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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 32

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Los Angeles, California
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32
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Aug. 2, 1973 Los Angeles Times WEATHER REPORTS, FORECASTS NATIONAL FORECAST FOR AUG. 2, 1973- 30.20 30.10 30.00 30.00 29.90 29.90 30.00 29.90 030.00 77 SEATTLE SAULT STE. MARIE BOSTON 30.20 092 BISMARCK PORTLAND GREAT FALLS 90 BUFFALO NEW YORK BOISE MINNEAPOLIS. 98 ST.

PAUL 59. 84 DETROIT EUREKA 0 87 RENO' CASPER OMAHA CHICAGO 98 0 98. 85 SALT LAKE CITY 0.80 RICHMOND 85. 0 CINCINNATI SAN FRANCISCO DENVER KANSAS CITY 80. NASHVILLE 105 LAS VEGAS 86 0 ALBUQUERQUE OKLAHOMA CITY 847 85 VLOS ANGELES 910 0 87.

088 860 101 AMARILLO LITTLE ROCK BIRMINGHAM PHOENIX DALLAS0 88 900 EL PASO JACKSONVILLE 93 29.90 HOUSTON 88 SAN ANTONIO NEW MIAMI 30.00 30.00 CORPUS FRIDAY FORECAST CHRISTI 30.00 BROWNSVILLE LUIS OBISPO1 BAKERSFIELD 55 74102 SANTA MARIA PALMDALE SANTA BARBARA 60 72 67 SAN OXNARD BURBANK BERNARDINO 6172 65 91 LOS ANGELES 065 98 CIVIC CENTER RIVERSIDE COLD WARM STATIONARY OCCLUDED SANTA MONICA, 65 86 65 FRONT FRONT FRONT FRONT WATER 6470 ANAHEIM TEMP. 67 SANTA ANA 110 65 BEACH PALM LONG SPRINGS 63 72 CLEAR CLOUDY CLOUDY COSTA MESA NEWPORT LOWS AND HIGHS WATER SAN DIEGO WIND DIRECTION RAIN SNOW FOR THURSDAY TEMP. 65 67 Prepared in cooperation with the National Weather Service Western, National Forecasts SOUTHLAND FORECAST LOS ANGELES: Late night and early morning low clouds and local fog, otherwise mostly sunny today and Friday. Highs both days in mid 80s. BEACHES: Night and morning coastal low clouds and fog, otherwise fair today and Friday, Highs today near 70; water, 65.

-MOUNTAINS: Variable clouds today and Friday with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers. Highs today, 80 to 90. SAN FERNANDO VALLEY: Patchy early morning fog lower portions, otherwise fair today and Friday. Highs today in upper 80s to mid 90s. SAN GABRIEL VALLEY: Patchy early morning fog lower portions, otherwise fair today and Friday.

Highs today in upper 80s and mid 90s. SAN BERNARDINO-RIVERSIDE: Mostly fair today and Friday with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers near mountains. Highs today in mid 90s. ORANGE COUNTY: Night and morning coastal low clouds and fog, otherwise fair today and Friday. Highs today near 70 at beaches to low and mid 80s inland.

UPPER AND LOWER DESERTS: High clouds at times with widely scattered afternoon and early evening thundershowers today and Friday. Highs today, 100 to 108 upper valleys and 108 to 116 lower valleys. SAN DIEGO COUNTY: Night and morning low clouds, otherwise fair coastal sections today and Friday. Charce of af. ternoon and evening thundershowers hear mountains.

Highs today, 77 to 82 coastal and 87 to 92 inland. Smog Report Los Angeles County Air Pollution Control District's first stage smog alerts based on peak reading: ozone, .50 parts per million; carbon monoxide, 50 com: nitrogen oxides (nitric oxide plus nitrogen dioxide), 3 ppm. The air quality standards of the State Air Resources Board do not involve peak readings, but are for a specific time period: ozone, .10 ppm for 1 carbon monoxide, 10 ppm for 12 nitrogen dioxide, .25 ppm for 1 hr. FORECAST Maximum land valleys, .10 to .15 sin. There light smog and haze as low as ozone levels today will .20 ppm in the central ppm in the coastal sections will be moderate smog elsewhere in the basin.

