HomeMy WebLinkAboutHistorical Records - The Arizona Territorial (207)APRIL 3,1980
Worship Him on Easter morning
Services on Page 19
I i -
ews-Gazette)
1978 COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD WINNER 20 cents per copy
Oro Valley planners
OK shopping center
By WALT NETT
Oro Valley came a step closer to gaining the town's first
shopping center Tuesday night, as the town's Planning
and Zoning Commission voted 4-0 to support John Stamos'
application to rezone 19 acres at Linda Vista Boulevard
and Oracle Road 1'or development of an integrated
commercial -residential center.
The rezoning will be considered by the Town Council at
its April 24 meeting.
The commissioners also voted 4-0 to reject a develop-
ment plan submitted by Mr. Stamos for 504 apartments
and a two-story professional office building on the same
property.
,.N49W salary- offef�dues
to Foothills teachers
The Catalina Foothills School Board presented a new
salary offer to the teachers' negotiating team Tuesday
afternoon in closed session. No settlement is expected
until all teachers have been notified of the proposal.
A regular school board meeting is scheduled for
Tuesday night, April 8 at 7: 30 in the Orange Grove Junior
High'Library.
At the last board meeting on March 18 more than 100
parents and teachers gathered to voice their support of
teachers' salary requests. Gary Howard, one of the
leaders of the parent group, says he hopes attendance
Tuesday night will "be of the same magnitude as last
time."
Also on the agenda for Tuesday night is a public hearing
on the board's intention not to renew the contract of
Orange Grove librarian Ann Joyner. Mrs. Joyner has
been employed full-time by the district for the past two
years and part-time for the previous two years.
Commission Chairman Sharon Chessen was absent
I rom'ruesday's meeting.
The request, which involves more than 19 acres at the
northeast corner of Linda Vista and Oracle, asks to rezone
four acres at the northeast corner of the property from SR
(one house per Dour acres) to Tit (transitional) for a
townhouse development. The remaining property is
proposed for CB-1 (local business) zoning and would be
developed as a shopping center and professional offices.
In recommending approval of the request, the com-
mission suggested that the townhouse portion of the
project be limited to 35 residences.
Dwight Lind, the engineer handling the project, told the
commission that the developer plans to build between 32
and 35 residences.
The commission, reacting to staterrients frorn'Mr. Lind
that Rural Metro Fire Dept. has approached the
developer about locating a fire station in the shopping
center; a Iso considered a requirement on the rezoning that
would force the developer to give land to the town for "a
Public safety facility." Some commissioners seemed
concerned that a year-to-year lease could force the lire
department to leave the facility.
Mr. Lind objected to the idea of the town taking the
building, saving that the town would then have to assume
responsibility for maintaining it.
lie suggested that there might be other solutions, such
as a long-term lease "so that the only way we would lose
the Dire station is if they want out."
At a preliminar' hearing in February, two commission
members expressed concerns about the project's
economic feasibility and the availablity of a market for
the stores in the shopping center.
But William Black, a member of the marketing faculty
at the University of Arizona, said that, because of some of
the features in the area — gasoline costs, location along a
major road, and the development of a restaurant and
financial institution as part of the center — said that the
project would be feasible.
BEVAN IS SOMEONE SPECIAL
John Bevan, a special education teacher at
Canyon del Oro High School was named Arizona's
special teacher of the year Saturday at the annual
convention of the Arizona Council Exceptional
Children.
The convention was held to focus on teaching
techniques as well as to. honor outstanding
educators. The council began giving the award
three years ago to anyone working with exceptional
children from the elementary to the college level.
Mr. Bevan was nominated for the award by the
Southern Arizona Chapter of the
Council for Exceptional Children. He speculated he
received the award for opening his home to his
students, giving out his telephone number and
making himself available anytime should any
students need to talk out a problem.
He also has kept in contact with graduated
students for as long as 17 years. Students have
called him from California, Utah and Florida.
Mr. Bevan has been teaching special education
for about 25 years. He graduated from Chicago
Teacher College in 1945 and began teaching at
Amphitheater- High School in 1961 before moving to
CDO two years ago.
He has also published articles relating to
classroom teaching techniques.
Kite expert watches 'disaster' .
Catching Olympics on film... .
Oro Valley girds for resort ...
Churches ......
Page 18
Classified......
Page 20
Page
11
Going Out .....
Kitchen Sink ....
Page 12
Page 4
.. Page
14
Oro
ts.Valley ........
Page 21
Page
16
Tanque Verde..
Territory .......
Page 15
Page 8
HAPPY HUNTING —
Laguna third grader Shane
McDonald was one of the
lucky ones who found the
fruit of the hen during an
Easter egg hunt staged'last
week by third grade
teacher Rita Hygrill.
Court sets
Ina Road
hearing
A condemnation hearing
has been set for April 24 in
Superior Court as county
property management
officials attempt to get
additional right-of-way to
widen Ina Road along a
parcel under option to
Tucson General Hospital at
1625 W. Ina Road.
The property is owned by
Equity Investments II, a
limited partnership whose
investors include TGH
administrator Michael
Harris.
County Property
Management Director
Jerry Sweeney said the
owners "have attributed a
relatively high value to the
property," adding that the
property's suburban ranch
zoning doesn't normally
attract as high a price as
the owners are asking.
Mr. Sweeney did not
discuss either the county's
offer or the owners' asking
price.
The hospital plans to
build an emergency
medical facility and
doctors' offices on the site.
OUTLOOK: Mostly
sunny and breezy
throughout the weekend
with expected highs
mostly in the 70s and
overnight lows in the 35s
to 50s.
FIFTEENTH YEAR, NUMBER 14
Melpomene
owners fight
liquor store
By PEGGY BARNES
A notice was posted
March 26 of a request for a
liquor license for a new
Quik 'Mart convenience
store planned near the
intersection of Melpomene
Way and Catalina High-
way, and some area
residents object.
Persons living within a
one-half mile radius of the
location have 20 days in
which to respond with
written arguments either
favoring or objecting to the
license to the clerk of the
Pima County Board of
Supervisors.
The site is on the west
side of .Melpomene, north
of Emily Gray Junior High
School. -
Objections to the store
have been raised by John
F. Emerson, an attorney
and local resident, and
Maj. Rick Cordon, M.D.,
another resident.
They contend that the
store is unnecessary and
will be incompatible with
the natural environment
with signs and bright lights
burning late every night.
They are concerned that
it will add more traffic, and
contribute to burglaries,
vandalism and further
commercialization of the
Catalina Highway. They
further object to the sale of
cigarettes and alcohol
within a short walking
distance from Emily Gray
Junior High School.
The two say the U-Totem
market at Tanque Verde
and Catalina Highway is
sufficient to serve the area.
Responses must be
received by the Board of
Supervisors by April 17 to
be considered.
Well contract
City purchasing officials
will open contractors' bids
Tuesday for construction
on a water well at 1791 W.
Roller Coaster Road.
The contract calls for
installation of a pump and
other equipment at the well
site.
H
L
R
March 26
60
40
.50
March 27
61
40
.12
March 28
64
41
March 29
67
38
March 30
75
40
March 31
63
44
April
75
43
tr.
J
Page 2, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
It doesn't matter whether
one's husband or wife died
after a prolonged illness or
whether it was a sudden
death. The resulting
widowhood is a deep-seated
impact which may last for
days, weeks, even months.
During this period of
initial shock, you must help
the widow or widower to be
ACTIVE. By occupying his or
her time with the important
details of "getting things
together" for everyday
living, he (or she) is forced,
thankfully, into activity.
With our professional
responsibilities and ex-
perience, we as funeral
directors can be of im-
mediate help. We assist in
processing the many per-
sonal papers such as Social
Security and V.A. We handle
literally hundreds of details
for the family throughout
the total service. And we try
to help as best we can with
the widow or widower in
i their emotional ad-
justments.
One of our chief goals is
to bring peace and comfort
to the living in their hours
of need. If we can help you
in this, please let us know.
L .
Valley
FUNERAL
HOME
2545 N.. Tucson Blvd
327-6341
r
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UFACTURERS I '�
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3423 North 1st Avenue • 887-8068
Tuesday Mru Friday 9:30 to 5:00•,i
Saturday 10:00 to 3:00
Good thru April 7th
Valley Animal Hospital, P.C.
announces the opening of
Sunrise Pet Clinic
5635 N. Swan (at Sunrise)
by
Dr. Robert S. Hoge
For Appointment Call 299-5044
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SOMETHING TO WRITE CHINA ABOUT — Coronado third grader Aaron Riley signs
his name to a note that's now on the way to Peking. He and third graders in Suzanne
Klein and Jean Biggers' classes wrote letters to Peking students telling of themselves
and asking about life in China. It's all because the two countries have something in
comon—third graders studying the magic in magic words.
Coronado third graders
spread magic. to Peking
Students in Peking have
something in common with
third graders at Coronado
Elementary School — they
are studying the magic in
words such as please,
thank you and may I help
you.
Third grade teachers
Suzanne Klein and Jean
Biggers had been teaching
their classes at Coronado
polite words. Then they
noticed a report from
Peking that talked about
another bit of magic in
those kind words. Incidents
of spitting, swearing and
fighting have decreased in.
Peking because of a
teachers' campaign
focusing on the importance
of such polite words.
The two teachers were so
impressed that classes
across the ocean would
focus on the same kind of
prograsrl that they decided
to take group pictures and
have their students write
notes to Peking students
telling of their common
interest. It all is put
together on one large
mural.
Students told about
themselves, their pets,
their home and school life
and asked the Peking
students about their lives.
University of Arizona
profvessor C.Y. Fan
translated it all into
Chinese and last week sent
the giant letter to his
daughter in China, who will
in turn deliver the merry
greeting.
Some of the questions
about life in China include
"Do you watch
television?" "Do you wear
hats?" "What are your
favorite foods?" and "Are
you near a desert?" At the
top is a postcard and the
greeting "Hello from
Tucson, Ariz., from the
United States of America."
Foothills District scores
near sweep in chess play
The Catalina Foothills
District dominated the
Southern Arizona Pre -High
State Chess Qualifiers
tournament last Saturday
as Orange Grove Junior
High and Sunrise
Elementary took the two
top positions.
In the junior high
division, Orange Grove
won top team honors and
Roadrunner Rob Fonorow
took the first place in-
dividual trophy.
Sunrise won the
elementary division, with
Manzanita taking second.
David Deniz of Sunrise was
the individual champion
and Jason Knight of
GET ON THE BANDWAGON!
amerlcan
Pre'
chools
v
Bring this ad for a tree day of individual attention, state
adopted curriculum, competent qualified teachers, nutritious
meals and snacks, field trips and swimming ... a complete
program for learning. Convenient family hours. Eight Tucson
schools to serve your family's needs.
1. 1101 S. Columbus 745.2980 5. 8425 E. Old Spanish Trad
2. 6425 S. Pacheco 294.2701 885.7261
3. 3107 E. Pima 327.4411 6. 7845 E. Golf Links 296-8020
4. 3902 N. Flowing Wells 7. 1710 E. Irvington 294.9757
887-9202 8. 5021 N. Oracle Rd.742.3369
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HAVE YOU HUGGED YOUR CHILD TODAY?
Sunrise was the second
place finisher.
The eighth grade trophy
went to Robert Orman of
Orange Grove and Jeff
Nicholls of Manzanita won
first place in the fourth
grade.
All tournament players
who won three or more
games are qualified for the
state championship April
26 in Cottonwood.
At Butterfield
Butterfield Elementary
School will hold a student
music concert Tuesday,
April 8 beginning at 6:30
p.m.
The concert will be held
on the school's new indoor -
outdoor stage, weather
permitting. Admission is
free.
Puppet opera
Puppets will perform the
opera Barber of Seville on
Wednesday, April at 4 and
7 p.m. at Nanini branch
library. The show will be at
Wilmot Branch Library on
Thursday, April 10 at 1 and
4 p.m.
THE
ARIZONA
TERRITORIAL
1 West Orange Grove Road,
Tucson, AZ 85704. Phone
(602) 297-11M. Published
weekly on Thursdays by
Territorial Publishers, Inc.
Also publishers of The
Desert Airman, The Daily
Reporter and Foothills
North. Second class post-
age paid at Tucson, AZ.
Subscription rates: by mail
in Pima County —$8.25 per
year; by mail outside Pima
'County in U.S. — $9.25;
foreign. countries — $11.00
per year; single copy 20
AprU 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 3
owtoeet'iriehm
Not lust older.
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Time flies —and with it, the value
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First, we have a wide choice"of
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statewide will be glad to help
you decide which savings plans are
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DEPOSIT
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Regular Savings
Your money is always
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you started
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Investment
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Interest earned
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quarterly Auto-
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Certificates of
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larger amounts are
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Page 4, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
Olsson, Prouty & Hill
Psychotherapists
Family and Individuals
Alcohol & drug abuse counselling, relaxation, hypnosis,
stress and pain management.
5501 N. Oracle Rd./Building C
Suite F Hours: Weekdays 10-9 888-9157
Saturdays 9-5
Our Business is Going To The Dogs!
ARIZONA DOG TRAINING ACADEMY where
training you is as important as training your dog. Basic
obedience, protection training and we specialize in all
problem behaviors: housebreaking, chewing, fence
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convenience. For FREE appraisal and demonstration
call
__' 297-7115
Arizona Dog Training
Academ
Walk-in registration
for Foothills classes
A six -week spring session
will be offered' by the
Catalina Foothills
Community Schools, with
walk-in registration
Monday night, April 7 from
7:30 to 9 p.m. in the Orange
Grove Junior High art
room.
Adult classes include
aerobic dance -exercise,
batik, food processor and
microwave cooking,
advanced photography, a
desert garden lecture
series, tennis and trail
rides.
Classes for children will
be baton, conversational
Spanish, gymnastics,
horseback riding, roller,
skating and tennis.
Class fees range from $10
to $45. For further
information, send a
stamped, self-addressed
Fast delivery.
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Make a login a hurry...
new 21/2 year maturity.
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keep this high -paying rate
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long as your money stays on deposit from 21/2 up to 10
years. All it takes is a $100 minimum. And Pima Savings
compounds your interest in a way that allows you to
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Ask us.
Rate effective April 1-30,1980. substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
Call 747-8484 for more information
Fsi% Q I✓
envelope to Community
Schools, 1926 E. River
Road, or call Ann Volz at
299-3634 before 5 p.m.
Donaldson's
safety effort
is rewarded
The Donaldson
Elementary School
Enrichment Class has won
second place in the state
for the best Safety Safari
Program.
Program teachers Sarah
Landau, Vickie Matchett
and Sharon Kelly received
a plaque and recognition
for the outstanding
program yesterday in
Phoenix at the Southwest
Safety Congress
Association awards
luncheon.
Students involved in the
project were: Chris
Bolebruch, Romi Carrell,
Corey Cogley, Keith Cook,
Sean Daniel, Shannon
Demorotski, Kenny Hulse,
Bobby Makela, Ben Mast,
Sally Merigold, Stephanie
Sierakoski, Sarah Van
Voorhis, David Cole,
Suzanne Roseberry and
Janak Shah.
Harelson Fair
planned April 19
Harelson Elementary
School is the site of a crafts
fair and car wash on
Saturday, April 19 from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. It is
sponsored by the outdoor
education program and
profits go toward the 6th
grade day camp to be held
near Oracle.
Local artists are invited
to participate in the crafts
fair. Price for the car wash
will be $1.50
view from
the kitchen
sink
By RUTH ILIFF
The "keeping" at our house has always been, by design,
somewhat ,haphazard. Nobody in the family has shown
great bent for neatness and I haven't been enthusiastic
about setting standards higher than I want to live up to.
I'll admit that any time somebody in the family wants to
declare the talent for doing it better than I do, I will
willingly and gladly turn over the task of organizing this
chaos.
Related declarations have emerged sometimes at
dinner when one -eater -or -the -other has rated the fare less
then average. (Though, to tell the truth, I'm not sure
where they've had on any regular basis even average fare
for any extended period of time)
I take the occasion to remind them that I took up the
task of cooking by default. It seemed preferable to
starving. But any time anybody comes along who has
more interest in the task than I have, it's a whole new
ballgame.
Meantime, I pick up enough so that the insurance
company probably will pay if somebody trips on
something and breaks a leg. And I keep enough dishes
close to the dishwasher, either on the way in or on the way
out, that the Board of Health, if they spot check, will not
board up the house.
The farther flung reaches of the house, though it's not
really that big, have a little more of the "flung" look. And
they have it a little longer than the "living" areas.
The weekend came along, last weekend, when we each
rolled up our respective sleeves, Tall Person and I and
tackled a kid's room. These rooms serve not only to store
the bed and wardrobe of each child but also to store the
toys and as playroom when I can't stand whatever noise
they are making at play.
"Not in here," doesn't mean "You can't play that." It
means, literally, NOT IN HERE, and more to the point, "I
don't want to hear it."
The things I like to hear are the children using crayons
on paper, the children watching Sesame Street, the
children each doing something in a different room. Nice
sounds. Inaudible.
But what Tall Person discovered in Little Lady's room
last weekend gave us pause. We have decided in the
interval since that whatever psychological problems this
may be the signal of, we're going to wait for more signals.
I have reconsidered some of the fairy tales for clues to
this extraordinary housekeeping procedure.
Unsuccessfully. Every time I heard or told the story of
Hansel and Gretel, I'm sure I identified with the children.
But just last weekend, in Little Lady's room, Tall
Person found 11 dolls and stuffed animals in the oven. If
that's a message, I don't want to get it.
Will soon be handling your
*cooling*heating & appliance
*SERVICE NEEDS*
North Oracle at Magee
in Plaza Escondida 297-2294
Pima County Medical Society is pleased to announce the opening
of the Northwest Tucson office of
ADIOLOGY
SSOCIATES
Marvin Baker, M.D. Harold Trief, M.D.
