvkee cat! today
and you can tlart ternary*•!

W IVES S WANTED
Qualitwd exp produce heutor
Long dlttenc*. C O L retp/'-ed
Clean M VR Call tar apptka
(ton
477 3 N IMS 7A m 7Pm

DRTWAU PATCH PERSON

EASY wont

_____

HAL'S UPHOLSTERY

CNA
Openmgt tor an thrltt Pleat*
Hinheaen Heeirht *,« Center
tt* Meltonv.lle Av*

• BXICUTIVB SICRETARY a

MEDICAL

NURSING ASSISTANT

I I P INDUSTRIAL SEWINC
MACHINE O PEIATOIS

All thitta Full lime and part
l&gt;m Only there* having cap*
riant# at a ttwauag Attrtlaal
to tong u r n car* mat borng
abto to tnaw proof of reg ttr*
lien to tee* in* court* or
challenge the let! w**n
applkatwr- ITtowtO agpiy Mwtl
he ter nftod n# letor than to
dayt *he» hire Drug Ire*
workpiece

Mon Thurt. Oil hr a w l dart
Pd ho)&gt;4*r S vacation ApoJy
*1: San Oel. »a e Oto Lak*
Mary Rd . Uatord U t N i l

E IP E R IE N U D COOKS
Need tar Santord area AM 4
PM thl III Inti itv) tonal
A p W r* '
IT* 3 (tatty Av*.
11314117

40 N Hwy 17 71
Oebary. FI
4*7 44**4M

FLOOR CLEANER
Strippor.'woear Pan lima
Lata haute It Pm (Am
Apply in per ten
to I bakery Mete r

attotowyirtt
Oebary. FI
77744S-47M ___
eOlNIRALWORKERSe
Ottk* tklllt to factory tklllt.
compkniat era hiring today*
PR IB RSOISTRATION
AAA IMPLOYMCNT
r**M tllhtl u t lift

GROUNDSPEASON
Needed tar large agar ImenI
community In Let* Mary
Full lima Summer only U hr

St. C/sti Apatlmtnh

321-nOf

111*1*1________

Experienced wpheltlery
peraen Cell tor epp) Ml r**»
MEDICAL

■ X C E L L S N T P A Y I Attam
bto preducM at home Can Tail
7 )0*1 TOO tot tt a e tx T Tee*
I K K I Local tirm neadi yewr
d.verti le d tt Hit Senahtt'
7 R ( I R I O U T S A T ION
AAA I M P L O T M I N T
770 W. 37AtS(. l i t 4)77

RN MANAGER
Full ttm*. 71 ihllt. weekondt
oft Eaporlenco In an acut*
car* totting and management
highly detJrabl* Com* end be
* part of th* changing trend in
long term car* Salary d*
pendent upon eager tone*

LPN
Full time end pert lime 7 and
13 hour thlltt aran abto Good
leader thip tklllt a mutt ON’t
and OPN't with prevltwt
leaderthip eaperitnc* alto
oneour aged t# *0*1»
Drug Ire* workplace
Apply In per ion
Oebary Manor
MN H w ylttl
Oebary. FI
77377B7737
Mf OICAL

LPN
11PM 7AM thlfl Full lime
Apply In per ton #1 Lakevtow
Hurting Center II* t Second
Street. Santord____________
FART TIM tO P P O R tU N ITIII
Available Call *17 lUt Atk
Brian tor detail*______ _

SOD LAYERS
No •aper tone•roquked
_______ CALL t») 7147_______

Tret tort
If you have I year* trac'or
trailer. O TR and tnaw and k*
aapartonca plut a good driving
retard, can
________I *707744077_______

(ARM tee**- Mere her Meat*
It you Save tour*g* cent
741(777 NSr. roc meg

s v s . in s t a l l e r

leper lanced

• L atoAAodel Canventtonel

( aperient** eniy need epp'r
Fat) ta in tar right per ten
__ 3t&gt; U M leave mattes*

MEDICAL

HELP!

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST

A Q CAR R IER S. Tavaret. FI.
a won etlabiithed end grow
Ing Central Florida bated
company offer t you
• I N tamper mil*
• Up to 11.077 m l perm*
d Stag Off Pay
• Unloading Pay
d Vat at ton Pay
a Safety B Per torment* Bonut
• Spoue* ■ Idtn* Program
0 Average Trip t 7Day*

LABORERS NEEDED Skilled
and untkllled. Dayt
Callbtlwotn I I
SPRINT STAFFINO, 1341*11

EXPERIENCED G R IU COOKS

Need* eiperienced Inttaltorv
Sel Up/ F Iber glMt Patching,
and F Inlthert Immodlitoly
CALL 474-7447 _____
Dynamic, eiperienced. Indl
vlduel needed tor mulll dlt
dpllnary ofIk* Scheduling,
collection. Inturanc*. phone
Mill*, recall, paltont relatlont
and comuptor literacy a mutt
That* with denial experience
need only apply Salary com
monturato with oiperlenc*
Available immedleltoly
774 771 4370

71 — H e lp W a n te d

RECEPTIONIST
Entry level Very heavy phene
work tor law title* tervrng
tow Income cemmimlty Typ
Ing 4? MFM. cemputor *-P
preferred, but wilt from Good
tpelllng. willing andorfanife
ttonal tkrlii Bilmpwal tkkl* *
pivt Eac benatiiti ttetumet
to Centre! flaaide Legal Sarv
ke* Inc 11? MagnaHa Av*
Santord 37771 by Jim* trd
177 7*77
FOE
Relerl

Head Cashier
FaN-TisM A Port Tistg
Hi(ft PorigtsisACo Ptfii
Ame-eda Met* hae an envra
bto repwtattovr lev eeralton
&lt;* eecoltant t e r v lt *
eecallonl preduct* and
aaceilant ampityment *p
partoiDiei tor pwal'ItoJ &gt;mh
viduat*
inlay lietrbi* icheduiet
patentiai tor aovancomeni
and benthtl which me lud*
S D U C A T I O N A l
A7II7TAHCI
Slwdy the epportumttot *t
Met* and met* them yourt
Per arktllional mlermelien
Slat um aOVJ/f Tl'l k ttwv
II 07 lingarad FL

AMERADA HESS
CORPORATION
Equal
M/F

♦unity emptoy*.

t s s t ts s s s s s s s s s s ts s s s s s ts s s s ttu s tu m m u i)

j

FLEET RESERVE-—

BIN G O

t

EAFILYB IflD S T H U R S D A Y S , 12:00 PM
3040 W ES T S .R . 48, S A N FO R D

!

t

•$12 Package •$20Double Package!

:
•

3 3 0 -1 7 0 6

:

Public Invited! Free Coffeel Kitchen Open! !

I$$$tss$ss$$$s$$$sti$s$s$t$$$$t$$t$$n$smstl

AfiENTS-AIAL ISTATEI
Nothing twcceedt ilk* toccata
Me re avell into our 3rd docad*
ol training tuccottful agontt
Nolle*) 1*01........... Mo’ll
WATSON REALTY CORP
REALTORS
313337*

A f PLIERS $11 HR
Me train local work.
_______ (13771 7777_______

ASSEMILIRS
Longwood company took!
hand mall procettort No ax
porlenc* necettary. t l por
hour.................. Never a toot
Help PstsebbsI, 1794AM
a ASSEMBLY*
Ready I* Mr* now. Will tralln.
FREE RSOI7TRATION
AAA EMPLOYMENT
TTOW.tStS Sf. 3331111

ROOT PERSON
Mutt hay* own tool*, tap In
heavy callltlon. Apply In
portent Atari Fr I. (AmlPm.
3401 Country Club Rd. Santord
3337S44__________

CARVER
To torv* moot to cuttomer* at
butlot. Will tram. Apply 1
4PM, Holiday Hout* Retlaurant, Hwy 17-71 noar Lake
Mery. A drug free workplace

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
CONSULTANT
Th* Santord Her4Id It now
Accepting application* lor the
clAiilttod dept. Requirement!
ar* : typing, 40 WPM and
•actlien:
•Iton! tpelllng and grammetical tklllt. Salat eaperl*nco It preferred. Salary plut
commit*Ion. Apply In perton
or tend return*. 300 N. French
Av* (Hwy T7-71) Santord.
Applicant! will b* contacted

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Caper lanced expanded dull**
Aiililent needed ter mulll
dlKlpllnary turglcal and prot th e llc re c o n tlru c liv e
practice. Energetic Individual
with tlrong Individual end
loam (kill*, willing lo go Ih*
oxlra mil*, a mutl. Salary and
banofllt commentural* with
experience. N 4 771-4344

Don’t Miff A Singlt IffUf!
LOCALXIWS•LOCALSPORTS•LOCALICtTOAULS
FtOFU-HULTX4FrT)atS-(OgCAnORiBUSMESI
Sitilttf 'I ll&gt; f tl'l

F U U TIME SUPERVISORS

AVON product*-10*4. tern lo
W% No door/door. RT/FT
Sandl 331 1173/1 IW 7441144

DISHWASHER

DBADUNKt
IN THS CIRCUIT COUST
OF T N I IIO N T IIN T H
•JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IIM INOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CRIMINAL CASINO, i
LOOItfO-CFA
SCtO I NCI (MINT NO. i

7 1 - H e lp W a n te d

7 1 - H e lp W ille d

N o tic e

C a r p e n tr y

FLORIDA STATE BCQUIRII
*11 contractor* b* regittored
or corlltlod To vorlfy a tlato
contractor* llconto call
1 (00 143 7*40 Occupational
Llconia* ar* required by Ih*
county end can be verified by
calling 311-1110. oxt 7411

I I S Enterprt*** Trim, paint
Ing. handyman larvlcet Llc'd
S Int d For th* bail quote In
town cell lodeyl 471 7141

A d d itio n s A
R e m o d e lin g
Rlt./COMM. Vinyl lldlns ,
Alum. Priming, Drywell,
Door*, Rooting. Concrete.
1334413 .. S O. Salmi, CSCIIftW
RESIDENTIAL EEMODEUND
Corpontry, painting, aluml
num **tfll work. C0CAO4117
7741144 botor* tpm

A i r C o n d itio n in g
IHERJNAN'l AUTO RIFAIR
Coldetl air In town. Auto A
truck air conditioning iy«tomt
repaired or Intlallod. Free **t.
70yrt eiperienc*
331700?

A w n in g s
. BUILOSRS ol cuttam canoptot.
carport*, window* B pall*
awning*. Hlghotl ol quality.
Free attimalo*. 4073741144

C a r p e t/ In s ta lla tio n
CAR F I T MILL DIRECT
•lg Oftcount* Fameu* Ertnd*
Flrtt Qualify, Teg U m .
Stelnmattor, Saxonlet.
Tracklot*. Sculpture* 14,77 yd
Commercial level loop* 11.77yd
Inttalllllon. 447 J74 MM

H o m e Im p r o v e m e n t"

C a r p e t C le a n in g
SAM’S CARPET CLIANINO
plus strap and bull ftaort.
Xoddontlal/commerclal 24
hr* 334 $141, beeper 444 0141

d lt a n in g S e rv ic e
QUALITY CLEANINO Indian*
butlnet* retoe*led lo Florida
10 yr* aep Excel. r*lt Very
reatonebi* 331 34U /1311140

C o n c re te
CAPTAIN CONCRETE. Weyn*
Baal. 1 Man Quality Opora
tlon! 3341317/41430*1
QUALITY CONCRETE WORK.
11 yoar* exp Reatonabl*
Lie /Int. 3131744

E le c tr ic a l
MASTER ELE C TR IC IA N .
Rapalr addition, comm/ret
Llc/lm, 45R0007I71 111 4471

F lo o r in g
HARDWOODPLOORINO
latlall Sanding Plnlthlng
TOM OLSEN 1-7134143177

H o m a Im p r o v a m a n t

d a r p a n tr y

ABSOLUTS Carpentry: trim,
matal iludt. rettorellon work,
drywell, doori, tiding, deckt,
porch*!
LlC/Int
3131777
AFFORDABLE HOME Repair
Dependable. All phato*. Call
for Free ett. Michael 111JIM

AMICK Cuttam W**dcr«fl S
Detlgn. Spedallilng In:
Shelving, CablMlt, Furniture.
Recondlllonlng. Rellnlthlng, 4
General Carpanlry 1141111
CARPENTER All kind* of homo
repair*, painting 1 ceramic
III*. Richard OroM..... i ll » 7l

Fix II rlghl *1 a price you can
afford. Uc’d/int. From tforl
to tlnlth. Carponlry, plumb­
ing, olectrkal, and rooting
•vet. 13 yr* of exporlonco. No
lab loo big or until. Call
31437M ar 312-411124hour*

XL DOES IT M l!

L a w n S e rvic e
RANOY'S QUALITY LAWnT
Complete pro car* *mc* logo
Clean upt, hauling i ll 0II4
TOM S JE FF'l LAWN CAR’ i i
Ret /Comm , dependable, tow
ratot I Free ett...........J » poro

P a in tin g
* DAVISS SON RAID

Freeetlimatei 10y

________ 3744477
FAINTINO . piper
prettur* wething an

repair. Freeetl. Mi !
’re ssu re C le ar

DUN RITE: Cleon drlyeweyt
roolt. pool deckt, walk,
houtet Free *»t. 3114171

P h o to g ra p h y
■EACH, Spoilt end Weddlngi
Mobil equip unique pricing.
For Into call M4 fool__

* LEOALFHOTOORAPHY *‘
Reatonabl*ratn
Cell 173 llta

S w im m in g Pool
S e r v le t / R ee p a lr

WEEKLY SERVICE ,rwn ,
mo. Cham RII* Pool Service
^JOWM^^ttofjShoomak

T r e t Service

ECHOLS TREE »VC Llc(.T
"Let th* Profettlonait do II
Frooetllmatot........ m tr.

Adver t i se Your Busi ness Every Day
For As Low As $ 4 5 Per Mont h.
Cal l Cl assi f i ed, 322 261 1

t

i

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida • Wednesday, May 29, 1904 7 1 -H tlp W a n ftd

9 9 -A p ir tm # n 1 i
U n fu r n lih td / R tn t

PART TIME OfFICC HELP
Light typing. bookkeeping.
phono CdllTMOlTE

MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lake Ada I bdrm, SMO me
Ibdrm, Skit me end up

PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR
Sem# tapdrUnct p rtltrrtd
Send rn u m a to Blind Boa
l » t . C/O Sanford Harold PO
B tt 1441. Sanlord, PL 7177?

SAUS TRAINEE/
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP
A lu m ln m u m and v in y l
•strut Ion* Lat Strten Cam
parry WO silver Lake Drlvt
S E C U R IT Y O F P IC R R ja b
•raining Armtd 1 unarmed
Sr fifty B Assoc M 4«gg

SECURITY OFFICERS
SeniorU Lak* Mary Cleat 0
guard Ikente required Stan
immediately! Calllte e iH

SHEET METAl MECHANIC
Pottibie training available
Call m aoee________________

.

dap ■or weakly

n * seal_____

SANFORD. I bdrm garaga epl
In downtown hitlorkel dll
♦Fie* S)00/monlh plus SMO

1/2 MONTH FREE!!

»h r* /w kC *H lM 4IS 4o vg *

&gt; Bdrm/I bath i n m e
SHENANDO AHAPAR TM INTf
&gt; ID R M I RATH apt evaiiebU
s/is/ea C h a a . Iiackeble
wether end dryer, ell kitchen
aepnontet
salt
M l ten

OTR taper rente Preduceeap
Ciaae A COL Call P&gt; P in
* TRUCK DRIVER*
Take yawr pick tram van la
tern! Cempemea hiring neo
with lantaalk benelitil
F i t ! REGISTRATION
AAA EM PLOYM EN T
mw.nmu m i m _
W A N TB O C A R P EN TER S er
Carpenter Helperi Mutt have
earn trenapartelian tte calla
after kPM Sra M M _____ __ ___

WAREHOUSE AND OSNERAL
LABOR M IL P N I I O I O I
Itenua ter d riie rt All anittt
eit'iabte Dally pay no tee
Report ready to aeort I K e n
Industrial Labor le t . Idle
tre n c h * , ho phone, e H«

W ID E R

r_

Purged, pipe and tubing
wgkderneeded C d i m i d l
|kt AUTO AUCTION DRIVERS
N IB O IO l Mutt have valid
Florida driver! Ikente and be
aMe to dr l re ttk k
Can between I &gt;
SPRINT STAFF IMO l»t Mil

9 3 - R o o m s fo r R e n t
O U IIT . C L IA N RM m San
to»d Kitchen A phone ute
l ean laundry |M 4 up M4 4*SS
SBiC TV. p « M . kit prtv
dr ink mg mature male
.at I M .a t ’tavp IV trva
a ROOaat &gt; v
~g
IS tS 'w k K ilch * * phene,
laundry, videe gamat. ett

ltouil

x " r » 'p » '. m g

(u R N IS H I D ROOM, elec'
I A C mkre. her plate deubie
tm*. table bed ceiling lent
I All util turn MM Magnolia.
I San lord Call i n I7f»

|tH IV A T I (N fR A N C f
Viator

m krenave

r*hq

cetor tv.

J ett ttreet parting and ma&lt;d
[avvytee ____
H i tone
M FOR R IN T Light bitch
privilwgt lot and lad
I Mature adult are! Ma Mae

97—A p o r l m t n t s
F u r n iils o d / R t n t

NOTICE

10 1— Houses
U w fu m lth o d / R o n t
ATTBACTIVB 1/1 w/Flo rm .
•pH . heal an Avail */l Sari
p'utdvp Nepali Ml Oats
DONT RENT when you can
ennl HUO hornet bank lore
clotures and more At lew at
StOOdown All e rteil

Ainton Mvtrv Or eve ID 777I
L A K IH A R N IV
W AT1BFR O N T I bdrm &gt;
bath manufactured haute Far
tala Ml.tot er rtnt SkM/me
ter m e t e r

R IN T WITH O FT ION Pmac ret I
Ml poet heme, lanced tin me
HI lot! 4 tec Ml eiM

SANFORO. I bdrm. FT bath
lata lion' haute Mtb ma

___ __ inrwt

SANFORO t bdrm, l bam. can!
H/A. carpel Ltka aewl l yr
leaae SMS/wm F04 M i ItH
SANFORO TO W N N O U SI I
bdrm. l ' t ba Fireplace,
private cotmtyerd m&gt; garabo
Na part taoo me Security
itaeatU Alter Ipm m i n i

Stenstrom Rentals
tS U N L A N O l/ l w family rm
pool. CHA. sers me MtO tec
e SANFORD l/l apt mi tel
perch IptaSMS m eS iri tec
• S A N F O R O l/ l I I lia ry
ducnvvCiHAtatO malate &gt;a&lt;
Sivmlrem Realty, lac
' F t NUnaga yeur Hama,
ItbeMwataur ewe ' Jim Darla
i n tees Attar tP M m itat
I ROHM I RATH Steve 4
rofng lanced v*'d On but
Ime sad mo piwt tec Rati
req Call M l 71*1____________

I RSOROOM. I 4am. cvni it *
family rm Only two deami
Alto 4bdrm. I bo*h a.ttabi*
Atk about Our HUO hornet I
Why real? TMI NILLIMAN
GROUP. INC Raaltor III t i ll
V t BOOM HOMR leakmg ter e
good lemily with rttwencet
C HA. famity ream fenced
yard
awe ma
Ml letl
1
11................

105— D u p le x -

Vkn rental end reel ettate
advertiaementa are tubiect la
the Federal Pair Meeting Alt
I which male* It llitgal la
|adverl'M any prttevtnc*. i.m
llatlon er diacrlmlnellen
;batad cm race cater, reiigian
|let handicap familial ttatua
pr nalional er igm
I BDRM. tile hen perch Mt ek
SIM dap I badraem SMS me
U M d*p Pato ok MO 4711

99—A p a r tm e n ts
U n fu r n is h e d / R a n t
RINATIR APTS
San
Lk Mary Win t monlht
II Deborah. IT) *104

BF= C001 O ff!!

One Bod/oom Apartment*

lit* D IA L
Mottnuod Apit n r in *

WHHEEEEEWX!
O R IC A L D O W N TO W N
FOR 0 Vary dean 1 bdrm.
ith Kitchen, dk.lng room,
tone** Fenced yard, good
a sart mo SIM dtp

ok_________ sis no*

■FORD. I Bdrm. SMO'mo.

nhrt aecurlty All ullllllea pud
^- docaui dec
U1IF4J

Triple* / Rtnt

mini mall High visibility and
•raffle count. 1,100 sq II build
Ing on large let. MOO/month
plus tee. Hall HealTy m i n i
SANFORO For Itaw . ronad
C I . 1101 Country Club Rd
Appro* MOO iq II Large
paved, fenced and lighted
parking lot or storage area
SSSOplul to* Coll Dkk Jove*

SANFO R D. I bdrm.. carport,

aecurlty ayttam. lull kil .
II* F ill d'Wountadldl
I RORM. I RATH Mt at tnO
itcurlty Ralaranctt Call
Ml IMa altar tpm balora tarn

1 0 7 -M o b ile
Hom es / Rent
I BDRM Park A.* Mobile Part
Quiet arte Cota to thop
j^ j^ ir t io u l^ llin ill^

114 —W a re h o u s e
S p a c e / R a n t __
LONGW OOOaAKI

MART

N I W Sanlord OlIKOI and or
warehouse! too MOO sq It

Spoelat. SMI/mo. M l t m
SANFORO

Of I k a spec*

A l I n i l H A H l I ‘ I' Mt r,

141— H o i t i b b f o r S a l*

, I flTum I PHilPI Hill 5

L A K I MARV IL V O
]/ }
Larded with ipecial features
Living room, dining ream,
family roam. luO sq ft Needs
lo go nowt Reduced I t IM tlO
Mb M il

:&gt;I 1l IfJ( a *
Sto totl 4/11 Llv din lam rmt.
aal m k l l . security. saFallilol
C O IT CUSTO M split Dining
fa m ily rm s A p p llo n c tl
Oa'aq* f*nc*d yd SVC *00
POOL NOM CI n . 1 000 sq Ml
L ly
din
fa m ily g «m *
room! ter POM hi sat 100
Landscaped M l. l/ l r a i l Appi
lly. dm. lam rm t sal too
SUNK I N F A M IL Y RM 4
tomm peal LI*, dm. I*m
r m t . appi Mr porch, tecuvi
•y lyifw n and garage'I* *00
BRICK 1/1 iplif. llv. gin. tom
rms. sec *y«Um scr porch
•oneod yd .gar ag*' Ids MO

ASSUME NO QUALITIES!
CUSTO M a/iglil bdrm plant
Dining family rm t. appi ,
freed yard it* ) me SM too
PR 1 F O R f CLOSURRI M i p i i l
Uv dm . aal m titch lanced
w gar aq* t u t mo IMtOO
CUSTO M built I T u lil li.
dm . ta t In kilch , appi
garage *141 mo U ! TO
I* A lf C

O S IIU H N E

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
3 2 S -4 / U 4
A L T A M O N T C j bdrm I ba'h ig

let an cut da sac Brantley
Scheoti la* oo* m m g______

BATEMAN REALTY
L k R**i E ila t* Broker

M R Sanlord A v*

3214759

321-2257

C A S S B L B IR R V l/ l. I car
garage Nnced Ski* Seller
*S|.Had linens ,ng 141 |IM
C H A R M IN O I I with
,
ceverad pan* car part tread
let. I'esn pam l Redusad to
SM 10* N R W l i l t IH O I a* k
badraem tW R k a ti- Frethty
pa.Ktedl i n *00

V I N T U R I 1 P R O P iR TIIS
Mery R Tabm
M l MM ar 111 IM *_____

HALL R E A L T Y
312 W First S t . S a n lo rd
IW fN i. Ik ifN Air I t N f ENA
VA »|*&lt; f«H I U 000 A J9++ i
0 «s ir«b lD J/l»9. ctn* H/A.
f»fX9 F g m ilffm It/ 100
DvpHa ) / l i l / l , ( r h ; « f«fH9d
1400 mo incom#1117 000

323-5774
C A S S I L B I R R V Baautlful 1
bdrm. I l l bath New carpal,
paml Shaw* Ilka a modail
1*4 SCO
I N 1074
DC DAR T
Lakilronl 11 can
tralH/A. p luto tlra tl 1*0 000

W Maliciawtkl. M l M*1

°^7\
BANK FORECLOSURES, GOVT
FORECLOSURES. LOW DOWN
ASSUME NO QUALIFIES
AVAILABLE IN SEMINOLE
VOLUSIA A ORANGE COUNTY

Otd C ou ntry Sloro

NEW RESTAURANT
OPENING
Storting Wage# Up T o
$6.25 A n H o ur

Since 1969 Crocker Uaircl lias been
dcdicutcd lo providing (he highest
quality food and gift merchandise
in our restaurants and gift shops.
We reward people who lukc pride
in being die best.
•Hoaliion/Skliry Advancement Han
•lleallh/Llfc/Dcnial Insurance

•Paid Vacation
•Reiircmcni/Savmg* Plan
•Employee Assistance Program
•Employee Meal Discount
•Discount Purchase Plan
•Employee Stock Purchase Plan

Immediate Full/PurMimc Openings
•IIost/Hostess

•Cooks

•Wallrr/WaHresi

•Dlshwaslicn

•Cashler/Gifl Shop •Night I’ortcr
Bring proper ID for 1-9 form
SAN FOR D
1*4 &amp; Stale Route 46
Call (407) 324*1020 toduy
for an uppolntmcnt.

193— L a w n * G a r d e n

141— H o m e s f o r S a l*

O I L T O N A . only 1*00 dawn,
SAM mo Chuot* from 1 hem*i
•o b* r*mod*l*d by builder
Or » « l opportunity
Mofye Oveeg I I I ISIS
C X C H A N O I OR S I L L your
property located onywtwrol
le vu to ri R*alty, 111 M il

O FFICB/w trthaut* tpaca. IB0
Sq II P rim * location at
entrance lo Central Fla R»
gional Airport kO/MI 1*01

• P IO B O A R O . 1/4 • IS ■
41 I I SO H ARD W ARE Ms
Ml m i

Asking SrOO mo Mlkkkdwork

FHA/VA low Ot t » . \ AN O s
owner Imonco low os MM/mel
Oav I Farvclaiuras. R»poil
Sammela, Oraag*. Vdesial

SUNLANO 1 bdrm with
ttparal* rocrootlon bldg
Completely fenced. Sc*.*00
KSTATI SALII Historical 1
bdrm with I car garagt
Appraised at SM000 A iteel
at in ooo1
Coll H r dalkllil

J.m l Mwsfitld, 323-7271
AA Como*. In c- I I M I M
LA K E M A B V . H I. thadad lot,
ftnetd yard, icraaned palio
Qultl. near a lam N*w carpet,
III*, blind* U l .100 M l M il

S A V f 1? OOO 111) (MHi
» 'l fjfdl V I lH O H 'l I I S

153—A c r M Q D *
L o f t / Sa I t ______
*1 B U I L D I N O

L O T I.

Lake

Mary Rare at lll.tolaechl
*1 L A R O I B U IL D IN O LO T.
OtUan. M *00
**• ACRS1 00*1 of Osteen.

•

*

Hemes wtIR MO* DOWNl

M S ACRES S E C L U O E O but I
mu* ewey Norn Boltwoy I
t\vwe/kt#

Rk a l e t t a t e . w c

* Saatevd Muterk Osslrktt

322 7451

* Cut* l/ l, great speculoiiv*
a vatu* the melt*! coming

1 5 7 -M o b ll#

*

M M

a SepnistkAUd n condo
o lewesl price tor area all
a appi met W D U 1 .M

a
a

Oav't Down Payment Its

a

Limited Coll Today I

STELTENKAM P
REALTY

3 3 0 -3 2 3 0
LONOW OOO Lb Mary Scheeis
1/1 w posi IM ' sq tt ISM
La n g w o o d L k M e r y Rd
f lf ,W i D e fer. 411 MIS
OW N I K M A T FIN AN C B IM*
fantastic 1 bdrm hem* m mint
cendifien Den I bey ealft
veu ve seeafluil
Call Duns a The Cannae Oveeg

legoocierina/gk

VENTURE I PROPERTIES
H U D 4 VA FORCLOSURSS
Lew dewnt Seminote Orange
and Velusi* Cewnlus
Can far defaitsl
• le ch Arber unique las*
Irani turn* Large US so* *00

• T OW NER. 1/1. double wide,
family perk, carport screen
'o e m . stores* E a c o lltn l
cond Priced b*Uw value
_ P h M l tik i Sam I Ipm
W IN TE R SPRINOS. 1 bdrm. I«*
■ so. C/HA. screened parch,
carport. 1 trill rms Secrlfko

f t ooo
m mm
i r X W MebiW Heme. Ibdrm. I
bath Goad condition SI P I
•04 111 in t e r &lt;04 U l S ill

165 — Duple* for Sal*
D U P L E X SANFO R O 1 Ddr |
be taobrnth rent owner ll
nance. *44 000. M l MM

1 1 1 —A p p lia n c e s
/ F u rn ltu r*
• AAA RAY S APPLIANCE •
III S Freach Are. Seekerd
N • Ir Ig e r a l a r , S ie v e s .
Washers Dryers Free I yr
labor wort Pol avail MSMdl
• A IR C O if O I T IO N IR . well
unit SSO F irm L v name 4
Number on machine n s SIM

3304273/774-B4B0

BUNK B I O S I T with I we
matchtag dressers Include*
mattresses I scetUwt tend

SANFORQ/IR M ART I harm 1
b*m » ear get t*M/av ue*e
aptuneSgtlb/me MlfMR
SANFORD Mf.ggt I bdrm I
hath Nk* area n i l Orange
Ave Real nk* hem* I can
make yew the owner a ll tied
SANFORO Brand

sheets IM AMANA wether
and dryer MOB MAdMI_______
e O f N i r r r S i r M U gram
tabu » t » ” a f***" with f
dreg m leaf and two chairs
OnTy *JC Call M l m * ________
P U L L ROR S P R IN O A N D

l/ l. C/HA biq Ut N k* quiet
area lecledes bedr the* with
largeparkmgarea Only
•14.kd*ObO I I I ***1
SAN FO R O U vgfy 1 1 MFf sq
f t . |t* acres Den dtnmq rm.
scr porch, new paint Possible
■eeve purchAt* StlSKM S'f**
Pam* Andersen Prop Inc
SANFO R O
coun lr. living
d a ta lo now mailt Great
sfarfev. l/l, dan. aal In kilch.
baaulllul fries Sk'K SSI !**•
Pateo Aedtrsee Prep., lee.
S A N F O R D 1 bdrm , | bath
Great location! New paint and
carpel
sse.MO
i l l 4101

STENSTROM
R E A L T Y ,

IN C .

FIRST TIME H0MEBUYERSI
Lai Our Full Tim# Sales Stall
Show YO U how Easy II Is lo
Own a Home ol Your O w n!
Coll any ol our Experienced
Agents A N Y TIM E I

322 2420 • 321-2720
SANFORD • LAKE MART
•In Out 31th Y u i*

IMS 1 P IS C B dining room SO*
t u t p u l l m a a g o -*•&gt;

M A TTR E S S *40 A S E T 4 UP

LARRr-SMARJI
1114111
H OM E' AP P LIA N C I C B N TIR
Over M year* in lenferd
Sale* New and Used Service
all makes 4 parts 104 E
Commercial St
M l Mkl
K E N M O R I washer very nkdt
Free delivery and warranty

ftht A t Bast. MS Mkl
MOVINOI Sola, loveteat Liko
new Traditional Mi sc Hems
M l s«ta days m OkM »ve*
MUST I I L L I Rich Plan Indus
trial freeter upright I Esc
condition I
M fllM
o W OO D I N T A B L E FO R
SALE, k chens Old wood
•abU. solid wood Very heavy
SUM
M kUk)

1S3— T e le v is io n /
R a d io / S tfr e o
S E P A R A T E com pononls:
Kenwood cassette cUcb Sharp
CD playor. Pioneer receiver.
Fisher 1 way speakers Over
SWO Sell U r US* FOkMkllM

1B7— S p o rtin g G o o d s
• It S F IID E IC V C L E
Mkie or Female In oncoiltnt
condition. SM 00 Coll M l 17*4

2 3 1-C a rs

2 1 7 — O a r a g e S ale s

CH EVY Marti* Carlo, Ift), i
owner, 44.000 ml. tuto. A/C.
V4. Nlcol S1.S1QOBOM00101
• CHRYSLER IM PERIAL 'FI.
Llk# now. M ull Mil. Only
m « o .c o ii i4 0 ii m w M

ESTATE SALE

TARE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN

b ’Et R IN K IN , M' cuddy cobin.
omc. I/O, 140 hp. low hr*
mollvolod MW114S FIS* ErnU

Furnltur*. appliance*, fool*,
clothes, household Horns.
Friday and Saturday, starts *1
lam 114 Citrus Drive, Sanford

•GARAGE S A U AD BARGAIN
Call In your garage u l* ad by
11 noon on Tuotdoy and lake
advantage ol our ipoclol
garage sale ad priced Coll
Classified now lor details I

322 2(11

219—W a n te d to B u y
FIN I JIW E L R V . Diamonds"
Roloa't. Gold Tool*. TV*.
VCR* Got I Guitar*. Stereo*
Comoro* Antlquts Buy.
Pawn Soil Broadway Jesrsl
r y a n d P a w n . I1 1 F W
Broadway SI Hwy 411. OvUd*

199— P e t e * S u p plies
R IA O LR PUPPItS. • wkt old
SM S fomaldi and I mat*

221— G o o d t h in g s
to E a t

• P R B B K I T T E N S P arllal
Meni Pitas* call alfor t
M l ugi____________________
• FR E E TO OOOO HOME *

U PICK. Black tr*d peas u
Zlpparcream pats no and
Q U l ______________171040*
U PICK BLU EB ER R IIS. i l l
Ouls* Rd . Ostaen 401 110 M il

i» icu

0 FR E E TO GOOD HOME
I
cal. I kitten, both Umau
40/ 114 4104 alter SPM A fur
It days will ge U pound______
F R E E TO O OO D HOM ES.
Puppldt and dags Shap
hard/Leb mla Good watch
Pegs i Cart M l IMa__________
G O L D IN R ETR IEVER PUPS~
AKC Registered Reedy to go

MM 4*1 Ml 1H4

PITBULL PUPPIES
For sou
M4 0M0
PURR F E C T P E T C A R E . lad.
A l ham* p*t cor* E ip In
Domestic 4 Castle pat* L k
4 Bond**
S t a f f e d by
Veterinarian and Zootogical
Park Hamad personnel We
provide the highatl quality
and per ventured pel care at
your hom. k il ***1111 ar
• g a in m u

2 0 3 - L iv e s to c k e n d
P o u lt r y

2 1 1 —A n tiq u e s /
___C o lltc lib lR S
P R IV A T E C O L L I C T O h &lt;&gt;
t a ilin g T e a m P in n a c le
&gt;as*bsii card* Alta. 1 P u n a
ar litis ' areals and Nyna
Sandburg i t at haw* Call
«Q4 774 H M ___________ _ _
W ANTED / ANTIQUES.
D lam ends
F in e le w e lry
Packet and wrlsl wale he*
Tiffa n y Horns P u rn ilu rs
Quilt* SUf rnachma* Toy*
Ivory Musical Ham, Swerds
Knives Anything anllqu#
Calh paid Rraadway Jewelry
and Pawn. IM I W Sraadway
S l . - H w y 41k O e l e d *
PUtk/OvUd* M l *4/1________

223— Miscellaneous
(B A T H R O O M 1S T » Inch
Vomfy. Sink. Faucet. Com
mode Tapper Cabinet. 4 Globe
Light Fixture Whit* trimmed
In gold Good Condition
1100 00 Coll M l 1411
■ POR SALE
Super Highway
Power King NEW I ply 1 7 }
14 1 L T Rang* O Tubeless on
I hoi* rim linglo or duel i m
U 100 Call Ml 414*
• O R AC O CAR l E A T i Like
nowl PetdlOO. asking MO
174 40411V ms

* CANOE. II •• Saar* Good
condition! *100 OBO Ml 410*

• HOUSEBOAT, llv* aboard ti'
Naulbllno,

twin angina V

drive. M0K Or Quam 4*14111
IM* O R LAN D O CUpper Alum
hull. 10 HP Mercury, trailer.
I kit 1*00 *04 1U It4l__________
* If*! R E O A L Modgllun. ir
10” . 4 cyl In/outtxurd motor
w.drive on traitor IS OOO OBO
BJO 4044 or *4* 410loves
IM4 CONROY 14 It ski bo*l
Top *0hp Yamaha, trailer,

a INSULATION tor attic. Owen*
Corning R I*. 41" ■ 11",
TOcper too, OBO M3 4140
e P L ill ii . Husky U S A mak*
}•' *" S ' Slip tofnl pliers tor
do ll yourtllo, Mechanic*
Good gift item to oil mau* In
your (amity Carton of *la 1*1
Per only *4 0* wwfix *1*
___________M in t s ___________
S U N O U E tf W O LF F TA N N IN O
B I O S No w C o m m e rc ia l
M om * U n i t s P r o m t i f f
Lam ps Lotions Accessories
M o n t h l y payments low os
•It 00 Call Today F R I I N I W
Color CalaUg I4 N S W SU7

233— Auto Parti
/ AccBtsorias
I R I I I I R I C I I V I R H ITC H .
1000/10.000. C ltl* IV F lit
m etl full til* p/u truck*
17S00CollM l»4l4

l l M IC H IL IN TIR E S . Sfl*
PllS/70 S ll Vary good con
dI Hon I Only 130 407 M1FTM

235—T r u c k * /
B u m / Vans
• CHEVY BEAUVILLE VAN
'7f, l ton. Possongor von,
(lean Loaded I Too much to
lilt, mutt so* to appreciate
Only Sl.atl OBO
Ml 1700
• FORD R A N O IR , LTX FI.
P/S. cruise. A/C. stereo. 4.K0
mil**. I yr er M.000 ml Ut! on
warranty
Call EM H U
OMC CAROO/W ORK VAN.
Runt greet) Looks g rttfl
Mustselltl.110 M0 007)
• JE EP PICKUP TRUCK. ITT*
1st with topper MOO OBO
Hood* a total TLC O T 1FW
• JE E P PICK UP 4*4, MTO. VI.
auto Engms and Iran* r*
bultl I about M.000 mil**)
Newer Interior 11000 Ml MOO

a Sanford Motor Co.
U N C H E V R O L E T CM PICK
U P *4.000mlU*. V 0. 1 fpued
C U a n o to p m l |I0.**1
_________ Call M l 4101_________
1*74 R H D M A IL J E E P . Appros
*0.000 miu* Hoar new lire*.
•hoc k*, m s lo r . b o l l o r y .
alternator, steering baa Doe*
net run Need* transmission

work SOOOObO........... M7 MM
a i m SUBURBAN OMC. 411
diesel. Suit San. mechanically
■tad /brake raters A

iiS R a g rp ^ fe S w r
’T r c j r J i i p r n g T T y T T l S T
radio, vinyl top. black. J sad
43.IM .... ■ acalUnt candifUn
M lk 1*7after* Pm.______

• IM ROMANCE NOVCLEI
H a rle q u in and ot her s In
perfect condition all tor only
HO 001 Call M l *177 ________

Cars
o FORD THUNDCRBIRD. I Ha
A ll o rlo ln e ll N**d* tom#
work
1I.4SS OBO M l 0114

1*4* FORD Pkkup. 1/7 ton.
restored 1*71 Lois of oatra
parts A Beauty M IOOtlOOOM

•1970 OEVIUE CADILLAC
13000 OBO All power M l 0114

2 9 1— R t c n a t i o n a I ~

V p h lc lB B / C a m p t r s
• 1*11 COACHM AN M H . 14 ft.
M K ml Many eatratl Incl
generator Vary easy to drive
1I7.F00........................ M l 4*30
ltot E X C E L IF tt. Air. queen
bed New awning Eicaltont
cond M.000 330 I t 71__________
• 74 M O TO R HOMR Runt groat
Will (rod* for travel trailer ol
comparable value 37I 74F3
o'FI A L L IO R O motor hom* 17
It. owning, twin bods, genera
lor &amp; lv. S37.SOOOBOMI 07M

"LOAN A-RANGER'
RIDES AGAIN!

oseel Uni cand U f O in iS lt l
o n FI O R AO V W H IT E . OMC.
Inboord/outboard. lap sir*
mad*! 14.800 OBO M l 1114
*14 F T PONTOON b*4t. All
•IborglasL 140 HP Evlnrud*.
Very l» » ll Many oalro*. Ilk*
nowl Only IF .H 0 H 1 MIS
• ’SI O L A IS T R IA M . II* booL
trailer. Mhp Johnson N*v*r In
sell wolor. esc. condition
13.400
O BO
*04134*11*

34* 13*1

• SI C H IV Y Cheveil* 4 dr. *
•pd. now tiro*, doesn't bum
oil Good lnd cor *400 M l HM
M PLYM OUTH Caravel!*. 4 cyl.
4 dr, low mil** Auto. sir.
Nk* cor I SI. 100OBO » 4 411*
'14 C H I V R O L B T C tp rlc o
Classic, a dr., runt good,
loaded 14.000 OBO. and
‘U ChovreUI Bololr. 1 dr., run*
good M.000 OBO 1141717
M BRONCO II E&gt; cel lent condl
lion I Low mlU*l Run* greet I
SI.000 Call no 7114

TREE MONEY
Around your house! Turn youv I
unwanted item* Into cash
Place an ad today!
IM 1*11 ar III tetl

230 — A n t iq u e / C la s s i c

215— B o a Is a n d
A c c e s s o rie s

• M il PORSCHE, f l l Torga.
low mileage, show* Ilk* now
110.000
OBO
M l 1114

All day Sal A Sun____________
W H IT E CORN FOR M L S
Mortaefhar Favms
1441 Calory Ave Sanlord

• L IV E S TO C K . Pigs lar saU •
wSl otd Yorkshire US each

H I f IM

tacopl lai. log. till*, ole
C A D IL L A C S E D A N OSV I L L I • M il , two Ion*.
coiMtto. all power option*,
till. crulM. Only |IS1.04/mo
Call Mr Payna for oppolnlmonl
m iiM o rtu ie t*
l i l t C J I J E E P . Rebuilt 4 cyl
Indor 11.000or best offer
401 Ml f!l4

• ' l l C H IV Y El Camlno. no
eng or Iran*. A/C. P/S. P/B.
cowl hood. IS grill* 14K

1*1*14, OvUd* M l 4411________
W A N TB O to buy military relict.
G e r ma n y , Japan***. US
Patch**. m *l4ll. daggers,
swords, uniforms, holmols
and flight lack,is Coll Bill or
Chou Ot Aston CUonors. M l
Wtoda/s. Mk » , I laves

month old femaU rat Gray
colar Call M l 1IF0__________

Hom ts/SBlB

a
a lake Mary tchaotst

FOR SALR WOOD M ULCH
Bring shovel I lltp k k up load
You Mod M l 1441___________
• LAWNMOWIR , Snapper, ty*
lorn 4. with illochm or.lt
Hoods funoug 1*0Ml m *
T R U C K . I r o l lt r , mowers,
woodoolor, blower, odso
trimmer, edgor. I I " iroo
chipperandmare M l 1401

us. sag

* fieVI. BaeR FaracUteres.

• Quality Used Can &amp;
Trucks
• Good Credltl No Credltl
Bad Credltl No Probleml

MINCER MOTORS

3 2 1- 2 0 9 3
321-1 4 5 0

M il SUMMERLIN S T R U T . 4
bdrm . 7
g «r«g «. cto tfil
H/A, new pemt In L out.
owner financing ISf.fOO D iy t

m 0J4*Evtnlng» JJJ 101/

W/.M

153—A c r e a g e L o ts / S a le
DELTONA AREA 10 ACRES
Ideal lor mobile homo or
homo alia, hortet. calflo,
farming, cr nursary. Zoned
agricultural SI.SOO par ocra
Smoll down paymanl with
owner llngnclng *oa-l&gt;MTFl

We make renting a

Breeze
CASH IN ON

S pring S avings
O n 1 ,2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Apartment Homes!

Geneva Gardens
1605 W. 2611) Struct •Siinloui

3 2 2 -2 0 9 0

M O N .- S A T . 8:30 A M * 5 P M

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

215— B o a t * a n d
A c c e s s o rie s

191— B u ild in g
M a te rla li

t*K

sq If building lolal. IM0 fq
l i f t ! olllcounll M MOOS
M0 SO P U T Mr Mate an ll r»
•uccatlful ranting anchor
but mesial Coed parking and
lighting Orool visibility

warabouMt MO 100. or 1*00

115 — In d u s tria l
R e n ta ls

• T Y P E W R IT E R • Brother
P artible Electronic Cor
roctrenlc 140 Full lino cor
rocllon. Two pilch. Automatic
rolocollon otter corrections.
StSS ch a ra cte r m em ory
storage Professional results
Ideal for homo or offic*. Cast
Bill *1 new My tailing price
ISO 00. Call (40/1 111.114!
Evenlngter leavo message
• T Y P I W R I T I R . IB M
Soloctrlc II. Eicollenl condl
lion SM or best offer Mutt
sell M l 1*40

H i — O ffic e
SpacB / R a n t

Mid all* public tlarage
aq II tpacat Nice, tecur*.
aaally accettlbl* location
f rom tu i^a rjn o M IPSIt

1B9— O f f i c * S u p p lie s
/ E q u ip m e n t

ko/mtaio

CLEAN. QUIET 1 B0«M
thadadaraa ABO mo 111 tu t

1B7— S p o rtin g Q o o d t
• E X E R C IS E B IR B . Oood
condition SM M l Otn________

IOBAL LOCATION lor antique

depoall m su e

SANFORD. Oak Av* 1 bdrm. J
bath Salt mo Itlandlatl.
___ IS* IW a r M l l l t t ____
SANFORD. I and f bdrm. apft.
Soma w/ullllllei Ott tlreel
parking FrornSJOBTII t i l l
VILLA S/t, I car gar. ml opener
Screened room, wether /dryer
_jrvc .m o te a m rsai alter igm
i b io r o o m f r i i m o n t h
SFIC IA LI ] bdrmt a elite
avail
Cell Jerry. MS MM

SUB SHOP/DCll HELP
TRUCK DRIVER MAJITID

«

3231(70
SANF0R 04II S. Park Ave I A
1 bdrm. air SMS IMS i noo

K I T ’ N ’ C A R L V I .F .® b y U rry W rig h t

1 1 7 — C o m m e r c ia l
_______ R t n t i l i

HOURS: Mon. •Frl. 6:30 •5:30
Managed By Angefca Qordon Property Management

W e'll advertise your car or other
motor vehicle until it's sold.
Y ou pay for the first 10 days and
if your car doesn't sell, call us
and renew it for FREE! Phone
number and asking price must be
included in ad. No copy change
while ad is running except for price.
Non-commercial only. Call 322-261 1 today!
Y o u r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n a d w o r k s b e s t w h e n it c o n t a i n s
in fo r m a tio n th e b u y e r w a n ts to k n o w :
• Make and Model
•Year
•Power Features

• Mechanical Condilion
• Body and Finish
•Transmission

Mileage
Previous Use
Accessories/Intcrior

SANFORD HERALD CLASSIFIEDS 3114611

�i

Y Y 1 1 1

Y • » » ♦ » I

l • i t

by Chic Young

BLONDIE

H8M.H6H
AMNT M

AHO H M \

THERE ARB THOSE WV©
SAID I SHOULO RETIRE

, NOTICED

TOUCH WITH
t'S TRENDS

ah /m o r

BEETLE BAILEY
m s BUXLEV,COULD
YOU STEP INTO MY
O F FIC E?
^

I JU S T
W O N P E RED

C0ULP

THE BORN LOSER
OH. YEAH? COOL

OH,YEAH* WELL,YOUR
A0THER WEAK) NUAY

S ir

by Charles M. Schulx

PEANUTS

YOU KNOW. I'M
NOT ALUJAYS 60IN6
TO BE AROUND
TO HELP YOU.. _

HELPWITH (A6AIN
MY HOtMEUWRK/'~\/— ”

how

Old

do you

El&amp;HTY

THINK YOU'RE 60IN6
TO BE BEFORE YOU
won't needme Anymore

by Howl* Schneider

EEK k MEEK

WOT REAll v SHE

EXCEPT THAT
V C VUAAJT') TO
BE 110 C O J T t t X
AU THE TIME

fY X U C E - T H IN G S

WTTH NttJ AMD

p c c a a i^ e o

f«E

n a o

d

ELECTIONS JOQW

TUMBLEWEEDS
ite m s . SVfETS
I ’ R O ff WITH II
Him F A W

UH.GOt
is r lOOSt

|0 M

KINKY SPRINGS

ARLO AND JANIS

by Jim m y Joh n to n

TREY 6AY I *&gt;HOOID
EAT 10T6 Of BREAD

TWCY 5AY I BHOUID
5&gt;TAY OUT Of THL 6UU'
' ----------- ------ -, r - ^

TWeY 6AY WIRT UUGTH
I6A AYAfYlROf PffteOUAl
jjA b T e 1
^

r

w UPblDC DOWv/

S

Q *
y e p 'A j/ t i c f

/ HIT M IDDLE AGE AD D
M Y L i f t T U R N ED

h*

Neeps a

^ D/uty port of

M.**

U)\

* ' 12

A N t&gt;

tM M v s.

GARFIELD
OPI£/1 HAVE A
TREAT FOR YOU.OPlE/

NICE TR V ,
GARFIELD

GARFIELD? I'M
NOT GARFIELD

JYM P*Vt*i 6 19

&gt;

See a doctor to
diagnose high fever
DEAR DR. O O T T : My wife has
had i-omitunt fever* every nlghl
of 102*103 degrees for three
yearn now. It hns her wruk and
run down. Numerous tests have
been unrcveullng.
DEAR READER: Fever In one
of the most reliable IndUutors of
dlseuse. Recurring fever means
Ihnt something Is wrong. Your
wife needs a diagnosis.
I have seen putlents with
"fever" who didn’t have elevated
temperatures: The thermometer
was registering Incorrectly.
Therefore, your (Irst lusk Is to
document, with a relluhle device,
that your wife does. Indeed, huve
nightly fevers. And. at the risk of
sounding loo obvious, don't
check her oral tcmpcruturc fol­
lowing an after dinner cup of
coffee.
If she truly Itus elevated tem­
peratures in the range you
mention, she needs a meticulous
examination, blood lesls and
X-rays to discover which of
many ailments Is to blame.
Fever of unknown origin, a
me d i c a l t e r m, can h r an
enormous rluillenge to doctors
and muy result from Innumera­
ble disorders, ranging from In­
fection and cancer to autoim­
mune diseases and Inflamma­
tion of various sorts
If your wife's doctor has
thrown In the towel, request u
referral to an Interni st la
sjirrUltst In diagnosis! or to the
diagnostic clinic at a teaching
hospital, wherr *(*•« lal tests and
st ans are available
To give you more information.
I am sending you a free &lt;opy of
m y Health Report "Medical
Specialists " Other readers who
would like a copy should send 42
plus u long, self-addressed.
slam|ied envelope to P O IVix
2433. New York. NY 10163 lie
sure to mention the title
DEAR DR. G O T T My wife and
I are worri ed because our
10- year- ol d son Is al ready
showing signs of puberty He has
developed pubic hair, luilr under
his arms, and he's started

In the Netherlands, you are
not allowed to pfay on an IR-hoir
golf course utile** you have a
Golf Ability Card. You must pa**
a fairly easy trsl of your driving,
chipping and pulling.
Should we do the same In
hrldgr, giving players who are
leaving t&gt;egirmrrs c U m t * a few
simple bidding, declarer-play
und defense problem*'.’
If so. do you think todays deal
would be slightly too dllflrult lor
the trsl. or Just right? West leads
the club quern ugalnst your
lour bruit contract. How do you
plan the play?
There are three passe* and
South opens one heart Would
you puss, double or bid two
club* with that West hand?
Most Inexjierlenced player* hid
two clubs. Uut I think II Is the
Ihlrd-brsl choice. With such soft

B y Bernice Bede Osol
YO U R B IR TH D A Y
May 2 0 . 1 9 0 4
In the year ahead hobbles or
side intcresls you consider
labors of love could provide
additional Income for you. Once
others know your work Is for
sale, lots of nice things could
huppen.
OEM IN1 (May 21 June 20)
Strive to devote us much (line us
possible today to tusks und
act i vi t i es that afford you
plcusurc and helps eliminate
mental stress. The change will
do you good. Trying lo patch up
a broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you
to understand what lo do lo
make the relationship work. Mall
•2 und a long, sclf-uddresscd.
stamped envelope (o Matchmak­
er. P.O. Hox 4405. New York.
N.Y. 10103.
C A N C ER (June 2 1-July 22) He
very open- mi nded today If
someone whose success you
admire talks about u new cndcuvor or enterprise. There
might be a place In this situation
for you.

MIDICINI

ejaculating In tils sleep. Should

,

P ETER
G O T T .M .D .

Aa V r d n
Nevertheless, you should defi­
nitely address this Issue with Ills
pediatrician, who may obtain
blood and urine tests to make
sure Hint u serious health pro­
blem Isn't to blame.
38 Roman 82
N Hebrew
measure
40 Old time
41 Actress
Sandra —
42 Verne hero
43 Lets dense
44 Actor Nick 44 Antelope
S3 Jspeneee si
84 Pried
84 Above (poet
44 Lubricate
40 Once upon

24 Arab eeilboet
Tb D e m tp s

41 Sors
42 Mesh
43 Ren easily
44 Curvy letter

30 Future LL.Es '
Siam
34Ptow pert
38 Phonetic
symbol
34 Small salmon
37 Jei —

□nnn □ng ran
□nnn nnn nn
nmnn nrannnni
nnnnn nnn nnn
nnrancinn
nnn nnnn nnnn
mnpnnn
nnnn
nnnm
□nnnnn
nnmn ranmn nnn
nnmnnnn
nnn nnn nnnnn
nnnnnnnn ranmo
nnnn nmn nnnn
□nnn nnn nnnm

DOWN
1 Dec holiday
2 Aleutian leland
3 Emperor (var.)
4 Al no lime

8 Anglo Bason
money
I Wettern hem
lephere tt tn

r~ r~ r~ r - j

r~ r~ r n
17

|w

IT

18

18

7 fault — Merle
4 Chemical dye
4 Beetle ot
burden
lOtpenlth euitt
11len t ( t l )
I t Mott dumty
sad awkward
21 Hunting with
birds
22— Marcos
24 WadUer
28 Wild pen*a
24 WWN event
27 Hawaiian town
24 Or aval rtdget
31 Several

32 Throat-

48 Terminated
44 Midday
47 Acting award
44 Graceful
rhythm
M F i f t l rete

(3 wde )
81 Marvin end
Ramie k
83 War god
SS Ear Iprel )
54 OrInk t lowly
87 Unde

valura oppuellr a |iartrirr who
couldnt evert open in third
poelliun, there is e good catr for
paealng However, especially In a
pair event, you should strive lo
coiiiesl the part-score. And
d o u b l i n g gi ves you three
chances to llnd a fit, whereas
two cluIn* will probably lock you
Inlnlhat tull
I’laylng In four hearts, declarer
must not win the dull lead with
dummy-* king and play u dump
Willi till* layout, the cuntract
can thru lie defeutrd. South
losing one spade, two hearts and
one diamond. It Is right to win In
hand with the club ace and
Immediately lead the diamond
juck, rcudy to overtake In
dummy If West plays low If
West wins with the ace and
continues clubs, you discard two
spade losers on dummys K U of
diamonds, play u trump lo the
ace und then another trump.

KART
e toil
e K it
e 7S33
4111

Vulnerable. Neither
Dealer West
s«ulh West North Katl
l*ata i'stt
l‘a »
l«
Dbl
I NT
Past
31
Pott 3 a
Put
3v
Pate t v
All (&gt;j

Opening lead: * Q

LEO (July 23-Aug 221 lie
10) At a social gathering today,
appreciative of uny good iliing* try to direct your conversation*
that hap|&gt;en lo you today und to topics which urc of general
don't measure wiiui others got in Interests, rather than to those
comparison lo what you receive.
tluil arc significant only to you.
All will level out later.
AgUARIUS (Juti. 20-Feb. 10)
VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) In Your effectiveness us a promoter
dealing wllh a loved one today, or salesperson will be marred
let your heart rule your head,
today If you don't know when to
even If he/she wain* tti do stop selling. Keep your pres
something of which you dis­ rntutlon brief und succinct.
approve. Hr vigilant from u
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
distance.
It's best not to disclose family
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In mailers lo persons who aren't
your commercial dcullngs today
kith and kin. Whnl you say
might be misconstrued und used
try to treut others us generously
In negative ways.
as possible without giving away
something of value you might
ARIES (March 21 -April 10) If
need later for yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) He you're thinking ubout attempt­
ing u do-it-yourself project today,
war y of maki ng Im pulsive
commitments today. Promises be sure you know what you're
made In basic might not lie well gelling Into, or else you might
thought out and could prove waste a lot of time and atoncy on
nothing.
difficult lo unwind luter.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You're likely to be rather Today If you need the support ol
restless today, unless you find a group, first determine who the
some profitable wuys to utilize key people are and work on
your time. Select projects that lhem. If they go along with you.
urc practical, artistic und cre­ (heathers will as well.
Copyright 1094 NEW SPAP ER
ative.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun. ENTERPRISE ASSN.

by Leonard Starr

ROBOTMAN
OR YDOR APPLICATION

MORE IF
YOU COUNT
THE YEARS

( MOMMA \

\ SPENT IN

PITTAS!

YOU CLAIMED 5 YEARS’

EXPERIENCE MAKING

s— 1 R I Z A S - K a * ^

'W

l

M iM N A Y tl

l MADE

W

THE. OLD
COUNTRY..

ONES.
MICRO- '

YOU NAME

i

'?/

/

YOU U ED
ON YOUR
AVPUCATiON
kDIDN'T YOU?

l'YE

\

SEEN THIS &gt;

NAIPEN
BEFORE AND
DON'T WORRY..
THERE'S
N EV ER ANY
P ER M A N E N T

DAMAGE TO
TH E CEILING
V FAN - j

..IF W O A IR ILY
WI6H A t TO LOOK
AFTER AUS A m t,

l Wtu, of cooast,
16 O O O H S R 't r — J

snaAur...

—

Wnue...\ ns...

THE MTH WATER

------------- 'M et, 16 STilL SftAAMftG,
AUMTlE M i t e . . . A M P -IA « K A *A iP
T GIVE W V TN ttS

HUH?

_

P f K H iO i?

FOR 6 U A C M N 6 HX/R
HAIR/IT'S HARP V W te
O U T WITH HAIR THE

T g - j COLOR Of A

P f* J* * 3 S

}

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241946">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, May 25, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241948">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241950">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on May 25, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241952">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241954">
                <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;, May 25, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241956">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241957">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241958">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241959">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24230" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23835">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/c27ba0248bf7872860374c9826385af7.pdf</src>
        <authentication>9e75363811fd98bfed44da1b57ef9416</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="241997">
                    <text>June 19, 1994

SUNDAY

75 Cents

Sanford Herald
Serving Sanford, Lake Mary and Seminole County alnoa 100S
06th Yoar, No. 258 - Sanford. Florida

When religion offends

NEWS DIGEST
□ Sports
Introducing th s h o m o team
SANFORD — The Sanford Recreation De­
partment haa announced the All-Star teama that
will represent the city's Babe Ruth Baseball and
Senior Softball leagues.
O S es Page IB

H a ra s s m e n t
g u id e lin e s
u n d e r fire
By 4. MARK BARPIBLD
Herald Sanlor Stall Writer

□Spsolal this Sunday
M eet so m e n ice fo lk s
In the second o f three special pull-out
sections, some of your friends and nrlgbors In
Sanford give you a glimpse of Our Town. Next
week. Lake Mary residents will be featured.

□ Local

SANFORD — A proposed scl of guidelines for
federal religious harassment complaints has
caused un outpouring of opposition by |&gt;eople
concerned uboul Inviting such complaints.
More than 50.000 comments on the proposed
guidelines were received during n 10 -week period
by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, the group proposing the guidelines.
Congressman John Mica. R-Fern Park, has

H app y F a th e r’s Day
On this day for dads, some of our readers
share special memories of theirs today. Paga
Related Editorial. Page 4A.
*

received 30 calls and letters on the prn|N&gt;sal, all
opposed.
Although Intended to prevent only harassment
and Intimidation, some fear the guideline!, will
serve lo block religious expression.
An unsigned llycr distributed recently at a
Sanford church dcclurcs " If you as a l&gt;oss have a
Bible on your tlrsk or a religious plaque on your
wall, a worker cun rr|K&gt;rt to the EEOC that he
feels uncomfortable ut work even If you tteyer
mention God or Jrsus to him. A worker may also
complain about the wearing of religious jewelry
such as n Star o f David or cross."
Pinkerton mild Mica op|M&gt;*e* the promised
harassment guidelines because they don't state
what Is urceptnhle conduct.
"W c'rr concerned about Ihr vagueness In the
guidelines." said Sharon Pinkerton. Mica's press
aide. "T h e congressman could snpimrt guidelines
If Ihey'rr more clearly defined.”
Mica has co-sponsored House Resolution 4-18
by Howard P. "B u ck " McKeon. R-Callfornla. The
resolution declares the House sup|M&gt;rts protection

C B«e Guidelines, Page 8A

Suit filed over
money motto
By NICK FFBIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — The Freedom From Religion
Foundation, a national organization o f athetata
and agnostics headquartered In Madison. Wls.
has filed suit In federal court In Denver. Colo.,
challenging the U.S. motto In God We Trust, and
Its use on U.S. currency.
The organization wants It eliminated from all
U.S ruins and bllla. and If necessary to have
something, replaced with the former motto "E
plurlhus unum.”
Named In the lawsuit are the U.S. government.
Treasury .Secretary Lloyd Bentaen. and Treasurer
of the Untied States Mary Ellen Wlnthrop. The

C 8ce Motto. Paga 8A

Wet feet

Murder
trial

/V " j l * *
*

Youngest college grad lands job
MOBILE. Ala. - Whiz kid Michael Kearney
doesn't like to waste time. He got his college
degree when wus 10. Two weeks later, he got u
television contract.
Kearney, listed In the Guineas Book of Records
us the world's youngest college gruduule. will be
a "special correspondent" for "Mike ft Maty."
an afternoon talk and variety show on ABC'.
The contract was announced Friday and
Michael's first uppearanee Is set for July? TrrnN
were not disclosed.
"T h is Is my big breuk." he said.
In Interviews before his June 5 graduation.
Michael said he wanted to become a game show
host. Until then, he will settle for contributing
regular reports to the ABC show.
"Michael hus u unique perspective on things."
said executive producer Steve Ober. "H e haa the
In n ocen ce of a ch ild and the In sigh t of an a d u lt."
Michael received a bachelor's degrre In
anthropology from the University of South
Alabama. He was In Las Vegas on Saturday to
receive an award from the American Academy
of Achievement.

J u s tic e S p iro A gn ew ?
BALTIMORE — President Nixon considered
getting rid of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew by
nominating him to the Supreme Court, former
aide John Ehrllchm an told T h e Sun of
Baltimore.
Nixon "had a notion to put Agnew on the
court, but he remembered that lie had to tie
confirmed" by a Democratlc-controlled Senate.
Ehrllchman said In an Interview published
Saturday.
At the time In late 1071, two vacancies were
about to open on the Supreme Court with the
resignations o f Justices Hugo L. Black and John
M. Harlan. The two appointments ultimately
went to Lewis F. Powell ‘Jr. and William II.
Relinquish
Nixon also thought that he might get Agnew
to step aside by arranging for "som e highpaying Job." Ehrllchman said. But Agnew
refused to resign.
Agnew eventually resigned Oct. 10. 1073.
ufter pleudtng no contest to Income tax evasion.

C la rifica tio n
School board chairman Barbara Kuhn said
she did not mean to say she wus voting ugulnst
the contract approval for Supt. Paul Hagerty at
the school board m eeting .on Wednesday
evening. She was Joking about unolher matter
Immediately following the vote anti, she feurs.
the comment was misinterpreted. The vote to
upprovc H ugerty's raise was unanimous.
Hagerty's contract has been approved through
June 30. 1997.

r y

IN D E X
B r i d g e ................
B u s l n a a s ................... 4 B F lo r id a ................
C la s s if ie d s ...... 10-1 S B H e e l t h p i t n e a e ..
C o m l o a . .. . ........
C r e s s w e r d ......- ....... S B

P e o p le ..'...............

D a a i h a ....................... B A

T a l a v l i i a f l ...........

E d it o r ia l......... -

U m brella w eather ahead

State seeks
death penalty
By SANDRA ILLIOTT
Herald Staff Writer

H w iM SIM M by M u m KaUft

David L. Qroen, Sanford, flguroa thara'a no use
running to beat lha downpour that tloodod several
areas ot town Fitday, Including 13th Street near Elm

' V

For mors weather, see Fags «A

□ B ee Murder, Page 8 A

Cops stay busy with drug busts
Motel
‘ Pot’
room
ring
raided
broken
By NICK FFBIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer

By NICK FFBIFAUF
Herald Staff Writer________________

FERN PARK - Members of the
Clty/County Investigative Bureau,
CCIB. Friday busted whut they nay
could be the biggest marijuana ring
In the urea.
Agents In three counties con­
ducted the drug raid, which In­
cluded arrests made at the Comfort
lint In Fern Park. Six persons from
Sanford and Longwood were ar­
rested. Three others were arrested
In Orange County.'and other may be
made In Voluslu County.
According In sheriff's spokesman
Ed McDonough, the suspects arc
uccuscd o f being part of a ring that
d is trib u te d an es tim a te d 100
pounds o f marijuana each week In
the three counties. Based on the
street value, McDonough estimated
the group was bringing In possibly
• 100.000 per week.
Arrested at the motel Frlduy
m orning was Alah Hunter, 23,
who's address Is listed ns 389 East
Lake Mary Blvd.. Sanford. He has
been charged with conspiracy to
trafflck In marijuana, more than
100 pounds, and his bond has been
set at $300,000.
McDonough snltj CCIB ugents also

SANFORD — Members o f the
Clty/County Investigative Bureau,
CCIB. raided a Sanford motel room
Thursday, where a half dozen per­
sons were arrested In connection
with drug activities.
Armed with a search warrant,
CCIB officers raided Room 3 o f the
Fountain Motor Lodge, S. Orlando
Drive, where undercover officers
h a d r e p o r t e d m a k in g d r u g
urchascs at an earlier time. Patrick
Robinson, 27, was charged with
possession with intent to distribute
and possession of drug parapherna­
lia.
Marie Annette Brooks. 30. of 1011
Locust Avenue was charged with
sale o f a controlled substance and
ssesston of drug paraphernalia.
uls Edward Brundlge, 30. of 27B
S. 3rd Street In Lake Mary waa
charged with purchase of crack
cocaine.
Officers said while they were
conducting the raid Inside the room,
several persons, believed lo be
seeking drugs, knocked on the door.
Officers responded to the knocks, let
the persons Into the room, and
arrested them. Tam m y Lynn Pratt.

□Bee Bust, Page BA
Variable cloudiness
with scattered even­
in g s h o w e r s and
th u n d e rs to rm s
likely. High In the
low 80s to mid 90s.

Avenue. His feet mey be wet but Qreen etaye
relatively dry beneath hla striped umbrella. The soggy
conditions are expected lo continue today.

SANFORD — The state Is seek in g
the death p en a lty for A n to n Daryl
M eyers, c o n v ic te d o f first d e g rre
m u rd er F rid a y In the d eath o f K a th y
E n gela w h o va n ish ed w ith ou t a
trace seven y ea rs ago.
" W e 'r e v e ry , v e r y p le a s e d ," p ro ­
secu tor C h ris W h ite said a fter the
Jury retu rn ed Its v e rd ic t a fter about
I I hou rs o f deliberation. "I think
Ih r Jury p ro b a b ly w o rk e d every bit
os hard as w e d id when ft ca m e
rig h t d o w n to It and th ere w aa
en ou gh co n fu sio n that II to o k a lot
o f c o n cen tra tio n an d focu s on th eir

C

H trd d Photo by Ajxyl KonUton

Allen Hunter, Sanford, la arrested on drug charges by a masked drug agent
at a motel Friday.

□Bee Raid, Page BA

Gentle ‘community pastor’ dead at 76
By SANDRA BLLIOTT

Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Retired Methodist minister Rev.
Leo King, who died Saturday nt age 76, Is
remembered by friends as a sweet, kind man who
was active In the community.
The Rev. King served 10 years as pastor o f First

United Methodist Church of Sanford before
retiring In 1983.
"H e wns Just one o f the most gentle, loving,
curing Individuals I've ever m et." mild the Rev.
CHIT Melvin, current pastor of (lie church. "H e
was Just the kind of person that always put
everybody else first. Thnt's whut epitomized Ills
ministry, c Ting for others."

King was born In Indiana In 1918 and came to
Central Florida from Miami In 1973. During his
career he served churches in Ocala, Morion
County. Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Winter Haven,
St. Petersburg, south Miami and Sanford. He waa
n member o f the Florida United Methodist
Conference since 1946 and served on a number of

□Bee King, Page BA

SU BSCR IBE TO T H E SA N FO R D H ER ALD FO R T H E B ES T L O C A L NEW S C O V E R A G E . C all 322-2611

. I

�i» 1

Readers speak: Memories of Dad
■ y E U M N W INNER

BUMPS'

Herald Correspondent

In spectors get free g u e sts
WASHINGTON — That couple you met on the cruise may
well have been a federal cop who took hts wife and family on a
free sea voyage while he sought out Illegal Immigrants.
The government paid his salary. The cruise line picked up
hts tab.
In a tale o f government regulation turned cosy, a Justice
Department audit reveals that Immigration and Naturalization
Service inspectors placed on cruise ships to detect Illegal
Immigrants have been taking family and friends nlong for free
or reduced fares.
The report, obtained by The Associated Press, also found
that the cruise lines were directly reimbursing the INS agents
— usually without receipts or documentation — for their travel
expenses.
It focused on ports in Miami, Port Everglades, Fla., and San
Yaldro, Calif., where cruise trips travel to the Dahamas,
Caribbean Islands or Mexico.
The Justice Department agency Is promising disciplinary
action and new regulations to curtail the abuses.
The INS Is required to check cruise ships for undocumented
aliens as they reach a U.S. port. Dul some Inspectors took
round trips that left them with Idle time aboard the vessels or
at foreign ports, then filed for overtime pay. the report said.
Auditors decried several practices of the round-trip Inspec­
tions. saying the cosiness Jeopardized the Independence of
agents whose Job ii u to fine cruise lines up to 43,000 for each
undocumented alien found aboard.
They specifically questioned whether the discounts for
agents* relatives violated federal laws and regulations barring
government employees from accepting anything of value In
connection with Ihelr official duties.
"T h e reduced fares would cause a reasonable person to
question whether such a gratuity could result In more lenient
Inspectors or treatment o f the cruise line." the report said.
The INS la overhauling Its regulations to prohibit the actions
described In the report, and will take disciplinary action If
warranted, agency spokeswoman Ana Coblan said.

SANFORD — When most peo­
ple think of dads on the screen
they may recull Mr. Cleaver and
Father Knows Dest series. A l­
though many sporting events
host a few "H I Mom" signs, most
people drummed up a few good
memories o f "Good Ole Dad."
Locala were asked to take a trip
down memory lane and recall an
event or special recollection of
the first muu In their life. On this
Father's Day some responded
that they hope their own dads
might “ read this and weep."
Steve Wood said, "W hen I
think o f my father I think of
what a good man he was and
how he raised me. He had a
strong will and desire."
Jim m y DcDose said, "I think
about the good times we had.
When I had a lot o f problems he
□ S e e Dad. P a g *

Jtff Byrd with ton, Slav*, and daughter. Elizabeth.

M arking
h isto ry
Sanlord Mayor Baity* Smith
and Longwood Mayor Paul
Loveatrand unvallad a historic
marker at the Lake Mary 1-4
re s t sto p T h u rsd ay . Tha
m a rk a r, o n a o f o v e r 10
throughout tha county, details
how Samlnole County was
formed from Orange County In
1913. The Seminole County
H is to ric a l C om m ission Is
placing marker* at Important
historical alias. Co-chairman ol
tha event were John Blstllne
and Paul Mlkler.

A ID S dentist m aybe not to blam e
MIAMI — Nearly four years ago. Kimberly Dergalis made a
shocking announcement: she had contracted the AIDS virus
from her dentist.
Dergalis was the first known case o f a health care worker
transmitting HIV to a patient, and eventually five other
Floridians said they had been Infected by the same dentist.
Federal disease Investigators later determined that Dr. David
Acer, who has since died. Indeed infected the six patients.
Dut a report broadcasted Sunday on "6 0 Minutes" program
now suggests Acer may not have been responsible for
transmitting the AIDS virus and questions the scientific
techniques used by the federal Centers for Disease Control to
accuse Acer.
According to a new study by Dr. Lionel Rcsnlck and other
scientists, the CDC in Atlanta vastly overstated the reliability of
the DNA sequencing tests used by government scientists, the
CDS News program reports.
Those DNA tests showed the particular strain of Acer’s virus
closely matched that of the six Infected patients.
"W hat we're finding la that there are Individuals In the area
that have similar strains." Resnlck told "6 0 Minutes." noting
that yuas significant because tt raises questions the patients
could have acquired the disease from someone else tn the
communjty.
The broadcast also raises questions about Information the
patients' revealed to Investigators of their scxuul histories that
. may have put them at high risk for getting the AIDS virus.
"Every aspect o f this Issue was completely and thoroughly
investigated by a legion o f medical experts." Robert M.
Montgomery, a West Palm Deach attorney who represented
Dergalis and three other patients, said Friday. "There Is
absolutely nothing new ....

D etectives seek c lu e s In b ird s’ death s
LOXAHATCHEE — Detectives trying to uncover the mystery
behind 400 dead exotic birds said they haven't made much
progress after spending hours digging up a shallow grave on
the bird farm that only turned up a dead dog.
The owners o f the western Palm Deach County bird farm.
Dhagwan La]!, 31, and hta aunt. Ltla Duerattan, 35, are still
missing.
” We Just don't know what's taken place here," said Palm
Deach County shertfTs spokesman Dob Ferrell. "W e're back to
square one."
Detectives have been looking for Loll and Duerattan since
Wednesday. On Friday, they spent 14 hours getting a search
warrant and digging up a box which they hoped would offer
evidence In the case.
Instead they found the dead dog.
The shertfTs detectives were called to Investigate a case of
animal cruelty this week at the home, where more than 400
birds had starved to death.

From Awoclatod Pros* rsports

M IAM I - Here are the
winning numbers selected
Friday m the Florida Lottery;

Hat aM Phata t y Tammy Vtntant

Way Back When: Legend of Mary Davis
By JULIAN STKNSTROM

Herald Columnist______________

Part 2 ol two parta
Fd lto r‘ 1 not* Tha lata Ju lian U a n ilro m
wro)* o n ' TOO W ar Back Whan colum n! lor
lha H trtia A lta r h'» d w lh ta il month, h i!
widow. L o u im . d iu o v tra d M v aral naw cal
u m m ha had com platad, Including tha
following ona

(Tills Is a series of Incidents
that huppriied here In Sanford
nearly GO years ago. It Is the
story of the legend of Mary Davts
called by Its author "A n Echo
from the Swam p." Now let us
return to Winslow Grant's story.)
"A s Richard's search for me
encompassed the swamp I was
In he eventually came close
enough for me to whisper u
reply. And. when he emerged
from the gloom he didn't even
pause to ask about my physical
w ell being. He Im m ediately
launched into an appeal for me
to help save Lea's life. Although
I was unsure o f how I could
possibly help Leo. 1 agreed to

try-

“ W e g u id e d o u r r e tu r n
through the sw am p by the
sound o f voices coming from the
vicinity of the Davis shack.
When we finally arrived, sud­
denly the glare o f the Model ’A'
headlights Illuminated poor Leo

sprawled on the ground, covered
with blood and surrounded by
several hulking figures armed
with shotguns.
" A s w e w a lk ed |ntp the glimmcrlng light "O eetch" allowed
signs of n bad beallng, (minted nl
die and blubbered pathetically.
'That's film, that's him. that old
Orlando bay did It. He did It. I
ain't had nothing* to do with It)'
" M y throat tightened, my
heart thumped wildly and my
knees turned to Jelly, before I
could summon my wobbly legs
to flee once ugnln. the hulking
fig u re s circ led urnund and
grabbed inc.
"A s I stood In their grusp,
speechless and completely para­
lyzed with fright. I was suddenly
blinded by the headlights of
dozens of cars and deafened by
the sounds o f auto horns blow­
ing and round after round of
applause.
"Just us suddenly. Leo urose
fnn his near death prone posi­
tion on the ground and began
wiping away the ketchup that
had been doused on him. The
hulking figures put their am is
around my shoulders. Virtually
all of the 'Mary Duvls Theater'
lovers of Sanford hud turned nut
to enjoy another command per­
formance of the Mary Davis
show.

Cash 3

1®

6 *8-0

'M

P l« y 4

W A

S-3-2-4

Tonight: Partly cloudy with u
chance o f scattered afternoon
and ev en in g
show ers and
thunderstorms. Low In the low
to mid 70s mph. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Monday: Partly cloudy with
scattered afternoon showers and
thunderstorms. High In the up­
per 80s to mid 00s. Southeast
wind 10*18 mph.
Extended
.forecast: Partly cloudy with
scattered afternoon and evening
thunderstorms. Low s In the
lower to mid 70s. Highs in the
upper 60s to mid 00s.

V

l accnd Class Foataga Raid si Sanlord,
Florida and additional mailing
Postmaatau Sand addrsss ohongoo
toTHC SANFORD HERALD. P.0.
Bos 1007, Sanford, FL 33773*1107.
Subscription Ratas
(Dafty e Sunday)
Homs DsUvtry
Mad
3 Months
Sit. SO
134.00
0 Months
PSCO
$40.00

IVaar

W

I

N

N

Ftortds Htaidants must pay 7 » sslso
tax in addition to ratoo above.
Shone (407) 333-3011,

City
Daytona Baach
FI. Laud Baach
Fort Myan
GalntivHIt
Jackionvlllo
Kay Watt
Miami
Pensacola
Saraiola
Tallahattao
Tampa
Varo Baach
W. Palm Boach

" •***1.1

---------- 3

SUNDAY
Variable 89*73

TUESDAY
Ptlyeldy 89*73

WEDNESDAY
Ptly cldy 89*73

TID U
SUNDAYt
SOLUNAR TABLE) Min. 1:55

Sunday, June 19, 1994
Vol. 00, No. 250
0a lly and Sunday, saespt
Saturday by TBs Sanford Hortld,
Ins. 300 N. FrancS Avo., Sanlord,
FW. JZ77I

Romania.
"S ev era l months after m y
capture, with nothing more to do
than sit and pick lice from my
skinny body, f noticed one i
clamor among m y Roman!
prison guards. They announced
something unusual was hap­
pening. The guards were all
looking and pointing to the sky. *
A wounded U.S. Army Air Corps
D*17 bomber, pursued by puffs
o f anti-aircraft fire, wus the
object of their attention.
"Suddenly a wing sheared oil
from the doomed bomber and
the plane augured Into the city.
M ir a c u lo u s ly , s e v e r a l
parachutists could be seen.
"T w o days later the survivors
o f the crashed D-17 were led Into
our prison cump. The news
spread via the grapevine that
one of the new arrivals was from
Florida. 1 sought out the new
man and was surprised and
exceptionally pleased to learn
that the prisoner from Florida
was from Sanford.
"During the course o f our
conversation. 1 asked the new­
comer If he'd ever known the
stec’ ’ of Mary Davis. Hts smile
was. probably, the first sign of
amusement he had shown In u
long, long time. He told me he
knew of the legend of Mary Davis
□ S « e Stenstrom , Page 5A

TH E W EATH ER
S X T IN D Ip O U T lM K

m

"M y relleTi’ It wus so prolound
I was Incapable of auger. Emo­
tionally and physically drained. I
fell Into it cumu-llkc sleep In the
bouncing Model 'A ' on (be way
back to Richard's house In
Orlando.
(Although this performance
I timed out to tic one of very licst
of the Mary Davis productions,
the legend of Mary Davis did not
end that particular night. Many
o th er rc-rnu ctincnts o f the
drama ensued until the owner of
the property and homeowners In
the vicinity got tired uf bearing
all the shotgun blasts amt de­
cided to put un end to It. Now,
buck to Grant.|
"A s the years (lasscd and the
nightmarish aspects of the Mary
D u v ls a f f a i r b e c a m e le s s
frightening, the clouds of un
Im pending great war slowly
durkrnrd. Thunder and light­
ning struck at Pearl Harbor. The
Impetuous young men of my
generation rushed off to play the
game o f wur. The memory of
Mary Duvls came to mind less
frequently bul II never fnded
completely.
" I suppose I was more fortu­
nate than ninny of my content*
porarlcs. I was cupturcd by the
Germans lifter parachuting from
a burning H-24 Army Air Corps
b o m b e r n e a r D it c h a r c s t .

LAST
June 30

Daytona Beacht Waves arc
1-2 feet with a slight chop.
Current In to Uic north with a
wutcr temperature of 81 degrees.
New Smyrna Beacht Waves
are 2-3 feet and semi glassy.
Current Is to the north with a
water temperature of 12 degrees.

a.m.. 2:15 p.m.: MaJ. 8:03 a.m.,
8:35 p.m. TIDES) Daytons
Beach) highs, 4:21 a.m.. 5:13
p.m.; lows, 10:40 a.m., 11:34
p.m .; Nsw Smyrna Beach)
highs, 4:20 am .. 5:18 p.m.;
laws. 10:45 a.m., 11:30 p.m.:
Cocoa Beach: highs. 4:41 a.m.,
S:33 p.m.; lows, 11:00 a.m..

