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SANDS: Miscellaneous Details

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timothy.j.mizerak

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Apr 15, 1993, 8:10:32 AM4/15/93
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Below is a file that contains some information about the locales and
other details of the show. This will be posted every 5 episodes or
so as we update it. You may find it helpful as you try to follow
the action. It's long, and here it is:


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(___// ___ || ||
// ) || ||
(( .---. ||.--. .--.|| ___ (__//
\\ | || || | | || (( )
)) (__.||_, || | (__.||_, \\
(___// (__))
~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~ ~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~ ~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~^~

File update: April 7, 1993


Basic sets for "Shifting Sands"

Time: The present
Place: Silver Beach, Florida, Paloma County

GENERAL OVERALL DESCRIPTION: Silver Beach is a barrier island
beach, shaped roughly like a recurved bow and arrow, or an
over-weight bracket, i.e. the northern end tapers to a slender
point, while the southern end is wide and thick. The business
district is located on the thick southern end of the beach and
has a population of about 2,500-3,000. A draw bridge connects
the island to mainland Florida and the larger city of Paloma.
The body of water between the beach and the mainland is Palmera
Bay. Greene's Pass separates Silver Beach from a smaller, un-
populated island named Egret Key. Silver Beach would be on the
West Coast of Florida, so the island has a Gulf side and a bay
side.
The business district has a city hall, a jail, a police
department, a 7-11, several cheap motels, a seashell souvenir
shop, a low-rent housing, and a large bar on DeSoto Road (the
blacktop main drag which connects to the drawbridge and runs
2/3 of the length of the island. The bar is named "Buddy's
Beach Brew Base."
The fishing boat docks are located north of the draw-
bridge on the bay side behind the business district. There are
two seafood companies on the docks, Paloma Seafood and Greene's
Seafood.
Driving north on DeSoto Road, the first turnoff is to
an expensive beach and tennis resort, the "Cristal y Verde Re-
sort." The resort features two grass and four clay tennis
courts. The resort's restaurant is named "The Court Room."
Next on the Gulf side are the Hernando's Hideaway con-
dominiums (any resemblance to this and Sarasota is probably in-
tentional). On the water on the bay side, directly across from
the HH condos, is the island's premier restaurant, "Medaillons."
Further north on the Gulf Side are the Sunset Haven
condominiums, and just north of them the moderately-priced Sunset
Haven Motel. On the bay side across from Sunset Haven are the
beach's expensive homes, some of which are on Marina Avenue.
Marina Avenue leads (you guessed it!) to the Silver Beach Munici-
pal Marina and the Silver Beach Yacht Club (which also has a
dining room). Sunset Haven is the island's most expensive
condominium complex.
A little further north of Sunset Haven on the Gulf side
are the ugly high-rise concrete Ocean Sands condominiums. A
few homes are on the bay side across from Ocean Sands.
DeSoto Road makes a turn toward Palmera Bay north of
Ocean Sands, and ends at a ferry to the mainland. Next to the
ferry is a moderately-priced ramshackle-in-appearance seafood
restaurant named "Sumbuddy's Steamery."
Just as DeSoto Road turns toward Palmera Bay, Park
Road heads straight north. Some moderately-priced beach cottages
are on the bay side of Park Road, and though the beach is empty
on the Gulf side, the Ocean Sands developer wants to put up more
condos there. Just north of the proposed development site is
Loggerhead State Park, a small state park preserved as the beach
used to be, with sand dunes, sea oats, and scrub palms. The
state park is named for the loggerhead turtles which lay eggs
there. As we all know, the bright lights from high-rise condos
could affect the hatchlings ability to orient toward the ocean.
Hence, there is a battle shaping up between the conservationists
and the developer.
There's a sign just as you cross over the draw bridge
from Paloma to Silver Beach which always has a few seagulls and
maybe a pelican perched on it. The sign reads
Welcome to Silver Beach --
Where Sun and Fun Meet the Gulf Waters."