David Emmerson, M.D. Michael Linver, M.D.
John Mericle, M.D.
for the practice of Diagnostic Radiology Ultrasound
North First Medical Plaza
4729 North First Avenue
Tucson, Arizona 85718
887-8970
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 5
Walker wins
rezoning ease
By VICKI THOMPSON
Overriding a unanimous recommendation for denial
from the town's planning and zoning commission, the Oro
Valley Town Council last week unanimously approved
E.S. "Bud" Walker's request to rezone acreage on the
west side of town for 42 townhouses.
Councilman Jim Kriegh voiced support of the
townhouse project, calling it "a good solution to a bad
problem." Mr. Walker has agreed to build a masonry wall
on the west side of the project, closing off the possibility of
a road entering the town at that point.
During a public hearing preceding the rezoning vote,
the' council heard from resident Dr. Kenneth Vinall, who
presented a petition signed by 42 homeowners protesting
the rezoning. "This is going a little too fast to suit us,"
commented Mr. Vinall.
The property is part of 15 acres annexed to the town last
fall. At that time Mr. Walker made it clear he hoped to
build townhouses on a portion of the property and create a
"buffer zone" between the town and more densely
populated housing developments to the west.
Before the council considered the rezoning question at
last week's meeting they heard. remarks from - Jack
Spaulding, one of the early leaders of the town's in-
corporation movement.
Mr. Spaulding urged town officials to ease their
restraint in zoning practices, pointing out that the federal
government will probably start reducing revenue -
sharing, and the town needs to find other sources of funds.
He recalled that those who petitioned for incorporation
promised they would never put on a town tax. "Unless we
change our way of life and allow more growth, eventually
we will have to eat our words," he continued.
"There are two members of the zoning board who are
very much on the disincorporation team," said Mr.
Spaulding, adding that when he looked at the Bud Walker
development and Henry Harvey's rezoning petition (for
an art gallery) he wondered if maybe some on the zoning
board are "trying to disincorporate by the back door.."
"We should reconsider what we've done in the past with
zoning and allow a little more leeway," said- Mr.
Spaulding. "We need more revenue sharing, more people,
and more growth in business."
•
THE WINTER HUNTER Paul Call, 1979
Come in and see this and other fine
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Sunrise Village • Sunrise & Swan
299-5107 /
•
Oro Valley_
TUESDAY ELECTION
AT -A -GLANCE
Oro Valley Town Council election facts at a glance —
WHEN: April 8 from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.
WHERE. Oro Valley Town Hall, 680 W. Calle Con-
cordia.
CANDIDATES: E. S. "Steve" Engle, James Patterson,
Edward Needham, James Kreigh, Pauline Johnson and
Rosalyn Glickman.
SEATS OPEN: Five.
REFERENDUM: Whether the five council members
will have staggered terms, with two members serving for
two years and three serving four-year terms.
Heuisler due
at ladies club
William Heuisler, can-
,didate for Pima County
Assessor, will be the
featured speaker at a
luncheon meeting of the
Oro Valley Republican
Womens Club on Friday,
April 4 at La Bodega
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Page 6, The Arizona Territorial, AprN 3,1980
More jobs were lost to Tucson
when council reneged on sale
What really killed General Instrument's
effort to bring 700 jobs to Tucson's west side?
Was it lack of a broadly based selling effort to
show people the need for these jobs in a clean,
campus -style environment? Or did City
Council panic at the shrill reaction of a few at
the expense of many? Can such economic
disasters be avoided in the future
Business leaders and public officials have
varying opinions on what happened and why,
but this report pinpoints what is being done to
prevent its repetition.
By BILL DAVIDSON .
The body count on jobs recently driven out of town by
adverse media treatment may amount to 4,000 to 5,000
with there rejection of General Instrument Company's
effort to locate on West_Speedway.
Tlie direct effect of rebuffing General Instrument plus
American Atomics and Vega Biochemicals directly cost
the Tucson community about 1,200 jobs — counting the 700
maximum employment projected by General Instrument.
But most economists equate every industrial job in the
area as worth as another two or three jobs in services and
related functions. American Atomics anticipated an
employment top of about 350 persons; Vega 150.
General Instrument exectutives attribute their
problems in locating here to "adverse publicity,"
according to James McGarry, vice president for
operations for General's Jerrold Electronics subsidiary.
"We just don't want to talk about it now," Mr. McGarry
told Territorial Publishers last week. "But you can say
this:
"1. We're very disappointed (with the 4-3 City Council
vote refusing to sell 21 acres of city -owned land on
Speedway to General Instrument). Our general attitude is
to drop the idea of expanding our operation here."
"2. We haven't even addressed the question of where
else we might go. But we had a great many approaches as
soon as the news broke that we weren't going to get the
site we wanted in Tucson."
Mr. McGarry said Albuquerque in particular was
interested in attracting General Instrument.
"Frankly, we're disgusted" with the Tucson situation."
"Frankly, we're disgusted" with the Tucson situation.
"It's not worth the troubl to pursue, Mr. McGarry added
when asked if General Instrument might consider an
alternate site here.
At present, General Instrument conducts a warehousing
operation here on South Park Avenue employing 45
persons.
Mr. McGarry's disgust struck a sympathetic chord with
many Tucsonians. Chamber of Commerce President
Peter Herder publicly asked City Councilman George
Miller ( who voted to sell the Speedway site to the
industry) :
"Do those people (the four on the city council who voted
against General Instrument) realize even now what -
they've done to this community?"
And Jack Davis, president of the Tucson Economic
Development Corporation, classed the way General
Instrument was treated as "deplorable."
Mr. Herder said the "bottom line" on the General
Instrument loss "is the people in political office. They're
responsible; they have to make the best decisions possible
based on the total welfare of the community, but they (the
city council) allowed themselves to be directed by
emotion, rather than fact or knowledge."
Miller wryly told the Tucson Metropolitan Chamber of
Commerce:
"Maybe we should turn city government over to the
neighborhood associations" (It was neighborhood
association activism which led the council to vote against
General Instrument's site on Speedway).
Councilman Miller said the Tucson community is
unusual in that it contains a disproportionate number of
people dependent on jobs in the public sector — all kinds of
government; sometimes, he told the chamber board, they
fail to relate to the need for more jobs in the private
sector.
Unlike some other critics of the General Instrument
episode, Mr. Herder felt the way to avoid future job losses;
of that magnitude is political action.
"There was no particular lack of good public relation,"
Herder felt — countering the feeling of some others who
want a super PR effort to guard against future debacles.
"The city staff and others presented a good case for the
industry, and well-informed people concurred, but four
people on the council didn't — and in the end that's what
counted.
Herder rejected the suggestion made by a few, that the
city council be subjected to a recall election.
"It was emotional: The neighborhood (around the
proposed site) reacted emotionally to a `factory' being put
there, even though it was clearly explained General
Instrument would be a clean, campus -style operation —
and the city council reciprocated."
In the final analysis, "The council was elected to
represent the people but didn't" Mr Herder said. It is
supposed to represent people who need jobs, but it let
them down.
"Eventually we must have on the council people .who
will represent the whole community. If this council isn't
providing jobs on a sound economic base in an outstanding
environment, it's not fulfilling its responsibility."
Pima County Supervisor Katie Dusenberry said "We
have to find areas where we can have attractive
campus -like industrial parks that are so close people dqn't
have to drive long distances to get to work. We're hopeful
(in the country) that we can find such an area, try it out
and let people experience the impact on their areas."
"The relatively sterile campus -like industrial layout
(like General Instrument proposed) is no more.
detrimental to an area than a junior college or a shopping.
center. It certainly wouldn't impact schools like an
apartment complex or townhouses or even four -to -an -acre
homes," she said.
"We'll have to look at getting jobs closer to homes,
especially with the energy crunch and difficulties in
providing mass transport— costs, waiting time for buses,
the need for streets and roads improvements."
Mrs. Dusenberry pointed out that "General Instrument
came at this community's invitation; it wasn't seeking a
Tucson site. They're nonplussed by whether we really
want them or not. The community sort of turned on
them."
"Too many people forget that for every industrial job
there is a ripple effect — two or two and a half service jobs
per industrially employed family. So when you talk about
1,200 jobs lost you are in effect talking about an additional
2,400 or 3,000 jobs."
Mrs. Dusenberry said there might be a need for a
consortium of interested parties to sell the value of jobs
from new industry here — notably in the wise use of public
relations.
"We really need in-depth discussions with people about
what kind of community we want to become and how to do
it. This community is becoming divided between those
who feel their lifestyle threatened and those who feel their
economic livelihood threatened."
"We must find some common ground: A good economic
base, good employment. I think education andl
understanding by the people has to reach a broad segment
of the community, not just officials or the business sector
alone.
Davis. a senior executive with a banking operation here,
said the city_ council abandoned its own comprehensive
land plan policy in rejecting General Instrument.
General Instrument met all the criteria for industry
here. It is environmentally sound, financially solid — a
Fortune 500 corporation; it would have operated exactly
the kind of manufacturing we have said we want here —
and we have said this for the last five years."
"They were romanced by other cities, but they
concluded after a site search that the Speedway site here
was what they wanted."
Mr. Davis said the city's recently -passed
comprehensive land -plan policy specifically says the city
will encourage and assist light, campus-stlye industry in
urban residential areas. "This is city policy," Mr Davis
said, emphasizing the word city.
"The city staff agreed about the site. We felt there was
no problem (from his standpoint as president of the
Tucson Economic Development Corporation).
Negotiations were started and all that was required was
rezoning.
"But then residents in the area started meeting and a
furor, and ultimately there was the 4-3 losing vote,"
How can a repeat performance be avoided?
"1. We need a determination whether the city intends
to abide by its own comprehensive land -policy. We:
(the Tucson Economic Development Corporation) cannot:
solicit industries under a policy which the city council
POSTMASTER: Send addrjOAS,=hanges to P.O. Box 35250, Tucson, Arizona $5740
Published eacn Thursday by TERRITORIAL PUBLISHERS
I NC. at I West Orange Grove Road in Tucson Ariz.
MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. Box 35250, Tucson AZ.85740
TELEPHONE NUMBER (602) 297-1107
U.S. Postal Service Publication No. ( USPS 545-920)
E.U. Jewett Jr. Jack S. Jewett David G. I lift
Editor and Publisher General Manager Executive Editor
Peter Herder
,Jack Davis
does not intend to honor."
"2. The city_ (unlike its performance about the Generah
Instrument site) must start with neighborhood associtions
by explaining correctly what is intended — as opposed to
letting people feed on misinformation and half truths. The
city did no selling job, nor frankly did we in Tucson
Economic Development Corp. But if the city can't or
won't do a selling job, then the development corporation
should assume the responsibility."
The community itself must make up its mind what it
wants. Mr. Davis added: "The decision must be between
campus -style industry, with a philosophy of putting jobs
where people are or major transportation improvements;
which people here have consistently voted down. In the
absence of major mass transportation improvements,
we cannot continue to have people driving long distances
to get to jobs, So we must either improve transportation
or accept the idea of jobs in residential areas."
Like Herder and others, Mr. Davis said "We cannot,
afford to have city government ruled by a vocal minority.
That's what happened in the General Instrument case. All
the council did was listen to a few vocal people. They have
the right to express such views, of course, and I can
understand why the neighborhood people were upset at
the prospect of a `factory' locating there. But the fact is
that we have to be broad enough in our ability to govern to
accept government by the majority."
Mr. Davis had another idea — that too many people here
were complacent about the relatively low unemployment
rate.
"The timing may have been wrong: The community is
prosperous and growing; the loss of another major
industry (even so soon after Vega and American Atomics)
didn't seem that important because people seem to feel
others are coming."
"But this is not necessarily so. There may be few or no
new industries coming, and we may feel the pinch of a
lack of jobs. I think Tucson will regret this whole
episode."
An attorney for an interested landholding party in the
West Speedway area, Donald Pitt. said his clients "would
have been the most affected" by rezoning to allow
General Instrument there — but we were for it."
Mr. Pitt, who represents Nationwide Resources, an
adjacent landowner holding 44 acres, said "Our
conslusion was that the plant on that site was more
desirable than the alternatives."
"We need to explain to people that what General
Instrument wants to do is not grimy, smokestacked,
Pittsburgh -like factory operations. We are not making it
understood that*, this kind of operation consists of
attractive buildings similar to a university campus."
"Also, the plant would require smaller, not larger, use
of services in the immediate areas affected — unlike
high -density residences. Apartments use the ground all
day and all night; this isn't true with campus -type
industries, in which people are there only about 7 a.m. 4
p.m. or whatever."
"It isn't and wouldn't be what you see along railroad
tracks. I was on the industrial development board's
bonding authority which furnished financing for these
projects. I'm familiar with this kind of development from
years of experience. `It's a shame that we keep doing
things that eliminate new jobs. This has for too long been a
community where the best young people leave" to find
-suitable employment," Mr Pitt said.
Mr. McGarry emphasized what his supporters here say
— that General Instrument's operation here would have
beeq.almost entirely assembly, not heavy manufacturing.
The firm operates in Nogales and Phoenix in this area; in
Hatb.9ro, Fa. (headquarters), Kansas City, Canda, Seattle
arI4, icopee,. Mass.
Aithe city blew this one," the General Instrument
executive summed up bitterly.
Most people observing -Tucson from an economic
standpoint seem to agree.
Winner of GENERAL EXCELLENCE Award, GENERAL
DEPARTMENTAL NEWS COVERAGE EXCELLENCE Award
and ADVERTISING EXCELLENCE Award from Arizona
Newspapers Association, January 1973.
Winner of GENERAL EXCELLENCE, NEWS WRITING
EXCELLENCE Award, TYPOGRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE
Award, GENERAL DEPARTMENTAL NEWS COVERAGE
EXCELLENCE, and EDITORIAL PAGE EXCELLENCE Award
from Arizona Newspapers Association, January 1975.
Winner of GENERAL EXCELLENCE Award and NEWS
WRITING EXCELLENCE Award from Arizona Newspapers
Association, January 1977.
Winner of GENERAL EXCELLENCE Award, TYPO—
GRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE Award, ADVERTISING
EXCELLENCE Award and COMMUNITY SERVICE Award
from the Arizona Newspapers Association, January 1979.
NATIONAL NEWSPAPER '
ASSOCIATION
NNmMr of
ARIZONA
NEWSPAPERS
ASSOCIATION
For Greater Public Service
AM 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 7
Honor student impressed by leadership program
By VICKI THOMPSON
Last month
Amphitheater High
School's Julia Moore joined
101 students from all over
the country in Colonial
Williamsburg, Va. for a
summit conference of
leadership -oriented
seniors.
She also learned to play
Yankee Doodle on the fife.
Two top -ranked seniors
from each state and the
District of Columbia met at
the historic location March
6-10 as part of The Century
III .Leaders Program,
sponsored jointly by The
National Association of
Secondary School Prin-
cipals and Shell Oil
Company.
Miss Moore, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Moore,
found it a leveling ex-
perience. "It put me back
in my place," she laughed.
"All the honors I had —
everyone else had the same
thing."
And Julia Moore isn't
short on accomplishments.
She serves as student body
vice-president and ac-
companist for the vocal
ensemble, as well as
belonging to both Honor
Society and Key Club. Last
year she won an essay
contest which garnered her
a trip to historic points in
Pennsylvania and
Washington, D.C.
The Century III program
also emphasises history,
but its main thrust is to get
young people who are
potential leaders involved
with community and social
issues.
Apparently it works. "I
was impressed and
relieved to find so many
people who cared," said
Miss Moore.
She said she was sur-
prised to find that students
from different regions of
the country held different
views, as well. From a
pooling of those diverse
views the students were
asked to come up with
suggestions for improving
education, leadership and
community development,
BRING
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C7
and the quality of life.
"There was a big con-
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and not just making the
buck," said Miss Moore.
"Many students thought we
needed more social
systems and programs."
Whatever the future
holds for this country, Julia
Moore plans to be part of it.
She has her sights set on
]Free
�.r
law school, aided partially
by the $1,500 scholarship
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t
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Page 8, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
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INHiHiINH the
with May Ravenscroft
Wednesday morning forty-two Swan Lake residents
rode the tram up into Sabino Canyon, then on the way
back stopped at Rattlesnake picnic area, where Leona
and Guy Jones had, a breakfast of eggs, pancakes- and
sausage ready.
On Saturday, talented residents set up 20 booths at the
clubhouse to show oil paintings, macrame, needlework,
quilts,, and wood craft. Members of the Daughters of the
Nile raised funds at their booth to donate to the Shriners
Children's Hospital. Donah Thede, Marian Miles and Dee
Tegt were incharge of this event,.
On Palm Sunday, 150 residents and guests, gathered at
the clubhouse to witness the Lenten verse -drama "I Was
There" written by resident, Doris Faulkner, and
published in religious magazines and produced in chur-
ches throughout the country. Residents taking part in the
drama were Harvey Faulkner, narrator, Clarence
Brooks, Ray Miles, Marian Miles, Marvin Perkins, Elmer
Yentz, Jim Anderson and Rosalie Heinricy. Maggie
Wisdom and her committee served refreshments after the
play.
mnm1:111 n
The Tucson Section of the National Council of Jewish
Women is proud to announce that Jone Hughes, president
of the Tucson Section, was appointed as chairman of Area
23, NCJW Western District, at a Western District Con-
ference held in Seattle. Vickie Pepper, vice president of
the Evening Branch NCJW, was appointed recording
secretary of the Western District, at the conference. Both
are actively involved in all areas of Tucson community
social services.
n
Mrs. Frederick B. Wiener was elected president of the
Arizona State Society, Daughters of Colonial Wars, at a
March 14 meeting of the group. Other officers elected
were Mrs. Forrest E. Teegarden, vice president; Mrs.
