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Star Citizen Sunday, May 03, 1970,
Arizona

Star Citizen Sunday, May 03, 1970,
Arizona

Star Citizen Sunday, May 03, 1970,
Arizona

Star Citizen Sunday, May 10, 1970,
Arizona

Star Citizen Sunday, May 10, 1970,
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Star Citizen Sunday, May 24, 1970,
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Star Citizen Sunday, May 24, 1970,
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Star Citizen Sunday, May 31, 1970,
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Star Citizen Sunday, May 31, 1970,
Arizona

Other Editions from Sunday, July 12, 1970

Appleton Post Crescent Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Wisconsin

Colorado Springs Gazette Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Colorado

Coshocton Tribune Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Ohio

Joplin Globe Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Missouri

Nevada State Journal Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Nevada

Salt Lake Tribune Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Utah

Zanesville Times Recorder Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Ohio

Waterloo Daily Courier Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Iowa

Burlington Hawk Eye Sunday, July 12, 1970 ,
Iowa

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   Star-Citizen (Newspaper) - July 12, 1970, Tucson, Arizona                              TOP of the NEWS CONTINUED FAIR The weatherman thinks the mercury will stop somewhere between 100 and 105 this afternoon The chance of rain is less than 10 per cent except over the tains Yesterday's extremes were 102 2nd 73 and last year's were 93 and 75 Records for the date are 111 in 1958 and 69 in 1949 gunny weather covered most of the rest of the nation with rain confined to two areas of the south Details on Page Global TEAR GASSING South Vietnamese police break up a demonstration by students and ish American visitors by using tear gas Three U.S newsmen are arrested and released while two others say they were beaten by Page MOON MEN ONE YEAR LATER What has happened to Neal Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin the first earthlings to set foot on the surface of the moon while Mike Collins watched from a lunar orbit one year What do they think their flight has meant to space See Page 1C OPEN TIE Jack and Doug ers finish the British Open Golf Championships in a tie and will play off today over the St Andrews Scotland course for the title Page IB National MINES BUREAU Dr J Richard Lucas asks President Nixon to withdraw his tion to be director of the U.S Bureau of Mines Two congressmen who said Lucas lacked both backbone and qualifications express their delight Page ENVIRONMENTALISTS LETTER Anti- pollution organizations and the United Auto Workers sent a letter to the Senate criticizing the 1967 Quality Act as virtually useless They include a legislative program which they say would guarantee cleaner fer air by 1975 Page 2A AUTO INDUSTRY A major strike and higher car prices appear certainties as new contract bargaining between the UAW and Detroit auto moguls begins oa July 17 Page Arizona OUTLOOK While there may be an eventual solution for a long-range program between the slate and local governments it is not likely to be achieved in th e next session of the Legislature Page Local HOME BUYERS SURVEYED The typical purchaser of a Tucson home looks at about seven houses before buying spends about two weeks looking and ends up spending more than he'd expected These and other patterns in Tucson home buying were determined in a vey made by Property Appraisal and Re- search Corp Page IDA FOOTBALL PREVIEWS With an analysis of the University of Michigan's football prospects for 1970 Arizona Daily Star sports editor Abe Channin begins a series today on the University of Arizona's football opponents for the coming season Page IB m Index Bridge Crossword 13C Financial SD Good Mostly Hers Pub Twenty Cents VOL i NO II TUCSON ARIZONA JULY 12 1770 FINAL Edition PASES City Police Hopeful Of Settlement Two Principal Issues Remain To Be Solved Differences between city officials and son policemen appeared yesterday to be near a settlement as both sides developed a solid line of communication to iron out their dis- agreements Attorney James Quigley representing the Fraternal Order of Police met with the mayor and City Council in the council chambers to discuss police employment and grievance de- mands Patrolman Paul Tracey seemed to sent the policemen's attitude after the meeting when he said The biggest thing now is the fact that we're city officials and police are communicating Quigley agreed to meet Tuesday night with City Manager Roger O'Mara and City Attorney Lewis Murphy to discuss issues that both sides agreed yesterday there was little or no dis- agreement about O'Mara said he would pre- pare a report on their meeting to present to the mayor and the council by Friday on items they agreed or disagreed upon Two of the FOP requests city tion of the FOP as the bargaining agent for policemen who belong to the FOP all but 13 of more than 300 officers and an arbitration agreement will be taken up later by Quigley and Murphy These two issues involve legal disagreements between the two attorneys about whether the city can enter into an tration and bargaining agent agreement with employees O'Mara said he would try to submit a re- port to the mayor and City Council on basic agreements and differences FOP and the city by July 27 Murphy told Quigley the city could possibly accept an arbitration agreement with the city if Quigley could reword the legal agreement presented to the city Murphy said