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

SIGNATURE OPENING SEQUENCE: Light, a pure crystalline winter
sunlight, dawns over Silver Beach. Seagulls wheel and squawk in
the crisp breeze off of the rolling Gulf of Mexico surf. Palm
trees flutter in the breeze. A squadron of pelicans, wings
motionless, glides in over the smooth, oily waters of Paloma Bay
and lands, bobbing on the low swell.

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


_RESTAURANTs, EATERYs, BARs, HANGOUTs_

"SUMBUDDY'S STEAMERY"
Owned by Mark Edward Carson. "We serve good seafood."
Located north of Ocean Sands condo next to the ferry to the
mainland. Moderately-priced seafood, ramshackle-in-appearance,
lots of atmosphere. Might need some renovation soon though.
Offers finest in American regional dining, East Coast style.
Conservationist James Gregory Alexander Thornton eats here.
Buys fish from Peter Louis Arquette.
Mark Carson likes to bring his laptop computer out to a table
to work on his accounts during the morning.

Exterior: Gravel parking lot. Street lights. Fence separates
parking lot from ferry parking area. On a nice night, the lights
from the ferry dock dance on the surface of the water. Crushed
oyster shell path. Entrance door is a wooden hatch-cover with a
rope handle for a door knob.

Main Dining Room: Hostess station by door, with podium for the
reservation book and shelf below for menu storage. (The menus are
a little dingy and sticky... time to have new ones printed.) Wait-
resses wear white sailor shirts and navy shorts. Waiters dress in
white bell-bottom trousers. Thick wooden tables placed rather close
together, gnarled driftwood chairs, fishing nets, net buoys, mounted
plastic game fish, lit with marine lamps, tables.

Bar: Bar stools.

Known menu items:
26 kinds of beer.
Steamed crab served in buckets, with nutcracker and pick.
Stone crab claws w/ melted butter.
Oysters on half-shell.


"MEDAILLONS" RESTAURANT
The premier restaurant on the island.
Located on the water on the bay side, directly across from HH condos.
Owned by Ben Mack and Madeline Blair.
Managed by Madeline Blair.
Barnard Mack is a waiter here.
Offers fine French and Continental cuisine. Very haute-y taute-y.
Foyer.

Bar: Stoole. Some side tables w/ candles at night. Madeline likes
to work at back one near the kitchen.

Dining room: Hostess station. Several wait stations.

Known menu items:
Drinks: Kahlua and cream.
Johnnie Walker Black.
Bloody Mary.
Coffee.

Food: French onion soup (served in crocks)

"THE SANDS" DINING ROOM, YACHT CLUB (when needed)
Darlingtons eat there.
Macks eat there.
Surf and turf cuisine.

"BUDDY'S BEACH BREW BASE" BAR
Robert Joseph Blain owns it.
Located on DeSoto Road.
It's a large place a beach bum would love.
"Ho-ho-ho and a barrel of rum..."
"Lt. Stephens hangs out there."
Juan Tomas Espinosa drinks Dos Equis there.
Might have marijuana around sometimes?
Like the owner, "dark-tanned, sun-damaged, bedroom windows with
a beer under-belly."

Long bar: stools. Kitchen in back serving sandwiches. Beer is
serves in steins from a keg.

Known items served:
"Dos Equis" beer.


"THE COURT ROOM" RESTAURANT
Located in "Crystal y Verde" resort.
Located near the Paloma County County Courthouse in "Old Town."
Elizabeth Louise "Lizlou" Mack works there as a hostess.
Howard Martin Boyer lunches here.
The atmosphere is bright and sharp, with walls of paned glass on
the east, overlooking tennis courts and golf course in the distance,
and west with a beautiful view of the beach. Behind the south wall
is the kitchen and service station. The north wall entrance is
mostly archways into the lobby of the building. The furniture is
light oak with green and mauve upholstery. There are large "country"
credenzas throughout the room. Tables are set up around the room.
Some along the wall have bench-backs to form a sort of booth, with
high-back chairs on the open side. The linen is seafoam blue-green.

