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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-08-01 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' I . FRIDAY .AFTERN6 0 N,-All6Usf'I, 196'1; ' \IOL. U. NO.•lU.11 SICTJotts.l-C,PAGt:S -I I .. ! \ •• * " ' ) ' ... . ' Michigan Sex .Slaying Suspect, 23, Arrested RE FLECTI ONS. ON OU R MAN ' ON THE MOON Astron1ut Aldrin as S,.en by Tra~eli"ng Comp1nion Moon Pho~ ShOw Man . . I . . Rompiryg in -E-e rie W orld ~ . ANN ARBOR. ~· (Ufl) -A 23- year-old former Ea.item M i f; b 1 g an University student bas t>een. lrtested arid charged with the slaying of Karen Sue Beineman, 18, seventh sex mW'der Victim in this area in the past two years, authQrlties announced today. At ·a -~WJI_ C91'lferenc~e11led_]y, s:tate authorities, the suspect was idenUfied as John ~an Collins, a l\WheW.,9f a stale police corporal. Police alleged that the SPACE CENTER;'Houston (AP)-Two 'backgi-ound or lhe mo\'ing moon 69 site or the slaying was the C9rpl:tal's Apollo 11 astronitvt.s romped on an eerie. miles below. home in Ypsilanti; to which Collini had unreal world or tortured gray terrain For a brief instant, the earth ap~r~ access while the family was on vacation. that J)hotographed almost sno'lf white over the lunar horizon---mark.ing the first AuthoriUes declined to link COtllns, of where brtlHant sunlight tefleded off it. time earth, moon and a. manned space· Ypsilanti, with the ~ previous sex Pll· Above was a coal-black sky,, .._ craft were ever captured in the same ings in_ this twin-uolv~ty area, but pro- Tms rugged land of cootraSla, · harin photograph.in...,..,.,, (See SLAJIN«;, I>•&• I) shadows, of era ten ·and rocb of all sizes, ---"'---'-'>-"'---"---- a place wt.ere man clearly was a~ in~ loper, could be seen as nev.er be(ore m CQJor pictures taken by the mtrr Ol'r the moon and released by the space ency late Thursday. A sequence or 34 still Picturee~~pped by Armstrong while walking on the · moon clearly shows nearly the whole spectrum of activity on lhe surface, including a dramatic view of Alqrm standing beside a seismometer and a laser beam reflector that lhe ..moon-men·. left behind. In the background, perhaps 100 teet away_. is the EaJle landing. ~raft. 'San American flag and the teleVlS1on caID· era_ perched atop its silver mouni~n plainiy standing out against ll' Jightt• sky. Photos taken from a camera moontt'9 in tbe window of the Eagle show Arrri- strong and AJdrin toge~r planting the American flag in lbe rOck-strewn luna!! soil, .tbelr spacesuits arid J?ackpack! ai blinding white in the sunshi~e. . A six-minute color motion picture film released at the same· Lime Includes ' shot's of a re«ding moon as soen out ~ Eagle's window while Annstrong and ~ Aldrin blasted from the tunar-surface. It included a sequence showing the , landing craft. approaching the corp-• mand ship, as viewed by-astron~ut • ?.tlchael Collins 'oUl fbe mother ship's window. The Golden Eacle. i~ rendezvous light blinking brlgblly, glkles eerily against a ---As~assin Plotter N-Ow--r.:¥-::-r-- Haitiab Ambassador PA~S (AP) -President Francois Duvalier of Haiti hall named his sc:m·ln- law, a n:an once sentenced to death for . havtn& plotted ag.al~t Duvli~r"aJJCe, u · ambaSsatror' to ri'ance. The new ambaMador, C61. .tifa1 Dominique. presented his crede .. Uals lc>- day to Praldent Georges Pompld<N ln 11 ;· ceremony al Oio' Ely~ Palace, ' ~ -· " ' .. • Ul"I Tt..,,_.,. lf'llll NASA ' ' ' ' ASTRONAUT A'l.bRIN. CLIM~S DOWN 'TO LU1~AR SURFACE ". ~spe;ernen Shu._!!trb.ugs, .J"'' Lik•,'. Earthbound ;rouri1t1 ~ . . . ' Sou rces Explain /Ho w 'froops· Could Be Used. . ' LAHORE> Pakistan, (UPI) -Yihlte govenil!lenl leaders in the Phlllpplnet, House s-es said. !Oday !hat. Prt/ildent · .lndonella, ·11ialland, South V,tetna.,, Nlxon's 'no-more-Vfdhams1 ~= 'Tn& lind 'la .PakislaJt today 'wllh {ion. ·n6t bar'futun! U:S, mlli!aty AP.a ' Mobamo.( Yahy8' Khan, jhe in A~'ll Conltnunlit "aggressloq gravely ~ prea""of threaterid to: dlange the ·balance of Tllo -~lhll•dapl!Ai !ill publle power there. . _ . ....nlonl that bo woald·anild llltluture\ The WbHe House sources •aid· Nil<on Vietnama bo had two1111jor _.._. bad re'ached thi5 decision after talks' with -af1u bil Wka; l San Clemente Buzzi~ W ith Nixon Preparatwn Heavy 'J)l'tp&rallons are near com.. pletlon loday: for the anticipated Aug. 11 arrival bf; Preslllent Nb:on in San Clemente -two years ago a. drowsy Spanish village which has .become American's second capitol city. No orflclal word has come from the White House, but sources close to · the world-touring chief executive say ~ is due back on the Orange Coast -abg\it two • day,s before a gala'-Aug. 13 state dinner, for Apollo 11'1 astl"Onaut!I. AppareaUy the-fltst-st.ate-dionet. eyer. held oulslde Washington, -the affair at Los Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel, will draw all 50 state 1overn6rs, .scores of diplomats to honoi the three. moon astronauts. Typically, only San.Clementeans, Nixon asaoclates who prefer not.to be.identified and. otheT: similar sources seem able tO . plus a U.S. Secret S'1'fice buteau with. donnitor)' !ac;illty .. Ortgbially i:alablllhed as a radio navJgaUo~al tnStan'auon.~e Coast Guard base -where Nixon's official helicopter Marine Corps One wtUJand -is now the locaUon of. a crtucal, world-wide Com~· .murucations ·center. A telephone hot line lo the Kremlin (See SAN 'CLEMENTE, P ... 1) JudgeRejects--. Move to Hold Kennedy Inquest oUer any definite comments on each ne\v BOSTQN (UPI) ...::. The chieLjusUce of developmept.' I.he Mauachusetts superior court today ."No, ot course we-,can'tisay anything. rejPCted ·a dbtrlct attorney 's .re<ju_ea't .for · We re£ei all qu!sUons lO the White a judlclal innutllt Into the talal auto . House,'' says. Keiv>etli· Icavooi, Sci:rtt .. , ' .If there ts a major attack across the borders, or a nuclear threat, ·the United States, would have to consider ~ posalbllity of taking mllllary action. • .II there ls a mllilary adl\>n by llii:: commanl.rts "Whidl thwlteoed tho in- tmiatiooal balance of power, tb.t tooi '!<!Uld be a factor in causing tbi! Pru;;. clerit ·to· abandon bis hands oil miHlaJ1 policy, the White Hoose sources aald. ·~ 'Ihe SOUrces aaid Nixon found -thll' Thailand and India were ~ worried' about the possibility of Qi111e10 CommuniJt aggression .. Here 'in Pakistan, there wa.s not IO ~ch '1"P't.ll§.!s C!P that as on the deltre ol tbil.-to gel more U.S.milllal1, eqlllpmpt. l"aklstan ftas <leveloped m. mMli!gly clooe lles wlth Pekln1 follow· · lllf ·• ,,..ang :or lls friendship wltho !ho Ulilted' Slates ,since the days of th' ~ -ad!plnlsfratlon. The United States embarSotd 1nn1 $1t>menls to both India and Paldltan folloWing their 17-day war in 1985. 1 The a(>u,rce.s ,said Nixon recognizes that ftiie embargo op;erated to lhe disadvantap o(· Pakistan 1~use it did not have other resoprces available to IDd.ia. But when asked whether this meant the Urilted States WBS J~anlng toward resumpUon of' arms aid t o Paklslan, While House officials said this wa•nol--ly..lhe-c~Uho . .ellll. of his: taJk1J tcKlay with Yahya the~· - said.the' subject was·"still under re'/lelJr."I Those wel'e" the same-. words used· b1 Sicretary of State \Viiliam P. Rogers' (See NtxON, P111e 11 Orange C:oue Weatller Ser;V!ce agenl-in-tharge St the San Wrtc.) lnvolvtrig §en. &'!Ward M. Ken- Clemeflte' Inn. nedy .. saying-the lnvesttgaUon was not Turn on the ·air condlUoner or within his C9Urt'• jurisdiction. ·get, out to ,tbe beach because ~ FOCAL ·POINT In a ~e two-paragraph statement, weather ls in store for the coast The sqdd~ tran#ormati0;n of_ I.be city Chief J:i e G. Joseph Tauro said the during ·the week'end, with tern,~ of 17,500' "peroQn•' Into'.& part.Um• focal request y Dill. Ally, Edmund S. Dini• ol • 1 h d' · the "•h 808 pOJnl of lnternaliOriat politics has ~gbt ' New Bedford was in the t'exclusive · ·era ures ea mg i,nto ''-'6 • many major changes to the town jurledlctlon.of the dlsllict court." INSm E TODAY They ~nge froin appVcaUon tor a Dinis Informed newsmen Thursday he · , $115,000 tedeHJ gran(..ind1 citf aPPl'Ct_val · had senCla letter to the judge·reqUesUng : Skt1rocketing cost1 of medi- to spend !I0,000 J<i _t\>Ug!len up~ the Inquest Into an auloJ~l~rull;.(ulfll2. _caL.£ar<. • .lt..tnPfdlV making """ - c.etrenU: Po11Ce-nepai1ment, to a--Mte en ~~ddick Island tn irfltctfa car «ng --!ick-o ... lVnt'JI thdt 1'lO one knocked m.... wall between the Nlibn driven bf Kennedy pluDged oil a bridge can afford. Paae 17. • mansion and adjatent U.S.· Coast Guard into a Udal pond.·Mari Jo Kopec:hne, 28, ' ltaJlon. • . a Washington 1ecretary, dtowned In the :!,.":, ' :~ =..-,,, ., ~ Pruldenl Nixon wUI drive through to· mishap. , .. ,., .. 111 • .-...1. ,.,. • c~mute . betweeq the 10.room Summ:er The Judge, w,ho said he received first ~~ fl-;: =:1 C: : White lloose ~net the long range radio word of the inqucSt through the press, ad-,,__,. u srtwt. ...,.... • navigational (LORAN) faclllty via golr · ded, "I just don~t see any precedent for $'i.:~·Medc• ,: ::=-.....,. ~t;; cart, work.in~ In new 1 y ·bu JI t ad· · it. AU the dis'"ict attorneysl've talked to ... • ,..._ .....,. .... I ,. l»aT........_ ..._. mlnlslrat ve eadquarter1. never beard or such a Wnt. 111111-.--.11 • ,-....,. ,,. .. • Besides the presidential headquarters, "MY research confirms my lntllal reac. ~.,,_ ~: -::=-..... J -the i.c>RAN lnstalltUon has also sprouted tion that tbc request Is not within tho MWn"9 lk1111•. a center for Wbtte House ~des work1 (Set KENNEDY, P11e %) ~-'-----------' • } I • • • . : % DAJLY PILOl 's Fro• P•ge J SAN CLEMENTE tbelt is anKing toO separate llnu which \\'ru be manned by White House com· rnunicaUons experts, with apparently no ~st Guard inv.olvement. L>\RGE NETWORK _JJes.ides the fantastic network of elee- ~ tronic surveillance and communications g,ear set up in the area by U.S. Marine COrps personnel from nearby Camp 'Pendleton, other steps have been taken. · Aircraft navl,gatlonat charts are now . fOrmally marked for plloll with forbidden t'U,ght corrtdora. while searchlights atop the: seaside bluff can plck out a stray bo&ttt hundreds of yards at su aod order him away , Penonnel operating Santa Fe Railway «ritna: along;tracks at the root of the blutt 11al9w the Old· Cotton Estate -onetime. ~way of President Franklin D. ~v~t -also have thei~ order~. -~..$j>eeds shall be reduced 1n passing the ~er While House and whistles whlch i\l:ibr dlsturb presidential slumber or thi:i:aJ talks on ~temational .poUUca are itJlh!biled. -~ ~ntillgent of key figures in the Nixon ~fnistraUon will live In rented homes !unding, the estate, located in the 'ex· ve cfyprus Shores development, for contacL · ~btless, the public will be drawn to Jlj' San Clemi!nte area during Presiden t '° • n's anticipated rour weeks' stay, but only glimpses they are likely to get be via newspapers and television. ""' . ,:YARD ljQUIPM~NT. ~oUiands of dollars have been Slltf\l ~be more sophisticated guard equlp- t, while publk pathways through the ifta. are now blocked and Secret Service ~ will be on palrol. • ~iqot only personal safety, comfort and tevenience alteraUont are being made, ~-toP 1eCTel esthetlc Improvement.. are llJParenUy under way at the Nl:a:on sum· ~ home, according to unofficial ~rvers. ... :_..P.ollowing sale by elderly Mrs. Victoria bk.ton of the Spaiilsh villa, for an Gllmated $340,000. movers hauled away lrir elegant furnishings collected over a t'rear period. ~s. Pat Nixon'is havjng the ornate ha· ~a -surrounded ,by flowering, frµit· ~ing trees and shrubberies -re-done j!r . a Beverly Hilla decorator. But Ule ~r is the toppest top secret of all. ..:· ;-.; . ... .;., f'rom Page. 1 itAYING ... ... tktiitor William F. Oelhey of Washtenaw ~unty said, "We will consider other charges, naturally. We will be cheeking ,him out regarding the other crimes." Collins at his arraignment today stood mute before Circuit Judge Edward D. Deakc, who ordered him to jail without ~nd. A preJiminary hearlng was set fDr /\ug. 7. "' _ Police said Collins lived across 1)'8 It.reel from where anoilm' victim, Joan Schell, lived while · attending Eastern flfichigan University. ' . • Collins, a nephew by marriage to a &tale police corporal,. was arrested Thursday night althis Ypsilanti home. The announcement ca_me at -a news conrerence called by state police director Frederick E. Davids,'appointed by Gov. William , G. Milliken to head the in· vef!tigalion. Miss. Beineman disappeared and was lihiin July 23. Her body was found nude,· ~ten and strangled in a wooded gully between ~ twin university cities of Ann ~ and Ypsijanti. · ft>avids said he "believed" that Collins, st'iz·foot, 170-pound athletic type, closely rfiembled an artist's .sketch of the •peeted killer. jlt was made from descriptions furn ish· • . ed. by witnesses who saw Miss Belneman riding on the back or a big. shiny motorcycle with a tall , dark, young man the day she disappeared. . Davids said that there was "more than one motorcycle he ICollirui) had access · to." Davids said he did not: believe any of them. was a Honda 450, whlch police believed was the mOdeJ on which Miss Belneman was riding. ' County Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey said that Collins had been questioned before Miss Beineman's body was found, an<t was released. · He said, however, thal Collins had been under surveillance si.nce last Saturday. DAILY PILOT ~1liiill H,,...., ...... --_,...., ..__ CAUPOUllA OlAHGI CO.U1 .. I.II\ IMftNO CQlll.fl>AH., ll•"•rt N. '*'••• .. ~, .... f'#lfW Jodi It. c .. ,1 • ., ~U ~ruidlfrlt..,. ,Citflftlll ~-· llt•m•• li:tnll ldltw 1'1011111 A. M,,,hi111 """"""" ..... ....... (tlla IMtat IJll fl'ttl ··~ SirH! ........... .,..,,, 1111 "'"' hlblM .... ........ ~ ...,,: 211 ,,.,..., ....... .... ........ ltlft h«fl: at 3111 I""' ' • Frld'1, Aug ust l, 1%9 • Kee11i1ig Her Cool for Kris Laun, 18, lifeguard at Orange Coast College s\v im1ning pool in Costa Mesa, 1.he remedy for hol 'veather is a simple matter All she ha.s ~ do is. jump i.n the pool. What presents more of a problem for Kris is keeping those shoulder length tr«:sses out of her face when she ·Surfaces. PR Man for Irvine Co., I 1 ' Nixon Note •Just Bight~ 7-year-ol.d Composes Play Invitation With Special Care stolen if the man wlth the same last name acceplS Ule Dana Poin t starlet'a invitation. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 !IHI DI~ l'Mtl Slf" No formal note carrying ~elicate over· tones of international diplomatic proto- col was ever$ with more intensity or lac al n !t£!-. Tina Reel'e, 7, lppe the hair out ol her eyes, 1quincbed up her mouth and touched the pen to the stationery the way astronaut' 1Nell Armstrong set his foot on the m~.;.· ---·0ear Mr. Presioem,'' There was a crtticaJ pause. "Eeeeeyyuuu," groenel the girl select- ed in auditions to play Gretl Von Trapp in the . Lyric Opera of Orange County's tipcomt ng stage musical. "I keep writing slanted," .she com- plained. "I don't skip two spaces like you're supposed to." Miss Reece, daughter or htr. and Mrs. hfarvin Reece, ol 33261 gremerton St, Dana Point, would like President Nixon and his family to see her in "The Sound of Music," ~en il's perfonned. Th•t woo t be until September, but they could drop Into Irvine Bowl for a dress rehearsal later in the month while vi!lt ing the summer White House 'in San Clemente. "She can hard ly. ~alt to be!,;in." says Mrs. Reece, expla1n1ng that T1na~r is it Gretl-well, you know who, next week • Fro1n Page 1 KENNEDY ... jurisdiction of this court," he said,""Tauro said Dinis would be informed of his decisio n today. ' . "No provision of lhe law has come to my attention nor have I been able to find any precedent which ,,,.ould permit the supi!rior court to conduct the inquest." Tauro's statement said. "The district attorney bases his request explicitly on General Laws, Ch. 28 . Sec- tion 8. This section and all other related sections clearly indicate that the district court has exclusive jurisdiction over such proceedings and have ·no application ta the Superior court," he said. htassachusetts Jaw says if the medical examiner ''is of (the) opinion that Uie death may have been ca used by the ai't or negligence of another, he shaU at once begins two hours' daily preparation for her stage premiere. What does the mlni-llarlet herse lf have to say? "Oh, nothing," she comments, with all i11e airy nonchalanct: of an old·limer like Faye Dun•ay, but certain sources close to Miss ~e c ontradlcL this as merely trying to give her public an image. ·•She puts on that record ·~home and mimics right along with ilie music," says Mrs. Reect. ''I'm getting my fill ofit."·· Tina.and others chosen for ·the Rodgers and Hammerstein hit will sing live at Ule four September performances. Tina was a bit more forthright in her note lo President Nixon than to men and women of the press during the Thursday interview. "I am so happy because I am going to sing in 'The Sound or h1£is1c','' she wrote. ''My friends and I are going to be 1he Von Trapp children. "Jt is my favorite movie and no\\· I ~m going to be Jn the play, h1y mother read that it is your fa vorite too. I hope you will come to see us." "P.S. Marni Nixon is the star and I saw her on lelevision. I saw you on television too." Miss Nixon is no relation to the Presi~ den~. but as star, she miy find the show Ticketa are reserved for the First Family if they can work one of the hit production's local performances 'Into their busy August schedule. but Tina didn 't get to mail them personally. Stretching to send the invitation on Its way, ho\l{ever, Gretl cir Tina-whichever -was caught with her public lmi&e dow n, as w'ell as the mall deposit box lid. "Don't get my tiptoes in the picturt," she ordered. Boy Drowns as 'fwin Looks on Helplessly UNION .CITY (UPI) -Mickey Wayne Dumond, 12, drowned Thursday in Alameda Creek while his twin brother, Rickey, v.·atchcd helplessly from the bank. . Tbe brother said Mickey tumbled down a 25-fool bank into the water and was swept away. Rickey ran for help and the body was later recovered by Union City police. Oct. l Distribution , I County Names Direct9r Of roodStampProgram A direclor for Orange County's new Food Stamp Program has been selected an d \Velfare Departmenl Director Gran· ville Peoples said the first stamps would be distributed Oct. I. · Donald J. Herstenstein , a county " welfare staff member for the past six years~ was appointed to the post which has a salary range of $940 to $1,170 a month . Herstenstein, 39, a resident or Santa Ana, pla ced first in a recent competitive examination for administrative level positions, Peoples indicated. . necessary data processing programs and recruiting and training a staff. • Benefits vary under the plan. A mother with three children. drawing $230 a month in welfare would pay $72 for stamps and receive $96 in food value, a net of $24 worth of food per month. Participation in the prograrn is-volun· tary and eligibility will be determined by the welfare-department Peoples has estimated that there are up to 36,000 persons eligible in the county. • , notify the district attorney and a justice Wl·zz; nm -::. z-J·r.,,.-c·r-, R..-e-s_i_g_ns __ ..... di•l•ic•coorl-wllhln-wROH juri•dic. The new stamp 1 ircctor is a soctsl work supervisor \Ylth degrees i n pt;yQRolO(W arut rociology_ from the University of Illinois.· Stamps can be used to purchase domes· tic food items only. Banned are purch.ases of pet foods, soap, vitamins, tobacco, liquor and imported foods. KC; fl. U J f,;94 .1 lion the body was found ... " Dinis was unavailable Jor comment The Food .Stamp Program "'as ap- proved by the Board of Supervisors la5t May 13. as mandated by a slate Supreme Court decision or last Dec. 30. Police to Hold Satw·day Auction QUITS IRVINE COMANY PR Executiv• Aldrich . " ' William L. Aldrich, public relallons and advertising director for The lrVine Com· pany, today announced ~-s !J~pation and plans to establish a. cohsU1-idg fi~. Aldrich, who has been' with the Irvine · Company for four years, said he will establish the William L. Aldrich Publ ic Relations firm in Santa Ana. \Vil!iam R. Mason. president of The. Irvine Co., said Aldrich's resignation will be effective Aug, 8. . "He !s very capable in the public re\a. lions field and I kn o\v he will be suc· cessful . ir~ his new firm," 1tason said. Al~rich has been a lec turer at Pep· perd1ne College and at American f.tanageme·nt Assoc. seminars on the businessman's role in public affairs. He also se rved as an instructor at Riverside <ind Irvine campuses ot the University of California. Patl"ol Baton Rouue " BATON ROUGE , La, IUPll -About 2i)O National Guardsmen 1olned state troopC'rs and local police patroling the uneasy .stre.ets of Baton Rouge early t()- <tay as violence flared sporadically. i~olice reported intermittenl sniping. ~u11ti11gto11 Asl{ed to Join I . . 'Coalitio11' Over Free,va1· ' ' J . - I untirgton. Beach "'ill be asked ~lon­ da. ~i~t lo .add it~ vo.1:e to the cotlcctl\'e op 101\$' of sa other c111es concerning the fu re route of the Orange Freev.·av. uncilman have been :u:ked b)i lhc Orange County Road Department to form Fro11a . I' age l NIXON ... when he talked with Yahya lv>'o 1nonlhs ago. The SQUrces said it was clear thal Nix· on has hardened his attitude on the ques· lion of possible U.S. military aid in this •area since he began his tour almost two \\'eeks ago . They said while still hoping to confine American assistance lo Asia to lhc economic sphere, the President had decided not to rule out the possibility of military interevntion if that became necessary. , Tbf ll1Af'n objecti\'e, they said, W83 to prevent the emergence in Asia of · a chaotic situation which migtit give China. ~,ith its nucleat weapons, an invitation to move into some or lhe other countries by force. White 11ouse officials said Nixon w115 not in favor of lhe Indian idea for a jolnl U.S.·So\•iet agreement for 1n u t u R 1, Sh'!~ntce." of any· of the n~tions or 1his The indications were..that lndlan Prlnll' ~1inister Indira Gandhi h3d brou.ht up Uiis qwcstJon ,ar.d then Jt.noc:ked It dO\•ln. an ad visory committee to join \\'!lh six other affected county citieS to .present thr1r problems and desireS on a united front to the Stale Division of Highwa)'S. The O\ange Freeway is expected lo be aligned through Foutnain Valley, Hiin- 1ington 81;"11ch. Costa ~1esa ancl Ne'.l'port B(iach in the vici'nily of )he Santa Ana Jfi'.·er. A specifio route has not been ado~d ;ind countv road commis$iO~ Al S. Koch has devetoped a plan of cooperation bet"·ecn tile county a(ld affected cities to present their side of the issue 'to the st;ite. ' The council has been asked to appoint a com millee of concerred citizens to trade information and view-s with the other cities and with the state highway depart~ men\. Koch pointed oul Jhat a joint effort on tbc !reev.·ay situation would presen t a unique situation in California. once again making Orange County a leader ID in· tergovemmental cooperation. ' ' Rogers Men4s Fences [u Naiionalisl China TAIPEI, · Formosa (AP) -U.S. Secretory of State W\llian1 P. Rogers er· rl\•ed in Nationalist China tqday on a fcncr·mending lour of Asla and the f'acif1c v.11th lhc now familiar message : ••\\1c \\•Ill continue to meet our treaty <1blig:1tlons la our allies'' -including Formosa. when the judge's decision was released. At the lil'tle of .the acc ident, medical ex- aminer Dr. Walter Mills said he did not ask for an autopsy or an inquest because the cause of death -drowning -"was ob\•ious." In Washington, Kennedy said earlier to- day he would "cooperate in any way" v.·ith any inquest. The 37-year-old U.S. Senate whip plead· ed guilty a week ago today.to a charge of- Jcaving the scene of the fatal accident. He received a suspended two-month jail sentence and was placed on probation for a yea r. His driver's license also was sttspended. Peoples has estimated the cost of the program for 1he first year al SJ 10,000 and said that about 6:000 needy persons v;ould proba bly take advantage of the project. He said he will hire about 20 additional workers to administe r the plan. The eounly picks up the tab for ad· minislralive costs but the U.S. Depart· ment of AgricuJture rciniburscs all cost of food purchased over and above lhe amount a recipient pays for the stamps. Peoples said applications for aid would be proc.essed beginning Sept. I. He is presently negotiating with local banks which will .sell the stamps, w9rking out A gianl·sl?ed fork and spoon along with more than 25 bicycles will be up for bids al th& Costa Mesa Police Station auction Salurd~ at 10 a.m. The p(tlice • .auction will feature goods unclaiffied-,during the last three months. It will be held in Ulc parking lot behind lhe police facility. Checks will be acce pted for purchases and all proceeds will go into the police station's general fund. Robert Goode, a traffic investigator, will serve as lhe auc· tioncer. AUGUST QUALITY SAVIN GS ,, Drexel French . the Country Ma11.11er Ill DINING TABLE REG. $329. SALE $289. ARM CHAIRS REG. 1125 . SALE $107.50 SIDE CHAIRS REG . $11 0. SALE $ 95. Our summ•r sale also includ es sel•ct group 1 !rom Or•x•I -Henrsdon -He ritag•. Also N.1tlonal, Marg• Carson, and num•roua oth•r hnes. R.ductiont on acces5ories limp d p1cture1 1r• availabl•. ' • •n NIWPORT HACH 1721 Wntcllff Dr., 64 7-2050 OPIN •llDAY 'TIL t ~I INTERIORS Prafe11lon1I lnt•rior D•lgMrt Av1ll1bla-AIO-NSIO LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coaat Hwy. 494-6551 OHM P.llDAY 'TlL t , r ti , ·I I t I I t I I 1 I . 'I 11 ·I • ... .. • . , I \ ea~h TodaY's Fl•al N.Y. St.oeb VO[ 62, NO. 'taJ; l SECTIONS. 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST T, 1969 TEN CENTS Coast ~ants to . Cut Out Final Freeway Link ~ J~r.::. • • , ... 0 • By RANDY SEELYE 6f fM 0.11' ~I ... Sl1fl Councilmen from four Orange Coast cities hope the last Unk of the pr~ Orange Freeway (Route 57) will ·be eliminated. , At a meeting of the }.lesa Verde.Home Owners Association Thursday night, rep.. resen(atives said the freeway should be stopped at the San Diego Freeway or be routed east to join the proposed Corona del-P.tar Freeway. .. We must act iT "'e want the Divlsion Man Held lnMichigan Sex Slaying ANN ARBOR. l\1ich. iUPI) -A 23· year-old former Eastern l\f i ~ h i g a n University student has been arrested and charged with the slaying or Karen Sue Beineman, 18, seventh ses. murder victim in this are.a Jn the past two years, authorities aMounced today. At a news conference called by state authorities, the suspect_was identified as John Norman Collins, a nephew of a state police corporal. Police alleged that the site of the slaying waS the corporal's .'LET'S TALK IT OVER' Or•ng• Route to Sea *home in Ypsilanti, to which Collins had access while the family was on vacation . Beach Asked To Join Freeivay Advisory· Group Huntington Beach will bt asked Mon- day nigbt to add its voice to the collective op~ns of six other cities concerning the future route of the Orange Fr~way. Councilman have been asked by the Orange County Road Departmt?nt to form an advisory committee to join with six other affected county cities to present tht>ir problems and deslres on a united • front to the State Division of Highways. The Orange Freeway is expected to be aligned through Foutna.in Valley, Hun- tington Beach, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach in the vicinity of the Santa Aaa Rh·er. .o\ speCific route has .not been adopted and county road commissioner Al S. Koch has developed a plan of cooperation between the county and affected cilies to present their siQe of the issue to the state. The council has been asked to appoint a committee of concen::ed citizens to trade infonnation and views with the other cilles and with the stare hikhway depart- ment. Koch pointed out that a joint effort on the freeway situation would present . a unique situation in California, once :3g~1n making Orange County a leader 1n in- tergovernmental cooperation. Beacl1 Coµple Wants to See Grandchildren A Huntington Beach couple who once faced child stealing charges have asked Superior Court to order their former so~­ ln·IB\V to allow them to visit with their grandchildren. Chester and ~tary \Valciak seek ''reasonable visitation rights" in a court complaint which names James and Jillion l~anson of Orange as defendants. Hanson \\'as the husband of the Walczaks' daughter Wendy, who died in 1967 shortly after the birth of her second child, Richard. J~anson filed child stea.llng charges against the \Valczaks when the couple rled to a s1na1l .New Hampshire town with Christine, 4, and Richard, 2. 1t was alleg- ed at the Ume that his decision to re· marry sparked the Walciaks' Olght with their grandchildren. Orange County .district attorney's of- fi cers declined to press charges against the WaJaaks. who formerly lived at 8941 Gleneagle St., \Vest min s le r. Their Superior Court action is awaiting selling of a hearing date. ' Plauc Trip Cl:uice led SAIGON (UPI ) -An J,)ternalional Control Commission (lCC) flight which '\·as to have brought three American pri.sone.rs of tht North Vietnamese to freedom was canceled Friday because the ICC had not· "received the permission of the llanoi governnu~nt." Authorities declined to link Collins, of Ypsilanti, with the sii: previous sex kill· ings in this twin-university area, but pro- secutor \V illiam F. Delhey of Washtenaw County said. ''We will consider other charges, naturally. We will be checking him out regarding the other crimes." Collins at his arraikrunent today stood mule before Circu.lt Judge Edwari:I J?. Deake, who cmdered him to jail without booil. A preliminary hearing w.as ~t 'r Aug.. 7.. • ' Police said Collins lived ael"l)SS me street from whtre another victim, Joan Schell, lived while attending Eastern ~tichigan University. Collins, a nephew by marriage to 1 state police 'corporal, was arrested Thursday-night at his-Ypsilahti ·home. The announcement came 'al a news conference called by state police difector Frederick E. Davids, appointed by Gov. William G. Milliken to bead tbe in- vestigation. Miss Beineman disappeared and was slain July 23. Her body was.found nude, beaten and strangled in a \\'ooded gully between the twin university cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Davids said he "believed" that Collins, a six-foot, 17(1.pound athletic type, closely resembled an artist's sketch of the (See SLAYING, Page %) Teen Night Spot To Ask COuncil For New License Syndicate 3000, Huntington Beach's conlroversial teenage nightclub, will be back in-the eye of the City Council Mon- day in th~ form of a pet.ition to operate. City Clerk Paul C. Jones has denied co- owner Gilbert Covell renewal of his business ·license on recommendation o( the police department. · Covell, 32, who has been in a running feud with police and the city, maintains this is illegal. He said he has been operating without charging and vows to keep fightin g city hall from the aging building al 302 Pacific Coast Highway. He recently scheduled a press con· ference 'there to present his side of the city-Covell hassle. ' Jones states in a July 28 letter to the council that police believe renewal of the license would not be in the best interests of the community. Friction betewen Covell and , the city has betin much in the courts. City attorney Don Sonia la.st month ob· tained a conviction 'of ~II. a \Vestminsler resident, on l\\'O counts of allowing minors under 16 in his dance hall. Covell, 14201 Locust St., in the past has been arrested in connection with an April 20 riot and has instituted a $1 million lawsuit against the city. Jn a letter to the City Council, he main, tains that $15,000 has ~n spent on im- provements at the club which were Te· quested by the city. He lists: officers and penoM financially Interested in the corporation as himself, president; Carlotta Corey, 9301 Catherine . St., Garden Grove, vice president; and Pbillip Gibson of Long Beach, secretary. City Clerk Jones stafes in his July ·:a letter to councilmen that : "to date, I have not rece,i ved an appllcatlon from Covell in writing for subject permit." Councilmen are tidvlsed by their agen- das that they may direct the city clerk to issue a business license or to deny ii. . ! or Highways to consider our proposals," lluntlngton B ea c h Gj ty Councilman George McCracken said to.a large crowd gathered at Estancia High School in Coot.a Mesa. ' - "Huntington Bea.ch -iesidents were not uniHed when they had a chance to change the route ol the HunUngton Beach Free'way-so the Division of Highways made the decision," .he said. City Councilmen rrom Costa. ~fesa, Founuiin Valley and Newport Beach agreed that residents should present one major recommendation to the route planni.ng division. The~opinions were voiced at a panel discussion held at the high schoo!:-TW'o representatives from the Division of Highways' Division 7 and Al Koch, Orange County road commissioner, ~led ractual background to me dis· cuss1on. The area under study by the Division or Highways Is a 10.7·mi!e strip, one mUe wide, !oUowing t.be ta Ana River. Sid Ellicks, districtiiplan r for the Division of Highways-' said, "We muh still corlduct studies to det'ennine the possible location of the last link of the freeway. The route will not be adopted until after a public hearing to be held after the st'udles have been com· pleted." Ellicks said the department is study- ing four possibilities !or the route ot the wa~. ''It could go au ~ way tti Ule e;d Pacific Coast Freeway-,:. swing e to meet the Corona del Ma'" Freeway, sv.;ing west to meet lhe Hunt.: ingt.oh Beach Freeway or end at ~ San Diego Freeway." Koch said that a freeway wiU eveotll(' ally be necessary to relieve the tralliC pressure on Harbor Boulevard. "Traffic'. studies will detennine which rout"e trill. ~ FREEWAY, Page %) l(ennedy Inquest Denied . . BOSTON (UPI) -The chief justice of the Massachusetts superior court today rPJr-cted a district attorney's request for 1 judicial inquest into the fatal auto wreck , involving Sen. Edward M. Ken- nrdy, saying the investigalion was not within his court's jurisdiction. In a terse t"'o-paragraph statement. Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro said _the request by Dist. Atty. EdmunOS".lililis of New Bedford was in the "exclusive jurisdiction of the district court." Dinis infonned newsmeQ. Thursday he h11d sent a letter to the judge requesting the inquest into aii auto accident July 18 on Chappaquiddick Island in which a car driren by Kennedy plunged off a bridge into a tidal pond. ~1ary Jo Kopechne, 28, a Washington secretary, drowned in the mishap. The judge, who said he received first "'ord of the inquest through the press, ad· ded, "I just do~/see any precedent for ii. All the disttict attorneys I've talked to nevevh6rd of such a thing. . r'My research confirms my initial reac- tion that the request is not within the jurisdiction of this court," .he said. Tauro said Dinis would be . informed of his decision toda y. "No provision of the law has come to my attention nor have I been able to find any p1ecedent which would pennit the U'I Ttlfftletl hfn N•SA REF~ECTIONS ON OUR MAN ON THE MOON Astronaut Aldrin as Seen by Traveling Companion t Moon Photos Show Man Romping in Eerie W orll}, SPACE CEN'l'ER, Houston IAP)-'l'wo Apollo 11 astronauts romped on an eerie. unreal world of tortured gray terrain that photographed almost snow "•hi.le where brilliant sunlight reflected off 1t. Abo\'e was a. coal·black sky. This rugged land of Contrasts. of harsh shadows, o! craters and roe.ks of all sb:es. a place where man clearly was an inter· loper, could be seen as never before in color pictures taken by the men on the moon and n!leased by the space agency late Thursday. A sequence ot 34 still pictures snapped b,.... Annstrong while walking ' on the moon_dearly...sbow.a. nwly the whole spectrum of activity on the surrace, including~• dramatic view of Aldrin standing beside a sel5momet11r and ~ laser beam reflector that the moon men left behind, In lhe background, perhapg 100 feet away, is the Eagle landing cr1fl, an Ainer ican flag and the television cam· era perched atop Its silver mount-all plf;Jnly standing out against a llghtless •Icy. • Photos laken from a camera mounted in the . window or the Eagle show Arm· strong and Atdrln together planting the American fl._g in the rock-strewn ly:nar soi l, their spacesuits and backpacks a blinding white jn the sunshine. A c six-minute color motion picture lilm .rek:ased at thi1l:Dne time includes shois of a •receding moon as seen_ out Eagle's window while Armstrong and Aldrin blasted from the lunar surface. It included a sequence showing the landing cra!t apprbachlng the com. mand sblp, tis vlewtd by astronaut Mit'haet-Collins out the mother · shiprs window~ The Goldtn Eaale, iL'l rende:.VOU$ light blinking brlghlly, glides terlly against a b·acta:round of the mbving moon 69 m.Ues below. For a brief lnstanc, the ""arlh appears over the lunar horizon-marking the nrst lirrle earth, moon and a manned space- craft were ever captured In lhe same pholoiflph In 'P."''· • .. superior court to conduct the inquest,•• Tauro 's statement said. "The district attorney bases his request explicitly on General Laws, Ch. 28, Sec- tion 8. This section and all other related sections clearly indicate that the district court has exclusive jurisdiction over such proceeclin~s and have no application to the Superior court," he said. Massachusetts law says if the medical examiner "is of (the) opinion that the death may have been caused by the aqt or oegUgente of another, he shall at once notify the district attorney and a ju~tice of a district courf within whose jurisdic- tion the body was found .•. " Dinis was unavailable for ~ment 3 Seats at Stake when the judge's decision wu ~eased. At the time of. the accident, medical eJ'• aminer Dr. Walter Mills said he did not ask for an autopsy or an inquest becauae the cause of death -drowning -"was obvious." In Washington, Kennedy said earlier k!:- day be would "cooperate in any way• v.·ith any inquest. · The 37-year-old U.S. Se.nate wb1p plead-- ed guilty a week ago today to a charge ol leaving the scene of the fatal accident. He received a suspended two-month jaU sentence and was placed on probation for a year. His driver's license also •a• suspended. • io· Men -Com pet~:. • ·in Recall Vote • .... f • • By T.EfllY COVILLE slate or candidates for the eJeeUon - Of ,,. o.itr ''"' ''~" · VanOask has maintained his group_wu Ten candidates will fight ror three not f o r m e d to gain public office - council seats that may be available in although several ol the group's membel"I Fountain Valley's special recall election are ruMing lndividuaUy. Sept. 23. For t~e recall election, each candida~! All 10 had filed their papers by the had to designate which councilman uw deadline at noon Thursday and indicated was llling against, and he will be ruMing: opposition t.o a speicfic councilman o( the for only that councllman"s seat. three at whom the recaJI is aimed. · Opposing Schwerdtfeger -main target Ir the recall is successful Sept. 23 -it or the recall -will be Robert L. Sassone, must be approved by a majority or those 10444 FalCon Ave.: WOliam G. Schultz. voling -!he three candidates receiving -18534 Hawthorn St.. and George Scott. the highest number of votes in their race 1667! Spruc.e Circl~. would fill seats now held by Mayor Sassone lS ah attorney and handled Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice M a y o r several cour:t battles. for . the recall ~v~ Donald Fregeau and Councilman Joseph mt"nl On his quallf1caUons he said bis courreges. ~ legal experience would'beneLit the city In All three councilmen came under at· the area or ordinances. • tack from the Fountain Va Civic ""I believe In his lifetime every man Association, headed by Eugene VanDask, ~hould plant a tree .and have.. a chi~," on charges of ignoring the voice of the says, ~assone, pol~tuig to the .J>Otent.;al j>eople. _......... stability of Fountain Valley as...,.his reuon ~or wanting to Uve there. PLANNING, LOTS The issue has been plaMing and lot MARKEi'ING MANAGER sizes in Fountain Valley, but politics and Schultz lists his occupation as a personalities have also taken a htavy marketing manager for machinery •. ~e part in the recall action. was highly active in the recall activities The civic association has not pla ced a of the civic association. Forq u a Ii! i cat tons he stated hi! Sanitarium Issue Wiil Go Before Co1u1cil Monday A proposed 152-bed sanitarium opposed bv area residents in ~lunlington Beach will be before city councilmen Monday in thf' ronn of an appeal from a split plann· ing commission. denial. Planning commissioners split 4-3 in de· nying the ~1ajor D Corp. application In June. A petition bearing 77 signatures op- posed the facility. It would be located on - 3.4 acres on the south side of Holland Drive off Beach Boulevard. Residents of the ari;a have questioned the suitability of sucll a fa cility -even though the zoning allows il -and ex- pressed concern about the acU vities of pallents. Robert R. Rigby, property manager ror the corporation, has described the pa· tients of the "L Type facility" as ''The elderly. senile guest Who suffers from oemollonal disturbances, confusion, men- tal deterioration and the like.·· ·He has stated that the building would have free flow of movement for patients in the Interior o( the building but restricted egress to the o<iUlde, except eoclosed pa~o are~. . The corporation invited 61 area pro- perty owners tO a metllng to discuss the situation and related that six attended.· Planning Commission cdnslderaUon of ttie corporate application for a use. permit and conditional exctpUon also ln· volvcd orf:street parking, Requirements for the facility would have included 102 parking spa~t. The corporation had aougbt to have tl\la whit· tied to 70. background in administration a n d · management could benefit the city. Scott is a teacher, past president of tht: Fountain Valley Jaycees, current prest· dent of lbe board of directors of the Foun- tain VaJley Boys' Club. • He signed the recall petitions, but was not personally active in the movemenL His \\'ife, however, circulated recall peti- tions. Vice Mayor -Fregeau also drew three opponents including, Paul C. Guiso, 17576 Santo Domingo Circle; Paul P. Savarino, 10719 El Centro Ave., and Bernie P. Svalstad, 9803 El Tulipan Circle. Guiso lists himself as an engineering (See CANDIDATES, Page %) Oraage . Weather Tum on the air conditioner or get out to thf , be.ach bec~use hqt weather ia in store ·for the Coast during the weekend, with ltmr>- eratures heading into the.high ICls. INSIDE TODAY Skyrocketing corti of ?Mdi- cal care is rapidl11 making get- ting sick a lun111 that tiO one can afford. Page 12. ~ *"""' ,, a..tlllS 11 <•••1111 • OtW!ltMll fl .. t ,_.. . (__... 11 ........... ' Dl_...M 11 ltlltlf"i.I Pffe ' llllttr,.NMI! II>» 1"111-. lt-11 -.. """'......, 11 MtrrltM Lk..,..._ 1• • -J DAILY 'iLOT H ·1 Walkout Halts W 01·1{ ·011 Outfall • ... A beavy equipment operators strike bas stopped all construction on a huge S. ·mile long aewer ouUall north of the Santa Ana ruver mooth in Huntington Bech. Since Juiy 21 wocn members of the ·International Union of 0 per al in & ~£iigtnee.rs walked off their jobs, the site, ~ee bustling with activity, has been ~I)' deS<rted. . :.-·Project s1.1perlntendent John Ford said :Se did no\ know what effect lhe work j\oppage would have on the January 1971 :(¥gef date for completion since the ~ke is still on. . !--: "Out company is 'keeping in close con· :t,ict with the union however," said Ford. '.fourteen union members had been at :'wbrk on the project, operaUng various :jleces of heavy equipment. including a ~tr.uck crane and trestle crane used to lay :.ibe 10-ft diameter pipe into the ocean. • ~ i111f: strike ~eans the second delay for :·oie llroject, which. is. the second larges~· of till ~ind·o·n-the West Coast. - .;.unusually large deposits of silt fonned to.tar fhe ·river mouth in January and !f.ebruary when heavy rains deposited ~us of sediment in the con&lructiOn ~ Work was delayed three weeks. l • Once completed, the ooUall will <&!TY :MwM~ fai;: oqt to sea.-It will run pu~Qel JO an· old 7,0()0.foot ootfall whi_ch reached ~ capacity years ago. ~In building the $8.9 million project, eng- ~:eers are employing a l ,500 foot trestle 1With a huge crane which moves .down i tracks and drops the pieces of pipe onto rUte ocean floor. ~ .. Once the pipe is far enough out In the ::ieean, the additional pieces of pipe, each ~ghing 90 tons, will be laid from a ·:Sorge. -:.The iron lresUe. which looks somewhat • ~ a pier, will then be dismantled and ~oved from the site. •• .~ c ~mitingtQn Sets )unning Meet l'or Weekend ~tore than 200 cornpelitors are ex- pected lo parlicipate in the 15th Annual Huntington Beach Distance Tourney wllich begins at 8:30 a.m. Saturday at the Huntington Beach Pier. · Runners In three division,s.,f4H compete for trophle3 in the eVt?Jt wb1Ch will take them around beach service roads. Awards wiU-be presep.ttd for the five fastest times and to five handicap win- ners in the JG-mile handicap feature and to the Jive fas1e~t times in the l Yi and 3· mile events. In addition,, the city Recreation and· Parks Department, w~ich is sponsoring the tournet, will present awards to the first finisher from Huntington Beach in each or the three divisions . The competiton is sanctioned by lhe long distance running committee ()f the Soulhern Pacific AS!Qei.ation o( the Amateur Athletic Union (AAUJ. i Parking Meter ' Revenue Rising City coffers are jingling In ltunlington Beach despite strikes which have held up completion of the $2.3 million beach 'Park- ing lot project. Parking revenue along the waterfront from April I through July 29 has ex- ceeded $25,211. Income from the parking lots is Jn excess ()f $27,337, according to figures released today by the Department of Harbors and Beaches. Completion of the beach parking pro- ject awaits an end of the strike of heavy equipment operators. Landscaping of Pacific Coast Highway is continuing dur- ing-the !trike. • DAILY PILOT OltANG~ COA!T Y'~lllS~!NG COM,,ltN't Roborl N. WttJ rr11icltf\I •ncl l"llDllll'llU _ J•ck lit. Curl•y Wil'rciillu1J 1nCI Gentrl.I M1Ntf:I Tllom•t 1<11•il ECllli:r Thomlt ;., M1,1tphtn• Mff\Qln1 (Cllltr ;.lb-ti W. l 1l•• An«lllt ECl l1or M111tht91011 l tetti Offlte ")09 Sth Str••I ~•ilin9 Mdr1ni P.O. 101 790, t1l41 Otltft Olllth NI•"' IM•cll )11 t Wn• lt!t.n• &e11•tv1r4 Co.•• Mc:1-1· DO Wut 1&¥ !"1:<1! L.ootUN &a.tll• m f~rt11 ""'~~• ' ' DAIL T ,tLor l tln ,,,.,. • Ppllefl Exp'lalned 1U ~s. Can Still 'Fight • Ill LAHORE . Pa]{lstan (UPI) -White House sources sai d today that President .Nixon's no-more-Vietnams policy would nOt ~bar future U.s. rnHH.ary intervention ln •Asia if Communist aggression gravely threatened to change. the balance of power there. The White House sources sii..id Nix on h~d reached this dec ision after talks with government leaders in the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, South Vietnam, ·India and in Pakistan today with Gen. Agha f\1ohammad Yahya Khan, the military president. The sour~s said-that despite his RPblic assertions that he would avoid any future Vietnams h~ had two major· reservations Golfers, Relax: Asia after hls talks: If there is a 1najor attack across Ule borders, or a nuclear threat, the United States \.\·ould have to consider the possibili ty or taking military action. If there is a military action by the con1mun ists \\"hicft threatened the in- ternational balance or power, that too, l\"OUld. be a fac tor in causing the Pr~i· dent to abandon his hands off military policy, the \Vhite }louse sources said. The sources said Nixon round that Thailand and lndla were particularly "'orrled about the possibility of Chinese Communist aggression. Here in Pakistan, there was not so much emphasis on that as on the desire of this country to get more U.S. military ·equipment. Pakistan has developed in· creasingly close ties with Peking follow· ing a cooling of its friendship with the United States since the days of the Ei senhower administration. ALL QUIET A.T SEWER OUTFALL CONSTRUCTION SITE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Len9thening Operating Engineers' Strike Brings Helt to 'Lengthy ProjeC:t-• Edi.son Facility Won't Be Hazard The United States embargoed arms shipments to both India and Pakistan following their 17-day war In 19SS. The sources said Nixon recognizes tha( the embargo operated to the disadvantage Clf Paltistan because it did not ha\•e other resources available to India. Rookies " Li11e · on Fir emen Get Baptism of Fir e By RUDI NIEOZIELSKl Of tllo"Ofltr ,lltl 51111 Four rook ies of the Huntington Beach Fi!e Department received their baptism by fire Thursday morning . The men, Ste.ve Rini, Gary Hendricks, James Ellis and Lou Torres, had an op- portunity to show v.·hat they learned in a fiv~·week training course by ex~ tinguishing a roaring blaze in an aban- doned house at 2317 Delaware St. \Vhen they arrived with their truck, running red light and siren, smoke \Vas pouring out ()f the windows of the little red bungalow and flames were lick.ing the roof. It v.·as hot. And for good reason. The fire was set by one of the best •·arsonists" in Orange County, Battalion Chief James Gerspach, who poured 3 gallons of diesel oil on scraps of lumber arid furniture and ignited it with a flare . The ~r men surroiyided the. blaze .,.,.itb an extraordinarf $ow oC _ sk1U aad speed. City anti fire department brass had come to watch. So did the firemen's wives . Jlle lad ies chttred their menfolk on from the op- "posite side of the street. ~1aoy of them hae! nCver seen their husbands in action belore. The battalion and di vision chiefs present at the exercise threw up a few roadblocks such as nailing some of the doors shut' and starting another fire at the back ()f the house where it couldn't be seen . "They did very well," said Gcrspach aft~r the exercise. The firemen were trained in a variety of fire control. rescue and resuscitation procedures by Division Chief James B. \Vatters. By coincidence firemen working the training blaze received an emergency ca\J from a nearby trailer park while smoke was still pouring from the building. Apparently one nf the trailer court resident.s thought that the heavy black smoke in the area emanated from one of lhe trailers and notified the fire depart- ment. · ,"We'll~list Jt. on the log as an) honest nilstake," JaUghtd• Oerspach, a ft e r dispatching two t~ks to the scene. The abandoned afiack burned up in the training fire was donated_ by the city's building departmen~. From PQfle 1 CANDIDATES LINE UP • • • administrator. He did not fill out a sheet of qualifications .,,hen he filed and is relatively unknown in Fountain Valley political circles. I le ·was not nolab\y :ic· tive in" the recall movement. McDONNELL OFFICIAL Savarino is in ccontract manage!llent a ~1cDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co., Huntington Beach. He was neutr_al d~r· ing the recall battle and pr1mar1!y represents the interests of Green \Talley home O\.\'ners. "l'm I ooking for a stable, better balanced government in F o u n la i n Valley," says Savarino. Svalstad is a site selector coordinator for Jack-in-thc·Box restaurants. lie \.\'a<: highly active _in the recall activities o( the civic association . lie also has been a past president of the Fountain Valley Jaycees and is a 1nember of the Boys' Club boar·d of direc· tors. as v.·e\1 as being active in other vouth organizations. · Courreges faces the largesl list o[ can· Front Pnge 1 SLAYING ... suspected killer. tl was made from descriptions furnish- l'!d by witnesses who sa'v l\.,iss Beineman riding on the b1ck of a big, shiny motorcycle with a tall. dark, young man the day she disappeared. Davids said that there wa s "more 1llan one motorcycle he (Collins) had access lo." Davids sa id he did oot believe any of them was a Honda 450, \\•hich police believed was the model on \\•hich l\1iss Beineman was riding. County Sheriff Douglai; .r. Jlar\·ey s.aid that Collins had been questioned bflore l\liss Beineman's body \va s found. and \\'as released. He said, however. that Collins had been under surveillance since last Saturday. Huntington Installs Own Gasoline 1'ank A 10,000 gaUon gasoline tank was In· rt.tlltd this week near the polfce facilities of Huntington Beach City Hall to allow the city to buy Its gasoline supp\1'3 in bulk. • City Administrator Doyle Miller, sairl start members esllmatcd that the savings to lht: city from buying bulk gasoline sup. plits will orrw.t the installatlo11 costs in about one )'e.a r. didates, four , Including Donald E. Frank, 1880~ Los Leones St.; John G. Ginos, Jr .. l~O Cork St.: Roy D. Richards. 17686 Bay Circle, and Ron Shenkman, 94Z7 El Blanco Ave. Frank is a systems engineer wilfi North Amer.lean Rockwell Corp. 11e was also active in the recall movement and is a past presidenl of the Fountain Valley Jaycees. LISTS INVO£.VEtl-1ENT Frank lists five years of civic in· volvemenl as his primary' qualification for office. He feels his budgetary kno\\"ledgo of go\'emnent \.\'ill also be useful. Gino.c; is a property representat ive for Standard Oil Co. He did not sign the rcrall petitions but sa.\"s.. h(' is in ~ym­ pathy with the recall n;ovcinent. Ginos says he is running to provide a more representatiYc governn1cnt. wit h better direction to"'ard the. problems or youth. Hicha rds is a drnust. for the i\l;iynr in fact, ancl claims he has been highly 1n- \·olvcd u\ the recall 1no\·en1enl. "I an1 a concerned citizen ;ind I don't hrhc,·c the council ha<; been rc~pon~il·r \11 lhc rit11.ens." he says in st::itltl(; In$ rt'ason tor running . Shcr.k1nan is an clluca\or ••nd a 0h11sinessn1an . He cu~rcntly serves as t·hairman ol the parks and recreation l"0111mi~sion <incl 1~ <1 n1en;bcr or the Jayttcs. ··\Ve n1u~t rnd lhe confusion :ind chaos and develop confid~ncc 1n a stable city,"' deelarrs Shrnkman. \\'ho \\·as not notably acli\"e in the recall ·movement. 2 Join Others In Quarantine SPACE CENTER ,-}louston tliPI\ - The space agency added two mtn to quarantine "'ilh the Apollo 11 astronauts toda y because one of the technicians may have bttn exposed to moon rock materlal "'hen his vacuum chamber pressure glove broke. The laboralOry worker, Ronald Buffum, v.'aS 11plltting lunar samPles at the lime, reaching into the airless cabinet through two black rubber gloves. When one glove tore, the sudden rush of air sucktd his right arm dttf)Cr into the cabinet. George \Yilliam~. another technlcinl'l In the lunar rtct1v1ng laboratory, htlped D11Uunl pull hi~ 11rm out of the ch<in\bcr. Burfu111 rccih cd rn111or IJr1;t1Se~ . • I \ From Pnge 1 FREEWAY ... be needed." Councilman \Villard T. Jordan of Costa f\-lesa said the city hasn't adopted an off icial position on the issue yet, but noted "1ve must fight to see that the Orange Freeway doesn't run do\\'n the easl side of the Santa Ana River." John Harper, Fountain Valley Coun- cilman, added that the proposed freeway "·ould •·reduce our industrial land and prevent an access 10 the river bed for equestrian trails," Jiarper noted that "Fountain Valley hopes the freeway will be shilt1.-d slightly east to meet the end of the proposed Corona del ··Mar Freeway." Don f\1clnnis , Newport Beach Council- 1nan, presented similar ideas 11i•hen he. said, "The freeway should be tenninated at the San Diego Freeway or meet the. Corona de! Mar Freeway .'' After the panel discussion. the !\lesa Verde Home Owners passed a resolu· tion that hopes the Division of Highways will consider ending the freeway at the San Diego Freeway or join the Orange Freeway with the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway. . Rogers Mends Fences In Nationalist China TAIPtJ, Formosa (AP) U.S. Secretary oI State \Vllllam P. Rogers ar- r ived in Nation81ist China today on a fence-mend ing tour ()f Asia and the Pacific with the now familiar message : "\Ve will continue to meet our treaty Qbligatiorus to our allies" -inciuding Formosa. Further clashes between park pro- ponents ~nd the , SOuttJern California Edison Com'pany over a Substatitn within the futu re Huntington Central Park have been averted. A new location has been fo_und for the t"·o-and-a-ha!f acre facility which \.\'as originally planned for construclion at Ellis A venue and Golden West Street in an area deslined to be part of the park's public golf course. ~1ayor Jack Green said he and Edison Company District ~tanager Ralph Kiser have been able to work out a compromise which v.·ou\d put the station near Edwards Street, south of the future Pacific Coast Freeway. Kiser said the new substation would be put "out of and v.·ay from the tentative golf cou rse area and av.·ay from the pro· posed central. park.'' The Edison Company has \vithdra.,..·n its application for a use permil on the pro- perty and is expected lo su bmit an ap- plication for the ne1v locat ion in a few days. Furor over the su bstation was generated by citizens during the past few 1nonths \vho all eged that the substatjon and its overhead trans1niss1on lines l\'Ould destrof'fhc natural brauty of 1hc park . Some reared lhal runds SOl'[;tit for Ule park under the hoµsir.g and Urban · De1·elopmcnt Agency 1rcu ld be Jeopard iz- ed, since the agency specifies that the natural cn\'ironmen t remain unchanged. Kiser explained that the Edison Co. ac· quired the pro perty more than two years ago with the adv ice of I.he city ~taff, long before the park wa s planned. He said the substatgon was o{ vital im- pottance since oil drilling operations have overloaded the system. but added that il \l'OUld be impossible to place all transmission lines undergroum:I because of their high voltage. • AUGUST ' QUALITY SA VIN GS put when asked v.•hether this meant the United States was leaning toward resumption of arms aid . I o Pakistan. \Vhite liouse officials said this was not necessarily 'he case. Al the end o[ his talks today \\'ilh Yahya the !'Ources said the subject was ·•still unde1 review,"' 'fho::.e "·ere the san1e words used by Secretary of State \\'illlam P. Rogers \rhen ·he talked \vit.h Yahya two months ago. The sources said it "·as clear that Nix- on has hardened his attitude on the ques- tion of possible U.S. military aid in this area· since he began his tour almost two v.·eeks ago. They said while still hoping to confine American assistan ce lo 1\si11 to the economic sphere, the President had decided not to rule out the possibility of military \nterevntion if that became necessary . The main objcc\i\·e, they said. \1·as to prev ent the en1ergence 1n Asia of a chaotic situation \.\"hich mighl give China, v.·ith its nuclear \.\·eapons. an in\•ilation to move into sorne of the other countries by force . \Vhite House officials said Nixon was not in favor of the Indian idea for a joint U.S.-Soviet agrce1nenl ror mu t u a I guarantees of any of the nations of this area. The indications were lhat Indian Prime ~1inisler Indira "Gandhi had brought up this question and then knocked it down . Looking ahead to Nixon's one-day visit lo Romania Saturday, the officials said they hoped the Bucharest yisit \.\'OUld underline the interest of the Nixon ad· ministration in developing relations, .,.ith countries behind the Iron Curtain. But they insis~. as they have beh1re, that there is nothing anli·Russian about the trip. They said it was an example o{ the Nixon administration's desire to im· prove relations with all ()f Eastern Europe. - \ •• Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS in the Cou11 try REG. $321. il1an11er REG. $125. REG . ~I I 0. SA LE $289. SALE $107.50 SALE $ 95. Our 1ummet" s•le •lso includes 1elect groups from Drexel -Henredon -Heritage. Also National, M1r9• C1rson, and numerous other lints. Reductions on 1ctessorie1, l1mpa 11\d picturei are •vailablt. " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W•tcllff Or., ~.20!0 ON~ NIDAT 'Tll t INTDIORS Prm..1..,.1 ln .. rier o-i, ..... Av101bl ........ ID-NSTD LAC1UNA BEAC!i 341 Norftl C..lf Hwy. °"" Plf•.t.Y 'TT\. I ~ Toi "-.._. ei1 0..,,. C....., M .. I!•) I i I :1 . I ti , ,• :I ' ,. il • .._ .. ' ......... •" . ' • •• I Wex!ll RJKM . .. , .. - : 0 •' Mon·Fri 9 am-9 pm Sat 9 am-6 pm-. . \ - Model FIJkU. Westin9house "Frost Free 14" Refri9erator • 14 cu. ft. capacity • Com· pl•tely frost fr•a operation 0 Automatic ice maker optional -plu9. it. in at any t ime - when you buy, or later • Slim. W all design gives you bi9ne1• wh9re· you need it -inside • 121 • lb. frost free freei.er • 7.day fresh meat keeper• Can· tilevered ad justable sh11lves • RemO..,.a ble egg contain er• But .. fer ·a nd cheese s•rv•rs • Maq• . netic door gaskets • Glide out adjustabla rollers • Le rg,• v•ci•· iable crisper • Automatic inter• Tor , li g~t in refr igerator, Westinghouse ~Wash •N DI")' Twins stack up WI just 2r of floor space. And now the elldusfole Weslinghouse"Wela:h·TO·S•..,•- -door weighs evef'f load, so )'OU newr add more hot water and detergent tttan necesgry. Acto&lty saws Yo'! enough to wash e\1'1111 tlllrd load /reel Ftus the-5e WntiojlhoUle extras: Washer. • 5 nshine cycJes • Tab lnterlor &ght • Special pe11•nent Pf'MS cycle • 5 posttton wcter sawr • Autome~ lint ejector Dryer. s position drying selector • Special permanent press settln1• • lnteriordrumlliht • f'ort.dai«i.,.. an'el drum ·T.V. & APPLIANCE CENTER HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR, COSTA MUA I TELIPHONI 540·7131 ·---- . - 4 • ' " ' l'rld.,Y, AU<JUI\ !, 1%9 DAILY l'fL OT J • • , ., FIRST •• .. • ,.APPLIANCES • M'EREO • TELEVISION real bargains ... real savings ... real values ON WESTINGHOUSE EXTRA VALUE APPLIANCES "\ •. ,. NOTHING DOWN UP TO WESTINGHOUSE "FROST FREE 25" SIOE·BY .SIDE 1lURIGERATOR-FRW£11 • 25.2 cu. ft.capacity • Huge 322 lb .• 9.16 cu. ft. capacity fr-eezer •Completely frost free operation • Onty 35% In. Wide • Cecoratlv• p1n1 I fronts optioria~· le e cube 36 .MOS~ TO PAY! · server arid 2 e;letor treys· .• Automatic ice maker-·avaif· 21ble as an t1ptlo"·i 1 'add.on now, or buy It later • N!w Westinghouse poWer econo ·: • mizer. • Twin Juice can dis·· pensers • 7·day fresh ' meat keeper • J.temperaiture ad· Justable butter conditioner NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBER! • West(i'lghouse sUm·waU .d•·, a ran for a;reater:.inslde.1tora2•- • New cantilevered-adfllst· 21bte shelves • Utility storag9 compartment!. Removablit egj: container • Twin vege-- table crispers • Adjustible refrigerlltor doo r sh elveS l\"(:A .C.I · Weatlnchouse 6 Pus -Button Extra-Quiet Built''" Qi1hwlsh1r· • S.nltlztr-•s1urt 1 l 4~' hot w11h and rln11 wilters • ~er turret w.1h K.Uon ' • Glide.out lld/ustable rollers • Automatlc door clo1w R~modeling Your Kitchen? , There's A Westilghouse Built·ln Dishwasher Just Rlgkt · For Aqy Kitcb'n D.ecor ••• Westln1hou H Boint.rn Dl1hW11her • Autorr\1tlc doubl1·w1sh • Powef turret wash 1ction • Ou al autom1tic deteraent d11pen11r1 • pofcelain-on-st1~r tub and inner door ' . --. - • ' %0 DAILY PILOT H fr~. Allgust I, 1'6• Year B011etf'• Wortla • Complete-.:New York Stock List OVER THE COUNTER • Rates to Compare In Cm~ Financing By SYLVIA PORTER 1 f you are among the millions buying a new or used car during Olese summer \l.'etla, you are now discovcr- ln.s -perhaps for lhe first time -how steep art the cosu o( (lnancing it on time . Auto Joans always have been comparatively costly. 'They are now more so than ever in this tight money era. What's more, the "real" costs of automobile financing are now tn the open; the Truth tn l&n_ding law i.s forcing you., \he buyer, to look al the actual cost to you of ''add-Oas.'.' "dis· counts," extra financt charges. You may be so accustOmed to being in the dark that you resent being informed : or you may so dislike the knowledge of \\'hat you're paying that you prefer to be ignorant. NEVERTHELF.SS, no mat· t'er how you teel ·about know- ing lhe facts, here are typical yearly interest rates now beipg charged on ,auto loans: Most commerdal bu b: .. 10 to 12 percent on most Jfew cars; 10 to 14 pereent on most late model used can; JJ to 111 percent for older used cars (two years and older). PSA's ~Net' Takes Drop Pacific Sotlthwest Airlines ... reported eamin'gs for the sec- ond quarter, ended June 30, of fl,lrt[323 000 on total revenues of Sl7, ,000 compared lt> $1,209. in 1968 on total revenues of $14,037,000. Earnings per share in the second quarter of I 9 6 9 amounted to 36 cents com- parM to 40 cents for the prior year. The earnings for the sec· ond quarter of 1969 and 1968 include gains, nel or appllcablt: income tax, on sales of aircraft of 9 cents and 10 cents per share respectively. Earnings for lht: six months end=J . e 30, were $1,292,000 on total evenues of $32,102,000 co to ear!'ling.s of U 009 000 oa revenues of '15,600,ooo for the first half of 196!. Earnings per share for tht six months were 43 cents compart!:d to 117 centAI including t cent.I and 2& cents per share re1pectively from ex- traordinary gains on aircraft aales. 1'11••·······················1 NIW VClll .. (A') • Ftldlr'I ~lilt•• 1.. New Yen; s-.a:. 'llldllnn •k•: NASD l l1tlnv1 lo~ Th ur.Uy, July JI, 1"' Hardcastle Gets Agency Compacts Popular • Coast Folk Use '65 Autos Frank llardc.astl~, president of Frank Hardcastle & Assoc., Inc .• insurance brokt:rs of Los Angeles and Newport Be•ch, has annou~d the acquisition cif Pacific Westero Insurance Agency, a Hollywood based firm . John H. Hill. formerly of the Pa cific Western Insurance Agency, 6777 Hollywood Blvd., "'ill join Hardcastle's firm as vice· president. The new combined apera· tions will occupy offices at 7141 N. Figueroa SL, Los Angeles. There are more 1965 model automobiles being driven in the Harbor Arca tha n any other year's. The First National Bank. or Orange County found this out in a report it made for its third quarterly b u s i n e ~ s review. Thr report revealed lha IS 3 percent of the cars in ~ewport Beach and 12.1 percent o( Costa Mesa regi stt:re d vehicles are 1965 models. 1008 is the next most popular year $1,000,000 • ' COMMERCIAL FINANCE EQUIPMENT LEASE -SALES LEASE BACK ACCOUNTS RECllVAILE AND INVENTORY FINANCINCO. GREYSON CO •. LTD., INC. 1400 w .. t c ... , Hwy .. Sult• I \ NEWPOllT l l ACH -Ml-1102 with statistics ·()( 14.$ percent and ll. l wcent for Newport and Costa Mesa respectively. Overa11, about 68 percent of the cars are in the medium price range with 20 perctnt, low-priced. and the balance, high·prlced. For American-made automobiles, General ~iotors has slightly over 39 percent. with Ford Motor Co. at 2'.5 percent and Chrysler li.totors, 10.4 percent. Ho\vever, t.he Ford edges Chevrolet slightly for first and second places, with Volkswagen laking third place in individual makes. or the total number or hous~olds with autos, about 34 percent are multiple car owners. Compact car a\vnership r a t e s relatively high at 40 percent. Station wagons are popular al 20 per· cent. Foreign car ownership averages 2a percent for both communities. There are 32,12• households In Coota ,.lesa and Newport Beach area that s b ow ownership of 43,085 cars. 'The review also disclosed that building activity in bottt Costa Mesa and Newport Beach zoomtd again for the first baU of 1969 from $23.f Palafoutas Appointed John L. Palafoula! of Hun· tington S.~ach has been elected a dirtctor of the Empire Securities Corp. The firm, headquartered in Ariahelm, Is an affifiale or thti Empire fl\mily of financial corPoratlonis. Palafoutas Is associated ~·Ith the 1ilanuracturers Lite IMurance Ca. in Santa Ani and "'a!' his agrncy'a "Jo.Ian of the year" In ·1968. , Other newly ~lecttd dire<:· tors include: Llwrenct 11. Parker. Anaheim, and Jamei H. Cooley, John W. llowta and Robert A. Skinner of fuUertOf\. Ford's Net Declines In Quarter ' ••1'1 Ni t Ul .. J MIM 1.tw CIM CQ. • i I. 11 I· l I I • I '· I · ........... • • Friday's Closing H DAILY PILOI'" JJ Prices -CO plete New York ~t~.· ~xchange List Stock. Price R~e On Broad Front Complete Closing Prices -Ainerican Stock Exchange List. • • • • Ul"I Tt l9PHI• Not Push Me Pull Me? ' . . ' . ,. It's not a creatqre from· Carroll's Alice ·in \Vonder~ land but a coincidental juxtaposition as Andy and Cindy study visitors at the Overton Park Zoo ip Me.mph.is, Tenn. Even the matching body markings belie the separate giraffes. MEDICAL CO STS • • • (ConUnaed from Page 1%) and heeded by hosplla}s faced wilh acute manpower 11hortaBes. The fact ls that all types or med ical personnel -doctors, dentists, nurse.s, therapists 8J)d technicians -are func- tioning toeay in w h a t economists call a "seller's markel" They can ask for more for their services -and set it -because there aren'l enough tor them to go around. HEW estimates the nation currently has a shortage of 50,000 physicians, 9,000 den- ilsls, and 141 ,000 nurses. No early relief is in sight. REW projections indicate the physician shortage may be reduced by about 11,000 over the next seven years -but that would still leave the na· Uon. shy 41 ,000 doctors in 1976. , The overall .natio n al shortage of mechcal personnel 11 •ggravatett by maldistrlbution. Doclors, nurses and other practictioners of the healing arts tend to concentrate In cities and particularly In the wealthier residentia1 sections, where the pay is better and living . conditions more com· fortable than in other places. The result is that many small towns and isolated rura1 areas have no doctors, and the ghel· to ,area! of inner cities have far fewer than they need lo care for their teeming popula- tions. Thus the shortage of medical personnel leads not only lo higher cosls, but also, even more seriously, to in· adequate medical care for millions of American$. The first need, they say, I!! for more manpower In all of the professional and sub- professional specialties related to health. The Nixon administration Is appealing to medical schools throughout the country to find ways to expand t h. e i r enrollments and to shorten the time (now a min imum of 7 years) required to train a doc· tor. Federal aid fund s already are available to medi cal, den- tal and nursing schools and their students. CJVD.JAN JOBS Secretary Finch announced July 10 that his department is sctUng up an "office of new careers" which will encourage mili~ry medical corpsmen returning from Vietnam to take civilian jobs as physi- cians' aides. The second need is for more efticient utilization of scarce professional manpower. This means delegating to StJbprofe!Sional ·workers (physicians' aides, nurses' aides, lab technicians, etc.) some or the time-consuming routine tasks, such as giving shots and making blood tcst5, now performed by doctors and nurses. The id ea is to give docton •nd nurses more lime for the kind of work \\'hich rc- "quiret lengthy professional training. Some but not all doctor!!, and many government of· ficiala, also ravor group prac" tiCe as a device (or improving uUlizaUon of medical man- power. Group practice is medJca1 aervict provided by three or more phyticlan1 who share facilities, ass!s"1lts and paUenl>. About 35,000 ol the naUon'• 310,000 doctors are now enc•a:td ln group prac- Tbe AMA ICC! both a · nnuca and di.5advantuges in ~ pr1ctltt. from the doc· cor·1 viewpoint, t b e ad · vantages Include the op- portunity to work regular hours and take vacallons, and the availability of equipment and personnel which a Jone physician m1gQ~ rvt be able to afford. The disadvantages are some sacrifice of in- dependence and1 perhaps, a lower Income that he might earn in solo practice. From the patient's view· point, group practice insures the prompt availability of competent medical help, In· eluding ·consultation w i t h specialists if needed. The disadvantage is that the pa- tient may feel he's getting assembly-line treatment in- stead or the personal altenlion or a family doctor. The third need, recognized by government officials and the health professions alike, is for improved and expanded he~th msurance programs. The Jmprovement m o 1 t needed, 1n the view of Social Security Commissioner Robert M. Ball, Is to bring under in- surance coverage some of the "less expensive alternatives" to hospitalization, such as out· patient care. "This would remove the In· centives that now exist to hospitalize a person when he does not need that level of care, simply because his health insurance c o v e r s hospitalization but does not cover the type of service he needs," Ball told UPf. · The AMA seCtlnds Ball's pl.ea for insurance carriers to provide better coverage of out- of ·hospital medical services. TAX SUBSIDIES The medical association also Is plumping for tax subsidies to encourage all Amecicans to buy adequate amounls of health insurance from private carriers. Under the MtA plan, taxpayers could claim deduc- tions for all or part of the cost of health insurance premiums. "fi.tany people remain underinsurcd. or not insured at all ," s~ys an A r-.t A 11pokesman. The Committee for National llea lth Insurance, organized by union leader \Va It er Reuther, says· 14 percent of the Americans under 65 had no hospitalization insurance in 1968, and 20 percent had no coverage for surgical bills. Reuther's committee favors a national health insu rance program, sponsored by !he government. under w h I c h comprehensive coverage \vould be compulsory for alll Americans. A similar proposal ror na· tional heallh insurance was made public July 17 by a special Senate c o m m I t t e e headed by Sen. Edmund S. ~1uskie, (0-?\ole.) 1t originated with a cilizens' advisory com- mittee which had been created by ~1uskie's group The national go\•ernors con- ference, a bipartisan body in· eluding the governors or all 50 sta les. also has appointed a C"OmlAitlee-te ~ook into the pros and cons or mandatory national health insurance. Finch alluded to this moun· ting pressure ror national health insurance in a recent statement appealing to the medical profession to do its part in curbing the rise In the cost of health care. "'Vhat is ultimately at lilake," Finch said. "Is Ille in· d~odent, voluntary nature ol our heallh care syite1n. \YI! 'will lose it to _pressures ror govern men t·d ominaled medical care unless we c,.n make the pre~nt sysltm work for everyone in the notion.'' J State .Voting· Rules · Urge~ .. _aN1~~09it or.· money· to Le 11 m i n a l e Jess Ulan In maJ)Y foreign u~ state. and 30 days in the g6ve;n~ents should hl~e depu: ~ .,.,.., ,., BE'RKELE Y -.TWo University of California political scientists propose rdariQ&: the California laws wblCh prohibit hundreds 0 r lbousands of citizens from voting. ai:tlficial barriers betwetn a Ctilllltries whose Jaws en· community and county . -ly regtstrats resJ>On11ble for citizen and vthose w h o courage greater v o t e r ....aonvicted retons should be registering all eliglble vote.rs, presumably represent him ." participation, according to the granted full voting rights when and for clearing the rolls. of AuthOrs of the proposals in report. California's average Is t!J!l are re.leased frOm prison. I.hose who are ~t. Otherwise, the Public Affairs Report somewhat higher at 64 per· '1f"l8 irOnic that we would a register-by-mail plan should publislv!d by the UC InsUtute cent. though it ranks only lOth choose election day to remind be tried. of Coiernmental Studies at among all the states. 1'he the' released felon that he does -The closing dale Io r Berkeley are Edmond Coslan· report's authors .are urging not have access to the political registration should be .ad· tlnl , assistant professor ot legislators to allow greatfr systf!m by legitlmate'means." vanced from the unusually Three a~d a quarter million potential voters who fall to registe'r before• an election could thus' be sharply reduced in number, they c I al m. political science at the Davis participation in the follo\\'ing -Literacy requirements restrictive S4 days belore an campus, and Willis O. Jiawley. ways: ~ should be abolished. Altlwugh election to one or two weeks. JGS administrative analyst at -Residency requirements a mere declaration of literacy -The requirement of re-- UC-Berkeley. should be reduced from the now is usually sufJiclent, pro-registration if • citizen mi~es "It seems to us far more ex- pensive to democracy to tolerate relatively high rates of honparUc~Uon th an to in; vest telafively minor amounts The United Slates voter unusually demanding one year bably "many citizens do not one general election and wants turnout -;-slightly more than in the slate, 90 days in the register to vole because they tr.. v~te again should be relax- fiO percent of all adults in a county, aod. Sf days in the are not literate ed to take effect only after presidential election -is far local district, to six months in -St ate and lo ca 1 ti-1> missed elections. • "11 Wt,llYllMlw 11 Gold• Wnt-Wnlmln1ltf • 14't·w : Edlltltf •NI ...... Sl.-f:dlltfff ci.nttr. Sa11ll Ml U. Ml .... •l'fll.-H1,_,. Siie""'-C ... lfr, CH11 Mua • UUI 1.-c!t llYf. It Atl.lnll-Mllflflilt!M INCi!.., • Zll IE, 11111 Sl.-C.-$11 IMMI "sntppfllt CMlfl", C11l1 M.., • 17'04 M .. llf~ St. II Ttlblrl-\1111111• C111ftr, "•11nlll11 v1111, • INU 11111 ldlrl.-r llvtll.-H1111ll1191911 l•cll Shl!IPlnt Ct111tr, H1111llng!M lt-c:ll IJ1;2:1 l ,.....ll.llnt SI. 11 WetlllllMllr-Wlllfllntk (;1f1h:r1 Glrftn GN"ff llffl Vllilty VIN 11 cn.,....._EMitlll Pi.a, 0.nltn GNYI • 1•42 Kit.lie AYI. 11 811Clld-GlrNtll~NI Slll~illf Ctll1tf, Glnltfl 019111 • ,... CMplNlll "~·· II ll'llldlwnt-Or•~·· C-ty l'i.u . G1nlt11 GN•I Fruit: l:Oom -Chair Throws 64" Shelf Unit or 48 inch ·Record Cabinet 13-oi. Can $2.~9 Polyester Bed Pillows P) ''· <''1 ~ ........ Colorful ' 11\ 'I" to '2" Value! Plasticwares ~~$298 &.cbq: lot llftla" .tn:aAlh. ~ lifr. ~7h10e-w.. Sh;1•n.w $5.fJ ~'.::~~ 22aa ......11. J.o.bor ..,. cord CJbln,.,t ...;111 ll. '°lid tlidin1 u•tr O.ol<• el hg1o1lor cir Hard to Helcl ~uo:r frtt '°it 1"'0R't l<ave lu.ir iritf or stickr. Holds hair iii. place all da1l ~~~ ·s119 l!andtnl lize. ~ 9(( ll'Mb dw.ble -ton t;cJUn& i.n puld print.I o 11 whi!it. Noa·•!~ dmt , 1< JllOtbprad. 2 fw $S.IO €:::'::::: 9"9 .:n:cu .. ...,..., c 11" ... • J!ii• II .. llMT .._ •11,• II•• lnillW Cboica of Al"Oeldo, Gold ot f!aine. . 8 Years Old Dunstin Scotch ~:,.~. $318 •w $]47 ' ..... ·~- "Sbrer·Mift' lft ••llOU•d JllSf"I• ..-ith '"""elopt-1 JDtlc Ja '' •llerl5 Jl9U°• .(O~ Scooter Pants Skirts :::.. $2'7 0-!mm a 1'1St arr.y of coloriul lllfllmrr ptint1 ct.r -bra:O!ifttl xolid rolon in 1irts I 10 II. • 91' i.adles' Cotton Flop Hats.. • • . . . 771 '1" Women's S11mmer Straw Hats ..• •1•1 1291 Women's Halian Luther Sandals . $22' 1291 Imported Rattan Handbags . .". . . $237 . . 1191 Women's Stretch Denim Shorts ..• *1" 12n'1ty's Auorted Swim Trunks11• 11SJtt 1391 Uttle Girl's Colorful Shifts ...... . Women's Acrylic Shells $']" Women's Nylon Biki:il Briefs · 391 J.,11 Printed leach · Towels •2.49 Happe Insulated Picnic lo91 . . . $ J" 79' U.S. Womo11's Swim Caps . . . . . . • 661 •3.99 Table Model BBQ Grill ......• $344 15,99 119 Dl ... y 5 Foot Poly Boat .. s4tt 11.99 11119 Size Auto Seat Cushion ... SJ O • • 11.19 Pastlc 4 Player ladm1nton Set .• 88' -$1,, Pack of-3 Weitinghouse Flashcubes 9&c 39c Stoneware Dinner Plate Stock 11p 110• 19· •t. ,, •• , Th,ifty price! Ready Mix Cake Pans e 2•c Y11l110 11!01111111 2·5' • lle Yeh1a S11111•r• - -11°' Values-!. Floral Novelties $2. 9 5 Val Gourmet Servin9 Pieces Saled 1ets, 1erY1"9$199 pieces, oll & Ylneg•r •• A voc1do I. e.ch o""'' d11<orl!ed. Re9. 1 ;93 Decorator Waste Baskets •14" Aluminum Folding Bed Kitchenware . wit~ ·193 • yifss .......... ~~---Jnu• f-., ~ • .,......., thidi:a:imt'Oftoo ....... .. b l• t¥.i'" ... • •m- JD1.t1i•1.. "' Qoicir " -4 Stora ...,., • kiQ:hmmloa • H111dsnme Spil.l)o i•h sm'Oc:ll in rich lno kin1 .band c1r•cd. cll«t , __ '4.99 Plastlc 9-Pleco Salad .Set •••••. $3" '6 Value! Porcelain Enamel .Colander .• $3" 13,91 b1graham Duke Alarm Clack .•.. $ 11 Meta Enamel Roaster ............. 66' 19.99 2 Quart Fondue Set .••..•..... $5" Viii Wyck Electric Can Opener ....•.. $ 44 lluo Altoc Glassware ......••.•..•. 6 i $1 119. '4. 91 •24• Set of 2 l•lf·ovt FuD· Ltn9th ~Appliance . Door Mirror {I; "&-· . Wheels ..... $3'' ~":-· \ $] U hKhl +\ ~ 8rl.JilQrlr frunrd mir· •}. ~-ro~wi~ d«o11-tor rin,tt ./A !OODlb.bd On101U011-ltte Rflec· c1pocitr fw uon ! · anr •ppl~ Colton Fiiied led Mattress . • . . • . . • . $3" 43 Quart Clothes Hampers ......... $3" Padded Samsonite lrld9e Chairs ..•• -$6u l 79:, Mattress or Piiiow Cowers . . • . 2 '" S) 1 61' l1llss St11I Serwlng Pieces 2 '" 9• 39' Plastic Shoppl19 logs ...••..... "''' '"''"' $l s' 6 Gollon Plastic Garba9e c... . . . . . . 87' lnbn9ht ... ..,,.,...,..,.....,,..,,.,.,,,,.,.,.,,,,,...~:.;..,.;,::;;_;,;_;,;_;,,;_~:!,.-I colors. l!Mbl . ,._. .. C...k .. k•? 29i ... Ass orted' 9 Pc. Boxed Cutlery Set PHtk-• $247 Ha11lflft. Cano• "· bo11l119 k11lf.t, '•"· •ttooll k•l•.S. '4.99 ea. Mota! ·ice Cub• Trays Carded luttonl 2 ~? I ...,, ... _UI Fill &It itfriJirt· aton.A~ for fUtcr 1-· I . • • ' 7 l • • • • I ' J, • I· Ii • • . . I • Fountain Valley .~ . Today'• ·Fl.aal I N.Y. St.eeks • VOL 62, NO. 183, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA ' FRIDAY, AUGUST I, 1969 TEN CENTS • • Coast Wants to 1 Cut Out · Final Fre eway Link 'LET'S TALK IT OVER' • Orange Route to Sea Beach Asked To Join Freeway Advisory Group Huntington Beach will be asked Mon· day night to add its voice to the collective opinions of iii. other cities concerning the future route of the Orange Freeway. Councilman have been asked by the Orange County Road Department to form an advisory committee to join with six other affected county cities to present their problems and desires on a united front lo the State Division of Highways. The Orange Freeway is expected to be aligned through Foutnain Valley, Hun- tington Beach, Costa Mesa and NeWJ¥)rt Beach in the vicinity of the Santa Ana River. A specific route has not been adopted aod county road commissioner Al S. Koch has developed a plan of cooperation between the county and affected cities to present their side or the issue to the state. The council has been ask.ed to appoint a committee of concerr.ed citizens to trade Jnforrnation and v\ews with the other cities and with the st.ate highway depart- ment. Koch pointed out that a joint effort on Hie freeway situation would present _a unique situation in California. once again making' Orange County a leader in in· tergovernmental cooperation. Beach Couple Wants to See Grandchildren A Huntington Beach couple who once faced child stealing charges bave asked Superior Court to order their former son- in·law to allow them to visit with their grandchildren. Chester and 1'.fary Walczak seek "reasonable \'isitation rights" in a court complair.t which names James and Jillian Hanso11 of Orange as defendants. Hanson "'as the husband of the Wa\czaks' daughter Wendy, who died in 1967 shortly after the birth of her second child, Richard. Han!lOn filed child stealing charges against the Walczaks when the couple fled to n small New J!ampshire town wilti Chri!:tine, 4, and Richard, 2. It was alleg· ed at the time that bis decision to re- marry sparked the Walciaks' flight with their grandchildren. Orange County district attorney's or- llcers declined to press charges against the Walciaks, who formerly lived at 8941 Gleneagle St .. We st ml n s t er. Their Superi()r Courl action is awaiting 11etting of a hearing date. ' P la ne T1·i p Canceled SAIGON (UPI). -An lntl!:rnatlonal Control Commission (ICC) night which was to have brought three American prisoners or the North Vletnames.? to freedom was canceled Frklay beeauSe ltie tee had not "received the permission of the Hanoi government." ' By RANDY SEELYE 6t trMo 0911., Plltt Sti ll , Councilmen from fol.U' Orange Coast citifs hope the last link of the proposed Orange Freeway (Route 57) will be eliminated. . At a meeting of the Mesa Verde Home ()y.rners Association Thursday night, rep. resent'atives said the freeway sbould be stoppe<'. at the San Diego Freeway or be routed east to join the proposed Corona del ~far Freeway. "We must act if we want the Division Man Held In Michigan Sex Slaying ANN ARBOR, ~1ich. (UPI) -A 23- year-old former Eastern MI chi g an University student has been arrested and charged with the slaying ol Karen Sue Beineman, 18, seventh sex murder victim in this area in the past two years, authorities announced today. At a· news conference cailed by state authorities, the. suspect was identified as John Norman Collins. a nephew or a state police corporal. Police alleged that the site of the slaying was the corporal's home in YPsilanti. fo whi Ch Collins had access \\'bile the family was on vacation. Authorities declined to link Collins, of Ypsilanti, with the six previous sex kill- ings in this tw in-university area, but pro- secutor William F. Delhey of Washtenaw County said, "We will consider other charges, naturally. We will be cheeking J1im out regarding the other crimes," Collins at his arraignment today stood mute before Circuit Judge Edward D. Deake, who ordered him to jail without bond. A preliminary hearing was ·set for Aug. 7. Police said Collins lived across the slreet from where another victim, Joan Schell, Jived while attending Eastern i\1ichigan University. Collins, a nephew by marriage to a state police corporal, was arrested Thursday night at his Ypsilanti home. The announcement came at a news conference called by state police director Frederick E. Davids, appointed by Gov. William G. ?wtilliken to head the in-, vestigation. ~liss Heineman disappeared and was slain July 23. Her body was found nude, beaten and strangled in a wooded gully between the twin university cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Davids said he "believed" that Collins, a six-foot, 170-pound athletic type, closely resembled an artist's sketch of the (See SLAVING, Page Zl Teen Ni gl1t Spot To Ask Council For N e'v License Syndicate 3000, lluntington Beach's controversial teenage nightclub, will be back In the eye of the City Council Mon· day in the form of a petition to operate. City Clerk: Paul C. Jones has denied co- owner Gilbert Covell renewal of his business license on recommendation of the police department. Covell, 32, who has been in a running feud with police and the city, maintains this is illegal. He said he has been operating without charging and vows to keep fighting city hall from the aging building at 302 Pacific Coast Highway. He recently scheduled a press con· rerence there to present his side of the city.Covell hassle. . Jones states in a July 28 letter to the council that police believe renewal of the license would not be In the best interests of the community. Friction belewen Covell and lhe city · has been much in !he courts. City attorney Don Bonfa last month o)l· tained a conviction of Covell, a Westminster resident, on two counts of allowing minors under 16 in his dance hall. Covell, 14201 Locust.St., in the past has been 81Tested In connection with an April 20 rioL and has instituted a $1 million lawsuit against the city. In a letter to lhe City Council , he main· tains that $15,000 has been spent on im· provements at the club which were re· quested by the city'. He lists officers and persons finaneia lly Interested in the corporation as himseU. president; cerJott.a Corey, 9301 Catherine St .. Garden Grove, vice president; and Phillip Gibson or Long Beach, secretary. • City Clerk Jones states in hi:, July 23 letter to councilmen that: "to date. I have not rtttlved an application from Cbvell In Wlit!ng for subject permit" Council men are Advised by their agen· das that they may direct the city clerk to is:i;ue a business license or to deny it. of Higbwiys to consider our proposali,'' Jiuntlngton B e a c h City CouDC Uman Peorge McCracken said to a large crowd gathered at Est',ncia Higti School in Cos ta Mesa. "Huntington Beach residents were not unified when they had a chance to change the route oC the Huntington Beacti Freeway-so the Division o( Highways made the decision," be said. City Councilmen from Costa Mesa, Fount'ain Valley and Newport Beach . agreed that residents should present ont- n1ajor recommendation to the route planning division. The opinions were voiced at a panel discussion held at the high sch091. TWo representatives from the Division of Higb.-.·ays' Division 7 and Al Koch, Orange Coonty road commissioner. presented factual background to the dis· cussioo. 'Jbe area under sLudy by the Division of Higtlways is a 10. 7·mile strip, one mile wide, follow ing the path or the San· ta Ana River. Sid Elllcks, district plan$lg englneer ror the Division of Highways, said, "We must stlll conduct studies to determine the possible location of the last link o[ the lreeway. The route will not be adopted until after a public hearlng to be held after the siudies have been com· .f~pleted." . Elllcks said the department is sludy· in& four possibilities for the route of the freeway. "1.l coold go all the ~way to the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway, swing east to meet lhe Corona del Mar· Free!ft·ay, swing west to meet the Hunt- ington Beach Freeway or end at the: San Diego Freeway." · Koch said that a freeway will eventu-· ally be necessary to relieve the traffic· pressure on Harbor Boulevard. 1-i'raffic .. studies will determine which nXft'e will (See FREEWAY, Pase Zl l(ennedy -Inquest Denie·d·· BOSTO N (U PI ) -The chief juslice of ttir. Massachusetl"S superior court today rrjK:ted. a dist rict attorney 's request for a judicial inquest into the fatal auto wreck involving Sen. Edward M. Ken. nedy, saying lhe invesligation was not withln his court's jurisdiction. In a terse two-paragraph statement, Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro said the reqUest by Dist. Atty. Edmund S. Dinis of New Bedford was· in the "exclusive jurisdlclion of the district court." Dinis informed newsmen Thursday he had sent a letter to the judge requesting !tie inquest into an auto accident July 18 on t.!\ppaqulddick Island in which a car dr h·en by Kennedy plunged off ' a bridge into a tidal-pond. to.Iary Jo Kopechne, 28, a \Vashi ngton secretary, drO\\'ned in the mishap. ' The judge, who said he received first word of the inquest through the press, ad- ded, "I just don't see any precedent for it. All the district attorneys I've talked t'o never heard of such a thing . "My research confirms my initial reac· lion that the request is not within the jurisdiction of this court," he said. Tauro said Dinis would be informed or his decision today. "No provision of ~e law has come to my attention nor have I been able to find any precedent which wo.uld permit the superior court to conduct the lnqtiest,'1 Tauro's statement said. "The district attorney bases his request explicitly on Genera1 Laws, Ch. 28, Sec- tioo 8. This section and all other related sections-clearly indicate that the district court has exclusive jurisdiction-over such proceedings and have no applicaUon to the Superior court," he said. Massachusetts law says if the medical examiner "is of (the) opinion that the death may have been caused by the ai:t or negligence of another, he lhall at once notify the district attorney and a juatli:e of a district couit within whose jurisdic- tion the body was found .•. " Dinis was unavailable: for comment 3 Seats . at Stake ""en the judge'~ decision was released. At the time of the accident, medical e:r·· aminer Dr. \Valler Mills sajd he did not . ask for an autopsy or an Inquest because the cause of death -drowning --••was <1bvious." In Washington, Kennedy 11aid earlier to- day be would "cooperate in any way'' with any inquest. The 37-year-old U.S. Senate whip plead· eel guilty a week ago today to a charge of leaving the scene of the fatal accident. He received a suspended twe>-month jail sentence and was placed on probation for a year. His driver's license also was suspended; 10 Men Compete. ~In Reeall Vo·te REFLECTIONS ON OUR MAN ON THE MOON Astron•ut Aldrin as S.tn by Traveling Companion Moon Photos Show Man Romping in Eerie World SPACE CENTER, l·louslon (AP)-Two Apollo 11 astronauts romped on an eerie, unreal world of lortu"red gray terrain th at photogra.phed almost snow white where brilliant sunlight reflected off it. Above wai a· coal-black 4,kY. This rugged land of contrasts, of harsh shadows, of craters and rOCks ol all si~es. a place where man clearly was an Inter· loper, could be seen as never before in color pictures taken by the meo on the moon and released by tbe space agency late Thursday. A sequence of 34 still pictures snapped by Annstrong while walking on th() 1noon clearly shows ne3rly the· v.·holc spectrum or acti vity on the surface. incJuding a dramatic vtew ot Aldrln standing beside a selsmome\er ari"d :i li.se.r-beam reflecfor that ~e moon men Jen behhxl. rn the background. perhaps 100 feet away, iJ the Eag)t landing craft, an American nag ani the telev1slon cam· <'1"8 perched atop ilt silver mount-all plainly .stindlng out 15alnst a ll&htlC!JS 11k:y. 1 Photos taken from a camera mounled in "the window or the Eagle show Ann- strong and Al~n together planting the Ame(ican flag in the rock·slrewn lunar soil, their spacesuit.II and backpacks a blinding white in the sun!hlne. A ,six-minute color motion . p~lure film released at the 'same lime includes shots of a receding ·moon as seen out Eagle's window while Armstrong and Aldrin blasted from the lunar surface. It included a sequence showing the landing ct aft apf)roachlng tbe ·com· mand ship, as viewed by -3.'ltronaut Mlch1el Collins ouL the mother ship's window. , The Golden EJigle. its rendcivou.s light bllnklng bMghtly. glid,. e<rlly against a backgr.Ound o( the moving pioon 69 miles below. •For' a brier Inst ant, tbt earth appears over the lunar horlzon-.tnarking the nrst time earth. 1moon and a manned space· craft were ever captut'td In the sarne- fhotoaraph In 8pace. By TEJIRY COVILL E Of .... o.llr ,,., .,.,, Ten candidates will fight for three council seats that may be available In Fo\tntaln Valley's special recall election .Se pt. 23. AU IO ~ad filed their papers by the de2dllne at noon Thursday and indicated opposition to a speicric councilman of the U1ree at whom the recall is aimed. I~ \he recall is succ~sslul Sept. 23 -it must be approved tiy a majority of those voting -the three candidates receiving the highest number of votes in their race would fill seats now held by Mayor Robert SchwerdUeger, Vice Ma yor Donald Fregeau and Councilman Joseph Courreges. All three · councilmen came under a~ taCk from the .Fountain Valley Civic Association,, headmi by Eugene VanDask, o'n charge3 of ignoring the voice <1f the people. PLANNING, LOTS The issue has been planning and lot sizes in Fountain Valley, but politics and personalities have also taken a heavy part in the recall action. The civic association has not placed a Sanitarium Issue Will Go Before Council Monday A proposed 152-bed sanitarium opposed by area residents in Huntington Beach will be before city councilmen Monday in lhr form of an appeal from a split plann- ing commission denial. Planning commissiQners. spilt 4-3 in de· nyl ng the Major 0 Corp. application in June. A petition bearing 77 signatures op- posed ihe facility. It would be localtd on l.4 acres on the south side of Holland Drive of[ Beach Boulevard. ' Residents of the area have questioned the suitability or such a facility -even though the zoning allows it -and ex· pressed concern about the activities of patients. ·Robert R. Rigby, properly manager for the corporation, has described the pa· tients of the "L Type facility" as "The elderly, senile guest who suffers from emotional disturbances, confusion, men- tal deterioration and the like." He has stated that the building would have free now of movement for patients in the interior of the bullding but reslrlcted egress to' the out.side, except enclosed patio areas. Ttie corporation invited &I area pro- puty owners to a meeting to discuss the sltue.tion and related that six attended. Planning Commission conslderaUoo of tbe corporate a11pllcatlon (or a use permil and condlUonal exception also in· volvl!:d off·tlrett parking. R<quirem<nts for the laciUly woold have lncludtd · J02 parking spaces. The corporation had sought to have this whit· tied to ro. " ' ' slate or candJdates for the etectbt - VanDa!k hu maintained bLs group WU not f or m e d to galn public c(fice - although several or the group's membtrr . are running individually, . Fer the recall election, each candidate had tb des ignate whic h councilman he was filing against, and be will be tunning for only that councllman"s seat. Opposing Schwerdtfeger -main target of the recall -will be Robert L. Sassone • 10444 Falcon Ave.; William G. Schultz_ 185M Hawthorn St., and George Scott. 16'7! Spruce Circle. Sassone is an attorney and handled several coort battles for the rteall move- ment. On his qualtflcaUOM he: said hll legal experience would benefit the city in the area of ordinances. '"I believe in his lifetime every man should plant a tree and have a child, .. says Sassone, pointing to the potenUal stability of Fountain Va lley as his reason for wanting to live there. MARKETING MANAGER Sc:huJtz lists his occupation as a mark:eling manager for machinery. He was highly '8ctive in the recall activities or the civic association. For qua l i r i c al ion s he stated hl5 background in administration an d managernent could be.netit the city. Scott is a teacher, past president of the: Fountain Valley Jaycees, current presi· dent of the board of directors of the Foun· taln Valley Boys' Club. He·signed the recall petiUorus, but was not personally active in the movement. His wife, however, circulated recall peti· t1ons. Vice Mayor Fregeau also drew three opponents including, Paul C. Guiso, 17576 Santo Domi ngo Circle; Paul P. Savarino, Ht719 El Centro Ave., and Bernie P. Svalstad, 9803 El Tulipan Clrcl~. Guiso lists himself as an eilgin~ring (See CANDIDAT~, Page !) Orange Coast Weather Tum on the air conditioner or get out to the beach because hot weather is in !tort for the coast during the weekend, with temp- eratures heading into: tbe high 80s. INSmE TOD-"Y Skyrocketing cost& of medi· col cart U rapidly makhig bet- ting sick a lll.%UTJI that no ont can a.fjord. Page 17. '''"'' '' •Mtlat • 11 C•t1tnti. I ClllUllltlll 11..tl C"lftkl· Jf ,,...._.. 11 ~ Nltkft -t -" 11111"'111 ..... ' a.itlrtl lMMM ,,.. ,...__ •11 -" AIM l 1HW1• II •m-..1.1c_,. • ' ' • , ( ; 2 OAILY l'ILOT H Walkout f Halts Work -On Outfall •. A heavy equipment operators strlke 11\as stopped all construction on a huge S.- mile Jong sewer outfall north ol the Santa Ana River mouth in HuntlnJton Bech. Since July 21 when members of the lntunaUonal Union or 0 per at Ing ~ineers Walked of£ tht.ir jobs, the site, '!Glee t>usl.ling 'fhh activity, has been ~rly deserted. • • -~ject superintendent John Ford said did not know whal effect lh~ worK P.1£e would have on the January 19'71 git date for completion ainee the ""'1ike Is still on. ;:~;OUr company is keeping in close con· ~with the union however," said Ford. =l'purteen unlon members had bttn at ~k on the project, operating v.lirio\Ja ::DiCces of heavy equipment, including a :pck crane and Lrestle crane used to Jay :~ 10-n diameter pipe into the ocean. t---11'1le strike .means lhe second delay for ~ project, whiCh is the second large.st of ~kind on the West Coast. ::!Unusually large ~eposits of :!ill formed -'lear the river mouth in ;January and ;y~ru.ary when heavy rains deposited :ravers or sediment in the construction :ffea. Work wa.s delayed three weeks. J!9oce completed, the outfall will early r.aa:e far out to sea. It will run parallel an old ? ,000.foot outfall which reached · capacity years ago. -t~·Jn bi..IUding the $8.9 million project, eng· ~ are employing a 1.500 foot trestle .. With a huge crane which moves down '!tiacks and drops the plec;es of pipe onto ~ ocean floor. -~.:.Once the pipe Is far enough out 1n the ~ean, the additional P.ieces of pipe, each ghlng 90 tons, wifl be laid from 1 ge. ~jThe iroo trtsUe, which looks somewhat ;!Fe a pier, will then be dismantled and 2;moved from the site. ~ ·~ ~untington Sets itunn~!lg Meet Wor Weekend More Ulan 200 competitors are ex- pected to participate. in the lSth Annual Jiuntington Beach Distance Tourney v.·hich begins at 8:30 1.m. Saturday at lhe Hunl.ington Beach Pier. Runners in three divisioM Will compete for trophies in the rent whlcb will '-" them around beach aenice roads. '. Awards will be prestnted for the five fa stest Umes and to ftve ·handicap win· riers in the JD-mile hlfidlcap feature •lld· 1.o the five fastest times in the IY.i and 3- mile events. tn addition, the city . Recreation and Parks Deparlmenl, which Is sponsortng the tourney, will .present awards to the first finisher from Huntington Beach in each of the 'three divisions. The competiton is sanctioned by the long distance running committee of the Southern i'aclflc Association of the 'Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). . • f arking .Meter :jlevenue Rising 'city coffers are jingling in Huntington Beach despite strikes v.·hich have held up completion of the $2.3 million beach park· lng lot project. Parking revenue along the waterfront from April I through ,..July 29 has ex- ceeded $25,211. Income from lhe parking lols is in excess of $27,337, according to figures released today by the Department of Harbors and Beaches. Completion of the beach parking pro- ject awaits an end of the strike of heavy equipment operators. Landscaping or Pacific Coast Highway is continuing dur- ing the strike. ' DAILY PILOT OllAMGI CO.UT PUll1$HIHG CCIMl'AH'r Jlolt.rt N. Wt tJ rornkknl ...!I l"ublllhlr J •clc R, Cutlty Vkl Pru •Ofnl .,... Gmtr.i lll.1!1olttr Tho11111 K11•ll Ecinor Tho,..•• A. Mu•pllin1 M1n1tln1 Ell•tor Alh1rf W. l 1h1 ,on11<lttt Edll'M H 111th1t t•11 h1ta. Offk• ]1)9 51~ 51•••' M1ili111 Addre11t r.o. l o• 7to, •2••• Oti..t Ofllt" f; ..... '1 lltffl" ~~ti Wr1I llaltllll I Oll .. Vfl. eoar1 Me11: m We\••·~ 5tr~6t Lit-ltid'I: Jn f.,..e1t "'~"VI • bltt.Y PILOt, "''"' ""'lcro 11 tcmll•l'ltd ,,,. Hrwt-Pft'M, .. to11bl•-OM•'• 1•(11'11! ... ,.. dfT Ill ttPl•li't .. I!~ lw H""'I....,... 8ff(h. Fout1!1;n. Vil~. C.0111 l ... a.t. HI .. r-'1 ,,Id! -LAI-8Nth, •llnl •lllt .... '"illftll C'dl!IDM. 0 ... t>Ot C••I P"'°I'""' lflO C-111' ~tlfol .,,.r111 ~<T11 1'11 Wnl lllto.t $ll'O. H'•~I 9tKll. IN JJ0 to.ff! "'" .ltrftf, Colli MfU T1Stplil1 .. 171 41 &42-4J21 fr•"""'fttfftfntfl C•ll l40·12ZI Cklllllff 1.4..,.1.i., '41·5671 C-11tfll, Ifft. Orlllff <.otrl 'utlll'1>1fl'll ~fl1 ....... t 11flI1, 111'tllfllll11 .. ello!Oflll fNllN-r If 1Mf'!l'4:-fll1 llfrtllO "'''flt rt~ldVUol l#llt'IOUI iotu~I ptrmln!Of> II (U'f'f!IM e~rw. lttt•<I (II'\& l'Ol"l>I\~ 1>1''4 ti t.rt-rf ~Hiii 1"11 (.c1!1 ~lit· (11'!~••i1. :t~tUf·f'!(~ C.1 Urtkr tJ.(IO MOt',,,Jyl 1W m~fl 11 JO mot11111fl "''li'•tr .iu1l••I~. 11 11t m11·1111t. f., c ' DAILY l"ILOT $1111 l"holo Polley Explaltaed· ' u .s. Can Still ' Fight • Ill LAHORE. Pakistan (UPI) -\Vhlte House sources said today that Presidenl Nixon's no-more-V ie tnams policy v.·ould not bar future U.S. military intervention in Asia if Com muni!l t aggreSsion gravely threatened to change the balance of power there. The \Vhlte House sources said Nixon had reached this decision after talks with government leaders in Ult: Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, South Vietnam, India and in Pakistan today with Gen. Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan, the military president. The sources said that despi te his public assertions that he v.·ould avoid any future Vietnams he had l\vo major reservations Golfers, R elax : Asia after liis talks: If there ls a 1na jor anack across the borders, or a nuclear threat, the United Slales would have to consider the pos,ibility of taking military action. If there is a military action.. by the communists v"hich thre atened the in· ternational balance of power, that too, 11·ould be a factor in causing the Presi· dent to abandon his hands o1f military policy, the White House sources said . The sources said Nixon found that Thailand and India were particularly 11·orried about the possibility of Chint!e Cvmmunist aggression. Here in Pakistan. there was not so much emphasis on that as on the desire of this country to get more U.S. military equipment. Pakistan has developed in- creasingly close ties wilh Peking folio\'!'· ing a cOOling of its frlendshlp with the United States... since... _1be......days of,.. the Eisenhower administration. ALL QU I ET AT SEWER OUTFALL CONSTRUCT ION SITE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Lengtheni ng Operating Engineers' Strike Bri ngs Halt to Lengthy Project Edison Facility - W on't Be Ha zard The Unfted States embargoed arms shipments to both India and Pakistan folJoy,·ing their 17·day war in 196S. The sources said Nix:on recognizes that the. embargo operated to the disadvantage of Pakistan because it did not have other res.oUrces available ta India. Rookies Oil Li11e Firemen Get Baptism of Fire By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI or 1t11 OlllY P'llot llt lt Four rookies of the 11untington Beach Fire Department received their baptism by fire Thursday morning. The men, Steve Rini , Gary Hendricks, James Ellis and Lou Torres, had an op- portunity to show what they learned in a fi~·week training cou rse by ex· tinguishing a roaring blaze in an aban· d~ house al 231? Delaware St. When they arriv~ with their truck, running red light and siren , smoke was pouring out or the windows of the little red bungalow and flames v.•ere licking the roof. It was hot. And for good reason. The fire v.·as sel by one of the best •·arsonists" in Orange County, Battalion Chief James Gerspach, who poured 3 gallons of diesel oil on scraps of lumber and furniture and ignited It with a flare. Th! four men surrounded the blaze with an extraordinary sllow of skill and speed. City an".\ fire dipartment brass had come to watch . So did the firemen's wives . The ladles cheered their tnenfolk on ffom the op- posite side of the street. Many of them had never seen their husbands in action before. The battalion and division chiefs present at the exercise threw up a few roadblocks such ·as nailing some of the <loors shut' and starting another fire at the back or the house where it couldn't be seen. "They did very well," said Gerspach aflcr ,the exercise. The firemen were trained in a variety of fire control, rescue and resuscitation procedures by Dtv ision Chief James B. \Vallers. B}' coincidence firemen working the training blaze received an emergency call from a nearby trailer park while smoke was still pouring from the building. Apparently one of lhe trailer court residents thought that the heavy black smoke in the area emanat2d from one of the trailers and notified the lire depart· ment. "We'll lilt Jl on the Jog as an honest mlstak_e," lauw.i~ ~spach, after dispatching two trucks to the scene. The abandoned itiack burned up in the training fire was Clonated by the city's building department. l 'rom Page 1 CANDIDATES LINE UP ••• administrator. He did not fill out a sheet of qualifications when he filed and is relatively unknown in Fountain Valley political circles. He was not not.ably ac· tive in the recall movement. !\1tDONNELL OFFICIAL Savarino is in ccontracl management a ~1cDonnell Douglas ~Astronautics Co., Huntington Beach. He was neutral dur· ing the recall battle and primaril y represents ttie interests of Green Valley home ov.·ners. ''I'm I ooking for a stable, better balanced government in 1'~ o u n ta i n Valley," says Savarino. Sva!stad is a site selector coordinator for Jack·in·th e·Bo:< restaurants. He was highly active in the recall activities of the civic association . He also has been a past president or the Fountain Valley .Jaycees and is a membe'r of the Boys' Club board of direc- tors. as well as being active in other youth organizations. Courreges faces the largesl list of can· From Page 1 SLAYI NG ... suspected killer . It was made from descriptions furnish- ed by 1i1ritnesses who saw ~1\ss Btineman riding on the back of a big, shiny motorcycle with a tall, dark, young man the day she disappeared. Oa\•ids said that there was "more than one motorcycle he (Collins) had access to.'' Davids said he did not believe any of them was a Honda 450, whi ch police believed was the model on which Miss Beineman was riding. County Sheriff Douglas J. llarvey said that Collins had been questioned before Mi~ Beineman's body was found, and was released. He said. however, that Collins had been under surveillance since last Saturday. Huntington lnst11 1J s 0-wn Gasoline Tank A 10,000 gallon gasoline tank was In- stalled lhls week nur the police lacilllles o( Huntington 'Beach City Hall to allov>' the city to ~ut,.11& gasoline supplies In bulk. • City Admlni.Jlr1tor Doyle ~filler, said !itlff mtmbers estimated thal lhe savings 10 the city from buying bulk gasoline sup- pl ie.s will nffs~t the installa tion costs in about one year. • dldales, four. Including Donald E. Frank, 18805 Los Leones St.; John G. Ginos , Jr., 18540 Cork St.; Roy D. Richards, 11686 Bay Circle, and Ron Shenkman, 9427 El Blanco Ave . Frank is a systems engineer with North American Rockwell Corp. He was also acUve in the recall movement and is a past president of I.he Fountain Valley Jaycees. LISTS INVOLVE~1E~i ·rrank lists five years of civic in· volve ment as hls primary qualificatlon for office. He feels hi s budgetary knowledge of government will also be useful. Ginos is a property represen tat ive for Standard Oil Co. •le did not sign the recall petitions but says he is in sym- pathy with the recall movement Ginos says he is running to provide a more representative government. with better direction toward the problems of youth. Richards is a dentist. for the ?ilayor ir. fact, and claims he has been highly in· volved in the recall movement. "I am a concerned citizen and I don 't believe the council has been responsive to the citizens," he says in stating his reason for running. Shenkman is an educator and a business man. He currently serves as chairman of the parks and recreation commissio n and is a member of the Jaycees. ''\Ve must end the confusion and chaos and develop confidence in a stable city.'' declarts Shenkman. y,·ho ~·as not notably active in the rec all movement. 