2 new Florida sink holes open up ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla. (AP)-Two new sinkholes opened up yesterday, one just five miles from the huge sinkhole that has swallowed part of Winter Park. Police blocked off the areas and residents of threatened homes hurriedly moved out. A crater that threatened two homes here was discovered when Dominick Cipollone went out to water his gar- den-and found it was gone. "THERE WAS this big hole and it hadn't been there last night," said Cipollone, 76. "You read about Winter Park but you never think it can happen here. But it can happen here." "I was shocked. I never expected that," he said as neighbors helped him move his belongings out of the two- bedroom house. While Cipollone and neighbor John McClellan were moving out of their homes on either side of the sinkhole in this suhurban Orlando town, people living nearby "have been alerted as to possible evacuation," said John Spolski of the Seminole County Sheriff's Depar- tment. . THE CRATER was just north of the huge Altamonte Mall, one of Florida's largest shopping centers. A third sinkhole was reported yester- day in Auburndale, about 45 miles southwest of Orlando. Auburndale police spokeswoman Angie Kidwell said no houses were threatened immediately by the 60-foot- wide, five-foot-deep sinkhole, which was nibbling at a road in an area of orange groves. Police blocked all traf- fic from the road, she said. GEOLOGISTS SAID the sinkhole here was about 50 feet wide and 40 feet deep,. in the center. "Nobody can guarantee anything, but I personally think the subterranean activity has ceased," said Seminole County engineer Bill Bush. The limestone cavern that created the hole when its top collapsed "may have filled itself up," Bush said. "We're going to stay here and monitor to see if there's any further danger, but the probability is it has stabilized." AS SPECTATORS gathered, Seminole County deputies blocked off a three-block area. Utility workers cut off power to the two threatened homes and several other nearby houses. "It's frightening really," said Mary Williams, who lives near the Cipollone and McClellan homes. "When you don't know what you're going to find when you get up in the morning, that's something." Soil engineer Bryant Marshall said central Florida has a geological history of "ancient sinkhole activity." He said many of the lakes and other depressions in the region were formed by sinkholes thousands of years ago. AP Photo Sinkhole plague continues Florida sinkholes continue to threaten residential areas around Orlando. This new one, approximately 50 feet wide and 40 feet deep, took with ita fence and vegetable garden between two homes. INDIVIDUA L THEATRES_ 5th Ave. at Liberty 761-9700 BARGAIN MATINEES WED. SAT. SUN. $1.50 TILL 6:00 P.M. STARTS TONIGHTI! / N-I BEST FOREIGN r~. "- FILM (1980) , ..... * e e* . e 4 * ~-NEW YORK FILM CRITICS AWARD r * GERARD DEPARDI EU A LA IN1 R ESNA IS (PG) FRI-7:00,9:10 SAT & SUN-2:30, 4:50, 7:00, 9:10