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The San Bernardino County Sun du lieu suivant : San Bernardino, California • Page 14

Lieu:
San Bernardino, California
Date de parution:
Page:
14
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Firm Gets Patent (Page B-5, Column 2 Metropolitan News Sunday, November 30, 1969 Second From Pate B-l Critics Assert Cedu Destroying Teenagers Allegations Range From Orgies C7 To Brainwashing to Bad Food C7 Readers Ask HEI 1 1 IjJLjI Killing Deplored I would like to know why people ae being allowed to kill animals if it is only for a sport or just to find out if they can kill one. Can HELP think of how scared animals feel while being hunted? Is there anything you can do to stop some of this? I like animals anc. I think more can be saved if people would love them as I do. I would like to HELP if I could. I am 12 years old.

J.R. Fontana. ANSWER. May the kindliness within you increase each year as you grow up. We need a greater supply of people thinking as you about life and preserving, rather than destroying it.

Jim, hunting is old as our country. It was a necessary source of food for a great many years. Then hunting, under the guise of sport, became a virtual slaughter. As a result the hunted in most areas are less numerous than the hunters. That is a big factor in restraining the killing you deplore.

We can't encourage you to think it will be stopped until the moving targets are gone, but your thinking is sound as our dollar used to be. EDITOR'S NOTE: Cedu Foundation's efforts to work with young people involved with drugs have brought strident charges and counter charges since the organization began its work two years ago. This article presents the allegations. In a second article tomorrow, Cedu answers. By TOM GREEN Sun Teltgram Stiff Writer RUNNING SPRINGS The latest storm clouds gathered over t'edu Foundation are scarcely visible from the mountain perch here where on the VT) clearest of days they say you can make out the dint of the Pacific Ocean at the horizon.

This is the Running Springs lodge of Cedu, a home, for the time being, for .10 to 35 young people, most of them drug users at one time or another From all appearances on a chilled sunny afternoon, it is a happy place, strangely quiet as teenagers stretch out on overstuffed sofas to talk or gather around a table for what they call school. "Oh, 1 love this place," said a 17-year-old boy with closely-cropped hair and a button-down shirt. "I don't want to leave. Where do I have to go?" Down winding Highway 30 in San Bernardino, there are some people who will answer to that question. They insist that boy and all the rest of the young people under Cedu's care should be returned' to their families or to local authorities and that Cedu should be run out of town.

These people believe that Cedu, which has been set up as a private non-profit foundation in California, is simply a whitewash that deserves a public investigation. The allegations against Cedu. in general, are these: There is no professional staff no psychiatrists, no doctors and no social workers. The young people at Cedu don't get adequate medical attention. Cedu is the scene of sexual orgies and widespread drug use.

Cedu is a Communist -inspired Sun-Telejram photo School at Cedu Jane Gabrilove, of Greenwich, Conn, left), conducts an English class in (second from the informal atmosphere of Cedu's Running Springs Lodge. AH the young people at Cedu attend classes daily. Food is inadequate Cedu is wrecking homes because it is brainwashing young people to turn against their parents. Schooling is unorthodox and poor. Follow ing is the account of one mother who has been quite vocal in her criticism of Cedu Mrs.

Ruth Moore. 2380 Ogden St Muscoy has a daughter, Becky Wiggins. 17. who started going to the Cedu Townhouse at 1434 Parkside Drive in San Ber nardino List April. Becky had attended "a few of the Cedu sessions (sensitivity sessions), I began to notice changes in her outlook on Mrs.

Moore said. Becky wanted to spend more and more time at Cedu as if she were in a hypnotic state Then she lost interest in her desire to go to college Mrs. MOSTC said she agreed to lei her daughter go to Cedu to live for six weeks with the understanding that Becky would go to college in the fall The girl moved into the townhouse the day after she graduated from high school. The San Bernardino mother said she signed a medical release form and was notified by Cedu that her daughter had been given a $2,000 scholarship for one year's stay. She did not get a letter requesting her permission to let Beck stay at Cedu, she said Mrs.