Known menu items:


CHIN'S CHINESE TAKE-OUT

AJ Chamberlain often eats here.

Known menu items:
Cantonese food.
Hot mustard sauce.
Plum sauce.
Egg rolls.

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


_NON-RESTAURANT FOR-PROFIT BUSINESSES, FINANCIAL, PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES_


ROYAL PALM PROFESSIONAL CENTER
Located in Tamiami "Old Town" business district.
Across/near Paloma County Hospital.
Ann Johnson Chamberlain has private practice office here.
Howard Boyer's law office is here.


SILVER BEACH MARINA
Located on Marina Avenue near the Silver Beach Yacht club.
Williams runs a ship brokerage firm there.


"WILLIAMS SHIP BROKERAGE" FIRM
Located at the Silver Beach Marina.


SILVER BEACH DOCKS
Located north of the braw bridge on the bay side behind the business
district.
Grimy waters edge, several docks, stepladders, piers, seagulls,
seaweed, vague fishy smell, drying fish nets hung up. Some boats
are hauled up into dry-dock for painting or maintenance. A fancy
yacht can be seen in distance.
Paloma Seafood company is located here.
Greene's Seafood company is located here.
Pierre Arquette's deep-sea fishing boat is docked here.
Michael Parker's charter boat business is docked here.


ARQUETTE DEEP-SEA FISHING BOAT
Located in secluded back slip.
Peter Louis Arquette lives on it.
Cajun background. Sun-aged. Goes fishing, shelling, what else?


PARKER'S DEEP-SEA CHARTER FISHING SERVICE
Fishing operation owned and operated by Michael Parker.
Thriving business conducted on Parker's boat at Berth #18, end of pier.
Charters arranged through yacht club.
Piere Arquette often here.
Madeline Dubois Blair often here.
Creole-Cajun feel to it.

Exterior: Peeling paint, name "The Stuffed Flounder" hard to see.

Deck of boat: Fishing poles. Trash can for dead fish. Work bench
with waterless hand cleaner, rags, towel. Ice chest, usually with
beer. Map chest.

Controls: glass enclosed. Radio for off-shore communications with
microphone.


PAMELA WHYNANT-CARSON'S FASHION STUDIO
Located at "Ocean Sands" condominium.
One-room condo set.
Photographic equipment ranged around haphazardly. Cameras, stands,
photo lights, flash equipment, stands, some mannequins as props,
film cannisters, camera bag.


"CROSSROADS" SHOPPING MALL
Offers a good meeting place for characters, could have a restaurant
which caters both to ladies shopping and business lunches, could
be a believeable place for the teens and kids to "hang out" - kind
of a crossroads of the community.
Boutiques-as-needed here.


"GREENE'S SHELL SHOP"
Owned by Lilian Eve Greene, old settled family.
Collectors, visitors, tourists, souvenirs.
Gets lots of shells from Peter Louis Arquette.

Public area for customers: Seashell windchime above shop door which
tinkles whenever the door opens. Counter and showcases. Shelves
with big seashells displayed on stands and bins of small shells.

Back room: Separated from front of store by a shell-&-bead curtain
on the store side and a linen drape on the back room side. Card
table for general use. Stacks of papers. Shelljewelry boxes.
Refrigerator; seashell magnets on door. Shelves along wall. Sheets
of used newsprint packing paper neatly stacked. Old calendar with
a sailing ship. Wall telephone with slips of paper tacked by it...
some on small bulletin board, other just taped and tacked nearby.
Wooden crates: one marked "STARFISH-FRAGILE". Folding chair by table.


