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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 34

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Rochester, New York
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34
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Historian foresees decade of turmoil PHILIP NOBILE How bad is the crisis of the cities? So bad, according to urban historian Richard C. Wade, that America is slouching toward a national trauma worse than slavery. "If we do not begin to unite the metropolis (city and suburb) and to disperse the ghetto in the next few years, the 1980s will be a decade of renewed tensions and turmoil," he said in the current issue of American Heritage, Wade, distinguished professor of history at New York City's University of New York and a former University of Rochester professor, criticized the so-called urban policy of the federal government as counterproductive. He said that the revenue-sharing program that is keeping many cities afloat is actually harmful in the long run, and that the only way to escape impending bankruptcy and distribute justice evenly is an innovative sharing of metropolitan resources. Question: Are the bankruptcies of Cleveland and New York the wave of the future? Answer: Maybe.

No major city in the United States is self-sufficient. The shrinking tax base is forcing cities to look to the metropolitan area, the state or to Washington for necessary funds. Most cities depend on substantial amounts of federal dollars through revenue-sharing and other government expenditures. So long as the urban crisis is merely fiscal, we can meet it by pooling resources in a much more beneficial way than we do today. But is the crisis only financial? No.

The deeper problem is one of race. For example, even if New York balanced its budget tomorrow, the city would still have a million poor people, 40,000 units of abandoned housing a year, an education system that doesn't teach, and continous endemic crime a and disorder. This syndrome is repeated in ghettos across the Time of Everyone needs he can do By JACK H. SMITH In her 1972 book, "Nobody Ever Died of Old Age" (Little, Brown), Sharon Curtin, who developed a special interest in the elderly from her work as a registered nurse, relates this somewhat pathetic story. A Mr.

Hawk, who retired after 30 years as a furniture salesman, had a longstanding desire to be a carpenter. He had always been unable to follow the trade because of his wife's fear that it would reduce their social status, if not their income. Mr. Hawk now felt free to learn carpentry, but none of his friends in the lumber business would take him on as an apprentice because of union rules. He applied for a carpentry course at a local trade school, but was refused because of his age.

The school sent him to a senior center where he found a woodworking program, all right, but of the artsy-crafty type which didn't interest him. So Mr. Hawk returned to his apartment and began plans to convert the guest bedroom into a study room and workshop. Until, that is, Mrs. Hawk said: "Absolutely not.

I will not take all that noise, the dirt, and the expense because of your obsession with carpentry. Why don't you just relax and take it easy like the other men do?" Mrs. Hawk was guilty of a selfish oversight. She had her home, retired or not, but Mr. Hawk wasn't permitted to have a haven where he could practice what he liked to do.

It's my opinion that each of us needs a place to escape to a private room or nook which is ours and which we use to do whatever fulfills us. I have one. It's loosely called a den, but it's where I write. It's equipped with an electric typewriter, a dictionary, a World Almanac, a Bible, reference materials and magazines on retirement and aging, a file cabinet, and a copying machine. Oh sure, we use it for watching certain television programs and for reading newspapers (which is one of our favorite pursuits), but when I'm in a writing mood, the den is mine and the "do not disturb" sign doesn't even have to be hung.

If you will, my den is a substitute for the office I used to commute to each day. And all of us who worked need the same kind of substitute for an office. We may have disliked our jobs to a degree, but the office was a special place where we found a special brand of personal self -expression. Your private room or nook doesn't have to be a den. It can be a sewing room, a studio, a photographic darkroom, a garage, a garden.

The point is that it's your own "special place." A LONG TIME' AGO IN A GALAXY FAR FAR IT IS A PERIOD OF WAR. REBEL SPACESHIPS STRIKING FROM A HIDDEN BASE HAVE WON THEIR FIRST VICTORY AGAINST THE EVIL GALACTIC EMPIRE! Star Wars is coming! to the comic page March 11 occupy about 3 percent of the total land surface. The current housing boom roughly two million units last year occurred outside city boundaries. But didn't you point out that the suburbs themselves are on the verge of insolvency? The same forces that led to urban decay in the cities are now spreading to adjacent suburbs. Indeed, the phrase "inner suburbs" surely will join "inner city" as shorthand for the long list of urban ills in the 1980s.