Moore then tells of getting a "TUnaround" from Cedu officials about where her daughter was staying and an eventual refusal to let her see the girl. Becky did not want to see her mother. Mrs Moore said she was told. After a month, Mrs. Moore said she went to a house on Cedar Street in San Bernardino where her daughter was staying.

She sent a 14-year-old daugfatei to the door to see if they could talk with Becky. "Becky answered the door and hugged her sister and told Patty, "I cannot see you and went back into the house. Patty was crying Mrs. Moore said she returned to Cedar Street and demanded to see her daughin i Continued on 5. Column li Injuries Fatal To S.B.

Driver A 22-year-old San Bernardino man died early yesterday of injuries he received in a traffic cident near his home. Kerry Elmont Tiedenian. nf 399 39th was the driver of a car which Administrator of Hospital Loses Battle to Retain Job "We're trying to get the local doctors back into the fold," he added. He claimed that the hospital employes are dissatisfied with Jackson. "I made a survey of the hospital," he said.

"I talked to seven employes. Five of them are ready to resign as of this date "Frankly, our opinion is that Mr. Jackson as pur administrator has not done the job he had to do," said Roy. "We have not fired Mr. Jackson.

We Supervisors Facing Tough Questions Before Adopting New Anti-Smog Rules Cacti Go Fast When I wrote to HELP about our friends having a surplus of cacti because they were going to on the property, I had no idea what would happen. It was either ask you to find homes for the cacti or they would have to haul it to the dump. The response to the plea to HELP was really terrific. Peo, came from all over the county Yucaipa, San Bernardino, Fontana, Barstow, etc. Even desert visitors from Detroit happened to see the item and got their share.

All were happy and the supply is completely gone. J.E.C. Hesperia. ANSWER. When your problem came in there was a question in the minJ of HELP as to how much cacti would be desired by readers.

It is gratifying that the column could be of service to you and your friends. The HELP family is very responsive, as you discovered, and it ranges far and wide. Seems like everyone enjoyed your little Item. Outlet in Inland I world like to find an outlet for my hobby. I make crystal flowers and the hobby and craft shops seem to run more to trains and toys.

Maybe you could find someone who would consider displaying my handiwork and possibly sell on consignment. All my work is hand formed, none being made from a mold. I try to make them lifelike. Can HELP direct me to possible assistanca? Mrs. M.K.

San Bernardino. ANSWER. The person who would like to assist you has been found. She is Mrs. Ruth Channels, manager of Art L'Cor, 'ecorators, designers, Inland Shopping Center.

Her place of business (Continued on 5. Column 3) By BILL ROGERS Sun-Telegram Staff Writer The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors approaches a public hearing on proposed new anti-smog regulations Tuesday increasingly aware that politics mixes with technology about as well as oil mixes with water. The supervisors face such questions as whether a small savings is worth a huge cost, and whether or not they can devise a law that would prevent some industries from immediately violating it because there Is no way at present for them to comply. Essentially, two proposals will be under consideration at the hearing beginning at 10 a.m.: First, that the county impose limits on industrial emissions of oxides of nitrogen. Ceilings on NOx emissions, for which control efforts are stiH in the embryo stage, have been adopted by only two air pollution control districts in California and probably the nation.

Los Angeles County has a NOx rule under consideration, but it reportedly would apply only to large power generating plants. Second, that the county add to its present limitations on sulfur dioxide emissions a new rule restricting the sulfur content of industrial fuels to 0.5 per cent by weight. This standard, enforced by I. Angeles and at least two other districts in California, would force many plants, to their dislike, to convert to use of low-sulfur oil at materially increased cost. It would effect an estimated six have asked him for his resignation and he has had a nervous breakdown because of this "Obviously we're in a position of letting all the employes go for the sake of Mr.