will reduce early afternoon one to three miles. Central Los Angeles Northwest, Southwest Coastal South Coastal Southeast West San Fernando Valley East San Fernando Valley West Gabriel Valley East San Gabriel Valley Pomona-Walnut Valley Orange County EXTENDED FORECAST SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS: Extended outlook Saturday through Monday-Some night and morning fog and low clouds near the coast and afternoon I cloudiness in the mountains otherwise mostly sunny warm days and clear nights. High temperatures ranging from lower 70s near the beaches to near 100 inland coastal valleys and mostly in 80s in mountains. Overnight lows mostly In 60s coastal sections and 45 to 60 in mountains. WESTERN FORECASTS SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA: Fair through Friday except fog or low clouds along the coast extending inland late night and early mornings.

Highs today and Friday in the 60s near the coast to the 70s Inland. Small craft advisory for west to southwest winds-15 to 35 mph Suisun Bay and west Delta area. Elsewhere, winds westerly 10 to 20 mph afternoons. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA: Scattered afternoon and evenina thundershowers otherwise fair through Friday. Little temperature change.

High today, high Friday at Susanville, 98, 96. SIERRA NEVADA: Scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers otherwise fair through Friday. Little temperature change. SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY: Fair through Friday but chance of few thundershowers Sierra Nevada foothills afternoons and evenings. Little temperature change.

Highs 95 to 105 both days. Northwesterly winds 5 to 15 mph except westerly to 25 mph Delta area. SANTA LUIS OBISPO I COASTAL AREA: Fog or low clouds extending inland nights and early mornings otherwise fair through Friday. Little temperature change. Highs in the 60s near the coast and in the mid-70s to mid-80s inland both days.

Northwest winds 10 to 20 mph afternoons. MONTEREY BAY AREA: Fog and low clouds nights and mornings otherwise fair through Friday. Highs in the mid-60s near the coast to the high 70s inland both days. Winds west to northwest 10 to 15 mph afternoons. NATIONAL OUTLOOK FOR FRIDAY Dallas 89 70 San Francisco 70 53 Portland, Ore.

79 56 Seattle 78 53 Las Vegas 107 78 Salt Lake City 95 66 Boston 78 65 New York 82 Washington, D.C. 84 Miami Detroit Chicago 53 Kansas City New Orleans Houston Milwaukee 76 57 I WESTERN WEATHER SUMMARY High pressure continued to cover the northeastern Pacific with two main centers. One 1030 millibar cell located 700 miles west of Eureka and another 1026 I millibar center in the northern Gulf of Alaska. Low clouds extended out off the Pacific Coast from 300 miles to 700 miles allowing partly cloudy skies during the afternoons. Off the Southern California coast the marine layer was about 1000 feet deep with moderate onshore pressure gradients.

Weak low pressure prevailed over the entire western U.S., with the thermal trough extending northward from the Colorado River Valley into eastern Washington. Wednesday's Temperatures, Summaries LOCAL TEMPERATURES and minimum temperatures at Southern California points, as reported to the Los Angeles office of the National Weather Service, were as follows: Station- Max. Min. Los Angeles 86 66 Los Angeles Airport 76 63 Apple lalley 100 66 Bakersfield 103 67 Barstow-Dagget 108 81 Beaumont 97 65 Beverly Hills 61 Big Bear Lake 49 Blythe Culver City 64 El Centro ......110 81 Fresno 103 71 Hollywood-Burbank 90 66 Lake Arrowhead 87 59 Lake Elsinore 70 Long Beach 68 Montebello 62 Mt. Needles Wilson 90 72 83 Newport Beach 65 Northridge 64 Ontario 95 65 Palmdale 101 66 San Pasadena 63 Bernardino 67 San Gabriel 64 Santa Ana 66 Santa Barbara 70 60 Santa Maria Santa Monica 68 Thermal 111 83 Torrance 78 61 86 59 Station- Max.

Min. Albuquerque 88 61 Billings 95 60 Boise 94 65 Casper 87 Great Flagstaff Falls 83 45 Helena 96 Las Vegas 106 Phoenix 106 Portland, Ore. 87 Reno Salt Lake City San Francisco Seattle Spokane Tucson Yuma 110 84 RELATIVE HUMIDITY High, low, TEMPERATURES, AND FAR WEST PRECIPITATION Precipi- FOREIGN CITIES (Local time) City- Weather Temp. Athens, 2 p.m. cloudy 82 Berlin, 1 p.m.

