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Arizona Daily Sun from Flagstaff, Arizona • 2
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Arizona Daily Sun from Flagstaff, Arizona • 2

Publication:
Arizona Daily Suni
Location:
Flagstaff, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mf 2 The SUN, Flagstaff, Arizona, Sunday, June 24, 1990 Jaycees collect $2,500 for small fireworks show I By LESLEY ANN MITCHELL Sun Staff Reporter After weeks of fund-raising, the Flagstaff Jaycees now have just enough money for a small Fourth of July fireworks show. Jaycees member Vicki Whitney said the group has about $2,500 to spend for the celebration, which would be a little less than half the size of last years show. But they still have until Thursday to raise additional funds to increase the size of the show. Were out there collecting more and more, Whitney said. Most of the contributions are a combination of both private and corporate donations.

The Jaycees received another corporate donation Saturday for $500, a major part of the total amount, Whitney said. She said Flagstaff residents and businesses have given the Jaycees a great deal of support for the show, enabling the Jaycees to pay off last years debt, in addition to raising money for this years show. She said City Councils promise to match dollar for dollar any contributions up to $4,000 also will greatly increase the size of the show. Anything people send in will double," Whitney said. The Jaycees attended a council meeting June 19 to ask for funding assistance.

The council agreed to match any funds received between June 19 and the Fourth of July. Whitney said that during the meeting, Mayor Chris Bavasi raised more than $300 for the show. There was a lot of support right then and there, Whitney said. She said raising money for the show has been difficult because they first had to pay off more than $4,000 in debts from last year and also pay for fireworks insurance, which usually runs several thousand dollars. Whitney said the Jaycees sent a check to the fireworks company a few days ago.

They (the fireworks company) are real pleased. Theyve finally received our last payment, Whitney said. Whitney said its a great time for anyone considering donating any amount to the Jaycees to do so. If we raise more we can gel every penny the City Council offered us," she said. The Jaycees hope to raise enough money by Thursday to create a show at least equal to the size of last years show.

Up with the roof Members of the Flagstaff Sunrise Lions Club build a new roof on the Buffalo Park entrance Saturday afternoon. The supplies were provided by the City of Flagstaff with the Lions Club providing the labor to replace the old, weather-beaten roof. County considers helicopter service at airport 3 more typhoid cases discovered in Phoenix the service would improve control tower operations, insure adequate fire-fighting equipment and increase the safety of the public if an accident occurs. Although local residents complain of safety and noise problems, a similar facility could not be constructed at the airport right away. Because of this, the commission will look at granting a three-year permit instead of the requested 10-year permit.

Members also will look at granting a permit to replace a water tank with a tank requested by Doney Park Water. Engen said a few nearby residents may be opposed to a larger water tank. The adjacent people dont like it, he said. One of the arguments is that its too tall. Well consider putting part of it in the ground.

Doney Park Water also will request a conditional use permit to add an tank in another area of Doney Park. In other matters: Recycling in Flagstaff will request a conditional use permit to build a recycling center on Highway 66. Blue Ridge Development Inc. of Peoria will request approval for a site plan for a recreational vehicle park on Highway 87. Commissioners also will discuss the impacts of House Bill 2105, which permits logo signs on all state highways.

The commission will discuss the possibility of requesting the Arizona Department of Transportation to designate all state highways in Coconino county as scenic highways. The Planning and Zoning Commission meeting begins at 5 p.m. Tuesday. By LESLEY ANN MITCHELL Sun Staff Reporter Members of the Coconino County Planning and Zoning Commission will look at a variety of local issues at a Tuesday meeting, including upgrading the Pulliam airport to accommodate helicopter service. Commissioner Steve Engen said members will look at possibly granting a conditional use permit for the operation of a helicopter tour business located on the east side of Highway 64 near Tusayan until another facility can be constructed at Pulliam Airport.

The applicant would like to see it right where it is for as long as he can have it, Engen said. The commission will look at the effects of moving the helicopter service to the airport. Commissioners will discuss whether relocating Friday that allows him to reopen on Monday after closing June 12. In fact, friends and loyal customers are planning a special dinner party Thursday at the restaurant, attorney Marc Cavncss said. Randy Baca, deputy director of the county Division of Public Health, said Fierros signing of the health departments agreement cancels the proceedings started by the county to revoke his operating permit.