St. Aufuatine to Jupiter Inlet
Sunday: Wind variable 10
knots. Seas 1 to 3 feet. Day and
Inland waters u light chop. Wind
and seas higher neur scattered
thunderstorms. Sunday night;
Wind southeast 5 to 10 knots.
Seas 2 feet or less. Day and
Inland waters smooth. Widely
scattered thunderstorms.

THURSDAY
Ptly cldy 89-73

STATISTICS
T h e high tem perature tn
Snnford Saturday was 87 de­
grees and the overnight low was
71 us reported by the National
W eather Service at Orlando
International Airport.
Recorded rainfall for the
period, ending ut 3 p.m. Satur­
day. tolullcd .05 o f an Inch.
The temperature at 3 p.m.
Saturday was 84 degrees.
Other Weather Service dutu:

□Saturday's high............ 87
□Barometric pressure,20.99
□Relative Humidity.,..70 pet
□W ln de....North northeast 7
m
p
h
□R sln fsU ......... ..95 of an in.
□Sunset ..... •OOOOfMftM8)26 p.m.
□ Sunrise.............. ,8)27 a.m.

city
Atlanta
Bat Ion
Chicago
Columbut.Ohlo
Dallat FI Worth
Denver
Fairbanks
Graamboro.N C,
Hartford Vpglld
Halana
Honolulu
Irtdlanapollt
Jurwau
Kaniai City
La» Vaga*
LIHIa Rock
Lot Angalaa
Mamphli
Mllwaukto
MplaSt Paul
Naihvllla
Haw Or Itarn
Naw York City
Norfolk,Vo.
Phllodalphla
Phoanla
Pltliburgh
Portland.Main*
Portland.Ora,
Provldooca
Ralalgh Durham
Sacramanto
St Louli
Salt Laka City
San Olago
San PranclKo
San Juan,P.R.
Santa Pa
Saattia
Sloui Palls
Spokana
Syracuta
Topaka
Tuc**n
TulM

�OfflBS;

Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida • Sunday, June Itf, 1004 - 3A

POLICE BRIEFS

Tearful S im p s o n jailed in 7-by-9 c e ll
■ y MICHAIL P LIIM A N
Associated Press Writer_________

D ouble arrest
Tw o persons were arrested Thursday following a trafftc slop
by sberlfTs deputies al S.R. 4G and C.K. 4 15. Deputies slopped
a vehicle which they reported was being driven Improperly.
James Dean Capps, 38. o f 3804 Pine Avenue, Sanford, the
driver o f the car, was charged with driving under the Influence
of alcohol, and possession o f u controlled substance. Konuld
Thomas Alcott, 39, of the same address, listed us a passenger
In the car, was also arrested on a charge o f possession o f
marijuana. The deputy said when he wrote a uniform traffic
citation on Alcott regarding a reported open container
violation, Alcott refused to sign. He was also charged with
refusing to sign the citation. At the John K. Polk Correctional
Facility, Alcott was also found to be wanted on a warrant for
fulling to appear to pay a fine.

T h eft ch a se
Sanford police arrested Charles Lewis Jones. 31. of 2751 W.
18th Street Thursday. Police said he reportedly had attempted
to remove $15.90 In merchandise from a store on Airport
Boulevard. Police said he fled from the area and was chased by
store security personnel. When police arrived, they located him
in a wooded area off Old Lake Mary Road, lie was charged with
retail theft. The Items he reportedly took from the store were
listed us disposable diapers.

T ra ffic sto p s
• Kevin Ray Walker, 27, 400 Sun Lake Circle. Lake Mary,
was stopped by Luke Mnrv police ut the lntrrstntc*4 exit ramp
on Lake Mary Ilmilevuid Thursday. He was charged with
driving under the Influence o f alcohol.
• Dominie Dlcrlsrl, 30. 910 N. Grunt Court, Longwood. and
Duvld Wayne Gallant. 27, o f Apopku. were both urrrslrd by
Florida Highway Patrol troopers following a truffle stop on
lnlerslute&gt;4 at Luke Mary Boulevard Tuesday. Each was
charged with pooesslon or cannabis under 20 grams, and
possession of drug paraphernalia.

D isp u te s
• Beverly Ann Lewis. 34. 624 Rosccllff Circle. Sanford, was
arrested by deputies on Lake Mobile Drive Thursday. Deputies
said she reportedly threatened another woman with a pocket
knife. («ewls was charged with aggravated assault.
• Alfonso Stallworth. 38. 113 Sterling Court. Sanford, was
arrested by deputies In the 2100 block of 22nd Street Thursday
following an altercation with a female. He wns rhurged willt
buttery, domestic violence.

W arrants served
• Frederick Eastwood. 44. 211 Lavln* Landing, l.ukc Mary,
turned himself in nt the John E. Polk Correctional Factliiy
Thursday, He was wanted on a capias for driving with a
suspended/revoked license.
• Leon Callowuy. 31, 1810 Southwest Road. Sanford, was
located by depotIrs nt I3lh Street and Palmetto Avenue
Thursday He was wantrd for violation o f probation on a
conviction of twltery.
• Sharon Elizabeth Dickerson. 35. 126 Academy Avenue,
wus located by deputies on Country Club Road Thursday. She
was wanted on a warrant for petit theft.
• Raymond Russell Ragsdale. 30. 4200 S. Orlnndo Drive, wns
served a warrant nt the Jail Thursday. Hr was wantrd for
violation of probation.
• Stephfon Deangrlo Russell. 28. 502 E. Hickory Avenue.
Sanford, was servrd a warrant nt the Jull Thursday for falling to
np|M-nr On n c h a rg e Of battery.

Incidents reported to S a n fo rd p o lic e
• A woman's purse, with contents reported to tie valued at
•515 was reportedly stolen from a locker area at a business In
the 500 block of E. I.ukc Mary Boulevard Thursday.
• A business burglar was reported Thursday ut a construc­
tion site at Seminole Community College. Police said someone
apparently went Into a fenced urra. and using a fork-lift, loaded
a welder onto a vehicle. The welder was valued at $3,500.
• A 1984 Oldtmobllc was reportedly stolen Thursday from a
dealership In the 1100 block of S. Sanford Avenue. Police
reported recovering the vehicle early Friday morning In
Higgins Terrace.
• A man told police he was In a wooded area olf Grandview
between 24th Street and 25th Street al approxtmuily 2 a m.
Thursday, when somronc approached him from the rear,
striking him In the head and knocking him to the ground. The
victim said when he recovered, he determined that $ 1 )2 In
food stamps, $65 In cash and oilier Items had, been stolen.

LOS ANGELES - A tcurful
O.J. Simpson wus locked alone
Suit inlay III n 7-by-0 foal cell
with a bed, sink mid tnllct, his
emotions in tatters after his
surrcul flight from charges that
hr murdered Ills cx-wlfe and u
friend ofher's.
"A s had ns he has been In the
past four days. IPs the worst I’ve
ever heard h im ," Sim pson’s
attorney, Robert Shapiro, told
The Associated Press. "H e was
crying. He apologized lo me for
disappointing m e."
Simpson Is In a hlgh-seeurlly
section of the sheriffs Men’s
Central Jail without ball. A
deputy wns posted around the
clock outside the cell. Visitors
arc not allowed until his ar­
raignment, which could come us
early us Monday. Shapiro spoke
with Simpson by telephone.
Prosecutors filed a criminal
romplnlnt a m is lug the footltall
legend of kittling Nicole Brown
Sim pson and wulter Ronald
Goldman oti June 12.
Simpson dipped away from a
friend s house Friday Just before
his arrest and led jwllce on a
00-mile chase thul ended on the
robhlrstnne driveway of Ills $1.2
million Brentwood mansion.
Millions wulrhrd the surreal
ordeal live on national television.
Jfc Los Angeles, thousands of
people lined freeways and clly
streets anil some cheered the
former star running hack for the
NFL’s Buffalo Hills and Universi­
ty o f Southern California.
Clutching a fam ily photo.
Simpson was coaxed oul o f a
while Ford Bronco and gave
himself up Jusl before 0 p.rn.
Th e driver. Al C ow lin gs, u
lon gtim e friend and form er
tenmmule of Simpson's, was
arrested for Investigation of
hurtiorlug a fugitive and released
on $230,000 bond Cowlings
was In Ills Pacific Palisades
home Saturday, tint refused to
talk lo a rejxirler
“ Do not call. I have no com ­
ment." he said by phone.
With Simpson under lock and
key. the rase Is In Ihe bands of
lawyers, and there were signs
Ills defense was having pro­
blems Henry Lee. a prominent
fo re n s ic s c le n tls l hired by
S h a p iro , has tu rn ed d o w n
Shapiro's rrourst to stay In
Cnlilnriiiit Hint Irlt tor tils h om e
stale nl Connecticut.
The Chinese Dally News re­
ported Saturday that l-er exam ­
ined a cut on Slm|MMin'n hand
T h u rs d a y and co u ld n 't d e ­
termine whether II wus caused
by a broken drinking glass — as
Simpson's lawyers claimed — or
In a light.
"There are some Indications,
circuinstuntlul evid en ce and
motive provided by the (roller,
hut there Is no direct evidence,
so ihe evidence is not con­
clusive," Lee. sjteukmg Chinese,
told (he pajx-r.
Prosecutors, mean while, said
ihey still hadn't derided whether
to seek the death (tenally. The
charges Included the special
circumstance of a multiple kill-

with you," read a sign ( M is te d at
his estate. Another sign en­
c o u r a g e d . " H e s tru n g m y
brother."
The case took u number of
strange twists before Simpson
wus apprehended, slarllng with
visibly angry police announcing
Friday nftcrnomi l hut he had
reneged on a surrender agree­
ment and disappeared,
During a televised news con­
ference. Shapiro put out a plea
for Simpson lo turn himself In
for the sake ol his Inmlly and
fr ie n d s . T h e la w y e r s a id

Slinpsnn sneaked out o f a house
In Ihe San Fernando Valley with
Cowlings.
Then a California Highway
Patrol officer spotted the Bronco
on In te rs ta te 5 In O rntige
C ou nty, near the cem etery
us burled,
where Ms. Simpson wus
and the chase — a
one — wus on.
More than a dozen patrol
followed the Bronco, which
eled at 20-50 mph on
and city streets. In the
Simpson wns reportedly
Ing u handgun ut bis bend

Guaranteed and Dedicated
Service With a Per^nal!,
Concern for Your Repair,
Needs
Harrell &amp; Beverly
Transm issions
Repairing and Rebuilding A utomatic Transmissions^

209 W. 25th St., Sanford

3 2 2 -8 4 1 5

JC P e n n e y

FOR W OM EN

25-50% O FF Sale 9.99

Now 24.99

SWIMWEAR FO R MISSES
AND JUNIORS

HAGGAR* W RINKLE FR EE
COTTON TWILL SHO RTS

I

30% O FF

Ii

Rag. $18. SELECTED W EEK­
ENDS* OR ST, JOHN'S BAY*
SHORTS

Sale 14.99
Reg. $24-520. SELECTED
SHORT SLEEVE DRESSY
BLOUSES

Sale 19.99
Rag. $30-534. CRICKET LANE
S PO R TS W E A R FOR MISSES

20-40% O FF
BRAS. BRIEFS. BIKINIS.
D AYW EAR AN D SHAPEW EAR

I

25% O F F
SLEEPWEAR. ROBES. AND
LEISUREWEAR. SALE 14.99.
Rog. $21. A D O NN A* CHEMISE

Sale 16.99

SELECTED SWIMWEAR

Rog. $22. HUNT CLUB®
LOOSE-FIT COTTON DENIM
SHORTS

Sale 12.99
R eg . $26. SELECTED PA R
FO UR* KNIT SHIRTS

DOCKERS®
S A LE

Sate 16.99 :.

* Now 27.99

R eg. $28. N ATU R AL ISSUES*
C O T T O N JER SE Y K N IT S H IR T f

SH O RT SLEEVE C O T T O N
MADRAS SHIRT OR
CHAM BRAY SHIRT

• N O W 2 9 .9 9
LOOSE FIT TWILL PAN TS

Sale 9.99
Rag. 19.99-19.99. SELECTED
YOUNG MENS RAYO N PR IN T
SHIRTS

do

(k m *fiac*r*

iik*.!*,
»»*&gt;. «"*«•
QMpAJIfKM IrtMiMMlM*

« i» l FVwu0« ofl rnnw•
Mf*
CM

M M M M d w k jCP m v m , Smtrl v * u m 'Norn' ( r c w &lt; * "• *»■ « u .x g a on

i

n

a

m oH T "

Sanford Plaza
Hwy. 17-92 • Sanford

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y R EV IEW C O M M ISSIO N

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Wife has no
alibi for
Chandler

R E: P O S S IB L E C H A R T E R A M E N D M E N T S
The Charter Raviow Commission will bo conducting Iho first of three required Public Hearings for the
purposo of taking public input and comment on the following proposed amendments to the Seminole
County Home Rulo Charter at 7:00 P.M., or as soon thereafter ns possiblo, on Thursday, the 30th day
of June, 1994, In the Commission Chambers, Room 1028 of the Seminole County Services Building,
1101 East First Streot, Sanford, Florida:

l y Ths Associated Press_____
LARGO. Fla. - Oba Chan­
dler’s wife says she can’t ac­
c o u n t fo r h e r h u s b a n d 's
whercubouts on the night In
1989 he Is accused of luring
three Ohio tourists to their
deaths.
"Can you provide nn alibi of
any sort as to where he was?"
Assistant State Attorney Doug
Crow asked her during ques­
tioning Inst month.
"1 do not recall where he wns
on that date," Debra Ann Chan­
dler replied.

(1 -) Shall the Seminole County Home Rule Charter bo amended to provide for partisan election of
school board members of Seminole County and requiring a candidate's party affiliation to bo
shown on tho ballot?
(2.) Shall the Seminole County Home Rulo Charter be amended to require tho Board of County
Commissioners to preform on economic impact statement as a pre-requisite to taking any
legislative action that may have an economic cost to the public or taxpayers In Seminole
County?
(3.) Shall the Seminole County Home Rule Charter bo amended to authorize tho Board ol County
Commissioners, from time to time, to hire an Auditor which shall roport to and be responsible
directly to the Board of County Commissioners and assist tho Board in continuing studios in
the operation of County departments, programs and services?

Mrs. Chandler also cannot give
him an alibi for the night two
weeks earlier when a Canadian
tourist says Chandler rnjtcd her
aboard his boat, a crime police
say Is similar to the murder of
the Ohio women.
The couple sluircd a Tumpu
home at the lime of the rape and
murders.

(4.) Shall the "non-interference* clause of the Seminole County Charter be amended to clarify the
rights of individual commissioners to make Inquiry of the county administrative staff in the
performance of tho commissioners' responsibilities to tho citizens of Seminole County and
provide that the full Board of County Commissioners shall be the final arbiter for questions
arising under the "non-interference* clause?
(5.) Shall the Seminole County Homo Rulo Charter be amonded to croate tho Office of County
Attorney, which shall report and be responsible directly to the Board of County Commissionors,
to replace the present legal department which reports and is responsible to the County
Manager?

"Can you give me any
matlon. whether It would Incrim­
inate your husband or exculpate
him ... as to his whereabouts on
the day of the rape and the days
surrounding the murder?" Crow
asked
"N o I can't," Mrs. Chandler
said In a transcript o f her
deposition to prosecutors.
Joan Rogers, 36, and daugh­
ters Chrlste. 14, and Michelle,
17. were on their first vacation
awuy from their Ohio dairy farm.
They checked Into a motel on
the Courtney Campbell cause­
way June 1, 1989, and never
were seen alive aguln.

ing. which can warrant the
death jjenally.
Poller said they wanted lo
speak with an off-duty Los
Angeles police sergeant serving
as a security gunrd for Simpson
during the murder Investigation.
Sgt. Dennis L. Sebenlk was seen
escorting a man resem bling
S im p s o n a I th e m a n s io n
Thursday nflcr Ms. Simpson’s
funeral arrangem ents, police
said.
T h e m an . w id e ly p h oto gra|&gt;hrd as two men occompanvlng him pushed his head
down, wasn’t Simpson bill a
decoy, the Los Angeles Times
rc|iortcd Saturday. Sebenlk said
hr ran u legitimate security
company, but wouldn't com ­
ment on his work for Simpson.
Police said the department was
investigating Sebenlk's conduct.
Evidence hud mounted Inst
week against Simpson, with
everything from blood samples
to u glove rejKirtrdly linking him
to th e c r im e o u ts id e Ms.
Sim pson's Brentwood condo­
minium.
Still, It came as n shock to
muny when the Los Angeles
district attorney's olflce filed tlir
murder complaint Friday nam­
ing Simpson us the only suspect.
Simpson has his defenders.
"W e love you O.J.

Citizens ore encouraged to provide written comments to tho Charter Review Commission either prior
to or at the Public Hearing. Written materials may be mailed to Charter Review Commission, c/o Mary
MantzariSi Administrative Aide, County Services Building, Room 3020, 1101 East First Street,
Sanford, Florida 32771. Citizens having questions regarding this public hearing may telephone Mary
Manlzaris at (407) 321-1130 ext. 7211.

n o n o t a o 11 ( j o i n

Persons are advised that, if they decide to appeal any decision made at this hearing, they will need !
a record of the proceedings, and, for such purpose, they may need to insure that a verbatim rocord of j
the proceedings is made, which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal !
Is to be based.

Rita McCall aaalata Touchton Drug Store owner Glenn McCall as
he maneuvers around his downtown Sanfotd business with a
vacuum capable ol auctioning water from the floor. McCall'a
store flooded In the heavy weekend rains, beginning Friday.

Persons with Disabilities needing assistance to participate in any of these proceedings should
contact the Employee Relations Department ADA Coordinator 48 hours in advance of the meeting at
321-1130, extension 7941,

H«*M Sholo by Rm im Ktlttt

�4A - Sanford Hsrald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Jun* 19. 1994

Editorials/ O pinions
(USPS 441-280)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 407-322-2011 or 831-0903
Lacy K. Loar • Editor
Odaaaa M. Pugh • Bualnaaa Manager

SUBSCRIPTION RATE;
3 Mon Ih a ............................... 810.30
0 M o iillia ............................... 830 00
1 Y e a r ....................................878.00
Florida R ssM snts muat pay 7% aalee tax In
addition to ralaa above.

E D IT O R I A L

Appreciate Dad
O n e person can m ak e a difference. O n Ju ne
19, 1910* Mrs. J oh n B. D odd o f Spokane,
W ashin gton* p u b licly stated that It's about
tim e the p eop le o f the U nited S tates dedicated
a d a y to play h o m a g e to th eir fathers.
T h e decision w as m ad e Just three years
a ft e r a n o t h e r w o m a n . A n n a J a r v is o f
Philadelphia, asked h er church to d edicate a
d ay fo r m others. J a rv is had su ggested the
tribute on the a n n iversa ry o f the death o f her
m other.
D od d's Idea expan ded, and even tu a lly w as
supported b y President C alvin C oolld gc In
1924. W h ile M oth er's D ay beca m e official In
1914, F ath er's D ay w as not declared an
officia l h olid ay u n til A p ril, 1972.
O ve r the years, g re e tin g card com p an ies
and florists h a v e been v e r y bu sy su p p ly in g
cu stom ers w ith a p p rop riate m eth od s o f g r e e t­
ings. O ther businesses also h elp sh are the
best w ishes fro m o ffsp rin g to parents.
M an y p eop le take th e occasion to visit a
cem etery, p erh ap s w ith th e en tire fa m ily , to
pay tribute to th e person w h o g a v e them life.
In each o f these cases, the con cept w as
all-encom passin g. E very o n e has a m o th er and
father. T h e y m a y not b e w ith us a n y longer,
but th ey w ere In ex isten c e an d tog eth er tn the
past.
W h a t Is m o re Im pressive. Is h ow . In both
Instances, on e person w a s able to co m e up
w ith an Idea w h ich w as a ccepted b y others.
W e doubt If th ere w as a p etition d riv e o r
series o f pro and con debates. It w as sim p ly u
m a t t e r o f p e o p le w h o a g r e e d th a t th e
su ggestion s w e re good , g e ttin g togeth er and
b rin g in g the Id ea Into fru ition.
O n e person can, and often does m ak e a
difference. M rs. J
i
Jacuta.started
M o th e r's D ay,
M k . D odd s t a r t e d t o t t « » r * &lt; E * y . A n d ou r
m w h e r e and fathc
On thls^speclal d ay, le t's p a y ou r father a
visit, w h&amp; lhbr,by phone, In-person, or at his
restin g place.
N o father con be absolu tely perfect. S om e
h a ve m an y flaw s. But th ey are ours, and th ey
g a v e us the g ift o f life. O n this third S u n d ay In
June, let's sh ow o u r appreciation.

LETTER

Special daddy
In honor o f Father's Day: T o Billy Vincent Jr.
Dear Daddy:
Everyone seems to know you and everyone
seems to love you. but not everyone knows the part
o f you that I know.
If only they all knew how..
• Y o u fix complete meals with all your love for
me and my children
ildre so *1 won't
M Mhave to cook. Some
people you happen to know call It "road kill." I
guess that's klnda funny, but they Just don't know
what they’re mlasin', do they Daddy?
• How you’ve taken my kids all day so I could
work and would take them to see an old Indian
mound and then eat at McDonald's, which you
absolutely hate.
• Every time you see me you reach into that
beautiful clean truck o f yours and get out a bag of
fruit for us and then go In your pocket and pull out
two dollars so 1 can buy the kids an Icee.
• Draw my daughter a "B arney" picture when
you don't even know who he Is and come up with n
beautiful green dinosaur who lives on Sesame
Street, and she didn't even know the difference.
• How you'd come and do anything I needed at a
moment's notice anywhere, any time, and any
place, no matter how busy or tired you were,
•H o w you’d come from
fro
two counties away
whenever my car dies so you can fix It and get me
home safe.
•H o w you'd always take me fishing as a child
and haul me around to all your picture assign­
ments and then give me a dime if 1 would Just slay
In the truck
‘ and
i d .draw a picture, and then you'd
take me for an Icee or Yoohoo.
• How you were always so proud o f me and told
everyone I was your chosen little girl and how
special I was for being adopted.
Well. Daddy, there’s something else they don't
know. I Just don't think It's possible for any man to
love his natural child any more than you love me.
Any man can be a father who's got the time to
make a baby, but It takes somebody who's extra
special with an extra giving heart to be a “ daddy"
lUfe the
L* good---------Lord blessed m e with. And,
-----I know I
have the best there Is.
Daddy, there's Just one more thing. I’m so
thankful and so happy that I'm "the one" you and
Momma chose to be your "special one" back on
April 29, 1960.
I love you m y dearest Daddy, Happy Daddy’s
Day.
Love,
Lisa Michelle
P.S. Now. everyone knows)

L E T T E R S T O ED IT O R
Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters
must be signed. Include the address of the writer
ar&gt;d a daytime telephone number. Letters should
bd on a single subject and be as brief as possible.
The letters arc subject to editing.

The c ro ssro a d s of la w le ssn e ss
The violence In American society Is related to
the socialization o f the children In our society. It
Is Ihc responsibility o f the adult members of any
society to train youth for productive Uvea that
contribute to the enhancement o f society,
Traditional values associated with the preserva­
tion of society have been rejected by many
youth. America Is at the crossroads and
id ishould
'
dramatically confront and ameliorate the condi­
tions that have spawned this lawlessness.
What seems to be valued In this society Is
money. The means by which money la acquired
doesn't seem to matter as long as the end result
Is the possession of money. I could scarcely
believe my eyes when I saw two young couples
on a television talk show. The male spokesman
for the group was affirming that they didn't
believe |n working for M O a day when they could
have "w a d s" o f money from selling drugs or
robbing stores. Another talk show had youth
' atnfion
the program who allegedly were hit men,
prostitutes, robbers. The message these young
people seem to have Internalised Is getting along
...
. z- )d
by means necessary without working ant
without regard for others.
Evidently no one has trained these youth and
they have not embraced values and behaviors
essential to the positive continuation o f this
society. Actually we are drifting toward a more

America is at the crossroads. We are either
going to honestly face the need for significant
changes In helping endangered families or
violence will continue to escalate.

M M IN O L B
O P IN IO N

Change Is needed in health care. Which one of
us would choose to watch a loved one die In
extreme agony sw
for
the
of ------money
CAUCIIIG
s mi
- lack —
* to
~ secure
,, '
proper medical
care. Every American should be
nedlt
eligible for medical care and the brain power In
Congress should get together with the private
sector and make this a reality.

LURLENE
SWEETING

prtmltve type d f society. Some individuals
appear to believe that It Is an acceptable life style
to take anything they desire. The work ethic Is
not a part of their repertoire. There Is a
devaluation o f human life and Is probably related
lives.
own Ih
to the little value they place oni their
I
How have we arrived at this stale of being the
leading Industrialized nation In the area of
violent crimes. Possibly the root cause o f this
dilemma Is the fact that too many children are
grow ing up In situations where they feel
alienated from the mainstream of American
society. They are on the outside looking In. They
feel rejected by society and In turn they reject
society by their antl-oocta! behavior which brings
them some perverse sense o f accomplishment.

Welfare was Initiated as s response to the
ihould have been
Orest Depression and really should
phased out after the World W ar II when the
country was thriving economically. Welfare for
the aged and Infirm may be a necessity but Tor
others It Is a degradation. Persons on welfare are
at the poverty level, they are caught up in a
circle o f hopelessness due to their loss or dignity
and loss o f belief In oneself. The old saying of
giving a man a fish for a day Is not preferable to
teaching him to ftsh so he can eat many days.
Training snd Jobs are necessary to help persons
regain their sense of themselves and their
capabilities. I have never met anyone who didn’t
want a better life for themselves and Ihelr
children. Congress needs to address this Issue

c o l m a n

Too many perks
for reservists

W W W E a 'F iC E 'lN 1 ! ®

OTKH6 Wf UUS8AND
AFAMILY

WNAStYTSBEALLY

WASHINGTON - Misguided patriotism ran
wild when Congress showered stilt another
perk an America’s military. Deceased mem­
bers of the reserves are now entitled to the
same death benefits — free burials, free
graves, free headstones, free gravellnera amt
free perpetual lawn care — traditionally given
only for active duty veterans.

FARF£TtUED\HcnesHu,
w h e r e D O p e o p le c e t 1

firc h i&amp; a s ?

M c C a r t h y

y

Put 20 years In the reserves and Uncle Sam
the undertaker will dig a congressionally
ordered hole In one of the 59 national
cemeteries that still had room for bodies.
Fifty-five of the graveyards In the national
cemetery system — run by the Department of
Veterans Affairs — are packed to capacity,
regardless of who's dying to get In. In
addition to the final deep sizing for reservists.
ihelr spouses and depei
endears t - y’all come
are also exempt from the costs o f eternal real
estate.

!K \ \ '

Except for the comparatively few soldiers
who see combat, soft living Is the mark o f the
American military these days. The perks
Include low-cosi food snd merchandise at
PXs and commissaries — groceries are 15 to
30 percent lower than supermarket prices —
golf courses, officers clubs, generous retire­
ment benefits after 20 years, college tuitions,
and a dally no-straln-on-the brain routine of
following orders.

ELLEN GOODMAN

May Siam ese twins rest in peace
BOSTON — On Monday. Angela Lakebcrg
was burled In a grave next to her sister Amy.
The pair had been bom 11 monlhs ago tn what
was romantically and medically described as
an embrace. Now they were laid to rest side by
side.
By some random and rare accident o f nature,
they came into the world Joined at the heart.
By the most sophisticated medical technology
available, they went out of the world tn two
coffins.
Ten months ago. when these so-called
S ia m e s e t w in s w e r e b r o u g h t to th e
Philadelphia operating room where one would
die in an attempt to save the other, the
headlines scream ed the moral question:
Angela or Am y? But only a story here and
there noted the end o f Angela and A m y.
It Is tempting to try and wrest some good
from this tragedy, to grasp the straw o f a
happy ending. It’s tempting to try and find
comfort in the notion that the&gt; doctors
did
doct
"everything they could.” They did that.
But In any public eulogy for these girls It Is
fair to ask when and whether doctors should
do "everything they could.” Irt the midst o f a
debate over health care and costa, It’s fair to
ask about ethical cholcca and their prices.
When Reltha and Kenneth Lakebcrg were
told that she was carrying cor\|olned twins,
abortion was offered as a merciful choice.
When the twins were born at Loyols University
Hospital In Chicago, the doctors decided, after
much soul-searching, not to operate.
A fter all, one child would die on the
operating table — killed by surgery. The odds
that the other would survive for any length of
time, were, as a doctor explained to the
parents, the same as "walking Into a bowling
alley and bowling three 300gam es."
In the way o f the world, the Lakeberga found
another hospital, another team o f doctors who
were willing to take the risk. They performed
an operation that was In every sense of the
word on the cubing edge o f pediatric surgery.
Perhaps we shouldnTt question the Judgment
o f those surgeons today. !t*s easy, after the
fact, lifter the death, to second guess the
mixture o f hope and heroics that went into the
decision to go for It.
The motives o f the parents — or should I say,
the father — are more unsettling. Kenneth
Lakebcrg, described as violent and a drug
abuser, seemed to value the babies for the
attention and the cash they could bring. He
bought drugs with donations sent to pay for
f o r his
’
daughter's medical care. He spent most of
Angela's life In Jail on a battery charge.
On the
fhai
day of her death, he waa In court being
arraigned for auto theft.
But, In the way o f American medicine. It was
the doctors and the parents alone who were
given the right to choose for Angela and

Amy...and for the rest of us. They made the
decision to spare no effort. And to spare no
expense.
Money Is the uncomfortable bottom line of
this ethical life story. It cost more than $1.3
million to keep the red-hulrcd. blue-eyed
Angela alive In an Intensive care unit, fed by
tubes, mostly attached to a respirator, for 10
months.
The bill Itself Is
being wrangled over
by three states, two
h o s p ita ls , on e
M edicaid program .
But It will come back
to the public In one
form or another.
We are properly retlc e n t, understandably reluctant to
put a price tag on a
life. If Angela had
lived, would she be
worth It? Is It only
because she died that
th e m o n e y w as
"w asted"? But along
f It’s fair to u k
the treacherous path
about ethical
to hcalLh care reform
choices and
w e’re going to have
their prices. J
to factor In coats with
caring.
While
tuU the second of the Lakebcrg twins was
burled. Congress was In the m iddle or
grappling with health care, trying to figure out
the minimum to which every American Is
entitled. But we also have to ask: What is the
maximum?

In llle and death, the military Is sated with
perka. What's the speclalness of military toll
— active duty or reserves — that Justifies this
entitlement?
Why not publicly
paid-for
"burial
..........................
.......
ill
graves and burial for retired members o f fire
departments or police forces who risk ihelr
lives In war zones o f their own? Public school
teachers, being shot at more than reservists,
aren't given cemetery freebies. Nor are former
Peace Corps volunteers, who serve their
country as nobly as any soldier — and at
lower pay and with no access to officers clubs
or fairways.
The military's death perk — Including the
cost o f operating the 114 national cemeterici
a m i ttm n la • «
Sa HU... . . . ____ ___
1
and granla
nom
... ....... to
■ states to buy room
i i when
ft iik.11 u
um
ubllch----‘*
'L‘
*
■
‘
Is publicly available - totals more than $IOt
million annually.
67,000
corpses
art
^
» Some
'jT»____
W'1V
W. W
MImp(KD
Kill
ran *41.la&lt;rl a .
_ .
_
handled a year. The Congressional Budge
----------------------------------• ■ ,n a
Office reports that a typical--burial
cemetery runs about M 50.
The higher the rank o f the departed and thi
grander the scenery, the steeper the tab. Ai
the Arm y's kempt and exclusive Arllngtor
National Cemetery — the August Masters oi
federal graveyards - full honor funerals foi
colonels, admirals and generals can Involve
more than 75 troops: about 40 to march. 3(
musicians
r*— 11—* dirges,
-*■-------s few
* ■- ■
lusiclana playing
body bearer:
a firing party toth ootblankaan d a bugler ft
taps
ips. Plus warhorses: a team to lug th
caisson and s riderless one for pageant ryT
totedVonly by hourly wages IUI
for IIIC
the UUI1U
burlu
. If. -----platoons, plus the upkeep of the steeds — ant
not ocuntlng the costs o f dirt remova
equ ipm ent, law ncutting and long-tern
sprucing — these kinds of spectacles are
financial
—------ ------------• military’]
- - - - - - rextravagance
equal- to the
$600 toilet seat.

What are the coats, the benefits, the odds of
success for a 70-year-old man who wants a
liver transplant, for a 45-year-old breast cancer
patient who wants a bone marrow transplant?
For Siamese twins Joined at the heart?

The legislation extending last rights to
reservists had unlikely opposition: the De­
psrtme
tent o f Veterans Affairs, which does the
tire lifting and digging.
dig
heavy
It has headaches
and backaches
t% enoui
enough with already packed
cemeteries. More than 26 million living
veterans - plus spouses and dependents —
are eligible for free send-offs. Now 1.5 million
reservists are also qualified, not counting the
folka.
The competition for space means that In
the next six years, 11 m ore national
cemeteries will reach full-house capacity. As
the last ones to let the vets down____
. . has
. the. VA
begun environmental studies for what It calls
"possible cemetery development" in nine
locations from Seattle to Miami.
A solution to this foolery is s pay-as-you-go
system. When a veteran does go, if his or her
Income at the time o f death Is sufficient for
the burial, let It be paid In full. W hy should
the public be stuck with the bill when the
survivors can pay?

In fact, the tale o f Angela and Am y should
have been one o f the easier o f the hard choices
coming down this road. The moral discomfort
that entailed sacrificing one twin to the other
was towering, the odds o f success were
dismally low.
For once, the cry for mercy and the call for
cost containment were In harmony. And yet,
these Siamese twins were brought to the
cutting edge. If we cannot make the relatively
easy choices, ho'
how will we make the hard ones?
How will we pay for them?
I am afraid that my eulogy for these girls is
not very comforting. If we learned something
Important. It won't be found In the medical
texts. It's another Icason tn how hard It Is to
say enough Is enough. Only now may two girls
who shared one heart rest in peace.

^

tcW’T

�San lord Herald, Sanford, Florida - 8unday, June 10, 1094 - •*

Dad

n P M r r w w v f i•wwwy f a M i i i

Earlier this peat week, Anion Meyera' defense attorney Ed Lelnator,
left, atanda by hla client. Meyera waa convicted of flrat degreo
murder In the death of Kathy Engela, who vanished seven years ago,

Murder
Continued from Pads 1A
part to ace their way through all
Dial, and I certainly do apprvclnlc nil ihelr hard work, And I
appreciate all the hard work of
Put Whitaker and Mark Arina
and the Hoopers' faith. I’m Juat
real happy for them that after
seven yearn they can finally nee
Mim e Justice done.’ *
Charlen and Marie Hooper.
L a k e M a ry , a re E n g e In‘
grnndparrnts. who rained her
from Infancy. They were not In
court when the Jury verdict wan
reud.
Defense attorney Ed Lelnater
wan III and wan not present
when the verdict wan returned.
An unMiclate of Leinster's said
un appeal will be filed In the cane
following the penalty phase of
(hr trial. Scheduling conflicts
may delay the penalty phase
until lule summer.
The Jury rould recommend
Meyers die In I lie electric chair
or I k* sentenced to life In prison
without the possibility o f parole
for 25 years, Tlie final sentence
will tie determined later this
sum m er by Judge Alim A.
Dickey who presided over the
three week trial.
Meyers told the Judge. "I Just
want to get sentenced and get
Into the up|M*uls court us noon as
I can."
Earlier. Meyers llled u motion
on Ills own belialf Indicating he
d id not In ten d to p resen t
mitigating evidence during the

p e n a lly phase, again st the
advice o f hla attorneys. Court
appointed doctor* would need to
determine Meyers' competency
If he chose not to participate In
the penally phase, according to a
recent ruling from the Florida
Supreme Court, Dickey said,
This Is the first murder case
tried in Seminole County where
no body was ever found.
M e y e r s sat q u i e t l y an d
expressionlessly looking at the
Jurors as they were polled about
(heir guilty verdict, shaking his
head no' only slightly.
Lake Mary Police Hgt. Dave
Guilford who began working on
the Engels case In 1091 was also
happy with the verdict.
"I think Justice was served."
he fommenled. "I'm happy for
the Hooper family that It Is over
The Jury did a Irek of a Job and
I'm pleased that (hey came track
with the right verdict."
The Hoopers said they were
pleased Justice waa done.

I Continued from Page 2A
( waa a lw a y s th e re . I th in k
j everyone should have a father."
I
Joyce Sampson said, "T h e
love and affection he gave to all
us kids is how I remember him. I
think o f him loving hla Indian
heritage. He raised 15 kids. I
wish I still had him ."
Cora Bryant said, " I think of
the greatest man on earth when
I think o f my father. I remember
he'd lake us fishing. He didn't
like to fish but he'd sit with us
anyway. He’d bait our hooks
because we were afraid of the
ball.
Belly Luster said, " I think I
like the way he treated us. my
family, my mother, my sister
and myself. He always put his
family first."
Jose Cubulluro said, "H e was a
nice guy. After he died I realised
how much he loved me and how
much I loved him ."
Dana Martin said, "M y atepdad
was my real dad to me. He was
always there. My stepdsd had
me from the lime I was four. He
was there when I had tonsil
surgery and he was there all the
time I was growing up."
Boy Kris Ion said, "M y dad was
104 years old when he passed
away. He was very understand*
lug."
Mike Huron said, "Dad used to
go fishing with me. He took care
of m e."
Diego Centurion said. "Dad
does everything he can for me.
He goes out of his way whenever
he can for me.”
Jeff Byrd said, "W e go out on
the boat together. When I think
of him I think of someone who
has been nice to m e."
His son, Steve Byrd. B. said.
"M y dad Is u nice guy. He takes
me to neat places."
Carla Sonera said, "t think of
what I learned from my dad. I
learned to work hard for good
m oney."
Hen Alderman said. "H e's still
living. He's been with me since 1

was born. I f I ever needed
something he came through. He
never turned me down for any­
thing."
Anlla Powell said, " I think of
the nice, quiet upbringing we
had. It was different then and
not the way the world Is now. My
parents were always there for
me. My dad taught me values
and how to have good, clean fun.
He Instilled good morals In m e."
Andrea Colon said. “ He was
nice. When I needed money or
clolhes he provided for me.”
Teresa Dames said, "M y dad
w as the g r e a te s t m an. He
doesn’ t act. He Is himself."
Her husband. Michael, said,
"M y fondest memory o f my dad
was the fact that he's my second
Idol, My first Idol Is Jesus. I hope
he sees this comment. I hope I'm
almost exactly like him some­
day."
Chris Boles said. "M y dad la a
go o d p erso n . He tre a ts
everybody nice. W e did a lot of
fishing together."
Curtis Johnson said, "M y dad
was always laughing and smil­
ing. He was alw a ys Joking
around.”
Thelma Kendall said. "Daddy
was always so quiet. He would
always sit us on his knees when
we were little and sing songs.”

EDITORIAL
jfs s s B O a ffB S tt s
Os m M m a t o o t a t t w many
m asm m m t&gt;fcrgd « *

tvwysns has «f*sant ans
and tw pusooa o» nsMSpopor

* a to a r m r a m an s variety of
From tenSy Sauaa and local
to atacson eampoiana and paaaooi

va. You can road m (tout thorn at
wm- DrnmxQ rMM’M T l • O V f l M

S u b t o t a l Todayl
D on 't M itt
______

ix d t w n t n t .

522-2611

S .i 1111,1, |
i ii i .11&lt;|

P A R K E R D. ANDERSON JR.
W IL L IA M H. HAUN
Tuskuwllla United Methodist
Barker D. Anderson Jr.. 70.
William II. Haun. 78. Lom­ Church, and a member on sev­
8150 S. U.S. Highway 17-92.
bardy Road. Winter Springs,
eral Florida Methodist Confer­
Kern Burk, died Thursday, June
died Thursday. June 16. 1994 at
ence Level Committee*.
16. 1994 at home. Born July 4.
F lorid a H ospital A lta m o n te
During his career. Rev. King
1914 In Pennsylvania, he moved
Springs Born August 15. 1915
served In the following churches:
to Central Klorldu In 1920. He
In Medford. N.Y., he moved to
St. Marks. Ocala; Marlon County
,tj ii.nt waa n retired *tr (raffle conA
Central Klnr^^tf^pOO. He was ‘ CJgt0..'Ct£nfh United Methodist
't r b lie r . M f !' A n d e rs o n was* II 'c a rp e n te rr' a m em b er of
Church;,,Anderson Memorial,
member o f Finn Presbyterian'
Continued from Page 2 A
Ascension Lutheran Church, he
Jacksonville; St. Paula. Tallahaaaee. I where he added 900
and had uitenaeo numerous Church. Lake Mary. He also -also belonged * to AARB, VFW
and Foresters. He was an Army
members in three years: Beymer
jK-rfomiancrs of the Mary Duvis belonged to Atr TrafTIc Con­
veteran of World War II.
M e m o r ia l. W in t e r H a v e n ;
show. And. he admitted that the trollers Association, waa past
Survivors Include: wife. Rllu;
associate pastor o f Christ Meth­
best performance of the Mary president and founding memlK-r
sons. William II. Ocala, George.
odist, St. Petersburg; First Unit­
Duvis show was the last one he's of Florida Nursery and Growers
Association, founder o f A n ­
S u n fo r d . A la n , M is s o u r i;
ed Methodist of South Miami;
seen. What made It so unusual?
brothers. John. Orlando; seven
First United Methodist o f San­
"H e explained that many of derson Nursery and wus a
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; tw o g r e a t ­
ford, retired 1983.
the Mary Davis show perfor­ Mason.
Survivors include: daughter.
grandchildren.
Survivors arc his wife. Rubye.
mances were marred by the
B ald w in -F airch ild Funeral
Sanford; son. Richard Thomas
unsuspecting seekers of femi­ Mona Hudgins. Columbia, Tcnn;
Home, Altamonte Springs In
King. McIntosh. FL.; five grand­
nine favors from Miss Davis. son. Barker III. Oviedo; brother.
chnrgr of arrangements.
children and 1 great grand­
They fled so fust and so far that Raymond. Beaver. Pa.; sister.
daughter.
they couldn't be found so they Ruth Brower, West Balm Beach;
REV. LEO FLOYD KINO
A rr a n g e m e n ts by G a in es
could tie brought back to the four grandchildren; two great­
Curey Hand Garden Chapel
Rev. Leo Floyd King. 76. S.
scene and leurn that It all has g r a n d c h i l d r e n . B a ld w in Mcllonvllle Ave., Sanford died
Funeral Home, Longwood.
Fairchild Funeral Home. Allubeen a Iheutrlcul guise.
.
—I
Saturday, June 18. 1994 at
" B u t the n e w ly d a w n ed motile Springs in churgc of
South Seminole Hospital, Longairman from Sanford said he'd urrungemcnls.
■■
—I
wood. Born In French Lick,
never forget the lust perfor­
AnOwtan. F s r h tr D. Jr.
Indlanu on March 13, 1918. he
mance of the show he saw. It LOREN L. ANKRO M
Funaral M r v lc t t lor M r. A nd trto n w ill tw
came to Central Florida from
Loren L. Ankrom. 66 . Glen
candvctad 1 p m. Atendry *1 tha A lltm o M t
seems, he reluted, the last show
Miami
In
1973.
Rev.
King
was
a
Spring*
C lw psi e l iha Baldw in F e lrch lld
Arden
Way,
Altamonte
Springs,
he'd seen wus what might be
Funaral Hems. Bavarand H avant o l Iha F irst
retired
Methodist
minister.
He
died
Thursduy.
June
16.
1994
at
called a classic. "You see." said
P r ttb y tfr la n Church o l Laka M a ry w ill
was u m em ber und Pastor
o lfk la ta ! M ar man I w ll (allow at Oisn Ha van
the boy from Sanford. "T h e guy Florida Hospital South. Born
Em eritus of First Methodist
M am erlal Park. V io latio n tor frlandt w ill ba
wus from Orlundo and he hud an January 11. 1928 In Zanesville.
Sunday 01 p m B aM aln F a irc h ild Funaral
unusuul name. I can still re­ Ohio, he moved to Central Flor­ Church of Sanford und was a
Homs, vta E Altamonta Dr., Allam onta
member
of
the
Florida
United
ida
In
1983.
He
wus
u
machinist
member somebody culling out of
Spring*, ( I f t i l l .
M ethodist C onference since
for Eaton Corporation, lie was
the swamp, 'Winslow. Winslow.'
King. Bav. Las Fla yd
1946
"T h e legend of Mary Davis had Catholic.
Funaral ta rv lc st tor tha Bav. Lao Floyd
He was uctlvc In Sanford
Survivors Include: wife, Ann
King w ill ba hald an Wsdnatday at It 00 at
followed me halfway uround the
Klwanls
Club,
Sanford
Chamber
tha
First Unltsd M a(w dl»t Church ol San
Smith:
son.
John.
Arlington.
world.
lord.
"About 50 ycurs have elasped Tcxus; daughter, Laurie, Or­ of Commerce, und Involved in
Frlandt may call at tha church Irom 1 to 4
the Golden Age Games. Rev.
and ( to I p.m. on Tuatday.
since then. During the Interim, I la n d o ; tw o s te p d a u g h te rs .
K
ath
leen
Blutzcr
and
Nora
King
was
active
in
and
a
former
Intarmont w ill ba p rtvatt following ta rv lc st
managed to survive iny time as a
board m em ber o f Sem in ole
prisoner of war and serve In two S m ith , b oth o f A lta m o n te
Mutual Concert Association, a
other wars. Mnny of the details Springs; stepsons, Kevin Smith.
board member ofFlorldu United
of Ihcsc three wars have faded Winter Springs, Brian Smith.
Methodist C hildren's Home,
Into the distant pust along with A lta m o n te Sprin gs; sisters.
active In Sanford Ministerial
the name o f the downed airman Naomi, Mary Huug, both or
Association, former Chaplain of
from Sanford. (He later retired Zanesville; two grandchildren.
G o v e rn o r's Florida C abinet
B ald w ln -F a lrch ild Funeral
from the U.S. Air Force as a
during Gov. Farris Bryant's
Home. Altamonte Springs In
general).
term, Minister of Visitation at
"But It Is beyond my un­ charge o f arrangements.
derstanding why Mary Davis
should be branded so vividly and
so permanently Into my memo­
ry. My affair with the Imaginary
Mary Day In and the drama
'cooked up' by u bunch o f young
fellows In Sanford continues to
haunt me to this day. I wonder,
som etim es, about her other
"lovers." 1 wander, sometimes, If
Mott of ui never would think that ilmple tplnal ant.
that fellow from Sanford still
point could be lymptomi of deeper, chronic problem*. Bur, In
remembers Mary Davis. (The
foci, tie let&gt;], muxular and nervoui eyttem function* arc com­
general Is now dead).
pletely interrelated.
"A s for me, even now, and a*
Properly aligning bone*, Joint and muxlet promote* the fret
my final curtain draws near, I
flow of nerve Impuliet, promoting your hxly't own ability to
can still hear the call,..'Winslow,
heal and prevent lllneu — naturally.
Winslow,' echoing through the
Call ut today. And experience the positive tide effect* of
blackness o f the night In that
chiropractic.
cypress swamp on Sanford's
west side."
Wieder Chiropractic Center

The Rev. Leo King

King
Continued from Page 1A
conference committees.
He was also In the Sanford
C ham ber o f C om m erce and
Klwanls Club and was active in a
variety of community events.
Dave Farr, executive director
o f Ihe Sanford Cham ber o f
Commerce said King became a
community pastor.
"L eo was probably one of the
sweetest, kindest men I'd ever
m et," Farr said. "H e was proba­
bly everybody's tdcul of their
puslor. 1 think probably the best
thing to say about Leo was he
was involved In everything In
the community. He became the
community's pastor. Regardless

o f what church you belonged to &lt;
or what church you didn't go to.
Leo wus a pastor to you."
King was active In the cham­
ber until his health deteriorated.
"H e waa active very much In
the chamber until o f course In *
the last few years when he
couldn't." Farr said, "but while ‘
his health waa good. Leo was
Involved In the chamber and 1
everything In the community. (
Leo was alw ays there. T h e
community will miss him very, •
very much."
King Is survived by his wife,
Rubye. son. Richard Thomas
K in g. Fun eral s e rv ic e s are *
Wednesday.
\

aJ

Stenstrom

Leant the
side effects
of chiropractic.

Several local people played
various roles In the perfor­
mances of the Mary Davis show.
We're tempted to tell you who all
played the part of Jake and some
of the fellows who were among
the "hulking figures" Winslow
remembers so well. I could give
you name after name of the
fellows who lured unsuspecting
youngsters to experience some-

□Bee Stenstrom, Page BA

iH M

M ill- *

tflt'ni t •&gt;

T H A N K G O O D N E S S !
M y husband, B o b b y B risson , is back at w o rk . H e g o t tired
o f b ein g retired and rejo in ed B risson Funeral H om e.
Please d o m e a b ig fa vo r. D ro p b y and cn cou ruge B ob b y
to stay on Ihe jo b . I'm e n jo y in g Ihe peace and quiet
around the house.
A A fu u lu n . B / u &amp; to n

3 2 2 -2 1 3 1

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME
905 LAUREL AVE., SANFORD
A member of the Carey Hand Funeral Home Tradition * Eftl. 1890

q X fe re n c e
0
0
0

We do not charge interest on pre-heed
Installment payments - most others do.
We refund 100% of all monies paid,
at any time, for any reason - most
others do not.

We do not charge sales tag on mer­
chandise - most others do.
We are locally owned and operated many are not.

Dr. Neal Wieder
24Z5 South Park Avenue
(1/2 Block North of 25th Street)

BETTE a QRAMK0W

_____ 330-0240.......................
|
S P E C IA L F R E E O F F E R
| YouwDItecxrvtacxxnpIcUhcsldl Kiaiceysndccmultation,easmiiutksiof
| HWptcbl«iBa,2*-nn(ifrhNireflxd»'fp&gt;«^W,Bl?Wwc,u^
AHM **lue. Martiiuunncc*tcccpial

j

JIM 8CHUTOMAN

G ra m k o w
F u n e ra l H om e
Locally Owned and Operated Since 1906 •
500 E. Airport Blvd„ Sanford, PL 63773 |

f Ufvngto If* l kiwpai I* tiMMlk W

lit

3 2 2 -3 2 1 3

a

m
v
i

�6A - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 19, 1994

School
W ill

Y R E

■ y VICKI DcSO R M IM

S U C C E S S for teach ers

Herald Staff Writer

Tw rriiy two Seminole County teachers will be learning about
hiisttncH* lur the for the next week.
n part o f SUCCESS 2000, local businesses, In
i oilnboratlon with the University of Central Florida's Center for
Economic Education and the Economic Development Commi-.sion. the teachers will be learning about preparing their
suntenis for today's and tomorrow's careers.
SUCCESS ISrhoola Undertaking Consumer and Career
Economic Ed unit Ion) will be at a different business site each
day.
UCP will host a course In the morning and the businesses
will present information In their facilities each afternoon.
The teachers Will tour the focllltes and have Job shadowing
opportunities while they are there.
T h e.businesses Include Orlando North Hilton and Towers.
Fbirlmt Power Corporation, Seminole County Public Schools.
StulMitk. Siemens Stromberg-Carlson. Columbia H CA Central
Ilptkla Regional Hospital and the University o f Central Florida.

SANFORD — Year round edu­
cation (YREI was seen as "bad
news" by some students when It
was first Introduced to tf\e
school district.
Students (and. In some cases,
parents) were not happy thrilled
w ith the w ay the schools*
scheduling dictated when they
could take their family vacations
and for how long they could
stay.
"M y mom freaked the first
tim e she heard about that

L

M V tM S T s n m n / i

FAN KNOW THAT
NINRYAAMN
NOUS TNI CAAIIR
NttOROFMNfT*
TIN TNIMOIT
HOMI RUNS (7SS) IN TNI
HISTORY OF AMIRICAN
MAJOR UAOUI M i l BAIL
BUT NOT TOO MANY M OV
TNATINtMO.BAYl
NICHOUON, A 0NI6A00
WNITI SOX PUYIB, NIT
TNI LONOIIT MAJOR
U A M I HOMI RUN. IT
' n ia iu m i m n n .

p o r e l l . l UKK,M by Steve McUarry

thing," said Destiny Wilson, who
will be entering the sixth grade
when the classes resume on July
18. "But she says It won’t be so
bad. She really don't get more
than two weeks off In a year
anyhow."
W ilson said she and her
mother were looking al the
s i t u a t i o n fr o m d i f f e r e n t
perspectives however.
" I want all summer off like I
had when I was a kid," she said.
"Last year I got robbed o f my
summer. But I guess I get It back
In high school."
Lom a Dennison, a rising ninth

s o

b a d ?

grader, said she Is glad she
missed year round education
completely.
" I don't want to have to go to
school all year long." she said. "1
like having the option of sum­
mer school, but I don't want to
have to go."
Her friend Kelsey King said
she would have liked year round
school when she was nn elemen­
tary school student, because
summers were unbearably long
after about a month.
"But now. I need my summers
to work and save money for
college and to even go off and
look at colleges to sec where I

might want to go." she said.
"It's a good thing high schools
aren’ t doing that."
Daniel Fnrson said he believes
"taking summers away from
kids robs them o f their chance to
compete In sports" and will
make It harder for poor kids to
get scholarships.
"It means they'll be In school
ull summer when they should t&gt;c
out there playing twit and get­
ting ready for their athletic
careers," he said. " I f they've
gotta be In school all summer,
they aren't going to be able to
practice what they need to."

Wassman to study abroad

P D K aw ards sc h o la rs h ip s
On Juq&lt;- 2, nt their end o f the year awards banquet the
Central Florida Chapter (Seminole County) o f the Phi Delta
b.ipp.t educational fraternity awarded two scholarships In the
amount of 8300 each to local graduates Mary Huysman of Lake
Marv High School and Kerl Conner o f Lyman HIgh School,
The (wo pik
plan to pursue careers In English education.
Huysman will a\tcnd the University o f Florida and Conner will
go (o Flagler College.

b e

■ y VICKI D aSO K M im

Herald 8lefl Writer
Christopher D. Wassman of
Longwood has been selected by
United States Senator Connie
Mack to be a member o f the
Student Project Abroad program
to Japan.
Wassman was nominated by
Mack for consideration and will
make the trip In July with SO
students from other slates.
" I am always pleased to help
you ng, dyn am ic Individu als
pursue their academic goals and
I n t e r e s t s , " M a ck s a id .
" C h r i s t o p h e r 's a c a d e m ic
achievements and his diligent
pursuit o f excellence In the areas
of science and technology make
him worthy o f participation In
this program.
T h e k n o w le d g e g a in e d
through this experience will
assist Christopher as he pursues
future academic endeavors and
embarks on his career."
T o qualify, applicants were
expected to have demonstrated
active Interest In the fields of
m a t h e m a t ic s , s c ie n c e or
technology. They must also have
shown an Interest In travelling
abroad.
S t u d e n t s s e le c t e d fo r
participation In the program
w ere picked baaed on their
a c a d e m ic a c h ie v e m e n ts In
science and' technology, an In-

1,v r u . l l f .11 l- I- '

.........

HT

terest In International travel and
recom m endations from their
schools.
The program Is sponsored by
the Sony Corporation.
During the trip, emphasis will
be placed on visits to research
laboratories and manufacturing
sites o f both Japanese and
American companies. The stu­
d e n t s w i l l i n t e r a c t w it h
engineers and bualncsa leaders
as well as study technology
d e v e lo p m e n t and b u sin ess
operations as they are conducted
In Japan.
Also, the students will be
given the opportunity to visit
points of historical Interest In
Japan. They will also have the
c h a n c e to stu d y J a p a n es e
culture through living with host
families while they arc there.
Wassman has demonstrated
an exceptional level of com ­
mittment to academic excellence
while a student at Lake Brantley
High School.
He has been enrolled In gifted
a n d a d v a n c e d p la c e m e n t
courses, participated In research
projects ut the University of
Florida and Involved In many
extra-curricular a cllvltes. In­
cluding membership In the Na­
tional Honor Society. Mu Alpha
Theta. Future Business Leaders
o f America, the Brain Bawl team
and the New York Academy of
Sciences.

T o p gradu ate
Stevsn B. Garris graduated aumma cum lauda from the University
of Central Florida recently. An electrical engineering major, he
earned his associates degree from Seminole Community College.
He le the son of Brodut and Joyce Garris of DoBary end la
employed by Merlin Marietta In Orlando.

i.. i

Teaching them to control their destiny
Project.
The Corners Community of SI.
Ilclrnu Is near the Penn Center,
ST. HELENA ISLAND. S.C. which wns founded after the
The first graduates of an In­ Civil War to educate former
novative school that opened last slaves. The community Includes
October on St. Helena Island the Si. Helena Cooperative Soci­
near Beaufort are trying to shape ety Building, where Africana new vision for South Carolina's Americans once came to pool
coastal communities.
(heir skills and finances to In­
The Penn School for Preserva­ crease the value of Ihclr agricul­
tion was established to teach sea tural products.
Island natives how they can take
If It can raise 083,000 In
control of their destinies In the matching funds, Penn Center
face o f rapid coastal develop­ will receive a 0340.POO federal
ment.
grant that will pay to landscape
The school focused on leader­ the Martin Luther King Jr.
ship skills and strategics for Memorial Park and renovate the
creatin g developm en t, w hile cooperative building.
p r e s e r v in g Is la n d h is to r y ,
O n c e t h e r e n o v a t i o n Is
culture and the environment.
finished, the cooperative build­
The first 37 pupils not only ing and others will house several
graduated In March but also enterprises to benefit sea Islan­
came up with a 10-year devel­ ders, among them;
opment plan that begins with St.
— A community development
Helena and, If successful, will corporation to plun and coordi­
eventually spread to caver the nate development Initiatives;
entire South Carolina coast.
— A small loan fund and credit
The starting point Is the Cor­ union to provide start-up capital
ners Community Enhancement for new businesses;
B y J IF F M fL U M

Associated Press

u ic

original line up o f New Kids
On The Block-the group that
i '. h u pupiilted his b roth er
I) (i n u y W n h I b e r g t o
v.di Id wld&lt;- Htipcrslardam.
'imiy llu- following;
.ft LurciM Lynn’s younger

b. ) son o f actress Roxie
Roker. Ho hit the charts in
1991 with "It Ain't Over Til
It's O ver"
c. ) Australian rock outfit
formed by the two younger
b ro th e rs o f E a s y b e a ts
guitarist George Young.
MW

n i* » iX

30/3VC9

( • t«

(q

— A market for fresh, locally
grown produce and specially
foods processed at u new can­
nery;
— A folk art center lo (each
und market traditional sea Island
crafts;
— And u welcome ccnler for
the Island.
Nlnn Morals, director of the
Sea Islands Preservation Project,
thinks the Corners Community
will demonstrate how Jobs can
be created In an environment
that builds on local culture and
the skills of local people without
doing harm (o the environment.
"T h e entrepreneurial economy
Is going to work well here on the
Island because that's the histori­
cal tradition here,” Morals said.
Liz Aiken Sanlagull, a pre­
servation school graduate and a
native o f neighboring Ladys
Island, grew up In thut tradition.
"People were self-employed."
Santagutl said. "T h e y made
their living from the environ­
ment. farming or the seafood
Industry. Now, everybody works

for someone else, und I he pay Is
such that they can't muke a
decent living."
Suiitugutl says the resort de­
velop m en ts on H ilton Head
Is la n d a n d D a u fu s k le are
examples o f whut can go wrong.
"T h ey actually destroyed a peo­
ple," she said.
Sanlagatl, the
president o f the community de­
velopment corporation's Interim
board, said once the project Is
established an St. Helena, It will
spread lo other Island communi­
ties.
"T h a i's part o f the plun." she
said. "W e have from North
Myrtle Beach all the way down
to Daufuskle as part o f our area.
Once we start rolling, then we'll
be able to offer assistance to
other arcus, like Sandy Island
and Daufuskle Island and com­
m unities up and down the
coast."
"A ll this," Morals suld, "with
Just 37 people."
The Penn School for Preserva­
tion will begin ils second class
(his fall.

Seen at sc h o o l.. .
R eady for attack

Sdmlnole County School Board
sc hoot 6 u«t a oreak until July 10
when things get rolling again.
Take a break, kick beck and
enjoy. Maybe make your own

lunch

Nicholas Starks of COPS In­
ternational teaches some ol
the basics of self defense to
Emily Reed, a student at
Seminole High School. Reed,
14, and other young women
from around the school district
spent a week at 8emlnole
Community Collage learning
job and life skills that will
prepare them for the future.
There were workshops which
gave the young women a taste
or v a r i o u s h i g h p a y i n g
technical Jobs for which they
could prepare. They a lso
learned about Interviewing and
grooming techniques as well
as self-protection. The "21st
Century Woman" la an annual
program presented by SCO.
H * ft« Pholo by Tommy Vlncont

�Sanford Htrald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juna 10, 1004 - 7A

Health/Fitness
IN B R IE F
Blood needed
The Central Florida Blood Bank and WFTV Channel 9 are
aaklng area residents to make Blood Brotherhood Day a part o f
their Fourth of Julv plans and to donate blood lo help the Blood
Bank prepare for holiday emergencies thnt are typical during
the slow summer donation period.
The event will take place Tuesdny, June 28.
Donors may make their donations at the Channel 9 studios,
490 E. South St. In downtown Orlando, between 7 a.m. and 7
p.m.
The muln branch o f the blood bank. 32 W. Gore St.. Orlando,
will also be open for donors from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
The other branches of the blood bank. Including the one at
1302 E. Second St. In Sanford, will be open for donations from
9 u.m. to 7 p.m. that day.
There will be gifts for donors and light refreshments will be
available for all.
Donors must weigh a minimum o f 100 pounds, be at least 17
ears old and In good health. A mini-health exam. Including
lood pressure check. Iron and cholesterol screening will l&gt;e
given to all who donate.
Por more Information, call 1-800-852-0346.

t

H o s p ic e h elp s H isp a n lc s
In response to a growing appreciation for the needs of
Hispanic patients and families. Hospice of Central Florida has
created n special task force to bridge the language barrier and
( strengthen our ties with the Hispanic community.
The multi-racial. Interdisciplinary group has set the following
|goals for the next few months.
Ho ralac awareness of hospice services among the Hispanic
[community
Ho build relationships with medical professionals who serve
filia l community
• to ensure the availability of Spanish-speaking stafT and
volunteers
• to participate In minority events and organizations
• to sensitize Hospice staff and volunteers to the needs of
[ various minority cultures
Hospice o f Central Florida welcomes Input from the
|community to enhance their outreach to all minority groups.
If you would like to contribute Ideas or assistance, contact
Cindy Andrews ut 875 0028. ext. 467.

H o sp ital don ates sch o la rs h ip s
Susan McCIIntock and Gil Wartcll arc among the scholarship
winners that were donated by the Winter I’urk Memorial
Hospital Auxiliary.
The students all have a common goal: a career In medicine.
The 91.000 scholarships will help those students reach their
goals.
McCIIntock graduated from Lake Mary High School this
month. She will be attending the University o f Florida and
plans to become a physician's assistant.
Wartcll graduated this month from Lake Brantley High
School. He will pursue his degree at the University of Florida ns
well. He plnns to do research and practice medicine us a
surgeon.
Each year, the Winter Park Memorial Hospital Auxiliary
offers scholarships to students living In Seminole, Lake,
Orange and Osceola counties who plan to pursue a carrcr In
health cure.
Sara Carter, u graduate of University High, and Jennifer
Michelle Flcnrrn. u graduate of Winter Park High, ulso received
scholarships.

C a n c e r research library available
The Walt Disney Memorial Cancer Institute at Florldu
Hospital offers a free Cancer Help Link Resource Library,
located ut Florida Hospital-North. 601 E. Altamonte Dr..
Altamonte Springs.
The library's resource material consists of upduted Informa­
tion from several organizations that specialize In cancer
Including the American Cancer Society and the National
Cuncer Institute.
Videotapes, books and Journals about cancer arc available.
Visitors cun also schedule an appointment to talk with a nurse,
counselor or social worker.
The Cancer Help Link Resource Library's muterlals can be
checked out or viewed In the facility.
Library hours are Monday through Thursday from 8:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. and Friday from 8:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
For more Information, call 897-1700.

H ealthy Start Information
You can help determine how pregnant women and hnblcs
receive services.
Seminole County Healthy Start la looking for Individuals to
help develop the maternal and Infant health care service
delivery plan.
Those who arc Inlercsted In doing so arc asked to attend any
or all of the following workshops hosted by the Seminole
County Healthy Start Coalition . The Input .from the
community Is critical to the coalitions efforts to continue the
superior efforts In maternal and Infant health In Seminole
County.
Them ccttngB arc:
• Community orientation: Wednesday, June 22 from 9 u.m.
until noon at the Seminole County Public Health Unit, 400 W.
Airport Blvd.. Sanford.
• Developing the Service Delivery Plan: Wednesday. July 13,
9 a.m. until 2 p.m., Central Florida Regional Hospital. 1401 W.
Seminole Blvd., Sanford. For this meeting. RSVP for lunch by
calling 671-2005.
• Board and general membership meeting: Wednesday,
August 10. The time and place of this meeting arc still tobc
determined.
For more Information about these meetings or programs, call
671-2005.

H o sp ita l gu ide available
A new. free consumer guide to Orlnndo-arca bospltuls Is now
available at selected Albertson's stores.
The Consumer Hospital Quldc evaluates five different
treatments at acute care hospitals and provides easy-tounderstand explanations of the rating criteria.
For each hospital. \he guide rates five In-patient procedures
that are, accorlng to Independent research, of the greatest
Interest to consumers: baby delivery, heart (coronary bypass
surgery, heart attack, stroke treatment and hip and knee
replacement.
The rating Includes data on total number of cases, cost, and
rates o f mortality and medical complication.
The data In the guide came from the state o f Florida Agency
for Health Care Administration and was complied from
Information collected from July 1, 1992 until June 30, 1993.
The data were analyzed by Dun and Bradstreet Healthcare
Information and EDS.

Orwig honored for excellence
Top nurse began her career in Sanford
■ y VIONI DaSORMIBR
Herald Staff Writer
Sandra Orwig was recently
awarded the Clinical Nursing
Excellence Award by St. Cloud
llospltul In recognition of her
outstanding service lo her ca­
reer.
Orwig, the daughter of Martha
and Bob Orwig of Sanford, began
her nursing career at Central
Florida Regional Hospital, where
she worked from 1986 until
1990.
T h e C lln lc u l N u r s in g
Excellence Award Is a way of
recognltlng outstanding nurses
In clinical practice. It Is given by
St. Cloud Hospital, a part of the
Central Florida Health Care Sys­
tem In Osceola County.
The criteria upon which Orwig
wan evaluated Included her
clinical experllse. her certifica­
tion on advanced knowledge, her
advunced skills, her preceptor
participation, education, her
presentation of Insurances to
staff: and her hospital or unit
activities and customer satisfac­
tions.
O ther key values Include
honesty, caring flexibility, a pos­
itive attitu de and a strong
committment to putlcnt/famlly
care and fellow team members.

O rw ig has elght-and-a-half
years o f clinical nursing experi­
ence and three years of surgery
experience ut Orlando Regional
Healthcare System-St. Cloud di­
vision.

v:v.

Her advanced skills Include
local monitoring nurse, lasar
nurse and charge nurse.
She was a preceptor nurse for
three years.
According to her resume, Orwld graduated from Florida
S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y w it h a
Bachelors o f Science degree In
Nursing In December 1985.
The hospital praised her for
giving at least four Inservlces per
yenr to area departments. They
said she Is a current member of
the Association o f Operating
Room Nurses.
T h e y sa id sh e has a ls o
belonged lo the Ballet Guild of
Sanford-Semlnole and that she
has served on that group's board
of directors.
As an active member of her
church und other community
activities, the hospital said she Is
more of an usset to the hospital
staff as well.
In r e c o g n i t i o n f o r t h e
achievement of this award. Or­
wig received a plaque, roses and

• 1.000

Susan Orwig

Virtual anatomy: dissection
on disc helps docs learn
In addition, u real cadaver,
which costs the university about
•600. Is often hard to come by.
Often,
students have to share
RALEIGH. N.C. For de­
cades, medical students have parts such us hands, heads and
used cadavers to study the eyeballs.
"It's easier to get a computer
human body. Soon they may be
than a body," Nelson said.
using their computers.
One o f the drawbacks, howev­
A new medical research and
education program uses com­ er. Is the reduced studentteacher contact, he said.
p u t e r g r u p h lc s b a a e d on
"Personal contact 1s Impor­
hundreds o f photographs to
tant," he said. "There's always a
allow students lo view body
student who asks u question you
parts In detail und from u variety
can't nntlclputc."
of angles.
Another drawback, says Dr
r* A consortium of university
Gcrr/ Oxford, "a professor of
departments and softwure com ­
physiology at the University of
panies — Including tw o In
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Is
Raleigh — Is developing the
that computers dehumanize the
program with funding from
study of unatomy.
Glaxo Inc., the drug giant that
No one working on the 91
has Its' U.S. headquarters In million project claims that It
North Carolina's Research T ri­ should replace real cadavers. It's
angle Park.
value, developers say, lies In
By 1995, users of the program,
supplementing research and ed­
called Glaxo Virtual Anatomy,
ucation.
should tic able to call up photo­
Virtual Anatomy was born five
realistic. three-dimensional Im­ years ugo In two different places:
ages from a real man's thorax,
at Glaxo, where Michael Du Toll,
the region between the neck and
vice-president o f m arketing,
the abdomen. They'll lie uble to
promoted the Idea after seeing
view everything from the skin,
fold-out figures In a human
bones, lungs and heart to the
anatomy book, and at Colorado
arteries und veins, from all
State, where a federally-funded
angles.
(cam was developing programs
" S t u d e n t s cun ta k e th e
to supplement cadaver study.
cadaver to their computers at
Du T o ll In itia lly thought
home and dissect them over and artists would create the threeover ugaln," said Dr. David
dimensional figures, but said
Alclutore. an assistant professor that would have cost 993 mil­
ut Colorado State Univerelty/'lt
lion.
can be taken anywhere. In any
About a year ago, Glaxo found
environment."
researchers ut Colorado State
who had been working with a
Future phases Iqcludc the
different upprouch — using pho­
head and ubdomcn.
tographs Instcud o f drawings.
Virtual Anatomy differs from
For the p h oto gra p h s, rean alrcudy available program
called Adam, which offers simu­ scurchcrs turned to the Universi­
lated dissection of the entire ty of Colorado. There. Dr. David
body using animated computer Whitlock, a professor In the
Departm ent o f C ellular and
Images.
With Virtual Anatomy, users Structural Biology, and Dr. Vic
can study the thorax by rotating Spltzcr. an usslslant professor,
the parts with a computer mouse developed the cryomacrotomc.
to get different perspectives. In an Instrument to cut crosssome ways, the computer ofTers sections o f a cadaver.
T h e p rocess " In v o lv e s
more flexibility than traditional
embedding a block of tissue In a
dissection.
"Y o u have total co n tro l." su bstance like g ela tin and
Alclatorc Bald. "You can remove freezing It," Whitlock said.
The rock-hard block Is then
the skin and bones but still leave
shaved Into sheets that arc only
the veins."
Dr. Marc Nelson, assistant half a millimeter thick. These
dean of medical education at the sheets arc photographed and
Stanford University School of scanned Into a computer by a
Medicine In Palo Alto. Calif., said digital camera.
Alclatore said the thorax re­
that electronic cadavers are con­
venient because they offer stu­ gion of the six-foot man required
about 900 photographs.
dents flexibility.

Doctors want to appear
to be making less money

By VICKI CHINO
Associated Press Writer_________

CO NTACT LEN S PA C K A G E
S P E C IA L
COM PLETE
L IM IT E D O F F E R

D

Includes: I pair dally wear soft contact lenses • Exam,
3 months of follow up care • Starter Kit
DLL Oiledon or ocular science versa-scrlbe

Dr. Pamela H elple, O .D ., Certified Optom trlst

PuRLiVismtamr

her patients and at the same
time serves as a resource person
to her peers."

The hospital said that she
"performs consistently at a level
that provides superior care to

the Incomes of government
d o c to r s , but th e y arc
known to earn much less
than doctors In private
practice.
The AMA adopted the
accounting change at Its
annual m eetin g, w hich
ended Thursday. The first
r e p o r t s r e f l e c t i n g th e
change are expected In two
or three years.

By PAULRABBURN
AP Science Editor__________

1

CHICAGO - Tired of
being told they make too
much money, doctors are
going to Juggle the books to
m ak e It se em t h e y 'r e
earning less.
The American Medical
Aaaqclatlon Is changing the
.KIBJUtL calculates doctors'
In c o m e s , lu m p in g the
salaries of private practl(loners with those o f federal
governm ent doctors and
young doctors In training,
who make considerably
less.
"Yeah. It's an accounting
change." said Dr. Nancy
W. Dickey, the AM A's sec­
retary-treasurer. "But the
press leaves out the foot­
notes. Therefore our only
choice is to make a change
so the numbers show the
whole picture. Now the
physician looks less like
he's gouging America."
The lutest calculations,
bused on 1992 data, show
that the mean Income of
U.S. doctors In private
practice Is 9177.400 per
year. That varies from
• 1 1 1 .6 0 0 fo r g e n e r a l
practitioners to 9253,300
for radiologists, the highest
paid group.
In contrast, doctors In
training earn only 922.000
to 930.000 per yenr. The
AMA has not previously
collected information on

"It's unabashed decep­
tion o f the public or anyone
else who would want to
k n ow w hat p h y s ic ia n s
m ake.” said Dr. Sidney
Wolfe, director o f Public
Citizen's Heulth Research
Group In Washington, D.C.
"It sounds like the kind of
snake oil that the AMA Is
very fond of criticizing
others for."
But Dickey argued (hat
the current figures reflect
only doctors' prime earning
years. They fall to take
account of the many years
o f training that doctors
undergo and the long hours
they work.
" I think the doctors were
trying to say, 'Let's give
the whole picture.' " she
said.
Doctors leave medical
school with an average of
•50.000 to 9100,000 In
debts, she said. They spend
three to 10 years as resi­
dents In training, working
60 to 100 hours per week.

Dr. Chlda it Board Certified in Cardiovascular Diseases and
in Internal Medicine.
He completed his residency at Ml. Sinai Medical Center in
Cleveland, Ohio, and his Fellowship In Cardiology at the
Metrohealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, Ohio. Following hts Fellowship, he served as an
Assistant Professor at the University o f Iowa College of
Medicine. Dr. Chlda obtained his Initial medical training in
England and Is a member o f the Royal College o f Physicians.
H

i

9

n

i B

m

S a n fo rd
S E M I N O L E C E N T R E ( n e a r W a l- M a r t )

6 pm
M o n d a y - F rid a y 9 a m
S a tu rd a y I Q a m - 3 p m

\

�■A - 8anford Herald, Sanford, Florida -

Bust
C o a t la «* 4 from Pag* 1A
Mixed a 45 caliber retnlautomatic handgun and 22 cali­
ber revolver, aa well aa two
vehicles. Alan’s brother Steve
Hunter, 24. of the same address,
was also arrested on a charge of
c o n s p ir a c y to t r a f f l c k In
martausna. His bond has been
M t at $200,000.
Also arrested at their home at
1065 2nd Place. Longwood, were
Harold Sharpe. 21. and Melina
Shea Robertson. Robertson's
b o n d Is $ 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 . w h ile
Sharpe’s bond Is $ 150,000.
2H24 O rove Drive. Sanford.
Cox's bond Is $150,000. Allen's
bond Is $3,000 as she wus
ch arged with possession o f
marijuana, less than 20 grams.

I n g r id A lle n . 10, a n d
27-year-old Carlton Cox were
also arrested at Pern Park
motels. Their address Is Haled os

Each o f the others were charged
with conspiracy to ttafrick In
m a riju a n a m ore than 100
pounds.
The three suspects arrested

C aaU aas* fr— Page 1A
from religious harassment, but stales (he Civil
Rights Act adequately protects Individuals and
the guidelines are unnecessary. The resolution Is
In committee review.
Lost September, the EEOC proposed guidelines
for employers to help them understand the Civil
Rights Act o f 1064 prohibition against on-the-job
harassment bated on race, color, religion, sex.
national origin, age. or disability. Guidelines
already had been produced for Mxual or national
origin haraMment. but nol the latter two
categories.
\
The guidelines are based on prior EEOC rulings
and Judicial decisions, said Hope Williams. EEOC
spokesman In Washington. They do not represent
new policy, Williams said.
Williams said the EEOC originally planned lo
accept comments for one month, from Oct. I to
Nov. 1 last year. But when the controversy arose,
commissioners extended the comment period lo
June 12. No tally has been completed, hut
Williams said more than 56,000 responses were
received between Feb. 16 and June 0.
The proposed guides, published In the Federal
Register Oct. 1. 1993. state conduct becomes
verbal or physical harassment when It "deni­
grates or shows hostility or aversion toward an
Individual becauM o f his/her race, color, religion,
gender, national origin, age, disability,..." or
people known or related to the employee.
According to the proposed guidelines,
• Conduct becomes unlawfully harassing when
It has the "purpose or effect of creating an
Intimidating, hostile or offensive work environ­
m ent" or Interferes with work performance or
employment opportunities.
•Harassing conduct Is defined as "epithets,
slurs, negative stereotyping or threatening. In­
timidating. or hostile acts" oi "written or graphic
material that denigrates or shows hostility or
aversion toward.saIndividual or group" placed In
the workplace. The conduct must be considered
haraswnent-'tD thsi Treasonable person", of die
alleged victim's race, religion, etc.

• The employer Is responsible for protecting
the Jobsite from harassing conduct by employees
and non-employees alike. In considering a
complaint, the EEOC would determine If the
em ployer took "Im m ediate and appropriate
corrective action."
The proposed guidelines admonish "Prevention
Is the best tool for the elimination of harassment"
and suggest policies and regular reminders
ngalnst harassing actions, behuvlor or materials
In the workplace.
In a separate "fuel sheet" prepared by EEOC
staff and provided by Williams, the guidelines are
Intended only to explain existing rules to
employers and may lie clarified. The fact sheet
further states "not all offensive conduct violates
the law" and only becomes unlawful when a
"reasonable person" would find It hostile or
abusive."
The fact sheet goes on to state supervisors who
tell the religion of an employee to another or
makes a declaration of his or her own religious
beliefs are not breaking the law.
Further, wearing a cross or yurmulke Is not
harassment, the EEOC Information slutes. "It Is
one thing to express one's own beliefs; another lo
disparage the religion or beliefs of others." the
fact sheet stales.
The fact sheet ulao slutes the EEOC bus
"repeatedly ruled" employers must allow their
workers to wear religious gurb to work unless the
clothing causes safety or oilier undue hardships.
Rev. Donuld Hicks of Central Baptist Church In
Sanford suld he ugrecd guidelines may be needed
to protect religious expression, but added such
laws and rules should nut lie necessary.
"W e used to be u nation of one God and now
we're a nation of many gods." said Hicks. "W e
used to be a nation as a whole and now we're a
nation of Individuals. If we're going to protect
everything else, we might as well protect the
Christians as w ell."
Hicks suld he would like to see the guidelines
more dearly.defined to Incliifte what is permitted
lo reduce the number o f potcnllnl complaints.
-

trap and among those who
"sprung" It.
We recall one youngster they
found In the swamp and brought
him back to the Davis house
with his clothing tattered and
torn. He was told It was only a
show. But that didn't help too
much. I can still hear him
saying:
"Mama paid $8 for these new
trousers today. I can’t go home
like this, she'll kill m cl" He went
home but she dldns't kill him.
But If he’s still with us. he'll take
the memory o f the legend of
Mary Davis to his grave.
To reiterate, there was no such
person as Mnry Dnvls. She was
only a legend. But she'll never
die because when all of us who
were associated with It and knew
about It are gone this story will
be In the archives of the Sanford
Museum.
There were two good results
about the Mary Davis affair. It
taught about 60 youngsten to
never again go out Into the
country during the blackness of
night looking for a "good tim e."
‘ " Tr
ruined clothing and scratched
bodies, nobody was Injured — at
least none that we know of.

Continued

from Pag* 1A

su it
challenges a 1958 law passed by
Congress.
In an Independent national
survey commissioned by the
Foundation, president Anne
Nlcol Guy lor said 71 perrent of
those qu estioned said they
believed the motto was an en­
dorsement of a belief In God. In a
nationwide press relcure, she did
not say what percentage o f the
rsons (lolled objected lo It
Inga belief in God.

Juana to other dealers In Orange,
Seminole and Volusia counties."
He said the arrests were the
result o f a six month Investiga­
tion.

She also observed that the
su rvey results regarded the
motto as religious, endorsing
religion over non-religion.
The motto on currency Is the
most common complaint the
F o u n d a tio n hears from Its
members according to Gaylor.
"W e hear It constantly.- she
said. "There arc all kinds of
complaints of rourse. regarding
state/church entanglement, but
this really Is a special grievance.
Some people complain about the
$200,000 of tax money annually

that pays for Congressional
prayers. Others want to know
why churches aren't paying
their fair share of taxes. But
a lm ost ev ery o n e com p lain s
about the use o f money to
promote a belief In religion."

C A R P ET

Continued from Page I A
20. 3202
Orlando Drive, wus charged with
purchuse of crack cocaine. Jcrrry Collins, 32. of Longwood.
wus charged with attempted
purchuse o f crack cocaine.
Timothy O'Neal. 25. of 2549
Ridgewood Avenue, who officers
said walked Into the room while
they were searching It. was
urrested on a charge of posses­
sion o f drug paraphernalia.
All persons were taken to the
John E. Polk Correctional Facili­

ty-

In a d d ition to b e in g un­
constitutional. Gaylor says thr
motto Is inaccurate.
" T o lie accurate," she ob­
served. “ It would have to read
‘ In God some of us trust.' and
wouldn't that be silly?"

