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Times-Advocate from Escondido, California • 4

Publication:
Times-Advocatei
Location:
Escondido, California
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A-4 DAILY TIMES-ADVOCATE. ESCONDIDO, MAY 76 1971 S. policy defended at PC patriotic ra Notes from today Nixon OKs research on cancer Schwarz, who helped to found the Christian Anti-communism Crusade in 1953, lashed out against critics of the American and capitalist system, even quoting Lenin to the effect that, capitalism could outgrow and destroy communism unless capitalism were destroyed. "There are many people in this country who claim that America robs and uses violence to make its gains in foreign countries," said the crusade president. "This is historically not true.

America has done more to help the underdeveloped nations economically, educationally and with food and medical supplies than any other country in the world, "Schwarz said. The United States is man's greatest chance for freedom," he added to applause from the larger and older. group of his listeners. Why do the Communists attack the Bank of America?" Schwarz asked those who came up to the speaker's stand to congratulate him after his talk. The Communists fear capitalism because it is so successful and the Bank of America is a symbol of that success." Schwarz, a former Australian doctor, now heads the Christian Anti-communism Crusade with international headquarters at Long Beach.

He came to America, he said, because he realized "the destiny of freedom depended upon the understanding and attitudes of the American people." His organization, Schwarz said, is to inform people the true nature and deceptive methods of communism while they still have a choice. The method is to encourage citizens to inform themselves and others. The crusade helps by providing them with the necessary tools, which include literature, films, tapes, records and financial support. B. Hunt, USMC (ret.

of Poway. Four or five raised clenched fists when the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" was played by the Unit 29 Band of Naval Air Forces, Pacific, from San Diego. Attracting more amused attention than approval was the lone placard saying "Kill a commie for Christ" carried by a student said to have been one of the organizers of the student antiwar rally several weeks ago. Tuesday's public rally was arranged by Beauford Chambless, a Palomar instructor in history and social sceince, who introduced Schwarz. Hunt introduced Lt.

Gen. Edward W. Snedeker, USMC (ret. who asked "Let us take pride in our country and veterans." While our country may not be perfect," said Snekleker, a 27-year Marine veteran of World War II and Korea, "it has done more than any other country. SAN MARCOS The claim that America's relationships with foreign countries and the nation's opposition to communism has historically resulted in the social and economic improvement of those foreign countries was greeted with warm applause and minor derision at a patriotic rally Tuesday at Palomar College football field.

The applause came from the older, nonstudent group of the 150 persons who heard Fred Schwarz, president of the Christian Anti-communism Crusade, defend America's aid to underdeveloped nations. A few derisive remarks came from a minor group among the college students, most of whom were in agreement with Schwarz. Several students did not rise during the invocation by Rev. Coy Maret of Escondido's Emmanuel Faith Community Church. Neither did they rise and recite the pledge of allegiance led by Col.

Sanford v4; a Downing scores spending LEUCADIA San Diego County budgets keep mounting each year, and the North County, which pays for about one-third of it, is not getting its moneys worth, James Downing of Escondido told Leucadia Town Council Tuesday night. "The county is spending all that money." Downing said, "and the North County, which embraces 32.7 per cent of all assessed valuation land in the entire county, is not getting its fair share." Downing, who told the group he has been a student of county government in relation to the northern sector of the county for more than 10 years, said he thought a good indication of the services rendered the north county by the county was the fact that out of 9,000 county employes, only 862, less than 10 per cent, "serve the area which pays one-third of the bill." Downing said that leaps in almost all the departments budgets each year "would shock you, if youd take the time to look at them." The 1969-70 budget, he said, awarded the County Planning Department an annual budget of $1,754,952. The next year, he said, in the 1970-71 budget, the planning department got $2,732,807, "and I would like to know just why they got almost a million dollars more this year than last," he said. Another of many, many examples," he said, "is the county administrator's office (CAO). For the 1969-70 budget, that office was allocated, for legislative and special projects, $53,649.

In the 1970-71 budget, the supervisors approved, for the same item in the CAOs office $304,400. And in the same period, the CAOs overall budget jumped from $376,220 in 1969-70 to $658,494 in 1970-72. Why?" Also, he said, county government costs have increased nearly threefold in the last 10 years. In 1960, with a county population of 1,033,011, the county )iad a budget of $78.3 million. In 1970, with a population of 1,310,837, the budget jumped up to $239.5 million.

Verse choirs in joint program SAN DIEGO Verse choirs from six San Diego County schools will join the San Diego State College verse choir in a program at 7 tonight in the dramatic arts building. E. Kinglsey Provenmire will conclude a career of 26 years directing the college choir he founded at the free, public performance. The Aztec verse choir has about 200 members. Burglars strip trees of fruit RAINBOW Violet Mae Houghton, a real estate broker of 1811 Camino Rainbow in Rainbow, has reported the burglary of oranges valued at $165.

