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1969-08-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
. . • • • l ow lllS ·' Ul ... * t* * 'ti * * * * * * ~ * * * * * .. ( - 10-year-old LSD Victim DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST, 8, 1969 Caught on Mesa •Trip~ .. Splashing CIAILY l"ILOT ...... br •1c11m M:Mhllr Using traditional backyard method, Patrick Lavalle, 3. splash~s brother. Timothy, 6. F.ountain VaJley youngsters found it was a cool \9ay to beat Thursday's heat. They are sons of Mr. and i\<lrs. Gerald F. Lavalle, 17279 Santa Lucia St. Man Loses Two Fingers In Beach Freak Blast " A freak explosion in a Huntington Beach oil skimmer tank Thursday morn· ing claimed l\vo fingers fron1 the righl hand of a maintenance man and caused second and lhlrd degree bums to his face. VOL. Cl. MO. Ht, 4 SECTIONS, 41 l"AOEI Navy Speeding to Of Harbor Crew .Woman . . Parachutists Dropped f 01· Early Help A Navy communications vessel today \Vas speeding to a rendezvous with the 50· foot stoop \Vesterly, 1,000 .ntlles from Jlonolulu. to aid a seriously ill Costa ~lesa woman aboard. The ill crew member was identified <1s San De \Vobbrock, 23, a part time employe of Bartell Corp .• a marine elec- tronics firm of Newport Beach. Three medically trained parachutists were dropped from an Air Force plane Thursday to aid her until the Navy com- munications vessel Arlington arrived. Miss Wobbrock has no loc al residence address, according to Ja1nes Bartell, owner or the electronics ririn . "She ls a very capable woman who has \vorked for us from time to time when she \vas visiting in the area." Bartell sa id. The \Vesterly is a Colun1bia·50 sloop owned by Ernest C. Wilson , commodore or the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. The yacht left Honolulu about a week ago on a return trip from the Trruupaciric yacht race. She is being skippered by David Lyman, Honolulu, a chief mate in the Merchant Marine. Wilson said there were six men and two "·omen aboaid. The. others in the crew are from Honolulu and San Fraacisco. LSD Victim, 10, . • Caught on Bad 10~000 to Greet· Nixon ' County Rolling Out Welcome Mat for President By RANDY SEELYE Of I'll• 01ll't' Pli.t Stiff Orange County will roll out the red carpet for President Nixon Saturday afternoon, when Air Force One touches down at Orange County Airport. Thousands of citizens and county VIP's are e11:pected to be on· hand when lhe President arrives at -I: 30. Airport official!; are roping off a large area in the parking lot north of lhe. I .-terminal building on ft1 a c A r th u r Boulevard for the expecled 10,000 visitors. Vacant lots across MacArlhur from the airport terminal will be used for parking. After an informal greeting President Nixon will fly to his Summer White !louse in San Clemente by helicopter. At a press conferenct: Thursday the welcoming com1nittee said c o u n l y supervisors and mayors of all ciUes in Judge Sets Inquest Sept. 3 Into l(ennedy Accident EDGARTO\VN, Mass. (AP) -The In- quest into Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's auto accident on Chappaquiddick Jsland will begin in this island resort town Sept. J, District CoUrt Judge James A. Boyle announced today. The. announcement was made after a meeting between Boyle and Dist. Alty, Edmund Dinis, who ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited newsmen will be admitted to the proceedings. Dinis said he had "no intention at this lime" of calling Kennedy to testify. Dinis had indicated earlier that he ••ould be 1>ummonlng Kennedy. ' The senator has slild he would~> coope rate In any legal proceedings con· nected with the accident, and has can· celed a European trip in order to keep• himself avallable. order. tn order for our courts to Cf>nsider an order for an autopsy, il would require a showing of Imperative reasons." In Wilkes-Barre, Evans told newsmen, ''It's not up to me. An autopsy will be at the discretion nf the PeMSylvanla courts. All the facts are In Massachusetts." Widow Aw arded $317,500 in Husband's Death A Superior Court jury has awarded $275,000 In damages to· the widow or a' man who died four years ago in a Leisure World construction accident.. the county are expecled to attend. , Several bands also will be prepared to greet the. Presideat. Mr. Nixon decided to land at the county. airport earlier lhis week, Since then. airport officials have been frantically making arrangements for his arrival. He had been schedu1ed to land at El Toro ftlarine Corps Air Station, as ht has (~e \VELCOME, Page Z) {:r {:r * 0 ' Nixon's Pla~ ; Joining Fl y -in . >. ·Movieland of the Alr Museum of!i£lals claim President Nixon is a participailt In the First Annual Bi.plane Fly·in scheduled !Or Saturday at Orange Count~ Airport. "Nixon chang~d his fllghfplar't ftom Et Toro to Orange C<iunly Airport, So that he co u Id join our fly-in,'' a museum spokesman dead panned. The Presidential pla ne, Air Force One, will be the largest participant In the DY· in1 In fact, it ii; the largest plape ever to land at· the airport. The biplanes will be arriving Satdt;day from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. arid wiU 'ny' around lite .<:OUnty in formation Sunday ...... Oran ge Coas& Wea f.her ~ l I ., 1 I Polise said J. W. Stephens, 56, of 881 Calico St., Garden Grove was cleaning a tank at Huntington Street and Utica Avenue with a dry chlorine powder when the explosion ripped th rough the tank at 10:30 a.m. 'Trip' in Mesa Dinis said Thursday he hoped lo begin the Inquest within a week or IO days. lie added that he would call 20 or more wltnes.-res, including all persons who might have had any knowledge of events before or after Ke.nncdy's car plunged ofi a b r I d g e. on Chappaquiddick Island, drowning Miss Mary Jo Kopecbne, 28, a Washington secretary. The panel return~ to the courtroom of Judge Byron K. McMillan late Thursday to assess those damages a g a I n s t Rossmoor Sanitation lnc. of Laguna Hills, one or four defendants named by Mrs. ftfarguerite E. Cagigas or Pomona. High, patchy clouds won't keep the sun from roasting · the coast- line over the weekend. But the predicted 75 at the beach bodes much fairer than the 93 forecast for inland. -- Tot Recovering After Losh1g Arm A 2·year-old Anaheim boy who Jost his right arm in a washing machine Thursday was !isled in salis!actory condition today at Anaheim General Ho.1pita.1. Anaheim police said 1t1ark Christopher Lake, ol 159l W. Juno Ave., climbed on top of mother's (op-loading washing ma· chine and stuck his arm in during the l!pln Cy<:~. Police credited a neighbor, Stephen Earl Smith, of 1957 \V. Juno Ave., wtth saving the boy's life by applying pres· sure to the severed Ann to stop bleeding, An Rttempt to reimPlant the limb railed. Stephens was taken to Huntington 1ntercommunily Hospital by a fellow "'·orker, where ht mny face possible am· putation of the right hand. The blast remO\o'ed his fourth and rlfth finger. Police aad fire department in- vestigtlors theorize that the explosion was caused by hydrogen released from the cleaning powder. Hydrogen can be created when chlorine is mixed wtlh oil. It ls a dangerous gas which can be an oU by 1unllgbL or a apark, police said. Me1·edi th Sentenced NEIV YORK (UPI) -Civil rlglts c.rusadec James Meredith was sentenced today t.o "time served" on hl9 conviction ol harassing tenant11 who lived in a Bronx apartment buJldln1 ht o"n<d. I A long·haired little boy be.aring mRrks of much drug use -and estimated lo be only about 10 years old -was caught running down a Costa Mesa street on a frenzied LSD trip early today. "Take me home, I'm guing lo die," police quoted the youngster as scream- ing. "'hile he dashed along Placentia Avenue at West 19th Street, shortly after midnight.. Patrolman Frank Upham t.ooll: the boy Into eustody and Officer Dennis llosslle.ld, who searclled him at headquarters, aald three LSD tablets and some marijuana were hidden in his boot. "They couldn't handcuff ~hn." U. Tom Durham said tOday. "his wrist' were so small he'd ju.st slip them right off.'' lnve1t.lgators s.ild the boy h n d necdlcmarks. indicating narcotics in· jection over a long period. on both &rmA. tie was taken to Orana:e County Juvenile Halli where cbara:cs are J>!?ndiRg. ft1eanwhlle Dinis was advised that he will have to go to coUrt if he wants an autopsy on the body of Miss Kopechne, who la buri<d In Plymouth, Pa. The dead girl's parenls, Mr. aad Mrs. Jose.ph Kapechne of Berkeley Height!, N.J .• haYe indicated Uiey will oppose ex· humation o{ the body, and Dist. Atty, Blythe H. Evans Jr. o{ Luzerne County, Pa ., hes assured them lhey will have a chance to make their stand In court. In a letter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said: "No ordor would be consldered1 In Penn~ylvanla \~lthout notice to the near relatives and an opportunity for them lo appear ln the proctcdln&s for auch an ?\irs. Caglgas, mother of four, will receive a total of $317,500 from the delen- dants she charaed with ne.gligence and responkibillty for the death o{ Henry J. Cagigas, 27. Cagjgas was one of two men trapped in a cave-in on Oct. %9, 1965, dur- ing underground construction on Avenlda Sevilla. 111s companion, George E. Widman of West Covina, was pulled from the col· lapsed ditch by rescue WQrkera. Widman was granted $30,000 In damages by the jury following its four-hour deliberation. Mrs. ·caglgas wilt r«elve $12,500 from F.lmcr Olson, a backhoe operator at lhc Lelsure World site amt $30,000 from Toups Engineering Jnc. of Laguna Hills, a 1ubcontractor. . INSIDE TODA 'l' Yacl1tina, can be awf1Ul1J se,.. fous to those Involved but sometimts ft becomes just fun. particularly ever y Tlnirsday evening in the summer during the Beer Can Regatta. See Weekender Page 2J. •lrth .,. ... UM lt C111frtr111t I Cle Pill.. ,,_., Clll'lkl 1t CFMtMMI ft °"'"' Mtl!Cff t Dhwc•• It Ed!twlll Pne f l~tffttl-1 tl•H l'lllall<• 1•11 "9,.M•H I U AIO~ Ltf!~tn U Mt!llM• ~ Mtrtl• .. l.'""'1t"t .,. \ I ='6 ~ MlltMI l'IM"I lt .. ,-.1 "' ....... , OrlllM CM!\tr • S1'MI l'fff9r 11 llMl-.llh 1>H lecl91 N.iwt 1),U "9f1• , .. ,. Sl9di: Mtnt•ll ta.II Telt~hltll 2J lllfflt" U-11 Wut)ltt' 4 w•rtt Htw1 '"' W•MMf 1'1•2' .......... 111 .............. ,,. ......................................... "' ............................................................................. ~~~~~:--~~........ ........--,_- l .. ' 2 OAILY PILOT -rrfd.if. August S, 196~ Spee,.:h on TV Toniglii Nixon Brief·s GOP on Welfare WASHINGTON (UPll -p,.,\dent Nixon briefed Republican congressional leaders todaf on details or the far. refching overhaul of the nation's welfare i;ystem which ht will Ul'lVeil in a na· tionwide broldcast at 7 p.m. POT. Chan- nels t 4 and 7 will carry the broadcast Uve. Nixon and the leadership spent two hours on the message which the White House bllled as the President's most comprehen5ive statement on home front prpblems slnct his inauguration address in Jan1ary. The Wblte Housc announced before the radie>-televlSjon appearance that NixoD. ~ 'l\'OUld send thrtt special meas11es to Congress ne1l week spelling out the legislation needed tor his prop!:nlals. Press secretary Ronald Zieglu said the first message on Monday would deal with wellare; the second on Tuesday with a new plan to expand federal manpower- training programs. and the third on Wednesday oulllnin( a completely new approach of federal-state revenue shat· Ing. ~ecause of the scope of the fresldent's re\•amplng propo&als the target date for legislation to put it into effect would be probably a year <lr more fr()m now. The message came on the first an- nlversary of Nixon's acceptancl!: of the Republican presidential nomination al f\fitmi Beach last Aug. 8. In his aceeptance speech a n d throughout bis campaign, the President ab'Used h1a aim of getting people off the welfare rolls and <lnto the payrolls of private lnd\Jllry. On Saturday, Nixon will work during the mornlnfj clearlng his desk before ll!:&Ving (or a month's vacation •l his new summer White House at San Clemepte . In advance of Nixon's speech, ad- ministration sources disclosed the basic approach he would take to the mounting problems of welfare ln America. Sky Divers to -Bare pown Nine to Jump Nude; Sheriff Keeps Eye Peeled ~ LYON~ Wis. {UPI ) -Nine male members of the Milwaukee Sky Divers Club plan to parac:hute into a nudist camp Sunday -naked. The ah.ib!Uon of raw eoura1e. Club Pre:ildent .R.ty Macguire, 31, said Thurs· day, will be the second nude sky div! made by club members. A nude dive was made last year but kept under wraps, he iald. Muulre aaid no female members of the cfub would make the jump becawe ··we couldn't talk them into it." He said the men would wear boob and helmets. and would drop into the Runnlne Bares Nudist Ruort. Rogers Says U.S. Hopes to Reopen Talks With China CANBERRA, Australia (AP) Secretary ol Stale \Vi!liam P. Rogers said today the U.S. government will 6oon make another attempt to reopen talks with Commun ist China in Warsaw. "WI!: would like to resume this dialogue," Rogers told the Canberra Press Club. "WI!: would hope that they do, 100." Ambassadors from the United States and Red C h i n a met periodically in Geneva and 1-0en in the Polish capital from 19M_untn January 1968. Peking pro- posed 'a, rewmpUon of the talks last February, but canciled at the last minute y,·hen a Chlnue diplomat in The Hague defected to the United States. Rogers also won endorsement of Pres!· denl NiJ:on's new Asian policy from Australia and New Zealand, America 's partners in the Anzus Pact. A com· munique issued a!tu the meeting today of the Anzus Council said the two island commonwl!:a1ths "shared with Asians the view thal the responsibility . for internal security could be increasingly aSl!lumed by Asian nations them.selves.'' ST 1-6 -ROVERS J~ From Page 1 WELCOME • • • done In th! past. Victor Andrews, co-chairman of the welc.omin1 committee said, the President feels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "It will give him more of a chance to meet the people ." \Vhen Air Force One lands at Oraflie C-Ounty Airport il will mark the fi rst time a U.S. president has flown into the facili- ty. Air Force One will be the largest airplane !Ver to land at the field. Robert Bresnahan, county director of aviaUoo. at first had doubts that the Boeing 7ff1 could land safely at Orange County Ah]>orl. But Bresnahan said 'Thursday he is now confident the plane can 1aad without probll!:ms. ............ "*" ............ ---·~"' c--CAUfOllflA CaAHOI COAS1 ..Ull.IM41NO COM,...N"f llt•Nri H. Wtff Pt..-.it _, .......... JHli I. C.rlty Yk.t '°**"* ....i Gtfltrel Mm9t11 TheM•• K•..,il .... ThlMlt A. M1r,~1ftl ~ffl!af -c. .. Mull "' ...... , ..... ''""' H...,..-l ~ Hll -I ....... ...,11¥1Tt .._ h.C.fll ttl '-ti A-""'""'91R t.lcll: .. ,.. ..... \Valworth County Sheriff \Vill iam Cum- mings said that if he sees any naked bodies suspended from b i 11 o w i n g parachutes he will arrest them on charies of lndeoent uppsure or dbon:lu- ly e<1nduct. Maguirt aa1d the jump would go on anyway. "It's a le1al jump because we'll be lan- ding in the camp," Maguire said. ••Besides, we'll be coming in hieh enough that people on the ground outside the camp won't be able to see us with the naked eye." fifrs. Ada Marseu.s. owner of Runnlnc Bares, said she had a standing agree. merit with parachuting clu~ in the aru allowing them to land in the camp any time they give her 30 minutes notice. L.ast SWlday, nine fully clothed members or the East Troy Sky Knights Club dropped in when they found their regular landing spot clouded over. 'I'hey were fully clothed, she said, but some shed their garmenb and joined resort guest3 in swimming and volleyball. As for the nude sky divi ng, Mrs. ~1.gett.s-known as "Little fi1a" -said if ulhey're brave enough to do it, it 's fine wi t.ti me. But I hope they don't land somewhere else than on the club grounds. "It could be embarrassing to them ." Charges Against Leary hi Girl's Death Dropped RJVERS1DE (UPI) -The district at- lorney's office here has until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint against Dr. Timothy Leary after charges against him stemming from the death or a teen-aged girl were dismissed on technical grounds. Charlene Rene Almeida, 17. drowned June 14 while sw imming-in a lake on his ranch. He was charged with contributin1 to the delinquency of a minor. Municipal Court Judge EJ"•ood Rich Thursday granted a defense motion th'-t the :fni8clftnl!:anor complaint be dropped because It did not specify how Leary con· tributed to the girl's delinqutncy. Defense attorneys said It was not shown that Leary gave her· the halluci natory drug. The judge gave the prosecution unti l Au1. 21 to file an amended complaint, and also continues until Aug. 28 a hearing on a felony charge of possession of a restricted drug against Leary and his v.•lfl!:, Rosemary, 33. Leary's "eternal brotherhood com· mune." near here \vas abandoned this '~eek by about 30 of his followers after a second death at the ranch. · Toxicological tests are being made to determine the cause of death of John Grlrgs. 28. Chief Deputy Coroner William Dykes said it was sus~ted Griggs' death might have been caused by use of the drug tsilocyb!n from the 111u6hroom tsilocybe u~ed by ~1exlcan Indians, \V h i c h is similar lo LSD and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other species of mushrooms and jimpson "'eed, which C<>ntains belladonna, "'ert also in Griggs' tent. Leary claims he was in his tent when I\liss Aln1eida drowned and \\.'as a\vay from the ranch when Griggs died . He said he did not e. v e n kno1v ti1iss Almeida'sname. but "'as closely ac· qualnted with Griges. "Yes, \\"e all knew John," Leary said. "He "'as the holiest man· ever to live in this country. I don 't know "'hat killed him." La Habra Girl Bitten by Dog . A 3-year-old La-.Ha~~ sir1 whose left ear "'as bitten orr and back and arms se\'crcly gashed by a chalned dog was recovering today at St. Jude Hospital in Fullerton. Terry Clennao, 551 N. Chestnut St., \\'3S the victim of the dog attack. La Habra police said the neighbor who ov.•ns lhe German shepherd dog, Charles Youman, of 600 N. Chesnut St., told them he did not want !he dog back "'hen a r3bies quara ntine period is ended. Israeli J ets Strike Insid e Jordan Again By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Israeli jets attacked Inside Jordan t1> day for the third slraigh t day after the Arab guerrilla command clai111ed its commandos killed 60 Israelis in raids on three Israeli settlements and military outposts in !he northern Jordan River Valley. The lsr<1elis called the Arab claim a fign1ent or in1agination. Later. ho"'e\·er, Israeli lighter·bombfrs screamed acro,,s the border into Jordan to pound rocket positions 1vhich fired on lsra e!"s Dead Sea polash works in Sodom Thursday night, a Tel Aviv spokesman said. Merger Plans Underfoot Between Niguel, Avco Negotiailions to m-erge Orange Colln· ty's Laguna Nigue l Corp. "'Ith a subsidiary of the financial giant Avco Corp. were announced today. \Villiam Beck, executive vice president of Wguna Niguel, said if the deal is con- summated the greater fin an c i a 1 reliources could provide a stepped up de\'tlopment and marketing program ror the community. Laguna Niguel. the county's sixth largest landholding stretches from the ocean between SOuth Laguna and Dana Point Inland to the San Diego Freewa y. It is plsnned to be a "l'lew town" of 80,000 people. Present populalion is S,500. The proposed merger is between LaflU1& Ni11Uel Corp. and Rancho Viet President's J\fen Ask for Huong Ouster SAIGON (AP) -Ltaders of President Nauytn Van Thieu 's poltUcal front \Oday signed 1 pet1Uon askiila Thieu '"' oust Premier Tran Van Huong. The petition c11l.s for a new, "presll· 1110011 and able premier'' to replace tht a.1Jlng 66-year-<1Jd J-fuong. ~ Bernardo. a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp., conglomerate with assets of $\.8 billion. Rancho Bernardo is ' another new town. loceted north of San Diego, planned for an ultimate populatioo of 50,000. CommcnAed one rinancial observor: "The merger should give Laguna Niguel the firepower and consistency to keep things rolling, Thl!y\·e had a cash flow problem and three times have come to a grinding halt." Terms of the proposed merger call tor Avco Corp. lo buy 1.4 mil\lon shares oC l.aguna Niguel stock at $7.50 per share from the cont.mlllng stockholders. Principally. they are Cabol, Cabot and Forbes Co., land developers or Boston; Paint, Weber, Jackson and Curl.Ui, the underwriters. and a lhlrd lllvestor, American National lnsurancl!: Co. of Tex- as. La1una NJ11.1el Corp. would be the surviving stock entity following the merger. About one 1nlllion shares art owned by the gene.ral public. Dttk and the rest of tht UJUna Niguel st.aft v.•ould retain their 5.11me jobs. In the past, Laguna Nl1u@I has done some of Jt.s own derelopment, sold parctll to land developers In other cases. Beck said one could logic.ally think the program of devt!lopmtnt wlU rontinue on · llk1'1 basis. • The new program would provide a 11peciflc federal welfare payment to the recipients. At present, the amount varies greaUy from slate to state. Adult,, receiving welfart! payments would be aQlomatically rega rded as beln& job appllcanU. They would be enrolled in job tralnin& proirams which would pro- vide lncenUve pay. Once they were plac· ed in jobs, they would be able to keep all or pa.rt of their earnings up to acutoff point when they would no longer·requlre welfare help. Under the revenue sharing program, the fede ral government v.·ould make uneannarked bloc grants lo the states for use in welfare work. Kiesinger, Nixon-6kay 'Hot Line' • \VASHlNGTON {AP) -President Richard Nixon and West Germ an Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger agrttd today to establish a "hot line" for instant communication betwcen the White House and the chancellor's office In Bonn. A joint statement followin g two days ol talks sald the line "'ould be installed as soon a.:> techni cal arrangements ha\·e been completed. The United States and the Soviet Union also maintain a ''hot line" which permits Instant C<>mmunication between the na· tions' leaders in the event of a crisis. \Vhile the joint statemeni. bet"·een NiJ:. on and K.iesin1er made no mention <lf any crisis, it said that the two had agreed on the importance of slaying in close com· 1nunicat.ion with <lne another. '"In oi;der to assure that they wiU be able to communicate rapidly in case of emergency, the President and the chancellor have agreed to the establish- ment of a hot line between the \Vhite House and the chancellor's ofifce ," the state111ent said . The President and the chanccller discussed a full range of issues affecting relations bet\\·een East and West. in- cl udtna: the prospects for strategic anns limitation lalks and br oaden ing discussions on European security, the statemenl reported. Agnew Voted Raise \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate voted Thursday to raise the pay of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Speaker John \V. f\.1cConnack, (D·f!Ia ss.), from $13,000 to $62 ,500. The bill al so reises the salaries of the congressional leaders -Sens. Richard B. Russell, J\1ike Mansfield and Evere tt ?ii. Dirksen and Reps. Carl B. Albert and Gerald R. Ford -from $4.2,500 to $49,500. POLICE SGT. SORENSON SCRAPS ID BUREAU'S TRAPS Dragnet Deemed Unnecessary in New Ouarterti ·Rats--No Mi~e But Beac h Officers Don't ltf ind Move By RICllARO P. NALL 01 ·~· 01111 P'lltl t!•tt ''Rats", Huntington Beac.h police didn't catch any mice last month. But !heir past record has been good. The identification department, which makes monthly reports on a b o u t everything, Jogged a kill record of 42 mice this year in the ancient iden~ tificalion bureau. They really kept the traps · snapping. Sgt . .Robert Sorenson -an outstanding mouse catcher as \\"l'll as identification officer -doesn't mind a bit relinquishing thC mice-catching detail. He 's getting new offices. Police identification work should benefit. The city is opening a new addition to the old detective building at Sixth Street and Orange Avenue. Its 11 offices will in- clude twtt interview rooms, a polygraph center, restroonu and a c r 1 m e laboratory. Sorenson, who will direct the crime lab. said it inclu~es a balllstlca section with a $5,000 compar.iaon micro9COpe. "The machine Is for comparing object!! to determine. for in&tanee, information such as whether two bull els were · fired from the same weapon or not . "Shell casings, hairs, fibers and most any thing including sate doors and burglary tools can be compared with this set up." "We have been sending this kind of "'or k out to other police departml!:nts and have spent well over the cost ()f the 1nicroscope ln man hours in olhrr departments. ,;One of the 1nai{l benefits is the ability to quickly clear innocent persons \•>ho might have been suspects in a crime as well as to develop evidence connecting persons with crimes." The lab also boasts a chemistry section staffed on a part-time basis hy three UC lrvine'graduate students, \Varren Bun. can, Terry Flckies and Bill l1emmerlin. The lab will be used lo identify mari- juana and other substances, to sweep clothing for evidence and analyze blood samples. Next tc. the chemistry section is the la- tent print aectlon manned by technician Robert ~1arks, "One of the best lalent print men in Southern California," ac- cording lo Sorenson. Here fingerprints, enarly invisible to the unaided eye, wUI be discovered and processed. But the new setup, alas, isn't going ID include a mouse control division. France Sla tes Te!j,ts PARIS (AP) -France will resume nuclear weapons tests in the Pacific in the summer of 1970, Defense Ministry sources confirmed today. The tests, begun in 1966, were suspended this year under the government's austerity pro- gram. mid-Summer Sale Featuring MJ/DRJGJ!l By Heritage NIWPQAT HACH 17V Westcllff'Dr,. 641-:ZO.SO Of'IN NID.ll "I'll. t [ M1dri41I , a rom1 nti c 1ccent of old Sp1 in. Fe1turing long , low m•11ive pieces with deep he•vy mouldings cheracteri1 tic of century old Spanish furniture. A v•lue •t •ny price .•. M•drig1 l is offered 1t 1ub1tanti1l 1aving\ durin9 our Au9u,t Seto, Reg, Solt S<l9 $359 Our Summer Se le also include~ selected 9roups from Dr•icel H·entedon, Herit•ge, National, Mer91 C1r1on and rn•ny other lin•t. Henr1don i nd He ritaQe Upholstery on la le. Rtduction' on ac celsori es , li mps ond pictu r1s •r• evailtble. Size: 74" W -20" D -32" H INTERIORS Prafttslontl Interior Oetlgntr• Avtlltbl---'10-NSID I LAGUNA HACH 34S Nerth c .. n tfwy. 49'-'JS1 Ol'U fllOAY ,,L t I '{ \ B~n:tington Beaeh • .. • ¥ • ' EDITION , .. Totlay!s:·D••I N.Y. Steeks .. •• ' VOL. 62, NO. 'IQ9, 4 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES . ORANGE C\:>U!'ITY1 CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Annex Foe Says Beach Bid filegal Richard Harrison, principal opponent of the prOJIOSed annei:ation of Sunset Beach to Huntington Beach charged today that the conduct of Wednesday night's Hun· tirlgton Beach City Council public hearing was "high1y illegal." E:ity Clerk Paul Jones doesn't think so. "'I1le government code on annexation procedures, reads that the council 'shall he.ar and pass on all protests so made and if they represent a majority of the assessed valuation of the property in· volved, the protest shall be sustained and the annexation proposal declared void.' " Harrison said. But City Clerk Jones said Harrison should, "read a little further.'' "The code also states, 'al the time set for hearing protests or to whlch the hear· tng may have been c911tinued,'" Jones replied. Jones notes that the City Council , after accepting the prolesf.!I profferred by H~r· rison adjourned to a final hearing session on Aug. 18 at which time a decision will be made. "Jt was a physlcal impossibility to check all the listed parcel protesta offer· ed b·y Hanisan in a few hours, and we ob- viously couldn't accept his figures," J ones said. Harrison dropped the protests, sup- ~y 'representing 60 petcent of the assessed valuation of Sunset neach pro· pert.its, onto Jones' lap on mid·aftemoon Wednesday .. Jone! also noted that some of the 1ignature& on prote.st& were different from those on the coonty aSMasot's roll for partlcutar .properties. "The parcels may have been sold and the Dew owner'I' name not yet recorded on ·tbe roll, but we w~ have to check that out," JOl'\es said. • The clerk admitted that the code lang:ua_ge ·is vague on what constitutes legal owners of property. But Harrison remains adamant, "If at the time set for the hearing (W~ay rµght) the protests offered were insufficient then the council had the right to postpone the hearing for not less than 10 days," he argues. "But we filed more than sufficient protests." "The proponents of the annexatuon are now going around trying to get persons who protested to withdraw," Harrison continues, "and this could possibly . kill our successful protest. "The councilmen, and T have told most or them this, should call an emergency meeting and pass on the protests right now," Harri.son demands. "We will go to court If necessary, especially if the city accepts withdrawal of any of the protests." Beach Mayor's Father, 84, Dies N. Jay V. V. Green, 84, father of Hun· tington Beach Mayor, Jack Green, died this morning after a lengthy illness. Mr. Green, of 460 Elmhurst Lane, Costa Mesa, died at Huntington Con· vale.scent Hospital. Fune r a 1 ar· rangement.s are pending at Peek'• Colonial Funeral Home, 7801 Bolsa Ave., We!fntlnster. Born in New York state, Mr. Green moved to Altadena in 1908. He was a real estate broker and retired in 1961. He moved to· Costa Mesa in 1963. He had served as secretary of the Chamber of Commt;rce in Altadena and \vas a member of lhe Elks Lodge and the Kiwanis Club. Tn addition to Mayor -Green, survivor:-; Include l'iis widow, Loretta and a daughter. Mary Frances, both of the family home, and a sister Jennie F. Burt, Oxnard. DAILY PILOT""'°'-1tY fl:l<ll•l"f p, H•N POLICE SGT. SORENSON SCRAPS 10 BUREAU'S TRAPS Dragnet Deemed Unntctssary in New Quarters Rats--No Mi~e · But Beach Officers Don't M in,d Move By RICHARD P. NALL Of '"" D•lly l'ilot S!lfl "Rals", Huntington Beach police didn't catch any rriice last month . But their past record has been good. Tq~ ideotifiq.tjqn depart~t. which makes montllly reports on a b o u t everything, logged a kill record of '42 mice this ~ar 1ti the ancient iden- tification bureau. they really kept lM traps snapping. Sgt. Robert Sorenson -an outstanding mouse catcher u well as idenUfication o!ficer -doesn't mind a bit relinquishing the mice-<:atchin( detail. :He's getting new offices. Police identification work should Denefit. the city is opening a new addition to the old detective building at Sixth Street and Orange Avenue. Its 11 offices will in· elude twc interview rooms, a polygraph center. restrooms and a crime laboratory. Sorenson, who will direct the crhne lab, said it includes a ballistics section with a $5,000 comparison microscope. "The machine Is for comparing objects to determine, for instance, information such as whether two bullets ~·ere fired from the same weapon or not. "Shell casings. hairs, fibers and most anylhing including safe doors and burglary tools can be compared with this &et up." "We have been sending this kind of work out to other police departments and have spent well over the cost of the microscope in man hours in other departments. "One of the main benefits is the ability to qulckly clear innocent persons who might have been suspects in a cfime as well as to develop evidence connecting persons with crimes." The lab also boasts a chemistry section stalled on a part-time basis by three UC Irvine graduate studen~,-warren Bun. can, Terry Fickies and Bill Hemmerlin. The lab will be used to idenUfy mari- Stock JllorkeU NE\V 'YORK (UPI) -'I'lle market closed on in even keel today in light trad· Ing. (See ,quotations, Pages 10·11·). Mosr inv~lors moved to the sidelines In the absence of new motivating innu- enccs. The UPI marketwide indicator was ofr O. 13 percent on I ,529 issues trad- ed. Of the se , 6.51 adva nced, and 612 declined. juana and other substances. to sweep clotlUng for evidence and analyze blood samples. Next tc. the chemistry section is ~he la· tent print section manned by technician Robert Marks, "One, of the best latent print men in So\lthem iCaliforni1," ac- cording tO Sorenson.~ lfere fmsetiPrints . enarly invisible to the unaided eye, will be discovered and processed. But lbe new setup, alas, isn"t going lo include a mouse control division. Missing Man's Body Recovered Off Huntingto11 The body or Gunther Sainoylenko, 21, or La Puente washed up on the Huntington Beach sands early this morning, city lifeguards reporled. Samoylenko had been mis.sing si nce last Saturday rooming when he disap- peared while s•.vimming off H:~ntington State Beach with a sister. The body was found at 12:40 a.m. by Don Waite, 29, of Loni; Beach, chief of in· halation therapy at H u n t i n g t o n lntercommunity Hospital. Huntington Beach lifeguard Vern Fotheringham aided in the recovery at the bOuhdary line between the city and state beaches opposite Beach Boulevard . Ramoylenko disappeared about 10:45 a.m. Saturday while swimming in chesl· deep water, his sister reported. His drowning was the sixth in the past two months off -city and state beaches in Huntington Beach. Max Bowman, assistant director for Harbors and Beaches of Huntington Beach, blames the unusually high number of drownings to early riptides and heavy surr, combined with in-- experienced swimmers. "Only four o{ the six drownings hap- pened while lifeguards were on duty," Bowman polhted out. "The others were early·morning swimmers at deserted beaches." There have been only four drownings. three this year. recorded in Huntington Beach in 20 years while guards wer(: on duty, Bowman said . Sky Divers to Bare Down Nine to Ju1np Nude; Sheriff Keeps Eye Peeled LYON, Wis. {UPI) -Nine male members or the htilwaukee Sky Divers Club plan to parachute into a 11udls\ camp Sunday -naked. Ttie exhibition of raw rouragt, Club President Ray Macguire, 31, said Thurs· cla,~, wUI be the sE:COnd nude sky dive rn~de by club m~mbers. A nude dive wu made last year but kept under wraps_. ht said. f\faguJre said no femalt members of the club would make the jump because "we couldn't tall!: thtln into ll" Ha aald lhe: men wouJd wear boots and btlmets, and would drop into the Running Bares Nudist !Wort. \Valworlh County Shtriff William Cum. mings said that ii be sees any naked bodies suspended from b j 11 o w i n g pai;achutes he· Will arrest them ~n charges ot indeceflt expostirt 01· disordeJ<. ly t.'Onduct. Magulre 1aid the jump would go on anyway. "It's a legal jump btcauae we'll be Ian· ding in the camp." Maguire said, "&sides, we 'll be coming II) hJgh enough that people on the ground· out3ide the camp won't. be able to iee us with tho naked •11-11 Mra. Ada Mnrgetts, owner of Running Bares, said she hltd 1 al.anding agree. ment with parachuting clubs in the area :tllowing them to land In the ca,mp -MY lime tl1ey give her 30 minutes notice. La&t Sunday, nine fully clothed members .of the East Troy Sky Kni~hts Club dropped in when they found their regular landing spot clouded over. They were fully clothed, she old. but some 1thed thelr gannents snd joined nsort gudt! ln swimming and \'olleyball. As for the nude sky diving, !rtn:. MArsetts-known II "Little Ms" -s&ld jf "they're breve enoush to do it, ·It's fine with mo. But I ·hope they don't !And somewhere else th&ft on lhe Club grounds. "It could be embanaS!lng to them.'' c Nixon F ete Set 10,000 to Greet President Saturday By RANDY SEELYE Of tll• D•ltr P'lllt $tiff Orange County will roll out the red carpet for President Ni1on Saturday afternoon. when Air Force One touches down at Orange County Airport. Thousands of cititens and county VIP's are expected to be on hand when the President arrives at {:30. Airport officials are roping off a large area in the parking Jot north of the terminal building on M a c A r t h u r Boulevard for the expected 10,000 visitors. Vacant lots across MacArthur from the airport terminal will be used for parking. After an informal greeting President * * * Peace Co1incil Will Protest At Clemente Despite denial of a parade permit. the Peace Action Council (PAC) will hold a protest demonstration Aug. 17 near President Richard M. Nixon's San Clen1ente Summer White House, PAC member Robert 0. Bland said today. Further, Bland said that the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) will file sui t soon in Orange County Superior Court against the city of San Clemente an~ the Capistrano LTnified School District. f~I' date iJ unkno\fl11 °D4~ Bland, 1 Lll&'!l'an and aoulll Or~e Cotlllly head of lhe PAC, said he was hopeful that litigation could be resolved prior to the Aug.-17 protest by txpedited ltgal action. Tht PAC hopes to forct the ctty and the school district to permit use of pubilc property for the demonstration and pr~ test rally on school grounds, through the courts. GO TO COURT The PAC has said that il with the assistance of the ACLU will carry the suit to the Supreme Court of the United Stales if necessary. i·1n the meantime, we want to em- pl1aslze that we are going to conduct a picket line and rally which will be perfectly legal in that we are not re· quired to obtain permit! for them," Bland said. The Lagunan said that it was felt that a large number of military enlisted men ~·ill come to the protest in support d the peace group's position against the Viet· namese war. "This makes it especially necessary to hold the protest," he said. Bland said that between 2,000 and 3,000 people are ex· peeled to take part in the demonstration. A group of "several hundred" will be coming from San Francisco in buses, another group of several hundred are busing In from San Diego and a ma jor portion of the demonstrators will bt.. com· ing from Los Angeles. An Orange ~nty conlingent will also be there, he sa1d. PICKETING SET Demonstrators will picket along the sidtwalks and parkway of Via Del Frente, .. adjacent to the Cyprus Shore area where the President's home is located. The protest rally CflUld be held tn the San Clemente State Park, near the Cyprus Shore area. Bland said. Bland said that the PAC will talk with San Clemente Police Chief Clifford Mur· ray to make arrangements for the pro-- test. · Assistant Chief Stanley r.fatchett said toc!11v talks are scheduled in the coming week. Malchell said that denial ·or the parade p~rntit to the peace group has not chang· ed police department stance. ''We just have a job to do and we will do it as well as possible using what ever means necessary. "We haven't had this type of thing ever happen here before, but it has happened in other places before and it has been taken care of. We wlll be able to take' care of It here," Matchett &aid. He pointed out that mutual aid pacts with other law enrorce11\ent . ag~ies, 'make J>06&lbl~ I.ht ·bo~l"lng ,oL il1' .34. man-.. San Clemente police forte Jf nec~sarf. . 1 , j "We consider ourselve:o; very Pro-' fCSSlonal. I "We will do what 11 n6CeSSal"7 tO take· care of the situat\on,," he-«mcludtd.. Meredith Sentenced NEW YORK (Ul!ll· -'Civil r\ghtl cruaader James Ml!l'td)lh WM ll<Jlltnetd , todaJ to .. Um• ~·~~ blt convict~ • o1 hM..,.lng ,teriOJllo who]li•ed ner- , apartment buUdlng· he owned. • -· ,1 Nixon will ny to his Summer White HOW'ie in San Clemente by helicopter. At a press conference Thursday the welcoming committee sa_ld co u n t y supervisors and mayors of all cities in the county are expected to attend. Several bands also will be prepared to greet the President. Mr. Nilon decided to.land at the county airport earlier this week. Since . then, airport officials bave been franucally making arrangements for his arrival. He had been scheduled to land at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, as he has done in the past. Victor Andrews, co-chainnan of the welcoming committee said, the PresJdent feels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "It will give him more of a chance to meet the people." When Air Farce One lands at Orange County Airport it will mark the first time a U.S. president has flown into the facili· ty. Air Force One will be the largest airplane ever to land at the field . ' •Robert Bresnahan, CQUnty director 9f aviation. at first Md doubts that the Boeing 707 could land safely at Ora"°'e County Airport . But Bresnahan-gal(! Thu~ay he is now confident the ptlDt can land without problen1s. He said he called the Federal Aviation Administration in Los Angeles to cheek the landing safety factor. • ~udge Sets Inquest Sept. 3 Into Kennedy Accident EDGARTOWN. Mass. (AP) -The In· quest Into Sen. Edward M. Kennedy 's auto accident on Chappaquiddick Island will begin in this island resort town Sept. 3, District Court Judge James A. Boyle announced today. The announcement Wa.s made alter a meeting between Boyle and DisL Atty. Edmund Dinis, who ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited newsmen will be admittt!d to the proceedings. Dinis said he had "no intention at this time" or calling Kennedy to testify. Dinis had indicated earlier .that he would be summoning Kennedy. The· oen~tor has' !'14', h'" Wf'!~ @Pe.rate 111 any 'fega1 i)Jl"oceedl'n1s nected wJtb the accidenlj--and bu can- celed a European trip in order fO keep h~aelf available, Dtnls said Thursday he hoped to b:e;gln thi!: lnqliest. within a week or JO days. He added that he would call 20 or more witnesses, includlng all persons who might have bad any knowledge Of events before or after Kennedy's car plunged off a b r I d g e on Chappaqulddkk hlmd, drownlng Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, a Washington secretary. · Meanwhile Dinis was advised that he will have to go to court iI he wants aJJ autopsy on the body of Miss Kopecbne, who is buried in Plymouth, Pa. The dead girl's parents, Mr. and Mn. • Joseph Kopechne af Berkeley Helg_bts, N,J ., have indicated they will oppose ex· humation of the body, and Dist. Atty. Blythe H. Evans Jr. of Luzerne County, Pa., ha! assured them they will have a chance to make their stand in court. In a letter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said: "No onler woul~ be consldtrid . In Pennsylvania without notice to the near reJaUves and an opportuni~y for them i. appear. in the proceedings ·for such an order. In order for our courta to conside? an order for •• autop<y. ll woilld 1"'!W,. a showing of lmperafive reasons." Jn Wilkes-Barre, Evans told newsmen, "It's not up to me. An autopsy will be: at the discretion of the Pennsylvania courts, All the .facts are in Massachusetb." Did J(enoody Ask, Kin To Take Rap in Crash? WASHINGTON (AP) -, C.olumnist Jack Anderson says Sen. Edward M. 'Kennedy asked his coUsin, Joseph Gargan. "to take the rap" for driving the car in which a young secretary drowned. In his copyrighted column today, Anderso n said Gargan "grimly said he would admit to driving the car." "In the cold light of dawn, Kennedy decided to face the consequences himself, and then he filed his terse statement with the Edgartown police at 10 a.m . .'' said Anderson, who co-authors the column with Drew Pearson. The Washington Post quoted Gargan as saying in Hyannis Port. f\1as.s., there wa s "no truth whatsoever" to Anderson'• story. Anderson, attributing his story to ''reliable sources'' and Kennedy "in· ti mates," said the senator had invited Mary Jo Kopechne to go for a midnight swim the night the car went off a narrow bridge. The-columnist described the swim as "a nocturnal adventure not uncommon on ~tarlha's Vinyard.'' ''Nor are these summer night swims necessarily viewed as evidence of im· moral conduct," Anderson added. He said Kennedy knew where he was going but ' Man Hit· by Car, Loses His Finger A Fountain Valley man crossing a street In downtown Costa l'ifesa late. Thursday suflered cuts. bruises and an amputaled right.first finger when struck by a ·car, poll~ said todM'· · •. , · Kerlrtit.h Ford, 5:4. ~f 912 ironwood. hane,'was !13ted t1'1 131lsfador)'0 Cor,d ftion at Coita Mtsa IM~morial Hospital, after. beln~ hi!ld overtu)lht for obseiVallon-for, posS!bl• lotemal ln)urles. . · Police said· f'(\rd w.as 'CTOl.91ng Newpor~ Boolevord •• West lBlh S\reel when , hi\ b~ a car drlV<n·by H<rbert Gurthcr, 38, of 4221 Sli'!us Av•" Orange... _, · . JnvesUgakn said Ourthtr hao nq dlance> to avoid Ille accident when ford appeartd suddenly lin1 front of hit car wfllle m>islnl Iii an -wltbool ·& Clil8Slt!'lk. . r The motorist wu D9t cit.cl. the car was going too fast and went off mto the wattr. 1'1ary J o drowned despite Kennedy's ef. forts to free her. In his exhausted state, Kennedy con· ceived the idea of asking "Joe Gargan,.lo take the rap for him," Anderson said. Anderson said Kennedy summoned Gargan and "returned to the scene of the di!aster to make certain that Gargan would be totally familiar with Ule circumstances surrounding "his un· fortunate accident." France Slates Tests PARIS (AP) -France will resume nuclear weapons tests In lhe Pacific in the summer of 1970, De~ense Ministry llOUf'CeS confirn\ed today. 111e tests. begun in !966, were au~ed thJs year under the g!)vernment's austerity F.O- gram. ' Orange Ce as& We11ther 11igh, patchy clouds won't keep the sun from roasting the coast- line over the weekend. But the predicted 75 at the beach bodes much fairer lhan. the 93 forecast for Inland. INSIDE TODAY Yachting can be dwfulty ter· lous to tho$e involved but som.et£mes iL btcomtt just Jun, partfcutarly tvUV Tllxrsdou eueping i~ tllti_ $Mmpttr ~uring th( , Ster (tan lj:epatt.01' ~s~; \Vctkll1dtr ~Qe 23. ' ·• ~ ~ •lrtti• ,. Mftt""11 It lt•K11t If MWi.t U.Jt Ctll""'"' • !*'Iv .. l'"Wllft 1• ~=~" a-;; :: c: ·: er.,....,.. '' ''""" ·~ it 0.1111 NittlCM t .......... ,.ts ::= .... !2 = """" :tt: &1191'ttilMtllf t l41 Mtclll Mvtllt& 1•11 fllllltflff 1•11 l""""'9 , ~ ll ~= aw: ~.... & ....,. """' .. , ~ ......... •· ........... ,, .,. , ' I I 1J Ir .. ,,~~~-~-----.. --------------------------------------------------~--............... $ ....... --~--•• ---• I DAILY PILOT H l\uss .Oust I Envoy in • • Retaliation • WASHINGTON (AP) -Russia has ex· ~Ued a diplomat from the U.S. embassy n .Moscow 1n retallation for the U.S. MJ$ter of an official of the Soviet United !JaUotL1 delegation on a charge of spying. The State Department, announclnti: the 11c:hange o{ e1pulsions, disclosed also flat the U.S. had wotested to ttte Soviet iov.ernment that the retaliatory action against embassy CQunselor J\1ilto0 l\ov· •er was "prejudicial to our relations." The So\•let delegation member al the J.N. wa! named here as Igor L. \!¥1reyev , a counselor of the Soviet niision at U.N. headquarters in New Vork. Tbe United States, press officer Carl Bartch said, told the office of U.N. ;ecretary General U Thant on July It Lhat Andreyev had "engaged In activities '11 the"U.S. wttlch constitute abuse or the privilege ot res:ldence within the meaning ~f Section 138 of the headquarters agree- menl between the U.S. and the U.N." U Thant's office was officially notified lhat "he could not be permitted to re- n1ain in the U.S." ~rtcb was asked what Andreyev was 11.ctually accused of and replied "we in· rormed the United Nations and the Soviets that he was eniaged ln in· tclligence acquisition activities.'' DAILY 1"1LOT l"Mrt '' Ji:k~1_. Kt1~W Splashdown Bartch agreed that in ordinary language this was an allegation of spying, bu:t said he had no information on what kind of espionage action was involved in lhe charge. Bauer to Protest Los s of Industry, Business Zones Using traditional backyard method, Patrick Lavalle, 3, splashes ~rotber, Timothy, 6. Fountain Valley youngsters found it was a cool way to beat Thursday's beat. They are sons of ~1r. and Mrs. Gerald F. Lavalle, 17279 Santa Luc ia St. Be1uer Power will soon be felt at Hun· til)iton Beach planning commisgion and city council meetings. ·y alley Police Ch~ge Five ;\Vith Assault After Party High scbool Truatee Ralph Bauer th is \\•eek announced his intention ol sounding Complaints have been lodged against cpjmition at both city meetings whenev· five persons involved in a noisy, rock· er s zone change from industrial and throwing Fountain Valley party and commercial .land to residential uses is police have dropped charges against four cons.idered. others originally involved. ''In the last few years several cities in Preliminary hearings on charges of the Huntington Beach Union High School assault on a peace officer face District have been granting variances Christopher A. Gray, 19, of 8372 Bryant and zone changes ~lch have-decre!sed Drivt, Huntington Beach ; Jack \V. the commercial and industrial land, ?le H. ki 18 1 8911 •1 1· A F 15aid. aw ru, , o 1• ar U1 ve., oun· Such change$, ht\ a~ls ara detrimenY la!Jl Valla,y ; and D,!ajel A. Campbell! 19, ta! to ~I dls"JWSmdlth<y!iialt 'of ~.ri!".111• Gl!<le, ljuntin4!0n Bf!'b. row the~al ba'se' abd plice the burden on Hearlnj's a~ scheduled at 9 a.m. ~ug. lhe homeowner. 14 at West Orange County ~tunicipal •·1 will m'ake it a personal effort to at· Court. tend as many of these meetings as possi· Held for trial ob charies of prowling li!e. ll[J'l. not afraid of stepping on were Barbara E. Martn, 18, of 6212 anyone1s toes because bucks arc im· Picket SL, Garden Grov.e, and 'f..tichael B. portant." Tolin, 19, of 411 Alabama St., No. 2, Hun· He asked that his suggestton be placed l~gt~n. Beach. on the agenda for the next trustee session Tolin s trlal has been scheduled for nnd urged that other board rmmbef'3 do Sept. 16 while Barba.fa Martin has been likewise. asked to appear Sept. 2. Trustee John Bentley agreed with him, Others \\'ho \lo'ere taken Into custody following the midnight bra\lo'l 1i1onday but against whom charges were dropped are Larry G. Rowe, 23, of 17301 Ward St., Fountaln Valley; John L. Nymari, 19, of 15541 f..fayflower Lane, Huntington Beach; Jon C. Lamberg, 2.1, of 12012 Laureletn St., Garden Gro\'e, and Mark T. Dewdney, 18, of 5002 Terrier Drive, Huntington Beach. They had been ar· rested on suspiclon of assault with a ~eadlI weapon . roimlaih vaU<1" potiee o!lioet~ with the aid of Hunting{On Beach and \Vestmlnster units, broke up the noisy gathering of the charged at 1?::11 a.m. flfonday. Police said decorative rocks '11.'Cte burl· ed a\ them from inside the house at 8911 liiartln Ave. when they attempted to transport Hawkins and Campbell to the police station. Offietrs then moved into the home and arrested the others. - i;aying that "if such zone changes affect lhe tax structure, the district has a real righ t to enter into it. We have to be sure or our grounds though." Bauer said lhfl.l during the past seven ) ears the City of Huntington Beach alone lost more than t ,000 acreS of industrial land to such zone changes .. Other cities in the district include f ountain Valley and Westnlinster. Heavy Action Reported; Big Break in War Lull? Viet President's J\1e n J\:'.sk for Huong Ouster SAIGON (AP) -Leaders of President NIPl)·en Van Thieu's political front today 11ifled a petition asking Thieu to oust P~mier Tran Van Huong. The petiUon calls for a new. '·prtsU· gi<Kl.s and able premier" to replace the alllng 66--y~~ld Huong. DAILY PILOT lteb•rt N. Wied f'rn•dt11J """ Publhhtr .I Jttk R. Cu•l•r J Vic• Pru•~"t 111d Geftfr• M•~•t11 • ' • Tholfl•I ICtt•il E:dltOf Tho"'-•1 A. Mu111h:111 Ml"t'l"t E:d,ltr "lh~fl w. 1,,,,, Ji1-•tH ld>IOI' Hu111l11tl•11 l••cll OHie• l09 5th 51tttl ,11;~9 A4dr111: P.O. l e• 790, t2•41 a Otltet Offltn ,1iNtY.l'O<I aru~ ~Ill \'ff~t l •IM• •'"•r' • CMlt M(w: 3JO Weit ltY $!<HI Lff\IN lff(.11: lll J'11ttll AYtn!le • • I • ,, SAIGON (AP) -The huviest action in nearly t1vo months was reported across South Vietnam Thursday. But U.S. military spokesmen said it was too early to tell whether it was only a brief break in the war lull or the prelude to renewal of major enemy operations. More enemy and allied casualties voere reported since midnight \Vedntsday than in any such period since June 18, \\'hen the current lull in major sustained ground fighting began. Allied com1nuniques reported a sharp Increase in groJ.1nd fighting just south of the demilitarized zont, in the coastal 101v lands south of Oa Nang, in the Cenlral Highlands, and in War Zone 0 northeast of Saigon. Along with this, the Viel Cong on Thursday made the biggest terror attack in Saigon since the lull began and a com- mando squad successfully invaded a U.S. convalescent hospital at Cam· Ranh Bay. Flood Victims To Get Refw1ds Proputy tax refund checks \\·ill be malled Tueiday to more than 1,200 ''ic- lims of last winter's floods. Coun~y Auditor Vic Jleim said Thursday. Helm said the refund wUI total $33,323, Including $8,717 to owners of seven flood · damaged goU courses, four of them in tbe .southern parl of Lhe county. Checks to home owners will range from $7 to S4~. Helm liaid. No breakdown of golf course refunds wu givel\, but courses. which filed claims 11rt t..quna Country C1ub VIiiage , Miss\on Viejo, Son Juan Counlry Club. S~re Cliff~ Country Club, Santiago, Yorba Lin· da and Creen River. Helm said most of tht check.s will be malltd to land owners Ln the: communities of L11una Beach , San Clemente, Tr1buco Canyori, Sllvertdo. S•nta Ana, LI Habra, Yorba Llnd• and Fuller10ft. Tax relief f()(" Oood-damaged property wu authorlted under a state senate bill and a oounly ordinanct. These two attacks accounted for 14 persona dead and 160 wounded. as \.\·ell as heavy damages. according to revised cll!ualty figures released by the U.S. Command. Allied military spokesmen reporled at least 147 enemy soldiers killed in ground a<'lions since midnight Wednesday. Allied losses were put at 14 Americans killed ;ind 164 wounded, 17 Soulh Vietnamese troops killed, 51 \\·ounded and one miss· ing, and 14 Vieln;iese civilians killed and nine v·ounded. But a spokesman for the U.S. Com· mand said the sharp increase in ground fi.Shting "i's not necessarily an indication of increased enemy iniUated acli\'ity." Beacl1 Trustee Asks Disclos1u·e On Drug Abuse Huntington Beach Union High School DisLrict Trustee Ralph Bauer \Vednesday asked the administration to provide him \\'\th a dclailed report on drug abuse pro- blems in the schools. "I know that this is happening and I am aware that there are aome people \Vho are willing to accept It. 1 dont," said Bauer. "I will pursue this with some vi&· or as time goes on." District SUperintendent ~tax Forney told Bauer that "drugs have no place on campus" and that the administration i~ doing all it cln to eliminate !ht problem, yet remain w1thin the \egal llmiu. Tru:rtee Bauer 5aid that If information about drug violation on the campus CtJUid be made available to the ptJbllc, the peo- ple would become lhe school's best ally in curtailing narcotics list. •·we don't want «i 1wetp these pro. bl ems under the rug and hide them," he v.·amM. •:11•11 tragedy when lhl.s !0!1 of thine ioes on." I GOP Briefing Dr. Leary Charges Dropped ·Nixon Welfare · Plan Revealed RIVERSIDE (UPI) -Th• di1trlct at· tomey's office here has until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint against Dr. Timothy Ltuy after charget agahtst him stemmin& (rom the death of a teen.ag~ girl were dismlssed on1echnical grounds. Charlene Rene Almeida 1 17, drowned June 14 while swimming in a lake on his ranch. He wa11 charced with contributing to the de1inquency of a minor. Munlclpal Court Judge Elwood Rich Thursday granted a defense motion that the misdemeanor complaint be dropped because it did not speclly how Leary con· trlbuted to the girl's delinquency. De.fense attorneys said it was not shown that Leary gave her the hallucinatory drut. The judge gave the prosecution until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint, and al&0 contlnues until Aug. 28 a hearing on a felony charge of po.1se1sion of a . reslricted drug against Leary and his wife, Rosemary, 33. Leary's "eternal bro\herhood com· mune" near here was aba.ndoned this week by about 30 of his follower s after a gecond death at the ranch. Toxicological tests are being made to determine the cause of death of John Griggs, 26. Chief Deputy Coroner \Vl\Uam Dykes said it wa.s suspected Griggs' death migbt have been caused by use of the drug tsilocybln from the mlllhroom tsilocybe u.~d by Mexican Indians, w h i c h is similar to LSD and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other specles of mushrooms and Jimpson weed, which contains belladonna, were also in Griggs' tent. Leary claims he was in his tent when f..1iss Almeida dro\\·ned and was away from the ranch when Griggs died. lte said he did not e v c n know ~liss Almeida'sname. but was closely ac- quainted' with GrligS. Kid . Picks W ro1ig Pot Custo1ner "\Vould you pay !or "'hat r"e just ordered?" a happy.go-lucky youngster kid asked a stranger at a restaurant in the Five Points Shopping Center in Hun- tington Beach this morning. . "For a lid, nay for half a lid, I'd pick up your tab," the strapger 811JWered, ac· c:ordlng to a police rtport. The IS.year old youlh left the establish· ment and returned \\'Ith what police Of· ficers said was a marijuana cigarette. lie didn't kno1v that the stranger "'as officer Henry liitchcock o( the Hu n· tington Beach Police Department. The youngster was taken to lhe Orange County Juvenile llall. A companion in a car outside the restaurant, Holden D. Thomas. 19, Glendale. was arrested for furnishing and possession of marijuana. WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Nixon briefed Republican conaresslonal leaders today on det.all.s of the far· reaching overhaul ol lhe nation's welfare system which he will unveil in a na· Uonwide broadcast at 7 p.m. PDT. Chan- nels Z, 4 and 7 wW carry tbe broadcast Jive. Nixon and the leadership spent two hours on the meSl!lage which the White House billed as the P.resident's most comprehensive statement on home front problems sinei! hJs Inauguration address in January. The White House announced before the radiG-televislon appeara.nce that Nixon 1vould send three !!peclal me;JSages to Congress next week spelling out the legislation needed for his proposal!. Press secretary Ronald Ziegler sald the first message on Mooday would deal with weUare; the secoqd on Tuesday with a new plan to eipand federal manpower , Widow Awarded $317,500 in Husba11d 's Death A Superior Court jury has awarded $275,000 in damages to the widow of a man who died four years ago in a Leisure World construction accident. The panel returned to the courtroom of Judge Byron K. McMillan late Thursday to assess those damages a g a I n s t Rossmoor Sanitation Jnc. of Laguna Hills, one of four defendants named by Mrs. Marguerite E. Cagigas o~ Pomona. ~trs. Cagigas, mother o{ four, will recei"e a total of $317,500 from the defen· clants she charged "''ilh negligence and responsibility for the death of Henry J. Cagigas, 27. Cagigas was one of two men trapped in a cave·in on Oct. 29, 1965. dur· ing underground construction on Avenida Sevilla. H.is companion , George E. \\'idman of \\lest Covina , was pulled from the col- lapsed ditch by rescue '11.'0rkers. \Vidman \va s granted ;30,000 in damages by the jury following its four.hour deliberation. Mrs. Cagigas will receive $12,500 fro1n Elmer Olson , a backhoe operqtor at the U!isure World site and $30,000 from Toups Engineering Inc. of Laguna Hills, a subcontractor. Aguew Voted Raise IVASH!NG70N (UPI) -The S<Mle voted Thursday to raise the pay of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Speatler John \V. McCormack, (O.'f..tass.), from $43,000 to $62.500. The bill also raises the salaries of the congressional leaders -Sens. Richard B. ""Hussen, Mike ~1ansfield and Everett M. Dirksen and Reps. Carl B. Albert and Gerald R. Ford -from $42,500 to $49,500. trainin.J pro1ram1, and tbe third on Wedne$day outlining a completely ne1v approach of fedtral·state revenue shlr· Jog. Because of the scope of the Pruident's revamping proposals the larget date for legislation to pot it into effect would be probably a year or more from now. The message came on the first an. nivers8!Y of Nixon's acceptance of tht: Republican presidential nomination at /\-!iami Beach last Aug. 8. In his acceptanct speech a n d throughout his campafgn, the President stressed his aim of getting people off the 1v~!fare . rolls and onto the payrolls or private industry. On Saturday, Nixon will 1vork during the morning, clearing his desk before leaving for a month's vacation at his new summer While House at San Clemente. In advance of Nixon 's speech, ad· ministration sources disclosed the ba.sie approach he would take to the mounting problems of welfare in America. The new program would provide a gpeclfic federal weUare payment to the recipients. At present, the amount varies greatly from state to state. Adults receiving welfare payments 1vould be automatically regarded as being job applicants. They would be enrolled in j~b t:aining J>l:Ograms which would pro- 1·1de incentive pay. Once they were plac· cd in jobs, they would be able to keep all or part of their earnings up to acutoff point "'hen they would no longer require \\'ellare help. Under the revenue sharing program, the federal government would ma.ke unearmarked bloc granb to the states for use in \\'elfare work. Beach Explosion Blasts 2 Fingers Off County Man A freak CXJ>losion in a Huntlncton Beach oil skinuner tank Thursday morn· ing claimed two fingers from the right hand of a maintenance man and caused second and third degree bums to his face. Polise said J . W. Stephens, 58, of 881 Calico St., Garden Grove was cleaning a tank at Huntington Street and Utica Avenue with a dry chlorine powder when the eiplosion ripped through the lank at 10:30 a.m. Stephens was ta.ken to Huntington Jntercommunlty Hospital by a fellow 1vorker, where ht may face possible am· putation of the right hand. The bltst removed his fourth and filth finger. Police and fire department In· \·estigators theorize that the explosion \\'aJ caused by hydrogen released from the cleaning powder. Hydrogen can be created when chlorine is miied with oil. It is a dangerouJ gas which can be set off by sunlight or a spark, police said. mid-Summer Sale fffturing MJ/DRJGJ/l Dy HeritCIC)e NEWPOU alACH 17!7 Wtttdfff Dr. 642·20SIJ Of91 fllft,Af,.,' ' IN1BIORS ....... loMl..Jft-o•r•,.. A,.anaW--.A.ID-NSI:> < Madrigal, • rom•ntic ac:cMt of old S~i.a. heturin9 &o.19, · low ••1sA-a pi.c:as with d••p hH.,., n1ooldin9s charactarirlie of e •tury old SpanU.h fun>1itur .. A ••W. at •fly priea •.• MaOricaa.I ii offarad at 1ub.tantial '~ Ovri11g our Aug:ust Sal.. .... .... 1419 SUt 0... s .... s..i.. U:o iKl.dn • .i..ted 9f'ovpl ,_ o.-i Hent'NOft, H.,.it•t•· N•iOMI. Ma19e C."°" nd rn•,.., _.her !in.,_ Henredon ""d H1 rit•g• Upholrt.y -,.1 •. A..tid1.1dioaa °" •ece&aori M. la...,_. •nd ptchrM •t• -•ilabla. LAGUNA HAC!i l<U -~ HWy. 4'4.6S!1 OPDI PllDAT "n\. t I I ' . Cal State School of Arts Set •. FUILERTON T h e establishment of the School of the Arts and the appointment of Dr. J. Justin Gray as its ac- ting dean were announced to- day by President William B. Langsdorf of Cal S t a t e Fullerton. Gray, a professor o! music wbo has served as aMOclate dean of the Cal State School of Letters, Art.! and Science for the past three years, begins bJs new duties Sept. I. An alumnus of University of Michigan, Gray eamed his master's degree from the Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester, and a doctorate in music from University of Southern California. The School of the Arts, BC• cording to Dr. Bernard L. Hyink, vice president for academic affairs, was formed In respoose to administration and faculty desires for closer coordination among t h e creative aru and for ex- pansion of professional pro- grams. The new school, according to Hyink, will have a dual func- tion in emphasizing a pro- ·f essklnal level of academic training and being equally committed to the development of professional teachers in the arts. At the same time it will offer many c<>urses in genera] education for all students in lhe c<>llege. Before joining the Cal State faculty tn 1961, Gray taught at University of Montana and Ohio Stata University. Meetings DEATH NOTICES BF.cK llldW'd LM lltcll. AH l'-ef 25'15 H. °'9ft9e, Cost• Mew. 0.llr of dull'!, A\19\lfl .!. Sl/l'Vl.,..t b'I' fa!Mt', Jll<""•rd 0. ll<ld. USAF, J-n1 IM!tltr, l"l'r!l• SI-I -~I and -s!t'9r. Servicft will Dto /191d NatiJ.-r a'! 1o:JO 1.m. Westcllfl C!MPff. 1-.......i Good ~ c~. tt""""8toll lleltdl. Wetk11H C/\IPo!I Mol"llMry, OlrKIOl"S. TAYLOR Wl!llaorTI W. Jr., cf Corot11 del ,.,.,.r, Oat• ti 6Htt\, AullUSI '· Survlv.d b'I' wffe, Ml.,.l'f't. Pr!.,.lt ..,...kts ...,It 11t4c1 at PKl!le View ,,.,..._litl Part;, ~ a.tell. Plclflc View Mort~ry, ......... ARBUCKLE & WELSH Weatcllff Mortulrf 1%1 E. 171h Sl, Cotta MtP -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dd Mar OR :1-HIO . Costs Mesa au a.wt • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Bl'Mdway, Co1tl Me11 u l.JCl • DILDAY BROTllEll8 Bualington v olloJ Monailey 17111 Belcb B1'd. Hanlington Bt1cb IC-7771 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17tl Llp.na Canyon JlHd Llpn• ll<adl ltf.Hl5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortaary Chopd 350I Padflc View Drive Newport &tch, Calllonda -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '1&01 BoUa Ave:. We1lmln1U:r llWUS • SHEFFER MORTIJARY Lopna B<adl 191-1131 Su Oemeate 0%-llOI • SM1'111S' MORTIJARY G7 Milo SL Ba:atfngtoll &tell - DAILY JILOT KIRKPATRICK'S ' . 2760 EAST COAST HWY • Corona del Mar • 673-2650 • Religion No Barrier Judge Grants Woman Divorce,, Child ' SANTA ANA - A Garden Nov, 21 that her estranged of which went towards Cost of BUY NOW ,and SA VE! OFFICIAL RCA Color :rv , ' CLEARANCE SAiiol! -R--G--1~ ft'_.;:..;; Grove molher1s devotion to an husband, David, should have courses of instruction in the ol»cure religious f&hh did not custody of the lllile girl. ratUt and counsellng costs at a mean that she was an unfit Jones claimed through his church center in Tustin. person to rear her 2-year-old attorney that his wlfe 's deep Mrs. Jones ~led that she daughter, a Superior Court interest in the Church of had drastically cut down her judge ruled Thursday. Scientology and her c<>n· payments to the church in re- THE CANDIDATE •.• Big screen ci>Jor •• SALES ••d Judie Robert K n e e l a n d siderable e x p e n d i t u r e s cent weeks and had actually granted a n interlocutory towards advancement of the made no contributions during decree ol divorce to Mrs. faith interfered with her duties the past month. WJtnesses Yvonne Jones and ordered as a mother. described her as a "good that her daughter,' Monique, It was testUled that Mrs. mother'' and a "loving person be returned to her. Judge Jones had spent some $1,500 who takes very good care of Robert Gardner ruled last during the past sb: months, a11 her little girl." portable has vivid, true· to· life New Vista picture, Sportabout Chassis wjth new Solid S ta t e Components, po~up handle, EL-442. 180 sq. in. picture. SERVICI . ,, SERVING HARBOR AREA. 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Many 8.ssociaUons also offer extensive and effective job placement services. The NationaJ Shorlh and $1,000,000 COMMERCIAL FINANCI EQUIPMENT LEASE -SALES LEASE BACK ACCOUNTS UCEIVAIU AND INVINTORY FINANCINw. GREYSON CO. LTD., INC. 2400 Wdt Cutt Hwy., lultt 11 f-NEWPORT llACH -642-1112 TWO ACRE PARCEL OF PRIME C·2 PROPERTY BEING OFFERED FOR LEASE INTERSECTION OF IROOKHURST AND ADAMS CITY' 0, HUNTINGTON IEACH, CALIF. For lnfomuitlon PlffM CHtlttf CITY OF NEWPORT HACH, CALIFORNIA JJOO Nowpott llYd. 17141 673·2110, Ext. 21 -More docfott, de11ti1'1, etlot"•Y• ind profe1tio111I •p1o~l1 1n• TAI bet1u1e they c111 d1p111d 011 r•li1bl• llr'ltCI , • • • ·= FOR AS LOW AS $)450 PER MONTH TAI COii ---'°'' pH.. C.tl NOW for .. ,..._,. ..d 1.tol'Mlrtfo• • ROUND TRIP ANYWHERE IN CALIFORNIA 85( For caf1s after 6 pm. ,..el<days and all weekend. J minutes stltion-to-s!ation. plus tax. --@ ·" K~ilue • Kon• • Hawaii "EMERALD BAY OF THE" KONA COAST" ' -. llll llONA COASTS FINEST llSIDINTIAL • COMMUNITY • WHITE · SANDS BEACH ESTATES • '· ' ' Rare Fee'.Simplo Homosifes From $12,000 with Excellent T orms FOOT PATH TO WHITE SANDS BEACH PLUMERIA STREET TREES MOSTLY OCEAN VIEW SITES A.l.L AVAILABLE IJTILITIES WIOE •PAVED STREETS ·_,.EXACTING DEED RESTRICTIONS ~ ·"1 · •• • ' • THE BLACKBURN CO. DEVELOPERS . ' 1823 Wostcliff Or. ' Newport S.ach Phono: 6-41>-0231~ hi~-60 -A-1f1I ~ .. 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AmtrE1 1111 6 2.W. 2l'll ~ ""' B~IVnUG 1.12 7' ~.,. AmrE1 Pf1.'0 l •l •I 41 +1 8rO'l'll CO r~ II'' AMBAC .$0 11 11!1 11\lo 1n6 -\to llr-Co J>f 7 N Ame ..... 'co:!!.' ... 90 J 20.. 10\i 20'» + °" llWll Mwtf~ I -.... 24 In-1110 llt'o -1-Mt e-Slloe 1.51 '1 ••' • Amelt plJ 'iO S• 11?''1 1111'-. 110\lt -1'~ llrvn. .... 07" ~Vt m; A....,mw,,,",.!"-1t U14 U\1 U -I~ llucvEr 1.10 y, " m' ~~?I~ 1J 71 -"'-lluckl Co .to 111.~ 1f Amedcll !.&ct 1\1 !2 50''> SOYt _ ~ 11\IOoet t" .6"1 "" '"' 8tktt 1 ~ 11 H>'• U -c, lluffF0<9 LIO :1' ~Vi AIDortloC .12 5 4 1" 411• Al'/> -1, llUloYI .llO • 1 """ C~n 110 '7 •1>.. ~'• A1\'> + .. Run• .IUmo 6Vi \~ AmCv1n 1:15 10 281• 28 11•11 l \o 81m'cll P'fl.j(t 6~ &6\li Am Ol~!IH 1 2 7• 2• :u ~ llurl 11111 I .00 21\~ 7'\lo .r.ou.IV! .120 16 n~ 12 ... n:w, I• llUtlldV .70 .u,, 1 ADU.I pl.... 2 ll'I> IJ .... lJVI eurr•"-• .6tl 16 .. 11Vo AmEtPw ·1.51 llS 36\'0 lO 30\~ _ \\ ll111Uftv 1.2'1 '1 '~ Am e ... 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'< ~=~~n 11't":J 11 2' AmPhctl ll9e 61 10" lb'~ ID'* .+ ,. i 1rll1le Mt ~ ~ "-llt!ll'Cll ·.•111 21 206\ft 200"1 201'1> -IV. 1ro C&bll J >4 •''o Am Rarch wl JI 52 50>4 511., :. 1rol'Lt 1.'1 1~·~ 101.lo "'" Seit l ~ n~. nv; 11\0, .••• '"1•pTtfl I 60 I •VI A,•,~,','o ·,'!. 1 t II~ 11111 t•'lt , C:1rr~rCo '60_ • ., '" !AO JG 7t'i JO + ~ !'«rGn l ntf " lU 171 AmSoAlr .n 1• •O>lo lf'" l9'~ -v, ~~rtttW :a ~ I Am Ski 1 SS l&'io JJ\.]71, -''>~ti~ JI n•, JJ'• Am5rd 1>1•1S 1J lot\~ 101"'1 101'~-1 '"1"1f<.~f .t.t "'< ' '• Am Sltril •I 4 ~ u>. 161. -1-. ,..•ltrTt \,. 6' 4S A Sll!1f' 1.60 31 ?~ .. 1l'~ 141, CCI M1.Qo, ' •' l\mS ..... Pl' .ti ! 10•. to" 10•, + •i. rPCt> C1> .lo 11''1 121'1 Am Ta,T ),d K16 53'> $l 51'> + '·'i' '"fllnH.-C• 2 )' ,. ""'ww~. 56 • 1: tl~I!··· -•:,'"ti•~ 1>1A•.~n 1J'1 uv, "-WWSo! 1j5 110 1•"• 1ev. 1111 -'•~en'~ 1n1 ~o t~ i &"~ AW Prtf 1.)1 >10 17''t 11 111~ .,. ·~ ... t111Fdv ·'°" 511• Sil! AW •.ID• l •l 11111 pz., 11'• "'• + ~·"en Hoo 1 j1 u•. 90" "'" l ine · 1 111,\ 11•1 21 v, r"" 111Lt 1 » .fl.'J 5V. A!Mlel< .60 •S )] 11'~ 13 + '> '"Ml!IPS i'U '"' '''• AmlH;l~c .llO 11 .51'\ ••'• 51•~ •l>o. "entt..~r:1 ·., lO l!V1 AMIC CD JO 1S5 "'• 21'~ Jl~ + .......... 1.u•w f11 U'lo 13"• A.YI( P'll.10 1 llO llO IO -1 rfft! SW I '111!1 , ...... 1'\V1 AMP '"" ... 's u •, IS AS -"''"""' Sov~ ·~o 1114 91 Am1>t• C0<1> 106.I 310, 31"1 ll1 ~ -14 Ceo.Tell/I ill •,•,:1 ','o•• ·.~· .... , .J .40 U 38lo ~'l'I :Ml, + "'o Cf"•O 1.IOi> ., ,. ,., ., >n 11.ii. 11 n f.e•l·~d .Ill 7• 1~'f1 An1cond 1.90 V6 JO,. ?t~ lO>t, + >,'• CM1nll"-lr 80 .Hlil n•Ao Alld\Hock .IO 26 •l V. •1 Al -1 ...... S!I 90' ~'" ~ Arlf,,..Dt-lSv 1 1 "" '1\lo ,.,,. .i. IOo C/\1dbm ·inc l•V! 1~ And Clay 1.20 20 lS'o .:UV. :t.S'ilt +II\ C/\e""'S 1.20 )!Iii 11l~ A1>1Kfw<1> '>O •l 1''1o 1' 71•. -... C/\1rte<NY 1 s w AKOOU 1.41 n 3:l n,,"' :111\ + v. rnneMri 1 JG 11 1• A"''' o...., )I l"'• ~~-. +l\/o C/\i.;ker Miii ''l't""" ARA $Vt ·'' n 101"• "~ ..... _,,,. r"'=m•I'> 1.M 3''' ~"·• 'lr•~f'I,.,, 160 11 •"'• •< •< -""Cl>emHV 2.<11 1J 2JV, Arl1P~bS¥( I ,27 75"9 111"' 15'1! + ~ '"'"'""'·~ .?O ''·• .,_ ll•l•n• ns ·'" ,., " ~··, )I + •, ~lltt ~lo ' 21 lO ArmtoSI I 60 la 19'1 79•1 711:\t -~~ .,,....,.,,, "I 1.iJ••>ltA•"'' ~I •'1 4 11 '' ,, -'t'1C/\lcEtsl 111 11 n Arm1!Ck 10 ll "° l'I 39 -l'l'i '"'""" ••1>" ,,,,.. ll\~ Arm,.._ Ill:,'~ J.,, '"' 1 '"'~ ""'1 Cll\M5tPP ~I II 21 ArmlluO 160 11 391, lf 3'I -11 "''5" ,.<c•s 1'J1., 1t ,.. ... c~·· "O ' '''• J», ,-.. CM Mu•lt l 101\ 11Vt A'vl11 Ind I 16 1t'• 11 .. 211.4 + ._ '"'P••u" 7 I '', to'lo .r..nld 011 110 1~• •l>o •I>• 41 ->.. CllJ l!I PK 11~ U~ •s..i ~•t·~ • ,,...,. 1-1iu.. -•·"""'"ct ''" 1' 11 Aud DG 1.20 •? 4S"• M'~ ••''» -Vt Clll!IP ctHW 11.\ltlt l\1d<-,, l.l'r~ 1 3"1 1"' '"~+•.~'~I T'"• 1"" 1•• 11 AudTr~n ,41) 1 11i1 11''• 12'\i ••. Clloclr.Full ./iO 23\/'> :IS~~ A!l(!•EI 1 'D 4T ?<.;.• T ?"'> -I• ,_.,,.,l Cl' •~ ••~ t'h AllCEI 015.17 2 lQI 9'1,'/ "Ir.I •.•. CCII (Vpf.!Od lll.li lll~ All llltlof"l 1 ]<• 1111\ 11n>, )" ..-~'""'"! 4j 1 1~ Jl>o. Allll:d\ Pll.7S z1G !.I"' ~v. SI'~ t ·~ C~ml•r i 7 "4 All •l!!Ot "' l 'l"'l 1'~ ll!O'~ 7•l rtn• ... "' • .. l.t'.r. 1t\>. .r.llll:th Pn.IO .. n~ T.I 131, -I.I. C!llGE-oU n 1$1.\ I~ All!~C~~ I ~· 7~·1 '>' 1•·, ... '\ ,..,~ r><< ~· • l?'~ ll'• Atilt Coro 51 51> S';' J'li +-I.lo C!nMilf 1.«11 1"9 614 Aurnr• Pl~• f I• 131, " + ·~ ,-.• ,.,T•I ' oo 2''• 1?'1 A\/1~1>1\lt Ole •4 l~~. Hl'I l~io -V. CITFln 1 90 •V, m Au!am!n Inn 1~1 14'• IO 1"• -'•""I"'~•( • 2.''' 2Al'I Avm Co 1 20 111 25'1 ;s,... 25'• -~-Cl!y Inv .:ill~ 4~ 1\lo .r.•co nU.;>I' ~ s1·, "'• ,.,~ +IV>ruv•ftv ,,n? Av...,. Pd .n s 51~ 51 \o'J 51"1 -VI Cllyl11 1>1\.Jl ACROSS THE f 0 Un tr Y. "' Av,,.,11"1: •O 9li U •••1 U•o -'" r •t• ""! ·~ •Z:•{'.!.,!!<:;;;::;':l"'•"' .. "''iAvOll Pd I '0 ~· 151'~ U611 IJ.6U, -1 Cl•rliEG 1.lfl bridge, social, fr temal and AllK 011 G• 11 1•h 1•1~ '''"' -\, ,.. ..... .,., , -8-Clt•<:,1111 1_60 hobby-oriented clubs are pro-ftlbckW 1 16 lM ,, ,, 13,, _, '• ~~l.'p11,;1 •; viding a forum (often through M ·, I F d Aa~ro111 61 7J 1~1. l"'" 19•'1 -...,, '"n•n• 11'> trade m a g a z i n es) r or tllll3 i llll · S R:~~luft1·~o l: Il~ ~~: i~:.: ± V: :;~11.:~:ea,,,.;io members to sell or swap R:::",,01l~· if ~l1.; f!~ ff +l'i c~A Fini .so various equipment. Ski equip-~:~::0~111.~! jl ~I.,, fi~ i,! = ~ ~::!, s: A~: Bisi( Inc .90 14'1 " 1'" C>1SG, ptl.lt menl is jus\ Oil(> costly __,.. __ Risk n• 2 so 11 "°'" .e·~ llll~ + ;, c-co1 1.n " h' h b ~· .'"-""' 111H Mio 12 lO'o !Olo ICJ.o -1-Coc.1e1lo 1.10 category In w 1c: mem ers &1111 Ind SI •rv. •P• •I"'_,, cart Pt! 1.10 who trade. buy and seU can ~~Zll~rt~ !-:~,·~ i,;! ~,",,IF1~1 c, .. 1.u 1 Grw1tt 1.M '·"I''" 1"" DI! u 11•1> 110•.., 1 11 1~ + ,,., co111n1 Al• 1 NEW YOJU( CAP)Ccfi~;;,c 11."':11.,Ft~t Fno 6•S Pl SI~ 690 711 IU$t11Lb 80 11? ~ !:~ tJ~+1~?:~rn~:f11i achieve b ig savings a n d -Tnt 1n11ow1no ""n· oms Id • '3 S.'M Ft .. G·'J 6 o 1 61 1nc:om s.s• e:os ft!~~k\:'i: ·~ 5 13 12,,. 12~ _ ,. CDh trld ,5{lct economies. 1a11ons, 1u~He<1 by i:.o .,mo1· ··ll•• ·" IF"" Gii> 11s s.1~ s1oc:~ 1.so 9.1' !e•rlna• 1 ' '' u JI +111o Colt In 11u.1s But perhaps the .b1ggesloea""· '""· ,.,e 1nvn1 t611osoFours11 11."'un EL Gl!I •.n10,2•j..:-"''"·50 ,~, :~ ~., ~~.:.:·.,c,•"-~•'•.•• • :irOllH•~°"~~~~i~ ~~t~d :~:~·nJ"°'"nd" 111 •os~·· we.i 1" 6.Sl :::~: J,, '1 l:l~ ::~ i.:lt:!:.~~vr1 1i~'.60 single fringe benefit Io r ~ orlcei " ""'1"' ~roti. '·" 111.•s Fr1n1t1111 Grouo· aiwl!I n .M 7l.M 11:::~~1~ :~ ... .. -.-. .. ........, - joiners is a new type of mass· ~i:J:i 1>1v~'c11•= ~:m: ~~ 1 ~ l ~ c ..... s1 • 11' 1..s1 .,,. e"" •.10 10 ... 11eoc11 cr11. 2 z~ ~:~ n:~ ~ ~ ... c:~~~ tn h . "°"' lt>ldl or n.,~11111 omi> As 15111611 ONTC HUl2.1JIN~ HM H.1'26.U ll1k11Pt! .50 .53 2•\io ;;.,. n~-lloCombEn :t.'11 mere and1sed g r o u p in· (1511.f'dl Tnu"d~. o"'r>e' ~ 11 9 1·• U•ll 6 to 1 •i New w• ,, ,, 14.56 CamE p11 ,10 · I I h Ith Al~ AtW Camp lld 9.1• 10.11 .. ComlSoN .4~ surancc, parllcu ar y ea , Abe(an ·2.11 2.1t com" i.d ''" 10 111com 2 32 2 s.. NY vei.1 16.2111.11 com1so1 Pl.IO life and automobile. Chicago's ~~~:r:td ~.~ ~:~ ~~~~d 1~ ~1 il:~~ "'•P<lrn 1.n 'Jl New1.... H.61 u" / £~wEE"1>1f] Contl·nental Cas It C Afut•• 10.m 10.0? Ot'llOI 1n 11.75 u .11 ""..., Am t.3110 2• N0<e1u u .JO 16.30 A d c..,,.,.. 011 ·" U3 Y 0 • • Atptt1 I'd II :)6 11.'1 l>Mu In • 61 S,IQ c;.n Si'< 1112 11 2'2~nfpl't 1.40 t 11 stI'O a ta CamPUI Sci "·hich specializes in J)UCh in· ~c·: ~:;: ;:: c~ f~g a I~ It~ Glllrtl!t 12.10 12 1010_1ne91 I.OJ 1.15 ~= .. .lA111s I surance, has 1.500 diffe rcnl ""' o~r11 1.~,\11.11 ~'-" w '·" 1.s1 Grooo s.<· ·100 Fd 1•sa11.9J c""'~ccg .60 t . I . 1145 .11. A.Et •Pl t.U .. r11w I" 11 1111 H Aero Sc I C• t .J.6 'l101 I'd 9,111 I0.11 E 1 COii EdT1 1.IO pans ln\'OVlng lnL 1011 :'.I""' Grth ft ,17 llQcltV!lll M M••66.~ Com St 1l.=71'.61()n• WmS lS,IJIS.17 .. at'illll~~s f011Ell~ "'' y r n n urance a es ""' M"' 9 •o 111.21 oe11w<• 1,'.·,',",'·,',' ,,,, ,_ , ,, c .... e r>1c•.~ I ·1 ed r . r AmN Giii 1,11 1 ci helf8 lr ..... '"' 11.6111,11 !oo•"" l.~o . !':Oii food$, ea •1 ·, S S I Am Inv 1 . .19 1.49 OKll tnc I ' 11 lJ,IS F I Ad 9.lO 9 95~,N .. ll IS Oii 16.0~ ......-ConEdll Pl S 3! Or 0 r aSSOC\a JOnS Al'•.~~· G•ID'•" Olvkl ~r J 1l •at e•Y"'1n ~t~ it~ ~:"~Ji" ~·~~ ::~ ~:~:11;:,:·Sf (lawyers. de n ti st s , ac-~~:n 1rn 1rit; g;~, ~11 :·;: ::;: ... ~~Ot'I: n111 "·'' 16 . .i Ri A • ~OllN•tG '·'' countants. skiers. etc.). ~':t" l.,Y i·:~,i·~ti~:~~ j;;;:;·; ~~l :·,; :.fl~::1m ,;:~li:i! ..:. se !!am c:~~-pllJ: To suggesl the savings a JO.. ... ,_1, 1:13 1:cs E~ll)f18.tto-..~r" · ~:;"°~ ~ J :.J: ~1:~: 12.11 u .oi LJ c11111A1rL .so Id b . · Asl•On 6 l!> 6.9• 61ltn 10.16 11 .16 1 1, 1, l j_~ "l•n !~• !l.'16 11 07 C1111t Ctft 2.,0 year-0 man uy1ng. a $10;000 Axe Mou9ht11t1 : Grw•n 11 ?' 11 41 H&~wL 11.39 17.11 Pritt TR 21.1~ n .14 Astrodala announced today C""I Co1>11 .:JO f' t r Jd Furd 'I ~.~.~ 7,"6 lncam 6.G5 6 61 H .fY ~el ~.IS PrD l'ul\cl ID.;!!! ln 3Q C"" Cl> 1.IO Jve-year t erml pof ICy$tGWt' OU. f,"= 8 : ~~ f·~ if':~ ~! .:';' i'1 ;~ H:i~e ~or 17,u 1l.6G ProYOnl •.IO S.25 earnings Of $223,000 Or JO Cents ll e: :::::: pay a Ola 0 In Sci C11 s ., s.n """"' 11 ,. ••.YI t<lfjJpe '" J.21 Purlt~n '·" 10.IO Ct Mt I 20 · f th' Pl1"-' t 6n ~ 60 Etret 1J 32 u .. H M1n11 1'•1• IS.II l'utn1m "uflds: per share from Sales Of C1111r.....: .10.. premiums or IS coverage e 111, I'd 1a:n 11:11 F.mrt r.c fu 1:it H1111<mn , •• a 6• eoua 10 3' 11..n conr ou 1 !Cl th h C ]·1 · d · •·· 11-'"' ~•? 1lJEl!ff'9Y uoo1•00 n1 Glfl 5.11 s.,, G!Ol'1I u .uis.u $5,008,000 for lhe first quartercon1011 p1'2 roug a a 1 orn1a rugg1s"" e"''"" 51 , 11 10·50 F:nio,.. f•• •n 1:.1 rnc • H '·" Grit> 1• 7!11,.1' !~' \" ' association -one of hundreds eo51on 1:11 .:c. Eouu., t.511o:ci 1,~" ~1• 1°1.'.·'• '•'.',', •,~.~.,, 1.21 '·°' ended June 30 according to ""' el .n • . Br"""'' l•:MIJ.SO ~CNI Gitt 110\\19,16 '"" .... n " 7,1? 1,11 • crotrol Oala now offenng such low-cost 1n-11u11oc:k 1! ·~ 1~.110 Euex u .tJ u.95 l0M ','"'• 11.1111.n vi,1t 10 ... 11.o1t1 James A. Yu-"e r, board ~~.!.~pt•, .. " .. CG fd f 11 t.'1 -._...,, In "·""' 1 1.~J II( d 7 )ct 1.00 VOYlll l.>2 9,!l Ill\ '"""'"' s urance. The same coverage C1nadn 1s:1• u .61 E•olo< n .'1 2,,.,. I~'~":',., 't~l !~:~ ::: .. ~ec11 1~·~ 1t:f chairman and p resident. This 1~~1 1~ an an individual basis would ~!:!1 ~ :J! T:ll ~:~e1 11u 17:~ H:S: 1"'"'"' s.95 •.5111tOSP11111 1.t1 1.n -· TR , th. $2?t $ttO c""'' Shi' 10111 11uc:ecr "•111132211•<111$1'« sni. &1s •.n5C11•"'1r u .1216.S5 compares.to a Joss of '179,000 -"'nd 110 COS Im , or more. c1>~"ftt11• .,.,j,o1: · Ffd Ct• 11.• u ·ss 111• CoA 11.~ "·'''Scu<ld"' Func11: 1:11.oe .5llb ll•ta11 i; 01u13 c1d • """ 16.•s "·'° 1nv "1"" 1.•• '·"' •nr 111v u.,...111 or 12 cents per share from ,~!!',' ' . .!! rom 51 t 11 1nfi<t Tmd l•ll171J Inv lndlc 12.6'1?.P S11<I l!.ISl!.15 .. '" .. ~ THE 'IESS 'GE o f thi"s -1-Grwlll 1 "6 1:0t1 Flft8~< 11 p,;,.,. ' '""' "('> •1 0.1 11 1, '~· 1•.11 ... n s I s of 14 ·-000 ·1 lh 1· t CorGW 1 »i " " .. v 1...,""' 1., , •• o.,nm I ?t , ff lflVtslon Group: com SI 10.1• 10.1' a e ,U<N, n e !J'S c ... -11n · .u umn is clear· no matter what S1>tt1 111 l.l• 1rr -1 ,·,, s:M 1 0~ ndl •• ~ s.nSK 01v 11 .'212.:M • 1 1 t!l68 c-1" .w ·. . C""'' i;;rou lncom I.XI 1.7' Mui 10.1511 ,U 'K 1-<iull l.6' •-00 Qt.'3 r er 0 . r:~~~I .~ t ype of assoc1allon you belong Fvnt! 11J911.~5 ""'" '·' 1 •l P n~ ~JI •"SK Inv •'.·,',' ,!,·,•, Jt th f"fth t' CPC Intl 1 70 . . f·n• •1" "o '''' "'• '' 1111... Stock U.6111.;e ''"' A"' . " was e 1 cons""U 1ve cr&111 1 '°" to. look into what savings your s1>r11<t 11 11 11.1e1c·1 1/ " ·~ 1•?'1 ~-.. tt • M 9.n s.1 Specs 1s.1t 1'.,1 .. ,. tromo'<11· .lft II COULD ff c~-"'<1 n 97" ,. F$• 1ns1~ 1 ,_ '·'° v,, P• 1.69 1.36 '~ 0t111 1t.11 n n Improved quarter for the elec· r,.~:i:,",'~,.,,', group o ers o r o er o ·on111: · "·t ,, . .,,1 • 11 • ,, 1 .. v Rr111 ,..,..~.11 SIOt t .n 10 61 .,,..,. t ·•• be ,....,,v ••• •00 1'11 N•• '·" 1.u +s1t1 21 nn.fl \'"""' ••1 1~.•1 tron1"cs m•"ulactur1"ng 11·rm c..... '"' O J..,, mem rs. Fund 11.61 u .n F~1 s1er1 olll.:16 .... li •v•tt •• 1• 1~.•• s11 ,,.,. 11.1112.IO ...,, l'.n..,cortr: wi ,.,, •.m t.Ol ""'/If\ I t ,:14 t.~• he d d b t Cr'W117tlt 1.1'1 Wershow - REAL ESTATE AUCTION EXCEPTIONAL [~~~ LOTS IN SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. TO BE,PfFERED IN 4 PARCElS AND/DR 1N GROUPS TO SUIT TH£ BIODERS. Home of the Summer White House 2 OUTSTANDING C·2 LOTS FRONTING HWY. IOl·A Near Fwy. on/off ramp. • Each lot is appro". 3,600 sq. ft. 1906 S. El C.mino Real 2 CHOICE R-3 OCEAN VIEW LOTS 'n block from Ocean •In •n •r11• of new apartmtnt bulldln1 • Lots ,,.. et the inttr· stctlon of Avtnida Monlllvo •nd Avenid• Lobeir•. AUCTION SALE 10 TAKE Pl.ACE 1906 S. El Cimino Real SAT AUG 23 Cont Hichwly IOl·A ., • . SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF • at 11 A."1. CONTACT AUCTIONEER roR DESCRIPTIVE LITERATURE ••u '· Wershow c. •W:l-llH • If.Al 10~) 1111 M(l.t0$l AYL • tOS AllCUCS. uur. ~. CJIJ) tJ.l·l~I ltU .._.Mil ll!wl • -....-.. ~ t~ • flltl m .1111 ~ BROKER COOP_l;R-'JION IS t~COUR.1.GEDt t Hncoc;~ I M 1.71 Sw Invest I." t.n a C Y a rJeW managemen Cr" l pf4,1!1 )Ollr1$ln 11.12 21.12 ~""" l"v 1• '11<..o J , t:TS Corl> ,.., '<~.,·.,.,, F"n",. s1Frm G1 5.u 5," team. The new y r eported first r.U!'l~hv c .. Cu• 11 1'.92 10.IO \!&It SI ._ U •9 15 $UIU•en .n cu1 ~i 2n 11']'>11 s1t111m•11 Fu11c11: quarter earnings were greater c::..."i.O~~·~ ~~! ~~ t~ 1i.l~ :Id..~"" ';::1 1 ;:: than the t otal earru"ngs ol 'c~',',"w' w, "• '• Cut l(J S.l• l .12 !>c!t11 • '' '·" v f~ Sill r::r, n~ 1i1:1 RM ,:.g.r~,,-i $1$4,000 for the prior fiscal f~ ~;= "' · •.no 1·1' c ... 0o u .11 "·11 year end•' March 3t. Cui s. .... s.~ S1odl: IA.OD U.OCI ~ ,. .. , .. , •,. •.61 Suo ll'IGI 6,11 1 '1 l'J11t1 ltlv '·'!! t<11rcli;b J.u '·°' ~u .. 111s1 t .10 1~."' The company pays no g:~t 1~·, ' . .?', IC:n!ck Gt !~ •• , 11.tl ~YllC, GI 11.18 n.» .,. Lt•11111 10.1111.01 t,y,R AP :io.~ ~.oe FecleraJ income taxes because ~=~~!r"! f'.,~ L•• If.Kii l•.l 1'.15 j••cflri 10.:JO 10,73 ""•In'"' 1 ,~ LJt11tri., '·" t·n ec~nc1 •.1) •.PO of tax·IOSS carry~orwards. oM. "'B' 1> Litt Stlt •ti ,U fltlvsl I.It •.. Liie 111¥ '·'' 'I' TKl!l'IO( I~· • 56 Eaminn in the first quarter o;;:;:.·,,;~ ,'.• lino 'l5 6. 'Tftfl• Gt 2?,(lf U.U erw Looml1 Sivie,: T-· Mlf 1.1111 1 1. include a tax credit of $118,000 o;;,~·;;; i..;0 r~n·d 11 ll ~J.~I T'1n Ct• 1.15 I.SJ 5 •• h "•""' ••\ C11>U 11.s111..s1 rr~v l:n '·~ "·'~ or cen~ per s are. Dool!K 1111 111 M"t 1••11••1 \IOor f'cl 16S111.ll '", _ _, h d '° Mtnl'l!11 1.01 1'.u 1...,,c 01 .::1.1 •.13 n su V1.1ata, ca quartered In 0:::,•,·•,·, •,•, M•" "" lt l •HJt TwnC t11c •16 !.20 • h · · d J d •···· M111Glfl 11'n1,:o:i•)r1" Mu• 111.~'"·M ""a e1m, 1s a eveoper <in "~····~, .. , Mr• lr 11 '6 I~ <1 lllld t.U 10.G \ f t f d ta ~RG~ 1.10 M11H •·•• .:,. v1111n """''-.manu ac urer o a ac· ..,. • ..., "' ~ MA'"'" 11 "n." "'""' 1.~ t·'J quisition and control systems. R:~~~~"'i .!O McDoll t.ll 10.22 lnro-n I' M 1 •1 o .. Ed t>JO NlldA ~V 6 II 7.11 S..J.M 7..IJ 1,.56 "'" ':: Mooc:l'IC•l •.(ljlU.)7\ll!j C•" ""•viii O 1~1!!0',,60 Mood.... ll" I• so •1119 ._, .... Fd : ltlarleet ,.f:,:r~.·~ ·~ M«ton Fund•~ V~I 1..111 1.., •-. Gtw!ll IG. 1' 11.12 lncom S.2' 5 111 0[1mln11 1 IO I~ ~.GS A,O Sp! SI! 7 Sl l.~l l'I "'~'"' ' <Cl l~sv• 7 01 1 '' VllUS $1>! ~·" t·" ~\1f' fbf~ t:1" ~~ I·lf '1:n =b' ~..:.71~ Sy11a .. ols 01:•1• : .. Mv 0m0 s.• .n '" •11<1~ s t10 1.'3 • U "'•"<>Id "" Mu O.,.ln 1n )111.Jl 1111111 • u 7.CS DIOl1tr111o ,6'1 Mitt u.n 112' 19.,~ I. MCI<• I ~S t '11 1)11t1n911.,. IO ,,,,, .. tnt : .. in •HSI t11 11 71 lito ,.,... '°""'"' II I lfl'I' 10 l\'fllboh lmd D!llM pf .. ' Nl!A Moll 10.JJ lG,'9 1•~ Mu 17 .11 lJ ~' lfl ftM 1toca !Nrklt rWorh. -ltt l')l11aroroo ~...., "M Wk Ill'( 1141 Wt!191tn 11 U ll t1 ..,., Dl....Club .5' NII lllO 1(m 1(09 ••! Ind ,.\. 1'11 SllM fltUO'n ... UMftkl•L 1')1"'""' ,l(lb N>1! I""'' f1t 1:<0 Wllllell!I l •.36 U.6t ,_-Alie nifl O< tldfll. ~Artfl_Ull H id Dh!St" 1.l'll N•! ~ Str; .,.,.!M•flt t ~4 10J1 "' 1"6t eh«; '\l dividend•, e>-~"'rtCI hrPl!r""• .Of! .