Clear 75 Heng Kong, 8 p.m. Clear London, noon Clear Madrid. p.m. Clear Manila, p.m. Moscow p.m.

cloudy Paris. p.m. Partly cloudy Rome, p.m. Clear Saigon. p.m.

Cloudy Tokyo, 9 p.m. cloudy VITAL RECORDS Deaths Funeral Announcements ADELMAN, Philip. Malinow Silverman Mortuary. AITKINS, James M. J.

T. Oswald Mortuary, N.H. ALMEIDA, Manuel beloved father of Marcy Villa and Ray Campos, brother of Hermenia Salcido and Marie Feamott. Blessing today, 10 a.m. at ter Mortuary, 3120 W.

Main Alhambra. Interment Calvary Cemetery. ANDERSON, Caroline beloved wife of William Anderson, loving mother of Marian J. Jack and Florence Fletcher, sister of William Vorpahl and Theresa Mosel, also survived by 4 grandchildren and 1 greatgrandchild. Services Friday, 11 a.m.

in the Little Chapel of the Dawn. Gates, Kingsley Gates, Santa Monica, directors. BARON, Anna. Mount Sinai Mortuary. BERNSTEIN, Freda.

Groman Mortuary, directors. BERNSTEIN, Jack. Services 1 p.m., Thursday at Courts of TaNaCH Chapel, Mount Sinai Memorial Park. Mount Sinai Mortuary. BONAWITZ, Evelyn, died July 31, 1973, a resident of Irvine, survived by husband Karl, mother Mrs.

Fred Rossback, sisters Dorothy Rossback and Mrs. William Harper. Rosary Thursday, 7:30 p.m. and Mass Friday, 11 a.m., both at Our Lady Queen of Angeles Catholic Church. Contributions for Memorial Masses may be made in lieu of flowers.

BaltzBergeron Funeral Home, Corona Del Mar. BOOTH, Carl Homer, late of Los Angeles. Services, Friday, 10 a.m. at Kiefer Eyerick Mortuary, Glendale. BUTALA, John George, of Chatsworth, survived by wife Mary Ann, daughters Mary Ann Cipiranio of Brookfield, Ohio, Joan C.

Butala of Chatsworth, Genevieve Campbell of Irvine, sons William Butala of Granada Hills, Richard Butala of Sepulveda, Michael Butala of Costa Mesa, Anthony Butala of Chatsworth (Anthony is a member of the "Letterman's" singing group with Capitol Records), sister Ann Butala, brothers William and Mike Butala all of Sharon, also survived by 24 grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary Friday, 8 p.m. and Requiem Mass Saturday, 9 a.m., both from St. John Udes Catholic Church. Interment San Fernando Mission Cemetery.

Utter- McKinley's Mission Hills, directors. CARR, Lawrence Virgil, survived by 5 brothers and 3 sisters. Visitation 4 to 9 p.m. Thursday at Pierce Brothers Hollywood Mortuary. Services, p.m., Friday at the South Hollywood Presbyterian Church, 1055 N.

Normandie Pierce Brothers' Hollywood, directors. COLLINS, William H. Forest Lawn-Glendale, CONNOR, Mrs. John J. .03 GANZFRIED, Sadie.

Malinow Silverman Mortuary. GRUBER, Selma. Groman-Eden Mortuary. GRYDE, Tilda C. Cunningham O'Connor, L.A.

DAVIS, George beloved husband of Keitha, father of Stuart R. Mudder, also survived by 2 grandchildren Laurie and Stuart. Visitation 1 p.m., to 9 p.m. Thursday, at Pierce Brothers Mortuary, 417 N. Maple Dr.

Services 1 p.m. Friday at All Saints Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills. Santa Monica Blvd. at Camden Dr. Pierce Brothers' Beverly Hills, directors.

DEASY, Peter beloved father of Mrs. Kenneth Kast, Victoria Ann and Michael P. Deasy, brother of Eleanor M. and Rev. James J.

