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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 21

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
21
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THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR SECTION PAGE SEVEN TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1966 Russians Don't Realize When They're Well Off It is nearly 6 p.m. when Fyo (brough to them by their friendly Standard Oil of Siberia dealer), when their intellectual mfSr1 PUBLIC KNOVvV JSfak "mm mm mm ajr r. i it V.kf Smokeless Carriage Holds Deep Perils By RUSSELL BAKER 1966 New York Times News Service WASHINGTON In the long run it may turn out that the most important event of 1966 was not the escalation in Viet Nam, the Chinese purge or the American rioting, but Russia's flirtation with the automobile industry. Renault and Fiat have already been to Moscow. Last week Arjay Miller of the Ford Motor Co.

was there THE OBSERVER Tor five days of conferences. Soviet rulers have apparently decided to enter the car age. To grasp the implications for world affaLs, we must visualize the effect on Russian life by the year 1986. Let us drop in on the Bolkonski family at its home just two minutes off the Moscow beltway. The year is 1986, the time 5:35 p.m.

on a hot summer day. Papa Fyodor Pavlovitch Bolkonski is 20 minutes overdue from his office, at the Peoples' Yummy Borscht Manufacturing Center in downtown Moscow, where he is responsible for distribution of Yummy Borscht's famous 47 flavors of frozen cabbage soup to expressway restaurants throughoutthe Ukraine. His wife, Natasha, has guessed correctly that Fyodor is again stalled in the usual rush-hour traffic tie-up at the Bukha-rin Interchange and will arrive home in. a sour mood. She knows very well what this means.

Three vodka martinis before dinner and a surly bout of grousing about his ulcer and how the automobile is ruining Russia. He will be in no mood to hear the bad news, and this evening she has an unusually heavy bad-news budget. Earlier that day their youngest son, Alyosha, had declared that he was irrevocab ly determined io try out for the auto demolition derby team which the Soviet Union would pit against the Americans in the 1990 Olympic Games. This would be a heavy blow to Fyodor Pavlovitch, who had dreamed that Alyosha, whom he regarded as a saint, would out grow his boyhood passion tor demolition driving, study Mar xism and devote his life to stamping out revisionism. In addition, Natasha's mother, Anna Mikhaylovna, has just phoned to say that she is driving in from Tashkent to spend the weekend with the Bol-konskis.

This will mean scrapping Fyodor's plan for driving up to the Urals for a weekend of swimming and golf at the October Revolution Motor Lodge. Public Record MARRIAGE LICENSES Esteban L. Canez, 25, Tucson, and Fell-ciras F. Galaz 30, Tucson. William C.

Kimball, 27, Tucson, and Emily M. Kittle, 24, Tucson. John W. Hollzaople. 23, Selinsgrove, and Janet M.

Sheiton, 20, Tucson. Richard Lee Kuhn, 22, Tustin nd Karen Sue Kelly, 21, Santa Ana, Ca.f. Richard Smith, 25, Cliff. N.M.. and Linda Lee Wood, 24, Tucson.

Dennis Anthony MacDonell, 26, Tucson and Susan Louise Shadiev, 22, Tucson. Armando Griiatva Loya, 23, Tucson, and Hermelinda Cota Robles, 23, Tucson. Thomas Joseph Hiles, 21, Kankakee, and Marcia Ellen Trimple, 19, Grant Park, III. Walter C. Wyllie, 29, Tucson, and Yvonne Ross, 20, Tucson, Raymond M.

Borfrness, 20. Tucson, and Marilou LaVoie, 17 Tucson. Peter R. Schiller Tucson, and Dorothy Marie Simpson Tucson. Ira A.

Osman, 50, Phoenix, and Fave D. Loughride- 30, Tucson. Dennis Eugene Krise, 20, Tucson, and Suzanne Baikovic, 19, Tucson. Fred Dominguez, 21, Tucson, and Dolly Diane Hart, 16, Tucson. Steven E.

Clark, 19, Tucson, and Me-lanie I. Schroeder, 21, Tucson. Richard W. Hardman. 29, San Antonio, and Louise A.

Hanten, 25, Tucson. Robert A. P. Gabriel, 21. Tucson and Virginia Raye Johnson, 20, Phoenix.

