The Miami News from Miami, Florida (2024)

I I I I I I I a a a a a a a a a Miami News Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1981 Demolition starts The Miami News A.G. MONTANARI Crews began tearing down Miami Beach's New Yorker Hotel just hours after a demolition permit was issued yesterday and just a day before the city commission was to discuss a moritorium on such permits. Barbara Capitman of the Miami Design Preservation League said, "That's dirty stuff," but Abe Resnick, one of the New Yorker's owners, said, "To take a hotel with 70 rooms that is losing money constantly and try to restore it is economically unfeasible' Policeman, two others killed in search for missing machinist FORT SMITH, Ark. Police Detective Ray Tate went to investigate the disappearance of a 22-year-old machinist Monday and then dropped from sight.

Yesterday, a farmer stumbled on a patch of blood-soaked soil and found Tate's body and two others stuffed in a huge tractor tire, authorities say. The man Tate was seeking still is missing. Police have arrested a suspect in the case, 37-yearold Thomas W. Simmons of rural Van Buren. Simmons was arrested yesterday and is being held on four complaints of kidnapping and one of capital murder, a crime that applies in case of more than one death or the death of a policeman.

The arrest came a short time after Simmons went to a Van Buren bank and deposited a check written on the account of the missing man, Larry Price, according to Wayne Hicks, assistant Van Buren police chief. Besides Tate, 34, the victims were identified as Price's wife, Jawana, 21, of Fort Smith, and Holly Gentry, 28, of Alma. All three had been shot in the head, police said. Tate was bound with his own handcuffs and Gentry with a small white cord, officials said. Police initially believed that four bodies had been found, but they later said the search for Price, 22, a Fort Smith machinist, was continuing.

Farmer Clyde McClure found the bodies while working on some farm equipment. When he first noticed blood on the ground, he thought dogs had killed a small animal. "I was coming back and I saw bare flesh and I had a pretty good idea what it was," he said. The tire, one of two near irrigation pipes and a fuel POISON, from 1A Associated Press roost," Green said. "A bird has a 50-50 chance of survival if it eats a single kernel of the corn containing Avitrol.

Chances of survival diminish if the pigeon eats more than a single kernel. really a humane way to rid a building of pigeons. We look for a 5 per cent kill rate. The pigeons don't suffer; they are out of it." George Alonso, owner of the pest-control firm, could not be reached. Green said the chemical is widely used to control pigeons, blackbirds and other feathered pests, mostly by farmers.

"There must be a more humane way to get rid of the birds," Hooper said. Apparently there isn't, according to a state expert on bird control. "Let's face it," said Tim Reagan of the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission in Palm Fire company burned up about phone number error MAPLE SHADE, N.J. Maple Shade fire officials are hot under the collar about the second wrong listing of their telephone number. "It's easy to make a mistake, but for an emergency number, you would think the phone company, would do some double-checking," said fire chief David Wise.

Camden The inside County front directory cover lists of the police department number for the fire department. In an effort to correct for the fire department telephone number, New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. sent out enclosures with the December bill, but the enclosures listed a different wrong number. New Jersey Bell said a correct. enclosure would be mailed with January bills.

"I don't know how the error oc- I was coming back and I saw bare flesh and I had pretty good idea what it was drum stacked at the end of a small dirt road, was piled with several 5-gallon fuel tins that apparently were meant to conceal the bodies. Mrs. Price Monday, said Electric. Price told Henson by 2:30 p.m. work had reported her husband missing on Mike Henson, Price's foreman at Baldor had missed a lunch date with her, she telephone, and failed to show up for his shift.

Henson said Mrs. Price told him a man had come to the couple's apartment Monday to see a car Price was selling for Gentry, and was still there when she left for work. The Prices were resident managers of an apartment complex Gentry owned. Henson said someone had called to say Price would not be in to work Monday. "He was a good worker, really well liked.

It hit the people here pretty hard," he said. Tate, followed by Gentry and Mrs. Price, headed in an unmarked police car to the Prices' apartment Monday afternoon after the missing person report was filed. Tate, the father of two school-age children, joined the Fort Smith police force in July 1976 and had been a detective for two years. Beach.

