Corpus Christi Caller-Times from Corpus Christi, Texas (2024)

Child Aid Priority Urged Over Plans For Aged, Disabled AUSTIN (P) The lof a legislator-layman commitfree on welfare reform said Sunday programs for needy children should take priority over increasing welfare checks the needy aged, blind and disabled. William P. Hobby president, and executive editor of Houston Post, discussed the reclommlendations of his study television committee the weekly and radio panel show, "Capital Eye. "Society's obligation to the needy blind, aged and disabled is essentially one of maintaining them at a level of human dignity--a maintenance obligation," Hobby said. The obligation to young children obviously should be radically -it should be develop these children, to devellop the working skills in these adults of working age," said.

Asked whether the 1971 lature, if faced with implementing the committee's proposals for increasing grants for the needy aged, blind and panel's proposals develop disabled or "carrying out the needy children and their parents, Hobby "That answers itself, repliedis The first priority of. the state has to be in the developmental areas that I mentioned; the day care program and the work stu- Three Injured In City Wreck Three teen-agers about 12:45 a.m. yesterday the autos they were eat Morgan and South street, police said. Injured were Eddie 19, 2530 Guadalupe, one of the autos Robert Mungia, 17, Townsend, driver of car and his passenger, Juarez, 15, of 4422 All were taken to Medical Center where treated and released Juarez who was admitted broken left leg. Police said the Mungia was traveling south on while the Garcia auto eling north.

The Mungia turned around by the and struck the corner Ital Laundry. program for needy teen lagers clearly should have priori Hobby said the committee' central recommendation-tha needy persons in Texas be prov ided enough money to satisfy their "basic human be interpreted as increas ing the current grant level based on 75 per cent of budgeted need for families with needy children, to 125 per cent of cur rent budgeted levels. Nothing that Texas now rank: 37th among the states in the amount of its grants to need; families, Hobby said the in crease in grants implied by the committee's report would "bring us up somewhere mid way on the list -somewhere it the high 20s, probably." Bishop Drury Appoints Foley To Council Post John J. Foley, former public relations officer with Naval Air Advanced Training and one-time sales representative for Rio Airways, was appointed to the Diocesan Pastoral Council yesterday. Foley was named full-time executive secretary to the group by Bishop Thomas J.

Drury of the Corpus Christi Diocese at a meeting of the council in Alice. The council is a development lat the diocesan level of parish councils which Vatican II recommended be established throughout the church. It provides for cooperation between clergy, religious and laity in the apostolic, charitable and social endeavors of the church. Foley will be responsible for coordinating the activities of the council and acting as liaison between it and other organizaItions. Foley retired from the Navy in 1969 after 27 years as an aviator.

He and his wife Margaret, have been members of St. Patrick's Parish since 1949. They have six children. auto Budget Work Staples was travcar was impact of Orien- BLOOD BANK OPENING William W. Henderson (left), executive director of the Nueces County Medical Society, and Dr.

John W. Chriss, president, discuss plans for the society's Community Blood Bank which was formally opened yesterday at 1620 S. Brownlee. In existence for six months, the facility collects and distributes blood to 10 participating hospitals in Nueces and San Patricio counties. To maintain fresh blood reserves, 20 to 25 units of blood are needed daily.

Local businesses and clubs are organizing donor clubs to supply the blood requirement. (Staff Photo by Murray Judson) Woman's Tax Victory Could Help Jobless (C New York Times News Service NEW YORK It took a determined elderly woman fighting a personal battle against inflation to give the powerful and impersonal Internal Revenue Service an important setback re cently. All of this proves that doughty taxpayers with a little knowledge of law sometimes can win a round against bureaucracy. Furthermore, the woman's single-handed success could be useful to some temporarily unemployed people who have jobs away from their homes while waiting out the current recession. Miss Virginia C.

Avery, who described herself as a "senio" citizen" of Tampa. lived there after her retirement from many years as an expert legal stenographer. This is a well paid profession, and good legal stenographers are usually in demand. The high cost of living caught up with her in the mid-1960s and she could find little work in Tampa. In 1967, she took a train to New York where she placed a series of situation-wanted ads in the New York Law Journal.

In the ads, she he carefully indicated that she wanted temporary work only. Her aim was to substitute for law secretaries who were on vacation or ill. She found a series of part-time jobs that kept her busy from May through December, and after that she returned to Tampa by train. In making out her income for the year 1967 on the followling April, she explained that trip and deducted the cost of the oundtrip train fares, the amount she spent on lodgings in New York, and the sum for the advertisem*nts. Deductions Disallowed The Internal Revenue Service disallowed all of the deductions on the theory that New York became her home during the seven months.