2 Joi.It Others In Quarantine SPACE CENTt-;R, Houston (U PI) - The space agency added tv.•o men to quarantine .,..·i th the Apollo 11 astronauts today because one of the technician' m1y have been exposed lo moon rock material \\hen his vacuum chamber pressure glo\•e broke. The laboratory v.·orker. Ronald Buffum . \\'as splitting lunar san1ples al the time, reaching Into the airless cabinet through two black rubber gloves. \Vhen one glove tore, the sudden rush of air sucked his risht arm fleeper into the cabinet. (;eorge \Vllllams, aoothtr technician ln the lunar receiving ·laboratory, helped Buffum pull hi.~ arm oul of the ch1tmbcr. Buffum rcccl\'ed minor bruises L F rom P a ge 1 FREEWAY ... be needed ." Councilman Willard T. Jordan of Costa ~1esa said lhe city hasn't adopted an official position on the issue yet, but noted "we must fight lo see that the Orange Freeway doesn't run down the east side of the Santa Ana River." John Harper. Fountain Valley Coun- cilman, added-that the proposed freeway would "reduce our industrial land and prevent an access to the river bed for equestrian trails." tlarper noted that "Fountain Valley hopes lhe freeway will be shifted slightl y east to meet the end of tbe ·proposed Corona del Mar Freeway." Don Mclnfl is, NeWP.Ort Beach Council· man, presented slm1Jar ideas when he said, "The freeway should be terminated at the San Diego Freeway or meet the Corona del Mar Freeway." After the panel discussion, the ~1esa Verde Home Owners passed a resoiu· Lion that hopes the Division of Highways will consider ending the freeway at the San Diego Freeway or join the Orange Freeway with lhe proposed Corona de! ].far Freeway. . -~9gers M_ends Fences In Nationalist China TAIPEI, Formosa" (APl U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers ar- rived in Nalionalisl China today on a fence·mendlng tour of Asia and the Pacific with the now fam iliar message : •·we will continue to meet our treaty obligations tO our allies" -inciuding Formosa. Further clashes between park pro-_ ponenls and the Southern Cal ifornia Edison Company over a substation within the future Huntington Central Park have been averted. A new location has been fOUQ.d for the two-and·a·ha\f acre facility which was originally planned for construction at Ellis Aveoue and Golden West Street in an area destined to be part of the park's public golf course. ?itayor Jack Gr~n said he and Edison Company District Manager Ralph Kiser have been able to work out a compromise which would put the station near Edwards Street, south of the future. Pacific Coasl Freeway. Ki ser said the new substation would be put "out of and way from the tentative golf cou rse area and away from the pro- posed central park." ' The Edison Company has withdrawn its application for a use permit on lhe pro- perty and is expected lo submit an ap- plication for the new location in a few days. Furor o•·er the substation y,• a s generated by citizens during th e past few n1onths \\'ho alleged that Lhe substation and ils overhead transmission lines would destroy the natural beauty of the park. Some feared that funds sough! ror the park under the housing and Urban Development A~ncy would be· jeopardiz· ed. since the agency specifies that the natural environment .remain unchanged. Kiser explained tha t the Edison Co. ac- quired the properly more than tv.·o years ago with the advice of the city slaff, Jong before the park \\'BS planned. He saia the substatgon was of vital im- portance since oil drilling operations have overloaded the system. but added that it 1tould be impossible to pla ce all transmission lines underground because or their high voltage. AUGUST QUALITY SA VIN GS But when asked whether this meant the United Slates \\'as leaning towa~d resum ption of arms aid to Pakistan, \\'hile House officials said thlii was not neCfssarily the case. At the end of his talks today v.·ilh Yahya the sources said the su bject was "still under review.'' Those Y.'ere the same words used by Secretary of State William P. Rogers \\•hen he talked with Yahya two months ago. The sources said it was clear that Nix· on has hardened his aUitude on the. que:56 tion of possible U.S. military aid in this area since he began his tour almost two weeks ago. They said while still hoping to confine American assistar1ce to Asia to the economic sphere, the President had decided not to rule out the possibility of military interevntion if that became necessa ry . The main objective, they said, was to prevent the emergence in Asia of a chaotic situation v.·hich might give China, \\'ith its nuclear weapons. an invitation to move into some of the other countries by force. \\'hite House officials said Nixon was nbt in fa vor of the Indian idea for a joint U.S.-Soviet agreement for mu tu a I gua rantees of any of the nations of thi' area . The indications were thaL In~ian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had brought up this question and then knocked it down . Looking ahead lo Nixon's one-day visit lo Romania Salurday, the officials said they hoped tbe Bucharest vi.sit would underline the interest of the Nixon ad· n1inistratiol\ in developing relations with countries behind the Iron Curtain. But they insisted, as they have before. that there is nothing anti-Russian about the trip. They said it was an examp le of the Nixon administration's desire to im· prol(e relations with. all of Eastern Europe. •• Drexel French· DINING TAB LE A RM CHAIRS in the Country REG. $129. Manner REG. $125. -SI DE CHAIRS REG. $110. SA LE $289. SALE $107.50 SA LE $ 95. Our 1ummtf sale also inciudes select group 1 from Drexel -Henredon -Herlt9. Aiso N•tional, Marge Car$0n, and numerous other line1. Reductions on 1cc•nori u , lampt; and \ pictures are availabl.e • NEWPORT BEACH I 727 WMfcllff Dr .. 642·20SO onM RIDAY "TIL' INTERIORS Profntlon.I lnterier 0..ifoon A••rt.We-AID-NSID l LAGU!IA H ACH 341 N-c:.a.t Hwy. °""' ..,.,,, m' ' • ' ' r II .. . . . • • -J --· Lago:Qa Beaeh Today's Fl•al " N.Y. Stoek8 • ' ' ' VOL 62, NO. '183, 3 SECTIONS , 42 r-!<GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST I, '1-969 TEN CEl!ITS • San Cleinente ·Bu.zzing for President's Visit Heav y preparations are near com- pletion today for tbe a.nticipated Aug. Ll arrival of President Nixon in San Clcmeate -two years ago a drowsy Spanish village which has become American's second capitol city. No o[ficial word has come from the \Vhite lIOUSe, out sources cIOse to the world-twring chief executive say he is due bac,k on the Orange Coast about two days before a gala, Ang. 13 state dinner for Apollo 11 's astronauts. Apparently the first state dinner ever held outside Washington, the affair at Los Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel, will draw all 50 state governors, scores of diplomats .to honor the three moon astron auts. Typically, only San Clewcnteans, Nixon asSOCiates who -prefer not to be identified and other similar sources seem able to offer any definite commehts on each ne w development. . "No, of course we can't say anything. enne DO.Via the ~lission T•·ail Ban·anca Road Bid Opening Set EL TORO -Bids will ,be opened on Aug. 18 for construction of a 1.5-mile realignment of Barranca Road from 2,100 feet west of Sand Canyon Aven~ to Laguna Canyon Road, and for a bridge on Barranca al Sand Canyon over San Diego-~reek. The coontY Jiighw ay Dep<}.J'tmenl has estimated the cost al $141,855, f{)r the Irvine area job. e It'•· Uoll11woed Week .I . MISSION VIEJO -This community will be the home of the stars -almost - when the Recreation D e p a r t m e n t sponsors Hollywood \Veek beginning Tuesday. ' Area youngsters will dress up like stage and screen stars at 10 :30 a.m. and the best dressed couple will be awarded tickets to a movie. Following the contest. the plaza parade, st.arring the young· sters, will be staged. Stock lllarket• NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar.kel bobnded to anolher strong gain 1b:lay, as it extended its rally through a third slraight session and closed the week on a winning note. (See quotations, Pages 20- 21). In Michigan Sex Slaying ANN ARBOR, 1'.tich. {UPl) -A 23- year-old fonner East.em 'M i c h i g a n Universily stud~nl has been arrested and charged v.'ith the slaying of Karen Sue Heineman, 18, seventh seJ murder victim in this area in the past two years, authorities announc_ed today. Al a news conference called by stale authorities, the suspect was identified as John Norman Collins, a nephew of a state police corporal. Police alleged that the site of the slaying was the corporal's home in Ypsil3.nli, to whlch Collins had access while the family JVas oo vacation. Authorities declined to link Collins, of Ypsilanti, with the six previous sex kill- ings in this twin-university area. but pro- secutor William F, Delhey of Washtenaw County said, "We will consider other charges, naturally. We will be checking him out regarding the other crimes." Collins at his arraignment today stood mute before Circuit Judge Edward D. Deake, who ordered him lo jail without bond. A preliminary hearing was set for Aug. 7. Police said Collins lived across the street from where another victim. Joan Schell, lived . while attending Eastern 1'.-tichigan University. Collins, a nephe\v by marriage to a state police corporal, \vas arrested Thursday night at his Ypsilanti home. The announcement came .at a ne"·s (See SLAYING, Page!) UPI Ttll....,_ lnlll N"S4 REFLECllONS ON OUR MAN ON TljE MOON Astr9naut Aldrin as Sttn by Travtling Companion - ·' I • \Ve refet all quesUons to the White ~House," says Kenneth · lcavoni. Secret Service ageat-in-charge at the San Clemente Inn. The -sudden transformation of the city or 1'1 ,!loo persons into a part-time foca l poinl of international politics has brought many-major changes -to-the-town They· range from applicaUon for a $115,000 federal grant and city approval ' to spend $10.000 to toughen up the San Cements. Police Department, to a bole • knC>Ckec! Jn 1 wall between the Nixon mansion and adjacent U.S. Coast Guard station. President Nixon will drive through to commute between the 10.room Summer \Vhite House and the long range radio navigational (LORAN) facility via golf .-<'art., working in newly·buirt ad- ministrative held.quarters. Besides the presidential headquarters, the LORAN installaUon has also sprouted a center for White House aides' work, plus a U.S. Secret Service bureau with Coast Guard Involvement. donnltory facility. Besides the fantastic network of elec- Origina11y established as a radio tronic surveillance and communicii_!ions- navlgatlonal installation, the Coast Guard gear set up in the area by U.S. Marine- base -where Nixon's o1ficla1 helicopter Corps personnel from nearby Camp ¥arin~ Corps One :Will land ,.... is now lhe-,1 Peojeton, other steps have been taken. · lOcaUcip , of a critical, world-wkle com-A.ifuaft naviptlonal charts are now, municat1ons center. formally marked for pilots with forbidden• A telephone hot line to the Kremlin flight corridors, while searchlight& atop itself is among 900 separate lines which the Seaside bluf( can pick out a stray will be manned by White Home com-boater hundreds of yards at sea and municaUons experts, with apparently no (See'SAN CLE!\1ENTE, Pase l) n nest e·ecte • r " • 'SOUNO OF MUSIC 'S' TINA REECE GIVES PERSONAL TOUCH TO NIXON INVITATION Wi'th..Much lnftn1ity and Som• F.acl1r Gymn11tiu,_A Farthrifht Not1 ta th• Pr1sldent . Nixon Note •Just Rig!tt~ ' 7-year-old Cornposes Play lnvitati.on With. Special Care By ARTH\JR R. VINSEL 01 rti1 Oal1' Plltt Sllff No formal note carrying delicate over- tones of international diplomatic proto-- col was ever compOsed with more intensity or facial gymnastics._ Tin.a Reece, 7, fl ipped the ha ir out of her eyes, squiached up her mouth and touched 'the pen to the stationery the way astronau~ Neil Armstrong sel his foot on the moon, ''Dear Mr. President." There \•:as a critical pause. "'Eeettyyuuu," groanel the girl select - ed in auditions to play Grell Von Trapp in the Lyric Opera of Orange County's upcoming stage musical. "l keep writing slanted," she con1 - plained. "l don't-skip two spaces like you're supposed to." Miss Reece, daughler of Mr. and J\·lrs. ~farvln Reece, of 33262 Bremerton St.. Dana Point, would like President Nixon and his family to see her in ''The Sound of Music," when it's· perfonned. That woo't be until September, but they could drop into Irvine Bowl for a Fantastic Moon . Pictm·es Sho'v Space Romp SPACE CENTER, llou ston ( AP )-Two A1>0llo 11 astronauts romped on ar\ eerie, unreal world of tortured gray terrain that photographed almost snow while where brilliant sunlight reflected off il. Above was a coal-black sky. This rugged land of contrasts, of harsh shadows, o{ craters iind rocks of all si:r:es, a place where man clear\11 was an 1h'er· loper, could be seen as never before in color pictures taken by the men on the moon and released by the space agency late Thursday. A sequence of 34 still pictures snapped by Armstrong while walking on the moon clearly .shO\\'S nearly lhe whole spectrum or activity on the :;urface. including a dramatic view of Aldr in standing bes ide a seismometer and a laser beam renec1br that the moon men left behind, dress rehearsal later in the month, while visiting the summer White House.in San Clemente. 'She can hardly wait to begin," says A1rs. Reece, explaining that Tina-or it it Gretl-well, you know who, next week begins two hours' dally preparation for her stage premiere.· What does the mlni-5tarlet herself have to say? ''Oh, nothing." she comments, with all !he airy nonchalance or an old·timer like Faye Dunaway, but certain sou rces close to Miss Reece c ontradict this as merely trying lo give her public an image. "She puts on that record at -home and n1imics right along with the mu3ic," says Mrs. Reece. "J'm gcttiog my · fill of it." Tina and others chosen for the Rod gers and Hammerstein hit will sing live at the four September performances. Tina was a bit more forthMghl in her note to President Nixon than to men and women of the press during the Thursday interview. "I af'(J so happy because I am going to si ng in 'The Sound of Music'," she wrote. "My friends and I are going to be the Von Trapp children. "It is my favorite movie and now l am going to be fn the play. My mother read that 11. is your favorite too. I hope you will come to see us." "P.S. Afarni Nixon is the star and I saw her on television, I saw you on television too." 1'.1iss Nixon is no relation to the Presi- den(, but as star, she may find the show . stolen if the man with the same last name accepts the Dana Point starlet's invi tation, Tickets are reserved for the Fll"'!;t Family if they can work one or the hit production's local performances int'o their busy August scheG:.ile, but Tina didn't get lo mail them personally. Stretching to send the invitation on its way, however, Gretl or Tina-whichever -was caught with her public image down, as well as tlle mall deposit box lid. "Don't get my tiptoes in the picture," she ordered. Festival Issues Policy Letter in Fetus F ollowup Laguna Beach Festival of Arts direc· tors today underscored their position on removal of so-called objectionable art from the grounds with a letter of clarifl· cation to all exhibitors. The communication, signed by Festival Board President \V'illiam D. Martin, declared that the governing board has the right to remove objectionable works or signs. · t>.1artin's letter was viewed as a followup on the Festival's Great Fetu.it Flap wherein son1e. paintings of unborn children -and In one Instance kittens - were .ordered removed.- The board president's letter declared. "We are happy that fhe large majority or our artists reel ll ls a privilege to exhibit here and we in tum are happy to have artists of such high Calibre. "\Ve feel at this point we should remind all exhibitors that it is both the legal and moral responsibility of the Festival board to order the removal of any inappropriate signs or other material from Festival booths and to see· that the ground rules are adhered to." Martin11 letter con· eludes. ~1artin explained today that the idea for the letter came from the board as a whole. "We figured it was the correct thing lo do," the board chief sRid. The letter aclion was decided on by the board s~veral days ago . "The only thing Tn Che \Vorld we're trying to do is have a good exhibition and a good Pageant,'' fl.1anin declared. He said the board had rccelved 11 number o( complaints l'rom member's of the community about certain art ·works display«!. Lower Court Must ~Ac1' Say~ Judge BOSTON (UPI) -The chief justice ol the Mass.achll!etts superior court. today rejf'Cled a· district attorney's request fot a judicial inquest Into the fatal auto wreck involving Sen. Echi,·ard M. Ken- ned)!', saying the investigation wu not v.·ithin his court's jurisdiction. In a terse two-paragraph statement, Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro Jajd the request by DI.st. Atty. Edmund S, Dinis of · New Bedford was in the .. exclusive 1"J!CtJijjjQftli<1!1BtrTd'Ciifll'f. Dli\Js informed newsmen 'J'hausday he had ... , 4)ell<r "' the Judge requesting the inquest into an auto accident July 11 on Chappaquiddick bland In wblch a car, driven by Kenntdy plunged oU a bridge into a Udal pond. lifary Jo Kopechne, 21. a Washington secretary, drowned in the mishap. The judge, who said he received first word of the inquest through the press, ad· ded, "l just don't see any precedent for it. All the district attorneys I've talked to never heard of such a thing, "MYreseirCh conllnns my·1nrua1-reac- tion that the request is not within. the ' ju:-isdlction of this court," he said. Tauro said Dinis would be informed of his decision today. "No provision of the law has come lD my attention nor have I been able to find any precedent which would pennit the superior court to conduct the inquest," Tauro's statement said. "The district attorney bases bis request explicitly on General Laws, Cb. 28~ ~ec· tion 8. This section and all other related sections clearly indicate that the district court has exclusive jurisdiction over such proceedings and have no application to the Superior court," he said. · ~fassachusetts Jiiw says if the medical examiner "i~ of (the) oplnion that the death mav have been caused by the aet or negligince of <inother, he shall at once notify the district attorney and a justice of a district cou1 l within whose jurisdic- tion the body was found ... " Dinis was unavailable for comm~t when the judge'!> decision was relea.Sed . At the time of the accident, medical ex- aminer Dr. Walter Mills said he did not ask for an autopsy or an inquest because the cause of death -drowning -"wa.s obvious." In Washington, Kennedy said earlier to. day he would "cooperate in any way'' with any inquest. • . The 37-year-old U.S. Senate whip plead· Pd guilty a week ago today to a cha.z:ge of leaving the scene of lhe fatal acc1denl Orange Co as& Weather Tum on the air conditioner or get out to the beach because hot weather is in store for the coast during the weekend, with tern~ eraturts heading into the high 80s. INSIDE TODAY Skyroeketino cost.s of medi· cal care is rapid.Cy making get· ting .sfck a. h1.rur11 tllat no one can afford. Page 12. llrT~t lt MHl11t11 t ltlllltf 11 Mlvf.. t 7, H. >t CtNll<l'i,. I Mwt11el Pltllft » CIHtlli..I Jl..U """"'' """ t CM11k1 1t ~llM e-tf t CrMll"411 II 1'1\11 ...,,., • Offtll Htllc" t St(~ .._. 1).lt Dtwntt II '-" IH1 •.ittri.i ,.,. ' ltecl' ~ l!Wl• Jn lhe. background, perhaJll 100 feet away, i! lhe t:.agle landing craft, an American flag and the ltleVlsloo .cam· era perched alop its 1Uy1.r mount-all pl1in1Y 1tandlftg out agaln&t a nghlless sky. "Unfortunately, a vtry small group ol "hi)>l1'>n r><enlly 'decldtd 1'> d\spl•Y works that. Jn tbe oplnlon or the board, are ln. podr taste •nd not in tht best in- terests o{.lfle Festlval, the communJty, or even the artists as a whole •• Some artists expressed surprise tl)1t the letter was IS$Ued, believlnJ tbat the ~ Creal FIJu• Flap had quietly 41«1' aome diiys aao. a11ttrt1l11-4 t'l>.JI T•tt'ltW. n ,...ll!Ct_ ~u '11N"" 11. & " ~· 1• WNlfMf 4 l\,IWI LI""'" 11 Wtnll N"" W Mtrrl"t Lk•MI 11 I ' • . ~ l • ! ~ • ' / ~ DAILY PILOT L frldot, Auo.,t I, 196' • . • Summer White House Faces Antiwar Picketing· A Lq\ma Belch apolt..an for Ille l'elce A-C<lunell uld today Illa '"'°P ~Ill m~t1r 3,000 pickets for a mass demonstration at President Nixon's sum· sner White House in San Clemente. •Robert 0 . B.land, spokesman £or the co.uncll, said the anti-war protestors '!i'OUJd come from areas all across the :West. Coast. ~ JI rerused permission for the Aug. 7 ~rch in San Clemente. Bland said the lf'OUP ii prepared }SI-10 to the courts to ijobie: Alter . ' ~rdered to Pay '1ife Support .... ~urflng millionaire Hobart Laidlaw ~bie" Alter of Laguna Beach must pay a; estranged wife $1,354 a month pending h perior Court trial of the action. ::Judge H. Waller Steiner made that ·Wrd to Mrs. Sharon Diane Alter, 31, p · of 2527rMain Sail Drive, Dana Poinl. B'!I pretrial order &ranted Mrs. Alter ~ tdnouth-ptrsonal ~up-port, $150 a month i.-each of tb!'"t!t children and USt a · iiPnth in olMI' expenses, ~e trial court judge must rule on Mrs. De.r's original application for a personal . iltmanee of SMl,000 a year plus monthly ~fits of $700 for each of the three ~r c ildren -Paula, 14,·Hobart Jr .•. 12· effrcy1 7. . Aller filed her complaint last June ~ e accus"es Alter. 35. of 1073 Ga viola ljtive. of "e11treroe cruelty and grievous tm:ntal suffering." :=.1.1ter has been ordered not lo dispose iioMfing court trial of any ol the substan- ~ business holdings and Interests listed ~rus wife in htr f2-page petition. : frs. Alter details her husband 's control ~ extensive surfboard and catamaran ~trucUon firms and valuable-re.al date in San Juan Capistrano, Dana Jl.Oint, Lake Elsinore and several out of ~nty locations. . ~ ,1\ltei" is· widely known In Orange Co.st loitlng circles as the designer-builder of ~tfObie Cats" . -lhe popular 14-foot q.tamarans that have triumphed in _..,eraJ coastal races. He also c:>ntrols ~bie Surfboards Inc. ' :-. · From Pnge 1 SLAYING •.. conference called by slate police director Frederick E. Davl~, appointed by Gov. ,\Viiliarn G. Milliken to bedt the ID: ,\'estlgation. ·· .. Miss Beineman disappeared and was sta.Jn July 23. Her body was found nudt, beaten and strangled in a wooded gully between the twin univeTsity cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, Davids said he "believed" that Collins, a six-foot, 17G-pound athletic type, closely · resembled an artist's sketch of the litis pected klller. It was made from descriptions furni sh· cd by witnesses v.•ho saw Miss Beineman riding ()n the back of a big, shiny motorcycle with a tall, dark, young man the da, she disappeared. .Davids said that there was "more than Ol)t mol()rcycle he (Collins) had access t~." David! said he did not believe any ()f them was a Honda 450, which police bf.lieved was the model on which Miss Btineman was riding. .. ~County Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey said thft Collins had been quqtioned before ]1.f155 Belneman's b<>dy was found. and was released. He said, however, Iha\ C()!lins had been under .rurveUiance since last Saturday. Patrol Baton Rouge BATON ROUGE. La. (UPI) -About 2;,o National Guardsmen joined state troopers and local police patrolfng the uneasy streets of Baton Rouge early to- day as violence flared sporadically. Police reported intermittent sniping. O~llY 01101 OIAMO'! CO.Ul l'Val ISHINO ~JC'r Jtoffrt N. W11i l'Tu ......... l'vlllllftv , .S.cli: •· C1rloy Vlal ,,.lllMI ..... 0-011 Mt..., Tho1111t kH~ll .... Tfi,,..,, A, M11rplriT11 MtMl!N l:llW Jilt~•'~ P. N•ll L"""" .. tdl ,,,, 1''11tr letk permlulon for the mtrch. PuCi martbers umnbled at Nl•oa's San C_l~ente utile darin&: his Jut vl1ll but there w~ no lncldenta or difficulties between the anti-war people and the authorities. Bland and fellow representatives of the Southland-wide organization of some 90 antiwar groups will ask lhc Capistrano Unified School Oistric:t Monday for use of Concordia School as rally headquarters. The campua lies adjacent to President Nlion'1 ma.Mlon In tht Cyprus Shorts realdentl1l section. 'nit Puce Action Council -which or1ani&ed the Century City demonstraUon. again st President John.wn in 1"1. lead.Ing to a bloody confrontlilion -will also ask city permission for the march on Wednesday. No per1nil is required to demonstrate on the sidewalk in front of the Cyprii£- Shores development, accordlng to the PAC, but they are asking San Clemente OAtl Y 1"11..0f Stiff l"twt. 1finning Co11ibination J9hn Gilbert, manager of Boys' Club squad which captured Laguna Babe Ruth League pennant, congratulates team member Mike Neis- wender, 15, winner of Schumacher A\vard as league's .outstanding player. As a pitcher. Mike recorded four wins without a loss. His batting average for the season 'vas a hefty .434. U.S. Still Could Fight In Asia Despite Policy LAHORE, Paki.stan ctJPI) -While House sources said todaj 1hat Pre.!iident Nixon·s no-more-Vietnamil policy would nol bar future U.S. military intervention ln Asia if C9mmunist aggression gravely threatened to change the balance .or pov.•er there. The White House sources said Nixon had reached this decision after talks with governinenl leaders in the Ph ihppines, Indonesia. Thailand, South Vietnam, India and in Pakistan today with Gen. Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan, the QUITS .r RVINE COMAN Y PR E xecutive Ald ri ch Irvine PR l\ian Quits Position \Vil\lam L. Aldrich, public relatlol'ls and advertising director for The lrvine Coin· pany, today announced his rcsign1t1on and plans to establish a consulting firn1 . A1dricb, who has been vdth the Irvine Company for four years. said he will establish the William L. Aldrich Public Relations firm in Santa Ana. .. William R. f\1aS<lD. president of The lrV\ne Co., said Aldr1ch 's resignation will be effecllve Aug. 8. ''He is \'f:ry capable in the public re\a. lions field and J know he will be 5UC· cessful in his new firm." Mason said. Aldrich has been a lecturer at Ptp. perdlne College and at Amer ican Management Assoc. seminars on the businessman's role in public affa irs. lie a16o served a~ 1n Instructor at Riverside ind Irvine campuses of the University of California. military presidf,nL • I The sources A.id that despite his public assertions that J>e would avoid any future Vietnams he had two major reservations after his talks : If there ls a major attack across the borders, or a puclear threat, the United Stales would have to consider the possibility of la ing military action. If there is .a military action by the cdmmunists which threatened the in- terna tional balance of power, that too, v.·ould be a factor in causing the Presi- dent to abandon his hands off military policy. the \Yhite House sources said . The sources said Nixon found thal Thailand and India were particularly v.·orried about the possibility of Chinese Communist aggression. Here in Pakistan, there was not so much emphasis on that as on the desire of this country to get more U.S. military equipment. Pakistan has developed in· crcasingly close ties with Peking follow- ing a cooling of its friendship \\·\th the Unite d States since the days of the Eisenhower administration. The Uni ted States en1bargoed anns shipments to bo!h India and Pakistan folloll'ing their 17-day \var in .1965. The i;ou rces said Nixon recognizes that the embargo operated to the disadvantage of Pakista n because it did not have 01her resollrces available to Ind ia. But when asked \.\'hether lhis meant lht United States .... ·as l<'aning toward resumption of arms aid to Pakistan. \Vh ite House officials sa id !his \\"8S not nece ssarily the case. A t the end or his talks today '\'ilh Yabya the sources said the subject was "still under review." Those ..,,·ere the same words used by Secre1ary of State \\'illiam P. Rogers \\hen he talked 11ith Yah~·a 1 .... ·o n1onths ago . The. sources said it ""'as clear that Nix· on has h11rdencd his attitude on the ques· ti on of possible U.S. 1nililc.ry aid in this are:l since he began his tour almost t1\'0 weeks ago They said v•hlle still hoping to confine An1crican assistance to Asia to the economic sphere, the President had decided not to rule out I.ht possibility of military interevntion ir that became necessary. The main objective, they said, was lo prevent the emergence in Asia of a c~aotic situalion v.·hich might give China, v.•ith its nuclear weapons. an invitation to move into some of te other countries by force. White House ofr ic Is said Nixon wa! not in favor of the Indian idea for a joint U.S.·Soviet agreement for mu I u a I guarantees or any of the nations of this area. The indications Yi-ere that Indian Prime f\linlster Indira Gandhi had brought up this question and thtn knocked It do1vn . Looking ahead lo Nixon's one--day \'isit to Romania Saturday, the officials 1111\d they hoped the Bucharest visit V.'OUld underline !he interest of the Ntxon ~d· ministration in developing relations ..,,·ith countries behind the Iron·Cur1ain, I • • Clb' Cl?uncll 1pinval ol IOllJld triii:'8 Ind I ~l)i' pmoil. We (tally doo't tno" ,''·Bland sald to- day wbtn 11kld U he expects: a hard-nos· . td attitude towJ1rd ~· request when con· l.idered in official circles. "We've laid out a·very careful' plan and '"'e th~nk it ls lmperatJve that we get pennlssion In order l(t avoid a con- frontation," he said. Denial of the request Wednesday will bring court action Thurs· day, he said. llnde.r PAC prog·rammin1, demaol1nf4rl w1nl lo block or! South El C.mloo a .. 11or 11 blOCU. auomblln& 11 1 p.m. for the march and rally,. with an estimated 4 p,m. dispersal time. "We're doing an exceptlonal amount of leafleting at military posts and we'~e been hitting the ~1arlne hangouts Jn Oceanside 'vi th surprising results," Bland said today. He predicted a large contingent of servicemen will join the demonst raUon. which is being a,dverti.sed all over the \Vest Coast, w~ buses coming from a.s Ease Height Rules Building Code Changes Weighed by Planners Proposed amendments to the Laguna Beach building code, including one to e{lse the restricti~n on building heights, will be up for Plan~ing Commission con· sideration ~tonday. Laguna architects Christian Abel, Peter Ostrander arid Lynn Muir will be at .lhe 7:30 p.m. session to present results of a study requested by ~1ayor Glenn E. Vedder, on building heights and sideyard setbacks. • 'The major change proposed 1~11 a(fcc t hillside home.s. Present regulations require a n y building in an R-1 or R-2 residential zone to be built oo higher than 25 feet above the street elevation. If a home ls built atop a bank 20 feet above the .street, then It could only be five. feet high In front, Ostrander ex· plains. The proposed change would allow the build ing·to be built no higher than 25 feet above so-called mean grade at the building roundatlon , without consideration to actual street elevation. The '6ame· change would be tr ue for buildings in an R-3 apartment zone. ex- cept the 1naxlmum height v.•ould be 30 feet. "The only thing that's being changed is the point where the maximum heighl is measured.'' Ostrander explains .. The other major change proposed by the architects deals with sideyard set· backs. Current regulations require a set· back to be determined by building height. The proposed change would detennine set.back by a 10 percent formu la based on average lot width. If the average width is 100 feel, it would establsh ten-foot setbacks on each side. The setbacks could be juggled however. so one setback would be 12 feet. and the other setback eight feet. Minimum setback would be four feet. The prop;osal also sugge.sts a maxjmum setback of 12 feet, according to assistant planning di rector Al Autry. Jn other action, the commission will : -Hear .. a request by Werner E. Ehercn- preis, "607-611 Sleepy Hollow Lane, lo. build a 12-uni t apartment building on the two lots. He wanted lo disregard tone boundary·Unes, permit parking lo project into the rive-fool setback, reduce the re· qutr~ sideyards, and increase density by twO~ units. -Resun1e a pub.J lc hearing requested by Dave r-.1acPhee to operate· a restaurant al 240 Thalia St., with liv e entertainment and sa le of beer and wine, continued last time for more de tail on proposed parking. -Look into a study by city engineers before considering a request by Richard Burl to add 32 units to The Shoals apart· ment complex 1601 S. Coast llighway. -Act on a request by Carl Benson and Victor LaPorte to cut down off st reel park ing requ irements al a new office building at 473 Forest Ave., since they could not ~supply ail required parking spaces due to building restri ctions. -Rear a request by Yvonne L. Crowshaw lo add a bedroom and bat h to her family home at 1031 Templ e Hills Drive without providing additional off slree t par1ting. as the zione requires. 2 Join· Others In Quarantine SH.CE CENTER. llouston (UPI ) The space agency added two men to quarantine v.·ith the Apollo 11 astronauts today because one of the tcrhnirians may have been exposed lo n1non roe~ material 11·hen his \<lCuum cha1nb<or rressure glove broke. The laboratory v.orkcr. H.ona ld Buffum, \Yas splitting luner s<1n1ples at the tilne. reaching into the airless cabi net through two black rub ber gloves. \Vhen one glo\'e tore , the sudden rush of air sucked his right arm deeper Into the cabinet. George Williams, another technician in the lunar receiving laboratory, helped Buffum pull his arm out of the chamber. Buffum received minor bruises. AUGUST QUALITY SAV INGS fir ..a•y IS S1atUe. Bland h!mli~ i.s I World Wor n veteran, serving as a Navy lleultnant in the liberation of the Philippine Island!, Bland, the bearded Orange County coordinator ror the PAC, said today that the detailed plan to use Concordia School - grounds as a rallying point sfle~ the picketing accomplishes two key points. "First, it will not inhibil the now.. or traffic into lhe arelf' and second , ii givell us some elbow-room to co ntrol the cro\\·d," he explained. . F ron• Page l SAN CLEME NTE order him away. · Personnel operating Santa Ft Railway trains along tracks at the foot of the blufr below the old Cotton "Estate -onetime hideway of President Franklin D . Roosevelt -also have thelr orders. Speeds shall be reduced in pa~slng the Summer \Vhite House and whistles which might disturb presideritial slu;nber or crucial t"'iks on international politics arc pfbhibited. ' A contingent of key figures in the Nixon Administration will live in rented homes surrounding the estate, located. in the ex· elusive Cyprus Shores development, for quick contact Doubtless, the public will be drawn lo th"e San Clemente area during President Nixon's antici pated four WC<!ks' stay, but lhe only glimpses they are likely lo gel 11'ill be ~·ia newspapers and television. GUARD EQUlPJ\1E1''T Thousands of dollars have been spent on the more sophisticated guard equip- n1ent, \lihile public pilthways through the area are now blocked and Secret Service agents will be on patrol.. Not only personal safety, comfort and convenience alterations are being made, bul lop seeret esthelic improvements are apparently under \\'ay at the Nixon ·sun1 - mer home. acc:>rding to unofficial observe rs. , Follo)Ving sale by elderly Mrs. Victoria Colton of the Spanish villa. for an cstin1ated $340.000. movers hauled away her elegant furnishings collected over a 3~-year period . t.lrs. Pat Nixon is having the ornate ha- cienda -surro unded by flowering, fru it· bearing trees and shrubberies -re-<ione by a Be\·er ly Hills decorator. But the decor is the toppest top secrtt of all. Summer Scl1ool Ends in Laguna ''No more pencils. no more books ... " A belated chant from an elated schoolboy? Well, not truly belated. Summer school ended today for 450 students of !ht Laguna Beach School.s, from elementary through high school. An assembly this morning concluded the summer school activities. a scant five weeks before the Sept. 4 start of regular school. Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS in the Co untry Manner REG. $329 . SALE $289. REG. $12!. SALE $J07.50 REG. $110. SALE $ 95. Ou r summ.r ••I• allO lnc.lud" selert group s from Dr•x•I -Henredon -H•ritag•. Also National, MA"91 Carton, and numerous ot h•r lln•a. Reduct ions on 1cc•11oriH , l1mpt i nd pict ur .. ar• av1ilabl•. INllRIORS ' ( • Ul'I P'IMM frollO ,,.L MARINER 6 PHOTO SHOWS SURFACE OF MARS FROM 2,100 MILES Crater et Left is I Miles Wide; Area of Picture Is About 30 Miles Moel• Like Moon Life on Mars Chances Dim PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The odds against finding life on Mars lengthened today as scit:ntists studied 1ttariner 6's closest-ever pictures of the red planet, showing a meteorite. battered surface much like the moon's. Black·and·white photographs televised across 58 million miles Thursday night discloe· ed such utter desolation that only the mO!'lt optimistic could h~ for the presence of un- 6een living organisms. TI!ere were huge and an· cient craters, many with sharp-edged smaller craters inside; mountainous highl_ands, precipitous slopes, crack lines and scattered rub- ble -but no tunt that the mysterious planet harbors life or ever did. S,cientists who plan to send surface-scratching unmanned landing craft lo J\.1ars in the 1910s were cautious In their comments on the pos.sibility of life. Said Dr. Robert Leighton, physicist-astronomer heading a study of the pictures: "The camera system was expected to provide an answer to the question of life on Mars. It is expected if there is life on Mars it would be I ii microscopic form or a low order of vegetation." • The photographs, m a n y snapped with a telephoto le as the 850-pound spacecraf swept within 2,130 miles of the Martian equator, covered a dark equatorial band some scientists have thought might bear vegetation because It seems to darken in the spring. What the spacecraft's two !.cameras saw, however, were ·scenes like American desert!: where dark mount.aio ranges rise from wastelands o f bleached sand. There were no clOuds and no signs of a haze which some observers ll a v e theorized might be evidence of moisture In low places. Leightop com· mented : "The blue haze that som.e i;ay is on Mars may not exlst. The surface features are very clear." · The televjsed images, some showing craters estimated as small as a few city blocks across, were an hour !ale a~ pearing on monitor $C~ns at Jet Propulsion Laboratory and some did not show at all. Scienusts at first thought the trouble was at a receiving and relay station at Goldst4:11'e, WASHINGTON (UPI) -from Bonn ' 'sounds Calif. Later they said it might The West Gennan government reasonable'' but raised some be in the spaceerafL has admitted the United States "'Ibe tape will be brought West Gern1any Admits Getting Gas From U.S. questions, h f G td t " gave it small quantities of ere 1 rom o s one, a poison gas for testing He questioned whether the spokesman said. ".so we can pul'JlOses, a practice criticized shipments had been cleared try to find out where the trou· by one congressman as tan· with other West European na· ble is:• tamount to spreading around lions as he believed was re· Scientists will get a second nuclear weapons. quired. chance at taking close-ups of A spokesman for the dt:fensc " ... The broader and most Mars when Mariner 7, five minister in Bonn confirmed basic issue is whether the daya beh.lnd Mariner 6, makes his country received small United States should g i v e a slmllar fly-by Monday night. quantities of the g.ls after chemical and biolog1cal war-Silent for several hours Rep. Richardo. McCarthy (0-fare agents, regardless of Wednesday after apparently N.Y.), charged that such shitr their amounts, lo other coon· being knocked askew by a ments took place for "several . tries," l\tcCarthy said. ''I re· small meteorile, Mariner 1 at years." gard them as similar to nu· last report was operating The German government clear weapons, which Ameri·. normally and scheduled to said it needed the gas to test can law prevents us from giv· begin taking approach pictures gas warning equipmeril such ·o;l;;ingi;;;;l•-•lh-er-na;;;u;;;·"""-·;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;lo;;;n;;iigi;h;;;l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iill as that carried on some tanks II and to test gas masks and met.hods of neutralizing gas. McCarthy, a fr:equent criUc of the Pentagon's chemical and biological warfare p~ gram, aaJd the ea:planation Cocktail Hour In Quarantine?! SPACE CENTER , Houston <AP) -Is there a cocktail hour in the lunar quarantine station where the Apollo 11 a!U'onaµts are In isolation? "lt ls not a dry ship," John 1tfcLeai.gh, a public relations officer in quarantine with the crew, said Thursday in reply to a newsman's question. Andy Williams' DELANEY llROS. • SEA FOODS 2800 La F11yette St., Newport Beach 673-3450 or 54S.2217 • , GOURMET -------. FREEZER SPECIALS Thurs., thru Sun., July 31 ·Aug. J. WHOl.E -IMPORTED DOVER ·SOLE ,. "' ,.._, ffcJI • ;• 1rJdq, Au9u1t.l, 1%9 DAil y I'll.OT I . Surcharge A•sured Missile Maker1 Tax Cuts Bloom He Gets Parts at Dumps In Reform Bill WASUINGTON (UPI) -promise surcharge extenaton. With congrea&ional approval These features Included e:r· assured for the 10 percent In· tending the surchargei at S come tax surcharge for six percent for the firat eix months, the House Ways and months of 1970, which PresJ.. Means Commltlee has com· dent Nixon sou(ibt; repialing pleled the biggest tax overhaul the 7 percent buslnesa tax in modern U.S. history. ~ crtdit: continuation of car and The refonn package fn· phone excise tues; and pro- e:ludes bitter medicine for vidlng almost total income tax some -but there are signifi· rellef for some II million poor ' cant and surprising tax cuts per.lions. for nearly everyone else, The surcharge extension cspeeia\ly low and lJlidd1e in· passed the Senate Thursday come taxpayers. and probably will pass the A committee spokesman house early next week. It was said the pack.age was the most sought by Nixon to help figbt extensive revision of tax laws infiaUon. since the modern income t.az-The reform p a c k a g e was imposed in 1913. formally went to the full :rhe tax cuts, f(lme of which House today and will be up for . . . ~~~~~~~~- dalions and a minimum In· come tax for wealthy person!! already written into t h e reform bill, the Ways and Means 'Committee on Thurs-- day went rar beyond what had been expected tflf" the nUddle income taxpayer. . BOSTON (AP) -A college student says he has ·bought from private firms two-thirds of the parts to build an in· &ercontinent.al ballistic missile and has acceu to Ule reSt. J oseph R. MacG. Seil%, 21, a special student ar Massachusset.s Jnstitut.e o f Technology, said in a copyright story in the Boston Globe today that he purchased the parts from various salvage and surplus metal dealers ln Massachusett.s. The GI~ said Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, provost of MIT and a former science adviser to Presidents John F. KeMedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, called its atLe.nUon to Seitz's work. Seitz said he found a metal salvage dealer in Boston who "will :se.11 yOu an Atlas nose cone for 10 cents a pound .. He doesn't know what they are unlesk you bother to tell him." A warehouse in Taunton furnished .a complete first- stage assembly of the Titan Il- e, three gfildance platforms,. six re-entry shield! and· four "umbilical a.ssemblles," Seitz said. An "umblllcal ,....,bly" • one which diacormects tbe missile at the moment of laun- thin~. Seitz. ol Elberoo, N.J., llitd he collected th compooeall out of "idle curiosity" and to ahow.. security and ordnance -ie that "all you have to do tr.p out to the llliplua yards and look." • Seitz •aid that actually assembling an ICBM ta "a SOO..: ma~year job,"' but a o classified Jmowltdge ia ~ ed. 0 I've Jot •II the critical aub a~bhea for an ICBM,'' ~ said. "The rest Is plumblng,u Seitz said be had 0avo~ 11ettin1 such thinp as foel tanks and exterior structum which are 2.1 feel toog and 10 feet In dia meter, but l knew where I can get them." fttost of the part&, Seltz nid, were obtalned from 0 dumpa" that apeciallie in Ar m y hardware. He aald fissionable matertal for warheads ·could be ..,._ ta lned. 'b\'I "I would be ftr)'. reticent to di5cusa that.'* would stli.~ next year, would debate next Wednesday. It deprive the fe0era1 trea~uiy of ' should .. pass unchanged -no about $7 billion. But the amendments will be permitted government woul~ make up -next Thursday. For middle inc<1me .people, there would be a generous in~ c.reue in lhe 10 pereent max· imum standard deduction to 13 pen:.ent In 1970, to 1-' perceat in 1971, and 15 percent in 1972. This would be· coupled with a maximum deduction going from $1 ,000 now to $1,400 tnl---------------------- for the loss through taxing Then It will go to the Senate groups as • • g e n t 1 e m e n where it faces tough 11oing in farmers." . . '. the Senate Financt COm· 1970, lo $1.700 in 1971 and to ·$2,000 in 1972. The \Vays and Means Com-mittee. With such pro visions as .. a mittee added to the package cut in the 27lf.i percent oil Several other features that depletion all~ance, taxing of had been stripped off the com· church businesses and foun· For all middle incOme peo- ple, there·would be rate reduc· tions in 1971 and 1972 of at least 5 percent. This would start helping families filing joint r~tums, whose taxable inc<1me starts about $8,000. • COMMUNITY EVENTS - AUG. 11 ·25 AUG. 20 Th o Lut BIG EVENT LAST TWO Before School CLASSES NEWTIMER YOUTH OLDTIMER DROWN -PROOFING PICNIC & STEAK YMCA 84.RBEQUE Gemes-Food-Art Displey Newport Beath FREE H•lieopter Rides .. 1. The Guaranteed GroWth Plan. Oepo•lt $1,000 or more. When all your money and Interest remain at our gw1r·1nteed 5.25% annual rate, compounded dalty, your account will grow 30% inSyears 23% ln4years 17% ln3year1 FOUR MAXIMUM I INTEREST PLANS AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL 2. The Guaranteed Income Plan. Open an account of $1 ,000 or moro for 38 to 60 monthL We'll guarantee you a 5.2So/o annual rate, compounded daily, with Interest paid out to y9u each quarter. In case of hardship or emergency, you may wlthdraw the necessarf funds at the end of any quarter and get full lnterHt to that date. 3. The Bonus Plan. Hare'• a :J.year account that lela your eavinga eam 14 % mol9 each. year than passbook accounts do. They now earn at a 5% aMual rate. SO Bonus Plan accounts currently eam 5.25% a year wllen the bonua Is credited at the end of the 3-year period. lnV9St any amoun~ tn multfples of $1,000. Interest can be transferred quarterly to a passbook account end, when held for a year and compounded dally, wilt earn 5.13%. ~ 4. The Basic Plan. The most flexible plan. You can Invest arry -of money and wllhdraw It whenever you wish. If you •- all your..money and Interest lr1 your account for a,..., at our current 6% annual rate with Interest compounded dally, you'll receive an annual yield of 5.13%. You emn interest from the day you deposit your· money 'UI .the dtl/ you withdraw It And the money you deposit by the 10th of any month earns Interest from the 1st, When It remains until quarter'• end. C~!!fitgJ!~Bf.~!~r!!§@!IDgs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL f • 3rd Child Born JUMBO PDAWNS -BURBANK. calir. IA Pl-A ~ 5 . ·LB. IOX $12' 5 COSTA MESA OFFICE: ~~;d1~h~1~,~~·A~J; ~;:r.~ 2700 Harbor Blvd; near Adams• 546-2300 and h~ wile. Claudine Longet, CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER 1lso a recording arti!t. at St U.S.D.A. CHOICE -6-ox. 95 ¢ Joseph 's hospital . T s· I'. K EBO BS A spokesman said the baby op Ir uln e.. \ boy, weighing sevtn pound!, l------...:"'::•:•:.,~"'"::.,.::•~":!!''~"""'~':":"~-=~._::"~"°::!'="":""~"!...,:.!'~lal=~'-::::'!"='": .. :"'::.:.'!-::::;q:""':.:"'~"':!""'.::"'~"""=~'"=':":' :•:•:_ _____ .J •·aa DOI immc<liately named . ._ _________________ _.. " ) • ' 'I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGEj Ne W·;ROad tO · Learning • -. ... ( i .. • • , .. •• •. £ • • , ' -lf one thing has become evident Jn tecent crlll· cism o! the social studies program at taguna. Beach 1chools, it is that behind the issue is a basic reluctance of the critics to accept change. Frequently in talks before the schOols' board or trustees, at the special discussion session and in con· versations with newsmen, critics have stated, "But that's.not the way I learned history." Should it be? In the past 25 years man's know!· edge has quadrupled. Countless new approaches to education have been developed, most of them better than that which. came before it. At the heart of the criticism is opposition to the conceptual approach taken by Laguna educators in the teaching of history. In the conceptual, or inquiry, method, related socio-economic and political concepts are put together \Vilhout special regard to the limila· lions o! chronological or geographic bounds. It is felt by educator( t~at stUdents learn and re· tain more of what they are taught if they have a hand in di scovering the basic tenets of history. Discovery is infinitely more exciting than rote memorization of hi storical names, dates and places. and it makes hislory mean inore to students. Certainly the promotion·· of logical and · critical thinking young men and women is not indoctrination as some critics, perhaps naive, perhaps uninformed, have charged. It is the opposite of thought control. it . is freedom itself. _ It is the spirit of seek and d~scover that would be hobbled should education revert to the "good old days• teaching." The trustees of the Laguna Beach School District must, of course, be responsive to the community. But President Goes Behind Curtain President Nixon becomes the first American Presiden1 since the cold v1ar ·began to visit a Communist country wt:en his plane puts down in Bucharest Satur. day afternoon. Preslden!. Franklin D. Roosevelt attendi!d a wartime meeting llf allied leader& at Yalta in the Soviet Union in February, 1945. { Editorial • Research -.._President Harry Truman took part l.n a ma~d on their. bofdcrs with Romania at meeting in July and August of the same the -time of the invasion 0 f year at Potsdam in East Gennany. Czechoslovakia. Uncowed, the Rom·anien President D\vlght D. Eisenhower planpt'd Grand National Assembly and the Council to make a trip to the Soviet Union in 1960, or State on Aug. 21, 1968, endorseJ but the invitation was canceled by · Ceaiisescu's sland deploring the in· Premier Nikita. S. Khru::hchev after the terference in Czech domestic affairs. U-2 spy plane incident. "'East Europe" ?'!Calls: "As it hR~ However, President Nixon is ~ penfd., Romania_ v.·as not:: invaded. The i;tranger to Bucharest. He \vas wami1Y rea~s were complex. Fir 5 1 , received there in March, 1967, after haY•· Czeclioslovaki1, had proved far harder to ,_1 ing been nfused a vis~. by ~olanjl ru¥f digest than the Kremlin had anticipated. sharply snubbed by off1c1aJs 1n MQ!:C9'\\I. Then the rc~ction of the Wesetrn Com· P~ilip Ben '()b~~es : "They (the 1!'1m~,lf: ''.\munist parties and of intmiationa-1 public n1.ans) we~ sen;'Jble enough to be kind ~o opinion was much more hostile than CJ.· Richard Nixon, in 1967, <it a time when lls pected. Both Romania and Yugoslavia was n,ot even. sure .,or getting the had declared ihal they would take up Republican nom1naUon . arms. CNna, too, had made ominous IF rifE ~RESIDENT were to visit :Jny Communist state, Romania was a pretty obviws choke. Without having broken free ol Soviet domination like Yugoslavia, Romania has shown a remark<ible in· de"jiendence, even audacity, towards its powerful neighbor. Soviet. Hungarian and Bulgarian troops noises." R0)1ASIANS fo r years ha\·e been trying io cslablish a better relationship y,·ith the United States. P.resident Nicolae Ceausescu invited P~den). Nl:<on let Ron:iania about a monlli after Nixon's inl auguration. Romania long has sought most-favor~d· they also consider that some vocal factions of that com. munlty ma.y•attempt to apply pressures not in the total con:munity's Pest interest. · • El Toro's F t1ture ' I Possible use of El Toro Marine Air Base as a ci- vilian airport was much in the news in recent weeks. Congressman L. Mendel Rivers mentioried it as an example of a U.S. hiilitary holding in an ezpensive l~nd market where sale of the property could bring a stzeable sum. LQcal congressional representatives quickly de- clared Rivers had simply used a for instance ana no great significance should be attached to the mention of El Toro. Then John Killefer, administrative assistant to Supervisor Alton Allen, hinted that a county Master Plan of Air Transportation Group soon will recommend supervisors forget about the El Toro base. Meanwhile, some military sources have hinted ttiat El i:'Of9.hB~ ~ lif.e expectan~y in. its..pi;f>.5ent .use oi only anolher ten years. . And 'finally, Carl R.hoadeS~ a sa1ety planner · at Philco.Ford Aeronut-ronics, said conversion of the base to. 3: regional airport for civilian use would cost $43 m1Jhon and the aiIJ>Ort would be used to capacity in only a few years . All thi.s i$ of interest to residents of Mission Viejo. 1..a'!una Hills , El Toro and other communities that mipht find themselves in thP fli.eht path. But at this time the only certainty about El Toro airport is that iis future ts uncertain. { .,. ~ ' " 7f if~~ a grr.at machine, ;you fl;y ill' J ------. (l 1 l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---· nation trade treatment by the tlnited States, presently enjoyed by two allier Communist countries, Poland a n d Yugoslavia. M yet, however, the Nixon administration has show n no sign of trying to "'in that concession from Congress. Romania's trade "'ith non.Commuaist countries climbed 1rom 18 percent of !ler total trade in ·198 to 47 ~cent last year. llut her expo'l. to the United Stales amount lo no ore lha:n one or llro million dollii:rs year. · CEAUSESCf internal policies are or:thodox tnou ' for the Commurusts in !f:""'ow. ·•· . · "3. F. Brfi'n, an American Kremlinologis t, observes: "It is r3.ther in foreign relations that Romania's sins have been committed: by her agreemP.nt with West Germany-, her /neutral) stand on 'the Arab-Israeli connict, her (fril'nd· ly) attitude towards China and towar&. the in{asi;ln ()f C&eehosJovakia." \\1h.ar,~ sins 1rt..RU!$~ e;es appear to b!! Ute -very policies th.al leQ President Nixon.to accept Ceause'sqfs lnfitation to !_top over In Bucharest. Sore1asen's Biggest Job • Who Wrote Ted's Speech? The voice was Sen. Edward Kennedy's, but the words were provided by two long· lime Kennedy family Jiegemen - Theockire S o r e n s e n , thrice-married counsel and ghostwriter for President Kennedy, and Richard Goodwin,~literary Pandyman of Senator Robert Kennedy. \\1ithin a few hours after the disdosure of .. Teddy's" involwment in the drown· ing of a young Washington secretary, Sorensen and Goocfy,•in. l):ad rustied to his home at Hyannis Port, 1Mass.,..'1o~advise . and guide him. They had come without being :.ummoned, as did former Defense Secretary Robert MeNamara and "i"Oalf· dozen other dedicated Kennedyites. It was on the emphatic instruction of these iMer devotees that Kennedy main- tained tight-lipped silence -about the tragic affair for nearly a wffk. His oWn ir.stincts were to talk, and neWsmen wCre told a press con(ere~Jd. t)e--held il\e following day. · BUT THE Sorensen-Goodwin clique peremptorily harried ·it o~ two grounds: First, get public reaction to the curious affair ; second, to obtain the views of at· tol"neys and friendly local officials on possible legal implications facing Ken· nedy as a result of the death of the young woman and hil mysterious failure to report the fatal auto accident for many hOur~ - This last consideration dominated lhe week-long deliberations of lbe Sorensen- Goodwin group. A:J I en-Go I d s111i th ,; l•fl; 'i"' '}!-\. • ,t ~~ t . J! .,t leletast. Goodwin prepared a draft, part11 d ·which wt¥'e jncorporated in thf: final , 1Cri1tl.., Virtually all or the last port.ion, which Kennedy·roemorited and in which ·ht as~ed for public Jlelp to "think. thlt throuP with me," was t'Sorensen1S,,ban- diwork. Throughout lhe week of closely guarded deliberating and cogitaling, there was much telephonic conferring with pro-Ken· nedy newsmen, broadcasters, political lea~"I l!"d Qth.qs, , C¥e"dampiep correspondent of the ' ' . ·1 strongly pro-Kennedy ' \Vashington Post was flown in a private Kennedy plant from !\1artha's Vineyard to Hyannis Port for several hour& of consultation. None of the other nmOOrous iepofters on the island were called in. Teddy persooally talked by phone with a number of Senate "peacenik" col- leagues~ Among them were Democratic Floor Leader f.fike flfansfield of Montana, Ge<lrge.McGQvern of ,South Dlikota. who has )912 aspirations, ~ank Church of Idaho, Vance Hartke of lncliana; also Representatives John Tunney of California, wbo has his eye on the seat held by Sen. George !\iurphy, and Tor· bert MacDonald (D-Mass). ... By Robert S. Alle n and Joha A. Goldsmi th 1El Toro S u_its Him Fine ~ the Editor : Your account (July 25 ) of the report ''Orange County Interim Region a 1 Airport" by Carlton Rhoades, an aerosp;ice safely engineer, s~ms to pro· vide more questions than answers .. (!\1r. Rhoad~ said El Toro Mar ine Corps Air Station could not ;iccommQdale both civilian and military jct traffic.) Despite the facl that you point out Mr. l\laiThox- Other Worlds to Explore -When!: was finally declaed. --wrthlfic approval of the local district aHorney. an old friend of Teddy, that he \V()Uld appear irr court on i'olartha·s Vineyard and plead guilty to leaving the· scene of the ac· cidrnl. it \\'<IS Good1rin 11•ho conceived the iclea of follu"·ing th;it 11p \l'ilh a televised broadca~t . Jlhqa(,fes lives_!l_!)i!_er .tru:_E1 Toro flight pattern, one must presume he is l'n- bia'sed. But even \~1ith an off.shore airport, prevailing \Vinds will stlll bring l~ndings over people's homes, e\·en though lh('y may not be at lr~·lnc. • Letters from reader1 art welcom r.. Nornu:tlly writers should conveu thei r messages in 300 words ()T less. Tht rigl!t to condense letter.s to fit spact or eliminate libel is reserved. AU lrt· ters _tru1s_t include signature and.mail- ing address. but 11omes moy be witl1- hcld on· request if .sufficient re asul' is apparent. Armstrong and Aldrin.. on the plaque be truly appropriate~ . -. . . If you'll stand ror ()ne more 1ouch ot 5'3ce, this is a modest contribution. The que;tion before the space adtT.inistration: what do we do now? Of course, there is a program !or Apollos 12, 13, 14 and so forth. But these depend on the monev available, whi ch depends on the mood ol the people and lhe Congress six months or a year hence. Futur,e Apollos are going to be anti· climax and that does nol fuel great \•isions, or even great achievement. The NASA people have a high content of those who live on visions. The lunar conquest is already force-feeding them. Tak:.,~ case of Dr. Werner von Braun played an important part in Apolk>'s success. Dr. von Braun told the newsmen: "We can from now on move to wbere we wanl to go, "'here other wor\dJ , ' Royce Brier can support our life." THIS EXPANSIVE altitude is sup- portl"d by many ()thers in and oul of NASA. The obvious long-range sequel of the moon is exploration or the planets. Here th.e \'iSion encounters practical ()bstacles. The earth has seven planetary companWns, and of these Mars is lhe "n- ly practical target for manned ex- ploration. It is a little less rigorous than the moon. There may be a trace of water vapor, but altogether the atmosphere is apparently like ours at IO.IS miles Following Pied Piper ...Y nou1hts At Lar1e:: ,-•• ,. ... -..,...~..-~ ...._ 1 dot11 believe that ~pie, even [ Ju...,;1es, are "led astray' by others; I Si dney J. Ha.r ris when they follow , it is because something tn their nature has been conditioned to \ respond to the tune of these Pied Pipers: at one level or our being, we always know what we are doing, even though we may noi know why we are doing it. -t-Why do some humans. feel jp!;Ulted when we are referred to as an "animal ..---Bii George--~ Dear Geor£•; • If you're J\ICh a hot-shot advice ~ columnl~ how can we cure the rfs. ina ratio of broken homet? SKEPTICA~ Dear SkepticJI; SW:np out dJvorce. • species" since it is ?i.fan "'ho destroys lhe Earth and exploits and exterminatrs his ,own kind, not the other animals? !\Jen are largely irrational In their al- titudes toward women - a man will be annoyed if a wq_man doesn •t know as niuch about &0melhing as he thinks lhe should, but he btcomts evtn more an- noyed when she Wllbits mort knowledge than he thinks ahe should have:. TUE TROUBLE wltb. "fret spetth" Is that we are willing lo practice lJ. tnore than we are wllJJng to Uslen to Tl ; and wlLhotll citiitns who listen as intensely .tr they illk, no coristrucUve social diolog i1 possible. ( allltude. not enough lo support a hurnan organistn unaided. Its gravity is .38, n1ore than twice that of the moon. This ls a n1inus for us. si nce the lunar success \Vas dµe. to lo\v gravity, permitting me'l to mo~e. \Vilhout a crushing weight in body. suit and pack. . ~Jar, our ~965 photographs show a flfart.ian crust resembling lhe moon's, rocky _and pocked wilh craters. Bot the pictu~f covered oflly t percent o( the Martian surface. There may be more !10!pitable ·ateas. and we may detennine this in a tevr )'ears. BUT ENVIRON!\tENT is not the main barrier to Martian manned exploration. The main barrier is distance. At present cruising speeds, averaging 17,000 mph, our astronauts reach the moon in a few days. It is an enormous physical and psychological strain. Under the lrajectory necessary-to a Mars ap· prooch., Mars is SOIH300 limes as distant as the moon. At our top rocket speed, 25,000 mph,. the l60·million-milt Mars span would consume most of a year, one way. It Is therefore .. manifest lhat the present energy production and propulsion system is wholly inadequete lo put a man on Mars. Some speed of the order of C"· 500,000 mph is required. This is about five: limes the speed of free meteors and you might call it dangerous. ' EVEN THEN, 30 days in lhe current space vehicles woulH seem to lmpase in- tolerable -phys1Cal and psychologica l bur~ens on the human organism. The vehicle would have lo be far larger. "'ith far larger payload in minimal amenities for lhe journey. Let the technologists wrestle: wilh these equations, and see 1f lhey can work them out in 20 or 30 yea~. t.feanwhlle, we have meta.ls "'hich donl ha ve mortal muscles or mortal brain cells or mortal rea.'ioning faculties. \\1e: may be pinned to !hem for ~'ears in our thirst (or secrets of the Solar System. IN THE DISCUSSION that followed. th is propcsal v.•as enlarged to include a "public den1onstration of confidence" - son1e form of dramatic response to Ken- nedy's spit!. Again it wns Goodwin who suggested the · st ratagem of having this public manifestation center on "'hether Kennedy shou ld resign his Senate seat. . As he characteristically remarked, "Thal'\I get them . That's got sex ap- peal ." ne:al purpose of lhis "poll" is lo build up support for Kennedy"s re-tlection next year. That's the primary concern of him and his devotees. He never had any in· tention or resigning . At no time "'as it seriously discussed by him or his inner clique. Their sole anxiety \Vas salvaging Ken· nedy's seriously jeopardized ·1970 re-elec· lion chances. The ''poll" is the first move in that endeavor -about which a lot more 1vill be heard and on which a great deal more will be spent. SORENSEN \\'ROTE most of Teddy's Dear Gloomy Gus: \\1ouldn 't it be nlc' If the LB Plan· ning C()n1mlss.ion made a decision the same night the Issue was first presented to them? c.s. 'nll1 h1tvrt r1""1f. ,..,,.,..-'II.wt, Ml ~tttntrltv IMM ff ffl9 ......,_. tt11• ~.,,, HI ...... • o •m., •n. 0.1" P!r.t, l\tORE Ii\1PORTANT. however. is the argu1nent re n1ilitary use alongside civilian use al F,I Toro . Apparently rifr. Rhoades Is noL aware that not just a fe1v but many · hundreds of charter civilian and n1illlary transport four-en- gine jets have departed from and arrived at El Toro, fully loaded, with Vietnam !\1arines. If it's gOOd enough for tho'ie gentlemen, it's good enough for the rc:>t of us. And the 7C17 "'hich carries President Nixon to his new home in San Cleme nte? tf it's safe enough for !\1r. Nixon, it's sale enough for me. The economic argument does not hold "'at er either. Since when has the Pen· tagon been empowered to make a profit out of the public ii is supposed lo serve? El Toro belongs to the people, unless somebody has rewritten the Cllllstitulion. and "·hen IJie people's needs change so n1ust the facility . Some 300 years ago. John Locke \\'rot~: "All men are liable to error : and m')st men are, in many points, by passion or interest, under temptation to it" KEN LLOYD 'Boorb h Behnvlor' To the Editor : Do you rind dl9concertlng, perhaps em· barrassing, the President's habit of in- sinuating his presence into events which through melia coverage increase his personal notoriety ? Is it boorish behavior to invite one$Clf to share the pre-mission dinner "'ilh those who are about to undertakt the risk of space travel? Is It immodest to insist upon utfitaginit the heroic astronauts during the moon exploration? To repeat the grandstand play on the carrier? IS JS 1NAPPROPRtATE to arrange! • that Ole President's nam e be Insc ribed on the plaque to be left on the moon rather than the name of deserving contributors to Apollo's success! Would not lhe names of Grlssom •. \Vhltt: and Chaffee alongside: those of \Vould not the names of many'scie nt ific contributors be more appropriate~ ff· political personality had to be in- serted in the plaque's inscriptio n, wouldn't il have been magnamimous nnd fitting that either the name of President Kenhedy w~ inspired th! space effort, or .that of President Johnson who as Vice Presideot and President gave impetus tn the space effort, be perpetuated dn the moon plaque? ' ISN'T tT A FACT that the President has made no material cootribution to spaoe success'. in fact , doesn ·t he reprr· sent the Eisenhower administrat ion 11·hich deplored American involve:ment In peaceful space exploration? \Yould it be reassuriag if the Presider.t "·ould forsake cha sing TV caml!:ra<: around the globe and instead expend hi~ energy on ihe attempt to rt.duce thP. numerous blunders he commits and t() minimize the contradictory a c Ii on, among the member~ of his ed· ministration? Isn't it time that executive respansibility repla~ campaign tactic~~ BOB FORD --~-- Friday, August I, 1969 Tiit cditorlat page ()f -~!it Daily Pilot 11eeks to inform. and st1m.. ulate readers by prcse:ntina Ciiis newspape:r's opinions 011d com.. mentary on topics of inlertst a1id. significance. by providing a forum f()r the e.rpr11sion of our readcirt' opiniom, 011d by prese11tjng tlle divert.e vl1w- points of informed observets ond spokes-mbn on topic.t-o/ the da11. - Robert N. Weed, Publisher / J ·-·-' ' ' • .. .... . JEAN COX, 494-9466 l'rltla_, AwtUJt l, lW I "''' 11 The Laguna Line -- Lots of Action Seen On Art Colony Front By ·JEAN COX Of ttt. Dlltf f'ti.t Sl1tl August \vill be a very good month Cor art, dra.ma and music. In ,. addition, area people are. keeping themselves busy \vith parties, meetings and other projects. MRS. WARR~N KRAMER of Emerald Bay hosted a baby shower and luncheon yesterday for ~1rs. Robert Ragatz, also of Emerald Bay, \Vho is expecting her second child. Fot her guests I'vlrS: Kramer, Who is fro1n Nor.vay, served smo'rre~ bro'd which are delicious open·face sand\viches pil ed high \vith delicacies. She also made Krem,kake, a special Nonvegian cake filled with imported muller berries. Luncheon \Vas served \vith vin rose d'anjou, a French wine • . Emerald Bay \vomen joining the gathering included the Mmes. How- ard Preston, \Villiam Johnson, Leighton French. George Barr. Gay Brant, Robert Schock, James Keyes, James Kindel and Don Vaughn . Others present included Dr. Arona Kagnoff of Nev.1port ~ea"ch and the ~Imes. Allan Cottle of Laguna Beach. Robert Roper of Irvine Cove, PhiUip \Vinsor and Philip Kendrick of Ne"'•port Beach and \VU1iam \Vickett and Eugene Boston of Fullerton. • I . ,' .• t. '. ' A whole series of gatherings will be given this month by Queen of Hearts guild l\)embers. Children's Hospital of Orange County. The purpose of the gatherings \\•ill be to give s:uests the opportunity to order Christmas cards which guild members are selling to benefit the hospital. Mrs. ?\.1acauley · Ropp gave the initial coffee in her Three Arch Bay home yester- day morning, and Mrs. James Delaney plans another co!fee in her Laguna Niguel home AT THE RANC H-Chatting happily at Rancho San Juan following the annual awards coffee for Aux· iliary of South Coast Community Hospital are (left to right) l\.1.rs. Violet Adams of Emerald Bay, treas· urer of the auxiliary's Silver and Gold Chapter; l\.frs. Victor Andrews of Emerald Bay, and Mrs. Tandy Coleman of ?Ylonarch Bay, chairman of vol· UJ)teers. • Thursday, Aug. 7. · · Auxiliary Volunteers Applauded A cocktail party for 70 potential Christ- mas card buyers '''i\J be· co-hDsted bLJ'lrs. Robert Russell and Mrs. Francis Fabian in U1e Monarch Bay Beach Clu~ Tuesday eve- ning, Aug. 5. Other hostesses givin ·'coffees \vill be ~frs. Harlo\v Boyle Of · Emerald Bay, who G·ift of Time Rewarded I JEAN CGX will entertain guests Saturday, Aug. 12; J.1rs. Neil Nels'On who \vill have friends to her Irvine Cove home Aug. 20 ; r..Trs. Dewight Smith of Emerald Bay, who will entertaii:t Aug. 25, and ~Irs . Thomas Fleming of Monarch Bay, Aug. 26. ' MRS. J . H. MALCOLM, president of the Women's Society 0£ Chris- tian Service, Laguna Beach Methodist Church \vill attend the School ot Missions next ~1onday throu gh Saturday at California \Vestem Co!lege, San Diego. Joining her in represen.ting the Lag.una Beach. group will be· the Mmes. Carl Hawkins, Allen Bruley, Eve Price and Lois Lyerla. The churchwomen also are busy collecting ne\V and good bed linens which are needed for ,,·ar-orphaned children of the China Beach Orphan· age in Da Nang, Vietnam. Those who v.•ish to donate to this cause may ca\J Mrs. Ruth f\-lillhouse, 499-1 249. • In between projects and' conclaves, the church\vomen took time off ~ for a picnic in Heisler park last ~esday.. . . Laguna Beach Panhellenic is planrung its nudsummer coffee to take place in the Emerald Bay borne ~f Mrs. \V •. ~· Doole~ a~ 10 a.m. Summer visitors \vho are members of national sororities are invited to attend. FOR SILVER AND Gold Chapter. South Coast Community Hospital Auxiliary, the month of August will include another trip to the races. Bus· es ~ill be provided for the Ii.de lo Del Mar Race Track Thursday. Aug. 23. OPERA LEAGUE members are busy spreading the word about their annual luau which will take place in Monarch Bay Beach Club beginning at 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23. Festivities will include dancing, dinner and plenty of entertainmenL ON THE CULTURAL scene there is enough for everybody: In addi· t..ion to the three festivals running through Aug. 24 -The Festival of Arts," the Sawdust Festival and Art·A~Fair -there is the All California Show in Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery, which also closes Aug. 24. ,_ FESTIVAL OF ARTS Chorale and memberS oi Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Co. are combining their talepts to present three Sunday afternoon performances of a South American Folk Mass at Aug. 3, 10 and 17, at 4 p.m. The bal.let'fompany also \vill present "Alfresco" in Irvine Bowl at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 30. · · MRS. SIDljEY JOHNSTON of Lagun~ Niguel is back from the hos· pita! and recovering from a ruptured. appendix. She is happy to announce she will be well in time to attend the Opera League Luau. Auxiliary of South Coast Community Hospital re- ceived its full share of a""•ards during a Blue Ribbon Day lvhich took place on l\1r. ,and.Mrs. Jose Rosan's Rancho San Juan in San Juan Capistrano last \veek. There were 147 volunteers \vho gav·e 100 hours of service or more to the hospital during the past year. Each was recygnized with an American Hospital Asso- ciation pin of honor attached to a blue jibbOii. Follo\\i.ng the social coffee at 10 a .m., Mrs. Jack Lyons, auxiliary ptesident \velcomed those attending the annual auxiliary a"•ards coffee and added a par- ticularly \Vann greeting for civic dignitaries ?Ylayor Glenn E. Vedder of Laguna Beach and Mayor Wade F. Lo\ver of San Clemente. During the business portion of the meeting, the general membership nominated two members from the floor to complete the five required for a nominating committee to select officers for the corilifig-year. Those nominated and approved "''ere ?\.1rs. Sam Garst and itrs. Violet Adams. After the business was taken care or, ~Jrs. Lyons Introduced Mrs. Mont McMillen, program chairman, '''ho thanked her committees and presented Mrs. Tandy Coleman, chairman of volunteers, \Vho made the a\\•ards. Mrs. Coleman was assisted by Stanley Volga, hospital administrator, whose words of praise, predic- tion and purpose highlighted the afternoon. He spoke, said Mrs. Thomas J. Fletcher, public relations chaii-man for the auxiliary, of the appreciation extended by the South Coast Commt1nity Hospital board of tru~tees end himself to all the 384 members for the 43,000 hours volunteered during the auxiliary's existence. • "The place where the action is is here and no"' in the auxiliary's office," he said, according to 11rs. Fletcher. The coffee marked the 11th year some or the volun· teers have served the hospital and 10 'years for others. A special corsage was given each in these two groups. Heading the 11-year-group "'ith the highest number of hours was Mrs. Thomas Swanson of Emerald Bay \vho as assistant hospital treasurer had devoted. a totai 0£ 15,835 hours to the hospital cause, Next in line was Mrs. Harry Sowden of Dana Point chairman of the auxtliary's gift shop in the hospital: She has put in a total of 8131 hours of service. Third lvas Mrs. Fletcher of South Laguna with 5767 hours follo\\•ed by A1rs. Perry La Pierre ·of Lake San Marcos, with 5558 hours and l\1rs. Harold Ekman of South La.guna \vith 5310 hours. Ot"hers in the 11-Year· group \vere A1rs. Coleman of Monarch Bay, 4069: Mrs. lva A-1arsh of Laguna Beach, 3738 and ~1iss Elfreda Biggin or Laguna Beach, 1879. ' Those in the 10 year bracket were Mrs. Adams ot Emerald Bay, 4048: Mrs. Blaine ·Young of Laguna Beach, 3009; Miss Elizabeth Allen of Seal Beach 2713· li~rs. George E. Griffin of Dana Point, 2219; Mr;. Pat: rick Shea of South Laguna. 2090, and Mrs. William Thompson of San Clemente, 2227. ~ . Those in the...ni.ne-)U?at-bracket wb0-eamed bar.s included ~1rs. Lyons, of South Laguna, a 5000 hour a\vard; ~'rrs. Ray Marsh Fox of Laguna Beach 3000 hour bari. Mrs. John Valentine of Laguna Beach' 2000 hour bar and Miss Ann Crossett of 'I..aguna Beach: 1000 hour bar. '?f the 61 Candystripers. Miss Janette Brylla. the pres1~ent, had a total of 230 hours of service. Miss Bonnie Clapper was the second highest with 202 hours. For the coffee. Mrs. Imhoff was in charge of the t~ble setting and Mrs. M. E. Thompson ~·as respon- sible for flo\ver arrane:ements made available through tile courtesy of Jack Escbbach. l\.1iss Prances Christeson and her committee pre· pared refreshments. Presidinst over the coffee table \\'ere A1i ss Fern Randolph, Mrs. \Villiam Tracy and l\.·Irs. Gertrude Carroll. Hospitality hostesses were the ri1mes. Jack Stewart. Ekman and Donald Teetor. . , Candystr.ipers assisted in serving under the super- \11s1on of their coordinator, Mrs. George Kennedy. Nelv year books were distributed by Mrs. Edward Kriss, nlen1bership chairman, assisted by Mrs. Valentine. • Star-gazer Sets Sights on Down-to-earth Constellation I DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several weeks ego rnY husband bought a telescope to study the stars -he said. Alter th• · fourth night he lost interest in the llky and i~ now ·studying other "heavenly bodies.•• We live Jn an ·apartment which l ls ideally situated far his~ new hobby. He hurries through dinner. races to the Win· dow and stays there four or ftve hours at a time. I Last week be invited lhree of the boys . from the office to enjoy I.he fun. He was quite dlllBRPC>inted. because his two best aubjects for observation (he calls them Venus and ~1an} _.ere not at home. He promi!td the boys he'~ Invite them back. 1 am disgusted wlt.b him and he knows ANN LANDERS 5l it. r am also concerned that he might be breaking the law. I've heard o( men being arrested as Peeping Toms. Please lnfonn me. -JUST LOOKING, THANKS DEAR JUST: So long as Tom stays ill his own apartment be cannot be arre11ted. In the meantf,ple, be paUeot. 'dearle. Tom "'lU lire el hit bobby after a wblle. Grow- ing up takes Hme. DEAR ANN; A distant relative of mine who ia going Lbr0u11h the menopause ls acting very oddly. Six weeki ago she telephoned at 2 a.m. and asked, "Are you all rigfit7" r"iald, "Ye!, of cou.ne.'1 She then related a terrible dreim she had in y,•hicb I was murdered. That was the end of my night's sleep. A Week Jater ahf telephoned it. 8 a..m·. and asked U I had call<d h.,., I said, "No." She UH:n uplalned that her phone bad nmg and ahe htard a ICl'eam that IOOllded Uke 111¥ VoiC.. ./ This past week she has telephoned ri ve times, aci:used me of calling her and not speaking, just breathing into the phone. l 'm rure the woman needs a psychiatrist. In the meantime J'm going to need one, too, if she doesn't quit bothering me. Any suggestions'? -PESTERED BY A NUT ' DEAR PES: Suggest that sbe see a doctof afld cer bt lp. nen belp younelr .; by ge«litg 8n inillsted leltpbone number. · tt ct1ts 'nothlni. · ' DEAR ANNo'Our ll·Jllar .. ld>on'! best rr1end, joey, wants lo admire his fathc!r ·and tries bard , lo j~y hls drinking. t.asl night ht asked U I wu agalrut beer, "ev~ If a perl!Of'I can drink ti bottles In a row and &.Ull walk a strallht line." He added with [a~e bravado, "r.fy dad can do It!" t gave a noncommittal answer and Ultn hated myself for not having the courage lo tell the boy what heavy, continuOU3 drinking can do to a person. How can I get the n1essage across without running do"'" his faQ!er, and incidentally, his mother, too? -AUSTlN DEAit AUSTIN< It 1, not yo<r rupoDJlbuity to "Jt.t the meuage across." A chi.Id's bale concept& art JearHd at home, aot frtm tH JMl&lllbon. \\i'hea the bo)' alb leDttih1 'qllt!1llon1 tell him te talk I• ~s pattntl• I1 ·Ute ~a1- Ume1 tome tod!•i,lual1 wbo srtw ap arowid alcoboU1m bale Uquor od ne.~r toucb It. Olhen turn oat to be te<!ood and third generation lu1he1, whlcll ctye1 ti. Impression that alcoboUsm 11 ltertd.ltary. It is not, of coune. It la a leantd reapoue to fru1trat1oe, ltaell1t11 ud ta.- security. Drinking may be "in'' to the kids you run with -but it can put you "out" ror keeps-.-You can cool It and stay popular. Read "Boote and You-For Teeni&Ua Only." Send 3$ cent& In coin aod a lonr, oelf-addreued, stamped envelope with your request. Ann Landers wUI be gl!d to help you with your probltm1. Send !hem to htT In care of the DAILY PILOT, tnclooq a 1tlf·addressed, ttJ!nped envelope. • • • . .1.4. PlllY PllOT -~ ~ol f d.ay -Season Rushed i Fior ~hop.pars' Benefit · ?. bir\atm.1 In A11i111t! Ephraim Lewis o! the Sl!lta .,, ""6!\. P<!>P1• ""®dtr at the Ano Chlpler and acldltlonol ::;~~ but wi.. •!Joppers, .collet• In the hoopltal con· ·.-lwekOm• t.be early. Yule al· fettnce center. i.-;,·mDtlPhetl created. by four The A!flllant Chapter will 1.H~Sor Area w om e n 'i 1 OO,,t a coffee. Wed.ntsday, Aug. ;to11ahJptions. II. from 10 a.m. to noon, and • '-!-!l'hl 'tour groups 1et holiday the Hunter Chapter's showing _,;plat\J on \ht) way e&rlJ by, <if· Will take place Thursday, Aug. ~did« Christmas .card• for 21. al&o from 10 a.m. to noon. -<.!ale ( at· ·discofmt p 'r I c es • 'Mle Gift Box wfll host \.'few-~·~· poc'kelboob are ings Thursday, Aug. 7 and :.-:raiten.d wUll tho savlnp and Thuisday, Aug. 11. .. .:the ~\K~ of the lfOUPI In Funds from the card sale :-:iuJia1 arl fattened to ·buJldlng !111 be used for the auxJliary's ::t\lfld. pleclies can be met and pleclie or $17,500 to the :'1>i.htt 'wortH'&11i1e endeavors holpltalmade by the Gift Box. :~~ · Also assiaUng with the sale :;· Btilnntng their. an nu a I are the Mmes. Ralph Tilton. ~ftmas card sales are the co • c h a I rm a n , Charles :·Auii'Uary of Hoag Memorial Hollister, Edgar Hill, Philip :';H.o •pit a I. ' Presbyterian, Doane, Carl Gise, Francis ·~ewport. HarbQr ... Sp a ~tie Grlset, Lewis,· R l ch a rd ·:~League, Cind~ell• G,uUd of Simpson, Charles Clemens and . :Clllldmi's Hosplfal of Orange Mi.. V..UI. : ~COUJlty and Punch and Judy AIJO oUerb:lg a %0 ptrcent 0::GuP~ of rnoc, discount during-August will be :·· Ho:.g'a Atu.11iary. under the tht Newport Harbor Spastic ::IUidlrice of Mrs. Jame.t W. Lague, which WiU offer carUs ... ::oed;er .. paper .goods b,uyer throuih Np\'ember. ;'fo!'tbe atrt Bex, ·will offer a 20 Mrs. Robert Woodward is -1pereent discount' durlng the headiog the annual project, . -month of August. Cards also asi;istett bf Mrs. Teren'Ce Han· ;.;w?U be on sale in lhe hospital na, l.Jdo and peninsula areas: ... J g,,b'b y through e 1; r I y Mrs. George Jansen wut ; ~ber. Back Bay area to 'Balboa • CCrds rriiy be vieWed during lsland. and Mrs. R o be r t ; an evening coffee hosted by FuUer, Eastbluil to Corona del : ·~f'ra.· Robert L. Bacon and . Mar. ~ Bemic.e~Vestal. a morn. .Anyone w• 1o view the '-int coffee in ~ home of Mrs. cards may contact · a n y the '8'ftlilll gift 0 OMEGA ef,.,,,,,__ .'](}(} tt'1 built like a 1ubmtrine, and is 50 wat•rproel deep-sea <l ivers tru:;t it to t•me their oxygen .supply, w .th· 1tand1 lf[!<ler-water pres• suru up lo 600 feet. Has t~-resefVe Nldicator with click·1oet rim. Fully suto- matic. St1inless 1tff'l ad- ~UbM bracelet. 111~ President On Podium Sponsors Combined For Picnic Orange County legal secre- taries Yt'ilJ hear James F. Penny, president of the Or- ange County Bar Association Officers' Wives League ()f ~ak when the .secretarial Orange County and Retired association meet.s fo.r dinner Officers' Association Orange County Chapter are joining on Thursday, Aug. 7. forces !or an annual picnic in The gathering will take \V. E. Hart Memorial Park, place in the Aladdin restau-Orange beginning at 11 a.m. rant. Anaheim, with 8 social Sunday, Aug. 10. hour a$ &:30 p.m. preceding Wives, husbands and guests dinner at 7. , . are invited to enjoy the The spe.aker'.s topic will be games, entertainment and a Availablity of lhe Legal Aid picnic lunch which will be ser· Service in Orange County. His ved at 1 p.m. Horoscope Arie·s: Recognition Spreads IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 seconds loo kin g ot e och of our sh ag sampl es, it would t oke you over 9 hou rs to see the m oil-' so come «orly ond bri ng your lun ch . DON'S CARPET-SHOP ~26 SO. MAIN (2 Blks. No. of Bulldck'a) ORANGE IP©!1!1W Wffiillilll:3rn°0 Pru/essf(}Hlll @[bf:3ffi~C3m0 275tl EAST COAST HIGHWAY · 17141 075•H1f CQptONA DEL MAR ZIP 92625 G.ET_ ACQUAINTED SPECIAL • • • FOR THOSE WHO CARE! ·- FREE MI N er LA.Diii SLACKS or SWEATER Cleaned and Press ed Fr•• With A $5 'l•aning Ordtr WE SPECIALIZE • .t.11 klllt GIUlllfftl •r• bl.UH t9 yo11r WIMlllt•INlttl e Wo lf"Cl•llw 111 •II Leather •114 fi r Trl111-4 ••r-n. Ako Mfll•I• tri111 t•r-ntl ••• Weddlllf Gowa • FMCy t,e.1. Clotflt: ttlld Nitplcin • t,.clolty • Al,..,..,lo• •f •II types .t M" ..ci Wo-•'• cfotllltt • Dftllllit '""' fM Jitti .. Md. P,_,119 .-rntMtt wtille YH woi, PHONE : 675-6511 talk also will cover the ques-Cribbage boards. c a r d s . lion of legal ethics. chess and checkers may be HOURS: •·S:JO DAILY CLOSID SUNDAY The Bar Association pres-brought. and offerings will in-llm••mm.i:iiiiiiiiiiil. •• liiiiiimmml.•• HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 892-5501 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA 545.9415 'dent, now in partnership with elude Senior Citizen Olympic his twin brother John C. Pen-Games. ny in Newport Beach, is a Reservations may be ob- native Californian. He re-talned by calling Maj. Bill C. ceived his law degree from Hall, 546-9029 or Maj. Matthew the University of Southern Kennedy, 673-7958 by Monday, California and began his law Aug. 4. pract\ce in association witb11:==''======== I Judge Karl Davis. Reservatkms for the dinner and meeting may be made with Mrs. James R. Orr at 541-0842 and Mrs. Ray Sharp at S2.5-6478. Members 3nd guests are Invited to attend. IT'S NEW! Th• ltand1est halr4car• ancl styHnt aid tYtrJ *MIRROR* PO-LITELY _flENDtETON: Wardrobe Fun-damentats : . . SEE NOW. NEW FALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Pendleton's• FOR MEN & WOMEN In Ca.ta Mill It'• sintJzis 'ARIC CON\llNll"'1'1 Y, Jw1t • 1!•11 fro111 . .., .. ,. lftfrlfttl C l!"'A"TMf NT •TOR E t 1l Dt• • 1116 NEWPORT BOULEVARD P:rl4l•v 1•• i•' CENTllllLY lOCATED AT NEWPORT AND HARBOR IOULEVARDS • \ u .. • MlltltOlt • ..0.LIT[LT • wlltl '(Ollr '*"" '' ~••lty inlrrot , •. '" , .. , -"" Nell: lit .,..., lttt<l 1 I'll rwr celflvr• wllll IYlt 'flt ... ldlaf~llllllllll • Rich Br••• Finish • Hi-Qu t 1ity Mirror • Adju1t ab1e Light end ·· Mirro r • Remov•bla Tot e Bt9 •Portable Sptit19°Ten1 ion Pole ORDER /\'OW i •. . . . . .-... .. • '! ·• . . . :• .. . . • ~: . . :• . . • . . . . '• . . . ' N 2+ . . . . . :• M . . • o r . . . = :• -. . . • )( ·1 . • :• . ~ • 0 ... 2 ~ . . =· co .. !! . . . . • ·=a•~ . . . . :• O• " . •. ·•t . . :• . • er..~ z . • :i ~i~I " =• . . '-. " :• • 2< ........ '.• •0:::111 -" 'I. . § w. • U.<( ~ . 8. -.... w . • tJ""]"'~ " 0 ~ <O ' ,...,. = 0 ~· • cr..U ;; • .. "• •••••••••• Daily 10 • 10 , Sun. 10 • 7 FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 1 & 2 ONLY! LOOK ALIVE AND LOVELY IN BONDED SLACKS 0111' R eg , 2.78 Vnlue 2 Dn11s 011111 2.22 Cl1n r9e II! So sleek ! Slacks \Vith elastic :;els on the wais tbands. Lig htweight to ~eep you cool cciloray. acetates. · Jersey . and i:natte jersey. Flatter your figu re 1n good tas te. h1isses 8-18. l ' 2200 HARBOR BL VD. Cornt•r of wa,on and Harbor COST A MES • I I' " ., j I I ' -· --+·· ~ -• . .. Saddleliaek l'.aday'• Fblal -N.Y. StoekS • VOL 62, NO. 183, j SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST I, 1969 TEN CENTS San Clemente Buzzing for. P~esident's Visit Heavy preparaUons are near com- pletion today for the anticipated Aug. 11 arrival o( President Nixon in San Clemente -two years ago a drowsy Spanish village which has become American's second capitol city. No officia l word has come Jrom the White House; but sources close to the wotld-tourlng ch.ie.f executive say he is due back on the'·Orange Coast about two days before a gala, Aug. 13 state dirmer for Apollo ll's astronauts. > • • Apparently the first state dinner ever held outside Washington, the affair at Los , Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel, will draw all 50 state governors, scores of diplomats to honor the three moon astronauts. , ~ypically, only San Clementeans, Nixon associates who ~efer not to be identified and other similar sources seem able to offer any definite comments on each new development. "No, Of coorse •we can't say anything. ., ' . ,, enne . ' . Down the Mission Trail Barranca Road Bid Opening Set EL TORO -Bids will be opened on Aug. 18 for construction of a 1.tmile realignment of Barranca Road from 2,100 feel west of Sand Canyon Avenue rto Laguna Canyon Roa$!,' and for a bfidge on Barranca at Sand Canyon over San Diego Creek. · The county Highway Department· has «!stimated the cost at $141 ,835, for the Irvine area job. e It's Hollyweod Week . MISSION VIEJO -This community will be the home of the stars -al:rnost - v.·hen the Recreation D e p a r t m e n t sponsors Hollywood; Week beginning Tuesday. Area youngsters will dress up like stage and screen stars at 10:30 a.m . .i.nd the best dressed couple will be awarded lickets'to a movie. Following the contest, the plaza parade, starring the young· st'ers, will be staged. Stock JHarJ<ets NE W YORK (AP) -The stock market bounded to another strong gain today, as it extended its rally through a .third straight session and closed the iv eek on a winning note. (See quotation s, Pages 20- 21). Man Held In Michigan ' Sex Slaying • ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -A Z3· year-old former Eastern M i c h i g a n University student has been arreited anL charged with the slaying of Karen Sue a e.ineman, 18, seventh sex, murder victim in this area in tbe past two years, authorities announced today. At a news Conference .called by stale autho rities, the suspect was idenUfied as John NOrman Collins, a.nephew or a state pOliCe corporal. Pollci alleged that the site of the slaying was the corporal's home. in Ypsilanti, to which Colliru:~hl\d access "1lile the f~ wail on vacation. Authorities declined lo link Collim, of Ypsilanti, with the sJx previous sex kill- ings in this twln-uniVersity area, but pro- secutor William F. ~Ibey of Washtenaw County said, "We r Will consider other charges, naturally We .will be checldng him out regardin~ the other crimes." Collins at his {ltraignment today stood mute before CirCuft Judge Edward D. Deake, who ordered him to jail without bond. A prellmiaary hearing was set for Aug. 7. Polite said Collins lived across the slreet from wbere another victim, Joan Schell, lived iwhile attending Eastern Michigan University. Collins, a nephew by marriage to a state police. corporal, was arrested Thursday night at his Ypsilanti home. The announcement came at a news (See SLA YlNG, Page Z) REFLECTIONS ON OU R MAN ON THE MOON Astronaut Aldrin a1 Seen by Trave ling Companion ) We refer all questions to the White Jiouse," says Kenneth Icavoni, Secret Service agent.-in-<harge at the San Clemente Inn. The sudden transformation of lhe cily of 17,500 persons intp a part.-time focal point of international poUtics~as brought many major cbanges 'to the They range from ltiipplica on for a $115,000 federal grant and city approval to spend $10,000 to toughen up lhe San Cemente Police Department. to a ~e n . .. • knocke<! in· a wall betWeen the Nixon mansion and adjacent U.S. Coast Guard sta tion . President Nixon wil l drive tfirough to commute . between the JO.room Summer \Vhite House and the Jong range radio navigaUonal (LORAN) facility via golf cart, working in newly-built ad- ministrative headquarters. Besides the presidel'ltial headquarters, the LORAN lnstaJlaUon has also sprouted a center for White House aides' work, .. plus a U.S. Stcret Service bureau with donnltory facility . · Orlglnall.Y established as a radio navigational Installation, the Coast Guard base -where Nixon's official helicopter Marine Corps One will land -Is now the locaUon of a critical, world'-wide com· munlcaUons center. A telephone hot line to· the Kremlin It.Wt is amoflg 900 separate llpes whlch will be manned by White House com- munlcaUons experts, willi apparently no • Coast Guard Involvement. Besides the fantastic network of elec· tronic surveillance and communicalions gear set up in the area by U.S. Marine Corps personnel, from nearby C&mp Pendleton, other steps have been taken. · Aircraft navigational charts are now, formally marked for pilots with forbiddm flight corridors, while searchlights atop the seaside bluff can pick out a stray boater hundreds of yards at sea and (See SAN _CLEMENTE, P•se I) e·ecte . . DAILY PILOT.._..,,., ,t,ttMr Vlattl ~ .. ~ower-·courr · Must Act, Says Judge 'BOSTON (UPI) -The chief justice of the Massachusetts superior court today rejPCted a di strict attorney's request for a judicial inquest into the fatal auto wreck involving Sen. Edward At. Ken- nedy, saying the inVestigation was not within his court's jurisdiction. · In a terse two-paragraph statement,. Chlef J~ice G. Joseph Tauro .said the request by Dist. Atty. Edmund S. Dinis.of New Bedford was in the "exclusive jurisdiction of lhe district court.1' 'SOUNO •QF MUSIC'S' TINA REECE GIVES PERSONAL TOUCH TO NIXON INVITATION With Much Intensity and Some Feclaf Gymnastics, A Forthright Note to the President Dinh informed newsinen TburWy he had sent a letter to the judge requesting the .inquest Into an auto accldeht Ju1y 111 on CbaJlP'qWddlck lsland ln wlilcb a car dri\-'en by Kennedy plunged off a bridge Into a tidal pond. Mary Jo Kopedult, 28, a .Washington secretary; drowned in the mishap. Nixo11 Note •Just Bight~ The judge, who said he ieceived first word of the inquest through the press, ad· ded, .. I just don't see any precedent fo r it. All the district attorneys I've talked to never heard of such a thing. 7-year-aUl Composes Play Invitation, Witli Special Care "My research confirms my .iniUal reac- tion that the request Is not within tM jurisdiction of this court," he aaid. Tauro tlld Dinis would be informed of his By ARTHUR 11. VINSEL Of Tiit ~ .. , ... Slfff No formal note carrying delicate over· I.ones ol international~ diplomaUc prolo- col was ever composed with more intensity or facial gymnastics. nna Reece, 7, flipped tbe .hair out ot her eyes, squincbed up her mouth and touched the pen to the stationery the "''ay astronaui Neil Armstrong set h!s foot on the moon. "Dear Mr. President," There was a critlcal pause. "E~yyuuu," groanCI the girl select· ed in auditions to play Gretl Von Trapp in the Lyric Opera or Orange County's upcoming stage musical. "I keep writing slanted," she com - plailled. "I don't skip two spaces like you're supposed to ." Miss Reece, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Reece, of 33262 Bremerton SI., · Dana Point, would life ,Pr.esident Ni.ton and his family to see her4n "The Sound ol Music," when it's perfonned. That woo't be until September. but they could drop into Irvine Bowl for a Fantastic Moon Pictures Show Space Romp SPACE CENTER, Houston fAP)-Two Apallo 11 astronauts romped on an eerie, unreal world of tortured gray terrain that photographed almost snow white where brilliant sunlight reflected off it. Above was a coal-black sky. This rugged land of contrast&, ol harsh shadows, of craters and rocks qf all sizes, a place whe~ man clearly was an inter· lope r, could be seen as never before in color pictures taken by the men on the moon and released by the space agency late ThvrSdaf. A sequence of 34 still picturet snapped by Armstrong whJJe walking on the moOn..J.dWly shows neatly lhe ·whole spectnnn or activity on the : surface. including a dramatic view of Aldrin llfl)dlng bes\de a &eismo~ and a luer btAm ·renect'or that tb& 900fJ men tell behind. ~ In !ho backgroond , perhaPt 100 !eel away, is the Eagle lin<UAI cralt. an American nag and the teteV1slon cam- era perched atop Ht 1llver· mount-all · plalnly tlandlog out against a 11.ghUess sky. • , i dress rehearsal later in the month, while visiting the summer White House in San Clemente1 "She can hardly wait to ·begin," say., ~lrs. Reece, explaining thal Tina-or is it Gretl-well, you know who, next week begins two hours' daily preparation for her stage premiere. 'Vhat does the mini -starlel herself have lo say? "Oh, nothing," she comments, with all the airy noncha1ance or an old·timer like Faye Dunaway, but certain sources close to Miss Reece c ontradict this as merely trying to .give her public an image. "She puts on that record at home and mimics right along wllh the mlLSic," says Mrs. Reece. "J'm gelliilg my fill or it." Tina and others chosen for lhe Rodgers and Hammerstein hit will sing live al the tour September performan~. Tina was a bit more forthright in her note to President Nixon than to men and women or the press during the Thursday interview. "I am so•happy because I am going to sing in "I'he Sound of Music'," she wrote. "My frieQds and I are going tQ be the Von Trapp_ children. • "It is my-favoritimovie and now I am going to be in the play. My mother read that.it is your fa vorite too. I hope you will come to see us." ·•P.S. Marnl Nixon is the star and I saw her on television. I saw you on television too." ~1iss Nixon is no relation >to the Presi- dent, but is star,.she may find the show stolen if the man with the same last name accepts the Dana Point starlet's invitation . Tickets are reserved for the First family if they can work one of the hit production's local performances into their busy August schedule, but Tina didn't get to mail them personally. Stretc:hing to send the invitation on Its way, however, Grell or nna-whichever -was caught with her public image down, as well as the mall deposit box lid . "Don't get my tiptoes in the picture," she ordered. lleci.sion today. . "No provision of the law has come to my attention nor have I been able to find any precedent which would permit the superior court to conduct the inquest,'" Tauro's statement said. "The district at~orney bases bis request explicitly on General Laws, Ch. 21, ,Sec~ lion 8. This section and all olber re.lated sections clearly indicate that the district court has exclusive jurisdiction over such proceedings and have no application to U:e Superior court," he sald. Massachusetts law says if the medical examiner "is of (the) opinion that the · death may have been caused by the ac:t or negligence of another, he shall at opce notify the district attorney and a justic~ of a district coul't within whose juri.sdlc· tion the body was found . , . " Dinis was unavailable for comment when the judge'~ decision was released. At the time of the -aceident, medical ex-. aminer Dr. Walter Mills.said be did not ask for an autopsy or an inquest because the cause of death -drowning -"wu obvious." Festival Issues Policy Le(ter in Fetus F ollowup In Washington, Kennedy said earlier to-- day he would "cooperate 1n any way" with any inquest. · The 37-year-old U.S. Senate whip plead· ed guilty a week ago today lo a charge of leaving the 1cene of the fatal accident. Orange Coa1& Laguna Beach Festival of Arts ~dlrec­ tor'B today underscored their position on removal of so-called objectionable art from the grounds with a letter of clarifi- cation lo an e@Jtors •• ,--c~~- The ·communication, signed by Festival Board President William I,). ~fartln, declared that tlie govemlng board has the tight to remove objectionable works or signs. Martin's letter was viewed as a followuP on the Festival'• Great Fetus Flap wherein son1e paintings of unborn children -and in one inst&"nce kiUeru - were .ordered removed. The boar:d presidJ!llt'• letter declared, "We are happy that the large majority of our art.isl.I fee.I It ii a privilege to exhibit here and we ln tul'JI are happy to have arlisll ol such hlih ulibre. "Unfortunately , a very amall groQp of exhibitors recentl:y declded to di.splay work• that, Jn Ole opinion of Ute board, are tn·poor taste and not in the best in· terests of lhe Festival, tht community, or even the Mti.N as • Whole. ....... "We feel at this Point we should remind all exhibitors that it is both the legal and moral responsibility of the Festival board to order the remqvar of any inappropriate slgfl'.ror-othermatertal fr 0111 Festival ~,­ booths and to see that the ground rules are adhered to." M111rtin'.s ..J.ett"~con­ cludes. Martin eJtplained today lhal. lhc Idea ror the letter came from the l.Joard as a whole. ·~e figured it was the correct thing to do," the board chief' u.ld . Tht: lctt.er action was decided on by the board several days a.go . · 0 The only thing tn the world we're trying to do is have a good ex.hlblUon an8 a good Pageant," Mar Un declared. l{e said the ·board had received a nwnber or complaints rrom m~bf:r1 of the community a~t certain art works dlsplO)'ed. Some artists u preutd surprise tha.t the letter t..as lssu«I. believing that•the . Great Fetus l<~lap had quietly died somt days aao. Weatlaer Tum on the air conditioner or eet out to the beach because bot weather is In store for th~ during the weekend, with temp- eratures heading into tht high 80s. INSIDE TODAY Skyrocketing costs of medi- cal cart ii ropidlu tttaking get· _J.ing_sick_a_lw:uru-th.a.Lno.. one l can afford. Paat: 1Z. ,. . --.. ''"'"-1t ~... .... ~ • ...1111t n ,........ "·~-a ' Ca"i.r~i. I ~ ,_.. 2t CltHllltcl 11.11 ,.....,_, """' • Ctmk• n on.... C...MV t ,,_.,,,..... 11 ,,,,.. ...,..... ,. DMt11 Melkti I It(... ..... 1lol' DI..,._• It ...,,. t•lf t '"""' .. ·-' '** llMfl• .... ••""1111'1-' ,,.. ,........, . .,, ,~ 1'-1.1 TM...-. 11. .. ,., I ~ 14 Wtdlff" 1 W Wnftn. '' w..-. Mm M !Mm ... ~"""' 11 .. :1 1 • J J DAl~V PILOT L Summer.>White House Faces Antiwar Picl{eting A i...,... S..ch 1pok11111111 !or the l'eooe Aotloo C«Jncll Aid today bJs group will mUst.er 3,000 pickets for a mus demonstration at President Nixoifs sum- mer While House in San Clemente . .. Robert O. Elland, spokesman for the cooncll, said the anti-war protestors would come from areas all across the We&l Coast. 'If refused permission for the Aug. 7 ma.rch in San Clemente, Bland said the 11.;0UP ia: prepared lo go ta tbe courts to Dobie-Alter ~rdered to Pay '1ife Support ~~ng millionaire Hobart Laidlaw 'm,obie" Alter of Laguna Beach musl pay .far estranged wife $1,354 a moilth pending Roperior Court trial of ·the action. r Judge-Jf:< Walter Steiner-made ·ihat .i:i¥'ard to Mrs. Sharon Diane Alter, .31, floW otMl Main Sail Drive, Dana Point. Hli pretrlal order granted Mrs, .Alter ~50 .:month Personal support, $150 a !'Tionth (Qr uch of three children and $354 a pipnlb in other. expenses. -;The trial court judge must rule. oo Mrs. ~r's original app1icalionJ or a persOnal .iklwance of $50,000 a year plus monlhly 'binefits 0£ .$700 for .each of the . thr.e~ ~ c !!dre -Paul~....il. H9batt' Jr,.Jl bd Jeflrey, 7. · :.,:..'Mn . Alter filed her complaint last June Ill She accuses Alter, 35, of 1o73 Gaviola lltive, of "extreme cruelty and grievous tR~nlal suffering." : !Alter has been ordered not to dispose ~ding court trial or any of lhe substan- ~l business holdings and interests listed ~his wife in her 12-page petition. h Mrs. Alter details her husban d's control q-extensive surfboard and catamaran i::pnstruction firms and valuable real §tale in San Juan Capist rano, Dana ~int, Lake Elsinore and several out of ~ty locations. ~Alter is widely known in Orange Cost ~ting circles as the designer-bu.ilder of ~~obie Cats" -the popular 14-foot iitamarans that have triumphtd in ifveral coastal races. He also controls J!9ble Surfboards Inc. ..... ~i · F .. om l'age 1 SLAYING ... conference called by slate police director Frederick E. Davids, appointed by Gov. .William G. Milliken .Jo head the jg. ' westigation. . -' fl.fW Beineman disappeared and was iilain JuJy 23. Her body .was found nude, beaten and strangled in a wooded gully between the twin unlversity cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Davids said he "believed" lhat Collins, 11 six·foot, 170-pound athlelic type, closely resembled an artist's sketch of the 1uspect«f killer. IL was made from descriptions furnish· cl by witnesses who saw ?-.1iss Beineman riding on the back of a big, shiny motorcycle with a tall, dark, young man the day' slle disappeared. '• Davids said that there was "more than oOe motorcycle he (Collins) had access t~!" Davids said he did not believe any of t~ was a Honda 450, which police bl!lie.ved was the model on which Mias &ineman was riding. ·~ty Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey said . th.at Collins had been questioned before Mi*s Beineman's body wa.s found, and wa$ re:leased. He said, however, that Collins had been under surveillance since Ia.st Saturday. Patrol Baton Rouae -. . " BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -About I.Ml National Guacdsmen joined state lrooper.s and lQCal police patroling the unea.sy &treets of 8{1ton Rouge early to. day as violence nared sporadically. Police reported intermittent sniping. DhllY PllOI Oll.o\HGl COA.S1 f'\l•l tittlfll()' toMMltl'f tl•btTf N. w,.1 Prn ...... «llllMll!lllr J11k a. c •• 1.., Viet ltlllffnl el'ICll CO..r!W Mw"r t•e11111 K.,Yil .f.llilW Tli•"''' A. M•r11h i•1 ~11'1 ftlller ~•••'4 P'. N•ll ·--City •il!W ~ .... om.. lit , ..... ""•· M11n., Al4r-m P.O •••• ''" t2•1Z ---··---~-------eo.i· _,., 111 "'"' ....... ,..,. ~ ladl: 11'11 Wltll ........ ...,.,. .tf"""'"'llll lteUI: M Stll Mntrt -Qa .. • ' .. aeelt pennllalon ror the march:- Pe:aeei marchera. asaen1bled 1t Nlxon'1 ,San Clemente· esllte during bls teat vbll but there wtrt no incidents or dUficulll's between lhe •nti·war people ind the authorities. Bland and fellow representatives of the Southland-wide organiiation of some 90 antiwar groups wlll ask the Capistra1i~ Unified School District. Monday for use or Concordia School as rally headquarters. The campus lies adjacent lo President Nixon's manalon la lhe Cyprus Shorts. rtaldcnUaJ 1ecUon. The Peace Act}on CounclJ -wlllch -olganizecl the Century Clt1 demOllllration against President Johmon In 11187, lead ing lo a bloody confrontation -will also ask city permission for lhe march on Wednesday . No permit l.s required lo ~emonslrale on the sidewalk in front of the Cyprus Shores development, according to the PAC, but they are asking San Clemente City c.tincll apQrOVll al ic.lnd tnX:Jco and • .,.-.11y·porm1t. .. .,, rtally don't know," Bland said to- day when aabd 1f he expect' a hard-nos· eel aWtude tow&Rt t.be request when con· aldered in official circles. "We've laid out a·very c~ful·plan and we think it is imperative that we get permission in order· to av~d a con· front.allon," he said . Denial of the request Wednesday will bring court action Thurs- day. he uld. Und PAC pro1rammin1, • demooatra1ot1 want to block orr South g1 Camino Real ror 11 blockl, ustmbttng at I p.m. for the march and rally, wit.h in estimated 4 p.m. di!pttnl lime. "We're doing an etceplional amount o! leafleting at military poN and we ·~e been hilting the Marine hangouts >n Oceanside with surprising results,'' Bland said tcxlay. He predicted a large contingent, of 11ervicemen will join the demonstraUon. which i~ being advertistd all over ttie \Vest Coast. wtth buses coming from as Ease Height Rules Building Code Changes W e_ighed by Planners Proposed amendments to the Laguna Beach building code, including one to ease the restriction on building heights, y,•ill be up for Planning Commiesioo con- sideration J.1onday . Laguna architect!'! Christian Abel. Peter Ostrander and Lynn Muir will be at· the 7:30 p.m. session to present results of a study requested by Mayor Glenn E .. Vedder, on building heights and sideyard setbacks. • :::Y.~i;i.;Th:f.ei· major change proposeC will affect '1 1!1side bOffies ... Present re.gulations require any building in an R·l or R·l residential zone lo be built no higher than 2S feet above the street elevation. If a home i! built 41top a bank 20 feet above the street, then It could only be five feet high in front, Ostrander ex· plains. Wit1tii11g Co111bi11otio11 The proposed change would allow the building to be bu.ilt no higher than 25 feel aboVe sCH:alled mean grade at the building foundation , without consideration John Gilbert, manager· of Boys' Club squad which captured Laguna Babe Ruth League pennant, congratulates team member .Mike Neis- wender, ·15, winner of Schumacher Award as league's out.5tapding player. As a pitcher. Mike recorded four wins without a loss. His batting average !or the season was a hefty .434. to actual street elevation. The same change would be lrue for buildings in an R·3 lpartment 2one, ex· cept the maximum height would be 30 feet. U.S. Still Could Fight "The only thing that's being changed is the point where the maximum height is measured." Ostrander explains. The othe~ major change proposed· by the arch.ltecls deals with sideyard set- backs. Current regulations require a sel· back to be de~ermined by building height. The proposed change would determine setback by a 10 peree.nt form ula based on In Asia Despite Policy average tot width. Jf the average w4fth i11 100 feet, it would e.stablsh ten·foot setbacks on each LA HORE, PakJst.an (UPI) -While Hou.~e sources said today that President Nixon·s no-more-Vietnams policy would not bar fut ure U.S. military intervention in Asia if Communist aggression gravely threatened to change the balance of power therr. military president.· side. The sources iaid that despite hi s public The setbacks could be juggled however. so one .setback v.·oold be 12 feet , and the assertio ns that he would avoid any future other .setback eight feet. Vietnams\e had two major reservations Pi-linimum setback would be four feet. after his talks: The pro1Wsal also suggest.s a maximum If there is a major attack 11cros~ the setback of 12 feet , according to assistant boi-ders, or a nuclear threat, the United planning director Al Autry. In other action, the commlssion will: States would ha ve to consider the -Hear a request by Werner E. Eheren- possibility of taking military action. prei.s, 687-611 Sleepy Hollow Lane, to two lot.s. He wanttd to disregard zone boundary lines, permit parking to pr:ojecl into the five-foot setback, reduc.e the re- quired sideyards, and inccease density by I WO units. -Resume a public hearing requested by Dave ti1acPhee to operate a restaurant at 240 Thalia St., with live entertainment and sa le ~f beer and v.•ine, continued last time for more detail on propos ed parking. -Look into a study by city engineer!! before considering a request by Richard Burt to a9d 32 units to The Shoals ap~t­ ment complex 1601 S. Coast Highway . -Act on a reque.st by Carl Benson and Victor LaPorte lo cul down off street parking requirements at a new office building at 473 Forest Ave .. since they could not supply all required park.ing spaces due to building restrictions, -Hear a request by Yvonne I~. Crowshaw to add a bedroom and bath lo her family home. at 1031 Temple Hills Drive without providing additional off street par1<ing, as the zone require.s. 2 Join Others In Quarantine SPACE CENTE R. Houston (UPI) The space ~gency added two men to quarantine with the Apollo 11 astronauts loday because one of the technicians may have been exposed to moon rock material \1•hen his vacuum chaffiber pressure glove broke. The laboratory worker, Ronald Buffum, ""'as splitting lunar samples at the time, reaching into the airless cabinet through lwo black rubber gloves. ¥.'he n one glove lore, the sudden rush of air sucked his right arm deeper into the cabinet. George Williams, another techriician in the lunar receiving laboratory, helped Buffum pull his arm out of the chamber. Buffum received minor bruises. fir 1Way as Seattle. ... Blind himself 1a a World .war Jr veteran, serving as a Navy lieutenant in the liberation qf the Phillppine Islands. Bland. the bearded Orange County coordinator for ttle PAC. said today thst th~ detailed plan to use Concordia School ground.s as a rallying poinl afte~ the pickeling accom plishes tw~ key points. "First, it 1vill nol inhibit the flow or traffic into the area and second, it gives us some elbow room to control the crowd," he explained . • Fron• Page l SAN CLEMENTE order him away. Personnel operating Santa Fe Railway t~ains along track.sat the foot of the bluff below the old Cotton Erlate -onetime hideway of Presideot Franklin D.