PHOENIX (AP) Arizona and Maricopa County officials have found three more suspected cases of typhoid fever in the investigation of an outbreak linked to a popular downtown restaurant. Seven people, all who had eaten at the restaurant, were diagnosed as having the illness last week. Meanwhile, Norman Fierros, owner of the restaurant, reached an agreement with Maricopa County restaurant inspectors i Public record Rep. English pushes for conservation corps bill Police Log HIKER IDENTIFIED. Coconino Sheriffs Office has identified a tourist who died while hiking in the Grand Canyon.

Paul William Stykcr, 26, died when he and his wife ran out of water on a hike Wednesday while on the South Rims Tonto Trail. Sheriffs deputies used a helicopter to recover Stykers body and to take his wife out of the canyon Friday. TOUGH LUCK. A Flagstaff man said he his luck was running out as he was cited for driving without insurance after he had an accident on Patterson Boulevard and Seventh Avenue Saturday. But Robert Forums luck didnt get any better when, a few minutes later, he hit the car of the police officer who issued the citation.

Both cars sustained minor damage. I cant believe I did that; this just isnt my day, police reports quoted Forum as saying. CHILD NEGLECT. Flagstaff resident Leroy Yazzie was cited for child neglect after allowing his two children, ages 2 and 3, to walk out into the middle of the street Saturday afternoon. A woman who tried to coax the children off of Sixth Avenue and East Street called the police.

24-HOUR ACTIVITY SUMMARY. Flagstaff police answered 136 calls for help Friday, resulting in 1 1 arrests, including three for drunken driving. Police also investigated 12 traffic accidents. By LESLEY ANN MITCHELL Sun Staff Reporter State Reps. John Wettaw, R-Flagstaff, Karan English, D-Flagstaff, and State Sen.

Tony Gabaldon, D-Flagstaff, gathered in Wheeler Park Sunday to voice their support for a bill which would establish funding for a civil conservation corps in Arizona. All three of us are supporting it, Gabaldon said. But Karen, shes the originator. English has pushed for House Bill 2671, which would give the Arizona Conservation Corps an annual appropriation of $300,000 for more than four years. The Senate will take a final vote on the measure as early as Monday.

It takes a long time to get anything through the legislative process, English said. And we need funding to get it off the ground. English said she and Wettaw discussed the idea of an Arizona corps more than four years ago, when she was a Coconino County supervisor, never knowing for sure if it would get off the ground. If they receive funding, the Arizona Conservation Corps will operate much like the Civilian Con servation Corps in the early 1900s, providing unemployed people work through civic projects. But English says there will be one difference: An emphasis on education.

The emphasis is still on values and work ethic, English said. But it will have an education component. English said those who complete a project will receive not only pay, but they will be eligible for one free semester at one of the three state universities. The Arizona corps has received support from Coconino National Forest, which probably would provide joint funding and projects for corps employees. In addition to the forest, she also said original employees of the first U.S.

corps have helped English organize Arizonas program. These old guys know what they got out of it. They are behind it 100 percent, she said. She said shes received a lot of job offers for the first corps employees. Theres a lot of fields where theres a deficit of labor, English said, citing forestry and other areas.

Jason Lee Ross, 19, of Flagstaff, and Rebecca Margaret Scott, 18, of Flagstaff. Jeffrey Scott Hartin, 21, of Flagstaff, and Jennifer Lee Morehart, 21, of Flagstaff. Louis Francis Montiel, 33, of Flagstaff, and Deborah Sue Cook, 34, of Flagstaff. Kellee Gerard Sroia, 29, and Mary Aurea Treheame, 25, both of Flagstaff. Darell Edward Boone, 25, of Eagar, and Sandra Lee Leschin, 45, of Eagar.

Warren William Poreter III, 29, of Flagstaff, and Susan Mary Skelton, 30, of Flagstaff. Larry Hyden, 26, of Tuba City, and Betty N. Patterson, 41, of Tuba City. Michael Arthur Brooks, 27, of Flagstaff, and Candra Ann Fischer, 22, of Flagstaff. Kenneth Lee Hardy, 26, of Utah, and Veronica Salena Sandoval, 26, of Kaibcto.

James Edwin Erdman 29, of Flagstaff, and Eve Marie Tallman, 29, Flagstaff. Mark Dudley Steward, 25, of Phoenix, and Laurinda Marie Kirsch, 25, of Mesa. Duane Paul Harry, 21, of Flagstaff, and Valencia McCabe, 17, of Flagstaff. Dcvanicl Charles, 21, of Lake Havasu City, and Rachel Rae Curtis, 17, of Lake Havasu City. Kelly Ann Lawson, 25, of California, and Mamie Lynn Madden, 22, of Michigan.

