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The Californian du lieu suivant : Salinas, California • 2

Publication:
The Californiani
Lieu:
Salinas, California
Date de parution:
Page:
2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

2-SALINAS CALIFORNIAN Wednesday, July 12, 1972 Rodeo Eve Parade a Week Away Kiddie Kapers Coming Up Say, kids, get your kostumes and kars ready if you have the knack, you might win in the Kiddie Kapers parade just one week away. The annual parade, which draws crowds of about 15,000, will start at 7 p.m. July 19, the eve of the Calfornia Rodeo. Some 5,000 youngsters, dressed in everything from spaceman outfits to firemen's uniforms, and traveling by every means of conveyance, from floats to decorated bicycles, will kaper. They are to assemble at the new municipal parking lot between Salinas Street and Lin- McGOVERN (Continued From Page 1) of six other candidates for the presidency -will be placed in nomination.

Aides said he would watch the proceedings in case McGovern wants to call him, but re-emphasized "he has ruled out the vice presidency." Lucey also said the southern and border state governors who attended the morning meeting with McGovern were unanimous that Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas would be equally acceptable as a vice presidential candidate. Mills was still scheduled to be nominated for President. Lucey-a longtime McGovern backer -said some thought was being given to "going outside Washington" for a running mate.

McGovern aides kept alive speculation that one name from outside politics being considered was Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers -second largest union in the nation. The withdrawal of Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and Edmund S. Muskie from the scramble left Sen.

Henry M. Jackson as the only would-be nominee with labor support. And Jackson sounded the discord which has persisted despite McGovern's domination of the convention. "I don't expect to get the nomination," Jackson said, "but the attitude of this convention is not one of unanimity. Whoever heard of organized labor on the eve of a possible nomination by the Democratic party being in very strong opposition to" the probable nominee? This has never happened before in the Democratic party." McGovern was also trying to heal the wounds opened when Chicago Mayor Richard J.

Daley was ousted from his convention seat. In a further move to bring the "new politics" together with the old. he asked Lawrence F. O'Brien to stay on as party chairman, instead of replacing him with someone from his own camp. But Louisiana Gov.

Edwin Edwards, a strong anti-Mc-centage Govern man, went home saying it would be a waste of time for him to stay. "McGovern can't win in Pennsylvania," said delegate Hugh Carcella, a steelworkers' local president from Philadelphia. a right-to-work advocate." Alabama delegation chairman Earl Goodwin of Selma complained "the convention has been taken over by McGovern. What he wants he's going to get. But come November, what McGovern wants McGovern is not going to get." Aides to McGovern said the vice presidential selection was still up in the air.

Among the other possibilities being mentioned were Sen. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut, who will make one of McGovern's nominating speeches tonight. It was Ribicoff who drew Daley's ire during antiwar debate on the floor of the tumultuous 1968 convention in Chicago. coin Avenue, south of Alisaly Street, Judging of the entrants will take place at 6 p.m. by the Salinas Business and Professional Women's Club in the parking area.

No formal entry is required. The parade starts at 7 p.m., and will proceed down John Street to Main, down Main to Central Avenue, left on Central to Lincoln Avenue and back to the starting place, Parade entrance is restricted to those 12 years old or young. er, but musical groups OUST (Continued From Page 1) ture both without authorization of local membership. Gonsalves' had acknowledged as early as December, 1971, that he spent as much as 000 for his activities in Salinas, but said $24,000 of Local 748 funds included in that sum had since been repaid. $15,000 Owed Local Other Teamster officials said that as of several months ago there was still some $15,000 owing to Local 748.

In imposing the most severe penalties against Gonsalves, the International ruling also barred Gonsalves' former executive board colleagues from seeking renewed union leadership in the September election. A statement signed by Murray Miller, Teamster general secretary treasurer, noted that "whereas the executive board permitted the operation of the local with a lack of internal controls, it was Brother Goner, salves who took advantage of the absence of control to take unauthorized actions. Gonsalves and his six colleagues have been out of office since Local 748 was placed under trusteeship in January, 1971, with that trusteeship originally scheduled to expire after new elections last March. But Gonsalves was able to obtain an order from the U. S.