S U P ER

1

A l l First Q u a lity C a r p c tl N o S e c o n d s l

Days S a me As Cash • F in a n cin g A vaila b le
VINYL
COVE
BASE
SPECIALI
ONLY

$ &lt; |0 0

• PLUSHES,TEXTURED,SCULPTURED
&amp; BERBERS, DUPONT STAINMASTER
MANY COtOnS TO CHOOSE FROM $9.99 IntUlltd
• COMMERCIAL CUT PILE - 1at Qualityl

COMMERCIAL
LEVEL LOOPS
I slOuahtyl
Choc* Oi Colots
(40 Yd Mm)
PER YARD

rc t*rrj

w . a .c .

HARDWOOD
SPECIALI
Bruc«
Hardwood

M oi. Foe* Haayy WnQhti ■Many OtauhM Colon

Ido*I For Family Rooms
or Dona 1000b o/jtfi
toM l 8*0 &lt; 13

&amp;

99
P E R YARO

F am ou s B ran d sl

SAVINGS FOR YOU Oil
TOP OF LINE CARPET

Raid

.

Continued from Page BA
thing they'd never forget. We
don't know what harm It would
do to them since a number of
them have passed on. Out we
suppoM It could affect their
families. But we can tell you one
o f the characters who first
played the role of Mary Davis'
father.
It was the late "W ay Back
W h e n ” c o lu m n is t . J u lia n
Stenstrom. He gave up the role
after 20 some performances.
Why? Too many members of the
"audience" hidden In the dark
cars got to bringing shotguns.
There was simply too much lead
flying around that area In the
blackncM of the night. One
evening when he called for Jake
to bring him his shotgun, Jake
fired tne weapon accidentally
and the blast passed his head
less than two Inches from his left
ear.
That was his lost performance.
W e're Indebted to Winslow
Grant for relating this yam. All
there years we thought the
legend of Mary Davis ended with
the final show. Now, we find out
the legend made Its way halfway
around the world and still lurks
In the hearts and minds of many
old timers who got caught In the

purchase the marijuana from
smugglers who had brought the
marijuana Into the United Stntes
froM M exico. T h e suspects
would. In turn, sell the mart-

Motto-------

Guidelines —

S t e n s t r o m

F rid a y m o rn in g In O ran ge
County Mffl agents were not
immediately Identified.
McDonough explained. "CCIB
agents said the suspects would

■i - o c

&lt; g iii n n y ,

- \ v s i iu n u u u i i v o ;,

SsnfOfd

(2 Blocks North of Airport Blvd. Between JCPenney &amp; ABC Liquor)

324-8800
H O URS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7 • Sat. 9-4 • Other Tim es By Appointm ont

Don*t Miss A Single Issue!
LO CAL NEWS • LO CAL SPORTS • LO CAL EDITORIALS
PEO PLE • HEALTH &amp; FITNESS • EDUCATION • BUSINESS
S illllo n l lllT illll

300 NO R TH FRENCH AVE. • SANFORD, FL 32771

USED OIL DROP-OFF SITES

help!

ALTAMONTE 8PR1NQS
Midas Muffler
010 E. Altamonte Dr.
Pep Boys
1020 E. Altamonte Dr.
Sanlaudo Park
401 W. Highland St.
Springs Amoco
S.H. 434 &amp; Mobile Ave.
Seminole County
Softball Complex
North Street
Sears Automotive
451 E. Altumonle Dr.
Lake Masters, Inc.
200 N. S R. 434

We need your help. Please bring your
used oil to one of these convenient
locations In Seminole County.
O ILD SO PO f?

But please, do not pour any liquid
contaminants such as mineral spirits,
water, paint, turpentine, or lacquer
thinner Into the used oil Igloos.

I I

CASSELBERRY
Discount Auto Parts 5800 S. Ilwy. 17-02
Red Bug Park |2|
3800 Red Bug Lake ltd

Lake Mills Park

CIIULUOTA
Lake Mills Road

FOREST CITY
Discount Aulo Parts
I ISO Ilwy. 430 W.
USED OIL ONLY
GENEVA
Seminole Co. Laudffll 1030 E. Osceola ltd.

Contaminated oil requires extra

L
LAKE MARY
Dept, of Public Safely 235 Rlilnehnrl Rd.

processlng, which costs the County (you)
up to $500 per Igloo for proper disposal.

10% STORE DISCOUNT
with this coupon
• Large Selection
• E r* * ,.ln

Non-contamlnated oil Is easily recycled
at no cost to the County (you).

E s tim a te s

• Quality Workmanship
• Replacement Slats
• Custom Valancoa
• Mini-Blind*

r i i i i i r
C O M E A N D SH O P A T O UR

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Residents may also bring oil and other
household hazardous waste to the

N E W L O C A T IO N !

Central Transfer Station or to the County
landfill, free of charge, through the

2559 Park Dr., Sanford

"EVERYDAYIS AMENESTYDAY"

3 2 1 -3 6 0 1 I

rewi—

program.

au
-r-W&lt;

.v• ..TvC.rAaJfr-

K EEP Y O U R
O IL R E C Y C LIN G
PROGRAM

FREE

LONQWOOD
Transfer Station
1034 S.R. 410
Discount Aulo Paris 275 S. Ilwy. 17-02
Longwood
175 W. Wnrren Ave.
OVIEDO
Discount Aulo Parts
110 Central Ave. N.
Oviedo Fire Station
42 S. Central
BANrORD
Discount Auto Purls 2023 S. Orlando Dr.
Leonard's Shell
2500 l*nrk Ave.
Lake Sylvan Park
855 Lake Markham Rd.
Fire Slnllou S3
1300 Central Park Dr.
Mobil Service
2518 French Ave.
Texaco Express Lube 2710 S. Orlando Dr.
Big T Tire ft Muffler
2408 S. French Ave.
Environmental Svcs. 3000-A Southgate Dr.

�S a n f o r d H e r a ld

SUNDAY

June 19, 1994

Sanford Sr. All-Stars

IN BRIEF

Local squad
w ill host
tournam ent

T ic k s ! O ffic e o p e n et D eyto n s
DAYTONA BEACH — The ticket ofllce at the
Daytona International Speedway will be open
seven days a week for the Saturday. July 2.
Pepsi 400 NASCAR Winston Cup Series race.
In addition to Its regular Msndsy-Frlday hours
of 9 a.tn. to 5 p.m.. the Ticket Office will be open
on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on
Sundays from noon to 4 p.m. The Ticket Office
Is l o c a t e d a t t h e w e s t e n d o f t h e
Speedway/NASCAR office complex. Inside the
“ World Center o f Racing” Visitors* Center.
For more Information or to order tickets for
the 30th Pepsi 400. call (904) 283-RACE (7223);
or write to: Ticket Office: Daytona International
Speedway: P.O. Box 2801: Daylonn Beach. FL
32120-2801. VISA and MasterCard are accepted
ns payment for advance ticket orders.

Harold 8 porla Writer

S o u th A fric a n lo a d s O p o n
OAKMONT. Pa. — Ernie Els shot a 30 on the
front nine Saturday, the best nine-hole score
ever In s U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club,
then survived to finish with a 66 and the lead
after three rounds.
The 24-year-old South African started the
back nine with a double bogey but regrouped
and ended It with two birdies and finished 54
holes at 7-undcr-par 200. two strokes ahead of
New Zealander Frank Nobllo, who shot a 68 .
Tom Watson shot a 68 to be four strokes back
at 4-undrr-pur 209. tied with Loren Roberts,
whose 04 was the second-best round ever In the
seven Opens at Oakmont.
Also at 4 under was three-time Open winner
Hale Irwin, who double bogeyed No. 18. und
second-round leader Colin Montgomerie.

Purvis repeats in A ll Sport
BROOKLYN. Mich. — Jeff Purvis over|&gt;owrrcd
the field Saturday to win Ihe All Sporl-Meljer
200 ut Michigan International Speedway for Ihe
second straight year.
The Clarksville, Tenn.. driver, led 67 of the
100 laps on the way to his fifth career ARCA
Supercar Series stock car victory and second
this season. He averaged a Michigan ARCA
record 133.284 mph. breaking the mark of
130.293 set In 1900 by Tracy Leslie.
Oary Bradberry was second, a distant 4.14
seconds behind Purvis’s Chevrolet.

H u ffm a n t a t s p o lo vault m ark
KNOXVILLE. Tenn. — Scott Huffman
American pole vault record of 19 feet. 7
on Saturdny In the USA-Mobll Outdoor
and Field Chumplonshlps.
Huffman broke the record of 19-6W set
Dial seven years ugo to the day.

set an
Inches
Track

Members of Ihe Sanford Recreation 8 enlor Softball
All-Star learn, which Is playing In an ASA 16 andUndor tournament this weekend In Port Orange, aro
(from left): front — Dixie Ross,
Ross. Shannon Ross,
Ross. Shayla
Shevla

BALTIMORE — Twenty-one people were
taken to area hospitals with minor Injuries after
an escalator at Camden Yards Jammed and sent
riders falling atop each other before Saturday
night's game between Baltimore and Minnesota.
Between 20 and 30 fans sustained minor
Injuries In the Incident on the upward bound
escalator, which occurred at 6:45 p.m.. 20
minutes before the game began.
•'It's mostly orthopedic problems — abrasions,
lacerations, sprained ankles, cuts. At this point
It looks like no one will probably need to be
admitted," said spokeswoman Joan Shnlpper
for the University of Maryland Medical Center,
where 11 people were taken.
"It went click-clack and whoosh. It's Just like
the floor went out from underneath us." suld
Orcg Johnson of Brooklyn. Md.

P ie rce p u lls ou t o f W im b led o n
WIMBLEDON. England - French Open final­
ist Mary Pierce, on the eve of her Wimbledon
debut, pulled out o f the tournament Saturday
for "reasons beyond her control."
Pierce and her mother, Yannick, met with
officials of the All England Club and told them
she was withdrawing.
In a written statement, she said: "F or reasons
far beyond my control. 1 have decided not to
participate In the most prestigious and tradi­
tional tournament In the world."
Pierce, who was seeded seventh, did not
elaborate, but she had been the focus of much
attention from the Brltsh media, particularly the
tabloid newspapers which concentrated on her
private life and relationship with her father.
One tabloid. The Sun. had an Interview with
him Tuesday In which he said he was going to
defy the ban and come to Wimbledon.
The Dally Mall then quoted him saying he was
going to come to Wimbledon and "create a big
spectacle"

N B A FIN ALS
□ 7 p.m. - WESH 2. Game 6 ; New York Knlcks
at Houston Rockets, (L)

Hooks, Shavon Williams, and Yolando 'YoYo' Cox;
back — Coach Arthur Brooks. Kollt Otis. Shannon
Jackson. Nino Byrd. Coretia Mitchell, Nlccl Cllett,
Haneefah Miller, and Coach Denise Byrd

Prep All-Stars aim to ‘rep eat’ success
By DBAN SMITH
Herald Sports Writer
SANFORD — Tlie Sanford Babe Kuih Prep League
All-Slurs (13 year olds) will have big shoes lo fill If they
hope la duplicate Hie feats of lust yeur's team.
Last year, the ull 13-yeur-old group won Its first two
games and came within one win of advancing to the
state tournament.
Bill that was I9V3. This Is n whole new group of
players.
j * -J If
U
I
The double -elimination (district tournament will uguln
d at Candylnnd fferk In Ixuigwootl this week,
with i
pulrtngs und tlmeJra-Ing announced early this
week

This year's team will be led by Tug Daniels, Hurry
Porter and Randv Casey, who helped lead the Sanford
Little Major Baseball League All-Slurs to the sub-district
title lust year and a spot In the district tournament ut
Ormond Bruch.
Making up tills year's Prep Lcuguc All Slur team will
be: Dunlcls and T.J. Johnson (Moose LtMlge Pirates);
Dontu Harper (A Lakeside Cutlery A s); James Gunn
and Chad Oetchcll (Huggs Produce tCxpos): Eric Sperry
und Sylvester Wynn Jr. (Knights o f Columbus Curdlnala): and Freddie Hawkins (Nobles Construction White
Sox); Porter and Justin Nettles (Blue Jays).
Also. Cusey arid Melvin l l o l f (Rotary Club Royals),'
John Bryanl. Mike Robinson. Nuthun Rice and LUke
Young (Seminole Produce Marlins): und Adam Dryden
(Klwunts Club Orioles).

T h e w in n e r o f that ga m e w ill p la y
the u n d efea ted tea m s i 2 :3 0 p .m .
In sid e S a n ford M em o ria l S ta d iu m . If
th e u n d efea ted tra n v lw s r s i'r tie tsrd
team s will return for a w in ­
ner-take-all g a m e M on d a y at San-

□ S e o Baba Math. P a g * SB

Kids top Untouchables

by Joe

F a n s injured at C a m d e n Y ards

C o m p lstollstln t* on P a » o l l

S a n fo rd S e n io r S o ftb a ll A ll-S ta rs

SANFORD — Potential future high
school baseball stars of North Cen­
tral Florida will be on display
starting this Friday, when the Babe
R u th 13-15 D is tr ic t A ll- S ta r
Tournament opens at Sanford Me­
morial Stadium.
This will be the fourth different
site for the tournament since San­
ford Joined Babe Ruth Baseball four
seasons ngo. In the past, the
tournament has been played In
Sarasota. DeLand. and Tavares.
Tavares and Longwood will open
the five-team, double-elimination
tournament with a noon game
F rid a y . At 3:3 0 p.m. F rid a y.
Daytona will take on Flagler. Both
games will be played at Sanford
Memorial Stadium.
Four gnrnea are scheduled for
Saturday, when Sanford swings Into
action at 10 a.m. against the
Tavares-(.ongwond winner In San­
ford Memorial Stadium. The losers
of Friday's games also will play at
10 a.m. at Zlnn Berk field.
An elimination game matching
I he loser of the 10 a m. Stadium
game and the winner of tht 10 a.m.
game ut Zlnn Beck will be played at
2:30 p.m. at Zlnn Beck. The win­
ners' bracket final — pitting the
winners of the Dnytonu-Flngler
g a m e a n d S n n ford/Tavares/Longwood bracket —
Is set for 3 p m . In the stadium.
The losers' bracket final. (&gt;alrlng
the winner of the 2:30 p.m. game at
Zlnn Beck and the loser of Satur­
day's 3 p.m. game In Ihe stadium,
will be played at 10 a.m. at Zlnn
Deck Field.

SANFORD — It hud lo happen
sooner or later.
Far the lust two seasons, the
Untouchables out of Nice ft Easy
have hud their run of the Playtime
Darts' Mixed A League, going un­
defeated lust season and throwing
their way lo Ihe largest lead of any
division front-runner this season.
But In play lust wee. Ron’s Kids
out of Uncle Nick's took It upon
themselves to make sure that the
Untouchables wouldn't enjoy u
secon d c o n s e c u tiv e u n b eaten
season and handed the lcuguc
leaders an 8-5 setback.
Even so. the Untouchables still
have a 26-gumc lead over their
nearest competitors nnd have all
but clinched the regular season
championship und the No. I seed In
the playoffs.
But because of Ron’s Kids. It
won't be a perfect season.
HOTSHOTS
The leagues' women dominated
play last week and grabbed a
majority o f the Hot Shot laurels.
Leading the pack with seven wins
and a hat trick was Jan Barlneau.
who throws for Uncle Nick's D.J.'s
In the Ladles' A League.
R a y n e ll B a r n e s fro m th e
Tou ch dow n Pub nnd W hiskey
River's Kathle McCawley each had
six wins. Bamboo Cafe aces Jolynn
Moreland and Bobble Buckley

ruch collected five wins Moreland
also hud two bulls.
The top thrower among the men
lust week was Bruce Van Taaaell.
captutn of Quivers' Blind Darts In
the Men's A League. He turned In
six wins and a jialr of bulls.
Bumboo Cufr's Dave Oakes won
five games.
MEN'S B LEAGUE
T h ere arc six learn* In the
Playtimes organization with 100
wins or more und three o f them urc
on top of this division: Bamboo
Cafe's 2 Big, I Old (110 wins) and
8.O.L. (109 wins) and Real Easy
(105 wins), both out o f Nice A Easy.
Involved In the battle for the
fourth and final playofT berth urc
Quivers' Cobras (98 wins), Ihe War
Eaglea from Score At Touchdown
(95 wins), and M.T. Muggs' Muggs
Studs (87 wins).
The Bonecruahera from Quivers
(76 wins) arc seventh. Tied for
eighth with 69 wins cuch arc
Bamboo Cafe's Youngblood and
Team No. B nut of Quivers. They're
followed by the Bushwaekers (55
wins) and E.M.T. Pocket* (34
wins), both from Sir Walters.
MEN'S A LEAGUE
The action In this slx-tcum circuit
Involves the bottom four teams,
who arc scrambling for the third
and fourth playoff berths.
Quivers' Blind Darte (116 wins)
continues to lead the puck, 19

□Bee Darte, Page 3B

Quartet dominates seniors’ play at BA-Sanford |
SANFORD — Mike Deshesky, Buck Benton,
Barbara Richards and Elenore Deshesky were
the top scorers In the four senior citizen bowling
leagues at Bowl Amcrlca-Sanford this past week.
Mike Deshesky hud the best series o f the
week, rolling a 607 In the Monday Senior
Citizens Lcuguc on June 13. It was the second
big scries o f the week for Deshesky. who had the
second-best series o f 562 In the Wednesday
Senior Citizens League on June 8 .

Deshesky also had the second highest single
game score In two leagues, posting a 227 In the
Monday league und a 203 In Wednesday action.
Benton had the best single game of week with
a 233 during u 589 scries In the Monduy Senior
Citizens League on June 13. He also had a 196 In
the Saturday Senior Citizens League on June 11.
Also having a hlg week was Don Bangs, who

had the top scries In the Friday Senior Citizens
League (571) on June 10 and the Saturduy
Senior Citizens Lcuguc (572) on June 11.
Barbara Ricbards hud the tap series score of
the week umong the women, putting up a 500 In
the Wednesday Senior Citizens Lcuguc on June
8 . Richards' 473 also topjicd play In Ihe
Saturday Senior Citizens Lcuguc on June 11.
Elenore Deshesky hud the women's highest
single gumc score of the week, rolling u 205 while
posting the top scries of 487 In (lie Friday Senior
Cltlzena League on June 10. She also had the
best scries In the Monday Senior Citizens League
on June 13wltha441.
WEDNESDAY SENIOR CITIZENS, JUNES
Men's Series — Myron Gates. 584: Mike
Deshesky, 562; Oames — Gutcs. 214; Deshesky,
203.
Women's Series — Barbara Richards, 506;
Phyllis Motl, 454; Oames — Pat Saylor. 200;
Richards. 193

Notes — Mable Vogel picked up u 5-7-10.
FRIDAY SENIOR CITIZEN8, JUNE 10
Men’s Series — Don Bangs. 571: Carl Moyer,
549; Q u a e s — Bangs. 202: Moyer. 194.
W om en's Series — Elcnorc Deshesky, 487:
Mury Bangs. 446; Gomes — Deshesky. 208:
Lucia Weaver. 164.
SATURDAY SENIOR CITIZENS, JUNE 11
M en's Series — Don Bangs. 572: Myroij
Gates, 509; Games — Bungs, 213; Buck Benton.
196.
W om en's Series — Barbara Richards. 473:
Murty Miner. 436; Games — Miner, 178:
Richards. 171.
MONDAY SENIOR CITIZENS, JUNE 13
j
M en's Series — Mike Deshesky. 607; Buck
Benton. 589; Gamea — Benton. 233; Deshesky,
227.
'
Women’s Series — Elcnorc Deshesky. 441;
Esther Lansing. 410; Qames — Eve Hogero. 158;
Deshesky. 157: Lansing. 157.

FOR TH E B E S T C O V E R A G E OF SPO R TS IN YOUR A R EA , R EAD T H E S A N FO R D HERALD DAILY

�I B - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 10, 1004
I-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

STATS &amp; STANDINGS
lA r a m a y o A rrarm a
1 40
Q ( M ) 74 M l P (11)50.10/T i l l 11140.44
14th game
I Said
14 40 17 40 7 40
at Seminal* Park
1
E
r
k
tlla
4 40 4 00
F rid a y night
4
V
ictor
4 00
F lr t l raca — I.X S i B iM . t t
Q II 0) 51.40/ P (1-1) M .70/ T (0 1 4 ) 110.40
♦ Dynam ic Dtnl#
4 X * to ISO
Ilth game
I Hondo Snokame
) to &gt; x
I Napa B ellra n
7 40 1 00 4 00
I B u lla lo Spirit
a.ao
5 Rena V ictor
140 10 40
o i u i i i .N i p i * n m . x , T i v i m x x
IZ
u
g
a
ia
B
rklag
a
lio
Sa tan *rata — l,45*j C i l l . 54
Q (5 4 ) 47.44/ P (01) 171 74/ T (0 5 1) M4.M
1 N ila 's Joa Kid
74 M 1)00 a to
17th game
4 F o « y C rv U a r
1)00 * M
1 Napa A rra to la
140 4 N 7 00
IC ra ty R a y
to o
1 Z u g a ia M a n d l
n o 4 40
O (4-11 ir . M i P ( M l I H . N i T 11441
1
A
/p
llleg
e
V
ictor
4 70
5,559 X / 0 0 It I) III *
Q (1-1) 14.10/ P U l ) l l l . l t / T (1 1 1)
Tklrd ra ta - ),044&lt; Ditt.74
111.40/ Q D ( 1 0 B 1 5)014.10
) C ritta r
n o 4 00 1.40
Ilth game
) M L G lory Bound
4 40 t.40
I U ralde410 140 110
7 S llllln Dh G lgl
4 00
I Aram aya
14 40 4 10
Q O i l &gt;1 M i P ( M l | ) J t i T 0 ) 7 , I)
1
Napa
1M
t ic h t ) 1)1.00
Q
(I
I)
15.10/
P
(I
I)
M
.M
/
(T
rl
tug,
I &gt;11
Fourth raca — 1 4 M i C i l l . X
144.40
as* Karrlgan
5
40) I 0 100
14th game
I S p iritO Eclipse
140 100
I Mendiba V ictor
D M I N 4 )0
'4 M l High Command
4 00
1
A
rp
llleo
a
E
rkle
g
a
5 00 100
Q (14) IT .H i P (41) l l . M i T 14*1*4) 1)1.44
4 Zugaia B ellran
4 00
(C a rry tv a r) l l) . M
Q 11 1) 11.44/ P I D ) 17.10/ T ID -4 ) MO M/
F ifth race — 1,454/ C: 11.4)
5 (1-14 A ll) MS.M/ DO ( l- l) 1II.M/ ( ft
S K r y p lo F la k
110 I 1 M 100
llnlthad fourth) I.M
4 Sw um Baal
1 40 1 )0
A -0 7 0 / H - 5 D . M 1
.1 Soloitl Tlpp
it o
Q 15*4) 54.441 P ( M ) M t .M i T 1) 4-1) 474.1#
*
S l l t h r t c t — t.454; 0:11.44
J Sm w hrsm hw '
IN
100 1.40
d M L Royal P alm
1 40 4.40
i Downtown Relay
1010
1 O (4*)) 11.401 P ( M ) 41.441 T 0*4*11 44).M|
&lt;417. J 411)4)4 44
Savant* r a c e - 1 .4 M iA t M .7 9
1) B nt Lna Bth
1 40 I N ) . »
1 W at M y F la ir
S M 7.00
O R M 'tM a m o ry m a k a r
SM
i 0 0*1) 1144/ P 0*5) 44.14/ T I) 5 4) 17S.M;
1 I M 4 4 ) 1,177.)0
I
I l o h l h r a c a - 1,450/ B/11.07
f Sun Bathing
15 40 I N 4 00
I Jersey John l
1 )0 J 40
I Tack Wahoo Won
1 00
■ Q 11*1) M .M / P (1*1144.14/ T 0*5*0) 144.N
Ninth raca — I,454/ A /M .M
Dn
5 40 140 1.10
( MP laL Chttn
Nooky Ray
140 2 30
7 Bonham town M ika
1.40
0 (1-0) 14 M / P (5-0 ) 44.54/ T 1) 01) t l. M i
0 0 1 1 ) 0 5*0) 144 44
14th r a c a - 1,450/ C ill. M
iH a llo A p p la b a a
4 to 1 )0 140
5 0 A Evary|aanla
0 00 ) M
7 J Onay
4 00
‘ Q ( M l 17.M/ P 0 4 ) 47.M l T 1)5-7, 14
O lCht) 104.40
1 1 t h r a c a - 1.450/ D ill.5 1
O ScoLdyB dol
4 70 7.M 4 40
1 Rlplay Bonflra
17 00 4 M
1 R M To W all*
)40
• O (54) 44.44/ P (4*1) 154.44/ T (4-1-1) 115.44.
(Carryover) 17,171.7V
Ilth race -1 0 4 4 / T ilO .tt
I Achlung Lady
1)00 4 M 4 40
4 Fond A Tango
4 00 1 40
/Q ueanO r Denial
4 to
' Q (1*4) 14.40/ P (1*4) M M , T (1-4-7) 454 N ,
1 11-4 7-01t . X I . X
Ilth ra c e -1 .4 5 4 / A i) t . 14
IC h a C h a Lover
4 70 4 00 1 70
1 Lou Joa
10 70 110
4 B ay's M r. Finn
4 70
• Q 0 4 ) 11.40/ P (1-4) 40.44/ T (7 4-4) 104.44 .
14thrace — 1^54/ B it 1 .lt
1 Omni Lion Heart
7 00 1 40 5 40
7 T a lk Honeycomb
1) aO 1 to
1 Rad R ive r Stormy
7 00
0 0-7) 11.44/ P (5-7) 4144/ T ( H I) 47.M
Ilth race - 1.044/ C it t . t l
SS p kle N Bghl
10 40 1) 40 4 00
7 Fre th Appeal
7 40 4 70
1 G ala Long Home
100
Q (5-7 ) 54.44/ P (5-7) 54.10/ l (57-101
L it ) A t
A — 1,1M| M — 4144,441

at Orlande5amInala
F rid a y night
F lrttg a m e
14 )0

1

I O ta
440 5 70
I Ricardo
5 40 4 70
ft a lu c a
10 40
Q II-7) S4.X; P (1-7 ) 44.44/ T (1-7-4) 50S.M
Second game
I Saluca A g uirre
1)40 4 00 4 40
1 R icard o Jota
4 40 1 40
rO nalndia Mandl
4 10
0 (1-t) 15.44/ P I D ) 70.40/ T (1 7 41 544 M l
DO H I) 47.70
Third game
10 M 4 40 4 00
1 Rcrdo F rra
14 00 0 00
tO n eln dla Jota
IN
I O ta Aguirre
Q ( M l 41.N l P (14) U 4 .ll/ T (14-1) 741 M
Faurthgam a
I Ricardo
1040 4.40 4 40
1 Forurla
4 40 I N
7 Pita
14 40
Q 114) 40.M/ P (0-1) 41.71/ T (4-1-7) 1,401.44
F ilth go me
SOta Chlm ala
14 30 4.40 ) M
1 Ricardo Reyet
4.00 4 40
4 Cola A guirre
4 *0
Q ( M ) 11.40/ P (11 &gt;41.44/ T (1 M l I t l. M
S lith game
I Pardo A g uirre
11.10 10.10 S'40
4Cola Enrlqua
4.00 S 00
I O la R eyet
4.40
O (14) 14.44/ P (14) 11I J I l T (1-44) 155.40
Seventh go me
5A fp illa g e
I N 5.M 1.40
4 Barra
4.M 4 00
lA t p I r l
7 40
Q (5-4) 104.M/ P (5 4) 111.40/ T (5-4-5)
I.II7.M
Eighth game
4 Zugai* A rra to la
010 1.40 140
t Berra A tp lrl
10.40 1.40
IM endlbe E rk le g a
140
Q 11-4) 11.Mz P (41) 71.40/ T T (4 1 7 ) I71.M
(Tw ln-Trl Jackpot) M 0 4 .N
Ninth game
IM endlbe A tp lrl
70 M I S M 1.10
lA ip llle g a Uralde
7.00 4 00

New Y ork
Baltim ore
D e lre ll
Boston
Toronto

A ll Tim et BO T
l a t l D lvliian
W
14
14
n

N A T IO N A L L B A O U B
A ll T im e! ROT
t a e l Ohrtelen
w
i. Fct. OB
A) 11
Atlanta
a n •—
40 33
Montraal
*15
Florida
u
11 .547 d i l l
Philadelphia
tt 34 441 n t i
4*5 14
New York
X
M
Central Divltton
w
L Pet. OB
74 .541 —
Houeton
3/
U
14
554
Cincinnati
*00 4
33 17
Sf Loult
Pittsburgh
30 IS
447 ***
Chicago
400 10*1
3* J*
W t*l DtviltOfi
W
L Pet. OB
34 17 .515 —
Los Angelas
455 4
Colorado
. 30 M
30 X
San Francisco
441 3
574 1
San Diego
33 41
F rid a y '! Gam e!
Philadelphia 10. Montreal I
F lorida 4. New York 1
Atlanta 4. Cincinnati 5
P ltte b urg h7,St Lou ie)
San Otago 1. Houeton 1
San Francleco 4. Chicago I
Colorado 11. Loe Angela! 5
Saturday'! Oem et
Chicago 4, San F ran clK O 4
New Y ork at Florida, (n)
Cincinnati a l Atlanta, (n)
P h lla d e lp h la a lM o n lre a l. (n)
Pltteburgh at St. Louie, (n)
Colorado at Lo t A ngelrt. (n)
Houiton at San Diego, (n)
Sunday'! Oamet
Cincinnati (RI|o M ) a l Atlanta (Marcher
5-1). 1:10 p m .
P itts b u r g h (S m ith 4 4) a l SI L o u lt
( P a la d o t 1-4), 1:15 p m
C o lo ra d o ( R l t l 1-3) at L o t A n g e la !
( M a rtin e t) 11,4.05 p m .
H ou ito n ( W lllla m t 4 1) a l San Diego
(S a n d e rt! 4).4:0Sp m
Chicago (Po tter 0 1) a l San Francleco
( T o rre e l l).4:05p .m .
New York (O eedin 1-1) a l F lerid e (Hough
M M iO S p . m .
P h ila d e lp h ia ( W e il 1 4 ) a l M o n tre a l
( F e t t e r o M ) , 0:05p.m.

Lakt Kerr
Lak* C m cant

£ P P *
Q P F
£

Lak* Qaora*
Ocala Foraal
1 Ocklawaha Rlvar
Lak* Panasonic*

B a ss

1 FIS H

!

E

F

P" £ "

P
~ iL
Q. £

P ’
F

Laka Kltalmmaa

E_ F £ _ .
£ P £

Laka Orimn

F_ P_ P *

Laka Harila

£

P

P

Oranga Lak*

E

F

Q

Clermont Chain

[33 1 I I

Lak* Lochlooaa

fl 0

Laka Tohopakallga

H□ 3 0 I
£ -- “l£
P £ P_
£ ££
£ £ £
Q P F
e n ra n u

Laka Rouiiaau
UkaWalr
Rodman Raaarvolr
BL John* Rlvar (M)
81. John* Rlvar (8)
WUhtacoocha* Rlvar

eounco neriae Owns ana fimmMm neh Cew w ver

Pet. O B
.too —
.54) l i e
500 4*4
441 7
444 7D

u
Central Division
W
L Pet. OB
404
14 IS
Cleveland
541 1
14
I
t
Minnesota
14 74
540 4*4
Chicago
14 11
51) 5*4
K a n ta t C lly
455 10
Milwaukee
X
X
West Division
OB
L
Pet.
W
477 —
T e sts
11 U
4)1 1
Seatlto
71 17
14 14
California
4M 1*4
144 1*4
Oakland
»
*1
F rid a y '! Oa mac
Milwaukee 0. New York I
C leveland!. Bolton I
Toronto!. Detroit 4
Baltim ore 4. Mlnnaeota 1
Seattle 5. Kansas City 1
California 1. Chicago)
Oakland*. T e sts 1
Saturday'! Garnet
ClevelandI. Bolton 1
New York 4. Milwaukee 1
Mlnnaeota at Baltimore, In)
Toronto at Detroit, (n)
C alifornia at Chicago, (n)
Seattle at K a n e eiC lfy . (n)
Oakland at Teeai. (n)
Sunday'! Oem et
Bocton I f inn void O 4) at Cleveland IM orne
M ) . 1:01pm
Toronto (G utm an 44) at O alrotl (Gohr
10). I : IS p m
M innaiota (Mahomae 41) at Baltim ore
(O g u llt1 11, I l i p m
M ilw a u k e e (B o n e i 4 41 al New York
(M ulholland 5 4). 1 1 5 p m
California I Finlay 51) at Chicago (Sand
ereon4 21,7 l i p m
Seattle (S a lk a ld 1 1) a l K a m a ! C ity
(G u b ic ia 4 41.1:U p m
Oakland (Ontlvero! 11) at Taeae (Roger!
I D , 1:05pm

T H IS W E E K S F IS H IN G F O R E C A S T

l

tt

L
14
IB
11
11
i)

tt

11

B A S K B A L L B O X IS
M A R L IN S ). M E TS 5
NEW YO R K
F L O R ID A
ab r h bl
ab r h bi
Vina It
100 0
C a rre l
4 0 10
V ic a ln o t i 5 0 0 0
Browne lb 4 1 1 0
O rtu la k rt 4 1 7 0
Shflleld r l 1 1 1 0
Bonilla lb 1 1 1 1
C o n ln a ll
till
Kent lb
1 1 )1
Clbrnn lb 4 I 1 1
Segul lb
4 0 10
N enp
0000
Hndley c
10 0 1
Snllagoc 4 0 10
R y T p tn c t 4 0 0 0
KAbbtt i t 4 1 1 .
P S m llh p
10 0 1
Brberia 7b 1 0 I 0
R lv e ra p h 1 0 0 0
W th a n p 1 0 0 0
G ono p
0 0 0 0
Je llco a l p 0 0 0 0
H arep h
10 0 0
C a rrillo It 0 0 0 0
T a la li
M ill
Total!
B i l l
New York
t i t ON 0 1 0 - 5
Florida
111 tit Mi - 4
E - Bonilla (101. Hundley (5). Browne 1
I t l D P - New York 1. F lorida I LO B New York 4. F lo rid a 1 IB - Browne (01 IB
- B onilla (I). Conlne (41. HR - Bonilla &lt;111.
Colbrunn 111. KAbbotl (7). S - Weather! SF
— Hundley.
IP
M R E R B B SO
New York
P S m lth L .) 7
1
7 4 t
4
t
G o/to
1
1 B B 1 1
F tor Ida
Weathers W. 7 5
7
4 S 1 1 )
Jaflcoat
1) 1 • 0 0 0
N a n t.I
B 0
11 1 a 0 •
Weather! pitched t e l better! In the 0th
H B P - by W o alhert (Kent) W P Weather 1 1 Balk - Weather!
U m p ire! — Heme, Oavldeon. F lr t l. Davit;
Second. Vanover; Third. Olbbent
T — 1 77 A -11.074

Houston 41. Now York 04
15
Now York 41, Houston 17
Frid ay. Juno 17
Now Y ork 41, Houston M . Now Y ork wads
series 13
Sunday. Juno t t
Now York at Houston, 7 p.m
Wednesday. June 11
Now York a l Houston. 4p m . If necessary
F rid ay ntgfit'1 game
KN ICK141, ROCK RTS M
at Now York
H O U S T O N (M l
H o rry 114 I I 7. Thorpe 4 14 1 4 14,
Oto|uwon t i l l 11 17. M a iw o ll 111 D I.
K.Sm ith 1 4 I I 4. Herrera 51 l- l It. Cattail
I 5 1 1 4 . E l to D 1 1 1 Jam » 1 0 0 0. Totals:
H i t 1)1404
N E W Y O R K (41)
Oak toy 10 44 10. C Smith 1 7 44 4. Ewing
It 11 1 1 IS. Harper S t) 3 1 1*. Storks 7 14 44
14. Mason 4 II SO 17. D*vto 0 I 0 0 0 . Anthony
0 4 0 0 0. W lllla m t 0 0 4 0 0 Totals 14 74II 74

LW alkor. Montreal II. Btgglo. Houston,
74; O y k ttre . P h ila d e lp h ia . IS; M o rris .
Cincinnati. II. Alou. Montreal. If. Bagwell.
Houston, t). Blchotto. Colorado I) TGwynn.
San Diego. 14
Triplet
R S a n d e n . C in c in n a ti, 7/ B u tla r. L o t
Angolas. 7. Mondetl. L o t Angelos. 1. Sosa.
Chicago. 5. Allcoe. St Loult. I Sandberg
Chicago. S. I aro tied with 4
Heme Runt
M e W lllla m i. San Francisco. 71. G alarraga.
Colorado. M . Bagwell Houston. II. M c G rltl,
A t la n t i, III M ltc h o ll. C in c in n a t i. I);
Bicheito. Colorado. 14.- Watlach. L o t Angeles.
14
H elen dates
O S a n d e r t, C in c in n a t i. I t i G r lit o m .
Montreal. U i O le w tt San F ranclK O . 11/
Biggie. Houeton. M i Mauton. Houston. 14;
C a rr. F le rid e , 14/ R K e lly . A lle n ta . 15/
Butler. L o t Angela!. IS
PITCHINO
1 Decttleni
DnJeckton. Phlladolphia. I I. .444. J 01/
G M ed d u i. Atlanta 101. O il. I 17; KHIII,
A4ontreat, 101. 7!4, 111, R M a ri ne/ Lot
Angeles. ! 7. 7JO. 7 14; Orabek. Houston. 4 J
7)0. 7 44. Seberhegen. New York. 7 7. 700.
111. PJAAartlnai. Montroal. * J. M l. 7 11.
Sw ill. San Francisco. 14. M l. 7 1)
Itrlke ou ti
Bene*. San Diego. 107; GMaddua. Atlanta.
41; R l|o . C in c in n a ti. 47: P J M e r lln e i.
AAontreal 40. Gtavlnei Atlanta. 40. K e G ro tt.
Los Angelas. M . Fattaro. Montreal. 07
D Jo n a t. P h lla d a lp h la . II. M cM tch a o l.
Atlanta. 14. Fr)nco. tsew York. 14: Bock. San
Francltco. I). M yers. Chicago. I); M P tr e i.
SI. Louis. 17; Wottoiend. Montraal. 17
A M E R IC A N L E A O U E
0 AB
II
H Pet.
O 'N e ill N Y
9 704 31 II
147
WCIark T a i
43 717 44 M
ID
Bella Cto
43 1)4 34 40
177
Thomas Chi
43 » e
41 44 .171
Lofton Cto
43 1)7
31 41
154
P alm eiro Bat
43 14) 44 1)
147
M entor Ter
44 151 44 (7
144
C D a v ttC a l
44 I X
43 74
141
G rllla y J r Sea
43 111 43 1)
.H I
Farm In Sea
sa to# 34 44
IX
Runt Scared
Thomas. Chicago. 44. G rllfo y Jr, S0 4 UI0 .
47; Cantoco. Taaat. 41; Lotion, Clortlond .
H Ball*. Cleveland. 14; White. Toronto. SI;
P hillip s. D tlr o ll, St.
Runt Batted In
Puckett. Minnesota. 45; Carter. Toronto.
45; WCIark. T ta at. 41. C)ntoco. To m s . 41/
G rlttay Jr. Seattle. 54; Franco. Chicago. 54;
Sierra. Oakland. 17.
H ilt
Lotion. Cleveland. 41; Bello. Cleveland. 40;
M o lllo r. Toronto. 17; WCIark, T t ia t . M l
Palm eiro. Baltim ore. 4J, Thomas. Chicago.
M : Frym an. Detroit. 11; O rllfe y Jr, Seattle.
01; Puckolt, Minnesota 01.
Doublet
Knoblauch, Minnesota. 10; Balia, Clevo
land. 1); F rym an . D tlr o ll, 11; B atrga.
Claveland. 30; WCIark. T e ia t. 70; Olarud.
Toronto. 14; Palm eiro. Baltim ore, 14.
Triplet
LJohnton, Chicago. 10; Coleman. Kansas
City, I; A D Iai. Milwaukee. 7/ Lofton, Clave
land. 4; M cR ae. K a ntat City. 4; Mult#.
T e ia t . 4/ C u rtis. C 4 lllo rn l4 , 4/ ACola.
Minnesota. 4: JG o n ia isi. T t ia t . 4; Buhner.
Seattle. 4.
Hama Runt
G r llla y Jr, Seattle. 10; Thomas, Chicago,
7); Cantoco. T t ia t . 14; MVaughn, Boston.
17; B a llt. Cleveland. 17; Slarra. Oakland. It;
Fielder. D tlr o ll, 14; C a rltr, Toronto, 14.
Stolon Betas
Lollon. Claveland, D . Coleman. K a ntat
C ity. 14/ N lio n . Botlon. 15; Knoblauch.
Minnesota. 14/ AAcRaa. K a n ta t City, 14/
ACola. Minnesota. II; Hulso. T t ia t , 17.
FITCH IN O

I DtdiiMi

Key. New York, N il. .404. 1.44; Boro.
Chlcogo. I t. .104. l.M j M C lerk. Ctovttond.
0 1. 004, 104; A lve ro i. Chlcogo. I I . 000.
I. 904 Cone. K a n ta t C lly . 10). .744. 1.47;
AAahomat. M inna tola. 4 ) , ,7M. S.4); Tapani.
Minnesota. 1 1. .7)7, 417/ RJohnson, Seattle,
I I, .7)7.1.14; Rogers. Tanas. 1 1. .777, 4 45.
5lrlkao«1t
R John von. Seal Ile. 104; Clam ant. Boston.
101; A p p la r, Ka nsas C ity , f i t F in la y .
California. 41/ Htntgon. Toronto. 74; Brown,
T o ia t. 71/ B tro . Chicago. 71/ Gordon, K a ntat
City. 7).
Sevas
LaSmlth, Batllmoro, 14/t Aguilera, M in
nasola, 15/ R u tto ll, Boston. 11; Grehe,
C alllornia, 10/ AAonfgomory. Kansas City, 10/
E ckartlay, Oakland. 4/ Ayala, Seatlto. 1/
Hanneman, Detroit, 5.

NBA P L A Y O F F S
A ll Tlmaa EOT
- N B A F IN A L S
W tdnasday, Ju n to
Houston 15, New Y ork 71
F rid ay, Juno 14
New York 41, Houston 45

RAINES QAUQE
’94
Category
Games................ 57
At-bala................ 211
Runs................... 43
Hits..................... 53
RBI...................... 22
Doubles............. 5
Triples........ ....... 2
Homo runs......... 7
Steals................. 5
Average............. .251

Jtoutton
11 14 14 1 1 - 0 4
Now York
H 10 I) M - t t
) P o l.il goals - Houston 0-10 (H orry 14.
Oto|uwon I I. K.Sm llh I t b lto 1 1. M a iw e il
1). Jant O l, Cotaot O il. Now Y ork 14
(E w ing 1-1. Starke I A C Sm ith B l. Anthony
B t , Harper B it . Fouled out — Cassell
Rtbeunde — Houston X (Thorpe ID , Now
Y o rk S7 (Ew ing It). Assists - Houston 14
(H orry 4), Now Y ork t t (Harper 1). Total
touts — Houston 11. Now Y ork I*. Technicals
— M a iw e ll, Mason. Storks. Flagrant foul —
Marry. A - 10,701.

LA U T O
N A T IO N A L L R A O U E
0 AB
H Pci.
R
TGwynn SO
10 737 44 at
1*4
154
M o rris Cln
&gt;51 IS 40
Alou Man
43 &gt;40 4t I t
754
U4
P la n a LA
43 747 X
IS
Bagw ell Hou
57 •0
43 7M
514
G a la ira g e Cot
1)7
43 let
51 M
Mondesi LA
44 151 X
14
US
)X
Je lto rie tS tL
41 &gt;1) 7* 77
Canine Pla
43 744 I f M
.174
I f ISO »
1)4
J u t lk o A ll
57
•
Rent Scared
O r l t t e m , M o n t r e a l, S t ; 13 y k • I r a .
P h ilad elp h ia. 54; Bagwell. Houeton. S7/
G alarraga. Colorado. 11/ Lankford. St Louie.
40. Alou. Montreal. 44. Blggio. Mom ton. 47/
R K e lly . Atlanta. 47.
R um Batted In
Bagwell. Houeton. 41. P la n a . L o t Angola!.
M Galarraga. Colorado la Canine. Florida.
111 Bichette. Colorado 5). M a W llila m t San
F ran cltco. 10 W a lle rh l o t Angela! X
Hitt
M o rris. Cincinnati. 00. G alarraga Col
or ado M . TGwynn San Diego M . Can/na.
Florida, M i Alou. Montroal. M P la n a . Lot
Angelos. 41. Monde*! Lot Angeles. 5*

Tim Raines Is a Sanford native and 8amlnola High School
graduate now playing for the Chicago WhllB Sox. H I b stats are
for the 1004 Besson In the first column, personal-bast season
totals In the second column and current caroer totals
(Including 1004 games) In thB third column.
Raines was 0-for-3 with a sacrifice bunt In Chicago's 5-3 loss
to tha California Angola Friday night.

R A C ttM

Zl

A ll Sport MM|er 500
B R O O K L Y N . M k h - Results Saturday
from the A ll Sport AAel|er 100 toir A R C A
Supercar Sartos stock cart, with starting
position In parentheses, residence, typo of
cor. laps comptottd reason out. l i any.
money won and wtnnor'e average speed In
mph
I. (1) J o il Purvis. C la rk tv llto . Term.
Chevrolet Lu m ln a. 100. 014.750. 15) 104.
M ichig an A R C A record previous record
DO 141. Tracy L n lto . 1400; 1. 1141 Gary
Bredberry. Chelsea. Ala . Chevrolet Lumlna.
100.00.400
1 (4) Frank Klm m el. Jettortonvllle. In d .
Chevrolet Lum lna. t t t I) 000 4 (IS) Andy
Belmont, langhorna. Pe . Ford Thunder bird,
100.55.400
5 1)01 Jett McClure. Harrisburg. N C .
Chevrolet Lum lna. 100 M 000 4 (1)1 Laura
Lana. Charlotte. N C . Ford Thunderblrd. 100.
5)400
7 1241 Donny Paul. Berrien Springs. M k h ,
Olds Cutlass, too. 51.400. 4 (M l Joel White.
Roys# City. Teats. Chevrolet Lum lna. 44.
57 400
4 lU I H a rris OeVant. Cumber! Ga . Ford
T h u n d e rb lrd . 44. 11.700. 10 ( 41 M a rk
Thompson. CertersvNIe. G a , Ford Thun
drrbfrd. 44.17.4)0
II (401 Wayne Larson. Am os. Iowa
Chevrolet Lum lna. 40. 57.600. 17 I M l Tom
Loren/. Red Oak. T eiat. Chevrolet Lum lna.
44 51.4*0
11 (571 Je rry HI*. Brandywine. AAd,
Chevrolet Lumlna. 40 51.400 u 1771 Howard
Rote Ashland Ky . Ford Thunderblrd. 47,
H IM
II I lf ) J t r r y Glanvllto. Roswell. G a . Ford
T itmderbird. M . 51.000 to 111) P erry Tripp.
Fredericktown. M o . OMs Cutlass. 41.11.710
17 (7)1 Bob W illiam s. Conltold. Ohio.
Chevrolet Lum lna. 44. 51.700. 11 (541 Glenn
Brower. Columbus. G o . Chevrolet Lum lna.
41.51.010
14 (M ) Joey Sonntag L ittle E lm . T o io t.
Ford Thunderblrd. 01. handling. 11400; 10
1141 Kenny Alton. Shelby. N C . Chevrolet
Lum lna. OX. 53-0*0
v/ . l J
I t . ( I l l John Wltktrwen. 11u s , town, AJ#v
Chevrolet Lum lna. 77, transmission. 51,400;
D (I) Bobby Bowthor. tprlngltold. Onto.
Ford Thunderblrd. 7], 01.45(1.,
17 (171 Bob Strait. Mekene. I l l . Ford
Thundtrblrd. 71. 5*400; 14 141 L W M illa r,
D u th o ra . P a , C h a v ro la l L u m ln a . 70.
d rlve lraln . II.JOO
75 D l l G ary W tlnbroor. Broofcpark. Ohio.
Olds Cutlass. II. engine failure. 11.700; 74
111) B ill Ventorlnl. C o K o rd. N C . Chevrolet
Lumlna. 41. angina failure. IS10
77 (4) Jim m y Horton. Mammon ton. N J .
Chevrolet Lum lna. 57. rear and. 51.415. 31
(M l J e ll Finley. Lansing. M ic h . Chevrolet
Lum lna. 44. angina failure. 1400
74. (101 K irk Shelmerdme. Winston Salem.
N C . Olds Cutlass. 41 engine failure, teeo
10 0 4 ) Jo h n S t r a d lm a n . C la v a la n d .
Chevrolet Lum lna. 41. crash. MtO
II. (5) Bob Ketetowtkl. Rochester H ills.
M ic h . Chrysler LoBoron. 74, engine failure.
51.1)0. 11 ( U l D avid Boggs. Pelrttold. I l l .
Bglck Regal. M. engine failure. 5410
17 (71 O lck Trickle. Iron Station. N C .
Chevrolet Lum lna. 17. d l leek. 51.100; 14 1411
Roger Btockttock, Shelby Twp . M k h . Olds
Cutlass 51. angina failure. 5400
11 (7) Bob H ill. Story City. Iowa. Chevrolet
Lum lna. 17. engine failure. 1740. 14. (101
C raig Rubrlght. Safety Harbor. F l a . O ld t
Cutlets. M. angina lalliao . 5440
17. ( l i t T im Steele. Ceopertvllto, M k h .
Ford Thunderblrd, 14. engine failure. 51.4)0;
M . (11) Bob SchacM. Chapin. 1 C .. O ldt
Cutlass. II. engine lelluro, 5770
14 ( D l Henry Wallace. Prospect. Ky.,
Chevrolet Lum lna. It. angina failure. g710:
40. (II) Ke rry Taagua. Concord. N C . O kb
Cutlass. 4. angina lelluro. 5700.
41. ( I l l Dave Jansen. G rain Valley. M o .
Chevrolet Lum lna. 4. angina failure. 5700. 41
1)11 R ic h Blckto. Concord. N C , Ford
Thu nd trblid . 1. tog lna lallura, 5000
Time ol race 1:10:01.
M arg in ol v ic to ry : 4.14 seconds.
Caution Hags: 5 lor m a p s
Lead changes: 10 among 7 drivers.
Lop leaders Bowther 1-11/ P u rv is D IO ;
Alton ! D 4 i P u rv is 17-45; Horton 44-51;
P u rv is 5)14; Klm m el 54/ M cClure 4041;
P u r v lt a i l l; Thompson41 M ; Purvis 12 100
S e r ls t point leaders
B ow th er !,D 0 :
K lm m el 1.410; Bredberry 1,440; Strait 1.450;
(tie) Venturlnl and M cClure 1,545; Brower
1.541/ S c h a c h l 1,500/ W ilk in s o n 1,145/
Kotoiow skl 1.120, M ille r 1,510/ Btockttock
1.2)0 , G lanvllto 1.035

Q O LP

. . i \ .v
_____________________

U .l. Open
O A K M O N T , Pa. — Leaders altar Setur
day's third round ol (ho 51.5 m illio n U.5. Open
on the 4.444 yard, per i l 12411) Oakm onl
try Club
C
Country
court*:
E rnie E ls
44 71 44-104
Prank Nobilo
44 71 44 -704
Tom W alton
44 7)40-104
Loren Roberto
74 4444-704
Halo Irwin
44 44-71—704
Colin Montgomerie
71-45-71—104
Slava Lowery
717144—710
Curtis Strange
70 70 7P-3I0
Stove P alo
74 44 71-111
Grog Norman
71-7144-11)
John Cook
7)4471-111
Jumbo O ia k l
707144-112
Fred Couples
D 71 *4—111
Clark Dennis
ii-m o-iii
K irk T rlp lalt
70 71 71-117
Jo lt Sluman
71 4471—3D
Brad F a io n
7)44-71—11)
D avid Edwards
7) 4175—311
Ja fl Megger 1
714175-114
Save Ballattoros
U 7 1 7 0 -1 I 4
Scott Hoch
D -D 70— 314
Brandt Job#
73 74 44-114
Ban Crenshaw
71-74 70-115
Duffy Waldorf
7440 7 1 - l l i
Jim McGovern
71-00-74-110
Chip Bock
717)70— 115
Tom Kilo
D -7I-D —114
Jack N lcklau t
44-70-77—115
Bernhard Longer
D -D -D —117
Gordon Brand. Jr.
7171 71-117
Lannto Clamants
D-71-71—117
Craig Pa rry
70 40 71-117
Fulton Altom
71 70 74-117
Jim Puryk
74 44 74-317
Scolt Varplank
7 0 D 7 5 -1 I7
PhllM Ickalto n
75-70 71—110

Tom Lehman
F re d Funk
W eynoLovI
Don W altworth
M ik e Springer
Sam Torrance
Jim Gallagher. Jr
Bradley Hughes
F ra n Quinn, Jr.
Scott Simpson
Doug M artin
D a v it Lava III
Hugh Royer III
D avid Bergamo
F u lly {ooltor
M ichael Em ery
E m ly n Aubrey
M a r i Cameveto
5tovon RIcKardton
O lln Browne
Tim Ounlevey
Recce Mediate
Tom m y Arm our III
M ichael Smith
P au l Oeydee
E d Humenik
Dave Rum mens

best
160
647
133
104
71
38
13
18
go
.334

career
1,874
7,087
1,254
2,104
729
337
102
130
758
.297

77 44 71-110
74 71 74-110
70 TO D -114
D 7) D —114
71 7571—1)4
74 71 D -1 1 4
71 71 74-114
74 40 77-114

MDD-ttO
75 D 75-150
74 7571-D O
74 70 7 4 - DO
74 7) 74-150
D 71 77-1)0
D 7 1 7 4 -D I
74 TO 74-771
74 7) 75 - 773

714411-ni

7577 7 0 - I D
74 D 7 0 - n i
74 7) 77- 714
7* 7g D - D *
74 D 7b—US
D D 74—t t l
74 D D - t t S
74 D t o - 77*
74 D B l—t t l
71 74*7-777

BellSawth Ctoeeto
N A S H V IL L E . Tenn — Leaders alter Sal
uvJay i second round at the 11 03 m ill!**
BellSouth Classic an the 4.745 yard, par 7)
Spr Inghous* G o ll Club course
Dove Stockton
4) 44— 111
Lea Trevino
*7 4 5 - 111
Jim A lb u t
44 44—154
Jim Deni
45 71-154
J C Sneed
*4 47— 155
Tom Wergo
47 4*— 1)5
B ill H ell
44 44—115
G lbby Gilbert
71*5-15*
Rky Floyd
D 4 4 -IM
M ike H ill
54 47-155
Terry O lll
4 * 4 * -D 4
Rocky Thompson
47 44-1*4
George Archer
*5 71— 11*
Bob Brue
*4 a - i n
Or ahem M arsh
44*4-1)7
L a rry Ziagtor
4*44— 1)7
Bob Charles
4 ! 7b—I X
Jim Colbert
4* D - l ) 4
L a rry G ilb ert
71 44—1)4
Calvin Peel*
7i t e —l i t
. 71 4*-r 1*4
Walter Zam hrltkl
70 70-140
Tommy Aycock
*4 7 1 - I X
Jim m y Powell
71 70— 141
Randy P tt r l
71 70—141
O rvllto Moody
*4 77-141
Dick Rhyen
4 9 U -I4 I
Den flies
44 TV—141
Tommy Aaron
74 4*-147
Tom W titk o p l
71 71-147
Simon Hobday
71 71-142
Jay Slgal
71 71-147
Charles Coody
70 71-141
Jim Ferre*
74 49-14)
G aylord Burrows
71 71— I X
Chi Chi Rodrigue/
71 71— I X
Je rry Mcge*
7071— I X
G ary P la ye r
74 ID—I X
Bob Leaver
7)71— I X
H arold Henning
D 71—I X
Butch B aird
71 T V- I X
IsaaAoki
7 ID -IX
Ch arlie Slfford
74 71—I X
O avt H ill
D D -IX
A rt Procter
75 71 —I X
BobG ealby
75 71 —I X
R ive t Me bee
75 71 —I X
7* 77—I X
Bobby Nichole
O ew lll Weaver
7 1 7 4 -IX
M ille r Berber
73 74—I X
Gay Brawar
D 7 4 -IX
K a rm ltZ a rla y
D 74— I X
Bob Pane elk
D 7 4 -IX
Oery Schroedtr
74-71—147
Dave Ekhetbarger
77 70-147
L a rry M ow ry
74 7 V - 147
Richard B e tta il
D 74—147
Fred R u li
D 74-147
A l Kelley
7V 74— 147
Tom Shaw
4710-147
Bruc* Crompton
7V D — I X
O k k Goal)
7 V D -1 X
La* Eldar
D 75— I X
Don January
77 7 4 - I X
Homero Blancas
7 1 7 4 -IX
Bob Manna
71 7 7 - I X
Dick Hendrickson
74 71-144
Stonewall Jackson
7* D — 144
Dale Douglass
7V 71— I X
Bart Yancey
D 7 4 -IX
George Shortrldge
74-74— I X
Kan S llll
74-74—I X
L a rry L a o ra lll
74 74—I X
Jack K later
7) 7 7 - I X
Gena L ltlle r
7140-151
Den Matsangato
7474—155
Mason Rudolph
7111-154

Tim Ralnaa

ftoelhov Drew
Jane Geddet
Dina Ammaccapana
E lba Gibson
C h ris Johnson
Loretta Atoareto
Dab Richard
Tina Barrett
Short I Stolnhauor
Allison Flrvwy
Barb Thomas
P am ela Wright
E laine Crosby
E v a Dahl lot
Sherri Tumor
Carolyn H ill
N an cyLo po i
V k k l Ooot/o
Anno M ario P a lll
A m y Road
Lynn Carvwlly
Robin Walton
Jadl Flgtoy
R im Bawav
T racy Kardyk
Cindy Flgg C u rrier
Patty Jordan
Tania Abitbol
Janice Gibson
JonoCraftov
Susie Berning
K r is Ttchattor

7540 7 1 - I D
74 40 D —115
70 7) D —115
D 04 74-115
44 71 75-115
D 7) 71-114
44 74 71-714
71 71 D —115
n o D -1 1 4
D IB 75—Ito
71 D 75-114
7171 74-114
71 7075—114
7444 D —111
D D D —117
D 7) D —117
71 D 74-117
47 74 74-117
74 44 75-114
75 70 73—111
75 TO 73-114
71 74 75-114
71 74 D - H 4
D T I 74-111
71 D 74-114
71 71 74-114
TO 7) 75-111
71 71 74-711
44 7)75-111
74 71 74-114
7) 7| 74—114
74 70 74— 7)0

TRAN SACTIO NS
BASEBALL
Am erican league
B O S T O N R E D SO X - P la c e d Scott
Bankhead pitcher, on the today disabled
list Purchased the contract e l R k k T r ik e !,
pitcher, from Pawtucket d the Intornahenel
leag u e
C A L IF O R N IA A N O E LS - Activated Oe
m ien E a sie r Inltolder. from the today
disabled list Optioned Red Cerrele. Infietoer,
to Vancouver el the Pacific Coast League
T E K A t N A N O E R I - A c tiv a te d Tern
Henke, pitcher, from the today disab led list.
Sant Tarry Burrows, pitcher to Oklahoma
City e l the Am erican Ataeclallen
National League
F L O R ID A M A R L I N I - Promoted.,Panttl
Oteroey. d ft b a n Srem Brevard County
Florida State Leegue to Edmonton
P e d tlc Caetl League.
N E W Y O R K M E T 5 - Signed Jeremto
Simpson, outfielder, end assigned him to the
G u ll Coast League.' Noah Peery. pitcher and
assigned him to Columbia of South Atlantic
le a g u e ; a n d T e r r a n c e L o n g , f i r s t
baseman outfielder and r-tig n ed him to
Kingsport e l the Appalachian league Re
signed Doug Datcen/o. outfielder, to a minor
league contract at Norfolk o l the Interna
lionet league
BASKETBALL
National B etktto ell Association
M i l w a u k e e B U C KS - Waived Mika
O m lntki, center
P H IL A D E L P H IA TIERS - Waived Moses
Malone, center
Continental Basketball Association
OM AHA R A C IR I T ra d e d ' Chad
Gallagher, cantor, to tie Rock lord Lightning
lor O arry l Johnson, guard; M elvin Robinson,
cantor; and a tilth round draft pick In 1444
FO O TBALL
National Feet k ail League
KA N S A S CITY C H IE F S - Agreed to terms
with C h ario t M lncy, safely, on a on# year
contract
W ASHIN GTO N R E D SK IN S - Acquired
Tyronne Slewe. linebacker, tram the Arizona
Cardinals ter a late routd IS4S draft cholca
CO LLSO E
C O L G A T E - Named Nadine M atlretoo
women's assistant basketball coach.
C O N N E C T IC U T - Named K a rl Hobbs
men's assistant b e t k tlie ll coach
F L O R ID A A T LA N T IC - Announced the
resignation e l Tem S o ft athletic director to
became athletic lund raiser. Named Tam
C arg ill Interim athletic director.

t v

/i u

p io

T t lev Iston
A U T O R A C IN O
t p m. - W C P X4 . N A S C A R .M ille r 400. (LI
4 : ) 0 a m . - E S P N . O l Road Sartos
BASEBALL
ItOS p.m . — T B S. N a tio n a l League.
Cincinnati Rads al Atlanta Braves, (L)
4 p m. — WON. National League. Chicago
Cubs a l San Francisco Gtonti. I D
I p .m . — E S P N . N a tio n a l Laa g u a .
Phlladalphla Phillies al Montreal E ip o t. (L)

L P O A R tch eito r Intornaftonel
BASKETBALL
R O C H E S T E R , N .Y. — Loaders altar Sal
7 p m. - W ESH 7. N B A Finals, game 4.
Urday's third round o l (ho 5100.000 Roc h e lle r
N#w Y ork K n lckt al Houston R eckttt. ( L )
Intornetlonel, played on the 4.141 yard, par-71
BO W LINO
(15-17) L o c u li H ill Country Club (a denotes
am ato urli
) : M p.m . — SUN. A B C W orld Team
Challenge
ly j
47 D 47-304
K risti A lb ert
O O LF
44 44 44—704
M lchala Redman
I p.m. - W F T V 4, U.S. Open, final round.
a 47-71-704
(L)
B aity King
44 44 71-704
Barb Bunkowtky
G YM N A STICS
D 47 44-107
Dawn Coe Jones
1:10p m. - W ESH 1. Budget Invitational
44 47 71-107
U se Klggent
47 44-71—207
Dollle M o d u le
E Q U E S T R IA N
44-D44—704
Nancy Ramsbottom
! : X p . m . - SUN. Sm lrnoll Cup
40 7144-704
Htton A llre d s ton
44 70 70-704
HORSE R A CIN O
Roslo Jones
D 7147-110
1 p.m. — SC, Summer Racing '44 Irom
Tamm lo Croon
71 7044-110
Yonkeri
M a rla Figuoras D o lll
447144-110
4 :1 0 p .m . — S C , N e w H a m p s h ir e
Laurie Brower
44-D-7I—110
Sweepttokat. (LI
Joan Pllco ck
44 44 D —110
SOCCER
K t lly Robbins
M 4471-110
11:15 p m. - ESPN , UNI. World Cup:
A lic ia Dibos
D7I 70-111
Belgium
vs.
M
o
rrocca
(L)
Janet Anderson
M il-70-311
1:S5 p m . ESPN . UNI. W orld Cup:
Nina Foust
71 44-71—111
M a ik o v s . Norway. (L)
Colleen W alk tr
44 7171-111
7:10 p.m. - E SP N 1. UNI. W orld Cup:
M l f ile Me George
74 70 *4-117
Cameroon vs. Sweden, (L)
Hollis Slacy
71 70 71-313
U iS J p m - ESP N . World Cup: Cameroon
M ichelle M cG ann
D-47-71—111
vs Sweden
Jan Stephenson
77 44 D —311
M artha Faulconer
70D D - lll
H j(||
Dale E ggtllng
7044-71-313
A U T O R A C IN O
Sally Lltlto
74 44-70-111
~ W 0 T A M &lt;**». N A SC A R ,
Barb Mucha
D-71-70—111
M illa r 400
M u flln SponcarD ovlln
71- D-70—111
BASEBALL
Leigh Ann M ills
71 D D - U )
11:10 p.m. - WWZN A M (1440), National
Am y Alcott
7071 D - 1 D
Laague. Cincinnati Rads a l Atlanta Braves
Susto Redman
44 777 3 -1 1 )
S:30 p.m. - W O T A M (540), National
Nancy Taylor
D 4471—111
League.
New Y ork M a lt a l Florida M arlins
Shelley H am lin
44-71-74—111
BASKETBALL
ValSkinner
747140-1)4
7 p.m. - W D B O A M (540). N B A Flnala.
M a ry Bath Zim m erm an
D-71-70—114
gam# 4t New Y ork K n lc k t a l Houston
Jenny Lldback
D 7 I-7 I—114
Rockett
K im W illiam s
74 44 D -1 1 4
Fo o t b a ll
Maggie W ill
40-74-D —1)4
4 p.m. - WWNZ A M (740). Aran* --------Klm C e th roln
D 40-71-1)4
In Your Fat# Live

tD-j.v.frv s v :

�Sanford Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Sunday, Juna 19, 1994 - II

Wynalda’s free kick gives U.S. 1-1 tie
■ * RONALD BLUM
APSporta Writer
PONTIAC. Mich. - An Ameri­
can soccer crowd finally had
something to cheer for Saturday.
Playing before vociferous fans
In the Pontine Silverdome, the
United Stales si iwed how far It
has progressed In four years,
tying Swlttcrland 1-1 In the first
World Cup game Indoors.
aii ns** ■or
"For me It was a little bit
FlftlT BOUND
e m o tio n a l," U.S. goalkeeper
4 ROUP•
W l r or m
m
Tony Meola said. " A lot o f people
■rail I
• 0 f
• ■ «
didn't expect me lo be here."
CaiWNh
• I • • t S
Most o f International soccer
R v m is
l
i
s
t
s
#
• • • • • •
never expected to be playing a
taaOey, Jwst*
World Cup game under a roof,
Al PstaOMS. CsM.
and didn't didn't expect to be
Csmsfssn vt. » asOs. t.ttp m
has
playing In the United States.
Four years ago. Ctechoslovokla
■rsill vs. Rvsds. I.M am.
routed the Americans 9-1 in the
Prttay, JsaaM
At HaaiarN, Csui.
opener, and U.S. players wanted
■rstll v*. Coalman. 4;M»m
to show both the soccer commu­
Al Pm Nsc, Mkh.
nity and U.S. fans that they
Iw s O w v s Russia, t.ttp.m
won't be first-round losers.
At ttm m . Caul
"W e couldn't afford to lose
Russia vs. Camaraan. 4H a m.
today and get knocked out o f the
At PsaMaa. Mkk.
■rstll vs. I — dsn. s M p m
tournament already." said U.S.
midfielder Tab Ramos, one of
•R O U PC
the six players from 1090 still on
W L T OR OA Pis
Oarmaar
I
t a
I
I
}
the team.
tawlfi Karaa
a
• I
}
| |
For a few minutes. It looked
.
a a I
t
&gt; t
like 1090 all over again. Oeorges
Mivia
a i a •
t a
RrM
ay,
is—
It
Bregy, a 36-year-old midfielder
A lO — a
who specialises on free kicks,
Oarmaer 1, OallvUa
bent a misplaced defensive wall
AtOsllas
tpawt». lauWt Kh m t. It*
and Meola In the 39th minute.
tt
But In the final minute of the
half, with just about 39 seconds
Ourm sAy v« 1— In. 4 M p m
T te rte a y , Ju— II
left before the whistle, Eric
A ! F ilt e r * , M g ,,.
Wynnlda smacked a 29-yard free
lo u ttiK o r— v , B u ll.la . 7 U p m
kick perfectly Into the upper
M - d a y , Ju— i f
A l CtMc.p.
Icfi-hnm ltornrrofihe net.
S o h . iu v,. tpain, 4 U p m
"W hen Wynnlda scored, the
A ID PR P I
crowd exploded." Meola said.
Carm pny &lt;1 io tiih K ar.a, I H p n
"W e needed something to gel
CROUPD
the fans going."
W L T OF OA F H
Four years ago. Wvnalda was
A r*— tlna
I
I I
I
I
«
Bulgaria
« • 0
I
0
t
so pumped up he wasn't around
&amp;&gt;**&lt;*
I
0
0
«
«
0
nt the end of the game. He was
Ntparla
I
I I
s
s
f
ejected seven minutes Into the
T— a^. Ju— II
A l F p ite r* , M a tt.
secon d hulT fo r pu sh in g a
A r — n I tn a n C rw c a . 11:11* m
Ciechoslovuk player In front o f a
A f 0.11*1
linesmen while the ball wns
N * * u fla n Bulgaria, f U p m
dead.
" I don't even think ubout
that." said Wynnlda. a 29-year"T h e laal 10. 19 minutes we
old from Westlake Village, Calif.,
ran out o f gaa — it was like a
who spent the past two seasons
sauna out there," Kamos aald.
In the German league. "Last
"Th a i crowd kepi us In (here."
time a lot of us went out there
The three sections o f Swlsa
thinking It was w ar."
fans In the upper deck made
plenty of noise — ringing cow.
• They weren't quite thinking
about peace against ftwitirrUrul,
bell* and chanting to the Trium ­
but they concentrated on play­ phal March o f "A ld a ." But for
once a U.S. crowd cheered for
ing their game. It wasn't easy to
the American* Instead o f the
keep their cool: It was 80 degrees
team o f their heritage.
with 71 percent humidity on the
An overwhelming majority of
field o f the unulrcondltloned
the 73,429 at the game waved
Silverdome. and play got rugged
*mall American flag*, and some
at times uk sweat llew off the
even dropped them selves In
drenched pluyera.

GROUP A
W L T OF OA Pts
Switzerland
0
0
1
1
1
1
United States 0 0 1
1
1
1
C olom bia
Romania

0
0

0
0

0

0
0

0
Saturday, June 18
At Pontiac, Mich.

0
0

0
0

Switzerland 1, United States 1, tie

At Pasadena, Calif.
Colom bia vs. Romania, (n)

Wednesday, June 22
At Pontiac, Mich.
Romania va. Switzerland, 4:05 p.m.

At Paaadena, Calif.
C olom bia at United States, 7:35 p.m.

Sunday, June 26
At Pasadena, Calif.
Romania at United States, 4:05 p.m.

At Stanford, Calif.
Switzerland vs. Colom bia, 4:05 p.m.
t a iw ia y . j — . t i
A l F a lte r s . M a u
Arg antlnp ys N lg a rla .i M p m
Sunday, Ju— M
At CMc s m
B idgarla .1 G . m c u , t l U p m
T te r —ay. Ju— M
A l F a tte r* . M ats
G r— t t r ,

la. 7 I t p m

A l Dallas
A rgantm avs Bulgaria. / U p m

OROUPI
W L T OP OA P it
I
o
«
)
g
j
4 0 1 4 , 0
0
0
0
,
,
g
0
I
0
o
I
0
t a lv r * ., , Ju n , ig
A l l a t l RuMartar*. N J
Iraland I. H a lf ,
Sunday. Juna I, A l W a U M g ln
Nor nay Y l M an ta . 4 01 p m
T te r— ay. Juna II
A l l a t l Ruttertard, N J
lla ly Yt Nom a y . i U p m
Friday, Ju n . u
A l Orlanda
M a i k a v , Ir.land. II U p m

Iraland
M a ilc o
Norway
l'* ly

them.
"That was putting a big lump
th roat," said defender Alext
Lolas, a Detroit native who drew
the biggest cheer*.
W hile Sw llierlan d had the
better play, outshoottng the
A m e r ic a n # 2 4 -1 9 . T h o m a s
Dooley. Kamos and Itarkes had
good scoring chance* In the
second half.
" I f any team deserved to win. I
thought it was us." Switzerland
coach Roy Hodgson suld. "but
we didn't take udvuniagc of nil of
ourchunccs."

Tuasday. Ju— K
A t l a s t R utteftard, N.J.
Ir.la n d vs Norway, i n i p m
A l WatAJngNn
Italy rS. M a ilt* , II U p m
ORO UFF
W L T OF OA P H
4
0
*
0
0
*
0
0
0
4
4
g
0
0
0
0
4
4
0
0
0
4
g
o
Sunday. Ju— I f
A t Orlande
B.ig-um
Morocco. II U p m
Monday. Jo naM
A l W atMngHn
N altiofland, »s Saudi Arabia. I U p m
Saturday. Juna IS
A l Orlando
Balglw m vs N olborland, I I U p m
A l ( a i l Rotterlord. N J
Saudi Arabia rs Morocco II U p m
Wad— W ay. Jim . 71
A t Dylan—
M o rocco » t Natbaflandt, II U p m
A l W atM n fN n
B alglw m v, Saudi Arabia. II U p m

Balgium
Morocco
N am orland,
Saudi A r— la

When ‘trolling’ stores,
check to make sure
your ‘catch’ is fresh
Fish Is perhaps the most
perishable o f all meats, and I am
fortunate lo usually have a fresh
supply. Others are not so lucky,
and must shop for fish al a
market or store.
This [loses a problem, for how
docs one know for sure that a
fish Is indeed fresh? One ensy
way lo tell If a fish Is fresh or not
Is lo examine the eyes. Fish that
are fresh will have bright, clear
eyes. Fish that are less than
fresh will have cloudy eyes.
Another area to examine Is the
gills. Fresh fish will have bright
red gills: fish that you should
avoid will have gills that are
more of a pink color.
If you are not certain after
examining the eyes and the gills,
press in on the flesh with the Up
o f your finger. If Ihe meal Is
fresh, II will be solid and Ihe
depression will disappear rapid­
ly. Flesh that is not fresh will
retain the depression for quite
som e lim e. Th is Is a sure
indicator that the meat has
already begun lo deteriorate.
Most pre-packaged, frozen fish
Is fairly fresh. Many commercial
fishing operations will remain al
sea for weeks at a time. The fleet
will consist of smaller fishing
ships and a large "m other" ship.
Fish captured In such operations
are actually processed al sea.
They aro filleted and flash frozen
on the spot, and usually arrive to
Ihe stores In a very fresh condi­
tion.
As fish Is more subject to
spoilage than other meats, It Is
prudent that you examine whole
fish carefully before making
your purchase.
SHUPE'S SCOOP
When purchasing seafood. It Is
more Important to shop at a
store you can trust, rnthcr than
shopping around for bargains
Your "burgalus" may turnout to
be a product that Is less than

fresh and needs to be unloaded
In a hurry.

FISHING FORECAST
Bass fishing continues to taper
off with the high temperatures.
Bream and catfish will be the
only species hardy enough to
remain active during the sum­
mer months. Both species will
remain active In deap r iv e r
bands.
Now that the snook closure Is
In effect, snook are really active
al S ebastian Inlet. T h ese
gamesters will be gathering at all
Inlets and passes In preparation
for spawning activities. Jack
crcvalte, Indyfish. red fish, and
flounder are also biting with
regularity.
C a p ta in J a c k at P e r t
Canaveral reports spotty of­
fshore action. A few anglers are
doing w ell on dolphin and
wahoo, while others only catch
scores o f barracudas. Bottom
fishing has been more consis­
tent. with some good catches of
grouper and snapper.
Inside ihe Port, flounder and
bluefish are the two primary
species. Trout and redfish are
rated as good on the flata o f the
Banana and Indian rivera.
At Ponce Inlet. It's mainly
sliecpshead and bluefish. Jack
crevalle. drum, redfish, and
(loundcr will also be mixed tn.
Mosquito Lagoon still continues
lo be one of the best spots for
redfish and trout tn the entire
central Florida area.

D arts---------

Despite the tie — the first
non-loss for the Americans In Ihe
are very much In the running for
World Cup since their shocking C o n t i n u e d f r o m I B
the four playoff spots.
gam e* in trout of O ops trom
1-0 victory over England In 1990
Score At Touchdown's T o w n
— U.S. players thought they Q-III/(97 wins).
Currently. Bad Attitudes and
No. B (98 wins) lost a game off of
made many mistakes. They ran
tta lead last week and now has al
all over the field trying to get the BRJ. both out of the llsinboo
lO-gamc edge over T a a m No:*BI
ImiII. (lien had little energy left Cafe, are tied for third with 73
from Q-BIx (88 wins). *twhen they carried It Into the wins apiece. Close behind are Do
Bulls from Nice A Easy (70
Just o ff the pace are the
offensive /one.
wins) and Sir Watters' W e 'r e
B u llsh ootors From Q-Btx (80);
fUmiboo Cafe's B am boo Boos
"I think all o f ihe boys are Back 1(18 wins)
(831; M om 's M u ggers out o f
disappointed." U.S. forward Roy
LADIES' B LEAGUE
M.T. Muggs (82): and Nice A
Wrgerle said. "Now we have to
Sitting In first are Quivers'
Ensy’s G ood Q u estio n (78),
step II up. We have lo play so
U n p red icta b le* (111 wins).
Trailing are Bamboo Cide's *
much better than we did today."
The Icuguc's other four teams
8 (la g e r s *n' T w ee n ers (63).
ore knotted In a pair o f ties.
MIXED A LEAGUE
Team No. S from Score At
Despite suffering (heir first
T o u c h d o w n a n d W h lc k e y
loss In two seasons. Nice A
River's Leather A Lace sharing
E a s y ’s U n to u ch able s f t 14
fense. but not enough to produce second with 93 wins while Nice
wins) continue to enjoy a 26A Easy's Good Answer and Bad
a goal.
game
lead over Toam tfo. 2
to
the
Bone
from
Tim
e
Out
are
That distinction belonged to
from the Bamboo Cafe (88 wins)
Houghton, who wus born In tied for fourth (64 wins each).
C on trolllm f the third and
Scotland.
fourth
playofT spots are Bamboo
LADIES'A
LEAGUE
With a loose ball boating
While the four playofT teams Cafe's Points R Ua (82) and
dangerously near the penally arc
In ihe 12th minute, Houghton have Just about been decided Ron's K id s out o f Uncle Nick's
chested the ball down and with two weeks left In the (7 1). T h e y ’ re fo llo w e d b y
regular season, there's no telling Bam boo -Cafe's Slowly Bat
s w u n g a l e f t - f o o t e d s h o t.
Surely (61) and Nice A Easy's
Glunluca Pagliuca came a few which team will finish where
Dart Deputies from Nice A
yards out o f the goal and the ball until the final game Is played.
Easy (60).
soared over the goalie's out­
Bamboo
Cafe's
Wantabees
stretched arms. Into the center
of the net and the heart of (he (93 wins) arc In first place. Just
six games ahead o f D.J.'s from
Irish crowd.
If the game was a triumph for Uncle Nick's (871. Score At
BILOXI BELLE C A S IN O
Ireland, It was also a triumph for Touchdown's No Answer (86 )
agronomy. This was the first ure a close third with Bamboo
World Cup game played on the Magic out of Bamboo Cafe (81)
newly Installed grass Held at In fourth.
Giants Stadium, which ordinari­
* 9 9 oo
Completing the loop are Uncle
ly has an artificial surface. FIFA,
Nick's Kat W/2 T a ils (04) and
soccer's ruling body, mandated
M.T. Muggs' Mugg Shota |57).
a change. And the grass, fit­
_
A T A I N 11 It N A T I O N A l
MIXED B LEAGUE
tingly. splendidly, was green.
I 8 0 0 4S1 I lO O
I BOO M l O H O
Six o f the circuit's seven teams

Sanford-based Ireland surprises Italy, 1-0
By PRBD LIBF
AP Sports Wrllar
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. In a stadium more akin to a
launa. Ireland on Saturday
turned the World Cup Into a
rollicking Gaelic festival.
Ireland, which Is training at
the Seminole County Sports
Training Center. Jolted Italy liO.
touching off a thumping celebra­
tion at Giants Stadium that no
doubt resounded across the
Atlantic and Into every pub and
living room back home.
This was u great victory for

coach Jack Charlton and his
"lads." They played superb de­
fense, denying Italy when It
mattered most, and used a fine
goal from Ray Houghton In the
12 th minute to supply all the
scoring they needed.
“ It was like In a dream," said
Houghton, who scored his first
goal for Ireland In five years,
"but It was no dream and we
pulled It out."
In the last World Cup, the
Italians eliminated the Irish 1-0
In the quarterfinals. This time,
the Irish didn't have to wall that
long to extract revenge.

FathersChangeTheWorld
OneChildAtATime.

