Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 62

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
62
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

41. REPUBLIC story The Arizona Republic Saturday, July 40, 1901 MAIL Quickly State Chino Valley couples file suit over fighting cocks' 'clangor' PRESCOTT Two Chino Valley couples are seeking $100,000 from a neighbor they allege is disrupting their peace by raising, training and selling fighting cocks, according to a suit filed in Yavapai County Superior Court. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mikkelson and Mr.

and Mrs. John Whiteman also allege the fighting cocks are being maintained in the Chino Gardens subdivision in violation of deed restrictions. Defendants in the suit are Mr. and Mrs. Garald Domokos.

The suit alleges the Domokos have raised the roosters in Chino Gardens since they moved there in 1979. It also alleges that the pens where the fighting cocks are kept are unsightly and are being maintained in violation of subdivision restrictions. The suit alleges the fighting cocks in the early morning "carry on a clangor of loud, disagreeable and incessant interfering with the comfort of neighbors. injuriously affecting their health, making it impossible to sleep." It also is alleged that when the plaintiffs notified the neighbors of their displeasure, they were informed by the Domokos that they intend to continue housing and training the roosters. and Mrs.

Domokos could not be reached for comment on the allegations. Raising, training and exhibiting fighting cocks is legal in Arizona. The Mikkelsons and the Whitemans each are seeking $25,000 in general and $25,000 in punitive damages. They also want the court to enjoin the Domokos from raising, training and selling the fighting cocks. Oro Valley to appeal ruling ORO VALLEY The Town Council here has voted to appeal to the Arizona Supreme Court a lower court's ruling in a suit brought by a California developer.

The case stems from a suit brought by Lillian Fox i in June 1980 after the council rejected her proposal to build 96 apartments on a 2.4-acre site west of Oracle Road and South Calle Concordia. Pima County Superior Court judge ruled in Ms. Fox's favor in July 1980. Earlier this year, the ruling was upheld by the state Court of Appeals. In June, the appeals court refused Oro Valley's request to rehear the case.

The council's action was taken at a meeting Thursday. Attacker gets 25 years TUCSON A Tucson man convicted in June of aggravated assault by breaking the woman's face has been sentenced to 25 years in prison. Pima County Superior Court Judge Thomas Meehan on Thursday imposed the maximum sentence on Aurelio Navarro, 50. Navarro will be 65 before he is eligible for parole. Deputy County Attorney Victor Wild had asked that Navarro's two previous convictions for assault and battery and one second-degree murder conviction be considered aggravating circumstances in the latest sentence.

Industrial park opposed GREEN VALLEY Opposition is growing against a Green Valley Industrial Park proposed by Fairfield Green Valley Inc. The Green Valley Community Coordinating Council voted unanimously Thursday to oppose the corporation's plans. Green Valley residents said they are against the complex for privacy reasons. Fairfield officials said on Tuesday that they will ask the Pima Planning and Zoning Commission County change the zoning, on the instead designated parcel of land to business of rural. Tucson worker charged TUCSON A city employee was arrested Friday on charges he forged birth certificates for undocumented aliens, authorities said.

Investigators said Peter Lopez, 55, surrendered when Immigration and Naturalization Service authorities came to a Tucson office. Immigration agents said they were tipped off about the alleged scheme by aliens who bought birth certificates. The city equipment operator, also a notary public, allegedly sold the documents for $500 each. Death sentence is upheld in Bisbee resident's death By Ken Wayman State Prison, where he had been sent Special for The Republic in 1970 on conviction of the secondPRESCOTT The first degree murder of an elderly Salt Lake murder conviction and subsequent City man. The Utah man also had death sentence imposed on a Utah ex- been strangled.

convict who killed a Bisbee man have In his appeal, defense attorney been upheld by the Arizona Supreme Tony Shaw claimed evidence obtained Court. during a warrantless search of Grove's Edward Harold Schad Jr. was automobile when Schad was arrested convicted in October 1979 in Yavapai should not have been used in the trial. County Superior Court for the stran- Shaw also claimed that there was gulation murder of 73-year-old LeRoy insufficient evidence presented to the "Larry" Grove. jury to convict Schad, that Rosenblatt Schad, 39, was sentenced to death erred in his instructions to the jury by Judge Paul G.