-~1~11 10,l• 11 ,. Wl11lleld -v111 llr Hid "' ,,, • .,.,,, f-P#t'lbll 111 Dorl'IJM111 .IO 80t'lf 5 Q SI! 'lll"llfl f ll / 1' stodt dlP'!M l , .-tlmtfH, rtll 11 ,,.,,,.. I' I IJ• Dl~ld i41 .: t.#O<lll l 07 J lJ tlock divldl'llf, ct-DKllrKI Of c111! v111M C-W.l'*'t' Ill '--------------!"" t-~-c1;,ldenf « ~!1tl'fbullorl Ollt. f\8rk. r .. .J2 .-t-•110 llJI Wtr,__1'1-.::0ttl'"" or .. Id Dorr Ol!Vff ilftor I~ dlvllJet'lll or .. 111 Ullo t\ovr• C• ~.t k-0tt1tfeG 0t Nkl "'1 ftlr. _,, et• CMI 260 = .. ~,..::,~ '='· ~~ ~!~ ~::'fi:d \.: atttrrlld or no Kllof! ll!k..ft°~11 div~ 1ur o•l.(O df!IWll "'"''lt"lf ,._Dtcl'A'd or 11111:1 111 It~ tnr pf!J :~,,:~.:.. ~=i.J(~~·e~\-"' J":.: ... l~!c'i-~ alvl09nd ~ 1x.cl!rlrl11U1lorl c1111. •-L~ •I d !O Cet:Jr"e t.a Bollita a lS."ear tM1kt111111 d•vlotf!d. 1111 c11 Ill • I r-'oltt In f1J11. CfU I J $Oe ~mploye with Keenan Pipe (ld-(iitet. -I!• 111"i.tn!S. Nit-I!• r' irr•jg l lllflbu!IOll. •r-E~ rlohlt. •-Wtt!lout Dfl1 rfl and Supply Co. has betn aJr w1rr1ntt --w1111 w1rr•111 t 1 ~\0o1*lM wt1-S..~uflllt:1 111111ml!'ti.,., 1Utll. nd-Nf'lll /' -l pointed manager of lhe Costa w~~, t11'"""''"'· w1-'Nl!t!I 1"°'*'1 _ bltftt 11cn .11 , Of'Olfl fM ~ t"9 e&tlfo.•UOICV ~I, ft '10.0 0 Mesa Salr:s and Service office dtV cNllv~rY -.w ...... h com-.nln. II S,..t ' 1 Am A !Uanagc r Na n1 e<l I \ \ • • • • • • ! • : • • • • • • • • • i • • • • • • • • • • ' • , .. • ~ • .. • h .. " • • .. .. .. .. • .: • " .. • •• ,, • .. • .. .. .. • .. • .. • '• ' '• • .. • .. .. • •• , • • • ~ ., : " .. '. , .. ' " • .. • c .. • ·~ • • '" " " " ,i: , " :: • • ' . ' • • I • l'tll ll:tdl "'"f''" ill T f t.s I. l'fD c ~""' ,., ' ptJ 1nlt ,ir,J I• I' • "I U II A In "~ce ll'tltrHe pl S tl'tl 11 •• ,.., 90 lnlerD5 r llO l'tlt-rJf'W 1 3C i:"t-' ~ep~ ~ 1ii1 E"lll low1f' 1 • owtP v in 'f!HOOP 1 IT Imp SS II Corp • Friday's Closing • Prices -Complete New York Mart Ends On Mixed Pattern NEW YORK CAP) -The sto<k market closed on a lower note today, after moving in a rruxed pattern for much of the session Trading was slow near the close The Dmv Jones industnal \\as off l 62 at 824 65 average at 2 p m Dechnes Jed advances by a narrow margin Prices near lhe close included off 1/2 at 81 718 Natomas 518 at 19 518 Metromedia up \Valk1n s Johnson off 1 718 at 15 718, Pan American Sulphur up 314 at 15 314 and Com· puter Sciences oCC I 318 at 21 718 On the Amencan Stock Exchange Four Seasons Nursing up 318 at 58 318, Asa mera Oil, off 112 at ~ 24 318 H&B Amencan up 518 at 17 Air \Vest up 3/8 at 14 314 and Rtchford. oCC 318 al II 318 Industries There \'l'ere a few point sized S\\Ulgers among the oil s but the ~rend was mixed One of the pro- v1s1ons of the House-passed tax reform btll includ ed a reduction 1n the 011 depletion allowance -the n1aJor tax benefit of the petroleum industry -from 27 112 percent to 20 percent Computer Science day fell more than also slid 1 or so ~he most active issue Thurs l near the close Polaroid .... ..,, _________ _ UIAI "'9 LfW Ctlw Olf, -WXYZ- '" """" u -· ev1ry dey '" '----------~ Ainerican Stock Exchange Li st J1 'lt. 1P• 15 +1 -J l!l? 13\la l~ = ~ t 1'~ ,m nv. =·" I" 11 1i1~ t1 1~. + ~ ,. 1J T o 7 .. ,, • ,. t'• •l•' ~ l 12 1 \. " 21~ 15111 l ,., • ... ,,~ 7""-~ 1t 19 , 11 • lt\~ +Ho II 6 o 60 '°"-l't s 7• ,. ~··i · . • 1~ '1 ~ 16 + ' 11 '~ i1' .. J)l =t: ;j II U 1~.. 11u + -a u •• ·~ ···-i ~ .. 10 0 li' ] 21 ' 1!" 7 '1) l.fl111 ~!!t . 71 16•1•'> 3, 1r' 15 ? ,t:: ~ l• lPo IP• ll o + •\ ).I .... •1 .. •l +411 1n 1l"'!-~ I• 11 l "' l ' -~~ , 11¥1 l ! .. 1J1o , s ' .. 5 111 1 611' l 75'1 2j • 2\•+ 1 ~ "" l\lo 12 1f14 ,t,,. ,t .... t • 'l5 ~~ =,;: ~~ + : ,, ""' n, + • ''Ii~"+-· ,:,~''"Ir\-~ 'l II'• Tl l'I I • o ~ '• I~~~ ff' n:=,z )1l'~l1.ll -'f • 11~ 1? 17 ,., I ?1 'o ?•\~ 11';-, 1t1•1•-~ Jil t S 1*\11 '-I 6 1 ,;, •~ t>io-V..... 1 In r lD"'-1nV. + •1'111111 1 +• 1 1' ~ 17 ,, + 1~ .~; ,:~ J,• = ,, l'l)NrtS 2!l 1 1+1 ,• 1 17J l'Xl lll _, ~ !t't "~ .!•V.+ ~ t • 1n1 \DJ 1n1 I ' 111 Ul Ir -' 17 17'1~ 11' 11• _, 11 11 11'1 n~-7\t, l451~$75l +t lt9Pr + 1D 7•, n \l ll Ai -\ ' •? 17 ., _,_, • i 3111 111 +0 tU't0'41 1 u ··~· tlU fl\; .... • I ~·'"".+] 10 '' ''• ••v.+ t 111 111. lll l ' -1 • ,• 3 6!'46565-• l n¥i nv. n\.'1-•• 10 1 ~o 111 -1 7 ~I 61 61 +I ' •11' ., "' -1 11 " t6 '' ' ., ·~ ~1 -l-1 ,, 171 ~ u 111 lo_,.,.. J IU UO ''' -2 11 IJ II ll 61 j.fl.\ !llk '' + • fl Milo 11 11•1 -4 41 "'' 711 7Tt'I +7l'li 11~1•n-\'11l 1111' n~1 ,.,~ .. 10 ,.~~;, , .. ,,., 14eVt--11 l~r.~~f.+s! 70 11'\" 71 -·· 13 ""' 17\11 ""' +1~ 1110.,,, lO~ !l!i{ -+I\.\ J.S 1J '' '' -' l56.Mla 4.S 1~ n'f n~-' "'~~ ~~ .. ,, .. +1 ,<J S U M U 1 SIO~M\6"1\.\ J 7\'l< 111.. 75>~ +I I t , ,, J) )J _,; ~ l ll II 11 -1• IO tll'I ·1~ ti ~_..."¥' 10 11"' • IJi '' • -~-r S U 1' 11 A lit 1111\ 1 ll~-1-- 11 tJ14 •1 " _, 10 '' 6'114 611/o -,, IG " ~ M 11 ,,,,, t4V. .... _,,,. l 7 I~ 1&01'1 161 -7 12't 21t Mt +l 1 "" .. ., ' ., 12 12 +1 1141')}11 1~-J. 1~UU\~-:;:1 ,. U UV. SS SS -1-'\ 14 .... 12 ., • u:: ts t1v. +JI.• " " ltr.l\'J 117 +11~, !l ' i{ tr' tl u 1:i"" ,:1~ 1f!.~ = ~ 11 nna 'joih nf~ + 44 I ,fl""'~ ,1,1~ :i.1 ,01 lts 101 +nl " u~ _, ,, 2•1 1112 10'1 -· I \.'I '' Ill') 1 "' "' "' • " ,, -11 r r; 1n n10 3 ~· • , .-f l ,1 ~{. ~" ~~. '" ~ I~ 1!S 1J~ +I ' 134 2)1 "' __. 1 "':iii '"" )"~ ''!"lt J ' 'ii t s .. 116~ ,, 7119• 'l 'f 46 t1'i '1 • -'"' "I ,~ •1 "1·~ 11 114 +tit JllU'l'l"'-1 1 ··~ •fl\ 69\~ -4i I ""lo ~~ fl -~1 2416161+~ Phone 641-4311 ,,,,,,,,,, .. •• .. ; . . ' . • : ·: ' .. • . • . .. • • • .J • r • • p f •• f F #0 u;op #<~,.....---, OAILV l'ILOT F'rlday, A1.19~l 8, 1%'> ' FIRST • Mon-Fri-9 am· 9pm APPLIANCES • STEREO • TELEVISION, Sat-9 am-6 pm._ 'll..· _________ ;...._ ___________ _, another 11 Gibson • first! only ••• buys the newest most elegant all Frost-Clear Sida-by-Sida Rafrlgarator- Friazarl Custom design ed to fit most kitchens! Only JHI" wide! You go one better with • 1 son \ The most beautiful .of an sidHy..sicf• refrigerator-frHzert ;n your choic. of Awocad•, Coppertone and Whifel it Frost l1e'lef forms ill'fleezer! -tc Frost can't form in refjgerator! -tc 3 fun.width relrigerat~elves ! -tc 3 full·width fre<lzer shelves! -tc Sli~ut porcelain enamel crispe r! -tc Molded egg ra cks! -tc Removable doo! racks! -tc Ju ice can rack and 2 freezer baskets! -tc Frts your present refrigerator space! -tc Sparkling trim on both doors ! Availabk with au /omatic ia-maker al small addilional cost. See this macnificent Gi~on slde·by·side value today! WESTINGHOUSE "Frost-Free 25" Side-by-Side REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER • 25.2 cu, 1t. capacity • Huge 3 22 lb., 9.16 cu. ft. capacity freezer • Completely fros t free operation •Only 353,4 in. wid e• De corative pane l fronts optio nal • Ice cubt server end 2 ejector trays • Automatic Ice maker -avail· • able as an optional •dd-on now, or buy it later • New Westinghouse power econe> mizer • Twin juice can dis- pensers • 7-day fresh meat keeper • 3 -temperature ed· justable butter cond itioner • Westinghouse slim-wall de- sign for greater inside storage • New cantilevered adjust- eb!e shelves • Utility storage com pa rt me nt • Remo11able egg container • Twin vege- t able crispers • Adiustable ref riger ator door shelves • Glide-out adjustable rollers • Automatic door closer ,BUY NOW········PAY LATER "4od1l RJK64 Westinrhouse "Frost Free 16" Refriger1tor • 16 cu. ft, capacify' • Com- pletely frost free operation • Automatic ice maker optional -plug it In at any time- whe nyou buy, or later• Slim- Wa\I design gives you bigness where you need it-inside • 1374.b. frost free freezer • 7·day fresh meat l<eeper • Cantilevered adjusta bl e shelves • Remova ble egg contai.ner • Butter a nd cheese s ervers • Magnetic door gaskets • Glide.out ad- justable rollers • l arge ve~e- 1.abla crisqi:r • Automatic 1n• terlor light In refrigerator . 2300 HARB.OR ' PHONE 540-7131 COSTA MESA l NOTHING DOWN! UP TD 36 MONTHS TD PAY! ND PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBER! CW.A.C.) 16.6 cu. ft No Frost Refrigerator • Giant .zero-degree freezer holdl up to 1541 .... • •Two ice hays on htmd;r rack. • Four cabinet sbelws,, one adjultable, one slidee out. • Separate __ __ • OnJ,y 30~. wide, 67• high. ·A--Only ~ ~~?·· s2999s UJ or add lat.er. DUH 6HEATEST VALUE EVER! BIG SUMMER SALE ~ e NEWEST FASHION COLOR "HARVEST GOLD" e NEW ADMIRAL AUTOMAT IC DOOR CLOSERS e CANTILEVER SHELVING e GIANT FOOD STORAGE CAPACI TY GIANT 22 CU. FT. CAPACITY ONLY s39900 COMPARE AT 499.95 Ice Maker Optional $ MODEL ND I b94 Adn1lrol IM PERIAL DUPL EX• I b SERIES NO-OEl'llOJTINO l'lllE EJ:fll·llEl'll.10111.ATOll. ONLY 31" WIDE, YET FULL SIZED IN IOTH FOOD AND FREEZE R SECTIONS! Tlli1 _!L"'•llly 1lyl1d .-.d "'irel DuDle• •t ore11nh your 9r11!- •1' ¥•lw1 iR 1 top q111lity 1idt·llty·1id~ fr•11••·rt fri9•r1· lor. l1r9• 11.l cu.fl.rt h i901 •!0' 111d room¥ 191 lb. t i • p1t ily fr•llt r-l 6.1 cu, f•. of •o,,c1 in a111 co"'p•t l t1bi11t+t r;,,,,,, 1ac.tio11 f11lwr11 loM d ull width do11bl1 ===::!lJ 9dd fr111i119 1h1!¥11. Si11 llf!t• roo"'y door 1ll1lw11. Wid1 r11191 l11T1 p1r1l11r1 conlrol 1llow1 pr1c•11 l11mper1lu•1 11l•clio11. lt1fri91r1lor •~tlioR f11i11••• li¥1 full width int1ri1r rh1l¥11 to pro wlclt 1p1c(ou1 llor1g• 1r11. ltrt • 11orc1l1i11 tri1p11 w!ll •••P fruih •!>d v1Q1!1bl11 ti th1ir fl1•orf11! b•1I. Refrl91r1tor door 1111 I ih1t ... 1 ,1111 co11· 1111l1nl b11tler/ch1111 co111p1rt"''"" ind 199 1h11f. Di. m1111ionu 64-7/1 .. h, 1 1·• w 26·7 I 'd . Admiral Duplex Refrig • Comes in 31-35-36-41-48" I ! I I I • ' .. J, • " I ' i: i· " ' (· ' ' " ' '" I• l I .. .. I ' • " • I " I: " ' . ' \· ! ' r I· I ... I Fountain Valley EDITION '* * VOL. 62, NO. 189, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES * Annex Foe Says Beach Bid IDegal Richard Harriscn, principal opponent.of the proposed annexation of Sunset Beach to Hunlingt9n Beach charged today that the eonduct of V.'ednesday night's Hun- tington Beach City Council public hearing was "highly illegal." City. Clerk Paul Jones doesn't think so. "The government code on annexation procedures, reads that the council 'shall hear and pass on all protests sc made and iC they represent a majority oE the assessed valuation <>f the property in· volved, the protest shall be sustained and the annexation proposal declared void,' '' lia.rrison said. But Ci~y C1erk Jones said Harrison 11hould, "read a little further." "'The code also slates, •at the tim t seL for hearing protesb <>r to which the hear- ing may have been continued,'" Jones replied. ORANGE COUNTY, CALI Jones notes lhat the City Council, afte r accepting the protests profferred by Har· rison adjourned to 1 final hearing session on Aug, 18 at which lime a decision will be made. POLICE SGT. SORENSON SCRAPS 10 BUREAU'S TRAPS Dragnet D~emed UnneceJ1ary in New Ouart1r1 "It was a physical lmpossibiUly tn check all the listed parcel proterit& offer· ed by Harrisan in a few hours, and wt ob. viously couldn't accept his figures," ·Bats--No Mi~e J ones said. ' But Beach Officers Do1i't Mind Move Harrison dropped the protests, su p- posedly representing 60 percent of the a ssessed valuation of Sunset Beach pro-By RI CHARD P. NA l.L perties, onto J<>nes' lap on mid·afternoon Of ,,.. o.itF r 11tt <'•" \\'ednesday. "!tats", Huntington Beach police didn·t J"Ones also noted that some of the catch any mice last month. signatures on protests ·were different But their past record has ~en good. from those <>n the county assessor's roll The identification departn1ent wh1ch for pa~iculaJ'. J!'O!l'rlles. •I< th! II . ' b t ''The parcels-may bave been spld and m ft , mon 1 repoc. on a o u the MW'O'ffner's name not.yet reeorded .. _ev.el'}th1ng, logged a..kill r~ord ~f 4.% on the roIL but we w1U have ·to chtck thit r:i~ce . thfs year In the ancient 1den· out ,. Jones said tif1calion bureau. The clerk admitted that the code They really kept the traps 1nappi~g. language is vague on what constitutes Sgt. Robert So renson -an. out~~nd~ng legal owners o! property. m~se catcher . as ~ell a~ 1de~tif1~at!on But Harrison remains adamant, ofhcer -. doesn.t nund a .bit rel!nqursh~ng "I{ at the time set for the hearing the mic.e-catchin~ ~tail. .. lie~ getting (Wednesday nighl) the pr<>tests offered new <>rf1ces., Police 1dentificat1on work were ·tnsufficient then the counci l had the sh<>uld benefit. right to postpone the hearing for not less The city is .openi~g .a nd.v ~dditlon lo than IO days,'' he argues. "'But we filed the old detective bluld1ng at ~ixth ~tr:et more than sufficient protests." and Orange Avenue. Its JI gffJces w1ll 1n· "The .proponents ol the annexatuon are elude twc interview rooms, a polyg:raph now going around trying to get persons center, restrooms and a c r 1 m e who protested to withdraw," Harrison laboratory. . . . . continues, "and this could poss ibly kill Sorenson, who will direct the crnne lab. oor successful protest. said it includes a ballistics section with a "The councilmen, and l have told most $5.000 comparison microscope. of them this, should call an emergency "The machine is for comparing <>bjecls meeting and pass on the protesls right lo determine, for instance, information now." Harri30n demands. such as whether two bullets were fired "We will go to court If necessary. from the same weapon or not. especially if the city accepts \\'ithdrawal "Shell casings, hairs, fibers and most <>f any ol the protests.'' anything including safe doors and burglary tools can be compared with this Beacli Mayor's Fatlier, 84, Dies N. Jay V. V. Green, 84, faUler o( Hun- tington Beach Ptfayor, Jack Green, died U1is morning arter a lengthy illness. 1'-1r. Green, of 460 Elmhurst Lane, Costa Pt1esa, died at Huntington Con· valescent Hospital. Fune r a I ar- rangements are pending at Peek'll Colonial Funeral Home, 7801 Bolsa Ave., \Vestminster. Born in New York state, hfr. Green moved to Altadena in 1908. He was a real estate broker and retired in 1961. He moved to Costa Mesa in 1963. He had served as secretary of the Chamber of Commerce in Altadena and 1,1•as a member of lhe Elks Lodge and the Kiwanis Club. In addition to hfayor Green, survivors Include hls widow, Loretta and a daughter, hfary Frances. both cf the family home, and a sister Jennit F. Bw1, Oxnard. set up." "We have been sending this kind of work ou' to other police departments and have spent well over the cost of the mic:ro'Scope in man hours in other departments. .. One of the main benefits is the 11bility to qu ickly clear innocent persons who might ha ve been suspects in a crime a.:> weJI as to develop evidence connecting persons with crimes." The lab also boasts a chemistry section staffed on a part-time basis by three UC Irvine graduate students, \Varren Dun- can, Terry Flckies and Bill Hemmerlin. The lab will be used to identify mari~ St°"k Jllarkets NEW YORK (UPI) -The market closed on an even keel today in lighl trad· ing. (See quotations, Pages 10·11). Most Investors moved to the sidelines ii\ the absence of new motivating lnflu. enccs. The UPI marketwidc Indicator was off 0.13 percent on t.529 issues trad- ed. Of these, 651 advanced, and 6U declined. juana and other substances, to sweep ' clothing for evidence and analyze blood san1µles. Next I.e. the chemistry section is ·the la· tenl ~rint section manned by technician Robert f\-farks, "One of the best latent prpit qien iq Soulh~ Calllorni~" ~ cording to·Soremon. . llere fingerprints. enarly invisible to the unaided eye, will be discovered and proces!led. But the new setup. alas. isn'l going to include a mouse control division. Missit1g Man's Body Recovered Off Huntington The body<>! Gunther Sarnoyltnko, 21, of La Puente washed up on the Huntington Beach sands early this m<>rning, city lifeguards reported . Samoylenko had been missing since last Saturday moming \\"hen he dlsap.. pcared \\'hile swimming <>rf Huntington State Beach with a sister. The body was found at 12:40 a.m. by Don \Vaile, 29, or Long Beach, chief of in· halation therapy al Hu n ting ton lntercommunity llospitar. Huntington Beach lifeguard Vern Fotheringham aided in the reco•:zry at the boundary line between the city and state beaches opposite Beach Boulevard . Samoylenko disappeared about 10:4fi a.m. Saturday while swimming in chest- deep waler, his sister reported . His drowning was the sixth in !he past llvo months off city and state beaches in Huntington Beach. Max &wman. as.'iislant director for Harbors and Beaches of fluntlngton Beach, blames the unusually high number of drownings to early rlpli~es and heavy surf. combined with in- experienced swimmers. "Only four of the six drownings hap.. pened while lifeguards were on duly," Bowman pointed out. "The other: were early-morning swimmers at deserted be11ches." There have been only four drownings, three this year, recorded in Huntington Beach in 20 year11 while guards were on duty, Bowman said. Sky Div~rs to Bare Down Nine to Ju1np Nude; Sheriff Kee ps Eye Peeled LYON, Wis. (UPI) -Nine male mentbers of the Milwaukee Sky Divers Club plan to parachute into a riudlst camp Sunday -naked.· The exhibition of raw courage. Club President Ray Macguirt, 31, said 'nlurs· ~ii ~. will be the second nude sky di'o'e mkde by club members. A nude divt was n111de last year but kept under wraps, be said. fl1agulre said no h~mt1le members of the club ..rould make the jump beause ''Vi'e couldn't talk them into It." He 1alct the men would we1Jr boots and helmet.,, ~nri l\'Ot1ld drop Into the Runnlna Bare!i Nudist Resort. Walworth County Sheriff William Cum- mings said that U he sees. any naked bodies sus~ded from b i 11 o w i n g parachutes he will aritst them on. cbaran oi indtetnt exposure· or dl!otder- ly-.:ondu<t.. Ma~ said _Ille jump would go on 1nyway. "Jt11 a legal jump because v.•e'll be lan- ding in the camp," Maguire liaid. "Besides. we'll be coming ln high enough tti,t j)((lple on the g."'Ound outside thP. camp won 't be able lo see us wllh lhe naktd eye." 1'fl'I. Ada Margetls, owner of Runnlnl( S"res. uid Jhe hod • standing 11grt."· mcnl with parachullng clubs In the area I allowing them to land In the ca1np any time they give her 30 minu~ noUt<e. ' Last Sunday. nine fully clothed lllWlberl or the East TrQY Sky· Knlghls Club drop(>cd in. when {hey found' tMir regula r landing spot clouded over. They 1vere fully clothed. ~he said, but l'iQme .!lhed their gannents ,and joloed, rtsort gilt:sts in swimming and voJleybaU. As for the nude lkY diving, Mr11. /\targetl.I -known a1 "Little Ma" -said if ''they're brave enough to do it. il's floe with me. But I hope they don'l land so1newhere elM! than on the tlub grounds. "It could be tmbtl rr;1 ssin.g to them." I Today' Fhlal N.Y. Stoeks • • TEN CENTS Nixon Fet·e Se,t 10,000 to Greet President Saturday By RANDY SEEL VE Of ... Dilly Plllf ftl ff Orange County will roll out the red carpet for President Nl1on Saturday artemoon, when Air Force One touches down at Orange County Airport. Thousands of ciUzens and county VIP's are expected to be on hand when lhe President arrives at 4:30. Airport officials are roping off a large area in the parking lot north of the terminal building on ~t a c A r t h u r 8?t!levard for the expected J0,000 visitors. Vacant lots across MacArthur from the airport terminal will be used ror parking, After a.n informal greeting President * *· * Peace Co1i1icil Will Prmest At Cleniente Despite denial of a parade permit, the Peace Action Council (PAC) will hold a prolest demonstration Aug. 17 near President Richard fit. Nixon's San Clernente Sumrner \\'hite House, PAC member Robert 0. Bland said today. Further, Bland !aid that the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) will file :;:uil soon in: Orange County Superior Court against the city of San Clemente ~nrl the CapUtrano lTnified School District. Filin& d\tte ·is unknown, but Bland, a ~an · and .llOlllb Orange CoOJ!ty head of the PAC, sa.id he wirs hopeful that litigation could be resolved prior to the Aug. 17 protest by expedited legal action. The PAC hopes to force the city aild the school diitrict tQ permit use <>f pubile property !or the demonstration and pro- t~t rail-on school grounds. through the courts. GO TO COURT The PAC has said that il with the assislance of the ACLU will carry the suit to the Supreme Court. of the United Stales if necessary. "In the meantime, we 'A'ant to em· phasize that we are going to conduct a picket line and rail} which will be perfectly legal in that \\'e are not re- quired to obtain pennits for them,'' Bl2nd said. The Lagunan said that it \\'as felt that a. large number of military enlisted men will come to the protest in support of the peace group's position against the Viet· namese war. "This makes it especially necessary lo hold the protest," he said. Bland said that between 2,000 and 3,000 people cire ex· peeled to taJw: part. in the demonstrali<>n. A grou p of "several hundred '' will be coming from San Francisco In buses, another group <>f several hundred ~e busing in from San Diego and a ma1or portion of the demonstrators will ht com- ing from Los Angeles. An Orange Co~nty contingent will alsc be lhere, he said. PlCKETING SET Demonstrators will picket along lhP.: sirlewalk s and parkl'l'ay of Via Del Frenle. adjacent to the Cyprus Shore area where the President's heme is located . The protest rally could be held in the San Clemente State Park , near the Cyprus Shore area. Bland said. Bland sai d that the PAC will t.alk with San Clemente Police Chief Clifford ~1ur ray to make arrangement! for the pro- test . Assistant Chief Stanley Matchett said today talks are scheduled in the coming \\rttk. Matchett !aid that denial of tht parade p:-rmit to the peace group has not chang- ed police department stance. "We just have a )ob to do .!Ind we will do it as well as possible using what ever means necessary. "\Ve haven't had this type <>f thing ever happen here before. but It has happened in other places before a.nd it has been taken care of. We· ~Ill be able to take care of It here,'' Matchett said. He pointt<I out Lhat mutual aid pacts "'ilh other law tnforcement agencies n1ake J)08Sible the bolslering of the 34· man San Otme.nte po~ce forc.'t U necessary. "\Ve con!ider ourselves very pro-, reulona1. "We will do wbat Is necuMfY to take ctre·of lhe situation,". he conc.h~ect: Meredith Senlenced NEW YORK (UPI) -Civil rights crusader James M'eredllh wat sentenced today t.o "Ume served'' on hls con9ktion... of harns&lng, tenants who lived in a BronJ apartment building he 11wned. ' Nixon will ny to bis Summer \Vhile House in San Clemente by helicopter. At a press conferenre Thursday the welcoming commJttee safii c o u n t y supervisors and mayors of 'all cities in the county are expected to attend. Several bands also will be prepared \o greet the President. Mr. Nixon decided to land at the county airport earlier lhis week. Since then, airport oflicials have been frantically making arrangements for l:iis arrival. He had been scheduled to land at El Toro Marine Corps Air StaU'on, as he has done In the past. Victor Andrews. co-<:hairman of the \\'elcoming committee said, the President !eels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "lt wil l give hlm more of a chanct to meet the people." When Air Force One lands at Orange Counly Airport il will mark the first time a U.S. president has flown into the facili- ty. Air Force One will be the laraest. airplane ever to land at the field. Robert Bresnahan, county director o( aviation , at first had doubts that the Boeing 707 could land safely at Orangt County Airport. But Bresnahan said Thursday he is now confident lhe plane can land without problems. He 11ald he called the Federal Aviation Administration in Los Angeles to check the landing safety factor. Judge Sets Inquest Sept. 3 Into l\.cnnedy Accident EDGARTOWN, ~1ass. (AP} -The In-a b r Id g e on Chappaquiddick laland, quest into Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's drowning 1'-1isi f.1ary Jo Kopechne, 28, a auto accident on Chappaquiddick Island Waii:hington secretary. Meanwhile Dinis was advised that he will begin in this island resort town Sept. \l'ill have to go to court if he wanb an 3, District Court Judge James A. Boyle autopsy on the body of ~fiss Kopechne, announced today. who is buried in Plymouth, Pa. The announcement was made after a The dead girl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. meeling between Boyle and Dist. Ally , Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Heights, Edmund Dinis. who ordered the inquest. N .J .• have indicated they will oppose ex· Boyle said accredited newsmen will be humatlon of the body, and Djst. Atty. admitted to the proceedings. Blythe H. Evans Jr. of Luzerne County, Dinis said he had "no intention at this Pa., has assured them they will have a tim-e" o[ calling Kennedy to testify. chance to make their stand in court. Dinis had indicated earlier thal he In a letter to Dinis , the Pennsylvania ~·ould be summoning Kennedy. prosecutor said: The senator has said ·he would ''No order would be considertd in cooper1tt. in any le&ll ,nctedln11 c6o-.i...pennsylva nli. without notice to llie near nected with the accldeilt, and. has can-relaUVes and an opportunity for them to celed a Eui:opcan trip in order. to keep appear In the procttditlg.f for such an hlm,sglf available. order. Jn order ror oor courts to consider Dlnls said Thursday he hoped to begin an order for an autopsy It would require the Inquest within a week or 10 days. He a showing of imperative' reasons." added that he would call 20 or more In Wilkes-Barre, Evans told newsmen 1rl.lnesscs, including all persons who "It's not up to me. An autopsy will be ai might have had any knowledge of events the discreti<>n <>f the Pennsylvania courts. before or after Kennedy's car plunged off Alt the facts are in Massachusetts." Did Kennedy Ask /(in To Take Rap in Crash? \VAS!llNGTON (AP) -Columnist Jack And~rson say!! Sen. Edward M. Kennedy asked his couSin, Joseph Gargan. "to lake the rap" for driving the Cilr in which a young secretary drowned. In his copyrighted column tod<1y, Ar1derson said Gargan "grimly said he \\"l!uld admit to driving the car ." "In the cold light of dawn, Kennedy decicled to face the consequences himself, and then he filed his terse statement with the Edgartown pollce al 10 a.m .• " said /\nclerson, who co·aulhors the column \I ith Drew Pearson . The Washington Post quoted Gargan as s<i~·ing in Hyannis Port. f\-lass., there was "nn truth whatsoever" to Anderson's story. Anderson, altribuling his story to •·reliable sources" and Kennedy "In- timates,·• said the senator had invited M<i ry Jo Kopechoc lo go for a miclnlght swim the night the car went off a narrow bridge. The columnist described the swim 1111 "a nocturnal adventure not uncommon on ?ilartha 's Vinyard." "Nor are these summer night i;wims necessarily viewed ai; evidence of im- moral conduct," Anderson added. He said KeMedy knew where he was going but Man Hit by Car, Loses His Finger A Fountain Valley man crossing 3 street in downtown Costa Mesa late Thursday suffered cuts, bruises and an amputated right first finger when struck by a ear, police said today. Kenneth Ford, 54, of 912 · Ironwood Lare, w¥ Jisted Jn .satlstactory'Condltlon al.Coftt.a Mesa Memorln1 •rosj>lt.al, efler being held overnight ror observation for ,pOsstble lntemaf lnjurits. Police said Ford was crossing Newport Boulevard 11 West 18th Street whefl hit by a ca r driven by llerbert Gurthtr, 38, or 4229 Sir.ius Ave., Orange .•. lnvesli,gators aald Gurther had nn chance to.avGrallle acclcfent when Ford appeared suddenly In front. of h' car "'bile Cf'Q.\Sing In •n area wlthOul a crosawaJk, The mototis1 w•s not cited. the car was gqing too fast and went lllf into the water. ~fary Jo drowned despite Kennedy's ef. fc.rts lo free her. In his exhausted state~ Kennedy con· ceived the idea of asking "Joe Gargan to take the rap for him," Anderson said. ' Anderson said Kennedy summoned Gargan and "returned to the scene of the disaster to make certain that Gargan would be totally familiar with the circumsta nces surrounding "his un· fortunate accident." France Slates Tests PARIS· (A P} -France will resumt nuclear weapons tesb in the Pacific in the summer of 1970, Defense Ministry sources confirmed today. The tests, begun in 1966. were suspended this year unde r the government's austerity pro- gram. Orange Coast Weather lligh, patchy clouds won't keep the sun from roasting the coast- line over the weekend. But the predicted 7S al the beach bodes much fa irer than lhe 93 forecast for Inland. li'1SIDE TODAY Yocltthtg can be 11wfuUy 3tr· iot1.! to lhosf: involved but aometimes it becomes jU$t fun, pa.rticularl11 every Thur8day evt11ing in the 1ummtr during the Beer Can Regatta. Stt 1W«kend•.r Paoc t3 ., · •lrlht " Mrtttlltn " '"""' '' JMwlft u.a Ctll19nole I ~ .. '"'" • CltH!fln n-•f N1lltNI Ntwt •t c-tC\ ,, °''* c"""" I C'Nn...,. H S~Mt r.mr 1 0.1111 Ntllttl t •111tMl'tll.. t).ts Dt""'-tt H letlll Ntwl 1).IS IEfllwll l ,.,. ' .....,.. 1 .. tt l'~ttt11111nMM f1·1t tMttt Mln:ltf '"'' '""""' 1 .. 11 ,.,'"'11111 n ~ '' ~ ...,. "'11• ltflllltn II Wutlltr 4 M.-llilP l Wlrtt ....... .., M9"19" LkHI, ... '9 Wt.iltllf9t' tta 1 ·' • • • • J 'b.lJLV PllOT H Rus s-Oust ~nvoy ht Retaliation WASHINGTON (AP) -Russia has ex· ~led a diplomat from the 1).S. embassy n t.foscow in retaliation for the U.S. M.1Stef cf an official of the Soviet United S8U(lns delegation On a charge of spying, The State Department, announcing I.he 1xchange of u:pul!lons, disclosed also !lat the U.S. had protested to the Soviet 1overnment that the retaliatory action •rlYnst en1bassy counselor Alilton Kov- ter was "prejudicial to our relations." The ,Soviet delegation member at the J.N. was named here u Igor L. Utdttyev, a counselor of tbe Soviet nission at U.N. headquarters in New York. The Unlttd States, preu officer Carl BartCh said, told the office of U.N. · iecretary General U Thant on July 14 Utat Andreyev had "engaged In activities In the U.S. which constitute abuse of the privilege of residence within the meaning ~r SecUon 13B or the headquarters agree-~ ment between the U.S. and the U.N." U Thant's office was officially notified that "he cpuld not be permitted lo re- main in the U.S." ' · Bartch was asked what Andreyev was actually ~ccused of and replied "we in· rorrited the United Nations and the Soviets that he was cn&a1ed in in· telligence acquisition activities." Bartch agreed that in ordinary langu8ge this w.a.s an allegation of spying, bu~ said he had no information on what kind of espionage aclioo was involved in the charge. Bauer to Protest Loss of l1ulustry, Business Zones Bauer Power will soon be felt al Hun- tington Beach planning commi.asion and city council meetings. fli&"h school Trustee Ralph Bauer th is "·eek announced his intention of sounding cpposition at both city meetill8S whenev- er ·a zone change from industrial and commercial land to residential uses is considered. •·Jn the Jut few years several cities in the Huntington Beach Union High School District have been granting variances .and r.one changes which have decreased the O'.lmmercial and industrial land," he said. Such changes, he assets, are detrimen· lal to the school district since they nar- row the tax base and place the burden on 1he homeowner. "f will make it a personal effort to at- tend as many of these meetings as pOssi· ble. I'm not arraid of stepping on anyone's toes because bucks are im· porlanl." He asked tha l hi s suggestion be placed on the agenda for the next trustee session and urged that other board members do likewise. Trustee John Bentley agreed \vith him, ' Ea}'ing that ''if such ZOfle changes affect the tax structure, the district has a real r ight to enter into il. V.'e have to be sure of our groun ds though." Bauer said that during lhe past seven years the City of }luntington Beach alone iust more than 1,000 acres of industrial land lo such zone changes. Other cities 1n the district include Fountain Valley and \Vestminster. .. ' . . . ''iet P1·es id enl's l\len . i\~k fo r Huong Ouster SAIGON (AP) -Leaders of President Nguyen Van Thieu's politicaJ front today signed a petition asking Thieu to oust Premier Tran Van Huong. 'Ebe petition calls for a new·, "presti- gious and able premier" to replace the ailing 66-year-old Huong. DAllY PILOT Rob••' tt. w.,d rru••tn• ~ l'tll~!IWr J1ck R. Curley Y<tt r rn•Glnl 11\d c.vw111 M1N;rr l ko"''' K11vll Ed11or The""•~ A. "'411r~~in1 N 1n1tl"• Edotv Ji llu•I W. l •lt~ ,.netl.i• l:d110I' H»Rtln.yttt• .... ~ Ofn~ 309 ~!k St•t•I ~.;ti~9 ,A,ddrt1u P.O. l e-. 7•CI, 'f2•41 Otlltr OllkH tit•..,, a•••" ;;11 "'~'' a.,~,.. '"'''tvu4 [ .. It M•1t• J:IO 'o\lt11 It¥ SI•«' Lt~.m• k o<ft: l1l F"nl "'""'"' OAILY "llOT Pl\019 •t llklll N Ktlhlfr Splashdow11 Using traditional backyard method, Patrick Lavalle, 3, !iplashes brother, Timothy, 6. Fountain Valley youngsters found it \vas a cool way lo beat Thursday's heat. They are sons of Mr. and ~'trs. Gerald F. Lavalle, 17279 Santa Lucia Sl. Valley Police 01a1·ge Five \Witl1 Assault After Party Complaints have been lodjed against fi\'e persons involved in a noisy, rock· throwing Fountain Valley party and police have dropped ch2rges againsl four others originally involved. Preliminary hearings on charges of assault on a peace oHicer face Christopher A. Gray, 19, or 8372 Bryan t Drive, Huntington Beach; Jack \V. Hawkins, 18, or 8911 Marlin Ave., Foun- tain Valify; and Dari!el A. Campbell,}'• of 8852 DeVille Circle, Hurc~gton Bet\ b. Hearings are scheduled at 9 a.m. Aug. 14 at \Vest Orange County Municipal Court. Held for tri;il on charges of prowling \\'ere Barbara E. Martn, 18, of 6212 Picket St., Garden Grove , and t-.1ic:hael 8, Tolin, 19, of 411 Alabama St., No. 2, tlun- tington Beach. Tolin's trial has been scheduled for Sepl JS while Barbara Martin has been asked to appear Sept. 2. Others who "''ere taken into custody follo1-vlng the midnight brawl !\fonday but against whom charges \\'ere dropped are Larry G. Ro11•e, 23, of 17301 \Vard St.. Fountain Va lley; John L. Nyman, 19, of l5M2 li.1ayf\ower Lan e, Hun l ing t on Beach; Jon C. Lamberg, 23, of 12012 i.aureleen St., Garden Grove, and li.1ark T. Dev;dney, 18, of 5902 Terrier Drive, Huntington Beach. They had been ar- (CSted on suspicion of assault ,.With a deadty weapon . # Fountain Valley police ·officers, with the ' aid of Huntington Beach and \Vestminster units, broke up the noisy gathering of the charged at 12 :30 a.m. Monday. Pqliee said decorative rocks ~·ere hurl- ed at them frotn inside the house at 8911 Martin Ave. when they attempted to · transport Ha\vkins and Campbell to the police station. Officers thtn moved in!o the home and arrested the others. Heavy Action Reported; Big Break in War Lull? SAIGON (AP) -The heaviest action in nearly two month!! \1·as reported across South Vietnam Thursday. Bul U.S. military spokesmen said it was too early to lrll whether it was only a brief break in the \1·ar lull or the prelude to rene,1•al of major enemy operations. More enemy and allied casualties we.re report.ed since midnight \Vednesday th an in any such period since JU11e 18, when the current lull in major sustained ground righting began. AIHM communiques Teportcd a sh3rri Increase in ground lighting jus( south of the deml\itarized tOM, in the <..'<tas\al lowlands south of Da Nang, in the Central lligh\ands. and in War 7.one D northeast of Saigon. Along \\'ith this. the Viet Cong on Thursday nlade the biggest terror attack in Saigon since the lull began and a com· mando squad succe~sfully invaded a U.S. convalescent hospital at Can\ Ranh Bay. Flood Victims .To Get Rcftmd s Propert y tax refund checks w\11 ~ n1ailed Tuesday to n1ore than 1,200 \'IC· tims of last \\'inter's flood s. County Auditor Vic He i1n said Thursday. He.im said the refund will total $33.31.3. Including $6.717 to owners of St:\'en !1ood· damaged golf courses, four or them 1n the $00\hern part of the county. Checks to homt owners vo'\11 range from $7 to $41», Hebn said. No breakdown ()f golf course refunds \\'as gi ven but courses which filed claims are. La£Un'a COuntry Club Village, ~fission Viejo. San Juan Country Club, Shore Cltffs Country Club, Santlago, Yorba Un- da and Green River. l!eim said most of tht cht<:ks will be mailed to land owners In the communlll«1 of t..111una Beach , San Cltmtnle:, Trobuco Canyon. Sllverado, Senta Ane, La Habra, Yorba Llndi and F'11llcrton. Tax relief for flood.{'Jamagcd proptrlY ,.,a~ authorited unde r a stole senate bill :.ind a CQUnty ordinance. These t\\·o attacks accounted for 14 pe~ons dead and 160 wounded, as \\'ell as heavy damages, ac cording lo re\'ised c~ualty figures released by the U.S. Coinmand . All ied military spo kesmen repor\M at least 147 enemy soldiers killed in ground actions since n1idnight Wednesday. Al lied losses were put at 14 Americans killed l'lnd 164 wounded , 17 South Vietnamese troops killed, 51 ,\·ounded and one n1iss· in~. and 14 Vietnaese c:i\'lllans killed and nine v·ounded. But a spokesman for the U.S. Com· 1nand said the sha rp increase in ground fighting "is not necessarily an indication of increased eneony initiated activity." Bcacl1 Trustee Asks Disclosw·c On Drug Abuse Huntington Beach Union Hi;h School Distri ct Truslee Ralph Bauer Wednesday asked ihe administration to provide hlm with a detailed report on drug abuse pro- blems in tht schools. "l know that U1is is happening and 1 am aware that there are some people 'vho are willing lo accept it. t don!," siiid Bauer. "I will pursue this wHh some vie· or as time goes on." Distric t Superintvidenl ~1ax Forney told Bauer that ''drugs have no place on campus" and that the administration is doing all it ran lo eliminate lhe problem, yet remain within the legal limit.I. Trusttt Bauer said that ii Information about drug \'iolation on the campus rould be made avallable to the public, the peo- ple 'A'OUld btcomc the school's btst ally In curtailing narcotics use. •·we d0rt't w1nl lo •\\·eep tht1;c pro- blcn1s under lhe rug and hide the.m," he w11rned. "It's: a tragedy 1\'hcn this sort o( thing i;ocs on." ,. Dr. Leary Charges Dropped RIVERSIDE (UPI) -The dlstricl al· torney's o!rlce here has until Aug. 21 to file .an amended complaint against Dr. Timothy Leary after charaes aaainsl hlm stemmln11 from the death of a teen-aaed girl were dismissed on technical grounds. Charlene Rene Almelda, 17, drowned JWle 14 while swimmlnll in a lake on his ranch. He wa:i: charged with coolributing to the delinquency of a minor. t-.1unlcipa1 Court J udge Elwood Rich Thursday granted a defense motion that the misdemeanor c9mplalnt be dropped because it did not speclly how Leary con- tributed to the girl's delinquency. Defense attorneys said it was not shown that Leary gave her the hallucinatory drug. The judge gave the prosecution until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint, and also continues uni.ii Aug. 28 a hearing on a felony charge of possession of a restricted drug against Leary and his ·wife, Rosemary, 33. Leary's "eternal brotherhood com- niune" near here was abandone.d this week by about 30 of his foll°"•ers after a second death at the ranch. Toxicological tests are beine; made to determine the cause of death of John Griga:s, 26. Chief Deputy Coroner Wiiiiam Dyke.s said it was suspected Griggs' death might have bten caused by use of the drug tsilocybln from the mushroom tsilocybe u~ed by Mexican Indians, w h i c h is similar to LSD and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other species of niushrooms and jim pson weed, which contains belladonna, \1·erc also in Griggs' tent. Leilry claims he was in his t.ent \.rhen 1'1i.ss Almeid<t drO\\'ned and was a\\'ay from the ranch '"hen Griggs died. He said he did not e v en know t-.11ss Almeida'sname, bul was closely ac- quainted with Griga:s. Kid Picks Wrong Pot Cu stonier '·\Vould you pa y lt1r lvhat l've just ordered?" a happy-go-lucky youngster kid asked a stranger at a restaurant in the Five Point! Shopping Center in Hun- tington Beach this morning. "For a lid, nay for hair a lid, I'd pick up your tab," the stranger answered, ac- cording to a police report, The 16-year old youth left the establi sh- 1nent and retumed with what police of- ficers said was a marijuana cigarette. 1-l'e didn't know that the stranger \Vas officer Henry Hitchcock of the llun· ti11gton Beach Police Department. 1'he youngster was taken to the Orange County Juvenile Hall. A companion in a car outside the restaurant, Holden D. Thomas, 19, Glendale, was arrested for furni shing and possession of marijuana. NIWPOIT H ACH Brief In • IXOll Welfare Plan Revealed WASHINGTON <UPI) -Preoicf!nt Nixon briefed Republican congreasional leaders today on details of the rar- rtacblng overhaul or the nation's welfare system \\'hich he will unveil in a na· Uonwide 6ro.adcast at 7 p.m. Plir. Chan- nels 2, 4 and 1 will carry the broadcast live. Ni1on and the leadership spent two hours on the message which tbe While House billed as the President's moat comprehensive statement on home front problems since his inaulUfaUon address in January. The White Houise announced before the radio-lelevi1ion appearance t.bat Nl:con would send three special measages to Congress next week spelling out the legislation needed for his proposals. Press secretary Ronald Zlealer said the first message on Monday would deal with "''elfare: the second on Tuesday with a new plan to expand federal manpower Widow Awarded $317,500 in Husband's Death A Superior Court jury has awarded '275,000 in damages to the widow of a man who diM four years ago in a Leisure \Vorld construction accident. The panel ret urned to the courlrOO{ll ol Judge Byron K. McMillan late Thursday to assess those damages a g a in s t Rossmoor Sanitation Inc. c.f Laguna Hills, one of four defe.nd11nts named by t-.1rs. bfarguerite E. Cagigas of Pomona. Mrs. Cagigas, n10ther of four, \\'ill receive a total of $317,500 from the defen· dants she charged \\'ith negligence and responsib ility for the death or Henry J. Cagigas, 27. Cagigas was one of two men trapped in a cave-Jn on Oct. 29, 1965, dur- ing underground construction on Avenida Sevilla. His companion. George E. Widman of West Covina, "'·as pulled from the col- lapsed ditch by rescue worke rs. \Vidmen '''&S granted $30,000 in damages by the jury fol!owing its four-hour deliberation. !\frs. Cagigas will recei"e $12,500 from Elmer Olson, a backhoe operator at the Leisure \\1orld silt and $30,000 fr om Toups Engineering Inc:. of Laguna Hills, a subcontractor • Agnew Voted R~ise \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate \'Oted Thursday lo raise the pay of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Speaker . John ,V. f.lcCormack, (D-Mass.), from $~3,000 to $62,500. '!'he bill al so raises the salaries of the congress ional leaders -Sens. Richard B. Russell, Mike Mansfield and Everett t-.f. Dir ksen and Reps. Carl B. Albert and Gerald R. }~ord -from $42,500 to $4:9,500. training proirams, and the third en Vi'ednesday oulllning a completely new approach o! federal·stste revenue shar- ing. Because of the scope of the President's rev.amping proposals the targel dale for leg1slation to put it into effecl v.·ould be probably a year or more Crom now. The message came on the fir st an- nil'ersary oI Nixon's acceptance of the Republican presidential nomination · at iiiami Beach last Aug. S. In his acceptance speech a n d throughout his campaign, the President streS¥<f his aim of getting people off the welfare rolls and onto the payrolls of private industry. On Saturday, Nixon will work duriog lhe morning, clearing his desk before leavina: for a month's vacation at his new summer White House at San Clemente. ~n advance of Nixon's spee<;h, acl· ministration sources disclosed the basic approach he ~·ould take to the mounting problems of welfare in America. The new program wou ld provide a. specifi c federal we\!an payment to the recipients. At present, the amount varies greatly from state to state. Adults receiving welfar~ payments \vould be automatically regarded as being job applicants. They would be enrolled in job training programs which would pro- vide inctnlive pay. Once they were plac· ed in jobs, they would be able to keep all or part of their earnings up to acutoff point when they would no longer require welfare help, Under the revenue sharing program, the federal government would make unearmarked bloc grants to the stales for use in welfare l\'ork. • Beach Expwsion Blasts 2 Fingers Off County Ma1i A fre ak explosion in a fluntin1to n Beach oil skimmer tank Thursday mom· ing claimed two fingers from the ri1ht hand of a maintenance man and c:auied seC<tnd aod third degree burns to his face. Polise said J. \V. Stephens, 56, of 811 Calico St., Garden Grove was cleaning a tank at Huntington Street and Utica Avenue with a dry chlorine powder when the explosion ripped through the tank at 10:30 a.m. Stephens was taken to Huntington Jntercommunity H~itat by a fellow ~·orker, where ht may face possible am· ' putation of the right hand. The blast removed his fourth and fifth finger. Police and fire department in· ,·estlgators theorize that the explosion \\'BS caused by hydrogen released from the cleaning powder. Hydrogen can be crealed when chlorine is mixed with oil. It is a dangerous gas which can be set off by sunlight or a spark, police said. fr.4ad.ti91 I, • romaMi' ~ccMt of old Spaia. F•1turin9 long, · lcw ma,1iv• piec.•s wi th d••P h•••1 "'ouldi1191 c"1ract1ri1'fic of c.wthtry old Span~ fuf"l\ifur .. c A....tt.atany pric • ••• MJ dJi f a.I is off9f'ed at t1lbsta..tial '""'"' during oor Ao9u1t Sal .. .... .... S<I" $Ht ew~s.1. .-ko iftcluclas s•lacted groups from Drn.e I Htnr.d-. Heril ag&. NaitiOft&l. ~.,,. C.Non end,.....,. .. ,,., in..... H1Aredo11 tad H1rif1tt. UpJ,o...,_,. -.. i.. RMudiofl • "" 1cc.11sorl11, 1.,,..,., NU~ pic.fWM l tt ...... a.b1 ... Sia: 74• W-20" D-32" H llnBIOllS . ~ ......... • LAGUNA l lAt~ 1111 w ... .wff 0r ... 4'2-2010 D11~ A'ft n.M.,_...,.ID-HSR> "" -c...t Hwy. 04.\lll ON't ,_,.AT .... t Of'QI ... lt AY 'Tl1. t • • ' • ' I ,, I I I •• . . . ... • ---....... . .. ·' Saddleha~k VOL 62, NO. 189, ~ SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Nixon Welcome Mat Out Gala. Reception Due Satur®y at County Airport By RA"-'llY SEELYE 01 1!11 C1llY Pllol Still Ora nge County will roll out the red carpet for President Nixon Saturday afternoon. when Air Force One touches down at Orange County Airport. Thousands of citizens and county VlP s are expected to be on hand when the President arrives at 4:30. Airport officials are roping off a large area in the parking lot north of the terminal building on M a c A r th u r Boulevard for the expected 10,000 visilors. Down the Mission T1·ail Pct, Doll, Bike Shows Scheduled ~t!SSION VIEJO -\\'ho has the sn1artest dog in Mission Viejo? The prel· tiest doll? The fanciest bike? These. pressing queslions will ht; solved when the Recreation Center will hold "Show Off Week" Aug. 12, 13, and 14.. A pet show, with judg!ng based along the same lines as the national dog shows, will be held Tuesday at 10 a.m. The doll show wiU be staged Wednesday, anQ the bike zhow TtnJrsday. 'I'bey will also be hMd at JO a.m. All shows -~ill ~e in the Recreation Center. Compet1Uon 1s open lo members on ly. e Smhia Heel Slated LAKE Jo~OREST -·The six-y,·eek old Lake forest swim team, y,·hich_ ~sts .or an undefeated season after w1nn1ng its first match last week, will ho~t the Pacilic Sands swim team of Hunllngton Beach Tuesday at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Action gets under way at 5:30 under the coaching of Don Harris. who watched th: team's membership expand from 30 to 4:> ~·oungsters after the first win . Boys and girls ages five through 17-years old can swim for team. workouts are scheduled daily. The Lake Forest team defeated Green Valley 112 to 107 to open the season . e Space Week Carded t~AKE FOREST -America's futu re astronauts may have had their initial training as youngsters living in Lake Forest, as this community undertakes "Exploration \\'eek" fro1n Aug. 11 through 15. t>.1onday and Tuesday youngsters ages 6 through 12 will discuss the solar system through stories and pictures. \Vednesday the children v.•ill play a "Lost in Space" game, before making foil \vrap fantasies on Thursday, The week 's climax will be a trip to the San Onofre nuclear power slatinn south of San Clemente. Permission slips for the Friday trip must be turned in by 5 p.m. Wednesday. No Deportation For Antonia Diu·iug Appeal Immigration cfficers agreed Thursday that deportation action against convicted murderess Antonia Thomas of San Clemente should not be pressed while lhl': Filipino woma n's case is being argued before tire U.S. Supreme Court. They shelved the issue following a brief hearing al the California Institute for \Vomcn at Frontera. ~.i:rs. Thomas. 26, a minimum security prisoner, is servlna a Ufc sentence at the Chino {acil ity. Allorney Dudley Gray, the Torrance lawyer who deicnded the soft-spoken petite prisoner through two Orange Coun· ty Superior Court trials, left the hearing to again stale his conviction thal Mrs. Thomas '''ill never be returned to her native Philippine Islands. "lmmigreUon officers told me that I.hey have every sympathy for my client," ht> said. "They have taken lbe matter cfl calendar and it will ctrtaJnly not ht rcnev.td nntil all avenues of ap- peal have been closttl. "Aod that could be a long, long time 8\\'&y," Gray added. "ll"s not by ant meanA certain that exhaustion of the ap- peal procea;s could raise this deportation business again." Vacant lots across 1'-1acArthur from the airport terminal will be used for parking. Arter an inronnal greeting Preside nt Nixon will fly to his Summer While House in San Clemente by helicopter. At a press conference Thu rsday the PROTEST MARCH STILL ON : STORY COLUMN I, PAGE 3 welcoming con1mittee sa1a c o u n t y supervisors and mayors cf all cities in the county are expected to attend. Several bands also will be prepared to greet the President La91111agrl11s t>.-lr. Nixon decided to land at the county airport 'arlier this week. Since then, airport official s have been frinUcally 1nalting arrangements for his arrival. I-le had been :scheduled to land at El Toro li-1arine Corps Air Station. as he has done in the past. Victor Andre\vS, co-chairman of the \\'e\coming con1mlttee said, the Presidenl feels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport "It ~'ill give him more of a chance to meet the people." When Air Force One lands al Orange By Phil lriterlandi ' . County Airport It will mark the first time a U.S. president has flown into the facill· ty. Air Force One will be lhe largest airplane ever lo land at the field. Robert Bresnahan, coonty director of aviation, at first had doubts that the Boeing 71J7 could land safely at Orange County Airpdfl. But Bresnahan said Thursday he is now confident the plane can land without problems. He said he called the Federal Aviation Admin istration in Los Angeles to check the landing saietY. factor. D1·. Leary Charges Dropped RIVERSIDE (UPI) -The district at- torney's office here has unUI ~ug. 21 to file an amended complaint against Dr, Timothy Leary after charges against him stemming (rom the death of a teen.aged girl were dismissed on technical grounds. Charlene Rene Almeida, 17, drowned June 14 while swimming in a lake on his ranch. He y,•as charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Municipal Court Judge Elwood Rich Thanday grariltd a deiense motion that t~e misdemeanor complaint be dropped l!<c•UJIC~I dld 11j>l 1pec~y ~W Le"fl' coo- tribuled 1o the gtrl's delinquency. l>efense attorneys said it was Ml shown that Leary give her the hallucinatory drug. The judge gave the prosec.111ion until Aug. 31 to file an amended complaint, and also continues until Aug. 28 a hearing '---------------------------.....J ,;14 a felony charge .or possession of a ' restricted drug against Leary and his • Art Ycu Sure We'r• en tht Ccrrtct Tram fer th1 Festival cf Arts? Metger Plans Underfoot Between Niguel, Avco Negoliaitions to merge Orange Coun· ty's Lagu na Niguel Corp. \vith a subsidiary of the Jinancial giant Avco Corp. were annou nced today. Prircipally. they are Cabot, Cabtit. and Forbes Co., land developers of Boston : Paine, \Veber, Jackson and Curtis, the underwriters, and a third investor, American National Insurance Co. of Tex· as. wife, Rosemary, 33. Leary's "eternal brotherhood com- mune" near here was aband oned thl.-. wetk by about 30 of hls iollowers after a second death al the ranch. Toxicological test~ are being maQe tn determine the cause of death of John Grigg9, 26. Chief Depuly Coroner \\iilliam Dykes ~aid il was su11pected Griggs' death might have been caused by use of the drug Lsilocybln from the mushroom tsilocybe uiied by 1'-1exican Indians, w h i ch is similar to L.5D and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other species of mushrooms and jimpson weed, which contains belladonna, were also in Griggs' tent. William Beck, executive vice president of Laguna Niguel, said if the deal is con- summated the greater f i n a n c i a I resources could provide a stepped up development anrf marketing program for the community. Laguna Niguel, the county's sixth largest landholding stretches from the ocean betw een South Laguna and Dana Point inland to the San Diegc FreP1vay. It is planned to be a "new town" o( 80,000 people. Present population is 5,500. New Road Slated The proposed mer ger is betw een Laguna Niguel Cor p. and Rancho Bernardo, a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp., c,onglomerate with as sets of Sl.8 billion. Rancho Bernardo is another new town, located north of San Diego, planned for an ultimate population of 50,000. Commented one fi nancial observor: ''The merger should give Laguna Niguel the firepower Rnd consistency to keep things rolling. They've had a cash Ouw problem and three times have come to a grinding halt." Tenns of the proposed merger call for Avco Corp. to buy 1.4. million shares of Laguna Niguel stock al $7.50 per share from the controlling stockholders. Boat Canyon to Ca1npus Drive Laguna Beach city c01Jncilmen have started the municipal n1actJ.nery rolling on a Boal Canyon road project billed as the "first commitment to the inland Coast Freeway routing." City staff will begin working with coun- 1y road officials to determ ine the align· men t of the proposed four ·lane road. an extension or Campus Drive which begins in the vicinity of UC Irvine. It will con- nect Coast Hi ghway to the Coast Freeway. The road will cut across the Irvine ran· ch. cross the future Coast Freeway and intersed Coast Highway at Boat Canyon in north end of Laguna Beach. Riddle Field, a UtUe league playing ground, and the Boat Canyon shopping center are in the road's palhway. Depending upon precise alignment, 1111 or part of the field and shopping center may be needed for right-of-way, Cily Manager James D. Wheaton said. Mayor Glenn E. Vedder notl"!d that in the fight I<> ha ve the proposed Coast Freeway routC!d inlatld o( lhe city, Laguna promised to provide roads to gel to the freew ay. Jn the prcject's future is a full slate of ci1y planning commission and city council hearings on alignment and r!ght of way acquisition. City plans should be read)' for county consideration in about a year, Wheaton Sky Divers __ to Bare Down Nine to Jump Nude; Slieriff Keeps Eye Peeled LYON, \Vis. (UPI) -Nine male members of the Milw aukee Sky Divers ·Club plan to parachute into a nudist camp Sunday -naked. The exhibition or raw courage, Club President Ray M1Cg11lre, 3t, said 1hurs- da1, will be the second nude sky dive m&de by club members. A nude di\·e wa s made last year but kept under wraps. he 1aid. Masuire sa id no !emale members of the--c1uo wculd m11 ke the jump be<:al~~ ';we couldn't talk them Into il." He said the men would wtar boot." and helmelJi. ind would drop tnto the Runnin& Bares Nudist Resort. \Valworth County Sheriff \\'illiam Cum- mings said that i! he sees any naked bodie.!i suspended from b I 11 o w i n g parachutes he ~i.11 arr~ them on charges of indecent exposure 01· disorder- ly conduct. Maguire said the jump would go on anyway. "It's a legal jump because we'll be lan- ding ln th e. camp," f\.fagulre sa id. "Beside&, we'll be coming in high enough that people on the ground cutside the cam p won't -be able.Jo set us with the naked eye." f\.1rs. Ad.a MargeU.S. owner cf Rtmning Bares, 11td ehe had a 11tandlng agree- ment with parachuUng clubs in lhe area , • allowing them to land in the camp any time they give her 30 minutes notice . Last Sunday, nine fu lly clothed members of the Ea.st Troy Sky Knights Club. dropped In ·when they found . their regular landing spot clouded over. They were fully clothed. she said, but some shed their garments and joined resort gueslJ In swimming and volleyball. A! for the nude sky diving, Mrs. ~1arg_etts -known as "Little ~1a'1 -said if "lhcy'ril>rave enoug1CtO do U, ll't nn·c wllh me. But I hope they don't land some~·here else. Olin on the.cTub grounds. "It could bt embarrassing to them." ' N.Y. Steeb " , DAILY" PILOT SltfJ flw. Tee1i Festival Ope1as Photographer Eric Van Deuse~. 18, and painter Karen, Browning, 19, prepare for Canterbury Fair, Laguna's fourth and newest sum- 1ner art show. It runs from 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday a'l l.aguna Federal Savings and Loan parking lot. Show, featuring work of teen-age artists and craftsmen, is sponsored. by South Or- ange County YMCA. Judge St!t~ 111.quest Sepi. 3 l11t? l(ennedy Accident EDGARTOWN , ,,_1ass. IAP) -The In- quest into Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.'s auto accident on Chappaq!Jlddick Island. 'rill begin in this i$land resort town Sept. 3, District -Court Judg~ James A. Boyle announced today. The announcement "'as made after a n1ecling between Boyle and Dist. Atty. Edinund Dinis, who ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited newsmen will be ad1nitted to the proceedings. Dinis said he had "no intention at this time"' of calling Kennedy to testify. Dinis had indicaled earlier that he would be summoning Ken nedy. · The senator has said he would * * Columnists Say l\.cnncdy Sought Cousin for Rap \Vl\SHINGTON li\P) -Colum nist ,J;icll" Anderson say!! Sen. Edward M. Kennedy asked his cousin , Joseph Gargan. ';to take the rap" for driving the car in which a young secretary dr.owned. In his copyrjghted column today, Anderson said Gargan "grimly said he \11!111!d admit to driving the car." ''In the cold light of dawn , Kennedy decided to face the consequences himscU, and then he filed his terse statement with lhC! Edgartown police al 10 a.m .. " said Anderson, who co-authors the column· wilh Drew Pearson. The Washington Post qoot.ed Gargan as ~a,·ing in Hyannis Port, Mass .. there was "rio truth· whatsoever" .to Anderson 's story. Anderson. attributing his story to ''re.liable sources'', and Kennedy "in- tima tes," said I.he. senator had invited ltl;.ry Jo Kopcchnc to go for a midnight swim the night the cu r went off a narrow· bridge. The columni!iil de.scribed the swim as "a nocturnal adven ture not uncommon on r-.tariha's Vinyard ." "Nor are these su1nmcr night swims necessarily vlcwed as evld«:_nce of lm- n1otal conduct," Anderson added . He said Kennedy knew where ·he was going but tl'e car was going too last and went o{( cooperate in any legal proceedings cmi· nected with lhe accident, and has can .. celed a European trip in order to keep himself available. Dinis said Thursday he hoped to begin the inquest within a week or 10 daya •. He added that he would call 20 or more witnesses, including all per!ons who might have had any knowledge of events before or aiter Kennedy's car plunged off a bridg e on Chappaquiddick Island, drownini Mi~ ~1ary Jo Kopechne 28 a \Vash.ington secretary. '. ' MeanY,.hlle Dinis was advi!ed that he will have to go to court if he wanbl an autopsy on the body or Miss Kopeclme, who is buried in Plymouth, Pa. The dead girl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph · Kopechne of Berl<eley Heights N.J ., have indicated they will oppose n: humation cf the body, and Dist. AUy. Blythe H. Evans Jr. of Luzerne County. Pa., has assured them they will have a chance lo make their sLand in court. In a letter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said: "No order would be considered in Pennsy lvania without notice to the near relatives and an opportunity for Uiem to appear in the proceedings for 5t)Ch an order. In order for our courts lo consider an order for an autopsy, it would require a showing of imperative reasons." In Wilkes-Barre, Evans told newsmen, "It's not up to me. An aulop!y will be at the discretion 'ol the Pennsylvania codrts. AU the facts are in Massachusell$ ... Orange Cou& Weather fllgh. patchy clouds won't ·keep the sun from roasting lhe coast. line over the weekend.. But the predicted 7$ at t,he beac.h.··botks much fairer thun the 93 forecast ior inland. INSIDE TODAY Yaclltina can be awfulllJ SM'· ious to those, involo«d but son1etimes it btcome1 ;11st fun, particularLu everiJ TJiurlday 've11ing in the summu durino tbe Beer Can Re:Qatta. Ste \Veekender Page 2l. inl.o the willer. . ~lnry Jo drowned .despite Kennedy's,er· air"" • MtttMtt 11 forts to {rte her.. , '''""' 1t Mt•ltt tsoll Ctllltrllffl I M\lhllll •&OMt In his exhau4ted state, Ktnnc<IY C9"l" e1n1111.. n .. i "'""'' "'"" '"' celved the idea of asking "Joe Ga rgan, to =-~ ~ ::=-1= .1: take the rap for. hhn." Anednderson ~~:....... t::.e.'!"1"' ,: ~.·:r.-.=. ~~U Anderson s;ud Ken 'I SU•wuYr""' l!«terlllf ,..,. , ~ '"" Gargan. and •·returned to the sctne of \he totltt"ltliilMIM r,.fi ~~~"' '"~~ .. dlsa!lt!r-to--m11ke cerLain-lhal-Gar:pn__ _=::.:,.. ~ 'flle.,.., ..,. \\Otlid be totl'llY filmlllar with the ~'::~.""""' ]-:!::"..=----.~;--- {h:Cunistance!!I surrouDding "his ·uir ~ u.-..,. ........ ,,_. rortunate accKlent." ... -~ . ... . -·· f DAllY PILOT, l £rldly, A-8, 1'69 Court Back s OCCBom·d's Bm1011 SDS Orapge Coast Junlor Collea;e Dbtrlct ln+atee1 bave won Superior Court ba~king for their refusal to regard the militant Students ror A Democratic Solcety group as a rteo1nized or&an!zatlon on tbc oranae Coast College campw. Judi< Roller! Coflmaq djsmla!td "the SOS araument that its mem~rs 11'Jd beeq unlawr1.1Uy barred from a s~\us en- joyed by other c a m p u s club!; and oraanlJltiom. ''School trustees, deans and a.d- mlnlatrators ••• should be permitted to exercise their di1tretlon . . . and llhouldn't be hauled before the court to expllfn every decision that they make," he told attorney Richard W. Pelherbrldge Tutaday. Corfman ended alm06t three hol,lrS o! bitter debate by conceding that "a non- reeognized group doe1n'L have as much stalus aa those accepted by the college administrators and they don't, In this case, get the $10 a quarl!lr tenn that is granted to the other groups." But he made it clear th at district trUJtees acted within the law and within their "clearly defined regulations" when they withheld recognllion of the left wing group as a campus orgaization. He particularly upheld decisons in that sense by college president Robert Moore and Joseph Kroll, dean of student activit.les. Kroll testified rrom the witness stand and Moore stated through depoaillon that the SOS group had been denied recoani· lion beca11se ol "1oals and alms stated by the national organization which were not compaUble \\'Ith college policies and regulations.'' Kroll insisted, in an argument that was refuted out.side the courtroom by angry SDS spokesmen, lhal there had never be:en and would not be any de.nial of !he use of college facilities by the group. He ar1ued that the group's message of sup- port of campus turmoil and advocated disruption of university and college schedules was contrary to stated OCC pGUcies and repugnant to many other students on the Costa Mesa campus. ··we have here a situation in v.'hich students, the general publle, professors, ;idministrators and trustees all have a vested interest in the operation of this ,i;chool." Judge Corman wnunented. "That same general public has charged those trustees and administrators with the operalion of the school and has given thrm. through its regulations. a certain amount of discretion in that operation. "You can't," he said, "lake a man and tell him to run your school and then deprive him of the right to exercise judg· ment. Do that and you might just as well have a puncbcard to do the job." DepulY County Counsel JobQ PO'Mll suc~fu\ly argued that the school boiiril acted within the bounds of the state's education code and "model. carefully ,,.,.orded regulations" when it kept the name of SDS from the list of organiza- Uons accepted at Orange Coast College. Pctherbridgc announced his intention of appeallng Judge Corfman's ruling ... An SOS spokesman condemned the ruling as "uhfair, not based on the evidence be.fore the court and pretty typical of the kind of thinking that brought us lo court in lhe first place." ·Folk Mass Set At Arts Festival The Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach will be setting for a ''Misa Criolla" -South American folk mass-at 4 p.m. Sunday. Presented by the Festiva l of Arts c.liorale, under ~iarityn lnterlandi's dlrtc- tlon, the program vdll feature authentic Spanish instruments, costumes and music. A similar performance will be given a "'eek from Sunday. Appearing Y.'ith the chorale will be game 15 members of the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company, directed by Antonia Morales. Event coordinator is Hat ·O'Neil. ' UAlll PitOI OtAMG~ C04'1 f'Ul l tSHtHCi CCW.H.~1 llt~l't M. W••' P r u IRnl ff4 I"'* "'-' J•clr It C11I.., Ykl ,,.,_ -G.tlll'f .. ""'"''" 1~11111 1 ICtt •il .... ThlM•I A. M11,,hi~• -ft*'"" 101ror ~1,)i,rJ P. Nill L-SMdl City Etl!M" L ..... .._, Offke 212 fo•11! A••· M•llf~1 ..,,.,,, .. 1 r.o. ••• '''· •1111 • • OAILY P'tLOf lltll P'hott Before Leases Cranston Urges Hearing WASHINGTON -Sen. Alan Cranston (D·Callf.) has urged that public hearings be made mandatory before the federal government grants any more offshore oil leases. He told Interior Secretary Walter J, Hickel that Bureau of Land Managem ent regulations should be made tougher in light of the Santa Barbara oil spill situa- tion. "The federal government. without hearings and without proper evalualion of oo of th~ priorities, and community apd human v a I u es involved. overrode ob- jections and opened the federal portion of Santa Barbara Channel for oil ex- ploration,'' i:ran slon r,minded Hickel in a Jett.er dated July 30 and made public to- day. on Oil '·\Vtiat has happened since tllen Is sad history and familiar lo everyone." Cranston continued . ,;I am sure you share 1ny concern that we should not let such a disaster occur again."· Ctanston called for a change in present reiulations which permit the bureau director to hold public hearings or not as he secs fit. ' Cranston would also make it 1nan· datory that prior lo the final selection of tracts the director "shall request and considt'r the views and recommendation!! of appropriate federal agencies and shall consult 1vith appropriate state and local agencies to aid him in his evaluation and determ!nations. In addition, he may con- sult \Vllh other organizaUons and in· di1·iduals for this purpose." HILLSIDE SLl~S INTO STREET AT INTERSECTION OF LA PAZ AND PRADERA Heavy Action Repo1·ted; Big· Break in War Lull? · Eff•cl1 of Winter Rains Still F1lt in This Mis1ion Vi1 jo Neighborhood South Coast Youths HappY, Witl1 Visit by Black Tee11 s By TO~I GORMAN . 01 111• 0111, P'llll 11111 NE'V FRIENDS DEPT. -\Vhat are the reactions of Laauna and San Clemente teens wlto spent a weekend hosting 14 black, Mexican, and while teenagers from Los An1eles? Posith•e. ''It was a very 11:oocl thing,'' said 21-year-old Keith Piller, a member of the South OrBin11e County YMCA board of directors. He hosted a Mexican- American. "\\le had a very close rel•· tionship," Keith said. That was the purpose of the weekend. the first half of a cultural exchange bet"''een two separate groups of teens. Previous to the exchange, area teens had .JitUe appreciation and understanding of the beltefs and feelirJiS of their Los Angeles counterpart!:. It was hoped that after the exchangr, a new rlo1v of dialogue between three distinct cultures could open up. It d!d. And many teens are wishing that white adults ~d undertake the same project fi to '3h<M' ;an honest attempt to un-i 'aent.IW\d (eielinp of blacks and ?iiexicai.i· Americans. ... Sixteen-year old Pam Galloway ex- plained~ "When t\vo strangers get together, no matter what color they are, they can get along if they try , Color can't be a barrier. If two people are honest to each other, color won't matter." "I think race relations In the future "'ill lmprove,'' Pam added. "Our generation Isn't prejudiced like many of our adults are. \Vhen \1•e become the leaders of society. we \viii help to form a new public opinion ." \Vhile Pam·s ''11ister" 1vas talkative, Eric Van Otusen's lhree black gue5ts "·eren't. "They talked about superficia l ~luff. like the prices of cig11rettes, the draft, and girls," she said. "But through these discussions. their p e r s o n a I i t y started to come out. Then, after a little prying. they 1vere quite open." "\'ou "·ant my feelings ?" Eric asked. ''They \\'ere VE:ry honest lo me. These kids will get \\'hat they 11•ant in life . through the establishment. They're going lo help their people -but not by throw· ing 1r.o!otov cocktails. They're going to do it by going to school.'' Said Linda Goff. 16, a student at San Clen1cnte lllgh School, "I 11·anted to find Sign Vp Aug .13 For Watts Visit \ew students planning to enter ll1e Newport-~tesa l.inlfled School District lhis tall must re1tster for fall classes between Aug. 18 and U. Parents must present proof of age for children entering kindergarten. A child 1nust be 4 )"Ca.rs. 9 months old before Sept. I lo be eligible to enroll in school. Re1istration will be conducted at schOol district offices. 1601 16th St ., Newport Beach. Laguna '(Ir.;:·. ' .. ~ . T een Corner out how black people felt about Ji\·lng In a gbtlto are a. I sort of fouod out, but not as much as I'd liked. It v.·as partly 1ny fault -I didn't want to pr v. and I fell like f was." ' Linda's two black guests also believed in non-violence. "They are members of the Black Student.a' Union. But they were disappointed in it because it "'·asn't ac- live. They didn 't want to be militant. They want to move forward through eduCalion." r Laurie Prouty, ~· ~so or San Cle1nente, found the weekthd very grati· fyine. "Before the exchange, I sald 1 \\'&Sn ·t against blacks. But how could I say that v.·ithout really know ing them? "But now I know them. And I kno w how I feel ." Laurie, like the other Yi>.1CA teens, arc thankful for the experience of n1eeting n"'w friends. And. when you make new friends, their color is incidental. That was made clear la!t "'eekend. As a result of the exchange. a dialogue \l'&.S optned, and friends "''ere found. That. alter. alt, \\·as a purpose of the ex- changt, and a purpose of the Yt-.1CA. It was a rewarding weekend. Tram Bench Just Ups and Va1µ~)l es The case of the missing train brnch is under investigat ion today by the Laeuna Beach police department. 1'he gaily painted red and \.\'hite bencl1, one or many spotted arcund IO\Vn for the convenience of Festival of Arts visitors disappeared from its station in front of \'ictor Hugo's, 307 Cliff Drive Thursday. Valued at about ,$75 the long and a"''kward canopied seal was ap· parenlly bench.napped during the night, Police Sgt. Frank Diilon said. Ag new Vo ted Ra i!e \\TASHINGTON tliPl) -The Senile voted Thursday to ra.ise lhe pay of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Speailer John \V, ritcCormack, (0-t-.tass.), from $43,000 to $62,:ioD. The bill also raises the salaries of the congressional leaders -Sens. Richard B. Russell, P.Uke Man.sfltld and EvueU lit. Dirksen and Reps. Carl B. Albert and Gerald R. Fore: -fro1n $42,&00 to $49,500. Mercy Mission Speeded For Coast W onianonBoal A Navy communic1llons vessel today f'l·as speeding to a rendezvous with the 50- Jool sloop )Vesterly, 1,000 miles frcm Honolulu. to 11id a seriously 111 Costa Mesa woman aboard. The II) crew member w1s identified as San ~ Wobbrock, 231 a part t.lme employe or Bartell Corp,, a marine elec· Ironies flrm of Newport Beach. Tbrtt medically trAlned parachuti!ts wtrc dropped rrom an Air' Force plane ThursdA)I to aid her until the N1vy com- munle:i.tlonr vessel Arllngton arrh·ed. P.fln \Vobbrock. haa no local residence address. according lo James Bartell, owner of the electronics firm. ''She Is a very capable woman who has worked for us from time to lime when sbe v.·as visiting io the area ,'' Bartell 51ld. The Westerly is a Columbia.SO sloop owned by Ernest C. Wilson. commGOore of the Newpoi:t Harbor Yacht Club. Tbc yacht left Honolulu about a wee.k ago on a return trip from the Transpacific yacht race. She is being skippef!d. by David Lyman. Honolulu, a chief mate Jn the Merchant h-1arinc. \Vtlson satd there were six men and t\\·o \\.'omen a.board. The others In the crew are from Honolulu 11.nd San 1-·rancisco. • Hill Slippage s Being Repairecl Befor e Winter Hillside slippages in the i\1ission Viejo area, brought about by last winter's heavy rains, are still being repaired in an attempt to lini5h before next winter's onslauaht. If the hillsides' al'!:n't properly cor- rected by then, there may be an even greater degree of damage. Workers this week were re-&rading the hillside along La PH Road near the Pradera Intersection . Redwood boards 1vere insttlled longltudinally along the hll!slde. so the ground would be son1ewh1t terraced and plants could get a rooting. This was not done last winter, ~·hen the soil and grass fintdly gave "'ay to tbe "'·eight of the rain\1·ater that had not run off. One resident on Aracena Drivr. whose house is built atop the hillside along La Paz Road, told of her problems. "\Ve sure held Ollr breath during those rains," said Pi-1ary Ostling or 26652 Aracena ~ve. HJr ~n. Michael, w~ on leave from' the Mirdtant M.arloes during the rains. "I've got picturts of our back yard sliding away," he said . The rains er~ed about fil't' feel of back yard. Part of their Sll-'imming pool \\•as also undennined, but it e!caped any cracking. Their redwood fence torn away. the f\llssion Viejo Company installed a chain link fence to pre\·ent people falling dOYln the hill~lde. "They. along \\'ilh the coun- ty. arc paying for the repairs,'' Ostling explained. • SAIGON (AP) -The heaviest action in nearly two months was reported across South Vietnam Thursday. Bul(' U.S. military spokesmen said it i,1·as too early to tell 1vhether it was only a trief break in the \\•ar lull or the prelude lo rene"·al of 1najor enemy operations. to.fore enemy and allied casualties were reported since midnight \\'ednesday U1an In any such ~riod since June Ill. 1vhen the current lull in n1ajor sustained ground fighting began. Allied comn1un1ques reported a sharp Increase in ground fighting just south of the-demilitarized tone, in the coastal lowlands south or Oa Nang, in the Centra l Highlands, and in \Var Zone D northeast of Saigon. Along \vilh thls, the Viel Cong on Marie 'Estabrook Ftmeral Slated t.iemorial services will be held SUl'lday for t-.faric Estabrook, a 20-y,ar resident of Laguna Beach. t-.1rs. Estabrook, 77, died Aug, 5 at South Coast Community Hospital. The services will be held at l-1 a.m. by tht Unity Church of Laguna at the \Vom1n·~ Club, 286 St, Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach. Funeral rltcs were conducted today at Forest La"'" r-.1cn1orial Park Glendale for l\1rs. Eslabrook. who 1ras born in Ireland and Jived in California for 47 years. r-.trs. Estabrook is su rvived by her ddughter, f\.lrs . Alice Diestel of Glendale; her son , Herbert Estabrook of Nevada: t.even grandchildren and three great grandchildre n. Thursday made the biggest terror attack in Saigon since the lull began and a co1n- mando squad successfully invaded a U.S. convalescent hospital at Can1 Ranh Bay. These two attacks accounted for 14 persons dead and 160 wounded, as well as hea vy damages. according to revised ca~ualty figures released by the U.S. Command. LSD Vi ctim, 10, Caug ht on Bad 'Trip' in Mesa A l:ing·haired little boy bearing 1narks of much drug use -and estimated to be on!y about 10 years old -was caught running do"'" a Costa r.1esa street on a fren zied LSD trip early today. "Take 1ne home. 1'1n going to dit," police quoted the youngster as scream~ ing, \1•hile he dashed along Placentia Avenue at West 19th Street, shortly after midnight. Patrolman Frank Upham took the boy into custody and Oflictr Dennls Hossfield, \vho searched him at headquarters, said three LSD tablets and some marijuana \rcre hidden in his boot. ''They couldn'l handcuff him ." Lt. Tom Durham said today. "his \Vrists "·ere so small he'd just slip them right off." Investigators said the boy had needlemarks, indicating narcotics in· jeclion over a long period. on both ann~. ~le was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall, where charges are pending. mid-Summer Sale FeaturiacJ AJJ/DRJGJ/L By HeritCICje NWWl'OllT HACH 1727 wr..tdltf Dr .. 641.2(1!':! Oftjil P«tOAT 11~' t.Aad'ti91I, e ~~ .11c;c:111t of old Sp1ia. Feehrring Ion ~. low rroes~ive piet•l wit!\ deep he•V)' mouldin9s ch11 r1cteri1fic; of c entury old Sp.11nish furn itur._ A "Alu. •t •"T pl'ic.e • , • t.A1dri91t is offered et rub•ifanti•I 1MM;, durinq our Auqust Sa le. lt•4-s..t. $4 19 $l5t Ow S11mrn1r s .. 1, .11110 includes seled•d g tCXJ):K from Cftei:1 I Hanr1don, H•rit191, N1tional. M•rg1 C 1Non and m•11T .t~er lines. H1nr1dD11 •nd Hwif191 U~rl'.ry -,.1 •. 'RMuc;tion1 °"" •tc11sori•s. l•'"P' .1111d pic:tur11 •'• ..... a.bi .. Sia: 74• W -20" D -32" H Pr.,_OMI htte.ri.r D9tia1Mrw A.vatlsw.-.AID-HSID LAGUNA llAOI . 146 ~ C09tt Hwy. t -1 ,,,._ ff4.6SS 1 OflM r«IOAT ""' r I I I I 1 •• I 7 Laguna Beaeh ED·ITION VOL 62, NO:?. ~ SECTION""!fi PAGES Nixon Welcome ·Mat Out Gala, Reception ·Due Saturday at County Airport By RANDY SEELYE 01 tllt O•llr l'lltt Sl•ll Orange County will roll cut the red carpet for President Nixon Saturday afternoon, when Air Force One touches down at Orange County Airport. 'l'housands of citizens and county VlP 's are expected to be on hand when the President arrives at 4:30. Airport officials are roping off a la.rge ~rca in the parking lot north of the terminal building on M a c A r t h u r Boulevard for the expected 10,000 visitors. Dowta the Mission T1·ail Pet, Doll, Bike Show s Scl1eduled f\tlSSlON VIEJO -\Vho has the smartest dog in ~1ission Viejo? The.prel· t1est doll? The fanciest bike? These pressing queslions will ~ solved v.·hen the Recreation Center will hold •·show Off Week" Aug. 12, 13, and 14. A pet show, with judging based along the same Jines as the national dog shows, will be held Tuesday at to a.m. The doll show will be st.aged Wednesday, and the bike show Thursday. They will also be held at 10 a.m. All !!hows will be in the Recreation Center. Competition is open to members onl y. e Swl111 llleet Slated LAKE FOREST -The six-v.•eek old Lake Forest swim team, which boasts or an undefeated season alter winning its first match last week, will host the Pacific Sands swim team of lluntington Beach Tuesday at the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Action gets under y:ay al 5:30 under the coaching of Don Harris, who watched the team's membership expand from 30 to 45 youngsters after the first win. Boys and girls ages five through 17-years old can swim for team. Workouts are scheduled daily. . The Lake Forest team defeated Green Valley 112 to 107 to open the season. e Space Week Carded LAKE FOREST -America·s future astronauts may have had their initial training as youngsters living in Lake Forest, as this community undertakes "Exploration Week" from Aug. 11 through 15. · Monday and Tuesday youngsters ages 6 through 12 will discu ss the solar system through stories and piclures. Wednesday the children will play a "Lost in Space'' game, berore making foil wrap fantasies <ln Thu rsday. The week's climax will be a trip to the San Onor re nuclear power station south of San Clemente. Permission slips for the Friday trip must be tumed in by 5 p.m. Wednesday. No Deportation For Anto1iia D~-ing Appeal Jmmigrallon officers agreed Thursdtiy that deportalion action against convicted murde ress Antonia Tho1nas of San Clemente should not be pressed while the Filipino woman's case is being argued before the U.S. Supreme Court. They shelved the issue following a brier hearing at the California lnslltute for \Vomen al Frontera. Mrs. Thomas, 26. a minimum security prisoner, ls serving a life sentence at the Chino facility. Attorney Dudley Gray, the Torrance lawyer who defended the sort-spoken petite prisoner through two Orange Coun- ty Superior Court trials. left the hearing lo again state his conviction that .Mrs. 1'homas will never be. returned to her nali\•e Philippine Island!, ··tm1nigration ofricers told me that they have evuy sympathy for my clie:nt." he said. "They have taken the matter off calendar and it will certainly not be renewed unUI all avenues of a~ peal have betn closed. ··And that could be a long, long time away,'' Gray added. "It's not by any means cerlain that exhaustion of lhe av- pcal process could raise lhls drportaUon business agnln. •• • .. Vacant lot! across P.1acArthur rrom the airport terminal will be used for parking. After an informal greeling President Nixon v.•ill Oy to his Summer White Hoose in San Clemente by helicopter. At a press conference Thursday the PROTEST MARCH STILL ON, STORY COLUMN I, PAGE 3 lverCom1ng comm1Uee sa.ta c o u n t y supervisors and mayors of all cities in the county are expected to attend. Several bands also will be prepared to greet the President. La9unagrl111 P.1r. Nixon decided to land al the county airport. earlier this week. Since then, airport officials have been frantically making arrangements for his arrival. lie had been scheduled to land al El Toro P.1arine Corps Air Station, as he has done in the past. Victor Andrews, co-chairman of the lvelcoming committee said, the President feels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "It will give him more of a chance to meet the people." When Air Force One lands at Orange • By Phil lnt•rlandi Art You Sure We'r• on tht Correct Tram for th• Festival of Art,? Merger Plans Vnc(erfoot Between Niguel, Avco Negotiaitions to merge Orange Coun· ty's Laguna Niguel Corp. with a subsidiary of the financial giant Avco Corp. were announced today . Prir.ci pally, they are Cabot, Cabot and Forbes Co., land developers of Boston; Paine, Weber, Jackson and Curtis, the underwriters, and a lhird investor, American Nalional Insurance Co. of Tex- as. County Airport It will mark the first lime a U.S. president has flown into the facili- ty. Air Force One will be the largest airplane ever to land at the fie.Id. Robert Bresnahan, county director of avlatlon, at first had doobts that the Boeing 707 could land safely at Orange County Airport. But Bresnahan said Thursday he is now confident the plane can land without problems. He said he called the Federal Aviation Administration in Loii; Angeles to check the landing safety factor. Dr. Leary Charges Dropped RIVERSIDE (UPI) ~ The district at- lomey·1 office here has until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint against Dr. Timothy Leary after charges against him stc1nmlng from the death of a teen-aged . girl were dismissed on technical grounds. Charlene: Rene Almeida, 17, drowned June 14 while swimming in a lake on his ranch. He was charged v.·ith contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Municipal Court Judge Elwopd Rich Thursday granted a defense motion that the misde1neanor complaint be dropped b0c1ruse it did DOI specifibow l'Jfary con- trlbuted rf the girl's delinquency. . , De[ense atforne~ 1aid il was not shown that Learr gave her lhe hallucinatory drug. The judge gave the prosecution until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint, and also continue.~ until Aug . 28 a hearing on a felony charge of possession of a reslrlcted drug against Leary and his 'vife, Rosemary, 33. Leary 's "eternal brotherhood com· mune" near here was abandoned this week by about 30 of his followers after a second death at the ranch. Toxicological tests are being made to determine the cause of death of John Griggs, 26. Chief Deputy Coroner William Dykes said it was suspected Griggs' death might havt been caused by use of the drug tsilocybin from the mushroom t.silocybe u~ by f<.fexlcan Indians, which is similar to LSD and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other species of mushrooms and jimpson weed. which contains belladonna, y.