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Tucson Citizen from Tucson, Arizona • 2

Publication:
Tucson Citizeni
Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SATURDAY MARCH 11 1978 PAGE 2A TUCSON CITIZEN ashes scattered 14 sites are chosen 1 If Shirley MacLaine Richard Burton 1JW i' (t'WQi Turning Point Heavy favorite W- 4K l)PI Teiepphots Space celebrity PHOENIX (AP) Gov Wesley ashes were scattered over historic and scenic points in 14 counties his family announced The 66-year-old Bolin who died early last Saturday had asked that his body be cremated and the ashes scattered over Arizona A statement issued by members of the Bolin family said they had chosen scatter bis ashes over the 14 counties at locations historically significant or personally symbolic to Gov The chief of security Department of Public Safety Sgt Allan Wright said yesterday the mission was carried out Thursday in an aircraft The chosen sites at which the ashes were deposited: County the Four Corners County Coronado Pass County Grand -Canyon Graham County Mt Graham County Coronado Trail at junction with Blue River County Tonto Boy Scout Camp on Mogollon Rim County Gov George WP tomb County Havasu City area and Oatman historic ghost town County Old Orai-bi one of the oldest continually inhabited villages in North America County Sax Xavier Indian Reservation County Picacho Pass site of April 15 1862 battle between Union and Confederate troops Cruz County Old Tubac Presidio State Park three-day display for the public the craft will fly on to Huntsville Space Center for testing Thousands of people turned out yesterday at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston to see the space shuttle orbiter carried by a 747 jet After a Babbitt urges sale of mansion Burton headed down stretch in Oscar race LAS VEGAS Nev (AP) Bookmakers here routinely take bets on sporting events so it came as nor surprise that they are offering a betting line on one of the biggest races the Academy Awards The favorites: for best picture Oscar Shirley MacLaine as best actress and Richard Burton as best actor for his role in the academy members vote the way people have been betting Burton might as well go pick up his Oscar right now" said Jim Brann a spokesman for the Union Plaza Hotel in the downtown Casino Center The British actor never a winner despite seven previous Academy Award nominations was a slim 6-5 choice when the odds were posted earlier this week But a rush of betting on Burton dropped the odds to 5 by yesterday Brann said The oddsmakers made the movie favorite at 6-5 while Miss MacLaine was given 4-5 odds as the favorite to win an Oscar for her role in Turning Point" The awards are to be presented April 3 Odds for the- Academy Awards are given in the same way as those for any sporting event Brann said With Burton a 3-5 favorite have to lay $5 to win In coming up with the betting line he said oddsmakers consult with two film critics and get their picks And they have been off only once in the two years that bets have been taken year all the films the oddsmakers said would win did win and the year before four of the five Brann said He said he did not know how much money has been bet this year but in the proceeding years handled over $20- 000 each time pretty good considering the maximum bet allowed is $200 and the minimum bet is $5 Following Burton in the best actor category are Richard Dreyfuss for Goodbye at 7-5 Woody Allen for at 6-5 and John Travolta for Night at 9-5 Marcello Mastroianni is rated a long shot at 5- 1 for Special Tied for second place for best actress at 6-5 odds are Anne Bancroft fpr and Diane Keaton for Jane Fonda is a 3-5 shot for while Marsha Mason is last at 3-1 for Goodbye lee Pima and Santa Cruz But if for example UA and Arizona State University offer similar programs UA will be responsible for the same counties and for Yuma County Then ASU will be responsible for the other counties The two schools will share responsibility for the cities of Eloy Oracle and San Manuel yesterday and later said he plans to regularly attend those Friday sessions where lengthy discussion takes place Former governor Raul Castro only attended meetings of the full board and former Gov Wesley Bolin sent an aide The board is expected to act today on Babbitt's proposal that the mansion at 7402 Highclift Drive be sold According to the original contract of the donor Tom Chauncey the house reverts to the regents for sale when it no longer is used by the governor Bolin did not live in the mansion and Babbitt says he will not Castro however did live there The contract stipulates that the mansion be sold by the board and the proceeds be used to set up a scholarship fund for needy students Chauncey the donor is president of KOOL Radio and Television Inc Babbitt also told the regents they have greatest responsibility of any board in the that he intends to take an active role in their meetings and that he shares their of purpose and Although Babbitt said too late to make any in university budgets university adminis- By KAREN CASTO Citizen Staff Writer TEMPE Inn unexpected appearance before the Arizona Board of Regents yesterday new Gov Bruce Babbitt recommended to board members that they sell the $500000 mansion to provide scholarships for the needy At the same time he pledged allegiance to the cause of education telling regents: mission of education in this state transcends virtually every other function of state Babbitt appeared at the committee meetings trators said later that the tone of his remarks seemed to promise strong future support for higher education in the state In other action the board gave