Rosenblatt. and that the death penalty was Grove's body was found in August improperly imposed. 1978 in a ravine off U.S. 89 south of During the trial, Schad denied Prescott but was not identified until killing Grove. He also testified that he Schad was arrested in Salt Lake City a obtained Grove's vehicle in a trade at month later, driving Grove's new a Phoenix truck stop.

Cadillac. He also had credit cards and However, he admitted forging personal checks belonging to Grove. Grove's name to more than 140 creditAt the time of Grove's murder, card receipts in a 38-day tour of the was on parole from the Utah United States in Grove's Cadillac. License color changed to hamper alterations special orange back- erase or blot out birth dates will ground has added to Arizona smudge or cover the background, a drivers' licenses to make it more Transportation Department difficult for teen-agers to alter spokesman said. their birth dates so they can buy alcoholic beverages, state officials Alterations that make it appear said Friday.

that a teen-ager has reached the The change was made in licenses state's legal drinking age of 19 are being distributed because of easier to make on the old licenses now the increasing incidence of license because Mrs. they have a plain backalterations by teen-agers, said Win- ground, Grady said. kle Grady, a records manager in The new background costs the state Department of Transpor- state a penny more for each license, tation's Motor Vehicle Division. 40.7 cents instead of 39.7 cents, but The new background has wavy the additional costs are expected to lines of blue and orange inter- be recovered in reduced costs for twined. Alterations will be more law-enforcement agencies in catchnoticeable because attempts to ing license alterations.

Senate passes memorial urging Judge O'Connor's confirmation U.S. Supreme Court nominee San- House on Thursday, with two memdra O'Connor's former colleagues in bers opposing it. the Arizona Senate passed a memorial Friday, urging that she be confirmed Gov. memorial Bruce Babbitt signed the swiftly by the U.S. Senate.

Friday. The vote was 29-1. Sen. Manuel "Her position on abortion is not Pena, D-Phoenix, cast the dissenting exactly as she has stated it to be," vote. The memorial had cleared the Pena said.

IRS man turns out big loser; pal winds up over the hump Associated Press HAMPTON, N.H. A dieter lost 50 pounds, his friend lost a bet, and New Hampshire's busiest ocean-resort town gained a camel. James Kennedy, an employee of the Internal Revenue Service, lost the weight to win a bet made in December. His friend, Michael Daboul, lost the bet and had to ride a camel through downtown Hampton. A third party, restaurateur John Tinios, lost nothing.

Had Kennedy not trimmed down, Tinios would have had to treat Daboul and his sevenmember family to a meal each week for a year. Daboul mounted the camel and, escorted by his family and Hampton police, began an unusual three-mile parade. Thousands lined up along the town's main street to watch. Daboul, wearing an Arab headdress, waved to spectators from atop the single-humped camel. Kennedy, down to 170 pounds, followed in a jeep.

Tinios set up the terms of the bet when he suggested that Kennedy lose 45 pounds by June 1. Daboul, son of a Lebanese immigrant, agreed to the ride on the condition that Tinios provide the free meals if Kennedy didn't reduce. Anti-crime crusader given moving lesson at City Hall Associated Press JERSEY CITY, N.J. One man's war on crime backfired when he stopped off at City Hall to hear a proclamation marking "Citizens Against Crime Week." Richard Dwyer, vice president of Citizens Against Crime, parked and went in for the City Council's announcement. When he returned minutes later, his car was gone.

Dwyer reported the theft. The next day, police found his car, which was missing all four wheels and the battery. Dwyer took a look at his auto and went to get replacement parts so he could drive it home. When he returned two hours later, the car had been stripped completely. "It was missing radiator, motor, dashboard, seats it was just a shell," he said.

A used-car dealer in Bayonne heard of Dwyer's plight, knew of his crime-fighting work and, in a gesture of appreciation and sympathy and gave Dwyer a 1969 car. 'Gravy train' was derailed for congressional losers In 1933, the 20th Amendment to the Constitution eliminated the "lame-duck" session of Congress where congressmen who failed to be re-elected were given a last chance to legislate. The amendment set the date for the convening of the newly elected Congress at Jan. 3, and the inauguration of the new president on Jan. 20 thus eliminating what had become a political gravy train.

