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The Tampa Times from Tampa, Florida • 2

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The Tampa Timesi
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TAMPA TIMES, Saturday, May 10, 1975 WeatherScope Local, Florida, National, International temperatures Weekend may get much-needed rain If the weatherman's predictions are accurate, the bay area may get some of that much-needed rain this weekend. The best chance for rain is tomorrow, forecasters say, as there is a 50 per cent probability. There is a 30 per cent chance it may rain tonight. Skies will be partly cloudy through tomorrow. High temperatures, are to mid expected 70s.

in the low 90s. The overnight low will Winds will be at 10 miles per hour, except stronger near thundershowers, should they occur. Elsewhere, fair and pleasant spring weather dominated a large part of the nation yesterday, marred only by widely scattered showers. Continued moderation of temperatures held readings in the 50s 0 overnight through most of the midcontinent outside northern mountain areas. 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 Partly cloudy to occasionally cloudy through afternoon and evening thundershowers.

tomorrow with chance 8 of mainly Highs mostly in low 90s. Lows mostly in the low 70s. Winds variable 10 m.p.h. or less except gusty near thundershowers. Rain probability 30 per cent tonight, 50 per cent tomorrow.

18 20 21 22 Partly cloudy through tomorrow with a chance of afternoon and evening thundershowers. Highs in 80s on the coasts and 90s inland. Lows in the low to mid 70s. Winds variable 10 m.p.h. or less except onshore in the afternoon and gusty near thundershowers.

Rain probability 20 to 30 per cent through tomorrow. 23 Partly cloudy through tomorrow. Highs in the mid to upper 80s. Lows in the upper 70s. Winds variable mostly southeast 10 to occasionally 15 m.p.h.

Florida High Low Rain Apalachicola. .82 71 Clewiston Coral Gables .86 Daytona .91 Ft Lauderdale .84 Ft Gainesville .92 Homestead Islamorada Jacksonville Key West Lakeland 93 Miami Miami Beach ..85 78 Miami Beach 73 .90 Showers dampened Georgia and scattered Plains. The showers in derstorms that roamed evening. Tornados spun out of and lower Mississippi section of Branch, airplane hangar. No where.

Hail pounded' parts of thunderstorms late inches high at Vick, in Hoboken, in southeastern northwestern Oklahoma. High Low Ocala ....94 70 Orlando. Pensacola .81 Tallahassee. .86 .93 Vere Beach .90 Palm Beach .89 72 National Albany .68 Albuquerque .70 Amarillo. .74 Anchorage Asheville .70 Atlanta Atlantic City .59 Austin .88 Baltimore.

Billings .53 Birmingham 73 Bismarck Boise Boston .57 Brownsville ..91 Buffalo Burlington, Vt. .66 Casper. 51 Charleston, S.C.. 85 67 Charleston, W.V... .70 Charlotte, N.C...

Cheyenne Chicago. Cincinnati .71 Cleveland. Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Dal. Ft.

Worth .85 Dayton .69 Denver Des Moines .66 Duluth ...61 45 3 Partly cloudy through tomorrow with a chance of thundershowers through tonight. Northerly winds 6 to 10 m.p.h. becoming northeasterly 3 to 7 m.p.h. by tomorrow. Highs in the mid Lows in the mid 60s.

Probability of rain 30 per cent through tonight. Partly cloudy through tomorrow with a chance of thundershowers through tonight. Northerly winds 6 to 10 m.p.h. becoming northeasterly 3 to m.p.h. by tomorrow.

Highs in the mid 803, Lows in the upper 60s. Probability of tain 30 per cent through tonight. Zone Forecast 45 6 7 8 9 Partly cloudy to occasionally cloudy through tomorrow with chance of thundershowers. Highs mostly in the mid 80s. Lows mostly easterly 10 m.p.h.

or less, except gusty near thundershowers. Rain probability 30 per cent through tomorrow. Transportation to social services said inadequate By SARA SCHWIEDER Times Staff Writer Tampa Bay area residents told state officials yesterday that transportation to social services is one of the most important needs of the county. A group of about 100 persons attended a meeting to give their opinions on which social services should be emphasized in this area and which new programs need instituting. The group named transportation for senior citizens, migrant workers in Ruskin, children needing medical- care and others as the area's most immediate problem.

Tampa woman requested night prenatal clinics be started. for poor working women and told the officials that more family planning services are needed in Hillsborough County. There were many requests for expanded health services for all age groups. A representative of the state division of aging suggested escorts be provided senior citizens and handicapped people when they use public transportation. The meeting, staged by the state department health and rehabilitative services (HRS), which operates most of the ANGLE services for Dewey H.