•cre also in Griggs' tent. William Beck, executive vice president or Laguna Niguel, said if the deal is con- summated the greater f i n a n c i a I resources could provide a stepped up development and marketing program for the community. Laguna Niguel, the county 's sixth 1argest landholding stretches fr om the ocean between South Laguna and Dana Poinl inland to the San Die~ Freeway. It is planned to be a "new town" of 80,000 people. Present population ls 5,500. New Road Slated The proposed m e r g er is between Laguna Niguel Corp. and &ncho \Bernardo, a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp., conglomerate with assets of Sl.8 billion. Rancho Bernardo is another new town, located north of San Diego, planned for an ultimate populaUon of 50,000. Commented one financial observer: "The merger should give Laguna Niguel the firepower 8.nd consistency lo keep things rolling. They've had a cash now problem and three times have come lo a grinding hall." Terms of the proposed merger call for Avco Corp. to buy 1.4 million shares or Laguna NigJ.Jel stock at $7.50 per i;hare from the controlling stockholders. Boat Canyon to Campus Drive Laguna Beach city councilmen have started the municipal machinery rolling on a Boat Canyon road project billed as the "first commitment to the inland Coast Freeway routing." City staff will begin working with coun- ty road officials to determine the align- 1ncnt of the proposed four·lane road, an crtension or campus Drive which begins in the vicinity of UC Irvine. It will con- nect Coast Highway to lhe Coast Freeway. The r-0ad will cul across the Irvine ran· ch. cross the future Coast Freeway and intersect Coast Highway al Boal Canyon in north end of Laguna Beach. Riddle~ Field, a Uttle league playing ground, and the Boat Canyon shopping center are in the road's pathway. Depending upon precise alignment, an or part of the field and &hopping cente r may be needed for right-of-way, City f<.1anager James D. Wheaton said. Mayor Glenn E. Vedder noted that in the fight lo have the proposed Coast Freeway routed inland (l{ the city, Leguna promised to provide road s to get to the freeway. Jn lhe project's future Is a .full slate or city planning commission and city council hearings on alignment and right of way acqui sllion. City plans !ihould be ready for county consideration in about a year, Wheaton Sky Divers to Bare_ Down Nine to Jump Nude; Sheriff Keeps Eye Peeled LYON. \\'is. fUP I) -Nine male members of the P.1ilwaukee Sky Di\·ers Club plan to parachute into a nudist camp Sunday -naked. The exhibitJon of raw courage, Club President Ray 1'1acguire, 31, said Thurs- day, will be the lH.-COnd nude sky dive made by club members. A nude dive was made last year but kept under wraps, he said. Maguire said no female members of the club would make the jump because "we couldn't talk them into it." He uld the men would wtar boot.I and helmeu. 11nd woritd drop into Uie Ruonlng Barca Nudist Resort. \Valworth County Sherirf William Cum· mings said that if he sees any naked borhes suspended lrorn bi 11 ow i n g parachutes he will arrest them on charges of indecent exposure or disorder- ly conduct. Maguire said the jump would go on anyway. "It's a legal jump be<:ause we'll be lan· ding in the camp." Maguire said. "Besides, we'll be coming In high enough that people on 111': ground oualde the camp won 'l---be a\le to see us wllh U'te naked eye." f..frs. Ada Marget~. owner of Runnin g Bares, iilct llfebad a sl11nding Agree- ment with parachuting clubs In the area allowing them to land in the camp any lime they glve her 30 minutes notice. L11sl Sunday, nine fully clothed members of the East Troy Sky KnightJ CJub dropped in when they found their regular landln& spot clouded over. They were fully clothed, she said, .but eome shed their gannents and joined resort guest.II In swimming and volleyball. As for tho nu~e •k/'. dlvin~, Mrs. M&rg~Us --known'-as "bUtle-Ma' -•&kt if "they're brave enough to do It, It'! line y.•JU\ me. But I hope they don't land 8011lCW~er< el .. ll\atfOlftllt''t!Ublfl>Ulld!. "lt Could be embarrassing to them." ' • • Today's Fln-•I N.Y. Stoeks · TEI)! CEi:.ifs I .. DAILY l'ILOr Sl•ff 1'11911 Teeta Festival Opetas Photographer Eric Van Deusen, 18, and painter Karen Browning, 19. prepare £or Canterbury Fair, Laguna's fourth and newest sum· mer art sho\v. It runs from 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday at Laguna Federal S.avings and Loan parking lot . Show, featuriitg '"·ork o! leen--age artists and craftsmen, is sponsored by South Or- ange County YMCA1 . I • ~ Jud~Sets Inquest Sept. 3 ! ' Into· l{ennedy Accident f~DG ARTOWN, Mass. (AP) .....: The In· que st into Sen. Edward ~1. Kennedy"s auto accident on Chappaquiddick Island \Viii begin in this island resort town Sept. 3, Distr1ct Court Judge James A. Boyle announced today. The announcement was made after a meeting between Boyle and Dist Atty. Edmund Dinis, who ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited newsmen will be admitted to the proceedin(::s. Dinis said he had "no intention at this time" of calUng Kennedy to tesUfy. Dinis had indicated earlier that he would be summoning Kennedy. The senator has said h!!! would -tr 11 fr Colunmists Say l(eu11edy Sougl1t Cousin for Rap \VASHlNGTON (AP) -Columni.<1t Jack Anderson says Sen. Edward M. Kennedy asked his cousin, Joseph (:argan. "lo take the rap" for driving the car in which a young ae:cretary drowned. In his copyrighted column today. Anderson said Gargan "grimly said he wuuld admit to driving the car." "In the · cold light of dawn, Kennedy decided to face the consequences hlmself, and then Ile filed his terse statement with the Edgartown police at 10 a.m .. " said Ar1derson, who c~authors the column with Drew Pearson. The Washington Post quoted Gargan as sDying in Hyannis Port, P.1alis., there was "no truth whatsoever" lo Anderson's story. Anderson, attributing his story to •·reliHble sources" 'and Kennedy "in· t.imates.1' said the senator h11d invited f\1a ry .Jo Kopcchne to go for a midni!Wt_ swim the night the car went off a narrow bridge. . The columnist described the swim as "a nocturn"al adventure not uncommon on P.fattha's Vinyard." "Nor are the.'le summer night swln;is necessarily 'viewed as evidence of im· r1oral conduct," Anderson added. He &aid Kennedy knew· wher~ he w11s going but Ule car was going too f11sl and went ofi · into the water. ..... t.1ary Jo drowned.despite Keno.edy's ef· forts to free her. In his exhaustM stale. Kennedy eon-, ce:ived the Idea of asking "Joe Gargan, to t1d1e the rsp for him." An~craon &a.id. Anderson said Kennedy 1ummone,d . Gargan.and 1.'.r.eturued.to the ~ene.olthe._. disl'l!ler to make certain that Garg•n would be totally fimU.lur with the clrcumstnnccs .surrounding 11his un- tortunale accident." ) cooperate In any legal proceedings ·con- nected with the accident, and has can. celed a European trip in order to keep himsell available. Dinis said Thursday he hoped to begin the inquest within a week or 10 days. He added that he would call 20 or more witnes.!es, including all persons whtt might have had any knowledge of events before or after Kennedy's car plunged oft a b r i d g e on Chappaquiddick Island, drowning Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, • Washington secretary. Meanwhile Dinis was advised that he will have to go to court If he want.s •n autopsy on the body of h-fiss Kopechne who is buried in Plymouth, Pa. ' Ttie dead girl's parents, f\1r. and Mrs. Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Heights N .J .. have indicated they will opPQse ex: llumalion of the body, and Dist: Atty. Blythe H. Evans Jr. of Luzerne County, Pa., has assured them they will have a chance to make their stand in court. In a letter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said: ~ "No order would be considered In Pennsylvania without notice to the ne.ar relatives and an opportunity for them to appear in the proceedings fOr such an order. ln order for our courts to consider an order for an autopsy, it .would requir• a showing of imperative reasons." In Wilkes-Barre, Evans told· newsmen., ''ft's not up ta me. An autopsy will bt at the discretion Qf the P.ennsylvanla co1.nU:. All the facts are In Massachusetts." Orange Coasa Weather lligh , patchy clo4ds woo't. keep the sun from roasling the coast. lin.e over the weekend. But . the predicted 75 at tlie beach bodes much fair~r ' than the 93 . lo~ecast. for, inland.1 1 INSIDE TODAY Yacltti110 can be nwfully 1er· ious to tlt0$S involved bus sornetimis it bt'comts ju!i fun, particularly everu ThUisdau t'vening in the !Umme:r during the Bter. Con Rl!l'gatta; Set \.Vttkender Po.gt 23. llf1tlt '' "'"""'' " .... ,". If .......... is-• I C•IHffftOll I Moltffl l'lll!fl It '""'""' tt •t "'""'" """' .. , ,_,u ,, °''"" C_,., t c-~ tt '"" "'"" tt Otlfll Mtlk•• t llntevr"h ».u 01"""• ,. lecltl ..... ,.,, EflNtlll 1'111 I 1...... 1•tt a11ttrt111ut1..,I t'l·ll Ii.ct! Mll'hb 1•11 ""'Ffllfllllti 1 .. 11 TllfVlllM ...,,. "·-,, """'"' tf.Jt Allll ~ IS W .. llltr t M•UMll • Wwllll Ntwt f.f ,...,...... Lie-· tt-........... ' ~I J DllLV PILOT Court··8acks 0€CBoai·d'.s Ban on SDS Oran&e Coast Junior College District l-rusleel have Won Superior Court backing for their refusal to regard the mUltant Stude.nls for A Democratic Soicely group as a recoc:ni~ oreanitatlon on lhe Orange Coast College campua. Judge Robert Corfman dlsmlsS<d tbe sps argument. that Its members hid been unl.aiwfu1ly barred from a :itatus en- joyed by other c a m p u s clubs and organluJtlons. "School trustees, deans and ad· ministrator1 .•. should be pennitted to ~· their dl!Ctetion . . . aod shouldn't be hauled before the cowt to u:ptiin every decision that they :nake,'1 ~ t.o\d attorney Richard W. Petherbridge Tutscioy. Corfman ended almost three hmus of bitter debate by conceding that "a non-~ group doesn't have as much status as those accepled by the co!Jeae admlni~ators and they don't, in t~s cm, get the •10 a quarter .~erm that LS granted to the other groups. But he made it clear that cllstrict t.natees acted within the law and within their "clearly defined reaulations" when lhe)t withheld recognition of the left wing group as a campus orgaizatlon. He particularly upheld decisons in that sense by colleae president Robert Moo~~ and Joseph Kroll , dean of student actlv1Ues. Kroll ttsUfied from the witness stand and Moore stated through deposition that the SDS group had been denied recogni·' llon becluse of "g01!11 and aims stated by the national erganii..ation which were not compatible with college policies and reiulatlons." Kroll insisted, in an argument that was refuted out3ide the courtroom by angry SDS spokesmen, that there had never been and would not be any denial of the use ol c0Ue1e facilities by the group. He arcued that the group's message Of sup- port of campus turmoil and advocated dl1ruptlon of university and coUege schedules was contrary to stated OCC policies and repugnant lo many other ,tudents on the Costa Mesa campus. "We hs.ve here a situation in which students. the general public, professors. administrators and trustees all have a \'e&ted interest in the operation of this school" Judge Corman commented. "Th~t same ge.neral public has charged those trustees and administrators with the operation of the school and has giv~n them, through its regulations, a ~ertam amount or discretion in that o~raUon. "You can't," he said, "take a man and tell him to run you r school and then deprive him of the right to exercise judg· ment. Do that and you might just as well have a punchcard to do the job." Deputy County Coun.!lel John Powell successfullr. argued that the school board acted witliln the bounds of the state's education code and "model. carefully "'orded regulations'' when it kept the name of SOS from the list of organiza- tions accepted at Orange Coast College. Pelherbridge announced his intention of appealing Judge Corfman's ruling. -An SOS spokesman condemned the ruling as "unfair, not based on the evidence before the coort and pretty typjcal of the kind of thinking that brought us' to court in the first place." Folk Mass Set At Arts Festival The Festival of Aris grounds in Laguna Beach \\'ill be setting for a "111isa Criolla'' -South American folk nlass-al 4 p.m. Sunday. Prese:nted by the Festival of Arts Chorale, undtr !ilarllyn Jnte rland.l"s direc. lion. the program will feat ure authentic Sp~ish instrun1ents, costumes and music. A similar performance "'ill be given a \reek from Sunday. Appearing with the <£horale will be son1e 15 members of the l.aguna Beach Civic Ballet Company, directed by Antonia fl.1orales. Event coordinator ls Hal O'Neal. OAlll Pl\OT ot•vo~ co.u1 Putl1SHni1ci ~111., l1'Hrt "'· w ••• l'rnlftlll 111111 Pullt""'1 J 1t\: It. C.rlry Viet ., ... ,.,,1 •1'1111 k!ltr.i Mt111trr Tho11111 JC11.,if .... T~1•1111 J.., M1rpl.i~1 Ml nq lnt ldilW ~icl.1tll r. Ntll l-•-.di c 11., EllllO<' L .. •11• IHc\ Offtu 111 f1•11I A••· M4ilfno M4•111 1 r.o. ,, .. '''· •l&IZ Of"-" Offk11 Coit!• ,_ ... i• wttl '"' Sf""1 ~ •1:9d'i 1111 ""'*' ... ""' ....... ,.. """"1o.i111 lell.ll. -~Ill ilftl& ' . ~ .. - ' • DAILY Ptl..DT $!1tl Pl\ttl • ·.:··-····· • Bel ore Lease• Cranston Urges Hearing on Oil ' \VASHINGTON -Sen. Alan Cranston (0.Callf.) has urged lhat public hearings be made mandatory before tile federal govern1nent grants any more offshore oil leases. He told Interior Secretary Waller J. Hickel that Bureau of Land Manarement regulations should be made tougher in light of the Santa Barbara oil spill silua- ti:in. "The federal govcrnmen!, \vithout hearings and without proper e\'aluation of ·on of the priorities, and community and hun1an v a I u c s involved, overrode ob· jeclions and opened the federa( j'.>(lrtion or Santa Barbara Channel for oil ex· ploration," Cranston reminded Hickel in a letter dated July 30 and made public to- da y. "Whal ha~ happened since then Is sad history and familiar to everyone," Cr anston continued. "I am sure you share my concern that we should not let such a disaster occur aa:ain." Cranston called for a change in present reauJations which pennit the bureau director to hold public hearings or not, as he sees fit. Cranston lvould also make it man- datory that prior to the final selection or tracts lhe director "shill request and coosider the ''iews and recommendati ons ot appropriate federal agencies and shall consult with approp riate state and local iigencies to aid him in his evaluation and detenninat.ions. In addition, he may con· suit with other organizations and in· dividuals for this purpose." ' HILLSIDE SLIPS INTO STREET AT INTERSECTION OF LA PAZ AND PRADERA lffect• of Winter R•ln1 Still Folt in Thi• Ml••ion Viejo Neighborhood Heavy Action Reported; Big Break in War Lull? South Coast Youths Hall PY, With Visit by Black Teens By TOM GOJIJllAN ot·TM o.irr •111t lltll NEW FRIENDS DE;PT. -What are the reactions or Laguna and San Clemente teens who spent a weekend hosting 14 black, Mexican, and white t.eenaeers from Los Angeles? Positive. "It was a very good thins," sa id 21·year-old Keith Piller. a mem~r of the Sout.ll Oranae County Yfl.1CA bo(l.rd of directors. He hosted a fl.1exican· American. "We had a very close rela- tionship," Keith said. That was the purpose of the \1-'eekend, the first half of a cultural exchange bet\\'een t"·o separate groups of teens. Previous to the exchange, area teens had little appreciation and understanding of' the beliefs and feelinc:s of their Los Angeles counterparts. It was hoped that after the exchange, a ne1v now of dialocue between three distinct cullures could open up. It did. And many teens are wishing that white adults cou~d rtak.e the s8.me project -1tt show ii nest attempt to un- dcfilind , ·-<I.. blacp and.~ezica~,. Americani. · Sixteen-yea r old Pam Galloway ex· plained, "\Yhen two strangers get together, no ma{ter what color they are. they can gel along if they try. Color can 'l be a barrier. If two people are honest to each other. color won't ma(ter." "l think race relations in the future will improve," Pam added. "Our generation isn't prejudiced like many of our adult!I are. \Vhen ll'e become the leaders or society, "'C will help to form a new public opinlon." \\'hile Parti"s "sister" was talkative, Eric Van Deusen's three black guests \Veren'!. "They talked about superficia l stuff. like the pricts of cigarettes, the draft, and girls," she said. "But through. these. discussions, their p e r s o n a l i t y started to come out. Then. after a litUe prying, they were quite open ." "You "'ant my feelings?" Eric asked. ''They \Vere very honest to me.. These kid$ 11·lll ge t \vhat they want in life through the establislunent. They're going to help their people -but not by thro\\·· ing molotov cocktails. They're going to do ii by going lo school." Ssid Linda Goff, 16, a student al San Clemente lligh School, ··1 wan ted to find . ).j" Sign Vp Aug. 13 For W att;s Visit New students planniog to enter the Newport·~leiia UnUitd School District this fall must rtgi&ter for fall classes betw«0 Aug. IS and :tz. Parents must present proof of a&::e for children entering kindergarten. A child must be 4 years. 9 monlhs old before Sept. I to be eligible lo enroll in .school. Registr1tion will be conducted at school district ofrice&, 1601 16th Sl., Ne1,·port Deach. Laguna Teen Corner out how black people felt about living in a gh~tto area. I sort of found out, but not as much as I'd liked. It v.·1.s partly my fault -I didn 't want to pry , and I fell like I v.·as." -· Linda"s tv.·o black guests also believed 1n non·violence. "They are members of the Black Students' Union. Bul they were disappointed in it because it wasn 't ac· live. They didn't want to~ militant. They want lo move rorw tbrougb tiucation." ~ .• , -· ~auric Prouty. 171 i _ of San Clemente, found the wee.btld ery grat1· fying. "'Before the exchange, ti said I \\'a.sn't against blacks. But how could I say lhat without really knowing them? ''But no'v I know them. And I know how I f~l." 'Laurie, like the other YMCA teens. are thankful for the experience of meeting n~1v friends. ' And, whe.n yo u make new friend s. their colo~ is incidental. That v.·as n11.de cl ear l~t weekend. As a result or the exchange , a dialogue \vas opened, and friends were found. That. after all. 'vas a purpose or the ex- change, and a purpose of the Y~1CA. It was a rewarding wetkend. 'J'ram Bencl1 Just Ups and Vanisl1es The case of the missing tram bench is under investigation today by the Laguna Beach police department. The gaily painted red and white bencl1, one of n1any spotted arc:.ind I0\\'11 for the convenleTTCe of Festival of Arts visitors disappeared from its station in front of \"ictor Hugo's, 307 C\Hf Drive Thursday. \'alued at about $75 the long and a"·kv.'ard canopied srat wa s ap- parently bench·napped during the night, Police Sgt. Frank Dillon said. Agnew Voted Raise \VASHINGTON (U PI) -The Se11ate voted Thursday to rai&e the pay of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Speaker John \V. ~lcCormack, cD·!\1ass.), from $43.000 to $62,500. The bill also raises the salaries of the congressional leaders -Sens. Ri chard B. Russell. t-.llkt r-.tansficld and E\'erett ~!. Dirksen and Reps. Ca rl B. Albert and Gera ld R. ford -lron1 $-42 ,500 to $49,500. Mercy Mission Speeded ForCoast WomanonBoat A Navy communications vessel today was 1petding to a rendezvous with the :SO· foot sloop Wt1lerly, 1.000 miles from ~ulu, to 1id a serlou1ly 111 Costa lo1a&1 woman aboard. The ill crew member was Identified as St1n De \\'obbrock, 23, a part time employe of Bartell Corp., a marine elcc· troniel firm of Newport Beach. Th~ medlcally trained parachutist!! "'tre dropped from an Air force plane Thursd1y to 4id her until the Navy oom· mu.nlcaUons vessel Arlington arrived. Mf!s WObbrock h111 no loc:1I ttslaenct addrtss, aCC"Ordlng to Jamtt Bartell. o"·ner of the electronics firm. "She is a \'try capable woman "'ho has \vnrked for ua from time to time \¥hen she wa.s vi$iting in the area ," Bartell said. The \Vesterl)' is a Columbia.SO ~loop o'4'ned by Ernest C. \\~ilson, commodare of the Newport Harbor Y11cht Club. 'Ille yacht left Honolulu about a "'eek ago on 111 return trip from the Transpacific y1cht race. She IS being skippered by David Lyman, Honolulu, a chief mi:ite In the Merchant 1'1airlne. Wilson nid there were six n\ell and lwo women aboard. The olliers ln the cre.w are from Honoluh.1 and San Franci5co. Hill Slippages Being Repairecl Before Winter }lillside slippages in the Mission Viejo area, brought about by last v•inter's heavy rains, are still being repaired In an attempt to finish before nezt winte r's onslauaht. If the hillsides aren't properly cor· rec ted by then. there may be an even greeter degree of damage, \Vorkers this v..·eek were re·grading the hillside along La Paz Road near the Pradera intersection. Red\\'ood boards 'vere installed longltudinatly along the hlllside. so the ground \vould be somewhat terraced and plants could get a footing. This was not done last \V inter, when the soil and grass finally gave way to the \veight of the rainwater lhat had not run off. One resident on Aracena Drive. whose house is built atop the hillside along La Paz Road, told of her problems. "We sure held our breath during those rains," said Mary Ostling of 26652 Aracena·Or;ve. Her son yMicbaeI. wu on leave from the Merchant Marines duriiig the rains. "I've got pictures (lf our back yard sliding a\Yay," he said . The rains eroded about fiye feet of back ya rd . Parl of their swimming pool \Vas also underniined, but it escaped any cracking. Their redwood fence torn away. the Mission Viejo Company installed a chain link fen ce to prevent people fa\liag do\\"11 the hill ~ide. "They, along ll'ith the coun- ty. are paying for the repairs," Ostling expl~ined. • SA IGON" (AP ) -The heaviest action in nearly l\\'O months ""as reported across South Vi('tnam Thursday. Bul U.S. mil ilary ~pokesmen said it "·as too early lo tell \\"hether it was only a brief break in the "'ar lull or the prelude to rene\val of major enemy operati ons. l.tore enemy and allied casualties "'ere reported since midnight Wednesday than In any such period since June 18, \vhcn the current lull in maJOr sustained ground fighting began. Allied communiques reported a sharp increase in ground fighting just south of the demilitarized zone, in the coastal lowlands south of Da Nang, in.the Centra l Jlighlands, and in War Zone D northeast of Saigon. Along "'ith this, the Viet Cong on Marie Estabrook Funeral Slated t-.femorial services "'ill be held Sunday for Marie Estabrook, a 20-year resident of Laguna Beach. f\lrs. Estabrook, n, died Aug. 5 at South Coast Community Hospital. The services will be held at 11 a.m. by the Unity ChurcH of Laguna at the \\'oman's ·Club, 286 ·51. AM'S Drive, Laguna Beach. Funeral rites ·were conducted today at Fores t La1vn r.i1cn1orial Park Glendale for 111rs. Estabrook. who \vas born in lre!and Jnd lived in California for 47 years. ~1rs. Estabrook is survived by lier d .. ughtt:r. fl.lrs. Alii::e Diestel of Glendale: her son, Herbert Estabrook of Nevada; SC\en grandchildren and lhree great , i;;randchlldren. -· ~ . Thursday made the biggest terror attack in Saigon since the lull began and a com· mando squad successfully invaded a U.S. coova lescent hospital at Cam Ranh Bay. These t"'O attack• accounted for If persons dead and 160 wounded, as well as heavy damages, according to revised c~ualty figures released by the U.S. Command. LSD Victim, 10, Caught on Bad 'l'rip' in Mesa A king.haired little boy bearing n1arks of mcch drug use -and estimated lo be only about 10 years old -was caught running down a Costa Mesa street on a frenzied LSD trip early today. "Take me home , l 'm going to die,'' police quoted the youngster as scream· ing, v.•hile he dashed along Placentia Avenue at \\'est IMh Street, shortl y after midnight. Patrolman Frank Upham took the boy into custody and Officer Dennis Hossrield, who .searched him at headquarters, said thrte LSD lablets anrl some marijuana were hidden in his boot. "They couldn't handcuff him,'' Lt. Tom Durham said loclay, ;'his wrists "·ere so small he"d just slip tl1em right off." Investigators said the boy had needlemarks, indicating narco!ics ·in· jection over a long period, on both arms. He was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall. \\'here charges are pending. mu.Summer Sale Featurinc) • M.//DRJGJ/l By Heritage ....ari,.1 .• """•"tic. •cc•nt of old Sp•i1. Fe•turing long , low D'l•l'i"• pi•cei with a •• p h•••y m•ulding' ch1raeteris tic of century old Sp•niih furnitur .. A.-a••t•trT pric• •• ~ ~Miriqa.J U offw.d at wbs+entt.i ...... ft9\ dcrilMJ oor August Sal•. .... .... $419 $lit Ow 5'rrttM• 5-.Je •ho includH s•IK+ttd CJ'OUJK froM Oruel Henr•don, Her11•9•. NetiOt1a l, Mer9• C•rson •l'ld 111t•"T •• ~., lil'l9l. H•nredew1 et1d Het·ltag• UpluNst.., .... 1 •• Red..cfiou -eccettori ... lefttJ" •t1d pictw. .,.. ..... it.bl-. Size: 74• W -20" D -J2" H it(,.. • INlllUOIS MIWl'Oft:T BIACH Prtlwiwl 1 .... rt.r LAtuNA MACH 1727 W..tdiff Dr .. "2.-2050 O.IP*• ~ .... c:..t Nwr-V--1""""' '94 .. 551 OfU NJOAT m 1 A..n.w.-.AID MAO ... twlAT "nl. • • .... , .. ,_ .... ., 0...-~ ..... ' • ~., ..... ;..;~. • • .. • • • •• J ·~ ~ ......... '· • .. ~. ~ I. .. ..: .. •. ; ... 1; '.1, 3 »r;::t;::lj4i5ill'---Z i j !( c ea; s s . c . au : : a o s 1)$ $ PUFP*•>•>•• • •• Nixon Tells· GOP Plans F 01' Welfare WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pmldent Nixon briefed RepubUcan congreWonal leaders today on details of the far- reaching overhaul of. the naUon's weUare system whlch he will unveil In a na- tionwide broadcast al 1 p,m. PDT. Chan· ne.ls 2, 4 and 1 wtU CAil)' the broadcast live. Nixon and the leadership spent two hours on the message which the White House. billed as the President's most comprehensive statement on home front problems since his Inauguration. address In January. The White House aMounced before the radio·televl!ion appearance that Nixon would seod three special measages to Congresa: next week spelling out the leg islation needed for his proposals. Press secretary Ronald Ziegler said the first message on Monday would deal with welfare; the second· on Tuesday with a new plan to upaod federal manpower training programs, and the third on Wednesday outlining a completely new approach of federal-Jt.tte revenue abat- ing. • • r 10~1. A119ust 8, 1969 L DAIL V l'tlOT ,'l Nixon to Face Protest· PAC Defies City Action Despite denial ol a parade permit, the Peace AcUOn Council (PAC) will hold a protest demopsttatlon Aug. 17 n<ar • President Richard M. Nixon's San Clemente Summer White Houae, PAC member ~bert 0. Bland •aid today. • Further, Bland said that the American Civil IJberlie< Union (ACLU) will file suit IOOl1 in Orange COunty Superior Court qalnst the city of San Clemente an<!. the Capistrano Unified School District Filing date 11. unknown, but Bland, a Lagunan and south Ora.nee County head of lhe PAC, said he was hopeful that litigation eoold be resolvtd Prior to the Aug. 17 protest by expedited legal action. 'Ille PAC hope3 ~ lon:e· the city •nd the school district to permit .,. of publlc property for the demonstration and pro- test rally on school grounds, through the courts. GO TO COURT The PAC has said that tt with the usist.ance of the ACLU will carry the suit to the Supreme Court of the United Stales If necessary. between 2,000 and S,000 ptOple are ti'· peeled to take part In the demonatratlon. A iroup ot "several hundrtd0 will be comlnf from San Francisco In bu.wt. another croup ol eeveral hundred are buslnJ In from San Diego IJld.a major portion of tbe demonstraton •ill II< com. ing from Loo Angeles. An Orqe County cootingenl will Ibo be there, be said, PICKETING SE!" llemollstrators will plcktt along tbe aldewalks and parkway or Vil Del Frente, adjacenL to the Cyprus Shtre area where the President's home i! located . 'l1le protest rally could be held In the San Clemente State Park, near the Cyprua Shore .area, Bland saJd. Bland said that the PAC will talk wlth San Clemente .Police Chief Cillford Mur· ray to mate arraJliementl for the pro. test. Assistant Chief Stanley MalcheU sald today talks are seheduled ln \he coming week. MatcheU said that denial of the parade permit to the peace J?OUP ha.a not chang- ed pollce department l!tanC<. "We just have a job to dO and we will do it as ':fell as possible ua1ng what ever means necessary. PROTEST STILL ON P11ce Council's Blind YOUTH NOT ONLY ONE SURPRISED RICK AND NANCY CHUCKLE OVER CUBAN SNAPSHOTS Girlfriend Wa ited While He Made Unscheduled Stop Because of the acope of the President'• revamping proposals the target date for legislation to put it into effect would be probably a year or more from now. The message came oli the first an· niversary of Nixon's acceptance of the Republican presidential nomination at Miami Beach last Aug. 8. ''In the meantime, we want to em- phasize that we are going to conduct a picket line and rally which will be perfectly legal ,ln. that we are not re- quired to obtain permits for them," Bland said . · The Lagunan said that it was felt that a large number of military enlisted men will come to the protest in support cl the pl"ace group's por,itloo against the Vlet· namese war. "We haven't had th.is type of thing ever happen here before, but It has happened in other places before and i\ has been • taken care of. We will be able to take care of It here," Matchett said. WAUKESHA, Wis. (UPI) -Charges again.st an 18.year-old driver arrested by, Menomonee Falls police for repeatedly veering over the center line were dismlwd here Thursday. Cuba Not Bad to Visit, In his acceptance speech a n d throughout his campaign, the President slressed his aim of getting people off the welfare rolls and onto the payrolls of private industry .. "This makes it especially necessary to hold the protest," he said. Bland said that He pointed out that mutual aid pacts with other law enforcement agencies make possible the bolstering of the 34- man San Clemente police force U necessary. Price County Judge cart E. Bjork, a:it. tin& In W8Skesha County Court, said the erratic driving was understandable under the circumstances. Huntington Youth Finds On Saturday, Nixon wi11 work during the morning, clearing his desk before leaving for a month's vacation at his new summer White House at San Clemente. * * * Nixon's Plane "We consider ourselves very prtr fessiona1. i;We will do what ls necessary to take Clll'f. of the situation," he concluded. The boy had a nude 16-year-old girl as ' a passenger, accord.Ing to Sgt. Terry O. CooJUard of the Menomonee Falls Police Department, who stopped the auto Wednesday. By RUDI NlEDZ!EL.5Kl 01 tll• D1ltr ~li.t STi ii Imagine lounging poolside at the Havana llilton, eyes shaded from the &irnmering heat, getting a bronze tan whUe cooling off your insides with a Cuba Libre. But you say, "That's preposterous. No one vacations at the Havana Hilton anymore. It's in Cuba!" Rick DeNuccio of 12791 Saint Andrews Lane, Huntington beach did. Unex· pectedly. And he enjoyed it. The 26-year old former Golden West CoUege student bought a ticket to New York City June 25, with the intent o{ visiting his mother during summer vaca· tion. But before he got there he look his forced vacation in Havana. · "There has been a slight cliinge in our de6lination," the pilot's voice calmly told passengers of United Airlines Flight 14, about two minutes out of Los Angeles International Airporl .. We are flying to Havana, Cuba. Estimated arrival tima-will be in five hours, 45 minutes. Please enjoy your flight. .. DeNuct:io thought the captain was kid- ding. The master of a strange, un· derstateC joke. But the stewardess told him and the other passengers, "We wouldn't kid about something like that," and everyone took off their coats and shoes and had a few drinks. They were free , with United Airlines wanting to ease the pain or the unschedu1ed atop. "Everyone was getting pretty well bombed," said ruck. "But I stayed sober, I didn 't want to miss anything when I went lo Cuba." "The guy next to me knew that I was broi<e. So he" gave me a dollar lo buy cigars in Havana. I guess he felt 110rry for me." DeNuccio and lhe 50 other passe ngers didn't see the benefactor of the unsch eduled vaca tion until they arrived at Havana airport. where he was un- ceremoniously hu stled off by one federale on each ann, "He was a dark-haired, dark -skinned man. I later heard he was an American Indian," De:Nuccio explained. "The stewardess told me he took a gun and put it next to a passenger 's head and tokt her ~n the captain's door. She let him Ir. a remained in there until we landed." "He's probably working pretty hard by now. I understand those guys bave to labor in sugar cane plantations." Larger than life posters of Che Guevar- ra, flanked by similar-sized portraits of an Oriental man an1 woman, greeted the Huntington Beach youth as he peered out o( the window at the airport building. The passengers were taken Inside by bearded soldiers, wearing baggy green uniforms, interrogated and fed. Each passenger was given IO Havana cigars to help pas.~ the time while the airline and the Cubans haggled over who should pay the landing lee. The squabble lasted three hours, just past midnight, when they were transfer- red Into two big buses and taken to the Hilton for lodging. "It was 20 stories high, big, fabulous and beautiful. But it was deserted. I lhink we we re the only people in it." DeNuccio and a Londoner he met on the plane decided to share the same room for the night.. "Everything we had gotten wasJree up to this point, so we thought if tt's free, why not ring up room service and order something good to eat?" They did. ''The guy came up with steaks, pie, eggs and Coke," said DeNuc- cio. ''It was covered by a really classy silver thing and the food was pretty good, except that the Cokes tasted like maple syrup." The next day lhe passengers had the run ol the Havana Hilton with all of its impressive facilities until it became time to 10. When they got back to their seats they found that their possessions had been searched and film removed from their ca.meras. Just as they left DeNuccio loaded up bis camera with a roll of film he carried on his person and Slllpped two pictures of tht airport. "Nobody waved goodbye. 'J"ney weren't loo cheery about the whole thing. 1 think they were glad to see us go." Crowds of photographers, newsmen·and the FBI welcomed the plane tn Miami two hours later asking quest.ion! of the passengers and waiting with official documents. After the glory was over, the passengers were led back into the plane, decorated with balloons and streamers and partied their way to their original destination, once again courtesy of the airline. Rick 's mother was happy to zee him when he arrived in Albany, but no more elated than his girl friend, Nancy Herbert of Redondo Beach, who was anxiously awaiting his return in Calilornia. "I a1most didn't recognize him," she said. "When he ret1Jrned at the end of Ju. ly he had grown long hair and be looked like Harpo Marx." "Yea," smiled Rick. "In New York they called me 'Elett.rk head.'" In advance of Nixon's speech, ad· ministration sources disclosed the basic Joining Fl y-in approach ~:would take to the mounting Movieland of the Air Museum officials Green Ber et Lawyer To See Secret Da ta problems of weUart in America. claim President Nixon la a participant in The new program would provide a tbe First Annual Biplane Fly-in scheduled WASHINGTON (UPJ) -One of the specific federal welfare payment to the for Saturday al Orange County Airporl lawyers in the hush-hush murder ln- recipienb. At present,·the amount varia ''Nixon changed his flight plan from El vestlgation involving elght members of Charges of contnbuyng to the delin- quency of a minor were dropped after lhe • boy explained the girl -his fiancee - had "surprised" him in hie car when he finished work as a grocery clerk early that morning. He said he was taking her home. greatly from state to state. Toro to Orange County Airport, ao th.at the Green Beret Special Forces In Viet· Adulb receiving weUare payments he c 0 u I d join our fly-in ," a museum nam, has been given cleara.n<.:e to Seti The girl gave no ex planation, police said. would be automatically regarded as being spokesman dead panned. secret informati9n, the Pentagon dlsclog. job applicants. '111ey would be enrolled in The Presidential plane, Air Force One, ed today. c· C job training program.a which would pro-will be the largest participant in the fly · Jerry w. Frled.helm, a Defense tgarette Olltracls vide incentive pay. Once they were plac-in. In fact , it is the largest plane ever to Department spokesman, said the clear-WASHINGTON (UP1) -The Ametlcan ed In jobs, they would be able to keep a!I land at the airport. ance was granted to George Gregory who Broadcasting Co. (ABC) has rejected a or part of their earnings up to acutoff The biplanes will be arriving Saturday left Thursday for South Vietnam to proposal to let cigarelte makers out of point when they would oo longer require from 8 a.m. to S:30 p.m. and will fly represent Maj. Thomas C. Middleton Jr., cOntract.s for 'televieion commercials at welfare help. around the county in formation Sunday. one of the accused men. ~e end of this y,ear. Under the revenue sharing program, 1------------------------------------------- tbe federal government would make unearmarked bloc grantl to the ltate1 for use. in wellart work. Soviets Expel U.S. Diplomat In Retaliation WASHINGTON CAP)·-Russia has er· pelled ii diplomat from the U.S. embassy in Mo.scow in retaliation for the U.S. ouster of an official of the Sovlet United Nations delegation on a charge of epying. The State Department, anoouncing the el'change of expulsions, disclosed also that the U.S. had protested to the Soviet government tha t the retaliatory action against embassy counselor Milton Kov· ner was "prejudicial to our relatiom." The Soviet de!egaUon member at the U.N. was named here as Igor L. Andreyev, a couneelor of the Soviet mission at U.N. he.adqua.rter.1 in New York. The United Slates, press officer Car1 Bartch said, told the office of U.N. Secretary General U Thant on July 1f lhat Andreyev had "engaged in activities in the U.S. which con8tltute abuse of the privilege of residence within the meaning of Section 13B ol the headquarters agree- ment between the U.S. and the U.N." U Thant's office was officially notified that ''he cou ld not be permjtted to re- main in the U.S." Bartch was asked what Andreyev waa actually accused of and replied "we Jn· formed the United Nations and the Soviets that he was engaged in tn.. telligence aCquisttion actlvtUes." Bartc:h agreed that in ordinary language lhis was an allegation of &pylng, but u.Jd he had no Information on what kind of espionaa:e action wu involved in the charge. mRnSPISUl's EXPANSION and Remodeling NOW IN PROGRESS Hurry for Best Selection •• '• Repnbli~ans Fete -Nixon Due to the present large expansion of our Fulle rton store we must move a large amount of our inventory immediately. All 3 stores ore participating in this event offering you discounts ~· . Nomination Ce'lebrated ; President Praised WASHfflGTON (AP) -The GOP ce.lebrated ;i;t the Wh.ite House today the anniversary of President Nixon's 1968 nomination and heard a prediction that the party wou1d be doing this every year through 1976. _ The President listened lo tributes and glowing praise or himself and his ad· ministration at a ceremony In I.he rose garden. It had some of the trappings of an old fashioned political rally or c:on· ventlon. with partisans dumping hun- <lreds or mult.i-colored balloons from the rooftop or the west wing. There was a thunder of applause and a tremendous popping of balloons. Just as Rep. Rogers C. B. h1orton ol 7'taryland wu pa.ylng tribute to Ally, Gen. John N. Mitchell as the 11168 cam- J>&lin.manager. snd~LPfJnclpaLan:hll«t of the Nixon victory, the President $!lifted his feet, stepped on a balloon and citement, there's nothing that equals the jumped. satisfaction, there's nothing that equals Perhaps 200 people turned GUtrto honor the etrain of a presidential campaign," the President and First Ladyi Tbty NJl'on 48.id. "We won, but It was close." waited in the steamy, humid rose garde He chuckled and added that It sew;ns and sipped coffee'andmuncntacooldts. things are a1ways close, including some PicldnJ up a thought Morton had ex-votes in Congress, and he predicted that: pressed, Nixon told the partisan throng "We're going to conUnue to win the that one thing they all could be thankful close ones alld golng lo win tbem even for Is America's position int.he world . bigger In the years ahead." "J don't take the credit," he added. Morton, who also ls Rtpubllcao na- Nlxon went on to say that he.came along tionaJ chairman, gave Nixon a 80Uvenir at a Ume when conditions were bound to of the. occasion, a clock set at the Ume of change. the presidential nomination -ac~ally a "We are going to continue .•. to make year ago yesterday -and a convenUon America worthy of the trust that millions badge. all over the wortd have in UJ," he uld. Speaking directly to the President, Nb:on looked out at many of tbosC who fl,1orton saJd : '1You have urutec1 .our party had etarted campaigning with him last u It has nevtr been united before ... the year In the snow1 or the f'(ew Hampshire great dreams of the Republlcan Party dma.o'.-and.Jicote1_who.Joined..upJa,ier.__,cazne lnlt_al..)'ouJore el.e.cl® Pmldeot ''There's Mthlng that equab; the ex· of the United Stites." _,.. ON Tiii U.IGUT SIUCTION O• SPANISH, MEDITEllANEAN AND l lNE MEXICAN IMPOITED JUllNnUU EVa •HIEMlll 'D mRnSPl.BLD'S FULLERTON. 225 No. Harbor Bltd., downt- • Phone (714) 871·5720 HUNTINGTON B~CH, 18582 Beach Bltd. • Phone (714) 962-4477 TOMS! ctrlAlllLYI RIVERSIDE. 430 Morket (ntar 14th on Market)• ~ (714) 682·7950 STOit! ttOUltl! .... a ""'.All 10, ,.. , W£IX DAYS a MT •• NI TO 9:30 "' ' • DAl\.Y PILOT Frldil, August 8, 196'1 • ~reec.I Prisoners.· Weak, But They're Do111e Pan American Airway• will 1hlp $1 million worth o! obsolete stew· ard .. s 1 unifo~ to children in Nepal~ LaOs • • It turns out that the folding chairs used for banquets at the Grand Trianon Palace in Paris -Ptflldent Nixon sat on one when he was bere--cost '260 apiece. The design is responsible for the price. The Grand Trianon has been re-- stored to look as it did when No- poleon lived in it. The chairs were designed to look like pieces from a royal Empire dining room, not like somethipg that could be fold· ed away between baDQuets . • Hugh Hefntr, 43, multimUUonair• publish.tT of PlayboV magarine M· scribes this bunny a.s hi& firat love and says he might marru her. The bunny ii Barbara Btnton, 19, Cali/or• nia coed turned actress. TM twosome appeared in R~ where Barbof'C is working. She'll make her movit de· but in a picture cal~d .. What'i a. Nice Girl Like You Doing tn a Busintll Like This?" 0 With floral wreaths floaUng be- hind, Floyd !I· Nelson set sa!Hrom Long Beach in an 111-foot sloop de- termined to stay at sea "until the killing ts stopped in Vietnam." Flowers were tossed by his fellow members of the Peace Action Council who gathered at the shore to mark the anniversary of the atomic attack on Hiroshi.ma. e Throwaway ~ pant f e a being tested by nine nurses at a London horpital for a c01'llU- mtr report publication prootd unimpressitlf:, ""Th.ty ;u.at feU apart on me," OM nurse report. ed. "Thank god'nes.s I waa wear- ing tights a.s well,• anothtr aald. • I The california Senate bas voted automatic jail tenn for persons convicted of repeated acts of pros- titution. Sen. Mervyn Dymally, CO.Los Angeles) argued in vain lbe bill should require punishment of the customer as well as the prostitute. Noting San Francisco sponsorship of the bill. Dymally said: "I'll tell you why San Fran- cisco doesn't want to punish the customer. It's because it'll kill •their convention business." Ul'I Tti.Mtw Bouse Passes Measure Long Debaw in Senaw Looms for Tax Reform WASHINGTON (UP!) -The most comprehensive tax revision measure slnce the income tax waa framed in 1913 uida,y raced the prospect of another three mooth! of debate and change in the Senate. The reform bill, which shuts the door on $7 billion in tax breaks while hand.Ing· out $9 billion in reducUons to indlvidual tupayers, passed the House Thursday 394-30. House approval came after siJ: monthl of bearings which produced IS volumes of test.I.many, and after two days of floor debate. A Senate battle appeared certain over plans in the measure to reduce Lhe oil depletion allowance from 271,) percent to 20_...i. ~allowlll<e Is considered byilwiy the "aY11lbol" ol tu~ ' The S-te ·Flnlmce Commlttff, which wui condutt_ tu hfonn bearings, Is beaded by Sen. Russell Long, (D-La.). who is opposed to reducilon of the oil allowance. During the Houte vote Thura- day, Democratic whip Hale Boggs, (D- La.), was the only member of the eight· man delegation from oll·rlch Louisana to vote for the vast reform package. Boggs proposed the oil depleUon allowance reductJon as a member of the l!ouse Ways and Means Committee which approved the bill. JU said reducing the allowance would eliminate the con- troversy surrounding the oil industry. Senate leaders have ~ a vote after corripletioo by Oct. 31 of Finance Committee bearings. In addlUon to ta:r reform and tax relief, the measure includes a six-month ex- tension of the income tax surcb.arge at 5 percent between Jan. 1 and June 30, 1970. But tu reform Is the substance ol the bill. 'nle measure woald impose taus for the first time ori1 f~ijons, llmit tu benefli'J for the oil aDd mineral in· dustrles, and prevent milllonatrfll from escaping taxation. These were among 27 major areas of change. * * * * * * How Refprm Shapes Up WASHING TON -Highlights of the tax bill pused Thursday by the House: Tu Belld: Tax rate cut for all· under $100,000 income by 1972 of at least 5 per· cent. standard deduction raise..1 by 197'2 to 15 perctnt with a top of $2,000. Tax breall for widows or widowers and single persons over 35. Low·income allowance eUmlnaUng or sharply cutting taxes for those at the poverty level or not much above it. Fon.ndatlons: A tax of 7.5 percent on net investment income of private foun· dations for the flrst time ; tighter reporting requirements and new rules on disbursement cf funds. ~1inJmum Tu: A formula requiring taxes on at least half of total income, a move to prevent tax escape. Not every source of income is included, though, with ollmm still allowed preferenUal tax tnatment. DepltUoa: The 17.5 percent oil deple- tion allowance, sald lo be the symbol of tax reform, dropped to 20 percent; more than 100 other special allowances for other mineral industries reduced acrou the board by 27.l percent. .Tax Exempt Orgulzailons: Corporate tu Imposed on unrelated business ac- tivities of churches, social clubs and fraternal organiiatlons. Fann Louear Restrictions to prevent wealthy hobby farmers from writing off paper farm losses against other income. JJltereat Deduetl.on1: New limit of $25,000 on Interest deduction when bor· rowing to offset other income. Charitable ContribuUons : Elimination of unlimited charitable deducUons that allow millionaires to donate stocks. and art works to eliminate taxes. Banks: New accounting rules to raise effective lax: rates of C'Olnmerclal banks, mutual savings banks and savings and loan assoclaUons. Arizona Ripped by Storms Tornadoes, Winds, Rain , Lightning Sweep State California klutt>erll ClllfOl'ftla c:ont!Mled tQ ..ir; 1lr qncMtia..d "t~ '""'" ..._ .,_. end t\.vmld!IY tocHv at ttie "'"°" _., "'""'"*' Ill Ille '°' • ~ "' '"°" d the lf'N, It -inwtty ftlr Wfllt • kW lllMl«I 11!\i+idlt+ iiliOW+s 111 .. "*""'-'"' llfld MHfh 11111 ..... ,. •lont .,,. -tf. -ta "'*'" •nd 'tldll)to/ hid fl11Y Wlllh!N wlltt '"9tdl'I' M •IDf+t ftl4I <-' HI ..,_ "'°""'*"" ~ 'T1't II! ... __,. -• ., 9ftd Pf'lldlctld tow thlt --of 70. Tllil Air Pol!vtltlf+ Contr.i Ol1trlct Mid ...,._ -lltlll tQ JnOdntll ....... llt "" l.c. ~ 111!11. Tiie U.S. We.tll'lff' I U'rN1.1'1 ,..., ~"" ...,.., -"° tPPl'«ltblt ,.t(..l! .. t\Glt tor ~ ~lfDfllil •nd ,...._ ""'"''" •-Int ) 1o S drfAa ........ "°""91 fw h .... loci l<'ICllN W.....,..'(, AVfl, U. A -IUrtered .................. ,,.. ~ In tM Cl-" ..... l'l'lllUftfl lflL TIM tlNdle Mft flll tr, wrt 11 fli91t ft 1t fMll, M to • ""'~ at\' IM eo91t ff .. 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Long Beach, with wile J anet Lynn at left, and Navy Seaman Douglas B. Hegdahl, 23, of Clark, 5.D., arrived in Washington TbursdaY. after having -been released as prisoners of war by the North Vietnamese. An attibulance took Rumble, who hurt his back when be was shot down, to near· by Andrews M Force base hospital. He is report- edly suffering from dysentery, chills and fever. Frishman told newsmen that they had received •'adequate food, clothing and housing" during their captivity. Here is how: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $500.00 :szs~ Free safe deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.0Q savings account . = s6~ (1pproxlmlt1 yearly coal lo rent box .i bonk) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express travelers cheques OR = s7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TICKETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account =•39!! 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 ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION SOUTH COAST Pl.AL\ • COSTA ME'JA, CALl .-Oh il!A ,::;~:-,-,-_-.::_;;_,,..=::="'"z;:;..:::;:c;,cc,_:::;:, ==.:;;.;<(;::;;:_:-;:;:::;::;:=::::=,,::.ll<t::::;_:'.OX:O:&<====•=t='.=>;>i-0.,>C-4< ... 4 ....... --f'j __ ..,,,I>:.' •o -·-·-·-· ... -·--·-· ~0-•0P•~Oo•~·~• .. ,....•o-o_o_o_o oo-o•o~o•v~•~++• --..---.--.--...--,,_.,.-..,..,....,,.,__,,_.~ ... • By JEAN ClOX ~ IM O!l6h> POM Iliff. Fnm~y, Tom MID'pblrie, Alan Dlrtin and Jack Chappell ....,•ta bit alJ);e. Tom Murpblne bu a harried, ~ look. Thal'• because be wun htlmelf lno 10 I fraule: ead> ~y '" lllllllsJnl lditor of tbe PA!LY PILOT. He r.,-eiy bu llmt for lunch. SIW!)g lnduslrioualy •I tbe copy, doaa;· behind""" la Alan D!rkin .. He ltlll maJn.. Laina ·l\la ""Y· Engllab complexion, aJdnc wllh tJiat l"IMU• Britbb, wit, dttpite aev.eral. years tn California. Hi llways comes equipped with a Iar1e paeket of photos to keei> bl& crooles am-.aS\ Or tilt progress ol hit two diapered sons. In Ille Loguna Bead! buruu ol tilt newspaper, yoong Jack .Chappell is run- ning from leS\lvll to lire dlgiitng up tilt news. He ls running beeause he dOe:an't have much time. Soon Jack WW be teav. ing tbe paper to join Uncle Sam. Meanwhile he la .food of r=untJnr in- cidents from softer and more frolk:lome days u a Sigma Alpha Epsilon lratemlty member at Unlvtraity of Southern California. COMMON DENOMINATOR · Be!lides the fact tl)a.t" these three men live In Laguna Beach and are employed t.y the same paper, they h!ive another common denominator -their wives. • • on A nt , , DAILY PILOT""" 1W Pllfflcll. O'DMMll No, they art not all married to the same woman. Each has his ver; oWn wife, and each of these women Is an art· ist exhibiting in the Festival ol Arts. SKILLED CRAFTSMAN Lu Murphin• Prlll,, A.-st Uo 1M I. ., ... lJ ·• ' The three women, like their husbands. all have a different medium of a· pression. Diana Dirkin, a sculptor works with marble, wood, ala.baster and bmme •. Lu Murphllle, a potter, wwks wllh day, and Judy Chappell, a paint<r, works wlih oils. BEACH IN ATHENS How do newspaper men and artists get together anyway? A1an found Diana walking along a beach in Athens. She wu on a holiday from Paris where she spent two years u an apprenUCf: to two llCll!pton -Lynda Luzanowfaky and Darla Gamsaragan -both ol whom are former apprentices of Bourdelle. She ·also studied In several well known French academies. He was working for an Engl~h newspaper in Greece. 'lbo5e who aee Diana's ga.spqiy beautiful <arVinl• .In her leS\lval boelh lajgb be tul'lfised to learn she I.! ooly IS yiarl Old. It takes no expert to realize the "sOOtlt rtyliations ol the human fig- ure were created by a 8Cll1ptor wicb.' a britlfnt fl.lture ahead of her. Because 1he is ·color=blind. abe tw an ll"ICfeued understanding of volume and fonn wbleh enables her tb transmit: ll!e into oold •tone. and wood. Diana, one ol Mr. and Mn:. Coleman Walker Morton's five children, was rail· ed In Pu~a. She had to stay indoors because the bright outside light was pam.. ful to her eyes, so she spent a lot of her tinle drawing, liO!llefhing •he prdemd to playing with older children. However, it was not completely fulfill· Ing r.r 111< color-blind girl <o paint. "Yau doo't,.. wha\ other peorle I\«. I'""" I wanted to communkatt wlth others," lbe explained. She discovered clay, and.much to her parents' dismay retreated to the 1 basemerit of their large home during the summer months where sbe worked busily thrnllghout the day. At that time, ~t ol her figures were animals. Not until abe began tnmUng people, dJd she begin carvlr1g them. Now most of her aculpt.ures are groups of peo- ple, inlertwtned and interdependent. 111e stone! she uses art marble, steatlte and alabaster, and for her wood 1he UHi teak, mahogany, tulip, roeewood and !IOJTleUmea even California dr\ftwood. Except when she works wlth br~, lhe usually gets her ma~ first and decides wbat to tal"V\; when inspiration com ... SUBTLE STYLIZATIONS Diana Dirkln after they were graduated . from their respective colle1es last year. Judy spent most of her young life in Olula Vista and when lhe went to the University of Waahlngton her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Armond Ault , moved to Huntington Beach. While at the university, she majored in graphic design, but her interest in art didn't begin Uiere. "I can't remember when I started drawing. J always was In· terested. Jf really is a racket, because you can paint while other people have to ~ study things like chemistry," th& gifted youiig blonde said. Tltis is Judy's lint year ~ the festival and she was pleasanUy surprised that sh• watt.. aCcepted. · To be juried, artists are asked to lake their works to Irvine Bowl aild line them up on the seats. Judges go from chair to chair, screening lho work! ani:.l there are only about 40 to 50 openings ea"ch year. People who like to know what they are looking at when they view a painting will dilj,ght ln Jlidy's large, colorful, realistic ca.nva5$e:S. Take her painting in ·brown! and blues of eight young girls In bloomer suits. One holds a basketball with '09 written across It and they seem ready to get up and jump onto the courts any minute. The plcturt, Judy said, was in· spired by a photograph of the basketball team On which Jack's grandmlther played In 1909. 'PREFERS PEOPLE wife. As a young reporter, ,he bad !,he "Bible beat." Lu, a freshman, was in chai'ge of publicity for the Y. Lu was an Interior design student while ln college and tt wq not until she was a senlor, and already miirried to Tom, that she became hooked on pottery. She took one claSs under James Lovera, a well- k n o w n ceramist, and she and clay became best friends. While they were !iv· ing in Swmyvale, after she bad her first of. three children, she began studying wilh a wOman ceramist in Palo 1\lto. Soon after they moved to the Art Colony. Tom, who was graduated from Laguna Beach High School, lived most of his life there and when offered a job in Newport Beach, leaped at the opportunity to move back to his home town. FIVE YEAR VETERAN It was a good opportunity for Lu to continue her pursuit into poltery. She joined the Artlsl.5 Guild and exhibited in their shows. In the old gallery. She also joined Laguna Beach Art Association and wen.a few first pri1es ln its membership shows. She has eshiblted in the Festival of Arts for five years and is Gne of 14 ceramists and s e v e n potters on the ground.. The disciplined shapes, balance and finishings to her stoneware a n d porcelains show her to be a thoroughly skillful craftsman. She work!! busily in her own home where she has her gas kiln and a wheel, .and unlike many potters makes her own glazes which enables lier to finish her works with an lnflrllte varie- ty of com.blnaUoos in coloring. ' . OAILY PILOT f'ltllt. IW Jack C~•"'911 COLLEGE STUDENTS Judy in the past has done com· missioned portraits and to make~ extra money worked a1 a sketeb artist at Disneyland. She· prefers people to land9capes, and her lnteres\ in the hu- man form is U'l.Olmitted onto her warm, cheerful paintings. There are 87 women exhibiting ln the Festival of Arts which features the works of 182 artists, some of whom are very good. However, there are three newspaper men who don't have any pro- blem deciding which · of the 182 is their favorite. Ask any one of them. PREFERS PEOPLE Judy Chappell Jack found bis artist-wife in the Anaheim c.onventlon Center. n.e two col· lege studenta both were working there during the IWllDler of 1917 and mar'ried It was Tom Murphlne's job on the Spartan Daily, San Jose'College's student newspaper, which brou&}lt bim to his Grandparents Should Learn Love · Puts 'F I or • DEAR ANN LANDERS : ?-fy husband a,,d I marrkld eight years ago. I was nearly lhree months pregnant. We've had a happy marriage and I've tried lo be ·kind to my jn-laws although they never had any use ror me and they lel me know II. 1 We now ha ve lhree children and are: proud of lhem all. My in-laws moved out Of the state five years ago. They send the tWo younger children beautiful blrt.hday glfts every year and Ignore the oldest child's birthday completely. The message Is clear and 1 resent it. The ch.lid Is old eriough to l\Sk why her grandparents nevtr send her a birthday gift. 1 can no 10nger say, "They forgot." -Although hiy in--Jaws dislike m• ln- tenstly l have managed to keep things • 'l>ANN LANDERS '".~.' peaceful and I'd hate to create a rift in the family. Al the same Ume I feel they are being cruel to our child and I can 't bear it. Whal should I do? -NO HAPPY BtnTHDAY DEAR NO: Your husband (not you) tlmuld write to bis pannb a.ad tell them lhe oldest chlld can't understand wby. Grandma ana Gra~~pa keep fOf1CIUiag her bl.rtbday. Aak Diem to pleue l end her a card II they don't wlah to tend a llft. u they fill lo -ply wllh hli re- que1t nei:t yur, return dte youaaer cbUdreu'1 birt.ltda1 atfta. aopeaed. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am marrled to a wonderful man and conaidtr lJl)'self utrtmely fortunate. He has dou!ll ol marvelous qualities but u a }over be is a failure. I try to !ale ft but no mile u _.Po tl ve and stnsltive as he can be footed. He kn&... my lovemaking II lhe "duty brand" It kills me when my hU1band Iles beside mt at night, s\lent and pensive. I'm S\U'e he ls brooding o~er bl.s in· adequacy. I don't go along with your ad· viCf: to other wives -"Tell·hb\l what 11 wrong and toed.her you can work out a pattern ol loftmaklns that Is mutlially rewarding." I c1n1t imagine anything more ego shattertni tO a man than to be told he Is. • pnor lover. Help me, pleut Ann. I'm confused l\ncf uMlppy. DEAll JENNIE: By yoar ..,. ..i. mlaloo,i J'Oll'•• alrUdy &old lilm -la la.ap.ace~tt more tJOq'aeec, .Un wonf1. And '°" JCllll m11t M iDora explicit. He won't be !nut, he'll be gtatefal. A m11 wbo caret for bl1 woman Is teachable. IAad II Ule shoe 11 on \be other foot, boy1, women are teachable, t<M>'.) DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm an honor student and I work bard to get good grades. Some kids are just naturally b·ralny but I'm a.plugger, not a genius. Last year I wu bugged by al least JO friends who wanled to copy my homework. Hall the lime I said, "OK." The res\ of the time I made up e1cusu like, ''1 haven't flnlshed it· yeL" 'Ibey knew I was lying. Later I bated myself for being chicken. I don't want to lose any friends. Can you suggest a poltte way of telling the p:ipooses (klda who ride on aomebody • > Givin.g else'! baclc) lo get Iott"! -C.Ci DEAR C. Q.: Yoa don't H•e to tell anyboCty 11 •et losL JUst MJ -"No." A frttod who drops )'OU becalllse-you woa't ltdp blm. cbe'at repreteDts •• sreat loa. ' How far should a~ couple go1 Can necklng be safe? When does If become too hot to hand!~! Send for Ala Landers' booklet, uNecltlng and Petting -Whal Are lhe Limits?" Mall your re- quest to Ann Landers in care of your news1>3per enclosing 50 cents th cdn and a long, stamped, seU·addres.m' envef91>e. Ann Landers wUI be glad to hdp JOU with your problems. send lbem to, be:r: ta ure ol tho DAILY PIL<Yr. enclosinJ t self~ddressed, -1t1mped envelopt. " • I I I I I I I I • . -' ' - • JI OlllY PILOT R·~~ea1 ~ cu·ltural . Trends 1J GAY P•IJLBY NP YO~ (tJPI> -W1len ............ -~ ..................... ""' Iha loloT• female Cll O>e #I ... •lillt wore dr1_, llDd .... •1 1111; ~ under a wool dreu ' ..1tli ....... lonl Ulrt and black~ Haw ... ~ , aQoal, lei Oll)oyod the ~ 1'.'f1m. ls some 1ort ol I n\lncle. Bot ...... y WU rDodosl, u lhe -al ber I. c!ay lntct>reted -y. She'd tum Mr In her era'·· tor .ire.. ll ft we.re to -toUJ' ...., al IW!m-sulta llllllll pndlcllly aotblng ond P!"'ldlllc w1tar l]lrites I wtthullMIChlmdoma1!1 ' they were "skinny dipping ... For 'l'l'imlfetr bas gone thniugl\ 1 ~ revolu- lloo, -Im -about lt • then....,. other femlnlne faablon . lmloVaUoqs, lib .the mlnllklrl "' the Dior .. _ ' ~" Aiiout the oQ!y rut rip-~ pl~ _. with the b1klnl and Rl!dl O.mreich'• toplw. Diapita the hoopla Rudi"• ~ ctused I low :,-. ago (1111! the WI Ve of 1111\le falllla>s ti aet off in other dolhllll). Genuelcb Is not Im· rnortaJiud in the I a t e I t doewneotaUon on "Women's Balhi"I and Swimming co.tume in the U n I t e d Statu." Its author iJ Claudia B. Kidwell, IJll>lanl curator of American CQl!ltume at the Smltb1on lan lnltltutioo, :Wuhlngtml, D.C. But the blldnl goea lnl4 the record--without menUon ·ol Bf1111te Bantol -Kidwell !l)'I the blklnl. altboulli lnlroduoed In the United Stales In the llHOo, WU slow in betDg accepted. Wcmen were wearing the two- ploce berHn1drlfl suits In lboeedayl. Achlally, the curator'• work !nots ~-customs and costumes f r o m the ancient Greeb and Romana. She tells of the g-11 of spes in bollt the United Stata1 llDd Britain, finds one of the earllt1t refemicee: to women's bathing costumes in a book written in 1538 when mix~ bathing was practiced in Zurich -"The women wearing only drawers, hllhlng with men." The first topless? MORE OR LESS -Women's swimw~ has come a long way since grandma swathed herself in several layers. of ~loth before taking a dip or appearing in public (top). Today's bildnis cover up1I'ess than ever, and provide water sprites wlth far more freedom than grandma ever dreamed of. But with all the new freedoms in mores a n d morals, will the swimsuit disappear? Miss KI d we 11 doubts it -"It Is unlikely that Horoscope either the swimsuit Industry or standards of modesty or the near fu ture \vlll permit a total elirninalion of swimming cos- tume. Colorful Gardens On Slides Quls\allding rose gan1.,,,. or the Uofted Stales and Canada may be viewed O!I alleles by lho5e attending, lhe ~ge Count)r RMe Society's mffiing 'J\leSday, Aug. 12, at 7:30 p.m. CommenUne on the films tateri on a recent tour will be John Van Barnevek!, who is in charge ol the Pageant or ll<loes garden In Rose Hills Memorial Pilrk. The meetinc will be called 14 ord.,. by Art Gandy, society president, in the recrtation · building of the Westminster Civic Center. Van Barnev~d currently serves u a naUonal director for the American Rose Society and also ia a member of the Orange County R<JOe Society. Preliminary plans M"lll be preM:Oted ,for the Society's 1970 Rose Show by Lyman Cralle, chainnan of the 1969 show. s~men roses and at· rangements brought by members will be entered in frieodly competition during ihe meeting and visitors are invited to aUend and bring their entries. Party Plans Scheduled HO!ling a luncheon and card party Friday, Aug. 15, at noon will be members of El Camino Real Woman's Club. Party setting wtll be lhe Community Clubhouse, Dana PoinL This i1 the fitat pr~ gram of the 'year and a ways and means project, according to Mrs. Seymour Nutt, presi- dent. Reservations may be made with ?.1rs. John Renfro at 400. 22;7. 'Ille deadline " Tuesday, Aug. 12.. Mrs. Ernest Riedel is the general ways and means chairman and asaistln& will be Mrs. Ray Miller and Mrs. Renfro. Benjamin Franklin seems to have been the most famous proponent of swimming among the colonists andJ~ w~. in 1827 ~ Fr•oces Liefv establish· ed 11\e lint swimmlilg llChool in 'Bostbn. Among its vlsHors -John Quincy Adams and John James Audu~. Strimming for women began to be acceptable toward the end of the 19th century and In 1188 Goucher College, a pro- minent school for glrls, built lta own indoor pool. swimming as a feminice sport and to get rid of some of the trappings on bathing suit Miss Trapp in 1909 became the first woman to swim the East River in New York through the treacherous Hell Gate; 1'1iss Kellerman gave swim· ming and diving exhibitions in sleek tights, and Mlss F.derle swam the English Channel in 1926. By the 19.105, sv;imsuits were covering less and less of the bather -and women started the cult of suntaMing. Neither trend has ever slop- Leo: Trust Hunches Annette Kellerman, Gerttude Ederle and Adeline Trapp, of course, helped to brtU down the barritrs of ped. What of the future! Miss Kldwell says one thing Is cer· ta.in-women never again will i;wathe tbell}Ulves with yards o! fabric. SATURDAY AUGUST~ By SYDNEY OMARR TEEN DATING HINTS ' ~tost rom a n t I c individual tonight Is apl to be Scorpio. Date wbo 1penda the JDost probably w l I I be Gemini. Umcllgbt ls grabbed b y Cancer. Ideal date for all signs features 1ood food, home ·entertalnmeat. Avoid the 1en· fiational. Capricorn sertou1ly considen a permanent rtla- tionsbip. Aries maktS perfect hOlt or bo5tess. Taurus is rest-1"'• flirtallous. Leo Is theatri-cal. Virgo is friendly, but de- manding. l.Jbra is amblUous, bot cbarmlDg. LUNAR POSITION FINE FOR FISHING. A1\1ES ftl-tarch 21-April 19): You get nothing for nothing. Take bard look al property. other &Mels. Streamline methods. Hanging on to past may be sentim<'nlal. but is devoid of profit Go modern. TAURUS (April 20-?.1ay !Ol: Canadian Vacation · Get around. Be versatile. Act in confident manner. Take financial risk on your own ideas, talents. Means display fact that you believe in yourself. Then others will follow s1:1it. GE?.UNJ (May 21.June 20): Lake Louise, Alberta. 1n the CMadian Rockies was the·vacation destination of ~1r. and ~1rs. J. \V. Ray of Sen Clemente. Their sia:htseeing a genda included the famous 10,000 foot Victoria Glacier. Obtain hint Crom Ta11n1s message. Jt may be necessary to make cash outlay. But money spent today provides good return . Accent ls on grea ter personal recognition. Women's Club Leaders CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cycle continues hlgb ; yOu meet people and convtnce them of your abilities. Take initiative. Assert yourscU. Put f(l(Ward ideas. Envision Year Ahead LEO-(July 23-Aui. 22): tdels for the coming year and Secrets are featured. Sofne dlfcuU Important calendar are your own secret fears. dates. Your ESP works owrtime. Cbainnen and club ~ of Ortnct-D I at r I c \ C.llfomia l'ederaUon or Women's Cl1,1bs wUl envia!on the panorama of the 15'10 year ,.,.hen they g1ther at t :30 a.m. Tuesday, A1Ji. l1 The Buena Park Woman's Club .tu be the scene of the meetblc, rreaidtd over by Mn. Dll• Mowery. vice presi- a.nt al Oranie D~trlet Ind dean of cbllnnln. Memben of ~ena Part Womm'1 C!Ub wfll serve 1 GMlnental breUIHL Ettl> dillrlct chalrm1n will pr ... nt 1 report on pllll1' and Future plans will Include You S(>OSe what people are workshops in late August a.nd going to say, do. Trust your presidents' brunches as well hunthes. aa four dlstrlct council VIRGO <Aug. 2.'J.Sept. 22 ): meetings, the first to be Accent on frlendshlp!i. You get scheduled In September on the your w1y through charm. But theme of Happlnw ls Doing don't mate promi5es you don't tor Ot.hers. _._ Intend to fulfill. People you Thirty s!J: clubs make up the llllk to · .today apt. to have di5tr1ct, with a total mf"1· elephantllkt memories. benhlp or &451. Largen Of llte • LIBRA (S.pl 23-0cl. 211: group and Jargtst club In the · Advt1ncemf!nt is lndicattd. state Is the Woman's Club of Thint of future-and do Leisure World Laguna Jfll ls, 1cmethlng tibout IL Don't tie with a total of 888 membtra. overly modest. St1te needs. • You get what you really want -but you must ask. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect today c:oftl· cides with journey, writing, ability to effectively advertise your product. On personal level, you auract persons with their problems. Try to help. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): !\1ystery pe rsists where money and mate, partner, are concerned. Key is diplomacy. You cannot force lssues. Best to turn on charm. Then you obtain needed in· fonnatlon -and maybe some cash. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19): Be aware of public relations. Some today tend to challenge meanings o( your statements. Steer clear of legal disputes. Stri ve for honorable cnmpromlse. AQUARllJS (Jen. 20-F•b. 18): Give attention to health requirements. Means avoid extreme!. Fulfill resoluticns concerning diet, rtereation and rest. You may receiVe news which is complimentary but represents added pressure. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on creaUve endeavors. Day features variety-and ac· tivity connected with children. You enjoy what you do. Member of opposite sex pays meaningful compllmenL IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are at- tractive. a natural showman and capable of capturing and holding attenUon. You are due lo change of residence or domestic adjustment. St . Andrew's Chosen For Candlelit Rites St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church was the scene of a candlellght wedding w h e n Gayle Ann Pearson exchanged vows and rings with Phillip Edward Cotton. The Rev. Dr. Raymond I. Brahams perfonned th e ceremony for th e daughter of the \V, W. Pearsons of Newport Beach and the son of the R. B. Cottons of Costa f\1esa. He was assisted by Wt;s Roberts. youth n1inister of \Vhiltier's Calvary Baptist Church. _ • Given In marriage 'by her father, the bride wore a gown of sHk organta over taffeta with bodice and long sleeves of chanUUy laet. A pea.rl-trlm· med headpiece of lace and satin caught her elbow length illusion veil and she canitd phalaenOpsis and 11.tphanotis in her bouquet. . f\.liss Chtis Pearson, maid of honor for her sister, wore. a gown of lime 1recn acd whlle and a daisy headpiece. Jn stmi11r costumes were the bridesmtlds. the Mims Pihl Lacock, Nancy \YtU.s and Melinda Colto11, si.!ter o( lbe bridegroom. All car r I e d baskets of yellow and white d11isies. Tom Westgate was best man, and ushers Included Chrll Wall, Carl Taylor and Dan Boers. Approximately 350 guests attended a reception in the Fireside Room and paUo of the church followina the ceremony. ·fl.trs. James G. Bauer, the bride's aunt from Nashville, took chara:e of the guest book. Other apecial guests Included f\frs. 0. K. Galbraith also from Nashville, grandmother of the bride. The bride was graduated rrom Ne"'port Harbor High School :ind Goldenw e s t College. A graduate of Corona del P..1ar Hi1h School, the bridegroom attended Golden~'est Ccllege and Is enrolled at the University of California at Riverside. The couple are making their home in Rivera.Ide upon their re:tum from a honeymocn to Palm Springs and Bia Bur. Republicans Plan Meeting Harbor Arta Young Republicans will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 12, in the Newporter IM. A soc ial galht-ring will rouow lhe buslneu meet.log and an fnttrnted persons m lnvtted to attend. - 0 WORLD SOUVENIRS -!\ems collected on flight trip Arabia and Africa are displayed by (left tci' right) the and Barbara Conroy. across Misses Europe, Saudi Carol RyckoU Sight-seeing Does It World Becomes Smaller The flight over Finland, Europe, Saudi Arabia and Africa "'as smooth, hut the camel ride in Egypt was "rough.'' These were the impressions of 18-year-old Barbara Conroy. just returned from a seven weeks flight trip that took. her also on a safari ln Africa. She has returned to her mother's Corona del Mar home. The daughter of Mrs. Jeane Conroy was accompanied by Carol Ryckolf. daughter of 1'lr. and Mrs. Paul Ryckoff of Balboa Island, and by her l~ year-old brother Bill Conroy. Pilot for the extensive trip was Miss Conror's father, Jack Conroy o Santa Barbara. He had been display· ing his turbo-prop oc;.s in the Paris Air Show in late spring and met the Hart>or Area travelen in Copenhagen in MRS. RICHARD H. WILLIAMS Honeymoon in H1walf Newport Couple Exchange Vows Honeymooning In Hawaii b~tort taking up residence in Newport Beach are Mr. and Mrs. Richard }I. Williams, who were married in St. An· drew's Pmbyterian Church. The former Carolyn Jane Stuhrman is the daughter of ?.f.r. and ?.1rs. Ahlert P. Stuhnnan and the bridegroom is lhe IOfl or Mr. and Mr1. Neil V. Williams, an · of Newport Beach. The Rev. Or. R.'lyMOnd l. Brahams officiated for the double ring service. Escorted to the altar by her falher, the hrkle wore a gown of lace and peau de 1M>le with a chapel train of lace. A rose and pearl headpiece caught her elbow length llJUJ1lon vall and 6he carrled a cascade of butterfly o r c h I d s and stephanotls. Yellow ora:anza gowns with long chUton 1leevea were chosen by bridal attendants, who included ~trs. Robert G. Slilnncr as matron of honor. Bridesfllalds were ?>.liss San· dy h·lcClain and the fl1mes. Leeland R. Schlenker and Donald Tyler. All carried cres- cent shaped bouquets of white and yellow chrysanthemums. Russell Packard served as best man, and guests v.•ere seated by George Engelke, Skinner and Schlenker. For a reception in the lrvine Caa1t Counlry Club followins the ceremony, fl1r.;. Marlin Krager took charge or the 1utst book. The bride was graduated from San Diego State College, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega, Ph I 1..1.mQda Theta and Cap and Gown LeadenhJp School. Her ht11band earned SS and MS degrees rrom Stanford University and a business ad- minl.WaUon cert1fJcate from UCI. mid.June for the beginning of the journey. Their most vivid impre ssion tn the extreme north of EU.rope was the sight of the midnight sun in Finland, Miss Conroy said. From there they flew tc. Switi.erl and, where the trip across the Alps was nothing but smooth. lihe commented, and where the scenery was the prettiest and the people the friendliest jn Europe. Another favorite area was Africa, where again people were helpful and friendly and the scenery was spectacular. They visited Nairobi and Kenya and thoroughly enjoyed their safari through a o African game preserve. The bumpy camel ride ex- perience came in Egypt, where they traveled Jn that ancient fashion across the Sahara to view the pyramids and 1he Sphinx. After a flight from Africa back to Spain, one of the De. 3's engines burned out and the senior Conroy and son Bill stayed to see to repairs, along with other members of Lhe party who included Miss Conroy's stepmother. f\.frs. Jack Conroy, of Sant a Barbara and her daughter Angelee. The f\.1isses Conroy and Ryckoff elected to fly home via commercial jet, leaving the rest of the group to con·· elude the trip with a visit to England. What was the m o s t memorable part of Lhe trip? It was all wonderful, lbe Corona del ?.far girl said, and now with her mind still in a whiri she added, "I even ha ve to look at my list to reme1nber all the place. 1 visited." Wings Fly Poolside A swimming party and buf. let will highlight summer ac· tlvlties for the Clipped Wings, Orange County branch of United Al r 11 n e Stewardess Alumnae, Inc. The party will take place Friday, Aug. 22, in the Hun- tington 'llarbour Beach Club, <1121 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. Cocktails v•ill be .served at 6:30 p.m., follo\1-·ed by dinner at a p.m. Interested residents are in- vited to conlact hfrs. C. S. Loosrnore , vice president, 84Z.. 2048, or Mrs. ~f. E. Smith, 835- 3128, for additlo·nal in· format.ion. Po ren+. Club Orana:e Coast Chapter, Ptr· ents Without Partners spoil> sors a pallClke breakfast the last Sunday of each month in Costa lt1esa City Park from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Will y Richard~. chairman, will an. swer questions regarding tlfl public "rain or shine'' evtm at 542.a700 or M2·9665. Donce Club Square Riggers Square Dance Club "awings out" t v· ery Wednesday at a p.m. in the Flt'!ll Methodist Church, Costa 1\-tes:a . ' \ I I \ I I I I • Newport Barbor EDITION ' ' . •. TOtlay'a Fl•al : VOL. 6);-NE>. I 89, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, ·1969 ' • Splasladow1i • I Nixon Welcome Mat Out Gala. Reception Due Saturday at County Airport By RANDY SEELYE 01 llM Olllr 1'1111 Stiff Orange Couoty will roll out the red carpet for President Nixon Saturday afternoon, when Air Force One touches do"'" at Orange County Airport. Thousailds of citizens and county VIPs are expected to be on hand when the President arrives at 4:30. Airport officials are roping off a large area in the parking lot north or the terminal building on M a c A r l h u r Boulevard for the expected 10,000 visitors. h·rine Co. Apartment Bid Fails By JANICE BER~1AN 01 tht D•llr 1'111'1 Siii! Vacant lots across MacArthur from the PROTEST MARCH STILL ON : STORY COLUMN 1, PAGE 3 airpgrt tenn1na w or par 1ng. After an infonnal greeUng President Nixon will fly to his Summer White l1ouse in San Clemente by helicopter. Al a press conference Thursday the · v.•elcomlng committee said county supervisors and mayors of all cities in the county are expected to attend. Several bands also wlU be prepared to greet the President. 1.1r. Nixon decided to land al the county airport earlier this week. Since then, airport officials have been !ranUcally making arrangement$ for hls arrival. 1te had been scheduled to land at El Toro f\1arine Corps Air SlatJon. as he has done in the past. Victor Andrews, co-chairman of the welcomJng-rommlttee said, the President feels strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "It will give him more of a chance to meet the people." When Air Force One lanch: at Orange Cou.nty Airport It will mark the first Ume a. U.S. president has flown into the facili- ty. Air Force One will .be the laraist airplane ever to land at the field. Robert Bresnahan, county director ~f aviation, at (irst had doubts that the Doting 707 could land salely at Orange County Airport. But Bresnahan said Thursday he Is now confident the plane can land without problems. He said he called the Federal Aviation Administration in· Los Angeles to check (Ste WELCOME, P11e .1) 'Don't Make It H~blt' Surf Beach BackBaySkiesFriendly Pl S d · an core For Nixon Jet's Visit The seldom-lolerant skie.s over Upper Newport Bay will be friendly Saturday when Air Forte One roars aloft-again after delivering President Nixon lo Orange County Airport. than those now using them," he said, '·bvt if they cun take 18',000 PQUnds, the n "'e're concerned." "I l's hard for me to believe they have a 707 that light,'' Emory added. By Hurlburt By JOHN VALTERZA • Of tllt Dallr ,, ... Stiff U'sing traditional backyard method, Patrick Layalle •. 3, splashes brother, Timothy, 6. Fountain Valley youngsters found 1t was a cool \vay to beat Thursday's heat. They are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Lavalle, 17279 Santa Lucia St. The Bluffs Homeowners Association and members of the Newport Beach Planning CDmmission saw eye-t~ye Thursday nighL The result was the defeat or a proposal by the Irvine Company to build an apart· 1nent complex in an area <1riginally earmarked for single family dwellings. Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise Abatement Committee, said today that his group has no objection to the chief executive's aerial limousine flying over the Back Bay area on~. ''I don't think we would like for it to become a regular thing," added the leader of the group '1-'hich has long fought lor reduction of jel noise generated by the airport. The difference in Air Force One and other commercial airllher.i the same size apparently involves modillcalions to the presidential jet, plus its doubled landing gear capacity. Emory said he doubts many Newport Beach residents whose homes lie in the takeoff path of smaller jetliner1 will be hothercd by Air Force One roaring overhead Saturday evening. A bid by Newport Beach's: aurfers for an all-day surfing beach of their own goes before the city council Monday, tiut Clt1 Manager Harvey Hurltrurt win advlM against it. The request, specifically for. a secti<1n of. beach between 21st and 23rd streeU upcoast from Newport Pier, was made last month in a petition signed .by scorea ol surfing enthwiasta. Firm Seeks Newport 01( To Attack Geis Smells A Long Beach construction nnn ls ex· peeled to win city approval Monday to build an experimental burning device to rid Y.'est Newport Beach of its rotten-egg a;rhell. Jenkin Construction Co. this week f':nlcred the low bid for the tragping and burning device which will be built under an ''experimental'' financial arrangemen1 Wido'v Awarded $317,500 Ill Husband's Deatl1 A Superior Court jury has a"'arded ~27~,000 in damages to the widow of a man who di ed four years ago in a Leisure \\'orld conslructton accident. The panel returned to I.he courtroom ot Judge Byron K. f\.1c~1illan late Thursday lo assess those damages against Rossmoor Sanitation Inc. of Laguna Hills, one of four defendants named by ~rs. Marguerite E. Cagigas of Pon1ona. ~!rs. Cagigas, mother of four, "'jll receive a total of $317,500 from the defen- dants she charged with negligence and responsibility for the death of ~lenry J, Cagigas, Tl. tagigas \\'as one of two nlen trapped in a cave-in <1n Oc~. 29, 1965, d~r· ing underground C<1nstruct1on on Aven1da Sevilla. Jl is companion, George E. \\'id1nan of \\rest Covina, \\·as pulled from the col- lapsed ditch by resc ue workers. \Vidman was granted $30,000 in damages by the jury following its four-hour deliberation. ~1rs. Cagigas will receive $12,SOO from Elmer Olson. a backhoe operat<1r at the Leisure World site and $3(),000 from Toups Engineering Inc. of Laguna Hills, a 1>ubcontractor. tin land occupied by a Union OU gas sta· tion un Pacific Coast Highway. The firm propose·s to build the gas trap and permanent burner for $4,350. The gas, seeping hydrogen sulfide and other gases. gives off a constant, heavy oclor of rotten eggs near the station at 3939 W. Pacific Coast J-lighway. A device already is in place al the sta- tiofi, but instead of burning the smelly, flammable gas, it disperses lt into the air from a pipe above the service station building. The project will be paid for by the city. the Union Oil Co. and the Balboa Coves Community Association. They will split the bill three ways. If the low bidder receives lhe job il will build a system of collector pipes to guide the gas into a riser, then into a pipe jut· ting 30 feet into I.he air. At the end of the pipe a flared burner will ignite the gas and keep it burning ct1nstanUy . City Public Works Director Joe Devlin said both the design and the financial ar· rangement -are experimental, but he says that the plan will probably work, easing th e irritation from the heavy smell now present in the area. One firm. llirl Combustion Engineer~ of Montebello, didn't submit a bid, but sent a letter, instead. The firm said the plan has "little chance for success." since il has not been detennined exactly \Vhat the gas contains and ho\V much of it is discharged from the soil each day. Slock Jtlarl<el• NE\V YORK (UPI) -11le market closed on an even keel today in light trad· ing. (See quotations, Pages 10-11). Most investors moved to the sidelines In the absence of new motivating influ- ences. The UPI markelw\de indicator was off O. 13 pen:i!nt on 1.529 Issues trad- ed. Of t bes e, 651 advanced, and 612 declined. ' Planners unanimously denied the Irvine Company permission to amend its general development plan for the Norlhbluffs area in order to build apart- ment units on four acres at the southeast corner of Vista del Ori> and Vista de! Bolsa. 