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

Tucson Daily Citizen from Tucson, Arizona • Page 12

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 12 A I I I MONDAY, JULY 5, I97F love is ironing his shirts on a hot sticky day. --Sanders-Manlev Studios --Gene Lohbera Mrs. Brooks Her Mrs. TFittiam Boussios Mrs. Dave Abendano Monica Kyros Judie Scalise Debby Daws Rudy Arenas Are Engaged Erlinda Figueroa Felix and Rudy A.

Arenas Jr. plan a Nov. 26 wedding at St. Augustine Cathedral. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. RafaelL. Felix, E-1343 S. 9th Ave. Mr.

and Mrs. Rudy A. Arenas, 2315 E. 22nd ar- of the prospective brie jm. Miss Felix is a graduate of Pueblo High School.

She works at Tucson Medical Cen- Mr. Arenas, a graduate Tucson High School, is employed by Food Giant lac. Iler-Kyros Catalina United Methodst Church was the setting last evening lor the wedding of Monica Linda Kyros and Brooks Lloyd Her. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mr.

Charles Limanni, 4525 N. Osage Drive. She was graduated from Catalina High School and the University of Arizona. Mr. and Mrs.

George Her of Mesa are parents of the bridegroom. The bridegroom is a graduate of Palo Verde High School. and UA. He is employed by. Gulf Western Co.

in Memphis, Tenn. The bride's sister Melissa Ann was maid of honor. Best man was-Robert Marvin. Boussios-Scalise University of Arizona students Judie Ann Scalise and William A. Boussios were married Saturday at the Aztec Inn.

The bride is the Mr. and Mrs. Jerome V. Scalise, 1833 S. Avenida Sirio.

Mr. and Mrs. James Boussios, 5622 W. Copper are parents of the bridegroom. Mrs.

Robert Boarder of MarysvUle, was her sister's matron of honor. Best man was Mickey Carroll of Flagstaff. Mrs. Boussios is a graduate. of Palo Verde High SchooL Mr.

Boussios attended data; lina High School and 1 was graduated from Palm Springs (Calif.) High School. He is employed at Arizona Hide and Steel Co. Abendano-Davis Debby Davis and Dave Abendano were married Saturday at Newman ChapeL Mr. and Mrs. Charles B.

Davis, 5841 E. 4tt are the parents of the bride. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David C.

Abendano, 1615 N.Howard Blvd. The couple was graduated from Catalina High School. Mrs. Abendano attended the University of Arizona and is a secretary at Arizona Trust Co. Mr.

Abendano attend UAinthefall. The bride's cousin Terry Fogle was maid of honor. Best man was the bridegroom's brother Gabriel. Mr. and Mrs.

Abendano are on a trip to Save a Health Center our set sale. TWIN OR FULL SIZE MATTRESS BOX SPRING KING SIZE SET S319.95 SALE Fora limited time, you can get Spring Air's famous Health Center mattress set at big and with big features. Magnificent "Poetic Blue" cover is'quilted for extra luxury. Premium quality upholstery materials and finely tempered steel springs. Center area provides additional support, from your shoulders to your knees, where you need it most.

Creator of the popular BACK mattress 5725 E. Broadway 296-2361 THE FURNITURE FAMILY HARRIET VAN HORNE Will New Work Relief Rule Solve Welfare Dilemma? NEW YORK That new rule requiring certain welfare recipients "the employ- ables" to work for the city or go off relief may not lift the spirits of the poor. But oh, dear, what euphoria it has induce! among the citizenry that sees all welfare cases as cheats, bums and dope addicts. According to Human Resources Administrator Jule M. Sugarman, the employable poor will be set to work in hospitals, schools and parks.

Their welfare checks will be their salaries. The city, however, will undertake to pay for transportation, lunch and, where needed, special uniforms. This seems only fair. The notion of "work relief' is hardly new. It was tried successfully during the Depression.

Gov. Bonald Reagan of California now believes in it. The working poor and the overtaxed middle class have a right, to be cheered by the prospect of ,50,000 welfare recipients going to work. But it should be remembered that the hard core of the poverty- remain outside our technological society. They simply lack the ability to learn new skills.

Many are illiterate. Years of malnutrition have created, in some cases, dull minds and chronic ill health. These poor we shall always have with us. It should also be remembered that the aged, the blind and dependent children (the largest group in any welfare chart) will continue to live by public assistance. The way to break the cycle of welfare, dependency, some experts say, is for the federal government to a stern program of family planning, mandatory in ghettos and other depressed areas.

But on television recently I heard a most articulate and concerned black man announce that family planning was discriminatory. Negroes, he said, have been frustrated for centuries in virtually all areas of human endeavor. Sexual endeavor, therefore, must not be blocked. Now, it's possible to understand this feeling that birth- control programs aimed at a particular ethnic group are discriminatory, even gen- otidaL But were I a Negro-parent my most tender concern would be to feed and clothe the infants at hand. I would pray that the Lord send no more mouths than the father or the state--could feed.

But in offering-such white, middle-class notions I am, according to my enlightened and "involved" friends, doing grievous injury to the pride and dignity of the blacks. Since this was not my intent at all, I usually withdraw from the argument in puzzled pain. But the question persists: How can our society endure with the poor getting poorer -and begetting ever more children? A European visitor, gazing upon the wreckage that is Brownsville, remarked in horror, "It should be leveled to the ground. And all the people living hand to mouth within moved to new government housing," he added. John Locke, apostle of the Puritan work-ethic, suggested in the 17th that paupers' children be taken from their parents and put into work-schools.

There, he imagined, they would warm, well-fed and gi- u. for a chance-to learn a troe. We find this idea appalling today. SUMMER SPECIAL FOR INDIVIDUAL TREATMENTS DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR PROGRAMS START AS LOW A 65' PER VISIT OVERWEIGHT: Lose 15 to 30 pounds, lose 6 to inches off hips and waist. UNDERWEIGHT: Add 2 inches to bust.

Fill out hips and thighs. Call Today For Free Information No Obligation Of Course! Hours 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. are oHe to charge your treatments to your Volley National Bank Credit Card. I 2000 East SPEEDWAY I PHONI 327:7835 Also'in Phoenix and Tempt For people who like high interest: -t" iSwJk 'Ki TUCSON SAVINGS First in Tucson i.

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 Tucson Daily Citizen
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Tucson Daily Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
391,799
Years Available:
1941-1977