Bernard H. Benson, Chaplain; Mrs. Donald L. Chery,
recording secretary; Mrs. Ralph L. Sheets, corresponding
secretary; Mrs. Roland James, treasurer; Mrs. Luther A.
Glenn, registrar; Mrs. Clarence E. Bensema, historian;
Mrs. Thomas Navin;, custodian; Mrs. George Baker and
Miss Patricia Scheurs, councillors.
Members were guests of Mrs. Thomas Navin, founder of
the state society, who was celebrating her 19th birthday.
m�mtllUlu
The Arizona Theatre Company Understudies had an
interesting meeting Wednesday at the Tucson Community
Little Theater. Tom Hall, production manager, took the
group on a tour of the theater and actress Mary Layne,.
Arizona Theater Company member, took them on a look
behind the scenes of the production The Three -Penny
Opera.
SPEAK SPANISH
IN FOUR WEEKS
"We bring the country into the classroom"
INTENSIVE CONVERSATIONAL
SPANISH CLASSES
Tourism -Legal -Medical -Real Estate -Business
I I I tff Mr , M 1,11., .I
Semi -private instruction in our changing
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methodology • Certified instructors
• Parties and educational tours to Mexico.
NEW SESSION
STARTS APRIL 22
885-8559 6720 Camino Principal (near Kolb do Tanque Verde)
Several Foothills residents were among 8,500 members
and guests of the Associated General Contractors of
America, who attended a convention in Honolulu last
week.
Isabelle and William E. Naumann spent several days
before the convention vacationing and golfing on Kauai.
Isabelle stated that this is the wettest spot in the world but
very beautiful. A sugar company takes over most of this
island with plantations.
Pauline and Wilbur Conelly and their son, Fred,
Dorothy and Tommy Matz were among those that enjoyed
part of the trip on Maui. The Conellys had breakfast with
Rev. Richard Du Fresne, a former Tucsonian, while in
Honolulu. Pauline mentioned that she missed hearing the
old time Hawaiian music as the bands are now playing
more mod tunes.
Others enjoying the trip were Ruth and George Codd,
Frances and Bob Sundt, Virginia and Bill Bickley and
their daughter, Cami and son, Charlie, Norma and John
Carlson. All mentioned the tremendous amount of
building of condominiums and motels everywhere and
even though some had transportation problems, all felt it
a great trip.
rmml
20
Mrs. Carl Berry was elected president of the
President's Club at a luncheon meeting held at LaBodega
Restaurant March 27.
Other officers elected were Mrs. Florence Epright, first
vice president; Mrs. Virginia Page, second vice
president; Mrs. Harold Dresser, recording secretary;
Mrs. Illa Trout, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Russel L.
Hardy, treasurer and Mrs. W. E. Naumann,
parliamentarian. -
Following the election, Mrs. Hugh Winter gave a most
inspiring talk on "The Melody of the Trees" stressing how
the trees are compared to the lives of humans and even
though we don't like to see a tree destroyed, we gain so
much of our material possessions from them including
musical instruments that bring us many enjoyable
melodies. She : closed with a poem "I Heard a Forest
Praying" honoring the Easter holiday.
Irene and Bob Beck and Wilma and Carl Fenstrum
hosted a dinner party for 47 residents and guests of Oracle
Villa at LaBodega March 27. Several of the group
returned to the clubhouse later for a game of cards.
MY WISHES FOR A
HAPPY EASTER TO ALL.
vur U� owe n0he w owuw ow mop owmen
Canyon
Ranch
tour set
A combination tour,
luncheon and fashion show
titled Spring Daze will be
held at Canyon Ranch, 8600
E. Rockeliff Road,
beginning at 12:30 p.m. on
Saturday, April 19.
The afternoon's ac-
tivities will be sponsored
by Pueblo Junior Women's
Club to benefit Parents
Anonymous, the groups
community improvement
project.
A tour of the health
resort, complete with,
demonstrations of exer-
cise, hair and face care will
kick off the program. A
luncheon and fashion show
will follow at 1:30 p.m.
Fashions provided by b.
bazaar will be modeled by
club members Judi Put-
nam, Sue Campisano, Kitty
Dewar, Marcia Lackland,
Luchi Alvarez and Ruth
Roberts. Make-up and hair
styles for the models will
be done by the Canyon
Ranch staff.
Tickets are $10 each: For
reservations call Mrs. Bob
Edwards at 296-9375.
Marcia Palmer
Ikebana program
set for April 15
Marcia Palmer, designer and
craftsman, will present a program
of the Ohara School of Ikebana in
Japanese. Flower arranging, during
a program of special flower
arranging to be presented at a
meeting for all Garden Club
members and their guests to be held
Monday, April 15, at 1 p.m. at
Tucson Botanical Gardens, 2150 N.
Alvernon Way. The Ocotillo Garden
Club is hosting the event.
Mrs. Palmer, who is a master
flower show judge in the National
Federation of State Garden Clubs, a
member of the judge's councils in
Michigan and Arizona, a third
degree master instructor in Ohara
School of Ikebana with an in-
termediate certificate of Ikenob
School of Ikebana, a juried member
of Arizona Designer Craftsman in
Ceramics and assisted in the
Ceramic Department at Central
Michigan University, has a pottery
studio in Michigan and Tubac.
Some of her pottery designs will be
used in her program. She is also a
garden club member of the Tucson
and Green Valley garden clubs.
Reservations for this meeting may
be made by calling Mrs. David Reid
at 299-2377 or Mrs. Lee Weikal at 325-
0333 by April 9.
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Green Fields pupils
return to Serendipity
Green Fields School students are scattered throughout
Arizona and Mexico this week as they take part in the
independent school's seventh annual Interim program.
Interim is an opportunity for students to do in-depth study
of special interest subjects not included in the regular
routine of lectures and chalkboards.
This year three Green Fields groups are in Mexico for
Interim. Sixteen students, accompanied by teachers and
parents, are learning about marine biology in the Gulf of
California. Two other groups, in Mexico City and
Hermosillo, are studying Mayan history and Spanish. A
group of seventh and eighth graders, led by school head
Nancy P. Masland, is re-enacting the Spanish colonial
heritage while camping out at the Tumacar_ori mission.
Today all students and their teachers will return to the
campus for an all day festival called Serendipity, when
they will share their adventures and discoveries with one
another.
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FORMERLY OF Anton's Hair Concepts
IS TEMPORARILY LOCATED AT THE
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CALL - 887-8501
SHE WILL DE MOVING SOON TO
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JUST ARRIVED
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 9
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Page 10, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
TV ads, fashion modeling
keep agency on its toes
New York talent agent
Eileen Ford was in town
recently looking for
modeling talent, and there
was no shortage of
material for her to in-
terview, says Plaza III
agency director Brooke
Daley.
Ms. Ford, the agent who
discovered Cheryl Tiegs,
was looking for wide-eyed,
long -necked 16 to 22-year-
olds, says Ms. Daley..
"Applicants are pre-
screened, but I don't want
to do the thinking for her."
She looks for models
between 5'7" and 5'11" tall,
she adds.
While Ms. Ford looked
for a specific type of model,
Tucson talent agencies are
looking for men, women
and children of a variety of
ages. The day of the "dumb
blonde" is over, Ms. Daley
says.
Today's model has to be
greatly because work is
pretty, intelligent, and
limited.
professional. She has to
Models and actors have
continue to study her craft
to be willing to travel to
and be willing to work
other cities, she says.
when jobs are available.
In Tucson the major
Agencies like Plaza III
thrust is toward local
serve the same purpose
commercials, national
that big -name New York
movies and television, Ms.
firms do.
Daley says. Fashion
"I take the guff, the
modeling runs a close
garbage and the yelling,"
second and commercial
Ms. Daley says.
print also is becoming a big
She also is an adviser and
business.
coordinator for models and
Locally there is a need
actors, helping them get
for older men and women.
the right jobs.
"People buy things from
"It's a 50-50 deal," she
believable people," Ms.
says:" The talent has to be
Daley adds. They aren't
cooperative and I have to
necessarily the look
work for the talent."
people.
Modeling jobs pay well, -
Initially it is expensive to
but the work in Tucson is
start modeling, because
sporadic, Ms. Daley says.
composite pictures costing
The agency has 50 to 60
from $100 to $500 are
persons on contract and
required to sell talent.
does not expect to expand
Models also must maintain
an updated wardrobe to
show a variety of looks.
-- _GANT f
Tucson is becoming a
/
sophisticated market
demanding professional
e
results in commercials.
°
Advertisers are using
better talent and higher
o
quality production
techniques, she says.
There is no comparing
Tucson and Phoenix. Both
o
are good markets but have
individual characteristics.
Being a pro is not
something that happens to
everyone, but for most it
•
starts with training.
Sometimes it's being in
the -right place at the right
time. Then it's letting fate
take over, Ms. Daley
concludes.
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ART SHOW AT
PLAZA DEL ORO
Thirty Tucson artists will be displaying their
work at Plaza del Oro at the corner of Oracle and
Orange Grove roads Thursday, April 3 through
Saturday, April 5 from 91a.m. to approximately 6
p.m.
Arts and crafts will be part of the exhibit, as well
as paintings. The event is sponsored by the Catalina
Junior Women's Club in conjunction with Plaza del
Oro Merchants Association.
Jesse Carpenter, owner of Wendy's Hallmark in
the shopping center, is chairman of the art show.
The artists are paying a $10 entry fee and donating
10 percent of any sales to the Catalina Junior
Women's Club, which will use the proceeds for
charity.
Realtors given
fashion
update
Tucson Women Realtors
on Oracle Road just past
got an update on the spring
Ina. Their original shop is
clothing scene March 27
at 6061 E. Broadway. Both
during a fashion show held
stores are open from 10
as part of a preview of
a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday,
LeMarr Construction's
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Sunnyslope Townhomes.
Saturday, until 9 p.m. on
New York New York pro-
Thursdays, and from 11
vided the models and
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays.
fashions for the show, with
Mrs. Gass urges cus-
narration by co-owner
tomers not to eat before
Manya Gass. Wine and
shopping at New York New
hors d'oeuvres were cour-
York, because she serves
tesy of Bon Appetit.
wine, coffee and cookies
Mrs. Gass geared the
every day, and bagels and
fashions to the working
cream cheese on Sunday.
Designer fashions are
women in the audience,
discounted at New York
with the emphasis placed
New York, and anyone
on tailored, classic outfits.
paying cash receives an
Many had jackets or
additional 5 percent dis-
blazers to stretch the
count.
wearability from early
spring into late fall.
"
Easter display
Red seemed 'the pre-
dominant color, and solids
The work of four Tucson
outweighed prints. Dresses
artists will be on exhibit
are becoming increasingly
beginning Easter Sunday,
popular, . said Mrs. Gass,
April 6, at St. Philip's
and her selection reflected
Gallery, Campbell Ave.
that trend.
and River Road.
Hemlines were below the
Alice Gardner, Trinkle
knee, and many skirts had
Hastings, Pat Marohn and
slits "for ease in getting in
Cherry Murray will par -
and out of cars," said Mrs.
ticipate in the exhibit,
Gass.
which will be open from 2 to
New York New York
4 p.m. on Sundays,
recently opened a new
Tuesdays and Thursdays
store in Cottonwood Plaza
through May 1.
CLOGS
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BLOWIN' IN THE WIND — Laguna Elementary students Holmes' fourth graders made the kites earlier in the week
got more wind than they bargained for the afternoon of under the direction of kite expert Bruce Mitton, the author
March 28, which made flying their handmade tissue -paper of the book Kites, Kites, Kites.
kites difficult. Tina Allen's first graders and Sandra
Expert views kite 'disaster'
It was too much of a good thing.
Laguna first grade teacher Tina Allen and fourth grade
teacher Sandra Holmes needed some wind to launch over
50 handmade kites. What they got on the afternoon of
March 28 were gusts which left many of the tissue paper
creations in shreds.
Kite expert Bruce Mitton, who spent time during the
week teaching the kids to make the kites, shook his head.
"It's going to be a disaster," he predicted, as the band of
children swarmed on the playground with their rainbow -
colored kites and miles of string.
The only ones not dismayed were the kids, who had as
much fun with the self-destructing kites as with the ones
which remained airborne. They ran gleefully across the
grass dragging kites and tangling string.
Even for experts like Mr. Mitton, author of the book
Kites, Kites, Kites, kite flying is a tenuous business. He
admits that of the 300 or so kites he's made, quite a few
never got off the ground, and others expired after their
maiden voyage.
"It's all trial and error," said Mr. Mitton, who has been
flying kites seriously for three years. Kite flying the way
St. Odilia's
selling arts
and antiques
Glassware, china, silver
and collectables will be
offered for sale at the St.
Odilia Catholic Church
Antique and Art Show
Saturday and Sunday,
April 12 and 13, in the
Parish Hall, 7570 Paseo del
Norte.
The Indian paintings of
local artist Donna Wick-
man also will be shown as
well as works of other local
artists.
Hours of the sale are 2 to
7 p.m. Saturday, and 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Sunday.
he approaches it is not child's play.
"I have trouble getting adults to fly kites," he said. Yet
his stunt kites are "too tough for kids to fly."
Although children can handle his cotton delta -wing
kites, they often lack the skill to sew them. Thanks to the
tutoring of, his girlfriend, Mr. Mitton does all his own
sewing. "The tricks is to find pretty fabric,"he said.
Once he's made a kite he's satisfied with, Mr. Mitton
goes looking for a good fight. "Very few people kite fight
anymore," he commented.
A fight involves catching the crepe paper tail of an
opponent's kite on your own string and with a jerk
divesting him of that tail, which signifies victory, ex-
plained Mr. Mitton.
He also likes to fly kites at night, painting them
phosphorescent paint, `They look like UFOs," he said.
None of this is nearly as much fun alone as with other
people, he said, because the beauty of kites increases as
more are put in the air. When he flies kites he will attempt
to keep as many as 15 aloft by launching them and tying
them to available car door handles.
"I wish somebody would sponsor a kite festival," said
Mr. Mitton wistfully.
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.April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 11
A shoe adventure
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Page 12, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
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TUCSON, ARIZONA 85715
Backstage struck
by youthful cast
By VICKI THOMPSON
A member of the
audience characterized the
cast as "young and
fresh -looking," pinpointing
one of the key ingredients
in the Tucson Stage
Company's production of
The Great American
Backstage Musical playing
in Gaslight Square.
The dinner theater, the
latest venture of Gaslight
Theatre producer Tony
Terry opened officially
March 19, although
previews were scheduled
the previous weekend.
Fair registration
Registration for the May
4 arts and crafts fair at
Fort Lowell Park starts
Monday, April 7. The fee is
$8 and applications are
available at all parks and
recreation centers. For
information, call 882-2680.
A buffet dinner catered
by nearby Los Yentes
restaurant is served before
each performance, with
curtain time at 8:30 p.m.
for the musical.
From the opening
number — which describes
how nobody ever pays
attention to the opening
number — the six cast
members woo the
audience.
By the last song of the
production — dubbed The
End — they've become six
people you'd like to invite
over for a weekend
barbeque.
Part of the reason for this
might be the nostalgic
nature of the musical,
which is set in the late
thirties and early forties. It
centers around an aspiring
songwriter and his
songstress girlfriend and
their struggle to maintain a
relationship Xmid the
pressures of their careers.
The production also
pokes gentle fun at some of
the stock dramatic
situations of the forties —
boys going off to war,
heroism at the front, and
faithful, girl -next -door
sweethearts.
Dick Hanson's
choreography, extremely
important to the
reminiscent tone of the
show, is masterfully done.
Mr. Hanson also does
double duty as a member of
the cast.
The role of the
songwriter is played by
Alex Chrestopoulos, a
young man with opera
background. He gets a
chance to show off the
range and timbre of his
voice in "The Star of the.
Show," a love song
directed at his co-star
Tracy Hall, who displays
vivacity and talent in her
role as Kelly.
The Great American
Backstage Musical plays
Wednesdays through
Sundays, and guests may
buy a ticket for the dinner
and show or opt just to see
the show.
110
going out
Next production
features Kramer
and lots of girls
Herbert Kramer, owner
of the Saguaro Dinner
Theatre, will make full use
of his Austrian heritage for
his next production, Music
in My Heart, which opens
April 9.
Mr. Kramer adapted the
script from a comedy titled
The Concert, written by
European playwright
Herman Bahr for the
Kramer family. Mr.
Kramer's ; parents
dominated Austrian
theater for many years.
Mr. Kramer's addition to
the comedy is a musical
one. "Music enlivens an
emotional reaction," says
Mr. Kramer. "It's as if the
highlights of the play were
put in a warm bath."
Handling the leading role
himself, Mr. Kramer has
brought his leading lady
over from Hollywood.
Carol Leslye Gallagher will
play a character Mr.
Kramer says must be "not
just beautiful, but wise,
warm and understanding."
"Fortunately for the
audience," he continues,
"the cast contains a whole
array of attractive young
girls."
In the other two major
roles will be Jack
McReynolds and Katy
Fleming. Miss Fleming
starred with Mr. Kramer in
his recent 13-week run of
Dinner for Three.
According to Mr. Kra-
mer, Music in My Heart
will be similar in tone to the
sophisticated Dinner for
Three. "It's a very high-
class comedy which adapts
itself most excellently in
the round," says the com-
bination producer, com-
poser, musician and actor.
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Herbert Kramer
The Saguaro Dinner
Theatre, located at 749 W.
Miracle Mile, has been pre-
senting theater -in -the -
round for seven years, and
for much of that time they
have been the only dinner
theater in Tucson. That
changed recently with the
opening of The Tucson
Stage Company's dinner
theater on Tanque Verde
Road.
"I wish them great
success," says Mr.
Kramer. "Competition is
good.,'
Reservations for Music
in My Heart can be made
by. calling 623-9456. The
buffet starts at 6:45 p.m.
except on Sundays when it
begins at 4:30 p.m. Cost of
the meal and show is $11.50
Wednesday and Thursday,
$12.50 Friday and Saturday
and $9.75 Sunday.