1 The proposed switch ln the seven-year- o\d plan would change from 21 dwelling unls on the four acres to a maximum of 25 per acre, not to exceed 75 units total, Jim Taylor of the Irvine Company told planners. Bluffs Homeowners Associalion Presl· dent H. W. Linton objected. He said apartment dwellers would make use of "common areas," those areas jointly owned by homeowners already living in the Bluffs. "I didn't hear any plans to reimburse those people for maintenance of streets and green belt areas." Linton said. Taylor said that dwellers in the apart- ment units wou:d not make use of those common areas because they woold have thei r O\\'n recreational facilities within the apartment complex, as well as use of the adjacent Eastbluff Park. He pointed out that the apartments would be scparaled from the low-dcnsily housing by 120 feel of street. "How much effort does it take to cross two 60-foot streets?" asked Linton. lie added, "Th<>se people "'h<I occupy leased facilities don·t have the in- volvement in or dedication to the com- munity ." Planning Commission Chairman John J . Jakoski Jr. said, "l think this area has succeeded because of the low-density housing and green belt areas between." The new plan , he said, •·would change the entire character of the area." Said Taylor: "We feel apartment units need not affect an overall environment. They are serving a need." He pointed to University Park as having a successful mixture of hlgh and low density housing. Taylor said the apartments "'·ould blend \vilh the community, and have "ava ilable and adequate buffering from single fami- ly units." Jakoski repliOO, "The people north of this area have bought without planning on hlgh density. 1 don't think you're really being fair to those pe<>ple who have been there a long time." "Plans sh<luld be flexible to the developer or _he might question the feasibility of submjttina: long-range plans," replied Taylor. Sky Divers to Bare Down Nine to Ju1np Nude; S.heriff Keeps Eye Peeled LYON. Wis. <UPI} -Nine. ·male memben of lhe A1llwaukee Sky Di ve rs Club plan lo parachute into a nudist ctimp Sundny -naked. The exhibition of raw courage, Club President Ray Ma cguire. JI, said Thurs· rlat, will be the second nude sky dive m&dc by club members. A nude dive was made last year but kept under wraps, he said. At~gutre 5aid 11.9 ~frmale mcmbr.rs of lhe clu b would mak.e Ule jump because "we couldn't t3lk tbem Into it .'' He said !he men would wc8r bonl.'\ and helmels, nncl ~ould rlrop into the Running Bares Nudist Resorl - \ t \Valworth County Sheriff Willia m Cum- mings lfaid that if he sees any naked bodies suspended from b i 11 o w i n g parachutes he will arrest them on charges of indecent exposure OJ' .disorder- ly conduct. Maguirt said the jump would go on anyway. "It's a le.gal jump because we'll be 1an· ding in the camp," Maguire said. "Besides, we'll be comlng ln hJgh enough that people on the' ground out.Ide the camp won't be able to &et us with the naked eye." Atta. Ada ~fargetll. owner or Running Bares, Pld she htid • 11tanding egree- mcnt with parachuting clubs In the area allowing them lo land In I.he camp any lime they give her 30 minutes notice. Last Sunday. nine fully clothed membctrs of the East Troy Sky Knights Club dropped in when Oley found their regular landing spot clouded over. They were fully clothed, she Wei, but. tom~ shed their garments aDd jOlned felort guests in swimming an4, voUt)'baU. As for the nude 1lcy dlvlng. Mrs. Margetts -known as 1oLltUe MA " -said 1f "they 're brave enough to do i~ It's fine with me. But I hope they don 't land somewh~rt elae thin on the club grounds. "II could be embarrasslng to them." "J.1certain\y have no quarrel with the President's one·shot visit." Emory con- tlnued, but sald lhfe: fact that a Bbeing 707 has been cleared for county airport lan- dina is worrisome. "We ha\'e been reassured before that the runways could nol handle jets larger "l don 'l think many of them will be h.om~1"·~¥ quipped. · ' ''l want to emphaslzt again that t i.ave no quarrel with the Pre.sldef11 hlrostll,'' the anti-je( noise campaigner re~. · "In (act, I'm kind or excited a~t tbt whole thing myself." Judge Sets Inquest Sept. 3 l11to l{ennedy Accident EDGARTO\VDi, Mass. (AP) -The in· que st into Sen. Edward ~1.· Kennedy's auto accident on Chappaquiddick Island \\·ill begin in this Island resort town Sept. 3, District Court Judge James A. Boyle announced toda y. TI1e announcement was made after a meeting between Boyle and Dist. Atty. Edmund Dini~. "'ho ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited ne"•smen "'ill be admitted to the proceedings. Dinis said he had "no intention at this time" of calling Kennedy to testify. Dinis had indicated earlier that he would be summoning Kennedy. The senator has said he would cooperal$, in any legal proceedings con- nected with the accident, and has can· celed a European trip in order to keep himSf'lf available. Dinis said Thursday he hoped to begin the inquest within a week or lO days. He added that he would call 20 or more "'ilnesses, including all persons who n1ight have had any knowledge of events before or after Kennedy's car plunged off a b r Id g e on Chappaquiddick Island . drowning Miss Mary Jo Kopechnc, 28, a \Vashington secretary. ~1eanwhile Dinis "'as ad\'iscd th al he \1•il1 have to go lo court if he wants an autopsy on the body o( Miss Kopechne, who is buried in Plymouth, Pa. The dead girl's parents, Mr. and r.trs. Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Heights, N.J., have Indicated they will oppose ex· humation of lhe body, and Dist. ~tty. Blythe·H. Evans Jr. of Luzerne County, Pa., has assured them they will have a chance to make the ir stand in court. In a Jetter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said: "No order would be considered in Pennsylvania without notice to the near relatives and an opp<1rtunity for them to appear in the proceedings for such an o~der. 1n order for our courts to cunsider an order for an autop&y, it would require a showiqg of Imperative reasons." Jn Wilkes-Barre, Evans told newsmen, •1tt's not up to me. An autopsy will be at the discretion of lhe Pennsylvan\a courts. All the facts are in f\.tassachusetts.'' Agnew Voted Raise WASHINGTON (UPI! -The Senate voted Thurlday to raise the pay or Vice Pre1fdent Spiro T. AgOflff .and Speaker Jolin W. M<:Corm•cl<. (D4dW.), from W.000 to 162~· The bill also raiseii the salarles of the congrcsslonal leader1 -Sen~. Ric.hard B. Russell, Mike Mansfield and Everett fl.1. Oirk!ien and Reps. Carl B. Albert. and Gtrald R. Ford -rrom $42,500 to $49,:7JI>. WON 'T BE CALLED? Sen. Edw1rd Kenntdy Columnists Say l\.ennedy Sought Cousin for Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -Columni5t Jack Anderson says Sen. Edward M. Kennedy asked his cuusln. Joseph Gargan, "to take the rap" for drivJng the car in which a young secretary drowned. 111 his copyright.ed column today, Anderson said Gargan "grimly said be wtiuld adm it to driving the car." "In the cold light of dawn, Kennedy decided to fa ce the conseqllences himself, and then he filed his terse statement with the Edgartown polict at 10 1.m.," slid Andcraon, who co-authors the column with Drew Pearson. The Wa.shlngton Poet quoted Gargan a& li8)'ing in Hy•nnis Port. Mass., there was "ho troth wbatsoevtr" to Anderaon's StoT')'- Anderson, attrlbuUna: hi3 . story to "reliable source•" •nd Kenn«ly •110- tlmate.s," said the senator ~ad il)V\ttd ~t nry Jo Kopechnc to go for a mldnlght s~lm the n1ght lhc car went off a n8JTOW bridge. • Monday's appeal to the council wlll ln- cludt a lenathy letter from ,. city lifeguard •nd one from a Newport beacllfront couple. Both ask for approval ol 1 surfing beach. The lifeg114rd, Dennis P.f. Hurw1ti, ukl allowing su rfera all day in the area west of Ult pier would not conflict wtth ~ peace or o<ean front rtl!denti, becous4 the J>l'OP06ed surfing """' Is backed by parking lots. .. Hurwitz defended surfing enhusiasts, charging that in the past they have hem unjustly accused of creating beach pro- blems. He said when the original "blackball system" ordinance was passed the primti surfing klcition was at S&th to 42od Stred.. The surfers' favorite wavllll; art downcoa!t these days, he said. He said the present ordinance is "an- tiquated for present coodiUon&." At present the 21st through t3rd steel.I area is <1pen to surfin1 from 7:30 a.m. to noon. The surfers are asking that it be open· td all day Jong. Charge Reduced In Assault Case Newport Beach waterfront resident Ray Watson, 60, has entered a no-contest plea to reduced misdemeanor assault charges stemming fr<1m • shooting i& cident July 4 on a sidewalk near his home. Watson, 3505 W. Ocean Front, will IP..' pear at a prObation hearing Aug. is on charges of carrying a concealed weapon and misdemeaoor assault. ' Watson was arrested by Newport Police after he allegedly fired a bullet on- to the pavement during an argument with Independence Day revelm: touchi{lg oft fireworks on the beach. The bullet split- tered and scratched several perS(lns, ac· cording to p<11ice. • Orange • Weadaer High, patchy cloud.a won't keep the sun r,rom roasUng the coas~ line ovtr the weekend. But tJle, predicted 75 at the beach bodQ much falN!r than the t3 forecast for Inland. INSmE TO.,A 'l' Y acnu110 coif bl oao/"11U alf\o ious co cho1c fnvohJtd but ao1nrtlm111 ti brcomrs Ju11C Jun, po1'iiCulorly iverv Thundttll evtnlng in. th11 altmm.ttr during the Brer Con Regotio. Sec \V trkonder Pa gr 23. " . ' ' , • ---~---------........................ _ ...... ~--"""" ............. =,.,..,,=,,,..,,,,=,,_.~--------~~-~--·-.. ~el, Avco _ I - ~erge1·-Plan 11 ~otinced • N~itlons to merge Orange Coµn, ty's .Laguna NJ.Kue! Corp. with a gub{aiary of the financial giant Avc1>. CorR-were aruiounced today. WJllam Beck, e:ir:eculive vice president of ~guna. Niguel, said 1f the deal ls con· sunp.at.l the grealtr r i n a n c fa l res(lltetl could provide a stepped up development and marketing program for the ~tnW'lity. Laguna Ni.rue!. the county's sixth largest landhokling ilrelcbes from the ocean between South Laguna and Dana Poiat inland to lhe San Diego Freeway. Jt is planned 'to be a "new town" of 80,000 people. Present population is 5,500. ne proposed m e r g e r is between Laguna Niguel Corp. and Rancho Beitiardo, a land development subsidilll')' cf Avco Corp., conglomerate with asse~s of 11.8 billion. Rancho Bernardo 11 another new town, localed north of San Diego. planned for an ultimate population of 50,000. Commented one financial observor : "The merger should gi\'e Laguna Niguel the firepower and consistency to keep things rolling. They've had a cash flow problem and three times have come to a grinding halt." Terms or the proposed merger call for Avco Corp. to buy 1.4 million shares of Laguna Niguel stock at $7 .50 per share from the controlling stockholders. \ Prir.cipally, they are Cabot, Cabot and Forbes Co., land developers of Boston: Paille, Webu, Jacbon and Curtis. the underwriters, and a third investor, American National Insurance Co. of Tex~ as .. LIFEGUARDS GIRD FOR ANOTHER 'UMBRELLA CITY' WHk1nd Crowds, Wives -Both L•ra• -Haeded Our Wey Children Tlu·own From Car; You11g Driver Sought A young hot-rodder who forced another car to skid out of control ejecting two Newport Beach children before it hit a power pole Is sought by Costa Mesa police today. Felony hit-and-run charges could be fil - ed against the driver of the 1955 Chevrol- et, since the young brother and sister were hospitaliied overnight. Jeffrey Waterbury, 6, and his sister Cherie, S, of 213 3Stb St., Newport Beach, .suffered multiple abrasions, but we re due to be released from Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital today. Edward P. Ban Jr., 16, ol 2i4S Oria;; Ave., Co!ta Mesa, said he WU d · •oulh oa ~F.air:YieWr . .R.oU near Ad<ims Avenue \at 8:35 p:m. 'lbufsday when the other car roared in from El Camino Drive: Swerving when the vehicle cul in fronl. Ban's car went into a skid and the Waterbury youngste{s tumbled out the rear door before the aulo smacked the pole, police said. r The driver who was at faul t -despile the fa,,the cars did not collide -slop- ped. l ed back, then roared of[, ac· cordin to young Ban and other v>'il· nwe.s. E'ro1n Page 1 WELCOME • • • the laniling safety factor. Bresnahan ~·as t 0 I d that be!CIUSe or ·good weather conditions and of modlfica· !ions made to the Presidential plane. the airport could handle U1e 707. "The runway su rface at the airport is designed to handle a maximum of 200,000 pounds." Bresnahan said. "l\.1ost Boeing 707s weigh about 240,000 pounds and so I had my doubts. But FAA offi. cials assured me that Air Force One weighs 185,000 pounds." "The stress on the landing strip will be about the sa1ne from the 707 as it would be from the Boeing 727 and 737s. The larger plane has aboot tw ice the landing gear of the lighter, 9~.000 pound planes, so the "'eight will be wtll dis· tributed.'' Bresnahan emphasized that the larger {!esidemial plane will be landin g on a : oa,-shot basis oAl.t "This landing doe! hot.apA tb('dool' for. fqtu re,airctaf ">n,'e..-!plane will be I<>* on furl' ,fMri il arrives, so our S,700 foot runway y.·jJI be long enough," ht said. After lhe Presidential plane has l11;nd. ed at Orange Countv Airport, Air Force One will fly to El Toro. · The pres1denliel welcome ll'ill also present se\'eral problen1s lo the Air Traffic Controller Specialists and to the California Highway Patrol. The traffic controllers must clear the skies of all aircraft 15 n1inutes prior to the President's arriral and for I~ minutes after he leaves. Mercy Mission Speeded To Save Woman on Boat A Navy Communications vessel today 'vas speeding to a rendezvous with the so. fool sloop Westerly. 1.000 miles from Honolulu, to aid a seriously ill Costa itesa woman aboard. The ill crew member was identified as San De WobbrOclc, 23, a part time employe of Bartell Corp., a marlllf: elec· tronica firm of N'wport Beach. • Three medically trained parachutists were dropped fl"Qlll an Air Force plane ' OAllY PllOT n•AHll: Cl)A!1 l'Yll11~1HG COM'°""'' ••ll•rl N, Wtt.I "'"'""' .,... h'~ltlltr Tht1t11' kto,a ··~ Tllo1t11• A Murphl11 Mt"'"" fl\IOP , J,,, .. , F, C1lli11 -·-<!fr E~IOI' ....,.., .... ~ f 2111 w .. t ltllt.1 •••l•v•r• ~1Ui111 A4.lr111: P.O. lu 1171, t2••1. o .... -... et.It ~! m Wnt It¥ Stott! L""""" "'°''" tn ,__,, 11-Mwrflowltrl .. fCl'I. lOf Jiii 1"""1 I Thu rsday to aid her until the Navy com- munications vessel Arlington arrived. f\U$ Wobbrock has no local residence address, according to James Bartell, owner of the electronics firm . "She iS a very capable woman who has \\'Orked for us from time to time when she was visiting in the area," Bartell sa id. The \Vc~terly is a Columbia-SO sloop 01\'ned by Ernest C. \Vils&n. cemmodore of the Ne.,•:port Harbor Yacht Club. The yacht le.ft Honolulu about a week ago on a return trip from the Transpacific yachl race. She is being .skippered by David Lym~n. Honolulu, a chief male in the r..terchant f\farine. \\'llson said there \\'ere six men and 111.·o \l'on1en aboard . The others in the crew are from Honolulu and San fraoclsco. Signups Slated For Fall Oasses New students planning to enter the NewP?rt·l\.1esa Unified School Dl1trict this fall must register for fall classes between Aug. 18 and 22. Parents must present proo[ of age for children enterin1 kindergarten . A child must be 4 years, 9 months old before Sept. 1 to be eligible to enroll in school. Rcgi$1ration , ... 111 be conducted at school rHUr1cl offi«.s, 1601 lith St., Newport Be:lch. Surfiug Fihu Slated AL Harho1· 1-Iigh The surfing movie "fret and Easy'' \\ill be sho"·n at the Ne~·port ll1rbor fllgh School audilorium tonight. The 8:30 p.m. show i.5 1ponsored by the 1tudenL body and proc~s will go Into the student body rund. Tickets at $2, will be available al the door. Storm Doreen To Make Waves; Gu_ards Ready r-;e v.·port Beach lifeguards today girded for the heavy waves a.s tropical storm Doreen spun its force from the coast of ~·lexlco. The heavy surf, expected to equal or even exceed lhe large waves that hit the Orange CoasL l\lo'O weeks ago, were e1· peeled to arrive sometime today. Lifeguards said indications of the lar1e breakers were noticed this morning with occasional wave sets of four to six feet. •·Jf the big waves do come, v.·e expect to have .some hard work this weekend, especially if lhf expect.id btach crowds Jn. too," one k\Jard 1aid. ;I i a'".D weeks ago ~~VY.tu~ d\trlng a bu11y 11·eekend caused an average of ~ rr!cues a day and one drowning in the Nev.•port Beach area. Alt Work Needs 'Envii·onment' All Its o,vn Vancouver artist Frank Baxter plans to C!Xhibit his work at a Newport Beach art show Oct. 7, but he needs an empty Iot- a large one -to do it. Baxter, v.•ho is expected to display his la..rge "environment" needs large open spaces, and spokesmen for the show 11·ill ask Monday for city approval to use the si te for the ci\o;c center at Newport Center. Spokesmen for the sponsoring Newport flarbor Art Museum said Baxter iS neither an artist nor a painter as such. "His n1ajor interest is ·creating r~ evaluations of what we think of as 'com- monplace' and he does this in a landscape or large environment .•• his works, 1\•hile covering large areas, are not in themselves large.'· The Irvine Co., they said , has given its consent to the eithibit, and nearby businesses and organizations have con· sented to provide parkir11 for the show. The museum \\·ill provide liability in- surance lo cover any dama1e or injury during the event on the city-ov.·ned lot. Robbery Hoax Brings Jail Term A Newport Beach restaurant ma.na,er l\·ho admitted that his stery of bemg bound and gagged in his place of employ- ment by a lone gunman was a hoax must spend the next six mooths in Oran1e County Jail. Superior Court Judge William Speirs sentenced Pierre Jacques Bertolino, 19, of 8l5 Cente r St .• C031a "1rsa, Thursday. Bertoli no must also make restitution of ~1.740 not reeovered by police. June 21 when called to the Burier. 4Ml1 \V . Coast Highway. Btrtolino told officers he was lotced to hand over $2,340 to the fictitious highwayman. hn·estigators ha\·e revealed that a cln~c friend of Bertolino unC.O\'ered the managtr's plan and pointed. the "'~Y 10 his prosecutkm. Hig accomp\lc.-e, not 1den· t 1fied bv officers. has been convicted ol ptlly theH in n1unieipal court. i''leredith Sentenced NEW YORK !UPI) -Ci'll ri&hL• crusader James ~teredllh was sentenced todtay to "time served" on his conv1cllon of harauing tenants who llved In a Dronz apartment building he owned. D;. Leary Charges ·Dropped RIVERSIDE (UPI) -The district at· torney's oftice here has until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint against Dr· Timothy Leary arter charges against him stem1ning from the death of a teen-aged girl were dlsmlsaed on technical grounds. Charlene Rene Almeida, 17, drowned June 14 while swlmmi.ng In a lake on his ranch. fie was charged v•ith contributing t.o the delinquency of a minor. !\funlcipal Court Judge Elwood Rich Thursday granted a defense motion that the mildemeanor compl aint be dropped because it did not specify bow Leary con• tributed to the girl's delinquency. Defense attorneys s.Ud it was nol shov.•n that· Leary gave her the hallucinatory drug. The judge gave the prosecution until Aug. 21 to file an amended complaint, and al so continues until Aug. 28 a hearing on a felony charge of possession of a rrstrlcted drug against Leary and his wife, Rosemary, 33. Leary's "elernal brotherhood com- mune" near here was abandoned this week by about SO or his followers a!tCr a second death at the ranch. Toxicological tests are being made to determine the cause of death of John Griggs, 2S. Chief Deputy Coroner William Dykes said it was suspected Griggs' death migbt have been caused by use of the drug tsllocybin from the mushroom tsilocybe u.~ed by Mexican Ind.iam, w h i c h is similar lo LSD and peyote. Dykes said some IS other species of mushrooms and jimpson v.·eed, which contains belladonna, ,~·ere also in Griggs' tent. Leary claims he wa.s in his tent v.'hen ~Ilss Almeida drowned and was av.·ay. from the. ranch v.'hen Griggs died. He said he did not e v c n know fo.1iss Almeida'sname. but was closely ac· quainted with Griggs. CdM Beauty Meet Judges Named Two former New York models, a radic> sports director and a restaurateur will be jud1es at the Miss Corona del ~1ar Beauty Contest Friday night. Part of the contest Is installatio_n festivities qf t,he . Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce at the Irvine Coast Country Club. - The ex-models are Mrs. David Rose, v.•ife of the musical director and com- poser, and !\irs. Elon Packard, who v.·as a singer with seve ral name bands. Also judging the con~st \vill be KFI spol1.s director Chuck Bennett and Allen Dale, owner of the Villa Nov a Restaurant. Guest speaker V.'ill be Ge orge T. Zebal, and music will be. furnished by Al Leonard, Corona de! Mar musician and teacher. Before Le•1e1 Cranston Urges Hearing . 'VASHJNGTON -Sen. Alan Cranston CD.Calif.} has urged that public hearings be made mandatory before the federal government grants any more offshore oil lea us. He told Interior Secretary Walter J. flick.el that Bureau of Land Mana1ement regulations should be made tougher in light of the Sant.a Barbara oil spill ailua· lion. .. The federal government, without hearings and without proptr evaluaUoo ol on of the prtoriUes, and community and hum,an v a I u e s involved, overTOde ob- jectlona: and opened the federal portion or Santa Barbara Channel for oil e1- ploralion," Cranston reminded Hickel in a letter dated July 30 and made public to- day. on Oil "What has happened since then fs Sad history and famili ar to everyone," Cranston conUnued. "I am sure you share my concern that we should not le~ such a disaster occur again.·· Cranston called for a chana:e in present rtgulaUons which pumlt the bureau director lo hold public bearings or not, as be sees fit. Cranston would al9o make it man~ datory that prior to the final selection of tracts the director "shall requect and consider the views and recommendations ol appropriate federal agencies and shall consult with appropriate state and local agencies to aid him in his evaluation and detenninations. ln addition, he may con- sult with other orsaruz-ations and in- dividuals for this purpose." Newport Elks Get Wheels Now Need Storage Barn By ALBERT W. BATES Of 1M ci.lly P'llll llllf 'Vanted ; A barn, any old barn -as long ais it has al least 50 by 40 feet of floor :;pace and there's no charge for rent. Owner's compensation will come from the satisfaction of doing somelhing for the deprived children of the area. This is the urgent call from Newport Harbor Elks Lodge in behalf of its "Needed \Vheels" program. It all began before last Chri!lmas when Stan Panek, nO\V the lodge's exalted ruler. spearheaded a drive to collect bicycles, tricycles and toys. Lodge n1embers cleared out their garages. con- tributing outgrov.·n or broken children's vehicles and toys. Space was contributed on old Newport Road where the it!:ms were collected. A gr-0up of dedicated amembers spent e\'e- nings and weekends repairing the broken bikes. trikes and toys. In less than eight months. nearly too bicycles and tricycles have been given to children. Non-lodge membe rs heard about the project and cleaned out their own clut- tere(I garages ·for the benefit of disad- vantaged youngsters. Then came a major break. One of the Jeadjng merchandisers in S o u t h e r n CaLifomla has a problem with brand new bicycles, tricycles and toys with minor defects - a mis.sin& nut or bolt, a break needing a litUe welding. Rather than return such goods to the manufacturer. the chain is contributing them to "Need- ed Wheels." An estimate of the value or their cur- rent contribution -to be made when there's storage space -is $25,000. The owner o( the Newport Rc>ad loca· tion needed the space on short notice. The Elks moved their inventory quickl y to a too-small .sp~ce in an inconvenient location near· 17th Street a nd Westminster Avenue, sacrificing many items in the process. LSD Victim, 10, Caught on Bad 'Trip' in Mesa A long-haired Jillie boy bearing marks of much drug use -and estimated lo be only about 10 years old -was caught running down a Costa ?-.1esa .street on a frenzied LSD trip early today. "Take me home, I'm going to die,'' police quoted 'the youngster as scream· ing, "'hile he dashed along Placentia Avenue at \Vest 19th Street, shortly after midnight. Patrolman Frank Upham took the boy Into custody and Officer Dennis J~ossfield, who searched him at headquarters. said three LSD tablet! and some marijuana were hidden in his boot. "They couldn't handcuff him," Lt. Tom Durham said today. "his wrists ll·ere so small he'd just slip them right off.·· Investigators said the boy ha d needlemarks. indicating narcotics in- jection over a long period, on both ar~s. He was taken to Orange County Juverule Hall, where charges are pending. mid-Summer Sale Featurin9 A/J/DRJGJIL By Herita9e N.-IT .IU.CH 1727 W.teHff Dr., 642-2050 ONJil NltAl 'Tll t M•dri9el. a rome nti c •ccent of o1d Spa in. F••+urin9 lon9, low m•ssive pieces with d•1p heevy mould in91 cheracteris tic of century old Span iJh furnitut1.:, A v•lu• at •ny price ... Medri9t l is off•r•d •+ subsl•nti al 1avin9s durin9 our Au9u1t Sale. R•!· Seil• 5419 Sl59 Our Summ •r Sel• •ho includes sel•c+ed 9roup1 from Dr exel H1nredon, Herit •g•. N•tiona l, M•r9• C1r1on •nd m•ny other lin •s· Henredon and H•rit ag• Upholstery on s1le. --- Reductions on acce11orl1s, lamiti and picture$ i re •v•ileble. Size: 74" W -20'' D -32" H INftllOl.S LAGUNA 111.t.QI w -h c.. ....,, '94-6'51 Dfwt ..... ' ..,,., ' ,.._. , .. ,._ al.If .. ~ c..... ..... 1i•• -~----.. j I IT 11 I Costa Mesa VOl. 62 , NO. 189, 4 SECTIONS ; 42 PAGES D,t,llY l"ILOT l"het. '' tllc~1rd KttM•r Splashdown Using traditional backyard method. Patrick Lavalle, 3. splashes brother, Timothy, 6. Fountain Valley youngsters found it·was a cool \vay to beat Thursday's heat. They are sons of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Lavalle, 17279 Santa Lucia St. St. Clan· to Seek Probe Of Gru·age Sales in Mesa Garage sales in Costa ~tesa are Aurting retail merchants who must pay for business licenses, taxes, higher ad- ''erlising rates and provide off-street parking, charges City C o u n c i I m a n \Villiam L. St . Clair. Motivated by complaints from one furniture dealer, Sl. Clair has requested discussion of UlE:. alleged problem at the next council meeting Au g. 18, and is demanding an investigation. He said Harry Goodacre, owner of Are Furniture, 1772 tjcwport Blvd., brought the matter to his attention end he feels a staff report should be given to coun- cilmen in 60 days. "Harry is not objecting to the one·time 11 year garage sale -unless it runs con· tinoously for a year," the freshman coun· cilman explains in a memo to his Col· leagues. He charges that weekend garage sales, however, have become a secondary business for some homeowners, creating parking problems for neighbors and degenerating property values. .. Some of Our residents are attending auctions, swap meets and oLher sales, purchasing truckloads of 'goodies' and then reselling them out of their garages," he complains. "These constant sales. , .offer unfair competition lo our local legitimate businessmen," St. Clair further adds. Huntington Beach and Garden Gro\·e have put the curb On driveway rummage s3Jcs and the like, he noted, and sug- gested che(king on their method of doing so. Heavy Action Reported; Big Break in War Lull? • SAIGON {AP) -The heaviest action in nearly two months was reported acros.s South Vietnam Thursday. But U.S. military spokesmen said it was too early to tell whether it was only a hriel break in the war lull or the pf-elude to renewal of major enemy operations. fl.fore enemy and allied casuallles were reported since midnight Wednesday than Slock ~larkel • NE\V YORK (UP!l -The market rlosed on an even keel today in light trad· ing. ISee quotations, Pag~ 10-1~) .. ~lost investors moved to the s1dehnes in !he absence of new niotivating influ· ences. in any such period since June 18. when the current lull in major sustiined ground fighting began. Allied communiques reported a sharp Increase in ground fighting just south of the demilitarized zone. in the coastal lowlands 60Uth of Oa Nang, in the Central flighlands, and in War Zone 0 northeast of Saigon. Along with this, I.he Viet Cong on Thursday made the biggest terror attack in Saigon .since the lull beg11n and a com· mando squad successfully invaded a U.S. convalescent hMpital at Cam Ranh Bay. These lwo attacks accounted for 14 persons dead and 160 wounded , as well as heavy da mages, according to revised ra .. ualty figures released by the U.S. Command. Today's Flllal N.Y •. Stocks ORANGE cbUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDA'(, AUGUST 8, ) 969 TEN CENTS • Nixon Welcome Mat -Out Gala. Reception Due Saturday at County Airport By RANDY SEELYE Of tMI D•llJ Plitt S"H Orange County will roll out lhe red ca rpet for President Nil:on Saturday afternoon, when Air Foret One touches down at Orange County Airport. Thousands of citizens and county VIPs are expected to be on hand when the President arrives at 4:30. Airport officials are roping off a large area in the parking lot north of the terminal building on Mac A r I h u r Boulevard for the expected 10,(XX) visitors. LSD Puts A long.haired llttle boy bearing marks of 1nuch drug use -·and estimated to be only about IO years old -was caught running down a Costa Mesa street on a frenzied LSD trip early today. "Take me home, I'm going lo die," police quoted the youngster as scream· ing, while he dashed along , Placentia Avenue at \\'est 19th Street, shortly after midnight. Patrolman Frank Upham took the boy Into custody and Officer Dennis fl ossfield, "'ho searched him at headquarters, .said three LSD tablels anC some marijuana were hidden in his booL "They couldn'L ha~uff him." Lt. Tom · Durham said today, 'bis wrist.s were so small he'd just slip them right off." Investigators said the boy had nee<llemarks, tndicating narcolics in- jection over a long period. on both anns. lie was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall, where charges are pending. Beach Explosion BlcLSts 2 Fingers Off County Man A freak explosion in a lluntington Beach oil skimmer tank Thursday nlorn- 1ng cla imed two fingers fron1 the right hand of a maintenance man and caused second and third degree burns to his face. Polise said J. W. Stephens, 56, of 881 Calico St.. Garden Grove was cleaning a tank at Huntington Street and Utica Avenue with a dry chlorine powder when the explosion ripped through lhc tank at 10:30 a.m. Stephens was taken lo llunlington lntercommunity Hospital by a fellow \1·orker, where ht may face possible an1- pulation of the right hand. The blast r<!'moved his fourth and fifth finger. Police and fire depart1nent in- vestigators theorize that the explosion 1\.'as caused by1hydrogen released fron1 the cleaning pdWder. Mesa A1:my Man Dies h1 Vietnam An Army officer from Costa Mesa to- day was reported to have died in Viet· nam, but not due lo combat action, according to the U.S. Defense Depart· ment. He was identified as Chief Warrant Of. ficer Albert A. Vaquera of 617 Vlcturia St., V»ho leaves his wife, ~1rs. Delores \V. Vaquera. • No details of the "''arrant officer ·s death were given. ~ PROTEST MARCH STILL ON :· STORY COLUMN 4, PAGE 3 acan ols across ac ur rom e airport terminal wlll be used for parking. After an informal greeting President Nixon will fly to his Summer \Vhite House in Sa n Clemente by helicopter. At a p~ss conference Thursday the welcoming committee said c o u n t y supervison and mayors: of all cities in the county are expected to altend. Several bands also will be prepared lo greet the President. 1'-lr. Nixon decided lo land at the county airport earlier this week. Since then, airport -Officials have been frantically making arrangements for his anival. He had been scheduled to land at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, as he has done in the past. Victor Andrews, co-chairman of the welcoming committee said, the President feel, strongly about landing at Orange County Airport. "It \\'ill give him more of a chance lo meet the people." When Air Force One lands at Orange County Airport It will mark the fi rst Ume a U.S. president has Oown into the facili- ty. Air Force One will be the largest airplane ever to land at the field . Robert Bresnahan, county director of aviation, at first had doubts that the Boeing 7~ could land safely at Orange C.OUnty Airport. But Bresnahan said Thursday he is now confident the plane can land without prob lems. He said he called the Federal Aviation Administration In Los Angeles to check ~,. ll'ELCOME, Pa&t I) iDon't Make It Habit' Surf Beach BackBaySkiesFriendly Pl S d an core For Nixon Jet's Visit The seldom-tolerant skies over Upper Newport Bay ~vill be friendly Saturday \\'hen Air Force One roa rs aloft again after delivering President Nix on to Orange County Airport. Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise Abatement Committee, said today that his group has no objection to I.he chief execulive·s aerial limousine flying over the Back Bay area once. "l don 't think we would like for it lo become a regular thing," added the leader of ,the group which has long fought for reduction or jet noise generated by th e airport. "I certainly have no quarrel with the President's one-shot visit," Emory con· tinued, but said the fact that a Boslng 707 has been cleared for county airport lan- ding is worrisome. "We haVe been rea ssu red before. that the runways could oot handle jets larger than those now using them," he said, "but if they can take l~,000 pounds, then we're· concerned." "It's hard for me to believe they have a 707 tJ1a1 light," Emory added. The difference in Air Force One and other commercial airlinen the same size appa rently involves modifications to the presidential jet, plus its doubled landing gear capacity. Emory said he doubts many Newport Beech residents whose homes lie in the takeoff path of smaller jetliners will be bothered by Air Force One roaring overhead Saturday evening . "l don't think many of t~m will be home," he quippe~. .. l ·wanL to emphaslr.e.11abt lh~l J.heve no quarrel with the President himself," the anti·jet noise campilcher repealed. "Jn.fact, I'm kind ol excited about tht whole lhing myseU." • Judge Sets Inquest Sept. 3 h1to l(en11edy Accident EDGARTOWN, Mass. (AP) -The In· quest into Sen. Edward ~1. Kennedy's auto accident on Chappaqu iddick Island will begin in this island resort town Sept. 3, District Cou rt Judge James A. Boyle announced today. The annooncement was made after a meeting bet\\·ccn Boyle and Dist. Ally. Edmund Dinis, who ordered the inquest. Boyle said accredited newsmen will be admitted I~ lhe proceedings. Dinis said he had "no Intention at this time" of calling Kennedy to testify . Dinis had indicated earlier that he would be summoning Kennedy. The senator has said he would cooperate. in any legal proceedings con· nected with the. accident. and h~s can· celed a European trip in order to keep himself avallable. Dinis said Thursday he hoped to begin the inquest within a week or 10 days. He added tha t he would call 20 or more \41itnesses, including all persons who might have had any knowledge of events before or after Kennedy's car plunged of( a b r Id g c on Chappaquiddick Island. drowning Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, a Washington secretary. Meanwhile Dinis wa.o; advised that he \Viii have to go lo court if he \vanLs an autopsy on the body of Miss Kopechne, who is buried In Plymouth, Pa. The dead girl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Jfeighl~. N.J., have indicated they will oppose ex- humation of the body. and Dist. Atty. Blylhe II. Evanll Jr. of Luzerne County, Pa ., ha s assured them they will have a chance to make thei r stand in court. Jn a letter to Dinis, the Pennsylvania prosecutor said : UPI Tel...,_ WON 'T BE CALLED? Sen. Edward Kennedy By Hurlburt By JORN VAL TERZA 01 llM D•ll'f' PllM Sllll A bid by Newport Beach 's surfers for an all-day surfing beach or their own goes before the city council Monday, but City !\tanager Harvey Hurlburt will advist against it. The request, specifically for a section of beach between 21st and 23rd streets upcoast from Newport Pier, was made last month in a petition signed by scores of surfing enthwiast.s. ti.1onday's appeal to the council will in-- elude a lengthy letter from a city llfe~uard al'lf .one from a Newpo'1 beathfront couple. ·Both u k for approval of .a surfing beach. Tbe lifeguard, Dennis M. Hurwitz, said allolf\ng surfers all day in the area west oi the pier would not. conflict with the peace of ocean front residents •. becauUJ the proposed surfing zone is backed by parking Jots. Hurwitz defended surfing enhusiaslll, charging that in the past they have been unjustly accused of creatlng beach pr~ bl ems. He aaid when the original "blackball system" ordinance was passed the prime surfing location was at 36th to Urid Street The surfers' favorite ~·aves are downcoast tbeae days, he said. He said the present ordinance is "an- tiquated for present cond..itioris." At present the 21st through 23rd steels area,is open to surfing from 7:30 i.m. to noon. The surfers are ask ing that it be open. ed all da y long. The pler area, clty aides have said, is the most crowded of the city's beaches. The staU believes that it is unfair to tum away swimmers and giYe tbe area completely 1'l surfers. Signups Slated For Fall Classes New students plaM!ng to enter the Newport-Mesa Unified School District this !all must. register for fall classes between Aug. 18 and 22. Parents must present proof of age for children entering kinderg.vten. ·A child mtist be 4 years, t mon(hs old befo~ Sept . I t.o be eligible to enroll In school. Registration will be conducted at school district offices. 1601 16th St., Newport Beach. Orange C:ou& Weadler ·Sky Divers to Bare Down "No order would be considered in Pennsylvania wllhout notice lo the near relatives and an opportunity for them to appear in the proceedings for such an order. Jn order for our courts lo consider an order for an autopsy, it would require a sho\\'lng of imperative reasons." Colun11tlsts Say Kennedy Sought Cousin for Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -Co lumnl!lt J ack Anderson says Sen. F.ctward ftf. Kennedy asked his cousin, Joseph Gargan, "to take Lhe rap" for driving the car In which a young secrttary drow9ed. iligh. patchy clouds won'~ keee the sun from roasting the coast. line over the weekend. But t&e predicted 75 at the beach bodes muc h fairer lb.an the 93 forecast for inland. INSmE TODAY Nine to Jump Nude; Slieriff Keeps Eye Peeled I.YON', \Vis. (UP!l -Nine male members of the Miiwaukee Sky Dlveri; Clu b plan to parachute into a nudist camp Sunday -naked. The exhibition of raw courage. Club Presidenl Ray r.tacguire, 31, sald Thurs- da~. will be the stcong nude 11ky dive made by club members. 'A nude divt was made la.:st year but kept under wraps, he Aald, ~11gulre said no ·female members or 1l1e club would malle. the jump because "we couldn't tall!: th em into it." He said Ilic nicn would wear bool! and helmets. ;ind y,·ould drop into the Running BIU'eS Nudist Resort. .. WaJ11t·orlh County Sheriff William Cum- mings said that U he sees any naked bo<hes suspended from b i 11 o w i n g parachutes he will arrest them on charges of Indecent expo.,ure or disorder- ly conduct. Maguire saki the jump \\"Ould go on anyway. "It's a legal jump because we 'll be lan- t'!ing in the camp." M11gulre. said. "Be.sides, we'll be coming in high enough that people on the ground out.side the camp won't be able to see us with' the nak~ ~ye." Mrs. Ads Margelts, owner of Running Bares, sAld sh11. had a liitanding agroc. ment with parachutlng clubs in the area a\lowlng them to land in the cam p any 1i1ne they give her 30 minutes notice. Last Sunday. nine fully clothed members of the East Troy Sky Knights Club dropped in when they found their regular landing spot clouded over. They ¥.'ere fully clothed, she said, but &0me 1ihed their garments and joined mort guests in swimming and volleyball. As for the nude sky diving, Mrs. 1t1argetlJ -known as "Little Ma" -said ii "they're brave enough lo do lt,,lrs fine wllh me. But I hope the:y don 't land somewhere else than on the club ground&. "Jt could be embarrassing to them." Jn Wllkes·Barre. Evans told newsmen. "lrs t.m up to me. An autopsy will be et the discretion of the Pennsylvania courLs. All the facts aN! in Massachusetts." Agnew Voted Raise WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th< Senate voted Thursday to ra\&e: the p;iy of Vice PresidenL Spiro T. Agntw and Speaker John W. ~fcConna<k, (0.M"5.), !tom $43,000 "' IQ,l(JO. The bill also raises the salaries of lhe coogresslonal leader1-Sen:s. Richard 9. Russell, Mike ~fansfield and Evtrttt M. Dirksen and Reps. C8rl B. Alber't And Gerald It. Ford -from $42,500 lo $49,500. In hii; copyrighted column today, Ar.dersoa said Gargan "grimly uid be ~·11u ld admit to d'riving the car." ''In the cold light of dawn, Kennedy decided to·face the consequences himself, and lhc n he filed h\i; terse stalement with the Edgartown police at 10 'i .fn.," said Anderson, who co-authors tbe column with Drew Pearson. The Washington Post quoted Gargan 111 gaying in Hyannls Port. ~11.ss .. there waa "oo truth wbat.90ever'' to Anderaon's story. Anderson, attributing his story to "'rt.liable: sources" and Kennedy "ln-- tlmates," s1kt the senator bad lnvlttd l\lary Jo Kopcchnc to go for a _i:nidnlght 1wJm the nlght·~e car weat off a narrow brldg•. Yachtina cca be titofuUu ae r· iou1 to 'hose in~ued but sometimes it bttomt1 ;ust /147', pariiculartu tVUJI Thursdcy ~veuillQ. h~ the summer during tlie Beer Can Regatto. Ste Wttkender Poat 23. '""" M -" C•N""1tllo I .............. ._, n .,,_ M DMt1ll l!Mlctt t -M ... ..,i.I ,... ' '"""'......... ,, ,,. ..... , .. 11 -" AMI LIMln 1J ~I"" • Mmlf9t """'" 1t • r: . ' · -!J' D'lbV PILOf c . D.t.U.'r PILOT Stell , ..... . -·. Dr~ Leary Charges Dropped RIVERSIDE (UPI) -The dlslrlcl al· torney's office here has unUI Aug. 21 to rile an amended oomplaint against Dr. Timothy Leary after charges against him slemmirig from the death of a teen-aged gir l were dismissed on technical grounds. Charlene Rene Almeida, 17, drowned June 14 while swimming in a ll;}l;e on bis ranch. He was charged "'ith contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Municipal Court Judge Elwood Rich Thursday granted a defense motion that the misdemeanor complaint be dropped because it did not speclly how Leary con· tributed to the girl's delinquency.~ Defense atlomeys said it "'as not shown lhal Leary gal'e her the hall ucinatory Cranston Urges_ Hearing on Oil \VASHINGTON -Sen. Alan Cranston (0.Calif.) ha~ urged that public hearlna:s be made mandatory be(ore the federal government grants any more offshore oil leases. He told Interior Secretary Walttr J. •li cktl that Bureau of Land Management regulations should be made tou1her In light ol the Santa Barbara all spill altua- lion. '"The federal government , without hearings and without proper evaluation of on of the prioriUes, and community and human v a I u e s involved, overrode ob- jecllons and opened the federal portion of Santa Barbara ChaMe l fur on Cl• pl-oration," Cranston reml.nQed l:Uckel in a letter dated July 30 and made public to- day. "What has happened since then· Is sad history and familiar to everyorie,'' Cranston eonlinued. "f am sure you share my concern that we should not lrt such a disaster occur again." Crans ton called for a change In prue,. reaulations which permit the bureaf. dlre<:tQr to hold public hearln1s or not, 11· he Stell fit. Cranston would also make It maD datory that prior to the final selection ot tracts the dlr~tor "shall request 1n~ conaider the views and recommendauons ot appropriate federal agencies and shall consult with appropriate state and local agencies to aid him in his evaluation and determinaLions. Jn addition , he may con· 1u1t with other organizations and in· dividuals for this purpoge." DISMANTLED AIRCRAFT SIT MUTELY IN HALECREST HDMEOWNER'S FRONT YARD Anonymous Inquiry Sends Clty Attorney Buuing Through L•w Books on Wing •nd • Prayer drug . j-th 1· ·1·1 The udge gave e prosecu 100 un 1 AU£. 21 to file an amended complaint, and also continues unlll Aug. 28 a hearing on a felony charge cf possession cf a restricted drug aga1nst Leary and his wife, Rosemary, 33. Major Issues in Strike Against Pan Am Solved Niguel, Avco Negotiating Merger Pla11 Negotiailions to merge Orange Coun· ty's Laguna Niguel Corp. with a subsidiary ol the financia l giant Avco Corp. were announced today. William Beck, execull\'e vice president of Laguna Niguel, said if the deal is con· summated the greater f i n an c i a I resources could provide a stepped up · development and marketing program for the community. --- Laguna Niguel, the county's sixth Jargrst landholding stretches from the ocean between South Laguna and Dana Point inland tot.he San Diego Freeway. It is planned to be a "new town" of 80,000 people. Present population is 5,500. The proposed me r g er is between Laguna Niguel Corp. and Rancho Bernardo. a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp., C1>nglomerate with assets of $1.8 billion. Rancho Bernardo is another new town, located north of San Diego, planned for an ultimate population of :I0,000. Commented one financial observor : "The merier should give Laguna Niguel the firepower and consistency to keep things rolling. They've ~ad • cash flow problem and three times bave come to a grjnd1llg ball'' - Terms oC the proposed mergtt call for Avco eorp. to buy 1.4 million shares of Laguna Nieue! stock at $7.50 per share from the controlling stockholders. Prlr.dpally. they are Cabot, Cabot and Forbes Co., land developers of Boston; Paine, Weber, Jackson and Curtis, tbt underwriters, and a third investor, American Nationa l Insurance Co. of Tex·· ... President Signs Surtax Extension WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Pre1ident Nixon signed Into law today an extension of the 10 percent surtax through the end of this year, calling it a "major and essential step in the administration's pro· gram to combat inflation." The President said in a staten1enf, however. lhat he still considers a furt~er extension at five per cent for the first h11lf of 1970 a needed tool to cope l\'ith lhe ~piral in prices. Ni1on received the tax bill . which \\'Ouk! raise 15.6 billion in revenue In !his fir;caJ year. from Congress on ~fonday. DAil 't PllOl OUMOI c°""'1 PUtl ""IN6 COMP.ut'J 1.e\er4 N. WeM .. ,.. ......... hMl""' Jt(ft It Ctrl•Y yi. ,.fp\llotftl '11411 Gllf'erfl MMllflr T~111111 ketvil ··~ T~'""'' A. M11t,Mft1 ............ ,,. ... , .... c •• ,.,....~ llO W11t l1y Str1el M,n;~t Affrtn : ,.O. I•• 1160, 92.li o""--,..,,._. lttc~: nu"'"' ..... ew"'...,' L•-llotc~: 1ll frwttl &.....,.,_ H1111ll"'ltfl atldl1 .. lrJI IW'tM Airport in Yard Mesan H~ 2 Dismantled Craft Sometimes Upper Newport B a y residents feel like they have an airport in the back yard. They could always Jive in Costa ~tesa's Hatecrest section. Somebody has a mini·airport in his front .yard, 1t 3101 Loren Lane, aDd the city has been formally asked to invest!· gate what law, iI ·any, is being violated. "You 've got to be kidding," exclaimed ~fayor Alvin L. Pinkley when noUfied by Cily Clerk C. K. "Charlie" Priest Tues· da y. Someone "'ho didn't sign hi~ letter brought the matter of John Kelley's two dismantled alrcrart -one a twln-englned job -to the attention of city hall. That someone Y:asn't kidding, a visit lo the driveway, or airstrip, or whatever quickly determined . "The long-term storage of aircraft might affect the property values," wrote the Red Baron of Halecrc~t. evidently hoping to shoot down the grounded planes. Ordinance experts may find their weapon empty of ammunition. "The ordinance involved s t a t e s residents are not authorized to store dismantled vehicles in d r I v e w a y s , garages or yards," explains City Al· torney Roy June. Airplanes are not mentioned in the law. The Costa ~tesa City Council, as a result. will have to decide whether the basic intention of that ordinance is to in· elude aircraft along with aut.omobiles as vehicles. Technically, boats are vehicles. it may be valid to note, and any attempt to check out the number or partially built or now-under-repair watercraft in the city ,,·ould make your head swim. City Attorney June - a \\'orld \Var II fighter pilot himself -will barnstonn through the city lawbooks to determine if authorities have grounds to engage the airplanea in a zoning batt1e. "If the owner is C1>nducling an activity other than residential, $Uch aa running a repair business, he is violating the re ald· ential zoning Jaw," June explained. "But if the planes are being repaired as a hobby, we may have no recourse," he added. The occupant of 3101 Loren Lane could not be reached today for comment, but depending upon the outcome of the case, he may have a victory in his sights. Can you envision a replica of Costa Mesa City Hall painted on each fuselage, marKing one official "Kill"? , Forced~ Car to, S~i.d ; -. 1 -Childre11 Hu;t i11 C~~sh; Police Seel{ Hot·I'odder · A young hot-rodder who forctd another car to skid out of control ejecting l\\'O Newport Beach children before it hit a power pole is sought by Costa Mesa poll cc today. l'rona Pag!! 1 WELCOME • • • the landing safety factor . Bresnahan was l o I d that because of good weather conditions and of mottlflca· lions made to the Presidential plane, the airport could handle the 707. '"l'he runway surface' at the airport i~ de~gned to handle a ma1im un1 or 200,000 pounds,'' Bresnahan said. "Most Booing 707s v.·eigh about 240,000 pounds and' so I had my doubts. But FAA offi· ciats assu red me that Air F'orce One weighs 180,000 pounds." "The stress on the landing strip will be about the same from the 707 1s It would be from the Boeing 727 and 737s. The larger plane has about twice the landing gear of the lighter, 95,000 pound planes, so the wei&ht will be well dis- tributed." Bre!nahan emphaslied that the lar1er Presidential plane will be landing on a one-1hot basi5 only. "This landing does not open the door for future aircraft. "The plane will be low on fuel wh~n it arrives, so our 5,700 foot runway will be long enough:' he said. Afler the Presidential plane has land- ed at Orange Coun(y Airport, Air Force One will fir to El Toro. ' The pre.s1denlial welcoine will a!~o present several problems to the Air Traffic Conlro\ler Specialists and to the Cali fornia Highway Patrol. The trafric controllers must clear the skies of all aircraft 15 minutes prior to the President's arrival and for 15 minutes after he leaves. Three commercial 1irli11e llighU may alao be affected, Bresnahan said. TlYO fl!ghts are scheduled to arrive ju5t after 4 p.m. and one ls to takeoff at $ p.m. Tbt Highway Patrol will be In charge of handling the ov~rflow crowds upect. td to jam airport roads. \7ast Water Project Talk Set for JCs Detail• of t $1 billion ~fetropolil•n \\'1ter blstrict sy1tem to brlf\I Northern California water to the Southland wlll be e~plelned to the ~sta ~feu Junior Chamber of Commerce Wednesday. Ray Hudson. MWD publlc relaliont aide, wilt be featured t.pcaker at the 7:30 p,m. meeting Aug. 13 al the Costa Mesa GoU and Counlt)' Club. Felony hit-and -run charges could be fi!. ed against the driver of the 195ii Chevrol· et, since the young brother and sisler v•ere ho11p\ta\lzed overnight. Jeff~y Waterbury, 6, and his sister Cherie, S, of 213 35th St., Newpcrt Beach, suffered multiple abrasions, but were due to be released from Costa ~tcsa 1'1emorial Hospital today. Edward P. Ban Jr., IS, of 2145 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, said he was dri ving south on Fairview Road near Adams Avenue et 8:35 p.m. Thursday when the other car roared in from El Camino Drive. S"·erving when the vehicle cut in front, Ban's car "''tnl into a skid and the \Vattl'bury youngsters tumbled out the rear door before the au to sn1acked the pole, police said. The driver who was at fault -despite the fact the cari; did not collide -stop· ped, looked back, then roared off, ac- cording to young Ban and other \vlt· ne53es. Flood Victims To Get Refunds Properly ta:r refund checks will be mailed Tuesday to more than 1,200 vic- tim s o( la5t winter's flood~. County Auditor Vic Heim said Thursday. Heim said the refund will total $33 ,313, including 56.7 17 to owners of se\·en flood· damaged golf courses, rour of them in the oouthern part of the county . Checks to horn!! owners will ra nge from $7 to $495, Heim said . No breakdown of golf course re funds \Y&!i given, but Courses which filed claims are Laguna Country Club Village, Mission V1tjo, San Juan Country Club, Shore ClUfs Country Club, Santiago, Yorba ,Lin- da and Green River . Helm said most ol the checks will be mailed to land owners in the communities of Lla:wia Beach, San Clemente, Trabuco Canyon, Sllver1do, Santa Ana, La Habra, Yorba Linda ind Fulltrton. Tix rellt-f for flood-damaged property 1\·as authoriied under a state senate bill 1111.J a county ordinance. France Slates Tests PARJS (AP) -France will resume nucle•r weapons tests In the Pacific In lhe iununer of 1970, Dtfenae Mlnlatry sour cu confirmed today. TM test1, beaun In 1966, were suspended this year under the government'• austerity pro· gram. Leary's "eternal brotherhood com· mune'' r.ear here was abandoned this week by about 30 of his followers after a second death at the ranch. ·roxicologlcal testl'i are being made to determine the cause of death of John Griggs, 26. Chief Deputy Coroner \Villiam Dykes said it was suspected Griggs' death might have been caused by use of the drug tsilocybin from the mushroom tsilocybe u~ed by ~le~iean Indians, which is similar to LSD and peyote. Dykes said some 15 other species of mushrooms and jimpson weed, which contains belladoMa, were also in Griggs'~ teat. Leary claims he was in his tent "'hen Miss Almeida drowned and was away from the ranch when Griggs died. He said he did not e v e n know Miss Alme.ida'sname, but was closely ac· quainted with Griggs. Robbery Hoax B1ings Jail Term A NewJ¥)rl Beach restaurant manager 11·ho admitted that his story of being bound and gagged in his place o! employ- ment by a lone gunman was a hoax must spend the ne1t sl1 months in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge William Speirs senlenced Pierre Jacques Bertolino, 19, of 835 Cent.er St .• Costa ?tie.sa, Thufsday. Bertolino must also make restitution or Sl ,740 not recovered by police. June 21 when called to the Burger . 4501 \V. Coast Highw ay. Bertolino told offi«:rs he wu forced to hand over_ $2,3f0 to the ric:litious highwayman. Investigators have revealed that a close friend of Bertolino uncovtred the n1anager's plan and pointed the way to his prosecution. His accomplice, not iden· lifitd by ofrlcers, has ~en convicted of petty theft in municipa l court. \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Negotiators loday settled most major issues in a strike by more than 8,000 Teamsters Union Y:orkers against Pan American \\'orld Airways, which halted all the car· rier's domeslic operations earlier in the day. Man Hit by Car, Loses His Finger I . I . A Fountain Va ley man crossing 1 street in downtown Costa ~1es11. late 'fhursday suffered cuts, bruises and ;in amputated right rirst finger when struck by a car, police said today. Kenneth Ford, ~•. of 912 Iron,1·ood L.ire, was listed in satisfaclory condition at Costa Mesa Men1orial Hospital, after being held overnight for observation for possible internal injuries. Police said Ford was crossing Newport Boulevard at \\'est 18th Stree~ "·hen hit hy a car driven by Herbert Gurther , 38, of 929 Sirius Ave., Orange ... Investigators said Gurther had no chance to avoid the accident when Ford apper.red suddenly in lront of his car while crossing in 1n area without a crQsswalk. The motorist "'as not cited. l'Iereclith Sentenced NE\Y YORK IUPl) -Civil rights crusade:r James Meredll.h was sentenced today to "time served" on h\11 convicUon of harassing tenants who lived in a Bronx apartment buildin& he owned. The negotiations were recessed at mid· day and another session was called 4 p.m. PDT to tie up loose ends to an agreement on a new three-year contract. Assistanl Labor Secretary W. J. Usery Jr., who had been sitting in on the n\eetings, lold newsmen snortly aft.er 10 a:m.: "l would say moe;t of the major issue.s were settled. ''But even after you avercome tbe ma· jor issues, there are a number ol minor issu~s that must be worked out 'and thiJ La.kts time .'' He emphasized L~at the strike wa11 not yet settled. The negotiators. headed by E11eren Goulard of Pan Am and •larold Gibbor.\. a Teamsters vice president, had met a.\ night and half the day before recessing. Pan Am is the nation's biggest O\'erseas carrier. Alter the walkout started during the early morning hour~ today, Pan Am passengers v.·ere diverted to other carriers. Boys' Gym Ransacked At Estancia School A burglar apparently using keys lo&t by a custodian bas looted the boys gym· nasium at Estancia High School of a ta pe recorder and cash worth $360, police said today. Administration spokesman Georgiana r.1cI..eod told police of the burglary Thursday, saying the items \•:ere still the re Sunday, according to one coach who was in the building. mid-Summer Sale Featuring NJIDRJGJIL By Heritage NIWl'O•T llACH 1127 W ... dlff Dr., '42·20SO wt• PllDAl' 'TU. t Madrigal,• romanti~ acc•nt of old Sp•in. F•aturing long. low massiv e pieces with de•p heavy mo uldings ch arac.teritfic of century old Spanish furniture . A valu e et any price •.. Madri9•l is offered at 1ub1tantial 1avin9s during our Au9u1t Sa11. ll:t9 . Se\1 $~19 $35, Our Summer Sal• •ho inclullllts 1el1ct1d 9roup1 from Ortxel Henredon, H1rit191, Nationtl, Mar9• Carson •nd mt ny other lin1 s. Henredon and Heritage Uph olst•ry on sel1. R1ductions on acceasories, lamps and pictures tr• availabl •. Sire: 74" W -20" D -32" H INTERIORS itrof ... l.ntl lttt.rler o.. ..... ,. A11ai-l1)J..,_AID-NSIO LAG\INA llACH l4J N•rth c ... t H.,.. Oft• RJOAT 'TU f I •M4551 I I Friday, August 8, 1969 s DAILY PllOT ;J Pier Development Plan Ready for City Council : By JAClt BROBAClt Of .. Dfllf' ''"4 ,, ... lts title is 0 Top of the Pier Develop. ment Plan.'' It bas been {n the works for ~ and a h:llf years and .has gobbled up lbowla.nds of rnan hours, voluntarily given. Everything iB jelling now and the Urban Land lnsUtute Citizens Steering Committee (CSC)-who has dooo most of the work -is ready to present It to the Huntington Beach City Council for 1ction. Monte Nitzkowski, who has chalnnan- ned CSC since its tnc:eption early in 1966, says the target area for action ~ the beachfront blocks. one block inland to Walnut Avenue in the downtown Hun-. tington Beach area from &th Street on the west to sligbUy beyond Lake Street on the east. "In May, the city council, after hearing our plans for expansion of the city park~ Ing authority, gave us the ball. They told us to look at three alternate plans fOJ° development of the five-bklck area,•• Nitzkowski explains. The· area lncludes about five acres east or Lake and north to Atlanta Avenue. The alternates indude : 1. All Of the area. z. All of lbe arta with thf exctpt.lon of two acres east of Lake owned by tbe- Huntlngton Beach Co. 3. All or the area with the excepUon of the Hwitington Beach Co. aereage and tile recently rated Ho1t property on the northeast corner ol Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway. The ULJCSC story goea back to Jate 1965 when the city commissioned the Urban Land Institute, a non.profit, privately-financed national r e s e a r c h organizaUon to study the Huntington Beach problem. The study cost l30,000 ana promises to rea~ dividends into the ml II Ions. When the Cit.Lr.ens Steerin' Committee was named U was given three objectives: -oraantze a new clvle center. clN.n up and develop the btach down t <> w n redevelopment. '[1,e first hu all but been ac- complished. A Civic Center aJte has been picked and an architect aelected for the property ... 1 o/ HunUngton Beach High School on Main Str<et, llOVlh al MMS!on Avenue. The second objective la well on lta·way. COnstrucUon is under way on J,500 park· tng spaces on the ocean side ol the highway from Main Stt<el to Beach Boulevanl. Altbough completion 41 been held up by the winter rains and the cur- rent heavy equJpment operators atrlke, revenue from l,l500 spaces in c:tperation ls already topping anticipation, accordinl to Vince Moomou.., d~ector of the Harbors, Beaches and Development Department. Solutions for the downtown area - largest and most' dilficu1t targt;t. -" will be presenlod to the clly cooocll early in Cuba Ni~e Va~ation S-poi Beach Youih ·Hijacked, "Enjoys "Diverswn By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of the' Daltr .. ,.., ll•lf lmagine lounging poolside at the Havana IUlton, eyes &haded from the l!immerlng heat, getting a bronze tan while cooling off your insides with a Cuba Libre. But you say, "That's preposterous. No , one vacations at the Havana Hilton ~.nymore. It's in Cuba !'' ruck DeNuccio of 12791 Saint Andrews Lane, Huntington Beach did. Unex· pectedly. And he enjoyed it. The ~year old former G<llden West College student bought a ticket le> New York City June 25, with the intent of visiting his mother during summer vaca· tion. But before he got there he took bis forced vacation in Havana. "There has been a slight change in our destination," .the pilot's voice calmly told passengers of United Airlines Flight 14, about two minutes out of Los Angeles lnternaUooal Airport. "We are flying to Havana, Cuba. Estimated arrival time will be in five hours, 45 minutes. Please enjoy your flight. .. DeNuccio thought the captain was kid· ding. The mast.er of a strange, un· derstatOC joke. But the stewardess told him and the other passen&.ers, "We wouldn't kid about 50melhing like that." and everyone took off their coat£ and shoes and had a few drink&. They were free_. wi~ United Airlines wanting lo ease the prun of tht unscheduled stop. "Everyone was getting pretty wet~ bombed " said Rick. "But I stayed sober, 1 didn't' want to miss anything -when I went to Cuba." "The guy next to me knew that l was broke. So he gave me a dollar to buy cigars in Havana. I guess he fell sorry for me." OeNuccio and the SO other passengers didn't see the benefactor of the unscheduled vacation until they arrived at Havana airport, where he was un- ceremoniously hustled off by one federale on each ann. "He was a dark-haired , dark-skinned man. I later heard he was an American Indian," DeNuccio explained. "The stewardess told me he took a gun and put it next to a passenger's head and told her lo open the captai~'s door. Sh.e Jet him in and he remained 1n there until we landed." "He's probably working pretty hard by now. J understand those guys have to labor in sugar cane plantations." Larger than life posters ol Che Gu_evar- ra, flanked by similar-sized portrait.! of an Oriental man and wcran, greeted .the Huntington Beach youth as he peered out of the window at the airport building. The passengers were taken Inside by bearded soldiers, wearing baggy green uniforms, interrogated and fed: Each passenger was given 10 Havana cigars to help pass the time while the airline and the CUbans haggled over who should pay the landing fee. The squabble lasted three hours, just past midnight, when lhey were transfer- red into two big buses and taken lo the Hilton for lodging. "It was 20 stories high, big. fabulous and beautiful. But il was deserted. I think we were lbe only people in it." DeNuccio and a Londoner he met on the plane decided to share the same room for the night. "Everything we had goUen was fret up to this point, so we thought if It's free, why not ring up room service and order something good to eat?" They did. "The guy came up with steaks, pie, eggs and Coke," said DtNuc- cio. "It was covertd by a rea11y clusy silver thing and the food was pretty good, except that the Cokes tasted like maple .s:yrup." The next day the passengers had the run ol the Havana Hilton with all of its impressive facilities unW il OOcame time to go. When they got back to lheir seat.a they found that their poaseu:ions had been .s:emhed al}d Dlm remQved from their cameras. Just u lhey left DtNuccio loaded up bis camera with a roll of film he carried on hl« person and snapped two pictures of the. airport. "Nobody waved goodbyt. They weren't too cheery about the whole thing. 1 think they were glad to ace us go." Crowds of pbotographerS, newsmen aM !he FBI wekomcd the plane in Miami DAILY ,ILDT llaff ,Mtt RICK AND NANCY CHUCKLE OVER CUBAN SNAPSHOTS Girlfriend W•ited Whtie H• M•d• Unscheduled Stop two hours later asking questions of the passengers and wailing with official documents. After the glory was over, the passengers were led back into the plane. decorated with balloons and .!ltreamers and partied their way lo their original destination, once again courtesy of the airline. Rick's mother was happy to see him when he arrived In Albany, but no more elated than his girl friend, Nancy Herbert of Redondo Beach, who was anxiously awaiting his rtt.urn in California. "I almost didn't recognize him," she said . "When he returned al the end or Ju- ly he had grown long hair and he looked like Har po Marx." "Yea," smiled Rick. "ln New York they called me 'Electrichead.' " Republicans Pay Tribute To Nomination of Nixon WASHINGTON IAP) -The GOP celebrated at the White House today the anniversary of President Nixon's 1968 nomination and heard a prediction that the party would be doing th.is every year through 19'76. The President listened to tributes and glowing praise cf himself and his ad- mJnistration at a ceremony in the rose gatden. It had some of the trappings or an old fa shioned political rally or con- vention, with partisans dumping hun· dreds of multi-colored balloons from tbe rooftop cf th e west wing. There was a thunder of applau se and a tremendous popping of balloons. Just as Rep. Rogers C. B. Morton of Course Planned In Recreation -. Care to lead In a growing field? A course lo help volunteer leaders plan better recrtaUon programs for youth groups. senlor citizens, clubs, church ancf. school organiialiom will be offered this fall at Golden West Evening College. "Our area communities rely heavtly on volunteer services and we want to pro- vide as much professional guidance as possible to make their activities ln- t....U., and appealing.'' said Dr. Loren Mon, dean of lbe evening college. Moll said the course also wtn be valuable to paid staff personnel who want to lpcrease their ability to direct recrta- Uon activities. The course will be taught Thundays, 7. 10 p.m. in the music building, by Sam Migllazzo, director oC the Westmlnster RecreaUon and Parks ~l'tment. Wlfo h&s 20 ~ears' experience in the field. ' Maryland was paying tribute lo Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell as the 1968 cam- paign manager and a principal architect of the Nixon victory, the President shifted his feet, stepped on a balloon and' jumped. Perhaps 200 people tumed oul to honor the President and First Lady. They walled in the steamy, humid rose garden and sipped coffee and munched cookies. Picking up a thoUghl Morton had ex- pressed. Nixon told the partisan throng that one thing they all could be thankful for is America's position In the world. "I don 't ta.ke the credit," he added. Nixon went on to say that he came along at a time wben conditions were bound to change. "We are going to conUnue .•. to make ( America worthy of the lnl!t that million.s all over the world have in ua," he said. Nixon looked out al many of those who llad started campaigning with him last year ln the soows of lhe New Hampshire primary and &eores who joined up later. ''There's nothing that equals the ex· citement, there's nothing that equals the satisfaction, there's nothing that equals the strain ot a presldentlal campaign," Nixon said. ''We won, but it was close." He chuck1cd and added that it stems thing1 are always close, lncluding some votes In Congress, and he predicted that: "We're going to continue to win the close ones and Jolng to win them even bigger ln Ule years ahead." Morton. who al9o la RepublicAn M• tlonal chalnnan, gave Nixon a souvenir d thf: occasion, a clock stt at the time or the presidential nomlnatJon -actually a year ago yesterday -and a convent.Ion badge. Speaking directly lo the President. Morton aaid: ••rou hive united our party as It ha• never been united l>tJore ... the great drtams-ot the Republican Party came trot: a!°}'ru were-elected Pm:ldent of the United St.Jlu." I ' ' Sepi<!nbet, accordlni lo Nllzkowskl. Total C<lll al the project is estimated at about $.'I.a& million, William Wren, CSC member in charge of financial studies, reports. As outlined, the project would involve buying ~ land al appraised pric<s, wllh condemnation if necessary, clearing the existing blighted buildings, construcUon of about J,000 parking apaces on the in· land side of the tughway, and developing plans lo lease air rights over a large part of the area. 'the steering committee says the plan will take full advantage of the valuable beach asset and providing a strong stimulus to expansion of downtown businesses outside the target area. - Revenue would be in reverse during construcUon and lniUal years of operation as construction, bonds and other costs of the parking areas would drain about ,96,000 a year. But the picture rapidly assumes a 108)' YOUTH NOT ONLY ' __,, - ONE SURPRISED WAUKESHA, Wis. (UPI) -Charges against an ta.year-old driver arrested by Menomonee Falls police for repeatedly veering over the center tine were dismissed here Thursday. Price County Judge Carl E. Bjork, sit· ting in Waskesha County Court, said the erraUc driving was understandable under the circumstances. The boy had a nude 16-year-old girl as a passe nger, according lo Sgt. Terry 0. Couillcrd cf the Menomonee Falls Police Department, · who stopped the auto Wed nesday. Charges of contributing to the delin- quency of a minor were dropped after the boy explained the girl -his fiancee - had "surprised': him in his car v.·hen he fini shed work as a ~ry clerk early that morning. He said he was taking her home. The girl gave no explanation, police said. ' . . hue. Increases would •ccrue in Illes tax revenue, higher property taxes, perking meter revenue, the Wren report states, lo show a po!sible profit of $6,000 by the se- cond year of operation. And prol~ from the nearly completed beachfront parking project will more than offset any possible losses during the first four lean years of the second pr. ject, Nitzkowski estimates. A prbne benefit from the first year la seen 1n the encouragement of private development in the surrounding downtown area. Prtsmtly few· businesses can remodel or elJ>B.nd for lack of park: ing apace. Wren's figures forecast an alk>ver p~ fit of $235,000 by the ntth year I climbing to M67,000 annually by the end of the first decade. __ TJWI picture gets even better, if figures don't lie. By the time the revenue bonds are repaid, the city would be receiving CUTTING RED TAPE City Attorney Bonfa mAnSPISlll'S EXPANSION and Remodeling nearly ll mllllor> a yw net prplil !rwm the inland patlWIJ lol and the devolop-l ment 1' ,.-ould IUmulalll. Getting back to what bu 'bet!n ac· compllahed •Jona the be a c bf r on t, Nlt.U:owakl enthuses over the present anit future. ._, "We now have beach night 1lghUng, ~ .!- tJvated thre, weeks ago, and should be" 1 attracting large evening crowds. Flvf hundred palm trees will be planted aJon • the one-mile of beachtront and landJcap-•·· ing is on the way. Wllh ·nlghl lighUng of'' the treea and beach It is exciting lo cm-~ template -a real beauty scene com· pared to just a few yean ap~: Nitr.kowskl explains. ."t " 'Top of the Pier' Is ready lo go. No....;., we have lo seU it to the City Council and ' to the whole commuolty. The linaf- decision to go ahead must be one of an the people -they live here, they're m:- volved ," the chairman challenges. City Attorney To Teach Law ... How do you snip the red tape at city hall? I : Don Bonfa, HunUngton Beach city at-• tomey, ahould have some pretty good Jn."" formation on the subject. .. He'll be teaching the subject this fall I~ 't non·technlcal tenninology in a coorse tlU· , ed "How City Laws Affect Cilizena." ~-, Registration begins Aug. ti at ~, evening college office of Golden West College. The c I a s & will be taught at. • Marina 'High School Wednesday evening& from 7 p.m. lo 10 p.m. , • InfonnaUon on the course may be 01>-1~ taioed by tele~g 1192-7711. · ' NOW IN PROGRESS Hurry for Best Selection Due to the present large expansion of our Fullerton store we must move a large amount of our inventory immediately. All 3 stores are participating in this event offering you discounts •.• ON TME LARGEST SELECTION OP SPANISH, MIDITERRANrAN AND FINE MEXICAN IMPORTED PURNITUU l'VI& U$EMILEI> • mRnSPIBLD'S FULLERTON, 225 No. Horbor BM!., do11 llllil • Phone (714) 111·5720 HUNTINGTON BEACH, 11582 Beach Blvd. • Phone (714) 962-4477 I TOIMSr CERTAIHLYI RIVERSIDE, 4343 lllmet (nnr 14th on lllarliel) •Phone (714) 682·7'50 1- STORE HOURS: MON. & flt. t AM TO I PM I wtDC DAYS &"SAT. t Alt TO 5:30 PM OPD1 SUNDAY 1200 TO I N • . ' • , .. • f DAllV P!l.OT Fi1at, August 8, 1969 • " ..... ---.... -·-~ -~ ·----. -. -- • Freed Prisoners., Weak, ·Bu1 They're Do111e ' . ........ Pan American Airways will ship $1 milliQD worth of obsolete stew· ardesS Uniforms to children in Nepal and Laos . • It turns out that the folding chairs used for banquets at the Grand Tri.anon Palace in Paris -President Nixon sat on one when he was here-cost $260 apiece. The design is r~sponsib1e for the price. The Grand Trianon has been re- 6tored to look as it did "''hen Na· poleon lived in it. The chairs were designed to look like pieces from a royal Empire dining room, not like something that could be fold· ed a\vay bet,veen banc:iuets. 0 Hugh Hefner, 43, muttimiUianair• publisher of Playboy magat:ine de· scribes this bunnu as his first love and says he might ma7T11 her. TM bunny is Barbara Benton, 19, Cc1Ufor· nia coed tumed actress. TM twoiome appeared in Rome where Barbara f.s working. She'll make het movtt de- but in a picture c.aUed "What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Business Like This?" • 0 . With Doral wreaths floating be· hind, Floyd B, Noloon set sail from Long Beach In an !II-foot sloop d .. termined to stay af sea '1until' the killing is stopped in Vietnam." Flowers were tossed by his fellow members of the Peace Action Council who gathered at the shore lo mark the anniversary of the atomic attack on Hiroshima. ft Throwatoat1 paper pa. n tie 1 being tested b-y nine nurie1 at a London hospital for a consu- mer 1eport publication prowd unimpres.riue. "Thtt1 ju.st fell apart on me," one nurae Te~ ed. "Thank goctness 1 wca t.oear· ing tights as weU," anothtr .said, • Tbe California Senate has voted automatic jail term for persons convicted o! repeated acts of pros· litution. Sen. Mervyn Oymally, (0-Los Angeles) argued in vain the bill should require punishment of the customer as well as the prostitute. Noting San Francisco sponsorship of the bill, Dymally said: 401'11 tell you why San Fran- cisco doesn't want to punish the customer. It's because it'll kill their convention business." UPI T1"""9 Bouse Passes Measure Long Debate in Senate Looms for Tax Reform W AS!llNGTON (UPO -The most comprehensive lax revision measure since the income tax was framed in 1913 today faced the prospect of another three mont.hs of debate and change in the Senate. The refonn bill, which shuts the door on $7 billion in tax breaks whlle handing out $9 billion in reductions to indlvidual taxpayers, passed the :House Thursday 39"10. House approval came after six months of hearings which produced IS volumes of testimony, and after two days of floor debate. ' A Senate beWe appeared certain over planl . in .the~me.a!W'e to reduce the oil depletion allowance from 2714 perctQt to 20 pe:rcmt. '!be allowance la considered by many the ~llJDlbol" of tu .-m. 'Ibe Sena!e Ftnanee Committee, which will conduct tax reform hearings. Is heade<I by s.n. Russell Long. CD-La.). who is opposed to reduct.Ion of the oil allowance. During the House vote Thurs.. day, Democratic whlp Hale Boggs, (0- La.), was the only member or the eight· man delegation lrom oil-rich IAubana to vote for the vast refonn package. Boggs proposed the oil depletion allowance reduction as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee which approved the bill. He said reducing the allowance would eliminate the con- troversy surrounding the oil industry. Senate leaders have promised a vote after completion by Oct. 31 of Finance Committee bearings. tn addition to tu refonn and tax relief, the measure includes a six·month ex- tens.ion of the income tax surcharge at 5 percent betwetn Jan. 1 and June 30, 1970. But tax reform'is U. substance ol the bill. The measure would'j.mpose taxes for the first time on foundations, llmit tu: benefits for the oil and mineral in· dustries, and prevent millionaires from escaping taxation. These were among 27 major areas of change. * * * * * * How Reform Shapes Up WASHINGTON -Highlights of the tax blll passed Thursday by the House: Tu Relltl: Tax rate cut for aU under $100,000 Income by 1972 of at least S per- cent. Standard deduction raised by Im to 15 perctnt with a top of $2,000. Tax breaks for widows or widowers and single persons over 35. Low·inco':'le allowance eliminating or sharply cutUng taxes for those at the poverty level or not much above it. • • · · '• FoU11dations: A tax of 7.5 percent on net investment income of private foun- daUons for the first limt; lighter reporting requirements -and new rules on disbursement of funds. Minimum Tu: A formula requiring tu:es on at least half O{ total lncome, a move to prevent tax escape. Not every source of income i!I loc1uded, though, with oilmen still allowed prtferent1al tax: treatment. DepleUoo : Tht 27.5 percent oil deple- tion allowance, said to be the symbol of Lax reform, dropped to 20 percent; more than 100 other 8peclal allowances for other mineral industries reduced across the board. by 27 .3 percent. Tax Exempt OrguJ1.1Uons: Corporate tax imposed on unrelated business ac· tlvities of churches, socia1 clubs and fraternal organizations . Farm Losats: Restrictions to prevent wealthy hobby farmers from writing oil paper farm losses against other income. Interest DeducUon1: New limit of $25,000 on interest deduction when bor· rowing to offset other i0C1Jme. Charitable Cootributloo1: Elimination cf unlimited charitable deductions that allow millionaires to donate stocks and art works to eliminate tues. BanU: New accounting rules to raise effective la:x rates of commercial banks, mutual savings banks and savings and loan associations. '· Arizona Ripped by St~rms Tornadoes, Winds, Rain , Lig1itning Sweep State California PIE'llEW DFESSIWLITHHIUtU'.MFOltCASTtO J:llA.11. llT I• I·· $wthern C.llklmt. ~ to '9"11: •Ir ccndlllol"llld nll.t from llw hNt fnd flumld!Ty "1Cldrt ft 'tti. """" tUO' ~•lned In !!'le to. or ~ In ,,_i fJI IM -tt 'Wll• fn\lltll' fllr wtlh • i-¥1'tlflf IJM'olltln/IOl'lln In 1"' _,.,,.. and deMrh •nd - Loa MO<!lfo9 •nd WICl~llY ,_.., Mf'f' WNl'l!M -'"' ~ toe •IOl'lt ,.,. r:Glill lf'I "°' ,,_.,,.,.. "°"''· Tiii hi.t'I toNV .,.., n 1nc1 11..cilcMcl i,,,. m11 ~of ,o, Tiii Air llollvtJOll (Olltrol Dlltrli:t Hid 111«f -llfllt IO ln04tfr•lt •mot In h Lo. /.nftlu B•1ln. Tiie U.$. W•thlr 811,_•1 flw ffY' ......, ... ,,. .~ !llf1dp11.. c...c.a "°" for ~ c.llrornll '"' ~ WlitfW '*" .... -"" ..... """''"" ....,.,i,.. 1 to 5 ...,,'" end wm ti. -"" 111r wlll'I '°"'' ....,.,.... _,,.I for lfw "'1'1Qd erlll!"' • •MY Tftll"lllll9 f09 Wllfl I-llMVV W..,,.,..'I'• A111. 11. A t... teelltrtd llOll'lflwtf M'ftb 111C1 ... tlen t~ 1Nll'dll ·-·I ffit •~MC!td In "'-T""""'"""" WIU rvn Jn!o !flt "'· ...,.,... lfld mountelnt. T-re!v,. 11-IM °'""" Tiii blldlll wtl'i 1111 by Mrf n Pllfll .. II 1"t1 M I• 1 hllnk-oH 111t -f ti lllll C•llfornl1. TPll Oftlrlt """" 1vn11y wt!ll 11o- l1Md 111i1M111111111c1Mt1• -1119'1 '-W •IWM ,....,,.. trim 100 kl HO. C-1 lOiNY wlll r•"" from M to 71 ..,.,, ,_,,,, ffo'n 6$ to n . Welw -,.,....,... .. ff. Sun, .tJoon. Tide• Pll!OA'I" ......... flltll . 1: .. 1.11'1. J.f JATUllOA'I" ll'l"t kiw ............... J:rt l .lft. ... 1 Pini ~ ................... m • ..a.I 5fUlnd IN ............. 1:,. 1.111. 2.1 lecond """ .. , 1:411.111, J.I IUNOA'I" l<lrst tow ...... , . . . • .s·u • "'· .e t l'lrsl tl)loll ............. '"'·""· ,, ~ ,_ ............. i.u 1.11'1, '' '-Ml hltfl ............. l:M 1.1'1. I.I V .S. Sutn111arir VI°"'"' ~llWl'l'll ""°"" ,.m ol S1Ulfletn .r.rtrflf\I lllw Thu~y 1MI ""' io.,, 'Nrltl w.u bl!ll..,td 10 N • twMOu da,,,..... 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Norlfl Pltlle 0.~ltnf <*l•l'lome Cllr ""'"' P•IT"n IPf'hm -·· Pllllbur'lfl PortltM 11111\d Cil'I' ·---· $111 t,1-1 Cltt S.n Dfttt 5tn Fr•ntl•ea k•lll• Sooi;1ne '"'""'' W1tl'li<ie!Qll Hllfll low,,_. n "' ·°' " .. 100 ,, " " " " " n IS 71 .11 ft '' .OS ta ,, .tl • M ... 6J .. , 17 ,, ij :tt .ti '' ,, " " ft St " 's .o.> '" u N 7• " a " " " n .. ,. ., " n " ,, ,, M M tot " 106 ,, .01 M M " " " " •s '' .... .. " .. .. '' ll ft SS u " 101 Ii .. " • Their new uniforms hung loosely on their thin, wracked bodies and one of them lay on a stretcher. But they were home and with loved ones at last. Air Force Capt. Wesley L. Rumble, 26, of Clare- mont, above on stretcher, Navy Lt. Robert F. Frishman, 28, of. Long Beach, with wife Janet Lynn at left, aad Navy Seaman Douglas B.° Hegdahl, 23, of Clark, S.D.1 arrived in Washington Thursday after having been released as prisoners of war by the North Vietnamese. An ambulance took Rumble, who hurt his back when he was shot down, to near· by Andrews Air Force base hospital. He is report· ed.ly suffering from dysentery, chills and fever. Frishman told newsmen that they had received "adequate food, clothing and housing" during their captivity. Here is how: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $500.00 ='252 Free safe deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.00 savings account = •(,«!! (approximate yearly cost to rent box at bank) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express travelers cheques . OR = •7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TICKETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account =•392 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 ASSOCIATION SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA t/1• I\, C1,L1. ~ ••.. !/\ MAIN OFFIC~: 5401 WHITTIER BOULEVARD• LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA r rldiy, AUVUJl e. l %9 DAIL v PILOT G • 1 ~. Sears I • I \ 5-Pc. Contemporary Style Dinette Set Save •4 on Craftsman Heavy Gauge Tool Box E xrni11'rt Dtpl. No Phone Or C.O.D. Ordc,. On These Item! Stretch Panty Bose ' 99~. Mesh hit with nude heel, fashion colon. Proportioned fit sizes io Petite, Average. Tall. First qUJlity. Buy now and SAVE! 3 for 'l.50 C:rew Soeks Pkg. of 3~:$1 ~·lln111-( Jnl• f I 111111 ... l 4Ju.1nl1I•' Oiildren"• Supima coaoo durene mercerized yarn with . scretch nylon crew socks in bull..')' knit, reinforced heel guard. white, aod white with stripes. 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Assortment of Knit Shlrta ~ llu111-4 •nh' I 11111i. ol 1.111.111111 ,' • Collar and pl2cket scyles, in washlble "'""· Perfea ror active spofts or leisure time. /iftn's FnrniJhint Dtpt. •7.59 Driveway Coating Yonr Cboie9 ~-110111 ~ 4Jul •' I u11111·d (111.111111•' 4t~ I Choose from $7.~9 durablt> Driveway Coating or DriTeoo way Coating Paste ia S-gallon pails. Paint D1p1. Regular •3,49 Green Glade J99 "SatisfadiollGuaranteed orYourMoneyBack" -.-a-..,. Shop 6 Nights Mondoy through Saturdoy 9:30 A;M. to 9:30 P .M. " .. • ; .