District Court in Sacramento delaying the election, which Gonsalves contended should be held when membership is at peak during the fall harvest and not March, when membership is down to about 1,000. Today's disclosure makes that a hollow victory for Gonsalves, whose name will be barred from appearing on the ballot when the election is held. PLAN (Continued From Page 1) two department heads, two county employes, at least one of whom must be a minority; and three representatives of minority communities. The advisory committee will recommend timetables for implementation so that "the perof minority employes will approximate their ethnic composition in the county." The plan provides for annual review of minority hiring by job classification and for the elimination of artificial hiring barriers. Attend Your Public Meetings TONIGHT Monterey County Economic Opportunity Commission, 7:30 p.m., administrative offices, 15 W.

Gabilan St. Alisal Elementary School District Board of Trustees, 8 p.m., administrative offices, 1221 E. Market St. TOMORROW Salinas Health and Safety Board, 3 p.m., city hall rotunda. Monterey County Zoning Administrator, 1:30 p.m., supervisors' chambers, courthouse.

Colmo Ticket Office Is Opening Friday Tickets go on sale Friday can see exactly what the at the Colmo del Rodeo tick- judges see. et office, 210 Main The Salinas Jaycettes will be selling Colmo tickets from for Salinas' spectacular night lighted Big Week parade. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day except this Sunday and FriThe Colmo del Rodeo day, July 21.

parade is scheduled Saturday Tickets are $3, prime; $2 night of Big Week, July 22. reserves; $1.50 unreserved A new feature of parade (adults) and $1 unreserved seating this year is the desig- (children). nation of prime areas across The Colmo parade will end from and next to the review- at Avenue at the edge of ing stands, where spectators Salinas High School this year. Obituaries Louis Cedriano Louis A. (Gene) Cedriano, a 61, owner of the Quality trie Co, died last evening in a Louis A.

Cedriano Salinas hospital after a lengthy illness. Cedriano, who resided at 22 San Juan was a native of Varrazze, Italy, and had lived in Salinas for the past 27 years. He became owner of the Quality Electric Co. in 1945. He was a member of the Salinas Masonic Lodge 204, San Jose Scottish Rite Bodies, Islam Shrine, Salinas Valley Shrine Club, Salinas 614, and Corral de Tierra Counrail try Club, He is survived by his widow Edith of the family home; a daughter, Mrs.

Allen (Carole) Caldeira of Salinas; and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. in the Friday, Struve and Laporte Chapel. Requiem Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. in the Sacred Heart Church, Entombment will follow in the Garden of Memories.

will be recited at 8 Rosary Thursday at the Struve and p.m. Laporte Funeral Chapel, Memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society. Ada E. Tyler Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow in Healey chapel for Mrs.

Ada Elizabeth Tyler, 76, of 348 Sequoia who died last night in a Salinas Hospital. A native of Santo, she had been a resident of Salinas for the past ten years, making her home with a daughter, Mrs. Norma M. Loe. She is also survived by two other daughters, Mrs.

Nadine Patterson and Mrs. Jane Patterson, both of Salinas; two sons: Ben Cochran of Lordsburg, N.M. and Joe Cochran of Tucson, two sisters: Mrs. Winnie Chandler of San Rafael and Mrs. Margaret Smith of Tempe, two brothers: Louls A.

(Gene) Cedriano, 61, of 22 San Juan Dr. Ada Elizabeth Tyler, 76, of 348 Sequoia St. Jesse S. Daves of Milton, Fla. and B.

Mack Daves of San Diego, as well as 21 grandchildren and 33 great grandchildren. Funeral service, with Bishop Edward P. Lyman of the North Salinas Ward Two of the Church of the Latter-day Saints officiating, will be followed by graveside rites at 1 p.m. Friday in the Safford Union Cemetery in Safford, Ariz. 4 aporte (44 FUNERAL HOME, INC.

COMES SAN LUG LINCOLN AVENUE the Area for fee Generations Deaths Big Hat Barbecue Tonight! composed of older members are invited to participate, Divisions There are 10 divisions in the 43rd annual Kiddie Kapers parade: decorated bicycles; playground floats; cowboys and cowgirls; tricycles, wagons and buggies; miniature floats; costumed children and pets; group floats and uniformed groups; characters; little leaguers; and baton groups and CO-OP (Continued From Page 1) with a $250,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce. Last Hope? Alfredo Navarro, director of CCCDC, believes the coopera-; tive movement offers the last and best hope for salvaging what most people picture as the typical small, family farmer. He also believes the cooperative gives a unique opportunity to the farm worker to become the farmer, increase his income and achieve a sense of place and community denied the migratory, or even seasonal. worker.