Giants Stadium, during the
glory days of the Cosmos, was
Ihe home to some of the biggest
soccer games In the United
States. But never had there been
such full-throated passion on
both sides o f the field.
The passion and Ihe decibel
level overwhelmingly belonged
to the Irish In the stands, ever
ready to cheer the accomplish­
ments o f their team, which gave
them much to cheer.
There was the lonely bnnner
or two urging "F a ria Kalla"
(Let's Go llaly). but this was an
afternoon where emerald green
covered Ihe Inndscnpe.
Before a crowd of 74.226, the
Italians showed Hashes In the
first half as they began their bid
for an unprecedented fourth
title. The combination of Roberto
Baggio, the 1093 player of the
year, and Giuseppe Signori
threatened the sturdy Irish de­

Babe Ruth
Continued from IB

r*h d « 1«M Mp dupe 1 lilt- ilul drpmh Wf| mwh « )uu ini fit
llii am, pta tjkh lo ihe htuV iinl, ind »ifr

w a luu thu k-«h

theknputai k-uumof humvyMrjytt) jnl ihrtilwr uftuol «-»lt mj
ten(irawil *T&gt;- *i pmrfxamplt

ford Memorial
Stadium at 5:30 p.m.
The Sanford team, coached by
Jeff Small and Charlie Lytle
(who led the Nobles Construc­
tion W hite Sox to the City
Championship this year) will be
led by third-year all-slnra Rich­
ard B a d g e r. B re tt C ou n ts.
Tom m y Raines Jr. and Walter
Bryant.
Badger played for the National
Division runner-up Knight* of
Columbus Cardinals, Counts for
the champion White Sox. Raines
fo r th e A m e rica n D ivisio n
runner-up Rotary Club Royals
and Bryant with the Elks Lodge

No. 1241 Cubs.
Tw o other experienced players
ure Chris Louwsma and Bradley
Jenkins (both from the While
Sox), who have been playing
with the Sanford A m erican
Legion Post 53 B Team this
summer.
Also named to the team were:
Jason Graham (City runner-up
Moose L o d ge P ira te s ); Ned
Raines Jr. and Tarrell Bender (A
Lakeside Gallery A's); Robert
Randall and W esley W inkle
(Cardinal*); Alex Jacot, Chaz
Lytle, J.R. Nobles and Oerald
Bishop (White Sox); Nathaniel
C lin e (R o y a ls ): and Robert
Hampton and Steve Bussard
(Cubs).

e n s te
Matinees: Mon., Wed., &amp; Sat. 1pm t
Niflhtly: al 7:30 pm
Seniors Froo al all Matinees
GREYH OUND PARK
2000 Somlnoia 8 lvd„ Casselberry

(407)6994510

u A m ui ion mi i iv i mu. Mai lui. ,vi i i n m WAr.iHiNi; via a a i i i i h i
HU lllimillll.HIIHI II IlllllSt IIAI INI. I HUM I Aim H IN MIAMI1

C7/V.T-J / v r * o

M fjq fJ L A t f

AUihr linle ihwp )uu Ju nn&gt; in nuke i tupiWttnwt Inthe lr*r»
iju.ui ihiklrtn ,»tn m l tu Inti ihufulun- In U t tuu «lt J w*|iir
tn l Im iJjivjN r purl it )n«f ihJJ * dmtujimiiu Mu » o-SMalhk’ uWi
I lull &gt;utiy *i- trl itfcle unt- in M tl tuur tunm l twif tumnil
metntuii ur Iwih Htffy ftlh trt Opr, t W

nW Moat tut1

Sanford Paint &amp; Body
&amp; Wrecker Services Inc.

B e t H o rs e s
Tuo, thru Sun. 1 p.m.

A ls o O n T V

National
Fatherhood Initiative
,1rWtuihtr ri* iWf.itf il* tuffimn ft in&gt;cMUwrit fWtw
luf inure mkinuum un pad UWtla*. ftr-w
Vjtmui ttkrfkuud IctuUw. I«JI A n SuJ. ItuWJin* I. Ijm U it, P\ |-HU

1

Pompano Harness
Miami Jal-Alal

2001 Country Club M
322-91144 or322-89Q9

HWV. 17-92 &amp; 436

B e t J a l-A la l
Wed. thru Sat. 7:30 p.m.
Thur. &amp; Sat. NOON
Sun t p.m.
Minors 39* Tall
Amitted With Parent

(407)331-9191

�- Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 10, 10M

Business
IN BR IEF

A new direction for Sanford
business crime prevention

W a tso n m o ves up
ORLANDO — Brian K. Wataon haa been appointed
director-consumer marketing for Tim e Warner Cable's Full
Service Network, headquartered in Orlando. The appointment
was announced by Tom Fclge, president o f the network.
In his new position. Watson will be responsible for
developing, coordinating and managing consumer sales,
marketing, customer service and research activities.
Watson Joined the Full Service Network from Walt Disney
World where he was national project manager o f ethnic
marketing.
Tim e Warner Cable serves a large portion o f the Central
Florida area, including many customers In Seminole County.

McDonald’s dsgros
SANFORD — Simone P. Askew, manager o f McDonald's
restaurant, Orlando Drive, Sanford, has been awarded a
Bachelor o f Hamburgerology degree from McDonald's Ham*
burger University (H.U.) for graduating from the university's
advanced operations course. All McDonald’s restaurant
managers, franchisees, mid-management and company execu­
tives are required to complete this course.
By the end of 1994, It Is estimated that over 50.000 students
will have graduated from H.U,
"T h e Importance of Simone's achievement and training
cannot be overstated," said Shirley Rogers. Dean o f H.U. "Like
all other McDonald's restaurant managers. Simone Is the chief
operations officer o f a successful loco) business."

M ehl In W ash in g to n
SANFORD — Thomas J. Mehl, Jr., o f Taylor Rental Center,
3215 Orlando Drive, recently attended the American Rental
Association's (ARA) 1994 National Legislative Caucus In
Washington. D.C.
Mehl received a special Invitation from the American Rental
Association's Governmental Affairs Committee to participate.
According to Sandy Howell, director o f public relations for
AKA, Mehl was selected because o f his knowledge o f legislative
Issues affecting small business.
The four-day caucus presented a series o f speakers on n
variety of topics Including the OSHA reform act o f 1994 and an
update on health care reform.

Flo rid a C itru s
LAKELAND — Howard E. Sorrells o f Sorrells Bros. Packing
Co., Arcadia, has been unanimously chocen by the Florida
Citrus Commission as Its new chairman. James E. Huff of
Graves Brothers Co., In Wabasso was voted vice chairman.
The selections occurred during the annual re-organisation
meeting In Lakeland.

CraVrt o r&amp; b on eu m er ca m p a ig n
HEATHROW
Florid# Agriculture Commissioner Bob
Crawford and officials from A AA headquarters in Heathrow,
have launched a statewide public awareness campaign to help
protect consumers from automobile repair fraud, the number
one consumer complaint reported by Floridians.
Specific details were not announced as the program kicked
off at the first o f this month outside the Commissioner of
Agriculture's office at the Capitol.

Brantley Pointe
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS — M/I Homes plana a new product
home with new designs, when the company opens Its new
community o f Brantley Pointe, in Altamonte Springs later this
year, according to sales and marketing director Shelley Eddy.
The com pany w ill be breaking ground on the new
community In August, with two new models under consid­
eration. priced from 9160,000 to 9250.000. Living areas range
from 2,200 to 3,000 square feet. There will be 66 homesltes
available.
Brantley Pointe Is located off Pearl Lake Causeway, in
Altamonte Springs.

Je n n in g s at A la q u a
LONGWOOD — Rick Jennings Building and Development
Co., has completed Its five-bedroom, flve-and-one-half bath
custom home In Alaqua according to Bab Underwood, vice
preseldent o f marketing and sales.
The home, the "Casa Rlcnta" is priced at 9859,900, and has
5.300 square feet o f livin g area with a view o f the
championship golf course.
The two-story home features a library, family room with
vaulted celling, downstairs guest room and master bedroom
suite with morning kitchen and media center.
There are 30 homesltes available at Alaqua, with custom
homes starting at 9700,000. The community la located at
Markham Woods Road between S.R. 434 and Lake Mary
Boulevard, in Longwood.

SANFORD — It's known as.
Crime Prevention Through Envi­
ronmental Design. It's referred
to as CPTED, and pronounced
sep-ted. It's a nationwide pro­
gram w h ich appears to be
growing by leaps and bounds,
and Is now moving Into Sanford.
CPTED Is backed by the na­
tional Main Street program. It Is
aimed at helping a business
com m unity reduce crim e by
Improving the physical appear­
ances o f the stores and the
giving o f advice.
In the national Main Street
N e w s p u b lic a t io n . S h e r r y
Plaster, chief planner with the
Sarasota Department o f Plan­
ning and Development wrote.
"W hen I rcnllzcd that It was
possible to do something about
crime, I felt tremendously em­
powered. Within the concepts
and applications o f the princi­
ples o f CPTED. wc can cffectlvelly discourage crime, and
In the process, bring back the
beauty and economic viability o f
our older urban areas."
In her article, she pointed out
that criminals do not want to get
caught, so they go to places
where they can be less vlsable
while controlling their acts.
She explulned that the goal of
CPTED Is to Increase the dis­
comfort level o f would-be offend­
ers In order to make the desira­
ble users, (customersl. feel wel­
come, comfortable, and safe.
Plaster listed three major and
essential prtncfles taught by the
National Crlmr Prevention In­
stitute regarding reducing busi­
ness crime.
• Nutural surveillance — the
placement of physical features
such as windows, fences and
canopies. A ctivities such as
outdoor vendors. Location of
seating and/or cash registers
Inside stores providing m ax­
imum vtaabtUty. Lighting both
day and night.
• Natural access control — the
physical guidance o f people en­
tering und exiting a building, nr
the proper location o f entrances,
exits, fencing, landscaping and
lighting.
• Territorial reinforcement —
set of physical attributes that
express ownership. Including
pavement treatments, art, signs.

Left to right, Sabrina Armstrong, owner of The
Willow Tree, Sanford police officer Dllly Creppt,
end co-chalra of the newly formed Crime
landscaping, and others.
In Sarasota. Plaster said they
determined that maintenance
should also lx- Included. "It
gives a signal lo unwanted
trespassers, and provide good
vis ib ility through w ell kept
landscaping." she said.
Sanford Main Street. SMS. Is
now g e llin g In v o lv e d w ith
CPTEl). SMS members, through
the organization's Promotion
C o m m it t e e , h a v e s e le c te d
Sharon Brown and Bob Kuhn as
co-chairman of the local GIFTED
project.
Th e Prom otion com m ittee,
chaired by Kay Bartholomew,
plans to request SMS funds to
send at least one of the two to a
"Security and Crime Prevention

oT

Prevention Through Environm ental Design
(CPTED) program, Shsron Brown and Bob Kuhn, l

"W e deflnately need the coop­
eration of the merchants on First
Street, which has been desig­
nated by Sharon and Bob us the
site of the first pilot program."
Bartholomew said. "Later, they
plan to ask Ihr Sanford Historic
Trust to work with them In
initiating the program in the
historic residential district ns
w ell." she udded.
Brown and Kuhn are presently
going through the downtown
area enlisting assistance und
seeking additional support from
others, especially persons such
us police officer Billy Crapps.
Poller Chief Ralph Russell. City
Manager Bill Sim m ons, and
other officials from planning and
zoning, building, parks and rec­
reation and public works de­
part menu.

C e n tra l

•* Bartholomew gave an esample

Florida.
Bartholomew ls,; also asking
Seminole Community College
Business Development olflce to
establish a similar workshop to
be conducted for Sanford busi­
ness owners and others persons
Interested In Improving their
businesses toward helping re­
duce crime.

of what she considered, "...a lock
of unified caring In downtown
Sanford, which should be pre­
ven tab le If everyu n e works
together In the CPTED project.”
"It doesn't deal specifically
with crim e," she said, "but It is
an exam ple o f u downtown
problem which doesn't speak
well of us."

at

th e

u n iv e r s ity

Universal seeks business equity
U n ive rs a l S tu d ios F lorida
opened an Office o f Minority
Business A ffa irs earlier this
month. The m ove has been
m ad e In c o n ju n c tio n w ith
multi-billion dollar expansions
planned at Universal.
Vice President of Legal and
Business Affairs for Universal,
Ron Sikes, commented, "T h e
purpose of this new unit Is to
further assure consistency and
fairness In the administration o f
our company's commitment to
ethnic and gender diversity
among the businesses that pro­
vide us goods and services."
He added that the Office of
Minority Business Affairs will
"en h a n ce the level o f com ­
m un ication o f opportunities
which will become available to

local m in ority and wom en*
owned businesses Interested In
working with Unlvcrsul us wc
Im p le m e n t o u r te n y e a r
expansion program."
Sonia Martel, a five-year veter­
an of USF's Human Resources
and Legal and Business Affairs
departments has been named
manager of Universal's office.
Sikes Indicated thut the first
priority o f this new unit was
Implementation o f a formal Mi­
n o rity -o w n e d B u sin ess E n­
terprise (MUE| policy. "Our poli­
cy will nurture use o f minori­
ty-owned businesses to the snmc
extent qualified or quallfldble
suppliers of goods ami services
are reasonably available in our
community."
In this regard," he said, “ the
c o m p a n y has v o l u n t a r i l y
esta b lish ed target le v e ls o f
participation for ethnic minority

"One morning, walking to my
olTlee. (First Street Gullrry). 1
noticed a horrible stench. Think­
ing that one of the buildings had
been fumigated. I suspected a
dead umtnmal may have suf­
fered from the fumes, crawled to
u n earb y shru b, und been
killed."
She continued. "I glanced, tail
didn't detect anything Four
days later the smell had not
diminished. Finally, I found 11 ...
a dead duck lying on the street
s id e o f th e b u s h e s (n e a r
Magnolia Squurrl. very close lo
several businesses whose cus­
tomers certainly must icuvr de­
tected the horrlblr smell."
"A s far as I could find out. no
one had bothered to call the city
a b o u t

t h e

p r o b l e m , ' '

Barthokimew said, "so I colled
Public .Works. The mao said
he'd gel right on it, tail hud Ip
cull the county who bus the
responsibility to come out and
determine the demise of the
animal."

For Personal
&amp; Commercial
In su ra n c e

businesses and womcn-owned
minority businesses of 15 per­
cent and 5 percent, respectively.
"W c want to be confident that
the entire Central Florida com­
munity continues lo derive fair
economic benefit from the com ­
pany," Sikes added.
In September of lust year, USF
announced plans for Universal
City Florida, n major multlbllllon dollar expansion. Univer­
sal City Florida will be a worldclass resort designation Includ­
ing Universal Studios Florida, it
second theme park, nn enter­
tainm ent zone, five them ed
hotels, conference and meeting
space, additional motion picture
and television production facili­
ties, a PGA signature golf course,
a championship tennis center,
and expanded retail, merchan­
dising and supiKirt facilities.

RICHARD RUS8 I

TO N Y RUSSI
INSURANCE
2575 S, French Ave.
Sanford

322-0285

Ht/r m

ACT NOW &amp; SAVE BIG
BUCKS $$$ ON LEGAL FEES!
ADOPTION
WILL
POWER-OF-ATTORNEV
LIVING TRUST
DEED OR LEASE
MORTGAGE OR NOTE

Choose From Over 500 Different Services!
Super Low Prices 8 c Qualify Too!
A n e w place to live
a,****•«.
Tha city’s newest apartment community I* now complex to the oily ie Meyor Betlye Smith. Town
officially open. The Greater Sanford Chamber of Cantra haa 184 unite, In one, two and three
Commerce Ambasasdora held a ribbon cutting bedroom alzaa. Each cornea with waaher-dryer
recently for Town Centre Apertmente, 1000 W. connections, paddle tana, mini blind* and
First Street. Center, with the giant adaaora, Is modem, energy-efficient kitchens. The complex
Ralph Schmidt, one of the owners. Also In the has a pool, clubhouae-cabana, picnic area and
from row, officially welcommlng tha apartment children's playground.__________

.

Free Consultation • 20% Senior Citizen Discount
Fast Professional Service - Satisfaction Quaranteedl

NOW!,

EXT9

m hours

�San foul Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juno 10, 1994 - OB

Traveler finds Orient marvelous
Barker to retire after 36 years in education
France* "Fran" Mitchell la mill
overw helm ed nftcr n sim ply
marvelous trip that took her to
the Orient nmi California. Ac­
companying Fran on the 5-wcck
venture was Barbara Kuhurn of
Casselberry, a former Sanford
resident.
An avid reader, Fran was all

syched up with a wealth
E
Istory and culture tucked
for the long-awaited Journey.

or

DORIS
DIETRICH

away

She said she was "Impressed
with the friendliness and beauty
pf the people and flowers. It was
a really nice trip .! learned a lot."

Gaiy Pteyer demonstrates swing techniques to clinic attendees.

Pro golfer teaches
in youth clin ic
at Alaqua course
On June 14. Alaqua Golf and
Country Club hosted the Junior
Interclub G olf Clinic, which
featured Gary Player. Junior
golfers, ages 0-10. from Alaqua.
Errol Estates. Heathrow. In(erlachen. Bolling Hills, Sweetwater and Tlmacuun country
clubs were Invited and repre­
sented.
Gary Player dazzled l he crowd
with Imltutlons of all the grrul
golfers' swing*. Story after story
was shared by Player about
different golfers with whom he
had had Hie privilege of playing
who were ph ysically handi­
capped. yet In many coses had
no golfing handicap. The most
impressive of those Individuals
was blind.
Gary Player has no secrets
about the game of golf; Hie
biggest challenge Is "stance''
Mini, with all *|x&gt;ri* "balance"
and "follow through" remain
Imperative. In addition, he told
the students that u healthy body
and a healthy mind, drug free. I*
Hie first step tn enjoying any
sport.

O tto event su c c e ssfu l
For the eighth consecutive
year, Mr. Dick Otto hus chaired
the " T i e Up For L ife G olf
C la ssic" which benefits the
American Cancer Society. This
amateur event l» the lurgrsi In
this slate and is sponsored by
the Sweetwater Country Club. In
the past 12 years, this event has
raised 1500.000 for the Ameri­
can Cancer Society and is hearti­
ly su pported by the m em ­
bership. Another year, another
huge success und much appreci­
ation
a n o n tto
o Dick
u i c * Otto.
u iw -

SH AY

KOEGEL

Line dancing taught
How about u family night with
a country-western theme and
line dancing Instruct Ion every
Saturday night In Longwood?
This Is the question |&gt;osed by
Assistant Police Chief Baker and
lie wants your thoughts on this
Issue. You may respond by
calling 200-3400.
“ Night Move*." the nightclub
for terns at 311 Dane la n r In
t^ingwoud. sponsored by the
Longwood Police Department,
tius designated Friday nights
from 7:30 until 10:30 p.m. for
the middle school students. This
■light has been extremely suc­
cessful with the number of
students growing each week.
••It's c le a n , fun und w e ll
s u p e rv is e d ." says Assistant
Chief Baker. Unfortunately, the
Saturday night crowd, set aside
for high school students has not
ticen the success the department
had anticipated and they arc
Inquiring aboul a family style
country-western night to replace
the high school night. Any
comments, cnll 200-3400.

'Prime Timer#’ meet
Two years ago, AI and Virginia

□See Longwood, Page 6B

They saw the grent wall at
B eijin g w here thousand* of
bicycles were on the streets In
the poverty-ridden area. From
here they went to Hong Kong, n

very modern site now ruled by
W h ile In the O rien t, the
the British crown. Fran said,
tourists visited dinner thculres.
"T h e natives nre very much ute lots o f strange foods, and
uwurc that the Communlsty i attended a cultural arts show
Putty will be taking them back ' where they learned about the ten
In 1097."
rituals, (lower arranging and
From Hong Kong, the tourists
traditional dances, among other
visited Bangkok, also a pov­ subjects.
erty-ridden area, and then on to
After three weeks In the Or­
Singapore, once again a modem
ient, Fran and Barbara relumed
city. Fran said their tour guide
lo California where they visited
look a poll o f how the group felt
Barbara's cousin for two weeks.
about the young American get­ From here, they visited the
ting caned for breaking the law.
beaches, Los Vegas, the Mormon
She said they all agreed he Tem ple In Utah, the Grand
should have been punished ac­ Teton Mountains tn Wyoming
cording to the luwa o f the land,
□See Dietrich, Page 6B

But Fran was depressed over
the poverty In some nrcu* of
China and the antiquated living
conditions. She said, "China
proper Is like stepping bark In
tim e." Farmers still use oxen
and c ru d e h and p lo w s to
cultivate the crops. In describing
the beauty o f the temples. Fran
said. "T h e people are poor...the
temples are rich."
Their first atop was at Kyoto.
J a p a n , w h ere th e y m et
Barbara's cousin who look them
out to dinner. Fran was a little
apprehensive over the stigma
cost by World War II against the
Japanese. But she said, "E very­
where we went, the people were
so friendly. The kids waved and
were so cute." She mentioned
that the fair-haired foreigners
were fascinating lo the darkhaired Japanese who seemed
Intrigued. "For the first lime. I
fell like a minority." die fair
Fran quipped.
Then it wns on to Tokyo where
the cherry blossoms and other
flowers were In full bloom and
"gorgeous." The travelers had to
lake clothing for two seusons
since north Japan wus so cold
and south China was so warm.
Fran marveled how one day they
were In a clean, modern metro­
politan environment and the
next stop would be abject pov­
Fran Mltchall show s som a o f ths Oriental finds shs brought hom o from h«r trip.
erty.

S w e e t h e a r t 1 9 9 4 c r o w n e d in p a g e a n t
"Th ere's u Miracle tn You "
was (he theme of the Sweetheart
Entourage 1094. The evening o f
May 21. 22 young bcuutlful
ladle* and their escorts pill on
the show of all allows ai Hie
Sanford Middle School Gyniuutortum, the crowning of 1994
Miss Sweetheart Entourage. The
o v e r flo w crow d o f parents,
w ell-wishers were left spell­
bound us each of the young
la d les g ra c e fu lly p resen ted
themselves during the talent und
evening wear competition.
For the first tim e In the
pageant’s seven-year history, the
young men used as escorts were
Involved tn self-image sessions,
under the direction o f the laic
Mr. Lee Norris Hayain o f 2-R
Concepts. These well groomed

M ARVA
H A W K IN S
young men represented the end
product of several weeks of hard
work with u fascinating, pre­
cision formation.
Additional entertainment was
provided by members of Sem i­
nole High School dance team
"D uzzlcrs." and the talented
urtlntlc troupe from TaJIrl Arts
International Inc. under the dl-

r e c tlo n o f P a t r ic ia M e rritt
Whatley.
The pagrunt flowed smoothly
under the skillful guidance o f the
host and hostess of the evening,
Miiyam and tils lovely wife. Llsu
Myers Itay am o f TV Ctiunnel 2.
The slam gleamed brightly; u
beautiful backdrop emerged In
walling for Hie crowning o f Ms.
1994 Sw eetheart Entourage,
Laterlca Quinn, u seventh grader
at S a n fo rd M id d le S c h o o l,
daughter of Valorlc Burke and
Veonts Quinn. Sponsor for Hie
pageant wus Anderson A McGee
E n te rp ris e s . S econ d plu cc.
Ayanu Slplln. a student at
Piedmont Lakes Middle School,
daughter o f Mr. aiul Mrs. Michael
Slplln. sponsor. Cynthia Holt*
Miller und Joyce Wright. Third
_

p la c e : S h a ro n B rock . 10th
grader at Oviedo High School,
(laughter o f Dorothy Jackson.
Sponsor was Matthews Fendersan, attorney at law. P.A.,
Orlando. First runner-up was
Lutiilu flicks, a ninth grader at
Seminole High School, daughter
o f Lovely Beamon und Ricardo
flicks, sponsor. Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Kennedy. Indianapolis,
Ind.
T h c w i n n e r a n d I fi e
runners-up will receive savings
bonds and cash awards. The
salute of the week goes to Dcttyc
Brown and her committee o f the
Wom en's Day Observance of
New Bethel AME Church. Altamonte Springs. They wish to
thank all of Sanford and Semi-

C8ee Hawkins. Page 7B
( •

Pre-schoolers go ‘Off to Kindergarten’ with songs and family picnic
The Happy Elves Childcare
Center. Crystal Lake Avenue.
Luke Mary, held their pre school
graduation on June 3 at Sylvun
Lake Park. The graduation und
family picnic has been an annual
event since the center opened In
1982. More than 100 kids,
friends and fa m ily en joyed
h a m b u rg e rs and hot d o gs
cooked over an open lire and
covered dish contributions on
the mild summer afternoon.
Tw o of the classes from the
center presented a musical pro­
gram fe a tu rin g solos Horn
A n d rew N clen unsd Shane

M ARY
R O W ELL &amp;
SHARI
BROOIE
Nonncmacher. "It's Not Easy
Belng Green" complete with frog
costumes; Alyse Carrcro. with
teddy bear on "M e and My
Teddy Bear"; Julian Egler. Kyle

the musical question, "Do You Know the Muffin

Marshall. Megun Reese and
AlexaNelen.
The six gruduutCB were pres­
ented certificates o f achievement
appropriately garbed In cap and
gown.
They presented "Oh.
We're Heady" and "O ff to Kin­
dergarten." But after the ob­
ligatory photgraphs were taken,
the pomp and circumstance
ca tn c to an e n d .
Th ose
soon-to-bc-kindcrgartcncrs were
ready to eat and hit the plnyground,

R ap to rs in the library
Wednesday, June 13 wus an
exciting day for children visiting
the Northwest Branch o f the
Sem inole County Library In
Lake Mary. Doris Magcr was the
special guest speaker, bringing
with her four raptors, or birds of
prey.
The first bird Doris Introduced
the children to was E.T. E.T.,
which stands for Extra Terrific,
not extraterrestrial, is a great
homed owl. E.T. was taken as a
baby from his nest In South
Carolina by a man who wanted a
pet. By the time authorities
found out Hint the man. Illegally,
had the bird, E.T. had already
Imprinted on a human. It would
be Impossible for a bird to live In
the wild after Imprinting on a
human. DorlB, who has special
permits to care for birds of prey,
was called and asked to take
E.T. Doris told the audience that
great horned owls never build
their own nest, but use the nests
o f other birds, preferring cuglc
nests. Although they arc a threat
to eagles, great horned owls are
very good for the environment,
They eat sick and dying animals
and rodents.

Recent pre-school graduates (from left) Ryan
Spears, Phillip Powell, Shane N o n n e m a c h e r,
The second bird wns a bur­
rowing owl. This particular owl
was hit by a car and had to have
Ills wing amputated. Burrowing
owls dig holes In the ground for
their nests. Sometimes, they will
tuke over the burrows of rattle­
snakes. One o f the calls o f the
burrowing owl even sounds like
n rattlesnake. Their burrowing
habits are what has threatened
them tn Florida. With all the
progress in the state comes
bulldozers which often bury the
awls alive. More work needs to
be done to save the burrowing
owls and their environm ent
because, not only do they cut
lizards, but they cut one o f the
most noxious of all Flroldu pests,
the cockroach.
The third bird Doris brought
out wus a female bald eagle
names Osceola. When Osceola
was only 7 months old. she wns

purposely shot by a man. Fortu­
nately, a woman who lived next
door happened to sec the shoot­
ing. Although the man threat­
ened the woman with revenge,
she still called police and game
wardens to report the shooting.
Osceola was saved, hut lost a
wing. The man. who could have
been fined $ 20 ,000, was only
fined $3,000 and put on twoyears probation. He made good
on this threat o f revenge on his
n e ig h b o r . He c o n s ta n tly
harassed her middle school age
children und finally shot her
dog. The woman was forced lo
move out of the state. But she
never regretted suvtngOsccolu.
The fourth bird. Cara, was an
18-year-old Crested Caracnra.
The Crested Cnracaru Is the
national bird o f Mexico and is
closely rcluted lo the falcon und
the vulture. An unusual looking

moved by Hie speech. Muuy
asked afterw ards what they
could do to help. Doris's organi­
zation Is Save Our American
Ruptors or SOAR Inc. For $10.

□Bea Lake Mary, Page 7B

�- Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juna 19, 1W4

‘Brother’ role m ost im portant
■ y SUSAN W INNER

Hsrald Correspondent________

ALTAMONTE SPRINOS Even an attorney needs a little
time to get away from the
courtroom and back down to
earth. What better way to
relax than to be a kid again.
A n d ...w h a t b etter wny to
become a kid again than to be
around one. John Michael has
been an attorney for 13 years
and has lived In Altamonte
S p r in g s fo r th e In s t
four-and-a-half years. He has
his business based out of hts
home and works In general
fctlce with an emphasis on
urance claims. Michael Is
single so hla contact with
children has been somewhat
limited except for his active
church life. He Is a member of
the St. Mary Magdalen Church
In A ltam on te Springs. He
w o rk s as the e u c h a rls llc
minister, as well as being on
the retreat team to organize
get-a-ways about twice a year.
" W e talk about the good
things in our lives and try to
focus on them ," he said. "It's a
way to find ways to see the
blessings in your life." Michael
volunteers with Habitats for
Hum anity and has helped
build two homes this year. He
also worked as a catechism
Instructor for a year to 10 , fifth
grade boys.
Yet, Michael's drive for the
last four y e a rs has been
w o r k i n g w it h t h e B ig
Brother/BIg Sister Program.
During this four year period he
has been a Big Brother to a
boy that Is now 12 years old.
He found out about the pro­
gram from other professionals
he had worked with. "T h is Is
m y way of donating m y time
and doing something good,"
he said. " I saw the need from
working In different offices and
seeing what kids are gong
through when their parents
divorce. I felt I might help."
With Father’s Day here, It Is
a good time to focus on the fact

E

Tori LoAim ShotftoM and Kenneth Retorts Jaeoto Jr.

Sheffield-Jacobs
GENEVA — Mr. and Mra. John
K. Wcndrrleln III o f Geneva and
Sgt. Johnny R. Sheffield, U.S.
A rm y . W oodbrldge, Va. an*
nounce the engagement o f their
daughter. Tori LcAnn Sheffield
to SPC/E-4 Kenneth Robert
Jacobs Jr., son o f Mrs. and Mrs.
Kenneth Jacobs Sr. o f Chuluota
an d M rs. A lic e J a c o b s o f
Chuluota.
Born In Ft. Stewart, Oa., the
b r ld e -e lle t Is the m aternal
randdaughter o f Mr. and Mrs.
.D. McLellan and the paternal
granddaughter o f the fate Mr.
and Mrs. f.J. Sheffield, formerly
o f Sanford.
Ms. Sheffield la a 1994 gradu­
ate o f O viedo H igh School,
Oviedo where she was a member
o f DECA Club. She w ill be
attending Cameron University In
Lawton. Okla. with a major In
nursing.

S

She and her fiance are active
m em bers o f Genevn Baptist
Church. Oeneva
She Is presently employed at
Sears Roebuck and Co., Winter
Park.
Her fiance, bom In Winter
Park. Is the maternal grandson
o f Mrs. Dorothy Fox of Chuluota
and the late Mr. Bill Fox. He is
the paternal grandson o f Mrs.
Edna Jacobs o f Chuluota and
the late Mr. George Jacobs.
Jacobs Is a 1992 graduate of
Oviedo High School where he
participated in vnrslty football,
weightlifting team and Future
Farmers o f America.
Jacobs is currently serving In
the U.S. Arm y ut Ft. Sill. Oxla.
where he is a fire direction
specialist.
The wedding will be nn event
o f Aug. 27, 1994, 2 p.m.. Geneva
Baptist Church, Geneva.

Dietrich

Brld* honored

and various Southern California
deluding the famous
lit j n - . - m M ^ h 'I m -—
III!

tu l

Jl

S lt ir il)

i l ’I A

Barker retires
Ted Barker will officially retire
as principal o f Greenwood Lakes
Middle School on June 30.
Sending the principal off In
grand style were 180 friends on
June 3 at the Malson et Jardln In
Altamonte Springs.
According to Ted's daughter,
Lisa Robertson, the evening Is
one to be remembered. Former
principals toasting the retiree
w e r e : H u g h C a r lt o n . D on
R e y n o ld s , W illie H olt. Jim
Shupe, Seminole County Com­
missioner Carlton Henley, and
Bud Layer, form er Su perin­
tendent o f Sem inole County
Schools as well as Ralph Mays, a
childhood friend. Also arriving
for the event was Harold Barker,
Ted's brother from Tennessee.
A video or the honor guest’s
life w as p re p a re d by Beth
Whlgham and Dale Vorheea after
which he was given a standing
ovation. The guests presented
Ted with a camcorder.

Jonne Renee Drown and Eric
:

'^4{ a y I f y * i i ' t - T

’

Brown* Macy
SANFORD — Jon and Debra
Brown o f Sanford and Marla
Brown o f Neoga, III. are an­
nouncing the engagem ent of
their daughter, Jonna Renee
Brawn, to Eric Lawrence Macy,
son o f Barger and Betty Macy of
Neoga.
T h e bride-elect Is a 1988
graduate of Neoga Jr.-Sr. High
School and a 1991 graduate of
Lakeland Community College
with an associate o f science
degree. She Is presently a stu­
d e n t a t th e U n iv e r s it y o f
Southern Indiana, Evansville,
Ind. working for a bachelor of

science degree In art education.
Her fiance Is a 1986 graduate
gn
Jr.
o f Neoga Jr.-Sr.
High School und
a 1992 grad
aduatc o f the Unlvcrslty of Illinois. Urbana. 111. He
received a bachelor o f science
degree In mechanical engineer­
ing and Is an alumnus of Alpha
Gamma Rho Fraternity. He Is
presently employed as engineer
at P o t t e r &amp; B r u m fie ld , a
Siem en's Company. In Prin­
ceton. Ind.

Ted's stafT honored him at
another even t at Tlm acu an
Country Club. Announcement
w a s m a d e th a t th e a d ­
m in is t r a t iv e b u ild in g at
Greenwood will be named In his
honor.
He has been In education for
38 years and hopes to keep
active In' that field since he Is
seeking a seat on the Seminole
County School Board.

The wedding will be an event
o f Sept. 17, 1994, 8 p.m., at the
Christian
Church o fTNei
Neoga,
“ ......

Somlnole High School Claaa of 1M4. Seefetf le ft
to right; James Davla, Don Colvin, Format May,
Mil a Hardy, Janetta Gardner, Jean Carpenter,
VaHean Prevatt, Shelby Seville, Carrie Redfleld,
Peggy Wrlghl, Joyce Jonea, Helen Michele, Jonl
8aunder*, Freeda Colvin, Lucille Price, Anne
Ranaboltom, Avia Starnes, Gloria Hemplon, Ann
M ma, Paulette Cason, Jo Anne FIJpee, Nancy
vyilaort, Barbara Cassube, Gwen Coppengar, Janie
Ogleaby, Wllla Dean Stover,-Belly Jean Earnest,

Martha Owen, Beverly Cooper, Barbara McAlex*
ander, Elolae Snyder, Sandra Dunn, Gordon Toll,
Hamilton Blabee, Frank Murphy. Second row, loft
to rig h t: Joel Moaa, Jimmy Whatley, Gerald
Gehrena, Lawrence Skatea, Marvin Goembel,
Dickie Moaa, Roae Nalawander, Jaaale Byrd,
Nancy Drlggara, Nanoy Rountree, Imogene
Bostick, Shirley Eubanks, Battya Hamp, Jewel
Cohen, Ellen Lyon, Sue Ann Radford, Ann Bittern,
Palsy Collins, Mary Mlkoljclk, Sheila Browning,

I

that many boys need a male
figure as o role model. Michael
discussed his feelings o f being
a Big Brother versus a Father
role model for this boy. "It's
definitely a big brother rather
than a father image,” he said.
" I see brothers as ones that
don't push much and there's
no discipline. We Just do a lot
o f fun things together. It's
good for him lo relate to
another m ale." Michael said
that his "Little Brother" lives
with Ills mother and many
aunts nnd has little contact
with males. Mlchuel talked of
how this experience could be
good for him because one day
he hopes to marry and have
children himself.
M i c h a e l s p o k e o f th e
c h a n g e s h e 's seen w h ile
w o r k in g w ith his " L i t t l e
B roth er."' I've seen a lot of
changes," he said. "Unfortu­

Karen Milam was guest of
honor st a bridal shower on
Monday, June 13.: In the ban­
quet room of Ifollduy Inn. San­
ford Marina.
,
About SO guests enjoyed hors
d 'o eu v re s and punch w hile
Karen opened her beautiful and
useful gifts.
Hostesses for I he event were:
.Jackie Eckert, Carla Spcldel,
Susan Vestal. Susan Bcndfelt
and Joanne Prager.
Karen became the bride of Jim
Zulla June 18 In the Osprey
Room o f Holiday Inn.
T h e y p la n a b e a c h s l d e
getaway before resuming Ihclr
hu nter-ju m per tra in in g and
showing business at Tailor Made
Farm. Oviedo.

Friend* gather
" A wonderful time was had by
a l l , " D o r o th y M c R e y n o ld s
gushed. "It was beautiful."
Dorothy was speaking about
'the recent gathering o f the
Friendship Club, a group of
women who have been meeting
for lunch for several years.
This summer m eeting was
held Wednesday at the Holiday
Inn. Sanford Marina. Although
several were absent, the follow­
ing enjoyed the fellowship with
Dorothy: Liz Helfrich, Martha
Yancey, Nellie Coleman. Lourlnc
Messenger. Charlotte Knowles.
DcLores Lash, "B ill" Glelow.
Rose Payne and Jewel Williams,
Nellie's stster-ln-law.

Celebrity baby
O ur c e le b rity

g rea t

aunt,

nately I sec some negative. He
does talk more now. In the
beginning he was very shy.
He's more open. Sometimes
we like to Just ride bikes In the
neighborhood, do housework
or go fishing. W e've also done
a lot of cam ping." Goals was
one o f the things Michael fell
he had given his Llltle Brother.
"I'v e given him some goals."
he said. "There Was a time
that all he wanted to do was to
play video games. I've exposed
him to a lot o f good things. We
do sports and hobbles. We
play tennis, and basketball.
I've taught him how to fix u
flat and fix other things on his
bike. He thought when you
had a llut you get a new bike."
Michael talked about the
many fairs und festivals they
have visited. "Sometimes we
get tickets that are donated to
the Big Brother program." he

Lnurine Messenger, has now
been made a great, great aunt by
her famous movie star nephew,
John Schneider, and his wife,
Elly.
Llltle Karls Lynn was born on
June 13 In San Antonio where
her father Is making a movie.
Paternal great, great grand­
mother Is Lllllnn Dugan, also of
Sanford.
This Is the first child for John
und Lourlnc said he Is real
happy about beluga father.

said.
We vc gone to Magic
and Predator games. We've
gone at least once to all the
major events here."
The thing Michael said he
enjoyed most about participa­
tion In the Big Brother/Hig
Sister program was the "fu n ."
" I did make a rommllmcnl
and I certainly want to keep
that commitment." hr said. "I
hope to do this the rest of my
life because It's so much fun.
It's really fun seeing him do
male things that he wouldn't
have picked up w ith Ills
m o th e r and h is a u n t s . "
Michael concluded with. "I
really have a hope for his
future that things will work
out. The Big Brother/BIg Sister
program Is doing good things
for kids. I wish more people
would get Involved."

SHS 40th reunion
The 1934 class of Seminole
High School will take place at
Kamada Inn North. Longwood]
on June 24 nnd 23. Plans are
under w ay for a gala 40tli
reunion celebration. Sec accom­
panying pholo for (hr clans wlu-n
they graduated from SHS.

Longwood—
Continued from Page 9B

'Bye for now, Kay
Kay Hall, a resident of Sanford
for 20 years, has moved to
Tampa. Kay lost her husband
recently, but before his death,
they purchased a home at Davis
Island to be near their two
children.
As bad luck would have It, Kay
was stricken with cancer and
needs her family more lhan ever.
She and her doctors are op­
timistic she will be fine.
Kay was a member o f Epsilon
Sigma Omlcron, the Sanford
Woman's Club, the First United
Methodist Church, a Bible study
group and the Woman's Club
Chorus.

Hardee Bunch meets
The Hardee Bunch held Its
monthly meeting at the Colonial
Room In downtown Sanford.
Ann Hootchan presided over a
"Knick-Knack" auction. Plans
were made to hold a cruise down
the river and another auction
later In the year.
Eighteen women attended the
m e e tin g and lig h t-h e a r te d
breakfast.

Grace Marie Stlneclpher, Helen Brown, Carol
Loechelt, Jeanne Lane Miller, Pally Bell, Jeanette
Kinlaw, Frances Lawson, Kay Walla, Pally Walker,
Batty Wallatedl, Georgia Ann Thigpen, Rosemary
Garner, Deloris Mllsled, Edward McCall, Annette
Brooks, Lynn 8ellara, Polly Graham, Jimmy Wade,
Phillip Toney, Jimmy Krlder, Jimmie Fox. Bach
row, le ft to right: Tommy Kuhn, Carlton Jacobs,
John Troup, Jimmy Houk, Ronnie Anderson;
Glbaon Balea, David Hoaack, Don Karraker,

P fu ff fo u n d e d th e " P r i m e
Tim ers." an over 50 organiza­
tion that currently boasts o f 97
members. This active group en­
joys aerobics twice a week, game
and card nights twice a month,
organized golf, a monthly lun­
cheon and day trips to places
like St. Augustine und Tarpon
Springs.
How did this begin? Virginia
says that It nil started on a curd
table at the association's Octoberfest and "w e asked the sc-i
nlors what they would like and;
this was ihclr answer." If you*
live In the Wckivu Hunt Club)
community mid arc over 30
years o f age nnd would like n|
great deal for your $5 per year)
dues, call Virginia and A1 Pfaff at
682-3039. If you are Interested
In starting a "P rim e T im e "
group In your urea. Al und
Virginia will be glad to share
their successful experiences and
point you In the right direction.
*

t

(Shay Koagal la a Sentord
Harald corraspondant covering
tha Longwood araa. Phono:

3334)514.)

Stanley Katz, Rodman Brumley, Randall Farrell,
Eugene Estrldge, Dickie Kendall, Johnny Carter,
Sonny Hasklne, Billy Park, David Leonard, Stanley
Arthur, Jimmy Bollinger, Roes Hannum, Milner
Osborne, Richard Plaklea, Tommy Newsom,
Randall Reynolds, Not pictured: Jeanette Cleve­
land, Geraldine Munden, Ernest Canada, Jimmy
Butler, Mack Brown, Marvin Klnard, Walter
Wlederhold.

)

�Sanford Herald. Sanford, Florida - Sunday, Juna 19, 1994 - ?■

Hawkins
Continued from P i f e SB
nolc County and their many
■u pportera for the bucccbr
achieved In thin annual event.

Special agent honored
Congratulations are In order
for Special Agent Erik Freddie
who was selected "Officer o f the
Year." Special Agent Freddie
received this honor at the State
Law Enforcement Chiefs Associ­
ation Inc. Sum m er M eeting
Banquet held on June 6 nt
Orcnclcfe Resort Special Agent
Freddie Is employed by the
Florida Division o f Alcoholic
Beverages and Tobacco In South
Florida. He represents the finest
among the many outstanding
officers o f the slate's law en­
fo r c e m e n t n g e n e fe s , O o v .
Lawton Chiles said, "It always
pleases me to hear of the exem ­
plary efforts that our law en­
forcement officers are putting
forth. Freddie's contributions to
the field o f law enforcement arc
commendable. Thnnks for your
dedicated commitment."
Special A gen t' Freddie also
received a letter o f congratula-

L a ltrlo a Q uinn

ttons from U.S. Senator Bob
Oraham and I quote Erik, “ has
performed In a manner giving
reat credit to yoursclL the
lorlda Division o f Alcoholic
Beverages and Tobacco, and the
state o f Florida ns a whole. Your
leadership, expertise and strong
sense o f dedication to duty have
put you out In front o f the rank
and file."
Special Agent Freddie, lovely
wife Princess, his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Freddie, shared
the h on or at th e banqu et.
Freddie In a graduate o f Semi­
nole High School and Florida
AAM University, He was an
ofTIcer In the United States Navy
before returning to civilian life. A
firm believer In upholding the
law, Erik does his Job In that
regard In seeing that drug traf­
fickers are arrested. His firm
background In what Is right
makes him the great special
agent that he la. A meritorious
service award was presented to
Special Agent Erik Freddie.

S«rvlcB (or grads
Mars Hill Seventh Day Adven-

tlsl Church. Sanford dedicated
the June 11 worship service to
the graduates In the congrega­
tion. The graduates presented
the Sabbath School program and
lesson study. Pastor Dorsey de­
dicated n poem that he had
written to the honorce. After the
spoken word wns give n by
Pastor Clarence W right, the
graduates were addressed by Dr.
Bess Stamps, counselor at DeLand High School. She spoke on
the theme of "W hat You Will Be
Facing As You Start a New
Phase o f Your L ife ." These
words of strength will forever
remain In the tnlnds and hearts
of the students who have now
becom e adults In this ever
growing society.
The honorce and guests were
treated to a luncheon by the
church, and they then prepared
to share the afternoon In further
worship service. At the end of
the service each graduate was
presented with a gift of appreclat lo n a n d h o n o r an t h e i r
achievement. Lest we forget the
theme of the occasion "You 've
Only Just Begun," the honorees

w ere Richard W are, Darius
H o w e ll, K a t r in a H o w e ll.
J o h n a th a n W ils o n , A m b e r
Alllgood, Jeffrey Greaves, Urlth
Nosworthy, Shavonda Thomas
andShantrellSubb.

Summer program set
Summer Activities Fun and
Reading Interventions, Session
One, a six-week learning experi­
ence needed to give your child
self-esteem and make him a
better student.
The Summer Safari Cainp
began last Saturday. There are
still spaces available for your
children, June 11-July 30. Enjoy
your summer, students, and
learn at the same time. Educa­
t io n a l S u m m e r C a m p fo r
children ages 4 to 9 years old.
Get your child Involved, get
them to actively listen. There
will be oral Interpretation o f
literature, visual and auditory
com p reh en sion , gam es and
videos, arts and crafts. Call and
give your child a summer o f
e d u c a tio n a l w o n d e rs . C a ll
Starlltc Tutorial Academy at
324-4747.

Lake Mary—
C o n tin u e d fr o m

6 00 I 6 30 | 7 00 | n o

| 0 00 | 6 JO | 9 00 | 9 10 | 10 00

10 10 1 11 oa

1130

Page 5 B

you can adopt a raptor (bird of
prey) for one month. SOAK will
send you adoption papers and a
3x5 picture of your bird. The
address In SO AR Inc., 802
Hemlock Dr., Apopka, FL 32712.
And If there urc any really nice
car dealerships out there. SOAR
could really use a van. Right
now, Doris spends 00 percent of
her time on the road giving her
educational lectures and her van
lias over 400.000 miles on It.

S e n io rs take c o u rs e

12;00 1 12:30 I 1:00 I 1:30 I 2:00 I 2:30 I 3:00 I 3:30 | 4:00 | 4 30 | 5 00 | 5 30

Half u dozen seniors took the
AARP 55 Alive Driving Course
offered at the Lake Mary Senior
Center. Wednesday und Thurs­
day, June 15 and 16. Th e
course, offered to seniors 50 and
over. Is a defensive course de­
signed to hone the older drivers'
skills and to bring them up to
date on any new lawn. Many
Insurance companies offer dis­
counts to seniors 55 and over
who take the course. The dis­
count Is good for three years at
which time, the course must be
taken again. Several of the
seniors present nt th e L a k i Mary
course were taking it for the
second time. If you are Interest
cd In taking the AAR P 53 Alive
Driving Course, call the RSVP at
323-4440 for future dates.

*

-

Wr&lt; !'•

V
^

4 %
TV

*

,

•

.

jr
^

' f VI
H m U B M W Sjr t t t n "toM S

Doris Mager and bald angle, Osceola, who survived a shooting, but
lost part of a wing.

Salute to father, dad, pop, etc.
DEAR ABBYl I have hud a
stepfather for 11 years, and I
realize how lucky I am. I wasn't
always the perfect child, but he
has always been there when I
needed him. Although I don't
call him "D ad," he will be the
one to walk me down the aisle
when I get married.
Any man can make a baby,
but it takes a real man to be a
father!

MY FATHER'S DAUQHTER
DEAR FATHER'S DAUQH­
TER! How fortunate you are to

8:00 | 0:30 | 0:00 | 9 30 | 10:00 | 10 30 | 1100 | 11 30

6:00 I 6:30 I 7:00

NBA BttktiM rUftni uuwtwnuv a *w t •• Hr* Tort
Hr*k\ &gt;1 llouMdn Uk UII ItM) ■

UufBti. bw 'HiM
Norlfwn[
__
AflWflCi
' G S f C 3 5 T(
DfUwlUintAll

&lt;

i' i m

YitW. »' IW ttn tt «lLLljjW |
11,111 _ --i . » Iliil a-tk'lllOA U'J'1*! LI*1

Aitiorl lln5W*» CO"
• s jjw w k i n n i r r o a r

ILt* A O fw m u
‘ blw&gt;,J&gt;,'‘________
W«I1M im sa-noiM
JjcA I m w f t 1*0

A IM ( ■ « •

rasr
fmn
)*\uJl |W
\ N«w»

«■'. uwL I s a FE9 iin
Jim Mjni»gna (In Stetwjj *'
mi
00
INWgjBj H
T B j SB
0«wrt B m i m | I I W Uiaim ) imVn«&gt;i
Iwnil »•*&gt;* * •• IJttJ, (Anutil Mrt Wjmai, TmS m Cape &amp;hm f S F
TffTiui« oi

Loti PHW im Mw«o| TO

MAX

Itoc1 (1w? Dump
Dt4 •
|IM) Ccmnt)

&gt;1 hum (In
.SlnrolM.
1h»
lU ift • |IWJ. DfknuJ AimjrtJ
Aim m * Abi««o BvxKfJt

'Mltnr* P'lU*'*

H llll

Dm mil

irin m in

Tihnf Bk I Mr Lilt: II* Nwc»

11|111 ai11111

Jm * i n CuM |ln Sintu) Ml “

ii i i nil

m—

I1
,
.grtaigt
t1"
fT w
iFtthMvg

CunwOr) 0 * i G u m (In Skn»ol Nil

irij __
*yn~ K»m »»it BBS
SmBi »&gt;i

liim M if .

u,,i»rl—

have such a wonderful stepfa­
ther.
T o honor all fathers (step,
foster, etc.), here's my favorite
Father's Day column:
A special tribute to those men
who are (and have been) "Just
like a father” In a family whose
"rea l" father has died, or simply
has not been In evidence for one
reason or another.
A garland or orchids to stepfa­
thers — the men who married
women with "ready-inndc" fami­
lies. They have had to overcame
countless obstacles that only
men In that situation have
known. ("Y ou ’ re not my real
father, so you can't tell inc what
to dol")
Let's not forget the uncles,
older brothers, cousins and
friends who have stepped In to
be the "father" in homes where
there were none. And God bless
the generous men who found the
time to Join Big Brothers, an
organization of men who have
volunteered to be surrogate fa­
thers to fatherless boys.
A 2 1 -g u n s a lu te to th e
divorced father who has never
uttered an unkind word about
the mother o f his children, and
w ho has a lw a y s been
Johnny-on-the-spot with the
child-support check.
A championship trophy en­
graved with a heart o f gold to the
single father who Is head of the
household, Juggling the duties of
child-rearing and bread-winning,
with few (if any) role models to
guide him.
Happy Father's Day to all you

i

IIIMtiaaNt MAMI
u k Auc O w S i im u*»wn n «
WWuni OAlw lln SlUfOl II
ri.un&gt;(nuvi Ki ll
I'.luAonu JcLi Uhgtwr imsineol 11 luAwawi* 1-1 t t lltW ) j«n»t C S y
AB»wilu«l Jiim Gunuu
l - . , . H....... 1h.fiA.I IH l.l||,H4,Bu.J.. lu.,| |Up Hn.cupu
|C«nClo&gt;«J~
nm asm T kU ■|iai bLAwa1 »«i smW.
Itut dmin* * * Lnh |i/li) r^
toil «l lffl-1 |
Bh^ H S b
t S f.
I&gt;..Ui
IhoumVV |i»»
..... ......
i on* Q M B
M««&gt; |ltH MwiA {In
(II' Blnr.ll
hlmm.| 1th* Wtt»*PUtu »•* l l W A(l,r«Uiiii&gt;|
fe r
in
Uu^wlM»M« P
CmwT K0{l&gt;
Simon
A
limrul
6
Unon A 1rar
liptww
i.»otk Ho»w-« In 1!«« »«' [lV » iL« lrfu .H A |w«to*l iuognpluc
a*o»
|5___|y»cw W.MJ

ADVICI

A B IG A IL
VAN BUREN

*

men who have been positive role
models for children who need
them.
And, Dad, If you should get
another necktie Tor Father's Day,
be sure to wear It Immediately,
so the kids w on ’ t ask you
(around Christmastime), "Say.
how come you never wear that
tic we gave you last Father's
Day?"
Now, for those whose fathers
have died: It seems appropriate
that on this day, you may want
to offer a silent prayer to honor
ills memory. This is the one I
have recited for a number of
years. It Is from the Hebrew
Union Prayer Book:
"T h y memory, my dear father,
Dlls my soul at this solemn hour.
It revives In me thought o f the
love and friendliness which thou
didst bestow upon me. The
thought of thee inspires inc to a
life of virtue: and when my

Litchfie ld T h{\itt&gt;“';

pilgrimage on earth Is ended and
I shall arrive at the throne of
mercy, may I be worthy of thee
In the sight o f God and man.
May our merciful Father reward
thee for the faithfulness and
kindness thou has ever shown
me: may He grant thee eternal
peace. Am en."
DEAR ABBYl 1 was recently
In an automobile accident. (I am
still in the hospital.) Last week,
the doctors told me I will never
walk again. Every m orning
when 1 wake up, 1 have to face
the harsh reality or my fate.
I feel that 1 have the right to
mourn over my condition, hut
my family members think I am
blowing It out of proportion.
W hutdoyou think?

SITTING
DEAR SITTING! I think your
family Is outrageously unsym­
pathetic. "You will never walk
again" Is Indeed a devastating
verdict. However, 1 would like to
hear from readers who were told
they would never walk again,
but with determination, therapy
and the grace of God, they dldl
jV . \ \ c ,Y t V v t i\ O i

m S P E C IA U I
r M l Mt h FRH
Nnkig ttM T W r tl
ter 'O lfT V fO IVIH Wrtri OAO 'W UCS iT

CITY SLICKERS 2
M l MO

MAVERICK
T:1I * »

EVERY TUESDAY
-,10AM
&amp; 12 N O O N
4*

4] 4:10T:ll

FLINTSTONES

MOVIE - POPCORN
&amp; DRINK
*2 . On
all included - ONLY

1
m

aq moots

_LQ01:W»;«T:C0»M
S N f AK
PIU V llW t
b It) O NLY!

THE FlINTSTOHES Li^J 8:48

JUMSSICPARK

10:33

tto

S MiOmMUMtl

SPEED

JE2.

KIVTKUCX
lOKSTOOM
HI TONMDJERRYTHEHOME 7/11FERNGULLY
7ACHPMUIKADVENTURE TflROCKADOOOU
mimENEHO

s auxtuuu*n SPEED

]:Ml:OOT:]QfriO
GETTING EVEN WITH DAD
13840 M i M l

1:00]:101:117:10 HO

WOLF

6 IU L
O

W OYS1

(PQ)

BEVERLY HILLS COP 3

O F

so rusu

BABY'S DAY OUT

I:»4tt7;00t:»

w m K &lt;xm

L O T S

Hs/.17-«,l

(P0)

1:4S4:1073010:00

(H) I
(R)

U N I AK

pm vii wi
ft I l) O N I v

SJ M f Of I ALL M OVft S S I A M O N G

UMWUN 4 10 6

�SB - Sanlord Herald, Sanford, Florida - Sunday, June 10, 1004

WHO IS
THAT

CO U PLE

.■BA, At&amp;H

by Chic Young

BLONDIE
w u *r Dtp T h e w a s a n
HE DO T ) ARCHAEOLOGIST

UNCLE LEO
ano aunt

MARSARET

■

HE LOVED M IN S
APOUIO ANCIENT
RUINS k __

■

By Bernice Bede Oeol
TOUR BIRTHDAY
June I B . 1994

by Mort W alker

BEETLE BAILEY
HOW P IP YOU
GET BEETLE
TD G O TO
CHURCH 60
REGULARLY?

X V O IP HIM IP HE
IW EN T TD HEAVEN
HE CO ULP LOLL
AROUNP ON
FLUFFY CLOOP6 A
v ALL PAY

6 P E O AL SITUATIONS
CALL FO R G PECIAL
EXPLANATION®

by Art Sansom

TH E B O R N LO S E R
"7

G0LF...ITS JUST ANOTHER V
. FOUR-LETTER W0W&gt;! J

'

by Charles M. Schulz

PEANUTS

OKAY, SN O O PY/
W E 'R E A L L SET.
s j o g o .'
y

WOW .'ARE YOU SURE YOU'RE
BRINGING ENOUGH STUFF ?

I'M 61AP YOU REMINDED
M E ..I FO R 60TM Y
60W LIN 6 B A IL I

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK
EEK SEEMS X ) BE
A VERY COMPUEX
FEK5O I0ALnV

' HE'S A
THEME F W K

r H e 's
MORE THAW

COMPLEX,,.

Problem s with which you
might have to contend In the
year ahead may not be due to an
absence of opportunities, but to
the fact that you could have too
muny to choose from •• It'll
confuse you. •
G E M IN I (May 21 •June 20)
Tasks you usually perform with
relative ease should not be taken
for granted today. Unless your
inlnd Is totally focused on your
w ork, serious m istakes arc
likely. Gemini, treat yourseir to a
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions for the
year ahead by mailing $1.25 to
Astro-Graph, d o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 4405. New York. N.Y.
10103. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Subdue extravagant Impulses
today, or you might feel Impelled
to buy something now that you
might be able to buy later at a
better price If you're patient.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Praise,
politeness and tael are tools thut
can work very well for you
today. Howrver. all o f the afore­
mentioned attributes must bnvr
a true ring o f sincerity.
V1ROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Your word must be your bond
today, especially when making
com m itm ents to loved ones.
Broken promises could leave
scurs that might be difficult to
heal.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) In
order to Impress and manipulate
olhrrs. you might l&gt;c templed to
lay It on rattier thick today.
You'll be more effective using u
th in n e r brush and sm a ller
strokes.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Basically you're a courageous
person. und tills Is u very useful
asset. T o d a y, how ever, you
might be more foolish than bold
and rush Into situations where
ungrlsfeurtolreud.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 11 A friend of yours who doesn't
have a handle on things needs
your help und advice. The least
effective thing you can do Is to
tell him or her whut you think
tills person wants to hear Insteud o f the truth.

ACROSS

34 Eyeglass
1 Oklahoma town 39 Rely on
4 A comtallatlon 40 Seel
41 Unhappy
9 Praaktantlal
42 Party givers
48 Written
12 Cut off
reminiscence
U Torre —
44----- Clear Day
14 French yaa
49 Repentance
ISMualcal
42 Yellow ocher
Instrument
S3 Sacred Imegee
(2 wnte.)
44 Affirmative
U A ctor — I
48 Summer
(Fr.)
11 Pdfera
---»—»--- * mi Jllfj
rmCIpISni
OF0VTI
lePaesegeweV
57 Me. time
2lMwy.
22 la the right a la
DOWN
lor
24 Supply food
1 European
24 Leu off
mountains
30Ralae
j
--------yourself
31 N eil to Sat.
3 Haw
32 Notice
connection
33 Jackie'* 2nd
husband
(with)
34 Historic period
4Anger
15 What vou walli
s Heart mi omens

p

m

m

F££nAND GRAIN CALENDAR!!

ARLO AND JANIS

by Jim m y Johnson
me ’s j u &amp; rp u rriu fi
. 0 0 Mb bOCKb. .

MOM! WHATSUjOOTWOfi
WROUGWITM
. DAD 7 M t k

___________ _____

Answer to Previous Puzzle

□mmn mmmn gon
rannn nmnn nnn
n rom n
u jn m n
□ □ □
FihnHinnPi nnnnm
n o n

m a n n a

o o ra

n ra n n m on

non anmn ntnmo
mnnn mono non
nmnnnnn mnmn
□mn nnn
oonno nraooono
non moon nnnra
rann mnmn mnmn

o h o

o o o n

S Haul with effort
7 Actress —

nm nm

body

guoat

10 Twofold

111

• LaeHneklng

ICafe patron
iAct of doing
find by

Corn Sfy
If i l l
Of aircraft

Pen nemo
Paving atona
Toppled

l i niciuri
t i i f fi
nlrfai
'r
noKJif
1R
e im M n o v .
DwiOrw

Canine tooth
atckneeafly
Stockings
S lap ------1

Underground
oseavatlon
FroeU
Author
* * » —-* i. t _

petit*

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn.
19) Regardless of what situations
you find yourself In today, rely
only on yourself, your resources »
and your abilities - not on
others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Have an appreciation for the
suggestions others offer toduy,
hut don't use this as u cop-out to
fall to think for yourself. You
know more about your personal
nffalrs then they do.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) tr
you do something thoughtful for
another toduy, be certain your
motives urc sincere and nut Just
for show. Being good for false

If you've been doing this lately,
try to lake some time toduy to
stop and smell tlic roses.
VIRGO |Aug. 23-Srpl.' 22)
In the yenr ahead you might
IIrid tt necessary to divide your Instead o f merely counting to 10,
time between two specific en­ count to 50 today If a companion
deavors. T ills can be done docs something thut angers you.
satisfactorily only If you're a Your temper might have a short
fuse, and you could blow things
good organizer.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) out of proportion.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be
Currying an old grievance could
prove to be a very heuvy burden fair In your dealings with others
today. One way to rid yourself of today, hut also be prepared to
tills nuisance is to try to forgive protect your Interests If someone
und forget. Mujor changes urc tries to take udvuntugc o f you.
ahead for Gemini In the coming Success Is Indlcuted If both
Impulses arc operating.
ycur. Send for your Astro-Graph
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
predictions today. Mall 91.25 to
Avoid associating with Individu­
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper.
P.O. Box 4465, New York. N.Y. als todny whose ethics don't
10163. Be sure to stale your measure up to yours. A crafty
companion might try to Involve
zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) you In something under the
What to you Is Innocent teasing tabic he or she bus engineered.
8 A Q IT T A R IU 8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
today could be something more
serious to another. Don't do 21) Attend to difficult chores as
a n y t h i n g to e m b a r r a s s a early as possible today, becuusc
sensitive friend In front o f other undesirable assignments might
be left to the last minute and nut
friends.
LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) Am bi­ done properly. Keep your thumb
tion and InduslrlousncBs are out from under the hammer.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
adm irable qualities, provided
they urc not pushed to extremes.
19) Even though you'll not want

By Bernice Bede Oeol
TOUR BIRTHDAY
Jane 30. 1994

TUMBLEWEEDS

■

*-

reasons will be discerned by
others.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 10)
Usually your lnnutc sensitivities
enable you to maintuln pleasant
social associations with persons
from almost every stratum. T o ­
day this asset might not be
operative.
TAURUS (April 20-Muy 20) In
situations where discipline Is
req u ired for those In you r
c h u r g c . d o not s u b s titu te
p e rm is s iv e n e s s . T h e lu tter
compounds mistakes, the former
corrects them.
C opyrigh t 1994 N EW SPAPE R
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

to be u. loner todny. there Is a
certain clique you should try to
avoid. It's the same gang that
always makes you feel uncom­
fortable In their presence.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
If you Insist on doing everything
Ihe tiard way today, success Is
likely to elude you. Instead of
letting your Impulses run the
show, have a game plan.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Murch 20)
Your sense o f humor won't l&gt;c
uppreclatcd today If you make
someone who has thin Bkln the
butt o f your Jokes. G etting
iaugliH this way Isn't worth It.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
You might Ik - a bit reluctant
today to shurc what you have
with others. This could cause u
serious problem If you huve to
deal with an Individual who has
strongly similar views.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
areas where you and your male
arc usually In accord, you might
pull In different directions toduy.
This situation could be worsened
if you r dissension is m ade
public.
C opyright 1904 N EW SPAPE R
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

JOUOMOfy

OIL SPIl’L i, O Z O N B

otmriON, son&gt;
tm io N

**

i

%

l

w m

TO HUN S O M E t e s t *
BUT IT t o o * * L i f t
Y O l/ V E GOT A BAt&gt;
c a m

o f

’ p e o p le * .

by Jim Davie

QARFIELD
rr&amp;

tru et

r

o h ,..

G E TTIN G

RO B O TM A N*

by Jim M«ddick

LOOKING BACK AT OLD SCI FI
ITS AMA1INS HOW MUCH
.STUFF ACTUALLY CAME TRUEmoohrocketsX

V£AH

5 S [

1

SUBMARINES.. V ? r a K 1
GENETIC
/ ( J r V
EN GINEER!N6y
\

ISN'T IT REMARKABLE. HOW
THE SCIENCE FICTION OF
TODAY CAN BECOME TH
THEE .
TODW
SCIENCE FACT OF TOMOURCM?

i said , \ w n * w w e r me . m w o t ih s a
VSH'T IT S STOW A9QMT HOT- LOOKING
tlEMAim vE) ANDROID WOMEN WHO HAWE
HOW- L_VM ARim RtiATDNS WTTH GfcfcKY

By Phillip Alder
Margaret Bourke-White said.
"T h e beauty or the past belongs
to Ihe past." But why shouldn't
we enjoy the good things of the
past In the present?
Today's deal was played on
February 4, 1929. and was
broadcast over the wireless on
that date by the BBC. The
listeners were able to lay out the
hands In advance. The declarer
was A.E. Manning-Foster, the
first editor of Bridge Magazine,
which began publication In
1920.
Back In 1929, South's opening
bid showed nine tricks with
hearts as trumps.
West started with two top
diamonds. On the second, East
discarded a spade and South
ruffed. The heart ace dropped
the queen from West. Now
declarer drew only ' two more

rounds o f trumps before un­
blocking the A-K o f spades. Then
Manning-Footer exited with the
heart three. East had to win the
trick and give access to the

NORTH
* QJ32
98
* 8762
* K832

dummy.
This was a brilliant play,
especially for those days, guar­
anteeing the contract even If
East had the club, acc and West
the club queen. But a wave of
listeners wrote In. complulnlng
that South had thrown away an
ovcrtrick (or two) by falling to
play West for the dub ace. The
more erudite pointed out that
West was marked with the acc
by his four-diamond bid.
I'm glad to say that Man­
ning-Foster was unrepentant. He
ended his report by writing:
"But that Is the kind of tiling
which we, who broadcast and
write about bridge, have to pul
up with. And then you wondev

ANNIE
LOOKED T'/ME LIKE
THOSE OUTS WERE
GIVIN' YOU A HARO
t im e / a i T - -~T^

w hy we lose our hair
maturely!"

WEST
*765
• AK109343
* A10

p re­

4-ll-M

EAST
* 10984
99654
•J
4Q987
SOUTH
* AK
9 A K J10732
*Q
* J54

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer South
8ouUi
Weal North East
39
4•
Pass
Paaa
4*
Paw Paaa
Pus
Opening lead: • K

by Leonard Starr
Thos*
HLIOW6?.

NAM. 1VtY'Rt A

SWECTHCAJEfS/ JUST HA
KNOW HOW TO HANPLB
THEM.

p * HXMFH/ TMf COUP i
[WAITED UNTIL SOMEONE
TOMPltTELY HflPLMSS CAME
a ID THE AUTOMATIC
4
T E LLER/...1

�I 11

Sanford Horald, Sanford. Florida - Sunday, Juno 19. 1994 - SB

L e g a l N o tic e
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N IN E M IN E N T DO M AIN IN T H S
CIR C U IT C O U R T O F T H I I I O N T I I N T H JU D IC IA L CIRCU IT.
IN A N D FO R S I M I N O L I C O U N T V , F L O R ID A
C A I t NO. 94 *79-CA-11-E
SEMINOLE COUNTY, apolllkal tubdlvitlonol IS* St*l* of Florid*.
Patlllonar.
CITYOF ALTAMONTE SPRINOI, FLORIDA,a Municipal
Corporilloni SOUTHERN WHOLESALE FURNITURE, IN C ,*
Ftotld* Corporation) FLORIDA POWER CORPORATION, a Florida
Corporation! ALTAMONTE FURNITURE WAREHOUSE. IN C ,*
Florid* Corporation W ILLIAM A. WATSONi CHARLES B.
MENDEZ. JR.i U.S. POSTAL SERVICE) BONAIRE
DEVELOPMENT COMPANY. I NC. a Florida Corporation, RIVER
RUN INC.,aPlOTld*Corporation; NAY V ALD E S**Tat Collector
of S*mlnol» County, F lor Ida) and lh* unknown ip o v u i of th* abova,
if *nyj tSatr hair*, davit***. attlgntat. gran Ion . creditor*. In u o t,
aaacutor*. admlMtfralar*. mortgogia*. ludgmanfcradllort.
Iruttaot. Uanhotdart. p*r ton* In pouattlon and any and all otSar
portonahaving or claiming to hav* any rlghl, fill* or inlaratl by,
through, undar or agalnal th* abova nomad Dafandanlt. or othtrwli*
claiming any rlghl. Illl*. or Inlarott In lh* raal proporty datcrlbad In
thll action.
pElEndAnfi
TO: THOSE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS AND TO ALL
PARTIES CLAIMINO INTEREST BY. THROUGH. UNOER OR
AOAINST THE NAMEO DEFENDANTS) AND TO ALL PARTIES
MAVINO OR CLAIMINO TO HAVE ANY RIGHT. TITLE OR
INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED BELOW.
An Emlnant Domain Pallllon. togathar with lit Declaration of
Taking hat boon fllod In lh* abov* itylad court lo ocqulr* cortaln
property Inlaratlt In Samlnol* County. F lor Ida. doacrlbod at lot low*:
[ PARCEL NO.

100

MONTGOMERY ROAD
F IE SIM PLE

| THAT PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT OF LAND
DESCRIBED I N O .R . BOOK 2 1 4 1 , PAGE t o , IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OP SEMINOLE COUWPY, FLO R ID A,
' BEIHO MORI PARTIC ULARLY DESCRIBED AS PO LLO Nsi
COHN EH CE A T THE CENTER OP SECTION 19, TOWNSHIP
11 SOUTH, RANGE 20 EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A .
RUN N O O * 9 4 * ]5 * E ALOHO THE NEST L IN E
OP THE Nt% OP SAID SECTION 19 ( A . K . A . CUTTER
I LIME OP MONTGOMERY RO AD ), 2 4 1 .0 7 FEET TO THE
1 SOUTH L IN E OP THE AFOREMENTIONED TRACT OF
IAND|
THENCE
ALONG
SAIO
SOUTH
L IN E ,
8 4 9 * 4 0 * 2 0 * 1 , 2 9 .0 0 TEET TO THE EAST R IG H T -O F WAY L IN S OP MONTGOMERY ROAD AS DESCRIBED IN
DEED BOOK 1 0 0 , PAOE 1 7 0 ; THENCE LEAVING S A ID
SOUTH L IN E , RUN ALONG S A ID R IO H T-O P NAY L IN E ,
H O O *9 4 '3 9 *E , 1 9 .3 7 FEET TO THE P O IN T OP BEG IN­
NING FOR T H IB D E SC R IPTIO N ; THENCE CONTINUE
ALONG S A IO
R IG H T-O P-H AY L IN E ,
H O O *9 4 '1 9 *S ,
, IS O .43 FEET TO THE NORTH L IN E OP THE APORZMEHI TIONEO TRACT OP LAND; THENCE LEAVINO S A ID
RIGHT-OP NAY L IN S , RUN ALOHO S A ID NORTH L IN E ,
S I V * 4 9 '2 9 * B , 7 .4 0 TEET TO A P O IN T ON A NONTANGENT CURVE CONCAVE NORTHWESTERLY; THENCE
LEAVING S A ID
NORTH L IN E RUM SOUTHWESTERLY
ALONG THE ARC OP S A IO CURVE, HAVING A CENTRAL
ANGLE OP
0 0 *4 9 *3 0 *,
A RADIUS
OP
7 4 9 4 .4 4
FEET,AND A CHORD BEARINO OP S 0 3 *4 1 * 0 7 *W , FOR A
DISTANCE OP 1 1 0 .4 0 P EE T; THENCE S 0 4 * 0 9 '9 2 'W ,
40.13 FEET TO THE P O IN T OF BEGINNING OF T H IS
DESCRIPTION.
CONTAINING 4 0 1 .9 5
PARCEL NO.

SQUARE FEET.

109

MONTGOMERY ROAD
FEE S IM P LE

THAT PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT O r LAND
DESCRIBED IN O .R . BOOK 1011, PAGE 9 41 , O .R ,
ROOK 1 0 1 1 , PAGE 9 4 5 , O .R . BOOK 1 0 8 1 , PAGE 9 5 7 ,
O .R . BOOK 101 1, PAGE 8 8 8 , t O .R . BOOK 9 9 5 ,
PAGE 1143 A L L IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF SE M I­
HOLE COUtlTY, FLO RID A, BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!
COMMENCE AT THE CENTER OF SECTION 19, TOWNSHIP
11 SOUTH, RAHOE 39 EAST,
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
RUN H 0 0 * 9 4 '3 9 * E ALONG THE EAST L IN E
o r THE NMt OF S A ID SECTION 19 ( A . K . A . CENTER
LINE OF MONTGOMERY R O AD ), 1 3 9 .0 0 FE ET; THENCE
H 89*30*2 7 * ¥ , 2 9 .0 0 FEET TO A P O IN T ON THE WEST
RICHT-Or-WAY L IN E OP MONTGOMERY ROAD AND THE
SOUTH L IN E o r THE AFOREMENTIONED TRACT OP
LAUD, T H IS BEING THE P O IN T OF BEGINNING FOR
THIS D E SC R IPTIO N ; THENCE ALONG SAXO SOUTH L IN E
N D * 3 0 '3 7 * H , 6 1 .3 0 . FE ET; THENCE LEAVING S A ID
SOUTH L IN E , RUN N Q 4 / A 5 *8 3 'K , 4 4 .3 8 PEET TO A
W HIT o r CURVATURE OF A CURVE CONCAVE NORTHHCSTCRLY; THENCE NORTHEASTERLY ALONG THE ARC
OF A
CURVE
HAVING
A
CENTRAL
ANCLE
OF
OO’ i O ' S l * . A RADIUS OF 7 5 0 4 .4 4 FEET, AND A
CHORD BEARING OF H 0 1 * 4 0 '2 0 * E , FOR A DISTANCE
OF 1 1 3 .1 1 FEET TO THE NORTH L IN E OF THE AFOREHCHT10MED TRACT O r LAND; THENCE LEAVING S A ID
CURVE RUN ALONG S AID NORTH L IN E , 3 6 9 * 3 0 * 2 7 * 8 ,
5 1 .1 9 FEET TO A PO INT OH THE NEST RIG H T-O F-W AY
L IK E OF MONTGOMERY ROAD; THENCE ALONG S A ID
WEST RIGHT-OF-W AY L IN E 6 0 0 * 3 4 * 1 9 * W ,
1 7 B .3 0
FEET TO THE PO IN T OF BEGINNING OF T H IB DE­
SC R IPTIO N .
CONTAINING 1 0 ,0 1 9 .5 9

SQUARE FEET,

TOGETHER WITH
PARCEL NO.

705

MONTGOMERY ROAD
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT

THAT PORTION OF THAT CERTAIH TRACT OF LAND
0E5CRXBED IH O . n . BOOK 1 0S 1 , PAOE 9 6 1 , O .R .
BOOK 10S 1 , PAGE 9 6 9 , O .R . BOOK 1 0 8 1 , PAGE 9 9 7 ,
O .R . BOOK 1 0 2 3 , PAOE
( O .R . BOOK 9 9 9 , PAOE
1442 A L L IH THE PU B LIC RECORDS SEMINOLE COUN­
T Y , FLO RID A, BEING MORE PARTIC ULARLY DESCRIBED
AS FOLLOWS I
COMMENCE A T THE CENTER OF SECTION 1 5 , TOWNSHIP
11 SOUTH,
RANGE 29 EAST,
SEMIHOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
RUN N 0 0 * 5 4 * 3 9 'E ALONG THE EAST L IN E
OF THE NHk OF S A ID SECTION 15 ( A . K . A . CENTER
L IN E OF MONTGOMERY R O AD ), 2 3 S .0 0 FE ET; THENCE
" 1 9 * 3 0 * 2 7 'W , 2 5 .0 0 FEET TO A P O IN T ON THE WEST
ICHT-OP-WAY L IN E OF MONTGOMERY ROAD AND THE
3UT1I L IN E OF THE AFOREMENTIONED TRACT OF
VND; TIIEHCE ALONG SAID BOUTH L IN E , RUN N « 9 * l '2 7 *W , 6 1 .3 0 FEET TO THE PO IN T OF BEGINNING
)R T H IS
D E S C R IP T IO N ;
THENCE LEAVINO S A ID
3UTH L IN E , RUN H 0 4 '0 5 * 5 2 'I , 6 6 . BE J S f P J Z *
31HT ON A CURVE; THENCE NORTHEASTTOLY ALONG
IB ARC OF S A ID CURVE CONCAVE NORTHWESTERLY,
kVINO A CENTRAL ANCLE OF
• A RADIUS
f 7 3 B 4 .4 4 FEET, AND A CHORD BEARING OF $&lt;&gt;3 4
* 3 1 *E , FOR A DISTANCE OF 7 2 .9 1
TIIEHCE
36*19 *0 1 *W , 2 0 .0 0 FE ET; THEHCB A M M O 99 W,
5 .0 0 FE ET; THEHCB S S 6 * 1 9 * 0 l E, 15. |
IENCE S 0 4 * 0 5 * 5 2 *W, 1 1 1 .7 7 FEET THENCE,8 6 9 3 0 I 7 'E , 9 .0 1| PEET TO THE PO IN T OF BEGINNING o r
IIIS D E SC RIPTIO N .
OHTAIIIIHG

1 ,2 3 7 . 5 9

■ARCEL NO.

113

AT

PORTION

SQUARE FEET

OP THAT

MONTGOMERY ROAD
FEE SIM PLE
CERTAIN

TRACT

OP

LA1IU

SCRIBED IH O .R . BOOK 1 6 7 3 &gt; p A ° B J J 6 7 * L J?2°
E SOUTH 50 F BET FOR RIO H J-O F-W AY AO DE­
RIDED IN O .R . BOOK 2 1 2 2 , PAPE ^ M
(A .K .A .
K STREET)
A L L XW THE PU B LIC R E CO R D S O P
MINOLE COUNTY, FLO R ID A, BEINO MORE P A R T IC U R LY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWSI
KMENCB A T THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE NORTH»
W O T n O T S E N IO R 15, TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH,
NOE 29 EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY,
. B"!J
0 *5 4 *3 5 * W ALONG THE EAST U N B O r T O * IKWJi OT
TO SECTION 15 ( A . K . A . c “ J j *
MERY ROAD)a 0 5 2 464 FEET/ THENCE 0 0 9 *0 5 25
V“
FEET TO A P O IN T ON THE NORTH L IN E OP THE
iUTH 1 1 5 .0 0 FEET OF THE NORTH 1/4 OF THE W^
1 THE NW% OF THE NE&lt;| OF S A ID SECTION 1 5 , T H IS
IliS THE p o m OF BEOINHIMO FOH T H IS O M C H IP OHl THEHCB ALOHO S AID NORTH L IN E , SB9 29 0 2 !,
2 5 .0 0 FE ET; THEHCB LEAVINO S A ID NORTH
NB, RUN S 0 0 *5 4 *3 S *W , 7 .6 # FEET TO A P O IN T OF
~IVATUHB OF A CURVE CONCAVE NORTHWESTERLY I
INCE SOUTHWESTERLY ALOHO THE ARC OF S A ID
IVE. HAVING A CENTRAL ANGLE OF 0 2 * 1 3 * 3 9 , A
HUS o r 7 6 9 9 .4 4 FEET, AND A CHORD BEARING OT
l* 0 1 * 2 3 * W , FOR A DISTANCE OF 3 9 0 .7 8 FEET TO
•OIHT OF TAHOEHTJ THENCE 8 0 3 * 0 1 * 1 0 W, 6 1 .8 1
!T TO A PO IN T O f CURVATURE OF A CURVE OONt| NORTHEASTERLY; THENCE SOUTHEASTERLY ALOHO
I ARC OF S A ID CURVE, HAVINO A C K N T R A L AHOLE
9 2 * 4 1 * 8 8 ', A R A D IU i OF 3 9 .0 0 FE ET, AND A
(RD BEARINO OF 8 4 3 * 1 2 * 8 0 '* , FOR A DISTANCE
4 0 . 4 9 F E E T TO THE NORTH L IN E OF THE A rO R E TXONKD OAK STREET; TIIEMCk ALONG S A ID H O R T H
E, RUM H 8 9 *3 3 '4 9 W, 4 1 .3 1 FEET TO T H * EAST

R IO H T-O r-W A Y L IN E OF MONTGOMERY ROAD; THENCE
ALOHO S A IO R IG H T-O F -N A Y L IN E ,
N 0 0 * 5 4 * 3 5 'E ,
4 1 4 .2 5 FEET TO THE P O IN T OF’ BEOIHNINO &gt;OF T H IS
D E SC R IP T IO N .
CO NTAINING 9 ,0 7 6 . 1 4
PARCEL NO.

7 40

SQUARE FEET.