"You can trap the pigeons, but what do you do with them? Where do you take them? They are homing birds and they will return to their roosts as soon as they are released." Reagan said Avitrol has been used to get rid of pigeons since the early '70s. Margie Radowski, executive secretary of the National Audubon Society chapter in Miami, said the society has no official position on the use of Avitrol in pigeon control. "We have a few pro-pigeon members, but we have never gotten into the question." So, has the pigeon kill worked at U-M? "I don't know if the pigeon-control program has worked or not," Hooper said. "But there are about 10 to 15 dead pigeons on the roof and a lot of live ones who are trying to find out what happened to their dead brothers." Hill dies at 65 Vernon Hill, a long-time Miamian whose family has lived in Florida since the early 1800s, died yesterday at Hialeah Hospital. He was 65.

Hill, who was born in Lakeland but moved to Miami as an infant, went to Edison High School and graduated from Charron Williams Commercial College in accounting. Hill and his family worked for many years with the Dade County Tuberculosis Association and the Greater Miami Boys Drum and Bugle Corp. Services will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Lowe-Hanks Funeral Home, 151 Okeechobee Hialeah. Burial will follow at Dade Memorial Park, 1301 NW Opalocka Blvd.

Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today. Hill is survived by his wife, Opal; two sons, Vernon Ronnie; three brothers, J.F., Carl and Floyd; two sisters, Vivian Henninger and Louise Felton; and four granddaughters. Contempt order asked in de desegregation case Associated Press BUCKEYE, La.

Federal prosecutors have been drawn into the battle between a federal judge who wants to desegregate schools in Rapides Parish and the state judge who is defying him. State District Judge Richard Lee traveled here yesterday to escort three white girls to classes white Buckeye High School, even though U.S. District Judge Nauman Scott ordered them to attend a predominantly black school 15 miles away. That prompted U.S. Attorney Randell Keene to file papers Scott in Shreveport asking that Lee be held in contempt of court and fined $1,000 a day.

That in turn prompted Lee to question the competence of federal prosecutors. "You have to understand that the individuals with the Justice Department are a bunch of he said. Lee said he had not seen the proposed contempt citation, but was ready to go to court to defend himself. He would meet today with a constitusaid he tional lawyer, Dan Alexander of Mobile, to discuss strategy. Lee also said he had not decided if he would go to school today to ensure that the girls are admitted.

"I'm getting old, and that's a long drive for me," Lee said. Lee, 44, lives in Alexandria, 15 miles away. Scott ordered last summer that Rapides Parish public schools be more broadly desegregated and reassigned 108 of the 7th and 8th graders at Buckeye High to attend Alexandria's Jones Street Junior High which is 54 per cent black. To get around Scott's order, the parents of three of the reassigned students Michelle Laborde, 13; Lynda McNeal, 13; and Ramona Carbo, 12 gave custody of their daughters to friends living in the new Buckeye attendance zone. Harold Urey, helped make H-bomb, dies Associated Press LA JOLLA, Calif.

Nobel Laureate Harold C. Urey, whose discovery of heavy hydrogen a half-century ago set the stage for the atomic age, died at home yesterday. He was 87. A spokesman at the University of California at San Diego, where Urey had taught since 1958, said the professor emeritus of chemistry died "peacefully of heart problems and old age." In 1934, Urey won the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his discovery of deuterium, or heavy hydrogen, essential to the development of the hydrogen bomb, while working at Columbia University in 1931. The onetime Indiana farm boy was honored by governments and universities throughout the worid for his research as well into chemical origins of life, the climatic history of the world, beginnings of the solar system and the nature of the universe.

Urey was also a major figure in the Manhattan Project which in the 1940s developed the atomic bomb. But in later years, he had regrets about his discovery of deuterium, which led to hydrogen bombs. "I'm sorry for this," he said in 1972. "I wish they (the bombs) didn't exist." In recent years, Urey became increasingly critical of atomic power plants producing energy through the fission process by splitting the atom, in contrast to fusion, forcing atoms together. Lottery winners The winning number in New Jersey's Pick-It Lottery Tuesday was 033.