Deasy, S. uncle of Rev. J. Thomas Deasy, S.J. Rosary this evening, 8 p.m.

at Callanan Mortuary Funeral Mass Friday, 10 at St. Gregory Church, 9th and Norton. DIGIURO, Marie, beloved wife of Guy Digiuro, loving sister of Jim Wukjevich. Rosary Friday, 7:30 p.m. and Mass Saturday, 10 a.m.

both at St. Peter Church, 1039 N. Broadway. Pierce Brothers' Simone, directors. EHLERT, Mrs.

Fay, Dramatist and Writer, widow of the late Max Henry Ehlert (Chilean Consul at Chicago). Private services were held at Forest Lawn-Glendale. Forest Lawn Mortuary. FIFFER, Edward. Services to be held at Veterans Administration Cemetery Chapel, Friday, 9 a.m.

band- Willen Hollywood ary, directors. (626-6260). FENNER, Julius. Groman-Eden Mortuary. FERGUSON, Harriet Morris, beloved mother of Dr.

M. Richard Ferguson of Pacific Palisades, Jane Todd of Castro Valley, also 6 grandchildren. Services pending. Pierce Brothers' Santa Monica, directors. FINKEL, Ben, beloved husband of Mrs.

Esther Finkel, brother of Jack Finkel. Services 2 p.m., Saturday in the Little Church of the Flowers, Forest Lawn-Glendale. Forest Lawn Mortuary. FISHER, Frieda Ruth. Graveside services Friday, 11 a.m.

at Beth Olam Cemetery. Groman Mortuary, directors. FRANKEL, Stella. Malinow Silverman Mortuary. FRAWLEY, Sheila Agnes, aged 14, beloved daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Patrick Joseph Frawley of 618 Club View Los Angeles, sister of Mrs. Gerock Hurley Swanson of Tulsa, Patrick Joseph Frawley III of the home, Miss Mary Louise Frawley of New York City, Miss Eileen Jopsehine Frawley of the home, Michael Paul Frawley of the home, Miss Joan Therese Frawley of the home, Miss Barbara Irene Frawley of the home, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J.

Frawley Sr. of Managua, Nicaragua and the deceased Mr. and Mrs. Michael Patrick Clancy of Vancouver. Funeral arrangements pending.

Callanan Mortuary, directors. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Los Angeles Orphanage Guild or St. Vincent's Hospital. FRIEDENBERG, Ann beloved mother of Louis Friedenberg, Murray Howard and Stanley E. Friedenberg, sister of Ethel Kraus, Margereta Klein and Helen Klein, dear grandmother of Chris, Mark, Karen, Randi and Howard, also survived by 2 great-grandchildren.

Services, 3 p.m., Friday at Courts of TaNaCH Chapel, Mount Sinai Memorial Park. Mount Sinai Mortuary, Family prefers donations to the Verdugo Hills Hebrew Center. Visitation Thursday, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Funeral services Friday, 1 p.m.

at Grace Chapel. Inglewood Cemetery-Mortuary, directors (678-1251), HALCHESTER, Martha E. (Marti). Pierce Brothers' Hollywood, HALL, Monroe J. Mortuary HORWITZ, Anna.

Mount Sinai Mortuary, ISENBERG, Anna, beloved mother of Alvin and Sidney Isenberg and Evelyn Rifkin; also survived by 6 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren. Services Friday, 12 noon at .05 Groman-Eden Chapel in Eden Memorial Park. .28 Mortuary, directors. IWATA, Fusae, beloved wife of James, mother of Ben and Ken of Seattle, Mrs. Ann Martinelli and Amy, sister of Noboru Tanimura of Watsonville.

2 52 Services were held July 31 at 1.13 the Fukui Mortuary Chapel in the Garden, Rev. Fujikado offi.03 ciating. JUDELOWITZ, Isadore. Groman Mortuary, directors. KARR, Yetta.

Mount Sinai Mortuary, KELLERMAN, Elmer J. Lawn Hollywood Hills. Deaths, Funeral Announcements KLUCKHOHN, Richard P. Kluck- beloved husband of Lucy hohn, father of Bruce and Gullbert Kluckhohn. Memorial services Thursday, August 2, 1973, 10 Martin in the Fields Church, 7136 Winnetka Canoga Park, Calif.

