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Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 15

Location:
Santa Cruz, California
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Budget Approved GOP Candidate Arnold Blasts Sentinel Reporter Sewer Connection Fees To Jump In SC County Sanitation District 'j? he Sentinel Tuesday, June 29, 1982 Santa Cruz, Calif. 15 Monthly sewer service charges will remain the same in the coming year, but new sewer connection fees will increase, the Santa Cruz County Sanitation District board of directors have decided, in approving its $3.8 million 1982-83 budget Monday. The approved hike will bring the cost of sewer connection for single-family dwellings to $1,000, up from $900. Connection charges for commercial buildings will increase 40 cents per gallon of average daily flow to $4. Connection fees for senior citizen projects, however, will remain the same at $100 per unit, directors decided.

The $10.50 a month sewer service charge will also remain the same for single-family dwellings. The $3.8 million budget is only $170,000 more than this past fiscal year. Some $2.1 million is earmarked for tge operation fund. The largest single cost in this category $689,000 is the district's portion of planned improvements to the city of Santa Cruz treatment plant. Another major cost involves the maintenance and operation of the district's various sewage pumping facilities.

This totals $710,000. On the revenue side, sewer service charges amount to $2.6 million. The increase in connection fees will generate $450,000 or $110,000 more than this past fiscal year. Honored By SC Rotary John Byrne recently was given an oak desk and standing ovation from fellow members of the Santa Cmz Rotary Club who were honoring him following the announcement that he is retiring as club secretary after 39 years in that post. Past District Gov.

Paul Sandas was emcee of the program In which Rotarians George Pea-niman, Harry Lncas, Ted Schipper and Bob Rudolph told stories of Byrne's work as secretary since 1943. Byrne joined SC Rotary in 1937 while working for Byrne Brothers, the hardware and plumbing business started by his father and uncle. He said he has thoroughly enjoyed being active in the club that has a motto of "service above self" and plans to continue his membership in Rotary. The new secretary is Jack Pagen. ing for a candidate instead he was working support of his own philosophy of "Free World Republicanism." It states that in Arnold's campaign literature, he claims "Ronald Reagan, you have so obviously abdicated to the CFRT (Council on Foreign Relations and Trilateral Commission) operatives, you will go down in history as the Paul Von Hindenburg of our time." It also states that Barry Goldwater founded a "Free Society Association" around the time of the 1964 convention, but dropped it soon after causing Arnold to surmise "Maybe, he was bought off." In his challenging news release, Arnold states, "For the edification of the reader, I was working for, not against, Ronald Reagan, and against, not for, George Bush.

"But when Beatty wrote as a quote that 'Goldwater was bought off it only goes to prove without any question of a doubt just how far these prostitutes of the press will go to seduce their readers. "Take it from me, Beatty's garbage is not gospel, it is laced with lies," Arnold states. He also says that an editor of the New York Times, speaking before the annual meeting of the American Press Association had stated: 1 "There is no such thing as an independent press in America, if we except that of small town newspapers. "You know this and I know it. No man among you dare to utter his honest opinion.

Were you to utter it, you know before hand that it would never appear in print. "We are the tools and the vassals of the rich behind the scenes. These men pull the strings and we dance. Our time, our talents, our lives, our capacities are all the property of these men. We are intellectual prostitutes." Arnold concluded his press release, saying he would continue to expose those who are attempting to "sell out the sovereignty of these United States to sickness land con-trolism of socialism." Of his "no comment trap," he said, "I'm not sorry for having baited Beatty, when you're going fishing it is always one's intention to catch a big one." Wally Trabing's rmu Wdly Trabing is taking a few days off.

His column will resume upon his return. World's Shortest Parade Lucile Aldrich and Anne Isaacs of the Aptos Ladies Tuesday Evening Society are getting ready for the annual Fourth of July "World's Shortest Parade" through Aptos Village Sunday. The parade starts at noon in Aptos Village, and will end in Aptos Village Park (where the two women are picture.) Participants need only show up at 11 a.m. in the Rancho del Mar parking lot, and judging will follow but participants will only be judged if they go the full length of the parade and end up at the park, Ben Lomond Republican congressional candidate Gary Richard Arnold says he replied "no comment" to questions from The Sentinel, in order to "bait (and) trap" reporter Paul Beatty "into yellow journalism and slanted prejudicial press" coverage. "This muckraker manufactures the news, he doesn't write it," Arnold says of the reporter, explaining, "but I can understand why the Dow Jones Sentinel is out to get Gary Richard Arnold because Gary Richard Arnold is out to get the Dow Jones Sentinel and the entire Rockefeller Eastern Establishment." The story he's referring to was published June 24 and stated that Arnold was asked if he attended the 1976 Republican National Convention in Kansas City, Mo.