A straight bet pays $302.50 and pairs pay $30. There was no box payoff. The winning Pick-4 number was 5335. A straight bet pays $2,824. THE MIAMI NEWS (USPS 592-820) is published daily, except Sunday, at 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fl (NOTE: Send mail for the departments to O.

Box 615, Miami, FI 33152. correspondence to circulation and promotion departments should be mailed to Box 1029. Miami. FI 33132 City Desk '350-2145 Lifestyle 350-2165 Photo. Sports 350-2175 Display Ads.

350-2462 Classified 350-2222 Circulation Dade. 350-2000 Broward. 462-3000 Insurance. 350-2443 Reader Services. 350-2444 All other Dept's.

(HOME DELIVERY RATES) 1 $39.00 6 months. .19.50 3 months. .9.75 Monthly 3.25 1 week. .75 MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS 1 year. $59.80 6 months.

29.90 3 months. 14.95 4 4.60 SINGLE COPY PRICE Dade, Broward, Keys, $.15 Second class mail privieges authorized at the Post Office Miami. FI Flowers say everything you can't. Since 1910 Helping you say it right. You have to understand that the individuals with the Justice Department are a bunch of novices Disclaming racial motives, the parents maintained that they didn't want the girls bused to classes far from their homes.

The judges' tug-of-war began when Lee approved the custody move and Scott, calling it a "sham," took the case away from Lee's state court. "For someone to come along and say a judgment of my court is a sham impugns the dignity not only of my court but of every state court in the nation," Lee said. On Dec. 4, Lee sent Rapides Parish sheriff's deputies to Buckeye with an order threatening the arrest of Principal Charles Waites if he did not enroll the girls. Waites complied, but Scott ordered the deputies away.

Two days ago, Lee sent state police to Buckeye with an identical order, and with the same results. This time, Scott not only ordered state police away, he also ordered nearly every public official in Louisiana to stay out of his way in the desegregation case. Yesterday, Lee himself went to the school with one police officer Scott apparently forgot about naming in his order Monday local Constable Newton Paul Jr. But Scott sent a federal marshal to the school with a court order that chased the constable away. Keene's motion also asked Scott to fine Waites, Paul, the girls' parents and guardians and school Supertindent E.A.

Nicholls $500 a day "until such time as each purges himself or herself of contempt." to is the Death Notices AA-01 Death Notices BARTOSIAK FRANCES 87 of Miami on Jan. 5th. Local resident past 25 years coming from Ill. Survived by her husband, John; daughter, Irene (Mrs. Sigmund) Wiodarczyk, 5 grandchildren; 2 sisters, Amelia Antoinette.

Private services were held VAN NORTH MIAMI CHAPEL. BRUMLEY JOHN L. 57 Miami passed away Sun. Survived by Marzell; sons, John Donald Wayne, James Edward Michael C. all of Miami 1 sister, Katie Reineke of Ky.

Friends may call Thurs. 11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M. with funeral services at 2:00 P.M. Thurs.

ArrangeMORTUARY 1495 FLORIDA N.W. Miami. CZARNECKI JAN AUGUSTUYN 68 Miami resident for 18 years coming from N. Y. passed away Jan.

2. He was retired librarian from the University of Miami a member of the Polish American Club of Miami. Friends may call SON FUNERAL CHAPEL 837 Ponce de Leon Blvd. on Thurs. from 7-9 P.M.

Rosary recitation will be al 8:00 P.M. with the Liturgy of Christian Burial celebrated 9:30 A.M. Fri. at St. Michael's Catholic Church, Interment Our Lady of Mercy Cemetery.

by COMBS FUNERAL HOME. EVERY VIRGINIA K. 69 of Miami passed away Jan. 5th. Came to Miami in 1952 from N.

Y.C. Survived by husband Ernest M. Private services VAN ORSDEL NORTHSIDE CHAPEL. FEVISH SHIRLEY of M.B. Ser vices were held.