Mrs. Houghton said the burglars apparently used crates to strip the bottoms of 22 trees of the fruit. Bid opening set VISTA Bids will be open at 7:30 p.m. Thursday for the new $4.5 million Vista High School at 400 E. Bobier Drive, Vista.

The bids will be opened by the board of trustees of Vista Unified School District. Antidrug program approved SAN DIEGO (CNA County supervisors approved an antidrug program contract with the University of California at San Diego Tuesday that could cost $1.3 million during the next fiscal year. Chief Administrative Officer Fred J. Morey told the board that the state will be billed under the Medi-Cal system, but that there is no assurance the state will approve all or any substantial portion of the cost. Morey reported that the university's Department of Psychiatry had 204 narcotic addicts in treatment as of May 1 with another 210 waiting to be offered treatment.

He said there are 13 at Escondido, 41 at Solana Beach, 140 at University hospital in the outpatient methadone clinics along with 10 patients at Deer Park north of Escondido. Methadone treatment to block the need of addicts for heroin is the most eye-catching part of the program, but counseling, education and rehabilitation seem to be at least as important. Of the Solana Beach effort, Morey said, Extensive community participation in the clinic, combined with an increase of addicts in treatment, will make it a unique model of community involvement in a treatment The contract calls for the county to make available to the university selected areas of Deer Park without charge during the term of the agreement for its exclusive use as a county-wide intensive care narcotic residential treatment center and drug abuse training center. A county patient is defined as an individual who has demonstrated an addiction to narcotics, is a county resident, and is unable to pay the full cost of his care. Morey said that while there are no assurances that the state will, in fact, reimburse the county for the program, the need to provide such a service is critical and warrants moving ahead in spite of the risk.

Hie county also is seeking a federal grant for the antidrug program, but Morey said there is no assurance of receiving money from this source either. In addition to the selected professional staff, Morey said, the university has hired and trained as addiction rehabilitation counselors 23 new trainees, all of whom are exaddicts and from San Diego County. He said the contract calls for gradual expansion of the drug program to accommodate an average of 500 addicts. Also included in the board's action Tuesday was the extension of an interim three-month agreement with the university from May 30 to June 30 at a cost not to exceed $62,500. The contract for the total fiscal year of 1971-72 will follow this extension of service.

Planners oppose permit Cont. From Page A-l a storage and maintenance repair shop," argued Klammer. I think this belongs in an industrial i area, not in the downtown. "Dont misunderstand me, he added, I lean towards Sears Roebuck. 1 like their new store (on Valley Parkway), but its too small.

Otherwise, they could put the repair shop in it. "Part of this is going to become a warehouse," said Johnson. "My question is do we want to establish a huge service center in the CBD." Milne's motion was defeated although it provided that the building could not be used as "a warehouse." In other action, the commission voted 6-0 to recommend council approval of rezoning property at the northeast corner of El Norte Parkway and Country Club and from single family to neighborhood commercial (C-N) designation as requested by Unger-Pacific new owners of the Escondido Country Club. John Adams, an Unger-Pacific spokesman, said the firm is developing a 350-acre master plan which envisions as many as 5,000 residents. WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon announced today he has signed a $7 billion supplemental appropriation which, among other things, provides an extra $100 million for cancer research.

Nixon issued a statement saying I strongly commend the Congress for acting favorably on his request for more money with which to seek a cure for cancer. However, he called for equally prompt action on his May 11 proposal to set up an independently budgeted cancer cure program with the National Institutes of Health that would have a director responsible directly to the prssident. County jail explosive SAN DIEGO (AP) Overcrowding in the San Diego County Jail is described by a law group as dangerous and potentially explosive. A report of the County Bar Association called today for more officers and minimum security facilities and better medical care. Council vacancy seen SAN DIEGO (AP) The city council plans to consider Councilman Floyd Morrows case Thursday.

By missing four council meetings this month, under law he must vacate his seat unless a formal vote of the council excuses him. Morrow, an attorney, was trying a case in court when the council met Tuesday. Coronado recall off CORONADO (AP) The citizen who launched a recall movement against three city councilmen says hes changed his mind. The notice of intention which Roscoe Creighton filed was withdrawn. A spokesman for the Citizens Recall Committee said a new notice of intention may be filed against councilmen Richard Parker, Ben Cohen and Joseph Overton.