• I I •DAILY PILOT EDITOB(.U; PAGE Welcome, Mr. Pre·sident Welcome home to your naUve Orance County, Mr. Presldont. We hOpe your vacation will bring you as much relaxation, recreaUon and real rest as may be possible for anyone in your ~ition. -We realize the demands of the most powerful,oUice ln the world don't ever end, even for a month of vaca· lion. But we trust theY'I( be minimized to the point wbere you will be able to renew your energies, to re- charge your batteries, as it were. It seems likely, Mr. President, that you will also have enough rtme to become TealJy acquainted wlth, and updated on, Orange County. Even as you relax and enjoy our coastal beauties -little changed from your youth -you may also be exposed to some of our prob- lem$. Frankly, some of them require attention from your varjous federal administrative departments, from the Congress -and possibly Crom your While House desk. These are a few examples: -Offshore oil drilling. You're aware of the tragic ~il spill still continuing in the Santa Barbara Channel. Residents of Southern California won't be satisfied with anything short of a total ban on offshore oil drilling, \vhelher in state or federal waters. Temporizing by the Department of Irrterior, the Congress and our own state Legislature is political dynamite. Public opinion' is running far ahead of poli· tlcal action. After you've relaxed awhile on our beauti· ful South Coast, perhaps you'll be moved to apply the political prodding only the White House occupant has at his disposal -to get serious consideration for trading offshore oil leases for inland reserves, or doing what· ever else rhay pe necessary to end permanently the oil threat to our coastal environment. over !he United Slates. Fund• needed for acqulaltion or scarce beaches and park areas are greater than local taxpayers cao afiord. -Narcotics. TwD-way traffic ln drugs •across our neighboring Mexican border calls for mote ac\,ion at the federal level in cooperation with the MexlCIJl gov· ernment. You might ease this youth corrupting and destroying problem by applying the dlplpmaUc expert· ise you have at your command. -Highways. Observing your home county's enor· mous population growth, it wJU be obvious to you that federal funds for road consthlction must COl)tinue un· abated j( we are to retain the mobility so necessary in today's economy -and to meet tomorrow's needs. -And finally, airports. ll you do land al Orange County Airport tomorrow despite the overweight of the presidential plane (and, frankly, sir, we'd breathe easieT if you didn't) you'll have a closeup view of one. of our most serious dilemmas. We must have modern airport facilities . \Ve need them for supportive commerce. And we need them for our grea\ and growing nwnber of non-commercial air travelers. Your administration is already in this picture. But it may be your ultimate decision that \vlll be required to initiate a solution-whether by joint civilian-military use of one or more existing air facilities or lhe use ot federal land not now employed . Actually, we bope, Mr. President, that you will become personally aware of those of your home coun· ty's needs which are beyQnd local solution. -Public beaches and recreation areas. These are In far too short supply in relation to public ne.ed. And that public isn't just loca1 . Beach.11oers come here not merely from all over.Southern California but frarn all But above all. we want you to relax and enjoy your· self thoroughly. We're proud that you chose our a.rea for your summer White House. Even i! you don't use that surfboard your daughters: gave you, daily djps in that salty surf you'll find just as great a tonic for the nerves and the whole man. Bien venidos, Senor Presidenle. 'What's so objectionable about a surtax without tax reform1 Why, I'd be proud to pay it if I paid taxes!' Modern A.rt ls Far From 'Unrealism' s· duey ;J, )I~ . Not long ago 1 heard a charming story .about Picasso. An American sailor was introduced to the painter at a reception in Paris, and the sailor bluntly remarked lo him, "I don't care for modern paintings, because they 're not realistic." Picasso said nothing in reply, but a lit- tle 18ter the sailor !holf.•ed him a snapshot nf his girl friend back home. "She's very rrelty,"wexclaimed Picasso, "but is she 1·eally a:'. tiny as all that ?" The lily mind has a curious idea of t¥hat "rtallty" consists or. It never OC· curs to us that if we are to carry around a "realistic" photo of a wife or t;weethurt. it should be life-size, three· dimensional. have a tactile surface resembling skin, and give on feminine odors. A SNAPSHOT is as much a "symbol" or "abstraction" or a person as one or J1icasso's multi-faced paintings. It me~ly symbolU:es the person in a \vay we have become used to -bul the Picasso pain· ling may reveal more about lhe essential "reality" or lhe person than any photograph. l\toclern science confirms modern art. A "realistic" rendition of a chair would show a whirling arrangement of electrons and neutrons. rather than the coarse ob- ject that presents Itself to our sense percepUons. The chair we see is by no means the "chair·in-itself.'' JT lS STRANGE how people today will readily accept the fantastic theorems of science. yet reject the same theorems ~·hen appUed to art. Subatomic physics - Dear Gloomy Gus: l\.1aybe the next moon night will include the deportation of some of our local long·haired, bushy· bearded and mustachioed friends. After all, \\'e should spread wealth ••• and filth. -J.E. V. 1'111 hllv•t ~ntct' ..... ,,.. 111.ws, ..... NtHlllify llMll ef the ft--Ht. llllf 1'911r "' HtV• •• GIHmr Giit. 0.UJ ,Ii.I. "'hich delves into the basic "sluff" of ex- istence -is all a matter of energy and mavement and process, where the idea of "substance" disappears almost entirely. Yet when a work of art attempt.a to depict the world in the same fluid and un· common·sensible way, we ridicule it for •·not showing the worli:I the way It really is." If science had stayed with its old concept of "hard matter." it \\'Ould have made no basic discoveries in the 20th Century. But we ask art to stay exactly where it was centuries ago. ACTU ALLY, l\fODERN art h a s foreshadowed modern science. alld lhe palnter intuitively grasped the structure of "inner" reality before the physicist Confirmed it. A recent annual report or the Bell & Howell Company placed ••abstract'' paintings side by side with electronic photos of nuclear events, and 1' was impossible to tell one from the olh - er,,so closely did the paintings ~rrespond to this "reality." Obviously, much modern painting is bad, or banal, or fraudulent; but this ls because its perpetrators are bad or banal or fraudulent painters, not because what they are trying to do Is absurd . Their "unrealism," like subatomic physics or the psychology of the unconscious, may turn out to be the dominating realism or the 21st Century. 'Not a Political Vote' To the Editor : In the July 17, 1969. issue of the DAILY PILOT. Mr. John Killefer is quoted as saying that I once declared that my 1966 vote on the State Lands Commission tigainst the Upper Newport Bay land ~x change was •·a political vote and nolhmg more." I, of course, ne\'er made any such statement. l\1y \'Ole against the exchange was based upon the merits of the issue and upon my conception of \\'hat w_as in the public interest. I believed that thi s un· que Southern califomia estuary should be developed onlv in a way Uiat insured full public access 8nd recreational use. I urge that both sides of the land ex· change dlspute present the facts and their respective arguments as objectively as possible, avoiding the kind of slatement 11ttrlbuted to Mr. Kll!efer al the meeting al the Costa Mesa Country Club. ALAN CRANSTON United States Senator A g11ln1I Draft 'fo the l':dltor: How can an)'One In his right mind lhink that our dtlft laws are, by any stretdl oC the tmaglnaUon, consUtutional? Once Ollr govtrnment gels hold of someone, all ol a Nlden they 1'11 you how and wll•n to cul your hair, when to eat. when to talk, what to say, wl)M to ahl\'e. \\'hen lo sleep, "'hen to gtt up, what to wear, how 1'1 w.:•r Jt and ju1I about everything else • pertoo should do. All they try to do I.a bralnwash a ptrson to get ~ to think Uie way our govern· ""'"! thinl<• they lhould. It oounds like •n ucerpt from Georg~ Orwe-U's JQ84, but lt jm't, lt'a more Uke Nad Oermany waa. J • f • Mailbox L"ltf'I tnim rrecll<"s ·~ w.kllrne. No'""'"' '"lfft1 11!ould toll"" ""91• m~ In 3G:I Wln:ll 1• ~~l. The rltM to Cfll'ldlnn 1wti.n lo Ill IPa(t .... tlll'l!ln••• Hbf.1 II ftWrv..,. AH H!lllU mull lnCluOI •'rntlure end ...,m.,. edd•tu. 11111 ftlmet wilt bl! •lllll'ltloll on rec1u111 II 111ffld1111 11fl0fl 11 ••renl. IT SEE.i\1S QUITE obvious to me that our government has realized Ute cause v;e're fighting for ls not \~Orth a damn. \Vhen there's a cause worth fighting for, our country v.•on't need a draft. The worst part of the situation Is that 80 percent of the men killed in Vietnam aren't even old enough to vote. They don't even get to say who makes the laws and who gets this country into the se disastrous wars. Obviously, Vletnam has been and still Is the biggest blunder this country t\'er made. But lhis hUn't stopped our belov. ed President from making other defense commitments -that's just what "'e need, another "police action." If voe work hard, maybe we can lose a couple of m1illon more men. 111.E THING THAT really turns my stomach Ii; that many people are becotn· in8' rich from thb war. People are 1etting rich off of our dead soldiers. All this '11.'llr is doing Is dralntng us of our most lm· portant natural resource. youth, ~laybe somt' day some or the ldibtic con5trvaUves and Um@ l1tnorant John Blrcheri u·ill see the llght. Let's face lt- wr .... dr..ilL laws Alinlh Lef1 do aomeUllllg about 01cm. MICHlEL LARUE A New Studg of St1ule1it Behavior Why Some Rebel, Others Do Not By NORMAN NIXON, M.O, Many Americans, convinced t h a t parental permissiveness is the cause of today's campus violence. have latched onto Dr. Spock as the villain. He Is to blame, they say, for debunking the q:e· old axiom : ''Spare the. rod and spoU the child." Although Dr. Spock did suggest, "Just do what's necessary," countless parents misinterpreted what he meant and forgot all about discipline. Now come! a study conducted by Diana Baumriod, dinctor Of the Parental Authority Jlesearch Project at Berkeley, which provides insight into why some high school and college students become violent rebels while others do not. The Berkeley project describes lhrE>e types of parenLS ip their dealings with young children : (1) The permissive parent• "'ho accept a child's every aclion a, natural and desirable. and never uses force, physica l or verbal, to get him to behave. J-le ''discusses" everything with the child and seldom holds him responsible for ' ' • chorea or any'thl In the home. (!) ne audlort(!l:tiaa parent who uses absolute standards'to shape and control a child's behavior, permitting no devia- tions from rigid rules and orders, just because he said so; and (3) The aulhorltaUve partnt who Lriu to guide a child's personality deveJop- ment within reasonabJe limitil. He uses reason to help his son or daµghter un- derstand certain rules and pcilicles, but isn't afraid to discipline when the limits are tested . DR. BAilltlRIND'S observations in· dicate Uiat reasona ble punishment which matches the child's misbehavior does not produce negative results, as th e pennissive parent contends. Althouglt parenta should not rely on their superior power in dealing with children and adolescents, they must be able lo defend rationally whatever rules are established., without heac!-on, hostile confrontations which quickly reach the point of no return. Frequent sadistic physical punishment leads either to more rebellion or unhealthy submission. E q u a 11 y un- desirable results occur when there art. no limita and no punishment. For the child feels increasingly anxious, confused and guilty as he e:oilUnues to act out at hon1e and in the community. Subsequently, as a young adult, on or off campus. he .is resentful of any limitation on his ac· lions and behavior. The Berkeley study suggests that man y young people have little reason to respect authority because their parents, directl y or indirectly, attacked our social in- stitutions \vhilc they were grov>'ing up - particularly schools, churches a n d govemment. t~urther. some rol\egc students retlc:ct their parents' permissive <ittitude toward student unrest and urban disorders because of their own guilt over lhe Injustices our society has perpetrated on the underprivileged and many minorities. TIIE BERKELEY researchers con · eluded that both exces si ve permissivene8s, which provides no struc- ture and fc\v guidelines, and excessive controls, which permit no independent action, lead to the development of in- secure. aimless and neurotic adolescents and young adults. Obviously, children need rea.sonabll? rules, clea1ly stated. and enforced without exception. So do adolescenls as they stumble along toward responsible adullhood . They need parents who lo~·e them, but who are not afraid to say "no" as lovingly as "yes." Instead of believing the generation gap is insurmountable, we need to feel th at "parents (let's include parent surrogate~ too) and children can le arn how to fight for, rather than against one another. Bu t there mu st lJe .a clearly defined line where children end and parents begin. Despite Danger, Army Won't Stop . \VASHINGTON' - A Boston youth achieved a measure of fame last wee.k by getting together the materials v.·hich could make him the world's fifth nuclear power. Having assembled everything necessary from surplus stores t o manufacture. an interrontlnentat ballistic missile, he announced that all he needed was 500 men for one year to go inlo pro- duction. The incident is relevant to a general proposition whlch scienUsla hive been proclain1ing fOr some time, namely that there are no secrets to science. It is more immediately relevant to a speclflc warn· ing being sounded by Congressman ~1cCarthy of New York: that our ov.·n people and the people or all naliom are endangered by.the U.S. Army's lnslste~ on the testing and storage of chemicals and germs. McCAR111Y HAS been sounding the warning for some time , but the Army won't stop, and it won·t stop despite its o\.\'n experience which can only be described as hapless. There. was first of all the mysterious death of the shee.p at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. It took a year for the Army to admit that the sheep died from an overdose of nerve. gas, resulUng from fault y spraying by airplane. Then there was the leakage from the 28.000 tons of World War II mustard.type gas while In shipment frOO\ Rocky Mouh· tain Arsenal. lt turned out that some of the rylinders in which tht gu was stored were faulty. The Department of Transportation had routinely exemp~ed the Army from the inspection which lhe law requires for 5hipment ol dangerous material. THERE FOLLOWED R•p. McCarthy's Intervention ln I.he Anny 's plan lo ship nerve gas across the country for burial al sea, and lhe revelaLlon that American soldiers on Okinaw1 had been glvir:n atropine as an antidote for a minor ex· posure to nerve gas. Finally, there are the my~tertous deaths ()f farmer John It Hall's c•ltle jurt downmream from the Army's Fort Olelrlch in Maryland. whe.re the Anny adm!ls to storing germs, ard where - £OtM congrusmen be.lie.ve -the Army is also testing aerms 1n the open air. At Fort Oietrich, too, cooscienUous ob- these \\'eapons against the event that another nalion might use them first. This argument has a grave naw -in the age of the nuclear deterrent it seems insane to respond to an attack of the plague by loosing more plague. Therefore the •;..;:·~tl!ltll 1 Defense Department's "incapacitation·• •.I:"• · iheory Is a lasl resort. jeclors are being voluntarily inoculated The trouble with this argument, scien- wlth toxins to test the "incapacitating" tista say, is that "incapacitation" for one effects of certain chemicals and germs. set of human beings in one environml'nt The~Department of Defense relies upon may mean death to another. and though "incapacitation" as a counterforef! lo the the Army's incapacitating germs are tox- current British proposal for a fl$t in-ins (dead germs), storage and testing of ternational ban against the possession or live genns are essential to the prcxluction use -under any circumstances -'Of all of dead ones. ' chemical and biological weapons. ~ ' ' DEFENSE SECRETARY P..telvin Laird has argued that the United States "f' THE WAR BETWEEN El Salvador and Honduras last month demonlltrated bet- ter than any argument the need for ef· ' fe<:tive control of chemical and biological \\'eapons, v.·hlch are among the che.ape.st cf all weapons to produce. Only the lack of mcxlem v.·eapons kept that war from expanding into something horrible -and chemical and biological weapons arc within the capacity of either nation. For that matter. if we be Ii eve -as President Nixon told the Geneva Disarmament Conference last month - that the "specter of chemic"al and biological warfare arouses horror and revulsion throughout the world," would we not be better off working for its restriction, rather than its expansion·! And why are Vo'e giving the stuff -a!I Rep. McCarthy says we arc -to, of all people, the Germans? By Frank ~1anklewicz and Tom Braden 'Making of the President'-Part II Sin~ his initial campaign rtct1rd or Jll80, TileOdore H. White has worn his affection for the Kennedys on his reporter 's sleeve. He does so again in "The l\1aking of the President 19'8," v.•hlch we discussed in our last. Of all the major characters in it, Robert F. Ken- nedy emerges White's favorite, and his section on the late Senator, up to and beyond the Los Angeles assassination features sever!( personal and revealing anecdotes about him. WJIJTE INJECl'S hlmself Into U\19 nar- rath·e of the dark and confusing political year 1968 more than he did .in his pre\·ious campaign books. He has a areat sense of drama and brings this Into full play here , setting his narrative against a background of crisis, the assassinations, the Columbia Univuslly riots, and ascen- flancy or the black mllltanu. the frulitra· lion of Vietnam, the issue of law and order. These and other phcoomena or the campaign and election year tend to overshadow the centr&I political story, Agnln. in this book White leans more loward int~rprtlatlon of events lhan on the stral~ht reporting of his previous el· forts. 'J'lus, It seem.a to me, results tn 1 more malure book than his rtC«'(IJ of '60' lllld '64, U an equally absorbinC ont. ( The. Bookman ' • .. \\'hlle the tolal story of p;ilitics and na- Uonal moods, 1964, might seem just too complex for any one man to hav~ bandl· ed. White handles it lesa as dogmatic history ll'lllfl as his own journalistic mosaic. It is 1nosaic rather ltt•n a chronological narrative. BUT BACK TO his affection for the Kennedy1. In lll60 White came to cherish John Kennedy: he "tucked away" the candidate'• earlier failures and con- servaUvt stands. Richard Nixon came closest of any to becomlng the "villain·• ('If that book -an unsy mpathetic figure in any cast. So the strupulously fair old·style Roosevtll·l'ruman-Ktnntdy brand o r liberal journalist looks for and finds a "new" Nixon. lie came lo respect Richard Nixon during 1968. While \Vhlte make!ll no ludlment of P.lr. Nixon as president here, Indeed predltU !bat v.-e will probably sit longer In jud;:· nient of Mr. Nlion U1an on any other modem president, he. found the GOP can· didato of hist )'Cllir a full-dress pro- fessionat. During 1968, \Vhite shows, Mr. Nixon was always probing, reaching, asking questions: he was a man with a curiosity of mind and a hung er lo grow. Among other elements of this one man's report, on and analysis of politics, 1968, I find his portrait of Mr. Nixon the mosl revealing on record and to a great degree the most hopeful. \Vllllam Hogan Friday. August 8, l969 T/le adilorial page of tile Daily Pil ot seeks io inform. a11d .tlini.- ulatt T"taders b11 prtsenfi1111 tlds n4ZWJPCPfr't opiniort.t and com- mentary on topir1 ol inlerest and sfgni/lcanct, b'J,I providing a forum for the e:z:pre:atfon o/ ou., .,cod11"1' oplniont, and bu presenting the diver.se victo- polnit of f~orm.ed obsft'"vcr• and 1pok.esmtn on topics o/ th.• dou. Robert N. Weed, Publisher , ' . ' Most Men Don't Buy Enough Socks I ByL.M.BOYO SPORTS -Why is It F001WEAR _ A v e r a g e basel>Jll ~ to tum out fai; American female buys ll more' pr\ma donna ,players pairs of stockings a year.· than does football ? Such is • Average American male buys customer's inquitj'. Do n 't fewer than one pair o( socks know, but believe-hat's rle:ht. per year. Is that fair? Of course,. the statistics include Baseball (>layers art apt to be little lots in cribs and car· far less even tempered than riages. Nonetheless, the ratio football players. Also, base- of one to eleven in the fool· ball players are much more wear field is inequitable, and superstitious than f o o t b a 11 somebody ought to complain. players. However. it is Com· Vigorously. mon knowledge that baseball "N A T U R A L LEADER· players &Te more inclined than SHIP" is what a fellow called football playe rs to help their David is supposed to possess. wives with the household .i;ay our Name Game man. A chores. David is apt to pretty good al EYESIGHT -Maybe you'll bossing people around ano:I want to file the fact you can making them like it .. , JUST be expected to blink your eyes CAN'T RECALL the name of 25 limes a minute, each blink !he old tune containing the taking a fifth of a second following line:. "Would you lncidentally, while we're on rather be a colonel with an the matter of eyesight, a eagle on your shoulder or a Fresno, Cal., s ub sc ribe r private \Vith a chicken on your claims she know s a knee?" Can you? .... THOSE partnership pair of eye FLATTERING FELLOWS, the specialists named Or. Snow insurance statislicians, always and Dr. Fog. ls she pulling me regard a 36-year-old woman to on? Doesn't matter. Whal l be only 27 years old in their started oul lo tell you, acluarial calculations. anyhow, was that eagles have TWO.PANTS SU I T larger eyes than people. "\Yasn'l the originator of the WITCHES In the two-pants suit one of President Netherlands is a village called Nixon's forbearers?" Inquires Oudewater. In the village is a a client. Not so far as I know square. In the square is a set A fellow named Nixon in the of scales. It stands there to- Chicago firm of Benson & Nix· day. Ages ago on these scales on is credited with bringing were weighed the sad women oul the first two-pants suit, accused thereabouts of witch· but believe he was a member craft. Inevitably, each such of a differen.t batch 0£ Nixon. woman was exonerated. With CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. a public announcement tha t ''l·fow ol~s Robert Mitchum?" each was too heavy to ride on A. $1. .•• Q. "WHAT'S THE a broomstick. Ni\i\1E Isaac mean?" A. He RAPID REPLY: Qu ite \vho laughs .... Q. •' H 0 W right, Mrs. J., the Bible makes l\1ANY GROWNUPS are blind no mention of potatoes. Nor of in one eye?" A. About one in rice either. incidentally. ten. , ... Q. "HOW LONG DID Your questions and com· il take to build a World War Ir ments are welcomed and ""Ill Liberty ship?" A. As little as be used wherever possible bt five days • , • Q. NAME "Checkin g Up," Addre11 mall THE BEST saxophone solo." 10 L. ~I. Boyd, in care of Dally A. "Harlem Nocturne," I Pilot, Box 1875, Newport think. Beach, Calif., t%1631. Puffing t o St op City Gives Up Ciga rettes GREENFIELD, Iowa (UPI) -Today ls the day of reckon-- Ing for smokers who signed Greenfield·s pledge of total absUnence from tobacco. For the same reason New Orleans holds a Mardi Gras before Lent. Greenfield is planning a day.Jong celebra· lion in honor of the 309 smokers who have promised, in writing, to give it up, at least for 30 days. Chosen as a site for a movie -called ';Cold Turkey" - about a town which tries to give up smoking to earn S25 million from an ec~ntric * * * Nicotine, Tar Reduced millionaire, Grttntleld decided to do it free. A survey by the committee shows there are abou.t 500 con· firmed smyke'"' .tn the central lo)'t'a town, and most of them have promised to gi ve up tobacco after 7 p.m. They were to gather around a bonfire then and toss In their cigars, cigarettes, pipes and tobacco. ~ Cigarette machines in the town already are wea ring black crepe and chewing gum and anlismoking preparations are big sellers among those who anticipate trouble kicking the habit. Some of th~ confirmed smokers in the Community of 2,243 have been t.apering o!I , but many are waiting until the bonfire to go "cold turkey ." Among those puffing Furiously down to the wire is Mayer DaJe Yount. When the committee was formed and the campaign started, he pro. mised to give up his clgan, WASHINGTON (UPI ) -which are "about a foot long." f\.1anufacturers are reducing He then took a fishing trjp to cigarette tar and nicotine con· prepare himself for the ordeal. tents, new statistics showed To help smokers face It all , today. But most smokers are the committee has planned a still puffing brands relatively frog jumping .contest. a fire high in tar and nicotine hose battle, dances, strolllnc delivery. musicians and a costume con· Ru ss Ship H~ading For Moon ~tOSCOW (UPll-The So.. viet Union today fired an au- tomatic space stalion Into or- bit around the earth today then sent it hurtling toward U)e moon for photographs and study of the lunar surface. "A f.OWerful Soviet carrier rocket ' launched the station, ZOf\d 7, the Soviet ne"''s agen- cy Tass said. • ZOod 1 will also test "im· proved onboard systems" and the design o f what Tasll called "the rocket space com. plex." Tas.. said Zond 7 was first put int..o orbit as an artificial satellite of the earth. ., At a planned point or the trajectory, an accelerating unit was swilChed on to man. euver the station into a lunar lrlijee(ory." Tass said.· All systems were function- ing nonnally, the agency said. Zond 7 is one or a long se- ries of 0100.n probe space- ships sent up by lhe Soviets . LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Ru ss Morgan. one of the leaders of yesteryear's "big band sound·' .and who '1elped the Dorsey brothers gel their start. is dead at the age of 6S. Morgan, whose music was among dancers' fa vorites in the 1939's and 19405, died late Thursday night ol a cerebral hemorrhage, spokesmen 5ald at Southern Nevada l\1emorial Hospital. An accomplished arranger and songwriter, he w r o t e such hits as "You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You." '·Somebody New is Taking ti.ty Place" and his band's theme. ··Does Your Heart Beat For ?-le"'' He had led his group, "The Russ ~!organ Orchestra," for the past five years at lhe Dunes Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. Morgan formed his firat band in his home state of Pennsylvania In 1923 aod dub- bed it lhe· "Scranton Sirens." Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, who both went on to their own fame, were members or the band. The Dorseys a n d Morgan went to the same church in «cranton, where one of the Oorseys played the church organ. Befort: he Wll! oot or his teens Morgan had left for New York to arrange mu1ie for John Philip Sousa and Victor Herbert. Later he led the Jean Goldkette Orchestra in Detroit which ·tlai~ed as mumbers sUch nlmea. as Dorse}'!, Joe Venuti, Eddie Lang, Chauncey Morehouse, Bix Beiderbecke and Fuizy Farrar. Aldrin Accepts Sweden Request STOCKHOLM (UPI) Apollo 11 Astronaut Co 1 . Edwin 1'Buzz" Aldrin, whose an~stors came from Sweden, has accepted an invitation th visit this C9Untry in the fall f,s a IIIJesl of the Swedish govern. ment, the1 foreign mlnlstry l said today . No date was set. FRANCHISE Man or Lady Ir v•u w.t11I 1 hlt k 1rnp 1fhy for p1opl1 '"•i11t 11 '""'"'•'•·yo~ m•v fit hit• 1ur pr19r•"'· A c11!1pl1t1 tur11·••v 1p1r1flo11 l11 · cl11di11t tr1l11i119 11111 1up1r•i1 ia11, l1t1I i1w11fm111t $1,$00 l p1rlly 11c11rM l. ,1!0111 Mr. H1rll191 541·1•14, 6 le I II·"'· or write 1100 N. l ro1lllwe;. Suite IOI, S111!1 M o, Collfe,.11 •1106. Of the 10 top selling brands test -with frozen turkeys u ~~~·~P""~·~·======::::==~~~~~~~~~~~I last year, ooly one, Kent, wu7: among the 10 brands lowest In 1 tar, None of the 10 top sellers 1 n1ade the list of IO brands lowes t in nicotine. h1a rvels, lowest Jn tar and l ni cotine, ranked 32nd in sales. \\lins ton. tops in sales. ranked 69th in tar "purity'' and S4th in low nicotine content. Ir ish Pre111ier }'lies to London LONDON {UPI) -Prime f\flnister James Chichest!!r· Clark of norlhern lreland flew to London today for talb with British Home Secr etar y James Callaghan about recent outbreaks of violence in his country. ROUND TRIP ANYWHERE 1·N CALIFORNIA ,35< OltLUI Chichester-Clark's meetlnR For calls after 6 p.m weekdays with Callaghan, their first 3 I ainct he became pr 1 me and all weekend . m n.ftes ndnlsler, followed three days station·lo-stalion, plus tax.. ,...t,,.._. f,I;\, cf relative calm ln norlhcm1 i::====::r::============================~=::!I Ireland. 1. • DAllV PILOT Senators Planets?-• Life on ~ Possibly On Mar s Unlikely 01i Moon Say More In Viet -'• Another first from Newport National Bank <STARTING AUGUST 9th) SATURDAY TV BANKING SATURDAY TV BANKING IS CONVENIENT AND EASY Banking on Saturday will be an added convenience at Newport National Bank for people who missed banking during the week, or when emergencies ari se and e1ttra cash is needed . Ju st dri ve up to our un ique Auto TV Drive -in screen on any Saturday and , after pushing 1he button, one of our televi sion·selt.e!ed tellers will cash checks, accept deposi ts. make wit hdrawals on savings accounts, accept loan payments, issue money orders and even open new accounts. Our special TV hostesses will serve you and you r family refreshments and show you how to operate the TV Banking. It's convenient, fun and very easy, Saturday TV Banking can make your l1fe a httle more pleasant. ., •. · at these locations only IN FULLERTON SUNNY HILLS OfFICE • H11bor al 8ru • 171-7(911 UNIVERSITY OfflCE • E..t Ch1p111Jn 11 Sta~ C.11111 •I ·1140 IN NEWPORT BEACH WESTCllfF OFFICE • W"lcliff 11 Oovv • 642J lll SATURDAY TV BANKING IS AVAILABLE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00 A.M. ANO 1:00 P.M. A/10 open 1v1ry dey tfll 5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. o,, Ftldtys. ) 7 • , • • -~ . ' . • • • DAllV PllDT Taxes, Aid Resolved 1.:'*• ,,.. ... wou . .. Free Press . 'Reveals' NarcoMen ML MUM Solons Pass Reagan's Rebate Plan SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The legislature raced toY:ard adjournment oi an unusually b I t t e r , seven·monlh·long session today afler reluctan1ly rescMving its two major issues ~ -taxes and schools. Teen Beauties These three pretty teen-age girls take time for beauty as they await competition for the tiUe of Miss Teen International Jater this week in Los Angeles. Miss Teen Yugoslavia, Yasmi.nka ~{artin ovic holds the mirror as Miss Teen Australia, Suz- anne Patricia Blizzard of Melbourne combs the long tresses Miss Teen USA, Sydna Bunton, of Kansas City, Mo. Girls of 12 nations seek the title. Savage Knife Slaying Probe Hits Dead End SAN JOSE (UPI) -The in- vestigation into the savage knifing deaths or two San Jose teen-aged girls last &mday is stymied, according to chief of detectives Barton L. Collins. Funeral services for the pretty victims, D e b b I e Furlong, 14, af1(1 Ka I b y Snoozy, 15, we re to be held to- day. Collins said" Thursday that San Jose Poilce have. received more than 1,000 telephone tip!! about the slaying in wbicb the Churches' Businesses To Pay Tax? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Legislature has sent to Gov. Reagan a bill to take away a church's tax exemption on in- come from nonreligious opera- tions. The bill's author, Democratic Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson or Beverly Hills. said Thursday as far as he can tell California would be the first st.ate to repeal tht tradi· tional exemption. Reagan, sticking to his custom of not committing himself on whether he plans to sign or veto a bill. has said on- ly that he believes "there 's been pretty general agree- ment. •• that Ibis type of thing has gotteTJ out ol hand ." Beilenson's proposal would make churches pay the se\'en percent corporate income tax on ·money they earn from such operations has h o t e I s , restaurants or factories. The Assembly approved the bill 70·3 Thursday, sending it to Reagan for final action. On July 22 It cleared the Senate 21·7, the minimum two-thirds vote needed for upper house passage. Assemblyman William T. Bagley (R-5an Anselmo). who .sponsored the bill during Assembly debate. said !here is no way of knowing just how mucll money ch urche s • nonchun:h businesses bring in. but estimated the tax could amount to around $2 million a year. girls were stabbed more tha n 300 limes. Collins added police are investigating each tip, but have hit a dead end, so. far. Analysis of blood taken from the £iris wu con1plet ed Wednesday, but the t e s t s proved negative. Police had theorized that Deborah and .Kathy might have been drug- ged by their attacker before the inorbid knilings because the girls showed no signs of resisting the onslaught. Police continued t h e i r search for .a man in a white or light colored van seen in the hill where the victims' bodies were found. Officers also ex· amined a set of photographs taken by a man near the murder scene Sunday in hopes the pictures may disc.lose further clues In the double slaying. Police said t h e photographer was also driving a white minibus, but does not fit the description of the suspect. Detectives have talked to tnore than 2QO persorui in the area who said the driver of the suspected white van was "drinkinj .beer and singing to him.sell" beside the vehicle. 8 Request Busing Plan SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Eight blac~ students have ask· ed the California Supreme Court to order the Richmond Unified School District lo reinstate its controversial plan for racial integration by com· pulsory busing. The students and lheir mothers, represented by the Contra Co6ta Legal Services Foundation, complained a superior court judge exettded his discretion in allowing the district to substitute a volun. tary open enrollment plan, also in\·olving busing. They asked the high court Thursday IG take jurisdictioo in the case and issue a wril of mandate requiring the district to integrate three elementary schools by means of the original plan adopted by the Richmond Board or educalion last December. ROUND TRIP ANYWHERE IN CALIFORNIA 85< l For calls •fter 6 p.m. ,,..kdays . end ell weekend. 3 minutes . statiorHo-5talion, plus tax. -@ . . . ...... Legislators, after pulUng in a 1$-hour day Thursday, hapcd to pack up and go home tonight. Both Houses passed and sent to Gov. Ronald Reagan Thurs- day afternoon a $134 million school aid bi II m a n y legis lators C01.nplained didn't provide enough funds for ghel· to schools "I don't th1nk this bill is anything we can point to with a great deal. or pride," con· ceded one o( the co.authors. Sen. Stephen P, Teale (0· Railroad Fial. The Assembly also approvtd Reagan's proposed $37 1nillion income tax rebate, desp ite Democratic leader J e s s Unruh's con t e n tio n it represented nothing more than an e1ection-year g i m m i c k . Amendments to the bill, by Sen. George Deukmejian (R· Long Beach ). still had to be concurred in by the Senate. .. Tbis is a phony hoax on the people,'' objected Uruh , who plans to run against Reagan next year. Disposal of the two con- troversial issues cleared the decks for a midnight ad· joummenl. The legislature. however, could literally "stop the clock" and continue to meet through this weekend. About 200 measures still re· main on the legislative files. But whatever happens, the final windup is not expected lG be as bitter as last year's when the Senate and Assembly could not agree on ·ad· jourrunent and were· abruptly sent home. ove r Unru h's angry objections, by senate Frye Freed In Murder LOS ANGELES (AP) ~1arquette Frye. whose 196S arrest is listed officially as the spark: lhat touched off the Walls riots. has been released by police v;ho booked him last Monday on suspicion o C murder. Police announced Thursday night they did not have sur. flclent evidence to hold him on the booking. Frye, 25. or Los Angeles. was arrested after he came to the County-USC M e d i c a I Center in search of treatment for cuts he said were caused by flying glass. fie was booked on suspicion of m u r d e r • Authorities said he was an ac- complice in an abortive holdup that ended when one man was shot to death and another seriously woonded . President Pro Tern Hug~ gubernatorial campaign .•• Bums, the acting governor. "U this suffices to re.elect Most or this session's bit-this administration next year, temess took place earlier -It sets the stage tor every in- during the Senate's •·1young coming administration to raise turk" purge of the 1'bld taxes Its first year and give guard" and between Reagan them back in an electioo year, and Unruh-led Democrats. \ saying, 'We've been very The political sparring con· frugal with your funds.' " linued to the very end. The bill passed 47-22. Unruh charged Uial Underthelegi sla tion Reagan's tax rebate bill "has Californians would red u c ~ more bail inJt than rebate." their slate income tax nex t "I should insist," Unruh 6,ril by IO percent, up to a said, "that this be filed under fh'nlt of $100 for single persons expenses for the I 9 7 O and $200 for married couples. * * * \"?" * * School Ai(l Bill Aimed at Suburb SACRAMENTO IAP) -A $133.7 million school aid bill favoring White, sub urb a rt "bedroom" communilies over big cities with their teeming black and brown student populations reached G o v • Reagan's desk today. Supporters of the measure said that never before has the legislature given Califomla's 1,200 local school districts such a big boost r rom the Capitol treasury - yet com· ments against the bill far ex· ceeded th ose in favor. However, the bill cleared lhe Assembly 59·15 and the Senate 32·2 Thursday, and went to Reagan for his routin e signature. The author. Republican Assem blyman Victor V • Veysey of Brawley, described it as "not as large as I would like to see.•• Its Senate sponsor, Democrat Stephen P. Teale of West Point, told his colleagues, "I don 'l feel this is a bill that any of us can point lo with a 5:-eat deal of pride.·• The Assembly minority leader, Democrat Jesse ~t Unruh of Inglewood, labeled it "perhaps the worst school bill .. .in the 15 years I've been here." Others called it terrible, un· fair. unjust or inequitable. set ~side for abou t 200 distri 4 described as "low weall ' because lhey have ma~· ~ildren but not much business to tax for education funds. 1 These ·usually are pre.4omJnanlly white, mid- dleclass suburbs whlch ring cities. and whose residents now are refusing to raise local properiy taxe1 any further tG cope 11ltb increasing enrollrmtits and so a ring education costs. The la wmakers objected that while this money is cer- iain to be allocated lhe amount of corres ponding s~ial aid set aside to help slum.ridden big cities 11 bere poor minority group pupils present special problems is very little. Up to $5 million is earmark- ed for poor children, but there is no certainly it will ever ap- pear. This i~ because only $120.5 mHUtn in new stale aid to schools a~ually is budgeted for the comlng year, and any more will come from what is called. the ''! factor ," or whatever budget surplus turns up from revenues in coming 1nonths. I I l! \J 11 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The anti-establishment Los Ange- les Free Press has published \Vh&t Jt identifies as 8 Jlst Of 80 slate narcotics agents - \\•ith addresses and telephone numbers -under the headline "Know Y'o u r Neighborhood Narc." The publication of the list \Vas termed a "wildly irres· poosible act'' by California Chief Dep. Atty. Gen. Charles A. O'Brien, who said he could ''neither confirm nor deny" the list's accuracy. Tht list said the narcot ics agents were based in Los An· geles. Santa Ana . San Diego and San Francisco. Narcotics bureaus in Sacramento and Fresno were left out. Dead Man Clears Suspect ''This country has a tradi- tion of a rree press grounded on responsibility," O'Brien said. "These agents nrc deal· ing "'lth hard.bitten and Ire· quentl.v \'iolent traffickers in narcotics." "To give t h e i r ho1ne ad- dresses, exposing their fami- lies. women and children to SACRAMENTO (UP I) -A ed to find bullels instead of murder charge against a young Sacramento woman has been dismissed because of a note left by the viclim. Patrick "1ard, 25, not only cleared !\tiss Constance Diregolo. 21. of any malice in his death. but als:i threatened to return "lo haunt" the court if she were punished. "Under no circumstances should Connie Diregolo be held responsible by law. This is my i>lot that has been in the mak- ing for years." wrote Ward, a Sacramento State College stu- dent. ··-1 am responsible for my own desliny .. , I can assume that she will be quite surpris· blanks." danger, is the kind of irrespon· Alter Deputy Dist. Atty. Ken sible action ·which places in Reeves Thursday presented grave question the relalionhip th t I nd th . Li between J!:overnment and the e no e oo on e v1c m, . Miss Diregolo said that during prcf~·ri~~ ~aid an investigation a visit lo her home July 12, had been launched by the at· \Yard handed her a .22 caliber lomey general's office but <Je. pistol. then frightened her into clintd lG say "'hat act i 0 n kiUing him. The girl was ar· mii?ht be taken. rested and charged with first· t.fanaging Editor Jack Bur· degree murder after she gess of the Free Press said his telephoned police to tell them staff was taking security pre- of the shooting. · nd 'd • 1 d Another section of Ward's eautions a sa1 ' might a d that we are expecting a bust note read: "Do not punish her here." Bust is a slang word for lhe deed or I will come back to haunt you. No funeral l;::=for='po=l=ic=e=r=a=id=. =====; please. f don't want you look- ing at me. If Connie doesn't kill herself. it would be fitting that she gets my guitar." 'Get Tough' Bill Opposed SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A A conference committee on UNITED STATES N ATIONAL BA N K SOUTH COAST ·PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPEN joint conference committee a second bill by Assemb ly· recommended today the Sen-.man Frank Murphy Jr., (R. ate give up its efforts to toughen up Assembly bills Santa Cruz), still had to reach laking a moderate approach agreement. to curbing campus dis.sent. The two omnibus bills it SATURDAYS ,t,1P.M. MOH·THUIS T0°S P.M. The object of their ire was the fact lhat $41.2 million is Adel Sirhan Pleads lnnoccnl Tthe committee on a bill by took the Assembly Ed~atioa Assemblyman John Stull, (R· and Criminal Procedure com- SACRA t.1ENTO (\UPJ)-The Leucadia), recommended mittees most of tbe session to Senate has appro1·W legisla· tougher provisions put in the write were thrown into con· tion designating I~· regular bill by the Senat'e be dropped ference Thursday when the and the Assembly version Assembl y refused to aecept holidays to alwav fall on sent to Gov. Ronald Reaga n. Senate changes~ 3 Monday Holiday s Set FRIDAYS 10·6P.M. (7141 540·521 1. tocotH 1111: So. Comst r1 ... , C01t11 M"o AHi. Ykt Prtl.•Mlnlttl" JAMES W. VERRAL l Jl.fonday tu give 11 0rkers a1...:=:...:::....::::.::_:.:=::.::_.:::::!:::.::__::::::::..:::~=------"====::::====== OCEANSIDE (UPI) -A brother of condemned assassi n Sirhan Bishara Sirhan pleaded innocent here Thursday lo misdemeanbr charges o f drunken driving. speeding, driving without a license and driving on the wrong side of the road. Adel Sirhan. 3 0 , of Pasadena, asked to be represented by the public defender at a jury trial Oct. 2. three-day weekend. The n1easure by Assembly- man Carl Britschgi, (R-Red- \\'Ood City), 1v a s teturned Thursday to the lo"·er house on a vote of 3rH> for concur- rence in minor amendments. It "'ould provide that \\'ashing. ton's Birlhday falls on tbe thi rd Monday in Feb ruary, ~1emorial Day on the, last l\1onday in Jl.Iay, Columbus Day on the second ~tonday in October and Veterans Day on the founh i\londay in Oc1ober. nrouhava astck 1ov9 buu •.• 188 or. Iverson athlsn8w bug headquarters •45 E. COAST HIGHWAV l•t Bwtlde CJrW./ fthEWPORT BEACH d .. "' 673·0900 OP '~~~~JS ~ After a few years, it starts to look beautiful. 'Us'y, Isn't iii" ''No closs." 1'Th~ hump." ''Loc:s like on afterthought," "Geed for laughs." "Stuoby buggy.'' "El F.g.O." N ew York Magazine recently hod o few choice words to say about it too: 'And then there is the VW, wh ich re lair: its value better than anything else. A 1956 WI is worlh more lodoy !hon any American sedon built the some yeor, with the pOssib!e exception of c Cadillac." Around 27 miles to the go lion. Pints of oil insl eod of quorls. No radiator. Rear engine traction. low insurance. Independent suspension. Beautiful, isn't it~ @ NEWPORT BEACH • Chick Iverson, Inc . 445 E. Co.ost Hwy. SAN JUAN CAP ISTRANO Bill Y eles Inc. HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volk~w•gen 1871 1 Beach Boulevard (7141 673.0900 32852 Valle Rd. 499·226 I <71•) B•2-4435 ~~----.----:----------------==:-=~---,.,.-~~~.-.:-:--=---..,,"'"""'"'>'!""--;",,_.,.,-----,~----···-·-,,-J Cal State School of Arts Set FULLERTON T b e establishment of the School cf the Arts and the appointment of Dr. J. Just.in Gray as its ac- ting dean were announced to- day by President William B. Langsdorf of Cal s t a t e Fullertoo. Gray, a professor of music who bas served as associate dean of the Ca1 State School of Letters, Am and Science for the past three years. begins hls new duties Sept. 1. An alumnus of University of Michigan, Gray earned hl5 master's degree from the Eastman School of Mus(c, University of Rochester, and a doctorate in musJc from University of S o u t b e r n California. The School of the Arts, ac- e<irdlng to Dr. Bernard L. Hylnk, vice president for academic affairs, was formed In response tG administration and faculty desires for closer coon:Jination among t h e creative ·arts and for ez- pansjon of professional pro- grams. The new school, according to Hyink, will have a dual func- tion in emphasizing a pro- fe:Wonal level of academic training and being equally committed to the development of professional teachers in the arts. At the same time it will offer many courses in general education for all students in the college. Before joining the cat State facully in 1961, Gray taught at University ol f.1ontana and Ohio. State University. Meetings DE .. !'B NO!'ICES BECK ltlllfwd l.M Bl!dt. At• 16. llf 2515 N. er.111e, Co11• Mew. Dllit ol dealfl, A119'1Si S. SurvlvM by l•ltlirr, R~•rd O. Btd;, US.AF, J-n1 rno11wr, "1"11' stone1 -~1 •r><I -1l11t<. $«Vic.ti !Jrill be hetd Mond•'f at 10:111 1.111. Wntdiff ChNel. 1~ Good Sl'llPMnl c~. Hllllllnqttn llUCI!, W~ldlff Cl'llpel ~,Dl~on. TAYLOR Wl!Hen'> W . .k~· llf Cllr9W d.i ~r. Olfe al deollt!, A119'1SI '-SIJrvlVd b¥ wffe, Mlorwrlf. Prlv1t1 ...-V1Cl!1 _.... Mid If "tcfflc Vi-MefNlrill P1rk. ~ llMCll. h<'H~ \llllW Mort111ry, .......... ARBUCKLE A WEUB WettcWf Mortuary 4%'1 E. 17tla St .. CosLa Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del P.far OR 3-MSO Colla Meu lU iW4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 11t Brolchr11, ee.ta Men uwus . • DILDAY BJUmlEllS Banllngtao. ValleJ l\l0r10"'Y 11111 -Blvd. llutlqtGa Beatk 14%-7'1'11 • M<'CORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711 Llguna C..yoa Road Llpulleach -· • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAlllt Cemetery e Morlaaly Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, Calllorai• ~ • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FIJNEllAL HOME ,,'1181 8olP Aft. Weftlnluler lta 1111 • "'°"---1-E-R MORTVARY Llpn1 BeJKh IM-JAI Su Clemea&e •tUtOI • SMITBS' MQ.l\TUAllY C!7 Mala SL Bantin'"'° llelcll - DAILY OT If .. 'Religion No Harriet' 1 KI R K·P AT~-· CK' S 2760 EAST COAST HWY • Corona d,i Meli • 6J3.2650 Judge Grants Woman Divorce~ Child · BUY NOW and SAVE! OFFICIAL RCA Color TV SANTA ANA - A Garden Grove mother's devotion to an obscure religious faith did not mean that sh.e wa s an unfit person to rear her 2-year-old daughter, a Superior Court judge ruled Thursday. Judge Robert K n e e I a n d granted a n interlocutory decree of divorce to Mrs. Yvonne Jones and ordered that her daughter, Monique, be returned to her. Judge Robert Gardner ruled last • ' Nov. 21 that her estranged hu.sband, David, should have custody of the litUe girl. Jones claimed through his attorney that his wife's deep iilteoest in the Church of Scientology and her con· slderable expenditures towards advancement of the faith lnterfered with her duties of which went towards cost or courses of instruction in the faith e.nd counseling costs al a church center in Tustin. Mrs. Jones tesUflerl that she had drasUcaUy cut down her payments to lbe church ln re- cent weeks and had actually made no contributions during the past monlh . Witnesses described her as a "good mother" and a 1'lovlng person who takes very good care of her little girl." CLEARANCE SALE! THE CANDIDATE .... Big screen c9lpr portable has viVid, true -to~ life New Vista picture, Spor~bout Chassis with new Solid S t a t e Co'mponents, pop-up handle, Elr442. 180 sq. in. picture. non· as a mother. It was te.sUfied that Mrs. Jones had spent some $1,500 durlng the past six months, all Some sets available with remote control SERVIJ\'6 consor., automatic i•focfl:ed-ln" fine tuning(AFT) on both UHF and VHF. N"' Vista 25,000 volt chassis with Solid State components. All ranee tone control, duo.c.one speaker. I Th• Modena-automatic fin&tunlng, tra nsistorized New Vista VHF tuner, automatic Chroma color control, $01ld state color stabilizer. •529eo * The Castleton -full function ''Wireles.s W'aard,. remote control optional NewVista25,000 wit chassis; deluxe contemporary cabinet; AFT automatic fine tuning. i52990 * The Bt.ldfield -handsome Early American console, automatic Chroma color ci>ntrol, New Vista 25,000 volt chassis with Solid State components, MT automatic fine tuning. '1111 IWkherr-. sculpturecl Scandinavian styling;-m automatic fine tuninr; Ne« ~ Vista VHF tuning, "Detent'' Solid State UHF tuner. i59995 * WALK-AWAY VALUES 'Ille -.,-"Wl111tss Wizard" remot. eontrtll and sta..s optionfl on the blqut color Kfltll )'Oii can buy. Ttblt modtl In wood en Jn flnl.ti; one-set VHF twlln&. bullt·ln antennas. I TM Sheftif-flltures thl'll Input FrtqutflCY ltafet, SoHd Stat. UHF brntr, otte'fft VHFflflttunlnt. Solid State colorstablliztr, New Vista 25,000 volt dlauiL Stlnd optlontl. TlMi Trouper -Q)ft\91d ar'llf ll&htwei&ht. ,.u: aroirnd with avitcaie conVW1itnu. 21,000 vott chlslls. Solid State color stlbillnr,CMollt VHFIW\inf, bllllt·ln VHF/UltF antlnnll tot pM J*fomwt. SAL ES ••d SERV·ICE AREA Ask your dealer about -PIJJS -•.• the MORE of COLOR TV ' • r ' . - '· I· I l • • • .. ' JO CAl\.Y PllOT . y..,. Jtl.Ol!efl'S Worth Join Club and .Save Money OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List 1----------------------··I New YORI( f,1..Pl· ,.)lunlltY'I UW11111t• NIW YOft $lodl; fl!C~llllll Wltal .... .. -B- .... ..... ,,_, •111111 "" c•ca.. -E·F-•1' SYLVIA .POJITnt To Illustrate: ' If JOI.I are 1 normal Amttioan, you beloq IO at Jean one club, association, p r o f e &monal organJ.z.ation, fratuaity. Just about every one of us, from age 10 to 100, does.' THE AMERICAN Medical Aun. now issues an Audio Newa Journal -an a udio tape serie& of 12 monthly one-hour tapes which can bl!: played on an automobile tape player to bring physicians up to dale on a 'tilde \lariety of medical news. The cost ls onJy $72 a yur. lf IO, you may be able to 11ve llterally hundreds of dolJara elCh year by taking full advantqe ol the benefits )'OUl" IOclal or professional club . may be offering (or Jaunchl.ng now) -ranging from an important array of health and life insurance policles to educaUonal serv· icu to vacation packages. .The Public Relations Society or America olfers a videotape series to prepare men or women for the society's 8C" c:redilation exam -for free. Many associations also offer extensive and effective job placement 5en'ices. • The National Shorthand $1,000,000 COMMERCIAL FINANCE EQUIPMENT LEASE -SALES LEASE BACK ACCOUNTS RECEIYAILE AND INVENTOIY FINANCING. GREYSON CO. LTD., INC. 2400 WM't c .. 1t Hwy., Sult. 11 NEWPORT •EACH -M2..a102 TWO ACRE PARCEL OF PRIME C-2 PROPERTY BEING OFFERED FOR LEASE INTERSECTION OP' 8ROOKHUIST AND ADAMS CITY OP' HUNTINGTON BEACH, CAL.If. For lnform1tlon Ple&M Contact CITY Of NEWPORT IEACH, CALIFORNIA 1300 Nowport llYd. (7141 673-2110, Ert. 21 f ROUND TRIP ANYWHERE IN CALIFORNIA 85< For calls alter 6 p.m. weel<days and all weekend 3 m;rnJles station-to-station, plus tax. '9cMct...,.._@ ·~ Kailua a Kona .. H1w1ii "EM~RALD BAY OF THE • . . - KONA COAST" • :n:!1 JIONA, COASTS "NUT lESIDENTiAI. COMMUNITY • l . ...-"'. WHITE SANDS BEACij ESTATES ; ;.f.,'.. , . v /. r '-I I I R~r• Fo .. '3:1.mplo H..;,..ite, From '$12 ,000 wit!. bcol!ent Torm• FOOT PATH TO Wl'llTE ;ANOS 8EACft PlUMERIA STREET TRW MOSTLY OCEAN VIEW ·s11es Alt. AVAllAllE UTILITIES WIDE PAVED STREETS __.EXACTING DliD JIESTRICTIONS - I ,,.. -'l ......... ., ' • / ( -~ . . . . . ' - HE BLACKBURN CO. DEV~LOPERS ' ' . -- 1823 Wostc~ff Dr. Nowpcrt BHch Phone: 6#-02 l I · NASO Ll1ll"91 for Thurtdoy, Aututl 7, 1'69 lllft.I M1911 LAw ti.. Cllll, ·-· l•& 1)t ~ 4$\, '1~ -\Ii Hit,~ ... J M jilt R.port'r. A··n orre-I" • -II.-• 81nllF DI ' l 131 131 UI Jl ·-• ·" lt& ""' • •" ""' ,,,....,,.11,... ~ _.ttllllt 11 •..-1"""" ' A.M. ,,... NASO. 1, U"' ~"~ -.. ,, I .. 1 ,e~•,iF .!!:.·-.~ ,!!li1~ l~"',, !l"" ,~ :'!lji' ~, 11.15ft 1 1•1-. ~" members Jow. cosl insur .. ..,.,,. '"'-• ... .__.. ,... .. • •rtnJtr. ...,..,.. • CM'11111t•• :'~"'·'"~r·~.,·~ .,.. ~ .. , -··,. -... ... 111 w 'ff ll~ 'v. "'"'" Lt tl \• 6t,_ l._ It-I .)tS ""° I• t't ' Kl::' •• 'I! • .. l'nst IOOS Of SI. hi h ., '5~ ... .... I~ tn 11 21 21 , •. , , 11~1 I 1111..,1 ~" ags • ~ • speec I lrllW YOlllC (Alilic-att :u~ lS ' ,. .tHfi DWI ,.I G6W ff~ 2•tli := l·"i! ff Ii~ na 1}.; l;t'~ ,;:: ,~ lr~ l:.. H~:; ~ t~~~lf I"! :N~ hearmg or the ability to use -'1'1\t t1J11ow1n1 bl4I )4 »\'I "'" ~ J1~ 21111 ;::i ~Ii! ~ J~t; •rmMAIO u·-, h i~ ..... 11~1~ s11 !·ff n n 11•, 31._ -" ~un ;-,: .).cl,11 t;v. n:!~~. "· • d 0 ·r ·1· ~ •1-H OUOI• • "' lllO G11 14.,., 2i Pt.rll'll I l~ 111\0 ~d(jrMllll$1 .~ ·~ u U\1 .. r 1r,M 11111 •1 ,,~ 20\lt '°"" -\iii ektnl FLi ~ m ~,,an . r I the, ab1 tty of a ,. .,~1~ •• Jiv Sit l't 11M1 NIKI lll 21 ht•li sr ..O\.'J 411'1: ....... ~~ ,.., u 4-l:i<. ~·i~.·-~,,:: l .~ u • T~r-. : G 1 ~ .Oh •1~ "°"'" -141 i'.!:i•rot , -r;. -" !'Ao "" 1llt )t\lt ii Mhi U1 ill lJ.t: :: 'v> "'Blllc*Dll 1.20 12 Ill\ 61\!J ~ ..... G " Si .. member or this · group to=-"~"t"-':: ll"'lJ -"r"ft., 1:•d ,.:.:;:,.. u n ~.::t',,l~ , :MYt £~ t?"t•r•Jo11n . ., ~~ ~~ 10l,"' tt ...;..,. c ·.~ ~ d . 1. 1 11oi• -,... 11 ii nc11 s·r1 I~ !>tin ~ 21~ n ~1rr1 '" .iJ 1"' ft '' 11 -1 11~11~ri'1.so , .u l\'I )H\ t ""Elect "~ 1 1 coor 1nale 1sten ng, reeordlng r-111 .. , In•· '"' !" ·•~ '" ~ Pfloto!>. *' 11~ "• ~ .Xlb u "~ •1,1r -.,. ..,1,1 Pl•.1s 1 1011.., 10111; 1G11.'i ll'r !~,_M -wi ""' -• dNltr Dtlat:I w ., !f-. Cm "5 ' "I •111 1 "l\ec p, d '"' •-. Ar n »o t4 2111~ ,,. Ult -"'B<ebl• aru 31 l6 1~ 1ra I\ ... 2 ~"" -and transcribing is lost or im· -•n\llitlY 2 ,.. •:w, ll 1! n 11 f4 ,. 111u1i .n ,,,..,.. AJ ac:,•t•la '! ,J~ t\,. "'+ \\ 1100!1"11 1.10 )!JI 13\i :n\I. 32~ _ "" 1nNU Ind 1 l l~ •. ,,. .. !LWllldl fMM Ml ~· ~ Ct '"" l Porlr IC ~ .... lll,,• ···~·a .. ':!J I ' .,~ l1'h 1?.\lo •. ,. u .!Elf"•" ·.K·"'., 'll t?,• ,•,14 '!..._ t.~ 1····,'j~•1.10', 11l!, ~u "' paired. the. policy Y.'111 pay theMC:Ur""""-~~ ::1..,~K 1: nt ..... , ~·~f;"'=~°:! it~ .su ... ~~ i~• ... a ....... "" ""~ ....... "" ,'fi g .. s fla\'I -Rocti: » i1t 11,,.. t\'o lt A ~ 2' l~ Jt:; i: ~ = tt Sir.. I 11 ,, nfo 72'9 -II :fl E_lf\, M = costs or switching to another~!.\'1""1~lni.':: s1r11te ~ 1~1,,,...,-'°""ll~~J U:! D04 11t;A .10.. 1~ 11 u~ 1,~_"'11PC11tM111111 1 2t1•Ai JO '° _,,. ,,....,.n,"·'° 5 iif:1.. matt; h 9'1G ~ l'.anlp 2) Pvb$ NC ftw. Ill\ A ~ 10 I 51'4 Sl:W. 51:\11 -ll.lo B°'*'l l,20 6f 21 tn1 11\'o -1'1 mhtrl I :iob t :11 Career. ~1""11'1~~ .::tnt. 1 1:'1llil~~UI~ 2t" ll'r~~~ ':*'~llo~~"'~r':at«l ll 4Y4 ~a a~-ttt==~ Inf~~~ '~t+~1=~l1 \:: 1t h'l: n~ llD no 1..d'Uai «• S l<lVllft C \I~ 1 l'r p &ellMI 21111 Hiio A toPw ,•11 1 ,.~ I' jll'I "I R0$ Edi• 2 !It l' :MUI )11'1 3'11:. ~ l'MIJOl>n ·.1~ n JI JCl\4i Tu~ SCOPE r the 1'1!11H rnttkuo. n<rlrd \4i 2 l'r -Wt! l'\t I ,.U•llY St 11 11\fJ A MldCh l. -i! .!\Ii "" -"' lou•M Inc ' ""' IN I"" + .... ndJohn ol 4 JlO Sl 5.l •:u:. 0 groups ....,.,...,..n w com. HI Mii .... , .... I.: l "' 1 POU. c. •"" 1 .... Mlln .411 • -... 31:1 -""B••lll•Alt .jO 1n llh 131, 13\ii .. En1111'1Mln ID tt ~ ,.. h• n'lblloft. .,,.. 'I "Jh FCl'I t\!J 1.lo P\llnrrtl U\11 lS "IJ!ldMIU .15 4 ""· 2'\i 2'7\4i -* BrlHSI 2.40t 2 ~ nv. '"' + V. EMl1l111 :u { " to W Leh tens Of millions Of US ~I C~ 2j~ tt1,v, ~~ C im l •' 00 "'• ij" ln! II.Id Oyl'I 21 :o,L •'i'a"'"!'"'• ,·!!: » :11111 n "t ,..,, -"t lltlll My I to 121 ~ !Oc\'o !Oc'' -V. ~o+11G11 t.JO 1' 35 ..,.. -· "' m ·--"" R b El 211'1 2'n -51 ~\'\ 3:1.'lti 3:ll\ + "!rl1IMY .tJ II 'l'h 4l C V,+ -ESI Inc 1.20 20 2 1'" belong is far beyond what:~~P'C~ 1~~1 ::i!'~ ~J~~ :v~ 1 v.1 ~!t~Ol t.Pm 201 :m~S:.p,..".: 1;J 141)\ 14\.\ ~:ii.=\,;~~·~ .. ~ 2~ ~" ~~ ~\.+i.i:~!:'~~~,·f.20 1~ ~ ~;: I • lltll'lt •f!t 111' 12 •1 0.o ' ~ Hr T 1'\!J ltU. RI.,.,,. (.p JlV. ~l'r Alli• Cnt)m " 2~'1to 2•l'i '~"-+I l\tlynUC 1.11 211 74 29\' 21'l. + ~ li!hyl Co .12 11 '' 2~ most people magJne.. The ra· " ~ Y t Fd llAll I YI 'I"" m 1 ::o-Mf: •. ci n~ 2Cl1' AIOlitPC .»I I 1'"' I~ 1&~ .... Br-Ct l 11.,... 11\lo 11 ...... ElhYI 1111.411 1 (1 41 . • Alf 24 \'1 Y Mir il'r YI tlwd 2 Ill~ ,, Ak:oo 1.ao IJf .. ._.. •1.,, Mia_ W. lwn Sh••• 1 ' 11•, 11•~ 111, -\4o t,;11rofna .11-11 n 11n 111,1; li h d ' ,.trtlrn F ·~ ,1· n~"'AP U IYI M QO"<I E• n ni.o AMBAC Jn Jl 1)1< !!:-! 11~ ... lru111'"1t ~· :m lt ... 11'• 17~• -~' <:VlnJP .60D 16 .. '4'\lt. Encycloped1a O( Associations Alr . '*'• •v. 1~ 1"~ 1 ""'ti ll Jl,.J•Y.t :r:.i.'S'l: :=,,..,l\111 M1115vl 1111 l ~ ,._ 'Z•'AI +.., •~ 1.51 1 :1i1t.1o :a.•r, 1'14 + ·~ E11ro1c1 1n.20t 2 u 16 pub s e every-three-years by ,. '~• ,:.c ll:u:· If~ re~· • · r.~1~ ".1->W" itolllft M---.v-»~ ~.£.t._l,N .. ,,1 J~, flil-~"'+11' 5~0 '-•--,11. ?~.... r:i..-~ + ·~ ~~Jr•1 15 ll ~tte ~:I? Gale Research Co., ia Detro!• 21~ r1 1f~ tu 1 ~g~T /!~" ~,:::~, ,'!"" Rtl'r ::11~., 1f' J~ '1!",,",,,•,,E~ 11• 11311'. now. 11)\i +'14 11n "' 11 U\ii 1•1• 111' -""F1Mr111 .«t 2• 2''4 ~ . . .. Alla eoi •Vt 714 ...,.,. I \II' lrt fl U 11,,. ffu., 2, •w .-•t OI -S 21 2~1', '~l'o -1' Ill/ff or• 1.11 U 3'\lo 3!'1> 3H\ -~ l'ocloi A ~ Ji' 3'\V. I says It will 1·~ about I' 000 ~-' •• -• ,e ' Iii ,_ i5 1!a RJ•ft Ho 3:1 ~ m t n .IO l(Q ,,.. ~ 77'11! + IUloYI ,Ill 1• 412.li •Ni 47\li . . f:'1lrd>( ""°" JU " ~ ~ ... ... ..,.. ~ 111.'Ji Iii S.Sllff ..... 111\'o "'" Bellff I ~ 151(< u r. ISloi + ,,.. Bu1* --.. 11 .... 10\.o 11 ·~ "1lrcl'I Hiiier JI IJl' 12- dilr rent I ti t ~~ ~ 1f" 1r" 'I"' 'A ~ ~?0.1 w. ScilMn E 1 av. Arn •••""• 2 113 Ml,;. M :M\11 + \\ lkln!tlt 1111 541 11 :141\ :14"'1 :14"" + Y. l"•ll'fflO!'t l ll I"' 11 e organza ons nex ":::"ti l ,.~ " j » t9M• 1,, 26l.lo21Ylkllot1 1,, 12...,11 11m&c1c,.1 IMJ 11 s11'r '°1~ ~1 ~:.~~•u•llrld 1.«1 38 UI• "'• ll'• +\\~'"'"' ·"° 11J 11~ 1~ ' .. ' I Md ... 22·~ "" •• ·-" M ., ........ C1n 1'° 16 41\'o "'• 41\1 + ~ 8Utndy .10 2• 3:1\, ,,,. n·~' ' Fem Fln 1.JO 14 21\li 11 year, against only S,000 as ~mel L~ 21 .. : "J°"• 11"n4"' L! .. :'4; , .. 4 .. I '" ~ 4v. AC1n pt :H to 2A~. 26'1to u 'lll .. 1urrp~1 ..a 111 ll'"" 1J1 1::." 11 Farut"1 Inc 20 il ·~ E ... """-it oe 22\.'J 21• "1~ ", ... ti eom, .. ' ,,~ 1\li Ml C11m 40 '6 111" 11\'o 11~ ....• DlhUnY 1.21' • 11 101-'l 201.'t .. F'1rW"/ Fin 14 1 i~ 17ft. recenUy as 1955. And these~ F~ •~ '"Ui. -..,"b ·11 t~-c.et ~ '"Seo• Som •s" "'"'"°'•Jn 1:40 1 1,., .. 12•a r.r~. + ~ ll'1lltr1st1 "° • llv. " »:i. + l'o F••atiM .tot> •1 1A:. fi;,:;-n.es don't even IOU h :rn ~it ~ ~ r •ort fl' f:U t..,';"' T., -f;"' f11 ~I:: r 2~ 'J"" :~~1 ,·: 1~ ~ f,U ~ :-:~34 -C-~= 11o '?; Jr' fm e~ C ()fl,..., 11\Sd 11 20 P'!lnl 21\lo 25'.IO l r ill,; 1114 1 IA l:::',; .. pt lilA 11>4 AmCy1n liS '°2 ?ll\ !!:!' 2'V. -V. Clbol C• IO ' >O'c >•• ,,1~ ... FldPIC' Eltc .K ~ IJ'lol ••-•o/th ds f llArnMtdl 36 31 Ill ft !'llo t'llolj,'j"1En 1• JS l1Cmp 2S 26 AmOlst!lll l 23"o . 23\<t -'4' ' "" w -~w "P~cDl'l.26 I~ 20 our l.clu ousan o sma A"l PIH 1•"-r .. ,_ ~on Ljb '.,.. tll'>, A .. ",,. 1, ,, AOU11v1 .n . 21 11..., 1 1114 _._ ... •1 Fl"•nl IOJ 11 ~. 1n~ r1:it -'• F1<1P•Pld ·, 1 21 27 ... " Go& "' ,.,. clacb I 2&\IJ 2'\':I ,,_.,., •'1 1'" 11 AOu I Pl Ma 3f 13" ll\'o J\l -,-•< llMl~M .r.11 lot '6'-'> 2W 16 -V. • p t lO t:i 13" hobby clubs, socia1 c lubs, "511 G ot 1~ if" --5SY •11o 1\1. t:!.' ~ ,~~ 1~ ~,..~,• :! ~ ~E'1,0w ... ·1.t' 11 ·lav. 311 ~ t"\~ :;:::~\L i•f: :~ ~ w.; ~:~ t ~ Ftc1s~:,,;11j/ 1111 '''"' 2s r I Am t11v 14V. IS I P1sE1 I~ I~ LY'l'M:h ~ 31 lJI~ Sg""t Cl' 1:it "' l 29\IO ,, 29\.0 V. anSou Rf ~ 1211 Sol~ s.i\~ ~~ lh Fe<10~1r .ts J.ll 36 J.IV. raterna groups, etc. What's :nchr ~ ll:i ~w. 1 =~ Jl'h JlVI Ml/Id c.:1 ,,.. iti. Sor• P•• n ,, ""' Exp 1na 161 "" is"" 26'l ..... "" l rew 40 ,1 1._ .,,. It.lo + """'"" Mt• '"" 1 1~ 914 d. h A:::r::::' ,... II(< IClec>Y JI.to ,., M•rrc Ot. ml,. .... SC1! W~t ~ ~t~ :g~~~ ... Pli~ t~ gl't )l"-~(; +1 . ~dn PK i n •1, ........ HW wt. .. ~r;:o.~· .-fo0 .! !;}.; ~ .... more, accor 1ng to t e An•" J•\li :iw. 11,i;wn •V. \l.o M~ 1111y '''~ 1u1. looffE •! ,, .. ,1 AmHolst .111 m 1,,,, u ll11t _, •1>1llld 1.10 2 •• 2•\'i 241'1 .. "iei<kiM 1 40 1 11~ .• 15v, A • Soc' ( . Arco Ind I. Ii IC $yf •l'lojl'JM•!lkrl ""M~iil.aUn (Os • AH~ 140 1~! !~','• r:!"",~ ~_:~+4icC~~-~."t'.•" n1, ,"'>1,, n n,,,.71•,_lltro) ! . <> '55 _ .. . , . A.nan of ]I * I Modul I '¥. Mlnlllf' 1' IS W f1$vc 11\lo II Anllrwil 1.10 xlt II' 11"1 llV. + I -,. -"' l"i .. Fl 61 ,., 2d'·• mer1can lety 0 ASSOCla· Arcltft X 1oi~ 10.... t 0.1• IS Mam! A1 5 1lli ig;G1Cl> 1Hli I~ Arn Howo '.n -. ..., t ,,. , ...,..,. . c"·"ooo'· _ ' 0 ,._ 4!'1i ,,~ .,. rln r4<1ttll" l't ...,,. lion Executives m Washln.n .. 11 Art MoP 111'. n v. 1.c C•o 1"" 211 ~ ... ,:rR" M • •\'Jr ...., I 11" ~FdY 90 1 • '"t••o c16~ s ,10 11,,. 11~ n~ + ·~ re.rne '·'° SJ 511.to 51" 200 US . . 6"" • ,.,.~ H " sc.., .....,, Old ll"' l: ~ ~"'{::' ::. " s A"91• }."' ~"' NMICI• i 1o fi ~ 3: ~ +· ... ~::::~~ f·:l 1J ~~ F J:"' ~ ~!:~·; t~"' ts •~ 44"1 •. associations have ~~c 1111 ~:""~'!"';:~:"A• 6¥1 V.4~ .... , 0 ~~nv,11,,,~ ,.20 ~ :~N~cr-2 1101 •v. • •11o-\t 11 ,.1erc.·.o 21 ~ ili., ~ +:i.F11NS1r .»11 1ri ~!t ~:: Yearly budgets r 11 .111 Au10 Sc 1·~ 1~ Enn11 e 12 1• Mc1··~... 'l'7'llo ,."' str•w c1 .,, •l\ ArnPl'lol ·°"' ~ f:t; .iill~ .iiP~ = t? ~r,.••w i.!!? .... ,,1 301'1 »v. ?!.\">, t ~~. ~~[~qd .J6 1f lirz li!t 0 ffil On llYtmco ti.,, 1 Enrwl1I l•V. 17 Midi' H 11 :t0 Sui.c Tlf 10·,-, l:i: All:tirch .... ""' t -....,. "' 21 16 ....., , •ot •• I •• d 0 od I d --· .,... -· ...... ,,. --• I ...... Asrdl WI "l $,~ $1 Sit.lo -l'o'. ,-:: •1.. ..,,, ...... • -, .r: F'JI E Ccoa•t ll ;,1 31\.!i i:•••o >•• ·=,-'ml •" •' ••...01rn " Jl ........ ! F -••• ~ t> I c o• O••L · F " t ll J1 ·~~ an ver a severa oz.en 1re1 At 11~ 12 ou11 o 11 !WI .v..lso•r "' t\~ S••bo Fd ''' 171 Am Se11 1 21\li 22'-n•t _ 141 -,-.. -1 ,!!.,"". nlli .. .. Fii Gii "' 11 ..... '° '1 rl• TK 1~ lJl.'i Merli! Nt 11.., l•l'r Tamp• • I Am 511111> .60 •5 llqlj II..,. 11\0 -1 II --... 16 .... !!., ni.. -~Flt Pow 1 Sl ~ ll\.li " have yearly budgets ir; the $5 ••,!.,',".,"' •, ,• '•"p-'•'· ~~ •"','1'• ... ,, "' l" 'i•l'!lf'r _,, ,,,,_ " StM11 1.to "" » 2t\.ii 2'~ + "' •lttTr 1.20 '!k 1 1 ""'" •"11 .... _ Fi••wLi 111 42 ~ •s:i-, 8 ¥ _,, ..,. -~ " lGW 1 '4 ls>Nft .. ,. .. ArnSc!Alr 10 61 411\i, ~ Jn< f \Ii Cl Mll'Cldl .,. 10... 10\oi 101'1 -\lo F 1 Slffl ·.., 2Th million and up range. R:~~ c ~~!IJ li~ F:r:fld T~ ; ~ ~:~1!· nT J ,11111 :=e w !.,'"' ~"' ~~s.~d p:~.15 ·~ 1= 1~"' I~~ -t,~ 1,,:i:,.-. '.:, •• ·~.' 1?4 li141 ~t, i.·.~ t1~ ~l~:c:. ~Of I~ ~t? lliZ =· cu 1•YIHs 12" ,,,,. ldN Mt 20S 209 Miu Vlr. 1"" 1'4 Thlrm ... .. _, .. A ~1111•• 1 . .0 41 2'"' l''llo 1-W. -"" ··~ "' . • ,..., ,,,.. • -•• FMC Co IS 16' 25\.'t One Of the bigg·~ j b ll111n P f:wi I l'I 1rrlno ?Ill. »"M Mol1 G .. ~ 111111 Tviu AS ~·~t •,,. Arn Slerll .41 6 2q.' ''"" 26~~ <-o t"' ·,, l 6:N ::._ 55, ... ..,. '[!f ly TkMr .10 75 tt~ '"' •· "I · I """" jl't> l21'1 Fi r Bolt W IO Mo Rid! S ,_ Tlffn• C• c. Am.SW pf 61 J lJ'• O\.o 101~ _ ~ ~IFdy .10d ' u v. Ul'r 14~ -v. FMC 012.is l '1 ,, • Ch' • '•1?'~trld ·110., /11 ,',lMA ~ ,. 1f,~, Monrn Pk 16111 57 11.., Gl' 12"' 631.11 AmWWk1 :w 16 2 11;. 12 .. . Cen tllLt l.l1 21 l•V. '•'•~ nv. -\lo Foo•• c1 · 10 1: 11 ~ ll\:o uo;'netls IS group lrave sav-1•11• t111 fV.U 11G RE Ji1!1?JV.M01>w11 'l n n Jll'~" 1n ll...,U141tmTlT 1·40 605 1, ~7.,. ri +11o CenH11<114 a"'• 1•1• 1J10 FoooF•f• 911 ;"' ~1~ 1ngs. A 1cago golf assoc1a-orkH, 33 ... 16 Fl1 w?ln 51-41, Moore P '"" 1°" !"""I. sv. s"" AW'"-'° 1.1s t50 11 11 11 _ ~c-..111Ps 1.11 3J :>" .,. 1•,,. Foot, Min· 10 o~• 15 I• ( • la h • ~Ir Lib SS 51 F~NI 11\lrj!llOMoort S 1''~1~ rncnt • 11•.~tl ... AW4,lpt I,<! tl40 2l 2it\ n1o1o -i~~8fllL1EI U S 21\li 21\/o 21 11<-IAfoole o'220 f5 1i'.f. 2$ ion or 11\S nee •• organtz 1 w •• ,,. ,, , , , Mo•cn M ,!' .. ,•,Vt Jr,.~' ,o, 'l'r 5\lt. ..,,,,..,M 60 21 n •> 2Ho nv. + v. .11nMPw 1.12 ~ 11>. IT'ii n~. + \'f For<IMot 2., 36' ~il .o~• • ' ..., -I Ulll ... ... ' I • Mo! (lut> • ' •nd "'V• ,,,,. Amleclnc· JIO us "''·• ··~ .. +~Cent SW I.• :l.S 401\ 40\lo «ll~ .. . ForMtK ;5 Ul ,.,, , ... _, . ,, di I r l lrd 50fl ll 411 Food FP I '"' Muelllr 12\lo n Trice Pd )II l1V.. A.MK (p .30 '" n; ?l 71 -\Ir r..,,1 So•1 .llO in n·~ 1"'<. ,, ... + .:, FMcK Dll.IO 11 44 .Ul'r cu. a nme-ucoy expe ton or lrldlt 6\o 1 For11 on , '" 12Vi N11,,~~ c ,,,~ ,.,, \tict1lr 121,ro Uli AMP inc .4 JI •!'lo 4!1~ ~ + ..., c ... T11t11,_,_U u it!\ lf:Mi '"" _ •\ FOJIWl'tl .60b ,. 11-. 111.1o be r lildt Ht :M lJ F0$1 Gml 26''1 21V> I'll! ltnd 4l'a Slli ropk1 ~ "'"'• ...,._11 (Oto 111 Ja1' lilt. JIV, •. Cerro 1.-1'6 Jl .. ?l'"' ?l\o t •,Foxboro .60 !Cf )2 JI 2.000 mtm rs o area country l::r1.~1 1t.,. ,;~ ~=~c1 ~ra ,~ to1~te~·" 1A1. 1'\4 T,._ Fd 1rv." Am1r...i 2 . .0 u ,;a" 11 .. 31,..,, ert·teeci .111 33 2,\/0 nv. ut.1o ,., Fr•nt srr 32 7 u 2,,,\ I b t G r I l"lPC ooll'oe ( ~ 16 l'rnkln 21 NII Elllll 61 M Un.UK 11~ U Amit! .:n 11 17':. 16\0 11 -~ C1rt-led ~.'41 • 1•"6 7JI~ 7''• ~ Fr~5ul 1.60 9! j1\li 2SV. c U s 0 reece or on y ......., ,,. c.., JOi;. llYt l'ulY•w i,;, , t.r Fd Pd ,,,,, ""' UllArt Tl'I 23\/o 2'\lt """'°"" 1.1'11 •Jo l'l\1 2J\lo 29'tlo + v. ''"'"•Air .1111 .s ',f'.', 26 2a"' ..... Fru~Co 1.10 130 s"'° 3Sloa -including air far!: and hotel ~!A~ ~r ~~~ 8:'"~!, 1s•. Im-~~: ~~0 ~~ •• " tl: ff°~ ij"' ~:;? ~~y ·If ~ j~ fl:tt ~VI_"' r~!.i6:~ ·~ ~ 11~ 7j"' t;i: + .., Fuou• Ind 21 n* 3l rooms. Typica1 charter flights ~a. 7~'11 n ~c:, ;~~ ,,~ =:: f!irt ,~"' 1~:! tl~ ~II 1:~ 1; ~ •. Jf 1! Ytz ~ m? ~'~ ti::~SHJ·2; Ii ll:; ll~~ ll~ + ~ G.t.C (p 1.SO ;;:~ "~ which are used heavily by &urllllD s 1'"' ll'll K1,...11c 4•, s~ N•I ~ 1,; •'Al us Btrvt 2115• " .. " ,•~,• ,,',"'"'.·· l1 ""' ~" J'llo +1 Ch1wMn I.IQ l<I ·~ 44'" •• + ·~ AF Coro .411 is,•, •,•,:! l!~ . . • .,, .... "' !5'\lo ff~ Al Est '""' IO'lrt. N~tol ~·· J vs Crwn RJ -n 102V. 102 102 + .,, Checker Mol 14 21 20$;i mt t v. ....F ... 1.7'0 ... •WTO associations and clubs can be •t w sv 5'i\ 2~1; 111 s ,.,, NEn GE 1t'.'1 ,, .... us Envtl 11 1' l\rdlo., .. 1.60 6' 4' 41 41"1. + fi Chemetn 1.ao loCI JO"ll 29'~ 31".1 :i, •m fu 1.JO 11 "''~ t~ ·-· J 25 It.ti l~ lW. NI t.r11r. 7•1'1 ''"•us 5U111r ~7\11 '9\o'o .t.rltPu~Svc l •1 25"• i5v. ""' •.• Cl'ltmNY '·'° 14 $6.,~ 5"'11o 56 \11 tJ ms •tl.7$ 2 211' ..,,.. 65 percent below ri>a'l1Jar -M 10 14 !no'• '!"' l)~ Nld>lft F J1 l:IY, us 1rlcL )II~ 17\lt A•ltns OS .70 ll JO~ • .)(IV; 301' + 'It (l'll'fnw•W .XI 11~ .... 11 .. 11'9 ""c.,,,,.u .72 I ~ ••• ""•• -o~ l nnM 9 6f 73 1•11111 4 "2 Nit!i ,t, '9•~ 3"'4 Up p..,p 25 ll•}i ArmcoSI 1.60 106 '2t ,,,... :!tl'lro -.... (l'IM VI I 60 ,,J ~ >o!V. ~ _ \~ e;.r W-60 fares. 1nr1i:r Ht. 5"' llat" W ~11' 0.. Mltlt 11 30\.'I JIV. U!M SLd 1\/0 N Atmr pt 4.75 ,', ~ •• •,·, ~~ ~"'! ~ ~ Cl>el Oft0o.~ I> ~\lo. '1,,_ ~'~ t .l~ G.or,~Etn .!,.XI », lDl'f 291' h b. be . ltO Sow 1,,,,, '6 lot> Au' ~ ,.. .. NA, Res, lYJ •\.'I Utll Ind 21 lO Arm11(t .to _,,.,., _...,,-.-... hHebr ,. --·W _... l'la ...ck -Ill' •• Anot er 1g nef1t ls sav· •D lnlA 111'1 n 'h orln's '"" lo>.ro NC1r NG 10 IOVt Vil LO 10{\ 1!'111 Ar ... Rut> 1,611 l )9 .. )ft' JO'" -\/, ltkE•1I Ill l 121'1 1m 12111 GlleW'tln IO • "' Hl9 • rr b . I aoTcl'I I ~ ••Pl! '" 16!.'t 17\/o Nt=ur D!I ..... J V•llCI $& 21 'l2 Aro Corp .90 I T.11• n·.~ 73'!. + "• Ch!Mll SIP,. 2• 2•1' mii 11.\/o .:.:.1y. Gemini c... l ' i 16\!.i 1ngs om group uy1ng pans. ••'-Ill '" '"" ••oll .Sc 611 63 NPA G11 1•1.'Ji lJY. Viv Wor> 11:\lr :nv. Arvin Ind 1 16 18 iTVo 11 ... + "ChlMStPP ct 1u, 21-. ~ ~ -2•.ro Gemlnln .SM I illl hl·• ... c.• I Los An I N ''" Gp " ,, '"r Mt 11 17"'-NW Na•G lnVI l~l,i, Wldlw p 11 21 ..U~lcl 0 I I.XI 201 ''"• ..,,, ..,\I -1. Vo Cl\MSPP of s 51 SI SI I GnAl"Y 2.n.. .. n gees, a egro i.c NG 12>1 nv. rnf llE 11 llYr NW PuSv n n'!t. w Aetdoe 1""' 11 .41<1 lrew 11 10~ 1ov. 1""'< ~ "'o CMSP ,.. ct s 2 n •,i, 53 " =1 !tA.mOll .60b l1S -iaf f (' .,,tu 27 ..... 21\io rlnMl 1/t 172 N •I lh ,_ Yo W1tshw 101'r '11\o'i ~i.d 0G 1.7'0 li "5 4J •S ..•. Chi Musi( I 17 U'9 2t\to 26"ti t,, .,A.Trt n I.loll J6 Wa '·• assoc ion or coopera 1ve ~" vPs ,. 111 n '""ffi P~ '"" 11"1 O:io Ari 12 n1.1i we.,, Nr. 11,~ ""i' t-:..5fr',n1~ 3 J.1l1o ,.. ,.. .... t1oi P-.,r 1 " 3$>4o 3' 3.S} ~ XATrn 11n if 1 4 .,., 4~ buying U1e United Benevolent c '" Lei llf',>\ 15"" ..w 1" 21 "" 21Y> tlli'a w.1 ;R•• ,..~ w1111 RE 11~ U'l.I ,, 1 ,.,, •.-6 11!1 111• """ •. th! 11.1 Pie n 7l'• n 11 2l t t ,,, ... en line · u 11\:o JJ\i • ' "'"'Id 11~ 4 Wlr Ch •t' 1 ... '''" '' •• .., Tr 11 II .. ... 16 16 7JV, ''"" -Al 1hA1P Cl UP 1 n• .... ,.. ..... ,. Gft (lbl• 1 20 " 20'1'l lt'lo $oc1ety has been Set Up lo ht$ Ind ·Iii ~\Ir Uld T« J:W. 3'1o (1,,.,,,.. . "" l't Webb R• ~I lllcl!l1d 1 l.'11 1 11'~ 11"\• 111 +Vi llAIP ctNW 21 21 2:111t 2;\' j• Gfon Clo l.211 1.) ~7'111 n~1 • ""' Ul!I 16 ll un l"' '"' ""Ot1 TP 1•q ll!'t Wel<llrn l~~ lf AllRch DI] 75 11•v l~v. .~v. 1tt'~ = ~. Ill Tlllt 2.20 • S7 Sol'• ST·. +:V! 8~.n~·.'.m·"\ '! " .. achieve big discounts for its ,,!i1rr~r 1U 1I: :~oci'C,,. n:z J:v; nv:: t.rA 111., ,.,,. w111.., M n y, 2.!lo'i ~::A~~" .. W.1J 6, 14 13 1,,,, _ '• C~Full .60 2S U 'il 111, ljh -~ l>lfl Elec 21a 1b_ if' i!:.2' 10 000 members on p-'ucls 11m1 o• 101 111o1 Htnd va , a>;; °"••c'',' , lG 11 w~1"q r, ti-. '"' 1111•• cnem 1 111 '"""' 1111 161.li + 1, C11t11 en ·'° 251 IJli i2;. 1 -h :;n FlrPI .i2o 21 13~ !a ' . IUU UaOol 1\(1 1¥!H1"""r S :ZS 21 <r 111~13\li WllQt ft l~U ....... un C~P 1G1 J!IJ 5'• 5'•-'~((ft .,,.,,.. I I'-16 16 . GlftFds 2.IO 124 J):loi l'J rangmg from luggage lo cars flit u 11 1•'1'> 1S\~ "''"'" 1n l :m P,1b11, '! 31V. '.II wstn NA 11,., 11 ~ ,t,uror• Pl•• • l• ,,..., 17'<1 _ '• civom•ll ·" :Jt JO 2'"• 2' -" v.... Host u I• 1 v. . • \I U 8 l4'lo 2SV, Hllh Mor 16 .... ll'JO ftC l': l"~ l•"• WJln Mii 1 7'!11 Au!Soklr .0.. ,1 lS '\ 141~ 14'• -·~ CIWomal DI 5 I 1121'r 112'1t 112'' + \'> rotn Inst S•I 41] 1 ~ ]Jl~ Jn the WOrd.<; Of the SOC:ICty's 1&1'11 Mr 17\/o 2l'h Htnrtd F 2' ll Plkco Cit ~~ 11'> W•ln P"O 18'4 1''• ,t,111om1n ll'l<f 51 5!'. l•l• l•'ll -i:, C~rys!er J 361 :it 38 ll•r, -V. Cen1nt1r iJ1 J l 2 iSl'r .SVt . . ,, ... ,.,,, .1, 5\• Hlll~Yn 13~ 1•'4 p~"COI 11 ·~ 11'olo Wint WI\ 1$\li lffi A~ee (D 1,20 71 26\'0 ;si·i 7~ ClnnGE 1.•o d 2•111 2• 2414 •.. r ... " Mlll1 II 190 lll''O lOV. vice president. Ve rnon Brown · unt M•• "~ !"'Holm EP SJ 51 PkWY 011 16'11 11 W•l'lb"Q n·~ "" Avco Dr.J.111 31 ~\a .u .u + '• Cln Ge o1 ' i.o ~l 6l 63 -t GenMot J .ioi ...,1 14,. ni1o . llntori 0 t•-. I >.1o Hoover l.SV. 16"o Paulfo" P ll IJ"' Wtnstw T l ... 60:. "vnet Inc: «l ti H 1'•• 1''~ C!nMlll 1.•0. ' 4 1'• 411Jo .ollito + l4o G Mo1 J.Pf J II l!'llo -"I can gel a car for about $100 low co H\4 20i,i, Hou11 Flt JU. J'., P•v•llt ''"' 101" w11c PL n ·, ""' AYnt1 PU.50 J u t11•~ .,,., +4'~ c1"~Te1 2.MI 1 121., ·~ •21i, t •} G Mot Pll 1s 4 llG ff.,, over the dealer's price.'' l~r.;. ~ ,~ ... '~~~':ii• P~' ~111 ~"' :~'Ci.[ 1::Z 2~~ ::z= ~ ,;t;: ,m :;:: Pgu '~ l! 1tft; 'i~~ 'i!~ = ~~Ii~" ~l~ 1l ~"' ~v. ~ + ~ ciP~~f"1 'f ~ ~:~ ~: ColDfl Sir 2•1'i2S\'IHllCI C11 1' 15 P1 Entin ~ • Vrdny E .W. 7\lo -8--~ll!nSvc~ 11 ~2 .S1\lo SIV.-\lo r.en lttir.ict 1' l!'h 11\lo l•bck W 1_:w; I \1¥ Inv~. :m. '6\lo :UV. 26 .+1,1) G-tn Sim I 10 u ,7 411111 ACROSS THE co u n I r y,J,.,.,,,..,,,,,.,.., .... ,. .. ,,,.,,.,,..., ... ,.., ........ .,11 1 IM 2-,14i 7'1'~ " + '~ 111nY &2 24' •214 n 4 1' .... c;,."s111nc1 ·IO ,~ II'• 11:\t 81~rOllT .l.J 32 1 ..... 19'~ 1'\/o -'Ii ltyln "1.)1 ' !l\11 56" Slo:V. ->.:. C TelEI t .ii m )4\lt .1' brl.dge, ·-;al, fraternal aod 11,11Ge 1.111 's m~ n~. l'11t-u.c1w s1ri A 11 13 lt\lo lJ +:itr.1e1F o1i 15 JY'O 1, iiv. ~ l1IC l'fl4.SO 110 61 M 61 ,, . (larliE<1 1.411 102 3:21'1 l7',4 :121' -'lo 0' 0 -···-10< hcbb · t·' I b 1111nc 111C• ,_111 St''I '"" l"'., + '.l. c1•r1< on ·"° 11 •l n n -1 ' "" ·"" uoo 1' • y.or1en eu cu s are pro-ll•noPuni .~ 11 73\Ai 71~ ,,, _ '\ ci.vcmi 1 611 2 ll'., 31..., ll\!J c.enTl"'e .1111 •1 '111'~ 11 Viding a forum (often throurrh Mutual Fu'nds •,,',"oo"••' ,•,.~.. 11 6(1 59'\lt. 59"'< -:it ~i.vEUll 2:04 3S lS ..... lSl'lo lJ'h +·i~ g:~~·, 1~ 111 ltlli lt\IJ ti ,, SI 5'' .. s1·~ t"' leY p IPI l IISO 2'V. :l'9 2tl'I +1~ G I . JI l? ,,11~ '-ade m a g a z ,. n e s 1 I o r ~••cl cit .1s '' 51 s2v. .sN l\ lorOll. 1,. nt ,,. "'" 1 ... -'"",..Ph 1 ,•,•, ~· '''" u ~11lc Inc •o • u u. 16 16'~ + V. 11/tttPH to' 11 1l:V. 2"' ,.;:•• -"4 r.~ Pac lll'b .. n members lo sell or swap ll1•1c o• t.jO 1110 •1 ""''• 401,:. -1111 Cllltf!P "'.' , 21v. 20111 21 ~ + ~ G•PK "'' M 11 10 ,, llllfl Mlo ' 101\i 10\t I~+ ·~ , .. '' ' ... • r.~P-c "" 40 i ·~'~ ·~ "arlous equ;pmenl Skt' equ1·p a1th 1n11 u ,~, ,., ....... +1"' " n n Jn~ 21"' -v. Ge•lllr 1 10 .i 11111 n • . • 11'11! Ind ofJ l 11)01 101"1if'+11" HA J>fAl.10 ]7 'nloli 2'\t 211" ·· · '"~ttv011 · .. ~ 3J 51\, 5''~ ment is just one costly _ •• •1ui.c11L1> •10 ""' t.oio. ••v. '4tio + v. '""'St G•s 10 llt1o 36 3''1• -1•,i, Ge11y pll.20 , 111~ 11v, category in which m ember s 111Y1tkCta .50 4 I'''• uv, 12,.,, + .., 1co1 1.3' s1 n~ 10·~ lllfi -•• Glbr•I' Flri u l!l'I 32 ~ " .l-. l11t!rLeb .1• N SO''o '9:U '9'4 V, ~!SG1 ~Llt 1 3'1!1 3'1!1 3' .... · r.o ftnl PC 10 Cl 1 1~ 1''\I ho d bu d II INVeSTIHG Ctwl~ ' ll '·" f:'lel '"' 1.. Gtwlt> I" ,,,, &e1d nm f . l ~ ll'4 lS>.11 t \,') tfi Pt! l.JO 54 IJ 44141 ., :I: ~ !':jfld Lew IO 11 IQ'o lt11 wch. tra eb •• Ya~ se cadn NE~o'fo"'tJEfAP1 ~c i1·n,~·~ F1e1 Fnd .:as .... ~P• 5111 '·'° i.s. :::t!.~ ~'" ~~ ~= ~f.? _::,., + :~oiMt~.:111.J ~ ~ ~"' ~~~-1 .... gl~~~1~·4 ;~J ~~ ~"' a Jeve 1g savings an -t"e1011ow1""-omS8d 4.n1::u.F11c·~ ,,,11•1 IM<im J.S1•.01aK101e11.:111 ,,1511 d'!ll#lo'i .. okllnt111 . .o "Ji"'~l61" ... ClenAldtn '1 ti-. Ro ·-onomies. 1111on1. 111pp11ec1 1wcornmonw11n I-do: Fnd Gt~ 5.:1.S '·" sioc~ 150 t:!t 11r .... ~•1• .;~ •4 ,.,..., ,. " -~ g/ff':::I~ 4 ~ • l', ~ -nr.1obot1 M••ln JS :.i 1910 ""-!he NallPna\ lluocl· CtP fd ,,54 10 • .IJ ' . 8tlco P<I 511 1 '" 1-N 1l'L 13'.4 1 !:!! "' + "" G-Uo 00 O 11'~ 11'4 h the big•esl •!Ion ol Secur1!1•1 tncom t,i·t 10.10 FounOri 1.11 t.OJ N•t Well 5" &,5J 11r•~H..., :.... '1 "''" ,..,~ "'"" :' ,,.. o~ I" ~ . J .W '"' ~·~ + 1" r.-,1cn i r.I ,,.,. 31ih 1,.., But per aps 0 DNter1, '""·· art tnYHI t611(150 FourlOI 11.7(;11.1' El Glh t."210,2• ••II HIM ·'° • llll'A 5'1\i llG'lo +.. n ofl, 11 2J 2•'1\ 24:ito .. GoodYM• '15 191,. 11\to Sing\e fringe benefil f 0 r ltlt Ptlca II whi-ch Sloct t.5110:"5 Ft1nklln Grau•• tuwlll ll.162116 ·,~l:nic~o;n 1° "'• R '"" .it<ili*'1... 4 113 ·:\It •i;:i,J.7:; ! : r.-Jl¥A :2• 6 29 ,.1 .. joiners is a new 'type of mass-~'-::, .,.~-:cu·~~ wl~ ~& l·~ l:r. com 5t •.•1' 1 Jl Nrw E"' t .10 10.n -~~1~ 1 '° 3f ~~ ~~~ ~~ + v. r:"'JV~ i'il 'J Il"" ~~ ~:t t :z ~~':: l·: it ~~ ~~ h d • d . )Old Ibid) or bouiihl omto Al 1,,1116.51 01.rl( 11.1612.l.llNrw Hor 21.U:llS.U lenGI• ... J ' 67lli 17 '""' +114 om'bfn i.~ .0 41\ci 60\'I 'i\lo +l Cren.t>y 1.211 14 )Ololl 31:1 mere an ise . gl r ol u hp ltnh-t1!.k~1 r11utl'r,i'·,.,~ ~:e'aci ::~ i::~: u111 6.eo l.•J "'tw w111 ll.3114.s. c°"''k1..i1.10 5 :14 l<I f: -""gi:~r,~ s':I ~ t;,. f~~ surance, part1cu ar y ea l , AIH•dn 2.31 2.n como Fd ti\1 10 lncom l l2 2.54 NY ven1 16.2111.11 c:::;:Solv p1411 lt J6"il 1'~ ~·~ + v. C••nlltY 1 40 , '°"" 20'oo life and automobile. Chicago's :1,rli"::C. '·~ i:~ :'!i 1~.~ 1!:~~ l"•H<lm 1 s1 •.J1 Newton u.n n •1 comwEd 1:?: ~ ~ !:it !J~ ::· .. Gr1n1w i.fo 21 ·~ .. ,, C ti t I c ll c Afulrt 10 DJ ID.QI Cll'ISO! In 11.7, 11.;s Fund Am •-» 10.2• NoretSI 11.JCI 16.XI A d ~=.!ol:' :~ !: ~ io~ = = ~ &~'PiJ \~ ft 1:~ r~ On nena a SUa Y 0.,.._....,. Fd 113611.ri on1w 1" •61 J.lOGen ~ 11.21 11,2' on. 1.411 tit st1•0 ala (OfTID\/I Sci 2t172 '' :»1i, ']llt -HtGrlNolt l.le.S '15'11 IS'~ which Specializes in SUCh in-"mua S.~• A,1\1 Cor1t Ld 1,.11 li.U Clbrtllr 12.70 12.111 Omea• i.Ol I.IS , j::omM! &/ d\~ •ra. U.'~ + ~ GtNoPap l,j(I l°o 15'5~, n\11 surance. has 1.500 different~~ g~rn J-~: 1ifi l~nc~ 1l.~ 1/J; Grcua Set ~ !100 Fd 1•..Jl IJ_'P] r~~ac~~11.J 1~ ji:1 ~~'"' ~~ ?:.l\8~Ni:-!'. g!,:"\ u 46v. 4' . 1 · .. llE• •Pl'·"' C•"W ln 1•11111) Aetak l.~••.5'101 Fd •1111011 Cori Edlsl.IO :U1 30'01'\lt )f\li-... crw,,tFlnl 2'421 2•'• plans 1nvo \'lng $14fi m1\11on a ..,.., Crth 6 n 1.J11 V'lh M '6.44 u .u com st ll.:1 t• IJ 0 w 5 ,,·,, u 'n E • fEEe111 pl' s1 t l'I 90 to -I'• GIWnUnll .to 1' ::..,., 1,.., · · I Am In., t 4' I d Of<.•! Inc: P 12 ll 1~ F "" m · · a1q-o • ngs Edl• of S J n n~ n + V. GWUn pt LU ' l"' '"' year in 1r.surance s a e s "m M"' tj(I 1n:11 0e11wrt u .JI u .11 G u1 Ad t.10 'u O'Ne!I u ot 11.o.1 .l..&.Lll one ofC,.15 140 "'\ "6\'o Mt\ + "'G1W11hln .so a ' uv. ') d f • · AmN G!~ l 11 J «l bell• Tr 1 11 I ~1 rl~ lnG 1!,62 71.21 OPO<!OO l.611 I.JI Cori l"OOd• 1 101 39~, 39 Jt~ + 141 CrffflGnl ,t6 12 21'4' 21',\ tat ore or associations Anchor Gro•iP: Otvl\ Shr 3.13 ~:at G•vPhn IS.IJ 11.;io Pe"n so 1.01 1.01 Co"F" Pu.so 14 105 104 1o.1 _ Grnn5h 1.10 3:1 2s:o.:. 1s·~ II d l . t (IPll ''° '6-1 Uow rn 6 JI I It Gu•"·" :U • .1611.:it p~ Mw1 l .n 1.n COOIFl'1'1 ht I 16 2!1,1 16 i ,,, Ge hound 1 '' 19\t ltli awyers, en 1 s s , ac-c;rw111 n·1Jui•~0ow"1 F &10 ,·,, .. .,,,111°"' h111 ut111,,1 Rise Agam' !°"N••cf 1.1• S9 '21i.. ,,,,.. ,,~ G~oT1er 1.111 , s141 s1111 coonl.ants skiers elc:: I Inv 1.11 t.u O•t•el 1~.11 u ·11 HF• •.11 5.ll P119r1m •'.0t •.tJ oruPwr , 90 l06 l<I'.~ J3''t 3, Grcllff wl ,•, n,_ ,n,.. • • • • Fd Inv '·~ 10 to Dr•~ 111• n" Giii 1.n '·" Piiot 1.51 l.M -onl"w 1'14 50 11 ... 61 U V. 61 + .,., Gr11mmnC11 I .... To suggest the savings a JG-~K>tl• (» 1:u E~·on&HpW~;d . · Hinov• i.1s 1 ~1 Plne St 1~ 16 10 16 ConrAl•L ,so llO IJ~\ 12i.. 12•~ _ .., Gull MO 2.IO 11 m\ 15'-' . ' A11ron 6JS '·'' l1l1n 10.11l1.76H1rbar 1 9' tltPlonttr tl.'714.01 Cori!Can .20 11 6"'o 6-l:it 6.11\-lloGull 011 t.50 net ]l"lo 36 Year-old man buying a $10 000 Ax• Hough!Q!l' G•w•h 1111 1l.•l H~n.wll 1,,16 l! . .i.a Pl•n 1~v 11.96 lJ,01 As'·odata announced today <':t C•n PU 2s i:JO 6S 65 •s .. cull Ae1rcn u 1•\<o )l,, . . • Fuiid "" 6.06 1.~ lncom ,,GJ 6.61 H&(: L'Y H,l9 !1.ll Price TR ?l.&4 n .14 ... Conr ,_ ,JO 1$ 11-.. ll l1 . Gutllle• pl.20 3 ~ .,,.,,. five-year term policy WOUid Fund 9 I 71 t.5' S~! I!~ 11.12 Ht<1b Gor I.IS l.•J Pro FunO 10,]0 10.JO · ( _, (IOO \O •• <':ont Cl' I.to 1~1 """ 411'• 4'\lo -V. GllRn ... 1.lO 6 11 · 20V. I · Stock 6 7• 1 ~1 Sl«k 14 •1 1J 75 Hecltc ll.44 lJ.60 Provdnt 4,111 S.2,5 earnings 0 ....,, Qr Cen.., Cl Co ~A,,JG 16 ~ 41'., 47111 -2 Gu!fS!tUI .96 &t 1' :13<\ pay a tot.a Of $161 lfl Sci Cl> s:'9 S~ff E~••I 1)'6 1• » t!e•llff ?·" l.17 Pura~n t.91110.111 Cl ¥191 I lO lU l7 3''h J6 -~ CultSU ~· 40 ilJO ''"" ~\Ir ' ( lh' Ila-!"41 'IG E1r1t lll2U•I" M•nn l •l f !J.llPUll\.Mll f'und1• per Share from saJes Of CoritMnt .lf!CI 36 n 11'h 11111 -l!oGullWln . .tOi p7 21'>\ 21 .. p remiums or lS coverage 1 111, Fd 10.n 11:11 Emra S< 1:111 a·w 11ub\mn •.•I 1 &• e .... n 10 :ii11.:n c°"I "'I 1 JO ~ " l'\11 JJ•.r. n.. -"'Gul!W l'fS.1S 1 ....... ~, lh 0 gh a Cal'.forn'ta dr g ·sis' 11onrt~111 ~ 61 , ,J Enrrgy u oo u oo 1sr Gr1o s.11 '·" Ceort u .11 u.44 tit 008 000 for the first quarter Sor> s1 1 2 1n~ 31\'r 3n, -""cwttor> ind '° 19,,. 11 r u -u gt 8ostori 51 .... 1o:JO En!D"I .: .. 9)7 1)1 Inc •.• 1 •.JI' (;tT~ 11 .l'O U.2• .... ' cont lt! .72 ff "'' 1Ht '"' + ,.., H I assoclaUon -one of hundreds BoJto" 1.11 t.u Eauu... ~.n 10.411 1"'" CaD 10·1111.01 lncom 1.11 t.os ended June 30. according to >M",,t~o1, ,°',,.,." "",,, 1",,. l:t'h 1!!!1-:-1 :~ LI•••••• , ,. -• -• . lroed St U 3<1 U.50 f,,.,.1 Glh H .II 19.16 lft'lp C.!n 1,41 l.IJ lnv~t 1,1! 1,11 "" 6 ,., ., ...,_, -,, ,, 4 «lV. 40•4 «lti _ ,,_ now offering such low-cost 1n-11111ort 1! 16 ,, 111 •H• u .•s u.t1 Inc Fund 11.• 12" v1s11 10.,,.11.-J A y k •--d . ....-1.tooi 2 :14t'o :M''" ,..,, + ""HattPr1 1 .O. , 36\li i. .... ,1'\j, _ •.r, CG Fd •.11 t.n F.v'"' I" '•-" 15,61 Inc: FaB J.JO 1.00 VOY~Q I 71 '·" ames . un er, uut1.r Coolr Uni! .51'.1 41 11'.'o l!'I 31,,, + l~ H•!llbo.lrl i 05 41 51 ""' .,,, -I\• surance. The same coverage c~"""" 11 1• o 61 E•olo• n.n t•,n /~-~ ',',~! 1,ot! "•"' TPC~ ,'·" 1s u • . Thi c-1n i . .., n u u. ,.,.,. 2•'• -i,;, H1mwa1 ut t u~ n:i. 1~ .d .. d lb . ldC•Pll lnc '31 •11F~r.io 1010116''"' ""' ........... ~ver~ J.'°••6 chainnanandpres 1dent. sc-•TR• Ult'~" 1t11o -~HimmPtti1 i1w•21 ,.,, ... 1 on an in 1v1 ua as1s wou cap11 SI!• 6'7• 1:31 Firm a ... 11:0• 11 :0• 1na11r... s.•, •.JO"°""'~ • 11 '·'~ 1 r $ 79 000 ~~11~ ~ 1~ :1~ ?1l'\ :r"" ~ ·.~ Hernmna .1G '' 1.,. u•,, 16'• + \lo I "' $271 $J!0 Cent $h• 10 20 11.IJ F'd r.n~ ll.11 l4.4S ln~Bk ~tk 6.11 6,11 ~th•·•tr IJ,12 16.S• COmpareS to a OSS O l , cOiiWISll i 20 " 111-. 1,'ii lt"' H~nOl~"ltn JO i"•'•' JlV. 3 10 114 t i cos .11m , or more. 0i.in111ng F"""': Fld c1a 11.• 12 u 1,,... '°" lJ.44 U.6t·5cvdder F11n1b: for1.,,111 no 7 111 ,,...._ 71 + ~Hand H1r .n 11 M B•l•n 11 01 nu F1d r, ~d 1• •s 11 ~' 11nv t.u•<I •.~• I'~ 1"' in... 11n~v1u or 12 cents per share from c-Gw ,,.· , '' •-· >• , •• _ .. ',•"~!' 1.'"!, 1 F~ ?nt 21'~ + 1", r am SI 1'11 1:t:1Fld l rnCI 2412lf1J nY lf'ICllC 1l.ffl2.ff So>cl lJ.ISJ,.IJ ,.-_,,. ., ... en ....... -16 Jt·~ J9 lt\li ~ l'~ THE •IESSAGE or lh1's c-'-Clrwlft ' " 1.0! Fln~~clel Proa: '"v"' b01 11 O• ll " .... 1'.n 14,1/ I r 14 689 000 . lh f' t ortlMlt ... n JI 1PI 1S\.. 2~ . ..._. HtrCOll•t i' ll SI'• ~ Joi -h UT lnc;rn 1 GJ I• 1 0¥""' 6)t & .. l"VfllOn GtOllP: Com $1 10.7110.1' Sa eS 0 t • ln e JrS ~O~Bclc .. JO 7 :lfli "'""' :it"lo t '~ H.,rll 1nl \ 111 2l'1t 11.... JI .... -1\{oo umn is clear: no matter what s..ett 1.11 3.u 1o~1·"1 "•l ~:o• 10s ndl 1-·~ s.n Sec 01v 11.•2 tt:M r """ c~1C,,.:11r ,J;,;10 5j Jt~ !:;,z ri'~ + !t, H•rico co 11 20', "XP~ ~ _ .,. . c11~u Grou·· tncom aXI •1t Mui 10.2111 .11sec Eauu l.~• •.M quarler 0 l:mo. CrOA'C)K" 11 10 1 ~,~ 111.., 1114 _...,H1rt5Mr• .Ml 11 l•'ll! nv. ""'+v. lype of association you belong F11nd 11.3' 12.U V•nt .-XI ,·,, r:~~ ,;·l·'• • 15 ~ lnY 7.tc l.Sl It th f"lh t' C•oui.el-tlnd l I '"~ ,, ..... '''lo -~Harv "I 1.70 111 71'~ 2? n -•• to, JOOk into What Savings your t'..i~d ~~ ~ ':\.: ~!:F 111't~~ 1! n ~~:~ ~t~I •:N 2~:~ s;:~.:..s l;:r: l~:lt WaS e l.I COl\SeCU I Ve ?~olC!:(ll l~ ~:; fitt e\!J = tt ~:~~OA"lb ·'f' ~1 lO\t ·~ llf :. • '' COULD oll r~,,.,,,. 11 t11tu Fst '"s~ '51 t40 V1• P., 1.H t.36 · o.,,, n 1121,n Improved quarter for the elec , --, ,, 1-1, ,, ,, Hale1u~ ~i\4o ~ ™ -v. group o ers or er c•lol'll•li · · F•! M111u •:1, ,:411 Inv llnn untY~•l ~Ide •.n 10 11 -i'~1;it 1'%o 91 ..iiiZ Jiit.io "'I"~,~ Htcl1¥n<o .111 111 1t1~ lt\11 1,.... + "'° I ... be E<MStv .,1 s011 F11 M•• 1 u .. ulltel nn:n.t1 s1om1 t ,9110.1J tr · m I I · fir cri z 11 -380 61 •• a# +1• .. H~lnr l'IJ .k I• U"4ll 33 -1 o 1..,, mem rs. Fund 11 .<111 n .n ""' 51.,. ci·364415 1¥111 u .J1 1.s.61 Si• 1nv 11.11 n .to omcs anu ac ur1ng m r1f"s ctlo ·.e 1 "' 111(; iN 11~ .. '."Hillen• cur1 :u n 1H11 u.., -•.11. 1 ---Jlimmmmmmmmmi!~~·~~~~~~c.:c·::::·:; ~v"Hncoctt l:gJ t'tt l':11'nv:,, ti: ;:~ headed by a new management ~"llfh" '1 11 u .. 13•4 ~~ -,1, ~![~, ~~l' ..;t° ,1 1 11lt"'1~111Jlt• t l;t Jlll1n•ln )).12 11.12 !.o~ei-lny I• '1 1~ ~ 'f-11 o&n . I 7 23"11 :1'1>to , -'Iii ttelmt Piii 1 II jl"' 21V. ,i\lo , t<eY•t""e F,.,,..,, s1Frm ct s.n s.n team. The newly reported firs t r:::;.,'B:.':..,·~ t ~ ~ ~ •;; Hel"!