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Sharon Tate
lish film producer-director Ro-|
man Polanski in 1968 photo. . .S
(UPI)I
.More Suspects
Continue from page one
Miss Tate’s fiance, died of
multiple stab wounds of the
» body.
—Voityck Frokowsky, 37,
worked with Polanski as an
actor and writer in Polish
, films, died of stab wounds of
the body and limbs and a
gunshot wound in the back.
—Steven Parent, 18, a friend
of Garretson who left home in
* suburban El Monte Friday to
visit him, died of multiple
gunshot wounds of the chest.
Garretson’s attorney, Barry
* Tarlow, said Garretson sat up
reading until 6 a.m. Saturday
but heard no unusual sounds
from the main house, separated
* from the guest house by a
swimming pool and shrubbery
“There was a party at the
’safe*
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Abigal Folger
(UPI)
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of Phil Sansom
who passed away 4 years
ago August 11, 1965.
He loved the house of God,
His dearest wish to be.
A servant within her walls
In service full and free.
Beautifully he lived,
We who well loved him know,
Blessing with kindly hands
our loved ones,
Soften deaths cruel blow.
Beautifully he died —
The church floors he trod
To pass to his reward within,
The alter of his God!
Sadly Missed by:
Wife, Blanche Sansom,
Daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Greene,
Grandchildren,
Sherry and Linda.
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house the night of the killings,”
Tarlow said. “From the investi
gation made by my office, our
best guess is that whoever did
it was involved in a personal
way with these people who
were killed.”
Attention today turned to the
second suspect sought by
police.
Homicide Det. Lt. Robert
Helder said, “We are looking
for an individual. We don't have
any definite information that he
was involved. His name came
up in conversation with Garret
son.”
The motive for the strange
slayings was a mystery. There
were no signs anything was
stolen from the home, which
sits at the end of a long
driveway in exclusive Benedict
Canyon.
Contrary to earlier reports,
Helder said there was no
evidence that the crime was a
ritualistic murder.
Autopsies on the victims
showed there was no evidence
of sexual molestation, no
mutilation of the bodies. Police
said there were no narcotics in
the home, no alcoholic bevera
ges on the tables, no signs of an
unusually violent struggle.
“We have a weird homicide
with two bodies inside and two
bodies outside,” said Helder.
"We don’t have anybody that
we can talk to. We’re trying to
piece the thing together with
the small amount of physical
evidence we have.”
Pasteurized Beer
NEW YORK (UPI)
Pasteurization is largely identi
fied with milk, but it was past
eurization that has made possible
canned or bottled beer.
Keg (draught) beer is kept at
low temperatures and expected
to be consumed as soon as it
leaves the brewery. Therefore it
does not offer the problem of
after-fermentation of yeast. To
prevent possible renewed devel
opment of the yeast in beer that
will be packaged, say researchers
at Rheingold Breweries, it is
pasteurized by subjecting it to
heat long enough to kill any
existing yeast cells. Then the
beer can be bottled or canned
and able to stand for weeks or
months before use.
Griffin Daily News
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LONDON — Polish film
tor Roman Polanski (r)
cd by unidentified j
pares to board plane in London
for
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William Garretson, 19-year-old |B J
house boy questioned in mur-p 1
ders.
(upi)
For better clinics
NEW YORK (UPI) -
If the modern hospital is to
keep pace with community
needs it must create a concept
of “individual outpatient ser
vice,” according to Monsignor
James H. Fitzpatrick, president
1 of the Catholic Medical Center
: of Brooklyn and Queens.
Ixmg lines of clinic patients
who must wait sometimes for
1 hours before seeing a doctor are
“incompatiable with a hospital’s
obligation to the preservation
sos human dignity,” Msgr.
j Fitzpatrick said.
> “Even though the quality of
care available in many clinics
; is equal to or better than that
[ received by private patients, the
r manner in which it is delivered
must be upgraded,” he said.
Monday, August 11
5
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Nixon Shifts
Poverty War
From OEO Unit
By MERRIMAN SMITH
UPI White House Reporter
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UPl)—President Nixon, con
tinuing what he regarded as a
badly needed repair job on the
machinery of federal govern
ment, today shifted much of the
operating responsibility for the
war on poverty away from the
Office of Economic Opportunity
<OEO).
Ostensibly the President was
not attempting to downgrade
OEO and its new director,
Donald Rumsfeld. Nixon, in a
special statement, made It
quite clear, however, that
henceforth OEO was to be an
“innovative agency” with most
of its operating responsibilities
transferred to other depart
ments.
Rumsfeld was here today at
the summer White House and
planned to add his public
comments to the Nixon state
ment during the day. No
conflict between the two men
was anticipated since Rum
sfeld, a former Illinois Republi
can congressman, took the OEO
job knowing of the President’s
intentions.