"BRENDA & FRIENDS" BEAUTY SALON
Located in "Old Town."
It was decorated by Brenda's best friends, Midge and Barbie, and it's
Florida turquoise blue, circa 1958. Only the hairdryers have been
updated.


"CRISTAL y VERDE" RESORT
Located just off DeSoto Road north of Silver Beach.
Ben Mack owns and manages it from an office here.
"The Court Room" Restaurant is here. (See desc. under restaurants)
Lobby: can see through arches into "The Court Room" restaurant;
leads to secretarial station for Ben Mack's secretary.
Features 2 grass and four clay tennis courts.
Nice sandy beach here.
Beautiful gardens here: plenty of flowers.
LizLou Mack works in "The Court Room" here.
Juan Espinosa is groundskeeper here.

Ben Mack's Office: So far: desk, executive chair, telephone.

"OCEAN SANDS" CONDOMINIUMS
Ugly high-rise condo located on Gulf side north of SH.
Mason Arthur Darlington developed it and has office here.
His secretary is "Shelley."
Beach, sometimes used by Pamela Whynant-Carson for fashion photography.
Pool, often used by Mona Darlington. Lounging chairs. Gate to
beach area.

Mason's Office: It's very, very neat. NOTHING ever gets out of place.
It's so clean, you wonder if anyone works here. Desk. Two chairs.
Big picture window over the beach.


"HERNANDO'S HIDEAWAY (HH)" CONDOMINIUMS
Located on the Gulf side north of Cristal y Verde Resort.
Stephens apartment.
Boyer apartment.


"SUNSET HAVEN" CONDOMINIUM
Located on the Gulf side north of HH condos.
Most expensive condominium complex in Silver Beach.
Blair family lives here.
Williams family lives here.


SUNSET HAVEN MOTEL
Located on the Gulf side just north of SH condos.

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


_SILVER BEACH: CITY, STATE, COMMUNITY, AND NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS_


LOST SOULS CHURCH
Inter-denominational space, as needed.
Located in "Old Town" district.
Espinosa family lives nearby.
Maria Espinosa goes here EVERY DAY.
Angela Williams comes to Sunday services.
Confessional.
Variety of stained glass windows, as needed.
Pews and altar.
Rack with candles. Lots of candles everywhere.


SILVER BEACH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Located in "Old Town" Tamiami district.
Jean Brewer Stephens teaches there.
Paul Robert Stephens attends here.
Louisa Anna Espinosa attends here.
Teachers' Lounge.
Main office.
Corridor.
Other classrooms as needed.

Jean Stephens' Classroom: Long wall of windows to the left, angled up
center, where it meets the front of the classroom at a right angle.
The front has a big double blackboard, chalk rail with chalk and erasers,
flag in stand, geography maps in pull-down rack along top, "Nutrition
Chart" on wall, bulletin board with student art, wastebasket, pointer,
down right another wall corner and door to the corridor outside.
Rippled frosted glass in door. Teacher's desk in front of blackboards,
but angled by windows. Books in rack neatly. Papers to correct in pile.
Pencils, markers in big red apple holder. Student desks arranged in
middle of space. Two extra wooden straight chairs at side of teacher's
desk. Mobile of dolphins and whales floats gently in air from windows.


PALOMA HIGH SCHOOL (if needed)
Patricia Maria Espinosa goes to school there.
Main office.
Corridor.
Locker room.
Athletic field w/ bleachers.
Gym - also used for dances.


PALOMA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
A two-year college.
"Pamela Mack attends classes."
Corridor/staircase.
Main office.


SILVER BEACH CITY HALL
Located in center of Tamiami "Old Town."
Franklin Williams has Mayor's office here.
Exterior entrance with important steps.
Corridor.
Mayor's office.
Secretary's office.


SILVER BEACH POLICE STATION
Located in back of Silver Beach City Hall.
Lt. David Craig Stephens chief staff.
Front desk.
Holding tank.
Office.