•hP ,10 n l'• nu 2J;. W h CuJ 11 1•.n 20.111 ••It SI Ml IJ "9,IS . C11!''111 Wrt 1 11 1•'11 ;~ "'• -~ H~r1111•h ~"' 1 ~ 61• .... + ~-ers Ow '"' 111 2fl,l1 n .11 s1,a<1m1n F11nc1s: quarter earnings were -eater c11r1 wr " 2 2 311• lH• J111i -•• 11,emnnc, ·"", 1 •·~ ...., ''" + '• CwJ B• 9.M 10 $7 Arn l"cl ln,11 11 Ill D' Cu!ltf H 1 10 t JI 3• M -... ere iw; 1" l!'" 3~ 3J\.', -t'o cu. 0::1 1 •i 1.6.1 F1c1uc 111 1.11 than t he total earnings of c~,1..,. .1111 1s J1•• 3-ni.~ +:it. t!••t11,1',' 1.,1,• 'I l , ... ,.., + "~ Cut K2 5,24 5.72 5<1.,, ~ '' 4.19 CVll•lllM 1 "' .. 11'1 4'\i •1 -4' r:w e n . • 2 '~ l4'4 ~ -.._ REAL ESTATE AUCTI ~~ !; ri:t: r-71:~ si11:1 Aoe ,o"~~.7'l $164,000 for the prior fiscal -0-H~·•;:t•~:n"e r. ff'~ l:~ 1~~ = :z ON ~::; ~ t; s:~ ft:-°" l::fJl!:~ year ended March 31. ~n 1t1Y 1.11 11 1~ 11t1. ,,.. •,. ~\.:'~i'tl ' .t 1l!? ~::, f; -'• J>o•~r '?ol 4.•1 5u• lnGI •.It 111 ""C~ 1.15 1 24\t 2Jl.o 'l'" -~ "4o1?.\rl ·'°-' J $' 41\'t 4~ • '• Exe . ~:l~~'!rc1 1kH it~ ~~~~'G1 ,:.~: 1;.n The compan y pays no ~ 1:= :;, '~ ~~ ~"' ~~ ~ ~ ~glfdv~~~ ~31 ~~ ~~ !,,~ = ~ EPTIONAL REAL LQJS Lu1"11 ie.u n .01 rMR A" 2f'."' n."' Federal income taxes because .~:'~l.1t i1~ ~~t ij~ ~ti :t\'"' H..,","'• i."f,, , '1 &1 tt +1 ESTATE t~ wt1 1:::f 11•:~ f~n<1 •:·~ 1%;~ f ... ( d 0.f!nPL l .M 1s l11t 21 21v. f .... j~"':: •. .to J Ili! ~:t Il~ ~ ~t IN SAN C EME u .. 5•t •.• , ·" \Kt>Yll t.11 . 0 ..... -loss carry-orwar s . gPL Pll l.IS 1100 J,t 5' J,t ""H_...wl 1,2t lOS l:ll l:IO\lo lll +I L NTE CALIF Litt ln'I 6.,, 1 01 t(:flnol 7.IS ~ 5' E . . tbe r· I rt PL ~D 1.4 J20 IOl IG3 llD "'HOOY II 1 709 ll ~ ,, .. a,_ -*lo Li.., ~.JJ 6,,, ..,.."'Gt n .ot'4.u arn1ngs 1n 1rs qua er0eer, co 2 ''' :itl~ •~ ll"' 111HQ.11 1"tr .. :io aa 1!it 371' lr"1-'• J " L09ml1 51Yie1 : Tow• Mq ,_.,. 1.1• include a tax credil of $118,000 8:i'M'~r. I:~ ~ ~ri:; r,\., ~:;,: t' .,., = '1~~;, li 1~ ~~ 1l11t + \: TO.[ -[R Cf\nl!d J'J.ll Jl.15 Tr111 C•• 7.fl I.~ • Def A ,.. .... 29~ \t 37 ~ u.-r m IN 4 PA.RCELS MID/OR lit GROUPS C•Pll 11 .$1 11.Sl ,,_,, E~ t '6 1P.'i or 5 cents per share. 0.1\:c 1'1ni.o '= ft>i r, n . .. = .:rJt1~-.,J ~:\~ ,. ''"' -ll" TO SUIT TME BIDDERS. ,,,,~,;::"' 1:::f l~jl f~ ~~ ltll ,1}l As lrodata headquartered tn 0tnn Mtt ·'° lli t6'• 2Vt. 21\1t +1 Holll""'F 1.11 u r.~ ll"' :io•.11 i , Home of the Summer Whi'te House M•u "'" 10.n "·ij T.....c inc 4 " 1.,. • o.....M1• ,,.. • 1 n l'r 21"' 221':> -\Ir H<M" ..i•.• J 1 •'" 1u 11.,.. J\\ """ l'h 11 "I'· unu .... , 1nnR1 .... Anaheim is a de veloper and ~nyA11 -" 1u "" 2.5\i '~ -""Hou•F "j.JJ s .w 511\ Joi 1 2 OUTSTANDING C·2 LOTS FRONTING HWY. IOI -A Near Fwy. on/off ramp. • Each lot is approx, 3.600 sq. it. 1906 S. El Camino Real 2 CHOICE R-3 OCEAN VIEW LOTS '>I block from Ocean •'"In 1re1 Of new apartment building • Lots are 1t the Inter- section of Avenldl Mo"t•lvo and Avenlda Lobtirt. AUCTION SALE TO TAKE: Pl.AC£ 1906 S. ti Camino Real SAT AUG 23 Coast Hi&:hway 101-A •t • . SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF . at 11 A.M. CONTACT .AUCTIONEER FOR DESCRIPTIVE LITERATURE ··~ 1. Wershow .. ~\ICllOl'lll~\ • •J~< 111~i 11U M{l\OSi avr • lOS UtCn ts, CAU,, tQOq • flU) '"·~I 111? Sffllo 11"1 111"( • loct•"'"'' CMlw.,. tH)f • 1'14) lU•Ull 8ROK£R t'OOP.ERATION..IS ENCOU~AGED~ lillliiii- ... 1, ""' w ' n11ply 1.20a 2 •34' o .. ·~ H0111ILP .17 51 31 :161,\ l61'i , • ·~ ' ·" 6·\ unifd '·" io.4 manufacturer of data ac· AGr 1.10 ~ 11"' "" ltlli + •,:; liOllttNG• ;to 113 36'6 36 l61t • '" Mllf't 4.91 •.'4 Ufllled Fund•· , . KO pt II I 51\ .. 51~f 51\'t Ho...(l\ of 10 I 40 .fO ID -•~ :;;;::• l~ ~ lA·;; r"c,.~ ,~·:: 1~·!~ quls1tion and control syslems. 'Pt'.C of I • s.111 S(,l.. ~t· + ~HOW Joli" 14 " ,~ , ... ,,~ -,. ~~-M,u ,1:s1 1:11 Sdtn 7.ll l.S6 8:~1!"'i tc" u H·~ n.~ ,,,.., ~;; ~~.r.., 111,., ?1 r:.~ ~r~ r::~ -~ :u-•, • •.06 15.11 UFd C~n '•~•1111 Ot! Ell plS.SO 4 to ff'• "'' -... ldllhoPw l l.o ll ]1\' 31\1 ll\~ -., ~v t 1).21 !• 50 II~ Line l"d: Jt.f J t Ott 5!ffl Ill 101 l J•o 1)\(o 1 ~' 1\\111e•l lt1•< I )It 11>, ,, '"• • Morton Ful'MI~: V"I Lin I.••,,, a ·r "e Dt•I., ·''' l 211,~ 11''0 ll~o ~l<H11l8 ofl.1' 7 n 11\\ 12 +1 r,•wll'I 1n. I 11.U lncom S.29 1111 ... Ol~IJ'ln•n SO i II'• 2$o 11t1 '.lo Ill C•nl '.., ,, .•'°"\ ,.,, ••·~ •t 1:" }~ t~ .~~. s_i~, ', '•' •, '00' l l11mr .. 11 (111 so 41'' 41 41 -\lo Ill C•n ...riJO ,, 6"4 to>\ ,n , • 1 "I> >< ·~ ~ -• ·. 1151\im I 40 13 ,,.., J)'~ 23\lr -\\HI p.,... I Ill U '''• ,. 3''• ' •0 "' t,16 t,1111 l nG•bt 19~ I.•~ s b l '•S~ pf (.2 2 :M ll\' ll\1 -~.Imp (• llm &.I IS'I 11'\ 1$•t -"<llF G.., SI! 6.0 ~ lll'llVlll y11a 0 s 1•5 Pl'Ol '1t lS U'~ 11 .. lf'o -.. tN,t, (p ''1ft '" Jl•• )""' lft't -" Mii Ofl'>G 5.0I t·ll Y•r lndP s M S.•1 '""''ti'": ... '' ,,., ,,,~ U \• -b Inc°"'' C1•ll 7 14•• 14'~ 1 •·~ t -~.,o ... 1~10)1 1 Ylk tn1 llS 745 ~ ·-t r . 'J ••, "• ''• '• Mui Sl'l•t 112• 11'74 WL Miii'• 'tJ ,.7i ftba .411:> 26 5211 11~ 11 · • •~ .C<l'I' S'Q > ~."I t rst z: .. 2:1) 111$1 '" 11 '711''.111 In tt;t_ followfnt II I kin< '9 IYmlllllf I/Mid or'~~~ ·~ 2~ nli 2:~ 1!•o -... 1~:::rp'td 1'~ 1, ~ 1~:~ Jf.,.:: i! '1r"w~ 1::R lf1' Wa~1n"'"' H ~a-ii ..... lll)(I; mtrk'I ---~i. ~llonC• :St ,• ,1~ ~ ~ -\lo:~~,,,..~ ·511 J J.. l\l .... N I Ind 11U111111 w .. t tl'ld 11.1 1'14 511'1 fltw9 1r1 ""°"1cf1L lNrClltl .5t I ......, .. •nee ' .., " ti•, !!" •~""' ,-.,. 1'.a wi.1t.1111 u .36 u :,, "'~• .. •x"'',."'~ •,t!.'l:~nc1~~!,".,.111 /:g-:.,.lf'10 1~ :r• ';r:1,~ ,!l,\ =I \Ze111~ l\ ~ :? ~~ ~ t':~ ""t l«Yr W1 WINI'°' tlool1U1 lilop • ft!·~ f ~• ,_ ·-l 15'\ •!lol-1'11/nll"" SU j 1>1 jl'lo Jl'.6 JI •~ ''1 l'lnlr~ lP.l• 11 11 Wlnl!tkl ·.,.,....!! or P• < •1 "'1,.. 11 '"'' -l'•Yabi. In tMI~ 'to '1 ~11'1 441 fltnfln!C1> • 11 !'\ ,., , 11>; - •-S.O s.n Wltcon I 13 1 1t ltodt "''"' • estlmltM, r•Z. •1111 Fd 1 \Je , JI'• 12~ i,•.~ t' " •-t pli 50 1IG 1 llo •J~ "'"' . . . 01 .. ld •,o •.U Ol'l1'I J 01 ' 15 ttacl! d'= -Dtc:ltrld OI' UM 'tll nelll\'. 60 llG Vo 3!\t l6\\ " ln•HCOC:.. '20 " ,l ... ,. .. , 111 . , :~~: lttt n11flf ~lonOI' 0:. Ct '.Ji 11 lD ,.,~ JO f U lntlflrlftC"" ) l' •Ut ~·· oll'oii + '6 1ntr stodr d"'lcielld or •Ill 1111 01/v., l ,_ ""' 11~ '' •r...,,.. 1 I~ 31'1 3•l• ,,., • Oo<I " ... .-.. C• '4 » 54.. :14 ~ tt I""'"" l.IO J :mu. lO lO•~ + ·~ -~' er l'lld m•• =· 1 .. -•< 11m t 60 111 111 4,..., ,,.. 1~ &.u. , 1•1 311 2"1\o l'''"' _,. cvmuM!ttY\, IN\19 wllfil dl't Ml -"' 'IOC' 1·.., , ,.,! :it• :Ml~ tn1••••• <!Ob JO n 51,. fo ,. "·{ N d ~· ri-•lcl 11'11' •Mt. dlY d :f"llt'H • ,,,:; i'40 '" :tt•' , •• : ,,~ t '' '"t H"'" 1 eo ,. """ ?'·' i., l ""' J.T ana f1Cf 3 JllC c11nc1r:'..Tfn. no~~=':.~:,,, 1~ ~r 111;,r ] :!X1-JP>1 ll'o 1, int Mold ?it f " 11~ t•~ -u. 0 -I'~ tlodl dfvldlnll t--P1,fble !ft $111dt r'" DI ~o 1J ~1 ~r.!~ ~\'I t ~ .:: .~.:n '9 {, ~i'' ;,;\" 1"' -" ~rftillHl . .,t1n1i41d~t11v1Mtrfll l'lfwt111 _ 1 , •• 4 ,a.•,I t.·"•n·•··~ 1o•'•'''~-1 • Ol'llllDno or ••-dltlrllovlkllt Ute, v-l.l-•"w ·"" "• 4!• 1 I' -Ml " o 5 ~ '- George l.a Boll I ta, a JJ.year ""1d'.l.'1: ,1.,~ '!tr; .. ~df;-10 ~ ~! ~~11 70.; : i"' 1~! .~ .,,,~ .~ ti ,J,\ U j l '- t'.mploye with Keenan Pipe c'ki-cl1~. ~·i-1!• dl'llMM, •·dl!-1• ~~·~; Dir: 'l ' ,, 1)t:~ 1tt~ ~ ~ !~IN~C:O 11\' i:1 Jf! u~ ~:-:;1'' dl1!rlb\lllc!I. -r-(k tltlltl. Xw-'#llllDUI ~Pon.I ll'fl 1 1't ~'' !1'-1 + ~!I'll P.Jll pf 4 dO ~ .... M'' M'~ _ and Supply Co. ba! bttn as>-w•rr•r1t1 .._w11~ :J[';J_"~' Uol \.t lM 41 t.. '• m. n11 11H;111 li :.. !l"" u 11 "' 'II pointed man•-.of the <Mita~. ~"f~I:~. ~ , ttllltCI. btr,.. tJ~·i? :100 " ., n,., .:!.,'~ 1~l '~ 1'# ~ "-111., V1t :..1., "'6~· or.int \lflOt'f ftlt 1~v-icY-.r.tt.-tif \:r 'l6V Y 11!f. l!\ ,.,.,. ~ • •-·~l '"llfl1 4 j 15 "' -Mes& Sales and Servi-ollict d1 ... d11 nrv --.w.,;:~ts'COl"l•an:es ~me 111 .~ "; '"" 17•) 11\\ -"'!TT fD• •"' " .,. 91 _ ~ "" • 111""" .• Jt u~ ll\.'J 11111-V.!nf'!•T llW Jf 11~ YI lt"\-1', • i , • ' • • • • • ' • ; • • • • • • ' • • • • ' • • • • ' • ' • ' ,, Tlim·sd~y's Closing St... Nt!o------------r IMI I MJ9JI L .. CllM Chi Prices -T- ' .i: ' . ' ' l1~1 " " ~· 31 -'•1 " 19 -1 • Complete New York Market Mixed; Trading Average NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks finished mixed Thursday despite economic uncertaint1es and a statement from U S chief negotiator Henry Cabot Lodge that the Communiats refusaJ to negotu1te 1nay hnve doomed the Vietnam peace talks Trad ing ''as modera'le The UPI market,v1de indicator showed a gain of 0 11 percent on 1 531 issues on the tape There ''ere 643 advances and 615 declines The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average was up 0 45 at 826 33 near the final bell Turnover approximated nine million shares a.boul a m1ll1on :hares below Wednesdays pace Achve stocks included ?\Ietromedia Computer Sciences American ~1otors (this week's automo- b1te production schedule 1s up from a year ago but belo\v last \veek) Clorox and Gulf Oil Auto issues \\ere narrowly mixed with General l\lotors closing dO\\ 11 1.14 at 7<!.l t8 and Ford down I8 at43718 Steels mo\ ed 1n !1 actions as did most chen11cal and rali issues Ranging around l to 2 higher near the close \Vere Polaroid Xerox and Amencan Research & Development The latter 'had advanced 7 1n the pre- \ 1ous session for no nc\v apparent reason ' Piper Aircraft fell around 2 1n tU group Grumtnan down 1 \Ylth C'onglo n1erates 1noved 1n both directions and 1n so1nc 1n::.tances more U1an a point • Stocli Exchange List UAL l"C 1 A.~!O 1 1UG Cp 110 MC nd /1 \ Vn1 to ~ " I Id ~ Un I NV 1te Un CtmD 1 Un C1rblll~ ) Unon (op Un Elec 1111 Un Et P"'ll Un El pUU H~o'k.r ;: uoc. Pn jO Un PK (p 1 Un O!'IPI CU 1 UnP•c pt 'II Un onam 1 4 Ul'I 0¥• 10 U~ roy~I pl I Uni"'°"• XI Ufll!A ( I IG DAILY PILOT delivers Co111plete Closing Prices -A111erican Stock Exchange List " " • '" ' " •• • "' • " 11 : " ' " "" .. • '" ., ur: ;: ... " . 11 " 6 II ' 101 ,!g ~ 10 10 .. 11 J) ~ . '" ~ 11 ~ • • )(J , •• • • • ... •• "" IAI~ " " st.~ ,~~ ". " , .. "' "' • '" " .. '" " ri.: "' " • -JM- Finance In Brief WASHINGTON (UPI) Great Lakes Trensmlss1on CO has asked the Federal Power Commission for pmnwlon to build SIO mllllon worth of natural ga1 faclllUes and to Import 1116 a tnUUon cubic feet of gas dally via Trans.Canada Pipe Lines, U.. ST LOUTS CVPI) Moimnlo-Co. wnr bQIId 1 mullo million dollar phlhalate ester plutlclztt unit 1t lts Texas City, Tn: compltL Copoclty wm be 200 mlllian pounds a year ' .. I ! l • • . ' ' • • • I .. • • ·-. • --. J2 DAILY PILOT Ftltfay, August S. 196? • • • • • • • • • • ' " Mon·Fri-9 am· 9pm Sat-9 am-6 pm another • Gibson I I • first! only ••• You go one better with • ,, buys the newest most elegant, all Frost-Clear Side-by-Side Refrlgerator- F,reezerl Custam designe.d t-0 fit most kitchens! Only 31 %" wi<k! I son The most beautif~ of an side-by-side refrtgerator-free1er1 in your choice of Avocado, Coppertone and White)• -I< Frost never forms in freezer ! -I< Molded egg racks 1 1< frost can't form in refrigerator ! -I< Removable door racks! -I< 3 ful!·width ref1 igerator shelves! -j( Juice can rack and 1 freezer baskets! -I< 3 full-width freezer shelves! 1< Frts your present refrigerator space! -ic Slide,out porcelain enamel crisper ! -+< Sparkling trim on both doors! Available wit Ii automatic ice-maker al small additio11al cos I. See this magnificent Gibson side-by.side value today! WES TINGHOUSE "Frost-Free 25" Side-by-Side REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER .----, ~~ --~~~--:0 -- ' • 25.2 cu . ft. capaci ty • Huge 322 lb., 9.16 cu . ft. ca pacity freezer • Completely frost f ree opei:ation • Only 35* in . wide • Decorat ive panel fronts optional • Ice cube server and 2 ejector trays • Automatic ice maker -avail- able as en optional add-on now, or buy it later • Ne w Westinghouse power econo- 1nizer • Twin iuice can dis- pensers • 7-day fresh meat keeper • 3.temperature ad · justab\e bl.liter conditioner • Westinghouse slim-wall de · sign for greater inside stora ge • New cantileve red adjust- able shelves • Utility storage com partment •Removable egg container • Twin vege· table crispers • Adiustable refrige rator door shelves • Glide·out adiustable rollers • Automatic door closer ,BUY NOW-·a•m~--PAY LATER Model RJK64 Westinghouse "frost free 16" Refrigerator • 16 cu. ft. capacity • Com· · p\etely frost free operation • · Automatic lee maker optional -plug it In at any time - when you buy, or later• Slim· Wall design gives you bigness where you need it-inside • 137·1b. frost free freezer • 7-day fresh meat keeper • Cantilevered adjustable shelves • Removable egg container• Sutter e nd cheese servers • Magnetic door gasKets • Glida-out ad- justable rollers • Large ~e~e- 1.able crisper • Automatic 1n· teriqr11ight in refrigerator. ---........... • !• • •r ' " FIRST . APPLIANCES • STEREO • TELEVISION NOTHING DOWN! UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY! NO PAYMENT UNTIL NOVEMBER! IW.A.C.) 16.6 cu. ft No Frost Refrigerator =•"".i,. • Giant .zero.degree freemr boldll·llP to 154 lbs •• • •Two ice trays on handy rack. • Four cabinet shelve&, one adjuatablc. one slides out. • Separate temJlel'ature controls. • OnJy 30lh" wide, 07" high. Only .._ ____ __. 529995 DUH 6HEATEST VALUE EVER! BIG SUMMER SALE ~ • NEWEST FASHION COLOR "HARVEST GOLD" e NEW ADMIRAL AUTOMATIC DOOR CLOSERS e CANTILEVER SHELVING e GIANT FOOD STORAGE CAPAC ITY GIANT 22 CU. FT. CAPACITY ONLY s39900 COMPARE AT 499.95 Ice Maker Optional $ MODEL ND 1694 Ad111lrol IMPERIAL DUPLEX • 16 SERIES ONLY 31" WIDE, YET FULL SIZED IN IOTH FOOD AND FREEZER SECTIONS! ...... ' I I • . -----.. --~--~·---··---·~------------·--------------------- \/Olunteers . --Adding GrilOr • ·-, The Assistance League of Huntington Beach had a lofty purpose tn mind -to staff all the volunteer services at Huntington Inter· Community H1>5Pital. So ••• they formed the Silver Anchor Auxiliary. lt was a noble deed and today auxiliary members provide num-: erous patient services, always with a smile. The "ladies jn blue" staU the infOrmation desk l:q the hospital's maln lobby seven days a week. Terry Tours ~are conducted the first Saturday of each month to acquaint chl!ifren with hospJtal procedures and equipment. To put tl},e tets at eas~ the wom!!O serve refrj!shments and each child receives a coloring book and crayons. On admission each small patient receives a terry cloth puppet made by auxiliary members. Accurate records o? patients receJving blood, and the blood re- placement programs are kept by an auxiliary committee to aid the Red C!'!>SS in maintaining the-~lood supply for Orange County. New mothers are specially treated by the auxiliary. When her new "pride and joy" arrives, staffers offer her the opportunity to purchase color photoirapbs. To relieve the patients' boredom the women wheel around a bookmobile which offers reading material on a library .loan basis. Tray favors on special occasions a.id in making meal tune more en~ joyable. Volunteers also deliver tQe patlents' mall, deliver and water flowers and run errands for hospital personnel. . · Their most recent endeavor was to provide a nursing .stud en t at Orange Coast College with a schola.r:Ship to further her medical career .. Money also was set aside for future use in aiding families with premature baby expenses. Anyone interested in becoming a member is invited to contact an auxiliary member or any member of the Assistance League for further information. Directing the auxiliary for the coming year are the Mmes. Harold Buck, chairman; Owen Miller, first vice chairman; Robert Langer, second vice chairman; Fred Gibson, third vice chairman: J im B. Martin, recording secretary: \Valter Charamza, correspond~ ing secretary, and Wilfred Rose, treasurer. JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 Prllef, A'9Vlf lo Ifft S , ... 11 YOU HAVE TO HAVE HEART -The scale illus· Jtrates that members of Silver Anchor Auxiliary of the Huntington Beach Assistance League have plen- ty of heart when it comes to helping others. Among volunteer staffers at Huntington Inter-Community .-- fo Hospifial Hospital are (left to right, standing) Mrs. llarold Buck, chairman and Mrs. Jim B. Martin, record· ing secretary. \Vei ghing their services are (left to right) Mrs. Robert Langner, second vice chairman and Mrs. Owen Miller, first vice chairman. HOSPITALS CAN BE FUN -Showing the en· tertaining side of the hospital is Mrs. Howard Schoonover. Showing their appreciation and delight are Keith Pearce and Tracy Tait who, on admission, were given coloring books, cray· ons and puppets. LADIES IN BLUE-Stocking the bookmobile which is wheeled into the patients' room are (left to right) Mrs. J. T. Pierce, Mrs. C. J. Crozier and Mrs. L. D. BalUmore, chairman. They offer reading material to lonely patients on a library lpan basis. ··•. Grandparents Should Learn DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband and l married eight years ago. I was nearly three months pregnant. We've had 11 happy marriage and I've tried to be. kind to my in-laws aJt.hough they never haa any use for me and they let me know It. We now have l.hret children and are proud of them all. My in·laws moved ou1. oC the 1tate five years ago. They ~end the two younger children beautiful birthday gifts every year and lgoore the oldest .child's birthday completely. The mesa.age 'Is clear and I resent It. The child Is old enough to ask why hu grandparent.a never !lend her a birthday gift. I can M Jonger 11ty, "They f()rgot.'' • Although my in-laws dislike me in- tensely J have managed to keep thlnp L ANN LANDERS - peaceful and f.d hate to create a rift In the fam ily. At the same Ume I feel they are being cruel to our child and I can't bear it. What sboukt I do ? . -NO HAPPY Bl1tTHDA Y OEAR NO : \'our husband (not you) sbouJd 'lflile to bis parents and ltll tbcm the oldest child can't undentand wl\y Grandma and Grandpa keep rorgetllllg her birthday. A1k them to pleo1e send ber 1 card U they don't wl1h to tend • 1Ui. U they fall to co mply with bl1 re- quest ne:rt year, rctm the younger tbUdreo's birthday gifts, unopened. DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 am married to a wonderful man and ·consider myaelf extremely fortunate. He has dozens or marvtlous qualities but as a H>vcr he la a failure. t try lo fake Jl but no male as perccp. live and senslt.ive as be can be fool.id. tie ------------- Love Puts 'F I or • knows my lovemaking ls the "duty brand" It kills me when my husband lies beslde me al night, silent and pensive. I'm sure he ls brood.Ing over his in- adequacy. I don't go .llong with your ad- vice to other wives -"TeU him what is wrong and together you can work out a pattern of lovemaking tho.t is mutually rtwardlng." I can't Imagine anything more ego !battering to a man than lo be to~~e~ ~e~ ~~oz;~; l'm confused and unhoppt. -JENNIE DEAR JENNIE: By your l)\lrD ad· mlillloa. you've alreild)' .&.o1d him -I.a J1.nguage far mort doqu~nt th nn word1. And now you must be more e:rpUdt. lie ' won•t be bnrt, he'U be grateful. A man who cnre1 for bis woman Is teachable. (And If the shoe 11 on the other foot, boys, ~·omen are teach3ble, too.) DEAR ANN LAN DERS : I'm an honor student and I work hs.rd to get good grades. Some k,lds are just naturally brainy but l'nl a plugi;er, not a genius. Lnst year I was bugged by at least 10 friends who y,•anted to copy my homework. Half the Ume I said, "OK." The rctt of the lime I made up cxctl"es lite, "1 ha\•en't flni!hcd It yet." The y knew I was lying. Later 1 hated myself for being clilckcn. I don't "'®l to Jose any fricuda. Can you suggest a polite way o( t~lling the p;.ipooscs (kids who rlde on somebody <,->------------- ' Giving else's back) to get lo.9t? -<:.Cl. DEAR C. Q.: Yoa don't have to tell arybodf to i;et losL Just uy -''No." A frlel!d who drops you because yo. W011't help blm cheat represents no creat Ion. How far should a tee.n-1~ couple go1 Can necking be safe? When doel ll become--too hot to handfe? Send for Arul. Landor•' boollet, "Neckl!ll 111d Petunc -What Are the Limits?" Mall your re- quest to Ann Landers in care of your r.owsp.aper en clos:lnq 50 cenla bYcoln and a long, !lamped, self.addressed envelope. Ann Landen will be glad to help you with your problems. Send the~ to her ln cart of the DATL Y PlLO'l\ enclosinl a self-addressed, stamped envelope. •.................... ~ ....... ~..,.. ..... _... __ '""!!'"' ________ ....... __ ...,..,..........,.,~"'"""",,,,...,..,.,.,.,._.,,~~~ ' ..... ~ ................. ~p · .. '• ...... -..... ' ., . • 14 OAl\.V •!LOT . Frl4aJ, A&lgus\ S, 196• S,uils · Revea·I:. Cultural · Trends ' ;• llJ GAY PAULEY ,. ;i . JCEw YORK (UPI) -Wilen ~-....... qilnc, Ille wse "'°" """"'P thU IOdly's female "'.the Pl t~*'ee· '• I ~ wore drawen and o;ir- Colorf ul' G·ardens On Sl ides outJtandlng roae gardens of !be Vnlied Stat" and Canada may bt!i viewed on slides by U>ose attending the Orange let, yd, tinder • --With l!leev,., long aklrt and , l>I~ irtockings. How she "'Pl allol~ •lei alone en)oyed the awbn, is some 1ort ol rhltacle. But granny WU modest, as the mores ol bet day interpreted mod<llJI. t County Rose Society's meeting She'd tum over tn her • chemise. lor sure. if abe were • to see today' crop of awtm- ailts hiding pracUcally notJ\lng and providing water sprites .. wilb as much freedom as if . ., they were "sk.iMy dipping ," 1" For swimwear has gone ~ through a tremendous revolu· UOn. with Jess noise about it • thaD aome o l h e r feminine t. fasblon innovations, Uke the min1lkirt <:It the Dior "new loot." About the only real rlp- l pleS came with the bWnl and Rudi Gernreich's topless. ~ Despite the hoopla Rudi's !.;.,topless caused a few years ago : (and the wave of nude •fi.ahjons it set off in olber "clothing), Gemreich ls not Jm. morlal.ized in the I a t e 1 t documentation on "Women's Bathing and Swimming c.ostume in the Un It e d States." Its author is Claudia B. Kidwell. assistant curator of American costume at the Smithsonian lnstituUon, Washington, O.C. But the bikini goes Into the record-without menUon ol Brigitte Bardot. MiM Kidwell says the bikini, although introduced in the United States in the lMOa, was slow in being accepted. Women were wearing the two- piece bare-midriff lulls in thooe days. Actually, the curator's work tracts bathing customJ and costumes f r o m the ancient Greeks and Romans . She tells of the growth of spas In both tbe United States and Britain, finds one or the earliest references to women's bathing · COltumes in a book written In 1538 when miXed bathing WIS practiced in Zurich -"The women wearing only drawers, bathing with men." The first topless? Ul"ITe......_ MORE OR LESS -Women's swimwear bas come a long way since grandma swathed herself in several layers of cloth before taking a dip or appearing in public (top). Today's bikinis cover up less than ever, and provide water sprites with far more freedom than grandma ever dreamed of. But with al\ the new freedoms in mores a n d morals, will the swimsuit disappear? Mjss K i d w e 11 doubt:s it-"lt is unlikely that Horoscope either the swimsuit Jndustry or standards of modesty of the near future will permit a total elimination o( swim1ning cos· tume. Tuesday, Aug. 1%, at 7:30 p.m. ComtrienUng ·on the films taken oa a recent tour will be John Van Barneveld, who is in charge of the Pageant of Roles garden 1n Rose Hills Memorial Park. Tbe meeting will be called to order by Art Gandy, society president, 1n .the recreation building or the, Westminster CivJe Center. Van Barneveld currently serves ., a naUonal director for the American Rose Society and also is a member of the Orange C.OUnty Rose Society, Preliminary plans will be presented _for the Society's 1970 Rose Show by Lyman Cralle, chalnnan of the 1969 show. Specimen roses and ar· rangements b r o u g h t by members will be entered in friendly compeUHon during the meeting and vl!litors are invited to attend and bring their entries. Party Plans Scheduled Hosting a 1\UlCheon and card party Friday, Aug. IS, at noon will be members of El Camino Real Woman's Olub. Party setting will be the Community Clubhouse. Dana Point. 'This is the rirsl pro-- gram of the year and a ways and means project, according to Mrs, Seymour Nutt, presi· dent. Reservations may be made v.·ith fl1rs. John Renfro at 496- 2257. The deadline is Tuesday, Aug. 12. Mrs. Ernest Riedel is the general ways and means chairman and assisting will be ft1rs. Ray Miller and Mrs. Renfro. Benjamin Franklin ....,, to . have been the moat (llTJOUS pniponenl of IWimming among the c:olonlstl and tt was ln lai7 that Francos Lld1< --ed the fiist IWlinmJnc IChool ID Bosfm. knGaC its visitors ..:. John ~ Adams and Johh James Audubon. Swlmmln& for women began to be acceptable toward the end of the Jltb century and in 1888 Goucher CoUege, a pro- minent tchool for girls, built its own indoor pool. swimming as a feminine sport and to get rid of some of the trappings on bathing suit Miss Trapp in 1909 became the first woman to swim 'the East River in New York throush the treacherous Hell Gau; Mias Kellerman gave swim- ming and diVing exhibitions In &leek tichts, and Ml111 Ederle swam the Englbh Channel in 1926. By the 1930s, swimsuitl were covering less and less of the bather -and women started the cult of suntanning. Neither trend has ever slop. Leo: Trust Hunches Annette Kellennan, Gertrude Ederle and /.dellne Trapp, ol coune, h<lped to bruk dowu the barrlen of ped. ' What of the future! i1iss Kidwell says one thing is cer· Wn-women never again will swathe themselves with yards of fabric. Canadian Vacation Lake Lou!Je, Alberta. in the Canadian Rockies was the vacation destination of Mr. and Mrs. J . \V. Ray of San Clemente. Their sightseeing agenda included the famous 10,000 foot Victoria Glacier. Women's Club leader s Envision Year Ahead Chairmen and club. deans of Orange D i 1 tr l c l Calllon'l.la FedtraUon of Women'• Clubs wtu envision the panorama of the 11169-70 yur when lhey gather at 9:30 a.m. Tueadly, Au1• u. Tbe Butna Park Woman'• Club will be the ..... of U>e meeUnc, prtaided over by Mn. Dale Mow<zy. Vfte pres[. dent Of Oranp Diltrlcl and de1n ol chairmen. Member• ot Buena Park Woman'• Club will 11erve a c:onttnental breakf11t. Each district ciJA)llMn win prttent a. rtport on plans and ideas for the coming year and dliCUSI importanl calendar date.s. Future pla.m will Include workshops in late August and presidents' brunches u well as four dbtrict c o u n c 11 meetings, the nral to be 1theduled in Sepltmber on the theme of Happiness ls Doing for Otb<n. Thirty six clubs make up the dlsttlct, with a total mem· ber1hlp of 8459. Largest of the group and largest club in lhe 1tat.e la the WQm8n's Club of Lemu·e World Laguna Hills, with a total ol 888 members. SATU RDAY AUGUST 9 By SYDNEY OMARR TEEN DATING HINTS' Atost r o m a n t I c lndlvtdual tonight Is apt to be Scorpio. Date wbo lipends tbe most probably w 111 be Gemini. Limelight is grabbed b y Cancer. Ideal date for all signs features good rood, home entertainment. Avoid the ten· saUonal. CaprlCGm seriously conslden a permanent rtla· Uonsblp. Aries makes perfect hotl or hostess. Taurus 11 rest· less, flirtatious. Leo Is tbealrl· cal, Virgo la friendly , but de- manding. Ubra Is ambltJous, but cbarmlng. LUNAR POSITION FINE FOR FISHING. ARIES (March 21-April 19): You get nothing for nothing. Take hard look at property, other assets. Streamline methods. Hanging on 10 past may be sentimental, but is devoid of profit.. Go modern. TAURUS (April 2~May 20): Get around. Be versatile. Act in confident manner. Take financial risk on your own ideas, talents. Means display fact that you belleve in yourseU. Then others will follow suit. GEl\UNI (?!1ay 21..June 20): Obtain hint from Tllllrul message. It may be neee.ssary to make cash outlay. But money spent today pro\'ldes good return. Accenl is on greater personal recognition. CANCER (.lune 21-July 22 ): Cycle C1>nlinues high ; you meet people and convince them of your abllitits. Take inillative. Assert yourself. P\.Jt forward ideas. LEO (July 23·Aug, 22): Secrets are featured. Some are your own secret fears. Your ESP \vorks overtime. You sen.sc what people are going to say, do. Trust your hunches. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 )' Accent on friendships. You get your way lhrough charm. But don't make promises you don't intend 10 f\1Jn11. People yon talk to today ti.pt to ha,·e elephantlike memories. LWRA (Sept. 23·0d. 221' Advanctmcnt Is indicated. Think or future-and d 0 somelhlng aOout 0. Don't ha ol'erlY modest. Slate needs. You get what you really want -but you must ask. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect today coin- cides with journey. writing, ability to effectively advertise your producl. On personal level, you attract persons with their problems. Try to help. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Mystery persists where money and mate. partner, are concerned. Key Is diplomacy. You cannot force issues. Best to turn on charm. Then you obtain needed in· formation -and maybe some cash. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be aware of public relations. Some today tend to challenge meanings or your statements. Steer clear or legal dl!putes. Strive for honorable compromise. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 18): Give attention to health requirements. h1eans avoid extremes. Fulfill resolutions concerning diet, recreation and rest You may receiVe news which is complimentary but represents added pressure. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on creative endeavors. Day feature s variety-and ac· li vity connected with children, You enjoy y,·hat you do. 1-.Iember of opposite sex pays meaningful compliment. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are al· tractive, a natural .showman and capable of capturing and holding attention. You are due lo change of residence or domestic adjustment. St. Andrew's Chosen For Candlelit Rites St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church was the scene of a candlellgh' wedding w h e n Gayle Ann Pearson exchanged vows and rings with Phillip Edward Cotton. The Rev. Dr. Raymond 1. Brahams performed the ceremony ror the daughter of 1he W. W. Pearsons or Newport Beach and the son o{ the R. B. Collons or Costa 1<1esa. He was assisted by Wes Roberts, youth minister or \Vhittier's Calvary Ba pt Is t Church. . , Given In mnrriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of silk crgania over taffeta with bodice and long sleeves of Chantilly lace. A pe.arl·lrlm· med headple<:e! of lace and satin caught her elbow length illusion veil and she carried phalaenopsls and stephanolls in her bouquet. • 1'-t1ss ChrlJ Pearson, maid or honor for her sister, wore a gown or lime green and wblt~ and a daisy headpiece. In similar costumes were the bridesmaids, the Misses Pam L.tl cock, Nancy \Vell!I an<J r.-ielinda Cotton. sister or tne bridegroom. All c a r r I e d baskets or )-'ellow......_ and 1A'hlt4 dlllsles. ........_ Tom \Vestgate was bea nllln. And usher! included Chris \Vall, Carl Tnylor and Dan Boers. Approximately 350 guests attended a reception in the Fireside Room and paUo of the church following the ceremony. r.1rs. James G. Bauer. the bride's aunt from Nash\'ille, look charge of the guest book. Other special gul'Sts included Mrs. o. K. Galbraith also from Nashville, grandmother of the bride. The bride was gr'\duated from Newport Harbor Higb School and Golde nw e.s t College. A graduate or Corona de! Mar lllgh School, the bridegroom altended Goldenwest College and Is enrolled at the University of California at Riverside. , •. The ct1uple are maklng their home in Riverside upbn their return from a honeymoon to Paln1 Springs and Big Bear. Rep ublicans Plan Meeting Harbor Area Young Republic1ns will meet at 7:30 p.m, Tuesday. Aug. 12, In the Newporter Inn . A social gaLherlng "'111 follow the business meeting and an lntereslcd persons are Invited to attend. -· -----------· WORLD SOUVENIRS -Items collected on flight trip across Europe, Saudi Arabia and Africa are displayed by (left to right) the Misses Carol Rycko!f and Barbara Conroy. Sighf·seeing Does It World Becomes Smaller \ The flight o\·er Finland. Europe, Saudi Arabia and Africa was smooth, but the camel ride in Egypt was .. rough." These were the Impressions of 18-year-old Barbara Conroy, just returned from a seven weeks flight tri p that too'k her also on a safari in Africa. She has returned to her mother·s Corona de! Mar home. The daughter of Mrs. Jeane Conroy \\'a!I accompanied by Carol Ryckoff. daughter of Mr. and l\1rs. Paul Ryckofr o( Balboa Island, and by her 15- year-o\d brother. Bill Conroy, Pilot for the extensive trip· was Mis.! Conroy's father, Jack Conroy ol Sant a Barbara. He had been display· ing hi.I turbo-prop 003 in the Paris Air ShO\v in late spring and met the Ilarbor Area travele rs in Copenhagen in MRS. RICHARD H. WI LLIAMS Honeymoon in H•w•il Newport Couple Exchange Vows fl oneymoonlng In llawaii before taking up residence in Newport Beach are 1t1r. and Mrs. Rlchard H. \Villlams, v.•ho wel'f: married In St. An· drew·s Presbyterian Church. The fonner Carolyn Jane Stuhrman is the daughter of l\1r. and l\lrs. Ahlert P. Sluhrman and the bridegroom is the son of l\1r. and iirs. Neil V. Williams, all of Newport Beach. The Rev. Dr. Ra)1mond 1. Brahams offlciated for the double Mng service. Escor1ed to the. altar by her rather, the bride wore a gown of lace and peau de soie with a chapel train of lace. A rose and pearl headpiece caught hf!I" elbow length illusion \'tll and she carried a ca•cade or butterfly o r c b i d s and stephanolis. Yellow orgnnui gowns v.ith long chllron sleeves were chostn by ""bridal tl\tendanfs. '"'ho Included Mrs. Robert G. Skinner as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss San· dy McClain and the l\fmes. Leeland R. Schlenker and Donald Tyle r. All carried cres· cen t shaped bouquclS of white and yellow chrysanthemums . Russell Packard served as best man, and guests we.re seated by George Efiielkc, Skinner and Schlenker. For a reception in the Irvine Coasl Country Club following the ceremony, Mr:s. J..1arlln Krager loo k charge or the guest book. The bride was graduated from San Diego Stale College. where she wa s a member or Alpha Chi Omega, Ph I Lambda Theta .end Cap and Gown Leadership School. Her husband earned BS and filS degrees from Slanford Unil'e.rslty and a business ad· mlnlslratlon cerllflcate from UC!. mid-June for the beginning of the journey. Their most vivid impre~ion In the extreme north of Europe was the sight of the midnight sun in Finland, MW Conroy said. From there they flew to Switzerland, where the trip across lhe Alps \Vas nothing but. smooUt;-she commented, and where the. scenery was the pretliest and the people the friendliest in Europe. Another ravorite area wa9 Africa. where again people were helpful and friendly and the scenery was spectacular. · They vl1ited Natrobi and Kenya And thoroughly enjoyed their uflti tbroug?i · a n African gam:e preserve. The bumpy camel ride ex- perience came• in Egypt, wbue they traveled in that ancient fuhk>n across the Sahara to vie,w the pyramids and the Sphinx. After a flight from Africa back to Splin, one of the OC. 3's engines burned out and the senior C.Onroy and son Bill stayed lo see to repairs,'along with other members of the party who included Miss Conroy's stepmother, Mrs. Jack Conroy, of Sant 1 Barbara and her daughter Angelee. The Misses Conroy and Ryckoff elected to fly home via commercial jet, leaving th e rest of the v.oup to con- clude the trip with a vl.5lt to England. What wu the mo st memorable part of the trip? It was all wonderful, the Corona del Mar girl said, and now with her mind sUll in a whiri she added, "I even have to look at my list to remember all the places I vi.sited." Wings Fly Poolside A swimming party and buf. fet will highlight sum.mer ac. tivitles for the Clipped Wings, Orange County branch of United Air 11 n e Stewardess Alumnae, Inc. The party will take place Friday. Aug. 22, in the Hun· lington Harbour Beach Club, 4121 Warner A\·e., Huntington Beach. Cocktails will be served at 6:30 p.m., rollowed by dinner at 8 p.m. Interested residents are In· vite.d to CQntact Mrs. C. S. Loosmore, vice president. 842· 2048, or Mrs. M. E. Smith, 835· 3123, for addition al in· formation . Parents Club Orange Coast Chapter, P1r. ents Without Partaers spon- sors a pancake breilkfast the last Sitnday of each month In Costa Mesa City Park from 9 1.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wally Ridlards, chairman, will an. swer questions rerarding the publlc "rain or 1fiine" eve.Ill at W-8700 or 542·96&. Dance Club Squire Riggen S q u a r • Dance Club "swlngs out" tV· ery Wednesday at 8 p.m. In !he. Fli:st Methodist Church, Coslei ~tesa. - • Ritet Performed at Sea T arnara T esrt1an ·Married MRS. L STENS CHRISTENSEN Costa Mesa Home Selected Goodwill Send-off for Guest Married at 111 aboard the Mojo during afternoon ·ceremonies last Friday were Tamara June Tesman of Newport Beach and L Stens Christensen of Costa Mesa. Dr. Vern Olsen read the double ring· nuptials' for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Tesman of Malibu and the son o( Dr. and Mrs. Slens Christensen of Smithfield, Utah who with the bridegroom's graru:tparenls, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Christensen, also of Smithfield, drove to Newport Beach for the occasion. Given in marriage by her rather, the bride wore a simple A-line gown of white organza, appliqued with white daisy lace. Daisy appliques also trimmed her pillbo:i head- piece and her Illusion veil. She also wore a white carnation lei with a garland of roses: \Vearing pink chiffon over taffeta gowns and headbands of pink carnations were Mrs. Richard Wood of La Mlrada, matron of honor and Andrea Christensen, the bridegroom's sister and bridesmaid. Both carried pink carnation leis over their arms. Robert Stewart was best man. A reception for 50 guesl..'I followed in the salon where Miss Kerry Sawyer of Fontana circulated the guest register. After honeymooning on Cat- alina, the newlyweds will reside in Costa t.1esa . The b r I d e received her education in Mayer, Ariz. and her husband studied in Salt Lake City and Orange Coast College. MRS. TERRY R. LESTER Northern Celiforni• Honeymoon Lindo Wellman Now 50th Date Celebrated By Mesons Receiving conaratulatlons ol relaUves and friends on the occulon of their JOldl!fl wl!d- . ding anniversary wert ~tr. and Mrs. Harlen Bettis of Costa M!!Sa who werl! hosts for an open house. The couple wel"f: married on July 31 fifty yean ago ln Corydon, Iowa. -They have bel!n Costa Mesa resident.s sin· ce 1148 and ~ has been a Ward and Harrington Lumber Company employ!! for more than 20 years, ~ing just last year. Their three dauglltl!rt1, also Costa Mesa residents, are Mrs . Stanley Addy , Mrs. Ann Harchuck and Mrs. Chester Socha. Grandchildren are nine 1n num~r and the couple also have two great-grandchildren. Out of state guests at the · party included Mr. and Mrs. r~rank \Voodley and Mrs. Bon· nalee Stockman of Jef· ferson. Iowa. Also present 11.·ere Mr. and Mrs. Emeral ri.!cDoweJI of Sheridan. Wyo. and Mt. and Mrs. Glen Cook and Ronald of Gillette, Wyo. ·-· DAltY-PILO!' RECEIVING CONGRATULATIONS Mr. and Mrs. H1rlen Bettis Mrs. Terry R. Lester Presbyterian Rites After honeymooning i n nor~hern California, newlywed 11-tr: and Mrs. Terry R. Lester will establish their first home in El Moote. The former Linda J\.1arie \Vellman, daughter of J\.1r. and ti.1rs. Roger L. \Vellman of The bride ls • graduate or Orange Coan College and now is a student at California State College at Fullerton where she is working towards h e r f.!lementary t.eaching creden· tials. Her llusband Is attending Rio Hondo Junior College. Laguna Making their home I n Laguna Beach are the fonner Cheryl Charlotte Crocker and Newport Beach, was escorted ~!m""'""'""'"""~,:;JrHl!MW.~zw '"'" , .. by her father to the altar of I the Christ Church by lhe Sea ~ \\'here she exchanged vows J' and rings with ber husband. 1111 Weddings, Troths Residents Wed Michael Vincent Easley of ~1cA11ister, the bridegroom's Laguna Beach. coosins. ar.d Maurice Clark. Returned from a honeymoon Two hundred guestJ greeted In Newport Beach and San the couple during the recep. Diego, the newlyweds were tiolt. in the church hall. Mrs. married during d911ble ring Ricl1ard Neilsen circulated the rites in Downey J>tesbyterlan guest book. Church. The Rev. Fred Coots or. The former Miss Crocker ls Performing the cuemonies ~ was the Rev. Dr. Thurmond J. 4 George. pastor of the First Southern Baptist Church of El Monte, a long-time family Pilot's Deadlines ficiated for the daughter of the a graduate of the Untveralty of Howard P. Crockers of Californla, Santa Barbara Downey and the 60n of the y,·here she pledged Chi Omega. 1 Gilbert E. Easleys of Arcadia. She no\v is a l t e n d' I n g The bride selected a long Calirornia State College at organz.a A·line gown of venise Long Beach for her elemen- \ace. Organza and garlands of tary teaching credential. friend. ~ T;le bride Y•Ore a r'<iingote ' styled gown of chantilly lace which extended into a chapel train and a lace headpiece caught her illusion veil. Form-~ ing her nosegay w e r e miniature yellow roses. white 1 . pompon daisies, gladioli and baby's breath. Comprising her entoorage ·were Miss Jean Davis of Tor· ranee, maid of honor : Miss • Teri Londelius of Newport J Beach, Miss Cindy O'Shell of \Vest Covina. the bride 's cousin and ~1rs. Brian L. Wellman of Pasadena, her sister-in-law who served as • bridesmaids. ;J Mint green organdy over laffeta gov;ns and colonial nosegays of yellow spider pompons. elegance carnations and baby's breath w c re selected for them . . To avoid .disappointment. prospective brides are reminded to have thell' \Vedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PlLOT Soci.ty Depart· ment prior to or within one week after the wedding. For engagement announcements il is suggested that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be submitted early. U the betrothal announce- ment and wedding date are six weeks or less apart, only the \vedding photo will be ac- cepted. To help fill requirements oq both v.·ed· ding and.engagement stories, forms are avail· able in all of the DAU..Y PILOT offices. Further questions \Viti be ans\vered by Social Notes staff ~e-~b~rs at 642-432 1 or 494-~ Teachers Warned Silence Not Golden lace adorned her oval wedding Her husband, an alumnus or train and a floral headpiece UCSB in political science and caught her veil. She carried urban afairs, studied at UCJ. iardenlu and stephanotis. Presently he is assistant city Gowned in lime green A·line planner of Laguna Beach. dresses were the Misses Betty 1;========:::;:=;:; 1Kennedy, maid of honor; Con- nie L'Heureux, Marci t.1ild- dock, Peggy Reeder, and lleene Wolf, bridesmaids. John Miller was best man while ushering duties were 1 assumed by David Crocker.) the bride 's brother; Craig and I Scott Nelson and B r u c e VFW Auxilia ry Coastline Auxiliary to Vet· erans or Foreign Wars. Post 1 3a36 gathers the first and third Fridays al 8 p.m. Costa ~1esa's American Legion Hall is the meeting scene. FINAL SHOWING Frid!)'• August 8 NEWPORT HAJllOJI HI AUD. Speclol Sherti "W•yN, Dnld, Not, C•rtY" Adm. St., kr""ti'" 1130 I'.& NOW 0 PEN ' • In a yellow organdy frock and carrying a bask.el or blossoms v.·as Teri Shea of Nev.·port Beach. flower girl. Ring bea rer v.•as George Alex- ander of El ~1onle . HARRISBURG, Pa. tUPI) that legends and mi•-\ ~-! CARYL'S WIG BOUTIQUE f \ 6IJ: N. C0,1.ST HIGHWAT ~ The bridegroom . son of Mr~lence is golden, they say. Ramiro Pas of El Monte aifd But it is the great enemy of the late Mr_ Loren 0. Lester. the leachc s y R bert E asked Michael Scott of El r, 3 s o · Monte to be his best man. Phelps, executive secretary o( Cuests were ushered to their the Pennsylvania State Educa- seats by Danny R. Murchey lion Association (PSEA J. and Larry ~1iller. both of Phelps told 400 leachers-in- Ternplc City and Michael J, training that young tea.chers ~1oon of Newport Beach . must be fully aware of the cepllons grew u1p around . the1 L .. ', LAGUNA llEACH • , Bastille. the in amous prison We offer • c.omplet• line of W iqs, Wigl•ts, F•lls, °"' of the French Revolution, that made it a symbol or despotism C•sc.ades, Ac.c.•ssoriei .•• A complete Wig Serv~c.e -due only to the secrecy sur· 'l l 1 PA JI IC I HG rounding the castle and the 1 T~ephone 494-6405 strict prohibitions a g a i n st O,.n t :JO • • -Mond•J thn1 S.t11rdoy t!' gaining entrance, resulting in jl' :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~·~ a reputation for torture and li ritrs. Richard A. Parsons potential evil of silence when \Vishing their guest a good day at Disneyland arc ( !e!t to righl) Laura Weber ci rculated the guest book to it comes to working out public an d her mother l'vtrs. Henry G. \Veber or Ne""·port Beach \Vho were hosts lo well-wishers attending the school problems. horror. I tie said lhat alter Its cap- ture in 1789, the Bastille was found to be just an ordinary priSQl:l containing, in fact, not a si ngle instrument of torture and providing the I e w prisoner·residents with a more l or less luxurious existence. l Takashi Nagasawa of Japan. one of :ro on a Japan Youth Goodwill Mission in rW!ption on the church patio. He said that out of silence the United States. The Weber family are joined by approximately 100 families in Special guests attending were grows "~he baseless. rumor. the Harbor Area who. as members of International Student Service o{ South-Mrs. Dillon M. Warner and the frenzied exaggeration and ern California. are unofficial an1bassadors to international visitors. Those ~1rs. John H. Wellman, the the unmitigated lie." \Vishing to join the group may call ri.1rs. Gary Drcfus at 54().-6767, bride's grandmothers. As an example, Phelps noted -----"--"---~_c____c_~---jiijiiijjji------iliiiiiiiiij Baker Stages 'Cloc k-in' Alfred Sherman. a bakery employe slages a clock·in every midnight in hi s home . At the st roke of midnight. the 11'4 clocks in Sherman's l\1aryland ho~e do their ov.·n thing, chiming an old cacophonous blend of music, baUs..and chimes. Waltzes llke the "Blue Danube" blend with other tunes. clash with lhe national anthems of t'rance and Great Britain, and tangle religious hymns. Despite his chinting clocks, Sherman depends on a special. hand-tooled alarm clock to wake him at 3 a.m. for his bakery job. I Sherman became lnterestl!d in his hobby when his boss, fo'rank Zaffere. gave him a broken musical clock 29 years ago. Sherman got 1he clock running and "'as hooked on \Jmepieces. IT'S A FACT! If you •pent 30 •econds loo king at each of our •hag sample•, it would take y.ou over 9 hours to •ee them all- so come early and bring your lun<;}i. DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN (2 8lk1. No. of 8ullock'1) ORANGE Cl.OSID SUNDAT • UNIFORM SALE! *At Cost! * Below Cost ! ' *Near Cost! Umited Time Offer Come In -Visit Our New Location In Downtown Costa ti'•sa . ·~· .. UNIFORM & MAT ERNITY SHOP Catli"~ 1767 Newport Blvd • .64&-5388 (Just Solow 11th St.) ' I• INTRODUCING JERRY GUTIERREZ for,.,1tly At ~owt• Co••t P'l1s1 ORAMA TIC SCISSOR GUTTIN9 [p)jJg_tT. 548-0460 WESTCllFF PLAZA FEED IT AIR The Atmos ctock b:y Lecoultre doesn't need batteries. Nor electricity. Precision timekeeping by eir temperature chenges Perpetual power in motion for hia office or home. A beautiful way to keep time oilen~y 1nd 1ccur1tely. S 150. (Atmos lhown: Frame of brm ind gl111, I~ for protection. Also IVll1ble with 1qu1re face.) SLAVICK'S Jeweler• Sine. 1917 It FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT-BEACH -644.1380 'Vtllr Cfitflf Aceoy,il Wtleel'llt -•~AIM•lt•rl. M1ti. CM,... tM o,.e M•"'•Y• frid•y •1ttll •ilO ,.._ ' I ~I 11!1119! ............... ._ ....... __________________________ ~~~~~~~~~--~-· Jf OAllY Pll.OT .Morton-led Cowboy·s Battle Gabriel & Co. LOS ANGl!lt.ES (AP) -CnJi Morion. Iha romw UnlvmllY"' Colilornla 11ar, talloo -ot quazUrilack lol""1t ror Ille Dallas o.noys lacina the i... Angel .. 1Wn1 It the .,._._ -Ice both No.-! Football League lffmJ. Monon. an anderaludy for three yurs. rep!Kos the retired Don Meredith II the helm (If the Cowboys, highest ocorlna team in Ole NFL last year. ftoler Staubach, the Heism~n: Trophy winner at Navy in J.95.1, bas joined the Cowboy• u a rcokle !his IU5on aft<r four yeara of military !el'Vl<e, and could see h1s rlrtt pro action in thls Los Angeles Times charity game. Veteran Roman Gabriel dirtc:t.s the .Rams attack ror the game, with a.n l :OS kickoff in the Meznoria.1 Coliseum. He won't, however, bt handing off to Dick Bass or Tammy Muoo. Mason. Coach Geora:e Allen hu elected lo hold !he pair out of early games. So !he runnfn& duU,. &o to Wfllle Ellllon, lhe club's top rusher 1n Jtot in hi1 second pro •eeson; Jel.f Jordan, a rool:ie from Washlnltoo. luy Lans. !he ' fullback picked up in trade rrom the Philadelphia Eagles, and Lm J0&eph5on . Anothtr ex-Eagle, tackle Bob Brown, makes bis first appearance for the Los Angelea club. bolstering the offensive Uni . Dallas, which whipped !he Rama U.10 In the pre rauon ol ltll lo bind Allen h1s wont defeat In i... Aneelea. haa r,.hul- lled tu backfield with !he rellremenll or Mttadllh and runnfn& back Don Perkins. In addlUoo, Ooach Tom Landry pro- bably will not pt., runnlng bact Dan Rttvu, recoverlni from Jut ie1r'1 lme< injury. cra1c Baynham and wa~ Gar- rison operate in the runninl back poml· u .... Al !he top posslna club In the NFL a Allen Anti~ Does In Skinner NEW YORK CUPl) -Richie Allen bad somethllig on his mind. He didn't keep it thert long. He calmly V.'alked into tbe manager's office at Con- nie. Mack Stadillm before TUesday'1 tw~ night doubleheader between the Phillies and Giants and got it off his mind. . "I'm not going to Reading," he told Bob Skinner, referring to Thursday night's exhibition game the Phils had sc:heduled. "Whadd'ya mean you're not going?" Skinner asked his temperamental slug. ger. '"Just what 1 said. I'm not going. That v.•as part ol my agreement with Bob Carpenter (Phillies' owner). I agreed to play only scheduled games." "I don 't know anything about such an agretment," Skinner said. · "Well. we have one. In my 'conference' with him I t-Old him the scheduled games would be the only ones I'd play ." "You know this aame with Reading has been scheduled ror sometime and that everyone's expected to go there ." "I'm DO& gOlng:' Allen informed his ~er. "You can tell Bob Carpenter lot me." .. ''The bus leaves for Reading 3:30 Thunday," Skinner replied. ''If you 're not on lt then I'll take it lhat yoo've left the team again. .. Bob Skinoer relayed what AJlen had told him .. to John QWnn, the Phillies' general manager, and Quinn, in turn , pused Jt along to Carpenter. . Someone in the Phillies' front office then did a most unusuaJ thing. He con- tacted a dole friend of Allen's, a friend Allen has designated as his "agent" and appealed with him to try lo talk some sense Into Allen. Meanwhile, Skinner wa s d o I n g some thinking. He was thinking he had it way up to here with Allen. So he called Quinn and said :. "I can't Lake it anymore. From the fi rst day I c.anu~ here, I've had a lack of support from the front office and a lack o( communicaUon. I'm fed up with It and I'm telling you Utia, man-to-man, there is no way a manager can operate as long as Allen Is allowed to do the things he does. "Now I know what Gene Mauch went through. You can fine Allen and he just laughs at you. He negotiates with the front office, makes his own private agreement, and It's like handing the money right back to him. I don't want to go on managing this club under the circumstances." Quinn said if that was the way Sk!Mer felt, he'd pass the information along to Carpenter. Skinner said that was the way he felt. ' Allen's agent came by to see Skinner before Wednesday's night game with the Giants. He asked Skinoe.r whether anything J>08Slbly, eould be worked out regarding Thuraday'1 aame w I t b ReadinJ, to be played in !he Eastern League city. fl.faybe, instead of goinl up in the buJ like everybody else, Richie could 10 up by car wllh his wife and family! "Nothing doing!" Skinner 18.id. "He's going to be on the bus the aame as the other 24 players. The same u I'm going to be on the bu.a." The qent left and Skinner wondered wh.at wu the game corning to when a manager had to deal with an agent. The Phillies' manager made a special a~ pointment with Carpenter · Thursdly morning and tokl' him the same thing be had told QuiM. There was really nothlng for Carpenter to do but accept Skinner's resl1naUon. "Richie Allen is a great player," Skin· ner says. "I wls.h him the best of luck. His ne.1t manager, too." ' MOVE OVER, JOSE -Dodgers' Bill Sudakis wound up between tlle Dezelan calls the play. The Dodgers banked on Claude Osteen's five- legl'I of Pittsburgh third baseman Jose Pagan Thursday night at hit shutout pitching and bl anked the Sues, 6-0. Osteen made it a com· Dodger Stadiwn -aft.tr ·he tripled in lhe sixth inning. Umpire Frank plete evening - he even hit a homer and single to drive in two runs. ~~~~~..::....~..:...~~~--'~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~"--~~~~~~- Rejuvenated LA Pitching Haunts Loop LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pitching, a hallmark of three Los Angeles Dodger pennant drives this decade, is making its presence felt again this season. Claude Osteen·, who was a key part of suocessfuJ quests in 1965 and 1966, feels be.'1 pitching as well as ever after shut· Ung oot Pittsburgh l-0 Thursday night oo five hits. The Dodgers picked up a half-game Doelger Slate 7:" 11.rn.. Kl'I fut) f:JS 1t.rn.. Kl'I 16'01 11:J.t p.rn.. KFI (4Cll tn the live-way National Lea1ue West Dlvlllon chase and trail pace-setting CIJl. cinnl.ll by two Rames. in fourth place. "They face a stern challenge this wee.f;end from East leader Chicago. Sport s Cl i pped Short Yale Put on NCAA Hotseat KANSAS CITY -The Natinnal Collegiate Athletic Association Thursday charged Yale with '' i n te n tion a 11 y viola Ung a basic constitutional provision·· when it encouraged basketball player Jack Langer to compete in the l\1ac- cabiah Games in Tel Aviv. NCAA executive secretary Walter Byers said, .. Yale University, by choos- ing to be a member of this Association. voluntarily agreed to administer its athletic program in accordance with NCAA rules, just as the 649 other in- stitutional NCAA membe rs dld. Bytts would not commen t further, but another NCAA spokesman said, "we con- sider it a violation because they publicly announced that they would not take any action again st Langer and encouraged him to participate in the Games." • trants take lhe!r mar'ks at 8:30 al the ctnter. Late entries will be accepted the morning of the meet with signup al 7:30. Defending tillisl Bob Deines of the LA Slriders has noL entered the field so favoritism shifts lo Fred Ritcherson. outstanding two-miler from Salesian High last sea.wn. ' • LONDON -Jimmy Ellis, the World Boxing Associalion's heavyweight cham- pion, and Henry C-ooper, Brllaln's Euro- pean heavyweight king, have agreed t;i meet in a IS.round fi&ht here Sept. 27 that won't be billed as a world title bout. • scheduled today with top seeded Clark Graebner taking on Patricio Cornejo of Chile and third-seeded Bill Bowrty or Australia play.lng Gene Scott of New York, seeded-sixth. • TORONTO -Second..eeded CliU Richey came from behind two set.s Thursday to defeat South African Ray Moore 4.fi, 4-6, 6.4, 6-0, 6'2 to gain the semi rinals of the $10,000 Canadian Open tennis championships. Top-seeded John Newcombe o { Australia was ahead of Ecuador's Pancho ·Guzman 4-1 in the first set when rain forced a postponement . Rain also stopped fellow Aussie Dick Crealey. who was Ued wUh Butch Buch· bolz. of St. Lou.is at two sets each. year 1101 tbt COWboy1 have two excellent ~ivers in speedy Bob Haye. and Lance Rentz el. The Rams loel rec.eivera Bernie Casey via retirement and rookie Jim Seymour to military aervice. Jack Snow and Wendell Tucker get the 1 t a r t I n 1 .uslgnments, but depth la lacking. Both clubs boast atr<»iM defensive .aJiinmenta. Each dropped opposlni quarterbacu 51 Umee lul ........ Playoffs May Delay Series Start CINCINNATI (AP) -With the \Ve!lern Divillon race being bot.ly<:00- tested, the N.Uonal League might hive to utilize a playoff set up it has devised. After Thursday night's games, Cin· cinnati paced the division with Atlanta only percentaae points behind and San Francisco trailing by hall a game. Los Angeles was two g a m e s back and Houston was 41h out. If only two teams ended up dead1ocked tor first. sudden death would determine the winner and playoffs would not be much of a problem. But .a mulUple tie could throw the start of the World Serles into late October. League rules specify that a two-deleat- and-out playoff would be necessary ii three (Ir more teams lied. For instance, iC three teams lied, league President Warren Giles said he would draw lots to detennine teams I, 2 and 3. Team 1 would play Team 2 at Team I's park; Team 2 would play Team 3 at Z's park; and Team 3 would play Team 1 at Team 3's park. However, each team might only Jose one game and lot3 would have to be chosen again with Team l meeting Team 2 at Teem l 's park and the wiMer of that contest would play against Team 3 at a site to be detennined by lot. He Shoots 67 NEW COLOR MAN Bill Rigney Rig Lands Mike Job SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Bill Rigney has rejoined the San Francisco Giants a s a broadcaster for the Golden West Radio Network. Rigney told a news confer· enc e Thursday he will of:fici· ally start Aug. 17. joining Lon Simmons, Ru ss Hod ges and Bill Thompson. His contract runs only for the current baseball season. Rigney managed the Giants ~ from 1956-60. during which d they fini shed no higher than llf third, and then managed the Callfornia Angels until he was fired last May 27. Angel's owner Gene Autry also owns the Golden West Radio Network. .\ Rigney was offered a simi· Jar Job by Charles Finley, owner of the Oakland Athle. tics. Townsend Unworried Over PGA Inspection . MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -Pele r Townsend, 1 young Englishman who oncf! Jost his .approved player card because of poor play, isn't coocerned with that pro- blem any more, "I figure that if they pick up my card again, they're going to have to pick another 150," the dark-haired 22-year~ld said Thursday after shooting a five· undt:r·par 67 and grabbing lhe first round lead in the $100,000 Greater Milwaukee Open goU tournament. "l\le been playing pretty well for the Jut few months," Townsend said. "I'm about 98th on the money list. And there are about 250 or 300 players on the tour." "U they pic'k up my card, they've got to ret all the rest of them." With most of the great names of the game by-passing this event to practice for next week's PGA championship, some or the lessu lights of the tour dominated the windy, llrsl-<lay play. Rookie pro John Miller was second with • 68, followed by Mike Nugent, Steve Op-- perman and South African Allan Henning, all at 69. Al 70 were Jim W!echers, Larry Ziegler and Bob Lunn. or the leaders, (In- ly Lunn played In the afte rnoon, when the wind was al its highest. The top attractions had their prob lems with the wind that gusted to 28 miles per boor. Arnold Palmer came in wi th a 76. lour over par on the 7.075-yard North Shore Country Club course. Defending cham· pion Dave Stockton had a 77. Bert Greene. second in last week·s \Vestchester Classic. took a 75. Gary Player had a 73. Town send 's approved player card, which he must have to compete in regular lour events, was picked up for poor play in May of this year, along wlth 21 others. He was re-instated, on a pro- bationary basis, a few days later. Townsend , in his second year on tht tour, Yloukln 't appear to be in danger now. He's won about $12,500 this year, moot of It In the last two months. He was fourth in the Western Open and 10th ln the American Golf Classic. "I tend to play bettu in the north part (I{ the country than in the sou th ," he said. "It's more like home." "In the last few months, since l 'vt been playing better. I've felt more at ease. It's more like I belong here." Mes sersmith Faces Boston BOSTON -Are the Angel s in the mldst of another disastrous all-losing road trip! There's something about the New York· Bost.on-Detroit combination -and in that order -that brings out the worst in the Angels. The club was G-2 in New York this week and in its first test in Boston's Fenway Angel S late ,t.119. I ~II •I llK!on ':!$ p.m. k.MP'C 17161 Avt. t AllQ•!i ii llo>s!Oll IO:lS 1.m. l(M(I>(. 17101 A\111. 10 Alll'tll •I llo~:on IO:ll •.m. KMPC 010! A"'9. II Alll'tll 11 0-!rlll ~·$S p.m. KMPC PIOI Park this evening manager Lefty Phillips will offer his best pitcher, Andy Messersmith, in hopes of preventing anothe r road calamity. The la st such trip cosl ma nager Bill Rigney his job. Facing P..1essersmilh tonight will be Sonny Siebert, a player involved in !he Ken Harrelson trade two months ago with Cleveland. Phillips can"l do much be tter than trot out !\1essersmith, a former Western High ace who achieved slardom at the University of California before being signed by the Angels three years ago. Since June 8 he is lG-2 and sports a 1.51 earned run ave rage. His seasonal sta t.' are IG-7 and 2.32. HJs 10th victory came over the Red Sox July 30 at Anaheim Stad ium. lie tossed a four-hitter to win, 4· I. The Angels, after seemingly being on the roa d to recovt.ry just two weeks ago, have now lost five of their last six and are again in the American League's western di vision cellar. Bill Singer, IS.7, who has allowed only three runs in 24 innings since the All.Star break-without winning a game-goes for the Dodgers tonight In the opener of lhe aeries. Ferguson J enkins, lS-9. is ChJcqo's starter. LOS ANGELES -A home run by Pittsburgh 's \Yillie Sllrgell Tuesday, the first ever to clear the bleachers at Dodger Stadium. mea!ured Sl2 feet, the stadium's resident engineer said Thurs- day. LOS ANGELES -Former champion Emile Griffith announced Thursday he intends to claim the welterweight boxing cro"" because champion Jose Napoles refuses to meet him for the title. Napoles. who won Ule cl\ampionship from CUrtis Cokes, turned down a pro- posed UUe defense against Griffith claim· Ing the for mer champion was too tough a fighter. Lawmaker Backs Lady Ump l'mllU1tOK LO$ ANO•Ll l "" r II lti M.AfW. t1 4 • • Wiiia. ., ~-•I (r9wtor4.lf St.,,. If 4 t WDW!e. d c..,......, rt J I Kowit. f1 ..,_.._ c I ' H1lllor, c A,.Ollwr. ,, J 1 11111••1&. • AJ!ty, ft J I Hlll!On, lt1 ,.,..._ N J I Sl191nO<"-. :r11 ._...., p 2 t C.Oll~ IJ ~·· .. (,T1 ... llh I t •II r II tW 4 • ' • 4 I 1 t ' I I t • I J t J I I I • I I 1 • 0 • 0 l 0 • 0 ~ I 2 1 .... ~··· . T••• »I TtN• io!••• P~ •••-a ta ...,...... OClll 114 --• I: -,....... Oii' -Ut A/IOtlft I. "°' -,.~ .. Lot .IU\otlta .. 18 -t.ffltl/lli.... HtllW1 -Cl•"""'-~' Sii -l l.llSll<lt. Hit -c.. Ot'-Ill. " -w °'~" The ooUielder hit a curve ball over the 26th row or the right field ·pavilion to tnap 1 3-3 tie in the seventh inning. It was the. longest hit in nearly 1 ,000 gamea played at the atadium. • Distance runners from lhrou&hout Southern California will gather at UC Irvin< Saturday momlng foe !he SPAAU 20 kllomUtr championships. 'Mle ~nlor (40 and over) and (lptn title will be up f(lr grabs when the 12.>plus en· • . . SOUTHAMPTON. N.Y. -Stcond Sffd. ed Bob Lull of Los Angeles and fourth seeded Al1111 Stone of Australia won quarterfinal matches In the 80lh Meadow Club Invltal.Jonal $12.000 grass courts ten- nis tournament Thur8day. • l,11tz, U.S. Davis Cu pptr. CJ\'•r'(:ame 1 C'nalren1ee from Georges Goven, the 20· year-old F'rtnchmen, 11-1, 12.fi. 7-S. Tiie '"''o other quarterfinals are \\'ASHlNGTON (AP ) -A New York congressma n uld Thurlday he would w-ge an invesUgaUoo o( ori:anlzed baseba ll In the wakt of the sport's rtfusal to mike Bernice Gera tll fltll woman umpire . "Due to the conduct of baseball ln this m3tter. which ttndt to be Uleg1l," said Rep. M1rio Biag i, t Democrat, "there might be olNitl' 1reas that also are ll· le al ." ~laggi Aid Mn . Gert , a 33-year-old JackltOO Hclghts, N.Y., housewife, w11 denied an umpirt's job tn the Class A New York-Pennsylvania Le.ague solely on the basis of her sex. He said refusal by Phillip Piton, head of the tnlDor le,,gutS, to approve Mrs. Ger a 's contract, was "devious, dilatory and cruel." Biaggl, who sJ.ld he is representing Mrs. Ge.ra as a "friend, congressman and attorney ~t fee, filed a complair' Wtdnes.1ay oo her behalf with the New York commission on human rights in an effort to aet organized baseball to honor \ the woman's contract or pay damages. Last year Mrs. Gera filed a complaiRt with the st.ate commission arter the New York-Penn League refused to pve bu a contract. After negoliation, ho11.•evcr, the league relented, signed her to a contract 1nd assigned her to "''Ork a &loll ... Aue. 1 In Auburn, N.Y. Before she lelt last v.·eek, Plton 1ent ht r a lelegram sByl ng he had diiip- provcd hei' contract. • t • • • d n >I Sprinters Record Doubles A pair of sprinters, Doug Eckert and Mike Black, stole the spotlight at the final all- comera track and field meet of the swnmer sponsored by the Cosla Mesa Recreation J)e.. partment Thursday al Costa ?ifesa High. The pair scored impressive double victories in the cham- pionship meet which drew more than 300 competitors. Eckert, who attends Cha~ man College, turned In the summer's fastest c e n L u r y clocking as he raced to 1 9.8 lime in the open division. Later he came back to win the open 220 in 22.7. ~tack, who competes for Anaheim High during the school year, won the high school 100 in 9.9. and then made it a double with a 22.5 effort in the fur long, the sum- mer's swiftest time . Other marks were about average for a summer meet although J ack Mc Quo w n scored a tough double in the high school division. He won the mile in 4:32.2, the day's swiftest clocking and then doubled with a 2:03.1. victory in the prep 880. Complete results : OPEN OIVIUON ?II HH -J, Wolll.m1 1. !,..ii~ J. llrMlffwood Tlme: t.•. MILE -I k f\mll1 ' C1rlon 1 Fr9 ... MH1 T-..: •·olO.l M11ft'I Miit -I. McOon1Mf ' G1ttl1 J. HoDl<I Ttmt: J:1l.I loo -1. Edl.1rt !. 8111!9llnf l VI"'"" Tlmt: t ,I. MO -1. MulcloDn 1. Wmltl J Win- ton Tlm1: !3.J. no IH -I. Ekl10 ,_ ~'°"' J Swl\S ,.lme: !J.I. ...0 Rt11v -1. Te1m ol Stflmili, F,...I, Eld•o. Etk1r! ?. VOIOt!"I Wu! l. 1t111ch0 .t.11mlto• Tlmt: ... 0. uo -1 P1v1n '· Mulooon l . Oll1rn.rdo T!mt: ':01,,, no -I, Eck1r1 1. Sevrnoi.or J, 8wT· t.11,,. Tlmt: n.1. Cron COUfll.., -I. C1rlon l. Cl"P'IOI' 3. SPktr Tlfnt: 11,1'.0. Mlle Wal\ -1. Ovei-1..., 1. Chtrd l, Merdba!f.,1 Tlmt: 7•,J.l. MJ -1, Fr~r 1. Fl11>rr No third Ho!fhl; 6-7. J1v.i1n -1 S"ltl ' 1 •111!1\> No !hlrcl Ol1t•Mt lOS-t, Ol1cu1 -1 Lo!! J. Gorct.... No t+."d Ol1t1n<:e: 1'5·6. U -1. Wlll11m1 J. 111..0 l West 0 1111...:t: ,.10·~. SI' -1. Loll J, Gor6<1<o No rhl•d Of1t1M• U·I. T J -\, "rOll 1. SwlH J. Wt11 Olit•11c•: 11 .. '~ HIGH SCHOOL 10 MH -1 Eow1'°1 J, 0 '0ell !. llu.rl Tim.· 1.t. ""Ill -1. MC'Ouown 1, Win!"" J. LIM~ Time: 1·Jl.J Hit -l. 11tdi; J. V11llho l. Ed ... 1r<11 Tl'"": t t. <411 -I. Kttw'W'dY 1. LNkU l . 0! ler,,.rdcl Tl<nt ·.fl.I, lllO -I, McOuawn 7. Ot1n J. Winton TkM: 1:03.1. no -I. l lKk ], E<1w1"'• l. SWl1' Time: JJ,J, Crt1H Coun!"' -'~ ''"' l. Plllfl"..,.. !. Llntt.ck Tl..,.: ll ·J•.O. 0 \ll:IB -1 l""ltk 7. lo•dt~ l. ltmell Ol1!1n<:t' 1'0-1 LJ -1. Swln J. End•\tY l. Owr11• Ol1llMt: )0.-7. T J -1. v•uuv 1. o~n• J. Noo,..11 0!1!1n<:t: 11-l. SP -I. 8ardtn 1. l•rntlt J, L•dlm•• 011111\te: Jl·J'•· HJ -1. Eow1ra1 1. unot•wood l. Enchll'Y Heigh!: 6-1. JUN!Oft HIGll ?llMl-I -1, p_.JI J. Jonu J SPt•• Tlmt: t.6. Mll<t -1. Ml!tht ll 1. Wheeler J. M111tltle'9 Tim~:• n • 100 -I. l•k" J. s.111 J. Powell ,.lmt: 11 .o. <411 -1. l••tr J, llrrtlt J. Kell>' Time· 5S l. 120 IM -1. Powell 1. Jonn J, Sl>t•I Time: lt.O. 11111 -I Suncltll 2. Hqtlbe•t l H1t• f ll Time: ?;11.S 220 -l, l(fllY J. l•~u l SJ>trl Time: '1.J. CrDll COUl'I .... -I. J Ol!Wlflil l. r. O"Wlflil l. H•itM Tlmt: l'O·UO. LJ -1. lh~!r J f ntlJlt Y ], l(tllem"llM Olll•n.tf: 11-5' 1 SP -l, Er>OlltY l f '-1pt0n 1, l<•ll<lrm•"" 0 11!•Mt l'-"• HJ -I. IO:!•n J Ill Colbert l. 0. Coilw•• HtltM. 1-l DfKIB -I. l~ompion !. AVf"' J. (Wl/ll Olllll't• ..... 10. Baker New SACC Boss Ken Baker has taken over 11s the new manager of Santa Ana Country Club after a 15 year career at goU and coun- try clubs in the San Francisco Bay area. Baker previously worked al the ~1arin. Sharon Heights and Claremont golf clubs up north and is a former navigator- bombadier in the Royal Cana- di1n Air Force. SOFT SELL SAM • QUEEN OF TERMITES -Pretty Cici Ordaz takes a spin in a ne'v lawnmower engine powered off-road recreational vehicle called the Termite. The 5- OA tLY ,ILOT Iliff Philio horsepower car is manufactured in Costa Mesa and sells for $289.95 assembled or $139 in kit form. rrld<IJ, August 8, 1~ ~AIL V "ILOT l l ._ l 2 Area Grid Stars To Co-captain South .; . •: . . ..• ... By RON EVANS Of 1M O.lll' PINI ll•ff The awesome specter of Isaac Curtis and Darryl Berg was hanging like a black cloud over the North today after Thursday's South scrimmage. CUrUs and Berg, two all· CIFers last fall for Santa Ana and Westminster high schools, broke loose for three long runs each during a 45-mlnu te scrimmage. So impressive was the or- fensive demonstration that Baldwin extended the lime limit for the scrum from 20 minutes to 45. Baldwin, exuberant over the South's potent s co r Ing machine. c11ncelled today's scheduled workolJ\ at Santa Ana High. His club has only rour light workouls remaloina before next Thursday's kicko!J at Orange Coast College. The South will assemble at 10 a.m. Sa.turday fot a review- ing session and then log no- conlact drills Mon.1ay, Tues- day and Wednesday evtnings. Thursday's was the final hit- ting session. •lBerg and Curti:1 were really something -those guys are ready to play, that's for sure;• Baldwin summed up. The South players voted two Orange Coast area players as offemive and defensive cap- tains. Huntington B e a c h ' s Tony Bonwell was named the offensive leader and Laguna Beach linebacker and center Steve Klostennan was assign- ed to lead the defense . .KeyTahti Buckets Do It, Tars Bag Cage To11r~ey By DAV E CEA RLEY Of 1'IM 0•111 Plitt SI•" Four third quarter buckets by Newport guard Nels Tahti sparked the Sailors to the San- ta Ana baskelball league tourney champiOnship Thurs- day night as Newport thrashed Santa Ana. 60-48, at Santa Ana College. The Saints w h It 11 e d Newport's lead to six with 6:30 left in the third then Tahti began hitting 20-foot jump shots to give the Tars a comfy margin. Five straight N e w p o r t passes went astray early In the third frame lo spark the Saint rally. A belated Santa Ana rally in the fourth quarter was halted ~·hen the Saints' lop two scorers. Billy Williams and Kim Pickering, fouled out. Lee Haven and Taras Young led the Sailor scoring attack with 14 points, while Tahtf ad- ded 12. Haven also galhered in 2t1 rebounds. Slill unpolished In t h e South's ar~nal is Its pass pro- tection. "Our protection is better th~ it was, but it still needs some work," Baldwin said: . :· •: ... "Our defensive ends got to _' Bonwell In the scrimmage several times Thursday but ""'e whistled lhe plays dead before they hit him." , T)le defensive ends -Mike Quinn of La Quinta and Larry Brumsey·of Sanla Ana -were singled out by Baldwin for tl\eir impressive s h o w J n 11 Thursday. Klosterman also played well Thursday at linebacker, Baldwin pointed out. "This kid has really shown us all somelhiJl&," he $aid. The seuioo was Jnjury.(ree. Since no contact drills remain, the South seems virtually cer· tain lo enter the game un· marked. Argos Log 11-5 Win Over Tars • .. Garden Grove's White team sc.'Of'ed an 11-S victory over the .l Newport Blue team tllring a ] summer league wala' polo ac. •• tion Wednesday al Estancia : High School. Bob Reed was.Jkwport's top scorer with two goals. I Wooden Car May Travel Mexican Roads Bue, Lucky Fives Post Cage Wins The victory completed an undefeated season for Newport, the squad garnering both the league championship and the tou rnam ent tiUe. Other scores had Troy's Blues logging a forfei~ win over Bolsa Grande, La Quinta beating Fountain Valley. M, and Costa Mesa handing -:; Estancia's While team au 8-3 setback. Termites. Running .Loose Orange Coasl College and Lucky's pulled away fr om op-- ponenlS in the second half to post victories in the Costa Mt'sa Open Summer Basket - ball league Wednesday night at OCC. By GLENN WHITE Of 1'IM O.lty Plitt Slllf Termites are running loose in lhe Costa Mesa area . The termites in mention are actually off road recrealional vehicles, powered by a lawnmower e n g i n e and capable of speeds up to 30 miles per hour. From a standing start on a quarter mile track, I was able to clock 22.7 mph for one mile. The terrilite is the in· novation of Ernest Kanzler , a new high speed fishing crart called the Marauder. and £ormer employe or the great architect Frank Lloyd Wrighl. Tbe 36-year~ld Kan z I e r grew weary of home designing and converted what had been a hobby into a blossoming business venture I h e building of vehicles and boats. His Costa Mesa production center ( Autocoast) turned out lhe Termite shortly afler opening (or the first time 13 months ago. Originally Kanzler designed the ~·ooden car for his son. The rugged. dependable ~troke of geinu s was further perfeeted r o r commercial distribution and is now design- ed to go anywhere. Kanzler is at the moment seriously consider ing an en- durance run with hts 5 horsepower masterpiece. He is hoping to take a fleet of Termites down the highway lo ~texico City. A test car has already been developed ~·itb a rubber seal between the springs modifica- tion that n1akes driving a dream, according to Kanzler. The ambitious trip could come off as early as October, but v.·ith red tape involved in i n ternationat arrangements for soch a venture, the project By Marvin Myers may be delayed u n t 11 sometime next spring. I drove a Termite for two ~·eeks -over hills, through soft dirt, mud · and heavily watered grass. It had an oc- casional problem of the chain coming off but that was easily remedied, ·with a minimum of strain. grease and profanity. The Te""ite is produced in two sizes -the shorter varie- Yankee Tacl<le Injured Tn its final hard contact before next Thursday's North- South county all-star prep football go.me at Orange Coast College, the North may have lost a starter Thursday even- ing. Car! Rahn. an ofrensive left tackle from Anaheim, twisted a knee during coach Dave Gibbs' 25-minute drill Thurs· day and the jury is out over whether he'll be able to play. "How it looks Friday even- ing will tell us a lot," Gibbs sa,ld. Indicating he didn't think lhe lineman would miss his starting assignment. "IJ we have to replace him, it'll be with Jim Bondy from Troy, who's now working out with us as an alternate." While that was easily the low point of Thursday 's scrum . the high point was the offensive guard work o r guards Craig Lilicker. Garden Grove, and Pal Mahoney, Anaheim. "Those two really looked great They were pulling quickly and opening up some i:iood holes for our backs. Andy Bielanski broke loose on a play we whistled dead but he'd have gone all the wey in a game." Doing most of the legwork Thursday were Tom Brookller nr Savannah. the fullback: Loara's Brant Light, and Troy's Sleve Clodfelter. Tonight Gibbs plans to ln- ~tall some goal lint offensive plays and conducl 1 review of the nffcnse and def'mse. I NATIONAL SPEED CENTER New lw rM ..... CIMes Af'N GU.ND OPINING S,.clek .. CHAOMI AND MAG WHllL's AM AIMlft tt• DllcMJ1tt! ty for youngsters, a longer versjon for adults . Onesuper-Termlte Is powered by two lawnmower engines and was recommend · ed only for daredevil types. who can stand speeds or over 30 mlf>. Kanzler's pet ts· s o I d assembled for $289.95 or in do- it-yoursilf t it form for $139. Sn far only 30 have been sold. However, the market has scarcely been s c r .a l ch ed. Since people boast more leisure time and extra money , saJes could rocket. And the Termite will pre>- bably thrive -as long as the drivers keep them off public streets and highways -a dangerous o(fense rewarded by accident or ticket. How Tl1ey Stand NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division \l'on Lo5l Pct. GB Chicago 70 41 .631 - New York 59 47 .557 Sita St. Louis 60 SI .Ml 10 Pittsburgh 55 54 .505 14 Philadelphia 44 64 .407 241~ ~funtreal ~ 76 .315 3.S West Division Cincinnati 58 45 .$63 - Atlanta 63 50 -~ - S. Francisco 61 49 .55.'> 1 ~ Los Angeles 59 50 .541 2 Houston 57 53 .518 4 1i~ San Diego 35 76 .315 27 T"un111y•1 1tllun1 S!-loul1 1. Stn O'ttu ! LO$ An9e!of:1 6, ,-hl•blll"'lh I Only -• KlltOulrd TMl1"1 0 •,,... lolew Yar\ CGtll"Y ,_, 1no IC"°'m'" 1-1) •! A!IMll• IP•-1 •.• Ind lleed t..I), 1, lwl-flllh! PhlllOo!Phil !JKk1on 11.10 1• c .n- c1.,...11 !Clon.t-a.111. "''hr Mon1'"1 (bed 6'll fl HM!ori (Wll· ion 1:1-11. !1Jtlll .Pll1'bw"' (VMk 6-lll •1 Sin Olete (Hlll!<ru 6-ll, ll!f'hl C~ !Jenllfll JS.fl 11 LOI An9to "'• cs1..,.., 1i-11, n10111 S!. LOUii (lrllH 11•t) II SI~ f •1n- tilCO (Perrv 1'·1), l'lrt'>I S.hll"Mr'• 01 ..... HllW Yar• 11 A.1111'1•. nigr,1 P1!ll-.k!Ptll1 1r Cl11dnn•I'. nl9ht Mon<~11 •' Holltlon. nltn• CP>i<.I .. t i LOI .t...,.ein. nlttlt SI. LOlllJ •I S." Pr1nc:lot.o Onlr tltnet ICMGY .... A~IERICAN LEAGUE Eas t Division Won Lost Pct. GB Baltimore 76 34 .691 - Detroit 60 48 .556 I 5 Boston 59 51 .~ 17 Washington 57 56 .504 20 New York 54 56 .491 21 11 Cleveland ol6 47 .407 31 Y.a West Division 1"1innesota 68 43 .613 - Oakland 64 43 .593 2 Seattle 45 63 .417 21 11i Kansas City 44 65 .404 23 Chicago 43 66 .394 24 California 41 65 .367 24'¥ Thw•Mlr'• lltlulh OflO.l1nO J, C~i.nO G !lo.Ion J, kl9111e ' l •l!lmor• 10, K-•• Clrr l ou rol1 '· iw-to11 • O/ll• ilmf"I tdledult'd T M11"1 01mt1 Ookl1nd (Hunlf• f,f 1"11 111\/0' 1·11 u Ho,.. VDftl l l•hMffl 7-11 1"4 Oown· •nt l·Jl, 2, IWl~lhf Detroll fl(ltlltnnY l·f •lld OoblOfl .._71 11 Chieffo !Horlen 1·12 1rMI ill't- lfr1 1·111, 2, lwl-nl..,I 1(1n1-. Cllv (lunt.t• 1-1) If Clevt- I•"" 48Cl'l'd 0-1!. nl"'' Mk neto11 1""1lltr .._., 1! l1l!lmor1 (P~I ll·'l. nlthl C1ll!ornl• (M011Jt<V11I!~ t•7) 1! IOI• 10n /Sl.C..rl ,_tl, "''111 b 1111t-!lruf'Wf 1,.7) •' W1•n;n9!ori {Celt"""' M ), l'lt111 , ..... ,..., •• o.,,,., O.•l'i!ll 11 cr.ie..o, 1wl.fll11111 1(,.,,.., en ... •t c1ew1- Mlnl'f'l<ll• 11 ltlllmotit. nl"'I Sttnle 11 '°lllP>lr•t!CW• o.-i....i 11 New York C111forni. •I ""'""' Orange Coast th rotlled Wilson Ford, 90-34 , while Lucky's trimmed Wigmore Insurance. 7&-10. Orange Coast had a we.JI . balanced scoring a t t a c k against \Vi!son with Rich Stickelmaier and Jim Kindelon leading lhe way with 24 and 22 poll'}ts. Freshman C h u c k Yerkey added 19 more to the Bucs' total. John Simac had 2t1 to lead Wilson while Torn Witt scored 18. Tom Reed and Larry Mancebo were instrumental in Lucky's overcoming a four· point halftime deficit as they pumped home 27 and Jl markers. However high-poinl honors went to Wigmore's Frink Zebot, who potted 31 poinls. Bob Schermerhorn had 20. v ........ Jl(ln<ll!lo~ E~1n1 Wl!llam1 TurlfY s11c.1;,1m1lor r oi.11 ••• L1•'1.0n Ambl'i!llCP! Slm•c lP>O•nlon (cnkll~ Pelt110n Tol•l1 H•lnlmf Jon•• Gl11eW>l9 '"' L, M...c;ebe R. ~l'C~ba -(;ull•lton G1nl1flon G••nllr Tctl•ll l~C~J'I (Tl) " ' ' " • ' ' ' > w1,,...., lftS. 11t1 " • ,.,_ ·~ .. Sd'>¥,,,.,..," ' • • ' ' • , ' ' ' ' • • ' • ' • ' ' ' " " ' • ' ' , ...... ,.. °'"'" Hew Yortl: 11 .t.l'lllnt• ll'hll.cle~I •I Cl11tln,..r! Mont'"I t i H011151Pn .-1nlllu,..,. u S.11 OiHo. 7 Cttk.I.. II LOI Alllelli SI. Ltult-•t "" F'911Cix. '"" .. .,.' 0..mtl MCCor"" • " ' ' 0.1~11 •I Chlwto llOet ll:1t1111 Cl"1 t i Cle11tltn0 Cr""'lrf Ml'"'"'°'' 1! ltllimort Ch*""" ~•Ult •I WHl'llllttofl Tol•ls o.i.:i..ci .i H""' '(.0. M11ftlt'M 1cerw: C1INarnl1 •I aot!Oll ~1, lltl(l(y't ,7, Sllmihle-hun1 " • ' " WltmPrl ' • • Shooter, age 14, shot himself • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8 • • as he ran toWards a-bird he • ••• I had seen alight. He tripped WE GOT and fell . His .22 rifle struck • lhe ground and discharged and • · the bullet passed through the • EM right shoulder and into the • chest. Fortunately he stMWW- iid. • ••• HARRISON BOAT CENTER ·~· . ·~· . """ $ ........ ""' "'""" ... Cliff •• l•'"Mtl """""-°"""' • 1• 1• r• • • • • > • Full Selection of adidaS • • 1969 CLEARANCE • SPORTS SHOES • • • • • • • • Newport finished with an overall league record of 14--0. SANTA. ... '"' " " ,, TP ... • ' ' " w 111i.m1 , • ' • Plo, .. lnt • • ' ' Cr...0.1! • • ' • P111-111 • ' ' ' H"'°"'' • ' I " .... • I • ' F1,,i1 ' • • • Tol1h " • ~ • tollWPOI T ,., •• " ,, TP ,._ • • ' ,. Ealu ' • ' ' M1Ji..atf ' • • ' r.i.11 • ' • " v~~ ' • • ,. .... ' ' ' • '-..!>ean Weiler scort:d three ti~r Estancia iD the lat· ter match. ~1aU WaKUick scored the same number for the Mustangs . La Quinta's Tom Willia.ms tossed in five goals lor La Quinta in Its decisiun over Founlain Valley. For Garden Grove.. I..arry Littlejohn scored Urtt pals in the Argonauts' vicMry O'itt Newport, the de£endillg CW champs. T1ylor ' ' ..... • ' "" , ' ...... • • • ' • • • ' ' • Other scorers (or tht Costa Mesa contingent were ."'-: Misiolek. Red Kinyon, lliA ~ Beal, and John Garpen\a'. •: TOii" " " ,. • 5•1'11 ·~ " ' " ,,__.. --~iiiiiiii------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ; ·~-" " " ·~ WE QUI T! EVERYTHING MUST Ger 20 On All Merchandise Lumber Hardware Tools Plywood Electrical Paint Sash & Doors Moul~in9s Desks Files Shelvinq Office Equip. Fencinq Floor Tile Siqns Liqht Bulbs Weather Strippinq Locks Panelinq Sheetrock Cash Reqister Addinq Machine Chairs Tables TOO MANY ITEMS TO LIST! • -CASH AND CARRY - All Sales Final-No Refunds COSTA MESA; LUMBER CO. 1700 SUPERIOR AVENUE • ' . • ' • ' ·' .. '' -·· ' '' .. · ,. . •• . : . ' h " "4/fJ.L Of CcrJ,f5f .IM &:ft'/)/J&E, A!TE,f ALL T/IAT 8tfV/Jf/) STl/f f I'ff CCtlftMEP/' 2110 HARBOR BLVD. IN•xt To MR. "T") COSTA MESA * MM700 * o i.11,... 116, Liii W:lf,, """' Mm lll'lfnll IJl, I.Isl uMf. Mft' t2Jn toll'll""I" Ot, Lkt Miil. "'""' ..,, """'w'" ue, Lbl 1un, ...,, llltl l llltwl""" t•t. Lllf f4J"J, Nft' Ufft ... ..... 11$. LIU U1tL Jltw t.Uti ff• ••• tit. lllt 114M. Hew um M.t.tolV 111.0•l • , , Ill 'IMt IDJ !OUTM 111.Altol ll Wl"l'tr SANTA AHA 6"" f D111 hti. fltn*UU • e • ORANGE SPORTING GOODS • • 132 S. Glenill 633"4022 • ..................... ,• • COSTA MESA • I , ---------~---·--~=~-" I l I I I ·--· to P"" • "' ----............ ,,. '~,, --~···--·-..... --- Jf DAILY PILOT Start Yo11r Engi11es! 'by .Deke Hou/gate Dirt track raring is lht lalesl "in'' thing in motor sport. The dinosaur of speed sport is 1naking a lusty comeback, but In a way mosl folks y;ouldn'l have guessed. The n1achinery per· forming on Lhe dirl neither resembles nor sounds like U1e open wheel cars lhat drew thousands of fans inlo motor palaces like Legion Ascot, Soldier Field and Syracuse in another era. They're racing dune buggies and class A speedway 1notor- cydes on the dirt to good audiences in Southern California, and tt won 't be long before both forms of the sport will spread coast to coast. Dune buggy racing arrived at Ascot Park in Gardena a couple of weeks ago, and nOl the least or its attractiveness was Its Hollywood flavor. Competing on lhe track was Steve Mc- Queen, and watching from a grandstand seat was Jan1es Garner. Meanwhile, there are three other tracks with good spectator facilities that present weekly dune buggy shows near San Diego, in Fontana and Palmdale. The courses reature bumpy sections, lots of tight, winding turns, hi.Us and depressions which the buggies take with a leap and in some cases · mud holes through which the racers must fi]>lash their ~·ay. The difference bct\.