- Roosevelt -also hive their orders. Spetd.s shall be reduced in passing lhe Sum mer White House and whistles which might disturb presidential slumbe r or <!rucial talks on international politics arc prnhibited.., _., A contingent or key figures in !be Nixon Administration will live: in rented homes surrounding the estate, located in the et· elusive Cyprus Sh~s development, for quick contact. Doubtless, the public v.·HI be. drawn to lhe San Clemente area during President Nixon's anticipa"ted four weeks' s\ay, but the only glimpses they are likely to get wilt be via ne...,·spapers and television. GUARD EQUlPtitENT Thousands of dolla rs have been spent on the more sophisticated guard equip· 1nent, while public pathways through the area are now blocked and Secret Service agents will be on pat rol. Not only persona l safety, comfort and convenience alterations are being made, but top' secret esthetic improvements areo apparently under way at the Nixon sum· mer home , according lo unofficial observers. ~~ollowing sale by elderly f.1rs. Victoria Cotton of the Spanish villa, for an estimated $3.W,000, mov ers hauled away her elegant furnishings collec ted over a 34-year period. r.trs. Pat Nixon is having the ornate ha· cienda -surrounded by flowering, fruil· bearing trees and sh rubberies -re~one by a Beverly Hills decorator. But the ·decor is the loppest top sec re t of al!. . r Sumn1er Scl1ool Ends in Laguna "No more pencils. no more books ... " A belated chant from an elated schoolboy? Well . not truly belated. Summer school ended today for 450 sludenls of the Laguna Beach Schools, from elemenlary throu gh high school. An assembly this morning concluded lhe summer school activities, a scant live weeks before the Sepi. 4 start of regular school. The \Vhitc Ho4se sources said Nixon had reached this decis ion after talks with gove rnment leaders in the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, South Vietnam, Tndia and in Pakistan today ...,·ith Gen. Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan, the If .there is a military action by the build N[unit apartmen~ building on the communists which threatened the in·"'-~~--------------------------------------- QUITS IRVINE COMANY PR Executivi Aldrich Irvine PR Man Quits Position W1111am·L. /\ldrictr.pubtic-relations and ad\'CTUsing director for The Irvine Com· pany, today announced his resignation and plans to establish a consulting Orm. Aldrich, who ha s been with the Irvine Company for four years, said he \\'ill establish the \\'illinm L. Aldrich Public Relallons lirm in Santa Ana. Willi am R. tifason, president oL.Jlit Jr\•lne Co., said Aldrich·s resignation""'1 be effecth·e Aug. 8. "He is \'ery capable in the pubHc rela· lions field and I know he will be suc· cessful In his new firm," Mason said. Aldrich ho been a lectui-er at Pep· perdlne College and at American tifanagement As.soc. seminars on the bualnes1man'1 role in public affair~. He ~t~ served a~ an lns[n1ctor 111 Riverside fl~d lrvlne campuses of the University of Cahfprnia. • { temational balance or power, that too, would be a factor in causing the Presi· dent to abandon his hands off military policy, the \Vhitc House sources said. The sources said Nixon found that Thailand and India were particularly worried about the possibility of Chinese Communist aggression . Herc in Pakistan, there was not so much emphasis on that as on the de.si re of th is country to get more U.S. mflitary equipment. Pakistan has developed in· creasingly close ties ""'lth Peking follow. ing a cooling of its fr iendship "'ith the United States since the days of the Eisenhower administration. The United States embargoed arm:« shipments to both India and Pakistan following their 17-day war in 1965. The sources said Nixon recognizes thal the embargo operated to the disadvantage of Pakistan because it did not have other resources available lo India .· But "'hen asked v.·hether this meant the United States wa s leaning toward resumption of arms ai d l o Pakistan, \\7hile llouse officials said this "'as not necessarily U1e case. At the end of his talks today with Yahya the sources said the subject v.·as "still under r:ev iew." Those were the same words used by Secret ary of State. \Villiam P. flogers \\'hen he tal ked with Yahya l\'o'O months ago . The sources said il was clear thal Ni1- on has hardcntd his attitude on the ques· lion of pos~ib!e U.S. military aid in this area since he began his tour almost two \ree ks ago. They said v-·hile still hoping to confine An1erican assistance to Asia lo the CCQnomic sphere, the President had decided nol to rul e out the posslbllity of rilllifary inlerevnfion if that became nectssary . The main objective, they said, was to prevent the emergence in Asi a of a. chaotic situation which might give China, "'ilfl its nuclear weapons. an invitation 10 move into some of the other countries by force. \Vhite House officials said Nixon was not in favor of the Indian idea fo r a joint U.S .. Soviet agreement for mu t u a I guarantees of any of the nations of this area. . The indications: were that lndlan Prime r.Hnisttr Indira. Gandhi had brought up this question and then knoc ked it down. Looking ahead to Nixon's one-day visit lo Romania SJlurday, the offlel1ls said they hoped tht Bucharest visit would underline the interest of the Nixon ad· n1inljtr11ion in developing relations v-·ith coun ricli behind the Iron curtain. I < ' • AUGUST >· QUALITY SA VIN GS I Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS in the Country REG. $319. REG. $125. REG . $110. Manner SALE $289. SALE $107.50 SALE $ 95. Our tummw ••I• 1lto fnch,Mlu ••lect group 1 from Drex~I -Henredon -Herit1ge. A.lso Natlontl, Mlftte C1rton, ind numerout other llnu. Rtlduction1 on 1cce11orlff, lamptt ind pidur" ere av1i11ble. INTlltlOIS • LAGUNA HACH Ml-(-Hwy. ~' • 7 a s Of'UI l't9A T• "N. t J I \ • 7 ' I . " t .. Newport Barbor Tot1ay:s "lnal .. N.Y. St.eeks • VOL 62, NO. 183, 3 SECtlONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA F~IDAY, >iUGUST I, '1969 TEN CENTS Coast Wants to Cut Out FinaI ·:Freeway .Link . By RANDY SEELYE 6f ttif Pally l'llilt SleH Councilmen from four Orange Coast cities hope the last link of the prnpOOed Orange Freeway (Route 57) will be eliminated. At a meeting-or the Mesa Verde Home Owners Association Thursday night, rep. resen~tlves said the freeway should be stopped at the San Diego Freeway or be routed east to join the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway. "We must act i! we want the Division of Highways to cooslder our propo.sals," Huntington B e a c h' City Councilman George McCracken said to a lar:ge crowd gathered at Estancia High School in Costa Mesa. nHuntington Beach resldeots were not unified when they had a chance to change the J'Ollte of the Huntington Beach Freeway-so the Division of Highways made the decision," he said. City Councilmen from Costa ~lesa, Fountain Valley and Newport Beach Keepitig Bet· Cool For Kris Lann, 18, lifeguard at Orange Coast College S\vimrning pool in Costa l\fesa. the remedy for hot }Veather is a simple matter. All she has to do is jump in the poof. What presents more of a problem for Kri s is keeping those shoulder length tresses out of her face \vhen she surfaces. San Clementeans Buzzing . Over Visit by President Heavy preparations are near com· pletion today for ~he anticl.pated .Aug. ll arrival -0f President Nixon in San C!emen~e -two years ago a drowsy S;:>anish village whi~h ~as become American 's second cap1t-0! city. No official 1vord has come from the \Vhile House, but sources close to the world-touring chief executive say he is clue back on the Orange Coast about l"·o 1lays before a gala, Aug. 13 stale dinner for Apollo !l's astronauts. Apparenlly the first stale dinner ever held outs ide \Vashington, the affair aL Los Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel, will draw all 50 slate governors, scores o[ diplomats to honor the three moon astronauts. Typically, only San Clementeans, Nixon associates who prefer not to be idenUflecl .and other similar sources seem able to o((er any definite comments on each new · development. "No, of course we can't say anything. -. ministrative headquarters. Besides the presidential headquarters, the LORAN installation has also sprouted a cen ter for White House aides' work, plus a U.S. Secret Service bureau with dormitory facility. Originally established as a radio navigalional installation, the Coast Guard base -where Nix-0n's official helicopter Marine Corps One will land -is now the locatlon of a critical, world·wi<fe com· 1nunications center. A telephone hot line lo the Kremlin itself is among 900 separate lines which will be manned by White !louse com· munications experts, with apparently no Coast Guard involvement. Curses!' agreed that mld<ots should present one major recommendation. to the route planning dlvls!oll. ' 'The opinJoos were ·v6ictd at a panel discuss.ion held at the high school, Two rtpresentatlves from the Division of Highwa)'s' Division 7 and Al Koch, Orange County road commiss.ioner, presented factual background to the dis- cussion. The area under study by the Division of Highways il a 10.7·mile strip, one mile w.ide. following the path of the San· ta AM River. Sid Ellicks, di.!trict planning engineer for the Division of Highways; said, "We must sUll conduct studies to determine the possible location of the last link of the "freeway. The route will not be adopted until after a public hearing to be h~ld after· the studies have been com· pleted." Ellicks said the department is study- ing four possibilities for the route of the freeway. ''lt could go all the way to the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway, swing east (o meet Ille Corona del Mar Freeway, swing west to meet the Hunt· ington Beach Freeway or end at the San Diego Freeway." Koch. said that a freeway wilt eventu- ally be necessary to relieve the traffic pressure on Harbor Boulevard. "Traffic studies will detennine which route will be needed."( Councilman Mllard T. Jordan of Chll.a ~iesa said the city hasn't adopted u official position on the issue yet, but noted "we must fight to see that lbe. Orange Freeway doesn't run down the · east side of the Santa Ana River." ' John Harper, Fountain Valley Coun.. cilman, added that the ~ropostd lteewJy would '"reduce our "Industrial land and prtve.rit an access 1·0 the river bed for 1 ·(See FREEWAY, Pa1e 2) " l(enlledy Inquest ~ Denied • Judge Says Lower-Couit Must~'lake_E_irs tAction BOSTON (UPI) -The chief justice of . the Musachusettl superior court today rrjPCled a district attorney's request for a judicial inquest lnto the fatal auto wreck involving Sen. Edward M. Ken· ntdy, saying the investigation was not v•ithin his court's jurisdiction. In a terse two-paragraph statement, Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro said the· request by Dist. Alty. Edmund S. Dinis of New Bedford was in the "exclusive juriWiction of the dlstrict court." Suspect Held In Michigan ~Slaying ANN ARlllR, Mich. (UP[) -A 13· yelr..:old .fD(tPtr Easterjl f.1 i c b~I g a n UnivtrsitfSti14ent haf bee11..arrested and charged with the slaying of Karen Sue Reineman, 18, seventh sex murder victim Jn this area in the past two years, authorities announced today. At a news conference called by state author"ities, I.be suspect was identified as John Nonnan Co1Uns, a nephew of a state police corporal. Police alleged that lhe slte of the slaying was the ·corporal's home in Ypsilanti, to which Collins had access·while the family was on vacation. Authorities declined to link Collins, ol Ypsilanti, with the six previOUJ 1ex kill· ings in this twin-university area, but pro- secutor Wiiiiam F. Delhey of Washtenaw County said, "We will consider other charges, naturally. \Ve will be checking him out regarding the other crimes." Collins at his anaignment today stood mute before Circuit Judge Edward D. Deake, who ordered him to jail without bond. A preliminary hearing was set for Aug. 7. Police said Collins lived across the street from where another victim, Joan Schell, lived while attending Eastern Michigan Univers.lty. Collins, a nephew by marriage to a state police corporal, was arrested Thursday night at his· YpsililnU home. The aMouncement came at a news conference called by state police director Frederick E. Davids, appointed by Gov. \Vllliam G. Milliken to head lhe: in· ve!Ugation. Miss Beineman disappeared and wa s slain July 23. Her body v.·as found nude, beaten aoo strangled in a wooded gully between the twin university cities of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti. Stoek lllarkets NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market bounded to another strong gain today. as it extended its r"ally through a lhird straight session and closed the' week on a winning note. (See quotations, Pages 2Q. 21). Foiled! Dinis Informed newsmen Thursday he had sent a letter to the judge requesting the inqu~t into an auto accident July 18 -0n Chappaquiddick Island in which a car driren by Kennedy plunged -0ff a bridge into a tidal pond. Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, a \Vashington secretary, drowned in the mishap. The judge, who said he received first \\"Ord of the inquest through the press, ad· cled ... , just don 't see any precedent for it. All the district attorneys I've talked to 'IMPOSSIBLE-A HATED W<?RD' Optimist Bre1n•ha n ' never heard of such a thing. "My research confirms my initial reac· tion that the request is not within the jurisdiction of this court," he said. Tauro said Dinis would be informed of his decision today. "No provision of the law has come to my attenllon nor have I be2n able to find any precedent which would permit the superior court to conduct the. inquest,'' Tauro·s statement said. "The district attorney bases his ~equest explicitly on Genera: Laws, Ch. 28, Sec. A Man in the 'Hot Seat': Airport Chief Bresnahan By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'9 0 1111> l'lltl Stiff This week , Orange County Airport Director Robert Bresnahan celebrated his 48th birthday, and he's happy abQut il · -largely because he has survived. .He allows that hl'S job Is the county's hottest of "hotscat'' positions. It's a job full of criticism, long h01Jrs, court suits and endless planning sessions. On the wall of his office. flanked by prints of the Navy 's Blue Angels flight team in action, hangs a modest in· sc rlption: ''l\1iracles are accomplished by positive thinking.•• TAKE l\tJRACLE Bresnahan subscribes to that. tie has to. It may take a miracle to solve all the woes of bis job. The airport he Jlldministers has never had more business or criticism. Traffic. both private and commercial, is at an all time high. So is public reeling about the jets new using the once sleepy air strip. His first stint at airport management. however, was in BatUe Creek, Mich., near his hometown or Dowagiac. He held that post for nearly five years. Airlines and flying have monopoli~ed Bresnahan·s life. His present family life is no different. ile admittedly defied his father In 1943 to enllst in the Navy's flight training pro- gram. , "He was a veteran o! the World War I cavalry and wanted me to join tha~ branch, bu t I chose the Navy anyway." Arter \Vorld War II he re11umed his studies and became an efficiency expert and engineer for a manufacturer or j ct engine parts in Michigan. TEST PILOT Bresnahan has served as. a test pilot, a Oi@:ht instructor and holds credentials as a pilot for both OC3 and DCf.aircraft. His two adult sons, Robert and Jerry, plan to become airline pilots after they complete college. "My daughter. Patricia, Is a college music major. She.plays the trumpet.'' he said, smiling. tion B. This section and all other related. sections clearly indicate tbat the district court has exclusive jurisdict.ioo ovw Id procttdlngs and have no appllca:Uon to lhe Superior court," he said. l\1assachusetts law s_ays if the medical examiner "is of (I.be) opinion that the death may have been caused by the .act or negligence of another, he shall at once notify the district attorney and a justice of a district cou1 t within whose jurisdic· t1on the body was found .•• " Air Cal Asks To Sell Tickets : • Beyond State f ' . By JEROME F. COLLINS Of H11 Dellr l'lllt Iliff -Air C8llfomla today asked the Ovil Aeronautics Poard ror certification 11 a scheduled domestic air carrier. The certification would allow the Orange County.based airline to sell flight tickets to anywhere in the world. InlUal reaction o1·Newport Beach cilJJ officials to the Air Cal proposal was one of concern. "This obviously means Air Cal would have more business, more traffic, mor• flights and more use of Orange. County Airport," sald City Manager Harvey L.. Hurlburt. Air Cal president Carl A. Benscoter in· dicated Hurlburt is right. Benscoter said il' !he CAB does approve the certification, it would broaden the airline's "potential for expansion." It \vould make it possible for passengers to make interstate and ove rseas connections at the Air Cal ticket counter at Orange County Airport. Only one ticket, with as many "coupons" as required, would have to be purchased, an Air Cal spokesman e:r .. plained. The coupons would serve as transfers on aircraft certified to fly beyond the state's borders. Ail' Cal , which does not have an in-- terstate pennit, would fly the passengers to airports where I.be transfers would be made, such as at San FranciscQ. "Through CAB cert If j cat I o n,•• Benscoter said, "travel on Air California would become available to interstate air travelers and Air California passengu-s w::iuld be permitted to book continuing i.ir travel on 1.lomestic and foreign carriers.•• CAB certification also would enable the airline to bid for military and NASA com· me rcial air movements, as well as in· terstale charter flights he said. A sub- stantial increase in cargo and freight trarfic also could be expected. he added. The boost in freijht flights could mean (See AIR CAL, Page %) Orange Coast Weather We refer all questions to the White 11ouse.'' says Kenneth Icavoni, Secret Service agent -in-charte at the San Clemente Inn. Panliandler Loses Duel W illi Police "I've got a job where the ground rules can change each day. Tl's rar different than thE!·work or most other small airport managers who tell me they're trying like craiy to increase service to their terminals. I have to do the reverse.'' Ht" and his wife of 25 years, Mabel, live ln Fountain Valley. Tum on the aJr condiUoner or get out to the beach because bot weather is in store for the coast during the weekend, with temp- eratures heading iota the high 80s. The sudden transformation of the city -0f 17,500 persons into a part-time foca l point of international polltics has brought many major changes to the town They range from applicaUon for a $11$.000 federal grant and city appro1,1al to spend $10,000 to tought:n up the San Cemcntc 1 Police Ol!partment, to a hole knock«! In a "'all between I.be Nixon mansion and adj11cenL U.S. Coast Guard station. • Presidtnt Nixon will drive through to f'ommute belwffn the IO.room Swnmer White Hoose and the long range radlo navrg11lional (LORAN) faclUty via golf cart, working In n e wly .bu i lt td· ( . - A bikini-clad panhandler parried and thrusted at plainclothesmen on the Balboa beachfront ThurSday afternoon "'ilh an antenna ripped from a parked car. But the n ·ordswoman in bright red never got a chance to cry touche. Instead. she wound up in the bastille. Poll ... -e saki the swordplay incident started like this: The Officers, wearing beach clothes, were approached at the 161.h Street beach by the 17-year-old \Vest Covina girl. She asked· them for "a nick.le. a dime, anything yOu can spart." Tht offlctrl took out thc.lr wallets and showed her some badges. She took off running and disappeared intO the crowd of beachgoers. Moments later the plainclolhe1men saw her run off the beach onto I~th Street and Octan Front Sbe grabbed the antenna or a car belonging to an off-duty Chino policeman who was on the beach. The girl twisted the metal tube off and came at the ofllcera, tbt7 said. She tried a few swipes, but missed. As Ule girl rode to police heftdquarters she shouted oMcenlUes and. "IOught us all the way in," the ofHcen aaid. She faces char1e1 of rtslstlng arrest and panhandUn1. 'I The bsues that dominate Bresnahan·s day range from studying· solutions to airport growth in the county to answering complaints about jet noise and working with at lea.st three county departments which have direct administration of segments of airport service. Bresnahan is a short .. stocky msn with a direct manner. TOOK POSITTON He stepped Into the airport manaaer's slot. ln March of 1068, bucking COl'fi· peUtio~ft'Om 90 other applicants for Ille job. • Before that lie ·managed Rivenlae: County's system of airports. '\ ~ It Is at that home, on Friday evenings, he say.s, when his firm conviction 9galn:st the ~·ord ''impossible" can Jose Its vlgor. "Sometimes when J get home O'!I those Friday nights J n!ally lhink that some things are impossible. ''That disappears come ~1 on d a y, !hough." AVID l!OBBIES And when l\fonday comes Ule relax· ation from gardeninl and fishlna -his most avid hobblei -give way to the ten!;lon or a bus; executive. , When he speaks he may rise from his d"k \foich IJ covmd with ~nu and 1ircr11t mode.ls. K'e wlll wander (See BRESNAHAN, Poge II INS IDE TODJ\Y ' Skyrockttfng costs of medJ· c!!l care ~ rapfdlu. making get· ting sick. a luzuru that no one can afford. Page 12. I I I • I j • ! • • .. --- •• • Nixon Faces Anti-war Picketing A Laguna Beach 9pokesman for the Peace Action Council said today his group will musfer 3,000 pickets ror a mass demonslratlon at President Nixon's sum · mer White House In San Clemente. Robert 0. _BJand, spokesman for the council. said the anti-war protcstors v.•ould come from areas all across the West Coast. lf refused permissk>n for the Aug-. 7 march in San Clemente, Bland said the group is prepared to go lo the court.! lo seek permission for the mareh. Peace marchers assembled at Nil::on's San Clemente estate during ttis last visit but there were no incidents or difflcuJties between the anti-war people and the aulhorities. . Bland and fellow representatives of the Southland-widl' organization of some 90 anUwar groups will ask the Capistrano Unified School District Monday for use of Concordia School as rallx_ headquarters. The ca;mpus Jjes adjftcent to Presiden~ Nixon's manBion in the Cyprus Shores residl!ntial section . - The Peace Action Council -which organized the Century City demcn&tration against President Johnson in 1967, leading to a bloody confrontation -will als'l ask city permission for the march on Wednesdey. From Pqe I ,_ - ": :.;• V,I Ttlttllltt9 ,,_ NASA ;.•. AIR CAL ... ~eflections on the Moon ~J:\Vhat would you do if this figure approach~ you on the moon? Snap ~:ji picture of it, or cours~. Figure i~side ?1oonsui~ and protective !ac.e :,.plate is astronaut Edwin E . Aldrin. His travelmg companion, Neil i;.:Ann11trong, was cameraman. Armstrong took photo as Apollo 11 ~astronauts romped on eerie, unreal world of tOrtured gray ter~ain use of Air Cal's Boeing 737 jets overni&fit at COunty Airport, Newport city sources said. They pointed out that most ca rgo is shipped at night by many airlines at other airports. This is done to get max- imum service from the multl·million dollar aircraft. which carry passengers generally in the daytime. r"l'-j.hat is lunar surface. __ t If granted a CAB· certificate, Air Cal would be the first scheduled domestic ~ ~estival Issues Policy : ••• carrier to receive permanent CAB certification In more than 20 years. "I imagine the city councU will want to kno1v a Jot more about this," said l'\ewport City Manager Hurlburt. '"On the face of it, this request appears not to be in the best interes~ of the city. But the council will have to know more about iU implications before any official posi- tion can be taken." ~: t etter in Fetus F ollowup ' Laguna Buch Festival or Arts direc-=today undencored ·their position on oval of ao-ealled objectionable art the grounds with a letter of clarifi· cation t.o all exhibitors. 4 The communication, signed by Futival, Board President WUllam D. Maitfii. declared lhat the governing board hae the right to remove objeci,ioJ)able works or 1igns. ' M&rtin's ,Jetter was view~ as a followup on the Festival's Great Fetus Flap wherein some paintings or unborn children -and in one instance ldltens - we.re ordered removed. The board president's letter declared , •·we art: happy that the large majority of our artists feel it is a privilege to exhibit here and we in tum are happy to ha ve artists of such high calibre. ''Unfortunately, a very small group of a hibitors recently decided to display li{orks that, In the opinion of the board, ate in poor taste and not in the best in· tfl'elts of the Festival. the community, or eye:n the arW:ts as a whole . • , No date for a hearing on the application •·we fetl at this point we should remind Is expected to be set by lhe CAB for at all exhibitors that it Is both the legal and least two or three weeks, Air Cal moral responsibility of the Festival board spokesmen said.· to order the removal of any inappropriate The airline ~!so.has pending ~efore the . . CAB an application for serv1cce from signs o;, other materlal from Festival Southern Cali!omia to the pacific ):>ooths_J1'J_to se,Vh§"L~ g!_OUnd rul~ -=Northwul cittts::otSeafUe azKlfortland. are adhered to," h1utln's letter con· 'Ille cities of Newport Beach aod Costa eludes. Mesa •nd Orangfli County governolent Martin expfained today that the Idea earlier this year protested the added for the letter came from the board as a service. whole . "We figured It was the co rrect A recommendation on the Pacific thing to do," the board chief said. The Northwest appl ication. which would letter action was decided on by the board permit Air Cal to fly out of' state for the several days ago. first tjme, may be forthcoming from CAB "The only thing in the world we're hearing offleen ln "possibly a month," trying to do Is have a good exhibition and Air Cal official said. a seod Pageant" Martin declared. Air Cal began operations in January, He &aid the board had received a 1967, with flights froom County Airport to number of complaints trom members of San Francisco. It now provides service the community about certain art works also at Hollywood-Burbank, Ontario, San displayed. J05e and Oakland airporU. Some artists express ed surprise that The airline ope rates a fleet of six 115· the Jetter was issued, believing that the passenger Boeing 737 pure jets. lt start~ Great Fetus Flap had quieUy died some v1ith l1vo SO-passenger turbo· Pr o P days ago. aircraft. From Page l BRESNAHAN IN 'H OT SEAT'. • • around the office at times, then sil down abruptly. He speaks with a sense of urgtncy. "Some people have criticized me for beit1t an impatient man, and I ha ve to agree with them. I am impatient." Jumping Imm ediately into the mass of issues facing the county's aviation pie· ture, he eumined the concept or public desfre·and opinion about the issues. He sees an immediate need for tapping DAIL Y PllOI f\IAHOI C:l)An '"UIL llMINC5 C:ON.~AllY aeMtt N. W1t4 •r"i.t.nt •M l"\oMl .... tr ,~ ..... , .,..,a lllillt T1'-•t A. M11rphfn• ...... .,....,. .,llor . .i.,.. .... '· e.111111 -""" 'llY '"lot ---1111 Wnf t•ll>M 11111..-.,. Mlllilltl Ai4r-. P.O .... '1111, t2U). --c.t• ""'-l ,. >#tit ..,. ....... ".....,. ._,., m ,,_, •- ~*''""""' ltecll; -,,~ '"'"' ( the pool of public opinion on the airport issues -sentiments that Jiive yet to get much attention, he says. "I sit al more public hearings U1an you can imagine, and il seems that I always See the same people there, and sometimes I think thal there has to be a better way of sampling the majority opi- nion than the public hearing._ "ft seems the only people who come to them are against something. There are few who are for something." Included in the silent majority. Bresn~han says. Is the county's industrial commilnity. \\'hich has yet to be heard \\'ith any intensity on airport growth m::tl· l:?rs. "I really expect a strong showing .by in· dustry on the issues. After .all, !he airport is their life 's blood." Untll public ofricials hear from . n~orc spokesmen for industry and the m11l tons of other private citi zens. "I don 't think we have an accurate indication of "'hat people want for aviation in Orange Coun· ty." says Bresnahan. . "I realy wonder if we 're analyzing the public' pulse right." . He says he greatest hope 1s for .a gmooth orderly system -Gf planning for the exPanded alr service to Orange Coun· ty communities. . "U we. can austain a system of sn\ooth pl<"tnning whtre all segments .f~ll into place -a series of small dec1s1on~ - we'll solve this lh ing. And I really believe it will be solved." He cfiticiies arch foes of expansion of the. pre.sent -tenninal for drawl~ pa.ralles of 1he Orange Count{ te.nnlnat wi th Lot Angeles Intemationa Airport. "That 's a ridiculous comparison," says the .airport chief. "There is qulte • difference .belwetn the 250 jel departures a day with fGUr· englnt craft at L.A. and the 20 departures of twln-en1lne aircraft at Orange Count y each day." Ke also seriously questions the validity of many o( th e complaints lrom the iame 1ector over airport noise. "If lhese planet are indeed causing 111 great noise problem, then why aare con· l tractors and developers building new homes in the area and &elling them quite successfully?'' lie \vould like airport and noise critic s to "take the time lo learn "'hat the real factors are and offer some const ructi1 ·c solutions." ·· Land use compatibility surrounding an airpo rt is the key issue in sol ving pro· blems \\•ith noise. he says. •·Every airport 1 can think of 11·a~ first built on the outskirts of to1vTI a1\·11v from resideTitial zones, <1Tid government agen cies allO\\'ed the dcvelopn1enl of residential areas to a point 1'.'hcre they met the boundaries of the airports." Residential areas \\'ill ne\·er beconH' 1' 1·Jn1pat ib\e use if they <'ldjoin airport~. hP behe1·cs. "E1·en H we do gel aircraft \\'llh q111e.1er C'n~incs -and I bc!ic\'e tha1 "'·e 11·Hl . c1en1ually -yo11 cen never eliminate the fear of a crash from \he owner of a hon1e. Satistics still won 't dispel that feeling thal a jet might come zinging do1vn his chimney some day." Bresnahan offers no set solutions to U1e county's airport service question, but s;iys adamantly that if the majority of 1he county's taxpayers desire a certain plan. "then it'\vill be built." And as far as a time limit lo the solu· tion. he is uncertain, too. "It might take four or five generatioru of living with the problems of air travel before a soolution could be found. It's hird. even impossible -1 hate to use that "·ord -to say.'' 'C A.SINO NIGHT' TO HELP DEAF . The money "'ill be funny . but tht cause will be serious. Deaf youngsters, throuah the John Tracy Clinic and the Aqive 2G-30 lnterna · ~ tlonal's Project Deaf FoundaUon, will be the beneficiaries of the SOuth Coast 20-30 Cluh 's first annual "Caslno Night" In Newport Saturday at the South Bay Club. The fS event will be gln at 7 .JO. ' • DAILY PILOT Slltt PM .. SANTA ANA RIVER REMAINS 'OLD SANDY BOTTOM' AS EARTH MOVERS CONTINUE STRIKE Sand Slated for Beach Replenishment Unmoved; Corps of Engineers Seek Union Cooptr1tion ·PR Man for Irvine Co., W illinm Aldrich, .. Resigns William L. Aldrich, public relations and advertising director for The Irvine Com- pany, today announced his resignation and plans to establish a coiuulting firm . Aldrich, who has been with the Irvine Company for four years, said he will establish the William L. Aldrich Public Relations finn in Santa Ana . \Vi!Uam R. Mason, president of The Irvine Co., said Aldrich's reslgnation "'ill be effective Aug. 8. "He is very ca pable in the public rela- tions field and I know he \l.'l\i be sue· cessful in his new firm," Mason said. Aldrich has been a lecturer at Pep· perdine College and at America n r-.:tanagement Assoc. seminars on the businessmar's role in publi c aff~irs .. He also served as an instnictor at R1vers1de and Irvine campuses of the University of Californ ia. Sand for Beaches Still in River; Of ficia}& Worried: The delay in hauling an estimated million-dollar's worth of "gift" sand from the Santa Ana Riv.er bed to we15t Newport's eroded beaches will entr.r it! lhird week Monday with no quick solution expected in a slrike by earth-moving equipment operators. And the mid·November deadline for removal of the storm.borne sand is ap- proaching. The sand. which "·as expected to be cleared out to a point about eight miles upstream. must be taken out before 'vin ter rainst-orms start so there 1vill bt room in the river for the CK pected runoff. county f\ood·control aides have warned. In the meantime, the groin fields irt \Vest Newport are balf finished and earth moving machines are idle . Ci ty Harbor Coordinator George Dawes said he is dismayed at the inconvenience caused by the ha\f.finished stone finger' tying uP 1,500 feet of beach at the peak of Ft-om .Page l----the-&Umme~beach-teuon'--'~~~-~ QUITS IRVINE COMANY PR Executiv• Aldrich Patrol Baton Rouge BATON ROUGE, La. (UPJ) -About 250 National Guardsmen joined state troopers and local pO\ice patroling the uneasy streets of Baton Rouge early to- day as violence flared sporadically. Police repo rted intermittent sniping. FREEWAY ... equestrian trails." 1£arpcr noted t'1r.t •·r··o:1nt:iln Valley hopes the freew ay w,!\ b:? si1ift:!'.l slightl y casl ·lo meet the end of the proposed Corona de! f.lar Fr~:\lo'ay," Don ~lcl nnis, N~1\•port .Beach Council- man, presented similar ideas "·h~n he said, •·The frec1\·ay should be terminated at the San Diego Freeway or meet the Corona ciel Mar Free1>1'ay." · Aller the panel discussion. the Ptfesa Verde Home Own ers passed a re&alu- tion that hopes the Division of Highways will consider ending the freeway at We San Diego Freeway or join the Orange Freeway wilh the proposed Corona de! Pt'far Freeway. AUGUST QUALI1'Y SAVINGS . " "' , . Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS • I.II. the Country REG. $329. REG. $125. REG. $1 10. ·- Dawes said the Army Corps of Engineers will try to receive special union permission lo carry oot the large sand·haul work on an emergency basis, but chances for the permit are slim. . Tile sand would amount to a hl.jj;e .uv- lngs fur the corps, which intends to use the 900,000 cubic yard!!i as fill between lhe four groins. The new sand would more tha n doubl#! the width of beaches from 36th to 56th streets. Won't Talk lo Soviets LONDON (UPI ) -'soviet novelist AnalOly Kutznctsov today refused to see Russian embassy officials who sought to questio n him about his defection to Great Britain. Ma1111er SALE $289. SALE $107.50 SALE $ 95. Our au mm-.. s1le also includes 1elect groups fro_m. Dr•JC•I -Henrdon -Htrit1p.. Alao Nation,:, ~re-Carson, and num.rous other llnli. Reduct ions on eccessoriei., lamp1 and picture• are •v•llable. IN'IUIOIS NIW'°RT BEACH ProNHlon.1 lf'rttrior LAGUNA &I.ACK 11'21 w ... clfff Dr .. ut.206() o.....,.. u.s Nwth CM•t Hwy. 494-6551 ~ • ............. ~,.111.41'1"' ... ' ...... IAl....,.......... .. 19! .... JO-NSll> .... lll!!!!!!!!llllllll!!ll°""!!!!!~..,_!!!!!4'111.,.. .. ' .... ~1 ' .,._ ,._ w ........ ., ...... e:.-tt .-.1ttJ a a i 1 I • UPI P""9 lnM .ll'L MARINER 6 PHOTO SHOWS SURFACE OF MARS FROM 2,1 00 MILES Crater at Left is I Miles Wide; Area of Picture Is About 30 Mile·s Mu~h Like Moon Life on Mars ·Chances Dim PASADENA, Cali!. (AP) - -The odds against finding life on Mars lengthened today as scientists studied Mariner 6's closest-ever pictures or the red planet, showing a meteorite- •~----.battered.surl&ce..Jrulcil Uke the moon's. Black-and-wttite photographs televised across 58 mJllioo miles Thursday night disclos- ed such utter desolation that onfy the mot5t optimistic could hopt ror the presence of un- seen· Uvlng organisms •. There were huge and an- cient craters. many with sharp-edged smaller craters inside; mountainous highlands, precipitous slopes, crack lines anq~altered rub- ble -but no hint that the mysterious planet harbors life or ever did. Scientists who plan to send wrface-scratching unmanned landing craft to f\1ars in the 1970s were caujlous in their comments on the possibility of life. Said Dr. Robert Leighton, physicist-astronomer heading ~a -study of the pictures: "The camera system was expected to provide an an~·er to the question of life on ftfars. It Is expected i{ there is life on West Germany Admits Getting Gas From U.S. Mars it "'ould be In microsCQpic fonn or a low order of vegetation." The photographs, m a n y snapped with a telephoto lens as the 850-pound spacecraft swept within 2,130 miles of the . Martian equator, covered a dark equatorial band some scientists have thought might bear vegetation because tt seems to darken in the. spring. What the spacecraft'• two ; cameras saw, however, were scerte1 like American desert! • where dark mountaln 1 anges rise from wastelands of bleached sand. Thera. were DO clouds and DO signs of a haze which some observers h ave theorized might be evidence of moisture in low places. Leighton com- mented: "The blue haze that some say is on Mars may not exist. The surface features are very clear." The televised images, some showing craters estimated as small as a few. city blocks across, were an hour late ap- peating on monitor .screens at Jet Propulsion Laboratory and some did not show at all. Scientists at first thought the trouble was at a receiving and relay station at Goldstone, WASHINGTON (UPI) from. Bonn '' & o u n d s CaHf. Later they said Jt might The West German government reasonable" but raised some be in the spacecraft. has admitted the United States "The tape will be brought questions. h f Gold i " gave it small quantities or ere rom s one. a poison gas for te s t l n g He questioned v.•hether the spokesma'n said. "so we can purposes, a practice criticized shipments had bei!n cleared try to find out where the trou- by one congre.o;sman as tan-with other WeSt Euto'pean na-b\e is.'' tamount to spre!lding around tions as he believed was re· Scientists will get a seCQnd nuclear w!!apons. quired. chance at taking clo&e-ups of A spokesman for·the defen.se " ... The broader and most Mars when Mariner 7, •five minisler in Bonn confirmed basic i s s u e is whether the days behind Mariner 6, makes his country received small United States: should g 'i v e a similar fly.by Monday night. quantltie5 of the ·gas after chenilcal and biological war· Silent for several houn Rep. Richardo. McCarthy (D-fare agents, regardJess of Wednesday after apparenUy N.Y.), che.rged that' such ship-their amounts, to other coun-being knocked askew by a ments took place for "several tries," ifcCarthy said. "I re-small meteorite, Mariner 7 at years." gard them as almilar to nu· last report was operating The German govemment clear weapon!, which Ameri-normally and scheduled to uid it needed the gas to test can la~vent.s us from giv-begin taking approach pictures Ing to nau-... " tonight gas warn!~ equipment such ·-.i;ii;;iioii;;;;;.,;~;;-;;;.-___ ;;;;;i;;;ii;;;'iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;;jl I as that carried on some tanks II and to test gas masks and methods of neutralizing gas. McCarthy, a frequent critic of the Pentagon's chemical and biological warfare pr'?" gram, Bald the explanation Cockta il Hour In Quar antine? SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -Ts there a cocktail hour in the lunar quaranUne station where the Apollo 11 astronaubl are in isolation? "It Is not a dry ship," John McLealah, a public relations offlcer in quarantine with the cre.w, said Thursday in reply to a newsman 's queaUon. Andy Williams' :l rd Child Born DELANEY -aaos. •SEA FOODS • 2aoo·La Fay1tte St., N1wport Be 1ch 67J.~50 or 545-2217 ~-----GOURMET ------, FREEZER SPECIALS Thurs., thru Sun., July 31 .. Aug. 3. WHOLE -IMPORRD DOVER SOLE '',.~ .. di BURBANK, CaJU_ (AP)-~ third child was born early II> day to 11Jnger Andy \Villiams 1 and his wife. Claudine Longet,\ • • ' Md11, AU9usl I, 1969 ' . , DAllY l'ILOT .I; -Surcharge Assured Missile MakerJ Tax Cuts Bloom H·e Ge~ Part,s at Dumps In Reform Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - With congreuional approval muted for the 10 percent In- come tax surcharge for sll months, the House Ways and Means CommiUee has com- pleted the bluest tu overhaul in modern U.S. hist..iry. The re.form package in- cludes bitter medicine for 90me -but there are signifi- cant and surprising tax cuts for · nearly everyone else, espe:e:lally low and mJddle in- come ta:rpayeni. A committee spokesman said the package was the most eitensive revision of·ta1 laws since the modern income taz was imposed in 1913. prOlltiae surcharge ntenslon. Tbeae .features Included U• lending the surcharge at I percent for the first al.I months of lr70, which Preai- ~ent Nixon sought; repeaUng the 7 percent buslneu tu credit; continuaUon of car and ----------phone excise t.uea; and pf'Ooo vlding ahnost total lncome tax relief for some 12 million poor per.sons. The surcharge extension passed the Senate Tburlday and probably will pus the house early next week. It was sought by Ni.Ion to help fight innauon. d1tlon11 and a minimum In· come tax for wealthy persons already written into t h e reform bill, lhe Ways and Means Committee on Tbuts. day went fa r beyond wh11t had been eipeeted for the middle income taxpayer. BOSTON (AP) - A college . 21b.ldent saya he has bouaht from private firms tw1>thir<fs of the parb to build an ln- tercontJnental balll!tlc missile and haJ acoesa to tbe ftSI. Joseph R. MacG. Seit.I, 21, a spec ial student at Massachussets InsUtute o t Technology. said in a • copjrlght story In ttie Boston Globe todat that he purchued the part,, from various salvage and surplus metal dealert in Musacbusetts. · The Globe sald Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, provost of MIT and a former science adVi!er to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon 8 . John.son, called it.s attention to Seitz.'s work. Seltz said he found a metal salvage dealer In Boston who "will sell you an Atlas nose cone for 40 cents a pound. • He doesn't know what they are unless you bother to tell him." A warehouse in Taunton furnished a complEite first- st.age assembly of lhe Tit.an Il- e, three guidance platforms, six re-f.$Y shields and four "umbilical assemblies," Seitz said. , An "umbllkal u1<mbly" fl one which diJconnecta the ml&slle at the moment or lau.o- dlln,. Seib:, ol Elben>n, N.J., Aid he collected th compoaentl OQt of ••idle curiosity" ind to lhoW.1 aecwity and ordnance ~ that "all you have to do ls p 1 out to tile 1urp!UJ yuda -.i loot." Seit.I laid that actually assembling an ICBM la "a ~ ~year job,'" but 11 o classified knowled1e ls need-ed. - "I've got. all the critical sub assembliea for an JCBM," be a aid. '.'The rest Js plumb lag." Seitz aakl be had .. avoided getting such thlnp as !IOI tanks and aterlor structures which are 25 feel l"'I and 10 feet Jn diameter, but I know where I can get them." Most ol Ille par1I, Stitz Aid, were oblllned from "dumps'" that speclalhe In Army hardware. · ' He said fissionable material for warheadJ could· be-db- talned. but "I would .be wry reticent to discuss th.at." The tax cuts, some of which 1Vould start·rtext ye.ar, "ouJd deprive lhe federal treasury of about $7 billion. But the go\•e.rnment would make up for the IOM through taxing groups as ''gentlemen farmers." The reform p a c k a g e form'alty went to the full House today and will be up for debate next Wednesday. It should pas,, ·Unchanged --no amendments will be permitted -next Thursday. For middle inc«ne people, there would be a generoua in- crease in the 10 percent max- imum standard deducUon to 13 percent in 1970, to 14 percent in 1971, and 15 percetit In 1972. This would be coupled with a maximum deduction going from $1,000 now to $1,400 ini-------------------- Then it will go to the Senate where it races tough geing in t~· Senate Finance ~'Com· - 1970. to $1.700 in 1971 and to $2,000 in 1972. _ The Ways and Means Com- mittee added lo the package everal other features-tl}at had been stripped off the com- mittee. With such provisions as a cut !rt the 271h percel1t oil' depletiOILall011'.ance, taxing ol church businesses and foun- For all middle income peo- ple, there wou1d be rate reduc- tions in 1971 and 1972 of al least 5 percent. This would atarl helping famillea filing jaitlt __returns, whose t.xatne - income starts about $8,000. COMMUNITY EVENTS AUG. 20 FOUR AUG. 'II · 25 MAXIMUM LAST TWO The Lui BIG EVENT INTEREST Before School CLASSE S NEWTIMER PLANS AT YOUTH OLDTIMER CALIFORNIA DROWN -PROOFING PLCNIC & STEAK BARBEQUE • YMCA G•mer-Food-Art Oi1pley Newport Beach FR.EE Helicopter Rid11 . 1. The Guaranteed &rowth Plan. . Depooit $1,000 or more. When all your money and lnterest remain at our ~ 5.25% annual rate, .compounded dally, your acc6tmt wlll grow 30% ln5yeara 23% ln4y81111 17% ln3yeara FEDERAL 2. The Guaranteed Income Plall.' Open an account of $1,000 or more for38 to 60 monthl. We'll guaranlff you a 5.25% annual rato, compoundocl daily, wilh Interest paid 9,~t to ~u each quarter. In CIM ol ltardehlp or emergency, you mny wlllidraw the1 111neceAllY funda at the end of eny quanor and get u nllrelttolhatdale. 3. The Bonus Plan. Heni'a a 3-year account that lets your aavlnga eam ~ % mora each. year than passbook accounts do. They now earn et a 5% aMuaJ rate. So Bonus Plan accounts currently earn 5.25% a year when the bonus Is c redited at the end of the 3-year period. Invest any amount, In multiples of $1 ,000. Interest can be transferred quarterly to a passbook account and, when held for a year and compounded dally, Wiil eam 5.13%. ' ' 4. The Basic Plan. Th• most flexible plan. You can Invest any amount of money and withdraw It whenever you wish. If you IMV9 an your money and Interest in your account for a year at our current 5% annual rate with Interest comPoUnded dairy, you'l~recelve en annual yield of 5.13%. You eam interest from the day yo u deposit your money 'tll the day you withdraw It. And the money you deposit by the 10th of any month earns Interest from the 1st. when It remllne until quarter's end. COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd; near Adams • 546•2300 ,- -' • also a recording arti.!il, al St. U S DA CHOICE 6..os. 9S ¢ ~:~;~f~~;·.~~~nih~::.:. Top .Sirloin-KfBOBS e.. L------...:"'~·:-:"':: ... ~-=='"~·~·::"!~: ... ~-=~-==!"~ ... ~,=-=·~""!:::"'~·~ .... =~·-=""~"':: .. :·:· ... ~·~-==.:":'"'::'"~"~'~"":·~ .. ~"=·~ .. ~-==·::.._,;.. ___ .J wu oot Immediately named. __________________ _.. CUFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER . j T-- -.. • • I ,,. • r •• 'I DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGEj ' ' -TH·' ( ' ' e· Fire\vorl{s ·· Ban • Nobody was counting, bul one day ear!y·last month there \Vere thousands of scofflaws in Newport Beach -all of lhem local residents: , . Tho day was the Fourth of July. and the law thal was beJng scoffed at was the city's ban against the sale and use of fireworks. lt appears to be an unenforceable law: the c!ty's ""' brighUy lit skies, beaches and backyards provided glittering testimony to that last month. City councllmen are not unaware of the situation. They've been not unaware of it foi' several years. But this year, something is being done about it, presumably in time for Independence Day, 1970. The council has directed the city staff to come up with recommendations on how the law can be revised, without setting the Stage for neighborhood infernos. One possibility, suggested by City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt. is to chang! the Jaw so thal organized and controlled family fireworks displays are permitted, but only at certain ·designated areas, such as parks and sections of. the beach. ---~remen and police would be standing by. Clean: up, crews would.move in ,the next morning. CouncilmE!n liked the idea. Hurlburt was instruct· ed to pursue it and· perhaps refine it. 1( there are enough such areas, the plan should work. But few are likely to walk or drive a dozen or so blocks just to light a Sparkler. ~Unless plenty of places can be set aside, the law will continue to be oQ.served mostly in the breijch. -A softening ol the prohibition is clearly in order. ' As It Is now , it elfectively controls notlling . What it does do, in fact, is to generate a wave of "· minor law violations. Surely, that is the \vrong lesson for lh.e youn&. / Unseen City Toilers When it comes to Newport Beach municipal affairs. lt is usually city councilmen who get the headlines. That's because the final decisions -large and small -ultimately come to rest on their shoulders. But there are many others who also serve. They are the people who often initiate the studies that lead to council-mandated projects. Their reco~endations usually are heeded by the council. We are speaking, t>f course, of Newport's city com· mission and board members. Several of these citizens are new to their jobs. Appointed with.in the past month by the council, they include; Planning commissioners Gborge W, Brown;· Gor. don A. Glass and Wiliam D. Martin; civil service board member llenry C. Duffie; library trustee Charles Sword and parks commissioner David s .. Tingler. There are doubtlessly many Jong days-and nights -ahead for these volunteer city officials during which they will wonder why in the world they vo.lunteered. The answer',then wUJ be the·same as it ls"now; To help make ours e better community. • • ' "' -r:F '. , (N) •• • ,• I ~ .. President Goes Sorensen's Biggest Job .&...l<~ehind Curtain· ' President Nixon becomes the fir£t ~erican President liince the cold v1ar began to visit a Commanist country when his plane puts down In Bucharest Satur· day afternoon. Prcsider1! Franklin D. Roosevelt attended a wartime meetiryg_ of allied leaders at Yalta in the Soviet Union in February, 1945. President Harry Truman took part in a meeting in July and August of lhe same year at Potsdam 1n East Gennany. President Dwight D. Eisenhower planntd to make a trip le lhe Soviet Union in 196!), but the invitation was canceled 'ty J>rem.ii!.r Rlk:ita S. Khruthchev after the U-2 spy plane inciden t. .... However, President Nixon is JlO ,. slranger to Bucharest. He was wann 1y t received there in March, 1967, afler hJ!V• "1 Ing been refused a visa by Poland and<I &harply snubbed by officials in Most.OW. Philip Ben observes : "They (the Roma nians) we re sensible enough to be Jµnd to-' Richard Nixon. in 1967, nt a time when he-' was not even !Ure of getting the Republican nomination." IF mE PRESIDENT were to visit anY Communist state, Romania was a pretty obvious choi~ Without having broken free ot Soviet domination like Yugoslavia, Romania has shown a remarkable in- dependence, even audacity, towards jfs powerful neJghbor. Soviet, Hungarian and Bu.lgarian troops ... Editorial Research massed on their borders with Romania at tile time of the Jnvasion of Czechoslovakia. Uncowed, the Romani an Grand National Assembly arld the Council of State on Aug. 21. 1968, endorieJ CMoJJ.s.e:SCU:.S. stand deploring the iu- terf erence in Czech domestic affairs. "Easl Europe" recalls: "As it hap- pened. Romania was not Invaded. The reasons were complex. Fir st. Czechoslovakia had proved far harder LG digest than the Kremlin had anticipated . 11len the reaction of the -wesetm Com· munist parties aod of :.ntemationatiput1lic opinion was much more hostile than C:>i:· pected. Both ROmania and Yugosla\'i&i had declared that they would take up arms. Chma, too, had made ominous noises .'' · RO~fA~JA!'\S for years have been tryi ng to establish a ,better relationship \•dth the United Stales. President Nictilae Ceausescu invited President Nixon to Romania :<bout a montb-alter'.-Nixon·s is-auguration. Romania long has sought mdsl·fa vortd· • nation trade treatment by the Unile.:I States. presently enjoyed by lwo ollier Communist countries, Poland a n d Yugoslavia. As yet, however, the Nixon administration has shown no :sign of trying to win that concession frOfn Congress. Romania's trade with noo-Commuai:;t countries climbed from 18 percent of ~er total trade in 1959 lo 47 percent last year .. But her .exports to the United Slat~s ­ amount to no more than one or t\\'O million dollars •·year. CEAUSESCU'S internal policies are orthodox tnough for the Communists in Moscow. J. F. Brown , an Am t r i can Kremllnologist, observes : •·it is rather in foreign relations that Romania's sins have been committed: by her agreemP.nt witfl·West Germany, her (neutral) stand on the Arab-Israeli conflict, her (friend- ly) atiitude towards China and towards the invasion of Czechoslovakia." · \Vhat are sins jn Russiiiil eyes 8ppear lo Qc the ve ry poUcles t!Jat led President Nixon lo accept ceafisescp's invftation to stop over in Buch~est. Other Worlds to Explore lf you'll stand for one more touch of 1pace, this is a modest contribution. The question beforeihe space administration: what do we do now? Of cou rse, there is a program for Apollos 12, 13, 14 and so for.th. But these depend on the monev available, which depends on the mood o1 the pegple and the Congrees six months or a year hence. Future Apollos are going to be anti· climax and that ·docs not fuel great visions, or even great achievement. The NASA people have a high content or those \lo'ho Jive on visions. The lunar conquest is al ready force-feedlng them. Take the .,case of Dr. Werner von Braun, who played an im~rtanl pa rt in Apollo 's success. Dr. von Braun told the newsmen : "We can tfom now on move to where we want to go, where other "·orlds ( Royce JJrier can support our life." TlfiS EXPANSIVE attitude is sup- ported by many others in and out of NASA. The obvious long-range sequel of the moon is exploration of Lhe planets. Here the vision encounters pra ctical obstacles. The earth .has seven planetary companions. and of th~e Mars is the fin· Jy practical target for manned ex· ploration. It is a little less rigorous than the moon. There may be a trace of water vapor. but altogether the atmosphere is apparently like ours at IO·lli miles Following Pied Piper . Tboagbu At Laree: T don't believe that people, even juveniles. are "led a.,tray" by others : when they follow, it 11 because something tn their n.ature Jias been conditioned lo respond to the tune or these Pied Pipers; al orie level of our being, we always know what we are. doing. even though we may not. tnow why we are doing it. • Why do iome hum11ns feel Insulted when we ire referrt!d to as an ''animal / .---B11 George ---, Dear George : - Jf you1re such • hot-9hol 11dvice c:olumnl.Jt. how can we cure the ris- Jn& raUo ol broken homes? SKEPTICAL De.ir Skeptic•!:· Sllmp out dJvcrce. ' ~ _,..._.,..._ •• ,. ___ .,,,......_..,.1""!' .... t•"•• ., ' ~ ' f fo~dney .J. liar:ris i I , , ..._. _ .... +-' species" sinct it is Man who dcl!troys tbe Earth and exploi~ and extirnninates his own k.lnd, not the other animals ? ~fen are largely irrational in their at. tiludes toward women -a man wlll be annoyed if a woman doe!in't know as much abotll something as he thinks she should, but ht' becom~ even more in· noytd when !lhe.elhibits more knowled ge than bt lhinks she should hav~. THE TROUBLE with "fr .. speech" ls that we are wlllltli to practice JI more than we are wJlllng to II.st.en lo It; and without citizens who listen as intensely as lhey talk, no constructive soci&J dialoa 11 JlOS'lble. ill1i!ude. not enough to support a hunian organism unaided . Its gravity is .33, rnore than twice that of the moon. This is a n1lnus for us, since the lunar success l\'as due to low gravity, permitting men to moVe without a crushing weight in body, sui t and pack. So far, our f965 photographs show a Mirtian crust resem bling the moon's, rocky and pocked with craters. Bul the pictures coVered only I percent of the Martian .surface. There may be more htlspitable are.as, atid we may determine thl1 in a few years. BUT ENVIRON~IEl\'T ls-not the ma in barrier to ?ofartian manned exploration. TI1e main barrier is distance. At present crui sing speeds, averaging 17.000 mph , our astronauts reach lhe moon in a few days. It is an enormous physical and psychological str.ain. Under the trajectory necessary to a Mars ap- proach, ~1ars is 500-600 times as distant as the moon. At our top rocket speed, 25,000 mph, the 160-million-mile T\-lars l'.ipan would consume most of a year, one way. • It Is there/ore manifest that the present energy production and propulsion system Is wholly inad1!9uate to put a man on Mars. Some!~ of the order of 500.000 mph is required. Th.ls is about five. times the speed ol free meteors, and you might call It dangerous. EVEN THEN, 30 days In the current space vehicles would seem lo impose ln- lQlerable physical and psychologi cal burdens on the human organism . The vehicle would have to be far larger. with far larger payload in minimal amenities for the journey. Let the tech nologlrts wrtstle with these equaUons, .and see if they can work them out in 20 or 30 years. ~1canwhile, we have met.sis whic'h don't llavt mortal muscles or mortal brain cons or mortal reasoning faculties. We. ma.y be pinned. to them for X years In our lhirst for sttrets ol U1e Solar System. • Who Wrote Te4's Speech? The voice was Sen. Edward Kennedy's, but the words wer'e Providj!.d by two long- time Kennedy family liegemen - Theodore S o r e. n s e n , thrice-married· counsel and ghostwriter for President Kennedy, and Richard Goodwin, literary handyman of Senator ~o~rt Kennedy. \\'ithin a few hours after the disclosure. of "Teddy's" Involvement in the ~ ing of a young Washingtoit-secreWy, Sorensen and Goodwin -had ~It lo; bis home at Hyanrij.f Port, Ma~ise . and guid~ him. They had come without being :,ummofled, as did former Defense Secretary Robert McNa mara aod a half. dozen other df{!icated Kennedyites. lt was on the emphatic instructiori of these inner devotees that Ke~y main: tained tight-lipped s!lence about the tragic affair for nearly a week. His oWn ir.stincts were lo talk, and newsmen were told a press conference woWcl 'J.\e held the following day. ' · BUT THE Sorensen-GOOdwin clique peremptoMly harried it.on two grounds: First, get public reaction to the curious affair; second, to obtain the views of al· torneys and friendly local officials en possible legal implications . fa cing Ken- nedy as a result of the death of the young \lo'Oman and his mysterious failure lo report the fatal auto .accident for many hours. This la st consideration dominated the \veck.Jong deliberations of the SOrensen- Goodwm group. \\'hen i: was finalty decided. \vith the approval of the local district allon'ley, an old friend of Teddy. thal he would appe.ar in court on l\1a.rtha·~ Vineyard and p!ead guilty to leaving the scerie of the ac· cidenl. it was Good\\•in \Vho conceived !he idea of following that up with a televised broadcasl. TN THE DISCUSSION !hat followed, th'is prop<;sa l was enlarged to include a "publi c demonstration of confidence" - some form of dramatic response to Ken· nedy's spiel. Again it wa s Goodwin who suggested the stratagem of having this pub lic manifeslgtion center on whether Kennedy should resign his Senate seat. As he characteristically ri:marked, "That'll get them. That's got sex ap- peal." Rral purpose of this "poll"' is to build up support for Kennedy's re-election next year. That's the primary concern of him and his devotees·. He never had any in- tenlion of resigni ng . At no time was i seriously discussed by him or his inner clique. Their sole an xiety was salvaging Ken· nedy's serlcusly jeopardized 19i0 re-elec- tion chance·s. The "poll" is the first move in that endeavor -about which a lot more will ,be heard and on which a great deal more will be spent. SORENSEN WROTE mosl of Teddy's Dear Gloomy Gus: T do not think Isabel Pease v.·ould be pleastd v.•ith plastic trees. And that's probably coming up next, now thrit the city is testlng plastic grass. \\1h('re are you, tuy. now that \re need you? Nature Lo\'.er ''"' ... ,u,. "n.ctt ,........ • .... "" llfC•t .. rllr lll•N •I tllt ._..,~. SW ywr HI "''It It oi.-r OY .. Otllf Pli.t. • ·' ..... Allen-Go I d sn1ith ''· ~ i.. . .... t II ' -, ' ) ' telecast. Goodv.•in prepared a draft, parts of whi ch were incorporated in the fmal scrip.. Virtually all ol the . last portion, ·which .Kennedy memorized and in whtch he asked for public help to "think this lhrouib with me." wi!s <Sorenseq'1 baq- diworK. Throughout lhe week of closely guarded deliberating and cogitating, there was much telephonic conferring with pro-Ken· nedy newsmen, broadcasters, pol itical leaders and others , oof'example: At cOrrespondent of lhjJ , . I . strongly pro-Kennedy Washington Post ":as flown in a private Kennedy plane from Martha's Vineyard lo Hyannis Port for several hours of consultation. None or. the olher numerous rf!por:t!rs on the island were called in. Teddy personally talked by phone with. a number of Senate "peacenik" col· leagues. Among· them. were Democratic Floor Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, GeOra;e Mtj}overn o( South ·~Ola, who has 1972 aspirations, · F'filhk Church of Idaho, V;!nee Hartke of Indiana; also Representatives John Tunney o I California, who has his eye on the seat ' held by Sen. George f..furphy, anO Tor· bert f..>lacDona!d (D-blass). By Robert S. A.Ilea and John A. Gold1mUb El Toro Suits Him Fine To~ the Editcr: Your account (July 25) of the report "Orange County lnterim R e g i o n a I Airport" by Carlton Rhoades, a n aerospace :safety eng ineer, seems to pro- vide more questions than answers. {l\lr. Rh oades sai d El Toro f\tarine Corps Air Station cou ld..,not accommodate b'lh civihan and milita ry jet traffic.) Dcs11ile the fa ct th at you }}()int ou t.l\1r. Rhoades lives under the El Toro fligh t paliern, one mu~! prec;ume he is 1•n- biased. But e''en with an off.shore airport. prevailing v.'inds V.'111 still bring landings over pl'ople's homes, C\TO though they may not be at Irvin.;:. l\10RE IJ\<1PORTANT. hO\vcver, is the argument re military use alongside civilian use at El Toro. Appat enlly l\1r. Rhoades Is not aware that not just a few but manv hundreds of Charter civilian and niHitary transport four~n­ gine jeLo; ha ve departed from and arrived at El Toro, fully loaded, with Vietnam Marines. If ifs good enough for th1>se gentlemen, it's good enough for the rc:.t of us. And the 707 which carries President Nixon to his new home in San Clemente? If it's safe enough for Mr. Nixon, it's sale enough for me. . The eccnomic argument does not hold \\'ater either. Since v.·hen has the Pen· tagon been empowered lo nlake a profit out of the public it is supposed to serve? El Toro belongs to the pe<>ple, unless somebody has re \vritten the Constitution. and when lhe people's needs change so must the facility. Some 300 years ago, John Locke wrott': "All men are liable to error: .and m'l~t men are , in many points, by passion or interest, under te1nptatlon to It ." KEN LLOYD .... ""''\ ~fa ilhox. ) l~etters from readers ar1 welcome. Normally writers should convey their messa{jes in 300 words or less. Tiie r ight to coi.:idense lettera to fit tpace or eliminate libel is reserved. All Ut- ters m11st include signature and mail· ing address. but ·names may be witlL- hcld on Tequest if sufficient rea.1on is apparent. Armstrong and Aldrin on the plaque be l!'uly appropriate? \Vould not the names of many scientific contributors be more approp riate? If political personality had to be ln· serted in the plaque's inscription, wouldn't it have been magnamimous and fitting that either the name of President Kennedy who inspired the space effort, or that of Presiden t Johnson who as Vice President and Presider1t gave impetus U) the space effort , be perpetuated on the moon plaque? ISSI IT A FACT 1hat the President has made no material contribution to space success, in fa ct, doesn't he Tepre· i;ent · the Eisenhower adm inistration \\·htch deplored American invol\·cment in peaceful space exploration? \Vould it be reassuring if the President ,~,·ould forsake chasing TV camert1!I around the globe and instead ~xpend his energy on lhe attempt to redUce the numerous blunde rs he commit s and la minimize the contradictory a c t I o n 5 a1nong the memberi. of his ad- ministration ? Isn"l it time that execulivo respcnsibility replace campaign lacttc5? BOB FORD -~·B~o~·oris!!_Belaaviorc:' __ ,_ ____ ~===='--. To the Editor: Do you find disconcerUng,Pl!rhaps em· barrassing, the PrC!lidenfs habit of in· sinuating his presence into eveflts which through melia coverage increase his personal notoriety? Is it boorish behavior to in vite oneSf'lf to share the pre-mission dinner "·ith !hose v.·ho are about lo undertake lhe risk of space tra,•el? Ts it immodest to insist upon upstaginit the heroic-astronaut:ii during the moon exploral ion'1" To repe.a t the grandstand play on the carrier? TS IS INAPPROPR IATE to 11rranga that the"Pr~stdenf~ name'bt in~r1bed on the: plaque lo be: left on the moon riUher 01an lhe nam e or deserv lna contrlbutors to Apcllo's ~uecess? Would not the n8mes of Grissom . \\'hit~ and Chalice alon,gslde those o f • ---- Friday. August I, 1969 The tditoria~gt of the Dail11 Pilot ietks to in form and •\i"" a.!lait rtodna by presenting ltia newspoptr'.s opinloni and com· mtnior11 on topics of intt1rt1t arid signfflcanre, by proViding a forum for th1 czpr11'ion o/ 01tr rtodtrs' opinions, and b!f pre1t"11ting tl1e diverse vitto- point.s of informed obsttt'e1·a 011d spokesmen on topic1 of Cht day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher .~ . . .. ...~4~"1• •• .. --· ---· .. _._ • . J:J PrMtr1 Allllltt 1, IHI tf J Mrs. Ralph B. Morgan Jr., Mrs. David Eisenman 'I'he Min es. "-b •w •rt T ~ • Ood"'atd (~ story , Tort!Jce 1fan,, ne.ict Page) •. 11obert "'·" • "'1er . . Star~gazer Sets . Sights on Down-to-earth Constellation DE~N...LANDE~; Several weeks ago my husband bought a telescope to 5tudy the stars -he said. After the fourth night he lot;t interest in the sky and is now studying other "heavenly bodies:" We live In an apartment which is Ideally &iluated for his new hobby. He hurrle& through dinner. races to the \\'in· dow and stays the.re four or five hours at a time. Last week ht Invited three of the boys from the office to enjoy lbe fun . He was ·quite disappointed be<:ause his two best subjects for obsen•atlon (he calls U\Cm Venus and Mars) were not at .home. tle promised Ute boys he'd invlt.e them back. -. . I am disgusted with him and be knows -· ANN LANDERS it. T am also concerned that he mieht be breaking the law. I've Mani of men being arrested as Peeping T_oms. Please inform me. -JUST LOOKING, THANKS DEAR JUST: So long as Tom 1lay1 la b15 own apartm~! be cannot be artt1ted. 111 the meantime, be jittent, dearle. Tom will dre of hla hobby alter 1 wbllt. Grow- ing ap takes time. ~ DEAR ANN; A dis tant rel1Uve of Diina who is 1oin1 throua;h the menopause ii • acting very oddly. s·ix weeks ago she telephoned at 2 a.m. and asked, "Are you all right?" t said, "Yd, of course." She then related a tem'ble dream she had in which I was murdered. That was the end of my nlghl's sleep. A w~ek later she telephoned at 6 ,a.m. and asked lf 1 had called her. I said, "No." She then ts.plained that her phone had rung and ahe heard 1 tcream that sounded.like mY voice. This past week 1he bas telephoned five times, acci.lsed me of calling her and not speakitig, just breathing into the phone. l 'm iure the woman needs a psy.chiatri&:t. In !he meantime I'm going to need one, too., lC she doesn't quit bothtttng me. Any auggesliQns? -PESTERED BY A NUT DEAR PES : Suggefl that &be stt a d0:ctor ud ge( help: Tba help yourself by gett~& 8;11 unlisted telephone number. It co1t.s aotbJa&. DEAR ANN: Our 11-year-old son's best Criend, Joey~ wants to admire his father and tries ha,rd to justtry his drinking. Last night he asked lf I was 1galnst beer, "even If a person can drink 12 bottles tn •·""'and •Wl walk • lir•llht line." He added with fake bravado, "My dad can do it!" I gave a ooncommittal answer and then hated myseU for not having the courage to teU the boy: .what heavy, continuOU.5 drinking can d(> to a person. How can t get the message acrosg without running down his father, and Incidentally, his mother, t.oo? -AUSTIN DEAR AUSTIN: It 11 not your rupoaslblllty fo "get the message 1cro1s." A dtrlld'1 ba1lc concept• .,.. ~·learned at boine, "°' fTilm lbe otlglabera. Wbtri tbt boy 11k1 leadJa1 qot:ltlODI ttll blm to talk to hla pareatl. h the mean· Ume, ,omt lndlvtdu~ wH crew, up 1roW1~ aJcolloijlq:i bllt llquor ud never • touch It. Otben: tum out to be teCOBd lad third generation lu1be11 wlllcll rtvn U. impression t.bat alcohollam la hereditary. Jt. 11 not, of coune. It 11 • leuwed mpoose l.o fruatraUoa, lonellne11 ud bto security. -Drinking may be "In" to the kids you run with -but it can put you "out" fm: keeps. You can cool it and 'stay popular. Read "Booz.e and You-For Teenagers Only." Send ~ ctnts In coin ind a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope with your ffilUest. Anl'.1 Landers wln be &lad to help you with Your problenu. Send them to her in . care of the DAILY Pllpl', tnelosilJI a l!'li·addresled, &lamped envelope. • • "-• . . •' - ' ·~·Holiday Season Rushed o ~, Snoppers' Benef it • Ho roscope Aries: R.ecogn ition Spre·ads SATURDAY AUGIUSl 2 which provide more li ving by good news. Be orii,inal. Not Be recepUve. You obtain whit room. necessary to follow the crowd. you need. Fancy frUll are rd I l!:phtolm Lewis of Ille Sl!lta Ana ~""' .and acl<lllional comes ·in oie 1>oop1w coc1- r~ Qtl)ter-'I'!>& Afflliant Chapter w.ill hjlti a coffee Wednelday, ~UC· l~" rroJP 10 a.m~ to noon. and the HI/liter Chapter'• sbowlnli will '&kt place 1'bursd1y, Au,. 21, Ibo from 10 a.m. to noon. The Pift Box will hoot vieW· in,gs 1"hursday, Aug. 7 and Thuraday, Aug. 14. Funds from the card &ale will be uMd i.r• auxillary's ..... "' fl7-lo Ille . .......,,..., ... Giii .... ...... ....... witb Ille •• ft ... Mina. Ralph Tilton, ~ Qrd Ale& a.re I.be co-ehalrman. Charles fl BOii Memorial Hollister, Edpr HID, Philip fa I , Prftlbyterian, Doane, Catt GIN, rrancil Barbar .S p I • t I c Grllet. ];#b, R I c ll a r d ~e. Cincl<ftila Guild or Sim-a.!ooClcl"11 and '~·· Holpltal " Orange 1'fiss v-..i ~If and Puiich and Jody A11o l)lferU>i a :Ill percent ~ulld GI Cl!OC. • d"""'nt durjn& A.Ulusl wlll be "'l. ~·!I Auxiliary,, under the the N~wport Harbor Spastic ~flDC*· of •Mrt.-James-W-. -Leque:, whleJt-wQl.fifer cards g~r •• fOOdl . buyor throup No-r. . ~ . _.,.J.ll~•" ~....,... Woedwar~ Is ' . . , ,Mril]f Ille ~· Ille 11111Ual proJect, I .._. ~ allit ~ 1'f Mn. Tore!)Ce Han· ~;wnfbe on lfle in1be bolpilal e.a. Lido and peninsula areu: .o bb t t b r ouch early Mrs. George Jansen, west ~· -Bock Bay area lo Bal1>9& bi."f"mqbeTinoddurlng Island, and Mn. Ro b ert ~~1:""ee booted by Fuller, Eutblufl to Coiona del f . · ,, -L. Bacoa and . !Ur. . . • .. • ~ Vt!!al. a mcrn. AnY<W wishing to vil'f tlle . ulfoo·la·tlle·-GI lolno CJirdS-•• .... · a •-Y- : the . " i:•lialgift ' ~~w.J()() It's built like a submarine, al'ld Is so w1terproc;f dup- ua diwirs trust it to time : th.Ir oxyeen au~. With-sl1nd• under-water pres· sum wp to 600 feet. Has tirnH'eHrff indbtor with 1==-1-=-dicL-Ml.J:im._;[~_f.Ute--matle. Stainless tteel Mi· ~-., ... JMl!lber of Ille Sputlc !Mp or ctll Mr1. Woodward at 64&- 4!30. Funds from the Nie are us- ed to assllt the Cerebral Pfl1led or Oran1e County, C111 Harvey and llopo Haven 1ehool1 and the youna ldult Woml>op It. U-Cfr<tiral Polslod A-i.tloo of Ortnce COUnly. Tiit loliit • fl 0 purchased two 12-pNStnger buse1 for the UCPAOC durill,a: the past yur. Contlnlllnl lll<lr • 1 I e lln«llh 0.-bu will be memtilr• cf ~ Cindtretla Guild ol Ohlldren'a HO<pital of Orange County. Cards a t sub.stanU-111 recWced pricea will be l)lgwn durinf" coffee klatclles 1nd tau Ill Ille h<!mlO ol the Mmes. Ralob l«'tll. Frt<ler· lck Prescot(, Jolmoon B1ll4rd, Joseph D. Ryan arid ft6bei't J. Lucas during AIJ.iUlll. Mrs. Ralph P. Morgan Jr. is chairman ot the Cindertlla_ Guild's sale. • Also o f f e r I n I Christm8s cards at 20 peretnt off during August is the Punch and Judy Guild of CHOC. Mrs. Dav id Eisenman is chairman of the annual sale whleh will be carried on through a series of coffees. H.;istesua will be. !he Mmes. Greg Eierioo• Aug. 4, John W.U., .Aug. 11, and PJll Thom1s, .Aug. 19, and others "' ba illMW\C<d. Anyone wishing information on the coffees or to purchase cards from the Punch and Judy Guild may call Mrs. Eilenman, 546-1710. President On Podium PAULETTE DoNALD Bntaf'd By SYDNEY OMARR TE>EH DATING 81NTS' All should avoid tendency to be overly 111re11lve. Friendly persu11lon 111ures be1t time Conlcht. Romance featured for l11IU1rlus, while Taurrus get• •tack wtlll the check. Special dance or pa1ea.nt ls Ideal date. Atles 1blnt1. Llbr1 talks I.bout a pennenant rel1Uon1hlp. Pisces ts 111rprfstd -blind dale turns out to be eye-filling. January ARIES (March 21·April 19), What appeared to be op- position boomerangs tn your favor. Recognition spreads. W dd ·· People consult you. Exprass e · 'ng Lhoughts in ' forthright manner. :filatter or contract. agreement ff could arise. Study• it. In 0 i ng TAURUS (April 20-May 20), Study Aries message. Your . . fears are unfounded. ClOpera· A~Ja.n::ary weddlns ls being tlon is forthct1mfng from plalinetf b~iulette-Ctcite-aSsoei'ales. eo:worKefs. ·Krio\v DoRald of Balboa ap4 Charles . this; proceed with confidence. Stcphyn Barclay of Huntington Libra individual backs you Beach. · News of the rof.thcoming ~EMlNI (May 21-Junc 20): , t h .. Friends and romance are e en . as.-"!een announced by featured Trust h h 11 d the bnde-elect's parents Mr . · unc · ce and ~rs. Ray R. DonaJd' ~ inner feelings. Some around of Balboa. ' YOU, te~d to be extravagant. Mias Donald a t t e n d e d Don .t give away something for Newport Harbor Hi&b School, no~1ng. :fi.tessage clt;ar by was graduated from Edison tonight. < High School,TulA,Okla, and _ CANCER (June 21.July 22)' now is a student at Oran&e Promotion may be duE:. Don't Coast Colleje. . underrate yourself. Your ideas Her fi~, son of Mrs. A. c . ~ ustful an~ probably are Jones of La Mirada and J . w. ~1ng used. Think. In personal Barclay of Costa Mesa, is a life, m a k e . arrangements graduate of Mayfair H I g h School, Lakewood and also is an OCC student. Sponsors Combined LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Yc..t PISCES (Feb.19"Marcb20): Jlect!sary. Know 1hla and U• can expand and profit. But you Avoid extravagant gestures. erclse will power. i must be 1ware of details, fine . .,=~~~~~~~===;§;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~ points. Acoent on what is at a I " ! distance. Means be farsighted. AWARD WINNING SHOE SERVICE I cordingly. Sen!e treJ'lds and act ec· ~~I VIRGO (Aug. 2~pl. 221' Some chaf1ies are · necessary. II they '"' made, profit COMPLETE SHOE e LUGGAGf rtsulls. II not, opportunity e HA ND BAG REPAIR slips away, Choice is your own. Gi>< praise to mate, ALL WORK GUARANTEED partner. cl.,. associate. TO YOUR SATISFACTION LIBRA (Sept. )3.()ct. 22 ), Accent on how public accepta 5 CONVIN llNT SHOPS --your actions, opinions. B• '"" L COA.IT ....,.. e 11• 1•v1Ne A¥e . aware .. of how you e1press w-,.. ...,., .,,..... w111c11n l'llJI• Ir P e MU ¥IA lll>O N......., letdl. ...... yourse • ersonal magneUsm w...,... ''""' ,,,,.... e 1011NM>tt'I rating is high. If single, mar· .,, PAlHIOM ISLAND Fwllliln hllnl l)age may be on your mind. Ii~=====·~·=·"~"~'=-~='"'~'"'~~·-~ ... ~"~~-~~~~~ SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov. 21): Don't deceive younelf' about basic issues. ·snort cuts are fine if they don't cut quality. Work aasoeiatt. neighbor may be thinking beyond y o u r nleans. lP@n.n.w Wffiffiffi~ro00 ./!lQf,llit!lf I!__( . .@[b~ffi~[3ffi0 SAGlTIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dt'c, 21): Money ~nd how to earn nlore of it take s spotlight. You may have more lo do -but rev.·ards are greater. Specifically, pursue <!realive project. Express yourself. Be true to yoUr ~tyle. CAPRICORN (Dec. 12..Jan. 19): There may be minor con· flict between home and pri> fessional duties. F'mi$h what you start. Keep promises . Adhere to golden r u 1 e . AQUARIUS (Jan. JG.Feb. 18): Now you a1\. in better position to make q u I c k decisions. Judgment is aided 2769 EAST COAST HIGHWAY 1714) 875·1111 COlltO NA DE L MAR ~ ZI P 92625 -0..... JO .,..n ea,.n ... 1 .. Dfy C'"'""9 IN.,,,- GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL • • • FOR THOSE WHO CAllE! FREE MIN •' UtllS SLACKS or SWEATER For Picnic Orange Cotinty legal secre· taries will hear James F. Penny, president of the Or- ange County Bar Association OfUcers' Wives League. of speak when the iecretarial Oran&e 1 County. a.nd Retired IT'S A FACT! Clean1d and Pre11ed Frie With A $5 Cl1anin9 Ord1 r __ ........ ~._ __ __._ ,, • _..i· Officers Association Orange ~ .. -·-··---aor--..OWmner-=eoun_~atiter are -joining on Thursday, Aug. 7. forets for an annual picnic in The gathering will take W. E. Hart Memorial Park. place. tn the Aladdin re:stau. Orange beginning at 11 a.m. rant, Anai,e;m, with a social Sun~ay, Aug. 10. hour at 6:30 p.m. preceding \Vives, husbands and guests dinner at 7. are Invited to enjoy the The speaker's topic will be g~_es. enterta!nme~t and a Availabllty of the Legal Aid p1cn1c lunch which will be ser- Servicc in Orange County. His ved .at I p,m. (OllUW 1tN ltr llmll9' tllllfl If you spent 30 seconds lookin g at 1 . ifac~Hof 'o urs~ag sain ples,'lt woula--'-1~~~~ -~~j"'"'"'"'-====-==o=l· WE Sl'ECIAUZE ·take you over 9 hour~ to see t he m all -I • I so com e ea rly and bring yo ur lunch . _DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN 12 Blks. No. of Bullock'tl ORANGE ·e .tll 1t:11lt Ger-ti .,. W.UM .. YH' ,.._,. ... ti e We •pHi•llq 111 oll Leotllor ...S hr 1'ri9'111H ..,.._"· ........... tr1111 ,.,.,.." ••• w..w1 .. °'""' e F"'f T~ Clt ths !IN Noplliia • 9"Cs.itr • Alllf ...... ·9f •II ~ of Mefl llM WeMM"111letlli .. • D,.... '""' t-r Jtnl .. a114 Pronlftf t•nM•fs • wtllf• ~· ,,.,, l'HONE: 675·6511 • talk also will cover the ques· Cribbage boards, ca rd s . lion of legal ethics. chess and checkers may be HOURS: '·5:)0 DAI LY CLOSID SUNDAY The Bar Asspciation pres· brought, and offerings will in-llm••••••-••••mmiiiiiiiiili •• .!:l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.I 1dent, now in partnerMlp wilh elude Senior Citizen Olympiel- • .. HUNTI NGTO N CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 192·SS01 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA 545.9415 0,... M9dry. ThunlltY & P:rW•Y 'till t IM'l'I• Crellllt Teffftl' AvalleDI• .. ~~ .PENDtETON: his twin brother John C. Pen+ Games. ny in Newport Beach, is a Reservations may be ob· na~ive ~aUfornian. He re-tained by calling Maj. Bill C. ceived hlS Jaw degree from Hall, 546-9029 or fl.1aj, Malthew the Uniyersity of Southern Kennedy, 673+7958 by Monday California and began his law Aug. 4. ' practice in association wilh'i,""=========:I Judge Karl Davis. Reservations for the dinner and meding may be ma<H wit.h Mrs .. James R. Orr at S<t--OIU an . y Sharp at 52$+647!. Mem rs and guests an invited attend . IT'S NEW! Tllo llao41nt -· .... styll09 ol4 .... 1 *MIRROR* PO·LITELY Wardrobe Fun-damentals: U11 • Ml•IOI • l'O·llTf.lT • wlltl .,..vr Ml~ tr '"""Y "'!•rl< •.. .,.. Cl" -!Iii qc• tf .,.ur ~•••II ''' .,..vr ctlfl\lre wllll fuH "~­ ....... ""' lwMlll • RiJl, Br•ss Finish • Hi-Quality Mirror e Adjusteb1e Light •nd , M irror • R•mov•ble Tote Beg • Port1ble Sprir111· T •nsion Poli ORDER NOW! 511 NOW. NEW FAU Pendleton's• FOR MEN " WOM&N MAJOR CREDIT CARDS . '" (•t• Mesi It'•~ sintJrls PA•IC CONY.IN llNTlY, Jui! t '''' '''"' I UI t .. I l fttrtft(t 0'1N DAILY DE JtAftTMENT 8TORie: •:JO ••• 1116 NEWPORT IOULIVARD Frii • ., l~• 1•' CENTµLiY lOCATEO AT NEWPORT AND HARIOR BOULEVARDS .. -· . Daily 10 °10, Sun. 10·7 -FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 1 & 2 ONLY! LOOK ALIVE AND LOVELY IN BONDED SLACKS Our Reg. 2.78 Value 2 Dau• 011111 2.22 _ Charge II! SQ ~leek! Slacks \\•ith elastic sets on the waistbands. Lightweighl to keep you cool coloray, acetates, jersey and malle jersey. Flatter your figure in good tal5te. l\lisses S.18. 1200 HARBOR BLVD . Corn'" uf Wil •on and Harbor COSTA MES • • • • • • ' Costa Mesa ·Today's Flaa) · N.Y. Steeb IOL 1.2, NO. 183, 3 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST I, '1969 TEN 'CE~ Coast Wants ·to. Cut Out I:inal Freeway Link By l\AtlDY SEEL YE llf the 0.1'1 .. lllH SI•" Councilmen from four Orange Coast :ities hope the last link or the proposed )range Freeway (Route 57) will be ~liminated. At a meeting of lbe 11-lesa Verde Home Jwners Associatiori Thursday night, ~p­ lesentatlves said the freeway should be otopped at the San Diego Freeway or be ·outed east to join the proposed Corona lei Mar Freeway. ~ "We must act if we want the Div ision or Highways to consider-our propoaals,'' Huntington B e a c h City Councilman George McCracken said to a large crowd gathered at Esiancia High School in Costa Mesa. "ffuotington Beach residenl!I were not. unified when they bad a $ance to change the route ot. the HIJntington Beach Freeway-so the Division of Highways made the decision,'..:, he said. City Councilmen from Costa ~1esa, Fountain Valley and Newport Beach acreed that realdents should p;esent ont major recommendation to the route planning division. The opinions ·were· voiced .at a panel discussion held at the high school. Two representatives from the Division of Highways' Division 7 and Al Koch, Orange County road commissior.er, presented factual background to the dis· cussion. The area under study by the Division or Highv.·ays is a 10. 7·mile strip, one n1ile wide, fpl\owing the pa th of the San· ta Ana River. Sid Ellicks, district planning engineer for the Division or Highways, said, "\Ve must sti11 conduct studles to determine the possible locallon of the last link or the freeway. The route will not be adopted until after a public hearing to be held after the studies have been com· pleted." Ellick.s said the department is study· ing four possibilities for the route of the freeway. ''lt could go all the way to the proposed Pacific Coast Freewly, s1•dng ell3t to meet the Corona de! '-far Freeway, swing west to meet the Hunt· inglon Beach Freeway or end at the San Diego Freeway." Koch said that a freeway will eventu· ally be necessary to relieve the trafUc pressure on Harbor Boulevard. "Traffic studies will detennine which route will be needed." '\..__./) Councilman Wllla'rd T. Jordan of c.o.ta ~1esa said the city hasn't adopted an official position on the issue yet, but noted ''we must light to see that the · Orange Freeway doesn't run down the east side of the Santa .Ana River." ' John Harper, Fountain Valley Coun- ellman, added that the proposed free:"a1 would "reduce oor industrial land and prevent an acet.ss t'o the river bed tor (See FREEWAY, P•re Z) l(ennedy Inquest Denied Judge Says Lower Court Must Take First At;tioi:i BOSTON (UPI) -The chief justke of the Massachusetts superior court today rtjf'cled a district attorney's request for a judicial inquest into the fatal auto wreck involving Sen. Edward J\.f. Ken· ntdy, saying the investlgation was not 1'il\in his court's jurisdiction. In a terse two--paragraph statement, Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro said the request by Dist. Atty. Edmund S. Dinis o{ New Bedford was in the "exclusive juri,~diclion of the district court." ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -A· 23- year-dd, former Eastern M i c h i g a n University student has been arrested and Dinis informed ne\vsmen Thursday he had sent a letter to the judge requesting the inquest into an auto accident July 18 on Chappaquiddick Island in which a car dri~·cn by Kennedy plunged off a bridge into a tidal pond. Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, a Washington secretary, drowned in (he mishap. The judge, who said he received. first word of the inquest through the press, ad· ded, "I just don 't see any precedent for it. All the district altorneys l've talked to never heard of such a lhing. "~1y research confirms my initial reac- tion that the request is not within the jurisdiction of this court," he said. Tauro said Dinis would be infonned or his decision today. •·No provision of the law has come lo my attention nor have J been able to find any precedent which would permit the superior court to conduct the inquest," Tauro's statement said. "The district attorney bases his request explicitly on Genera: Laws, Ch. 28, Sec- f""ri '<-"'~+---charged with the slaying-of Karen-Su• Keeping Ber Cool Eor Kris Laun, 18, lifeguard at Orange Coast College swimming pool jn C_psta Mesa, the ren1edy for hot weather is a simple matter. All she> has to do is jump in the pool. What presents more of a problem 1 . .f6t Kris is keeping those shoulder length. tresses out of her face when ee SUt:fQ~S; I .., -. ' s~Uementeans Buzz!ng Over Visit by President Heavy preparations are near com· pletion today for the anticipated Aug. 11 arriva l of President .Nixon in San Clemente -two years ago a drowsy Spanish village which has become American's second capitol city. No official word has come from the \Vhite House. but sources close to the world·touring chief executive say he is due back on the Orange Coast abOul two days before a gala, Aug. 13 state dinner for Apollo It's astronauts. Apparently the first st~te dinner ever held outside \Vashington . .the affair al Los Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel. w.ill draw all 50 state governors, score5 of diplomats to honor the three moon astronauts. Typically, only San Clementeans, Nixon associates who prefer not to be identified and other similar ·sources seem able to offer any definite comments on each nt\V development. "No, of course we can't say anything. minlstrative headquarters. Besides the presidential bead.quartus, the LORAN instaJlation has also sprouted a center for White House aides' work, plus a U.S. Secret Service bureau with dormitory facility. Orfginally established as a radio navigational Installation, lbe Coast Guard base -Where Nixon's official helicopter ~tarine Corps One will land -is now the locatloii. of a critical, world-wkSe emi- munieations center. A telephone hot line to the Kremlin itself is among 900 separate Jlnes which v.•ill be manned by White House com· munications experts, with apparently no Coast Guard involvem~nl. Curses, Heineman, 18, .seventh sex murder victim in this area in the past two yean, authorities announced today. At a news conference called by state authorities, the suspect was identified as John Norman Collins, a nephew of 1 state police-corpor-al. -Police alleged that the site of the slaying was the corporal's home in Ypsilanti, to which Collins had acctSS while the family was on vae1tion. AuthoriUes decllned to Unll: Collin!, of Ypsilanti, with the 1\x previous sex kill- ings in this twin-university area, but pro- secutor wuuam F. Delhey ol Washtenaw County said, "We will consider other charges, naturally. We wi U be checking him out rega'rdlng the other crimes." 'IMPOSSIBLE-A HATED WORD' Optimist lrnne~an Collins at his arraignment today .stood mute before Circuit Judge Edward D. Oeake, who ordered him to jail without bond. A preliminary hearing was set for' Aug. 7. A Man in the 'Hot Seat': Police said Collins lived across the street from where another victim, Joan Schell, lived while attending Eastern ~lichigan University. Airport Chief Bresnahan Collins, a nephew .by marriage to a state police corporal, was arrested By JOHN VAL TERZA Thursday night at his Ypsilanti home. ot IM o.u~ '"'' s1at1 The announcement came at a news This week, Orange Count! Airport conference called by state police director Director Robert Bresnahan lebrated Frederick E. Davids, appoir.ted by Gov. his 48th birthday, and he's hap about it \Villiam G. Milliken to head the in· -largely because he has surv ed. vestlgation. He allows that h?s job is Jhe county 's '-1lss Belneman disappeared and was hottest of "hotseat" positions. It's a job slain July 23. Her body wa.1 found nude, full or ·criticism, long hours, court suits beaten aod strangled in a wooded gully and endless planning session!, between.the twin univusity cities of Ann On the ·wan of his office, flai'lked by ¥bor and Ypsilanti. prints of the Navy's Blue Angels flight --------------.. team in ection, hangs a mode st in· St.efc ltlarfcets NEW-l'ORJ{ (API -The 1tock market bounded to another strong gain today, as It mended its rally through • third straight session and closed the week on a winning note. (See quotations. Pages 2().. 21). Foiled! scriptlon: "~1\racles are accomplished by pasilive thinking." TAKE MIRACLE ~ Bresnahan sub&cribes to that. e. has to. lt may take a miracle te solve 11 the woes of his job. The airport he administers has never had more buaineu or criticism. Traffic, both private arid commercial, is at an all time high. So is public feeling about the jets now using the once 1lecpy air strip. llis firs~ stint at airport management, however , was in Battle Creek, Mich., near his hometown of Oowagioc. He held that posl for nearly live years. Xirlines and flying have monopolized Bresnahan's life. His present family life is no difftrent. He admittedly defied his father in 1943 to enlist in the Navy's Oiaht tralning pro- gram. "He was a veteran of the World War t cavalry and wanted me -lo join that branch, but I chose the Navy aqyway." After World War 11 he resumed his ~tudles and became an efficiency expert. and engineer for a manufacturec of jet engine parts in Michigan. TE'iT PILOT Bresnahan has served as a test pilot. a r1tght instructor and holds credentials as a pllot for both OC3 and OC4 aircraft. .. His two adult sons, Robert and Jerry. plan to become airline pilots after they complete college. "My daughter, Patricia, is a college music major. She plays the trumpet," be said, smiling. We refer all questions to the "While House," says Kenneth lcavoni, Secret Service agent·ixharge at the San Pan.lu.u'tdler Loses Duel With Police "I've got a jol> where the ground rules can chang!t each day. It's far different than the work of mos( other small airport managers who tell me they're trying like crazy to increase service . to teir 1ermlnals. I have to do the reverse.•· Hr and his wife of 25 years, '-1abel, live in Fountain V1Uey. Clemente Inn. . The sudden transformation of tile city of 17,500 persons inlo a part·time focal point of international politics has brought many major changes to the town They range from applleatlon for a $115,000 Cederal grant and city approval 10 spend $10,000 to toughen UJ> the San Ccmt!nte Police DepArtment, to a hole k.nockct: in a wall bttwecn the Nixon man~;ion and adjacent U.S. Coast .,Guard sta1ion. President Nixon \viii drive ttU'ough to commute between the JO-room Summer \Vhile House and Ille long ranae radio navigational <LORAN) facility via aolf cart, working in nt\\'IY·bullt ad· I A bikihi-clad panhandler parried and thrusted a! plainclothesmen on the Balboa beac.hrront Thursday afternoon with an antenna ripped from ·a parked car •. Bue the .-dnloman In ~nod never pt a dion!>e to i:ry tooche. . ln1C.ld, lho wound tip ln the baJUlle. PolL., Aid the swordplay Incident started like this: t The offtcerS, weartn1 beach clothes, were approacbed at the J5th Street beach by the 17-}'ear-old West Covina girl. She asked lhem for "1 nick.le, a dime, anY:UtlnC.YOU can spare." Tho-otfktrs toot out the.Ir walleta and !lhowed her some badges. ·-She tooll: otr nmnin1 and difappeared Into I.be O"OWd of beachgoers. Morilttltll laler the plainclothelmen aaw her run of( the beach onto 14th ltrctt •nd OCed Front. She grabbed tht. antenna ol. 1 car belonatng to an oft~ Chino p61Jceman who wu on the bea<*· The girl twisted thflntt:al tube off and came, at lhe officera. they said. She trltd a few iwlpe11 but missed. As the glrl rodt to pollC'f. hef!Clquarter11 she shouted ot>sctnltie.s and "fouabt us all the 1''3Y Jn," the officers said. Slie faces charge• of ttslsUng me5\ and panllandlln&. The issues that "dominate Brtsnah n'ii day range from studying solutions to airport growth in th!.._county to answcrlnr complaints about jet nol&e and w~klni with at least three county departfue!" which have direct adminiJU'allon1f segments <I airport oervlce. Bresnahan• ii a abort, stocky man a direct manner. TOOK P081TJON r I He stepptd Into tht airport manage~ slot In Man:h of 1968, bucking ~· pet!Uon Jt1Jm w other applica~ for e job. Stfort. that be manaacd Rivcn Jfk County's system of airports. • • ' ! , • II is at that home. on Friday ev!ninp. he says, when his firm conviction igainst lh::o word "lmpossiblf'" c1n lose its vigor . "Sometime!! when J get home on thost frlday nJ&hU I nally think that some !'hlngs are Impossible. ''That ~lsappears come M o n d a y , though." . AVID HOBBIES AM ',\'.hen · ?tioDl:IM comes the relax· atlon from gatdtnlni ana fblifn.g -his moat avid hobbies~--way to lhe tenr;Jon or 8 bu57 ~e; \\!hen he speaks he may rlae from his desk which ts covered with tlotumentt ~nd 11lrcr1rt modeb. He will wlOOer tS.. BRESNAHAN, Pa1e It I I .. ~tion_ll. Tbis section JUld alLotberJ.c1aad __ sections clearly indicate that the diatrict cc.urt has exclusive jurisdiction OYtt such: proceedings and have no applicaUon to the Superior cour.t," be said. Massachusetts law says if the medical examiner "is of (the) oplnioo that the ~ death may have been caused by the act or neglige nce of anothet, be ahall at oncti notify the district attorney and a jU5Uce of a district court within whose jurisdk• t1on the body was found ••• " Air Cal Asks To Sell 'rickets · Beyontl~e By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tlM Dllllt' ,.... l llff Air California today •sked the Civil AeronauUcs Board rfor certUlcatloa u a oeheduled-d<>m8tlc-ai<-carrlu. _ 'Jbe certification would aDow the Orange County·based · airline to RB fligh t ticl(ets to anywhere in the world. JniUal react.ion of Newport Beach cil1' olficials to the Air Cal propOsal was one of concern. ,;This obviously means Air Cal would have more business, more traffic, more fligtil.l!I and more Usei of 0ra-nge Countr, Altport," said City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt. . Air Cal president Carl A. Benscoter in- dicated Hurlburt i.s right. Benscoter aa1d if t.he CAB dC!eS approve the certJflcaUon, It would broaden the airline's "potential for expansion." lt would make it po8SJDle for passengers to make lnteratate a!>d overseas coMectm-lttlre Air CaJ ticket coonter at Orance C6lmty Airport. Only one~. ticket, . with aa .. JDfl\1 "coupons" aa.requireCI, would have le be purchased. an Air Cal spokesman & plained. The coupons would serve as transfeis on aJrcraft certified to fly beyond the state's borders. Afl' Cal, which does not have an ~ lerstate permit, would Cy lhe ~et'9 to ajrporls where the transfers Would bi made, such as at San Francisco. "Through CAB cert i fi ca ti on,•• Benscoter said, "travel on Air California would become available to Interstate air travelers and Air California passenam would be permJtted to book continuing air travel on domestic and foreJgn carriers.'' CAB cef1if)cation also would enable the airline to bid for military and NASA com- mercial alr movements, as well as in- t.rstate-dlarler nights be said. A 3ubo stantlal Increase In cargo and• freight traffic also could be_ expected, he added. The boost in freight flights could mean' IS.. AIR CAL, Pace ZI Orange Coast w~daer Turn on the air conditioner or get out to the beach because bot weather is in ltc:re for the coast during lhe weektod. with temp- eratures bending into the high IOa. INSID"E TODAY Skurockc~hg Ooilf Vf 111td~ col oare Ii ropldlw ,_.,_go~ Ung lick 0-IUZll'l'f Q&at no one ·co• •fiord. P•O• 12. ' 'lfrM ,, ...... ' ~ 1: 11..::.~ Clttti.... 'I.ct __ ~kl 2t --' -•Cl.........,. II ,.. --. ...... ' .... -·---··-~ ••1tr1111MtM ~ 'f F 1 ,.._. ...,, .,.....,. .. ~ 1• .......... 1,.4 • L..-, fl W_........ M *'""tLk_...tt " ' ' . • • .. ... ' ;_;. UP'I T•ltpl\9t. frt'" l<tA.SA 1-• ltefleetions on the_ Moma -:::~\Vbat wou1d you do i{ this figure approached you on the moon? Snap : "!:a picture of it, of course. Figure inside moonsuit and protective face · ;t~pJate is astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin. His traveling companion, Neil l:Arm!ltrong, was cameraman. Armstrong took photo as Apollo 11 ~f -astronauts romped on eeri"e, unreal world of tortured gray terrain :J;that is lurrar surface.--~ · I ·" .. :~esa Woman Recovering ·if rom Step to Transplant ~trs. Colleen Randall, 1206 Parnell Pllce, Cpgt1 Mesa, is recovering from the first step on the long road leading lo Frot1t Pqe 1 FREEWAY ... equestrian trails." Harper noted that "fountain Valley hopes t.he freeway will be shifted slightly ea.st to meet the end of the proposed Corona de! }..far Freeway." Don McI.nnis, Neweon: Beach Council· man, ~resented simdar ideas when he said. ' The freeway sbould be terminated at the San Diego Freeway or meet the Corona del Mar Freeway." ~fter the page! discussion. the Mesa Verde Home Owners passed a resolu- tion that hopes the Division of Highways :trill consider ending the freeway at the Ian Diego Freeway or join the Orange Freeway with the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway. a kidney transplant ne1t year. Her second kidney was removed !uly 22 at Orange County Medical Center and if things conlinut: to go well, she will return home next wed. ri.trs. Randall will hive to r;urn to the medical center twice a weelr: for the next year. however, to receive dialysis treatments. She will spend four lo six hours-at the cen(er on each visit The Colleen Randall Trust Fund now totals $11,~ enO!J&b to conli_nu.e with the dialysis trealment. An anonymous con- lribution Of f7 ,500 made her lreatment possible. Contributions toward the ultimate figurt of $25,000 needed to save her life, can be made in care of the eoueen Ran· dall 'J'rust Fund, U.S. National Bank, 1145 Ne."·port Blvd., Costa ri.tesa. From PIJfle 1 BRESNAHAN IN 'HOT SEAT' ... around the nffice al times, then slt dov.-n abruptly. He speaks with a seMe of urgency. "Some people have criticized me for being an impatient man, and 1 have to agree with them. I am impatient." Jumping immediately into the mass of iS!lues facing the county's aviation pic- ture, he examined the concept of public desire and npinion about the issues. He sees an immediate need for tapping DA il i Pl lOI (Ml.f.H.01. COl.-'1' P\llll.IHI ... COM,-Afli ••Nrt N. w,,4 1'rwWl!'lf -~,_.,., J•d1 •· Carl•'f Vici Pr.-..t •!!oil ~fl ...... , . ' T~.,..,, K••"ll , .. , .. Tht111~1 A. Mvr,llift• ,,.,._.,.. 1•11tir cw.--3JO W•1t l•Y S!tt•I tl1ili11t Aili,•••: r.o. ••• 11•0, •2•2• --.........., .. kl'l12!11Wttl M-.......... a..-._," m ,.,..., •-• Hurlll!!t"" ee.dl ... ,_h Sll'fll ' the pool nf public opinion on the airport issues -sentiments that have yet to get much attention, he says. ··1 sit at more public hearings than yoU can imagine. and it seems that I alway:;; see the same people there, and sometimes I think that there has to be a better wa:t of sampling the maj ority opi· nion than lhe public hearing. "It seems the only people who come lo them are against something. There are few 'vbo are for something." ' Included ' in the silent 1najority. Bresnahan says, is the county's industrial community, which has yet to be heard \\'ith any intensity on airport growth mat· lers. "I really expect a strong sho"'ing by in- duslry en the issues. After all, the airport is th.eir !Ue's blood." Unlil ·public officials hear from more spokesmen (or industry and the milHon.5 or other private citizens. "I don't think \\'C have an accurate indic11Uon o( what people want (Or aviation in Orange Coun- ty.·• says Bresnahan. "I realy wonder if we're analyzing the public pulse right." He says he greatest hope is for a smooth, orderly system o( planning for the txpanded air service to Orange Coun· ly communitit!s. "lf we can Sl.lstain a system of smooth planning where all segments fall into place - a series of small decisions - we'll solve thls thing. And I really believe it will be solved." He critici zes arch foes of expansion or the present tenninal for drawing paralles of the Orange County tenninal wllh Los Angeles International Airport. "Thal's a ridiculous comparison," says lhe airport chief. ,;There is quite a difference between the 250 jet departures a day with four· engine craft al L.A. and the 20 departures of twin-engine aircraft at Orange County each day." He also urlou1ly questions lhe \'alidily cf many cf the complaints from the same aector nver airport noise. "If lhrsc planes are indef'd causing 11 great noise problem, then \\'hy aare con- I Policy Explained U.S. Can Still '· J • Fight Ill Asia LAHORE, Paklslan (UPI} -White House sources said today that President Nixon's no-more-Vle tnams policy v.·ouJd not bar future U.S. miULary intervention in Asia If Communist a1gresslon gravely threatened to change the balance of . power there. The Wh.ite House sources said Nixon had reached this decision after talks with government leaders in the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, South Vietnam, Jndia and in Pakistan today with Gen . Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan. the military president. The sources said thal despite his public assertlOO/i that he would avoid any future Vietnams he had t'A-·o major reservation.s after his talks: If there is a major attack across the borders, or a nuclear threat, the United States would have to consider the possibility of taking military action. If there is a military action by the communists which threatened the in· ternalional balante of power, that too, W<1uld be a factor in causing the Pre!i· dent to abandon h.is hands off military policy; the White House sources said. · The sources said Nixon found that Thailand and 1ndia were particularly worried about the p<>SSibillty of Chinese ·From PIJfle 1 AIR CAL ... use or Air Cal's Boeing 737 jets over.Ught at County Airport, Newport city sources said. They pointed out that mruit cargo is: 5hipped at night by many ajrlines at ether airports. Th.is is done to get ma1· imum service from the multi-million dollar aircraft, which carry passengers generally in the daytime. Jf granted a CAB certificate, Air Cal would be the first scheduled domestic carrier to receive permanent CAB ccrUiication In more th an 20 years. "I imagine the city council will wan! tG know a lot more about this," said Ne"·port City lt1anager Hurlburt. "'On the face nf it, this request appears net to be in the best interests of the city. But the council will have to know more about its implications before any official posi· ti on can be taken." No-date far a hearing-on the ipplicaffoft 1.~ expected to bt: set by the CAB for at least two or three weeks, Air Cal spokesmen said. The airline also has pending before the CAB an application Ior suvicce from Southern California to tbe Pacific Northwest cities of SU.tile and Portland. The cities of Newport. Beach and Ccsta Mesa and Orange County government earlier this year prolested the added service. A recilmmendation on the Pacific Northwest application. which would permit Air Cal to fly out of state for the first time, may be forthcoming from CA9 heating officers in "possibly a men th," Air Cal official said. Air Cal began operations in January, 1967, wilh Olghts: froom County Airport to San Francisco. It now provides service al.so at Hollywood-Burbank, Ontario, San Josr. and Oakland airports. The airline operates a fleet cf six I JS. passenger Boeing 737 pure jets. It started wi1h two SO.passenger tu r bo -pr Op aircraft. lractors and dt:veloper~ bui lding new homes in the area and sell ing them quite successfully?'' Me \\'OLilri like airport and noise critic~ lo "lake the lime to lcn rn \rhat the real raclor~ arc and offer some constructh'e sp l4tions." Land use compalibllily surrounding an air port is the key issue in !olving pro- blems ~·ith no ise. he says . "Every airport I can think of wa~ first built on the outskirts of towo aw!lv from residential zones. and go,•ernn1cr;t agen cies allo"'cd the development or residential areas to a point "'here thty met the boundaries of the airpo rts." Residential areas "'ill never become a rampatible use if they adjoin airports, he. belie,·es. "E''en H ll'e do get aircraft '''ilh quieter rngincs -and I believe that we 'viii. evenlually -you can never eliminate the fear of a crash from the O\Vnel of a hu1nc. Sallslics still won't disprl lhat fttlin g that a jet might come zinging do1\•n his chimney some da)'." Bresnahan offers no set solutions to the county's airport service question, but ~ars adamantly that if the majority of the county's taxpayers desire a certain plan. "then it will be built.'' And 1s far as a time limit to th"! solu· lion. he Is uncertain, too. "fl might take four or five aeneralions or living '''ilh the problems of air travel bot ore a soolulion could be found. It ·~ hard , t\'en impossible -I hate to u3e that word -to say." 'CAS INO NIGH T' TO HELP DE AF The money will be funny, but the caia:e will be :i;trious. Deaf . youngsters, through the John Tracy Clinic and the Ac'llve 2o.30 lnterna- tional's Projf'Ct Deaf Foundatkm, will be lh~ ~ntficlarles of the: SOI.Ith Coast 20--30 Club's fir st annual "Casino Night" in Newport Saturday at tlie South Bay Club. The 15 event \\'ill brgin at 7; 30. Commun1st a11gresslon. J:iere in Pakistan, there was not so • mucb emphasis on that as on the desire or this country to get more U.S. military equipment. Pakistan has deveJopid In- creasingly close ties with Peldng follow. ing a cooling of its friendship With the United States since the days nf the Elsenho~·er administration. The United States embargoed arms shipments to both India and Pakistan following their 17-day war in 1965, The sources said Nixon recognizes that th.e embargo operated to the disadvantage of Pakistan because it did not have other resources available to India. But when asked whether this meant the United States was leaning toward resumption of . arms aid t o Pakistan, While House cfflcials said this was not necessarily the case. At the wd of his Lalks today ·wilh Yahya the sources said the subject was "still under review.·• Tho.se were the same . words used by Secretary of State William p. ij.ogers when he talked with Y ah ya two months ago . The sources said it was clear lhat Nix· on has hardened his attitude on the ques• lion of possible U.S. military aid in this area since he. begaD-his tour almost two weEks ago. - They said wbile still hoping to confine American assta:tance lQ Asia to the economic sphere, the President bad ilec\ded not to rule out the possibility of military interevntion if that became necessary. The main cbjeclive, they iaid, was lo prevent the emergence in A.sia of a ch.aotic situation which might give China, with ill'l nu clear wupons. an invitation to move into some of the other cOWJtries by force. Director Named For County's Food Stamp Plan A direct.or for Orange County's new f'ood Stamp Program has been selected and Welfare Department Director Gran· ,;tlc 'Peoples said· the first stamps \YOU!d be distributed Oct. I . r Donald J. Herstenstcin , a co unty welfare staff member for the past six years, was appointed to the post which has a salary range of $940 to $1 ,170 a· monl.b. Herstenstein, 39. a resident of Santa Ana, placed first in a recent competitive examination for adminisllative-level positions, Peoples indi~ted. The new Stamp director Is a social work supervisor with degrees i n psychology and sociology from the University of Illinois. The Food Stamp Program was ap· proved by the ~oard or Supe:rviS<lfS last ~tay 13, as mandated by a state Suprem• Court decision nf last Dec. 30. A11ctio1i Co11ii1ag (]p Mrs. Diana Manvip, records clerk at Costa ?>.1esa Pollce Dep~t· ment, displays giant utensils which will be among items from police property.room auctioned' Satilrday begihning at 10 • a.m. About '40 bicycles also go on auction block in parking lot at rear of police facility, 99 Fair Drive. PR Man for -Irvine Co., - William Aldrich, Resigns QUITS IRVINE COMANY PR Ex•cutiva Aldrich • \\'illiam L. Aldrich. public relations and ad.,ertising direct.or for The Irvine Cnm· pany, today announ ced hls resignation and plans to establish a consulting firm. Aldrich, who has been with the Irvine Company for four years. sa id he will establish th e William L Aldrich Public Relations firm in Santa Ana. \Yilliam R. Mason, presiden•. of Thr. Irvine Cn., said Aldrich's resignation "'ill be effective Aug. 8. · "He is very capable in U1c public rela· lions 'field and I know he wili be sue· cessful in his new firm." r.tason said. Aldrich has been a lecturer at Pep· perdine College and at American ?t1anagement Assoc. seminars on the businessman's role in public affairs.-He also served as an instructor at Riverside and Tr"ine campuses of the University of California. Order of Pakistan Bes towed on Nixon - LAH.ORE. Pakistan (U P.I ) -The order of PakisLan was bestowed on President Nixon today at an oHicial ceremony for the "deep interest" he has shown in Pakistan. The 22-caral gold badge in the shape of 11 10 pointed star with the crest and star green and white emblem of Pakislan waS Nixon's first decoration as president. ·• AUGUST QUALI'fY SA VING'3 • Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS in the Country 'REG. 1329. REG. Sl25. REG. $110- J\fa1111 er SA LE $289. SALE $107.50 SALE $ 95. Our •umm.r ••I• 1l10 includes s•l.ct grou p 1 from Drexel -Henritdon -H•rit1ge. Alto Netlon1I, M.rge Carson, and numerous other li nes. Reductions on acce11orl11, lampt ind picturM are available. NntPOITNAOt 1717 w-o.. 641.