In lieu of flowers. send donations to the Richard Kluckhohn Memorial Library Fund at the California State University, Northridge, Mortuary, Calif. diWestwood Village rectors. KNISELEY, Charles. Glen Haven Mortuary KOPPE, Evan loving husband of Beverly Normanly Koppe, father of Jeffrey Gregory Christopher and Stephen Koppe and Mrs.

John Hawley, stepfather of Eric R. Carson, son of Edgar J. Koppe, brother of Mary Alice Wilcox. Memorial service Friday, a.m., at Pacific View Cemetery Chapel, Newport Beach. an Mission Mortuary, directors.

KRIVORSHA, Art. Groman Mortuary, directors. LACY, Walter P. Ill, passed away July 30, 1973, survived by mother and father Walter and Mitzi P. Lacy sisters Jennifer and Jeanne and Judy Davis, brother Thomas Warde, grandparents Walter and Florence Lacy.

Graveside services 10:30 a.m., Friday at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills. Praiswater Funeral Home, Van Nuys. MAIN, John beloved husband of Frances, loving father of Michael brother of R. Roy Main. Services Friday, 1 p.m.

in the Chapel of Smith Salsbury, Culver City. Interment Inglewood Park Cemetery. MINER, Mabel beloved wife of Lucius Frye Miner, mother of Milton A. and Harry C. Miner and Mrs.

Jane L. Burton, also survived by 6 grandchildren. Service 11 a.m., Friday in the Little Church of the Flowers, Forest Lawn--Glendale. Forest Lawn Mortuary, MOSELY, Daisy M. Mortuary MUSE, Charles Gordon.

Forest Lawn Hills. PAYNE, Walter survived by wife Majel of Pasadena, son Howard W. Payne of Concord, daughter Eleanor Ford of Missouri, brother Wilbur Payne of Missouri, sister Myrtle Beard of Waterford and Zola Robnette of Missouri, 6 grandchildren. Services 2 p.m., Friday at the Lamb Funeral Home, Pasadena. PINELLI, John.

Rosary Thursday, 7 p.m. and Funeral Mass Friday, 9:30 a.m., both at St. Genevieve Church. J. T.

Oswald Mortuary, North Hollywood, directors. QUINELL, George Howard. Glen Haven Mortuary RATZLAFF, Lucile G. SCISOREK, Ann. Groman Mortuary, directors.

SEGAL, Dorothy Ouriess. Groman Mortuary, directors. SHORT, Odessa. Harrison-Ross Mortuary SINGER, Dr. Isay, M.D.

Groman Mortuary, directors. SMITH, Matilda. Harrison-Ross Mortuary Funeral services Friday, 2:30 p.m. in Memorial Chapel. Rose Hills Memorial Park, Whittier.

Rose Hills Mortuary, directing. RILEY, Clarence W. Sr. Callanan Mortuary, directors. ROSEN, Freda (Fritzie), mother of Jackie Berman and Alma Berkus, beloved sister of Dr.

Herman B. Maltz, devoted grandmother of Marianne Bardsley, Maureen Berkus, Phillip Berman and Cathy Berman. Services were conducted at Hillside Memorial Park under the direction of Groman Mortuary, The family prefer contributions to the Spastic Children's Foundation, 1307 W. 105th Los Angeles. ROSS.

Sam. Malinow Silverman Mortuary. SCHALLETT, Morris, beloved husband of Bessie Schalett and loving father of David and Herman Brown; also survived by 5 grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren. Services Thursday, 11 a.m., at Hillside Memorial Park Chapel, Groman Mortuary, directors. SCHWARTZ, Nettie, beloved wife of Philip Schwartz, loving mother of Alvin (Thelma) Schwartz and Shirley (Stanley) Scher, sister of David Hirsch and Frances Wall, also survived by 5 grandchildren.

Services 1 p.m., Friday at Courts of TaNaCH Chapel, Mount Sinai Memorial Park. Mount Sinai Mortuary. prefers donations to the Israel Emergency Fund. SMOUSE, Paul Gordon, E. beloved Smouse, husband of Virginia father of Paul Robert Smouse, brother of Helen Martin, Kenneth Smouse and Shirley Baker, grandfather of Michael Reed.