Police cruiser: David Stephens uses it a lot. Uses a dashboard
sign which says "Official Police Business" when he parks, especially
in no-parking zones.


PALOMA COUNTY COURTHOUSE
Located near Silver Beach City Hall.
Every soap has one.
Courtroom.
Corridor.
Holding room.


SILVER BEACH COMMUNITY CENTER
Civic and recreational building: a good general purpose space where
people of all walks of life meet and mingle.
Offers arts & crafts courses.
Aerobics classes.
Square dances.
Indoor pool: swimming classes, Red Cross/First Aid training
Gymnasium: used for basketball, dances, art/craft shows, hurricane
shelter, Civil Defense and Coast Guard alerts, etc. Put a
platform at one end with simple curtain and American flag
for audience events.
Locker rooms (male and female).


PALOMA COUNTY HOSPITAL
Surgical room.
Emergency room.
Nurses station.
Private room.
Dr. Chamberlain comes only as needed.
Angela Williams does volunteer work here.
Lots of marine accidents, hurricane emergencies, Bermuda triangle
disappearances.


SILVER BEACH CLINIC/GREENE TRAUMA CENTER
Dr. Chamberlain is in charge.

Exterior: Parking lot. Flowers in boxes. Square building with
aluminum trim. Glass doors.

Waiting area: chairs, magazine rack, magazines, doors to outside
and consultation area inside, glassed-in reception window. Frosted
glass window in door to examining rooms. Corridor to examining rooms.

Examining rooms, small, subdivided from big room with curtains on
poles. Vinyl-padded table. Height-weight chart on wall. Straight
chair. Contraption on pole to hold emergency fluid containers.
Small side-chest to lay clip boards on top. Open shelf below for
stainless steel bowls and kidney-shaped utensils.


SILVER BEACH MARINE SCIENCE INSTITUTE
Located on Greene's Pass, just outside Silver Beach business
district.
Conrad Carter Blair has offices here.
Blair is famous, but frustrated by lack of research funding.
Built by charitable support.
Office.

Hatching laboratory: Interior, a large warehouse-type building,
dominated by blue-green shimmering reflections playing off the
roof, sunlight slanting in from large louvered windows on one
side. The reflections come from a large concrete-walled tank
about twelve feet high, about the size of a hotel swimming pool.
Other tanks are assumed, as needed. A ladder is at the side to
climb to the top of the tank and a catwalk goes above the tank
which allows access to the hatchling turtles inside, using a long
net. Below the tank is a small, flourescent-lighted area with
several tables, several PCs, and VDTs.

Chemical laboratory: Test tubes, beakers, computers with testing
equipment. Microscope. Table with water samples for testing.

Computer room.
Public Acquarium/Museum, open to visiter's.
Front desk.


LOGGERHEAD FLORIDA STATE PARK
Ranger Alida "Al" Ruth Handley in charge.
Lots of windows to watch for strangers and dangers and to see nature.

General Entrance to area: Beach of the whitest sands, rolling waves
beyond which alternate between the deepest blue and the green of
emeralds... on a good day. Blacktop main road lined with palm trees
from city of Silver Beach runs parallel to beach. Narrow gravel road
runs 100 meters and then turns left into parking area.

Park Office/Visitors Center:
Exterior: Log cabin. Flag pole with flags of the United States,
Florida, and the Parks Commission out front.
Interior: Sparsely furnished. Hat rack by door at left to outside.
The door is rigged with a muted buzzer which sounds when the door
is opened to signal visiters. Creaky wooden floor covered with
gray-blue institutional carpet. Dark wood panelling on the walls.
In far corner is an American flag in a pole-stand. Large desk at
right with telephone, blotter calendar and file folders on top,
and over-sized chair, used by Alida Handley. Behind Alida's desk
hang three framed documents, probably citations or diplomas. On
bookshelf behind are some back issues of "National Geographic."
Second desk, smaller, towards back in front of wall of file cabi-
nets along back. A wooden "fence" with a handrail extends from
the left wall across the room and separates the small desk from
the door traffic, with a swinging gate through.

