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Plant City Times &

Observer YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

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FREE • FRIDAY, MAY 1, 2015

FEELINGBLUE

SPRINGFEVER

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The fields were picked out at the Blueberry Fest.

Check out our spring stories, including a list of summer camps.

Ken King is looking for the descendants of the Jacoby family after coming into possession of their family photo album from the 1800s.

+ Archives selects associate director

+ Ooh La La hosts contest for moms

Ooh La La Hair Studio is having a Mother’s Day contest, and the grand prize is a makeover. Write in about your amazing mom via Facebook on the Ooh La La Hair Studio of Plant City page or mail-in or drop-off letters to the studio at 2412 James L. Redman Parkway, Plant City, Fl 33566. All entries are due at 12 p.m. May 5. The winner will receive: color service, haircut with style, make-up application, manicure and pedicure and a gift certificate to dinner for the winner and guest. The winner will be chosen by the salon. Any ques-

OUR TOWN / PAGE 4

, 3&

This week’s winner is

Jim Church

See his photo on PAGE 17.

governance by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer

IDENTITY CRISIS by Amber Jurgensen | Managing Editor

OUR TOWN The Plant City Photo Archives and History Center added an associate director to its staff. Plant City resident Barbara “Shelly” Drummond joined the staff April 13. Prior to joining the Photo Archives staff, Drummond had been serving as curator of education and programming for the Polk County History Center in Bartow. She has previously worked with the Photo Archives staff as a consultant for grant writing and as a part-time assistant to the executive director. She has written several successful grant applications for the Photo Archives. Drummond studied at Western Kentucky University and Virginia Commonwealth University and holds degrees in general studies, archaeology, folk studies, and historical and cultural preservation. She has worked as a group education instructor and trainer at Walt Disney World and as an archaeologist, GAI Consultants, regional Departments of Transportation and Army Corps of Engineers, Monroeville, Pennsylvania. A published author, Drummond has worked with Historical Literacy in Polk County, and with the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, and has served as the instructor in oral history workshops. Locally, Drummond is on the board of directors of the Arts Council of Plant City, and has worked with Plant City Entertainment, and the East Hillsborough Historical Society.

Cork students are raising money the pink way.

City plans to improve aid for homeless

The city would provide the venue, but nonprofit organizations would continue to provide the resources and volunteers. Plant City’s homeless population is likely to soon have a new place to receive meals and other services, thanks to an initiative put in place by the city manager’s office and supported by various community organizations. City Manager Mike Herr is looking at the possibility of offering the Winter Visitor Center, an indoor, multi-purpose building on the campus of the Planteen Recreation Center on Dort Street, as an alternative to Veterans’ Memorial Park, where 13 organizations and churches feed the homeless every night. The visitor center is equipped with a restroom

SEE COMMISSION / PAGE 4

IN OTHER NEWS • City staff is moving forward with the plan for an expedited permit process. The new process will allow citizens to complete the permitting process in as little as 15 days, instead of months. • The new city website is scheduled to go live around July 9. • The commissioners voted to approve a contract with Sport Surfaces LLC, for the resurfacing of the Plant City Tennis Center.

OTHER NEWS / PAGE 4

Amber Jurgensen

Ken King has been working for six years to track down the Jacoby family in the photographs that were found abandoned in an attic.

SOLVING MYSTERY THE

A customer plopped down stacks of vintage black-andwhite photographs at the front counter of a Plant City thrift store. The victorian faces lured employee Ken King to their mystery — a man with a sheriff’s star, three daughters, a black couple in fine clothes. The photographs had been found tucked away in the attic of a historic home in town. King’s natural curiosity bubbled up. Who were these people? Where did they come from? And why did they leave all

SEE PHOTOS / PAGE 4 The photographs were taken in a professional studio.

OVER MY DEAD BODY by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer

Plans for cadaver research center in Lithia canceled

USF anthropologists had hoped for the facility to be located at a site in Lithia, but have decided to change the location. When University of South Florida anthropologists introduced their plan at a public meeting Thursday, April 23, for a cadaver research center in Lithia, they were met with opposition from the neighboring residents — so much so that USF killed the plan the next day. The cadaver research center would give anthropologists, criminologists, forensic scientists and law enforcement officials an opportunity to study forensics and the way bodies decompose under real conditions, such as Florida’s humid weather. The

training would help these professionals improve their skills of identifying bodies of missing persons, determining how homicide victims had died and more. The Facility for Outdoor Experimental Research and Training, or FORT, was proposed to be constructed at a Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office training site in Lithia. USF said it remains committed to the project and will look for an alternate site despite the suitability of the Lithia location.

SEE BODY FARM / PAGE 4

you are here by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer

Chamber orders new maps

The brochures will have updated information and be more user-friendly than previous designs. When visitors and tourists walk into the Greater Plant City Chamber of Commerce, their most frequent request is for a map of Plant City. The chamber has a few maps, but the supply is dwindling. And some of the information on the maps is outdated. The current maps were printed in 2009, and the cham-

ber used to publish new maps every five years. “It’s time to do an updated map, and we’ll probably go every two years from now on,” Marion Smith, president of the chamber, said. Although the use of a GPS can help visitors find a specific location or business, the chamber’s maps are popular

for those who just want to walk around the town. There are also a number of people, usually of the older generation, who feel more comfortable using a paper map. Smith said that among the chamber office, City Hall and the tourist information center on Park Road, 48 maps are distributed each week on average. The brochures also include

SEE MAPS / PAGE 4

Catherine Sinclair

Erin Kimmerle discussed her plans for the FORT at a public meeting last week.

INDEX Calendar.....................12

Vol.2,No.31 | Twosections Crossword...................17

Obituaries...................13

Sports...........................5

Weather......................17

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