Services Saturday, 2:30 p.m. at Rainbow Chapel. Rose Hills Memorial Park, Whittier. Rose Hills Mortuary, directing. Interment lone Cemetery, Ione, Oregon.

SPENCE, Judge John C. 1973, aged 60, passed away July 30, member of Long Beach Lodge No. 888. B.P.O.E., Seaside Lodge No. 504, F.

A.M., Scottish Rite, El Bekel Shrine, Past Commander, V.F.W. Post 279, Reserve Officers Association of U.S. and Association of Alumni the Judge Advocate General School of U.S. Army, survived by wife, Betty Joe Spence, sons, E. John Charles C.

Spence, and Spence Brent Ill step- and and 2 Estes children, grand- Ralph and A Patricia Ruzicka children. Service Friday, 12:30 p.m., at Covenant Presbyterian Church, Long Beach. Dr. Hugh David InterBurcham, officiating. ment in Arlington National Cemetery, Fort Meyers, Mortuary, Va.

Shee- Long lar-Stricklin Beach, directors. SWAN, Bette beloved mother of Pamela Perez, of Sylvie and John Nickerson, sister of Russell Bennett. Private memorial services were held. Family requests donations to be made to Shriners Crippled Childrens Hospital, Unit (17 or the Commandery Blind. WALBORN, Minnie beloved mother of Mrs.

Katherine R. ruff Brubaker, and Mrs. Elouise W. Mrs. Betty Brinegar; also survived by great grandchildren and 9 children.

Services 12 noon, Friday in the wee Kirk o' the Forest Lawn-Glendale. Forest Lawn Mortuary, WESTBERG, Ruth E. Forest Lawn-Glendale. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of our dear mother MADELYENE WYATT Deep in the heart lies a picture of a loved one laid to rest. In memories frame we shall keep it because she was one of the best.

Sadly missed by Charles, Dorothy Marle Funeral Directors Utter 388-2481 CALLANAN MORTUARY LOS ANGELES HO. 2-2266 GARDEN GROVE JE. 4-7576 REED Tapley Geiger Los Angeles 732-6115 North Hollywood 985-0141 Armstrong Family 1201 SO. HOPE ST. 747-9121 Forest Lawn Mortuaries TELEPHONE 254-3131 HOUSE OF HALL 1607 S.

Flower St. RI. 9-2211 McCORMICK MORTUARIES 674-8751 696-6915 641-1042 J. T. Oswald Mortuaries 769-0021 342-3107 ROSE HILLS MORTUARY RAymond 3-5391 OXford Scrub Takes Staging Site of A-Bomb Raids TINIAN -Before dawn on Aug.

6, 1945, the U.S. Air Force B-29 bomber "Enola a thundered down a asphalt and coral runway on the Western Pacific island of Tinian, heading for a place in history. On board was the world's first atomic bomb to be used in combat, which a few hours later was to virtually erase the Japanese city of Hiroshima and kill more than 000 people. it visualize the Twenty eight years later drama of that event from a visit to Tinian. The four bomber runways still run arrowstraight across the northern tip of the island and Senate Votes for Mandatory Fuel Allocation WASHINGTON (P)-The Senate Wednesday adapted an amendment directing the President to establish a national mandatory fuel-allocation program by mid-August.

House action on the measure is expected Friday, before Congress recesses for a month. The Senate vote was 79 to 9. Under the legislation, President Nixon would be required to draw up and carry out a program under which all oil and oil products would be distributed. Prices would be set by the President. Sen.

Henry M. Jackson sponsor of amendment, called it the "last chance for the Congress to preserve competition and a viable independent sector in the oil industry." Jackson said Congress can no longer afford to wait on the Administration to impose an allocation program whenever it sees fit. The measure directs that within 10 days after enactment, the President draw up an allocation program that would take effect 15 days later. The Senate reected, 70 to 20, an attempt by Sen. Dewey F.