Duty ranger private quarters for Ranger Handley.
Ranger Station.
Lover's Lane in secluded stretch of the park.


SILVER BEACH DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION
Located in yacht club.
Franklin Williams is Chairman and has office here.
Good marina view.

Office: small, basically a meeting room with a rectangular table, a
desk in front with phone, modem, FAX machine, PC/wordprocessor, filing
cabinet, white board for erasable ink presentations, overhead pro-
jector and screen. Paintings of sailboats. Blue walls, gray carpet.


"THE SANDS" YACHT CLUB
Club Manager is Mason Arthur Darlington.
A country club on the beach.
"The Sands" dining room.
Athletic club complex (membership open to Silver Beach residents):
2 locker rooms (male & female)
Exercise room
Spa
Sauna
Weight room
Outdoor swimming pool.
Silver Beach Development Commission Office.
Marina space.

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


_PRIVATE HOMES, RESIDENCES, LIVING ARRANGEMENTS OF ALL KINDS_

CARSON RESIDENCE
"Beach cottage near the state park"

CARSON SONS' RESIDENCE
"Business district apartment."
Good skyline.
Living room - open style - w/ kitchen/dining.
Tom's bedroom. Messy. Lots of clothes. Careless glitzy.
Lou's bedroom. Seedy, but neat. Textures. Beach artifacts.

DARLINGTON RESIDENCE
"Expensive home by the yacht club." Beach frontage.
General tone is over-decorated, gaudy, ostentatious display
of art, leather-covered furniture, brass lampstands, and
crystal vases. The professional decorator was given too
much money and too little supervision. Occasionally see a
romance book around.
Housekeeper is Maria Fortuna Espinosa.
Dining Room: dark, polished wood, large central vase of flowers
which are changed every week. This is a formal room which is
used for all family meals, including breakfast grits.
Luxery Bathroom: Bubble baths, champagne baths, milk baths,
sauna, misty showers, relaxing, taking phone calls, seductions,
jacuzzis, even drownings? It is also more personal and intimate
than the ubiquitous pool-side dip.

MACK RESIDENCE
"Expensive home in yacht club area." Beach frontage.
Housekeeper is Maria Fortuna Espinosa.

BLAIR RESIDENCE
Apartment in "Sunset Havens" condo.
Luxurious, well-appointed, eclectic, oceanographic flavor.
Sea lanterns, aquariums.

Bedroom: Big bed. Two night stands. Conrad's has books for
night time reading, telephone, lamp. Adjoining bathroom.

WILLIAMS RESIDENCE
Apartment in "Sunset Havens" condo.
Kitchen with breakfast nook: has exit to outside.
Living room: TV (Angela watches talk shows, game shows, soaps).

DAVID STEPHENS RESIDENCE
Apartmant in "HH" CONDOMINIUMS
The bachelor abode of a world-class slob: pizza boxes: pepparoni,
empty Chinese food cartons litter the living room and kitchenette.
Newspapers and magazines clutter the floor and furniture. Dirty
clothes are everywhere. Blinds on the windows, no curtains. Coffee
table with copy of TIME magazine (Magic Johnson "It's AIDS!" issue).
Notices from condo homeowners association tossed on floor. TV/VCR:
Stephens tapes "Guiding Light." Sofa where he often falls asleep.
Cordless phone hidden under papers on floor. Overflowing ashtrays.
Easy chair. Small bathroom: Alka-Seltzer in medicine cabinet.

