HomeMy WebLinkAboutHistorical Records - The Arizona Territorial (214)
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Make your vacation plans from this week's travel section
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JUNE 12, 1980
6 crosses
'
stolen
at church
By WALT NETT
Burglars br oke into Dove
or P eace Lutheran Church ,
655 W. Roller Coaster
!loa d, for the second time
in as many weeks last
weekend, taking $100 in
cash, and six crosses .
Among the crosses taken
by the burglars was a
Dean's Cross belonging-to
Dove or Peace Pastor
Gregory· Adolf, who is Dean
of th e Lutheran Church in
America 's Arizona distric t.
Th e Dean's Cross, valued
at $250 , is six inches long
with a four-inch cross arm.
The br a ss cross is inlaid
with 14 turquoise stones
a nd was a ttached toa black
ve lve t cord.
"It has s entimen ta l value
t o th e pa s tor , a nd it
probab ly is a ver y im -
porta n t pi ec e to th e church
,t,;cH:· sa id a s pok es man
I or th e Sh e ri IT's Office,
which is inv es ti gating the
case.
Th(• burgl a rs al s o took a
('Oll ection of fiv e other
cros ses be longing to Pastor
i\d olf.
Sh e r i l'f 's offici a ls
es tim a ted th e total loss in
t he burgl a r y a t$500 .
A s poke s man s a id th e
burgl a rs e nt e re d through a
do or which wa s unlocked
be ca us e of re nov a t ion work
go in g on a t th e church .
The s pokes man s ai d th at
c harges pe nding a lso in -
cl ud e va nd a li s m , s inc e t he
burgla rs a ppare ntl y we nt
thro ugh filin g cabin ets,
drawe r s a nd a c loset in
Pastor Adolf 's off ice, but
actua ll y did no da ma ge to
the c hur ch .
Burgla rs hi t th e church
tw o wee ks a go taking an
un s pecifi e d a mount of
cas h . Th e sheriff's
s pok esman said a pipe
wrench was used to break a
locked doorknob .
Church officials have
asked that anyone with
information leading to the
return or the crosses
contact the church office at
887-5127 .
1978 COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD WINNER 20 cents per copy
LEFT TURN TROUBLES -The left front side of a car driven by Grace Barlow, 80, of 11
E. Orange Grove Road , was smashed in when she attempted to turn left off of Orange
Grove onto Oracle Road and hit broadside a car operated by David Rodger , 50, of 1510 W.
Calle del Media, which was proceeding east on Orange Grove. Deputies said Mrs. Barlow
was cited for failure to yield the right-of-way. Mr. Rodger was treated at St. Mary's
Hospital and released. (See Letter to the Editor on Page 6.)
Orange Grove JH addition
gets Foothills Board okay
Architect John R .
Kulseth 's plans for a 10,500-
square foot multipurpose
building at Orange Grove
Junior High were approved
Tuesday night by the
Catalina Foothills School
Board .
The bi-level building,
scheduled for completion in
April or May of 1981 , is
expected to cost ap-
proximately $800,000 .
Board member John
McDonald suggested
Tuesday night that the
project go to bid in August
so construction could begin
in September.
Architect Kulseth said it
had been "a real
challenge" to fit the
building on the site
southwest of the present
administration building,
because the new structure
will be twice the size of the
original building proposed
in the master plan for the
school.
The lower elevation of
the building will be used as
a basketball court, two
volleyball courts and the
lunchroom area . The
raised platform area will
contain room for 70 to 80
band members and can be
draped for drama
productions .
At a special meeting
prior to the regular
meeting, the board held a
public hearing on the
• proposed 1980-81 budget.
The $5,771,394 budget was
approved in the regular
meeting .
Amphi teachers won't take
s_alary plan Without extras
Amphitheater School
District teachers have re-
jected a n arbitrator's
recommendations for 1980-
81 contr acts saying the ar-
bitrator did not address the
real issues that threw nego-
tia tions into arbitration in
the first place.
Larry Wurst, president
of Amphitheather Class-
room Teachers' Associa-
tion, said the arbitrator
would not address working
conditions, such as class
size, which was a priority
with the teachers. He said
arbitrator Sharon K.
Weizenbaum, a local at-
torney , disregarded teach-
er demands to negot iate
working conditions be-
cause of state law. The
board has a policy of not
negotiating non-monetary
issues.
Teachers rejected the ar-
bitrator's recommenda-
tions including base salary
of $11,850. Teachers had
requested a base-salary of
$12,500 while the district
had offered $11,400.
Continued on Page 19
Looking in ...
Churches ...... Page 5
Creating high-rise cakes
Fashion for shorties.
Big game scheduled
Page 9
Page 17
Page 19
Comment ...... Page 6
Going Out ..... Page 11
Kitchen Sink ... Page 16
Oro Valley .... Page 4
Poor Sport ..... Page 6
Sports ......... Page 21
Territory ...... Page 8
F1FTEENTH YEAR, NUMBER 2-t
Fall strike
is possible -
·at Marana::',
.... , ..
By DAVE ILIFF . .., .,
The Marana :Education Assn. has ·again threaten~t¢.
strike in the fall because the school board refuses to
continue bargaining on a 1980-81 settlement witb Ul'e
union . However, Board President Harry Hansen said
Tuesday, talks have already begun with MEA President
Dianne Hoy toward a 1981-82 contract.
Mrs . Hoy admitted meeting with the board before
Tuesday's regular meeting at Thornydale Elementary
School, but she denied that she has given up on a 1980-81
settlement. "You are forcing teachers in this district into
a strike," she warned the board.
Mr. Hansen polled the board but none was willing to
continue negotiations , maintaining that signed contracts
returned by teachers make further talks unnecessary .
The MEA has tried without success this year to expand
contract talks to include items of work ing conditions and
policies beyond the usua l salary and fringe benefit
bargaining.
The union was most upset Tuesday because the board
went ahead with second reading on a group of policies
effecting teachers wi thout union input. They made a
formal request that the board not proceed wi th adopting
these policies.
"The board is maintaining unilateral control of these
policies," Fred Wilmshurst of MEA charged. "You have
significantly changed them from tentative agr eements
reached earlier with us ." Mrs . Hoy said the new policies
were meant as ''punishment for the teachers .''
The verbal exchanges came after a budget hearing and
action on most of a long agenda . During the session
Marana School District accomplished the following:
-Awarded a contract to Tucson Construction Co. to
build the 14-classroom "H" building a t Marana High
School on a low bid of $607 ,700 with occupancy set fo r
summer of 1981.
-Awarded contracts on a vocational agriculture lab
building to be built in 30 days at a cost of $90 ,366 .
-Decided no t to bar s t udents on the first day of school
whose immunization records are not complete.
-Rejected a taxpayer's plan for alternate days of
kindergarten to save transportation costs when teachers
strongly objected ;
-Agreed to allow Melvin Brunson to remain on the
district payroll as a part-time security officer and con-
tinue to live on the Marana Elementary School grounds .
He is completing 34 years as a district maintenance
employee;
-Increased the high school book rental fee from $15 to
$25 on a 4-0 vote of the board ; -
-Decided to meet June 17 with U.S. Home officials to
pick an elementary school site in the Countryside
development west of Arthur Pack Regional Park; and
-Formally adopted elementary and high school district
budgets somewhat lower than those for the current year.
Looking out ... -·
H L
Wed. June4 99 58 OUTLOOK: Seasonable
Thurs. June 5 99 63 temperatures and con-
Fri. June 6 97 60 tinued hot and dry
Sat. June7 99 62 throughout tlle week-
Sun. June 8 103 64 end.
Mon. June9 106 64
Tues. June 10 106 66
~------
r. Plfi if'fflFMl'zbiii~,trti't1ati,1he~,,ao
We're Glad .
You Asked.
with
Bob Moffett
Funeral Director
How Can
Handicapped
Persons Attend
Funerals,
Visitations?
We have facilities at our
funeral home ~'t~ make it
easier for I handicapped
persons and the~lderly. For
example, we can provide
the use ~I a wheelchair or a
walker and we ha,le
designed o ur entrance and
rooms t o make it convenient
for them.
Please let us know in •
advance ii such equipment
may be need~d. just as you -
might with an airline. ·This
assures that such equipment
is immediately available ,
Advance notice can save
embarrassment for yo u, the
mourners and our stall,
especi.ally ii we were to
have several handicapped
pE,rsons on hand at the same
time.
We can also b·e of service
in finding certain equipment
needed by the handicapped
at home. Hospital beds and
items for physical therapy
are sometimes hard to find .
We may be able to direct
you t o sources for .them.
,i,,,~..,-.,,~, ,.~,,-
Valley
,.?_:·FUNERAL ~ HOME
2545 N. Tucson Blvd.
327-6341
Our Business is Gofng To The Dogs!
ARIZONA DOG TRAINING ACADEMY ),Vhere '
training y o u is as important as training your dog. Basic
obedience, protection training and we specialize in all
problem behaviors: housebreaking , chewing, fence
jumping etc. ALL training done in your home at your
\
-~ convenience , For FREE ~~iiraisal and demonstration
297-2088
: ' Arizona Dog Training
-J. ,_
\~ Academy
Don't Give Away Your
Silver and Gold!!
We Pay The Highest Prices!
For U .S. coins : slerl i.ng silver : ·Franklin Mint scrap :
all Mexican , Canadian . and fo r eign gold & silver coins :
• war nickels . etc .
Appointments For Quantilites
No Waiting • Call Ahead
Store Hours :
Monday -Friday 9:00-5:00
For More Information Call:
795-1594
ARIZONA STAMP & COIN
24 -Hour Price L i ne : 327 -0675
LI CE N SF r, HA O K E A 4668 East Speedway
w,, Se ll At Nat,ona lly C o mpe t 11iv e Pri ~es
!f.* GET ON THE BA;~o~~GON! • *--\'
: • {/)J,~~ : • ~,)fr/! *
ic ~\.J;;;n~) *
>-"
.....J z
0
Cf)
!:,:!
Bring this ad for a tree day of individual attention, state 0
adopted curriculum. competent qualified teachers, nutritious ~
meals and snacks. field trips and s~mming • ·\· 1 complete 25
program lor learning. Convenient family hour,..JEight Tucson z
~ schools to serve your timily's needs . • ' ~ • ~
-:f. 1. 1101 S. Columbus 745-2980 5. 8425 E. Old Spanish Traff . ~
s 2. 6425 S. Pacheco 294-2701 885-7261 ~
~ J.3107E.Pima 327-4411 6.7845E.Gonlinks296·8090.,
25 4 . 3902 N. Flo wing Wells 7. 1710 E. Irvington 84-9757 ~
u.. 8117 -9202 8. 6021 N. Oracle Rd .7 42 -3369 r
::::, 4 :? 1. ~ 0 ~ I t;;t I I rn 0 • o -. 3 . lll z
u --~ ~ I ~way i .,, ~I:
'ii
3t ..,
C:
i
.51 -... I 'I l'N' I 6
5.
amencan pre.schools
HAVE YOU HUGGED YOUR CHILD TODAY?
With interest rates
what they are, here is
one you can count on. And on, and on ...
!1.5D%
Compounded daily 10.110%
Open an American Savings 30-month Money Market Certificate before June 25,1980and you can
guarantee yourself this high rate for 30 months to ten years. No minimum deposit is required and
all accounts are insured up to $J 00,000 by F.S.L.I.C. Now that's interest you can count on.
With the decline of 26-week Treasury Bill rates , we would like you to visit any of our nine
convenient locations so that you could take advantage of this high interest.
FEDERAL REGULATIONS REQUIRE SUBSTANTI AL INTEREST PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL.
For $t00,000 Certificates rate, please call Gene Ross or David Dolgen
at 795-3019 for more information .
..................... -........ .
"MERICIIN
.S~IJINGS
...........................
£§.~!i;J
'l'Du•S.v<nQtl~"•'•cs •o~ooi:'!.
"A LOCAL INSTITUTION WITH COMMUNITY CONCERN" •
Main Office 4400 E. Broadway 795-3019
:; .... •!"'1.,:-···
HOLDING UP THE WALL -Workmen set a pre-cast concrete wall in place at the
Oracle Plaza shopping center, now under construction at Orange Grove and Oracle
Roads. General contrator for the 120,000-square foot facility is Lawrence Hickey & Sons.
The shopping center is scheduled to open around Thanksgiving.
United Bank petitioning
to open Northwest branch
By WALT NETT
United Bank of Arizona ,
which currently has no
offices serving the Nor-
thwest area, has asked the
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation to approve a
branch to be located at the
Oracle Plaza Shopping
center, now under con-
struction at Oracle and
Orange Grove Roads .
Jack Davis, executive
vice president of the bank,
said the bank has asked to
move a charter already •
granted by FDIC for a
• branch United had planned
to build at Oracle and
River Roads.
Mr. Davis said the bank
hopes to have the branch
open _after Jan. 1, but, he
added, a temporary office
will not be located on the
site because of con-
struction underway on the
property at this time .
The bank will be located
in a separate building from
the shopping center.
Greater Arizona Savings
and Loan, which already
has a small office at the
corner of Orange Grove
and Oracle Roads, is
hoping to break ground for
a larger facility at the
corner before the end of
1980, according to regional
_ vice president Paul Rich .
Mr. Rich said the $avings
and loan is working on a set
of plans for the new
branch, and is alrea.dy
Registration still open
Registration of first through eighth graders for summer
school through Amphitheater Community Schools Inc.
will continue through the first day of classes, Monday,
June 16th.
Registration will be 9 a .m. until noon every morning at
Cross and Amphitheater Junior High Schools or the
Community Schools office, 701 W. Wetmore Road, Room
13 of Wetmore Elementary School.
The cost is $35 per student. Transportation passes are $6
per pass . Courses will be offered in three different periods
every day from June 16 through July 25 at Cross and
Amphi.
/('11r /t!PJI.
PRINTING
ON ROGER ROAD AT ORACLE
,887-5061
having some site
preparation work done.
• The shopping center ,
which '"'.ill be anchored by
an Alpha Beta grocery ,
Thrifty Drug and Discount
Store and a Handyman
home improvement center,
has a projected opening
date near Thanksgiving,
according to Richard Eddy
of Coldwell Banker, the
leasing agent for the
120,000-square foot shop-
ping center .
He said that the three
anchoring stores, along
with three smaller tenants ,
have signed contracts . In
addition, at least five other
contracts are out for
signatures, Mr. Eddy
added.
Meals free
for children
Federally subsidized
meals will again be
available for children in
the southern part of the
Amphitheater School
District this summer. Free
breakfasts and lunches will
be served at Prince, Nash,
Wetmore and Keeling
elementary schools from
June 16 to July 25 .
All children under 18 in
the attendance areas of
those schools can par-
ticipate at any time .
Free meal hours are as
follows: Prince 7 : 30 to 9
a.m. and 12 :15 to 1:15p .m.;
Keeling 9 to 9:30 a.m . and
12:30 to 1:30 p.m.; Nash
8:30 to 9 a.m. and 11 :30 to
12:30 p.m .; Wetmore 8:30
to 9 a.m. and 11: 30 a .m. to
12:30p.m .
THE
ARIZONA
TERRITORIAL
l West Ora,nge Grove
Road, Tucson, AZ 85704.
Phone (602) 297-1107. Pub-
lished weekly on Thurs-
days by Territorial Pub-
lishers, Inc . Also publish-
-ers of The Desert Airman,
The Daily Reporter and
Foothills North. Second
class postage 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
cents .
palitics
Goodwin
seeking
8th te}·m
in House
Tom Goodwin, District 12
representative and
chairman of the Arizona
House Appropria lions
Committee, has announced
that he will seek an eighth
term in office on the
Republican ticket.
As appropriations
chairman, Rep. Goodwin
said he has been in-
strumental in bringing
millions of dollars into
Tucson's economy. He
cited the McKale Center,
the Univ ersity of Arizona
Cancer Detection Center,
the prison annex and
proper operating budgets
for Pima College and the U
of A.
In addition to serving as
appropriations chairman
for eight years, he has been
co-chairman of the Joint
Legislative Budget Com-
mittee. '
Rep. Goodwin has been
an Arizona resident for 34
years.
Rep Goodwin
Wactor runs
for constable
• Roy Wactor, 50, will
enter the Democratic
primary as a candidate for
constable for . Precinct 6,
the newly formed justice of
the peac_e district on the
Northwest side.
Mr. Wactor, a retired Air
Force major, is now the
constable in Precinct 1 but
his address at 1810 E.
Water St. was removed
from that precinct when
Precinct 6 was formed .
Mr. Wactor is owner of
Rappaport Electric Co. •
· nS c.O(\
c,teo\ ,~,(\":::J • • . ou{ no\{
"o??en \O 'I
Let one of our professional stylists become
your stylist. A stylist who listens to you and
matches your hairstyle to your lifestyle . We offer
a full range of services t oo. All at very reasons
able prices. Call for an appointment today.
H e len e Curtis Perm Sale
Gimme Curl Perm ........ $19 -$25 value
Hennalucen t ............ $14 -$18 value
Expires June 18, 1980
-~~-~ .,,,flll
STYUNG SALONi'le
' '
Entrada de Oro Plaza
Oracle at Magee
297-8064
Prices also good at Park Mall Salon . 790-4532
and Green Valley 625-5212 Salons ...
•; J11n.,.1'21 _ 1-980,l~;A,lizona pf.enitlrial: •~• 3
Mawhinney relates issue-s in Senate
District 12 Senator John
T. Mawhinney has an-
nounced that he will seek a
second term in the Arizona
State Legislature on the
Republican ticket.
In his announcement the
43-year-old senator citied
crime, taxes and the state's
water supply as the major
issues f11ced by the state in
the coming legislative
session .
Sen. l',iawhinney is vice
chairman of the Senate
Commerce and Labor
Committee and the Senate
Government Committee
and a member of the
Judiciary and Natural
Resources committees . He
is also a member of the
Arizona Groundwate'r
Study Commission .
In his announcement
Sen. Mawhinney advocated
cutting the state's water
consumption by 75 percent,
adding that the Central
Arizona Project is in-
s u ff i c i en t to solve
Arizona's water problems.
He spoke in favor of tax
proposals which received
voter approval in the June
3 election, but said more
work needs to be done to
simplify state tax laws and
eliminate unenforceable
legislation.
Walker running for third term
With a promise to vote
against any tax rate in-
crease which county ad-
ministrators recommend
this year, County Super-
. visor E.S . "Bud" Walker
recently announced his
candidacy for a third
term on the Board of
Supervisors.
Mr. Walker, a Democrat,
said he decided to seek a
third term because "we
have far too many un-
finished objectives and too
many difficult decisions
facing the board during the
next four years to leave the
job uncompleted."
The present chairman of
Nl:W)1)12~•
~~YOl2!J
Your Fashion Ex:
the supervisors, Mr.
Walker has served as
chairman for the past four
years, and headed the
board for one-year during
his first term in office. He
-was a state legislator for 14
years prior to his election
to the board of ~upervisors.
Celebrate the joys of summer
'
_,,,
/
'~ ..
I
f
....... ,
'-.
HOURS:
10 to 6 Daily
Tburs. 10-9
Sun. 11-5
\
at _ Nl:W '1:>12t<·
~~,,~~
'
The incredible
discount store
I
W~ looklike a boutique,
give you the personal
boutique service, but
without boutique prices.
Always
20%-50%off
at Nf.W~~-
NEWYO~IK
Kasper for Jo an Leslie
one of our many
top d~signer collections
6061 E BROADWAY
790-6362
7332 N ORACLE
297-0865
297-0497
·i
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................. a111t.1•
. ., . ... ,
_ .Council 'hearin9 July ·~4
Fox sUit against council dropped
-A suit brought in Superi-
or Court by developer
Lilian Fox charging that
the Oro Valley Town Coun-
cil purposely delayed
action o!i a proposed 96-unit •
apartm~nt complex has
been dropped.
The council had set a
July 24 date for a i:e-hear-
ing of the Fox .proposal, ·but
Mrs. Fox charged that the
hearing was set after the
time the council planned to
complete revisions of the
town zoning code, and that
the revisions would affect
her appeal.
Cobrt officials ruled
Tuesday that because Mrs.
Fox's development plan
would be judged under the
zoning code in effect at the
time of submittal, the date
-~-I
i----·---i·~~
;~h.::;, DiClr
by... .
FASHION EYEWEAR
PRESCRIPTIONS Fl LLED
SUN GLASSES
• BAUSCH-LOMB MAGNIFIERS
• PROMPT RE.PAI RS
297-BaOI
IN CASAS ADOBES
Clyde Holland -Opticiai1
7043 I\J. Oracle Rd.
llil
~
THE
of the re-hearing could not
affect the ruling of the
council.
The July 24 hearing will
take place as scheduled,
report council members.
When development plans
were initially submitted for
the apartment complex
last fall, they called for 102
units on approximately 2.5
acres west of Oracle Road
and south of Calle Concor-
dia.
When town officials
objected to the density of
the complex, architect
Howard Peck modified the
plan to 96 units . The council
objected to the revised plan
on the basis of poorly plan-
ned traffic flow and lack of
sufficient parking space.
A GOOD INVESTMENT
MENrlGERIE
.~ •. 7'
-~ ... .:_;;:;-~·,.,.·
------------------------
Oro :Valle~
r coo =;cONCERr SET ' I
I The Amphitheater Community Concert Band will M I be performing in a special free concert at the I;
ffil Canyon del Oro Fine Arts Auditorium Wednesday, &}
.~ June 18, at 8 p.m. . . ;@
,¼ Marches, show tunes and pop music will be T
Im played. Larry Wilson enters his 35th year as ;;:c I\ director of the comm_unity band. The CDO concer~ is ;[;,
00 sponsored by Amphitheater and CDO Community fa I Schools and the Oro Valley Commission on . the Arts. fil]
la,immfilwtfil½'Wm\}l!.W · ,. -❖,,. ·,--· ---• ~--❖--•••• • ;--Ai'iWlticl'ti
OV Council to adopt
final area plan tonight
\ . . '
By VICKI THOMPSON Four planning and zoning
Acting on a recom-commissioners
mendation made Monday unanimously approved
night by town planners, the recommendation of a plan,
Oro Valley Town Council la beled Plan B, in public
will adopt an area plan for hearing Monday night. The
. the town in public hearing fifth commissioner, newly -
tonight at 7 :00 at the Town a ppointed Nanc y Wahl.
