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Arizona Daily Sun from Flagstaff, Arizona • 1
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Arizona Daily Sun from Flagstaff, Arizona • 1

Publication:
Arizona Daily Suni
Location:
Flagstaff, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE WEATHER Flagstaff Williams Peaks -Grand Canyon Reservation areas: Mostly sunny, continued warm. Winslow Holbrook area: Variable cloudiness. Verde Valley: Fair and warmer. (For Details See Page 13) mi Tuesday, June 14, 1966 Price 10c Phone 774-4545 FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA, CITY OF SEVEN WONDERS Defeated 6 Alive on Damg "S' v'''- A Revaluation Homeowner May Get His Taxes Boosted Again This Supreme Court Now, it could get a little ridiculous. Under the new ruling handed Vol 2o No 254 down yesterday, whenever police make an arrest they must: 1.

Tell the suspect he has the right to stay silent. 2. Tell him that anything he says may be used against him in court. 3. Tell him he has the right to have an attorney with him before any questioning.

4. Tell him that if he wants an attorney but cant afford one, an attorney will be provided for him free. 5. Tell him that after hearing all the above and he still doesnt want a lawyer and is willing to be questioned, he may be, providing he reached his decision knowingly and intelligently. 6.

But, after he agrees to be questioned, he can shut off the questions any time after they have started, whether or not he has an attorney. Undoubtedly all of these requirements would be very easy to meet if every criminal was apprehended in a police station. However, there are some who carry guns and knives and clubs and just dont take lightly to being arrested. How about a Chicago cop tonight? A thousand angry Puerto Ricans have been battling police there for the past two nights. More of the same is promised.

Youre the cop. You attempt to arrest a gun-toting, half-crazy rioter that youve caught looting a store. In the five minutes it takes you to read all the new rules, hes shot you six times and a hundred buddies of his are there to help him do the job right. In the serenity of the Supreme Court chambers this new rule may sound completely logical. But with bullets zipping past your ear its an entirely different story.

What about the individual rights of a police officer? Like the one that says he is entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? Especially life. Motion CHICAGO (AP) have been battling Puerto Rican two nights were on the use today. The department O.W. Wilson, integration of and put a new charge of the the riot area. Seven Puerto wounded in night.

An eighth night. Police more than 1,000 the rioting control early Wilson directed commanders higher rank are call for use of crowd control. that the presence night fanned Capt. James recently chosen in a Near North district, was a territory morning. Tom Nielson, local troop master, directed the activities with Don C.

C. Kimball speaking. Kimball is the Chief Executive of the Grand Canyon Council of Boy Scouts. Members of the church and community attended the ceremonies. (SUNfoto) OLD GLORY To commemorate Flag Day and to dedicate the new flag pole, local scouts troops 27, 28, and 127 present the colors of both the original 13 star flag and todays 50 star flag.

The ceremonies were held at the LDS Church on 625 East Cherry at 9:30 this PHOENIX (AP) Pima County Assessor Jack Bade predicts residences will be the hardest hit Arizona properties under revaluation. Bade made the forecast Monday at a meeting between county assessors and State Revaluation Director Steve Spear. Spear said 1968 will be the earliest that property can be taxed on equalized assessed valuations from his office. Spear said that when the equalized property valuations are placed on the state tax rolls for 1968, a special board of review may have to be set up to hold extended hearings for property owners. Agreed! It Was a Bad Night Out EAST LANSING, Mich.

(AP) Trapped five hours in a rain-torm andiin a barrel 250 feet up a radio tower guy wire, a steeplejack was rescued in todays wee hours. Buffeting winds and rain made everything slick. It was a lousy way to spend the night, said Sam Schreiber, 58, of nearby Leslie, once he was on the ground again unharmed, except for a cold, windswept soaring. Schreiber, who described himself as a steeplejack all my life, said hed go back up and finish the tower maintenance job he set out to do at WKAR, the educational outlet of Michigan State University. Fifty-gallon barrels, lifted by mechanical hoists and hooked to guy wires, raise steeplejacks to their jobs and usually bring them smoothly down.

But Schreiber got stuck the equivalent of 25 stories up. Current legislation provides only 10 days a year for county supervisors to conduct such hearings. Spear said this probably will be inadequate. In a vote of association members, the assessors asked the legislature at its next session to end the present choice mobile home owners have been paying vehicle lieu taxes or regular property taxes. A pay raise for themselves also may be sought by the assess jrs.

The assessors agreed with Spear that property replacement costs rather than higher selling prices should determine the valuations. The group decided to seek a formula which would value household furnishings at a uniform percentage of the valuation of a house in order to avoid having to make a door-to-door check of homes. Bade said taxpayer suits are expected to test the new evaluations. He and Pinal County Assessor Wyly Parsons have suggested that Arizona consider Californias arrangement by which a review board supervises county assessments ruled unfair by a data-processing system which Spear plans. Bade was critical of Gila County Assessor Margarite Harding Webbs absence from the meeting which members of the State Tax Commission attended.