Orchestai
concerts
next week
On Monday, April 7,
Orchestai will give a free
performance at Flowing
Wells High School for
students or individuals
financially unable to attend
their regular concerts. This
performance will start at
7:30 p.m. in the auditorium
and will be the dress
rehearsal of Orchestai's
current concert series,
"Light of Day."
Schools service
organizations, youth and
senior citizen groups, and
community rehabilitation
centers have been invited
to this performance.
Orchestai, directed and
conducted by Mark Narins,
will present "Light of Day"
to the general public at
nominal ticket prices on
Tuesday, April 8 at
Flowing Wells Performing
Arts Center; Wednesday,
April 9 at Center West in
Green Valley; and on
Thursday, April 10 at Saint
Michael and All Angels
Church.
MACK IS BACK IN TOWN — The Threepenny Opera,
opening at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 3, provides the finale for
the Arizona Theatre Company's 1979-80 season. Enacting
a scene from the musical are (left to right) Benjamin
Stewart (Mr. Peachum), Jill Rogosheske (Polly), Dee
Maaske (Mrs. Peachum) and Joe De Salvio (Mack the
Knife). Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht created The
Threepenny Opera in Germany prior to World War 11 as a
modern version of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera. It
details the antics of Mack the Knife and his gang of
cutthroats teamed with Jenny the Pirate and her ladies of
the evening.
Pinnacle Peak
playing for ties
If you're carefully
knotting your tie in
preparation for an evening
at Actors' Repertory
Theatre in Trail Dust
Town, think again.
Your wife may have
made reservations for two
at Pinnacle Peak under a
new package plan with the
theatre, and you know what
happens to ties at Pinnacle
Peak.
The crew at the
restaurant would love to
scissor off your tie, reports
assistant manager Vicki
Keyes, because the new
management is doing some
spring cleaning, and
several of the old ties have
been taken down from the
rafters.
So you've out away your
favorite tie and donned the
pink and purple polka-dot
number Aunt Gertrude
sent for Christmas, and
you're headed down
Tanque Verde Raod to
Trail Dust Town.
You've planned at least
an hour and a half to have a
cocktail, eat your steak,
beans, salad and ranch
bread before the curtain
rises on Not Now Darling,
the new play at Actors'
Repertory.
If you've picked Wed-
nesday through Friday to
go, curtain time is 8 p.m.,
Saturday is 6 and 9 p.m.,
and on Sunday you can see
the play first at 2:30 p.m.
and then take your time
with the steak after the
show.
The dinner will cost,
including tax and tips, $7.80
for the 15 oz. Cowgirl Steak
and $9.60 for either a 25 oz.
Cowboy Steak or a rack of
ribs. Reservations can be
made at the Repertory
Theatre box office.
From Pinnacle Peak it's
just a few steps to the
theatre, where you can
watch Tony DeBruno,
Gerald Carey, Prindle
Gorman and Tim Gilbert
romp through a comedy
about an exclusive fur
salon, philandering
husbands, suspicious
wives, mistaken identities
and scantily clad ladies'
hurriedly hiding in closets
and furs.
Others in the play, which
is directed by David
Gardiner, are Lois Kaye
Parker, Mary Frances
Glenn, Elizabeth
McMahon, Cate Richarson,
Lorrie Small, Tom
McMahon and producer
Paul Secrest.
Producer Secrest says,
"It seems in times like
these, that audiences are
seeking out entertainment
that will help them forget
for a while their everyday
worries and problems. Not
Now Darling is an ex-
tremely funny play that
offers a terrific opportunity
for people to spend their
evening in laughter."
Simon Peter due
this weekend in
TCC Music Hall
The second annual
presentation of Simon
Peter will play at the
Tucson Community Center
Music Hall Friday,
Saturday and Sunday,
April 4-6 at 7 p.m. with a
matinee also scheduled
Sunday at 2. Admission is
free for the 21/2 hour
production.
The presentation is
unique in that members
throughout the community
are part of the production.
Members of the Tucson
Symphony will accompany
the musical drama, under
the direction of symphony
member Laszlo Veres.
Professional actors play
the starring roles.
William Hannah, with a
degree in drama, will fly in
from Delaware to again
play Jesus. He lived in
Tucson last year.
Armen Dirtadian, who
played the lead in Fiddler
on the Roof with Southern
Arizona Light Opera
Company and also starred
in Fiddler, Oliver and
Unsinkable Molly Brown in
a Salpointe High School
production, will portray
Peter. He played the lead
in the recent Playbox
production of Brigadoon.
Pam Casey, a
professional singer who
starred in a Playbox
production of Funny Girl,
stars as Mary Magdalene.
Katherine Genders is the
director, author and
producer of the presen-
tation and is chairman of
the board of the newly
formed Simon Peter
Productions. She first
presented the production
last year at Amphitheater
High School with a budget
of about $5,000, all from
donations.
It was such a success
that the set was rebuilt and
moved to the Community
Center to accommodate the
crowd. The non-profit
association is now
operating with a $19,000
budget for the play. About
12 prominent businesses
have donated about $1,000
each.
Ms. Genders said she
hopes the unique com-
munity event will become
as traditional as the rodeo
parade. She decided to
begin such an event in 1977
after moving to Tucson
from Indianapolis, where
the Lutheran Church had
presented a pageant every
year f or 30 years.
It all became a reality for
the first time last year
after Ms. Genders, a
professional violinist,
played in Fiddler on the
Roof at Salpointe and met
Mr. Dirtadian — whom she
recognized as a perfect
Peter — to get her
production off the ground.
She then began writing the
script and circulating
posters asking for volun-
teers.
She chose to make it a
community event in which
everyone can participate
so no segment of the
population would feel
unwelcome as they might
be if one church presented
it.
About 200 people have
worked on the production
both years, with about 60
forming the cast. Ms.
Genders hopes next year to
provide scholarships for
music and drama students
because, she said, the
cultural talent in Tucson
has been left un-
derdeveloped.
All -breed
show at
Fenster -
The Fenster School 17th
Annual All -Breed Open
Horse Show will be held on
Saturday, April 5 at 9 a.m.
The show will take place at
the Fenster School Stables
— 8500 East Ocotillo Drive
— just south of Sabino
Canyon.
There will be 27 classes
divided into appropriate
age groups for children,
juniors, and seniors. The
winners of each class will
receive trophies and
ribbons. High Point
Awards will be given in
each of the three age
categories. Many classes
are Stock Horse of Arizona
— point approved.
There will be " no
admission charge for
spectators, and
refreshments will be
available on the grounds. A
photographer will be
present and available to all
contestants.
Entry forms for the
Fenster School 17th Annual
Horse Show, are at the
school office, 8500 East
Ocotillo Drive — just off of
Sabino Canyon Road.
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 13
Tamales, Tamales
Meat & Sweet
Special Cooking Class with
AMALIA RUIZCLARK
author of "Special Mexican Dishes" Tuesday, April 10
at 10 am. Registration by phone April 8 & 9327-8174
X AT
The Tasting Spoon ,
2559 E. Ft. Lowell (near 1`ucaon Blvd.) S,�PO�.
1�^n
L CALL 3277,6174 'for brochure
Cot,!
1�� Dk4d
03
NOW OPEN
Homemade polish sausage and Kiszka • Homemade
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Stuffed cabbage and Pierogi by special order •
Homemade salads • Luncheon sandwiches
for here or to go
EASTER SPECIAL
Polish baked ham $1.99/lb.
(offer good thru 4-5-80)
Fla" r
325-7044
5224 E. Pima
Mon -Fri Open at 7 am
Sat Open at 8 am
(l B
7053 North Oracle
in Caws Adobes Pla a
deV11g0 bythefountain
Q E qTucson's Finest in Continental Cuisine
featuring
Accents from Around the World
Jackie -Lange — St. Louie Woman -
Wed. thru Sat. in the Lounge
Luncheon
I I to 3
297-8351
Happy Hour
Dinner
Daily
6 to 16
Closed Mondays 4 to 6
Page 14, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
tribution to the project.
"There were five of us, so
that means the directors
have about 100,000 feet to
cut."
The ultimate product — a
30-minute documentary —
amounts to roughly 1,100
feet.
"I haven't seen it yet,
and the last time I asked,
they told me it would be
ready sometime before the
next Olympics," he said.
"But I did see some of my
film one day at Lake
Placid."
"I shot three of (Eric)
Heiden's five gold medals,
most of the hockey games
— except the finals, which I
went to — the slalom, giant
slalom, downhill and figure
skating," he said. "About
the only things I didn't
shoot were the luge and the
ski jumping."
The Lake Placid area
holds a special attraction
for Mr. Rose. "It's one of
the finest areas in the
world. My grandfather and
my father were at the 1932
Games in Lake Placid —
standing around in the mud
— so I knew I had to go."
Although the "contained
events" — figure skating,
hockey and speed skating
— allowed him to follow
competitors from start to
Use Our IICIassif iekr
for the beet Deal in TWO
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OPEN NEARTN
• Char -broiled Steaks & Chops
• BBO Back Ribs
• Lamb Chops
• Blue Points on Half -shell
Rick Rose, cinematographer
for Olympics, awaits films
By WALT NETT
Rick Rose is a man with
a lot on his mind these
days.
Mr. Rose, a Tucson
cinematographer and
president of Film
Creations, is trying to open
up shop in a new location at
2856 E. Fort Lowell Road.
At the same time, he's
waiting to see the fruits of
his last labor — "his"
footage in a half-hour film
chronicling the Winter
Olympics in Lake Placid.
Mr. Rose is one of five
cinematographers from
around the world selected
by the Lake Placid
Olympic Committee for the
assignment."
"I shot 20,000 or 25,000
feet," he said of his con -
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Located in Cliff Manor Inn 5900 N. Oracle
finish, other events allowed
him to see only a segment
of the action.
"You're assigned to a 300
or 400-yard slice of the
course for the giant slalom.
They come out of the trees
above you and go down the
hill in milliseconds," he
said. "You don't even know
if you've got it until the film
is developed — and there
are no second chances."
He's already received an
invitation to work at the
alternative games which
may be held this summer
as a result of President
Carter's order to boycott
the Summer Olympics in
Moscow.
Back on the home front,
the move to the Fort Lowell
Road location — which was
scheduled to open Monday
— has occupied a lot of Mr.
Rose's thoughts because
the company, which
prepares documentary and
educational films and
television commercials —
is trying to pick up a share
of the local hobby market
in photography.
"Photography is the
second most popular hobby
in the country after stamp
collecting," he said
showing a visitor through
the "other half_" of the
company's other quarters.
The facilities include a
retailing area, a large
communal darkroom for
printing black -and -white
still pictures, a developing
room for film, and a color
darkroom with enlarger
and processor.
He said the company
hopes to handle its public
darkroom use on a club
basis, with a yearly
membership fee and an
hourly rental rate.
The company plans to
offer classes in still
photography, Mr. Rose
said, gearing the in-
struction to different levels
of skill and experience. The
classes would be kept
small, he added, which
would allow students more
"hands-on" experience
with darkroom equipment.
Federation to
meet Tuesday
The Federation of Pima
Homeowners Associations
will meet Tuesday, April 9
at 7:30 in Cragin
Elementary School, 2945 N.
Tucson Blvd.
Speakers include Prof.
Gerald Matlock of the city
water advisory committee
and Joe Chaliff of the
county wastewater
management department.
The Downtown Mercado is proud to contribute to the
Tucson Festival `80, an annual celebration of our City's
cultural heritage. Saturday, April 5, 1980, the Down-
town Mercado presents the Inter -Tribal Indian Dan-
cers, under the direction of the Mercado's own Joe
Begay. Their performance begins at noon and ends at
2:30 PM.
Call for
information
791-4439
Fri. 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
Sat. 7:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Start Oct. 6 Winter Hrs. Fri. 9:00 a.m.
—3:00 p.m. Sat. 8:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
International Alley at Pennington
ro•2
Take z
stoS
in AmPrirn
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 15
Tanque Verde Bond consultants due
to discuss new school
IBM employees
take over troop
Jack Davis, a former
scout master in New
Jersey, has assumed
leadership of Boy Scout
Troop 141 which meets at
Tanque . Verde Lutheran
Church, 8625 E. Tanque
Verde Road.
The group consists of
boys nine years old and
older and is making an
effort to expand. Fifteen
boys are members.
Meetings are at 7 p.m.
each Thursday with the
exception of the third
Thursday of the month.
Mr. Davis is an employee
of International Business
Machines and came to
Tucson about a year ago.
He was formerly an
assistant scout master and
his oldest son is an Eagle
Scout.
lie is assisted by Tom
Fowler, another IBM
employee.
Register
for school
next week
Kindergarten
registration at Tanque
Verde Elementary School
will be held at 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday and Thursday,
April 9 and lo, in the school
cafe�terta;
Parents with°last names "
beginning with the letters
A-L are asked to come
Wednesday and those
whose names begin with M-
Z are to come Thursday.
A short explaination of
the program will be made
by the kindergarten
teacher and school staff
and will be followed by a
question and answer
session.
Registration also is
underway in District One
schools for kindergarten
and first graders who did
not attend kindergarten in
the district.
Parents are to register
children at their local
school and parent -child
visitations to the kin-
dergarten classroom will
be scheduled April 14-30.
State law requires
children must be age 5
prior to Oct. 1 to be eligible
for kindergarten and age 6
prior to Nov, 1 to be eligible
for first grade.
A birth certificate and
updated immunization
record will be needed.
Fouradded
as directors
The Sunday Evening
Forum, a community
service of Catalina United
Methodist Church, has
named four new members
to its 12-member board of
directors.
They are Cleo M.
Fryrear, Jerry Holmaas,
David Pingry and Audrey
J. Scott.
Outgoing direcf ors who
were presented with
commemorative plaques at
the March 16 forum were
Ruth Eikenberry, James
E. Gibson, Lee Stith and
James Witner.
The troop was left
leaderless in December
when scoutmaster Walter
Knot, a forest ranger and
university student, was
struck by a car and killed
while trying to help the
victim of a motorcycle
crash.
The troop had met at
Sabino High School.
A representative of
Young, Smith and
Peacock, bond consultants,
will meet with the Tanque
Verde School Board at its
regular meeting at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Arpil 8, in
the Emily Gray Junior
High School library,4201 N.
Melpomene.
Conditions of the bond
market in realtion to bond
sales for the planned Agua
Caliente Elementary
School will be discussed.
Other items on the
agenda include the
footh i 11 auto lease i nc.
4501 East Speedway Boulevard Tucson, Arizona 85712
All makes and models for sale or lease.
Call Keith Wiegand
(602) 795 5825
presentation of cun-
struction drawings for the
new school, a review of the
1980-81 school budget, a
review of the junior high
school language arts
curriculum and finalization
of principals' contracts for
1980-81.
IT'S SPRING
1T
Color Gardens
PANSIES ......... 18 FOR $4.00
VEGETfi3LFS.... (MOST KINDS) 50C
'Buy your plants from Color Gardens -- all grown from
seed and completely adjusted to local weather.
1615 N. Tanque Verde Loop Rd. 749-3380
HISTORY • ART • REFERENCE • BIOGRAPHY • PSYCHOLOGY Ld
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OurReg.Price $700
Trainload Price $635
Less GE
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YOUR
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3W' RANGE a
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s Black glass oven door
With window • Three
6-inCh, one 8-inch Calrod
surface heating units ...
the 8" unit lets you save
energy by adjusting to 4",
6" or 8" utensils • Large
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• Automatic rotisserie `
• Broiler pan and rack.
OurReg.Price . $69S
Trainload Price $64 SL
Less GE s § 0
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wm
pay
nor
me
ISTALLATION!
th the
TSCRUBBER111
retail
purchase
of
this
General
Electric
I,PISHWASHEF
While it may not do
everything, such as burned -
on foods, GE's Power
c Scrubni` Cycle is.designed
to remove dried -on and
baked -on food from pots,
pans and ccsseroles!
• Energy Saver Drying Option
a Cancel -Reset Cycle
(JJJJ
J��ifr • Self -Clean Filtering System
• Quiet PermaTuf® Interior.
• Low Water Usage Cycle
Selections including Energy
ull�����llllll Saver Cycle
Model6SD1200
TRAINLOAD
VALUE!
General Electric has arranged to Perform a NORMAL CHANGEOUT INSTALLATION which will W billed to General Electric
with the purchase or the following GE dishwasher models: GS3 580, GSo 650, GSO 900, GSD 980. GSD 1000, CSD 1200. Normal Changs-Out Installation is -lined to include only: (1) Disconnect existing water line, drai SID gl electrical line, air pap and ye dishwasher: (2) Re -install water line, drain line, electrical line and reconnect air pep. (Includes Nbos and clamps needed
for n-iretallation.)
Offer Expires May 31, 1980
EXCLUSIVE 110—YEAR
PernsoTuf6interior PROTECTION PLAN
In addition to the General Electric Dishwasher Warranty, if the PermaTuf tub or door finer
should fail to contain water due to a manufacturing defect such as erxking, chipping, peeling
Or rusting within the 10 year contract period (ending 10 years from purchase datel. General
Electric will repair or replace the tub or door without charge for either parts or labor unless the
failure is due to misuse or abuse. The Service Contract applies to dishwashers installed and re.
tained for home use within the 48 contiguous states, D.C. or Hawaii.
Also located at 3535 Me Grant Rd. 795m9803
Page 16, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
`
NW FOOTHILLS TOWNHOME
1
ROMANTIC? DISTINQUISHED?
Near Cliff valley 18 hole Golf Course — Country
Club Lifestyle — Elegant 2 bd, 1/ ba, 14'X30'
living room & dining area, energy efficent kit-
chen — Clubhouse, Relax in 2 heated pools, play
tennis or enjoy your own large private patio. See
*
this Resort Quality home. $74,900.00. Call JON
STEFAN 795-0500 or 299-3312 FOR THIS AND
OTHER GREAT BUYS.