-........ , ..... , ' • INl'Elt IOllS • LAGVHA HACH 345 ,._rftrl Ct1t1f tiwY. .tt4-65S1 °"" ,.. ... , 'T&' --• I - • ' ' UPI "Ill" trim ~l'L MARINER 6 PHOTO SHOWS SURFACE OF MARS FROM 2,100 MILES Crater at Left is 8 Miles Wide; Area of Picture Is About 30 Miles Much Like Moon Life on Mars Chances Dim -·~ PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The odds against finding life on Mars lengthened today as scientists 15tudied Mariner 6's closest-ever pictures or the red planet, showing a meteOrile· batte@ surface mush like the moon's. Black·and·white photographs televised across 58 million miles Thursday night disclos-. ed such utter desolation that only the most optimistic toold hoi:m for the presence of un- seen Uvlng organisms. There were huge and an· cient craters. many with sharp-edged smaller craters inside; mountainous highlands. precipitous slopes, crack lines and scattered rub· ble -but no hint that the mysterious planet harbors life or ever did. Scientistl ·who plan to send 1urface-scratching unmanned landing craft to Mars in the 1970s were cautious in their comments on the possibility of life, Said Dr. Robert Leighlon, physicist-astronomer heading a study of the pictures: "The camera system was expected lo provide an ansv.·er to the question of life on Mars. It is expected if there is life en ~tars it would be t n microsCQpic fonn or a low order of vegetation." The photographs, m a n y snapped with a telephoto lens as the 85Q..pound spacecraft swept within 2,130 miles of the ~1artian equator, covered a dark equatorial band some scientists have thought ntight bear vegetation because It seems to darken in the spring. What the spacecraft'• two cameras saw, however, were scenes like American deserts where dark mountain ranges rise from wastelaD<b: of bleached sand. -Tl1ere were no clouds and no signs of a haze which some observen h a v e theorized might be ,_vidence of rml.!lture in low places. Leighton com- mented: ''The blue haze that some say is on Mars max. not es.ist. The surface featUrcs are very clear." The televised images, some showing craters estimated a.s W ~G~ .\d small as a few city blocks est er111any ' 1m .. ts across, were an hour late ap-.. peering on monitor screetlll a Jct Propulsion Laboratory and G • G F u s some did not show at all. ettmg 3S l°Ofil 0 0 Sdentists at fi rst thought the trouble was at a receiving , and relay station at Goldstone, WASHINGTON (UPI) -from Bonn ''go u n d s Calif. Laler they said it might The West German government reasonable" but raised aome be in the spacecraft. has admitted the United States "The tape wiU be brought queslions. gave it small quantities of here from Goldstone." a poison gas for testing He questioned whether the spokesman said. "so we can purposes, a practice criticized shipments had been cleared try to find out where the trou- by one congressman as tan-with olher West European na· ble is." tamount to spreading around tions as he believed was re-Scientist! will get a second nuclear weapons. quired. chance at taking close-ups of A spokesman for the defense ". --The broader and most Mars when Mariner 7, five minister in Bonn confirmed basic issue is whether the days behind Mariner 6, makes his country received small United States should give a similar fly-by Monday night. quantities . of the ga.s after chemical and biological war-Silent for sever1l hours Rep. Richard D. McCarthy {)).. fare agents, regardless of Wednesday after apparently N.Y.), charged that such ship· their amounts. to other coon· being knocked askew by a ments took place for "severaJ tries,'' ,.fcCarthy said. "I re-small meteorite, Mariner 7 at years." gard them as similar to nu· last report was cperating .:rtic German government clear weapom, which Ameri· nonnelly and scheduled to taid it needed the gas to test can law prevents us from giv· begin taking approach pictures ... gas warning equipment su Ch ''i"i;;;ngi;;;;to;;;;;;ot;;;her;;;;;;;;;";;;at;;;ion.!;;;;;;;;;.";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tonl;;;;;;gii;b;;;t.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;O:.;;;;;;"i!I as that carried on son:ie tanks II end to test gas masks and methods of neutralizing gas . McCarthy, a frequent critic nf the Pentagon's chemical end biological war£are pro- gram, said the es.planation Cocktail Hour In Quarantine? SPACE CENTER, }louston (AP) -t.s there a cocktail hour in the 1unar quarantine st ation \Vhere the Apollc l l astronauts are in isolation? "It is not a dry ship," John 1'-fcLeai!h, a public relations orncer in quarantine with the crew, said Thursday In reply -,..a newsman's question. An~y Williams' 3rd Child Born BURBANK, Call(. iAPl-A thi rd child li1as bom early to- day to linger Andy Williams and bis wife, Claudine L<>nget, DELANEY BROS. • SEA FOODS • 2800 L• Fayette St .• Newport Be•ch- 673-3450 or 545-2217 ~~~~~~GOURMET~~~~~--. FREEZER SPECIALS Thurs., thru Sun., July 31 .. Aug. 3. WHOLE-.IMPORRD DOVER SOLE 1•" ,.._, .. di JUMBO PRAW~~ IOX $1295 · §urclaargeA••ured ' Tax Cuts Bloom ln ·Reform Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - With congreJ&ional approval assured tor the io percent in· come tax aurcllarie for sir months, the House Ways and f..feans CommlUee has com· pleted the biggest tax overhaul in modem U.S. history. The re.form package in- cludes bitter medicine ror some -but there are aignifi· cant and surprising tax cuts 1or nearly everyone~ else, especially low and middle In· come taxpayers. A committee spokesman said the package was the most extensive revision of tax law5 since the modern Income tax ·was imposed in 1913. The tax cuts, some of which would start next year, would deprive the federal treasury of about $7 J>illion. But the government would make up for the lllM through taxing groups as ••g ent l emen farmers." The \VC1ys and Means Com- mittee added to the package several other features that had been stripped off the com-_ COMMUNITY EVENTS AUG. 11·25 AUG. 20 LAST TWO CLASSES YOUTH DROWN· PROOFING YMCA Newport Beach Tho L .. t BIG EVENT l•for• School NEWTIMER OLDTIMER PICNIC & STEAK BARBEQUE Gam•i-Food-Art Oi1play FREE H•licopt•r Rid•1 • 1. The Guaranteed 8rowth~· Depoait $1,000 or more. When all your and Interest remain at Our 9Uiltiiittffd S.25% rate1 compounded dairy, your account wlll grow 30o/o ln51eara 23% ln4)'811rs 17%8)'811ra 3. The Bonus Plan. Here'• a 3-year account that lets ~% moreeacl\Y,,arthan puabook now earn at a 5% annual rate. so Bo currently earn 5.25% a 11981' wh., vlnga eam nta do. They Ian accounts 118 IScredllod at ihe end ol the 3-yoar pertod. multlples ol $1,000. lntarest can be to a passbook account and, when compounded dally, will earn 5.13% amoun~ In •mod quarterly 1or a year and • ., DAILY l'llOf §; -.,"it ... Mis!i~ts Maker He _G ' _at_Thimp FOUR M)CIMUM JITEREST iANSAT ~LIFORNIA FEDERAL 2~1'!!8!~~mo~~·eo~ We'll gu1rantH you a 5.25% annual rate, compounded dally, with Interest paid out to y9u each quarter. 4. The Basic Plan. The most nexlbla plan. You can Invest any amount of mooey and wlthBraw It whenever you wlah. II you -all your money and Interest In your account for a year at our current 5% annual rate with lntereet compounded dally, you'll receive an annual yield or 5.13%. Ycu..,,, Interest from the day you deposit your· money 'tll the day you wllhdraw It And the money you deposit by the 10th of any month eams lntereat from the 111, wlMrl It_... until querte(• end. LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd; near Adema • 648-2300 ' CLIFFORD M. WESOORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER also a ffe'Ord ing artlsL, at St. U.S.O.A.. CHOICE _ ML 9.5 ·,. J-.:.·~~k:;:~~i;•~id th• b•by Top Sirloin KEBOBS " boy, ~·etghlnR sevt'n pound!!. • l-------·-==~ .. ::.::o;.:.":;':11!1J:,:"'=":.:-;::=:;ot::,:"':.;:r""=":;•=•""':;•:i.:::•~l-==~,.::"":':'"'::,:'!-==~":!:""':!,!.,~"°::-=:::"':t>o~!Cle:u•:•:~------.J v.·a.s Dot imn1edialcly Darned . ._ __________________ ..... ' I --- • . . \ -. . .;.4 <l . . ' :.1 • • 1.Jefleetions on the Jtfoo11 :-t:Wbat would you do if this figure approached you on the moon? Snap : 1 :a picture of ;t, of course, Figure inside moonsuit and protective face '.]!plate is astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin. His traveling companion, Neil ~; Arm!ltrong, was cameraman. Armstrong took photo as Apollo 11 ·1~.; astronauts romped on eerie, unreal world of tortured gray terrain : ::that 1s lunar ·surface. :.!" .. -:~esa .Woman Recovering .. ,. :!from Step to Transplant ~1rs. Colleen Randall, 1206 Parnell Place, Co&ta Mesa, is recovering from the first step on the long road leading to Fro• Pqe l FREEWAY ... equestrian trails." Harper noted that "Fountain Valley hopes the freeway will be shifted slightly east to meet the end of the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway." . Don MclMis, NewP.Ort Beach Council· man, presented similar ideas when he said. "The f~way should be terminated at the San Diego Freeway or meet the Corona del Mar Freeway." After the panel discll!sion. the t.1esa Verde Home Owners passed a resolu- tion th.at hopes the Division of Highways ...Ul,consick-r ending the freeway at ihe , Ian Diego Freeway or join the Orange Freeway with the proposed Corona del Mar Freeway. • a kidney transplant next year. Her second kidney was removed July 22 al Orange County Medical Center arid if things continue lo go well, she will return home neit week. t.frs. Randall will have to return to the medical center twice a week far the•next year, however, to receive' di3Jysis treatments. She ""ill spend four lo six hours at the center on each visit. The Colleen Randall Trust Fund now totals.$11,000, enough to continue with the dia1ysis tre8iment. An anonymous con· l.ribution of $7 ,500 made her treatment po~ible. Contributions toward lhe ullimatc figure of $25,000 needed to save her Ufe, can be mad!: in care of the C-Ollt!:tn Ran· dall Trust Fund, U.S. National Bank, 1845 Newport Blvd., Costa. r.1eu.. From Page l BRESNAHAN IN 'H OT SEAT' • • • around I.ht. offi ce at times, then sit down abruptly. He speaks with a sense of urgency. "Some people ha.vt!: criticized me tor being an impatient man, and l ha ve to agree with them. I am impatient" Jumping inunediately into lhe mass of lssu~ facing the county's aviation plc- turt, he examined the concept of public de!lre and opinion about the issues. He sees an immediate need for tapping Dhll1 PILOT CUNIJl C04.'t PV•l ISMIM• CCW.,AH't tt•Mrt N, w.,4 ,. ... ...., ..,,. Pvtlbllt• J1d1 a. O.rft'f Viclf ,,....,. .... ~II ....... llU n,..,.,, ic .... n tf!i.r T~1l'lllS A. MVT,hi~• --"'1 l!llls CllM ..._ OfftM 3JO We•t 111 Sir••' tr.f1lli1t1 Mllrt•'t P.O. Je• I J•O, t?•26 --"""""' .. ldl, 2211 .,,."' ... -lllololwlt• .._.._. ...-: ttt F-1 •-1 ffl#lll"911111 ...,., ., "" ·-· the pool -Of publ ic opinion -0n the .airport issues -sentimenlS that have yet to gel much atlef'ti-On. he says. "f sit at more public hearings than you can imagine. and it seems that I ah\'ay:r; see the same people there, and somelime11 I th ink that there has to be a belier wa~ of sampling the majority -Opi- nion than the public hearing. "ll setms the only pe<i ple who come to lhem are aga inst someth ing. There are few \vho arc for something." Included in the silt!:nt majority, Bresnahan says, is the cnunty's industrial community, which has yet to be hea rd '''ith any Intensi ty on airport groy,·th mat- ters. "1 really expect a strong showing by in- du stry -0n the issues. After all, the airport Is their life's blood." Until publiol'offlcials hea r from n1ore spo kesmen for Industry and the million~ of -0t her pri vate citizens. "I don't think \\'e have an accurate indi cation -0r y,·hat people want fOr aviation in Orange Coun- ty.·• says Bresnahan. "I real y wonder if Y:e're analyl.ing the public pulse right" He says he greatest hope js ror a smooth. -0rderly system of pTanning for tht!: expanded air ser"vice lo Orange Coun- ty commun ities. "U we can S'UStain a system of ~mooth · pla nning where all segm ents fall into place -a series of small de<:lslons - we 'll solve this thing . And I really believe ii will be S-Olved." He crlliclzt!:s arch foes of expansion or the present tennlnal for drawing paralles of the Orange C-Ounly t.ermlnal with Los Angeles International Airpor1,. "Thaits a ridiculous comparison," says lhe airport chief. "There is quite a difference between l~l!'""t50 jet departUttS a day with four- engine craft at L.A. and the 20 departure! cf twin-engine aircraft at Ora nge County ea ch day.'' He also .seriously questions lhe \'alidity of many of the complaintl from the same 1ector over airport noise. "If thest plants are ln<1ced cau~in,i: " great noise probl('m, lhen ~·hy aare c.on- I Pollqf E~plclned U.S. Can .Still • .. Fight Ill ' LAHORE, Pakistan (UPI) -White House sources said today that President Nixon's no-more-Vietnams policy y,·ould not bar future U.S. military intervention in Asia I! Communist aggress1on gravely threatened lo change the balance of power there. The \Vhite House sources said Nixon had reached this decision after talks with government leaders in the Philippines. Indonesia, Thail and, South Vietnam, India and in Pakistan today with Gen. Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan . the military president. The sources· said that despite his public assertions that he would avoid any futurt!: Vietnams he had two maj-0r reservations after his talks: If there is a ma jor attack across the borders, or a nuc lear threat, the United States would have to cQnsider the possibility of taking military action. If there is a military action by the communists which threatened the in- ternational balance of power, that. too, "·ould be a factor in causing the Presi· dent lo abandon his hands off military policy, the While House sources said. The sources said Nixon found that Thailand and India were particularly worried about the possibility of Chinese From Page I AIR CAL ... use of Air Cal's Boeing 737 jets overnight at County Airport, Newport city sources said. They pointed ou.t that most cargo is: shipped at night by many airlines al -0ther airports. This is done lo gel max· imum service from the multi-million dollar aircraft, which carry passengers ge nerally in the daytime. If granted a CAB certificate, Air Cal would be the first scheduled domestic carrier to receive permanent CAB certification in more than 20 years. "I imagine the city council will want tn know a lot more about this," said Newport City ~1anager Hurlburt. '"On the face of Jt, this reque&t appears not to be in the best interests of the city. But U1e council will have to know more about its implications before any official posi- ti-0n can be taken." No date for a hearing on the application I~ expected to be set by the CAB for al leas! lY.'O or three weeks, Air Cal spokesmen said. The airlint!: also has pending before the CAB an application for servicce from Southern California to the Pacific Northwe.5t cities of SeaUle and P-0rtland. The cities of Newpc:irt Beach and Co,,ta Me.oia and Orange County government earlier lhis year protested the added service. A recommendation -0n the Pacific .Northwest application. v.·hich would permit Air Cal to fly out of stale for the fi rst time, may be forthcoming from CAB hearing office.rs in "possibly a monlh," Alr Cal official said1 Air Cal began operations in January, 1967, vdth flights troom County Airport lo San Francisco. It now providt!:s service Also at Hollywood-Burbank, Ontario, San Joor. and Oakland airport!. The airline operates a fleet of six 115- passenger Boeing 737 pure jt!:ls. It started with two 80-paasenger turbo -pr -0 p .aircraft. lractors and developtr.'i bullrling nt\v hon1es in th·e area and selling them quile successfully?'' Me 1rould like airport and n-0isc t'ritic.'i lo "'!ake the time to lctirn \\·ha~ the real factors arc and offer some constructi ve solutions." Land use compatibilily surrounding an airport is the key issu e in solving pro- blems y,·ith noise. he says. "Every airport I can th ink or \\'a" first built on the outskirts of town a'"'i1Y fr om residential zon es, and 1;overnn1ent agencie!'i allowed the deve lopment of residenti al areas to a point Y.'ht'rr. they met the boundaries of the airports."' Residentia l areas y,·ill never become a compatible use if they adjoin airports. he belil'\·es. "Even if \\'C rtO get 11ircraft )\'ith qu ietrr C'ngincs -and I believe that ""e 11·iH. C\'Cnlually -you can ne ver eliminate the fea r of a crash from the 0\1•ne~ of a horne. Satistics sUll won't disptl th11t feeling that a jet might come zinging down his chimney some day." Bresn ahan offers~no set solutions to the county 's airport service queslion, but says adamantly thal if the majority of the county's taxpayers desire a certain pla n, ''lhen it will be built." . And as far as a. time limit to the 3-0IU· I ion. he is uncertain. loo. "It might take four -0r five 1enerations of living "•ilh tilt problems -0f air tra,·el be.fore a soolution could be found. ll's hard , even impossible -I hate to u!'lc lh1t word -to say." 'C ASINO NIGHT' TO HELP DEAF !fhe money will be funny, but the cal.lie will be serioos. Deaf youngsters, th.rough the John Tracy Clinic and the Active 20-30 lnterna- tiooal's Project Deaf FoundaUon , will be the be neficia ries -0r the South Coast 20-30 Club 's first annual ·:ca.~lno Night" in Nt~·port Saturday at the South Bay Club. Thi; tS event 11'111 ~cg1n at 7:30. I • I Asia Communist 111resston , fJere in Pak.i!'ltan, there wa s not so much emphasis on that as on the desire ol thia: country lo get more U.S. military equipment. Pakistan has developed in- creasingly close ties with Peking follow. ing a.., cooling of its friendship with the United States since the days of the Elsenh-0wer administration, The United States embargoed arms shipments to both India and Pakistan foll~·ing their 17-day v.·ar in 1966. The sources said Nlxon rec-0gniz.ts that the embargo operated to the disadvantage -0r Pak.Istan because it did not have other re5outces available to India. But when askt!:d whether this meant the United Slates was leaning toward resumptl-0n of a.nns aid t -0 Pakistan, White House officials said this was not necessarily the case. At the end of his talks today with Y.ahya the sources said the subj.eel was "still under review." Those were the same words used by Secretary of . State William P. Rogers when he talk~d with Yahya two months ago. The sources said it was clear that Nix- on has hardened his attitude on the ques- tion of possible U.S. military aid in i.hL~ area since he"began his tour alm-0st two weeks ago. They said while still hoping lo confine American assistance to Asia to the t!:COOOmic sphere, the President had decided not to rule out the possibility of military interevnlion if that_ .became necessary. The main -Objective, they said, was to prevent the emergenct in Asia of a chaotic situali-0n which might give China, with its nuclear weapons, an invitation to move into s-0me of the other countri~ by force . - Director Named For County's Food Stamp Plan A director for Orange County"s new f"ood Stamp Program ha s been selected and Welfare Department Director Gran· \1i\le Peoples said the first stam ps 1vo u1d be distributed Oct. I. . Donald J . Herstenslein, a county ,.,.elfare staff member f-0r the past six years, was appointed lo the post which has a salary range of $940 lo $1,170 a monlh. Herstenslein, :19, a resident or Santa Ana, placed fir st in a recent competitive examination for adminlslrative level positions, Pt!:oples indicat.ed. The new stamp director Is a social 'vork supervisor with degrees i n psychology and sociology from the University -0f Illin-0is. The Food Stamp Program was ap- proved by the ~ard -0f Supervisors last May 13, as mandated Oy a state Supreme Court decision of last Dee, 30. Atietiota Co111itag lfp Mrs. Diana !Ylarwin, reco rds clerk al Costa Mesa Police Depart- ment, displays giant utensils which \vill be among items from police property-room auctioned Saturday beginning al 10 a.m. About 40 bicycles also go on auction block in parking lot at rear of police facility, 99 Fair Drive. PR Man for Irvine Co., William Aldrich, Resigns QUITS IRVINE COMANY PR Eltecutiv• Aldrich '\\'illiam L. Aldrich. public relati-0ns and advertising director for The Irvine Com · pany, today announced his resignatio n and plans to establish a consulting tirm. Aldrich, who has been with the Irvine Company for· four years. said he will establish !he Will iam L. Aldrich Public Relations firm in Santa Ana . William R. Mason, presidcn~ or The Irvine Co., said Aldrich's rcsignallon wi!l be effecti ve Aug. 8. "Ht!: is very capable in the public rt!:la- tions field and I know he y,·il i be sue· cessful in his new firm," r.1ason said. Aldrich has been a lecturer at Pep- perdine Co llege and at American t.1anagement ASS<><.'. scrninars on, the busi nessman·s role in public affair!'!. He also served as an instructor at Riverside and Irvine campuses of the University of California . Orde1· of Pakistan Bestowed on Nixon LAHORE, Pakistan (UPI) -The order of Pakistan was bestoy,·ed on President Nixon today at an <lfficial ceremony fQf the "deep interest" he has shown in Pakistan. /of The 22-carat gold badge in the shape or ,. a JO pointed star with-tRe crest and star green and whlte emblem of Pakistan w.as Nixon's first decoration as president. AUGUST QUALITY SAVING '3 \ •• Drexel French DINING TABLE ARM CHAIRS SIDE CHAIRS i11 the .Country illan11er REG. $329. SA l E $289. REG. $12 5. SALE $107.50 REG. 111 0. SALE $ 95. Our •ummer ••I• 11.a includes sel.ct groups from Dr•xel -Henr~on -Herit-oe. Also N1tlon1I, M.lrge C•rson, and num•roua othe r lin••· Reductions on 1c.cts•ori11, l1mP1 end plctur .. are available. · 7a1., 1NteJuoas P'rohMion•I fnt.rter Di't&t!Mrs LAGUNA 11.ACH 345 North CNtf Hwy. 49 4 .. lll A .. ..n.~le .+.10-..HSIO °"" .... ' '11l ' I ---· F 7 a !& F • ..... I I . ' a Surclaarge Assured Tax Cuts Bloom • In Reform Bill WASHlNGTON (UPI) - With congrwional approval assured for the 10 percent in· come tax aurcharge for six months, the House Ways and • . . DAILY l'ILllT /17 I Missile' Maker He Gets ~llrts at Dumps said. An 11umbillc11 assembly-• one wbk:b dlr<OOO<Cll the mWlle at the roomeo( ot la~ citing. Sellz. of Elberon, N.J., 111Jd he collected tb ,components aut of "idle curiosity" and to &how , """"1ty .00 qrdDanoe people that "all you ba\>e to do-Ill p out to the surplua yards and' look." . --Means Committee baa com- pleted the biggest tax overhaul in modem U.S. history. Seil% uid that actuaJIY. a.ssembllD1 an ICBM Is "a 500-man-yu r job,"' but no classWed knowled1e is netd· ed. Ul'I 1'111119 lrtfll .ll'L. MARINER 6 PflOTO SHOWS SURFACE OF MARS FROM 2,IDD MILES Crater a t Left is 8 Miles Wide; Area of Picture Is About 30 Miles Moch Like Moon Life on Mars .Chances Dim PASADENA, ~alif. (AP) - The odds against finding life on Mars lengthened today as scientists studied Marifler 6's closest-ever pictures of the red planet, showing a meteorite- battered surface much like the moon's. Black-and-white photographs televi.scd across S8 million miles Thursday night disclos- ed 5uch utter desolation that only the most optiriiistic could h~ for the presence of un- 5eert living organl!ms. There were huge and an- cient crater.;, rnany with :shar;,..edgcd smaller craters in5ide; mountainous highlands, precip.itous slopes, crack lines anCI scattered rub- ble -but no hint that the mysterious planet harbors life or ever did. Scientists who plan to send gurface·scratching unmanned landing craft to Mars in the 1970s were cautious in their comments on the possibility of life. Said Dr. Robert Leighton, physicist-astronomer heading a study of the pictures: '"The camera system was expected to provJde an answer to the que1Uon of life on h1ars. lt is expected if there is life on West Gern1an)'. Ad1nits Getting Gas Fro1n U.S. Mars it would be I n microscopic fonn or a tow order of vegetation." The photographs, m a n y snapped with a telephoto lens as the 850-pound sr,acecraft swept within 2,130 mi es or the h1artian equator, covered a dark equatorial band some scientists have thought might bear vegetation because It seems to darken in the spring. What the spacecraft's two cameras 'saw, however, were scenes like American deserts where dark mountain ranges rise from wastelands 0 r bleached sand. There were no cloudg and no signs or a haze which some observers h a v e theorized might be evi4ence of moisture in low places. Leighton com· mcnted: "The blue haze that some say is on ~1ars may not exist. The surface features are very clear." T·he televised images, some showing craters est1mated as small as a few city block!: across, were an hour late ap- pearing on monitor screens at Jct Propulsion Laboratory and some did nol show at all. Scientists at first thought the trouble was at a receiving and relay station at Goldstone. WASHINGTON (U PI) -from 8 on n ''a o u n d s Calif. Later they said it might The West German government reasonable" but raised 11ome be in the spacecraft has admitted the United States "ThC1ape will be brought gave il small quantities . of questions. here rrom Goldslone," a polson gas for te s t i 0 g He questioned whether the spokesman said. "so we c:an purposes, a practice criticized shipments had been cleared try to find out where the trou- with other West European na· hie is." by one ~gressmdi~n as tand lions as he believed was re· Scientists will get a second tamount "' sprea ng aroun quired. chance at taking close-ups of nuclear weapons. Th ~· d d t Mars when Mariner 7, five A 'pok.'man (or ''"'e defense . ._.. e roa er an mo~ · · I ·1 B "' ni· 'd basic i ss ue is whether the days behind Mariner G, makes mirus er n onn co inn~ United States l!ibould g I v e a similar ny-by Monday night. his coUntry received small So'lcnt (or ,e,eral •-·rs · · ( th rter chemical and biological war-111)U quantities o e gas a di , Wedne-'ay a'ler apparently R. h d o McC rth 1~ fare agents, regar ess Ol 31..1 • Rep. ic ar · a Y their amounts, to other coon· being knocked askew by a N.Y.), charged that tn'ch ship· d 1 small meteon·te. 'lan·ncr 7 at k I ( " al tries," :PifcCarthy sai . " re· i• ments too p ace or sever them ilar last report was operating Years." gard as sim to nu· nonnaUy and scheduled to t clear weapom, which Ameri· Thr German!h governmtent can law prevents us from giv· begin taking approach pictures The reform package in- cludes bitter medicine for some -but there are signifi- cant and surprising tax cuts for nearly everyone else, especially low and middle In- come taxpayers. A committee spokesman said the package was the most extensive r evision of tax laws since the modern income tar was imposed in 1913. _ The tax cuts, some of whlch would start next year, would deprive the fedetal t.reasury of about $T billion. But the government would make up for the 1065 through taxing groups as ''gentlemen farmers." The Ways and Means Com- mittee added to the package severa l other features that had been stripped ort the com- 1. The Guaranteed Growth Plan. Depoelt $1,000 or more. When all your money and Interest remain at our gum"antHd 5.25% anrfual rate, compounded dally, your account wUJ grow 30% 1n 5 years 23% In 4 years 17% In 3 years . I • 2. The Guaranteed Income Pl8a. Open an account of $1,000 or more for38 tot!O rnonb. We'll guerantff you a 5.25% annual rate.. compoundld daily, with Interest paid out to Yl?U each quarter. uid it needed· e gas to es in" to other natk1ns." tonight gas warning equipmeat such -,i·::;.~ii;;;iiiiiiii;;,i~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;jll as that carried on some tanks fl and to test gas masks and ' ~ OS In caM otllltdlhlp or emergency,~ ln8Y wllhdraw the neceaaJ)' funde at tho end of any quarter and get full lntereot fD Ullt elate. 3. The Bonus Plan. 4. The Basic Plan. methods of neutralizing gas. DELANEY BR • McCarthy, a frequent critic of the Pentagon's chemical SEA FOODS • and biological warfare pr.. • gram, aald the etplanation • Cocktail llour In Quara ntine? SPACE CENTER, llouston (AP) -Ts there a cocktail hour in the lunar qUarantine station where the Apollo 11 aStronauts are in isolation? .. ll Is not a dry ~ip," John ifcleail1h, a public relaUon.'i officer In quarantine with the crew, said Thursday In reply to a newsman's question. An dy Wi lliams' 3rd Child Born BURBANK, CaHr. CAPl-A third child wa11 born early to. .. day lo singer Andy WllUams and his wife, Claudine Longet, also a recording artist, at St. Joseph'11 hospital. 2800 La Fayette St., Newport Beach · 673-3450 or 545-2217 .------GOURMIT ------, FREEZER SPECIALS Thurs., 1hru Sun., July 31 -Aug. 3. WHOLE -IMPORTED DOVER SOLE 16" ,.._ ... di JUMBO PRAWS~~ IOX $12'5 u.s .D . .t.. CHOICE -... L Top Sirloin KEBOBS A l!lipoke:sman said the bnby hoy, weighing seven pound~. ~·aa oot lmrnedlatcty named. L., __________________ _., Here'a a a.rear account that lete 'PJ'1t aavlnga eam l4 % """" each. year than pasebook acoounto do. Tl>ey now eam at a 5% annual rate. so Bonui: Plan accounts ... currently eem 5.25% • yur when the oonua la credlled at tho end of the 3-year pe~ocf. ~ lff'/ emolln~ In multiples of $1,000. lnterast can be tron11em1efquarterly to a ptmbook account and, when l!lld for 1 year and compounded dally, will earn 5.13%, , The moot flexible plan. You can Invest any amount of money and withdraw It whenever you wlah. 11 you INve au your money and Interest In y.our account for a year at our current 5% annual rate with Interest compounded dal ly, you'll receive an annual yield or 5.13%. You eam Interest from the day you deposit your,money '111 the drt you withdraw IL And th.a money you deposit by the 1lllfi of any month eams lnlerastfrom lhe111, when It,_.,. unlll quarte(a end • C@!!f~g]tf!ef.~J!~!!ro§@:!i!!gs --NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL ·~ ·1· ff· ~ . . ···.~ ' . . ~~· : ·~ . ., . . . . ~ . M• > ~·., COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd: near Adams • 54&-2300 . CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER .\ - I r ' G I DAIL y ~IJ,OT EDITOBIA.L PAGE I • T• !-'l' · ' . ' ..... (1' " W ere It · ~ ....... -es .. :Fr.om \ I '' .... • • . ' ' \ ' . ' The Costa Mesa C Council has adopted . its fl.58 cities with lower rates, or course, but M are there ciUes with higher -substantielly higher -rates. A ten-year study of average tax rates in .Orange County shows Costa Mesa almost in the middle every time. This year promises to ·be no different. -:.;J~zk. million budget !or 195o;70. Needless to say, it !S, llkt , all budgets, a record o'\•· . Unlike previous years. discussion o~ the 1969-7~ budget sparked a debate\"1'hcn city coun_cilmen took it llJ?. The discussion was aqimonious at t1~es as Coun~ c1lman George Tucker and Councilman William L. St. Clalr attacked some figures. When jt was all over, th• offi~ial co,ta Af~sa city tax rate will be just the same as tt has J?een smce the city was incorporated -th~_ legal maximum rate of $l per $100 of assessed valuatff!n. This means that for basic municipal services, the ~·ner of a $24,000 house will pay about $60 next year. . Despite the fact that it draws a certain. ~mount..of attention each year, the adoptJon'Of the muruc1pal bu~g­ et isn't really very important in the over-all ta'!'. bill. Most Costa A'fesans pey a total roperty tax rate of about $10 per $100 of assessed valuation. ~bo~t one- tentb of' it is directly attributable to the basic city tair: rate adopted by the city council. The rest goes into a diverse nuiObed of district and taxing entitles. More than half of the '10 lg~s. to support JocaJ schools from kindergarten throu.&h JUn1or college. The Orange County treasury gets $1.68 of the tolat $10 rate a nd such districts as mosquito abatement, county , water, county libr~ry, take lesser arnouot;s. Some cities -Newport Beach, for ex~ple -have higher municipal lax rates but perfor~~,&e~~ices sup- plied by special distr icts in other munic1pal1l1es. Costa Mesans, for example, pay about 18 cents .per $100 of as· 6essed valuation to belong to the county library system. Newport's library is a city-operated institution. Like· \vise. Costa Mesans pay a healthy 33-cent tax rate for parks and recreation activities and a 12-cent rate for 6ewers and-traih pickuP:--- What finally matters in the tax picture is the total tax bill. Costa Mesa doesn't fare badly in this area when co~pared with other Orange County cities. There are (Newport taxpa,rers pay a lesser rate to ~ecure nQr· mal municipal service sucb as police and fire prote~­ tlon, library, sewers, but their portion ·of the ~chool bill is larger than Costa-Mesa's.) So far as the city budget ts concerned, the jqcome from property taxes -while importan,t -is not the Key to a weU-run municipal government. A healthy economy generates saJes tax income that Car ov.er- shadows property taxes as a dependable and growrng source of income. . · Costa Mesa's city administration and its city coun· cil don't deserve any particular commendation for "holding" the tax rate at $1; that's the, official rate and any increase would require a vote of the people. Th~y do deserve recognition for continued stimulation of oth· er sources of income, particularly sales tax income. de· rived from a husUing and still gro\ving business com- munity. Last But Not Least The world may very soon be beating a path to the doorway of Mr. Russell G. Poff. For Mr. Poff bas invented, o'! all things, a better mousetrap. The United States Patent Office informs us that r.1r. Poff's patent No. 3,430,380 provides a new method of holding the bait in a mousetrap that othenvise ap- pears to be conventional. Instead of the usual notched tongue in the trap, Mr. Poff uses a pair of" wire bait hold'ers that prevent the mouse from nibbling and flee· ing safety. • We doff to Mr. Poff! , 7/ it'a llUCh a grqJJ machine, :>W fl:! it!' 1 CC I President Goes Sore1ase1a'~ Biggest Job ; " Who Wrote Ted's Speech? Behind Curtain President Nixon becomes !he first ~merican President since lhe cold v1ar began to visit a Comm:mist country when bis plane puts. down in .Bucharest Satur· day afternoon . Presider.~ Franklin 0 . Roosevelt attend:!d a v.•artlme meetin~ ·if allied leaders al Yalta in the Soviet Union in febtuary, 194~. President Harry Truman look part 1n a I . meeting in July and August of the same year at Potsdam 1n East Gennany. President Ow:ight D. Eisenhower plannf'd to make a trip.to the Soviet Union in 19EO., but the invitation was cancCled by Ptemier Nikita S. Khrll!:hchev after the U-2 spy plane incident. However, President Nixon Jg no gtranger to Bucharest. lie was wann}y received there in March, 1967, after tµi1'. ing been refused a visa by Poland and isharply snubbed by officials ill Moscow. PhUip Ben observes: "They ('\he ~­ nians) were sensible enough t• kind t,o Richard Nixon.in 1967, ;it a-lime when-he was not even sure of getting the Republican nomination." IF THE PRESIDENT were to visit lny Communist state. -Romania was a pretty obvious choice. Without having broken free of Soviet dominaUon like Yugoslavia, Romania hu shown a remarkable in· dependence, even audacity, towards its powerful neighbor. Soviet, Hungarian and Bulgarian troops r ---' E,ditori Researc The voice Was Sen. Edward Kennedy 's, but the words were provided by two long· time Kennedy family liegemen - Theodore S or e n s e n • thrice-married counse1 and g~writer for Pre~ent Kennedy, and Richard Goodwin • .literary handyman of Senator Robert Kennedy. Within a few houi-s after the disclosure of "Teddy's" involvement in. the ~rown- nation trnde treatment by the Uniled ing of a young Washington secretary •. • States, presenlly enjoyed by t~·o ot1er Sorensen and Goodwin had rUJhed tq his massed on their borders with Romania at Communist countries, Poland a n d home al llyanni Port, Mass.~ to-$ad.vise ' , the time of the invasion o f Yugoslavia. As yet, hov.·ever, the Nixon and guid~ him. They had come without Czechoslovakia. Uncowed. the Romani an administration has shown no sign of being ~ummoned, as did former Defense Grand National Asse1nbly and Ule·Counc1I trying lo win that concession from Secretary Robert McNamara and a half· of Slate on Aug. 21, 1963, endorseJ Congress. dozen other dedicated Kennedyites. 'Ceausescu's stand deploring the in· Romania's trade with non-Communist terference in Czech domestic affairs. countries climbed from 18 percent of her It · was on the emphatic instruction of " II • 1 these inr\er devotees tha t Kennedy main- !"East .f:urope. reca s: 'lt hap--~·tradeinJ95tlo47percenl-8s!year., tained light.:-Jipped sllence ·:about '~ ed, ·RqmarQa wa• nol inv • eel. The Bui her "poMs lo the United St3tt::5 · tragic a!Iair for nearly a week: His own sop$ were complex. 'Ir 3 t. amo_unt to no more than one or \\\"O lr;stincts were to talk, and newsmen were echoslov.akLa hadied far b ~er to ;nllhon dollars a year. IQ)d a "ress.conference would ht' held tM digest than $e Kre In Qad anUctp,ated. 1. t' Then the t~on o tb4f1 We~t\n Com· CEAUSESCU'S intern• policies are . !~llowing ~y. ; munist parties and of· tematlCJ11BI puDtic o~thodox tnough lir the fommwlists in1 •1 ... UT Tn~· S • "··" -,· 1: ,. opinion was much mo l10!jlile than ct• ~¥oscow. • 1 l u .1:1 o~ens~1rvvuuwt c IQt~ pected.-Bolt1 Romanta,-and Yugoshn1a-lHf..~ f'. Brovl'n an h m e-r i c a-n~ _percmptorib!,barr1ed._1l on two.grounds _ had declared that they would take up Kremlinologist, ob~erves: •·it is rather in Fl_rst, get public rea~tion to ~he cUrious anns. Chiria, too, had made ominous foreign relations that Romania's si ns aUa1r: second, to obtain the views of at~ noises ." have been committed: by her agreement torneys and friendly , local officials on ROil-tA!\'IANS for years have i>een trying to establi~h a better rclatio~p \l'ilh the United St.ates. Pr.e~dent Ni . e Ceausl!scu invited; P.reSldtnt Nixon Romania about a mohth.Jrler Nixon'~ . auguration. ~ • · \ Romania long has souahl mosl·favort!d· with West Gennany, her (neutral} stand possible legal implications lacing Ken- on the Arab-Israeli connict, her (friend· nedy as a result of the death of the young ly) att{lude low~s China and Joward.i woman and his mysterious faJl ure to the inv~lon or echos11:·a.,~~r'·i .•. report -~~(•~ auto accident for many Whal .~e sins ~ J~ ey.is ,21~pea r 'hqurs ....... : ·O : , lo be Ul! ve ry pollcie:s .f.l!Bi, ed President This • lltit cilt!iider.fition riomin aled the Nixorr lo Aer.ept Ceause5Ql_'1~iniitation l1I vreek-idhg deliberations ef the Sorensen· slop over in Buchar~!_L ,. •. Oood\Vin· group. Other Worlds to Explo~e · \\'heii i~ was finally decidfil. \1·JtJ1 the .approval of the local district-attor{l('.y, an old friend or Teddy, that he "·au\d appeor in court on !\larlha's \'incyard and plead i::uil1y lo leaving the scene of the ac· c:idcn!. ii v.·as (;ood" in "'ho conceived the idea of fo!lov.ing thal up "·ith a_teJe,.visJ?d broadc3~l. 1 Tf you'll stand for one more touch or epace. this is s modost contribu!ion. The question before the space administration: what do we do nO\v? Of course, there is a program for Apollos 12, 13, 14 and so forth. But these depend on the monev available, which depends on the mood o1 the people and the Congress six months or-a year hence. , Future Apollo.l; are going lo be anti· climax and that noes not f11 cl great visions, or even great achievement. The NASA people have a high content of those who live on visions. The lunar conquest is already force-feeding them. Take the case of Dr. \Verner von Braun. who played an important part in Apollo's success. Dr. von Braun told the newsmen : "We can from now on move lo v.·bere we v.·an't to eo, "'here other worlds ( . "Royce Hri.er • can support ou r life." THIS EXPANSIVE attitude is SUP· ported by many others "in and oot of NASA. The obvious long-range sequel of the moon is exploration of the planel..s. Here the. \•lsion encounters practical obstacles. The earth has se11en planetary · companions, and of these Mars is the ron· Jy practical target for manned ex· ploration. Il is a Utile JesS rigorous than the moon. There may be a trace of "'ater vapor, but altogether the atmosphere is apparently like ours at 10-15 miles Following _Pied Pipe1· Tb oagbls Al Large: I don't bellcve !hat ~le, even Juveniles, are "led 11stray" by others: when they follow, it is becau methin,:: In their nature has been conditioned to respond to Lhe lune of these Pied Pipers: al one level of our being, we always know what we are doing, even though we may not know why we are doing it. Why do some humans feel insuttPri \4•hen '4'e a~ relerred to as an •·animal ---B11 George --~ Oeitr George: If you 're such a hot·~hot "lfvice columnls~, how can we cure the ris- ing ratio pf broJtcn homes? ' SKEPTJC<IL Deir Skeptical: Sl•mp out di\'m'Ce. ' \ ... ' Sidney J .. Harris ' ' . '• . -._.....__ _.,!_..... species" since It is Man who destroys the Earth and exploits and exterminates his own kind, not the other animals? r-len are largely irrational In !heir at- tiludes toward women -a man will be annoyed if a woman doesn 't know •s much about something as he think• &he should, but he becomes even more an· noytd when itbe exhibits more knowledge Ulan he tlllnks Jhe '..hould have. TllE TROUBLE with "frff speech'' I~ that wt ere willing to practice it more than we are willing to llstt':n to 11; and without citliens who listen as intensely as they. btlk, no consLructlve social dlaloi:: '! possible;-. /, ;illitude. not enough to support a human or;:ani~nl unaided. It s gravity is .38, n1ore than twice .that.of the moon. This is a rulnus tor us, since the luntir success "'ll\ due to low gravity. permitting men to rvove wAthout a crushing "'eight in bod)• suit ~ pack. So far, o<t 1965 photographs shdw a Martiin 'crfEt r:es!mbjing. lhe moori:s, rocky 'end Pocked ~'fth craters. But lhe- p'rclurt\ covered only .) pertt11t of lke •1'.1arti1',rt surface. Th~ nlay.' be. more hospit8llle areas, artd We may determine tkis in a'/ew years. BUT E\YIRONl'i1E1''T is not the main barrier to Martian manned exploration. The main barrier is distance. At presrnt cruising speeds, averaging 11 ,000 mph, our astronauts reach the moon1 in a !cw days. It is an enormous physical and psychological strain. Under the !rajettory necessary ·to a Mars ap.. proach, f\lars is 500..fiOO limes as distant as lhe moon. At our top rocket speed, 25.000 mph, the 160-million-mile r..1ars span would consume most or a year, one way. It Is therefore manifest that the present energy prod'Uclioo and propulsion system is wholly inadequate. to put • man on Mars. SOffie speed of the order of 500,00Cl mph is required, This i.s about live times the spetd oC free meteors, and YOLJ. might call it dangeroui EVEN THEN, 30 dayl h1 the current space vehicles woukt seem lO impost in· lolerable physical and p.sychologlcal burdens on the human orpnLsm . The vehiclt would have lo be far luger, with rar larser payload in minimal amenitle5 for the journey. Let the technologists wrt..Ue with lht!se tquatfons, and see if they can l!Ofk lbtm out in 20 or 30 years. • • · -. ~1c.anwhlle, we have metals ·whlcti don't ha ve mortal mu.sclts or mortal brain cells or mortal reuonlng' faculUes. \\Te mny bl'! pinned to them for X years in our thirst ror secrets of the Solar Systtm. IN . 'l'IJE DISCUSSION tha t follo\verl • !his propc:sal was enlarged lo include a "pu~M'c demonstration of confidence" - ·some form of dramatic respo nse to Ken· nedy·s spiel. Again .ll wa s Goodwin who suggester! the , strMagen1 of having this public ma.~lfe$tttlon center on whether Kennedy should resign his Senate seat. As he characteristically remarked, "'That'll get them. That's got sex ap- peal" }:tt31 pafjJose or this "poll.'' is to build up,sUpJ!ort for Kennedy's re-election next year. That's the primary concern or him and his devotees. He riever had any in· tention of resigning. Al no time was it seriously discussed by him or his inner clique. Their sole anxiety was salvaging Ken· nedy's seriously jeopardized 1970 re-elec· Uon chances. The ''poll" ls the first move in that endeavor -ahout which a lot more will be heard and on which a great deal more v.•ill be spent. SORENSEN i\'ROTE mosl of Teddy·s Dear Gloomy Gus: Do you suppose ttie car washes art subsidizing tha1 perennial waler pudd le on Ne\\lJOTt Blvd. just aouth of Brlstol St ~ C.K. T~ll '91!1111 '9flech ,. ... ,., .i.... Ml llHtHlrll, fhtH fl tllt ~ .... .,..,, ..... WflH'. ''' -v• It OIMM, ••a. Dtll'f l"lltf, .· tcl,ecast. Goodwin prepared a draft, parts of 'which were iricorJSorated in the nnal · ~cripl. Virtually all Of tbe last portion, \\•hieh"-Kennedy n1emori~d and in which he asJ.ed for pqpiic b~ lo "!Pink. Uri!; thrbu.gh v.·ith Ill.ti:' "'4f .Sorenser.~ ,ba.ft. di work. Throughout lhe v.·eek of closely guarded deliberating and cogitating, there was much telephonic conferring with pro-Ken· nedy newsmen, broadcasters, political leaders and o1hers. strongly pro-Kennedy Washington Post was flown in a private KennedY. plane from Martha's Vineyard to Hyannis l?ort for several houtS of coflSUJµtion. None nf the other numerous :i'tiMt:e}s on the i:sland were called in.' Teddy persona1ly talked by phone with a nurdber of Senate · "peacenik" col· leagues . .Amofl,g them .l.ere Democratic Floor Le&der MiKe tt18~£ield of Montana, Georie ~tcGoVern of ,SouJ.h .Oakota, v.tio has '1972 aspirations, F.raflk Church o! Idaho. Vance llartke of Iadiana; also Representatives ' John TuMey <1 f California, who has his eye on the seat held by Sen. George lt1urphy, and Tor· bert MacDonald (J).1t1ass). ~ " By Robert S. Alltn :. • ",i1.nd John A. Goldsmith ·Ooe '.~imite>iA_ f,res~nl:of ~ l . ·Ef T ·ro Suit$' Htin Fine 4 r .,_: "'· To· the-~ilol": . 1 ...,., Your account (July 25) of the report •·orange County Int erim Reg i on a I Airport" by Carlton Rhoades, a n -~crospace safety engineer, scetns to pro. vide more questions than answCrs. ti\1r. Rhoades said El Toro ft1arine Corps Air Station could not accomn1odalc both civilia n and military jcl trarf ic.) Despite !he fa ct that' you point out ~1r. Rhoades lives under the El Toro flight p111tcrn, one musl presume he is t•n- biased. But even with an off-shore airport. prevailing \\'Inds "'Ill still bring landings over peoplc "s hornes, e\'en though lht-y may not be at lrvinc. !\JORE· L\1PORTAN"T, hO\\'e11er. is the argun1ent re mililary use alongside civilian use at F.I Tor(). Apj>aren!Jy ?l·lr: Rhoades ls not a"•are that not just a few but 1nanv hundreds of charter civilian and nlilitary transport rour-en· gine jets have departed from and arrived al El Toro, fully loaded. with Vietnam l\1arines. If it's good enough for lh•l'>C gentlemen, irs good enough for the rc:.t or us. And the 707 "'hich carries President Nixon to his new home in San Clemente·! If it's safe enough for Mr. Nixon. it 's sale enough for me. The ecopomic argument does not hold \\'Sier either. Since when has the Pen· tagon been empowered to make. a prorit out of the public ii is supposed to serve·! El Toro belongs to the pe<iple. unless somebody has rewritten the Consli l)tion. .1nd when the people's needs change so musl the facilit y. Son1e 300 years ago, John Locke \\TOtt>: "All men arc liable to error; and n1'lst men are, in many poinls, by passion or interest. under templati9n to it." KEN LLO\'D •Boorls/1 Be/1n vlor' To U1e Editcr: , Oo yoo find disconcerting, perhaps e!TI· barrassing. the President's habit of in· sinuating his presence into events v.·hlclt through melia coverage increase hts personal notoriety~ Is it boorish behavior to invite onc~ir lo :share the pre-mifsion dinner with those who are about to undertake the risk of space lra11el? Is It immodest lo in.!;ist uj'IOn upstaging the heroic astronaul'I during the moon exploration? To repeal lhe grandstand _play on the carrier? IS JS INAPPROPRIATE to arran~C' that the President's name be inscrl~d on the plaque to be left on lhe moon rather than lhe name of deserving con(rlbulorti to Apollo's success? \\'ould nol the names of {;rfs.~n1. Whi1e 11nd ChaUc.~ aloags1dc those o f ' -·Mailbox Letters from readers are welctttnt . Normally' writers should convev their niessages iii 300 words or less. T~ right to co11d.ense letteYs to fit spare or eliminate libel is reserved. All ltl· ters must includt signaturt and mail· ing address, but naml!s may bl! wtt/t. held on request if sufficie11t reason is ap1)arent. Arinstrong and Aldrin on lhe plaque be: truly appropriate? \~ould not •he names of many scienlif~c contributors be more appropriate? Ir political persohality had to be In- se rted in the plaque 's inscription, wouldn't it have been magnamimous and fitt ing that either the name of President Kennedy who inspired the space effort, ~ that of President Johnson who as Vic:e Presiden! and President gave impetus 10 the space effort, be perpetuated on tl1e moon plaque? JSN·T IT A F AC'I: tbat the President has made no material contribution to space success, in fact. doesn't he repre- sent the Eisenhower administration v.'hich deplored American involve1nent in peaceful space exploration'? \Vould it be reassuring if the Pre~ident \\'011lc1 forsake chasing TV cameras around the globe and instead expend his energy on the alte111pt to reduce the nunterous blunders he cotnmHs and to n1inimize the contradictory ac t ion! among the tnemben. of his ad· ministration? Isn't it time that execu ti\'e responsibility replace campaign tactics? BOB FORD -----~ Friday, August I, 1969 Tiit: editorial page of tht Doily Pilot st:eks to inform a11d stim.- tdate readtta bu presenting th.is news papt:r's opinions and com- tnentary on topict of inttrui and 1ig11ifica11 ct . bu providing a forum for tilt t.t'J>rtuion of our rendtrs' opiniom. and. by prcsentt11g the divtr1t vic1b- poiltt.J oj informed obscrvrra and spakesmen on topics oj tllr lfu,. - Robert N. Weed, Publisher • I • 'I I • • • I ,, ... , . .t.11111.i .. ,"' • Star-gazer Sets Sights on DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several weeks ago my husband bought a teloscope to study the stars -he said. Alter the fourth nlgttt he lost inlerest in the sky antl is now sludying other ''heavcnl}'w bodies." We live tn an apartment which is idea lly situated for his new hObby. He hurries through dinner, race! to the win- dow and .!ila)'s there four or five hours at a time. Last "·eek he Invited three of the boys from the office to enjoy the fun. He was quit e disappointed because hi.Ii two best :;:ubjccts for observali~n (he ca l\11 !hem Venus and ~tarsi "·ei:e oot al holne. lie prOll'llsed lhe boys he'd invite them back. ( I am di sgusted wlth him and he knows ANN LANDERS ~ it. J am also concerned that he rnig11t be breaking the law. I've heard of men being arrested u PetJ)ing Toms. Please infonn me. -JUST LOOKING', THANKS DEAR JUST: So long 11 Tom Btay1 la his OWll apartment be canaot be arrested. In Utt meantime, be patient, dearte. Tom "-IU tire of hie bobby all.er a wblle. Grow- iag· up iake1 Ume. DEAR ANN: A distiJll relaUve of mine 1''ho ii 1oinC UU'OO&h the ~nop.ause ii acting very oddly. Sll weeks agn she telephoned at 2 a.m. and asked, "Are you all right?" I said, "Yell, of course." She then !'dated 1 terrible dream "'she had in which I was murdered . That was Uie end of my night'• st~. A week later, she telephoned at I a.m. and asked U ~i ''had' called her. J 1aJd, ""No." She I.lien explained that her phoge had nijig and ahe heard a acream that a"ounded like my v~~e. l l.'1 Mrs. Ralph B. Morgan Jr., Mrs. David.Eisenman Down-to-earth Constellation Th.is 1>1st wet.k 1he has telephoned five times. accused me of calling her and rot speaking, just breathing into the phone. I'm sure t.he woma n needs a psychiatrist. Jn the meantin1e I'm going to need one, too, iI she doesn't qWl bothertng-rne. Any suggesUons? -PF..'iTERED_BY A NUT added with fake bravado, "ltfy dad can do it!" I gave a noncommittal answtt and then hated myseU for not having the courage lo tell the boy what heavy, cooUnuous drin ldng can do to a person. 1'ow can I get the -message acr056 without running DEAR PES: Sug1eet \bat sbe 1ee a down his fathe r, and Incidentally, his doct.Or Ud i:et •ltttp. Then belp yourself mother, too7 -AUSTIN by 1~tt1D1 .P waU1ted t.elepb,one aumbef. DEAJl1 AUSTIN: It LI not your It cffts no~inl. responsibility \o "'get the m'eiBigc DEAR ANN : Our ·11-year-old SOii's bell acro11." A cblld'1 b1slc coocepb are [riend, Joey., wants to admlre his falhtr learued at bome, not from the: ntlP~· and tries. hard to juatlly his drlnkln&. ~Wben-tbe-boy uks ltldln1 queltfOM .&tU Last night he asked U J was agalMt bets, blm to talk lo hl1 pareab. la the mtg. "even if a person c8ifdJinf12-bclttlts-th time,.-10JDe.....ftcUYJduaJ1......ft)L. crew_._1p 1 row and aUU walk a straight line:." He •round 1lcobol11m balt liquor ud never • touch it. Others tum out to be tteoed and th1rd generation lu1be1, whJcb &fvet uire imprfsslon th4t alcoholism Is heredltmy •. lt ls not, of cOurse. It 11 1 1t-- re1poase Lo frustraUon, toneUDtU Md lao itturtty. Drinking may be "in " to lhe kids you run wllh -but It can put you "out" foe keeP:S. You can cool it and stay popular. Read "Boou and You-For Teeoagera Only." Send 3S cents In coin and a long. &ell·aHdrwed, staniped envelOpe with your requm. Ann Landers wlll be glad lo help you "ilh your problem.. S.od tll<m lo her In care_of the _DAlLY_ .eunr, encloafn& 1el!t ddressed, &tamped tnvtlo~ _ ' .• .... .------------=--~==,--------~-------------------------....,..---------~-------------- .. f~~' Au,..1 l, 1'149 ;!Hol i_day ";Sea son Rush·ed . ' ~For Shopp~rs ' Benefi t ·~· t-' ~ In AlliW'I?. Ephr~m Lewis of th• Sonia meniller of tljO S1>4fllc Loague =f: Molt~ llludiler al tit• ..,._ Cllaplor ond addltlollal or call Mrs. Woodwan! at $48-~tllotlclil. but -aboppera ccl!llll. ill the 'boopllal-con· 4130. ~~ ~tiat early Yule it.-tercnee e,enter. Funds from the 11le are U&- ""'~ created by four Thei....~itiant· Chapter will ed lo assist the Cerebral Har\Orl .. ~ W-CI men' 1 host a coU~ w;e4nesda1, Aug. Palsied of Oran1e County, •i~· 13, from 10 a.m. to noon~ and C'lt'I Harvey apd Hopt }Javen , TM m trOUJIO gel. holiday the aunter Clloter's showlnC -1• and the Y"'nl adult "plw.., the "''1· ••11' by of· will lake place Tbur!d&Y, 1 .. 4 """"'°' ti llllHtci Ce"'llral ltrins Qlrlltni.. c.oros for 21, also frol" 10 a.m. lo ""!! Ptl1iod A-i.tlon of Ortnl• i1le at &count p,r ices. The Gift Box will hoilt vie11-~. 1'te *""" a 1 a o : ~' pocketbooks are tnp ThurJclay. Aug. 7 and ·purchase<f two 12-paa&enger :•tau.nod'1'1th 11\e '&aving/J ·and Thursday, Ailg. 11. buses !or the UCPAOC during PAULETTE DONAL D ;tilie u-irtes of the groups in Fulld> froll) the card "le ·the past y,.r. < E d :~tum 'are•fattened so building will be used'ffr tM: auxiliary's ConttftbinC their s a 1 e ~9'1' :jtund P.~ can be mel and ,._. , " 1!7MO ft lllf tllrou&h lleOfmber will be . .U... ' ...... While "'*avors ......... mllle., ... Giil llot. mem6•n oJ the Cinderella »= .WO .,.llfl!of wttli tM •olo Guild l)f Clllldreo's Hospital of :f:·Bi .·. ftteir annual n.-e Mmis. Ralph Tilton, Orange County. ~ (1J'd. aaJes are the co. c h a J rm. a n , Charles Cards a t substantially 1cAdaty ot Hoag Memorial Hollister, Edgtr Hill, Philip reduced pritf!s will be shown :ift Oa'pi ta 1, Presbyterian, Doane, Carl Gile, r,ancll during coffee klatche$ 1nd 'A:Newpori Harbor Spastic Grisel, JM,ls, n.tctt•rd teas in~ homP ol the /Wiue. Cinderella Gu lid of SlmpsOllTlol a..-tnd r.r'~i::ir.. J= ::if~~~ rClilkfto'• ll<isp!tal of Ortn1• Miss V • , • ;~CcQtty and Punch and Judy AllO of ering a -20 percent Joseph D. Ryan tfi41\611i•r J. January Wedding .In Offing • -' • . Horoscope • Aries : Recognition Spread s which pravide more llvlng by good news. Be origin&!. Not Be recepUve. Y~ 01'11J w'hl.t SATUl\DAY AUiUST 2 By SYPN!V OMAilR room . neceMary to follow the crowd. you need. Fancy &ills m net LEO IJity 23·A"C· 22): You PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): necessary, Khow ~-al!d e<• can expand and profit. But you Avoid extravagant ge~tures. ercise wlll power. must be aware of details, fine --=j~~~$~~~~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ TEEN DATING HINTS: All polnls. AC'dent on what is at a 1-WI sbould 1vold 1end<ncy to be distance. Means be tarsighted. AWARD NNING SHOE S•RVICE overly aggres!ilve. Friendly Sense trend s and act ac· . ~~t peniuaslon usureri: bes' time cordingly. . tonl11bt, Romaoce featured for VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): s11Uiartu1, -w:hlle Taurtus gets Some changes are necessary. stuck "'th tbe cheek. Speclal Jf they tre made, profit ' COMPL!TE SHOE e LUGGAGE dance or pageBllt ls Ideal date. results. If not, opportunity •HAND BAG RI P.AIR Aries 1hloes. Libra talks about slips away. Choice is your a permenant rtlaUo.,hlp •• own. Gi•• praise .•• male, ALL WORK GUARANTIED Plscts Is 1urprised -blind pariner, close associate. TO YOUR SA TISPAC'10N dat.e tut'lfS Ollt t.o be eye-fUUng. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): , Accent on how pubiic acceptl . S CONVI Nl!NT SHOPS --. ARIES (P.1arch 21 -April 19): yOur actions, opinions. Be e MH" C041T HWY. e 1101 tlVtNl AVE. \Vhat appeared to be op-aware of how you e:r:pre~ eCC:ittt .. ~:O· '7MMI := =~ M4P posit ion boomerangs in your yourselr. Personal magnetism .~1-;:1~1:;:c1~~ •:~.~~°.:'~ fa\'Or. Recognition spreads. rating is high. Jf single, mar-""'"'"a-a. U..1'n tiiwpori t.-dl People consult you. Express riage may_ be on your mind . thoughts in rorthright manner. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):10iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;--Matter of contract, agreement Don't deceive youcself about11 could arise. Study jt, basic Issues. Short cuts are fil@n nW fVYlli\.l m .f'i)r.1r.l1'1r.I tiile il they don't cut quality. Lt' L!Jl!l\l ~WWWL!IW l!9 -S:nftild of CHOC. . • discount dtµing August will ~ Lucas during August. fi'"itoa&'a Aaxillary ~ the the Newport Harbor Spasbc Mi-s. Ralph P. Morpn Jr. is -,1\Udanoe of Mrs.' James W .. League, whkt wii.tfJet cards chainnan of the Cinderella TAURUS (April 20.~1ay 20): Work associate:, neighbor may "4 Study Aries me!.sage. Yo"r be thinking beyond your Ari'P. (.' "1".1 •(l'Jt' h. I fears are unfoullded. Coopera~ l1 lJ. , H A January wedding is being tion is fo~coming from D'l~~~iITARIUS <Nov. 22- planned by P1ulette Ctcile associates, co-workers. Know Dec. 21 ): Money and how to @[b[3ffi~ [3 ffi@ • . ... · --'• buyer throll•b Novtfhber. Guild's sale. ,. • · ·· ~ .--·~a.-., . .-...... d • "-'offerin1Chr1stmas · • Ir .,,. •• ._. .,.,., .. ar IS .ru.au . _,.--··!#@IC · · ie ~ Ole lltllUI) project, cards at 20 per<ltnt off during _,,, r -• • • • 1 • ~ bp Mrs. T•M)Ce Han· Au~at is t.\le Punch and Judy Donald of.Ball:)oa and Charles this: proceed with confidence. earn more of it take 9 A D Stephyn Barclay of HunUngton Libra individual backs you. spotlight.. You may have more . . . Beach. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): lo do -but rewards are ~-.-Oft II Hi e _ ", '18, Lldo and peninsula art&s:-Gnlf/J'"'Of-al~: , . J:t obby throug h early Mrs.·Gtorge Jans«1, west · ~n. David Eisenman is ~December. Back Bay area to Balboa chairman . ?f the annu_al sale :;, c.irda: may be vieWed during Jslarid, and Mrs. Robert which w1h be carried on -!an ev,enlng colfee hosted by Fuller Eastbluff to Corona del through a serie s of coffees. ·~· 'Robert L. Bacon Md Mar. ' 1' Hostesses will be the Mmes. ·r ial ~ yest.al, a morn~ AnyOQe wishing t9 yifw the Greg Egerton, Aug. 4, John : •••collfeinthe]1oineofMr11. cards ,..., -an.y Wells, Aug. 11, and Pal :!'":'Ji · · · -· 'f'homas, .Aug. 19, and others Nev,rs_ o.f the forthcoming Friends and romance _ are greater. Specifically, pursue event ha! been aMOUnced by fe1tured . Trust hunch. tlced creative project. Express the briJle-elect's .p1rents, Mr. inner feelings. Some around yourselr. Be 1rue to )'1lUr style. and Mn. Ray R. Donald, also you tend to be extravagant. CAPRlt'ORN (Dec. S2'1an. ot Balboa. Don't give away somelhing for 19) Th b · Miss Donald . a t ten de d . : ere may e minor con· nothing. Message clear by flict between home and pro- Newporl.Harbor High School, tonight. fessional duties. Finish wlfat was gfa<tuated fr~m EdisOn CANCER (June 21 -July 22): you start. "Keep promises. High School, Tulsa, Okla. and Promotion may be due. Don't Adhere to golden r u I e, now is a student at Orange underrate yourself. Your ideas -AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. Coast College. are useful and probably arc 18): Now you are in better 2758 EASf COAST HIGHWAY . 171•) en·llll COJllONA DEL MAR ZIP 92825 -ov., 10 .,.-s •• ,.r1 • .u 111 Dry c r.111111 lll4111trr_ - GET ACQUAiNTED SPECIAL , . n -OMEGA Q4.,,,,,...S()IJ , ft's bult liM a submarine. 1f'd is *> wat•rprod deep-su divers trust it to time theif' oxys.en supply. With· st•nd• Uftder·weter pres· SUl'U Int to 6CXJ k:et. HIS t'"'-.....,ve indDl•r wiUt click-Mt rim. FuJty IUICI• m:ltic. Stainless steef ad- -~..-..... ;;-j(irk• ©~ ' . lJUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 192·5501 H,ARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA 545.9415 o,.,. Meftfll•Y· Thvrt•IY & Frld1y •tul ' ,.,,., Cr-11t TClf'Jn• Av•ll•bl• · ~ be'annoonoof. Anyone wishing informalion on the coffees or to purchase cards from the Punch and Judy Guild may call Mrs. Elaerunan, 546-3710. Her fiance, son of Mrs. A. C. be. d Th. k I I position to make quick ,}ones 9f La Mirada and J . W. tng use . in -. n persona . . d d Barclay of Costa Mesa. is a _h_·re_,~m_a_k_e_a_r_ran--'-ge_m_e-'n_ls_d_e_ei_sio_n_s_. _J_"d.::g_m_en_l_"_•_•_e_ President On Podium graduate of Mayfair H i g h School, LakewoOd and also· is an OCC student. Sponso rs Combined For Picn ic Orange County legal secre- taries will hear James F. Ponny, pmidoilt of the Or· ange County Bar Association OffiC'ifs' Wives League or Oranse County and Retired speak when the &ecretarial Officers' Association Orange 8830ciation metts for dinntr County Chapter a.re joining on Thursday, Aug. 7. forces for an annual picnic in The gathering wiH take W. E. Hart Memorial Park, place in the Aladdin re.slau-Orange beginning at 11 a.m. rant, Anaheim, with a ~ocial Sunday, Aug. lO. hoor at 6:30 p.m. preceding \Vives, husbands and guests dinner at 7. are invited to enjoy the The speaker's t'opic will be games, entertainment and a Availabfity ·or the Legal Aid picnic lunch which will be 'Ser. Service in orange County. His ved at 1 p.m. talk also will cover the ques-Cribbage . boards, c a r d s • IT'S A . FACT! If you spent 30 seconds looki ng. a t each of o ur shag sampl es, it wo uld take you over 9 ho urs to s·ee t hem a ll- . so come early a nd brin g you r lunch. DON'S CARPET SHOP I 426 SO. MAIN 12 Biko. No. of Bullock'1) ORANG E , I HOUIS: 9·S:l0 DAILY CLOSID SUNDAY ••• fOR THOSE WHO CARE! FREE • MEN .,. U.Dln SLACKS or SWEA liR Cleaned and Pressed FrH With A $5 Cleaning Orcltr WE SPECIAl,.IZE e All X11it G111r111e11t. <11re MePH r. ,..., "'"'',_ .... e We 1pHlollu ht •II l..Htl!9t •IMll "'' Trl111'"4i GerMMtt. Alt• •ul• trl111 9er111e11h •• , Wed41., ••WU e f••Y Jdbf• Cloths o d Nepkl"" • tf1Ml•l'1 e Al ....... M·ef all ty,.. ef Met1 ettd WetM~~t •1•tlrillf e D,_... ,.. ... fet Jittl111 ud P,..tl., ttflM111'1 w•ll• Y•• w•lt PHONE : 67 5-6511 lion of. legal ethics. chess and checkers may be The Bar Association pres-brought, and offerings will in·llm••••••••••••••••••••il tdent. n0w in partnership with elude Senior Citizen Olympic his twin brother John C. Pen-Games. ny in Newport Beach, is a Reservations may be ob- native Californian. He re-tained by calling Maj. Bill C . ceived his law degr~ .from Hall, 546•9029 or Maj. Matthew the University of Soqther!l Kennecjy, 673-7958 by Monday, Calilornia and began his law Aug. 4. practice in association with1;-==========,I Judge Karl Davis. Reservations for the dinner and meeting may be made with Mrs. James R. Orr at 541--0842 and Mrs. Ray Sharp at 62.5-6478. Members and guests an invited to attend. IT'S NEW! . Tiii• hendl"t hair.car• .. d 1tylln1 old norl *MIRROR* PO-LITELY Daily 10 • 10, Sun. 10 • 7 ·· FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 1 & 2 ONLY ! :JlENDtETQN; Wardrobe Fun-damentals i • SEE "OW. NEW FALL' MAJOR CREDIT CAR OS Pendl eton 's• FOR M!N & WOMEH Dll'Al'lTMINT 8TOIU< ]116 NIWPOAT BOULEVARD 'AIUC tONVINIENTlY, J vol • ohp frt,.,. •Yt ... t l~tr•~C• 0,~N DAILY •:lO lo • ,,;,,,., •·· ,, . CENTRALLY lOCAfEO AT NEWPORT AND HARIOR IOULIVARDS Utt • Mlll.ftOll • PO·llTElY • wllh \'ti.IT ll•lh er vtltl!\' mirror • •; . ya11 c1n ..., lht ~ck of yt1vr 11•8d t · "I• v•vr <;Ot1!11•1 wnll 11111 "''''" "" ... !!!!!.. 1 .. i.a .. e Rich 8r1s1 Finish e 1"4i-Qu1lity Mirror t Ad/"ustable Light end M rror _.• Remov•blit Tote 819 • Port•ble Spring-Tension Pole ORDER NOW! . LOOK ALIVE A.ND LOVELY IN BONDED SLACKS Our Reg. 2.78 V<&l ue 2 Da ys Ou lu 2.22 ·• C/1nr9e 11 ! So sleek! Slacks with elastic sets on. the waistbands. Light\veight to .keep you cool coloray, acetates, jersey and matte jersey. Flatter your figure in good taste. Mi sses 8-18. 2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~eornor of Wil•on and Horbor COST A MES I , r-~~ ............................... .., ................................................................................. ""'!'"".""":':"""~,.,-~~~-,-~ .... -:--'-~ I • • • Marijuana ' Marl{et Hit ~y Inflation SAN DIEGO (AP) -Inflation has hit the marljuona market. doubling the _ pricelags in the past year. The reason : It's getting scarce. An uncommonly dry period in northern Mexico's growing area may be a cause, U.S...· Customs Agent Walter Buck said Thursday. The flow was slO\ved also by the killing of a federal police chief six v.·eeks ago in Culiacan, Sinaloa, for v.'hich Mexican authQrities arrested the alleged owners of big mafijuana plantations. And "it's between crops," says Joesph l louse, who heads the State Narcotics division office in San Diego. Agents operating 11\rough the San Ysidro Border Station seized 40,000 pounds of marijuana in the 1967~ fiscal year. In the year which ended r •rsday, they counted 20,000 pounds. A year ago, the weed sold on the illegal market for about $75 a kilogram "brick" or 2.2 P,PUnds. Now , it 's around $150 or more in Southern California.. .' The furth er north of the border, the higher the price. Marin County sheriff 's deputies with $10,000 in undercover purchases last ¥-'ee k found that a kilo costs $230 in the San Rafael area, compared with $90 a month before. At that, the packages were short- y.•eighted by the seller and weighed on- ly 1.5 pounds apiece. Along the border, pushers hard-put to meet detnan<I have sold veg.etable matter in the guise of marijuana. ' Pat Nixon Dra'\vs Chee rs, Applause At School Visit LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) -Pal Nixon drew excitetT' cheers and applause today when she impulsively kneeled down while young Pakistani musicians were playing for her visit to a school. On her knees. f\.1rs. Nixon listened and her gesture \\/On the approval of several hundred students and women v;hose v.·ork she applauded. A heaVy security detail including three :soldiers with Sien guns riding atop the b:ick seat of an OP.fn coRvcrtible. guarded lo.Trs. Nixon in the JOO-degree heat. She drew modest crov.·ds on the I wo- hour aflemoon visit to a rehabilitation center and I.he All Pakistan Women's Association school. The association is de"ttlll to bringing women more fully in· to the national life of lhis Moslem socie- ty. \Vhen police sto111JW traffic al .an in- l{'rscction, scores of persons got on top Qf their halted buses to get a glimpse of the visi ting American First Lady. Asked how she felt about the heat, 1\trs. Nixon replied: "Oh . v.·eJI I'm used to it. }'\'e been here before." This is l\lrs. Nixon's third trip to Pakistan. she sakl, setting the record slraight. It is Pre>sidenl Nixon's seventh. ., . LEARY CLOWNS BEFORE BE·ING SERVED ANEW Outside Courtroom With Attorney Georg~ Chula New Charges 'Influential Government Men Out for ~e': Leary RIVERSIDE (UPI) --Dr . Timothy Leary, apostle of LSD who Is running for go\·ernor of California, blames his legal troubles on "some inrluentinl men in government out to get me." .... Leary, 48, and hi& wife, Ro!emary, 33, were served with a new lelony complaint charging possession of dangerous and restricted drugs when Leary appeared in municipal cou_it for arraignment on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Both charges stemn1cd from the drov.·ning July 14 of a 17-year-old Lagima Beach girl v.·hile she was sv.'in1ming under the influence of LSD in a pool at Loory's ranch-commune near Hemet. After receiving the autopsy report, a judge issued a search warrant for a raid on the ranch last week that resulted in the arrest of five pe rsons Oil marijuana possession charges. Leary was dressed in moccasins, bell bottom trousers and a burgundy colored shirt. Jiis graying hair was fastened at he neCk with a red rubber band. He said U1e arrest "showed some in- fluential men in government are out lo get me. I am the leading spokesman for the largest persecuted group in the coun- try ~ 30 million marijuana smokers." The m~in plank in Leary's campaign to bcco1nc the state's fir st "Ps.v.chedelic governor" is the legalization or n\ari- juana. Leary has-denied c r i m i n a I responsibility or giving the drowning vic- tin1 LSD. in reference lo the charge of rontri!>uting to the delinquency of a n1inor. Leary, his wife, and Son, John,-19, also fa ce trial in Orange County in September on marijuana possession charges. The en- tire family was arrested in Laguna Beach last December. A11 gels Join Fight Against Anaheim Airpol't Beleaguered by a group. of their own dtizens and Orange city officials, Anaheim city councilmen today added a new opponen( to the list of those fighting the city's proposed metroport near Anaheim Sta<iium. The California Angels Baseball Club has joined the Cray. Dick Walsh, the baseball Club's general manager, met with city off icials Thursday and ex· pressed "disapproval and concern over the 85-acre project on the southeast area of the stadium parkitig Jot." . Walsh is reportedly disturbed over the possibility of aircraft crashes and noise disruptions. The council has set Oct. 7 for a final hearing on theiiroJect. One Picture is Still Worth More tha·n ssoo • ORAMA ' Camera Contest RULIES 1. Anvo"• who ;, ""' ,. ,.,cife1•iontl pholc111r1pher, •" 1111olciv1 of ! o• "'~"'be• of the f4m·lv of "" 1mploy1 oil lh1 DAILY PILOl, F11hio" l1l1"d 'Merch•nh Ano,i1tion o• 1 Ft1h<on l1l 1nd me r,h1nl i1 t li']ibl 1 !o e~le• the ~onle•+. 1. O~lv bl~c~ •nd ,.;ha, trhotca lt~on 1intt Jtn. I or th i1 vte• will be <tetoplod lo• judgln9. ), Pit1ur11 should bt unmounted 9lo11y p1i"h •I ltt•I S., 7 ~ehe1 in ,;,, prcfer1b!y S It 10 '"'"''· ~. N19tti •r• of tonle.t ehoi<H "'u1I bt r11dily 1•4i11bl1 "' thtl b!owup1 ,,.,. b1 m•dt lo• publie~lion •nd lot di1pl~v .. 1 folo••"'•· S. P1 inh bttomt l~t tr•<:tpoi.rly of lht OA!l'f PllOT •nd c •nnot be •1l11rn1d . ( N1')~livr1 w•ll be rt l11rned 1lltr FotD• , • .., •. 1 ~. f,,.11h 11i1 in '"bj!el mtflcr •hcu:,/ bt on "Irle" pie· 1111.,1. tuch ~I tpcirh •Ctf.,itoo" f:•e1, ll ~r,od1 lft ll:c •Ccicl1nh, bo .. tin9 •~d bt•thf'1 o• n1ne1 ., i~h cl•tfl'tl•t ;,,.ptcl, un~1u 1I M"'ood" q11•!i+., o• loe•I hu"''" i"l••r1l. i. E•ch p,inl "1u1I bt 1cco111o•ri~ci bv th1 ntmt. •d· ~•tu ind d1yli"'• lelephon• numb•r of lht entrant pl u1 I c•plion or 1h cirl d11tropliv1 p 1ra9raD~ t~pl1ini119 th1 1lorv lold bv th1 photo. 8. If • to11lt1l pholo 1how1 idenlifieb!t clo1tujl1 of p1opl1, !h1 dtlt•ip+;.,, "'tl<iriel 1ho~ld intl"d" the li,.t ind 1..,11 "'"''' of !ht 1ubj1c! or 1ubj1cO ind th1ir 1911 ind hcimt tddr1u11. 'f. It i1 111um1d thia photogr1ph1r •nd 1ub\1tl or 1ub0 l•eh qrtnl p1rml11ion for pubHttl!on ind publ ic di1pl1y of 1nv pholo• 1ub"'itt1d fo• comptlition. 10. Winntri of lht lop thr11 plttll etch,..,,~ wHI \,. r ubli1h1 d In lht 0.AILY PILOT. They will rteeivt $25, $1S"1nd I I 0 rt1p1ctiv1!y, in F11hOon ltlt nd 9ifl c1rtific1!11. G rind 1iri11 winntr (to bt 111ecitd /.u9, 21 -23 durin9 Fotor~mt ti F.111hio11 l1l1ndl 9111 t n 1ddi1ion1I $500 in 9ift c1rtific1lt1. 11 . 011dlin1 for 1nlry 11th w11~ i• noon on Tllufld1y •nd '"'"'' mu1! be d1li.,1r1d in pe .. on or bv mtil lo 1ny DAILY PILOT .,!fice bv lht! lim e. Ottdlint thi1 "'11kj1 Aug. 7. t 2. Conl11! photo1 1hould bt d i11cl1d lo: FDlor1m1 C1m1r1 Conl11t, Public S1rv<c.1 Dtptrlmt"I• Or1n91 Co11t OA 1 LY Pl LOT r oflir.e n11 r1~t youl. You Could Still w ·in EN .TE~ NOW! • ' Ult V PD.Of 3 From Art ~ Marriage He Designs, Slie Executes Ideas in Acrylic Paintinga ., By JANICE BERMAN ot lflt Dtl,., l'llt l Miii Rodgers and Hammerstein, Lerner and Loewt, Guy and Cooper , .• Guy an~d Coope...r?~? Yes. But unlike tbe olhers. they _are collaborators in IU'I, not music. And it's the Sawdust-Festival, not Broadway. Guy's the girl and Cooper's the guy. The last name Isn't as confusing. It's Dowos ror both artists, who happen tµe man and wUe. They became a team when they met al Arizona State University, where Guy studied tine arts and Cooper studied architecture. Later, they turned to painting. Cooper plans ihe idea, and Guy ex· e<:utes It. They have moved from abstract, swirl· Ing ronns Into the here-and-now world or hard.edge canvases. done in acrylic paint. .. For Cooper. the ne\v designs are a natural extension of his full·time job as an architect with a Newport' Beach firm. "It won'l be long before art and architecture merge as one,'' he said, predicting mind-involving designs as part or the wall s of new buildings. "ll1ll be fa bulous." Involveme nt of the tnind is a large part of Guy and Cooper's art. just as it is with more traditional paintings. - They use carefully-calculated lines , 'No Busing' Aid To Scl1ools Bill Passes in House 'VASHINGTON (UPI) -The llouse has approved a major education money bill but attached to it a rider barring the use of funds to promote school in- tegration by busing or compulsory transfer or students. Adoption or the restricti\'C amendment which sti ll requires Senate approval drew cheers. from southern House members when it passed Thursday. Opponents of the antibusing provision, v.·hich still faces Sennte action. claimed it v.·ou\d all buL end the government's ef· forts to halt'tchool segregation. The provision v.•as included in the $17 .6 billion appropriations bill for l he Departments of Labor and Health. Education and \Velfa re (HEW) passed on a 393-16 vote Thursday. after three days of· debate. measured in widths to the rr&eOon ot an inch. Each line 1s painted a color that links it inextricably to the next line, or the next shape, that tbe eye Will see. The resull is a sense of movciTient, as the viewer's eye, and his mind, is drawn deeper and deeper :.nto the canvas. Thal movement depends on color and form, space and time. It isn't easy to achieve, the two artists agreed. Cooper pointed to a multi-colored can· vas of squares. reetanglei'I and a bright yellow line that rambled angualrly . through the entire composition. • "We bad Jt all planned. Then we &9' It onto the canvas, and it dldh 't wOrk aC 'aJf; it was just nothine:, untlJ we added thil yellQW line,'' he said. · ••• "It's just like Sny other art form," aaff Guy. "You have~lo be aware oi spaee, ot CQlor, of proportion and what they do.:·· The artist coupl e thinks their new ap- plication or the oftl rules will pay off. (. "Our stuff is not as widely accepted""~ other things, but it's beginning to be," said cooper. COUPLE COLLABORATES AT LAGUNA'S SAWDUST FESTIVAL · The Down1 Family: Guy'1 the Girl, Cooper'1 the Guy 'syourBag? • /"jJ'~ ... Are you a Swinger? • DODGE $50,000,000* CLEIRlllCE SILE HARBOR DODGE 2181 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA-S•0-1811 ., ... Are you a Charger? your.dlance to me a batfiJll ! Prices era slashed on every 1969 Dodge Car and Truck. Trades are up ••• terms are yours to make. Even demonstrators and executive models are on t~e block. So get your share of the savings today • ._whila they last. BEACH CITY Dl>DGE 16555 .BEACH BLVD. (Hwy. 39) . - ·HUNTINGTON BEACH-U7-9631 ,, .. • 1 4· OAll V PILOT • ·' TOllrl IEWS ----- Pope · Meets On Endit,.g Nigeria War KAMPALA, Uganda (UPI) -Pope Paul VI met today with federal Niger- ian and Biafran representatives in hopes of begiMing peace talb to end what be •c-"" .-... 0111r "" .. s1110 called "agonizing conflict" in Nigeria. • ' • · B D " · s He had pledged to African leaders Tod~y is 'Anti-ra ay ln an earlier he would continue his efforts to ~anc1s~o. 1-leadquarters for ... the halt the civil Wa r, and Ugandan Presi- world·Wlde call for the natural dent Milton Obote, hOISt to other negotia- lpok, San Francisco is famous for • lions, sat in on the talks. · Us free.thinking coeds and its top-The pontiff's meeting was unschedul~ less dancers-all unremitting foe,, and it _ threw his plans for the day Into of brassieres. The topless dancers ~usion. He emerged~Crom the meet- plan to picket the city's major de--1ng _looking worn and exh~usted'. partment stores and a drive is on D1plomaUc _sources remained s_1lent on th -Id what cooclus1on lhe papal meetuig had fOr wom~n all over e wor to reached. Authorities said premature 1end their bras here for destruc· publicity in May 1968 negotiations Jed lion. Some 200 bras already have to breakup of the talks. arrived, ranging from size 32B to During that meeting Obote received 5200 . an urgent personal cable from Gen. • ·It's not quite dial-a-fish, but dia· ling the letters "T!IE COHO" on the .telephone at Ludington, Mich. gets you salmon fishing tips. 0 Yakubu Gowan, the federal Nigerian leader but its contents w~e not pub- lished. ThQSe 8ttending the meeting were chief Athony Enahoro !or Nigeria and Austine Okwu, Biafran roving ambassa- dor in eastern Africa. Ulll l t ........ lnvet1for's So11 Charles Edison, son of scien- tist-inventor 'fhomas A. Edi· son, died in New York Thurs- day at the age of 78. The younger Edison was Secretary o[ the Navy in 1939 and won a three-year term as governor of Ne\v Jersey a year later. ' Ah, the pleasant scene: Three yo1'thl at the side of the road picking. flowers, or something. South Bend, Ind. Pol ice dis· turbed the idyllic scene and said ·the!! three Michigan youth.I were!! Fate of ABM Plan Rests • picJcirig grCJS -marijuana. Po- 1 ~uce said they a.skld highway officials to destro11 the crop growing along the St. Joseph Counttt Road near here. -· Penny Brah'!."11, 19, of Biggin Hill, ~gland began taking flying les· aons at 9 a .m. one morning. Sev· en hours and 55· minutes later sbe made her first solo fligh t, becom· ing Britain's first woman to fly aofo m· one day. She piloted bare- foot. G In its weekly bulletin, St. Philip P resbyterian Church in l-louston issued a timely warning to mem- bers who might choose to spend ·~unday on the highways. "Drive carefully. It's not only cars that -can be recalled by their maker!" • ' ElUn Kaufman, 27, will vie for tlil!! Miss Nude Ameri· ca title (minus her towel, of course) Saturday. J\ member -of the yucca Naturis t Plub, New Afex~-''"" co's only nudist ~a mp, she!! will *eaent the state iii-the!! •a tionaL contest. M i s s Kaufman soys ahe · 1iopes to reach the 'finals of the con- test wffich offers .4 ~1,000 trip as d ·iirii'. -. ! • _A couple of thieves, who appar- • ently wanted to do something about . the 11Jong, hot summer," robbed "'the first national bank in Garland, ··Tex. No cash was taken -the : thieves made off "'ith a half-ton :window air conditioner. With Four U.S. Senators WASHINGTON (UPI) -Aft e I four weeks or debate, the Senate will vote Wednesday on President.Nixon's proposal for an antiballislic missile (ABM ) system. The .-erdict appeared lo rest with lour senators who have "'not com- mitted themselves publicly. Sen. Henry 1tf. Jackson (D-Wash.), said in an interview the ABM Issue would be settled by a margin of "from one to three votes." He decllined to predict who would Win. . Barring some unexpected development , Sens. Mike .Gravel, (D-Alaska), Warren G. ?\-Jagnuson, (0-Wash.)~ John J. \Villiams, (R-Oel), and Clinton P. Anderson, (D-N.M.). appeared to have the balance of power. Magnuson said he would have a state- ment Saturday. A spokesman for Gravel said he planned to speak Tuesday. The betting was both would oppose the ABM . \Yilliams and Anderson have no plans to reveal their decision until the final vote. But if they decidl to suppoct the ABM, the matter CQU)d wind up in a SO.SO tie, by some counts. The test 'will come when a vote is taken on the so-called Cooper-Hart amendment which would prohibit deploy- ment of the ABM at any lime during the fiscal year which began July t. Such a halt to deployment is ..all the ABM op- ponents bope to win. A tie vOte on the amendment, however, U.S. Infantrymen Battle N. Viets In 2 DMZ Oasl1es SAlGON (UPI) -American In· fantrymen batlled North Vietnamese troops in two clashes along the demilitarized zone {DMZ) wh.ile trying to rescue crewmen o( a U.S. hospiLaJ helicopter the Communists shot down , military spokesmen said today. American fighler·bombe.rs and artillery smashed four Communist bunkers and a mortar site in the DMZ, which separates the two Vietnams and U.S. B52 bombers dropped 270 tons of explosives in three raids on Communist camps and bunkers 20 miles west of the place where the Americans fought the North Vietnamese Thursday. ~ would automatically kill the attempt at revision. The amendment is a key vote because il applied ta the ABM money portion of a major military procurement bill now before the Senate. The test is on the amendment and not on the entire bill, however, because it was not likely there would be much qppos1tion to the whole military spending package which includes many other items above and beyond the ABM. It was considered unlJkely, therefore, ABM opponents would try to make the final vote on the whole bill another ABM test. United Airlties Req.1e sts Fare Increase of 10% \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The nation's largest airline -United -today asked the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), to approve higher passenger fares by as much as to percent. The rest of the major airlines are ex- pected to file for far hikes of their own shortly. If the board pproves, it would be the seeond fare i crease given. the airlines since Februar when the board approved a 3 percent t in lhe cost of a ticket. In ita petiUon, United said a continued decline in airline earnin s "make.$ an in· crease in revenues for the entire air transport industry absolutely necessary." Steel Price Hike B1-in gs Buy Halt PITTSBURGH {UPI) -The U.S. Steel Corp. confirmed today it had been asked by General Motors Corp. to hold up all deliveries of steel producL'J on which t~~. steel company increased prices two days ago. A spokesman for the steel company said it had received a telegram from General Molars notifying it to hold up "process.ing and shipment" ol any steel at lhe higher prices pending a re-evatua- tion of the competitive situation With respect to steel prices. • ' . Record Lows .in Michigan ' Thundershowers Scattered Across Mi.divest States ~ C•lllor";' torit!nuetf to l-"9r !ft tt. ae•IOl'I'• llnl m1lor l'IMt -lodlY •• Plltn 1ffl'IJ>er•1~rt ~ W1rrt /llttt lt\U'l'llClllV. T~ _...., s ~ 10 dni•ftt J\l...,.. ""'" ,,.,..,..,1. No relit-I .,.., 1 .. t lOlll f« fM wtfll;....t 1(Qlftllnt lo tt!tr U. S. Wff'""°-awr..~. lt.9 l05 A"9elH Arff tonlll'llltd ~It' di'•' l fld hd lod11. H1fh - "'9f\I,.._. M fl. t!le law /'O. ~lie ,. tht Air f'oUul!M CCII'- ~ DIMrld, ~ l1t1 Alt9t!ltoi. a1t l" JI.cl '"°*'"•'-to """" Jrnot. Tl'le ~ wt•e '"°'"" •v"nv• Hltft ~lvr• -. In lttt 10s. wtttr 61. Coiut al V .S. S1unmary Temperature• AlbutlUt lll\11 A tit nit ltk"nlit lll l ltm•rO. ..... ·~"" en:iwn1vl11t Clllc.N \ C1r.ciMeH -~ ... ,,..._ O.tr'Olt FllTIM"ks Fort Worth ,,_ HrltN Horio lulu ICl"ll' (il1 "' Vf<ll• ' Hl1ll L-l"r.t. ,. lJ .09 •• 101 15 n " M .. 11 '' " " 8~ '' .. u .. " • tl Jt ll lt .OI .... '2 7J .IM 100 62 ... 11 71 . .. lit u -- Cuha Better Than Jail P~isoner Esca-pes Custody During Flig ht, Hijacks Jet MlAMl (AP) -Al the aa:e of 'sz, life told me to go Into lhe cockpit," the 19-a brawn paper bag from his Seal, and offered nothing to Lester Perry but long year-old redbud said. met two Cuban militiamen at the door.' years ln prison. He had drawn seven to 12 Wlnglng over Wichita, Kan., ·the Boeing "f.re you armed?" they asked. years for robbery wUh violence in 727 liner wkb 111 penons aboard swung "No," he replied, ''I just have a razor Brldjeport, Corm., and 15 to 30 for a IOUlh for Cuba. As it landed , Perry blade.'' Perry was led away, free of an departmert store robbery in Buffalo, atnx:le calmly out ol. lhe cabin, picked up American prison, but lo an unknown fale N.Y. · on the Communist island. And he was on hla way to California The U.S\ Marshal's office In Miami said 'l'burlday, in cuatody ol two federal of· Selected Reservists Lavin woold oot talk to newsmen aboot ficer1, to stand trial for a bank rdbbery. , why Perr} was allowed to roam around Then the classic escape route opCned to p El' • I d the plane and how he managed to pull the him suddenly. The officers took him rogra m 1DlW8 e hijack while in custody of two officers. aboard a Tran! World Airlinu Jet at WASIUNGTON (AP) _ Tbe Army to--It also said a deposition Lavin was giv-Pittaburgh. bound for Los Angeles. Ing on lhe case today would not be I,.ester, tall. heavy-set, 1tony-Caced, grab-day eliminated a special "selected released for publication. bed his opPortunity. reserve force" aet up lour years ago for AJrline regulations do not permit pr~~.: ~~.haJlooeWphllUamHart. ,Laallvl0nwedandbun· a quick use tn..qational war emergencies:. l!!SCOrted prisoners to be handcuffed on l:!Ull &....... The SRF \otalsi some 137,000 men lg. grounds that they need freedom or their to leive his seat. He walked to a hands to protect themselves in event ot magazine rack beside the ga11ey arxl Natiopal Guard and Reserve unlts which an aircraft emergency. stood there unUI stewardess Deborah theoretically were supposed to be But 8 TWA spokesman said ·it ia re- Sulllvan walked past. prepared to deploy eight weeks lfter quired that the prisoner sit between two ••He p.Jt a razor blade to my throat aod caltup. officers. • • ... bring y-ou .J!erfect Magnavo x Instant Automatic Color-gives you a perfectly tuned picture that slays precise-on evtry cbaonel, 11ery t ime! Other· advanced features include: Brilliant Color 295 sq. In. pictures with the most vivid, natural color n er, Chrom1ton1 adds thrilling depth and dimension to color: warmth t o black and white. Quick-On gives "instant'' pictures and soWld::-no annoying "warm-up'', And exclusive Magnavox ~nded Circuitry assures high.est reliability and years of. 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Your Choice of styles s599so Cnni<' 1n <.t'lcct f1on1 over 40 M.iqn.ivo• Color TV Styl t'<:. now lron1 only s299'lo KERM RIMA MAGNAVOX Ma.gnavox Honie Enteif.ai11.1nent Ce nters-Factory Direct Dealer MDu!lllln ....,., hlod vt rlt tlk cl-· ·-· I ..... tu1"°'9d II"'""'°" ll•U"• ~ •nd 11191'1 1-•IU•H In "'9 Ills 11 !tie -1 it'¥elt. ~Hf l.llMf lodtf •>Id S..!\l•lllv WI~ --If I .. JS kllOb, H19!1t l~F I,. 11\t IOI, T~•e w.n wlftly i.uttt-ftCI ,,..,,,. II~" t U1;111 ll'UCl'I d Int t(IU ... lry IOIUl\I Ill/I lllllffwlfl ·-•11-r l•lf Wfffhtf P~Y•li.d. Ch Anpelt1 M ftml Ml-ffell• ~ " u " " .. •1 n ·" 2666 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif. 546-1691 894-2350 • • TM 6Ktrts tortll"Vrd lllll .... 1111 ~">c CJ1f1tfl-1111111 • I-ll"lullclfnftowt'11, TIMi lllthl ,.. ..... tl"OM la! I" "" ..... """ ~ Hi lU Ill ""' lowt• .,,,_ -TI!ul'MltY'• hot POt for l!"I' ,.,,,.,., W•• ltT I I a...o-. Ar ri. ,,.,.., "''"' ll!ft. C.!Jf. l"tl"' Slff'lfttt Wtt ont II .. .,... I-•I II .. 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AA awrnr111t low of 'J wl • rfttlf'll •I fOPeill• 1C1n. ly COl'lltl!I N...,lf!I, t.1!11., ""' "'9 motf'tUM''S ICW •or ""' nl9M 11~ts. Ttoe1 ltfl ''°"" J.n111 wit ceni.rfd 10C1 "'llH '''' J0\11111111 of Ml1"'1 111d -Ille rio !llrNI lo !!It m1l"lt!l(I "°""'"""' tflll't wtrt •ll-l'IH II lidt" Pt\( fu!Uft rn>Ol1' Pl! -lltlt ln- (TH"" In t1\fl 1l0<m't tflU!ll ll mlli!s ~· """' .-111 . I ~"'""'uur" ""'" .,,. IM ho! 11111 '"•Ol.lfPIOUI iDU!ltt•n Cal!fornlt . TM "'non·• Iii.it Tl!urtdlF w11 11' •' NHlll" 11111 eurtr'1'. "'''' . 11111 onr1 -°"'" i9lo'tf' 11 1111m &ar1ri1 .. -Ori""' Nt• Yen; N«th "l•ltt 0.-l•f'lll ""' ..... Clh• ...... "•1"' &or\"'' ""°""l~ "ll!llbur•ll "ortl•IJ! R11tkl C!lf ~ llufl ·-lt<rl mtfllo .. ,, Ll~t "' ,., ·-... Frtl'ICIKO ,. ' • T"""'•I Wttllllllton .. " II U .. " u .. " ~ lll ., , HJ ti .... '' .n " 1°'4 •• " .. " " ~ .. .... " .. J) " • w 1" •1 .. w ·~ 6855 Westminster 12116 S. Brookhurst Westminster, Calif. Garden Grove, Calif. 530-,4360 636-1250 -·· -~---· . ~ .1 IJ"I PMll f..m Jl'L MARINER 6 PHOTO SHOWS SURF1ACE OF MARS FROM 2,IDO MILES Crater at Left is a· Miles Wide; Area of Picture Is About 30 Miles Mncl1 Like Moon • Life on Mars Chances Dim PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -r The odds against findi.ng lire · on Mars lengthened today as scientists studied 1.fariner 6's closest-ever pictures of the red planet, showing a meteorite- battered surface much like the · moon 's. Black-and-white photographs televised across 58 million miles Thursday night disclos- ed such utter desolation that only the most optimistic could ho,Mi for the presence of un· seen living organisms. There were hu ge and an· cient craters, many ·with sharp-edged smaller craters in s ide; mountain ous high lands. precipitous slopes. crack lines and scattered rub- ble -but no -hint tha t the mysterious planet harbors life or ever did. Scientists v.·ho plan to sood surface-scratching unmanned landing crafl to Mars in the 1970s were cautious in their comments on the possibility of life. Said Dr. Robert . Leighton. physicisl-astronon\cr heading o study or the pictures: "The C<ln1era syste1n \Vas expected to provide an answer to lhe question of life on r-.tars. lt is expected if there is life On Mars il would be I n microscopic form or a Jow order of vegetation." The photographs, m a n y snapped with a telephoto lens as the 851).pound spacecraft swept wlthin 2,130 miles of the Martian equalOr, covered a dark equatorial band some scientists har~ thought might bear vegetation because it seems to darken in the !Pring. What the spacecraft's two 'cameras saw, boWever, were scenes like Arh.erlcan deserb where dark mountain ranges rise from wist.elands o f bleached sand. · There were no clouds and no signs of a haze "''hich some observers have theorized might be evidence or rooisture in 101v places. Leighton com- n1ente<i: ··The blue haze that some say is on Mars may not exist. The surface features arc very clear." The televised images, some showing craters eslimated as s1nall as a few city blocks across. were an hour late ap- pearing on monitor screens al Jet Propulsion Laboratory and }.Ome did not show al all . Scientists at first thought the trouble was at a receiving and relay station at Goldstone, WASHINGTON (U PI) -from Bo nn ''sou nd.s Calif.Later theys:rt'ditmishl The \Vest German government reasonable'' but raised some be in the spacecraft. has admitted the United States ''The tape will be brought West Ger111any Adn1its Getting Gas Fron1 U.S. que stions. h ( r -Id " g.ave it small quantities nf ere rom vu slOne, a poison gas for 1 es l ing lie questioned v.•helher the spokesman said. "so, we can purposes, a practice criticized shipme nts had been cleared . try to find out where the lrou· by one congressman as tan-with other \Vest European na· ble is." • • • tamount to spreading around lions as he believed was re-' Scienti sts will get a second nuclear weapons. quired. chance al taking close-ups of .A spokesman for the defense ··. -. 1'he bro ader and mo~t Mars when Mariner 7, five minister in Bonn confirmed hasic i s s u e is \Vhether the days behind Mariner 6, makes his country received small . United States should g i v e a similar fly.by Monday night. quantities of the gas after chemical and biological war· Silent for several hours Rep . Richardo. McCarthy(!). fare agents. regardless of \Vcdnesday arter a11parenlly ) ch ed th t ch h. ' their an1ounts. to other coon· being knocked askew by a N.Y. • arg a su s lp· · small meteor,·1e, '1artner 7 at ments took place for "several tries," ~1cCarthy said. ''I re· 1• years." . gard them as similar to nu· last report was operating The German governmenl clear weapons, which Ameri· normally and scheduled to said it needed the gas to test 'can raw prevents us from g\'I· begin taking approach ptctures gas warning equipment such ·-;;;i;;nG;;;;to;;;;ol;;h;;er;;;;n;;al;;io;;ns;;.;; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;to;;n;;ig;;h;;l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i as that carried on some tanks Ii and to test. gas masks anC 111ethods of neutrali zi ng gas. ~1cCarthy. a frequent critic of the Pentagon's c-hemical and biological warfare pro- gram, said the explanation Coc ktail I-lour In Qua1·anlinc? SPACE CENTf:R, llouston (AP) -Is there a cocklail 1 hour in the lunar quarantine 1 station where the Apollo 11 1 astronauts are in isolation~ "It is not a dry ship,'' John l\JcLealsh, a publi c relations l officer in quarantine with thel c-rew. said Thursday in reply to a newsman's question. DELANEY BROS. • SEA FOODS • 2800 La Fayette St., Newport Beach 673-3450 or 545-2217 ,------GOURMET -----~ FREE ZER SPECIA~S Thurs., thru Sun., J ul y 31' ·Aug . 3. WHOLE -IMPORTED DOVER SOLE JUMBO PR AW5~~ BOX $1.295 U.S.D.A. CHOICE -6-01. Top Sirloin KEBOBS • ·~.----··--• • .. -· Frjd'a,, August l, 1%9 • DAILY !'!LOT !lj~ Surcharge A11ured Missil e Make1· 1· , Tax Cuts Bloom He Gets· Parts at Dumps ~· In Reform Bill W ASHJNGTON (UPI) - ·With congressional approval assured for the 10 percent in· come tax surcharge for six months, the Houae Ways and lt1eaM CommlUee has com· .Pleted the blggeat lax overhaul in modern U.S. history. The reform. package in· eludes bitter medlcine for 30me -but there affl algnifi- cant and surprising f'lX cuts for nearly everyone else, especially I0\'1 and riliddle in· come taxpayers. A comm.lttee sPokesman said the package was ·the most. extensive revision of tax laws since the modem Income tax was impose<t In 191!. promise surcharae ettension. These featurea included eJ:· tending the 1urcbar1e at S percent for the first .sis month! of 1970, whlch Prea'"' dent Nhon ooughl; repeallnc the 7 percent buslnea taX credit; continuation of car and phone excise taxes ; and pro----------- viding almmt total income tax relief for some 12 million poor persons. ' 'The surcharge extenlion Passed the Senate Thtfrsday and probably will pass the house early next week. lt wu sought by Nixon to heTp fight lnfiation. dations and a minimum In· come. tax for wealtl}y persons already written into t h e, refonn biU, the Ways and Means Committee on Thurs- day went far beyond what had been e1pected for the middle income. taxpayer. BOSTON (AP) - A college student says he has bought from private firms two-thirds of the parts to build an in· tercontinental ballistic mlulle and bas ac~ to Ole rest. Joieph R. MacG. Seitz, 21, a special student al Massachuasels Institute o t Technology, said In a copyright story in the Boston Globe today that he purchased the parts from various salva~c and surplus metal dealers 1n Massachusetts. - The Globe said Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, provost of f\1IT and a former science adviser to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, called its atlention to Scitz's work. Seltz said he found a metal salvage dealer in Boston who "will sell you an Atlas nose cone for 40 cenls a pound .• He doesn't know what they arc unless you bother to tell him." · A warehouse in Taunton furnished a complete first- stage assembly of the Titan 11· C, three guidance plalforms. six re.entry shields and four "umbiliCal assemblies," Seitz said. An •·umbilical assembly" fl one which dhtconnects the mlsSllc at the moment of law\. ching. Seitz, of Elberon. N.J., sa.i~ he collected th components out of "Idle curiosity" and lO sbow security and ordnance people that :·au you have to do is ~ out to the surplus yard! and look." Seitz said that actualJy assembling an ICBM Is "a SOI). man-year job,"' but n !> classified knowledge is netd· ed. ''I've got all the critical S\lb assemblies for an ICBM," h·e said. "The rest is plumbing ... Seitz said he had "avoided getling such th ings as fuel tanks and exterior structures which are 25 feet long and 10 feet in diameter, but l know wl)ere I can get them ." ~1ost or the parts, Seltz said, \\·ere obtained from "dumps" that specialize in Army hardware. lie said risslonablc material for warheads could-be .ob-tai ned.~ut "I would be very reticent to discuss thal." The tax c.uts, some of whi ch would start next )'.ear, would deprive the tedelal 'treasury of about $7 billlon. But · the government would make up for the 1065 through taxing groups as ''gentl emen fannirs." The reform p .a c k a g e. formally went to the run House today and will be up (or debate next Wednesday. lt should pass unchanged -no amendments will be permitted -next Thursday. For middle income people. there would be a generous in· crease in the IO percent max- imum standard deduction to J3 percent in 1970, to 14 percent in 1971, and 15 percent in 1972. This :would be coupled wiUt ll maximum deduction going from $1,000 now to ,1,400 inl---------------------- 1970, to $1 ,700 in 1971 and to n,ooo in 1m. The \Vays and Means Com- mittee added to the package several other features that had been stripped off the com· Then it will go to the Senate where it races tough going in the Senate Filiance Com· mittee. With auch provisions as a cut in the. J7i,, percent oil depletion allowance, lazing of church businesses and foun- For all middle income peo. pie, there would be rate reduc· lions in 1971 and um of at least 5 percent. This would start helping families filing joint returns, who.se taxable income starts about $8,000 • _..__ ..... _ ................. _ .... .....,. EXCLUSIVE! .. COMMUNITY EVENTS AUG. J I • 25 AUG. 20 The L••+ BIG EVENT LAST TWO Befcre Schoel CLASSES NEWTIMER YOUTH OLDTIMER . FOUR MAXIMUM • INTEREST PLANS AT .... CAUFDRNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS .......... --••• •••• CALIFORNIA DROWN -PROOFING PICNIC & STEAK BARBE QUE FEDERAL .... ,\ YMCA Gemes-Food-Art Oispl•y Newport Boech FREE Helicopter Rides 1. The Guaranteed 8rowth Plan.· Deposit $1 ,000 or more. When all your money and Interest remain at our ..,...IHd 5.25% unual rate, .compounded dairy, your account wUI grow 30% lnSyeara ~% ln4JN18 17% ln3years • 2. The Guaranteed Income Plan. Open an account of $1 ,000 or more for 36 to 60 months. We'll guarantee you a 5.25o/o annual rate, compounded dally, with Interest paid out to YC?U each quarter. In caM of hardlhlp or e!llllrgency, you may wllhdraw the neceuary .funda at the end of any quarter end get full lnttreal to that date. 3. The Bonus Plan. ..~ Here'a a 3-year account that leis your savings earn Y4 % mol'9 each. year than paaabook accounts do. They now eam at a 5% annual rate. So Bonus Plan a ccounts cu rrently eam 6.25% a year when the bonua 11 credlled at :he end of the 3-year period. lnveat any amount In mulflplea of $1,000. lnti1111t can be transferred quartOrly to a pa8Sbook account end, when held tor a year and compounded dally, wlll earn 5.13%. • 4. The Basic Plan. 7he most flexible plan. You can Invest any amount of money and withdraw it whenever you wish. If you leave au your money.and interest in your account for a year at our current 6% annual rate with interest compounded daily, you'll receive en annual yleld of 5.13%. You eam interest from the day you deposit your· money 'til the day you withdraw It. And the money you deposit by the 10th of any month eams interest from the 1st, when It remains until quarter'• end. C@llf'l~!~1F.~~~ti:!Jro§.~W.gs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd; near Adams • 546•2300 CLIFFORD M. WESOORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER I . I . -- • s I DAIL y PILO'J', ED.-rOBIAL PAGE I ,, • ~· -• T:h~~.-·CJi~Dce! P~1fl :'·Oft;· . . . . ' • ..;1 ,,,.... ' ., 1' {"'" ~.. , ' ' . . .. ' .. r The books balanced will afte. .lb• ;Huntington ped• leAmlng. • • Beach rock . conaert SwJday. i\nd there. are hi~ sl:hool clistrlcts, amonr-tbem· . The balance wasn't financial. Tb• city took a dol· \he Newport-Mesa Unified School District, which have Jars and cents loss on its agreement to underwrite the .. left it::/: t~ pa~t.s:)O detqmine what ~elr -chlldren three Now Generation ~ands that wailed to Ye>_U~gsters. rnayP~m:!Ytt~fui~~ B~11-1cb t,ru1siee$ ~~ould i'*e 7'" 111.e ~lance came in ~nother ledger. nie oty was at least examihe - a cha~er :from ·oQ\er ·di~triCfs tha( out on a limb. The Establishment had taken 8 chance have turned the decisJon ·on fashion. over to parents. ·· on behalf of the youngsters, a chance that trouble Dress, ·Sideburns,· hair, whiskers have. proved a . might d~velop. . . " · continuing gray problem area for educatipn· adtnini· 1 • It didn't. The heavily pohced event ·produced not strators Perhaps it'a time to get out of fashion en·· Clne incident, not one arr~t. "Canned Heat". waxed hot forcem~t. as did the other bands with the mod·&oundmg names, but deportment stayed COC?I. . The Establishment city council bad reached - doubtless with some trepidations -across J,he .fa.mous ---generation gap in an attempt to do something that 75 Better Opportitnities youngsters valued. . . . .. J know some of vou think the Establishment 1s all bad." Mayor Jack Green told cheerin~ youngsters. "But this should be proof that every once ID a while we do something right," Head Start, operating 0ut of th•'. Cpmmwµty Methodist Chun:h in. Htmtinglcn Beach; is , giving a11<>ut 75 local children the chance they will' need in' the in· creasingly competitive System of general education . These chil~r~.-all pre-kindergarten and au from under-privileged homes -.would haVe found theln· selves at a serious disdvantage from the l>egihnini of their school years. But the government: aiMl a lot of concerned citizens, decided they deserved thtt · same start as other, more fortunate youngsters. The ''ayes" should ha.ve·it, Mr. Mayor. I Dress Regulations • Storm clouds are gathering over the Huntington Beach Union High School District again. . The controversy over dress regulations is certain to be resurrected again this fall when students .return. It is a confrontation that might have been avoided .. Educators . now agree that ·the first 1even years of a child 's life are the mbst formative ..and critical. Head Start -perhaps better named "catch-up" -takes a di· rect bead on those early years. · Today's students perfer to wear their bai.r longer. They also adorn· their faces with mustaches, sideburns, beards, and wear more stylized clothing. This, th~e administration conte~ds, interferes with the educat· al process. But does 1t really? It gives the tots ·a chance to learn abQut objects, animals and ideas. they might not fin d in their own homes. And it provides an inter-relatJonship amqpg youngsters and teachers not available in the biga:er, public education system. ' ' Colleg and universities throughout the country have long abandone<i dre~s regulations with th~ c.on· clusion that the new fashions are here and don t im· The Community Me\hOdi st Chun:h, under \he di· rection of Rev. Roger Betsworth, has been a commun· ity leader in many .fields. Head Start is one of its best projects. · s President Goes Behind Curtain Editorial Who Wrote Ted's Speech? Soreiisen's Bigge$t .Job President Nixon becomes the fi rst "nle voice wu Sen. Edward Kennedy's. ,.~~ ':(,t~~'lt' ... "';~'-1!) ... ; :strongly pro-Kennedy Wa.Wngton Pt18t bu\ 'the worde: were provided by two long.. ! . (:, ~i .. • .. , ~ was flown in a private Kennedy plane time ·Kennedy family Uegerne• -:;.,frl .. le'n'..G."'J.l~oit, ti· · from Martha's Vineyard to Hyann~ Porl Theodore s 0 r .. n.s t n , Ou-ice-married .. ~ ,., ~ .\:: .a;J, ror,aev,eral boun of consuJtation. None of counsel 8.nd ghtmwrlter for President ..... ~ ·.~ .~.i .... ':~!f., J'. "', ~; ::ii.:~ n:U~. ·!~~en on the Kennedy, and Richard Coodwin, literary • , . American President sifice the ei>ld v1ar began to visit a Communist country whrn his plane puts down in Bucharest Satur· day afternoon. President Franklin D. Research: Roosevelt attend~ a wartime meeting l)f. " allied leaders at Yalta in the Soviet Union nation trade treatmtnt by the United handyman of SenatOr'Robert Kennedy; tfleeast. Goodwin ~pared a.draft1 part., Teddy. Personiilly talked by-phone with Within a few hours .ttet-the dJsc~e ,.,ol ~*h . wer~incorPorated in tlfj: final a •number of ~enate "~acenik" col- 'ot "Teddy's" involvemeat in the df~ , scr1~-V1rtua~y, ~~ ~ 1he last.ilirtloft._ leagues. Among them were Democratic · ol w .. :-.n..... ,.__.,..,.., .. wrucn:1e enned14meJllorized and 1n which Floor Leader Mitt Mansfield ol Pl.fontana. in February, l!M5. States, presenUy enjoyed by two ot1er President Harry Truman took part in a massed on their borders with Romania at Coolmwlist countries; Poland a n d meeting in July and August of the same the. time of the invasion o l Yugoelavla. As yet, however, the NIJ:on year al Potsdam in East Gennany. CZecboslovakia. Uncowed, the Romanian administration has shown no sign of President Dwight D. Eisenhower planDt'd Grand National Assembly and the Council trying to win tha~ concession . from .... to make a trip to the Soviet Union in 1960. ot State on Aug. 21, 1968, endo~ Congreu. . but the invilaUon was canceled by Ceausescu's stand deploring the in· Romania's tiade with non-COmmwdst Premier Nikita S. Khrtl!hchev after the terference in Czech domestic affairs. countriu climbed from 18. per«nt of her lJ·2 spy plane incident. · '!Efil Surope.~'i"call1:0 "A'-!I~ hap!!' &otaJ tradeUD~'to 47 jilrctn~Jt yea'r. However, President Nixon jj ~:\, pened, Roma~ .. as not '1nv ••. Tbi· But her !J · to th.e Untted State3 stranger to Bucharest. He was ~'f .'r reisons w~, comple1 . ~r s t, amount to more thl@D ~or two received there in March, 1967, after h•V-.~i Czechoslovakil_:P,d proved far ~r to milllon dolars!a year. • il)g been refused e visa by Polar\11 Nll ' digest than ~Kremlln,hatl anUC:lpited. >· sharply snubbed by officials ~ 1'4isCOW. Then the rcs.adon of the W.J8ttt:J! Com-CEAUSISCU'S internal ~licies are Philip Ben observes: ''They (the:Joma .. .:.~. munist parties· and of hltemaUon .. public orthodo:r. tnouah for the Communists · in nians) Yr'ere seilsible enough to ~nd to {'"opinion was much more bosflle ~ e 1'folcow ;. ,__ - --· Richard Nixon, in 1967, ot a time dlten ~ • peeled. Both }lomanla and Yua1oislavt J , F;-l Jri>wn, an American was not . even sure of getting the had declared that they would take up Kremlloolo(ist, obst.ryes : "It is rather in Republican nomination." anns. China, too, had made ominou! foreign refstions that Romania's sins IF THE PRESIDENT were to visit any Communist state, Romania was a pretty obvious choice. Without having broken free of Soviet domination like Yugoslavia. Romania has shown a remarkable ill· dependence, even audacity, towards ils powerful neighbor. Soviet, Hungarian and Bulgarian troops noises." have been committed: by her agreement • 1 with West Germany, ht.r (n:eutral) stand ROl\1ANIAXS for years have been oo the Arab.Israeli conffict, he.r (friend· trying to establish a better re lationship ly) aWtude toward.s CtUna and-towa.nl.a \\.'ith the Uni.led. States. P~esident .Nicolae the invasion ~ Clechos~.'1.,. · Ceausescu mv1ted Pres:ident N11on to W~ are sins tn ·RuS$1iA eyqiappear Romani~ about a month after Jiixon's in· to be~ 8:ry pol=W.Yre!ldent augurat1on. ,. · .:. NixQl)HO.ir:;cept C "' . ;avltauon fu Romania long has souib\•Dm·favore~ stop.,_.et'~-Buch~1: ~·, .'· . ~ f• ' .. -.. Other Worlds to .~xpl~re tr you"ll stand for one ,more touch or space, lhis is,a modesl contribution. The question before the space administ ration: what do we do now? or course, there is a program for Apollos 12, 13, 14 and so forth . But these depend on the mone:v available. which depends on the mood of the people and the Congress six months. or a year hence. Future Apollos are going to be ant i· climax and that does not fuel great visions, or even great achievement. The NASA people have a high content of those who live on visions. The luna,r conquest is already force-feeding them. Take the case of Dr. Werner von Braun, who played an important part in Apollo 's &Jccess. Dr. von Braun told the newsmen : ''We can from now on move to where we want to go, where other worlds ' . ...... Royce Brier can support our life." THIS EXPANSIVE attitude is sup.· ported by many others in and out of~ NASA. The obvious long-range sequel of the moon is exploration of the planets. Here the vision encounters practicaJ obstacles. The earth has seven planetary Cilmpanions, and of these Man is the on- ly practical target for manned es· ploration. It is a liUle Jess rigorous than the moon. There may be a trace of water vapor, but altogelh6 the atmosphere is apparently llke oW'i at Jl).15 miles Following Pi~d Piper Thoughts Al Large: -I don'l be:li~ve that people, evtn Juvenilb. are "led astray' by others: w)>en they follow , It is ~a use something jn their nature h8! been Cilnditioned lo respond to the tune of these Pied Pipers; at oOe le•el of our being. we always know wh.at we are do1ng. even though we may not know why we are dOtng It. \\''by do some humans ftt:I insul ted when we art referred to as an "animal .