The basic tax rule is that when a person travels away from home on business, his expenses are largely deductible. Miss Avery pointed out that her home for years had been in Tampa, and that she returned there, but the IRS refused to accent this argument. After the usual process throuch appeals to the regional tax office, Miss Avery was sent 3 90 day deficiency notice and she took the matter to the U.S. Tax Court. Armed with her legal background and logic.

she pleaded her own case. 'Respondent Erred' Noting that "she was. over 70," Judge Austin Hoyt stressed Accused Sergeant Is Refused Stay SAN ANTONIO (P) An Air Force sergeant, whose request for a stay of proceedings was denied in federal court, will face a military trial Monday 01 charges of maltreating basic trainees. Scheduled for court-martiali is T. Sgt.

Jack H. Wilson, 34, of San Antonio, a native of Kenova, W.Va. After losing his federal court bid for a stay, Wilson's lawyers sent a similar request to the Court of Military Appeals in Washington. By Sunday night, however, no word had been received from the high military court, a defense attorney said. Wilson is charged with choking, striking or kicking recruits while a training instructor in September, Training here at Center, Lackland the only Air Force basic training installation.

One of 10 trainees involved claimed he had to undergo surgery after Wilson allegedly knocked his head and another recruit's head together. The veteran sergeant's lawyers said they sent the military Food Collection At St. Joseph's Ends Tomorrow Funeral services will be at 4 p.m. today in Jackson Woods Presbyterian Church for USAF Sgt. John Scott Vetters, 23, of 1102 Timbergrove.

Burial will be in Seaside Memorial Park under the direction of Clifford Jackson Funeral Home, Violet Road. Vetters was killed Nov. 27 in the crash of a chartered jetliner after it took off from Anchorage, Ala, The plane was ferrying U.S. Air Force troops from McCord Air Force Base in Tacoma, Wash. to Cam Ranh Bay, South Vietnam.

Forty-five persons were killed in the crash. Sam Mooneyhan DEATHS AND FUNERALS Mrs. Billy C. Yates Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in St.

John's Methodist Church for Mrs. Billy C. Yates, 16, of 901 Ashland. Burial will in Seaside Memorial Park under the direction of Clifford Jackson Funeral Home. Mrs.

Yates died about 3:30 p.m. Friday in her home after a short illness. A native of St. Jo, she had lived here since 1962. of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to an educational fund or to the St.

Memorial Fund. Mrs. Laura Maude Lewis GEORGE WEST Requiem Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Monday in St. George Catholic Church for Mrs.

Laura Maude Lewis, 77. Burial will be in Gussettbille Cemetery under the direction of Brice Funeral Home of Three Rivers. Mrs. Lewis died Saturday morning in a Corpus Christi hospital after a long illness. A native of Gilmer, she moved to George West with her husband, James T.

Lewis, in 1917. After his death in 1956 she spent most of her time in Louisiana. Mrs. Mahalia Jones Mrs. Mahalia Jones, 96, of 2722 Soledad, died at 9:50 a.m.

yesterday in a local hospital after a long illness. She was born in Weimar and had lived in Corpus Christi 32 years. Funeral services will be at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Calvary First Baptist Church with the Rev. H.

Clay Dil worth officiating. Burial will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Runge under the direction of Jackson Flowers Funeral Home. Survivors, all of Corpus Christi, include five daughters, Mrs. Mamie Sullivan, Mrs.

Ophelia Lawson, Mrs. Aline Jones, Mrs. Willie E. Jones and Mrs. Lela McLennan; three sons, Alex, Alaway and Adell Jones; nine children grandchildren, and 11 13 great great-greatgrandchildren.

Otto A. Kuehn ORANGE GROVE, Funeral services will p.m. Monday in Holmgreen Mortuary Chapel for Otto A. Kuehn, 76. Burial will be in Rose Lawn Memorial Park.

Kuehn died at 3:15 a.m. urday at his residence after apparently suffering a heart attack. A native of Moulton, he lived in Orange Grove 45 years. He was a member of the United Church of Christ. Hurley Horton Graveside services will be at 9 a a.m.

today in Rose Hill Memorial Park for Hurley Horton, 79 of 210 S. Alameda. The Rev. Tom J. Murphrey will officiate with Ross Langham Mortuary in Charge of arrangements.

