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Times-Advocate from Escondido, California • 1

Publication:
Times-Advocatei
Location:
Escondido, California
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Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ADVOCATE 10c 60TH YEAR ESCONDIDO, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1972 HOME EDITION: 56 PAGES, 4 SECTIONS MAIL EDITION: 24 PAGES, 2 SECTIONS Doctors Surprise agreement DAILY air Two Koreas may merge to be a success or not. For our part, we pledge our utmost sincerity. Lee said the agreement was reached after highly secret visits in May and June by officials of both countries. He said he proposed the meetings in March and traveled to Pyongyang in May for two sessions with North Korean Premier Kim II Sung. May 29 through June 1, he said, North Korean Vice Premier Park Sung Chul came to Seoul for talks with President Park Chung Hee.

The communique came as a shock to officials who knew nothing of the sessions. Lee said the decision to hold the meetings was made without consulting the United States or any other third country. One South Korean diplomat in Tokyo said, Ive never been so surprised in my life. Short of official recognition of each other, the exchange of visits represented a tacit understanding that there are two Koreas. Previously, neither recognized the existence of the other and both claimed they represented the entire peninsula.

TTie two Koreas began moves toward reconcilation in August last year when Choi Doo-Sun, president I the South Korean Red Cross Society, proposed a plan for reuniting 10 million families separated by formation of the two nations. It was the first direct contact between the North and South Korean governments since the peninsula was divided along the 38th parallel when World War II ended in 1945. By JAMES KIM SEOUL (UPI) North and South Korea, divided for 27 years, agreed today to work for peaceful reunification of the country. The agreement, reached through negotiations so secret that even Korean diplomats expressed surprise, was issued simultaneously in Seoul and the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. The two nations, which have been technically at war since 1950 and have refused to recognize each other, agreed not to undertake armed' provocations against each other and decided to promote mutual understanding and expedite peaceful unification of the Korean peninsula.

(In San Clemente, Deuputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren said President Nixon viewed the development as an encouraging indication of lessening of tensions in the area which could have a favorable impact on the prospects for peace and stability on the Korean peninsula.) The agreement was signed by Lee Hu Rak, director of the South Korean Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and Kim Young Joo, director of North Koreas Organization and Guidance Department. Lee described the agreement as a move from a a confrontation without dialogue into a confrontation with dialogue and added: Their (North Koreas) sincerity will decide whether the agreement is going service SAN DIEGO The medical services committee of the San Diego County Medical Society will arrange a meeting with North County physicians as soon as possible to discuss acceptable solutions to the shortage of medical service for new Medi-Cal patients. The committee, headed by Winston Hall, MD, held a news conference Monday to announce the results of its three-month investigation into reports that North County residents, especially those in the Escondido area, depending on Medi-Cal to pay for medical expenses find it difficult and at times impossible, to find a physician. The committee learned that some 100 new Medi-Cal patients moving into North County each month are experiencing severe difficulties in establishing a relationship with a primary physician. (A primary physician is a general practitioner, internist, obstetrician, gynecologist, pediatrician or other physician serving a wide range of medical problems).

A large segment of Medi-Cal patients, especially those who have lived in the area for some years and those who need the help of medical specialists, are receiving proper medical attention, the committee found. The reasons given by the committee for the resistance of doctors to new Medi-Cal patients are the administrative burden and Medi-Cal regulations that influence the type of care doctors can deliver and to a lesser degree, resistance by physicians to underwriting a system of which many do not approve. Doctors receive lower fees for Medi-Cal than for private patients. Hall said acceptable solutions will be sought at the meeting, at which his committee hopes to have about 140 primary physicians from North County present, plus as many specialists as possible. He said proposed solutions include transporting patients to University Hospital and to San Diego area physicians who will take them, caring for patients regardless of their ability to pay (that is, treating them free rather than going through the paperwork to get Medi-Cal payments) or forming a roster of physicians who will rotate care of the patients.

The latter proposal seems to offer the fairest way out to all concerned. Hall said. Delegate hassles continue WASHINGTON (UPI)-The U. S. Court of Appeals convened on Independence Day today to hear suits by Sen.