Jackson." Support for Jackson came from two surgeons brought in when local doctors failed to provide emergency service. Mountains Community Hospital is re- Continued on 5, Column 4) per cent reduction of industrial emissions in the county and about a one per cent reduction of total air pollutants, including those being spewed out by vehicles. Although these are the two proposals that have been most discussed. Tuesday's hearing actually is open to any kind of action. The supervisors could turn into completely different avenues.

The board is expected to hear urgings by groups such as Clean Air Now and the Desert Environment Conservation Association that it plunge full speed ahead. It will receive "go slow" recommendations from its Clean Air-Industry-Agriculture Advisory Committee, which agreed late last week that the proposed sulfur rule is unnecessary and that a scientifically supportable position cannot be taken yet on NOx emissions because not enough is known about them Concerned that the public outrage against smog is going overboard and that proposals such as those on NOx emissions are premature. County Air Pollution Control Director John Fairweather declared: "Public pressures are causing regulatory bodies to take steps thai are hurried, unreasonable and impractical. Our rules and regulations have to be stringent enough to meet the health standards of the state, but there has got to be a rationale to every thing we do." Fairweather contends the county bai done "a darned good job" in that it administer the new fire protection financing plan would cover valley communities including Yucaipa, Mentone, Highland, Grand Terrace and parts of Alta Loma, Devore and Etiwanda, in addition to large parts nf the mountain area. Its boundaries would extend six miles north of state fire stations at Phelan, Hesperia, Lucerne Valley and Yucca Valley, taking in southern desert areas not served by cities or fire districts.

The service area would levy a tax rate estimated at 10 cents per $100 assessed valuation. The general county rate now includes nearly three cents for payment of the contract with the By LEONARD METZ Sun-Telegram Staff Writer Thomas A. Jackson administrator of Mountains Community Hospital for the past two years, has lost his battle to retain his job. In an executive session following an open meeting Friday night, the hospital board agreed to give Jackson until next Friday to resign or face the consequences. The board left little doubt what the consequences would be.

If Jackson refuses to resign, he will be fired. Jackson did not attend any of three meetings held Friday one public, and two in executive session. Ironically. Jackson was one of four patients in the hospital during the meetings. Ted Y.

Roy, president of the board, said Jackson was admitted earlier Friday, suffering from a nervous breakdown. Jackson is being penalized for the same reason managers of sports teams are penalized failure to field a winning team. Since July, not enough patients have been sent to the hospital to make it financially successful. Roy said the hospital lost $12,700 during October alone. Local doctors, feuding with Jackson, are sending patients "down the hill" to hospitals in San Bernardino.

During October, said Roy, the average number of patients in the hospital each day was 3.6. "The break-even point is 10 patients," he said. "The lack of patients in the hospital doesn't mean people are not getting sick," he said. "They're going someplace else. The grenade was described as a 40 millimeter shell from an M79 grenade launcher.

It was turned over to explosive experts at Fort Irwin. Officials said they believe the grenade was tossed out of the car as a means lor getting rid of the shell which cannot be possessed legally by civilians. Experts said the shell normally explodes on contact, sending shrapnel in all directions. The grenade can only be detonated, they said, if it is fired from a grenade launcher. on County Proposal cost is shared by taxpayers within cities and districts having their own fire departments because it is included in the general county tax rate.

The plan has been opposed by the City of San Bernardino and some fire districts in the fear it might discourage annexations. However, the supervisors, who originated the proposal as a means of spreading tax costs equitably, reaffirmed their support of the idea after formal and informal nods of assent came from practically all other cities. Tomorrow's hearing is scheduled for 2:15 p.m. Police Recover Grenade has brought 92 per cent of industrial emissions under control. By contrast, 98 per cent of pollutants flowing into the county's atmosphere from vehicles which are responsibility of the state is still uncontrolled, Fairweather points to his latest emission study Showing that 83.6 per cent of the 1,593 tons of pollutants pro duced in the county every day emanates from automobiles and other vehicles, while only 16.4 per cent comes from industrial sources.