Hall. was absent from th e
meeting.
Although Plan B was
recommended for ap-
proval, the commission has
requested some r e visions.
In addition to suggested
zoning within th e town
boundari es, both a rea
plans in c lud ed zoning
recommendations for land
cast of Oracle Road a nd a
parcel exte ndin g south to
Hardy Iload. Both areas
arc part of a proposed five-
vca r an nexation plan for
Oro \'a Il e ~'.·
According to attorney ,
ltobert _Stubbs. who
represents landowner John
l{oone~·. the adoption of
Plan B could affect an-
nexation or hi s client's
property east or Oracle
!toad. •
Pl:..tn A had recom-
mended l\1r. llooney's
propert~· for resort zoning.
IJUt Plan B recommends
that l\lr . l{ooney·s property
bt! zoned for one house per
four acres . A resort has
bee n planned • for the 160-
acn· parcel owned by
Atlas -Glenex sout h or Mr.
Hoo ney's land . ,
Attorney Stubbs in-
dicated that l\lr . Rooney
was very· .anxious to be in
Oro Valley , but that
removal or the resort
zoni ng from his property·
wo ul d remove much or the
incentive for requesting
annexa ti on.
l\lr. Stubbs also said that
I\I r. Hooney had been
approac hed as a potential
subsc rib er to th e proposed
Oro Vaill',. sewe r di s trict ,
but that zoniqg or one house
per four ac res would ma ke
a se wer unnecessary for
the I {oon e.v property.
··1 think we"d better see
what problems we have
with one res ort before we
a ll ow anoth e r .,. com-
mented Commiss ioner
Dorotfiy l\lontgomery
dur in g the meeting .
7025 N. ORACLE RO .AD 297-7229
The commission also
recommended adoption of
a transportation plan for
the town . The plan
recomm e nd s no new
media n cuts , on Oracle
!load, a bicycle path on
Calle Concordi a a nd Oracle
!load, a nd improvements
or Linda Vista Boulevard
a nd po ss ibl~• Hardy Road to
draw traffic awav fro m
Ca ll e Concord ia. a street
11~(-ri he<1v1l .v by school
' -----... <'h li(lrv
FIFTY DOLL\HS HH 'IIEH-Dan Ellis. c e nter. holds. a
~ift l't•rtifkate 1•1.1titling him to $;,0 in goods and ser\'ices
from Plaza d<'I Oro nwrchants who participat<'d in the
n•<·Pnl '.\'.t•al<'Sl Mom I Know conl<'Sl. Dan's first t>lace
t•ntr .,· said his mom "earl's for us lik<' a guard dog .....
:-.ha,'in~ Dan's Plation with tlw priz<' are Tom Hoof.
pn·sidt·nt of the Plaza dl'I Oro M1•1Thants :\ssociation ·and
Dan's 1110111 . .-\ndrl'a l\larit• Ellis.
Moral Majority
rally ol1 Monday
The Life Action Singers will present a concert on
Monday, June 16, open to the public in the Catalina High
School gymnasium at 7 p.m . Tim LaHaye will be the
special guest.
"America , You 're t(!o Young to Die! " is a 75-minute
multimedia presentation which includes special lighting
effects, twelve computerized projectors covering a 36'
screen, and more than 1,300 visuals synchronized to the
lyrics, music and nar.ration .
This program will be viewed coast-to-coast during 1980.
It has a strong message of allegiance to America, with a
call for our nation to return to the princ.iples upon which
she was founded.
Dr . LaHaye has been a counselor for more , than 25 ,,
years. He is the senior minister of two dynamic churches '
in San Diego and El Cajon, Calif. He is founder and
currently president of Ch,ristian Heritage College .
The rally is sponsored by the Moral Majority of
Arizona .,
From 1 to 5 p.m .. on Monday there will be a seminar
about Moral Majority at New Testament Baptist Church,
2855 N. Craycroft Road. Speakers will be Dr . LaHaye and
Jerry Falwell .
Accorqing to J.C . Joiner, Chairman of Moral Majority
for Arizona , the local group will be patterned after
national organization headed by Dr. Falwell. One of the
first tasks of the group in Arizona will be a massive voter
registration drive in July.
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Humbler dependence
·on divine advo:cate.d1
( ·hri st ia n Scie n cl' Chu r c h
il'adl'r s h av l' rlecl a rl'd t hat
··hum a nil\· can 't a fford a
<'onti1111l' dri ft toward the
nrnr:tll Y ba nk r upt doctrint-
th :1t ma t l'ri a l pl l'asures a n ·
I h(' sol (• or chid g ood in
Iii (•."
Tlw Chri sti a n Sc i c nCl'
Bo .1rcl of Directors urgl'd
tn(•ml>l'rs of th(•
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through ··humhle i:
tll•p('tHlencc on divine
1.;11itl :111('(' and deeper un-
derstanding of what
Christian discipleship .
really means."
1111 hand in Boston for th('·
domin a tion's annual
lll('(•t ing w(•n· mon• t ha n
-; .ooo m<'mb<'rs or Th P
:'dolh<·r < 'h11rch . Th(' First
, h11rd1 of ( 'hrist. Sl'i enti st
111 l \oston . from som(' 2:1
1·ot111I ri t•s.
1 hn ,t i :111 Sl'i<'n ce was
, 1r ,I 111trod1t('(•d in Tucson
Ill I H!IB II\· l\lrs .. /\li e<' A.
I l o ll. 1r h o n •sidl'd at 127 W .
F r .1nklin St. i n w hat was ·
I IH·n know n as Sn oh
I .lollmr. ll{•r h om (' has now
h (•(•n dl'c l a r l'd an h i stori ca l
L1ndm :1r k .
Thl'n' :if(' four Christian
Sl'i <·nc(• Chur e hl's 111
T11l'son . Among t hose from
hl·n· :t lt<'nding tlw a nnual
m<·<·t ing ,rt'rc \·i o l t•t
Thom :1s . Alma Konigslow
ind J)i :1n a llanov(•r from
First ( 'hurl'h and .Ja ~·nl'
< ;n•t•n from Third ( 'hurc h.
ln<·omini.; Bo a rrl
l h :1irman .Jl'an Stark
.lf<'IH'n strl·it said "The timl'
h.1s l'Om<' for all of us to
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11111<•,-.·· stH's:1id .
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''GREATEST ~El:.ESSION•FIOHTER IDEA YET-MIDGET SHOPPING CAATS
SO iHE.Y'lL THINK THEY'RE CtETTING .Ai(OR.c FOR 1MEl~ 50 f3UCl<S/''
Smaller cars key to gas savings
How much gas has the six-year-0ld 55 miles
speed limit saved? About one half of one
percent, according to the best studies. In the
meantime, more than eight million people
were arrested for exceeding 55 last year.
Obviously the costs of enforcement far out-
weigh any benefits obtained, but Arizona is
going to_ ~peedup its crackdown on the over-55
set anyway.
Hmit. Right now Arizona is not meeting those
standards. So our highway patrolmen are
giving tickets out to drivers who hit 60 with no
questions asked. •
Several • western state· legislatures are
testing the waters with state laws to raise the
speed limits back to where they were before
OPEC started its oil squeeze. Other states,
admitting they can't catch all the speeders,
The reason is because the Federal Highway
Administration can cut off funds for state
highway systems if a state fails to meet the
compliance_ standard~ on the 55 mile per hour
-are· simply daring the feds to • cut off their
highway funds.
_ In the _ meantime, Sen. ,Howard Metienbaum
: 2 of Ohio'-i s holding heari ings in C6ngress to
stiff en the compliance -standards and the
federal penalties for states· that don't toe the
mark. This activity is misdirected, just like
th~ whole 55 mile limit. It's the cars, not the
drivers, that should be the federal target to
really save on gasoline consumption.
Oracle corner needs
left-tum signals
To the editor
Arizooa Territorial
Dear Sir
The intersection or
Orange Grove Road and
Oracle Road on the nor-
thwest side of Tucson has a
built-in hazard that ought
to be corrected.
Two days ago I witnessed
a collision there. _At least 50
times in the two years I
have lived here I have seen
the same form of accident
narrowly avoided . Let me
describe the situation and
then prescribe ~he remedy.
Drivers in the westtiound
lanes or Orange (}.rove who
want to make a left : tur:i
( southbound 0" o~~,-i ,)
cannot see eastbound
traffic on Orange Grove.
There are two • physical
reasons: first, the slope of
the streets has the outside
lane lower than the center
lane and the middle of the
intersection; second,
Orange Grove west of
Oracle curves behind the
cars at the intersection
(curves . northward to
compensate for the mis-
alignment o_f streets that is · The comparative gas mileage statistics are
socommonmTucson) h 1· • ff t M • ·ts ·h Thus a driver turning ·---,anot er . unrea istic e or . otoris ave
from ' westbound to 'found they don't get the gas mileage promised
southbound cannot see while the automobile industry camouflages
oncoming traffic i~ there is U:ie problem with rhetoric. The mileage tests
a car-and there 1s almost are done with driving experts under
a I ways AT LE AST l bo d' · f p II h one-waiting to turn from a ratory con 1tions. I E Area y wants t e
eastbound to northbound . public to compare autos, the mileage ratings
The solution: simple ... a should be based on actual driving tests on real
Jeft turn light for Orange roads by real people under normal conditions.
Grove to clear all the -. . -
turning cars out of the The best way to go! we thmk, 1~ to expand
intersection so that drivers efforts to make Detrmt come up with a better
traveling across Oracle on engine. That means · having a corporate
~range ~rove ~re not average fuel economy (CAFE) standard of 30
nskmg thei_r own hves a nd miles per gallon now and 40 miles per gallon in
those of their riders . ,
The situation will get 1985. Thats tou_g~ on the carmakers but t~e
worse with the new -smaller, gas efficient cars are what the pubhc
shopping center being wants and also what can best cut our foreign
built. ~ut prompt action by oil requirements.
the Amona _Department ?f Lowering their average weight of a car by
Transportation ca:n avoid _ . .
similar accidents in the 1,000 pounds will have a much greater impact
future . If enough of us who on gas conservation than artificial speed
use Oracle and Orange limits. Detroit can do it if the car-buying
~rove wr~t~ to AD~T public and the feds insist.
director Wilham Or~way • Then maybe we can do away with all those and demand left turn hghts -. .
we may see a crew out spee?mg .tickets over 55 and put t~e
there installing them soon. maximums where they ought to be for safety s
Ruth Ann Iliff sake.
the poor
·sgort
By Walt Nett
It's with a certain amount of glee that we watched
President Carter's IO-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax increase
fall by the wayside.
The measure, while well-intentioned, seemed destined
to punish the wrong people. The folks ultimately harmed
by the gas tax increase would have been people like you
and I, and not the burnoosed greedheads of OPEC.
Some parts of the_ country may have been able to cope
with a 10-cent increase, but Pima County would have been
in more hot water than before, since we'd have laid out
more_ money -with nothing to show for it.
J>art of the gas tax is presently pumped into the High-
way J.Jsers' Fund, which the Feds in turn dole out to state
and local governments to help cover the costs of things
like regular maintenance. If you do a lot of driving around
here, you've probably noticed that the roads aren't in the
best or shape: In fact, the only people who could really
take any pleasure from the state of some properly-paved
city and county roads are our dentists, who make out on
replacing fillings that have been jarred loose. •
The county funds maintenance from its share of the
Highway Users Fund and by drawing against a statutorily
set maximum of 25 cent per $100 of assessed valuation in
property taxes.
In checking before the gas tax increase was to go into
effect, County Transportation Director Charles
Huckelberry said the county · was close to the limit in its
use of property tax funds and didn't know if any of the gas
_ tax increase would find its way into the coffers of state or
local governments.
But he said that there is need for a change iri the way
Highway Users Funds are distributed, because, for a
variety of reasons, the present dole is not enough.
For the past few years,· Mr. Huckelberry and his
predecessor, Jerry Jones, have been pointing to the
shrinking revenues from the fund with some degree of
concern. The raw dollars, despite the rapid growth of
Pima County, just aren't coming in. •
There are a variety of reasons. Reduced allocations at
critical times have scared some people out of their cars,
while others have switched to smaller, more fuel~fficient
cars. _ _ • .,,-.
The visible result is that ,:·contributions" to the fund
have fallen off. Lawrence Horwitz, a vice president with
the economic fol1!C3sting firm Chase Econometrics, saicl
in Tucson recently, that Arizona has seen a substantial
decrease in revenues for the users' fund because of the
rising cost of gasoline and the moves people are making to
counteract it ..
.The revenues were better than 10 percent behind last
years, he said.
And this is happening in a state which is among the
nation's leaders in growth. It's somehow difficult to
comprehend.
Considering President Carter's decision in 1978 to
eliminate the gasoline tax deduction from the federal
income tax structure as being inconsistent with gasoline
conservation policies, the whammy of the now-<iefunct 10-
cent increase would have been at least a double.
<;i\'l'II Uw sot-r~· state of some local roads, and the ap-
p:.in·nt inabil_it~· of finances to keep up with maintenance.
ii ·,v:1s somdhing of a surprise to sec Mo l.idall voting with
1 tw minorit~--When the numbers were ta !lied in the House.
tiw override passed :3:l5-:l4. The Senate voted 68-10 to
o\'l'ITidt· tht) veto.
Thl' override was the f"irst such action a Democratic-
controlled Congress has dropped on a Democratic
pn·sidt•nl since 1952. •
The gas tax was designed to "encourage" us to drive
less, or find more fuel~fficient ways of getting to and
from work. At least, that's the White House version .
From behind the wheel of a '78 Plymouth, it just looks
like the Feds were trying to get something for nothing.
Letters to the Editor
are welcome in your Foothills
newspaper. Send them to the
ARIZONA TERRITORIAL
[A}llffltartal Winner of GENERAL E .XCELLENCE '<ward, GENERAL
DEPARTMENTAL NEWS COVERAGE EXCELLENCE Award
and ADVERTISING EXCELLENCE Award from Arizona
Newspapers Association. January 1973 . ~
-~-~
POSTMASTER: Send adctrfls CMfl9e$ lo P.O. Box 3S250, Tucson,ArilONI 15740
Pubhshcd each Thursday by TERRITORIAL PUBLISHERS
INC . at I West Orange Grove Road ,n Tucson Ariz.
MAILING ADDRESS: P.O . Box 3S2S0, Tucson AZ. 85740
TELEPHONE NUMBER (6021 297-1107
U .S. Postal St•rv1Cl' Publ1 cc1r 1on No. ( USP~ S~S .9201
E .lJ . Jt·wt •f! Jr.
Editor and•Publl s hcr
Jack 8. Jewett D<lV1d G. 111ft
General Manager . E Xl•cut1Vl' Editor
W i nner 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 . •
W i nner of GENERAL EXCELLENCE Award . TYPO .
GRAPHICAL EXCELLENCE Award . ADVERTISIN C,
EXCELLENCE Award and COMMUNITY SERVICE Award
trorn the Arizona Newspape:s Assoc i at ion. Januarv 197<';1 .
NATIONAL NEWSPAPER
ASSOCIATION
•
~rof
AIUZO\'.-\
~ E\\ 'SPA PE HS
As.',(}('1.-\TIO\'
For Greater Public' Service
2 malls one toO 1many·?:
.-. ,z. 1111, lllt ..... ft:, ... ,..,
BU)ODUNJT TO BE IN NORTIIWEST
. • A self-contained blood unit' from the American Red
·,'.('ross will be accepting,.donations from 8 to 10:30 a .m.
Wednesday, June 18 at 3749 N. Romero Road.
.James W. Cocke cast
some doubt last wel.'lc on
whether the two regional
shopping malls scheduled
for Northwest Tucson can
both be successful. He said
a population of at least
125.000 is needed to support
just one such mall and the
JX'ople really aren't here
\"Pl to suppor:t two.
l\lr . Cocke is a vice
president of Valley
:-.Jational Bank and heads
its economic development
department in Southern
,\rizona. He was speaking
on the economic ruture of
Tucson to the Kiwanis Club
of the Catalina Foothills.
l\lr. Cocke noted that
'\Jontgomery Ward has
:1pparently chosen to locate
its new store in the Tucson
!\Jail at Wetmore and
< >racle Roads: rather than
in the Foothills Mall at La
< 'holla Blvd. and Ina Road.
I le said developers of both
silt!s arc apparently
determined to proceed with
construction plans.
I le noted that the malls
ma\· be built in phases with
final completion deferred
until population in the
:-.Jorthwcst grows some
mon·. I-le cited the case of
El < ·on Mall where Gold-
wall•r·s did not build until
man:-· ~-ears alter the mall
opened.
So far Goldwater's a_nd
Levy's are committed to
t ht• Foothills project and
l'tmney's, Diamond's.
Sears and The Broadway
are going in at the Tucson
!\Jail.
Nevertheless. Mr. Cocke
I ,.
SAWED CEDAR
said. the area north or the
Hi llito is the fastest
growing in Tucson and
should continue to gain
populaton in the dec _ade
ahead. He cite<l recent
figures in Tucson Trends, a
stu<l~-co-sponsored by
\"alley Bank. which gives
tlw current population of
the Tucson area as 542,000
in 196.100 households. He
said this should reach
900.000 by 1990 .
The 1980 edition of
Tucson Trends has divided
the northern suburbs or the
metropolitan area into two
districts for the first
time-called 1 West and 1
East with Oracle Road as
the dividing line. This is
done because of the rapid
growth of the Foothills .
District 1 Westincluded
( ·:Isas Adobes. Oro Valley
.Jncl Thornydalc. It now has
a population of :H,900 in
11 .400 households with 80
IX!rcent owner occupied.
District 1 East include
Sk~·linc. Sunrise. Sabino
Canyon and Tanque Verde.
II has a population now of
:i0.:l00 in 18,300 households
and is 90 percent owncr-
occupied.
llesidents of both
Foothills areas were
frequent shoppers at the
two n!gional malls in
Tucson-El Con and Park
l\lall. The Tucson Trends
sun•e:v· showed that during
:.1 :Ml-day period 55 percent
ol tlw JX!ople in District 1
Wtist made at least one trip
to El Con and 38 percent
made at least one trip to
l\1rk !\tall. The figures for
District 1 East were 63
JX!rcent and 66 percent
respectively.
Plaza del Oro at Orange
(;rove and Oracle Roads . .
had the highest percentage
of shoppers for any of the
centers in Tucson Trends.
Data showed that 8.5 per-
cent of families in District}
West shopped there at least
once during the . 30-day
survey period.
UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
PRESENTS:
Conference on Black Heritage in Arizona:
Seeking New Perspective With The Humanists
Friday, June 27, 1980
Ramada Inn
SEMINAR Ill
Topic/Early Black Pioneers'
Migrations Into Arizona and New
Mexico : "What can history teach
about early black pioneers to New
Mexico and Arizona?"
SEMINAR IV
Topic/Black Slavery in America:
Spanish and English /American :
"What can history and genealogy
teach us about early slaves in the
U .S.?"'
SEMINAR V
Topic/Black Groups in the United
Slates: "What can anthropology
teach us about early black groups
in America?"
Saturday, June 28, 1980
Ramada Inn
SEMINAR I
Topic/Black Women in Africa and
Arizona: "Whal can history and
anthropology tel I us about
women's activities in Africa and in
Arizona?"
SEMINAR 1-1
Topic/Black soldiers· in Afr ica and
Arizona : "What can history and
anthropology tell us about men's
activities under different military
systems in Africa and America·
Arizona?" Q
•Made possible by a grant f_rom
the Arizona Humanities council.
------CLIP AND RETURN ■------
REGISTRATION FORM
NAME ________________ _
ADDRESS _______________ _
PLEASE CHECK:
_ S6.00 __ For Friday Lunch
SI.SO __ For Friday Banquet
ss.so __ For Saturday Lunch
s20.oo __ Forall 3 meals
Meal reservations must be prepaid and check received by June 15th.
Make check payable to The University of Arizona and mall to Gloria
Smith, 315 Social Science Bldg., University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
85721.
Fashions lor Dad
on
FATHER'S DAY
SALE!!
All men's clothes . %5%
Jogging suit• .. %0•60%
~ I Famous brands such as:
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t'\.~ JJrSb Spald_ing_ f;:>V .-f ~ Winning Way ~ '·TE ... -~ alsowomen's ~ . '\';ii' terry sets
I 805 E. Speedway • 20%011
Reddington Plaze
885-7633
PAYING TAXES
ON YOUR
INTEREST DOLLARS!
• Cur.-.nt lnte.-.at Rat•:
TAX DEFERRED l 3. 6 5 %
•GUARANTEED Fnt Contract Y•ar
For more information : Detach and moil -------------------I NAME _________ PHONE ---I
I ADDRESS I I CITY ____ STATE ___ __..IP
I Mail to: Catalina Investments Limited. Attn: Bill Hines
I 7454E.Broodwoy,Suite210 ·or call I
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ALL -■■-■D • . ,
DOG . GROOMING . .
DISIRTDALI KINNILS
6745 N. La Canada 297-0420
Call for appt. 1 mile west of Oracle
· --~~Upholstery Specials
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·~ Wl.JY fJlle ~
Selected fabrics -Free Delivery
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5970 S. Palo Verde 294-1213
• Com pet1t1 ve rates
Dr. Richard Weiss
announces
Preventive Dentistry
• All insurance plan s welcome
• Nitrous oxide for yo ur comfort
• Complete denture service
• Denture laboratory on the premi ses !or fast and convenient service .