and that if it was true he had engaged in political tricks against then presidential-hopeful Ronald Reagan. Arnold answered, "No comment." He then went on to give details on other Republican National Conventions he had attended, beginning with the 1964 Goldwater convention in San Francisco and culminating in the 1980 Reagan convention in Detroit. "I hate to have used trickery to have trapped Beatty by answering 'no comment' to his questions, but I felt it was time that someone in Santa Cruz used him as an example of yellow journalism and slanted prejudicial press," Arnold states in his news release. He continues, "Beatty's insinuation that rather than he, was the dirty trickster is a joke that more and more of the public is seeing through. "By giving Beatty the bait in my 'no comment' comment, it was admittedly a trap.

Beatty fabricated an entire story headlined 'Dirty evolving around the 1976 Republican convention. "Try this one on for size Mr. Beatty, I WAS NEVER The story was headlined "Arnold A Well-Traveled Campaigner" and was headlined in the page one index "Dirty Trickster?" The story states that Arnold claimed he was at the 1980 Republican convention but not work Area Digest Ms. Fix-Up Lynne Witteveen, also known as Ms. Fix-up, will be teaching classes in basic home repair for women and other beginners at Cabrillo College, July 7 and 14, at San Jose City College on Sept.

18 and 25, and at Cabrillo again on Oct. 9 and 16. Plans are being considered for additional classes during the winter terms. For further information, call the Community Education offices or Lynne at 426-5196. Witteveen will also appear on KMST-TV channel 46 Wednesday.

June 30. The show is called Mornings from Monterey and will be aired at 9 a.m. Psychic Research A series of three seminars designed for beginners interested in exploring their psychic abilities will be presented the week of July 5, beginning Monday evening at the Berkeley Psychic Institute of Santa Cruz' Church of Divine Man, 108 Dufour St. Seminar topics are, Being Psychic, Clairvoyance and Personal Integration. Each seminar will include a lecture along with healings, aura readings, and an opportunity to experience tools to develop your abilities.

The series is open to the public and the donation is $45. For further information, call 429-6166. Management Degrees Two Santa Cruz residents were recently awarded master degrees in management from the Alfred North Whitehead Center for Lifelong Learning at the University of Redlands. They were Jerry D. Franks and Charlene L.

Bartholomew. The Whitehead Center offers programs designed for advanced studies on both the bachelor's and master's degree level. The University of Redlands is a private university located in the San Bernardino foothills. Scotts Valley Days Time is getting short for entry forms to be submitted to Scotts Valley Days, scheduled for July 31 and Aug. 1.

The 16th Annual Parade will be held July 31 at 1 p.m.', on Scotts Valley Drive. Horses, ponies, novelty entries, floats and, especially, musical units are welcome. Some game, food, and arts and crafts booths and spaces are still available. For further information or requests for entry forms for all categories, call Mary Sutherland at 438-4000 or 438-6571. Harvard Grads At Its 331st Commencement, held June 10, Harvard University granted 4,705 un Emergency Supplies Are At The Ready i 1 sr.

-a' 99 77 ULTRA INTERIOR LATEX Orw-coat hiding Washable Fast drying Water clean-up Applies -sily Durable COMPARE AT 13.99 BARGAIN PAW Low pfK. mtttt tonsil OH whrt. comptrt 3.9 LI 2.79 GAL 9.99 6.99 2.75 GAL. SUPERIOR Durable, anrcMt tadtfig MMdtw fsistnt. untKttkd color ftttntttft.

EXTERIOR LATEX gIWS ECKCST I ITCV riflMn New araducl! OH wM. Mwa-itat. LA I LA LnHpiLL ru ymf w4r tHm- REDWOOD FEKCC Economical color CAL. WHITE FENCE PAINF SPECIAL CAL. In dergraduate and graduate degrees at outdoor exercises attended by more than 20,000 people.

Local students receiving degrees included: S.A. Seville-Jones of Soquel, bachelor of arts degree; James Podczerwinski of Santa Cruz, doctor of law degree; Roberto Najera of Davenport, doctor of law degree; and Glen Williams of Santa Cruz, master in business administration. Awarded Degree Pamela Neva Richards of Santa Cruz is among the more than 800 students who completed work toward degrees at Marshall University, Huntington, W. in May. Richards received a regents bachelor of arts degree.