Angle, 62, resident of 9816 Memorial who passed away Thursday in a local hospital, will be conducted Monday afternoon at 1:00 o'clock at the Wilson Sammon Memorial Chapel, 4730 N. Armenia the Rev. Charles Bartlett of the Drew Park Baptist Church to officiate. Interment in Myrtle Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers, Charles Malkemus, Gay Angle, Mark Angle, Douglas.

Philpot, Vincent Blesi and Joe Lazzara. Mr. Angle was a native of West Virginia and had resided in Tampa for 22 years. He i is survived by his father, A. T.

Angle, McRoss, W. one son and daughterin-law, Dewel Ginger Angle, Tampa; one daughter, Mrs. Wilma Rodriquez, Tampa; five brothers, Britley Angle, Carlos Angle, Nashville, Garnie Angle, Sanford, I. Lee Angle, Berea, Kentucky, and Willard Angle, Newark, Ohio; four sisters, Mrs. Josephine Reed, Indianapolis, Mrs.

Ruby Rigsby, Indianapolis, Mrs. Macie Sandford, Rainelle, W. and Mrs. Nina Baglie, Tampa and 8 grandchildren. The family will be at the funeral home Sunday evening from 6:00 p.m.

until 7:00 p.m. for visitation. WILSON SAMMON FUNERAL HOME 4730 N. Armenia of the South from Texas in the northern Rockies and South were remnants from thunregion yesterday afternoon and thunderclouds in the southern Plains One twister, whipped through destroying greenhouses and an were reported there or else- Oklahoma, Texas and Georgia in Small hailstones piled six Texas. Golfball-size hail hit Georgia, and Woodward, in High Low El Paso 76 8 Fairbanks .56 Flagstaff .59 Great Falls .57 Hartford Helena Honolulu.

.82 Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. .75 Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Las Vegas Little Los Angeles. Louisville 72 Memphis .82 Midind Odessa 83 Milwaukee Mpls. St. Paul Nashville 78 New Orleans .86 New York .73 Norfolk, .65 North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando 94 Philadelphia Phoenix.

.84 Pittsburgh .68 Portland, Me. ..55 Portland, Ore. Providence .65 Raleigh .67 Rapid City Richmond .71 St. Louis. Salt Lake City San Antonio .87 San Diego.

.68 San Francisco. ..60 3000 30.00 2983 (LOW (BOSTON MIGH NEW YORK HIGH 30.18 SAN FRANCISCO DENVER I 2971 LOS ANGELES ATLANTA (LOW COLD HIGHEST TEMPERATURES NEW ORLEANS MIAMI -LEGEND -70 2977 70 80 RAIN SNOW 80 AIR SHOWERS FLOw UPI WEATHER FOTOC AST Nation's weather Thundershowers were expected today across the Pacific Northwest, the northern Plains, lower Texas and the south Atlantic states. Fair to partly cloudy skies were expected to prevail elsewhere in the nation-(UPI). Rain High Low Rain San Juan, .88 74 St. Ste.

Marie .72 .25 Seattle. .62 Shreveport. .86 .02 .13 Sioux Falls. .69 .03 Spokane .52 .31 .68 .77 Tulsa .85 Washington Wichita. 77 .03 Pan-Am Acapulco ...88 Barbados ...84 Bermuda Culiacan .90 Freeport ..84 Guadaljara 1.32 Guadeloupe Havana .93 75 Kingston .90 Mazatlan ..84 Merida 104 .01 Mexico City .82 Monterrey .90 75 Nassau .88 San Juan PR .88 Trinidad ..90 St Kitts ..86 Tegucigalpa Vera .95 73 11211 International Time p.m.

Temp 45 Amsterdam ..1 p.m. ..3 p.m. Antigua a.m. 32 Bus loses brakes State police and ambulance attendants carry injured students the wreck of a high school lost its brakes yesterday on Death Notices Notices Athens ....2 p.m. Auckland Berlin p.m.

Birmingham p.m. p.m. Cairo p.m. Casablanca Copenhagen p.m. Dublin p.m.

.......1 p.m. Hong Kong .8 p.m. Lisbon noon London p.m. Madrid. p.m.

Malta p.m. 73 Manila ..8 p.m. Moscow p.m. New Delhi ...5 p.m. 102 Nice.

p.m. Oslo. p.m. Paris. p.m.