Serving the entire NW area
I ~ Dmal
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7 44 7 N. Oracle Road ~;;:;;~•;111
Open_, • Friday 9 a.m .•6 p.m.
Sallnlly 1M Nenilot IPtlllllnltols nallllll
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c0venng
the
.~ ... t ~'";T .. •t .
~it!:!!!ofrory
Jack and Jerry Grady, Terry and Diane Larson and
Tom and Katie Knight hosted the annual Progressive
Dinner for 33 couples of Oracle Heights Recreation
:,. Association Saturday. Their patios and landscaped yards
served as the perfect setting and the sunset matched its
rosy glow to the pleasant socializing.
Social Chairman Micky Scheiber affirmed that the
dinner is one of the highlights of the year for members
who most of.ten are meeting on the tennis courts or at
poolside. With swim team getting into high gear for next
week's first match, many of the parents will be timing,
. cheering and checking, so an occasion to renew
. acquaintances was welcome, Mrs. Scheiber said .
Norman and Betty Cole of 1764 W. Hudson Drive en-
joyed their 25th anniversary at a party given by their five
children at Bali Hai restaurant. The Coles have lived in
Northwest Tucson for twenty year-s and all of their
children hav e gra duated from CDO. They were married
May 27, 1955 in Soda Springs, Idaho. The children present
were Glen of Phoenix, Linda of Cyprus, Calif., David ,
Dale and Laura of Tucson , and Ben Lim.
Severa l Foothills residents took part ih the Inner
Ch<1pter Novice Quartet Competit ion of the Old Pueblo
Chapter of Sweet Adelines May 28 at Broadway Chr istian
Church .
Theria Beverly was chairman of the eve nt , with 'Sally
Centr v as emcee and the "Silk and Sound" quartet as
mike testers.
Costumes were worn by members · of the nine quartets
who were competing in the four part barbershop har-
mon~,. Th e Old Pueblo Chapter with Bobbie Munn
di r ecting, ente rtained while the judges were making their
decisions.
First place wept to the Sun Country Singers including
Theria Bever ly, Gerry Christakos, Dolly Bail ey and
Shire ly Marinus. Second place went to the Fanny Flap-
pers, who are Lynn Ellis, Natalie Kraft , Patsy Avery and
Sally· Singley .
F'or fu rther inform a tion on this group you may call Pat
at 297-6481:
I don't often cover sports but when I saw a crowd of
people around the Shuffleboard court at · Swan Lake
Tuesday evening, I had to ask what was going on. It
turned out to be Phase one of the Arizona Shuffleboard
summer tournament of District 2. Matt Mittlestat is
chairman of the events. ~
Ruby and Archie Woods won their match to ·go on and
challenge Marian Wright and Hubert Gander of Friendly
Yillage on Wednesday at Sleepy Hollow court. The Woods
are _the champions.
Mrs. Phil Castor of the Tucson Woman's Club and Mrs .
Scott Vaughn of the Catalina Junior Woman's Club were
among the 16 delegates of Arizona who attended the
Genera l Federation of Woman's Clubs ·convention held
May 31 through June 7 at the Chase Park Plaza in St.
Loui s.
During the award ceremony, the delegates were proud
to a nnounc e that fifte en awards were presented to Arizona
Clubs.
While there the group were threatened by two tornado
warni ng s but were told to stay in the meetings as they
were safe the.re as anywhere .
Mrs . Caslor enjoyed a tour that took her through t he old
capit ol bu ildin g, wh ic h is being renovated and was im-
pressed by the inside rotunda. She a lso wen t to the Busch
St ad ium and the 'Old Cathedral. She thought th e climate
was very humid.
Wh e n Sylvia London decided to change her hobby of
c hin a repa iring into a busine ss, she advertised in our
papt>r but like most of us , unl ess you needed the service
right the n, yo u didn't notice it. Syl's china repair, or an-
t iqu e restoration of figurines, and repairing of dishes
could make you very happy if you break a piece of china
that is an heirloom and has a great deal of se)1timental
va lu e a nd couldn't bear to throw it awav.
So make a note of Syl's numb er, 742-3292 and th e day •
will come when you will be happy to call he r .
-i( • 3sf'Aa *
FENCE CO., l~C.
Northwest
Fellowship .
will meet
Ka t e and Lou Mitchell hosted a party honoring their
son. Chris , who · was celebrating his graduation from
, Sabino Hig h School May 29. A buffet d inner-.topped off with
•• baklava, a Gr eek pastry was served to 38 guests in the
patio of their hom e.
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217 E. Giant Rd.• 624-1703 or 298-1364
-UCENSEDandBONDED•C -1451E~;;u• ~
/ _Monday _thru Saturday 8:00 to 5:·30 • Sunday 10:0 _o· to 2:00 I
.,
Northwest Women's
Aglow Fellowship will
meet Saturday, June 14 at 9
a.m .. in the Palm Room of
• Westward Look Resort.
Breakfast cost is $5 .25
each.
Special speaker will be
Wilma Moats, a pastor's
wife, drug and alcohol
abuse counselor.
Season tickets a r e no w on sale for the Philha rmon ia
·orchestra of Tucson, a n internationally regarded youth
orchestra. Concert dates are Oc t. 23 at8 p .m., Feb 1 at 3
p.m. a nd May 17 a t 3 p.m., with a ll concerts given at the
Tucson Community Ce nter Music Hall. For ticket in-
formation call 323-6565 . Philharmonia officers for the
coming season are President Jeannette H. Manley, Vice
President Barbara S. Stern, Secretary Nancy C . Whitney,
and Treasurer Orestes N. Stavroudis . Gordon Epperson
was newly elected to the Philharmonia Board by ac-
clamation.
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without receiving this information.
Food service
scholarships
are awarded
Three $100 scho\arships
have been awarded to area
seniors by the Northside
Chapter of Arizona School
Food Service .
Scholarship recipients
are Gordon Parry_ of
Amphitheater, Jeff Cleary
of , Flowing Wells and
Norma Vill of Marana.
Chapter members raised
the funds for the
scholarships through a
western barbeque held last
September. In order to
qualify for the award,
students had to show an
interest in the field of food
service during their high
school years.
Lions forming
A new Lions Club is
organizing to serve Casas
Adobes with meetings at 7
a.m . on Wednesday at
Coco's restaurant in
Cottonwood Plaza. Those
interested in becoming
charter members should
call John Hart at 742-2089.
.11111111, 1•~ ,..,._.,eillllil;fiiit'I
His cakes fOwer Over 'Competition
. .
TRIM~NG THE SABERCAT-Albert Sevilla decorates a graduation cake f!)r some .of J
his friends graduating from Sabino High School. But don't let the size of the cake be 1
misleading. He normally makes ·cakes as tall as 6-feet and has made some real doozies
while running a bakery in San Francisco.
Catalina FFA
picks officers
New officers for the 1980-
81 school year have been
elected by the Family
Faculty Association of Cat-
alina Foothills District.
Elected were President
Marcia Bay, Vice Presi-
dent Marijo Nagle, Secre-
tary Terri Ballou and
Treasurer Carol Chiolero.
In addition to these officers
the executive board will
include Joanne • Sellers,
Cindi Zele , Carol Otto,
Nancy-Kay , Mimi Crowley ,
Nancy Guthrie, Georgia
Paul, Nennee . White and
Bill Gruber.
JOE G. CHANEY. JR., WILLIAM B. BLASER
THOMAS G. KELLY, Ill AND
FRANKLIN DON, JR.
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE
FORMATION OF A PROFE~SIONAL
CORPORATION AND THE OPENING
OF THEIR OFFICES FOR THE ••
GENERAL PRACTICE OF LAW .I ·
IN CASA BLANCA PLAZA
6080 NORTH ORACLE ROAD
TUCSON,AR~ONA85704
MAY, 1980
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By DEBBIE ENGLISH
It's wedding season again, ,
so call in th~ cake
''engineer.''
Albert Sevilla, 33, of
Brown and Caldwell
consulting erigineers,
promises he can make a
cake of almost any height
and deliver it. safely in a .
truck.
•• Mr. Sevilla refuses to let
his cakes slouch on the job.
He figures if he can design
a safe and sound tall
building he should be able
to do the same with any
cake.
Making tall or sculptured
cakes for weddings and •
special occasions is his
hobby, but he also views it
as an artistic extension of
his profession as an
engineer.
A lot of creative work is
involved in·engineering, he
said. It takes innovative
ideas to produce a nice
looking . building. The same
is true with "building a
cake," he explained.
He said any standard
bakery has to use plastic
pillars to connect each
layer of a tiered wedding
cake. But Mr. Sevilla pulls
out tl)e hammer and nails ,
builds a pyramid-shaped
wooden . frame, paints it
white, covers it with wax
paper and fits the cake into
theframe ..
That's where his
engineering expertise
comes in. Everything has
to be precise as far as
height in proportion to
balance, he said.
The plastic pillars bet-
ween tiers most bakeries
use have to carry the entire
weight of the cake, which
limits the height of the
cake, he explained. But the
wooden frame divides the
weight evenly, so he can •
make his cakes taller .
He has made as many as
-1,000 tall cakes ranging
from two to six feet high .
" Last week Tucson Country
Club offered him his
greatest challenge so far.
For a July 4th
celebration the club wants
a .cake that will feed 1,000
people, has lights wired
throughout the cake but is
structurally sound to be
paraded throughout the
club on the shoulders of two
carriers. Designing the
Empire State Building was
probably an easier request.
A member from the club
has also asked for a 5-foot-4
inch wedding cake with
lights between the tiers.
He just recently rµade his
first cake in Tucson for his
.girlfriend. Others saw it
• and wanted one. That's the
only way of letting people
know of his hobby until he
finds a place to set up a
bakery arid hire someone to
bake for him ..
Mr. Sevilla has never
le.ken any c.ourses in the
art. He learned the flair for
cake decorating in high
school while helping his
aunt in her bakery in the
Philippines . He and his
sister moved to the United
States 10 years ago and
operated a bakery in San
Francisco.
He charges more than $1
per serving for smaller
cakes and somewhat less
than that for larger cakes . .. ~·..,_,, ... , '·:·· • ~
';iii!_,,
_.-: '· ~--. .,.: ., •. ' ::. ... -~'. ·'.-~-··,
.. ;,. •~ \ ... · ,, ' a .-.. ~(' ·-r: . ·. ~ ~, i-..• _., .~'!fl,~ •• ,
.. _. :.' l"' y'"'·~. .. .,,., ,, ·'. -.,-4'( • . "'. ... -.. • .,. . . .. ... JJr
"· DIGGING INTO AN UNDERGROUND
·poWER LINE COULD GIVE YOU
THE SURPRISE OF YOUR LIFE
Many power lines have gone
underground.
You can't see theni, but you
can still get the surprise of your
life if you dig into one.,
It's great to save money by
doing your own digging for that
backyard project, but before you
dig call the Blue Stake Center at
792-2211-. All Tucson utilities will
mark the locations of their un-
derground lines for you within
two working days of your call.
And that's great. Because if
you find the lines on your own ,
you could get the surprise of
your life. The last one .
UNDERGROUND POWER LINES-
What you don't know can hurt you!
~
TiJcson
Electr1i. r .x ' . Pou.liir
;:
Page l0, The Arizona Territorial, June 12, 1980 .
SUMMER EXHIBIT OPENS AT TMA
The works of five artists from southern Arizona com-
prise the summer exhibition at the Tucson Museum of Art.
The exhibition opens Sunday, June 22 with a reception
from 1 to 4 p.m. Summer hours, which go into effect June
22, will be 10 a.m. to 4 p.m . Tuesdays through Saturdays, 1
to 4 p. m. on Sundays closed Mondays .
NEIJ'ES T CHINESE RESTA UR ANT AND WUNGE IN TUC.SON
Serving: Mon. thru Thurs. 11:30 to 9:30
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 to 10:00
American Breakfast & Lunch 7 am to 2 pm
dinner rea erna tion, recomme nded
Banquet Room seating for
private parties up to 270 people
Authentic S,:echwui, Mandarin and Cantoneae Cui&ine
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I ONLY WITH THIS COUPON • 1 I Finest Chinese food in Tucson prepared by I I • Chef David W ei I I Special Luncheon Menu from $2.20 I ~------~~~~J?a---~---
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Oscar Mayer Packaged Meats D:sc;,r
M;,uer
All Meat Wieners ....................... 1-l b ........ 1.49
All Bee f W ieners ....................... 1-lb ... .": ... 1.73
Big O ne Bee f Fran k s ............. 4 pac k/1-lb ........ 1.79
Jumbo Beef Franks .............. 8 Pack/1-l b ........ 1.73
All Meat Bologna ...................... 8 oz ........ 95,
All Beef Bologna ....................... 8 oz ........ 1.05
All Meat Bo l ogna ..................... 12 o z ........ 1 .33
All Beef Bologna ...................... 12 oz ...... :. 1.55
All Meat Thick Sliced Bolog na .......... 12 oz ........ 1.33
All Beef Thick Sliced Bologna .......... 12 oz ........ 1.55
Beef Bologna .......................... 1-lb ........ 1.99
CottoSalami .......................... 8oz ........ 1.19
Cotto Salami ......................... 12oz ......... 1.71
Beef Cotto Salami. ..................... 8 oz ........ 1.25
Machiaeh Salami .• ........ ·-........... 8 oz ......... 1.21
Hard Salami ............ , .............. 8 oz ........ 2.08
Beer Salami ........................... 8 oz ........ 1 .21
Cheese Smokies ...................... 12 oz ........ 1.73
Smokie•links .............. • ........... 12 oz ........ 1.73
Summer Sausage ...................... 8 oz ........ 1.37
Sliced Braunschweiger ................. 8 oz ........ 1 .24
Braunschweiger Chub ................. 8 oz ... '..... as•
Braunschweiger Chub ................ 12 oz ........ 1.27
Ham & Cheese Spread ................. 11' oz ........ 1.16
Ham & Cheese .......................... 8 oz ........ 1 .35
Head Cheese .......................... 8 oz ........ 1.37
Liver Cheese .......................... 8 oz ........ 1.16.
Sandwich Spread ...................... 8 oz .... : . . . 89'
San d w i ch Spread ..................... 12 oz ....... •. 1.25
Luncheon Loaf ........................ 8oz ........ 1.19
Olive Loaf. ............................ 8 oz ........ 1.15
Honey Loaf ... , ........................ 8 oz ........ 1.65
Picnic Loaf ............................ 8 oz ........ 1.35
Pickle & Pimiento Loaf .................. 8 oz ........ 1.07
Square Variety Pack ........... , ...... 12 oz ........ 1.79
Round Variety Pack ................... 12 oz ........ 1.79
Beef Variety Pack ..................... 12 oz ........ 2 .09
New England Brand Sausages .......... 8 oz ........ 1.53
Old Fashioned Loaf ..... : .............. 8 oz., ....... 1.25
Cooked Ham .......................... 6 oz ........ 1.55
Chopped Ham ......................... 8 oz ........ 1.41
Jubilee Ham Slices (8 slices) ........... 16 oz ...... · .. 3.41
Pu llman Ham .......................... 3-lb ........ 6 .89
Bacon Bits ............................ 3 oz ....... , 81•
Bacon ................................ 1-lb ........ 1.47
Clausse n Kosher Pickles .............. 1-gal. ....... 4.39
Claussen Kosher Pickles .............. 32 oz ........ 1.13
Claussen Ic ic le Pickles ................ 32 oz ........ 1.13
Claussen Sweet and Sour Pickle Chips .. 24 oz ........ 1.23
Claussen Sauerkraut. ................. 32 oz ........ 1.37
Claussen Kosher Tomatoes ............ 32 oz ........ 1.25
Nabisco Premium Saltines ... • ........... 1-lb ......... 74 '
Rath Variety Pack Sl iced Meats , 12 oz ............... '1 .49
Prices s ubject t o change Monday, June 16 , 1980
FedMart*
•America's greatest general_ store _
Phoenix:
3010 Grand Ave.
2820 W. Dunlap
740 w. C.mellNtct
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Tucson:
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7030 E. 22nd St.
5255 E. Br•~••
:,; ·~! ~I'
Betty Wineinger recrl:rfflng families
to host Japanese exchange s·tude·nts
For the second summer
in a row, Northside
resident Betty Wineinger is
recruiting families who are
willing to hpuse a Japanese
. college student for three
weeks.
Mrs. Wineinger expects
about 35 students to arrive
at Tucson International
July 30 as part of the
Pacific American .
Institufe's Heiwa
Language Study program.
Each will need a bed to
sleep in and, if possible, a
room of their own for the
three-week stay.
So far 18 families, many
of them volunteers from
last summer's program,
have agreed to host a
student.
Being a host does not
mean entertaining the
students for , three solid
weeks, emphasizes Mrs.
Wineinger, who says the
students will be busy with
their own pursuits.
What the host family is
responsible for is room and
board for the student and
transportation to an
English language class
three times a week, Classes
are given at a facility at
Fifth Street and Alvernon
Way, which is on a bus line,
so students can use a bus if
available, says Mrs.
Wineinger ... • • •
Last year's program was
the first for Tucson,
although the idea began in
_the United States 10 years
Clark Office Products
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oo Pfaltzgraff
Village.
Village Stoneware place settings and
other selected accessories. And re~
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oven to table beautifully.
STONEWARE
Place set ting, 5 pc.
Luncheon Plate , 8½"
Fruit Bowl, 5Vs''
Ova l Veget a b le Bowl
Fl a nge J Soup Bowl
Pl a tte r, 14"
So up Tureen , 3 qt.
Coffee Mug , IO oz.
,Teapot
G LASS
Win e Goblei:, 61/z o :.
Water Goblet , 11 ¼ oz .
Tumbler , 12 o z.
Coole r , I 2 o z.
Rocks/Juice, 9 oz.
, . s
Sll,._i,1tq
Regular
Prices
$13 .25
3.50
2.50
9.50
4.75
11:00
36 .75
3.50
15.00
3.00
3.00
2.25
3.00
2.25
Special
Prices
$8 .50
2.80
1.90
7.50
4.00
9.00
30 .00
2.75
12 .00
4/9.00
4/9.00
4/7.00
4/9.00
4/7.00
, Hardware & Supply Inc.
756 East Fort Lowell 623--4311
,'
ago when a Japanese
businessman decided to
sponsor the exchange.
ready to come back again
this year.
Mrs . Wineinger reports·
that last :,tear's program
proved interesting and
educational for students
and host families alike, and
that all the students were
"They had a good time
when they were here," she
says . "They loved it."
Anyone wishing to host a
student may contact Mrs .
Wineinger at 299-6188.
,&-· l ~
r jl
,.. I
'ffei
¥. /
Mr. and Mrs . Bart Goldstein
Couple exchanges vows
Northwest resident Marci Ann Ranni ger was wed to
Bart Phillip Gol dstein May 25 in an"evening ceremony at
The Lodge on the Desert.
Rabbi Henry Kraus presided a t the ceremony, and
music was provided by organist Joan Ashcroft and soloist
Ben Hankey . A. reception at the lodge followed the ex -
• changing of vows . . •
The bride was attended by Gina Ranniger , Lisa Long,
Susan Goldstein and Donna Hoffman . Attending the
groom were Donald Goldstein, Mike Rukasin, Robert
Stradford, Thom Robinson and Nathan Hoffman.
The bride, daughter of Northwest residents Patricia and
Bill Ranniger, graduated from Canyon de! Oro High
School and the University of Arizona . She has been em-
ployed as a teacher in the Flowing Wells District.
The groom's parepts , Donald and Ileane Goldstein, are
from Covina, Calif. The groom graduated from Royal Oak
High School in Covina and from the University of Arizona.
Following a honeymoon trip to Hawaii the couple will
make their home in Covina .
;
;
SABINO STUDENT
TO RAP WITH MO
Sabino High School student Terry Barnes has
been selelcted as one of 12 youths from Southern
Arfaona who will traveJ to Washington , D.C. this
month as part of Rep. Morris K. Udall's Youth
Advisory Council. •
The Council, established in 1977, provides an
opportunity for selected high school students to
discuss current politi~al issues once a month with
Rep. Udall. A total of 57 students were chosen for
1979-80.
The 12 students participating in this month's
program will leave June 15. P lanned activities
include tours of the FBI Buildi ng and the House of
Representa tives .
AUDI
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(6021 623-4323
(6021623 ·t"3I
(6021 298·2316
)
gaingaut
Kramer creates
convincing Devil
By VICKI THOMPSON
l lerbert Kramer and his
slaff al the Saguaro Dinner
Thealer have recovered
gracefully from a recent
epidsod e of vandalism
which delayed the opening
of lheir latest production,
Ferencz Molnar's The
Devil , by one week .
The lobby and bar area
are redecorated, and
lhea tre patrons would
never suspect anything had
been amiss.
The production delivers
tlw same air of gentee l
l'nl e rla inm e nt s o fa miliar
lo Sa gu a ro Th e atre
rl'g ul ars, a nd Aus t ri a n-
ho rn Kr a me r is lhoroughl y
.11 hom e wilh fe llo w-
Concert Band
begins season
The Amphi Community
Concert Band begins its
:15th year under the
direction of Larry Wilson,
former Amphi High School
band .director, this summer
session as it enters another
round of concerts at Amphi
High School at 8 p.m. every
Th~rsday.
The first Thursday night
performance is tonight at 8
p.m. and continues • each
week until July io. It is
sponsored by
Amphitheater Community
Schools.
Marches, show tunes and
pop music will ~e part of
the repertoire. Anyone can
join the band by calling
Larry Wilson at 297-3331 or
Amphitheater Community
Schools at 887 -5500.
Practices are every
Monday from 7:30 to 9:30
p.m. at the Amphi High
School band room.