\-een this and ordinary off-road racing is that it all takes place on a tiny plot of ground in front of spec· lators, instead or remolt' desert areas over long distances where the only witnesses are hostile rattlesnakes. Buggies are more exciting to 11i·atch Uian the old jalopy derbies that were regular dirt lrack fare a few years back, Their drivers, who improve as the acquire experience, are more Jntent on racing than bumping the other cars. Dune buggy raci~ is a real gas Meanwhile, Californians have suddenly discoYe.rcd Euro- pean style speedway bike racing. The forn1at redutes all races to four-lap heats wb.ich lake a couple of minutes to run. Riders lean on each other. shoulder to shoulder , from st.art to finish. The excitemenL is difficult to describe. It's too much. Speedway n101.0rcyc!es race at Orange County Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa aoo \Vhiteman Stadium in Pacoima. They put oo an exhibition for the American Legion Fireworks Show at the Coliseum on J uly 4 and were the hit of the evening. At the end o( this month there wiJI be a series of races in the Los Angeles Sports Arena -on the dirt, or course. It has .to be brought in and laid down on the arena noor. The true test or both dune buggy and speedway motorcycle racing is I.hat aeilhcr has had any promojlon to speak of bul both are drawing good turnouts of fans. They are just plain good family entertainment at a reasonable price. Shows llis Tailpipe Tbe "sporty car boys" are havin& their best }'ear on the USAC championship trail. Latest rood racer to show his tailpipe to l\.18rio Andretti. A. J. f'oyt, Boby Unser et al is Pete Revson, the Vt'ealtby New Yorker. Revson is the \\'ihner of the Indianapolis Raceway Park too. which he achieved w·ith third and first place finishes in t~o JIJO..lap huts.. 11e i~ also the same fellow who IOllit oul in "rookie of tbc year" balloting at Indianapolis last Memorial Day lo l\lark Donohue, rven though he finished ahead of Donohue in the 500. "Yes, that vote did hurt my pride some." Revson ad milled after be won at IRP. ''I reel that today I vlndicated myself." Revsom is the arch.typical road racer. A wealthy young man, he's everything the grizzled Indy \'eterans imagine abouL 1porU CP!r' drivers. They have learned lbat be Is not a playboy, . bu1 a serious competitor who is earnestly trying to make his way as a driver. Revson is a bachelor who likes fine wine and beautiful women. He prefers managing his investments to punching a time ckk. He likes to travel in comfort, because, after all. be tpends • lot of lime traveling. He has a good eye for a bargain, whether it is a rare paint· Ing or a stock lhat is headed for a sharp price Increase. lt11p1·essl1·e 1•e1·fot•111011ces The roll call of other road racing drivers shows an impi:,c.~· live performance so far this season. Mario Andretti, of course, started as a teenage(. driving forrraila junior cars in Italy. and he's leading lhe race for the U.S. Auto Club national driving chan1pionship. . . . . ... Los Alamitos Results TllWr•qy, ·~·-1. lM' Cllar a flatt l'IRST RAC•~.1rd._ ""'•iOefl l ~ar oldl.. Cl.lim1ft'll. Pu~ SHOO. P-'" Rt-I !51r•uul u .• tO 20 l ~ !k>lcl Moon CW•'1"Dlll ' fll ? 60 .l~r<>"t Giii (Acl•ir) 110 Tl-JI )'10 , $t;r1JU1te1 -Gretwltl. MOOt>. llowG~ r.1rreo. Clwrtg, SECO~D 11.lCE . .iDO v1ro1. ' ve1r Old.I Ind \<O I" Grade B PIY.1. Pur~ Sl500. NII~ BIY Mclto C"-iUo! 1 5 '8 ''·'° 1.10 Monkrf1 Gyp.1y (HtrH l~.IO 6111 I.I r1oml>I t w • 1 MM> > l IO Tlme-:111 I/It !>cT"•I~ -Ml.1.1 !\<IH'T Dul, DI-· ,..,~ BoY. J,_., SC"· w 1.,. 1·m 1 Taki". HIGHTL V OOIJBL1'-J.1'11wm II• ~Util & 6·Ml11 a1y Mtk._ fl•lcl i111.31. THIRD R,t.C•. lSll v1r°' Mlollrn J ve1r DIG•. Purw. 11700 .• Mtkltl Btr (51r1uill 1.IO 1.0CI J OCI M ·~· Biel 4P•M'lol I.Ill 3.20 Tl>U Re-eel B1r (0 B1nk.1! 3.111 fliN--19 J/10 kr11t11~~ G<•nd 111 ... Oc~1n RDCCii~I. ProJ><;tlClll T!llt•, Tiny Toucll. FOURTH ltACl5. HO Vl•d•. J ve1r old.I 11>!1 UP. Cl1lrr\1"9 PUr>• SXIOC. L1rk G••nd (LIP1'11rnl I Ill • 70 310 Gl•cl LM 4\lr/•tson! 1.0 '00 BY"nv'o fk.>;t l•dtir) S 10 Tl,..,.._7? ]/ID Scr1!~ltl!'d-Hllo S-" FIFTH lt,llCE. 400 ••rck ? ,,.~., oloi b~cl in Ct lll AllOw1t>Ct$ Put~ SllOCI IN AOe<iul!t ILIPN>ml 1111 l IO ? llQ 0.U PJ'l'Of/ !H Cro1b1I l .OCI 7 -0 T•n• Ttl$n (Hart) J.00 Tl~ 1CI ,110 SIXTH IACIE. JSC v•rd1 l Vtt r old1 """ UP I~ Gr.oe .. Plu•. Puf1• ll'l'CIO Ll>l!•'on 1Smlrt11 ~.Mt 160 J.oo llud Ev• <ltlcl>artbJ S.O •.•O Blq G•mcl1ddv !Riiey) • 10 Timt-11 2110 krt!c"'cl -!.co....er'• M••.•, l utkv B•fl Jot, l!lill Lil Ptr~tr. Moc<1 1 Bei;t. Sl!'VEMTH 1t•CE. vn .. l• S• Cou"• -'70 •l•!I• J Y~l' old1 1fld uo. Cl.limlng, Purot Sl20ll HCI PtPl>l'r Pod (H Ct"OSllV) t 60 •.60 J .O B~r.-,:d'I BllCll'' ~w111 .... 1 l 60 l 00 L•llle Obie O·hr!) , ~ T lm~I Ill ! S~r1•cntd -!On~ 01 T•~. Wor>d•'• Rodlt!. IE1(;14TH 11.t.CP?'lllO y11d1 J ,,. •• , olds and up~~ (;';j,~·i...A M•nu1 P""'" 111~0. 801>1ficle Bolo (A!11otJ Tep TO<ia 1 1-1~·0 Tt .,i.,. Gl"91t l ll•<"'"•Od Tirn-tf 2110 lO'O SOO 100 l IO l.00 .. ~ Scr1ttnflt-Rgy1I R•~' Tl''"~ "'ch. L~IP P•rr, Llk• .t. "oc~•! NINTI( RACE . .00 V••O• J v•o• ohb -up In Gr10~ A M nv• Pur1r s11oa. o.,.,.roti>t r'd•irl S""'c M-!11:1<!\•rd•! S•e.~n Torie (Pitf) Tl"*-20 1/10 111),1(1 160 1120• . .a ,,. :kr•l<l'oe~ -Oto M• O.r1ino, 1'o(!v W1•tt>. 18Y"Coct O~•eri-!. G~'• Tw•11. OU!i'lt:l.L.t. -,.o .... ~;, & 1-Sonlc MCOll. Ptlcl 114.10. Al/Mid P~ GOLF HOW TO HIT IT "ON THE SCREWS" • / I'm afraid that so much rs said these days abou tfitti ng the ball hard that we lose sight of one \/ery impqrtant fact. That is, no matter how hard or fast you swing. you will never rea- lize maximum distance unless you strike the ball SQuarely- '"on the screws," as we say. 6 \ Though there is no su re-fire way 10 hit the ball squarely e\/ery time , I do think that keeping a steady head while you s wing is the bes t way to achieve such a resu lt. t If you keep you r head as steady as possible -no one ca n keep it perfectly s ti ll all the time-you will produce the best possi ble swing arc to return the clubhead to its or1g1nal PO· sil1on. Whenever your shots s eem to be missing. firs t pay strict atteiltion tb keeping your head still. ·. • 1 ... --~----• ..,, l7•J tJ.1 \. "'~" ,, ... Long Irons from Tht Rou&h. P1tthing from Woods. Uphill and Dowr'lh•ll Lie5-thlSI! and otner sllots are d1ta1led for you 11i Arnold Palme1's boolllet, •• rroub'•I! Shot~." For your topy, sand 20, and a stamped. 5ell-•ddrt$Std envelope to Arnold p,trner, in cart of th•s ntwi.~~r. Fishing Report S ... 11 CLEMENTI -?U 1Ml•l1. 111 blo·1. 1•1 baffttuO•. 1.1..i bon•lo, I ~ .. 1iow1101. • w1>1r .. ••• """ i'IEWl'ORT !0 11111'1 LK~tf -)'1 Al!Q lf'rs. ~ 1Mff4<\lllo, OW D<l~•lo. 101 IMU. I l>IUllWI CAr1'• l1nOil\'I) -110 •"91..,.11 6S barr•u·"'•· ss1 "°"no. 111 baU. l Yt llowt1ol, I ,..tibll1 HUl'ITtNGTOH IEACH -1\ *"° ""' I bArr•C\<cll. lSt bon•IO. ns WI>. Borge. II 1n;le<J; 110 bo"ito. ;o b••· rau.•I•, & ll•libut. )11(1 b111. HE!i!MOS• -n 1no•••1; Ml ... ~cl ba•'. 11 bof>llo. 16 barfAUldl SAHT.t. MONICA -101 •"91""' l•l 1>onl10. IO• ban , "EOONOO -!~9 ~r<>lfro: 9 t•r· •l<ucl1, 60'I baH, UI bQt!llo, s nallt>ul, iC9 •O<~ COii. M.t.RINA DEL ll:ET -31 •ft'lller\r ltl ban. II boro llg. I Nhboll PARADISE cove -,. aneltrJ: 5'0 bftu , 5 ntlltlu!, 301 bonll~. • b•"•<v<I• M0"110 IAY !Virt'• L1no1n1t -H Anitltrs: II htlltHJI, U? Hn!l coo. 1\9 •o<k coo Sl"AL IEACH -1)1 t ne!t',., 11 116•· ••CUO... w bQnao •• ,, bau. u ti1t+bu1 B~<gf', 1J •"lli<'rl. l10 bonilG, 1S ba1>. 1t rn••••••I. LONG IEACH 49elmOlll l'ler) -59 1n1l•'l: •l o.t\f, SPO bonito. J n1hbu!. BITIJ". 41 '"~1<'•11 I? bl"· ]lO bonila, 1 n•libul. (Paclllc L1nOl"1l -Ill •R~le"' lQ ....,,11~ 1e1 b•n . I vrllo-..· I•"· 9 blfflC\<01. 6.1>11,iwt &.II Cl• CO IHU Sii hpn•IG. fl'ifrpot"T Lu11lln11- 1!6 1n~len: il' b•~•. •t6 t>oflllo, l y~11ov1t1ll. 1 h11ib11• OCEl.1'!SIOE -lli ~nqio•~: 1.101 hJfflCUo;J. S!] ba••· l.JOol bonito. , "~''''I!• bl•" !J .~t1owra11. 1' lta!•t>I/" MO!i!"O BAY (Pl. Mtrrt! -lO ~~11~"· 16 hrl\I ced. Ill roe~ coo, I ••lrnon OKNAlllO -lll lngl,.,.; '6S 1>111, ' bo~I!~, 10 ~~I ')u .. ,15 tO<~ Ced 5,t.N OIEGO JM11fti<kotl l'!tPl -Ill ~nglpn; U9 1lblu1rp, 1• ve!lowt1it, 13 bt~t'" !un1, I? !;trracuclt . 21 baU, 71 bo~l!p, SA N PEDRO (3Jnd sr. Ltndintl -•S <>n<Ji<'r>; J ypllowt!1U, 1 bl!n1c\ICll. 110 c~l1co bl!•<. I h.IHb\11. 3 w~n, 1e• tw•i.. l~ bonllo. CHerm'• Undlntl -Iii 1nqlfrs1 s yellowtAil, 1 1>1rr1<11C1•, 511 caUco bl!u. Jal bonito ===== Tha belted GTW is a safety belt on wheels. A fiber· glass lwln-belt under the tough, Ouragen~ rubber lre11d shields against punctures and blowouts. Full Nygen"' cord plies -General's patented process nylon cord -add to powerful perlonnance. Famous, deep. dual tread design gives sure stop.and-go lraclion. Dislinclive, three while ring sidewall sets it apart. . . . . . . .. ~ . . . . . . ... 'Alamitos Entries ,.,,, l<rlelv. Aitl ... IN,_.... O•r Cll1r • fll$1. l'ir" flftl 1,tj l'.M. OtuPle M hi a tnll -••cu OUllleli. .,. tit! ll•Cit l<IRl1' 111.t.Ca. U(I YlfOI J V~•• Glds I~ wP Jn G•1do B Plul. Purt• 11500, llDb'I R11tu1 IK•n!sl Mocllall Udy IH Crc.1b~) 0.T\IU. "°" {Smith) Wl1'1 I'm A T1~ln IM'l~ud•I Tito 011\dv flt• "'""•I 1'1'1 lllt 'Ma" (Lloltarnl !orl• BIU• (Wri~nlJ r.er!omtil CWellDll! "•dttor C11cn Oft• IA~irJ m ' " "' "' '" '" "' '" "' '" SECON D R•Cf.. 350 v1tdl. 3 vror o~~ Ind UP In G•ldt A Ml"UI brtd l" C•ll!. Purte $1100. Henryc"•"I Don fCll'ilOll) l-lGblH" ll:ock.t (8rtflklf;w) l lU'1 R-t (II B1nll.1l Tlclv Wllth lMorrl1! Lumr,,.,.., (K•~b> A~llftlt• r.1rtfld !Strauul DKk BtU !Lllll>lm) &/Uy Mad<1y ltov (Rlclt1td11 Lll 'S Bid {Wll.tooll Sutwoad Recllel (McJle¥nct;cf1) "' '" '" "' "' '" '" "' "' "' o1ltl i nd u11. Aliowr1<tU•. JI• R1 IOll \$1""') O.o WI/ti! lArink!ttt $~...Sv Cni, !H Croibvl (up d 11> A" !l ""11m) f'•lkity (lrnll'llJ Mr SllY B•• (H1rtl ltunc:l>t• !W1t-1 $! B ~uo1r !Ka1'"1 Don Pueblo CAdalrl Mr. •rtoo jMcJtcyroi1c111 Pu•~ a:oooo '" "' "' "' '" " ' '" "' '" "' 'll'TH R.t.Cl5. »II V~'°' ' old~. Tn.. Klnd9r91~ frill~ Olv. Purw s:isoo. .... wn ....... , To Go (LIP1'•m) J•Vutr'I (;o Go R.o~I Cn1r!~ {H••O A Goin' Min Cl!; B....rul K~wean 81• TOI> C.O•orl l u"c!I• Ck1n!1l R:ecl C/lltH<" Bat rWar10t1l A·°"'11>1 To Go A-Vrue!1 Sll!l~n ,.,,.. -..1..,., "' '" J;') '" " ' '" '" '" Sll!lllNTH ••cl5. lSll Yirol• 1 v'&r .. 111.. 1no ~\"°""'"~" Trllll-lrcl Oov Put>~ -1lS'O~ P-1•1 C:.r~~ iCordou) 11.1c1•1 GG!cl 1111cn,•ao L•i:...,·.1 Go M.,, c~m.1hl C.o ~noe!>f< 1 Jt B1n~sl Gocd Sn• (ADOClac1! sna•s A Gcllr lLllll>•ml Batrro·~ R«:k!t !llrln~!Pvl Aun!lf' Lulu '" '" '" ". "' " . "' "' EIGHTH RACf.. 11~ue1.1 Sr CO<.lflt- 110 ·~·a' J ..... Oldl '"" Ull. Al•ow· •~«'· l>U"O $10,000. TM [1'du•an~· P111rg Lii (Ll11n1m) 110 8~11 Ra!!ui /Wll•Dlll •?(I Blo:>b• °'"'°'' !ADOCl141! 11l B•r•~•l<:>O (5m•thl !II M• 110.,on.lll>' IMor,,•J 116 ~;:r10IT1 /Rotlltrcll) 114 J l•nm~t Jr 1R B1n•1l 11! 1•1'Pt:!lll R.oc~"' 18rlnk\n) 111 NIJtTH 11 ... CE, ]~D Ylrd•. l l'l!•f ti~-•rd UP In G•oldft ,.. M1nU>. Sl)ITH RACE. )!Q f•rd1. ' ye>r Pur~r 1?100 Gfcl1, Tne Klfidttearlt" Trl•I• -2nd 'Jar• For Luc~ (0 8•~~) 1" D!w. PurlO '2500. Llkt RocOtl IW•h.onl 11) Riie Ff'.'ff !Llolwrnl 1:-1 GtrO"l"'o Sa• (ll lcto&rll•l •H sa'"' Ll.,,1 {fl: B1nll1! 111 D" e .. ...,,, l""G<•IS! 1111 F1.tmln EIDI>! tMorrl.11 I~ l<JP P1rr !Lll>l'!lmJ Ill J•-r Ro<•ft (H C:r~Y) 1;'0 l'IDw1• loOI>'"! l Wol)<)n) 117 T'lny t-loo tlCa~'hl 1:-0 B<I< 80,. 0...,. !C1rdoz1) 111 Piflll. Mllllt. IAl>Od1<1\ 111 (p~ G•lld (Alhlr) l!l 1'HIRO llACl5. HO ..... ~ 1 Vftr lllu!l>tr lltOll>er lAdl'f) 1'0 S-.:t~I Tonto lP.tor) 11$ old.I. Clllrnlf19. l'urs. UOOG. Clt•rnlft'll Cl•HY R«•fl !Smllhl !;'Q Tntn\ Pocn IP•H"'! Ill Prktt S3JQ!I, I c=:=.:..:::=.:::::::::::::_ __ _.::::__:::::_::::.:_::::.:::_ ___ _;.;: Jo llurfS• !Wleb<,irg} 1?1 •**** ...... ***"*"******* .... **'*************"**..........,. Sgglll!'d WIVl'll! (Acf•I•\ 117 ft: . .. . • Mr. 6•• Clll1'9c ll l~h1m1 1111 YOUR PROBLEM » r::t~,,f~=~:~ .... ~/. 1.:.: •• ::i: · : :. "•~um D«1t: IW•t..onl Y I I JI ·1 ~ "'"'' "'"uesi CR:iley ) ou wan o se some 1 em • ~<>0t1«1 o..v11 tMorr1.1 :::It that you no longer need but :: G•I• Go M1n 10 B1nk1J n1 ! someone else can use for • JDURTH RACE. 1'' v•rdt. J ""'' : N 0 T Q V E R $ S Q : . ,. E 111111 i : YOUR ANSWER: : . ,. .. You cllll THE DAILY PILOT, ask for • ! Classified Advertising, and plac• a ! Movie Net Event Set • • Headlined by more than 20 ! ,,,.-,...._ p IL 0 T • rilm and television stars, the : t1!\ ~. • . : • \._~ I • 35th. annual Molion Picture .. .. ....... --.. ! Tennis Toumament "'ill be : . ..... PEN NY • held Aug . 14·17 al tlie No rth ; "· '\ : American Rockwell recreation ! ''.., PINCHER • ,. center in Los Angeles. ! • The 1ourncy "'ill b e ! CLASSIFIED AD ! sponsored by the San Fernan.I.., "' do v,11., rce,, ctub 1oc the :: AT OUrt SPECIAL LOW RATE ! benefit of the l\1olion Picture1 : 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS ! Reli ef Fund, Youth Tenn i s -tr • Foundaliog. and Valley Press .., : Club Founda!ion. ! ANO YOUR CRED IT IS GOOD! • • The public may "cu re ! D I A L ti 0 W D I R E C T • tickels {adults $1 , children 501.. : cents) at the tournament t 6 4 2 .. 5 6 7 8 ,.. grounds, 5353 \Vest ln1pcri:il j• ! Blvd., Los Angeles. Parking is : !Toll free North Co\<nl'f 540·12201 • free. I!°••• .. ••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••+ .. ••••••• .... •,,..•••••! Most Tire! "-------\.. ~--~1-· --~ @ntiriental RaP14 RADIAL * Provides safety at high speeds .• *Gives over twice-the milegae .• Second in the standings is Dan Gurney. Tenth is George Folbner, winner of the Phoenix 150. Ronnie Bucknum. it may be Tecalled, "'On last October in his first oval race appearance aside from lndy, the Michigan 250. I Donohue, who has made limited appearances on the champ trail due to other racing <XlmmitmenlS, has also impressed the 1ndy veterans. He set an all·lime record for qualifying lipecd I by_ a rookie at the speed\vay. LONG, LONG MILEAGE *Saves gas too! A lol of knowledgeable racing people now have second th:M.Jghts about the "farm system" lheory USAC clings lo. It holds that to bc<'ome a successful Indianapolis driver one must work his way up through 1nidgets and sprint cars to the charn- 1 pionship trail. . Road racing experience right no"'"· is producing 1nore top drivers than midget and sprint car racing are. I made a rule once, but it gets broken all the Ume. The rul e was never to become lo friendly with race drivers. All too often a friendship like that has a sad ending. It happened again the other day. as Mexican nalion<1l hero Moises. Solana met death in an obscure hillclhnb at Valle de Bravo near 1'.1exico City. Solana was the jai alai champion of his country, sort or a l\.texlcan \Villie 1'.1ays. 11e wanted lo be an 1ntemational racing driver, bul after 11 brief fling in this country la st year decided he had belier stick to playing jai alai professionally and driving race cars ror rec· rtalion. He had discussed formula I racing with Enzo Ferrari Jast year, but he \.\-'as making too much money at jai alai to go abrorid. The really disturbing "'Ord about Solana's death 11as that he was trapped in a burning car for a little more lhan <Jh hour , because apparently there was not adequate fire equipn1cnt on hand . Bullfight School Open , To Public in Mexico The chance to become matador-for·a-day is I he ne"·cst attraction for visitors to Tijuana. San Die go· s neighbor city acro~s the l'\tex· ican border. A coastal resorl is undcr developmen t where bullfight.ing lessons arc open to men. women, and childrrn over 12 years ol age 111 the first and only ''bullfighting college" in the world. The school ls located al a new $1.$-milUon complex call· ed Villa Playas, four n11les west or downtown Tijuina Lwol15 In the sport w Ill b< open to amateurs and pro· fessionals. Vlslto~ are en· couraged to come and watt.h Jeaons iD progress. For beg inners and am1teun, le150ns begin with lnstniclion! In technique. or capework. Sludenls learn how lo use a cape and "pass" the red malerlal at bull. 1'he second s1cp in in· st rudlon involves a real calf.! or "becera", Th~ bull fight school uses only calves in both J <1malcur a n d profession:il 1 (.•ourscs. I Each calf wiU only be ustd two or lhret times before he becomes 18V\'Y to the. sport and has lo be. retired from the tidw>ol. Animals will not be 1 killed as part of the in slruction. , Bullfight. amateurs rn a)' enroll In a t"'"·o-month courst.I or 8 bciJinner's 1n1roductory c·our~t-of rive I w o. h o u r ~wons. r.uch two -ho u r se~s1un C'Q5f~ fj The '"'O- monlil, 120-hour course C03ls 131,() ' ..... rl~s S2.l8 ftd. LA. ldl. ~llt £18 17 35ll4l tllhefe~s wh1tew,11. Other \11ts compar,bly !"ICCd. MAG WHEELS SS/8000 Super Sport Chevrolet, Plymouth & Dodge • Mirror.polish throme • (15st 11luminum center • Theft.proof hub cap • Other styles ava ilable 646-5t:~3 FULL PLIES OF NYGEN" CORD t Your BankAmericard ., Master Ch •rge Don Swedlund FRONT END ALIGNMEN T WHEEL O ur 'P'!eiol••t' ptec.is•~n lo!'lonc• botll f ro"' wlltf'\ COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Doily - I I I ON FL YING TRAPEZE Crewman on Pal Car- riker's P-Cat El Tiburon takes to the trapeze as the Arizona Yacht Club skipper beads for finish to win the Southern California Championship at Long Baxter Barely Misses Getting Own Trophy ' Bob Baker or Redondo Beach had just one bad race, • but it was enouah to bring him up a quarter-point short of the unique dlstlnction of becoming the first winner of a sailing trophy dedicated in his honor. Baker, 45--year-old engineer from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club and a resident of Redon· do Beach, had a series of 1-7-l· 1·1 in the ·annual Pacific Catamara n Southern California Championshps Aug. 2-3 as an event or the annual California International Sea Festival al Long Beach. His score was 10 points. But young Pat caniker of _,Phoenix's Arizona Yacht ll.ub ~::was a bit more consistent with .:. a 3·1·2·2·2 serie.s and 9~ ':,points. He thus was first to " have his name inscribed on • .. the bronze trophy which ·~depicted Baker's 1.renerable P-•. cat No. 82, the boat in whicb ~ the 2().year yachtsman cam- : .... paigned so successfully before ·.~ret1rin1 it recently in favor of :;:.. a new bull, the Turtle. • .,, The finish was a repeat of .. ,, the Desert Regatla at Lake :_;Havasu City in which the 21· .· year-<>ld Arizonan and his El Tiburon shaded the 4~year-old father of seven earlier this year. .Trask Wins Blue Star Don Trask d the host San Francisco Yacht Club won the PaciUc Coast District (Blue Star) championship I a s t wetkend, asauring himself a berth in the world cham- pionship (Gold Star) later this year. Second in the d istrict com- petition was Barton Beek of Newport Harbor Yacht Club •• and third \'13S Alan Raffee, San Diego Yacht Club. The first five finishers in the Blue St a r championships •• qualify for the "wo rld's" if .. , they have not preYious ly ·: qualified in fleet e\iminalions. ; Final standings in the Blue •• SW' l. Don Trask. SFYC, 1·1·3-1- DNS -6 pl!; 2. Barton Beek, NHYC, 2·2-4-3-1-7 pLs; 3. Alan Raffey SDYC, 4-6-2-3+-13; 4. Pet.e Bennett, SDYC, 11·7·11·~ .. 2 -25; S. Ralph De Luca, LAYC, 25 pts: 6. Tom Black· ·~ alltr. St. FYC-27; 7. Lowell ~ Norlh. SDYC -'ll. - Class B honors In the class, most popular multihu\I in the world, were won by Mike Sai.. terlee of South\\·e stern YC with 9 ~4 points earned with a l ·S-l·Z..l series. The regatta "'as sailed in light airs and under an un- characteristic umbrella of low clouds on Long Beach Harbor. Results: Class A (19) 1. El Tiburon. Pat Carriker (Arizona YC, Phoenix), 9:;.4 (3- 1·2·2·2}: 2. Turtle , Bob Baker (Cabrillo Beach YC), 10 (l-7·1· l-ll: 3. Brokatt; Joe Ritldick IABYC), 27 ; 4. No n ame, Thomas Omohundro (Costa Mesa ), 27 ; 5. Aquarius. Norm Marchment (Malibu YCJ. 28; 6. Loki, Earl Thornburgh (Malibu YC), 33. Class B (7) -1. No name. fi1ike Satterlee (Southwestern (YC). 91,4 (1·5-1-2·1); 2. No name, Joel Blekenship lCabrillo Beach YC). 11 1h: .3. va·a , Lew Parker !Lake Oroville YC). 13: 4. Cat'sass, R. F. Lawyer (~1alibu YCJ, 22. Rod Eales Takes U.S. PC Laurels Rodney Ea\es o f San Diego Yachl Club won the nationa l Pacific Class <P CI cham· pionship last \\'eekend in a regatta sailed in his home waters unde r the s ponsor ship of the San Diego Yacht Club. E a les was at the helm of La Cucaracha, a boal he had cre we d on in four out of t he six limes the boat had won the naliooal championship i n prev~ous years. In the previous champlonshlps La C ucaracha was owned by \Vally Springs tead of SDYC, In this year's championship E a les was the owm!r and skip. per and Springstead was a member of the crew. San Diego Yacht Club boats took four of the first five places in the nnal race of the three-race series. Only Tony ~1artineau 't: Man-0-War from Pacific Mariners Yacht Club -\\'hich finished third - spoiled the clean s weep. l\lartineau W8S runner-up In the series and Bud Caldwell's Panic from SDYC was thlrd. ~ Long Beach Sea Festival • D.ll1.Y PILOT JO LIWAL NOTIC& ; LEGAL NOTIC& LEGAL NOflC» LEGAL NOTICE: Lt.It t• .......,, Cll•T•~ft 0111 IUllMIP. 1'1t' t~P•1tt01t CCH.lltT Oft THI Cll;Tlllltu.'f• OP luttMIU lllKTiflOUI Ml.Ml I MOTICI Of' tNTlllft ... t• STA.Ta Oii CALl~IUll.& 111011 lllK:TITI0'-'.1 fllMll 'T1'f ~ ... Cilrttfy '-M -(IUTI llCVl lT'I' lllT'ftlQT THI COUN'n' CHJ' N.Ulel 1'lMI lll'M""""" ._. qrttfY M .. ~ ductlfiit • MlltfM ti !Ml L-1 Dt., IS-. 4111 . atlt l'U.'J .. A,..., Mtllll • ........... at P'.O. ._ .... <MM C.t., ~. Cellf9nllt, ""'*'" "" fie> J.IOTICI!: 11 ...,.., ,,.. 19 ,,.. NOT1C• Oji HIA~t Of' tln'ITM* ~ C..1""1!.l .. 111\W ""' ~ ftr191 fl.... fl1"I -tf AOVAMCIO c,..,,., fl THOMAI c; w,cK .... 011 ,._.,.Of' Ult WILL AMO~ el COAIT PltOllll& IOHAL MATl~IA.U •M ~ .. 11 fttlll II_,.. HlltlllT w. llJ.11&,. .,_,,._, ...._. L•n••• ,,,, "1'UY PltVICll ... t!\9t wlf """ II c-..... " .... feltowlftl "-.... ~· ..... " tlll ...... i. "-f1ftle of SA.LUO e:PolMCIJA. o.oe..t MIN • IM toti.w!M ,.,..,... ....... -lfl full '"" ,i.e. " ~ It II c .... ~ (~ty " or... ,,,,. .; NOTICI! II HIRll'I' OIYl!N TMt 11trM "'"'II•"', .. , •• NlllHf\ce It .. "0.-WI! . c1nlM.11 ·~ • tlQll'lty ~""'' It ROSI!! ,LORES flM ti*' lltft1l1 I .. tt-IO!llWtt • (trl W, :loMI""" ltll UNI Of •• 1Mt.lt ... bt ' Ct' ..... 11'1' Oeiller 1M r. I . I r. , .... ,.,. "rot>fJt .. Jolllt Wiii .,,. .... Mtrvvn l , ,lth!Mdl. 1nn Sin I.ti.... ,.,. MH&, C.llf. ,.. • ttWlftd .. HAlllTl'Oito lllNANCIAL i..v.nc:t ot L•fttn Tette,.,......rv .. "'"' «t 1..tnt. Hvnll!lllO!I •..cf\. C11H. OtlM AueUll 1. IMt CO.l"ORAT.ON/ ttcw'tf 1"1rty, ..,... I !llMr, r'ttt...-..ct It wftkll t. m.-. "" Dtltcl J111Y .. lNf. C"'I W, ,...,....., Mnlntit MdHA It IOI' .,.. LI •rt• fllr ....... H ttkllll,.. ~ "'-' tflt lln'll W ~" l. ,I~ SMtt of (llltonlllo Of'Mtt Cwnl'tl A-1...-AftMlel. C.-1'1 fA Lit "'.l;c,3 1 Pit? of ~""9 ""-.,_ "-"""' WI &llM fll Cillftrnt1, Ortnt• Cll.HllY: Ofl AWwt 1. lNf, ....,.. mt. 1 .,...,,. ~"'-&ttM " c.m.•1t. Pl fw A119..,.t ,..-,....-.H;#"A;M;i<"ll'rfM o..-ltllY ,._ ""' ........ l'Mlt-1 *'"" ~ )\ 1!'11 fir Mirt.St.tt.Jtl'Mflt.ltr ¥,,.....,.,.,..._.__: .. .,.;,..._,..~ .. ---~1 '°"',,_ If DINf1'n'ltnt "'-I If "Ill f'vtlk Ill Mf ,., MN $11"' 1'1.....,.lly •-tN C..ri W • .ltltMNn UH!i tt""' .... l'Mf'"411 bl UM!tlll W, Ill_.,,,, 11T court. 11 1111 Wtd l!ltftltt &tr"'' In JIM ''*"" M4fVYft L. ,..,....a: ~n " le .. lfl6 --""'*-nltnt " ~II> n11tvrM .,,.. "'1i..n.nt, 11.ttntfl\lft .,., Cil'I el "1111 AM. C.llftrtlll. mt 19 bl ""-"r-"""""' -It .. h !11.t wflfilll'I IMr,_,,.t Md fvrftiollllnt1 tf Otl:lttr CWl!fl,.. 1r-rlY 0.1..i A.ll'llltl 1, lNt WOIO'lllH h tflt wl#lkl lnetr_,,,,, Ind tck""""1tOttd Ill lllK\ltH tllt M-. -llalN ti 21'1 '°itCfl'ltll Aw., C•I• W. I!, ST JC»4N, .Ot'IOW~ ... 111 lff(llltd tM Nll'lt. tOFFICUrol S(AL) Mnt. Ctllnl'I If Ottntt. IMlt 1r c-" Cl9rll (OFl"ICIAI. llAI:.) LOUii J. HUMILf (tllf(llo"I•· ..... lllltlfltl• klltWll •• I Mc'OW•N 6 OR••N Mt,., It, H.,.,.,. NotlrY "'*lk l"ROMAX MACHIHI COMl"ANV. SJt •· Cllt..ntt A'ft. Nfll1,., Public -Ctllltr111t $11'9 of CIUlontlt Tl'lf "°'"'ld itc11rll¥ trtMICll<l!I "'!II °"'"" CAii..._ '"rlnclNI Oftlc. bi l"rJMki•I Offlc• l" Iii -"'9tld CWI w ilhor ,,,. 1'11'1 dot' Tll: 11141 UH11I °''"" Ctllll-"' Oru111 C-" ol A111111t .. lH•. •t It AM II tllt olf!U:S I At ......... 1 fer l"tfllil!Mr Mv CtmmlulM bl>lrtt My Gln'\fllltolo!I l!.u>ltfl of UC1oow1 &. Vtt>f""t.' 1Dt Wttl "'"' Beach. P·Cats were designed and built in Newport Beach and are one of the most popular small multi· hulls in the world. • RUNNER·UP -Fonner champion Bob Baker of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club watches carefully as his crewman hikes precariously in breezy going dur~ ing final race. Baker won four of the five races but placed s eventh in another to Jose the championship by a qua rter-point. P11bli.hetl Or-,_, Otllf .. I... f+W. M, 1tn Mlrtfl 11. Im $1 Lei """*' (1llf0f11l1 AIM!'""" tllr A1111111I I. t , 14. IHt 14Jwt l"llbllMW Of'Mt9 C"tt Dtlltf ''""' l"uOll!Ohtd Or-COid Otll'f "°"· 5"vrto1 l"lr1'Y Httla ' II e 1111" A11t111Jf I, I, IS. It, lftt 141-" Allt..,_I I, U. :1:2. It, INf Urwt 11\tl L"""' lo ''"""'"1 - -nc,.... LEGAL NOTICE l'lolftiu wltlll11 "'-l'MtnlM « Stcllon LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE "-"·' c1vt1 0..1. -------;:;;;..----:--:--·1 ___ ...:'.:'.::'.'.:'.'.'.::...'.'.::'.~::'.'._ __ .1---'.::'.:::;:.;;;-:.::::::._ __ .! St l1r ts._.... to tllt s.cur..i l"1rlY. fl~U74 P4df'I tll bll1ln1U ll&ll'ltt 1.W 11idr"N1 llttd lW Ct:RTll"IU.TE 01" •u1tNl.SI ••R Int CIRTIPIC•T• Ofl •UllNlll. 11'11 O.blc• fOI' "" "'''' , .. ,. i.11 11111, l'ICTITIOUS NAN.I: S11l"l!RIOR COURT 01" TMI! l"ICTITI0\11 NAMt: 111: Stmt. Thoi 11nder1"nei:I OOor1 nrtlf'I' Pie II ten> ITAn 01" CALll"O•NtA POR TM \lflfff11otn..il dOet urtl+r' M II fOll· OATf01 ,.,,..,., S. IN•. dllt.111111 • blillMH II 1111 • lllY-TNI COUNTY o• OIU.NOI! lil.IC!lns • blll!MH .... t111 Ct""' DrlYt, HARTl"OlllD l'IHANCIAL Wt,, oln11!1lm., C1lttomlt. u-llw flC· IM. A'4UH VIiii Ptrll, CilN ""*!IM lldlllout ,.,,.,. COllPORATION llllCM llr,.., ,...,.. ol EXTllUllotf DIE HOTIC• 01" HllARllUJ OP l"ITITION lie,.,. o1 VILLA i>ARK REALTY 1N 11111 Slc:UrM P~rl¥ co. and 11111 Miii tlrm Ill --Md.,"" 01' P•O•ATI 01' JOIHT WILi. AMO Mid fir"' II --., !I'll. i.1111Win. •~: R-ld •. L~. tlllowlne ""°"' ~ "'"" I" 11111 t l'ld Llnw:•s TllTA.Mll!NTAllY -whon "'"" lfl 11111 ""' •ltu ol A_, pll<:f al rulCllflCf !1 .. fcl!oWI : Ellllt of JESUS ESPINOZA., 0.Ct"'411, ~ ii 11 ftllrlwl: LI ... .t. VtMrtU OGn.11!1 MeiYln GW.r, lJfJI Stfll• NOTICE 1$ HEREllY GIVEH TMI Wilttr ~nllpp, t71t Ci~llr Otl._, Al"'""n •,', .... M1rl1. Founllln V1l1ty. C1llfor"l1. ROSIE l"LOllES f\11 lllM M•tln 1 Piii· VHll l"trlt. (•IN, Utt Wiii "' 11,..1 Dlled JulY 'Zf, ,... llotl for PrtlNll .. Joint Wtll •I'd "' Dlltd JlllY JO. 1... Lit AM•llt. Ctllfwn .. "'"' 0-.kl M, G11¥lf IUlltn{I of L1ttar1 THll!nlr!l1ry to '°111· Wt tltr khlll-.. ull!lll'letl <mintl C-1 0.lly 'llot, s11i. of C•Ufcmlt. LOii A11911U COllfl!Y: llot'oer, ~ lo wflldl r. l'NICll kif $1111 al (1llfotnl1. Or•nr• C-IV: A ...... 11 .,. 1Hf 1471 ... °"' A1111u1t tt. 19H. blfor• ...... No"rv lllnlltr N f'llClltlltn. •lld thll 11\t """ •nd On JU!Y ,,, IMt. btfort mt •• NoltrY•l-------------- LEGAL NOTICE Publl{ m and !Of' Mid ,,,,.,, ..,_.lh' •IKI If t.Mtlnt 1"' -f\11 *" Mt f'ublle In Ind '" Mld ,, .... Pll'Mllllly -••rad ~kl M. Ootr _.,,...,. ft mt for A.11111$1 "' INt, II 9:3' A.M., In !I'll ,_,, ... Wtlkr Sc.llnltH k-i. mt to 11 Ill !IN ----II "'*"11tio coott"-« Dwtrl!Mrol Ne . 3 ef uld bt 11\t ""-wfllH ,,...,. It tuOtcrlMol•I-------:-,,,,::------... to 11M wtlll" Ill~ w.11 cwrt, ef 1'0I W•I Eltllltl Slr"I. In !hi to ll'lf wtlhln lnitrvn\1nl tfld ~· P·M• ..0:-~ Pll uK'UNMI 1111 1ttM. Cll'Y flf Salllt Aflt, C11tfcrnl1, N Ill tlll'CllfW t11t -· CIRTll"ICATI 011 •UllltlU (SEAl.l tlttM ........... 1. '"'· IOl"FICIAL SEAL) 'ICTITIOUI NAMI I UCllLE A. ltAYMOND W. E. ST JOHf'/, MARY K. Hl!'NllT Tt-iE UNOElllSIGNEO do Mreb¥ ctn!N NoltrY Pllbt" · C1llfer11!1 C-"' Clerk. NCI..., f'vfllk:.(1tlfornJ1 "'" ""' irt (OlldilC!llll 1 IM/alMH 11 PflMINI Ol'lkt In MtOWIN 6 ORllN, Prll\Cip.t Office In lle' Wnl COll'lllWIMlllll'I A¥lf1Ut, Lot Angtlh (O\lflly Ut I . CkltMlll A.,.., Or1111t (ounlv Fulltrlon, Ctlllomll, uf\der "'' tl(tlllot.lt M~ CommlHltll (11.Pltt• O,._., Ctlll, My COtfll'l'llUltn E•,lre1 trrm n11,11 of CCW ASSOCIATE&. tnd Au<1u11 1J, lt7'11 ''" ''"I '""''" NO¥. )(, "" lhtl ••'" 11 .... la COINPOltd Gf '"'' lalltw• Publl"1'4-Orlfltt C.U! 0.11'1 l'lltt, """'"'' Mt .. tllllfMo". l"ubll1hN 0•1.,.• C111I Otl" l'llol, 1,.., w"'"' fllmt.I t<ld 1clclr11111 1r1 11 A111u1I I, .. 1J. 1', 1Ht 10?-ff l"llllHIMll On-C.111 OtllY Plitt, Auvust 1 ••• u, n. ,.., U2741 tolleV•t: . """"'' •. '· l(. INt 14''"" •••!Min C..!rKMn, Inc: .• l)IW Wtot LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE c__.11t1 A-. Fu111rt1n. LEGAL NOTICE c11fflf'n11. -------;:;;;;0 ------1. __ _.::::::::::::...:::::::.:::::___ •AR ltM CCW Entt"'r\lt!I. !M6 Or.1.n ,..,.....,., ,...,._ NOTICI 0, t.ILI O' Sffl ltedl, C.llforfllt. CIRTll"tCATl.0' •UllNlll MOTICI Ofl PUILtc KIA• 1N I l'llllONAL l'RO,IRTY AT DATl!O ffll1 W dtY of J._. 1"9. ,ICTITtOUS N.... • ... oa1 TM• CITY COUNCIL Of' PUILK: IALI 1eor-.1~ s .. u ,,.,_ 1indfflllflM ff t:lf'llty !!WY tte TNI CITY Ofl POUNTAI N YAt.LtY A,._I lllATTAIN COHTll.ACTOR.S, INC. ~ 1 tMJllMat f11 2fiJS Stnlt Alll NOTICE II NEltEIV GIVEN 11'11! lfl SUttrlef Cllltt OI' tM llilr ol Ctll!Otn!i t C1l!lornl1 (Df11C!rtllotl Av.r1119. 0tt1 MKll, C1Llferft(I, 11n1tr tM TllUlllY, A11tu1t le, '"'' ti l iot ,.,M. In tor "'-Couf!IY of Oftllte 1,. 1ttt ...... lhlr 11 llY EdWln •. lltllltln. Ptll~nr ftdllloin firm "''"' of II .. II "" Council Chtll'llMrt. City H•ll. 1'200 "" llllfto 9f MAllL N. OllORN ccw £NTERl'RISfl l"OllTAILE CflANKSHAl"T GlllNDING S,..er A.,._. ~nltl!I V1 ll1y, DllC'.fflld.. • A Llm!llcf '1""9nlll1 1,,., 11'111 1tld firm 11 ~ ol '"'' Cllltorn11. ll>t Cllv Colinc!I wlh Nllll I Hotln It hlrtbv elYffl thtt lht lift· e, H1rrv s. c- 1o1io..1M __,., wholt .. ..,.... In fvll Plllllk llt1r1.,. (WI lllt felloWlN. dfflltonM Wiii "" IT Pllbhc .... Oii OI GtMrll fltr'-tnd •IKn of """'-' .,.. •1 hlllwl: I ...... at-Ml. 9'1 -..._.,llc1tltn 1fMr 11'11 1111'1 t1v 14 A11tinl, 1Ht, II !ht It Skll'llY Wl'lllDll'll •tv Dl<rit. J11S S.11!1 Alll A,,_, l'*"tlliN lW J .•. Clerk Cl. flOIUHllnt Clf'f!ct ff OANliLSON " ST. CLAIR. Slll!t GtMrtl Pl..,_ CMll MM•. c~r ... rnll. It.~ I Id d\1-of JOflf! ... P-ITT locatt<I MCI I03. "' '°""" l'lowff llrtel, (lfy of Loot ·~ Me• c-Ko1ul111ll. 1S1S S.!\!I AM ~........... "'°"' •• i.tu '"' wt•1 "' Broolr.lwut Mle11$, C-1¥ of Les ....... 1es. !1111 ol CP>er•I p"""*" C~ll M•M. Clll"'r11l1 Slrttl, tfld t6I ""'' er 1111 let! ""'!ti (tllfor1111. 11 1111 lllthnt 1...t Dnl bldOer, STATE OF CALIFORNIA I l>lllecl A11t1t1! •. lHt ol WI"''' Av1n1,1t lrOll'I Al GIMr1I incl autllld II «lnflrmtllon by itld COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES! '" Rt' DIVll A1rl<;111!ur1I Dltlri<t lo Rl·l'D 6IGO Sue>1rlor Cturl. Ill IPll rleht, title tl'MI 111-0.. !toll inl dlY ol JuN, 1 .... bite ... ltlHllkl tlDUtllUlr S!ntll ''"'tr' R111oe..cr •<Id Plt!WIN ,,,..., ol ••Id Otel•lld ,, IPll llm• 01 ""'·. Not1ry Pub!l{ In""' tor Hill "'"· SI Mt o1 Ctlltornl~. Or1ne1 Cou"lv. Dtwlol>ment Ce"' b I 11 I" I Dl1!rlct Olll'h Inf Ill Ille rltlll, Hiit tnd f"ltl'tl r111dl,,. llllr1lfl. d111Y cornml111oMd uit Oii A11tltll A. lNJ, ""°"' IM. 1 Nol1ry ll"ulllltn W ""'' rtllfldtvt d11tr!cl tllfl tllt etMll of .. Id dKllaed 11u I C-•-m, "rlOnlll' IPflftt"ld EDWIN II!. 'ulllk In 111d tor MICI ~ltlt. H•-flly CIM!tr.tl UN l"ermll No. <41 !lllld 111 tlllrM by -rtllon o1 ltw •r etlll,...,llt. 11.olTTAIH. ~to mt to Ill 1111 Prt'J. 11>H1rM Riv t11vll ,,.., """•kl H-1•11• ctnhHld,.,, wlltl l'hl• 1-Chl"91. '""' lrllfl or Ill lddlllofl ... lrlll .. Id .... , of ll>t C.Orp(lftllolt ""' .. ecvtftl "" Mown to ..... "" ... Ill• ...,,_ wtltlt This -tlllr " llllM ··-'" Pll"lllnt -....... It !Ill llmt llf """'· h IM .. larf901"9 IM!Nrnfl't Oii Ollll" of ""' or-........ 11'1 ~fitll!I lo 1111 wllllll lflo .te f1lt l"ltnlll.,. l.IWI llf IM STiit ef tU thl (.ll'!t l" PIAll'lll l"l'-r1Y tltulltd -911en !Mreln lll!l'lld, Ind ~· s!T\HTll<>I Ind «Mowled9 ... lllt'I' PktlNd c.11,., .. i. fo.v't. Clft u•" '"·I .... tn 1111-Co.In"' of °"'"''' Sitto "" " .... "" WCI! ~·""' ••ICl!ltd .... """' "" ,_,..,. VllJ.¥' ZMklt OnllrltMe. Cthtornl1, P1rllc11ltt1'r ftKl'(bed •• "" ...... . <SEAL ) 'nit ZIOllfltl ~-. hwllnt MIPt. t.W ttllowt. .....it: WITNESS mY hind lflll .tflotltl tttl. Jotl'llll E Div!• bllllllff I t I tit fll.t In tllt '°ltnnlnt lt11ld.,.I Mtmbtohll Clftlliuh N (Sii i) ~llf'Y Pilti11c.Ct llfomlt 0...rtrMnl tfld t r1 lvt lllatlll Ill° llUlllk ft11 C..ldorl lttl" l"Ollndlllorl of L1tuM M1rrltl Hemlrtlfl Pr1Ml1t1 Off1ct 111 !~ aM dt"'lllltlon. llllit. ll'lf Mtmbtl'lfl\I C.rlltlafto Sltlll Noltll' Pllblk • CtMfol'nlt Drtr'IH COUnl'I TlleM dltlrlnt ,. titttlfr lfl l1v ... OI' In N .• Cltl'llllatt Nt. 1M1, ~11111 Hiiie lt1MIPll Oflkt In Mr C°"""i.1111'1 Eul... *""ltllfl 19 ,,._ ll'OIOtlll Wiii Ill t lvtn Mulllll Ne. ,lttttn. Vil Alltffft Cllln"' Jufll U, 100 1n °""'""'"ltr ,. • N, II llirllltr lft. T•MM el 1111 cttll II\ ll'l'M rnentY 111 ITATf 01' CALIFORNIA ) Pv11tl11'1ed 0•"111 (Diii Oti llr ,1111, lorl'l'lt"'ll 11 lllllNll, Y8ll nllY etoflltd lllt 11\t Ullllecl Slt ltl 111 «lllfl•-11111 o1 11111, COUNTY OF LOS ANGILESI n . """'"' .. 15. Zl.1t. \"9 14'Mt '"""'"' OtM""""' ti Mt·U~U '"" or ,,,, QI/I ~ lllllMI t\'ldtt!clOlll ~ °" Jwnt l. '""· ..._, mt. lrlt _,,.. rtfft h -llllYt '"""'-llOft 11CUl'td by Mortt191 fJlf Trvtt D-ff"ltfltd, 1 Nllll'Y l"Ublll: In tM tor 11ld LEGAL NOTlCE CITY COUNCIL OP' THE tit irll ..,_rtv 11 told. T'" !Plr ,etll el ll1te, ".._..11y 1-l'td stDNl'f CITY OF ,~NTAIN Vl\LLEY lfMVfll bid f11 Jlt--llld with bid. WEINllEllG, HARRY S. COONIN. ,,... l!.vt"" H. Ott." 1141 er off1r1 "' be 111 wrlllnt ll'ICI wlll MAX COONl!N, 11-'-..,. Ill Ill tt.. ,.J.UU D"""" (t"' C1trt:' lit •lc:1lv1H1 t i 1111 1toru1ICI olfl<I t i tlW --wllow "'"'" •rt wbKrlbtd Ill CERTl1'lc.All OF IUSINt:SS l"llljl11lltd Ortntt C..11 DtllY .. llol. Timi lfhr tM flrtl ,ulllkllltft 11trlOI tlld IPW wllfll" 111111'\H'Mftl llld t~lldtld l"ICTITIOUI MAMI A111uil I. lHf un4 t btlert IUllt o1 1111, 11111 thrr nec:i.rttd ""''· Tiit vrwlertlt'*" 6oa ~•r11+r' Ill II (Of\• Otltd July 1!. !Ht. WITNESS mr ~ '"" effklll Stlt d!Jctlnt a t11.111MH ti • ~rOCluctlon LEGAL NOTICE EletllOt' 0. McMkktfl, Eftculrl~ IS.II) 'Itel. • NtwPorl lle1dl. Ctlllernl .. _,_, ot lllt Ell•lt el "'Id Ottt•ttd. Hl,,ltl H•..,llfcft .,.... tkllll"'" !Ir"' ..,.,,... o1 ~LA.STIC OANl•UGN a ST. CLAIR, I .TTYS, Nct1rv Pvbtlc • C1l1N>t..i1 TICHNOlOGY tfld it.I ulll """ 111 °"'" 1telS S.llt Ma. 'II S..tli ,...,_, llnll l'r1Ml11I Off•ct 111 ,._,, "' "" tctl-lne """"· ......... ,.OTH:J OJI INTINTION Lit A,...., (•llfllnlll• ... " LOI ........... c-"' 11&11'11 Ill fllll fflCI plKI .t ruldellCI: 11 II TO CllATI l lCURITY INTlllllT Tl'I 1 U1$1 6U-11J1 ROTMMAlt • NA.MILTON ,.,11ow1: 11K1. 61t1 ·•Ur u.c.c.1 i"11blllhtd °"'"-" c.111 011no 1';111. a1t Wlllllln .......,..,.. .. , .... J. GllL 21n1 ... i.ow. CtvlM, NOTICE 11 f\lrlby elWfl ,. It'll Ju.Ir JI t lld .......... , I. I, "" UJ74t LM ........ C111Mn!M,.... Ctllfol'fllt Cre<lllto!'• of MAlJllllCE LINDEii, 0.btor. _ llfn. 011M Alltllfl '· '"' Wfllll tani.in. ....... It '°1 Ptc:fflt LEGAL NOTICE '"""' l"flflk J. Giff CCIII! Hltllwtr. Seti lffdl, courttr ol '"°''lllM o,.,.. CMll D1ll1 ,1111, S111r flf ~llfool'nlt. Ottlllt COi.inly: OtlMt. Slth., Ctlllonilt. ""''. r.tOJrl-A11111tf .. u.12. "'· lfft U)'Mt OI\ Alll\lll 6. IMf """! 1M 1 Not•rv tor lnttfftl II ....,, .. bi Cf"liW b'¥' ~ Ull 11"4 ,ubHc In •nd' fer ·,.rd $ '"· • .entntlh' tor '"' 1r•nlW lo \INION OIL COM-HOT!Ci' Gii I.tr.LI OJI LEGAL NOTICE '""'.Id F .. llk J Giit t.-n i. Pl'll to l"ANY OF CALl,OINI"' ltalrff '''"'' •IAL P•OJllITY AT tit IM _._ W..0M fl&MI II 1~ W11D11 ltvll"lll ~..-ll .. , South P•.IYAT• JI.LI • lo the within 1Mtn.111'1'11f Ind fdtnowlidt" lltrltfen ltrtff. LOI Al!mrfft. c_,, "' .... ........ NOTIC:I •Y T ...... , •••• ~ hi tKK\19" TM llrrit L11 """11'1· Sit h"' Ctllfornll. Sultrlw Ceurt If IM 11111 ol C1ll!wftl1 TO· ClllEOITDRS 01" (LIFTON I /OFFICIAL !EALI ' Thi pr-"Y kl wf<ldl 11\t 5Kwll¥ flt 1111 C-'Y ol Orllltl I~ lht Mlfftr Ill' DUNU.N, TllANSl"fROR • . OltMAH I/. UTT lnltrffl will Ill CrHllll II. lrl ,....,,L t ll 1111 EJttto of Nl!NRllTTA M. THl!'ISIN, ,LEASE TAKE NOTICE 11\tl "°"• W Not1rv Pl!Oltc • Ctlllorllll flXlllft l Ind Miii~. "'"""""' '"" °"'''"· •ICl'I .......... ,.,.._nl No $t(llel\I t lOS 'rli'l(!Ml Ortln ln lllml1hl1111 l'I Otbttf ~Int •rt11ertY Heflct It lleftllf' tl\IWI lhll Ille IHI'> 1M tlt7 of tt>e Unlflml COft'lrntrdll Orll'lllt CoutllY -!Ka"" t i ttl Pf.Clfl( (Mt! Hlehwlv, dfrtltt11cf will It'll t i •rlv1lt 111t. lfl er (lff, HfREIT NOTl,IED 11 follDMI: My CommbllCn !••l•~I Slit llldl. C-1'1 If Of1ntt, &!tit ot tftw tllt 1111'1 dt r ol A11111at, 1fff. II ll>t I. Thi Trtntltro.r, CLll"fON I , DUN· M.lrdl 11 ltn Ctlli9rflll. I nf llutl,,.1t ~ 11 Ltllld ofllcl el Edm"'IMI II, ltrktr, IOCD Wflllller CAN It illoul to lrt"-111' le !hi U!I* l'ut:lllJ/lld or,.,,,t COM! Otllr 1"11ot, SlfYICi Sllllon No. un. &eullvlfll, MMhlbtlle. COU~IY ol I.DI c:i.n1fnte1. JOSEPH FAltl(US, Tt1n1ter". Aueu•I I 1s, n..1t '"' ·u,Nt Thi 1wn1td ttt11rtf'1' ti'•n ... dldn will m1111, 511M If C1lllornl1, 11 IM httl'lnt In bulk. 111 c1 T••,.tllrar'i rlihl 1111e i nd ' ' IM ~umm1ttlll '" tr af!lr IM lltll NY tlld but bldllt•. llMI 1ubltct ~ (Of!. lnllr••I In 1..0 to l!le bull111$• 011.Mwn tt If Ayeu11, Ifft, el t :OO AM. It UNION fltmtllOll lrl' 111' lllPtrlor Col.or!, t it 1111 H H HOLllllOOIC l"LUMllNG CO 111* LEGAL NOTICE OIL COMl"ANY OF CALti'OitNIA.. '" So. flt~!, title 11111 lnter11t ol ••Id dlctl..0 t!iidlrit lnvtnlor"t'. MU1Pmtnl. lur"11friit11•• H . . H Uh s l " 1--------------1 '"'"'°" StrHt .• Lii A.ntlltl. CIJlftPnll •I .... llrfle If llfflll IM •11"" rlshl, ll!lt ... 111,.. lttdl Ind """ w1H. Miid ,. 'L W aiian 0 im .. .,.. "'"' mttlll. IM lnhrlll 11'111 "" 1111t1 .. uld ....... llofl of tlllt "" IM ....... lllr'!'. ""Ip. t..1 CIRTlllCATI O, IUtlNlll So !tr e1 ~ It 11\1 Slc\I ..... ,,...,, tMtUICI lltl '"11lrttl llt' -r1fltll ol lew flllnl, f\lrnlSl!lntl lfld telllne 1111dc Ill l"ICTIT!OUI It.tr.Ml 111 1111111\tU ftll'MI '"' .......... , VIH llV "'fllllltwf1t, eflllt IN" .,. In Hdl!IM lo Tr1111ltrv 1111111 _, In lllfl If 1111 , ........ ,,,.,, "°"' ctrtttv flt F.• tofl. ... Oeatlor ,.,. lllt lhrH Ytlfl ltU Piii, it.II "' .. 111 dtaUICI. " ""' tlrnt ol -c11u1 Hkl ., llld lllltlnnt bot '"" 4,..: $1mt. dNlll. In •rid to 111 ,... etrt11n rtt1 -Tr1t11ferlt. 111 11 ,.t torlll In 11'111 atttm dl>(.llnl I bullnet• .II lllff Moilrl"ll. D•ltd: olut. !. 1'4• ""' 11111111• Ill Ille Ctllll" ol Drtnt• .... ~ llltwten""' .. ,, ... Ill 1119 .... Ntwoort llttch, Ct lllOfnl•. IH'(I•• ""' Ile. UNION OIL COM~ANY Sttle ol C•llltrnl•. l'lrlkvltrtr t..crf»d -!or 1..-rltn If "" Nd .... lilted l!lleu1 rl•rn 1111'1\t el SUN S!T Ind ltlll °' CALIFOtlNIA 11 tolloWI. fo.wll; •r ~-·--••'--• o·-· --•. ,.Id urm 11 c""'°'*" of lllt lollowlftt • , '' • , " N "" " '' ~"''"¥""" ""' ¥~ -l ... 11 IMI l _. W. V. C•lddlt .. o fl o. • ltr m 1. Tl'lt 111met. Ind bu1lnt11 IHPIHtl 11 Lead in Cal 20 Race JiONOLULU (AP) -Norm B axter of the Hawaii Kaneohe Yacht Club had the lead loday·~oing into the third race of the 1969 national Race Week Un der Way First races of Newport Harbor Yac ht Club's Race \Veek RegaUa got undtr "·a y today with competition scheduled on both inside and outside COllrses. The regal~ conlinu~ Sotur· da y and Sunda}'. One of the t o p features of the regatta is the Gold Coast Race fo r ocean racing handicap yachts which will be sailed Saturday only. Y achts racing under the Cruisin11 Ch.:b of America rule will sail to Long Beach and return while those rated under the PHRF and MORF rules wlll :!iall to Emmy Oil Denick and back.. "''°"• wllolit Mme ft "' I I tCI "' Mtnllt• 0Hr1ll011t & $t1'¥1C~S rec;Onltd Ill IDOk lf, P1tt1 )2, ll lf\d ~ lhl• ti..,. llf I~ Ttlnlftror tnd it.1 rt.ll:~e lt1~~.f01=: l"GmOfll Ne. Sl PuatlfiMCI Ot1ntt Col t! DlllY PllOI, cl Mlt<:tllll'lfOUI MIPL R-rllt In IM TrllllfftH 1,., tt follewl: Cal•"fornla-20 c 1 ass yachting • Aue1111 L *"' 1...0..t Olli«''''"" C-ty RtCOtOlr (II 0••-TRANSFElllOR : CLIFTON II, OUN• CC.It MtM, C•l!lornll Coun..... Cllffwrlll (Ilk! ..-m .. CAN, m Wtll lt'ltl strw. Clllll• Mt,t, championships oU W a i k i k i 0111e1 A"'u11 '· \Ht 1«11ec1 11 u.t L1o:1r.11. ~•elH'll 111ee11. cintorni. "'21 B Mlkt T1llt LEGAL NOO'ICE c 11tcrftl1I each. st1i. ol C1Rloml1. Ort !IM '°"'" .... ' I TltANIFEREE: JOSEl"H FARKUS, B t l kl e-nd · th " '"'"'' •· '"'· bll'ert -· 1 Jfoltrv Term1 a' ••It ''"' ln liW'lut ......,., ol 111 Wttl lflll $1rffl, Co1t1 Mell, ax !r a ng s ._v 1n e •A• 1.,. 1111 URlllCI Slit" on ccntlrm1t1trt of 111t. c111torllll .u21 . ' l'vblk In Ind le• 11kl 51111. "'""''" ''" P•r <Int ol 1movnt bit fe lot olll 1~, 11usl11e1i ~-•<Id Mdrnl"• first lwo re.ces Thursday for 4 •-••<HI Mike T1111 __ ,. •o me It be ,•,•,•,•,• .. •0•,',',",/0',0•'••'•"•'• .,.,...lltd with 11111. uatd llY IM Tt•Mlerw wlltl!n ""' thrte .w h Ids 1· th t~e ,..,....., -t """' !1 l\lbl(rlllfd to •• ., -• bt ln wrfflrM 11111 •111 ,,.,.nts, 0 a s 1m ree· , •• ··-·-••••• me .. 1 1/111 K-NIWltdtef f NI COUNTY 01" •RAN•I • .... ••• , •• ,. IHI ""· IO flf II tno..n " lh• ,,. ""'' Cltt """"Mr 6 1"llt tit ttttlwH t i !I'll 1tott11lll olflu 1t •ft'!' Trlnt«Pret, 1,., None. quarters of a poinl lead O'ler lie ••ec:r,itc1 the ,...,,. SUMMOMS t1m1 tfllr tl'll 11rt1 p11bllclllon h1rto1 •lld J. Thi bulk tr1fl1ltr " to bt aw>- 1968 champion Hank Schofield tOFl'ICo"tr11;J.~"~~ UTT "'''°"' L. Kllh!•. f'1tin11rt v1. Gertkl •:-e"'"}*1°'1:'~fft t.Umm1rn •' the efll(t o1 11ot1111T N. f C Uf I 1 I B •• --·bllc< 11wn11 I! 11{11ftr ..,.,,.,n, I I u ¥ • '" IROXON, AllOl'IWY t i L1w, Sllllt we, •• 0 a om a 's A am tos ay • .., r'W • .,.,61' ... i DF .THf STATll! DI" J. WESLEY fHE" .,,., CtmN• orrw . NIW-1 •••en. Y ht Cl b l"tln1:1MI OtflCt I" CALll"Oi!:NIA .. lhl ~ Mll'IH Oii'"° NATA.Lii QUINLAN C11U .. n!1, Oii or 1lltr AUlvtl lS. !Hf. ac u • 0r.,... '°""" •• ,.,. I I _,..,.,lnl111'1totn JOSEJl!l FARl(UJ., TttfllflfH Schofield placed fourth in M¥ C-IUIOll lulrl!$ y.;, ••• Mt•llY dlt.cr• .. flit • writ· "' "" "'"'Ill 1110 ffcldtnt. STATE 01' CALIFORNIA I the m· orning race and 11·r•l m· Pvbllo.1'1:-r~~"'c .. u 0111'1 '1111· , ... 11t1dl111 "' """"" .. lti<t Yftll!ICI IOMUND ....... 1(111 COUNTY OF OlllA.NGE I IS 1'6Mt (Ol'r!Plt1nt llf ............ n1l'tllt •J.llRllfl 1 ... Wlttltler llHlllY.nl °" lhll 1:1111 d•Y "' Juh'. IMt ...... the afternoon. outsail\ng 27 of '"'11111 I. is. tt, ,., 1"' will\ 11>1 cltrk 111 .... ,.,..... 1nt111t11 toUrt ~. C•llflftl1• tNAI ""'· "" wfllllollntd. t Ntttrv 'lllllle in th I kl In flll 1Mvt lfllllltd 1ctlol\ a.;.v;l'll AIMrMY fir '•11119""1 •M lor .. 111 Sl11t, --•llY 1-rtd e nation's top Ca -20 s P. LEGAL NOTICE .. ,1,.11 ,ou In ••Ill '-'• wl#lli! T~N 'ubU$hld Or•nM '"'' D•l1' "''°'· JOSl!:l'H FAll:Kus, kMWn ro"" to 111 th• pert. dlYI 911.,. th• 1t<¥ICI.., vw 11 thlt ,..,,.,. July ll trMll A~utl 1, I, IHt 1•1H' """' ~ ntm• I• 1ulllctllllel to itw · . "'°"'· If 11rvtel wttll\n lllt tbcvt Nmtd wlit.111 IM!nimtnl, 111d •ctc-iw,ecs 10 In third plice I~ ~b Miller CllllTll'IC:AT~·l41~ I USlNlts, '°"""''" wllllln THlltTY d1V1 II wtvlel LEGAL NOTICE m~r;~fhl•s '!.a;~.~ ~nd 11;t(111 '"'· of the host W~1ki.kl Yacht P1CT1T1ous NAMI •1~e:J'~r~ h"•IW Mllf1M flllt 1H111\.t "" tOl'l"ICtAL SEA1..1 Club. MU!er, with 9 poinll, Thi 11ndlr1ll111t1 '° t'l.,."1'?.~!"'"~1,.. .. 1111 1 wrllltn ,.,~1.,. 1111111119. 111d Ntw,'o~~~.1:T1~:.J1ll!O SARA fLLfN TOTTIH ·1 ,_ J · II h i;onClllCtlnt 1 llllilf!llU •I -111 ft. 111ln!IN wtµ l1k1 lllllltl'l'llflf !Or •nY ,,,_...., c-· OllTllCT No11rv "11111k sa1 ed COn!llllllt.nt y In g t to $ulh ao.N.orlll T-. °''"''' c1111 .• " dtl'l\1111 tM'landM Ill ""• vtlltlttl I .. Sllhl llf Ctlllflrnll moderate Winds from 10 to 2Q fHtl. unftr 1111 fldtl\lul flrl'l'I 'l:m~ llf ~ CO!rllltl~I It t flllllt -~lrtct, tr w!H = .... ~:.:: l"rlnc:l11I otnc. lfl A. M. CDMl>ANY ...... 11111 .. r"' -Ir lo IM ell.Ir! ~· -..,.... ftlll'I Rr y OlVEN t ""' °''"'' C-1'1' knots, and has a ftftb and ~ c11mt111Md o1 thr ft!loWI"' 11ru.,~1, w1101t ffmilldttl kl 1111 v ... 111111 Clll'llllnt. 1 NO:IS.E E~~ NI~ : tllt N...,:t-Mnt M• Cat'rtm!ulltl l!•tlrH f h I l hi ed.1 ,.mt, 1n !ult tM ,11(11 .t rtt net t •e y ""' •IM ffle lfVltol ., 1,. lftor..ey tlf •11 OI' Mtrch 10. nn ourt pace o s er 1 . 11 iolll'ln: ..i ,...11., Md wllll it.• f.Oll'lo Uftllltd khool Dt1trfd llf •ntt c1u11tv. l'ublltht<I ot1t111 ce11t o1rtr ,1io1• In foui:-th place O'lera1J ls k~· ld~r ~'rJ":~;..~ t~~ ~:~:a~~ :;'11~:"'., fllli :::,... lllCll 1n1tMY ~!':'nl1~;· 1':..i ~~in:. :,:1:~,11':,!~ ol111V1I I, ltff IOMt Greg Booth 19 a freshman at 8 .": • 11WM.11d 111 t"OMUI""" wtt111" ,.,. 111111 nmlt 1nc11idtt1 •r• K"°'' "'"''""''' ofn,, LEGAL NOTICE ti Al F• • A d 0:1111' July '1, IHt tlllld In fllll l'i'""'*" IOI' fllln1 • """"n "'Kl'll"" 1M ctttllrlt 11.llcl'ltft _1..,,11'11 ie r orce ca em y , c "-*1' ....,,1"' 11 "" CO!ftll11nt. 1n1111111tu... 1---=~---------representing t h e Columbia ....:.rtu.r111 ,klWlfldtr D•..,. A11t. 1, 1H,t 11111 wi1t 111 ttc:•I'" '" 1111 ""'"' o1 IM woT1ce ,., Tlll>VISPIRI• 51111 of (i tlttl'rllt, Otel'lf CMl!llY: (SIEALJ l"urehlllllt Attn!, 11J1 'lltt11ll1 AYlfllll, TO: CllEDITO~I OF Jo IE fl H FlttJ from PorUand, Ore. °" Julr JI. 1..,, ""°" ...., 1 ,..,..., w. II!. ST JOHN, Cll!'t c11t• Mn1, C111for1111, uP" 10:00 A. M., l"ARl(US. TRANSFEROlt Booth won the Thursday ....... 11( 1n .,.. tor llkl $1111, PIFMlltltr •• Miil' Liii Hodli« AlltUIJI II. !tit,·'' 1'111otll lllftt ,..., Wiii 'LEASE TAKE NOTl(i! it.11 ""· •(Id •-trld F C Sdl,,.ldtr 11MI M1rwulrll+ . 0•1¥ Cito!< Ill 11Ulltlt" OMllH Ind rttll llO\ld. E•th t1cti ol rw. 1rJ, ..-rwW1t fc Stclltnt 611S mornln11 race. In the 11fternoon 1c11n1id•r tM i. ''" to 111 111t ,., ...... ~N •. •lllN &rd m1111 IM •c~n1" .., • uihltr'• 1nd •101 111 "" u"111rrm c-ci.1 he man""ed only a t1th which wl!OMI 111,,,.1 •r• •llhctlbtd" 1111 w11n1" i.ft •••1,c=: A~ tflKI ., c1t111111cf (he(k.,'",,,"" ~-~r~ Codi. HElllEIY No T,, I I! 0 "' ... ' l"tlflllMnt •llCI KknoWltdlff 11\f' .. °'"~". ~ 11¥1 ... ctn! Ut4.) • r• . '0L\OWS: gave him a total Of 17'1. KUltd 1M Mmt. j"U ttMl• CljtCti:1 Will Ill ll'llft tty1bi. It the 1. ht Trtn,ltror. JOSIEf'.H FA.ll(US. '-..,.1 ,., (OJllllCIA.L S!ALl """"#w '°'"""" New•t-Mul \111llftd Sd'IGOI Ol•lrk.I. l id tboul fl lr111{ftr to !ht _,,,..,,lllllcf yvaRl"lo MAllY K. HENllY , lull!! .... Orl llf!.t Cotii 0111'1 "11tt. ltPlldc will ~ fotl1lttd ff •u«tl9'111 bll· CLIFTON I , OUNCAN. Trilt.fr.,.., I~ """' Pllbllc-Ctlll"nl• Al/fllJf •• IS, :rt. w; "'' 1•1MI '*" .. .., ll'llkl llYllllM '" lltll wlltlln bulk •• 11<\H'lfy h'lttr~I ... '" """"'"'"" Prlllc!HI Olfln In .,.. wttk lfllt l'tnlwlnt wr_ltttrl Mllllc" -i..-1 1ne1 lllrnllllhm o1 !ht 111(1!~ Dt...,. (°''"" LEGAL N'"""'CE ""'llf tt>e 1cc1Ptt11n of'"''' ll!d. lJflSuc· known 11 H. H. HOLllllOOIC PLU.Y.81N() M• c-tHlon Exel•.. ...,,, ctttllll lllllldff'I w111 ,,..,. lllllr 111111 dlt<ll:I co .• IKlt..i ., m W••t I""'''""· (Mii Nev 2:'<, 1tn """"""· Mell. C1lifor11l1 tH)1', tU ol Wllkfl !1 P\lll>lltlltli. Ortl'ltt (1111 Dtllr l"llot. NOTIC•., :Ut:• •1111 mvt .. 1\1 l~ltrid \ft '"ltd Plrfklllt,IY ilricrltlld 111 !Mt c.rfll" Alltlllll 1, a, lS, 22, '"" IGMt fn tc:mnllfli:I wnh 1t1t ....... 11'-... "'fl tn¥tr.tl IMl'klill "k"'IW l"f#lrty I W ltfffll'llfll ol t1lt ll!twtlf! tllt Hrflfl en c.11,.rn11 u~r"'m c.nmtn:lll Cod•. N1. ~1t". 111111111 °"'"tor 111.;.c11an" .,_ tdlllrt» .I ·-· •• ..• Inboards to Tangle Over Weekend 'LEGAL NOTICE 1t1tr1 lilllnt d111 _, Vl'IH!of '"'"' llr A 1111 fll llM11 llftrfd fet 11\e. elvlnti I t11t1C1 , ... QIMUll'IMll'ien of JIKh 1111. l ___ .:::.:::.:::__: ______ l""k:ll 1r1f ''"°" ,.riinifllr Coml1nv I• 4t1er1,i1en If !ht U"" •IW 111t mlnlmUll'I 1. Tilt n1rn11 lfld llllelne11 tclcl'""' ., ... '' I 1n110..i lo 1 l~il ll Wlttflot.i!M\111 tf! tt.. ~«ll'l•b" 11111, 11'11'1'' r ~0!1·~ J!"" I~ ltt11 lfmt Ill Ille Tttnlltror •M !lit ' tflOlfl lltftlMll.,. OttcrllltC llld dlll Oltlrkt'1 "utdllt nl ....,,,.,.. ...,.,,_ti In., Tttn,leree 11'9 If tol,low,: ct•Tll"ICATI 01' •u•t"''" l'ltlkl fllv1M """tlvtl\ 19 Ntllll 11:...-·~ Hllrn.i. Loc1tlM1 of"" 1 ...... ll'lll TltANSFllllO•: JOSEl"H FAltl(US. ,1CT1TIOUS NAMI -·-fO ci.1 ... In 1 .. 1.,.m flltrtll\ lfllf'll'll llfllt lllMIKtterl l(:flldult '!Wiii ... Ill(~ WI"' 171 war-1t111 • 11, .. 1. COii• ~" .. TM vndtttlontel M (trtlly ,,... '" 111<tlled fn '"1cJ'I flOllU '6r 1-nt .t 1114' Utt, (tlllefl'lll t1U1 ·-.~.. National championships In ·-Inboard circle boat racin&'ll .!; three most popular classes :;: will be detennlned Saturday • '";. and Sunday at Long Beac h ·"'~ lttarine Stadium as highUght :;: of the 9eCOnd wtekend of the ... , California International Sea :w-FcsUval at Long Beach. :r Saturday's program or 1. elimiflitk>n heats begins at 11 J~ •.m . to detmninc which 11cts .,,. of eight drivers w11l competo ~ Sunday beginning at' noon In ~ American Power Boat APR- " champlonahip action in Suptr StockJ, F. Racing Runabouts and Crackuboxes. Two other flalb o ttom cla,sses and ireven hydroplane clas5tl will a 4o be io action both days In the Southe rn California Speedboat C I u b re a au.a. Super'" Stock s and Crackerboxcs are powered by 427 ·cubic-i nch engines generaUng clcse to 6 0 0 horsepower. 'lbe difference is lhet the SS's are one-man boats which h it over 100 m .p.h. down the stral1htaways while the Crackers art two-- man craft only slightly less rapid ••• and quJte 11 bit more d~cult to keep rlcht side up. ~ntli1"es In th! !: Runabouts are limited to 320 cub ic Inches, enoug h to cr01#d lhe 100 m .p.h. mark d o w n the 518-m1lc chult!i. Art F ield of Gardena, v.·hosc S.150 seasonal poln\,s not only lead the natiQll'I Ctlc:ketbox standings but also place him at the lop of 1he over11ll APBA inboard list, is l"-ni1n to \\'atch In hls Lemon Crite. Clem McCullah of Torranct lw: dominated SS racing t tus yenr, but former star Don Sl. J ohn of Inglewood has been in· acllve with Sbockwave: and returns for the N1tlonat Championships as a ddlnlte t hreat. Jon Paint.tr of Rtdando Beach and defendin1 cbtm· pion Norm Tayklr o( South Gale. are lhc E llunaobut favorites. The Sea Festival's san bont 11cadllnc cl11Ss this week Is the Clfldl>(.l\nt • ""'/""' ,, 11111 "'"" -" ....... """"· f'lllfln i. 11t1.iw "~ Ultt .... lln1t. 111111!" ....., .. In· TRAl.ilFlltlE: CLll'TOH I . Dur+- venerable f'fationaJ One-Design aw1n1,... '-"1" v111tv. Ct.--tA. _,. 11111 t111tt ..,.... "'" • "111 ,, '9kt ~ 11-"" w111e11 """ ••• 111do <AN, 111 w111 lflll 11rH1. c•t• Mu•, .,...... IM llcllfloul rlt111 -el ""*'le 1\l'dltft t i W\llCY'1 Alldllll Certttr, t int. TJll Dt.fl'ltt ... lllf llllflllttt Ir Clllltnllt ftdl clast; whose n1tlonal cham-ltlCHA*D'S "All.MARI( .,.. ftltl "" -N"'"'1 ..., ...... fl!. <"' " Ctff• Wlrttnl'I lllY '*"' "llMI ~. All 1111tr llllslftts' "'""' IM 11Wlft$ti · h. "II ~ l led llr"' II (llll'llillJH cl fM tellfWIM ...,...,., ,..,..., c-1Y fA ~tllt«t lftft fl lvcCMlllll ll!Hwt rlllltl fl!MYI """ Vitti tw 1M TrtMltr.,. Wlllllto 111f """ • pion! 1ps w1 ..,.., con ea on ,,,,..,. "•""" 111 "'11 '"' '"'" « ciu~ni., 111 "" ,,,,_ ..., , 1 A111111tt. "'°""" ,. tt1t1r twn e-. R-11 vt.,.. i.it P'''· ... ,., ,, --" "" Alamitos Bay today U'lrou"" 1111d-• '" ., 1e111w11 1,.., ,, 1 .,,lldt; f'.M. WtUtt bot 11,. 1111r1,.. 1M ntrm11 11u11iw•• Tr•~"'"' •rt: N"1r. S . &'' 1.klltr• ,11'11111'111\, 117U VII ..,_111, Tiit foltewl .... 1111 k 1•11\"llf '9a!Jtltn lltv 11'111 ll'lllil M CG!'flP!fllCI w1it.ln lfll J. The bult lrt1111•r 11 lo bot -, unday out of Alamitos Bay 1 ... 1n1. c.111nrn1t "*'· T1~1t J•M tf .,.1 ~te M tollli wttk If lcctttllfltt et 1111 1MJ. •""1m•IH 11 111e 011~ o1 11:,0111tT N • YC in a flve~race series ''""-"' 11n, v11 VtrtM, 1,,.1,., o-r "' llt41• Lit• ....,,,,..,., "''"""' win IM •tetlvN 1n th• 11to>10N, AltorN!v 11 Liw, S•l!t wt • .t5ot • C.11111'1111 fHU. Ntll'lt °"'*'"'Dull l"wcl'l"IM Oeplrlll'lllll. l•ltt 11)1 t1.ft¥1 C•INlll• Dtlvt. Ntw..o<'t I I o t ~ • Two non-Ma F e s t I v 1 1 Otltrlf JlllY 11. '"" ,.,.., H 1 ...... M" ~ • .., .-u-1 win 11e """'*' "' .. m c11"-1t• °'°' e1 ''"' A""VI' u. ""· ~ , ltldllrCI f'lllllrntn -JS, Ml ........... _.. •111-111t. (Ll,TON I. OUNC.AN, iquatlc events alJO take plm TtKll J•M Fft'lf1nl111 •11 wt m .. ""·"' "12; HmMhtlll Tritt ~Is""' MoHtr w111 rec1rvt Tr~ In Long Beach both In the Sl•h"' Ctlfftrtl!t1 Let"""* c11111,..tt_ ...... ~""' IC.Nh. Ul.ltr ~ .. .,.. IN!tl'tl'IU lfl -•tflll9 .... _ ... , tM ITA.T£ 0, CALllllO•NIA I t °" .Nh' ,., 1,... ""'" ""· I ..... ""'" lffKft. Jvtl• •tv11Wten ....... Mn .. ,,.... 111 '"' rnl OUNT'I' 01" C>lANOI , " city's famed harbor. l"wltle '" 11111 ..., 11!• .11.i., ...,..,,.,., •11.,.,1 ,117 HwMtltlf -O.: ft ""' ldloilt oi.wlc'I, 1>\11 '-"" 11!1«1114 °" "'" ,,..,. ..., " J111Y. '"'· ....,. •-•rWI lttdlaf'f ''1111""" ,,,. Ttl(lt ' -"• .U-.r!/11111 If MCI'! .-wllrd -'I 111 -, 1111 \Jlllll"lt<l9ll' 1 Nottrv Pvtlllc Ill The Kallfornla Oulrlgger Jt,.. 1111111m1n ,,....,. ,. IM .. IM'"' ;:,,•· .... ':c.'""Ct':!" uni rut o.. ""''""· li.dtn "'"' 11Ctt11 M~tmn 11111 tor t ••d ,..,.. "'*'"" """'" Aun SUlte Championships ......,.. ......,.. 111MH '" ,~r1"" " -· "' ,..,., ~'" w..,_t11111 ..,. llltft tt1tt -Mik11 11111r 1trGN111 ~ <L•,TD~ •. O\INCAN, 11-1, 11'11 .,. · ,,,. wllllfft 1Mt'11m"'I W tdnlwlMMf •• • . • ... te!n" IM 1tM Ptr'°" .,,.JI -• 11 tuMcrlMll begin at t a .m . off Cherry IM't 111t1C\11., "'-"""'· Oieda. 11:....-1 Wtr-tf'I, llh.to• TM '",.. « IM-1t1en flltrvn ''" 111 "'' wi1hlt't 11111~1. ,,.. ~,...,.. h llh M 1 d I 101',.l(IAL II.ALI ,.,,, .. lit. ltll, MlMll!l.,...,. Otel:I&. tl•M I• .. IKI 1ny If t l1 llldt trMll to 1lllOM te ft'lt 11\tt fie IMC:ljtn 1111 """' Ave. Beac • " IT DI e •11111r K. P11ttPM11o Ull01 V•l«lt f ; Mwt911:. AllltCI 1n ••Jvt l flY ltrWullt!I¥ ... 1"'""11'11111¥ kl WITNESS'""' Ill ... 11116 -1~!•1 IHI. Rey n--Club fa-r~ wbllo NtM'f' l"Ulll~<11lfWnlt ,...,. ,,,. ftet1tlt. mr.211 l>JA. 1111 ""fine. tOl"l"ltlAL t•ALI ...,.,_ .. u cv, ,llllCf!MI Oflln '" , """"'*" ...... Cl~ It. NtltM, ·NfW,OlliT-Ml'A UNl,110 ~llA ILL!N TOTTIH lhe Southe rn Cl I J l ( 0 r n I. Lot Aneelt.• """"" '2A.llJ iu.. U.ntlV-JIMtlf. Oll'T SCHOOi. OllTllCT ... ,.,., Mlle Ufeguard Aun siaaes ha two-Mr Cfft'lll'\lteltrt u•1ru P111tn1t1. MM1 llUL Tr\11*• A Of °''"'' C.U1f't, c1111Dt11'• 11~11 llf CIJlftml• • • Mtf'C'! ~I. INt .. (ent., lltfllt'I< J, Dl'llttll. 91.u. •v DtrllllY Hernv f'r!nc:tNI Qtlln 1~ m a n dory r o w I n g cham· •00111 r:. """*R'°"' ..,...,,..,., ''"'" Tr1ntm c"""""" P11tt11t1111e Attnt orwne• c"""' Pion.hi~ on • _,,,. wl-"lna UCll t!. Wllllllff IMI. O•ttlll ,, "*" Mt11. C111ft111i.. A11tllll ...,.\lot My C-IMIM lllllfU r~ '"""' !IU WlllH!w, ~lftnl1t "'" i. "''· Ottwcl olvt\ltt l. l"I ro lL l'n around the oil Jsla.nds in the Pdlhtt1e1 Of•"" cout 011~ ''""· J111t1111i'IM Or11111 Ctt.,t 01fly ,.11111. .,~"'""" °''"" Cl•' OtKv •1111. ..~r or.,,.. c.... 011" PJhlt. h bo All'tutl I, I, 11,o.tt, lt'9 1'1Mf A111111tl I, IS, lfft 14ll·'t ...... Ult_\, eM AwWl I. IHt UtMt A~r t, ttt t'1Mt ar r. • • t l l 40 Coast Residents On CSCF Honor Roll Forty ·Orange C o a s t resident! are amoog 631 studtnts named -to t h e California _State Co 11 e 'g e , Fullei'tOll honor roll !or the spring semester.. They are: Fnwn Balbol JshpJd: ·Deane M. Halter. From Coro111 del Mar: Rowell \V. Greene, and John F. McGraw. F.orm Costa Mesa : Gregory Berg; Pete E. ,Englander ; Pamela· J. Fate; Sherry God- dicksen; Roy C. Gregg: Carol Kleck: Mkhael Velarde; Betty Vrebalovich; Mark Witten, and Samuel Wray. From Dana Potni: Frank T. lle3, and MarRaret Russell. FHm Foaatafa.. 'Valley : Ker· ry M. Keple; .Melanie D. Mathias, and -Kenneth L. Robinson. From IlunUngton Beach: Donald S. Ackles; William R. Christian: Joseph . L. Maga, Jr.: Peter Rowlands, and Billie Weide. From Jnlno: Dorothy R. Keen , From Laguna B e a c h : Michael ·L. Davis: Joan A. Dermody: Rdbert A. Goulart; Lawrence E. Shrimp : TO(fd M. Sloan: Elsie Taylor, and Crysla1•.Tlmmins-. From Mission Viejo ! Laurie E. Estabrook. From Newport 8 e • ~·b : Gregory G. Gaylord ; Hugh A. Nelson;. Sally Reinbutg;' Joyte Rich; Edward R. Roads; Margarette Tousley, a. n d Katherine Watson. From Sell ·Beaell:. Phy\llS Lichenstein: I See By Today's Wini Ads: e Rtd Sall5 In tht' Sun~t. nr red 1111.tln s!M!tta a n.d pillow .eue •. att 01 •. sso. • Bouncing baby win "'be..!Jle: contmtedl;y .u.·-thll 1lam. OY'O'Us light blue crib and dresatr with pefU'I fn11erta, hf"t pla~n and miaco ·, baby'items, e Rock Hound Heaven: lap. ldary unit with motor. lumble:r and· otbtt r o ( k bound-ttma. · : , . ·-• i • . ' Fanladle JI'"~ )llSt /or TOii n .. , a.uomer. Lo.4 "" ""., e•r Mlilh 1lt.e1e uruu• .. &e.-. ','.~. ~ .. . ' ,. 't ~· ' Vrom Our FLOWER SHOP SPECIALS P:rractlntha Wax Leaf Privet Boule .Bnuh . c 99 . GAl.W •' SPECIALS· Italian Cyp•""• Ta1!1" JUniper Garrknitu · J' eroriicn Rul>ia }apaNJ.<e lri& Me.<iron Fan Palm Philodendron Blue Dni1'y Japari.esP f.ln.x "' nn•l LiquUl Amber . ' 2r~r l SALE ORTHO liqM J-tilia.- ORTHO 1-/tiltJ lnrr •-t. J, 1-footl -' rttell'• 1M ..-.l -• frw C.EltMAINS r""'~ t ,_I B~Dll'll Pl• Z /rw I VH (.,._ H-o-~I /m'Jl~ •Jllr.,.l!r ' ,;;. 1.49 "'-_,,, , MU/VTf:HEY PINE .. • .. DAHIJAS ·.ttc MARIGOLDS C.tW • .......... ./ ehr,....1 ~ift /,_ .. Ow Cn'-. • fMo11"-i 6-11 to Wf1Ac- •P ,.., ~ •""' I'--,._ 1"1.,.t ,._ /M • ~ •f 6-tUi/tJ ,,.._rec· U.91 39' ·Hollywood Twlsled ~· •l .. ~? .. AZALEAS .. , . .......... . •It• STAR JASMDIB. CA., ..... '"":'.. • I ··' • Kello111 Gro-Muleh 2 •• $ .. OLEANDER rq. 11 .49 890 Gerba DAISIES 9s~· ,._. s.. ... B•ill TOSI' _,. rd,,..... or _,.. bft -•·• , l.lldte<1JN TOW kth, ,,.,.,,., -ri.lfl ;.,w N""" '11ii,,1neflt ;.... ...,.~. ,.,._ AIMi'l.W. GreenVp SPECIAL Sulfate or AMMONIA GRUM RAVEN GARDENS 111101 llorbor Blod., C<J1'<kn Gro1'fl & Anaheim 53</-6774 l$Clo,fll~ 2123 Ne11>port Blod., --&.1a Mua 646-3925 ,,,,.._.,..,~, 12031 B-h Blod., Stanton, 893-8551 Kt......,.. !"-~I a:eorr TEIMS AVAR.ABLE-BankAm•riccrrd- Mott.r Chore• Grtitf\ Ha't9ft'• Ow" Ctecfit,..... . ' • i J.; •I,,! ., .. • • ' ' ... ,, , ,..,,..,..ti, 1969 OAJI, Y '!LOT IJ ' DER A Complete G~ide ••• Wllere to "go • •BUSY CREWS MAKE READY FOR START OF ANOTHER THURSDAY EVENING B!iE'R CAN REGATTA. Rumor Hai It That Even Some Wtves AgrH to S.11, •• Long a 1 Sailing Mastera (Hu1blnd1) Agrff Not to Shout at the Crew . ' Thirsty T.hursdags This Regatta , Is. All for Fun Photo1 and Story By Lff Payn• Yachtsmen take their races seriously. that's even better. Thousands of dollars are inve!ted in That's how the Beer Can Regatta start· boats, sails,\•fld equlptnent to get jwt a ed. After the week 's work In Los Angeles JIUJe more speed out of 'each breath of and before the weekend's racing, fishing. air .. The proteSt committee ls the busiest painting, sanaing, and socializing - a of all as they .try to sort out the chaJ1es leisurely evening sa il on the bay and from the ti>Unter-charges aft.er 8 close maybe a littte match race or two. cl r rnish By 1958 so tnany boats were turning out race. And every ra n& season u es on Thursday evenings that the Beer Can enough argument about how the races rsd Se · should have been sailed to last alt Regatta and the Thirsty Thu ay ncs I · were organized by the Balboa Yacht through the vtinter untl nert racing Club. Today, though limited to keel boaL<I: season. under 50 feet, the twilight races drew· So when a racfug &eries sailed ·iitrictly around 70 yachl.1 every Thursday evening for fun becomes so P.Opular it draws between the middle of June and lhe scores of the biggest as well as. the beginning o{ September. smallest yacht'! week after week, and The race starts at 6:00 p.m. from a line seaS'oml after season, and when that ser-east of the Pavilion and progresses past les has a title like "The Beer Can Reg-Balboa Island up the north Lido Charmel atta," it has lo be a little unusual. and back agHin . Tttursday "evenin·g comes near the end sJ)ectators along the route are treated of the week's work in the hot smoggy city · to a race sailed In weather conditions along with .,idless hours of freeway com· ranging from fog and dead calm to a muting. Friday night and the weekend heavy blow. are already filled with s o c I a l Despite its ·growth, the relaxed engagements, ·projects around the hous~ character of the race is still in evidence. and on the boat, but Thursday evening is Cocktails are sen·ed aboard many of the the perfect tltne to take a little sail yachts as well as In the landlubbers bay around the bay and really relax. front patios as guest! gather to watch the If you e:hould happen to meet another race and the sunset. 1!!1 this any way lo yacht and engage in an Impromptu race, start a weekend? You bet Jt ls. CLOSE QUARTER$ -In spite of' relaxed nature 'of · contest, there ·are 'some exciting mo- ments, ·••pecially when bigger boats battle for position in con- fined waters of bay. Marty ·a race has been lost by misjudg· Ing the Ball~>a Ferry. . . ' ,.. . 'WOKENDER IN!Jmlr FEATIJRES f If you think "French Polynesia II one or the "big travel bargains check Stan Delaplane's travel,. column on Page 22. 'All Is notl.. bananu and .coconuta. Newport Coocorl Gulde lo .... ,.,.... . Me:Ma at Ute: llOwt Out 'N' Ahoat Gulde to Movta MDUe 'F1i: Dl1oeylud lb.Dt:t ln Lipna "Cattle """" A"utemoa.Ue P•1tut Queenie ' Comics ' TV Vlew1 Television Los Crossword Puult In the Galltrtes Papi! Pap!i Pop D Paae n p-P.1$ Page U Pace ts Paae H Page 18 Pago. Pa1e !I Pac• 11 r•re !1 Ptp 17 Page n Page a Page U . -~-~--~---• .... AFTER THE RACE, BEER CAN SAILORS HEAD HOME Time to Coritemplatt •ncl Witch 1 Summtr Sunset --~------------~ -~-- • •• W' " '" ' at :.r:a· ' J ' Weekend ID,ghlights ART 'IST·IVA~S -There l!lt thteo· lesUvals ·gbing on l!I ' Laguna Beach, Tho Laguna Beach Festival Of Ar.ts is tekinc place on the grounds of th.• Irvine lli>wi, &50 Laguna Canyon Road·. The SaW<!ust Festival'ls two blocl!s beyond th .. opposite side oJ tho street In about the 800 block of Laguna Canyon Road. Tho third {esUvat Ii called .Art,A·Fair ~nd Is iocatocl' at M8 N; Coast Highway, -across lhl st.,el ,from the Laguna Beacli ¥t .Association, Gallery where tl)e All Califomla lnvi· tatlonal show Is now·on display. · ~IBIE GENTRY -Pianist Rotor Williams joins aong. stre" Bobbi• Gentry on the Tomorrowi~nd S\age at Dlmey· land Mon. • Fri. with shows· at I ind 10 p.J11. Sunday night there Is Country Jubilee music with the George Jones. and Tammy Wynette show set for Au~. 10. ,$~ will be playin1 on the Terrace Uu®gh Aug~ 8 wiUt the B yn Bridge open- ing Aug. 11. LED IEPPLIN -The Anaheim Convention Center, 800 Kateila Ave., Anaheim will be tho scene, of the Led Zepplin Concert, Set., Aug:t at· 8 p.m. Jolillnl tlft 1roop perfonnance will be Jethro.'l'ull. . ' .. INTERMISSION ' County's Broadway Star Sidesteps the !-imelight I '---------By roM nTua-------.....J MM up Ind comlnC young tlai• oc-truSts who have picked up.a Jew credits in the ·chorus -and receive the oppar• tunity to spill them on an evenin& talk 16ow -u.sually do IO wlth unabubed relish. Orange Q¥1ty'1· Dilne .'Keaten is a blrd of a dilfertbt feather. ~ (, J, ~·lo. .. !f_I'!!> . .,,r; Both In an inter- view with thla · co~ umn tut Decembet and hi a pelt llhot on the Johnny c.,... aon ahow·lut week, Mia Kealon ldnilt· ted .to beiDI" ·"one. ol the glrft Jn the lhoW" wti:en · qiles· tioned a b 0 U t her OIANa KaATOJf current aS!llgnment Jn tht WQOdy :Allen· comedy "Play It Again, Sam." A couple weeks 1go, 1Wingtng throu1h New York on a Cf91.Mountry vacaUon trip, I caught the abow and w8J ple• anUy itartled 1l the Santa' Ana aclres!' undera~tenlmt. . Far from belnc merely "one Qf the girls," Dione ta actually the female. lead. She re<:elv., featuqod billing, but jw:Uy deserves lhe ~ credit 11- slined lo Anthony ~. • It'• a, big lllep upward ,.,.. Diane,. who started al Orange Coast CpUeg~ Jn \'Tho SbuOO of MusJc" and "Bye, Byw:, BlnUe" under her real n1me of IMaoe Hall • in the earlf 1960'1. When she arrJved in New York,. ahe found another aetreas had already clalmed this ·name, so she took her mother's maiden name as her profeefonal moniker. FOR· SEVERAL MONTHB she played the leading female role In "Halr" (the same part taken by another Orange CounUan, Jennifer Wamn", in the Loa Angeles production). She was, ahe nota:I later, tbe only girl ln the cast who didn't dtarobe. Today ahe'a displaying her comedic talents in the brief (llO minutes with in- term!ISIOft;!J but b!Ungly funny produc- Uon whlc1i llan the btlpedac~ Allen as a Bogart.worahlplng ron:iantic IOHr. Mill Keelon ft the family friend who tboret up hh follen tlO by havin( on l!falr with blm. A1i · "accomplidted 1ln1er as well u • taltntei;J ~I Diane dellVered I rt- markabJy ltyUJed,r e ndt t lo Dal ''I'll Never Fill hi Love Allin" on I!!< Car· m lbOw. Moments later, bowenr. ahe wu Wx:orrirartably lll at eue; amall lall la not Diane'• '11&. Ind Ihle l!lmlll u inllcb. ' An6lbtr thlnf the .idm!t. ft !hal htr .Dl'<lillicta let llllfe employmtnt do not iooni tarae after "Play l.t. Again, Sam•• runt !la courR. She'd lite lo do I rilOvle, but with lyplcal,1Keaton candor llile Idell, '"'nQbody'1 ukeG me yet." • It ibOWdn:'t be too Joni before aome- 00:!)' does. * ' FiloM .ONE OF TUE relatively newer BroadWay show11.1 drooped hi on one ·of the old Umu1, "Mame,'' whJch hu COIJh pleted . three yun ~ the 'Great Whit.I Way ind doetn't lhow any a11J11 c!( slowing· down. It could very well end up challeoitn& tble longevity recordt of "My Fair ,IMr " ':Oklahoma" and the cur-.... , bW·~-clwnp, ''Hello Dolly." • A'i·Em~ the realdeot Mamo la Ann · \..S at least..two New York CrttJCJ~ her u the best ol aU the M~. W!ltn,yOU sie her perforni-oo ~If~~ at ho" Utile tlmt IUli · 014 from Ille diya o1 · u.r Al:O·M musteaJa In the late fortl~.' · A>ide · frbm belll{J 1 (•U1t> gor1eoua mUllcal comedlenbe, Mlu Miller re- mains,~ of the top lap 'danceri· Jn the bustneas. The producers of "Manie .. have captialtud on OliJ ~ad by. wriUnr in· * ~II,, 4ance numl>tr for her In which ·ibe •UPI offstage to change· Into htt ·llP Bil.., *"d retuma lo stop tliO lhow With 1 freewheelln< and frenzied delivery of VTha&'a How Young I Feel." Tbtre hive been by now probably aa many Mames 11 DoUya on Ind off Broadway1 but Ann Miller's Auntie hU to rink . high on the list. If Anlela t.11111- ~ doan't c~ a crack at the movie Vrion, 11 Miller would be one fine choice. . Leo McCatey Left a Trail BJ VERNON llCO'IT U'I Mt"""'" C.itM '"•tnt HOLLYWOOD -Tiie death of dlrectOI' Leo M~y recently merllt more "th.an ao oblltla17, funeral rites and a nicker of memory. · When Hollywood blofraphen poond out books op the ak>ry -day• of motion Jiic- lurl!J in Ille Ill, Ill Ind 40s, they do IO hi · tenn1 of •tan.and the founding moguls, Mayer, .Goldwyn,. Warntr, DeMIDe, and tbe Net. , Bui In. lruth II WU Ille unhalled Ind lttqUelllly -· dlreclon ol thlt .,. 1"1o ~ ~·the ptctuns the publl< fOlllbt lo .... Cortlhliy Mc;CmY .... -ol lliem With "Goin& My Way," "Rugg! .. of.lied GaP" and "Tbe Awful Thlth." Before that It w11 Llunl Ind llardy" comecl!a Ind CbUUe Chase. IDS CONTBRMPORARll!S lncludtd FraM Clpra, John Ford, Frank Bonage, V1ctcr 11tmtnc, Lewi• M i I e a to .n e , Mlcf111•l OUttls, Nonnon TIUrof, Henry King, Henry H1lhew1y, WllUom Wellm .. and 1 ICOl'e of other•. ' ,,,., •P!'""'ched the jqb l>I dlroetlq motloo plclurM -which lht7 celled pie- 1ur... not film> -ded!Clted lo ... trinJn1, persont who pal<! .-y lo enter the1tm. The) ah'iassed a tremendou1 number or arttauc movlta, as well as a 1tockpUe of Oscars. · But their intentiqn was not to mak.1 movlea ~ specialiif!d ut'fonn, limited to hlteDectiiol or purely emotional rt1ponae. TbUe men were 1bowr1\tn. They ••re a1so rrilddtemen · between 1 thouiand temperatmental stars and the te,m. peatm allJ4lo chief• who rode bad on thin\. LIU· l!AJILT jlD muslcl'"" their product WU Int.ended ((II' evuyolle. Timolloii plcturet 1re lnaulin(iy_ m-tt., r amaller aoo smaUer audlencea. The , who l!ave repllced ll1e pioneer director& cannot undentlnd Ille -" ol ~ llce.nr ~.C.pr1., 'l'hejr havt metsages to de.IJver.on tlh;n, pollUcal, p(!lnt.s of view to· dlssemrnate, toeJll OUtricel \o 0Vtrt<IM1 lex to U•' p!o!l ' , Tiley brln1 to mind lod1Y'• Jm mua~ CllN 1"1o havt played thei11Jelv .. lnlo I ' conlW whri on1y Oilier Jm artlsll can; lrult lf'llt'eciltt what la bein( played. , I I \ 1 · -'!'-"~--------------------~--..,..,,.:------~--,--~------- ~ .. • • ' ' • ' ' • ! .-. • l •, ' -r • • • • • • . - ·Listening Not.· All Conoe"' Great for People W ateliers ' • < • FOr-ytollltnli' curttnr s-erl~s--or--sillnmer-''P~·o---concens-at Fa1'11eti 1 -...~I audiences almost as entertainin& as the mu .. sic m•d• '9Ci-otcbestra under Henry Brandon's baton. At right, the Edwa l 'falilllY -Danny, Jay, Michael, Peggy and Lil!da (from 'ttrt to right) -cuddle under comforter they brought from 'heme . lri photo below (right) Gayle Saunderson gets c o m l y in big, borrowed heater while grandmother, Mrs. Harry Moore, and sister, Betsy Jane, enjoy music. Jn photos below, Je!f Harriss checks out music while hi,s dog, Nicki, checks out toes of woman standing behind him and (below) 8-year..old Mark Merritt checks out what makes light work under his seat on Stage Cou rt in Fashion Island's Mall. Concerts will continue through Aug. 25 at 9: 15 p.m. each Monday night. Admission is free - both for people watching .and music li stening. (fuide to Fun Autos Aid Big Brothers AUG. 1-H LAGUNA. FESTIVAL OF AllTS -The :Wth annual Fes· tival of Art! and Pageant of the Ptia.sters is being held at the Festival grounds and Irvine Bowl, 650 Laguna Canyon Road , Laguna Beach, through Aug. 2t. Tickets for the Pageant of the Masters, if available, are on sale at the box office dally, to a.m. • 5 p.m., and inclu,de admission to the grounds. Sln1le admission to the grounds to see the artists' exhibits is 50 cents for adul ts, and 10 cents for children. Hours : noon to rnJdnl1ht daily. Phone 494-1145 for additional infor- maUon • AUG. 1-H SA. WOUST F~TIVAL -The third annual Sawdust Festival is· being held In the 800 block of Laguna Canyon Road. La1una Beach, July 11·24, $ponsored by the Laguna Artists and Gallery Ownu s A55ociation. Over 100 artists and crafts- men will display their work and talent from 10 a.m. to mid· nigh t. Admission is free. AUG . 1-1.f ART·A·FAIR -The arts and crafts of 70 craftsmen are on exhibit at the outdoor art show. sponsored by Laguna Beach Fine Art! AIM>ciation, 348 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. through Aug. 24. Open Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; Fri., Sal IO a.m. to midnight: Sun. IO a.m.·10 p.m. The ad· mission charge is ~ cents: with children under 12 admitted fr ee. Season ticket ~'ilh unlimited ad rrussions, $1. Phone 494-131 4 for inrormalion. AUG. I DISNEYLAND SHOW -Songreu Bobble G~try and pian- bl Roger Williams will be appearing lofon .-Fri. on Tomor- rowland stage through Aug. 22. Show times are 8 and 10 p.m. nightly. Sunday is country music jubilee nigbt with Geor1e Jones -Tammy Wynette show, Aug. 10 at 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Shango wlll be on lhe Terrace Aug. 8; The Brooklyn Brid&e, Aug. 11·15. Shows at 9 and JI p.m . AUG. I WESTAIJNSTER JUNIOR DANCE -The Junior Tee n Club of Westminst'U invites all seventh and eighth graders living Jn Westminster to attend their activllles which include a d~ most Fri. nights 7:30 to 9:30, at the Westminster Com- munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave. The Rapp musical JTOUP will play for tonight's dance. Admission SO cents. AUG. ~!% HOM_E RACING -Quarter Horse Racing IS scheduled nigfilTy. except Sunday al Los Alamitos Race Course, 4.961 XJtella Ave .• Los Alamitos. First post time is 7.t5 with nlnt racu each evtnlni. 'Phone l-sz7·2331. AUGUST t LED ZEPPEIJN CONCERT -Anahdm Convention Center, IDO W. Katelll Ave., Anaheim, win stage a concert Aua. t at I p.m. 'J1te Led Zeppelin group will be joined by Jethro Tull. TickelJ, $4.50 • M.50 are available al the box office or -lktel qencJ.,_ ~ AVG. ~.SEPT. 11 HORSE 'RACING -'The Del Mar Ract Trick. Hi1hway JOl at the Intersection ol lntustate liighway :. In Del Mar. hu tho roughbred hllrte r1el111 daily except Sundays (and Tueed.11. ~pl. 2) throu&h Sept. JI . Nine raw dally with poll lime, 2' p.m. $1~;000 W Jolla ~tlle, Sat., Aug. 9; $10,000 Graduation Stakes. Tues., Aug. 12; $25.000 Ra mona Handi· cap Wed., Aug. JJ. Phone 17lt) J-755-lltl. AUG. 9 TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com- munity Center, 8200 \Yestminster Ave .. (for \Vestminster Teens) each Sat. from a p.m. to midnight. Admission, $!. for members, $1.50 for non-membe.rs. Sweet and Sour Blues band will play for dancing. AUG. IO AUTOJ\tOBJLE PAGEANT -Several million dollars worth Of antique, vinlage, classic, unusual. modern. foreign and domestic sports cars as well as horseless carriages will go on display Sun., Aug. JO, on the grounds of Phil co Ford 's Aeronutronic Division al Jamboree and r·ord Roads. in Newport Beach. Show hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. with gen- eral admission tic kets Sl.50 for adults: SO cents for children under 12. Parking is free and all money raised 11·i!J benefit Big Brolh ers of Orange County. AUG. I I POPS CONCERT -A Concert w1lh 35 musicians unde r the direction or Henry Brandon will be conducted in the mall at Fashion Island , Newport Beach, each Mon. at 9: 15 p.m. No admission charge. AUG. 11-%1 DODGER BASEBALL -Dodger Stadiu1n . 1750 Stadium \\'ay, Los Angeles. Day games start at I p.m.; Night games at 8 p.m. and Twi-nlght double headers at 6 p.m. Dod gers vs. Card.! Aug . JI (5 :~), 12-13 (NJ; Expos Aug. 26-28 lN ). AUG. 14 STORY llOUR -Every Thurs. the Laguna Beach Library, 363 Glenneyrc, Laguna Buch, conducts a story hour {or children t~·o and one-half to fi ve years. It starts at 9:30 a.rn . AUG. 15 ANGEL BASEBALL -In the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd ., Anaheim. All night games are at a p.m.; day games start at 1 p.m:Tlckets available at all ticket agencies and the box office. Phone 1-633-2000. Angels vs. Cleveland Aug. 15, 16 fN): 17 (D), 18 IN); BalUmore, Aug. 1~21 lNl; Ilelroll, Aug. 2% tNJ , 23-24 ID). AUG. 1$-17 FIESTA -The third annual PoOr Clare Guild Fiesta will be staged Aug. IS-17 on the grounds or St. Barbua's Church at E.'uclid and McFadden in Sanla Ana . Food, rides. games and prlies will be mort plentiful Ulan e.ver before. Sponsors of the f iesta will use funds raised to a5Sist thf' Poor Clare nuns in paiylng off the $245,000 debt for the day care nursery operated by the nuns. Houn: 6 p.m. f'ri., Aug. 15 ; noon to 10 p.m. Sal. and Sun., Aug. 16, 17. AUG-IS-%8 CIRCUS -Anaheim Convention Ctntcr, 800 West Xatel!l Ave .• Anaheim, will be lhe t.ent for the "Greatest Show t 1 Earth" when Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circ .i presents the 991h ed1Uon ol their show Au1. 1>2tl. TralncJ animals, lrap€J:e andntlb Wirt artists. musical spectacles, ck>wns and much, much more wlll be on the program. There will be two performances each ~ay \\11th lhree on Sat. Tlckel.s, $2 • $S avallible at the Arena office an1l all Ucket agencies. Children under 12 ii:et SJ. discoun t for all performances EXCEP1' F'rl. night and ~-cektnds. • Mehta Set For 3 Boivl Programs Saturday. August 9. the 1-lolly .... ·ood Bow l Pops ConCi!rt \viii be conducted by Don ald Voorhees who was conductor of radio's famous Telephone Hou r ror I! years. and has been condu ctor of lhe Bell Telephone Hour on lelevis ion r .. avel GtlWe ::..:..=-=--=-~.;........;-· • • -• South Seas No . Ba:rg-ai , • PENAAUIA TahJU '-You can't get ln•urance do\vn here against f'all ing coconut!. That's why your rent car has a shell key chain marked : j<Don 't park under the coconut trees, s'il vous plait!" * There's a legend that no hotel can grow I.all er than a coconut tree on Tahiti. But that's fini, Cla ude. \Ve came down tctsee the ne w Hole! Matlv1 which costs $7 million to go up seven stories. Across the island beside Matavai Bay, there's the new multi-storied Tahara's. They are not boxy skysrapers. Tahara's goes down the sld~ of a bill. Maeva goes up in terraces. Somethlnc like the old stone temples. * For the new elegance in French PoJyneJia, you pay: $26 double, $23 sinale. The brealtlaat - (rolls juice and coffee) -nudges you fl.SO. Cock- tails 8.re $1 .25. And the taxi to town is is.50. * '"'C1n't young people on • bud91t m1k1 it In some South P1ciflc Island? The prices y.u'vt print- ed •r• out of our sight ••. " The Sopac is no bargain basement. French Polyne!ia doesn't want you melting into the fi1h· and-free-banana economy of the native Tahitian.a. (Even tbe millionaires have to get out atter-11..Z months. "Because by then they ha".e learned to live cheaply," was a frank explanation I heard.) * But -there ARE cheap places to stay if you can make it. Couple of hotels on the Papeete water· front are listed at $4. I didn't go in. From the out- side they looked old, battered . Something out of Somerset Maugham . . There's the excellent Hotel Bora Bora on Bora Bora, the ·world's most beautiful island. That's $48 double with meaJs by one of the world's best chefs. But a place in the village goes !or '6. * Now the best buy in the South Pacific is Club Mediterranee. This cost $599 for EVERYTHING. Air round trip from the West Coas~. Cottage. Meals. Wine. Skin d1yjng. (You pay for ~garettes and any liquor besides the wine.) The Club is on Moor1a (ac ross from Tahiti); on Raiatea in the Isl&Qd'- Under-The-Wind. * "''The high prices in T1hiti •• ~?" The islands are losers for the French Goveqi- ment. There's no income tax. Almost everything fs imported. Native labor is paid litUe. But the taxts put the Otis on the price list. * "What 1r1 the che1pe1t isl•nd1?" . The outer islands of the Fijis. These are U,e / getav.'ay islands -and there . .\RE a few mode.st . places to stay comfortably. * . Not for sw ingirs though. Papeete on Tahiti J s the Paris or the Sou th Seas. A sandy cOconut pci-t with two or three noisy bars. Quinn's is mo&t fath-!' ous. Bar Lea aA<ither, French sailors. Tahititn girls in flower croWns. i1usic that \vould blo\v a safe. And a coeducational bathroom that requires plenty of savoir faire. * 11(1n Wt get a skin diving tq_uipment?"" Yes. all ove r the French islands. Check in with the Chasse Sous-marine Club for where to d.1ve. \Vbat's dangerous. If you wear glasses, have yoyr prescription ground into a face plate for your mask and take th.at .-it.h yoo.. You can rent everythiQg else. * ''We p&.nMct on •Wting T•hili en reute to Austrelia. But we •r• not Yount ind wt de Ilk• comfort ..... These r.e"W" hot.th an as good as anythin& SL \\/aik:ik1. The Rotei Bora Bora is cottage style bµt perfectly comfGruble. :\nd you'll find no bet~r food in IM •orld. They have a Chinese cook whO:'s been th.re.ateru.ng LO quit for years. But somehow lb ey kttp mm_ * .. ....... .,.. ~i•I we c1n't ""•t •ncf lhouad since 1959. -·1•" "'?""'""'-• Voorhees will condu rl the 1 11 brinig with us?" orchestra in numbers ...,·hich ,-OV'?' !pOT'ls clothes. (I never wore anythiP.f hut !and.ah. shirt and shorts. Nleht and d1y.) Tl\is ha\·e been popula r on these BOWL CONDUCTOR ts oot Honotnlu with a big selection of clothing. BUt programs and soloists for lhe Zu:r:in Mehta rou c.a:o buy anything you need. I e\"ening v."111 be singi ng stars\;:.-:;r--:::;:;:;:;:;;::::-::---;----"~o;;;iiiiii!iiiiii;;i;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili soprano Jen n Fenn and John. Raitt, borit.lne. \ Tuesday, August 12 . Zubin J r-.te hta. music dircclor of the l L<ls :\ n g e I e s Philharmonic Orchestra. who ~·ill conduct 1 all three of lhe ~·eek's pr& I grams, will open the week 1 with :. prog ram of \lo'Orks by Berlioz and Rossini. The pro- 11ram will include the Overture I and two dances from "\Villiam 'I Tell '' by Rosinl ; the Roman Carnival Overture and three • pieces from Berlioz' Dam-I nation of Faust,'' Opera singer , Maril yn Horne will be soloist. singing arias from "Dam· nation of Faust," ''Siege of Corinth" and "La Donna del Lago." On Thursday, August 14, i\I eh l a will conduct !he orchestra in the classic v.·orks v.•hlch ~·ere used In the 1 musiral sco res for the films1 I ··Eh1ira 1'fadigan " and "2001·1 A Spuce Odyssey ·• Geza Anda. pianist. and David ' Frisina, vloHnlsl. w i I I bt soloists. I On Saturday, August 16. Zubln fliehta v.·ill conduct a Tc h a i kovs)I.")' Spectacular. 1'-1W1a Olcht.e r, sololst, ¥.'ill play the Piano Concerto No. I 1n B fla1 minor : and lhe ~ ore:he:;tra ~-111 IX' heard In ··~1arche Slav.'' "Romeo and Juliet" overture, and Lhe j:I Overture 1812,_ complete "'llh ~ cnnn'ln. rircv.·orks and the 5G.2nd Cal!fom\a Air National Gnard Band. HE'S 90 YEARS YOlllG AND STILL GOING STRONG! MR . FRANK GOODAR D 1t•rt•4 1eflin4j1 the world', finest produce Vr century •90, •nd the fr•dition ha• nffet b•en jeopardi:r:ed, West Fruit, Los An9ele1 is the n•me of his tomp•"Y· •nd it IPll1 the fin1st procfuce reputation in Americ1 .. We •re 9r•teful to Mr. 6odd.,d for supply ing us with hi1 produce th1t has" helped c.on tri but1 \O much lo our succ.es1 ! We hope you QO for '0 morel Sint er1 ly, ERNEST CAMP -Htrt Ate West Ft11lr'1 Spoclob 1., Ow c .. 1....,. 1'1111 Wffll - I•••••••••.••••••• a• •J' • • • • • • •.•" • CALIF. IAITl.m • IC.DI•• • •IANT SID a • PEARS 8 , LmUC:E • NECTARINES 1' : 1 oc lb. : 15• "· : 15• •. : • U111 .. -S lbt .• Ulllt-4 • Lh1111t-1 ... a • Witt! h.11 Co11,e11 • Wtttii Tltlt Ce.,H a Witt, TMs Co1,111 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS IXPIH AU•UIT lJ Ya M• e'1n11•r 1111 •• bt "Owl of Tlrtl, W1114" ti 01ttl fl11t to1lt1trt lllt. Th., i.w, tho fi1101t ~1 1>d u<t "''"'" <tn bu¥. Tlrtt¥ wo11'I 111111 for 111,01111, eltt. Th1y 41111 1114 tho ._,,, T1y tlrt.M .nd .... ~II 1e1! THI: PtSHlflfl4,t.H, llNllAHDT. 1or .,. IOT, "OWAID'S, SIA IHANTT -t 'ld '"'' JOO ollrt1fl. ''''011!1• lho1J1I M•w ii.out yew c1ltl•t 111 1 "ORANGE COUl/TY 'S rASTUT O~OW/NO PRODUCE ORGANIZATION" i N~!~~~! ~~~~~~CE __ ~:_~~- ... ' "3 2 Ytinr o/ Produce K11ow low'' f ''\Vhe11 Qt1alltv It Tht Order of the Houtc .. -. ' -~----~~------------------------------------------ - ' I I ' Q -(J 1 \ . , N ---------.....-~---~--------------··:---....-----~-. J'r!day, AugU$l 8, 1961 DAil Y PILOT 2.'J ABOUT By · NORM STA.NLE\' ORANG E COUNTY 'S R-E S T A UR AN T, NIGH T C LIJB AND ENT ERT AINM EN T SC EN E ------ Ontra Cafeteria H's always a bit wondrous to behold the seem- ingly endless array of food stretchmg along . the cOunters of a deluxe cafeteria. Certainly the idea of a bdm of plenty comes into sharper focus. ' And the cornucopia immediately sprang to mind as we were contemplating the abundance <?n display durtng a recent visit to the Ontra Cafeteria in Newport Center. ~ The experience also reminded us of the ~un and excitement that goes with the act of ch000:1ng lrom such a profusion of dishes. T,he practice, further, will be repeated more often m the future than we've managed the past few years. CHOIC ES-CHOICES There' was a pleasant change of pace in seeing the food first-band before selecting, as opposed to reading about it on the printed ~ge of a me~u. And satisfaction in the overall vanety the occaSion afforded. Ontra's individual items are so extensive one must be careful to avoid detaining the next person in line. salads, entrees, vegetables, breads, des- serts; all are available in large numbers. But some of the special meals they offer shouldn't be overlooked. Particularly by cost-con- scious families with a brood of any size. SPECIALS lt would be hard, for example, to beat what they call the plaiter of plenty - a different daily ontree .erved Monday through saturday With WhiJ>' ped potatoes and a choice of two vegetables, for the tidy sum of 89c. Monday it's veal cutlet: Tuesday, chopped steak; Wednesday, liver and onions: Thursday, baited quarter chicken; Fliday, fried Icelandic sole; Saturday, stuffed pepper. DELANEY'S Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home. STAG CHlllSE WINO • 111 2 ht pl., Newport Buch ORiole 3-9560 o,_ Y ........ D•lly 11·11 -ht. -4 s.t. 'tll l •.•· Ent'•rtainment Ni9htly Tuesday t hrough Saturday THE FA BULOU S DICK SEAN * BANQUET FACILITIES FOR. 450 * SERVIN G LUNCH AND DINNER DAILY MEADOWLARK country club GOMER. SIMS. CECIL HOLLINGSWORTH, Co·OwnotJ 16782 GRAHAM STREET HUNTINGTON llEACH For R ... rv1tiom C1ll 846-1186 or 846-1416 Lnc• ...... 