Marc David Biggs, 22, of Utah, and Heather Joy Andreascn, 19, of Tempe. Glenn Charles Peaches, 24, of Tuba City, and Alondra Michelle Gorman, 21, of Tuba City. Kim Jan Naelhout, 33, of Parks, and Bemadine Leding, 32, of Parks. Christopher Glenn Noth, 18, of Flagstaff, and Donna Irene Frost, 28, of Flagstaff. Robert Lewis Woodman, 35, of Flagstaff, and Linda Sho Moriwaki, 36, of Flagstaff.

Richard Dean Carrillo, 32, of Flagstaff, and Anna Marie Hamilton, 19, of Flagstaff. Rodney Alan Whitchair, 25, of Gilbert, and Marshamarie Myers, 25, of Flagstaff. John Nicolas Dancu, 20, of Flagstaff, and Karin Elizabeth Palmgren, 20, of Flagstaff. Neil Nathan Ncpsky, 33, of Flagstaff, and Carolyn Marie Gcritz, 29, of Flagstaff. David Edwin Linton, 59, of Bellemont, and Jackie Ballou, 47, of Bel-lemont.

George Russell Sewell, 43, of Phoenix, and Marilyn Sue Elder, 34, of Phoenix. Ricky Allen Sloan, 27, of Kaibeto, and Cynthia Perl Gishey, 24, of Flagstaff. Patrick Augustine Castillo, 25, of Second Mesa, and Wilhemina Sauf-kie, 27, of Second Mesa. Todd Justin Walldorf, 23, of Mesa, and Erin Michele Mickelson, 21, of Flagstaff. Richard Mark Dumez, 28, of Flagstaff, and Gail Nessa, 25, of Flagstaff.

Pathways of Memories a 50 YEARS AGO The Flagstaff chapter of the Red Cross raises $1,100 for war relief. 25 YEARS AGO FlagstafFs Mark A. Moore American Legion Post opens for the first time today. 10 YEARS AGO Members of Flagstaff City Council dont plan to alter their policy of allowing a moment of silence before regular meetings despite objections from a local atheist group that demands a stop to prayer before public meetings. A I ZONA Official Legal Newspaper for City of Flagstaff and Coconino County Publication No.

(USPS 030-560) Dissolutions Marriage licenses David Arch Workman, 23, of Flagstaff, and Lisa Marie Gutaw, 24, of Phoenix. Timothy Brian Allen, 24, of Lakeside, and Christie Nannette Hazlett, 22, of Tucson. Paul Robert Karlsberger, 33, of Flagstaff, and Melinda Hume Thybony, 32, of Flagstaff. Michael Byron Dotson, 37, of California, and Heather Grier Cameron, 43, of California. Gilbert Many goats, 20, of Red Lake, and Elvina Lee, 17, of Wupatki National Monument.

Bryan Arch Boling, 27, of Flagstaff, and Brenda Kay McMaster, 22, of Flagstaff. Graham Rodney Parker, 41, of Sedona, and Brenda Lee Moore, 43, of Scdona. David Alan Bcndelin, 29, of Flagstaff, and Rae Frances Begay, 27, of Flagstaff. William R. Emig 50, of Flagstaff, and Teresa Marie Stavros, 50, of Phoenix.

Joseph Manuel Ono, 26, of Winslow, and Kimberly Ann Moyer, 24, of Flagstaff. Published Monday through Friday evening and Sunday morning by The Flagstaff Publishing 417 W. Santa Fe Flagstaff, A 86001. Post Office Box 1849, 86002. Entire contents copyrighted by The Arizona Daily Sun.

Second class postage paid at the Flagstaff, Arizona Post Office 86001. Subscnpiion rates $6 75 per month by carrier, $7 25 per month by auto earner, $144 per year by mail in Flagstaff and elsewhere. Advertising 774-4545 Classified 774-4545 Guaranteed Carrier Delivery If you fail to receive The Arizona Daily Sun by 5 30 weekdays or 8 30 a m. Sunday, please telephone your carrier. If unable to reach your carrier, please Department at 779-4189.

Postmaster: Send change of add to The Arizona Daily Sun, Post Box 1849, Flagstaff, AZ 86002. The Arizona Daily Sun welcomes solicited photographs, articles, releases and manuscripts. Inqui should be addressed to the Editor. Publisher, however, assumes no res sibility for such materials and their rel even with return postage included, i not be guaranteed No payment for tides or photographs will be made un specifically agreed to, in writing, by Publisher. 1 Circulation Subscriber Service 779-4 Editonal 774-4 774-4545 Daniel C.

Perez from Sonya J. Perez. Cheryl A. Couture from Bradley J. Couture.

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