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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 32

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I REPUBLIC REPUBLIC Obituaries Obituaries published by The Arizona Republic in its news columns are provided free of charge as a public service. Parties desiring specifically worded obituaries may place them through their mortuaries in the paid classified advertising section. AHEARN, Lenore T. ALLEN, Richard 'Gene' ANDERSON, Albert Russel BEVEL, Jimmy Cline CAIN, John M. CARMEAN, Florus H.

CLARK, Morris CRADER, Delbert L. DOW, Kellin S. EDGERLEY, Hazel Leon FIETSCH, Myrtle Frances FREDERICK, Doris June GLASS, Harry M. JANZ, Rola R. KROEGEL, David Paul MARTIN, Ray W.

MAYS, Mary McCOMB, Eva M. McCRACKEN, Kathryn Amelia MELLE, Louis J. PEARSON, Samuel Paul QUINN, Tiny RUFIANGE, Lewis W. SAENZ, Mary T. SANDOVAL, RE Rachel T.

STEININGER, Edna Bilger STEWART, Ann SUNDBERG, Cyrus Cameron VALENZUELA, Hipolito 'Polo' VOGEL, Veronica V. WATERKOTTE, Alvin Henry WATSON, Velva E. WEIN, Evelyn M. Lenore T. Ahearn, 82, of Scottsdale, a homemaker, died Aug.

15, 1987, at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital-Osborn. She was born in Chicago. Survivors include a daughter, Marjorie Hopfer; sons, Robert W. and John and 15 grandchildren. Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m.

Monday, with prayer service at 7 p.m., at Messinger Mortuary Chapel, 7601 E. Indian School Road. Mass will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. Maria Goretti Catholic Church, 6261 N.

Granite Reef Road. Richard "Gene" Allen, 57, of Phoenix, self salesman, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Thunderbird Samaritan Hospital Health Center. He was born in Beloit, Kan. Survivors include his wife, Arline Helen; daughters, Carolyn Aberle, Rockhold and Kim Shepardson; sons, Steve, Daryl and Tim; mother, Ruth Inez; two sisters; a brother; and 10 grandchildren.

Friends may call from 5. to 8 p.m. Monday, with services at noon Tuesday, at Grimshaw Bethany Chapel, 710 W. Bethany Home Road. Albert Russel Anderson, 71, of Phoenix, a construction laborer, died Aug.

12, 1987, at Maricopa Medical Center. He was born in Arkansas. Survivors include a daughter, Lois Burton; sons, Charles, James, Thomas, Rut and Eric; mother, Arilla Cranford; two sisters; a brother; and 12 grandchildren. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at Botimer Family Mortuary, 8646 S.

Central Ave. Services will 10 a.m. Tuesday at Church of God and Christ Congregational, 6216 S. 22nd St. Jimmy Cline Bevel, 64, of Black Canyon City, an automobile parts manager, died Aug.

13, 1987, at Phoenix General Hospital. He was born Enis, Texas. Survivors include his wife, Mabel Lena; daughter, Pauline L. Hermsen; son, Thurmon K. Thomason; and two sisters.

Private arrangements were made by Greer Chapel Funeral Home. Brenda Clampitt, Janet John M. Cain, 51, of Mesa, an electrician for McDonnell Douglas died Aug. 14, 1987, at Hearthstone of Mesa. He was born in Spokane, Wash.

Survivors include his daughters, Carolyn Cooper, Cheryl D. Calvert and Kelly J. Branum; sons, Scott Peterson and Pat; mother, Carolyn and five grandchildren. Services will be at 10 a.m. at Holy Cross Catholic Church, 1244 S.

Power Road, with arrangements by Mountain View Mortuary. Florus H. Carmean, 81, of Mesa, a railway postal clerk for 39 years before retiring in 1965, died Aug. 13, 1987, at Valley Lutheran Hospital. He was born in Newton, Ill.

Survivors include his wife, Pauline; daughter, Carol Jean Maurer; son, Bruce; and five grandchildren. Memorial services will be held at a later date, with arrangements by Melcher Mortuary Mission Chapel. Morris Clark, 71, of Cottonwood, a retired mathematics teacher at Mingus Union High School, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Marcus J. Lawrence Memorial Hospital.