MONTGOMERY ROAD
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT

TWO PORTIONS OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT OF LAND
DESCRIBED IH O .R . BOOK 1 1 9 9 , PAGE 501 OF THE
P U B LIC RECORDS OF SEMIHOLE COUNTY, FLO R ID A,
BEINO MORE PARTIC ULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS!
( I ) COMMENCE AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF THE
SOUTHWEST QUARTEH OF SECTION 1 0 , TOWNSHIP 21
BOUTII, RANGE 39 EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY, F L O R I­
DA.
RUN N 0 0 * I 9 * 2 4 * E ALOHO THE EAST L IN E OF
THE BWt OF S A ID SECTION 10 ( A . K . A . CENTER L IN E
OF MONTGOMERY RO AD ),
1 6 1 0 .4 9
FEET;
THENCE
S S 9 * 4 0 * 3 4 * E , 5 0 .0 0 FEET TO THE EAST R IO H T -O F WAY LIM B OP MONTGOMERY ROAD AND THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT OF LAND DESCRIBED
I N O .R . BOOK 1 1 9 9 , PAOE SOI ALSO BEINO THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF LOT 145 OF "R IV E R RUN
SECTION THREE" AS RECORDED IN P U T , BOOK 2 1 ,
PAOE 61 O F THE P U B LIC RECORDS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY,
FLO R ID A,
T H IS
BEINO THE P O IN T OF
BEGINNING FOR T H IS D E S C R IP T IO N ; THENCE ALOHO
THE NORTH L IN E OF S A ID LOT 1 4 9 , S S 3 * 1 S '5 7 'E ,
8 0 ,9 0 FE E T ; THENCE S 0 0 * 1 B '2 4 * W , 1 .1 4
FR ET;
THENCE
M 8 8 *0 9 'B 9 *M ,
1 1 .6 4
F IE T ;
THENCE
N 9 0 * 4 0 'l t * W , 3 3 .1 0 FE ET; THENCE B S 2 *1 2 *2 3 *W ,
1 0 .1 6 F IE T TO S A ID EAST RIGHT-OF-W AY L IN E OF
MONTGOMERY ROAD; THEHCB ALOHO S A ID EAST R IG H T OF-WAY L IN E , N 0 0 * 1 9 '2 4 * E , 3 6 . 6 8 F I R TO THE
P O IN T OF BEOXNNINO OF T H IS D E SC R IPTIO N .
AND
ALSO l
( 3 ) COMMENCE A T THE AFORESAID NORTHWEST CORNER
OF THAT CERTAIH TRACT OF U N O DESCRIBED IK
O .R . BOOK 1 1 0 9 , PAOE 5 0 1 .
HUH S 0 0 * 1 9 '2 4 'W ,
5 1 .5 1 FEET ALONG THE
EAST R IC IIT -O F -H A Y L IN E
OF MONTGOMERY ROAD TO THE P O IN T OF BEOIHNIHG
FOR T H IS D E S C R IP T IO N ; THENCE LEAVINO S A ID EAST
RIGHT-OF-W AY L IN S ,
S 8 9 * 4 0 '3 6 * E , 2 0 .4 5 FEET;
THENCE
SOO* 1 9 '2 4 ' W,
9 .S 3
FEET;
TIIEHCE
8 S 4 * 1 6 '0 B * E , 1 2 .4 6 FEET TO THE SOUTH L IN E OF
AFORESAI0 LOT 1 4 5 ; THENCE ALONO S A ID SOUTH
L IN E H I 9 * 4 0 '3 6 'W , 3 0 .6 5 FEET RETURNING TO S A ID
EAST RIGHT-OF-W AY L IN E ; THENCE ALOHO S A IO EAST
RIGHT-OF-W AY L IN E , H 0 0 * 1 9 * 2 4 'E , 1 6 .9 9 FEET TO
THE P O IN T OP BEOIHNINO OF T H IS D E SC RIPTIO N .
(1 )

AND ( 3 )

CONTAINING

1 ,1 4 5 .4 4

SQUARE FEET,

TOGETHER WITH

P A R C E L NO.

762
MONTGOMERY ROAD
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT

THAT PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT OF LAND
DESCRIBED AS "BLOCK D" OF "R IV E R RUN SECTION
TWO" AS RECORDED IN P U T BOOK 1 0 , PAGES 21 4
34 OT THE PU B LIC RECORDS OF SEMIHOLE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A, BEING MORE P A R T IC U U R L Y DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS|
COMMENCE A T THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH­
WEST QUARTER OF SECTION 10, TOWNSHIP 31 SOUTH,
RANGE 39 EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
RUN
N O O *19 * 3 4 'E ALOHO THE EAST L IN E OF THE 3W| OF
S A ID SECTION 10 ( A . K . A . CENTER L IN E OF MONT­
GOMERY
R O AD ),
1 6 1 0 .4 9
FEET;
TIIEHCE
S B 9 * 4 0 '3 6 'B , 5 0 .0 0 FEET TO THE EAST R IG H T -O F WAY L IN E OF MONTGOMERY ROAO AHO THE SOUTHWEST
CORNER O r S A IO BLOCK D, T H IS BEIHO THE PO IN T
OF BEOINHIMO FOR T H IS
D E S C R IP T IO N ;
THENCE
ALONO
THE
SOUTH
L IN E
OF
SAID
BLOCK
D,
0 S 2 * 1 S * 5 7 * E , 9 8 .3 3 rE E T ) THENCE LEAVING S A ID
SOUTH L IN E , H 1 9 * 1 6 * 1 S * E , 4 2 .1 3 r t t T l THENCE
e i0l 'W ,
4
h uET;
i j T
i l U i U K , . N i l f 96* l l ' W
N 5» «2 * J3J3 * 4
4 44 ..7/U
0 tFE
THENCE,
2 71.9
.9 7 FE
-------E T;-------------THENCE
-------M O !* 3 7 * 2 8 ,H , 3 1 .0 5 ------FE ET;
IENCE
H 4 6 * 3 0 '4 6 * E ,
1 6 .8 1
►k E T i
TIIEHCE
TIIENCE
MOd
) d 'i6 * 4 f * r , s o . n t e e t t o t u b n o r t h l i n e o f
S A ID BLOCK D; THENCE ALO N O nSAID NORTH L IN E ,
N 0 9 * 4 0 '3 6 * W ,
7 5 .3 9
PEET TO THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OP S A IO BLOCK D AND THE EAST R IG H T -O F WAY L IN E OF MONTGOMERY ROAD; THENCE ALONG S A ID
EAST RIG H T-O F-W AY L IN E , S 0 0 * 1 9 '3 4 * W ,
1 6 3 .0 6
PEET TO THE P O IN T OF BEOIHNINO OF T H IS DE­
S C R IP T IO N .
CONTAIHINO 1 3 ,1 3 3 .7 4 SQUARE FEET.
OWNER
C IT Y O F A L T A M O N T E SPR IN G S. FLO R ID A
a M unicipal Corporation
J Dud lay Batat. Mayor
Allam onl* Sprlngt City Mall
311 Nawburyport Avanut
Allam onl* Sprlngt. F L llfO t
S U B JE C T TO: E t t t m a n li In layor ol R lvar Run. Inc., a Florida
Corporation, racer dad on daadt In O lllc lo l Racordt Book l l t l , Paga
00*0 and O ltlclal Racordt Book I in . Pag* 501. Samlnol* County,
F lorida
MONTGOMERY ROAD
PARCEL HO, 761
TEMPORARY CONSTRUCTION EASEMENT
THAT PORTION OF THAT CERTAIN TRACT OF LAND
•DESCRIBED AS LOT 145 OF "R IV E R RUN 8 ECTIOH
THREE" AS RECORDED IH P U T BOOK 31, PAOE 61 O r
THE PU B LIC RECORDS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, F L O R I­
DA,
BEINO
MORE P A R TI C U U R L Y
DESCRIBED
AS
FOLLOWS I
COMMENCE AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTH­
WEST QUARTEH OF SECTION 1 0 , TOWNSHIP 21 SOUTH,
RANGE 29 EAST, SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLO RID A.
RUN
N 0 0 * 1 9 '2 4 * E ALONO THE EAST L IN E OF THE SW&gt;« O r
S A ID SECTION 10 ( A . K . A . CENTER L IN E OF MONT­
GOMERY
R O AD ),
3 6 3 0 .4 9
FEET;
THENCE
S S 9 * 4 0 « 3 6 'E , 5 0 .0 0 FEET TO THE EAST R IG H T -O F WAY L IN E OF MONTGOMERY ROAD AND THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OF S A ID LOT 1 4 5 ; THENCE ALOHO THE NORTH
L IH E OF S AID LOT 1 45 , 8 B 2 * 1 5 » 5 7 'E , 6 0 .5 0 rE ET
TO THE P O IN T OF BEOINHIMO TOR T H IS D E SC RIP­
T IO N ; THENCE CONTINUE ALONO S A ID NORTH L IH E ,
S S 3 * 1 5 * 5 7 'B , 3 7 .7 2 FE ET; THENCE LEAVINO S AID
NORTH L IN E , S 1 9 * 1 6 '1 R * H , 1 2 .3 1 FEET; THENCE
H74 * 0 2 ' 4 0 'W , 2 9 .6 2 FE ET; TIIENCE H B 5 '0 8 '5 8 * H ,
4 ,9 0 FEET TO THE EAST L IN E OF THAT CERTAIN
TRACT OF LAND DESCRIBED IH O .H . BOOK 119 9,
PAOE
503;
TIIENCE
ALONO
S A ID
EAST
L IN E ,
N 0 0 * 1 9 * 2 4 'E , 8 .1 4 FEET TO THE POIHT OF D E O IN HINO O r T H IS D E SC R IP T IO N .
CO NTAIHINO 3 4 9 .4 3

Florida tomato growers
angry over M exican im ports

SQUARE FEET.

G ath Dalandant It lurthar notlllad that th* Patlllonar w ill pallllon
lo r an Ordar o l Taking balor* lh* Honorabl* O.H. Ealon. J r , on* ol
th* Judgat ot th* abova tty lad Court, on lh* Ith day ol Ju ly.
m t , a l t iM p.m., In lha Samlnol* County Courlhout*. Sanford.
Florida. In accordant* with lit Daclaralton of Taking haralolor* Iliad
In th lt caul* A ll Dalandanlt to Ihlt lu ll and a ll olhar Inlaratlad
p a rtia l m ay tlm aly raquatt a haarlng on lh* Petition tor lh* Ordar ot
Taking *1 lha lim a and placa datignalad and b t haard. Any
Dalandant tailing to Ilia a tlm aly raquatt for haarlng th all walva any
rlg h l to o b |td to Iho Ordar ot Taking.
AND
Each Dalandant and any olhar partont claim ing any Inlaratl In lha
proparly datcrlbad In th* P allllo n In th* abov* tty lad Em lnanl
Domain procaadlng It haraby raqulrad lo tarv* wrlftan d altm a t. II
any you hav*. lo th* P allllo n haralolor* Iliad In Ihlt caut* on lha
P allllon ar, and any raquatt tor a haarlng on lha P a llllo n lor lha
O rdar ot Taking, li datlrad. on I'a llllo n a r't Attornay, who** nama
and addratt It thown b tlow on or baloro Ju ly 1. iota, and lo III* lha
original o l your w rllla n dalantat and any raquatt h r haarlng on lha
P a llllo n lor lha Ordar ol Taking with lha Clark o l Ihlt Court althar
balora ta rv lc o on Iho P a llllo n a r 't Attornay or Im m adlalaly
tharaallar, lo thow w hal right, till*. Inlaratl or llan you or any o l you
hav* or claim In and lo lh* proparty datcrlbad In told P a llllo n and lo
thaw caut*. If any you hav*. why to ld proparly thou Id not b*
condamnad for th* u ta t and purpotat a t tat (orlh In told Pallllon. If
you fall lo antwar, a dafaull may ba antarad agalntl you for lha rallaf
damandad In lh* Pallllon. If you fa ll lo raquatl a haarlng on lha
P a llllo n for Ordar of Taking you th all walva any rlghl lo obl*ct lo
ta ld O rd a r of Taking.
W IT N ESS m y hand and taal ol ta ld Court on Iho U th day ol May.
m a.
(S E A L )
M A R Y A N N S M O R SE
C L E R K OF T H E C IR C U IT COURT
IN A N D FO R S E M IN O LE CO U N T Y . F L O R ID A
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clark
R O B E R T A. M c M IL L A N
County Attornay
lor Samlnol# County, Florida
Samlnola County Sarvlcot Building
I I O I C a tiF I r t l S tr u t
Sanlord, F lo rid a 33771
Taltphona: (407) 321-1110, E »l. 72S*
Attornay for Patlllonar
P u b lllA : Juna 12, It, l»9*
DES 3

in*,

AP Farm Writer
W ASHINGTON — Florida (om alo growers
didn't like Ihr North American Free Trade
Agreement before it took cffccl In January, and
they like It even less now.
After five months, the stale that supplies (he
bulk of this country's fresh tomatoes Is crying
foul.
Mexico had been shipping tomatoes north at
below cost, and this year's slightly reduced turllT
made matters worse, (he growers lament.
The complaint, like the pending dispute with
Canada over wheat Imports, shows trade agree­
ments don't bring Instant harmony.
The administration has pursued a complaint
over Canadian wheat shipments to the United
Slutcs, In part to keep a promise to lawmakers In
exchange for supporting NAFTA. Il ulso had to
bargain to win support from Florida repre­
sentatives.
Now that the tomato season Is over and the
trade figures ore coming in, the state has begun
Its first push for action.
“ The continued dumping of underpriced Flor­
ida tomatoes ... Is devastating our market,"
Florida's com m issioner o f agriculture, (lob
Crawford, said lit a May 31 letter to U.S. Trade
Representative Mickey Kuntor.
“ I am told no Florida tomato grower has made a
profit since January." he said. The winter
months arc when Florida and Mexico typically
put tomatoes on the market at the same ttme.
The trade ugreement gradually lowrrs the tariff
on Mexican tomatoes, but also Includes nn Import
ceiling above which a high tariff can be Imposed.
Mexico denies It Is dumping lomuloes. a
complaint It has dealt with off and on since 1978.
Numbers supplied by the U.S. Agriculture
Department show Mexico shipped fewer fresh
tomatoes north from Junuury through March this
year than In the comparable period last year. Not
only that, the value was higher this year, slightly
more than 8190 million.
"T h e prices nre definitely down," mild Gary
Luclcr. the department's authority on vegetables.
"But the reason for It. my unnlysts Is anyhow. Is
not from Mexico."
W e a th er and o th e r v a ria b le s , lik e the
availability of trucks, determine crop size and
when the vegetables come on the market.
Sometimes Mexico hits a good harvest and
Florida doesn’ t. Sometimes It's the other way
around. And sometimes both have good harvests.
All the variables make (nr erratic prices, going up

Legal N o tice

L e g a l N o tic e s

C O D !E N F O R C E M E N T
■OARO
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY. •
F L O R IO A
Ca*a No f* JO C E B
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , a
p o lllk a l tubdlvitlon ol lh*
Stale o l Florid*.
P allllon ar.

IN T H E C IR C U I T CO URT
OF T H E 14TH J U D IC IA L
CIR C U IT . IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A .
C A SE H O .t l ia a i CA.14-E
LOCKHEED FE D E R AL
C R E D IT UNION.
P la tn tlll
v l.
DAW N J. ROSS, a l a l .
Defendant*
N O TICE O F
FO RECLO SURE SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
p un ua nt lo a F in al Judgrnanl ol
F orad o tu r* dattd June a. Iff*
a n d a n t a r a d In C a t * N o.
*3 1*03 CA 14-B ol lh* Circuit
C ourt o l lh* IIT H J u d ic ia l
C ircuit In and tor S E M IN O LE
C o u n ty , F l o r i d a , w h e r e in
LOCKHEED FEDERAL
C R E D IT UNION. P la ln tllf. and
DAW N J ROSS. at. al., ar*
dalandanlt, I w ill ta ll lo th*
highatl bidder lor cath at lha
W ait Front Door o l th* Samlnol*
County Courlhout*. Sanlord,
Florida, a l lh* hour of II 00
a m , on lh* 517* day of July.
1004. lh* following datcrlbad
property a t tat lo rlh In tald
F inal Judgrnanl. tow n
Lo l 7*. C R Y S T A L R ID G E ,
according lo lh* P la t tharaol a*
recorded In P la t Book X . Pag**
94. *7 and N , Public Racordt Of
Samlnol* County, Florida.
D A T E D Ihlt 417* day of Juna.
1***.
Maryann* M o ri*
Clark C ircuit Court
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clark
Publlth: June 13. If. Iff*
D E S I I S ________________
IN T H E CIRCU IT COURT.
E IO H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IRCU IT , IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
F LO R ID A
C A S E N 0 .M M 1 » -C A -I4 E
LE A D E R FE D E R A L BANK
FOR SAVIN G S,
Plain tiff,
vt.
B E T T E AN N H A L L ,a la l ,
D a la n d a n llll.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Nolle* l i haraby given that,
purtuanl lo a Summary Judg
mant ol Foradotur*, I w ill ta ll
lh* following datcrlbad property
located In Sam lnol* County.
Florida:
Condominium U n ll II. Build
Ing ] o l H ID D E N SPR IN G S
C O N D O M IN IU M , according lo
lha Daclarallon ol Condominium
rtcordad on November IS, IN*.
In O fficial Racordt Book ISt*.
peg* 044* thru Off] ol lh* public
raco rdt o l Samlnol* County,
Florida, togathar with all appurlanancat Iharalo and an undivided Inlaratl In lha common
alam anlt ol tald Condominium
a t t*l forth In tald D aclarallon
Togathar with. Rang#, ratrlgara to r. d lih w a t h t r . d ltp o t a l.
wathar, dryar. paddl* l i n t and
llreplac*.
a l public tala, lo lh* highatl
b lddtr for cath. al lh# watt Ironl
door of th* Samlnol* County
Coutlhout*. Sanlord. F lo rid a
II 00 a m. on Ju ly 7, IN*.
NOTICE
A M E R IC A N S WITH
D ISA B ILIT IE S
A C T O F I NO
A d m ln ltlra llv * Ordar
No f* X
P arto n t with a d lta b lllty who
need a tp tc la l accommodation
lo participate In Ihlt procaadlng
thould contact D lta blllty Cooc
din* lor at X I N. P a rk Avanua,
Sulla N. X I . Sanlord, Florida
37771 at laatl llv* dayt p rior lo
Iho p ro c a a d ln g . T elephone:
(407) 373 *310 E a t . 4117)
1 100 MS 1771 (TOO u ta rt only).
W ITNESS my hand and S a il
o ffh lt Court on June*. IN*.
(S ta ll
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
C L E R K . C IR C U IT CO URT
By Jana E. Jataw lc
Dapuly Clark
Publlth: June 12. It. IN*
D E S I lf

W IL L IA M A JIM M IE M A R T IN
R atpondanli
N O T ICE O F H E A R IN G
(SECT IO N U l . l t l i ) .
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S
TO W illiam 6 J lm m l* M a rlin
l i t Fairw ay Orly*
Wlnlar P ark, F L J7793
Proparty Deter ipllon N 713 II
o l W IM II of Lo l I*. B Draw* 1*1
Addition to Black Hammock,
Plat Book 1, Paga 73. Public
R acord i of Samlnol* County,
Florida
In accordant# with Chapter !J
ot lh* Samlnol* County Cod*, a
haarlng ha* baan tthadulad ba
for* lh* Samlnol* County Cod*
E n fo rc e m e n t B o a rd to da
tarmln* II a violation al th*
Seminal* County Cod* It occur
ring on th* above datcrlbad
property. You ar* haraby called
upon to taka nolle* (hat lh*
P u b lic Haarlng w ill b* con
ducted In lh* abov* tly la d caut*
on lh* JJrd day ot June. 1*1*. al
1:30 p m. In Room 1071 of lh*
Samlnol* County Service* Build
Ing, l t d E a t l F l r t l S lraal.
Sanlord. F lo rid a 33771. You
hav* baan charged with th*
aalllanc* o l a |unk vehicle or
vehicle* on lh* abov* datcrlbad
property, In violation ol Sadlon
95 3. Samlnol* County Cod* Th*
Board w ill receive lattlm ony
and evidence a l tald Public
Haarlng and th all make luch
llndlngt of fact a i ar* tupporfad
by th* tatllm ony and evidence
p e r t a in in g to th* m a tte r*
alleged In lh* Statement ol
V io la t io n an d R a q u a tt lo r
Haarlng. II, prior lo lh* haarlng.
you ihould com* Into comp 11
anc* w ith lh* County Cod*
p ro v ltlo n i lhat you ar* alleged
to b* violating, but lh* violation
r a d in prior lo lh* haarlng, or II
th* violation II nal co rro d ed by
th* tlm# tpaclllad lor correction
by lh* Cod* Im p acto r, lh*
p ub lic haarlng w ill ba held
pertaining lo th* allegation*
ag aln tl you.
YO U A R E A D V IS E D TH AT,
IF YOU D E C ID E TO A P P E A L
A N Y D E C IS IO N M A D E AT
THIS H E A R IN G , YO U W ILL
N E E D A R ECO R D OF THE
P R O C E E D I N G S . A N D . FO R
SUCH P U R P O S E . YOU M A Y
N E E D TO IN S U R E TH AT A
V E R B A T IM R E C O R D OF TH E
P R O C E E D I N G S IS M A D E .
W HICH R E C O R D IN C LU D E S
T H E T E S T IM O N Y A N D E V I­
D E N C E U PO N W HICH T H E
A P P E A L IS T O B E B ASED .
P E R S O N S W IT H D I S ­
A B IL IT I E S N E E D IN G TO
P A R T I C IP A T E IN A N Y O F
T H E SE P R O C E E D IN G S
SH O ULD CO NTACT THE
E M P L O Y E E R E LA T IO N S D£
P A R T M E N T . A M E R IC A N S
W ITH D IS A B IL IT IE S COOR
D I N A T O R . 41 H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E O P T H E M E E T IN G
A T (*07)131-1 IX . E X T E N S IO N
7*41.
P L E A S E G O V E R N YOUR
S E L F A C C O R D IN G LY .
Dated Ihlt X lh day ol May.
Itf*
COOE E N F O R C E M E N T
BO ARD
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY,
F LO R ID A
By: M A R C IA L. F U L L E R .
CLERK
Sam Inot* County Sar v Ic at
Bldg
Room No. 7014
1101 B a il F lr t l Slraal
Sanlord. Florida 33771
Taltphona; I407I32MIX.
E nttntlon 7*41
P u b llth ' M ay 3*. June J. June
12. and June It, Iff*.
D E R 707

und down from week-lo-week, month-to-month.
Prices averaged $18.HO a hundred weight In
February, about $4.70 n box, n low month. Hut
Imports were down Hllghtly compared with last
year, when prices were $21.90,
In March, prices were $24.20. compared with
821.20 a year earlier, but imports were up 43
percent from the previous year.
Then In April, a lot o f Florida tomatoes ripened,
and Imports dropped. Prices hit 810.50 a
hundredweight.
"T h e two low months were February and April,
neither o f which you can say was caused by
Imports," Luclcr said.
Hut Florida growers and shippers say market
dnta from the U.S. Agriculture Department show
another picture: Mexican tomatoes being shipped
on consignment — with no fixed price — and
bringing $3 for a 25-pound box at most. That
would be $12 a hundredweight.
The state Agriculture Department claims a 25
percent Increase In Mexican imports.
Bcrnle Hamel, a field representative for the*
Florida Tomato Exchange, a cooperative for
puckers and handlers, says U.S. production costs
run about $5.50 to $7 a box. and Mexican costs
couldn't be that much longer.
Floridians say a ycnr-by-ycur comparison
doesn't mean that much because the complaint Is
longstanding.
"Obviously this Is not the first time wc’vc bad a
problem," said Michelle Lagos, spokesperson for
the Florldn Department of Agriculture. What's
different, she says. Is that the issue came up
during NAFTA discussions and "w e got verbal
commitments Hint this kind o f thing would lie
dealt with swiftly once this ugreement goes
through."

Legal N o tic e s
IN T H E C IR C U I T CO UR T
OF T H E IIT H JU D IC IA L
CIR C U IT IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY,
F LO R IO A
CASE NO.: 94-11*1 DR *1-P
P A T R IC IA L E E
P O IN D E X T E R .
Patlttonar
VS
D O N A LD L E E P O IN D E X T E R .
Hatpcndanl
N O T IC E O F ACTION
TO D O N ALD L E E
P O IN D E X T E R
Ratpondanl/Hutband
YO U A R E H E R E B Y NOTI
F IE D that a P a llllo n lor D ll
tolullon of M arrlag* hat baan
(Had agalntl you You ar* r*
quirad lo tarv* a copy ol your
w rllla n dafaniat. II any. to th*
action on P alltlon ar’t attornay.
W ILLIA M W C A R P E N T E R .
E S Q . whot* addratt It 1*0 E
H lghw *y 43*. Longwood, F L
37)30. on or balor* th* 7fth ol
J U N E . IN * and til* th* original
with lh* Clark ot thl* Court
althar balor* ta rv k a on P la in
tiff** attornay or Im m adlalaly
tharaallar: oth trw lt* a Judg
mant w ill ba onlarod lor th*
ra lia l damandad In tt&gt;* p allllo n.
W IT N ESS my t\ary! and taal
o l Ih lt Courl on Ihlt 7Jih day ol
M A Y . IN*
(S E A L )
M A R Y A N N E MO RSE
C L E R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT CO U R T
B Y Nancy R W lnlar
P u b llth May 7* 4 Juna I. 17. If.
IN*
D E R 779

IN TH E CO UN TY COURT
O F T H E E IO H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCU IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE CO U N T Y ,
F LO R IO A
CASE N 0 .f* m - C C 1 9 O
W E K IV A COVE
HOM EOW NERS'
ASSOCIATION. INC.,
a F lorid* notTor profit
corporation,
Plaintiff,
vt.
K IM C A R S O N and ROY JA M E S
CAR SO N , har hutbandand
U N KN O W N TEN AN T S.
Dalandanlt
N O T IC E O F ACTION
TO: K IM C A R S O N
H llllo p t M ill Road
Thing W all
W lrral. EnglandL417UT
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to foraclot* a llan on lh*
following datcrlbad raal propar
ly localad In Samlnol* County,
Florida, hat baan (Had ag aln tl
you. and lh* olhar Dalandanlt
Idantlllad haraln. In th* County
C o u rt of th* 11th J u d ic ia l
C ircuit, In and lor Samlnol*
County, Florida, by Plaintiff.
W E KI V A CO VE H O M EO W N
E R&amp;‘ A S S O C IA T IO N . IN C ,
lo wit:
L o l 7*4, W E K I V A C O V E
P H A S E FOUR, according to lha
p lal tharaol a l rtcordad In P lat
Book 33, Pag* *0. of lh* Public
R acordt ol Samlnol* County.
Florida,
You ar* haraby raqulrad lo
tarv# a copy ol your w rllla n
dalantat. II any. on E M IL A.
C A S P E R O N I , J R .. E t q u lr t .
P la in t if f '* a llo r n a y . w hot*
addratt It 303 W aklva Spring*
Road. Sulfa 100. Longwood,
Florida 377)9, on or balor* Juna
71. IN*, and III* lh* original
with Iho Clark ol Ihlt Court
allhar balora tarvlc* on Plain
(Iff** attornay or Immadlalaly
tharaallar) o lh trw lt* a datault
w ill b* t n it r t d ag aln tl you tor
lh* r a lia l dam andad In lh*
Complaint.
W IT N ESS m y hand and taal
of Ih lt Court on Ihlt 7*th day ol
M ay. IN*.
(CO URT SE A L I
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
Clark o l tho Court
By: C a rrlo E . Buattnar
A t Dapuly Clark
NOTICE
A M E R IC A N S WITH
D ISA B ILIT IE S A C T
O F 1990
A d m ln lilra tlv* Ordar
No. f3 17
P arto n t with * d lta b lllly who
naad a tp tc la l accommodation
to p arllclp al* In Ihlt procaadlng
thould contact A D A Coordinator
at X I N. P ark Avanua, Sulla
N o rih 301, Sanford, F lo rid a
3377) *1 la a tl f lv t (S) dayt prior
lo th* procaadlng Telephone:
(*07) 373*130, ta la ntlo n 4737;
I 100-931-177 1 ( T D D I , o r
1 *009111770 (V). via Florida
R a lly Sarvlc*.
Publlth: M ay 3f 6 Juna S. 13. If.
IN*
D E R 33*

Legal N o tic e s
IN T H E C O U N T Y CO URT
OF T H E IITH JU D IC IA L
C IR CU IT IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 93 714* C C 19 Z
SAN M A R C O V IL L A S ASSOCI
ATION. INC .
P la ln tllf.
v.
JO H N B CASTRO, a tlngla
man. JO SE L CASTRO. JR . a i
tln gla man. U N KN O W N OC .
C U P A N T 1 and U N K N O W N
O C C U P A N T 3. and S A B A L
P O IN T C O M M U N IT Y S E R V
ICES. INC
Dalandanlt
N O T IC E O F
F O R E C L O S U R E SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
purtuanl lo a Final Judgrnanl ol
F o rtc lo tu rt da ltd October l . :
1N3. and antarad In Cat* No :
93 3744 CC 20 Z ol lh* County !
Courl ol lh* l l l h Ju dicial C ircu it 1
In and lo r Samlnol* County, ,
Florida, w h traln SAN M A R C O
V IL L A S ASSOCIATION. INC It
P l a i n t i f f , and JO H N D
CASTR O . JO SE L C A ST R O
JR
and U N K N O W N O C C U
P A N T S 1 A N D 7 ar* Dalandanlt.
I w ill ta ll lo lh* highatl and b a il I
b lddtr
catfi al lha W atl Ironl I
an mane a el lh* SaMlnoi* County (
Courlhout*. Sanlord. Florida, al
11:09 o'clock A.A4. on lh* 7th day I
of J u ly . Iff* , lh* follow ing
datcrlbad proparly a t ta l forth .
In ta ld F in a l Judgrnanl, lo wit:
U n ll No 17, Bldg 1 of SAN
M A R C O V IL LA S , a condominl ,
urn, according lo lh* Oaclara
lion of Condominium tharaol,
rtco rd a d In O ffIdeal R acordt
Book ISM a l Paga lo l l h a Public j
Racordt o l Samlnol* County, .
F lorida
O A T E D Ihlt *1h day of Juna, .
Iff*
M A R Y A N N E M O RSE
Clark, County Court
By Jan* E . Jataw lc
Dapuly Clark
In accordance with lh* Amar
leant With
O ita b llllla t A d .
partont with d llib llllla i ntadlng
a tp t c la l accom m odation lo
p arllclp al* In Ihlt procaadlng I
rhould contact Court Adm Init­
ia t io n a l X I N P ark Avanua.
Sulla N X I . Sanlord. F L 37771.
Itltphon* (4071 323 4330. t a l
4737, not talar than tavan (71
dayt prior lo th* procaadlng II
h a a r ln g I m p a ir e d , I T O O I
1100*511171. o r V ole* (V I
I 100 955 1770. via F lorida Relay
Sarvlca
Publlth: Juna 13. 19. 199*

B C i HI

IN T H E CIRCU IT COURT
OF T H E IITH JU O IC IA L
CIRCU IT. IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE COUN TY.
F LO R IO A
CASE N O i f l 2134 CA M L
J A M E S H . S C M LU R A F F .
P lain tiff,
I
vt.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A N IK K E N
G R O U P, INC .a la l..
Oalandanlt
NOTICE OF S A L E
N O TICE IS G IV E N lhal pur
tu a n l lo a Su m m ary F in a l
Judgment of F o rtc lo tu rt dated
th* 7*TH day o l M A Y , Iff*. In
lh* abov* tlylad caut*, I w ill
ta ll to lha highatl and batf
bidder lor cath al th* Watt
F ro n t door o l lh* Samlnol*
County Courlhout*, X I Norih
P a rk Avanua, Sanlord. F lorida
37771, a l l l ' W A .M on th* 7th
day ol July, Iff*, lh* following
datcrlbad property:
Lot 3t. B lo ck B. S P R IN G
V A L L E Y F A R M S . S E C T IO N
T H R E E , according lo lh* p lal
tharaol a t rtcordad In P la l Book
1*. Pag* 9* ol lh* Pub lic Mac
o rd t ol Samlnol* County, Flor
Ida
D A T E D Ihlt tth day o l June.
Iff*
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
Circuit and County Court*
By; Jan* E. Jataw lc
Dapuly Clark
Publlth: June 12. It, Iff* D E S 117

LEARN

AS YOU EARN

Find the
skills you
need lo
get a
better
Job
In the
C LASSIFIED S

�Legal N o tic e s

L e g a l N o tic e s

IN T H I C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T H C II O H T E E N T H
JU D IC I A L C IRCU IT ,
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A CT IO N NO. i
ftO O U C A -IS E
B A N K U N IT E D O F T E X A S .
F SB . ate.,
P la in tiff,
v».
D E B O H A H O. P IC K E T T , (It.,
•I al,
D e ltn d e n lt
N O T ICE O F M L R
NOTICE It hereby given that
pursuant to ttw F in a l Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sato antarad
In Iha cause ponding In tha
C ir c u it C o u rt q l tha E IO H
T E E N T H Ju d icia l Circuit, In
and tor S E M IN O L E County,
Florida. C iv il Action Number
faOOSSCA U E tha undarilgnad
C la rk w ill ta il tha proparty
•Ituatad In M id County, da
scribed at:
T hat c a rta ln Condom inium
P ar col known a t U N IT NO. IIM .
N O R T H L A K E V I L L A G E CO N ­
D O M I N IU M , I, and a n undlvldad Intoroat In tha common
olom anti appurtenant tharalo In
accordanca with and sub|ect to
convonant*. csndlIlona, re*lrlc
tlom . o atam on lt. la rm t and
othar p ro v ltlo n t of tha Declare• Io n a f C o n d o m in iu m o l
N O R T H L A K E V IL L A O E CON
D O M IN IU M I, a t racer dad In
O ff ic ia l R o c o rd t Book M i l ,
Pago 1/4, of tha Public R ocordt
of Sam lno* County. Florida,
togathar w ith a ll structures.
Improvements. fixtures. appll
an ca t and ap p urttn anca t an
M h f land or utad in conjunction
thorawlth. a l p u b lk M ia, ta tha
hlg h atl and b a it bidder tor cath
at 11:00 o'clock A M . on tha m i
day at July. IIM , at tha Watt
Front door ot tha S E M IN O L E
County Cow fthouM . Sanford,
Florida
(C O U R T S E A L )
M A R V A N N E M O R SE
CLERKO FTH E
CIR C U IT CO URT
By: Jana E Ja ta w k
Daputy Clark
P ub lith: Juna II. It. Ittt
OES l«

L E O A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
E I D t l/ t M t
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that the C ity ot Sanford.
F lo rid a w ill racalvo w aled bid*
up to t :M P.M . on TuodM y, Ju ly
i l , m a in Itw Purchatlng O f­
fice, Room I f f lor Itw following
C O M P U T E R E Q U IP M E N T
(P E R S O N A L )
AM b ld t th a ll ba addrattad a t
loflowt:
A . F a r M a ll Delivery:
Purchatlng Agent
C ity of San lord
P.O. Box l t d
Sanford. F L M f T T I ft l
R. F a r Hand Dalhraryt
Purchatlng Agent
C ity of Sanford
MO North P a rk Avenue
Room 141
Sanford. F L U I D
T h a t t a l e d b ld t w i l l ba
p ublicly opened talar that M in a
day at 1:00 P.M . In the C ity
C o m m ltilo n Chamber*. Room
ttr, Sanford C ity H all. Lata
offert w ill ba returned to tender
Specification! and Itw proper
bid form t a r t available, at no
c o il. In ttw Purchatlng Ottlco.
Room le t, MO N. P a rk Avenue.
Sanford, Florida. (4S7) J » M 1 )
Fact!rr,lla o r telegraphic b ld t
w ill not ba accepted
The C ity of Sanford re te rv e i
Itw right to accept or ro|ect any
o r a ll bldt, with Or without
cauM . to w aive technical!tlet or
to accept ttw bid w h k h In lit
judgement b a it w rv e t Itw Inter
a it at ttw City.
P t r t e n t w ith d l i a b l i l l l e t
needing e ttltfe n c e ta p artkI
pale In any ot thaw proceeding!
thould contact ttw Pertonnel
O lllc e A O A C o o rd in a to r a l
MO M M tarty eight hourt In
advance of ttw mealing
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D
W aller Shear In
Purchatlng Agent
June I L m a
P ub lith: Juna If. Iffa
O E S - lf t

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
L E O A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
F L O R ID A ,
R F P N O . fl/re-45
C IV IL ACTIO N
Tha C ity o l San lord. It looking
C A S E NO. f M T f I-CA14
reeled proposal* from Qualified
DIVISION E
fir m ! lop ro vid e tha follow ing:
M AROARETTENA
K A R A T E IN STRU CTO R
C O M P A N Y , IN C . tu c c e tio r In
P r o p o t a l d o c u m a n lt a r e . IM eretl to N A T IO N SB AN C
available, a l no c o il. In the
M O R T G A G E C O R PO R A T IO N
O ffice of Purchatlng. Room 241.
O F V IR G IN IA , l/k /a SO V R AN
MO North P a rk Avenue. San
M O R T G A G E CO R P..
lord. Florida W I I , 1407) DO
P la in tiff.
M U . It It m andatory that you
vt.
ra c a lv o p ro p o ta l d ocu m ents
R O B E R T J .M A C K O W IA K ,
p rio r to subm itting a proposal
a ta l.
S e a le d p r o p o t a lt a n d
O alan d anllt)
expressions o l Interetl a re due
N O T IC E O F S A L E
In the O ffice ot Purchatlng. MO
Notice la hereby given that,
North P a rk Avenue. Room 111,
purtuant to a F in a l Judgm ent ot
Sanford. F lo rid a H 77l. no later
Forecloture datad Juna 1. m a ,
than 1.00 p m. on Thurtday,
antarad In C iv il C a w Number
Ju ly 7. Ittt. Late ottert w ill be
f S C / S I C A U E . In ttw C ircuit
returned to tender unopened
Court for S E M IN O L E County.
A ll p r o p e t a lt t h d ll ba
F lorida , wherein M A R G A R E T *
addret tad a t fa llo w !:
T E N 4. C O M P A N Y . INC., sueA . F ar M a ll D elivery t
c a t t o r In I n t a r a il l a N A Purchatlng Agent
T IO N S E A N C M O R T O A O E
C ity o l Sanford
C O R P O R A T IO N O P V IR O IN IA .
p o . t o iim
l/ k / a S O V R A N M O R T O A O E
tan lord. F L 1)7/1 17M
C O R P . It tha P la in tiff, and
R . F ar Hand D e livery,
R O B E R T J. M A C K O W IA K . a l
, Purchatlng Agent
at., are ttw Oetendanli, t w ill
I City of te n fo ld
V*.4
w ll lha property * situated in
M0 North P ark Avenue
S E M IN O L E County. F lo rid a ,
Room 241
described a t:
Sanford, P L J17/I
Lot SO, B R ID G E W A T E R , a c ­
P m p o ta lt w ill ba evaluated
cording to the p lat thereof a t
utlng lha refection c riteria M l
recorded In P la t Book 1*. Paget
forth In the propotal documantt
( and f. P u b lic R eco rdi o l
The City ot Sanford re te rv e i
Samlnola County. Florida,
tha right to accept or reject any
at public M le. to Itw h lg lw tl and
or all p rop M tl. with or without
b a ll bidder, for cath. a l lha
cauM , to waive te ch n lcjlllle t. or
W a ll front door ol tha Samlnola
l j accept tha pro p o M lt which. In
County Courthouta. M l N. P ark
l i t lodgement, best w rv e t lha
Avenue. Sanford. Florida, al
In le re ito f the City.
11:00a.m on Itw 7lh day Ol Ju ly,
Per to w are edvlted that. It
UN.
they decide to appeal any de
Datad: J u n o L m a .
c itlo n m ade co ncern ing tha
Maryann# Morse
aw ard o l thlt propoM l. they w ill
CLERKO FTH E
need a record o l Itw proceeding,
C IR C U IT C O U R T
and tor tuch purpota. they m ay
by: Ja rw E . Ja w w lc
need to tn tu re that a verbatim
N O TICE
record of Itw procoedingi It
A M E R IC A N S W ITH
made, which record Include! the
D IS A B IL IT IE S ACT
te itlm ony and avldanca upon
OF m o
which Itw appoal It to ba mada.
A d m In itia tiv e Order
P arto n t with d ita b llltle t need
No. M M
Ing a ttitla n c o la participate In
P a rto n t w ith a d lie b lllty who
any ol theta procoedingi thou Id
noad a tp aclal accommodation
contact tha C ity Pertonnel D e ­
to p ertlclp elo In th lt proceeding
partm ent A D A Coordinator at
thould contact D lia b lllty Coor­
hourt In advance of the moating
dinator at M l N. P a rk Avenue,
at (407) IIP M M .
Sulla N. M l, Sanford, F lo rid a
C IT Y O P SAN FO RD
H77I a t W ait five d e y t p rio r to
W aller Shear In
th o p ro c e e d in g . T elep h on e:
Pin chatlng Agent
M O M 111*41)0 E a t . 4117;
Juna 14. m a
t • » M S i n i l T D D m a r t only).
Pub lith: Juna It. m a
P u b lith : June 11, tf, lf M
O E S 150
D E S 104

C ELEB R ITY C IPH ER

CM brty Ctnar m uuqiw m era crewed tram guutaliaw by Iwnou*
paoexa. pat: and pwtera. Each M r n N cipfw u w u lot anoaw
Taityt ctut A equal* r
‘ A e a w M o c
F S L M
a a

c o m

i w e o

R C V F W O M O C
B O W M O

E O M J ' O

II M J

J M E O Z P

M J B V F W . *

—

E I E P
I W B
F B e

n

H E V Z

W E O L M P ,
P R E V I O U S S O L U T I O N : 'W h * n I d ig , I w a n t lo b a
sittin g In front o f a n a ir c o n d itio n e r a a tin g • g ra a n c h ile
b u it lfo .' — (A cto r) H a t ty N o n h u p .___________________

OFF THE LEASH® by W.B. Park

L e g a l N o tic e s

Legal N o tic e s

I N T N E CIR C U IT CO URT
O P T H E IITH JU O IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A .
C A S E N O .ft 11)1 CA M K
M O N D R IA N M O R T O A O E
C O R P O R A T IO N , a D alaw ara
corporation.
P la in tiff,
vt.
DON A M E S . E T A L .
Dalandanlt.
N O T IC E OF
FO R EC LO S U R E SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
purtuant to a Sum m ary F inal
Judgment of Forecloturo dated
Juna 1. m a , and antarad In C a w
N o *1 1)11 C A -14 K at tha
C ir c u it C t u r t o l th e I I T H
Ju d icia l C ircu it In and lo r Sami
note County, Florida, wherein
M O N D R IA N M O R T O A O E
C O R P O R A T IO N , a D alaw ara
corporation. P le ln lltl, and DON
A M E S . B T A L ., are dalandanlt.
I w ill w ll lo ttw hlgtwtt bidder
for ca th at Itw W a if Front Door
of tho Samlnola County Courthouw, Sanford. F lorida , a l I l i M
o'clock A M an ttw 7th day of
Ju ly . m a . ttw tot towing da
terlbad property a t w l forth In
told Sum m ary F in a l Judgment,
to wit:
Condominium Unit M L Build
Ing IA
L . of H ID D E N V IL L A O E
CONED O M IN IU M , according to
ttw D eclaration af Condominium
rocor dad M a rc h 11. m &gt; In
O f llc la l R o c o rd t Book l i l t ,
p a g a t t i l l th ru t i l l and
amended by t in t amendment
thereto recorded M ay 14. t f t f In
O ff ic ia l R e c e rd t Soak ISM.
P a g e t I f f ) th r u I f ! ) a n d
amended by wcond amendm ent
tharalo recorded M ay N . IIU In
O ff ic ia l R e e o rd t Book M ai.
Paga MOI and amended by
am endm ent tharalo recorded
June a. IMS in O fllc la l R tco rd t
Beak IM L P aget 111) thru t» 1.
an d fu rth e r a m e n d e d by
am endm ent thereto recorded
Ju ly tf. IMS In O fficial Rocordt
Booh &gt;454. pagat ISaa thru ISSt.
P u b lic R o co rd t o l Sam lnola
County. Florida, together with
a ll appurttnancat thereto and
an undivided in fa n t) In Itw
common elem ent! af tatd Con
dom inium a t w l forth In to ld
Declaration
Togathar with a ll tlru c tv re t
and Im p ro vem e nt! now and
fw n a lt e r on to ld land, and
Ilaturat attached thereto, and
a ll re n ti, lu u e t. proceed*, and
p ro m t accruing and to accrue
from la id p re m lw t. all o l w h k h
a n Included within ttw forego
In g d o i c r l p t i o n a n d th e
habendum t her rot: o lto o il get.
ttoam . electric, water and other
heating, cooking, refrigerating,
lighting, plumbing, ventilating.
Irrigating, and power ty ite m t
mechlrwt. ap p liances llxtureo
end appurtenances which are
now or may hereafter pertain lo.
or bo utad with. In. or on tatd
p t t m lw s even though they may
ba Attached or detachable
D A T E D th lt |th day ot Juna.
Iff!
M A R Y A N N E M O R S E . Ctark
C ircu it Court
By: J a n a E . J a ta w k
Daputy Clark
■ubltih.
J
Pub
lith: Juna
11, tf, Iffa
OES M l
: . . .. O
I - I t o Y f f A llR C U I T COCJOT
O F TH E II O II T E E N T H ,
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E CO UN TY,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO. 14 114 CA M E
Home Saving*ol Am *:lea. FSB,
f/k/a Home Saving* «f Amor It a,
F.A..
P la in tiff.
vt.
B ria n O B oylea/k/4 B rian E .
O ' Boy le and J utle A . O' Boy la
a/k/a Ju lia Ann O'Boy la.
Advonllct Health Sytlam /Sun
Balt. In c , a Florida not lor
P ro tll corporation d/b/a F lor kto
H oapllal, United Stalot of
A m e rica, and Je n a /Jo in Doe.
fle lltlo u t names ropraw ntlng
la n a n lt In p otw ttlo n ,
Dalandanlt.
N O T IC E O F
FO RECLO SU RE SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
thal p u rw a n l to a F in al Judg­
ment of toroclaauro dated Juno
1, Iffa, and antarad In C a w No.
f4 -IM CA-I4-B o l ttw C irc u it
Court o l Itw Eighteenth Ju d icia l
C irc u it In and lo r Sam lnola
County, F lo rid a wherein. Home
Savlngt of A m e rica, F S B , t/k/a
Home Savlngt of A m e rica. F.A.,
P le ln llt l, end B rlo n O 'B o yle
e/k /a B rian E. O'Boy to and
Ju lio A . O'Boyle a/k/o Ju lio Ann
O 'B oyle, Advonllct Health Syttem/Sun B a ll, Inc,, a F lorida
not le r-P ro flt corporation d/b/e
F lo rid a H otp llel. United Slatot
o l A m e r ic a , R o b e rt M o y e r
(T en anll and Sun Bank, N a­
tional A ito c la tlo n ore ttw De­
fe n d a n ts I w ill w it la tha
h lg lw tl and b a il bidder lo r cath
a l tha W att front door ot ttw
Seminole County Courthoww. In
San lord, Florida at 11:00 o'clock
AM. on the Slh day e l Ju ly , Iffa,
Itw following d ttcrlb e d properly
a t ta t fo rth In la id F in a l
Ju d g m an t.tew ll:
L a i f f . O R O V E V IE W V I L ­
L A O E , A SU BD IV ISIO N , a c ­
cording lo Itw plat thereof a t
recorded In P lo t Book If, Pogat
«, S and 4 o l ttw P u b lic Rocordt
o l Seminole County, F lor Ido.
Together w ith e ll In to rotl
which Borrower now h a t or m ay
tw roaltar acquire In o r to told
property and In and to: (a) a il
o aw m a n lt and rlg h ti of way
appurtenant thereof: and (b) a ll
b u ild in g s ilru c tu ra t. Im prove­
m e n ts fix tu re s and appurla
nencet now o r hareattor pieced
th e re o n . In c lu d in g , b ut not
lim ited to, a ll apparatut and
equipment, whether or not phyt
Icelly affixed to ttw land or any
building, utad to provide or
supply a ir cooling, a ir condi­
tioning, heal, gat, water, light,
power, refrig eration , v e n tila ­
tion. laundry, drying, dlthwathIng, garbage, d lip o w l o r ether
w rv lc e t: and a ll w atfa vent
• y t t e m i, a n le n n e i, p o o l
equipment, window co ve rin g s
d re p e t end d ra p e ry ro d t,
carpeting and floor covering,
a w n in g s ranges ovent. water
healer*-and attached cabinet*;
It being Intended and agreed
thal tuch Home ba conclutlvely
deemed to bo eltlxod to end lo
bo pert of the reel property: end
(c) a ll water and water rlg h ti
Iwhether or not appurtenant)
and shorts at clock pertaining to
tu ch w ater o r water rlghl*.
owner chip o l w h k h effect! M id
property: end (d) ttw re n ts
income, it iu e t and p ro fit! of a ll

N O T IC E
Notice It hereby given that Itw
annual report Of the Bronton
F a r llc Foundation, Inc. It a v a il
able tor Intpecllen at l i t p rln
clp a l o llk e . 4 Law n Street,
O vied o. F lo r id a 11T4S ( t o n
W U / f , during regular b u tln ett
hourt by any c lllie n who req u e tti II w ithin 1M d ayt a lte r
ttw publication o l th lt notice,
and that Shirley R. P k k lo r d It
ttw Foundation * principal man

DATE
(W
oD

’Pardon ino, but you wouldn’l by any chance
be from the planel KJ-7, would you?*

th lt 4th day o l Jurw,
Iffa.
Maryanno M o rie
C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: Dorothy W. Bolton
Deputy Clerk
Pub lith: Juno 11, tf. tfta
D E S 104

F ? b liih : J u n a lf. Iffa
OES tf l

CO D E E N F O R C E M E N T
BOARD
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y.
F L O R ID A
Cate No fa 14 C E B
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y , a
political subdivision ot Itw
Slate o lF lor Ida,
Petitioner.
D E N N IS A . C A L L A O H AM
Retpondtnl.
N O T ICE O F H E A R IN G
(SECT IO N (U.11(l&gt;,
F L O R ID A ST A T U T E S
TO: Dennl* A Callaghan
a n C an on * w a y
Altamonte Sp rin g s P L H I M
Property D o u rlp lle n : Lot Itf,
Oakland H ilt s Section 11. Town
chip It. Range I f . Plat Book 11.
Pago aa. P u b lic Record* o l
Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with Chapter U
of the Seminole County Cede, e
hearing hat been tcheduled ba
lore ttw Sam lno* County Code
E n fo rc e m e n t B e a rd to d e ­
term ine it e vlotellen at the
Seminole County Cede It occur­
ring on the above deecribod
property. You are hereby called
upon * la k e notice trial Itw
P u b lk H earing w ill ba con
ducted In lha above tfyied caute
on ttw I k f day at Jurw. IM L at
1:11 p m In Ream two at ttw
Sam lno* County S o rv k e t Build
Ing. MSI E a t l F l r t l Sfreot.
Sanford. F lo r id a J i f f 1 You
have been charged wtlh ttw
a x llle n ca o l a |unk vehicle or
v e h k le t not w ithin an anclotad
g a ra g e a r c a rp o rt: the ac
cum ulation ot troth end debrtt
and u n u te b le o r abandoned
furniture on ttw above detcrlbed
property. In violation at Section
fS L Sam lno* County Code Ttw
Board w ill racalvo tetllm eny
and avldanca a l u l d P u b lk
Hearing and lh a 11 make tuch
finding! e l feet a i are tupporWd
by ttw tetllm eny end avldanca
p e r t a in in g le th e m o l t e n
alleg ed in ttw Statem ent at
V io la t io n an d R t q u e it lo r
H earing If. p rior * Itw hearing,
you thould come Into com pll
ance w ith ttw C e u n ly Code
provisions that you are alleged
ta ba violating, but Itw violation
re cu rt p rior to the hearing, or it
the violation l i not corrected by
ttw lim e ip e c llle d tor correction
b y lh e Coda Im p o rte r, tho
p u b lic he aring w ill ba held
pertaining to ttw e lle g a tie n i
agatrwlyou.
Y O U A R E A D V IS E D T H A T .
IF Y O U D E C ID E TO A P P E A L
A N Y D E C IS IO N M A D E A T
THIS H E A R IN G . YO U M I L L
N EED A RECORD OF THE
P R O C E E D IN G S , AN D . FO R
SUCH P U R P O S E . Y O U M A Y
N E E D TO IN S U R E T H A T A
V E R B A T IM R E C O R D O F THE
P R O C E E O I N O S IS M A D E ,
W HICH R E C O R D IN C L U D E S
THE T E ST IM O N Y A N D E V I
O E N C E U P O N W HICH THE
A P P E A L IS TO B E B A S E D
P E R SO N S W IT H D IS
A B I L I T I E S N E E O I N O TO
P A R T I C I P A T E IN A N Y OF
T H ESE P R O C E E D IN G S
SH O ULD CO N TACT THE
E M P L O Y E E R E L A T IO N S OE
P A R T M E N T . A M E R IC A N S
W ITH D IS A B IL IT IE S COOR
O I N A T O R . 41 H O U R S IN
A D V A N C E O F TH E M E E T IN G
A T (aoriM I-IDD. E X T E N S IO N
7f4l.
PLEA S E GO VERN YOUR
S E L F A C C O R D IN G L Y .
Datad M ill JOih day o l M ay,
tf94.
CO D E E N F O R C E M E N T
BOARD
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
By: M A R C I A L . F U L L E R .
CLERK
Sam lno* County Service!
Bldg.
R o o m N o .M ta
lis t C a ll F i n ! Street
San lord. F lo rid a 17//1
Telephone: (4 0 /im lt » .
Extent Ion fa it
P u b llih : M ay If, Juna 5. Jurw
t), and Jurw If. 1M4.
DER M l

IN T H E C IR C U I T CO U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL ACTION
C A SE NO. tt-M U -C A
D IVISIO N MO
R YLA N D MORTOAOE
CO M PANY,
Plaint) If,
v i.
S H E R R Y L .E C K E S , el al,
D elendent(i).
N O T IC E O F
FO EECLO SU R SSALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
p u n u a n l to an O rd e r R e
ic h e d u lln g F o ro c lo iu re Sale
deled June II, 1*4. end entered
In C a w NO. f l 144SCA o l Itw
C ir c u it C o urt of Ihe E I G H ­
T E E N T H Ju d ic ia l C ircu it &gt;n end
for S E M IN O L E County, F lo rid a
wherein R Y L A N D M O R T O A O E
C O M P A N Y II itw P la in tiff and
SH ER R Y L. ECKES, D E E R
R U N H O M E O W N E R S ASSO CI­
A T IO N I lf , INC., and "JO H N
D O E " n / k / a R o b e rt D u lly
and/or " J A N E D O B ", n/h/a
L o ri Seay a r t Itw D elendenli, I
w ill M il lo Itw highest and b a it
b ld d ir lor c a ih at tha anlranca
o t th o S E M I N O L E C o u n ty
Courthouie a l 11:00 a m., on lha
la th d ay ot J u ly , Iffa , Ihe
following detcrlbed properly a t
M l lo rlh In u l d F inal Judg
Lot U , Door Run, U n ll If,
according to the p la l thereof a t
recorded In P la l Book II, Paget
4( and 4f, P u b lic R eco rdi a l
Seminole County, Florida.
Together w ith the following
lle m i ot property which ere
located In end Inttelled a t part
o l tho *Improvement! on la id
land:
Ranga/Oven, Vent Fen. D lipo ta l, D lih w e ih e r , Sm oke D e ­
tector. Carpet
W ITNESS M Y H A N D and ttw
eaal o l B ill Court on Juno t),
if f a
H O N O R A B LE
M A R Y A N N E MO RSE
C la rk o l ttw C ircu it Court
B y: Ja rw E . Ja ie w lc
Deputy Clerk
P u b llih : Jiv w It l 34, Iffa
D E S Iff

| L e g a l N o tic e s
IN T N I C O U N T Y CO URT
O F T H I E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
I I M I M O L I CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO, fO-ftl-CC-M-Q
W E K IV A C O V E H O M EO W N
E R S ' ASSOCIATION. INC., a
F lo rid a not lor profit corpora­
tion.
Plaintiff.
K*M CAR SO N and R O Y JA M E S
C A R S O N , her h u ib e n d and
U N KN O W N T E N A N T S .
Defendant!
N O T IC E O F ACTION
TO: R O Y J A M E S CARSON
H N te p iM itt Road
Thing W all
W lrral. England L4IJUT
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to toreclOM a lien on the
lot lowing detcrlbed rea l proper­
ty located In Seminole County.
Florida, h a i been tiled ogelrwl
you, and Itw other Defendant!
Identified herein. In ttw County
C o u rt o f th a M lh J u d ic ia l
C ircu it, In and tor Sem ina*
County, Florida. By F la M Iff.
W E K IV A C O V E H O M EO W N
E R S* A S S O C IA T I O N . IN C ..
L a i 144. W E K I V A C O V E
P H A S E PO UR , according to tha
plat thereof a t recardad In P la t
Boo* s i. Paga 41, at It* P u b lk
R ecord! at SamUwta County,
Florida.
Yau ere hereby required to
le rv e a copy ot your written
d ete n u !. II any, on E M IL A.
O A S P E R O N I . J R ., E sq u ire .
P la ln t lt f 'e a tto r n e y , w h o le
e d d re tl It tot W tk lv e Sprlngt
Road. Suita M P. L ongwood.
Florida u rn . on or before June
N . Iffa. and l i * tha enam el
with the Clerk et Ih li Court
either before u r v lc o on P la in
tlt fe ettorrwy o r Immediate!)
thereafter; eH w rw tu a default
w ill be entered ageuwt yog tor
Itw r e lto l dem anded In ttw
Camglatnt
W IT N E S S m y hand and u a l
a l Ih li Court an m il 1am day el
M ay. Iffa.
(C O U R T S E A L )
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
Clark at ttw Court
B y - C a r r w E . Buethw r
A t Deputy Clerk
NOTICE
A M E R IC A N S WITH
D IS A B IL IT IE S A C t
OF IMP
A d m m tifr etl ve Order
No f l i t
P o rte n t with a d lia b lllty who
need a tp eciel accommodation
to p a rtk ip a to In m u proceeding
Ihould confect A O A Coordinator
at M l N. P ark Avenue. Suite
N o rth M l . la n ia r d . F lo rid a
W fl at W ait liv e (4) day i prlar
to ttw proceeding Telephone
M U ) n i4 J M . extern Ion a n f:
l - I M - f l l S f f l IT D D I, or
Ib o O tlS b /ro (V). v ia Florida
Dalau tar virtf
P u b llih : M ay t f A Juno L I t tf.
iffa
der m

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO URT
F O R S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F I * Member f4411-CP
IN R E : E S T A T E O F , 0 , ,
J E A N N E C A R O L M e tA O O A R T
Oeceatad
N O TICE O F
'
AD M IN IST R A T IO N
Tha e d m ln iitra tle n ot tha
e ila la a l J E A N N E C A R O L
M c T A G G A R T , d o n a te d . F l*
Number fa IIS C P , l i pending In
Itw C irc u it Court ter Semlno*
County, Florida, P ro b e * D lvl
lion, the e d d re tl e l w h k h l i
P o ll O lllc e Drawer " C " . Sen
ford. Florid * U rn The name*
and e d d ra tw t et ttw p e ru n e l
re p re u n le tlv e and ttw pertonel
r e p r e u n la lly e 'i attorney are
M l tor th below
A ll In taroited p o rten t are
required to II* with m il court,
W ITHIN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T ICE : (I) a ll c la im !
a g a ln il ttw e t te * and (1) any
o b je c tio n by a n I n t e r f ile d
per io n on whom th ti notice w et
♦erred that challenge* the valid
Ity ot tho w ill, Itw qualification!
ot ttw pen on el repratentetlve.
venue, or lu r ltd k fle n at tha
court.
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C ­
TIONS N OT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R BA R R ED .
Publication o l Ih li Nolle# hat
begun on Juna If, Iffa.
P e r u n e l R ip ro u n lo tlv e :
ROSS M c T A G G A R T
Altor ney lo r Par tonal
R a p ra u n la llv o :
R O B E R T E. M I L L E R .
E S Q U IR E
ffO D ouglei Avenue,
S u l* IM
Alfem onto Springe,
Florida D M 4
Telephone: (40/11414544
P u b llih : Jurw If,M . I f f 4
O E S 111

IN T H E C IR C U I T CO U R T
IN A N D F O R
F O R S E M IN O L E
CO U N T Y , F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F ile Number t s r a - C P
In re: The E ila la ot
N O R M A N S . C H R IS T E N S E N ,
s s is a in a u f
Deceased.
N O TICE O F
A D M IN IST R A T IO N
The A d m in istra tio n ot tho
E ila to e l Norm an S. Christen
u n , deceased. F ile No. f4-»SC P . I l ponding In tho C ircuit
C o u rt In end (or Se m lno lo
County, Florida, P ro b e * D iv i­
sion, Itw e d d re tl ot which l i
P.O. Draw er C, Sanford, F L
U]J 1 . Tha name and e d d re tl ot
Ihe P e rso n a l R e p ra u n ta llv a
and h it attorney herein ere u l
W. A ll I
lor in below,
tons are required lo file with
Ih li Court W ITHIN T H R E E (!)
M O N TH S F R O M T H E D A T E
O F T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A T IO N
O F T H IS N O T IC E : (I) a ll
claim s a g a ln il the estate, and
(1) any oblecllon by an In te rfil­
ed perton that challenge! Ihe
q ue llflca llo nt ot Ihe Personal
R e p r a t e n la liv a , ven ue or
jurisdiction o l tho Court.
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C ­
TIONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE FO REV ER BARRED.
Del# o l the l in t publication at
Ih li N o tk a ot A d m ln U lra lle n i
Juno If, lff4 .
N. S T A N L E Y
C H R IS T E N S E N .
Per tonal Representative
A p l. 4-W, SJ4 Stretford PI.
Chicago, IL 40447
R IC H A R D R. BOOTH,
Attorney tor P a r tonal
Repretenlallve
I I I ) SW bind PI.
M ia m i. F L U I D 4441
Phone M S/]74f4M
F ie. B ar U tf)
Pub lith: Jurw If A M . Iff4
D E S Ib4

L e g a l N o tic e s
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R 1
O P T H I MM
J U O IC IA L CIRCU IT
IN A N O F O R
I I M I N O L I CO U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO: b b llb t-D R -a i-P
P A T R IC IA L E E
P O IN D E X T E R .
Petlllerw r.
eftd
D O N A LD L E E P O IN D E X T E R ,
Respondent.
N O T IC E O F ACTIO N
T O :D O H A L D L E E
P O IN D E X T E R
Y O U A R C N O T IF IE D that a
Petition tor Dleeelutien o l M a r ­
riage hoe been tiled a g a ln il you.
You are required to le rv e o copy
o l your written defenses. II any,
to the action an lha P e lltlo n e f i
attorney. W IL L IA M W. C A R
P I N T E R . ESQ . whose ed d retl
l i 140 E. Highway 414. Lang
wood. F L H M 0. m a r before the
n t h of June. I f N end tf* Ifw
original w llh the C lark e l m il
Court either batore u r v lc o on
P la in r if f i attorney or Immedi
Ita ly thereafter: otherwise b
Judgement w ill Bo entered ter
Ihe re lto l dem anded In tho
Petition.
W IT N ESS m y hand and tool
ot m il Court an m il tsm day at
M ay, i m
M A R Y A N N E M O R SE
Ctork at lha C ircuit Court
B Y Nancy R Winter
A t Deputy Ctork
P u b llih : June L 11A If, Iffa.
P E S 4 S ______________________
IN T H I C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T H I E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IA L CIRCU IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E CO U N T Y ,
F LO R ID A .
C A I I N O .f f - lt / r C A M L
C IT Y O P LONGW OOO
P O L IC E D E P A R T M E N T ,
Plain tiff,
R A U L G U T IE R R E Z ,

C LA S S IFIED A D S
Seminole
322*2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831*9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
•:00 AM. *9:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru
FRI0AY
CLOSED SATURDAY
A 5UN0AY

PRIVATE PARTY RATES
14 c o g s b c u U v b l l t n M ..... .

3 c o m a e utlvb llm a s ---------- O t ia U r w

1 tims

Chief C ra g Manning, ot me
Lengwead P o lk a Department.
S e m in a l# C a u n ly . F lo r id a ,
through h it e tfk e r i. Invert*#
to rt or aganlt. u lie d lha tub|ecl
property, to wit,
i m DAIH ATSU .
V IN IJD 1FF 1I4X N 41 Ideal
on M ay X IfU , a l or near
Samuwto Caunly, F tend#. and II
tor Itw p u rp a u et tor to i fur*
purtuant lo Section* r n to I to/.
F io n a # S le lu le t . h a t R E ­
Q U E S T E D mat an ttonerabto
Judge a l Hw C ir c u it Court,
E lg h le e n lh J u d ic ia l C ir c u it.
Sam lno* County. Flo*Ida. lit* *
a Finding a l Probable Caute
why Itw above properly thould
net be lor tolled to Ihe above
agency. Y ou win be u n i • copy
e l Ihe F in d in g #1 P ro b a b le
C a u u e n c f l l le tlgnad By ma
Judge and II w ill a d v tu yau haw
requaeJ tor tor tol lure
I H E R E B Y C E R T I F Y TH AT
a true end car reel copy *4 the
tor ageing he* dean furnished to
U S registered m o ll, return
receipt requested, this y d dey
e l Jurw. tto4.
N O R M A N R. W O LF 1N O P fl
ST A T E A T T O R N E Y
B Y : Anrw C
R ich ard ! Rufberg
A tiH la n l Slate Attorney
Florida Be: (71/101
O llk e o l Ihe Stele Alter ney
la o E e tt F irs t Street
Sanford. F L U /7 1
407 U l 7514
Publish: June I), IS, l f . l l . I M I
D B Ifl

11.11 a Hot

R b t H a r t p *f ib b w , b t s s d on 3 Bo m
‘ 3 U n a s M inim u m

NOW ACCEPTING

Sclw didng may mchato H an k) Advertiser at *w c o t I Ot an aM w onal day
Cancel whan you gel reetm P e y o rty k u d e y e y m e e d n e w a lie to e a ifw d
U u k d d ee ap eo n tor laswel la f t A t Copy must todcu aeeoptabto lypo
graphed hum •Com m em d bequency la to i are avadab*
DEADLIN ES

Tuesday thru Friday I I Noun Tha Day Bokxe PubOcabon
Sunday IINoonFreSey • Monday S10 PM Ffktoy
ADJUSTMENTS AND CREDITS: In lha event ol an error In an
ad, ttw San lord HarMd will ba rtapooatble for ttw ffrat
Inaartion only and only lo ttw axlant ol Uw cost of that
ineartton. Raaaa chMk your ad foe aecurpcy lha Bret day It
rung.

IS— S p sctil rtsUcss

1 2 * -E ld r ly C s rt
O f P E N D A B L I , Caring Woman

rUalrge
ITe «_m
rw*
h CAM
MAfllSfll W
Wwieeee ■
wr^w
wwwf^wf^ww

A care tor elderly. t « reft
Deitenaar San lo rd
boa-S71S

13— Bingo
F R E E Traetportaltoa to Tampa
S e m in a l# B in g e 4 A c t s
Charier A Tours 110004/514]

21— P trs o n s lt

N O T IC E O F F O R F E I T U R E
P R O C E E D IN G
TO: R A U L O U T I B R R I 1
M t o lQ U I lL L A S T R E E T
O R LA N D O . F L &gt;MU
and e ll others who c la im an
Intorotl to Itw Below detcrlbed

97* a l in t

7 ccnsbcultv* times ------70m Urn

~

AOOfTKMS

f res m a d k a l care. It t nrper
lo tio n , c o u n u ltn f. p riv ate
darter plus living expense*
Aar rtl/115 Clearwater A Iterney

JphaFrkBar....IQiPW/Se*
O I N T L C M I N . Looking lor re
le t e lle n l Looking tor light
touch body rub s? D e lin g /
P art to* I Loos no further Call
Diamond M ine t ntortelnment
407 la s Tbag Now H irin g

FAX
TOUR CUSSIF1ED AD
TO US MITTIMI
DAT OR NIGHT!

407-3239408
For convenient end ecenomi
cal advertising, naming beets
the la n ia rd H erald F a s vs
your ad to lha C lo t* lie d Dept

and includa lha toltowmf in
tormallon
O Billing
0 Contact name end phone
number tor ad verification
0 lia r l date
e Number of days you would
Ilka your ad la ria i

, _

II you have any gw tllen*.
please c e ll Ihe C la t s llie d
A d v e rtisin g D eperknenl e l
I I I M i l . M o n d a y F r id a y .
1 00 5 M

B e A Team Player
Tc«mwwk is antrapwtru pb/t if tmg ihr bref
onbndoff ihe SrkUn Ihe Anny Nstimul Guard.
youihl have Ihe
io he i tiu) phytr
cmIhe teamthat pianis your cumwly, state,
andcuuntry.
At a Gua/dlearnpbyrr, youtniy qualify fur
Iinternattnlanc induing the Modtpcnery GJ.
iWQ.Three brnrfda sir avidihir lo &gt;cai lot asIrtlk*
as a fewdays a munthanda few errki a year of
Guard service. Fur aUthe dcUib onjoining Ihe
ULTlMATIi WINNING TEAM CAU TODAY
S F C A L F E L IC IA N O

407-323-3317

nom uA

Am
ericansAtTheirBest

n&gt; k w UM xxd l o t ■ mL*x41W - x n t«e*m

N o t lc a

C o n c rtfs

L iw n S srvlcs

F L O R ID A ST AT E M Q U I l l l t
e ll con Ireefers be regltfared
or cerllttod. To verify a slate
c o n t r a c t o r s lic e n s e c a l l
I b M l a l /faO. O ccup a llen al
Licenses are required by (he
county and can bo verified by
catling
»)■l lI lIM.
Hint »
» ext. 7411

C A P T A IN C O N C R E T E . Wayne
Beel. I M an Q uality O p e n
iia n i m -t m n u -t m
Q U A L IT Y C O N C R E T E W O RK.
11 y e a rs axp. H aasanabie
L k . / l m m - ia w

D I C LAW N A T R E E IV C No
|ob too sm all or big Rettd/
Coml t i l off 1st cut or prune
F r u t s l . L lc / ln t l i e If 11
H A R O L D A H O W ARD’ S L iw n
Mewing Service. Looking for
la w n s le m e w l E d g in g ,
trimming, fertilizing III re­
quelled), alto froth hauling.)
40/ la t M/g leave message, or
*0/ l l f 5400 Licensed/ Ineured

Atfdlil:
_ HonTiT
R«m od«ltna
R I I ./ C O M M . V in y l t i d i n g !
A lu m . F r a m in g , D r y w a ll,
Door*, Roofing, Concrete.
515 4011 1.0 ballnl, C iClltoO Q
R II ID I N T IA L R IM O O IL IN O
C arp en try, aaln tln g , alum ,
soffit. CO CAO bl lb MP-I1M

"ATrTonJfflonli

Eis c f m

~

M A I T I R E L E C T R IC IA N .
R epair-addition, com m /res.
lie /In * lERM O eiTJ J l l 447)

“

S H B B M A N 'S A U T O R I P A I R
CoM m I a ir In town. Auto A
truck b lr conditioning systems
repaired or Installed. Free M l.
10 yrs experience.^
ID-toOf

F lo o r in f l
H A R D W O O D FLO O R IN O
TOM O L S 1 N

I b lM M lW

Hom o Im p r o v tm tn l
A B S O L U T ! Carpentry ? "trtn T
metal studs, restorellen work,
dryw eil. deers, tiding, dw ks.
L lc / ln t
nu u/
A F F O R D A B L E H O M E Repair
Dependable. A ll phases. Cell
tor F r w u l . M lc h u l H l-7l0b

RAIN AQ W LA W N S E R V IC E j
No |ob* lo b io o r s m e ll.
R e t ld e n lla l/ C e m m e r lc e l.
Llconted/lntured. 40/-H4 N t l
R A N D V ’ I Q U A L IT Y L A W H i
Complete pro rare since 1M0.
Clean up*, hauling. H I O/IS
S O U T H E R N L a w n m a in te ­
nance. Q ualify work af a fa ir
price, Froaaw im ales. m ales
T O M A J E F F 'S LAW N C A R E l
Ret./Comm ., depandab*, lo w .
ra to tl T r u e s t ...........JOOWO

A u to m o tlv#

/U. DOES IT A lii

Pslnllng

A u t o 1 Bad y R e p a ir/T ie lin g .
Heme/offlca.i. W ll u v e you b.

F ix II rlg h l a l a price you can
allord . Llc'd /ln s. From tle r l
lo finish. Carpentry, plumb­
ing. electrical, end roofing
tves. 11 yrs of experience. No
lab loo big ar sm all. Call
m -w b a a r u m i t la Naurs
H O M E A O F F IC E R 1 F A I R I.
E lectric, plumbing, A /C re
p a ir * . D o e r s , w in d o w s ,
screens, c e ll, Ians, w ater
he aters, c a rp e n try , decks,
custom turn., woodwork. A il
et ettofdoBto prices I la f - H f l

CUSTO M FA IN T IN O by Jeffrey
P o w e r. I n t e r le r / f lx t e r lo r / L lc 'd /ln t. F r u B s t . H I 0145

^UunudFraaJULTSTjMM

C a rp o n lry
C A R F I N T B R A ll kinds of ho.ne
repairs, painting A ceram ic

Ml^khardOrOMj^mjNn

C a rp s t/ln s ta lU tlo n
C A R F I T -JU lL L D I R I C T

•If Dfscaeati F im a u s Brands
F irs t Q w ltty , Tap Liao.
Stelnm ettor, Sexonlet.
Trackless, tc u lp tu r e s lf.*
Installed. C om m ercial levkl
S S I * yd.ee/

SAM I

CARPET

A P R E S S U R E W ASHIN G
F r u e s f j b j r e e i^ H M lt e

P m i u r a Ctssnlr

iSL

A Q U A C L E A N . Houses, pallos.
driveways. A ll work done By
pretoeslene) firem en m - b t li ~
D U N R IT E : Clean driveways,
re a ls , pool d eck s, w a lk s ,
houses Free e tl, m a i n
frh o tp g ra p K y

■■ACM
:m . S.....
p e nIt __
end____
Wm
M obil equip-unique pricing.
For Into cell Ma eeoi

C L I A it I N Q

plus tfrfp and buff flap*.
Ritldentlal/cemmerclbl 14

ftn /R tp i
5craan/Rapalr«
P R A 0 I R ■ullders-Sc:r u n rms,
vinyl windows, repairs. Lew
prices. CBCQ5J007 417-4071

hr*. « a is a i,, beeper4
beeper 444 osai

CI—nTrigitrvics
if lM n
W ILL dean hooiei end offices
V ery ruasanabto rales Frau
et tim e le i I lb years expertonce. C all a n yllm t. HP-1114

DAVIS A SON PAINTING

Lsw n S r v lc t
B U I N H O O M O W IN O w llh
large tractor. A ll kln d t of yard
A vacant lot mowing m i m

Traa iarvlca"
« C H D L . T R I i S V C Lie's, Ine.
' l e t Die Profess k n e lt do It."
— Free esl Una * s .......... m a n

A d v e r t i s e F o u r / i u s i n e s s Every Day
F o r As L o w As $ 4 5 P e r M o n t h .
Ca l l C l a s s i f i e d , 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

�8anford Herald, 8anford. Florida - Sunday, June 19, 1994 - 11B

31— P rs o n a ls
'N I C * L O O K IUO M K . i l ,
M lth , looking for non tmekIn g /d rln k ln g , nlco looking
loay. t*0M&gt; with i l ml lor In.
toratto la en|oy m in k , out
Ooer ocflvHtoa, travel, movie*,
good wfu to M m i fun. Roconl
photo 0 PH . I lot P O . Boo
n * . to n ford, p i m n o n *

11— L o tt 4 Found
L O IT OOO by ffh and If f|.
Romoronion, aatoan bro
"T in y ". R E W A R D 313 ****

27— N u r o r y A
C h ild C a r t
B A B IE S to ( y r t P ro K clotto*
Summer fun. Infereotolon and
offer tcfioel care. HRS rogi*
fared. Call Evelyn M !-***»
M A R T A 'S O AT C A R S Infant to
pra-Khaot. H R S L k « * * 1
L o t . M ory o rto n a o o u

41— H— ith $ F l i n t s
R I S H A R I Y O U R ROOV Free
CiubM atof. 4 wk program. No
contract*. C a N M M M *

NUUW YimMTW YI
Work wrtta* o m o d ko l doctor at
hom o, ■ o c o lio n t feuilno**
/product* Com m m t m t m
IN T R R IS T R O IN PURCM ASIN O A M W A V Product* or
ttorting your m m ku*ln*t*.

CaRMMlWRaaaiWM
LAW N S E R V IC E Truck, tro ll
or, igulgm ont and account*
Not* In n r * Growth poton
noi.
ih r
m um
V E N D IN G -LO C A L R O U T !
■ •toMNAad Immediate Solo
u g to lM B /» k F R E E INFO
IS M )!
V I N DIMO a O UT*
Tired ol
got rk ft g u k k dealt? Want a
got HI P riced to tell.
W *"

41— M ont y to L u d
KEEP D ttV IK M O m u .
GCT TMC MOMYI
A ll you noad I* your title Jack
Olomond far ogeelntmonl

Jio rrst

STOP • AV O ID B A N K R U P T C Y
Free Debt Conoolldallon with
Credit torvtca* I *00* 1* I ? lt

71— H t lp W a n ftd
f

* D tlY IllM IfT lO *
R oll lim e

M o tt hov* Iota

daltvorto* u tllliln g parm nal
v iM c i i C a R M a - n o i a n
AD D TO YO UR IM CO M I
S I L L A V O N NOWI
c a l l m o m »r m o * * *
A D V E R T IS IN G

IMMEDMTE O ff NIMS
I. IN S IO I S A LE S . I full Dm*.
I port lim a i n C Shrtl.
L S A L I S ASSISTANT, part
lim a (13 40 hr*)
M in t hov* w riting (kill* and
b a c k pnotagropy ability.
A ll I pool IIon* require an• h u t ia tm a n d good cam m u n lc o tla n o k lllo . H o u rly
w a g e g l u t c o m m l it l o n .
b o n u io * e n d c o r p o r a t e
b o n o lll* A p p ly In porton.
m a ll/ la i m u m *
Pom Royner
C/O tom Mala Poanytaror
*0* N. ttory If-Of
Longwo*d. PI n ? M
_______F o il **?**»tO *______

MENTS-REAL ESTWEI
Nothing tuccoodt like twccot*
W a r* well Into our Jrd docad*
of training tuccatoful agent*
N o lk a n to ? ...........W o llh o lp l
W ATSON R I A L T Y CO RR
r ia l t o r s
m m *

APP1JEK11IHR
W . tra in local warfc.
_________ t u t i i t m _________

ASSISTANT MANAGER
Two year* m inim um la*l food
o ip o r lo n c o . S a la ry v a r lo t
from U ?1 le UOO par weak
High tchool dip Ionto required
Rote mo and application tei
L a o 't R a m a * * R o c lp o
Ortchan, Sanford. R H W I

ASSISTANT HAMMER/
CASHIERS

7 1 - H t t p W a n ftd
DATA ENTRY

LANDSCAPERS

Wo ore paying bonut S altar
|u*t 100 hour 11 M u ll have
ICOOP 11.000 KSR H . Lang and
•hart term etd g n. Start lm-

“

MaRoa

DENTAL ASSISTANT
B ip o rla n ced eip o n d td dutN*
A t t lilo n l needed lor m u lll
d ltd p lln o ry tu r g k e l ond p ro
llh a llc r o c o n t lr u d lv e
practice. Energetic Individual
w ith tlro n g individual and
team (kill*, w illin g to go the
o ilr o m lk , o m u ll Salary and
bonolll* commonturot* with
oiporlonco t m - r o - o M

006 GROOMER
E ip o r la n c e d o n ly need lo
apply. A t le a d J y rt
OOO B A T H B R A N D CO M B
OUT RBRSOM. A l loo it * y rt
• ip t r lo n c o J t g u lr t d
C a ll
17* *?M lor oopoM m ool

DRIVERS NEEOED
A .O C A R R I E R S .T o r o r ^ FI,
a wall ettablUhed ond grow
M g C o n tro l F lo rid a bated
company attar* you:
o n * to 10* par m ile
a U p to 11NM m l. par mo
P S top O ff Roy
a Unloading Ray
a Vacation Roy
a Safety A Perform ance aonu*
• i Rouoo Riding Program
a Average T rip S I Day*
0 Lot* M o p d Conventional
Tractor*
If you hove 1 year* tractor
h e lle r. O TR and mow ond k e
r ip e r lento ptu* e goad driving
record, coll:
________ I N M M N N

DRIVERS WANTED
Q ualified, a ■par lone ad pro
duco hauler Long dltlonca.
CD LroquIrad C lao hM V R .
Caiiao? w n oo
B A R N U R TO n a n par weak
p ro co ilin g P H A /H U O O d v t
rotund* No o ip nacottary
i i i H a s - i i aa. B i t, m , s n v *

ELECTROMECHANICAL
Stoman*. Strombarg. Carlton
hao rotomod T R A N SW O R LD
S B R V IC B S O R O U R to MoH
m an y a t Ih alr o lo c lro n lc *
potlllano. M u ll have u p o n
once In tom* o l Hie following
area* Com m a rtia l Sotdtrlng.
R e w o rk / T o uch U p.
E toe tromachanical A tm m btr.
and W lro W rap p ing P O R
IM M B O IA T B C O N S ID
E R A T IO N C A L L: *44 t i n
a I X I C U T I V B ASSISTANT#
P lu m a tfk o m local laca'lonl
W o rd p r a c o ttln g h o lp tu l
F o n lo ttk coroar oportunlty I
F R B E R E G IST R A T IO N
AAA BM RLO V M BN T
f o t w a m s t . m - iii*

EIP INDUSTRIAL SEWING
MACHINE OPERATORS
A LSO NB B O B X R B R IB N C B O
S R R B A D B R /C U T T B R
M on Thur*. IV* hr work day*.
Rd holiday 4 vacation Apply
o ti Sm OoL H O Ofd Lake
M o ry Rd., S o o to rd n t iaiO
oOROUNDSKBBRBRo
P A ID R A I N / S H I N B I N ic e
place to work Owtot area
F an l at i k growth 4 benefit*
R R B B R B O IST R A T IO N
AAA BM PLO VM BN T
w a w . im s t . P M I M

HAM AND EGG DELI
bocauto at Incraotad tola*
noad holpl Itl and &gt;nd m in*
avaiiakta. b»Wa&gt; than avaraqa
pay E ip . In m aking d o ll
tendwlcho* haiptul Apply In
por»on AAAACO a i l l f l . SR 44

Haafnaf Hits and Pradacts
H a l an opening lor
D I L I V I R Y / W A R I HOUSE
P IN S O N
M u ll ba II y rt o l ogo. (Japan
dab la. ctoon cut. claan driving
racord with no DUI convlc
lion* In lo t! Ihraa year* and
good attondanc# record
Apply M p an aa Man.- Rrl.
I l l Commorco Way.Sanford.
E n o llo n l benefit* package

HOUSCCUANERS
For T ID Y M A ID S deyt/w k
with pay ond benefit* W 3 7 U

"SaRsWata” Papar Caul*is
Needed lor route* In Somlnolo
H IR A L O

m u ll

RECEPTIONIST

C a o ila l M o r i, In c. h o t
opening* lor A»*l»lonl M an
opart and CatM or pot 11iont
G oad w o rk in g co n d itio n * .
■ ica llo n t wage*, bonolll*. A
p a id v a c a t io n . A p p ly In
porton: M M Orlando Avo.