DIVORCES Ysidro Limon vs. Maria Louisa Limon, ctecree. Adeline Calvilto Mendoza vs. Louis Mendoze, decree vacated. Bernice Rae Brooks vs.

1rvmi L. Brooks, decree. Minnie V. Towler vs. Ocit W.

Towler, complaint. Erna Kreye Prusha vs. John Frank Prusha. complaint. Lena M.

Hou chard vs. Raloh R. Hou-chard, complaint. Donald F. Rabb vs.

Barbara F. Rabb. comp taint. Rafaela Lopez vs. Guadalupe Frank Lopez, complaint.

Wilhelmina Royce Steininger vs. Arvid Lidean Steninger complaint. Kenneth J. Lincoln vs. Linda D.

Lincoln, comp (a int. BIRTHS ST. JOSEPH'S HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. Manuel L.

Amado. 295C e. itm. a 9iri ar a.m. Aug.

5. and Mrs. Miguel Arvizu. 2212 fh. a airl at 4:28 a m.

Ana A Mr. and Mrs. James Moore. 6409 Calle Boons, a girl at 7:55 p.m. Aug.

6 Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Bracamonte. 71C w. uran.

a boy at 1:44 a.m. Aug. 7. TUCSON GENERAL HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas P. Galvin, 5d Mohave, a girl at 10:32 a.m. Aug. 5. TUCSON MEDICAL CENTER Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Watts, 911 Calle Castile, a boy at 1:40 a.m. Aug. 6 Mr. and Mrs.

Jesus Guevara, 400 S. El Paso, a girl at 10:23 a Aim 6 Mr. and Mrs. Mariano Contreras, 1416 c. Lee, a gin at 3:36 p.m.

Aug 6. Mr. and Mrs. William Steele. 3019 E.

Alta Vista, a oirl at 5:25 o.m. Auo 6. Mr. and Mrs. M.

Datton Turner, 1044 E. Soring, a bov at 7:02 a.m. Aug. 6 Mr. and Mrs.

Freddy Soza, 402 E. Rcieo, a air1 at 1:26 o.m. Aug. a. Mr.

and Mrs. Kirk Hans, 3935 Country Club, a bov at 1:23 a.m. Am. 7. Mr.

and Mrs. Charles Hoover, 6957 Calle Ositn. a 9irl at 10:35 a.m. Aug 7. Mr.

and Mrs. Dennis Daly, Box 4367 Huachuca City a boy at 11:16 a.m. Au" Mr and Mrs. Richard Soto. 606 Riverside.

boy at 12:46 p.m. Am. 7. Mr. and Mrs.

N. L. Wilson. 244 Alturas. a bov at 7:39 p.m.

Aug. 7. Mr and Mrs. C. D.

Thomas, 741 N. Perry, a girt at 11:27 p.m. Aug. 7. Mr.

and Mrs. Howard Auit. 4223 Positc a boy at 5:26 a.m. Aug. t.

DEATHS HITCH, Jeanne 47, of J103 E. 35th, Aug. 7. ROCHELLE. William C.

65. Of 5850 Bar Aug. I. BYNUM. Stella 77.

of 1529 N. enton Aug. 7. CASHMER, Jo Anne. 35.

of 1601 E. enn. Aug. 7. ROMERO, CtoriMM 7t.

nf Wil N. Anita, Aug. t. dor pulls up before his split-level dacha in Josef Stalin Acres, kisses Natasha's cheek and begins mixing martinis and com plaining about his ulcer. He had been driving on the Minsk Turn pike at lunchtime, he grumbles, and had made the mistake of lunching on fried clams at a Sergei Howardovich Johnson s.

As luck would have it Fyodor has scarcely settled down before television to watch the Smerdyakov Oblomov report Am phi's Board To Consider Bond Sale The sale of $170,000 in high school bonds will be considered by Amphitheater District's board of trustees at a 7:30 p.m. meeting today in the administration building, 125 E. Prince Rd. Funds, authorized in a June 19 61 capital improvements program of $6.7 million, would be spent for several construction projects including tennis courts at the Amphitheater High School and lighting at Canyon del Oro athletic field and parking lot, as well as additional furniture and equipment for classrooms-at Canyon del Oro School. In other business tonight the board is expected to set a date to inspect the science mathematics building at the Canyon school which is due for completion tomorrow.