George S. McGovern and Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley. They want to overturn separate Democratic Party decisions about delegates to the presidential nominating convention. The court set morning hearings times for McGovern backers, who are trying to hold California's 271 delgates; and the Daley supporters, who are trying to be reinstated.

Daley and 68 other delegates from Chicago were ousted from the Illinois bloc for failing to follow the partys reform rules in gaining their seats. A three-judge panel agreed to hear the McGovern and Daley pleas even before their suits were turned down in U.S. District Court Monday. mi i Assoooltd Press Photo Holidays accidents not serious Wallace returns from outing Solons mull city budget physicians home. The man pushing Wallaces wheelchair is Alabama State Trooper Capt.

E.C. Dothard, who was shot at the same time as Wallace. Alabama Gov. George Wallace gives the for victory sign will being wheeled back to his hospital room in Silver Springs, Monday after a four-hour outing at his ESCONDIDO Law enforcement agencies in the North County reported a quiet Fourth of July, with only a few minor accidents. Nixon inviting world to U.S.

200th birthday fete ESCONDIDO The city council has scheduled an adjourned meeting for Wednesday at 8 a.m. to begin its review of a proposed $7.8 million city budget submitted by City Manager George Patterson. The proposed 1972-73 fiscal year spending policy reflects an 8.7 per cent increase over last year's budget. Patterson has recommended that the present city property tax rate of $1.41 per $109 of assessed valuation be maintained because of the yet unmet needs of the community which the council will be looking into and attempting to solve during the coming year. Included in the preliminary Details were lacking on an budget is a contingency reserve auto accident at about 8 p.m.

fund of $160,000 to cover salary Monday on Lake Wohlford and fringe benefit adjustments- Road, which caused injury to Agenda items before the Robert and Dawn Jensen of council for its regular meeting Route 6, Box 822F, Escondido, at 7 :30 p.m. Wednesday include They were treated and released a preliminary bikeway master at Palomar Memorial Hospital, plan, a traffic circulation study, of Gan)ette a request for a raise rates by pQ Bqx the Escondido Yellow Cab Co Escondido and Mary K. Long of and a joint powers agreement 815 Redw(K)d street, Escondido, with the Comprehensive coUision at Lincoln Planning Organization. Avenue and Ash They i I and a passenger, Ruth Story of rwi a the Valle Vista convalescent Inside todays I -A home, were treated and released at the local hospital for minor injuries. Another accident was llotpual B-6 reported at 7 -30 m.

Monday at Obituaries B-6 Rear Valley Parkway and El Opinion A-12 Dorado Drive, but no Sports information was available due Television B-5 to the holiday. Landers B-3 A-9 B-4 Calendar A -5 4-8 Thosteson A-8 Ann Bridge Comics Court Crossword Dr. with foreign branches; U.S. municipalities with sister cities abroad; Americans with overseas relatives; shipping lines; airlines; all to join in the campaign to urge foreigners to accept the invitation and then to help act as host to them. Volunteers young and old can serve as guides, as interpreters, as hosts and hostesses, to help greet a flood of bicentennial guests which may be double the nearly 14 million persons who visited the United States last year.

Such contacts, he said, would go'a long way in reducing the fear and the ignorance which have divided mankind down through the ages. The bicentennial commission has been criticized from some quarters for moving too slowly in preparing for the celebrations, but Nixon promised it would follow up his announcement with a vigorous action program. your countrymen have worked in this new country of ours. Come and let us say thank you. Come and join in our celebration of a proud past.

Come and share our dreams of a bright future. Nixon gave only the broad outlines of the planned celebrations, which are being coordinated by the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission, established by Congress in 1966. Of the other two themes, one called Heritage 76 will focus on the nations history during the past two centuries and the other Horizons 76 will involve setting goals for the third century, he said. Nixon said he would send formal and official invitations to governments around the globe and urged Americans to participate in people-to-people contacts with the millions of visitors he predicted would accept the invitation. Nixon called on corporations main themes for the nations bicentennial celebration, which he promised would be as wide as Americas land and as richly diverse as its people.