TUCSON REALTY & TRUST CO
r 2961 E. Grant Rd.
Tucson, Arizona 85716
"since territorial days"
�� eStPrrt C�DIIegF, , �1nr_
THE REAL ESTATE SCHOOL
5151 N. Oracle
REAL ESTATE SALES
Night classes April 7 6:30 to 10:15
Bruce West, Inst.
Day classes April 14 9:00 to 12:15
Bruce West, Inst.
FOR INFORMATION CALL 792-4540
IN NORTHWEST and NORTH CENTRAL
TUCSON
We're The Neighborhood
PROFESSIONALS
FOR ALL YOUR PROFESSIONAL
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
O� Companion Realty, Inc.
rm 7010 N. Oracle Rd.
Tucson, Az. 85704
-- �V (602) 297.8331
Subscribe NOWH
THE ARIZONA TERRITORIAL
OUR
:FOR
iAr hfti ,"di; r
�ww
ON THE MARCH — Picketers from the Arizona State subcontractor on the job. Defco, the general contractor
District Council of Carpenters march outside the for the project, is a union contractor, one of the picketers
Embassy Plaza shopping center construction site at Ina said.
and Thornydale Roads, protesting the use of a non -union
Plans for resort aired
By WALT NETT
Months of rumors and
speculation ended last
week when Atlas Glenex
Ltd., a Phoenix -based
development company,
announced plans to start
construction this summer
on a $25 million, 500-room
resort hotel -convention
center east of Oro Valley —
the largest such facility in
the Tucson area.
The hotel site, a 169-acre
parcel on the east side of
Oracle Road one -quarter
mile north of Linda Vista
Boulevard, is just east of
PLAN
POOL LAYOUT!
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A total yardscape with swimming pool, landscaping,
patio walls, lighting, paving and therapy spa
If you're thinking about a pool for the summer, step back for a moment,
Look at your whole yard. Think about a custom plan that combines land-
scaping and irrigation to make the best use of precious water; brick and
concrete paving, patio walls, a ramada, imaginative lighting and a swim-
ming pool or spa.
Cimarron Circle Construction combines any or all of these elements in a
superb custom design that can be as simple or complex as you demand.
Transform your home into a desert oasis by this summer. Call Douglas Staples
at Cimarron Circle Construction today.
1 ROIY
IR E
STRUCTION
MPANY
The do -it -all yard people
299-9776
5720 East Lee Street, Tucson, AZ 85712
Oro Valley's town limits
and west of a 1,200-acre
parcel recently purchased
by the Estes Co. next to the
Coronado National Forest.
Atlas Glenex partner
George Johnson said at a
press conference March 26
that the development
company also plans to
build about 850 residences
on 850 acres the company
owns on both sides of La
Canada Drive north of
Lambert Lane.
He estimated the total
cost of the two projects at
somewhere between $150
million and $200 million.
Construction of the
homes would begin early in
1981 with development
spread over a period of five
to eight years, Mr. Johnson
said, adding that those
house prices might run
between $100,000 and
$500,000.
He said the company
plans to develop the
residential acreage as one -
acre lots, town houses and
patio homes.
Hotel construction is
slated for completion in
October 1981. When
CANADA CONSTRUCTION CO.
ROOM ODDITIONS
ENCLOSURES - CfiRPORTS
REMODELING - GORHGES
LIC. BONDED - INSURED
297-9408
FREE ESTIMIRTES FRfiNK RUITER
Coronado National Forest
E "When ill - Call your
doctor. When selling
your home - call
your Realtor."O
N
M ®E aa�aaa�
s
In 1980, perhaps you will
have a need to Ask for More
from the MOREYS - Connie
and Sam.
. • 887-4200
925 W. Prince Rd., Tucson, AZ 85705 Office299-3206
completed, the hotel's
amenities will include four
restaurants, a 27-hole golf
course, 16 tennis courts, a
swimming pool and indoor
handball and racquetball
courts.
Nine golf holes will be
built on the resort site with
the remaining 18 being
built on the 850 acres in the
Lambert Lane -La Canada
Drive area.
The resort will feature
350 suites in the main
complex and 150 "casita"
rooms, suites and in-
dividual rooms separate
from the main complex.
The grand ballroom will be
15,000 square feet, capable
of seating up to 2,000
guests.
Also planned as part of
the resort would be a
Western town, which Mr.
Johnson said would be "a
kiddie Gunsmoke-type of
development which would
try to recreate some of
Tucson's history.
Mr. Johnson said that
about 300 people would be
employed in building the
hotel. After completion the
hotel would employ bet-
ween 500 and 550 persons.
Atlas Glenex is
"negotiating to get what it
considers to be the finest
and most capable resort -
hotel firm to manage the
resort once it is com-
pleted," the developer
added.
Mr. Johnson said he
would consider asking Oro
Valley to annex the
projects "if the town wants
US."
"We think it's a neat
community," he said.
"And we think our project
would upgrade the town."
�- foothill grounds
environmental contracting
commercial a residential
desert landscaping • poolscaping
custom planting
MONTHLY WEED CONTROL
We will rid your yard of ugly weeds
and keep them away with our monthly service.
1 month free service with 12 month contract.
Call us for a reasonable estimate.
2820 E. Ft. Lowell Rd. 795-5641
Signing catches on at CDO
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 17
Flowing Wells offers class
By DEBBIE ENGLISH
Canyon del Oro High
School students had an
opportunity last Friday to
enjoy some popular music
in a different way.
The CDO and Flowing
Wells Sign Language Clubs
each signed to and ar-
tistically interpreted songs
as well as performing in
mime for CDO students on
the lawn during lunch. It
was the first performance
for the CDO Club since it
began in September.
CDO Club President
Kelly Klein said she hopes
the club will soon be active
in performing for the
community like the
Flowing Wells Club. Both
clubs plan to travel to the
Arizona School for the Deaf
and Blind to sign and
perform mime.
The Flowing Wells Club,
which has been performing
in the community for about
four years, plans to also
appear at the Pima County
Fair April 13 at 5 p.m.
The approximately 15
Flowing Wells club
members are a collection
of students taking sign
language classes as part of
their regular curriculum.
Flowing Wells sign
language instructor Linda
McElroy said the district is
one of the few in Tucson
which offers signing
classes. She noted that it
was a real honor when the
National Theater for the
Deaf recently called
inquiring about their club.
Most of the 11 CDO club
members got interested in
learning sign language
while attending Cross
Junior High. Cross enrich-
ment teacher Geanie
Kenyon, who last year
directed the play "Greece"
in sign language, instilled
that interest.
Freshman Seth Dubry
graduated from Cross with
the notion to start a club at
CDO, and he and Kelly
Klein made it a reality.
`Deal
`Estate
By Bob Hall
TAX TIPS
Q. I am thinking about selling my
home, but I will not be 55 until
May 23. If I list my house for
sale now, and receive an
acceptable offer before age 55,
will 1 be eligible for the new
"over 55" exclusion of the
capital gains tax?
A. Yes. You can accept an offer
before your 55th birthday, but
the sale must close onor after
your 55th birthday.
0. 1 am 56 and my wife is 53. If we
sell our home before she is 55
will we be eligible for the "over
55" tax exclusion?
A. Yes. Only one of you must be
over 55.
For the finest in
professional assistance
with your home sale call
BOB HALL, TUCSON
REALTY dr TRUST, 745-
6151 or 885-6120
(Res.).
MOTION MESSAGES — Becky Teel (left) and fellow CDO club signer Terry Wyman
have a lot to say to the beat. They are two members of the new sign club participating in
the club's first debut on the lawn at CDO last week during lunch. Flowing Wells also put
on a performance. The two clubs got together for the performance to observe and learn
from one another. Both clubs have plans to go into the community to share their art.
DISTINCTIVE -ELEGANT -
LUXURIOUS
a
This beautiful territorial home is now
"s
under construction. Your personal touches
can still be added to the following features.
TAMMY CONNER
Large entrada with garden leads to living
room with French doors opening onto a
SALES ASSOCIATE
veranda. Formal dining room, library and
family room. Master suite has Roman tub.
D
All the latest in kitchen appliances. All on
over an acre with spectacular mountain
views. Call today for Appt. Offered at
$285,000. Tammy 297-0852.
7110 N. Oracle Rd.
Suite 105 Ph. 297-2516
GRECA REALTY
GREAT LOCATIONI
Lovely 4 bedroom home near downtown & Pima Collega.
Family room with fireplace. Beautiful kitchen with breakfast
area & counter. Dressing area off master bedroom. All rooms
are very large on approx. Yz acre lot. Walking distance to. -
schools.' Call Juanita 297-8241 or 623-3241.
Plaza del Oro
Orange Grove & Oracle
297-8241
623-3241
To subscribe to The Arizona Territorial, call,
297-1107 and we'll have it in your mailbox
every Thursday.
"We're waiting" ... "We've decided to wait"..."With interest rates the way
they are, we'll wait."
And so you wait, and you lose.
DON'T WAIT!
Take a look at the facts:
• Between 1977 and 1979 the value of an average Tucson home appreciated as
much as 63%. Without a doubt a long term hedge against inflation.
fln 1977, the price of a foothills LeMarr home was $49,000.
III In 1979, the market value of that same home was $104,000, a 112 % increase!
DON'T WAIT!
We'll help you with our creative finance options including a NO
DOWN PAYMENT PROGRAM
Phone: 742-4805
-9 re
L IF
Ar .11 74, C
Visit LeMarr today at Sunnyslope Townhomes
on Oracle 2 miles north of Ina
Exclusive agent LeMarr Realty
Models open 12 noon - 6 p.m.
N
I W
J
V
Q
F�
0
INA
Page 18, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
tI. t� �t fa. t� ew tI. t� � ti. tI. t� t� t�ti• t�
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RADIATOR SERVIC
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• Radiator Service —REG. $48.50
'
with'this ad — $41.50
SAVE $7.00
• A/C Service —REG. $26.50
with this ad — $21.50
SAVE $4.00
• We pick-up and deliver FREE Mon. -Fri.
I
If your a/c system Is not too cool, not just right, avoid hot
weather waiting time. NOW IS THE TIME to have the
system tuned up. We will pick up your car, evacuate the
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system, check recharge and return to you
FOUR HOURS OR LESS
SAVE MONEY - SAVE THIS Q
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4 VICE 62 3-8994
501 W. Grant
'
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1/2 block west of Miracle Mile
t� tt� fa• tt� tta t� � ti• � fa t� tt� tt� tI• � tI• tZI�
IN TIME OF. SORROW...
the gift of your presence
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AIIAe
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AVALON CHAPEL
4519 N. ORACLE 888-1072
INTERESTED4N PLACING AN AD IN THE
ARIZONA TERRITORIAL? JUST CALL
297-1107 AND WE'LL ARRANGE TO HAVE
ONE OF OUR ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES
CALL ON YOU!
Don't apologize
for "just browsing"
Ethan Allen really understands the meaning
of "just browsing."
We understand you may be in the market for
ideas before you're in the market for things. So
come in and collect some. You'll find them all
around an Ethan Allen Gallery. Feel very
churches
Christians unite
for Good Friday
The congregations of
four northeast area
churches will join together
at 1 p.m. tomorrow at St.
Andrews Presbyterian
Church, 7600 N. Paseo Del
Norte, for Good Friday
services in rememberance
of the crucifixion of Christ.
Casas Adobes
Congregational, Beautiful
Savior Lutheran and St.
Mark's United Methodist
churches will partiepate in
the service.
Remembering Christ's
command to "love one
another even as I have
loved you" Maundy
Thursday services will be
welcome to wander through our beautifully fur-
nished and decorated rooms.
If you like, we'll give you all the help you
want. But if you prefer to be "ignored", to
browse to you heart's content, just say the
word. After all, you're our guest!
Cleorgetows,vii Nlan()r
An EthamUen (,nailer),
5757 North Oracle Road
Phone 888-5757
MASTER CHARGE OR USE OUR REVOLVING CHARGE.
Hours: 9:30 A.M to 9:00 P.M. Mondays
9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Tues. thru Sat.
Sun. NOON to 5 P.M.
celebrated at 7:30 p.m. at
Casas Adobes
Congregational Church.
Beautiful Savior
Lutheran Church, a new
congregation, will hold
another Good Friday
service at 7:30 p.m. at
Thornydale School.
Tenebrae, the service of
darkness, will be
celebrated at Tanque
Verde Lutheran Church,
8625 E. Tanque Verde
Road, at 7:30 p.m. Friday,
April 4.
At St. Mark's United
Methodist Church, 1431 W.
Magee Road, Maundy
Thursday services at 7:30
p.m. will be followed by an
all-night prayer vigil that
ends at noon Friday.
A candlelight parish
supper with Holy Com-
munion will be held in the
church gallery at 6 p.m.
tonight (Thursday) and
Holy Communion will be
celebrated in the sanctuary
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Philip's
in the Hills Episcopal
Church at River Road and
Campbell Ave.
Children's Good Friday
services will be at 10 a.m.
with meditations on the
cross from noon until 1
p.m. Tenebrae service will
be at 7:30 p.m.
Holy Communion will be
celebrated at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the First
Evangelical Free Church,
4700 N. Swan.
The Church of Saint Cyril
of Alexandria, 4725 E.
Pima, will have Reflec-
tions on the Lord's Passion
at 2 p.m. followed by Good
Friday liturgy at 7:30 p.m.
Easter vigil will be at 8
p.m. Saturday followed by
refreshments in the parish
hall.
The congregations of the
churches of the university
area will hold a service at
noon on Good Friday at the
First Congregational
Church, 824 N. Second
Ave., with the Rev. James
Hine as speaker.
Dove of Peace Lutheran
Church will hold Maundy
Thursday services at 11
a.m. with the Last Supper
and the institution of
blessed sacrament, and
"Upper Room Com-
munion" by candlelight at
7 p.m.
Good Friday ob-
servances begin at 6:45
a.m. with an all -day prayer
vigil concluding at 7 p.m.
with Tenebrae. The choir
will lead the service
through the moods and
message of the seven last
words of Christ.
Members of St. Francis
in the Foothills Methodist
Church, 4625 E. River
Road, are asked to bring
bread, cheese or fruit to
share at Maundy Thursday
services at 7 p.m. Child
care for nursery and pre-
school youngsters will be
provided.
At 7 p.m. Friday the play
The Serpent, written by
Jean-Claude Van Itallie,
will be performed.
Faithful meet
at sunrise for
Easter prayer
"He is not here, but is
risen." -Luke 24:6.
In celebration of the
resurrection of Jesus
Christ, worshipers from
throughout Tucson will
gather at 6:30 a.m. Easter
Sunday (April 6) at the
Reid Park bandshell, 19th
St. and Country Club, for a
city-wide sunrise service
led by Roger Barrier,
pastor of Casas Adobes
Baptist Church.
Sponsored by the
National Association of
Evangelicals, the yearly
event also will feature local
singers Pam Evans and
Greg Wilford.
Sunrise services and
Easter breakfasts also are
planned at several local
churches.
Services at the First
Church of God, 3355 N.
Fontana, will begin at 7
a.m. with a sunrise
celebration on the church
lawn followed by a con-
tinental breakfast with
slides of the Holy Lands
shown in the sanctuary. A
children's Easter program
will be at 10 a.m. followed
by a worship service at
10:45 a.m. and a musical
program at 6:30 p.m.
Reservations are
required to attend the
Easter breakfast at St.
Philip's in the Hills
Episcopal Church. Food
will be served from 8.30 to
10:30 a.m. Services are at
8, 9:30, and 11 a.m. and 5:30
p.m.
..St. Mark's United
Methodist, 1431 W. Magee
Road, will hold a sunrise
service at 6 a.m. on the
church patio followed by
breakfast at 7 a.m. and
worship services at 8:30
and 11 a.m.
Beautiful Savior
Lutheran Church will have
its sunrise service at 6 a.m.
on the church property and
breakfast at 7 a.m. at
Thornydale School.
Communion service will be
at 8 a.m.
Casas Adobes
Congregational Church will
support a united service at
the Church of the Painted
Hills on West Speedway at
5:45 a.m. Participants are
asked to bring finger foods
or beverages to share.
Sabin Canyon will be the
site of a sunrise service at
5:30 a.m. for the youth at
Sabino Road Baptist
Church, 2710 N. Sabin
Canyon Road.
At 7 p.m. the Easter
cantata "The Last Week,"
by John Peterson, will be
presented by the adult
choir.
The Church of Saint Cyril
of Alexandria, 4725 E.
Pima, will hold a special
children -family mass at
10:30 a.m. in the Parish
Hall in addition to regular
Sunday services.
The First Evangelical
Free Church, 4700 N. Swan,
will have a singles break-
fast and fellowship at 7:30
a.m. at Village Inn Pan-
cake House, Speedway and
Columbus Blvd.
The Easter musical
"Then Came Sunday" will
performed by the Sanc-
tuary Choir with guest
soloist Arnold Majuta, at
the 9 a.m. service at El
Camino Baptist Church,
7777 E. Speedway.
Rev. Warren Fleisch-
mann's message will be
"Does Easter Make a
Difference?" A Baptism
and Holy Communion
service will be at 5 p.m.
An Agape service at 3
p.m. Easter Sunday at St.
Demetrios Greek Orthodox
Church, 1145 E. Fort
Lowell Road, will be
followed by a dinner at the
Hellenic Center from 5 to 7
p.m.
The menu includes
traditional barbecued lamb
with Greek soup. Adults
are $7.50 with children
under 12 years old $5.
Panathenian dancers will
perform Greek dances at 6
p.m.
Tanque Verde Baptist
Church, 220 N. Tanque
Verde Loop Road, will have
a sunrise service at 6:30
a.m. in addition to its
regular 11 a.m, service.