Peking p.m. Rome p.m. Saigon p.m. Seoul p.m. Sofia p.m.

Stockholm .......1 p.m. Sydney 10 p.m. Taipei. .8 p.m. Teheran p.m.

Tel p.m. Tokyo p.m. p.m. Vienna p.m. Warsaw p.m.

73 Now you know The hindquarters of female baboons turn red when they are ready for mating. grade in Ashland, and careened off a mountainside on Interstate 5. The driver and two Mt. Shasta, from High bus that killed, and over a down- some seriously-(UPI). School students were 17 were injured, BROWN Catholic Church at Himes held Sunday, at 2:30 p.m., Mr.

Minott L. Brown, 71, of Ave. and Hillsborough Ave. from the Whidden Funeral 7517 North 40th Street, Tampa, where a mass will be offered Home Chapel. Interment will passed away Friday morning.

for the repose of his soul. In- follow in Wildwood Cemetery, Funeral services will be held terment will follow in the Gar- with Masonic Rites. Monday morning at 11:30 from den of Memories. Mr. McMathe Chapel of the F.

T. Blount hon was a native of Louisiana Company Funeral Home, 5101 and came to Tampa 40 years GR Nebraska Avenue. The family ago, he was a Supt. for W. L.

PETTY and friends are then requested Cobb Construction Co. Sur- Masonic graveside services to meet at Sylvan Abbey Cem- vivors are his wife Ethel for Mr. Arthur V. (Vernon) etery, Pinellas County, Fla. at McMahon of Tampa; one Petty of 3945 Eden Rock p.m.

for interment. In daughter Mrs. Lorraine Loper cle, will be held Monday lieu of flowers, contributions of Tampa; one brother morning at 10:00 a.m. in Myrmay be made to the Crippled Charles McMahon -of San tle Hill Memorial Park conChildren's Hospital, c-0 Egypt Francisco, one sister ducted by Hillsborough Lodge Temple Shrine, Tampa. The Mrs.

Mary Helen O'Brian of -No. 25 AM. Honorary pallfamily will receive friends at Caron City, Nev. The family bearers will be the Directors' the funeral home Sunday eve- will receive friends at Wilson Staff of the Egypt Temple ning from 6:00 to 8:00 o'clock. Sammon Memorial Chapel Shrine.

A Navy veteran of WW A native of Somerville, 4730 N. Armenia Ave. Sunday II, Mr. Petty was born in AtMr. Brown had lived in the evening 7:00 and 9:00 o'clock lanta and had lived in Tampa Tampa Bay Area since 1956.

and a Wake service at 8:00 since 1961. He was a member He was a Methodist. Survivors o'clock. Pallbearers are Steve of Hillsborough Lodge No. 25 include his wife, Mrs.

Nellie Phillips, Louis Massaro, AM, Scottish Rite, York P. Brown, Tampa; two daugh- Henry Mathews, James Loper, Rite and Egypt Temple ters, Mrs. Elsie V. Vartanian, Craig Lawhorne, R. L.

Han- Shrine. Survivors include his Salem, N.H. and Mrs. Nancy cock. Honorary pallbearers wife, Mrs.

Alma J. Petty of P. Oakes, Tampa; 5 grand- are Howell Loper, Jace Math- Tampa; a son, Arthur V. children, David Vartanian, ews, Angelo Massaro, Hubert Petty Jr. of Tuscaloosa, AlaCorey Vartanian, Stephen Lawhorne, Frank Fyfe, W.

H. bama; his mother, Mrs. Katie Spack, Michael Spack and Phillips and employe's of W. Scott of Atlanta; a brother, Cindy Spack; two nieces, Mrs. L.

Cobb Construction Co. Mon- Robert L. Petty of Atlanta; a Marion Felteau and Mrs. day morning everyone will sister, Mrs. Edith Marlow of Phylis Russell.

meet at the church. Atlanta; and a granddaughter, Wilson Sammon Co. Dina Larinda Petty of TuscaFuneral Home loosa, Ala. Please omit flowers; friends who wish may McMAHON memorial gifts to the Funeral services for Mr. MULLIN Diabetes Trust Fund, 2919 William J.

McMahon, age 68, BARTOW Funeral ser- Highland Birresident of 303 W. Giddens, vices for Carlos P. Mullin, 67, mingham, Ala. 35205. will be held Monday at 10:30 a resident of Alturas, who B.