In order to keep their taxes down, the inner suburbs allowed most of their land to be developed. Now, they too have a shrinking tax base and no room for expansion. Your picture is pretty bleak of both city and inner suburb caught in a fiscal trap. It's not that bad, really. The solution lies in the redistribution of resources within the metropolitan area.

For example, New York has a metropolitan area population of 18 million. This region could deliver a good level of service if its resources were evenly divided. Instead, we have one suburban school district spending $7500 per student while the city school pays $600 per child. Therefore, the answer is political. But politicians don't get elected by voting for redistribution of wealth.

You're right. The city and suburb have been historical antagonists. Politically, cooperation is difficult. But let me give you a case of functional arrangement. St.

Louis recently consolidated about 20 metropolitan police forces into one, thus drawing their tax revenues from a larger area and increasing their per-capita expenditure. Is this sort of cooperation the only way out of the urban crisis? Yes. Those very expensive items that are natural metropolitan functions water, traffic, police, education, etc. should be funded on a metropolitan base. Does Washington recognize or appreciate this approach, or is federal policy still addicted to Band-Aid remedies? Unfortunately, there is no federal policy but merely a series of programs which exacerbate the metropolitan question.

For instance, according to the formula of revenue-sharing, everybody gets something. The suburb of Lake Forest receives as much as the West Side of Chicago. So there's no incentive for Lake Forest to consider metropolitan arrangements when they get money for doing nothing. Revenue-sharing has the carrot without the stick. Washington has always tended to magnify, rather than resolve urban problems.

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4C Mar. 4, '79 Deaths (Monroe County) Acker, Marie Marie, Acker, on survived March by her 3, daughter, Jeanne Acker and her son, William H. Acker; 6 grandchildren and 4. great-grandchildren; a niece and 3 nephews. Friends may call at the George J.

Funk Funeral Home, 1119 Joseph Ave. at Norton St. Monday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service Tuesday, March 6, 1979 at 8:45 in the Funeral Home and 9 a.m. in the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help.

Interment Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Brumber, Winifred T. Mar. 1, 1979, of 54 Kings La. She is survived by her nieces, Mrs.

Roy (Margaret Elizabeth) Whalen, FL, and Mrs. Elbert (Joanne) Day Rochester; her nephew, George Henry "Bud" Wandell, FL; a friend, Elinore Beeler. She was a member of the Rochester Teacher's N.Y.S. Teachers and a past-member of Delta Kappa Gamma. Friends are invited to attend memorial service Sunday afternoon at 4 in Asbury First United Methodist Church (1050 East Burne, Jessie Of Greece N.

Y. on March 2, 1979. Wife of the late Lt. Forrest A. Burne.

Survived by 2 daughters, Miss Ethel M. Burne, Mrs. Pearl B. Zimbrich; 1 brother, Robert Cragg; 2 grandchildren; 5 great -grandchildren; several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be Monday 11 a.m.

at Arndt Funeral Home, 1118 Long Pond Rd. Interment, Riverside Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, contributions to Lakeview Community Church, 30 Long Pond Rd. in her memory would be appreciated. Christman, Hazel E.

Of Rochester on March 1, 1979. She is survived by her daughters, Miss Jacqueline Christman and Mrs. Jerrie Hanley; son, Miles Christman; sister, Mrs. Emma Dahrsnin of sister-inlaw, Juanita Myers of brother, Myers of granddaughter, Shellie Hanley; several nieces and nephews. Funeral arrangements incomplete.

Clark, Blanche H. Blanche H. Clark of Clarkson, N. Y. Thursday, Mar.

1, 1979. She is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Frank (Jean) Hoyt, Clarkson, Mrs. William (Mary Ellen) Delhanty, Rochester, Mrs. Floyd (Kathryn) Ellis, Brockport, Mrs.