F u ll llm o p oll Mon Typing and
phono o ip o r lo n c o a p lv t .
P ita to apply In par »on a l Iha
SA N FO R D H BR A LD
m N. French Avenue
Sanford

AV O N product*-1 .M t. B a m to
M V No doar/door. R T/R T
la n d im - I I M / l M Ptoto-liM
■ARNI
If yea have courage coll I
M iin a S N v . r o c . m M .

L A B O R E R S N B B O B D Skilled
onduntklllod. Day*
Coll between 11
S P R IN T STAR PIN O , SI*-Ml I

CM DRIVER
P /T or R/T. M a N or fame la.
M u tt hove good driving record
ond know Sontord oroo.
__________ m -m f_________

CARPENTERS I DECKERS
SUBCRBW SNEED ED .
C o ll after f o m M l lO d

CARPENTERS
Apply o ti W oklvo P ark, a ll ol
W okh Rd , Apopka. Mon F rl.
too Richard or *07 *40-41*1

CASHIERS
A ll thlH* available. Exparlonce p ro ltr rod. Apply:
Pino E ip r e u M o r t
ItOF S. French Avo.
Sontord m o m

CHILDCARE CENHR
T E A C H B R /A ID B . 333*1*7

CLERICAL
Front dotk typo. Soma computor oiporlonco naodod.

_______ ao;w ?m i _______
COMPUTER PR06RAMER
/ANALYST

B ip . ond dogroo required.
c p u s -t i m _________

DEMONSTRATORS
Friend ly Homo Portia* ho*
opening* In your oroo. A lio
booking p ari to*. )M 0 M I* I* 3

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
D y n a m ic oiporloncod. Indi­
vidual needed tor m ulti dlt: d p i Inary oltlca. Scheduling,
*cal la d Ion, Inturonco, phono
•tklll*, recall, pollonl rolallon*
and comupter literacy a mutt.
JThoae with dental oiporlonco
need only apply. Salary com­
m on tu r o k w ith oiporlonco.
'.Available im m adialtoly.

wt-m-tfbi

LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE
Need a cummer (ob i M utt
hove tip e rle n ce with wood
oolorondodoor. 331*313

MACHINE OPERATORS
Longwood m o ll m o rk o lln g
company took* oiporloncod
m oll Intartar o r tort or. P e r­
manent p oll Iion.. .Never a foe I

Htlp Pmanual, I2V41SI
MAINTENANCE TECH
Needed lor largo opt commu
nlly. M u tl hova o ip . In a ll
photo*. Including A/C, H*ol,
R tl , ole. C a ll between 10 ond
1, M on F rl m « I M __________

MAINTENANCE ASST.
F u ll llm o p e titio n . H V A C
/ P lu m b in g o ip o rlo n c o r e ­
quired. Immediate opening.
G r e e t b o n o lll* . A p p ly In
par ton:
Sellpolnt Apartment*
401W. Sam lnoftB lvd
Sanford m 1051

MARINA ATTENDANT
A u l t I cutlom ar* a l o** dockLight claan up dull#*, launch
and ratrlav* cutlom ar boat*.
E ic t llt n l working condition*.
S a tu rd a y and Sunday renulrad. Call 333 1*10_________
M E D IC A L

CNA
Energetic. M il d orter. C N A
needed to a t t lt l In carrying
out program * lo r our Roh o b lllto llv o /R o tlo ro tlv o Doportmonl. M u tl bo corllflod In
tho d ot* of Florida.
Apply within:
D tbory M anor
U N . Hwy I7-F1
Dobary, FI
M7toMto43*

V. p'ir'

K IT 'N ' C A R L Y L E ® by L a rry W rig h t

7 1 -H tlp W in ttd
F u ll lim a petition*. M101M

MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Port llm o • Infer
clno/cprdfofogy. Bock office
dutloo. knowledge of E K O ,
Slgmatd. d r a w t a il and XRay tech helpful. Competitive
*alory. Sand rotem ei PO IB o i
1M *.S g ato rd ,P LB fT 1
O P P O R T U N IT Y

U MARIAN 1/
YOUNG ADULT
M o it o r 'i Dogroo In L ib ra ry
Science from on Am erican
L ib r a r y A tto c . o c c ro d iltd
c o lla g e o r u n lv o r t lly . To
apply, tend retum o to:
Somlnolo County Deportment
of Em ployee Relation*
IJOI
01 lBoatdi Second
Soc
SI .
Sanford. PI 17371
CLO SIN O D A T ! IS J U L Y I,
I f M A T I iM R . M
Somlnolo County Government
I* a drugfreo work (face and
I* committed to a dl vw ta
work tor co._________

N lT a d S o
IMI
Sontord. PLO T T I
by l i M p m . on JU N B V. IfM .
Somlnolo County Oovommonf
l* a drugfreo workpiece and I*
c o m m it t e d l a 0 d iv e r t#

CONTRACTOR SALES
REPRESENTATIVES

W AREHOUSE AN O O B N IR A L
LABO R N BLR N EED BO I
Bonut tor Or Ivor*. A ll *hittt
ovaitobto Dolly pay. no to*.
Report ready to w o rt l : M am.
Indw drlol Labor Svc . ISIt
French Ay, No phono e d it
Bop. preferred C D L Ucorw*
roq. Apply In porton. lb *. 1*01
C lark SI.. Apopka (Lochhart
A rea o fl Overland R d I
oYARO FO RERUN*
I f hr. Kaop area In running
ordorl Malnttnanc* 4 fork lift
• ip hotot. Full bonoflt* I
F R E E R BO ISTR ATIO N
AAA EM PLO YM EN T
f W W . M B t M . llM lf *
M A U T O AUCTIO N D R IV E R S
N I B D flD I M u tt hov* valid
Florid * drlvor* Ileant# and bo
a b to to d rtv o ilk k .
C all botwoon 1 1
S P R IN T STARRINO. MO M i l

73— E m ploy m tn t
W in tad
L IC E N S E D C A R B O IV B R . Cor*
given In your homo 14 year*

V I— A p a rt m a n ts /
M A T U B B F E M A L E Raommoto
P ra l SontorO U M /m o ptu* to
u tllllto t Reft 130 00JO
RO O M F O R R E N T . Fom ol*
prof. W ill there homo with
pool. SM/wk Coll m M M

For ImmodUto conddtroflon.
apply In porton to Bcb Town*.
C o n tro l Manager, of Scofty l.
TO* F ran ch Avo.. Sanlord
B O B .D ru g froow ortplaco
P A R T T IM B

A O U IET. C L E A N R M In San
lord Kllchan 4 phona ut*.
com laundry S7S4up W -ttSS
C L E A N ROOM S tingla dartin g
*3S/w k. K it c h e n , p h o n o ,
laun d ry, vldoe gam**, a lt
ttroot parking
P U R N RM. S3b wk . util In

P a n llm o B iportonco a m utt
Drug troo work ptac* Apply
In porton. **m Spm .Mon F rl
M N H w f lln
O tk o ry, PI

R M N U tt_______

P A R T T IM B

Bulldini MsinUiuitct Ptnoa
F lo ilb lo d a y h r* . No
wookond*. Per opt tittu p
'
tP A R T S RU N N ER *
Kaop track ol Invontory Train
to d a liro r part* to doro*
P R I B R BO IST R AT IO N
AAA E M P LO Y M E N T
tOOW .MtkSI. m - f lf *

RECEPTIONIST/
GENERAL OFTICE
Challenging potlllon In a buty.
non tm o k ln g ofllCO . 0 * t*
e n t r y o ip o r lo n c o a n d
oico llo nt phono otlquofto re­
quired. F lo ilb lllt y a m ult.
Start Im modlatolyl Apply to
porton Monday only: A F C O M ,
I f f Commorco Way, Sanlord

RESTAURANT MANAGER
ASST. MANAGER
E iportonc* roqulrod. Dogroo
aplu*.___________ a p f i c s n s i

RN
Naodod tor buty community
clinic. M u d b* a gradual* o l
on accredited RN program
and llcontod In Ih* tloto o l
F lorida. Sabm ll return* to
Tba Control Florid* Commantty Clinic. I4T1 S. P o rk Avo.,
Sanford, R LM 77I___________

SALES HEW CAREER 14
11,000 S3.000 wookly. M ako
Im m ediate Income. **rvlco
hundred* o l retail account*,
o i d l l n g m u tlc and vid eo
product*. W tokly ro o rd trt.
bonum*. C o ll 111 fSTM**
S B C U R IT Y O F F IC E R J o b '
training. A rm ad &amp; unarmed.
Bronlty 4 A u o c . M * « M
a S E M I D R IV E R *
*400 wkt- Local run In comtruck I Your o ie o r llM
K ny
hind Ih* who*I land* It.
R R B B R B O IST R AT IO N
A JU EM PLO YM EN T
T M W .lS tb SI. Stt-II?*

SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
10 Im m odUto opening* for
tip o rlo n co d Sowing M ach ln t
O p o rd o rt. sa 71 per hour p lot
Incentive*. Groat opportunity
with bonolll*. Day *hllf.
For Immadlato canddaratlon
apply to porton Monday. Juno
Mth, Lab* M ary Jab Sarvlco,
Laka M a ry Blvd. (Raltoclton*
Cantor) from tarn tp II noon
Or Contact T RANSW O RLD
S E R V IC E S OROUR*to-**75

TELEPHONE OPERATORS
Antworlng u r v lc o need*
plo with good phono ond
ing t k lll* . A ll t h ill*
wookond*. No Poo. C o ll
0*4* to d U c u u your tk lll*

pootyp­
and
•**-

TRUCK TIRE TECHNICIAN
E iportonc* naodod. Apply:
___________ m?f*o ___________

TYPESETTER
F u ll llm o opening In buty
Longwood p rin t thop. M ac
■xp. roq. Scanning, Adob*
photo »hop, Quark and other
program*. aPwpm. M f *0*1

t B E D R O O M . 1 bath, can! H /A,

1 B D R M D U P L E X . Carport,
kllchan appliance*, hook up*.
No p a ll
U3i
ua-7**&gt;

103— Houtaa
U n fu m ts h a d /R a n t

BATEMAN REALTY
1*M Sontord Avo . 1/1, S W

32147SV............ ...3212237

Sttnstrom Rtntib

C U T E B CO XY I Bdrm. Homo
Cant. H /A • Shodtd Lot U M
mo. t U M me dap
1/1 B D R M ■ Vary Largo Homo
Cant. H /A • Fan* • Shaded Lot
SUS/mo
Call to ri

W

jL

• H ID D E N V IL L A O B , Lk
M o ry. in condo, w/ k&gt;&lt;. CH A.
•II oppl*. U M / m o , *MS me.
• S A N F O R D l / l opt w / *cr
porch. Iptc S V V m o no d tp
• S A N F O R D 1/1.1, 1 K o r y
duptoi C H A U M /m o S*IB/MC
o S A N F O R D b Ito. V I S . dbl
gar ago. tp k . Ig yard, wall 4
M pN c. SBM/mo M M /m c.
• D E L T O N A 4 Ito. V I . w/dbl
garogo. Ig *cr. porch, fp k .
ctoan MJO/mo MOS/mc
• S A N F O R D V I Apt, ter. potto.
CH A. UOO/mo UOO/me
Roolfy. lac.

PROPERTIES

m * m , P ag u rM tO U*
D E L T O N A C L B A N . 1 bdrm. 1
bath. Ihr., lam ., par ago. qutot
Claoa to tchoatt. Loom option
ovoll. SUS/mo. M tM E T m tg
FO R L E A S E OR R B N T i V I
homo at T7II Sontord Avo.
d yoi
it. Cali
H IO O B N L A K E N k * 3 bdrm. 1
both. Ig tcroon perch, hood
lot Looto/Optten Owner ft
nanclng SOU mo Mb»M *

Ufco Horn* our ow n." J t n Dry to
rn-SOH A N o rtP M : M b lO M
1 B D R M Ito BATH . P riv ate on
•m oll toko. U M /m o I t l mo.
ondoocurlfy d ip id lt U - M I S

LocatedOnBeautiful
LakeMonroe...

V7— A p artm a n ts
Furnlsbad / Ran!

A ll rental and real tt la lo
advortltam anlt a r t lublact to
Iha Fadaral Fair Hom ing Act.
w h ich m a k it It Illeg al to
odvortlt* any protoronc*. Ilm
llo llo n o r d l ic r l m l n t ll o n
b a u d on roc*, color, religion.
m i . handicap, fa m ila l itatu*
allonal origin

■ F P I C I IN C Y . A ll utllltlo* paid
Stovo, r o lr lg . window unit
SMS/rna. Nom to. M b 104*
S M A L L 1 B D B M . Furn lih ad
apartmanl. Utlllttw* Included
CIo m In Sontord. STS wookly. I
i only MT O bbM T

W—Apartmants
pann

U n lu rn ishad /R a n t
B R ID O E W A T IR A P T S ■ San
ford/Lak* M ory Coll today
about our Jvno Spoctoll Only
a tow ton I DtborM i 131 »IQ*
C O N V E N IE N T T O downtown
Sontord. 1 bdrm. 1 both, qutot.
S*li/m onth_________**3 1 tn

I B D R M P ark Ava MaWto Park
Qutot araa. CIom to thop
p in g 'b u trouto. f * 13I-3MI

103— D uplexT r ip le x /R a n t

114— W arehouse
_____Space / R ant

L A K E M A R Y - claan 3 bdrm .
c e n tra l a ir , w a th a r/d ry a r
h o o k u p . N e a r ic h o e l* .
400/dlK O un tl Call now I
Iwvaatort Realty, n t U U
LA K E M A R Y D U P LE X , 1 BR. I
B A , tt a v a . r a f r l f . , A / C ,
w ath/dry hook up. big yard.
SJM/m a , MBO/dap m fU S
L A R G E m o d e r n 1/1, n a w
c a r pat, w aihar/dryar hook up
prlv./traa*. U M /m o . HI MIO
S A N F O R D 1 B D R M . I bam.
vary nice neighborhood, vory
clean. A v ail. Ju ly 1. MOM**
SA N P O R D : Good araa. clean 1
bdrm . A/C . pry. patio 4 yard.
P a ttO K . M M plu*.

L O N O W O O O /L A K E M A N Y .
M id t l i a p u b lic t lo r a g a
w artheum t. MO. MO. or IMO
tq It tpacat. Nice, meura.
• • i l ly a c c a u lb la location .
^ ro n W U ^ a jm a ^ jr a u ^ ^

117— C o m m e rc ia l
R entals
BEAUTY SAIOR
F u lly aqulppad. Vacant. For
L a a t a . Ilia P a r k O r lv a .
Form er Daaufy Boutique.

CP Baqtol Rataff*

1MOVE “YOU”
V'lN SPECIAL
...

A L L ! ,:

. APARTMENTS

1W/A IB MO. LBABB

F IL L -O U T A P P L IC A T IO N
B E F O R E J U N E 3 4 th .
C A N W A IT F O R M O V E -IN
T I L J U L Y 1 st
• I A 3 D cd fo o m t Available
• Slug)* S to ry d calgn • no one below or above
• E nergy • efficient tlu d lo a
• F rie n d ly O n S lle D ependable M anagem ent
• A llle Storage. Private P olio A more

SanfordCourtApartments
3301 Sanford Ave.. Sanford •323-3301
Hours Mon Sal 9 5 • Sun. 15

BRAND
NEW!
Town Centre ApaHments
•1 Bedroom....$ 3 9 9 mo.*
3 JB e d ro o m

aaaa

$ 5 4 8 mo.*

* May latna aubjoct to change

O N E

M O N T H

P R E -L E A S E

F R E E

S P E C IA L

•11.. St-U-i ••••i • &lt;. •
f, .'n k
»*
i •• 1
• b M U f lT M S » M l b L A U L L 1

• Sparkling Pool • Large Floor Plan*
• Eicrcltc Center • Energy Efficient
• W/D Connection*
nouns M F 0 S. S a t 0-8. S u n II S

$300 OFF Full Month's Rent
On Selected Gorgeous l &amp;2 Bedroom
Apartment Homes.
Amenities Include Washcrs/Druers In Every
Unit, Fireplaces, New Clubhouse v Fitness Center.

401W. Seminole Blvd.1 Sanford 3 2 2 -1 0 5 1

&amp;

6

***^

**?

l

A

■

2

2

- 8

6

9

6

PERFECTFORROOMMATES!f
2 BDRM.

^

I**}

1 Bdrm. and
3 Bdrm. Floor Plans Available I

S IO O O rn S T MONTH

S / l/ fO
■

3

Country Living
City Convenience
NEAR HWYS.
17*92 and 417

Beautiful 1, 2, &amp;. 3
Bedroom Apartment
Homes Available
M.

IP O W Ilu je T c ir c Ii» S a n f o r d

2 BATH

Phase II

NOTICE

107— M o b ile
H om es / R an t

• 2 B e d r o o m ....$ 4 7 7 mo.*

V3— Rooms for Rant

fu ll homo pry M l S i l l
IN P R I V A T E L O N O W O O O
ham* Steady employed only
M O/wk MO/oap
C o ll W It**
OOOM f o r M N T . Light kltch
on privilege* IN and lo ti
M ature adult prat a a SQM
1 A N FO K D Jlaaplmg room In
p rivate homo Hom o p r lv .
wothor/dryer. MS/wk 33* 14*4
I P R I V A T E IM S . a a tln kltcn
an. I 1/1 fcalh I h wk. SIM
dap
P ottO k
1J041U

fam ily rm . Only SMO down I
A im * bdrm, 1 bam available.
A tk about eur H U D home* I
Wiry ra n ff T H E H IL L IM A N
OROUR, INC. Realtor 331 *333

to a in u n

House fo Shara

PRODUCTION WORKERS
Largo graonhouM noodt par
ion* In our Shipping 4 P r o
d u e lio n D e p t* . E ip
P IE C E W O R K E R S tor Prod
Oopl 4 w ill tram P A C K E R S
lor Shipping Pollago Dept.
P L A N T P U L L B R p o tlllo n
a lio avail. Apply o l *770 W.
State Rood a* Sontord_______

H IO O B N L A K E V I L L A S . 1
bdrm . 1 bath ond unit. 1 cor
g a r o s * . F r o t h ly p a in te d ,
tpoclou*. SSM month. C o ll
C a r o ly n E v a n * , S tra tfo rd
P ro p irtto iW -M M o rlO b b lT S
H O M E IN T H E C O U N T R Y ,
near Ih* SI. John*. 1/3. w/fplc.
b ig k llc h o n . On s aero*.
Norm* O K. MOB mo. n * O t* l
L A K E M A R Y . V I . com er tot.
te r patio. C /H A . No pal*.
S47V mo., plu* dtp.
___________ 337 3JM__________
L A K B R R O N T co ttag e. 1/1.
C /H A , new ly rtnovatod, 1
aero*. Qutot edinty totting.
Dolton# oroo. U f ) m 30*3
R E N T W ITH OPTION Pln*cr*«l
V I pool homo, fenced. U3S mo
U t, tool, b me. m &lt; is «
SA N FO R D , 1 B D R M Ito B A T H ,
5*3S/mo plu* (NpOtll.
No pot* p i n e
IA N FOR 0. 1 bdrm. Ito bom
lokofront houm S*M/me

S A N F O R D . V I . loncod yard.
S C V m o .. work wim dap. So*
*1111 E lm Avo., Swtford
S A N F O R D • Why rani when you
con own mi* ippetout and
beautiful 1 bdrm homo with
don tar onty s i.* u down and
opproxlmototy S4*l* rnonm?
Colt tor dotalt*
Intoad Roolfy, Inc. Brokor
n&gt; 31U or 3T7 OU4

SAN FO R D . Near 14. 1 bdrm. I
bath. 117*/month rent %m
m curlty. C a ll i n C l* ________

WAREHOUSE PERSON

II you havo b u ild er tola*
oiporlonco. or aro currently
em ployed with a building mo
torlal* tu p p llo r. Scotty'* .
F lo r id * ’ * U r g e d b u ild in g
tuppty company ■m ay hov* a
bettor opportunity tor you I
Our foam ho* token a now
direction and wo’d like to talk
to you about our compotltlvo
wage*. o ico llo n t boratlft. ond
growfh Inconllvet

RELIEF COOK/DiETARY AIDE

105— D u plexT r ip le x /R a n t

S A N F O R D . 1 bdrm , 1 bom.
C /H A . te r porch. Ig yard.
CIom to ichoolt. w/d hook up
SM V m o . ♦ dtp. W M f lo r

W — A p a rtm a n ts
U n fu r n lth a d / R ant

71— H tlp W a n ftd

FIRE SAFETY INSPECTOR

103— Houses
U n fu rn is h e d /R a n t

_________ni-wb*________

O P P O R T U N IT Y

High School Diplom a or O BD.
and five (SI year* oiporlonco
In tiro In ip ecflen Hold or
In d u tfry . S P E C I A L R E
O U I R I M I N T S : Roooooo and
m a in ta in p v a lid R lo rld o
D riv e r'! Lkorwo R o q m i * ond
m o ln lo ln S tole o l F lo rid a
M u n k lp a l F ire Safety Inopoc
Hon Ce rtlfk o tla n and have Iha
knowtodgo. tk lllt ond o b lllly
of o F ire Im porter I 4 II a*
lin e d on National F ire P ro
•action A u o c la Mon Standard*
N o 1011 A io n M u d bo
roglttorod a t o F ire Im p act*
through S IC C I or poMot* the
ab ility to become *a ra g lt
farad w ith in a tim e fra m e
•pecIliad by fho Ptporfm onl
To apply,
apptkottanfo!

103— Housas
U n fu rn lth a d /R a n t

i B ed ro om
SEABREEZE

# m 0 .

B

a

p

R ID G E W A T E
a

r

t

m

e

n

t

R
s

• I y r . IdASfi

1/2 o r r DcposM-ONLY $1001
Mention This Ad ^ Pay No Application Teel

St. Croix Apartments
3 2 1 -7 3 0 3
On Lake Emma Rd. • Lake Mary
H o u i s i M - F , 9 - 6 1 S a t. 1 0 -S * S u n . C lo s e d

O pen: M o n . - Frl. 9-7
Sat. 9 - 6 , Sun. 11-4

COOL OFF11
On* Bodroom Aportmonl*
lif t DEAL
M ouw ood Apt*, ill-m t

J72-9104
500

_____ WHHCEEEDMII_____
E F F IC I E N C Y on Vltoklva R iver
at Kollo* Landing. A/C . No
polt. FroocanoouM.SlIO/m o.
___________113 **30__________
H IS T O R IC A L OOW NTOW N
S A N F O R D Very claan 1 bdrm.
I both. Kitchen, dining room,
appliance*. Fenced yard, good
neighbor*. 5*31/mo, SIM dtp.
H U D O K .___________ M b lS M
LAKE MONROE AREA,
carport L lawn. Garbage A
utllllto* Included........ M l 11*3

D is c o v e r
th e

E n c h a n tm

e n t . ..

MARINER'S VILLAGE
Lak* Ada I bdrm. SMO mo.
Ib d rm . U lO m o en d u p

★

3234470
MOVE IN SPECIAL ★

Convenient I and 1 bdrm opt*.
S3tt S3*t&lt; U t? dopooll. I year
loam. No pot*. M *7M *
P A R K A V I : 1 b d rm b Ig
tfflctoncy. lull kltchon*. romod*tod. A/C. Lot* o l tpoco.
on but lino Monthly SIM or
w otklyrato* avail. I l l *0*0
CP Roirtol R*«uIt*
R A R K S ID E APTS. 1 bdrm, I
both. W /D hook up*. S400
M O V E IN SP E C IA L. 13PM M
SAN FO R D . 1 Bdrm. UOO/mo.,
plu* M curlty. A ll u tllllto t paid
«»copl»toc._________ u t m i
SAN FO R D . 1 B D R M UOO/mo.
plutdopotll. No pot*
___________13311*3__________

1/2 MONTH FREEH
1 Bdrm./I Both I t b lt M
SHBNANPO AM APARTM EN TS
1 B D R M 1 BATH Apt CH 4A,
tlockobl* w ith e r and dryer,
o il kltchon appllancot. S*3S

m-iosi

1 a n d 2 Bedroom s
Starting at

$

M o. *
•With a 12 Month Leota

W e've
got it!
( j p a ) affordability!
(p/b) s p a c e l
(Jy c ) great location!

(p/d) fu n !
(p/e) a ll o f th e a b o v e !

• Lake Front • Sparkling Pool

1 Months Rent FREE

• Newly Renovated • Volleyball

Over A 12 Monlh Lease

Country Lake

C o e v illa

A PA RTM EN TS
2714 Ridgewood Ave., Sanford

330-5204

APARTMENTS
2 5 8 0 R id g e w o o d A v e . , S a n fo r d

330-1431

�I

ta n - Sanford Haraid, Sanford. Florida - Sunday. Juna 19, 1994

111—Appllancts
/ Furniture
It. I f fain rm, w/fpic, icr
BBBl.BMd*ch*oi. MK H J -tm

sarvic*. Taa many a ifra * ta
Hat. C lfy 4 county proaorty,
I n c lw fa t U r M w o rk sh o p ,
A w ning, Ir r lM lI o n sytfom ,
lighted baskstaoll court. A ll In
chain link tones tor pots 4
kids. C la st lo a ll ic h a a ls t-tl.

t u c c a t t lu l a s h lin g anchor
b u tirw ttot Good parking ard
llg h lln g . O ro a l v is ib ilit y .
AtklngS400/mo R l u U M r k

, pm oiidgo ciub . j
“ d im , J b a lh . l r d H o a r,
t i l l ™ Immod occ.M akoda
C o rpftaa l E ila t*
u s saoo

sanfo rd

Inland Roalty, Inc. fraAor
m -ltS S a rW -S S IS

STFMSTROM

J A A DISCOUNT S I D O IN O
• Quaan U R , F u ll StW, Twin
SIM. J M F ranch Ava. 31*4477
S a w in g m a c h ln s . C a b in s !
Modal. Only SSI OBO. Call

m-srn

O LAST O N IT B R ,' 14 I IS More.
B lm ln l w/traltor. Oroat cond.
very fa it.
im p
1114110
• S A IL for Su n flth sailboat.
Spaclal "S ta rt and tlrlp a a "
datlpn to t C o l l t a m i l
• I! F T w/ traitor, as H P M arc..
14 lb. (ro llin g m otor, llah
lln d sr, b lm ln l lop E a tro tl
SHOO firm ....................H I 4081
PISB4 S K t/F IS H BO AT. SB H F
M erc., w /lrslto r. Runs fr e s tl
t i noo P a rtia l llnanco S tS /IOS

M A P L E B E D R O O M SUIT, solid
wood. Bod. d rottor. m a llr a u /
boo spring* HOP 111 OS IS
• M IC R O W A V E O V E N Only
SMI F N o m t a ll » l 41*1 ter
d s ls lls _____________________
O P E N H O U I I I F u rn llu rs tor
solo • L iving room tot.
Ftoooo co ll 330 0414
R E F R I O S R A T O R . E ic o llo n l
c o n d it io n 1 M A N Y T O
CH OOSE FR O M I *100/41*
A F T . I I I ! W otMeg M ocM noi
Your tholco 111
3111111
R IF R IO
Konmoro. Hdo by
I Ida. It cu. H „ Vary good
cand Ouarantaad SHQiw m i
O TRASH CO M PACTO R.
S E A R S KENAAORC SIM

• ISBS R E O A L Madsllton. i f
IB'*, 4 cyl. In/oulbo*r motor
w/drlvo on traitor 14.MB OBO
SIB 4004 Or &gt;4*4101»VOt
• II F T O R A D V W H ITE . OM C,
Inboard/oulboard. U p strs
model
It .00 O BO
W 1 IS 4
• M F T PONTOON boat. A ll
llb a rg U M . 140 H P Iv ln ru d t.
Very f a tll M any aatrat. Ilk*
naw I Only t* .l to m 4*01

199— O tflc a S u p p lla s
/ E q u ip m e n t
P IL IN O C A B IN E T S . F a t
machine, captor, typewriter,
c h a in Call SM 1SSS

•6ARME 5AU A0 MRCAIN
Hal. W atch T V Show Channel
4. Su n . II A M I

t U t VOM dki ip llt bdrm
lim in g , la m lly rm s. a p p l.
Irardyaad Set!/mo its.SOS
I’ R f r O R I C L O S U R I I 1/J aplll
I l v . d m , aal in kltch loncod
w. gar ago SMS/mo SSS.SOO
( U S t O M built 1/1 tp lll. Ilv.
d i n , o a l In k llc h . a p p l,
g*'ago SSCI/mo u ; too

3 2 1 - 4 / U &lt;1

I

A L T A M O N I I 1 bdrm 1 both. Ig
lot on ( u ld o a o c . B ron lloy
v t r » i«
sat.ooo
» tm t

O C LTO M M CA lM CtU
Idaal far mablto ham a ar
ham * t lla . h a rta t. c a m * ,
farm ing, ar nurtary. lan a d
ag ricultu ral *3. *00 par acr*
S m a ll dawn paym ant with
pwwar financing S B A ltl i m

L a b o M a ry achasSal
a
Baautiful. ig. V t hardwood a
ttoara. new toaldt SI I M M
a
a
Sankard’ a boat d a a ll Largo a

a tn . poat.gaodaroaSIT.tOB a
a
a
a
a

Oov‘ 1 Down Payntont SM
Llm ltod C a ll T a M y l

S acrat, SS% ctoarad. 100* tq
f l piwt b am wtlh hydraw lk
IIN. Roe room, ihop and *1
Ilea, t w alls. Irrigation. 1
bdrm . I balh mablto wtlh now
total 11to and aaparata laundry
M uch much m oral Wan I last
at a s / .m rn 3314134. owner
W H O LE SAL I LAN D - Tlmbar
Company IHyuldallng lands,
tm all/larg a par c a ll (1$ *c to
HO a«.I Highland, craakt.
Lakat. w lldllfa M lnutot from
O r la n d a / D a y t a n a
P r lc a t
bag In at S47S/OC STL. P.O.
baa 7IS, Tray. ALM 0SI
(MS) SSB1BJB
S P L U S A C R E S Pavad road
fra n ta g * . n e a r St. J a h n s
R lvar. SSMSS St. John* Roalty
r.m a tn

BATEMAN REALTY
O N C A R S H O P P IN G COfllOf,
county, a/1. aplll plan. pool.
p lu tS o c ro t SHO OTO
o DOWNTOWN U n lo r d a unit
opartrnvnl houto Lot 100 ■

sutnoo

3214)759__

am

C A S S F L B I R R Y B e a u tifu l 1
bdrm I 1, both Now carpal,
point Shows llk t a modal I
.......... 4t0 MS*
SA4.000

HALL REA L I V
312 VV First Si S.111I011I

321-3200
LONOW OOD
_____ _
It I m 1 bdrm..

f argot___

1 bdrm, cvvftam batlt ham* an 1
acrast P rim * Iand I Stt.too
I bdrm . carnar lat. c/h/a.tow
dn and monthly I Only S41.S00
SI. ia h n 'i R lv ar a c c a t il 10
ntraa. I0K downl 471.000

323-5774
DELTO NA
) bdrm l i t balh.
la m lly rm .a a tra s l SSI.100
W M a lu ta w tk l. t n / M l
D E L IO N A , only Itoo down,
to o . mo Choova Irom 1 homaa
In tm 1amodalad by bulldar
Groat opportunity
M a tra Oraap 4447707

______ ____

L a r g o w a a d a d 1*1. L a k *
M a r y L a n g w a a d s c h o a ll.
I t 1,tOO C a ll I M # Sptvoy N r
appl. I vos. I l l 41*1

D O W N TOWN "H IS T O R IC
H O USE 1 llo r y , II rooms. S
1
» '/ o u o iis M M ________
O T H A M IT E 1 Bdrm Low Down
C a ll Diana a Th* Carman Oraap
______i t s aac 1 *r m u s e
OOOO A H E A I g Hoorn, 1 lot
F rath painl A carpal In/out.
m n ro r.t
SIS.000
171 4101

M A Y F A IR M IA O O W I •
A itv m a n* gasHTy. Lowatl
p rlc a d 1 bdrm . 1 bath In
tubdlvlttonl Groat rpam, aal
In kltchan. S74.S00 Call M ary
S ir oust E vat, 14411*

3222(11
1319993
193— L a w n A C a rd an
FO R SA LS WOOD M U LC H
Bring ih a v a ll I l f p k k up toad
Vau toad H I H 4!___________
L A N D S C A P IN O P LA N T S .
Laugwttrum and a lh a rt t 4 It
i#U. WbaHaato Prtcast
m eo n___________

199— M a c h in e ry /T o o I s
• W O O D JA W C L A M P S .
Craftsman, to Inch rapacity
wpod. M ild eak L IF E t i m e
O U A R A N T E E 4 only C a ll
140 to ll tor MS 1114/44

am
MOtIUHOMtC
t COMMUNITY
l u l l 1/1 M N aM llty Control
H /A U.S00
14*44 l/ 1 S t SI P la a tw o a d /
C la r e m o n t C a n lr a l H / A .
carport, ralaad tcraan rm
St. too
14*44 1/1 IS tk y lln a /Ja frl A ll
a l a c l r lc , c a n lr a l h a a l. 1
window A/C units SII.JQ0
1«US 1/1 to E l Champion/ fu n
v la w . C a n lr a l H / A ,
g a t / * l* « lr lc . tc ra a n a d rm

199— P tts A S u p p llts
A K C DOO SNOWS A ll bread,
and ebadtone* Canlral F lor
Ida Fairgrounds S I Juna 14,
IS. 14. Intar m4lton 411 144*
Padigraa- brand tood tor dogt
CH O W C H O W P U P P I E S . S
le m e le /1 m ale F ath er on
p ram lto t 33**Cv&gt;
F R E E TO OOOD H O M E . I
adorabto loving K IT T E N t
w k i old C all m IWI anytim e
F K B B to good homo, full chow
Pamato. black, spayed, a ll
shaft, heueabratan 110 tgag

ISIS# 1/1 to I I S k y lln a . A ll
atoctrlc. Canlral H /A. ralta d
serpan rm , ca r p an . S I M M

Cal 323(1(0 *1 3 1 37 93

M A R M A L A D E Tabby Famal*.
• ISO Cream P a rtla n M ala. SIOO
to wks. paper t/that H a t t o ll

140— B u i l r i f i i

____ For Solo

NANtMT C0NURES $125

S A N F O R D C O N S IO N M E N T
SM O F i E tla b llth a d . Ctoan.
Can x n r m w m w n . ... « s i* s

COULDN’T BELIEVE ITI

HOUSE SOLO IN
ONLY 3 DAYS!
0*4 Odall o l Th* McAdam a
Group krww tlw would hav*
tu c c a a i wi t h Ih* S t n lo r d
H araid C la ia llla d t. but th*
routon I bollav* bar luck whan
•l» hout* aold altar balng
a tlv a r llta d In Ih* S anlord
Har aid lor only ] dayt.

M AKE NO DELAYS!
ADVERTISING PA Y S!

137— M o b U f
Hom os /S o lo

L O N O W O O D • g r a s l roam ,
Hr*pla w . sacarlty tystom. I
bdrm. 1 balh - Largo tcroanad
parch alt dming and living
room Ntlghbarhood p o rt with
boat ramp and p icnic area
Only S IIA tM C a ll Elato Spivoy
lor appl Evas. SH A H S
W IN T E R P A R K • F a rm sr
modal homo I A ll vauttod and
a a la n d a d c a llin g s . S p ill
badroom plan. 1 bdrm. 1 balh.
b a a v rih i m a t tor tulto with
w alk m thwwar and gardan
tub IIL4.S0S Call Elsto Spivty.
a vat. ID A lts

Plac* a ad today tor thow
unnaadad Itam t and mak#

OSTEIN, MINI RANCH

a
a
a
a

I b ird s 4 cage. I l l fla g
• F I T T R A V E L o r train in g
cap* Heavy maided plastic
M edium to sm all sir* Vary
idea. MB. C a ll m 1444_______

111—Appliance*
/ Fumlturo

221-Oood Things a
to E i t
PROOUCE FOR SALE
S IL V E R Q U E E N CORN.
P E A S Call III IS41

‘ S A N F O R D H IS T O R IC DIS
T R IC T ■I ita ry , f earner M s.

sioo

caum-tito

HONDA CI VI C O X &gt; 7 1 ,S S M &lt; 4
door, e/c, new lire*. Good
(ondltionl to.WOSH l i l t
_
• L I B A R O N CanvirttBIs. 'to
Rod, loaded, dig. dash, naw
(op, tww tiros 14,100 4*17S0B
L I N C O L N T O W N C A R , 1*11.
M in t Condition. SSK, Landau
roof, w ire wheel cavers. S/.J00
M B R C U R V S A B L E W AOON 'S4
V d , meonrf, P W /P L . crulto.
Icy s lr . s o a t s / t l. S t o m t lB I
N I C E , C L E A N . d*p«ndabliT
cold A /C cars tor sals.
LOW doom paymontt and
LOW weakly paymants.
P U B S A U T O S A L E S SSMSto
S U P E R ■ ■ ■ T L E , 71. Naw In
tartar, naw paint Runs good
11.1/1 C a l i m MSB

TAKE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN
tacap t 1st, tag. till*, ate
O O O O I A N I I I • 1*11,
automatic, A /C . PS. F B . Hit.
AJM /FM Itoraa Only SU IT S
par manRt. C a ll M r. Fayna tar
flppphffTlihV.
Caartoay U*ad C art, SSS-IISS
W l O F F E R U S E D CAR S. Law
p rk a t. Law dawn paymants
Vau writ# your awn d ta l
C Lana Avtonaattvi Inc 1*11
S. Or land* Dr ISM 1S4BSS1
Canto to- L a fs tnabas d aall
a im
P O R S C H E . *11 Targa.
tow mltoag*. thow* Ilka naw.
SIS.0M
OBO
m &gt;114
• ' l l C H E V Y E l Cam too. no
ong or Iran* . A/C. F/S. F /E .
caw I head. IS grllto S4M
S401WI____________________
• 71 VW B E E T L E . I4M ong
Run* goad, took! goad, prlcad
goad With radio s noo m a i k l
II PO N T IA C T R A N S AAL Vary
ctoan and run t g ra n ll 4 tp d .
a /c s i o o o o B o m t m
• n B U IC K S K Y L A R K . 4 dr
Haw tlrat/w lras/plug* Run*
goad S H W O RO *B4 7t*4SM
• I I O LDS C U T L A S S
S U P R E M E . T Taps, naw paint
and tires. ISO. aicaltont can
n i cool
• '•* C H E V R O L E T C a p rlc a
C la t tlc . 4 dr , ru n t good,
loaded
*4 000 OBO end
‘ IS Chevrolet Betelr. 1 dr . runt
goad SPAM O B O P * SMI
‘ l&gt; DODO I Caravan auto . A/c.
a c y l Ctoan.run*•■caltonl
M lto n s la* * _____
• 71 F O R D B RO N CO II. rad.
4*4. VS. I tpd ovardrive. A/C.
F/S. P / i . A m /F m cataatta.
alum inum whaalt w ovartJiad
lira s Good candilton M u tt
to ll
| MOO
MS *417

235— T r u c k s /

239— T r u c k ! /

Butts /Vans

B u s t /V a n s,

• C H IV Y S B A U V IL L B V A N •
'I f , I tan, Fassangar van,
ctoan. Loaded I Taa much la
list, must m s to appreciate
Only &lt;1,4*1 O B O .........-H I 0700
B p O R D R A N O S R , L T X FI.
F /S . crulto. A /C . stsrsp. 4,100
mil**. I y r or 11.000 m l. left on
w arranty.
C a llO T i i n
a J E E P P IC K U P 4i4, |*7S. V I.
•uta. Engine and (rant, r*
b u ilt (about lo.ooo m ilt s )

• M B E O N C O ' l l . ' B ic s I U n f
condition I Low m lto tl Runs

H a w Inltrlor S1.00011I 700S

M IN I V s* Plym outh V aytgar.
•to. Oraat condition, low m lto
OBO 414 0*10

^=5 Sutfoid MotoXa.
I**0 C H E V R O L E T CIS P IC K
U P • 44.000 mlto*. V I. S tpaad
Ctoan a* a ptol SpactoMII.4*!

_____ csm noiti_ _ _ _ _

• ItM O AT SU N P IC K U P . 4*4
A/C. II.M O a rlto tl attar
_________C a ll 1114II*________
74 F O E O VAN. 4 cyl. aut* . tww
llr a i/ b o t t a r y . O ra a t w o rk
truck. SUB
OBO H I t i l l
41 O M C W O R K V A N . mM. SSK
m l. S ic ..c a n d . W lR ia itra s.
S U M S M C IS B s ltS a r wkands

jr a a t ^ jJ M ^ a U ^ ^ O l^
241— R s c r s B f io n s T - V s h lc ls s / C s m p s r s
• C H I V Y M alar Iwma. 7*.
Ctoan. runs graat F u ll bath,
A /C . Oanarstor. Naw awning.
Oood lira s .................. I l l 71*4
H ild a naw parantsl
OISB1 C O A C H M A N ALH. 14 ft .
U K ml. M any a itr a s l Incl
ganarslor. V ary aa*y la d riv a

sis,tog.... ........... m 4bss

a n w i R N ib A o o is tt. Now
angina A rad iato r
.44.000
111 ISIS a r m OIM
'4* F A C E A S R O W , to*. IK ml
an Chavy 414. Awning. A/C.
gan .v a c ., tw in bad*, dlnatte.
m kro/avan. fu ll bath, drivers
doer. 1 a s ty c h a in , tofs
&gt;leapt I
S11K
407 i n in s
'17 CHAJNPION La to ll*. C la n
A , Chavy 414, I T , 1 naw
M lcfw lln t, rear br, awning*.
1&gt;K ml. M IN T . M U M SIS 1 /7
• 7 1 A L IE O R O m alar ham* n
ft. awning, twin bads, ganar*
U r A fy .S P J I E O iO lllB m

SATISFACTION
BEGINS W IT H SAVIN GS

QuolityPn-OwmdMkM
Lowest Prices!
Short-Term Financing!
Low Down Payments!
No Auction Cars!

« r.?

m

JEFF &amp; KELLYS
FAMILY A U TO S , INC.
fO ! S French A v !

322-8600

SflnforcJ

Builder Closeout
IN P R IV A T E P O O L C O M M U N IT Y
308 and 310 Krider Rd. Sanford • Sanora Subdivision

223—MlsctilsnfOUS
• B A S E B A L L CAROS, appro.
IIUOCArdl '1/ '91 In Alburns
1100Cdll H4U9II
•

H R IR D R Y E R
Salon protatttonal. lo to t
1/1 F irm 111 4114
___
• W R O U O H T IR O N SW IN O
SET. appraiM d at S100 Ask
Ingt/S F irm
M l to ll

230—Antlquc/Classic
______Csrs__
P C A D IL L A C O E V IL L B . I t !f
A L L PO W ER I Only II*** or
botloH or Ptooto call IH 0SS4
• F O R O T H U N D E R B IR O . IM4.
A l l a r lB ln a ll N a a d t tom *
work
tl.4 * l OBO W I 0 IS4
• 1*40 FO RO Pick up. 1/1 ton.
restored IF/S L e tt ot o tlro
parts. A Beauty ta.eoo eio o«n
71 N O VA. Show Car. ISO cw. In .
J HAS L o ti o l chrome. M utt
tool L lk o n o w l MHO P S t i l l

• Three Bedroom. 2 Bath
Split Plan.
1600 Square Feet
• Vaulted Ceilings
• Spacious Master Suite
With Deluxe Bath

• S creened-In Patio
• T w o -ca r G arage
• Professional Landscaping
• W a lk in g D istance To Pool.
C lubhouse. Tennis tk
B asketcail C ourts

D W IC n O N S . LaJia M azy Bluet. M i l a o o t t 17-92. to Left o n Sanfunt A v e
1/2 m Uc to R ig h t o n SanotA Bfvtl , past p o o l A c lu W io u te lo left on k ik le t Ret

P A U L R. S C H W A B

231—Cart

Swaabsatd. O ttsan SM aach
___________H I 4114
_
P R O F E S S I O N A L DOO
T R A IN IN O Individual train
Ing. Oreup c la tta t forming
n*wl C s R M B S in ___________
I S IA M E S E K IT T E N S . I wks . I
male. I tomato. Uttar boa
trained SIS each U 4 IH1

i iv r y . w arranty, m a s s

Re a l

219— W antod to Buy
F IN E J E W E L R Y . Otamondt
R stoa’ t G old Tool*. TVt.
V C R i G all G uitars, cam arat
Storaot C am arat Anlipuat
O u lllt Old pockat and w rit!
w a lc h a t Iv o ry cut g lo t t
H u m m a lt S lat m a c h ln a t
Swordt. K n lva t Toy* W id e r
Tiffany Itamt O il paintings,
c la c k * B r a n ia t S ta r lin g
Itamt Oriental ru g t Inttant
Cash Broadaray Jewelry and
Pawn Oytoda Ft*la . 141*41*
V IN T A O I WRIST AND
P O C K E T W A T C H E S. Uoto*
L* Coultf# Movado Flap*I
C a r t la r
P a la k P h illip *
H am ilto n E lg in Longlnat
T llla n y an d C * l ll l n a lt .
V a c h a ra n A n y o ld m ean
phot* ar c hr anagraph w*l
chat Paying up to SSB.00B
inttant cash s a a a t t

* POT BELLY PIGS

Do you nood a quick ratpona*
on your homo lor u l a ! Call
Ih* U n lo rd Haraid Claaalftoda
and plac* yavr ad todayl

3222(11
131-9993

3222(11

IS N 'T THAT
WONDERFUL!
I . W . w a s a o a lr s m e ly
taltoltod custom*, wtwn th*
called to cancel her ad on
F rid a y marnlng Net only did
th e t a ll th* taw th* had
a d v e rtlta d in Ih* S ta fe rd
H araM claaalftod M ello n on
th# l i n t day har ad ran. but
•h* had a pockat fu ll ot a .l,#
ipandlng m o o t, tool

1SJ— A crooooL o ts/S o la

a
a
a
a
a

C a ll In your garapa M l* ad by
II noon on Tuesday and taka
a d v a n ta g e *1 our I p a d a l
garag* u to ad p r lc a ll Call
C lattlftod now tor d a la iltl

S U N L A N D -F O O L H O M E . &gt;4
ba Praam. 1 bath. S i l JOB
_________ m -m d in ________
s a il S U M M E R L IN S T R U T . 4
bdrm .. I bath, parap*. can lral
H /A . naw paint In 4 put,
financing. SIF.ISa D a rt
lE v e n t o g a n iM t l

ASSUME NO QUALIFIES!

VENTURE I PROPERTIES

• C H R Y S L E R I M P E R IA L '« .
L ik a naw. M u tt soil. Only
SnjO B. C a ll (40! I d - t o l l
DO D D E CO LT , IflS. 4 cylinder.
Runt but naadt carb rebuilt.

P R O F E S S IO N A L Valtoyball Hat
4 *cco ttar tot Naw In boa
Ortg em t SIM w ill to ll SSB
a o t - n t ii i s

t*o.tool s / j i LIV. dm. tarn rm*.
- at to k l l . security. total Ilia I
m t V CUSTO M ogaltt Oming.
l a m lly rm » . A p p llt n c o s ,
gar *0 0 . loncod y d 1*4. too
t o t h o m e i i / i . 1.000 so in
• lv . d in , f a m ily , g a m s
t oom i. Set p orch l SOB.SOO
l jndreapod 1/t, l / l acral Appl.
Uv. dto. tarn im t SA1S00
M IN K IN F A M IL Y RM . 4
n m m pool I lv , can. lam
rm* . * p p l. ter porch, socurl
ly i , darn and gar*0 *1 St.too
nHICK i l l s t ill. Ilv. din. lam .
nits, t o ty tlo m , te r porch.
' t«*d»d gai ago I saa.too

IIIIN I

OUR M O T H E R S C LO S E T hat
ratocatod to aot W. l i t It.
M - F iM .
Salt S’!.
1SBBSSS

IIS—Boifgand
AccBMorltg

117—Spoiling Poods

O S H

231—Cars

• lOVELYANTIQUESIMflt

in out

P A U L

209—Wtirlwg Apprtl

TAXE UP PAYMENTS
NO MONEY DOWN

CU STO M HOM ES

oacopl Isa. log. Illlo. ole
O E O M E T R O X F I l**0, A/C.
tlo ro o c s ito H o , o verdrive
Only II 1 M I par month. Call
M r. Payrw lor appointment.
Coartoty Utod C art, IIS I lls

699-0962 - Office
321-8631
- M odel
lk .« SG0O44I66

m yq ftrvq

U rttW U B lW

estate, w c .

I22‘74M

PENNY

S«E«L-LrI-N»G? S"A»V"E $ $ $
FULL MLS SERVICE O N LY
31/2% COMMISSION
1/2% IF OWNER FINDS BUYER
Penny Broken H u Sold Over 800 Homes
Sellers Have Saved Over 2 Million Dotlan in Real Estate Commiuions

Mo. P.I.
NO MONEY DOWN FOR QUALIFIED BUYERS*
MEDCO PAYS CLOSING COSTS
APPROXIMATELY $600-$800 TO MOVE IN
A.P.R. 8.75% FIXED FOR 30 YEARS
40 COLOR AND OPTION CHOICES!

STELTEN KAM P R EA LTY
205 N. Palmetto Ave. (Next lo Post Office) • Sanford

.♦ O jJ

-i 1 j

H A M I / f lU f )
im r r o u ic u is t u i c t • s 2§,»oo
Cuie 3/1. O ic il Speculative Value. The
M all It criming. Soup you wonT bo able lo afford

'l l .

B E S T S C H O O L S . ( S I ,M O

$

Sophisticated 2/2 Condo. Lo w ell price fgr arcs,
all sppllincos Including Washei/Dryer
U )t - ■.!.

6

2

, 9

9

0

. 0

0

, n c l l uo ? , n o

* s la te S .H .I.P. program

•CONCRETE BLOCK W/STUCC0 • FULL CARPET • TILE TUB ENCLOSURE
- LOT CHOICE • CENTRAL A/C HEAT • WASHER DRYER HOOKUPS • HOT WATER HEATER

L A K E lV O O D A T C K O S S IN G 8 . $111,000
llv ti Lake Mary schools. Magnificent 3/2
____ Ilm d w iK H J floor*, Totally New Inaldel
M i

CEa H

m m

' CATHEDRAL CEIUNQS • ENCLOSED SINGLE GARAGE • SEVERAL SUBDIVISIONS AVAILABLE

9 4 9 ,M 0

2 Bdrm/2 balh V illa w/Osrage,
New Roof. New Painl, sic. Sellar Motivated

C A L L FOR M ORE DETAILS 4 0 7 - 3 2 8 - 8 2 7 1

330-3230

3

M ED CO D E V E L O P M E N T

CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS^.
»T &gt;

S -E -L -L -l-N -G I C A L L TO D A Y! $ $

;^

•

• •

'

v f

:

�W fl« *rV

*iwe«M Ah?^

I!
i

3*

M trik l Photo by Apryl KtnJtlofl

Halan Stair* and Patt Shafar In front of th* Rltz Thaatra, which la alatad for ranovatlon. Story Pag* 2.
••v

t

�a - Sanford HsraM - Sunday, Junt 10, 1904

Kheat

Main Street now
starting to show!

puttin’ on the
• y K A Y BARTHOLOMEW

Spsclal to the Hsrsld
SANFORD ‘ Bring­
ing back the Rita" —
Project HOST (Helping
our Banrord Theatre) re­
c e iv e d a trem en d ou s
boost this week when
David Pearl man. owner
o f the movie theatre, do­
nated the land and build­
ing to the R ltt Communi­
ty Theatre (RCT) Project,
a n ew ly form ed non­
profit group determined
to restore and develop a
cultural arts progam to
parallel Main Street's eff o r t to r e v i t a l i z e
downtown Sanford.
Helen Stain, economic
d e v e l o p m e n t
chairwoman lor Sanford
Main Street, along with
Patt Shafer, chairwoman
for the new RCT. Initi­
ated this, the last o f
numerous drives to re­
s t o r e th e b a d ly d e ­
teriorating theatre, said,
"Mr. Pearlman's gener­
ous act Is the last vital

piece In our fln t big step
toward our goal."
"W e were under the
burden o f a June 15
deadline to apply for a
shite Special C a tegories
Grant o f $106,400 for
Phase I o f the project that
addresses the desperate

■ y R A F BARTHOLOMEW
Special loth# Hsrsld

Cover
Story
need to repair the exteri­
or, especially the roof.
There actually are holes
In the celling where one
could actually sec the
sky."
She Indicated that the
assessed value will con­
tribute to a portion o f the
co n firm ed , lo c a l cost
share necessary to apply
for this type of grant,
together with other Inklnd donations.
Phase It will deal with
restoration o f the Interior
which has been severely
damaged by water, par­

for the
ticu larly in in e siage
area. E qu ip m en t and
o t h e r a c c o u tr e m e n ts
necessary for support of

E S P E C I A L lA 0 e n ijy » S

« r v n C l I f e(lturin8

Jam es Q u in n , M .D .

vK l D ® y Cookie
V
Clow n
FA C E

Is pleased to announce his association with

H arvey S ch efsky, M .D .

SCO O P O F

p a in t in g

Family P ractice

B A U O O N
.A N I M A L S

Dr. Schefsky is a board certified family practice
physician with over 20 years In practice.

KID'S NITE at Danny'*
y TH U RSD AY NITE'S
I
6 -S P .M .
V
If '■

N o w a c c e p tin g p a tie n ts .
O ffic e h o u rs a r e by a p p o in tm e n t.

Muubtacvomfmni^bfMpmrrnJ

*i

Vj

Denny’s, 17-92 • Sanford
Good st This Location
Only.
N o t G ood w /sny othor discount.

y *

activities associated with
a performing theatre will
be addressed In Phase 111
ss well ss other areas
vital to developing a cul­
tural arts program.
“ Our mission for RCT
Is to provide a home for
cultural arts as part of
the Main Street vision to
r e v i t a l i s e d o w n to w n
Sanford." said Shafer.
"Sim ply put. she con□ B e e R lts, Page 0

SANFO RD "T h e
community should now
begin to really nee what a
difference a Main Street
p rogram can m a k e ."
Chris Crania*. Sanford
Main Street president,
said os he ticked off their
accomplishments since
receiving the official des­
ignation ns a Mnln Street
City — one o f only 35 in
Florida and one of over
400 In the nation.
"O n c e we a ch ieved
that recogn itio n last
August and hired a pro­
gram m a n a ger, we
lieahed out plans already
In progress and acceler­
a te d o u r e ffo r t s r e ­
vitalizing Sanford," he
continued. "Actually, our
board acts as a facilitator,
tapping into the energy
and know-how of those In
the community. And I
wont to emphasize that
our results will be in­
cremental — we can’t do
everything we want to do
overnight. DeLand has
taken 10 years. And we
arc only In our formative
p h a s e , la y in g th e
groundwork and building
relationships." he added.
“ W e hove formed a
board of directors from
major segments of the

com m u n ity and havl
now established an ndvf
sory board with a wldl
spectrum o f expertise
and Influence, We hav&lt;
set up four major com]
mlttee* — Economic
velopm ent. Promotion^
Design and Outreach
which have written busl-!
ness plans, set goals for]
*94 and ‘95 with action?
p la n a to m eet th ose]
commitments."
In Ihc area of economic 1
development, headed by
Helen Stairs, we luivr
complied u building and
property owners' Inven­
to r y . are c r e a tin g a
baseline photographic
r e c o r d o f h is to r ic
dowplown, decreased the
downtown vacancy rate
from 48 percent to 23
percent, created 11 new
jo b s , In c r e a s e d the
num ber o f downtown
businesses, prompted the
expansion o f two existing
b u s in e s s e s ," C ran lss
continued.
"O ne project that will
have an Important Im­
pact on all concerned, is
the market analysis that
w ill be com pleted In
July. This will osslM In
business recruitm ent,
balancing the mix of re­
tail. service and pro­
fe s s io n a l bu sinesses.
See Main, Page 0

2 2 0 9 S o u th F re n c h A v e n u e
S a n f o r d , F lo rid a 3 2 7 7 1
(407) 3 2 1 - 4 2 3 0

�fclM fy, Juft# 19, I X

’ ill*,*

\ \c \ r r s

In i i u l r t b i u l !
: " • H i l l I \ •&gt;) M U t s n j S
t&lt; c
c\

ilm
I

It' l l

ci

tm

the

1C - M l ‘ \ C I S

1 I W i n &gt;|n|i t t in

Y
I

1 ^upVl

^

1

l

•100 posters to b e g iv e n a w a y startin g at noon.
Full color p oster m easures 22"x28". O n e p er fam ily.
• Free postcards all d a y lo n gl

Show Car Schedule

2 ? ~ 'A f .

�4 -

NEED A NEW ROOF?

GET A
FR EE IN F O R M A T IO N K IT
Before you contract to put a new roof on your home,
there are several things you should know....

—

1. D ea l o n ly w ith a licen sed , insured, exp erien ced ro o fin g
contractor.
2. C h eck out the ro o fer you d e cid e to use w ith you r local
B elter B usiness Bureau, D epartm ent o f P rofession al R e g u ­
lation , and trade organ iza tion .
3. M a k e sure yo u r ro o fe r used o n ly qu a lity m aterials ~
think about it, you 're g o in g to all the trouble to contract w ith
the righ t ro o fe r, the least you should d o is m ake sure that he
uses the best qu ality sh in gle you r budget allow s...an d u
qu a lity sh in gle is o n ly pennies m ore. N o t m uch w h en you
think that the sh in gles w e sell are w arranted b y the m anu­
factu rer fo r 20 years o r m orc...som c fo r us lo n g as 30 years.
4. Sunniland C orp o ra tio n has been servin g the p eo p le o f
Floridu sin ce 1884, and w e arc ro o fin g specialists, stock in g
o n ly qu a lity sh in gles and tiles.

S e n d f o r a fr e e k it
w ith I m p o r ta n t in f o r m a tio n
o n s u c h th in g s a s :
How the home owner can be liable If an unlicensed,
uninsured worker Is Injured at the site.
How to avoid property liens if your roofer does not pay
his bill.
How to get the best value for your roofing dollar.
Why now Is probably the best time to re-roof your
home.
C a ll F o r Y o u r F R E E R o o f in g
I n f o r m a t io n P a c k a g e

1-800-432-1130
or
C L IP A N D M A IL
CO UPO N BELO W

rFREE INFORMATIONf!
Fill out and mall to: Roofing Information Package
Sunniland Corporation,
P.O. Box 8001 • Sanford, FL 32772

Name
Address
CUy____
Phone(

State
)

Zip

Samuil Warrtn displays rsllcs

Belly gunner recalls
drama of war, D-Day
■ y SUSAN WINNER

Hafald Correspondent
SANFORD — Although some may
set* the old Jacket of Samuel Warren as
an anllquc* war relic It held a special
significance to him.
Warren was a belly gunner In World
War II, and makes his homr Sanford.
Wurren and his wife, Frances, have
been married for 45 years and all but
two of those years have been spent In
this area. They have two children.
Elizabeth and Mel, and two grand­
children.
“ I flew 31 combat missions from
Norwich. England and two of those
missions were on D-Day." he said.
“ We bombed the Normandy coast. I
was In the 8 th Air Force and the 2nd
A ir Division. I was a belly gunner In u
B-24 bomber."
Warren spoke about what the Job of
the belly gunner was and why he was
chosen for the Job.
" I enlisted In November 1042,” he
said. " I went through gunner training
In Florida and A&amp;E (Aircraft and
Engine) training In California. 1 then
went to Salt Lake and then Boise,
Idaho where our group was formed.
W e then went lo Nevada for final night
training and getting familiar with the
B-24 bomber."
A belly gunner hangs underneath
the bottom o f the airplane.
“ You get In on lop. You sit in the ball
turret. It's Just aluminum and flex(glass. When you get In the ball turret
mere are two 50 caliber machine guns,
beside each leg, for you to fire, f was
the smallest on the crew and that's
why I wus put In the ball turret. I was 5
ft. 11 and 135 pounds," Warren said.
Arrival date for Warren was Feb. 27.
1944 to Horsham St. Faith. He did not
leave until Sept. 10,1944.
“ It was a great thing Ihat the 10

original men In our group came
home." hr said. "There war one tall
gunnrr whose nerves snapped an the
12 th mission so we had to get another
loll gunner. My group was assigned i&lt;&gt;
I lie 752nd Bomb Squadron of the 4T&gt;H
Bomb Group In the 8 th Air Force.
W e've even hud a couple of reunions.
It's good to sec them old foglrs."
Warren remembered a lime when
they were coming back from a mission
and (bey were In the middle ol three
groups of bombers.
"W e ulmost hit another B-24." he
said. "W e took a dive lo keep from
having a collision."
He also spoke of one house at the
end of the runway that he can always
remember.
"There was a house right across the
street." he said. "It wus a two-story
house. It alwuys amazed me that we
never hit that house. Every time we
took out In that direction we'd go rlghl
over It. I think about the bombs going
oIT too.. There were times when we'd
huve to toke off even when there were
crashed planes ahead o f us."
One thing Warren did speak of. In
relief, was that he was glad the war
was over with and said he wouldn't
want to go through It nguln.
"It dues make you feel good lo know
you were a part o f history." he said. "I
am Just thankful I wasn't shot up or
lost a leg or anything."
He said he felt- It wus a good
experience for him and he thought
young boys today need the training.
"It would make a man out of them."
Warren was discharged In October of
1945 us a staff sergeant. He received
un Air Medal with 3 clusters and
European Theater of Operations rib­
bon with three battle stars on It. He
still has a picture of Ills commanding
officer presenting him with the Distin­
guished Flying Cross.

�After a year of concentrated effort by local leaders,
including city and county representatives, last August
Sanford wassclected a Main Street City, one of only 35 in
Florida and one of over 400 in the nation.
WHAT DOES THAT MEAN TO YOU? A great deal!
With access to resources at both the state and national
level, the Main Street program can and is bringing about
dramatic, positive change in downtown and throughout
the entire community through economic development
within the context of historic preservation.

Accomplishments To Date
• Creak'd a Hoard of Directors from major segments
of thecomrminity. Recently established an Advisory
Hoard comprised of civic and community leaders,
corporate officers and business owners
•Opened a WELCOME CENTER and set up a Main
Street office
• Hired a Program Manager who is presenting
lectures and slide shows on Main Street to local civic
and religious organizations
• Compiled a building and property owners' in­
ventory for the Main Street program area. Creating
a baseline photographic record of historic downtown
• Initiated a market analysis which will be used for
business recruitment and retention. This study, due
out in July, will be made available to business, city
and county
• Created eleven new jobs while increasing the

number of downtown businesses
• Decreased downtown vacancy rate from 48% to

22%
• Prompted the expansion of two existing busi­
nesses
• Conducted a window workshop for merchants
•Created a facade improvement grant pool for local
merchants providing up to $750 each, towards aw­
ning and canopies
• Currently researching possibilities of bringing
outlet stores into the downtown area
• ’ Established a Crime Prevention Through Envi­
ronmental Design (CPTED) Committee to work
closely with the Sanford Police Department and the
Seminole County Sheriffs Office to provide busi­
ness with practical tips to prevent crime and form
personal safety habits

SPONSOR
□ F ou n d a tion S pon sor $1000 □ G o ld S p on sor $500
□ S ilv e r S p on sor $250
B u s in e s s a n d P r o p e r t y O w n e r s
□ L a rg e Business (11 o r m o re e m p lo y e e s ) $250
□ M e d iu m Business (4 to 10) $125
□ Sm all Business (1 to 3) $75
□ A ssocia tes $100 □ F a m ily $35 Q In d iv id u a l $25

• Developed committee business plans for this year
and for 1995
• Established Main Street as the umbrella organiza­
tion for festivals in the downtown area while acquir­
ing liability insurance for special events
• Producing a monthly calendar of events designed
to help the community toplan and to market Sanford
throughout Central Florida
• Raised over $22,000 in membership dues for the
'93-'94 fiscal year, and currently conducting the '94'95 drive with an on-going phone blitz
—
• Staged the "Family Fun in the Park" fund-raiser
both last and this year, netting $13,000
• National Main Street representatives conducted
workshop here for interested participants from all
over the state

MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE
NAM E
ADDRESS
C IT Y , S T A T E , Z I P _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
1can volunteer
Hours per month to help revitalize downtown Sanford
Plane Mail To; Sanford Main Street • 101 W. First Street, Suite D • Sanford, Florida 32771

�• - Sanford Herald - Sunday, June IB, 18W - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, June 7-A IBM - 8inlord, FI

Ritz------Continued from Pe|e 2
tlnurd. "our vision Is lo
have the Kltz n multi­
purpose theatre. Ycl our
program Is quite corn*
prrbcnslve and as nur
itoard devrlops, 1 am sure
they will envision other
uses us we fulfill the
cultural needs of the
community."
Plans Include
Youth al risk. an on­
going series of produc­
tions utilizing urea young
people In stage and crew
positions
Nccltula: the musical
community cun use tinHltz for recltuls and
chamber work
Dartre programs: local
dance troupes can use
the stage for productions
C/aaecs In acllnfi and
production: To enhance
the skill sets of commit-

Ttfi tilt tin ltd oh
H i) j i r l j h i

m f t

Main
Continued from Page 3
and. o f course, business
retention."
A lthough sanctioned
b y

M S .

H e l e n

h a s

s|tcarhcudrd ihc drive lo

i

h i t *,V i

*

f t

urqulrc and restore Ihc
Kltz Theatre, setting up a
separate non-profit group
lo tnrcl this goal. In a
similar cITort. Helen and
Kay llurtholumew are
vigorously pursuing the

acquisition of Ihc Wclaka
Hulldlng.
Crunlas pointed out
Unit the work of thr
Design Commlltrr is one
Ihul will lie seen more
vividly downtown. They

Bobby Bruton, Shorty Smith and Bill Wdbotn uc on hind to ktvc you and your family.

-

Now Is The Time To
Plan F o r Tomorrow
While no one likes lo think about his or
her own Mortality, the fact Is, one day
your loved ones may be at a loss lo
deal with all the final details.
Thai is why pre-planning and pre­
financing your funeral now can help
lighten the load • both emotionally and
financially • on your family later.
It's also the I k s I way la help Insure that
your service Is performed In strict
accordance with your own wishes.

3 2 2 -2 1 3 1

BRISSON FUNERAL HOME
905 L A U R E L A V E ., SAN FO R D
A m em ber o f the C urcy Hand Funeral H om e T ra d ilion * Esh 1890

have set up a pool of
$5,000 part ol the
Initial MS $10,000 grant,
lor fucudr Improvements
and will match up lo
$730 for new. or repair of
aw nings or canopies,
"You will lie seeing much
more of this committee
In (he future. Laura
Straehla, chairperson,
has great Ulcus."
"Under the banner ol
Promotion, chaired by
Kay Bartholomew, we
have created a logo, and
llu- new brochure will lxoff the press ncxl week.
Monthly, ihc rommillcc
produces n Community
C alendar designed to
help merchants and or­
ganizations plan their n&lt;
tlvltlcs." heudded.
"They huve conducted
u window workshop for
merchants, staged thr
" L ig h t Up S a n fo rd ."
launched u new retail
event — "Palm the Town
Green" — In March and
w i l l a n n o u n c e n ew
e v e n t s s h o r t ly . T h e
billboard at the 1-03 — 1-4
ramp In Daytona Beach,
provided by 3M at no
cost throughout the city,
was designed by this
group.
T o help Improve Ihc
Image of downtown, they
have formed a "Crime
Prevention Through En­
v ir o n m e n t a l D e s ig n
Committee (Cl’TED) lo
help businesses prevent
crime and form personal
safety habits. They have
a lr e a d y p r o d u c e d u
practical lip sheet on
these matters. This Is
certainly one o f the most
Important projects wc
h a ve u n d e r ta k e n ,"
Cranlus emphasized.
"T o do all o f this, wc
raised over $22,000 last
year under the leadership
o f Lee Moore In mem­
berships and arc In our

nlty jmrt Id pants
Cinema: historical and
themed series films prese n te d with guest
lecturers
"Our Immediate goals
were, of course, to obtain
the building, apply for
the grunt, while setting
up nn In c o r p o r a t e d
non-profit organization
and siarl organizing a
Itoard." Stairs remarked.
’ •W r have a e •
compllshrd those items.
We ure optimism-, and
now moving on to other
arenas to obtain funding
fo r r e n o v a t i o n a n d
o p e r a t in g e x p e n s e s ,
overseeing the actual
w ork, e s ta b lis h in g a
corps of volunteers, and
eventually, paid stair for
the Hltz. establish a
schedule of events for
fond raising and set |Millcy lor se lec tio n am i

second drive, conducting
a phone blitz to lop Ibai
amount. We huve Juki
completed our srrond
"Family Fun Day" fund
raiser featuring Disney
characters, which along
with last year's event,
netted over 813.000. Wr
have formed an Out reach
com m lltrr lo work In
Ibis arena as wc sirugglc
to back our projects with
the necessary funds." hr
added.
Wc arc very conscious
of building bridges lo
organizations, lor Main
Street will affect not just
downtown. Iml all ol thr
com m u nity. We deflmil ls' keep quultly ol llhlll mind. thus, we are
building lor (lie future,
working with young peo­
ple We continue to In­
volve ut-rlsk students
from Seminole Cummuntiy College in downtown
activities and work with
the sliudow program at
Sanford Middle School.
The promotion commit­
tee participates In the
intern program at the
U n iversity o f Central
Florida, as well as Semi­
nole Community College.
In the full, wc will help
establish u volunteer
club ut Seminole High lo
help them fam iliarize
themselves with business
practices and teach them
pride In Ihc community,
while helping with Ihe
developm en t o f their
town.
Our m anager. Faye
Fulton, who keeps us on
truck has been speaking
lo c iv ic and ch u rch
groups, p resen tin g a
s lid e sh ow , v ls u u lly
portraying whai wc are
about. Wc welcome any
who arc Interested In
working with us and will
quickly find a place for

p r o d u c tio n o f plays,
m u s ic a l pro d uv •
tlons/vldeo a rts." she
cntlllnued.
Shafer, a former Imard
m e m b e r o I Lo &lt; b
Huvrn-Kdlth Bush Tin­
nier. has a background In
c o m m u n i I y I hen Ire.
su m m er s t ne k a nd
children's repertory Her
personal vision Is to hr
Ing a vlial cullur.il hi-url
lo thr iK-opIr ill Semlnolr
Counly.
R em in iscin g. Shufrr
said, "M y Inlroduriion to
Ihe theater occurred in
h igh sch ool where a
stron g drama teaclu-r
brought musicals and
enlertalnmrnt lo a small
q u lr l c e n tra l Florida
town. Th ai cncotinirr
changed my life. 1 wind
our youth lo experience
ihul same sense ol ,u
r See Hits, Page 7

th em on m ir o f our
committees.
W e I n t e r fa c e w lili
many task forces, orga­
nizations and cominuin
ty coin millers. Fm m
stance, wc are drepU
Involved wlili ihe ally's
Waterfront Development
task fnrrr. helping with
the signage program lor
the wuierfnmi. the lu-&lt;
Inrfc eommrrelal and res
Idential districts FavrFulton, mtr manager, is
assisting In the rcscaich
and development ol •&gt;
Community Redevelop
m e tit A g e n c y It'll A I
which would lurid l.irgi
liekrl Items for silt’ll im
proveiticnls us lighting
Tor Ihe dowiilowu area
As you can sec. wc
serve us a catalyst and
arc most eager lo work
with and support olher
organizations, such as
Ihe cham ber. Sanford
Historic Trust and Ihe
S an ford Historic
D ow ntow n Waterfront
Association, which have
Ihc same general golds
we have.
A perfect example Is
Ihc recent Preservation
Week wltcn our Promo­
tion Comm 11tec worked
closely with Ihe Sanford
Museum, the Sanford
Historic Trust and Ihc
Higgins House, Sanford's
bed and breakfast, to
mount a whole scries of
activities during the an­
nual event. Wc fielded
t h e

p r i n t i n g

a n d

advertising costs. Also,
wc Initiated the forming
o f un expanded commit­
tee lo Include most o f the
h istorical groups
throughout the county to
plan and execute next
year’s week long celebra­
tion nfourhcrltngc.

�Sanford Herald - Sunday, June 19, 1994 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, June 23, 1994 - Sanford, FL - T

Greek
ftMIIILIV K. BAKIN
Herald Correspondent
SANFORD Ncllhrr
nor ihe Inconve­
nience of parking In a
dirferriil parking lot due
lo the massive ronslna ­
tion cfTorts nl Seminole
C o m m u n ity C o lle g e ,
prevented the Greek Ex­
tra vaguruu s|innsnrrd by
Ihe Sanford Alumnne
Chapffcr of Delta Sigma
Tliefn Sorority. Inc. from
o c c u r r in g . H o w e v e r ,
C h a irw om a n Sharron
Riggins decided that "the
show would continue."
Every other year when
Greek Extravaganza Is
presented, members of
Ihe Sanford committee
are pleasantly surprised
uud entertained by Ihe
y ou th of S e m i n o l e
County. This year was no
exception. On May 28. on
slage In Ihe Fine Arts
Auditorium on SCC's
campus. Grerk Extravag a n i a began with
beautiful prcludlnl music
provided by Soror Evelyn
Clark on the pluno. I’rc•schoolers from Mrrthlc's
Duy Cure continued the
opening ceremony with
p a t r io t ic s o n g s , the
r o ln

Ritz------Continued from Page 0
compllshmeul."
She concluded by ap­
pealing for support and
encouragement to return
the Itlt/ Theatre to Its
original slate.
"W e urc keeping our
fingers crossed on the
outcome of tills grant,"
Stairs noted. However,
even If we arc turned
down we plan to go for It.
We arc confident we can
ultimately lie successful
for this Is somewhat a
symbol for the city of
Sanford since II has been
altcmpted so many times
In the past."
Stuirs continued, "T h e
vision o f the restored
Ihenter has 'been a driv­
ing force behind our ef­
forts for Ihe Rllz. Our
mnyor. being uble to de­
dicate the theutre on
opening night — lights,
cumern and nclir n! The
dream Is real and with
the support of all, we can
make It hnppcn.
e d ito r'i Not*: Kay D irtholom aw l i
tha chairwom an of tha Promotion
C o m m ltla a to r S a n fo rd M a in
Strati.

Pledge ol Allegiance lo
Ihe American Flag, and
the Lord's Prayer. The
audience always looks
f o r w a r d to t h e i r
purtlelpntlon.
Ill Ihe segment entitled
"Spiritual M ovem ent."
th e S e m i n o l e H i g h
School Gns|&gt;cl Choir re­
ceived a standing ovation
for their renditions of two
popular gos|»el songs.
Creative dances were
gracefully performed by
Rush In Shrrman. Alicia
Wells and Iasi year's
iinbbcrwnck contestant,
Cecily Hose Lewis, who
performed an orlglnul
creative dance to Ihe
music of "Is My Living In
V a in ." D ancing with
Cecily were hrr friends
a nd c l a s s m a l e s at
T it s k a w 1 11 a M I d &lt;11e
School, Tla lloonc and
Tunya Lcwin. ( ’ rooms
High S ch ool's Drama
Troup also presented an
exciting dance routine.
Another show stopper
was an "Expression In
S o n g s " perform ed by
T u v y , T o r i. T e sh a ,
Jom eka. A drlenc and
Kallshla. Seventh grader
Jeffrey Fulnc's version of
"Songbird" by Kenny 0.

on hln saxophone was
also well received.
Dramatic presentations
Included a selection by
T a m l y u l ia s k e r v lllc Johnson and the poem
"M ountain M over" by
Lee Norris Hayam
former Orlando commu­
nity activist and poet
who wns recently killed
by rubtrers In Jamaica,
was dramatically recited
by Cecily R. Lewis.
T c m e l l a R o b in s o n .
Miss J a b h e r w o c k .
1993-94, was presented
to the a u d ien c e and
given a bouquet of roses
by Soror lilanche Holden,
assistant principal at
H am ilton E lrm e n la ry
School. Tam elln Inter
joined other members of
Ihe Deltecns. an organi­
zation sponsored by the
Sanford Alumnae Chap­
ter of DST Sorority. Inc..
In a f a s h i o n s h o w
featuring popular youth
attire.
A major part nr Greek
Exlravagauza this year
was devoted to the pres­
entation of DST's 1994
scholarship recipients.
T ills year's first place
r e c i p i e n t Is A m e l i a
Smith, a graduating se-

Photo by S to war I B*k»r

Tha Crooms School of Cholca Drama Troupa haata up tha ataga.
nlnr at Lake Mary High
School, who plans to
c o n t i n u e h e r punt secondary education at a
local college or university
and pursue a major In
prc-mcdlclne. Her career
goal Is lo one day become
a pediatrician. She vol­
u n te e rs at Ih e lo c a l

YWCA. Her parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Smith. .
A graduating senior at
Seminole High School,
second place scholarship
recipient Vcrnltu Carter,
plans to attend Florida
S tate U n iv e rs ity and
major In accounting. She

Is an active member In
th e F ut ur e B u sin ess
Leaders of America Club,
Mrs. Nancy L. Newmnn Is
her mother.
The third place recipi­
ent surprised the Extrav­
aganza Com m ittee by
playing a beautiful piano
□ S e t Qraak, Page 11

WILLIE B. NEWMAN, M.D.
In The Practice Of

Obstetrics, Gynecology and Infertility
BOARD CERTIFIED
S O M E S A M E D A Y A P P O IN T M E N T S

Obstetrical Care Office Surgery
Routine Well Woman Care
Contraception
Sterilization
Routine and Complicated
Gynecologic Care
Infertility Evaluation
Patient Education Resource Center

Amniocentesis
Cryosurgery
Fine Needle Aspiration
Hysteroscopy
LE EP
Norplant
Office Laser
Office Ultrasound
By our patient's request and
F o r your convenience D r. Newman offers
most H M O 's and PPO 's
A C C E P T IN G N E W P A T IE N T S

U.S. —
SAVINGS

BONDS

THE GREAT AMERICAN
.
INVESTMENT

521 W. SR 434
Suite 200
Longwood
(407) 260-0818

1403 Medical Plaza Dr.
Suite 214
Sanford
(407) 324-2500
I• i t t t i i M l

�■

.

■ - Sanford Hamid - Sunday, Juna IB, 1BB4 - Herald Advarllaor - Thursday, June 23, IBM - Sanford. FI

700 Sun Drli&gt;«
Ufcc Maty. H ot Id* 32740

E m m a n u e l A s s e m b ly o f G o d
320 Commercial Si., Sanford
Across from Sanford Civic Center

Cross Lutheran Church
Ilf L a U N in

Pastors

Sm kcsi too a

iojo

»

M ).

uo

Plione

^

v »«u , • sis v-u*, k w

Sanford Harald - Sunday, June IB, 1BB4 - Harald Advartlaar - Thursday, Juna 23, 1BB4 - Sanford, FI - B

Pastor John Paslny
Sunday School
9:30 AM
Sunday Morning Worship
10:30 AM
Sunday Evening Worship
6:00 PM
Wednesday Night Bible Study 7:00 PM

The Following Churches
Invite Youjto Attend
Your Chosen House
of Worship

321-1215

c«a Am toutft amt reUowtftlp AtUaMItal

T h e L a k e M a r y C h u rc h w ith
a C h a r is m a tic D is tin c tiv e

6 9 9 -6 4 1 1

LONGWOOD CHURCH OF TOE NAZARENE
Pastor Al Green

a dynamic new church invito
you In wurahip with oilier
warm, caring Chritllant
at
Lake Mary Communily Ccnict
260 N. Country Ctuh Kn.nl
Lake M.try, l;L

One-Payment Debt Consolidation
Credit Report Review
No-Waiting - Call For Appointment

450 Seminola Blvd.
Casselberry

Welcome to the

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
CHURCH, UCC

A NON-PROFIT MINISTRY
"FREE TO THE PUBLIC-

S u n d a y W o r s h ip - 10 (Hi
L a k e M a r y I '.lc m c n lu iy .S ch o o l
L a k e M a r y t t lv d . 4k C o u n t r y C l u li Mil

10:00 am Service

___________ 323-8900

Rev. Art Arvay, Pulor

▼

WIlDNIiSDAY
WoeUtip Service
SU NDAY
Sunday School
Mmmjna Wufdilp
Oi.lilrrn”* O iu ri*
Youth
I’ vcnin* Wwitilp

323-3119

■Y o u ftM n b ^

‘ SmalGroups

’CortefpporarySfyte
,p°“ * T“ h*
■Friendy FeOwshp

S U N D A Y W O R S H IP
1 0 :3 0 a.m .
S U N D A Y E V E N I N G W O R S H I P 6 :0 0 p.m .