Horton died at 5:20 p.m. Friday in a local hospital after a long illness. He had been a resident here since and was a retired machine operator. Mrs. Ignacia de Vega KINGSVILLE Funeral Mass will be at 4 p.m.

Monday in St. Martin's Catholic Church for Mrs. Ignacia de Vega, 87. Burial will be in Chamberlain tery under the direction of Piper Funeral Home. She died at 5:45 a.m.

Friday in a local nursing home after a long illness. Mrs. Chester Martin WESLACO Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. Monday in the First Baptist Church here for Mrs. Chester Martin, 68.

Burial will be in Highland Memorial Park. Mrs. Martin died Saturday in a local hospital after a short illness. She had been a resident of the Rio Grande Valley 45 years. Arson Is Ruled In Bryan Fire BRYAN (P) Arson was ruled by Fire Marshal R.

R. Januc Sunday in this city's fourth school fire in the past three months. Januc said he found a bottle near School the which Carver Elementary he said was used as a Molotov co*cktail. He said the Sunday morning fire damage was undetermined. Valley TV Mrs.

Juan Garcia Funeral Mass will be at 3:30 p.m. today in Holy Family Catholic Church for Mrs. Juan Garcia, 73, of 3719 Pensacola. Burial will be in Rose Hill Memorial Park under the direction of Angelus Funeral Home. Mrs.

Garcia died at 12:20 a.m. Saturday in a local hospital after a sudden illness. She was born in Karnes City but had lived in Nueces County 15 years. Rodolfo Gonzales ALICE Rodolfo Gonzales, 17, was a junior at Alice High School dead on arrival at a local hospital at 11:30 p.m. Saturday after falling and striking his head on a piece of furniture at the home of a friend.

The death was ruled accidental. A native of Orange Grove, Gonzales had lived here most of his life. Known to friends as Rudy, he was active in baseball and track and was a halfback for the Alice Coyotes. He was a member of the high school choir. Requiem Mass will be celebrated at 4 p.m.

Monday at St. John of the Cross Catholic Church in Orange Grove, with burial in Orange Grove Cemetery, under the direction of Walker-Mora Funeral Home of Alice. Survivors include his father, Serapio; a sister, Mrs. Olga G. Jimenez of Alice; brother, Carlos Gonzales of Alice; his patern al grandfather, Aparicio Gonzales of Orange Grove; and his maternal grandmother, Mrs.

Rosa C. Lopez of Alice. Thomas J. Woodlee PLEASANTON Funeral services will be at 3 p.m. Monday in Hurley Funeral Home Chapel for Thomas Jefferson Woodlee, 75, of McCoy.

Burial will be in Pleasanton City Cemetery. Woodlee died at 2 a.m. Saturday in a Jourdanton hospital after a long illness. He was a native of Wilson County and had lived in Atascosa County 43 years. He was a stock farmer.

Nacogdoches Chicken Plant Fire Battled NACOGDOCHES (P) Fire continued to rage through the Burgess Poultry Plant here Sunday as fire units from Nacogdoches and Lufkin battled the blaze which almost destroyed the large chicken processing firm. The fire erupted Saturday afternoon at the plant which employed about 200 persons. Plant president Carroll Burgess said it was too early to determine if the company would rebuild immediately. The processing plant turned out 175,000 chickens each week, creating one of this area's big. gest payrolls.

A Nacogdoches Fire Department spokesman said the plant was about 90 per cent destroyed. Although firemen were unable to determine immediately the cause of the fire, Burgess said welders had been working in the facility earlier Saturday. He said the plant may shut down as long as a year. An estimated half million pounds of chickens were destroyed. Squad in Brazil Blamed in Death RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) Brazil's notorious death squad.

is made up of off duty, policemen, responsible for slaying of another criminal, police said Sunday. They said the body of a man was found hanged with a nylon rope attributed near a deserted road and the killing to the death squad. The squad was created in 1958 by policemen who administer vigilante-type justice in nighttime raids. It has been accused of killing more than 1,200 persons--mostly small-time criminals-in the past 12 years. Several government authorities called earlier this year for an investigation of the squad, but no results have been announced.