George (Virginia) Keiser, Ashville, N.C.; one son, Roger Clark, Brockport; one sister, Mrs. Arthur J. Clark, Rochester; twelve grandchildren; twenty great-grandchildren; several nieces, nephews and cousins. Friends call at the Fowler Funeral Home, 52 State Brockport Saturday, 3 3-5, 7-9 p.m. A memorial service will be held at the Clarkson Community Church, Sunday at 3 p.m.

Interment at the convenience of the family. Friends wishing may make contributions to the Clarkson Comunity Church or a charity of their choice. Crouse, Wayne W. Mar. 1, 1979, Wayne W.

Crouse. Surviving are his wife, Betty J. Crouse (Cornell); daughter, Martha; sisters, Mrs. Averil Schlatter, Mrs. Carolyn Chaaf, both of Warsaw, Mrs.

Carol Nicholson of Homer; brother, Maxwell Crouse. Memorial services at the convenience of the family. In his memory give a little of your heart to someone today. Arrangements, Younglove-Smith Funeral Home Inc. Dank, William M.

March 1, 1979, formerly of Norton St. He is survived by his wife, Ada Reinhardt Dank; his sister, Miss Evelyn Dank; several nieces and nephews. He was a veteran of WWI and a member of William Doud Post and Post VFW Friends may call Sunday 2-4, 7-9 at the Schauman Funeral Home, 2100 St. Paul St. where Mass of Christian Burial will be offered Monday morning at 10 o'clock.

Interment, Riverside Cemetery. Finocchio, Maria Angela Friday March 2, 1979. She is survived by her son, Raymond Finocchio; her daughter, Mrs. Josephine Lenzi; 5 grandchildren; 2 great-grandchildren her brothers, Cosmo DiMarzo of Greece, N. Y.

Antonio Diof Italy; her sister, Carmella DiMarzo of Italy; her sisters-in-law, Mrs. Anna DiMarzo of Gates, Mrs. Concetta DiMarzo of Irondequoit, Mrs. Clotilda Uttaro of San Jose several nieces and nephews. Friends may call Sunday and Monday 2-4, 7-9 p.m.

at the DiPonzio Funeral Home, 219 Spencerport Gates. Funeral services Tuesday morning at 8:15. Mass of Christian Burial at 9 from St. Francis Assisi Church. Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.

Flynn, Martin J. Friday March 2, 1979. He is survived by 3 daughters, Mrs. Madeline Dwyer, Mrs. Louis (Geraldine) VanEpps and Mrs.

Marie Minnamon; 1 son, John J. Flynn; 8 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren. He was a retiree of Eastman Kodak Co. No prior calling. Friends are invited to attend a Mass of Christian Burial at Corpus Christi Church Monday at 9 a.m.

Burial, White Haven Memorial Park. Friends wishing may have Masses offered for the repose of his soul. Arrangements, McLaughlin Funeral Home, 871 Culver Rd. Francis, Kenneth D. March 3, 1979, Kenneth D.

Francis, 78. Surviving daugh- are Margaret, ter, wits: Fred (Janet) Rose of Hamlin; sons, Robert of Pa. and Richard of step-son, Jack Spry; 12 grandchildren; 3 greatgrandchildren; brothers, Howard, Harold of Clarence of Pa. He was a member of Kodak Pioneer Club. Friends may call Sunday 2-4, 7-9 p.m.

at the Younglove-Smith Funeral Home, 1511 Dewey Ave. Service Monday 1 p.m. Interment White Haven Memorial Park. In lieu of flowers, friends may contribute to Park-Ridge Hospital, Intensive Care Unit. Freedman, Norine March 3, 1979, Norine Freedman of Green Knolls Drive.

She leaves one daughter, Ruth Margolis of Rochester; one son, Marvin Ithaca, N.Y. 3 grandchildren; 6 great grandchildren. Several nieces and nephews. Funeral services and interment at the convenience of the family. Burial in Stone Road Cemetery.

Friends wishing may contribute to their favored charity. A period of mourning is being observed at 321 Village Lane from 7-9 P.M. thru Tuesday evening. Arrangements by Parsky Funeral Home, Inc. Frumusa, Josephine Survived by her sons and daughters-in-law, Joseph and Mary Frumusa, Samvel and Santina Frumusa, James Frumusa, Mrs.