Austrian Molnar's
dialog',-le .
He should be-the
Kram e r family premiered
lhe play in Europe.
The story involves a
Bohemian artist, played by
J a'c k M c Rey no Ids ,
hope.lessly in love with the
wife qf a banker. Betty L.
Shute makes her first
~ppearance on a
professional stage in the
production as the banker's
wife , and she does a
creditabl e job.
.Jos e ph Ba ndiera is well
suited to th e rol e of th e
bank e r.
1 nlo lhi s se tting ripe for
wr on g-doing sle ps Mr.
Kram e r as Th e De vil. He
prctl'nds to e ncourage a
liason be t wee n the artist
and the banker's wife. but
his re a l targel is the wife , a
lady he perceive s can be
lempted and taunted for
years to come.
l\1r. Kramer's Devil is
urbane , mischievous and
_witty, with a suggestion of
the darker side of his ·
nature ever-present.
The play is designed to be
fun, but the hint of evil is .
what keeps the ,audience
involved with the action.
Other cast . members
include Kelli Dennis, whose
portrayal of _the Heiress
dis plays professional
growth, and Matt Miller
and Jeannie Tucker as the
\"alet and the Model. Mr.
Miller and Miss Tucker
show promis~ for their first
lime on a professional
stage.
Performances of The
Devil are Wednesday
lhrough Saturday with
cocktails at 6:15, dinner at ·
6:-l5 and show at 8:15 p.m.
The Sunday schedule is
cocktails at 4, dinner at
4::rn and show at 5:45 p .m.
COPPER DOME
OPEN HEARTH
•. !·
DOE AND FAWN-The bronze artistry of retired Army
:viaj. Gen. Ben Pochyla, a Northside resident, is part of a
.six-artist display presented by Fine Art Galeria under the
!wading All Creatures Great and Small. Maj. Gen .
Pochyla has-t ·ekindled an early love of art after a career
which included serving on the staffs of Gen. Dwight
Eisenh1n\'er -and Gen. Douglas MacArthut. as Com-
manding Gen. of Fort Huachuca and as Director of the
Continuing Education Div ision for the . U niversity of
.\rizona . The art exhibit will continue through the month
of .hlll('.
Local artists featured
in Galeria exhibition
The June art show in the Old Town Artisans Fine Art
Galeria features works by Oro Valley res_ident Cotsy
Engle and I<~oothills residents Maj. Gen. Pochyla and
Mark Rossi. .
Joining these three artists, who are each displaying
work done in bronze, are watercolorists Wyona Gillis and
Doris Harrison. Ruthanne McLehdon's· oils and Joan
Shaw's pastels are also part of the show, which is titled All
Creatures Great and Small.
A receptionJ or the artistsis scheduled from J),Ao 7 p.m.
Fridav evenitfg; June 13 '.ffithe c'ourtyar d"..ga it'ae¥i . of the
Galeria : .... -" • -• :
The Galeria is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sundays from noon to 5 p.m .
Classic film
shown at Nanini
The classic love storv
W u t h e r i n g H e i g h t s·,
s tarring Laurence Oliver
and Merle Oberon, will be
shown free of charge •
\\"ednesday, June 18 at 6 :30
p.m. at the Nanini Library,
7:lOO N. Shannon Hoad ..
The film won an
Academy A ward for best
cinematography . when it
was released in 1939.
June 12·, 19ao, TheAriiona Temtorial,·Page 11 •
Jr_· QoQden C:Ollogon fi
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1 • LUNCHEON SPECIAL
$250
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on the ·freshest
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vegetables, fine natural cheeses and good lean meats, baked
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• Salad Bar
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DINE BY CANDLELIG-HT AND
ENJOY OUR PANORAMIC VIEW
HAPPY HOUR 4-7 P.M. Mon.-Sat. 887 ■.4000 Gift Certificates Available
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Page 12, The Arizona Territorial, June 12, 1980
. ,
Avra Valley Airport on verge of changes
By WALT NETT
The airport in Avra
Valley sits in the midst of
flat cotton fields near
Sandario and Avra Valley
Roads just inside the
Marana town limits.
Once nothing more than
a paved square 3;000 feet on
a side used for military
pilot training during World
War II, the airport has
gradually revived since
private pilots began to use
the facility in the late 1960s
-and is apparently on the
verge of bigger and better
things.
The growth of the airport
is very apparent to
operator Bill Munroe, who,
with his wife Nancy,
purchased Aviation
Projects E!)terprises
Company -the cor-
poration which leases the
facility from Pima County
-from Robert and Ollie
Shouse in May 1979.
The airport opened in the
late 1960s when Tucsonan
Don Hamilton leased the
property from the Bureau
of Land Management and
put in the initial facilities.
Later, he donated -the
facilities to the county,
, which has gone through a
series of six "fixed base
opera tors ."
A quick inventory of
APEC's domain shows 22
hangar spaces -all full -
~1
':a l~
U a and tie-dodwnt ' facbilitiets to
1 accom~o a e a ou 50 ' u more airplanes.
~ The airplanes, all
1 . M propeller-driven, range • •1l1t1:"iJ from 'twin-engine busin_ess wt_ ~ J planes to restored classics, percent increase over the
pr evious year.
C I RC US experim7ntal aircraft and
1 home-bmlt planes. For various reasons,
private plane owners based
at Ryan Field and Tucson
International Airport are
getting interested in A vra
Valley, but at this time are
finding no vacancies for
Wed.25 JUNE
: ;"'~TUCSON
·coMMUNITY
/ ~,.,.._rc~NTER
rrr,1(f lq ,}
THRO
Sun,29
JUNE
.:..'..4r...l:-',
~---PERFORMANCES----
Wed . JUNE 25 8 :00 PM
KGUN -TV I LE VY'S FAMILY NIGHT -Save $2.00
On Alf [1ck ets With LEVY 'S Discount Coupon
Thurs . JUNE 26 2 :30 PM* ... 8 :00 PM*
fr,_ JUNE 27 2 :30 PM* , 8 :00 PM
Sat. JUNE 28 11 ·00 AM* , 3 :00 PM . . 8 :00 PM
Sun . JUNE 29 1.30 PM . . 6-00 PM
ALL SEATS RESERVED • PRICE INCLUDES TAX
$5.00 -$6.00 -$7.00
SAVE s 1. 00 ON CHILDREN UNDER 12
At Performances Marked With A Star * In Performance
Schedule Shown Above .
TICRETS ON SALE AT:
TUCSON COMMUNITY CENTER BOX OFFICE
(VISA & l'IAST[R CARD Accepted)
e LEVY 'S 3rd· floor • El Con Mall-e PARK MALL
e DAVIS -MONTH A~ A .f .B . • FORT HUACHUCA
• LA POPULAR • Nogales • HINDS BOOK STORE • Plaza de/ Oro
• EASTSIDE CITY HALL • FOR TICKET IN FO . CALL : (602) 791-4266
FOR GROUP SALES INFO. CALL: (602) 791-4838
CHARGE TICRETS BY PHONE!
CALL: (602) 791-4836 or 791-4837
thru fri. -·10 AM to 5 PM e Use Your VISA or MASUR CARD
($ 1.00 Handling & Postage Charge Per Phone Order)
MAIL ORDERS :
Send self-addressed, stamped envelope, wi th check or money order
payable to : TUCSON COMMUN IT Y CENTER,
Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey Circ us. P.O. Box 3053 ,
·Tucson. Arizona 85702
With winter visitors, the
number of airplanes
calling j\vra Valley home
gets as high as 85, which
Mr. Munroe said
represents about _ a 30
AUDITIONS
ARE BEING HELD TO DISCOVER TUCSON'S MOST PROMISING
NEW MODELING STAR
The Grissom Agency of Talent and Modeling
will be a uditioning
JUNE 11 a_nd 12
and
JUNE 18 and 19
from
12:00 noon to 5:00 p .m ..
Applicants will be judged on
• Appearance
• Photogenic e ff ec t
. • Personal Int e rvi ew
Ten finalists will be selected by
Grissom Agency Staff
and the Grand Finalist
will be selected by
a prestigious panel of· judges
FOR
AUDITION
APPOINTMENT
CALL
327-5692
.8'·
GRV.1'0111 AG8ICY
Of
TMlflT MD IIODIUIWi
2909 E. GRANT ROAD
\ TUCSON , AZ85716 (602; 327 -5692
~
The Grand Finalist will receive
an exciting all expense paid •
trip to Los Angeles
Highlights of the L.A . trip include
• Interviews at L.A. Modeling Agencies ...
Nina Blanchard, Elite, Mary Webb Davis,
and Wilhelmina West
• Full daY, c hauffered limousine service
• Lunch ai the 20th Century Fo x Commissary
• A visi t to the s tudios of 20th Century Fox .
lo cat ion of Cha rlies Angels, M ash, L o ve Boat ·
and Fantasy Island
and your hos t will be Mickey Freeman
of Freeman and Doff, promotors of
Loni Anderson, Loretta Swit, Leonard Nimoy
and many other stars
The Ten F1110/is1s will each receive a
professio nal photography session with
fashion photographe r. De rri a k Anderson
AUDITIONS ARE OPEN TO
ANYONE 12 TO 25 YEARS OLD
NO EXPERIENCE IS NECESSARY
BUT THE GRAND FINALIST
MUST BE WILLING TO SIGN A
CONTRACT WITH THE
GRISSOM AGENCY
Pretty planes all in a row
aircraft storage .
"I've stopped making out
formal request forms,''
said Mr. Munroe, removing
a file folder from a cabinet.
The folder, wh_ich contains
requests for hangers and
tie-down space, bulges with
forms and notes on odd-
sized pieces of paper . Plans
are already in the works
for additional hangers and
tie-downs, but the waiting
list is quite lengthy.
Although he's not
designated as the airport
manager, Mr. Munroe
spends about half his time
working on airport
problems, and made
several changes when he
received the operating
lease from the county .
"My first job was to
convince the county that
this airport is an asset to
them," he said. "I cannot
believe the coope?a tion
-between me and the ,
(county) Department of
Transportation. It's
super."
He said the county has
worked hard to make
several improvements in
the facilities at Avra
Valley, including resur-
facing the main runway,
alleviating drainage
problems at the wash rack,
installing a steam washer
and repairing runway
lighting.
Another change has been
the formation of the Avra
Valley Airport Advisory
Committee, a group of
pilots working with Mr .
Munroe to keep the airport
in good shape .
Mr. Munroe has watched
the issue of a · general
aviation airport for nor-
thwest Tucson • with in-
terest. The San Fran.cisco-
based consulting firm of
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell
and Co . has recommended
·that Avra Valley 's
facilities be upgraded to
serve as a general airport
rather than building
another airport.
• "There's no other place
for an airport," he said,
pointing out that Tucson
needs another facility. In
the Phoenix area,_ there are
-13 · general aviation
facilities, while Tucson has
only two .
The county has already
started ~nvironmental
impact and master plan
studies in an attempt to get
federal funds to expand
and improve the airport.
Growth of the airport and
its facilities would mean
more business for APEC,
but Mr. Munroe said ex-
pansion will also mean
more fixed base operators.
APEC currently offers
aircraft storage, rentals ,
fuel ~ales and general
maintenance. It also offers
flight training on a contract
basis between student and
instructor.
APEC is the Munroes'
first venture into the ad-
ministrative side of private
aviation. A, New England
native, Mr. Munroe is a
former Air Force officer
who has adopted flying as a
hobby.
The 1947 West Point
graduate moved to Tucson
because of a severely
asthmatic child 10 years
ago after owning and
operating a resort off Cape
Cod .
After his involvement
with several businesses in
Tucson , Mr . and Mrs.
Munroe purchased APEC .
"I paid for my education
last year," he said. ''We'-re
in the black now. But
Nancy keeps telling me,
'You bought your hobby.' I
almost never fly
anymore."
On weekdays , APEC
keeps the· airport open
from 8 a.m. until 5 p .m .
with a staff of 7, but on
Sundays, it's a Mom and
Pop operation that stays
open until noon .
Mr. Munroe gives high
marks to his employees,
including operations
manag~r Marla Rice.
"She's here six days a
week and really works
hard. She's really what
makes this place go.''
"We have a very com-
petent shop crew," he
continued, adding that he
had just hired Tom
Lampson, whose resume
includes experience with
Cohtinental and Cochise
airlines, as his service
manager . APEC also
employs two licensed
mechanics.
While other businesses
are looking at the economic
conditions with some
concern, Bill Munroe sees
the aviation inmdustry in a
different light.
"We don't seem to know
there's a depression on
here," he said. "We've
seen a-real increase in the
number of people who want
to learn to fly.''
He said the hobbiest may
find some problem witht
rising fuel costs, but the
main impact is felt in the
rising cost of airplane
maintenance.
• "One of the big problems
is getting parts because
some major manufac-
turers are . shutting down
big plants," he said. "But
the demand is still there.''
Expansion
plans rest
with county
ByWALTNEIT
The A vra Valley Airport
seems destined to grow.
The question is when. •·
"It's all a matter of
money," said John Bernal,
the county's deputy -
transportation director and
head of the department's
planning and program-
ming division. "We were
fortunate tyo get the money
this -year to surface the
main runway. Next year
we hope to do the ·crosswind
runway ."
State and regional
transportation planners
have been looking since
1978 at needs for a general
aviation airport. The
strong consideration has
been for a facility located
near to Tucson's northwest
area, replacing the
abandoned Freeway
Airport located near
Prince Road and Interstate
10.
The San Francisco-based
consulting firm of Peat,
Marwick, Mitchell & Co. -
which the county has
retained to prepare the
master plan and en-
vironmental impact
studies for expansion of the
Avra Valley facility -
looked over three · sites
before recommending that
Avra valley be expanded in
·lieu of building a new
airport in the northwest.
The sites considered
included acreage east of
Interstate 10 • near
Tangerine Road, west of
Interstate 10 near Cortaro
. Farms Road, and west of
the Freeway Airport site
near the Roger Road
wastewater treatment_
plant.
The consulting firm
concentrated its alter-
native study on the In-
terstate 10--Cortaro Farms
site, and eventually
recommended against it
after estimating
development costs of $3 .5
million for a single runway
facility . •
A parallel-runway
facility carried a cost
estimate of $10.9 million in
1918, according the the
study, with the large in-
crease in cost attributable
to an estimated $5.5 million
expenditure for flood
protection at the airport.
Mr. Bernal indicated that
the county is committed to
the Avra Valley facility,
but pointed out that the
county wants to solidify its
control over the airport
before any major ex-
pansion is begun.
The first step , he said, is
for the county to gain clear
title to the land from the
U.S. Bureau of Land
Management. He said the
county has begun
negotiations, but further
steps to gain the airport
acreage have been held up
since BLM requires that
the county prepare an
environmental impact
statement before deeding
over the land.
The same environmental
impact statement, when
completed, will be turned
over to the Federal
Aviation Administration as
part of the_ county's ap-_
plication for a ·majpr
airport expansion grant.
Mr. Bernal said county
officials held some in-
formal -talks with the FAA
about the possibility of
financing both A vra Valley
and a second northwest
airport. At that time the
county was advised that
__ the FAA has a policy that
precludes financing for two
airports .
The Peat, Marwick,
Mitchell interim study,
released in August 1979,
predicts that about 140
aircraft will be based at
Avra Valley, including 25
multi-engine airplanes, 110
single-engine planes and
five helicopters. The firm
estimtead that in 1979, 60
airplanes were based at Ute
airport, conducting about
64,000 flights during. the
year.
The study predicts •that
Avra Valley will be the
take-off-or landing point for
Low and easy
about 135,000 aircraft trips
in the year 2000.
State transportation
officials , who are ·
responsible for distributing
state aviation funds as well
as some FAA grant money
to different airports around ·
the state, have included
Avra Valley in the five-
year airport construction
plan starting in fiscal year
1980, with a -proposal that
$609,000 be spent on im-
provements there beteen
the 1981 and 1983 fiscal
years. for land acquisition,
Jigh~il!g,)_a . ru~wayj_ex-
tens1on ,·and 'llothep Im-
• provements.
The tentative • five-year
plan starting with fiscal
year 1981 nearly doubles
that figure, 'proposing that
$1.18 milliOJI be spent
thr_ough fiscal year 1984 for
runway reconstruction,
land acquisition, improved
landing signal systems and
other improvements.
.
J :t,.: .. J('
"--
so,a Table Sofa Table
Solid oak frame with • Columbian ook with
Chompogne laminate tropical walnut top :
top. Reg. $289 Reg $289
NOW $249 NOW $219.
June 12, 1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 13
Room to grow
Occaslon■I
Table
SALEI
A collection of our fine sofa
tables mode of oak ore now on
sale at unbelievable prices!
They ore craftep in the highest
quality that you 've come to
expect at Contents. While
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Accessories • Other
Pillows,. baskets, -Occasional
contemporary clocks, Tables
folding screens, oak
frame mirrors etc Bosket tables, coffee
• • tables, end tables, etc.
4753 E. Speedway-Open M -F 9:30-6:00 Sat-9:30-5:30 881-6900
COPING WITH INFLATION
thru REAL EST A TE . .--:·-t:' ...
HERE IS A FIRST-TIME OPPORTUNITY IN TUCSON TO LEARN ,HO~~~ \ ·
YOU CAN MAKE MONEY IN REAL EST ATE .,. '. ·:~-.
You are invited to attend a one day seminar on Real Estate Investments. This seminar features two pro~irian t Real Estate ·
investment instructors, who will explain in lay[)lan'.s terms how you can make money in Real Estate TODAY, EVEN IF YOU
HAVE LITTLE OR NO FUNDS TO INVEST .
• C. DANIEL MURR
• Instructor of 2 nationally known
Real Estate courses in Estate
Building and Real Estate problem
Solving.
• Past Director for the Arizona
Association of Realtors .
• 1976 President of the Arizona -
Association of Real • Estate Ex-
cliangors .
. ,•
JIM HOGAN
• Owner of Hogan School of Real
Estate.
Southern Arizona 's large~t Real
Estate School.
• 8 years teaching Real Estate and
Investment concepts, including a
nationally known seminar on Real
Estate Calculator Applications.
• Past President of Arizona
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BOTH INSTRUCTORS WILL BE TEACHING THIS PRACTICAL, DOWN TO EARTH SEMINAR FROM THEIR ACTUAL EXPERIENCES·
IN AN EASY TO UNDERSTAND FORMAT. THE SEMINAR WILL HELP YOU: * MAP-OUT YOUR RNANCIAL FUTURE • _ _
WHEN: Saturday June 21 _ Bam -5pm : BUILD YOUR PERSONAL WEAL TH r •••
WHERE: Aztec Inn, 102 N. Alvemon Way, Tucson MAKE INFLATION WORK FOR YOU-
TOTAL COST: $95.00 including course materials & coffee breaks. * OBTAIN FUTURE FINANCIAL SECURITY , -
To attend this seminar, fill out and detach the registration slip
orcall 327-4686
Mail it with your check, Visa or MasterCard number,
or a deposit of $50.00 in insure your seat at the seminar.
Mail to:
Sun West Seminars , Inc., 4023 E. Grant Rd., Tucson, AZ 85712
Sponsored by SUNWEST SEMINARS , INC. in association with
HOGAN SCHOOL OF REAL EST A TE •
,------------------------1 ~ Pltue register me for
~ COPING WITH INFLATION THRU REAL ESTATE (check ane)
I Here Is my checklor$ _____________ O Oeposlt D Ful payment
I ar VISA ____ ~ ____ MuterCard Na.
I Expritian date ___________ Or for Instant reglslrlllon • cal 327-4686 I, NAME I AOOIIESS ___________________ _
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--. -------------------------------------------
Page 14, The Arizona Territorial, June 12, 1980 ~;:· .,._ -.... -:" / ~ ... --.,;:·::;-. -~-~-=· __ :: :"'": .-·:-··r..•;
E.xplqr~ts /i_
9-rg ·anizing
Olsson, Prouty 6 Hill Psych~therop~~!s A new Explorer Scout
Post will be organized 011
Tue sday, June 17 at the
Golder .Ranch Fire Station,
:l535 E. Hauser Road. The
meeting starts at 7:30 p.m.
and boys who would like to
become Explorers are
urged to attend_
The fire district already
sponsors a Cub Scout Pack
in lht; Golder Ranch area_
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,•,-... -;._ .. , ~-·
•
NEW EAGLES -Four members of Boy Scout Troop 160 recently achieved the rank of
Eagle Scout. From left they are: Bob Marchese, 16, sone of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Marchese; Jeff Kramer, 16, son . of Dr . and Mrs. Robert Ratcliffe; Jim Duffey, 17, son of
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Duffey; and Mike Woolsey, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Woolsey.
All but Woolsey are students at Sabino High School. Woolsey attends Milton Academy.
"'
Russell HaU appointed
to head JA Association
\ ,~
: ,; .. \ . ...•.
'.(
Russell Hall
The board of directors of
Junior Achievement of
Tucson has appointed
Russell W _ Hall to the
position of executive
director for the
association.
Mr. Hall will aid in the
qevelopment of Junior
Achievement programs,
fund-raising . activities',
public relations , financial
development and long-
ALL SEAL YS ON SALE •
WARE HOU S E-T 0-Y OU-PRICES
Thursday, Friday & Saturday
JUNE 12, 13 -& 14
range planning.
Prior to relocating to
Tucson, Mr . Hall served as
executive director for
Junior Achievement-Quad
Cities Area, Inc. which
incorporated 12 counties in
Iowa and Illinois . He joined
the Junior Achievement
• organization in 1976 as
director of project
business .
Mr. Hall received . a
degree in Business Ad-
ministration from St.
Ambrose College in 1973.
Jack B. Jewett, chair-
man of the executive
director selection com-
mittee, said, "We are
proud to have Mr . Russell
as a part of the JA team.
