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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 1

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

REPUBLIC cnT Homemakers of the '30s share secrets of how to prepare meals that hide the taste of hard times. Chorus for us Scandinavia's sun is sky high in summer; A principal actor tells of staging A Chorus Line, which opens in Phoenix on Tuesday. the prices are that Two Phoenix entrepreneurs are raking in dough as orders for their build-your-own-car plan roll in. way year-round. IZONA The Ar EPUBLIC.

50 cents, Metro 75 cents, Other Sunday, July 6, 1980 Phoenix, Arizona 91st Year, No. 51 Copyright 1980, The Arizona Republic aliens found Trapped between 2 worlds dead in desert; 7 others saved A JO Two aliens from El Salvador were dead and seven others were near death Saturday night when found after having been abandoned in the desert about 28 miles south of here. Franklin Wallace, superintendent of the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, said a search will begin today at 5 a.m. for 25 to 28 other Salvadorans believed to be lost in the desert. Many of them are thought to be women and children.

IIIIMMWJMIllMllmIWIMIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllll. I 1 1 llllllllMim IL.U IIU HIIIIM V- 4 1 1 5n f- 'HA iu cu. By John A. Winters Republic Staff They make up more than 6 percent of the state's population and occupy more than a quarter of its lands, yet many Arizonans know less about them than they do about the Vietnamese, Cambodians and other groups The official temperature at the 7777777 Jl monument Saturday was 109 de IK 16 half a world away. They are Arizona's Indian peoples.

They are the Havasupai, the Wal-apai, the Yavapai; the Mohave, Quechan, Coco-pah and Maricopa; the Hopi and Tewa, Navajo and Apache, Pima and Papago, Paiute and Chemehuevi, the Yaqui. Trapped between theirs and the white man's cultures, they have moved in four generations from a position of nearly total independence to one of extreme dependence. They are sovereign, yet they rely on the federal government for much of their economic well-being. There is no return to the life they once led. The land has become too populated.

Game and flora that constituted their livelihood have diminished. Waters have been diverted. Streams have gone dry. Yet, neither can they merge with the dominant white culture. Nor, for the most part, do they want to.

Their ways of life differ from the mainstream more than those of any other minority group in the country. The culture that surrounds them lives by the clock. We axe time servers, time worshipers. The Indian cultures are grounded in the seasons, in the day that begins at dawn and ends at dusk. The notion of "Indian time" is a white man's joke that describes a reality.

Gatherings announced to start at noon may begin at 3. Thursday frequently rolls into Sunday. Also different are the attitudes toward the land. The notion of Manifest Destiny the expanding into and embracing of an ever- Trapped, A14 ''i "A r' 'I Bjorn Borg grees. Wallace said the search for the aliens began after one of them had staggered onto Arizona 85 at about 11 a.m.

Saturday and a motorist had stopped to assist. The motorist notified National Park Service officials, who oversee the monument. Wallace said it took about two hours to get enough information from the alien to begin the search. About five or six hours later, nine males were found about IVi miles north of the monument headquarters on an old power-line road. The monument headquarters is 35 miles south of Ajo.

"They were just scattered all over," with two of them dead, Wallace said. "Just a little bit longer, and they (the other seven) would have had it because they had been without water too long," he said. "Some of them weren't coherent when we first got them," Wallace said. "When we gave them water, they became coherent." He added, "The people that supposedly contracted to bring them in through Organ Pipe got them so far and then quit them. "They (the smugglers) had their money and left.

That usually happens." Wallace said there was conflicting information about how many persons remain in the desert. "They (the men brought to the Phelps Dodge Corp. hospital in Ajo) are not in condition to give us information," Wallace said. He said the aliens had Mexican passports but were without U.S. entry permits, and they had walked about 30 miles north into the monument, which lies along the Mexican border.

"They were carrying their own water (when they crossed the border Friday), but they didn't have enough to last them even a day," Wallace said. "Tomorrow (today) will be the third day, so they don't stand a chance." John Willard Republic Dewey Healing of the Tewa Indian tribe tells nearly 300 years ago. Healing lives in the the story of how his people came to Arizona village of Hano, in the heart of Hopi country. It's Borg again at Wimbledon Trauma-center 'boom' assailed as unnecessary WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Bjorn Borg outdueled John McEnroe on Saturday to capture his fifth straight men's singles title at Wimbledon. Match point came on a backhander.

When McEnroe wa unable to return it, Borg sank tc bis knees and raised his arms tc the sky, a ritual he has gone By Marilyn Taylor Republic Staff A rush to develop trauma centers at Valley hospitals could create financial trauma for hospital consumers and threaten the quality of trauma doctors' skills. That's the contention of Arizona Emergency Medical Systems a private non-profit group of doctors, nurses and hospital administrators that rates the quality of hospitals and trauma centers for Maricopa, Pinal and Gila counties. Michael Rodolico, the group's executive director, said his agency haa tried to discourage development of centers, but warnings are falling on deaf ears. for the centers through higher insurance premiums and hospital rates, Rodolico and several Valley physicians said. Rodolico said trauma doctors currently don't have enough work to maintain their skills.

