Yuma Daily Sun, The (Newspaper) - May 14, 1968, Yuma, Arizona Editor's Notebook Dad Your Support Is Needed Now By JONES OSBORN The price is 53 for your dinner 1 And with it you get to Coach Bobby Winkles the highly s u c- b a s e- ball coach at Arizona State U n i versity Plus the op- t o see the out- standing high school a t h- letes receive their highly deserved rels The dinner the talk by Coach Winkles and the honoring of athletes from five high schools are the three main ingredients in the Sixth Annual sponsored by Los de Yuma It starts tomorrow night at 7 in the Kota gym This is the one big finale of the high school athletic year and it deserves a good dance The teams have played their best and win or lose they deserve an accolade at year's end If the father of every varsity athlete will take his son to the dinner tomorrow night it will be a huge success son tickets cost only for the pair Shell out Dad Five years from now when your boy has gone off to college or to military service or to a job you'd pay 10 times that much for an evening with him P.S Mothers are invited too Get your tickets at the Chamber the high schools or from Caballeros Put the money from the ister in a bag and give it to the bandit demanded Guadalupe G the Circle K clerk at 6th Avenue and 1st Street noted the caliber revolver the bandit had cocked and pointed and took out of the cash register The bandit grabbed the money before Rueda could put it into a bag The bandit shoved the money into his pocket He then ordered to lie down on the floor behind the counter Rueda did The robber fled on foot west on 1st Street No car was seen or heard Rueda told police the bandit had come into the store about 2 today and walked to the rear Then he Rueda at the checkout counter The robber was described near 21 or 22 years of age weighing about 160 pounds having blue eyes blond crew cut hair and wore a white short-sleeved shirt with grey trousers Police were still searching for the bandit this morning Is Still Here Below normal temperatures will continue in Yuma and at least through today According to the weatherman the thermometer should get up to 82 today A low of 55 is ex- here tonight Normals are 92 and 62 for this date Some gusty winds from the northwest will diminish here night and Wednesday A high of 85 is predicted for day It was 84 in Yuma yesterday and a cool 58 here early this morning Ideal springtime weather However back in 1927 the temperature here was a sizzling 113 degrees and in 1880 it was 51 C the first Ma fro cabinet member plans to leave as secretary of s of who 5 s YUMA 203 Per Copy lOc 16 Pages Yuma Arizona Tuesday May 14 1968 ARIZONA 55 VOTE CHANGE SLIGHT By JOHN BATTIN The Yuma Daily Sun Yuma City Council canvassed vote returns of the April bond election yesterday and found only minor differences with the unofficial count In another important action the Council called for bids and set the date of p.m Wednesday June 19th to open sealed bids on the purchase of water revenue bonds Councilmen and City Attorney John B Wisely Jr upon of fiscal agent Joe Refsnes and bond attorney Fred Rosenfeld Phoenix decided forego the selling of sewage treatment bonds at this time Refsnes and Rosenfeld told the Council that the contract with the U S Navy relating to enues from Marine Corps Air Station is not firm They mated it would take a month or so to firm up the contract but the exact time required is unknown Refsnes and said the general obligation bonds to help finance the sewage ment plant could be sold but Attorney Wisely and the Council decided it would be better to wait because the revenue bond issue relates to the general ob- ligation bond issue as far as financing goes Three Hours The meeting yesterday con- three hours During that time the bond election re- sults were canvassed A page resolution to authorize the water revenue bonds was read and explained by Refsnes and Rosenfeld An estimated timetable Following the acceptance of a bid on the bonds if the in- terest price is right it will take about a month to print the bonds and get the money bonds will require signatures by or Thomas F Allt The dale then will be about July 19th Then the condemnation ment of million must be paid to tiie court by Aug 5th After that a trial must be held to determine the price of im- and betterments to tlie Yuma division of the zona Water Co since Dec 1962 Hold Up The trial however wouldn't necessarily hold up possession by the city of the Arizona Water Turn to Page 2 Col 4 Please FIRST NIGHT IN NEW CITY This general view made shortly before midnight shows hundreds of un- painted A-frame plywood homes erected near the Lincoln Memorial