He was born in Oregon and was a lieutanant colonel in the Army Air Force during World War II. Survivors include his wife, Helen; daughters, Kathy Wright and Mary Sterrett; two sisters; a brother; and four grandchildren. Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday at United Methodist Church in Clarkdale. Arrangements were made by Westcott Funeral Home.

Delbert L. Crader, 67, of Yarnell, a computer programmer for Honeywell in Phoenix for 17 years before retiring, died Aug. 10, 1987, at Veterans Administration Medical Center in Prescott. He was born in Wathens, and was a veteran of World War Il. Survivors include his wife, Lela; daughter, Mary C.

LaBarthe; son, Larry; and four brothers. Private arrangements were made by Memory Chapel Mortuary, Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society. Kellin S. Dow, 6-month-old son of Ronald and Linda Dow of Phoenix, died Aug. 13, 1987, of natural causes.

He was born in Phoenix. Other survivors include a sister, Randie, and grandparents, Dick and Marvidene Donald and Darlene Holden. Friends may call from 4 to 6 p.m. today, with services at 10:30 a.m. Monday, at Hansen Mortuary, 8314 N.

Seventh St. Hazel Leon Edgerley, 94, a Phoenix homemaker, died Aug. 13, 1987, at Thunderbird Samaritan Hospital Health Center. She was born in Danville, Ill. Survivors include a daughter, W.

Maxine Schafer; sons, Warren and Millard; and 10 grandchildren. Friends may call from 2 to 5 p.m. today, with services at 11 a.m. Monday, at Chapel of the Chimes, 7924 N. 59th Ave.

Myrtle Frances Fietsch, 92, a Phoenix homemaker, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Golden Mesa Nursing Home. She was born in Chicago. Survivors include a a a a a a a a daughter, Margaret Pruett; son, Frank; a sister; and four grandchildren. Services will be in Westmont, with local arrangements by Melcher's Chapel of the Roses.

AUGUST 16, 1987 Doris June Frederick, 54, of Phoenix, bookkeeper, died Aug. 13, 1987, at Maryvale Samaritan Hospital. Survivors include her husband, Delmas; daughters, A. June Wicklund and Julie F. Tenuta; son, Michael; mother, Sadie Crouch; a sister; a brother; and eight grandchildren.

Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. today, with services at p.m. Monday, at Chapel of the Chimes, 7924 N. 59th Ave. Harry M.

Glass, 62, of Phoenix, a procession grinder, died Aug. 12, 1987, in Phoenix. He was born in Ohio, and was a Marine Corps veteran of World War II, serving in the South Pacific. Survivors include a daughter, Michaelynn; son, Scott; and two grandchildren. Friends may call after 4 p.m.

Monday, with services at 7 p.m., at Lundberg's White Rose Chapel, 5310 W. Northern Ave. Rola R. Janz, 78, of Sun City, restaurant manager for Towsand Wall Department Store in St. Joseph, for 12 years, died Aug.

12, 1987, in Sun City. She was born in Merril, Wis. Survivors include a son, Ray; a sister; and two grandchildren. Memorial services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at Faith Presbyterian Church 16000 Del Webb with arrangements by Sunland Mortuary.

David Paul Kroegel, 22, of Clifton, a brick mason, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Maricopa Medical Center. He was born in Florida. Survivors include his mother, Rose Martifather, Frank; sisters, Donna McNich and Debby; and brother, Gregg. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m.

today, with Mass at 9 a.m. Monday, at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Clifton. Botimer Family Mortuary made arrangements. Ray W. Martin, 73, of Phoenix, a vice president of First Federal Savings Loan for 25 years before retiring in 1969, died Aug.

14, 1987, at Good Samaritan Medical Center, of natural causes. He was born in Kramer, N.D., and was an Army Air Forces veteran of World War II. Survivors include 12 cousins and a nephew. Friends may call from 2 to 5 p.m. today at A.L.

Moore Sons, 333 W. Adams St. Services will be in North Dakota. Mary Mays, 77, a Flagstaff homemaker, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Los Arcos Health Center.