For Further Information:

Cal 324-5433 For Information

Where Visitors are always Welcome

Home of the
Koalaty Kare
Learning Center

PASTOR RON WILLIAMS

&gt;00 a Oak Ava.
Sanford
Ph. 407-322-3795

VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME

Sunday School.......9:45 AM
Mom. Service. . . . 11:00 AM
Evening Service. . . . 6:00 PM
Wed. Bible Study. . . 7:30 PM

8ATURDAY 5 PM MASS
SUNDAY

.d W c w ik '

7:45 AM, 9AM (Spanish), 10:30AM, 12 NOON MASS

38)
.

t*

„

323-7737 or 327-0387

Sunday School 9:45 AM
Worship
11:00 AM
Sept.-June Btta Study Tuee. 10:00 AM

2626 Palmetto Ave.
Sanford, a 32773

ALL SOULS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH

4 0 7 -3 2 4 -4 3 3 8
4 0 7 -3 2 3 -5 8 3 0
4 0 7 -6 6 8 -1 7 4 9

U:MI AM
1(141 AM
10 41 AM
S.MIPM
araiPM

BAPTIST CHURCH

L ... J*n«RCo&lt;-SenkxPastor

FIRST(DISCIPLES
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
OP CHRIST)
Whara friendship it not compaUion; openneaa, not
scheming it the quality that allows everyone to count*
We invite you to worship with us every Sunday)

7 (Ml P M

Palmetto Avenue

300lavModLakaUaryRead*LakaUjry.Fl32M6

407-322-9222

“A Friendly Church For Friendly People’4

200 WAYMAN ST. • LONC.WOOD

• • a -v r

1 0 1 8 N. H W Y . 17-92
(1 M ile N orth O f H w y. 4 3 4 )

*rw /Ji??*, *. * .• W,

Sunday School
,
9:30 am
Sunday Worship Service
10:30 am
Wednesday Service
7:00pm
Communily Prayer Services
Every Friday
7:30pm
Youth Every Friday 7:30-9:00 pm

1007 Sanford Ava.

831-8558

C a r f&gt; H » i» H l y Q .iw u t

L0NGW00D CHURCH OF CHRIST

.vY/HSJ ■jWJnTrJ ' ’

1770 W. Airport Blvd. • Sanford, FL 32771

Pastor Jeff Krall

N U R S E R Y P R O V ID E D

CHRISTIAN CREDIT
1COUNSELORS, INC.

Family Worship Center

* C lU lO v

PrtsdMol thra I2dl Cro4«
N o v U n U t jlo r d K

1994-91 School fur

3 2 3 -1 5 8 3

Rav. Ed
Johnson,
Pastor

Christ United Methodist Church
Ilc v . L a rry A r in b n w t
Sunday School • 9:30 am
Intermission and Refreshment* • 10:30 am
Sunday Worship • 11:00 am
Wednesday Adult Bihle Study - 7:00 pm

Summer Vacation Bihle School
July I I • 1 5 9 am -1 2 noon

408 Tucker Drive
(Corner of Tucker Dr. &amp; CR 427)

322-7900

Nursery Provided

(Jpsah Communily Presbyterian Church
101 O p te la

Rd.. Sa n fo rd

3 3 0 -2 6 3 5

S u n d a y S a r v lc a a
Sunday School
0 .0 0 A M
W o r s h ip
1 0 :0 0 A M
Y o u th C h o ir
4 :3 0 P M
P ra la e W o r s h ip
6: I S P M
Y o u t h M e e tin g
6: I S P M
U lb le S t u d y
Tuee.
I O :O O A M
H o u r of P raye r
W ed.
7 :3 0 P M
F e llo w s h ip S u p p e r
2nd W ed.
6 :3 0 P M

A F rie n d ly W e lc o m e T o E v c ry o n c l

STARLIGHT BAPTIST CHURCH

HA BIG CHURCH WITH A COUNTRY CHURCH ATMOSPHERE"
Located in the beautiful Ranchlands o f Winter Springs
J tk
One o f Florida's Fastest Growing Churches!
STARLIGHT

A.____

Exciting ministries for everyone
• Soulwinning Organizations
• Two Different Singles / College &amp; Career Classes
• The Awesome Starlight Youth Ministries
• Bus Ministry Reaching Many Young Kinds in Seminole County
• The Sweothoart Couplos Class
BAPTIST CHURCH
• Children’s Churches
V
.......
• Puppet and Skit Ministry
*To give light to them that til in iluri/iets...'
• Men’s Hunting and Archery Club
(Luke 1:7V)
• Children’s Activity Groups
OR QIENN C. RlQQS • PASTOR
• Starlight Christian Academy K-12
SCH ED ULE OF SERVICES
• Starlight Knights Association (Student Preacher Training)
9:30 AM
Biblo Study
•
Old Fashioned, Spirit Filled, Spiritual Proachlng!
Morning Worship 10:30 AM
•
A
Warm, Friendly Atmosphero Where People
6:30 PM
Evoning Worship
Know
Your Namo
7:30 PM
Thurs. Evening
• INDEPENDENT. FUNDAMENTAL BAPTIST
100 East Bahama Road • Winter 8prtngs, Florida 32708 » (407) 696-8110

�10 - Sanford Harak) - Sunday, Junt 10, 1004 - Harald Advertiser - Thuraday, Juna 23, 1004 - Sanford, FL

‘Karate Cop’ has the
formula for success

h pw

nww Vf ¥

Ktnny Kaiser delivers • prsetlce kick to Master Lsngaton Mtncfoo.

With personalized care from our staff of professionals

SANFORD - Kenneth
(Kenny) Kaiser, at times
referred to as thr "Kuratc
Cop." la a true believer In
the variou s form s o f
m a r t i a l a r t s as t h r
f o r m u l a t hut w o r k s
within many aspects of
his life.
"T h e re really Is no
better way that I know of
that ran combine dis­
cipline with one's mind
and body as well ns
spiritual enhancement."
said Kaiser.
Kaiser hus Increasingly
become so devoted to thr
sport that karate has
become hln second ca­
reer. Hln first career Is
with the Sanford Police
D e p a r t m e n t as a n
elght-and-a-half year vet­
eran |M&gt;llce ofRcer. Five of
those yearn he spent
working with the Semi­
nole County S W A T
Team.
As Kaiser explains hln
achievements In martial
arts. It lakes him back to
hla youth.
"W hen I wus about 12
or 13-years-old my dnd

brought a pair of boxing
gloves home for me. "H e
look me to the park one
day and told me to
challenge anyone to a
fig h t"
Kaiser did as he was
told, lie lost most of his
"challenged park" fights
In the beginning. But. he
soon came to reulUe that
Ids father's plan wus only
to trorh him how to
defend himself.
" A f t e r a l l . " says
Kaiser, "w r lived In the
Bronx and II was best lo
learn early how to take
care of yourself."
Kaiser continued with
Ills a m a t e u r b o x i n g
throughout Ills youth, lie
enlisted In thr armed
forces and stayed active
with (Mixing to thr point
of hemming the IUHI
Golden Gloves' champi­
on. Aftrr his discharge In
1084. Kaiser hung the
gloves up for a few years
as fathrrluMMl became his
priority. But It was just
the beginning for Kaiser
as he now hud eight
years of boxing experi­
ence behind him along
with his first champion­
ship boxing win.

THE
GATEWAY
TO
SANFORD'S
ONLY .
' FULL 1
SERVICE
SALON

HEY SANFORD
MORE THAN 100 HAPPY HOMES
KNOW ABOUT OUR SERVICE

HOW ABOUT YOU?
I H L L ULCMN INC
UcsnMd, Bondtd, Iruurtd

Summer Cleaning
SPECTACULAR
Locally Owned and Operated Since 1956

Gram how Funeral Home
800 East Airport Boulovard • Sanford, Florida • 322-32IS

•

Do It N o w ! H urry!
WE DO WINDOWS

321-7699

Kaiser moved on In hln
life to heroine u Sanford
rollre officer In I OHO. It
was through his Job that
he m ine to know Master
I.angaton M r n r f r r .
Menefrr Is a 14-year vet­
eran with the Seminole
County Sheriffs Office as
a correctional officer.
"I'v e known Kaiser for
about seven years, lie
was renlly shocked when
hr first met me as he'd
heard alMiut me on lhr
streets, and to see how
small I was hullt. really
surprised him. I'm S ft. 8
In. tall and go rigid ill
lo o pounds."
Mrnrfer taught classes
In martial arts and told
Kaiser that " If he Joined
my rlasses. I promised to
make him a stale point
fighting chaipplon." lie
started the elasses In
1t*HH and he becam e
stair champion In point
karate under the FAME
Circuit (Florida Amateur
Marllul Arts Enterprise)
for 1080-00.
Kaiser's love and re­
spect for the martial nrls
has g r o w n und has
b ecom e g r e a te r wi t h
each year that he con­
tinues with Ills training.
"W hen I first met him
he was very c o c k y ."
Menefce said. "N ow hr
has evolved Into a less T
centered Individual."
Kidser currently holds
the title for Florida State
Amat e ur L i g ht we i g h t
C h am p ion u n der the
KICK (Kurutc Interna­
tional Council of Kick
Boxing) Federation.
There arc sevcrul styles
and variations when It
comes to murtlal arts us
well u* different titles for
the Instructors. For In­
stance. Kyoshl. before
the name of Lungston
M enefce. means
"Muster" or "Sixth De­
gree flluck licit" In Japa­
nese. There are also dif­
ferent federations thut
one can compete In for
different titles und styles.
One style that Kaiser hus
perfected, and Kyoshl
Menefce over the yeurs
hus very proudly created.
Is culled "H lto Sclshln
Justu Ryu." This Is u
c o m b i n a t i o n o f six
various styles and tech­
niques of karate, such us
Shotokan. Tae Kwon Do.
K endo. Ai ki do, Al kl
Justu and Kick Boxing.
K a is e r has b een a
champion many times
over under the guidance
o f Kyoshl Mencfee.
K aiser said he holds

USee Kick, Page 11
*• • ♦•

••

•.

�t

Sanford

Herald -

Sunday, June 19, 1994 - Herald Advert Iter - Thurediy, June 23, 1994 - Sanford, FL * 11

reek
ittnued from P i| « 7
| lo. S h e I k G il tin
irnrcx. a graduating sc»r at I-nkc Howell High
|hool, who plans to
rod the University of
Ural Florida and mu­
lti business innmigesnt. She prescnlly does
Junicer tutoring.
] S o r n r M a r i a n An[e r s o ti ■C u m ni I n g s ,
inlntnnt principal ut
tin Iwile High School,
rsenled each recipient
i bouquet of roses and a
rrtlitcatr for uradntele
leellenee after each had
le r n I n t r o d u c e d by
fhnlurshlp Committee
H ialrm an Shi r l e y K.
laker.
The Sanford Alumnae
Chapter of Della Sigma
rheta Sorority. Inc. la
proud of these young
rumen w ho liuvc nil
jmulnlalned a GI’ A of 3.0
lor higher and the Semijnolc County community.
I T h e f unds fo r th ese
|scholarships are uequlred
[through the generous
support and contribu|lions of Seminole County
f ci t i zens In our fu n d­
raising drives eueh year.

Kick
I Continued from Page 10
Mender In Hit- highest
esteem.
As M c n efee s la te d .
“ Kai ser has g r o w n
deeper Into ihc martial
arts. Ills role and purposr
lu Hlr has become much
clearer."
With his career as a
[toller ofllcrr. Kaiser feels
wllhoul a doubt that lie
lias made an Impression
on the young people that
he encounters. When It
comes to himself. Jobwise. there Is no doubt
that his training not only
keeps him In top physical
condition, it also lends
Itself to learning how to
relieve different levels of
stress that might conic
with the Job.
With the level o f pro­
fessionalism Kaiser has
reached and maintained
over the past six years,
he also sees the great
rew ard s th rou gh the
lessons he teaches to
many o f our young peo­
ple. He has n training
room In his home and felt
that along with the phys­
ical training, he needed
to stress the Importance
tlml goes hand and hand
when learning murtial
arts, of discipline.
Kaiser Is marcicu and
also gives his wife, Vi­
vian. karate lessons. "He
trains me In Ihc art o f self
defense." said Vivian. As

PSa*» S r Sl*w»rt Bkkbr

Scholarship recipients Amelia Smith,
tram right, Vernlta Carter and Gllda
Alvarez accept bouquets of roses Irom

Ill, Siinfurd lh mhl
lu llin ' I III wot III lo
your (/oursh /i...
•Unirtt*!
• N«aMuK1olcra&gt;aM*l Non

&lt;Spoil

• W t.ik tr

• town to tlw ti&gt;ur
•Cbonk fit*
-Cook*

Photo by Stowof t Rot or

•CU«lTMA4i
• Lm &lt;I A4nrU&gt;Uf

C ecily Rose Lewis roclles 'The M ountain M over' by
Leo Norris Rayam.
Another exciting and
entertaining ('.reek Kxt rnvagunz a was coneluded with remarks and

an e m e r g e n c y room
nurse. Vivian llnds ilitre
are many times dial the
walk lo her car after her
slilh has ended can he
quite frightening.
"You Ju s t never know
these days." she said
Vivian doesn't hesitate
for a seend when It
comes to explaining how
she f e e l s ab ou t her
hustiand and Ills karate.
"It's great being mar­
ried to a champion.” said
Vivian "I'm really very
proud of him." Vivian
goes on to explain Just
how much time Is re­
quired to keep up with
his training. This lype of
grueling schedule docs
keep Kaiser away from
his family quite often.
"However, when I go to
a meet or a competition
with him and I sec Just
how well he does, makes
up for nil of those hours
that he wasn't home."
said Vivian.
Kaiser Is also the father
o f two sons. Nicholas,
who Is eight years old
and
currently lives in
G e r m a n y w it h his
mother.
“ W h e n he r e t ur ns
slate-side. I will continue
with his lessons." said
Kaiser. His second son,
Urandoti. Is nine months
old and Kaiser will start
him with karate lessons
around the age of three
or four.

• S*n4i, llrilik &gt;'Motwl

MwolMSiolatH

a c k n o lw c d g m e n ti by
V ice -P res id e n t Syl vi a
Stallworth. Nora Holt Is
president.

why

«o

out

or

' Spoilt Sntint

00 tiw u/Ci . niy U m t*
To Xubttrib* Call Jwioj *

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

t o w n ? shop local

COM PUTER CENTER
OF S A N F O llI)

the 8anford Alumnae Chapter ol Delta
Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

Our 1994 closedl
sales are up 55%
over 1993. We're
listing property and we're
selling it! For results,
call us TODAY!
Thanks to all our Lake
Mary and Sanford friends.
D a n iel &amp; W o h lw e n d e r R e a lty , In c.
L a k e M a ry C e n tre
^
3 7 3 3 L a k e E m m a R d.
L a k e M a ry • 4 0 7 * 3 3 3 - 8 0 8 8

CONTACT LENS PACKAGE
SPECIAL

100 West first Street, Suite 71"

Sanford, Florida 32771
Sales (407) 322-5346

k£ri"9

cA* •»

COMPLETE
LIMITED OFFER

9 « Pfl.

f % o f f nag pu rth ssv.
T &amp; fu tO t &amp;

H f t y U ld t

Includes: I pair daily wear soft contact lenses •pram,
3 months of follow up care * Starter Kit
*41 Oilmen « ocuU Kttnct vcruKilbc

. Dr. Pamela Hetple. O.D.. Certified Optomtrist

PearleI/bunCenier
m

Sanford
SCMINOit CtNTM (near Wal-Mart)
Monday * Friday 0 am • 6 pm
Saturday 10 am • 3 pm

r s

r a „ s

LX.
17-92 next to Wal-Mart
322-6117

BOOKS
H a lf Price &amp; Less!
C D -R o m

CD-Rom
Games

me* BOOKS ON TAPE FOR RENTI

�Advertiser - Thursday, June 23, 1M4 - Sanlord, FL

is budding singer
Herald Correspondent
SANFORD Kaylle
Lytle, 17. of Sanford Is
w e l l on h e r w a y to
adorning the cover of a
iopular LP album
eaturlng her renditions
o f pop, rnythm and blues
and alternative music.
F o r th e p a s t s ix
months she has been
working diligently with a
well-known producer In
putting together a reper­
toire o f possibly eight to
nine pieces of which all
c o u l d be p o t e n t i a l
musical hits.
T h e work has been
tedious and hard. Many
times she has hod to go
the studio on a mo­
ment's notice to wait her
turn w hile others are
using the equipm ent.
S h e r e m e m b e r s one
night being there until
a f t e r mi d n i g h t on u
Sunday with a school
day fast approaching on
Monday morning. It hns
taken plenty of patience
for her to go through tills
process.
H er ex p e rie n c e has
given her a chance to
visualise the future and
see a place for herself

f

we do rare!

We'll Help You Feel Good!
Our facility is a place that feels
like home • safe, secure and
always brimming with activity.

&amp;

•24 Hour Modlcal Caro
• Paraonallzod Attention
• Canorous Visiting Hours
• Family Involvement
Encouraged
•Planned Activities
Whsthsr you invito th# grsndUds over
lor an aftsrnoon, or an old buddy stops (
by to say *hi*, things ars always vary
hospitable whan you Hvs with utl
You'll loti right at homo in our boautiM y docoralod rooms, and In our
comfortable lounges, dining room and
gams room. There's something lor
everyone horal

•We O ffer
Restorative Versing
Respite Care
O ut 'Patient 'iHerapies

If you're not ready to give up doing
things and enjoying Me, but staying
home presents a problem, you ought to
consider making our home your home!

A
V

m

J -------------------------------

h f l l Ma v e n
H EALTH C A R E C E N T E R
9S0 Msllonvllle Ava. •Sanford * (407) 322-8560

along with such greats as
Oliva Newton-John and
Barbara Streisand. Of
course these are only
dreams, but she says you
never know what the
future will bring. Her
p a ren ts. B renda and
Charlie Lytle, admit the
remnants of immaturity
in the teen are disap­
pearing as Kaylle con­
tinues to work out her
dream.
Kayllc's renditions of
"One More Night" and
" W ill You Be M ine?"
offers gentle romantic
listening along the lines
of Olivia Newton-John. "I
Can See It In Your Eyes"
Is a simple love song (hut
displays her ability to
ma k e dr a s t i c tonal
changes and to soothe a
listener's feeling lo the

point of relaxation. One
of the highlights o f her
brief career hns been a
special Invitation she re­
ceived recently. She at­
tended a reception put on
by a producer she had
met while working on her
tape. The party Included
names from some of the
big record com panies
such as Motown. Klpp-lt
and Epic Records. It gave
her a chance to extend
th e c h a r m s h e has
nurtured and developed
for many years. This was
one big step In gaining
recognition that she will
need when It com es
down In getting her work
recorded and marketed
In the highly competitive
f i el d o f mus i c a l r e ­
cording.
The Lake Mary High

School senior has worked
on the e d g e s o f her
dreams for several years.
Her past credits Include
wi nni ng local beauty
competitions and danc­
ing. One beauty pageant
this |&gt;aal summer lea to a
chance for her to partici­
pate In national competi­
ti on aboard the S.S.
Norway with many
well-known celebrities.
T h e Hawa i i an T rop ic
event wns film ed and
later presented on na­
tional TV. There were
many scenes In which
she appeared as one of
the contestants.
Knyllc's parents anil
friends are proud of the
trrn who hus set such
lofty goals and strives
enrh day to accomplish
them.

Local sailors may back
USS Saratoga as museum
By NICK PFIIPAUP
Herald Staff Writer
SANFORD — Civic leaders In Jack­
sonville have thrown their support Into
turning the USS Saratoga Into u
museum when the aircraft carrier Is
decommissioned this full. There may
also be support to retain the ship from
the Sanford area.
Although numes of local citizens
who may have served on the Surutoga
during Its many years o f service arc
not available, the ship was active In
the most recent conflict known as
Desert Storm or the Persian Gulf War.
During thut time, u Desert Storm
support group organized In Sanford.
Parents and/or spouses o f u number of
Saratoga personnel were Involved In
the organization.
Relatives of Robert N. Cooper and
Nicholas Focdcrcr. engineers on the
Saratoga, as well as Scott Wolff, with
the operations division, were Included
In the membership of the Sanford
support group.
when the war had ended the Desert
Storm Victory Parade was held In
Sanford on June 15. 1001. Local pride
In the Saratoga was displayed with a
special float In the parade dedicated to
the Saratoga and Its personnel.
In addition, many local servicemen
were assigned to temporary duty on
the ship during that same time period.
None of the servicemen could be
contacted for opinions, but Navy
personnel are known to give endless
support to the protection and pre­
servation o f their former ships.
In Jacksonville meanwhile, City
Council President Don Davis and that
c it y 's T r a n s p o r ta tio n A ut ho r i t y
Chairman Charles Sawyer were ap­
pointed chairmen of the effort to head
a foundation to manage the project.
" I feel like the Navy would rather
save the Sara and keep it here than
take It to Philadelphia and scrap It,"
Davis said Tuesday.
A feasibility study Is under way to
determine If there would be enough
local visitors and tourists to make Inc

f '- :

ship srll-nupporllng.
Officials estimate the Surutoga would
need 300.000 to 330.000 visitors u
year to puy for malntulnlng It us u
museum.
Next month, foundation supporters
hope to begin u drive to raise $4.5
million to |&gt;uy for museum start-up
costs.
Fund ruining will depend heavily on
contributions from private citizens,
but business nnd government figures
also said they would help with the
museum project.
"The city and the ehumber are going
to support tills ull the w ay." Jackson­
ville Chumbcr of Commerce President
Jim Klnamun said.
The Saratoga, which will be de­
commissioned In August, has been
stationed at Muyport Nuvnl Station for
Its entire 38-year career. It Is nearing
the end of Its finnl six-month deploy­
ment.
The foundation will usk (he Nuvy to
donutc the carrier and would manage
It us a tourist attraction. Museum
supporters have debated a number of
sites for the museum and are now
focusing on the Southbank Rlverwalk
a r e a, a l t h o u g h D a v i s s a id th e
Northbank Rlverwalk also Is a possibil­
ity.
Others backing the project arc
Andrew Cheney, president o f Barnett
Bank of Jacksonville, retired Rear
Adm. Joseph Coleman, and Elaine
Brown, a convention planner and
Downtown Development Authority
member.
The Saratoga hus had a colorful
history since Its arrival In Mayport on
Aug. 27, 1956. Including action off
Vietnam and In the Persian Gulf.
During the Persian Oulf War In
1991. a Saratoga FA-18 pilot Lt. Cmdr.
Scott Spelchcr became the first Ameri­
can lost In the wnr when his plane was
hit by a surface to air missile over Iraq.
Information from Iho Astoclotod P r o t i It
conUlnod In this rtport.

�fVfc;V i*!

r&amp;i&amp;SSk?

‘ vlw ® yS|feki?t' f

Ssnlord Htrald - Sunday, Juris 19, 1994 - Harald Advertiser - Thursday, Juna 23, 1994 - Sanford, FL - 1S

Restored rectory a touch of heaven
■y SUSAN WBNNBH
Horald Correspondent
SANFOIH) Father
Trout graciously gave u
grand lour o f the newly
rem odeled and much
Improved rectory at All
Souls Catholic Church In
lhe historic district of
Sanford. The restorations
gave an old while ele*
pliant a whole new look.
Father Trout and his
decora l i nk t aste of
bri ght. c o n te m p o ra ry
style nave Just the Hair
needed to mold this love­
ly historic home Into u
masterpiece. “ It wus very
important to me to make
Ihe place ligh ter." lie
said. "Most o f the priests'
houses are Institutional. I
wauled It more homey.
It's u little more contem­
porary. I wanted a bright
and po s i t i v e l o o k i ng
place for parlies anti
socials."
He spoke about the
history o f the house.
“ Ii was built In 1809,"
In' said. "It was called
Ilie Chase Mansion. In
April of 1954 Ihe Chase
lamlly sold It and other
property to the Catholic
Church. We needed the
space to build a school
and expand. The last
pastor moved Inio an
apartment."
Father Trout fell ihe
need to restore the recto­
ry not only to save the
church money on rental
(or the priests' apart­
ment, but be wanted a
place where people could
come and feel at home
and he used for the
ministry.
"It had been ncglrrlcd
for such a long tim e," he
said. "It had an almost
h a u n t i n g w a y . Pa s t
priests felt It was somewhat s p o o k y and

gloom y."
In an cfTort to conserve
as much as they could,
they began the endeavor
o f restoration.
"It was presented to
the church and they were
very receptive," he said.
" W e w o r k e d out a
pay-as-you-go plan. Much
o f th e f a mi l y room ,
windows and shcetrock
was donated. We didn’t
wnste anything."
He spoke about the
wood on the porch that
needed to be totally re­
placed. yet Ihe wood In­
side Ihe house wus re­
stored. All new electric
was installed as well as
rolling fans and extra
Insulation lo conserve
energy. Hruullful bright
l i g h t i n g now hangs
w here Ihe once dark
rooms were.
" A first class security
system Is now In the
house." he said. "Many
of the priests were a hit
worried al&gt;out ihe hick of
security."
Fresh paint was added
to all the walls and some
walls were even rlpjied
out for more spare or
added privacy. Ceilings
were also lowered to help
wllh energy costs.
"W e had three open
houses before we begun
Ihe work," he said. "W e
hud one open house
w h e n the wor k wus
hal f way Mulshed and
another when the work
was complete."
The elevator that the
Chase family purchased
wus still operating and
avai l abl e. T h e house
o r i g i n a l l y had ei ght
bedrooms hut the new
plan has five Iredrooms
and much of the upstairs
are now suites Instead of
Just a bedroom. Futhcr
Trout's one projection for

Father Trout stands on the porch of Ihe rostorsd home si Ninth Strsst and Oak Avanus.
the future was. "a new
roof In a couple of years."
The outside of the rec­
t ory was be aut i f ul l y
lumisru|&gt;ed wllh colorful
flowers and a Mother
Mary statue to accent the
garden. A sm all, yet
cla s s ic , whi t e p icket
fence addrd a welcome
ho me f e e l i ng to the
gr ounds. A f ount ai n
danced with clear water
In Ibe Itaekyard and was
su rrou n d ed by m ore
lovely flowers. The house
was pulnlcd shell, while
and dark green.
F a t h e r T r o u t reajKiudcd by saying. "W e
were very sensitive to the
Sanford Historic Trust.
Wc also didn't want to
ruin the integrity of the

house. The colors of the
paint wc chose hud all
that In mind. The once
white elephant was now

t r a n s f o r m e d Into 4
beautiful work of art. The
restorations add a charm
to the urea of Ninth and

Oak. The splendor of the
house now also creates u
much of heaven for all to
sec.

C astle

Cost $50,000
or $500,000?
Let
C row n Bank
Finance It
For You!

L o w e s t R a te s In Y ears!
Call f o r an Appointment Today I
260-1003

Crown Bank
A ttllLIIAL SiAVtNlJS HANK

105 Live Oaks Gardens
Casselberry, FL 32707

\

iS n

DER

�14 - Ssntord Herald - Sunday. Juns 18, 1994 - Herald Advertiser - Thursday, June 23. HAM - Ssntord, FL_________

Special ladies heading for retirement
Beloved
teacher
says
goodbye

a

By B M M tlV K. BAKIN

Harold Correspondent

I'm

HwiM *n io by Im iW tw w
Ed and Joyce W e a l with grandchildren Krlatln and Kara.

Head nurse to see
more of grandkids
By SUSAN WINNBfl

Herald Correspondent
S A N FO R D - J o y c e W e il.
Pediatric Head Nurse for Central
Florida Regional Hospital, retired

J

June 8 after 25 years of service.
This was a celebration and more
because the eighth was ulso her
birthday. What a birthday present!
West admitted her retirement was

□Bee West, Page 15

LAKE MARY LAWN 8
GARDEN EQUIPMENT
Celebrating 14 Years In
Historical Downtown Lake Mary
SERVICE / SALES / PARTS
All Popular Brands o f
MOWERS • TRIMMERS • BLOWERS
^
• CHAIN SAWS

m

SANFORD - Although
It Is commonly agreed
that teachers are very
Important tn the lives of
our children. It Is cer­
tainly the Influence of the
k in d e rg a rte n tea ch er
who hrlps to set the stagr
o f the nest 12 years of a
ch ild 's education. On
June 10. 1004. Leila
Ross, an outstanding
klndergurtcn tenrher In
the S em in ole County
School System, ended a
career that luis chvrred a
period of 34 yoirs. The
fun-flllcd relrhntllon that
took place at I turn litem
Elementary on Tuesday.
June 7. resulted In her
remembering many o(
the people, children and
experiences she has en­
c o u n te r e d s in c e she
began working at Real
Haven Day Care Center
in Sanford In 10511. It
was here that site began
her long association with
children.
Dorn In Sanford. Sister
Ross, as she Is lovingly
addressed by many who
know her. graduated
from Crooins Academy,
now Cronins School of
Choice, with honors. She
sold. "I have lived here
all tny life. I have been
out of the country eight
times, but I liuvc never
lived away from Sanford
a whole year."
Her Involvement with
children began with her
employment In 1050 at
Rest Haven Day Care
which was at that time
o p e r a t e d by M o th e r
Wilson, a well known
religious leader and child
advocate. It was Mother
Wilson who recognized
the special Influence that
M r s . R o s s hud on
children and encouraged
her to attend college. So
back to school she went,
to Stetson U niversity
where she successfully
c o m p l e t e d a kindergarten teacher train­
ing program. Her success
In this program and the
a d vice o f one o f her
rofessars encouraged
er to enroll at Seminole
Junior College. After re­
ceiving an AA degree,
she enrolled at Florida
Technological University
(UCfh- During all o f her
years In school, she con-

C

H to M Ptwta by ApfyT KMttlnn

Leila Ross. loll, celebrates retirem ent w ith another
retiree, Shirley H elnrelm an
tinned to work ul Hrsl
Haven us u kindergurtrri
teacher, as well us in the
nursery or as a cook or
whatever, when the nerd
arose. Ily now. she and
her husband, Bishop
Hezcklah Ross, also had
a child of thrlr own.
Rosalyn. In 1074, she
rrclvcd Iter BA degree
from FTU.
Having heroine totally
In charge of Rest Haven.
Ross felt that she would
hr there forever, but
Ed n a C h l l i e r d o n , a
teacher who retired In
1074. felt thut she was
needed In the public
school system. Through
the help of Mrs. Chitle r t lo n . Russ be g un
working at Luwmn Ele­
mentary School. During
her 14 years at Lawton
Elementary, another long
time Seminole County
teacher and friend. Mary
King, introduced her to
the Idea o f starting work
on a master's degree. In
1088, she received a
master's degree In educa­
tion from Stetson Uni­
versity.
Before school began In
the fall o f '88, Ross re­
quested and received a
transfer to Hamilton El­
e m e n t a r y S c h o o l in
Sanford. She felt thut she
needed to reduce the
mileage required to trav­
el to Lawton Elementary.
It was at Hamilton El­
ementary that she wns
recognized and honored
by her co-workers. Prin­
cipal David Scott, former
P r i n c i p a l C. G a g e r ,
form er students,
classmates, friends, and
fa m ily In clu d in g her

m o t h e r , s i s t e r , and
brother* in-law.
Hrr team of teachers
reminded Ross of many
humorous Incidents that
had occurrrd during hrr
yrurs ai Hamilton. One.
In particular. Includrd
her iiM- &lt;4 chalk to dis­
cipline the children In
her care.
"Whenever one of her
charges hud difficulty
scltllng down, nut came
Hu- chalk, which was
used to draw a sud-fuerd
clown on Ihc rluilk lioard
next to the name of the
uncooperative child. A
happy.laird clown was
drawn next to Ihc names
of students who were
very cooperative. Needl ens to nuy. no one
wanted to hr associated
with a sad clown."
R oss' plans for re ­
tirem ent Include con ­
t i n u e d w o r k In t he
churches pastored by her
husband. Bishop Ross,
Sanford Freewill Holiness
church and the Freewill
H o l i n e s s C h u r c h In
Duytnnn. She also looks
forward to assisting her
daughter and son-ln-luw.
Rosal yn and M ichael
Nl ckson, with their
be aut i f ul da u g h t e r s ,
Mlchaclaand Khalllah.
Ross believes that God
has s p o k e n to her
through all the people
who encouraged her to
make the decisions that
have brought tier to this
point. Consequently, her
life has been one that
was most appropriate for
a teacher and It Is for this
reason, she has been so
successful In her rela­
tionships with children.

'

�S
a
n
fo
rdH
e
ra
ld- S
u
n
d
a
y
, Ju
n
e19, t9M- H
e
ra
ldA
d
v
irllM
r- T
h
u
ra
d
ty
, Ju
n
e33, 1W
4 - S
a
n
fo
rd
,F
L- H

West---C o a t ia a t d fro n t Pago 14 after class to visit her.
only a change from One day she looked up at
the children In (hr hospi­
tal to upending more time
with her own children
mid grandchildren.
"I Irave for me moiinInins noon and we'll stay
until N ovem b er." she
M ild . "Then when I re­
turn I look forward to
bring able to sew. travel,
read, and learn more
utxHit my computer, but I
especially want to spend
m o re t i m e wi t h my
grandchildren."
West has t&gt;een married
tn her hustNind. Ed. for
.10 years. They have two
chi l dr en, Honda and
Scull, and three grand­
children, Kura. Kristin
an d S h u n d s . H er
husband. Kd. |ust retired
from Florida Power and
l.lghl In September ol
last year alter 30 yearn
on the Job.
We s t w a s b o r n In
Atlanta. Gu. but moved
tn the Sanford urea In
I 0 0 H. S h e a nd he r
husband have been
active members of the
Sanford Church o f Christ
since their move here.
Nursing lias been a part
of her life for 39 years
She received her nurse's
training from Crawford
lauig School of Nursing
In Allnnla.
All hough she originally
wunted a degree In social
work. Wesl said. "God
o|&gt;encil the right doors
wlion I entered nursing
lush-ad of social work."
She was always very
mel l c ul oo s about r e ­
ma i ni ng t rue tu her
commitments. Not a day
o f high s c ho o l was
skipped. Nor was a day
missed In her three ycurs
o f nursing school and
only two sick days werr
used during her 25 years
will) the honpllol.
She s|&gt;oke of her most
memorable patient. "T h e
case I rememher most
was a post nasal en­
cephalitis patient." she
said. "That was when I
was in nursing school.
She was In a coma for
five weeks. I'd go over

m e a n d c a l l e d me
momma. That was the
beginning o f her pro­
gress. When sire left the
hospital she was walking
and talking I lost touch
with her when her family
moved away with the
service."
She said that even after
five years In inedlral
surgical nursing and one
year of obstetrics. |&gt;crilnlrlcs remained her love.
" I recalled the good
e x p e r i e n c e I had In
nursi ng school when
working with children."
she said. "I had found
m y niche
When I
w orked at Chi l dren' s
Ho s p i t a l In Mi ami I
would see many Inter­
esting cases. There were
kiddy transplants ami
children In O r Iiuhhle
I lay IrcauM- they had no
immune system to light
disease.”
To Iteglnners In the
pedlulrlr nursing field,
tier udvlcr was. "I think
nurses In Oils llrld must
have u genuine lovr for
children. They need to
keep In mind Out they're
nnl Just working with the
children hut tUso with
young families."
In her conversation she
spoke of Central Florida
Regional Hospital fondly.
"I have enjoyed wat­
ching tile hospital grow. I
feel we had an outstand­
ing pediatric slaff and
(hal niiidc my Job easier.
I enjoyed being pari of
the management team. I
met ma n y w onderfu l
people. I truly think there
arc great things ahead for
the hospital."
West's love and con­
cent for her patients has
only been transferred to a
diffe re n t group of
children. Not only have
her own grandchildren
been cared for by her
loving hand hut many
young mothers at her
church have solicited her
w ords o f advice. Her
wisdom has been valued
by many and will only
continue to do so.

LOCAL NEWS
LOCAL SPORTS
Call Today To Start Your
Subscription Delivery

S a n f o r d llo r n ld
322*2611

Parks in w hich to play
Am i Burnham, 8, plays Peek-a-boo w ith her dad at
Park on Park In S anlord. Sanford Is known lor Its

fam ily atm osphoro, w ith m any parks, lakefront and
dow ntow n activities Ih ro u g h o u llh o year.

Do you know you have a hearing loss •tt 7 _! 50% OFF
Do you suspect
you have a hearing
loss..*?
1 factory authorized sale
1
—
I Com puterized Programmable
........— i A
HEARING
A ir
ID
If so, you qualify for this special offer!
Bcltone Composer
'

*

"NO RISK" SPECIAL OFFER J
1) W c evaluate your hearing amt discuss the lest ic m j I ik w ith you.
2) W c outline all the benefits you can expect, wealing llellone Healing Aids.
3) Wear the Uellonc Heating Aids wc recommend lot one complete month,
•t) Attend our scheduled follow-up visits and we'll niunilor your Uellonc
experience.
I F Y O U D O N 'T F E E L T i l K B E L T O N E H E A D IN G A ID S H E L P Y O U ,
W E W IL L R E F U N D 100% O F Y O U R M O N E Y .

|
j
i

SANFORD
2200 S. French Ave.

(4 0 7 ) 3 2 3 -1 4 0 0

WINTER PARK

m onth

BELTO NE W A R R A N T Y ft.
L O S S /S T O L E N /D A M A G E
PRO TECTIO N P LA N
_____

___ ____ ____

&lt;*»*&gt;*»*“ '''• «

w

1

i
_I

JR®m ["b ATTERY SPECIAL
U^IPoURACELL. ZINC AIR 312. 675. 13

(407) 6 2 8 -8 0 0 3

WL Morion HUMANA. MIOICAIO. UNIOtl AMU HOSPITAL t’LAHS

PLEASE
RECYCLE. ^
B E C O M E A N EYE D O N O R
CA LL 4 0 7 -4 2 2 -2 0 2 0 .
\ litlit i

NuOm* iiu«ii *«*r 1&gt;
|&gt;WWI

$150 OFF

lie year* fur a* little I

2301 Lee Road

*84900

O N ALL CUSTOM BELTONE
HEARING AIDS

UrtUr Hearing can
us (.IS u iminth.

ON
SALE

FREE ONE YEAR "l|

* lo o s , rclunit i . Iiniilnl (u ItrilMM Ik m n m A .I . | «m tu w d m Juiw HUM
Out f*gulnr rvlurn Arc ju llry will m i»ly In all ulh.r lk.,nn|t .ii.lt |„»rt li.i*r,l In.m u i

B E L T O N E H E A R IN G C E N T E R S

Xrg SIMM

ll I \ C InUlL't’l I It'iuhl

$2.50 r » rack

�" ; : r NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ° t r
save
Warehouse Showroom
save
3 °Rn,irTnn«T
CS AlTY '1UMIITT7! OJ i|
I

n

. n n p t c T opprifli

tv

I

M

P

f f T

W

W

W

F

l

IT S N E W

IT'S D IFFE R E N T

IF Y O U L I K E S A M ' S W H O L E S A L E
OR W H A R EH O U SE S H O W R O O M S

L I V I N u HUUIVI S l U H t

V E R 11000
0 0 0 S O TF AA S . LI OO VV I S IE AA TT S' .

-

&lt; - E

* ~A * f

u m i'l I

OVER 0
00
NERS
i ••ovhi
so
oRhEi CciE Iiner
s
D
C
K
F
H
A
I
T
R
O
C
K
E
R
S
A
N
D
C
A
I
RS
S
ROCKERS CHAIR
•
00M
A
•O
OV
VE
ER
R ‘&gt;
SOO
M AA
TTTR
T RE
ES
SS
S A

.

B
X sS P
N gG sS
b O
o x
p R
r Ii n

n
u t nR i1 MI
f.mL Li Im
u rDuOnL iL A
a iRkS iUm
nni)f
OVE
ON
Nm
D E Rit ROOT

,

;•
V '

-' ;,i w M f c # x t

r m

'

n l iu

S A V F ’

u n

w L .

H AN D LE
ACTION
RECLINER

DELU XE
RECLINERS

RECLINERS

IIC I

.

A N n

■ -I

•

I D IIC

YOU LL LOVE Ub!
SHOP OUR HUGE
. o niinuunnniMI
NO FRILLS SHOWROOM

A
FE
t PP EE R
AN
ND
D S
S LL E
RS
S

a

2 for

:

&gt;499

ENTIRE IN V EN TO R Y A L L 1ST Q U A LITY A T
W A R E H O U S E P R IC E S !!!

ALSO ON SALE
MATCHING
•LOVESEAT
•CHAIRS
•SLEEPERS

AVAILABLE IN MANY COLORS AT SAME PRICE!

B o t h P la c a a

MOTION HANDLE ACTION SECTIONAL
SET
FU LL

.,

SET

$269 SET
FREE

BEDFRAMEI

FREE

DELIVERY!
•

REMOVAL OF OLD

PERFECT SLEEPER SETS
LOWEST PRICES ANYWHERE

THIN SET... $249 QUEEN SET....$399
FULL SET.... $299 KING SET.... $549

C o m p la ta *

BurlinatonS
Sofa co.

F IN A N C IN (

l AY A
WAY

Call (407) 324-SOFA (7632)
410 Silver Lake Road, Sanford
g . . . ___

C all for directions.
•SAT1

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241942">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, June 19, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241943">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241944">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on June 19, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241945">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241947">
                <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;, June 19, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241949">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241951">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241953">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241955">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="24229" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="23833">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/fbe179a67b40937f0dcad78f340ed660.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d4c99f41200f0fc7bf498334235c9674</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="241961">
                    <text>'JW Hif

T7

July

30 C e n t s

TH U R SD AY

S an fim l H erald
i«n rln « Sanford, Laka Mary and Samlnola County
all
%
86th Year, No. 280 - Sanford, Florida

NEWS D IG E S T

Local gospel pioneers honored
SANFORD - The Oospel Music Lifetim e
Achievement Awards will be presented next
Saturday night. The backgrouna o f some o f the
honoceca are highlighted in today's PEOPLE

Accsss-94 tonight

SANFORD — How easy Is It to get
sea over the phone?
Apparently, It's as easy as dialing
a toll-free number and pushing a
few buttons on your Touch Tone
telephone.
Last night, parents who wanted to
find out which bus their children
are supposed to board next week
when school starts got an earful.
When a school district press
release gave a toll free number for
an Information source, two digits
were wrong and the Information
parents got was not at all what they

"Y ou 've reached the hottest tele*
phone at work in the country," a
silken voiced siren answers In a
recorded welcome. "O ur one-of-akind service lets you choose your
own fantasy phone pleasures."
That wasn't what parents were
looking for.
And many are Irate that It is so
easy to gain access to a telephone
fantasy line.
Larry S trlck ler, m anager for
external affairs for Southern Bell,
speculated that many phone fantasy
m arketing com panies probably
began using 800 numbers when
900 and 976 numbers began getting
a bad reputation.
Those who call the 800 number

don't hear anything erotic or ob*
seccnc unless they stay on the line.
The recorded message Instructs
those under the age o f 18 or those

SANFORD — The City o f Sanford w ill hold an
Access-94 meeting this evening at Sanora Club
House, 330 Sanora Boulevard, Sanford, for
District 3, represented by Commissioner A.A.
McClanahan. City officials and others w ill be on
hand to dismiss such Items aa Sanford Avenue
widening, reclaimed water, city parks, drainage
problems and crime.

to hang up.
"A s long as they cover the age
□ S ea Phase, Pags 8A

School,
HRS reach
agreement

The meeting Is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.
Prior to the meeting, voter regtotntion w ill be

Visitation for baby cubs
SANFORD — The clouded leopard cubs at the
Central Florida Zoological Park are now ready
for limited public display. Bom March 31. o f this
year, the male and female cubs have thus far
been kept in a protective off-exhibit area. They
have been given excellent care by their mother,
and have lived In an area complete with a den
and play yard.
Beginning this weekend, the cubs will be on
display for the public on Saturdays and Sundays

8ANFORD — Embattled Plnevlew Academy
reached an agreement with the Florida Depart­
ment o f Health and Rehabilitative Services
yesterday which plays a role in the federal and
state funding received by the for-profit day care
center for emotion ally-disturbed children.
Last year's HRS rate agreement had expired
June 30 without resolution. The District 7 HRS
Alcohol. Drug Abuse and Mental Health Program

« at 8788 N.

S T - " " "

•
------- ------------

Enterprising friends finance
surprise 12th birthday bash

baafefhrtWy for 88333300T h en are expected to bo an

County ehorttr flooring tonight

SANFORD - You couldn't ask for better
friends.
Shannon Brewer w ill be celebrating her
13th birthday today with a day o f miniature
golf, relaxation and an all-night ' slumberparty at which there are no plans for alumber.
And her friends are picking up the tab for
the whole thing.
_____________________

SANFORD - A Sanford roan being tried for
first degree murder In the stabbing death o f his
girlfriend testified Wednesday be was physically
Injured by her at various times during their 3 1/2
year relationship but he always returned to her
after she asked him.
•
* Darrick Oermld Taylor. 32. said on the night o f
June 28.1993, hia girlfriend. Kimberly Orace did

"W e're paying for the whole thing." said
Tam m y Hlnkley, one o f Brewer’s friends. " It’s
her birthday."
H lnkley. along w ilh her friends Katie
Hartaock and Lacey Laird, opened a lemonade
stand earlier this week and had a "one day
on ly" sale on the finest lemonade and most
heavenly Whoopie Pies.
A t 80 cents for a good-sized cup or
refreshment and 78 cento for a tasty treat, the
□ B ee B irth day, Page ■ A __________________

Charter w ill be held at 7 p.m. tonight In th

Police patrols
shift to cover
loss of officers
SANFORD — Police Chief Ralph Russell said
earlier this week although Sanford Housing
Authority development* will lose four police
officers on special patrol, the level o f coverage will
m nAln the name.
In March o f last year, the City o f Sanford
into a Community Policing Team (CPT)
project. A grant supplied by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development, allowed the
hiring o f four police officers who would be
-d « --* uMAUtM
•
lllll
|vllCWvu •
Although the city had agreed Ifm oocyrou ld be
found to fund the project until October. City
U - l . — Bill Sbnmona advleed the commission
that money waa no longer available.
This p u t Monday, the commission w u re­
quired to amend the original ordinance setting up
the CPT project to have U rescinded. The matter
ptM cd unanimously.
"W e don't expect any difference In ’ police
coverage In thoae areas." said Police Chief Ralph
R u u d f-W e have reaUIgned the natroWng zones,
and I am confident we w ill be abk to handle any
needs which may artoe."
Tbscom m unities which had been patrolled by
the CPT officers IrH i*4*^ Ooldaboro. Seminole
Oaidena. Lake Monroe Terrace. Edward Higgins

F OR T H E l i ES

■„ p n . T O R . a i S

F. Gilbert, 58, of Alexandria, Va.. from his 1887
Chevrolet following a collision yesterday.
According to police, Gilbert w u traveling east
o n ffR . 48 near Pomegranate Avscwsjjrh^nhs
struck the rear of a P «kad unoccut*sd U jjto j
trailer. Altar ha w u removed from the vehicle

O P I N I O N S A N D A N A L Y S I S OF T H E N E W S , R E A D THE H E R A L D

I

I

�1*

mm

Sanford Herald. Sanford. Florid* - Thursday. July 14, 1W4

N E W S F R O M T H E REGION AND A C R O SS T H E S T A T E

Wife of serial killer victim fights state
C laim s H R S w orker was on duty at tim e of death
Stolen tugboat sinks
MEXICO CITY — A stolen tugboat carrying at least 31
Cuban refugees sank In • bid to leave that country's waters,
Cuba's news agency said. An unspecified number o f people
were reported missing.
Prensa Latina, in a dispatch monitored here, said Wednesday
the vessel sank In waters about seven miles o ff the coastal
capital o f Havana after it waa "seised early in the morning by
anti-social elem ents."
The dispatch quoted Cuban Rebel Radio as saying the
"illega l attempt to leave was reported at 3 a.m. local tim e" and
that 30 men. five women and six children were aboard the
tugboat stolen from a shipping dock.
it was not known how many people were aboard the tugboat.
In Miami a private group o f pilots. Brothers to the Rescue,
said it would send four planes today to search for survivors.
"S tate vessels and troops o f the national border guard took
part in the rescue o f those aboard the tugboat." Prensa Latina
reported without saying how many people were rescued or In
what condition.
Prensa Latina did not say lives were lost, but the Mexican
news agency Notlm ex quoted the radio as saying an
undetermined number o f people were missing In the waters.

GAINESVILLE - The widow oT one o f the
victim s o f serial killer Alleen Wuomos
wants the state to pay her workers com­
pensation benefits because her husband was
working on a state Job when murdered.
The State Is refusing to pay, apparently on
the basis that the victim. Charles Hum­
phreys, 56. somehow contributed to his own
death, perhaps by going w illingly with the
serial killer.
Humphreys, one o f six men killed by
Wuomos, was found dead along a Marion
County road with several shots In the back
and head. Wuomos. sentenced to death for
the murders, ts In a Broward County prison
during her appeals.
N early four years after Hum phreys’
murder, a state agency, the Division o f Risk
Management. Is refusing to pay on a
workers* compensation claim made by his

wife almost two years ago.
Humphreys’ fam ily says he was on the Job
as a child protection investigator for the
Department o f Health and Rehabilitative
Services when he waa killed.
The state Is fighting the compensation
claim "tooth and nail," said Humphreys’
daughter. Terri Slay.
The fam ily w ill find out what’s behind the
state's opposition Friday In a hearing In
Ocala before Jonathan D. Ohlman, Judge o f
compensation claim s
Attorneys for the state's Division o f Risk
Management wouldn’t say much.
"T h e best story about the hearing will be
when you know the results o f the hearing."
said Daytona Beach attorney Qeorganne
DeLaughter, who la representing the state.
"It's not clear to us what the state's
position Is on th is," Mrs. Humphreys'
attorney, Dorothy Sims, said Wednesday.
Just before encountering Wuomos In

A t the Ume o f the murders, police said
some o f W uomos’ victim s were lured by
promises o f sex. while others m ight have
stopped to help someone In distress.
If she wins. Shirley Humphreys would be
allowed two-thirds o f her husband’s salary
every two weeks up to a maximum of
$100,000. Some funeral expenses would
also be paid.
The former Alabama police chief w u
earning about $11.17 per hour when he was
killed. The couple lived in Crystal River.

Training programs
creates 8,500 jobs

Lottery winners
BIRMINGHAM — A Birmingham couple who won $7.3
m illion in the Florida Lottery didn't have a lot to say, but It
wasn’t hard to detect thetr feelings.
Derrick and Sharon Martin quietly claimed their prise from
the July 3 drawing at the Tallahassee lottery office on Tuesday.
"S h e was very quiet, and he was Just beaming with a grin on
his face," tottery spokeswoman Angie Raines said. " I said to
him, Y o u look happy,’ and he said. T m very happy.’ "
According to Ms, Raines, the Martins aaid little while In the
office and declined to take part In a customary news
conference. They left after filling out forms and verifying the
ticket’s authenticity.
Mrs. Martin, 37. is a customer service representative at
Infinity Insurance. Martin. SO. la a crane operator at American
Cast Iron Pipe Co.

operations or expanding in Flor­
ida can apply for financial help
TALLAHASSEE - A Florida training the workers they need
program using state and private at com m unity colleges, voca­
money to train workers for new tional schools, or at the busi­
businesses created nearly 8,000 nesses themselves.
For example. Aero Corp. waa
better-than-average paying Joba
in Its first year, officials said granted $130,711 for aircraft
repair and service training at
Wednesday.
The Quick Response Training Lake City Community College.
program provided $4.9 million T h e m o n e y w e n t fo r 169
in state jcnuits, combined with em ployee* for a facility that
$96.6 m illion from industries, to provided 300 new Jobs; the
m eet w ork force needs for company paid $705,609.
X e r o x C o rp . r e c e iv e d a
expanding or relocating busi­
n esses, th e D epartm en t o f $370,000 grant and spent $1.3
m illio n its e lf to tra in 335
Commerce aaid.
"W e are providing up-front, em ployee* at 8t. Petersburg
qu ick resp on se tra in in g In Junior College for a collection
exchange for long-term, nigh* services facility in Hillsborough
paying Joba." said Commerce County.
In the first year. 0,076 workers
Secretary Charles Dusaeau.
The training was proposed by were trained for operations pro­
Gov. Lawton Chiles in 1993 as viding a total o f 0,496 new Jobs.
part o f the Enterprise Florida In their Initial Jobs, the trainees
program that combines state are ea rn in g an a v e ra g e o f
ana private economic develop­ $37,474,00 a year. 31 percent
above the state average. The
m ent efforts.
” A rapid, effective worker average wage at the businesses
training program Is essential for Involved Is $33,741, or 49 perc r e a t in g m o re c a re e r opItles for Floridians and a
business climate,’ ’ Chiles

Deputies aaid they found women’s underwear in his pickup
and that Sommer admitted breaking into homes to steal such
items.
Circuit Judge Bob Bennett ordered Som m er's release
Tuesday because County Judge Barbara Briggs had ruled
deputies
probable cause when they arrested him. She
rltamlsarirl as evidence the confession and the underwear found
In Sommer’s truck.
He was charged with 19 burglaries, many o f them in the
Meadows development o f northeast Saraaota. In each, entry
waa made through a eliding gtaaa door left unlocked or pried o ff
Its tracks. In tom e tnrtanreu, Jewelry and pornographic tapes
Assistant Stats Attorney Adam Oould says the decision to
ft—&gt;
appealed to the 2nd District Court o f
Kt3 5 t o 5 » e p 9 e * **vetal rtstrtctions on Sommer during the
s p p p B e fle a n o t leave his home except to go to work and (gif
medical attention- He w ill be supervised by the Department o f
Corrections parole office and must report to a community

Rivers receding as residents dig out

Dali woffcer Infects custom **
TAMPA — Ten deli customers contracted a nonfotal hepatitis
vtnrn after eating tainted tuna and crab salads two months ago.

state, county and federal o f­
ficials.
The governor made his first
vtait to C a ryvllle and other
flo o d -ra v a g e d area s o f the
Panhandle, where floods have

A worker at the downtown dell foiled to wash his hands
before " » » H " g the salads sad transmitted the hepatitis A virus
to custom ers o ve r several days, R oger Sanderson, a
The health dtpem **—♦ waa alerted July 5. when a caller
wtth the Warns contacted Sanderson for information. The next
day, Sanderson received four a m * calls - all from workers at
the First Unloo Center, the office building that houses the dell.
First Union Center officials told the health department that a
deU employee was sick In June. Records showed he had
hepatitis A, aad the incubation period coincided with the Ume

o f appetite, nausea.

THE

September 1090, Humphreys was advising
a woman about her children, whom she had
left in a car, Sima said.
Sima w ill argue that W uomos forced
Humphreys to his eventual death, perhaps
under the guise o f needing help.
"Th e
circumstances o f the murder lead one to
believe that he was forcibly taken from the
area and m urdered," Sims said.

He heard requests from resi­
dents and local officials for help
rebuilding roads, cleaning up
businesses and getting their
Uvea back to normal. He said the
state would get them assistance
as quickly aa possible.
"W e need a lot o f dirt on our
property ." aaid Heidi Rydeard.
who told the governor that flood
waters had washed away part o f
h e r c o u s in 's p r o p e r ty in
Btountatown that kept a small
creek from spilling into her yard.
Later Wednesday. Chiles met
with Clinton and the governors
o f O eorgla and Alabam a In
Albany. Os,, where the president
announced additional federal as­
sistance for homeowner*, busi­
nesses. farmers and Mate and
local governments.
Chiles asked the federal gov­
e r n m e n t to d e c la r e B a y .
Oadaden, Liberty. Okaloosa and

WEATHER

Tonight: W idely scattered show­
ers and thunderstorms becom­
ing fair wtth a 30 percent chance
o f rain. Winds will be light from
the south. Temperatures In the
low to m id 70s.
Frldayt P artly sunny with
scattered afternoon showers and
thunderstorms. High in the low
to m id 90s. Winds from the
southwest at 5-10 mph. Chance

----------- 1
MONDAY
SUNDAY
H IJ slangy BS*7S •3*71

I K i M ^ f o f c a s t ; P a rtly
cloudy with mainly afternoon
and evening scattered showers
and thunderstorms. Lows In the
m id to upper 70s. Highs in the
low to mid 90s.

FULL
Jaly S3

a.m.. I I iOO p.m.iMsj. 5il0a.n i
5:40 p.m. T tlM M i D aytaa
•aaafai highs. 106 am ., 1:4
p m .; lows. 7:34 am ., 8 0 8 p.m
* • » Smyraa Bessht high
t i l l am .. 1:03 pm .: lows, 7:3
am .. 8:13 pm .: Csaaa Basal
highs. 1:36 a m .. 2 06 p.m
lows. 7:44 a.m.,-8:38 pm .

IftOATSMO

■

It* A M lU f li t l J n lt n litei
Seas 3 feet. Bay and Inland
waters mostly smooth. Widely
s c a t t e r e d e v e n in g th u n derrtonna Friday: Wind south
10 knots except onshore near
the coast afternoon. Seas 3 feet.
Bay and inland water* a light

The temperature at 9 a.m.
T h u rsd a y waa 90 d egrees.
Thursday’s overnight low waa
73, aa recorded by the National
W eather Service at Orlando
International AirportOther Weatho: Service date:

Santa Rose counties aa disaster
areas. President CllntBn already
has declared six counties dis­
aster areas: C alhoun, O u lf,
Holmes, Jackson, W alton and
Washington counties.
M ost riv e rs con tinu ed* to
■lowly recede Into thetr banks
W edn esday alth ou gh h eavy
rains In som e parts o f the
Panhandle were delaying that
^ T ^ e ^ C h o c ta w h a tc h e e waa
expected to return to Its banks
by next Tuesday Instead o f
Saturday because o f the rain,
aaid Mike Rucker, state meteorep orted In scattered areas
around Choctawhatehee Bay,
which encompasses Okaloosa
and W alton counties.
,________

�SsnfordHereld, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 14, 1994 - SA

Sanford vthicla casts
• A tan 1978 Oldamoblle. license number QKE-89T, was
reportedly stolen Tuesday from In front o f a store in the 1800
block o f W. 13th Street. The owner; a Deltona man, reportedly
told Sanford police he had left the motor running while he went
Into the store, and saw three men drive o ff with the vehicle.
• A blue/green 1981 AMC Concord, license number
KCH-99F. was reportedly stolen Tuesday. The vehicle had been
parked near First Street and Cedar Avenue because o f brake
failure.
•Sanford police recovered at 1994 Mitsubishi In the 300
block o f Geneva Gardens Tuesday. Police said the rental
vehicle had reportedly been stolen in Volusia County.

On* plan* waits In th* wings
as another readies for takaolf.
General aviation type aircraft
operations at th* Central Flor­
ida Regional Airport account
for approximately 99 percent of
the air traffic. In all, approxi­
mately 200,000 takeoffs and
landings occur at the Sanford
airport In a year's time, or an
average of almost 590 per day.

M «n In s tru t
Sanford police round several men reportedly standing in the
roadway at 11th Street and Maple Avenue Tuesday. Floyd Lee
Alkena, 22, 224 W. 19th Street, was arrested on charges o f
disorderly conduct and resisting arrest without violence. Police
said Dennis Grooms, 24. o f 821 Holly Avenue, ran from the
area to his home, and was located there. He was charged with
disorderly conduct and resisting arrest without violence.

Exposure chirps
Sanford police were called to a transit bus Tuesday. The bus
was stopped in a parking lot in the 3800 block o f S. Orlando
Drive. According to the arrest report, a woman and her 12-year
old daughter reported seeing a man sitting across the aisle,
exposing hla organs. Several others on the bus also reported
seeing the incident. David Eugen Sllleman, 44, o f 2818 Sanford
Avenue, was arrested on charges o f exposure o f sexual organs,
and lewd and lascivious act in the presence o f a child.

Forging c m
Sanford police arrested Alice Vega, 18 o f Deltona, at a bank
on S. Orlando Drive Tuesday. According to the arrest report,
police were called by the bank when Vega attempted to cash a
check in the amount o f 8800. on the account o f a Casselberry
man. The bank said they contacted the man who denied
having written the check. The report says Vega told police she
had found the check In an unlocked vehicle. She has been
charged with uttering a forged Instrument.

Warrants sarvsd
• Harry Lee Flowers, 18. 906 Center Avenue, Sanford.i
turned him self in at the John E. Polk Correctional Faclllty|
Tuesday. He was wanted on warrants for falling to appear to
pay a fine on a conviction o f fleeing and attempting to elude,
and failing to appear on charges o f leaving the scene with
injuries and trespassing In an occupied structure.
•Alphonza Cosby. 24. 3711 Washington Street. Sanford.
was located by Sanford police at 25th Street and Georgia
Avenue Tuesday. He was wanted for failing to appear on a
charge o f theft.
• Lincoln A. Hunsinger, 22, 106 E. Jenkins Circle. Sanford,
was arrested at the Longwood police station by Longwood
police Tuesday. He was wanted on a warrant for battery.
•Jam es Williams. 31, 2055 Sipes' Avenue, Sanford, was
arrested at hla residence by deputies Tuesday. He was wanted
on a writ o f bodily attachment.
•M ichael Alan Whitmer, 29. 1550 Emette Road, Sanford,
was arrested by deputies Tuesday. Officers said he attempted
to leave the area when they arrived, and ran into a wooded area
before being apprehended, He was charged with resisting
.jvrrgg without violence, and served a warrant for Calling to
rawwarapaphargcQfctheft,

'

Deputies still investigating
reports of attacks in Midway
SANFORD — Tw o men whose
cars broke down in separate
incidents have reported similar
attacks by a group o f men In
Midway.
On July 8, a Geneva man
reported he had been beaten by
several men after his truck broke
down near the Intersection o f
Sipes and Midway Avenues, In
Midway. A sim ilar situation is
rep o rted to h ave occu rred
earlier, on June 29, in the aame
general location.
In the earlier case, Danny
Cribb, 33, o f 911 Park Avenue,
ientiy an inmate at the John
Polk Correctional Facility,
says he was also Jumped by
number o f persons between 9
and 10 p.m., in the same general
area when his car broke down.
Cribb said he was en route to
visit relatives in Osteen at the
time.
S h eriff's deputies however,
have thus far refused to believe
his story.
According to the incident re­
port written by the arresting
deputy, "M r. Cribb advised me
that he was traveling east bound
on State Road 46 in the area o f

r

swung an axe at him.
When he managed to break
free, he told deputies gunshots
were fired at him before he was
able to reach a nearby residence
and phone 9-1-1.
Deputies reported finding the
windows and windshield o f the
truck were damaged and one of
the tires was slashed.
Crlbb also reported hearing
shots when he was assaulted
near his stalled vehicle.

“ When I read the story about
the July 6th Incident." Cribb
said. " I first thought It was a
report on the attack against me.
but then 1 realized it wasn't and
saw that it was very similar to
what happened to m e,"
S h e r iff's s p o k e s m a n Ed
McDonough said that Cribb’s
arrest on the false report charge
did not necessarily Indicate that
the case is closed. "That was
very recent.” he said, "s o the
investigation Is still open."

C H IC K E N W IR E
M ALL

lector-Feljr Air Coedltioecd
Bet World In H k Dm I,
Bet DEAL IN THE WORLD

a

n o rm i •

H

m

iy

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

•Jam es Ervin W illiam s. 44. 2300 Green way Avenue.
Sanford, was attested by deputies at his residence Tuesday
following a reported dispute with his daughter-in-law. He was
charged with battery (domestic violenoe).
•Jam es Edward Campbell, 32. 2400 Water Street, Sanford,
was arrested by deputies at Sipes and Midway Tuesday,
following a reported fight with another man. He was charged
with battery (domestic violence), and possession o f drug
^"•Sanford police, responding to a domestic call, arrested
Carolyn Fay Collier. 50. o f 2841 Myrtle Avenue, at her
residence. She was charged with disorderly intoxication.

stolen early Wednesday, from a residence In the 1400 block o f
Northlake Drive.
• A CD plsyer and other Items valued at 6212 were said to
have been taken Tuesday from an apartment in Seminole
Gardens.
• A n estimated 82,000 was reportedly stolen during a
vehicular burglary Tuesday In the2900block o f Orlando Drive.
• A residential burglary was reported T u ^ y l n t h e 100
block ofW lllner Circle. Items taken were valued at 98,500.

an foot and hid under a ear on
Sipes Avenue. I then ashed Mr.
Cribb how his vehicle ended up
st the intersection o f Sipes and
Midway A ve„ Mr.-Crtbb stated
that he was in the vehicle and
several black males pushed him
and the vehicle to that area."
The deputy Indicated however,
that when he aaked Cribb once
again to describe the situation,
several item s w ere changed,
Including no mention o f the car
being pushed. The report also
said that Cribb told the deputies
one o f the men had fired a shot
aa he fled.
The most recent incident on
July 6. also involved what was
described as a group o f black
men who attacked the driver o f a
stalled vehicle. This time It was
struck.
According to the incident re­
port. the 37-year old man said
hto truck ran out o f gas and
coasted to a stop, when be was
approached by a group o f men
offering to help.
He reportedly said the men
then told him to give them
money or they would kill him.
He added that they then started
beating and kicking him and one

NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN that th* lake Mary Cky Commission wU hoki a public having to
dtocueaamandmenle to the City* Comprehensive Plan.
_____
Amandmants may Induda changa* to th* official Futura Land Um Map
otivnoMto govfoi.
obiactivee arxl polities o f the Comprehensive Plan. This meeting w i be heidJtiy21,1994al Lalw
Mary City Hall, 100 North Country Club Road, lake Mary, Florida st 7:00 P.M. The entire
incorporated land area of the City of Lake Mary, Florida, a*shown In the map below, may be affected
by the proposed amendments to the Comprehensive Plan.

First-tim e jobless claim s up 19,000
WASHINGTON - The number of-tin t-tim e
claims for slate unemployment benefits Jumped
by 19,000 last week, the biggest increase in two
months, the government reported today.
The Labor Department said the number o f
A m erican s filin g in itia l claim s totaled a
seasonally adjusted 363.000 In the week ended
July 9. up from the previous week's 344.000. The
number for the week ended July 2 wss revised
sharply upward from the 332.000 originally
Most economists were expecting only a alight
slight
increase o f about 3.000 in the number o f claims,
which would have tracked movement in the
weekly figures in recent weeks. Not since May 14
had the number gone up or down by more than
10.000. with most weeks registering modest
declines.
The 19.000 inertase was the biggest since a
rise o f 30.000 in the week ended May 7. pushing
the weekly number to its highest level since the
weekended May 21. when It stood st 366.000.
The Labor Department's four-week moving
average o f Jobless claims Increased for the first
time since May 28 to 353,000. That was up 3.500
from the previous week's revised average of
349.500.
Economists say the four-week average to a
better indicator o f hiring trends because It

smooths out fluctuations in the weekly number.
The nation’s Job market has shown steady
improvement all year and despite weekly dips,
most analysts expect some modest growth to
continue in the com ing months, although they
predict the pace o f Job creation wlU be slower
than it was in the spring.
The Labor Department said Increases in initial
claims were reported by 34 states and territories
In the week ended July 2. while 19 had decreases.
The state numbers lag a week behind the
national figures.
The largest Increases were reported In New
York, 5,815; New Jersey. 4,151; Virginia. 3,161;
Connecticut. 2.570; and Michigan. 2.390. Re­
porting the largest decreases were-California.
2.570; North Carolina. 2,365: Kansas. 1.549:
Maryland. 1.018; and Washington 607.

A copy of th« Comprehensive Future Land Use Pten and propoeed amendments are tvaiiabfc tor
Inspection in the Planning Office, 100 North Country Club Road, Lake Mary. Florida. Monday
through Friday, from 8:00 A.M. until 4:30 P.M.
InlvMted parties may appear and be heard regarding th# proposed amendments to the Com­

prehensive Future U nd Use Plan or vwitten comments may be IIM wM the City Clerk a!100 North

Country Club Road, Lake Mary. Florida.
NOTE: PERSONS ARE ADVISED THAT A TAPED RECORD OF THI8 MEETING 18 MADE BY
TH E C ITY F O R ITS CONVENIENCE. THIS RECORD MAY NOT CONSTITUTE AN A0EQUATE
RECORD FOR THE PURPOSES OF APPEAL FROM A DECISION MADE BY THE CITY. ANY
PER80N wisHING TO ENSURE THAT AN ADEQUATE RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS 18
MAtM^UNEDFOR APPELLATE PURPOSES IS ADVISED TO MAKE TH E NECESSARY AR­
RANGEMENTS AT HIS OR HER OWN EXPENSE.
*

City of Lake Mary, Florida
Carol A Foster
City Clerk

_____________________________________

�u

- Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, Florida - TTntrsdsy, July 14, 1W4________________ ___________________________________ ____

Editorials/ Opinions
WILLIAM A. RUSHER
(USPS 481-2SO)

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Aren Code 407*322*2611 or 831*9993
Lacy K. Low •Editor
Odtsss H. Pugh •Business Mansgtr

EDITORIAL

W hat do
you know?
‘W h
ha
att do you
k n o w ."
yc
it*i tim e to p lay "W
E specially fo r people In Sanford C ity C om ­
m ission D istrict 3. represented b y C om m is­
sion er A .A . M cClanahan.
Do you know h ow to obtain reclaim ed w ater
fo r Irrigation , thus savin g m oney on potable
w ater b ills? Do you know w hat the G ood
N eigh bor U tility Fund is?
Sanford A venu e w id en in g la com in g up.
H ow m any know w here, w hen, w h o m ay be
affected and how m uch It w ill coat?
O th er qu estion s sh ou ld be con sid ered
Including those about c ity parka, drainage
problem s and w h at la happening In regard to
crim e prevention.
N ow la th e tim e to ask. to listen to the
responses, and to learn about th e future o f
yo u r d is tric t
T o n ig h t the C ity o f S an ford w ill conduct
an oth er in its con tin u in g aeries o f A ccess 04
tow n m eetin gs. T h is on e w ill be In MeC lanah an 's d is tric t and be h eld at th e San ora
C lu b H ouse. 2 3 0 Sanora B lvd.
C ity M anager B ill Sim m ons and variou s
departm ent beads w ill be on hand to g iv e
rep orts on these m atters, as w ell as field
qu estion s w hich m u st certa in ly b e In th e
m in ds o f th e residents.
T h e c ity la to b e com m en ded fo r settin g up
th ese m eetin gs. W h en th ey w ere first created,
th e aim w as to ta k e th e c ity to th e people.
T h is la ex a ctly w h at haa happened thus for,
and m a n m eetin gs are planned, In clu ding
o n e n e x t w e e k T u e s d a y ,. J u ly 10, fo r
k m n W h ttey E ckstein’s D istrict 4 ,

ached
r iT c J S iS &amp; ^ S .
sen R equ est Form .
A s a n o th er e ffo rt to h elp th e p eop le,
registration fo r v o tin g w ill be conducted p rio r
to each m eetin g from S till until 6 p.m . ID 's
are requ ired.
P eop le are tru ly con cerned ab ou t w h at la
g o in g on In S an ford. U nfortu nately, som e
base th eir opin ion s on ru ro a n rath er than
facts.
T o n igh t Is th e op p ortu n ity to lean t th e
facta.
F o r cttlxen a o f. D is tric t S . a tten d th e
It w dl d o yo u aa w e ll aa th e c ity a

LETTERS

Proud of Sanford

...we are going and growing strong.
From our beautiful Bm and Breakfast to our
quaint antique shops, to the wonderful, delightful
and excitingly different cuisine d fc n d from our
cafes to the IU11 blown sjeskhmissa and the lovely

Berry's World
HAMS &lt;fc&gt;i&gt;

*W6 LATEST?
flS O fie A X e S E T T lN *
H ig h

b y

The truth about Joe McCarthy
Every so often some younger conservative
Innocently makes a derogatory reference to the
late Sen. Joseph McCarthy that simply Incorpo*
lythology bout him. This
rate* the liberal my
saddens me, because I llvea through the days.of
his spectacular rise and fall, and t know that the
liberal version o f the McCarthy story la false In all
Its major particulars.
So I am going to take a day o ff from Haiti and
O J . Simpson and devote this column to some
brief comments on the McCarthy controversy,
Just in care you were bom after (say) 1935.and
would like to know what an older conservative o f
some experience has to say about that grand old
flap.
The central Tact that must be understood Is
that In the years from about 1933 to 1950 a
significant number o f energetic Am ericans
looked to the Soviet Union as the hope o f
mankind, and devoted themaelves •• some
loudly, others quietly - to furthering the cause o f
id Communism. Many Joined the American
Communist Party quite openly: others, secretly:
some never Joined II at all, preferring to assist the
cause from outside.
In any case, openly or not. these people
managed to Infiltrate and Influence a large
number o f American Institutions. Including the
government, the universities, labor unions, and

^

Relax, Sofj,Be«P
Y o U R KMeeS— T H a T U
IT --W R isT STRgWHT, CHotfe
UP, Row P V U ! H aR peR I
, fedSoTIT! ScoO! ^

M O H T O N K O N D R A C K E

Kennedy had given the . day before at the
University o f Michigan with lines similar to the
Inaugural theme, ,lAak not what your country
can do for you..."
" I remember thinking. ‘He la talking exactly
about m e,'" says Begal, and It got Segal started
on a road that led from work with poorchildren and battered women during college
and law school to top roles in the 1968
McCarthy campaign and the 1072 McGovern
campaign, where he actually hired Bill Clinton,
and eventually to the pool o f chief o f staff o f
Clinton's 1902 campaign.
When Clinton wan the presidency. Segal was
offered various Jobs In the White House, but
Planned to return to bis magazine business In
Massachusetts until Clinton offered him the
Job o f heading up the new national service'
program.
He took It. believing that the soon-to-be
launched AmertCorps could be for the Clinton
presidency what the Peace Corps was for
JFK'a. and could Inspire so-called “ Generation
X " young people to service in the way that
JFK’a words Inspired Saga) and so many
others In their parent*' generation.
Already, while It got nowhere near the
publicity o f NAFTA or Clinton's economic

Inoculation. W hile they were working, the
number o f Inorulattnna administered In Texas
went up by 104.000.
This summer, as another pilot, 7,000 young
people w ill be working in 90 projects In 70
cities as part o f the "Bummer o f Safety"
program, working with police departments and
community groupa to orguilae neighborhood

be launched S ep t 12 and put 20.000 young
people to work by the end o f Us Bret year doing
community sendee on public safety, educa­
tion, tbs environment, and "human needs."
iiwhMUwg work with the aped, poor Dcooic. and

TOAD

VENOM!
WHAT
KEXT?
/

a / S f e W ’ fv
ftCKVMfW.
rfeuJi.jqaa

feffcttR Tttitf BaseBaLL

S t y o t c iq a

W lE P

even (or all places) the clergy. Most simply
agitated for Communlst causes, publicly
or su rrep titiou sly.
Some, especially In
government, actually
committed espionage
for the Soviet Union.
During)the days o f
the New Deal, and
even more so during
W o rid W a r II when
S ta ffliw aa our ally,
this seemed to the
regnant liberals (who
were not, o f course.
C o m m u n i s t s
f I know that tha
themselves) to do no
liberal varalon
particular harm. But
of tha McCarthy
with the onset o f the
story Is falsa In
Cold War in 1046.
all Its major
th is s u d d e n ly
particulars. J
changed. T h e R e­
publican Party was
well positioned to
make an Issue o f the Communists' Infiltration
and espionage, and lo condemn the liberals who
had so long genially tolerated them. When
Republicans captured control o f the 80th Con*

In its top year o f activity. 1906. the Peace
Corps hod 18.800 volunteers overseas; today,
that number la down to 0.800. AmertCorps is

program 's databrae.
l M y i that, despite widespread stereo*
types to the eontriuy, {feneration X already la
more motivated toward volunteer service than
baby boomers were In the early 1900a. He cites
a UCLA survey o f 290,000 college freshmen
showing that 68 percent reported doing at least
three hours per week o f volunteer work during
the poet year, and 10 ----------------------------percent reported do*
tng more than six
hour* every week.
s a y s th e
s u r v e y J u s t ifie s
C lin to n 's lin e, re*
peated often during
fW]
com m en cem en t

On June 24 In SL Louis, Clinton launched
the city's Bummer o f Safety program and
mentioned national service two other times,
yet TV and newspaper coverage concentrated
almost exclusively on Clinton’s attacks on
radio talk ahnw hot la and far-right Christiana.
Even given the media's penchant for con­
centrating on bad news. AmertCorps is a story
o f Idealism deserving attention.
Volunteers will receive the minimum wage
while they work, plus health insurance, and
w ill get aa education allowance o f 94.728 for
each year o f sendee, up to a maximum o f two
years.
The allowance could be used either to pay
college, graduate school, or vocational school
tuition or. In the case o f college graduates, to
pay o ff loans.
Segal hopes that, unlike the Peace Corps.
AmertCorps w ill not be dominated by middle*
class whites but w ill be made up o f all ethnic
groups and social rlsssrs That le the record of
the Texas project, in which 60 percent of

grew In. 1046. they turned Its Investigative
committees loose on the subject.
The battle was long ana hot. and for many
liberals U reached its nadir when Alger Hiss waa
convicted o f espionage for the Soviet Union on
fact o f serious Communist
SO. T h erac
Jan. 21, 1080.
Infiltration and espionage could no longer be
denied. But It might still be argued that this was
minor, and that - far more seriously - false
charges o f Communism were being leveled
against many loyal citlxena whose only crime
was being liberal.
It waa leas than three weeks later that Joe
McCarthy, the ranking Republican on the
Permanent Investigations Subcommittee o f the
Senate’ s Government Operations Committee,
rose to address the Republican Women o f
Wheeling, W.Va., on the subject o f Communists
in government.
The liberals quickly seised on McCarthy's
speech as the paradigmatic Illustration o f the
"fa ls e " charges they claimed were rampant. But
McCarthy fought hack, naming names. In 1983
and 1984 (now chairman o f the Subcommittee,
after Republicans again took control o f Congress
in 1982). he went on to hold Investigations Into
various instances o f alleged Communist InfUtra*
tlon.

JOSEPH SPEAR

Long live the
politically correct
This la a warning to all true believers In
political correctness. They are trying to kill
our movement.
First the New York Times suggested, for
noble but misguided reasons, that the term
“ political correctness” be retired. Then some
repugnant organization called the First
Amendment Coalition launched a crusade to
"lib erate" — that’s their phrase
college
campuses from the politically correct.
Now. alas, the most
p o litic a lly correct
c o r p o r a t i o n in
A m e r ic a . B en ft
J erry's Homemade
In c., purveyors o f
fine ice cream and
diehard supporters of
.1..:
p eace and lib eral,
n n cau aes.. h a s an *
" ■ n o u n c.e d i t 1i&lt;
•sk ittlin g for a bona
fid e , e x p e rie n c e d
CEO to oversee the
com pany's “ future
b u s ie s * d evelop *
£ Can you baltave
m ent" — and U is ■lt?AWtfctto
w illing to pay this
teams namad
person much more
after militaristic
than the traditional
white malts.
nine times more than
How could they
the lowliest dipper.
ay under that
T h ere are those
who say this is the
beginning o f the end o f the PC movement. We
at the National Clearinghouse for Politically
Correct Stuff say never! Keep the calls
coming.
This PC ALERT Is provided by the people
at NCPCS, Nickplcks.
Have a PC day.
Pete: Hey, listen. I Just want to say thanks,
to whatever deity you worship, for Nickplcks.
Hadn't o f been for you, the sports teams at
the University o f Massachusetts at Amherst
— that's m y school — would still be calling
themselves "M inutem en" and thinking it's
OK. At least now they're sensitised.
PC Person: Out you believe it? Athletic
teams named after militaristic white males.
How could they play under that burden? Any
chance for change?
Pete: There's an underground movement to
rename the teams. 1 personally prefer the
UMaaa*Amherst “ Cranberries."
PCPt Careful there. My computer Hat o f
offensive names, words and phrasrs indicates
a team called the Cranberries could offend
the ciUsens o f the Australian capital o f
Canberra, the residents o f Canterbury In
England, the Archbishop o f Canterbury, the
faun who raise Canterbury lambs In New
Zealand and the people who Uvc in the
Cantabria rn tan o f Spain. I'd think twice
about the UMats Amherst Cranberries If 1
were you.
Fred: Look. I agree we should try to prevent
hurt feelings, but you people go too Car
sometimes. Out here In LA. where I live, the
PC Police Just forced an adult nightclub to rip
a shower out o f the dressing room because it
w aa to o s m a ll to a cco m m o d a te th e
wheelchairs o f disabled nude dancers.
PCPt Not "disabled." Fred. "Differently

Kfjggjrf

----- Is' Whatever. There's never been
dfet bfed nude dancer at this club. There'
never even been a disabled applicant.
PCPt You're missing the point. The club I
denying potential differently a bled nud
dancer* the opportunity.
Fred: You people are nuts. W hy don't you...
Lee: You w o e going to come up with i
different name for the Washington Redskin
football team. Any luck?
PCPt Nickplcks la recommending the Wash
Ington Adm inistrative Assistants. Haa a nlo
ring, don’t you think?
Lee: 1 have an intrinsic indinalion towar
tardiness. I don’t want to be late, but I can'
help myself. I get low grades and I've beet
fired from five summer Jobe. Can Nlckpick
PCP: W e've fanned a task fon x on bow t
protect the temporally challenged. Hang ti
there. Help is on the way.

�Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 14, 11

Law requires both heart, head,
Supreme Court nominee says
■ f OMWi TW SKOHMSBK

Associated Prato Writer

W a s h in g t o n — sentim ent
on the Senate Judiciary Com*
m ltte e fa v o r e c o n fir m in g
S tep h en O . B re y e r to th e
Supreme Court after two days o f
questions aeeldng ineighta Into
the feelings
feeltoi behind his judicial
rulings
Eleven o f the 18 panel mem­
bers — six Democrats and five
R epu blican s — h ave eith er
publicly declared their support

they do not declare their views
before the vote.
That support was based on no
bombshells being revealed dur­
ing a closed meeting with Breyer
today to discuss the FBI's beckground check on him. The FBI
performs such checks on all
judicial candidates.
" I always think law requires
both a heart and head," Breyer
told the committee Wednesday.
" I f you don't have a heart. It
becomes a sterile set o f rules
rem o ved from hum an p ro­
blem s."
At the same time, he added,
" I f you don 't have a head,

there's the risk that In trying to
decide a particular person's
problem ... you cause trouble for
a lot o f other people, making
their lives yet worse. So It's a
question o f balance."
While avoiding any hints on
how he might vote In future
cases, the Boston federal appeals
Judge portrayed him self as a
cautious lurlst.