Grace Frumusa, Mrs. Jennie Frumusa; 8 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild; her brother, James Frumusa; nieces and nephews. Friends may call 7-9 at the Falvo Funeral Home, 1395 N. Goodman St. Funeral Services Monday 9:30 from the Funeral Home and 10 o'clock at Holy Spirit Church.

Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Grimwood, Walter K. Memorial service, All appreciated. Saints Episcopal. Church, 759 Winona Sunday, Mar.

4, at 4 p.m. Harris, David T. Of Fairport, March 3, 1979. He is survived by his parents, Donald and June Harris; 2 sisters, Jeanne and Judy, both of E. Rochester; maternal grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Harold Keskel of Victor; paternal grandmother, Mrs. Hilda Harris of Rochester. Friends may call Sunday and Monday 2-4 and 7-9 at the Curtice Funeral Home, 76 So. Main Fairport where Services will be held Tuesday a.m.

Interment White Haven. Those wishing may contribute to Teen Challenge of Greater Rochester, Alexander St. Henderson, Gertrude J. Friday, Mar. 2, 1979.

She was the wife of the late Thomas Henderson and is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Barton S. (Trudy) Horner; a grandson, Barton Horner; a granddaughter, Mrs. Douglas (Nancy) Richardson, Great Falls, VA; one great-grandson, Matthew Richardson. No prior Friends are invited to attend a memorial service at the Crawford Funeral Home 495 N.

Winton Rd. Monday at 11 a.m. Interment Grove Place Cemetery at the convenience of the family. Friends wishing may contribute to the Shriner's Hospitals for Crippled Children, 875 E. Main St.

Hoyt, Mabel A. On March 3, 1979 at Lakeshore Nursing Home, age 93 years. She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Daisy Markel of her 2 sons, Homer of Rochester and Edward of Clarkson; her 4 grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren; her sister, Clark of Mich. and several nieces and nephews.

Friends may call at Cass Funeral Home, 1429 West Ridge Rd. (opp. Stone Rd.) on Monday 2-4 and 7-9 where Services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. Spring Interment in Parma- Union Cemetery. Hurysz, Theresa A.

Of Irondequoit on Saturday, March 3, 1979. She is survived by her husband, Ca3 sons, Paul, Roger, Theodore; 6 grandchildren; 4 sisters, Frances Warchol, Mrs. Stephen (Julie) Yuzwa, Mrs. John (Cecelia) Herbert, Mrs. Josephine Dudden; several nieces and nephews.

Friends may call at the Kroll Funeral Home, 746 Norton St. on Monday 2-4, 7-9. Prayers a.m., followed Tuesdays of Christian Burial at 9:30 at St. Thomas the Apostle Church. Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, Masses may be offered or donations to the Cancer Fund will be appreciated. Hyde, Margaret A. Of Rochester on March 2, 1979. She is survived by her daughter, Dorothy M. Hyde; her sister, Letticia Condon of Canada; several nieces and nephews.

Friends are invited to attend her Mass of the Christian Burial, Monday at 10 o'clock in Boniface Church. 'Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. King, Dorothy J. March 3, 1979, Mrs. Dorothy J.

King of Holley. Surviving are her husband, Gale H. King; sons, David and Bruce, both of Syracuse; daughter, Sharon Simmons 6 grandchildren; sisters, Irene Connors, Bahls, Edna Merrill of Caledonia. Friends may attend a Memorial Service Sunday 4 p.m. at Bay Knoll Seventh Day Adventist Church, 2639 East Ridge Rd.

Interment (private) Hope. Cemetery. Contributions may be made to The Voice of Prophecy, P.O. Box 55, Los Angeles, 90053. Arrangements YoungioveSmith Funeral Home, Inc.

Jeffries, James Henry Friday, March 2, 1979 in Batavia Veterans' Hospital. Mr. Jeffries was a veteran of the Korean conflict. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Melissa Jeffries; 2 daughters, Adrienne and Sheila; 2 grand-children; his father Elder Joseph S.