The film "Tough Men" will
be shown at 6:30 p.m.
Filmed in Alaska, it tells of
the escapades of two men
and a beagle in the
widerness.
Tanque Verde Lutheran
Church, 8625 E. Tanque
Verde Road, will have a
sunrise service in the north
parking lot at 6:30 a.m.
followed by services with
Holy Communion at 7:30, 9
and 10:30 a.m.
The senior high youth
will serve breakfast from 6
a.m. until noon. The menu
includes eggs, pancakes,
juice and coffee.
Services for the new
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton
Parish meeting at But-
terfield Elementary School
will be at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.
Oro Valley Church of the
Nazarene, 500 W. Calle
Concordia, will hold a
sunrise service at 7 a.m. at
the church.
The courtyard of Dove of
Peace Lutheran Church
will be used for the
congregation's sunrise
service at 6 a.m. Brass
ensembles will play music
before the 8, 9:30 and 11
a.m. worship services. A
continental breakfast will
be served at 7 a.m.
Saint James United
Methodist, 3255 N. Cam-
pbell Ave., will hold a
sunrise service at 6 a.m. on
the church lawn. Breakfast
will be served after the
service. Those planning to
attend are asked to call the
church office.
The sunrise service at St.
Francis in the Foothills
Methodist Church, will be
at 5:30 a.m. at the church.
Neighborhood groups three
and five will host pot -luck
breakfast at 3801 N. Swan.
Participants are asked to
bring eggs and other food
to share.
SCA will take
old refrigerators
SCA Services of Arizona
will be picking up un-
wanted refrigerators in the
unincorporated areas of
the county this month.
The company will collect
the refrigerators on four
consecutive Tuesdays April 8, 15, 22, and 29.
Persons wishing to get
rid of old refrigerators
should call the company at
882-8792.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF PIMA
GAYLE JOHN WILCOXSON, an
,inmarried man, PLAINTIFF vs.
RICHARD R. SAMPLE and
SALLY SAMPLE, husband and
wife, ARTHUR D. MAHANY and
JANE DOE MAHANY, dba ART
MAHANY REALTY, an Arizona
corporation, and GREGORY J.
DREGDON, dba BANNER
REALTY, and DENTON REAL
ESTATE COMPANY, INC., an
Arizona corporation, JOHN DOES
I-X, JANE DOES I-X, and XYZ
CORPORATIONS 1-X,
DEFENDANTS No. 183470
NOTICE OF SPECIAL
EXECUTION SALE OF REAL
PROPERTY
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that in obedience to the Writ of
Special Execution issued by the
above entitled Court and in the
above entitled cause, which Writ
and the Judgment described
therein by reference thereto are
incorporated herein, commands
me to sell, and I will sell, subject
to the right of redemption in such
case made and provided by
statute, at public auction, all of the
right, title, interest, claim and lien
which the parties named in said
Judgment had or have In and to
the real property hereinafter
described, and from the proceeds
of said sale, to satisfy said
Judgment in favor of the judgment
creditor therein named, In the
total judgment sum of S36,476.18',
together with accrued and ac-
cruing interest and costs since the
date of entry of said Judgment.
'9% interest on $26,000.00 to 3-5-80
and 6% interest on $2,732.25 to 3-5-
80.
The sale will be held at the East
West front door of the Pima
County Court House, also
sometimes known as the main
entrance of said Court House, in
Tucson, Arizona on April 22, 1980
at the hour of 10:00 a.m, to sell the
following described real property
to the highest bidder:
PARCEL]
The East 58.30 feet of Lot 1, AND
Lots 2 and 5, Block 1, MESA
VERDE, according to Book 5 of
Maps, page 73 thereof,records of
Pima County, Arizona;
EXCEPT the West 103.36 feet of
said Lots 2 and 5.
PARCEL2
That part of the North half of the
Southeast Quarter of the Nor-
theast Quarter of Section 35,
Township 13 South, Range 13 East,
of the Gila and Salt River Base
and Meridian, Pima County,
Arizona, described as follows, td
wit:
BEGINNING at a point on the
North of Lot 1 in Block 1 of MESA
VERDE, according to Book 5 of
Maps, page 73 thereof, records of
Pima County, Arizona, distant
58.30 feet West of the Northeast
corner of said Lot 1;
Thence East along said North
line of the Easterly prolongation
thereof, a distance of 60.60 feet,-
Thence Northerly at right
angles to a point on the South line
on the Old Tucson -Casa Grande
Highway, as it existed on June 15,
1966;
Thence Westerly, along the
curve of said South line to its in-
tersection with a line per-
pendicular to the. North line of said
Lot 1 and running through the
POINT OF BEGINNING:
Thence Southerly along said
perpendicular line -to the POINT
OF BEGINNING. CLARENCE
DUPNIK SHERIFF OF PIMA
COUNTY, ARIZONA By K.A.
Kampe SGT. DEPUTY SHERIFF
DATED DAY 5 MONTH March
YEAR 1980
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
March 27, 1980
April 3, 10, 1980
Pub: Thikoll, Johnston & Rosen,
Attorneys At Law
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF PIMA
OESTREICH ELECTRIC, INC.,
Plaintiff, vs. HENRY FOLEY, et
al., Defendants, No. T-11250
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
WHEREAS, purs6nt to an
execution Issued out of the above
named court in the above entitled
action upon a .judgment for the
above named Plaintiff and against
the above . named Defendant,
entered on the 18M day of Sep-
tember, 1979, in the amount of For
Hundred Seventy -Nine and $41100
Dollars (9479.84) together with
interest thereon at the rate of 10%
per annum, until paid, and costs in
the sum of $32.00 plus accruing'
costs, 1 have levied upon all of the
right, title, and interest of the
Defendant HEN RY FOLEY, in the
following described property:
VISTA DEL PUEBLO LOT 14,
BLK 3, (DI C: O 5465 P 283 02117178)
VISTA DEL PUEBLO LOT 15,
BLK 3 (D1C: D S465P 28302117178),
Pima County, according to the
Map or Plat of record in the Office
of the County Recorder of Pima
County
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that 1, the Sheriff of Pima County,
on the 22 day of April, 1980, at the
hour of 10:00 o'clock a.m., at the
East front door of the New Pima
County Courthouse in Tucson,
Arizona, will sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash all of
the right, title and interest of the
Defendant HENRY FOLEY in and
to the above described property to
satisfy said judgment. DATED: 3-
17-80. CLARENCE DUPNIK
SHERIFF OF PIMA COUNTY By
K.A. Kempe Sgt. Deputy Sheriff.
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 19
Public Notices
"The People's Right to Know"
PUB: The Arizona Territorial
March 20, 27, 1980, April 3, 1980.
REQ: Russo, Cox, Dickerson,
Cartin & Sylvester, Attorneys At
Law
ARTICLESOF
INCORPORATION OF
MIR-GRA, INC.
ARTICLE 1 The name of the
corporation is M I R-G RA, INC.
ARTICLE II The purposes for
which this corporation is formed
are, or include, the transaction of
any or all lawful business for
which corporations may be in-
corporated under the laws of the
State of Arizona, as amended from
time to time. Without limitation,
this corporation may transact, in
addition to the business which It
initially intends to conduct, any
and all kinds of retail and
wholesale merchandising
business, and may acquire, im-
prove, use and dispose of, and deal
In any lawful manner with real
property and Interests in and
Improvements thereon, and with
personal property and intangibles
of all kinds.
ARTICLES III The corporation
initially intends to conduct the
business of a retail drug store and
Pharmacy, including but not
limited to the preparation,
dispensation and sale of
prescription drugs and medicines,
the sale of all manner of mer-
chandise commonly associated
with the retail drugstore business,
including medicines and
preparations, products for
hygiene and health care, gifts,
food items, cosmetics and con-
venience- and sundry items; and
the corporation may conduct the
operation of a soda fountain and
lunch counter; and the cor-
poration may engage in the sale at
retail or wholesale of any and all
goods and merchandise associated
with, appropriate or desirable to
the conduct of such business.
ARTICLE IV The corporation
shall have authority to issue
1,000,000 shares of stock,
designated "Common Stock," the
par value of each share of such
Common Stock to be $10.00.
ARTICLE V THe name and
address of the statutory agent of
the corporation- is: J. DAYTON
FORD, 6985 North Oracle Road,
Tucson, Arizona 85704,
ARTICLE VI The known place
of business of the corporation shall
be 2334 Miracle Mile Strip, Tuc-
son, Arizona; and the corporation
may.establish such other locations
for the conduct of its business as
its Board of Directors may.
detenp,ine.- -
ARTICLE VI The initial board
of directors of the corporation
shall consist of two (2) directors;
and the names and addresses of
the persons who are to serve as
directors until the first annual
meeting of shareholders or until
their successors are elected and
qualified are: SHELDON R.
TUCKMAN 4515 East Grant Road
Tucson, Arizona 85712
MILLICENT TUCKMAN 4515
East Grant Road Tucson, Arizona
85712 The number of directors to
serve on the board of directors of
the corporation shall be fixed by
the By-laws of the corporation.
ARTICLE Vill The in-
corporators of the corporation,
whose addresses are stated in the
preceding Article VII, are:
SHELDON R. TUCKMAN and
MILLICENT TUCKMAN
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the
named incorporators have
executed and adopted these
Articles of Incorporation this 3-14-
80 day of March, 1980. Sheldon R
Tuckman Sheldon R. Tuckman
Millicent Tuckman Millicent
Tuckman AZ. CORP. COM-
MISSION FOR THE STATE OF
AZ. FILED MAR 17'80504056
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
April 3,10,17,1980
Req: J. Dayton Ford
Attorney at Law
PUBLIC SERVICE
ANNOUNCEMENT
TAX NOTICE
Pursuant to Arizona Revised
Statutes 42-342, the Second Half of
1919 real property taxes became
due and payable March 1,1980 and
becomes del lnquent on May 1, 1980
at 5:00 p.m. and unless paid prior
thereto interest from the time of
delinquency at the rate of ten
Percent 00 percent) per annum
day of the mrorated moontthhuntil paid, wfirst
ill be
added thereto. Taxes are payable,
from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Monday through Friday, legal
holidays excluded, at the office of
the Pima County Treasurer,
Courthouse, Tucson, Arizona.
Any questions relative to the
authority for property taxation,
the definition of taxable Froperty,
or the criteria in determ ning the
classification and extent to which
property Is taxed should be
directed to your STATE
LEGISLATIVE REPRESEN-
TATIVES.
Any questions relative to ap-
praisal techniques should be
directed to THE STATE
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE.
Any questions relative to the
AMOUNT of taxes should be
directed to the GOVERNING
BODIES of the State of Arizona
and its political subdivisions
(State, County, School Districts,
Cities, etc.)
Qny questions relative to the
manner in which property taxes
are collected, and subsequently
invested, should be directed to the
undersigned James Lee Kirk
Pima County Treasurer
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
April 3, 10, 17, 24, 1980
Req: Pima County Treasurer
SUMMONS
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF MARICOPA
THE LINCOLN SAVINGS BANK,
a corporation, Plaintiff, vs.
WILLIAM LEO CARRIER and
JANE DOE CARRIER, wife of
William Leo Carrier, if any, in-
dividually and as husband and
wife; HUGHES FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION, a corporation;
MAX W. MOLDENHAUER and
PHYLLIS A. MOLDENHAUER,
individually and as husband and
wife; SAMUEL JOYNER dba
Joyner Realty; RUBY JOYNER
dba Joyner Realty; TEMPLE OF
MERCY OF DIV. IN-
TELLIGENCE, an Illinois cor.
poration; JOHN DOE and JANE
DOE, Parties in Possession; the
UNKNOWN HEIRS AND
DEVISEES of any one or more of
the foregoing named defendants,
if deceased; JOHN DOE I to V,
Inclusive; MARY DOE I to V,
Inclusive, and DOE COR-
PORATION I to V, Inclusive,
Defendants. No. C407434 SUM-
MONS THE STATE OF ARIZONA
to each and all of the above named
Defendants:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUM-
MONED and required to appear
and defend In the above entitled
action in the above entitled Court,
within TWENTY DAYS, exlusive
of the day of service, after service
of this Summons upon you If
served within the State of Arizona,
or within THIRTY DAYS, ex-
clusive of the day of service, if
served without the State of
Arizona, and you are hereby
notified that in case you fail so to
do, judgment by default will be
rendered against you for the relief
demand in the Complaint.
The names and address of
Plaintiff's attorneys are CARSON
MESSINGER ELLIOTT
LAUGHLIN & RAGAN, 1400
United Bank Building, 3550 North
Central Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona
85012.
GIVEN under my hand and the
seal of the Superior Court of the
State of Arizona in and for the
County of Maricopa this MAR 24
1980 day of March, 1980. WILSON
D. PALMER, Clerk. By M. JOHNS
Deputy Clerk (Court Seal) UN-
DER RULE 10 (d) R.C.P. AND
SEC. 12-311 A.R.S., ALL AN-
SWERS MUST BE IN WRITING,
FILED IN THE CLERK'S OF-
FICE AND BE ACCOMPANIED
BY THE NECESSARY FILING
FEE
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
April 3, 10, 17, 24, 1980
Req: Carson, Messinger, Elliott,
Laughlin & Ragan Attorneys at
Law
Our
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Help
You
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Page 20, The Arizona Territorial, Apri 3,1980
ANTIQUES
Antique Clock Mart
Buy -Sell - Trade
Expert Repair - Refinish
5665 E. 22nd St.
747-5674
AUTOS FOR SALE
1967 Buick Electra. AT, PS, PB,
radio. Runs good. 4 good tires.
BEST OFFER. Call 886-9357
even in gs a nd weekends.
AT DA TFN E
1979 Ford F-250.4X, 6 cyl.-dual
tanks -etc. 10,000 miles, ,$5500.
297-3341 or 884-0534
AT DA 14
'71 Chev. Camaro 350. 4 speed,
has everything. Call 886-6472
AT DA 14
1977 Buick Skyhawk, V6, 4
speed -floor, 26 mpg, hatchback,
great cond. Call Dixie 747-0069.
AT DA 14
1975 Chevy Suburban: PS, PB,
dual air, dual gas tanks, 61
gallons, excellent condition. Call
747.1514 eves.
AT DA 13,14,15,16
1965 Olds F85 - needs brake
work. AT AC, PS, PB, radio, 4
good tires. BEST OFFER. Call
886-9357 evenings and weekends.
AT DA TFN E
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
By owner, 1979 Lancer Class A
24X56, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, large
family room, 2 awnings, car-
peted porch, 2 coolers, 114 in.
Paneling, single roof, lapped
siding. Plush, up -graded wall to
wall carpet, all appliances. Must
see to believe. Assume loan at
13.61 percent, with down
Payment. Call Jim Snyder,
office 748-4816, home'889-7005.
AT DA 13,14
AUTO SERVICES
PMT ENGINE TREATMENT
add to crankcase for longer
engine life and better per
formance - guaranteed, $14.95.
A & J AUTO PARTS 2517 N.
Campbe11881-5156.
AT DAb,7,8,9,10,11,12,T FN
AUTOS WANTED
Cash for junk cars and trucks. I
give discounts to servicemen.
Call Steve at 294-9475, after 5:30
:all 748-0168.
AT DATFN
BABYSITTER
WANTED
responsible, mature adult to
abysit 4 mo. old in our home.
references. 297-5510 after 5:00
.m.
AT DA 14
Vanted: early riser to get 6 & 9
ear old boys ready to catch
chool bus weekdays. 748 8377
sk for 27-4805.
AT DA 14
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
to you run out of money before
ou run out of month? Turn the
3bles with extra income the
Amway way. As little as $20.00
ets you started in a business of
our own. We assist. Get the
Thole story. Phone 297-4620,
AT DA 14,15,16,17
HIS SPACE COULD BE YOUR
D. CALL 297-1107 OR MAIL IT
O TERRITORIAL
UBLISHERS, 1 WEST
RANGE GROVE ROAD,
UCSON, ARIZONA 85704,
C.B. RADIO
FOR SALE
Walking, talking C.B., 40
channel SSB-AM with desk
Mike, Astra Plane antenna, 50
feet coax, connectors. Call 886-
2745.$200.
ATDA14
DOG TRAINING
BOBCLARK
DOGTRAINING
"In Your Home"
• P; oblem
"Obedience
*Protection Training
791-3624
FERTILIZERS
Extra fine pulverized fertilizer.
$6.50 yard delivered. Cook
Fertilizers. 887-0164.
AT DA TFN
FURNITURE
WANTED
Cash paid for couches, dressers,
dinettes, desk, . housewares,
stereos, TVs or whatever. Free
Pickup. Call 622.8231 or 887-5117.
AT DA 13,14,15,16
HELP WANTED
Senior citizen home inspector. 20
hours per week. Must be 55
years or older and have an in-
come not to exceed $4200 per
year. Must be able to meet the
public and dolotsof walking.
Apply at Flowing Wells Fire
Dept. between 9-5 weekdays.
AT DA 14,15
HOME FURNISHINGS
BOUGHT AND SOLD
Dining room table and four
chairs $200.00. White bamboo
like coffee table with glass top
$75.00. Matching etagere with
four glass shelves $135,00. Call
299 4859 after 4:00 and on
weekends.
AT DA TFN
4 RMS. OF
FURNITURE
$584
Like new, nice houseful Of
furniture, sofa w-matching
chair, 2 end tables, cocktail
table, dinette set, master
bdrm. set, dresser, mirror,
panel bed & chest. 2nd bd-
rm. set, dresser, panel bed,
nighistand, all like new only
$584. Must sell all or part.
See credit manager.
The Barn
5970 S. Palo Verde
294-4201
HOME FOR RENT
Attractive 3 bdrm. home in NW
area $395 mo. 297.3341 or,884-
0534.
AT DA 14
HOUSES FOR RENT
OR LEASE
NOW AVAILABLE. Speedway.