Bartlett (R- Okla.) to let the President decide when to impose and when to halt allocation. Funeral Directors PIERCE BROTHERS NEIGHBORHOOD MORTUARIES VALHALLA, MEMORIAL VICTORY AT CAHUENGA MALINOW SILVERMAN JEWISH FUNERAL DIRECTORS RI 9-1051 MouNT SINal JEWISH MORTUARY- CEMETERY 466-4171 MORTUARIES Los Angeles Valley RI. 8-2201 TR. 7-0335 "A INGLEWOOD Cemetery-Mortuary TEL. 678-1251 Cunningham O'Connor ALHAMBRA CU.

3-8666 HOLLYWOOD OL. 5-7280 LOS ANGELES Est. 1898 RI.9-0297 950 W. WASHINGTON Bresee Bros. Gillette.

749-5125 PIERCE-HAMROCK 921 Venice Blvd. R1.9-9231 CEMETERY Lots- Crypts MT. Sinai 8 plots Moses sec. $375 ea. Inc.

care. 4417 Lee, Tucson. ROSE HILI.S-Camelia Lawn. 6 lots. $1900.

2 lots $700, 325-5498 F.L. dbl. lawn crypt incl. 2 vaults only $475. 872-0660, Bkr.

CREMATORIES THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY Complete Cremation Services with dissemination at sea $250 The Dignified Simple Alternative To The Costly Invoived Mortuary Funeral Cemetery System From Reuters are easily identifiable from the air. But on the ground the all-pervasive tangan tangan scrub has taken over the entire area where the 20th Air Force once camped. Cows graze on the old runways. The mixed coral and asphalt surface is still in good condition, apart from a few palm trees growing in the middle of the runways. There is little reminder of Tinian's role in man's only venture into nuclear warfare.

A tortuous journey through a maze of scrublined runways, taxiways and bomber parking areas, all liberally covered with cow dung and jungle debris, finally leads to two small memorial stones. plaque proclaims "number one bomb loading pit. From this loading pit the first atomic bomb ever to be used in combat was loaded aboard a B-29 and dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945." Planted in Palms A few yards away a second plaque commemorates a similar function carried out three days later when the second atomic bomb was loaded aboard the B- 29 "Bock Car" for the raid on Nagasaki. Both pits, however, have been filled in and planted with coconut palms and plumeria bushes.

900-plus native population of Tinian does not make much of its role in the atomic age. Tinians shrug their shoulders as they recall how many years it has been since a tourist came to see the runways of the old "North Field" which is still retained by the U.S. military. Says municipal council member Silvestri Cruz: "Years ago we used to get an average of 50 tourists a month. Now we get none.

What is there for them to see? The whole area has been fenced off with barbed wire now to keep the cows in. Who would want to go to the trouble of coming here just for a couple of plaques?" New a Slaughterhouse Apart from the air field, the only reminders of the war are an empty and battered Japanese military headquarters, and a solidly built Japanese communications center now used as a slaughterhouse by an American operated cow and pig raising company. The headquarters of Gen. Curtis Le May, commander of the 20th Air Force, is now a four-room hotel in an idyllic hill location almost smothered with blooming tropical flowers, bushes and trees. Inge Marcuse; Wife of Radical Philosopher LA JOLLA (P -Inge S.

Marcuse, wife of radical philosopher Herbert Marcuse, died Tuesday night at 59. Mrs. Marcuse was born in Germany, like her husband, and came to the United States with him eight years ago. She was a lecturer in French and German at San Diego State University until this February. Marcuse, 75, a Marxist and author of "OneDimensional Man," is a retired philosophy professor at UC San Diego.

George W. Davis Rites Set for Ex- Mayor of Beverly Hills Funeral services for George W. Davis, 80, former mayor of Beverly Hills, will be conducted at 1 p.m. Friday at All Saints Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills. Mr.

Davis, who died Tuesday at St. John's Hospital, was mayor in 1955 and in 1958-59. He served eight years on the Beverly Hills City Council. He was a past president and director of the Perpetual Savings Loan Assn. and a past president of the Beverly Hills Men's Club.

He leaves his wife, Keitha; a son, Stuart. Modder, and two grandchildren. Gen. Shikin; Former Red Army Leader MOSCOW -Gen. I.

V. Shikin, 67, former chief political commissar of the Red Army, died Monday after a long illness, Izvestia reported Wednesday. His obituary was signed by all 16 members of the Politburo. Gen. Shikin rose to prominence during the German siege of Leningrad during World War II.