MONDAY KGBT-TV (Channel 4) Harlingen 9:00 Lucy Show 1:00 Love 9:30 Hillbillies 4: 30 Flintstones 10:00 That Girl 5:30 News 5:00 Brady Bund 10:30 Love of 1:30 Guiding Light 6:30 Gunsmoke Life 2:00 Secret Storm 11:00 Where Heart Is 2:30 Edge of Night 7:30 Lucy Show 11:30 Search for Tomorrow 3:00 Gomer Pyle 8:00 Football 12:00 Table Talk 11:00 News 12:30 3:30 Bewitched 11:30 Death As World Turns 4:00 Family Affair Valley KRGV-TV (Channel 5) Weslaco 6:00 Inspirational 12:00 News 5:30 News 6:30 Farm 12:30 Words and Music 6:00 News 7:00 Today 1:00 Days of Our Lives Dinah's 6:30 Red Skelton 9:00 Place 1:30 Doctors 7:00 9:30 Concentration 2:00 Another World 8:00 Bob Laugh-In 10:30 10:00 Jack Hollywood Lelanne 2:30 Bright Promises 9:00 Billy Graham Hope Squares 3:00 Somerset 10:00 News 11:00 Jeopardy 3:30 Bozo 10:30 11:30 Who, What, When. 4:30 Football Tonight KGNS-TV (Channel 8) Laredo 7:00 Today 12:30 Words and Music 5:30 News 9:00 Dinah's Place 1:00 Days of Our Lives 6:00 News 9:30 Concentration 1:30 The Doctors 6:30 Red Skelton 10:00 Sale of Century 2:00 Another World 7:00 Laugh-In 10:30 Hollywood Sq. 2:30 Bright Promises 8:00 Bob 11:00 Jeopardy 3:00 Somerset 9:00 Johnny "Carson 11:30 Who, What, When. 3:30 Theatre 10:00 News 12:00 HI Noon John Scott Vetters Sam Mooneyhan, 79, of 202 Tarlton, died at 7:35 p.m. Saturday in a local hospital after a short illness.

He was born in Paris and had lived here since 1941. He was a retired sign painter and had owned his own business for 50 years. He was a member of Local 735, Painters and Decorators Union. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. today in Clifford Jackson Funeral Home Chapel on Kostoryz.

Burial will be in Seaside Memorial Park. The Rev. A. D. Norris, pastor of the Tuloso-Midway Baptist Church, will officiate.

He is survived by his wife, Anna J. Mooneyhan; one son, William S. Mooneyhan of New Carlisle, two daughters, Mrs. S. Mary, Calhoun and Miss Rebecca Mooneyhan, both of Corpus Christi; and eight grandchildren.

John L. Kinney ROCKPORT John L. Kinney, 63, a resident here for the past six years, died Sunday morning at his home after a long illness. A native Texan, Kinney was a retired drilling supervisor for Gulf Oil Corp. with 17 years of service.

He was a Presbyterian. A private graveside service will be held Monday afternoon at City Cemetery in San Marcos under the direction of Pennington Funeral Home of San Marcos. here Marshall Funeral Home was in charge of local arrangements. Kinney is survived by his wife, Ruby; his mother, Mrs. M.

0. Rayor of Cheyenne, three daughters, Mrs. Paul Allen Jr. of Gonzales, Mrs. Ellas R.

Rutherford Odessa, and Mrs. Bill Robbins of Luling; a sister, Mrs. J. F. Scott of Colorado Springs, and nine grandchildren.

Bart Clark Rozzell Mrs. Victor Recio FULTON Funeral services will be at 3 p.m. Monday in the First Baptist Church for Bart Clark Rozzell, 23. Burial will be in Rockport Cemetery under the direction of Marshall Funeral Home. Rozzell died at 11 p.m.

Friday due to injuries received in a one-car accident on Riverdale Road near Goliad. He was an employe of Reynolds Metals Co. He was a lifelong resident of the Fulton-Rockport area. Mrs. Helen Elizabeth Clark KINGSVILLE Mrs.

Helen Elizabeth Clark, 90, died at 8 a.m. Sunday in a local hospital after a short illness. She was born in Lockhart and had lived in Kingsville three years. Funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in McCurdy Funeral Home in Lockhart, with burial in Lockhart Cemetery.

Piper Funeral Home is in a charge of local arrangements. She is survived by one son, Dr. Jack P. Clark of Kingsville, and two grandchildren. T.

ROBSTOWN Funeral Mass will be at 10 a.m. Monday in St. Anthony's Catholic Church for Mrs. Victor Recio, 48. Burial will be in Robstown Memorial Park under the direction of Ramon Funeral Home.

Mrs. Recio died at 12:25 a.m. Saturday in a Corpus Christi hospital after a long illness. A native of Laredo. she had lived in Robstown the past 45 years.