The board will also receive a report on "A Study of Community College Possibilities in Pima County," which has been conducted and compiled by the Arizona State Board for Junior Colleges and the Pima County Junior College Planning and Development Committee. Dr. Marion Donaldson is Amphitheater superintendent, and Atty. George B. Morse is board president.

Foreign Officers To Visit Tucson A dozen foreign officers stationed temporarily at Ft. Huachuca Electronics Proving Grounds wil come to Tucson today for a day of getting acquainted with the Old Pueblo, Bob Markley publicity director of Tucson Chamber of Commerce said yesterday. Markley will accompany the officers from Greece, Italy. France, Turkey and Canada as they make a tour of Burr-Brown Research the Thermo-Ki-netics Old Tucson, Ari-zona-Sonora Desert Museum and finally pause for lunch at the Ramada Inn. Telegram Rate Hike Approved PHOENIX (AP) -Rate increases on most telegrams were approved Monday by the Arizona Corporation Commission.

Western Union asked for the increases which included a 3 per cent raise in rates for public messages other than press. There also would be an additional charge for collect public and government messages. Authorization was given for the company to issue up to $100 million in promissory notes and put up $75 million in insured debentures. Nap In Auto Full Of Peril SAFFORD (AP)-Joe Lavin. 19, went to sleep in a car and woke up with two broken ankles.

Lavin was en route back to Fort Bliss, from his home in the Globe-Miami area when the freak accident occurred Sunday night. Officers said Lavin was sleeping while a fellow soldier from Fort Bliss, Wayne Keller, 20, was driving. Lavin accidentally kicked open a door, Keller was startled and swerved off the pavement, the door hit a sign and went shut on Lavin's ankles. Explorer Scout Joins S.D. Group James J.

Hardie. a member of Explorer Scout Post 799, will leave tonight for a 12-day scouting expedition with a group of Scouts from South Dakota. The group of 19 and two adult leaders, including Dr. George W. Conner who served as adviser to Tucson's Explorer Post 12 before moving to South Dakota, will leave from Yankton, S.D., and will complete their trip in Philmont Scout Ranch and Explorer Base, in Mexico.

They will visit Rocky Mountain National Park, Denver, and the United States Air Force Academy. To bring oil to Americans, the oil industry in one recent vear drilled one mile of holes every 14 minutes around the clock. son, Alexei, arrives home in his sports car. "What are you doing here, Alexei?" Natasha cries. "You're supposed to be in the summer session in the University of California at Baku." "And that beard!" cries Fyodor Pavlovitch.

"What's the idea of growing a beard as soon as you get away from Josef Stalin Acres for a few weeks? Do you want the neighbors to think we're raising our kids to be un-Russian?" Alexei does not bother these days to answer absurd questions. Instead he makes a lengthy speech. Its burden is that he has seen the light at the University of California at Baku, has realized that his parents are trapped in the rat race and knows that unless the youth of his generation takes decisive action, Russia will not be worth saving. Accordingly, he has decided to go to jail. To get there, he intends to join one of the Kremlin sit-ins, which is protesting So viet slowness in negotiating a dis smogament treaty with the United States.

"That's silly," says Fyodor. "There always has been smog. There always will be smog. That's the price we pay, Alexei, for the right to weekend at the October Revolution Motor Lodge and eat fried clams at a Sergei Howardovich Johnson's." Alexei, seeing that it is useless to tell these dolts the facts about exhaust pipe fallout and what will happen to the world when all 600 million Chinese get cars, simply demands gasoline money for his sports car and leaves. Shocked though Fyodor is, Natasha gives him the rest of the news.

About Aloysha and about her mother's driving in for the weekend. As she finishes, on TV Chet Smerdyakov is telling Oblomov that the Presidium has just voted to raze Red Square and rebuild it as a parking lot. The Bolkonski's don't realize it, but the East-West struggle has ended peacefully. The East has become the West. SL, FLOWERS by nii Burns for all your floral needs E.

Pennington MA. 2-4638 Tom Inglis Flowers 2362 E. BROADWAY 622-4643 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF CALL FOR BIDS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed bids will be received in the office of the Pima County Purchasing Agent. 2855 South 8th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona, uo to 10:00 a.m.. August 25, 1966, for the following: BID B- 255 -WIDE ANGLE REFLEC-TlVb SHEETING MATERIAL FOR ROAD SIGNS To furnish Pima County Highway Department with Wide Angle Reflective Sheeting Material for Road Signs for (1) vear period, beginning October 1, 166 to and including September 30.