His past experience and
extensive background with
JA-Quad Cities Area
provided unique
qualifications which
caused the selection
committee to unanimously
select him over the other
well qualified candidates.
Sorensen
accepts
TV post
The Tanque Verde School
District Boa rd of Trustees
has ·named Lewis T.
Sorensen. currentlv the
superintendent oi' the
Sunn yside School District.
to the superintendency at
Tanque Verde .
l\1r . Sorensen , 44, will
replace Haymond Haugen
. ~~'? Ju ly I. According to Board
0'? 'iS' !'resid ent Jaimie Turner, ~~ <'>~ 25%•50%■75% l\1r .. Sorensen will have a
~ Q~v two-year contract with
'=> ~ OFFIii Tanque Ve rde and an
J_'\~ • ••• a.nnual salary, yet to be ~r • tmahzcd ,o tabout$38,000.
I all merchandise from our regular . l'rior to ~is posiJ ion .as
f . k Sunn y sid e s Superin-
ine stoc • tende.nt, Mr. Sorensen
• • • k t • d t served as superintendent of
Ca'l'lan coo ware,semware go ges the Catali na Foothills
• cookbooks• gourmet foods• Le District from 1976 to 1978. • , ·h LTD Creuset • Cuisinart • gift items • He has ha d 20 years of I C CZ n etc., etc... experience as a teacher
:i I I I ' u.i • • • a nd an admi nistrator. m 1 ~ Camino Principal .supt. Haug~n submitted
z ! • ~ 886 5223 his r esignation to . the ~ I t -J ■ Tanque Verde Board of
~ tJ · Trustees Feb. 26 . The
~ -<v~. l 0:00aro.-. 5:00pm dis,trict's fir?.t . superin-
'-9 G \'ti~'\ tcndentt> he held _'the
OUR ' ..... "'"'" _-·.,. ,,_ .,_ ,., ,JJ\.)Sjtjpp [pr .~.~Y~P.,,.~~~r~.-~,•.,.,'.,
GETTING STA .. TED -County a·nd Marana School
District officials got together at the site of Denny Dunn
Park on Massengale Road west of Thornydale Elemen-
tary School to break ground for the five-acre park.
Dignitaries turning over the •fir st shovels are (from left):
Jon James, sales manager for-Wood Bros. Homes; Tony
D' Auria, development services representative for Wood
Bros.; Vivian Dunn, widow of Denny Dunn for whonf'tnf'
park is named; H.B. "Mac" McColluni; Joan Swetland,
Moore awarded
top OGJH honor
Orange Grove Junior.
I ligh eonf e rred its most
prestigiou s honor the Rohr
/\ward. upon e ig hth gra de r
Er ic Moore durin g
1fro m ot ion cere m on ie ,
Th ur sday ni ght. Jun<,. 5 a t
Am ph it heat e r High School.
Eric's name will be in-
~cribe d on th e Rip Hohr
Trop hy, a trophy honoring
the memory of form e r
(Ir a nge Grov e
mathe matic s teache r llip
l{ohr . who di e d August 10 ,
1975.
According to school
official, th e criteria us e d
ror selection of a student
ror the award include
"academic e xcell e nce.
outstanding citizenship and
contributions to the school
community through par-
tieipfttion 'in activities that
,,. (
~
Eric Moore
mak e -Orange Grove a
better place.··
~ric has maintained a
perfect grade average , as
,veil as participating in
:tthldies and other school
act ivili e s.
1:3,wrn • 8NIN30cJV8 • WV • AH<l'm8018-'
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CJJook§Jiop
Thank you for making
our Grand Opening
such a success.
7211 Nort he rn Ave .
297-4843
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GARDENING • PSVCHOLOGrV • BIOGRAPHY
June 12, 1980, The Arizona Territorial, Page 15
GIRL SCOUTS REGISTERING CAMPERS
Registration is now being . accepted for Camp
Whispering Pines, a Girl · Scout operated camp on Mt.
Lemmon for girls aged 7 through 17. An open house for
those interested in touring the camp facilities a~d meeting
the staff will be Sunday, June 15. The first camp session
begins June 22. •
EXTRA LARGE TEAK
DOUBLE BOOKCASE
. with 8 adjustable shelves. '
(unassembled)
. 47½"w'.X76¾''h.X12½"d.
REG. s23aoo
SPECIAL
county parks and recreation comm1ss1on; Terry
Lehriling, chairman of the county parks and recreation
commission; Alicia Meza, county parks and recreation
commission; Gene Laos, county parks. director; Nels
·Havens, Marana School District superintendant; Don ,.
• Pierson, Thornydale Elementary School principal; and
Wanda Janssen, executive aide to County Supervisor E.S.
"~ud" Walker. County crews began clearing the land for
the park Tuesday. Wood Bros. Homes donated the land to
the county for the park.
s15900
• 11 111 • • Tllr.\L'IU lill.il11i,:
Open Mon thru Sat 9am to 6pm Fri until 9pm
copenfiagen
,
4146 E. Speedway (Between Alvernon & Swan)
795-0316
We have a sale
on long distance
~everyday. ~· .,
ffl l r ~~~
~ ~ '"'~ y..
~ W(i'(U \
itW
Save.up to 60%
Weekends. Fron1ll
p.m. Friday through 5
p.m. Sunday, you can get
the best rate s g oin g . So
make a g ood weeke nd
, b e tte r. Ca ll a fri e nd. Or
b r in g a s mil e t o fa mily
fo lk s in faraway pl aces .
Every ni g h t b etwee n 11
p .m . a nd 8 a.rn. J ust t hi nk
abo ut w hat t im e it will be
in t he c ity yo u'r e calli ng .
If yo ur friends li ve o ut.
west. they'll get yo ur
11 p .m . call at 10 . If
t hey liv e back east , yo ur
early morning call will
cat c h the m an h our or two
la ter.
.. ..... ~ .
~ I I
. J1 •
Sav• up to 350/o
Weeknig ht ~ Sµnda y
throug h Friday fr om 5-
to 11 p.rn. Take a fe w
• minutes aft e r dinne r t o
li g ht up som eon e's ni g h t .
If nothing e lse , they 'll
t hink yo u 'r e a b ig
spen de r. Eve n th ou gh
yo u 'r e n ot.
• Ho li_~@Y._~-a ll day lo ng .
On Chr ist m a s , New Year':;
Day. Labor Day, .h i!:,; Hh
and Thanksgiving . lt ·s t he
p erfect time tu ring up
friend s and family . A.ncl
if the ho liday falls on a
weekend, or you place
your call at night , you'll
save eve n m ore .
@ -
Mountain Bell
~ f' ~ ,:,,:,
; ~) : ·~ j-'"'-~f,%,
. ~l.,, .. ,--
Always dial direct .
To make the most of
th ese savings . dial 1 +
are a co d e + number. Area
co d es a r e li s t e d in the
fro nt o f yo lll· Te leph one
Directory.
171ese ra t es a pply t o
out -of-state call s. \o ur
Directo1y t e ll s how to
san· on lon g d is t a n ce ca ll s
,,i t hi i1 yo ur state .
Rem e mbe r. t he tim e you
place tlw ca ll determ ines
th e rate. It won't cl1ange
if you ta lk beyond th e
r e duce d rate period . So
make use of our t ime ly
sales. Reach ou t and
to u ch so m eone.
-..,........ .-----
......... .,. ... ,Mlt1ti1NI"'
. LOCAl.1 PIIOTOGRAPHER EXHIBITS WORK
"(\~t
FOR BEAUTY,
DURABILITY,
VARIETY
AND SHAPE
Tucson photographer Joe Cardner is displaying · his
collection of Sm,ithwestern scenic photography.during the
month of June at Western Savings and Loan Association,
:mo2 N. Campbell Ave . Mr .· Carder's photography took
best of show at the 1980 Pima County Fair, as well as
placing first in color landscapes and a public appeal
award .
"We Invite You to View One of the Most
Distinctive Collections of Imported &
Domestic Ceramic Tile in Arizona"
MEXICAN, ITALIAN, SPANISH,
l ERRA COTTA & HAND PAINTED
"ADVICE & TOOLS AVAILABLE FOR
THE DO-IT-YOURSELFER"
EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR, DECORATED,
TEXTURED AND SMOOTH , GLAZED & UNGLAZED
FOR WALLS, FLOORS. WALKS AND PATIOS
FULL LINE OF
HARDWOOD FLOOR COVERING
APACHE TILE
323-8423
5324 E. SPEEDWAY BLVD.
NEXT TO HOLIDAY HOUSE INTERIORS
Bob & Karen McDonald
Residential & Commercial Sales
Real Estate Counsel ing
887-4200 or 297-5777
IN NORTHWEST and NORTH CENTRAL
TU(::SQN
Lovely 3 bedroom home featuring
l.'--,·'',-,',I ~,,-.,...A HOURS: Tues ., Thurs., Fri. 10-5
·"'""' ~kV. Sot.10-3 ·w INSTALLAOON AVAILABLE BY APACHE TILE
ii:
• den with wet bar. Fenced rear yard
& decorator touches of wrought
iron throughout. $66,900
I v,SA i •~iNiWNii\\'M'#.AW~Wl,~~:~;:~:,-;;tUIMt Onluir21
Companion Realty, Inc.
7010 N. Oracle Rd.
THE TERRITORIAL wants your news items
CALL 297-1107
'-:c _ Tucson. Az . 85704
(602) 297-8331
.L.......
Insuranee
for · your future.
'':'.ffi"
>I·'.{. ":'..,:._
A real estate investment-fa· your home is ,.the -b.est· • ., .. ,
•financial .ins~rarice you .~an have Jor the:_f1;1tur~-~.. ' ',
• And as the market gets tougher, ifs even more. .· I ,:
important to insure ·that tiiisurance. A( Tucson ._, ' ,,;
Realty and Trust • we repr.esent. pver 60 insur-
"'-u ce comp anies, with policies as tJnique as the
~es we se ll. Our in'surance agents will assist on
7
deciding which one is right for you ...
·-...
just as our real estate agents
would help find you the
'··1p
right home and the
right financing , despite
today's tough market.
·,
'·
"son Realty & Trust
~,surance.
•~ insure your future.
" "
~'
Rath Variety Pack Slice ..
Prices subject to change Mono~.
FedMar _,_ ~ <..
~ ·~ • America's greatest general_ store
Phoenix:
301 0 Grand Ave.
2820 W. Dunlap
740 W. Camelback
H15E.~•-
Tucson:
1820 E. Ft. Lowell Rd.
7030 E. 22nd St.
5255 E. Br~a,
., ,, ..
~~
--.
·._·.l ,..
<. 296·6145 .
.....,~
c:.1 East B roadway .
~74
-~
~~
view from
the kitchen
sink
By RUTH ILIFF
Since school is out. my two children hav e attempted to
turn this hous ehold into a n office of consumer affairs: a
place where the y ca n eat all da y.
Regular rea ders of this s pace already know that I
sometimes object to the fact that I am still expected to
produc e three interesting a nd de licious meals a da y .
What, in fact. I do is produce three EDIBLE meals; in-
teresting a nd delicious are in a realm into which ·t-venture
only occasionally a nd then usually by accident.
So the every half hour "What can I eat?" was getting
some strong answers by about the third day of summer
vacation. '.
I partially solve the problem by diverting the con-
versation to some other area . Our dialogue runs
something like this :
"What can I have to eat?"
"Let's get ready to go swimming.•: •
"OK. But ·first can I have something to eat?"
. "Where's your suit?"
·J don't know. What have we got to eat?''
• Look in the bathroom.''
T,1e Board of 1Health may not look kindly on parts of this
exctpnge but there isn't a parent with full custody of the
child1en in the summer who hasn 't carried on similar
s im ulnneous monologues .
The ,rick is to carry it on so long and to interject so
ma ny n1•w topics or to send the kids in so many directions
that the~ will see or hear something else meantime which
distracts '.hem from their original objective.
Another more straightforward approach is to answer
··What can I-have to eat?" with "Bread."
You han) to be already moving away from the
que s tion e r or in a position to move real fast when you do
this becaust· the howls that accompany this reply are
horrendous. •
.. Bread·~--Big Brother wails. Just bread? All I can have
to eat is bread?"
I console mys e lf that he has not yet been reduced to the
state of Oliver Twh,t so that he's willing to sing about
gn1d .
And that's just a s well becau se I don't know how to
rria~e that either.
WILDERNESS SLIDE SHOW AT UA
A free public s lid e progra m on some of Arizona's most
·beautiful re mot e desert areas will be given Thursday,
June 12 at 7 : 30 p.m . in th e Univers ity of Arizona's Physics
a nd Atmospheric Sciences Building, Room 201. The Sierra
Club is sponsoring the program , which will be presented
b~· Dick Burch, wilderness coordinator for the Bureau of
La nd Management of Arizona. Mr. Burch has spent the
past 18 months coor9inating teams of anthropologists .
bio log ists and geologists to survey and photgraph the
counti;y be tween the desert mountain ranges of Southern
Arizona and the Arizona Strip north of the Colorado River.
A MOVI.NG STORY
Because of health, owners have had to
leave their home-which they've cherished
for 18 years. •You will fall .in love, too, as
you just step ' inside the .foyer of . this
exquisite 2 bedroom . den with formal
dining room. An atrium with Balinese
. ~ •F.i~ lli... fountain open the whole house, as you gaze
_,,, ·'lii&h'U -. out at the pool and lighted ga_rden area .
BONNIE BEST Cooking would be a delight in this large
BROKER kitchen with breakfast room . On almost an
' ~~ .!..!, $152,000. Call to.day tor a private •!'owing •
~
• ~vfRJ acre of fruit trees and palms. Offered at
(}C(.t1.1&1.c ffw.,
_7110 N. Oracle R~ .. .Suite 105 .P~. _297 -251~
JON STEFAN
A lifetime Foothills
resident at your
service ..
79S-0S00
,.,. t;j, 299-3312
·. T® REALTY &TRUST CO.
2961 E. Grant Rd.
Tucson, Arizona 85716
·'since terr_itorial days"
MA~NING-O'DOWD Co
· 6 1 REALTORS
-·---' aw QUALITY
MAGNI -F-iCENT
Med iterrean 5100 sq. ft. p l us 4 bdrm including guest
quarters on 5 full acres with both city and private well.
Pool and a huge 30 X48 Butler. Financing ava il able
$450 ,000.
886-5711
'to
,._...... . . . ' • . . • . . .,. . . ...-.,..,~,,.-.... J.& -.~,:-:..,.t.~ '~-~~""'7"'?.' ..•• .,.,,..~,.,..
•••• , .• • -·". :;i; •• ,, •• .,. .• ,,.,,.., ... -i.~~,. , ... °"'' • -~ • . June12,1980,TheArizo,naTerritorial,Pane17
c,Slidrt:womenfina I ly gettiri'Q f ci5h'l'Or't0ttent100 --~_ ·_ ~
By PEGGY BARNES
My mother got the short
end of things. She stopped
growing at an early age
and then watched her
classmates pass her by.
Mom stands 4' 10" inches
tall and has spent her life
wondering .why clothing
manufacturers expected
her to grow to fit their
sizes.
When you have short.
arms, short legs and weigh
less than 110 pounds,
nothing fits just right. It
means .alterations on
. almost everything she buys
and she often just gives up
on shopping.
Until recently you would
have thought Mom was
unusual, but she's not.
She's one of 2.3 million
women in the United State~
who are . 5!3" tall or under
and need petite sizes and
styles to look good .
Until recently these
women rarely could buy a
new dress and wear it that
evening because it always
had to be altered.
Recognizing the need,
Levy's is introducing
Petite World, a . new
department in women's
clothing tha_t will • include
an entire range of petite
clothing conveniently
located in one area.
Unlike junior sizes that
are not cut or styled for the
mature woman, petite
garments feature shorter
sleeves and legs, darts
placed differently in tops
and blouses , and shorter
lengths in jackets and tops.
Items are cut fuller to
accommodate all figure
types in the . shorter
woman.
The total shop concept,
which Levy's Divisional
Merchandising Manager
Sue Zegers says is the first
of its kind in Tucson, will
feature coats, dresses,
junior dresses, petite
coordinates, blazers,
shirts, blouses, skirts and
~ pants.
Some of the manufac-•
turers include Trisse,
Vera, Tracy Petites,
Coordin, and Devon
Petites .
Petite World is expected
to be in full swing with a
trained full-time staff by
July 1, Ms. Zegers says.
A petite fashion show is
planned in September to
educate women on how to
buy for their petite figures.
Sizes will range from 4 to
14 with a few garments in
size 16. The appropriate
size in a petite · line is
usually o_ne size smaller
that a woman would wear
in junior sizes. For
example, a woman who is a
size seven junior would
wear a six petite . She
probably would wear an
eight in women's sizes.
The petite woman
usually prefers vertical
lines in close fitting designs
because they make her
look taller. Outfits of one
color also look good
• because they don't chop the
short woman in half -and
make her look even
shorter, Ms. Zegers says .·
Cowboy stories
Wildhorse Shorty will be
spinning cowboy yams and
providing homemade
music at 2 p.m. Tuesday ,
June 17 at Woods Library,
3455 N. First Ave.
The free program is part
of Sonoran Heritage
summer activities for
children .
Certain fashion looks are
not right for the petite and
should be avoided; but that
doesn't mean petite
clothing cannot be high
fashion. It's a matter of
choosing the right fashion,
she adds.
High necklines, over-
sized handbags, and super ·
high heels all make the
woman look out of
proportion, Ms. Zegers
explains .
• Blazers look good, but
should be short -about
two inches below the waist
for a skirt and sl~ve
length to wear with slacks.
Fi11ger-tip length is too
long. •
With the popularity of the
classic, preppy look, in-.
eluding subtle plaids ,
oxfords • and tone on tone
colors, it is a perfect year
for the i>etite woman to find
a large· sele~tion of flat-
tering garments.
The principle of mixing
bold colors is changing for
fall in favor of subtle color
changes such as pink with
burgundy and light blue
•
£Qegant cpQant~
. for Dad's Day
O"f come in and choose from
--our wide selection of plants and
nature photography for his den Qr office
!J11te1tio1t cpQant COegigklg
4757 E. Speedway, just east of Swan 795-7008
wnnnavy.
Slacks are popular,
selling . two to one over
dresses and skirts, but they
will include more detail
like side buttons and belts.
The classic medium
width in the cut of the leg
which is flattering to petite
women also will be the
leading seller, Ms. Zegers
predicts.
20%,0FF
All "Hair Services & Body Massaqe ..
(FO~ MEN 11ND WOMEN) •
i-;~~€7rmi;c"ru~-;~;;:-O-;;-; (THll OffE:~ 11\Jl11L110LE:
fON 11LL H111R lE:R\JICH & BODY Ml1lll1G€ I THRU JUN€. ·aoJ
l---~!_J~~8,S: ___ J <NOT 11\J111L~BLE w1TH c:H~11J
Anton's Hair Concepts 297-1521
7110 N. Oracle Rd.
(11T IN1111ND OMCL0
IN THE: Nl1NINI ~INl1NCll1L CENTER
tiOURS:
TUE:Vil1T ·8 ,30·5,00
CLO\E:D MONDl1Yl
-J.B. Enterprises,--
*New location · 3801 ·N. o.-acle 8N•3061
Checkthese Father's Day Deals ,on
• EMMY AWARD WINNING TVs
--~
--$ --.. -VIRD
BROADCAST
~ CONTROLLED
~COLOR
..//JJAR"\l..
"'·· PRECISION
EUCTIONIC
,u111,
25 " diagonal Color TV /25YM0825K
COUNTRY STYLING ... cabinet constructed
of a combination of genuine hardwood
solids and simulated wood .
G_ENERRL ELECTRIC VIR II.
WHEN YOU CHRNGE CHRNNELS
IT ADJUSTS THE COLOR FDR YOU,
AUTDMATICALL Y.
·S7BB
(With Dual Mode Remote Control)
25" diagonal Color TV /25YM0860C
MODERN STYLING ... cabinet constructed of
a combination of genui ne hardwood solids,
ven~ers and simulated wood .
GENERAL ELECTRIC VIA II.
WHEN YOU CHANGE CHANNELS
IT ADJUSTS THE COLOR FDR YOU,
AUTDMATICALL Y.
9249
10" diagonal Color TV /10AB0406K
Oak fini~h on high impact plastic.
• Keyboard Quartz •
. Precision Electronic
Tuning
1499 I .
19" d i agonal Color TV /19EC0772K
CONTEMPORARY STYLING ... oak finish on
' high impact plasti c .
GENERAL ELECTRIC VIR II.
W_HEN YOU CHANGE CHANNELS
IT ADJUSTS THE COLOR FDR YOU,
AUTDMATICRLL Y.
(With Dual Mode Remote Control)
''f/ thi spotlights
1/f onOad!
. I\ ~ ~
Fatlter's Day
Super Special
Energy Saver
Best Buy Refrigerator
s499.oo
•• I
• Single-Knob, 82 Channel,, Quartz
Precision Electronic Tuning
19" diagonal Color TV /1 9EC0742W
Walnut finish on high impact plastic .
GENERAL ELECTRIC VIR II.
WHEN YOU CHANGE CHANNELS
IT ADJUSTS THE COLOR FDR YOU,
AUTDMATICRLL Y.
~
S!l-4B
17" diagondl C:~lor TV/ 1.7 AC0602W
V'{qin\.11 finish on high impact plastic.
Also located at ·3525 _E-.dGrant Rd. 795•9803·
,.,.,.,.. .... .,.111 ... ,,. ... , . -
Public NOtices . n=T~~~; aassif i•ds;: 297•1101
1
••• •
1
' ----
ANTIQUES
Antique Clock Mart
Buy • Sell • Trade
Expert Repair -Refinish
5665 E. 22nd Sr.
747-5674
-
APPLIANCES
FOR SALE
-
Almond colored GE oven rang
30 ", never been used; still I
sh ipping carton -S275.00 or bes
I
t
off,,r . 296-1355.
