Star-Citizen (Newspaper) - August 16, 1970, Tucson, Arizona TOP of the NEWS The weatherman predicts a high of 95 today as temperatures begin to cool in Tucson The low tomorrow morning will be 75 The high a year ago was 101 ana in 1962 the record high of 104 was set The low last year at this date was 73 while a record low of 64 was recorded in Rainfall probability for today is 30 per cent Thundershowers dampened parts of the tion as hot and humid weather moved in where Details of the weather on Page Global MIDEAST CONFLICT Despite claims of cease-fire violations by both sides U.S officials expect the truce to hold and believe that will begin soon probably this week They tend to feel that while the Egyptians may have moved missile bases nearer the Suez Canal prior to the beginning of the truce there was no serious violation after the cease-fire began RACISM ATTACKED The black elite in apartheid South Africa who are relatively well off materially but deeply resentful of their discriminatory systems say the country is moving in the opposite direction from the rest of the world Page National CHANGING SOUTH Many Negroes say that a decade of activism turmoil and violence has made vast changes in the South and for the betterment of the Negro Some say blacks now have better opportunities there than where For a comprehensive report on the South today see story on Page ABM BATTLE Although leaders of a drive to curb the ABM system say they have a plan that will be acceptable to the White House GOP leaders disagree and say they want no limitation on expanding the missile system Page NEW CARS AND POLLUTION Most 1971 model autos have been designed to use or gasolines which is the first real sign that the auto industry is responding to the fight on pollution Page PANEL CALLED BIASED The governor of Mississippi calls the work of the President's Commission on Campus Unrest a biased in- after the group holds hearing on slayings at Jackson State College A panel member retorts that the governor was directly and personally responsible for the violence Page 2A OHIO BOMBINGS At least 16 persons are injured one critically in two Columbus Ohio department store explosions as police re- port finding dynamite and timing devices at four other locations Page 2A WIFE OF CIA CHIEF Cynthia Helms wife of the head of the supersecret agency devotes much of her time to a Washington organization that is working to alleviate pollution She is the subject of an article in today's PARADE the Sunday magazine Arizona NAVAJO TRADING CENTER A report on a typical trading center in the middle of the Navajo and Hopi reservations will be found on Page 1C PARKS DEPARTMENT The State Parks Department is at a crucial point in its career and must decide on where it is going and how to get there A complete story on the agency will be found on Page fiB Local AUG 25 REFERENDUM Tucson voters will soon approve or disapprove pay increases for the mayor and city councilmen and a million wafer bond issue Stories on the two referendum issues and a list of polling places are on Page Bridge 13C Hers Movies Editorial Financial Good Health 100 Pub Rec Sports 7 Partial Eclips Due Tonight A partial lunar eclipse visible here tonight barring storms and clouds will begin at p.m three minutes after the moon rises in the southeast The maximum eclipse 41 per cent will occur at The moon will then slowly pass out of the shadow completing the eclipse by During the hour before and after the eclipse there will be a penumbral or partly period of eclipse which will be barely visible to the naked eye said Dr of the lunar and planetary tory at the University of Arizona The eclipse will be visible over all the United Stales except the Pacific Northwest Twenty Cents FINAL Edition VOL I NO 16 TUCSON ARIZONA AUGUST 1970 ONE HUNDRED TWENTY PASES Golfer Go A displaced golfer heads for the clubhouse at El Rio Golf Course as Westside ters begin their invasion At least 250 adults and children occupied the course yesterday afternoon following a rally Led by the El Rio Coalition the demonstrators are demanding that the course be turned into a city park Sheaffer photo 250 Invade For Picnic Tour By RICHARD SALTUS Star Staff Writer Shouting Golfers go about 250 westside residents and their supporters swarmed onto El Rio Golf Course yesterday They put a halt to golfing for the afternoon and made a picnic ground of the course Leaders of the El Rio coalition said the move was a spontaneous action which followed a morning march and rally organized by the group Coalition members have demanded that the municipal course be turned into a city park for the low-income largely American Police offered no resistance to the invaders many of whom were women and children but tried to prevent friction between it Related Story on and angry golfers Many of the ers tried to continue their game but most gave up when people blocked the fairways Several golf balls were taken according to police City Manager Roger O'Mara has ly offered alternate plans the most recent of which is a community center on two acres of the golf course plus acquisition and development of a tract on West St Mary's Road and a promise to convert nine holes of El Rio into a park in four or five years The delay would enable the city to pay off its debt in the course Coalition spokesmen have refused any to El Rio and one said yesterday The city will have to come to us O'Mara who has with the coalition on the city's behalf met with legal and police officials yesterday and said that action will be taken to prevent anv recurrence of the takeover Sal Baldenegro a coalition leader who helped organize the demonstration