to house the Poor People's demonstrators Additional structures will be erected today is the Washington and the tip of the Capitol dome See story below AP Nebraska Vital to Kennedy OMAHA Neb AP braska Democrats vote today in presidential primary which ien Robert F Kennedy said he must win if he is to become the party's nominee for tlie White Rival campaigner Eugene J McCarthy privately pessimistic about his prospects insisted bat Nebraska alone would not ie crucial to his presidential brt and said he would stay in the race whatever the outcome Richard M Nixon led the Re- publican list with no real con- his managers claimed they had faced sive campaigns for absent GOP Nebraska also was choosing delegates to cast nominating rotes at the national political conventions They will not be by the outcome of the popularity race Vice President Hubert H lumphrey appeared likely to ain a big share of the state's 30 democratic nominating votes Delegates to cast 28 of them were being elected the other wo go automatically to the committee members who avor Humphrey Sixteen Republican ng votes were at stake Nixon vas expected to capture most of hem Youngsters 9 and 10 Held For Murder of Elderly Man MILWAUKEE Wis AP Judge George A Bowman Jr gazed for a moment Monday at the four youngsters aged 9 and 10 before Charge murder third degree The Milwaukee County Court judge then ordered psychiatric examinations for the four youngsters and detention in a county children's home until their May 29 trial date The court was told the girl two boys and a old hooky from school April 23 and decided to throw stones at the home of Theodore Werhun hoping he would come out of they could get in and take some money Technically Despite Bowman's use of the term the children technically are charged with battery in a petition filed in court prior to death The police report which man read to the court said that when Werhun appeared the children began to throw stones Poor People Begin Filling Shanties WASHINGTON A few dozen families today began moving into the hundreds of un- painted plywood Poor People's Campaign shanties taking shape in front of the Lincoln rial Bdb Winkles At All The main speaker for row night's All Sports Banquet will be the coach of sparkling baseball team Bobby Winkles The Sun Devils who have won NCAA title two of tlie past throe years compiled a 755 win record through the nine complete Winkles coached sons Awards won by Winkles arc many 1965 season ho was named Coach of the Year in the college ranks Most re- cently ho was named Coach of the Year in Arizona He has had several to coach in the ranks but prefers to work at the college level les received his master's degree In physical education from the University ot Colorado BOBBY WINKLES Bobby is n native of Switton Ark which he says is so that it's only there thro days a week This is okay it's better than what we have at said a Marks Miss woman as she brushed her hand over the wood sides and the plywood flooring raised off the ground with two-by-four joists We're living in little raggedy houses there so we might as well be she said She re- to give her name Rain Threat Despite chilly winds and a constant threat of rain the camp was buzzing with activity donned aprons and set out to learn the rudiments of carpentry Younger children studied arithmetic at an vised school Mrs Ralph David Abernathy wife of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference dent told a news conference she hoped to weld women of all col- ors together into a new force of womanpower She is convinced she said women could erase poverty immediately if they would work together but she declined to dis- cuss specifics Other caravans of the poor continued their trek to the capital despite n down pour that caught marchers in Greenville Detroit march leaders met to decide their next steps in the wake of a fracas with police that saw five sons injured none seriously at him He was struck by a large rock which knocked him down All continued to throw Werhun died Saturday in a hospital and death was due to pneumonia and heart failure caused by being hospitalized for a leg suffered when he was knocked down Bowman read I don't know the Bowman said later but I think this community the parents of this community better wake up to the responsibility of children Maybe the death of an old man will send out a message this court could never send During the hearing social workers offered sketches oi tlie youngsters backgrounds The family life they had was in the street That's their real family one said Next Talk Session Is Mapped By JOHN JI HIGHTOWER Special Correspondent PARIS AP U.S and Vietnamese