DISSOLUTIONS July 22, 1981 JESSUP, Bonita and Leonard DIVINE, Kashiku M. and Neal B. CHITTESTER, Jeffrey and Peggy HURST, Cindy C. and George R. SCOTT, Aldora J.

and Audie J. PICKENS, Dwain D. and Carol S. PERRAULT, Richard L. and Dorothy MACKOLIN, Christie A.

and Daniel E. GARY, Bernice and Joe L. PACKER, Gerald R. and Rachel WALSH, Deborah and Mark KLEIN, Roma D. and Robert L.

RICHARDSON, Maureen and Jerry B. RIVERA, Larry and Samai TEJEDA, Dora G. and Rafael NIEMEYER, James M. and Cynthia N. WOOD, Leo M.

and Teverly J. LAMA, Deborah A. and Rudolph P. LITTLE, Frank S. and Sally J.

ORDRONNEAU, Thomas and Patti LEE, Henry E. and Edna R.H. WETHERED, Lynne and Melvin STARKWEATHER, Carlton A. and Patricia A. RINEHART, Kathy and Dan HAMILTON, Harold L.

and Patricia S. TORRIJOS, Leonids G. and Modesto REYES, Lydia M. and Cristoval A. OPITZ, Carl J.

and Barbara A. CHRISTENSEN, Pamela S. and Larry FALLOWS, Robert A. and Susan M. WIEBE, Bambi S.

and Douglas E. WANGDEN, Kalsang and Lucy S. SWOPE, Carl and Cathline NEEMAR, Cynthia and Anthony McGHEE, Gladys and Michael ESPARZA, Henry and Phyllis FLEISCHMANN, Howard J. and Valora R. MITCHELL, Jean T.

and Bobby G. PETERSON, Frances M. and Frederick P. THOMPSON, Tanya H. and Gregory A.

FARRELLY, Anna and David BARRETTO, Irene R. and Eduardo S. RAY, Johanne and William L. UHLAR, Bonnie M. and Michael COPE, Geraldine and Leonard G.

HERMAN, Jean S. and Raymond E. ROMELE, Michael D. and Darlene A. HEADLEY, William and Rose A.

FUGGER, Letitia G. and David C. ALSTON, Lois J. and Jimmie L. DIXON, Lillie E.

and Emilio BARRETT, Bonnie J. and Clarence K. VERDUYN, Sherri L. and Ewoud B. FRANCO, Goldie F.

and Dominic A. PARKER, Diane L. and Robert A. ROSS, James H. and Annette D.

BABB, Lori C. and Richard W. TADYCH, Elizabeth R. and Gary A. ANDREAS, Debby and Richard MULLER, Robert P.

and Catherine A. GISH, Kay and Dale W. STOWERS, Leona and Gilbert R. JONES, Roberta L. and Truman D.

HAYES, Roseann and Kim J. GLISSENDORF, Louise B. and Richard E. MASK, Marvin and Elaine L. CROOK, Sandra J.

and Allen L. HADLEY, Dorothy J. and William L. NICOLLS, David L. and Beverlee J.

WIMBISH, Mattie L. and Bobby J. GRANTED July 22, 1981 GEORGE, Eloise and Albert Charles SCALISE, Mark and Laura MATNEY, Connie Belle and Billiohn HEDRICK, Jill and Robert TAPIA, Fred and Emma Tovar GUERRERO, Blanca I. and Dionisio H. SOUTHWORTH, Nancy Marie and David Clay MITCHELL, Charles Howard and Peggy Jean PEARSON, Charles W.

and Virginia PANSIER, Gary L. Carol M. LEWIS, Kenneth R. and Nancy E. HALL, Gary and Sharon A.

WAGNER, Kathy Ann and Alan P. HANSING, Lynna and William GIBSON, Denise Lynn and Rollie Joseph GEHRINGER, Donald B. and Judy J. GROSS, Ruth Marie and Gerald Warren NELSON, Brian Hurd and Robin WEBSTER, Madge and John C. MOORE, Catherine A.

and Patrick L. BORNE, Jessica Joy and Reynold RENNELLS, Bruce Alan and Eva Rebecca BAHADIR, Ova and Ilhan KOWALSKI, Terry and Theodore CHISUM, Jimmy C. and Donna G. SPREIER, Jill M. and Kenneth D.