She was born in West Virginia. Survivors include her husband, Cecil; daughter, Janet Hamby; son, Tom; and four grandchildren. Friends may call after 5:30 p.m. today, with rosary at 7:30 p.m., at Flagstaff Mortuary, 302 W. Oak Ave.

Mass will be at 9 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church. Eva M. McComb, 82, of Phoenix, a dietician for a children's nursery in Kilgore, Texas, before retiring, died Aug. 13, 1987, at Yavapai Regional Medical Center in Prescott.

She was born in Texas. Survivors include a daughter, Betty Evitt; sons, John Kennedy and Paul; two sisters; a brother; and seven grandchildren. Private arrangements were made by Shadow Mountain Mortuary. Kathryn Amelia "Kay" McCracken, 78, a Mesa homemaker, died Aug. 13, 1987, in Oakland, Md.

She was born in Friends-. ville, Md. Survivors include her sons, Charles C. and Norman a sister; and three grandchildren. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m.

Monday at Melcher's Chapel of the Roses, S. Stapley Dr. Services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday at First Methodist Church, 15 E. First Ave.

Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society. Louis J. Melle, 74, of Mesa, a farmer, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Chandler Health Care Center. He was born in Romania.

Survivors include his wife, Frances; son, Elden; two sisters; two brothers; and five grandchildren. Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. today, with rosary at 7:30 p.m., at Melcher's Mission Chapel, 6625 E. Apache Trail. Services will be at 10 a.m.

Monday at All Saints Catholic Church, 1534 N. Recker Road. Memorial contributions may be made to Dreamland Villa Help Service, 320 N. 55th Place, Mesa 85205. Samuel Paul Pearson, 23, of Phoenix, a cement finisher Del Com, died Aug.

6, 1987, in Phoenix. He was born in Lubbock, Texas. Survivors include a daughter, Jayme Lynette; mother, Edna Morris; father, John two sisters; and seven brothers. Private arrangements were made by Green Acres Mortuary. Tiny Quinn, 71, of Safford, a high school cafeteria worker and a hospital nurse's aide, died Aug.

14, 1987, at Mount Graham Community Hospital. She was born in Thatcher. Survivors include her husband, Frank; sons, Brent and Jerry; and 11 grandchildren. Friends may call from 5 to 9 p.m. today, or from 9 a.m.

to 2:30 p.m. Monday, at Safford Funeral Home, 501 Relation. Services will be at 3 p.m. Monday at the Safford Stake Center of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Lewis W.

Rufiange, 72, of Phoenix, a warehouse foreman for American Exceler died Aug. 13, 1987, at Good Samaritan Medical Center. He was born in Trenton, N.Y. Survivors include his wife, Mary; daughter, Mary Morris; two sisters; and five grandchildren. Graveside services will be at 1:30 p.m.

Monday at Holy Cross Cemetery, 99th Avenue a a and Thomas Road, with arrangements by Greer Chapel Funeral Home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Arizona Foundation, 3249 E. Indian School Road, Phoenix 85018. WORLD NATION Mary T. Saenz, 72, of Glendale, a homemaker, died Aug.

14, 1987, at Thunderbird Samaritan Hospital Health Center. She was born in Texas. Survivors include her daughters, Minga Paula S. Dominguez, Clara Ramos and Basilio Frank Jesse Joe Jose Angel and Pete and 142 grandchildren. Friends may call from 4 to .10 p.m.

today, with rosary at 7:30 p.m., at Chapel of the Chimes, 7924 N. 59th Ave. Mass will be at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Raphael's Catholic Church, 5525 W.

Acoma Drive. Mary Jane Osuna; sons, Rachel T. Sandoval, 51, of Holbrook, a homemaker and a volunteer at Christian Thrift Shop, died Aug. 14, 1987, at Flagstaff Medical Center, of natural causes. She was born in Grants, N.M.

Survivors include her husband, Albino; daughters, Marcella Quinonez, Rosie Quinonez, Lucille Sarabia, Priscella Salazar and Irene Garcia; sons, Albino Jr. and Danny; mother, Benita Barnell; two sisters; eight brothers; and 22 grandchildren. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. today at Owen's Mortuary, 409 First Ave. Services will be at 2 p.m.