The same study discloses that nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide, combined, make up about 75 per cent of the industrial emissions that are still not controlled, although those which come from industries constitute only about 12 per cent of total pollutants. Fairweather notes that sulfur dioxide i Continued on 5, Column 1) A Thought for Today ii 1 1 in 1 1 in nihl whtU Wi run to, not tn ft Whtti Wi MM fin in I iti Sir illiam Osier First Federal Savings Loan Association nf Ban Bernardino St. TU 9-0XK1 Also in and Loma Linda TARPS I. Surplua, ao-oz. Carnal Per Sq.

Ft. G.I. Bunk Bedi $19 99 G.I. Parachute Car Covera S1U 99 OPEN SUNDAY 10-7 FOX HOME CENTER Corner Witrrrau Ait. 1 Block fcj h.alaii'lt trttwar, Beniirdlou.

Pb. Junt Arrived Gifts for Christmas. Order Boxed Chocolates Now. Oak Glenn Ribbon Candies. CANDY TIME SHOP 1231 N.

I at Base Line) TU 8-3677 RE-ROOF NOW ROOF REPAIR IJCENSED FULLY INSURED RING BELL FOR BETTER ROOF" BELL ROOF CO. TU 5-6863 ran off Ml. View Avenue near Thompson Street and hit a telephone pole about 11:15 p.m. Friday. Tiedenian was tiappocl in the car for some tune.

He was rushed to ount General Hospital where he died about 1 a.m. 268 238 County Traffic Slncf Jan 1 Traffic Oeatru Sme Data Last Year A passenger in the car with Tiedeman. Albert Scoggins, 23, of 279 39th San Bernardino, was treated at County Hospital and released. Tiedeman was the fourth person to die on county roads during the four-da holiday weekend. HOl'SK FOR has opening for established, experienced hiu'h quality operator.

OCR I MODERN SOLON offers the best in Working conditions. If yOU are unhappy in your present location, we should like to speak with you. TU S-1606 22M N. Arrow head Ave, OBEDIENCE TRAINING class Starts Friday, Dec. 3.

Call lor information. Brooks Petland 1377 E. Highland Ave. TU 3-0341. MANY MANY CHRISTMAS GIFT IDEAS Open Today For Your Convenience SOFFA HARDWARE MON A FRI.

NITES 'TIL 9 OPEN SO'. A II Green Stamp Bankamencard and Mauler Charge 123 W. Highland Ave. TU 3-6614 FREE ESTIMATE SAVE! 1 VE WITH ECONOMY VAN STORAGE liljrh In Kfflanc Low in Coat Call Hay nr Night LIZ SAYS: Open Every Sunday Select Fall Fashions Noiv! GLAD RAGS BY LIZ Del Rou Highland Ave. and SAGE'S REDLANDS Colton Police recovered a live grenade early yesterday morning, thrown from a moving car at Rancho and Valley Boulevard.

Officer Christopher Mac Lane said he was parked about a half-block away from the intersection about 5 a.m. when he saw an object being thrown from a car which sped away. MacLane found the grenade on the edge of the road. He said it had rolled across the intersection Final Public Hearing Fire Protection Tax Plan Before Board The county's tax-shifting plan that would pin the cost of the state's structural fire protection service strictly on those communities which benefit from it comes to a final public hearing tomorrow before the Board of Supervisors. The plan involves setting up a board-governed agency empowered to levy taxes in all San Bernardino Valley, mountain and southern desert areas that ara not within cities and fire protection districts.

These areas would pay for the full $400,000 worth of structural fire protection that is provided annually in unincorporated territory by the State Division of Forestry. As it is now, this On the agenda tor the same time is a hearing on the proposal to form another board-governed taxing agency a county service area to improve roads in the Valley of the Moon development near Crestline. The community's improvement association wants to raise $35,000 over a two-year period to upgrade six miles of dirt roads that do not meet standards for inclusion in the county-maintained system. The project is estimated to require a tax rate of per $100 assessed valuation for the first two years. Lower rates would be levied for maintenance purposes thereafter.

The county service area which would.

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Années disponibles:
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