The effects of conglomerate farming have become part of the Salinas Valley political rhetoric. Congressman Burt L. Talcott, R-Salinas, for example, opposed the initial OE0 grant of $450,000 to the strawberry cooperative that never got off the ground. He said it would be unfair to use funds from the federal government to help one group of farmers compete with others. And his Democratic challengJulian Camacho of Soquel has pledged himself to work the improvement of the (small farmer's lot and to help end subsidies to large farming concerns if he is elected to Congress.

Each, in their separate ways, is concerned with what appear to be direct effects of the existence of giant agribusiness firms, including: -Erosion of the economic bases of small farming communities by the entry of conglomerates; -Acceleration of the migration of unskilled workers from rural to urban areas; -The concentration in fewer and fewer hands of the reins of power over the agricultural economy. One encouraging aspect of the picture is an increased trend toward full or part ownership of farms in Monterey County in recent years, while the opposite has occurred nationally, according to Marvin Garner, assistant agricultural commissioner. Diversification One shift in the Salinas Valley which has resulted from stiff competition in the lettuce business is a movement toward diversity in crops, combined with a steady increase in the size of farms. "Farmers have had to either increase their acreage or decrease costs," he says. "And the more crops you have, the better chance you have of not losing any money." "It's cheaper to grow one kind of crop, but the trend has been toward more diversity." Census statistics show that 74 per cent of the American population lives on about 1 per cent of the nation's land.

And, if present trends continue, that percentage will increase to 88 per cent by the end of the century. What that means for urban America in terms of both its physical appearance and its economic health remains to be seen. But control of the rural economy by large agribusiness firms would very likely hasten the deterioration of the small, farming community which has been the backbone of rural life. That day is not at hand in the Salinas Valley, and may never come. But sufficient presence of conglomerate farming has been established to warrant concern and thought about its longrange implications.

And its presence should continue to be a big factor in the direction which Salinas Valley agriculture takes in years ahead. In Loving Memory FLOWERS as near as your phone 422-4348 934 N. Sanborn Rd. CASA DE FLORES Across from Skyview Drive In Theater bands. Free tickets to the California Rodeo will be distributed at 6 p.m, to the entrants at the start of the parade, which is sponsored by the Salinas Exchange Club.

Division marshals should be at the division location at 5 p.m. in order to direct the children to the proper divisions. Marshals will make certain there are only proper entries in their respective divisions and check each entrant for a pass. Divisions should be in double lines when the parade starts, one line on each side of the middie street line. Parade marshals should make sure there are no skates or skate-wheeled vehicles in their divisions.

since skate wheeled vehicles have been a cause of accidents in the past. No commercial floats, enginepowered vehicles, or large animals are permitted. A loud speaker will be used in the assembly area and all lost children or parents searching for their children should be directed there or to the Salinas Recreation Center. The winner of the Jane Withers Trophy as the best playground float of last year's par rade was Loma Vista School. its depiction of the "Pied Piper of Hamelin." 3RD PARTY (Continued From Page 1) wheelchair before the convention.

While he did not say a third party candidacy was definite, Snider said, "the discussion we had this morning indicated this possibility was stronger and The convention, Snider said, has been "stacked from the start." Wallace's third-party presidential candidacy in 1968 was generally interpreted as having drawn votes from Hubert H. Humphrey, the Democrats' 1968 nominee. Snider said Wallace was "somewhat upset" at the way his views were rejected Tuesday night by the convention. Alioto Refuses To Appoint Dianne SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)Mayor Joseph L. Alioto has refused to reappoint Supervisor; Dianne Feinstein to the Bay Area Air.

Pollution Board's governing body. In a letter made public Tuesday, the mayor said he would assume the directorship himself. Mrs. Feinstein remarked that she suspected "the mayor's refusal to reappoint me is the price to be paid for running against him last year." Mrs. Feinstein was a losing candidate in November when Alioto won reelection as mayor.

HIS DISCOVERY John Dancer of Manchester, England, in 1839 combined the techniques of photography and microscopy to produce a microphotograph of a document. His discovery has been a boon to spies and librarians. I Big Hat Barbecue tonight! They'll be serving up the steaks, salsa, fun and music at the Monterey County Sheriff's Posse grounds on Natividad Road for the Big Hat starting at 6. Big Hat traditionally kicks off the California Rodeo season in the Salinas Valley. By tomorrow the entire community will have busted out in western togs for Big Week.