Yuma Cannon Blazes Trail YUMA (AP) The firing of research projectiles 80 miles into the ionosphere Monday night left phosphorous trails visible in Phoenix and southern Arizona points. Two shots were fired from the Yuma Proving grounds as part of a test in Project HARP (high altitude research project), sponsored by McGill University, Fellow steeplejack Bob Fin-, Montreal, and the Army ley, 30, of Eaton Rapids, Ballistics Research Laboratory, climbed 600 feet up the The projectiles, fired from a foot tower and freed Schreib- 1 19 V2-foot-long gun, carry scien-ers hoist ropes, which had be- tific instruments for of come entangled with the guy phenomena associated with the line. ionosphere. Traffic, Paving Top Council Discussion 9 Reinecke Proposal Blocked WASHINGTON (AP) Back-ers of the Colorado River Basin development bill struck down a motion today which would have knocked two proposed giant hydroelectric canyon dams out of the measure. By an 11 to 6 vote, the House Interior Reclamation subcommittee rejected the motion by Rep.

Ed Reinecke, to delete from the bill authorization for a $500-million Hualapai Dam and the $290-million Marble Canyon Dam. Pending before the committee when it recessed for the day was a motion to eliminate only Hualapai, which would be in Bridge Canyon and is generally known as the Bridge Canyon Dam Project. Rep. Morris Udall, a chief sponsor of the Colorado River bill, expressed confidence the committee would also defeat the Hualapai Dam motion. The committee approved an amendment by Udall to write into the measure an agreement reached recently by Arizona and New Mexico interests regarding division of waters of the Colorado River for the proposed Hooker Dam in New Mexico.

Under the amendment, New Mexico would receive 18,000 additional acre-feet annually. This would be increased to 30,000 acre-feet if and when a project for importing additional water into the Colorado River Basin is constructed. One section of the bill calls for a study to determine the feasibility of bringing wanter into the basin. Although no potential source is named, the most likely source is the Columbia River Basin. Rep.

Thomas S. Foley, is expected to offer a motion to strike that section from the bill. The subcommittee may meet Wednesday after an open meeting of the full committee. If not, it will next meet on Thursday, as regularly scheduled. Subcommittee chairman Walter Rogers, said it was possible but unlikely that the group would finish action on the bill this week.

Traffic Signal Study Begins Motorists are alerted that a special traffic signal study wiU be conducted this week at the intersection of Santa Fe Avenue and North San Francisco street. City Manager Harry Field reports that the study will take place Thursday, Friday, andSat-urday. Policemen will be on duty at the intersection to help direct traffic. The test Thursday is scheduled from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., with hours for the other two days yet to be determined.

The study is to determine possibilities on use of the traffic lights while trains have streets blocked. Bout With Roll Comes Out O.K. A Ponderosa Paper employe considers himself lucky today. Jim Reese, according to a company spokesman, is only likely to feel a little stiff following a scrap with an 1,800 pound roll of paper this morning. The roll fell, hitting Reese, but he was reported home with only bruises after an examination at Flagstaff Community Hospital showed no bones broken or other injuries.

I 4 Police who rioters in a neighborhood for given new orders of police dogs superintendent, also ordered two-man squads commander in district encompassing Northwest Side Ricans were rioting Monday was shot Sunday fought with persons before was brought under today. that only district or officers of authorized to police dogs in He said he feels of dogs Sunday the disorders. Holzman, tnly to clean up' vice Side night club assigned to command that embraces the Puerto Rican section raked by disorders. Wilson, in integrating two-man patrols, decreed that Negroes, Latin-Americans, Jews and others of minority groups shall not work together when there are two-man teams available for integration. Thirty-seven arrests were made last night and early today, making a total of 81 seized during the two nights of violence.

All seven of the wounded were Puerto Ricans. Police said one of the wounded was shot by a policeman, the others by stray shots fired by rioters. New Trial For Miranda Is Sought PHOENIX (AP) A new trial will be sought for Ernesto A. Miranda, whose conviction for kidnap-rape of an 18-year-old girl in Phoenix was overturned Monday by the U.S. Supreme Court.

My God! Maricopa County Atty. Robert Corbin exclaimed when he heard of it. If that is the ruling, its a lot stronger than anticipated. Attorney John J. Flynn, who carried the Miranda case to the nations highest court, said he was surprised by the scope of the ruling.

Flynn said he doubts that any U.S. law enforcement agency is in step with it. Flynn said the decision means Miranda wiU get a new trial after being convicted and sentenced to concurrent terms of 20 to 30 years in prison. The high court agreed with Flynn that Mirandas confession was obtained by police before the accused was advise of his rights to counsel to the Constitution. Flynn said its hard to say if the decisions will affect cases which already have been ap-appealed and acted on whether they can be heard again.