if he and Quigley still disagreed after the rewording they could ask the state attorney general for a ruling on the matter Mayor James N Corbett Jr said any new concessions gained by the Police Department as far as fringe and other benefits were con- cerned would be passed on to every other city employee and Quigley said he agreed I do hope when we discuss these things we do it with a greater rapidity than in the Quigley told the governing body Councilman Richard Kennedy however told Quigley he was trying to put blame on the governing body for slow negotiations and said that is simply not O'Mara described the meeting as very productive and said the issues over which there is little dispute should be settled first and then the legal bargaining agent and ar- issues will be easier to resolve Quigley said after the meeting that he hopes the matters discussed Saturday can be resolved between the FOP and the city within the next two weeks He added however that he was disappointed that the city wouldn't make a definite statement of issues we came here to discuss Kennedy said there is no great problem in settling their requests and it'll just take some give and take to settle the two legal issues ring Students Get Role In Parleys FLAGSTAFF The Arizona Board of Re- gents Saturday approved a study of the Uni- versity of Arizona Student Constitution to be made jointly by student government ASUA and the administration UA President Richard A said he hoped the study would clarify certain in the document which has been given different interpretations by ASUA and by the administration especially in regard to control of student funds Reports earlier this week indicated tha Harvill and Vice President Marvin D Johnson would ask for the abolition of the 1965 con- and all amendments made since then But Harvill said yesterday that he had no such intentions and still hoped that the con and its amendments could be inter- at the university level rather tha bringing them to the regents Harvill said the constitution had worked for the first two years and that it was only during the past three years that problems had arisen over it In another decision affecting students at all three universities the regents denied a request for student participation in board meetings saying that this would be permitted only on rare occasions Regent's President Wesley P Goss in a ter to the State Universities three student body presidents said that most student als could be handled at a lower level without having to come before the board He said the few questions requiring board action could be better handled if presented in carefully documented written form Gov Jack Williams said the ture with each regent serving for an year tenure does not lend itself to student If students took part in the work of the board they would have to absent themselves for such long periods from their studies that they'd have difficulty he said In addition student participation would lead to requests for participation from oilier groups such as the faculty staff alumni and civic interests Dr Paul Singer regent from Prescott said the board must not attempt to represent vested interests on the campuses The regents represent the public not vidual he said We must maintain a certain aloofness from these interests Harvill told the regents that the visitation and student key policies begun last fail at the UA are working out very satisfactorily and that he did not recommend any major changes The visitation policy allows residents of and sorority houses and dormitories to have guests of the opposite sex in their rooms during certain specified hours The key lation permits women students to return after their living unit has been locked for the night Hanill said there had only been four in- on Page 11 A Col I Victory Defeat MOUNT VERNON Wash AP An estimated tles and cans landed in the city dump here Saturday in a cleanup project that cost the sponsoring savings and loan institution about It's only said an official of the First Federal ings Loan Assn as he watched the experiment which cost his firm two cents per container The institution had promoted the project with modest expectations thinking it would receive eral thousand empties from Skagit County roadsides The drive was to run from 9 to 3 p.m Saturday but by 7 cars and trucks had begun to line up outside a city parking lot adjacent to the savings institution to dump the cans At one point the line of vehicles stretched five miles away People of of all ages brought cans and bottles in plastic bags paper sacks cartons and gunny sacks One boy lugged his collection in a small red wagon another pushed a baby riage One family five children and the parents picked up almost cans working at it all Wilson said NEWTON Iowa AP Iowa's native prairie flower which once blanketed the land in a sea of colors before man plowed it under poked its head above the bromegrass on a hillside last week and was blasted with weed killer For Frank Pellett of rural Newton it a sickening loss He set out to prove that if the flowers could be Iowa's roads they would not only provide beauty from spring to fall but would stabilize hillsides and crowd out weeds So in 1966 he started writing letters to the Iowa Highway Commission seeking permission to use two acres of roadside near his home for the experiment The flowers bloomed for the first time this year but for many death was headed down the highway It arrived last Wednesday a large orange Iowa Highway Commission truck which spewed pesticides over the plants By Saturday many of them had shriveled up and turned black The truck driver had mistaken them for weeds Richard A Hamli New Technology Imperils Privacy Murray Sinclair The electronics revolution is transforming