Sends Special Message
Later today the President
was to send Congress a special
message detailing his program
for sweeping reforms in the
federal welfare program. He
also sdheduled httgh -level
foreign policy discussions here
today.
Nixon’s changes in the
structure of OEO were laid out
in a public statement instead of
a congressional message since
the alterations did not require
House and Senate approval.
Specifically, the Chief Execu
ti v e announced concerning
OEO:
—Creation of a new office of
program development.
—Revamping and strengthen
ing the office of planning,
research and evaluation.
—Strengthening and upgrad
ing the office of health services
and the office of legal services.
—Creation of a new office of
program operations to Improve
the administration of activities
in the field.
What this added up to was
the Nixon determination OEO
be more of a laboratory in the
field of social sciences than an
operating, administrative agen
cy in the war against poverty.
f.C- FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN
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» tonight. Fair and partly cloudy J 7 \
little temperature change rnnONTn /umojTON
/ tomorrow. /V-*
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UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST®\ SHOWERS
Yy. MIAMI
Troops Mass
For Assault
On Viet Allies
By WALTER WHITEHEAD
SAIGON (UPl)—North Viet
namese and Viet Cong troops
are massing for a “decisive”
offensive in the area between
Saigon and the Cambodian
border and the Allies are
pouring soldiers into the area,
informed U.S. military sources
said today.
Two regiments or 2,500 troops
of the 9th Viet Cong Division
have already moved into
northern Binh Long Province,
the sources said. They predict
ed a Communist attack there
before Aug. 20.
The Communists are expect
ed to concentrate their attack
on the cities of An Loc, Quan
Loi and Loc Ninh, all 60 to 70
miles northwest of Saigon near
the Cambodian border and a
major Communist inflitration
route, the sources said.
The United States has been
intensively bombing the area In
the past five days. 852 s have
bombed northern Binh Long
Province 21 times in the past
few days and military sources
said at least 110 Communist
troops have been killed in the
raids.
While predicting the offen
sive, the American sources
conceded that "because of
Allied pre-emptive operations,
the enemy’s effort may be
feeble or even postponed.”
Three companies of the U.S.
Ist Air Cavalry Division were
sent to Bo Due and two
companies to Loc Ninh. A
mechanized battalion was
moved to An Loc. A U.S.
artillery battery was positioned
at Loc Ninh along with the
South Vietnamese troops.
France Freezes
Prices, Profits
By JOHN F. SIMS
PARIS (UPl)—Devaluation of
the franc took effect today and
the French government froze
prices and profits to give the
beleaguered currency what
Finance Minister Valery Dis
card d’Estaing called “breath
ing space.”
France devalued the franc by
12.5 per cent Friday. D’Estaing
said it was the only way. He
said France otherwise would
have run out of gold and
foreign currency reserves by
the end of the year.
Before devaluation a franc
was worth 20 cents. It now is
worth 17>/ 2 cents.
For foreign tourists in
France, it was good. A meal of
melon, pepper steak, asparagus
in hallandaise sauce, raspberry
tart, coffee and two kinds of
wine cost $7 instead of SB. The
International Herald Tribune
cost 17 cents rather than 20
cents.
Orders Freeze
French tourists in other
countries had trouble even
getting their francs changed.
D’Estaing ordered the price
and profits freeze until Sept. 15.
Now Possible To Shrink
Painful Hemorrhoids
And Promptly Stop The Itching,
Relieve Pain In Most Cases.
New York, N.Y. (Special): Sci
ence has found a medication
with the ability, in most cases
—to promptly stop itching,
relieve pain and actually shrink
hemorrhoids.
Tests by doctors proved that
in case after case, while gently
relieving pain, actual reduction
Il arueibc
\ +1 ILL -AT e> KOA D
“It is absolutely necessary
that the monetary operation we
have decided on should suc
ceed,” he said.
“We hav e taken a certain
number of decisions which have
as their object the creation of
what I will call a breathing
space for the franc, that is to
say a period during which
everyone must take stock.”
The devaluation took effect at
a minute after midnight today.
The price freeze was meant to
head off attempts by manufac
turers, wholesalers and retai
lers to raise prices immediate
ly, thus nullifying effectiveness
of the devaluation.
The decision to devaluate the
franc was reached July 16 but
only eight persons knew about
it. Only 18 months ago the
nation’s reserves and interna
tional Monetary Fund holdings
totaled nearly $7 billion.
Begin Spectacular Fall
The government today did not
disclose the nation’s current
loal reserves. The run on the
franc began early last year but
the reserves began a spectacu
lar fall after the student-worker
revolt in the spring of 1968.
of the inflamed hemorrhoids
took place.
The secret is Preparation H®.
There’s no other formula
like it! Preparation H also
soothes irritated tissues and
helps prevent further infection.
In ointment or suppository
form.
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