Harrison, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, pool
(service included), security
area for toddlers, walled yd.,
covered patio, 2 car carport,
carpeted, washer -dryer, refrig.,
dishwasher, near excellent
schools. Beautiful mountain
view. $495 749-5622.
AT DA 14
HOUSE FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
Spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bath
townhome in Orchard River.
Includes washer -dryer in
separate laundry room, com-
plete kitchen with trash com-
pactor, dishwasher, disposal,
etc. and lots of storage.
Beautifully landscaped private
patio near pool and barbeque.
Call 299-4859 eves. and
weekends.
AT DA TFN-E
HOUSE FOR SALE
TRANSFERRED OWNER
MUST BID HIS IMMACULATE
HOME A HASTY GOOD-BYE.
PRICED BELOW MARKET TO
SPEED SALE! Happy living
will start here for your family in
this 1600 sq. ft" 3 br. home that is
spit and span from head to toe.
See this bargain beauty before
someone snaps it off the market.
Priced below market value at
$64,900. Call Bob Beckwith
today. 747.8004 or 885-8448.
Millstone Real Estate Co. - Red
Carpet. 1112 S. Craycroft.
ATDA14
Close to D-M: Cheerful kitchen
highlights this roomy 3 bdrm.
home. Extra large living room
with fireplace and beam ceiling.
Lots of storage. Call 747-1759.
AT DA 13,14,15,16
For sale by owner: Assume 81/2
VA loan. 4 bdrm., 2 bath, pool,
evap-refrig cooling and lots
more. Asking $75,900. Call 885.
3054.
AT DA 13,14,15,16
HOUSE FOR SALE
LOW CASH TO MORTGAGE:
Assumable 101n% FHA Loan. 4
bdrm., 13i4 bath, five year old
home. 1/z block from Thornydale
Elementary School. $66,900. Call
744-3917.
AT DA 12,13,14,15,
INCOME TAX
BATES Accounting and Tax
Service. Call 297-6332 for an
appointment at your home or
office.
AT DA 11,12,13,14,15
INFORMATION
MOOOOVING?
Free information for home
buyers at your new stateside
assignment. Everything you
want to know about housing,
school, banks, recreational
facilities, etc., but didn't know
who to ask. No cost and no
obligation. Call today. Bernie
Digan (MSG USA RET) 747-8317
or 745-1122. ERA Estes Realty.
AT DA 14,15,16,17
HELP WANTED
RECEPTIONIST
Front desk position. Duties include
answering phones, typing, handling of
classified advertising and other varied
office duties. Apply in person. .
Territorial Publishers, Inc.
1 W. Orange Grove Road
Democrat
297-1107 caucus is
April 12
The state's registered
INSTRUCTION ROOFING
Democrats will start the.
process of selecting 29
delegates to the party's
BE A WINNER! "Who's
'
national convention in New
ROOFS
Running Your Life?;'adescribes
successful persons find better
adult programs teaching how ENERGY SAVING
York Cl Aril 12 b
ty p e
voting In a statewide
jobs, new careers, new life. For I
free copy call Southwest In- I
stitute of Life Management. 296-
4764. \�
■
caucus - for their
Presidential choice as well
AT DA 12,13,14,15
A L P �„I
B Y '• ���
CIA Y
as for regional delegates
pledged that candidate.
The delegates chosen in
LEGAL ASSISTANCE OO
the April 12 election will
meet in regional caucuses
Phone
May 24 to select the
LEGAL ASSISTANCE. No gg]_3384 LICENSED
&BONDED
delegates to the national
charge for initial consultation.
convention. At that time
Robert Arentz, Attorney at Law,
Nanini Financial Center, 7110 N. /
the regional delegates will
Oracle Road, Sutie 106, 297-7377.
elect the three State party
WANTED
AT DATFN
SERVICES
officials and six at' -large
delegates.
Polls will be open in 60
Need someone to babysit your
MISC. FOR SALE house? I'm a hometown girl with
WANTED: Eydie Gorme
locations around the state
good references, willing to live
Spanish Xmas carols album,
April 12 from 12:30 p.m. to
in your home during your ab-
sence. Call after 6:00 p.m. and
several years old, used but in
good shape. Call 293.3903eves.
8:30 m. for the election of
p•
Queen sofa bed, new uphoi., ask for Vicki.297.1956.
- AT DA TFN-E
regional delegates, with
mattress, $225. Also RCA Vic- ATDATFN E
trola, circa 1929. Org. finish and
1
polling places in Pima
WANTED
meth. $550. Both excellent Winter rains have your dirt
CLEAN FILL DIRT
County set by state
condition.790-8005. driveway in a mess? Let me
AT DA- 14,15 grade it. Northwest area. Call
NW area homeowner needs
clean fill dirt to fill in from rain
legislative district.
evenings 297-6284.
damage. If you don't know what
In District 12, Democrats
- - AT DA 14,15
to do with your extra, cal, 297-
0635 after 6 p.m. weekdays,
will cast their votes at the
IRONING: I do neat work,
anytime weekends for delivery
Steamfitter and Electrical
MISC. WANTED quickly, at very reasonable
rates. Give
address.
Workers Hall 2475 E.
me a try. Oracle-
Miracle Mile area. Call 884-9891.
AT DA TFN-E
>
Water St.
AT DA 13,14,15,16
District 13 Democrats
NW area. Desperately need
babysitter from 6 a.m. until
WANTED
will vote at the Unitarian
school bus picks up children, Seamstress: Custom clothing
weekdays. 748.8377 ask for 27-
Church, 4831 E. 22nd St.,
4805. I and alterations. Beautiful work.
while District 14 will vote
AT DA 14 THE STITCH GYPSY.325.4003.
AT DA 12,13,14,15
lS at Christ Presbyterian
Wanted: Furniture
Church.
MOTORCYCLES I
Used appliances, pianos, &
NEsc. If you want top
T\ /
1 N t� talk
FOR SALE I
dollar cash - Call Stan 2 9 4 -
SETTLED
0823 days ... 889-2042
inights•
at borC♦aI.S
sooner
g
1978 Honda Trail 125: Very low Moving,
The Tanque Verde School
miles, good condition. Call
weekends, 749.9416. i
Board will hold a special
AT DA 12 TFN
WORK WANTED
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
1979 YAMAHA SF650 spec. 1000
Monday, April 7, ill the
miles-60 mpg. $2100. 297-3341 or 1
CITY
library at Emily Gray
884-0534.
AT DA 14 A, STORAGE CO I
Experienced companion need
Junior High School to
work, days only. Call 887-7667.
discuss board philosophies,
195-6624
ArDA14
goals and ac-
complishments.
A Public Service of This Newspaper
W
PETS
Constituents' written
&The Advertising Council
questions regarding the
superintendent search and
Purebred black and tan i
resignation of Supt.
Sheperds. Must hurry, only 2
left! Call after 5:30 p.m. 297
Raymond Hau en have
y Haugen
TOWNHOUSES
been withdrawn, board
AT DA 12,13,14,15 FOR RENT
It from
president Jaimie Turner
Bill Cosby•
says.
•
Teacher negotiations will
Spacious 2 bdrm., 2 bath
ROOMMATE WANTED townhouse in Orchard River.
"Red Crt/SS
resume at 4 p.m. Tuesday
Includes washer dryer in
in the library.. They are
separate laundry room, com
water safety
open to the public,
plete kitchen with trash com
Wanted: Non smoking female to e. etc., , dishwasher, disposal,
share 3 bdrm. hse. with same. etc., and lots of storage.
Beautifully landscaped. Private
training
ry1 C
CDO adults
One child OK. NW area. 748-8377
ask for 27-4805. patio near pool and barbeque.
�7•( T
11VeS.
AT DA 14 Call 297 1107 or 299-4859 eves. or
weekends.
SCI. V eS
can register
AT DA TFN E
Maybe
-. For rent: 2 bdrm., 13-a bath
Registration for the
townhouse. Located near D-M.
ROOMS FOR RENT Carport and fenced back yard,
yours.
Canyon del Oro
etc. Call 747 8913 or 884 0504.
Community Schools new
AT DA 13,14,15,16
session Of classes will be
Furnished or unfurnished.
_:;
held next Tuesday and
Private room with or without
Wednesday, April 8 and 9,
board. Call anytime Sat after and
p.m. or anytime Saturdays and
from 7 to 9 .m. in the CDO
ll
Sundays. TRAILERS
^�
multipurpose room.
AT DA 14,15 FOR SALE
Thesix week classes
begin the week of April 14.
Cost is $12 for most of the
Must sell: 1974 Country Squire
.;
classes.
SERVICES Mobile Home: 12X65 with 8 It.
. extendo. 3 bdrm., 2 bath,
Enrichment for Parents
covered porch, all appliances.
$13,000.00. Call 748-8246 eves.
Will be offered b y
AT DA 14
Free tow -away for old cars and
Community Schools for the
Y
trucks. High dollar for titled -
first .time. Microwave
vehicles.' JUNK UNLIMITED.
294-8287.
_
cooking, jewelry design,
AT DA TFN
country swing, aerobic
Holiday Housekeeping Service. USED TRUCK
dance and slimnastics,
Husband & wife team, 18 FOR SALE
woodworking and
dependable yrs. Free window
estimates. Call 742-5234.
i
bookkeping are also
- AT DA 12,13,14,15
American
offered.
The Clean Sweep. Prof. chimney SACRIFICE
1979 Suburban Silverado.
Red Cross
now offering off season Assume balance, no down,
rates. Home smoke detectors &
Mariana graduate
$600.00 rebate, fully equipped,
fire extinguishers also avail. low miles, mint condition. Call
743.7629.
ends training
297-8241 or 888-5198 ask for
AT DA 11,12,14",15,16,17,18 Charles.
l
Evans Landscaping: We are a AT DA 14,15,16
Marana High School
prof. landscape maint. Co. with -
graduate Ralph E. Willon
the equipment & qualified
personnel to get the job done
�n t7CdL
has completed recruit
right. Weekly visits, both
commer. & res., monthly maint «h USE THE �.
��JQ��
training at the Naval
contracts, gen. clean up, lawn;CLASSIFIEDSt is
I !
__ _- _"_ -_ _
Training Center in San
renovation, weed control, &rock
we
ourestimate,
Diego. The Navy Seaman
or gravel lawns. For free :CALL 297-1107..1..........,_■_,�,
please call 742 4647.
AT 11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18
just
�
sense
Recruit is the son of Wayne
WIIA�
and Joann Willon.
FLYING BACK — Flowing Wells' Mark Wasko dives back to first beating the pickoff
throw to Canyon del Oro first baseman Dave Cooper in Saturday's AA -South showdown
at CDO. The two teams were tied for the conference lead with 4-0 records going into the
game, which the Cabs won, 4-3.
Smith's-HR provides
49
margin for Caballeros
By WALT NETT
But Batzloff worked his
and one in the fourth.
Pitcher Mike Batzloff
way out of both jams.
Phil Wright, Dave
pitched himself out of two
Flowing. Wells touched
Cooper and Mike Gould
jams in the closing innings
CDO pitchers Mitch
rapped out sixth inning
as Flowing Wells clipped
Maynard and Bob Retz for
doubles, followed by
previously unbeaten
eight hits. In addition to
Slone's single to close the
Canyon del Oro 4-3
Smith's day at the plate,
score to 4-3.
Saturday to take the early
Batzloff had two hits in
Catcher Dale Heintz
lead in AA -South baseball
three trips, while Mark
came up in the seventh
action.
Wasko went two -for -four.
with two out and smashed a
The Cabs, now 5-0 in the
Maynard came up with
ground rule double, scoring
conference, got some help
two hits in four trips, in-
Wright and Murray Hicks
at the plate from Ross
cluding a lead-off single to
with the tying and winning
Smith, whose fifth inning
right -center to start the
runs.
homer to left center with
Dorados' seventh inning
Gouid led`ihe CDO hitters
one on put Flowing Wells
rally.
with three doubles in three
on top for good. Smith had
Batzloff's win brings his
at -bats. Wright had four
two hits in three trips and
record up to 5-0, while
hits in four trips, while
accounted for three runs
Maynard took the loss, his
Heintz was two -for -four
batted in.
first in three decisions.
and Cooper was two -for
CDO's league mark fell
The Dorados got a share
three.
to 4-1, while its overall
of first place last week with
Cross banquet
q
record stands at 10-2.
a 5-4 win over Nogales at
The two teams traded
home Wednesday.
runs in the first inning, but
The CDO hitters, who
The L.W. Cross winter
the Dorados jumped out to
had given Apache pitcher
sports awards banquet will
a 3-1 lead on a two -run
Paul Bachelier a rough
be held Tuesday, April 8, at
homer by center fielder
time in the Northside
7:30 in the multipurpose
Jamie Slone in the second.
Baseball Tournament, had
room. Athletes in
Batzloff then helped his
some problems putting
basketball, soccer and
cause in the third with a
things together.
wrestling will be honored.
leadoff triple and scoring
Although they had
on a suicide squeeze with
reached him for seven hits,
Rincon outscored
one out in the frame to
make the 3-2.
Bachelier had kept goose
The Sabercats of Sabino
score
The Dorados mounted
eggs on the CDO half of the
scoreboard for five innings
posted their fourth golf
rallies in the sixth and
Meanwhile the Apache
victory of the season last
seventh innings, loading
offense had put three runs
we
d week by weefeating Rincon,
the bases in both innings.
on the board in the third
to Sand Boynton
y y
Sabercat girls produce
record performances
Sabino girls set four school records in romping over
Sunnyside 74-44 last Wednesday in spite of the rain in a
non-league contest. The boys fell to the Blue Devils 86-41.
Lisa Bernstein won the shot put event and set the record
at 33 feet 11 inches. Mary Walsh won the 3200 meter and
set the school record at 13:5.24. Bernice Bullock won the
1600 meter with 5:42 to set the school record.
The 400 meter relay team of Gwen Woodward, Karen
Dailey, Daphney Duke and Stacy Atkinson came in just
behind the Sunnyside team but still set a new school
record with 51:8.
Atkinson, the anchor for the 400 meter relay team led
Sabino with a total of 10 points. She placed first in the 400
meter with :63 and won the 200 meter dash with :26.3 to
help Sabino win nine of the 13 events.
In Sabino boys action, Marcus Duke, who holds the best
time in the state in intermediate hurdles and is second in
the state in high hurdles, continued his success.
He won the 120 high hurdles, the 330 intermediate
hurdles and posted the best long jump in the city with 23
feet 103/4.
Glenn Larson won the high jump with 5 feet 10 inches.
Carl Hughes won the pole vault with 11 feet 6 inches,
Frank Trenery won the shot put with 47 feet 8 inches and
freshman John Poates set the high school freshman
record in the 200 meter winning with :25.1.
and Greg Fields scored 40
which is four over
regulation.
2 games
taken by
Sabercats
Sabino's baseball team
picked up a pair of wins
last week, boosting its
record to 3-8 on the year.
The Sabercats took
advantage of an errant
pick -off throw to beat
Flowing Wells 6-3 March
26, and came on Friday to
beat Palo Verde 13-12, to
win its first AAA -South
East League game ofthe
season.
Doug Reid scored the
winning run for Sabino in
the third inning of the five -
inning game. Reid led the
inning off with a single,
stole second and scored
when a pick -off throw went
into center field.
Reid was among the
Sabercats' leading hitters
in the ball game, going two -
for -three.
Against Palo Verde, the
Sabin batters took charge,
rattling 15 hits.
After three innings,
Sabino led 11-5, but the
Titans closed to within two
runs with a four -run out-
burst in the fourth inning.
That score held until the
bottom of the sixth when
the Sabercats got RBI
singles from Dave Soble
and Scott Mattingly.
The Titans were only
able to pop three runs on
the board in the seventh.
Sabino leads
tennis play
The boys and girls tennis
teams at Sabino High
School are leading the
AAA -South East League.
And both teams furthered
their leads in downing
Rincon Tuesday and Santa
Rita Thursday.
The boys defeated
Rincon 7-2 and smashed
Santa Rita, one of their
stiffest competitors,
They improved to a 9-1
season mark, losing only to
Tucson High early in the
season in a non-league
match.
The girls remain
undefeated. They topped
both Rincon and Santa Rita
7-2.
Safford beaten
Canyon del Oro golfers
routed Safford 211 to 223
last week in posting their
seventh victory without a
defeat. Jeff Riz was co -
medalist with a 38, two
over par.
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 21
sports
/ NURSERY
LANDSCAPING
W MEXICAN IMPORTS
Closed Easter Sunday PLAZA ESCONDIDA
7974 N. Oracle Road
Phone 297-8358 Tucson, Arizona 85704
• Selection
• Savings I,,
•Service
*Satisfaction
Get all four at .
Four Seasons CALL
Spas and Hot Tubs c 888-1 273
4132 N. Oracle
(in Handy Andy Plaza)
YOUR
CUSTOM: i
DESIGN CAPS
ADJUSTABLE CAPS
With your Custom Design
For Businesses, Clubs, Team Wear, Safety Awards,
Promotions, Conventions and Money Makers.
These are HIGH QUALITY CAPS that have an adjust=
able mesh back. They come in a wide variety of colors
with a non -removable design.
All that is needed is a copy of your logo, design or
lettering and we'll do the rest.
Price includes one 1-color design on front of cap.
(minimum order — 12 Caps)
12 36 72 144 600 2500 5000
$3.25 $3.00 $2.75 $2.50 $2.25 $2.00 $1.85
ea. ea. ea. ea. ea. ea. ea.
ARIZONA SILKSCREEN PRINTERS
Plant and Showroom Retail Store & Showroom
1665 E. 18th St. Suite 110 4122 E. Speedway
Mon. -Fri. 10 - 5 Tues.-Sat. 10 - 5
623-0597 or 881-3887-
Compact, in -dash Panasonic Repeatrack
cassette player with pushbutton AM/FM
stereo radio. It features locking fast forward
and rewind, auto or manual eject, ft �
Specialists Price: $184.97
car audio
Auto Sound
S0
p eci
al.