Musical Honors Susan L. Marshall, former Pacific Grove and Aptos High School student, is among five students who have been selected to be members of the President's Quintet. The students, who are entering Fresno State for the first time in the fall 1982 semester, were chosen through auditions held in February. Marshall, a horn player from Sonoma, has bean a member of state honor bands and honor orchestras and, while attending Aptos High School, was a participant in a musical tour of Europe. Professor John Heard, chairman of the CSUF Department of Music, said some 30 high school seniors from throughout California participated in the quintet auditions this year.

Of the five students selected, Heard said, "They have demonstrated great potential for further development as outstanding musical performers." Trip For Four Karin Luikart, 14-year-old Aptos Juniro High School student, has been awarded a trip for four people to any city of her choice in the United States as Newsweek magazine's national winner. Through QSP, the fund-raising subsidiary of Reader's Digest, students selling more than 70,000 subscriptions to Newsweek magazine were given an opportunity to enter a national contest identifying any American city they would like to visit. Using 25 words or less, they were to explain their reasons. Newsweek editors chose Luikart's selection of New York City in her creative question. Luikart and her family left for Honolulu on June 21, where they elected to spend their 3 night and 4 day all-expense-paid vacation.

six supplies case flood, Church blankets, pancake be A St. weeks and of the voted into "academic system for school according At the In trustee years clause or fees In agency hand union In trustees sponsor the car tree. The 4.79 11.99 8.99 The January flood that hit Santa Cruz County is months in the past, but emergency food and stand at the ready in Ben Lomond in the of a future emergency. Drawing on their experience during the January organizers of the St. Andrew's Episcopal emergency relief center have amassed cots, water, lanterns, radios, toilet paper, coffee, shovels, hatchets, first aid kits, toothbrushes, mix, diapers and hundreds of other items to used in an emergency.

list of emergency items was compiled by the Andrew's emergency shelter organizers two after the flood hit, leaving in its wake 17 dead five persons presumed missing. The supplies have been stored at a Ben Lom6nd residence that is not designated to be in a flood zone. "Now we have our own disaster relief center for whatever," commented Annette Marcum, organizer St. Andrew's shelter. Bonny Doon Teachers Oppose 'Forced' Dues Bonny Doon Elementary School District trustees have to oppose a statewide movement to force teachers paying union dues.

Trustees passed a resolution last week stating the freedom of teachers is undermined by a that permits labor unions to control qualifications employment." The resolution states that 95 percent of California board members also oppose compulsory unionism, to a recent survey. issue is a policy change about teacher contracts by California School Boards Association (CSBA). a letter written to the trustees by Jerry Lloyd, of the San Anselmo School Cistrict, Lloyd said for the CSBA had opposed the so-called "agency shop" which forces school employees to either pay dues to a union on the threat of being fired. 1980, Lloyd stated, the CSBA began condoning shop as a negotiable practice. Lloyd wrote that opposition to agency shop should go in hand with opposition to school employee strikes.

According to Lloyd, compulsory unionism "suppresses the healthy dissent necessary to question militant tactits." its resolution, the Bonny Doon Elementary School request the CSBA to change its position and to a bill to remove "organizational security" from collective bargaining law. Son Jose Man Killed FRESNO (AP) A San Jose man was killed when his veered off a highway soi'th of Fresno and struck a victim was identified as Robert Calleros, 25. 5.00 SUMMER SPECIAL INTERIOREXTERIOR LATEX Cocoa Beig. $101)0 2 GALLON PAIL IZ.Otl 1 IKTERO LATEX tvn- cmp. it tsi IITrV ReuslsoVt For watts, woodwork Sermon la iu Imin.

Wer cljn.g. lut drying. CtHMfl Appunusily, mtcrm'ftttrnr. Couture 18 GL I ITCY CVTTDIDD body Wi Urn romlorcod LRItA LAIlHIUH wilhtrmitufiKhHlttopnwioilaitmc a.iU protKtwrt and line 4ppcKf. dIAIl! Compr.tU9S ALL PAINTS ABOVE ARE READY-MIXED! TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: 1105 FREEDOM BLVD.

WATSON VILLE, 722-8581 3 XPnjtfv i- 1,111 --'--rJv Sincel949 I 3600 SOQUEL SANTA CRUZ, 475-4321,.

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About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
909,325
Years Available:
1884-2005