---B11 George ---, Dear Geor&e· If yocfre such • hot-shot ad\'lce <"Otumnilt. how <!an wt cUl'fHhe ris- ing r1Uo of broken homes' t SKEPTICAi. Dear Sktplk:al: Stamp Ollt divorce. ,~ . . ~ .... ~ .. ,..,.. .. • Si~e • J. Jra . . • r1s j species" since it is Man who destroy1 the F.art.h and exploit.s aDd exterminate.a: his O"'n kind , not the other animals? Men are 1'irgely trraUonal In their at· tiludes toward women -a min wll\ be armoyed ir a woman doesn't know as much about sometlling 11 he thinks 1ht should, but he becomes ettn more •n· noyed when she. exhibit! more knowledae than he thlnks ahe ahould have. -TUE; TROUBLE wll.h "free spetth" fs that we are willing to practice it rnOre I.Mn ~-e are willing lo listen to It; ind without eltJun1 who listen as intensely as they' talk, no consltuctlYI 10Clal dlalo; Is possible. altitude, not enough to su pport a human organism unalded. Its gravity is .38, n1ore than twioe thdl of the moon. Thi! ts a minus for us, sin~ the lunar success \\·a$. due .to law. gra vity. pennittinS" men to mov·e 'wilh::iut a ctusbin8 . w'ei&flt in t>oey; ·~\Jlt.'aod.pack. . . · . SO far,. Po/ '1965 ' jlholograi>hs sttow a Ma'Clfan l.Cl'Uit f..esimb)ing , the .mood's, rock7 ·~.~ked with craters. Bat the picture;. ewti-ed ~on1y .t pettMt ar the Martiah · ..uifact. ~ maf ht more bo@ipltablt· aiiias. and we may determine this ia a feW -years. BUT'ENVIRONftfENT Is not the main barrier to Martian maMed explora tion. The main barrier is distance. At pruenl cruising ~~ averaging 17.000 mph, our astronauts reach the moon in a 1ew days~ It is An enormous physical and psychological strain. Under the trajectory necessary to a Mars ap- proach, Mars is 500«IO times as tlistant .as the moon. Al our top rocket speed, 25,000 mph, the ISO.million-mile Mars spa n would C1)n!Ume most of a year, one way. It is thtrefote manifest· that the present eDttgy producUoo and'propulslon system Is wholly Inadequate to put a man on ~fan. Some speed « the order of 501'.(000 mph ii required. This is about Cave llmu the !peed of free meteors, aod yoo might call it dangerous. EVEN THEN, 30 days In the current space vehicles woWd seem to impoH in- tolerable physical ·•nd J>11<hologlcal burdena on the. human oraanism. The vehicle WOtJld have to be far larger, wllh ·far lµger pa)'told ln minimal 1mtnitie11 !O< the Journty. Let the technologists wrestle with these equ'ations, and see tf they can work them out ln ~ or 30 y~rsi Mt:anW'hile, we have melah whlch don't have mortal muscles or moml brain cell& or mortal rtasonlnk f11_eulties. \)!e may be pinned to them for X years In our thin! for u<retl ol lhe Solar Systtm. • ing a young .~~s'""';'it""' .............. ;. • ~ ~ ~ for ~tc ftc!t $to~'t · k thil ~-~MCGo:m· ol =· Da;:ota , who Sorensen and GoodWin.!ilst nllhedi~ihis . . ..-;. ~e; •(ui;A9 h -. ·a=·' . ns, ........... _ .. of home at Hyannii.Port;;..-litass...ltoi tdrise ; ~~wilh me,, wa.·,.lor -~ -.:.., -r ·"nw:.,;n and guide him. !bey had cornt withOut diwork. . Idaho, VC1nce Hartke_o(-lndilina; also bting wmmooed all did~formU Defense ThroµghOut lhe week or closely guarded Representatives John Tunney (I r Secretary Robert .. McNamara and a half-deli!)eral.ing ~ oogl~Ung,. there wu California, who has his eye on the seat dozen other dedicated Kennedyites. , , much telephonic conferring with prirKen-held by Sen. George Murphy, ·and Tor· nedy ·newsmen, broadcasters, political bert ~d _(0.Mti118). It was on the emphatic instruction o{ · · these '"""'.cl<"""' ~ Kemp,tr•mi;,,. !<~lier~~ •!!Im. • ., . .•• .. ....,. • • <;11", By Roberts. ,AllH """"-iiil>t~ st1-o:-~t 'ihO_ ~~pf<!·~ 'Ooi:res~" the . »"': -t·~(Ud Jollt A.Gold1mitll tragic aifair for near17 a wee:&/HiS •wn . , t . liz::t_':!::~~~~~:~ 1Ef Tor~;,~suitS .U,i~ Fine BUT THE. Sorenseft.-Oood4 cliqu~ -: t ' · ~ -.-J '"~n--' peremptorUy-barried it'Wi two lfOUnds: ~ To-the E.fitor!';' r i; • -~p:. · • '(~-~---:-......-°"'\ First, get public reaction to the CU!ious Your account (July 25) ol the report ( ~' ..-, ... tr. ;;;+;;.l-A:~1 ~ •• j affair; 11econd, lo obtain the view! of at· "Orange Coµnty Interim Reg i 0 n a I i ;~' i ~ i.1'81•1L:~:X ./', 1 tomeys and friendly local officiaJs on " .,. JfJ _WQ: possible legal Implications facing Ken-Airport" by Carlton Rhoades. a n W. nedy a.s a result of the death of the young aerospace safety engineer, seems to pro-'' "" .J woman. Md ·his mylleriou.s lail1Ue to vide more questions than answers. (Mr. Letters from yeaders arc-welcome. 'report the tifll auto accident. for 'many Rhoades said El Toro l>iarine Corps Air Normally writtr! should convev th!ir hour&. :'1 ' ~ '. • Station could not accommodate both messages in 300 words or ltss. The ""nii•Jist cOOiiideliJlon domintied the civilian and military jet traffic.) right to condtnSe lettef's to fit space ~ttk·iqla de}lberati~ of lt'lb s.tCnsen· Despite the fact that you point out l\1r. OT eliminilte' libel ii Yeaeroed. AU Jet- Goocht\n .gr~. Rhoades lives under the El Toro rlight ters must:include signatuf't and mai~ \\'hen t; was finally deckted, witb the pattern, one must presume he is un-ing addrets~ but names may be with.. approval of tho local d!Strict ·attorney, an biased. But even Yr'ith an off.shore held on req·uest if sufficUnt t'e11.1on old friend of Teddy, that he WoUld appear airport, prevailing vdqds will still bring is appaYOtt. in court on Pl.tartha's Vineyard and P.lead lan!'.lirigs over f!eOPle's homes, even guilty to leaving the scene of t~. ac· though they may not be a~ Irvine. c\dent. it \\'as Good\\'in Yo'ho conceived the idea of following that up with a televised broadcast. IN -THE DISCUSSION that followed. this ,J>roposal was enlarged to inckKJe a , ··public df.monstratlon· of confidence" - some fonn of dramatic response to Ktn- nedy's spiel.· Again it •as Goodwin who suggested the ~atagem or having this public niaruhitafton center on whether Kennedy should resign his Senate seat. As he characteristically remarked, "That'll Id them. That's got sex aP. ~al.',' .. RW p~se of this "poll'' Is to build up sapporffor Kennedy's re-election next year. That's the primary coocem of him and his deVotees. He never had any in· tention of resigning. At no time was it seriously dilc'15!ed by him or his inner clique. Their sole amiely was salvaging Ke"'° nedy's serfoosly jeopardiied 1979 re-elec· lion chances. The "poll" is the first move in that endeavor -about whlch a lot more wlU •be heard and on wb,k:b a grea-t deal more will be spent. SORENSEN WROTE most Of Toddy'1 -- Dear Gloomy Gus: Ylhy doesn't 'the lreasurtr's Job pay better in Huntington Beach? \\'hat did that special rePort the city had done have to say 1boltl lhat ? M.D. n 11 ,..,.,. "l'IK1'i .-.-.n• .,..,... ... """'''" .... .. ""' -...."'· ,..., ,_. "' -" ,. •lliMllr .... t•llr ''"'· • Pi10RE ll\1PORTANT, however, is the argument re military use alongside civilian use at F:I Toro. Apparently ~fr. Rhoades Is not a\\'are that not jus~ a. few but many hundreds of charter civilian and military transport four-f:n· gine /.els have departed from and arrived at E Toro, fully loaded. with Vietnam Pl.1arines. If it's good enough for lhO'Je gentlemen, it's good ·enough for the rcr.t of us. · And the 7rr7 which carries President Nixon to his new home in San Clemente? If it's safe enough for Mr. Nixon, it's safe enough for me. The economic argument does not hold ·water ettber. Since when has the Pen- tagon been empowered to make a profit out of the public it is supposed to se rve? El Toro belongs to the. people. unless somebody has rewrillen the Constitution, and when the people's needs change so must the fa cility. Some 300 years ago, John Locke wrote: "All men are liable to error; and m'lSt men are, in many points, by passion or int.eres~ under temptat.lon to It."· KEN ~YD 'Boorish Behavior' To the Editor: Do you fiod disconcerting, perhaps em· b3rra53ing. the President's habit of in- sinuating his prtsence into events which · tllrough melia coverage increase his personal notoriety? Ls il boorish behavior to invite oneself to share the: pre-mission dinner with those who are about to undetUlce the ri.sk of space travel? Is It immodest to Insist upon upstaginR tilt h«oic a.slronauts during the moon exploration? To repeat the grand.stand play on the carrier? 15 IS INAPPROPRIATE to arrange that the PresidtnCs name be-Inscribed on the plaque to be left on the moon rather than the name of duervtng contributon to Apollo'' success? Would not the namts of Gri!tom, White •nd Qiaffee alongside thO&t o f .& ' • i Arinstrong and Aldrin on the plaque bt truly 8.pJtOPr iate? \\1oold not the names of many scientific i;ontributors be more appropriate? If Poytical personality had to be in- serted in the plaque's inscription. "''ouldn't it have been magnamimoul and fitting that either the name of Presi dent Kennedy who inspired the s'pace effort, or ·that of Pusident Johnson who as Vice Pi-esident and President gave impetus to the space effort. ·be perpetuated on the 111:oon plaque ? ' ISN'f rr A FACT lhal the President has made no materlal contribution to ~ :success. in fact. doesn't he repre· sent the Eisenhower admini$'ation \\'hich deplored American involve ment in peaceful space explor.ation? Would it be reassuring i! the Prcslde.at "''ould forsake chasing TV carileras arru~ the .g\obt and instead expend hi! energy on the attempt to reduCt the numerous blunders ht commits and lo minimize the contradictory a c ti o n , among the memberi of his ad· minist ration? Isn't it time that eJ.ecut.ive responsibility rep\aoe:campatgn t&ctJc..,? BOB FORD ----- Friday, Augu st I, 11169 The editorial pogt of th t Daar Pilot 1eek1 to infonn end ttim- ula:tt Yead.tis bv prc1tnUn.17 t1dt ncwspo~r'• op(nta111 end CO"'" mentorv on top(ca of intertlt and aigniflcanc«, b11 prmndtng a. forum for the t.rprtuicm of our Yeodtrs' op'iniON. and bu presenting t1Pt dtvtrae vfrw- potnt1 of (n/onhccl obttrtlera ond JPOkc1me11 on topfct of 'h' 0av. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • . .. t ' ... ~ . • . ._, I • -. ." • ·, . ' . ' ~ . ,, ~ ; ' • . . 'one· stop' shopping ot its finest! OPEN THURSOA Y & MONDAY EVENINGS . ' . . ' . . • • ' . . . . . .. ONE DAY ONLY ••• SATURDAY, AUGUST 2nd • , • w > c M.AllNIEIS DJllYE z WIEST C llfl' Q -·r·--• ) ~. ~LAZA ; -i ~ .. . L • •_j ·. ,, .. WESTCLIPlf' DlllYI I. ,-...:...:...::.:=.:....:..::.:..:~-- • OUTSIDE AND INSIDE -ALL STORES . ' ~ . I '· • · 10 A.M.· to 6 P.M • 7 CONVENl.NT ENTRANCES -lf-Xour Fav.aciteJs B u.si.er Than. Usu.al . . • Yoa Hav.e Six Other& to Choose ..• • . ·-DAILY PllQT 1 • • • • , I • • • . ' '1. . ' ' • I ~ -• . •---- I bAILV PILOT Friday, August l, 1'6• Ban Engine Type · Cleaver (!ssembly Def eats Return Tough Sirwg Bill ~=:~~~~l•ck SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A &mog control bill, t;lripped of provisions bannlng the internal combustion e o g i n e on California hlghwoys, w a s defeated early todc:y by the A s s e m bl y Transportation Committee. The measure by Sen. Nicho- las C. Petris, (D-Oakland), died when it could muster only five affirmative votdirtlt need· ed six. Petris Thursday yielded lo opponents of his measure in its original form that call_ed for the outright ban on '°'". Panther !ugllive E l d r I d g e Cleaver will relurn lo the United States be.fore the end of the year "even if he has lo come back the same way he left", according to Panther chier of staff David Hilliard. Hilliard said at a news con· ference Thursday Cleaver's greatest desire is to return here with' his wUe Kathleen and their son, born earlier this week in Algeria. Hilliard said the party has already begun "to create the machinery" to bring the author-lecturer back to the San"Francisco Bay area "even .. -~MUM I " • tema1 combustion engine sales J e n s e n , w h o a I s o beginning in 1975. if it means be bas t.e return to ...,,,{. jail." -~====~=~~~~========~~"~"=~ 11c agreed to substilule the represented the entire strict emission standards v.-itil Au t omobile Manufacturers hopes of gainng committee aµ· Atsociation, Inc., said the provill. Petris said he would 1neasure fell short of con· seek to round . up one more . d . " chn 1 · 1 f<lvorable vote to resurrect the s 1 ·e·r· 1 ~.g le o og1~a controversial proposal. '"""' feas1b1hty problems facing The committee :.cction came the automotive industry. sfter more than five hours of "California already has a testimony on what tuf!ied out properly constituted agency 10 be a sleeper in the . . ll'glslative mill and t h e which has . the authonty a_nd session's most potent anti· the expertise lo accomplish r smog proposal. . the goals ~g.ht ~Y this p~o- Automotive manufaclur1ng posed legislat1on , he said, spokemen from Detroit. even referring to the Air Resources with the ban written out and Board, successor to t h e the standards substituted for CalUornia ?\1otor Ve hi c I c il w e r e adamantly against Pollution Cont rol B o a r d • ii. Jtnsen is a former director t.£ "In our opinion it calls for that board. emission levels \Ybich ber no But Petris ar"gued the pro- Jogical relationship to any air posed standards, l''hicq would quality levels which have ever have applied to all new cars been considered here o r sold in California after 197:i. elsewhere," D. A. Jensen of were necessary to restore the Ford Motor Co. told the panel. state's smog-free atmosphere. Topless Bars Placed Under New Controls SACRAMENTO (AP) -The It i ! 1 i mi I ed to Senate has apprOved a biU giv-establishments serving food, · th beverages or both and "ex· Ing cities and counties e empts theaters, concert halls power to regulate or ban cer· and similar facilities primari· t lain topltss and bOLtomless Jy devoted to performances. shows. Democratic Sen. George The ''Quimby-Walsh Act,'' Moscone of San Francisco said ro--autbored by Assemblyman he voted for the bill "reluc- John P. Quimby ([)..Rialto), tantly" to reduce the chances and Sen. Lawrence E. Walsh of passage of a similar but ([).Huntington Park). was ap-o much stricter bill-by proved U.:& Thursday and Assemblyman F I o y d L. returned to the Assembly Wiiefield, R..SOuth Gate. where concurrence on an That bill. Moscone said, amendment is expected. "could even let local govern· The m e a s u r e pe~iLs ments -.:egulate the s i z e ol ordinances directly regulating bikinis." By approving the "the exposure of Ole genitals -Quimby-Walsh plan. he said, or buttocks of or the breasts the Senate was preventing of any person who acts ~s a Wakefield's supporters from waiter. waitress or entertainer getting the chance to say the need for their bill still existed. State Near Wide Open •·Besides," ?\1oscone added, "we're not giving anything to local governments. Nudity is already protected under, the First Amendment -except if it's done right out on Ole street." Cleaver fled this country last November rather than return to prison when his parole was revoked. He was declared a parole violator because of charges brought against him for his role in an April 1960 shootout with the Oakland police. "lle's willing to return and go on trial and even go to prison if he's convlcted," Hilliard said, "as long as he doesn't have to go to prison before the trial." New Papers Filed for Mrs. Judd SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Reagan's legal staff has sent to the attorney.general's office another request from Arizona Jor the extradition of Winnie 1luth Judd, the fam ed trunk murderer of a geriera- tion ago. She is charged with being a fugitive from an Arizona men· tal hospital. Reagan's office received the request Thursday. It had returned an earlier extradition request because Atty. ·Gen. Thomas Lynch's office said the papers were not in proper form. ·The governor's assistant legal affairs secre tary, Richard Turner. said if the al· tomey &eneral approves ~e documents this time, he will iebedule a hearing within the next few weeks. Mrs. Judd was arrested in June working as a housekeeper in Danville. She had assumed another name, but has admitted she ls the woman convicted in Arizona In the 1930s ol murdering two female friends and shipping their bodies to Los Angeles in a trunk. She was declared Insane and committed to th e Arizona Stale Hospital, but escaped from there in 1962. Primaries SUPERINTENDENT'S SACRAMENTO (AP) -On· Jy rouUne Senate apprhval of Assembly amendments stood today in the path lo Gov. Jl.eagan's desk of a bill open· ing Calllornia's pres!dential primary to any w t d e I y recognized candidate. Reagan vetoed a similar bill last year and has said he sees no reason so rar this year to change bis mlnd on tlle mat- ter. A $-15 vote sent the Senate-. passed bill back to the upper house from the Assembly Thursday. A present, a person must gather thousands of signatures! on petitions to qualify for the CalUomia pr eti dent i a It primary. Under the bill by Sen. Allred E. A1quist (0.San J'11Se), the secretary of state woukl be re- quired to put on the ballot automatically the name of any penon he felt was widely recogniz.ed in California or 'eJaewhere as a presidential J>061lbllily. The person could gel off the ballot only by swearing he was not a prtsldential candldate. SIDEWALK SALE! MID·SUMMER CLEARANCE LINGERIE BRAS HENSON KICKERNICK BUY 3 AT I TIME DIVIDEND SALE NYLON BRIEF Regul•r $1.75 •.. NOW ....... . 3 ~ $4.65 NYLON BIKINI R•gul•r $1 .bS .•• NOW .............. . 3 ~ $4.25 Coroner Bears No Hard Feelings Toward Staff LOS •ANGELES (UPI) - When Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi was fired ' as county corooer live months ago, many of the charges alleglng b i z: a r re behavior were gathered from members of his staff. But today, now reinstated arter a successful appeal of lhe dismissal lo the Civic Service CommisSion, Noguctii says he has "no hard feelings for anyone." Noguchi told newsmen after the ruling was announced Thursday that he spent his life savings fighting the 60 specific charges regarding his conduct as chie[ medical examiner~ coroner. Those charges, $Orne of the strangest ever lodged against a public · official, included reports Noguchi prayed for airplane crashes that would bring l!lffie to the coroner's of· !ice and expressed a desire to perform autopsies on county officials who were still alive. The most atariling allega- tion was that Noguchi danced in his office In glee as Sen. Robert F. Kennedy I a y fighting for his life in Good Samaritan Hospital. Noguchi was quoted as saying: "I'm going to be famous. I hope he dies. Because if he dies then .my international reputation will be establish- ed." The commission h e a r d testimon:ii . for seven weeks, but Noguchi refused to appear on his own behalf, His at- torney , Godfrey Isaac, said the decision was made so Noguchi would return to his job with a "spoUess" record. S.ATllRDAY VALUES IN * LADIES FLATS (SANDALS & CASUALS! .. VAl:UES TO $14. THESE SPECIAL PRICES WILL BE IN EFFECT TOMORROW, AUGUST 2, ONLY ' .:'"" J Reagan Tax Cot . 7 Major Cha~ges Due in Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -accept two courses menliontd the idea of an income ta~ .. Gov. Reagan's tax-cut plao by some IJMlocrats: uaing the rebate, but spoosored the bill appeared headeO for major roughly $100 million available anyway because he thought it chan.gt,J'loday 1n an Assembly for the tar cut for tither is fairer to middle Income l.jJ:· committee and it may emerge pub!Jc works conStructi.on or payers than Deukmejian's. as a 1ales tax reduction in-school a{d. Moscone said that cutting stead of an income tu cut. However, Diukmejian said the sales tai temporarily ''is The Assembly Revenue and he and the governor basically even better ytl." Taut.ion Committee beard the want simply to relwil the No one appeafed happy with Reagan plan and a rival money to the taipayers in one the relat.ivtly small size of the DemocraUc proposal -both form or anolber. income lax reduction that already passed by the Senate Moscone admitted frankly would be provi~ by either -for lhrtt hours, Thursday he didn't really think much of hill. night. .....;.;.c=.c.......:....:..._ __ ....:. __________ _ It took both bUlJ under study tor amendment, but these developments seemed likely, observers said: -The plan authored by Democratic Sen. G e or g e Moscone ot San FraDCisco won't get out of the Republican-dominated com· mittee. OWrman William T. Bagley (R-San Anselmo), said the only plan that will be ap-Jr: proved , if any, will be ;';··- Reagan's, au thored by Republican Sen. G e o r g e \ji• f ~"3,f; Deukmejian of Long Beach. · :1 ,,,.,.- -U the Deuk:mejl"n bill lf<{ ?" does emerge, it will be VJ · , substantially changed. Bagley .1 A Rare Fee--Slm1a· ,.,•1n frequently mentioned during F. . ./ · \ . -the ~ea,ing th~ possibility of • R °"' ll-~.~ith Exce)lent Terms ebm1nating the in come tax cut r ! ffi. ~~ \:, ~ "t );,: "' ' from the bill eod substituting ~TH :J-o 'WHITE SANDS BEACH a cut in the statewide sales [u~cD lA STREET TREES -~ 1. tax by one cent for three ."-?'. . .1·., . months, from Oct 1 through ~ Y 0CCAN VIE:W StTES • • Dec. 31 Bagley, frequently at t..~V~!E:A8lE l!TILITIES I; odds with Reagan on f-1 ., WlvE'i!':O.VED Sl'.REETS poUcy, called the governor's , .PEXAS,fl.!:I~ DE~ ·RES_TRICT fON S plan "Mickey Mouse.:.~ . _,~ .• £;? · ·-~~~. "f'.~"-F I Both th~ Deukme11an and ; -~?· .. 1 ,,.,. ' · V". ~.· .. · ,., Moscooe bills would allow the !"!!f§,J/.; °"'; !''~E B\:ACKBURN,fCO. _ I taxpayer to deduct from the ]~ ~~~-1 : · .... \ i:-0 ... VE:lOPERS "i-"· · , """"• state income tax bill he pays _:t ~ f '. : \ \ '· ·~ \ " j next April a small part of the ··.~ \ ?. \ ·~ \ ; · !!'\. 1823 W,st.chff Or. 1 amount he paid this year. . , '. ~ .. : .. \., \ \ ... /.Newp~rt Beach f ,Moscone urged a 20. percent t: 1• f ~ :ifumfil:\ ''· ~ \ .• ~'"' J deductiort, while Deukmejian '.'"!' t.i.:."~· ·{i;.~ · ~ \. ,,,.... Phone: 646-0231 t argued for 10 percent. J . ~~=·~""\ "<" Wi~ co~mittee members ''x~· ~ ~\ !-::~·:--~ ~ ·=: ;;.::..:~ ,- prodding him on what changes ~ ~. *• , ~A " ... , , he would accept In hi! ·bilJ, '\ "-'-" Deukmejian said ~ ~d not ,.,.,,~,. ;;;;c~-:-;-;m. -· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A.UGUST 2 ONL.Y SHOP EARLY STORE WILL OPEN AT 9:30 A.M. FOR THIS BIG ANNUAL ·EVENT MEN'S SHOES FLORSHEIM • ROBLEE· OTHERS LADIES DRESS SHOES LIFE STRIDE • DE LISO DEB $290,0$890 VALUES TO $24. 95 ' VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK COTION BRIEF Re9ul•r $1.00 ... NOW ......... . 3 ~ $2.70 3~$315 I P.L EASE, ALL SALES FINAL -NO EXCHANGb OR REFUNDS I SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOWOnH SATURDAYS tte 1 r.M. MON•THUIS 10°1 P.M. PllDA.YS 1M r.M. (714) 540-SZll . L.cat"4 •: h . c.o-t rt ... , C ..... MIN •u1. YIC:t •rt::1.·Mlfltttf" JAMES W. VERRALL ACET A 1'E BRIEF Rogulu $1.25 ••. NOW ... PHONE 642-1197 Veta's 1111t11Aft arPAllL --··-·---- • 1052 IRVINE WESTCLIFF PLAZA l ' NEWPORT BEACH 548-8684 ' ( ( ( ( I I I • • --r· Civic Center T aking Shape By JACK BROBACK planned ~s shown <>II the ac--handletl by Civic Center Com- Of ""' 0 •11'1' l"UOt "'11 companying nu m be red ii-mission. Payments of SI.SS SANTA ANA -Orange lustralion will give so1ne solid miUion a year for 25 years in- County ~isors were answers as provided by counly elude the Centra l Ulility described as "awestruck" on Space Control Plannl'r \V, BuiJding. Hou~es e i g h t October S. 1965, when they Clare Ennis : • n1unicipal and 25 superior reviewed plans !or a "ch'ic 1. Stadium: Parking lots to courts, County Clerk. Public Center of Tomorrow" as be developed west of this D e re n d e r , P u b I i c ouUined by Commun 1 t ·Y facility within the nut two Administrator, District At. Facilities PI an n er s or years. torney, ti.1arshal, and related Pasadena, a firm they had 2. Central Jail, \Voinan'.s offices. Presently unused floor hired for the job. Jail and sher i ff• s •!earl-space (upper stories) is pro· The plan was the culmina· quarters: completed in late \ idcd for eight more tion of more than three years I968 at a cost of SIS,662,000 municipal courts and 20 more of "heavy thinking" on future and being paid for oul of superior court~ to be. con1- government building needs of general fund budget on 8 pay-plele<l and plact.'CI in use over Orange County and the City or as-you-go ,b:lsis. the next 15·20 years as needed. Santa Ana. 3. Convention Center : In dis-II. City of Santa Ana Coun- lt wa~ described as "a long-tant future. Probably rinanced cil Chambers: No definite range plan, keyed to govern-by private parties along with time set ror construction. ment needs IS years away and the proposed Cultural and Estimated cost, $250,000. would encompass a 30-block Information Centers (4 and S). 12. New Santa Ana City area in downtown Santa Ana. 6. Federal Building: Santa Hall : Con~truction completed Its boundaries were to be a Ana architectural firm natned by 1972 at cost of $3.7 million roughly iectangular area from this month to do prelim inary under I ease· back ar- t.fain Street westerly lo ·design work on 300,000-squar~ rang~ment. City to pay beyond the f.1unicipal Stadium, foot structure. Only 30 percent $328,300 a year for 25 years. west or Flower Street ~nd of total arcbit~ctural cost of 13. Santa Ana Po I i cc between 4th and 8th streets.. $500,000 to be done this year. t~acility : Con1pletcd I hr e e The Pasadena firm's plan, Construction date indefinite. years ago. six months in preparation, 7. Central Utilities Building : 14. Santa Ana City L1brarY: cost $30,000 and envisioned a Completed late in 1968 at a Plans 1n work s to add ~,000 complete civic center complex cost of $1.8 million, with square feet to present 35.000- by 1982 at an estimated cost of $750,000 additional to be spent square foot st ructure before almost $50 million. this year on new equipment 1980. The s u Pervis ors en-for increased capacity. 15. County \\1elfare Building : thusiastically endorsed the 8. Law Library : Plans nov: Completed five years ago. plan "in principle" and being completed for $1 million I 6 . £ n gineering-Finance ordered a study of a joinl three-story slructure or 28,00!l Building addition · Construe- , powers financing authority squa re feet to be ready by late lion 10 start this year 011 with Santa Ana city officials. 1910. l lij,000-squarc-foot, th ree-story County Administrative Of· 9. Slate Building: To be structure primarily for the. - . 1 l • l ~ . -Ith St,..t --,.-----~ 0 D I J j dn ' . R!J. ~ •, ~, -· . . - @ ~-·~~ :i .. '@'---.! ' ' r-i @. ,_J I ! ® l1h $tr.-t ~ 00 ' -~---" ' 11 ----____ , (bt!I 61 S!rHr e:_· lh 5,, .. , • , f '· J -1)/J(V P!LO J Conv!""°" C111ter 4 lnl0tm1tioil ~.,. i C"1tur1I C111I"' (!)FodM~ 1,111;,. (D C.ntr.J Utility f.tdllly • I ~ ... l ibr.,-y I St1t• 8"'ilcli119 II Co1111ty Cour ... ~1• II Coull(.ll Ch1mb•n 11 City H1I -J;•itl1~9 8Jd9L - - --p,Opot•d llJd9s. t rice Roberl E. Thomas, then completed by 1973 under a Assessor's Depart men I . Building Services Director, lease-purchase r in an c in g Estimated completion date, called the endorsement the agreement with the Civic_July 1971. Space also p_rovide<I first step toward "getting the Center Commission. Over for fJcrsonncl Department, show on lhe road." He saw Lhe 00.000 square feet to house Real Property Ser v ices result as "a future cente r of about 600 state employes now Department. and an Emergen· beauty, utility and e(ficient-y." scattered in 14 buildings, cy Operating Center in a sub- Thomas outlined three mostly in Santa Ana. ' basen1cnt for Civil Defense. four years <1go. To house Street to be demolished for being remodeled al cost nr S6.000. E1•enlually \l'est sidc of juries. Property to be ac· phases : • Io . New 1 1 -story J6A. Prt'sent ll eaUh Depart· County f-tecordcr & Planning new aligninenl of Civic Center $8.000 (or Assessment Appeals 68-year-old structure will be <iutrctl this ·year west of ne1• l. The new jail and Sheriff's courthouse: ComplC'tcrl [ate in 1ncnt Building : Completed five l)epart1nent when addition Drive (8th Street). Board hearing rooms. Second used for a County Muscuzn. Jail for jury parking and headquarters, new courthouse 1968 at a cost of $13.88 million. years ago. rompleted. Present Hall or 17. Old Cow·thouse Building: floor east side to be remodeled 18. County Garage Buildiag: cntployes will use garage. and central utility building by Being financed under a )case-'!GB. Pr~sent Engineering-Hccords on 8th Street between Two former courtrooms on for Planning Departmen\'s Now used for counly-<1wnl'd Eventually two stories will be 1968. (Accomplished). back, revenue-bond p I an Finance Building: Con1pleled Broadway and Sycamore east side grol!nd [Joor now General Plan staff. Cost, vehicles and parking for added. 2. A new Santa Ana city llall .:_:::_.:_ __ _:._.:_ _ _:_ _______ __::.__...:.._ _____ .:.._ __ :._ _______ ......::._.:.._ ______________ _:: ______ _:_ _ _:__~_::=:::.:_-------- adjacent to the present police fa cility on 6th Street, (Now planned for 1971 ), construction of three pedestrian malls and more parking facilities (now underway). 3. A new county ad· ministration building by 197~ an addition to the present Engineering-Finance Building and additional parking areas. : Where does what v.·as then ~described as "a bold, im- 1 aginative and daring pro- ! posal" stand today: • A rundown of buildings com-~ pleted, under coosuuction and ' ~DEATH NOTICES S idewalk Sidewalk Superintendent's -SALE CLAY MD CLOSE.OUT •• ·• BLACK & DECKER I -_ , !~~~~E.-:~~r~:~~ POW~R TOOLS sA~~~Rs RION HARDWARE , Cl•v· y~ unc111 ,111e<10. Mn. W•I· !'1.::.:.:.:1,i,::: • .:..:~~=:. •• D~R:l:L:L:ER:S:. •• :...;~· ;;;;r:::::=================;-;;;;;;: ' f!!f F, ~~. Ta<.gma, W1 .... l11G- HOOVER VACUUM CLEANERS PRICED TOO LOW TO ADVERTISE ! MANY MORE ITEMS NOT LISTED ton; Mn. Wllll1m 111v111e. Brl1lol, New ... -------------------------.. ! Ha,.,.,i.hlre; Mrs. H-rd ,., Joni!$; ..._ 1nd th~ •rlnddllld~. FllTlllY Wi- • • tH!s lfloH wl.,.1"9 IO ..,...ke memor11I ·' contritlu!IOl>I, P*NM conlrltktl1 la 11'>1! .lo. Al~ C"""""""'Y HCll!Jlt.J. P--~ " denii Commu""IY Howll1I, Soulll Cot1sl • Comn>ullltv Ho5Pll1! Ill' 1'le .lmNkan ;. car.a• $0Cll'IY. Se<Vices. ~•Y· 1 • PM, Pac!llc VI-Chaoel. OlrKlftl bv P.eillc View Mor1U•f"I'· ARBUCKLE & WEUiB · \Vestelilf l\fortuary · m E. 17th St .. Costa l\1esa 64!><88S • BALTZ l\10RTUARIF.S ' Corona del l\lar · OR 3-9450 Costa l\1esa 1\-11 6-%424 • BELL BROADWAY l\10RTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa !\lesa LI g.3433 .. DILDAY BROTlfERS lluntlngton Valley l\1ortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 84%-77"11 • l\tcCORf\UCK LA GUN A BEACll l\10RTUARV 1795 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach 494-9~15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\1ortvary Cbapd 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, California 644-27 00 • PEEK FAJ\ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL no~E 7801 Bolsa .A,ye. \Vestmlnsler 893-35?5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY Laguna Beacb 494-1535 San Clemente 4!n-tll00 • SMITHS' MORTUARY 6%1 !\faiA St. llu.aUngton Beach 536-653, The Orange Coast's Most Complete PRINTING SERVICE Phone 642-4321 ''11·111M1"111i PLUMBERS FRIEND FORCE CUP REG. 79c 39' ALINI RITE 'TANK BALL REG.49c 79c WITH LIFT WIRE 10'' FR Y PAN $169 TEF LON REG. 2.98 ' MAGNETIC POT HOLDER • G.E. -CMl COFFEE POT 3 to 7 CUPS D-CELL FLASHLI GHT BATTERIES 32 qt. THERMO S .ICE CHEST Rt911lar $9.95 ,I • 11c • BRASS FllP· LOCKS 5 9c -MIXING- BOWLS PLASTIC SET OF 4 Magnetic Catches 11c GIFTS, GIFTS 50o/o To 75o/o OFF! Our Mistakes -Your Gain Qts. Re9. 2.99 Paint Goofs More Goofs Galo. Reg. 6. 99 TIKI TORCH FUEL 59c Quart EverReady 69¢ FLASHLIGHTS 'D'-CELL Reg. 991 ' ELKO CAN OPENERS, TONGS, FUNNELS, TOMATO SLICERS, 3 9 PLUS MANY MORE! c GADGETS REG. 49c-79c PATIO CANDLES REG. S9c Pistol Grip Hose Noz zle ' . SPRAY PAINT TUMBLE RS G.E. -Tl S TOAST.ER OVEN I I 57c ... 4 4c 25c ' r .. ~rlfu, AUIUll I, 1969 ' • ' ' . . For The Record Demos Aim -at Own Divorces THINK SIDEWALK SALE THINK WESTCLIFF PLAZA b42-2#4 ci..-•n. ,.,..,... "'"" 111 "!tM•• ,,_ ij:r.'~·o!:,~,,. ".;~: t::;orvn L H....SCW., Jo-n,,. l•vl'l'l',I YI (1'1¥lr.1 Eo .. m INT1!11LOCUTOaY D1!CltlllS Hod!, DoliY EIMI "' Gleil Arlll11r "°"'· Frfnc..> v• H•rrV (., Jr. Ollr1id1, Glencl1 L. 111 Alcllanl John W1!1n, 1(1nn11h W, V> M1•lt A. Rae.I.,., Oe'VtrM I."' Mlr1•1n I. l•~tt. B1rbflte Ann "' Edwtrlf Fr1nc:n D'-"'thtslor. C111rl"' H. v• AA~rlon A, Fl11d1, Bre!ld.1 L. w. Calvln C. I"°"· C~ren "' 01vld P. WIH!t. c ... _ e. vs"'-" Ell!'fl o~""''• (••"<-• J "' OM•ld (I ~t. P1lrlci1 Susan "' L1rrv "lotm•n SolvJ1, Cl\enlt IC ..... 111 Mlclleel H1u1. i-IHber< E1rl vs FtlM.'11 A"ltl Overblulol>I. E"lll>tf'nl1 M. "' Wn!l1m H. N1!1r~~ Ftl'd ~11nlP1 VJ Id• A-U• Cren.ri~w. ..81111 OtWlll 111 l'ieltn Ell11belh llO<lr"""'''' Judv lee"' Join• Ctrlloot Vlr1k, Btt!Y Viol• "' Arnold L BOtt!ll\, Arll!ltl Ellffn VI ltfrv R~rl Morin, Mkll1el O vs Judltto A. ~':'u~':'Ci.~~~" ... ~ ~:;,;: ';/.,":!, e H~•r!1. l(~v L "' l>lcll~rd J. Swan110n, 81rbar1 G, "' M•r!ln H .. Jr. Pottv, 0',..nn "' l(enfte!l'I llo~d O'Brien, Llflll• l . "' J1mes F, Bloomh•ld, (vnrnl1 Ann YI C1'11rl•I Wiiiiam ''"'"· 5,,.,,,,11 "' J~"'t• w11111m, Jr, Frank. Harold"" 8ellv J, 1nu•"-"'· lhtllarO k. "' J1coue1Yn A ~!I. CarolYn All<f n J1me• G"°•I'• J...-, Olxlt Lou "' wu11.,,, Oon11d H~•lrff1, M•ry JIM Y• H-1rd M.. Sllof;:kev, Helpn M. YS Jldr Huoritt. 81•1)11•• A. "' H1rr11 O. :~~o~~~r~vMJ':u~~~,., L lhrlo;tr. P1tricl1 A. "' Clworln C. !or1rltn. HarolO Ro!>lrl "" lortilll't Marie Ne>evtl, Jel'tl Jovct "' Orrll AnlhOl'Y, S•~l>l'l<l,,•on, MtlOdit Oline "' Oontld our.au. McGlnn•s, E11rt T, "' Velma, S(l\ick, C1rol Ann v1 Guv A Slanton. SYIVIA Lvnn ... Pi!UI Lt'ft McDontlO. CKrtll F, "' J1mt1 W1r- "" llo~li, M1rg1tet J. vs Dontld E ln1tc1>er. Daune Mitt• "' Htrold G ..... n. Birtlas ST, JOSEPN NOSPITAL July u Mr . 1nd Mrt. Jame. C. PtoP!o. tiM.W S.n11 Ynei, Fou~!•111 V1llev. ~ M• •nd Mrs. Rot>«! J, Sl~ulll.1, "m Stn Jao;lno1, FOU,,.llri V•lltl'" boY Julv U Mr. aflCI Mil. Allt#I Shlv1, lllD SICiiy, Con11 Mew, boY J111r 11 M~!ra~~Mrt.~· H~~1r.=1' 11:!'r:.~ ... Mr. Ind Mr$. II."· Jlovc•olt, UGI No.! u11> St,. w .. trnlntt.,., bov Mr. Ind Mrs. Dotl•IO M. SnYd9', J2J] O•~oll AYe .. COS!• Mes.. boy Marriage Lice1ases Lib~rals Seeking 0 uster of 2 Senators Uf'I Tt~ Just Like Grandfather WASHINGTON (AP) movement, Prof. Wes I e ~ McCarthy and the late Robert UberaJ Demo c r 1 ts are Bagby of the University of F. Kennedy. searcltlng for men and money West Virginia's history It bas .,passed a resQlfJon to, try to unseat two powerful department criticJzi11g J11ckson for what it senators of their own party H e pictured the operation as called efforts to keep Rlive "a lp:cing re-election contests 1n more a nonpartisan effort than fearful mood or cold war con· 1970. ' a party mutiny. He said there frontation and his eagerness tn In Washington state, the are 400 members, including a feed the milltary-induslrial Democratic Councll is trying number of Republicans. complex a lion·s share of the lo raise $250,000 to llnderwrlle "\Ve're lryln&. lo organize available re.sources." a candidate to challenge Sen. throughout the statt," said The group has committed Henry M. Jackson, a leading Bagby. "When we have itself to finding anolher can· congre!Sional advocate of the ~ough weight then we'll didate and to raising $250.000 Safeguard anUballistic missile decide who to enco\;a1e to op-to help him, JI has d istributed system. Jackson is a senior pose Qyrd." anti.Jackson bumper stickers member of the Armed On ·b ·i·t .d 8 b saying "Nixon.Jackson in '70." Services Commiltet: and e posst 11 y; sa1 ag y, chairman or the Interior Com-would be Rep. Ken Hechler, Jackson 's office said the m ittee. whose: espousal of l'nine safety senator ··welcomes the op- ln West Virginia. a group and suppor t for the "blac k position.'' centered a t the state unlversi-lung" str ike has given him Robert Griffith, the counc il'! ty is advertising nationally for prominence in the coal state. execuUve director. said the 1 d 1 Hechler has said he is not group "has raised $10,000 in un s o .encourage someone to seeklng any other office. confront Sen, Robert C. Byrd, pledges without much effort. No. 3 man in the Senate's A West Virginia politician We expect far more activity in Democratic leadership. who holds no brief for By rd fund raising in the fall." Neither effort is given much conU=nds "Byrd may be the Some members would Jike ti) chance by professionals. most popular politician in see Rep. Brock Ad¥fls, a Po 1 it I ca I book make West Virginia's history. This youthful congressman l!<'itil automatically place long odds drive will never get off the liberal c r edentials, contest on drives by amateurs against ground." Byrd had no com· J ackson. such well-entrenched n ames ment. "But we have n't asked David Eisenhower, Pre'sldent Nixon's son -inwla\v, as Jackson and Byrd. In Washington, the anti· him," said Griffith, "becaus11 and grandson of Dwight Eisenhower, tries out .a Republicans a r e said"lo con· Jackson operation is run by we don't want to hear a 'no.' .golf club from a new set given him by the Arnold s ider both senators safe from the Democratic Council creat· \Ve v"ant to take a lot of bod~s ORANGE. couNT" MA••t•GE Palmer Enterprises on the Capitol gro~nds . GOP assault a s of now. But ed in 1968 mainly by sup-lo the discussion and quite a LtcEHsEs 1ssu1.o the professionals also express porters of Sen. Eugene J. bit o( m oney as v.·ell." B1t001CS-EDWA11os. Atthur El, :10, 01 concern t at sue campaigns 110 s. 111111, S1nr1 ...... I nd (Ml" E., J't th rt ll•enner, Janlct A. vs Z•ver;o C. Gilrrl~. B"~ v1 WU1!1m E McM1/'lon, W1116a l . "' Edwlrd. (h1mberl1ln. Wllli1m F. YI Lindt 1. L"9olll. o r1na IC1v vt Lt•llt Allen. Mont"""· C•lllryn D. "' P•clllco. Cr•wford, Jtna Brown "' J01t1>~ Jlmfl. JULY 14 h h • i:g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mc~A°S'HrA.::r&~ko~\.1~11',"~1~~11~.. l llo•d """' H. HOllvwoocl, C•lll. '"" 8All.ANTINE-KOEHLEft. Doutlll I ' can sp I e pa y . 1t, a..o P11tJc11 A .. 11, born ot "'" K1!hlNt1 c. 21. of t.11'1 5u.r c • .,,, 21, o1 u1' w. llivm.or, S.nti An• To help ·raise funds, the • -Cl•v Sr .. N-t l!!JeKh Or!Vt, Sou!l'I L.,,... .,.., J1net e 20 "' 11• Salm J w t v· . . ,,. d I "" Whlle. lorn• Gent"" O.,,,ald Ltllov. ICYk05kY, ~n1h• K•Y "' J1mt1 Frtn-crs. M((ltlltn, M.-lt G vi Jt•nln! M. llen!<lm, Ernt1t1ne Vl(!o,11 "' E•rl Oavi1 T •..:~rn. (•rol "'"" VI W1•nt Charles Bolton. Donald E. "" KatM"l'n L Von Btrt, M1rl• V. "' lllcn••d E Moore. Tyrr1 Jo v1 i!!Jr1Kt .... !ltl' H11mpl'lrtv•, MltY ,t.nn v1 Thton~ ltillOY. W•lc:l'I. o.,,, 8. "' Je1nntnt. SllOlem•ktr, V. El~n "' lltv Mtl•l" Mlli.r. Belly M. vs Andttw A. 0-hly, Jtna l . \ol WIVM F. Hv!lon, Ruth E. VI Wtlltr S, l'rkt, J1,,_ H. Jr. v• Almt V. ChllL EdM-Mary v•_Ef~ TllOml.l Meylor, lletolna Yt Hovct J. Mtlnlo•h. Dtnnls S. "' Lindt C•rol F•l"eft, Glorle Pt~lrfte v1 EO'wlrd E8rl S""'nttr, !.Illy Ann "' John Oouoltl Bond. Judl!h C•rol b• G1reen Well Whl1lln9er, Oor'llthy E. "'John I(, 0•0?. lvtlde Rat "'Jam" LH Vl•lktr, IC:1rtt1 I, v• LH F. Wiidt, Oor!1 E vs NOO'man E Pletv. o· .......... IC:e<iMtll Robef'I wac~. J.,.nne E. vs Jf'J ttt Roni, 81rbar1 Jo.""" "' Dominic Yt•mftn, Patricia A. "' llk~ltd 0 R111i.rtoro. Jenn L. "' Lturtl'O IC1y JUDGMENTS G•IV•tl, Oe•><I A. VI l•""t IC. [fft-nulmtn!l. M••beuer. Ann Mlrlt "' John D•vlO (10\nUlmtnt) L•ZAMA-N1cH0Ls. Jol'ln .... 21. °' "'1 HEN0111cl(5CJH • T11ow111:10Ge, lla.d. ~ St..:+.. •fl"!• es irg1rua group-ca ing Saturday, August 2n On Y Wln•klw Orivt, Hun!lnalon &tic+. 1nd Gfff9, 21, "' 20(» l!!Jtr\11 L..... MOClllE·ltUSSELl, Wllll1m o .. J}, of itself the Coalition f 0 r •,·.~,,",,2.:• 21, ol Till W. M1lvern, N1'NOOl'I l!elCh •rod Ol1nt F., 72, of .,... , • 111 -· ion Pomona Av1 .. Aot. 11. c"'11 "'" ~Mrrlll, ""'lltlm, 11>11 0or1, F.. Alternatives lo Senator Bycd, 3LOTH·MILLEll, John W., 2J, ol ..02 Miii -J7, of 5& H1mlllcn SI., Costt Me$t. ~: 0~1~AA~~~7'm • ... ~ •. :~1~.~~%r:.: 11:uecKE1t·llOAOY. 01v10 ,.., n, 01 Julv n with headquarters in Morgan· KOVACH-MERINO, Jt re l' 25. ol 1111 ~~? s.1~,ia~;io.. ~ffJ: An: :r:~~OGO~ SCHOl.Tt.SULLlllAN, Frlh s .. 21. of lown-has turned to magazine ~lh S1 .. Ntwuor! Be1ch Ind M1rl1 A. s 1 lllS ll:Of\llO' Ro.id, Hunllnt!on 8e1cn 17, o• 12111 Crewe St .. Norwtlk MA~E~~~t'1.F~i'o, 11rr,o;";. e .. 11. ~nd Patr!tlt II ., J2, ot 11' E. Wll>On advertising. ll inserted this Mll.HEll·Al'TCH!SON, It-ti A .. '1. of w A j A I h 111 ~1 Mat Av1 .. Aot. F ind J•nt ~~ ~~1~~~.sM!!:. bolh 01 tto "}471" M":~.u':.'.:..,·,,~~:re. ~~-R., '·· ''· ,, plea for contributions in t e l , ll, of 1US El<!ln, Aot. N, both ol " ' Un ,.... ....,..,.,, J J J ' N cosrt Mes• H~~~~Rj~E1~.N~~· .,';'1)~1/ c~:n.~1~: SJO w. w;11<1t1, ""''· 1. co.11 Mn• persona co umns o tne ew GllEEN-ENOIG. Bruco A_, JI, ol mlO .o\Vt,. Founllln Vtllev •tld ktt~rlrie l .. Jt, ol !!10 • S. flep,bJiC, -N.W. l41n Pltce, G1lnttwlllt. Fl1 . De.,gl••· S1nt1 ""'· t:e.lj~"";,;,,,::; l!!Jo~.(l~)ft Lio M•s• M1cDONALO.D~C~uN, DDFllld. I], llOBEllTSON-GRIFFIN, Ger•IO' 11., )l, "Should ?o.tlssissippj have JIEFLOGLE.CHILOS. lt~ll w .. "· 01 of 102'2 Sttnl«d Rold. Gtrd~~ ti I 1 F d \ k 1157_11 R•ricllo Gr•""'• •nd tr....,, ,1, "' "st 1,...1,.,, Aon , N""'"°'' Be•c~ GrO\'e ind Sl'li ron IC .• J>O, .,. .,11 iree sena ors. orv.·ar • oo · ol "968 Callo C1dlr bo!h of LIDll"' ind Carvlllfl l., ll, "' 111 S. Filr· Sl'l•wnet Ito.ti. westmlnsttr. l·"g West y,·cgl.">·a·s ''Y 'No.' Hiiis ' ... ~ .. , S..n!I" ....... DUDLEY-THOMPSON, lloberT A., ol " " " MELLO-OUNN, John 5. 21. ol Sl• ltlGGS-WHllE, Oor>llcl L .. 71, ol 3SO lnlio1 Rod<NllC. trv!'lt Ind Ptl'OnY F., Help us replace \Vest [Yi!i1!~ E~':"t., !l""'C1con::i." C:.~ Mlri"' Orlvo, "°'· J ino Mlr<i• 71, ol 571"'1 Orc~ld, Cor-Otl Mir. y· . ' "d I f ,....,. ~ c .. 22, of "° MtdJ\I DcllYO, ... DI. J, LOCHEll·lllCHAllD$0N, ltrov L .. J>O. 1rg1na s res1 en reac 100· Wf11J.1M¢/,'11t.om','.'1,,',,",',",.'~-J,'·,•.. C~l(~~~:~~~· 110., 11 .. 10, of O! JS7J C1milt, SIM1 An1 '"" 110~1 ary Sen. Robert Byrd ••• " ·~ .,... l .. 1,, ol 6lll lltl!lflflr Drl~e. Th d h bcooght ,.. l a 10. of 15131 Wll~11 ll'lt, Hun!lnolon 1:1311 Edtr1t>ur9h Dt1,,., Wt1!mln•!•~ Hu1!tl111Jtor> kit~. e 8 as JUS Rl~·:1~TEMPLETDN, Jerrv o .• ,., GI .,.., Kill>IHfl c., n, "' l}.17! Flar· McLAUGHLIN·AOIE , S'""'" A,, ol couple of contributions and 15153 _WfblJtr Woo!ml"•!fr 1nd 1... once_ Clr<:le. Hllntlno!O<" Bte<I>. JUI? Via (1tall"•· Caoiilrt rio letch 01 'I'. IS, oi' lffl1 SMll!tlcl, H11n· ... SHLEIGH.JAC KSDN, Ft1n~ o .• 21. Briel Lind• L. :n, ol 1.SOO Holly l1r'11!, numerous inquiries." said the lln11ton Bt•ch ol lJ'lli Bordi llo.d, l• Mlrtdt 1nd NtWPOrT le••"· I ad r of th down Ith By d WA(;ONEll·PEKICAll. lllch1rd A .. It. Lindi L., 7', ol sm (1llonlf. Hu~!-JE"NNINGS·SULLIVAN. Louis E., u. ol e e e ·W -r 1• el LS.11 Chrl1t1 Pi•"", Hunlln9ton 1....,1,.,, 8e1th. .,. H Be1ch and "'lt!<l• L xr ol s• "''•"•·M•••••''· 0 •• ,,,, o . ''· ,..,,2 •'"u l tllf, Hun11n111on 8•1<1'1 ...rcl>tr, Ana""I• ·• ' '-~ ' -1rod P1trlcilr A ll ol !'601 Alli AllNE·OLtVAllEf' llC1'1r0 T , 2•, tncl 1"'1 Jo Ann (,, 1'. bolh ol ll•Sl 5.1.,. lu!lin. ·• ' lnte, Behlln1 l .. 21. bcl!n at ltlSO (•lie d1lwood S• .. Fouri!1ln V1l~v. GALLEGOS-5010, l,,0, It., ,,, o' U6 Btwlev, 11. both ol H~nl!1>11lon ll•l<h I uff'E'l~.f.•vl,•1."~,..!~~~ lt. '"" CHILO.COHEA, 01vl0 ".:~ 1,'· •,tot . s. E. Mc F10clen. Slnt• .-.~. Ind Ctrol Jwl'Y D ._.. "" H1rbclr. S..n11 An1 '"" llltle ... M., lS. ol f•1I S+.tll (lrcle. Wtt•· ltOVAl·llEYMOl.DS -Joseoh N, JoAnn, 11. both ol Si>Ol Ntv10t SI.. n. of 1'17 $.Indal-. (ost1 Me11. -·-•••. lloYf!. 16, ol Tuc1on, A1lr .. t nd l HunhnoHln Beith "' ·•• ll:OBEllT-VAUGINE. ltu•eric• T, :n, FOll GIE-OANIELSON, Frl!(lerick M' OICKE'r'·WOOO, Fttnll IE , J7• ol UOI L1K1ttl1 ll:tYr>OIO'!, lit, ol L•tunt l"<I S11Un110 L., 15, tloll> or 1035 17th 10. ol 11'• Con,.,.v Ave. f'ld P1ul· Nevlt; Clrtle, COii• ~,. incl 00,.._ lilli-1. St, ... pl, n, Hu.,llna1on BHCI> -t 1!t IC., ll, ol ]!JI $1"'10i Plltl. i ldl It,, JS, of 10!• Polt rll Or!ve, WEAVER-BACON -llcbtrl Gt1nl o'es,9~1e~~'c,~·,J:~~~!''i.J/c~ir.!:f.: b<lth of coo11 IMll. Newport Be1e1i. we1v.,., 11. of Hunt!n•lof! a11c~. 1nd M , 21, O! S60l Edl!t A«.. McOONAl.0.STAltl(., Ol"ld II .. l•. o! LANE-BUGNA, OIVld £., 21 , ol ISSS NorM1 Louise l!!Jtcan, 11, of Wtslmlnt!tr l:Ml All1ntt A--e .. H11nl11>11ton 8ttth El Rincho, Foumil~ Vtl14V I nd F~llerton. COMPLIMENTARY HAIRCUT With Your SHAMPOO & SET HAVE Y 0 U It HA I R RE· STYLED DUl'ING THIS BIG EVENT coMl"LIMENTARY HAIRCUT •• , SATURDAY ONLY PHONE 548-0460 WESTCLIFF PLAZA C1<1!•ns. Jtnt C. VI Ellit W1ndtll !•h• nulmtntl KRAM§R·DUFOllT. David K. 21. 01 1f!d Jetl l., tl, or U2S Pl1contl1. S~ry! l ,. lt. ol lot Mornl~I Stir Ju!Y lS .''' ''' .,, W•O"'•'"'''' '"" <·<o ··-· ·--. M<O""'NEll-MOllRIS -llar"'rd Pll·1:~~~~§~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ l'INAL OEC:IU!I:~ K., II, "ot, t7W 'W o 1 I bu';" A118ENZ·CoW'AN. Georve, 7(1, o1 17'A Lan11, N-1 lfftl'I. rict'N.c.oonMll. y, of L.,,... lel(h, M~lln"ihl, Mtr.o Ann P, "' EOwl" EB"~~\,,f.~~1!L'rv~~~~" l .. 11. al Maloru. l•1111n• Hlll1 tnd M•rJ.in lAS VEGAS, Nev. _ Mtffl,9e •nd FltnM lrt,,. Mlirrl .. JJ, ol f'/e'W· G&r"f' 112' Ch1rla1on. (11111 M""I Ind I!,, 6l. Of "6 W. 1flh St., (OSll lictn•K !U11..i Mrt Include: Dort lltldl. v.,, O•""· WUmt J, v1 Slew"'! l!!J C1rolYn M., I .. ol 2011 S, Ollvt, S..nll Ml!1t. FAZEKA5-TIMAll -... nthonY F1rell.1,, Mtrllno. HIUll• p, vs 0.1rlft r Allil Ml'EKE'lt.MYIEJIS. Clltlon A., II. cf lltiDEllWOOO'.Lt:~S~llDM _ ''""rd JI, Ind M1rlt Tlmt•, Jel, Derh of Sd'lm10\t', Oitl'M Jotl!PhlM .... Thorn•• JULT ,, IUI Ulll St.. Wttltnfnloltr t nd Casi• Mell. B••dY p~~~5C~-~~~1~f.Ef.;,.E3~.~ t~r. ~ Mlrlh• l ,, 1•. "' lll1 Clllol!Mn l. Uriderj'*· J1. Ind ~." Jiiiy t' Tl1>Ton, B•rblro vi 01"' l1,,.••n<• U , o1 110 W. 111+. $!., beltll ot (!llll Av• .. G11'0en Grev~. lindlltllf?I, I, Oolll of Wttlm!"'~" ll!OOHE AO.G A II (I A -Nell (. Dllnd. SVun L. vs llobtrl C~•rlr1 M""I OICIC:INSON·SCHDWENGEll:OT, WtYftt PUll:CEll -HOLT -l'ltll J eh" 1 a ft l!!JroOMIO, 21. 11' Hurillntlon IQCf!, l/JdW!t, Mary Ro1<: vi DannY SCHAPEl-MOOll E, lledn .... E . olll, Ind A .. , 7t. o1 ltsA GjtrKll-L A,pl, 0 . AM· Purtell, Jr., 1', tl'IO MlcMUe Arin I nd Alkt Ycll""t Gt"ll, Jl, of L-~wrtnt• Ll!<lrll 11: .. )<!, bo!l1 ol m w11...,1 s .. 1 nelm '"° ertnd• A .. 11, of :Ill w. Hott. ?1, llolll of Cmr1 Mew Wllmlnolon, 5"'81, llK~t 0 11 .... n John Joh~ ,,N,''!'ff"",,r .~",'.~. ve•··· ........ !.... Wi!•on • .t,pt. J, (Olli Mt••· KLENK·MJlcOONALO -Jc/In Ste~le¥ llOCKERT·HENllY -ltcb!!rl """""""' I ' • G' ' ._,_., '"' .. .. ,..., ''" ... ,,,,, ... 101,, , •• , W .. >I, • IC!en-, 4S, ol 8116cN, '"" N1ncv lrtllt &oc-ert, Jr., "· ond Doret n Htf'ry, 5an11m1r n1. ernan c "' o• 1 J 21 1 Ill 1211> St A 1 c 1 a ,.n'''" w. •,,.· ''·' "!!,,,, ..... ,-~ MicOor.1\d, 10, of lltlll-•r ""• -· • ,_,, Mo••· Morrl•. Wllml I. V$ Ri<ll•rd I . Ji.,kl tl, ll, of .OJ IJih 5~.: both~! ., '-""'~ '"' "' 0 O , S I ,, "'"" -.~ P1ttor1on. (trtOICt M. v1 JOhft EO,,.trd H I 1!!J h Kathryn G., 2f, ol "1t $. P1tlfk, ,H MPS N•Gl5o -lttl ~I Cll!•t HQOYEll-IC U$TEll ltob!!rt 01~ ,,.~~'..'"'o•"o"i•".'w1111,_ '·· o. 000 ,,.,, A·o. Tllcmoson. ?6, Ind Helen SIM Gl1t, 16, Hoover, JI. or H~ntlng!on lle1th, 1fld ~~':.'a9e~· :0~~1' {~,"~,L~=~~] ~~n cf11nl1 E .. .'i, both ~i' •10 J1smlne. , .N·;0110'.'PARISI. Wllll•m o .. ,5, 01 bolf' of Huntlnolon 811ch. vlchlrl• Let ic:utter, n, Ill G••Otn Cor0!1a oel M.t r u-M ., • OILLON·SELSOR -Ch1r1.., R1Y,.,.,nd G•o~t. l••dl, LOI~ M1t!e .... Phil F. &ERllY·ll:ICE. JAmn H .. 19. or '"l 7~S9 O•lhft, Cotte "" •rod ... ,,.. Diiion. ~1. of H1rwtwood. Mo.. rnd CUllRIElt-F lllEDGE N -lt1th•td (. StPPlnolo~, V<>nd~ v> T~cro S~.., Venter W1v. Cos11 Me~1 •nd Shl<ltv letn E ... ~J. of la taur1 l111t1. F1lr-JatklV" Ott Selsor, JS, DI H11nllnv•0<0 Currier, 76, Ind 1i1lt~• T. Ftl0!(!1en, Grl'l'f\tw•v. Marg~rtt Lua "' G!'O•Of :OI :t,taf l?6 .M•rlocla Av1,, Coron•_ •••· C•lll_ l!!Jtach _ u, botn ol l•vunl Hiiis. Ge~uwn DVIC&S-... LIANEllO. G!OtOt M., JJ. LAll:ET·MEWAllO -Robert J. l••"'· ,,.,,, .. ·o••w••. -.. ~ •• '. H . w• ,, • ' ' " ••• •I OOWELL·HDNETEll. lllcftt rd 1~ ,,, '' ' ' ....... .... """'-.. Otf!I. n '" .. ou V'"' •0 " u o1 Hll\~ w. O.:ean Ft0!11 ind niron cl 12112 N•woor! """ · • · '· "" (\, of FouM•ln Vllltv, tnd Ell•1b1tft CtmPtlf:JI, 16, of .Sr•I Sel(h, ~nd Our~n. Adella "' Ft1nci•<O H, l . lt, of t'6l Tiki (lrtle. bolh ol "" 11111 P1mtl• S .. 19. ol 7•111 LV· Y. Me"ard. olfr, of Or1nv•. Janet M. cornwill, 11, of Hunun,rcn Kono, Chf1lrnt C "'Danny L H11n•Tt1oton Be•<h ••nd• Drive. Mou1on Viele MOllllOW·SEtLEll: -Jolln J, Mor•ow, l!!Jeat'h. H1tltl!, Oeticrah "'· II• S....,ufl 811ABECK ·A811 ... CHINSKY, l hem• J SA81N·&AllTHE, H1rold A )1, ol •7. 1nd E1!11tr lltnel! ll!lkt, ... bolft MAllTIN-CHU llCH 1t1v""'Flll F, Mli<~•U. HfiM Mae v• Edward Ad~"' :~.~· :~10~,,~~~e.>1,i. ~~I. t.01LWJ 1710 Sll••on Cirtle, An•h••m 1nd of Ntwoort Be•dl. · Mlrt!n, ?I. •nd Joannt l-Ynn C~urdl. llOllOln, Charlo1~ M. VI ~!If E. Br.trlY. Hun!ino!on B•ICh Nlr>eV J., 1•, cf 11'0! Qonov1n MILHOMMl':.LATHllOP -ltlc1'1rd J. 1], botn of Cotll Mnt. ~:ror::~-11~::~:-t~ ::..~;;,.:~~A. ,..OllWOOO.FINNEY. ll!chud IC . lt. or Ro•O· LCl!I Al1m1101. Milllommt. ,1. "' 1\lflgoborc, ""'"" WOODEN-MOOSE -Mtrcltt l'Wll G•ol>b•n, Geo•qia L V$ Franll 11112 BorOroc-Drive, E:1 Toro 1nd 81ELMAN-8Rt.OV. Mkh1tl It., lf, ol ~nd Miry IC1y Ltrnr111>. II, of WOOderl. 5', ...... MlfY Elll1Dlth Jrnnl1>11-. Rollne• E. 'I'\ MiltGUttilf L. ~1~:. ,!;..i;,,1:,?; v1~10M101 S100lt1Mck rlln Ke111 L1,..., l05 Al1m1!0l 1nd W..,lmln$l1r. MoOlt, "· 1111111 of Wnlmlt11ler. Co•Ji.lon, Sa ...... e! A v1 M~r ~ Mlzifte HARVEY-BISHOP, llrN V., lJ, 01 •It J•" I(., 11, GI 11021 l lmt Tree Orlvt, July 21 AI ELLO-MENNIS Pl!rlt-LOYis l+ma, B~. J<. VI Ntncv Aller Flower ~I, Co•11 Mt11_111d Jt11l1 S1nll ... na. SODA·SIMl'SON -JMtPh John Sod1, Aiello, 7'-of lellllowff, 1"11 JOY O<lle, V1l•tY Ann vs O•nn>• J""I II . 11, of 4ttr llCl'Jlf, I OK 1)6, M•cOONALD·GOOO. ll1vmond J ... ,, ollJ, of Wtillflin•rtr. 1nd Mit,lt Lou Colene Mtnnls, 1', ol Wt1lmlnsl1r. ~~~~s~rfE?~ ... i::I~~'?Jemll 11~~\SkN~V~THEGROVE. O.nl•I rnd ~.I~ ~;;9~1.~·v0o'r":6o.s.i~~h 1~i c1~~~:~~,.E~l\,7 ~ .. ~~dis (dw(n 11;~0~~11~~;.jf~~ .. -;to'=~1~.Rbo~~':; M'i,,Y. Wllll~m P, '" C~ralvn M ~9,·u~:t l5K~. c;i~r~( r,;1d~1b~""ttrYe. N~Wl>Of'I Betch. C1rrlo1n, J.I, ll'ld Ge-or111 C1tol Hun!lngton 8tttl>. Book , M9fllar•! I(_ VI L'on&ftS l-. Hun!lnoton Br•~h FOl(HOVEN·REYNOLDS. Fr1ntl> T .. l.;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;oi;;;;;;i;oi;io;;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;io;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i:ll WAnJl•lJd, Barber" M~t Vt Ravmond GLnSSELL·SCHM!TZ. Andrtw. 25. ol n, 1"6 Jetn,,.tte G .. U. bolh ef t-41fl Wlfffn !10• S. 81v Front, Btlbcut l1ltnO 1nd w . 191+. St .. Co•11 Me11. Hi~~ ... n~~Jan 9n•tt Wellttt Y1 PhllliP ~:~;:~1"co.':".' M!~• at Jl4 6owllM 01 1173 A\t<Mlrn• st.. Hunh!lll!en Yttc .. ~. Cnt1l•t J y' M~ri~n P lOllTON·LEYESQUE. Oe~nh E .. J1, ct STEWAllT-HAllDING, lll>b"! Y .. 12. liy"I~•. WPf'dY v~ R~•mond Mlch11r ~961 C111l1n1, t1cun1 8t1rh Ind l!!J'ath 1rt0 C1rl11 .t,., ot lOJll Cit· I ~'m"' I(~; Sard<~ Y< A<>d'""' L u1anne M . 2!1. OT 2011 W. SI. to•• Drive, 1'110!> Verd•s. Clew. Ell11~1Jt Htltn v\ Oon~ld John trlfu<lt Pltc1. Sin!~ Anl EM£11Y·CLAlll(, M\cll&!I P., ll. '"" ~~~;,Fz;~n~r?. ~~~;Id~':';~, . F~O~~~h1,:;~AJji1f~1~~:r lt.;J'i.i~r 5hircn A., 11, bol!o ol 111 Cr1'IOOll. w'"'""''· Glecl>> Ell1abf:lh "' Dtlt di J .. U , of 11711 Pu•dY. MldW•v Sin Clfmtf>~. Fral'lthn Cltv MOLMES-21MMEllMAN. ChttlH H., 7'. Apole..tte (011,,le Jowre VI Ted A. HEAllol·IVEllSON, Jc/In W, 71, of 112' ot 15'lS Goldon Wt1I $1,, "'Pl· 11 tnd Ktnvn. 1rene P, "' LloYd w. 't'. c"'ii~ s~f A7,~r1m ~: K-Jr.7.~ "'""° s .. 11, of 1WJJ Go111tn w~• ~~g;:i..:.;,~!i;J;~ ~~ ~:'j~nllo•O' ,,w,,~1,.,',"•,1e:.v,,, ·-··· M . ••. •• SL, A~t. 2'1, "°"' ~ Hu~""'""' SUPERINTENDENTS l ~nq, F•"nc<~ A v• J~ntl L '"'" ""'' • •" B•~tl\, K~llv, Ma•G••tl J•Y"• ~• Thom•i !5551 lrrne W•• ind JGln . 11, al GlllFF!TH-MVEllS, llol1nd I , "· °'I J•m~' ~~!~l~~:~,Avt, So1tt 9~, boll> alt 1111 N. (;•It" San!1 All• '"" Mltv ~~lo, l>nno T. Y\ Ch•rlt• S, 11 lll~IC:·O'BRIE.N. Jatin p , ll. cl ~!JS L., U , of 1011 Will•<•• (0111 Mn•. r.i,1111~m~. l(~y Loro:t~. v• ll0111IO l'~u1 1,jiii;iii;;i;;i;;ii;;;;;;i;oi;;i;;i;i;;ii;;ii;;iii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-; Cdw~rd\. N1~C¥ E. YI Mo<h1el Wiiii..., SIDEWALK~ SALE~ "'~dr•. M•'""'"I "' "lvln Rav Mr.Grew. SallY Ja"t ~ lf'On G•ell'Gr¥ FRIDAY & AUGUST SATURDAY & 1st 2nd CHRISTMAS CARDS. Name Imprinted FREE IN LOTS OF I 00 OR MORE CARDS OF SAME DESIGN WALL HANGINGS PLAQUES PICTURES , ETC. ur1e1· 1/2 OFF WESTCLIFF PLAZA -S48-/921 DRESSES CAPRI ES BLOUSES I I· BATHING SUITS I SHORTS dick I vernon s WERE NOW $35 $5 .. NOW WERE $20 $3 WERE NOW $l-O $2 WERE NOW $20 $5 WERE NOW $8 $2 ' . ' SPORTSWEAR WESTCLIFF PLAZA, NEWPORT BEACH \ ' I~ I ' j !;1 . J I' ' ·~ PROJECTORS Sawyer & Air Quipt FROM 30%0iF! AIR QUIPT BAKERS Mod•I 950 WESTCLIFF CAMERAS WESTCLIFF PLAZA -548-4935 =· : ::,• 2' .----... ,, "' Fine Quality PRINTING Offset & Letterpress 642-4321 a: "A Complete Printing Service;' Free E,timetes PILO T PRINTING 22T 1 W. 8.tlboa Blvd. , Newport BRlch ., II I f b d ' • ' • Race Woh By Time of 30 Second s • NE\V YORK (AP) -Peter Rlttmaste~ or 1'.1iaml, Fla ., I'. ·:~<,ji, y,·on the 222-mile }leMessy ocean motorb oat race \\fednesday by a n1 e r e 30 seconds in his 31 -rool .Bertram An1erican Moppie . The . red. wh.ile and blue Aincl'ican Mopp!e, po¥:ered by t11·in 475-horse power niercrulser gasoline .engines, took four hours, 38 minutes l.O co\'er the course that ran from ~e1•,. York's Verratano Bridge, sout h to Point .Pleasant. N.J ., cast to Shinnecock Inlet on Long Island's south shore and IJ;.ick to the Verraz.ano Bridge. Pat Duffy of Grosse Point , illich., ,was the runner-up in the close finish. He drove the Janie D., a 27-ya rd n1angum po11•ered by three 140-horse po11·er 1nercury o u t b o a r d Florida Conies -- to Newpot•t engines. /1. large group of local yachtsn1cn attended the official opening of the ne1v Jerry Langer of !\1iami \Vest Coast facility of Richard Berlran1 & Co.,· noted Florida boat builder and Beach, Fla ., rinished third in brokerage firm. at the :\rches-Marina. 3333 \V. Coast High\vay. Bertram, Cen- t1nother outboard, a 32-foot lcr, introduced Phil lfafrill {lertl manager of the new office, and Ed Richard- carry \\•ith three of the big 120-.';on. longtime Ne,vport resident and yacht broker. In addition to functioning horse power mer cu rite s. k Langer's tiJne \vas four hours. as a bro erage, the co1npany \vill be dealers for Bertram Internationaf, build- 32 minutes. ~rs of stock custom yachts fron1 56 to 100 feet in fiberglass, \Vood and alum- Do A I ,1. . lllll!TI. n ronow o ,. 1am1. the----------------------------------- prerace favorite, hit a cruiser y,·ake soon arter the start. spilling crcwm3n B a r r y Cordingley into the y,•ater. Aronow picked up the injured (ordingley but then ran into mechanical trouble and drop· ped out. Another dropout \l'as BHJ Sirois of Miami. Europe Results Eyed For Hennessy Races • --. -" -' DAIL V PILOT f f _, Baja to Re-vitalize . Co a st · Seri.es of Harbors Planned on Bo th Sid es The once forbidding Ba-ja California coast b e t W e e n Ensenada and Cabo San Lucas may yet become a yachtsmen's paradise when plans of a new Mexican ·government agency, Yates y TUrisma, are C!Jmplete. These plans were recently updated at a meeting held in La Pai by a grou p from Southern California, represen- tatives of the government of Meidco. the governor or Baja California and officers of Yates y Turismo, S.A. The plans c a 11 for eslablisl)ing fueling depots, sMre.sl'e fa c 111 tie'• and marinas on both the ocean and gulf sides of the 8 a j a California peninsula. · The plans are not new. They were first aired in 1966 at meetings held at t1arina del Rey. But Yates y Turisma has since developed a program ttun has the support of both the federa l and territorial governments. !\tAIN OBJECTIVE been the mainspring behind the Yates 'I 'l\lrismo group. facilities at La Paz. These will include a )iheltered marina. fuel and water suply and a resort yacht club. Additional facilities in the first phase will be constructed al Puerta Escondido and in Conception Bay. SECOND PHASE They , have developed the plans, coordinated the plan· ning with the variouB agencies of governmi:.nt, and secured the support of the Ministry of Navy, Department of Touris1n and the territorial qvernment of Baja California. START WORK St>Cond phase or the pro- llic gran1 in1·olves trailered boat According to Panl. launching sites in the upper Ministry of Navy and lhe part of the gulf wluch could be Ministry of Public Works \1•iH reached by roads now being soon initiate the construction built. anct additional facilities by means o€ interim financing on the ocean side of the amounting to 12 m i 11 ion peninsula. dollars. 1:'he Miryls~ 0 f Encouraging also y,·ere the Treasury 1!1 negotialtng th e · 1·1 final credit that has been announced plans to s1mp 1 y basically approved by the ~stoms and immigration lnter-.American Development[ Bank and the World Bank. First phase of the plan is lo provide a major •fueling depot 1 midway down the Pacific sidel of the peninsula-probably at Turtle Bay. Gasoline. diesel. lubricating oil , water and mechanical repairs will be available. This will permit boats with 11 cruising' range of 500 miles to safely reach Cabo San Lucas \\'here fuel and water are now available. Concurrent wllh the , development at Turtle Bay would be the building or , I Hace Approved 1r-- ln cooperation . with Uie l\linistry of Navy, the ultimate objective presented at the La Paz meeting is to locale 1narinas and facilities ap- proximately one day 's cruising apart, and lo provide a network of r a d i o com· munic~tions that will include radio beacons and weather reports. A total of I~ major harbors LAKE HAVASU CITY. Ariz. clearance procedures ror boats cruising down the coast. Although relatively liimple now. there has admilt"'ly been room for improvement. Among those attending the meeting from S o u t h e r 11 California w e r e Callfornla Marine Parks and llarbors members; Doug Botnbard, state presidenl ; \Valter Shaw, Southern Divisio n executive \'lee pre s ident ; Steve Ney,·mark, Norinan Nee I y , Sta11 Va u g h n, Jack West, Southern Division directors; Lachlan Richards, Northern Di vision director, and Los Angeles County representative Arthur \Viii. I See .BY Today's Want Ads: • On a clt~a r Day you may not OC('(j a BENDIX MR·-1 32 rnilc radar, like nc\v, ideal ror \argr pleasure or eoinrnercial c-1·ar1, bu! It Is val uable during any wea- ther. • fllaybr no1 a ~!0011 walk, bu1 an invila1 ion 10 walk on sunshine, beau11ful pale orange 11.crilan rug. like !ll.'\V for 14xl9 covenng. • linmrnoonablc.. But as .'lure a11 tax~. 6 Cemetery lot!'. in lngl<'Y.'ood, all Dr , ~cpara.tely. CQast Guard To Celebrate 179th Year With the Henness y Cup offshore power boat race up- coming in Long Beach in August, poll'Crboat rtcing fans are eyeing the results of the 1969 races in the U.S. and Europe. and 17 secondary ooes are (AP) -American Power Boat projected. Association sanction has been ~tario Pa n I , well-known given the 1969 Outboard World hour in the Wills race. ~texico City architect, builder Championships at La k e1 Th 11 1. ed h and yachtsman, and founder Havasu. Nov . 20.30. race 1 Volante II Wins Race l!OWLANDS LANDING, CATALINA ISLAND -Volan- ~ tc JI 01,·ncd and skippe red by !\1ike J lirsh or Balboa Yacht Club \1•as the v.•inner of the Los Angeles Times trophy in the fi rst race of the 18th An- nual Yacht Rt1cing Union. The race started at noon from LOS Angeles Yacht Club and wa! a close reach to How- lands in moderate breezes. Pegasus. skippered by How- ;ird Nicholas of Los Angeles Yacht Club was firs t reported ;is the overall winner. but v.•as di squalified when it was detef· mined he started 20, minutes r;irly in the Pacific liandicap Fleet. Today the fleel v.•il l race fr om Howlands lo !\·loonstone Cove, the Newport Jiarbor llarbor Yacht C 1 u b Island headquarters. The trophy at st ake in this race v.·ill be the Robert ~1. At1an Jr. Gabboon. II ttults: Ot•I" 11.acl"t Ov1r•ll: 1 vo11nte II. Hlr1,.., flYC 1 Topet, A•1h"'r Mort/>O, CllYC l. M-u~•llde. Kl,.,bell ~111!~. lllYC j , s. l•ncha. Holm aod w1n~ce. lBYC 5 Jt1tbo!. V•I•" Couch. llYC Ck••~ 1111c1,.., c1a1111 A ,,... a \, Orle~ts. Prior 01vi1, NHY( 1. CIWOCllll'il. P"H Polly, LllYC J Atrl1, JDfl" C11jjor, llYC 0"111 ll 1clnt CllH• c '"" D 1, V011nte II 1 Sa" BallCl'IO l L1p.....,rfh (~mel, l!ob<n W111u1. l<t~O HBrbor Y1cM C\"'b Ptclflc H1n•;c1p 1!.1cl"t Fl•tl '· lol>f'l 1 Mnquer1cll J, Jtt~I. FF A Notifies .) of Suspension WASHINGTON (UPI) The Federal Aviation Administration says it has notified at least five air traffic controllers they 'face suspension because they took part in a sick call boycott in .June. An FAA spokesman said 111•0 others y,·ere given five-day suspension nolices and 18 others were cleared. ~londay, the U.S. Caasl Guard \Viii celebrate ils Ji9th Anniversar)'. Since its 1nodest beginning in 1790 \vhen Congress passed a n d President \Vashington signed a bill authorizing the construction of ''ten boats" for guarding the coast against smugglers the Coast Guard has gro1\'0 y,•ith leaps and bounds. Today one C"3n find Coast Guard Cullers cruising around the world. The larger cutters man ocean stations in both lhe Pacific and Atlantic :ind smaller· vessels may be con- stantly seen patrolling the coastal \\'aters of our nat ion, always ready to aid s~amen in distress, and the Coast Guard also has approximalcl)l 1.500 men aboard twe nty -{ou r 82-foot cutters Lo11g Beach Sea Fete Events Told Here is the hour.by-hour. day-by-day schedU!e of open· ing events in the 4th annu<tl California International Sea f'e stil'al at Long Beach : Today -Opening events of the American Water Ski Association regional · tourna - n1cnt, Long Beach Marine Stadium. 9 a.m. Saturday. Aug. 2 -Second day A\VSA regional tourna· n1cnl. l\1ari ne Stadium. 9 a.m.: three first day races in Southern California Pacific Catamaran Championshipli, Long Beach l~arbor, 11 a.m.: first da y races in lnternational Sabot Regatta. Alamitos Bay, 11 8.m.: Sea Festival spec- tacular and parade of lights. Long Beach shoreline. 6 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 3 -Grand Na· lional Catalina \Valer Ski r:ice startin.e;' off Belmont Pier. 8 a.m.: final tt1·0 races or P-Cat championships and final races of Sabol regatta. 11 a.m.; final events of AWSA regional tournament, Marine stadi u1n, 12 noon. ~**·•···················~··· ....... ••**·~··**·• i YOUR PROBLEM: -i • • • You w•nt to .. n som• it•m ,. ! th1t you no longtr netd but : : somton• el1• can UM for : ! YOU1R 1N~£E'R:· '," ? I • You call THE DAILY PILOT, ask for : ~ Classified Adv1 rtising, and pl1c• • : i ~---:~L:;y ~ : . PINCHER • • • • • • • i i 3 • : tLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE LINES 2 TIMES 2ooLLARS AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I DIAL NOW DIRECT! 642-5678 ; i !Tell tr.. Nertft Ce••ff 140.1220) : .......................................................... I e e ort ec ips anot er and staff comn1odore of the director Roberl P. ~lcCulloch'I great performance by Miami's -~A~c~a~p~u~lc~o:_Y:a~c=h~t~c:1u~b~,~h~a~s:_J'._r~.~a~n~n~ou~n~c~ed~W~e~d~n~c~sd~a~y~. _ _'.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Don Aronow in March when he Se\•eral eastern and Euro. pean drivers are expected to come to the \\lest Coast for the llennessy event. Veteran:> of the rugged sport are saying that the 1969 cam- 1 paigns thus far are like history repealin g ilse\f. A I r ' a d y American-made Bertram hulls have v.·on the first two 111orld championship events -England's Wills Intemalional and Italy's Nap- Its Trophy race. The British ~ea batlle was taken by the \ Italian Vincenzo Balestrieri. \Vhile the Americans and 1 Bahamians were fighting il out for the Bahamas 500 1 crown in ,June. Balestrieri and his giant Texas co-pilot Don Pruett were d:·iving their 31· foot Bertran1 Red Tornado \Vilh its twin 47frhorsepower MerCruiscr engines to a sizz], ing new international offshore speed record of 69.9 miles per averaged 67.1 miles per hour in the Long Beach to Ensenada race. Only two mlnuies behind Red Tornado in the English race was another Balestrieri· owned Bertram hull, While 1'ornado, driven by fellow Italian Francesco Consentino. WALK TO TOWN From thil Spic & Span TWO BEDROOM HOME with 1>lt w of Victor Hu90 Point I 5..,,f, !ee .. tif .. I Sm•U G•rd•n. l'"l• Oo .. bl • G1 r•9• with t•tr1 room bt hi11d. $35,000 GENlltOUS TEltMS MARSf;ALl & ROPP 211 Ot;tGl'I ....... w. ·LAGUNA l!ACH 494-1021 Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Direction 5 J ournalls'll 10 Pro1ectinr,t building par! l~ .... f!oy;i.I ' 15 BtCOl'l'e 11nwourid lb Lunc hl•irc 17 US pa\11ol 2 word s 111 Fuss a11d bother 20 Lofty ir1 concep\1011 21 Pert. to Washington's or ou~wa's qovernments £3 Beuu; a copyc~t 2~ ... ro ~e 2& YOU!11j s;i.lmo•• 2' Proto119 i•I· (1efi nltely 34 Pe11od ul 1n3cl\v11y JS P1ec1p1ta te 37 N;i.rrat iv es 48 Hubbub so Watt1 body 51 Ant~lhetlc 53 Certa in 'drums 57 Platin9 111 proper ordtr bl Mint : Fr. b2 Powtr th3\ is actual I~ wt~k : 2 wo1ds 04 Trte bS Rela!lvt of "betwet n" 66 CC!ntrett base for a house 67 Plal tho "' 68 Garden to ol b<i Caused pa in DOWtl l Fati~I feature s 2 Jacob's twin brolhtr 10 TV • nec essity 11 Far fro m A-one l2 Mixer 13 Cherri.jca.I su ffix 18 Tear~ 22 Ott-color 2~ Expressiv e action Zfi Fierce look 27 Oisagret· mtnt: 2 words 38 Black cuckoo 31118b7 to 3 Make a bolch of SDITltl!l•nl} 4 Spill the beans· 28 Flank bone 30 Dull sound 31 Pelvic bon t 32 Room in l9b7 , e.g. .41 lnteie ~t : Abhr . ~2 L~r1~t 44 Arti st's s11b1tcl ~5 Ultril !asllion- able mJr1 4& Ont dwelling rn a tent J • " 17 " ~ words .,, dorma nc t b ~ifd 1 Zen monas!try 33 Chemical compound 3& .... Boltyn -") 3<! Br iel 7 Ftmlni~t name B Esn t 9 Ft~\ure of some ;armenls • 7 ~ dramatic piece • ' 8/1 /fi<i 40 Re~t()re 1 batl"Y' to no1mal •3 More llavodul •S Sor! of black 47 Wiid Bull of the---: F 11po 49 Ptdod of penitence 52 Follow 1 gentral cours~ 53 Bu;!e til 1 54 Leave out 55 Miss Free1111n 56 Coars e hominy 58 Far Norlh abode - 59 Not distant bO G1eiilt Brit· aln: Abbr. t.3 Slut 9r<:SS I Here is how: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $500.00 =•z5~ Free safe deposit box for as long· as you maintain $500.00 savings account -•6!! (1pproxim1le y11rly cost to renl box al bank) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express travelers cheques OR s7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 1 O tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS _ (TICKETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account ' =SJ 9 !! Stop by and see us to open your account. If you have any questions please call 540-4066. We are open 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday. • • • • • • • • • • . -av1ngs AND LOAN ASSDCIATION SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA f.IESA, CALIFORNIA . ,- MAIN OFFICE: 8401 WHITIIER BOULEVARD• LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNl4 -' , ' r ' I I ' ,I I . .. • 12 Olll V PllOT F"riday, A.Ugust 1, 1%9 .Skyrocketing Medical. Costs Make Sick·ness a Luxury By CRAIG PAUlER • 1( ri.tedicajd costs continue to ti sts raked in upwards of ditional m~a n·p owe r and 'Thl&ad(tltional demand has Flncb -puls it, it leads . lo riaen even faster than medical grow a! OUs rate, the Depart· $200.000 each. facilities required to provide so overburdened our heallll "overuse ol high~t acute-capacillties. COovinced that WASKINGTON lUPI) -ment ol Health, Education and ' One reason why medical these ·setvices. care rC&ources that they are care facilities .. and neglect of medicine now baa a quick cure Sickness is becoming 8 IUXW'Y Welfare (HEW) estimates;, costs are rising is that new The Department of Health, approaching a breakdown," "lower-ccct altemati\les." f9r everything, some people in America. they will reactr 24 billion a government prog:ravis have Education and Welfare (HEW,. says Dr. James H. A third factor contributing badger their doctors lo Throughout the n at I o n , year by 1975... . brought modem health care admits this is true. I t cav~. an HEW orficial to rising medical c06ls is ·tbe prtlCl'lbe antibioUcs. for bead medical b\lls are the highest in Greedy doctors -a tmy within reach ol millions of old estimales that Medicare. the HEW Secretary Robert H. enormous progress acience colds, or lo bo6pitalize a pa. history. And they' are getting minority, according lo the people and poor people wbo government health insurance }'inch points out that many in· has achieved in tho treatment tlent who could be treated at Jllgher every day. American Medical Association couldn't afford it before. program {Or the aged, and surance .Plans pay for certain of disease. home. (The latter demand NowbeTe has inflation had a -have helped to drive up Dr. Dwight L. Wilbur, past Medicaid, a federal-state pro.. medical services only if they The new drugs, new opera.-=" may be prompted, in some greater impact on the pubLic's Medicaid costs. The Senate president of the American gram pro_viding medical care are provided while patient is lions and new treatmepf: cases, by a desire to let the pocketbook. The rise in health Finance Con1mittee ha s ?\fedical Association (AMA ). Cot needy bf fill ages, have ad. hospitalized. facilities developed in receti( hospij,al take over the work of care costs for the pasl four brought to light at recent s;:iys f.1ed icare and !\1edicaid ded from 30 to 40 million This rule acts as an in· years are saving counUess caring for the patient.) Thus years bas been uearl ~ 2~i public hearings figures sho\\'· have resulted in a "massive" persons "to the patient load or centive for people to enter lives. But they also are et· consumers help to drive tip limes as rapid as the rise 1n ing that 290 Ooctors c;ollec1ed int'rease in demand f o r American physiciaos and hospitals for treatment which pensive. Penicillin ~ more their owo medical costs. other living costs. 1nore than $50.000 a year each med ical services, but have hospitals during the past four they might receiv.e 'quite ade-'ttian .aspirin. Hospital costs probably 1£ lhere were no government and private insuranct pro- grams to boost demand. Labor accounts for two--lhirds of a hospital's total o p e r a I in g costs .. And hospital workers• wages for many years lagged far behind lhose of other groups in lhe U.S. economy. During the past few years, nurses. orderlies and other hospita l workers have made a determined effort to catch up. And their demand$ for higher wage scales have been heard (See MEDICAL, Page It) President Nixon, !rankly from Medicaid, \\'hile 41 den· done lilUe lo produce the ad· yeai;s. quately;"as: outpatients. Or1 as Patient expectations have .woi)ld have risen sharply even a~nned,foreseesa ''massive l-~~~-::::;;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiliiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;::--~~-crisis" wiUfut th~next two or three year! unless prompt steps are taken to curb the sharp uptrend in doctors' rees and hospital charges. Authorities interviewed by UPI offered a variety .of ex· planations for soaring medical costs. Most agreed, bowever, the basic problem is lhat the demand for health care has vastly outdistancW t he available supply. And in a free market, an exce~ of demand ovPr supply leads to higher prices. Like many illnesses, the economic disease of galloping inflation is easier to diagnose than to cure. Many remedies for the rise in medical custs have been proposed -by the Nixon administrat on , members of Congress, the health professions and other concerned parties. The pros and coos of these proposals will be reviewed later in this dispatch. The most significant area or agree- ment d~osed by a UPI survey is that it will take t1 variety ()( dovetailed acti~ by the government and the private sector of the health care industry to avoid a breakdown Jn the w h o I e system. NO TIME And there ls no time to lose. As Robert H. Finch, secretary of Health. Education and Welfare, puts it, "The problem is one of extreme urgency." During the IQ.year period ending in 1967, the goverrunenl's official cost of living index rose by 16.3 per, cent. But physicians' fees rose in that same period by 37 .6 percent. And hospital charges rose by 100.1 percent. The rise in medical costs bas been even more rapid since 1967. Physicians' fees have climbed at a rate of more than 6 percent a year. Th& average daily cost1'of caring ror a short term patient in a general hospital has gone fTom $58.06 in 1967 to $65.24 in ~ 1968 and $70.70 this yea r. The American Hospital Association estimates it ·will be $78.30 by next year, ai;id close lo $100 a day by 1972. Dr. John H. Kno"'·les, the Boston hospital official whom the Nixon administration re- jected for a top government health job, makes an even more frightening projection. "Can you imagine ~hat it will be like when charges hit $200. $300, $400, even $500 a day'?" he asks._ "I predict they're going to hit those levels while many doctors practiciog today are still ac· U\•e." Z DIRECTIONS The ave-age citizen ls being hit from two directions -as a private consumer of health care, and as a taxpayer wbo helps to underwrite public pro-- • LETS HFAR IT FOR THE. COOD <;.-r;UFF AT "THE RIGHT PRICE ! TY-D-BOL AUTOMATIC . • BOWL CLEANER 11 you aslr: the plumbing guy it the Sl\liJ' s any good he'll tell you. .. 14000.dames can't be wrong;· Keeps the bowl clean a\ltomalically. 44c 12.oz. JUG REPEAT OF A SELL OUT 6-INCH BATH FAN Choice of horizontal er vertical model (now you tell me what thqt mtatts). Super &ll•nt.- •ery efffc:ient 777 (and Pat bwgbt a ton. so you got a deal). . ' .... , • IRON RAILING Put your reading glasses oa..Alice. this Is going to b. a higgi•, W• got our best quality i:on railing on the ~;7;\]lll!P block for a good price. S-ms people wanl this stuff so 'f. w• waat them tohan the best. Solid •tuft. "B•rn.mber. ladies. you need twice os much 1rma as a mcm. lt' s sal•ty and good looks In on• deol. • . . • . .. . .. .. •.·. 12 x 12 CARPET TILE You cab b• a carpel )ayer with a roll of double sided tape and these good tiles. Liff. FT. Carpet ott• side, JoCrm 3 9 rubber und•nide. Choice C cl some gr90yY c:olors. EA. PATTERNED BALL SWAG 711 s .. this· ligh t on the display. Bill will try to sell _you Cl mo~expea~_ive on• (good man), but this one wijfplecrse. Choic:e ol colors, with brass awc:rg chain.· 2' 1( 6' P{&ASTJC PINELS 1'' DAISY BULLETIN BOARDS 1'' Cute new idea. Makes a charming board. l ike c big Henry Gibson flow.,. Jn many colors. about two 1Mt ot, ao in diamet•r. · MEXICAN LAUNDRY BASKET i>. . 99c ·"!' .... KIDDIE SANDBOX California Oalr: keeps them rolling. Fibe sandboxes. with adjustable canopy. two side seats, galvanized ru.st resislant bottom. A ~ winner, •, 999 24 INCH BAR-B-Q " grams such as lt1edicare and Medicaid. --METAL STOREHOUSE 2-INCB 8 87 The complete deal, Hood. motor. spit. ad jus1able grill. wheels. Everything • Medicare is the government he8.:lth insurance program ror persons over 65. J\tedicaid is a federal-state program o f health care for the needy of all ages. Medicare, financed by a payroll tax linked ·to Social Security, is proving more ex· pensive than anticipated and trus may necessitate early in· creases both in the payroll tax and in the $4 a month which elderly citizens pay for the op-- tk>nal part of the insurance -whlch covers doctors' bills. '!\tedicare costs are rising because or higher hospital charges and physicians' fees and' also because of the large number or old people taking advantage of the opportunity for free care. During the past fiscal year, Pi-tedicare pajd more than 6 miWon claims for hospital treatment, and more than 25 million doctors' biUs. at a total cost or $6.2 billion. The Medicaid program is costing about JS billion a year -more than twice as much as officials estimated at the 'time the program was enacted by Congtess in 196S. During Lht past. fiscal year. the number of persOns receiving Medicaid increased !rom 8.5 million to J.0.2 million , and the combined federal-state cost rose by $1.3 billion. ON THE TUBE i::or 11.e bed 9yiJ• .. wh•l'I "•,,1ni119 011 TV, r••d T\' WEEIC -~l;,1rlb11t1cl will! t+ie 51!v•d1v ... itle11 •f H.<l DAILY 'tlOT. \ Angie says he"lluoe1hi• 4777 to Ioele up all the gu.ys that don't sort and slack th• Jumhet right. :r O\l can use 11 Jor gatd'!n tools, extra hilr:9s. c:nd eYeQ a pool changing room. 10-FT. FOLDING FENCE Swell to keep little kids and pups out of your plants. 18 Inch high. Whit• so you can see it at JU.ght 99 and not walk thnl the thing. Fold C to suit your ahape, (Watch It!) PEAT MOSS Big bale, 8 cubic !&el compressitd lo 4, (You open it and. bo:mmo, you 'r• knee dMp in the 5lutf). Holds twice 277 it's weight Jn water. light•n• th• "soil. ~ \ SCALLOPED ~ Ooa• kiln d<iod .~~ANCE ~ · Stain. Paint. or cover for s mart looking valance. S(atYed to our specs. a ... pattern lhat pleases (the hos;s). 17~"1.IT, 1x12 PINE SHELVING The troop worked late in the· night to Jill bins in all •tor••· We took a Jood of it to sell at this pric•. Don '1 l•t us down. or 9 the termites will ha•e a . C banq1:1•t. LIM. FT. BLACK & DECKER 71/4" SAW Power and a good name lo back it up. Ith• name: John Doe) Anti·kiclrboclr clutch, sawdust •l•cts to rear. not in 24SS your face, depth and angle adj•stmenl. \ • I I 10 LBS "cBABCOAL BRJQUETS You cannot buy better for chf'Jr· broiling. so why pay more? Hi heat, long burning, and M SY alerting. So. it' 1 a mailer of bow i:oucb you pay for them. And Ibis settles the matt•r. but the steolr: (and today that price ain't something_ to kid about). · !1 I ' .. . ' • . -~ -____ . ._ ___ --~ --.. - / JEAN COX, 494-""6 • 1"ri'11, Awsint t, IHt S '••• 11 The Laguna Line Lots of Action Seen On Art Colony Front By JEA~ COX or IM 0.11'>' l"IWt Sl•ll August will be a very good month for art, dra1na and music. Jn addition, area people are keeping themselves busy \Vith parties, meetings and ot11er projects. MRS. WARREN KRAMER of Emerald Bay hosted a baby shower and luncheon yesterday for ~1rs. Robert Ragatz. also of Emerald Bay, who is expecting her second chil,d. For her guests Mrs. Kramer,<.ho is from Nonvay, served smo'rre. bro'd which are delicious open-face sandwiches piled high with delicacies. She also made Kromkake, a special Norwegian cake filled with imported muller berries. Luncheon V.'as served with vin rose d'anjou, a French wiJle. Emerald Bay \\'omen joining the ·gathering included the f\1.mes. llO\\'· ard Preston, \\lilliam Johnson, Leighton French, George Barr, Gay Brant, Robert Schock, Jan1es Keyes, James Kindel and Don Vaughn. . Others present included Dr. Arona Kagnoff of Ne\vport Beach and the Mmes. Allan Cottle of Laguna Beach, Robert Roper of Irvine Cove. Phillip \Vinsor and Philip Kendrick of Ne,,·port Beach and \Villiam \Vi ckett and Eugene Boston of Fullerton. A whole series of s:athe rings v,iill be giv~n this month by Queen of Hearts guild members. Children's Hospital of Orange County. The purpose of the gathertngs will .....be to give guests the opportunity to order Christmas cards which guild members are selling to benefit the hospital. Mrs. Macauley Ropp gave the initial coffee in her Three Arch Bay home yester..,. day morning, and Mrs. James Delaney plans another coffee in her Laguna Niguel home Thursday, Aug. 7. A cocktail party for 70 potential Christ• mas card buyers ,will be co-hosted by Mrs, Robert Russell and Mrs. Francis Fabian in the Monarch Bay Beach Club Tuesday· eve- ning, Aug. 5. Other hostesses giving coffees will be 1'1rs. Harlow Boyle of Emerald Bay, who JEAN COX \vill entertain guests Saturday, Ai.lg. 12; Mrs. Neil Nelson who 'vill have friends to her Irvine Cove home Aug. 20; l\frs. -Dewight Smith of Emerald Bay, who will entertain Aug. 25, and 1'1rs. Thom as Fleming 'of Monarch Bay, Aug. 26. , MRS. J. H. MALCOLM, president of tbe Women's Society of Chris· tian Service, Laguna Beach Methodist Church will attend the School of MTssions next l\1onday through Saturday at California \Vestern College, San Diego. Joining her in representing the Laguna Beach group will be the ?l.fmes. Carl Hawkins, Allen Bailey, Eve Price ~nd Lois Lyerla. The churchwomen also are busy coliecting ne\v and good bed linens which are needed for war-orphaned children of the China Beach Orphan· age in Da Nang, Vietnam. Those who 'vish to donafe to this cause may call ~trs. Ruth ~1illhouse, 499-1249. In bet,veen projects and conclaves, the church,vomen took time oU fo r a picnic in Heisler park last Tuesday. Laguna Beach Panhellenlc is planning its midsummer coffee to lake place in the Emerald Bay home ~f Mrs. \V •. ~ Dooler a~ 10 a.m. Summer visitors \Vbo are members of national soront1es are invited to attend. l'-OR SILVER ANO Gold Chapter, South Coast Community Hospital Auxiliary, the month of August will include another tlip to the races. Bus- es \Vill be provided for the ride to Del Mar Race Track Thursday. Aug. 23. · OPERA LEAGUE members are busy spreading the \Vord about their annual luau which will take place .in Monarch Bay Beach Club beginning at 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23. Festivities will include. dancing, dinner and plenty of entertainment. ON THE CULTURAL sceae there is enough for everybody. In addj .. tion to the three festivals running through Aug. 24 -The Festival of Arts, the Sawdust Festival and Art-A-Fair -there is the All California Sho\v in Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery, which also closes Aug. 24. FESTIVAL OF ARTS Chorale and members of Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Co: are combining their talents to present three Sunday afternoon performances of a South American Folk Mass at Aug. 3, 10 and 17, at 4 p.m. The ballet company also v.•ill present "Alfresco" in 'Irvine Bowl at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 30. MRS. SIDNEY JOHNSTON ol LaguoaNiguel is back from the hos· pttal and recovering from a ruptured appendix. She is happy to announce she \\'ill be well in time to attend the Opera League Luau. . --~ ------ AT THE RANCH--Chalting happily at Rancho San Juan following the annual awards coffee for Aux- iliary of South Coast Community Ho spital are (left to right) Mrs. Violet Adams of Em!rald Bay, treas- Auxiliary Volunteers Applauded urer or the auxiliary's Silver and Gold Chapter; Mrs. Victor Andrews of Emerald Bay, and Mrs. Tandy Coleman o[ ~'lonarch Bay, chairman of vol- unteers. Gift of Time Rewarded Auxiliary of South Coast CommmJily Hospital re- ceived it.s full share of awards during a Blue· Ribbon Day which took place on· A>lr. and ~1rs. Jose Rosan's Rancho San Juan in San Juan Capistrano fast week. There were 147 volunteers who gave 100 hours o[ service or more to the hospital duling the past year. Each was recognized with an American llospital Asso- ciation pin of honor ·attached to a blue ribbon:- FoUowing the social coffee at 10 a.m., 1\'lrs. Jack Lyons, auxiliary president welcomed those attending the annual auxiliary awards coffee and added a par- ticularly warm greeting for ci\ic dignitartes Mayor Glenn E. Vedder of Laguna Beach and ~1ayor \Vade F. Lo\ver of San Clemente. · During the business portion of the meeting, the general membership nominated two members from the floor to complete the five required for a nominating committee to i;elect officers for the coming year. Those nominated and approved were 1'1rs. Sam Garst and Mrs. Violet Adams. After the business was taken care of, 11rs. Lyons Introduced Mrs. Mont lt1cMillen, program chairman, 'vbo thanked her committees and presented Mrs. Tandy Coleman, chairman of volunteers, who made the awards. Mrs . Coleman was assisted by Stanley Volga, hospital administtator. whose words of praise, predic- tion and purpose highlighted Uie afternoon. ' He spoke, said Mrs. Thomas J . F1etcher, publlc relations chairman for the auxiliary, of t!'le appreciation extended by .. the South Coast Community llospital board of trustees and himself to all the 384 members for the 43,000 hours volunteered during the auxiliary's exi stence. "The place where the action is is here and no w in the auxlliary's office," he said, according to f\Irs. Fletcher. The coffee markt:d the 11th year some of the volun· teers have served the hospi tal and 10 years for others. A special corsage was given each in these l\\'O groups. Heading the 11-year-group with the highest number of hours was l\1rs. Thomas Swanson oi Emerald Bay \vho as assistant hospital treasurer had devoted a totai of 15,835 hours to the hospital cause. Next in line \Vas l\1rs. Harry Sowden of Dana Point chairman o[. the auxi li ary's gift shop in the hospital: She has put in a totaJ of 8131 hours of service. • Third 'vas l\Jrs. Fletcher of ~uth Lagyoa with 5767 hours followed by Mrs. Perry La Pierre of Lake San Marcos, \\'ilh .5558 hours and Mrs. Haroki Ekman of South Laguna \vith 5310 hours. Others in the 11-year .. group were Mrs. Co leman of Monarch Bay, 4069; Mrs. Iva Marsh of Laguna Beach 3738 and 1'1iss Elfreda Biggin o[ Laguna Beach, 1879. ' Those in th e 10 year bracket 'vere i1rs. Adams of Emerald Bay. 4048 ; lvirs . Blaine Young of Laguna Beach, 3009; h<Iiss Elizabeth Allen of Seal Beach, 271.3· 1'.lrs. George E. Griffin of Dana Point, 2219; Mrs. Pat: ri ck Shea -0f South Laguna, 2090, and "Mrs. \Villiam Thompson or San Clemente, 2227. . Those in the nine year bracket u•ho earned bars included fl1r~. Lyons, of South Laguna, a 5000 hour a\vard; l\·Irs. Ray l\1arsh Fox of Laguna Beach, 3000 hour bar; l\·lrs. John Valentine of Laguna Beach 2000 hour bar and Miss Ann Crossett of Laguna Beach1 1000 hour bar. . • ~f the 61 Candystriper!'i, -Miss Janette Brylla, the pres1~ent, had a total of 230 hours of service. Miss Bonnie Clapper "'as the second highest with 202 hours. For t~e coffee, Mrs. Imhoff \vas in charge of the t~ble setttng and Mrs. l\1. E. Thomps'on \Vas respon- sible for flmver a rran.1tements made available through the courtesy or Jack Eschbach. 1\'tiss F'i::ances Christeson and her committee pre- pared refreshments. Presidio~ over the coffee table u1ere 1\iliss F'ern Randolph, Mrs. \Villiam Tracy and Mrs. Gertn1de Carroll. Hospitality hostesses were the l\·Imes. Jack Ste,vart, Ekman and Donald Teetor. .. Candystr_ipers assisted in serving under the super· v1 s1on or their coordinator, Mrs. George Kennedy. Ne'v year book s we re distributed bv Mrs. Ed,vard Kriss membership chairman, assisted by ~trs. Valentine. ' Star-gazer Sets Sights on Down-to-earth Constellation .J DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several weeks ago my husband bought a telescope to 1tudy the stan: -he uid. Alter tht fourth night he lost interest in the sky ·and Is now studying other ''heavenly bodies." We live In an apartment which Is ideally situated for his new hobby. He hWTies through diMer, races to the win· dow and stays there four or five hours at ANN LANDERS [il it. I am also concerned that he mi&hl be breaking the law. I've heard of men being arrested as Peeping Toms. Please inform m<. -J UST LOOKING, THANKS acting very oddly. Six weeks ago she te)ephoned at 2 a.m. and uked, "Art you all right?" I said, "Yes, of courtt." She ~n rt.lated a terrible drum she had In W'hlcb t was murdered. Thal was the tnd of my night's aleep. This past week 11he ha.!1 telephoned five times, accused me or caWhg her mld not 11peaklng1 just breathing into the phone. I'm sure the woman needs a psychiatrist. In the meantime I'm goin1· to need one, too, iI she doesn't quit bothering me. Any 1uggestion.s? -PESTERED BY A NUT DEAR PD: Suggest that 11te-see 1 doctor and gel belp. nen help yourself br ¢ti.DI u lllllilkd klepbone number. n eo1ta aolbiai. added with rake bravado, "My dad can do it! II ~ 1 gave a noqcommittal anirwer and then • hated myself for not having the courage to tell the boy what heavy, continuous drink.ins can do to a person. How can I get the message across \\'ithout running down his father, aOO incidentalty, his mother, too? -AUSTIN courb it. Others turn out to be 1ecood and third generation lusbea, whlcll Jive• Ute im ptts.sloa lhat alcobolism 11 lteredltary. Jt Is not, oi course. It b a lelnled re1ponse to IrustraUoa, loat11Det1 ud la· HCUrity. Drinking may be "In" lo the kids you run with -but it can put you "out" for: keeps. You can cool It and stay popular, Q;ead '"Booze and You-For Teena&era Only." Send~ cents jn coin and a lmg, sell-addressed, stamped envelope with your request. ·-. a lime. Last week he invited three or the boys from the office to enjoy Ole fun. He was quite disappointed becall5e his .1wo best 1ubjects for observation (he calls them Venus and Mars) were not at home. He promised the boys he'd invlte them back. I am disgustod_ with !tim and ht koows DEAR JUST : So lone 11 Tom 111y1 11 bis gwn aparlmtot he cannot be am.~. In the rneantlmt, be patient_ dearie. Tom wl11 tirt of bis tiobby after 1 wbJlt.. Grew. Ing up taku time. DEAR ANN: A distant relative or mine who is gein& lhrou&h tht mePQp&ute is ' A voeek later she telephoned al t a.m. and asked if t had called her. 1 said, "No." She lhen uplained that her phone bad rung and she heard a ICl'UID tbat IOWlded lik•. lll1 voice. Df;AR ANN: O.U 11-year~ld son's best friend, Joey, wantl to admire hia father Md tries hard to justify his drinking. Last olghl ht asked if I was agalnstbe.er, "even iI • per~ can drl:hk 12 bottles in a row and 1Ull-'walk 1 straight line." He DEAR AUSTIN: 1t l1 not your respoa1lblllty to "get the menage actOIL" A cb.lld'1 baJlc coactptl are learned at home, not from the itelSllbota. When tbe boy 111kl leading question.a ten llhn to talk to bis Part:ab. In Ott me1a. Ume, 1ome Individuals 1"bt amr u:p 1rou.ad alcoboUam bate llqaor nd never Ann Landen will be glad lo htlp you with your problems. Send them to her ln care of the DAILY PU.QT, enclooloa • elf-addressed, stamped envelope. ' r • -~ -----· - llAJlV Pft.DT Frrd_,, Autldl 1, 19611 • Horiday Season Rushed . ' ·-'For $_hoppers' . Benefit . . bwi.tinu ln.A"'111l! Ephraim Lew!& of the Santa ~ost-lo 11\udd<I-al tile Ana . Chapter aid addltionol ~ but ...mr"""""'~ppei-s~cp"'!fr.ett-· bl-the: l""pilal--.:on· flcO:me the early Yule al· ference. cent.er .. crealed 'by four ThO Allil!ant Chapter will arbor Area Women' a boat a coffee Wfdnesd•Y, Aug. · aniJat.lons. 11, from 10 a.m. to ·noon, and 'll>t four groUf'S 1et hollday the Hunter Cbapler's showing !ana ,oil Ille W.lt/ urly by of-will take plaee Thursday, Aug. re Olrlstm#s cards for 21, also from 10 a.m. to noon. I; at -Obcow:tt t"p r l c e s • The Gift Boa: will h06l view· ors' ·pqcke-kl are 1ngs Tborsday, Aqg. 7 and -t altened with tM u.vlnp and Thursday, Aug. 14.. :.=.,,."1be .treasuri~ of the groups in Funds from the card sale ~ are fat~ ao b.tllding will be used for the al1%iliary's ~·p.ledgd can M met and pledge of f17 i500 to the ;::~ worthwhile enduyors hospital made by the Gift Boir: • . ~-:;;;.ed'. ~~n;w,g their • n nu a I are~~~ ~pb th~u:~~ : ..... Ou;stma:s cud salts are the co.ch airman , Charles l Uliliary of Hoag Memorial Hollister, Edpr Hill , Philip o 1 pit a I , 'Presbyterian, Doane, Carl Gise, Francis ~ ewporl Harbor S p a s l I c Grisel, Lewis, R I c h a r d ague, Cindettlla Guild of Simpson, Charles Clemens and :-b:bildren's Hospllal of Orange Miss Vestal. ."t'~ly and Puoch and Judy Also oliering a 20 percent :r "Culltl of CHOC. discount during August will be :'"lfE" Hoa.g's .Auxiliary, under the the Newport Harbor Spastic ·1 'd!lflff of Mrs. James W. League, wblch will offer cards r . ter, paper goods · buyer through November. ~ or the Gift Box, will olfer a 20 Mrs. Robert Woodward is ·: :Ol>ercent discount during the beading the 8JH!Ual project, : :.month of August. Cards also assisted by Mrs. Terence Han· :?-WUI be on ~le in the hospital na, Lido and peninsula areas; : .. obby through early Mrs. George Jansen, west .. ,~ber. Back Bay area to Balboa ·.~_r.;;.::;. may be v'-ed during I I d and Mr R b -~...--now san , s. o ert ·.: lln twning coffee hosted by Fuller, East bluff to Coron.a del :.~Mrs. Robert L. Bacon and Mar. ::Jtlia Bernice Vestal. a morn.-Anyone wishing to view the ~;;Jal coffee ht the home of Mrs. cards may cooLad any . ' l the spiiiliug gift 0 OMEGA e:/'---SfJfJ rs built like a submlrine. •nd Is so waterprOGf deep• sea diVers ~t it to t ime tkeir oxygen aupply. W,th· st•nds under-water pres• sura: t1'P to 600 feet, Has tirne-ftSefV• indic•tor with click-set rim. Fulty auto· matic. St•inless st~ ad- jult.tble tnctlet. Ilsa. President 'On.Podium Sponsors Combined For Picnic Orange County legal secre- taries will hear James F. Penny, president of the Or· ange County Bar Association Offictrs' \Vives League or speak when the secretarial Orange County and Retired Officers' Association Orange association meets for dinner County Chapter are joining on Thursday, Aug, 7. rorces for an annual picnic in The gathering will take \Y. E. Hart Memorial Park, place tn the Aladdin restau. Orange begiMing at lt a.m. rant, Anaheim, with a social Sunday, Aug. 10. hour at 6:30 p.m. preceding Wives, husbands and guests dinner at 7. are Invited to enjoy the The speaker's (opic will be games, e.nt.ertairrment and a Availablity of the Legal Aid picnic lunch which will ~ser­ Servlce in Orange County. His ved at 1 p.m. • Horoscope • Aries: Re~ognition Spreads . IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 seconds looking ot each of our shag samples, it would take you over 9 hours to •ee them all- •o come, early and bring your lunch. DON'S CARPET SHOP '426 SO. MAIN 12 Blks. No. of Bull0<ic'sl ORANGE !P@l!.l!,W Wffiffiffi@~110 Pro/essiPn11! @[b[§ffiQJ[§ill~ 2755 EAST COAST HIGHWAY 1714) 675·8&11 CORONA DEL MA" ZJP92625 GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL • • • FOR THOSE WHO CARE! FREE MIN er LADIES . SLACKS or SWEATER Cle•n•d and Pressed Frte With A $5 Cleaning Order 10111no1 .... "' lll!llltllll 1tm1) WE SPECIALIZE I All 1(11it GanMWts .,,. blod:ed t• yoer --•~ll'!Htl I We ipecl•llw 111 ell Lecther otH11 F11t Tri"'-' h...n. AIM Mit•llll tri• ,__,.ts ... WecWJ .. G•wu I f.e1te.Y Tpt>le Clotlll -.cl Nepld. • .-kihy e Al•.rien of all~ of..M..-oM w ...... ·, cletltJ .. I Dtw.ilt!..,_"' for Fitth1f, -4 PnaJ .. , .... 11 wtlllti '"wait PHONE: 675-6511 talk also will cover the ques-Cribbage boards. cards , t ion o{ legal ethics. . chess and checkers may be HOURS: 9·5:10 DAILY CLOSlD· SUNDAY The Bar Association pres-brought, and offerings will in-l!.••miiiiiii.aiiii.iiiim•••mm;;_j;;;;;;~ •• .1.J.ii;iiiiiiiiii HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON BEACH 892-5501 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA 545-9485 ~dent, now In partnership with elude Senior Citizen Olympic his twin brother John C. Pen· Games. ny in ·N~rt Beach, is a Reservations may be ob· native Californian. He re-tained by calling Maj. Bill C. ceived his Jaw degree from Hall, 546-9029 or Maj, Matthew the University of Southern Kennedt, 673-7958 by Monday, California and began his law Aug. 4. pract'ice in association witb 1;=========== J udge Karl Davis. Reservations for the dinner and meeting may be made with Mrs. James R. Orr at IT'S NEW! Optn Menday, ThurJday a Frld•Y 'till t p.m. 541-0842 and Mrs. Ray Sharp Crwdlt Twm• Av•ll•llole at 525-6478. 1.fembe.n and The handiest halr..cart and styll09 aid n•I *MIRROR* P0°LITELY ~~iii;~~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~,.lgu~es~~~·~re~ln~v~il~ed~lo~a~tl~en~d~.~I PENDtETQN; Wardrobe Fun-damentals: • SE! NOW. NEW fAU M.tlOR CREDIT CARDS Pendleton's• FOR MEN & WOMEN In Caal• Mou It's sintJZ'ls , .. kl( CONYINllNTl'f, J.1t • tit; fteM •• , ••tf l 11t••llct DEP'Alt.TMEHT •TOft& t1JO '• • 1116 NEWPORT B~LEVARD fi!llliv l~• 1'' CUITULLY LOCATED AT NEWPORT AND HARBOR IOULEVARDS U11 • lrllllll:ltOlt + l'O·LnEL'I' • wllfl YOllf Nlfl ~ Vllllty mtrrtr .•• ~ caa -The Mck Ill .,.," 11 ..... 1 l<hc r-u• ctlfhl,.. wttll tvH vltltll ltlflllt ~ 11U411 • Rich Br•s1 Finish • Hi-Ou•Hty Mirror • Adiustable light and .... Mirror • Removabl• Tote Bag •Portable Spring -Tension Pole ORDER l\'OW! ........... . ' . . • ~ ! ~- •• ~i :· _, :1 • ::::: 2+ :. • o .I e :• I X .~ ~ .:. 0 ol., .... • m~:'~ :• • "'-.. o o;a u :• • a.:~·==. ·.·• • -z . .i ~l:j~ :: . ~;:1, ... "5 : • :• • u; J s : !!:!1 -.... >" tl'I ... • ~< ... • $ uo• 1 ot; .. "1~ ~ a ~ <OJ=~ c o r: a.I I LU .. .,. a c u N. •••••••••• • Daily 10 -10, Sun. 10. 7 FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 1 & 2 ·ONLY ! LOOK ALIVE AND LOVELY IN BONDED SLACKS Our Reg. 2.78 l'alue 2 Doy• OHl!J 2.22 Cl111rge II! So sleek! Slacks with elastic .sets on the waistbands. Light\\1eight to keep you cool coloray. acetates. jersey and matte jersey. Flatter you r figure in good taste. Misses f!. I 8. 2200 HARBOR BL VD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MES • l \ " I I I ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' . . .. •• ' Jets Mode.st Choice To Stop Collegians. CIUCAG-0 (AP) -Although the New York Jets boast doughty Joe Namath, tbe SUper Bowl ch'l"'po go againat the co\. . leglans in the ll6th College AU.Star !oot- ball game a surprisingly modest favorite at Soldier Field tonlght. Favoritism OD the Jets, stunning con- querors over the National Foot6all League's Baltimore Colts, l&-7, in the ~= ~~~e!k d~p~3-'=tl=~ Eu1·ope~s Outleg U.S. Spike Corps quoted In Las Vegas. receivers as Jim Seymour, it_an"ratty's That's a muct} slinµner betting bulge Irish record-breaking battery·mate; Gene than NFL thampa enjdyed in recent Washington of Stanford· Jerry Levias af years, prpbabty rWectlngi a brisk flow ot .\ Southern Methodist an1d Ed Hinton of All-Star ~ney among many fans still Oklahoma skeptical Of the ~ets' explo.sioo to the top Sports Editor Geor~e Strlclle.r of the of the pro football heap. sponsoring Chicago Tribune reported that Namath, who made good his pre-Super while the crowd falls numerically short Bowl boast against the Colt's, expressed of some previous All-Star throngs which the feeling o( the nouveau·nChe Jets, went over 80,000, a sellout of higher asserting, "We'll be out to beat them priced tickets presages lhe blggesl mon-g~." ey gate in the charity series. Namath, ,who stirred coas l-to-coast Last year's third straight triurilph by headlines with his now-ended feud with the Green Bay Packers, 34-17, gave the commissioner Pete Ro~elle o ver NFL a 24·9-2 edge i.n the All·Star series Broadway Joe's ownership of a New York started in J9~. Last All-Star victory was bar, has aching legs and admits to being a 20-,17 dec1ston ov.er the Packers by Gra. a bit ~sty due to bis late training start. ham s 1963 collegians .. But if the pro form .Jheet is followed, so~;;:ies,11-c~\\t,.S~'."°i!~~~ Dtm•. •rd eott 1<111" On TV Tonight Channel 7, 6:30 ' Tackle> -Otve Foley, Ollfo S1111, tnd Gtorgt ntil, No!re Oilme • • G~,, "" ,-Mlke Montier, Color1do, 1rd O.vt ra tY, ffln S!tle. Cen!er -Jo11 Kolb, OkJ.11~ Slflt. 011&rterl)lck -T'"l H•l\l'ttty, Notrt Olome • 8~~· -. A.Ill• T1y or._ Ullh 51111. JtNy 'Levi••· gy,,,..rn tlhodl1t, Ind t'tul Gli»On, HOUllOl'I. End1 -Geor ~= !:i" .f.f." Lemmont Tackle.. -wPntion 1-1m 1rd Sim Wtl!Ofl.: G..-rlh -R•l'IClt RfSMllSHll •rd 0.Vt tftrm.tn Cenle< -John c~mltt. ' Qwrterblc~ -J~ N•m~lh, · S1'U'l'l'GART, Germany (AP)-Dean Coleman, a 24--year..old Sc:bool teacher from Washington, O.C.,' :ikimmed over the 110-meter hurdles in 13.3 seconds Thursday night as the United St.ates chalked up its first victory In the win~­ up competition of the Western HemL· sphere-~ope track meet. Namath may be on display before an eX"· pected crowd of 70,000, represenUng the • series biggest money gate, for only the first half. si!r1~k5 -Emerton &ooier, oo., Mevnerd Ind M9t The Ejliopean men held a 55-49 edge over the U.S. dominated· visitors after the first day's competition. The Euro- pean women led, 37-25. Europe compiled 194 points in the meet under Ule lights of Stuttgart's Neckar Stadium, compared to the West- ern Hemisphere's 151_. European worn· en won &1-M and European men had a • 114-97 margin. . Jet coach 'Weeb Ewbank, who directed his old Colts to All.Star victories in 1959 and 1960, plans to replace Namath with another capable slinger, Babe Parilli in the second half. ' Coach Otto .Graham's 49-man squad is as sharp as a three-week practice of his college stars of 1968 could get ~em in his return to the All.Star helm after three ·seasons as boss of the Wn.,hi .. mnn Redskins. 'i ... '6"' The All.Star running game ls missing such great ball carriers as O.J. Simpson or Southern California and Ron Johnson of 1'1ichigan, bul Graliam has the mak· ings of a sharp aerial game. Most of the tossing will be done· by Notre Qame's Terry Hanratty and Cin- cinnati's Greg Cook to such standout ONT ARIO TRACK GETS 500-MILER NEW YORK (AP) - The Onlario Motor Speedway under construction in South~rn Calif.ornia has been granted a sanction for an Indianapolis-type 500-mile auto race 'starting in 1970, it was an· nounced Thursday. The ev~nt, which will have a ~,000 purse, will be held on Uie Labor Day weekend . David B·. Lockton, P.residcnt of the speedway, and Henry Banks, director of compelitlon for the United .States Autc> Club, jointly announced a lO·yeV agree- m!!nt for the annual race. -----..,..---- Guenter ,Nickel of West Germany put on a last second spurt to gain second place in 13.5. Eddy OttO'Z of Italy was third in 13.6 and the United States' Gary Power, a rePtacetnevMer Willie Daven- port, had to settle for last place after holdi:ng BeCOlld. • place until the final meters: . MISFIRE -Angel rlghtfielder Bili Voss, a New· port Beach resident, tried this bunt in the seventh inning Thursday night but it roUed foul. On the next pitch he swung away and singled up the mid· die. Boston beat the Angels , !).!. The Halos begin • three-game series with Washington tonight at Ana· heim Stadium. · ' Paola P!gnt of Italy kept up a furious pace from the start of the women's 1,500 meter run to win in 4: 13."%, only a stride ahead of Mia Gommers of Holland. 1be 24!year-old Italian runner drop. ped to the ground In exlfaustioo. after the race. Frances Larrieu and Doris Brown of the United States kept up gamely with the leading Eur.wns oply to fade in the final lap and fin1shed third and fourth respectively. Josef Plachy of Czechoslovakia, flfUi ln il)e Mexico City Olym})ics. put oq a sipurt at tbe start of the second half of the BOO-meter run to overtake pace- setting Felix Jolmson of. the United States and win in 1:45.4. Byron Dyce appeared to be blocked by East Germany's Dieter Fromm. who fad· ed Into third place after Pl achy was . .,. sured of victory. Johnson was fourth. · Iris Davis, an 18-year-old student at Tennessee state, scored an upset in defeating her teammate, Barbara Far· rell in the 10!).meter dasjl. The time was 11:3. Wj.lma-van Den Bergh of Ho11and · was third in 11.4 and Sylvia Telllez of France was fourth in 11.5. Angels Peddle Hurler Brunet f Pltther George Burnet, an Angel since 196C, was sold by the club Thursday to SeaUle. To re p 1 a c e the 33-year-old burler, general manager Dick Walsh has sum· monned 22-year-old Steve Kealey from the Angels' PCL Hawaii club. He joined the club Thursd,ly night. At Hawaii, Kea1ey, a righthander, had a 3-S record in 32 re1lef appearances with fO saves. He had 42 strikeouts in' 60 in- nings and an ERA of 3. 75. i\ native Southlander, Kealey led Tor· rance High School into the CIF baseball playetfs in 1966. He atlended ~I Camino Junior. College for one sem~ter before signing wilh the Angels. He tiegan hls pro career at Idaho Falla In '67 and subsequenUy played at Quad Cities, El Paso ind Haw1ll. He apf)e*t'ed in six games with the Angel! at the end of last staSOll and logged a 1.70 ERA. Brunet wu f.7 and 3.87 lllth the Angels, with "'.horn he regl.ste'red a lietlme M'Oftl Of 54-69. Sports· in Brief ' Laver Near Net Award; 41,137 Watch Packers NEW YORK -Rod Laver of Corona de! Mar holds a decisive Jead in CQ?Jl- petition for the Gold Racquet Award for 19&9 in the opinion of an internaUonal Brookville, N.Y.; defensive end Bill Ac~an of New Mexico State and placekicker Tom Dempsey of Encinitas, Calif. panef of tennis writers. . The final rankings will be made follow- ing the Uniled States Open Cham· pionsh.ips at Forest Hills, N.Y., the Davis -cup-challenge-round-in-Gleveland and- the If>S Angeles Open in Septepiber. The, Chargers tapered of£ drills in preparation for Saturday's pre·season ex- hibition opener at home with the Baltimore Colts. • ' U..1 """'" EYES FAT PURSE Bert Greene clenches his fist In eX1illation a!Wr sinking a 10.!oot pull on the eighth holl'at the $25il,OOO West· chester Gol1 Classic Thursday. H,e shot a 67 for the first round. The leader was Tommy Bolt, who fired a 66. ' •• GREEN BAY, Wis. -A dazzling run- ning and passing attack, led by a re- juvenated Travis Williams and veteran Donny Anderson, paced the offense to a 26-0 victory Thursday night in the Green Bay Packers' annual intrasquad football game before a record crow! of 41,137. . • The San Diego Chargers waived,,three players Thursdiy to get-down to. the 60- man cutoft Imposed by the American Football League by Aug. t,, The three are quarterback _Jim cart ol ·Veteran running back Tommy Mason was moved to the wide receiver position by Coach George Allen of the Los Angeles Rams Thurs~y, the day after rookie Jim Seymour was called into , military service. • SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. -Top-seeded Arthur Ashe1ed the men's field into the quarterfinals as every favorite won Thursday in the 43rd annual eastern grsu courts te~ championships at the Orange Lawn Tend.is ·c1u~. Drysdale Asked to Halt Cardinals' Recent Surge . - ST. LOUTS CAP) -The Los Angeles The Cards. who bad the day off Thurs- Dodgers send their No. 1 question mark day after' thumping San Diego· three _ oft.ailing Don Drysdale _ to try to straight, hope they haven 't cooled off. srop the surge of the St. Louis c ardinals. They will send Steve Ca rlton, 12·5, who St. Louis, 1967 world champions and started the All.Star game for the Na- 1968 National League title holders, have tio~~s July 22, against Don Drysdale, 5--3, won 18 ol their last 23. The Redbird.t ":'ho IS still the number one Dodger: ques- were 151A games behind the Eastern -tion mark. . . . . . Division leading Chicago Cubs a montb -....-Drysdale, will be getting his first ago •"11 are now b,ut 81> down. ~ Domrer Slate Cam1ng into thei r nest for the first of AUi. 1 Dodo"' •t St. Louis J :!5 P.m: KF1 (i.n1 tl'lr~!!l'les tonight are the Los ;\ngeles • ""'' t Oodtt,... 1t s1. 1..ou1s 4:~Stt.rn. Kfl't f..Ol -,,,,..,..,,,rs l···-ol three o! four 1·n Forbes Aut1. J Dodtmi •• s1. L.oUI• 11.10 t.tfl. 11:F1 1..01 .uvue~ • .,.,...,.. ""'· J Dodten n Plthlluroll 7:55 '·"'· KFt (6411) Field in Pittsb11rgh this week, including a 2-1 loss in 15 irl'hlngs Thursday night. 0 stoppe r rote" assignment or the sum- mer tonight, as be opens the crucial three game set. Bolt Stays With· Young Cats Big Don was rocked for two home runs . in Chicago .last Sunday. however survived to win victory number five in his five in- ning sUnt. LOI AHOeLl!t • PITTSIUltGM •II r 11 r1t1 111 f,ft rbl ~ISON. N.Y. (AP) -j 1I just tournament, the richest In golr. wanted to show those young catlr I was Australian Bruce Devlin and unherald· playing with 1 can play too," said crusty ed Bert Greene were one shot back at t7. Tommy Bolt. • Another stroke back, at 68, were Bruce Bolt showed nOt only George Archer Crampton, another Austtallan; SOUth and Johnny Pott, hi1 playing partners, African Harold Henning, Paul Hamey, but everyone else in tht: elite westcbesfer Terry DUI, Fred Marti ~nd Bob Lunn. Classic field Thursday thaf Jtu4 be<:~ijse Long-hitting Tom 'Velikop( was .in a be has mellowed some at 5!, tiis game group at 69 which included"'Frank'Beard, ba~'t. , • Tony Jacklin, Jim Colbert, R. H. Sikes The tempestuous Tommy struck Lht Bo6by Nlcholt 1nd Marty fleckman. tight par 72· Westchester Country Club • Fourteen players came in with I/OS, ln- Bot( legendary for his eiplosive temper 88 !huch as ror his picture-perfect swing, said he gets jus\ as mad as ever although he can't remember when be last wrapped a club around a tree. Course like lightning with five con-eluding R.11 Floyd, Gary Player, Tomroy seaitlve blrdlt.s for a 6& and • .$>!1.9. shot Aaron and Tom Shaw. ~ lead a!ler !be Ursl round Of the li!o.000 ' Pott and Archer posted 7:1s. •The reigning U.S .. Seniors champion Nyed In the fairways and spent little tlme on the greens. Playing the back nine trsron the hilly 6,677-yard layout, he began hi:, birdie , blitz el the par 5 18th with' six-footer, ra.n In a 45-footer at the pac 3 first, a IO.footer· at .. the par 4 se- cotld, a 13-foo\er' at 'tHe pitr 4 third and ran out hls string with a two-footer for a blrdlc I al the fourth. ~ . . Wlllt.•• S011M.Alo.t.el •1 20 Mott, II' 6 0 I 0 C.T•VIOf, If • 0 0 I W.O.vt.. cf ' 0 0 0 lt,0.vls. II 2 0 a • "J(:qeco, i1 • O O 0 Cletntnte, rf ' 0 ' O tnlwford, If 2 o O 0 A.4lllwr, 11> 1 o J t K.&oyer, 1b • o o o $1111111111..,, c I o 1 o Hllfton. lb 1 O 1 0 Het>nel', Jb ' 0 1 0 Slld!lkl1, 3b ' 1 1 1 Pi"lek, " t I J 0 Sb1~t. 2tt I 0 1 0 AlltV, 211 & 0 t 0 Torll0!'9, c ' o t o W•ll{•r, p t o o 0 Htllor. c t o I o• P1911n, pl'I 1 o O I $1,,Pr. p l o o 0 Glboon. p 0 O 0 I ar-•r. o l o o I Mll'll!\tl, pit I 0. 1 I G1bf .. ,.,.,,pl'!OO 'o1~,p 001r Mllckelttn, p O O G 0 IN.-. p 0 0 0 0 C.Ol!Hn, pll 1 0 I o ·11•1111!1, pit 1 0 0 o1. Mc&ten. p o o o o tt.1rltt111tJ", p o o o Tot~I' 51 1 4 l, Tot1l1 i1 I 16 2. Ont ~t \llflwl wt!Wlh'lt r'brl 1cored, LAI t-"9lltt. ODO CIOO «'4 100 .. -t PllttWrtlll GOO 000 OOf lot 001 -t I! -Ptlt4l. All•V· K. IO'A!'• lutl~ ... 01" -lM A~1tt i, fll!hbu!'lll I. LOI -LOS A119ei.. I, fl!lhbllrOll I). 29 -S1f!Olllllt11. Hit -iudtkl1 111. 61 -Tor1101'9. S -~·• It. CMiv11. • ' ' ' Halos May Put : ' McGlothlin • • In Bullpen By EARL GUSTKEY ; Of 1~1 ~IY Pillt SI•" ~ Jim McGlothlln, who only two season,. ago was given a strqng chance of supe~ star status, is in danger of beint- dispa~ched to the bullpen. . : He turned in another dlstressfnl- perfonnance Thursday night. The Faun: ta.in Valley t'esldent was shelled In the s~ cond inning by the Red Sox, who went'ort to put_ 4 ~Ldent. in_the .. Angels •-_1hrte"!._!