our culture and threatening one of Americans most prized possessions privacy If you feel secure from prying eyes and ears in the privacy of your home apartment office hotel and motel room and such places as the bathrooms of stores or factories you're living in a dream world Giant computers and tiny highly sensitive microphones transmitters cameras and tric eyes are in danger of ripping away the fundamental right to basic secrecy Author Ian Fleming's fertile mind never provided James Bond with a flock of the ing devices now widely in use across the try All of us are now represented in the ry bank of one or more electrical digital com- puters If we have paid a signed a check been to a hospital received a parking ticket got a summons traveled on a toll highway bought or sold stocks bonds or goods even been born we are recorded stored and processed in some information machine In time we could even be stripped of our names and rank and given the indignity of a numbered identity John Brown would be The threat to our privacy and what can happen is generally uncomprehended except by a few congressmen industrial specialists and thinkers At the same time concern over who will have access to everything that happens to us from the womb to the tomb and how far in- can go in prying into our private lives is growing Because of this concern the establishment of a National Data Bank has been held up and is being kept in the dis- cussion stage The ability to pry is increasing far more rapidly than the and there does not seem to be any body or law defining value of personal information French sociologist Jacques maintains The Technological Society that we have tually lost control over technological forces and consequently will move closer and closer to totalitarianism Young says in Life Among ants that Without privacy there is no there are only types Who can know what he thinks and feels if he never has the opportunity to be alone with his thoughts and Everyone for emotional release must have privacy President Nixon and the ditch digger need time to themselves How else can they engage in Man's need for privacy is probably rooted in his animal gins Business unions governments committees all groups must on occasion meet in privacy This is becoming increasingly cult The ways in which privacy are being in- are frightening Hidden electric eyes and ears are being built Continued on Page 11 A Col 1 lanned President To Leave In June 1971 By BOB BRAUX Star Staff Writer FLAGSTAFF University of Arizona President Richard A announced his retirement effective June at the zona Board of Regents meeting here Saturday The UA administrator who has seen the enrollment grow to about since he assumed the post in 1951 said his decision was based solely on the fact that he had reached retirement age and that his ure in office was much longer than is typical for American university presidents Harvill said that he continued to find the president's role interesting and personally re- warding and that he looked forward to another year of Regent P Bradford of Yuma praised saying that the UA would be losing one of the outstanding educational ad- in the country today Bradford said three most unusual qualities were his ability to judge people his insistence on running the university himself and his honesty The first enabled him to surround himself with a very capable Bradford said He has insisted in maintaining control of the himself despite the fact that there are many people who would like to take over such as students alumni or interests But his honesty is his most important quality Never once have I ever known him to try to pull the wool over our eyes When we ask his opinion we know we are getting the full story One of the major accomplishments in nearly 20 years of as president was the establishment of the state's first school of medicine in the middle The medical school will graduate its first class of students next year about the same time that Hanill will step down In addition Hanill has followed a strong building program for the entire campus and is known for his ability to obtain research grants from government private industry and dations The regents did not discuss a possible cessor for Hanill The board also accepted the resignation of Dr J Bryon McCormick a former president of the UA and dean of the law college from his post as associate adviser to the regents He will remain as a consultant to on a limit Board of Regents members and university presidents are required to retire at 70 said Kenneth Murphy UA vice president of ness affairs but they can continue if they get regents permission each year past 70 resignation is strictly said Murphy AF Missile Goes Astray Probably Hits In Mexico WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE AP An Air Force Athena missile to come down on this New Mexico desert testing ground went astray early day and probably crashed in a remote section of Mexico Range officials said the missile probably landed in mountains 180 miles southeast of City Mex about 400 miles south of where it should have hit on the missile range They also said the Athena might have been destroyed by the stress of atmospheric try It was fired at p.m from Green River Utah for an overland flight to White sands 400 miles to the southeast The Athena would be the third White Sands Missile to land in Mexico since the nation's space program be- gan here 25 years ago The Athena is used to test re-entry of warheads and other parts that will be used on intercontinental ballistic missiles After launching from southern Utah it climbs above the atmosphere then rockets the test components back into the atmosphere at speeds up to miles an hour -1   

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