Army of Reds Given Warning MOSCOW (P) Defense Minister Andrei Grechko called on Soviet servicemen Sunday to "master to perfection" their weapons and equipment because "aggressive imperialist forces have not given up their schemes." "They unleash acute international conflicts in different parts of the world," Grechko said in an article in Krasnaya Zvezda, the official newspaper of the Red Army. "Subversive ties are carried out on a wide scale against the countries of the socialist community and peoples' liberation movements. "In these conditions," Grechko wrote, "the Communist party and the Soviet government call upon us, servicemen, to fulfill our main duty--increase vigilance, increase the defense powler of our homeland." Grechko's article marked the opening of the Soviet armed forces' training year. in the decision that Miss Avery went to New York for the sole purpose of obtaining work and "that her tax home was not in New York City the year before us." Said the judge: "The respondent (the Internal Revenue Service) erred in disallowing the claimed deductions." Meanwhile, her personal victory has hopeful ramifications for many other There could be a other retired persons who live away from big cities where job opportunities are plentiful and who want temporary jobs at Christmas or during summer vacations to supplement retirement income. It could also apply to many persons now unemployed who go to other areas to take jobs temporarily but without giving up their own home.

whether an apartment, house or other place of residence. The Nueces County Commissioners Court will continue its workshop session on the county budget at 9 a.m. today in the commissioners' courtroom. x30 20 10 Data From NATIONAL WEATHEA SERVICE. U.S.

Dept. of Commerce 30 20 50 50 60 MILd -60 COLD Rain FORECAST 60 Flurries .70 Snow Showers 60 Figures Show High Temperatures Expected for Daytime Monday Isolated Precipitation Not Indicated Consult Local Forecast WEATHER FORECAST Showers are expected Monday over the coast of Washington with snow flurries expected over the northern Rockies. Rain is forecast from southern Georgia through northern Florida along the Gulf to Louisiana. Snow is predicted from Maine through the central Great Lakes with a belt of rain to the south, extending from Ohio through Cape Cod. Cold weather is expected in the northwest and northeast, and warmer weather elsewhere.

(AP Wirephoto Map) WEATHER SUMMARY were injured in collided Staples Garcia, driver of involved, and of 4237 the second Rogelio Christie. Memorial they were except for with a court a request for a halt in proceedings of his case until a ruling is rendered on the constitutionality of a military law under which he is charged. They sent the request late Thursday after a federal judge in Austin denied a a similar petition seeking a three-judge federal court ruling on the constitutionality of Article 93 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. 'The article states: "Any person. is guilty of cruelty toward, or oppression or maltreatment of, any person subiect to his orders shall be punished as a court-martial may direct." Wilson's civilian defense lawver, James Gillespie, maintains the article is "so vague, uncertain, and ambiguous" that it violates constitutional rights.

Dec. 2 Wreck Injuries Fatal To Woman A McAllen woman died at 9:55 a.m. Saturday in a local hospital as a result of injuries suffered in a traffic accident Dec. 2. She is the city's 38th traffic fatality for the year.

Mrs. Richard Gardner, 70. a retired school teacher, was critically injured in an auto accident about 5 p.m. Dec. 2 in a collision on Texas 44 west of South Padre Island Drive.

Her husband also in the accident, was not injured seriously. Mrs. Gardner retired from teaching in 1959. She had taught in Edinburg, McAllen and in Chapel Hill, N.C. She was a member of the Episcopal church.

The body will be sent to San Antonio for cremation. Memorial services held in McAllen at a later date. Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Cage Funeral Home. Surviving is her husband. SUMMARY DATA FURNISHED BY U.S.

WEATHER BUREAU THE MOON Last New First Full Dec. 20. Dec. 28. Jan.

3 Jan. 11 Moonset 9:00 a.m. Moonrise 7:18 p.m. BOATING CONDITIONS INLAND BAYS AND LAKE CORPUS CHRISTI Waters will be. generally choppy today with winds northeast 8 to 18 miles per hour.

The water temperature at Port Aransas is 68 degrees. TEXAS CITIES Abilene 57 Alice 55 .06 37 Alpine 52 Amarillo .54 Austin .56 45 Beaumont-Port Arthur .05 Brownsville 56 50 .01 Childress College Station 57 CORPUS CHRISTI .54 53 .25 Cotulla 50 45 Dalhart 51 16 Dallas .58 Del Rio 52 44 .05 El Paso 59 25 Fort Worth 58 Galveston 50 46 .08 Houston .52 46 Junction 53 .03 Laredo 50 .16 Longview 58 Lubbock 55 Lufkin 59 Marfa McAllen 37 57 53 Midland 56 32 Mineral Wells .60 35 Palacios 51 45 BUREAU Weather at 6 p.m. CST. Highest temperature last 12 hours. Lowest temperature last 18 hours.

