Arizona Republic (Newspaper) - February 21, 1969, Phoenix, Arizona Phoenix weather Partly cloudy today with 10 per cent chance of rain and continued High today low Yester days high low Humidity high low Page 79th 281 THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC CITY Todays chuckle The trouble with good advice is that It usually Interferes with our TELEPHONE 2718000 February 1969 Five 70 Pages Ten Cents Nixon asks new electoral END OF THE LINE Where better for a pair of boys to be on a day when balmy breezes lift high a kite into skies The thrill of accomplishment covers a face and I Republic Photo by Yul Conaway made it fly Copilots of this flight are Steve son of and Ross Rudi 3748 and Doug son of and Robert 3741 House okays bail bond By DON BOLLES The Arizona House yesterday gave tentative approval to a tightening the states bail bond A final vote is slated for today to con firm the tentative voice vote approval given the measure following a Democrats generally opposed the con measure on the ground it may violate the Eighth Amendment to the which prohibits excessive bail for criminal Even the Republican sponsors con ceded the measure probably will face a court but they said it is the opinion of an outstanding Rex Lee of that it is The tentative vote marked the end of five weeks effort by GOP leaders and lawyers to find wording which would keep habitual criminals in jail while they awaited The last revision of the was ap proved by the GOP majority caucus only an hour before the As now the allows magis trates to set various probationary condi tions for freeing a man on includ ing limiting his visits to certain areas and denying him the right to carry a and prohibiting him from committing a second If he violated any conditions of his his bail could be revoked after a Superior Craig contended the measure would deny a person the fundamental right to carry weapons for his before he was convicted of any Fred re One of the biggest problems we have is the criminal who continues to commit crimes to pay for the previous This is an admira ble attempt to tighten up our bail Seventeen other measures won tenta tive and also will be voted on The most important appropriates to finance the pay rise granted legislators by the voters last Others allow the Employment Security Commission to spend from col lections for remodeling three allow the Game and Fish Department to enforce waterskiing regulations on Ari zonas side of the Colorado per mit counties to provide accident and life insurance for and commend the American Legion on its 50th anniver Six to get organs Costly property consultant best Woolery from single donor Associated Press NEW YORK Four persons had new hope for life and two others were to have a new chance for sight with six organs taken from the body of a 57yearold man who died of a brain Surgeons said the operations marked the first time that six organs both both corneas were removed from a single donor for into six The operations also marked the first time a heart was removed in one hospi tal and transferred via a blocklong tunnel to another hospital for The recipients were reported doing well after the series of operations late Wednesday and early The donor was identified only as a 57yearold man who was admitted to Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Al lied Diseases with an inoperable brain He died As death the two hospi tals the patients next of kin re solved that on the death of the they would permit the hospital to remove as many organs as could be Continued On Page All By KING The state property valuation director yesterday said his adminis consultant is one of the best investments I could despite a criticism from the Joint Legislative Budget Committee staff that the consult ant is Valuation Director Arlo Woolery iden the consultant as Scottsdale attor ney Owens a former vice president of Sinclair Oil in New Owens maintains a Scottsdale law office and business consulting firm in addition to serving the His fees for advising the state agency on a parttime basis for the last year have totaled approximately the same as the annual salary of the president of the University of Woolery credited Owens with saving Todays prayer 0 in whose presence our souls find deliver us from the mere enjoyment of thy Give us the the and the courage to share the wonders of it with those who have never come to the realization of thy love for the Property Valuation Department at least since the consultant was retained by Woolery early in Wool ery said Owens has develop an automatic data processing system to do work which oth would require additional salaried the shifts of data processing personnel needed in the de down the amount of work for merly contracted out to private data Woolery added that his departments consulting fee outlays are down from during the previous fiscal year to in the current fiscal Regarding the Joint Legislative Budg et Committee staffs assertion that about a month is being paid to Owens by the Woolery estimated that Owens has averaged 16 to 22 days a month of state This estimate would put his monthly income from the state at to close to that of the University of Arizona president who receives annually plus house and Woolery said Owens pays his own travel and subsistence expenses from his daily The status strivers Obtaining dominance to gain prominence London Sunday Times Service We have all seen them in action the drinker who gets served at once in a crowded bar the actor who dominates the stage without saying a word the committee man who has only to clear his throat for everyone else to stop talking and listen without saying they make themselves How do they do it The according to Michael of the Institute of Experimental Psychology at Oxford is that they achieve their aims by using a number of simple signals They hold themselves very straight with head smile stare coldly when they do use a de Argyle is the leader of a team which is investigating the undercover language of facial and tone of voice we all use continuously but largely unconscious United Press WASHINGTON President Nixon asked Congress yester day for a reform of the electoral system that would eliminate the need threatened last fall for the House oi Represent atives to decide a deadlocked He submitted a proposed constitutional amendment to the House and calling for election of a president by 40 per cent rather than the present required majority of the elector al If no candidate achieved such a he a runoff election would be held between the two leading with the winner of the largest popular vote claiming In a plea for prompt the President