Creightons petition was filed after the committee ousted Mayor Robin Goodenough and made Parker mayor. SD students push bonds SAN DIEGO (AP) Some students who want voters to approve $133 million in bonds June 8 to build new schools and strengthen old ones turned out the newest flick in San Diego. As music blares out pop tunes such as I Feel the Earth Move and Where Have All the Children the scene is a cracking foundation at Cabrillo Elementary School. Slides show water heaters hanging on classroom walls, rat traps in the basement of an elementary school, broken windows and crumbling bricks. The film project has won partial credit for sophomores and juniors who produced it in an American Political Thought class at San Diego State College.

It will be shown before the election at high schools. Chess foes adjourn VANCOUVER (AP) Grandmasters Bobby Fischer of the United States and Mark Taimanov of the Soviet Union Tuesday night adjourned the fourth game in their world chess quarter-final elimination match. At adjournment on the 41st move, Fischer held a slight positional advantage. Taimanov had asked postponement of Sundays game because of illness. Fischer leads the 10-game match 3-0.

The winner of the match must score 5V2 points to advance in the candidates series to pick a challenger for world champion Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union. Soldier sacrifices life BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) A British sergeant who took the full force of a suitcase bomb after herding a father and two young children to safety died today. The bomb wounded 27 other person, demolished a large part of an army-police barracks in Belfast and blew five cars across the street. One of the cars landed on a baby carriage and seriously injured the child inside. The sergeant was the eighth British soldier killed in Northern Ireland by terrorists and the second in five days.

Under the pressure of escalating violence in the strife-torn province, Premier Brian Faulkner a few hours earlier announced that the army had been authorized to shoot anyone carrying weapons or acting suspiciously. Mt. Etna lava diverted FORNAZZO, Sicily (AP) A river of flaming lava from Mt. Etna poured to within 100 yards of a bridge on the northern outskirts of Fornazzo today, but it appeared headed to bypass the village. Authorities withheld the order to evacuate the 500 villagers.

The lava was advancing at a slightly slower speed than the 30 yards an hour it moved Tuesday night. Lava from Etnas 50-day-old eruption is now pouring down the mountain in three streams, and authorities estimate they have done more than $20 damage to orchards, crops and farmhouses. Meeting with crusade leader Two Palomar College students, David Bengston (left) and Tony Atkinson, were among those who met with Fred Schwarz, president of the Christian Anti-communism Crusade, after Schwarz spoke at a patriotic rally. Park proposals Staff Photo by Howard Decker eyed meet the idea an excellent one. He said it would provide a wonderful opportunity for the citys youngsters to get started in the game, perhaps at special reduced rates of play.

Mastain said green fees at most golf courses range from $5 to $7 and a municipal course would provide an opportunity for lower rates. This is just an introduction, City Manager George Patterson told the council in regard to the list of proposed facilities, noting they were not being asked to act on the recommendation at the present time. As for the animal facilities, Patterson had this to say If you have a horse ring, it would probably help the flora and fauna. Cont. From Page A-l of rodeos in the park and turning it into more of a stockyard.

Mrs. Boyce, however, contended that the input of proposed facilites gives the council some indication of what people would like. A professional (landscape) architect can tell us where it could go. The quandry over development of the park was heightened further when Mastain told the council the commission is scheduled to vote Thursday night on whether to recommend development of a golf course there. I respect the wishes of the commission, said Mastain, but I will recommend a golf course.

At least two commissioners are known to oppose the links. Although admitting, I dont play golf, Roberts thought Ad hoc panel to Fiscal review system aired up 8 per cent; that expenditures are up 19 per cent and income is up 17 per cent. Trustees must adopt a preliminary budget before June 30. As Huber reported to trustees regarding Tuesdays Honor America Day Rally Milo Shadle, trustee said, The entire community and district deserves commendation that two such events could be held here without disruption." Huber also reported that 527 students will be eligible to march in Graduation ceremonies, slated for 2 p.m., June 12 in the Dome. Cont.

From Page A-l series, preferably before summer vacation. In another discussion, the trustees took a look at work done so far by Fredrick Huber, college president, on a proposal to split the community college district into trustee districts and increase the membership on the board to seven. The action would require approval by the electorate and by the county Board of Education. Trustee Richard Loomis, speaking in favor of such a move, noted the high cost of running for election at large in such a large district. Loomis also cited the embarrassment possible when two of five trustees are absent and unanimity among the three present is required for any action.

He said districting would assure that areas such as Fallbrook, which will not be directly represented after he leaves the board this year, and others would be better represented. Huber told the Daily Times-Advocate that the newly elected but unseated trustees Lucy Bayne, A. J. Pal Anderson and Anton K. Simson have been asked to participate in the districting discussions.

Districting would not follow high school district boundaries but would reflect the one man-one vote philosophy, based on population. Trustees are beginning to review the proposed budget for 71-72 which totals just over $5 million in income. John D. Schettler, assistant superintendent for business services, told the group that the predicted average daily attendance for next year will be.

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Pages Available:
730,061
Years Available:
1912-1995