negotiators mapped their next moves in the Paris peace talks verbal punches from their headquarters on opposite sides of Paris Ambassador W Averell riman emerging from the U.S after a morning of conferring with h i s advisers said he had been going over the North Vietnamese statement at Monday's session with a mi- to see whether he could find anything tive He indicated he had not had any success so far Al North Vietnamese quarters across the Seine on tlie Left Bank a spokesman said his government did not in- tend to pay ransom to the United States to get it to stop Jie rest of the bombing of North Vietnam That was his response Lo a question whether Hanoi would make a gesture of scaling down the war to encourage the United States to act The talks go into their second full session on Wednesday Today's verbal punches did not appear to change the mood of what has been described as businesslike start Monday They did underscore the point that very hard bargaining lies ahead By Boy MINNEAPOLIS Minn AP A 13 year Minneapolis hoy was held by juvenile today after telling lice he fired a shot that fatally wounded a 59 year old re- cluse while target shooting The victim Water Harvey died in a Minneapolis hospital Monday of a head wound Police said lie boy told of firing at a large piece of card board propped up for a to in a wooded area in north Minneapolis where had been living in shacks Harvey was beneath the cardboard Police said the boy anil his companions were aware Harvey had been injured but were too frightened to say thing Police said that Harvey been seen staggering and ing along nearby tracks but that no one wont to help him because they believed ho was drunk He was found along the tracks about 24 hours after the shooting Restive EL PASO Tex Urquides dean of girls at Pueblo High School in Tucson Ariz believes can youths are growing restive about inadequacies in their cation Inside The Sun Comics 13 Editorial 4 Markets 2 Movies 13 Sports 10 11 Women 7 CAMPAIGN FRIENDS There is no animosity be- tween principals in the run-off election today for dent body president at Stanford University ended last night for Dennis Hayes student body president and Vicky Drake 22 a professional dancer running mostly on her specifications The voting continues through Wednesday AP Ag Stations Here To Be Studied at Meet PHOENIX Ento- L D McCorkindale will try to meet in Yuma with California officials a month to discuss plans for a joint agricultural inspection tion near Winterhaven Calif The Joint Legislative Budget Committee approved the inary meeting today and agreed to send its budget analyst Bob Lawless and representatives of the committee to the meeting McCorkindale told the com- he had a letter from Raymond S Long deputy tor of the California Department of Agriculture suggesting the meeting This is something we ought to get settled as soon as McCorkindale told the committee They California officials are ready to go McCorkindale told the com- that by building a single inspection station in California four stations on the Arizona side could be eliminated saving per year in operating expenses Sen Harold Giss D Yuma declared himself in favor of the project but said he sees a raft of legal problems to be settled He said lie believes a joint ex- of powers passed earlier this year ture may not be adequate Giss raised these Could the Arizona officials issue citations in California where new inspection tion would be What would be done about California traffic to haven arid Bard which would actually not be crossing the state Rep M G Miniken asked if farming in the Yuma area would be adequately since traffic from and Bard could come into Arizona without passing through an inspection station under the proposal You'd have better McCorkindale replied He said that the Bard area of California is so closely connected with Yuma there is no way of stopping agricultural pests from crossing the boundary He noted that Arizona had passed the pink bollworm on to California THE WEATHER 84 5S 74 33 Highest yesterday Lowest this morning Temperature at 11 today Relative humidity at 11 Average high this date Average low this date FORECAST to Wednesday Variable high cloudiness this and tonight Sunny and a Iu warmer Wednesday Gusty west winds 15 to mph this inon tonight a n Wednesday High this afternoon 82 on- tonight 55 Wednesday 85 Sunset Sunrise BURN SCHOOL SEAL The flaming great seal of the Free University of West Berlin is shown on the steps of the administration building where it was dumped after being set afire by a group of students last night The seal bore the Truth Justice Liberty and had a black Berlin bear at its center AP