Alton RUBIN CHAPEL. 1701 Rd FISCHMAN RUBEN 40 of Miami passed away Mon. He had made his home here for 20 years coming from Columbia, S.A. He survived by his wife, Nelly; 2 children, Michael Janet brothers, Efriam of Miami, Joseph of Miami, Israel of Los Angeles, Fabio Columbia Moises of Columbia, Funeral services interment held Tues under the direction of Gordon Funeral Home 710 SW 12 Ave. Miami FLEMING MRS IVY JOY 79 of Miami passed away Jan.

1981 She came here in 1916 from Knoxville, Tenn. was a member of Central Baptist Church. Survived by 3 sons, Joe, Eugene John Fleming all of Miami; 3 daughters, Mrs. Carl (Juanita) MacDougall Charles (Lucille) Bass of Miami Mrs. Wilbur (Frances) Smith, Ft.

15 grandchildren 14 great Funeral service Thurs. 3:00 P.M. at Central Baptist Church under direction JOSEPH B. COFER MIAMI SHORES FUNERAL HOME 70931 NE 6 Ave. where friends may call Wed.

7-9 P.M. Entombment Woodlawn Park Mausoleum. GOLDMANN IDA C. of M.B. passed away Tues.

A resident here for 40 years, coming from Allantown, Pa. Atlantic City, Survived by daughter, Gladys Goodmann of Miami; sister, Anna Kaufman of M.B.; brothers, A. Edward Coleman 'of M.B. Lewis Coleman of Ca, many nieces nephews. She was a Chairwoman N.A.C.

life member of Surfside Chapter of Cerebal Palsy. Services will be Thurs. 12:30 P.M. at the chapel with interment at Temple Israel grounds Graceland Cemetery Arrangements by "THE RIVERSIDE" 1250 Normandy Dr. MB HILL VERNON FRANKLIN 65 of Hialeah, passed away Jan.

6 198 His family were Florida pioneers as early as 1800's. Mr. Hill was the only child of the late, Ruby 0. Hill Clay Horrace Hill. Attended Edison High.

School Charron Williams Commerical College maioring in accounting. At college he met subsequently married Opal McWhorter who was born in Arcadia. Mr. Hill retired from Transport Dept. of Belcher Oil Co.

in 1980. For many years he his family devoted much time effort to Dade Co. Tuberculosis Assoc. worked faithfully with the Greater Miami Boys Drum Bugle Corp. Was member of Allapattah Baptist Church for 20 years Miami Springs Baptist Chruch for past.

16 years. Survived by wife, Opal; sons. Vernon D. Ronnie Hill; 4 granddaughters, Debra, Deanna, Carrie Nicole. bros.

J.F Carl Floyd Clay; sisters, Vivian Henninger Louise Felton. He leaves many loving nieces nephews. Family will receive friends, Wed. P.M. Services Thurs.

11:00 A.M. LOWE -HANKS FUNERAL HOME 151 E. OKEE. RD. Interment Dade M.am.

Park. AA-01 Death Notices HOBBS MINNIE BELLE Miami resident since 1925, coming from N. Florida passed away Mon. She was an active member of the Baptist Church since 1925. Survived by her daughter Mrs.

Jeannette Moody of Miami; grandchildren, Sandra J. Tucker, William L. Lamb of Morristown, Tenn. Diana Albert of Atlanta, Ga. Friends call BESS, KOLSKI COMBS FUNERAL HOME.

MIAMI SHORES CHAPEL 10936 NE 6 Ave. Wed. (today from 5-8 P.M. Funeral services Thurs. 10:00 A.M.

in the Allapattah Baptist Church 3309 N.W. 17 Ave. with the Rev. Richard A. Pankey officiating.

Memorial Interment Park. HYMOWITZ EDWARD M. of N.M.B. Services interment in Pennsauken, N.J. RUBIN CHAPEL 1701 Alton Rd 538-6371 KELLER MAE 80 of Hallandale passed away Mon.

Survived by daughter, Roslyn Gitlin of N. sister, Dr. Ina Daft of Israel; grandchildren. Member of Hallandale Jewish Center Sisterhood. Services Wed.

10:00 A.M. 1921 Pembroke Rd Hywd Interment Lakeside morial Park. KIRSCHBAUM MAX A. 85 of Miami Mr. Kirschbaum is survived by his wife, Helen; his daughter, Ruth Levin; his brother, Dr.