MARION REED a.m. from. the St. Lawrence passed away Thursday, will be FUNERAL HOME -born actor Philip Dorn dies WOODLAND HILLS, Calif. (UPI) Dutch-born actor Philip Dorn, who appeared.

in many American movies and stage and television productions, died yesterday of a heart attack. Born Fritz Van Dongen, Dorn attended the Academy of. Fine Arts and Architecture in Scheveningen, Holland and appeared on the Dutch stage in such plays as "Ghosts" and "Journey's End." After graduating from the academy, he came to the United States and acted in some New York stage productions. He moved to southern California in 1939 to appear in versal's "Ski Patrol." Some of his other American movies included "Ziegfeld Girl," "Random Harvest," "I Remember Mama," "Enemy Agent," "Paris after Dark," "Passage to Marseilles" and "I've always loved you." Abraham Fischer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) Abraham Fischer, former leader of the underground Communist Party of South Africa, died of cancer in Bloemfontein Thursday, the commissioner of prisons, Jacobus Steyn reported. Fischer, 67, was sentenced to life imprisonment on May 9, 1966 on conviction of against the state and organizing communist cells in Republic.

He was a Queen's counsel and one of the country's top lawyers before his imprisonment. Earlier this year Fischer was treated at the H. F. Verwoerd hospital in Pretoria for secondary cancer of the liver and brain. On March- 10 Jim Kruger, minister of prisons, said Fischer's cancer treatments had gone as far as they could and allowed him to recuperate in Bloemfontein 254 miles south of Johannesburg, at the home of his brother, Dr.

Paul Fischer. Fischers release from jail was the first time in the country's legal history a political prisoner had been temporarily freed on humanitarian grounds. Roger Greene CLEARWATER (AP) Roger Greene, 71, one of the first war correspondents to hit the beach on D-Day who later became Associated Press Newsfeatures editor, died yesterday. He worked for newspapers in California and New Yorkbefore joining The AP in 1935. He served as AP War Editor in.

New York from 1940 until 1943, when he went to London, laterlanding with British troops on June 6, 1944. $330 million worth of social service programs for state, is the first in which the general public has been asked to assist in planning how money will be spent on social services. "It's a new emphasis on the participation of citizens in the development of the program," said Dr. Buzz Sandburg, an HRS official. "Local people should define what services will be provided in their own communities." He said the comments made at last night's meeting at the Hillsborough County Health Department would influence the emphasis given programs needed here.

Mrs. Essie Reed, the vocal member of the Tampa Council for Community Action, told the officials she thought the requirement that forces a woman receiving welfare payments to live without her husband or lose her payments should be stopped. Another woman suggested the state should employ more "ombudsmen" to help consumers of social services when they get stuck in the bureaucracy. The director of health at the Polk County Health Department suggested a way to solve the problem of getting CLARKE Memorial services will be held for Mrs. Jessie Eileen Clarke Saturday night, May 10 at Mt.

Calvary S.D.A. Church from 8-10 p.m. The church is located on the corner of Wilder Ave. and 32nd St. Final rites will be held in Key West Monday, May 12 at 5 p.m.

Mrs. Clarke was born in Harbor Is. Bahamas April 22, 1882. She came to Key West, Fla. at the age of 16 where she lived until 12 years ago when she moved to Tampa to live with her daughter, Mrs.

Ruby C. Smith. She was a former employe of Central Life Ins. Co. A faithful member of Seventh Day Adventist Church for 50 years.

She passed away 7 food stamps to those who have no transportation: "We're always talking about food stamps being such a problem," he told the group, "so there are always these Brink trucks going out across the area, why can't they just take the food stamps with them?" Another woman told the group pi public schools in Polk County have begun program to serve senior citizens hot meals in the school lunchroom. "The priorities of the system have to change," Sandburg told the group. "It will take a while, but the only bright ray of hope this year is that we're asking you people what you need." The suggestions reaped at last night's meeting will go into a funding request that will be sent to the federal government. Additional comments on HRS social service programs are welcome, officials said. Mail a letter or call the following to comment on which social services you think should be given priority next year: Office of Grants Manage-.

ment, 1323 Winewood Tallahassee, 32301. Telephone 904-488-5513 or 904-4885395. May 8th in a local hospital at the age of 93. She leaves to mourn, 4 children, Ernest W. and Nathaniel Clarke, Ruby C.

Smith and Marie C. Sampson, 15 grandchildren, 33 greatgrandchildren and a host of sorrowing relatives and friends. The family may be contacted at 224 Truman Key West, Fla. Rogers Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. BALLARD Mrs.