Sound systems that move.
4414 E. Speedway - 326-2455
Page 22, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1980
MANNING- O'DOWD Ca
REALTORS
i
CATALINA
FOOTHILLS
Adobe Territorial, 3 bedroom, black bottom pool,
quality construction. $178,500
Architect Design two bedroom with guest quarters.
Tasteful use of glass and wood, pool. $225,000.
886-5711
ALL BREED
DOO GROOM1Ni
DESIRTOAL■ KENNELS
6745 N La Canada 297-0420
1 mile west of Oracle Call for appt.
BROADWAY SOUND CO.
"DISCOVER HOW GOOD SOUND CAN BE
NEW LOCATION (Next to Loco Records)
2903 E. Broadway 5052 N. Oracle
881-1570 887-0192
LOW GROSS WINNER — Mary Steele, (right) president of the Arthur Pack
Roadrunners ladies 9-holers cuts up in presenting Arthur Pack's Annette Mathes with a
certificate for taking top honors at the group's first invitational at the club two weeks
ago. Two members from each of the approximately nine clubs in attendance were
awarded low net and low gross honors for their club. Mrs. Mathes won the low gross
honors for Arthur Pack with 53. Alice Kitchin won low net honors for the club with 39.
Walks ruin CDO effort
The Canyon del Oro
softball team outhit both
Marana and Nogales last
week, but pitching
problems forced in runs of
the Apaches and Tigers
and allowed Marana to
defeat CDO 10-8 and
Nogales to down the
Dorados 8-4.
The Dorados dropped to
1-2 in the AA -South league
after the two league
games.
The 750 Special...
-14„ A unique custom look.
t ride it today at ...\
4940 E. 22nd
A ► I ! • i
A superb handler. A quiet, comfortable
ride. It's all yours with
the XS750 Special.
ON SALE
$259500
Reg.s2885
astride Cycle
A
CDO was ahead of
Marana 8-5 entering the
sixth inning, but the
Dorados' pitching walked
in three Tigers and then
two more in the seventh.
The story was the same
against the Apaches. CDO
was ahead 3-2 going into
the sixth inning, but six
bases -loaded walks forced
in six more runs for
Nogales. CDO's two
pitchers walked_16 Nogales
batters.
CDO outhit Marana 9-3
and outhit Nogales 5-3.
Shannon Turpin had three
hits against Marana,
Marlina Keppner had two
hits against both teams,
and Sue Aune hit a single
and a double against both
teams.
Michele Kramer at
catcher threw out three'
Nogales runners trying to
steal. Coach Gary
Domzalski said Kramer
and teammate Shannon
Turpin, who is sharing
catching duties, have been
outstanding catchers.
He noted that the
Dorados have only made
two errors in the last two
games in pointing our the
strong Dorado Defense.
Now, he said, all the
Dorados need to do is
correct the pitching
problem to do well in the
league.
Rebels,turn
Seton away
Suffolk Hills stayed
undefeated in, softball by
beating Seton, the defen-
ding C-Central champs, 8-3
and 9-8 last Saturday.
The boys lost 5-3 and 18-4
to Seton.
Dorothea Gallagher
struck out eight in relief in
the second game for the
victory after winning the
opener on 10 strikeouts.
Melva Ballesteros went
three for four in the opener
and Kate Mawhinney was
three for four in the
nightcap._
Sewer emergency
The emergency after-
hours telephone for sewer
lines is now 882-2962.
During weekday working
hours, breaks in public
sewer lines should be
reported to 326-4333.
Polo Club
rides every
weekend
By DEBBIE ENGLISH
The sound of galloping
horses and mallets hitting
the wooden ball, the speed
and power felt on a horse,
the mental challenge, the
contact and the quickness
are all rare pleasurers of
which polo addict Ira
Wiesenfeld never can have
enough.
It stands true for the
about 14 other riding
members and about 100
social members of the
Pima County Polo Club,
founded in 1951. Polo has
been termed the fastest
sport in the world. It is a
combination of football,
basketball, hockey, soccer
and horse racing.
The riding members
form about three four
member polo teams, which
ride against each other
every weekend in a tour-
nament at the Pima
Country Fair Grounds. The
public is invited to watch
them every weekend
through May. The final
tournament is the club's
polo trophy finale played
May 24-25.
The tournament this
weekend, April 5-6. is the
Easter Cup. It begins at 1
p.m. The Border Circuit
Governor's Cup, which
attracts teams from
California, New Mexico
and other states, will be
held April 17-20.
Polo is played on a field
300 yards long and 160
yards wide — the area of
about nine football fields.
The game is divided into
six chukkers, a period of
7!i2 minutes. A 31iz inch in
diameter, 45z ounce
wooden or plastic ball is
used.
Dr. Wiesenfeld, a
veterinarian, plays the
number one or four
positions. The first position
is the forward, responsible
for scoring goals. In the
fourth position he is
primarily a defensive
player.
But his chief interest is in
schooling and selling polo
horses (referred to as polo
ponies) professionally. He
has a ranch at 801 W.
Overton Road, where he
has six playing horses and
schools two others.
All are thoroughbreds or
part thoroughbreds, which
are faster and have more
endurance for quicker,
more advanced play,
called high goal.
The goal is the sum of the
handicaps of all the payers.
Each player is rated
anywhere from a handicap
of -2 to 10 (the higher the
better). Only about five 10-
goal players exist in the
world.
The players in the local
polo club have handicaps
anywhere from 0 to the
highest of 5, with most of
them in the 0 to 2 range.
Therefore the club plays
mostly 4- to 6-goal polo,
which is low to medium.
Throughout most of the
games, Dr. Wiesenfeld is
schooling green horses.
The quality of the horse is
75 percent of the game. If
the horse can't get to the
ball, the player simply
can't hit.
Only about one in 100
horses has the stamina,
ability to stop quickly and
the boldness to play.
April 3,1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 23
around the C111hr.
with Debbie English
Arthur Pack Golf Course
The duo of Jim Curran and Terry Ackerman won the
Arthur Pack Men's Club blind draw two man combined
net event in the men's club weekly tournament last
weekend.
Tom Galland and Jim Barnes teamed up to take second
with 147. They won in a playoff with the duo of Tranky
Rael and John Shanley, who placed third.
In ladies 18-holers action, the Arthur Pack Roadrunners
played low net field last week with Annalee placing first
with 69. Alice Kitchin followed with 70, and June Holovnia
came in third with 71.
Cliff Valley Golf Course
Frank Breit pulled ahead of the pack to win the Cliff
Valley Men's Club low net tournament Sunday. He posted
a net 53. Ralph Hays finished a stroke back at 54, and Ron
Worman and his wife Paulette tied for third with a net 55.
In the Cliff Valley ladies 18-hole low putts tournament
last Friday, Alice Kitchin sewed up the top spot in Class A
with 26. Carol McBride placed second with 28. Gay Grif fin
and Louise Pepitone shared top honors in Class B with 30.
Grace VonThaden followed with 31. Ruth Torrence won
Class C with 35, followed by Isabel Owens with 36.
Tucson Racquet Club
Juniors dominated the Tucson Racquet Club's adult
tennis club championships Friday through Sunday. Peter
Ramsay won the men's open division in downing Shaun
Morey 6-2, 6-0. Cindy Buchsbaum won the women's open
division in defeating Alice Hume 6-3, 1-6, 6-4. Bill Krauter
won the men's B division. He defeated George Boiko 6-4, 6-
1 to take the honor.
In coming events, junior club members will have a
chance to dink, dine, dive and dance April 12 at the tennis
club party. It is for juniors only and will be held from 3 to 9
p.m.
The junior tennis leagues begin April 13 and- a new
session of tennis clinics begin April 14 for juniors as well
as adults.
Oro Valley Country Club
The Oro Valley Men's Club Saturday played the best
seven of nine on the front and back nine in their weekly
event. Dave Parlett took top honors with 19 on the front
nine in the 16 and above handicap division. Carl Schultz
and Chuck House tied a stroke back at 20. Bruce Pen-
nington and Charles Cook tied for third with 21.
Charles Cook and Dave Parlett also shared first place
on the back nine in the 16 and above handicap. Jim Grina
followed with 22.
John Trotter won the front nine in the 0-15 handicap with
22. Dick Mudge and George Fehrenkamp tied for second
with 23. Larry Dunham won the back nine honors in the 0-
15 division with 21. Charles Miller and John Mora tied for
second with 23. Three teams tied for third with 24.
T` ladies 9-hole best ball beat the pro event was
rest-,.uled for this morning, April 3, at 8:30 a.m. It was
rained out last Thursday. They play against professional
Don Copeland and assistant Tom Tatum.
Tucson Country Club
The Tucson Country Club Children's Easter Camp for
all ages begins this Thursday, April 3, and continues
through Sunday. The camp will give instruction on ground
strokes, run drills and matches and hand out trophies. The
cost is $36. It is open to members only.
NEW CLASSES
AT OPAC
Starting Aprill 7
•Youth Ballet, Tap & Jazz
-Adult Ballet, Tap & Jazz
eAerobic Dance
*Yoga
COMING—
Youth Swim Classes —April 14
Country Swing — April 15
CALL 297-8221
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7315 North Oracle Road
Forty Niners Country Club
Four teams tied for first place in the Forty Niner
Country Club's share of the fifth annual Kidney Foun-
dation golf tournament last weekend. All four teams
scored 27 under par in the two best ball of the foursome
event. But the team of Bill and Sally Schumm and Leon
and Bunnie Gray were declared the winners.
About 108 players participated at $10 per couple, with
the proceeds donated to the Kidney Foundation. The
tournament will also be played at other clubs this month.
The men's club championships begin Saturday, Arpil 5,
at 8 a.m. and continues for the next four weekends.
Oracle Place Athletic Club
Aerobic dance will be offered at Oracle Place Athletic
Club for the first time. It begins Monday, April 7, and
continues through May 16. Barbara Jones, who has taught
Aerobic dance with Community Schools, will be the in-
structor.
Ballet, tap and jazz and yoga classes also begin at the
club the week of April 7. Ballet, tap and jazz begins April 7
and continues through May 3 for adults and youths. Yoga
begins April 8 and continues through April 24. It is offered
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. only.
Catalina Racquet and Swim Club
Catalina Racquet Club member Chris Korby, 10, was
rated ninth in the nation for the 50 meter breastroke,
according to the 1979 Top 25 Age Group National Times.
Results of the Junior Olympics March 22-23 and Age
Group Championships last weekend, March 28-30, show
five Catalina Sunblazers taking top honors.
Todd Mazon won the 50 and 100 breast stroke in the 9- 10-
year old boys division. He also placed fifth in the 100 in-
dividual medley and seventh in the 50 back.
Jana Goodwin, in the 11- to 12-year old girls division,
placed first in the 50 and 100 butterfly and the 50 and 100
freestyle. She also placed second in the 100 individual
medley.
Janice Gottschall, in the same division, placed fifth in
the 500 freestyle, sixth in the 200 individual medley, the 100
back, the 100 freestyle and seventh in the 200 and 50
freestyle.
In the Junior Olympics competition, Judy Albert, in the
15- to 18-year old division, placed second in the 200
"freestyle and -fifth in the 100 breast stroke. Nicole Fusci, in
the 9- to 10-year old division, placed eighth in the 50
freestyle.
Kidney Foundation Tourney
The fifth annual Arizona Kidney Foundation golf
tournament will be played at five Tucson area country
clubs. The mixi two best ball of the foursome with full
handicap tournament will be played at Tucson National
Country Club April 13 with an 12:30 a.m. shotgun. A
putting contest will be held just before that at 11 a.m.
Oro Valley, Skyline and Tucson Country Clubs will host
the tournament April 20. Forty Niners Country Club held
its event Sunday. (See results under Forty Niner
heading).
The city winner will be determined when club winners
meet in a special event at Skyline Country Club May 11.
Entry fees are $10 per couple. All proceeds go to the
foundation to purchase a cardiac resuscitator.
River Racquet Club
River Racquet Club will hold a men's invitational
tournament Friday through Sunday, April 11-13, for
members and guests. It begins Friday at 5 p.m.
Spa Sale
Spectacular
Now you can buy the spa you've wanted at great savings.
Spa Bazaar sells the best quality spas with 10-year limited
warranties. When you buy from Spa Bazaar, we design your
installation and give you a free home estimate sG you'll be
completely satisfied. We install the electrical work,
the plumbing and even thgalecking. Most companies just
sell you the spa.
Enjoy a health center in your own backyard at great
savings during our spectacular floor sample sale. Stop in
soon and be sure to register for a free prize.
You can count on Spa Bazaar for quality and service.
I I I
7942 North Oracle Road (in Escondida Plaza) 7424508
Open 10-6 daily 184Sunday
Tucson National Country Club
Hans and Gerda Grimm and Ken and Alice Craver
scrambled to win the Tucson National husband and wife
Texas Scramble mixer Sunday. They posted a 55.2. John
and Linda Carter and Norm and Rose Hertzog teamed up
to take second with 56.5. Connor and Dorothy Flynn and
Jerry and CIara Smith placed third with 58.7.
The ladies 18-holers Tuesday played a beat the pro full
handicap event against professional Frank Boynton.
Three golfers topped Mr. Boynton's net 72. Pat Weltner
posted the highest score of net 66, followed by Alice Jewett
with net 70 and Gigi Darrah with net 71.
Dorado Golf Course and
Dorado Tennis and Swim Club
The Dorado Country Club Men's Club played NASSAU
for their weekly two-day tournament last weekend. Frank
Basile and John Doss shared top honors on the front nine
with 251/2. Back nine winners were Bob Finkelstein, John
Kamenchuck and John Howard, who all tied for first with
241/2. Mr. Basile and Bob Finkelstein also tied for first in
the 18 hole competition.
The Annual Dorado President's Cup competition begins
this Saturday, April 5 at 8 a.m. It continues throughout
April. Defending champion is Tom Mock.
The Dorado Tennis and Swim Club next week will begin
installing its first sand volleyball court with plans of of-
fering volleyball clinics, depending on its popularity.
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Page 24, The Arizona Territorial, April 3,1960
Church News in
The Foothills
is covered
weekly in the
Territorial
DODGE BALL — Soccer isn't the only game members of a visiting soccer team from
Mexico City will play well. A group of the boys found soccer balls can be put to good use
with a game of trampoline dodge ball while they wait for the entire group to gather to go
sightseeing. The 16 students were guests of the Tanque Verde Soccer League this week.
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FW teachers settle
The average Flowing Wells teacher's salary will in-
crease by 11 percent next year.
The Flowing Wells School Board approved the set-
tlement last week. The settlement raises the base pay in
the district to $11,800, and teachers presently employed in
the district will receive a $1,200 raise.
The board also approved an incremental structure
giving teachers with one to four years' experience another
$300. Teachers with five to 11 year's will receive $400,
while teachers with 12 or more years will receive another
$500.
Presents
an Easter Art Show
featuring local artists
Bettye Edwards
Guynette Shipman
Michael Cirone
Sybil Williams
Cole's Cache
Marguerite Brown
Dorothy Salsbury
House of Lov'an
Mary Holder
Henry Acuna
Patti McBride
Pauline Berry
Dave Craig
Leona Hanson
Stanley White
Virginia Hecht
Judy McLaughlin
Murchek Originals
Jane Monier Studio
Richard Smith
Carolyn Wallace
Juanita Marotta
Judy Pattison
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
April 3, 4 & 5
Mexican visitors
bridge cultures
on soccer field
By PEGGY BARNES
Americans have a dif-
ferent style of playing
soccer than Mexican
students, but when teams
from Tanque Verde Soccer
League met a group of 14
and 15 year olds from
Mexico City on the soccer
field, abilities were equal.
This week a group of 16
boys from LaSalle School,
a private school in Mexico
City, came to Tucson as
guests of the Tanque Verde
League and played four
matches.
At the end of three
matches each team had
won one. A third ended
tied.
Americans run faster
and play a quicker game,
but lack ball control, the
Mexican boys say. They
were quick to note that it is
just a difference in style.
Language has been a
barrier, but it has not kept
friendships from growing.
One mother who hosted
some of the Mexican
youngsters says the ex-
perience has instilled an
urge in her children to
learn Spanish.
The American youth
have learned that not all
Mexicans are of Indian
descent, and middle class
living is much the same as
it is in the United States.
The Mexican students
learned that Tucson is not a
cowboy town set in the
middle of a big desert.
While Mexican chlidren
learn English in most
schools, Genaro Gomez,
forward for the soccer
team, says their week stay
in Tucson has forced them
to practice the language.
In addition to soccer and
sightseeing, the boys have
had time to shop. Records,
electronic games, soccer
shoes and items for their
parents like golf balls,
shampoo and kitchen
utensils are goods they will
take home.
Biology teacher
Armando Martinez says
sex and alcohol are
problems among Mexican
society as in the United
States, but he hastens to
add that in the smaller
towns there is still a spirit
of comradery , among
friends and family.
Mexican chlidren watch
television, but the teacher
says it is not a major
problem. Those who do not
watch as much have more
imagination and creativity.
More of the young men
and women who are
Mexico's future are looking
toward technical careers
and Mr. Martinez is con-
fident that the country has
the resources and the
imagination to put that
knowlege to use.
sponsored by Plaza del Oro Merchants Assoc.
Bon Voyage
Greca Realty
Apache Village
Covell's Casuals
Wendy's Hallmark
Simpson Optical
Jay's Jewelers
Alice Rae
Hind's Book Center
Abundant Life
Tom Roof the Cleaner
Hobo Joes
Round Table Pizza
First National Bank
Castilian Room
Home Federal
Merle Norman
Mountain Bell Phone Center
Easy Living
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