William Kerwin sisters, Ann Lyness, Helen Levy Eleanor Braiver; 6 grandchildren 3. great-grandchildren. Mr Kirschbaum was a resident of Miami for 8 years. Services interment were held in Southfield, Mich. on Jan.

4, 1981 Newman Funeral Home 1333 Dade Blvd. 531-7677 MARTIN AGNES JOSEPHINE 84 A Miami resident for 15 years coming from Mass. passed away Tues. She was a retired elementary schoolteacher a member of the Dominican Laiety. Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated at Noon today.

Inferment will be in Mass. Local arrangements. BESS, KOLSKI COMBS FUNERAL HOME, MIAMI SHORES CHAPEL 10936 NE 6 Ave. NELSON JACK, 82, of Miami, passed away Jan. 3rd.

Mr. Nelson had been a resident here for the past 32 years coming from Brooklyn, N. Y. He is survived by his wife, Bess; 2 daughters, Enid (Oscar) Segal Suzanne (Dr. Alan) Cohen of Miami; sister, Dorothy Neison of M.B.; 3 grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held 11 A.M. Mon. Jan. 5 at the Chapel with interment to follow af Star of David Memorial Park. Family suggests donations in memory be made to B'nai B'rith.

Gordon Funeral Home 710 SW Miami ORTH MELVIN H. 61 of 4430 N.W. 15 Lauderhill, passed away Mon. A resident here 35 years from Bridgeport, Ala. Supervisor with F.P.L.

for 33 years. Life member of the Laud. Moose; veteran of WWII. Survived by his wife, Jeannette (Jan); daughter, Mrs. Donna Provenzano, Winter Garden, son, Dr.

Robert G. Orth, Salt Lake City. Utah; 2 sisters in pell, 2 grandchildren Service 11:00 A.M. Thurs. af FAIRCHILD WEST BROWARD CHAPEL with Rev.

Bruce E. Whitehead officiating. Interment in Lauderdale Memorial Park. Friends may call P.M. Wed.

Memorials may be made 10 the American Lung Assoc. PARODI MR ULYSSES of Mimai passed away Mon. A retired shoe salesman. Survived by wife, Annie M. of Miami; son, Edward Parodi also of Miami; brothers, Hector of Tampa 8 Waldo of Ocoee, Fla.

5 grandchildren 13 great-grandchildren. Friends may call Thurs. at AHERNPLUMMER BIRD RD FUNERAL HOME 7-9 P.M with Mass of the Christian Burial 10:00 A.M. Fri. at St.

Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church, Interment Miami Memorial Cemetery. AHERN-PLUMMER 60th and Bird Rd 643-3333 PERLMAN JOSEPH The Board of Trustees of the FIU Foundation expresses regret deepest sympathy 10 our President, David Perlman, upon the loss of his father, Joseph. Our sincere condolences are extended to. David, his mother, his sisters, Sylvia Feltman, Rhoda, Shougar his entire family at this time of Gergory Int'l Pres. Univ.

Thomas Lumpkin, Past Pres. FlU Foundation AA-01 Death Notices ROXBURY LAWRENCE E. SR. 73 Jan 6th. A native of Youngstown, Ohio Came to Miami 1 1964 after retiring from the Dept.

of Transportation, U.S. Army Ft. Eustis, Va. Survived by wife, Roberta; sons, James Lawrence daughters, Phyllis Mahan Judi Weaver; 10 grandchildren 2 sisters. Visitation 7-9 P.M.

Thurs. Services 10:30 A.M. Fri. at VAN ORSDEL CORAL GABLES CHAPEL 4600 SW 8 ST Burial Vista SALMON NETTIE K. of N.M.B.

Repose 2-5 P.M. today Services at 2:00 P.M. today (Wed.) RUBIN CHAPEL 1701 Alton Rd 538-6371 SCHOENFELD HARRY 74 of M.B. FUNERAL in HOME GORDON SEGAL TILLIE 73; a native of Russia, died in Oakland, Ca, Dec. 25, 1980.