Monday at First Assembly of God Church in Holbrook. Edna Bilger Steininger, 90, of Sun City West, a seamstress at Pennsylvania State Hospital for 22 years before retiring, died Aug. 13, 1987, at John C. Lincoln Hospital Health Center. She was born in McClure, Pa.

Survivors include her daughters, Marian Stauffer and Mary Badger; son, Arthur S. II; and six grandchildren. Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Monday at Sunland Memorial Park, 15826 Del Webb Blvd. Ann Stewart, 71, of Mesa, a rental property manager and a former accountant and loan officer for Humboldt Federal Savings and Loan in Hanford, died Aug.

14, 1987, in Mesa. She was born in Stroud, Okla. She also had worked for Crocker Bank in Hanford. Survivors include a daughter, Janice Timm; a sister; two brothers; and three grandchildren. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m.

Monday, with services at 10 a.m. Tuesday, at Henderson Funeral Home Colonial Chapel, 3529 E. University Drive. Cyrus Cameron Sundberg, 72, formerly of Phoenix, a retired employee Goodyear Aerospace died Aug. 6, 1987, in Thornton, of natural causes.

He was born in Minneapolis and was a Navy veteran of World War II. Survivors include his wife, Christine; daughters, La Vonne Sealy, Mary Thurston and Nancy Anderson; son, Jerome; stepdaughter, Barbara Morita; three sisters; a brother; and 13 grandchildren. Services were held in Colorado, with arrangements by Olinger Highland Chapel. Hipolito "Polo" Valenzuela, 91, a farmer, died Aug. 13, 1987, at his Phoenix residence.

He was born in Rodeo, Durango, Mexico. Survivors include his wife, Natividad; daughters, Elisa Maldonado, Katie Macias, Helen Eubanks and Nancy Gonzales; sons, Raul Paez, Paul, Johnny, Reymundo, Ronnie, Robert and Reyes; and 31 grandchildren. Friends may call from 5 to 10 p.m. Monday, with rosary at 7 p.m., at Mortensen-Kings Funeral Center, 1020 W. Washington St.

Mass will be at 9 a.m. Tuesday at St. Catherine of Sienna Catholic Church, 6200 S. Central Ave. Veronica V.

Vogel, 83, a homemaker, died Aug. 11, 1987, in Peoria. She was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. Survivors include her husband, Charles; daughter, Delores Mathiesen; son, Charles sister; and 13 grandchildren. Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m.

today, with rosary at 7 p.m., at Lundberg's White Rose Chapel, 5310 W. Northern. Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, 5614 W. Orangewood Ave.

Alvin Henry Waterkotte, 73, of Phoenix, a retired baker in California, died He was in Illinois. Survivors include his Aug. 14,1987, at Tempe St. Luke's Hospital. wife, Mae daughter, Duarte; son, Daniel; four sisters; a brother; and four grandchildren.

Friends may at noon Monday, with services at 1 p.m., at Tempe Mortuary, 405 E. Southern Ave. Velva E. Watson, 66, a Peoria homemaker, died Aug. 13, 1987, at Boswell Memorial Hospital.

She was born in Arkansas. Survivors include her husband, Urick; daughter, Carolyn Smith; son, Jerry; a sister; a brother; four grandchildren. Friends may call from 4 to 6 p.m. Monday, with services at 9 a.m. Tuesday, at Menke Funeral Home, 12420 N.

103rd Ave. Evelyn M. Wein, 70, a Phoenix homemaker, died Aug. 11, 1987, at Humana Hospital Phoenix, of natural causes. She was born in Philadelphia.

Survivors include a daughter, Gayle Luginbuhl; son, Philip H. Wynn; a sister; and two grandchildren. Services will be at 11 a.m. Monday at A.L. Moore Sons Chapel of Memories, 333 W.

Adams St. Memorial contributions may be made either to the American Diabetes Association or the Arizona Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Vincent Persichetti; musician held Juilliard composition post Associated Press L.S. Dillingham; tycoon PHILADELPHIA Vincent was savvy businessman Persichetti, composer of 150 works HONOLULU Businessman and one-time head of composition Lowell S. Dillingham, who served at the Juilliard School of Music, has died after a short illness.