ESPINOSA RESIDENCE
[REF: "Country Living," May 1992, pp. 81-88. The article documents
how native Floridians Kay and Luther Drummond uncovered a late-1800s
"cracker" house on their preserve of palm and pecan trees in Otter
Creek, 35 miles west of Gainesville, FL. After extensive research,
historical designer Michael Blocker restored the simple charm of the
wood-frame pioneer house."..."While exploring the 400 acres of virgin
woodlands they had just purchased near the Wuwannee River in north
west Florida, Kay and Luther Drummond made a surprising discovery:
a late-1800s frame house burried beneath tangles of vines and bram-
bles. 'When we worked our way inside, we could see the ground be-
neath the floorboards,' Luther recalls. Charmed by the curved front
porch and the simplicity of the dwelling, the couple decided to
restore the structure. Talented designer Michael Blocker conducted
exhaustive research of the area's pioneer families, who were called
'crackers,' after the cracking of their whips as they drove cattle
into Florida from Georgia and the Carolinas. From family archives
and local residents, Michael learned that the original inhabitants,
the Colliers, came to Florida in 1855 from a South Carolina planta-
tion. A shard of English china that the Drummonds found under the
cookhouse indicated the sophisticated taste of the pioneer settlers.
'We created a profile of the Colliers and a picture of the furnish-
ings they might have lived with,' explains Michael. 'Then, based
on this historical framework, we combed the Appalachian south for
appropriate 19th-century antiques and brought the house to life.'"

This set assumes that such an old cracker house is located in "Old
Town" and rooms described are based on the reference, except that
the building is somewhat "seedy" from constant occupation as a
rental property.

The Espinosa kitchen: it has been converted from what was a former
back porch, enclosed. It is longer than it is wide. There is a sink
along the long wall with two very low double-windows next to each
other, each containing 6-over-6 panes which look out on a sort of
breezeway. There are faded stencil designs around the window and
doors. The walls are clapboard siding; the ceiling is narrow-slat-
and-beam; floor is bare pine, showing its former porch origin. There
are 2 doors, one to outside, a wood-frame screen door painted blue
with a wire spring closure; another goes into the rest of the house.
Stove and refrigerator showing nicks and dents and signs of wear are
along one wall. Appliances on the counter. There is an old blue-
painted center area kitchen work table which shows signs of plenty
of daily use. It sets on a center hooked rug. A stool and 2 straight
chairs around the table. Several stoneware storage crocks around.
Pots of herbs in the window, and some dried herbs hang on the wall.
Drain rack by sink.

BOYER RESIDENCE
Apartment in "HH" CONDOMINIUMS

THORNTON RESIDENCE
Apartment. Modest, middle class.

LILLIAN GREENE HOUSE
Big "Old Florida" house located in heart of Tamiami "Old Town".
Developers would like to have the downtown space.
Too big for her, now that she's living alone.

MACK YACHT
Moored in slip at "Cristal y Verde."
Can move it to marina, anchor offshore, etc.
Must have dinghy aboard.

ARQUETTE FISHING BOAT
Moored in secluded key slip.

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

VARIOUS VEHICLES

PIERRE ARQUETTE:
Boat: Fishing boat

HARM BOYER:
Car: Mazda Miata

MASON DARLINGTON:
Car: Mercedes

BEN MACK:
Boat: Yacht

BARRY MACK:
Car: Porsche 911c, red
Boat: Hobie sailboat
Fanatic windsurfer

MICHAEL PARKER:
Boat: "The Stuffed Flounder," charter fishing boat

DAVID STEPHENS: Police cruiser

JAY THORNTON: Jeep, keys under seat, no door, likes open air

AJ CHAMBERLAIN: Mazda, w/ car alarm that gets _used_.

ALIDA HANDLEY: Park Services Issue pick-up truck


----------------------------------------------------------
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| What is it up in the air for? : Timothy Mizerak |
| It's going to fall if it's there for long. : t...@mhnmc.att.com |
| It's over, it's over me. R.E.M. : |

Thomas Yohn

unread,
Apr 15, 1993, 12:25:11 PM4/15/93
to

Since you are leaving, what will happen to Shifting Sands?
You`re not turning it over to ....Corday, are you?

toomces

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