_ game wlnninrstrealr. .. The Halos fa ce Frank Howard and th& Washington Senators ton1ght at th.e· Bi( A. Rudy May (4-9) duels the Nats' Diel(; Bosman (6-5). McGlothlin, who ha s never regained lhi A11gel Slate Auo. 1 Angel' WI wa.iillllllon 7:5$ p.ni. l(MPC t710l> Aug, 2 Antltls YS W1t#ll!11110f1 7:55 p.m. KMPC: 1.1101 Aug. l Angeli vs Wa1hl11111or! 12:» p,m, !CMPC tf'lOI . A.119. s ""9el1 at 111 .... York 4~i5 p.rn, KMPC: OID I• fonn he reached in '67 when he p1tJ;(i in the All·Star game, ts now >tt f0ri 69; Thursday's may have been his last start for awhile. · • "I'm thinking of putting him In the bullpen,'' manager Lefty· Phillips sai4 "Maybe he can get bacl( on the beam that way. He wasn't doing badly at all until his last four times out. liis contrql is real bad -he's ha ving to come rlaht down the pike on 3·2 counts. "Andy Messersmith is winning and ha! a lot of confidence. Mac is losing now and it's got him dow n. !l's a mental tbing'L. I think he'll get straightened out." ~ , The manager said he'd' bring \.il)'O'e 'Vrigh-1JILJ!i!!,)' ln_to the regular st.arUng rotation. If he removes McG Jotlilfn:lt1'U--- only Wednesday night that Phillips faid Torrt Mt.trphy, Messersmith aJl d McGlothlin were his three 14c1Qfh'! starters. But apparently Mac was sufttciefttly mediocre to change h.is mind. Thursday, He reUred Boston In order easily e•h In the·firsl but when Phillips brou~·~in Eddie Fisher to replace him in the sed>nd there were four runs in, two men on ~ase and Carl Yastrzemski at bat. Boston Lpoled three home runs ln1t e rout. Joe Lahbud belted one off McGlothlin in the second, 1'fike Andrew4 ripped another in the sixth off Fisher and Rico Petrocelli clubbed his 26th in · the seventh aff newcomer Steve Kealey. Jt was a big night for the explosive Red Sox. They had 20 baserunners and left, eight of them stranded. Boston starter Ray Culp, who won his LSth, had an ea57 Ume of it and had a one-bitter going until Bill Voss singled in the sevenlh. ~ aoS"TOM C4L.U'Oll:Ml,l . ,. r ll ·l'M • rlrM O'.J19n. Jb ' I 0 0 Alorneri fll ' • I O Ani:lr.ws, » S 2 I J lptn(lr, lb 4 0 0 I Y•11Tttfr11kl, II i ·o 1 1 lttidl~rdl, If ' t o • SCllolltld, If o o 0 o ,,...,,,, tl • ~ I 1 t PttrMelll, " ~ 2 2 '2 Joilfll-. ct • o 1 o kotf, lb 5 I 0 0 V-. rt 3 0'1 I llllolld, rf I 1 1 2.. '°"'°"" p t t t • Lodi, cl 4 I J I LleM•• pl'I 1. t " t • Glb$o0ft, c .s • , 1 A.iltOdflgui, lb 2 0 0 1 Culp.(I llltArcue.c :JOO O MeGIO!fllll, o 0 0 0 G E,FW!ert » 1 0 o 0 ttkk~ rn 1 O O O kt11t:,',11 001 0 ltepot. rl I 1 ' I To tdl JI f 11 f ltllls JI S I '°''°" ""° 110 1~ • c.111oN>11 110 om • -1 E -Aftdrt••• A. ll:odrtouez. Df' -~ 1. c 1111ornl1 .1. LOI ".'" lot!Oll, ., QUlorfllll ... - Andr-1. MA -L•"-1 111, ""',..,.... \ti, ~ Ctt11 (2'J. 51 -L•llOW. If--A. 11.odrJtt,ltL .. ,, . ,• • • -- ••• • • Frld11. August 1, 1969 Cali't Get t.o First • ' ' • -• • League Rules • # ' . . ·. ' . . . . ~ . . . '. ~ -. ' ' '• ·-----~·-----. --- Wilson, Douglas - ,.-------....... ------~ Qoe£1ag 111uA Vik.es ·End Hoop Loop 1 1· Palmer KEEi' PIJTTING STkOKU:ONSlmJ'l.~-i-l:Inbeaten-- .. Deep Sea 'Fish Report ., twWTINeTOtll tL'Cl4-U lftllftsl •1trl-JI ..Wlflll) <7' ..... )t ........ T 111 Mflllo, 11,.., 10 -lfrt; )Q '"-1111111, 11 rTllt1f COd. 0-..... n ""no. 17 ...... ' M lllllUI. • ... IH:IJ 1 M••· , .. ""'"'· NIW,OltT I lltl ' t laMlnJJ-111 OCI ANl101-t!1 •Mlt"I A:ll ti.,.. .,111Jrt1 4 1lb.lcke, I 1111111111 fvlll, S ••(~, ! a!O.to,.. ll! bt~ .. 115' _,.,udl, m -Ito. '°' Mu. b9n1IO. ' wllllf WI 0-11. II Wlitw!llJ,. CO._.. LldWl-n' •111191'.i J:IS 4 Mlltllirl. 1 IUfll • ...... !lo, ltf btM. , Mrr1Cwd1, IJ •ta: llAL llAC-112 •111~'11 11 wt.-1-MIJlll.ol =~=-olNllOtt:-M ....,.._, 1N14oll. 0... h !ltj LO•o •1acM c••c lie • 1,,..,"i no -i10. u i... J ~MIHl-lS.. M llr.1 $ WlllfW!ll~ ,,.ldr,,.I, J bl•r-t\ICll, J M IMlvt, l,«111 Jui.> '"'' l'tfrl-"' Ltuly Vmp Out . .F~f:J~:~!f!1 .. boflllo. IP~ UMll119~1JI IAN Ollt Op ' IM11111d"'1 ).tarlna Jligh S C h 0 0 f I S ...... ltnl 1 bf.rt.WO., 1,0llJ H U, 21 IMlfr•I )t -ho. 5'11 llNODrr, $ bollllo, ' Ytl1Dwt1ll. I M Hllul. c•.i-t hll,lell~ '""'" n rtllowt•!I. I NEW YORK (AP) Pilon which was'"lengthy and tories Wednesday night Jn basketblll learn completed an 1....:=:::..:.::::::::::..:.:::::::..:=::::......:=:c.c=-..c__.;..... ___ _ unbeaten season Wednesday ¥ Instead or callln1 out the run-legalilOc." Coeta Mesa R e c r e • t I o n nen at first base tonight, the "It advtaed D1f that rny CQD· Department League action at lady who wants to be the Urst tract has been dbapproved Oran1e Coast Colleae. woman umpire in organlz.ed and my assignments to duUes Brian Knill topped scoring • baseball has been called out have been canceled. It's a for Douglu wlth 20 points berRll. strikeout, but I will come up wtllle Eric Chriatensen con- , ''I gueu I just can't 1et lo again. 'lbe gam'-'s not over." tinued his offensive omlaught flrst bue,L" said a-1!.ejected This was ~ reference to her for-Bill Barry Pontiac wilh 35 t.1rs . Bernice Gera Thum.fay conferences with her attorney, points. after learning her contract to Rep. Mario Blauf, D-N. Y ·• Douglas wbippe4 Bill Barry umpire in the Class A New who expects to take further Pontiac 76-M and Wilson . Yo~·Pennsylvania Le ague acdon. She had been hired by Ford htat Lucky's 7~71 had been disapproved by Pl;!.ll the league .a~r ~ ~ Tom Witt po.It~ lt for· Piton, head of baseball's b r o u I h t d 1 s crlmination Wilson while t.eammatn Gary minor leacues. . charges before the SU!.te · Larson and John Sirnac had JI night In lheoOr ange High sum- mei league with an eaJY 77-$7 victory O\le.r outgunned Sonora. The Vikes finished lbe loop with a IM ledger. Rick f\tosier topped Vlke scoring with 19 points. He wound up lbe sea.son u the league's third hlghest scorer with an 11.4. average. &HEAT OLD BOURDON &HEAT IEW PRICEI 'ftle-38-year-old housewife of Human Rlgbts_Qunjplsskm. each. High for Lucky's was- Jackson Heights in Queens "I bad three sulkases pack· former OCC star Tom Read had been scheduled to work ed because 1 planned to be with 29 the Auburn-Corning game in ayviy for a month," said the w1isOO had a 41-35 halftime Auburn, NJ'., at first base. dtSappolnled >foot.! ~ r s • advantage and m_Jinta.ined "I disapproved her contract Gera. that lead througbOut the. ae- with the NY..P League," said "Many of my friends plan· cond hall. Douglas raced to a Piton at his Columbus, Ohio, ned to come to the game. But 37.70 lint hall lead over Bill office. "I don't wish to com-if this. ls the way it bu to be. Barry. ment futther at this Ume." there lS nothing to.do but wait. . The Mancebo brothers,· Rkt Mrs. Gera said she had I will have to conUoue the bat-and Larry, accounted for 27 of rtceiVed a telegram from tie." Lucky 's total . How They Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE Eut Dl>lsloo NA110NAL LEAGUE Eut Djvlsion WIUOlt l'OllO 176) "'" ,_ Afl'll>rDli<h Cftlln ·-J. TPtornl.,, l'O l'T I'll' TP J I t II . . . " J I t 1 l • l ' ' . , ,, 1 • 0 • &0 1Httll..n...._.,.... •H<M·to Wft~YOUI Mt1NG•1 tWe hAmtW·Pw~Jully llluttNt•f ..,i. to puttt~. llne+"Up, itf'bhl Stnd ~.,... with.--.-. •If ... , I denwlept toAmoW ..... ,, lA Clllf9" thl11w t ; ; r~ EstaD.cia, Mesa Win tire Newport offenu, pumping in five scores. Other final night scores Wednesday: Lowell 61, Anaheim S9 ; Katella 71, -- Orange 60 ; Troy 51, Pacifica 51. * * * MAalNA fnl Ml;.f.lt r ' • ' " MvlllHJ • • ' " .... • • ' " Slr11forO ' ' • " McGvlr, • • " Toll!• » • n SONOltA Ul~. •T "" TP: MY~'l • ' .. • T •Ylor • • ' " "'-''" ' I l 11 Hlllm." ' • ' • '"""" ' • ' ' K.....,.t N ' • • ' NoWIC~I ' • • ' Tot1b '" " " M1rlN1 k.tt'I •r Qv.tt,rs n 1 n 11-11 It U 10 1LI7 W L Pd.GB 72 31 ... - 56 45 .554 15 57 46 .553 15 54 54 .500 201> 49 Ill • WI. 24 43 62 .'10 30 • W L Pct.GB G. T"°""'°" H1~n Tlllll5 • • 1 • ) ] ' ' • l• 11 H lUCKl"S cn1 Estancia and Costa Mesa scored narrow 1-6 victories Wednesday in the summer recreation water polo league at Estincla !Ugh School Costa Meu chalked up its victory at the ~me or Newpc)rt Harbor with final period goals .by Ron Mislolek and Rod Kbtyoti breaking a S.5 -· Doug Weller was the big gun for Estancia in its win over Fountain 'Valley, scoring six tim~. .;=================oJ Baltimore ~Detroit Boston Washington New York Cleveland Wat Dlvldoa ~ Minnesota 64 40 .615 - Chicago New York St. Louis 64. 41 .610 - S> 44 .Slit 6 S> 41 .529 a.I> Pittsburgh 53 50 ..515 10 Philadelphia 4Z 60 .4U 201..z Montreal 33 10 .320 30 Wat Dlvbloa Atlanta 80 46 .566 - Cincinnati 53 43 -~ 2 l'Or:TPPTP' Jot1es l 2 I I GfllttlJle 1 , ] ' "* 11 1 , ,., L. M111t.OO I I 4 11 ft. Mllll.lloO , • 1 10 MOr'lon I I I I G.mle~ I • $ l Tottll JI 11 16 n ~llN JQW't'. Wllwfl '1, Llldr.1"1 » OOUGU.$ UO flG r:T Pl' TP J • 0 ' lie. • Misiolek, Kinyon and John Carpenter led the Cotta Meaa attack with two goals each. Jim Smith was nearly the en· In other games, La ~inta clobbered Bolsa Grande, ll>J, ;md Garden . Grove pounded Troy, 8-1. Chuck Halloway and Mike Cadra JCOred g and 5 goals In L.a Quinta's romp wbife Steve Shartrld'e paced G a r d e n Grove with four scores. "-Krilff • • , 211 S I I If --.,.-,.-------------------11 'fM Sll!I Ill ... ""9 "lelwr1 C•llf.'i Ltr911t Yolu!N Oell..- I IDW • Oakland 58 41 .586 3 1..> Seattle 43 59 . m 20 Kar'IAS City U 61 .40ll 21 1.Z California 40 61 .396 221h. Chicago 4.1 6.1 .394 Z3 Los Ana:eles 56 46 .~9 2 S. Francisco 57 47 .541 2 Houston 54 49 .524 41,1. San Diego 34 71 .324 U~t TIMI,...,.,, •...+tt Lyon1 GlllNrl 8lr9ft'lltr ,_ "·-To.r'lellt """ s • • 10 l I S 6 ' 1 1 • l 1 2 I • 0 , 17 n • n ,, IAltltY llll l'"G l'"T ,,. 1969 Hydroswl~ Skylartc 150 $1695 SEE IT NOWI CllMt ~II witll 1Ht Mtrc UI Wl•llll 11tle itlllliln, tlj wllffl V11t- Mlll Tr•U•. SUNNY BROOK ' Tl!llnMy't ll-lls Ml--'1t !, Detroit J Cll...tiond l. Cl'llu to l. II lftnlt111'1 81"""-• l. 1<..-. .. Cltv 1 O.ki.nci l. New Yort; t &o&fo-t. Olllorn!• 1 W••hlftllllll 1, 5.elflll 4 Tl4.af'I G- Hou1I011 2, H~w Yori!. I a.1c-n , $11> Frll'KlKI 2 Pllllbu•'11 i, L.oli ""911n !, U In- ·~· ,111t1n11 4.f. PlllllOl!lplll• 1·t 'tlnclMlll L Monlrffl 1 °"'' ....... 5~1111. T""'"y's GlmH I0610fl CLO!lborl 7 ... l I f 01kl111d lO-U·•I, t1l.it! ., W•NllM""' ceo ...... a.n II C1llkw· "'1111111 tNlellrf l~ll 11 NfW York 1c1,_1 ~n. nl!lfl! HcwllOll CL-ler 7·111 11 Monwt•I nl1 (MIJ •fl, nllll!I t 11t...i.. 1·2), ....... , -Yortc lllll't.dl Ml 11 S..111le fP1ttlol 1-t], fll .. 1 Cln<.lnnAll (Ciotti-f·lll II Piii!• MIPllll tFr'l'mlll M ), 111•1 !.In 0119'9 tKlrtrl J.l,JI 11 Cl\~ , ........ 11-1) C!ffli.nd Ol•r~n :).I) II Klfllll C il~ iOr11111 ._.), 11"'11 ~Ill Fr1nclsc1 (,....rkNI lU~ 11 ,.UhDIH'"' !SUlltllll' t ·7), t1ltlll 811llm1H1 I H1rdl11 s-AI 11 Mlnnaotl !Chin« ).I). n!fht Cllluto IOrlDs .. J) II Otlroll CHIU· ., 2·l), llilht LM ... ._~, (0r'l'l4f,lJ WI 11 SI. LOiii• 1c .. 11 ... n .n . 111w111 • -. 11 ........... 0.llllt Solton I ! Olllllnd W1•h!1111111t1 11 (.11flor11ll, 111.,,1 N•• Yori< 11 S&ittlt, nl9'11 '(lirvtltnd 11 it .... 1 (llY, nlgftl 811tlmor• 1t M'-tof1 c~ '' °"'°'' StlllrUT's G- ,111111111 •' H..,. V-. "'"" MOVt!O• 11 Mlolllr.al Clnc:llllllU 11 Phll1d•IP1!11, 111tftl S•n Fr1nc:IKt If Pllllbllrgl!, lllihl !.lft 01•91 ·., '""'"' Lot """~ 11 St Loul .. nl"'I _CLOSE.-OUT SALE ,...., EVERYTHING MUST GO 20 Lumber Hardware :rools Plywood Electrical Paint Sash & Doars MauldinC)S Desks Ales ShelvillCJ Office Equip. FencinCJ Floor Tile SiCJns UCJht Bulbs Weather StrippinCJ Lacks PanelinCJ Sheetrock Cash RiC)ister Desks Chairs Tables TOO MANY ITEMS TO UST! -CASH AND CARRY - All Sales Final-No Refunds COSTA MESA LUMBER CO. 1700 SUPERIOR AVENUE m ·-COSTA MESA • \ .. "»'!•• j ~J ~lllw 1 O J Cftrl1le1111" 1• l 1 EMii 1 1 I 1' + TO CMOOI• f'•OM • ....,..,, IM .. .,., ............ , lH v ........... ,._ Dell ..., ·~ ~ MIR. 0,. 1 ..,.. ....... Ul1 SOUTH MAIN Ill W""1iitl_ STRAIGHTBoURBON $t9wr!1 1 I O Tttt1t1 ii 11 f 6.J SAlfT• AN• n~ H1lnlme t core: Dou!ll11 11, •••r'I' 20 ======================== LOW MILEAG~ USED$ TIRES YOUR CHOICE TEED Jet-AirB ~ Kraftreads (General Tire's Factory System Retreads) 95 SIZES: 600x13 e 650x13 e 700x13 e 695x14 e 735x14 e 560x15 e 600x15 SIZES 775xl4 e 125x14 • 775x15 e11sx15el55xl4el55x15 95 SIZES 915x15 e 900x15 ell5x15el15x14 4 for s491s BRAKE ADJUSTMENT 99' U:S. C.. 0.r .,..Wlm •4111t killlK. llltpKt ltNll• II• 1.,, 4,._ M4 crtlMen. ,., •r••lk ft~ H - MAG WHEELS SS/8000 Super Stiort Ford, Chevrolet, Plymouth & Dodgo " • Mirror-polish chrome e Cast aluminum center • TIMft-proof hub cap e Other 1tyl11 1v1ll1b'9- ·- 646-5033 • D on Swedlund The World's Most ADVANCED Tire! @ntinental RaP14 RADIAL * Pro\lides safety at high speeds ••• * Gives o\ler l'!f'ice the milegae . , • *Save$ gas too! NONl' END ALIGNMENT PENNSYLVANIA Centre Court TENNIS BALLS 3 for $199 P-~~~ COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959. Hours: 7:30 •• 6:00 Dally 540-5710 r • • • -----------------------------------------------~~--~~~~~~~--- • -~ ,. _Los Alamitos Entries Mal'ina Wins, 4 -0; Goes 16-1 Cross Country Mark ~hattered by Lipski ~1arina Higb's entry in the Long Beach Police Baseball League, the Seal Beach Lions. defeated the Police Department's Motor Patrol team Tuesday afternoon, 4-0, on p itc her ·Dave KI unareseter's 14-strikeout, two-bit. performance. Nut 'outing !or lht Lions will be SUnday when Marina tests McCoy's . Market at 3 p.m. on Cherry Ave. Field in Long Beach. High school di.stance runner Tom Llpaki stole .the spotlight from the open division com- petitors 'nluraday night at Costa Mesa High School in the weekly all-comer.!I track meet when he stretched out to a course reeord over the 3.7- mlle cross country run. Lipski, Who. was graudated rrom S@ddlebock lllgb School last tmmth, covered the grueJ.. ing distance arouod tbe Costa ~ttsa track an4 neartif jlreets in 17:53 to slice 11 seconds off the old coune rtCOrd which Wes Ht ei:rlier this 'summer by Keith Slrodl ol Santa Ana Marina's secqnd team in the Colle1e. - league, Kaufman and Broad Other inarks turned In Construction forfeited I t 1 ... Thurlday were prll!l~ much TUesday 1ame. ordinary. -Pat Curran hit a twc>run Doug Eckert of Chapman hem.erjn the first Inning to get COllege had the most im- Marlna off wfug\ng -Tties<la·y. pte.sslve performance-tn -1he l t wouJd've been a three-run open division. running the 100 shot but Mark Cres.se, on first in 9.9. He'later made it a 9ou· base at the time neglected to ble witll an unimpressive 23.Z touch second b~ When roun-in the 220. ding the infield. The summer all-comers pro- The Lions sport a 16-1 gram wi~ds u~ next wetk with cord with four games left. . a champ1onsh1p meet. Action re Is scheduled to st,rt at 4 p.m. MAallr(A (4\ •• ' • '" c..~bl!ll, u , ' ' • Felml,.,, lb , • ' • Crtn~. If ' • • • C11rr1!\, cl , ' ' , Crt.o(i, lb ' ' • • .... ~'°"· ' , ' • • Ne f, 2111 , • ' • C1r!ns. rl ' • • ' k l11n.reiettr, • ' • ' • To111t " • ' ' SCWI llr lllfll"9S .... ' • MolGr P1lrol .. .. M.,l,.., '" .. ...... • • I Baseball's • Top Ten AMlllCAN L•t,OUI" G Al It Pity ... Cl .. C1rtw Min 111.smllll A1n F. ll:oblrnon Afl Oil~• Min u 3:111 " " fief, 11) ,JJJ 111 .:J.41 111 .lll 111 .»1 131 .:iot ,,, .JOf 1a• ,:JO, - 10" ·'°' 110 .1n Ol"IN DIVISION 10 HH-'I. Wll~ffnt 1. TllltY. 119 third, Thnt: t .I. Mlle-1. Carll.., 2. Mldlttletot 3 • 5c~m1u. Tr,.,., •:'1.l.• 100 -I. E~rl 2. W-l. Sl!l11tt, Tim•: f.f . ,.._,, M11klootl '· Saimlll 3. HD'fl. Time: U.l • t20 lt4-1. 'TU!ff . .,. otcOM or l!'llrlll. Tlm1: 21.l. «O ReltY-1. Titm 11f Ec~•rl, Jltlllv, Hort tnd $d'Wnll.r. 1. Gt•llltll Grove. Tfmt: 41J ...•••• --I. Schmitt 1 ....... ,, ... thlr•I. Tfrne: J :Ot l. :110-1. l!Ckh•rl 1. Hovi J. l lltttlll\tl. Tim~: 73.2. Crou C.aunh'y-1, Gr"''-J. C1rnot1 l. J-. 'fll'M: lt:tt.t. TJ-1. ••nlrlt J. Wtsl 1. iwls.t. Ohile!!U •1111 • LJ-1, Swtu 2. S.""°'~ l . l!INtlf. Ol1llnc:t: )O..f, ~-!. Gttl'doft J, Lott, no third. Dl1!111C'f ...... tl11K11..-l. Lott J, Gor .... Olll•nct: 11)-1 ...... Ht•H SCHOOl DtVlllDN Mllt-1. kJ'IUCf t. ICHl9y, 110 "'lrd, Tl""' $:1•.I. 10 HH -t. E ..... rcll t. Sl~t'1 ). IC•edel. l Jme: •.J. 100-1. ._.. J, McfHff"f l , E.rw1f'11f;. Time: 11.J. , no-1. s1u1r1 J. E••...,.. l. s ... 1u. Tl!M: JS.f. Q0-1. 0-~s '· GrHnwood 3, ~""' .,,11, llmt: t:Ol,j, 720-l . Aldermen 2, Vl11lnt 3, Vlnl.,., Tlmt: JS.•. C11111 CoUl'llo-1, L'-'kl t. ,.l tltfMln 1. J>-t. Tlmt: 17:1S.t . TJ-1. Nooo\.,,, 2. IC1llerrn1n 1. Ktft· f!HY. Dltl•ace: U.11. HJ-1. Undtrwood t. 1£dwt rd1 l, Mar!IMI. Helt M! ... 1. l.J-1. Ellwtr's 1. Ul'ICltrwood J. K""4tl. o r111nct: U-t. 51"-1. Btl'Nlt 2. L1ctm. 1 Krellltl Dlthll!CI U.J\11. Olte1,11._1. lt!Mk 2. a.r1111t S. L1c1wna~, 01r1111ee: loll).l. JvHIGa HHIH DIVISION l't HK-!, P-11 L .l*les J. S11r1. Tl-: '·'· .'1 Mllol-1. a1,111 J. l 1r..,.1 ), Whftler. Tlm"1 4 :SI.~. lfl0-1. Pllkhen 2. Stll 1. Ktll'f. Time: 10.t. ~--I. Kt!lt' 2. 0-11"' l , SH•I. Tlmf: S7,4. 22t !H-1. P-11 2. J-I. C*"9. • Tlmt: 1'.J, .- 1-1. Wakin :t 1tu1t .S. ••l .. v. Tlmt: 1:17,4. t»-1. KellJ' 2, Olektla~ l , P-tll, Tl-: 25.1. MJll! wtll:-1. DlltrM"" t. CMrrl. no l!'llrl. Time: 7:'5.0. Crou C-h'Y-1. Holeonlll l. lh•IY, no lhlrl . Tl1111t1 11.lt.t. " Dl-1. &W1119 2, T•. !'Ill lhlrd. Dhihlna: '5-1. HJ-I. KleM l . Cilllllnl l. '-•· Hll9M: ~I. LJ-1. Kt11erfn•NI 2. Celltw9 l. Klett.-DLtf~l 11-1, - Bo~s Camp Extended ' • The Costa Mesa Recreation Department.has added two .ad# ditional weeks of boys camp to its summer program at Estan- cia High School. · The two new sessions will run rrom AUg. 4..S and Aug. 11-15 from 1:30-4:30 p.m. under the direction or Jot Wolfe. The camps ediphasi2e techniques in basketball, baseball, tennis, track and football . Alsy Included in the program are daily swilnming, weight training. isometrics, conditi~g and agility drills. Youngsters may re gister for lhe program. al the recreation department in room 305 of the Costa Mes• Ci vie Center. 77 Fair Or. from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost of each weekly session is 110. 1111lr &II F.Howtrd W1' f't>lrOUlll 91~ l"owell 911 111n0o o~• C1r1r Dtk " 34• ,1 lOCI 363 13 t f st 59 101 t'l1 IO 10• )t1 1$ HIO ]II 60 JOI 361 SI ,,_ JIO 6' " '(11 0 11' ,,,. ---------------------------- Me101t¥. l1IUmCIU, n .e. I 0001 l1llV'o. owou. \+.], .1111 ,.,_ .. 111111morr. .,,. .1111 Ph•• 11 "'' • A•Hl......,..t. 11-lJ .1"1 Odom, 011r;i.11&. ...... 111._ N•1'10N•L \.IJiOUll c f ,1saHP•t. 103 •• ,. "' ,)ff 1' '°" M IOI ,,_.. .. 1'1 .. 111 l44 .. l ll u "'' .1'! " m ).t HJ ,J•J ,. lit n UI .ll1 tO JU n 11t ~19 tJ )U tt 1U ,l;t ,, )(It ., .. .~1• ti 411 n 1~1 .JH ly Marvin Myers I .. 4/fJ.I. Of Cf1./f5f .IM /J(J)l/JANE, AfTE~ AlL 7l!AT /JtWIJE!) 5[tlff J'Jlf CttlftlMEP/' ' , .. "'*'· A-. '· 1~ •• ., cw & ,.,, ,.,.,, ,... 1111 ',Mo ........ , ........... .............. -l'ltlt a~a • ,_,,_, I ¥t•r lffl "'" W> Ill O,..._ A M W.. '""M "*· Fyll ttl h'1 IS:-,._l llJ 1111' ~I' ..... tllkN,..I 1i. Ml D41R. Cit C"'*'I lV' Trl!l19 Dtdttf ~ 117 MY l •Y ""-cA•tlfl , 11t loottt'• 11-1 Clttl'lll) 111 Leo'a llr Oltltl (LIMtll'll 11J •wtl c • ..,.. ll"•ttl91 117 Y911dlJ \."'9 jlmllfl) 117 Kine of ll'lt Turt (W....,.,.J 111 SICOMD MCI. d .,.,._, J 't'llt elds 1M 11J In OrM A Mlow:I. ,..,,_ "JIOI. Oi-1 tM«r1$1 116 S11n GM11 llt lanktl 111 Mad<IV'I S•r !Wit-I 111 C~'' Y•ftlly t'••ll 11• !Jll (Wrl1M) Ill ••rr 51-l""'trl 111 \lfli.l'tl Priricen (Clrd0l1) JU FV Aims For 4th Triumph Fountain Vailey'1 iummer· .age--group swlm team will eye Ila fourth victory in co1.inty league action Saturday after poetiog a 214-191 win over Newport Beach rectntly. Valley meets Santa Ana Saturday at Memorial Po;ol in Satrta Ana. Result.!: - lllOMTM llACE. J~ v•rclt. 1 y~., olds I NI' "' 11' Gtldtl ..... Ml11U1. T'11 111\>f An,...11. f'wr>e llllOt. ll:o." Men•ct (Smillll t.111 I 00 J.14 s.,ule! 1-•ltJ .s 00 J_6Q M•CK•Y I , 5!•rr {Jl t t ) I.JG llm-11 1(10 t.11 1cr11c"-'· •UINILLA-4S-.fll9 Mel' I 7•KIJf?I ......_.. P•llt SUM. Cycles Vie ' ~-On CM Oval Match races head th~. bill tonight during Class A motorcycle competition 11 l County 1''airirounds Speedway in Cotti Mesa. National racing champion Swede Savage meets Larry Htinsllmao in the first match race and Rkk: Woods of Hun- tington Beach 11 scheduled lo take on the wlnner. Gatei at the Fairgrounds Speedway OP"' at 6:'111 an<! ractt 4t1tL at &. Admis11\oll Is $2.50 for adults, $1.50 for junlon and chllcft<n under 10 koe. Friday, A119ust t , 1969 O~lt Y PILJ!T 17 ,, • . ;.. • t ·i; • • ,. •• :; ~ ' .. ' • .. STEREO SENSATION! Tiie colartul saun.:l of Oranae County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM • .... ~ From Fashion Island, N~wport Beach • -:f.• ~' ,, • .. ·~ ~ ..-: :i- ; •\'.. • ~ r: -. ... -;. ""' ~ • -:. • • .; .. _,, :i ·-8 .. ... " ' :r • • • ., l I , I l • . . • Ja DAJlY l'ILOT • • • • Mon•Fri--9 am· 9pm Sat-9 am·6 ·pm PERFECT LAUNDRY CARE! ' " MODll. WA7JDI FILTER·FLO" . WASHER 2SPEEDS 3CYCLES • Filter-PJo nib 1J11lem- ends liDl>-fuuJ • 3 wuh. 2 due temperatma. • PenunflDt Pr9I Cfdll with "'eootdown•. • S waim' nnr IOl.d aellctiomi · .. • ~ enamel top udbubtudtub. s199oo " REPLACJ: THAT OLD DISHWASHER NOW! • GENDAL ELECTJllC BillLT·IN AUIOMATIC G •. E~ 1970 I • WASHERS/DRYERS · Giant 18-lb. Capacity Now Available! CLOSEOUT!. . f.. .1969 STOCK MUST BE SOLD! EVERYTHING GOES AT REDUCED PRICES! • • FIRST APPLIAN~ES • STEREO • TELEVISION • G MODIL DG47101 IDGHSPEED GAS DRYER • 3 aulollilatic-dry cycles. • AufmnaUc Permanent Preti Cycle wJ.lb, "'Cooldowa... 11 • 3 lleat Selections. · •"End-of-cycle algnaL • Electric Burner Ignition. • PorcoJaln enamel top and,.drum. • Flu.lf selling. . s1&soo FREE! OUR 6BEATEST ¥ UE EVER! Set Of Anchor HockilMJ Glasses BIG SUMMER· 1SALE . .DISBV: ,fill! Wilfi Purchase .Of Any DISHWASHER LARGE SCREEN 23 ~9~ s9. IN. I • J.1-ll~Waohwill>-"- Armmd.lWwT°'I"' • --------...! • Pows-Jl'lo·)ltdlenjn e 1i.wt.m Solt Food~·-No HmdRinoingorScrapioc ••• Js Tip Off Lorwe or Hald 8cmpl. • Antomltic Dekc~Difl"!"'"' ' • ~SilMww_W FREE! • W.U..Limitor.Omilld ·-.Y 13988 SU> Supply ·of Food · With Purchase Of Any REFRIGERATOR Pric• IK l1ffs: 1 '"' h rts W•rroty 2 lHr Plch1,. T1H Won. tD hy H••..S."ke Full Zenith quelity throu9h and throu9h! Beeutiful Contemporary styled compect console. b" oYal twin~t::one speak,r. Built es on ly Zenith Would build it! Medel 2tl1W •• NOTHING DOWN! UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY! NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBER! (W.A.C.) T. V. & APPLIANCE . CENTER , HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARIOR, COSTA MESA • TELEPHONE 540·7131 ~ e NEWEST FASHION .. COLOR "HARVEST GOLD'' 8 NEW ADMIRAL AUTOMATIC DOOR -CLOSERS e CANTILEV.ER SHELVING e GIANT FOOD STORAGE CAPACITY GIANT 22 CU. FT. CAPACITY QNLY s3g9oo COMPARE AT 499.95 Ice Maker Optional $ MODEL ND 1694 Adn1lrol. -. - IMPERIAL DUPLEX> 16 SERIES ' M~Oll"llOSTINCI f"lll!Ett:ll·lll~llllOt:llATOll ONLY 31" WIDE, YET FULL SIZED IN IOTH FOOD AND FREEZER SECTIONS! Tlilt tlfltrtly tlyltd Adlfllrtl Cupit• rtprtt1nh your 91•tf.o tit "'•'•• in • top qutlily 1ide·bv·1ide fr1111 r-r1f1 i91rt• ltr, ler91 11.)_cv, ft, refrit•••lor tnd roorriv 19) lb.~ •• pt cily fr•titr--16.t cu. f•. of •P•c• in 0111 ccimptct ctbl11etl Fttt1tr 11ctio11 f1 tfur11 fou rl"ull width double r=:::::;;;;w 9rid fr111i119 .... 1 ... 1. s; •••••• fOOlfly door 1k1 lv11. Widt ttllft fer11pt•1hlr1 conlrol 1Uow1 prec i1t f1,.,pt r1+ure 1tltctio11. Refri91r1lor 1tclio11 f11!11111 five full width Inferio r tlltlvtt to provldt tp•cio111 1tor•t• ''''· l•rt• porc.lei11 cri1p•r will ~ltp fr11ih ,!Id ••11•ftbl11 1t th1ir f11wo rfvl b11!. Rtfrigtrt lor door "'•• S 1htlve1 plu1 c•n· •tni1nl buller/chttl• comptrl1f11111t 1n4 •9t •hell. DI· fl'ltn1!on1 : 64·7/t " II, JI" w, 26-7t•·' d. Admiral Ouple'x Refrig. Comes in 31-35-36-41-48" ' • .. ' .. r i • • • • l - I ' • . , Mon-Fri ·9 am-9 pm Sat 9 am-6pm - Model RJK64 Westi119house "Frost Free 14" Refri9eratpr • 14 cu. ft. capacity • Com· pletely frost free operation • Automatic ice maker optionel -plug it in at any time - when y.ou buy, or later • Slim· Well design gives you bigness where you need it -.ins ide • 12 I • lb. frost free freeier • 7-dey fresh meat keeper • C.n- t ilevered edjusteble shelv•s • Removable egg contain•r • But- 'ter ai nd chees• servers • Me9• netic door gaskets • Glide out adjustable rollers • Large veg•· table crisper • Automatic in ter- ior light in refrigerat or. Westinghouse -taundn:mat...tiowash •re Dry Twins stick up tn just 27" of floor spa'te. And now the exclusfote Westinghouse"Welgh·To.Save- door"fn?ighsevery load, soyoo never ~dd more hot water end detergent than necessary'. Actually sews you enough to WISh 8\l8IJ thitd load lreiel Plli; these Westinghouse extns: Washer. • 5 washing cydes • Tub Interior light • Special permanent press cyt:le • 5 position water~ • Automatic tint ejector' Dryer: 5 position dryin1 ~ • Specie! permenent press settings • lnlerlordnlm ligtit • Porceillirl en- amel drum • T~V. & APPLIANCE CENTER , HARBOR CENTER "--)300 HARBOR, COSTA ·MUA TELIPHONI ' 540-~t31 • • \ ------- Fl.RST • APPLIANCES • STEREO • TELEVISION • • real pafgains ... real savings ... real values . . -. . -. ON WESTINGHOUSE EXTRA VALUE APPLIANGES Model ftSK25& NOTHING DOWN UP TO WESTINGHOUSE "FROST FREE 25" SIOE·BY·SIDE REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER •· 25.2 cu. ft. capacity • Hugs 322. lb •• 9.16 cu. ft. capacity freezer • Completely frost free operation • Only 35% in. wide • Dl!corative panel fronts oJjtion!J.• Jee cu t;>• 3.6 MOS •. ·10 PA Y!c \ .MMe:' ani:I 2 e.;eetOI, lr1~ ··r AutOmatic icli rfla'ker -ilviir. able as an opUon1r edtt-011 now, or buy It later • New Vlestinghoosa power econo• mizer-• Twin juice can dis· pensers • 7·day frc.sh 'meat lleeper • 3-temper8'Yre ad· fustable butter conditio ner • Wes.tioghouse slim-wan de· NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBERf -sl1n-for areater inside stortg• • Newcantitevei'ed idjust. -able shelves • Utility storage compartment • Removable egg container • Twin veie- 1ab1e crispers • Adjustable . refrigerato r door shelves IW.A.C.I · ·· • Glide·out adjustable rollers • Automatic door cJosv Remodeling YQur Kitchen? .. Jhere's A Weiti1ghQuse Built-In Dishwasher Jut Right Lll:=:::J1dJ.JJ.l8t;::::lJ For AnJ KitC_. Decot ••• ' estlnpouse 6 Pu'sh-Button Extra·Qtilet Ballt•ln Dllliwilshtr • Slnitlztr-•s1ure1 145' hot wish and rlfls• Witers • rawer turrrt we sit ~lion -. ' Westlnchouse Bullt·ln Dishwasher • A.utomalic jlouble·w•sh • Power tbrret W'll&h •ctlon .. Dull! •ulorn1tic det.raent dispensi rs • Porcelalri·on·1t1el tub ind lnntr door Limited Cj)uantity at $138 88 • 1 ' I ' • 1. ... ' • • ff DAILY PILOT S Frl!lil. "'"'" l, 1'16t Your M0ue11's Worth Rat~s to Compare In Car Financing By SYLVIA PORTER It you are among the milUons buying a new or used car ell.Iring these summer weeks, you are now discover· ing -perhaps for the first time -how steep are the costs or financing it on time. Auto loans always have been comp?u-atively co,,tly. Tiley are now more so than ever, in this tight money era, What's more, the ''real" costs of automobile financing are now in the open: the Truth in Lending Jaw is forcing you , lhe buyer, to look at the actual cost to you or "add-ons." "dis· counts." e:rtra finance charges . . You may be so accustomed to being in the dark that YOll resent being informed ; or you may so dislike the knowledge of whit you're paying that you prefer to be. ignorant. NEVERTHELESS, no mat. ier how you feel about know· ing the facts, here are typl~al yearly interest rates now bemg charged on auto loans: Most commercial banks: "10 to .12 percent on most new cars; JO to 14 percent on most late model used car.;; 12 to t6 percent for older used cars (two years and older) • . PSA's 'Net' Takes Drop Hardcastle Compacts Popular .-' Gets Agency Coast Folk Use '65 Autos Frank Hardcastle, presidel'll of Frank Hardcastle & Assoc., Jnc., insurance brokers of Los Angeles and Newport Beach, has announced the acquisition or Pacific Western Insu rance Agency, a Hollywood based firm. John H. Hill, formerly o{ the Pacific Western lnsurance Agency, 6777 Hollywood Blvd., will join Hardcastle's firm as 'Yice-presidenl. The new combined opera· tions will occupy offic86 at 7141 N, Figueroa SL, Los Angeles. -"There are more ioos model automobiles being driven 1n the Harbor Area than any other year·s. The First National Bank (l( Orange County found this out in a report it made for its third quarterly b u s i n e 5 s review. - The report revealed tha 15.3 percent of the cars in Newport Beach and 12.l percent of Costa Mesa registered vehicles are 1965 models. 196& is the next most popular year $1,000,000 COMMERCIAL FINANCE EQUIPMENT LEASE -SALES LEASE BACK ACCOUNTS RECEIYAIU AND INVENTORY FINANCING. GREY SON CO. LTD., INC. 1400 Wp t c .. st Hwy., Sult• 11 NEWr<)Rf l l ACH -'424102 I with statistics or 14.5 percent and 11.J percent for Newport and Costa Mesa respectively. Overall, about 68 percent of the cars are in the medium prict' range with 20 percent,· low.priced, and the balance, high-priced. For American-made automobiles, General Motors has slighUy over 39 percent, with Ford Motor Co. at 26.5 percent and Chrysler Motors, 10.4 percent. However, the Ford edges Ch~vrolet slighUy for first and second places, with Volkswagen taking third place in individual makes. or the total number· of households with autos, about 34 percent are multiple car owners. Compact car oyaiership r a t ~ s relatively -tfi.gh al 40 percent. Station wagons are popular at 20 per~ cent. Foreign car ownership averages 25 percent for both communJlies. There are 32,124 households in CQsta Mesa and Newport Beacfi area that s b ow ownership of 43,0&5 cars. The review also disclosed that building activity· in both Costa Aotesa and Newport Beach t oomed again for the first hall of 1969 frqm '23.t Palafoutas Appointed John L. Palafoutas of Hun· tington Beach has been elected a dirtctor or the Empire Securities Corp. The firm, headquartered tn Anaheim, is an affiliate or the Empire family of financial corporations. Palafoutas t 1 associated with the Manufactuters LUe Insurance Co. in Sant.a Ana and wu his agency'a dMan of the year'' In 1968. Other newly elected dirt.c· tors Include: La!o\Tence H. P11rker, Anaheim, and James H. Cooley, John w. Howea 111d Robort A. Skinner o f Fullerton. Ford's Net Declines In Quartet .. ••• -·--·· Complete-:New·York Stock List • tntiffa I lnf ... <O .n.11 In «lk&f l,M :~~h,• ·~1ro14 .• 1 .. ,t:,,I' Int 1"11 111f9l! :~=~. :.-: .• ~., tntNlck 1, '"' .... l ::11 s~ff'I .• /~~ T&T Jo' !ltf"ff.~ ou. tnlTJT !}II<• lnl U111 1.'11 iftt VIII A 1nw111 1111 n lnltrPKt I l~l'I J 1nl 8r•lld ,to lnt«DSlr JO tnltriF'W f..24 IOWll Bttl' I• El LP 1,30 It 111 GE l.ll 1°"'1PLI 1,.0 •oW•PSv l.n to(O liotP ,)II 1TE '""' ·" ltt't C:llrll ITT 5¥ Mt.JO ' . , Thursday's· Closing .... ....-----------· ui..., ........ c-.a.. OA!I. Y I'll.OT ' • Prices-' Complete 'New .. York f S~ i .Ex~hange List ''* ~.-----------------------·· tM.l.J Nhllt "9W CltM c ... , I - . . • I ~- ___ ,_ ~-.. -· -,._ 22 DAILY PllDT Friday, A~ust l, 1%1) UPITt...,_Ole , Not Ptisl• Jtfe Ptill Jtfe? • It's not a creature from Carroll's Alice in \Vonder· land but a 1coincldental juxtaposition as Andy and Cindy stud}> visitors at the Overton Park Zoo in Memphis, Tenn. Even the matching body markings belie the separate giraffes. MEDICAL COSTS ... (Continued from Pagt l!) and heeded by hospitals fa ced with acule manpower shortages. The fact is that all types of medical personnel -doctors, dentists, nurses, therapists and technicians -are func- tioning tooay in w h a t economists call a 0 seller's market." They can ask for more for their services -and get it -because there aren't enough for them to go around. HE\V eslima.tes the nation currently has a shortage of 50,000 physicians, 9,000 den· lists, and 141,000 nurses. No early relief is in sight. HEW projections indicate the physician shortage may be reduced by about 11 ,000 over the next seven years -but that would still leave the na - tion shy 41,<XXJ doctors irf 1976. The overall nationa l ghoJ:tage of medical personnet' Is aggravated by maldistributJon. Doctors, nurses and other practictioners of the healing arts tend to concentrate in cities and particularly in the wealthier residential sections, where th e pay is better and living condi tions more com· fortable than in other places. The result Is that many sma ll towns andisolated rural-areas have no doctors, and the ghet- to areas of inner cities have far fewer than they need to care for their teeming popula· lions. Thus the shortage cf medical personnel leads not cnly to higher cosls, but also, even more seriously, to in- adequate medicaJ care for millions of Americans. The first need, they say, Is for more manpower in all of the professional and sub- professional specialties related to health. vantages include th~ op- portunity to work regular hours and take vacations, and . the availability of equipment and personnel which a lone physician might rt>t be able to afford. The disadvantages are some sacrifice of in· dfpendence and, perhaps, a lower income that he might earn in solo·practice. From the patient's view· point, group practice insures the prompt availabiljty of competent medical help, in- cluding consultation w i t h specialists if needed. The disadvantage is that the pa· tient may feel he's getting assembly-line treatment in- stead of the personal attention of a family doctor. The third need, recognized by government officials and the health profession! alike, is for impr9ved and expanded health insurance programs. The improvement m o 1 t needed, in the view of Soci8l Security Commissioner Robert M. Ball, Js to bring under in· surance coverage some of the "less expensive alternatives" to hospitalization, such as out· patient care. "This would remove the In· centives that now exist to hospi(alize a person when he does bot need that level of care, simply because his health insurance c o v e r s hosp italization but does not cover the type of service he needs," Ball told UPI. The AMA seconds Ball's plea for insurance carriers to provide better coverage of out· of-hospital medicaJ services. TAX SUBSIDIES The Nixon administration is appealing to medical schools throughout the country to find ways to expand t h e i r enrollments and to shorten the time (now a minimum cf 7. years) req'uired to train a doc· tor. Federal aid funds already are available to medical, den· tal and nursing schools and their students. The medical association also Is plumping for tax subsidies to encourage all Americans to buy adequate amounts of health insurance from private carriers. Under the AMA plan, taxpayers could claim deduc· lions for all or part of the cost of health insurance premiums. "f\'Iany people rem a In underinsurcd. or not insured al all," says an A M A spokesman . The Committee for National Health Insurance, organized by union leader \V a I t e r Reuther, says 14 percent or the Americans under 65 had no hospitali1.alion insurance in 1963, and 20 percent had no coverage for surgical bills. CIVILIAN JOBS Secretary Finch announced July 10 that his department is selling up an "office of new careers" which will encourage ~ military medical corpsmen returning from Vietnam to take civilian jobs as physi· clans' aides. , The second need is for more ef(icient utili uition of scarce professional manpower. This means delegating to subprofessional worke r a . (physicians'· aides, nurses' aides, lab technicians, etc.) some of the time-consuming routine tasks, such as giving shots and making blood tests, -now performed by doclors and nurses. The idea is to gi\'e doctors and nurses more lime for the kind of work wh.ich re- quires lengthy professional training. Some but not all doctors, and many government Of· !icials, also favo r group prac· tice as a de\'ice for in1proving utilization or medical man· power. Group practice is medical 1ervice provided by lhree or more phys icians who share facilH ies, assistants and patienlll. About 3&.000 er lhe nation's 310.000 doctors are now engaged in group prac· Uce. Tht Aa.IA gees both ail· vantages and disadvantages 1n 11roup practlc:e. 1'~rom the doc. \or"s viewpoint, the ad· Reuther's committee favors a national health insurance program, sponsored by the government. under w h I c h comprehensive coverage would be compulsory for alll Americans. A similar proposal for na· tional health insurance was made public July 17 by a spec ial Senate comm l t tee headed by Sen. Edmund S . 1'1pskie, (D·~1e.) It original \\'ilh a citizens' advisory co miUee which had been created by Muskie's group The nationaJ governors con· lcrence, a bipartisan body in- cluding the governors of all SO states, also has appoinled a committee to look Into the pros and cons or mandatory natlonal health insurance. Fioch alluded to this moun· ling pressure for national health insurance in 11 r~nt statement appealing to the medical profession to do its part In curbing lhe rise in the cost ol health care. "What is ultimately at stake," Finch sald, "Js the In· dependent, voluntary nature of ()Ur health care system. \vt will lose it fo pressures for government -dominat!!d medical care unleM·•We can 1nake the preSent system work for everyone in the nation." ' ' ' \ • Freer State Voting Rules 'Urged·r;,·~~,~091c~ ... :1';~- BERRELEV _:ATwo of money to eliminate Un!Ven\ty of C a I I for n I a artWcial barrim bet~·een a citizen aod \hose w h o political sclenUsts propose presumably represenrhtm.·• r~Jax,ing the CallfonUa laws Authors of the proposals In which proh.iblt hundreds o f the Public Affairs Report thousands of citizens from published 'by the UC Institute voUng. " 9r Governmtntal Studies at Three and a quarter million Berkeley are Etlmtmd"t:ostan· potential voters who fail to tini. assistant prores<ior of register before an election political science at the Davis could thus be sharply reduced campus, and W11l\s D. llawley. in number, they c I aim. JGS administrative analyst at "It seems to us far more ex· .. UC-Berkeley . penslv• to democracr to The United States voter t.olerate relatively high rates turnout -slightly more than of nonparUcipatlon than to in-00 percent of all adults in a vest relatively minor amounts presidential election -is far less• than In many fortlgn countrles whose laws en. co.irage greater v c I e r --pal"tlClpaUon;llccording to the report. California's average is somewhat higher at 64 per- cent, thougtt it' ra.nls only 30th among all the states. The report's authors are urging legislators to allow great.e.r participation• In the following ways: -Reslden_cy requirements should be .reduced from the unusually demanding ol)e year in the stute, 90 days in the county, and S4 days in the local district, to si1 months in the state, ind 30 days In the governments should hire depu· community and county. ty • regi1trats responsible for ~onvicted f~ns should be registering all eligible voters. granted full votiog rights when and •for clearing the rolls of they are released trom prison. those who are not. Otherwise, "It is ironic that We would a register-by-mail plan should choose electio11 day tO remind be tried. • the released felon that he does -The closing date for not have 8ccess lo lht political Tegistration should be ad• system by legitimate meaQs." vanced from the unusually .. -Literacy requirements restrictive S4 days before au should be abolished. Although elect.Ion to one ol' two weeks. a mere declaration of literacy -The rcguirement of re.- now Js usually sufficient, pli>-· reglstrallon Ir a ciUze~ misses bably ••many citizens do not ooe general election and wants register to vqte .because they to vote again should be relax·' are not literale ed to take eUect only after -St B: t;e and Io ca I *'°'U missed elections. -• ··~· .. ~~. UM M• ...... •1 .... ..-H1rW S..,.,.... C•ltt,. CtJll M.u 21'-ll •..a.. ••w•. 11 Al\Mll-flumt-...., •lkll · e "21 Wnt1111111ter 11 0.111• Wnt-W.tmill&ttr e ., ... W. l!"l""' .... lriMI Sl.-Ellll'll" Cl!l'lttr, Sanl1 An• e 11"4 Mltllllllt II. 11 T11!1111-Vf1Jtte·(..,IH, ,OUllllill Vlllt}' 1Jbt t ,..ichvnt IL •I W~iat.-Wtstbf'Mll C1111"1', G•nl• GrlW• Ot61 \Ill"" \119w •I 0..~ ..... 11 f'iu..-G1nln G....,. e :W E. 11t'I St.-C.il ""'"" '"""illt Ctnlff. Coill '1' .... e 10IU Kit.Ii. A.,._ II EKIW--Ginlefti.~ SlllPflllf c ... tw. OINlll GNVI e "61 CH'""" ""· •I .~ .... C-ty l"Wou, Gt,._ G...w 13-oi. Con e Jlldl tl9' .E•ll'!ler lml.-tl11t1li1111'11 lndl SllOppilllf C..ttr, HWlllMlon IHdl Fruit ~ Loom Chair Throws 64" Shelf Unit or 48 ineh ·Record Cabinet $2.99 Polyester Bed Pillows . ~-~$298 bM'king fot s-•« IM~ loilAU I/fr. •7b 10r' .... ... ,....,, $5.fJ 1! ;$~·::~: 22aa -11. :to.boy ~ lord eabillf't 'With EA, ~lid 1lidi 111 UJlllT doorr. Chaic1 of llqulor or Hcud to Hold l..wnaer f rce so 'it woo't kave biir stiff or uidcy. Holds hlic in p!a« all ci•r! 8 Years Old Dunstin Scotch 1' ~~~. $3~· ·-$147 ' ··~ Stuart H•ll Sta~ionery ::::-.... s111 "'Sbeer·MUl"' Iii. •S101ted pdel. wi11t. e••tlopr1 a11cll 48 --40 .sft:lopo.. '2" wo-·s Scooter Pants Skirts :::.. $247 Oir:imif ,_ • -" •tt•f cl. tolorfal :rummer prl1u1 or .balitiflll did colon • ;,,_sizes 8 to Ill. '1" Women's Su11mer Straw Hats ..• $J 47 $2" Women's lta6an Leather Sandals. $2H $2" Imported Rattm1 Handbags • , ... $2u $1" Women's Stretch Denim Shorts ..• $)" '2'' Boy's Assorted Swim Trunks•to 11$J" '3" little Girl's Colorful Shifts ••..... $ " Women's Acrylic Shells $1" Chaise Lounie With Thick POii .Al_I_ ... ""'"' s11·· Women'' Nylon Biki:il'trlefs · 3cr 1 .• 81 Printed Biach Towels l2.49 Nappe Insulated Picnic lags . • . 'I" 79' U.S. Women's Swim Caps ... --". 661 •3.99 Talilo Model BBQ Grill ••..••• S)44 $5,99 Ilg· Dinghy 5 Foot Polr Boat .• s4t1 $1,99 King She Alto Seat Cushion ... SJ4' $J, 19 Postle 4 Player la-minton Set . • 88' 19' Chlpper's • Hershey-els or Corn (lusters Condy Peanuts ~ " Pt .. 11!d l-lenh-591 "' « 1) ... ~ J*• ..... IO' BOiden Frosted Shake Mix 2 ~ 151 $JH Pack of 3 Westinghouse Flashcubes 9&c 39c Stoneware Dinner Plate Stock up 110• 19• crt • 9reot Thrifty prire! Ready Mix Cake Pans $2.95 Val Gourmet Serving Pieces '""' ..... ""'"'$199 p!K.,, 1111 I. vln-oer • • • A YllCldO I. e«h 0..111gt d~or,.K. Reg. 1.93 Decorator Waste Baskets .. ,,._ ... $6'' HaadJon>c Spq• i1lt~ iiltidl lookin1 hand c1r•ed. cUeu ...... 14. 99 Pllllflc 9-Pi-Salad Set. • • • • • $3" •6 Value! Porcelain Enamel.Colantler •• $3tt 13, 98 l19"1hcnn Duke. Alarm. Clock •••• $ 11 Metal Enamel Roaster ........... • • 661 '9.99 2 Quart Fondue Set .••..• , ..•. $511 Viii Wyck Electric Can Opener .••.••. $ w Blue Aztec Glassware •••.•••..•••. ·6 i $J Reg. •4.98 Full Length Door Mirror Ml~ "'" $3U ~~\ IMhl • '2'' Set of 2Jloll-Ht Appliance Wh11ls $JU Il!Qlfol:lt trl!l'IClll mif. MM with decorltot rill,IO' DUtortioa·fM td:JOc• tiool ' Cotton Fllled-.Bed Mattresi .••.••••• $3" 43 Quart Clothes H11111pers .•• , .•..• ·$3'4 • Padded Samsonite Bridge Clialrs .•.• $693 79~ Mattress or Pillow Cowers . . . . 2 '" s 1 61' ·stainless Steel Senlng Pieces 2'-99' ' 39' Plastic Sho ping lags .••.••.•.. .,.,, •~•"' sls' 6 Gallon Plastic Garliagi Can ....... 871 h1 bright 1-.,..,....,.......,....,.,....,..,,,..,...,.;....,.,,,.---:,.--.:::;;,.-1 colon. M.llt I ..... "~ tc.J ~ ff. Assorted ' 9 Pc. Boxed Cutl.ery Set ...... If sr7 H-41es. Cort• ~. bo1tl11t lu1lfe, forll , 1lfflt k111¥n. SO' Blue Jay ... f.!!r,_ Plasters ...... '""',...... ...... -. ...... , ·---- 67' Fluorescent 91/i" Play Balls 44' llr!lllllllt C'lllon JOit (J!I •l'Gt ft .. clito ' lmtt. P'11r pool1• \••I'd Ill' besdt. '4•99 ea. Metal Carded l111ton1 ·tee Clllie Trays 2i? iiiii-...-ue Jill •ii rd.riit'r-.-. Ahlllilnllli foe Eater: 1-· 11 .......... . lutamatlt 44 Kodak Camera $7'7 J11nam-loadini ftulw:'llbr-t1. lo.,t•t pric t ~· • E KE A Complete Guide ••• Where BoH11"'°°d ' Raquel Welch Signs to Play Man-But Ho,v By VERNON scoiT Ul'I Hollywood C•..,.._lllltnl l-IOLLYWOOD -If you can believe Raquel Welch is a man, you may be in deep trouble. At any rate, the bosomy actress will p I a y the title role in "Myra Breckin- ridge,'' Gore Vidal's novel about the man who undergoes a sex change. Raquel will play Myra before and aft- er the operation. After, maybe. But before? "Certainly," said the sultry Btar of "100 Rifles" and "Lady in Cement.'' She went on to say, "There is a big secret how I will play the male episodes in the picture. • "I've been assured t h a t cinemagraphic tricks will be used to cover up the fact that I'm a woman." 1tAoUEL w 1LcH It wot.ild appear a more awesome task than adding the face of Darryl Zanuck to Mt. Rushmore. Zanuck's 20th Cen-· tury-Fox is filming the epic. In the breathless exuberance <lf bountiful film queens Miss Welch said, "I wanted lo play this part because'l'm like Myra in many ways. I like her sense of humor." The studio ,spent months searching for the proper (or improper) star to play Myra. Eight men and Raquel were teste:d {or the dubious distinction of por- traymg a woman and a man -simul- taneously and individually. While the movie may be pre-sold on the basis of tbe book's populariiy, many an established star bncked away from making iL ' • ta go • •• What ta do • •• • E~beth Taylor was prom.inenUy mentioned as a possibility for Myra. So were other performers, horrified at the prospect of what it might do to their images, especially the actors. VAN_DYKE AND SALLY"ANN HOWES HAVE A BALL IN CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG . DAILY Pll:OT St•rf ...... PAU~ HANSON'S ZEBRA WOOD AND ALUMINUM SCULPTURE Miss Welch was anxious to play the role, agreeing to a screen test, which to the professional aclor or actress is the uIUmate put-down. • ' f_rod_ycer Ro~ Fryer disclosed Out Raquel. ,better known for her curves than her thespian brilliance, had out- shone olher hopefuls whom he refused to identify. v ·an Dyke Lured by '·Chitty' I Festival Juries, Sponsors All California Art Exhibit Chances are Fryer and director h1icbael Sarne would have made their jobs infinitely less complicalecl had they selected an. actress or modest dimen- sions. ·Mia Farrow or Audrey Hepburn, for example. Says No More After 'Poppins' Then Changed His Mind M lf the Festiv;tl of Arts dido't have enough \o do! This year, as for the past 14, tha Festival Is sponsoring its All California Art Exhibit at the Laguna Be&ch Art Association Gallery, 307 Cliff Drive. Whlle the show at. the Festival grounds has a heavy concentration of local artists, the All Calilornip. collection spans the e~ tire state. Variety abounds In t11e media and schools all well as in the geography. The painting, sculpture and graphics range from realism to upressionism to &urrealisrn, with miny stops in between. The 136 work!ii on exhibit !UI'Vlved rigorous judging that narrow·ed the field from the original l,350 entries. 11lt jury members were Paul Darrow, Associate Professor of Art at the Clare- mont :Olleges; Vernon Dornbach, head of the University of Redlands art depart· ment and Harold Gebhardt, professor of fine arts in sculpture at the University of Southern California. The jurcrs recommended for purchase eight works, of which four were selected for purchase by the Festival of Arts. Purchase award winners were : Beverly Green, Hidden Hills, $500; Mas: Cole, Comara Gallery, $400; Willie Suzuki, Comara Gallery, $250; and Ferenc Cllentery, $250. - Also recom\nended by the jury were: Don BuUer, Riverside; Linda D'Amico, Long Beach ; Jay Maddox, Anaheim; and Robert Thom, Laguna Beach. Everything on display is for sale. and price! range from $40 for so.me of the araphia lo 11500. '!be Jilrpooe of the AU California Ex- hibit b "to provide • high quality show· tng of a cross section of art of 1969," sald Mrs. Eugene P. Nowlen, exhibition com- mittee chalnnan. The show continues through August 14, and is open from noon to I p.m. dally and · from )IOOll lo I p.m. on Friday and Satur· day, . Guld'!i t..rs'ol th< ahow art conducted every afternoon at 3 p.m. and Friday and Saturday evenings at 8 p.m. There is a festival tram that runs from the All Calilornla Exhibit to the Festival or Arts grounds on a regular schedule. Admission is 50 cents for adults, 25 cents for ages 12 through 18, and children under 12 free. special free group lours may be ar- ranged by contacting Tom Enman, direc· tor, at 494-6531. They are confronted by a definite problem in Miss Welch's generous busl· line which, to date, has been her great- est asset "It will be a new Raquel Welch that no. ont: bas ever seen before," Fryer said without further ex-planation, He was reminded that it would be simpler by far to add female character- istics to a role such as Myra, than to subtract them from one so richly en· dowed as Raquel. "We'll see," he said. "\Ve'll see." .Dick Van Dyke turned down many of- fers to do musical motion pictures after his starring role In the Academy Award v.·inning "h1ary Poppins." He claimed it v;ould take an exceptional vehicle to get him to change his mind and it would seem he found It in "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" v.•hich is currently P.iaying at the Port Theater in Corona di!J Mar and the Fountain Valley Drive·.Jn. The music and lyrics were composed by Richard and Robert Sherman in a rare jonrney for them outside the D~sney organization. The brothers' prior suCcess , v.·as "Mary Poppins" which v;on the Oscar for best musical score and one for the best song. Altogether the Shermans .o!.--..ii.;.--.;:..~----'-"'---...,,....~------' .. i ~ CIAlt.Y PlllOT Sllfl PlltM THE G-'THERING PLACE IS TITLE OF JEFF OWENS' ACRYLIC ON PANEL ENTRY:- • have written musical scores for over 50 feature films and have been writing music and lyrics since childhood. The biggest musical ever made In England, "Chilly Chitty Bang Bang'' gave Van Dyke the opporlunity to use all of his talents, and he has a ball. He sings itnd dances and flies through the air as he plays the part or an eccentric invento r in Edwardian England. · Actually Van Dyke's career came about through a lark when he perronncd in a u:s. Air Force Show. Back Jn civilian life he toured for six years Y.'ith a night club act, then turned to television and eventually wound up in a Broadway review called "The Roys Against the Gi rls." Two television spec:ials followed and as a result of his work In "The Fabulous Fifties" he was cast In the stage version of "Bye Bye Birdie.!' ~le went to Holly\lfood to make the sc reen version, as an established star, and returned lo CBS !or what was lo become the phenomenon of televiskln's situation comedy, The Dick Van Dyke Show, winner of dozens of awards in· eluding the Emmy. Co-starring in lht!-'ilm are Sally~Ann Howes and Lionel Jeffries. Sally Ann is a typical Jan Fleming heroine w I l h the very likely name of • ' T r u 1 y Scrumptious." While making Chilly it offered her a Ex-tcacl1er Goes Baclc. to S_cl1ool 1 Screenwriter Robert Bolt, a former teacher who won Academy Awards for his scripts of "Doctor Zhivago" and "A h1an for All Seasons,1' went back to school at director David Lean'• request. Bolt, was asked to rehearse a class of children In a scene of Lean's new motion picture ''Ryan's Daughter," the script ror which Is Boll's first original creation for the screen. In the s c e n e , schoolteacher Robert P.1'itchum leads a class of ruraJ Irish children through the multiplication tables. By the time Mitchum took over the classroom an hour loler and Lean's camera began to roll , the 2& young "ac· . tors for ·a day." on location in• Ireland, probably wished lhey hnd stayed in their own school in Dingle, so thoroughly had they been drllled by schoolmaster Bolt. chance to r e tu r n to Englahd and to musical comedy. As a former child star she was practically raised in Englisb music halls and made her first film when she was 12. Playing a variety of roles in her teens she turned to musicals at 2Q. ~nd found she liked this type or perform: 1ng best. It was a good decision on het part. While playing a straight dramatic role or the wife in "Hat 1-~uu or Rain 1' she was asked to replace Julie Andrews Jn "My· Fair Lady." Her success in this part haa made her one of many "overnight" stal'!. Since lhcn she has been acclaimed as one or the brightest musical comedy stars ill American entertainment. playing the lead in "\Vhat r..fakcs Samn1y Run" arid "Kwamina." Miss Howes also received raves for her performance in the ABC network television special, "Brigadoon." Bewhiskered and befuddled Lionel Jef· fries scrambles through the movie as Miss Howe's cranky father "'ho is kid- napped by the "bad guy.s." Sir Robert Helpmann haJ an op- portunity to show his dancing and acting talents in this film. He originally achiev· ed fame in ballet with Sadlers Wells. His portrayal of the child-catcher of Vulgaria in Chitty brings out his talent lor com- edy. ' lVEEKENDER INSWE FEATURES There Is much news .of new restaurants, some great lmprove.- ments in old ones, and Ups on · top entertaintnent, all in Nonn Stanley's Out 'N' About column on P~ges 2S-27. Guide to Fun Travel Uve Theater P..liss Universe Ask• Out 'N' About Lyric Opera Gukte-to-P..lovte1 Quttnle Comics TV Views Television Lo1t In lhe G1llerle1 Disneyland "The Chairman" Page 24 Pa1e U Pa1e !I Page !C Pages is-t7 Page IS Page ZI Pag~ :t Page D Paae n Pa1e H Pal& ;I Paae so •Paps.I ' 0 • . . a 9 a a . ' DAI\. V 1'1LOT a SS Guide to Fun ... OCC Stages Happy Fella j AVG. 1·14 v LAGUNA FESTJV AL OF ARTS -The 34th-annual Fe:i- tival of Ari.II and Pageant of the Muters is being held at the Festival grol,lllds and Irvine Bowl, 630 Lagwia Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, through Aug. 24. Tickets for the Pa1eant of the MasteN1, il available, are .on sale at the bo1 c(!ict daily, 10 a.m. • S p.m., and include Mlmisaion to the grounds. Siq:le adrniuion to the grounds to aee the artiltl' elhibits is 50 cents for adults, and 10 cents for children. Hours : noon to midnight daily. Phone 4H-1145 for additional infor- mation. AVG. HI SAWDUST FES'MVAL -The third annual Sawdust FuUval is being heJd in the 800 block of Lacuna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, July 11-24, rpoMOred by the 1.alllfl.l ArtiJts and Gallery Owners Association •. Over 100 artiatl and craft&- mea will display lhe1r work and talent from 10 a.m. to mid- night. Acfmission iJ free. AVG. l·il a j I ••• • i l BRAZIL'S MARTHA VASCONCELLOS She W•sn't Born When Rite W•s Pinup Girl ART·A-FAJR -The arts and crafts of 10 craftsmen are on Httiblt at the outdoor art ahow, lpOOSOl"fJd by Lltuna Beach Fine Arts AQociation, 34' N. Cout Highway, Lquna Buicb, through Aug. U. Open daily from 10 a.m. to mid: ""!' ,,., _,, .,,.. "',; '. 7 ""•,,,;; Miss Universe Query Exposes Famous 'Gap' The acene was a famitiar one. A pretty girl, Martha ValCOOCfllos (ooe ol t he prettiest in the world actua11y, since s b e carried the title or Miss Universe until July 19 ), In the CBS pllOto gallery in H ol 1 y wood surrounded by her supernumeraries. There was the photographer shooting 1lamour art for the network to he:Jp p.1blicize the ' ' M i s s Universe" special seen recent- ly (IQ Olanne1 2. And one did. Not ezactly earth-shaking in the lights of Edgar Cayce or Jeane Di.Ion, but giving one pause for thought about the g~ation gap. What happened was, ace CBS photographer Gabor Rona suggested that his subject, Martha Vasconcellos, th i 1 year's Miss Universe, assume the famed Rita Hayworth pose which was the most popular pinup ol World War II. If you're old enough to remember World War II and Rita Hayworth you remember the picture. All present -Bill K~brin the art director, June Wiley who works for the swimsuit company, Ana Maria Cumba the interpreter - responded enthusiastically. Not so our beauty, Martha. Not that she was lacking in enthusiasm. But there was a puzzled look on her pretty night, the admission charge is 25 centa; :with cltildttn under 12 admitted free. Season ticket with unlimlted admil!lons, $1. Pbooe 49f..131f for Wormation. AVG. l ·Z OCC MUSICAL -"Most Happy Fella" will be pruented in OCC Auditorium, Z701 Fairview Rold, Costa Meu, Aug. 1-2at1:15 p.m. Al! seats are r~11erved and tlc.i:eta, $1.50, may be purchased at the box office from 11 1.m. to 1 p.m. and 6:30 to 1:30 p.m., Aug. 1·2. Phone 834-5722 for .inf~rmation. AUG. 1-1 DISNEYLAND SHOW -Top recording star, PatU Page will headline Disneyland's stage show through Aug. 1. Appearing THOSE LENNON SISTERS ARE ALL GROWN UP. From Debut in 1955 to Own Series in 1969 Lennon Si sters Read y For Televi sion Series · with her will be the Doodletown Pipers, Disneyland Dancers The Lennon Sisters literally Sisters Hour," every Friday and John Scott Trotter and his orcbt.stra. Songstress Bobbie grew to womanhood before lhe evening. Genlry and pianist Roger Williams will open a three-week eyes of America. Diane was ~1uch has happened since engagement on Aug. 4, Mon.-Fri. Show lim~ are I and JO 16, Peggy,_14, Kathy. 12. and \Velk's son. Lawrence Jr .. p.m. nightly. Sunday is country music jubilee night with Janet. 9, when they "'ere in-brought the girls over to the Bobby Bare Aug. 3. and Jr. Walker and the All Stars will •troductd to television on house to audilion £or the appear on Tomorrow Terrace at 9 and JI p.m. Aug. I; Ch~el 7's "Lawrence Welk maestro. CYoung Larry had Shango Aug. 4-1. Show" on Christmas Eve o( known the girls, had heard AUG. 1-3 1955. them sing and was impressed. MELODYLAND THEATRE -Flip Wilson, comedian ls on This Stptember. on the Soon they v;ere regulars on stage through Aug. 3, Appearing with Wilson will be John same station, they begin th eir the \Velk series and famous ). Hartford, singer, gultarist and composer of 0 Gentle on My own musica l series, "Jimmy Diane left lhe group in · 1950 Mind." Performances are 8:30 week nights, 7 and 10 p.m. Durante Presents the Lennon to marry her sch 0 0 J Sat.; and 5:30 and 8:30 p.m. Sun. 10 Freedman Way, Ana· sweetheart. and rejoined her heim. Phone 1-776-7460. Cameo Role sisters in 19&1. Now all the AUG. 1 _SEPT. tz, . Lennons are married women, HORSE RACING _ Quarter Horst Racing is scheduled Diane wi\h three children. nightly, e1cepl Sunday at Los Alamit03 Ract Course, 4961 For Debbie Peggy with four, Janet \\'ith KateJla Ave., Los Alamito.!. First post time is 7:45 with twl~ addition 10 their recent nine races each evening.· Phone 1-527-2231. Debbie Reynolds has been · ed string of le levislon ap-AUG. 1-11 sign, by producer Stanley pearanctS -on such shows as Rubin for a cameo role in the ANGEL BASEBAlL -In the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State Ed Sullivan, J ackie Gleason, ' Travel Europe Jam • R . "' .. · UlilS---·:i r1p LONDON -Love this town, ?iut can't bear tt in the summer jam. Fact is, the European capitals cannot take this yearly increase of tourists, 15 to 20 percent, forev~r. 'fhey've reached a saturation point. J-lotels are packed. A \vait of l\venty minutes for a menu in the best restaurants not unusual. \Ve took children to The Changing of the Guard and couldn't get within a block. A walk through \Vestminster Abbey is like go-- ing through Macy's durin~ the \Vhite sales. People coming in from Rome and Paris aay it's the same there. * EVERY PLANE I 've been on has been filled fron1 cockpit to galley. Mostly 'vith packaged tours. No matter how cheap the trip, l don't think you can get fair value in a mob scene. \Vhat's the answer?"Maybe avoiding July and August. fl.1aybe heading for the back country out of...the capitals. TD a girl who \vanted to work in England, I said : "My passport was always stamped, 'Nol Per· milted To Work'." But I had heard there was a 'vay to get around thi s. This shook out three Amer· ican employment agencies who say they CAN ar· range jobs and work pennits in England: Stivers Lifesavers with offices in New York , Chicago, Los Angeles. Brook Street Bureau of Mayfair Ltd, Of· fices in San-Francisco, New York , Boston, Hemp- stead, N.Y .. And \Vestern Girl lnc. in San Francisco. * "Because of my h••lth I am required ta drink a gr1at deal of water. I am wondering how to handle this If I go to Mexico.'' ~ Tourist hotels put a jug of purified water In your room. Now as soon as you get to your room, empty this jug, Ask the maid to refill jt. She hasn't done thii since the la st person moved out -that could be a week 3go. She fiUs your jug from a five- gallon bottle of purified water. (Usually kept in the hall ii you want to watch it done.) * Tourist restaurant water is purified. But it's likely the ice is not. Bottled is OK. Ask for Tehuacan. If you 'vant it without carbonation, say "sin gas." * I don't think there's any 'vay to be absolutely sure about water. (I met a couple of American ~iris in h1exico who were brushing their teeth in Coca Cola.) Americans living in Mexi.co take all precautions possi ble a,nd hope to win most of the time. 'lbere were also the art dinctor for the network; the pretty ledy representative for lhe swimsuit company which owns the MW Universe Pageant; Miss Universe·., in- terpreter although she hardly nudi one now, she's learned that much Engli!h during her year's reign and absence from her native Brazil; and the ubi-~uitous pmis agent whose job It was 10 record the earlh- ahaking events that might oc· cur. face. · "\Vho was Rita }laywonh?" quoth she:. And to coin a cliche, the sllence was deafen· ing. College Blvd., Anaheim. All night games are at I p_,m.; day ''It's the Power Structure, Perry Como, Andy Wiliiams, games start at I p.m. Tickets available at all ticket agencies Baby" episode of the new 20th '·The Hollywood Palace" -* and the boz ofJice. Phone 1-633-2000. Angeb vs. WJ.Shlngton Century-Foz Television series, they have been playin .. to SRO ·Writers Set .For Next "Bracken's World," currently ~~ "We were intrigued with your lrish-renl·•-<ot-. .Aug. I; 2 (N), l (D): Cleveland 15, 11 (N): 17 (D), ll{N). audiences in concerts and at Jn production. h b. . -.._ tage story. Alas, t~ey seem to be full for th• time AUG. l· SEPT. 1$ l e 1gger night spots, ••ft;Y ., The piclure was shot. The ex planation was made to Martha as to who exactly Rita Hayworth is -not was -a.nd Martha 1miJe·d un- derstandingly. "Bracken's World'' stars al a h ,_ f 1 we want to 90, •• PADUA mus PLAY -The Padua Hills Theatre is pre-Eleanor Parker, Dennis Cole, w ys ave u=n success u Try this then. Irish International Airlines has .11. 1enting ''Harve.st Festival in Jguala" with authentic music Elizabeth Allen and Peler asAj~00~fffitt:ta~ters· reside selection of Irish country homes where you live and dancu from Mexic~_through Sepl 15, at 2;30 and 1:30 Haskell v.•ith Linda Harrison, within easy diStance of each with the family. They were picked for "luxurious p.m. Wed. through Sal AGjoining the 300 seat air-conditioned Laraine Stephens, Karen other in Southern California accom1nodations and scenic locations." 16 'G hosts' theater is the Padua dining room where the player• entertain Jensen, Stephen o Ii v er . nd ha ed -" · during luocb and.dinner. Mexican and American food is serv· ?i.ladlyn Rhue and Jeanne a ve arrang pi uuuction * "I'm only 20 years old," she reminded her . companion:i1. And suddenly World War II, the •la~e Bqb Landry "ho shot lhe Rita Hayworth photo and the world itself seemed just a· lttUe older, on a certain Satur- day a(lernoon in Hollywood. ed daily, except Mon. Padua Hills is located on Padua Ave., of , their new series 60 as Lo f th · hr . 1 Bl Cooper. retu rn home each night to lreland's one o e countnes where you won't Executive J)N;Mlucet David GeitMf:aM ProdoCerf\ow:ard Leeds have .set sever al. writers 10 create,• total of 16 scripts for 2Dth Cent ury·Fox Tel~vWojl·~ half-hour comed y aeries. ''The Ghost and .Mrs. t ee m1 es (lotth of Foothill vd. in Claremont. Phone The dramatic h 0 u r .1 0 n g Lake up duties as housewjves be cro1vded -except in summer in Dublln. Won· J-Q6-8288. series will be !ieen Fridays al and mothe rs which. lhcy derful driving country. There's Htt\e traffic. Don 't AUG. t · · 10 p.m. on Channel 4 begifinlng. maintain. are thei r most-im· boom around the curves. The road is likely to bft TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and in Septetl).ber. porlant roles. full of CO\VS. Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com-Ji;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-munity Center, 8200 \Vestminster Ave., (for \\'estminster Teens) each Sat. froi:n a p.m. to midnighL Admission, $1. for members, SI.SO for non-members. Unknown Frontier Muir." G h . ~, band will play for dancina:. "Gbosl" consullanl Jean ers Will 1•Jusic Holloway w:ill write four o( lhe AUG. Z ·SEPT. 11 ~.M nd · l J B · HORSE RACING -The Del Mar Race Track, llighway ··-" a • er Ip con· II ow l Auir. ?. 0 . ··-. . of I l ~-High . JU}t.ant.s Don Nelson and .._, -1 I at un: intersection n etGw:ote way 5 1n Del Mar, Arthur Alsberg v.· i 11 col· has thoroughbred horse racing daily e.icept Sundays (and laborate on four additional John Green will conduct the Tuesday; Stpt. 2} through Sept. II, Nine racu daily with acripts:. l-lollywood Bowl Pops Concert post time, 2 p.m. $20,000 San Diego Handicap, Sat., Aug. 2; Ron Friedm an. Si Rose and Saturday, August 2, a program $15,000 Del ·~ar Oaks, Wed., Aug. 6. Phone (714) 1-755-114. Frank Waldman will each do devoted to the works of The AUG. ' One !lcript as will the writing Creal George Gershwin. POPS CONCERT -A Concert with 35 musicians under' the teams of Peggy Ellioll and Ed Earl \Vild will be soloist. direction or Henry Brandon will be conducted in the mall at Schrarlach, Gerald Gardne r playing the Concerto in F for Fashion Island, Newport Beach, each Mon. at t p.m. No and Dee Caruso, Myles Wilder piano attd •orchestra, and the admission charge. Ind William Raynor. Ben Rhapsody in Blue . . AUG. S.11 (;ershman and Howard Har-Green will conduct lhe DODGER BASEBALL -Dodger Stadium, 1750 Stadium ris, and Joel Kane and Don ·orchestra In Gershwin songs \Vay, Loll Angeles. Day games start at 1 p.m.; Night games ~umont. which he has arranged for at 8 p.m. and Twi-nigbt double headers at I p.m: Dodgers . "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir:· Symphony 0 r c h es l r a vs. Pirales Aug. 5, 6, 7; Cubs 8, SI, (N), 10 (D). Which will be seen on Channe1lcf:;:::.iio;;;;i;iiiiz;;;"°loiiiiio=;.:;;;~;:;o~iii;;;;;i;iiioi~~;oiiii.i;ii;~~i;i;i.ii~;;a;niiiiiiiiiijil 't in September, stars Hopel~ ~ange ~nd Ed~·ard f\1ulhare. ' Live Theater , "Tltt Threepenny Opera" l Muaical drama on stage at South Coast Repertory, l827 . Newport Blvd., COllta fl.1esa · l'rl . ..SUn. through Aug. 3 at I :» p.m. Reservatlon.s -646· UQ. '.J I "Thurber carnival" ·1 A series of James Thurber aketc:hes o'n. _stage at the San CJementt C'ommunity Thea· 1 w-1 202 Avenida CabrilJo, San ~ Clemente, fri.-Sat. through .\ug. 2. Reservations l-llUl65. '!Ladies Night In A Turkish Balh " A rollfcking comedy will b< it: Jtqe at the Laguna Play· ftlilit;-tlt"Ocf:IJI Ave., Lagmt.- lleach, Tbvn . .Sun. lhroQgh 8epL J ai 1:3'l p.m. Reserva- liolll -4fHOlll. . ClllLDREN'S TREATER "MICKEY MOUSE" ADVERTISING GIMMICKS GET ME DOWN Som• 1tor• wlll ~dvertl1• Lettuce In ltl1 print IOc •nlll then I" 1rnall ,rlnt ln"rt Rff or lo1ton. WE SELL LAROE ICIEIERG for 1Dc .,, (thty l'f ltc). Sern• etero wlll •dyertlse l•n•nn•• 10c lit. ind In trn•ll ,rlnt ;om• "Mickey M•uM'~I. Wa .. 11 CHIQUITA$ •zclu1l¥1ly. Sem• ''''" will •d¥1rtl1• "1resh", "1arrn PlckM" (•Ml •II thlt J•u), ind their ,roduct Ms tra¥•1M hu!td""• er rnll• 1M HVtral Ila.,. •htt:e is w111 fr•h plckH. Ours comu frem th• f1rrn, IVIRY MORNING • • • try vi •nll "' whet we m••n- CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAVI! ~·········~·········,········~ Alw1y1 a faverlte HAAS L11t .r the leaNft • LA•o• 1cnuG • AVOCADOS • ru1H ru11roN1 a : LETTUCE : I "* : PEACHES 2 • 1oc... • v•... • 1oc.. : 8 Limit ' 8 Limit S • Limit I Lk. 8 • With -'J'hl1 Coupon • With This CHpon • With This cw,... a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Coupons Ezplrt Autnt 6, 1969 '1 • .,, 111 ;,.,.,, 11•1 lo lie "Out •f Th i1 Worllll" •' +h•1• f;l'I• P••lou••l'lh, llt1y \.,., fJ.1 fi1111t r•odu~• ""'"'" c• .. buy. Th1y w•,.'+ 1•1111 for 111ylhi11t 1111. lh•y 401t11rHI fto. \ .. t. Try th•,;, 0 1' .. v•u'U ••• 1 THI ••CHIS. ALLIT wn1. llllSHllll (? fi111 r•1to•••11'1J, YILLA.el INN. VILLA NOYA. DILLMAN'S-.11'14 o~•• ?00 oth1 ... 1'1lro11i10 tllofft! How 1M1t y•11 c1lll111 ~17 "O RAfiGE COUNTY'S FASTE ST GROWING PROll.UC! ORGANIZATION" i N~!~2.~,! .. ~~Qn~~CE 1e "32 Year1 OJ Prod11c1 "Whtrt Qvolitv 11 T/tt • "Torn Sawyer .. will be pre-. eenUd at tht Hunlington Beacb Pllyhouse. for chil· 4rtft. Fri. and Sal .• through Aili· t. llftervlllons-3'7·1631 .. -· •...c="""'-= .... ---.... -------------- GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION . AT ALL OFFICES! • Fm 81111 for £n17on1 DoorPriHI llofroslnMnll lalloons for lho llddln ' • n. unusual detldng, patio1, walkways ond <•ment tie the 4 beau. t iful pool mod•I• inla a hr1alhta1dng ond •n- chot.ting d l1pl ay park. The maonlnc.nt Royal Pao1a occupiea :23,000 1quor• feet In o laY.. ishly loncbcoped pool paradi'e. ~ ~ .. . ' GUARANTEED . NO EXTRA COSTSI 111bjec:I to 90[( t.sl lJtOmR mrt" tar11 JOOtS. w. w.. ..... lh."'"'"'" .. "4 ,_ r.::.: .. llO lITW ., MIDDEll .COSIS wh11 rH hne rwr foei ~ ., tty.I Royc:il 'ool• '' tM e11ly Molar pool c:o~ to cfrw n.i. .,_... tlo11 a11uri1t9 th• c11110"'"' of o 11•11 fr.• fob of quollty contlructiott d-ft qukltl1 01 po•tlble. And thate cu• mo11y _. "-flf'I •hlfll yoco lxiy fto'" Royal. W•' hove o IO«ll con1lrvcl!Of\ offK• .._., yo.u to oiY• y11111 f.,111>dly, pe1W11oli11d • .,.,;c .. loch phoM '9 COMpl•IMf by 0 lpMicol!1I, 'till 1op1rt ii'! pool con:trvclloft. We Of9 111l-y1 ~ -°" 1lct...iU1y -lo olve 'fOll qvi,lc,. etr.ci.nt ,.,.. w!c111 her '°I• ••• to in1111• Vo'" Iii~'"'' 1oh\I"'''°" with o Royal Pool. hcou .. of 011' '''' we buy the f.11111 b1ond-l'Mt,,.. ettlllP- ment 111 q111;anli'J ot th• loweU po1.ible coil, o~ po" IN MNl"91 on le yov. l£C0M£ ONt OF SOT'HfRN C.AtlFOR~JA'S Rd'rAL FAMrt.ttS! Gerl ,..,.., a!MI "'"' ••• Compl•llon bondt o!M ovoUobi. wi&Jt.,.,., Royal PooL WE FEAnJRE I LAARS I °"''' "'"" ............ JE -.Ull POOLHEAl'ERS ......... 63~6'20 Hunl in;lort ltMh ••••••• 00 •• 13s.3441 2305 So. Manchester, Anaheim ROYAL POOLS -f'rldaJ, Augu5l 1, 1'61J DAJLV l'ILOT Jlf OUT 'N' WEEKENDER ABOUT By NOllM STANLEY • ORANGE COUNTY'S The De1·hy Favored in the starting line-up -thanks to thoroughbred lineage in Arcadia -Costa Mesa's new Derby Restaurant had no trouble making it to the winners' circle from the moment the 'doors opened. . And those familiar with its parent operation near the Santa Anita race track kno\v \Vhy. The same high quality of food , service and manage· ment bas been imported in toto. Much or the colorlul turf atmosphere that's made Arcadia's Derby a landmark with the nation's racing set has been brought to the Orange County edition too. But one doesn't have to be a follower of the sport of kings to enjoy the.-photographs and other track mementos that add this touch. Located at 1262 Palisades Road, Costa Mesa. the Derby occupies the premises of the former Palisades Restaurant. Along with the new decor, there's been considerable retention of the previous establishment's Mediterranean flavor. MEET MURPH AND SLUGGER ?i1oving into the local scene \vith the .same .af- fability and friendliness they've been d1spens1ng in Arcadia for 18 yeai'S are owners Dominic and Lorne Sturniolo, better known by the respective monikers of "Murph" and "Slugger." The origin of these unusual handles offers a real insight into the good-natured and warmly hu- man personalities behind them. Slugger gained hers \\'hen several demonstra· lions impressed associates . that she could quite capably hold her own in tough si tuations -with a feminine, but firm grip. No fisticuffs, just an abun- dance of woman's wile and strength. Dominic beca me "l\1urpb" in 1935 when Italy OPEN . FOR LUNCH Tues. tllr11 11 30 t 2 • """' : o _p.m. Tues. ttn-1 51111day DINNERS 5:30 to 10 D.m. 9!E~C~~~NT 540. 3641 c.,.., .r ••Alf•lplt & lrlstel, cem M- A lie. I• L#J•n• kacJI; 494·1911 rraneois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE FLAMING \ DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Cloi•d Mondey HUNTINGTON BEACH , CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BL VD. 842-1 919 Open to the Public ~ Newly Enlargea Popular •.• LARK ROOM Entert•inment Nightly Tu9sday through Seturd•y THE FABULOUS DICK SEAN * BANQU ET FACILITIES FOR 450 * SERVING LUNCH AND DINNER DAI LY MEADOWLARK country club GOMER SIMS, CECIL HOLLINGSWORTH, Ce·Ow"•" 16712 GRAHAM STREET HUNTINGTON IEACH For Reserv1tions C1U 846-1116 or 846-1416 . L111M• ...... 11 :JO .... Di.....-..... 4iao , ... 0.11., •• ,.,t ii•nd.ey """" NOW APPEARING RENE & BURT GROOVY COMBO Tuesday thru . Saturday TONY FLORES rtls Songs and Guitar Sunday and Monday Nites 2607 W. Co .. 1 Hlghw•y~-N!"porl -646.0201 RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE u stabbed Ethiopia in the back. Chided by friends about ltis elhnic descent, he retorted : "So who's I ta1ia11? My name is Murphy." And it was from that n1oment on. • AND CHIP But this couple would still be cordiality incor- .pQrated under any names given to them. And you 'd have to include another family member in the act -their personable 18-year-old son Chip -who pre- fers to spend nearly everY .,.,,aking hour in the klt· chen broadening hi s culinary art, instead of surf- ing ; believe it or not. MUlllPH SLUGGelt On hand in Costa Mesa too are several long- standing m e m b e rs of still anolher Sturniolo "family" -the house staff in Ar· Cadia. They are manager Eddie Horan: and entertainer Bob Ol son. 'vho per[orms ni ghtly, 1'1ondav through Saturday, on the piano and organ. \Vhether you make it to the Derby first for luncheon or dinner, a top- flight menu ""ill be oITered . There also is ~the rare feature of a special menu for family dinners, \vhich is cHi,.,.1111 offered front 5 to 7 p.m. SPECIAL S TO 7 DINNERS It provides six pa sta di shes -including choic'e of so up or tossed green salad, fresh_ly grated par- Real Cantonese Food - e•t here or take home. ST AG CHlltfSE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 1 Op.• y._ Ktou!MI Dally 12.11 -Fri. encl Sat. "tit J •·•· Songwriter-Songstress Kate Porter And Her Guitar Luncheon 11:30-'4 Mon. thru Sat. Dinner From 5 Daily Sunday Brunch 11 - 2 3333 W. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH 642-429B VILLA ROMA Speciali1ln9 In hallan Dinn.rs HAYING A PARTY, A GATHERING OR FAMILY DINNER? ' n1esan cheese, ~arlic cheese toast, beverage and dessert -at prices ranging from $2.50 to $2.95. Additional entrees, served with choice of soup or salad, pasta or baked pe>tato, garlic cheese toast, beverage and dessert, extend from southern fried chicken, $2.75, to bacon wrapped filet mignon , $4 .50. Youngster's portions, for children under 12, are tabbed at half price. LUNCH MENU Lunch prospects include a la carte selections, sea food s, original Derby Salads, combination sand- wiches, protein diet specials, hot sandwiches, pasta dishes and a daily special of the week. On Thurs- days, !or example, this latter is chopped steak, $2.50, served with soup or salad and garlic cheese toa st. Dipping into two other departments for our ini· tial lunch here, \ve ordered ravioli (stuffing o! meat, c heese and spinach), $1.50, and the sliced breast of turkey, ham and swiss cheese sandwich, $1 .85. Both \Vere served \vith choice of soup or salad and fiarlic cheese toast. and each \Vas character- ized by generous portions and delectable flavor. HOUSE SPECIAL TIES . House specialties on the Derby dinner menu include southern fried chicken. $2.75. filet steak cuts en casserole, SJ.SO ; roast young duckling , $3.50; chicken li ve rs en casserole, $2.75; pot 1$8St of beef, $3.50 ; filet mignon and lobster tail, $7.50. . All are served \vith choice of sou p or salad, pasta or baked potato. and garlic cheese toast. \Vhich also come \vilh any of ten admirable char- broiler and sea food entrees. Among these are broiled chopped beef steak, $2.75; top sirloin, $5.95 ; New York cut, $6.25 · cha- teaubriand (for two ), $13.50 ; filet of sole , '$2.95; scallops, $3.75: lobster tails, $7.50. Dinner pasta di shes range from ravioli at $2.50 to half and half spaghetti-ravioli and meat balls for $2.50. Light eaters can partike of several &ood aahdwiches or salads. SUCH CHEESE CAKE No mater when or what you eat at the Derby, save room for an order of their sterling cheese cake. More than superb, it's the finest out 'n' about· er has encountered in a WeUJne oi dot.inc on it .., hi3 favorite dessert -or anytime snack:. The Derby Is (>pen lfom 11 a.m. to 2 a.m ., Mon· day through Saturday, and 4 to 12 p.m. Sundays. Late dinner is served to 12:30 a.m., Monday through Thursday, and until 1:30 on Friday and Saturday. We suggest everyone hereabouts saddle! up and gaHops on dow n for one of the· area'! great new treats. 11 Cowabunga" goes the exultant cry of surfers at liuntington Beach -an expression out 'n' about· ers could appropriately echo following a visit to the city's Fisherman Restaurant. If surfing terminology comes across a bit alien, however, a jubilant "Eureka" will suffice. Because anyone who's been seeking a top dining lpot can truly say "I have found it" after a meal here. CONSTANT DISCOVERY \Ve "found". the Fishennan long ago, of course. bul seem to enJOY a sense o( discovery \vhenever we drop by. Which probably explains why moat diners return tftne and again. • There Is the always changing mood of the ocean just outside the windows. Or the encounter with another delighUul dish that hasn't been sampled before. Continued on P• .. 26 ARTISTIC BAYSID~ DINING ••• R•~rv•tions: 4'4-6574 • • • r4!•.•wers Open Delly DELANEY'S ·-~~ U"lT•u : ~::~::·· eA ro ~ I =. c~~':r:~. ~:::. : :~:·,:;;~;'" ~ DININ!a NEWPORT'S 'FiNESl.' ~EJ.'FOoD CUISIHf OCEANFRONT DINING, Lunci.-11.5 . Dl•net 5·12 Cocktails ATOP TOWERS WING Of O~n•rs: Fr•n D•l•n•y •I'd 1111 ,.,.,. SURF And SAND HOTEL' 630 E. Lido Pork Dr., N.B. -675·0100 "" ""'" ""• ••••••• · LAeUNA •IACM, CAll,elN&A Dining with An Ocean View SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTllW * * * * FROM $3.25 * JESS PARKER Appearing Nightly Tllftdoy thru Siu11:dor BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE PHONE Sl6·Z55S 117 OCEAN A¥l. HUNTINGTON l!ACH Overlooking The Paci fic Oce•n At The Pi•r .-JOSEF'S-· CHUCK KEELY TRIO UANCING NIGHTLY FROM 9 P.M. ~ Restaurant SCENIC MOUNTAIN/SEA ATMOSPHERE DANCING NIGHTLY MON. Thru SAT. The Naturals [ 6'':.o"'" Open Daily 7 am • 2 am Rn. 499·2663 31106 Coast Hwy. South Laguna NOW OPEN ClmBBY .-AIRPORT COSTA MISA -ORANGE COUNTY AllPOIT 12'2 PALISADES IOAD . 17141 546 .. 190 M ... ttn Sot. 11 •.m.02 .... -s--, 4-p..,..12 , .... Our standard speciol 1p19h1fti dinner consists of our delicious meet seuce end moat bells, topped with im· SERVING LA TE DINNER ported permes•n che•s•, ind includ•s our d•licious SUNDAY BRUNCH 11-4 To 12:30 A.M. Mon .• Thurt.-1:30 A.M. Frl.·S•t. , g•rlic toast. LUNCHEON • DINNER Fa1turing the s1m1 world.famout menu & IOun9 1 N11 di,h•• lo w•1!. with our di1pot•bl• •l11111in11m co"ltinen. enjoyed by millions for thirty-ene years at the ~· ' N11111Nf •f dh11en. oii«t pric-To t• allty. 2121 E. COAST HIGHW.AY 100 -$145.00 6 -Sl.70 • "' .. -72·" • -•.•• AT THE JAMAICA INN 67J.lllO -lB'lll" ARCAD. IA J " -"·" , -..,, • . , c:s'1l<!!l!' a -• 10 -14.50 1 -1.45 11~~~-i!ii:::~~~~~-i!i~::~~~1~;:;;:~~;:;:;:;;;:;:;;:;;:;::;:;:;;;:;;::;;:;:;:;:;:=! 445 North Newport Bou levard, Newport B•ech Op•n 4 p.m .• 12 p.m. Ml 6-4929 Open 7 D•ys . - DON JOSE' -prowdty prnenh - SPECIAL, EXCITING ENTERT Al NM ENT Tuesday thru Sunday DANCING FRI. AND SAT. IN THE FIESTA ROOM Finest Mexican Food At Reasonable Prices e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Ad1ms Ill M..gnoll•I Hunt. Benh 962-7911 'Whete Ezcitiac ~ings~ Happening! .,.,,.,.,,,. .. Tltr•e• c .. ,_, in t.lt.e Ser:iill• £flfMWS Df1tln1 '" flte hf«•tiful Mfll.Ur ROMt Lfld•lt ne111 k.irvwt l«U.ltka GRAND HOTEL TFitUDMAKWAT AK•HEIM, Cl.Ur. '1172-7771 In The LIDO LOUNGE LOU NORRIS FOUR 1::111 P.M. -1:30 A.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY llLL McCLURE DUO DAILY: 5 lo 1::111 P.M. • • ' -H DA!LV PILOT Frida,, August l, 196' FLING lNTUTAINMINT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK WEE~ENDER ·OUT 'N ABO.UT * HAP HALL DUO * L•rry Lakt , . • 1111 ,..,. • ...,.. .. ••• Slngrr I <llct!Clm;c=m--•===""'""""'"""'"='""-=""•""'"""""'""""''°_"",_..., ____ ..,..,""",.""-•""=""'""""'°""=""""' .. mai:::am•.'J r Guitarist 1~ • . ,..,. 'tin ""'· ·---~~ ---~ 1 ME5A~_._ Reif-Mu• Theater SQu1.11:e Cost• Mfta 145 I. 1M St. Jat off N-por1 lf,d, MIKE JORDAN DUO .. . ' . MONOAY THRU SATURDAY JAN· & PAUL ••.• , .. OFF e • • WEST •• •••••• 37 FASHION ISLAND . NEWPORT CENTER Betwwn Buffum• ., Bf'0.11.1"'• Amp.I• Petld n11 "-rv•tlon• •644-2030• GRA.ND HOTEi;,. 1 P'l;lllM.U WAT • i\N•llUMI lC•OSS P'l;DM MU• UTl Of DISllrfUMD TONIGHT c?~ttjr j'e«11 PRESENTS . SUE CARSON ' . JV-::f, lec«dl~I $1.lr ?f.·~· CASEY · .... ANDERSON BUDDY FITE · FRANKIE ORTEGA enc1 ~It nn:11esn DAftCIN&. l ·I. 1G-11, 12·1 I®~ 111'1!1$...IT_HOISllOWll!l!S 9 '"' 11, 111£..!!US\!11. IT 9 •£SEIYATIDltS n141772·l17l •GROUP SALES 17141.771-48 20 Confinutd from P•g9 15 Regulars take all of t.l:lls in stride. So first-tim- ers have a lot of catching up to do even after their initial foray into the restaurant's pleasures. NEW MENU Settling down to dinner one night last week, we were further surprised to find a menu that has been considerably revised since our last visit. And ~ exciting new entertainer in the lounge. PRICED RIGHT A choice of 12 entrees from lakes and"Seas lead off with egg dipped filet of English sole, amandine, $3.50. Northe:rn halibut steak or pan fried rainbOw trout are available at the same price. The sum of $3.75 will bring giant gulf shrimp, broiled chinook salmon, filet of mahi mahi Royal Hawaiian, or~callops, sauce poillette, encasserole. For $3.95....yefu can order broiled swordfish steak sautc, meuniere, or stuffed ftlet of sole, Veronique. Al so, Catalina abalone steak, amandine, $4.25 ; and lobster newburg, rice pilaif, or combination sea food plate (swordwish, deviled crab, red snap- per, scallops and shrimp), $4.50 each. 11 ighly recommended , on the hflsis of the excel - lent dinners '"e savored, are tile rainbow trout, mahi mahi and sole Veronique. All were served 'vi th choice f\1anhattan clam chowder or tossed green salad, choice of dressing, potatoes and hol bread. '-FROM THE BROILER If there's a holdout in your party for something from the broiler -as there was in ours -satis· faction will be complete in this department too. I-le ordered the New York steak .(12 oz.), $5.75, and pronounced it prime on all counts. Other broiler possibilities included top si rloin, $4 .75 ; filet mignon. $5.95; ground sirloin. $3.50. Or on e can order brochette of beef teriyaki. $3.95; one- . hal f Long Island duck, $4.25; Australian lobster tails. $6.95. ' ' ONTRA'S All you can eat on Sunday $2.25 POPO AT THE BAR ,,,. For fl1 added kick to dinner you might want to try ohe Of barmaster P-0po Galsini's award-win. ning cocktails. Whether xou make it the lioness, mosquito or saturn, you 11 realize why Popo has snared some of the top prizes in competitions stag- ed by the California Bartenders' Guild. The lioness consists of a delicate blend of brandy, peach liqueur and falernum, while the mosquito is comprised of rum, cointreau and peach liqueur. The satum is a tangy mixture of gin, tropi- cal fruit nectars and falernum . A NOTE OR TWO Before we'~ fmished dinner the first Melodic strai!'s <!f some e_x~aordinary organ music began drifting rnto the dining room. The decision to move to the l~unge afterwards gave us an opportunity to hear 1t at close . range and meet the engaging young man ~espons1ble. 1'· Both the performer and hls instrument created many lasting impressions. He is the highly talented Jess Park~r ~d the musical m·arvel making the most astorushmg sound we've heard in a long time was revealed as tile X-66 Hammond space-age stereo organ . Parker says the X-66 is the newest and most r~volutionarr instrument developed by Hammond s~nce their first model was introduced in 1935. With v1rtu.a1ly. unlin:iited tOnal capabilities, it represents a scientific milestone in generating musical tones. MANY CAPABILITIES . A host of special distinctions includes the fact!· 1ty to duplicate many other. instruments such as maracas, blocks, glockenspiel, xylophone, banjo, cymbal, brush and even a piano. Under 'Parker's .. d.efb touch. a spark.ling array of percussions-par- ticularly the harp, celesta, glockenspiel and piano -create some of the most electrifying effects ever heard outside of an orchestral concert featuring ensembles of those specialized families of instru- ments. The X--66's stereo projection is yet anot.h~r wonder. It's all made possible by tl!e el_ectrontc sophi.&lication of a five channel, 200 '"att tone cab- inet within the console. . This cabinet includes one 15" bass speaker, four 8" wide dispersion speakers, two 8'1 treble channel speakers and two Qorns. It" .is de~igned. to give ma.1imum power, fidelity and dispersion with- out creating undesi rable directiona1 eUects. ,i1 IN COLOR YET Another side feature is the "blink" or light box on a back wall that projects the color of Hammond sound. Multi-colored patterns flas~ across the screen, the lights creating them tripped by the organ's sound waves. Toe instrument is Parker's personal property and one of only three being. played for the public in Southern California currently. The other two are at Anaheim Stadium and the Forum in Inglewood. Parker's musical career started ~t a very ten· der age on the accordion. Soon attracted to the organ, thanks to his parents, enthusiasm and pro- ficiency, he acctllired his first Hammond by the time he was eight. • CONCERTS AND CLUB DATES . Studying under leading · organists and arrang· ers through his teens, by Lhe time he reached his early twenties numerous public concerts and sup- per club engagements were r esulting in wide ac- claim. Now he is. one of the top artists in lhe·field, as anyone can readily verify Tuesday through Sat· urday nights from 8:30 or from 5 p.m. Sundays at the Fisbennan . In addition to the style and arrangements that are uniquely his own, Parker also demonstrates a versatile grasp of music's range. During any set there'll be selections extending from rock and pro- gressive jau to classical and pop. . FINE VARIETY Numbers we particuarly lJked included Lara's Continued on P•g• 27 GRAND OPENING Frid•y, August l, from 6 AM to 10 PM FREE COFFE~ SERVED ALL DAY Frid•y •nd Monday BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER & Short Orders F•aturlng , .. Mario C..lleMl•r Pin and Complet• Fountain Service Try our Char.lrol_IM Tatty Y•rryburger1 artd our Chef'• 51N<lol S•rtdwlchn mad• with mound• of beef er hem pllod hlth on e Hot luttorod Keiser Roll for only ........ 15c .OPENING SPECIAL -TERRY ISLAND ltlROllt TERRY'S COFFEE SHOP Corner of Main & Walnut In Downtown Huntln9ton l•1ch we specialize • OPENING cot<EnllHS '"C-StARRlllG · AUG.1 12th ·~~K~ELUshtES. MURl[t tA.Moars TWO w~~Ka Of'll.. y AND SlllSlR -SllAT DUllllS I' ll<Jds 10 ..i .-. Jost $125) i ertn« the fltlolt family and choose from entrees !UClt IS our fSllOll$ •·carved-1().()Jder Roast Betf," Veal Cutlet. &Jcculent Turlc:ey, elld 10 011 to Oill' t1bulous spreads of salads, vegetables, braids 1nd rolls. It's all 1tlere -Ontta'-1 t111111us foods. but llOW as 4 sPK!al SundlJ "'AU You &Ill Lit'' BoftllSI• Semd S1111day ••IJ, ll:OOA.ht.'til closin&o in ' . .,tCllTS o\l.SO AYAIU.BU AI so. CAL, "IUSIC co~l.~37 so. Hill ST .. l <n ANctttS: WALi.iCM'! MUSlt Cll"Y1 llUffUMS'; HIN:i.r111\l/"S1 AHO ALL ... UTUAL AND llBEllTY TICl([T AClNCIES. "Dmtot llK.11111• i.nw.cn w ~ OMl.T IT rallhtook Shopplq: C111ter Odrl 6617 rallbrook AY8Jlll!, Clnoka Park, CaJif, N...,.rt Bndl om • •llO f ashloa Island, Newport Beldl, Calli. GRAND OPENING AUGUST 1st· 2nd BERLINER RESTAURANT AND BEER GARDEN The Only Place to Dine The Continental Way Enjoy ohe of our Home·Cooked Dinntr.s WIENERSCHNITZEL -SAU.ER BRA TEN HASENPFEFFER -BEEF STROGANOFF WINE·CURED SAUERKRAUT PDT'>\ TO DUMPLINGS -AND MANY MOREi i We Serve the Fin est Wines From Germany and France Our Beers are Imported Direct .Fro m Bovorio - At 011r Grand Openin9 Party Yo11 Will Be Entenained By The Astoria Trio From M11nich Playin9 Until 1 :00 a.m. -Ch1mp1gM with Your Dinner- · Open Tuesday thru Saturd•y-11 a.m.·10 p.m. Sund1y 3-9 p.m. -CloseclMond1y1 We Servi Sendwich••, Bu1inH1mtn'1 LunchHn ALL·DAY In fht B••utiful Town & Countrv Center HUNTINGTON BEACH TOWN & COJ,!NTRY . 18552 B11ch Blvd, 962-5912 CHILD'S PORTION Hllf PRICE (Child11n under 12) PHONE IN ,.,All ITEMS !VllWLE TO TAlE OUT Taste the r~ason MR. STEAK is an exciting place to eat. We serve .dellclous steak dinners fe aturing USDA choice, perfectly aged, corn fed beef . I fttS Tl.U~Al"fT priced lower with the family* In mind • • . Optn Daily 11 a.m. Enjoy Your CONTINENTAL CUISINE ,, A1tllfftk 1 Miil Cetlt•'1 l11tll .. hcor RMEM ftE5TA.UMNT Contlnent1I Cuisine Cockt1il1 Serving Luncheon and DinneT Alondau through Saturdau. Closed SIDidays- Open for Private Partit1 Ontu ' Wt •ro located next fo tho May Co. in South Coest Pl•s•. JJJJ I. ltht .. 140.JMO OPEN l1 AM to 9 PM , BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE *Sandwiches and kl dies' mea/$1 tool U'7 FAllVllW IAt WllsOftl COSTA MIS.I. Mz.onz r H E FA M I LY f' L A C l :································· : f S\. &~-;;!IJ]J,_ .. ~ _lf'>d'.._ Caribe Room : : V. ~. ld/lllJ PRESENTS • • ~ • • • • • • . CONTINENT AL CUISINE. ENTERTAINMENT DANCING RETURN ENGAGEMENT JOHNNY-VANELLI ANP THE LUNCHEON e DINNIR • JACK LAWRENCE TRIO • • • • • .. COCKTAILS • 18582 Beach Blvd. 17171 lrookhunt Strttt • • 3 SHOWS NIGHTLY-MON. thru SAT. • • • H11 n Beach 968-5800 . fo••••I• VaHey • Ttlt hot1t: '6Z·'6ZS • JlllJ OCEAN AVE. IC-• Hwy.I -HUNTIN~TON II.I.CH -5J6-14Zl • '----~----,.-----------' L-------------------''1 \-~oi;;;~;;,.;.;,;,;;;;,;;,,..,l • • a m a a a a a a • a a a a a • a a a • a .• a a a a a a a a· a a: • ·'WEEKENDER OUT 'N ABOUT ' {Continued from P1go 26) Theme -"Somewhere My Love" -from "'Doctor Zivago," "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever," •'St. LouUI Blues" and "Light My Fire.'' Parker often gives an excellent account .of b1s vocal abil· ity too. · His first album, "Staifding Room Only.'' has just been released on RCA's Concert Jabel. And several more are on tbe way: "Two Pros in Con· cert'1 and "Extrasoni c -Vol. II." Bringing Parker into your home via records should result in a lot of rewarding listening. But we urge everyone to hear him in person first -to make his present appearance a "must" on the next night out. --- O""upying the site of the old Pavalon Ball· room, the Fishennan is locat:OO at 317 Ocean Ave., r1ght .as yuu start onto the pier, Huntington Beach . It's qpen seven days a week from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. LUNCHEON SERVED Lunch, served daily from 11 to 5, also offers a recently ievised bill of fare guaranteed to provide something for all tastes, And several noteworthy jtems have turned up for daytime plllling power in tjle bar. · They are the hot hors d'oeuvres available every day from 4 to 6 and the happy hours special -a double martini (gin . or vodka) served from 11:30 to 6 for $1. HER SPECIAL WARMTH Many of the agreeable new touches one finds at the Fisherman these days stem irom the guid· ing hand of Mrs. Coleen Baker, wbo took over as general manager some months back. A lot of geptlemen in the field couldn't do better than to emulate her capable and prO!essional efficiency. Adding still more continental flavor to the local dining scene, this establishment holds promise of being a haven for those partial to great German • dishes like sauerbraten, basenpfeUer, wienerschnit- zel and wine-cured sauerkraut. Not to mention con- noisseurs of German and Frencil wines and im· ported Bavarian beers. MEET THE OWNERS OWners are Oskar and Ingrid Schumann who've been operating the Das Berliner Restaurant in Gardena for the past five years. Feeling Oqmge County is the wave of the future, however, ureY.'ve closed the other place to spend full time here. · They are also proprietors of Der Berliner Deli- catessen located a few doors from the new restau .. rant in the Tc:Mn and Country Center. Between these two spots folks hereabouts will now be able to obtain just about anything Germany herself of- fers in the way of food and beverages. The front portion of the new Berliner will be devoted to a colorful and authe!ltic old-country beer garden. Several atmospheric dining rooms will occupy the remainder of the premises. GRAND OPENING SPECIAL During Ws weekend's grand opening, patrons will be entertained. by the Astoria Trio from Mu- nich. And champagne \Vill be served with all din- ners. Offering lunch and dinner, the restaurant will be open Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; 3 to 9 p.11,). on Sunday; Closed Mondays. Emphasis will be on home.-rooked. meals. Look for a full report from out 'n' abouter once I com,,.edienne The Berliner the Berliner is in full S\Ying and we've managed to Sue Carson, songslress-commedlenne, ls appearing partake of its cuisine. in Off Broadway West in the Grand Hotel, Ana· Grand opening festivities this weekend -to--If the Schumanns serve the same Black Forest heim. She has performed throughout the world in .day and tomorrow, August 1·2 -will launch the ~berry torte they offer in the delicatessen \Ve may, supper clubs and on stages. Appearing in the same new Berliner Restaurant and Beer Garden, !8582 in fact, take up permanent residence in the Ber· show are Casey Anderson, Buddy Fite and Frankie Beach Blvd., in the Town and Country Genter, liner. Ortega's orchestra for dancing. Two shows nigbUy, Huntington Beach. ==-====ii=================:::;:; except Monday. ®I " "II "-. 1 _"II " =IBJ Out 'n' Abouter solicits comments criticism =:::;;;;;:;=="=============II l:J :I and praise about Orange Coast resta~rants and THI MOTION PICTURI .. .. 1: SUPERB night clubs. If you have something you would CODE AND RATIM<O II like to say, write Out 'n' Abouter, Weekender, PROGRAM POLYNESIAN Box 1875, Newport Beach, California, 92663 ~w~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~:11 Th• Mollon Picture Cod• •ncf :I HILD OYIJI R1tl119 Ad111f11!tft1tlo11 1ppll1• E t t I ' OIAH JON•1 th• followl119 r1ti1191 to film1 ta er U nmeit "THI LOYI IUG" diitribut1d in th• U.S.A. Pie· pllrl 211111 Nl'W l'Nht.. I~ F~id1y & S1turd1y 8:3ll p,M. -2 A.M. "We prombe uou geod food :: and service'~ :: POLYNESIAN FOODS ~ iropicel Cocktails....;., Steak-Lob,ter fl //') , FOOD-T0 -60 YOU'U ENJOY OUR MIDDAY FAER .SUNDAY J2 P.M. TO 4 l'.M. DISHIY'S "GNOMIMOIJLI" tur•1 rl f•d G, M er II. <11UI "f Wlltl W.t.LTlll a1t•NNAlll for th. Cod. $11!, .. '"""-O.Uy 11• P.M. 1"":==:==:==:::=:=::=~==::11 Pidvt•1 r•t•cf X '• 11ot ~•t•lv•. I-• 5011, Th• ,.t1111• 1pply to plcttr11 r•l••1•d .~., Novill'l'I• bolr I, 1'111. Plctur•• r•l•111d li•for• th1t d1I• •r• d11trlb---lll M •• pr•¥1oudy l .. end/or SMAI. Jil-Sui~•lf•d for •I Nll.AL 1u ••nc•1. oLi ~ f<:.e&fau1•a1t f •• •p9Ci•I di1cou11hf 1: " '''' ADAMS AVE Phonas : ~ " HUNTINIOTON eEAcH 968-5050 -962·' 11 5 :: (!]~I:: 11 I I :: :1 11 :: II I x ~~ f ine Di11ing Siuc~ 1965 3801 f.AsT C.0AST HIGHWAY C.oRoNA DEL MAR, C...uFORNIA PHONE: (714) 675-1374 Jm-Suff•d•d for MATUll oudi•nc•1 IP1r111t1I di1° cr1tio11 1d¥i11d I. mJ-lUTllCTID -P•r10111 ~11d•r 16 flOt 1dmitt1d, v11l•11 •cc•fllPlnl•d by p•ylnf or •d11lt 9u1rd. I i111. Billingsley's ®-".,.... ..... '' ... ~"""*I, Thl1 •t• r•· 1trlcllo11 m•y b, hlth•t 111 c1rl1i11 1r•••· Ch•ck th••tf• er ocf.-orlhl119. For Actv1rtl1ln9 In • ' • • • CAILY Pilaf l7J BIST PICTURE 01' THI! Yl!ARI WINNER S /'CADEMY AWARDS! , TOOAf .. 1111 & l :lO ,_..._ aox OFFICIO,PIN DAILY '1.T HOON PCR •ROU• D&KOUNTS, CALI.I I J>l7t 1 ~m::=At ...,...,_,.. ,~~ ,__ ; Jack Lemmon and ' Catherine Deneuve are "The April Fools" T-..1!!!- Twenty.four hours In the llfe of 1 guy who'• nMly ·for something. {Isn't Sho Something?) 'EVERY FATHER'S DAUGHTER 15 A VIRGIN! ()R 15 SHE? Y .. ~"Tho Oraot• C-ty ,.,.......,. .. of "Goodbye, Columbus" A ll"ILM f'llOM TH I HoV•LLA IY PHILIP ROTH, i he Author of the Now e .. t s.11 •• "PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT" e "thnulnely lntlmeN Lna Sc.,.....-11mft: Magazine e "R•frnhlng To S•"-Ufe Magazine • "Memoreble"-Saturday Review e "Ut RISISTAILl"-New York Times llATIO ll -l'EllSONJ UND'lll '' NOY ADMITT•D UNL•SS WITH PAlllNT: ~ ~ '· • • • " ' • ' : ! ' ' • • ' • I • . . • ... • • • . ' • • • • • • • . > • . • ' . . . • FAMIL"( RESTAURANT 2200 Harbor Blvd., Co1t1 Me11 ~ (KM1rt C1nt1r) 642-8274 ~ GOLDEN - -*HEY K1os1 * The Weekender u~I ::;:'::;:''::;:''::;:' ::;:Sh::;:-::;:'::;: .. ::;:'·::;:t::;:'iOJ;:;j~~P,;;h;:;on~e~6;4;;;2=·4;;;3~2 ;,,1 ='II * * BEACH BLVD-. AT ELLIS * * i II~ HUNTINGTON BEACH * 847·960B COMBINATION DINNERS OR A LA CARTE DAILY LUNCH SPECIAL IMPORTED & DOMESTIC BEERS ll"rldl'f Th• 1.111 ... ti•'·"'· Slttrtl•Y -.. t 11'1 ,_m.-c:i.Mll ,,,,_.,.,......,...., -fl•:•'''"" """'' Tlmll•Y tnrv Tn111'11•1 111• I .Ill. .. •i• ""'" , The ] olly Roge.r SER V ING DAl.tY Breakta1t * Lunela * Dlnaer FINEST IN FAMILY DINING SPICIAL CHILDRIN'S MINU FOR LITTLE PIRATES UNDIR 1Z All dinners served with soup or selad , choice of French fries, whip ped potato or baked. Hot home-made bre1d1, FOR .YOUR EVENING PLEASURE JIM DIFFIE DUO ENTERTAINING IN THE LOUNGE Moe4oy "'"'5""'r4oy-l:JO P.M. • 1 :JO A.M. 2300 HARBOR BLVD. Costa Mesa 54o.8535 ; BULL llrmcht<l11 Steaks -Prime Rib wukdays Seafood -Cocktails l)]inntr HOW A"'IAJll N• JOHNNY :meil in the Grand Mamttr VANCE TRIO • Wed. ttir• s.t. Sil S. MAIN, ORANG!! l :JO ho 1 :JO ..,.._, 5~2-Jl9l J ust •ff~ (~SUzldly) SIMttl A11• """f imt II T-Jleff l'MIMI: IJD-0440 24-Ho•r C.ffn stt.p T he Restaurant · Exti·aor dinaire ~ (VJ: Med; Mr0t ef l11t.nectlM .t MecA.rttier Ir CMlt) " ~ 2325 East Coast ·mghway -(714) 673-8267 ~ Corona de! Mar " I\ I · '-'k ~ rt ~i) Thrill to Thoroughbred action! Nothing can match tho ell-out, ell-the-WBy ex· citement of Thoroughbred racing! Come alive to It all, .. the special thrlli when lime stands •~II for that thunderous Nn for the money. There's no thrill Ilka the Thorough breds! come, see for yourself, It's happon]Dg now at Del Mar. 9 races dally, Mon . .Sat., through SepL 11. Res. aeals from $1.20, (Sat. and hol/doyr, Sf.50.J Post Tim• 2 p.m. e Second Gre•t Shows • "01111 HOWL 01' A l'ICfUJll" - VAllllTY f'ltOM THI 1 10 l llO.t.DWA't LIGIT COM•DY A GIANT OF.A_ OVIE • Positively . LAST -::. Ends YIEEKt.=. Tuesday !f" ' WEST COAST PR EMIERE ENGAGEMENT • 2nd Out1t1ndln9 Hit Joi n Hackett •nd Walter Brennan 'James Garne r .. -~ • • ' • I -- • Q DAILY PILOT Tickets 'On Sale :For'Music' YourGuidetn ~01•• SOUTH SW TROPICAL FISH .-1 ........ " .. - Van Dyke Musical Sliowing On Coast ...... .._ ......... MNfl. Largest Selection ol AClU Of Fill PAlklN• Tropical fish & or1N AT 6:41 s U in Uue area " 'Tickets for Lyric Opera's production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music" are now on sale at ,multiple locations ,t~roughout Southern California. lt1all and "phone ordens are being ac· cepted. •'Sound o( h1usic" will be pre sented f,p r four performanceJ only on Sep. tember· 5. &, 12"' and 13 under the stars in Irvine Bowl, home of the world-famous Festival of Arts and Pageant of tbe P.1a.sters. Maml Nixon star• as Maria with Alan Bermann co-star- ring as Captain von Trapp. Featured are Andree Jordan as the Mother Abbess. Su Hannon as Elsa and Alfred DeMls as Max. • Kent Johnson is directing. · with Eugene Ober as musical ~ director and conductor of the " full professional orchestra. : Principal box office is at the ~ Festival of Arts grounds, 650 ~""'liii:l~ ... , Laguna Canyon Rood. A ''SOUND OF MUSIC" STAR ! special "Sound of Music" Marni Nixon in Rol e of Maria •telephone for reserved seat--------------------- ~ ticket orders Is 494.J900. , Tickets also are on sale at • .Jll Automobile Clubs of Southern California offices and Liberty a n d Computicket ageneier tbroughout t h e Soolhland. Mail orders should be sent to Lyric Opera, P. O. Bo:i 514, Laguna Beach 82652, with self· addressed, stamped envelope enclosed. Theater party and group fund-raising sales in· formaUon may be obtained by phoning the "lttwilc" line, 494- 3900. . His Face is Familiar J. D. Cannon's face is familiar, even if his name isn'L Cannon, the menacing "heavy" in fu&.role of the con- demned prisoner in Cinerama's "Krakatoa. East or Java". has been one of Hollywoocrs busiest character actors for yea rs. On televisi on he has made uncountable ap- pearances in "!pe Fugitive," ''The F .B. I .. " '"The Invaders." ' · M is s ion : Impossible." ''Rawhide·• and ''Gunsmo ke", invariably in the role of the villain. Cannon also is a m o n g America 's bu sies t Shakespearean actors. He has made a n n u a I appearances since 1954 with the New York Shakespeare Festival. YOU ARE . (Editor's Note: Th f s mouie gu1de i.s prepared by the fiLnu committee of Jlorbor Council PTA. Mrs. Johti Clark if president and Mrs. Hort Sweeney ii committee chairman. It U intended as ii'reference in '1etennhiing auitable filtm for certain a o e aroup1 and will appear weekly Y our vjew" are solicited. Mai! them to Mo- vie Guide, care of the VAILY PILOT.) * * * ADULTS Barb""'lla (SMA): G i r I as tronaut rectives o t d e r s from President of earth, in the year 40 ,000 A.O., to find a mis· sing earth scientist, an in· ventor, or a weapon that can destroy the world. Jane Foo• da. Goodbye Columbus (R): A summer romance between a poor librarian ·and a nouveau riche college girl lapses due te> their different views. A satire on sex with Richard Benjamin, ftli MacGraw. Last Summer (ft): Film version of the Evan Hunter novel about a group of young adults. Barbara Her shey , Richard Thomas. 1'1acKenna's Gold: ( 1'1 l Story of a group of men and women who all share a fear of rampaging Apaches a n d a greed for gold Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif. 100 Rifles (R): Story Q{ ~1 ex i can govemmenl's at· tempt to annihilate the Yaqui Indians in 1912 with Raquel Welch. Jim Brown and Burl Reynolds. Stiletto: Film version or 11arold Robbins novel of murder and intrigue among ·ONLY MINUTES AWAY! •• PACIFIC'S " • HARBOR BLVD. DRIVE-IN , THE ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING! THE PICTURE THEY.HAD TO RATE "R" <11ntrtcted> . Harbor Blvd. at McFadden l._...,- ___ .... G~DEN ·GROVE "FREEWA~Y~,,.--· SANTA ANA D .. •OLSA AVENUE c > ]~ J~ t; Mc ,ADDEN ·A _YENUE 0 .. J~D .. c :i: 8 . :::::J= • = ... AVENUE = .. ' ' . r IC THEATRES • AN EQUAL .. 0 .. ... -.. ... the jet set. starring A.lex Cord and Britt Ek.land. The Thomas CroW111 Affair: Faye Dunaway and Ste\•e li1cQuee.n star in l h i s sophisticated film about a crack Insurance sleuth. She becomes an intimate com- panion of a thrlll·seeking millionaire whom she suspects of masterminding a bank rob- bery. Pi1ATURE TEENS AND ADULTS The April· Fools ( !'11 ) : HilariOU! and romantic fan-- las~ about a married man "'ho meets somebody else's wife. Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve st.B.r. Tbe Chairman (1't): Gregory Peck i8 a Nobel J?r12:e wiMlr\g scientist who is sent on a spy mission to Red China. Anne Heywood is co-star. Odd C o u p I e : Uproarious comedy in which two ill- matched, ex-marrieds decide to room together. Walter Mat.. thau and Jack Lemmon. Once Upon a Time In the We st (l\1): Vi\Han, Henry Fon- da, hired to clear the way foi a new railroad, murders a ranche r and his children in this colorful, violent, and lusty western. Claudia Cardinale and Jason Robards also star. steal.$ the leprechaun's crock SHOW 5TAITS 1 r.M. upp es • of gold and buries it near Fort NOW SHOWING New t L.cetl•• ) K.oo:i to make It arow. Fred ''STILETTO'' 1uw.w1uoN,COST.t.M11a 11 toH F1!r~1ew ltd.. $.Of.1''1 Astaire and PetulJ Clark. U1·G, ll:lvtn:dt Or, -Nt'Jl'-1 hldl Tb Lo B D'• • , Wftti ._ Cbtfllnd !ht"•' Offlc•I ~ e ve ug:: L.llney com-~ltx Cord ·Britt· c kl1nd 11.~~~~~~~~~~ edy about a Volkswagen with Ab. human feelings. Dean Jooes Jison Robards and Buddy Hackett. Britt Ekli nd Oliver: Spectacular musical I• GO OU T TO A MOV IE THIS WEEK version of Vicken's classic "TH '"· NIGHT THEY about an orphaned waif cast II:. int<> the teeming squalor of the RAIDiD lower class, He finally escapes MINSKY'S'' to the ·etegance of the upperl~~~~~~~~§§~§~~~~~~~~i class. Mark Lester, Jack Wild and Oliver Reed. Sobma'rine X·l (G}; British World War II ad- venture in which a C<>m· • PACIFIC.._ ~~l:!t ~~arrr~n ~~~!~ ~tdl~li:l4!rr:TIEfl sub crews for attack on a -·-• •• -• • • -·-German destroyer. Excite- ment is enhanced by sh1ps and activities of frogmen. Support Your Loeal .Sheriff: H i I a r i o u s tongue-in-cheek almost non-violent we.stem with James Garner, Joan Hackett and Walter Brennan. * * * Tht letter immediately after the title tndicate" the rating given tlte picture b11 the Motion Picture Code. The ft.lotion Picture Code .A. nd Rating Program ntay be found on the motion picture page. He11rv °Fonda -Cl111di1 Cordinalo "ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WES T" Pl111 Jol\11 W1v111 -Rob.rt Mitchull'I "EL DORADO" Hannibal Brooks (M): An English prisoner of war, afterJr==========;J \torking in the Munich Zoo, begins a hundred mile walk with four companions and a prize elephant. This adventure story affirms human values that can· surmount t h e brutalities of war. Oliver Reed and Michael Pollard. l f It's Tuesday, This ~full be Belgium (M): A busload of American tourisls whizzing hilarously through Europe in search of instant culture are shepherded by :a. jaded young EJigllshman. Ian McSbane 3nd Suzanne Pleshette. Lion In Winte r: Clash of two strong-willed monarchs, King Henry JI of Eng land and his queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine, makes a brillant explosive drama out of fragments of 12th century history. Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hep- bumr The Night They Raided 1'1lnsky's (M): Tn 1925, a naive Amish girl, Britt Ek1and, runs away to New York and dream- ing of a glamourous dancing career, ends up at lttinsky's burlesque, where she in· advertantly invents the strip tease. J ason Robards, co-star. ·TEENS AND ADULTS Bea Jlur tG): Screen classic Y."ith superb sets, costumes, and dramatic chariot race. It demonstrates the impact of Chrislianity on Ben-Hur and his family. Charlton Heston and Jack Hawkins. El Dorado: An amusing ac· lion-packed western set after inside the bri9ht, turbulent world of tod11y's youth . • • i,sii 11111!11111 BBJJ • HARBO.R TRINITY BAPflST CHURCH LAWN ' FANTASTIC MUSICAL • Dick Vin Ovk• -S1!lv Ann How11 ••CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG" Plu1 , •· . . "SUBMARINE X· 1" ... ~~ ........ ~ ....... .. AN Alll.ll.T MOVll AaOUT TOE>AY't Tl!INAQlilll "LAST SUMMER" :. Plu1 --11111 : ' "100 RIFLES" .:.kV?! ! ---I H• ..,. llndtr II Wiii ... ""''" .. 11n1111 1e-ctm1>1nlM Dy 1>1r1111t fl' l""rlli.n. ...................................... Jock Lemmon -P1!1r l1wford .• "THE APRIL FOOLS" • ' • • plu1 : Audr1v H1pburf1 -Rich ard C11nn4_ , -;;.-i "WAIT UNTIL DAR K"' """" lltumlMllON For Muth ..... ~·~ ..... ~····· .. ······ Gr19orv Pac• -Ann Heywood "THE CHAIRMAN" • plus -•llll i Ck1rl1ton He1 lon -Roddy McOow•lf •. ..,. : "PLANET OF THE APES" ltKemm.MM ir1r Ad11H1 .............. ~ ........... .. ... .'.lick Le mmofl ' . ' $17 5 "TH:~~;,"('~UPLE" _ .. __ , pl111 ..,_.. i u:ER J•n•· Fo11d1 CAI AD "BARBARELLA'' the war between the states F "d • 1 1 r M "' '"' 11i'lftr t• wm k Mm lttW llftt•H 1cct<n,1n111111 11, ,. •• -,. .., .... w,. . . . '""' about a handicapped trio (led DciiuJtfoM Acuptff •r """11"1. by John Wayne), who battle/!;::::=;~~~~~:=:=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ for justice against an outlaw clan. Planet of the A~s : Science· fiction melodrama about three astronauts \\'ho crash land on unfamiliar planet, 2000 years hence. where apes are civiliz. ed and Jiumans, primitive. Charlton lleston. M a u r i c e Evans, and Roddy Mc[)oy,oalJ. \Vall Until Dark : Tense thriller In which thugs try to force blind wife to reveal whereabouts of a cache of heroin. Audrey Hepburn. FA~l lLY Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (G): A cheery musica l in \Yhich Dick Van Dyke portrays I.he crackpot inventor in Ian Fleming 's fa n ta s y . He remodels an old racing car and spins fabulous yarns to the amusement of his adoring children. Sally Ann llo\\'es also stars. Incredible Joumty: Bull ter- rier, Labrador retriever and a Siamese cat travel 200 miles through rugged Northeast Canadian wilderness tci reach home. Walt Disnty. finlan's Rainbow : FI Im version of the {3roadway musical of the Jrishman ~·ho Sex T1i gger In Movie Of ''Ryan's Daughter," the original screenplay he has u·ritten for David Lean and l l\1G"1. Acade1ny Award-win· ning writer Robert Bolt says, .. l hope \\'e ha\'e a truthful story of high emotion, in which sex IS seen as the trlg4 ger ... In proper balance: ~·Ith trust and tenderness, ~·hich are as nectssary to love u courage and passion." I Tbe countdown is ending ••• U.S.~llrftlift.Rvnian lltelligeace can't keep him ah much longer! If the Red Clinese donlknl him ••• a ClllllpUler in loildoll wfl! 20th Century~Fox prese·nts liREliORV PEEK· ADDE HEVWOOD An Arthur P. Jacobs Production '1HE EHAIRmAD" ARlHUA HILL•ALAN OOBE ·FRANCISCA TU·OR L£VY.i£w. ~ON -~VAMA -"" ~"I...·-·---··~~---··· ........ _"' •1'>ooO--MORT ASRAHAMS ·J. LEE THOMl'50N ·SEN M>m:!W·J/<r F>CHAAO KENNEDY 6-='--"'--0JJrFm'OOl.OS~. -.. -~ ........ \,Odo . Pwrl1l11t"·C......,.""-1!1!11(::::.!!Eijl NOW EXCLUSIVELY AT BOTH THEATRES The title role is pla red by ~oil's wife, Sarah l\files, vt'ithl Robtort ~1ilchum as her gooUt &e:hoolmaster husband and Christopher .Jones as her 1 erislocratic Dritl5h 1 o v c r ·1 David l..ean believes in casting again•l type. ..••••••••• • ' • !""""'...,....~ ........................... ______________ ~----------------~~~~~~~-------- • ) AUQUSf Z ' '.' n I' \ •• . e JOB PRINTI e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Outlity Ptint ing end Oep1r1d•ble Servi<• for more thin • qu1rter of • <1ntury. PILOT PR INTING 1211 WIST IALIOA l\.YO., NIWPOln llACH -642·4Jn 1 , , • .. - . ·. .. . ·. IN lllE REST PUCE. ... lME Si:CONP ru.c.t ~E CA».e HERE WITM ~AMEY Sf'BICH, FOC HEit OWl~2' SOME $SON, WANTS LOOKJN6 RX 'tel! 10 fiEEr 10G ! Gru! SUNDOWN!..AN'SNAKE-EYE AIN'T COMEBACK WITH THE 6UU£15 FER MY GUN. SOS I CAN AAAl;ST' HIM FE!\ ROBBIN1lllE BANK!AN'HE l'l\OMISEPl-r-'::1'.r.::'--4 MUTI AND JEFF. • , 8-/ "1\llS CRAZY DOODLEBUG FOLLQV.IS ME W>!EREVER I CAN'T GET I GO! ~ ... ,,. ··- ·--·..