AT DA2, I
-
-
AUTOS FOR SALE
-
1977 ,a1sun 280Z . 26,000 miles
AM -~ ·'A stereo, new tires, S6500
Phon e 297-8208 or after 6 p .m
624 ·8095 .
AT DA 2,,2 5
T · 1978 Trans-AM, low m i leage, T
top and four speed . 298 ·2876 .
24 AT DA 23,2
-'67 Ford ½ ton 4X4 , 390, , speed
LWB , $950 firm . '76 Ford
Granada , good cond ition, PS
PB , a ,r, auto., $2650. 889 -1727 .
AT DA 2•
-1967 Buick Electra . AT , PS , PB
radio. Runs good . 4 good tires
BEST OFFER . Call 886-9357
evenings and weekends.
ATOATFNE
-1977 Chevette, low mileage
excellent condition, clean, 2
door,, speed. S2800. Call after 6
p .m. 7'7·9189.
AT DA24
-FOR SALE 1978 Ford 1h ton
Pickup F150XL T, AM·FM
stereo, AC, PS , PB, regular gas,
28,000 original miles, call M· F (8
toS) 294·1.fn>.
AT DA 24.25,26,27
-1965 Olds F85 • needs brake
work. AT AC, PS, PB, radio, 4
good tires. BEST OFFER . Call
886·9357 evenings and weekends.
ATDATFNE
•1976 Chevy Nova, 4 door, PS ,
PB. AM·FM cassette, power
s•eerlng, cruise control, landau
lop . S2300or best offer. 74-0290.
/', T DA 24 ,25,26,27
-,n . 1975 Datson B·210, 2 door sedan .
Asking S2300 . Call 298 ·7598 .
ATDA24 24
-
-
AUTOS WANTED
Cash for I unk cars and trucks. I
give discounts to servicemen.
Call Steve at 294 ·9475, after 5 : 30
call 74·0168.
AT DATFN
-·
-
CONDO FOR RENT
-
Attractive 2 bedroom, l~ ba1 ~
condominium. Beautlfu ,
mountain views, coverer'
parking, newly redecorated, al
appliances, l32S. a monlh. 32 6
2l9Sor l'9S-2793.
AT DA 2',2E
-
-TUIIIII
BOB CLARK
DOG TRAINING
"In Your Home"
*Problem
*Obedience
*Protection Training
791-3624
-
FERTI.IZERS
Extra fine pulverized fertilizer.
S6.50 yard delivered. Cook
Fertilizers. 887-016ol .
AT DATFN
-
-
HELP WANTED
-
Part time Thursdays. Inserting
newspapers. No experience
necessary . Clerlcal background
helpful. Call Terrilorlal
Publishers at 297 · 1107 or visit
our offices at 1 w . Orange Grove
off Oracle Rd . and complete an
a ppllcalion form .
AT DATFN ·E
-Part·tlme janitor for evenings-
c ity wide In five offices .
Rel iable, loyal , good tran-
sportation . 74·0275 .
AT OA24,25
Re
No
ex 1
Receptionist light typing ,
Northslde law office. No legal
ex perience required, 742·4116 .
-
-
-
AT DA24
HOME FURNISHINGS
BOU&HT AND SOLD
Good used furniture and ap·
pllances. Call Another Buy . 790-
8137 .
AT DA 23,24,25,26
-Quality living room sets,
bedroom sets, dinette sets,
appliances and more. Another
Buy . 2021 S. Craycroft. 7'90-8137 .
-
-
AT DA 23,24,25,26
HOUSE FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED
House for rent. 2 bedroom, 2
bath, very clean . Located near
Oracle and Roger. Pool and
jacuzzi available . $350.00 per
month, with lease . Call Rob 622 ·
411 , days, 887 ·9477 evenings
AT DA 24
-paclous 3 bedroom , 2 bath .
Excellent Eastslde ne i gh ·
orhood . Kolb·Golf L i n k s .
arge, shady, walled yard, new
arpet, plenty of storage .
395 .00 . 296· 1355 .
AT DA 2A
-bedroom, former model. Spic
nd Span, professionally land·
scaped . Six monlhs m in i mum
ease, references. Jean 297 ·3'70
r Kerry 299 ·0099.
AT DA24 -5.-clMI 2 .._, 2 llatlt
'-IIIIOlllt la OrdleNI Rlvtr.
IIICIUdts walller-41rytr Ill .... , ... ~---· ,..._llltdllltWlllltrNII-...-,, ....... .,, ...... . ~-... ..,. ....... .
..... , ... , II Pi__,~ ..-.-------· c.11 ,,, .. , ""· --
AT D#. TFlll·E
mwt.'DUSETHE~.
~CLASSIFIEDS!i,.f'.fatt l
£.mBCALL 297-llt7~:'&.W.M _______ _
IISURAIICE
DON
MATLOCK
t·our J\'or1l1!4itlP
FARMERS AGENT
• 297-727l i.· ·
For AH Your Insurance Needs
AUTOS, HOMEOWNERS, LIFE, BOATS,
BUSINESS, MOBILE HO.ES
7110 North Oracle Road ' • . , •
Nan i ni Financial Center a 1 •
Tucson, Az. 85704
Res. 297 -0892
IIIT1IUCTIDN
SUMMER PRESCHOOL
Ages 3-6. 9· 11: 30, June 91h to
August 1st. Limited enrollment.
Casas Adobes Prep, 410 w.
Magee Road . 297-7660 or 297 ·
2338.
AT DA24,24
Hatha Yoga ..... experlence ii!
Classes begin June 7th. Call 297 ·
]t,00,
AT DA24
Tutoring In reading. Ex ·
perienced teacher with reading
speclallst degree. Grades 1st
thru 3rd . Phone 297·9518 .
AT DA24
PRIVATE CLARINET IN•
STRUCTION . Experienced,
Senior In college. For beginning
and Intermediate students. Call
297·7007.
AT DA 24
Child need help? Tutoring in
reading, language and math by
certified teacher and reading
specialist. S7 .00 per hour. Call
297·5332 .
AT DA 24
ABC DR UM SCHOOL
Professional quality instruction .
All styles taught. Lessons in·
elude: rudlements, theory,
technique, chart reading , with
emphasis on creativity. 297 ·6033.
AT DA 24,25,26,27
LEGAL ASSISTANCE
LEGAL ASSISTANCE. No
charge for initial consultation .
Robert Arentz, Attorney at Law,
Nanln i Financial Center, 7110 N .
. Oracle Road, Sulie 106, 297 ·7377.
AT OATFN
Watter L. Henderson
Zipf & Henderson, Attorneys At
Law
No charge for first visit. Casas
Adobes Professional Plaza . 6977
N. Oracle Road. 297 -6800.
AT DA 15, 16, 17, 18, 19·40
MISC. FOR SALE
New flotation bed for sale .
Queen size, frame and base, ten
y ea r guarar,tee,-SJ00 .00 . Cal l
624 -9128 evenings. Ask for
Rebecca .
AT DATFN ·E
Or iginal OeGrazia pa inting for
sale valued at $5500 . Best offer.
Gerri 296 ·2373.
AT OATFN
Wh ite Sears refrigerator . 16
cubic foot, excellent condition,
frost free. $150 .00 or best offer .
7'5·2125 .
AT DA 24
Above g r Qund pool , 4'x15 ',
pumps included. S100.00 . 745 ·
2125 .
AT DA 24
Stereo equipment, low, low
prices on all audio components;
includes every major brand. For
price quotation call 790-3822 .
AT DA 24
1971 Super Beetle. 4 x 8 wall unit
with psychodellc lights. 19,000
BTU air conditioner. 1913 Lestel
piano. 887 ·8822 .
ATDA24
•tGRCYCLE
FOIIALE
FOlt SALE: 1'11 IC__.kl '90.
onty 1.-miles. like ,_ con ·
dltlon, c.ll 1a•7G .,_ S p.ffl .
~TFlll·E
PETS
AKC regl•terect Lhasa Apso
puppies tor sale. Born 4· 17-IO. To
see, pllOne 745-2385 after 6 p.m .
or 298·21'8 days and aSk for
Harold . -
AT DA 21,22,23,24
IOOIIIIATE
WANTED
Male, 21, needs hOnest, rellable
male to Share 2 bedroom
townhome. Five minutes from
base. S175.00 Including utilities.
7~7-9010 or 790-9777 ,
AT DA 24
SERVICES
JERRY'S carpet service .
Carpets cleaned, repaired or
installed at reasonable prices
too. 888 -J6,j2 .
AT[?ATFN
Hol lday Housekeeping Service.
Husband and wife team, 18
dependable years. Free window
estimates. Call 742 -5234.
AT DATFN
Southwest landscape, main ·
tenance . Experienced ,
dependable. 55 .00 per hour plus
expenses. Call Tracy 326 ·.SW or
325 ·641 .
AT DA 24,25
Husband and wife clean ing
team, reasonable rates. Phone
after s p .m . 294·2294 . Military
approved .
AT DA 24
Dependable college student
Nilling to pet·house sit for
summer . Call Tracy at 326 ·58'5
or 325·641.
AT DA 24 ,25
Certified graphoanalyst .
(handwriting specialist). Will
offer c lasses, workshops and
lectures along with personality
assessments. Phone Jan MIiis,
886-2889 .
AT DA 24,25 ,26,27
PM CLEANING • Carpets and
janitorial service . Residential ,
. commercial and apartments.
• Personal satisfaction guaran·
teed. 297·3'91 or 297·643 .
AT DA 24,25,26,27
Curious abOut the value of your
home? No obligation. Call Kitti
749-9514 or 790 ·7311. C·21 D ·M
Really.
AT OA23,24
TOWNHOUSES
FOIIBIT
Neat as a pen I 2 bedroom un-
furnished townhome. Huge
backyard with separate patio.
Spacious layout. Country kit-
chen with appliances. Near
Wilmot and Escalante. $295 .00
with six month lease or $310 .00
per month. Call K lttl 749·9514
evenings.
AT DA23,24
KOLB & ESCALANTE AREA
Rent this 3 (BR), 1·¾ bath
townhome for $350 .00 per month.
Close to D·M, busllne, com-
munity pool. Fenced rear yard.
Call Pam 795-3805 -881 ·6300.
( INOEVCO), Realtors.
AT DATFN
Spacious 2 bdrm ., 2 bath
townhouse 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 297 · 1107 or 299 -459 eves. or
weekends.
AT DATFN ·E
WANTED
WANTED
CLEAN FILL DIRT
NW area homeowner needs
clean fill dirt to fill in from rai n
damage. If you don 't know what
to do with your extra , call 297 -
0635 after 6 p .m. weekdays,
anytime weekends for delivery
address.
AT DATFN·E
NEED CASH?
Sell your H.S. class r ing -up to
S70 .00 paid. We also buy 10k, 14k,
18k gold . Phone 327 -2927 or 881 ·
69"3 anytime.
IN THE SUPER LOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN ANb FOR THE COUNTY
OF PIMA
CL YOE E. BUCHANAN and
BEATRICE BUCHANAN,
husband and wife, Plaintiffs, vs.
MICHAEL MASON and JANE
DOE MASON, husband and wife;
et al, Defendants. No . 185383
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
SPECIAL EXECUTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the above-named Plaintiff
recovered Judgment In lhe above·
named Court on May 6, 1980,
against lhe Defendant MICHAEL
MASON In the amount of
$50,227 .41, plus accrued costs anc:
Interest thereon at the rate of eight
and one-half percent (8.5%) per
annum from April 16, 1980, until
paid, and pursuant to a Special
Writ of Execution Issued by said
Court on May 8, 1980, !he following I
described real property wlll be ,
sold at public auction to satisfy
said Judgment, on !he 17th day of
June, 1980, al lhe hour of 10:00
o'clock A .. m ., al the east Qoor of
the new Pima County Court
House, Tucson, Arizona : The
South half of the Northwest
Quarter of the Southwest Quarter
of Section 20, Township 13 South ,
Range 16 East, of the Gila and Salt
River Base and Meridian, EX·
CE PT that portion thereof IV Ing
w ithin Sold iers Trail Road, as
established In Book 2 of Road
Maps, pages 181 and 182 of Record
In the Office of the County
Recorder of Pima County .
DATED this 13day of May , 1980.
CLARENCE w. DUPNIK, Sheriff
of Pima County, Arizona By K.A .
Kampe SGT . Deputy Sher iff
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
May 29, 1980
June 5, 12 , 1980
Req : Waterfall , Econom l dis,
Caldwell & Hanshaw, P .C.
A ttornevs at Law
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF PIMA
BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO . OF
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
IN ANO FOR THE COUNTY
OF PIMA
UNIVERSAL WALLBOARD,
INC ., PLAINTIFF vs. RICHARD
MUDGE and MRS. RICHARD
MUDGE, husband and w ife,
DEFENDANTS . No. T -11964
NOTICE OF GENERAL
EXECUTION SALE OF REAL
PROPERTY
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that In obedience to the Writ of
General 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, al public auction, all of the
right, title, Interest, claim and Hen
which the parties named in said
Judgment ·had or have In and lo
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 5467.50,
together with accrued and ac -
cruing interest and costs since the
dale of entry of said Judgment,
plus attorney's fees of $200 .00.
The sale will be held at the East
front door of the New Pima County
Court House, also sometimes
known as the main entrance of
said Court House, i n Tucson ,
Arizona, on July 1, 1980 at the hour
of 10:00 A .M . lo sell the following
described real property to the
highest bidder : Lot 108, CASA
ADOBES WEST No. 2, Pima
County, according to the Map or
Plat of record in the Office of the
County Recorder of Pi ma County
CLARENCE DUPN I K SHERIFF
OF PIMA COUNTY, ARIZONA By
K.A . Kampe SGT. DEPUTY
SHERIFF DATED DAY 28
MONTH 5 YEAR 80
Pub: The Arizona Territorial
June 12, 19, 26 , 1980
Req: Lovallo & Stirton , Attorneys
at Law
ARIZONA , a corporation,1----------------1
Plaintiff, vs. JOE MORALES, et IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
ux, Defendant. NO. 185619 OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
NOTICE OF SHERIFF 'S SALE IN ANO FOR THE COUNTY
AT DA TFN WHEREAS, pursuant to an OF PIMA
execution Issued out of the above LESLIE R ZELENKA and
WIii buy household misc. glass named Court In the above entitled ELIZABETH R ZELENKA
iter;ns, tools, guns, jewelry, action upon a l~d~ment for _the husband and wife; Plaintiffs, vs '.
TVs, stereos, small appliances above named Plaintiff and against RON CALDERON and JANE OOE
and almost anything else. Call the above named Defendant, CALDERON husband and wife
•Marvin at885-1154. entered on the 25th day of March, Defendants. 'No. 18624' NOTICE
AT DA 21 ,22,23,24 1980, in the amount of $26007 OF GENERAL EXECUTION
together with Interest thereon SALE OF REAL PROPERTY
from said date at the rate of 12% • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
(twelve percent) per annum that in obedience to the Writ of
Pr i vate B ·W darkroon:i j I toge!her. wl!h accruing cos~, 1 General Execution issued by the
avallable for rent. Kolb and Golf WANTED ~ave levied upon all of the right, above entitled Court and in the
L.lnks area . Dark room lessons title and interest~ the Defendanl, above entitled cause, which Writ
also available ( PHOTO------------JOE ~ORALES, ,n the follow,.ng and the Judgment <1escribed
TECHNIC). 792 -0752 . 1 , described propert_v: therei n by reference thereto are
AT DA 21,22,23,24 Lot 2'1 , Manzanola Manor No. 4• incorporated herein , commands
W . Book 21 , page 23 I me to sell , and I will sell, subject
CELEBRATING graduation, a anted: f Urn 1tu re NOTICE IS _HERE_BY GIVEN t o the right of redemption in such
wedding, ann iversary or just the that I , the Sheriff of Pima County, case made and provided by
summer! Call now for the BEST Used appliances, pianos, & on the lSI day of July , 1980 al the statute, at public auction, all of the
in MEXICAN and related south Misc. If you want top hour of 10:00 o'clock -?-.. m .. at the l right, t itle, interest, claim and lien
western foods . We'll do the dollar cash· Call Stan 2 9 4 • front door 0( the Pima c _ounty wh ich the parties named-in said
cooking and the work for your O 8 2 3 days , .. 8 8 9 ·2 o 4 2 Courthouse, on Tucson,_ Arizona, Judgment had or have i n and to
party . References, experience . nights. "".111 sell ~t public auction 10 the the r eal property hereinafter
Janet Grayson. 881 -2706. h,'gheS! ~odder for_ cash, all of the described, and from the proceeds
AT DA 21,22,23,24 ,. .. .,..,. .. .,..,. .. .,..,. .. .,..,.. right, lllle and onterest of the of said sale , to satisfy said
Defendant, JOE MORALES, on Judgment in favor of the judgment
and lo the above . described creditor therein named, in the
property to s~llsfy saod Iudgment. total judgment sum of $3 ,202 .26 ,
The Mop·lts cleaning service.
General and seasonal clean ing,
residential and commercial.
Supplies furnished, team work,
fast and efficient. 747 -3599 .
AT DA 21,22,23 ,24
Landscape designs • unique
personal designs. 5 years ex·
perience, references, small
gardens to large estates. UA
landscape architecture student.
Call Darrel at 622 ·1680.
AT DA 21,22,23,24
Free tow·away for old cars and
trucks. High dollar for titled
vehicles. JUNK UNLIMITED.
29H217.
AT l>A TFN
Need someone to baby.it your
INIIIMT I'm a hometown girl with
good references. willing to IIYe
1ft your '--during your ab-
-· Call after 6:00 p,lft. and
atllforVlckl.~~-
ATOATFN·E
llAVB.TUI.EI
FGIIALI
1971 21' Layton. Excellent
conctttlon . Fully .tt contained.
150 gallon hOldlng tank. All
appliances, Including 3-wav
refrigerator. Root air. $3,000.00
or best offer. 745-90n.
AT DA 23,24,25,26
Fora
brighter
ftlirite·
DATED this 29th day of May, together with accrued and ac ·
1980. CLARENCE DU PN I K cruing interest and costs since t he
SHERIFF OF PIMA COUNTY_Bv daleofentryofsaldJudgment.
K.A . Kampe SGT . Deputy Sheriff The same will be held at the
Pub : The Arizona Territorial East front door of the New Pima
June 12, 1_9, 26, 19~ county court House, also
Req : Sch,esel & Tallon, P .C. somet imes known as the main
SUMMONS entrance of said Courthouse, in
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Tucson , Arizona, on July 1, 1980 at
OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA the hour of 10:00 A .M . to sell the
IN ANO FOR THE COUNTY following described real property
OF PIMA to the highest bidder: Lot 2«1,
KATHLEEN A . GONZALEZ, Olive Grove subdivision, Pima
Petitioner , and JORGE County, Arizona, according lo
GUITIERREZ GONZALEZ , Map o~ Plat thereof of Record In
Respondent. No. o 30986 SUM· the Office of the Coun.ty Recorder
MONS of Pima County, Arizona, BOOk 22
THE STATE OF ARIZONA to of Maps and Plats, at page 22 .
lheabovenamedrespondent DATED : 5·28 ·80 CLARENCE
YOU ARE HEREBY SUM· OUPNIK SHERIFF OF PIMA
MONED and required to appear COUNTY, ARIZONA By K .A .
and defend In Ille above entltl-.1 Kampe SGT. Deputy Sheriff.
action In Ille above entitled court, Pub: The Arlzci,1a Territorial
wlftlln TWENTY DAYS, tllCIUMYe June 12, 19, 21, ltlD
Of lhe day of service, If MNed Raq ~ RC>eERT C. ROWLAND,
wlftlln Ille State Of Arizona, or AttorMys at L-
wllhln THIRTY DAYS, exclu.ivel---------------
Of lhe day Of service; tf lerwcl I
wlftlout lhe Slate Of Arizona, anctl.-----------....,. rou are llerebli nollfled nwtt In
c-you fall so to do, Juogmenl by
.. IIVII WIii be rendered against
you tor·the relief ~anded In the
petition.
The name and address of the
petitioner's attorney Is JOHN R .,
MOFFITT, ESQ 4400 E . Broad•
way, SU lie 206 Tucson, AZ 85711
DOl'OlJ LOHA
CIIILD WIIO COIJLD
'Bt: SOl'IEBODY'?
GIVEN Under the hand and seal .uuy ~.-.. uap..-ua. lot the Su~iOr Court of the state
Of Arizona on and for the County of
Pima, this 21st day of May, 1980.
JAMES N. CORBETT Clerk of
Superior Court (SUPERIOR
COURT SEAL) By Theresa A.
Nino Deputy Clerk
You can help. By reading 10 the
child . Parent. grandparent. older
brother or sister. babysitter or lov-
ing friend-any interested per-
son can give a child an importanl
advantage in life by reading
aloud to him or her. All you need
is a little time and a library card .
IERVEES
IUSIIESI IEIVICU UNDER RULE 10 (d) R.C.P.
ANO SEC. 12·311 A.R.S . ALL
ANSWERS MUST BE IN
WRITING, FILED IN THE ,
CLERK'S OFFICE A
0
ND BE •
ACCOMPANIED BY THE j
,.iNEt;ESSARY FILING FEE.
L ·£1U&Y SAVIN&~ROOF-S!
~~~~~
RALPH· HAY§
ROOFING
Phone
887-3384 LICENSED & BONDED
'PIii>: TIie Arizona Terrllorlal
,-...,29, l9ID
J-5.12, 19, 19'0
Raq: Jllfln R. Moffitt, Esq, Atty
L:\P&:
ready. .
TUCSON PUBLIC LIBRARY
A GOOD INVESTMENT
Schedule conflict
lands pros here
---.