Beloved wife of the late Louis Segal. Loving mother of of Walnut Ca. Samuel Bernard Segal Irvin Segal of Inverness, Ca. Dear sister of Jacob Cohen of Silver Spring, Yetta Blatman of Brooklyn, Fanny Greenburg of West Palm Springs, Fla, Survived by grandchildren. Mrs.

Segal was a 20 year resident of Miami. member of O.E.S. Emunah Chapter 175, Miami, Fla. SerCa. Contributions in her vices were held Sunday in MORTUARY: GRANT MILLER Oakland.

memory. to the Kidney Foundation of West Tenn. 69 East Cherry Or. Tenn. 38117 SHEINBERG LILY of Deerfield, Fla, Staten Services interment at Island.

RUBIN CHAPEL 1701 Alton Rd 538-6371 SPRAGUE VER 69 of 195 Fla. Tues. Funeral Pago Pago, Isle of Capri, services will be 11:00 A.M. Thurs. at the DAVID K.

JOHNSON FUNERAL HOME Naples, Fla. TICE RUDOLPH J. 84 A Miami resident for 30 years from N.J. passed away Tues. Survived by his daughter-in-law Winifred M.

Tice. Friends call at SKI FUNERSHORES CHAPEL 10936 HOME, MIAMI NE 6 Ave. Wed. (today) from 7-9 P.M. Funeral services Thurs.

2:00 P.M. at the funeral home with interment Southern Memorial Park. TSOBANE NICK 81 of Miami Funerservices Wed. (today) 2:00 P.M. at St.

Sophia Greek Orthodox Catherdral Rev. Demosthenes J. Mekras officiating. Lithgow Funeral Homes 3232 Coral Way 757-5544 WEINSTEIN EVA 76 in of N.M.B Services L'HOME GORDON FUNERAL WEINSTEIN HARRY 82 of M.B. Services in GORDON FUNERAL HOME YOUNG FRANCES LAPPIN 71 of Miami formerly of Boston, passed away Jan 5.

Widow of the a late, Harry young; adored mother of Mrs. Maxine Bartel of Miami, Mrs. Judith Ms. O'Brien Andrea of Hollywood, L. Young of Hollywood; beloved sister of Mrs.

Denna Gilman of Brighton, adored grandmother of Jeffrey Scott Bartel, Douglas Greg Bartel. Member of B'nai B'rith. Graveside services 7: 2:00 to be held Wed. Jan. P.M.

Star of David Cemetery, Miami. David Cemetery, Miami. "THE RIVERSIDE" 1717 SW 37 Ave. Miami Family will receive flowers or contributions may be made to one's own charity. Associated Press curred originally, but this time, after the new enclosure is prepared in Newark, I've asked to see it before it goes into the mail," said Wally Halter, community relations manager for New Jersey Bell in the Camden area.

Wise said the mistake "has created some confusion, but fortunately, it hasn't caused any delay in answering alarms." There are no errors in the township's listings in the alphabetical section directory. "No fire calls will be missed," Halter said, adding that calls made to the incorrect number listed on the enclosure will be automatically switched to the centralized Burlington County fire reporting service. Maple Shade, which is in Burlington County but borders Camden County, is listed in both telephone directories. ZEWALD MARIE JENNER 71 of Miami Jan 5th. She came here in 1935 from Si.

Louis, Mo. Active in North Fulford Miami Elementary, Edison Past High Secretary School Founding member of Biscayne Gardens Civic Founding member of Holy Family Catholic Church was with Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co for over 20 years. Survived by daughter, Dolly Zewaid Ca. 8 Oosidyk of San Diego, grandchildren Itation 6-9 P.M. children.

Wed. Visprayer service 8:00 P.M. at VAN ORSDEL GRATIGNY RD CHAPEL 770 NW 119 ST Mass of the Christian Burial 9:30 A.M. Thurs. af Holy Family Catholic Church.

Burial Dade Memorial. AA-09 Cemetery Lots Memorial CEMETRY Lot in Flagler Park $1200 Call 844-7922 MIA Memorial 2 Vaultoriums bronze plaques vase sacrifice below cost 223-6343 Get away from it all. Travel, each Saturday, will help you get there from the swank resorts to the budget retreats..

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