In 1942, at the age of 36, he was put in charge of the perilous route across frozen Lake Ladoga to supply the besieged former Czarist capital. Soon afterward he was promoted to chief political commissar for the Leningrad front, a post he held until the end of the war. From 1945 to 1949 he served as chief political commissar for the armed forces. He was the only prominent member of the wartime Leningrad leadership to survive Stalin's last purge. be .25 to .30 ppm in the inand southeast areas, and of the Los Angeles bain the inland valleys and Morning widespread fog maximum visibilities to Carbon Nitrogen Ozone Monoxide Oxides .01 .20 .10 4 ,18 .18 .18 .17 10 .28 .34 .27 .23 .20 .26 11 .44 .11 3 .16 .17 12 .25 .05 .32 .04 11 .39 NATIONAL WEATHER SUMMARY Cloudiness and scattered thundershowers covered much of the eastern third of the nation.

Low clouds and fog still covered much of the West Coast, and a few thundershowers continued in the central Plains and along the Gulf, but the' remainder of the nation enioved sunny and dry weather Wednesday. Significant rainfall was reported at Ellington Air Force Base near Houston where 2.16 inches fell in the six hours. Other notable amounts were received at Lafayette, Louisiana 1.07, Beaumont, Texas .91, and Brunswick, Maine .70. Temperatures around the nation were in the 60s in the western Great Lakes and along the northern Pacific Coast, and in the 90s near the Gulf, in parts of Montana and in the desert southwest. It was in the 70s and 80s throughout the remainder of the U.S.

Corpus Christi, Texas reported a temperature of 98 degrees which set a new record maximum for the date. The national weather forecast for today: Showers and thunderstorms will be prevalent through New England and the Atlantic Coast States. There is a chance for thundershowers also in Colorado, southern Texas and southern Arizona, plus widely scattered areas in the Rockies and Great Basin area. Fair to partly cloudy skies should dominate the rest of the nation. Temperatures will be warming in the northern Mississippi and central Plains, in the upper Great Lakes.

Highs will be in the 60s Valley and in the northern along the northern Pacific Coast, 70s from and New northern England through the Great Lakes Ohio Valley, 90s in the intermountain region and along the Gulf, and CANADIAN STATIONS CANADIAN STATIONS Calgary 84 Edmonton 80 59 Precipi- Montreal 81 tation Ottawa 73 65 .18 Regina 94 Toronto 75 Winnipeg 78 53 Sun, Moon, Tide 466N QUAR 3 Aug. 28 Aug.5 Aug. 14 Aug. 21 THURSDAY, AUG. 2 Sun rises 6:05 a.m., sets 7:53 p.m.

Moon rises 10:25 a.m., sets 10:08 p.m. Sun rises 6:04 a.m., sets 7:54 p.m. Moon rises 9:21 a.m., sets 9:37 p.m. Aug. Low High Low High 2 6:55 0.9 1.4 12:45 4.5 5.2 1.5 High Low High Low 3:16 3.1 8:11 2.2 5.0 1.3 1:49 3.7 7:30 1.6 $2:22 5.1 1-5 p.m.

All time daylight savings. L.A. Observes Social Security Anniversary The Social Security Administration's 38th anniversary was observed in Los Angeles with a proclamation Wednesday of Social Security month, Mayor Tom Bradley presented the proclamation to Joseph Finnell, assistant regional representative. TEMPERATURES THE NATION PRECIPITATION Precipi- Station- Max. Min.

Albany 82 62 Amarillo 82 Anchorage 57 Asheville 82 67 Atlanta 86 Atlantic City 78 Austin 92 Baltimore Birmingham Bismarck Boston Brownsville Buffalo Burlington, Vt. Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W. Va. Charlotte, N.C.

Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, SC Columbus, Ohio Dallas, Ft. Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Hartford 86 Honolulu 88 Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City 78 Little Rock Louisville Memphis Miami Beach 88 Midland, Tex. Milwaukee Minneapolis-St. Paul Nashville 088 New Orieans New York Norfolk.

Va. 88 North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pittsburgh Philadelphia and, Me. Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh Rapid City Richmond St. Louis St.

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