He was 72. on the boards of Pan American World Airways and BankAmerica Mr. Persichetti died Thursday died Friday of a heart night in his Philadelphia home, his ailment. He was 76. family said.

Mr. Dillingham, former chairman His works included nine sympho- of Dillingham was the sucnies and works for chorus, bands, cessor to the business empire solo instruments, piano, organ, vio- founded by his grandfather in 1889. lin and cellos. Dillingham which had revenues totaling $1.5 billion in His A Lincoln Address, commis- 1982, was sold to a private investsioned for the second inaugural of ment group in 1983 for $347 million President Nixon, was a composition and was liquidated in June. of orchestra music set to parts of Mr.

Dillingham was credited with the text from Abraham Lincoln's turning his family's substantial own second inaugural address. Hawaii land, construction and He was associated with Juilliard, transportation interests into a divin New York, for nearly 40 years. ersified international corporation. 'Nutheads' told right away they're in for 90 hard days 'I'm going to find out whether you're going to make i it or not' The following are the comments of a guard greeting young offenders at the Georgia Department of Corrections' shock-incarceration program. The guard's fast-clipped demeanor leaves almost no time for the young inmates to answer: judge decided to give you a break and send you here for 90 days instead of in prison for five years, where you should be.

"What did you do to get here? Burglary! Look at me when I'm talkin' to you. I'm the man who runs that gate. I'm the man who's going to find out whether you're going to make it or not. You understand that. You know what happens to someone who'd come to my house and burgle it? I'd blow CAMP Continued from the general-population inmates and is believed to be advantageous to the shock value of the program," according to a report prepared by Arizona corrections officials.

"You hear several rude comments from the time we (young felons) march past," says one unidentified offender on a videotape being circulated among state officials last month. "I guess it's our youth," the young inmates says. "That's their life. Maybe they'd like to have sex with one of us. Well, they imply that all the time, and I think they would if we were over there." Participants in the program are on probation.

Any misbehavior by the young felons can mean the revocation of probation and immediate transfer to the general prison population. The young offenders are kept to a strict schedule 5:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday that includes days of gang work on roads or in fields followed by 30 minutes of calisthenics. Legislation that would allow such a program in Arizona is being pursued by Rep.

Mark Killian, R-Mesa, chairman of the Arizona House Public Institutions Committee. But such a measure is not likely to receive public hearings until January, during the Legislature's next regular session. Killian said he began pushing for the program's adoption in Arizona after seeing a Public Broadcasting Service report about the program in Georgia. "I think it's a great idea," Killian said. "We've got to be able to reprogram them (young criminals) to do more -constructive things with their lives rather than destructive things.

I don't know how else we're going to get to these kids." Killian said the idea of prison sex is something most young offenders probably don't even think about when they commit a crime. NY mayor's dog bites city worker collecting trash Archie, follows him around," O'Donnell said. "But when he made a sudden move, the dog bites him on the buttocks." Officials at the residence made no plans to discipline the mongrel, a mix between a Labrador retriever and a German shepherd. "He was doing the right thing," O'Donnell said. "He is a pet, but pets can be protective." Schwabb, who was wearing his green Sanitation Department uniform, may need a new pair of pants.

Commons was bombed Associated Press LONDON The chamber of the of Commons in London was destroyed by a German incendiary bomb in World War II. United Press International NEW YORK Mayor Edward Koch's dog, Archie, bit a city sanitation worker on the buttocks Saturday as he picked up garbage at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's residence. The sanitation worker, foreman Edwin Schwabb, was treated at a hospital across the street for two puncture wounds and released, police spokesman Raymond O'Donnell said. The incident occurred about 12:30 p.m. as Schwabb, 41, got out of his sanitation vehicle and walked about the grounds of the Upper East Side residence to see if there was any trash to haul away.

"The guy enters through the main gate and the mayor's dog, 'em away. "What did you do to get in here? Where'd you get that beard? You don't grow beards in here, do you? Answer me when I'm talking to you. If I see that thing hanging out of your face "What did you do to get in here? What? You don't know? You concealed weapons. That's a good way to get yourself blown away. "What did you do? Burglary! Whose house did you burgle? Would you like someone to come in and burgle your house? Look at me when I'm talking to you! What would you do to them? Blow them away.