-. i ... ,, .... " .... '---''=''"="="-"'"-='-"-'-'----' ............... ~. GORDO WJ!J.L! ~.SI~/(~ VS 9R).SSJ/0Pf!J'5' FIW0S IJJ FJ.J!AS .MAV AS Wl!J.J. fdtVE UP IN 1HE. SPAl!J; IZA~ f /UINY OAY AGTIVITIE5 CJW 8£ FU>/. eoi'! llM I PUMB!- All· 11 •j 1, • •• /fPJ-~I . l By Tom K. Ryan I SHOOLDAMA!'E HIM CRO$HISHEART ANP f!OPEl' PIE! --- I ' By_ Al _Smith_ By Gus Arriola . ' QUEENIE Phll lnfelfandl . '1 don't lmow what he wanla to -,.,.. about. All he aaid .... 'En garde!' •••• • TELEVISION VIEWS Dog Days Of August . By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Tb~· an the dOf·· days of television -the days of August. Almost noth~g happens on the home ~:: And I've been thinking how nice it would be 11 lb• ·-networks just went off the air -completely, period" each August, to create the pause that refreshes. NO DEADkY reruns, rio glazed eyes, no 1weety deodorant ad s, no nasal-voiced ugly hou1ewlVM ln detergent commercials, no smoking ads of peoplo puffing themselves to a cigarette death with llllil .. on their faces because they are getting paid for It by a manufacturer. • It might almost cause a real anticlpaUon, "II excitement, if the screen went blank ~or a mootll'• and then resumed with fresh shows as the 11.ey season got under way in September. .. In Hollywood , the atars are working on thefr new show s. They give out the same old lntervi~ with the same old quotes. And they really have n~thing to say. They have aides who dream tip angles for them to talk about And 'all they caro • about is selling the new 1bow. If they didn't ~ new_ shows to sell, there wbuldn 't·be any ang1ee ~ stones from them. .. ' • AND IN THE END, the only~ that maim. fs what they do on the 1creen, bow it is -not whet they say, not their packaged opinions, · not their predictions or views of the wor1d or the industr,r, or even their own shows. The results are all th4,t counts, and there are no retnlts in August. .. • Except one, maybe. That would be Merv Grit'· fin 's new late-night series on CB&TV, which bowl in on Aug. 18 opposite Johnny Carson and J.,.Y Bishop. But of ~ourse Griffin has had a simillll" gyndlcated series for some tlme. so ·there won't be much of a surprise in its delivery. The cbiet ~ terest will be how it does in the ratings againit Carson ~ Bishop. '" . ~ ' THE MORE Interesting television new~ fu August is· in New York. For wbile Hollywood m9* ly has stars who are working routinely and ~ t heir shows in advance to the public, and while tbie home tube has little or nothing new, Uie top u~ tlves in New York are planning ahead, over tJie long range, with the immediate pr ... ure of rlCl- ings still six weeks oil. • . . And it is there, also, that the news and dOOO- mentary peppl~ are getting things together, end when you talk to them it is not the same thing 41 talking to perfonners selling a shaw. They are news people, and there is a dtffere11ce -in alml, in values, in everything that counts. 1 As for mysel!, I am no match for August, 10 'I am going on vacaUon. Coming up Jn this space fqr the next month Is Bob Musel. If anybody can handle August, be can. Dennis the Menace • • • • ' ' . • -L-S.-dl I '\ tint ''THE THREE PENNY OPERA" I Y l l:llTOlT l llean'" 1m w..,.,. ......._ c.t11 ,,._. ,..,.-11•·--~---~uu_ IT'S HEREI Tho Most F1nt11mtgorlc1J Muslc1I Ent.rtalnr.nent In TM History Of Everything! '. 1714160 • WALT DISNEY prudllClloas - CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M. -Free P1rking- iiM JONES mm LEE 111111.TUMUNSON 11U1XJY ~~~ TICHNICOLDR'. =-..,.; -Also-. -Also-- I! w~;~"'r-Ill• li In& Q Walt Disney's INCREDIBLE ,"WINNIE ;HE-POOH JOURNEY' And Th~:y~~STER BODGER··TAO • WATH Eve. Show St1rts 7 p.m. Jl""'°IT l l.t.tH _; .. ti.. ••!••• .. le I.We•• UC. k!o -OL :l-l )JO Continuous Sat. & Sun. From 2 p.m. FREE PARKING HELD OVER FINAL WEEK He has a wife. She has a husband. With so much in common they just have to fan in love. "The April Fools" -211d MAJOlt FEATURE - ."~-Wtt11~~ ~ f1U£M" • • STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY -EXCLUSIVE "CASnE KEEP" ****EXCLUSIV E **** ORA N(:E COUNT Y ENGAGEMENT . SPECIAL CHILDREN'S PRICE (Th•o,gh Ago 14) - $1.50 THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED MOTION PICTURE! WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARDS '"""'"•"BEST PICTURE"! )/ETT/060/DW/1{,l/IJ'E/t p •••• ~!' ·-- 111 the Galleries , . • Japan Art At Center CHALLIS GALERY -1!90 S. C..,_,i :llighw~y, Laguna Beach. Hours: 11 •.m. to S p.m. dally, On exhibit through Aug. paintings by Mark ~ in oil ,and encSUSUc media. LAGUNA. ART GALI.ERV ';""" :3lJ! Clllf Drive, Laguna Beach. ·Admission .M cents; Memberl and one . ~e$t ' Cree. Hours: Sun. -Thurs. Noon to I p.m.; Fri. and Sit/Noon to 9 p.m. All California Show, coinciding with Fest.Iva) of Arts· through Aug. %4, 180 works will be,pbown. · -l\IARINER'S IJBRARY -2flos . Dover Drive, Newport Beach. On e:xhlbit. through Aug., in the Jr. Ebell Ex- hibit during regular ·library hours, paintings by Caro Eaton and an exhibit of children's art from their workshop. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. CUrrenU)' on exhibit through Aug, durini regular business hours weavings ·and tie and dye fabrics of H. Crane Day. COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY " -2625 E. Coast High- way, Corona de! Mar. Houn 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m, Mon.- Sat. No admission charge. On exhibit through Aug. 22 paint- ings by Ruth Osgood and pottery by Jack Taylar. CMC CENTER GALLERY -3300 West Newport BJ.ycf., Newport Beach. Hours: 8.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon.·Fri. Chil· dren's art exhibit including the work of sOme J apanese chl1- dren, ages 5 to 15, which are on exchange with some New· port children whose art is being shown in Japan. Two " ' . · 'T.he ~hairman' IALIOA • 673-4048 Now Sfiowlnt •' -' ENDS TUESDAY e This Summer's Big .Fun Showlll I'm -Europe, biby. I 1t11t ""' P>utth Elm Diotloe, . GeillllD Mo1Jl:..:i ' ~ussion R 'You Stlll mc WorfbN..i; . VacatioOTO... #2ZS.:i . . Now we're· even~ CllUll ~ --· ' ·. • ' murals done by children in the Costa Mesa Schools also Gregory Peck, shown with Francisca Tu stars in are on display, through August. · the motion picture, 11The Chairman" n~ playing FOR ADl'ERTISl.NG MESA VERDE LIBRARY-2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, at the Edwards Newport and Hiwaf 39 Drive-In l 1V TllE lfEEKENDER Costa MPsa. Currently on exhibit during regular library theaters. The story of Red China also stars Omar hours, through Aug., the oil paintings of Nanci Schontal. Shari!. PllONE~-6~2-4321 --'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__:_____:___~~~ Gentry Plus Wiliams at Disneyland Song!l:reSS-Olmposer Bobbie Gentry, whose "Ode lo Billie Joe" is a musical milestone, and the incompa r ab l e keyboard artist, Rog e r Willirurui, open a three-week engagement at Disneyla nd Monday, August 4, as s,tars of "On Stage U.S.A." Miss Gentry and Williams, along with a spectacula r pro- duction number featuring the On Stage dancers a n d orchestra, will showcase their talents ""-6ft~ Tomorrowland St.age Mondays t h r o u g b Fridays only, from August 4 through August 22. Showtimes are 8 and IO p.m. each even- ing. "Ode to Billie Joe," which posed the still unanswered question ol the Tallahatchie Bridge, was written bY Miss Gentry in a few hours, record- ed in only one "take," and hit the top of the best-seller lists in just four weeks following release. But tts effect was to be long-lasting. This disc Jed Bobbie to star- spols on major television variety shows ~and several network specials anii resulted in her being gclected l967's "best new artist" by the Na· tional Association or Record- ing Arts and Sciences. Jioger Williams' very special way with the piano turned "Autumn Leaves" inlo a year-round classic. HIJ ex· ceptionally wide appeal among all ages has been reflected in the popularity of every Williams recording and in his concerts. "Circus!". a musical salute to t.he fun and glamouro-world of the Big-top, is set ror the "On Stage'' produclion num· ber. In addition to orchestra, singers and dancers. the sho\v- opener will spotlight a performance by a live baby elephant. Shango will star in ne:ott week's edition of Disneyland's "Pop Pourri" cin the Tomor- rowland Terrace, ~t on d a y through Friday August 4-8. The group will present their fast-paced. action-packed ren- ditions in shows beginning at 9 and 11 p.m. The Park's popular Country J\lusic Jubilee this Sunday. August 3, presents one of Nashville's favorite sons. Bob- by Bare. His award·winning recordings cif "Detroit City," "Five Hundred Miles Away from Home." and "Game of Tri angles" have rocketed him to the highest points in the country-western galaxy. On the same program, set for 5, 8 and 9 p.m., will be pert ·1'.1ary Taylor. whose quick wit a n d completely listenablc songs have made her one of the fastest rising talents In country music. Among her hits: "Queen of the -House" and "Today is not the Day." Disoeyland cipcns every d3y during its summer season at 8 a.m., closing at I a.m. Fridays and Saturdays. and at mid· night Sundays t h r o u g h Thursdays. Go Out To Dinner Th is We ekend GB each fo~GLivi ng GAll Seasons TIUs j5 JI UNTINGTON :PAOFIC, luxury apartments on the sand. You'll enjoy the mild, year-round climate and the clean smell of sca-v,.ashed air. Come down this \\'cckcpd and l.i\"C, liluc ~kies and clear air. The '''arm sun on your back. Surf, fish, S\vim in your front yard. Long evening walks on a deserted beach. The vic'v of Catalina Island, Entertain in luxury. Dinner by n1oonlight overlooking the glim· mering ocean. N ight surf sounds lull ~·ou to sleep. Relax at the HUNTINGTON PAQFIC. N0\\7 LEASING: one-, t" o-;ind I hr htdton1:1 Ju,11ry :ipa runcnl s. from $225 a month. OPEN HOUSE TI-llS \XIEEKE'.\D: Sec niodcl apartments and nc\\· club house. LOCATJON: On 1hc beach side of Pacific Coast 1-Jjgh,vay, three blocks north of l-lun 1i ngton Beach city pier. Front San Diego Frce- "·ay, take Bay Blvd. turnoff south to Pacific Coast H"'Y~ then left down the roast to Huntington Beach. • The HUN T INGT ON PACIFIC. 711 Paci.fie Coast Highway, Huntington Beach, Californ ia for leasing information, call collect: (714) 536-1487 or (714) 536-4616 • . . • I l ' I . ~-·----~-------------------~~-----~-~--------·--........-~ ... .. . -..... • WILSON FORD SALES '18255 BEACH BOULEVARD ~ CHiway 39) HUNTINGTON BEACH I /OPEN 9 A.M. TO ·10 P.¥.-7 DAYS I J)RANGE CO's.-FASTESrGROWl.NCi FORD DEALER FORD M.OTOR HOMES • See our complete-selection of Minihomes, Contempo C1mpers ind Gypsy C1mpers for immedi1te delivery. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1'i'9 FORD STATION WAGON a l'Klotr1 equlplled, PDG ni. ' '61._ COIVAll STATION WAGON A ,_. .conornr _I ... Ol IC 216. $88 $148 $148 $148 $148 SUPER SPECIALS SPECIAL PURCHASE 1969 FORD GALAXIES • MUST ANG • FAIRLANES • 19. TO CHOOSE FROM Low Milea9e All Colors FACTORY WARRANTY AVAILABLE BRAND NEW 1969 LTD HA1RDTOP 2·DOOR FORMAL HARDTOP .. VACATION SPECIALS I 9 VOlKSWAGEN DUNE IUGGY , . $1388 Flblr Gian llodr wiO.. !Ifft, r.il i..r, clWllrM ""'"'l. l hi1 IO 1 ,.,. beMll~. l'l.A lt$, ' • ' $1688 $1788 '64 SIMCA SEDAN Y .. IN a black flnllll. rwl 9COl*!W. JSV Mr.• $248 Our Special PurchaM·WiU Save You Many$$ '67 R)ID '100 CAMPll SPECIAi V~, eOM., cutfoin rM, rMio. M!tr, .tr1 lull II'*, Wtf1 lllltrlM'l, t tont. .. V"D16. $1988 ~2 FORD FALCON · $248 B~~; 1·969 . THUNDERBIRD '65 FORD Fl 00 PICKUP + 1969 CAMPER ~ \\ Tlll'I IDtlt bN,_ V..I, CVll. UD, r..n... *I..-. H•. !Joll1t. Pl .. lttf Mc0ott1W Alltliltl IYH k,.ICl!Pk eMl,.... wltll -iton. 91tc. r"1rlf. Llk• new. Ht. 20Hf1. $1988 ' u~ '~I.. 1vtan110c,. rldlo. llNll'I', IEF tot. ' . . 153 FORD 1/J TON PICK-UI' V.f <1ntliw:. r1dlo, h&1ltr. YllJM. $248 '68 R)ID F250 % TON.PICKVP . $1988 fiord f'2!0 *l Toii Pldl:·ll!I. v:a. 11/IOml!IC, llldlo, HHltr. EKlll•~t Vl lut. jt\2JIO . '68 COUNTRY SEDAN •IO-PASSENGliR WAGON $2988 JfO v ... IUtora.tk, P. ,,..,.1'1 ... cUsc """•lo l11t1•tl! r1dt. Hl"ll W/l /W 1r1n:. L"lk• new. ir _,.r. Ptlw ut w1rr1n1y 1v1rr.V-cc~. BRAND KEW 1969 COUNTRY SQUIRE SUPER SPECIALS BRAND NEW 1969 MUSTANG . EL DORADO CAMPER SPECIAL 4-DOOR LTD. WAGON '65 ~~~~!~~~ St~.~~~,!d~heat" Da<k $ 68 8 green finish. PJL 021. $3988 FULL PRICE BRAND NEW '69 f-250 STYLESIDE .. ~,!J.::12 '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 $1088 Popular 4-door Sedan, Automatic, V-8, P. Steering, radio, heater. fact. warranly avail. 'TMG 005. l llDORADO 10\i CHllOKIE CAMPER.,_) IMMEDIATE, DELlvERvtt· •• "" FROM SUGGESTED UST PRICI . -e .All FUil_ PRIC!S ARI PIUS SAUS TAX & DEPT. ftlOIOl ~IHllµS FEES . e _ jJse ono of our mony w1ys to fin•nct your now or used cor ortruck including Bank of America, United C1lif. Bank.'or Ford Motor Cradit Corp.With your Approved Crtdit. MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE AT WILSON FORDTODA Y 18Z55 BEACH BOULEVARD HUNTINGTON BEACH · (HIWAY 39) I ' I' · • 842-660 9A.MS~E:o~~.T~Do~ .. , S;:::::~~~RD. Tut1d~,!~~~~M~D!~~~SP.M. 592-.iall ------ I . ttOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Gent ta I 10006'floral I 1000 FINER HOMES . Cj)UAUTY BA YFRONT . Pier & float; a very J>e_auUful, formal 3 bed.lo room, paneled den 'home. Decorated in ex- quisite taste. Owner must sell NO\Y. Re- duced $15,000. Offered at $139,500. Will coo- sider $30,000 down. Call to see this sacri- fice. DOVER SHORES l lo1ne on the beach, \vith beautiful view. 4 Bedrooms, family room, largi; living room, dining room; step-down wet bar. Beautiful landscaping. $118,000. Call for app't. VIEW Elegant 3 bedroon1" v.•lth magnificent Mt. & bay view. Spacious living room; garden or fa1nily room; oversi~ pool with extensive surrounding temce. Done in exquisite taste. Priced lo sell, $127;500. Qa]l for app't. DIFFERENT · . Custon1 built home, imaginatively deco rated. 3 Bedroon1s. family room, built-in wet bar; breakfast room ; ma~ter suite with complete privacy. Spacious pool & outdoor entertain· . ment aTea. $159,500. GOLD COAST HOUSES FOR SALE READ THIS • • •. 9 Are you in the mar .. · ket for a new home, a home in a prime area very close to }luntington State Beach; a home you can customize while it is being built, a home de- signfd by outstanding archi-tect~ constructed by Frank ll. Ayres & Son; a Company that has been in business since 1905~ IF YOU ARE e e e e Come to RAN~HO LA CUESTA at Brookhurst and Atlanta in Huntington Beach a ny day between 10 A.M. & 7 P.M. and select your home in our ne"·ly opened UNlT V. PRICED FROM $25,990 to $34,200 968·2929 or 968· l 338 1000 oenerel lbGeneral . 1000 LAND HO! LAND A'PlENTY! PLUS LAKES! LAKES l ·LAKES! U>OK TO YOUR Ftrl'URE, through clear blue-skJes , . NO SMOG, clean, DRY air ... the ideal climate Jor al· faUa gruwill(, nut & apricot orchards: horze ranching, fish hatcheries. , .unllmlted opPOrtunities! THERE ARE OVER 100 LAKES (man-made) NOW lN TI-IE AREA ..• makes this not only a highly productive area;'but one of great beau- ty, A.I well, 80 ACRES just SOLD ... 93 ACRES, level, now AVAii.- ABLE, with pump & \vell; or, 10-UMo acre parctl5 av&il· able. Don't be a "! remem- ber whtn-er" ... i.nvesli- gale this opportunity in Ne\V· berry Springs, NOW!! Own- er's must Jlquidatt lntere5tll. Call 847-6640 after 6 Pbi, any . time Y.'ttkcnds. IN COSTA MESA 6 LUCKY PEOPLE .. can have IMMEDIATE POSSESSION in any one or these 6 custom homes which were eo~pleted this week. ?t1a-ny features such as: • 1/4 Acre Lot e Wood Roof • Fireplacn e ConcNte Drives • Patio Kitchens with Pantrys • 4 Bedrooms • Wall to Wall C1rpeting • AND Much More V.A. -F.H.A. -Conventional fi n- ancing a v a i I ab 1 e. Prices flrom $29,175. I-furry! Hurry! COATS & WALLACE, REALTORS <et? Gener•I 1491 BAKER STREET S46-4141 COSTA MESA, CALIF. 1000 General 1000 HOUSES FOR SALE HOl)SES FOR SALE Gener•I 10000.neral Coldwell, Banker. "' OFFERS: REDUCED $9500-4 BR . Baycrest's finest 4 Br .. 3 Ba., Fam. Rm. PLUS billiard room wf.wet ~· Pool/entry court; 2-s1ory custom Sparush. $124 ,500. Joe Clalrkson CAMEO SHORES-VIEW . Spafkling pool; 3 Br's., 3 baths. Lge. family room. A delightful home. Owne_r. leaving area. Will carry 1st T.0 . to qualified bu!·: er. $79,500. Cathryn Tennille WATERFRONT DUPLEX $79,500 Slip &. pier. Lovely custom 2-story 3 bed· room, 2 ba. (master bedroom 555 Sq. Ft., fireplace & view); lge. patio:· also-I ~R . charming apt. ,v/sundeck. ln1m . possession. Ji.1ake offer . Ji.fary Lou Marion • WATERFRONT WITH SLIP . Over .4,0~0 sq. ft. of luxury living with a pan. oram1c view. 4 Bedroom!, huge living room; formal circular dining room; garden kitchen '· ~ breakfast area. Paneled fa mily room \vith j . fireplace. Like ne'A'. Priced $145,000. · DOVEll SHORES LOT General 1000 General 1000 SpoU,ss 3 BR & fam nn.\;;;~~=====;;;; Cho;~ loc. ~ "'hool•. 2300 SQUARE FEET ELABORATE EXECUTIVE HOME MESA VERDE Assume 5%. ~~ rnA loan- $174 mo. 2 ba. bit-in kit, all elect. 22' cov palio, ..,,.·ell landscaped, Only $26,9j(). ' P.\V.C. 546-5440 -$23,500 DIAL du•><l 642-5618 Chari• Assume GI Loon 5 BR, dining room, fam- tly room. 2111 baths, '.! lif'f'places. All the CX· 1ras you can imaginr. Prime area. High baJ. ance Cl loan can !)(' a.s- i;umf!d by ANYONE. Full price S39,200. GOOD TERMS. Be quirk! B/B OPEN HOUSE %4S PERHAM, SAT. & SUN. 1-S 01oice property, choicf' lora- lion. 4 Bd1ms. plu.s family rl)'l., 3 baths, Exira large rooms thruou1. $86,500, Sub. mit terms. Sale! contract possible, with SS.cm down. Vacant: shown anytime, Lovely home with sa'ndy beach, good S\~·i~· ming & your boat at your door. Hu ge pr1· vate patio and bayside._ cov~red terr<1ce. $75,000 with excellent f1nanc1ng . \Valter Haase UDO ISLE -VIA GENOA Custom built. Beamed ceilings. Large South patio; landsc aped by Beeson. 3 Bdrs., 2 Baths. Excellent condition. $67 ,000. t Large vie\\' cor ner lot 105 x 138; will build to suit. A:chitect's plans avaUable~ rou ARE RE A DIN G your ad lhtn sit back and RIGHT~ 3 BR 2 baths with listin to' the phone rin&! buill-ins we can sell to Vel!.l:========ol (no down. payment) I hope Gener•I 1000 Mrs. Raulston OPEN HOUSE SUN. l · 5 . SOPHISTICATED conAGE .. Walk to Little Corona from this newly dee· orated 2 bedroom, 1 bath home, with fire- 1 " pla~~ & separate guest accomodations. An exciting home on a lot & a half. $47,500. DlsHnctive 7 story rolonial home \\'ilh 3:xJO i;q I!, 5 bdrm, 3 baths. ro1mal dining room, sweeping view of golr courst'. Truly a home for fan1ily fun & rntcrtalning. Price bt>Jo\v reproduction cost. CAl.!L DAN LEE 540-llal. you are hrsl, Newport at Victoria FOREST E. OLSON ' co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS --546-4141-' (Open Evenings) Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. 675-3000 2407 E. Coast lhYy., Cdbt It's Assumabie 1\1 67o -Sl76 i\10. PAYS EVERY T 111 NG. 3 big bdnns, fan1ily rooin, ,.,./per. feet patio ror fan1ily fun. This Ont \Volf'l· last long. Come sre & enjoy, CALL 540-1151 Heritage Real Estate See private beach living in action. Join us at lovely 3 bdrm. 3 bath home w/formal din. & sunroom. Gate guard will admit you to 2591 Bayshore Dr. $58,950. lt1rs. Harvey -- ' Inc. Realtors EXCITING ·ocEAN VIEW 1-iohn macnab REAL TY COMPANY 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 642-8235 !anytime) DELUXE DUPLEX An exceptionally lovely 3 BR. 2 Ba. C.ameo 1-l ighlands home. 180' ocean view. All elec. kitch.: new carpeting; prof. landscaping. , ' - INVESTORS No Fool'in -$16,500 PRICE AND AT THE --l!EACH 1800 BRICKS ClO!l! to sand at Ne\\'J)Ort ?.Take up !he massi\•f' patio! Beach \5 today's besl buy. T"·o large bed· \Vhere in the \\'Orld "can you rooms, 2 Baths.•Oeluxe Four Bedrooms•. Pool North Sidl". JNDOQR.Qtrr. DOOR F A M I L Y HOME. S6.!Xll,imerovements in alum. inum ]iifio and S\Vli\fMING POOL addt'd. Large living Shuffleboard court. Only ........... $46,950 Chuck Place A REAL CHARMER-$32,950 ., A lifENT1GN ' Ea.sl..!lide Costa A1e-sa and jusl ·a block from the Santa Ana ~ntry Club. Six priclC' of $16,SOO Full Price J bedrOOm, 2 baths, l"Ofllplete. 1,Y carpt'1ed NEAR THE BEACH. All {')ec. buji! in kitchen. F"abWously large brick patio. Room for boat or trailer! Vacant-~sslon on credit approval. Sl50 per month lofaJ! Inner tircle Monie near park a.nd school. Be11 u. tilul appointmenllt and (·lean lhrougnout. Spa· t·ious, airy feeling. ~ bdnns, 3 baths, fonnal dining and family room. S42,950. find a J bedroom, 2 bath kitchen + built-ins. Liv· home, NEAR TBE BEA.Of ing room 10 lazily \•irw with electric built-ins, excel-sails and sailors from lent carper, boat door to sun deck M veranda - Dack yarrl, and VACANTI! Luxury living mean big LESS THAN $2.CKKI DOWN!! rt'nls!! ~t you hurry! room, den, dining art'll and Cameo Shores, S BR two baths. aosc to schools, S79,500 3 Bedroom, 2 baths. 20x20 family Toon1, dining area; fireplace; carpets & drapes. Freshly decorated. A big house. 1650 sq. ft., for little money. \Vestcliff shopping. · DWnel'lihip units. 5 hvo bf'd. ioom plus l ont bedroom Cottage. Concrete drive, top _thacle throughou1, plenty of ~rivacy for all $69.500 full ';rice llJld excelJcut financing availablt. " • "For A \Vbe Buy" • Colesworlhy & Co. 4 BR.-WATERFRONT WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 7700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ,......, Open 'tiJ 9 P?.f ' Dolphin Terroce aean & ready • 2 Bdrm .. den • 2n baths . elec. kitch- rn. Dbl. i;arage &. covered boa! port. $39,SOO CURT DOJH, ReaHor 1730 \\'. Coast llighway ~ E\'rs, 673-3468 •)1•··--·-1·1' •t" •• :-a \or ••• ,,_i, 546 -5990 e OPEN HOUSE e Sat. & Sun, 1-5 2341 Azure Ave. SANTA ANA HEIGHTS J & ~n. 1% baths. 20 x 24 Gar., 70 x 135 rornrr lot: room for boats, trailer, pool, plu~. $28,j()() • lrrms. Own /Bkr. 6i5-IS12 e FOR SALE e Real Estate Office Comple1e with namt' &·multiplr. Newport Beech Rea lty 2621 Nr1,·port Bh·!I . NB. • 675-1 642 • --LEASE -- WE SELL A HOME can 6'5-0000. EVERY 31 MINUTES SPANISH. SENOR! Walker & Lee 4 BEDRooMs 2100 1iarbor Blvd. 11 Adams ~~~~~ef~ 4![~~ ~9491 Spanish tlle f'nlry. l\las· Open 'Iii 9 Pr.1 sive: do u b J e fl replace. transportation aDd shopping. After 6 p.m. 6Tr3520 A REAL BUY AT S27,750! ii;iiiiiiii.,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii * 3 BR l %. bath, hdwood !loor~. cpt.s I drps, frplc, doublt! gar a g "· beautiful fenced yard. S2~,fi00 iiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\I Open flame cooking i n a gourmet k I t c h e n sur· Evenings Call 548-326.1 Horses! Horses! * ZONED for BUSINESS 1 BR cottage \\'/gar $14.500. * $21,000 • no loan charges · S4000 dn • O\\'ner \Vil! curry. 3 BR, 1% bff!h, interior re- decorated. Vac. & immed. occupancy. Charming vrcw custom home, zont'd for horses. 3 BR 214 ba, 2 frplcs. in beautiful ron. rlilion. O\\·ncr"anxious. Back Ba). rounded by convenient l!miiiiOiiiiii ...... iiiiiiiiii" built.:Jns .. The big plus c 1 PROPERTY foatuco. a hug< play '"'· • Walls of glass scan 8 srtting Columbu.~ \\'OUld lo\·r. Only :529,950--CaU nov; Senor!! NEAR SHOPPING Wells-Mccardle, Rltrs. 1810 Ne1vport Blvd., C.M. · 5,IS..7729 anytime JEAN SMITH Realtor FANTASTIC BUY 8?x2l3' & has a good sound 3 BR homr Gil f!'ont o/ lot. Owner will finance !hr prop. erty -no loan fees. Call I ,::~:::::=~~~~~ oow lo's3'9~soo $21,500 fMi.3255 Nf'\Y Joan 7%i ~-\Vo\v! One of only 35 beautiful -•~oo~E='·.!"1!!r~1h~S~1'!! .• ~Cos~ta'l'!M~c~"':oll to~n homes in exclusive 'OPE_N_A-FTERNOONS-Newport Beach area. 4 Newpo rt NEW CARPET NO Ql'ALlfYING Everyone can as:;un1e this J\1ary Lou 1\.larion WESTCLIFF. $23,500, LOT Choice corner -1255 Son1erset Lane. Best available & lOY.'est price in this desirable area of expensive, custom homes. Fee sim· ple, 82xll0. Owner \vill carry 1st T.D. J\lary Lou Marion MAGNIFICENT WATERFRONT _ft Pier & 60' dock. Lge. liv. rm., fan1. rm., gourinet kitchen, wet bar; BR. balconies· ; 4300 sq. ft.: 60' sun deck; great. down chan: nel vie\v .. ~1str. BR . has O\.vn fireplace. Al Fink COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., NEWPORT BEACH 833-0700 acrt'll o( ma ni cured 1218 Cambrid9e Lan• grounds, putting JtTeen. \Vestclill's most co Io r f u I club house, heated and home -\\'8.lnut kitch. _ Is. flllered pool. Tv.·o excl'p- land bar _ lors ol bit-ins. tionally large bedrooms, liled blllhi, stone Orr· 2.170 sq, fl. ?.lin1mun1 up-placl' and lair-st of ali at Victor ia 646-11111 (anytime) hiJ.?:h FHA Joan. ·--·-~-A-• ._._ .. _., _ 546-9521 ., 54~31 ~~ kerp -Orif'n!a l garden. d e I u x e built-ins. Un· ""~~!!!!!!~~~:":~ Olvnr r niovrd 11or1h -anxi-equaled a t this pricl'. 11· lmmar. Cond ~.S"6,:JOO Carp., drape~. built-il)ll. etr. \Vondrrful. ramily ho1nc! CAYWOOD REAL TY BEACHHOME- Oxnard shore.$ S32 500 3 bdr 2 ba. hll·ins, i~t.r~om: crpis: drps, clO!le' lo school, mkt~. Submit tenns. (2131 841).2815 Is Your Ad in our cla.sllilieds ! REFRESHING 10-· 4 Bil 2 l1111h~. l1r11,lrd I1Hrrrd . pool. sack say cul-de.sac. ~0 ~~t ~ ~:~ ~n~~'.s \~~~~a~~ ~;;;~~;;;;;;;;~~~ Read The Great Orange Coast's ous! S2.1,250. Only 10'0 do11·n. FAR EL WALKER _ Call no1\·. 6306 \V. Coast Hwy., N.8. • 548-1290 • REALTOR Q46.i414 $385/mo. 645-0303 \\'cs!cliH Shopping. Asking NEED Sharp young lie. R.E . !l>AILY l'Il..OT WANT ADS 1 Sameofll! will be looking for ' BPJNG RESULTS! ii. Dial 642..5618 ,...D>A160VIDSON R•alty NO matter what ii i!. ,·ou S33,9'"' 1\6.'l-CI. sales woman part or fuU ' • ,,. '911 11.t Jr11rbor Crnlcr ,,.., 1· N 'd "'"0111 -. ~vrs . .J-·•·· can sell It "'ith a DAILY PROPERTIES WEST inic. 0 "xp. rcq · ..,..;r DAIL 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.1\1. Y PILOT \VANT ADS! PILOT Oa~~ified ad. 10'18 Baysidr. N.B. 675-41:!0 \Vhnc .t.1crhanl~ '! No. l Doily Newspaper! '--'C:C...C==:.::::.c=-~1>=-~==--".:.::.:c=::=:..:..=_:_:....:.... -----:;::::=-:"=:=i:::s:::-_t:-:w~i~th~A~ss:!:•~·~r=a~n~c~e:__ ______ ~ B11y 1vitla Confidetace NEWPORT BEACH 0.FFICE WE PRIDE OUR SELVES ON HELPFUL COURTEOUS CORONA DEi. MAR OFFICE SERVIC ES FOR ALL MATTERS PERTAIN ING TO REAL ESTATE "HAPPY LIVING" 1" 1' D du< i " q Dan "LOOK" - 7 1/J 0/a FINANCING IS 26 1 OCEAN BLVD Thom'""· • • • • • • "GOODITE LANDLORD"-$27,450 IRVINE TERRACE -$69,500 HAPPINESS O ., m1mb1r of 1/1 '••'· JUST REDUCED TO S59.000. O\VNER <To This 4 bedroom plus family room homr CORONA DEL MAR DON THOM'50N $41-1111 , hat's 'vhat you'll say \\'hen you stt tv. w .,1cliff Offic•. \VIu. nNANCE at ?~,.~. BALBOA· DUPLEX ONLY TAKES SS,000 DN. 2 ba 1 and lari;:r pool, \\'ith 3 baths, \vas PENINSULA this charming 3 bedroom. Ui, 8 • lhou,ehtfuHy buill: the bencfllll includr H• corn•' fo thi1 ••· POINT! Four bt-drooms, BALBOA! O\VNER \VlLL F"lNANCE? m05l nt'w home. \Vall·I0•\\'811 carpctin,e, everything you'\'f' ~n looking for in ct nlly op•n•d N.... lhl"H' balh!i, and family room. Exlcnsh·r drape!\, living room fireplact>. :::vrrything comfort, conv('niencc and location in port •••ch office ,1 remodrling donr-in 1967. Unusual floor Bring $5,000. and buy th1 ~ attl'Bclivcly handy in !hi~ spact'-saving built-in kit· fashionable Irvine Trrracc The pool is 901 Do~•• Ori~•, Suit• plan. 1 · h d d 1 1 ,,9 ·-N ood h llh d. h h 11 . '! a special feature !iel in lush tropical 645•2000 urrus r . up rx or .,,,, ··""'· . r11r i;:: c l'n \\' J!i was er. s \'arant. 1• ove S\Jrroundings. Think of the enjoyment 11•. w;th • well-Evrs. 67J·O.li9 · 1 eight in ? A refrrshlnr fl('\\' life is \\'Bit· !hi• nr"\·id"•, Tu;, homt offo1110 match· bay ll('11ch. One bedroom each unit, argc .. ,. v ,_ rounded I~ ve•• ct · in.c [or you. Be surr and takr 11 look. lrss lh·in.c. is M.leably priced. Makt' your r111 in Ioctl ,,,1 ,,. front patio. 575.3000 Eves. 518-796:.? happy drclsion no"'· '••t. p,tf,,, '' '' E•STILUFFS llG "2,5 00 675.:~ooo . E\'r:>1. fi7:\-0:>5.J. ~ -645·2000 E,·r$. 673-1355 HOME FOR "THIMk·YOUNG" Delip:htful combination o[ exciting b.1y and ocean vie\"s, plus all the amenitil'~ of luxury livinia:. 3 f'Xlra largl' view bt'd· roo1ns. plus conver!ible drn and convf'ni· rnt 1'8tio • drck ideal for cntrrt11ininii;. O" nc.rshii:> or both land and homr, 110' Frontage, worth approximately SlOOO Pf'r [001, all Rt INVEST-TODAY prier. Ex· ru!fvrs \\·Ith an rye on !he futur{' should in1·C'~•l!!'alc t,his \\1thout f11\I. 67:>-3000 Evrs. 548-8868 ~now" ti "luy••• Ai· OPEN 1-IOUSE Sat. & Sun. 1.5 P.r-.1. COaONA DEL MAR SURPRISE ! BUYER -$42,500 1!1t1"t"-"et 11 t ,,1,,..f.n. •11d wilh hi' Out n( this 11·11rld dcror innovalinn~. ln· Ch''''"' Wh'''· ,,. , • I ' I ' I ' I F.AST BLUFFS! 900 Chrs1''''' Pl0 oe .,, 500 nowt IJt o oc • t•t11 en vt u11 c111 · " -' tcrior dCC01'ator's O\\'ll Momr . Brrath· '''"dtr •t•~;,,, in tod1v'1 t ll irnpo·!1nt i nd Lookin.i:: fur a BIG 1nai.trr IJN!1·001n:' IALIOA J UNITS-$69,995 Ocean vitc\\', It's older, built lo Jasl, solid takin~ly ne1\'. U your tastC' is !or "TO· P••i•n,•d •0••11whet cornplk1t1d ~!t•s fir btvo~ th1 Thill has it -hvo room~ "'"T'f' ron\i:!rl· and ilurdy. Spacious 3 brorooni 2 bath, DA'i''.'in bold, brilliant colorlni;s, \\·Rll d e,or1tor, ~ c.ep1city of !ht client to obt1i11. W1 e1e ed Into Onf', t1nd it's dtlightful. BALBOA ! Three un1ls plus bachelor! decoratjons. carpelln11:, custom built J. hepp, te h1 v1 0011 ibo1rd, . tf 20' (rp.ntagr, cornrr location, OV{'rr;ized furnitun.> in matching desi~ns, cabinetry o!"t c:olor inltrior 111 o cl t I coordin t• 4 llDROOMS -IRVINE TERRACE $46,000 v Pru:~ .. .. $42.500 furnisht'd: Octan view fro~ upper. Ne 2 car garage, {'Xlra slorRJ::I'. llln{'SS hand-crafted, including mastl'r built-in tor, 1tyli1t i nd dt· 645-2000 Eves. 645-2123 Bay. Top rental arf'L $6:1,995. make.$ quick Mlr nrcessary. \V c'vc got a bed, lhl'n by all n1ean~ lr-t us :iho\\· you 1i9ntr. Wilt of ,,,.. 615·2000 good thint hrrr and !IOm{'onr 1rho knQ\\'S thi~ homr Th{'rr arr :l hedrooms, 2' 111l- loca.I valor~ \\'ill pi('k up a bari.:ain. Ask· st11irs inl'hidini: onC< hui::r lfi7r \\·Uh 1'V 1ng $49,500. Come and 8e(' ror your.self. BJld bullt-in S tereo. Thr ptlC'r [11.r ht-\o\\I 675-3000 E\'{'S. 548-8868 ach1al 1·~1 Come and ~Ct' for your.1f'lf. erel conhtclor, \11ow1 •1lu11 , n d cash, 1p1cieli1l in L;clo li lt OPF:N llOUSE ~t. & Sun. 1 • .j P.P.I. JRVlNE TEIU!ACI::. CD.\l-i06 1' Thanta }'our 9"<1r0t1111,. 11\'0 ·on{'. ht1lf blttu:. family roorn and JJ(IOI M• ... _ $46,000 $4.5-2000 t.:vrs. ti73·135:i DON'T MISS lHIS -$34,HO ctJFFH.AVEN! Plrnty of room for fam- ily fun, lndoor lllld out. Thrl'f' bedroom ~ ldt>aJly located c.l05e to all schools. Prlct now -·-·---·--··· -· -··~~ $34,900 &45-2000 EYts. 548-4810 • CONDOMINIUM NEAR OCEAN $32,500 CONOOML .... 111~1 ' f l\f' 1nin11tN: frnn1 Ocean and Bay. rac1nic park and pool. Approxlm11.teJi 1500 sq, rL Thrtt bt'd· rooms. t\\•o ba~. large l1vinr; room with fireplace.. C&rpets, draJl(':s .l kHchi'.!n built-Ins, l\,·o car ~a.rage. $32,500. Con- venient terms! 645-2000 f.\'l'S, 548-6966 FREE i Are ~e• ta.Iii .. f11n H"""''' ef •111 ''FREE'' otter to crubt • ye• •• lb i•I• •f y•11t lil•rtte1 De ye11 we•t .... ,1"11 ,. ,..... ~ ... ,, .... "WMt ,nc. .,.. ... I .. , .. "Wllet wltl I ... ,,_ tlMJ Mle ofter ell c"h o,. NchrctH7" "WW •19 tM •.rlen r,,M 1f lhflfttt7" "How de '" tlOMCo pro""' ,,,..,., .. "Strtetrld I Celrry e JN Trw.t °""'" '""-•d "'""' -• otl i"'Jl"'-1 ... ti ... ere litt-'llfetttly -4 frMly ~ wttllevt oblltl'tl•11. Cell IOfld lot "' ,,..,. •ht " c•• d• fM ye1. l lttt.r effke wlll Mfft ye1 ~.,.11, wefl. 675-:lOOO [\'t'!I 646-S227 flld w•t1rfront p•o p· LIVING AT ITS IEST-$57,500 ••ti ••· c1ui11-W•Jtt> "Charm-R-plrnty" av.•11.ils yt111r ifUipt'('· lucky u1! to htvt 1uch 675-5764 tio n hrrf'. Custom constructC'd throu11h· t .,,1,1a, tnd htlplul mtrnbt• of ou• Co•• out. :l Bedroom. :l be.th loaded with hue· ~nt dtl Mir ,,1,1 qroup. Cht•ltn• h,, ,n ury fealUN'Jt, bll'nded in sparkling <ksiJ;:n 1n•i1bl1 ,,1 11 ••cord, i1 • dtdict!td, out. and lwaulifully dt'OOt11lrd. 0u'llt'r "•ill goin 9, hirdwotkin9 indj•iduil, who 9l1dfv carry l&rf:il' 2nd Trust ~ with 5flf'Cilll iht•t• ht r t~p11;1nct ind ho1r11 i1r1prov1· Jl!lymrnls. Brst Coron11. drl 'P>lar IO<'ll· ''"nt id••• with he r cliinh, She ''" h1 I,, Tin n. 1t·5 the <'asiM:I home buying de-.. '_, I h ' cislon you'll rvrr mRkt'. you 1cq..,ir1 t"' ino o orne yow are 1e• . 675-3000 'Ev". f>75·6772 1"11· WISTCllffl OfFICI 645-2000 fOI De"' Drl•e S1ite 12' BAY and BEACH REALTY INC. SllVING THI H.&11011: All.A SINCI 1t4' I C·~~~c~·· MM Offlu 675-3000 2~011. Ceoit Hlghw1y .. ......... This l&r&e home ii lo- cated on .. tree llned etrttt 2 blkl. from 5hop-. piJli. The 4th bdrm. could be a private sulte ideal for the llve1'n relati\le, Double gai·a~ and hnge yard. To t a I paym('nls $150/month incl\1des tax· '' and insurance. I 546-9521 or 540-6631 lM J K .• NICHOLS Do you have a VA loan bul a.re getting ready to make a $4QOO to $8000 dn. Pft¥ment on a home! For about S2000 down you can have the nealeat hoo1c you·v~ Sttn yf't in the hest area of Oran~c Counly ••• MESA VERDE \Vith the mon('y you've saved on th~ down ti.'t)'· menl, you ca n invei1t and have a $1000 to $2000 cashters check sen t to you every year to spend on the kids at Chrlstm&rS. \Vhen this is a f)061ti\lt' fact, is it wise to think otherwise"? P.S. New Gold Car\lE'ting Beautiful Pane ing ~. Block to Park 1800 Square Fi'f't FonnaJ Dining l~OOln PLUS A BIG SURPRISE Open Houses THIS WEEKEND K"P thl1 h.111dy directory with you this wuk· end u you 90 houM·huntlng. All th• locatlon1 !lated Nlow are ducrlbed In great•r d•tall by •dv•rtl1ln9 ela•where In toclay'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. Patrons showing open hou1e1 for ula or to rMf ar• urged to li1t auch Informa- tion In thl1 column each Frld11y. (2 Bedroom) 900 Chestnut Place ' (East Bluff} NB 64$-2000 : 64$-2123 Eves. (Sat & Sun 1·5.) (2 Bedroom & Family or Den) 1518 Dolphin Terrace (Irvine Terr.) Cd~1 642-6472 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1218 Cambridge Land f\Vestcliff) NB 646-7414 (Open afternoons) (J Bedroom) 2187 lrvine (County Corridor} NB 646-3255 (Sat 1-5) *681 Vista Bonita (The BluUsl Cd~t 67$-5930 . (Sat & Sun 1-5) *242 Joann Street (College Park) CM 548-9578 (Please call first) 459 E . 19th St. (O!C Irvine) CM 646-8811 !Sal & Sun 1-5) 2.591 Bayshore Dr., Newport· Beach 833-0700 or 644-2430 (Sun 1·5) • (J Bedroom & Family or Den) 3098 Donnybrook Lane, Costa ?.1esa 549-0909 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1495 Skyline Drive, Laguna Beach ·• 830-2825 (Sat & Sun 10-4) 2341 Azure Ave. {Santa Ana Heights) 67>-1642 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 287 Nassau Road (College Park) C~1 646-3255 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 1147 Gleneagle, Costa Mesa 540-1720 (Sun 1·5) 717 Poppy Ave., Corona de! l\1ar 67$-2101 !Sun 1-5 :30) 1959 Vista Caudal, Corona de! f\-1ar 61$-5930 !Sat & Sun 1·5) 14 Bedroom) *2431 Fordha m Dr. !College P ark) CM (Sat & Sun) 1226 Polaris (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun ) (4 Bedroom & Fami:y or De~) 442 Riverside Drive, Newport Beach 548-2986 (Sat & Sun 10·6) 11 5 Milford (Cameo Shores) CdM 675-6996 · · (Sat"& Sun 12-5) · 4645 Perham (Cameo Shores} CdM 67$-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2208 Fortuna, Newfl(>i:_t Deach 646-7711 (Fi'!., Sat & Sun 11-4) 1133 Gleneagle Terrace, Costa l\1esa 646-4494 1Sal & Sun 1·5) 1430 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores ) NB 646-1550 !Open daily) 1941 \Vindward Lane (Baycrest) NB 646-3255 ISat & Sun 1·5) *706 K Thang-a (lr'iiJ"le Terrace) Cdr.'I 64$-2000: 673-1355"Eves. (S•t & Sun 1·51 2341 Irvine (Back Bay) NB 540-1720 (Daily 1-51 1907 Lee,vard Lane, Newport Beach 540-1120 rsun 1-61 1380 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 225 North Star Ln. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (S;it & Sun) IS Bedroom & Fam;Jy or Den) *4536 Ro~ury Rd (Cameo Shores) CdM 67$-5320 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 3032 Capri Lane (l\·Tesa Verd'"e) C~1 540-1151 (Sat & Sun 1·6) 8882 La Roca Ave., Fountain VaUey 540-1720 rsun 1-5) 1712 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB (Sat & Sun) DUPLEXES FOR SALE (2 Bedroomj 719 Marigold. Corona d el Mar 67>-2101 (Sun 1..1:30) .. , ... ** W.wft911t --· ------. HOUSES ,OR SALE "'ycrest HOUSES FOR SALE Aero•• stre.t-16th Hole Me•• Verde Golf Cte. ------------- r rid•Y, A119ust 1, 1969 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES fOR SALE MAKE OFFER New homes, ready to move in. 2 to 5 bed· rooms, 2 to 3 bath.s . v.& mile from beach. First payment up to 60 day.s arter·move in. VA/FHA Terms. From $21,990 The Beach (on Brookhurst 1 mlle South of Adams) 962 -1353 DAILY PILOT :J3 HOUSES FOil ULI , VETS Stt our deal on this vae&Jrl ~ 3 bdnn. 5 mlnutet beach, $450 will mo\I• you In on approved ettdit. Ari, SLATES REALTY 841-3519, Evea. ~ SHOPPING FOR A HOME? Call, write or visit our office for your free ·copy o( our "Homes For Living .. magazine -with pie· lures. prices and details of our select list· ings in Newport Beach, Corona del Mar and Costa Mesa. TRANSFERRING? Ask us for a "llome For Living" magazine from any part of the country. We have associate of- fices throughout the U.S. RED CARPET REAL TY, 2025 IV. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach 92660. (714) 67l>OOOO. 2979 Mindanao Dr. 200) sq. ft. 3 Bdnn, l bath, den, tamlly room. livini 1'00m, bul\t0ln kitchen. By Owner. $32.500. lo\V down, 51,i,% loan. 546-1218. ' 1941 Windward LaM Well des!&:~ tor Uie gro\\•lne: family. 4 bdrm1, 2~~ baths. Patio otf mastf'r bedroom. formal dtnfrw room, beamed '"''"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"!!!!!!!!!!!!~ University Park 1237 Lido Isle 1351 celllnc in llvinz room, large Assume 51,1~~ loan 6112 .,, f!ntry. lar&;e family room La C t H " 'th b"·" ~p1 Lo ot r ge ~s om . ome Assumable loan. Beaut. dt"c-;~-~P~C:· st~. Very Beautiful, -w11h pool or 5 BR hon~ nr park Pool sized yard. OPEN SAT/ Near !\IV Pf oou~. l bdr. ~. Stt ihi~ ont'! ' SUN I~. or by appolnlnlent. 2 ba, tam rm, 2 breplaces, • Red Hill Realty E S H 'vet ba.r, J\.lany custom tea· 18068 Cul Dr 1 . J AN MIT tures. Open Sunda,y 1·5. Own. OPEN 9 AM ~r 8 p~ ~':.i,. Realtor "' ......,, · '' ~ ---'---- College P&rk 1115 !rvina Terrace 1245 ATTR.. 2 Br., oew trple .• new cpl.s. & drl)!t. new bl.t-ins. lmmae. cond. Lovt.ly palio. A BES?' BUY. $47,000. BEAUT. cust.-blt. hoim: 3 Br .. 3 Ba.; lge. party room . :l,000 Sq. ft. Bit-ins, dlx. featurea. OWTil."r must Rll. $20,200 FULL PRICE• FHA Loan 11t S"li~ with lo- lal payments of $123 P.J.TJ• nral 1harp doU l'lou.se ~ 3 queen 11iui bedroom. Gor. geous pullman· balh Anyone qualifies. Hure 25 X JOO lot with double &al'l.ge. llome has a built in vacuum. SI.Ibo mit you r down to WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 7&n Edlnll'r 14.2-445.J or 540-3140 Open E~. General ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 171h St . ., 646 4494 Ele9ant East Bluff Uvin9 An outstanding lovely 3 BR and Den. 2 bath, one level home \\•ith lwo patios open- ing on professionally land- scaped and maintained gar. den a nd greenbelt. Luxuri· ous rhroue:hout. $42.00J. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2043 W1$lclltf Dr. 646-7711 Open Ew•. Beach Combers Dell9ht This hvo bedroom, 2 bath home has a den. 2 pe.tios, an atrium otr n1aster bedroom. courtyard entry. forced 11ir heat, brick Jireplace and much morr. Sleep to ~ sound or lhe S urf it':oi: right al the beach. Asking $26,500 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E . 17th St., 646-4494 EASTSIDE Spectacular Buy 2 BR home & ttntal unit + 2-2 BR Duplex units on large lot 1vilh private entranres. 011•ner will carry lst TD \\•ilh cuITCnt interest rate!. Appoinrment only. 1860 Newport Blvd., 01 Rlt.r. 646-39'28 Eve. 644-16Ja Lachenmyer Office Open Sat:/Sun. 1000 COUNTRY GENTLEMAN 4 BDR\\I., 3 bath. lilod· rrn ramblini:: r An ch homr on es tate size lot. HORSES PERJ\UTIED. Ovt>r 1 acrr in onir of Nev.•porfs fi nest areas. Seein'= is belif'ving •. , $92,000. UPPER IAY EXECUTIVE f.ntl'rlaining Is A cinch in this nicely planned hunll' "·ith o~·rrsizr roorn.11. Large living ahd family rooms. cet•h \\'Ith thrir O\vn fh'€!pllcc plus 11ereenrd lilnai. Bcaull- fully drcoralcd &:. land· seaped. Secludr.d rear ~·ard. Thi"!'!! bedrooms, 21,1, bath 5. intercom, many extras fl'.'aturts. Vi<'w of upprr My and F .. nstbluffs. $49. 750. Can 1 assume 7•,;, 1oa.n. · IAY FlONT Thi~ i.11 onr of a f Pw primr locallon Jn All of J[11nt1ngton II arb o r- 4 BR, tam. rm .. dlnin~ rm., \\·rt bar 11·ith: 1. A lari:;r bay 1•lr1v. 2. Na- tural protl'C"lion from prevailing \\'Inds on pl'l· lion & dock an>a. 3. Sun on pe.Lio A rlock au dn.y. 4. No &Unshine In the home, leA\"e the drapes o{X'n for all day vi~w. Plus much. much mo~ $125.000. 01\'Tif'r ,v;n l'X· chani;;:e for Income prop- 1 r rty or land. 644-3255 . .too :£. 17th~ Co!lta l\f~sa 1000 BIG POOL BY Chvnrr Tustin 3 BR, + SPfln. sdn, sunken lhTm, Big Yard.. So/4•/. "'ailed court yd. beaut l BR, 2 BA. c:rp\5. $28,900 crpts &: drps, gd. loan. lo in- $4000 dn. OWNER. 5@-9578 te Located In a VffY popular ,:o=o.,:;,:...::,~=::...::::..::.:: rest. no pis. $55,500. prestlg-e area, this immacu-EXTRA LARGE 3 Bedroom. 675--0333 late 4 bedroom, 2 be.th homt 2372 Rutgers. CM. i-::::::::;====== o!te~ • larre, wiiffu.:? and /===*=-==~~''°*===I Corona del Mar popul&r Door plan. The lttp ~;;;~~~=:;:;1..;;;;;::::;:;:=~~~;;;;; down llvine: room and formal ~ewport Beach 1200 $100,000 Be Sure And Read This Ad 1250 CHARi\tING family . home: 4 Br. 3 Ba. 3 car gar. All blt-lrL,. Nrw cprr. 1D8 Via i~lorence. $69,g;;(l SHORE PROPERTIES 3U6 Newport Blvd. • NE\VPORT BEAOI 673-9060 4,000 sq. ~- 101 VIA EBOLI NEEDED 3 or 4 BR Glen Mar. Cash to VA or FHA k>an • qulclr n- cro1v • no point!'. Call lt-1ur. lelle Olsen BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-8531 Eves. 536-2l23 J BDR~l. 2 BA, fam rn1. Jes.s than 1 yr old. Assunie 6% % IOAn. Near Yorktown A Th!! truth in lending Law won't let us tell you how much the payment& are on this 4 bed· room college park home, but we can say they're. tow and they include. taxes, and we 011.n say that the average 11nnual intc-re.st rate is 5\0:%. An FHA loan 11•hich means you can usume it. and \\"e can't say how mUch the down payment \\ii.I be, but \\"e will say il"s well worth your "·hile. lo find oot. \\'e can tell you more about it over the phone, but you'll have to call us cause \\'e don't have )'OU1' number, ~is ours. dining are klea.l for large NEWLY LISTED gatherings. The o"·ner h11.s ~IKE '!0 • li\le on a small 2 Bdrm. on comer lo!. w/ been lransferred and his island. F~r sale. by O"'~r hdwd. firs., forced air heal, company has pureha!led 111~ due. to divorct'. Channing lge. country-style kitchen: home. VAcant 11nd ready for old house on Ne. w P 0 r I nr. shops & beach. $311,ao<l. 4 Rrl t". 3\li balh. 3-cAr garag,, Bushard. $27,900. principals c:1-pt~. drps. Unusual 1--ea· only. ture~. Built tn 1967. Owner O\\'NER " 962-2507 12131 2W-3101 Eves: (213) YOUNG & BEAUTIFUL quick sale. $32,950. l sland. 7 room11., 2 balks. OPEN Sat. & Sun. }.j 246-0100 J Br. 3 Ba. lrg tam rm off Has been c om p I et e I)' 4i4 Heliotrope CASUAL ELEGANCE builtin kitchen. Rm for pool 894-5313 · n.>mOO~led -modern kitchen CHARMER \\"/blt-1n.o;. Lots of storage. New England style 2·~1ory 3 Used briek frpl le dining bdrm., 2 bath!i; vaeant' & room \\"Lll. Bathrooms new ready for ON'Upaney. $39,j()(). wt.su nken tu~. La r g e OPEN Sat...& Sun. 1·5 Unw;ual homf' on primr 60' &. boat. S36,500. 96Z--0737 corner, providM u-em endous 10172 Suntan Circlfo, HB charm/prvcy. 3 Bd. +guest" 4 BDR, 2 story Prestige apt. So. patio/pool. Sl.25M. home. bro k e r I E 111 a - 20 Office• Serving Orvia"e Coumy sundeck ""/v1ew. Ne\\•ly oos He\io1mpe R. C. GREER, Realty Schrader call for ?.1yrt]e painted out.side.. Ae.r~ss MUST SELL 3355 Via Lido 673·9300 ~tct..a.rty 431-2668. strttt from Bay on l sides . • 3 bl •.• 1 O\,•ntr ha.o; n1oved; beautiful OCIU rom ocean. 4 bd f il d" . $42,500 buys this .f bdrm mi., a~ Y. rm. ining 153 6 Golden \\'nt 1 Blk. So. San Diqo 1-'wy. Belboa Island 13SS OPEN HOUSE Sat. & Huntington 'Harbour 1405 ~ 4008 ... .,8 rm., ""ei bar, "hl!e carpet-nume . .. ... rcus, '' . · • d k' m 500 67" "'~ ,,.. ,.20 u1g rapr11: as lrl6: ~. . .....,,,,,.,.. or .. -..... TRAPPED O~NGE COUNTY'S Stt this cum.om built Corona Beth-Bath·Bath·B•th Bf't\".•een the golf coul'!lf: & the CHINA COYE Sun. 212 S•pph ire Ave . 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I J BR. :Z Ba &. den. 24x30 brick pelio, exposed beam ceiling5, completely remod. By owner. GTa-0204 LARGEST del M11.r quality horn!! just There. 111-e .f~ Plus a foreve.r bay. ,spacious 4 bdrm. \'iew step! from the best Dee.an \•ie1v. 3 · 1''rplcs ble nd w/ horn<'. 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494 beach . .f bdrms + loft for fresh paint for e:<ll-a charn1. Open Sal/Sun Allernoon ............................... 1 pool table or '?. Unique us~ \Vidow will trade d o w n . 2{)1.a Galatea Terrace, I. T. or stone tor !ireplAC!! & built. S3.500 Handles. in BBQ. Call tor Appoint-Hal Pinchin & Assoc. n1ent to 1e& 1his unu11ual 3900 E. Coe.st Hwy. 6i5-4392 Ivan \Veils ' home at the :::C'Y O\\'NER * beach. Dee. nt Home, 3 BR, ulil Roy J. Ward Co. r m. sewing rm, !iv rm Huntington Beach 140o TRY THIS ONE- FOR SIGHS! Brand new And right near the beach. 4 Beautiful bedrooms. 2 hath5. Dramatic. raised <:t'iling living room \Vith di.~­ HUNTINGTON HARBOUR BAY FRONT 16m Bolero Lane. Beaut~ ful .f bedroom. 3 bath. c:ar· peted. built-ins, dock faciU- tle11. Owner 111111 moved East necessitating sale. $79,500. (714) 675-6050 -., ... ,.,a..& 0 (Baycl""'!st OU'kel w/,,plc & ocean ... ,w. 1430 Gll.laxy fAG-1550 "' 1 i==~======I Roomy kit w/bltin~ & ATl)'tlne can assume & pay.II avocado shag crplg thruout. tinctive fil'l!'place. An all ~:O~~~~~~~I glass garden kitchen takes -;; Sl36/monlh including prin-Front yd iv/patio & cabana. ,;pl•. ;,,. .. .,, "'" • ;,. $1600 DOWN 2828 E. COAST HWY. the .. erk"' out of housework Fountain Valley and make1; cooking an ex· 1----------I 1410 sur:ance. This fine 4 bdrm, ~S&l:::.::·000=·,:.67:::J."'90c=:::,,.=---I Corona Del M•r mod!!rn hardwood Qoor home to a (iualilied FHA/VA '\.'«!!-SPACIOUS 67).3770 hu A lovf'ly pool I: l.!l.l'.le en. eran buys this immaculale 3 3 BR & family nn. La rge liv-,I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! °"""" yakrd. Located in Col-BR" den Mesa Verde home. ing nn. Stone frplc. H\\' DUPLEX lege Pat . F-•·-• _,.. c•-l•"•g floors, cpts. & drps. \\'tll So h 1 Ii' ··"\ --'k .......... , '"' • ·.,,.. " kept Pro. 1'-nd!.capcd. Ask-. ut o. l\VBy 1\1Ju1 n w .. • 2437 Fordham Drive Open S•t/Sun 1·5 lush landscaping&. ev@n hu ing S2S,09((. 1ng d1stanc: to EVERY· a hobby •OOi> in garaae. Ow /Bk 646-2414 THING. nus \\'I'll located FHA APPRAISED At ner r • home plus inoome. could be $26, 900 OWNER'S SACRil'ICE the "just right" inveslment 4 BEDROOMS A sbarp house. Royal Homel'i l~Iagnolie & Garlield, F.VJ Nl'lV carpels " dl'H.pPS. run price $28,950 VA or FHA fi . nancing. $29,500 " 4 °" 5 BR. 2 mo. old Harbor for you • live in it year J-IUIJ1 home. LR, DR, Fam. 'round or keep ii for A sum. R \\1th frpl & bar. 3 Ba. mer retreat • South of the Crpts, drps,. many Xtras. hin·a,y for only $4.f,500. perif'ncc. Check these built. ins: \Vall to "'all carpeting, drape11cs, fencing, beaut. fronl yard ldsepg inclu(hng 'prinklel'!l. Drluxe bit-in ap.. pliance.s including: Range, oven. dish"·asheT I: disposal. lfs ready lo move into now. 6601 Lucienla Dr. Hunt. Bch. S27.190. and \\"Orth eve ry pen. ney. CA or FHA. ITI.f) 531-84~D. u AM to 7 PM. Bkr. NE\V ~1eadow Horne, 3 BR & $148.00-PER MONTH! d<0. 131,200. 13700 do, 7~% loan. immed. poss. by Jncludes FHA Loan at 6',b, l\Jeadow Home S a Jes taxes and .insuranCt!. Any·. 962-2760; e.vel'I 675-4900 Xlnt financing. 548-8281 673-1550 1PERRON -~. .. .-.-.. .. ,, . (Big down nee.) N•wporl •t Victoria WALK TO BEACHI 1=~6-4=2·~1~7~7~1 ~AZny~t~imez=::: 1 Furnished 3 BR. 2 Ba. Steps to OC1:!an. $25,000. CAYWqoo REAL TY FABULOUS VIEW \0 THE REAL ~ESTATERS ''. . one can qualily to buy this / "°'========;f 11l1arp 3 kingslze bedrooms. Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 2 bath home. 14 x 24 covered li306 \V. Coast Jh1-y .. N.B. e OPEN HOUSES e 1~~~~~ ~s e 548-1290 e SUNDAY 1·5:30 (anytime) patio leads to huge enclosed 2 BEDR.001\I Home + ~n, yard \\"ilh Jush . greenery. 56x300' lol. S27.950 By Double Garage \\'Ith laundry Owner. 646-6469 a!'ea. Ga.~ built·ins. Submit ==========I your down payment on Laguna Beach 1705 bllJe Pacific. BY O\\•ner, 180 degree view TI9 1\1.ARJGOLD. a everly de. lk'autl1Ul custDm home . of ~ck Bay, 4 BR lt den, ·oorated, ont!~f·a·kind duplex. 4 BEDROOM 3 Bedrooms, 3 Bath5. bit-ins, ?"Pts· drpi. large Front 11nlt ready lo occupy . $22.500 price. -~-------POOL Den&. l...a.Tlt' l!vi.rli room \\'alled 1n yard. $39,950. Immacula~ home with Days 642-6762. Eveg ~ Sun 717 POPPY. Imagine a 4.l ft. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES 18, 900 a really breathtaking view. 49&-3893 lot \\'ith a charming "Coun-Walker & Lee Sounds unbelievable doe!l'l't $105,CXXI BLUFFS Elegant split level try Feeling Home". ii, but it'a true and this Call Jim Cobb 3 br, 3 ba w/ Bay-View. Nr SEMPLE. home'simrru1.culatethrough. pool s. Many cu s. REAL ESTATE 7682Edinger oul. \Vith lour larg!! bed· impmvements, $42,950 lo dn. 251;; E. Coasl Hwy 6r:>-2101 8t24455 or 540-5l40 rooms. lv•o baths. forced 6#-4265 e OPEN HOUSE e -~=Ope~~"-'~"~'='·~~- alr heat. double garage. HUGE HOME Block wall !tnce. and short NeW'port Beach 1200 SAT. & SUil-5 d\stanee to beac:h. Full price 681 VISTA ' NITA 1"our IC'1.•el$ of llL'<ury living. SIS.900. Did I II.ii,)' $18,900!'? REALTORS OPEN Sat k Sun. 4·12 \\'here rise can u tnjoy 3 ~ bdnm. 3 baths. formal How can that be'? You'd 673-4400 Ri\lerside Dr. N.B. Prestige BR .. 2~i batli~ plus pool~ dininsr &:c-scparate family lil>tter see it cause. it's true .. ,,..,...,...,,....,...,,.....,. custom home. 4 BR lge Lca!C/option. S31.950. rooni on quiet cul-de-sac Call 6464494. T ~-r·t 0 1-rumpus rm, .f-level, Fenced ·sovo -~AL TY .• ~~~!· Priced,.,'1i~ht1 at $42,. . arrG~ ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST op ...,a t Y up ex yd 2 1-1-bit ,... ove' ""· .. ~sume " oan. • • .-""• -"'" -31!9 E. £;08S1 Hiway, CdM New on market. 2 B~. hchvd. i;lzed gar off alley. Pool 675 5930 MUTUAL REAL TY llrs. frplcs. FA heat. bit.in 1t7.e lot. CrpL~. drps. ~8-2986 • .::..._~ 842-1418-anytime kitchs, 1arages -between LEISURE LIVING - I FOR Sale. 2 BR, 2 BA, luxury OPEN SAT SUN I 5 Owner Transferred units, g fnt..'f.I yd!!, quiet Cos M S28 500 cond. hy owner. Assume ·• • • 3 Huge Bedroom!!. 2 l1L'l:Uri-~;;.0n'! ::s1! ~ ncll~! ' 61~% loan, S3.DOO dn. Back 1959 VISTA CAUDAL ou.~ bath.11. Entire home i~ , Choice E'side 4-Plex Bay a.rea. (71-IJ 548-6179 eves :I + OEN -!· VJF:\V heautifully d "co r-a·I e d. 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494 Near 17th St., C.Osta f\lesa. 3 & \\•kendl!. BOYD REAL TY Drapes 1hrou~hou1 Near EASTSIDE BEAUTY -2 BR 1 ba It I -3 BR l DELUXE Condo. ma, n y 3629 E. C.oa~t Jlwy, Ccl~I new cafi>Cls. Electric built- ba h /! I •11 1•· .. _ xt~. 2 Be, 2 Ba ....... J,/;,..,..,..'ii7.ii5-.i5ii9i,30;..,......, in kitchen is spotless. Block J -1· t·• 'th i~-t w rp c. ,.. un ..,, , ... ve . """' l I •·\\ u~, . ts = WI ......, p;~ C\J!ltom blt-irui cpts/drps pvt pa.Ho«; $28.500. Xlnt 1enns. Agt \Vllll comp ete Y, """ er says family room, mass1••e floor · -' • 646--0732 Panoramic View !!ell GI No Money Down or to ceiling fireplace and su-11aragf!s, sas.500. ..::.::..:.:::_______ low down FKA. Low price . "I TRADE'' BLUFFS • 3 br, 3 ba, w/ Mos! exciting 4 bdr, fam rm, ~r-Oeluxe kitchen. Lu~r-Bob Olson Rltr. ~16-5580 f0a.11hio n Shore kome al IOUS "'all to wall carpehng Bay-View, ~e grttnbell custom designed, Broad· f.25,500 N!!ar Jluntington lhroughout. Sprinkle-rs. cov-EXECUTIVE HOME Step:oJ 1o pool. Cus. addtns. moor Harbor Vif'w Hiiis CentPr. l'ret:I patio. Even Includes 8aycre1t-Newport Save! $42,500. Ownr 6.f4-4265 home. Exquisitely appointed WE SELL A HOME your cboiCt! ot financing for .f bi.a: bedrooms. 2\-. baths, & beaulilulty landscaped. EVERY 31 MINUTES ju~t $27.500, s0 HURRY!!! formal dining room. L.arge Bayshores 1225 l st lime ollercd. Priee: WE SELL A HOME family room \\'ith 2nd"" fire-$72.500. Call Ka.ye Neal, for Walker & L~e OPEN HOUSE Sat &: Sun 1-5 t "' "'~ Do aid Al E VERY 31 MINUTES place. C~rpctin". drapes. 8PP · ....-.-v.;uJ. n · · -,.. 4 BR, 3 BA. 2622 Vista Or. 8 "-' • ""'7 7"'1 W lk & L Assume l"...,.e loan&. mAke. b'U n SSOC, .r+ -..,.. 7682 f.dingcr a er ee -"B ·~r~o~w~"'~r~. ,,.....,~~~'==::-i''"'""'i~i'l!i~~~i""~I p.ayment j!Jit \lke rent! : 842-4455 or 5-10-Iil·lO "" 540-1770. CA~IEO SHORES ___ .:.Occpcn Evrs. ~3 I" tclitt o Dover Shores 1227 Ocean lront .f BR & Den £.,.. '~" r. TARBELL 2955 Harbor Camper/Trailer/Boat- 646-ml Open Eve!. BAYFRONT-BUYI *UNIQUELY ~tllford • 675:6996 -O\VNER? Here's your home SophisUcAled 2. story home Difterent "Old World" Con· ABSENTEE OWNER with plenty 0r storage area. plus bach. Apt. Prime I~ temporary. Executive luxw-y Says. "Get oUer··. on his Glen lofar 5 BR. co1-ner lo!. eation on So. Bayfronl, Ba.l· home. Unobttructed Bay &: beaut.. lge. 3 BR. l ba. Vacant • waiting for you. NEWCOMERS For lhe Executives moving boa Island. ?-ftn vie1v from most rms. Bluffs hom,.. Over 2.000 IQ. All 1he extras and glamor· 10 Ne,\•port. Beach -thei;e $13.1,000 5.000 sq. fl . .f BR, 41,t BA + ft Phone for App·1 . o11• terms. *VIEW HOME* BY OWNER PERFECT condition! M1111t see interior lo appT't'Cia.te!· 3 BR, 2 BA. large Jiving rm, fireplacP. dinette, all elec· tric incl kitchen. Thermo C'ontrol.~ each room. Beam~ Ct"iling th1i.i-out, wall to w&ll carpets, drapes. lge cor lot, shrubs. Good de111 .&or G.I. Owner movi ng lo ranch. Prict> $37,700. J\.1AKE OF- FER~! Write P.O. Box 914, Laguna Beach or call 494- 4726 anytimr. VIEW HOME •• e e BY.OWNER Ne1v 3 Bclnn Ir Den. Beam N>ilings, ou!slandlni:-VIEW. AU elrc kitchen. Roman bath.· f.Tust !ll!U • $'17,:)W or oiler. OPEN SAT & SUN 10 am • 4 pm. 1'495 Skyline Drive. or pbone 830-2825. -HANDYMAN'S ,. SPECIAL 4 Income unil.S, 120 yds. I beach. Patios. de.cks w ocean vie\v, Nds. paint, etc. Should gross $9,COO Annual. Price $69,600. Trades consid. '""'· h!ISSION REALTV 494--0731 ISO" vlt1'" just complettd J BR. 2'·~ BA, 300 sq. ft. sundeck. Arch B e a c h Heights. $34.700. Owner, Mr. Lewi!, (714J 523-5013, Noria. PANORAMIC Q('tan view lot: $6,950. Smftn, but level. Sl .DOO Down. baJ. at $70 month. 497-1021 NEW Ivan Wells' homes orr. L IDO'REAL TY INC. maids qtrs. Ideal ror enter-• CANON REAL TY Rex L. Hodges, Rlty '" i im um modem Mn-3400 Via Lido 67l-8830 lainlng. Easy main!. Immed, e 67!>.3581 e 81T·::J1j LACUNA CANYON 2 BR \'€!nl ces. hiihest quality ======c:'======= ~~~~ 1u r n ~ 1e~ rABULOUS VI-·! O'looking -C~00-11--'Cool l--Pool I house $14,500. }'enced yd. ' 1\·ork nship &. a Panornm· Costa Mesa 1100 ' • _ · oan. Little Corona Bch. Hear lhc LARGE 4 BDRM 7.oned industrial. 494-11170 ic Vie"' of t ~ Back Bay. _ -N.B. a~7249 i;urf! lmmac 2 Br.. den. 2 One of tbe la,....m 4 bdrm 3 BY 0"''NER: 3 BR. 2 BA. E ~ . 1 . Sink your \\"CIVY fttt fl ml 4 BR. N. Laguna. vklw. euy • • d b\10 I -~ W l"ff I A. ,. eoe mnp. X nt fin. bo . , .. & ard malnt Xlnt 11 " both homes available in the crps, rps, s, r;: y ... u . a1tc I 230 !.)4.j()Q Ownr. 714-67j..51i6 your wrary ne~ 111 "" Y • • • flesin.blr Dover Shore11 area, No down :o rVets. SlS.950 or -----1 bkni 1 htd/ntrd. pool. t.4xlrt. lg Owner, 4!)t....@1l • Larae family room 10.ith ~ume 6,, ·' IOAn. o~oner SPARKLES lt. SHINES In· YoT. oome ya.rd. -~-A-J~El=l'EL=-,~Larg--,~,~11-B~R.~1 wet bar. All electric liitett-will ('AfT)' 2nd TD. OPt."N side &: out . Liv rm. l din Ccllrol: "INVEST NEAR THE HAFFDAL REAL TY View. ~1ust see. $32.500. , en~ with view With or witb-HOUSE l~. \Ved·Thun-F'rl rm· se:rvitt porch., elec OCEAN. 3 Br. 31~ bl.. den_l 1740 \Varntr, F.V. 342-44ro OWMr, 494-8673 r oui pool . at 430 EaUier Sl. {ofl bit~. clean crpts., drps, trpl, din rm. 3 C'.ar. Can LEASE SALE Roy J. Ward Co. Tustin) C&lJ ~ lhruout 111~ 3 BR 2 BA bulld another home on lot. or {Ba.ycrest 01ficel BY OWNER: Eashddf CM. 3 Mme. Prof. lndac:pd & Some view, nr. ~~ch A. 1430 Galuy 6-i&-1550 B<lnn. bltn kitchen, natural malnt. wlchUdm 's play )1rd ghops. Bkr. 673-allO . ,,..,.~~~~..., ... ~/ birch cabinets. 68xl26" lot Ir pel area. Htavy shake OfARMlNG DUPLEX on WATERFALLI \VI 11.lley 11cceu for boftt or roof completes thla eha.rm· dbl lot !'. <:rl Hwy. Cdrtt. $23,500 Ira lie r. 6~ ',"1, loan c11n be ln~ home. By o w ner . 0Y.'lleT". Sjg.jOO. 67~169 Beat I.be 11t11 1~ 3 big brd· u gumed, $z.t .!rJO. 642-4\78 "l<~l.~,,;"°,:.·_61_'-_l593.,.._. ___ c...1 BUSR:SI' marketplace tn rooms. Jnvllini: tlreplact. TllE SUN NEVER SE.'TS on DON'T 1\ve It a\\·-.y, ~t tnwri. Th11 DAILY PILO't' Sprlnklent Exq11tslt1: land-Claalrted'5 action power. quklk cub for It w1tb a Oaaalt:ied ~ion. Saw ecapln1t. BBQ:s.tf).1720 ror an ad to stD '""'~ Daily Pilot want Ad! money, time A: eflort. Look TARBELL 2955 Horbor tho cl¢k, di" 61""'"· ""'"' ""w111 ==------ , 4 BR, 1•1 bllthit. nt\\·ly pain!. ed IMide. Cpts, rlrpa. Larae ('Omer lot. Vactnl. BRASHEAR REAL TY 8-17-8331 E.v•s. 968:ll78 ASSUME 5~ 'i'° lolln on 3 yr old, 2 1ty, 4 Br. + lam nn, $ BA . O•·n e r sn .!100. • 9(!3...5794 Lagune Nlgual I 1707 !\TIN! ocnn Ww. IJIK. BR. 2 BA. bet.m const. l11nd1C1rped, unusual, xtru. 0-.1-ntr S37.000. 4!M-3114 I BUSIESr. mamlota"I In I town. The OAil.Y . PlLOT Oa.nWed tec:tkln. Se v • :o;~· dma A t.Uort. took , , I a 4 S A L j a ; s a u !!!A "i!MS 2 0 40 •• * ' " .. r U 0:-!_~y c. P1LOT ftlday, .6.119'1st l , 116CI JRlN'i~-· R~NTAL5 RENTALS • RENTALS • - .-:. Housu Furnlthtd Aptt.. furnts~ HoUM• Unfurnl1h.d Heuw Unfumlthed • RENTALS RENTALS -r. 1!* __ 1!'22_111!1 __ *,__"1*'2'9-5P*!1 Apia. Fumlohod....;...._ Apia. Unfund1hed * * ~INTALS • A!!h. Furnlohod -Newport Baich 2200 Newport Boldt 2200 Newport Beach 3100 Biibo• lrf1nd 1~=.:~~~~;;;i 3HS N-rt Beadt 4200 L09un1 Baich 4705 Newport BHch 5200 1 t RENTALS -YEARLY ~·BR .. I Bath, fUrnished ..... " " ........... $150 II\ BR., I Bath, fireplace ; unlurn ........... $200 2 llR., I Bath, un!urn ........................ $200 i BR .1 1 Y.a Bath, unfurn, Costa Mesa .. , ..••.. $200 J lm.1 2 Baths, unfurn 1 ••••••••••••••••••••• $275 2 BR., 1 Bath, furn.1 Channel front ......•... $300 S BR., 1 Bath, Oen , furn .................•.. $350 • I • l BR. 2 ha. cual. """"· uni. IDO CLIFF DRIVE YEARLY ! BR 2 BA -ts lncludi"" 1ardtntr ·-Ne'IV'l)OM Beach · ' • -r ' ... ....., Two bid fumUbcd drps. trplc, gar. Nr bt:ach & TOWNHOUSES Salbb..,,., Realtor m."900 COUNLTIVRIYNGCLUB AU O.l~FeolvtH mkto. -Mo. 646-$800 3 Btdroom, 3 bath, splll--levt'I. 3 car callJOrl. f'a~s Huntin..ton Beach 3400 Luxury 11.1'llen apar1Jnenll Walking Db:tanel to Bee.ch BALBOA BAY CLUB ex· pool ~· th :.:.:;;;.:.;;,"'t:.:.::.:::.:.::.:...:.;;:: $225 -Yearly leUt quiaile l Br ept. Furn or , -o;w moo . oUerln& complete privacy. 4"•2449 unf ' --1~ ... -· ALSO EXEC Ho~. 3 lev•ls, cpt.s, beautlfuJ l&nd~Plnc & un-·l~=-_;.~.:..;:.;.:.c___ · ...-:, YVV· U'U"•o.:w 2 Bedroom 2 bath. splil·lrv· drpd, 2 &plc, alr cond. 4 BR JMll'&llelcd recreatlonaJ facll-2 BR duplex, tum & unfurn. •EJCCLUSIVE 3 Br, 2 Ba, e:l. l gµq'e, l carport, $225 Uv·&: din rm, el~ kit. rec ttici 1n a coW\try dub al· nr Vic llugo, new c.rpts, drps, bltns, $235 mo month. nn, fam nn, 2% BA, h~ mosphere. Now Jeulng in cpta/drps, frpl, &_!r . ·"":;:·~645-:::.~10=24;,.~~=-~ """ • • -·· -Bay & B-ch deck wllh view of cout. Newport Beach. l.-""=-1056=· ~-~~~-S°PAC new 2 BR. 2 BA, elt-e ,...,. Gardener. avail Set. ht. 1700 6 s•-Realty, Inc. S400 nmnlh n4:9&2-3405 1 th u..:et 1 BEDRM. pool. patio, near kit, frµl c, enc gar. Steps lo 901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 126 Furnished or unfurnished beach. Leai;e $175. -494-3208 bch, lse. $265. Mo. li'B-1990 S BR., 2 Baths. Den furn .................... $350 SUMMER -WEEKLY Whoddyo Want? Whoddy1 Gor? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR All 1i11s & locat ions, from ............•..... $100 BURR WHITE, Realtor 64,5..2000 Eves. 5'18-6966 3 BR. 2 BA, new pa.int, bit· Models open r'IOOll to 9 pm after S: 30 or 213: 271-4220 ins. 1enccd yard, walk to n4: 542.a110 1..:.:~.:::7-:------I ::;==~====" NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS '.,',~~.:I/ shopping. $180. OAKWOOD <fNTAL~ SPAC. 4 Br. 2 ba, duplex, \1. .........., ApfJ. Unfurnished Eut Blulf 5242 Specl1I R1to • S Lines -5 tlmts -5 bucks RULEI -AO MUST INClUOE 2901 Newport Blvd., NB 675-4630 blk to beach. Avail. 1 yr. lease, $300 per mo: ht us t $225/mo. New l BR 2 bath. GARDEN Generel -• 5000 1-1111 \'OU "-""' .. traot. 1-Wl!tl .,.U Wllllf h1 1,4 ... ~YOUlll 'MM 11111/tr ......... "'"-6 UMS Clf m•r11tl,. EVENINGS: 642·2253 or 67J-Ol59 Prestige Location Rent1ls to Shar• 200! have""'"" "'P'"" '""''''" Gude""'· b'Ub APARTMENTS Agent 8.JJ.-0820 It water pald. 53&-1024 For 1ea.5t', deluxi!! 1888 sq. tt. ......,,.OYHING FOlll SALi -TRl.OEI ONlYI Summer Rent1l1 2910 "N~E~W~H~ou=-.. -. ~3 ~e~R."-,o..,.~.~fm 1 2.,::.,,BRc-:--un!-'umc....;~...,-.~fl°'75~mo-.1 -~N~E~w=s~M=N~~IS~H~-I VEN DOME 4 BR., 2~ ba. Apt_ Frplc .• PHONE 642·5671 SHARE l BR w/l er 2 rm. din rm. Harbor View Bltns, beaut patio &: lrg VILLAGE APTS. drapes, carpets, wet bar, To Pl1ce Your Trader's P1r1diM Ad ladirs, cpl or motlx'r & BALBOA l BR, redtt. Nr. Homes atta. p 0 0 1• club yard • 646-4191 1 & 2 BDRM. Fum or un-?AtMACULATE API'S! priV. balcon.iea; dbl &;arage <laughter c<ms!dert'd. Kit. & beaches. fi;>-S1J,5. wk I Y • membership. Annual Ise. -furn Air..cond dah.,.,·hrs seU ADULT&: FA.Mll..Y oU ldtch. Dishwasher, dbl. 75' CruiM!r, auto pilot, 2 Jauodry privl. 005t' lo 53&-3911 or fi75....!fil0. 12131 797-7487 Fount1ln V1lley 3410 cle~'r 0~ patio, b~ak· SECTIONS AV~LE oven, pool. Convenil'nl to depth findl'rs, nnge 1200 Golrien \\'es1 oollege. S65 mo ~========= 3 BDR. l \• ba, lg fam rm Wt bars private fundecks Close to shopping, P ark shop'g,, schools I: recrea· mi . Recent survey -"''ill Mngll'. SIG mo doublt>. Call Condominium 2950 LEASE 4 bdr TownhouY!. i~ st-~• •lose•-. He•lod' * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba tion. consider property, TD. or w/ fireplace. Pa~led din 1~~ 1 n 1 • •~ .,. v·-.. ... ONLY $-S MONTH -" ~-t ~·--ITI4) aJI 6 p.m. \\'kdayt. 8(2-7821 MP. ~.JU c . mainu::~. pool, saunas, bar-b-ques. * 2 ~rooms "" smower ........ vwn.::r: "'A.'lT To 5hare my In; 2 BR LARGE 2 Br, l~ Ba, 1tudio ~'i7~nced ya . $2l5. 962--Ta04 kid! It. pets OK. Sound proof Wlllls walk in * Swun Poot. Put/green 135 AMIGOS WAY 179-3400 apt in Cl\t. A prof p-1 to type, hlt·ins, patio, pool. .::c::..:c..::c________ S3ri Lease S br, grdnr, wtr, closets. covered ' carport :It Frpl, Indtv/lndry fac'ls Ne wpo,rt Baach EQUITY in 4 Bedroom • s.nnic. Apt 'li furn. you pro. S20o. mo. Adults. 613-8800 HOUSE 1'-or lease S210 mo, trash pd. Children & peta Adults, no peta. · 1845 Anaheim Ave. Mgr. Apt. 9 7'feu. Verde home . TRADE vlde other i; or ''"''II make BLUFFS-2bdr 2 ba, den, elegant 2 BR. 2 BA, .Back OK. Lr& yrd. 962-4883 THE CALIFORNIAN COSTA MESA 642-2824 e NEW DELUXE • for income property, Costa a deal. 6·16-0:»0 or 546-7372 pool, years Jeue. Bay area. C.Ouples pref'd. NEAR new 3 Br, 11.• ba, •-Phono ,.,2727 Mesa area. 714-54$-6179 eves & wkends. ~ "Ii .,.... • RENT • 3 Br. 2 ba'9.pt. for leaae * 546-6288 * NUDIST couple v.·ants rental 644-1395 BLUFFit'Lease 2 Br, 2 &. 1 fam rm, bltns. Lease S2SO. SIN~LE Young Adults Lux· Incl. spac. maatr. aulte, din 1~=~"'";.:.,.=:...:;~-- 10 share. parl timt>, call D. RENTALS 1 1 dbl drp 962-042! ury garden apts with COU)\. 3 Rooms Fumlture rm. & dbl. garage, auto. HAVE: S'CabOverCampcr Louils ;,.tg.9J78, 6-7 PM or eve, gar, crpll, s, $ 0 $ door opener avail. Pool &. WANT: lent trailer, camp. Box 1793 , CM Houns Unfurnished $340. 644-1280 aJt 5 pm Westminster 3612 try club atmosphere and 2 • 25 & UP rec. area. Nr. Catholic er shell, aluminum boat. CL IF' FHA VEN Home. ----------oomplete privacy, SOUTH Mont~TO"M:onth Rentals Oiurch & school & Corona -=~~*~"~~~603_0_*_..,- ROOM!'.tATE servitts & apt Generll 3000 ..... 3 BR & Den, ....... t1 & drpa, BAY CLUB API'S. Irvine at WIDE SELECTION • l · s · l t t Couple. (baby ........ no pets). ...,, 16th N rt o. h de! hfar tligh. TR.ADE for home, duplex s iarin~. pcc1a ra e~ o G 1 b f h frplc. dishwaaher, bit-ins, ewpo LX"ac: · Applla""'' • TV" avail students. Broker 645-0ll l S22.;. 4 BR, l~ Ba, patio. reen t 1um or ugc yo.rd. 1 te . k 1 <114) 645-0500 • ONLY S2S5. e or T.D. well located C-2 213: 7"" """'0 sot wa r, s ;i r I n er II' No Security 0.posil .,,,-A I IV NB "ih I .. k" lrplc w/w ch.ildren &. pets ""'""'' . 00.1 m gos ay. . . w1 arge pav par 1ng ' *,.,c,~~yLS. ,}~ .. s-~;!po"'rtae~~~~ _O~-~K~-~·"""~-·-·,_5.14-6!l80~----c .. ~P~AA=Kc. ~u~oo=~ ... ~, ... ~-..,-w-. ~2 ~ro,::tc,a:i.~nd. ~~1gng/;,.a':i:i 5;Pe'R·+J~'~p-po:h ~nm"'ol 517HFRW.S~. nCMuure ~~~.... --lot and good building. ' """' .., B 2 B trpl 1 2 """"" -....,u. .............,,. Corona d•I Mar 5250 S21,200 with S21,700 equity, 613-Cli95. EXECUTIVE HOME: Lrg 5 r, ~· kr ~ car dryer, optional, $225. month. 1 BR + hide-a-bed $150 mo 1S68 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 Agent: &*ml W.ILL shan! iny apt "•ith 8dr 3 Ba. DR, FR. Avail gar. · B 897-59CM or 89'2-1450 or Spotleu. Boat dock avail. $ll5 l BR 4-I ' ts \!IOrking lady. Sept 1. $325. mo/548-1544 3•.ro,RBdrmLEAHSE * 1 ~'"::'""="~·::;=~==:;;;;;1~41~4~38~th~~!..~"~·""i<i!-""""'i~~~I!''~·-~. b~l-1~. p:::::e ioc: ~--; ~~a .. ~:c~,ba~:;;~~~ 64&-21J.12 alt 6 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Sun. ome or c o•;t-.fUll w ll.}'S. Adult!, Avail 8/15. Bkr. sh.ine Home. Completely re· S375/mo. A.gt. 646--32:>5 L1guna Beech 3705 ON THE BEACH 645-0lU tJ,. •rf• Huge nns. Nr. beach. Ocean . .. . ,.. ,~,,,...~=~~----views. Val S87.500. For Costa Mes.i 2100 pa.Jnu:d 1nsiue. Fresh & 3 BR 2 BA ram. rm. bltins, LUXURIOUS Modern 2 BR 2 .B.R. 2 BA, _suncleck, spac.1$110. 3 BR, 2 Ba., gar, stove, TD's or Comm. 494-46a3. clea~ ... ~~l a~.~175W-~1h BLUFFS -2 bdr, 2 ba, den, ba. frplc, bltin1, dsbwshr. hvmg rm.' $JjQ per rflo. yrly W/W Avail. 8/19. Broker I • 20NBR.TENFurnACRES. U-.. ·-J{orae Lovers! 3 BR home. 2 BR, g11.r, patio, rpts, drps. !'IO\'r, rrlni;, tropical SC'lting for adulls. l blk lo shOp $185. Mo 544-4180 WANTED: TLC Jor one year, for our 4·bdr. fam nn, crpts. home. Lease. approx. Sept. 1. S275 mo. 54~137 sma ...,posi . ........ .....er cPo;,'"';"';°'=·=====c I Utll pd. 497_1405,. ise. Avail Sept. 8. Phone 534-6980 a: ... wu & Lee, Sa..w55 -.,:=;:;~:"'"';==:;::1-"~~~82;:11~o~ttk~·~,~·;<>J.~2935~~·~'~"~-1=;;...::;:...,,~~=-~~ Frp1a I prlv. pa.Hos/Pool.a. Barn, corral, riding arena, WE SELL A HOME 1-N_ew_,_po_,_,_S_h_o_r .. __ 3_2_20 'L-19uno N'oguol 3707 5000 NEPTUNE $1.15. I BR. R/O. re!rig, Tennis -Contnt1 BldJl pu~ tack room, etc:. 1~~ acre. EVERY 31 MINUTES \VJ\V, good location. Broker ~ rtt:M.. S37,£XXJ eq. Trade for land, W lk & L 3 BDRM. 2 bath, 2 car BEAUT. View EXCL 3br 2 Avail now. 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 BR,:li534--6980~7.""~~---~-SCIO Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll c:tltbm. Submit. 642-61117 Bkr. a er ee garage, lireplace, Po o 1-ba, bltrui ds?!Wr. crpfdtps. 2 BA. CRll (114): 629-1462 nJS. 2 BR, bltri&, crpts, ii.rps. f!'.facArthur DJ'. Coast Hwy) ~ Amtwhead, magnifi. c I u b ho us ~lennis riiem· tp. $300 836/S159 542-1215 coHect. patio, child OJ<. Broker cent S Br, 4 ba on goU cse 7682 Edinger bership, 1% blks to beach, 1 1 &. 2 BR apts. From Sl35. to 643--0lll AVAIL Now, large 2 heir apt. &: lake. Vi!W. SU5M cir. Lo · 8it2..f4S5 or ~5140 CJl)ts. drps. Avail I year Condominium 3950 $115. No child~n or pets.I'='========= new crpll. painted. bit-Ins dn. Airplane or boat trade. Open Eves. lea1e at Jm. 642-3374 aft 6 n. 2 11 .1525 Placentia. Also avail. Costa Mesi 5100 Sale or rent at $200. Couple Owner (n4J 459-3103 or $32.."i LEASE, 4 BR, 3 BA. pm. $255. ocaul. Br, Iii Ba, un-unlurn. over 45. 673-{1130 337·3169. HARBO ·" H"gl ''"'' 3 bdr 2400 sq. ft clL!tom. no pets fum, Country Club Villa. 8 2 BR, 2 BA. crpll, drps, OIANNEL Reof apt, 2 bd-, 2 Clear lots & acreage. Large "" 1 1 -• • .~.,-v1·,1a· ea-. c M. Bay Shores 3225 Crp<•. d~. blt-irui. For in· *NEW AV FRONT* blt-ins, relrig, no children. ' 2Y.i bll. rlcn. dbl gar, ''"' .,u ·r-ba, $475/mo. J yr lease. deluxe lodge, Idyllwild. 16 covered pallo, renced yard, Io""'=-"~''=-~----\\'ATERFRONT N BBC fo CAii 213-826-3481 or 2 Br, 2 Ba, $330. yrly lse. $115 mo. 2089 Carden Wa:y, 675-5483 units Rlverside. Trade for 2200 Newport Be1ch g anlener. Children & pets 1185. 2 BR &: den. •tovo, ear ' 341·9451 Furn., adulta. 233 l9lh St .. CM. 54US53 "'=-~_.:..:,cc:____ large boot or ? '!' ? (n4) luxury l BR, 3 BA, with Apt . C. 675-0'1~. 1,-,==--c~-.....--.--..= IDEAL for working cpl 2 BR """2515. - Have large baylront home, pier k noat, Balboa Pf:nin. Pt. Nttd smaller ho m t , Newport or Costa r.1esa. 8 r o k er 613-7420 6'B-9l2'1 VACANT LOT IN NEWPORT BEAOf \VILL ACCEPT TD'S . OR BOAT. ., 642-7898 ., 20 Ac:re1 ranch. l Modmt homes, 2 wells; fenced. Training track, h111e barn, 14 stalls: FOR land, unllll or ! S4S,£XXI Eq, 675-6259 Have free &: clear houM, Covina atta. \Vant home Palos Verdes area to Santi h1onica. Madge Davis, Rltr. £42..100C Want homr, East Coar.a ?t1esa or N'pt. Heia;hl1. Have ~e il clear, 2~~ acres, value SMl ~Jadge Davis, RHr. 642-'Tfm lU Acres, Timber, small house on Hiway 31 Jn c:ol- viUe Nat. Forest, \Vuh. s~.000 Val. \Vant Ot or NB Pl'O'P. 6Q.1145 '62 T·Bird, autot12alic trans, full power. TRADE for camper or tent trailer. 778-3100 or 642-0026. Trade or sell all/part 20 fl.1 eqty in ?O acm Rancho, Cali!. I want units, T.D's 01' ? ? ,, OU get good tu shelter. Owner. 544-36.6 1velcon1r. S350/mo. Avail on relig, \\'Iv•, lrplc, child ok. gard, ;yrly Sept. 15 to 4 , NOW Renting: New lge 1 BR + d k 1 ~ ·o::.=::,,.----.,--or ahou! Aui;: 15. By Broker 645-(IW :,~lll'3. $650.,_ mo. Resp. Duplexes Unfum. 3975 DECORATORS PAD apts, cpts, drps, bllins, gar. No ~~s~~73-~~e refrig. Outstanding new view home. '!pp mnt. &12-Kll.l $149 2 BR. dbl gar, stove, adults, no pels. 714-642-5674 2 BR, partly furn. duplex, lg. Completely furn, color TV, Patios. A~ults nnly. Mgr.1-;,~t0~0;=:.2;;,b~R~.~b;it~·ins:_,~R&O~~.-.. Laguna Bch. 3 Br, den. 20' Century.ideal bay cruis., DOVER Shnres. ha Y r r on t w/w. children ck. Avail or 213-79!1-48S6 fen~d -ar yd -..,..,. mo. 11tereo. Groovy, compact I 2110 Elden. 646--1762 d Beam cril·gs, elec kit., ~ bay fishing. boat hoppinp, I ========== I •" •:i..N Br nr channel year lse $16S lsp, frpl, terrace, view util. 1'TCI l $14 000 e'tc. Refin. in/out, beaut home, 6 BR. 4 BA, lan;:e 8/3L Brokl!'r 534-6980 3230 542--4165 afler 6 pm. A· "I 911 2os 4Jrd. St· ?t10D~ 2 Br. cpts, drps, $190 mo. 540-2266 mfo~ lhaottho.. • .... by' ,.~... cond S3000 val. Tri truck, patio, 70' Private dock. ----------1 W•stcliff val · " GE kitch. encl. gar, nr bus. -=~~~~~==== • • ... • ....,,.. Avail Sept lst, yrly lse. SlOOO 2 BR. den. liv rm, fam nn, c.o.:.:;c:;;.:.:; ____ .:::= 'l BR, new, blt·ins, cptli, 67J..l540 after 5 pm. Sll8. Adl,tlts, Mgr. 124 E. -:-83G-28'.l5 v.•ag., R.E. or ? 548-;:ivc;1, 8 013 trpl. S275 rm. Emerald Ter· LEASE \Vestclill, NB. 3 Br, drps. Pri pario, gar. No yd ON THE BEAOI _h Huntington Beach 540011~::..:=------\' 2 BR bil h O\P· 2 t 3 : 7 o -5 or r Adu.Its only 494--0388 v.·ork $135 mo. lst & last mo .....,, Jmmac. o.,,,Tier'1 unit sep. \ ant . or mo ome. 2t3:785-6333 · · 2 Ba, fam nn. crpts, drps, plus S50 cleaning fee. Adults. 3 BR 2 B~. was_her/dryer. 3 BR, 2 BA Townhouse. UNFURN. 2 Br. apt. in hollse + 2 duplexes & tri-Have nrly. N~v 3 Br. :Z bl, O~ Tiit; HEAOI Costil Mesa 3100 b!tns. 20x40 hld pool, pool No pets 545-0914 Yearly lease $32:,, per mo. Crpts, drps. blt·ins. pool db duplex: carpets, bltns, gar. plex -beautifully ma.int'd, cptS, drps., bltns; treet. 2' Bdr, 1308 \V. Oceanlronl ·hse. Ow~r. 646-2113 t>ves ~~::;;:"'"=,:~~-.-..,-I ~2039SUrnmer S200 wk . hse. SZ15/mo. 545-5270 . space, ~p. yard, 2 Blks. Trade dO\\.'n lor R-4 zoned, Equity S5,IXX). Pyt.s S163.41. -. "9810 2 BR CUstom ra~10E f BR, 2 BA. ~ .. blk to beach. UI.,... trom Huntingtoo Jntc~-clear prop. Bkr. 642-&187 camn Ree.1ty, 61>3581 :J<J..-~·~ • ijoivffsity P1rlf: 3237 Ocean view. '""'" BAY FRONT &. dock 3 Br, :l Completely redeCarated. ** 673-5822 ** BACH. Apt. Will lease to (QM"RUOION 84m~3;71y63 Hospital. $140 , ...&. * * *' * * ,.~ S225Jmo lease. Adu It .!I. LARGE 3 Bcdr. 31,'9 ha, Fmly __ :c:_....:.::..;=:...:;c_ __ I responsible adult. S80 ?.lo. 1,~ _ IUI ..-"1'. Ba drn. Lcase/opUOn _,,.,. Refer req Drive by 264 E KcNTAL5 mock lo ocean. Avail. Aug. I ~ ino. 6T>433l. Air.a unfum. l.Bth St. ~I . Rm. w/w, crpts, drpll, hit· Apia. Furnished 1st. Call Collect: JUST (QMPUTING 2 BR, crpls, drps, bltns. leg I ~ Perron Realty . &42-lm ins, pool, tennis 11vail, adj %13: 793-0728 patio. $IL mo. 1501-B REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATI: park 131»-mo. 646-5511 G 1 4000 Alabama. S 3 6 -121 O or G 1 G I COZV 3 bedroom, l hath plus BEAUT 4 BR 2~ ba lownhsr enera MAGNIFICENT View, week Harbor Hei9hts Four 54l)-2723 en•r~ enera large play yard completely 2 '-lcs, dlb gar, near UCJ $125. l BR, nl!'W crpts, or yearly, 11plil level, 2 2 & l BR UNITS R · I W od 5990 ---------1 I --·" ho · and "• ~.. f'I,..._ Hunto'nglon Beach 5400 ant• s int 2225 Cu•·"'"-" near 1 pp1ng $32S mo. 833-2140 dishwuhcr, garage, avail ucurooms~:· garagr, aJl with fireplaces. Income Property 6000 grade 11ehool! $165 pcrl"=========I now. Broker 645-0lll 200l~i Kings Road, 548-2394 dishwashers & 2 bath!. e LANDLORDS e th W Ure • L aft 6 . NEW $ISO up. 1-2-3 BR . mon · a r e e Corona del Mir 3250 $155. 2 BR. 4-pJex., encl gar •. 1,.:""''~'"°"P~-~m~·-~--~-1 Rental Manager -I-leated & saun11. pooi .. rec Billboa· lsland __ _;;,2;:3;;.;55 _5'.>-0405=====~=-~ · l BR xlnW Cose t Bay Mrs. Oirlst:lensen ..., FREE RENTAL SERVICE -~ 3 BR .• 2 BATHS \V/\V. Close to ahoppUlg. oc. o 3 AC' nn. Hell & Algonquin. Mgr. Broker S34-G982 WINTER $22j mo. 4 Br. CONDOMINIUM 2 BR, Jl,.2 Bkr. 534-6980 &, beach. Adult! only. 117-1nnamon Ave. 8-!6-3137 or 846-4l"4 -..-~~.-~-...-~- ' BA crpts drps dsh\\'hr Fpl., <'pls., dl'J}!I. Avail. 675-78i6 it no ans 494-9471 Costa 'Mes• * Rental S•rvic• * FURN 2 BR house. Sept. lhru June $225. mo or yrly lse S29;'1. &15-IO:-i.1. . l~-o========= TRIPLEX Pride of O\vnership. Live tn 01vner's unit &: let the 2 BR. units pay your way, S44,500. Drive by 6S3 Plummer, C.i\'I .. then call - newly c:ltt, adults onll', 11 d' '1 tki "~ ' NO\V. N<t pet~ or child un. $125. lgc l Br deluxe. W/w, . . Phone ~l034 2 & 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, pvt pat.io, FREE TO LANDLORDS .,),1ar1ne. ·1!$-2996 A~~1j111 ~nl;. ~,;;-r ;~r: der 8. S21G mon•h. dlshwasher. Avail 8/11 &.2 BR. Apts., furn & Un· heated pool, ne\vly Blue Beacon 645-0lll • \\'Lr-.'TER rental Se-pt.·June. l 549-1259 CORBIN_ MARTIN Broker 534-6980 furn. Sl65 10 S200 yrly.l"'!!!!!~ ... ~~~~!!!• I decor-died. !Mi2-S994 =========== BR. trpt. bay view. 101 =-=----~--SlOO Ba h t . 1 fu Anita. Jones Rlty. 673-6210 NEW SPANISH ,,:c==.::c.=="-~- Jade. $250 mo. 213-838-4310 2 BR, garage, patio, crpts, ~036 E~~:t~~~~~ Cd !'.f all 'util,cpooal~ ·P:;:. koi:: 2 BR .. cpts. drps: elec. kitch. VILLAGE AP1'.S. 2o~_R. !.::."u2. ",!!:!..re, "-',' .. · ,"''•~ drps, stave refrig, tropical ~ I 1 ail 1 & 2 BDRM Furn or un-..... t-"" 0 ' Rooms for Rent 5995 D•Lancy Real Estate 2828 E. Coast Hwy, CdM ROO!\f F'or rent ot' share apt 67J..3770 e 615-lf.62 'e 534-0980 \Vinter/yr y. ease. Av . · garage $135. · 962-7637 L:kf 1 I 2351 setting for adults. l blk to ~=~::======;::;:l.!9!~l~N~·,~·~bc~h~67'~~~200~7---1 tum. Air-OJnd, dsh"'·hrs, seU 1:':;::•:__:~'~''------=-::..: shop $145. Mo. 544-4180 2 BR house S. of H'A)', ex-~ 4100 clean'g ovens, patio, break· 3 LG ' A _ cellent condition. hfarried Costa M... 1 BLOCK to ocean & bay. fast ban, priva•-fundec:ks, Tustin 5640 w/ employed, non-smoking 1---------- lady. C"11 84&-47115 aft 6 pm. 15 UNITS PVT. Ent. bath, phone, furn. All 1 story bldg. No vacan. for empl. man, no 1moker cies, good return It. minutes l BR. 2 BA. trplc. pauo, • Bedrrn&.~ full oaths, Le t 3 bdr 2 <e i.arage, excellent localion. stov•, ttlrig, washer, dfYH, couple, no chldm, no pets. $30 00 wk 82 or mo.-O"mo. ' lrg storage closets. Heated I ~ •1 1 _ _, S2'l5 mo. 837·2S26 • • up ba. ~ or S48--0797 pool, saunas, bat·i. -ues. THE ASPENS 15652 \Villiam SI Tu!.lin's prcstit:e addrt'SS Adult living, no pets Shag carpel!! Sept. lo June eases"""". "o. c ..... -.:u yd, Cfllls:, drps., tront .,...., call 673-4176 eves & wk· porch $Zi0. 646-5.186 LEASE 4 BR, 2 BA, eltt kit, e Day, week, month, e WINTER RENTALS e Sound proof walls, \Valk in or drinker. 548-2607 to ocean. 1 BR with BA. P..1 entrance. Only $120,000 epc1.~. ~3 BR, l bath, partly furn. patio, 1 blk bch. Adults no e Studio&: Baeh, Apt!. \VINlFRED L. FOSS, Art. closeta, covered carport pets Avail Sept. 24 . 673--0205 • Incl Utlls & Phone-serv. • 642-3850 • ' Adults, no pets. ( BR, 3 BA , l'ontemp. Ne\\fy 75. Cbitdren & pets ok. e f\1aid Service. TV avail. THE CALIFORNIAN Jlec. Avail SepL l:i. V.'nll' • 968-2314 2 BR )louse, rxccllcn! cond. e N~v Cafe & Bar LO\VER ocean front \\'. Phone 54~2727 Total air conditioning Furnished & Unfurnished Gymnasiums & Saunas Apartments from Sl50 No cooking S6Q. Furn. FIRST PIONEER • 675-0Til • 81:?·442'1 Eve11. 847.n76 GIRL Rootn-matc \\·anted to 1 TIMES GROSS -rcnttil or yrly. 6Th-36(H I========== i\tarTird l'OUples t,. no 2376 Ne\\'J>Orl Bh·d. S48·9'ra5 Ne\\·porl 2 Br. l~ Bn,1 --~-'0':;.,.:.:.~~~- Mesa del Mir 3105 childl'l'n. S250 mo.• 675-3291 Frplc & gar. avail Sept. 1· HARBOR GREENS share 1 br ap1. 646-5212 bef 6 Units wilh a good rental 4 pn1 or .alt 111:30 pm. record. Ocean side of Balboa Legun1 Beech 2705 1----------LOVEL\' Big 2 BR, 11~ Ba. \vinter lse. $210. 646-5832 Pool, patio. Clean. adults d 2 di d 1 23 1 BR, en ba x up ex, nr BACHELOR unfurn from 3300 For information 8JS..6687 Blvd. Nr. churches, ocean ,&: MESA Verde area nice rm. bay beaches, Good invtat· kitchen, gara~. monthly, n1ent. Asking $120,000. -NE\\'LY Painted 3 BR 2 bath OCEAN side vie'A', 2 BR & home S22S/mo. Vaca n I . den. 2 BA, washer, dryer. Agt. 546--4141 dishwasher. Avail Scp1. thru =''========== ;Jone at $'250. fl.1o .. k'c.se. Mesa Verde 3110 Avail &hortcr rental 5 mo or ---------- Balboa Coastal ~~2933 10 Santa Ana, C.M. bch. Adult~, refs req. Avail $110. Also avail 1 • 2 & 3 3 BR, 2 Ba, encl'd patio. "fiif.'itG:T.;C[;rtiJ.;:fiUi<dl~A~uag-"1gS~19':;,:. &~t~-2-308~~'~==1 Bdnn. ~leated pool,, child Lease, 125S. per mo. \Valer 1 BR, $145: Incl. uwa. Heated -Beach Apls. pd. 675-5152 for appt. pool dul'-t rare center, adj to shopping. , a ..,, no pe a. N · si'oli 549-2627, 968-1740. Caron• d•I Mar 4250 ° pets. 2100 Peterson W11y New • Deluxe GORGEOUS New l & 2 Br. ----------Costa 1\fesa J~G--0370 Lido Isle 3351 1586 w. ea•" s1. 54"""' BURR WHITE NICE aean room for employ. ed, non..smoking Jady. REALTOR 642-89 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. 615-4630 673-0859 Eves. 4 BR. 3 BA. beaut cxeculivc Activity rm. pool, sauna, LARGE ~t ODER N _;:M:::A:..:::Rc:::::___:.::_:::::'.-_ (71 4) 536-4616 Guest Homet -.: 5991 4 NA'ITY NTFTlE.5 home. Strps lo beach boat 2000 Parsons, C.!'.I, 64Z-8870 BACHELOR Beautifully TINIQUE (714) S3~1487 PRV room in lic'd: Board & All 2 BR -Elec: bltin11. Lush Vecilfion Rentils 2900 dock, tennis crts. For' le&.!le ALL Ulil pd, 1 bdr duplex, furnished, all util pd. SlOO. GARDEN APTS. i l l Ocean Avcnul' care home for elderly. am-patio!! AND over 12% net I ::=::::::::;:.._::::::;::.;:.::..;_:c:..:~ I Collesie Pirk 3115 unfurn s::iso., furn $650. No older ad~ts, 1nfan1. pets OK mil. 540-2266 Excellent, park·like surround-l="=h=ik='='=''-=o=i=i=l.=B=. =p=;'=''= I bulatory n1an or woman. return. i\lakP pte Pl'O\'f' ii! M•ui, Hawaii JM..'ls. Refs. \\Till con~ider op-SIOO. 2335 Eldrn, Ci\f Attractive Jg. single apt. $1 00 lngs for adults on!y. Nouri~hin<> meals congenial Jo Hansen, Rltr. 646-8226 more, price to be agreed upon. Call 49>-4995 Sat. bet\\Wn 9 & 2. 3 BDR, 2 ba, 2 firepl, cpts. drps. dswshr, Cul-de·sac. No J*ts. Avail. Sept. 1. S250/mo least". 5'16-3090 BEACJ{ -completely furn. !'.100ERN 3 Br. house, xnlt ·'~;"~"-·~O~·~·nc~'-~"""""~~c-.· -~!NICE 1 Br dplx, qu}l't. Sep, mo. yrly, Util pd . Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR. Apts. Dani Point 5740 atmo.sphe~; 1rg' yard & FANTASTIC 4-Plex. Xlnt. 2 BR. K.aanapali Apts. Ltasc condition. Yrly lease. Avail For DaUy Pilo1 Want Ada by gara~s.] adult, O\'f':r 30. 613-1000 Pool, nr shopping. LARGE New 2 BR 1 ~ BA pallo. Avail now. 548-5225 cond., ,like new cpts/drps, 3 mo to 1 yr, O:>ntact Belle now. Call 540-&'n4 Dial 642-5618 for RESULTS No pets. 646-2768 Sfl.1AU. studio apt. util. pool, 1rn Santa Ana, Apt. ll3, spht level duplt>x w/gar. VACANCY lic'd home, aemi· close 10 OCC &: South Cout hnte, £614 Kauna, Honolulu· I '.;;===,=====::'::::::~=~===~~~~!.::~~;::~~~===i kitchenett•. SIOO per mo. • 646-5542 e Refs. '1~, 4~1397 private. ambulatory lady, Plaza, S5&l/mo. Income. Hawaii No, 96821 General 3000Gener1I 3000 Gener1I 3000 Lse only. 549-0010 3 BDR. 2 ba Townhouse. good food & care, reas Four Star R@alty ~ ·-d •1 . ' REAL ESlAT.E rates. 893.-9713 Summer Rent1ls 2910 CUST'OM Exec. 4 brd. 3 ba, 1fMworamic vicv.• of harbor & -jeU,y. n<'IV !;:\\'Un p 0 0 J , Sl500/mo. 67:>-2717 Atlractivr, \Vaterlront :J BDR, l ba, i;:llp for 30' boat. S350/wk -Aug. Call ~ OCEANFRONT Hoose : SOll Sea.shore Dr. NB. Del~ Duplex 211 Cypres~. Balboa (213) 698-0012 BR 83.lboa apl adj bc:aches:/pler ,ST;,.$150 "·kly. 5.11N!lll, 6T~5SlO CLEAN Ba.1boa Sl!och Units. SIHps 2 to 10; for 1ummer ~uons call 673-9945 ll5 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa BALBOA -luLq)Cnsiw cal· ta,ps. w~ n.tes July, A-. S<pt. ~58 cusroM ' BR. 1& modem. 1 Mw;o from ocean. Avail. Au&; • Srnt 6'73-«)$ , MODERN 2 Br. duplex; nr. t,l'ach A bay: anll. fl/lf. !In. $160 \Vkly. 675-2091 2 BR. 1 BA. adj. ba)o/beach. A\·a.tl. AUf". S200 wk , 673-l!IOI \Yhl!e eleriban!J:f Otme-a·Unt Solve. a. Simple Scrambled Word Puzzle for a Chuckle 0 Rtorr0nge let11r1 of th1 ~<!'it>.,.; four 1aOrnblld words b&-.. • low to rorm fovr 11...,1. words. ~Uii I WEERAa ' 1 ·' .11'1'11. 1 t ' pl R_O_C_U_l--~1 I , I' I I' . - IRADRO I I II I I' Many people aren't reclly ':=·::;:::·==·==·==·-~ anxiou1 1o learn the secret cf r 1 suttess, because 1h.y've heard ISELKEH I thar h's --i.:..::.;.I' ::.l;:..:;.1,.-..1-.-1 -l o """"'... ... c11uc1.i. • .;l.o..t hy Jiil'"" lo ... M--. you deY1lop from "*P No. :f ti.tow. E> ~~i~tt'"" •0•1 I I I • I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSfflCATION 9900 • B1lbo1 ltlend ep.,., rps, '' hns. pool!!, G•neral I ~=========' I Business Rent•I 4355 rlubhollfi('. S2l0 unfr. S235 -.C.--------- 5990 -Misc. Rentils 6060 599'1 ------'--_;,;,'I ---------furn. 546-24~'6 Rent1ls W1ntld BIG BEAR LAKE Lodge 40' from lak•. ideal for family gro\lps. F'rom 4 to 20. Re!lSOnable nites. OtARi\11NG Inimac. 2 BR -.-TOWNHOUSE *- " P' · Nrar sandy 1 e ATTENTION e MAN ~35 "•anted to shart 2 BR 11pl on Balboa Isle. S8J mo. 6T.>-4 39::i beach. * Avail A~ 2nd 10 2 B_R, 1 ~ BA, r.rpt~. d1·pi;, Aug-16lh~ k lsl 2 "'k!I In patio. Adults. Sl60. 134 £. &>pl. 118 Abalone. 6'IT>-05&8 !'.lelody J..,anc. 642~72. 0 1\'llt'l'S In this arra \\ho may have lncon1e prol)l'rly in VIC. or L.A. AIRPORT: re· 5-19·2312 or (7141 866-2576. sponslble couple &: 6 yr. old l\IARINERS CE.iVTER daughter fno petsl, srek 2.J SLEEPER' OUice & store bldg, rent or Income Property 6000 BEAUTIFUL Upper duplex l BDR. hlt-in~. dispsl. cpts. A V I t St Ba 4 drpi;, S105. ll2 E. Bay St., pl. '!"I c ose o . y. B. 494-7792 Br. 2 ba. $400 per mo. yrly. J~-=========-1 Salisbury Riiy. 673-6900 Newport Beech Br. unfum. home {court, le11se. S75 kl $120 per mo. sgl. d\\'elllng or tome 11.pta. 20 ACRES navel, t>igh pro-149 Rlvenlde Ave. 646-24.14 considred), nr. school, in duc\ng orange grove. w/t'f'e. i PRIME Retail Loc&tio""ni nice 11rca. Dcacrving fam· mendoua gro\\1.h potential. 17X40, Xlnt foot A auto tnJ. 5200 STUDIO APT ily "'ill give bl'st of r.al'I!', 1'!1 Adj. 10 tl"''Y. 60 off.ramp, fie. 1871 Harbor, C.M. N v •~ I • • e h I 2 2 ov.·n homr, to your l'l'nlal. the n1ain tl'rminua to new ~-• 'E\ .,.. ..... up. -"""' r, I< Bdrm, be.th~ upstairs. Liv takf' & recreation proje<:t. -==========-I & i;auna. pool~. rec rm . lleU nn w/fl'plc. dining area. All Can pay SlZi or ll bit mon-, PRE -PAID l~'TEREST .Of &.: Als:oqu ln. l'tlgr 846-..'U37 rlrc kitchen, \\"11.Sher-Ot'y('r but pleaS{', submit "''hat you 00\\'N: Sl47.""" FU LL fice Rtnt1I -Incl. Ca.rptttl'd & draJM,.'d. En. havr 1\l't'S\ of !111\\'lhorn!, oNV Oringe County 4600 closed patio. 2 car garage. l..1wnda\f'. f'lc .: husb<1nd rm. FRI('·· y SPACE in l'l!'al estate ollice l~;,;:;~;,.,;;.;.;c;;;'--...;.;;.;..; Utt ol clubhoU8'l', pool &. plo~ by \\'l'1!Cm Airllrlf'~. MA TRADE· for public ~tenographl!'r, m. SINGLE )'OUng ad,ull!, lux-sauna bat..'I. S250 pe.r mo. Call focally: 6'2~. e\·t1/ • Pl ease l·all: Tom Drllal() aurance aaenl, acoounlant, ury garden apts. w/full Macf'atlane Rily "'rekends. • REALTOR (714 1 6TJ-6259 bookketper, etc. m-1972, recrn.Oon fa~ I 11 t I es A 642-386l HELP! \VUI somebody please Huntington Beach 34.10 W. Balboa Blvd. N.B. compl~tf! priviaey. South NE \\Ip 0 RT B h ttnt to 110mrone w 11 h * New deluxe duplex . ()('tan NEW Deluxe cWct ,.,.,.. Bay Cub Aplt. 271 So it a c chUd 2 Brookhunt. Anahl!lm tnf) \\'atertrmt 2 bdr •. 2 bl._ New rtn? THns I: one view. liome-like 3 BR owner 3al to 1200 sq rt at Santa ~ luxury bldg. bu 1 1t-1 n s, b.'lhy, 1.lnfum, 2 BR. bll·ln1, + 2 BR, Ille roof, pe.tio!I. -Ana Fwy A Cnr.m Valley aubterT&f'lf!an pl\rkla.g. bQl.t pool , Costa 1-fc1111 or * Nrw 12 1m!ts near caan, turnoff. 831-1400, 499-tLClll Garden Grove 4610 aliPI av•il. N""'J>Orl. Approx $1 $ o, Y.'rplC!!, plllioa. Sl600/mo in-OffiCI!" & desk ipace., ;;;:;_;;:;;;c..:c:..::.:.:; __ ,,;,:cc Carlbe Balboa S48-.'U07 rom,., Stocretarlal llt:l'Vitt. StNGLE \'oung Adults J,o:(· :uo t"t'nmndc St. \\'Af'\TY.:D: :t BR nnrurn hs,. * Olclt-r ~ unit!l oq COM'lt'l' nr Ne"'POT'I Civic Ctn1t>r, u1')' prdcn aplA "'ilh coun· 673-XI03 • \\'estsldt' Cos lA r.1 e, a'. oetan. r0n.~ltter S.'«X'.O do11 n li7~l60l t "I b I I ..... i 4 BR 21· $13J..$150. 3 Teen!l, rpl. TERRY RF.ALT\' ry .. u a mOAp H'.1 .. · am , 1 BA Tn1vnhoniK". ~,. "·""l 536·1\j[I E\·e, iiJG.i6.SS LARGE l:xcculiYfl office roml'ltt<' prl\1111cy. sot.ITH Bsick [l.lly 111"1'11, nr 111rhl11. 2 ,:..~~~:;;.,--,----~ N.ll. Abo smAU office tram BAY . CLUB APTS 13100 cer it1Jr., pntlo. Pool, NK" l FURN hr. q111f'I , xlnt Balboa Island Sl!i mo. 011•nc:r. 6'1~"164• CltAPMA.N Avr.. Carden ar'l'a, Sublet Aug ~th", $210 re!t't'f'OC"'!l •JI" r ti l(I, &ore or otrltt, w/w ca""'ta. 600 to 1200 Sq, Ft. Grow (f14) 6.'6--3030. mn. 64:2-3412 M~ ' • .,... ---------'--"'-='--..,,-----' _s1_M_._._ ... c.· ... _'·-""c.l5:_ ____ _:o~·c:"_:'IC:c,:F.::;.,_:C::-':'.'-:..:&~•;:6·2~t!>J:..: Huntington Beach 4400 6070 • .. .. .. rrfday, A119ust 1, 1969 DAJlY PILIIT 34{ •--------------IREAL ESTATI BUSINESS and DAILY PILOT Genorol F INANCIAL JOn> & •-.PLOYMIN I Ju11.~ I . . fNl( CLASSIFIED INDEX _1n_du_11_,1_.1 _R_on_1,_1 _l.o90_ Bus. 0Fportun111 .. 6300 When You Help Wanted, Mon 7200 Sales Help Wint .. , Men 7200 I . PARTS INSPECTOR;, I l\!lnlrnum on1 Y"lr W~t1 Ion of machine parts. D:c- ellf!nt opportunity tor Jr. ln- Mpt'Clor. Knawl.tda'e ()f 'tee-t Iron.le component* dc1irabk I but not lllf,ndlltory. Mwil be capable of readl.na-blll¢- prinb and able ID uae ver- SALE OR LEASE PIZZA -Want it done '°" '••t "•rvk• and lxpft't Alll1t1nc• 12,000 aQ. It, lndustrla.fbulld. h DIAL DIRECT 642-5618 1.,.. Z.n<.d M·l. L"'Ul"Y of-All plua equip for ,,... rig t . • • """"'""'· ""'""" muhUll Mutual Funds Sales 11.-------------------'I fice-alr cond. Ample park-houw, incl: oven, elect fund Aleimen (2) tot one of Ing, lOe aq, ft, or $85,QXI, chffse grinder, plrut pt.nl, Call one of lht hJa:hest produclrfg llttU HOUSES FOR SALE OEflt•ltAL .................. UOI COSTA Ml'SA ............... HOI MllSA Ol:L MAt ••..• , ........ lits MliSA VEROa . ., ........• ,.1111 COLLEO• l'AIK .............. 111$ Nt!!WPO•T tat.CH ,., ..••.•.. n• NtWl'ORT H'IGHTI ....•..... Ult IALIOA C:OVES .......... ,.UIS NlWl'OllT SHOIES ...•....•.. Ult !AYCREST ................ ·.,,UlJ IAYIHORf.S ................ nu OOYl'I SHORES ........... ., •. 1U1 Wf$TCLIPP , •·•·•••••• Int HAI.IOI HIGHLAHOS .•.....• IW UNIYEISITY PAllC ..•••..•••. UXI ttYINI! ............•.•....•• UM IACk aAY ..................... IJtt l!ASTILUFfl .............. IMJ 111.YlNI TEltAtt: ••••••••••••1'41 COllOHA DEL MAI ....... ,.,.IUI lllALIOA l'tNIHSULA ......... UN llEACOH llAY ·········•••••• •. lNS IAY HLANOS .........•...•.•. llM LtDO ISLI! ..•.....• ,,.,.,US1 IALIOA llLANO .....•.... lSN HUNTINGTON IE.ACM .•• ,.,1 ... HUNTINGTON HAttlOUI , •... 14ts FOUNTAIN YALLllY ........ , 1411 SEAL IEACH ............•... lut iUNSET lt!!ACH .....•......... 1Ul GAtDEN GROVI! .............. 147$ LONG 8fACH ........•.•..•.. ,IHI .AKEWOOD .......•.. , .••. ISM )IANGa COUNTY ............. ltfO OUT 01' COUNTY .•. ····•····• 1,H OUT OF STATE .•..•.•.....••.. llOI STANTON ····••••••••••••••1111 WESTMIN$Tl!t. ••............•. un MIDWAY CITY •...••••. ., ...... 1111 SANTA ANA ....••••.... , ... 141t SANTA ANA HGTS ............. lut ORANGe .... ·······•·• •. llH TUSTIN .........•...... 16'1 NOllTH TUSTIN ............ , .. 164S .1.HAHflM .. , ....... USI SILVliiRADO CANYON ........ llJS LAGUNA HILLS ................ Hot LAGUNA IE.I.CH .............. llfl UOUNA NIGUEL ............ 110'1 MISSION VIEJO •••••••••••• 11111 SAN (LIME'ITE ........ 1111 SAN JUAN CAPISTRAfitO •...•. lm CAl'ISTIANO aEAC.H ..•...•.. 1ns OANA l'OINT .................. UH CARLSIAO .........•..••.... , .. 1711t OC!ANSIDf ................... 11$0 s.\N 011'.GO . . .••••••••• 17H ltVElllDf COUNTY ...•••... llOI HOtlSIS TO IE MOYIO •.• ,.,It# CONDOMIN IUM ... \ • ., .. ltt41 OUl'LlXl'S POii SALi! ...•... 1'7J Al'AtTMl!Nl' ,01 SALf ,. . Ulf RENTALS Houses Furni,hed liENIEIAL ......... tllt tENTALS TO SHAii! ...•.... :roo:I COSTA· MESA ......•....... 11tt Mf;SA DEL MAI .•...•....... 21DJ MESA YfRO!llll COLLEGE l'AIK ........•..... tilt NEWl'ORT IEACH ........•... not NEWPOllT HOT,. ··-·········'-11f NEWPORT SHORES .......... 1210 llAYSHORES ..........••... 21" DOYl!lt 5HOllES ...........••.. m1 iNESTCLIFI' ...•......•.. 1ll0 UNIYEaSITY l'ARK , ......... n!I lllYINE . ········•••••••••••·HH £,t.5T ILUl'I' .......•.•... nu IRYINE TEllllACE ........... :n41 co•ONA DEL MAR ...••...... 21JI IAL90A ...................... llCI LIDO ISLE ..........•.•...... 2331 IAY ISLANDS ....•....•. .,.,.2.Hf &ALIDA ISLAND .............. 2)11 EAST ILUFI' ................. 3147 &ACK I AY ..................... 1240 SACK IAY ........... 2241 HUNTINGTON IEACH ......•.. 24GI FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......... 1411 S!AL &EACH ................ 2UO LONG BEACH ............. UOI ORANGE COUNTY ..•..•.•..... 21.0f SANTA ANA ..........•...... Hit WESTMINSTEll .........•..... ll!1 MIDWAY CITY ......... 2611 SANTA ANA HEIGHTS ........ J!JO COASTAL ............. 11QC LAGUNA &EACH ............ )JOJ LAGUNA NIGUEL ........... 1101 MISSION VIEJO .............. 17111 ;AN C .. l!MENTE .... ., 1l11 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO ..... 11U CAl'ISTllA'IO IE.I.CH ........ Jl)f OANA l'OINT .......... 1141 RIYflStOE COUNTY .....•.. llOI \IACATJON IENTALS ...•..... ttGI SUMMEI •INTALS ......... 2'11 CONOOMINtUM ...........•.. ,.2,SI OUl'Ll!Xl!J PUllN ......... ,...ms RENTALS Houses Unfurnished GENE•AL .... ••••••••• ..... :!CCI COSTA MESA .......•........ llW MESA DEL MA• ........... , •. J1U MESA \IEltDE ..•. ••·••••·····1110 COLLEGE PARK ···•··••••• .JIU NEWPORT BEACH •. , ....•.. ,.JHI Nl!WPORT HOHTS ......•...... 2211 NEWl'OllT SHORl!I •.....•.•. J?H 5AYSHOllES ................ Jtu OOYEll SHORES •.......•...... :nn WESYCLll'F ............... 32>0 UNIYl!ltSITY PARK ...... , .... )111 tYINE . ··········-··l2M 111.VtNI! TERRACE ..•.•••..... no CORONA DEL MAI .....•..... >Ht SALIDA .........••.. : ..•. !IHI IAY ISL,t,HOS ................. tut LIDO ULE ···········•••• l>SI &ALIDA ISL.t.NO .............. nu NEWPORT WEST ............. l)IJ HUNTINGTON aEACH ....... 1400 l1UNTINGTON NARIOUlt ••... '4U FOUNTAIN YALL IET .....•.•.. >'ll SEAL &EACH ............. .,:MJO GAllOEN GllOY• .............. l'IS LONG &EACH ... , ...•...• .3SOI OllANGE COUNTY ............. 2'ft S,t.NTA ANA . . ............... Mii llllESTMINSTEI ..........•..... :Ult MIOWAY CITY .......... MU SANTA ANA HEIGHTS ........ )I.It COASTAL ............ 11IO LAGUNA atA CH .............. 17U L,t.GUNA NIGUEL ............ )Ill MISSION VIEJO ., .........•. , UOI SAN CLliMENTI! ............ >710 CAPISTRANO ........... JJIS CAPISTRANO 9EACH , ........ JJ)I DANA POINT ......... , ..... 2140 CONOOMINIUM .......... 2'51 OUPLEXl!'S UN~UllN .......... lf" SUMMER llENTALS ··~····· ;ittJ RENTAL> Apts. Furnished GENERAL • . ........... 4GOI COSTA MESA , ............... 4100 MESA YER OE .... , .......... 41\f NEWPORT aE,t.CH ........... •100 NEWPORT HEI GHTS ......... UlO NEWl'ORT SHORES ........ ,.,4l1t WEnCLll'F .......•.•. 41Jll UNIVERSITY l'A.llK ........... 4111 IACIC lllA~ , .... , ...... 4141 EAST BLliFI'. ' ............ 4242 CORONA OEl MAii ......••. ,.•lH IALIOA ..•........ .,.4ll0 SAY ISLAHD$ ...........•..•.. 41H LIOO ISLE ........•..... , 4151 &AL90A ISlANO ............. 4W HUNTINGTON &EACH ....... ,.,IOCI lf0UNTAIN VALLEY .......... 44H IEAL l!EACH .................. 401 ~ONG 9EACH ............. ,4100 'RANGE COUNTY .•.....•..... UOO CAttOEN GROVE •····••·····• 4611 WESTMINSTEI ............ ,.. 4112 \llOWAY CITY .............•.. 4'\' IANTA ANA ., ....... 4'1t ~ANTA ANA HEIGHTS ........ ~ TUSTIN ···· ······•·····''°'' COASTAL ., .............. OIO LAGUNA 11,t.CH ........•..... 41tl LAGUNA NIOUEL .. , ......... U~I • Mls°SION VIEJO •••··•••·••• 47QI SAN CLEMENTE ............. ,4111 DANA POINT ·····•·····•······')II TIUPLEX, t!C. .......•...... ,.4tt0 CONDOMINIUM ····•••••·•···• •15t RENTALS Apt1. Unfurnished Gl'NEltAL .................. Slot COSTA MESA ................. SIOO Ml!S,t. YEii.OE .........•.... 111f NfiWPOllT 8ElCH .•......... not NtWl'ORT Hl!IOHTI ...• ., .... 1111 NEWPOllT SHOIES ••......... sno WllSTCLIPF ··•·•···•• .12Jll • UHIYllSITY PAii( ........... nu tACKIAY .............•• EAST ILUPI' .....••.. ,..IHI COIONA DEL M.&• ....... _ .. nH IALIOA ............... !IHI 9AY llLANOS ......... , .•. , .. SJH LIDO ISLE ............ , .'1.11 lllALIOA ISLAND .......... ll5S l\UNT!NCTON lllACH ......... UM l'OUNTAIN VALLEY , .• , ....• T!411 srAL 1t~CH , ........•..•.•... sot LONG atACH ............... SJtO Oft.ANO! COUNTY ••• , .......•. IHf OAIOIN OltOVE ....•.•••. ., .. 5411 WESTMINSTll .... , ....•..••. un MIDWAY CITY ................. U1' SANTA ANA .... . ..•.•••• ,.MM SANTA ANA HEIONTS • ., ........ . fUITIN .. . ............ "4t COASTAL ................ t1tl LAGUNA &•ACM ,.,. ........•. Slts M LAOUNA NIOU•L .. , ......... 11'1 IAN ,1,aMl'NTI . . ........ nu IAN JUAN CAPISTtANO ...... Jnl OANA l'OINT .... ,, .. 11 .. REAL ESTATE, General Tlll'Llll, tt'-··•••···••······ Hot CONDOMINIUM ..•.••••. ,.,,ltM ltllNTA\.I WANTl.0 ........ , .. tnl IOOMJ PO" laNT -~··········'"' llOOM a aOAIO "' " ' ··"" "'OTIEl$, TlllAILEI COV•TI ,,., GUEiST HOMl$ tttt M!St. ll;EN T.-,LS sm •NCOM• l'ltOl'llTY ,. ... ., .OW ~UJINEll "lt0PUTY ilOlt ' TRAILE R P4.RKI •~1 Owner wUl conaldtr carry hot choc. machit1e, Sa.ni· in "'-··them ,.._.,, Le.IJure •uSllolliSS RENTAL ................ • h ~ ~- 0,,l(l ltl"OITAl ... ' .. ,. lng tlnancing. CALL 545-8424 Se.rvt Ice-cream maker (wa. t e experts \Vorld. We mean it w~ we tNOVSTll:IAL '10"11" .......... South Coast Real Estate ter -operated), Toil!itmaster C{ ,.. . . mo" leads " ....._ eo-•11c1AL ........ ..,, ,::,='"-""""-''CC"--""-'-,'-1 ••M f' d b f /I ' ~ ~;~~STiii~~-~~~~-~~ •. ::::::: ::1RENT 1'11!11' ?¥1·1 neartr11 ca(e french-lryer, etc ..... .,.. }· ( 1ste e OW. tential than \Vt' can hanrtlr, Profit n\a .... in. Total Value • ( J Ou " Id P•o"lc ltAHCHES .... -._.. •.•..•.•.. 11M t.'Ompletlon. 10 1.bops. 1125 ... • r .... year o ., cn11:u1 011ov1s ............. 11n S\ h $llJ nio. 1355 1 ""an, $5500, will ~ell all for $~. Coast member flrm.s oUlce r.c1t1,1,01 .............. •i• 1 """' Cull 9"'W6 o• "'1628 Col· t,;,.•t-• I• t"· "·•rt of • "l•· u.K• llSIHOltl ........... Utl CJ\t. 6T~ll6 -• WO-""'" ""' " "" """ 1""' 111.1011rr110,.111TY ······· .ia'!l;o""'~c.=""'c---.,,--;c I lee!. SERVICli DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY ure \Vnrld "'here the busi. OIANOI co. f'ltOPl"ltTV .... .,~, M-2 INDUSTRIAL a>pace in CANDY S"pply _,., .... -•• "''' ,, "·I•• done. 0"• OUT OP ITATI PIOP ......... •!• bid :tOOQ !I 746 " '""" ,-, ""... ,. niers. micn >tnctcr• and l heiahth gauges. Call J im Hya1ns D113i1: 6~2·2400, Eves; ~19. 1o1ouNTAIP4 a oEtt•T ........ &111 conrrc lC! g. sq · or lull time, days/evt:L a.byslttlng 6550 G•rdening 6610 P•ptrh1nging hlgh1y quallfi~ clients wlU IUIDl\llSION U.HO . ······ 'llJ \V. 171h, Cf.1 (713) 434-5082 Ref"U oott ·-____ :;_ _____ P1JntJn11 6150 not .... ,. .. , do buJ;ineu GULTON lNOUSTRIES 'UlAL 11TATt s1av1c1 •..•. •1u . 1 &: ect money .. .,m W1LL Care Jor y 0 ur • GARDENER • • t.1. IXCHANOE .............. •t>I FOR Lease-New 2500 sq. Jt. coin opor Dlsnonsers in 1----'--------~1th fnn1 outside Lei.stltt l&W \Vhiltit.r Ave. C.M. '· •· WANT$ ····•··•· n• industrial bldf. 9c ft. 1639 Costa M~ & vie No Sell-pn-.schooler In my home EXPERT JAPANESE • PAINTING World. \Ve are particularly F,qua1 opportunity empJoyer BUF~~~ciAl.d f.1onrovia. CM. 673-0017 Ing. Sl650 Total ~ash req. \\ttkly. 968-6T75 Commercial Landscaping E.X-PAl.NTER now tracl'ler, Interested In men with man-Th R~' ger · •U•INISS Ol'l'OtTUHITlfl. u• L I Send name. address • BAB'iSl'JTING By the wk. Malntl'nanc-c and aeanup quality painting \\'kends, qerial abllity. Top produc-e •uuH1St WAHTIO ...... ''°' o s 6100 phone to: Route Dept. P.O. You furn tratl!lportatlon. MIKE INC. vacation. Free f'sllm11.te, crs only rail l'lfr. \V right at IHY•STMl!NT Oppelffull!tlt-i .. 6l11 -Bo 3846 A ~· ,~.. Call"" 1'07 ., d·· °'" ~. 714/830-1515. "' >"ASl llO SLAND IHY•STMl!NT WANT•o ...... •su " • na ... :im ~""" .,..... ~· CALL 642-5196 ~~ •• , Si:iiiiiiR~rf;iij;;.,;;;;;,o;;;-\'!!!!!!!!!!""!!'!':'!'!'!'!'!!~!!!!!!!!!!!' \ NEWPORT BE~CI I MONl"Y TO L.... ·····•••••·· un OCEAN VIEW COMMODITY TRADERS • RELIABLE babysitter, your SUBURBAN Pa,int!ng/Dec l'llltOHSAL LOANS ........... mi lo GENERAL Ya.rd service, -DIVISION-• NEEDS AN Jl>Wl!lltY LOANS .......... •SM d A . II Ask about ''The Oliver home, your lransporlat n. L-.·i ,1 low••I ·ates. ~ Expert Guarante!d \\'ork CONTROLLER EXPERIENCED COLLATl!•AL LOANS ......•.. uu San ,m,n1c. l\XMlUS se er FUii JU 56-2591 uo:::.. ' ~ '"" N . b 1 ll!AL l!STATI LOANS ...... •:wt v.·ants lo move this beautiful system" 17141 833-1368 or P me. estlma1es. (2131 438--1027 Free est. o JO too al'ic MOITOAGaJ, T....t D..et ... •:14$ k" 10 900 .th 1.c-. rnn.o catt, 5 days a ""k. or too small. 4!M·319o DlSHWASHER A0 NN0UNCEMENTS . '1SI ~~ :.i $subord~~te ~~ Investment Oppor. 6310 Exp'd mother. Li: fencd yd, e.g~~~e!. ~~p: 1 P_A_IN_;"r_IN_G_I_n_t_•_Ex_t_Lo_;_wea_t"'~:c:nice:~:a~ru::c: 1--'A~·~·~ly-"ln_P',_"""''--o_n~ly,__, d NOTICES t t I. loan all -uip, reJ's. 546-2110 • contract!d n•\l!CS }"'u.11> lM ll c~·p F"lbe •·-•· an anee o cons rue ion "· GROWING mfgr. o! Jbrgl! &1.;:="""'="======== Exp'd 646-6222 • ..-' · quires DivislOn Confnl er. c.."\ rguu !uvP 1nen FOUNO ,,,... At'J •.....•.... 64~ For more lnfomiallon, please hane f d I Satlsfaction ruat. Free e.-L Position reports directly to CHOPPERS ~:~Tso~ALs ···· ·::::::::::::: :!!~ call K. W. Small. ~~~s tina:i~I a~s~s~. f~ Carpenttrlng 6590 ~f.ta~~~:~e :J":~ Jln1 \Vttks 673--llfili grneral manag,r. Cost ex· GEL COAT ANNOUNCIMENTS .............. ,. Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. e pans" Acllve or ln ac EXT/Int. pntg. Aver rm. $20 perience: de&l.rtd. N'\\·port t'OAAI GUN OPERATORS iriTMt ····················•·41'1 1818 \V Cha Av' ·" IOll.. • • CARP!NTRY 5-18-4808/~2.1lO lift 4 + '°"" paint neat wor4:. Beachl tocatlon. ROLLERS PUNflALS ............... MIJ · pman • live Invest. secured by , b d l'A 10 011TuA11Y ........ ~11 Orange Calif equip. & inventory. Reply to l\flNOR REPAIRS. ~o Jo hipanese Gar ener Joe refL Roy, 8~7-1358. ~·1N1SHERS l'UNtlAL OllECTORs ······ '414 5il 2621 Eves ~knds ·5.llJ.5971 P.O. &·. 1,-74• Clll. Too Small Cabinet m. gar-E.x ..... r, compl yartl service! Contact A. J, Egli Top scale. Call BIU • (2131 l'LOltlSTs .........• ••n ·· • · .• r-e F'or better painting call ct.10 oF THANKS .•......... •o•I..,~'!"'!!!~""""""""'!"'~ I ages le other cabmets. >'rce est. ~8-79.)8, 546-0724 experienced painters 1 1 77g....11;,o IH MEM0111•~ , ............ 6411 BARGAIN 2 apt Job; Costa 63•0 545--8175, Uno answer leave J"l'S G-~•nlng • 1,, •• , CORPORATION GRANT'S SURPLUS CEMETERY LOTS ·········· Mii . . Money to LOln ' Ut <ll\J T 646-4077 altt'r 6 pm. c•Ml!TEllY CRYPTS ........ 6411 l\fcsa. A 19 unll & a 55 unit . msg at 646-2372. H. O. malntcnat11..'1!. Rt's. &: Com.1-------~--~l RADIX CEMETERY CRYl'TS ·•······ UIC E)(rel IOC &1;)...2060 0 r Anderson m·-···'· • "' ···1 PAI_NTING ~ lnt/exr. 2 Univ 184 E. L•"-·ty A······· ~1•M.1.T0111Es ·•········· •421 · ls: &: 2nd loans for quick1,c:.,,:~==~=-~--, ... ,.. ............., 3 R ""' y "" ~~~~~~L l'AllK•.::::::::::·:!~l -'536--0=_103c17· _A0ncy_U'c"c'7·~-,,,--cub.. Borrow on )'Our pro. PARTITIONS, Sm11ll Remod. s~~. 4~432e~es. esp. Anaheim 819-C60 AYIAYION SEIYICE •········""LAG. Bch, 3 adjoining 25 x perty eq \Vithout di.sturblna l\1ovt' walks, etc. Nite/Day Ge ::.:.:n~·~·~·~I ..:S~·~·~·~lc~·~•-66::;8::;;2 l~~!C~LA~RK~=.~c~LA~R=K'--l~EXP5iii~EiiR~IENENCCEEDDCC<'.O.,jk~.'-'iAiip-T•AvEL ········64li 100 I I · A h Bea•h R ' Call L • <:An AOZ'70 I d 1400 I" Coa I Alll TIANSl'OllT.&TION ....... ~41 0 S Jn f'C ~ l'OUl' )OW interest b: TDs. eas. n.en .,.,.,......,,., CUSl'O'f PAlNTJNG p Y ays al ·Y, S °' · l 00 ""'007 \VE SIT BETI'ER JNC " AUTO TRAN5PORTAT1 .... 64U Heights. 11 . ...,,,_, , or Also ....... us for 2nd TDs. REPAJRS. AL~ERAT"ONS • "'"2'Y • Hwy. NB. 642-8881 Ll!GAL NOTICE' ...... itM 540-9846 .,.,,. .• "' Subsidiary of ... -..., GEIMAN • TUT0111Ho ""'l..:c:.::;:::=.,,,..,-,---,-,---Sn.lUer ?.Iottpge Co. Inc. CABINE:TS. Any size job Gerber Prod. Co. SERVICE DIRECTORY ExCt'llent vlt'\v lot Serving Harbor Area 20 yrs. zs """· exper. $ 54S-6713 •"<O""''" I "'~ Professional SuP'rvi.slon for .. "" nG · · ·· · · ' Hill U1 ""r Three Arch Bay 336 E 17ti St ANSWERING SIEIYICE . uos 1•·~ <'A"2171 • • 545---0GU Q~ALITY Repairs ~ Altera-chlldren, elderly & convales. Al'l'LIANCE REPAIRS, P•rll H10 By Ownl'I' -'19.1-7890 ..... -lions -New const. by hour ANYTl1'11E·ANY\\IHERE ASl'HALT, 0111 .. ... .. '··· Ult!l:~:c,.::,.c:_""=""'=-':;'-;:;-AUTO •l'PAlllS . . tn• so. Laguna view le\"C'I lo!, or Contract. 6*>-34-42 s·rtti"ng Pretty AUTO. Ifft ••Ill. T1,,, "'"' ,}4. ~.i 1·1 8300 f M I I • TD '• 63451========== tAIYSITTING ........ HH u ..... crgr u I' s. . or 9 9 s, • • •OAT MAU"'TEN.t.Nc• ....... uss.,~s~LS~,7~50~·~o~'~',"'~'-".,..."-c1_6'3 __ It.•~ ,, .• TD ,, ·-•to•>th Cement, Concrete 6600 A9ency ltlCK, Ml.)ONRY, •I~ ..•... u~, ... ... ""u •• IUltNE$S st•YICES ........ 'so '65 RIVlERA, all equip., 642-3214 &U!LDEiRS .•........... •J11 t Nd "·"y .,,..k incl. 10';0 Int., all due 3 yrs., e CONCRETE \vork all cA.r1111NG UIJ very c ean. s uuv. ~· • · I t La CASINETM.AKING .•........•. .sto.,~121;:::00'.'.'.:oibe:::•olc_:&l"Z-8'84:,C:-:::.,...,....,... on oc.>can viciv 0 · guna types. Pool decks & custom. CAll'eNTEllHG ............. u'!i Beach. 20~& discount Call 518-1.324 Cl"M!NT, (Gn(rt!1 ..•........ "°'LEVEL ocean & coif course 714 : 494-1137 1-'-'.,,====~~-=cc CHILO CAif, Lie•~"" ' ...... it10 -1 I . ,_ Cl ' By • CONCRETE \Vork. bond-CONTIACTOIS .... : ... U10 VIC'\\' 0 in V<ln rn . . CARPIT cL&:.&M1NG . u 2s 011'Tler. Sl2 500. 494--0039 SG.000 1ST TD on OCt"an v1e_: eel & lie. Palios/dtv\V)'S CAlll'ET LAYING & llEPAI• IUI 1;c::..c;:cc::::c· ::C::-'OO'c:O::"=<:::-l lot, 8',,0, due 3 years. 1070 etc. Phillips c' men t . DRAPERIES .. . ···· .... 101 BY Owner: Lot, Dana Point, dl.loount. 497-1210 "-•<> .,.,.,,. ... OIMOl lTION .......... UlS _,. 6 't Lo' '"n ~~ HAULING, General, ll~H, hedges. lopped, trln1n1ed. re1novcd. Big John. 642-4030 CLEAN UP &: lite 1noving Tree & shrub removal Reasona.bi<'. ;;t!}..JJ.59 PA P E R SPECIALlSTS -Experienced Cal's best for viny!s. nocks, BROILER' MAN roll, murals. 347•1659 eves. Six: nights a v.·k. Starting rate PAINTING -papering, 10 $26.00 a day. Contact the yeara in area. R'asonable chef. Jntcrvie"·s bet. 12-4 ratf!s. Call 6'12--0427 p.m., ~lon.-Fri. Apply in PATh'TING .Papering l~ yrs person only. ir Harbor area. Lie. & bonded. Refs Jum. 642-2356 FIVE CROWNS NEED Painting! Call us RESTAURANTS Reliable st'rvi~ \\'ilh quail-3&01 E. PacLI'iu C.0.st Hwy, 1y at it.s bl!st at the mo11 1 ___ c~o0mo'=nao'=dc•l0M="--- rea50nable pri~s. 646-2837 COOKS OIAl'"TINO SEIYICIE ...••.•.. UJ7 zon.:u Uni S. ,,_ """ _.,_Of~497~-l~Q2~1~o~'~<~n~lng~';'--l-et:U:rrtiMlP.i:TicjSit-EL!CTllCAL ·········"" Clemrnlr zoned 111 units. A-NNOUNCEMENTS e CUSTOl\f PATIOSe EOUll'Mt:NT •t:NTALS .•.... u~o Both oce~ view 494-5352 concrete u.winc A removal Healfh Clubs 6720 Plastering. Repair 6880 ==:...;:.=---18 years or older Expe1ienced pt'tlerred Apply in person bet. 2-4 pm =~~~~~G. ·:. ·······::·:;:;:::::t:: . and NOTICES State Lie. * 842-1010 !-'OR SALE : Holiday Heallh lfURNACt: 1tEP.1.111s. Elr .••... 1oc 6150 ::::...:.;.:.;.;.;:. ______ l_..;;::c,;~,;...;;.:::::::::o.,... Spa menibership -Sll.25 a PUll NITURE R!STOR1No J:R;';:";;<;;h;•;•;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;; J Found lfrH Ads) 6400 * OONCRETf': firs, patios month. Call 642--{)232 alter 6 • 1~"1N1SHING un etc. Concrete & blk top saw-COCO'S OAROli!NING ........ uel pm. OEH!RAL SERYtCEs ......... UH MONTANA FOUND: \Vhil!! kitten w/ ing. R'as. Don, 642-8514 b~======= I .P_;:lu=m::b::i::,n,.•c_ __ _:6::1;.9D: l•!!!!!!!2!!!3!!1!!W!!o!!st!!c!!liU!!.!!N'!."B". !!!!!' e PATCH PLASTERING. All types. Free estimate. Call 54Q....6825 g~~,tNG, 011c1.~~.:::::::::: :.~ gold &. silver jev.·eled collar. -• co••EN THUM• .....•..••.•.. 1111 RANCH Vic ol Cos ta !\1e.sa St., CM. Child Care 6610 Hauling 6730 PLU1.IBING REPAJR DRIVER CLERK on GUN SHOP ................. 1711 ""' "109 1;_;;;;.o_.;;._.c;.______ job all book b"I M tlu ,~. l1EALTH CLU&S .............. •121 Bi,l ter Root VaUr v •c~"-'"'--~-.,-.,,-,,.-=-:,-:I C 1 ,, YARD /gar cleanup. Remo~ No too .sm mo 1 r. on "\I .,,. 11.t.ULING .............. 1rn 47 ·t th 1 't ·~··I• ' & l •n·'e CHILD atf' n my hoine . ..-.:i 1 d" 1 1 t e 642-3128 e day !"r-9 pm Saturday 9-6 2 110USECLEANIHG ....... •ns mi e!! sou o 1' is.,.,.. BLACJ<, whitr · an ... k 1 h INC!I, \')'. 1r , r.i.c or · · •NTElllOt DECORATING .... '1>1 Montana. Bolh creek & rl'S-doi:-. Has col!ar and ne<A· d a Y !!; w · u n e es bockhoc. grad!! 96'2-874:> yca1·~ collegt' minlmuni. No INCOME TAX ........ , 11u . 1 4..,, ~ ·,0.; v •• ., prt>.~chooler.; lron1 2 ~~ yrs. Rem_odol, !l!P•">r, 691.n students. Male. Call Hun--l}!C'"I, orn1mtnr.1, Et, ........ ,t1u crvo1r wa er. ""acre~ · liccn~r. i\f{'sa C1uc a, a It ri. J46-.6077 HA ULING, cleunup, lots rto. ·-- tROt11NG .. . •........ ''" galed. 1otal 620 aci't's; part !'l'l'.>-64s:i Handyman anytime you call. lington Beach P ll bl i c 1H ~l1 LATING ............ ,1,~ d -1 · kl s BUlLO, Reniodcl. Repair Library ~9327. J2:> l'l1ain lNSUllA NCE ····· 'n• un er gravi Y ~prin er sy ~· LARGE \\hi le rabbit with Cor~t Cle1n1"ng 6625 612--33811 B · k bl k t 1t111EsT1G.1.T1NG, Det•cllw• .. Hit ,em. Low dDwn payment. 6',., r-r1<' , oc • co n.c re e • Street, HB. ~!':.:~~=~A~El'•1•, Etc.::::::!::: interest. -Ollirorn1a interest ~~~:Y :::~~:L1~ountai.n CARPa' &: cF~u~m~.~cl-,-... -,.-: Housecleaninq 6735 ~~ir~ )ob too·s~~s.ca1A.;::S~TR~~O~T~E~K~C=o=R=P~. LANoSC,t.l'tNG . ··········-·",. for sale or trade Days. I 1 do ,.rv,·-& q••olily 1 OCKSMITH mt . •tINIATURE -ay ~le or Y "" . " 0-nln&•" Exporienct'd -· ··········· · 546-9842 art 6 &14 0123 &· •"""' -•1 s I f '!A!NT--s/-mc'l, \vtndo11·11 * I>" Y"" need remodclin.... r-· . MASONRY, lll lCK ....•.. , .itJll . . • . . HB -· pl1 ldcntlfy. 9.'0rk. c... ter ing or " .... "" -.... Ch k & Lathe f.I ch MOVING a 'TOJIAGt ....•••.. -1~~~~~~~~~~~ area, ow.,.... b . htne , 642-8520 our .specialty. Xlnt v.-ork, painting or upairs. Call uc crs a Jne. l'AINTtNo, "•Ht11•n11ns ...... •u•r ~96~,.:~-~~,.,--:.,,--:;;-.;;:i="•=g=":=·"'.'=':'=== 2 9446 k 6'121797 Top Pay l'AtNTJHG, l l'tns ···············"HA 6200 ~ reos! Refs. &I -Die • • UG7 LOGAN AVE', l'AT1os · · ·······--········"" ~~cr~•~•~ll'.=...------""= LADY·s \Vristwatch. BluUs Cer .... t Laying & · '" Now Interviewing SALES CLERKS Full Time Only ' Experirnccd preferred but : not n'cessary. f.fany com- pany benefits. Apply in per- son only between 2 i nd 6 P.i\1. ITJO Nf'wport Blvd., 01 MECHANIC tmmedlatc openings for 2 lop mtthanlcs. Fast Shop and ' good \\·agc!l---good working ronditions. New car dealer· ' ship. Apply in person: : Service f.tanaa:er I lollday Sales &: Service • 1969 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa-&12-&<rll *DRIVERS* No Experience Necessary! r.ru~t hav, clean Cal!Jornla driving record. A!)pJ.y YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St. Costa f,tesa DISHWASHER & BUSBOYS 18 or over. No exp. Nee. Apply in person 2-4 pm l'HOTOGllAl'HY .... ·····",. -r--Bay & Beach Cleaning .,.,rv 6960 COSTA MESA l'LASTl!lllNG, P•k!I. ltH•lr .. UN 11 ACRES. orange&. avocado area. Wk. of July 21. Owner Repair 6626 Carpet!, \Yindows, noor1, elc Sewlnp 11 ==~.:::::.:.;.::::::::.:,..,.,.., l'LUMBINO ················"" So 0 Co ty ~;,i~,n~l~lty~•_<c~lru~·m~·:,'&1~4-::1328~-J-;;:;;;;:;;:;;:-;~;;;;;;;-Co •1 ••• 1401 BOY for pt-time \York. !o-Ju.<11 COCO'S l'llT GROOMING 1t00 grove. . r. un · ~ A ING Res & mmc .....,.... e ~making _ Alterations hav' cirlver's lie. 4-8 pm. l'OOL sa:11v1cE .........• ··'"° $130 (0) on cash de a I OWNER abandoned us -CARPET L Y """<' ndo n C De · l'OWllR SWEEl'ING ........... •tu 125• 000 d N t C.A. pq, 642-2070 CARP.c.1,.-,, \\'i \\'S, Ml, ustom srgns 673-871J 2131 Westclir!, N.B. , l'UMI' sERvica:: ··············'"' "'' , 011·n. o pym s cute grey tiger kittens, need -====="====== ,1e. Res or Comc'l. Xlnt * 646--6446 * ..:c.:..:c;:B:,O"y=s~10~.