KAIRIS, Juliann S. and Donald J. DAHIR, Russell L. and Darlene L. MAHAFFEE, Charis Lawrence and Rebecca Ellen TORUGA, Rodolfo Cooper and Saraphine Louise YOCKEY, Kristina Dawn and Mark William WRAY, Georgia H.

and Phillip F. BENTLEY, Gertrude Carole and Randolph Young ACCARDY, Shirley Mae and Joseph Roger CONLEY, Larry O. and Karen S. ZEMP, Anna L. Tanner and Brian Lynn DERRON, Diane Paula and George Jacob Announcements HOLLIS, Clara Frances, Survived by husband Emett, daughter Lois Palmer Phoenix.

Sons Dr. Robert of Rolling Hills Calif. Rodney Guatemala Guatemala. sisters out of state, 13 grandchildren, great grandchildren. Visitation Sat Services Sun 3 p.m.

Memory Lawn Mausoleum Chapel. Interment Mon 10 a.m. Memory Lawn Memorial Park. Memorials can be sent. to Phoenix Central Christian Church Memorial Fund.

Ar-: rangements by Memory Lawn Mortuary. KEEGAN, Frances M. Sur-. vived by sisters Ruth Mrs. Margaret Chariton.of Talmage of Sun city, and and niece Mary Louise Talmage of Sun City.

Mass of Christian Burial p.m. Saturday at St. Clement of Rome Catholic Church, 15800 Del Webb Sun Cify. Entombment in Sunland Memorial Park. Arrange ments Menke Funeral Home, Sun City, 979-6451.

LIGHTFOOT, Maybelle June, Survived by son, Robert of Scottsdale. Daughters, Suzanne. Krever of. Scottsdale, Mariorie Whitefoof of Tempe. Sister, Harriet Bush of Ottawa, '5 grandchildren.

great-grandchild. Cremation. Arrangements by Messinger Mortuary, Scottsdale. LIPTINCOTT, Harriet P. Sun City.

Arrangements pending. Lundberg Mortuary, Golden Door Chapel. LOCKYER, Mary Jane For information call Arizona portation Service, 334 W. Monroe. vived by wife, Lillian MILLER, Alvin, Martin, surTempe; 1-son, James Moyer of Paradise Valley; 3-daughLois Williams of Arlene Wagner and Connie Baumgari, both out of 1-brother and 1- sister, out of state; 17-grandchildren and 5-great-grandchildren.

Visitation Sunday, July service, 26th, Monday, July BATh: 11:00 a.m., Chapel of Light, Green Acres Mortuary. Interment, Green Acres Memorial Gardens. MOORE, E. Mass of Burial 10 a.m. Saturday af St.

Clement Rome Catholic Church, 15800 Del Webb. Sun City. Interment in Sunland Memorial Park. Arrangements by Menke Funeral Home, Sun. City, 979-6451.

PROEBSTING, Fredrick C. Mass today a.m. Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Interment Memorial Park. Arrangements by Messinger Mortuary, Scottsdale.

SAIS, Tomasa P. Survived by daughters Genevieve Cisneros, Margaret Morales and Tamie sons Raymond Remigio. and Miguel Sais, and Jimmy and. Felix Vasquez. 28 grandchildren, 36 great grandchildren.

Mass 9:30 a.m., Monday, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, 5614 Orangewood. Visitation Sunday 5-10 p.m. Rosary 8:00 p.m., Chapel of The Chimes. Interment Resthaven. SCHULTZ, Clifford For information call Arizona Buro Transportation Service, 334 SQUIRE, Regina Jean" Died July 23, 1981.

Survived by sister, Margaret Peterson, Phoenix; Elmer Johnson. Memorial Weatherford, Services 11:00 a.m. Monday, Shepherd Church, 1500 Maryland the Valley, Lutheran Avenue. FRIENDS MAY CALL 5-8 p.m. Sunday.