But he and Corbin agreed that some cases being appealed would be affected. Meanwhile, Corbin said he. has advised Maricopa County investigating officers to make certain that accused persons know their constitutional rights. distribution throughout the country. The council deferred appointment of an associate police judge pending further study.

City Manager Harry Field recommended that Robert Merrill, a night clerk in the police department, be named to the position. The council took no action on a request by Jacks LockandKey Service to establish regulations and permits on duplication of keys and key-making. The council approved an application for a transfer of a liquor license from James A. Buntin, 2750 E. Santa Fe, to Dewey L.

Boyd of the same address; and an original application for Walter B. Kemper of the Red Bull Restaurant. Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy U8 HP VWX 68J ft Th Pa Np Pu Am Cm Bk 0 Ho Er Fm By JOHN SWINGLE Traffic and paving took up a large portion of the meeting of the Flagstaff City Council this morning, with one of the major items being plans for a left turn lane on Santa Fe avenue between the underpass and street. The left turn lane will be instituted on a trial basis with parking eliminated on the south side of Santa Fe. Councilman Elmer Hubbard said he personally would like to see a left turn lane all the way from Elden to the junction of Santa Fe andRt.

89. Theres been too many accident involving left turns, he said, adding that every businessman he has talked to along the route said it couldnt be put in fast enough to suit them. Councilmen decided to meet with state highway engineers when they are in Flagstaff to discuss the situation. In another downtown traffic problem, the council rejected the recommendation of the planning and zoning commission that the no off-street parking allowance for the area bordered by Agassiz, Beaver, Santa Fe, and Birch be eliminated. The elimination of the clause would have required that any new tenant or owner beginning business in the area after the property had been vacant six months would have to provide off-street parking as city code specifies.

A letter was read to the council from the Arizona State Highway Department confirming the original plan to complete and open simultaneously the Flagstaff portion of Interstate 40 and the interchange east of the city. A letter from the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad in regard to the crossing at the Diamond Trailer Park was explained to the council by Mayor Rollin Wheeler. He said the crossing is presently a private crossing and that it is hoped to acquire it as a public crossing. Crossing gates would cost an estimated $30,000. Regarding a frontage road east of the Diamond grade separation, Mayor Wheeler reported that officials felt such a request could jeopardize expediency on the grade separation itself.

Mayor Wheeler reported on talks with the Ponderosa Paper Co. concerning water usage and the drilling of a new well. The city agreed to give the firm until March 1, 1967 to start drilling a new well, or before if water needs become critical, and also to increase use charges from the present 35 cents per 1,000 gallons to 50 cents per 1,000 gallons. Ponderosa asked for the additional time to allow a study of operations. With some 200 employes the firm uses approximately 400,000 gallons of water a day.

An ordinance regarding buildings and land use in all residential zoning districts was placed on second reading. The proposal allows condominium-type residences, subject to city approval, and establishes guidelines on planning of such. Jack Redmond, manager of the Flagstaff Chamber of Commerce, and W. W. Davis, president of the group, appeared before the council to explain the accomplishments and plans of the chamber.

Redmond said last year Flagstaff was the site for 30 conventions with some 5,200 delegates spending an estimated $500,000 in the city. During 1965 the chamber made 65,651 mailings to tourists, handled 42,720 telephone calls, and had 21,533 persons visit the chamber center. In asking for a budget in-crease from the city of Redmond said the chamber is planning expanded activities for the coming year including a 15-minute film for MRS. BRADSHAW Mrs. Bradshaw To Head Nurse Staff at FCH Mrs.

Florence Bradshaw, a registered nurse since 1933, has taken over as Director of Nursing Services at Flagstaff Community Hospital. Mrs. Bradshaw comes here from a position as assistant head nurse-medical at Lutheran Hospital in Denver. Two immediate goals were set by Mrs. Bradshaw, including better salaries for staff nurses and beginning a program of in-service training by this fall.

Flagstaff Community Hospital in my opinion, is better staffed with registered nurses than any place Ive been, she said. Included in her background is Director of Nurses at Ukiah, General Hospital and a similar position at the Las Cruces, N.M.t hospital, where she worked under present Flagstaff administrator Lawrence Gold. She has also served as administrator for the Lutheran Society, who operate hospitals in Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota and Colorado. An U.S. army nurse from 1942-44, she rose to the rank of major.

Mrs. Bradshaw received her nurse training at St. Vincents Hospital in Sioux City, Iowa. Her training also includes two years post graduate work in psychiatry. the classes, are from left, Richard Rodgers, Sunnyside High, Tucson; Stoops, Preston; Alan Chesley, Eloy; Fred Wilson, CatalinaHigh, Tucson; and Marlin Prowell, Buena High, Ft.

Hua-chuca. The 20th annual Boys State will be in session on the NAU campus through Friday morning. BOYS STATE LAW SCHOOL Flagstaff attorneys William R. Preston and Dan Stoops are serving as instructors for the Boys State law School, held yesterday and today on the Northern Arizona University campus as a part of the citizenship program. Shown above, during a question and answer session following one erf.

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