Irene Ballard, 71, of Tampa, passed away Tuesday. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock from the Chapel of the F. T. Blount Company Funeral Home, 5101 Nebraska Avenue, with Rev. Bob E.

Lyons, Pastor of the University Church of God and Rev. Marion E. Wacaser, officiating. Pallbearers will be Jack Hildreth, Mason Mullis, II, Charles R. Mullis, Allen W.

Mullis, Mark Wacaser and Jimmy Falds. Interment will be in Garden of Memories Cemetery. A native of Bellegreen, Alabama, Mrs. Ballard had lived in the Tampa Bay Area 40 years. She was a member of the University Church of God.

Survivors include four sons, William Ballard, Robert Ballard, Richard Ballard and Jerry Ballard; two daughters, Jean Mullis and Carolyn Hildrith, all of Tampa; 21 grandchildren and 7 great-grandchildren. Hillsborough BROWN, Minott 71, 7517 N. 40th yesterday. CLARKE, Mrs. Jessie Elleen, 93, a native of Harbor Island, Bahamas, and Tampa resident for 12 years, May 8.

DATEMA, Harry, 71, May 6. DIXON, Enoch, 224 S. Melville Apt. 1. EDMONDSON, Harvey, 58, of Temple Terrace, May 8.

HANSERT, Mrs. Olive Pearl Faircloth, 66, 922 E. McBerry, yesterday. McMAHON, William 68, 303 W. Giddens a Tampa resident for 40 years and was a superintendent for W.

L. Cobb Construction Co. PETTY, Arthur Vernon, 3945 E. Eden Rock Circle, a native of Atlanta and Tampa resident for 14 years. -Anthony FLORIST Prompt City Wide Delivery Master Charge BankAmericard 3409 N.

Armenia Av. PH. 876-6370 879-7406 We've Moved NEW LOCATION 15411 N. Florida Ave. 2 Blocks North of Bearss ORCHIDS MY LOVE Send Flowers YOU Will Feel GOOD 961-1282 or 961-3027 "Your Phone is Your Charge Account" 935-3162 Buning.

THE FLORIST 8008 NO. ARMENIA AVE. We Specialize in REHABILITATION EQUIPMENT by Everest Jennings WHEELCHAIRS COMMODE CHAIRS MEDICARE APPROVED Jb hickey co. MEDICAL SALES RENTALS 111 5. Franklin St.

228-7641 CALL 224-7881 TO HAVE YOUR TAMPA TIMES DELIVERED And, if you are a subscriber and have been missed for some reason please call 224-7881. THE TAMPA TIMES Published evenings, Monday though Saturday, and Sunday morning by The Tribune Company, at Kennedy Blvd. and Morgan Street, Tampa, Foride, 33602, an affiliate of Media General, Inc. Second doss postage paid at Tampa, Florida. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY HOME DELIVERY RATES Week .60 4 Weeks 2.40 13 Weeks 7.80 26 Weeks 15.60 52 Weeks 31.20 TRIBUNE-TIMES SUNDAY ONLY per week The Times Office will accept payments for future credit to the independent corrier for perieds of thirteen (13) weeks, twenty-six (26) weeks or fifty-two (52) weeks.

MAIL RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily Sunday Daily Sunday 1 Week 1.45 1.00 .75 4 Weeks 5.80 4.00 3.00 13 Weeks 18.85 13.00 9.75 26 Weeks 37.70 26.00 19.50 52 Weeks 75.40 52.00 39.00 Member of Associated Press. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. Jennings Funeral Home, Inc. 6900 NEBRASKA PH. 237-3345 ENGLISH, Nancy Lee 1 PM Sat Nazarene Church FRAZIER, Mary Ruth 3 PM Sat.

Chapel STOWERS Funeral Home, Brandon OELSLAGER, Dewey D. 10:30 A Chapel MALLOY, Wilma L. Arrangements Pend. 31 Blount to FUNERAL HOMES SERVICES SLATE, Joyce Sat Nebr Chapel STARLING, Dessie 4P Sat Mt Enon Primitive Baptist Church HANSERT, Olive Pearl Faircloth 10A Mon Nebr Chapel BROWN, Minott L. Mon Nebr Chapel BALLARD, Irene 2P Mon Nebr Chapel EDMONDSON, Harvey 4P Mon Nebr Chapel J.

L. Reed Son GRANDFATHER-FATHER-SON Funeral Directors 3410 HENDERSON BLVD. at DELEON Phone 877-8151 Tampa's Oldest Established 1898.

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