You're lucky right now you're not look at me when I talk to you. You are going to be here for 90 days, you understand that? Maybe? "What did you do, to get in here? Look at me when I'm talking to you. Concealing a stolen car? How do you hide a stolen car? You were receiving one. You buy from B1 "It's one thing to be tough on the outside (out of prison). It's something different to be tough on the inside," Killian said.

The program is, in part, the brainchild of James B. O'Connor, a semiretired Superior Court judge who rides a six-county circuit in southeastern Georgia. "The idea is to give selected inmates the kind of life they'd face if they became career criminals," said O'Connor, 59, who has spent 23 years on the Georgia bench. "We have a good many people in this category. If they could see where they're headed down the road, they would lean toward the lawful way of living." O'Connor said the program would not work with convicts older than 25.

"When you get above that, habits have been formed. Personalities are very hard to change. It's strictly for young people," he said, emphasizing that the program heavily dependent on the training and discretion of judges. "It has to be very selective," involving those felons who appear to have been somehow been led into crime by drug abuse or bad associations, O'Connor said. "Corrections people are working with judges, trying to hold off the recidivists, the people who are coming back (to prison) again and again." Eddie Bozeman, a probation officer who helps coordinate the program in Chester, said the boot camp's recidivism, the rate at which convicts get in trouble and return to prison, is only 20 to 25 percent, or about half of the 40 to 45 percent experienced by the general prison population.

Bozeman attributes the success of the program, in part, to a lack of sophistication on the part of the young men. "They're at an impressionable age. The average age is 20. They get Classifications 801 through 859 See Section CL for All Other Classifications 801-Funeral Announcements ALLEN, Richard (Gene) For information call Grimshaw Bethany Chapel, 710 Bethany Home Rd. 249-2111.

ARMSTRONG, Helen P. Arrangements Pending, Funeral Center 254-3119. CROWLEY, Geneva Zoe Arrangements Pending, Funeral Center, 254-3119. ROJAS, Eddie Jr. Arrangements Pending, Mortensen Funeral Center, 254-3119.

VALENZUELA, Hipolito "Polo" Rosary 7:00 Monday, Mortensen-Kings Funeral Center, 1020 West Washngton, Mass A.M. of Chrisfian Burial 9:00 Tuesday. St. Catherine of Sienna Catholic Church, 6200 South Central, Friends May Call 5-10 P.M. Monday.

at Funeral Center. Mrs. Velva Visitation Monday 1-6 P.M. Menke Funeral Home, Funeral service 9:00 A.M. Tuesday, 12420 Menke Funeral Home, 103rd Ave, Sun Cify 807-Funeral Directors GREEN ACRES MORTUARIES SCOTTSDALE 401 N.

Hayden Rd. GLENDALE 5830 W. Missouri Phillips, Kevin: Pending Please call for addl. info SCOTTSDALE 945-2654 GLENDALE 939-8321 LUNDBERG'S MORTUARY Gindl, Sun 247-1111 979-7111 MEMORY LAWN 719 N. 27th Ave.

272-5639 and sell stolen goods? You're lucky you're not in prison, aren't you? Your're lucky what? You're lucky, 'Yes, Every time somebody says something to you from now on until you leave, it's, 'Yes, sir' and, 'No, That's all I want to hear out of you. "If it was left up to me, you'd be in prison. I don't particularly like inmates. I've seen too many of them come and go. My whole day is spent with nutheads like you.

"What did you do? You and he in this thing together? Do you know him? Do you know any of these people? Are you buddies? You're going to be my buddy for 90 days. I'm going to be your mommy and daddy and brother and sister. That's why you're here. You fool with me and I'll bust you so low you can sit on a cigarette paper and dangle your're legs. "You understand me? Speak up when I'm talkin' to you.