Jeffries; 6 brothers, Joseph, Emmanuel, Neremiah (Paul), Joshua, Howard and Freddie Jeffries; 7 sisters, Esther Thompson, Phoebe Lawson, Mary Jeffries, Ida Brown, Lillian McNeil, Lottie Latimer and Terry Hurt; uncles, aunts, nieces; 7 step-brothers and 4 step-sisters; nephews, cousins, and other realtives. Friends may call 7-9 p.m. on Sunday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home of M.E. Latimer Son, 983 South Plymouth Ave.

Funeral service Tuesday, 1 p.m. at the Latimer Funeral Chapel. Elder Douglas Jordan of Buffalo officiating. Interment, Riverside Cemetery Veterans' Plot. a Knipper, Frank P.

Richard C. Wade country, only on a lesser scale. Yet the tensions in Cleveland, Gary and Newark are greater because they are poorer and less powerful than New York. The question that is never asked is how better off would the cities be without the economic drag of the minority poor? If the ghettos were lily white, would we still have crisis? Probably. Our economy does not generate enough jobs for full employment, and since it does not, the burden falls on the blacks and other minorities.

That's where the injustice lies. Are ghettos eternal? Is there no solution for the perpetuation of this shame? The only answer is to disperse the population, as we did with the previous immigrant groups, through free housing. We still have lots of room in metropolitan areas. The cities only Your Life a place where his own thing Here you do what you like to do at the times you want to do it and at the speed which you prefer. A homemaker needs a place like this, also, and for those who like to cook, the kitchen may be it.

The important thing in retirement, however, is to set ground rules providing that food preparation can still be done without someone looking over the cook's shoulder. In setting up living quarters for retirement, it's wise to plan this special room or nook for each of the partners. And one of the criteria in seeking a new home should be whether there's enough space to make such a special room feasible. To assure continued happiness, no one should ever deny his or her spouse this private domain. It's.

the key to the self-expression that require, to validate and revalidate our own worth. NOTES FOR I A LEARNING SOCIETY By HAROLD J. ALFORD, Dean College of Continuing Education Rochester Institute of Technology PERSPECTIVE This is absolutely the last time I will say, "Get out here to RIT and get registered for a Spring Quarter evening class!" Open registration will be Tuesday and Wednesday, March 6 and 7, from noon until 8 p.m., on the first floor of the Administration Building. Advisors will be available. While late registration is permitted during the first week of classes, March 12-16, there's a $10 late fee; so I urge to register March 6 or 7 if you haven't already.

CURRENT EVENTS March 6 and 7 Open registration. 1st floor Administration Building. Noon-8 P.M. March 12 Classes begin. March 12-16 Late registration with $10 processing fee in effect.

1st floor Administration Building. Monday- Thursday, 9 A.M.8:30 P.M. Friday, 9 A.M.-4 P.M. OTHER HAPPENINGS Join the Professors- The Play's the Thing. Watch Shakespeare's AS YOU LIKE IT today on Channel 21-TV at 1 P.M.

Discuss it with Stanley McKendzie (RIT) at Nazareth Arts Center on Wednesday, March 7, at 8 P.M. Fee: $5. Residential Workshop-NON-SILVER HALIDE IMAGING SYSTEMS. Five-day photo science workshop to explore promising non-silver and unconventional silver halide systems in view of future requirements of cost, sensitivity, image quality, color rendition and ecology. March 5-9.

Inn on the Campus. Fee: (single); (double). Includes room and meals. For additional information on Special Courses, call 475-2142. THE LAST WORD Now that I've said the last word about registration for Spring Quarter evening classes, here's the first word about Summer Session: "Get on the phone and call 475-2234 so we can send you our brand new, hot-off-the-press, beautiful Summer Session catalogue, full of great ideas for a 'learning vacation' right here at RIT!" Rochester Institute of Technology Friday, March 2, 1979.

Survived by sister, Mrs. Raymond (Emma) Heim; 1 brother, George Knipper; several nieces. Friends may call Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Burns-Hanna Funeral Home, 1795 East Ridge Rd. Funeral Mass Monday morning at 9:30 o'clock at St.