Tickets for the barbecue are $3.50 and may be purchased at the gate. The Salinas Chamber of Commerce's Military Affairs Committee will host the county's top brass at the barbecue, and the outstanding cowboy and cowgirl from the Sheriff's Posse's annual junior rodeo will be honored. Obituaries Quiming Rites Funeral services for Jacinto M. Quiming, 64, of 1338 Bolero will be held Friday at 9 a.m. in the Muller Mortuary.

A Requiem Mass will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. in Madonna del Sasso Catholic Church, with burial following in the Garden of Memories. Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Mortuary Chapel. Quiming died Friday in a Salinas hospital.

Third Suspect In Explosive Case Arrested JACKSON (UPI) Amador County authorities have arrested a third suspect in an alleged attempt to steal more than five tons of dynamite from a Sacramento explosives company. Amador County sheriff's deputies reported Tuesday that John Thomas Sproull, 20, Plymouth, was arrested while lying on a lawn outside a residence near the AmadorSacramento county line. Two other suspects were arrested in Plymouth Monday by federal agents and sheriff's deputies as they attempted to from a storage facility the Margrat Exploaway, sives which is headquarterd in the Sacramento area. Federal agents said if the robbery had been sucessful, it would have been the largest theft of dynamite in U.S. history.

FISCHER (Continued From Page 1) started, protesting closed circuit televising of the contest. The unpredictable American stayed away for more than 30 minutes. While he was gone, Spassky calmly made his next move and then strolled around the playing area waiting to see what Fischer would do. Fischer earlier protested televising of the first game, saying the cameras disturbed him even though it was closed circuit I television. Planned Parenthood Group Meets Tomorrow in Salinas Planned Parenthood of Monterey.

County will meet at St. Paul's Episcopal Church tomorrow at 8 p.m. to discuss future Salinas programs, including a teen contraceptive clinic. Tomorrow's meeting will feature a panel discussion of Planned Parenthood members, doctors and others involved in family planning and pregnancy counseling. Current plans include opening teen contraceptive clinics in Pacific Grove in September and in Salinas in November.

The group also plans to open a vasectomy clinic in Monterey next year. Planned Parenthood is a nonprofit health organization which provides family planning information and services. COMMUNITY LINE BULLETIN BOARD CHICKEN DINNER, St. James C.M.E. Church, 285 E.

Lake Street, July 20, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Donation $2.50. REPUBLICAN WOMEN will serve homemade cake coffee at headquarters, 216 Main July 18, 2-4 p.m. All members prospective members are welcome. SALINAS CITIZENS Betterment Association Meeting, July 20, 7:30 p.m.

El Sausal Junior High School. Everyone welcome. PLANNED PARENTHOOD of Monterey County, Inc. meeting, July 13, 8 p.m. St.

Paul's Church, 1071 Pajaro Panel discussion, local physicians and others directly involved with family planning and pregnancy counseling will be there. Questions encouraged from audience. COMMUNITY SERVICE, COURTESY OF HEALEY MORTUARY NATAL 1'114 mo 1 1 1 do 40 405 SANBORN RD. Abundant Off-Street Parking GEORGE A. REBELLO Requiem Mass on Thursday, 9:30 a.m.

Christ the King Church Rosary Wednesday 8 p.m. in the Struve Laporte Funeral Chapel Interment in the Queen of Heavens Cemetery ARNOLD O. MILLS Thursday 1:30. p.m. Entombment Garden of Memories Mausoleum SALINAS' BIGGEST WESTERN SELECTION THE LOWEST PRICES See STAN'S for your LEVI'S, LEE'S, acme.

HATS and SHIRTS, Too! FROM ACME. (A) THE WORLD'S LARGEST BOOTMAKER. 'Rough Out" BOOTS $2095 Sizes To Fit The Whole Family POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY INFANTS' Sizes 5-8. $699 CHILDREN'S Sizes From $899 Men's Sizes $1999 WOMEN'S Sizes 5-10. From $1999 Cowboy Boots With EVERYTHING WOMEN'S STYLE $2550 Wrangler boots for the entire family! your BANKAMERICARD.

Open Daily 9 9, Sunday 11 5 master charge THE INTERBANK CARD welcome STANS Department Store the One and Only Since 1949 631 East Alisal Street, Salinas 424-9020.

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