also asked Congress to find some way to make the electoral vote more closely reflect the popular retaining the electoral college but eliminating individual White House officials said the President would be happy to settle for a one of many being considered in for allocating electoral votes in proportion to the popular vote They said he apparently felt that direct election of a presi dent by popular vote stood little chance of congressional ap proval in the near though he personally favored such a ly to communicate with each other whether we are talking or We use words for exchanging problem solving and things like says but nonverbal commu is the main means of establishing personal relation This was shown by one experiment at Oxford a group of subjects was shown a series of videotapes on some of which the speakers tried to convey different impressions of superi and inferiority merely by the words they On others the speakers used identical words but tried to put across the idea of superiority or inferiority The latter were found to be more than 50 times as effective on the scale used to assess Of all the different modes of nonverbal communication eye contact and direction of gaze has been studied most Continued On Page A4 In a reference to the closely fought November in which George Wallaces candidacy threatened at one time to deadlock the electoral college and possibly throw the election into the House of Nixon said 1 believe the events of 1968 constitute the clearest proof that priority must be accorded to electoral college Nixons plan would abolish individual electors who under the system form slates in each state pledged to a lar The slate supporting the nominee who wins the states popu lar vote casts the states total electoral vote in the Electoral where a candidate receive a majority of the total electoral vote to win the In the 1968 Wallace prevented Nixon and his Demo cratic former Vice President Hubert from capturing a majority of the popular But Nixon put together a combination of states that provided him with the majority of the electoral In most nothing forces an elector to vote with his and last fall one Republican elector in North which Nixon carried by popular cast his ballot for Wai Continued On Page Al Pueblo captives awaited attack on Red Koreans United Press International The captured crew of the USS Pueblo wanted the United States to attack North Korea even if it meant their enlisted men testified Quartermaster Charles Law old a Navy court of inquiry their captors warned they would be executed immedi ately if the United States struck back for the seizure of the intelligence We waited for the United States to punish the bunch of barbarians they had over but it didnt said of We realized we were going to have to sit there until they negotiated our re Radioman Lee Hayes of Co testified he was com to write a letter to the governor of Ohio asking him to use his influence to get the Pueblo crew released through an American Hayes said he tried to slip in the suggestion that the United States drop the atom bomb on North Korea by say ing in his letter I long to behold the great and glorious light of our father Continued On Page A4 Laird argues case for missile defense New York Times Service Secretary Melvin Laird argued yesterday that the United States should deploy a mis sile defense system because of very rapid Soviet progress in the strategic arms including the testing of a sophisticated new antimissile Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Laird suggested it may be necessary to reorient the Senti nel Missile ABM originally proposed as an to give it some capability against Soviet missiles and space weap At the same time he held out the pos that the United States and the So viet Union might be able to work out an arms control agreement limiting each country to deployment of a Chinese ABM Lairds testimony before the committee produced the first signs of if not within the adminis tration on the related issues of deploy ing a missile defense and entering into negotiations with the Soviet Union to curb offensive as wel las defensive stra From the testimony of Secretary of State William Rogers before the com Tuesday and Laird it was that the secretary of state was far more interested and eager than the secretary of defense in entering into strategic arms control negotiations with Despite repealed by for Laird declined to associate himsel with the hope ex pressed by Rogers that the arms control Continued On Page A4 TALKS peace talks get no Page CAMPUS CLASHES violence breaks out on campuses across Page FALSE ECONOMY Arizona counties pay high price for legal Page BIG ice pack to melt within one or two explorer Page POLICY plans full review of oil import Page Legislative Highlights Twelve measures face final Senate vote Page House declines Supreme Court Page John Eisenhower Walter Annenberg Jacob Beam Nixon appointments complete diplomatic team in Europe Associated Press Dear Pogos back By popular Pogos back on the comic page Because Pogo doesnt do so well in the comic we thought he had lost a good deal of his A lot of fans telephoned and wrote to say we were Its not true we were just We made a WASHINGTON President Nixon named a seasoned professional diplomat Jacob Beam to be ambassador to Moscow As his ambassador to Great Britain he picked Walter millionaire Philadelphia publisher and a friend of Nixon for 20 John 46yearold son of former President Dwight was named ambassador to The three which had been forecast in rounded out Nixons diplomatic assignments to key European posts as he prepared to leave for a weeklong tour of the The President previously asked Sargent Shriver to remain as dor to All three of the newly designated en voys will require Senate confirmation and thus will not be taking up their posts until after Nixons return from Europe a week from who will be 60 in has been in the foreign service since 1931 and is rated an expert on Eastern Eu He is at present serving as ambas sador to Czechoslovakia and was on duty there last summer during the Soviet in A native of Beam served previously as ministercounselor in Moscow and took charge of the em bassy when Ambassador George Ken nan was declared persona non grata by the Stalin As ambassador to Beam acted as representative in the Warsaw talks with the Chinese Communists from 1957 to and then he became assistant director of the Arms Con trol and Disarmament At Moscow he will take over the post recently vacated by Llewellyn Thomp Annenberg is slated to replace Ambas sador David Bruce at the Court of It will be the 60yearold publishers first government