Salomes Church. Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cem- etery. Livingston, Florence E. (Bushman) EAST ROCHESTER: Florence E. Livingston, March 3, 1979.

She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Robert (Patricia) Wilkins of Rochester; her son, Richard Bushman of Kissendorf, Germany; 5 grandchildren; 2 greatgrandchildren. Friends may call Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Harloff Funeral Home, 803 So. Washington East Rochester where Services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock.

Interment in White Haven. Lucas, Leslie H. (Blackie) March 1, 1979, of Chili. Survived by his son, Michael U.S. Navy in Spain; his father, Chester his aunts, Mrs.

Eloise V. Daubney, Niagara Falls and Miss Mae Dombroski. He was a member of American Legion Post Chili He was a retired Post Office employee. Arrangements to be announced by the Leo M. Bean Funeral Home, 2771 Chili Ave.

Mancuso, Peter R. Peter R. Mancuso, age 77, of 1004 Mason Utica N.Y. died Friday March 2 after a long illness at Faxton Hospital, Utica. He was born January 13, 1902 in Italy.

Son of Gabriele and Elena Scalise Mancuso. He came to Utica Area in 1906. Surviving besides his wife, are a daughter, Mrs. Raymond (Carmelita) Fratta, son Peter F. Mancuso both of Rochester.

Funeral service will be held at the Quinn, Ryan Nunn Funeral Home, 2212 Genesee Utica, Monday at 9:45, and at St. Mary's Of Mt. Carmel Church, 10:30. Interment, Calvary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home 2-4, 7-9 Marshall, Lindsay 150.

Van Auker Monday, Feb. 26, 1979. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mamie Lue Marshall; 1 son, Lindsay, 4 daughters, Margie Jackson, Lillian Rose, Ada Wilson and Glenda Williams, all of Newport News, 16 grandchildren; and 6 great-grandchildren; 1 brother and 3 sisters. No local calling.

Funeral and burial in Newport News, Va. Local arrangements, M.E. Latimer Son, Inc. Memoiral service to be held Sunday, March 11, 1979, 6 p.m. at the Mt.

Olive Baptist Church. McKay, William F. Saturday, March 3, 1979, William F. McKay of Gates. He is survived by his wife Ottilia McKay; 2 sons, William and Eugene McKay; 9 grandchildren; 3 brothers, Darwin, Thomas and Robert McKay; his sisters Mrs.

Willian (Georgianna) Trolley, Mrs. Glen (Dorothy) Sail; also nieces and nephews. Mr. McKay was a member of the Yonnondio Friends may call Sunday evening from 7-9 and Monday 2-4, 7-9 at the funeral home of Alvah Halloran Son, 2125 Chili Ave. Funeral services Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock.

Interment, Holy Ghost Cemetery. Contributions may be Metzler, Frances made to the American Cancer Society. Metzler, Frances Frances Metzler, March 2, 1979. She is survived by her sister, Anna Naylon; 2 sisters-in-law, Mrs. Charles Maier of Florida, and Miss Elizabeth Metzler; several nieces and nephews; greatnieces and nephews.

She was a member of St. Thomas Rosary Society and Doud Post Auxiliary. Friends may call Sunday only 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Paul W. Harris Funeral Home 570 Kings Hwy.

S. (corner Titus). Mass of Christian Burial, Monday at 10 a.m., from St. Thomas Apostle Church. Interment, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery.

Morabito, Joseph B. Suddenly on March 2, 1979, of Spencerport, N.Y. He is survived by his wife Lucy; 1 son and 2 daughters, Mrs. Peter (Donna) Fontana, Joanne Morabito, Gary Morabito; 1 sister, Mrs. Walter (Helen) Samoilo; 1 brother, Arthur Morabito; also several cousins, nieces and nephews.

He was a veteran of WW 11. Friends may call Sunday and Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at Walker Brothers Co. Funeral Home, 15 West Spencerport, where prayer service will be held Tuesday, at 10:30 a.m. Mass of the Christian Burial from St.

John's Church, Spencerport at 11 a.m. Interment, St. John's Cemetery. Friends wishing may contribute to the Spencerport Volunteer Firemen or have Masses said for the repose of his soul..

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