said day's activities would be limited to picketing but that the course would be used as a park every weekend from now on It's the first time many of these people have been in he said even though they have lived in this neighborhood all their lives The 11 rally in the course parking lot followed a march through neighboring streets by several groups that joined together and on the course with signs and banners chanting Chicano After an invocation by the Rev Richard A Cantrell an Episcopal minister and area worker there were speeches in Spanish and English mainly accusatory of city Loud applause greeted Frankie G Wood's question Why isn't Mayor James Corbett down here to address the and his suggestion that the Westside not Corbett in the November 1971 election Just before noon a few members of the crowd edged onto the course then were lowed by others including many small dren on bicycles They toured the boundaries and inspected the small lake then sat down under a clump of trees and collected money for sandwich materials Besides coalition members and Americans of various ages there were a few blacks numerous Anglo students and from such organizations as the Arizona Civil Liberties Union Model Cities the Pima County Legal Aid Society and Pima College none in official capacities Football and other games occupied the late afternoon Almost everyone had left by 5 p.m Fugitive Sought In Alabama Murder Kidnap Warrants issued For Angela SAN RAFAEL Calif AP Black tant Angela Davis was sought in Alabama on warrants charging murder and in the Aug 7 Shootout that killed a judge and three others Federal fugitive warrants were issued late Saturday to go with the state charges after officials said she was not found in a raid on a San Francisco home and informants reported she was seen in Birmingham Ala Saturday officials said Asst U.S Atty Jerrold Lader said he filed the complaint on on the basis of the state rants issued earlier in Marin County on the alleged purchase by Miss Davis of a shotgun two days before the Shootout and on tion by the informant that she had been seen in a Birmingham shopping center Miss Davis 26 identified by police and news media as the purchaser of three guns used in the courthouse kidnapings was charged with one count of murder in the death and five counts of kidnaping according to Dist Atty Bruce Bales Similarly charged was Ruchell Magee 31 Continued on Page fiA Col 7 ULS Officers Impressed ANGELA DAVIS SATO OX AP Moving by night 5.000 South Vietnamese militiamen fell upon a sprawling Viet Cong base area in the infested jungles south of Da Nang and claimed one of their biggest victories of the war day The militiamen claimed they killed 125 my troops including the regional commander and captured 25 prisoners in a coordinated series of more than raids centered in the foothills 45 miles south of Da Nang Friday and Saturday It was the second major victory this week for the militia in South Vietnam's northern Military Region 1 It also was a big morale boost for U.S cers whose Vietnamization strategy rests heavily on the still shaky belief that the will be able to help handle enemy forces after the Americans have left I've never experienced anything like this in planning coordination and spirit said Li Col M G Stafford of Eagle Pass Tex the senior U.S adviser It was a little he added re- ferring to the allied incursions last spring that knocked out enemy bases in eastern Cambodia Associated Press correspondent Willis Johnson reported from Da Nang that the ation was masterminded by Col Hoang Dihn Tho chief of Quang Tin Province who wanted to derail an expected enemy offensive in tember Copying enemy tactics dozens of raiding parties of 5 to 15 men set out through the jungle on foot Friday at one minute after mid- night guided by Viet Cong defectors to known enemy base camps They struck early and caught the enemy Stafford said Bahamas Protest Ocean Dumping Of Nerve Gas NASSAU Bahamas AP The Bahamas Cabinet went into an all-day emergency sion Saturday and voted to lodge what was termed a strong protest against United States plans to dump deadly nerve gas into the tic Ocean 150 miles from Abaco Island But the Navy went ahead with plans to head out to sea with the gas today The protest was delivered to a delegation of U.S and United Kingdom officials which had traveled to Nassau for a meeting with the inet Arthur D Hanna acting prime minister of the Bahamas said he thought the protest would be futile The United States has already made up its mind to dump the nerve gas near the Bahamas but I am surprised that they who are pions in the cause of decided to dump the rockets in the ocean much less on the doorstep of a friendly Hanna said Hanna particularly demanded to know why the gas was being dumped off the Ba- hama Islands instead of off the coast of New Jersey which was recommended by the tional Academy of Sciences A spokesman for the Bahamian government said the protest was the first the Bahamian government ever had lodged with another power He said the government decided to do so after debate because of what he said was inaction by Great Britain which sents the Bahamas in dealing with other tions The U.S Navy received an all-clear er report Saturday night and announced it would start today to tow the shipload of lethal nerve gas to sea The way was cleared when a tropical de- pression broke up in the Atlantic The storm had threatened the dumping area 282 miles east of Cape Kennedy and had caused day's scheduled departure to be delayed 24 hours planes flew over the disposal area Saturday and reported the weather rable for a Sunday sailing A Navy spokesman said