Precipitation for hours ending at 6 p.m. CST. Albany, N. Y. 29 19 Albuquerque .50 20 Asheville .46 36 Atlanta .50 36 Billings 37 18 Birmingham 51 38 Bismarck .24 13 Boise .40 21 Boston .30 22 .36 Buffalo 30 .28 Vt.

24 .28 Casper 35 Charleston, S.C. 63 Charleston, W.Va. 43 34 Charlotte, N.C. 56 33 Chicago 32 30 .05 Cincinnati 36 34 Cleveland 34 29 .05 Columbus, Ohio .36 33 .03 Denver .47 Des Moines .35 .01 Detroit 32 .09 Duluth 23 Fargo 14 Great Falls 41 Helena 21 Houston .52 .03 Indianapolis 35 30 .01 Jackson Miss. 55 Jacksonville .68 56 Kansas City 48 29 Las Vegas 56 33 Little Rock 53 28 Los Angeles 65 46 Louisville ,37 34 Memphis 46 Miami Beoch .82 Milwaukee 27 .16 Minneapolis-St.

Paul .24 .01 New Orleans 51 New York 36 .05 North Platte 36 Oklahoma City 52 27 Omaha 40 18 Philadelphia 41 33 .01 Phoenix .73 Pittsburgh 34 32 Maine 14 .06 Portland Ore. 42 .01 Rapid City 1. 32 Raleigh 54 39 Reno St. Fichmond Louis .47 38 .45 Salt Lake Petersburg City Tampa .37 76 17 56 San Diego Francisco .61 47 45 st Ste Marie .25 44 Seattle Shreveport .43 37 38 ,57 Spokane 28 15 Tucson .71 39 Washington ,45 38 Wichita .47 15 Sunday's low -18 at Greenville, Maine, Sunday's high 85 at Miami, Florida. I San Angelo .60 San Antonio .55 Wink .56 Tyler 57 Waco Wichita Falls 58 Victoria 52 983994 .10 ALASKAN Anchorage 29 26 Fairbanks 3 -14 .02 Juneau .37 35 .24 CANADIAN Calgary 34 Edmonton 16 Ottawa .33 Regina Winnipeg .03 Vancouver 33 FOREIGN CITIES Noon Amsterdam p.m.

Ankara 3 p.m. Athens 2 p.m. Auckland 66 Berlin 1 p.m. Birmingham Noon Brussels 1 p.m. Cairo 2 p.m.

Casablanca Noon Copenhagen, p.m. Dublin Noon Geneva 1 p.m. Hong Kong 8 p.m. Lisbon Noon London Noon Madrid p.m. Malta p.m.

Manila 8 p.m. Moscow 3 p.m. New Delhi 5 p.m. Nice p.m. Oslo p.m.

Paris p.m. 30 Rome p.m. 52 Saigon 8 p.m. 79 Stockholm 1 p.m. 39 Sydney ...10 p.m.

79 Tel Aviv 2 p.m. Tokyo p.m. Tunis p.m. Vienna p.m. Warsaw 1 p.m.

SOUTH AMERICA Buenos Aires 8 a.m. Lima 7 a.m. Montevideo 9 a.m. Rio De Janeiro 9 a.m. 84 PAN AMERICAN Acapulco 88 Barbados 84 70 Bermuda 70 .06 Culiacan 74 Havana 68 Kingston 75 Los Mochis 72 Mexico City 46 41 Monterrey 59 48 Nassau 81 fc San Juan PR .84 St.

Kitts 75 .03 81 71 1.13 LAREDO (Sp) The annual Laredo St. Joseph's Academy food drive will terminate Tuesday. Members of the school student council conduct the collection of nonperishable foods yearly and money to help poor families during Christmas. The food will be distributed to migrant families in Laredo. The students are accepting flour, potatoes, coffee, rice, and canned vegetables, cooking utensils, games, writing paper, pencils and clothing.

el.

Corpus Christi Caller-Times from Corpus Christi, Texas (2024)

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Corpus Christi, Texas
Corpus Christi
ZIP Codes78401, 78402, 78404–78419
Area code361
FIPS code48-17000
GNIS feature ID2410234
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