Iton
i Seminole County school board broke ground
morning on tho now Wintor Springs High,
ol that will bo built at tho intoraoetlon of
•Hoads 419 and 494. School board chairman
i Kuhn, mombara Joanns Morris and Larry

Stitoklor, vtoe chairman Sandy Robinson and
mambar Nancy Woman Jolnod Supt. Paul Hagorty
In turning ovsr tho first shovelfuls of dirt at tho
sits this morning. Tho school will open In tho
fall of 1996, district officials said.

ireement
ilA
Office
Continued la st y e a r's
lit through tommorrow
illations were comInly one child last year
I HRS ftmdlng under the

:sr

the agreement la one
required by Medicaid far
Kbursement for services.
ild la almost the aole
— J source for the school
I treatment center tucked o ff
&gt;Mary Boulevard.
He feel very good about It."
Terry Hadley. Ptnevlew
f. "T h is will serve as a

Irthday

model for the state."
The HRS program office in­
vestigated Ptnevlew earlier this
year In response to several
complaints from parents. In a
re p o rt, In vestiga to rs found
Ptnevlew successfully met only
half o f last year's agreements.
Am ong the conditions found not
In compliance were the agreed-to
ratio o f skilled staff to students,
s tu d e n t m o n it o r in g a n d
follow-up and teacher training.
The report was turned over to
the HRS llcenMng office and
state education department for
review.
The new agreement requires
Ptnevlew to meet the standards
o f th e F l o r i d a P a r t i a l
Hoaptuilxatton Association for
one staff member per six stu­

dents, one degreed professional
for each 16 students and statecertified counselor for each 33
atudenta.
Each staffer who comes In
contact with atudenta must be a
c e rtifie d teacher under the
agreem ent. The certification
must be completed by Sept. 1.
Failing to. meet that deadline,
Ptnevlew must provide an ac­
ceptable schedule for teacher
certification.
Hadley said certification may
not be completed by Sept. 1, but
Ptnevlew w ill meet the terms o f
the agreem ent- H adley said
Ptnevlew does not Intend to
replace staff with certified teach­
ers but the terms may require
the hiring o f additional counsel­
ors.

IA
gUia raised
1.45 in a four and a half hour

dto
the
tor the day's aetivt*
When they reached their
the table n,m* down, the
went away and the girls
; home.
*We got what we needed. We
‘ t't need any m ore." HJnkley
has been kept In the
about the whole event,
her lather is In on the
and w ill serve as chauffer
I chaperone for the miniature
Touting.
W e're going to have a tot o f
this afternoon." Htokley
"But it's a surprise."
I The girts' party la also a
*1 party to the letaurly Ufe
summer. School far the 8anIrd M iddle School students
ion Monday.
"Summer Is over too soon."
■aid. “ We hardly had a
■

-------- r*

Meanwhile,
to a cooling
lu m m er d rin k an d a Up_____ _ good treat, four girls
i signing o ff on summer with a

Phons
, requirement en g tg gto ll charges
they're O K ," Strfcktar aald.
He pointed qu(, that the 600
numbers are no raster to access
than the 000 numbers or 076
numbers. The problem comes
with those who want to block
access to those numbers from
their telephone.
"Y ou can black out all 900
calls or 976 calls," Strldder
explained, "but parents have to
weigh the pros and cons o f
blocking all BOOnumbers.”
According to Strickler, It to an
"a ll or nothing'' proposition. You
can not block out specific num­
bers. so if you block out fantasy
lines, you also block out school
board sponsored inform ation
lines and department stores.
Strickler said he knows o f few
com plaints from people who
accid en tally dial the w rong
number. It la probably because
the callers are gvea a chance to
disconnect the line before they
are exposed to something they
might not want to hear or pay
for.
The telephone fantasy lines
are b ig buslneaa and make
millions for the marketing com­
panies that promote them.

arrangements.
,

Oorilda Fontana. 67. Norfolk
Court Longwood. died Tuesday.
I July 13,1994 at South Seminole
Hospital. Longwood. Bom June
34. 1907 toS tirtln g. N J.. she
moved to Central Florida In
1990. She was a homemaker.
She w as a m em ber o f the
Church o f the Nativity. Lake
M ary, and belonged to the
Leisure Club.
Survivors Include son, John.
Longwood; sister. Mary Museo.
T e n a fly , N .J .t tw o g ra n d ­
children.
O aln eeV a rey Hand Garden
Chapel Funeral Home. Longwood. In ch a rp o f arrange-

JAMBS R. I
James R. Hickey. 67, Oak
Avenue. Sanford, died Tuesday,
July 13, 1994 near WlUtoton. F t
Bom June 4, 1937 In Buffalo.
N.Y., he moved to Central Flor­
ida in 1966. He waa a retired
engineer. He was Christian.
Survivors Indude wife. Helen;
eon. C ent D i p l J.. U.S. A ir
Force, Ohio; daughter. Jennifer
H. S m ith . O vied o; e letere .
Kathryn H. Hickman. Maitland.
Lola Hlm ss, Littleton . Colot
broth ers. S cott T .. O vied o.
Witttam. Helena. Ohio. Robert.
M o r ln g 'F u n e r a l H o m e .
Florida In charge o f

Henry Franck Moore, 96. A l­
ta m o n te D riv e , A lta m o n te
Springs, died Tuesday. July 13.
1994 at Orange Terrace Nursing
Home. Winter Rufc. Bom
33. 1697 In Centerville, R.I.,
moved to Central Florida In
1971. He eras a retired U.S.
Arm y major. He was a member
o f Sanlando United Methodist
Church. He wasa Master Maaon,
H o s p it a lit y L o d g e 12S,
W e th e r s fie ld . C o n n ., an d
belonged to the Scottish Rite
B o d ies and B ah ia T e m p le
Chanters. He wss a veteran o f
World War II.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e w ife ,
M a y b c lle : son , R a n a ld .
Bridgeport. Conn.; daughter.
Vera Lobert. Milford, Conn.; six
g ra n d c h ild re n ; fo u r g r e a t­
grandchildren.
Woodlawn Funeral Home A
M em orial Park. Orlando. In
charge o f arrangements.

JAMBS CALTBI
James Calvin
S I. W.
S.R. 46. Geneva, died Saturday,
July 9. 1994 at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. He
waa bom April 4. 1933 In Lake
Jem. Florida. He

|t

Apartments. He woe I
Survivors Include

by her being."
After stabbing Grace once In
the abdomen, and twice In the
back. Taylor said to her. " I love
you. Good-bye." before leaving
the apartment.
He said he tossed the knife in a
woods near Crooms High School
(Crooms -School o f Choice). The
murder weapon was not recov­
ered. After the stabbing. Taylor
went to Miami but returned
when he learned Orace was dead
and turned himself Into police
about a week later. He said the
knife, which he got from his
sister's house was about seven
Inches loos.
*'l picked a short k n ife ,"
Taylor said, "so I wouldn't kill
tj£|» If
'But you killed her," Stone
"T h at's m y luck." the defen­
dant replied.
Orace bled to death after the
knife hit a m^Jor veto. A trauma
surgeon,testified Wednesday be
found about two quarts o f blood
In the abdominal cavtty o f Orace
when th e wee taken to surgery
at Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Dr. Harry Paul Raymond
Jr. estimated the 2,000 ecs o f
blood represented 36 to 40
percent o f the woman's total
blood volume. Doctors were un­
able to stop the hemorrhaging
and she died.
In other testimony, defense

attorneys called G race’ s exhusband who said she was found
not guilty o f exitting him while
the couple was separated. But be
added she cut Mm a number o f
times after becoming angry at
him for not giving her a ride
home.
R o b e r ta J o n e a . a c lo s e
personal friend o f K im berly
Grace aald she saw Taylor reach
over to hit Grace once whlie the
trio was tiding In a car. Then
Grace struck Taylor on the right
side o f the face.
Although It area dark In the car
and Jones did not see what
Orace struck him with, she
added, ” 1 figured It was some- •
thing sharp. Tsylor drove to the
hospital and was treated tor a
cut on hla right cheek. Orace
drove her friend home and said
ahe was returning to the hospital
for Taylor.
Jones also testified that Taylor
was ju s t'a s aggressive tow ard'
Orace as Orace wss towards'
Taylor.
“ He would dish It out as much ae he got It frqra her?” Stone
"Y es ," Taylor responded.
S h e a lso te s tifie d T a y lo r
threatened Orace with a gun In
an Incident on Interstate 4.
T a y lo r testified he d id not
threaten anyone with a gun.
Testim ony resumed In the
t this morning.

fW O M ih to to try to icarv*
•sp a ce ln Health reform debate

The lines are
adhara to tha
standards" that govern other
a v a ila b le to resid en ts or
particular community, Strickler
explained.
*The Unea are not subject to
tboee standards which vary from
com m unity to com m u n ity,"
Strickler aald. "W hat la accept­
able In New Y a k City to not
necessarily acceptable In Or­
lando or 8anford."

;♦*'

members, pretty evenly divided
between the two parties.
M io ctM ig rr&gt;— tvn itr_________
Tw o dosen supporters o f a
o
s
n tr la t a p p ro a c h a g re e d
; WASHINGTON - Lawmakers
who w ant to reform health Wednesday to work tor a middle
Insurance but oppose requiring ground. "W e had a disco salon
on the need to unify our forces.”
anybody to buy It are demand­
Cooper explained.
ing
that
their
Ideas
be
put
to
a
The Santord Police report they
When the House begins floor
vote an the Door o f the House.
complaints after the phone
debate on health reform later
A
"cen
trist"
Mil
written
by
taiy number appeared In the
Reps. Jim Cooper, D-Teiui., and this month, there w ill be sepa­
paper In H it * o f the school
Fred
Orandy. R-towa. relies on rate vote* on a broad plan baaed
Information line, hut tha
overhauling
the Insurance laws, on Clinton's and on a version by
was turned over to the school
ta x chan ges and enhanced Rep. Jim McDermott. D-Waah.,
district.
c o m p e titio n p r o d u c e d b y that would have the g overnment
"T h at’s not really something marketplace reforms to bring puy iii medical W ilt.
"A t the very least tf we can
we would deal w ith," Cmdr.
health coverage to more people.
Dennis Whitmire o f the Sanford
A second, drafted by Reps. J. build a coalition we would at
Police aald.
R o y R o w la n d , D -O a., and least ask for the same consid­
Michael BUlrakls, R-Fla., focuses eration." Orandy said.
Intrastate calls are regulated
M cD erm ott scoffed at the
mainly on Insurance reform.
by the Federal Communications
N either includes President centrists' hopes. "T h e Cooper
C om m ission (FC C ) and In ­
C R n ton ’ e req u irem en t th at Mil hasn't come out o f any­
terstate calls are regulated by
where. It’s disappeared," he
employers pay far their workers’
the Public Sendee Commission
health
Insurance.
And
that
la
(PSC). Strickler mid. Complaints
Across the Capitol, Senate
enough to have gained the
about the lines would have to be
centrist Mile between them the Majority Leader George Mitchell
channeled through those sgensupport o f som e 110 House met with Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moyitihan. D-N.Y.. chairman o f
the Finance Committee, and
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass., chairman o f the Labor
and Human Resources Com­
mittee. Mitchell plane to meld a
plan from the Mils written by
Karen Joyce Golden with the
e ta n E. WinemUler, S3. Cat­ those committees.
U.S. Arm y. Cheryl Kathleen
House leaders are expected to
Sanders. IthJce. N.Y.; mother.
bird Court. Oviedo, died Tues­
A rn ta S an d ers, T a n g e rin e;
day, July 12. 1994 at Florida use a Ways and Means Com­
Hospital South. Orlando. Boro mittee Mil. which would expend
b r o t h e r . D a v id E .. S t.
August 29, 1910 In Detroit, ahe Medicare to cover the poor and
Petersburg.
B a ldw in -F alrch lld Funeral
m oved to Central Florida In uninsured, as the basis for a
Home, Apopka. In charge o f
1909. She waa a homemaker. compromise bill.
C ooper said that Finance
She was a member o f St. Luke’s
Lutheran Church. Lutheran Committee bill — which doesn’t
KEIOniTB fcBBI
require anyone to buy Insurance
Ladies Auxiliary and Ladies Aid.
Kenneth Lee Welker Sr.. S3.
Survivors indude daughter. — |a about as tor aa Congress
P e a c o c k D riv e . A lta m o n te
Barbara J. Altttage, Hariington. can go. "Anything any wider is
Springs died Tuesday, July 13,
T exas; th ree grandchildren; probably a waste o f tim e," he
1994 at Florida Homital. Alta­ three great-grandchildren.
Meanwhile, Roman Catholic
monte. Bom Jan. 7,1936 In New
B ald w in -F airch ild Funeral
Castle, Pa., he moved to Central
Home, Oolderood/Winter Park b is h o p s s a id th e y w o u ld
Florida In 1991. He sms owner Chapel, to charge o f arrange­ mobilise to tight abortion cover­
ments.
end operator of Coiffures by
age to health reform and 73
Kenneth salon, Apopka. He at­
House members said they would
tended Longwood Worship Cen­
not sign onto any health reform
ter. He was a veteran o f the U.8.
Mil that does not treat abortion
Navy.
Uke any other medically
MAIXeMIUAMMI Mt
Survivors indude wife, Mery
Lou; eon, Kenneth Lee Jr..
ih n to . July r, «M to toM Saturday at li
S orrento; daughter, Rhonda
tJd, MI.........
Abner. UmatUto. Tracy Bryan.
N ew C astle; sisters.* Bcrnic
ww to rritov ews h a-**
Haines, Lower Burrell. Pa.. Max­
ine Cater, New Castle, Mae
Atkina, Orlando, Lou Smith,
Houston. Etvecna Hill. Prescott.
M O U V .M M tS e ..
Arts.; brothers. Robert. AltaJ O t o it _______
■ S p rin g, Richard. Henry,
July tt, m i. *M to tow
si AN tato CsOsto C
o f Apopka, Russell, Cr­

•VW TAI

e

SOURCE

BE WITH

Woodlawn Funeral Home ft
M em orial Park. O rlando, in

YOU

j

'
'

"You have to be careful re- j
visiting precedents," he said,
adding that the right to abortionj
and the constitutionality o f th e ;
death penalty In some cases a re I
"settled" Issues.

Murder
injuries, Taylor admits stabbing
Grace, but hla attorneys contend
he la a victim of battered-spouse
syndrome.
Recalling thdr relationship,
Taylor said when Grace cut him,
sometimes there was warning,
sometimes not. "I'll put you In
check." la what Orace
times said before going to a dish
rack to get a k n ife In the
apartment the couple shared,
Taylor testified.
At other times. Taylor said.
"W e'd be sitting on the couch
and I'd aay something she didn't
like. She'd go to the dish rack,
get a knife and cut m e," without
any warning.
T aylor said the first tim e
Grace cut him was about two
months after they started living
together. He always moved out
after each violent episode but
would be convinced to return by
Orace, who was seven yean
older than Taylor.
Although Orace did not have
any weapon on her or make any
threatening gestures at him the
night Taylor totally stabbed her.
he testified he felt threatened by
her.
W hen p rosecu tor S tew art
S ton e rep ea ted ly asked on
croos-examtoatton how the un­
armed woman was threatening
him, Taylor said. "Cause she's a
threat. She Just threatened me

;
i
j
;

' K 'inlbUuH it&gt;
f- ■')j

tlr* *2*

aery procedure.
The 66 Democrats and four
Republicans sent a letter to
Speaker Thomas S. Foley, say­
ing a compromise Mil "m ust
contain coverage for contracep­
tive and abortion services If It la
to gain our support”
Last month. 35 House Demo­
crats aald th ey w ould vote
against any health b ill that
covers abortions.
A new poll by the Tim es
Mirror Center found 66 percent
o f those surveyed oppose In­
cluding abortion as a basic
benefit in a national health plan.
That survey found that the
p u b lic has tu rn ed a g a in s t
Clinton's original health plan by
a 49-33 margin — the exact
opposite o f a Tim es Mirror poll
And only 39 percent supported
making employers pay moat o f
the cost o f their workers' health .
insurance, w hile 76 percent
wanted reforms to ensure that
all Americans get medical care.
The survey o f 1,031 adults
June 33-36 had a 3-potnt margin .
o f error.

Loss

1A

Terrace, Castle Brewer Court, end
W illiam Clark Court.
Beginning last August, the
four officers, at tim es, used
s p e c ia l b ic y c le s fo r th e ir
petrolling. "W e still have the
bikes." Russell said, "bu t at this
time, we haven't decided when
and where to use them. A lot will
depend on the cells we have."
He said one o f his major concorns waa response time when
m ils are received.
Other than some changes In
s p e c ific sone re a lig n m e n t.
Russell did not expect any other
changes to be required because
o f the lose o f funding for these
four CPT officers.

;
i
1
i
•

j

�'ik

• A - Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, Florida » Thursday, July 14, 1 M 4

Eyew itness to G eorgia storm s, flooding
Herald Correspondent
Thanks to year round school, I had planned a
whirlwind vacation to cover as many o f the
relatives as possible. July 1, we would leave for
my In-laws In Huntsville. Ala. W e would stay
there until July 5 when we would leave to visit
my sister In Macon. Qa. After a couple o f days In
Macon, we would go visit m y m other in McRae,
Oa.
Sometimes vacations go awry. A t first, the
appearance o f Alberto was fortuitous. It chased
my brother and sister-in-law away from their
vacation at the Q ulf early so that we were able to
see them. We still kept a close eye on the Weather
Channel. -We knew the storm was headed for
Macon but everone said It would move quickly
Into the Carolines.
The Weather Channel was atlll saying the
storm was headed for the Carollnas when we left
Huntsville Tuesday, July S. We might run Into
some bad weather, but we were certain It would
have passed over Macon by the tim e we got there.
The weather was good for much o f the trt
Even through Atlanta, there were Just m:
showers. About 20 miles below Atlanta though
the wind-end the rain picked up. A t times. It was
difficult to sec. About 20 miles out o f Macon, the
rain became a drizzle and we were convinced the
worst was over.
We got to my sister's house arund 11 p.m.
That's when we found out Just how bad It was. A
decades old bridge at High Palls, an area we had
passed near, was washed away by the flood.
Many o f the roads In Macon were flooded. Warner
Robins. 25 miles away, was flooded worse than

£

Macon. And the rain was still com ing. A
continuous rain that went on through the night
and didn't let up until sometime after dawn. At
2:30 a.m., my brother-in-law, an engineer for the
Bibb County School System, was called out to
dose a school that was being used as a flood
shelter, and open a new school. The original
school wasn't flooded, but all the roads to It were.
The news Wednesday morning wasn't good.
i ne Pierce
nerce Avenue exit on w
o had
naa no
The
1-75
flooded Just a
few hours after we'd gone through lIt.
&lt; 1-75 was
flooded In other places as was 1-18. one o f the
major roads south o f the city. Doze:
Dozens o f other
city, county and state roads were under water. As
the day wore on, many o f the city's bridges
flooded. The only bridge that stayed above water
was the second street bridge. And the road to It
was flooded as the pressure o f the Ocmulgee
River sent geysers o f water through the drainage
system and onto the street.
We were warned that we would lose water, so
we all showered and filled everything we could
with water. But we worried that If we were stuck
In the city too long, we'd run out. After all, there
were now nine people in my sister's house, and It
takes three gallons o f water to flush a toilet.
So, aa soon as the curfew expired at
Wednesday, m y husband and I left the kids with
my sister and went out for some supplies. The
grocery stores were packed. And all o f them had
already run out o f bottled water (even the
gourmet bottled water) and Ice. The panic In the
air was palpable. I resolved then to get my
hurricane supplies together when we made It
back to Lake Mary. We stopped at a gas staton
and lucked out by getting their bog o f Ice.
Luckily, the k in never stopped playing long

enough to pay any attention to the bad nears. And
there was a lot o f bad news. Despite pleas from
emergency management officials and flrom police,
sightseen were everywhere. Police had to spend
valuable time running people out o f dangerous
eaa. Prom' the moment o f the first flooding,
warnings arere Issued. "D o not try to cross a read
cov/rred by arater." It might look shallow enough
to drive through, but there was no way to tell If
the road was even there. "D o not try to cross any
creek or rtver on fo o t" Too many o f the fatalities
occurred because people d idn 't heed these
wam lfigs. A man trying to cross a creek on a
railroad trestle was swept aarsy by the water. A
man and woman Joyriding In a flooded parking
lot went through a sinkhole, truck and all. The
woman's body aras found the next day. The man.
still in his truck, wss found in a storm drain
several days later. There arere many other tragic
deaths that shouldn't have happened.
We were very lucky. We arere all safe and dry.
And m y slater s neighborhood never lost poarer
like much o f Macon did. We could sit in comfort
and watch the nears show us Images o f the worst
flood in Macon's history. O f course. Macon aras
not the only city affected. Juliette, the small
Georgia town made famous by the movie "Fried
Green Tom atoes" aras under arater. We saw color
pictures o f the "W histle Stop C afe," only Its roof
still above water. Montesuma was a lake.
Americus, an island, com pletely cut off. and
Albany aras In the path o f the ever-rising waters.
I began to worry seriously about my mother. 1
knew she had planned to leave Kalamazoo, Mich,
and head for Oeorgia Wednesday morning. She
was supposed to stop In Nashville to spend
Wednesday night, but knowing m y mother, I
knew she’d try to go on through. And I didn't

know If she knew about the flood.
....
telling me she wasn't worried and I shouldn’t
worry either. Still, you should have seen the relief
on her face when m y mom showed up on her
doorstep at Just before midnight Wednesday. Just
as I'd thought. Mom had tried to make It through.
She hadn't heard anything about the flood. When
Mom got to-Atlanta, she'd felt tired and started
looking for a hotel to stay in. A ll the ones on 1-75
were rull. She didn't know why and no one
bothered to tell her why. She didn't know about
the floods until she reached the state patrol
barricade on 1*75 Just north o f Macon. One o f the
patrolmen told her how to get to m y sister's
house on unflooded back roads. He assured her
that there was no way she could get through
Macon to go on to her hometown o f McRae. There
were no roads on the south side o f Macon open.
Under normal conditions. Mom was 10 minutes
from my slater's house. It took her over an hour
to get there.
Thursday afternoon, are left Macon. It was a
long line o f traffic and a long wait to get across
the only bridge out o f the city, but we were lucky
that the road to the bridge was finally clear.
When we left. Macon was without water and was
expected to be without water for another 10 days.
Once the water la restored, It could be more than
a month before It's safe to drink.
Stories should have morals at the end. 8o, If
you need a moral. It's the scout motto "B e
Prepared." W e cannot stop natural disasters, but
are can prepare for them. W e can minimise the
danger to ourselves. W e can remember that no
material possessions are worth dying for. And we
can remember that there la no destination we
have to get to badly enough to risk our lives.

Experts urge irradiation of meat
to protect against some bacteria
'Science Writer

organ ized by th e A m erican
Gastroenterological Aaaociation
said the public would need to be
educated about the health safety
benefits o f Irradiation. But a
citizen's group said It would
oppose any plan to use radiation
on the n a tio n 's ham burger

W ASH IN G TO N - E xp erts
seeking to protect Americans
fro m p o w e r fu l fo o d -b o rn e
bacteria that killed four people
and sickened 700 others last
year recom m end that som e
ie E. co ll bacteria, first
hamburger meat be treated with
Identified In 1082. gained na­
sterilizing radiation.
In a report released Wednes­ tional attention last year after
illness struck at least 700 people
day. a committee o f federal and
who ate beef hamburgers from
p riva te health o ffic ia ls said
fast-food restaurants In four
treating raw meat with radiation
w ill kill the bacteria known as E. Western states. Four people died
coll 01B7:H7, which spreads and 178 were hospitalized.
"T h ere are still too many
through
beef.
The report said that current health questions about irradia­
tion o f fo o d ," .said Jerem y
federal meat inspection system
cannot detect K. ooii contamina­
tion and that new scientific
technology m u *. I * applied to are h ealth y whefr th ey are •
the food chain from the cow on sUughlered. they'll not be a
the form to the table."
threat to public health."
Rlfldn said current methods o f
"Th ere are no other methods
short o f Irradiation or thorough protecting and Inspecting food
should be Improved and farms
c o o k in g ," sa id D r. M artin
B rotm an , ch a irm a n o f th e w h ere food stock Is raised
experts committee and (acuity cleaned up.
The Food and Drug Adminis­
m em ber at California Pacific
tration has approved irradiation
Medical Center.
He said radiation may be the o f chicken. An application seek­
on ly way to control E. coll ing approval for using the tech­
con ta m in a tio n in raw b e e f nique on beef la pending.
Brotman aaid the com m ittee's
without affecting Its quality. He
also said the health beneflta o f proposal did not call for all
Irradiation would outweigh the hamburger to be sapped but for
consumers to be allowed to
cost to industry.
The 15-member com m ittee choose between Irradiated beef

ter

R o ily on ttw M l

u— a»•»***•

Twins, KJmmy (left) and Kelly German, •, are
having a bail with the Sanford Recreation
Department's summertime program. The bounc-

|nfl bails are smono the manv to ile r #Un.tima
aShSKaavaiiaMs* t £ S f i R r o t t e n f m K
atCttyHaiT
y

Nature Co. telescope ads:
Timely or misleading?
Associated Prase Writer_________
BOSTON - The Nature Co.
has tripled Its national telcscops
sales with advertising linked to
this weekend's cosm ic crash
bet ween Jupiter and a comet.
The telescope ad reads: "A ll
the world's telescopes w ill be
watching. W ill you ?" Several
sales people told Inquirers that
amateurs should be able to see
the result o f the Impact with
telescopes eoW at The Nature
Co. stores.
But astronomers say the retail
chaln'a telescopes are too weak
to pick up any a c tivity on
Jupiter caused by the comet
crash. And there may not be any
visible results at all.
So stargazers who expect to
see pyrotechnics through The
Nature Co.'s best-selling 5400
telescope w ill probably be dis­
appointed. aaid Daniel Green,
a s tro n e rm e r w ith th e
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics.
" I think they're kind o f on the
edge there o f w h at's proper
advertising and what Is n 't."
Green said.
The Nature Co.'s director o f
public relations. George Cruys,
said the ads do not promise that
(he telescopes are strong enough
to pick up any explosions.
"W e're not trying to mislead
people, but we are using the
event to sell telescopes and sell
books and get people Interested
In astronom y." Cruys said.
• The tactic has worked.
; By the third week o f May. the
most recent period from which
figures are available.
*

L0&lt;^
PEOPlf

by
50 percent compared with the
same period last year. Cruys
said. Sales have tripled since
The Nature Co. launched Ms ad
campaign on June I. The com­
pany does nbn release specific
The comet Shoemaker-Levy 6
is a string o f apace rocks or Ice
speeding In line toward Jupiter
at about 190,000 m iles per hour.
The largest fragment Is almost
two miles In diameter.
They are expected to start
hitting Saturday — on the side o f
the planet away from Barth. The
actual collision w ill be seen only
by cameras from the Hubble
Space Telescope. The Images
w ill be broadcast an television.
Astronomers and others with
high-powered telescopes might
be able to see the aftermath o f
the collision. But scientists differ
over whether the comet will
trigger fireballs more than 1,500
m iles across or be absorbed
without a trace into Jupiter's
gsaedus depths.
R ega rd less, o n ly a high1 telescope with an aperture o f at least eight Inches
would pick up any activity,
Green odd.
"Even I. because I don't follow
Jupiter closely, would have a
hard tim e," Green said. ‘ T o say
that the untrained observer is
going to go out and see some­
thingJa very misleading to say

When a reporter made anon­
ymous telephone calls to Nature
C o . s to re s In B oston and
C hicago, salespeople recom ­
mended buying the telescope
with the BO m illim eter i
* '
"T h e only thing you'll be able
to see la the Impact the comet
will have. With the BO m illim eter
It w ill be mare dearly defined,"
In Chicago, a saleswoman said
that with the 80 m illim eter
m odd "you 'll be able to see
som ething when It hits but
exactly what we're not sure
y e t"

"Y ou cannot guarantee sterili­
ty ." he said. "W hat you have to
do la reduce the risk.'1
Brotman aaid the annual na­
tional coat o f treating the infec­
tion la estimated at 1216 million
to 8580 million.
About 10 percent o f patients
develop a blood and kidney
disorder that requires hospital­
ization and can cause death due
to kidney (allure. Young children
are moat i
th e o n l y tr e a tm e n t la to
mechanically support patients
until they recover or die.
He aaid little le known about
how the bacteria get Into m eat
but aaid a Uttle goes a long way.
Though roost diseases require
In fe c tio n by m illio n s o f
bacterium, he aaid E. coll can
cause Illness by exposure to as
few as 89.
Such email amounts o f dis­
ease-causing bacteria cannot be
detected by routine meat in­
spection practices and new
measures are essential If the
bacteria are to be guarded
against. Brotman said.

50 years after Nazi retreat, German
troops again parading In Paris
Asaoclatsd Prass Writer_________
P A R IS

— T h e la s t t im e

Qtnoaa troops paraded on the
Champs-Elysees, Paris was un­
der Naxi rule. They paraded

Oermane. who marched daily
down the Champs-Elysees dur­
ing the four years Parts was
occupied. Those opposed range
Trom C o m m u n t e t s to
monarchists to former President
Valery Oiscard d'Estalng.
Mitterrand. In a mraasgr today
to French armed forces, said the
presence o f the Eurooorps In the
perade "testifies to the common
demire o f our people to build the
future together."
Narekee Bolmont. who loot
both le p tn the war, quit aa
m ayor o f C ham borlgaud In
southern France on Wednesday
to protest the German presence
5 L !“ “ J E “ “ “ 004 * * * * * the
victim s o f Nazi atrocities.
tt'a a French holiday, not a
■toopean one. said Bolmont. 71.
I m for economic and cultural
cooperation with Germany. But
m ilitary cooperation, no."
Adm. Philippe de QauUe. eon
■ «*fc n n e r president
Charles de Gaulle, is amn^g the

tS?Uy'« m •ymbo1 ** P ° * '
W orld War fl reconciliation but
also a reminder o f the war’s
enduring scare.
A lth ou gh o n ly about 200
Cruys said the salespeople's Oermans were among more than
comments were not what The 7.000 participants in the annual
Nature Co. wants them to tell Bastille Day m ilitary parade,
customers.
their presence has Aided an
Ron Forbes, executive vice emotional debate that has over­
president o f marketing for The shadowed other aspects o f the
Nature Co., said he wrote a national holiday.
The Oermans. members o f the
memo to the retail chain's 124
stores In the United States and multinational Eurooorps, made
Canada advising sales people to t h e i r a p p e a r a n c e a b o a r d
armored vehicles In uniforms
be more careful.
"N o one In the world should distinguishable only by sm*n
buy a telescope this size with the patches from those o f their
Idea th ey're going to watch c o l l e a g u e s f r o m F r e n c h ,
comets Impact Jupiter." Cruys Belgium , Spain and Luxem ­
bourg.
Throngs of onlookers cheered disgruntled.
David Levy, co-diacover o f the
•Tfs
con pletely the wrong
as the Germans rolled past, part
It's com
com et agreed.
Levy, whose book *«kyw at- of the five-nation Eurocorps that moment. During the 50th anni­
ching* is also brink promoted symbolises post-Worid War (I versary o f the Liberation o f
with triescooes by The Nature reconciliation.
Parts, this Is neither the right
As the Eurocorps units, a total date nor the right place." he
Co., suggests that am ateurs
watch Jupiter with a telescope o f some 500 soldiers, headed
before the com et hits, then down the avenue, a m ilitary
Paris was liberated on Aug. 23.
The best-selling telescope at watch the collision on television.
band struck .up the national • 1B«4 by France s 2nd Armored
The Mature Co. has an aperture
"M r message Is that people anthems o f the participating Division, which had a place o f
of 60 mlWmetcre. or 3Vt Inches. should be part o f this even tth en n a t i o n s , i n c l u d i n g ,
honor In today's parade. Division
The second best seller has aa they'll be able to say I watched "D eu tsch lan d., D eutschland. c o m m a n d e r G e n . G e o r g e s
o f BO millimeters, or 2 Jupiter the week the comet h it." Uber A ik s ."
Pormente helled the Eurooorps
Borne in the crowd, such as a as "an astonishing turnaround
he said.
«&gt;upfc wearing yellow ofhletocy."
stars like those Jews were forced
The Wehrmacht troops who
to wear in World War 11. were conquered Parle wasted no time
bitter. "We're here to keep the g o o s e - s t e p p i n g d o w n th e
memory alive." said Francis Cham ps-Elysees. Paris' main
Salomon. 80. "We need to show boulevard. They held a parade
N O W -lO Q N tlR M n i* LOCAL BNTOIIIflLS
the politicians we don't agree. "
hours after entering Paris on
- HEALTH t R T IO S ■EPUCATIOH - 8UXHE83
Opinion polls Indicate about June 14. 1B40. and marched
two-ihirds of tbs French public dally at noon for 1,515 days
support President Francois Mit­ before fleeing Allied forces in
terrand e decision to invite the August 1B44.

Nil III Old lit I ,||||

or traditionally processed meat.
But even If Irradiation Is
approved, Brotm an said no
American should assume un­
cooked beef is safe from the
bacteria.

An Illustrious group o f foreign
d ljpltm lre gathered to* watch
today's Bastille Day parade,
featu rin g 350 veh icles. 280
borsea, scores o f airplanes.

assLSsssaS

the broad avenue.
* * * ■Prefol tribute
*° JJ1® French soldiers who
cou ldnt march becauae they
--- -------- “ "
iH ln
VIPs Include
c e llo r H elm u t
m inisters Felipe
SpMn. Jacques Banter o f Lux” * £ " * and,J* * n*Luc Dehaeoe
lvonr Bedle;
£ ? ■ * Preal* «* •
Henri Konan
E™ e* to ® * »P e r o f
Colombia, and Jacques Defers,
d u tf o ecu u ve o f S . E u £ £ S

■

K oh l, le ft out o f June 6
ceremonies marking tbs 50th
anniversary o f the D J lqyT n ^
Ube™ * * r r e n e i
from Next control, came with the
•on* « f three men n « H to the
failed July 1B44 attem pt to
eaeeeetnate Hitler.
p

5 | S -s 5 w
Jpo h u m -. to U w T n S d s iJ S S

Field Marshal Erwin " _______

who tod Hitler's North A frS m
rempMgn. despised the Naxto
toil wavered to his support for
the conspiracy. Hittor fcs rS h im
to commit eutetoto
to the would-be
revealed.

■ M a to M a m H g i

/

■

�THURSDAY

All-Star state tourneys
L o n g w o o d te a m s head into action
T i t atop volltytotll latgut
SANFORD — Tim 's Team gained a share o f
first place In the Sanford Recreation Co-ed
Power Volleyball League by rallying past the
front-running Young Quns 13-15. 15-2. 15-13
last night at the Sanford Middle School
Oymnalorlum.
Earlier in the evening. Tim 's Team swept the
Bad Apples 15-9. 15-9 and the Unknowns 16-14,
15-11. M eanwhile, the Young Ouna were
knocking o ff the Unknowns 15-7. 15-2 and the
Bad Apples 15-9.11-15. 15-13.
The Bad Apples salvaged the evening by
beating the Unknowns 16-14.15-11.
Three weeks Into the season, the Young Guns
and Tlm 'ii Team share first with Identical 7-2
records. They’re followed by the Bad Apples
(4-5) and the Unknowns (0-9).

Toucan W lllit’t tits for load
WINTER SPRINGS - Despite playing a man
short. Toucan W illie's doubled up H ellig Meyers
8-4 in the W inter Springs Men's Class C Softball
League last night at Central Winds Park.
The won moves Toucan W illie's Into a tie for
first place In the league with Signature Pools.
The two teams are scheduled to play next
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Leading Toucan W illie's 17-hlt attack was
Eddie Norton, who went 4-for-5 with three RBI.
Harold Hitt added a triple, double, single, and
two RBI. Doug Pegel hit three singles and scored
taro runs.
Rick Tribit and Greg Register each contrib­
uted two singles. Trlblt also scored two runs.

YM CA 3-on-3 basketball
LAKE MARY - The Seminole Family YMCA
is will be accepting registrations through July
30 for its adult 3-on-3 basketball league.
The league will play on Sunday nights from
Aug. 7 through Oct. 2 In Seminole County high
school gyms. There will be a single-elimination
tournament at the end o f the season.
Players may sign as a team (6160) or as
individuals (637.50 for YMCA members. 647.50
for non-members) and be assigned to a team.
Rosters are limited to six players.
For more Information or to register, stop by
the YMCA. 665 Longwood-Lake Mary Road, or
call Mike Aldrich. 321-6944.

LONGWOOD — Three teams w ill represent the
Longwood Babe Ruth Baseball League In their
respective state tournaments over the next 10 to
12 days.
The Major (11 and 12-year-olds) Division's
state tournament w ill be hosted by Longwood at
Candyland Park. The 11-team playofT opens this
evening and continues through next Monday.
Coach John M ellllo's Longwood squad w ill play
Ocala at 6 p.m. tonight. The winner advances to
play Lakeland at 1 p.m. Friday.
"Local fan support, home field experience, and
having the kids sleeping In their own beds are
some o f the benefits o f hosting the tournament."
said Mellllo, who counts pitching, defense, speed,
and tournament experience among his team's
strengths.
"T h is team has the chemistry needed to win
the state championship and advance to the

PONY

regional tournament."
As the tournament host, the Longwood squad
didn't have to play any qualifying games. But
Mellllo pointed out that the team has played over
20 practice games and that all 13 tekm members
played on tcaqis during the summer that have
qualified for the AAU World Series In Minnesota.
Longwood's Minor A Division (9-10) team Is
headed west to W inter Haven this weekend.
Recipients o f a first-round bye. the Longwood
Alt-Stars o f Coach Joe Flndelsen — who
outscored their opponents 53-2 In the district
tournament — w ill play the winner o f the game
between Boca Raton and Perry.
Next week, the Longwood Commissioners
(9-10) Division All-Stars w ill compete In their
state tournam ent In Lakeland. Longwood.
coached by Mike Cottle, won the District II title In
Tavares to earn the trip to the state tournament.
Also the beneficiaries o f a first-round bye.

Longwood will begin
against the winner
contest.

Sportsmart
keeps hopei
league alive

Srs. keep
rolling 11
SANFORD — It appears that 11 Is
the lucky number In the Sanford
Recreation Senior (16-18) Baseball
League.
On Wednesday night, the Nobles
Construction White Sox scored 11
runs for the second consecutive
game, beating the Cline's Painting
Royals 11-5 at Sanford Memorial
Stadium. Meanwhile, the Metro
Sewer Red Sox were winning by 11
runs at Zlnn Beck Field, coasting to
a 16-5 decision over the Marlins.
Both the White Sox and Marlins
scored 11 runs In season-opening
wins Saturday.
The White Sox (2-0) are the only
undefeated team remaining in the
four-team circuit. The Red Sox and
Martina are tied for second at 1-1
ahead o f the Royals (0-2).
On Saturday, the Royals and Red
Sox tangle at 10 a.m. with the

SANFORD - It's the league that
wouldn't die.
The Sanford Recreation Wednes­
day Men's Spring Slowpitch Softball
League, scheduled to wrap up a
month ago. struggled on last night
at Chase Park. Sportamart-Crazy
W ings outscoring Dee's Nuts 15-3.
And there's stUI at least one game
left to be played. According to a
recreation department spokesman.
Sportsmart-Crazy W ings (now 7-4)
w ill play W ells Contracting (8-3) In
the regular season finale next week.
A Sportam art-Crazy W ings win will
create a tie far first and force a
one-same playoff.
The confusion was created when
one o f the league's five original
teams dropped out four weeks Into
the season. Tne scramble to have

one run. and an RBI. A drian
Mitchell bad a double, ooe run. and
tw o RBI whUe Curtis Peterson
contributed a single, ooe run. and
two RBI.
C edric W illia m s sin gled and
■cored a run. W alter Bryant scored
three runs. Marcus Johnson had a
run and an RBI. Dee Quinn scored a

O-Cubs double by Memphis
MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Ba^-to-backRBl doubles
by Mike Hubbard and Doug GUnvUle led the
Orlando Cuba post the Memphis Chicks 6-2
Wednesday In the Southern League.
Amaury Telemaco (2-3) pitched seven In­
nings, snowed five hits, two runs, four walks
andstruck out nine for the win.
Brian Harrison (541) took the loss.

Sun* otiUlug HisilsdHe
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - Huntavtk scored seven
runs in the first Inning, but Luis Quinones two
Wte and th isT R B IM ^ J sctem vllfc back for an
1 1 -8 w i n W e d n e s d a y I n th e Southern League.
The Suns scored three in the fourth and sent
12 batters to the plate for seven runs In the fifth.
Quinones had s two-run single o ff loser Rob
Mercs (2*4). Pteros retired only one o f seven
batters he faced.
D ave Evans (2-4) got the victory, and
LaOrande Russell pitched a scoreless ninth for
his second save.

In the nine-team draw
the Oainesvllle-Ocala

After opening the w ^o n with a win S M u ^ J ^ T h o ^
the
Marlins
suffered
u Metro
.? ro iE
IS p «eo
S d Sox
Baseball
League
campaign Wednesday, falling to ,^
the
sewer
oox

Zaladonls does job on mound, at plate
CRESCENT C ITY — Brian Zaladonls led Sanford Post
53 on the mound and at the plate to an 1M victory
over host Crescent City in American Legion baseball
two runs, and one RBI. Dax Kemp a
Brad Jenkins singled and scored a run
alaohlta
*
uTtsms drove In one tun and scored a run.
. Samm]
sir o f runs. David Sweeney, Ryan
Allan Gel
each scored a run.
Vinson, and Ryan
HU play
Deltona Trinity Christian
Now 12-5. Bank
.
to begin at 10 a.m.
In a doubleheader echedi
Saturday.

lim bed c ™ c , City to
four runs (throe earned) on four singles. He struck out
six, walked four, and hit a batter.
.
Zaladonls helped him self with his bat, twice com ing
to the plate with runners on second and third base and
twice com ing through with a two-run singles to
aocumulatcateam-lMdlng four RBI.
.
i Eubanks contributed a double, two runs, and
while Tim Raines Jr. chipped In with a double.

'th e fou rth and s ixth innings
Wednesday night. After both teams
■truck far three runs in the first
inning. Sportsm art-Crazy W ings
took the lead far keens by scoring
two runs In the lop o f the second.
Don B asil paced Sportsm artCrazy W ings's 18-hit attack with
four singles, a run scored, and two
RBI. Bob Palagalno contributed a
double (the only extra-base hit In
the game), two tingles, three runs,
and two RBI.
•
Oeorge Davidson singled twice,
■cored three runs, and had one RBI
while Darryl Miller singled twice,
scored two runs, and had an RBI.
Donnie Miller had two singles and
tw o runs, Don Macher h it twp
singles and scored a run.
Steve Woodley had a single, one
run. and two RBI. Jim Nulty also
added a single and two RBI. Chris
Fuller singled in one run. Paul
Rodrigues and Gary Miller each
scored one run.
For Dee's Nuts, Tony Belllaelmo
hit two singles and drove In a run.
B.J. Holt had a single and two RBI.
David Lively singled twice. Quinn
Barrows singled and scored a run.
Lonnie Tucker. Tom Lundy, and
Sonny Rlssoto each hit a single. B.J.
Osborne and Glenn Stewart each
■cored a run.

Induraln adds lo Tour toad
LOURDES. France - Three-time champion
Miguel taduraln pulled away from his chief rival
on the final climb and stretched his overaU lead
Wednesday In the first ro^or mountain stage o f
this year's Tour de France.
Luc Leblanc o f France captured the 11th stage
as the race entered the Pyrenees after 10 days o f
Oat cycling. But Induraln was the real victor.

advantage of dry track at Volusia
rhere are some nights you Just have to finish

T S U u n "llflk S r! thc’vCB defending champion for tb -P ™

lapped car. tangled, and were sent to the back of
the pack for the reetart.

□7:30 p jn . — WtRB 56. WTBS. Florida Martins
at Atlanta Bravos, (L )

order o f finish. Rob Underwood. Jason Burkett.

Burkett ended up retiring to the pita a few tops
toter. but.R ogers, taking advantage o f non­
counting caution tops, had a
before com ing back out at the rear o f the field.
"Four tires made the difference." Rogers said.
• Fifteen tops aren't a lot. but It waa enough. We
come q u ite try to win th e rs c e (each week).
Everyone else Is making a big deal (about the
WRS standings) and I'm Marling to fe*l tb f
pressure. And w e're not even halfway through
the letaon*"
Rogers finished ahead o f Jim m y Winks, who
he passed for the lead on the 24th lap o f the
V. »

.. _____41. ^

tka iM i flu* WFTF in

Baker, 'afbo'h ad the point before MlUer
seised 1L finished second In front o f Ray Fulford.
Roger W rtn. and Donnie Narmore.
OUUard came out on top In the Super Stock
chase. Following him across the finish line were
Donnie Otesoner. Jacob Warren. Eric Bolelho.
and Chad Allman.
_ . .
Loescher ran his Finish Line Racing School
mount to the lead o f the pack on the first top or
the Florida Modified headliner and stayed on the
point for the rest o f the 20-top feature. He was
trailed by Jon Compagnone Jr.. Jerry Lee
Yarbrough. Jon Smith, and Vernon Clark.
Orr took the checkered flag In the Mini Stocks
ahead o f Wea FUyaw. Alan Buker. Pat Norris, and
Dale Casteel.
Denyer led the way for Jim Butler. Keith
Lawrence. Russ Anlonucci. and Greg Elliott in
the Hobby Stock rpaln.

F O R THE 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

�- Sanford Harold, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 14, 1M4

Romario’s header has
Brazil playing for Cup

S T A T S &amp; STANDINGS

!,^t U -i -f -l

Cincinnati

Mocnten
St.Loult

PltHburgh
Chicago

Colorado

«

41

.447 1

tanFrancltre
ton Dlogo _

It
U

n
W

.os 7»r
J D IIH

Nogamat adwSuM
TSanSaVi Qaswt

tan Francltre (Slock 1-0) at Montreal
(Martina* t-4), 7:11p.m.

Lot Angelas IGrow M l at Philadelphia
(Wait 77), 7:11p.m.

Houston (Kile 0-1) at Flttiburgh (Llebar
4-4), 7:11p.m.
Chicago (Tracheal 7-a) at Cincinnati
(lm ltoyM ),7:lfb.m . '

tan 6toga (Aawy 47) at New York (Jana*

f-7), 7:40 p.m.

HASTFORD WHALZSI - Signed Jimmy
Carton, cantor, toamultiyear contract.
Zast Caaat Hacker Laipae
TALLAMAttSS TISZS INASKI Han dTarry Ckrlito— tank
COLLZOI
FRANKLIN A MARSHALL - Namad
Glenn Oall»jtnr basekall reach. Announced
the retlgnatton of Mark Faltor, wrestling
reach, andBethllyto. easlitant trainer.
LONRWOOO - Announced that Sanaa
White, warnin'! basketball guard, hat tranaWiNwifwiisWinTi
MltmtlPPI - Promoted Jo* Lee Dunn,
detensive coordinator, to Interim head toot-

Ftortoa (SarSaar Ml at AMaMs (Aeary
4-7).7i4»pj».
It. Lauli (Palactoe 17) at CatoraSs (Ntod

PASADENA. Calif. - Chance
after chance. Shot after shot.
Brazil thought It never would
make that final move and reach
another World Cup final.
And then the smallest man on
the field rose above It all and
headed In the goal that gave the
Brazilians a chance to finally end
24 years o f soccer frustration.
A header by Romarlo In the
81st minute gave Brazil a 1-0
victory over Sweden and a berth
In S u n d ay’ s c ha m p ion sh ip
against Italy.
~'T haven't made many o f
those," the B-foot-6 striker said.
" I can probably count them all
on the fingers of one hand."
Romarlo was the biggest man
on the field all afternoon. But for
79 minutes. It was for the goals
he missed, Including a gimme In
the 25 th minute.
Branco fed Romarlo all alone
at the top o f the penalty box. He
dribbled past Swedish goalie
Tomas Ravelll and gave a care-

teas lap toward the open net the equivalent In soccer or
home-run trot. But Swedlal
fu llb a c k P a trlk A n d eriao l
zoomed up to knock It away.
"I'm still trying to figure on
where that guy came from ," h
said after the game.
But the game wasn’t as c!o&lt;
as the score might Indicate
Brazil was simply overwhelm
Ing.
"Technically, tactically an
physically, we controlled tH
whole gam
e," Brazilian coaa
game,
Carlos Alberto Parrelra saU
"W e took the Initiative from tH
beginning, and 1*0 doesn
translate B razil's supremac]
The only difficulty was puttin
the ball In the goal."
Brazil outshot Sweden 15-1 t|
the first half and 26-3 for th
game. It's questionable Braz
can produce such number
against Italy. The winner o f thi
game w ill be soccer's first foui
time world champion.
"T h is." said Brazilian mlc
fielder Mazlnho, "hi a battle c
big dogs."

‘il Divino Codino’
lifts Azzurri into finals
AP8ports Writer

0 4), 7:05 p.m.

AMS AlCAN L I ASUS

AHTMwtlDT

J la lu r e V ,

IFarda .....

. - t li

4C al*

440

IS

i

Z

i' ,‘
j,
• (Ml KM* FPIINSi TU-1-4) MAM

Saatoa (Ctomare M) a* OaklwW (V
■sat 1-7),ft tip jn.
SaHbware IMcOatWA W41-M CaStort
lansatoaM). to:04pm.
-i/lxn
Naw York (Akbatt 74) a) laattto (Ffwni

safe

MltCSUANSOM &gt;'&gt;
I
4:J»&gt;m. - WOTOAM (140), Tito Iport*

4p*m.—WOTOAMIM), TtwFreaa ire
7 pm - WWNI-AM (740), WWIN-AM

EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. The crowd chanted long and
loud: "E-TAL-YAt E-TAL-YAI"
For the first time In 12 years,
Italy was back in the World Cup
final.
This was supposed to have
happened In 1990, when soc­
cer’s biggest show was in Italy.
But four yean later, the Azzurri
— like so many Italian Immi­
grants — accom plish ed on
Am erica’ s shores what they
could not back at home.
Roberto Baggio, showing why
he's called the best player In th*world, scored a pair o f brilliant
B rat-h alf goals W edn esday,
leading Italy to a 2-1 victory over
Bulgaria and a W orld Cup final
against Brazil.
"Roberto Baggio la a treasure
fo r o u r n a t i o n , " f o r w a r d
Gianfranco Zola maid.
Back home Baggio Is called "II
D ivino C o d ln o ~ (Th e D ivine
ngtallUU'Ji reaRy.sponyuU that
flops across his back as he darts
across the Aql4u Bulgarian de­
fenders. unable to keep up with
Baggio, saw a lot o f the ponytail
during the semifinal.
"H e should never be kept

W P M 1 W W .W r # « H P W
.Jv

Seniors

RMJL
JSmV

happy."
Eight days ago, the Italian
newspapen said Baggio and the
A zzu rri were underachieving
bums being dragged down bd
coach A rrlgo Sacchl'a e r a n
schemes. But following Victoria!
against N igeria , Spain g j &gt;
B u l« u t f .:the y’ns 6n « g a m e M f t

from being declared n f l
treasures,
"Criticism was overly M H fe
but I have been always s t f a ii
inside." Baggio said. "1 n e ^ l
surrender to difficulties.''
fl

�wmmm

+WWV*f
$• f t

f r * t * f I

, , r r #'

r r r ^ r

Sanford H erald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July 14, 1004 - 9 ft

G ospel m usic achievem ent awards

IN BRI EF

Local artists re cognized for their co n trib u tio n s

Pilot Club awards scholarships
The Pilot Club o f Sanford recently presented scholarships
and special awards to 17 students from Seminole High School.
Seminole Community College as well as Sanford sndLakevlew
Middle Schools.
Money earned from the Pilot's egg art sales are used for these
scholarships and awards which totaled S I,BOO.
Jalro a . Martinet from Seminole High School received the
academic scholarship to Sem inole Community College:
vocational scholarships were given to Edward Torres, James
Harper and Patricia A. Jones to 8CC. Shannon WUcoxaon was
■chohmlJ*!*01 o f the Seminole Community College nursing
Those receiving medals and recognition from Sanford and
Lakevlew Middle schools were: Ameen Baker, Johnathan
Hubbard and Brooke Francis from Sanford Middle School for
outstanding scholarship and Jenna E lliott Kara Killian and
Keytwana Copeland from Lakevlew Middle School also for
outstanding scholarship.
Awards for most Improved In academics were presented to
Sanford Middle School students Montfrsd CUcquennol, Joshua
Bowen and Rhonda Baum and Dana McFadden, Matt Reed and
Sam Reynolds from Lakevlew Middle School.
Mary Jo Cochrane, club president, M Hath RethwtU, Carol
Sprouse and Scholarship Chairman Bonnie W olf made up the
committee for choosing the awardee*.

Grant for kids
ORLANDO — A S3,000 York Children's Foundation grant
has been given to O lve Kids the W orld, the Central
Florida-based organisation that hosts children with life*
threatening illnesses and their Bundies during their specialwish vacations to the Orlando area's many attractions.
Carey Hand Funeral Homes, with five frmeral chapels In the
Oreater Orlando area, nominated Olve the Kids The World to
receive the grant
Give Kids The World, in Kissimmee, la a singular place at
which these special families stay — at no eoat — during their
Central Florida vacations. U features 86 two-bedroom villa*, a
Gingerbread House restaurant a fentasy-flited Castle o f
Miracles activity cen te r,' as wall as a swim m ing pool,
playground, stocked flatting lake and many oth tr fontasy-fllled
win be used
The grant fro m 1
to help refurbish guest vfllaa as thaVUttge.
The York Children’s Foundation was formed In 1902 by the
York Oroup, a nurior U.8; casket manufecturer. Each time a
York casket Is sold, both The York Oroup and Its distributor
make matching donations to the foundation.

Hollywood East etogglngotaMM
Hollywood
every
Thursday. Beginners from 6:90 to 7:90 p.m. and Intermediate
from
m 7:90 to 8:90. at Melodse Skating Rink, W. 28th Street
near Airport Boulevard In Sanford.
The eaec is 68 par elaas, agto • and
•free wtth
, .n
paying child. i n
For information, call Marty at M M N t or pawn. 904-7380270.

Emt-WMt Klwante Club m N b Thursday
East-West Klwants Club o f Sanford masts every Thursday at
7 p m., at tbs Friendship * Union Lodge bulldtng. ooroer o f
Locust Avenue and Seventh Street Visiting Ktwanlnns ore
welcome. For information, call Hobart Whtttaksr, president
889*6042.

Ov

tm

ursAnonym ousm ssnw ssldy

i Anonymous maata every Thursday, at
it 7:91
7:30 p.m..
’ Ridge!
at the Community United Methodiat Church, r
For Information, call Carol,
and U.8. 17*93,
922*0687.

6y MARYA HAWKINS

Herald Columnist_____________
G o s p e l M u s ic L i f e t i m e
Achievement Awards for Central
Florida will be presented at a
banquet to be held Saturday,
July 23. 6 p.m.. Sanford Civic
Center. The Sanford/Central
Florida Interdenominational
Musicians' Guild will present the
banquet In honor o f eight pio­
neer musicians In the Sanford
a r e a . T h i s h o n o r w i l l be
bestowed upon musicians who
have dedicated more than 40
years to the development o f
Central Florida church choirs.
A few musicians recall earning
83 a Sunday In the early '80s.
They didn't play for pay: they
were dedicated and committed
to their craft.
The guest speaker for this
momentous occasion will be the
Rev. Dr. Audrey Bronson, pastor
and f o u n d e r of the
5 ,0 0 0 *m e m b e r S a n c tu a ry
Church o f the Open D oor.
Philadelphia. Dr. Bronson la a
native of Sanford and slater o f
Bethune-Cookman College pres­
ident. Dr. Oswald P. Bronson.
Dr. Bronson la the recipient o f
numerous honors and awards.
She is In demand as a speaker,
panelist, television guest and
consultant. She was chosen as
one of the black women who has
made a contribution to the
Philadelphia Special Investiga­
tion Commission. Dr. Bronson la
listed In “ Philadelphia Leaden
1991." She was appointed as
dean o f the Philadelphia Urban
Education Institute.
Dr. Bronson said she bases her
life on one historical hero, Jesus
Christ, and tw o h istorical
heroines, Dr. M ary M cLeod
Bethune and Harriet Tubman.
Entertainment for the even­
ing's black-tie affair will feature
Sanford's own gospel recording
artist Vernon “ Papa'' Jones:
former Universal Studios' star
and Sanford native, Cynthia
C a sa a n o va B ro w n ; actres s
Patricia HUchmon-Whatley. the
Sanford Boys Olce Club, and the
Tickets for thts banquet can be
purchased at M cCoy's Deluxe
Cleaners. W est 13th Street:
Jay's Fashion*, 25th S tru tt and
through members o f the guild at
various churches. A donation o f
618 te requested. A bulfct dinner
wll be served at 7 p.m.
Mary H. W hitehurst Is wall
known for being tha ‘ ‘Doan o f
Anthem s" sung by all o f the
choirs she has played for and
directed. Whitehurst at the early

D
r
.A
u
d
r
e
yB
r
o
n
s
o
n
age o f 12 became a Sunday
School teacher and musician for
the Sunday School and youth
choirs o f Shiloh Baptist Church.
Orlando where she has been a
member for 00 years. She has
held the position o f director o f
music, and organist for Choirs
One and Three and director o f
the Mass Choir. She has been the
musician for Bethel Baptist, Mt.
C a lv a r y B a p tis t. O rla n d o ,
O re a ter Friendship Baptist
Church for 14 years. St. John's
Baptist Church. Sanford.
She attended Bethune-Cookman
College, Daytona Beach and re­
ceived the bachelor of arts de­
gree In music In 1970. graduat­
ing magna cum laude.
Whitehurst has organised and
directed a bicentennial choir In
1976, a multi-ethnic choir o(
over 100 voices for the city o f
Sanford's Martin Luther King Jr.
celebration in 1987. This choir
still performs In the city o f
Sanford. Her musical gifts have
passed onto her daughter. Faye
J. Williams, who la the director
o f music o f Morning Glory Bap­
tist Church, Sanford where she
has served for 20 yean.
Earl Everett Mlnott. is well
known as a musician and educa­
tor. He has served the SL Paul
Baptist Church where he has
been an ardent member for over
80 years.
He has always exhibited his
d d flljll career—he chose after

he matriculated at Florida M M
where he
In music. He baa since received
his master's degree In guidance.
He has completed and received
certification la administration

Lore tha Ouatarman O tb y
and supervision from the Uni­
versity o f Central Florida. Or­
lando.

Gertruda WootfaH

His teaching career has seen
him os teacher and director o f
choral music at JRE Lee College,
and choral music director at
Seminole High School. His ad­
ministration career In education
haa aeen him as registrar, and
assistant principal at Seminole
High School.

We salute a plonedr In music,
Gertrude W oodall, a stately
servant In the Held o f mualc.
Woodall received her bachelor o f
science from John Faren Col­
lege. Chicago. 111. She returned
to F lorid a w h e re she was
employed for 10 yean In the
Manatee County School System.

Loretha Quaternion Oaby.
born and educated In Orlando.
Her music career began under
the guidance o f Leasle Weaver.
At an early age - Osby began
p layin g for Mt. Olive AME
Church. After graduating from
Jones High school she continued
her education by attending Flor­
ida ASM College where she was
a member o f the marching band.
She received a bachelor o f arts
degree In music and physical
education. Further education
was pursued at Teacher's Cot- lags, Hew YorfcCUy where she
received her m aster's degree In
mliMekhd music education.
During her, year* o f musical
m ice. Osby’ Ihaa served church
chairs
in Orange and Sem i­
wire both In
nole Counties. She has been
musician and director far Mt.
OUve AME Church. Shiloh. Or­
lando, SL Jam es AME Church.
First Shiloh Baptist Church,
S a n f o r d , A n t i o c h B a p t is t
Church. Oviedo and she pres-

enlly serves as minister o f musl?
at N ew C o v e n a n t B a p t is t
Church. Orlando.

Her mualc and teaching career
has taken her Into the lives o f
many students where she taught
In the public schools o f Sarasota
and Polk Counties. Her musical
talents and education during her
time was expressed in many
area churches as she was mustclsn/dlrector. She has been
musician for many years for her
hom e church, the St. John
Metropolitan BapUat Church in
Sanford.
cttlsens o f Sanford rem c m b a r.m w .iu r'c o n c e r t s
p a r fo m s 4 J ly W o o d a ll an d
soloist, the late M r." M illard
Strickland, who waa °k
singer in the are)
were rendered at Trinity United
Methodist Church and Antioch
Baptist Church. Oviedo.
Also being honored are Evelyn
C la r k , L i l l i e H a ll, S y l v i a
LigStallworth and Zilfa
d in
glons who have been featured
p e r v l o u a S a n ford H a rold
cHum nti

I'-

Amwtean Lsgton, UnM moot Thunday
American Legion Boat 53 and UnR
•eoood
Thursday, at 8 p.m.. at tbs post horns, 28746. Sanford Ave.
For Information, c a ll322*1662.

SunriM Khwanto meets Friday
The Seminole Sunrise Kiwanis Club meats evaiy Friday, at7
s.tn., at Shonsy'a, U8 17*92. south o f Airport Boulevard.
Visiting Klwanlana ore wmm

'

McKtbotn, preaidant, 822 062
Ivo lyn C la rit

UHtoHaM

•
y
tv
tatta
U
w
o
r
th

&gt;
f

t~

r

alia Mat U gQont

Shoplifter barred from store for life
____ f i My daughter
got picked up for ahopUlUng 930
worth o f merchandloe In a store
where ahs had Juat spent 983.
After she waa caught, she offered
to pay far the Uema ahe look, but
th ey refused to accept her
money. (It w is the first tim e she
had ever been picked up for
shoplifting.) Instead, they put a
restraining order on her, deny­
ing her the right to shop In any
o f their stores for the rest o f her
life! (They are pari o f a large
national chain.)
My poor daughter Is a wreck.
She's manic-depressive, and has
been under the care o f a
psychiatrist for the last four

— m, j

mam

i

1.

\

i - * i
i i »

m

» v

i

ft

safefcgriS“ a •
—l — . i

m

i. k

m

i:' n
■

i . 1

.1

^
..
*

1m

* —-*

A bby. I could understand
fining her maybe 6100 and
borrinf her from shopping In
that store for six months or a
year, but for them to bar her
from shopping at any o f their
stores for life seems terribly
barahtom e.
Also, there are video cameras
all over the More so the custom­
ers can be observed while they
shop. Don't you think there
should be signs pasted advising
the customers that they are
being videotaped?
I would appreciate knowing
what you think o f this.
U M S T D f DfDtAJfA
D B A S U P S S Ti Shoplifters
cost retail merchants millions o f
dollars annually, ao 1 can't fault
them for dealing firm ly with

A D V IC E

ABIGAIL
VAN BUREN

However, for a first-time of­
fender. especially one who has
been u n der th e care o f a
pyochlatrist for the last four
year*. I would say that she
received very harsh punishment.
I, too. believe that there should
be signs posted all over the store
advising shoppers o f the video
cameras. This alone should dis­
courage shoplifting.
DEAR A R R Y i The letter about
the high school graduate whose
classmates had written some
X - r a t e d c o m m e n t s In his
yearbook reminded me o f some­
thing one o f my claaamtes wrote
in mine In 1928. This created a
terrible commotion when my
parents saw U:

"Dear Bernice:
“ I love you dearly. I love you
mighty.
‘ T d love my pajamas next to
your nighty!
"N ow . please don't fret and
don't get red.
" I mean, on the clothesline —
not In bed."
B E R N K R L ., O A K LAW N . IL L .
_/ V_\\&lt; \\\\&gt; \&lt;\

THE LION KING

�t
4 R - Sanford Herald, Sanford, Florida - Thursday, July

14, 19S4

71— H»lp Wanted

Macy board to consider
merger with Federated
By JOYOflMJ
AP Businese Writer
NEW YORK - R.H. Macy ft Co. Inc. end
Federated Department Stores Inc. are closing In
on a m erger that would create the nation's largest
department store company, a source said.
Macy'a board scheduled a meeting today to
decide whether the world-famous retailer should
reaolve Its bankruptcy by m erging with the owner
o f Bloom lngdale'a end Abraham ft Straus, a
source fam iliar w ith the bankruptcy case said late
Wednesday.
The source, w ho spoke on condition o f
anonymity, said executives had essentially comtd talks on a plan for Federated to pay o ff
Dieted
and acquire the store.
Macy'a t6 billion debt1an

Lagal Notices

Legal NoMoea

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando •Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS

The matter now reata with the Macy board. The
plan appeared to be m oving closer to approval
because the board scheduled a meeting.
The New York Tim es reported today that
executives had agreed on a merger plan, but that
negotiators cautioned the deal could still fall
apart.
Macy chairman Myron E. unman III and his
Federated counterpart. Allen Questran, met this
week to try to resolve their differences. It waa
believed that Macy was seeking guarantees about
the foture operation and Independence o f Its
stores, which Include 111 Macy and Bullock's
departm ent stores and t. Magntn. Aeropostak and
Charter Club specialty stores.
M acy had been tryin g to em erge from
bankruptcy as an Independent, publicly-owned
company under Ullman’a leadership. But It Is
under pressure from creditors — Including
Federated — to wrap up ltd 2Vt-year-old
bankruptcy case.
A ll o f Macy’a creditors, with the exception o f Its
bondholders, support the Federated plan. Bond­
holders arc negotiating with Federated and are
expectad to reach an agreement.
Federated also owns Stem 's and Jordan Marsh
in the Northeast! R ich 's, O oldsm lih’ s and
Burdina's In the Souths Lasarus in the Midwest!
and Bon Marche In the Northwest.
The merged companies would have 341 stores.

Lbgal Notteaa"

ALUM. COttlT. fwwrun, tip
Ctogn OL. S roomi
udtoo. cgrggrto m-ktto

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

MO AM.- MO Fit
MOMOAY thru
FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAY
0 SUNDAY

A itliU n l rwtdtd lor multi
dtKlpIlrvtry wrglcol and pro
•lh a llc r o c o m l r u c l l v o
procllco. Engrgttlc Individual
with itrong Individual and
loam u n it, willing lo go lha
ailra mlla. a mutt. Salary and
banafllt commanwrato with
aaaartonca.
m rtf4 m

NOW ACCEPTING

Tuaaday thru Friday 11 Noon Tha Day (
Sunday 11 Noon Friday •Monday SI

poopla In a latl pacad anvl
ronmant. Naad phytlcal
tlamlna and ability to work
tong heurt. band ratuma to
amMatoSaadto.
laniard. EL MWI

ADJUSTMENTS ANOCRtofrS: Inthat

DRIVERSNEEDED
A.O. CARRIER*. Tavarat. FI.
a wall otlabllthad and grew
Ing Central Florida bated
company offart you:
• » t to lN par mile
a Up to IMOO ml. per me.

•ItoaOtfPav

a Unloading Pay

•Vacation Pay

fatten, cawtaailng. private
•actor atuallvtngeaponaaa.
«r mrtis Ctoarnator Attar ear

mam

U g &gt; l Notkiaa

• latoty A Performance Bonut
• IpeuM Riding Program
• Avaraaa Trip 1-7 Dayt
• Lato Modal Conventional

M— C s m f r y Loti

CttA/NttA. Cartltad CPR
In yaur bom*. Raft
avaltoAta. Can ay-up

'.-V

3

jt .
Mid Jrfj^ljr-.A PP'I

CLERKOP THE
CIRCUIT COURT
■Vi Nancy R.Wlntar
Vbttob: July U,t1,NA

«SV

V M

W

'i

HATNOA

J VA

XI A

KAMI

IF

XIA

B T ¥ B «!

XIJX

IN

1X IA

VAJNTP

XI A

i Mu
P.UJ'lxS
Pawar. Intarlar/Eitarlor,
He'd/lag. PraaEat. Uigur

Sfcuv
f'syxjay*i*-

V; ' -iird
■i*.v v*-:

■ yvgraswtabtowart. I

W4-6I

TNRNCS f m OCOMCt AT
W wmm PERT; THENCE %

n PSSSEEI ar a r w. mm
•ie2wNOTHe
°*
Ogtgg R * MS Say a t J * r .

j£ £ !E v t&gt; .u .K it&gt;
...

•4 V

I

�S a n fo rd Herald, Sanlord, Florida - Thursday, July 14, 1004 -

71-HttpWamtH
HOUSIOEMM
Hard worker naadad lar
cleaning service. Must have
transportation and srporl
mm. F/T Mon-F ri.ro -t ilt
ALL FOSITIOMt
Sad Laying
Drivers
Irrigation
Full lime r o s i n

L
s
tsM
s
M
s
u
a
a
c
a
P
s
t
s
M

Must have osporionco end bo
noot. Full time. Laiy need not
oppiy.CaliroWM

UWN MAHnEHMCf
Must have own transportation,
tt/hr. Work 410 hour days.
Drug fraa environment
r o « H » between 4ondf pm
Must have own took.
Caliro-HW

71— H »ff Want#?
TC lC IM M ITC n MWTEO
All American Hn Km and Air
Conditioning it looking far
•■ptrltnctd phene people.
Hourly wages plot bonu*. Full
and part lima. Call now, « k
la r K r lt al llt-1 1 1 4 er.

D ILTO N A CLIA N ,

all ar will sail ports. r o n s i
1 Wavw ' t

*

t )f 4 T* u tT iy r .

ioooaunts______

i WAS

Light to haavy duty. Mutt
hovoosp.MkdavoMl-WS
W ARIHO UIR AND O IN PU AL
LABOR H K L F NRRDROI
Bonus lar drivers. All thlftt
available. Dally pay, no too.
Report raady to work 1:10 am.
Industrial LaBar Svc.. M il
French Av. No atena tails

I

*

-ifceTrt! ,

h /a u .m
U*40 V t IS Skyline/Jtfri. All
alaclrlc. canlral haat, J
window A/C unit*. II l.JOO
H i t 1/1 tpm as Paarton. Cant.
H/A. carport, i ll. loo
M iM l/IM M Champion/
Sony law. Cantral H/A, ralttd
•croon rm, carport. 117,100
I4sOT 1/lss I I Skyllna. All
•Metric. Cantral H/A, raltad
•croon rm, carport. 117,100

Houso to Short

217— Qara— la m

M IR C U R Y Marfa Is Station
W ipes, tws, VA auto, air,
many now parts. Nke cart
SiJMorteotoWor..... m i in/

Saturday and Sunday, l-T
Watfht sat, m lK. Horns. MO
Rluarytaw Aaa, laniard.

FRMALB PRIPBRRID.Hom o
with peat. S rooms • MS/wk
and SHP/wk. Call r o m p

have asparionca and
Apply at BUTCH'S TOWI MO.
nor W. Plrot Mroal, Seated
MBDICAL

UHia.

Nopots.ro:
C/H/A. La yd M t n a MS-Wta

tN/lFN
Full time ar part time avail­
able on S-11 or ii-y shifts In
our suparlbr rated facility.

• *14 CH R VRO LKT Caprice
Classic, 4 dr., runs pood,
lead*. MAW OBO.and
'U Ctearatst Batalr, l dr., runs
OTOd. SPAM QUO P4-C17

chest at drawers. C O F F If
TABLR, round. M I-M U

TWO SM I
TKO McCarthy Asa. pictures,
now and used children's
Items. Friday B Saturday. F-4

ns— Auto Pam

235—Trucks/
Butts/Vans

BRICK » split. Its, din, lam.
rms, IK . system, scr. parch,
fsncadyd-. Baraga! IMAM

citystenmii,

USMIWQIMUnCSI

CUSTOM w/ipilt hdrm. plan I
Dining, family rms. appl.,
tread yard. Stai/me. M A M
M l FO R IC LO C U R II1/1 apltt
Ihr., dkv. oat m kltch. tancad

STI NS I ROM

w/aardBO' aau/mo. us.saa

teat M M , SW IMS

CUSTOM BU ILT art! Us, dm.
lam. me, oat m ktt., security.
saMtltaMBAWII
CUSTOM Built V i M IL «*•.
din., aal in hitch., appl.,
goraBt' SS4I /mo. M U M

in — Lawn A Oaritn
Kathy at Mi n is

m

iu
uh
I’T r r r r r n a s ,

— P tt»

a

Sw an—

Ffl Apsrtwwti

HISTORIC
SB4-WS-W4I
hast alter. M a te celt MS MM
a FORD T M U M M R ilM k fMA

-I, L t U R w a i blsteRem
McWs. lanad RC-1. New I

1/1, C/H/A.

=^6 B M ea

U7-MWIU

alna/Bus route.

S4W. Beaut Hull Originally
^ w a M y is o a o w M g .

r e u v r p ftTK v rs

P-S S W M t

323-5774

AM ACAM L *»». *1 It artttera,’
twtn MP HF Marcs, nka cabin.

I I FOOT, B-Craft, Bawrldar,
Sri hull. M HP Chryslar.
Hollar SI AM M l 0111

maasa.asktsrBd_________
aCHRTSLBR IM M B IA L H
Lika new. Must Mil. Only
m A W .c a in r o iro o m
CMIVROLBT LUMIMA. IMS.

gala. SStl plus security

We'll advertise your car or other
motor vehicle until it's sold.
Y ou pay for the first 10 days and
if your car doesn't sell, call us
and renew it for FREE! Phone
number and asking price must be
included in ad. N o copy change
while ad is running except for price.
Non-commercial only. Call 322-2611 today!
’ Iyr.

l/t OffDtatdH*ONLY!lOOt
Mpnflon TNs A a l Tty No Application fed I

Studiot FUnMtd 4 UnfcvntsM
Etodrfc hmWNd In ftudtoi Only
l i t H a r tf n w H i i l d f r
Didon-no
Singh Stay Dttign*
no oni Mow or ibovt
E n m v ^ io M tit u io i

Your transportation ad works best 'when it contains
information the buyer wants to know:
• Make and Model
•Y ear
• Power Features

• Mechanical Condition
• Body and Finish
• Transmission

• Mileage
• Previous Use
• Accessories/Interior

Sinford Court Apartments
3301«. I m M AyC* 9894301

M i M Onto f-0 :B O

■ A N V O a O H E R A L D C L A S S IP IC M

S S fr t t ll

�’" T *V

V

'

H
•S

H

, » .

M

W

* . &gt; * 4

by Chic Young

K M «

Press doctor for
specific answers

DEAR DR. O O T T : Please
explain arterial hypertension
and paroxysmal tachycardia. M y
doctor has diagnosed me with
these conditions, and I have a lot
o f unanswered questions.
DBAR READER: First o f all.
you should address your "un*
by Mod Welker answered questions" to your
doctor, who knows best your
general state o f health and the
medicines you are taking. Part o f
medical care Is to provide ‘
very service you are re­
questing.
Arterial hypertension (high
blood pressure) Is one o f the
moet dangerous and common
medical ailments in the United
States. In general, the cause Is
unknown, although recent re­
ports have suggested a genetic
component. As the blood pre­
ssure progressively rises above
th e 140/90 upper lim it or
normal, many o f the body's
LIKE, IF ONE GUY
organs become damsged.
fUNiAM ILE J
Uncontrolled hypertension
IN FOUR
leads to stroke, heart strain and
kidney malfunction, to mention
MINUTES,
a few. Therefore, hypertension
TOURGUfc ) (
should be treated, using a vari­
C O JC D U U H
ety o f drugs. Including betaI IT IN 0HE n g l
b lo c k e r s . c a lc iu m - c h a n n e l
I MINUTE? J ia L
blockers and ACE Inhibitors.
P a ro x y s m a l ta ch y c a rd ia
means that, from time to time,
the pulse rate accelerates to well
by Charts* M. Schutz over 100 beau per minute. This
/
■■ ■ x
T.,^ i condition may complicate un( NO BUT i
controlled hypertension but can
0 0 YOU THINK
V T Am • J
I
also occur In the presence o f
BASEBALLS ARE LIVELIER
|
untreated hyperthyroidism and
THAN THEY USED ID BE,
M*
~
"7
—.
Q
other
diseases, such as anemia.
CHARLIE BROWN 7
/€k\
Paroxysm al tachycardia may
/ 1 i V.
also appear on tu own.
The
\
/
most frequent symptoms are
palpitations, anxiety, sweating.
_ ij b \
restlesanesa, chest discomfort.
ru W u ]
and a feeling that something Is
w ron g. T h e rapid pulse Is
usually easily treated with
drugs, such as calcium channel
by Howto Sehntodee Wocltera. In patients who expert■ *-■ — t
1 —i
ence brief, periodic bouts o f fast
tf£ ft ON |
pulse, no therapy may be neces0(0
J
sary.
-----------0
If you have hypertension and

P E TE R

paroxysmal tachycardia, the
Q O T T .M .D
conditions may be related, but
once the blood pressure level la
brought down to normal, the
tachycardia should be leas o f a cents, your afflictions and your
medications.
problem.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPAPER
Ask your doctor for an In*
depth discussion o f your con* ENTERPRISE ASSN.

neon
nnnnri
nnnn nnnnnnnn
romnn unmninmn
nnn i inn nnnn
nnn rinun
rjwnnnn nnnnnn
nnnn nnnn nnn
□nn nnnn c.mnn
nnnnnn nwtnnmn
nnnn Finn
nnnn nnn nun
nnnnnnnn nnnn
nnnnnnnn nnnn
nnnnn
nnn

r

so.riTWcsc
FOUR HOURS TO
C U TH fc G R W V

TOUR MEN
i
COULD CUT THE
SWCUMNIN .
ONE HOURI £ 3

II

T7rr~

TT

jusrcB M E flur wnH

anbh

MORE (O U S M U RNM3LLEC.,

byTJCHyan

Spotted In a coffee bar In
Colombia waa a sign that read:
"Bread with butter: 100 pesos.
Bread with mmrpulne: SO peaoa.
Bread without butter: 00 pesos.
Bread without margarine: 40
A person happy to have plain
bread must, o f course, make the
safety-play o f stipulating no
margarine. It la sometimes the
same In bridge.
On today's deal, you reach six
hearts. A fter West leads the
diamond king, how do you
continue?
Experts treat South's twodiamond re bid as forcing for one
round. It may save vital bidding
apace.
A grand slam in clubs, hearts
o r no-trump la reason able,
n eed ing on ly the opposing
hearts to divide 3-2. which they
w ill do almost 60 percent o f the

In the year ahead, your chart
Indicates m ore' social Involve-

It tNTim-YA
tAATTW

IFTP
rr
E
C□m
H

37“
*2“

V

Hft'.THO DRUG CCMPHh*

IT

T l~

~

T

r

—
5T“
BT~
04

J

time. But with a combined 27
poln u , many pairs wouldn't
even get beyond game.
After winning trick one with
d u m m y 's d U n M M l aos. 9 t y t h
cashed dummy's heart king and
played a trump to b l* dee. When
West discarded a low spade,
there waa a pause In the action.
Eventually South continued by
raffing a diamond In the dummy
and starting on the clubs. How­
ever. East raffed the third dub
and declarer, with no dummy
entry left, was farced to concede
two down.
South overlooked a safetyplay. The only concern Is a bad
trump break. The correct Une la
to duck the second (or first)
round o f tramps. This leaves a
low tramp In the dummy in case
th e d efen d ers persist with
diamonds. And South can use
the spade ace as a hand entry to
draw the remaining tramps before running
dui
ng the dubs.

better days for managing your
personal resources or the funds
o f someone else. Be careful In
money matters, especially those
o f others.
LIBRA (Sept. 2 »O c t. 23) As­
sociates who usually hark your
play In career matters might be
looking the other way when you

e H C M iim .

THAT mJtT n
WHT ttArICINt
THATt MS tiff
TOXIC *AtTt.
by JhwPevto

a c o s n o

(O c t .

m

-N o v .

a »

Duties and respon sibilities
should receive priority attention
today. Sweeping things under
the rag might leave a large lump
that could trip you up.
BAORTARIUi (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) T ry to avoid all forma o f
speculative involvements today,
especially those In which you're
gam bling on the abilities o f
another Instead o f on your own.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) U'e smart to weigh and
h fh n 1* both aides o f Important
Issues today. However. If you are
unduly analytical, you might be
led to defeat by your own
indedatveneas.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Usually you're a creative worker

C op yrigh t 1994. Nl
ENTERPRISE ASSN

who Ukea to adhere to pro­
d u c tiv e procedu res. Today,
however, you might misuse your
splendid Imagination and make
your tasks harder.
M C M (Feb. 20-March 20)
The beet food In town Is not
necessarily found In establish­
m e n ts that h ave the m ost
expensive menus. Keep this In
mind If you Intend to go out
w ining and dining today.
AIM (March 21-AprU 19)
Don’t turn your domicile Into a
m ilitary camp today for your
m ate and children. If your rules
are too rigid, the troops may
revolt.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
co-w orkers have been doing
things that dlapteaae you lately,
this Is not a good day to bring
1satire to a head. Action now
m ight only make matters worse.
o s a m n (May
-ju n e
Today you might find yourself In
the company o f persona who can

21

201

trying to operate on a par with
their extravagant patterns.
C o p yrigh t 1994 NEWBPAPER
ENTERPRISE AS8N.

j

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="87">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="141352">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1994</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241931">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, July 14, 1994</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241932">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241933">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on July 14, 1994.  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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241934">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241935">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, July 14, 1994; &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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241936">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241937">
                <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>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241938">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="241939">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