1967 as per specifications called for by Pima County. Opening of the Bid B- 2575 wil' be at 10:00 a.m. August 25, 1966, in the office of the Pima County Purchasing Agen, 2S55 South 8th Avenue Tucson Arizona Specifications relating to the aforesaid bid may be procured from the office cf the Pima County Purchasing Agent, 2855 South 8th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona. Bidder shall be required to furnish a sufficient Bid and Performance Bond ac-centaole to the Board of Supervisors. The Board of Supervisors reserves the rigfr to reiect any or all bids for any reason whatsoever or to waive any trre guiarities or informalities in the bids or bidding.

DONE BY ORDER of the Board ot Supervisors this 27th day of July 1966 THOMAS S. JAY, Chairman. Board ot Supervisors Pima County, Arizona PUBLISH: Arizona Daily Star July 29 30. August 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 9. 1966 NOTICE OF CALL FOR BIDS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sealed bids will be received in the office of the Pima County Purchasing Agent, 2855 South 8th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona up to 10:00 a.m., August 19, 1966 for the following: BID B-I2576-ONE (1) POWER PAPER DRILLING MACHINE To furnish Pima County Duplicating Department with One (1) Power Paocr Drilling Machine, as per specifications called for by Pima County.

Opening ot the Bid B-2576 will be at 10:00 a.m.. August 19, 1966 in the office ot the Pima County Purchasing Agent. 2855 South 81h Avenue, Tucson, Arizona. Specifications relating to the aforesaid bid may be procured from the office of the Pima County Purchasing Agent, 2855 South 8th Avenue, Tucson, Arizona. Bidder shall be required to furnish a sufficient Did and Performance Bond acceptable to the Board of Supervisors.

The Board of Supervisors reserves the right to reiect any or all bids for any reason whatsoever or to waive any irre- Sularities or informalities in the bids or idding. DONE BY ORDER of the Board of Supervisors this 5th day ot August, 1966. THOMAS S. JAY, Chairman Board of Supervisors Pima County, Arizona PUBLISH: Arizona Daily Star August 8. 9, 10, 11.

12, 13, 15, 16. 17 and 18, 1966. PIMA COUNTY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT DISTRICT NO. 3, TUCSON AREA NOTICE OF HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Pima County Board of Adjustment, District No. 3, Tucson Area, will hold a hearing on Wednesday August 17, 1966, at 2:00 P.M., in the regular hearing room of the Board of Supervisors, Third Floor.

Phoenix Title Building, 177 N. Church Avenue, Tucson, Arizona on the following appeal: 66-7 M. T. CHESNir: on property at 43 E. Deone Lane in CR-1, to reduce rear yard set-back from 40 feet to 15 feet.

Section 908 of the Zoning Ordinance requires 40 feet minimum rear yard. Persons interested may appear in person, by agent or attorney, and petitioners on this appeal must appear or be represented if action is to be taken by the Board. COUNTY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT. DISTRICT NO. 3.

TUCSON AREA. Meivin F. Norvelle. Executive Secretary. Publish; August 1966 i Istlfi 6.

SPEEOWAY 1 I f'" I 1 I'll i SI I FfiHir 033 I 1 You can present this information to over I I 1 2s Southern Arizona Residents Doily with a Daily card Advertisement or per column inch ill on ill one full year per per column inch nioiilli 6 months per per column inch moil til one month week davs and Sundavs. You are Invest col. inch rates available tn 95 lOA alUw 105 our copy appears In every paper, change per month. This is one ot the allowed nn i-nr, our advertisers. mm wm.u IlKyjjS' With an average Kfi.OM daily ifiS'vf'A-i weekday circulation of the Ari-Pt ft 7 zona Uailv an(' Tucson Dailv Citizen.

Copies will reach a conservative tfcir tfootijfltljj (Tito MORNING a SUNDAY EVENING Printed and Distributed by Tucson Newspapers Inc. 5 -si lndep.ndcnl Editorial Operations Although r- the Same Publishing Facilities. v. -y-, lyaraeatUWJI1 n'lL. i i ii tmnamlmmmmmt mmmi 1 "MaWaaMltWtMtMW if, Wirfi XJj fwr no vts.

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Years Available:
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