tentative approval to a policy on continuing education and off-campus course offerings That policy would assign each university different geographical areas of the state to serve According to Lawrence Woodall executive Rhode Island land to Indians? duplication in course offer- PROVIDENCE RI (AP) The Narragansett Indian tribe would get control of 1900 acres of Rhode Island under an agreement to settle its land claim officials say The tract in Charlestown will include about 1000 acres of state land and 900 acres of undeveloped private land Office spokesmen for Indians the landowners the state said Anti-smoking A Smoking Anonymous Club will be organized day at a 7 pra dinner Royal Buffet County first capitol at Ft Whipple Yuma County at New Mexico the and Mon- at Sir restaurant 4343 22nd St sponsored by GASP (Group Against Smokers' Pollution) All smokers and former smokers are Invited Downtown forum' is followed by eplipdiilpd fipro at 2-1 at 3-1 and Here trial moved The agreement was reached by the Carter administration the Office 32 landowners and the State Attorney In the movie category at 65 at 4-1 cin-' Judi Kirby public relations firm owner who is responsible for the Placita campaign will discuss happening downtown at a Tucson Press Club forum Wednesday The forum open to the public will begin at 6 pm in the club headquarters located off the patio of the IT RAINS IN MARCH BcttCf LOW! ii 5: MAR 1 889 f98 inches Favored for best supporting actor are Jason RobardsT7-5 for Alec Guiness 95 for Peter Firth 3-1 for Maximilian Schell 4-1 for and Mikhail Baryshnikov 61 for In the best supporting actress category Tuesday Weld is a 65 favorite for For Mr followed by Leslie Browne 2-1 for Cummings 3-1 for Vanessa Redgrave 61 for and Melinda Dillion 61 for Encounters of The Third A defense request to move the mail fraud trail of former Tucson Gas and Electric Co lobbyist Charles Davis away from Tucson and from the hostile attitude the attorney says residents here have toward the utility company was granted yesterday but for another reason Visiting federal court Judge Leo Brewster of Fort Worth Texas ordered the trial moved to a New Mexico court because most of alleged illegal activities occurred there The decision came after attorney William XMAR 1 905 388 inches JMAR-1 930 232 inches $MARl968 219 inche: Roinfall record of A station Marchiondo of Albuquerque argued that has received so much bad press and local residents have become so angry over the company's rate structure and profits that his client might not receive a fair trial Marchiondo had subpoenaed several boxes and files of records covering its rate increases since 1970 in an effort to prove his point Assistant US Attorney A Bates Butler argued that only articles specifically pertaining to Davis should about Davis Brewster eluded that it appeared The press had exercised restraint in case so as not to jeopardize his right to a fair trial But even so the judge said the trial should be moved to New Mexico where most of the alleged activities occurred Brewster compared the alleged crime to an "octopus with tentacles that reached out to touch Davis 59 of Albuquerque is charged with six counts of allegedly using the mails to Publicity for two bills Indians9 trek defeating its purpose? affect the ruling and defraud of expense that those printed were not money between February sufficiently prejudicial and April of 1973 Pima County Medical Society is pleased to announce the association of Fred Grimm MD with George A Shetter MD in the practice of Ophthalmology at 1601 North Tucson Blvd Suite 37 Tucson Arizona 85716 Hours by appointment Telephone 326-4321 After reviewing articles Davis who worked for from 1971 to mid-1973 and was paid a total of $200-000 was hired to help win New Mexico support of the now-completed $100 million transmission line from Farming-ton NM to Tucson indictments come during a lengthy FBI probe into whether any of the $200-000 was used for bribes valid and proposals to limit the ability of tribes to punish non-Indians on reservations and to put a lid on the water rights claims Indians have been making in the Southwest But Romero says that the Indians are really marching to protest what they perceive as an anti-Indian mood that has developed in Congress in recent years not walking against any specific Romero said of those are apparently getting off the ground more that tired of having this pendulum hanging over our By pendulum Romero is referring to the pendulum of national opinion about Indian issues With Indians aggressively asserting land and water rights claims and talking militantly about the sovereign nation status of reservations the pendulum has swung away from the Indians Select Committee on Indian Affairs called the anti-Indian bills by congressmen to deflect political pressure in their districts rather than serious legislative attempts the sole purpose (of the march) is to defeat these three bills it would be added Frank Ducheneaux special counsel on Indian Affairs to the House Interior committee Parker points out that the bills introduced last year by Reps Lloyd Meeds D-Wash and John Cunningham R-Wash even had companion measures introduced by any senators And Ducheneaux said unlikely any of the bills will be passed by the House and certainly not this session The avowed goal of the group of marchers is to mobilize public support against the anti-Indian proposals They include bill to declare all treaties with the Indians in By DOUG UNDERWOOD Gannett News Service WASHINGTON The band of Indians hiking across the country to protest the anti-Indian backlash in Congress are creating the only publicity for a number