the old Liberty ship towed by two boats would depart about 10 Navy Capt A G Hamilton in charge of the sea phase of the operation had said he would not leave this military port until he had a fore- cast of 96 hours of good weather In the hold of the World War II freighter are 418 and concrete vaults con- obsolete Army nerve gas Also making the trip will Navy destroyer escort and a Coast Guard cutter NORTH NAM CONG BASE SOUTH VIET NAM 100 In the biggest action less than 10 miles southwest of the provincial capital at Tarn Ky a raiding party came upon what officers say was the Cong's command post for both Quang Tin and Quang Nam provinces The militia opened fire just at daybreak as about 30 enemy troops sat eating The raiders fell barh before the camp's ity force could react and called for support from a larger unit positioned nearby The militiamen captured the command post found the bodies of 10 enemy soldiers in- one identified as the commander a LL Col Hieu They also found the personal effects of three other top enemy officials in Quang Tin province No militia casualties were reported in this raid though at least four were reported killed and 11 wounded in the two-day operation Unlike most allied operations in Vietnam the Quang Tin raids relied on surprise rather than fire power to defeat the enemy The mi- litia called in no U.S air strikes and only about 300 of the militiamen in the ation were lifted into their target area by copter In the other major action involving the mi- litia this week government communiques credited the regional and popular forces with killing 308 enemy troops in four days of ing along the coastal strip known as the Street Without Joy below the demilitarized zone The forces sweeping the populated lowland area U.S air support and the aid of the South Vietnamese 1st Infantry Division ally regarded as the government's best regular army unit Other 1st Infantry Division troops continued to encounter heavy resistance as they tried to break up fortified North around Fire Base O'Reilly in the northern mountains between Hue and the Laos border Field reports said 35 North Vietnamese diers were killed before the South Vietnamese pulled back at nightfall South Vietnamese losses were termed light although at least 16 were wounded in a mortar attack against a field position Fighting involving American ground troops remained light and scattered the U.S Com- mand said By Curtis Pepper Long before he reached Olona Christiaan Barnard knew he was going to have a wonderful day in the hilltop town 24 miles from Milan In the car driving through rolling Italian hills he was told what to expect by an old child Giovanna Bon The band is waiting for you and body will be outside their said vanna been flags up since day It's a big festa Barnard laughed and Barbara his new year-old wife who was sitting next to him smiled happily Each of his emotions surfaced in her sooner or later and the laughs generally reappeared almost immediately as though she were running after him and could never quite catch up For Barbara there was also no doubt about day Three weeks before when she ried Chris at her home in burg he told her about the invitation to go to Giovanna Bon's hometown and whv they had to go there No doctor in Europe had little vanna hope of life And then in ape Town a the Red Cross Hospital they had taken an ar- tery from a corpse and put it into Giovanna That was seven months ago Since then she had returned to grown inches gained 12 pounds and returned to school The entire town of people had watched this occur as though Giovanna were a daughter of them ali and now they wanted to thank ard for what he had done On the outskirts of two policemen wore waiting to clear fic and as the Citroen drove into town the crowds were there lining the streets and ing like flags even beating on windows of the car as it slowed down calling and often more It was as if the day of town's tron Saint Giovanni had been combined with the annual Tre Valle bicycle race There had not been so much excitement since the powder mill blew up in 1946 At City Hall Mayor Giovanni ing the tricolor sash of his office produced a parchment scroll proclaiming Barnard an Author Friend Author Curtis Pepper knows his subject well He collaborated with Dr Christiaan Barnard in the heart geon's autobiography One earlier this year Dr Barnard proved to Pepper and the writer continues as friend critic and Boswell to the most col- figure in medicine today Pepper 50 formed Newsweek Rome bureau in 1357 and headed it j for 11 years Two other books have come out of his time in The Pope's concerned with the inner workings of the Vatican and An Artist and the Pope which he wrote with sculptor Manza about great friendship with Pope John XXIII Pepper and his wife Beverly a known sculptress live in Rome with their children citizen of Olona and everyone on the City Council snook his hand sense of glory and victory continued as the town band led Barnard Barbara and vanna with Mayor Beretta still wearing his bright sash through the streets En route to Giovanna's home the escort took Barnard's car past the band in order to get away from a running mob of paparazzi or photographers They shouldn't have done that said Barnard and waved through the back window at the marching musicians a swaying field of gleaming trumpet and trombone of hands and noses red in the winter air of eyes rising above musical scores to note Barnard's ing hand while a crescendo of Santander broke forth to signal their glorious hour of triumph even though they had been left be- hind with the unwanted paparazzi The said Barnard They're Continued on Page fiA Col 1