Say, 'Yes sir, no a good experience as to what prison life is all about," he said. Aspects of the program have not been tried on general-population inmates for fear that they would entangle the corrections system in a web of legal protests, Bozeman said. "The inmates we receive in the shock program are not aware of certain rights," Bozeman said, making them more susceptible to the threats and stern language doled out by guards in the boot-camp program. The success of the program, however, has caused Georgia corrections officials to open a second 100-man boot-camp unit at a prison in Forsyth, Bozeman said. And it has given rise in recent weeks to a similar program in South Carolina, which plans to create a similar facility for young adult women, he said.

"The program has drawn a good deal of attention," Bozeman said, noting that corrections officials from Florida, Texas, Michigan and Arizona have toured the facilities in Chester. According to the report prepared by Arizona corrections officials, who toured the Georgia facility earlier this year, "The program works, since the actual prison experience seems to have played an important role in changing the attitude of some of the inmate participants." According to the report, the annual cost per prisoner was reduced from an average of $11,107 to $2,585, because participants stay for only three months. After successfully completing the program, participants continue on probation for up to five years. Georgia authorities estimated a first year savings of $2.2 million. As of Feb.

28, 1,003 of 1,158 felons committed to shock incarceration had successfully completed the program, representing a savings of $8.5 million, the report 807-Funeral Directors MERCER MORTUARY Thomas Rd 16th St. 266-4473 PARADISE CHAPEL FUNERAL HOME 3934 E. Indian School Rd. 955-1600 SHADOW MOUNTAIN MORTUARY 2350 Greenway Phoenix, AZ 85022 971-7350 WHITNEY FUNERAL MURPHY 3880 Indian Ave Sch 840-5600 254-7278 859-Cemetery Lots and Services AA 3 lots, 3 vaults al Phoenix Memorial $1850 for all or seperate. 439-4261 CEMETERY lot for 2 at Resthaven Park West.

Must sell; $1595 or best offer. 972-5443 GREEN ACRES, 2 cremation spaces, markers and 955-1367 $900. RESTHAVEN Cemetery Plot complete, $1200 943-0044, 972-6795 REST HAVEN, Mausoleum Glendale, niches, $850 for both. 934-1840 after 6pm Two Burial Plots al Phoenix sell Memorial for $600. Park, Call Worth 936-4021 $1000, 2 mausoleum spaces located in Acres etery, asking price $1900 396-8355 2 SPACES with vaults companion bronze memorial, Green Acres Scotts 890-1433 Phoenix Newspapers Inc.

120 E. Van Buren St. Telephone: 271-8000 Mail Address: Box 1950 85001 Metro Phoenix Subscriber Rate By: (C) Carrier (M) Motor Route, (C) (M) Gazette (Morn.) 1.00 wk. Republic Republic (Morn. Sun.) 1.75 wk.

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Subscribers desiring to pay in advance for 52 weeks, 26 weeks, 13 or 8 weeks will please Call Circulation Office Pay 271-8354. U.S. Mail Subscription Prices Arizona, Aclive Military to Post Office Rates Effective April 28, 1985 Wis Wis Wis Morn. Eve Eve Sun Morn Sun Morn-6 Day Eve-6 Day RepublicSun Only 16.25 32.50 65.00 Nev, NM, Utah Morn Eve Sun $312.00 Eve Morn Sun Morn-6 Day Eve-6 Day RepublicSun Only 19.50 39.00 78.00 All Other States Morn Eve Sun $94.25 Eve Sun Morn Sun Morn-6 Day Eve-6 Day 143.00 RepublicSun Only 22.75 45.50 91.00 Foreign Rates on request. CIRCULATION SERVICE Branch Offices and Representative Service- Telephone Ajo 387 -7845 Bullhead City 763-8290 Casa Grande 836-5723 Clifton 865-4255 Coolidge 723-3822 Cottonwood 634-5701 Flagstaff 526-9598 Globe 425-2002 Kingman 753-5694 Holbrook 524-6626 Lake Havasu 855-4822 Miami 425-2002 Page 645-2720 Parker 669-5470 Pavson 474-9368 Prescott 445-4181 Safford 428-0450 Sedona 282-3910 Show Low 537-2570 Superior 689-2971 Tucson 884-9855 Wickenburg 684 -5516 Williams 526-9598 Winslow Yuma 344-3733.

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