The Arizona Emergency Medical Systems has rated three Valley hospitals capable of caring for trauma victims John C. Lincoln, Good Samaritan and Maricopa County Hospital. The three centers have been categorized as' "level 1" by AEMS. Other hospitals in the Valley have lower ratings of 2 and 3, and are equipped to treat emergency patients with less-critical injuries. Through a system set up by AEMS, paramedics Trauma, A2 Trauma centers are emergency operations designed exclusively for patients mostly accident victims who will die without immediate attention.

They are patients whose limbs have been severed, whose loss of blood is so great that seconds are critical, whose bones have been crushed, Rodolico explained. He said trauma patients are usually young, active and unable to pay the average cost of trauma-center treatment. Rodolico said there aren't enough trauma patients in the Valley to justify the multimillion-dollar expense of building and developing centers. It is likely non-trauma patients will have to pay through every year since 1976. Borg is the first modern playei to win five straight Wimbledon crowns.

Willie Renshaw won sis in a row from 1881-86, playing i under different rules. Story, Fl. (fo Today Shah given rush operation to put in new drainage tube Flap! rap Bank's concourse becomes glass penitentiary for birds 'CHUCKLE About the only that makes you feel good is when you see it on someone you nearly married. PRAYER Lord, Lead us in the you want for us. Wei will follow faithfully.

Amen. WEATHER Hot and humid Variable clouds, with a chance of showers. High near 107, low neai 80. Saturday's high 106, low 78 United Press International CAIRO, Egypt The deposed shah of Iran underwent emergency surgery to replace a tube that was supposed to drain infection from his upper abdomen and check a rapid deterioration of his condition, medical sources said Saturday. But a hospital bulletin failed to mention the surgery, saying only the ex-shah "remains at the hospital's intensive-care unit and his condition is under medical control." For the first time, the bulletin linked the surgery with an operation the shah underwent March 28 for the removal of a cancer-infected spleen.

It said the "infection of the pseudo-pancreatic cyst took place after the splenectomy," which was performed by Michael Debakey, a Houston heart specialist. Workmen were busy cleaning up a mausoleum where the shah's father was interred during World War II, and attendants at a nearby mosque said it might be used to house the shah's remains if he dies. "Attending doctors faced a critical situation because his temperature continued to remain high and no fluids were coming through the tube," one of the sources said. The doctors decided to take out the tube, clean it and insert it again. It was the 60-year-old former ruler's second operation in a week.

The sources said the ex-monarch, whose temperature was as high as 101.3 degrees, was given a blood transfusion after the "cleanup" operation at a military hospital in a Cairo suburb. The shah underwent surgery Monday for removal of the infection in the upper abdomen and chest cavity below the left lung. Doctors had hoped it would bring down the shah's temperature but it did not, so they decided to replace the tube to drain any pus that was left over since Monday's surgery, the sources said. Humidity: high 33, low 12. E19.

Weatherline 957-C700 remained a prisoner in a lovely but lonely world," Mrs. Sweeney wrote. "After two months in captivity, he no longer rushes at the windows, but flies around and, on occasions, even breaks out in loud, cheerful chirps. "Indeed, I think he is trying to communicate his condition to the outside bird world, hoping that someone will come to his rescue." Mrs. Sweeney wondered if the Sparrow could survive for long or if someone would come to his rescue.

The answer to the second question is "Yes, indeed," according to Thomas Williams, chief of security for the building, at 241 N. Central. The Sparrow actually is many sparrows or small birds that slip into the concourse when the double By Charles Kelly Republic Staff The bird in the glass-walled cage wears many beaks, though he is "The Sparrow" to those who pass through the Valley Bank Center concourse. Now he swoops to the floor for a bit of spilled popcorn. Now he zooms to the ledges near the massive windows.

Now he takes refuge in the foliage of the planters. Kay Sweeney, an administrative secretary for the Arizona Department of Revenue, wrote a letter to The Arizona Republic about it. Mrs. Sweeney noticed the Sparrow about two months ago. "He flew into the windows, flapped his wings feverishly, but the glass did not budge, and he doors on the building's loading dock are removed to bring automobiles or boats in for shows.

The cheerful sparrow that Mrs. Sweeney has seen recently probably is not the desperate sparrow that she had seen two months ago. The desperate sparrow more than likely got a ticket to freedom. "On a weekend, when there's nobody in the building, we try to lure them to a spot with some water and doughnuts something like that," Williams explained. "Then we try to get them in a net, take them outside and release them.v "We don't mistreat these birds." Kids Leisure Movies G( Obituaries EE Radio Scrabble Eli Astrology D2 Bombeck Dl Bridge G3 Classified CL1 Close-ups Dl Crossword E14 Economy CI Editorials A6 Hicks Bl Hutton Dl Sports Fll Sun Living SLl) Weather E19 Wynn El i J1.

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