Grimshaw. Bethany Chapel, 710 W. Bethany Home Road. in lieu of material remembrances, those who wish may donate to the Shepherd of the Mathera: Church, 1500 W. STEINER, Edna A.

Funeral Services today 9:00 a.m. Shepherd of The Desert Lutheran Church, Sun City. Arrangements by Lundberg's Golden Door Chapel. WACKERBARTH, Leona services Monday, 10:00 a.m., Grace Lutheran Church, 1124 N. 3rd Street.

Friends may call af Mercer Mortup.m. Thomas, Green- Sunday wood Memorial Park. Family suggests memorials. to Phoenix Center for the Blind, 3100 E. Roosevelt.

266-4473. WALLACE, Mildred, A. Sun City. Visitation Sunday 12 to 8 p.m,. Lundberg's Golden Door Chapel.

Funeral Services at p.m. Monday Lundberg's Door. Chapel. WEISS, Henry B. Services today 9:00 Chapel of The Chimes.

Interment Resthaven. Family prefers donations to the Kidney Foundation. Ken Akers Mountain man Jeff Szoke of Chandler carefully works his way up a rock formation called a "chimney" on a mountain-climbing expedition in Carefree. Despite the altitude, summer temperatures forced Szoke to climb in the shade. Senate chief threatens to delay urban-land bill By Joel Nilsson Republic Staff Gov.

Bruce Babbitt must act on a highway-finance program before the Senate will take up an urban-land-use bill, Senate President Leo Corbet, R- Phoenix, said Friday. Corbet's comment does not close the door entirely for action on the lands bill, a Babbitt priority, but Rep. Jane Hull, R-Phoenix, said she doubts the upper chamber will act on urban lands during the special legislative session. "I don't think they're going to go ahead with it" in the Senate, said Rep. Hull, who has guided the bill through the House.

"I think it's too bad because a lot of people have worked hard." Corbet said the bill, designed to provide for the orderly development, sale and lease of about 575,000 acres of state-owned lands in and around Phoenix and Tucson, is "secondary to the transportation issue." Concurrent special sessions on urban lands and transportation began July 7 and July 8, respectively. Noting that some of the Republican senators are "violently opposed" to an urban-lands measure, Corbet said, "To inject that type of fight on top of one we already have going is probably one of the most stupid things I could do." He said he would hold the urbanlands measure, which cleared, the Senate Natural Resources Committee on a 6-1 bipartisan vote Wednesday, until the transportation issue is resolved. Meanwhile, Rep. Hull said a key amendment tacked onto the Housepassed lands bill by the Senate Natural Resources Committee is acceptable despite fears expressed earlier in the week that it would diminish the bill's chances for passage. The amendment provides that Tucson and Phoenix be the only cities that could request that land within three miles of their borders be reclassified as urban land suitable for planning.

Municipalities with populations of less than 250,000 could request reclassification within one mile of their borders. As it passed the House, all municipalities could seek land reclassifications within three miles. Rep. Hull theorized that Corbet is holding up the lands measure because he is still angry over Babbitt's veto in April of a Republican-backed bill to provide health care to indigents, which Democrats said would fail to qualify for federal matching funds. She said the lands measure and the health-care proposal may be linked in a special session on health care for the poor.

That session may convene in September if the GOP majority is successful in its negotiations with the Reagan administration on a health measure. "It's time for it to go and be passed," Rep. Hull said. Andrew Hurwitz, Babbitt's chief of staff, said the governor's decision on the transportation bill will not be affected by the status of the lands bill. There is "nothing we can do" if Corbet links the measure with highway finance, he said: Drug-agency director pledges cooperation with state units Frank Navarrete, 38, officially nominated Friday as director of the Arizona Criminal Intelligence System Agency, vowed cooperation with all state law-enforcement agencies in collecting and distributing criminal intelligence.

Goy, Bruce Babbitt made Navarrete's appointment official at a news conference. The job, which requires confirmation by the state Senate, will pay Navarrete $45,973 annually. If confirmed, he will begin work Monday. As a captain in the Phoenix Police Department, his salary was $40,000 yearly. He was with the department 18 years.