The President made his remarks in an Independence Day address prepared for delivery over nationwide radio from his office at the Western White House. The invitation is appropriate because the United States is, and always has been, a nation of nations, Nixon said. The blood of all peoples runs in our veins; the cultures of all peoples contribute to our culture; and to a certain extent the hopes of all peoples are bound up with our own hopes for the continuing success of the American experiment, he said. He said the bicentennial was a time for America to say to the nations of the world You helped to make us what we are. Come and see what wonders SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.

(UPI) President Nixon said today the United States will invite the world to its 200th birthday party, so that the children of those who stayed behind when others immigrated to America can see what wonders your countrymen have worked in this new land. He predicted 28 million would come. In his Independence Day address, Nixon said he was preparing to issue an unprecedented invitation to the world to visit the United States during the bicentennial celebration year of 1976. He appealed to the travel industry to try to put a vacation trip to the United States within the economic reach of more foreigners, and asked Americans to open their homes to visitors from abroad. The invitation, Nixon said, would be issued in conjunction with Festival USA, one of three Balloting postponed SM planners fail to elect chairman ove up to Russian Heather SAN MARCOS The San Marcos City Planning Commission, with Richard L.

Bivin absent, failed to elect a chairman Monday night to replace Lael Hartjen, who was not reappointed by Mayor William A. Buelow when her four-year term expired June 30. Three secret ballots ended in 3-3 tie votes for Edward K. Bonds and Arnold Hafner. A new commissioner, Willis O.

Femsel, appointed by Buelow to succeed Mrs. Hartjen, took his seat at the opening of the meeting and participated in the voting. When the deadlock was not broken on the third ballot, the six commissioners voted unanimously for Mrs. DeWilds motion to defer the election of both a chairman and vice chairman until their July 17 meeting. Bonds, who had served as vice chairman since December, was nominated for the chairman post by Commissioner Jack Wikoff.

Bonds, a commissioner since March 1970 to fill out the unexpired term of Vincent Cleveland, had been named to a four-year term by Buelow. Hafner was nominated by Mrs. De Wilde. A U.S. Marine Corps captain who has lived here more than eight years, Hafner had been appointed to the commission last July by former Mayor Ernest L.

Eaton to succeed Lee Kilgore. On Hafners motion the commmissioners elected Bonds chairman pro-tern for Monday nights meeting which lasted five hours. REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Hours after Bobby Fischer day. He said, "It is not known. ended his holdout and gave the world chess championship new life, Russian Boris Spassky put the match in doubt again today.

Spassky, the worlds champion, lodged a formal protest objecting that Fischer, the American challenger, has violated the rules of the match by failing to appear for its scheduled start on Sunday. Spassky told Max Euwe, president of the World Chess Federation, that his decision to allow a postponement in Fischers favor was unacceptable. Then Spassky and his aides, who were expected to draw lots for tonights match, staged a glum-faced walkout. Spassky was asked if there was a chance for a game to- Speaking to newsmen after was much more forthright. the Russian move threatened replied, Certainly.

Fischer arrived in Reykjavik first scheduled match with The 29-year-old American York after accepting London to match the $125,000 purse Federation. Now the winner $156,250 and the loser $93,750. Each will also get 30 per TV and movie rights to the the Russian walkout, Euwe Asked whether he considered to wreck the whole match, he about 10 hours before his Spassky. challenger flew from New banker James D. Slaters offer put up by the Icelandic Chess of the 24-game match will get cent of the $250,000 paid for the match or $75,000 each.

National Weather Service forecast: Decreasing night and morning coastal clouds and fog and increasing temperature and humidity Wednesday, with the possibility of thundershowers in mountain areas. A southerly flow of air from Mexico will gradually increase, generated by a tropical storm below La Paz at the tip of the Baja peninsula. Tonights predicted low temperatures, 58-63; highs Wednesday, 85-90 degrees..

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Years Available:
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