~1~4---l::::::::=:=:=:=::::::::=zEI' llOOl'INO ············'nt on equity for one yr. homes. 84&-9689 • wo"· Ro••.' Roi•. uo '1.111 Se Ire llAOIO. lltPllr1. Elc .........•. •no n• =<u B k El I · I 6640 '" • ~ 2-YRS ex-· •m• « ~ llEMOOELING & REPAI• ••io 4~ ro rr. •ttNIATURE Sil\"er .......,.,!,, ec r1C1 • J . ,.... • . .... • Carrier Routes ...,.,..n ll!MOOllLl"IP, K1TCH!NS ... "4S " !"""' \VINOOWS DIRTY'! altrralions & repair. n1cns for 1c1s,011.s stfAll'l!"N ...... : ... ••!.! TAKE over 10 Acres no fcm11.l,. has collar, HB area. ELECTRICIAN. no job loo J h O I I 1 It '"~ "1'1 WAITRESSES Permanent. Exp'd preferred. ; '.•>"O ''' o nny unn your oca clothing spec a y . .,...,...., .., 1 •'"una "·ach. So. • """"' se:w1'HG M.1.C.H1N£ 1til'Al11"s ,;,., down. S25 mo. Ranch site IW7-43Li .sn1all. 1',or prompt service service Free est 64G-'t4J -~ --&..G6 .Dt: o-e Apply bet. ~-4 pm ; Sl!l'Tlc TANKS, Stw•"· a:1c.. •HJ1 :";'·:•:"~·~',;':•;k•;·='~'='-'='="=A=g=t. SM.AU. ML-.;cd brC'td doc call 545-4614 · · "' Alterations-641-5145 DAILY PILOT .. f•1LOIUNG ·············""i~ 1,,:=~===~,.,-,---,c,-EXPER Housekeeper. day Neal, accurate, 20 years t'XP. 642-4321 Tll!IMITE CONYIOL .......••. nn & n... 6•10 Jound in !-'uJ\t'rton. 8~2-5073 EL E CTRICll\N Licensed, l\1>rk o.pe~"able own COCO'S TtLI, c ... mk ......•... tn4 Mount. ..,...rt "" · '"' · -----SERVJCE' STA, Salesmen. TILE. Llno!Rm & M•,bt1 ...... 1•111;:.:;_:_~~------l bonded. Small jobs Main!. & trans. S-2 pm. 968-2401 TILE, Cerimlc 6974 full Hme ...,.aveyard shift. 2131 \Vestcliff. N.8. , T•llE SEtYICE ····• ''" lotf 640 ren•ir. 548-5203 .-•• I ~ ........................... 1 TllLEYISION, Rt.,.irs, Elc •.. •KS .... ' f.1ust be experil'nced lr; neat I ' ~~~~~~~ERY .. ,. :: LAND HO! 12 LB wht long ha ir, 1nale Fl .. c''c0:""'o•,g,_ ____ ...:6c7c5c5.1 * V~rnc, The Tile l'ltan .* in appearance. See Jim, 259() • JANITOR • JOBS & EMPLOYMENT J\faltese dog. Red collar1:..:~00:c; _____ ...;.666.;...5_ Cust. "'ork. lnstoll t: ~pairs. Newport Blvd. C.l\1. J\latur<' man. No cxpcrienoe Joa wANTEo. ~ ............. 1ou LANO A'PLENJY! ,u/tags. Sat, CdM. Girl that Carn.t Vinyl Tile lroning-1 Sc pc. No job too .small. Plaster EXPERIENCED 5 er v 1 c e nel'Cssary. ive will train. JO& w•NTl!o, Wltn'l111 •...... JnG 11 d ,.,_. 1 coll •· Fo t patch. Leaking shower f··•t ,.,., m•''' ""llorm• ru-Joa WANTEO. ca e """ eve. P ., AU styles P.'ld rolot"!I $ . g.1-_19571846-0206 station attendant w time. ~ " • "'' .,,. Ml!N • WOME~ ............•.. lllO al{a in. Re<A"d. 6i3-53i9 Jo·ree est. Lie. conlr. In tn> home * S4S-'.°>l04 rep1ur. 1 Apply in perAOn 2096 Harbor i5hCd, insurance pJan avail· DOMl!STIC HELP ············· 10;' PLUS abl<'. Stock plan avail. Apply AOENCtas, .Mtt1 •••.••.••.. 1uo RF.1.VARD. Lady's i;uld ring $4~7262 546-4478 JRONING \YANTED! $1.2.l S 6980 Blvd. Cl\1 646-5558 ald f II tingt ~~~:c~::.T.!!!;..~•ft ···.:::::~:LAKES ! '"' Alt'xandrite !purple)T ·-'"'·'--'-'-•-i<_•-----1F..XPER Busboy. 21 or over. ~,!~nc;~S66 9 ~a: Bl~~ 14ELI' WANTED, W•m•n ······''°' LAKES 1 stone, left 1-lotcl Laguna. Gardening 6680 per hr.* ~6-43Sl + ESTATE Malnt TT"et Serv top salary. Ben Brown'5 JOIS-~tft a Wtmtn ., .... 7UO f "!I ------8·1l9!0IJ AG•Nc11:1. ""'" a w1m111 ... 1n~ • rci;trm Spec. a.m. G"l · _ Removal & trimmings, 1ree 31106 S. Coast Jlwy, South SCHOOLS • tNSTRucT10N .. 1uo LAKES I 494-6045 ALLEN BRO~. J 1 • I 6790 •.sl!nllltP., Call 5.tl.Q088. Laguna. Sec J im aJt.'r 6 SERVICE Station graveya.Q'.1 JO• l'IEPAllATION ····· ....•. >aoc • GARDF.NERS STUDENTS an tor11 " opening. Prt'fe.r older man, THEATRICAL · ·· 1'°' LOOK TO YOUR FUTURE DIVORCED \\'oma_n lo~_l 35 ,·-rkl-way th•• college. pm. MERCHANDISE FOR . 1 k·,,. " It ·• "• •• n U h lslery 6990 S ntu.st bt' exp'd. APP I y SALE ANO TRADE through t•lear b Ut" s ~. •. • mm ca.ml!ra on pa ... , on, Exp. Lie. Reas. 646-4203 \VALLS. \VindO\\"S, oors, p 0 ESTABU llED Insurance • Chevron Station. Harbor " l'"U:tH1TUIE ···•····· '* N0 -~\11~·id~~an~li~~~ ~~~ :...~~Film im p. to own,r. AL'S Gardrning & Lawn ':!:J:et~tiaJ.Co~~Ye~l~'ttl~CZ ·"'-Y-K_O_S_Kl_'S_C_U_ST ___ U_p_hol_. ~~ :p'p8f·~~ oUlee. San Diego freeway, CM. or111c11 l'UIN1ru11.E ...•...• toi• . f.1ainlena.nCt'. Commercial, "1 ,...__, h" 'il'P1cs EOUll'MENT ........ u11 alfaHa growing. nut &. apri-V RD \Vh'I "A • .-.. and/or Mo. rn-7350 European '-'" tllmans 1p s •• ~·iEN s~ Fl k 1 STOii! l!OUIPMEHT Nil h RE\ A . 1 c .><im01.:u industrial & tt11ldentia.J. JOO" ,. ' •• , ,,t~ ~· . llU'CS. • p E' p" r ,·c-d. lnte-111-····•····· cot orchard!l: h<Jrsc ranc -I • '" in . .,.. -..,., I'd '-,...... ... '06 CAl'I!, ltl!STAUllANT ........ MU dog, name Tai; 1a, very * 64&-3629 * 6110 •a~i Ne"""'rt Bl., c .r.f. tlml'" men. Exper. pre .· cu~lom \\"Ork. Top pay, a.1.• l!OUll'MENT ··•······· iois ing. fish harchcrirs . · · un-friendly. 4 9 9 -21 3 6 or . . l1nd1caplng ~c~:=·' ~==·~==c'----1 Guar. + comm. + PJ\1 s ~~~l~~o~~L~ooos ·:::::::: :::: 1in1l1cd opporluni1ir.s~ "R 100 4!!!1-2663 Ask Ior Pri!l<:illa Johnson,~ Garclenuig ----'--'-----DON'T JUST WISH Jor some-Apply 333 E. 17lh. C.r.I. \\'itlard Boat \Vories, 129.i FURNITURE AUCTION •...... IOU T II E RE /IRE OVE . .. . . Finest cqu p., expert care. * Li 'd lad t U1lna: lo furnish YOUl home'l~-"""'-.:;;..;;;,;,::;;.,:=c._-1 .""~k;:•;;'i;'~C~>io';;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I •NTIQUES .......••.. 111t n 11 Bo 1or; con1plete lndscpg &: alAO ... ~ ..., .,. NI h Cl k Small h 1 I '-l'l'LlANClS ... ··········· .1100 LAKES Iman-made) NO\V $50 RE\\' ARD for silvr r male Planting, clean-ups. 962-2035 c n scape CO/'I rac-. , f>"nd -•l b""• In I"' OLDER l\fan '""""M_O_l_O _MA-.K_ER_S-..,.,. SEWING MACHINE ..... ,.IUC JN THE AREA ... makrs poodle. blk ea co ar. y EXPERIENCED Japanese J11panei;e 1ardens RJ0.3037 day·11 Oa.saifled Ads. g t er . 0 I' "'U5JCAL INS•"•"•M'NT ..... llH this not only a highly pro-n('('(!!oi. 53&-39-10 . -M'""'· Roi•"•"'-. "'"1313 673-9410 1'1'-NOS & 011 S ••••••••••• tlH 5.,....., '"" <MC .,._.,. IADIO ................... ltot ductive area, but one of BLACK male poodle l1r. No. tor free estimate Your Ad Should Be Here, EXPERIENCED: s ER v . ,. D CONTOURS -,.tab. 1953 fELEYISION ..........•..•.... nos 1 be uty a well . . _, STA ATT ~ 21 ~1 st Hl·l'I. STlll:tEO ...........•.. 1211 grea • • s . NB-1281. Lost 1n. VIC. ... CLEAN-UP Spocialilt! r.low-• v•'t!r ... u Now in Oran,, county TAl'E l!C.OltOltl .......... HH so ACRES just sold ••. 93 Halecttsl (ll'ecl. M:>-5S73 '•ng, ~-····· odd J 0 b.. They're Look1"ng For It! have !IOmC exper. & R Mir Top l\ten R""uired 54S.3030 CAMl!IAI a EGUll'Mt!NT ... IJOll ACRES l••••I now AVAIL-~~~-~~~-~~~~~:.::.~~ J...:!:!:?~::=-..::::::~:!!...:~::::.....::~J l~~~;j4~~~~~157~h5-'Siit~<::~~. l ~~~~~··~·~·if~;;~~I HO&IYSUPl'LIES ·········1400 • · .... ' \VllITE long-halrtd Roasonable.548-6955 cu . · · " · · ~ SPORTING GOODS ·········'"'' ABLE. \\11\h pun1p & 11·el!; " 11NOCULARS, SCOPES ....••.. 1ut or l(}.2(1-40 aci·e parcels avail-Himalayan cat. Dark race&. EXPERIENCED shoe s es-h1ECHANICS And attendants MISCE LLANEOUS ·············"°' lail. nialr. vie. Lido Ill.l .. 'lll-llll'lll-1111'111-llll'lll-1111'111-llll'lll-llll'lll-llll'lll-llll'lll-11111111-llllllll-l l man. Inquire 245 Forest wanted: Apply In peraon MISC. WANTED ................ 1411 able. Don't br a "I rc1nem-R•w"tl. C•ll 67,_3247 11 Av,., t nnuna Beac:h. I N1ACl11NEll.Y, Et"' ........••.. IJtt ber •hcn·er" invesli· " ~ &..G6 on y. ~~~.8:G~ .... . ...... ::::::: :;~; ,.:;ate "Nc.,.,,be,.ry 5 j,; in i: s, REWARD ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCl:Ml!NTS JOBS & EMPLOYMENT PERMANr:NT r.tOLD TRIANGLE SERVICE aurL01NG MATElll•Ls . . . 1111 NOi\'" o ,,·-r·· must 10nut-f or •n•I• S•"omc•.• ca1 ln•I In and NOTICES and NOTICES J b W -• d 70'0 OPERATOR TRAL.~EES IPhlllips 6GJ fW,t.PS .,.. . . '"' •' . ... •"-" ~ o•:.:..;.;~':"~'~~·:..::Lc•::.i.Y.;.;~'c: l~ .... ~~P~la~e<~n~t~lo~.~c~.M~. -,,--1462:.i Pacilic Coast J1wy, NB PETS and LIVESTOCK da.t c interests Call 847·6&10 Santa Ana Htoight.s. !(a~ flea :: l'ITS ,GENlllAL ............. noe after 6 PM, ;inyHme week-collar. ~-16-0386 Per.so_n_•_l~•-____ 640_5 Announcements 6410 COl\tPANION, Convalescent Farmrr for Borneo ASSISTANT CHEF &: &1.1- c.&Ts ··········•·········••··•· 1120 ends -Aide or pract. nurse avail. uodcr :i;;, single. around ·cook. Country clyb. DOGS ........................... ms1 ..::=·------~ *** RE\YARD *** LICENSED 491J.M46 ~t~~~~icic .......... _ .......... ::,.~ J\1AKE your hcnne in scenic BLi\CI< male Labrador pup-Spirllua.1 Rcadi•lgli, advice FLEA MARKETI Live in/out. Sh. or longl •===~84~2~.J8~24:;;===~~1~op~w~·~g;•~·=· ,;;.:,:,;="'::=! CALIFORNIA LIVING high d{'sert. Sec our lux-PY· 49!HM3 or '192--0369 on all mattel"!'I. 312 N. El YIVCA • San•-A"'" tenns Hornema.kers $47.$)8Jn · Gold •1 ~a11· n 1-la -""========I ~ •• ER s ID Ex II s .H.olp Wanted Ml" 7'200H•lp W•nted, Men 7200 Nu11sa11r1s ...•.•....... n1• ur1ous •• •:u io • -;;. Camino R'al, San Oemcn!e 1411 N B d l'ltOTH · A . p. · · · SWIMMING POOLS ····••······1"' ciendas in Sk;y Harbor Personals t40S ~92-9136, 496-0007 · roa way senior. Avail. Remainder ol =~~1~GI ·:·.::·.'.:·.:::·.:::·.:::::·= Ranchos $21.900. 2 BR, 2 .10 AM -10 Pr.t July JI. Aug. J, 12•10 POl summer. 1213) 346-4120 11ACATtONJ lf'!.I BA, pRnc l1cd den . For \oral August 2, noon..& pm TRANSPORTATION info rail r.tt~. Pangborn • COUPLES e . ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Sl'IACK BAR-AnUques book.!! l50m;;ti"CH91p f 7035 IOATS a YACHTS flOt e SINGLES • Phone 542-7217 01· write to jewelry, colns, bottle~ SAILIOATJ .::::::::::::.toll 67:\.J:\28 PO Bol'1223Co tal\t -Chinese live-Ins. Cheerful l'~Wlll c•u1s1ts r .......... tnt RoUcrt Sohoonlebtl', lnr. Tired of Bani, r.1ail & HI Cost • ' _!.... '13• C f>t!nnanent. Exper\enctd ~: ... ~1>.J::11L11•11o,t.T i:.:::::::::·ru: CQnti'ftc!or, -S~bdlvkler computer clubs: JOIN TllE SENSITIVITY GROUP emetery Lots 6418 Far East Agency 6'.!2-8703 IOAT MAINfENANCI ••....•. ..,, 56189 29 Palm11·Hlghway ·FUN I THE IN CRCl\VD -l\feeting Thun July !4th. 7:30 • tOAT LAUNCHING ., ...•••. tCl4 Yucca Valley DIV. Qr J.M.P. f.lec t others pm, 296 Walnut, C.1'11. 6 C £ r.1 ET ER Y Lob, Goort:c All'n Byland Agency MAttM• l'OUll', ····•·• ."211-:===="-=""===-YOUR I t 1 t I n !;; I e 1v o O d . A I l or Ernpl'"-'t'r P•v1 Fte &OAT SLll', MOOltlNll ········""!" with n ere& s B our PERSON to liare nses ~~ "'Y aoAT 111av1c1:1 ............. "" R E Want•d 6240 <A"ttkly parties or select 1 5 cxpc M!prini.lely. R~uced rate. IQ6.B E-16th. SA 547~ IOAT llllHTALS ··-········ ...... J;:;;;· ;;;;·;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. them indlvlduaJI, &. <GALS and driving lo • Lu'?'ln, 54g..;i()84 lllOAT cHA1tTE1 ............... tt>t N bra~kR Aug 3 ~9-Q:JS.'J JloUJek,eper, lil-'f·ln !!Ome PllHING 10.1.rs ................... join FREE i Call Leah 1-! c · ' · · JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Nu-Ing '"""'r.. Oirtstian tOAT MOVING ., .............. 900 ·~ ,,., tOAT sT01t.e• ............ ··'"• $$ MORE CASH $$ p.m. 635-9320, Announcements 6410 7000 Mme. Eldttly lady. 6 Dys aot.Ts wt.rnto ................. 1 1 · ::;.;;..:."'-'":.o;.c.;.;;.:.-.;;...._ Job W1nted, Min 548-7364 .1.1•c1A,.T ............... tlOI * • · ,,,.;#===""="'~' 11 ~~~i::_~ ~~U~:~.:'.:'.::::::::·:: I 1ve --V. 11 -tft 11 ......... CLEANCUT C<il. trad. w1n11 Help Wanted, Men 1200 MOTOR HOMll ···············"" For \"our llome Equ ty e u d t t bl-.. , ' ... hll I .. •1cvcL&I ................ ms Absolutely no cost n • ec • te l'l'l.•n s ''mp. v.-o, .. w e wa 1"11J CAfiPbitERS requ\rtd for ILlCTRIC CAtS .............. t'JSI I '"· '"ll ,·1 • • Mttl th•I '""cial ~ C"•tom~made haJ-1-· Jrom fDr call from Pro football lo n~ I t-•·-MINI a1Kl's .................. nu o you ""' ..., c ,.. -.,. .,_ Tul r 1 , _ 1 nc·ranae "'"'ri us ...... 1 .... MOTotcvcl.ft ••••••••••••• '* 12 yea.rs o! p.ylna: mo~ caJh It begin to Uv . transparent Rrtlficlal Pin. 1"0r• 1 ua 1 n • --.~. • PfOIJl'&m. Only ~pcrianced MOT01tsc00Ta11 . ··-· ..... tlH O CO "'l "'"' I bl t _, 1 w 891-1421 ~ent I AUTO 11:t'9'1c11 a l'AllTt ... tt0t for rs.nae County property. ORANGE • .,., -woo Com orta e, na u ....... oo ... rc . .,:,;;,;;.=·====== need app y. o y n am arc AUTO TOOU • fQUll' ....... tilt Call tho Rest 24 hour recording Orani:e Co. l·Talr R11pl1ee-Corp. 4242 Campus Or, NB r11A1Lt•. T1tAvaL ••·••····· .,.,. • • • r'\.. ~33 N -··ti Job Wanted lady 7020 1 -;:.c:..,,..;.;,::...:::::c:c::.c:.;;..;~-11 TRA11.1111s. utlllfY ............ t•M Then call the Btst Attr•ctive Expert mint \,enter,, · ,..., n, • EXP'O Door w•x•r A. ofilct CAMl'ltt ...................... tnt Orange (l) 633-0431 • TtUcks ........................ ts. YOUNG \YOMAN · GRANDMA \VIII baby 1\t no malntcnallct man, ~',.~:.1 •tKTAlS .......... :rJ BEYERL J JACKSON danctr wlU leach you all ' •"'4-•"'" • l\ll mot't 1ti.n 1 1chIa1 e \~kendt. C..11 all ~, ouN• •UGG11s tJu la1C3l sl,ps. ea.n Amell BE HAPPY chlldrtn, do Ille hskPI t: SC2.-8101 IMl'OllTfO AUTOS ······-·-·· ,... 213 $91 4538 110 PM k Li I 968-3650 I ~=-""""=--~~~-.,., sl'O•T CA•S ........... t'1t RCILJY : · · ' Be \ndeptndf'nt, LEARN TO coo • ve n. MACHINIST. r,icp'd. able to ANTIOUai. cU.lllC.S ......... ttll LA BACH, 34 'A'OUld like lo met1 DRIVE. C.11 Jor FREE jf)-l,IVE-fN motlltt'1 11. t d , rt:ad blutprlnlJ le ¥.'Ori!: with lllACI Ct.as, ROOS ............ "" &UTO ll\lt:HTI ............... t•u •1.7 ,.33 or .... 2 ... w pl -intemroo in N lllfll. troductory l•t10n. 1 J11.pancM collr.iae a:Jrl, ioad el01c toleranet; Bed a ' s AllTOS WANT•D ••••••··•••••·97" -.._ .,..re -... _ • .,, Bat'--I~! 92826 A t -1 In Sc"··t ! II I ~ 0 CC Machine Tool '"f'I-, 1663 fltlW ct.it ................. tut uwo """"• ,,..... • • s ro 1.11 v c nuu am y. c ose • ., . ., ,.-,.u -.,; '-UTO LIASIN• •·••··••••··•· .. ,. White cleph3nts! D1mt-a•Hne 136-.5731 962-27TI' 11.h<'l' 4 P.~f. Superior Avt .. 0.1. •ISln C..Allf -········· 9'et A(CESSORY FABRICATORS The Techite Dept of Uni ted Ttchnotoiy: Center bas openings for Accesso~y Fabrl~a­ tors (at their facilities in Riverside, Cahr). These positions require a knowledge of plas-- tiCs, fabrication and layup to produce a var· iety of rtinforced plastic mortar type of ac. cessorics. Require exp. in mixing & appll· cations of resinous materials, use or tem-: plates and molds, & interpretation or draw· ings. Exp. Jn sheet metal is al.so applicable. Interested applicants should apply ln per$On. Or se.nd reaume to ~tr. L. G:'""Hltlln. 3100 Jerrcrson St .. Riverside, Calif. 92504. United Technologyi:entir A DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAfT CO-P. U.S. clUzenshlp required Equal opportunlly employer ' _ ... -·--..... ._ __ =cc...:..._ ------~-==---===-==-=--~==::.....!......:._;._;_,..:____::;~=== ........ --...:... • ' ... . . . AllY PILOT FrldaJi Au11:11t 1, 1969 ~~~~~y~"'~NT~;;.J~O!!B/!SJt.!J!!~~L~o:!Y~~-N~T~J ~·~s " EMPLOYMENT JOIS " EMPLOYMENT JOIS " IMPLOYMIN Wan!M, Mon 7200 Help Wanted, Mon 7200 ""!J.!:::'"4 7400 Ht!f.!~nt.td 7400 He~~td SEARS Costa Mesa e SALESME,N e ~tabllabed luritory to be expanded. Salary plus· (IOtn· ntiuioo plll.S car allowance. Mr. Bealer 642-7352 COUEGE Student, full time ITT IABSCO ITT JABSCO 0 C C\SIONAL Babyslu.r, woman firefemd; my home, 1(8 U'eL "6--2646 LADY To WO't'k in fiah market. 2620 Newport B!vd., Corta Mea 1ummer, part time durlJl( scbool. at Chevron statkln l on beach in La.Kuna. No lotli' Ainouncts openings for hairs. Must br: 18. 494-900.1 f · E * Experienced COMPUTER . CONTROL COORDINATOR KEYPUNCH OPERATOR WAJTRESS -OVER 21 Da3 • Evuinc Shift lB!\l alpha-numcrica.J. Verily C..U 545-9863 -J\!EXPERIENC D COUNTERM><N. DRIVER 1 -·- and somec relaled clerical HOU~:ER • Nanny duties. Good v."Orkina: Condi-with own tranap. lot nurse f~SS ENGER TIRE City Auto Parts ~ SALESMEN 2072 Placentia. C.M. !\tust have senior key- punch I verifying C!)lpCri- t'DCe. IBM. Good work.in&' conditions and beDdiU. Uoos and benefits ' 10 am-6 pm. incl lunch, din- . ner. Mon, Tues. Thurs, Frt. EQUAL OPPOR'MJNITY 963-9943 ' ~ TRAINEES. J.Ul or part LOOR COVERING time. cook-tountain-:<tish EMPLOYER. ''BAB~"'Ys;,,m;,,,,,ER~-.... -"'1-, ~co=M' SALESMEN machine. Tf!E ZOO. w. EQUAL OPPORTUNIT'i area. "Full·time until school, 1485 DALE \VAY lben after aehooJ, Rel.s tt• _._ Coast Hwy. &. MacArthur, EMPLOYER COSTA MESA, CALIF. 9'1SJ 0 O:"°::lttd:;::·:.:67::. ;_>-~18::1>:_~·--i INTERIOR NB. 1485 DALE \VAY DECORATOR RV . STA. ATTN~ •. CQSrA ~fESA CALIF. 92626 (n4i 545-Sa'il •-leg•! Secretary -•-\'er It. Exp. ne<:. See f.fiki' l 71~) ~151 . , OUTSIDE )\IRPORT TEXACO, -4678 Exper. 675-2677 OOf * Accounta Payable Dre1s Operators G .. TICKET SALES :1 .,~C•;.m;;';::"=oo';::··:,N=·=··===·I---,=""" __ _ -•-Heh~ Wilnted T°ELLER Cl•rk Top salary t~ tho&e with lots Experienced c n I y fyJ>e GO ol exper.~~2'166. E.~ccllenl Earnings Women 7400 Posi ti•n lnvnedia.tely avail- ~·---------able at our Ne11.'port Center bt'anch for an experienced teller. *PP~r1onntl A11i1fant Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500 Expcrlenced in lnterviewingl---------- and all phues or personnel Oe~Salh Plus "l'rofil sharing Hospilalization Group Hie ins. •Paid vacation ~8 paid holiday,; r·~ployee dis<.i:iunt • • ipPly in Pf'r.;onnel Oflic:e •Monday thru Safuroay ~ JOAMlo4PM • i SEARS ~ 1 Roebuck & Co. Si UTH COAST PLAZA , 3333 S. BRISTOL ; COSTA MESA i ',An Equal Opportunily ~ Employer :--PROOUCTION ~-HELPERS-' . T . assi.31 shop Joreman ln p~1ion of 1ools and pt.rts · processing. Mcchan1- Cf_l background ~desirable. N9 previous ,.,..crrk experience n!ttsS&.ry. ' . Call Jim Hyams. Da}'!: ~6.n-2400. Eves. )46-0319 ·-'PULTON INDUSTRIES. '· 16-14 \Vhittier Ave. ~ C.OSta 1'.fesa. Calil. ~1.181 opPOrtunity employer 'DUNG & LANE has SECRETARY Ne\\'poM Beach CPA Firm seeking per'llon for l girl of· lice. Must be good typist with experience in.of- fice procedures, shorthand desirable. Prefer a detailed work. Good typing skilh. TIME, LIFE Pl!':ase apply In person S50 Ne.wport Center Dr. Good cpportunity in WISHl"S fast growing·company. TO EMPLOY NC\\'POrl Beach Call for appointment SALES PEOPLE POLYOPTICS INC. n1 l n de d conscientious SECURITY PACIFIC worker who can adapt to a NATIONAL BANK wide variety of special proj- 546-mo f!Qual cpl)(lrtunity employer WOMAN STOCKBROKER Who were fonnerly wcrking or are currently work.inc part time with companitlt !IUCh as AVON, AM\\.'AY, er FULLER. BRUSH. Demon. ects. !\-lust be re~ponsible, Position open lo 1nen g, \\IO- well groomed. articulate, al-men. Equal opportunity em. 1111.ve you ever considered st.rale our beautiful books to tractive. Excellent working player. !!elling securities full time? your established customers. conditions, congenial al11~~-A-C~C~O~U--NT=~IN-G~--\Ve wculd Uke to train a No charge for training or ~ · I sales kit. Preler education -mosphere m...,.,1 * CLERK * singe woma n age 35 to 45 . P I ' ··• •~ orlented people What have LVN • Nu•••• Ao"ds . . l'P.V ous success w sau:s . • · · c ll you gc,t to .J..o a' ? Call Large progre&sive ECF need.~ Rap.idly expandin~ manufaC· experience required. o ege U. Orientalion provided by a tunng company in tht! New-graduate. Preftr a re1ident1 _63S-_5j~l"~· ------- full time, in service, educa. por1-~sta ?i1csa area. ~as an of NewpoM Beach or Hunt. !or. Opcning!I on all shills. opening for an expenenced ington Beach. Immediate Differenl.ial pd Ior swingers accounts ~yable cle.rk. Ex· opening. Send resume to PO FRY COOKS & nite owls. celle~t [tinge . ~nefits and Box 1()45 Laguna Beach RN-In Strv-Educ. ~ki~~\v:~:1~~~~·., ~I! ~.SE~RETARY Top wages, permanent, hon. Creative, energetic. Full Required in the ~Jes d~·part-est, and \\'Orldng conditions lime, day shift. Only those _M_""~·-~~-=---1 me~t or electronic: m.ai:iufac-jn area's Jeadinl:; restaurant. "''ho care nefll apply at 1030 Receptionist/Steno tunng company. M1n1mum Apply 9 am to 5 pm [or Ur \V Warner S.A. 546-6450 Attractive, 1,1·ell groon1ed, live ~ars of secretarial ex· tervie\v at · ' good phone vok'l'. Typing 60, perienee in engjneering or See Betty Bruce al SH·80. Duties include pur· general sales office. 80 wpm chasing dept. \Vork and in-shorthand, 80 wpm typing. ventory conlrol. Xlnt opp. Call Jim Hyam11 Day5: fol" girl with ability and ini-SU-2400,.Eves: f>46-0319. tiative. c;all for appt. Agency for Caner Girls Elaine Finch 5·16-2250 .C.10 \V. Coast Hwy., N. B. POLYOPTICS INC. By appoint 646-3939 Equal opportunity rmployer Pbone ' ~·ork Rtcpt. $400 STOP rto office. young prefer somr college '-.i fee reimbursed CULTON INDUSTRIES 16-14 \VhitHer Ave. C.i\f. !-'.:qual opportunity employer ACCOUNTING *CLERK* \Va.slink timt Beac..-h area. Plush ofJiccs Rapidly expanding manulac- START call Loraine ~lcrchants Per· luring company in the Nc1v· MANNING'S COFFEE SHOP 2-4031 El Toro Rd. Leisure World Lquna. Hilll 837-1014 Ex,,.ritnctd Bookkeeper and General Office Work ~ftF, mature. Day shift, S day "'·ee.k. Apply in person. lntervoews between 10 A?wI· 4 PM. :\faking !\1oney. i>OM('I Agency, 2043 \\'est· port-Costa Mesa area, has an s2 to S5 per hr. with bonus. clif1 Dr., N.B. ~mo. opening for an ·experienc'ed FIVE CROWNS eo-1w1 · G I o•-$ 75 accounu payabte clerk. Ex· getter, or. pt time. en T.. 4 c:e.llent fringe benefi~ and RESTAURANTS 230 \V, Wamer, suite 217, SA .1 N N ki 3801 E p, .... , .. ,.. __ t H --,==="°==-'--IBeauh ul ew e\l'port wor ng condition1. · ... u. ........... s wy, EXPERIENCED Beach offices, plf'a~ant di· CALL FOR APPOIN1'MENT1"'""'""Co"ro'""oa'""d"olii>iifii•ii';;;;;;;;;; WAITRESS .... mod dolios, Call Koy,' -~=5--46-=3~300~~-11' 546-5410 t . ,o; 9penings for experienced 91-Tir•s store Managers ~Commercial truck ~pply in Penon ~tire Salesm!n SURF &. SIRLOIN Jason Best PRODUCTION En1ploymen1 Agency -HELPERS - FINANCIAL INSTITUTION \te·pay top sal.anl's + a 00. 5930 Pac, Cst. Hwy. n~s· on nrt profi1s. Benefits N B h mo So. Main. S.A. IS for assembly \\'Ork of small moving to Huntington Beach. parts under microscope, No The beautiful IICW oHices pl'Cvious experlenc:e nee. needs an addition to the stall irk-IW paid vacations. free -.,.-o,•"w"po="=oce~a.,c __ I Hostess • Cashier hf.gpit.aliution j. lifr insur-* SECRETARY * All r 'II be ~Id !'11in1mum o( hl'O years ExpenC'nced • Over 21-Good ~. rep~111 pay. V.'ho has S&L o;,· Bank ex· Call Jim 1 lyams. perience. Salary commen-irf strictt!St confidence ~tariaJ exp er I enc e DON JOSE REST. Ai&ne Bob Lane or Omar : Good knowledge of gran1-B.J&.2'22;> Days: 6-12-2100, Eves: 546--0319 surate \1ith experience. Call Jo1i.td at TI4 /S48-1197 mar and spelling. Ability lo CULTON 1NDUS'J'RIES ,.,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 11ype scicniilic terminology.I ----,==~---1644 \Vhirtier Ave. CJ\t. Personnel (213) 61~150. i DRAFTSMAN . . k"q>erlenced rt<JUired in :)m~nical detail draft- (.iig with emphasis..on ro- l!~ttng: machine envolv· r cuting. I Profit Sharing ' i J. C. Carter Co. • . . : 671 W. 17th St. I Costa M•sa I s<11-3421 • An equal oppo rtunity j , empoly!':I"" l-~ROUNDSMAN -GAROENER- $t1 D to $620 per month CITY OF EWPORT BEACH .. Ji-ciuin'S six months ex· E. nee in nW'St'ry, gar· ng or grounds main. nee \l'Ork. Applicant• !;pted until Thursday. Ullt 1, 1969. Apply to Personnel OHice, Cl ty JlaU. 3300 Newport mvd .• ·-fewport Beach. Calil. ~ m<l ,,,_ i UPHOLSTERERS ,.J"Wagn, cu.<1tom shop. PC'r- nt full Limf'. Must be ""'· Me.sa Upholstery 2360 Newport Blvd. Oolta Mcaa, .648-1915 T Experienced MECHANIC 1 ~ Work •• Engin•tr • on Yacht Coll '71-7177 FKtory Tr•inen Exper. 'A'ilb IBM execulive NURS~ Equal opportunity employer type1,Tiler helpful. Type • RN-Rl':lief duty, two days 50-5.l \\'pm. Call Karmen per \\"eek. SECRETARY -Receptionist, Curtis for appt. 833-2500 • LYN-Relief. four shifts ful.l-time, lyp!ng, dictaphonc \VORKING Couple w I 3 per \\'Cek. Laguna Beach .& :~@. 8~ ·d!~~~·k. school-arno children need Nursing Honie 0 ' 4" -1· e RELIEF C 0 0 K , 2 lv-in houscktt""" who can '7"t-<IU :> ,..... das/wk. e Desk Clerk • Switchbofrd Oper•tor Apply in person HOTEL LAGUNA 425 S. Coast Hwy Laguna Beach do some cooking and child ?.1ATURE Woman for retail New senior c \ t I z en 1 Cart'. Preferably w/own bakery sales 1o;ork. Shilt residence, Lag Bch. 494-94581---------- l1"31Uiportation. 5 4 5 -5 1 7 6 open -r.1on. thru Thun., ~ rt after 6pm. $175 to start. 11;30 AM to 8 PM . .Many MOSPITALITY HOSTESS I!; 0BWp0 , "' 1. A 1 . looking for mature \\'Omen · j CLEANING Lady 1l'ilh own ....,ne its. PP Y in person, p8rSOn0B Iran~. 10 clean home on mornings. at Snack Shop lo wclco1ne newcomers to Lido Isle. 67~1805 ref. reqd. Bakery, 3444 E. Coast Hwy., the community, ?lt ust have •.. agency ====-=--~~1 at Narcissus. Corona del lypewriter, car. and be bon. BEAUTIYUL Girl \\'/good :ri1ar dable. Apply 235 E. !\lain, Professional Service figure for modeling. Greal1-~~==-=~=~ Sui te 7, Tustin, Ca Ii f. for tht employer Pay! 3 to 4 hours per week. PAYROLL CLERK 544-692j and tht applicant No rxp!"ril'n<:e. Hobby -Rl'quires minin1um of 1 year strictly !or fun. Wri!e box heavy payroll experience, 77 yr old blind man \\'&nl!. 133 Dover Dr., N.B. f\1869 Daily Pilot. and modest typing ability. coinpetent \\'Oman to OC· 642-3170 549·2743 Contact l\trs.. ti.tazur, !"iof0.97\0 casionally clean trlr, dri~ RESIDENT DIR.ECTOR SECRETARY i;m. car or cook a meal. 4 . BARMAID. No e,.;per nee. days, 5 hrs., a \\'k, Pays for boys. Older ~an or Allernoo~1 only. Train~ ck. blust be sharp. Nights. Ap-SIOO ti.to 536-0068 couple. Small pr 1 vat e Gd. typing & shorthand or ply in prrson; Vokki's · school. 673-9410 Stenorelle required. 962-6912 Lounge, 1791~• Ne\vport, ~~!lNtT~NG;1i:,~8: JOIN HAIR & CO. -thrtt before I pm. C.!i-1. Top \\'ages SJ.00-$3.51) 10 !ar out hair stylists! Open. PART-TIME LIVE ir. housekpr to care for start. Ph. for jnl. s.3~99S3 Ing Aug. lsl ln Balboa RESTAURANT elderly Invalid lady on SASSY LASSY, 290! Harbor, Island. Call SU~, f\ton, Tues, CASHIER \Vkencb; only. NB area. Call CM \Vcd. 714: 67;>-1230 or on Apply ln person only, Deli bel. 8 Pl\1 613-5208 · · other dnys, 213: 4-19-6967 COLLEGE Girl, ll lnt swin1· Shefs, 10039 Adams Ave., al P.1ATURE \Vomnn for 3-11 incr lo babysit 1 days. S2:l BEAUTY OPERATOR Brookhun1t, 118. PM shift. SAWYER HOJ\fE, \\'k:. £44-0022 Fashionable Nc"'JXlrt Beach HOUSEWARE SALES 2619 Orange Ave., Costa I~====~---salon needs an experienced Son1e experience prefen'P.d ?-1esa. 64ft.6"116 ' HOUSEKEEPER, w 0 m 8 n full time operator. Guar. & Ktrm Rim• Hardwar• LEGAL SECRETARY alone. Pvt. room, TV. SIOO. conimisslon paid vacatiofl!I ntonlh. 642-2'232 or 642-1249 'f'tc., 644-1570 546-7080 Fa.st. accurate typist, good II k 'V -• 1--~~=~~---1 ouse cepcr • ant"" e EXP. COOK 2fi66 Harbor Blvd .• C.M. on phone, Some shL'tncJ. f II 1· u ime e \VAITRESS B A B y S I T T E R , 1'.1ature Small b u s y office, HB. 64.2-8().14 \\"Oman. own transportation, 536-8078 or 8.lU-460. CURTAIN Ii: drapery sales Apply in per!!On. S\\i$5 :;, sometime!! 4 day11/\vk. MATURE \Vo n1 an• 2 expd'd. No calls. Udoff's, Chalet, 414 N. Ne\l,>pOrt, NB llam~pm. Lite housekf'ep-h r s I d a Y , 5-day wk. So c l Pl ' c •t · oas az ·" · EXPER grill & fountain, full Ing, 4. children. 642-5467 CM House,vork (,, occasionaJ e BOOKKEEPER e ch_auffcring for r-1d('r1 y. EXP'D SALESLADY & pt-tin1e. The Nut Burger Pharmaceuli<:al plant. thru ~1'00· ,,1!d~92'l· r.1ust have o\\·n lilen & \\''>mens Oolhin& 2727 \V. Edinger, S.A. ...... .....,..... * 548-5383 * CHARGE your "''11t ad now. trial baJance. Salary open.•--,,===='°"==-' ACCOUNTING CLE CASHIER, !\tatuT'l'. <Xp'd For appt; 646-3931 RK MAN. w/(.'Olle:i;e student !!On £?n1e peg .b?ard exper., typ-preferred. Wallichs t.1usic: NOW'S THE Ike . 1ng and filing. City. 3400 Br1s1ot, C.M. ~d/l. Mfl'I~ to hve "'ENSITRDN INC. ' 1 1~1o=u~s~=v~o~.~e---~~.- '" Priv ''TI WI-lo• TV ., c.• ,,,.,.., part time, · · ""-· ~ PauJarino amall home . Baylront, Balboa Island call Cost ~1 ,_.g....g(iX, after 1 pm. 613-8927 a esa ,,. WOMAN To \\'Ork in donut ORA~ Surgery olfict'. Im-LICENSED Shan1poo &:irl shop, full tiJne morninp. n1ed1at(' ~1nployment for needed. Top psy. TIME FOR NO phont' call~ please. den.'al ass15tan1. X-ray ex· • 64Z-6857 * \Vinchell's Doi-iut ltouse 2!H6 pertenct'. call ~m9 ACCNTS Rec. &. billing: girl QUICK J-larbor Blvd .. C.M. !-lJLL or pl·lime &aulic:ian. "''ant<'d, Exper. only, Ac· · DENTAL A.ul!tant _ reccp-clientcle pref. but not re· i:·uralf' typisl. Ap~ W, D. CASH . . . qui~. Ne.w $:rad \\'C'lccmc. Schock Co. J50'l S. Grun-~ . $2.00 Hr. hon1sl, Hun!Ln&ton . Beach. Call mgl'. MS-9919. ville St., Santa Ana THROUGH A ·PrTk>MnlllUU')I •xempl1 lrotn Ag• .JO to 6. .Typi.n&:, ~ ,, i;: P"-up. d , n 1· a I ~" x p e r i e n. c e B I K I N I Barmaid/dancer. GlRL Ovf'r 21, slrwle. smt1;rt, ; • ABIL.MTES ~· &t7...ro70 f\lll or part-time. Coata aUractiw; 1vorklng at Th' JjNUMrrEDAGENCY SALESWOMAN. E:ilpuience Mesa 6~T.lll ~~:':i, ~~alaurant .2100 DAILY PILOT :! E. 11th SC., Suilf' 224 In ladies rtady to wt"ar.1---•==°'---1 ~ Mesa 642-1470 0\-tr 25. Apply Mon lhru MAIDS \VAITRESSF.S, E:ilp'd. Lunch , ~kc!ept,_-Supervleor Fri JM, APROPOS No. 27, Jfote.l/Molel C'Xpcricncc 11hift C.fl.f. GuU & c:.e. Suftlite. c.onvaJeaotnlff<11pllal Town le Counb)', ()nngl!! 673-9410 540-T.lOO. Tntv. 11111:30 pm 1186 BEAUTY.. 0 PER AT 0 RS Barma.kl, nights, DentaJ A.!81..Nnt, 20-.'Q VJCE Sta lion attendant. 1,1·onted : No f o 11 Ow Ink Maverk.k " _Jhifta ()fltn, apply 2800 ~.ssary. 6T~232. 675-3701 1128 Ne\vport -tJh>d, C~f. \ Oil Hf.ahway, N.S. GIRl..·\\'llh on car to c11re lor \\.'AM'RF..SS \Va.nlt-d. Night ~ 2 bo'y!I. ii It 11 yra. my home ahift. Experie~. 1400 \V. r>~tLY P{LUT WANT ADS! !1.-5. ~16 Covt IJwy, tiR. 642-8881 no rxpcr neq. 642-7998 FULL Timf! bAbyslllf'r. 5 day \\'eek. Judy \Vllson 545-2167 11r1 5: :\0 P J\t. • WANT AD 642-5678 --------·-.. ·- Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers -See If You Have Any Of These Things A . DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Guitar 3. Biby Crib 4. Electric Saw 5. Camtr• 6. w .. htr 7. Outboard Motor I. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11. R•frigtr•for 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing M•chint 14. Surfboard 15. Machine T cols 16. Dishwtsh•r 17. Puppy 11. C•bin Cruiser 19. Goll Cart 20. Barometer 21 . Stamp Collection 22. ·oinett• Set 23. Pl1y Ptn 24. Bowling Bill 25. Wtftr Ski1 26. Fruier 27. Suite••• 28. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31. Btr Stools 32:. Encyclopedia I 33. Vacuum Cleaner 34. Tr.ot>ical Fiah 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 36. File C•bintf 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Stt 41. Slid• Pro)ector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool Table 44. Tires 45. Piano ~. Fur Coat 47, Drapes 48. Linens 49. Hor•• SO. Airplane 51. Organ 52. Exercycle 53. Rart Books 54. Ski Boots 5S. High Chair 56. Coins 57. Electric Train 58. Kitten 59. Cl•ssle Auto f.O. CoffM Table 61 . Motor~ele 62; Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 65. Workbench 66. Di•mond Witch 67. Go-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Tr1il•r 70. Antique Furniture 71. Tape Recorder 72. S•ilbo1t 73. Sports Car 74. MttfrHs, Box Spgs 75. ·Inboard Spttdboat 76. Shotgun 77, Siddle 78. Dart Game 79. Punching Bag 80. Baby C•rri•g• 81 . Drums 82. Rifle 83. Otsk 84. SCUBA Gtar Thtse or-any other extra thin9s around the house may be tumed into cash with a DA IL Y F! IL 0 T WA NT. AD so • • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 (YOUR CREDIT IS GOODJ DAll-Y-PILOT WANT ADS ' WILL WORK FOR YOU! Get In on-the Action Today! • .. • F'rldly, Avtust 1, lM DAILY Pn.OT MlllCHANDISI ~ SALE· ANO TRADI MIRCHANDISI FOil MERCHAND~ 'OR MEICHAllDlSI '°II MERCHANDISI '°It PETS ind LIVH'~~t1i!tHo'Yc>U1T~~~~~!:~r.t SALE AND TRADB ME RCHANDISE FOil SALE AND TRADI SALE AND TRADE .SALE AND TU.DI SALE AND TRADE "-'1120 fREE T0 YOU l~====-~,i~~iii~~~ii~~~~~i~i~~~il00~-·~1-...,-'m:.;;:.:ltv=~,.:;:.;:::...;,,;,;:=IOOO~-,=.~nll~.~,~.,~."'-.;..;;;:.;.:=IOOO::.... __ ·l-,=.~,,.=fl=..:uro;,;;;.=-:..:.::.:::.:IOOO~.--,.=r/l==lf~u.=.ro :.:..~ • .::::~IOOO~-l~ib:..:;:.~~~~-"'-~I~~~~~~~~ Sollloooto ~ , llll>IALAYAll K!Tl'DIS FREE to wry "'°" home S. CORONADO a Stock Umltecl frff DellYery ••••••••••••••••• '1'1"871~ • ~~ ~I ~...!,,,""':;~ ;:': NOW IN NIWl'ORT $60,000 * 3.ROOM GROUP * SEALPOINT Slam•le :,;..~~'::ts1~~~~ =:.:":~~:.~:;: WARE H 0 USE SALE C9MPLETJ • :;~~~kl,. heo ' ohotl.· -when u,.,-;;:: 6 Uled P-Ca~ fUll noo, -· _ov•r 6,000 tq. ft. of qu1Uty furniture Living koom -ledroom -Dinette mo1 old 543-0315 8/4 #», ····· ..•....•.. ,PJOQ. SPANISH -MEDITERRANEAN $297 ""--l~S CUD~LY . --"--O>n>nedo 23 .J"'-Sa>j ._.. , affa..'\lllf .. !f, white Sabota from •••••••••••• S- Show room Furnitu·re ll iftY 1irl kitten. l.ov• 29ll W.·Cpe.at HJ&hwly P RICED TO S E LL _ SAVE $$ Weekly.Payments •• We Carry Our Own Contracts ~.~~·i:;.~:: chlld ... n. ,.._ll88. 811 N ......... s .. eh 64><llO ! DfCOllATOR GETS CANCELLATION OF 18 LUXU~Y APARTMENTS Sp1nilll & MediltrT-•n FUl'llitun All BRAND NEW =ii~~·;=:;i:-~·~·,·~-- 3 Room• compl1t1, low .. $389. VAN'S Discount Furl)ltu,. oo1or1nc, "'" 1.m11y .,.,, MALE s;,m.., Stalpolnt 19118 COLUMBIA 21. Loedod. J. llank T St Ch Pl , 1 W , h 'S 5 ~. ~ el.!)' to 3% moa. Shota. 673-58191/31 Splnaker lf&r, rl.aed ~ 1 . erms -ore arge an "'1 • "' t., 1nt1 An• Frff P1rkin9 train. Perfect 1bow dois. FLUFFY, white male kitten. Genoa. alb wlocbes. haJ.ya°nl "" 1 Master Charge -BankAmericard Open Dally ~6-1 Sit 1().6 -547:2412 good Jor breed In a:. 1 weekl ?ct. 546-9963 t/2 winch, portable head, b , =rt.i>li~ T "°'-~;~·.':~;:::~:·~·::::··'.":·:ifii u:..'il:'!l:::... ...,_-"''· .:rn •............. ~ .. "1:11 -~ IR ...... m ........... ,NOW fl Open 9 .9 D~lly Sat-9-6 Sun 10-5 ••••••••••••••••• :a:~.P"!"h"", ll"1 FREEkilt~<0!oro ~~d :~~It::.°':,.~ 1\ SACRIFICE: Son in hospital, over pa.ymenfl $40 month. J A decorator dream house on display -3 rooms of gorge'ou> Spanish lumilure (was reg. $1295.00 SACRIFICE • • . • • • $398 ClllDIT T•llMS A\IAIU.SLI Clt\:CllT CLUll•D tMMUIATILY mm FURNITURE 1844 Newport Blvd.~·""·> Costa r.fesa only lnrt Night 'TU t -Wod., Sat. l Sun. 'Til 6 1130 Mlsc9l11neou, l600 beaut. Gttat otne pup, 10 ,..-,;;;-,;,;;:;--;==-=-.:112:: Aproxlmately $Z250 2065 Ch1rle St., Cost• Mew 548.9660 ---------wks, AKC, male fawn, $75. 2 BLACK Kittens, 3 mos. balance. Call ac.3731 Behlnd ''Jfarbor Car Wash" orr Hamilton or SALE aeprance on all Or-* AUCTION * After 5, 646-4640 old.. fl'ff to iood home. SAIUNG Catamaran 32' 6 Bernard St., a little hard to find but worth pna &: Pianos used In opr u lklSH Setter poppies, AKC, &42-622l eves. I:. wkends 812 bari of aalla. head & ,.lle,, the dollars you save! teaching Studios, Choose you wru se.U or buy Webllne line, 8 wltl. ~1738 GOOD home for Heinz 59 slttps 6. $6600. 642-M39, !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!l'!~!!!~J from Conn -Wuttltur -give Windy a try puppy. 54&.-t228 8/2 4JS..Q21 Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. or ~ ="""'-------! S . Knabe -Fisher. R.enlals Qd 3 fluffy kittelll!I, ca 11 co SEA Sc o u t • a deiperatlfly Gar1ge lie IO:z2 Garage Sile 8022 also from $10. W indy's Auction Barn -a-Poo puppies mother. 6T:>-2339 814 neoed I MAIN Ail kr 22 Gould Music Company Behind Tony's ~. Mal't 2 l'flOl·::e! S5 !l.flNl Kittens; male &t FOOT AL 8 AT R 0 SS . GARAGE SALE: m11.ny in· SAT. l Sun. 8222 Pawtucket 21»5 N. Mi.jn, SA 5'17.Q)81 20751,t Newport, C!l.f 64&8686 ~~~-oc-"',.:,..---1 female!:, bluUcream. one, °"&l"Z..S=769==~--~~· terestlns items. Dbl bed Dr. H. B .• Picnic table, bar· Open Mon k Fri 'tll 9 B 0 R Z 0 I (Ru• s i an , , I 11 . """'A HAND Braided reversible 'Volfhou.nd) Purw. Champion calico, 2 silver tabby'a, one PENGUIN 12' ( I be r r l •a·, \\' ma ress & s Pr 1 n g •. """'lue grill, Dbl headboard HAMMOND. Steinway. Ya· 1,1'00! oval rug, 9~~ x 15', like Sire .tr Dam .... classic, ReSl!Onallk parties RaWIOn built. dacron uUa, mple heabrd; 2 tbls 4.'<6, &: frame, hl fl & records, maha • Uw l med piatlOI new. Cost $500, sacrifice ,.....9865 only. ~ 8/4 good c:ond. $2'15. 646-.mJ t!O trains, ladle• cloth ing child's desk. washer, misc. of· all makes. Best buys in 1250. •••2013 -•10· F . ·~o bo \ ~=-~-"''-----1 DO GERMAN <""AP""rd, mal•, -'-""-'-· -------1 ..-, arsisa --• com terns. So. Calif . ..i .. ht hen:. :;;'. BERMAN, Mille, 11 """" '""" de\ 170 lid t ·~ QUALITY )dno ..... n1-.1 hsebrkn -nU•. all ohob, 17' 0'"-·· ,.,_.,.-,, ... x w wt so s . an1p; HUGE Back . Yard Sale: SCHMIDT MU~C 00., .. ,. ......,, qu oeu. monlh.s old , &ood dlsposl· ...... "'9J .,.....,NJ.I....., Ki!Ivinator irig, bottom · l9Cr7 N M 1 Complete, unused $100; tlol). $50. 645-U.82 before nttds good bOme. 646-To82 Demo $1750 -VHd $13!'!0 freeter. avocado. Honda MAov 1 l.ng! Sat. AJJ&. 2. 10 am. San'~ A~· n, worth $250. After 5 or wknd.s 2.30 pm aft 6 pm. 14' O'Day UMd •••••••• PP aances furn., rugs, kit. .... '"' 847-0406 • ,:;:;:· ;;:::;.· -=c:--,.--,, Fun APPROVED FURNITURE PltnOt I. OrgtM Sport 50, 1 yr old. All xlnt ware, records. c Io thing' Franchl10 Clo1-·t I RUSSIAN WolDiound, 2 2 BEAUTIFUL tame rabbits Zone Boat Co. Balboa JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I cond. 1Dl7 E. &lboa Blvd, -MUST go• Sabi• slot ort • <age ••• -•1 811 O'DAY RHODES 19' l/sltp F ·1 8000 toys, books, musical instr. The facto'"""--ord .. -• clo.... · e, en-female, 3 mos, AKC, show · ~~ urn1 ure Bal. Fri-Sun or as long as it .,, ,...., ~n:u '""' tal • l"d -·ge 1· ill' ........ J.b · --" • bo"- w ---------951 Cliff Dr., Laguna Beach oUt or 4 Console &: 2 Spinet "" " ... • an iques, quality. Make fine pelli. C"'°"AN, He a Ith y, ·box ,.., .. 1 • 1p1n,""'er • uu•n Jobs-Men, om. 7500 OVER-STOCKED lasts, 675-7525 Pianos on a cost-plus ha.sis. 11ilver. 24432 Los SeITa.nos, 5'46-9'123 trained, 6 v.·eeks. Some ~~ paint. New Int & cover, A·l SALE All day Sat. & Sun. Appli1ncet 8100 Never again piano bal"iains Lag Nig. 4!&-5614 ,c,=c:.:::::..------Siamese. 642-7081 8/4 cond. Sl.900. 642,:.2635 * EXPERIENCED * COOKS BUSBOYS WAITRESSES DISHWASHERS APPLY IN J:ERSON REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Coast Hwy, Newpor t Beach Professional Employment Assistanc e • COASTAL AGENCY A memhf"r of Siiclling &: Snelling, Inc. 2790 Harbor Bl, CM S<W-6055 MUST SELL! Beaut. "·a1nut !kirwr dress- er, two 2-0rwr commodes, hdbrd &: framed mirror, all for $172. Nl!W 9 pc. co1·ner arrang. choice o( clrs. reg. $230, now $149.50. Headbrds: Kings, $15, Queens $12.50, FuU $10.50, Twins $3.!6. Sofa bed mattrews $..?9.50 Roll-a-,vay · beds w I i n n . spring matt. reg. $59.50, no1v $39.50. F'ull sz. stceper·sofa reg. $239.50, now $169.50. New beds: King $99.50, Queens. $89.50, Full $49.50, Twins $39.50, fully guaran. King-size spreads, choice of elf'!' reg, $20.95, oow $12.99 lull sz. $9.95, SIESTA si.EEP SHOP: 1921 Harbor B~ 645-2760 daily l!J..9 Sat·Sun Brass beds, nr new COnVfrrl like ·~ ' y· 1· MACHINISfS Tool box &: TEMBROKE Welsh Cora:!, 14 SAND PIP sofa., lamps, Co Ionia I LARGE selection of recondi· erv:d"~· int come. 11sl tools for sale. Alter 6 pm. champlon aired, 5 males. 3 HELP!! Our cat had lD kit· * . ER SLOOP1 bedside table&: corner chair ti~ned applian;cea, repoa, ap-WARn·S BALDWIN STUDIO 646-2'792 females. Prleed according terur. 6'TJ.4236 ~/4 ~752 cond. Cover. ·1350 w/straw seat, both antique. phances from model homes 1819 Newport C.M. 'i42..&48.f E=x"E=R=c"v"'CL-E--Good--00-•• -. ~to""quc:al::;'"-ty'-.'-":: ... ..=923=-· ---ITRANSPORTATION Pewler pieces, cut down • all guaranteed. ' nu BOXERS 6 weeks old, cham· UOO 14, mo. 1564. Xlnt con. library table, Tillany style We Servlce -'We 'Finance FRANCIS Bacon B !I b Y Sl50: garden tractor $125. pion blood line. AK c Boats & Y1cht1 9000 ditlon: trailer. $UOO (213) light fixture, etc. 559 Vi sta DUNLAP Gra~ $650. Conn v.'OOd 548-2171 regi&ter@d. 642-4386 ~ ,;""""'c:.,c=--=----1 flora, N.B. 644-1288 APPLIANCE =~ne~ Good student THOM.ASVlLLE C.offee table GREAT-DANE puppies, 2 * ~~~ * LIDO 14 No, 215.l w/tlJW/t. SEARS O'lest • 1YJ.c, Cop. 1813 Newport Blvd .. C.M. in. $50, coM ovtr $100. Iron Rite male, AKC champion aires, CLE~N~oSALE Xlnt cood, $950. penone freei.er. JO cu fl. • 548-nlO • SMALL Grand piano, antique Ironer $33. a.ro-Ol46 10 \\'ks. 962-9531 AU.. 1969 TROJANS •675-231!* 1100. 20 :-.: so·· pool 1ablt', LADY K white. Re11.r.onable. !l.1usl CARPET DOXIE Pupp'-•r, 8 "'"" old, 25' Se Skllf 17989 SABOT-2 &&Us, like new~ ' enmore washer & sell inimediatel 1 833-0039 C!hA~ "' .. ..., a '·' •• • • • comp! w/ balls, cues, rack, Kenmore electric • · 11 0 ft. y , .,.. ..... s, tweeds, hi·lo pile. AD females, !J1in atures. 3281 28' Sea Skitf ••• ,.,,. St.2.500 dltion., $195. $60. Round maple !able, 4 heat'' dryer. Both in very T 1 i l colors. Free est Lie C.ontr. Colorado Ln., CM. 540--0687 36.' Sea Voyager ... : $31.820 * ti73-1Thl * chairs. like Ile\\' $60. Ex-excellent interior &t exterior e ev 1 on 1205 _,._...,_~"-·------ENGLISH Sp R 1 NG ER 2540 Shelter Island Dr. INTERNATIONAL 14. Pril> ercising couch $25. Dinette condition. $175 lor pair. FOR The large family Di· s · I c _, 714 : 223-7065 ed to aell now!! bl & 5 ba . ·~ L' pan1e pupr;. A.K. . • .... ta e c irs ..,.,. ime 6'1&-0836 aft 6. ~ll4., ext RENT OR BUY net.le table It. 6 chairs. Only malet left. 96Z-89&1 L JV E AB o ARD 4 5 • * ** ~9 *** oak table 4 chairs $25. m 2S4 days COLOR TV Chrome. In excellent con. Tri-.CS.bln Chris F.8. 150 13' FIBERGLASS o.y..Der Gove~r CM 6 4 2 -6 3 6 5 WHIRLPOOL Dishwasher. l $9 Month Up dltion. Call to see. 646-4063 Sbe~~~~:~~~C. WSS, fathometer, auto pilot, New Dae. sails, trailer. 540-001 year old. Excellent con-AI..59 MINl·Bike, Nova, 3 HP, $99. ~2 aJt & pm 2.5 KW Onan, davits and54s. .~1322~--~---•I' BIG GARAGE SALE. Anliq. di lion. Call 54f>-2617 STEREO.REFRIGERATORS G.E. eleC organ $35, like I =:-,~c==;:::!e:.!:::'.,..~ dinghy anchor winch, Chrys. (Af.. 28, N 19 Outboud organ, catwd grand~thr \VASHING Machine S 25. WASHERS OR DRYERS llt"w, leavlng area. 8J8..1056. Black Labrador puppies, 6 Imperial engint&-no trades. eqp'd for r:cina:~ $Bllll)' <"locks, washstand, fr 1 g. Dish\1'8stier $35. 23" Zenith OPTION TO BUY t.1 0 V I N G -Must s e 11 ;i:k~~K~ne~~G'..~~-1 ;;,";..7.,·7,;."30;;.,,==-;-,.,--,--1 m.<o28 dryer, chests, pwr. mower, T.V. S35. 644-2566 543-4539 household Jurnlshings. 2528 10' GLASSPAR dinghy; DON'T Give up! You niay port masAAge tbl. Navigator 1 Littleton Pl, CM. 548-1057 \\fEIA-1ARANEft.LABR.AOOR 11teerlng box, cables & dolly. 26' FOLKBOAT, aux aloop, • find il at America's largest. 420 radio. Much, muck good WESTINGHOUSE 1-"rosl free Retriever PUPPies, 8 wits. lapstrake hull, depend. lft ' mo.c;t unumial unfinished junque .839--2406. 10351 Pick-refTig. Cross top freezer. CL 0 SING Oul AU 1969 EDISON Crib & mattress, old. 968 .. 1253 X1rit cond, Sl90. ~20 boat·. 2 sets dacron ...U. I: . 1().6, • furniture store. Cor. Redhill ford {ofl cunninghaml, West. Xlnt cond. $'15. or offer W a•. her 1. Dryer 1, $35 494--ii167 M 38' STEPHENS Sedan., spi.naker. Mak • o f f• r. Educational Vacation 5th ·&:Santa Ana f'wy, Tustin. 1 minster, Fri 'Iii IKlld. 646-1361 Relngeraton:, C.olor TV'S, SCUBA TANK -Double 38 1 N lATURE Schnauu.ra, Beaut. cond. May trade 646-0713 graders ••• Sr Citizens mi So. o( Newport l''wy. F'li & Sat 10 lo 7, t.loving HOTPOINT Dryer. 1 yr. Dis~wash~, etc. 11.t F'an-w/J-va1ve. $60. ~ :~·ti~ ~u~~. iho.7667ghots, down. MUJI &el!. 846-9518 --=27"•-=so=U~N=G=--I Schools-ln1trdttion 7600 Chilcoat 10 lesson typing Open 362 days per yr. Conn clarincl $75. Good s\u. Coppertone $85. Rot a r-y .t.astic Savtngs! Pay nothing 673--0783 or 673-3636 10' GLASSPAR ·dinghy with Sehl. Trial J..cs~n. 173 Del .544-~~54::70:__"""~~~7 dent violin. Tool· books, power mower 1$15. 541).-7025 ~~ wH1thENyour good credit. !l.1EN'S Schwinn Varsity 10 ......, AKC6Basset Pups O!l.J'S. Good for children lor lmmeclSO!OCKi1te Delivery c ~ ~--------! oX'C at DERSON 'S 1877 11·i~lor wks540-863& then .. ., 1150 .,..., .._... BOATS ' ' Mar, C.!1.1. 548-2859 !l.fAKE reasonabl e offer. 18th typewriter w/table, Games FR.lG. 6 cu ft'. xlnt cond, Harbor, CM. ,s.as.o155 speed bikes (2). New con-,;;;;c;~;;;;:;;,· =:;;·..:0~·~=:;-'--,, Newport * 673-21:&) SIT A ·s t.10NTESSORJ School Century R e pro d u c I I o n concrete blocks, some tum $49.50. 610 Tustin, Npt Sch. dition $4J each. 61f>-2198 Hors" 1830 18' JOHNSON cab Crsr 50 2% to 6 years. Enroll no'v ~Jahogany dining 1able & & much misc. 324 Snug LI 8--5.19;) HI-Fl & Stereo 8210 ROTARY Lawn m 0 w.e r. hp, Evlnnlde OB, Tilt Trlr, 30' Tehltl Ketch $2,200 ~·: ror 1--an. 646-3706 or 541-5697 chairs. Perfect! 644-1679 Har bor Rd., Nwpt Sch. KENMORE 3 temperature Sear's. 3.5 llP, top condition MUST Sell $900. Part Thoro. eqUlpt. $1050. ~-4618. SAC. AS lS. 669 ~ MERCHANDISE FOR QUALITY King bed, quilted. 64&-00'.l'J dryer· exctllent condition 1969 STEREO CoflllOle, dlx, WI. 545--5684 hUnter, Ju m Per, Bay 17.6" Flt;\iiau Amer Marc W. Covina (n 3 1 eve SALE AND TRADE Compl!'te, u n u se d $HO; 1/3 0 1--F ON $50. ' in beaut cabinet, oomplete TV 19.. new w/stand $60. Gelding, 16.1 H. Xlnt cone!. 9 cc &i HP diesel &; trailer. 17' Centerboard Sloop rt • _ won h $250. Aft 5 or wknds EVERYTHING! 54G-9097 w/new g u a ran I e e... 4 Electrnlux vj'cuum $l7.SO. yrs . .Exp'd rider prt.f. Btr 9 Sl4IXI. 642-9712 fut. sd. cond. trailer. :0 Furniture 8000 &17~ Bikini5, coverups, fun v.·ear. O'KEEFE &:. MERRITT 36" $i>eaker 90Und l)'lltem, 4 !t>d AM/FM radio $17.50. Q'. am or alt 6 pm. 673"-2445 SKI boat bargain -S400 cash. I ,,,,,_..".,....,,.:--=-cbl~"-54&-47l4_.,~,_~1:-' NEWLY Upholstered 12' set:· Fri -Sat -Sun - Mon g11.1 range. Good eondition. ~:I.sh ~r, solid stale Keefe &: Merritt range $25. boat, motor, trlr, 16512°Rou CAL 28. F'ully outfltted. 4 17 Pc. Kinn Size tional , does not fi t decor ANYTHING GOES s•o ... _,. 847 o 11 &.· amo needle. Pay 0 11 40! Alabama Apt 4 Hntg FREE TO YOU ~ -l!B 847-2 aa.ill SIS -radk> SJ.D.DJ; • '7 $350. 645-1462 '#" 2.100 \V. Coast Hiway, N.B. ., · .... .,...~. arre Pa.I of $79.10 or easy pymnts, ' ..,,, ·u.;J 494-Qal. ~ Bedroom I-'~~"="""~~--TWIN box sprng•, mattress KGood"enmoceoo_;'_ "n"'o 'v ".T,r Credit Dept. '--2BchSl.L VERTONE w a I n u t MIRACLE ot birth: Ex· 1El8' ;:,1a,','art.w~1-.40 ~ o~,· La-e 9 dra1,1.-er riri!SM!r, mir· *RENTALS* rd uu '" -=' ...wot .. nt Snl'in.,.. .. Spaniel .... ,,., ~ ...,.. LIDO 14 No. 3060, fitted for . ... HO USES & APTS $100 UP &: frame, port. '"'a robe, 546-2 . 11ereophot'IOI! A!l.1/FM. 21" ,,......... ,, •. ..,-• Mar, CM. Anytime racing, lmmac. ll mos. old.. , "?r, I~=~ ;',::1s, ki_~1f Blue Beacon 645--0111 11urfbrd, record PI a Yer s ' $25. 234 Tape R•co~ders 8220 Slimline w a In u t TV. ~::tely .in need or a 15' Boa 35 h I Comp. lift acce11. lnc:I. size a , 1 e, qui • beds pd, drps, rug, clothes. KENMORE Washer, very TAPE Record So 530 4. fi46-4S98 !!'""" me with love soon as t, P e ec cover & trlr. Best ofr ovtl' • 1 ed mattress, sheets, blank· Off All gd. cond & reasonable. good condition $40. Tt k t ~ ny possible. 675-5044 8/2 starf. Motor & trailer $l500. ~306 I ets, etc. ice Equipment 8011 542 Tu.~tin. NB, Sat. 548-4862 * 847-8115 * M:;le ~:~ CM offer ~2 11 and 26'' bik~s $12, Gas f.REE To good h 0 me, $300 * 654-2915 c:;o~od~l;~t~l~h TYPE\VRITER, Adding MOVING·table l ch airs, G.~: Was!ier. Very good con-' nnge S25, Sewnig machine ado!'able long haired kit· 31' CRUIZEON, Ch r ya. Ai!;!t:~ ~ 21=-. :"",! mach, calculator, very d · bl t ditJon $35. Ci-•r ii I. E ul 8300 $IS. 1513 Or an & e • C.M. tens. Call alt 5 p m. Marine Hemi. re· b It. 67, ~ , All For $249 be s. misc. ta es, oys, * 847-8ll5 * ..... q p. 642-5666 531-7631 812 ~-ntc•'1 ,_,,.. I, ••~. ~0 .reawnable. Xlnl con d. 1628 Corsica Pl, CM Make ....... )"<' ' ,,... ~ -f No down • Pmh1. only $9 mo. 892·2423 eves. _.offers .. Must sell this wk. WASHER & dryer, still con-J>Ol.AROI~ lM camera for Misc. Wanted 1610 ADORABLE.% 9'lmeae kit· ="'"=~!"~'~=~~---AUX>RT Salllilh, new All, !: WELK'S WAREHOUSE 540-5.157 nected. Xlnt cond. $85 for sale, with case; xtnt cond. tens, all black. Why not FIBERG~ Supply 'center $45. 12' Glasa Sail Dine~ i Cafe, Restaurant 8014 both. 642-$400 or 548-0791 $60. 531)-8438 • ':&,o 0 k y 0 u r 1 e 1 f '! ! now ·in CM-NB 11 re a_ $70. Xlnt condition M&-4445 ~· BIG Garage Sale: House 1-::=~:==.=::=:.==:::-i,"-'=="=====°"' I WE PAY MORE 4 7 Ev _ .... I ...... boa CAi...20, xlnt cond, I hp 600 W. 4th SI., Santa Ana SC-100 ·S cot s man ice furniture, patio furn, retrig. Antiques 1110 Sportinn Goods 8500 473 814 .. ~~nl,na: ,::: )'OW' bo ~ (< Open Daily 9 • 9 machine $95, 536-8861, Hun-toys, lol!l!l. yardagt", dishes, • S1A¥ESE kittens, % swu••,., • ....... or. me. moor, Genoa, xtru:, al.Ip. Sat. 9 . 6 Sun.].). 6 lington Shores Mot('] bike, clothes Sat-Sun 9--ti, L1rry Morgan Antique• s u RF B 0 ARD JO' 6''. CASH Siamese,"~· 6 wks. ~ ~~ln :eJ~ = 0 : ~"~......,""""'~=----· s· sofa I:. 5· Love scat, 3,Jiv· 2138 Aater Pl. C.f\1, EXPANSION SALE "California" Cu:i;tom.made. ='""'='-'"'=~-,---::8/C4 I Sea, 1TJ7 Superior, C.M. 16 ' PEARSON &allrboat & ing room tablrs. Ca 11 Household Goods 8020 GARAGE sale: Sat. & Sun. Unloading 40' Van In new Like ~wl Sacrifice $100. DARLING black k 11t1e 11 , &t2.-7607 trlr. Xlnt con!. 11275 er 613-8202 aftl'!r 6 P!l.t Located at 2275 Golden Cir· warehouse. 20 Roll top 675-2082 male 7 wlu; old, must flnd ====~~~~-,,"'='-"..,m.=,,1'"'=--,-,-_,,i MOVJNG: Refrigeralor $40. I NB Ba k B desks, 16 China cabinets, 20 'f'or furniture, appllance.-.......i home11. ,.,.,. all! 8/1 '67 GLASSPAR CI tat io n , 151,i' SNIPE 1Jau1-~,· DR.E:\_"EL Light oak Bedroom Picnic table &: benches $15. <' e, · · c a Y · M 11 1600 ... 6 """' ~ l board.outboard 120 M ..._. set Occasional ehair, lamp 2 black .,.,,, b.,. •tool·, no. 54g..-0;-i71 · Round oak ta.hies, oak chaln:, lsce. aneou1 colored TV, pianos, organs Bl.A....,. "' wh>'t• k>'tten ,!'_,1 with · . ere;: xlnt cond, trir, dacron ..u.. " " roc kers, hall trees, armoires, and antiques. '-'"" • ""' u ser power Jet • $65(). 0.t ~10G li'&:co='y:'l•,,•.,'c,""'°'"''-:-;".;':;· o;;i...,..C:...::':':C: I ,:."'.'.:'C:b:._. T::n'..'..':>Y~cl"..'.!."".:-.'."'~'-::'.'.'"'."'~ AUG. 3-4. Game table, hl'llfili 300 clocks. You name it! ·we t.fISCELLANEOUS ir o use-Dav or ni~t female, has shots, 8 wka. power trim. Full rover. 2 walnut chairs. table, palio 5 PC. SterlirlJ!'. Silver Coffee hcadboord. a n1ique11 I:. Misc. have It! See at: 2380· Nev.·-hold goods. Remodeling :sale. 636-UlO MG-6988 8/2 Ready to enjoy. A 11 SNrPE No. 436, 151Ai' wtth umbrella & table, large Service withou t tray S,?,00, rug, patio furn. 851 Dom· port Blvd. or 2~28 Newport Green naugahydc recliner. ADORABLE Oulfy kllte111 malnternmce records. l trailer. Xl.Nr eond. "50. BBQ. 644-23.18 6734627 wkends or aft S:3o ingo, Easl BluU, NB Blvd., c.r.1. ..548-T'..83 Wagon wneel light fixtures, black, a:rey, &: w h 1 t e . ov'fle?'. Kl 6-4444 ~o;~""'""'804CC...=----- PATIO . G le s 1 =='=~-'-~'-"--~! 642-35Z6. Alter 4 weekdays $WE BUY$ 6~1 811 19 LA N 221 SABOT $75/best o lfer . •BEAUTIFUL pale orange arage $8 • a· GENUINE Jenny Lind spool & a.II day Saturday & Sun-· ' G STRO • cu· in. Acrilon rug 14xl9. like new G1r1ge Sale 8022 Sun, 8/2-3, 1()...5. 614 Orchid. beer . Other antiques in-dov. BEAGLE -female, 2 ye&r1, completely overhauled, new 548-0727. 1'8" Russell .V COM TV th'• ,,,,,.,·cal -t • f 11 2 1· bait SurfboanL Make o f f e·r .• _ $100. 968-6765 · • 0 • • eluding glllssware. etc. 326 , $ FURNITURE $ very good with children. op • u cover . ive- DINING room table & 6 GARAGE SALE appliances, furn, and dishes. Victoria Apl A CM betwn 68 MAGNAVOX Console col· APPLIANCES 847-5990 ~/4 saclu, A·l cond. =-~-""""'------! ha' b ff d nd $7_ Tal)!e:i;, lamp,:;, davenport, 3 FAMTLY Garage Sale: 9-8 PM ' ' or TV/stereo. Two 9' CUT $2825 675-6595 P-CAT Ready to r ace . ' c ir~. u et. ~ · c.'O • J etc. 456 G'lnd St .. NB · · t malching print 1JOla1. Gla.lla Color TVt-Pi•not-Sl•r101 E fem. tabby Calico kit-Custom trailer. Must aen 1..::'°c.'..:':.;11:._":.;7:.5--09=7,;.4 ____ 2 UPHOL. chairs, 2 Maple ~~::'1~~~ie! m~-:=1. 1 &~ ~~.: ANTIQUE chaise 1 ram e • cocktail table. Square lamp 1 Plec.. •t HoWM P11ll let!, trained. 646-'7349 alter S ~~ ~ullt~laM .... u0~1j $2495 or best cHer. 64J-37T6 A-10VING th is 11'eek, Stove 1.H 9 12 b · 1 hand carved Roman style, table. Marble lamp table. CASH IN JO MINUTES p.m. 8/1 u. 1 G E R I sp"".~· .x ra.idl'!c rug 2568 Carnagie, Cos.ta 1\-lesa. 14• ,, •• 1441 e 541 ,53 I e le~r-11hift, ca:ble, wheel. eves. , 'like nf''11• •· •· efr g, com-iv/pad, maple hi-chr. car '1• .... ~ -~ Antique dry sink. Club ....,. PART Boston.Terrier, fem, p;t'"te bedroom set, dishes. t 54· 307· FRI & Sat. Elee sto.Je, pllly DEiK With glassed book chair. Odds and ends. gd. Y1'8lcndog, obed, gentle Xlnl "ship to shore" lx>at. Sea Scout's J'leed •main aa.il coHeP la hie, lamps, kilchen sea .. ;>-. :> pen, clothes & m is c shelves & Hi ghboy. !I.Use 494-4497 WANTED-Camper or sleeper with children. 642-1354 8/1 tows easily. $125. 67J..6,';18 . for 22 foot Albatross. &42-5769 sci. Misc!. Call eves, Sat &: SAT & Sun. 171 71 Treehaven houSE"hold items. Ml E. 18th r C 11 ft 6 673-5656 for 8 ft GMC pickup. SACRIFICE·Wne51. 71' Luhr Sun. 646-2292. l.11, H.B. 842 -39 23. ~I., C.t\1. 642-1181 NA,rnVA.JO' a • .. T G N~ ~thoy<r S80surfboAE rd, 1o·k, 642-3526. After 5 9.'ttkd~ ~'PoeBlea .. glf~11't ~le skiff, 100 Chris CraJt. Full Power Cruisers 9020 Stel"f'O-<T.V.'&, furniture, & rugs wo tt)' r;uvu s ape . ~1. as &: all day Sat•--i .. ~ & Sun-gea o wv 1ng "h' g-•I LI o ·-LrvING Rm, bedim. kilchen misc!. GARAGE SALE Hills" f2) $40 each. Jor Gnog. 642--3518 d11.ya. ........., home. 546-5316 . 8/2 ... s in ~ .. ~ p. o-.w•;;o 46 MIN. to Avalon tn aty~. furnishings. v.'8shl'!r & 1400 S. Ba ylronl, Bl. (end of * ;)45-1441 * R .11 2 COCK A POOS S Id '65 Chry!!ler 181At' F.G. I-0 F.G. Century Bu~r. dryer. 5'1:>-7278 Sat & Sun RUMl>i AGE Sale Tue11-Wed '"'!•:i:n~no~Ac':"'.':·l_l -=~-· l :==:==~===,==I OTO-Ti er, 4 speed trans. WANTED: C 0 NCR ET E - -' ITIOfl o ' Mercruiser like new $2350/ Aug~ AlM:t ~oil painting11 .:.. Excellent condition. lieavy ~1IXER must stay to I ether. fl 50--mt 23x9, 50 hrs. Chryl. 300. Sips PAIR Oran~ velvl'!t chairs cheap! 20681 Surburbia, HB THURS-Fri, 2018 Phalarope, S.wiftg M1chine1 1120 duly wilh new clull;h. new 5.Jl.5189 8/2 ° er. 4, head. S.S .. 11tem room, $35 each. pair malching ot-oft Brookhllt!lt near Adams, <Republic Home!\) CM. 1969 SINGER touclt--o-tmalic, drl~e chains, 25 h 0 r 1 e 548-l80!I GREEN eyed gray kittens, 1908 29' Monterey Character w/w crptl, etc. Sllp avail. l ="=m=""=-'-"~'~'~'h~·-"=,_,.~15c-:o I left on Brook h u rs t & Bargains !or $1! 5-1&-0855 zig zag, button holes, sews ena:1ne. For Sale or trade. \VANTED Sewing , &Iae~ioe. affectionate, housebroken, =~· $~ ~~-Diesel Cost $12,<Xll, will tab BED Divan $12.50. Couch $45 I "Ac:dcc•mc:,::'=~~----I AUG. Z.3. steamer trunk, on buttons. blind hems .. (Make olferl 6'12-5488 Very modcn.tely pri~. 67a-5983 8/11 "c:.::c.:::::,:.::.:c:...::=---~ ::·68~=· ofc like new, olive & aqua. fURNITURE, Records, men dt'corator Item~. toy!\, misc. $34.88 or $4.16 mo. 5?.s-6616 113 OFr ON Portable, Ask for Bee~ 2 BEAGLES, young mother T·BlRD. 8'8" GOOD CON· =="=""'='~=-~• ~&lc:2-8:..:::I::.11:_ ______ 1 & woni e.M clothing. Art 713 Larkspur Ave .. CD!l.1. EVERYTHING! 548-l87l _ and g wk. old pup, rood 0ITION 915 Victoria MUST Sell 22 Mere. cabin 8' SOFA, never u:\ed. qu1Hed pieces, Po r I ab I e TV, G!ll'8ge Sale Sat & Sun Music1I lnst. 1125 Bikinis, coverups, tun ~ar. 6. 6.. Q e we Y weber wtt.tchdog, friendly dl sp. MS--lS3l :'!1~: SI= 2so 6 cylgai rutl floral. Scotchge.rd!!d Sl2:i. etc. 2501 crestvtew Dr. 463 Elmhunl Land, Cos!a ·--Fri -Sat -Sun -!I.Ion 837 7081 8/1 lA'. 45 JiP Mtt'Cllry; bait Matching Jove-seal $1 5 , Bap:hores. Mesa * 56--0101 TOP Condition-DRUMS for ANYTHING GOES mlnj..feather Surlboa·rd. 13 ;;:;;,·~~-----...:'.:'.:I tat1k. Large-wheeled trailer. lank, ball lank, etc. Sett af. 5.1f-80.l2 DAILY PILOT Oa.ssilied sale, 5 Red spark!!'! drums&:· "2400 '"'· Coalfl Jitwa.y, N.B. pounds. Green0· fin. $45, SIAMESE cat, spayed &: de-S450 d nd 592-546G ler OYft' $1000. 673.-3828 White elephants! Dtme·a·llne section fliOW! *. * ~a~~e S~1~B* * 3 Zelgine cYmbals, good BRUNSWICK Ce I e b r I t y 548-4445 ' ~~:~ e ~1! a rr-e ~~~ 2l' ~b. ~Ni~, I m m a c . 2S' TS CRUISON, V-drlva.; I~;:;~~:;;~;;:;;;:;;~;;;~~======!.::======== price. 673-0783 or 6~3836 rerulatk>n ab.e p001 table, KIRBY Vacuum CI e 11,, er 714 :673-2859 811 Inboard. SIS radlo, head. SIS tanks. SACR.lFICEI Furniture 8000 ·Furniture ACOUSTIC Ba&s Amplifier. 4 c11Cs &t balls included, $260. wllh • t I a chm en t 11 &: ,:.;,"'='='='-o---~~::'.! I galley, covers. $2600 or trade 6'JS.69l2 or 548-2854 mos old, xlnt cond. $695. 642.7607 ht'VTl D.S. • polisher. Take over sm!!.ll 3 ftAB811'S, 3 months old, l for Trailer-boat. ~2389 =========I $48-7007 Credit Dept. 535-7289 6Jack & 2 butt, AlltD pen. Speed-Ski loets 90ao SPANISH MEDITERRANEAN As Shown In Mod•I Hom•s What '" •~citing scenal Your home ca n come elive with our 9l1morcus decorator-correl1ted P,eckagel living room includ•s: luxuriou• Sofa and l.0¥• Seat in quilttd floral f1bric1. l Spanish Oak T ebl•1, 2 distin- guished Conquistedor T 1ble lamps. "Htcie11d1" Bedroom: Sptnls~ Tri le Dresser wlth Frtmtd Mirror, Kin9°site Htedboard, 2 Commodes. • c. Wrou9ht Jron OinittrS"tt1 Sp1f1l11\ Oak-h"t"K~~no-p. Mu1t be •••" to be truly tpprecieted ••• so. com• in today! Priced el,1wliert •' $895.00. I I.A.ND NIW lrtCIAL IA.LI e ·C•11 b• pwrdt••'"' ••P•t1t11Y !tty Cr•dlt T111111 4U W. ,OUaTM IT. UffTA AMA 547.0789 S35-72S9 GOLD C!lrpellng. approx 25 SUBMA.RINE BODY for &ale Must be taken by Frld1cy. 24' Cabin Cruiser, '62 Pem· ===-~'-'==-!yard•. 75c yard . .m Cabrlllo, 897-5277 8/1 broke .. Grey marine engbie, SAUCY 14 Ke t t en b ur c, WANTED: Martin or Gibson Co!ta Meu. • real cheap. Call 673-0783 or V a 13:. h SIS H d 1 cus"'m mede. • .. p f 't b. bod fi5.3836 DARLING tiger k 11 ten , ..,, p, • . ea ' "' -n acous 1c gu1 ar'. 1g y. All.I-FM Stereo dlmblhatlon, ~~~------· 1 waiting tor 1 new home, 11 owner, Pier prlvUege for 3'0 Mercury, w/trlr. Jl l d e Call belr Fn. 548-4193, good Yl'Orking order $25, WANT To buy (home) bar. wkl old 968-4397 .811 days. $2500. 6Ta-1909 or Gulde Steel'tfl&'. Stat trames 646-6i24 Eves aak for Greg. 642-35l8 ~i round or L shaped. Mu.'11 .SZl;::..-1:;:5;15"-===,.-.,-,,=-I not upbolstettd. Leg tha11 VIOL.IN Very gd cond ·be reasonable. Phone THESE cats are wtlllng to 24• GLASSTRON, 19 6 7 • 30 hr use. AUdnc $l:m. • · • VINYL TILE. LI no I e u m , 644-4687 llvt In or out, pl'Otty too. 543-CnS pract new. 5*--5300 days, A!phall Tile -Be:11.utiful col· ~2674 8/2 Inlx>ard...(IU!. 235 hp. as Slj.9:527 alt 6:30 or wkeods. ori and p11.tterns. Free h radlo. Loaded! ~1161 BOSTON WHALER 1 1 •, -1 Mic tnery, etc. 8700 GERMAN Shephtrd, 1 yr. JobMOn 100 bp + Jobnlon 3 Plenos & Org1nt 1130 =~~· Uc. c 0 n 1 r • FIBERGLASS Rapid eutt old. hed shota, nffda &:Odd ~~ri~ ~'=· s~. :,:, hp, trailer, acca. wen I bootl'il: Twtn &• x 12' tt!'m home. S4S-lll2 812 64U08'T"'cr ~1393 SHARP! <81Z> 6t4-UQ ' ~ ~a -NEW ~Lns. l§~, .. ., ... ,.,. a•-ck L -:;:;::;;,:~::..:=......,,.-~I . GOOD (X)NDJTION heavy ire.en Kodt1 shai, is.· control boothll, dueled to ~-•Ji r • d 0 r MAY·OA Y Divortetl 'li'---w/ ~~ ...;;.boll.t.. ~t!7"'_~1· $3$ * 673-1751 yd, Coet $7.95. 646-7343 !l.11imcsott "OM)'Wtll c On . R.e:trirvrr, 6 nlOI old, AJ<C 115hp Chrygier. 51 pter "'""'l" ......,. T...,..... De1Ul'9 NEED I trolHltate~blcwer-Be• t ~. ~ 811 II ... ann - -.am, antl after S: ITS-8l9I ~: o d upright pl.ano SET Of ceramic fin qs f 1 1 1v1 · ..,.,...,, •;"~"'°" with li>od tone tor Juvenile $10; lady'• rink roller 0 11 r 0 v t r 1 0 O O · TO good home, 2 sm. Tn-ONE OWNER POWER Hall. C-11 Pat Bush 613-1660 akaled $10. 50-0146 2ll-3Zl...&123 r len, fem, 1 mot. old. S1llbo1ft 9010 2 Mere IXl'1 Sl• WEST Coast Forklift Co. 6'16-4916 8/1 -..;... ___ ...;,.:.;.,; e Mi-.2936 e . SPrm:sAN?~n """" 11 GOLD Hl-Jo u.rpet, xlnl Sales & repair of lorkltlla. CUTE part Manx kitten • Udo 1' • =.-:,,,-..:.,""".;.;...:... __ ~,,. -· o:..,0~,,,_ cond;, yr. old, 60 + ydi, $2.~ Opening for bulllness Aug n e eds Io v t n I home , WITH TRAIU.1t 1:'-l'!:.. ~;r'!ftct.50 .. ~ ·-~ -=-"'-:::.-::;::c..,~--1 Jd, F&F 644· B!H-4840 4th. at 783 Newton Way, 548-0452 8/1 $800 494---2432 c*i1'"~2259 ....__ '' P IANO WANTED HEADBOARO'wtth ft'llm~ Costa Mesa ,;.3 .:;M,,;Oc:o71d,.,.,bl-ot°'k~k~lt-tc-n.-o,..::.:mo -14' HOBIE-CAT- C21.3) 877-1035 Pvt Party $15 49§-11321'"'F""or-,O"a"11l_,Pfi~.t-W~aJ1-I-.... ~ old puppy, whit• W/blk. No. 36.1. rr.;....tS08 CVf!&. .,,,,:83~ G~- •••!!l!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!iiii!i!iiii!i!il!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!ll DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! White Ele11Mnt1T 01\1 642-5678 -494-~ I ll Whlte Elepballt.s! 6t6-:i063 ' ~~-"""'-"-"~-··-~~.::::::::.....~~-1 SANTA ANA FURNITURE • -----------.. -=-=~====-'--=-==--"==:...:.:.._...:..• ....:.___:._--=.:======~.;;.....;.._.:,. • ~ 31 DAILY l'l\.OT Fri411, ._. 1, 1969 ·. ----.'ftXllDOililiiON -· 'filXNsPOilililON TilNSPORTATION i TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~r:!SPORTA~~ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION !TRANSPORTATION Mort .. Egui~ ~S Mini Ill.-9275 MotorcyclH 9300 Trucb 9500 ~-9510 C1mpers 9520 Imported Autos '600 lmJ>Qrted Aut')• 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Bl<NDtx ..,...· "' -TIWL .... , .. Pow.n. .~--;;,;;,A . "°· Nttd• -TOYOTl STOUT •Toyota Landcruiser -Jl&daJ' ht new coOO. JdHJ X1nl cond, itu1 Wider v.1;y, engtne work. New t.ltt 6: tot lrg ple&IUJ"fi craft • S1'1'$. call at t er l PM tube $50. 646-4644 comm 1 vesael. $4000 radar 61).6'fl'f r..11"l> + mo ....nat1oa.I-======== oe.2635 Molorcycl" 9300 Pl.m., 2lD hp, V-1 Mar\n! ="--==---- H~ndo\ * MO'do~i:i1 ~ ·''0" y-1,. r • .,.i~,.,, P<>•h * W•~•I<' ~'"'""''"~ ' l"'"''""o TU STIN HONDA ;,,,,Gt N~wporf .8J8.S712 Auto Services & P•m 9400 SMALL Block Chevy racifll'.' equipment New 327 block, Mondello heads, AMen fort· ed steel rods, 5/8 strcHler crank. Ansen Jorted plztans. All parts new. 846--0763 aft 5 pm. 9425 '67 plck·up, 011& Ruby Red. 'fi6 Hardtop, full equip!, l\l. cleanest we've ever seen. flotation tires & wheels. Y.'3.m L<Hnlles, e:<ce!. tires. UTP bubs, llke new RSF 309.' 2<!. $21 95 $1295 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Huntington Beach 841·8555 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA llun:lnglon 8<.>ach 847·8555 ( ·-UVE By the "BiY in sp. 29, Recr.1t'n Vthicl• 9515 enp. Marine bead. Vacuum PUReS. Elet". Tacbometus. Kohler 2.Skw auto start marine generator. fi73..ll6l REA 'mK1T Rad» tr:le;phonf:, 50 wa.tt. Factory bit. Can . ....,, be eoov<rtod lo '15 watt. Brand new, never hooke! Up. SUl(I. ~ mobU home A cabana. Pvt. 36' Houseear. Bll-lns. Good RCA. AR-8712 'Portable DF * ,68 YAMAHA 80 * 68 Coleman Trailer Camper. btach, clubMe &: pool, motor .l Urn 3298 Ot!J Battcry-110 VAC $35. Perla· T.N. Race eqp'd, X.dwnber, Slefps 6, Uaed 1 seaaon. A Bayside Village, NB . Asking Mar CM anytim°e "' h11l•n Triller, Travel IMMACULATE! 1962 V\V CAMPER BUS completely restored. New t~s. pa.Int, Porsche chronic \Yheela , upholstery, chemical toilet, sink, wa.ta tank, stove, shocks & valves. Try to beat lhi1 one ror $lli00. Can be i;een at 2219 Oia.nneJ Road, Balboa or caU 673-<l!34 C1mper. Rentals 9522 *EXPLORER* By 1veek or month, Luxurl- om. Sleep, 6. Sell contaln. ed. Limited number. Call today. LEISURE RENTALS (n4) 64f-00ll, (TI4) 831-3809 DATSUN '69 DATSUN Big sedan, 4 dr, dlr, 4 spef'd, tront disc brakes, oveailead cam, speedometeio•reads 3200 miles, \VW make exception. al deal to prvt prty. Full pr. Sl755. YN\V 146 l.B. Call Vic, 49'1·9773 or ~t ORANGE COUNTY'S NO. l DATSUN DEALER DOT DATSUN 18835 Beach Blvd. HunUngton Beach 842-ml or !)40..(M42 '68 DATSUN ble ~ $4.50. 564384 comp. releue, hi comp bead -'Si-''='=' =''=$650==· -===== I $16,95<1, MUST SEU..! LI I"'=''======= HAND beating compass fJ.50 & more! Must see to be· -s-crm C1mpef"1 9520 Flare launcher, new $6. Ueve! $285. 644-llfO. T:.o.;••:.;•:;;k;:;• _____ 9SOO J ~========~~~1;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;: Dune Buggies 54>-"381 '67 BULTAOO '67 Dodg• •• Pick Up Jups 9Sl0 9525 Big station wagon, auto lrarul, owrhood cam, dlr, disc bra· kes.' Perfect condition. Tak.? Ira.de. Sacrilice.. \VBJ 589 - LB. call Ken 545-0.134. HONDA &40 Ga& Generator 100 cc LOSITO * AUTOMATIC * 117 VAC $35. 6' T•l.,copl"I 1225 Good Cond Boathook $4.50. 5C5-4384 M2-9421 '6 9 KAWASAKI 175 Bolt Sllp Mooring . 9036 Bushwaker. mint cond, low $75. AfO. IJ..slip, 12 tt 6 in by mileage. $500 or trade for 38 ft. Up to XI ft mul VW bug. C9S-2l44 . 673-7449 '6.5 BSA 650cc S p I t f it e !"""="======='I Hornet. $&'.XI, Xlnt cond. Bo•t· "I acht 5(8-GlO Charters 9039 '66 HONDA 305, rebuilt erigine. Nttds paint. $300. '3' SLOOP w/skipper, auto 6'5-31.36 pilot & extras. By day or HONDA 125 xi t J week. 64&-1801 . • runs n , ow l ~=~=~-=o-=;,-·f mileage. $225. CAL 24 S25 day~ wk. 673-7003 CAL 36 S95 day~70 wk. 1964 HONDA. Good Rill. Red. Sharp! Buy lt al Southland's Truck Headquar- ters for ONLY n~. KUSTOM MOTORS 845 Baker St. Qmta M11!8a, 540-5915 '68 Chevy Pickup Cwrtom sport tnjeb:, bucket seats, fact. air cond, pWl" !leering, dlr, super condl· tion! Cost $4400. Will sacrl· fice $2099. LB 886628. Call Ken 49+9773 or 545--0634 * SHEU..S * Slight F r e I i h t Damage CHEAP! ~1800 For Charter. 846-29:11 condition. Muat see! '58 Ford pickup, V-8, * Finest Selection, PD'wer & 8!l3-Q85 stick. Good cond. Reblt =.i:P~ ~:· For TRIUMPH 198J TR6C, xlnt engine. $525. 548-38;,j '""""""'======I cond, lo "mls, rec. tuneup, CAMPING &: Surfing, '66 Alrcr•ft 9100 650cc mo. S48-4l.l.l Dodge Carry-All, v -8 --------'fl8 KAWASAKI, 120 CC, 700 • 4Speed, lo book. 662238 $lOOl GIVES you 1/3 lnl in miles. $350 or otter. Eves '62 Jeep FC-170 pickup 4 clean, low·tif1le' Cessna 1Tl uk for Greg. 641-351! \\'hi dri~e. good cond., rlso. at o.c._ Alrpt. caII 837-2200 '68 YAMAHA, 250 Enduro, lo 494--0386 after 6 PM. v."eekdyii, <>r 838-37211 eves. ml.I. xlnt cond. FORD PU. '54 Flathead rblt PrPER·Super Cruiser 1947 k> 548-7943. motor. $400. 642-4248 2125 ~~~nd. reasonable. '67 TRIUMPH Bonnie, 650 Orange Ave, CM I>========='/ cc, lots chrome, new eng, 1 '57 CHEV '4 ton pick-up call 9200 owner, Best <>Ir' Oftr $975. S.16-4593 $350. Ex c e 11 en t Mobllo Ho"'" GREENLEAF PARK in clear, cleM:I, cool C.OSta 646-4203 cond. Mobile Homes 9200 Mobile Hom11 9200 BA y HARBOR MHO~~': SALES Clearance Sale Mll!SI, New 92 sPal.'4! Adult 011 Aff Dltplmy Moct.11 JI r. ChoOM ffell'll Park NOW OPEN! Mobile All SI-12' te 34' WIN Home Display Moo.a •11.------INCLUDING------, Sales ott1ce localed at Park. OPEN 4 WHEEL DRIVE CAMPER Sales ~ Rentals Authorized Oe~er Eldorado • Four Windti '68 JEEP Commando Roads!er, '""" sharp. Scotsman . Barncuda FREE ZEBRA MINI BIKE with purchase of any camper or camper package! looks Theodore '66 4-\VD station wag., pwr steering, auto trans., hubs, 6 ~·heels, excel tires, very low miles. TEL 453. $2495 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA l luntington Beach -847-8555 ROBINS FORD DUNE Buggy Show Sale. Bodies from $149. Chaasis from $249. La Pa:z: Dune GOING to 6CJVe my country! Buggy Supermarket, 3623 '64 Datsun. lo mlles (57,0CKl) W. \Varner, SA. 546-4045 good oond. >..1nt transporta· OPEN 9-7 wkdys, Sat 1().5 lion car. 657-66J7 9600 '67 DATSUN Sia \V g n, Imported Autos . perfect cond. S!fA Must 5cll ALFA ROMEO immediately! 4%-0592 ENGLISH FbRD FIAT '67 FIAT ~ Sport Coupe, nicest In town. I 9989 $1397 Best Deals Are At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.AI. 646-93al '59 FIAT 1100 Rebuilt eng. 4 1p. Slick. Beautiful cond. f.tuat see! ""'· 646-9503 FERRARI FERRARI Newport Imports Ltd. Qr.. •n.&:e County's only author- ized dealer. SALES-SERVJCE·PARTS 3100 \V. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 642·9405 540-1764 Authorized MG Dealer ME~~DES BENZ Q, .u19,· Covnl~ ~ l .Jr(l("'' Sf'l»c f1 1:ii1 N1•w & U~rd Mer (t:d~·~ B("nl Jim Siemon • Imps. Wai ner & MJi11 Sr. S<1nta Anu 5464114 f.tUST NO\V! SAC. J.966..230 S. AIR CONO. Al\1/FM, P/S, P/B. BLK W/BROWN INT. 62,001 Afl. JN GREAT 001\'0. $2$0. Oft ISf GOOD OFFER: RUSH! 547~9 GOING ovcrsca5 111 u s t S1tcrilire my wi!f''s 1!15!t t.1ercede5 190 sedan. Very clellIJ. Asking $:i50. Costa r.1essa, 549-1453 or :116-5417 '60 220-S Convert. Very clean, $1,200 on rt'blt eng. J\·lech pert. new cloth top. SJOOO. 494-8319 * 1964 220 s * KARMANN GHIA Mere. Benz, auto, pWl" sir, ---------I am-fm, p~T bi'ks. complete 1967 J<arman Ghia. \Vhile 1 ser. records. 499-254~1 owner. 35,000 miles. $1550 536-45>! MERCEDES BENZ MG 1961 t.1G Roadster 1600, reblt motor gd. top, tires tonneau covers. 8J8-3alO or ~422 OPEL '68 OPEL Baby Blue, +speed. radio. fack. VZYI63 $1597 Best .Deals Are At DEAN LEWIS 9 AM TO 6 PM llOLLAWAY CASA LOMA CA.SITA$ SHIU.TON MANOI ICIT FAlllYllW IAY HAl.01 COltNE(L FASHION MANOI PlllSTfGI HOMITTI ClLllllTY SAHAIA ACCENT MOBILE II L-'"', =25_B_A_K..,.ER-ST-.,-C-O-ST_A_M_E-SA-- l/J lloc• I• 9f H.,.,_.. .,. lektr HOME SALES CALL ...... ,. TODAY '46 Army Jeep, top condition. New everything! incl painL & t!re11. 673-2191 '6'1 Jeep Wagoneer, stk .. ovr dr., 4 whl drive. Big Gates tires. Eves 548-2670 CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY No Better Prices Anywhere ! Open House Driftwood Beach Club 21462 Pacific Cout HW'I lnquift at apace 26 New section, new 24 w\de Ocean front 536-2131 1968 FLEETWOOD, 1b56 ""'"""°· Sldrtlng, awnlng, patlo, lawn etc. New-So. Coata Mesa Adult Park. S$l0. comp. 642-59ll "9. JlxSO GOLD Medal, 2 Br, 2 Ba. awning, skirting, util shed. Adult park. 1 3 5 L&burnam LD.. F-V . 961--0'190 ANGEL Tn.iler on beautiful spe.oe, Penn. N"' 5 yr least, with bay view. $7500. 67S-Q8J & 67>0'm MOBILE home, 2 Br, 2 Ba., Joe at Rancho Huntington. 96&-33'.19 <>r 962-7311 Ele<tric C1rs 9250 \ ELECrR.IC Cart, gnll cart -· $225. 5.16-J'6.1 alter 5 p.m. Mini BlkH 9275 3-wheel mini bike. MUAt .re to bellew! call aft 5, 5t5-J5Mi HEADQUARTERS FOR MOTORHOlllES BUY1!1r'Att-mr- . DODIE "EXPLORER" ........... * .... ................ ---AU. •tll&. ft ,..,, a •OOT. a tHf. r YUM rl•AIO. IWI A9 Nf'HVI• c.ttllf. waitll lt'1 ff.1 cir th1t wo11'I giv1 you 111ythin9 t11 worry 1bout. W1 1"tlr1 1ur1 of th1t. W1 glv1 ii th• VW l6·poi11t 11f1ty ind p1rform1nc1 1111. It h1 1 to p111. So •• t i"• it our 100 % 9u1r1nt11 th1t ••'11 r1plac1 111 mt lor m1chanic1I ptrh' for ]0 d1y1 Ot 1000 mit11, which1v1r com11 firil. hn'I th1t what a n1w c1r-own1r n1ad11 A bug that won't driv1 you nuh. Low, Low Prices on These SPECIALLY PRICED BUGS! HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS '61 YW '61 vw '67 vw Rtdlo &-h11t1r. l/IM 219 FM SQUAIEIACI rtdio, lu99191 rick, Lik1 ntw, TRH 705 1 ..... mil1191, O"I OWft tr. ICOK 141 . $1699 $2199 $1599 • '66 vw '66 vw '65 vw CONYlkTllLI fASTIACK R1dio '"d h11t1r. Don't ~dio • httlt r, .. ,,. Spacial 9ra1n; b11ulifu!, 11'1111 fhi1 Oflt. 515 155 . "ic1. RH IC 911 Ptl/ l lf. $1499 $1499 $1299 .... vw '67 GHIA PORSCHE5 SQUAil IACI COUPl Radio, otc. Ro1!1y nict. ''2 Super 'O REF 209. N11rly "'"'· UJC JI,, '57 C••P• lmtoredl $1499 $1999 'It COllfertllllo .,, t /12: - • 1970 N. Harbor, ~osta Mesa 11 BAYSIDE DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH. I ? 23 BRAND NEW 1969 RIVIERAS B1n1 110 SL Cp1. Rdtlr. Air, Auto .. P.S., lmmtc· ul 1t1. UKH 945 SAVE '66 VOLKS • ip11rl, r•clio, .. heeler. TRH 370. l 11w, low Mlle191. $1495 '67 CAMARG F1,lorv t ir condilion· in9, 1ulo tr1n1, p11wo r 1l11ring, low mil119t. S2295 '67 DATSUN 11.L 'II t. 4 1p11d, reclio, h11t1r. TZJ 294. $1295 C11ron1t 400 '!·cir. fttl, air cond., t ulo tr1n1,, P.S., R&H. !VGB 979 $2695 '68 BUICK Eleclr• 4 cloor 1td•n, Fwll power. FACTORY AIR CONO. WID l4S $3595 '66 IMPALA 'I Deer H.T, F1clory t ir cone! .. ~uto. Ire na .• po•· t r 1!1er., rtdio, liea!tr. $1695 '63 BUICK lt S1b•1. F1et 1ir co11, powor 1t11r I br1 ko1, !HYM 4 11 I S995 MARKED WAY DOWN! l Or. H.T. Fa e t ir. tulo Irani, pow11r 1l11rin 9. WJM 119 $2495 '67 MUSTANG Co"~'''· 'II, " 1p1t4, r1rli11, h111!1r. TXS 16] S1895 '67 RIVIERA GS Coupo. Full -pow1r, f-ACTORY AIR CONO. p !41 S3595 .'68 PONTIAC Bo""'.,.illt. 4 door htrd- lop, FACTO~Y AIR COND .. P.S .. P.I . WICG . " $3295 EXAMPLE SAYINGS No. 494879H9496'6 s111s OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE 22 MORE AT COMPARABLE DISCOUNTS F11tb1ck. 4 1pe1d, rt· dio, httftr. Sl/C 197 $1195 '65 MONZA Ha rdtop. Auto. tr1111,, i"'lmtculele c11ndition. !TXJ 176) $1095 '69 ELECTRA Cu1lom coupt. Factory 1ir 'oncl. Fully p<>wtr 1q~i pp1d. YPT 4~6 SAVE '69 FORD LTD F•et. ''" PS .. PB .. au!<> tr1n1. Only <1900 ,,.; in wtrrtnly, YPS 120. $3695 '65 OLDS Bl 4 Doer h1rdt11p, ftclory 11ir cond .• powtr 1l11r., rtdio, h1at1r. NOY 146 S1495 '66 T·BI RD FuH pow1r. FACTORY AIR CONO. l1ncl1u t11p. Sll/491 $2595 '65 ELECTRA H1 rrl top coupo. Full powt•. FACTORY AIR CONO. NCB <120 S1895 '66 CAPRIC E 4.dr. hcll p, 1ul<>. tr1n1 ., FACT. ,A,IR COND., P.S., P.B .. R&H. TGJ 149 $1995 OUR OPEL PRICES START AT s1n1 NO BETTER PRICES ANYWHERE JAGUARS MAKE US PROVE IT! LARGE SELECTION NEW· USED Comr.lete Siles ,,nd Serv ce Dtp1rtment Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. -Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. -Sun. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. AUTHORIZED BUICK -OPEL -JAGUAR SALES & SERVICE ' I I i -1-LINCOL .AMERICA'S MOST DISTINGUISHED MOTORCAR EXECUTIVE CATSAVINGS . . We have 6 exceptio'nelly well cared for executive cars driven by . Continental Selesmen, one bv Mr. John~on, end on e by Mrs. s5900 Johnson, 1111 at 11 price you'll like. Ste rting es low 111 •••• • GOOD SELECTION • ALL LUXURY E(j)UIPPED •SEDANS e HARDTOPS . WE ALSO HAVE OUTSTANDING YEAR END SAVINGS ON BRAND NEW LINCOLN CONTINENTALS. YOUR TRADE-IN WILL NEVER AGAIN BE WORTH MORE. DON'T WAIT TOO LONGI Our Year • End $ale 1$. Now On • • ~· . Just Great ..... Don't -Wait! Our Annivenary Sale Attracted Some of the Finest Trades In Orange County • And We've Priced Them To Sell ••• HURRY! SPECIAL PURCHASE From FORD MOTOR COMPANY - AFFORDS WONDERFUL SELECTION OF NEAR NEW 1961 CONTINENTALS, MERCURYS ANO COUGARS. BUYERS RECEIVE BALANCE OF NEW CAR WARRANTY! 1969 CONTINENTAL MARK Ill B•autlful 9old mist m•ftlllc: finish with interior •nd landau roof, fully equipped with •II the pow•r features. Factory eir conditionin9, of course, •utomatlc cruiae control and many lull· urious featuras. Orivan only 1 l ,000 mil1s. AT A PRICE YOU Will LIKE! 196B COUGAR COUPE Bae utiful Royal maroon with black interior. Auto. frJns., R&H, P.S., fa ctory air condition• in9. Excelltnt throu9hout. VEZ67 2. $2650 1964 CHRYSLER N•wport 4 Door Sedan. Washington Blu• m•tal· Ile fin ish with matching int•rior. Auto, trans., R&H, P.S., P.B., feet. air conditioning. MGF615 $675. 1965 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2 Door Hardtop. Gold be i9• finish with match· ing int•rior. Auto tran1 ., R&H, P.S., •+c. Ex· ceptionally cl•an. RDY745 $1150 1966 T-BIRDS CHOICE OF TWO-RTB 724. L•nd'". a,;foh m•tellic gr••n fin ish with matching interior and black landau roof. Equipp•d with Auto, trans., R&H, P.S., P.B., P-wind., P-1eat, f•ctory air con· ditionin9, etc. Priced b•low Kelly's wholesal• Blu• 8ook. 1963 RAMBLER 990 Station WaCJon. Polar white with black ehd silver buc.lret seats. V-8, Auto trens o, R&H. P.S., P.8., .air c.onditionin g, Rediel Ply tir•s. TUR890 $975 ' 1967 COUGAR Attractive Lim e Frost finish with matching in- terior. Avto. trans., R&H, P.S., Radial Ply tires, etc. Shows •xc•ltent c•r•. UON8 I 7 . s2175 1965 CORVAIR 6 cylinder, 4 speed, radio, h•et•r. PIX962 s975 , 1965 T·BIRD COUPE Attractiv• silver mi1t finish with match ing in• t•rior. Auto. trans., R&H, P.S.1 P.B., P.wind., P0 1•et, factory air conditioning. NNT4l) $1575 1965 CORVAIR MONZA 2 Door Hardtop,. Turquois1 fini1h with blac~ bu cke t s•ats, stick shift, radio, Mater, etc, HPE724 1'965 DODGE 440 4 Door Sedan. B••utiful pOwd•r blue finish with matchin9 int•rior. Auto. tr•n1;, R&H, P.S., etc. Very cleen car. RGV56 I $950 MANY. MQRE FINE NEW CAR TRADE-INS TO SELECT FROM , NEW CARS Johnson+ son USED CARS 540.5635 540.5630 • 642-0981 ID.Di!lllllDLll cemllEl!Tll!. • IUlll!IJil[ • lllElllDm. Cllll&I :tUl-IOUllYAID,CllnA IUIA' . ' • ' . ' • • . l.;;lm::.po=rt.::ed:.::..;A;.;u:.;t..:.°';;_-9600 __ 1m_po.__rted __ A_uto_•____ Imported Auto1 9600 Imported Auto1 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmpomd Autos 9600 Ant;qun, CIHslco 9615 Auto1 W•nled 9110 ; Austin America BRAND NEW 1969s 4 SPEED AUTOMATIC TRANS. 8 CHOIC! O'fl COLORS e DISC BRAKES a FRONT WHEEL DJUVE e LEATHERETTE INTERIOR. a INDEPENDENT e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SUSPENSION' • DRIVE YOURS HOME TODAY! ./CHECK ./ OUR WEEKEND SPECIAL 1969 AUSTIN 'AMERICA FULL'l'.-.EQUIPPEO with •ufomatic. transmission. R•d;o, h$1•6 9 so mu .. ALSO Se• Ou r Gold Seal Used C1rs OA:ANSE COUNTY'S FINEST SELECTION OF Porsche's, MG 's, A·H•aley's, Ferrari's · J1 rluporl · 31111por1~. SUNBEAM '67 TIGER 289 Conv. Modi- tied, Disc brakes, Inunac. Make offer 646-2812 1967 ALPINE.~ptlonally clean. Low mileage. Private party. $.1700 .646-7350 TOYOTA TOYOTA TOYOTA HEADQUARTERS ELMORE VOLKSWAGEN '63 VW LOVE BUG Radio, Lie. GPZ374 $795 Best Deals Are At DEAN LfWIS VOLKSWAGEN 1931 FORD --------Original Ford C:Oupe. Very '64 vw. tan, R/H, gd. tires, ~ood "· Xlnt running oond, have · IV' kept SOOO mi malnt, Actual mjles 49,000. $975 takes it. 968-1763 ' '67 VW. Like New! $1350. '4S..l 44l WE PAY ••• CASH for uRd can • trucb ju.rt call as tor free mtmate. GROTH CHEYROlfl Owner. Days 546-4936 eves. A'I}ENTION C1uaic Car 15300 Beach Blvd. Wstmns:tr 1~ Harbor. C.M. 646-l3ro 642.-7781 Buffs. '53 Talbot Supreme; Ask for Salet Manager -Phone 894-3322 '65 EQUIPPED VW Bus, •57 VW Convertible, I o body in xlnt oond. Run~ •. but lS2ll Beach ffivd. 1967 Land Cruiser, HT. 2<KKJ with new 110 hp Corvair !11-ileage, gG.°"c0n4!tion.-Ask· i;:~ J~ restoratlon. Hunttnaton Beach· '68 Toyota Corona mi, winch & cha.in. AJC & eng. Many extras. $1095. ~m:!_lgl~515C;·'·271~4:_;' --~!':-~·~ve~":..l>iii>ii;;;;;,f,;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;:-,; I KI &-3331 LEASE· RENT ALL POPULAR MAKES FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTEM Get-Our COffiptfitrw 'Rates - Theodore · ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Rlvd. Costa Mesa 64J.001D * AUTOMATIC * heater. Aux gas. Custom top,, .::54::8-4..:.::41::.0 ----~ ,61 Sq ba·'· 0 XI 1 1930 Model A. New motor & __ _::::....;..:;;.:;;_ __ 1• • 1,;11-wag n. n trans. New uphlsty Good Ult PAY Wff R/H, Sunor SHARPf $lS99 loader. 4 ~wn. stora~ box-1966 VW. Excellent condition cond. $1850. a.tt 1 er 7:30 body. 329 8 Del Mar, CM ft&; l ~~~~~~~!!'!I "'" es, trlr hitch, crptg, 38fety M us t Se I I Immediately 673--6 04 It \von't last long so Hurry! belts & hand bolds. HUbs. SU95. 54~1068 ,1.=••::;:yti::'m::•:______ fOR YOUR (AR KUSTOM MOTORS ?-.Jisc tools & equip. $400'I it" '68 VW Sedan also '67 VW '61 VW SUNROOF BUG. $600 '46 MERC Coupe, orig black 845 Baker St vested for $3100 541)-5856 ur best offer. paint, extra eng lllcl. $275, Co<ta M'"'· 540-5915 -• s,dan/or trad• ""VW Bus. 645-0419 CONNELL BACK To Vietnam,.. must 962.-2329 . best oUer !>46--6428 ITIOIYIOIJIAI .ell! '6'l Toyota. Crown dtx.'··66-"-'-"'vw""". -22-,llXl--m-i \-,-,. '69 VW ,;;~ Rue C•rs, Rods 9620 CHEVROLET . _ --C 4 spd, rechn1ng seat , SUNROOF 646-7080 2828 Harbor Blvd. Best Deals Are At burgundy/blck int., $2200 or $1395 * 548-5170 -.66-VW-, -.,,:.:,::., "'-",.-.-.~,~~-., e ouNE BUGGY $150 <:osta Mesa 546-1200 DEAN L. EWIS "'"' otter. call .it 5, 0 E M -.~~ e oRAGSTER •-& " 548-16>1 • ONE WN R "'"offer. ..mo "" CONFIDENTIAU Y Used C1rs 9900 TRANSPORTATION CARS : llWPORTER MOTORS : 2036 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 541-5294 or 541-1511 FINANCING AVAILABL!! 1--------6.'i Volkswagen 17,000 ml. ===~"~"";;:"~==fl~l00=.=;:==*:=;==833-008'::;:;' '69 TOYOTA Corolla SpriRler $l200 642.-2936 -::: -\Ve Pay More For 1966 Harbor, c .ri.1. 646-930:1 MUST SELL? 9000 mi, new · . VOLV-O Autos Wanted 9700 Foreign Or Sports cars BUICK BILL MAXEY $2200. A•k;,g $1155. 1 to 9 '63 VOLKS. New '""• __ _:~~~~--1:;;:;.~~~;,no~ PAID FOR OR NOT ---I '.Authorized Austin America-MG Oeal•r 3100 W•st Coast H 3100 West Coest Hiway-Newport 8each 642-9405 -540.1764 p m 64&-4300 ........ balmy & m"Ul.r. WE PAV TOP B. J. SPORTSCAR '66 Bu"1ck · • Good cond . $695. 549-2693 aft '58 VOLVO DOLLAR ITIQIYIQITIAI TRIUMPH 1,,:,-"==-.,.-.,-,== '""' good, v.,.,, cleao. !or good, cl..,, URd car•, CENTER L<. sabre 400, 2-door hao!top, · ~ ~,..,... =---~ ~ .. -----=--l'68 VW 1500, 2 dr 8dn, 21,000 Best <lfftt * M2--0890 all makes. See Geof'le Ray 2833 Harbor ffivd. factory air, full poWer, &Tl' 18881 BEACH BLVD. '64 TRIUMPH mi. Xlnt oond, R/H, Priced '64 VOLVO 544 B-18 2 dr. Theodore RCJbins Ford Costa Mesa 540449'1 178. I rted A tot 9600 Imported AutOI 9600 Hunt. Beach 847..8555 Convertible, SJC681, only to sell $1800. 673-1735 53,000 ml. Beautiful con-2060 Harbor mvd. Carl's Motor Co., "m-'po'----"----3 mi N, of Coast Hwy. on Bch $697 '66 vw Fastbach., xlnt oond; dltion. $895. 54f>...7301. C.~f. 642.(IQlO Auto Leasing 9110 I PORSCHE PORSCHE '66 CROWN WAGON Best DHls Are At "'w "'"· Blaupu"kt .-.dio, VOLVO BUYS Wi'll Buy "" LEASE"" 34 "'""~~-bu•i"'" S1lck shut with overdrive, DEAN LEWIS coco maU. $l450. &14-0924 '68 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, speaks for !Iseli. '57 PORSCHE ---------1 one-owner. Lie RGB760 '68 VW. R/H. 23.000 miles. '67 122 · ''' · d.: · .... h$l797 .. h fully -·•·p-d. 1129 mo. 1!»1 Harbor Blvd,, CM Automat1c, ra 10 eater. Your Volkswqen or n;c e ~ .. y ,.... Sunroof, "'"P<· jet black. 1967 Pomhe 9ll-S Coupe. $997 MAKE OFFER. · ......... 41 p 'd to '61 Fo·•, 10 ••-otoU"o" wag. 642-0413 1966 Harbor CM · 646-9303 Lie. 1 • ~ • & ""'" top dollan. &1 r n.• ,~ JKF343. SALE! factory installed, sports kit, Bost Deals Ar e At · · · 673-1735 .. ~ (h \ $15 ====~---Extra Sharp. or not. Call Ra1ph on, r , a r, ps, mo, '68 BUICK Rlv1era. Low ml, BestD~~~:7AreAt ' ~~.~a'!~·~,';M~~...; DEAN LEWIS VOLKSWAGEN '~U:~~.s~~.";e;1~~s1~:~~ '67144 ··•·•·••·· $l397 fi73-0900 ~01S1fH~6!\$~S67·50 mo. ~ded1330·'. 5A~~-•1o0,09 Lorl0' Dun1 $5000 f . ""' 4 door. Lie. No. UVA333 IMPORTS WANrED DEAN LEWIS STI-3~,' X3lll, work~: 1966 Harbor C.M. 646-9300 V\V 1959 Sedan, Xlnt mech. $1895. 714-842-5788 eves. Automatic transmission, alr On.rip Counties CAR LEASING Foster 497.15.58 borne TiiE SUN NEVER SETS ca. cond. Cl~an R/H, gd tires. '66 B~CK VW, orig. owner, conditioning: TOP s BUYER 300 W. Cst Hwy, NB 645-2182 ~DO°""N1'=JU~ST=w:=:SH=-fu<-..,-... -1 1966 "-~-, C.M 646-9303 . . , tlo •vt •ty. 962--0066 new tires, $1095. V~ry good '65 544 ••••.... •• $1297 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ts YOUR AD IN CLASSI· ti.1 .... to furnish ~-ho. m• lUU"UU , • Classifieds ac n power. " " condition. 642--6033 ck I ..... ,. ~·-~ J-'6G PORSCHE 912 5 RENAULT F d to U und CHARGE your want d •• '":C:C'-"'"'--~-cc-== Fast Ba ' scarce mode' 18881 Btacb Blvd. l'IED! Someone will be • • • WXI great bll)'I tn 11> coupe or an a se aro 8 ...... w.,. """" radio, heater, 4 speed. No. H. 8 ·ach. Pb. ••1-• I Dial ... ~ d••'o ~---'"-•A•· . gpd, AM /F M, Imm a c. the clock,. call 642-5678 Flnd it with a want ad! VW BUS -Sunroof, 23,vw oo: vo ._., looking or ll, ...........,,0 -......._.......... - .;;:==::=====.:.=:=::;::=:=:===""='miles. Excellent co nd. 1346. · S4,000. <>~<> '"'~" GOOD I E"'oo,~y car. 1960 9600 -• Aut 9600 Prival• party 837-7643 '63 P1800 ........ $1797 ~ Renau t -J miles per Import-• Autos lmportfil os ... · ' "' Sport Coupe. Lie. No 1ZW483 '63 MGB, hard & soft top, gallon. In good running con-FOR SALE '66 VW, SllOO or Looks like new. . STAR· ,GAZER~~ .f~~!~: ,!1so=::=·0·=~=Saf=;=~=;=~=~=:=·"=~=~==-·; 100~00[0)[!]~1 , .;:i~~~~.:o·· ~a~~!~~~·::: ~1!1?..~!!.=u ... '..!l.:..;:;,t:.~:..:.=.~.::j,;::~t:=?sS..!~ :i:'& =·""''·ask tor a,.,. --.,~BU.._G_EY_E__ • HUGE SELECTION • 11·=6l=vo""LKS="'. s'-"ur::.:: •"'ood:-:-::'"'""""· DEAN LEWIS ~·-.. ,~,...-z=·:;:~~.~ . - 1$9 •*-P0~548-as.9""19<3$E~Super Good conditiOn.' Take ovei' '69 TOYO-TA' . FROM $ J 7'90 Red, w~~er. $52S 1966 Harbor, C.M, 646-9303 #1:.a , ,.._, 31 Or • 61V..," OCf.:11 -................ payments. 546-8165 -• . o1MV:io 2~ ·310wt 61Your . NOV.rt '65 BUG. Sunroof. 35,000 ml. VOLVO '°lt.30-41 3l:'.:" ~~ ~·= ~ · •-1 PORSCHE 9ll • Slate SUSARU New tires, tuned exha.u.sl. ll-Gn · 'll.9ocll 35For I 65~ -:.... --~. ~" .. had __ _.______ e ,BIG SAVINGS e · ~ f ''"" ,.........,. """ " --.. r"' ... ...,,,.. Good cond. $975. 646-4~ Btst Deals Are At GIMIMt 7T_,, 37To 67C>ffldll. IACSn'AIM ·="":'.•;7 :~'.'1~" SUBARU DEMO SALE EXECUTIVE CAR SALE NOW! ·~ii 1~:;,c:~•;:',~~~ DEAN LEWIS ffl=: .. :=••J :~·d ~=-1 '::~ tires, paint. Sacr $1000. '69 TOYOTA HARDTOP #1977 . . $1977 night!. Ul66 flarbor, C.M. 646-930.1 i~ ii:!--~r-. ilt.'!"' "b T16-8ll8, 637-5005 eve!I. Low m~few=~traton, '69 VOLVO SEDAN, Auto, #6590 •. $2977 '65 SQUAREBACK. 1 0 n e 'SS Volvo rebuilt bead CAMCq ,No., .,.,._ 14y11111 1 CAl'llCDIM +-'6S-C00NVErtT:+; -$B99 NEW TOYOTA MAltK II :.,"";'f~ht~fi:S~-.,.,-,,.ill'iW,-ana .. ..,...,;----~!?-:. Jtt-:·-lji;.!•-~~ -~~ Xhit "'""·A xtras, nu po, NOW ON DISPLAY! ~ "'""-SISO 53&-<;868 ... ·17-..,_ 77i'<Alp •1 • .. st sen 646-1234 '""" VW 1500 S ""''ltt back. li:':""'' ' $ '" l,.. •.,!:" 711.,,f:J. • top. ~u · r-rtft.1. nu Vans A: TrUckl In ~ ..... ¥ ~ .,.., 63 ~-·· ~a AM/FM ~ ... ~ WI NllD YOUI TU.DI-IN POI $1150. s ,· c 9610 20,,,...., !OTe ' • .,T .. ',.~d;;m:' wbts. reblt atock. $1395 OUI Nrw UllD CAI LOT 497-183.5-A9k tor DON ~r •rs ~t::. ~~~ :1·;..- eng. 67i-7270 '67 vw BUG. Good conditmn. '57 PORSCHE ' '3Y-gGoof lll.onl • '66 POMCltE 91 1 • ; DEAN LEWIS s1 21s or best of· Sunroof, coupe. jet black. =Et.,. i;~.n· .t5f. All ~-_ ~ mil-ALSO Just ~. , . ftr. * 968-4.'tJA JKF 343. $ALE! 2' 'S'Wf'lh.. ~ e .. u.., ••,vvu "' TIIC New SUBARU UOO $1397 27,,_ $7Te\e ·•7,.. PtlCll .:~0;;:~ i:· :-,'"""' SEE THEM •r ·~::;!'.'·J :.:.;: :':~ic! DEa.An No..1Ls AEreWA•I~ it · ~S;... Eli :i_i:, OlANCil.COUNTT tOYOTA·YOlYO HU.DQ:UAllllS d 11 ® 6' ·~ enclne. Good oond. clo:n. --,KUSTOM MOTORS 6 4 6 . 9 3 0 3 ;1 e co r • II v • . '°"'-' "'-' .,;~ e ~ 12350. -"49 841 Baku St. 1966 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA l t:ll! * 633-IS' QIARGE JTl Costl ~lesa, 540-Mts !!!ll!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t!lll!! ... !!!l!l'!l!!O!_...,..., .. ~!Wb:!!l~'"!..!•;!!l'P~llan:!!to~!:_D~bnw"1n<==~ 196S Rubor, C.M. ,OCfi.9303 ------------------------'-' I . --. __ .. . .,___ ..... . ·-···-~ ... ---- • • • I • ( 0 OAJLY PILOT TRANSPORTATION TltUISPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIQ:I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -- - • • • • . . FREE with Purchase of Any Used Car on Pre• sentatioli of This Ad. FRl.-SAT.-SUN. ONLY! '63 Corvette s.;.,.~ $1595 TOTAL .,..,.. r• l'lllCE 4 Sp.eel, r1dio, li11!1r. INGl7l7) + l1• l l ie. '62 OLDS f.85 Cutl111 coupe. F1clory 1ir, 11110. tr1111., r1dio. 1122691 $595 TOTAL PRICE + l•• I lie. '63 FORD WAGON Autom1tic, r1dio, lt11t1r. (Ql(M. 710) $695 TOTAL PRICE +l11llic. '67 El Camino Cust. $2295 TOTAL v.1, f•ctory •ir, ,S, •u+o., r•dio, PTRICIE L' Ii•• n1w. 1074473) + 11 1 .. '67 CHEV. Impala Spt1. Cp1. Auto. tT1n1., r1dl .. li11t1r, ¥inyl roof. THH 615. $1995 TOTAL -+ ~~!~E Lie: , '66 CHEV. Sta. Wgn. $1395 TOTAL '65 CHEVELLE M11i;11 co11v1rlibl1. VI, 1uto· .. PS., r1di1, h11t1r. I SZH 71 1 I $1195 TOTAL PRICE + T11( I lie. '67 OLDS f.85 $1995 TOTA.L Cutl111 Supr1m1. Vinyl roof, 1ulo· PRICE m1lic, PS., Rl}-1, fTVR 6441 +Till l Lie. '67 CORVmE $3395 TOTAL PRICE +Taxi lie. Stin1r1y f11tb1clr, 4 •p1e.J, AM/· FM, rtdio, ~11l1r. 10'4111. Auto. tr ant ., powar 1taarln9, raclie. PRICE he1tar, tirat. RIL 419. + lair & Lie. '66 CADIUAC $2395 TOTAL '66 CORVAIR Cou1 conv1dibl1, 4 1p11d, radio, haatar. I ROY 365) $1195 TOTAL PRICE + lair & lie. '67 RENAULT 4 Dr. 11 ,000 act. mila1. Automatic, r1dio, ha1!1r. IVZZ 003) 195 TOTAL PRICE +Tax I: Lie, '67 CHEV. 1fl·T. PU $1395 i~lt~ Con'#. v.1, auto. tran1., f1riorv air PRICE . colld., full powar, racli., haatar. + Ta11 I lie. R1clie and h1al1r. V 97034. + T111. & lie. Sii 061. $1095 TOTAL PRICE + Tax & lie. '66 V.W. Bug Radie & Haal1r. lSNU 4061' '68 CHEV. Impala $2295 TOTAL S.S. Auto. tran1., f1clorv eir con· PRICE dilioni!HJ, radio, haatar. WAI( 127. +Tar I Uc. '65 T·BIRD $1295 TOTAL Sporh Coupa. Auto. tre1t1., fadory co!MI., r•clio,_ha•t.r. IXP 961, PRICE +T•xlUc. '64 EL CAMINO · PRICE '65 PONTIAC &rl'llcl Pri1 H.T. Cpa. Aufe. fra1u.,. factory eir aalMI .. rMio, hectar, NRY 911. PRICE 495 TOTAL '67 PLYMOUTH $1895 TOTAL F11ry Ill 2 Dr. H.T. Auto. trcm., PRICE . pow•r 1l1trin9, rtdio, h••f1r. + Tex I lie, '67 CHEV. Caprice $2295 TOTAL 5tc. W911, Auto. +r1111., fcctorv ,;, PRICE co11dilio11in9, power tf•ar., bra~1t, + T111 I. Lie. v.1, •ufo. trtn1., El Ct111i110. JIO,'<'· i t 1latring, r1di•, haat•r. N76105 $995 TOTAL + T111 I Lie. ' +Ta11lLie. TIM 1•1. radio, h11tar, tir11. 197911. '65 FORD Fairlerte 4 Ot. V.1, eufo. trtM., r•dio, he1t1r. YWI 025. ~ $895 TOTAL PRICE + Te• & Lie. '67 MUSTANG 2+2 F1,.tory air condltio1i119, powar 1leerin9, redio, hailer. TvY 440, .$1695 TOTAL PRICE + T111 l l ic. '66 CHEV. Impala $1395 TOTAL 4 Dr. H.T. v.1, auto. tram., powir PRICE . 1t11ri119, radio, h11tar. RSF 351, + T11t I l 11. '69 TOYOTA Coupe $1795 TOTAL . PRICE 1!:1d10, h11!1r, vinyl roof. XNL 489. • + Tair & Lie. '67 PONTIAC GTO $2195 TOTAL . Spts. Cp .. v.1, •uto, tre111., factory · PRICE '68 CHEV. MaHbu eir cond., redie, heeler, W8L 712. +Tix A lie. Sph . Cpe. V.I, eulo. tre111., power 1teeti119, radio, he1!1r. 210790. BUICK V-1 Special, good trans, air cond., Sacrltlce! $250. Mu.fit go thll v.>eek! 646-1914 CADILLAC 1-~~· GOING TO EUROPEI ~68 Cad. Coupe de Ville, 10 ·mos. old; 9,000 mi., new car • WUMnty; purdJased at Na· Mn. EveTY eXtra, blue wl .... "'tlite' vinyl top: $5,000, 9900 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET ' ,64 Ch ·oo CHEVY lml"1.: s.s. :rzr, evy bucket reals. aulo on floor, Impala. 4-door hardtop, fac· P/\V, 11eats, ste er Ing, tory air, power steering, brakes. Air, 21.000 mi, like power brakes, etc. OWK 538. new. SJ1!00. 67>1955 Cart's Motor Co., '56 CHEVY 2-dr. ne w uphol, Inc tranMnission, t u n e • u p • • Good oond. M is, or to con- 34 yean ln busineu vert to hot rod, $300 tt best speaks Jor itself. olfer. 644--0)48 1941 Harbor Blvd., Ct\t • 64ZOO.l DODGE - '66 Dod9e Convernb!e, factory air, pow. er 1lf'ering, power brakes, bucket 11eats, low miles sharp. SYO 578. ' Carl's Motor Co., Inc. 34 years in business speaks for i~l1. l!m Harbor Blvd., O I '64 FORD Sta. Wgn. Y.1, auto. tran1 .• factory eir con. ditionlng, power 1teei-in9, radio, heal1r. OMV 809 . $995 TOTAL . . PRICE • -t,...T •• & Lie. '64 CHEVY II 4 Dr. ll:adlo, h11I••· Ec·o11omy plu1! TYS I JO. $695 TOTAL PRICE +T••llic. '66.Ford Ec:online Van $1295 · i~lti R1dio 111d ti11t1r. fV216lOJ + Tix I Lie. :~.~ .. ~:!':· .. ~~~"·· ....... s1595 i~lt~ . IYAY 910 1 +Tall & lie. 546-1203 '59 CHEVROLET $495 TOTAL PRICE +Tix l lie. '/1 ton pie.up truck. f Kr I 01 l I 9900 FORD OLDSMOBILE CREAMPUFF ! • Panic Sale! 1965 Mldnitc blue 4-dr FORD GALAXIE. PIS, -• 4 n•w h"". ··L;ttt• old lady TORONADO from Costa l\Tf'sa". 62,000 gentle miles. Bc51. offer over $825. At home Sundny. Car parked in garage. 1'.tonlicello Tm•:nhouse. 23.12 Rid!.moncl 'Way, Ci\! , 540-6022., NEW & EXECUTIVE ONLY 6 OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC OLD!'; '67 CutlAS!'I Suprernf'.' --------- 12550 '"" ""'"''· '" '" '65 BONNEVILLE HT Vinyl roof. bucket sea!s w/console. Still und e r 50,000 mi fa c \l'llJT. xlnl cond. Pvt ply. PSI 8181. 847--0353. PLYMOUTH '69 Plymouth Full pwr, dlr, fact air con- ditioning, pwr windows, low, lo1v mileage. Xlnt condition in and out. Total Price $1399. \Viii fine prlv prty, LB VBA 319. Vtc, 515-0634. T·BIRD r-.1usr Sett! Going to College! 59 T-Bird Rebuilt 390 engillt' &. trans. Runs real good S200. 640-9563 TRANSPORTATION Car-'59 T-Bird Convert ible. Needs radiator "-'Ork. $65. 646-3632 '61, 48,000 mi, power equip, air, Xlnt cond., asking $575. ,.,..293 &; :Ford Galuie convm. Black wlwWte top: x1nt ~. Jn A out; new General t tires: $1400. CHRYSLER '68 NOVA. red w/vinyl top, ----· ··--'""Y , .. ;.... "'"' ''""'· '67 CHRYSLER OO-OUJ '68 . Ford Torina '64 Darl GT 2 dr, auto, p1\T 390 high per[onTJafl('r, • spd, TO CH OOSE FROM BIG SAVINGS! 4-door sedan, V·S. auto tmn1, radio. healer, ws1v, etc. 1645 (l;(:tua t miles. l'acl. -nev. er licensE'rl: full "-'arranly. '65 GT0-4 spd. 339 1'.Jags all around. SUcks. New p~int. C H ERR Y CONDITI ON! l\lakc offer. Al! 6, 5'18-5184 '62 FULL P"'r· new tire:i;, battery, vl'ry clean $650. 548-J2M" CVe!I. Datsun 4 Dr. &ed11n, very • &'('IJd cond, New Firestone · tires, $995, 6·7 S • 7 3 0 O or 494-7008. Leavtng area. S 16 5 0 . 494-8185 S.11 a.m .. 4.7 p.m. '65 OIEVY. Xnlt cond. Auto 2·DOOR ~ARDTOP . trans., P/s. New tires, V.S. automa~1c, factory air, brakes, shocks. Pvt prty. power R~cenng, power bra· $1050 Ca.II 6-8 pm 494-5687 kes, radio & heater, lmma· new tires & brakes. Red d!r, invr disc brakl's, one slrg, R/H, bu cket seats, owner, near tl('w. \Viii take new fif't!s & brakei;. Red older car in trade. \VIL 8il wired uph. Beautiful! $700 LB. Call Kl'n f>45-~"l4. cash. 499-1139 University Oldsmobile ~ CADILLAC 4 door sedan de Ville. Orig owner, air, leather upholstery, stereo, : loaded w/extru. M u g t AC:l'ifi.cel See .at 1 7 SO . Newport Blvd., C.M. Pri ·ply. . . culalf!. (UDE 7431 •a CHEVY Impa1', n<w •ng. $2295 c=-===~~~~-1 ~1UST SELL '65 Galas1e 500 '69 CHARGER SE. vinyl lop SL. 2-dr hdtp, facl air, P IS. Stereo, auto. Call 646-1282 PIB. aulo trans, buckN. • May '68, 15,000 mi, bkt seats, new brakes, pvt/pty. b('tween 4:30 & 5:00 Pl"lt ask seal~. 48,000 mi. Xlnt cond. 2850 1-larbor Costa l\tesa for Mike &l5-0251 S40..9640 116'0. 64 .. 7373 ATLAS '64 lMPALA Station \Vag., PIB, PIS, air, Xlnt oond, CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH CAl>1PING & Surfing, '66 '66 Ford Falrlane •. Dodge Carry-All, v.g f. speed, lo book, 64r>-Z'Z38 $495 • '67 CAD Coupe de Ville, vinyl ; 1op, 11tereo, AM/F?t1. Air 'all power, leather inL elec . door le trunk locks, sentinel 'l i t es , '4400. Pvt pty. 613-87111 $875 496--3702 29'l9 HARBOR BLVD. 968 2 Door Loaded. VS, l'IC. Lie. I DODG E Coronet 4 Dr, !Rt.f949. Phone 642·6023 Dir. '59 EL CAMINO, new paint, COSTA MESA 54&-l!/.J4 tiN>s, brakt"'s &. Interior. Open Daily 'Iii 10 p.m. Asking $475. 549-1842 '62 CHEVY Nova. 6 cyl '"'°· COMET '58 CADILLAC 4 cir, hrdtop, $475. 15601 Tustin Village --------- \Vay, no. 7. alter s p.m. '66 Comet runs good, klokl good. $250. 64 Nova 2 dr. V-8, 4 sp. Good 2-door hardtop, red, auto. 54&-9905 or 646-fil&l. 1920 orig. <"Ond. $750, 646-.f.563, tn1.n1, pcm:er steering:, radio 'Fullerton Ave., CM 673-7.f.13 and heater, etc. SVD 387. :&2 Cad. good condition Un-'68 Bel Atr, 4-dr. Fact air, Carl's Motor Co., fac air, landau. Lo mi. A·l co1id. Owner. 968-2160 • FALCON '62 R.ANCHERO. R and H. Stkk. Big Mg. Good <"Ond. $550. 646-4nl .FORD :mac. clean, all power, air, P/S, P/B, 327 V-8, Jo mi. I ·Will sac. 675-176:1 $2l9S 833--09l9 nC. '61 Ford Station Wgn. 1'=~==~-~--~ I 34 years in bugjnr~ transp, s1nall \'8, auto '61 CAOll..LAC. Xnlt cond. '65 BEL Air, 4 dr, 327 eng. t r a n r , n e e d c a ' h A. nd •~ Fri t p ~aks for itsclJ. . ir-co · -va • ar-Air, PIS. fJ.225. Private $265. * 642-5.S6.f. ly • .....,., ply ''"98!8 1941 l-far64~i:u81vd., Ct\i ''<;i>·;;-:--;:;::;;;'::-;;;;:;-::;::;J,,,,-°""'=~~::::;13;::,_ ___ 1966 FURD GaJaxy, 7 Lilrt!. i61 CAD Sedan DeVIDe. r '65 EL. Camino. XJnt cond .• 61 COME"I'. Orig owner. Power, air, tape deck, real "Good cond. $49S. 6f2-3850 New tire& & paint Job. $109:>. Stick i;h.Ut, Ver,y clean. $300. Rharp! 540--6549. :Days: Eve11. 6~2699. Ph: 842-3444 546-""•1 "ALCO •• CAD. eoo.-do VU'-~ r N '62, 4 dr, 6, stick. V'I 1 .. ~.... ..,. •34 CHE.VY Good cond. $340. · Jo•'""· '1" orig ownor, • S4SO CONTINENTAL * 546-!326 * :$1111<). 642-"'13 673-2965 ·57 FURD Wagon, rebll t!ng. '62 Sed&n DeVllle, full pwr, '66 Chevt!ile Malibu, R/H, CONTINENTAL Mark JI , nrw tires. $135 675-3603 :aJc. good oond.itlon $650. p/s, low mileage. XJnt black wit h white lralhcr '6l r ALCON Ra.nchero, 6 <6.f.M414 cond. A1ake ofter. 642-1007 upholstery, red tnm. See to 1 pd ~~====---1 appreciate. $1895, 54S..l501 cy. 3 s • n dio &: Rl~reo. ., $2 lDNVERTTBLE, Excel. 'fi6 Malibu Conv. Fae air, real clPan! ~. 847~2193 or ',int.nor. io.m11o .. ~ $995. 32T'. t...i.d, ""'' "'""· CORVAIR 847-]8'8 '67 Olds 2<1oor hardtop, auto trans., PQ\VPr steering, radio and '67 r.lerc Col. Pk. 'Vgn. 10 heater, vin1l top, bucket pass, a/c, rack, PIS, P/8, :;is, etc. -SHARP! TNT P/\\'. P\\'r, se11.ts, spd. cont. C · , auto door lock, All1/Fl>1, arf s Motor Co., MERCURY • n1uch n1ore. SZGJO. ~·lS Inc. fiO t.leh:, 11tlck, xln t body & inlE>rior. Needs rod bear. ings. $50. ~5-8878 34 years in business speaks !or it~lf. l!Nl Harl>or BlvQ., C)f 69 f\tERCURY Cougar, 6tl·Ol13 convt, lac\ air, Ai\1 rndio, lo REAL Sha rp '66 o I d mis, fact wty, $3200. 5-12-TISl Cutlass, Jlol. Coupe. Gold \\"i th blk, Landau rop, lo mlg, nu \vht/\\'Bll tires a: ---------1 brks, R/H, custom blk lthr '66 MUSTANG, 289 cu. in, 4 int & bucke1 seals. Console spd trans. Radio/heater, with tach, PIS, P/B, P/\V, f'O"W steering, ~r.Y clean. fact air. Jl;Just see to $1600 * 642-4704 bE'lif'Ve! PrivAte Party Best f.1USTANG 1967 Sharp GTA. olfrr. 962;2Sfi0 • MUSTANG l\lag wh!'.'t'ls. nr\v lin.'!S. '62 SK\"LARR, V-8. Riii, ./ S.15-1449 ./ w /s/w, rac air. 4 8Pd + '6.'l-289 4·SPD. alum mags ml'ny e:crras. 15301 Shasta "'/ne\• tift!.fi. Xlnt cond. Ln, HB. 893-744S $2695 Carl's Motor Co., • · Inc:. 34 yE>ars in business speR.ks tor ilseU. 19-ll llarbor Blvd., CM 642-().113 '6 7 Plymouth Fury Ill, 2-door hardlop, fac. tocy air. aulo. trans, J>O"'er steering, radio and healer, etc. TXA 59a. Carl's Motor Co., Inc:. 34 years in bu~inf'ss ,;peaks for itseU . 19-11 Harbor Blvd., C~f &IZ-0413 '68 ROAD RUNNER. Over $4200 inveslt"'fl. \Viii ntn high 12 sec. 1(6..110 mph. Laval hl.'aders, ?t1atlor.Y coil le clistr .• l1debrock manifold , heads by Jack Bair. ?tlu.st M."ll $2600. 846--0763 alt 5 pm. '65 Plymouth Satelitte l-IAn!top, big engine, bucket ' fleai!. fact air conrl., new paint. $1199 full pr, will fine. priv prty, dlr, LB-NPU 61}1, Call BUI 545-0&34. '57 PLYMOUTH In very good condilion. $250. * "' 9-.11111 .. '611 PLYl'>IOUTH Sia. \Vgn. Sport Satellite, air, p11-r, loaded, 11lwr grren. 10,000 ml. xlnt. S3li00. &14-2a87 ~ 1,.,;S1650o::;,:.:·_;!l4<>-;.:.:.,_;11128;;.;.,~~~~ 'fi6 FORD \Vagon. fully 'FOR a:ale '60 Cadnlae conv. '65 Chevy Impala 2 Or. Good •61 CORVAJR., 4 apd, xlnt equpd w/air, P/S, P/B. ,,$400. Good ttre1 _. aood mnd, Auto, V-8. $1200. cond. $22.1. Call after 6:30 $2350. 642-8400 d a Y • • Best offtt &45-22&4 OLDS Starflre -'63, pis, P/b. '61 t.lusL GT 390 Conv. 3 spd, ai.r-mrxl., llt'W _ ltJ¥5. auto p/s f dl5C' brakes. 25,000 ml. ""1ndows, metallic blt1e ltn· I-========= $!850. 673-79Jl mac. By owner 548..1106 PONTIAC SCRAM LETS '6' CUTLASS '42: pM., dlx. , · • inter; ~ '4·hcels.... Mini 'M LE .1.1ANS mupe, stick. cond. $1495. 8 4 6-0 8 2 .f.; RIH, w.w tire&. Sharp~ 'tioad. 548-Q'll 675-6578 p.m. 540-'mG 543-0197 eves. CAMARO .., CHEVY 233 • ., CUSTOM c.r..~. oil '57 ......... """ ....... 1969 PONTIAC Grand Prix rully equip. Xlnl cond. l\tust sacrifice. S.17-6193 PONT. '60 Catalina, big eng. 42,000 acl. mi. 2-dr, r/h, pv p!y. $495 -lenns. 644--03<15 RAMBLER '68 T·BIRD, 429, B/Landau, tun po"'·er, s!r.reo. Take over pymts. 518-5129 '5!1 T·Bird, '''hile. Sacri!ice S250. * 644--103.'l * '62 T-Bird. Blue. All power &: air. $495. 673-1266 '63 RAl>tBLER Classic \Vag· on, IHLIO, RIJ-1, 59.000 miles, (.1e11n! $450. 96S-476R FULL Po"·er '60 T-Bird. Xnlt me<"hanical. $ 3 O O =========I CASH. ~1508 T-BIRD VALIANT '62 T·BIRD conv. Xlnt coM.1---------·I lo mileage. J\lust sell by Mond ay. $600. 675--1595 or 673-4?.S.'l Used Cars '63 VALIANT, good cond. Contacl &12-2664 S;JOO or best olfer 9900 Used Cer1 9900 • "' 1 •-·--~•••'bi uh[ ....... I you've hid too many d•y1 of unheJlp'# Jriw in9 thtft~I to e wer11•out car, do thi1. M•~• o"• '"0•1 t1;11 ... to 0 11• lot •• , and tr•d• 11p lo the comlot! •"d lf•Jlend. ability of ene of th111 line c•rt: '65 Corvette '65 Pont. G.P. '67 Mere. Air ~ond. Auto. V.j , auto., pow1• Air, 11ow1r br••e• klH, JIW1' 1+1eri,... 1'e1ri"'il· 11wt win-1+1t•in4, wintlow1: NGN 62l dow t, lectory •ir. land to11 ol tlate. $2495 HPE l&l $2595 ANSWERS 523-3J.57 Must ~II this '"'eekend. '61 Lincoln ·54 0 Id 1 con\.'l'rtibi<', gd. S775, 646--IMT airer 6 Co11fi111"!1I, f11ll l------I 3 SPEED $450 vinyl exterior A. Interior. Radio, $300 or W t. Excellent cond 642-1461' ~-......... ,.... .. 1m~ 642-4729 or 642-14« '67 CAMARO 1 '1.JCiii&'°iii-'ii;::e:;;y. J ~~~~·=~-:;;.:;-~==-! =~-===-,..,,,..,....,..,.., JZ7, 4 gpd, dlr, xlnt condJUon! i '6.l OIEV. Bel ab'. 6-eyi '67 Shelby GT 500, .f. spd, :w:lnt $1195 165 Mu1t1"9 ..,,.,,,,,,. "" "''·· •""h •Uc"-l3SO coll oJi., s: CORVITTE """'· 544-9832 uk ,., ))lack lnl Sal:rln«:e! Like 536-2339 .,',,''~rt"U.._,T,,.._R,_..,,_....,.=-= car in trade. F'ull pr '511 Chevrolet bu&inea coupe, '63 OORVETTE Stingray, 327 'f,6 \Vagon, fully eqp'd. ,.ir, JH 173. LB. call Bill $13S. FI, Oean. $169.i. p/ft., 1>/b. $11% 612-8400 * 494--l449 * * 673--mt • da,.vs, 5'18--0797 eves. \1 CAMARO Ra1J¥ Sport. PLACE )'Olll' want ad whe~ '58 CORVETTE, excellent '66 GALA.XIE XL. p,.~ pb, l~-call .a.lttt a p.m. ttllO u. kloldng "'!'" DAJLY condlllon. $900 air, );\'1.t cond. 39.000 oriR -·~ PILOT claulfiedl 6.f.2.5671 * 546-9657 .• mt ?.lake oller. 6J&.0302 I Bev.'llre _ Curio _ Anlor cond. original owner, $650. '62 BONNEVILLE, 4 rloor, pow1r, hr1~1,, wi"· ,68 V W S d _ "'·kcl -ll'\RD \l'OR'-' 641-1583 P/8, P/S. \rcry good clean dow1, 111h , li1er· • • • • Co""· "''· R l H, ~·· " $'~ 962 ""~" inq, f~cl, air. F~ll'# f•.tl. 1q uipt. Aulo., "wr, d1er• i\lan.y people a ren 't l'f'aUy '.'."J6 OLDS, g.d. motor, nu <'ar. ....,, •6......,, IHU 660 Lie. Ne. >'BA •1S in9, PEJ 66S anxiou.ii: ITl !ram the srct'l'! t!r?s, slnt !rans. Sllilorr, '6.'i Pontb1 c ronwrl, new t1>ri. $S95 , '$1S90 $1295 ol 1ucceu, hecaullt' the)''ve 645--0-164 eves or "·koed1. air. auto. $890 or \."t&l otr. ....,.., lhallP• HARD WOR" IS YOUR AD IN a.AS.SI· 4'4-8304 VILLAGE AUTO SALES M"S Beach house t.lme. Bia· F1EDT Sameone will be n=1Eo"OQ~U~1CKER==.~y~o~u~CA=u.,~ 1465 EAST 17th STREET, COSTA MESA, 645-0411 ~gt selection fl\lerl See th!! looking for II. Dill1 Sl.2-5678 T~H~E~Q:!U~l~CKEz::!:R:..!Y~OU:'..:SE::'.U:::·~ •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • ' • .. -• < . Frld.,, .,, .. l 1, 1969 OAllY I'll.OT H . TRANSPORTATION TRANS~ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION rRAN5PORTATION TrilNSPOffiTION "'; 1 · .. ' • I - ... it's · the best time of year to buy at Roy Carver's. · Big s e I e ct ion, big savin gs . . . and the best deals! • BRAND NEW '69 ~CATALINA passenger. ·Decor group, turbo hydromotic transmission," push but. ton radio, deluxe seat belts, pow er steering, tinted windshield, AIR CONDITIONING , heavy duty springs and shocks, white sidewalls, frontflo.ormats. l252369Cl31400) Champagne with gold interior. ,__,. ·-- 54070 WHAT A GREAT TIME OF THE YEAR TO BUY AND ENJOY YOUR NEW PONTIAC WAGON! STILL THE BEST OF SUMMER LEFT ••. BUY NOW, -·sAVF'NOW! ---- •WHAT ABOUT LEASING? ••• IN MANY INSTANCES LEASING -YOUR NEW CAR HAS DISTINCT FINANCIAL ADVAN TAGES. ROY CARVER CAN LEASE ANY MAKE OR MODEL AUTOMOBILE. INCLUDING ROLLS ROYCE. LEAS 1f:4G 't~AY BE 'FOR YOU . DROP IN AND LET'S TALK IT OVER • • • I 66 ~~~~?~~' ,,..,;,,, wha o w1ll1, b1by blu1 with blu1 i11t11ior. $217.7 I 68 ~.~!~: .. ~~~~~~~~~;,. Jio11, pow1r 1!11ring. Gr11n 1xl1rior. 15,747 rnil11. ITXT 1191 IWA8 511 ) I 67 ~~~~~~~,.,;,, ,,.,,,,· ''"" ' 1le1ri119, burgundy. (UJC777J $2477 I 65 ~~.~~!~~"~!~,, P••· •• 1t••rin9 , "irryl lop. IRRI 5231 -. "68 PONTIAC $2877 I 66 ~~~~,~~!.~~;~ h,;,..,i;,, C•t•lin • h•rdloD. Whit• will. bl1ck . vinyl ' top. R1d io, he•l•t, •~lom1lic, , pow1r tle1rin 9, pOW•r br1k11, f1cfory power t'l1•rin9. !XSPlll) 1ir. 8ronl1 in color. fS IW 296) , • . BRAND NEW '69 GRAND PRIX Special point, .cordova top , turlio hydra· • matic transmission,, push button radio, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted glas s, Al_R CONDITIONING, G78 x 14 -white _side wall-tires. {-2-76579P345460·)- 5447 $2477. • 66 ~~.~~~~~~.£~;, "' h11t1r. !SST 10.t! $137.7 ~677 • 68 PONTIAC GTO $2977 R1dio 1f.d t.1il1r, 1wlorn1tic:, powtr lletri n9, f•clory •ir condilionin9. (WIC 0671 ~977 I 66 ~HRYSLER $2677 New Yo rk1r ~-'door h.rdtop. R1d io, h1•ftt, 1ulom1tic, pow•r tl11 rin9 i nd wi ndow1~ f1clory 1ir. Approir, !0,000 mile1. For11t 9r11n. !TZE291J e NOW ON DISPLAY ~ ~ ~ THE TRANS·AM FIRIBIRD I e SERVICE DEPARTMENT OPEN: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 7jo A.M. to 6:00 P.M. • SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN: 8:00 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. EVERY DAY [11 Equ ipped with 400 cu. in. Ram 1ir engine, 4 speed transmission, push button radio, flnted windsh ield, F·70 white lettered fiberglass belted tires, special hood with longar functional a ir scoops, dack lid a ir fol11, front spoiler, 1pei;i1l full l1n9th stripes on hood, (223379NI064SSI ·- ROY CARVER -PQNTIAC 2925 HARBOR BLVD/ COSTA MESA • Kl-64444 • • ALL' CAR PRICES INDICATED IN THIS AD ARE, OF COURSE PLUS LICENSE AND TAX • • 'I-YI ~-I • -··-·-• I •• ~, • • • . . •' . .· .. • . ----- -----------------. OVER 2 ACRES OF ROBINS RELIABLE USED CARS NO.W REDUCED F.OR SPECIAL SPECIAL SUMMER SAVINGS!! STATION WAGONS Fine1t Selection of Fords •nd Chevrolets, ·country Sedan and CountrY Squires 2-b8 's. Ex~ple: Some with Air Condltlonln9 1967 BUICK ELECTRA 225 FACTORY AIR, full power, vinyl roof. Excell. con d. ( 0110 ) 1964 FORD 9 PASSENGER $1095 CREAM PUFFS V-8 en9if,e1 Cruisomatic transmi•-' sion, radio, ht ater. 1$)flN54.4l ~ , Many, Many More to Stl~ From! ~ ton Custom Cab. Radio, heater, 1965 FORD f.250 PICKUP $1 95 auto., oew l9w p'o/;le i;. ... t Rl90 20I '66 bODGE CHARGER 1964 FALCON DELUXE WAG. VS , AIR CO ND ITION, luggage rack. ISVYb 7 1) Factory ajr conditioning , auto,, R&H , power steer·-$_995 in9 , white wells, blue bucket seats. Excellent con- d ition. ( RSW8b5) 1963 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Atito. tran,., R&H 1 P.S., ·P.B.1 A IR CONlllTION. tJJV9201 1966 VOLVO 122S 4-speed transmission. I RRE321J 12·FOOT TRAILER Northwest Coach. Sl•eps b, stove, ice box, d inette, 2 butane t anks. B.eautiful condition. I FE70 17 l 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA Hardtop 4-dr. v.s, auto. trans., P.S., air c:ond., R&H ._ (U KUl57 1 ·$895 $'1795 . 4 to choose from. All are fu lly recond itioned · and have fre5h new paint jo bs. ham pie: 1968 'FORD CUSTOM $1795 V-8 390, auto. t rans., R&H , P.S. !49 19 1 Stock No. PS-IOI . 4 Door Sed en. City of Newport car. 1966 OLDSMOllLE $995 V.8, autom atic, radio, heater, 131 126 ) , 1967 KARMANN GHIA $1695 App•••· 30,000 m;lu, .,d;o, he~ter. IVCK31 9l READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . '68 GA~IE 500 2-0oor Hardtop, 390 V8 , automatic, vinyl roof, P.S.1 approx. 18,000 miles. Factory warranty avail- able, IWXG'475 ) '69 FORD F0 250 3/•·TON Bi9 6, Cruisomatic:, heater with SCOTSMAN Cab over Camper. Approx, 4 1300 mil es. '68 CHEV. '!•·TON 4-spd. Approx. 16,000 miles, Lik e new. Split ,rims. l2255bEI '68 CORTINA 1600 2-Door Sedan. 4 speed, radio, hetter, 14,000 mi le&. Wa rrenty avail, !ZOS843 ) approx. 1968 MUSTANG $2295 V-8 , automatic, P.S., rtdio, heater, factory a ir Cond itioning. IVCJb63 ) '69 COBRA FASTBACK Auto., R&H , P.S., apprOX. 4,200 mil es, like new. Black iede. Fa ctory warra nty avail. IZLH8 8~) 1968 RAMBLER ROGUE $1995 American 2 Door. Hardtop. Auto., · R&H1 P.5. Extra sh arp! !VWV~OJ) '~c 11 ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY 1;1 .Q ··· ~ ~ " . AUTHORIZED DEALER l ~I I • .... \)' ~~;~ Large Inventory ·of New '69's For ----------.....----~-----~ --• • N.EW 196~ THUNDERBIR.DS . -. 00 -· OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE! • NO SALE& EXPENSE, NO . , PREPARATION CHARGE NO DEALER ADD-ONS _QF ANY · KIND! YOU CAN DRIVE HOME .ANY NEW '69 T-BIRD. IN 0\JR"BIG STOCK AT THIS PRICE! TWO·DooRS, FOUR~l>OORS -LARGE COLOR & EQUIPMENT SELECTION! ·26 LOW MILEAGE , 1969 STAFF CARS AT · EVEN · GREATER· SAVINGS ! BEFORE YOU BUY -ANYWHERE! CHECK OUR DISCOUNTS ON NEW '69 FORDS · MUSTANGS FORD TRUCKS OVER 200 NEW 1969 MODELS NOW AT FINAL CLEARANCE SAVINCiS! 'ENGLISH FORDS .a1s ii~ 11 i1 t +~:1 ANOTHER· BOATLOAD JUST ARRIVE D! England's No. 1 Seller ••• America's No. 1 Import Buy! Customs -GT's-Station Wagons. Lar<;1e Selection of'·Ailtomatil:s an6 Four Speeds! VACATION SPECIAL! FREE MIN I BIKE WITH Every Camper, T~mper Unit Or Motor Home Package Sold ! WHY "BREAK CAMP" TO GO PLACES WHEN WE WILL GIVE YOU A NEW ZEBRA MINI BIKE ABSO~UTEL Y FREE WITH AN'( CAMPER, NEW TRUCK & CAMPER PACKAGE OR MOTOR HOME YOU BUY! Example Vocation Package: · ' -.-------~ NEW '69 v.a FORD 1/z TON PICKUP 8' BED, GAUGES, EXTRA LARGE RADIATOR, HEAVY DUTY SPRINGS. FI OYRE9006S. tiEW BARRACUDA 600 CAMPER CAii-OVE R. !UTANE ANO ELECTRIC LIGHTS, DINING NOOK TABLE, BEDS, SINK ANO DRAIN, DRAPES, ETC. NEW '69 ZEBRA MINI BIKE RENT YOUlt . VA-CATIOJt HOME ·O .. WHEELS! BU Y! RENT! lmmed.iate Delivery. ,Tf!ree only.-.Nevf ECONOMICAL c1~~~R . FAOLLR $3295 MINI BIKE • You 10 whert1 you w1nt, 1t•y where you want without 1ched· ul111 or r•1ervatlon1 when you rent a Robin Deluxe Pickup C•n:ip~r or Condor "i1~tor Home. REASONAILE-iRATES RESERVE EARLY GOOD SELECTION 1968's Now Slashed RATES BY TO CHOOSE FROM DAY·WEEK·MONTH For l111mediate Clearance! ' - OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK VISIT OUI COMPLnt CAM,El CENTER -CRUISAlltf, FOU.1 WINDS, I ARRAC UDA, COHTI Ml'O Sl"OILI R, SUNDIAL, ELDORA DO. 'flEM TOI", MIN I HOME, CHASSIS , MOUNT$ , , • ALL READY TO ltOLLI {AL L $Al,.E PRICES !E FF ECTIVE THROUGH NEXT SUNDAY UNLESS PR EVIOUSLY SOLD.) , 2060 Harbor ~ tt?£ e.Mln ..... IUTOWI• Oii MIT llMlU 11 . , _ _..Q.1 C·psta Mesa ® 642 -0010 s A " •.· ' : • ·-<ONDAY FRIDA, • SA ruRDA r a AM ro 6 p M PARTS 6 SERVICE HOURS . PARTS ONLY Surirld Y\ 1 ti ., ""' to 6 p rr-7 /I. I\~ TO 9 P t.1 MONDAY e 7 A M T 0 6 P M TlJE SO A. Y ~RI DA 'r 8 A "..~ T 0 6 P M 'Alt 1 r; (J ,.. ... l • • • • ---~ --~---'----- ' I • . 1