The intelligence agency is the successor to the Arizona Drug Control District, which the Legislature altered earlier this year boy making it strictly an intelligence-gathering unit. Gone from the agency are the prosecutorial and enforcement powers that created jurisdictional battles between competing law-enforcement agencies. Navarrete said that under him, the agency will be a central repository for criminal intelligence and will not Vitals A STEP FORWARD MAUCH CHUNK, Pa. (AP) The first iron made with anthracite coal was produced here in 1839. Until then, only small quantities of iron were produced all by hand methods.

Announcements AGUILAR, Antonio F. Funeral Mass 9:00 today Sacred Heart Church, 919 South 16th Place. Interment St. Francis Cemetery. ArMurphy Funeral 330 rangements by Whimey N.

2nd Ave. BILLINGS. Donald R. Services today 10 a.m. Messinger Mortuary Chapel, Scottsdale.

Entombment St. Francis. BURNS, Hubert Jr. Graveside Service, Saturday, July 25, 1981. 11:00 a.m.

Green Acres Gardens. GREEN ACRES Mortuary, Scottsdale in charge. CHRISTENSEN, Ines. rangements pending. NEY MURPHY FUNERAL HOME, 330 North 2nd Ave.

COOKE, Madge. For informafion call Arizona 334 W. Monroe. DONOHOE, Peter. Masonic services today Chapel of the Roses, Larry J.

Melcher 43 Stapley Mesa. Cremation Paradise Memorial Gardens, Scottsdale, Az. ESTRADA, Lucianita 73, Mass and Rosary 7:30 p.m. Monday, Immaculate, Heart 909 E. Washington Graveside Blessing 10:00 a.m.

Tuesday, Queen of Heaven Cemefery, Botimer Family Mortuary. HENAGAR, Joe W. Survived by. wife Celia, son, Harrel, both of Phoenix, daughter Florene Elaum of Yuma, sister, 5 grandchildren. grandchildren, great, ServIces Monday Chapel, 388 School, Interment Greenwood.

Visitation Sunday 4-4 p.m. at Maryvale. 7-Funeral Directors LARSSION CEASHER 6625 E. Apache Trail, Mesa 832-3500 Camelback Funeral Home 301 W. CAMELBACK 277-2603 MELDRUM MORTUARY Macdonald at 1st St.

Mesa 834-9255 WERRERA SONS 1641 Jefferson 253-4105 CREMATION $170 ARIZONA BURIALCremation- Transportation SERVICE CALL FOR INFORMATION 257-0829 19-Cemetery Lots and Services CHOICE cemetery, property, Green Acres, o- Scisdi, sacrifice at $575 COMPANION Grave, 2 vaults marker $900. Resthaven Glendale, 979-6538 DOUBLE lot. Located Phx Memorial Park. Private party. 978-6687 GREEN Acres, Scottsdale 2 adjoining lots.

Nice location $600. 838-9560 Learn About Cremation Greenwood Memorial park 2300 Van Buren 254-8493 SINGLE lot headstone in Phx. Memorial Park $495 or best offer. Call 993-4794 WILL accept best offer over $400 for 2 cemetery JotsMemory Lawn Pk 947-5917 2 lots, beautiful Green Acres in Scottsdale. $780 for both.

944-8058. concentrate solely on drug-related crime as did the former agency. He said individual law-enforcement agencies will gather criminal intelligence and the new agency will analyze it "and return to them a usable product." "We do not want to get into the business of competing." Navarrete said it is premature to speculate whether the agency will grow in size. The Legislature appropriated $3.2 million for this fiscal year, down $200,000 from last year's budget. It also specified that nine positions are to be eliminated by Sept.

1, reducing the agency's staff to 70. He said there will be no undercover agents employed by the agency and that he will surrender his peace-officer status. There are no plans to move the agency's headquarters to Phoenix from Tucson, and he will move to Tucson, he said. COMPOUNDING TENSION UNITED NATIONS (AP) The largest embassy in the world is the 45- acre compound used by the Soviet Union in Peking. A Very Special Lots Green Acres Cemetery 948-3798 CLASSIFICATIONS 25 THROUGH 30 AND ALL REAL ESTATE CLASSIFICATIONS START IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING CLASSIFICATION 490.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Arizona Republic
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Arizona Republic Archive

Pages Available:
5,583,415
Years Available:
1890-2024