By DEBBIE ENGLISH
Football fans will witness
high caliber action like
they 've never seen before
in Tucson because of a
scheduling impasse.
That's how Big Brothers
of Tucson Inc. got the San
Francisco 49ers to clash
with the Kansas City Chiefs
at the University of
Arizona football stadium
Saturday; Aug. 30, at 7:30
p .m.
Big Brothers Executive
Director , Chip Tullgren,
said both clubs had a
scheduling conflict. Big
league baseball teams in
both cities were playing on
home turf the same day .
They thought it would be
futile to host a baseball and
football game the same day
because it would hurt at-
tendance at both.
Big Brothers in Tucson
tried to recruit a
professional football team
to play in Tucson just after
Big Brothers in Phoenix
had a sell-out crowd at a
pro game it sponsored in
1974.
"We thought it sounded
like a good idea and wrote
to all the football teams to
get • them to come here,"
Mr. Tullgren said.
But they c~uld not reach
an agreement. The teams
would not leave their home
sites because of the cost,
and they were decreasing
pre-season games, Mr .
Tullgren explained.
''.It looked like pro
football in Tucson was
out," he said.
Big Brothers gave up on
the idea until last season
when sportscaster Howard
Cosell commented on the
lack of attendance at a pre-
season game. He suggested .
~~m~ travel to a city that
has no pro tootbalt team,
speculating it would in-
crease attend.i'lCe because
fans would appreciate
high-powered football as a
new treat.
Mr . Tullgren then tried to
attract an all-star pro
game to Tucson. Cost and
scheduling problems with
the University of Arizona
eliminated all chances .
Again, things looked
bleak for professional
football in Tucson .
About one week later in
October, the National
Football League office
called informing Mr.
Tullgren of the turn of
events and indicating
Tucson, along with other
cities including Mexico
City, was under con-
sideration .
Tucson's contract was
accepted . ''It was realistic
and fair for everyone. It
wasn't the biggest money
offered, but they felt it was
equitable for everyone and
were impressed with the
way we handled it. We put
together a good package,"
he said.
Each team is guaranteed
$125,000 . The teams and
Big Brothers split the rest
to cover costs. Mr.
Tullgren said the crowd
break~ven point is about .
32,000 -which he-said is an
achievable goal. To sell out
the stadium, however, will
take a big effort, he con-
ceded.
CO-CHAIRMAN -Ronnie
W. Clark will serve as
co-chairman of the Lions
• Annual High School All-
Star Football Game set for
Aug. I at UA stadium. He is
lieutenant governor for the
southeast quarter of the
state for the Lions Club and
has served as president of
Sunrise Lions Club in
Tucson. He moved here in
l!li-1 as a principal in the
Palzman-Allen-Lamb In-
surance Agency.
"Because of the novelty
• of it -having never had a
pro football game in town
-it should dra·w well from
throughout Souther_n
Arizona, Phoenix and even
Albuquerque."
Ticket sales are steady,
he said. "We're right on the
butfon where we should be
< as far as ticket sales.)''
Tickets are $12 per
person for seating closest
to the 50 yard-line, $10 in
the 10 yard-line area and
eastside upper tier, $8 for
the south end zone and $6
for unreserved bleachers to
the north end zone .
Tickets can be purchased
at Diamonds Department
Store -or Big Brothers, 2520
E. Sixth St. Order forms
may be picked up at First
National and Arizona
Banks throughout the
southern part of the state.
He said the game can
potentially help the non-
profit organization raise
money and recruit big
brothers for the 112 boys
with unmet needs : About
200 others are assigned to a
big brother.
Some changes will have
to be made to the field to
accommodate a
professional team . The .
field will have a wider
boundary line, hash marks
will be closer to the center,
goal posts will be narrower
and a 30-second clock will
have to be added to give the
quarterback an indication
of time available for the
huddle .
"We have an event here
that Tucson's never seen. It
should be exciting. It was a
fluke that brought it here,
and the odds of getting
another game in the future
are minimal. This is going
to be it."
Work corps kept
at Flowing Wells
The Flowing Wells
School Board voted
unanimously Tuesday to
continue its campus corps
work program for high
school and junior high
school students who have
committed infractions
which could be punished by
five-0ay suspensions.
use of 60-cent levy funds
after a short public
hearing.
There were no comments
from the public on either
the $9,3&9,107 budget or the
five-year plan for levy
funds.
The district anticipates a
five-year total of $1.37
million to be derived from
60-centlevy .
Amphi
Continued from Page J
Mr. Wurst said teachers
will sign the contracts any-
way , but they will be
"totally dedicated to
Approximately 80 per-
cent of the students ·
referred to the program
opted -to spend six hours on
a Saturday working around
the campus under
supervisions rather than
take the suspension , high
school principal Larry
Hart said, adding that 99
students were referred .
Eighty of them chose the
work detail over the suspension. changing things in the dis-
The board also voted 2_1 trict " next school year by
with Robert Mellen op-getting public support and
posed, to make plans to seeking their own candi-
hold the high school's 198l dates for th~ee ~oard seats
graduation exercises at the up for elect10n m Novem-
Tucson Community Center . ber. Teachers had withheld
The board also adopted sig~ing co~tracts until the
its budget and approved a arb1trat_or issued a recom-
five-year capital plan for mendation. Supt. Tom Neel said the
Center expands district hopes to make a
. ~-,..;;decision on the arbitrator's
The public is invited to an recommendations in a ten-
open house, Saturday, June tatively scheduled meeting
14, from 2 to 4 p.m., to view Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
the $800,000 expansion to district offices .
the Villa Maria Geriatric In other action, the
Center, 4310 East Grant school board adopted a
Road, according to Msgr. $23.1 million budget, which
Charles A. Bast of Catholic reflects a 4.79 percent in-
Community Services of crease over this year's
Southern Arizona Inc. $22.1 million figure.
• M(-,if11M-.~f ..... tllff:lf""1
. .i:._,_;::· . .,..,,
--i.·a.
,,..,... t2, 1-;-~llle Arizlaa Tenhrill, Plge 19
FASHION SHOW BENEFITS GIRLS' RANCH Pulte b~gins -_.,
construct.ion • , :,A · fashion show to benefit Girls . Ranch will be held
Thursday, June 12 at the Lodge on the Desert. The
Grissom Agency of T;,ilent and Modeling is presenting the
show, titled the Talented New Teens Fashion Plus Show ,
with fashions from .Judy 's. KRQ di!c jockey Kent Lacey
Pulte Home Corp . has
started construction of a
new phase of its Casas Del
Oeste development on Ina
Road in Thornydale.
The new unit of 35 single
family homes in the Del
Bae Heights area slopes
down from Massingale
Road on the north to Mars
Street. A terraced land-
scape is being readied.
Frank Della, Tucson
area manager, said 84
homes have been sold in
the subdivision during the
past year . Prices start at
$57 ,550 for the homes .
JOBHONTING
COORSES
Our brochure "Who's
Running Your Life?" .
describes adult pro-
grams teaching how
successful people find
better jobs, new
careers, new life ..
Fora
FREE COPY
CALL:
295 .... 7&◄.
~
"h" m,.· ,,.,
-~.
will be master of ceremonies . --
Valley Animal Hospital, P.C.
announces the opening of
Sunrise Pet Clinic
5635 N. Swan (at Sunrise)
by
Dr. Roberts.· Hoge
F<>r Appointment Call 299-5044.
Dr. Michael J. Frey D.M.D.
COMPLETE DENTAL SERVICES
---INCLUDING:-----,
•crowns
•bridges
•dentures
•cosmetic dentistry
•nitrous oxide gas
(for your comfort)
Ftee Exam and Estimate
Extended Payment Plans
All Insurance Plans Welcome
501 W. Wetmore 293-4510
,··-;.-•' ~· ..
·----.. -..-.•:•
!lf!! 1i::::: :c,::.-
~~i:•
.,$5.00 OFF
, ••
-.li.-
Any Printshop Of The Future Order (over $15.00)
~i
Copying • Pri nt i n !1 • Bind in g • Color Copi e s • Busin e ss Ca 1d s & F o rms
Coupon must be presented with order
Coupon good during June, 1980 only,
at our 4039 N. Oracle Rd. store
4039 ) ,~
~
0
Roger N
w+. s
Copying • Printing • Binding
4039 N. Oracle Rd. -888-6050
llllllr1,IIII"
Printshop Of The Future
i~J. .~er~ cJ. oftS NEED NO
tit BE COSTL
re~ An -established reputali
• 30 years o! service • family operate
. EMOTIONAL OVERSPENDING IS NOT A SYMBOL OF DEYOTIO
-TIYE. SENSIBLE THINKING RESULTS IN MENTA
SATISFACTION AFTERWARDS
REVERENCE -DIGNITY -AND
UNDERSTANDING . . . PRE-NEED
=n:!I PLAN AVAILABLE WITH NO
··,,,,,1 ADVANCE PAYMENTS.
IJllfl F. IUIIG£l
111£CTft -~ ~ • PH.747-2525
• \' s Complete funeral services,
\\~~e . including casket, as low as $595.
Swan Funeral Home, Inc.
22nd & Swan Rd. (Just So. of 22nd St.)
Page 20, The Arizona Territorial, June 12, 1980 .
:···
1.:.fH~M'A~+~fq· fl:~TENNAS -
, .. ,.> ·; ,,·oN·Lv;,---· ---•--·
·z
0
tJ :::, ,_ .... .... .q::
~ z > "' u, "'
.$145.00
( in~talled)
742-4048
,
Sunblazers take some laps for summer season The Low Cost. ..
Lasting Shine! Swim competition scheduled
Sundial
Solarian
The shine that made
Armstrong Solarian .
famous is yours
now on beautiful
Sund 12I Solarian ... at
a fraction of the
•• cost I Choose from
11 exciting patterns
in a variety of
colors . All for one
low SALE PRICE
NOW'
s79s
Sq Yd .
Cf:..~ c$c-~ Interiors
5836 East Speedway
790-0394
Competition has just
begun or will soon begin
this month for the more
than two thousand
swimmers on 29 teams
which comprise the
Southern Arizona Aquatic
Association_.
Don M. Baker. president
of the SAAA. noted that 100
swimm.ing meets will be
climaxed June 23-29 with
championships in each of
five leagues .
Defending league
champions are Old Pueblo
Courthouse. Catalina
Terrace. Rolling Hills and
Oracle Heights.
The first division is
composed of year-around
swim teams. The other
division is divided into four
leagues, A-D.
The following is a swim
schedule . of teams in· the
northeast and northwest.:
t.he classics t
)··
..... ,:;,_.,,n ..
Jw'">JJ.,,.. 1 .
' )\tm W;,l
~'•
'
'
Rolls -Royce courtesy of Mathews Classics .
~ ' -~ -~ -'~
I =Jii "·j •zj ■"""L-;J",,,L j" _,~iiiiiii~Jai~i'Ja7 1_J!Rl_11f meat tfOle
university ~ain gate • park mall
/.'c
AMERICAN EXPRESS , VISA & MASTER CHARGE WELCOMED { ~\
-.-..-
\l;I, ':'f
Oracle Heights
League _C
June 17 . at Kingston Knolls
June 26 .. GLEN HEATHER .
July 2 ........ at Sahuarita
July 10 .... SABINO VISTA
July 17 _ ..... at San Rafael
July 24-29 .. championships
Pete Seidl. the Canyon
del Oro High School swim
coach, will be the coach.
All game times are · at 7
p.m.
Catalina Racquet and
Swim Club
Division I Year Around
June20 .. • ..... CATALINA
TERRACE
June 24 ......... TUCSON
RACQUET CLUB
June 27-30 at FL Bliss InvtL
( for El Paso AAU meet>.
July9 ........ OTT YMCA
.::-uly 12 ........ at Thunder
Mountain, Sierra Vista
July 16 ...... at Old Pueblo
July 18-20 .. Southern Calif.
.InvtL (tentative)
July 21-29 .. championships
July 30-Aug. 1 . city all-star
meet. ( for all teams in
SAAA>
• Aug . 21-24 .... Far Western
Championships
( in San Francisco)
All meets at 6 p.m. Paul
Warner is the coach.
Skyline Country Olub
· LeagueD
June 17 DAVIS-MONTHAN
June 21 .. Desert RatlnvtL
(at UA women's pool at 8
a.m .>
June 23 .... at Sabino Vista
June26 ....... CATALINA
DESERT PIRATES
July 3 ..... SOUTH YMCA
July 16 ... TUCSON YMCA
July 24-29 .. championships
. This is the first year
Skyline has had a team in
Beauty · isn't only
•: • skin deep
1980 -
only $3699°0
plus freight, set-up, tax and license
YAMAHA XS ELEVEN SPECIAL
This is a production motorcycle like none other ... in
luxury, comfort . power. smoothness ... and beauty.
It's a real super bike . •
Eastside Cycle
4940 E. 22nd
When you know
how they re built.
The shoe designed for
five years. Gail Kincaid is
the coach . All meets are at
7 p .m. unless otherwise
noted.
Tucson Country Club
League B
June 7 ..... OLD PUEBLO
June 17. EASTERN HILLS
June 21 .. Desert Rat InvtL
(at UA women's pool at 8
a .m .)
June 24. . at Skyline Bel
July 1 ..... SABINO VISTA
July 10 .... at Rolling Hills
July 15 ... INDIAN RIDGE
• July 24-29 .. championships
July 29-Aug. 1 all-star meet
All meets at 7 p .m. unless
otherwise indicated. Jim
Strong is the coach.
Tucson . Racquet Club
Division I
June7-8 ... , ... *at Tempe.
June 10 . , . at Conquistador
June 13-15 ... *at Scottsdale
June 17 .... SAN RAFAEL
June 21 .. *Sierra Vista Inv.
June 24 .... at Cat. Racquet
June 27-29 .. Southwest Inv.
July 1 ...... OLD PUEBLO
July 16 ..... at East YMCA
* indicates AAU meets,
which all begin at 8 a.m. All
other meets, which are
SAAA meets, begin at 6
p.m. Thad Terry ·is the
coach.
Sabino Vista I
League B
June 17 ... INDIAN RIDGE
June 21 .. Desert Rat InvtL
June 24 .... at Roll ing Hills
July 1. at Tucson Ctry.Club
July 8 ..... SKYLINE BEL
July 15 .. EASTERN HILLS
. July 22 .... at Terra de! Sol
July 28-29 .. championships
Sabino Vista 2
LeagueD
June 19 ..... SAHUARITA
June 26 ..... at San Rafael
July 2 .. GLEN HEATHER
July 10 .. at Oracle Heights
July 16 . at Kingston Knolls
July 24-25 .. championships
All meets begin at 7 p.m.
Barry Roth is the coach for
both Sabino Vista 1 ar.d 2.
todays woman in mind.
From the designers of Italy ...
'
The Lia and Lampome iri all
leather, both designed
with comfort and versatility
in mind.
6322 E. Broadway at Wilmot
El Mercado Boutique
Shopping Center
Monday-Saturday 10 -6
Closed Sunday
Available in
navy & taupe
790-3543
1/)r, j Women's (V/ -~ Shoes
I
• .. , -.11.1911.lill ....... , __ ,·
CDO
LITTLE LEAGUE I Catalna Foothls .. coo . hos:ts ,
The American Con-
ference pennant race took
on another new look this
past week. Goodin Pools
scrambled back to t ie
Woody's Sporting Goods
for firs t place.
Goodin Pools defeated
S .A.A.A .T . twice to catch
up with Woody 's, which
came back from behind to
down 7-11 Thornydale 10-9
in seven innings . Woody's
Mike Winters and Russ
Ponzio hit key hits in the
comeback effort. Winters
also pitched a perfect in-
ning in relief to earn the
victory .
In the National Con-
ference, Peck Enterprises
continued its dominance
and are in a good position
to clinch first place this
week . Peck stopped second
place Greer Construction
13-1 and beat S .A.A.A.T . 7-
4.
Results of the week of
June 8:
Major s -Woody 's
Sporting Goods 10 7-11
Thornydale 9 (in 7 in-
nings ); Peck Enterprises
13 Greer Construction l;
Arizona Portland Cement
10 Ralph Hays Roofing 7;
Young Excavating &
Paving 7 A.G. Edwards 4;
Goodin Pools 14 S.A.A.A.T.
13 (completed game of
April 29 ); Goodin Pools 15
S .A.A.A .T . 6; Greer
Co ns tru ction 7 Young
Exca vating & Pavi_ng 6 ( in
7 inn in gs); Peck En-
terprises 7 S.A.A.A.T . 4;
Ralph Hays Roofing 13 7-1 1
Thornydale 7; Arizon a
Portland Cemen t 5
Woody's Sporting Goo ds 3;
A.G. Edwa r ds _10 Go od in
PooJs9 .
Standings in the
A merican Conference:
Goodin Pools 11-5; Woody 's
Sporting Goods 11 -5; A.G.
Edwards 10 -6 ; Ari zon a
Portland Ceme n t • 9-7 ;
S.A .A.A .T. 5-11 .
Standings in the Nationa l
Co n ference: P e c k En-
ter prises .12 -4 ; Gr e er
Constr uct ion 9-7 ; Yo ung
Exca vati ng & Paving 7-9 ;
Ral ph Hays Roo fi ng 6-10 ; 7-
11 Thorny da le 0-16.
Minors -Gr eer Con -
struc tion 10 Statewide
Ho m e Improvemen t 5;
Ge ne r a l Medical Center 12
Powers Elect r ic Sho p 6 ;
P olice At hl e t ic Lea gue 10
Cata lin a Kids 7 ; Ki r by
Smith e I nsura nce • 14
Southwes t Energy 9;
Ge ner al Medi cal Center 5
Kirby Smithe Insur ance 4;
Police Athletic League tied
with Statewide Home
Improvement 9-9; Catalina
Kids tied with Greer
Con structi o n 14 -14;
Southwest Energy tied with
Golder Ranch Rustlers
( score not available ).
Standings: Catalina Kids
9-3 -1; Powers Elec tric Shop
9-4; State wi de Home
Im p r o v emen t 8 -4 -1;
General Medical Center 8-
5; Greer Constructi on 6-6 -
1; Kirby Smithe Insurance
7-7; Golder Ranch Rus tl ers
4-8-1 ; Southwest Energy 3-
9-1 ; Police At hletic League
3-10 -1.
AA Minor s -Straw Hat
Pizza 11 Ar izona P ortland
Cement 10; Doug 's Cabinet
Shop 9 Walco Internatio nal
6; Down ey & Sons Sand and
Rock 19 Fraternal Order of
Police 14; Ande rson Ar -
chitects 8 Bob 's Materia l
Suooly 4
Bobbysox cage camp
The second session of
Amphitheater Community
Schools basketball camp at
Canyon del Oro High
School will get-underway
Standings -Downey &
Sons Sand and Rock 9-2;
Anderson Architects 8-2cl;
Arizona Portland Cement
6-5; Fraternal Order of
Police 6-5 ; Straw Hat Pizza
5-6; Bob 's Material Supply
4-7; Doug's Cabinet Shop 3-
7-1; Walco International 2-
9.
Instructional Division -
Haunted Bookshop 19
Cactus Patch 16 ; 7.-11
Oracle Road 24 Pierce
Clinic 20 ; Auto World of
Tucson 20 Little People 17;
Dean Witter Reynolds 21
T .M.T, 20; Genzer
Livestock 15 Murray's
Carport Welding 11 Dean
Witter Reynolds 15 Pierce
Clinic 9; Genzer Livestock
32 Little People 16;
Murray's Carport Welding
12T.M.T . ll ; Auto World of
Tucson 16 Haunted
Bookshop 15.
CDO Senior Division
Results of the week of
June2-7:
Ina -Oracle Road Dairy
Queen 13 Goodin Pools 9;
Lighthouse Electric vs .
Western Emulsions
postponed ; Western
Emulsions 13 Goodin Pools
9 ; Lighthouse Electric 19
Ina -Oracle Dairy Queen 3;
Lighthouse Electric 23
Western Emulsions 5
Goodin Pools 10 Ina-Oracle
Dairy Queen 4.
Results from the weeks
of May 26-June 7: •
Majors -Homes
Illustrated 12 REAC-FOE
180 4; REAC-FOE 180 13·
Damiano 's Italian Cuisine
12 ; REAC-FOE 180 10
Damiano's Italian Cuisine
O; Homes lllustrated 14
Damiano 's Italian Cuisine
13;. Homes Illustrated 15
REAC-FOE 180 2 ..
Standings: Homes
Illustrated 8-3; REAC-FOE
180 7-5; Damiano's Italian
Cuisine 2-8.
Minors -P&S Electric
25 Beauty Built Homes 12 ;
Holmes Tuttle Ford 31
Filter Products Inc. 1;
Holmes Tuttle Ford 30
Beauty Built Homes 9; P&S
Electric 26 Uncle Bob's
Popcorn 3 ; Western
Lighting and • Electric
Supply . 20 Uncle Bob's
Popcorn 10; Filter
Products Inc . 34 Western
Lighting and Electric
Supply 33; P&S Electric 12
Filter Products Inc . 7.
Holmes Tuttle Ford 18
Western Lighting and
Electric Supply 8 ; Beauty
Built Homes 7 Uncle Bob 's
Popcorn 7; P&S Elect~ic 16
Western Lighting and
Electric Supply 3; Filter
Products Inc. 35 Beauty
Built Homes 17 Holmes
Tuttle Ford 44 Uncle Bob 's
Popcorn 6.
Standings: P&S Electric
14-2 ; Holmes Tuttle Ford
13-3; Uncle Bob 's Popcorn
5 ½-8 ½?; Beauty Built •
Homes 5½-11 ½; Western
Lighting and E le ctr i c •.