of anti-Indian bills that otherwise might be dead and forgotten The roughly 200 Indian protesters who left Sacramento Calif Feb 11 are on foot somewhere in Utah and hope to reach Washington DC sometime in June according to Gil Romero a member of the group But when they arrive doubtful that the anti-Indian legislation they are protesting will be remembered perhaps even by the congressmen who've introduced it Alan Parker chief counsel of the Senate Pima County Medical Society is pleased to announce the opening of an additional office for Neurological Associates of Tucson 5402 Grant Road 1701 St Road 6518 Carondelet Drive at The Medical Dental Center Of Green Valley 170 La Canada Drive Green Valley Arizona 85614 Telephone 795-7750 (Tucson) Hours by appointment Youth 17 injured by shot A 17-year-old South Tucson youth was shot in the left shoulder while walking northbound in the 2400 block of South Second Avenue in the company of two friends South Tucson police said Dwight Alvey who reportedly was assaulted several times in the past including an attempt to run over him in November was released from Kino Community Hospital following the 6:35 incident last night Alvey lives at 1713 2nd Ave Police said three juveniles reported hearing a shot fired but did not see who fired the gun Police said the shooting may have stemmed from a personal dispute There are no suspects in the case police said TUCSON CITIZEN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS and UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SUGGESTED RETAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Home Delivery in Metropolitan Tucson Btj Carrier 15c weekly 44 40 year- By Auto Route 1370 monthly AO yearly By uncle copy: 20 cent daily Home Delivery Outside Metropolitan Tucson S70 monthly $44 40 yearly ail Rates Payable in Advance: ARIZONA 15 25 monthly $63 00 yearly OUTSIDE ARIZONA (including Canada Mexico) $6 30 monthly $7540 yearly Second Class Postaoe Paid at Tucson Arizona Pushed Daily axcept Sunday by the CITIZEN PUBLISHING CO 4150 Perk Ave Bo 36767 Tucson Arizona Phone (602 2944433 For Subscriptions and Deliveries Call prehensive water plan dropped For Want Ads Call 89 5333 uofcrcs INTRODUCES A NEW CONCEPT IN WATER CONDITIONING BON NO SODIUM (SALT) NO MONTHLY RENTAL INSTALLATION CHARGE NO MAINTENANCE ENERGY CONSUMPTION NO SPACE OR STORAGE PROBLEM rr rar taunt ornuTawtrarottu mt wmt toot rtfi- CTBIjn PLANTS LOVI If ilL BON AQUA IrrLI rj ateG uote 5006 BROADWAY TUCSON 65711 m- up a million acre feet of water rights beginning with the forced liquidation of the Wellton-Mohawk irrigation district near Yuma After it became clear the bill had no sup-' tentative legislation began missing deadlines to deliver the legislation last summer After a recent trip to Arizona Krulitz decided It would be futile to continue to draft a comprehensive bill just decided It was not possible to solve all their problems In a single he said S905 which was drafted by the tribes' lawyers and was hotly contested by non-Indian interests would have resolved the claims to additional water by using the federal powere of eminent domain to buy port in the Arizona delegation the difficult task of resolving the claims to the ever dwindling supply of Arizona water was tossed Into the lap of the administration The five tribes representing Indians from the Papago Salt River Fort McDowell Ak Chln arid Gila River reservations are pressing or threatening to press court cases laying claim to additional water they fee) is theirs by treaty The Indians claim that under the Supreme 1908 Winters doctrine and the 1963 Arizona vs California case they are entitled to sufficient water to irrigate all practicable arable reservation land In addition they feel the recent Cappaert decision gives them the right to stop landowners in surrounding basins from pumping groundwater and lowering the water table The Papago suit already threatens the water supply of Tucson which relies entirely on pumped groundwater to meet its drinking water needs Both Indian and non-Indian factions have begun to call for legislated as opposed to litigated settlements And Krulitz said that while negotiations are still going on there could be other proposals like i bill which has passed the Senate and the House Interior Committee guaranteeing the Ak-Chln about 58000 acre feet of federal water annually as payment for their claims By DOUG UNDERWOOD GuMtt Newi Servtc WASHINGTON Despite earlier promises the Carter administration has abandoned plans to come up with a comprehensive bill to resolve the water rights claims of the five central Arizona Indian tribes according to Interior Department solicitor Leo Krulitz Krulitz said that instead of a comprehensive bill the administration will treat the prob- lem of each tribe separately and after negotiations with neighboring non-Indian water users develop water rights legislation tailored to the special case of each tribe more interested in solving the problem than in coming up with a grandiose scheme that doesn't go anywhere" he said have a better chance if we go on a tribe-ty-tribe basis and comult with alj the people Administration officials had promised to develop a comprehensive alternative to the controversial S905 bill which was sponsored by Sen Edward Kennedy D-Mass However Kru-lit and his staff who were developing the al- TIRE QUALITY AT MUSICAL DIRECTOR at LIBERTY i lotenutional lepatatioi Id kwlsh Music P0BoxtS3 CU SILm StatUa Nwitrut Qm6m R4V 221 AFFORDABLE PRICES! Phon 296-7163 7234 22ND ST (BNad PnHw AaU Sepely) i 4.

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Pages Available:
1,487,360
Years Available:
1879-2009