Suppl y 5-11; Filter
S tandings: Lighthouse
Electric 6-0 ; Western
Emulsions 4-2 ; Ina-Oracle
Road Da iry Queen 2-5 ;
Goodin Pools 1-6. __ J ,_roduc ts I ~.c;~;1.·JJ. 0 _ .: _.....:
·-YOT
0 E. SPEEDW
FINANCING fiVfillflBLE
OUT OF S T A TE CR EDI T O ~ 'Cln~pp_rci_~e d c r:_edii __
7 5· Toyota Pi ckup . $2688
4 s peed , r adio, heater, plu s "A Sunroof "
78 Datsun Pi ckup ..... $4988
AM /FM wi t h t ape, heater , rad io , a ir conditioning ,
ca mper s hell-looks like new !!
7 7 T oyota SR 5 Pic kup . $4688
S sp eed, A M /FM r adio, heat er, a i r con d it ionin g,
r adia l tires, c hrome bumper !!
73 Su per Buq
4 speed , radio , extr a c lean!!
78 MG Convt.
4 speed t r an smission , radio, heater, ra d ia l
tires an d rallye whee l s, tow low m iles!
.$2888
$4488
78 Monza 2 Dr ....... $4488
Auto m atic , radio , heater, air conditioning,
power ster ing, eonom ical '6' cylinder .
7 6 SAAB 99Cil .....
Au tomatic, rad io, heater, air.c on dit ioner ,
r adial ti r es , "A Classic"
7 3 Celica ST ....... .
4 speed ; rad io, heater , ai r cond ition ing,
mag wheels, sharp !!
$2988
''
$2388
7 5 VW 7 Pass Bus . •••• ■ $3988
4 speed, radio, heat er, sun roof -B i g B ig savings!
75 Couqa r XR7 ....... $2 288
Au ;omati c , AM/FM r ad io, heater, air conditoning,
power steering, "Super Bu y ."
78 Toyo ta Pickup ...
4 speed , A M /FM with ta pe, low, low
m i les-look s li ke new!!
7 6 Datsun Pickup ....
4 speed, AM/F M with t ape, a i r c ondition i n g,
-~h ite SP_£ke wheel s a. roll ba r !!
$5288
.$4288
sparts
Monday, June 16 . • •
Panasonic.
Register Monday ·at . the
beginning of camp. The
cost is $25 . Garry Dom-
zalski, assistant CDO
basketball coach, will be
the instructor . Joe Nehls, a
University of Arizona
basketball star, will be the
guest during the camp.
just slightly ahead of our time
Instruction for students
in the fourth through sixth
grades will be held from 9
to 11 a.m. Instruction for
junior high students will be
from 11 a.m. to 1 p .m ., and
instruction for high school
students wil\ be held from 2
to4p.m .
.idEU1
,--
CJ-3600
5-Band Graphic Equalizer/
Firemen, KCUB
in softball game
Power AmpHfle_r $ 7 9 g 5. · • 30 watts maximum
output power
• • Power indicator
• Fader control
_ A team of firemen from
the Golder Ranch area will
take on the KCUB softball
team at 2:30 p.m . on
Sunday, June 29 at
Coronado Elementary
School.
4AutoSound
Specialists
Proceeds will go toward .
maintenance costs of the
1 Golder Ranch Fire Dept.
ambulance service.
At the game two dinners
at Brave Bull Re&ort will
be awarded .
,.
Sound systems that move.
4414 E. Speedway• 326-2455
I .. ame:. ______________ _
I Addres s :. ________________ _
I Cit y: ______ State : __________ -!!
I
==·
CHAPARRAL
~~~~~~ ~(Q)[L[L~@ ~
NORTHWE·ST
. ( "LaBelle Center" 3212 N. Oracle Aoad /
A n ew f ac ility servin g Tu cson's g r owing
W es t-N o rthwes t s i de.
Spec i a l izing i n c l erical, secretar i a l an <:!
data entry cou r ses
• Accreditation,.by the .AICS
•Fi na ncjal ·aid available
• Fo.ur-day school week
,.-.--Placement assistance
I New classes starting June 23. Enroll NOW!]
Call 888 -4750 or 327 -6866
Page 22, The Arizona TerrHarial, June 12, 1980
:-. ,~-, .: _;,'l
CUSTOM CAPS
HIRTS • JACKIE
EMBROIDER
CATAL .INA
LITTLE LEAGUE
(WHILE YOU WAIT)
Slkscreeneif & Embroidered Items For
• Clubs • Uniforms
• Businesses • Promotions
• Teams • Money Makers
• Conventions • Emblems
• Jackets • Tote Bags
ARIZONA SILKSCREEN PRINTERS
Plant And Showroom
1665 E. 18th St ., Suite 110
Mon .-Fri. 10-5
Call 623-0597
AT LAST!
Or
AN EFFECTIVE METHOD TO
HELP YOU RETAIN THE .
HA IR YOU HAVE
Exces si ve ha ir loss can be re du ced
by new sci ent ific disco very!
nafural -man.
Retail Store & Showroom
4122 E. Speedway
Tues.-Sat . 10 -5
-1RR7
~ BIOi. Hair & Scalp Nutrient
,..
GUARANTEED RESULTS ~ Please call for a free consulation.
:~ 887 -2984
~ 445 East Prince
Tucson Fire Fighters
won by forfeiture over •
Coco's two weeks ago in-
stead of the other way
around as it appeared in
and was reported to the
Territorial last week.
Results of the week of
June 2-7 :
Majors ...,... Tucson Fire
Fighters 18 Coco's 2;
Quality Paving 16 Ad-·
justers 4 ; 7-11 Campbell-
Prince , Campbell -Ft .
Lowell 17 Tucson Fire
Fighters 2; Adjusters 15
Lions Club 9; 7-U Camp-
bell-Prince, Campbell -F t.
Lowell 21 Coco 's 5; Ad-
j us te rs 26 Qua lity Paving
17 .
Standings : Quality
Paving 6-3; Tucs on Fire
Fighters 6-4 ; 7-11 Camp-
• bell-Prince , Campbell-Ft.
Lowell 6-4 ; Lions 5-4;
Coco 's2-7 ; Adju s ters2-7.
Minors -Columbia
Block 29 White Outdoor
Advertising 13; Pizza Inn
37 A-1 Equipment 8;
Columbia Block 26 Red
• Raiders 4; Dyer & Co. 8
Pizza Inn 4; Red Raiders 15
White Outdoor Advertising
13 ; Pizza Inn 39 A-1
Equipment 8.
St andings: Columbia
Block 9-1 ; Pizza Inn 7-3;
Dyer & Co . 5-4 ; Red
Raiders 5-5 ; White Outdoor
Advertising 2-7 ; A-1
Equipment 1-9.
Farm -Outlet Electric
20 Pizza Inn 5; A.G.M.
Bears 8 Conelly Con-
s truc tio n 1; Cibo la 7 Outl et
Electric6; A.G.M . Bears 14
Mo ser & Sons 1; Cibo la 10
Pizza I nn 3; A.G .M. Bears
19 Conelly Con s truction 0.
Standings: A.G .M. Bears
10-0; Cibola 7-3; Moser &
Sons 4-5; Con e ll y Con-
struction 4-6 ; Pizza Inn 2-7;
Outlet Electric 2-8.
·LUXURIOUS
COM
E ~-. ,J.11 ~
1'1 1
GRAN D OPENIN G
TRY OUR SPA
.4'.
You \·e heard abo11t t he l 11x11Iio11s co111f;n1 of h a\'ing your m ,·11 s p a. I Icn:'s yo11 r c h a1ice for a fre e
sample . Call 11s at Cus tom Spa \\'orld fi1r an appoi 11 tm c 11t to expetic"i1cc s ooth ing r clmrntio n in o ur
d e 111011stJ"a ti011 t u b . .-\ll!I \\'h i lc ~-o u 'rc c njo~·ing those \\'arn1 , c.,in:s sing ln1hhlcs, tl1i 11 k abou t rel axing
\\·itJ1 yo11rfiic11ds i n your o\\'11 backya rd spa.
81795 GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
I >111i11g our p:rand ope ning ge t 01 11 i">' x 7' lrn111 _gc spa , a ~2200 n du c fi 1rj11s t ~17 9 5 . T h a t inclu d e s
h an 11 11ock and sofa-st de s c ats. t\\'o je t s n1st,1 11 1-i11st a l kcl \\·h nc ,·011 \Ya n t t h e m . h ea ter. fl lt c r, pump,
hlo\\'c r. drain and ex ira-thi c k i11sn iat irn1 all a nnt11cl fi1r 1'i 1orl' c·fflcicnt h ea t i ng. P lu s o ur cxd u s i \'C
C.1 r c_c i a 11 acrylic finish \\·i t il a 5 -~·ca r \\·a rrailty against fad i ng, discoloratio.11, L'1 1ippi11 g . s t afni 11 g. hhstc r -
in_g or crackin g ( cc 11111 K1rc tlwt t , 1 III L' ()Q.da \" \\'a rran t ~·< ,11 rn o st spas f ,
IIlGIIBST QU~ITY", EXPERT INSTALLATION
\\'e h e li c ,·c ou r anylic spas Ii~-(;rcda n arc t h e fln c st a,·,tilahlc . Th e~· c0111c i n s c ,·en de s igns
a nd s i x c olors . .-\ml o ur y ears o f i 11 stalla lio11 e xpuicnc c make ~·our tub from l 't1stcn11 Spa \\'orld
co 111 plctcly dcpc n d ahlc .
( ·0111 e ,·isit us s o on a 11d ·takc thL· free cle 111011stratio11 . Look m ·c r our spas. You 'l l agr ee t h L·y 'r e at
the h ead< if tl1 c ir cla s s .
,_ ---• --D..Wft kJ ■1 ~•1~•~C)~IIILID
,
5015 E . 29th Street • 7 48-0112
Open daily 10 am -6 p m , S undays 11 am -4 p m
H -it-a~ Th ·on series ,
at Randolph Park
The Tucson-Pima Baseball Congress, a non-pro AAA
League , will be conducting a baseball Hit-a-Thon Series
:.md c linic a t the Randolph Park Annex this Sund;:ly , June
f5, a nd th e following two Sundays, June 22 and 29, from
noon to 4 p .m.
Approxim a t e ly 2000 Little Le aguers from 14 league s
throughou t Tucson will be pa rticipa ting in this event to
be ne fit Little Leagu e a nd th e Tuc s on-Pima Ba seba ll
Congress .
Th e seri es , whi c h will be a first for Tuc son , will feature
~eve ra l notable Univ e r s ity of Arizona , P im a Co ll e ge a nd
ex -pr ofess iona l pl a ye rs including P a t Da r cy , a form e r
Cin c innati Re ds pitc he r .
• ll a r dees' Restaura nt s is th e sponso r for the event a nd
will be prov idin g priz es a long with the Tucs on Sk y a nd
Tuc so n T dros . •
The longe s t hitt e r s fr om ea ch di v is ion in each league
will co m pete in t he fi na ls Sunday , J ul y 9, pr ior to t he
Tu c son Toros and Albu que rque Duk es ga m e. The even ing
ha s bee n des igna te d Little League Night. An awards
cer e mony wi ll fo ll ow th e game.
CONTINENTAL
LITTLE LEAGUE
Re sults of the week of
Jun e 2-7 :
Majors -Police Athletic
Leagu e 11 He lsings 10 ;
B&B Concrete 12 Fraternal
Order of Police 6 ; Yo ung
Block 9 Meads 6; Jordans 9
Flowing· Well s Fire Dept.
5; Me ads 10 Jordans 6;
He ls ings 8 B&B Co ncr e te 5;
F raternal Order of Police
18 Police Athletic League
7 ; Young Block 4 Flowing
Wells Fire Dept. 2.
Standings: Young Block
13-2; Fraternal Order of
Police 12-4 ; Meads
Pharmacy 11-5 ; B&B
Concrete 8-7 ; Helsings
Family Restaurant 7-9 ;
Jordan Jewelers 6-10 ;
f>olice Athletic League 4-
12; Flowing Wells Fire
Dept. 2-14 .
Minors -Westenburg 13
Lowry 11 ; D&A 10 ; Tropics
of Tucson 2; American
Health Foods 11 Throop 6 ;
Blevins 21 Pima Bike 5;
McDaniel 12 Meads 11 ;
FINE
CUSTOM
FURNITU RE
•Quali t y f~
cus t o m _ ,,~ •
mod e ,
furn iture
• rea so nably pri ce d
mode from the
f inest hardwoods
•coffee tables , wall
sys t ems cedar chests ,
etc .
WE AL SO R E STORE
A N D DUPLICATE
F UR N IT U RE!!!!
VISCONT I •
woo~
ARTISANS
8 260 E. Wr ight s t own
885•5330
Tropics of Tucson 14
American He alth Foods 5;
American Health Foods 17
McDaniel 7 ; Westenbu rg 14
Blevins 6; D&A 21 Lowry
12 ; Pima Bike 9 Throop
Florists 7.
Standings : D&A Co n-
nectors 12-3 ; We s te n bur g
Inc. 12-3; Bl evi ns Air
Condition ing 10-5 ; Tropics
of Tucson 8-5-1 ; American
Health Foods 8-6-1; Meads
Pharmacy 6-8; McDaniel
Well & Machine 6-9 ; Pima
Bike Shop 5-·10 ; Lowry
Hardware 3-10 ; Throop
Florist 3-10 .
SABINO
LITTLE LEAGUE
Results of th e week . .of
June 2-5:
Three teams are tied fo r
first place in the second
half. The tie is between
Quik Mart, Ne w England
.-Life and St. J oseph's
Hos pital. Th e win ner of the
s econd half plays th e
win ner of t he fi r s t half fo r
t he champions hip J une 23.
Maj ors -New England
Life 12 Woo dy's 1; St.
Jo se p h 's Hos p ita l 4
University Pest 3; Quik
Mart 8 Danny's 5; St.
Joseph 's Hospital 9
Woo dy's 8 ; Quik Mart 8
University P est 3; New
E ngla nd Life 18 Danny's 2.
Standings: New England
Life 9-2; • St. Jos e ph's
Hos pital 7-4; Qui k Mart 5-
5; University P est 5-6 ;
Woody's 4-6 ; Da nny 's 2-9.
Footba ll cam p
regi stration
June 12 -13
Amphitheat e r High
Sc hool fo ot ba ll coaches
Vern F riedli and Mike
Piccone will conduct two
sessions of a football camp
th is month and a thir~
camp in July .
ETCtl
IVE DOLLAR SAVINGS
n any Haircut & Blowdry or
•THE HAIRCUTTERS
5720 W . Swan 299-6969
R egistra t io n for a ll
sessions will be t oda y , J une
12 , and tomor row , J une 13,
from 4 t o 7:30 p .m. a t th e
Amph i foo t ba ll s ta dium
and on Saturday, June 14 ,
from 8 a .m. un t il noon .
et, Permanent Wave ,
• t s or Frosting (with c oup o n)
• DOUBLETREE HAIR SALON
445 S Alvernon Way 881-8344
• HAIR CUTTER 11
32 N . Stone 624-8988
The cost is $5 0 per fi ve-
• day session. T-shirts and
certificat es will be issued
at the close of each session .
Additional sessions will be
scheduled if registration
warrants it.
--. .;;;;;,. --
MtH -~ i s'1'11I, ,!i.hu1,,,~Y r.11.»~hA o,H' ,t~ ~~~9l ...
•:·-.. • ·-June u;1sao, Tile Arizona ternfona1; Page 23
.,,_I, ... •·•.),_ -:-~l' ':,.. ' '\., • -.:.
t'\.~S-~3M. • -~
I b . ., ... ~~~~--u. . ..~ ii.
-~ • . tf
with Debbie English C u • s .~ , M ···The ~hristmas ~aus ~
• • ~~ ::::;peciali:zmg In ::::;o/1d 13vass & /2;opper ~ f
around the
Cliff Valley Golf Course Tucson Country Club f Acce~sories for the home and :(!.
It was a repeat of last week at the Cliff Valley Men's Carlos Touche and Art Waller combined to win a best :fJ. office, from $2.85 and up lJ
Club weekl! lo_w net tournament Sunday. George Hem -ball of the twosome tournament after finishing at 58 in the tf also specializing in custom :fJ.
sworth agam fired a net 52 to take top honors. Paulette men's club weekly event last weekend. f . .. lJ
Worman and Bob Saturley tied for second a stroke back at Three teams tied for second a stroke back at 59. They • •· sohd brass ra1hngs, etc. «
53. Bob McBride aced hole number five last Friday, weretheteamsofJohnMascarellaandBenKlimist;Fred t · · ··
shooting120yardswitha _5-iron . Landeen and Matt Lang; Bruce Gillespie and Don Ar-:Jl .• · ... · .. · · "solid brass isforet'er" . ~-lT . D
Sk line Country Club A parent-;child tournam~nt wi!l be hel~ Sunday, June 15, :,.. ·, _ • 1822 E. Broadway ,..._ . ~ . y . . _ . . . for Father~ D~y. !t be~ms with_ an 8.30 a.m. shotgun. , ,.· : 624-3943 . _
.Carmen and Harold Hmer shot a 29¾ to wm the tw1hght Entry deadlme is this Friday evenmg. . • ·• ., ·• . . ., ·• y ., _ .tr
mixie Scotch twosome event last Friday. Andrew and ~~~~~~~~~
Ethel Sharp followed in second with 30. Chuck Christman
and Majorie Tibels teamed up to follow in third.
The club also held a best two ball of the foursome
Sunday. Wait and Donna Laos and Renzo and Rosanna
Castellini teamed up to take top honors at 115. Dan and
Catherine Berg combined with George and Virginia Sheer
to tie for second at 118 with the team of Harold and Car-
men Hiner and Harvey and Maxi~e McCoy.
In Swingers action, Jerry Balderson, Bill Oliver, Ray
Harcombe and Hans Olpsteg combined to win the best ball
choice of nines tournament Thursday. They finished at 24 .
Dick Meyer, HarVE:Y McCoy, Chuck Chris _tman and Jim
Kinnear followed in second at 25 .
The Swingers played the point system Tuesday. Chuck
Christman, Jim Kinnear, Harvey McCoy and Frank
Stepek teamed up to win with 152 points. Ray Bailey,
George Sheer, Bob Sweek and Clark Sloat followed at 151.
Dorado Country Club
The Dorado Men's Club held a point quota A and B
tournament last Saturday and Sunday.
Bob Goodnight and Jerry McWane tied fortop honors in
the A group with + 10 . Arnie Cole followed in second at +
9. Anson Shively and John Serensa tied for third at +8.
Timmy O'Sullivan topped the B group with +14,
followed by Roger Sedlmayr with + 12 and Phil Federico
• in third with+ 11.
The men's club will travel to Kino Springs, Southern
Arizona, June 28 for a tournament. Sign up by June 22 to
attend. The cost is $5, which covers greens fee, golf cart,
lunch and prize money.
Forty Niners Country Club
Herb Needel and Mike Manela won the men's club two-
man best ball last Saturday after finishing at 55. Herb
Needel also teained with Dick McConnell to finish second
a stroke back at 56. Carter Suttle and Joe Bruce tied with
Al Merz and Joe Bruce at 57 to take third.
Dick McConnell, Mike Manela and Al Merz tied for first
place in individual low net with 66 .
Catalina Racquet and Swim Club
Henry Hines, who is a movement consµltant for as
many as 70 top touring tennis professionals, will be giving
a tennis clinic at the club Tuesday, June 17. The first
session is from 4:30 to 6 p.m. while the second is 6:30 to 8
p.m. The fee is $20 for members and nonmembers.
Everyone is welcome. Class-size limit is 50 people.
Arthur Ash attributed his 1975 victory at Wimbledon to
Henry Hines. The clinic will stress court movement,
balance, speed and quickness. He was to play on the. U.S.
Olympic tennis team in 1972 but an injury forced him out
of that and into his movement clinics known world -w ide.
The club will also hold a Fathers Day mixed doubles
round robin tournament, Sunday June 15, from 4to 6 p.m.
New pro Bill Adams will give an exhibition match from 6
to 7:30 p.m . along with Casey Esparza, ranked number
one on the University of Arizona women's team, Mike
Goldsmith, who once played for Pima College, and
C.9lleen Cleary, who also played on the U A tea~.
~ .. f -..
SAVE
WITH
Spring time Cleaning
.Protect your furs and garments from the
ravages of summer heat by storing them
with TOM ROOF THE CLEANERS, in a
fire proof and refrigerated vault.
Be sure and have your garments dry
cleaned before you put them away.
For longer life and protection of your
garments, bring them to TOM ROOF
THE CLEANERS.
TOM ROOF THE
CLEANER
6442 N. Oracle Rd.
Plaza del Oro 297-797,j
Make-Over Special
Step I -your face •
/Make-up consultat~?n: Application
Step II -your hair
Condition, Cut: Style
\
i Regular Price -$30 ,,
' Now$20 \
•. . of£.le .. ·.·r kxpires June 14th \ L _·
' ]~' i •. '.··., ' .;, '
TOTAL tuomAn LTD. '
47SOEAST (,RA1T /TlX30/\f'f<IZonA es112 By Appointment Please
Wed & Thurs eves 'Iii 9:00pm ' 327-4947
-W i ,'R.1WPAJ..J~ ~-t<J.N~
. )·
---• ~____.:::---
•
Page 24, The Arizona Territorial, June 12, 1980
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t.ike a
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s \<-t-0 s ilt~r a\ farr'!OU, ,,
w:·•· ,,,,..
51,000 in _savings
saves a service charge
· on checki11g.
When you qpen· a specially designated
Re~ular Savin~s Account at The First
with S1.000 or ~1ore. y ou'll sm·e more than
a nest egg -you"ll also save a sen·1ce
The
charge on )'()Ur First checking account.
And. vou·11 earn the hi~hest interest
allowed by law. F()r co~1plete details.
·\·isit anv First office soon .
Firs
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ARIZONA