11ilta.M. IH_. ..._ 4:10'p.111. hilf .....,. ~ Nl .. tty NOW APPEARING RENE & BURT GROOVY COMBO Tuesday thru Saturday TONY FLORES His Songs and Guitar Sundav and Monday Nites 2607 W. Co11t Highway -Nawport -646.0201 ~---------~-- Every ~Ionday night there also is a £ried chicken dinner for 99c. and a spag;hetti dinner for the same tab on Wednesdays. Fned· fresh water perch i~ served all day. for both lunch and dinner, on Fridays at the low cost of 69c. AND ON SUNDAY Sundays feature an "all you can eat" smorgas- bord -which does not include beverages or des- serts -for $2.25 per person. Children under 10 take part in the same feast for $1.25. It always includes six entrees such as carved- to-order roast beef, turkey, veal cutlet, swiss steak. breast of lamb and fried chicken, with unlimited portions of each. There is no limit either on the quantity of each of many salads, vegetables and breads. - An everyday offer, surely one or the last of it's kind aroundj is coffee -all you can drink -at 10 cents a cup. With all baking done on premises. they also provide celebrants with birthday cakes providing a day or two notice is given. PLEASANT SURROUNOINGS AJJ dining areas are spacious and attractive. with dark woods, wrought iron, patterned tiles. terrazzo and carpeting utilized harmoniously in the decor and furnishings. The handsome chandeliers were hand-crafted in Mexico. Ontra Caferteria is located at 60 Fashion Island,' Newport Center, Newport Beach {behind the Broadway approaching from the coast side , but facing the entrance on San Joaquin Hills Road). It's open Monday through Friday for lunch from 11 to 2:30, closed from 2:30 to 4:30, and open again for dinner from 4:30 to 8. Saturday hours run straight through from 11 to 9 and from 12 to 8 on Sun~ay. DON JOSE'· -proudly presents - The Sensational LINDA LEIGH and The LAOS Tuesday thru Sunday DANCING FRI. AND SAT. IN THE FIESTA ROOM Finest Mexican Food At Reasonable Prices e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. AdJms (at Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 962°7911 " " I " " SUPERB POLYNESIAN Ei1t e r tainmettt Friday & Saturday 8:30 P.M. -2 A.M. "We promise you good food a11d service'" POLYNE SIAN FOODS ONTRA'S All you can eat on Sunday $2.25 11161 10 ... -·Jost $L29 llrlle Oo -fllil7 a/Id -... --..... --i:a-• -Boot,• ..... -_ ,..,.,, ""' .... to oar tlbllom: :sprlads Of S:alldr, lQl!tlHesJ bfada mil fttfb. tt'a: all tfln-Olltl'• ....... ioods, bat llOW IS• loecill ~·Al Y• c. &r'-r--•.llilOA.M. 'tit-. oe....-............ _... DlllUT raUltfOefc SMMCeltlr' O•ln 6617 Ft!lbroak AW!nlll, Ctnop Par\ CaTif. Mt•"'1 km Ontrt #6(1 fnhl~n lit1!td, Newport Buch, C,Uf, c--- " " " " Tale of the Whale Take our word. The old Balboa Pavilion's ne\v restaurant -Tale o( the Whale -catapults the familiar landmark Lnto the top ranks of SouUt Coast dining establishments. Which proves you can't take a place fo r granted just because it's been around nearly three-quarters of a century. Or discount the possibility of changeS' that will improve an institution. SOME PHYSICAL CHANGE S Evidence to the contrary can be viewed in every particular of the recent conversion that's pro- duced one of the area's fin est seafood houses. COn· siderable imagination and initiative have been demonstrated in the process too. Alterations in the physical layout, enhancing and practical as they arc, have in no way ·marred the kind of ageless charm that is a Pavilion distinc- tion. In fact, the innovations bespeak expertise in 1noderniz:ing the traditional. Foremost among the results is a pervading air of soli d comfort, an atmosphere commanding total rest and relaxation. To which we surrendered com· pletely when we made our first Visit last week . A VIEW FOR ALL .A.nd the harbor view, long one of lhe most ab- sorbing hereabouts, sti ll unfolds in all its splendor. The ne\v arrangement also permits n1ore people to enjoy it -the old coffee shop having been in - corporated into the dining room and the wall booth s elevated to permi t unobstructed observation. Voting in favor of dinner for our Introduction to the Tale of tbe Whale, we setUed into a front win· do\v seat shortly after 7 p.m. Staying on through twilight into darkness, the changing drama of the WITH ~AlllENTS~Olllf>lElt OF OUlll DELUXE CANTONESE DINNERS . -On• Coupon Per P•rty - Good ~111 A1i19. t 1 GENERAL YEN'S CHINESE RESTAURANT 1500 Adams Av•., Costa Mt•• !'HONE 540.19)7 Dining with An Ocean View SEAFOOD, STEAllS AND GOURMET ENTREES * * * * FROM $3 .25 * JESS PARKER Appearin~ Nightly T1i1eldey th'!' S1i111doy BANQUE T FACILITIES AVAILABLE !'HONE Sl6·1555 l l 7 OCEAN AYE. HUNTINGTON IEACH Overlooking The Pacific Ocea n At The Pier -JOSEF'S-. LUNCHEON CHUCK KEELY TRIO DANCI NG NIGHTLY FROM 9 P.M. . SUND AY BRUNCH II -4 • DIN NER 2121 E. COAST HI GHWAY AT TH E JAMAICA INN 673-1180 'Whel1: Excitiq '{J'in&S c5l.re Happenin1! The f aJ#fl'- .. T hre'• Ct1M/Hflltt" itt lht1 Scdlh Lo11111t Dlnln1 In the H eutll&d Mrda4or Room LavUlt neM' b.tttQu«I lttrilltin GRAND HOTEL 7 FIU'JmMAN WAT A M'AHlllK, C.u.1,., 712-7771 - bay convinced us we'd chosen the ideal {ime to eat here. The menu immediately confirmed that the restaurant is living up to its advance promise of offering seafoods gathered from th'e world's oceans. An amazing variety of waters are represented in the selections. APPETIZE RS Jn a(ivance of dinner, if you're a hardy eater, there is a sizeable quantity of a la carte sea food appetizers. And Boston or Manhattan chowder at 75c a bowl. Cold seafood cocktail appetizers include Alas. kan king crab, $1.75 ; gulf shrimp, $1.60; lobster, $1.95; combination, $1.95. Or. fresh clams on half shell. $2.25; fresh oysters on half shell . $2.50: Ala s- kan king crab legs, $2.50 ; sea food platter, $2.95. Hot appetizers are steamed clams, $2.5iJ; baked stuffed clams in shell, $2.95 ; baked oysters Rocke. fellu, $2.95; oyster stew, $2.50. Twenty three entrees include two seafood Louies, four fried seafoods, six broiled sea food.5 and 11 .seafood specialties. There also are four land· lubber's specials for those preferring something in tile steak department. All are served with soup or salad, potatoes or rice pilaf! and rolls. TEMPTERS Among the entrees, a few of the tempting p>ssi· bilities we considered were crab Louie, $3.95; Gulf of Calilornia shrimp, $3.95; Nova Scotia scallops-, $3. 75 ; Chesapealte Bay oysters, $3.95; Pacilio north- west salmon, $4.25; California lobster tail, $6.50; seafood brochette (scallops, swordfish, shrimp, lobster and white sea bass on a skewer, Oaming}, $5.25. Continued on P•ge 24 ••• Re,.rv•lion&: 494-6574 ru•e·.·•wers Open 0.ily L.n u e LUNCHEON • e DINNEA • llSfAUIANT AND e SUNDAY aaUNOt • COCICTAIL LOUN•I e LAT!: SUttEk • DINING . OCEANFR~T. DINING, ATOP TOWERS WING Of SURF And SAND HOTEL'"" 11JJ SOUTH COA1T MIGNWA'f ~= Restaurant SCENIC MOUNTAIN/SEA ATMOSPHERE DANCING NIGHTLY MON. Thru SAT. The Naturals I 6''!.o"'" Open Daily 7 am • 2 am Res. 499·2663 31106 Coast Hwy. South Laguna NOW OPEN 4t,JE!tBY -AIRPORT COSTA MESA -ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT U 6Z PALISADES ROAD 1714 ) 546-8390 Mon. thru Sot. 11 a.m.-2 a .m-Sullday 4 p.m.0 lZ p.nt. SERVING LA TE DINNER To 12:30 A.M. Mon.-Thu rs.-1:30 A.M. Frl.-Sat, Featuring th• s•m• world 0 fam ou1 m•nu & loun9• en joy•d by millions for thirty-on• Y••rs at the ••BY -ARCADIA HENRY'S Arl•tocra t of Spanlah Food & St e lllca Extends A-Get-Acqu1inttd Off•r -SPECIAL FAMILY NIGHTS - In Tlte JollKo Room For 1 Limited Time Only Mon ., Thurs., Fri, & Sat. Sund ay Only S to 9:30 p.m. I to 9 p.m. MENU HENR Y'S CO!illO " PRONTO PU. Tl SALAD, 1111' TACO •Ill' INCMILA04 CMliESli I NCMILAOA tell, TACO. S .. ANIM Rte• ~l.UP"Y CtOl.I •ti.LINO l"llll!O llANS. TOftTIUAl ''"',..'" 1ucr. '""'o •••Ns 11.1n111.. co'''' TOl:flLUS, auTflll. (Ofl,11 ... AA $2.$0 FROM oua";aOILll GORDO'S DI LtGHT ... w "l'OIUC, TO, tlt&.OtM (Mil.I flllo.LIND .. ILIT Ml•NOM CNICICIN INCtU'-"OA. Olt l"OATlll.MO\lil FllllO llANS. COfl,-11 SOUi'-t ALAO. COP'll sz.oo $4.00 For Ion .. d Glrlt Under 1Z HAMIUfl:Ofll, llAN.l, Mii.iC I TACO. llAJtS, •tel. MIUC Sl.00 · !Jl.00 HENRY'S RESTAURANT flaDIOdH and N.Wport 101.11~ COSTA lil ESA 545-557' -- . - I .I ' i \ DAllY P.IUT .. • -~ tlie lLING .J Nl!lTAIN_.{t!T • ? NIGHn A WEH DANCING MON .-t UlS.·WID. WEEKENDER • ©UT 'N ABOUT ,, * HAP HALL DUO * L"'ry Lakt '~....s~sm~··~·!,....J I!!. ........................................... ~ .......... !!!! ............................................... ..;..,..,,.,,.,. .. ...,.., .. ,...., wltll ~-.:. :--,::. ~-t-~sl._ Reir.Mesi The1te,. 5:Jl~; ~ c-;;t;-Mita Continued from •e• 23 "· · the salad cold and crisp -served in a very cold singled out for express recognition. It's noticea,bly ..L1~Mllttrt.~!.!'· __ .. _ . . .. _ . .· nd-·plate _!lccom · ed qy a very cold foflk. . And Caltlorrua . abalone;-$4'*,:-'tufled-'l'haila Bui a very spe lfil no e was soundtlrln tlieway good and the friendly, youthful nature .of lhJ lie.Ip -everyone-appears to tmomewhere-betwe~-21-- and 25 -accounts for much of the pleasure diners experience. MIKE JORDAN DUO MONDAY THRU SATURDAY JAN & PAUL I -. 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER ••tw•n •wttums & •rMdws Am11L1 Psrldng R..n.tlori. •644-2030. J FHIDMAll Wn • All•llUM ACIOSS ,.OM al'll "TE Clf llSltlTl.Allt TONIGHT <71!.~tjr fa;, { PRESENTS FRANKIE ORTEGA 111id hii orchHt•• DANCIH'1 1·9, 11·11, 12·1 ..,_ IJPDIS lt 7:30/SltOWTtll[S I Atta 11 ~ TUt·SAT./S1'1l JT !I IESEhATIOIS n141772·TI77 •GROUP SALES 171-t) 771 "4121 OPENING COMEDIANS INC.-srmmo UG I 12th .BEN ILUE • A . .--.. v MERllE smrs. MURIEL LARDEIS TWO weEKS ...... ~-Allll SllfCE• -s••l DEllll1S TICl(TS ALSO AVAIU.l!tr Af so. CAL MU!IC co., 631 so. HIU sr .• LOS ANC(lfS: WAl.llCH'$ "'USlC CITT; 8UfF1JMS'; HIHSllAW'S; MID All MUTll.\l... All"D U8£1TJ llC~tt AC.HIC!£S. u.ger shnmp, $4.75 , lobster therm1dor, $5.50, cbiop-the choice of salad dressing was offered. A four- pmo, $5. 75; deviled Dungeness crab, $4.50. bowl contained was set on the table which contained FOR LANDLUBBERS roquefort, thousand island, French (with an egg Landlubber's speci al s were listed as top si r· base) !!Dd an Qil ·and vfnegar. cop:lbination. loin, $5.50 ; steak sandwich, $3.95 ; roquefort steak This ~nabled us to try a little of each and we'd (top sirloin smothered with roquefort and broiled ): have difficulty expre11sing a pr~ference for one over $5.95 · steak and lobster combo, $6.50. the others. All , it turns out, ate made in the kitchen The entrees we finally selected were stuffed from ,Pryva~e recipes ~ which probably ex.plains sole, $4.75 and assorted shellfish, $5.95. Both proved the dtstinction from their counterparts elsewhere. to be extraordinarly savory and gave us an oppor· ·r tunity to sa mple a rather wide variety of the . \Vhale's seafood otferings. FIFTY FATHOMS The sole, we learned, came from SO talhoms down off the Oregon coast. Stuffed with shrimp and crab, seasoned with a number of piquant spices and baked in a white wi ne sauce, its preparation indicated manifold culinary skill . Our assorted shellfish consisted of a selection or scaJlops. shrir,n p, c:rab legs and lobster. Ample and w.ell-cooked portions of each were highlighted by the inclu sion of three individual containers of tartar sauce, melted butter and cocktail sauce. ~ ~· • To obtain an additional cross sampling of the bill of fare, one of us ordered salad and the other Boston chowder. The soup was rich and creamy, VILLA ROMA Speciali1in9 ln Italian Dinn•rs HAVING A PARTY, A GATHERING OR FAMILY DINNER? Our standard special spaghetti dinner consists of our deli cious meat sauce and me.•t balls, topped with im - ported parmesen cheese, and includes our delicious garlic toast. No diih•i to ""''"' witk our di1po11bl• slumillU"I co11t•l111rt. N11111ber ef dl•Nn aftd pric-Te t• 111lly. 100 -$145.00 • -$1.70 50 -72.50 4 -S.10 25 -16.00 2 -2.90 10 -14.50 1 -1.45 4,.5 North Newport 8oufev1rd, Nawport leach Open 4 p.m. -12 p.m. Ml b-4 929 Open 7 Oeys -~~/ ' rrJp $149 ·~ g/RLOIN includes lrench fries or balled potato and Sizzfer toast • HUNTINGTON BEACH ~ COSTA MESA 10WN & COUNTRY HILl GREN SQUARE ll!U llt•ch l lvd. H2•Jfl2 • llEMIN() TEXACO STATION 5. 171t!. ''"" "'" •41·701 CHILD'S PORTION H!lF PRICE (Children 1nder 12) PHONE IN ... Ill ITEMS !V!ILABLE TO T!!E OUT MEET BILL CAOUETTE Visiling the Tale of the Whale also permited us to meet and get acquainted with the affable and newly appointed general manager, Bill Caouette. And to realize that the restaurant's successful launching stems in large measure from his capable direction. A master chet, he was born and raised in Ma ssachusetts where his father and tutor, also a master chef, was famous for his seafood special- ties_ Caouette came to California ten years ago but brings 22 years as a professional to his-' new position at the Pavilion. CLAMBAKES Prior to leaving lhe eastern se·a- board, he gained a reputation for his 11tL cAoul!TTI! clainbakes where up to 3,000 people were served at one time. The menu consisted of clams, lobster. prawns, New ·England clam chowder (all cooked on hot rocks), ..and tossed salad. In California Caouette \Vas previously employed by the Caravan IM, Bakersfield; Embers, Bishop ; and Sea Shanty, Newport Beach. Service at the Tale of the Whale must also be For A SUMMER TREAT fW1Ch \iOIJ96 toasl, crioP ~ seled. wl ct...ic. Of pollrla. 2267 FAIRVIEW (Al Wilson) COSTA MESA 642-0732 THl:C FAMILY PLACE . TO PLACE YOUR AD IN OUT 'N ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 642-4321 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • {S\. (!JI~ d/lf.-.. ~ ~·-Caribe Room • ~ ~~ ~mtl/ PRESENTS CONTINENTAL CUISINE ENTERTAINM ENT DANCING RETURN ENGAGEMENT JOHNNY VANELLI AND THE JACK LAWRENCE TRIO 3 SHOWS NIGHTLY -MON. thru SAT. the new BANQUETS, TOO • The restaurant is located al 400 Main St.. Bal- boa. The enlarged tacili ties provide seating for 160 in the main dining room and banquet arrangements for groups up to 300. It's open seven days a w~k for br~akfast. lunch and dinner. 'The cocktail lounge, which fe~ tures live entertainment Thursday through Sunday, is open until 2 a .m. daily. MUSIC King Arthur and His Knights, a bright ne:~ trio of guitars and a drum, perform Thursday, F t1· day and Saturday nights from 9 P:m. to.1:30 a.m. Gilbert Flores, master of the Spanish guitar, takes the stage every Sunday: from 4 to IO p.m. There's probably no spot a round whi~h ~nvokes as manr. fond memories or past associations as the ·Pavilion does for a lot of folks in these parts. Looks as though the Tale· of the Whale is destined to go on adding to them. Rembrandt's ln what's reported to be an entirely new con- cept in restaurant operation, the pilot for . a chain of Rembrandt's Re staurants just opened 1n Costa Mesa. . Haven't managed to hit the place yet. but ad- vance information we've received ma·ke s the whole thing sound quite intriguing. Particularly the idea that the bill of fare will be based on a combination ol "eye-appeal and taste-tempting goodness'' plus the fact that the new chain of deluxe luncheon and dinner houses will be masterminded by four men 'vhose names have been synonymous with good food in Southern California for many years. FOUR STRONG They are the Gordon Brothers, }\!, Bernie and Gene who, together with John Munsterman, have formed a corporation to build the Rembrandt chain. Each is to be operated on the principle that "food must be appetizing to look at, as \veil as to eat." Toward this end, the menu will feature dishes designed to induce customers to ex claim: "Isn't that beautiful!" OLDTIMERS The Gordons are well-known in the restaurant business as operators of such popular dining spots as the Revere House in Tustin, the Room at the Top in Hollywood and the Twin Lakes at Lake Los · Angeles on the Mojave desert near Lancaster. Munsterman has a long-established reputation with many out 'n' abouters from. his tenure as executive chef at the El Niguel Country Club. He designed the menu for the Rembiandt chain. which will have three restaurants operating in Orange County this year. COST A MESA SPOT The Costa Mesa Rembrandt's is located at 2831 Bri stol St., near the Newport Freeway and Gerard'• Costa Mesa Restaurant. lt was formerly known as Daniel 's ... and before that Zachary's. BilJingsley's Eltcitingl y different. A delightful setting to m~el every mood .-lnd 1astc. Well prepared gourmet menu -well served. Stroll ing Wed. thru Sat. THE Johnny Vane• Trio GOLDEN BULL RESTAURANT TUE .. AUG. 12 ONLY OUR ht BIRTHDAY ARLENE SKILES And Tht DICK POWELL TRIO . ' -' .... Just off tht Santi Ana Freeway at El Toro Rd. -Phone IJ0.0440 musicians add an atmosphere of charm and romance. . Enjoy this enchanting atmosphere for lunch, cocktaiils, dinner. And, o pening soon, the most exciting wine cellar in Southe rn Cal ifornia. Reservations suggested. 644-1700 Ext. 552. ' ' ·--~--,..---------------------------~------....------------·----·-·-~---.. 'OUT 'N' ABOUT · Meet the Mikes Jordan, left, and Provencal, right, make up the Mike Jordan Duo which finds Jordan on the piano and his partner on drums. Both give forth vocally and may be heard at Bob Burns Restaurant, 37 Fash.ion Tsland, Newport Beach, Mondays through Fridays from 8 p.m. and from 8:30 on Saturdays. YOU LL ENJOY OUR MIDDAY FAER ,.SUNDAY 12 P.M.1'0 4 P.M. JFM~ f111c Oif in!J $inct 1965 3801 IAST CoAST HIGll \\IAY CoRON A oicL ?.{AR, CAL1r-0RNJA PuoNr.: (71'1) 675-1374 [] s~~f:.!~~ 11'1 Wllf (0,1..IT JllOHW•Y N"'1o•r 11.t.CM 17141 -..-1 • 571 S. MAIN, Oil.ANG!! a......-s.42-Jl9S (a-d Sanday) MONDAY SPECIAL Top Sirloin ............. $1.19 (R .. ul•r $1.St) WEDNESDAY SPECIAL New York Steak . . . . . . . . $1.29 (llewvl•r S1 .6t) EVERY DAY OUR GREAT Texas T-Bone Steak ...... $1.99 Steak Sandwich . . . . . . . . . . 89' NEW SUNDAY MORNING BREAKFAST STEAK '"d EGGS .............................. $1 .29 HAM .. d EGGS ............................... $1 .19 BACON .,d EGGS ........................ $1 .09 SAUSAGE •od EGGS ...................... $1.09 PANCAKES IAll you c•n ••ti .......... 4tc BAN9UET FACILmES 10065 GARFIELD CAI Brookhurst1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 961 • 6371 rrl!Uy, A119ust a. 1969 DAll.Y PILOT JI Y·our Movie Guide / / 'Run Wild' a Simple Yet Moving Story ' (Editor'• Hou: T-h aporlmeat. J-,_ and molli• ~ " prepamS Roort Redlon!.' • th-r u 11 • d Northeasl Canadian wilderness to rtach )lome. ... _ .... , Ca11ias s• Wr 1:H P.M. "NIU PAN" "'Tiii l~alDllU JOUaNIY" b~· Ille /111111 commlllet of 11<a -!Gl• -claulc H-C-·JtfA.-lfra.-11'~1111....CQllJoh!I Clart ;., prtrid<nl aad a drlll10tic cbario1 r-. and lllre. Hori St•Hn<J It demoqolratn the lmpoct oi ~no Levo -llof-{Gl>-Dimey1\:=:;:=:=:=:=::;:::;::==: comedy aboUt a Volkswa.gen with human feelings. Dean JMOS and Buddy Hackett · -•1•· ._, JI Cbrllllanlty M Ben-Hur and ~ ~,M Mii CrtU&rmcft. bia family, ChlrUoo Htltoo u mtendcd ai a Ttfettnct and Jack Hawkinl The M1Heae Blppy (G): in detmninfno 1uitobl• ~ . Nonsensical c om e d y~Uler filw for cerlallo 0 p a Fully Girt: ~ Ill mµme1l •bout a couple of fly-by-nigM OTOUPI and will appear 'B~tion ti! ~e ~ r:; ' bualness partners who become weeklf. your 1Mtoa arc :f'umJ nee, a a I n v o I " e d with family of z.:-:#.d. lf-ll #'--1 111 . who becama: .are t werewol\les. Dan Rowan and so tL-..... ~ wa.m o ~ ccnuc star. Bartlra Streiuocl, Dick Martin vi• Gold<. c:at1 of the Omit Sharif aad Willer o II .(G) Spectacul DAlLY :zw.T.) * Pigeon. ' muslc,j ~!rsioo : oC Dickens~ ADULTS B..pre• ar.b (M); An cluaic about an orphaned wail ~ prlnw ol Wiii", aller cut IDlo the teeming 1qualor CuUe lteep (R): Art·lilled -.C in the lllllllk:h Zoo, ol the lower class. He fin.ally castle, ~pied by wounded begtbs_ a hundred mile wait eacapea to the elegance or the me~, is a symbol of real.stance with four eompanianl and a upper class. Mart Lester, against the enemy on the eve prize elephant. TblJ adv~ Jack WUd and Oliver Reed. ~ 1\:1 :::. ~.i:·i~~ ~ -::"'...:!.mt~ -Wild, Ra FftO (G): A in the winter of 1944. Burt brutalities of war. Oliver simple, moving story set in Lancaster, pa t r I ck O'Neal, Reed. ~ En.g~shl moors about au boy! Jean-Pierre Aumont Hoek. LIM: u4 staker (G): w o s en an emo ona GoocJbv. eotumi.°1 (RJ· A Jerry Ltwts stan as a man shock and loses his ability to ,~ · speak. A mall girl, a retired summ~r romance between a who believes he has only a Colonel. a coll and a falcon ~r librarian and a nouveau short time to li\le, Peter help blm to recover. Mark r1che ':01iege glrl lapses due Lawford, Anne Francis. Lester and John Mills. lo . their differen~ vie~s. A Pluet: ol Ute Apel: Science· Support Your Local Sberiff sat1~e ~n se~ with Richard. fiction melodrama about 3 (G): Hilarious tongue-in-cheek Ben1amin, Ah MacGraw. astronauts who crash land on almost non-violent western ~=t~! ll'I Hiii MOST JANTASMACK>llCAL MUSICAL INTllTAINMINT IN THI HISTOlY Of m1nH•N•1 -SHOW Tl"IE>-- ......_. 1r00•t~o M.t. ltlllt. & S.. J:M & 4:11 Hard Contract (~): Ja!Yles unfamiliar planet 2000 years with Jams Gamer, Joan Coburn .is a p~fess1onal ~ler hence, where apes are civilit-Hackett and Walter Brennan, who en1oys bia work un~ be ed and humans, prtmtUve. Peter Pu: Wa1t Disney's vUitn R.Droc:t.oii ~alls In lo_ve: '11le story is set Charlton Heston, Maurice animated \lersioo of James - 1n Europe s Jet.-se~ resort com· Evans, Roddy McDowall. Barrie's classic story or the t>ick'Van ~e munlty. Lee Renvck arstars. Pluet ti Ute Apel: Science-boy who never grows up. ~Ann 1ioWes MATURE TEENS fiction melodrama about 3 * * * 'Lioneljefliies AND ADULTS astronauts who crash land on Tilt letter immediately .. i.~ unfamiliar planet 2000 years Chi Chi G~ry ~:s:l:s a(~~:I ~OO!~W~=a~~~~ ~~th~~~nd;::e~ M'Aa·!!Z~ Prize winning scientist who is Charlton Heston, Mau r Jct tht Motion Picture Code. ~ sent on a spy mission to Red Evans, Roddy McDowall. The Jfoticm Picture Codt -·~trr :z China. With Anne Heywood. ne S.lbera Star (M): An And Rating Program may lfi1 ... ··• ........... ! The Great Ban.Ir. Robbery adventure film (baaed on be found Oft the motion ~' ..._,Ai>•'"Wa-l :-..;:;~.1M>t1':."": IJ4.8I • (M): Zero, Mastel, Kim Jules Verne novel) set in .. !picltw:·::~•...:-~~-:_ ___ _'.I=========:::!'!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-!!!!!!~-~·-~-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Novak, Clint Walker star ln Africa, about the discovery thiJ film about three different and theft of the , world's gang's attempts to rob the largest diamond ·and the same bank on the same morn· manhunt for the susPtcteci ing. thief. Onon Welles, Unula lf It's Tuesday, This mu1t Andreas, Gecqe St1aJ. be Belgium jG): A busload of American tourists whizzing hllarously through Europe-in search of instant culture are shepherded by a jaded young Englishman. Tan McShane, Suzanne Pleshelte. Lion tn Winter: Clash of two strong-willed monarchs, King Henry JI or England and his queen, Eleanor of Aquitaine, makes a brilliant, explosive drama out of fragments: of 12th ctntury history, Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hep- burn. Wining (M): The maniage of a racing car champion is almost wrecked by his con· centration on winning the big race. The racing background is colorful and exciting. Paul Newman stars. TEENS AND ADULTS Barefoot In lhe P • r k : Beguiling story about the first few weeks Of newlywed life in a Greenwich Villa1e walk-up FAMILY Clllty Ch!Uy lllq BIQ (G): A cheery mualcal in which Dick Van DyWe portrays t1'!e crackpot inventor of Ian Fleming's fa ntasy. He remodels an old racing car and spins fabulous yams to the a.musement of his adoring children. Sally Ann Howes abo atan. Tbe Great Race: In a pre- Worid. War I settln&, two darede\IU mmt mcm are pitted againat uc:b Gtber in an automobile race from New Yort lo Paris. Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtil, Natalie Wood. Futasdc Voya1e: A su~ marine and crew a r e miniaturized and injeeted into a scientist's bloodstream to perform a delicate operation. Stephen Boyd, E d mo n d O'Brien, Racquel Welch. Incredible Joante)',: Bull ler· Tier, Labrador retnew.r and a Siamese cat travel 200 miles How 'Milly Fix' Led To 'That Darn Cat' A small town girl, who never Intended to be an author, today has reached tht top in movieland, u a novelist and screenwriter. She.ls Mildred Gordon, born near E.ureka, Kansas, popula- tion 2,500, who collaborates with her husband , Gordon Gordon, on the wrlUng o( novels and screenplays. 'lbeir lastest book, "Night Before The Wedding," haa just been published by Doubleday. It ia their 15th, and follows their ''Undercover Cat" which sold 1,600,000 copies, became the Disney film, "That Darn Cat," and earned them more than $200,000. "I never wanted to be a writer -and I still don't," said Mildred. "l was going along as happy as could be as a housewife and then before I knew it I was trapped. Gordon conned me i.nto it. Don Ellis Scoring 'Moon Zer.o' Filming or uMoon Zero Two," the ftammer/Wamer Bros . .Seven ArL9 motion pk:- ture production about a spec· tacular space flight, has been completed in England. American composer Don Ellis and musical dlredor Phil Martell are now workina oo . the score of the film, wbk:h Spencer Reeve is editing for producer Michael Carrtras and director Roy Ward Baker. "P.1oon Zero Two," written for the screen by Ca\lin Lyall, F'rank Hardman and Martin Davison, stars Jamu Olson. Catherina Von Schell, Warren ~fllchell, Adrienne Corri. Ori Levy, Dudley FOiler and Bernard Bressi aw. 1'You see, he was working on newspapers, and we were barely acraping by. So he used to do features for magaz.ines, and when he came to a rough part, he would write on the edge, 'Milly fix'. Well. Then I would work it over. But in time the 'Milly fix' grew and grew and before I knew Jt I had written a book. He's never let me off the hook since. He's a slave driver. He locb me In my rom at 9, lets me out to get him lunch, and then back J go at one o'clock." The Gordon& live In a sprawling Spanish h i 11 t a p home in Encino which they share with D. C. (Dam Cat) who was the prototype for the "hero" in "Undercover Cat." A sign on their home reads: "This home was bought and endowed by a cat." "So much of the small towns goes Into our nO\lels and screeplay1," she said. "El· pression1 th-at I remember, little incidents, even IOO'le of Ute people J knew. In wr:IUna, you're constantly drawlng on yoo.r put." The Gordon•' novels hi.ve IOld II milUon eopu in 17 countries. Eight have been iic· quired I« Olmlng, . ''But it wu our cat, D.C. (Darn C1t), thll ~t ui the most fame and money," she said. "We got him for '2 from the S.P .C.A. It was 1 better investment than IBM." 'Ttle Gordon• wrohl a second novel wllb D.C. in the elltrlni role, .. UndertlOVtr Cat Prowll Ailln.'" wblcb wru be filmed shortly by Ttleworld. He doesn't appear tn "Night Be- l~ The Wedding," bowever, and they are. 1 UUle conctrned about whit their reader• may think, "But wt do want to write about other 'peaplt' and other backgrounds." ahe said. "We don't .want to be a Boswell to a cal for the rest ol our llve1!'1 lew Pun at Knott's ... _Bide a Log Through the lewest Mountain in Orange County Discover the thrill and fun of the early day Joggers ••• a ride through a mountain log-flume like the early days of the old Northwest! See the log mills, the waterfall s, !he logging trucks and the old time wacer wheels in action as you ride through Ca lico Mountain ••• Orange County's newest ••• at Knoll's Berry Farm. Experts tell us that this is the greatest Log Ride ever bu ilt •• ,, one ride and we know that you will agree. It's the newest add ition to all the other new attractions and the New Fun at Knoll's. I llOTT'S BIBBY FABll in Bnena Part ':-·: :-• .. ·. I l I I :I : I ~I .. ~Pop P011rri' Presents Shongo Disneyland's ''Pop Pourri" on Tomorrowland Terrace _will pr~sent Shango in concerts for listening or dancing at 9 and 11 p.m. torugbt. Tb1s mod group plays most any kind or tune with a beat and does especially well with their Cal.ipso numbers. 'Housewife ' Gets Help On Chores Laguna Civic Ballet Plans Alfresco Night Ralph Nelson. f i 1 m i n g MGM's " • • • tick • . • tick. , , tick •. , " with Jim Brown. George Kennedy and Fredric ~1arch in Colusa , California, had to employ a 91· year-old local \vomao as technical advisor for Lynn Carlin. Miss Carlin , talented enough to "'in a 1968 Oscar nomina· lion for her very first ;ictirig Job. in "Faces," was unable to perform such necessary on· camera chores for h e r southern housewife role as ironing clothes. hang_ing out laundry, shelling pel!s and snapping beans. 'l'he embarrassed •actress could only explain that, "I'm just an ordinary housewife." Laguna's lrvine Bowl will be I.he setting for a feast of music and motion. Saturday, August 30, when the city's widely ac. claimed Civic Ballet Company presents its fourth annual "Ballet Alfresco." Recently named a national honor company and twice the recipient of the Disneyland Community Service Award, the ballet group will present a richly varied, beautifully cos· turned and carefully balanced program featuring an en- tertaining work r a re 1 y performed in the United States : the amusing, happy· go-lucky ''La t'ille Ma I Gardet, '' which is concerned llith a youthful romance that wins out despite M.ama's ob- "Morvelou" •• , Brilliant •.. 4 Stars'' "THREE PENNY OPERA" I J 9IEllTO\..T lltlECHT FIHAL a' WIEIEKS Joll11 Milb "RUN WILD, RUN FREE" phn Jlt1q1111I W•l'h -Edll'l1111d O'l r\•11 "FANTASTIC VOYAGE" Japanese Movies Every Tuesday Night r .................................... . SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUl PAT•ONS : The 111<.htra. i., Thi• bo• ml• bll' (<lnliidli'ld by lOtN IO bl: ...... wlt.ttt• lot (fl lld•en 1n<1 V"llrl!I peoo!t -•I'd rniu!re P<1••nl1I dis-: uNOon~CA$T\..I!. KIEEPR (II.I ""'lKl!D AHCIE\.." (I ) • : "MA!l:O COHTIACT" (Ill "THE GllElT &A"'K AOl&EllY~ (M) : "SUPPOllT YOUll t.OCAt. SHElllF'" CMJ • • ''THI! CHllllMA"'" CM) • e Conlrt•'I' lo td~ffllllng be\'OllG our con•rol tf!d ePPta•lnt t l•t·e e wtiere, ~ DtOPle .....,.,. 11 (nol l'l will no! bt ldmillt<I IO Pit~. : lie TllNI«• 13 •eto tht 111 1 p'(tlll'n lluld In 1n'1 boll vnlu. t t·e companl..t P• puon1 or adult t1utrcli1n, • ...................................... , T-F11t1tcntic C1111111dy G\'Hft I0111No•oll -CH.-t Walll•r • "Tho GREAT BANK ROBBERY" pl111 Jocll l•111111011 -lo11y C11tl1 "THE GREAT RACE" laoll'l-'ff for Adull"I ............. ~ ........... . lnlmtft Dri••·I• ,,...,._.., hrt LMCt1tt.1 -Poter F-elk "CASTLE KEEP" ,1u Jo-G-lf -Woltllf l r•1111011 "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHE RIFF" Nn -undf1' 11 will W -6mltllld un\eu tee"""' ""nlt<I b,. po1ret1I or .ci11tt 1111.u<t\fn, ...................................... jections and obstacles. The production i a c I u d e s music by Herold arranged by Lanchbery. Choreography for the enlire program is by the Russian·bom founder a n d artistic director of the ballet company, Lila Zali. Lead dancers in the musical-com· edy type presentation will be Merilee Magnuson, Hal O'Nea1 and Charles Colgan. Also featured in the ballet in the bowi program will be "Pas de Quatre," with music by Pugni, and ''Dreams," in which Odile de Witte. Merilee Magnuson, Hal O'Neal, Gene Wilkes and the corps de ballet will perform lo music by Bartok. For years the world·famous Fesliva1 of Arts has helped sponsor tbe Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company by the awarding of cash grants as well as by making the Irvine Bowl fa ciliti es available for the area's biggest ball el event of the year. right after the Festival six.weeks s e a s o n ends. Ticket!'! for ''Ba ll et Alfresco" are on sale at the festival of Arts box office, 650 Laguna Canyon Ro a d ; telephone 494·1147. Since there is to be only one performance, early inquiry is strongly recommended. Car Buffs Get Treat At Pageant There will be something for every type of car buff to see at the second annual Pageant or the Automobiles scheduled for Sunday. August 10, on the grounds of the Phll~Ford's Aeronutronic Division, Ford Rood at Jamboree or MacArthur Blvd., in Newport Beach. Entries are still pouring in <1t. press lime from all over Southern California, according lo Pageant officials, Insuring that this will represent the largest display of show cars in Orange County history. Several million do 11 a r s 'vorth ofi antique, vintage . classic. unusual, e I e g ant modem, foreign and domestic sport cars, as well a s horseless carriages a n d speciali zed high·performance cars will be on display at the event. Y.'hich will have the Pacific Ocean as its backdrop. Grand Prix ~1~allions will be awarded for all classes of show cars. Castle Keep A Symbol Of Defiance .. ... "Castle Keep,u-1·t-a fftn-g Burt Lancaster, is currently showing at the Lido Theatre in Newport Beach. Based on William EasUake11 acclaimed best.seller, pro. ducers Martin Ransohoff and John Calley and director Sidney Pollack have brought it to the screen with all its ex. citement and unnerving counterpoint. "Castle Keep" Is set In winter, 1944, in the Ardennes Forest. As Hitler's armies prepare their massive counter- offense on the eve of the Bat- tle ol the Bulge, eight walking wounded of the American Anny come lo occupy a castle dominating the crossroads village of St. Croix. ~-...... r...-.. •-----~·-• CONTINUOUS DAILY flCM 2 r.M. u aES IDll£lEE .11111 m 111111 !l.8ill TEClllll:lllll' ==::-::t ·-A'--Al..-~ Walt Di1ney'1 "WINNIE THE POOlt And The BLUSTERY DAY" Tile castle becomes a Bym· bol of resistance against the enemy causing the men to take their stand and staunchly defend it. ASTRID HE'EREN'S FIRST FILM Loses Castle in Movie with Burt Lancaster i""""""""""""""""""'"""""~vvvvvvvvvv~~"""""""""'"""""~"""""'""""',._,..--"'-:! ''Casile Keep.ls On The Beam!" "-f:?"C?'tri>:l J.IBED 'CllS'l'l.E KEEP', 11.IKED IT.ll I.OT! AN OITBEJlTWJIBJ'ILM TIJ.llT'S ON i'RE BEJlM! The characters are saperbly drawn, hawi119 a gr-t time liwing in. the castle, kidding each other, eating well, drillking, and Yisiling the lively gia:ls at 'l'he Red O.een's pl-sare hoase·. Bat the• they bee-• gr-t fighting men, retarding a Germ-tank diwision in mtler's 1-t big pasla t-anl .:. the wesLBUBT l.JINCJlSTEB GIVES .II DISTDvGUISH.!:D PORTIUl.YJU. .115 TBL ,j Bll'ITJ.E.SCJUIRED M.IUOB! llND TBE ENDING IS A DEVllSTATING ll.llrn.E . OF TANKS llND rt.AMES!" -WANDAHALE,N.Y.DAU.T!ll:'WS "WHOLLY A8SOJl8fNG -!JND INTRIGUING! REFRESHINGLY OFFBEAT JllVD CHllLLENG· ING, WITH llllUNCBY HUMOR 1UVD POUND· ING ACTION! Yoa'U ... 1, Clftlong others, Tiie Red QaHn cand her svelte pte .. ur• srtrb; the baker's ltwco• wll• "110 puts a little yeaat In Peter J'alk's We; a motl~y sqaad of ••-sold.len lurned war-weary; and finally, there ls the . aawage deslraclloa ol the castle llaelf, by aodera weaponry. TBE ll_CTJNG JS FIRST RATE! LlllVCASTEll, WJTll ll PATCH ON ONE EYI!. rs EXCELLENT!" "A BIZABRE JUXTAPOSI· TION OF CONFLICTING MOODS , WITH THE VISUAL BEAUTY OF A DAR!t FAIRY TALE AND THE FINAL CLIMACTIC ORGY OF BAT.TLE ! Like the noveL the movie ver· sion of 'Castle Keep· begins as a satire on war. and concludes by glorifying the very sort of heroism and bravery it has been satirizing! AN EXCEL· LENT CAST !" .. ONE OF THE MOST UN USUA L OF WAR MOVIES J,,. -'J." lV ,.·-: -. "~'.;' .. ~ "ENOR MOUSLY INTER· EST!NG! UNUSUAL.Off. BEAT ... A far, far above average film about war! Ifs in a new bag!'" · D~.,,IOGO'.DMA.'f -.a,: ~.1..,...- , . ' I "'CASTLE KEEP' IS JI FILM YOU'Li. llE TAUl• ING ABOUT FOR SOME TIME! J CAllllOT RECOMMEND IT STRONGLY ENOUGBfBVll DO NOT WALK TO TBE TBEllTRE NEAJIJ:ST YOU FOR ONE ol..TBE YEAR'S COllPLEAT CINEMATIC EXP-NCES! E•ery elea-1 dowa to the saaDest detaD--11-- expertly and wttb 1111co•--• _dent......_. , Its 'wlaloa' of war~com .. acrou wllla -..eic ·-· latenslty that la PERFECTJOll! Tiie ••perll' t.ii: screenplay, the dazzling direction, Ille excel• " lent photography. Jlnd the acting! BURT LANCASTER, ONE OF HIS BEST PERFORM· AIVCES EVER cu the Major,,.and all llleolllers who make a conlrihaUon lo an OUTSTIUID- ING FILM! 'CASTLE KEEP' IS TBE BEST WAR FILM since the vr1eat 'A Walle In Tiie s .... ·.• THE ACTION IS FURi· OUS! EPIC IN SIZE, HANDSOMELY PRO· DUCED, THOUGHTFUL, EARTHY IN ITS HUMOR! Memorable performances by Lancaster. O'Nea.l. and Falk give the undertaking a firm foundation.. Cive 'Castle Keep· a high mark for both intentions and achinementl'" "' · ;~~·--~:·.:.~. · . ;,c·..,·~~~ !'IX\' .. A BEAUT ! The line you wait en to see 'Castle Keep' will be well worthwhile!'" L \i,_, hi.l~f"!-'."' .• \. ;, •J•\ .-.•' •• ------NOW PLAYING!----- A lHlly Grwot Mtttlc.ol • r»cll YOll Oytio -Sally AH H1Wft 'CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG' plu J.,ry L••ll -Petltf lowf•ul "HOOK LINE AND SINKER" The Pageant is open lo the public and is being held as a benefit for the Big ~rothers of ~ Orange County. Show hours £iJo NfWPORT BlACH •or the f!'ntronce to tho fobulou' Lido 11.lt!' ·OR 3·8350 I I I I I -·. ............. .._. ............ . JND II• WIEK - G11tory Pall -A.1111 H•Y•••d ''THE CHAIRMAN" .... ~ Cll•rltn Hnru -lodiy Mc.D•-11 -"PLANET OF THE APES" ltKtlftlMl!Hill fllf' .. ""' ~···········~·····••et •$175 ... El CA.LOAD "NAKED ANGEL" ''" J ..... c .... ,. "HARO CONTRACT" NOlflt~~lt WHl ll+td· "'111911 11111m Hff!nPllni<!ol bY 1'•'9!11 M advl• O<Jl..,I•" • run from 11 :00 a,.m. to 4:00 p.m . General admission tickets run '1.50 for adults and 50 tents tor children u n d e r IW!!Ve. rood and restroom racilities will be available. Parking on the grounds is free. Tntermi~ion ~lertainment \11ill be provided by Frankie Zietz and his Polka Bank with the Montclair Fold Dances. DAILY Cont inuous from 7:00 PM Saturday and Sunday Cont lnuous from 2 :oo PM Tickets at Computicket Outlets including Bullock's. Ralph's M1rkets . Wallic)(s or 11t the Box Off;ce. Harbor Blvd. at Mcfadden• Phone 531-1271 I "CASTLE UEP" .e.-';:,J.~.t?I ~~ I .•..• a:15PM lDl~·~·N Li\ 1 "" ,~.. =--o""'"'r.-:'o ri I "SOPPOIT YOUR -t .... o ·"'" -•. i~'. I lOCAL SURIFF" :iCJ,!ilOif": '~::~~;;;,~~ :;i1'SJN-o--·c'-- • See Co01plete Shew ~ 1 n l>le n 10:30 PM 1'=°1 ~ r.;...," • • Ir Phil in1er1~1 ''lly ailmellta to tll.o u.rt" , '.J!Y'VISIQN VIEWS New Shows For Children By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) -The mind of a child seeks simple solutions. If there's somebody you don't like why not hit him on the head? That's the sort ol TV viewing the little darlings apparently hoped for and \Vhat they used to get in the days before the television code began to frown ,ron gratuitous violence even in the cartoons of the r iCb SatUrday morning kiddie market. CHILDREN may not have much purchasing power individually but there are millions of them and...-behlnd nearly every child stands two indulgent pa.rents (and perhaps four even '"more induJgent .grandparents). So their likes and dislikes are and •haVe been a matter of deep commercial concern to the nelwerks. The good news from La\vrence R. White, vice- prestdeJlt of NBC-TV, is that children fro1n four to .12 years of age have found an acceptable altema- . tive to such delights as cartbOn characters slam- , med, banged and walloped by other cartoQ.n char- acters. In fact the pioneering of the past season in stretching the "attention span" of tbe young with r appt)a).s to intelligence as well as emotion have, at4 ,ci>i'dlnf to White, en<ouraged NBC to invest heavily • in a lineup of children's shows that it thinks marks (fa new departure for the medium. It premieres "Sept. 6. ' "THIS IS A big further step forward," White said at the Four Seasons. "Our ne\v shows are bet- ter written with much more use of fantasy and imagination. One of them, H. R. Pu!nstuf, is an ad- venture series devised by the famous puppeteers, . Sid and Marty Krofft, that I really think Is a work L of genius. ' "It's the story of a boy, played by Jack Wild, · lhe artful dodger of the film, 'Oliver,• who sails 1. off to the Jiving island. He meets witches, spiders. talking trees, mushrooms and so on -all played by humans inside astonishing co9lumes. ••we CORNERED the market in midgets and d\varfs but there are ordinary sized people, too. All this unrolls with a degree of sophistication that \Vt believe will appeal to older children as well. We 're also giving the children seven one hour specials about the fabrics of American life, a series of animal stOries; a humorous but instructional series on the little tilings in daily life that \Ve take for granted ftom pencils to tape recorders - a total of five ne'v and three returning shows all in color." , White conceded it was difficult to know what ·children will accept though the fact they liked tile comedy of "The Bapana Splits," one of the return· . ing shows,. last season was a good pointer. ''THE TROUBLE "'iU1 researching the tastes of children is 'that their degree of critical attitude is ;. never negative," he said. "They say 'I like this but -I like this better.' They rarely say 'I don't like this.• ' 'I'hey're not as diicriminating as they should be so for their own g~ the standards have to be im- posed by adults. -~en again parents don't say· 'you should watch thifo often enough. They are more apt ~·tony 'you can't 'f'atch that.•" i ~ Den · iJ the M~uaee '7llATt&VtPACfl.Y Pl!Pr ./ M!Wff_I • • .. PEANUTS ' MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS ~ ASSl8HMENT: DOsw.ETHING iOSTRIKETEll~ tNTO TllE MEART ~A PALEFACE! ' MUTI .AND JEFF GORDO MISS PEACH '8UTWE STARTED TO CROSS "TI<E BRIDGE- MAft.CIA JUST l'UN<:H!P l'U. 6!T llrA >N iHE NCff/ YOU'lE NIG~Y, 1 I~I\' • ----~-- ~1"'-PPEAt.. ro ~l!ll J:!E).SOW, MULLINS-·,ASK Ml'!> '10 CONSIDER )bOit f'EQUEST OBJECTIVELY·· \ By Cliarle1 M. Scliull ly John MO.S By Ferd Johnson EVERY TIME I Ast< "TO DO SoME'Tf.llNG, SHF3 OBJF3CTS .1 By Tom K. Ryan Youi DfO!/fRil'JT ISN'T WORKING- ., I; •• 11 By Al Smith WELL,"l\lEN DON'T YoU nllNK IT'S ABOUT TIME You BUILT YES, t>OC, SEND . 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(C) (30) l'l'tL 161: l11Mt lloJl.I. ! llMlt: "'TM .... .. ,,.,,,,, I~ c':'W::.. (C) (IO) ( r1~) '51-Din• Cl•r\. Mty Art Stld•ftb•um 1r:d Charin Ctl111· I'*" f• LMnr 11lin looll: •I cltJ twenu. Lt 'lldilllt ..... ,.._ (30') 10:.JO u. ...... , ..... (CJ , mm-<C> l••Zl• •e= D..w..... . ., ........... <• '(! l,CJCi,, on tht o.-n rMd-ltfY) '42.-MadoAll• Clrtr. Jill CyplJ' .tJ1t, It tllt tMl!it ti to-Phll~ nlfhrs show • .lolln H1rt11rd It ""' lyi:;: i.,flJAf~*:' ,_ <Cl c11l 1unt GI""" <•Ol 11:00a1m1111...., ,_ _ -~ (C) (30) kl! T•MI to ... ~. l:lOllfll-"" (C) <JOl D (J)llll•-" •,.. mJ1 ... ti-. 11• tlt CC) , l ) 'A~nth o1 .... 1.. ll :IOlf.~"' Ho-• ~ l aa... ......... (C) (30) ......... :lllt• a..w , .. (C) (90') !!! di llfi llOab. • ..... , .. LHit (C) (60) Mfrlt; .,.., tt •• 41 Wn fl tlrllt .._ ('°l .. Ridl· Wlll•nl '57-Mki. Mt-. ltY d t~ Kl " Dtrtk. If Ill n1. '8 lih*W-"11111 If .. ...... Im ..... ,.,.... (30) (1i11111) '5>-trMll l..Mtef, ..... t:OO IJ. ([I ca frW., lftril: l ta .. 111. ................ , ..... ) '6'-lllrt l•l'IWltr, M Otvalrs. I flldric M1tdl, lwt Glfd1111, EA· ,,,.... a"*' Mwtil• ..,_, 1\ls ft.. s.VAa: ..,....., fr. ... 12:111 • ([) ..... (q wldtlY ..,...,... Motl llr "*"" r..,. ,....., .~...=,a:-.,wa.11.:.=U:11•"*, -> ... _ .. ~ oil"~ "'' ., ... ci.1.... .. ---Hit -Cltlll• " ..,, ... ,.... °"""' I.Allow. 10 t•kl ...... "" tlDUlltl'J' w11en th• iz."'IU!:& (C) l'r_,.nt &lens • 11udt1r trNt)' ~C) with tt:t SM'!« Unltn. (II) ,., 1;itD.:r ... '": ~ 1~ 1"'IUitt :::.:. <• 1 .... (C) <e) '1h1 Ho!Jr C1ound: mt) '40 --J611n Wt:tM, a .. Thi Klllin1." T1t'l'Of, e """' Cits Miiiie.it (30) 11 •• "'Bl ru <.,...,,. 1:30, ..... (C) (30) Ted M17m '53-oennft O'K•f1. hrlfd If I ... ~ (80} ~ .... : "Cllllt ...... ('!° ... ) " •It• h11111.• A ,mill of '!1-GtM llrt)', -~ llrenn•tt .,. .,.c1tf ,..att .!IHI ft1t ll•I C-11. Bl1ir, A1lfr Dfti111. llllHJ OM:n, 1=-: .. II ..... ~ J111111 ltnlll' llld DIMld O'C-. --•• 1 • . .,;., fll111 Cllps lrM • null'llllr 8' W•~ VV a - ltr'I lllftitl lrt 11• tllown. 1:Jt.8Cl)"9 ........ ~ di..,,....... (30) "Clff of l•ll" ~ (0) {R) 1:4S 8 llMr. 1" c..r, rl .... II) C.•*''MiMI (30) CirlW' (tlhttftlvn) '.J4 -"""' lttll 11 llJ mm 1'o W.t ltl (IO) DoNt. """ ""'I. • ''TiittMuli11--V1JUu." Tiii S.iftl b1· 2:tO • 1111 If l1t llsllk fCJ -JM COIMI lmolftd llith rtdllwin1 i"°ltW'S Qfttltsf Jm IMU' ·~ 11n1tltn wh111 ht rri•IJ I fftlltl· If IWM'• lf•ltlt ...... , W- lul 1irt In V1nlct. tnll 11Ml ¥KttW M~lllM SUillifll• ! I "-' JC) (60) off• • camlllntd fllutical lltlf•r. (l)Qlllct; C1w111... 8DNtllt r1t111r1; ''TM DM!c ( ) i nu" 11111 "Ctny 0!'.i,. ,._, Dtlll (C) (IO) JennN1r W1rr11t1 S,W"'i& ~t l'I _ ~~ • ...., <Ml) ::Jon:i'm.;;f11 :';.;;. ,_ • Moo "" .. lo ·-(Cl (30) iilt ~ 1io f1nt .. -~ •·n Jo~ IOft flfllll ti lllt NltleMI ID:10I .... (C) (30) • .. na. Le11u1, ~twinr Ult , .. , .... Ctnlts (SO) ltssl0111I foiMlltll *"· TM 1111111 MlltJwslill llMI tllt ... (C) milt 1111 D1lll1 C.-..,. .t lt\1 • ..., L.A. r.llllllm. ONE BER:>RE SOMEBODY GETS DROWNED? u:001u.e-(C) II~ c.,x. "" to> c--:"'1 ... : "'liltrlt tf • ..,_ J:ODDMMt: tC) "Zin*"' <•Mn· 1rl" (~ '14 -H1r1y H. tllff) '57 -Vkltf MN' -· I AM NOT 4N6(Y NCAl.lfl r QAUII ITS MOT A'TIJALL'Y.tll jHe HATl5 /IMO -"1--I NMU~!O.Y AfYMIC&. 'Tl' *K· Co!Mtt. Ollnt a!tnlo. Ekbt11. IB ,_, ..... (C) (tO) 1-_ (C) _ F,._,..... -(0) (111u.te1l) '43 -Alict FIJI, Jtlln ,...... .,... y..,. ,.,.., 911 --"' ll:IODQll(J)-<CI -~(C) •:1011'1111-ll:l0.llJCllmt--(C) ,_. -(Q ....-CC'I "'T ....... (lihfft· ..... ~ • ==== tu.~G-Mlflt -Prtlhtl. DtrotllJ 4:ta 11" 1141 By Gus Anlolo u 1ni'm 111 JMr --::C..!'t.,.., (C) '"'litili ..... -..... ttH G llMtl: tc> ....... II 10:11" a. .. ldA tc> · (IUIPlflll) ''7-4tof1• Motllonl•IY· •:•1-,,_ . By Mon '''·'', .. -.. _ .. , ... , .. i> """"-""' Ll:IOll!Cillltr 1111 ........ Aci1t1 ntttr1: "Cod• ti SI· hct _... ... ... -111 ll:IGID-"II-··<-> 1:008.._ --!ti '!i-Jafl lrtlllfltld. l1tN11 Nlc:ll-Denftls JIM --. l:OO!i~::c-~.~ = 1~:; pi&}i.. .. -'-· 1=' Ill-... (C) ·--(II) -IC) ,__ l:JOmAlU'I!! -: .,,. • ., ot l:Ml1= .... t<I (R) iUl!u,• 'Ovto' tilt Meoa" &lid Jlt a Aa:e (I) "SltYI QuMll ti llllylol\.'" '::'t JIM l:Jl8Mtwie: "'latW-(4rtN) '41 ::..:::-:'CC> -John P1ynt, S1111!11 W-IMtra. ._ .. ,.,. a 1 •:•D"""""' ''"'' -(C) -.. to> e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAP&llS Ou•lity Printin'J 1nct D•ptnd1blt Strvict for more thin • quarter of • c1ftfury. r11 r ir rRitn 1ri . 1111 Witt IALIOA ILYD .. fllWPO.,. llACH -Nl•4ln ------------~,.----~----~----..------·-..... ~-..--,,,. ----·-· ·------· -~---~~---~ ·------ ' ·' It Oo\ll V PILOT Friday, August 8. 1969 • ' I ' Crossword ACllOSS -ndts: Cood Jalth s vr"'°"'' OllottrroClll ~J-• 4 Football , ... , 1.9. 'Mtivno 111en1br4nous fxpuslons ''Mountain : Cot11b. fOtll '11 Arli~l bill t·TOl'onto suburti;, l 2 words 20 Standing l;2:State: ADbr. 2:J 1Klnd.'of•1c1 j4.:E11iposd to -the publi c 6 l ip I ' ~,7 Bonnfe .r Prince ~Canadian pollticlan 34 '.Took It easy 3J'!Unll of 1 printing 36·11nglilr:e i,:process '7 1n an &ddlUa11I )!lannrr 3Ji:Crtdlbllity 4o~K1nd of son :C,r dat19hter Cl:Clothlng accessory "t"Turn out -of shape eJ:oo final ·worlr: on a thesis: 2 WOldS 45: Ora • forth 41 ClasstU11. .... 48 EndJng UJld wllh •IO andd• 4' Htlltf 50 Coeellnest 53 Sea eagle 54 Bird 58 l lthd,1wlng Into seclusfon 61 Plul)ge-iltlO water 62 F0ttlttrlth ~ .. 7 63 One •i~Jnt 81t/}t ltonc:t~ . 64 N•ture -11 Sttd 39 Man's 1 goddess app.ndage nlekname 65 CaDltol 12. T.iss11e 40 Occurlng • .twlldln9 ll l11flnltely occasionally feature 90oi \ 4Z Hazard on 66 NOvcl l9Soc:Jal graup contest 67 CotnlshmM, 21 Clay product outcome for ont 25 SIOn ot 44 R Iver in DOWN 1 lrasci blJl ty 2 Characterlsllc '""" 3 Fat North city 4 By the card: 3 words 5-Clumsy stupid person 6 Chaps: Slang 7 HaYln g htaring organs 8 Light submachine 9 rf~clllcal Engineers: Abbr. 10 La-: Puccini Ol>'l'I emllarass· ·Flanders ment 46 City 011 Lake 2 words Michigan 26 Ont who 47 Sports tvtnl makes 11art1clpant something 49 Con,fesslon corrtcl of lallh 27 Island 50 College ntar G'rttk de!"' mainland ho der: 28 Somtth!ng ·ln lnlo1mal s_plral fo1m 51 Nevad a 29 Egui ty In city a house, 52 -bomb for_Ant 53 Gfve off 30 Mapmaker's 55 Ma-ch lnt ilbbrevlation shop tool 31 Asstssor 56 Offensive 32 Ni!tlvt 57 Kind ol Ala skiln abode 33 Nortliern 59 E/aeulatrons Scandinavians o surprise 35 Dickens 60 The old character colltgt - FOR 1 WEEK ONLY NOW fOI THI FllST TIMI TOGnHll MA Tl NEES DAILY ! Thtlr Mft l'•ll-L9lllffl Mtvlsl UGlili:r-AF.-..ltr-.~ .... IOWAll~MARllll 1fo1K11 II AlWll, COPA lillM, LllOlf M•I "Tiii MA&JllE II'"" NOW THRU TUESDAY ~-11ioft' ................. @i!I!!. loc.1119 bc"--'tt fl• ~ 2114 FU.TUii ·winn1na· - ... IS EVERYTHINGI • BALBOA 673-4048 O,EN I 4:41 7"1.la-.. , .. ""''""''• HELD OYER 2nd. WEEK! Thia $!Jmm1r'1 Bil Fun Showlll I'm Europe, baby. ...... you Dutdi Elm l>iswo, &iimeo Me.ta and ..... Roulettt. You sail ... Wodd-W'nl v...,r.,.12u. How We're even. Pl.US CIUll ........ -- OIJ•·-•••llrt9J.Nllt• ·a.MMllM llROOICS' -':: . ·In tJae, G•I~•. ' Local Lil;>i~aries ... ' ... . : Book:Att Show~ ' CHALIJ8 GALLERY-4'90 S. Coast UJlbl'•Y, l;quna• Beach. H<iUrs: II a~1o l')l.m. daily. On 'uhlbll.~ Aug. palptlngf. bY Mark Coomd in oil and encaiiillc "media. LAGUNA-ART G4UEJIY.l-3IYI ClllL pnve,,. Loauna Beach. ~mfasi"" 50 ,i.:Dts. Melnbers 11114. ,ooe · gu.-.lree. Hours: SUn. .. 'l1lur3, Nbon to 't 'p.m,f •Frt: and Sat. ~oon 1 to 9 p.m~All Call!oplla Show, co!llddinf' with Festival ol. Art& lbtough Aug. 24, 180· works will be shown. MARINER'S LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. On exhlblt, thlough Aug., in the Jr.· Ebell Ex- hibit during regular library hours, paintings by Cora Eaton and an exhibit of chlldren'a art from their workshop. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 BayaJde Drive, Newport Beach: Cllrrenlly on exhlbil through Aug. during regular business hours weavings and tie and dye fabri cs of H. Crane Day. COFFEl'l GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High· way. Corona de! Mar. Hours 11 a,.m. ~ 3:30 p.m. M~.· Sat. No admission charge. On exhibit through Aug. 22 paint- ings by Ruth Osgood and pottery by Jack Taylor. • CIVIC~CENTER GALLERY -3300 West Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. ~: 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon .• Frf. Chil· dren 's art elhibit fucluding lhe work of some Japanese c:.hil- dren, ages 5 to 15, which are on exchange with some NeW- ·port children whose art is being shown In Japan. Two mural,s done by. cblklren in .the Costa Mesa Schools also are on displar.1 through August. CORONA DEL MAB LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona del Mar. On ubibit di.iring regular library hours, through Aug., the paintings of Chiis Winton. MESA VERDE LIBRARY-~ Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa MPsa. Currently; on exhibit during regular library hours, through Aug., tbe ·oil paintings of Nanci Schontal. COSTA ~A LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during reg\ifu library boon, through July, oll paintings by Marie Taggert. - C.M. ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours: ·Sat. and Sun. 1. to 5 'p.iii. ·Continuous exhibit of art work in various media 1" Art League members .. No admi&- sion charge. Also through July, work of the League's Schol· arship winners, in vari~ media. COSTA l\IESA COUNTRY CLUB -1701 Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa. The paliiiings ol Jane Hill, in oil and pastel,1 are on exhibit on the second floor of the club through the 'S3~~~~gmsT' NAT'L BANK -17122; Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through Aug. 22, paintings by Virginia Shunk. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main SL, Santa Ana Hours: Tues. through Sat., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sun. l to 5 p..rn.; Wed. and 'Tburs. eveningi, 7 io 9 p.m. No , admission charge. Currently ·oti exhibit C8.iilornia Bicenten- nial Exhibit and California Missions in Stereo. GLENDALE FEDERAL GALLERY -1833 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. On _exfiibit through Aug. during regular business hour, oil paintings by Mildred Snidow. FoR Advertising in the Weekender Phone 642·4321 SOUTH SW TROPICAL FISH · Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. New! LeutlMt tll W. WILSON, COSTA M!'SA (Off F1lr¥ltw ltd.0 !4-7Ml 177·G, ltfv1r.161r Or. -Hft'llOl1 811'11 tbtfllnd thf ,.., Otfk•l ~ Fo--i:""souT.H COAST. l"LAZA THllATRS Son llil&• frMWOY 11111;oto1 • 546-2711 ZERO MOSTEL KIM NOVAK CLINT WALKER "THE GREAT BANK ROBBERY" Plus 2nd Hit Feature JAMES GARNER JOAN HACKETT '. . . ' .. • tlf ''(1t.' F f'll'-•f'l•C 1"""N' p,,. '"'' .-1 "SUPPORT YOUR * COLO: LOCAL SHERIFF"' ""'"', ... , .. ; .. -Metinees Delly at 12:30 - Box Offlct Open 12:15 • • • HURRY -ENDS SOON ! • • • EVERY FATHER'S DAUGHTER IS A VlRGIN ! OR IS SHE? :.> ... ·.y ~-"Go-;d°b~7.e:-;i;~,~~" A f'l~'ltOM T"e MOVILLA •Y PHILIP IOTH, TJ,t Auff.er of tht now l1tt S•ll1t ''POlTNOM COMPLAINT" e "CilNUINILY INTIMATI LOYI SCENES'' Timi M1g11i111 • "ltFllSHIN• TO Sii" -Life M191ti11e • "MIMOlAILI'" S1h1rd1y R1~i1w • "llllSISTAILI" New York M1911in1 ,liltSONS UNOllt 1' NOT AD.lillnlO IJNL•ss WITN l"AltlNTSI * * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * • HUNTINGTON BEACH* 847·9608 • BET COAST HWV. & SAN OIEGO FWY. "'OM ... ,., ff • ,.k..,..'- YAltttTC , flltOM TH• •tO lltOAOWAY 1.IOIT COfoil l OT lllooloo;l "'1£" bpi;-~~ IOIElT UOfOD .. ·~. "'"' '°"°" - [! * REY K.IDSI * Cl IJt ht Mtew, s.t., l :ot ""'"'-0.11)' ,, 1 :» MM. ltir• TllUn. E'ift. • ,_111.-f'rL.S..!-1,31 11111. 1 .. Ill. llST PICTUll OF THf YIAl I Sp•ci1I Childr1n'1 Pric11 14 I Und1r-f1.SD 11NCOLN . DRIVE' IN '"THEATRE Lincoln W. of K"neit luenti Park-527·2221 YOU ARE ALSO Jim lrowr.-R1~u1I W•!cli ·~ 1.00 RIFW" "LAST $UMME:A" 1;15 P.M, i&. 12:15 P,M "100 RIF'LE$" 10;1S P.M. ONL.Y ONLY MINUTES AWAY! •• PACIFIC'S ;ORANGE ~DRl.VE·IN ONLY ORANGE COUNTY DRIVE-IN SHOWING! MDadcly's Gone A-Hunting" at 8:15 .PM ·..;. "Twisted Nerve" at.10:15 PM 511 CQMPLETE SHOW A5 LATE AS 10:·15 PM Santa Ana Freeway at Chapmali (North of Garden Grove Freeway) Phone 547-6011 ~ .. ANAHEIM .. .. ' ~ .. t .. .. 0 u ORANGE • I ., .. . ' l ' • ' ·WILSON -FORD SALeS 18255 BEACH llOULEVARD lHiway 39) . HUNTINGTON BEACH I OP•N 9 A.M. TO .10 P.M ~.;.7 DAYS I ORANGE: CO' s. FASTEST GROWING FORD DEALER FORD MOTOR HOMES See our complete selection of Minihomes, Contempo Campers and Gypsy Campers for immediate delivery. JRANSPORTATION SPECIA~$ $148 FORD SURF WAGON '55 ~adlo, he•!er, V-1 enf•nt . OZI ,,,, EXTRA ·SPECIALS BRAND NEW 1969 LTD HA1RDTOP 2•DOOR FORMAL HARDTOP '65. ~s~~J!~e. P~~~~n!.0!d io, heater. $688 Dark green finish. PJL 021. '67 ~~~~om?i~.~!~~ .. :~:I. new car $688 warranly availablf'. TWW 302. SPECIAL PURCHASE VACATION SPECIALS • '63 CORVAIR MONZA $188 1969 FORD GALAXIES • MUST ANG~ • FAIRLANES • '65 ~~~.~c~!!~~~ .. ~~~l•R·E~,~~=~~1~~· WAGON Lociorne NHt= fll. $1088 ·2 3 TO .i:HOOSE FROM . Low Mihiage All Colors '66 RANCHERO New 8roruo l tn:1h, Av!om•llc "?00'' en;lnt, ll111tr. Tl6' ... $1088 $248 . '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON V-1. 1111om1tlc rl~lo. llwllr. l1L ,,.,.. ctr w1rr1ntv. TIN 111. $1688 $248 . '63 PLYMQUTH VA~N~ WAGON ' cYI~. rldlao ....,.. • ~v 112 $288 . FACTOR¥, WARRANTY AVAILABLE '66 ECONOUNE CAMPER.VAN sr1a•1 a.u-\I"' wllll MW_... Ulllt ~-lit, •utomattc """".., ~• ''*""' T5*1t, ~ DJ, Our Special Purchase Will Save .Yau Many$$ '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON V4. IUIOll'IGll'1 ~. sMerln11, fKI. Air COl!d. • F.-mll~ SD« t . \IRS 3&1 • $1888' '62 FALCON DLX. WAGON $388 . . '64 fORD FAIRLANE TUDOR $488 $1988' '64 BUICK SKYLARK V-1, a.ulomftk:, redlo, hN!tr. l urtar.dl< flnttll, • o blttll ln!Wrlor. Liarm OLW 912. $788 '68 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN 10.PASS. V-1 rMlt Mt19 -•• s!111•Mt, _, r8ku t.clO<Y 1(r cor,c1ftfonlnw, wMi. will 1'"1.. tia. wh.,1 c-n. S«l.i 1221311. $26~8 BRAND NEW 1969 BRAND NEW 1969 TORINO GT $2488 coRTINA SAV·E AT s1200 BRAND NEW 1.969 $1888 · LEAST . COBRA . FROM s,UGGESTED LIST PRICE o.N ANY $ ' FULL PRICE 1969 THUNDERBIRD IN OUR HQGE INYENTO~Y 2 8 8 8 BRAND NEW 1969 MUSTANG SUPER SPECIALS BRAND NEW 1969 COUNTRY SQUIRE '64 ~~~~ H~r~~~~~au~ic, P. steer, $44 8 EL DORADO CAMPER SPECIAL 4-IOOR . LTD. 'WAGON radio, hearer. OlF 316. '65 FORD STA. WAGON . $788 Country sedan, 10.Passanger Model. V·S, eulomal ic Great fam ily special. 177241. . , $3988 FULL PRICE BRANO NEW '69 f·250 STYLESIOE Fl~.t'itF~.f61t SAVE $1100 & ELDORADO 101'1 CHEROKI! CAMPER Str. Ho. 11!74 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FROM SUGGESTED UST PRICE -e ALL FULL PRICES ARI PLUS SAW TAX & DEPT, MOTOR VEHICLES FUS e Ust one of our many ways to finance your new or used cor or truck including Bank of Amerita, United Calif. Bank. or Ford Motor Credit Corp. With your .Approved Credit • . MAKE YOUR CHOICE SAVE AT WILSON FORD TODAY 18255 BEACH BOUL·EVARD ' HUNTINGTON BEACH lHrNAYa~ 540-7780 SALES DEPT. Go~:~o':~c:'.M. SERVICE OPEN 842-6611 fue1d1y thr• ~riclly I A.M. ft 5 r.M. 9 A.M. t< 10 P.M. 7 D1y1 SUNDAY, AUGUST lOTH Mond1y1 I A.M ... 9.P.M. .. I . ' /1 - --~~~~~--· -----·--·-----· -----·--------~-------------~---·---· -...~-~-----------• •· •' o '•••I ••' ... • • •' •" '••-.. 1 '• •+ ••••••••••• ••• ' ,. ,-·,i;.,_..--;.T:;.o-,"l o· HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE FINER HOMES 9UAUTY BA YFRONT Pier & float ; a very beautiful, format ·a bed· room, paneled den home. Decorated in ex· qu isite liste. Owner must sell NO\V. Re· duced $15,000. Offered at '139.500. Will con· sider $30,000 do\vn, Call to see this sacri· fi ce. VIEW Elegant 3 bedroom with magnilicent !\ft. & bay vie\v, Spacious living room; garden or family room: oversize pool with mensive surrounding terrace. Done in exquisite taste. Priced to sell, $127.500. C.11 lor app'l. GOLD COAST Over 4,000 sq. fl. of luxury living \Vith a pan- oramic vie~·. 4 Bedrooms, huge Jiving room: formal circular dining room; garden kitchen & breakfast area. Paneled family room with fireplace. Like new. Priced $145,000. DOVER SHORES LOT Large, view. corner lot 105x138; if desired will build to suit. Architect's 1;>lans available. BEAUTIFUL DECOR 5 Bedroom, 31ft bath view home. Huge , sunk· en family roo1n with floor to ceiling fire- place, \Valk-in wet bar. Elevated terrace. bay & ?11t. view. Spacious. vie\\' side garden will accomodate both pool and play area. Separate maid's qu arters. 3 Ca r garage. Asking $88 ,500. Open Sal. & Sun. 1712 Ami· gua \Vay, Dover Shores. LINDA ISLE BA YF1tONT Owner moving; beautifully decorated home "'·ith large pier and slip. 4 Bedrooms, al· tractive. spacious living room, formal din~ ing room, family room, 3 fireplaces. A real buy, 1nust be sold immediately. Asking $135,000. Call lor app't. iohn macnab REAL;TY COMPANY 90 1 Dover Dr., Suite 120 642-8235 1000 General 1000 For The Mon Who Has "Made Good" Absolu1~ Spanish elegance design~ ror the active fami. ly and graelou5 entertain· in:. 4 bedroom plus 3 bath.~. largto family room with bu.ilt·in 11·et bar. ~ss than 2 years ne1v. Prestig e Bay- crest address. A n1ust sec at $76.500. Small Horse Ranch 2 BJ\ 1 bath homl' & garage completely fenct"d. T r y $2350 do11·n. 2 On a Lot Newport Hts Area :? BR l bat h each. On ly $21.JOCJ. Dream Kitchen CIO!e in home on r'Ornf'r R·2 lot. Bedroom \1•111 handle king sized bed, All this for $23.500. Lachenmyer t.%(1 l\ewport Bl\:il., C;\{ ' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALB HOUSES FOR SALE 1000 General 1000 O.noral IDOO Pet~ /Jarr~it J<e:'/t~ . p.redt1n~· . 'OPEN HOUSES LIDO CORNER-Move· in condition 3 bdrms, dming room, 3 car ~arage, large sunny patio \vith maximum privacy. Large lot. 521 Via L·lcfo Soud S1t./Sun. l·S NEWPORT HEIGHTS -Exclusively ours. 2 bdrm. home 'On< large \Yell kept lot wi.th se.parate g u e s t house. Situated in quiet neighborhood. $27,500. . SOS Santa An• Av•. • '.sund1y 1·5 AUTHENTIC BALBOI\ HOME ! Only $125 . 000 for this 4 bdrm. home on the bay froni. -main bay -glistening sandy beach, most spectacular view in harbor. 318 Buen• Viste ~ Sat./Sun . 1~s • • * BAYCREST CORNER -Price reduced. Owner anxious to sell this \Varm & frie ndly home. 3 bdrms, dining room, family room . Wonderful \Vork shop ~ darkroom • luxurious built-ins. * * * BUILOERS ATTENTION-Build up a good monthly income by living in a comfortable house in rear & building 2 qr 3 units in front. l,arge lot -52 x 218'. $27, 700. Office Open Saturdays & SJndays PETE BARRETT REAL TY 1605 Wost.cliff Or., N.B. 642°5200 ASSUME LOW FH,\ sw;o ... l"ITEREIT; ,·· , ASSUME )..fYW PAYMENTS OF $11 5 .. P.l.T.l. · . Submit )'O\tr down ~nt on this lovely ! . bedrooin cottiige l'f.'ady for immediate posseSllion. Huge fenced yard for the kids. Double ga.i-age for Dad. For ?tfoi;a, beautiful carpetina: and CUS· tiim drapes thfOu,cbout. FULL PRICE S22,500. NO 00\VN GI:1. Low Dowri FHA. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 Ml NUT&S Walker & Lee 76.S2 Edinger 8-12..4455 or 540--5140 Open eve1. TRI PLEX Pride cf o"''nership. Live In owner's unit & Jet the 2 B:R. units pay your "'"ay. $44,500. Open house Sat. & Sun. 1-5. 653 P!Ummer, C.M. 1828 E. COAST HWY. ' . .. READ THIS • • • • Are you in the mar· ket for a new home-. a home in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach; .a · ' home you can customize while it ls being built, a borne de- signed by outstanding archi- tects and constructed by Frank ff. Ayres & Son ; a Company that has been tn business since ' 190.I? , IF YOU ARE • e e • Come to RANCHO LA CUESTA at Brookhurst and Atlanta in Huntington Beach any day between 10 A.M. & 7 P.M. and select your home in our newly opened UNIT V. PRICEO FROM $25,990 to $34,200 968·2929 or 968-1338 Coron• del M•r 67~3770 2, 150 Square Feet ONLY S26,95cJ: iJ you need a l=========-1 rambling spaeiou& hoJ?lf' and Gener•I 1000 cannot aUord the high ask· l;::=======::;I ing prices, then let us show LOOKING For a quality home at a sensible price ? Then see this ne1v listinc in fashionable .Baycrtosl " __ •• _._,._1 _____ 101JO_ I _G;;;';;;"';;;';;;";;:1 ====10oo;;:·;.11 OFORELST ES. 0 N. BEAM CEILING • . ~:LNi~~~~ 3 BR -$17,950 you this LARGE FOUR BEDROOM, two bath with 22'x30' FAMILY R00?.1 WITH F1REPLACE and ae- parate attached GUEST ROOM. Gllest room makes ideal mothtr·lii-la1v quilt. ten. EnclO'Sed garage, two patios. This hon1e coul be tlie answer lo yoor pro~ le!ns. Various mean., of fl· nancing available -CALL TODAY!! with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining room, spacious family room, heated swimming pool. Thia 1Y0n't last long J BC'dtoom1 and 2 baths on \1/1.lk to exe&llent shop.. ~lcepy street of sky-l'f.'ach-• · 'ping. Sl\immini:: pool & 1ng shade trees. Lovely car-recreation area only pels 1hrough-0ut! Immense steps a1vay. Adult li v· l'eally ft1n F~i\flLY ROOM!! lng al its best. Reascit- SpH and pohsh clean!! True i.ble terms will buy this ranch like li\•ini "''ilh i I .!I beauty, c.\'.posed BEA..\! . CElUNG 1hroughout~! No. DOWN • COATS VETS or Sl.11» dcwn to a.U & others. WAL LACI WE SELL A HOME -REAL TOI$ EVERY 31 MINUTES 51~111-Walker & Lee co;e. Enn;""' 2790 Harber Blvd. a"t Adams 5:1S.~9t Open 'til 9 P!\f E xciting View Home Enjoy the 1winkling lights ol Eastbluff and Newport Cen· !er from this Up~r Bay cus- lom home. Three large bed· robms, family room, lanai, 2111 baths, all electric k1teh. en with eating space. Beau- tifully carpeted and ~l ed. Front and re a r sPriftk. lcrs, cvers!ze gafaae w i t h au!omatic door opentor. On. 1y $49,T;iO . • )1~,·:;,1\ ~r.~,· ")\\· .1f1'• ' 616-7171 546-5990 Inc. R~altors ·r. SPAN ISH-SENOR! ·4 BED ROOMS · .. S p an Is 11 clega(lct. 4 large bedrooms . .2 lUcd baths. Spanish tile.entry. ?iJassive dcuble fireplace. Open flame cookiog In a gourmet kitchen -T doe· luxe built-ins. Huge.play room and only $29.95o." Call no1v senor! 645-03o.1 FHA LOAN 5l/, '.1, $196 MONTH PAYS ALL . Evenings Call 646-1050 ASSUME 5'!'• F.H.A. Msume FijA loan cf $159-PER MONTH S24 ,700. No rees! 2 story TOTAL 3 bedroon1, 3 baths. Formal d i n t n g room. 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baUls Separate !Amity room. in betutilul area cf prestig~ Qualitv lbat 'viii excite homes. linmaculate cc~r you. Price slashed $311-home \l'ilh LARGE kitchen 000, seller tc help in lln-and dining room! Plush ance. Dial 645..0JG.1 ~ carpets and custom dra· )X's:!! Cozy living room "'ith p x ot iC STONE FIRE· at $56,500 Cal Jim C.obb $1600 DOWN to a qualifl~ FHA/VA vet- eran buys this immaculate 3 BR& denMeu Verde home. Featutts new carpeting lush landscaping &: e\'t'n 'has a hobby 11hop in garai:{'. 1'1lA APPRAISED at. $26,900 ~ PERRON • .I ... • ... ..-r:n .. ,... BEACH LIVING . LARGE DUPLEl< PitACE c1J elegant entry 6-42-JnJ Anytimti v.'ay, l'or·11tose who really 1 -:mz======~ want the ·best at cnly I ' Sand pebble's .th row from that wcnderful sea. 'I\\'O larcr. ~drooms and 2 ba ths each. Large kit· chen + deluxe buill·ins. Sun dt>Ck.~. Gr<'at Joca- $26,900! ! ! NO DO\VN VETS Cozy Corner if you wish!!! Trade in your In Afesa Verde. Immediate smaller hon1e! ! possession. 3 and famU;y \oTHEREAL ,'"'\. ESTA TERS $l6,500· PRICE-A~N~O~·ll tlon! Good rents! Only $38.500. Tod a y 's bes t 1800 BRICKS buy! Call no1v 645·0303 . WE SELL. ·A HOME room. Exceptionally clean. EVERY 31 MINUTES Only !26,900. Walker & Lee ~,..;::.:.=i1-, I "• • Rltr. 616-3928 I iiiiiiOiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiii !\Jake up the inUsive patic! \\'here in the "'Drld can you find .a 3 bcdrootn. 2 bath hon1e, NEA!t THE BEACH with electric built-i115, excel. l!:!flt• carpet, boat door to back yard, and VACANI'l ! LESS TlfAN $2.000 00\VN!! TAKE OVER 71/i 0 /, mo"""°' Blvd,at Adam• j C,C?.,UEOE REALTY FANTASTIC BUY >1;.m1 IJOO...,.•.,._,CI& "For A \Vise Buy" Colesworthy & Co. Newport Heights l bdrms 2 bath~. double gar· age , carport k wcrltshop. 454 Senta An• Ave. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 OCEANFRONT Eves. 646-2290 Veta-No On. Pymt. "-:C· :-=-::-::-1:·1:· =::-:::-=.l·:-:;:l I Neat 4 and family rm •. on • corner In lovely Afesa rlE'l SHORECLIFFS Ne1-1', exclu~ive Ii.sling al 320 &>111vard Road rorner ul Evening canyon Road OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-5 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths Paneled livin& room "'ilh UM'd brick fireplace On huge oorner iol 156.500 Call Jack Scroggy Re~. 611-2:?:i0 Mar, Room lor boat, trailer, e.tc. N EWPORT-$32.500 1 BDRM. + FAM. RM. Very spacioWJ home in pres- tige area. 2 balhs. Electric"" built-in kitchen. Fittplace. Enclosed patio. Roo1n, for pool. Luxurious fa1nily Jiy. ing! &40-lTlO TARBELL 2955 Harbor WE SELL A HOME EVER Y 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee :?100 Harbor Olvd. at Adams 5'15-9~91 Open 'Iii 9 Pi\1 OPEN SAT •. I. SUN. 1218 Ca mbridge Lane \VestcliU's moat co Io rt u I home -walnut kitch. -Is- land bar -loll of bit-ins. 2.l"iO sq. fl. ?i.linimun1 up- keep -Oriental garden. OWnl'r moved oorth -an.xi· ous·! Fantastic $20.900 loan. 11 __ ""o'-"'="=''="=•=·~P="~-1 •=222EZ~2= No foo;. On• of 35 b<au· OCEANFRONT $21,500 ti(ul town hom" io U· elusive Ne"'1>0rt Beach a.rea. Tclal price S23,2!SO. NE\Y 4, 5 Bedroom homes. 3 2 extra large bedrooms, ballu, family rooin, foim al 2 baths, fireplace, bullt· dini'1: room, ,vet ·ban fir>..'-!;:pe;+' ,!~~ g~~c 1~~ Pf•ces. dlrpets, 1cteiwm, dn. Hurry! call 645·0303 sundeck!, plus many other features. Fron1 51/, '1. Gl- $162 MONTH $79,900 NEWPORT BEACH 100 g:;n ~~~ S:al~!'ach Beat high interest. 1..arl!;e (next to Long Beach ~larina) NEW CARPET KO QUALIFYING E\Tryone can as:;ume thb high F"HA Joan. 546-9521 or 540-6631 -I ~ •. ~l(HOJ> cu ! Io fl1 h\"O bedroom {2131 4TI-$11 ho.rne in Nl!\vport Hchta. 11-~~=""c-"~==~-SAVE $ 11•i!h 51.\~0 G.t. PIPfl ty of light &: charm. S BDRM. + POOL Newport \\Pest 3 BR 2 BA Alley a ccri;s. High C.I. NEWPORT home. 1.i mi to beach. Cpll, loan cf $20,600. Room Reduced $10,000 for lmmedi-drps. All GE kit. Fenced, for poOI, bot1t, camper. ate sale. 2~' ba1hs, family landscaped, 1prinl:tleM1 k Only $26.900. Interest! room, all l'\tttrle built-in patio. Freshly painted &t HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Gtneral 1000General 1000 Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: LIDO'S FINEST-$197,500 5 BR. 6 ·Ba. Den, Family Rm. 2 wet bars. 5,000 Sq. Ft. of custom luxury in comp. privacy on 3 lots. One of tbe \Vest's out· standing residences. Joe Clarkson CAMEO SHORES TWO OCEANFtlONT HOMES OPEN HOUSE 1 PM until 6 PM Sun.; 107 Milford. With your own access to beach. High forma l din. rm .• den, ram. rm ., Jg. mstr. suite, guest rm. & 3 add'J. bdrm~. + sitting room in children's \VI n g. Pool. $197,500. DESIGNED for gracious c o up le living. Lushly p_lanled pool size patio. Extra letrge bmd. cell. liv. rm. + master suite. Both with view. Separate guest qu arters. Pan'I. den with frpl. & wet bar; dining rm. 3 car garage. $159,000. Kathryn Raulston SUN. 2°6 4615 PERHAM CAMEO SHORES-OPEN HOUSE Custom design. Quality construction. Beam· ed ceilings. Beautiful paneling. 4 BR's., lrge. den or billiard room . Ocean & jetty vie\v. $130.000. Cathryn Tennille CAMEO SHORES-VIEW If you need a lrge. 3 BR. home w/fam. rm. & swim. pool, see this one. Ocean jetty & coastline view. Owner w/carrry i st T.D. $79,500 Cathryn Tennille BEST VllW -BEST BUY Beautifully decorated 3 BR. 3 Ba. Lusk Harbor Vie\v Hill s home. Formal din ., fam. rm., 2 fireplaces; prof. landscaped pool· size lot. Sweeping ocean view. $59,950 Chuck Place SPARKLING POOL HOME Soaring beamed ceilinged liv. rm . ove?"- looki ng land scaped pool & patio. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths & brklsl. room . $54,500 1'-lrs. Harvey CAMEO HIGHLANDS-VIEW Lovely 3 BR . 2 Ba. home with l~o· ocean view. Red adobler brick, open beam ceil .. in g, all elec. kitchen, new shag carpeting. Great buy in a great area. $46 ,950. Chuck Place THE BLUFFS "E" PLAN, $41,500 ?iiost attractive view, on quiet st. 2-Story, 3 bedroom, den or family rm. opening on- to inviting patio. Ready to move into - vacant. i1ary Lou ?-.lar ion WESTCLIFF RARITY!! '111is very nice 3 BR. 2 Balh home just paint· ed & in top condition. The oversize rear yard for pool or play; close to schools. Low- est price at $38,500. Walter Haase FOR THE DISCREET BUYER . Choice, prestige area; lg. 2 bedroom, den, dining; hi-beam ceiling, 2 fireplaces. Pie· turesque view of garden. Immaculate. 2nd Story could be added for '~ater vie\v. Aiary Lou J\Jarion COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 550 NEWP.ORT CENTER DR., NEWPORT BEACH "' 833-0700 644-11130 3 BR home on excellent beach: $54,950. George Will i•mson REALTORS 673-4400 REALTOR '"'""""""""'"""""""" S73..(J5(I EV<'!I. 673-1564 I' Dial M2·56'78 !or RESULTS DAILY PILOT QassWed section NO\V! REDUCED $1COO Vacant 4 BR &. fam rm. Rustic Mesa Verde. 3 baths, stall shower. Traffic tree liv. room, sp. din. nn. \V/w cpts, drps, bit-ins. Choice Joe, NO\V $42,500. P .\V.C. 546-5440 FAREL WALK ER. J\'EALTOR 646-1414 It's Beach house lime. Bit<· ge1t selection l'Ver! See IM DAILY PILOT Oassitlf'd Call 6•13·0303. 11 ·-• f $28 100 rraturts. F"irtplaec. Large "'e c .... -= or. , . 645·0303 at J-la1·bot Center 2299 lla.rbor Bh'd., C.?11. heated & filte~ pool. Only {)y,'llf'r ¥.i.J.J.. carry 2nd. 720'l2 5 rn. new -bl'st buy in Capistrano Ln, HB. 540-9540 area! 540-1720 or 968-4132 TARBELL "2956..H •rbor --°'O"°!Ak=°'o=E°'IT°"!,.-- Read The Great Orange Coast's No. l Doily Newspaper! Gene ral lOOOG•n•r•I JOOOGene r1I 1000Gener•I 1000 Gener•I 1000 ' G•n•r•I 1000General 1-000Gener•I 1000 8/B Think ''Buy Notv''! ·Think ''Service''! Think ''Bag and Beacla Realty'' B/B NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE CORONA DEL MAR OFFICE tlT YOUR TENANTS PAY YOUR RENT !! JJO\V TO BUY A BEACII JIOUSE YOU CAN'T AfFORDI Four units near Oc!ean &: Bay. All fum lsht'd.. Live In One & thr (llhrrs "'ill m<1k1~ your paymcnt.s. Price SG.:i,995. 64~2000 E\ rs. 6i3· 1355 OWNER WI LL FINANCE! DUPLEX ju!t Mi block tc Bl~ Bl.)'. Very 1Ultac· ttve with nice J)lltic. \Vlth $5.000 dQ\\rn, C"-'fler will carry bala nce. Prict $39,500. ' US.2000 &.•cs. 67J-1J:)S EASTILUFF l VIEW! VACANTI OpPn Jlouse Sat. &:. Sun. 1·5 !'.'.\!. 2915 Catalp&. Four bedroorm. 1"'0 bath1. sr1JAr11.te d!nlni; room. Uah l 11nd 'lovelyl Priai S<JS,000. 64:S-2000 F.\ rt. 61S-2123 WISTC:UPf OfflCI 645-2000 CLIFFHAVEN! 324 SNUG HARBOR ()peon House Sat. & S un. l -5 P.!\l. For ycur fAm· ily -Cl<lie to alJ schools, on a picturesque, ~l'· ll nt·d 11t1'f'f'L Three bdrms. "'ith lets or activi ty room. In er out. Prict' just reduced le S34,400. VACANT & AVA.lLA.BLE! G-1:;.2000 t-:1·<'s. 54g.4i;110 WlSTCLIFF! Lovely loen! Lc\.'t'IY home! Lovely strttt! 5~':4 loan ca.n M auumed! Thrtt, fledroom home! rrice $48.:SOO. 645-2000 t\•('g. 645·2.123 OPEN HOUSI SAT. a. SUN. l·S P.M. IRVINE TERRACE ! Corona d•l f\1 ar. 706 K Than$:&. Four bt'droom1, l\\"C & ont-half balhl'I, fl'nlfly. room and pool. l'\N'ds rcdtcprating - lhet>t?ol'e 11rh:t' cnly .S JG,000. , 645-2000 Ews. G'i1·l::'.l5 BUSl·NESS is BQOMING! Our record of suc:c:e5s· ful sole1 reflects the growth and exp•nsion of -our area! BUY NOW DR . SELL NOW LET US OD THE IDB ! !! ! 4 IDllll. 21/• IA. "SHARP" p,1c1 $37,900 First time cffered -~·on"t last -completely re- deecrated. new carpels, cov. patlc I: lge fen~ yard. Nothing betll'T at thi$ price. Optn Sat. l Sun. 1933 Terulta Dr., N.B. ~ 675-3000 , Eves. 64.4·0818 l IDRM. 3 IA -IRYINE THRACE Terms tailored to ycu, owner to carry larae 2nd T.D. Euy ~en11. Nice yard . $59,51»-Htte"s lwrury f()(' It'll. Oi>ft' Sunday 1-S. l!Kll Bayadere. 675-3000 Eves. 67S-6m ASSUMI H '• ,HA LOAN -NO POINTS 3 Bdnn.. 50x127 corner lot, dbt i ar ., COJ1vert1ble l e Dl'n or cfllce, PaymfnU ll!SS ttlan $200 Inc.ls. everything. Top value at $29,950. 675--3000 Eves. 673-0554 "' ~=~·.~;·· BAY and BEACH .REALTY, INC. ,, ••• _ -----··~ ___ • _ _ SllVIN.C'i. l Hl .KilJOl.AIU. llNCJ lf 4' ~ - DON'T WAIT TOO LONG ON THIS! 3 Bdrm., 2 ba. Ocean ''ie\.\·. Cor. O\'l'r 100' front· age, quality, clran & inviting. La nd \"alue more than JusWles. price $49,500. 675-3000 Ercs. 5·18-SSGS GOOD 4 UN IT IUY, ANYONE7 2 Bdl.m., 11,1 bath f'SC.h. Cpts. Drps., ().\Vasher, Bit-Ins, Lge. Liv. Rn). $58,500. Open Sun. 1·5, 295-97 -16th Pl&ct. 67S·3000 [\·cs. 5<18·8868 FAMILY SPLASH -GUAT POOL 4 Bdrm. + F11mlly Rm., 3 Ba. Quallly th ruout. ShO\\S hra11 tiful1)'. Chclce Irvine Tf'rr. $69,500. OIX!n Sun. 1.S. 1920 Kenamtt. 615-3000 £vr.s. 673--0534 r.,. ... ' "'1&11, •ugUSl 8, 1!6t DAILY PILOT :JJ HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES POlt SAi.i HOUSES POlt SALi I HOUllS l'Olt SALi HOUSIS l'Olt SALi HOUSIS l'OR SA H =s=r-r=~~R=E=N=TA~L~--"""'-I o..,oral 1000 Giiiitral ~ 1100 Genonl 1000 ....... al looo' HUnlt!!f!'!!' INdt 1400 HUll't.f!' IMch 1400 c,;'";;;,"';al;";V;•;ll;oy;;;;;;';4;;10;;~~;,:.:•~ln:;V~•:.;l;ley~~~~1:.4il~O~1 ~H~ou!!iM~•='="=m=I=.....,::.!!! SHOP'PltiG FOR A HOME '1 • CORONA DEL MAit ._ ' r-:v~~ ,...,. $12.9'0. •• Call,. write or visit our olfice lor ,.,ur fl'tt , · POllNTIAL IAY VIEW LOTS ONLY 2 HOMES LEFT ' topy of OW' "Homes For Living" magazine Bull,d a ~story bome & 2nd awry will have ,7 -with pictures, prices and detalls of our spectacular v I e w of main bay channal le ·New homee, re.ody to move II), Ila mUe • General 2llGO , LAST 2 NE\'{ HOMES • Buy before price tncrease on next unjt. FURN wl.aler rental, 2 bdr, l 1u•1I rm, 2 b•. waaher/df'Ytt". -13th I. Ball St., On Newport Pcnnlnaula. 67>6SJ) • '- select Ustlngs in Newport Beach, Corona de!-panoramic oetan·vlew. TWO adjomlng R·l from beach. First paYlllent up IO eo days , Mar and Costa Mesa. TRANSFERRING? Ask lots cin be sold separately at '32,500 each; after move ID. us fqr a "Homes For Living" maguiue from ""to' -~.blanocBlkvdon. lovtly tree-lined street,' dooe c·ou• 1 SHORES 1 any part of the country. We have associate "" .. 1 offices throughout th e U.S. RED CARPET CHESHIRE R""'' ESTATE i REALTY, 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport' ,...,. (on Garfield ~tween . Beoch & Magnolia These are 4 BR -2 Bath homes complele with C&ti>els, W&upaper, Wet Blir and many exCras. Entire yard enclosed with Spaqish Stucco wall. $34,!M and '34,750. Conventional financing, 10% down. VlLLA MONTEREY R..,l•ls te Shora 200J WANT OA.wkillC woman to J •hart apt w/terract, flO. mo. Call anytim~ unW 2 pm ' ~ Beach 92660. (714) 675-600P. e 675-~50~ e 17'7' I ... _ MATURE woman to than J , .,.~, ,.., .. ~, St. Fount•ln V•llty Br, 2-ea apt w/amt11 , Sovth-of City Hill au ,.,I. 962· 113$3 • • - ·---1;-0, Frwy, Ret:. lu .. Avall -· IOOO c.ti.... Park 1115 c-a •I Wr 1150 t-i. "6-4268 ----- ---------1000 Genorol J -Glnwi_I ::::..-: --~C'.""~~I••-•••••"'":'"-"'· ------• = .. -..,~,.,""""wru""""',,,.,.--=,...,.. .. .,.,1 -,f-$21,950 ....-O)orner * 1---------1•_,,-'-----* BY OWNER * e OPEN HOUSIS e H I"""-•·ch apt,.NB w/non-amoker, 185 3 Bdnn, Iii ba, "1>1~ r/o, TAKE OVER Ilg V.A, Loan o.:..nti.nlllom<,3BR,utll SUNDAY l•S:IO ""= -• 1400 Huntington mo .!148-3335 MESA VERDE _w/w ""''· dbl ""· ~"""'· 51 ' Gl ·o· N. LY With only $4 'l50 down .. rm. ..wt»i "'" liv . rm 'llll7 CAl\08, !lutltl.U.. 4 TIY THIS ON"E 1-;;~H;;•';"°:;;"';;;;;;;;;;;;';;'40;;;:S FEMALE roo1nm01• , .. 22-rned. patio, 2220 Maple SL 5 BEDROOMS 14 • a:umt tt1.i. .siJ.,100 .g% VA ;~~~ Y l! ki'i.!7wt~I e ~ Bedrooms, Spectacular view. . 1• 28. 4 hr bowie CM $90/mo. 646-231'!. 3 bath" el•ctr~ blt-lno, $135 PER MONTH loan•-Total ..,.... ... only "" FOR SlGHS ! HUNTINGTON HARBOUR t>ttl te"'her,5'U264 • BY 0\VNER $23.900 cpts/clrpi; 61 lge cor lot. included everything. NO $175 Pm. 'A· 3·bt-drooni 2-avocado •hai: crpti thruout. ng MAJUCOLD, O effrly de. Brand new and right near the BAY FRONT ' NICE man ot woman to 3 Bd1"n1., 2 ba., crpts., drps., DAVIDSON Realty QUAlJFYING! 3 •pie-~ ~th hardwooCI tldor home :m~yd ~tlo Ir. cabana. coratll!d, one-o(.a.)dnd duplex, beach. 4 Beautitu! bedrooms 16911 Bolero Lane. Beaut!· stlare 3 lxlr. home, SlOO mo. frplc . 2 pafios. 6%<i'11 GI 546-5460 Eves, 642.-4951 l!pa.r'I bedrooms and 2 baths. ln Costa MS, large play ' ' • Front unit l'Mdy to OCC'U'Y. 2 batba. Dramatic, ra.!sed M 3 bedroom, 3 bath, car-&4l-3l6? _ qn, 646-7034 FIXER-UPPER l{~ ... "WOOD FLOORS•. ,....,..__ yard 1or the children. Ooae BIG POOL + -m·~ 11•'•· -m with d'-peted, built-Ins, dock tadll-•"''""'"""""".,--,....-==I ' ~ '"'""'" fo all ikhool1 and--.....1.... 1119 Y1rd, s~w, n7 POPPY. I-bte a 45 • :.:~-.-·::!,~'.'."-. An all-t'-. Ow-r '" m-·"' East 1 SHARE 2 bdr home, CDM. cbfi[)O: 11h-story,2 bclr, 13>l. 3 BR. Vacant. R-2 Lot. tom drapes! Beautiful .. ,.,... .... .., ~,. , .. "'"''"'v" W"'<' ...... .., ""' .... "~ ba),icpts, dr~. ~·et bar, bit· 1969 FULl..ERTON AVE. USED BRICK FIREPLACE! Full prlc:_.~f<»l4 3 BR, 2 BA, crpta, $28,900 lot "'!thlla cban:nina: "Coun-aiau guden kitchen takea neeeuitating &ale, S79.SOO. Pool 1 1• t:M:au1t,. dyare~ •. 7llAMT ~.... $4000 dn. OWNER. M&-1tl78 try .rff na: Homt". sng e, quie a ........ in "t 2-cn.r gar. bH-in strge $15,750 -10% Down Grflcious yard "'"ith block SEMPLE , t~ "eril:" out of housework &75 &Os· 0 0 spc, pool priv. Must see to call; MR. ROBINSON • wall fenciJtJ! As 'I9w ~ ~ maket oooldug an ex· >< • ~ Meta apprec. SZ2.500. 54~2631 Davis Realty 642·7000 $2,500 down or try NO Newport Beech 1200 REAL EJTATE perience, ~k tbese built--,,,, I..... zOltl 1-:;,;=:=:=="'<===-.:=::::::======="' I DOWN TO VETS with a LIKE To live on I. small 2515 £. Coast Hwy 675-2101 iris: Wall to wall carpeting, 2 BR, gar, patio, cptr, d1111+ 2100 tata.I price of a low. low bland! For sale by owntt TOP OF THE MARK draperies, fencing, beaut. ---atove, refri&:, tropical tettina =="----...:::=.::::.:::::.:.:.:c-----'-";.;. I $22, 750, -:..;;:,...:..:.:.::_,=-:;:.:._:::::..1 due to dlvo!'CE:. ...,_ __ In• front yard ldlCPI inclUding for . adults, 1 blk to .. n... ... WE SELL A HOME -.......... , Open, House Sat. SUn l.S· rprinklus Delux bit-' S a --r-EVERY 31 MINUTES Move Right In ~~and~e ;:;,m~e2wt;~~ lSSS Vista Ca.uda'.!. 4 Br., i pliances ineiud~: ~~;~1 ::•:.;n:.;l•::.::~::n:::• ___ ,:l6::2::0 $175. Mo MM780 ' Open Houses THIS WEEKEND K.., this h•IHIY dlrKtory with you thlt w•k~ end as you go hou~untlng. All th• loc•tions llstad below .,.. described In treater det•ll by ffvertial nt •IMWhere In todey'a DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. Patrons thowlny open house• f« NI• or to rent •r• urged to lit auch lnfonn•• tlon In thla column ••ch Frida'(, {2 Bedroom) 321 Poppy 1\ve., Co rona del Mar ' 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (2 Bedroom + Guest House) 505 Santa Ana A,v.e. (Newport Heights) 642-5200 Newport Beach (Sun 1-5) W lk . & L RedtcOratN throughout, ev· Has bei!n compll!te l y ,:e... oven,dlshwuherl:dlsposal. BY Owner 1750 sq. ft. 3 BR l BR on lrvi~O Preres "°'" 8 er ee eJ'Yl9ing shines like a new remodeled_ modem kitChen ,.._Dy FOR SCHOOL It's ready to move into now. Ubrary. Assume &CA:. 1417 lege men. · mo. eeps dollar, All the charm o1 open /bit i L t r 4 Br., 3 Ba, Completely up. 6601 Luclento Dr. Hunt. Bch, Shawnee, SA. :>40-9258 4, l Man $65, 545-2740. 2l'}U Weitclitt Or. beam ceilings a.nd" a spac-w • ns. -0 s 0 stor~e. traded. plus pool, ,.4, raa. $:17,190. and worth every pen.: I="="=="'="'=='="== J M6-ml Open Eves. iou:a look makes 3.Bedroom Used brick lrpl & dinin& BOYD REAi. TV ~y. CA or FHA. (TI4) N•wport hach 2200 Possession Pronto r..-;1.. room wall. Bathrooms ne\v .. ,,.,.. E L1gun1 le1ch 1705 -& ...... .....,. an exceptional w/sunken tub. Large vu.<;? • ())a.lrt liwy., CdM 531-8400, U AM to 7 PM. Bier, o.:.=""-==--'= HARBOR Hi&hJIUld5-3 bdr, hom~-Readyforimmedt·· aundeck w/vh, N e wly 67S.5f30 6'/e FHA PRICE REDUCED 2~ ba.,, den, dbl gar. ~~~~ ~.soo -painted outaide. A cross BY THE SEA J bdrm 2 bath. 3% ye ar• *VIEW HOME* ;o:~r~~~.~~ 646-JlJl street from Bay on 2 sides Charmine 2 Br. + conv,\den new, Hffvy shake roof, \\'elcome. $3.SO/mo, Avail on I c::-;--,;;;,-,;;;-:=-,-,--,1 & 3 Nocks from. ocean. + fonnal din, rm.: &ttic block wall fence, fireplace, BY OWNER * 3 BR 1% bath, bdwood $42,500 beys this 4 bdrm space, 2 frpl.: walled fill" complete kitchen center m. PERFECT condition! Must or about Aug 15. By floors, cptJ: / drpr, f.rplc. home, 4008 Marcus. NB. den, VIEW of ocean &: Jet· duding indoor outdoor car-see interior to appreciate! t ~•c,,ppmn=-'-~-------t double & a rage, beautiful 67>-0363 or~ ty, Stej>s to beach. Assume pet, Built.In BBQ. Priced to 3 BR, 2 BA, la.rte living rm, OOVER Shores b a Y tr on t fenced yard. $24.5«1 • OPEN Sat '= Sun. 412 loan at 6%%. $1<*,500. sell last at $29,SOO, firepla~. dinette. all elee-hnme, 6 BR. 4 BA. larae pes, ~rge e'""""° Ya r . custom home. 4 BR lge OCEAN VJE\V 4. BR, 3 BA,\ ~ ! ' ',. * 3 BR 1~~ baths.,~ Rtw.rside Dr. N.B. Pmti .. W1lk1r Rtty. •75-5100 ~ trlc Incl kitchen, Thermo patio, 70' private dock. d"' I ' ·--> d ~~; EMP controls each room, Bea.med Avail Sept 1st yrly be •1000 Vacant • i1tlmf!d. po65tssion. rumpus rm, 4.-level. Fenced fa m rm + 500 ,. ft ----• -ceiling thru-out, wall to wa11 n10, 2 l 3 : 7 8 O. 5 O l a or In park·llke neighborhood, 3 $20,'!50. yd, 2 frpJcs, bit-ins, ovenli-sundeck. Guest nn & ~ad~ -carpets, drapes, lge cor lot, _2_u_,,.._.,,, _______ 1 ~m.'' 1,.~, •• ':",'_m ... ,_f,akmiltyo Wellt·McCardle, Rltra. ed gar ott alley. Pool size jacent to aarage. Lr 1 GLEN MAR by owner: 4. 511.rubs. Good deal for G.l. Coron• del Mar 2250 ~hoois &· .. ,;~ping~ Lease/ 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. kit. Crpta, drps. ~2986 boat/carport. An on 45' tee Bdrm 1% batha, fireplace. ~~:r s3r;,~ng ro ranch. option? We can try. COL-~~548-~772S'!'!!~any~Hm""'e""'""I BAY AVE., BAY VIEW aimple lot. $74,900. 219 new paint inside~ out. Very MAKE OFFER SHOWPLACE near J 3 LEGE PARK. ::;; Open. Ho111e • 1201 W &3 Larkq>ur, CdM, 0 w n er . clean. Good neighborhood. Write P.O. Box 914, Laguna BR, ~ sep, forced air heat. JEAN SMITH J.2382 FLEET Lane, HB Apt ovtr sa~ on' 1atse fr7S...d15l "'\. 600 sqrt patio. Lots of tt-Bet.ch or call 494-47:16 any. 2 BA, bar, w/w crpts, 2 3 bdr, 2 ba. fam. nn. Xlnt. lot·· room tor view home LOVEL y ment • raised plantm. Um frplcs, lge patio, auto kit. Realtor cond. l~ yr. old. Prof. Foi-1inancinc call Al ~ Broad.moor Home • $58,750 Garage, ~yman~ dream, eH. •Noyu•N'S chen, gar & carport. $315. (2 Bedroom & Family or Deni 1218 Cambridge Lane (Weslclifl) NB 641>7414 (Sat & Sun) 646-J255 d'"''· $32.500. 962o<o4tl or JONES REALTY . Len than • Y'-old, Boaut. abts. I mt. all <ba>n slore1. " ~ teue. S'J3.1304 or 613-8filT, 400 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa 646-.fi328 f1U210 675-<1198 4 Br tam rm dln walk to elem. sch. 1 mi. to SPECIAL C'BR. 3 BA. $400. l'l'IO. 601 t I :z::;::~~7i=~~ I ~~~~;;;;;;;~~I " · ·· · rm.: HS 2 mi. to JC $26,500. 4 Income units, 120 yds. to Begonia. Alao 0 n J u r n , .·1430 Serenade (Irvine Terrace) CdM 675-3331 (Sun 1-5) {l Bedroom) *242 Joann St. (College Park) CM 548-9578 (Please call first) 2032 Miramar, Balboa Peninsula 675-6000 (Sat 1-5) 454 Santa Ana Ave. (Newport Heights) NeVtp<>rt Beach (Sun 1·5) 548-5508 245 Fordham. Costa Mesa (Sat & Sun 1-5) 522 Via Lido Soud (Lido) Newport Beach 642-5200 (Sal & Sun 1-5) '2187 Irvine (County Corridor) NB 641>3255 (Sat 1-5) (3 Bedroom & Family or Den) 717 Poppy Ave., Corona del Mar 675-2101 • (Sun 1-5:30) *1701 Galatea Terrace, Corona del Mar 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) **107 Milford, (Cameo Shores) CdM 833-0700; 644-2430 (Sun 1-6) *1224 Nottingham Road (Westcliff) NB 642-5200 (Sat 1-5) *633 Cameo Highlands,' Cameo High ... lands, Corona de! Mar · 673-6510 (Sat & Sun afternoon) 1147 Gleneagle, Costa Mesa · 540-17".0 (Sun 1-5) 19031 Colchester Dr., Huntington Crest ' 842-6691 (Sun 1-5) {4 Bedroom) 2915 Catalpa (Eastblull) Newport Beach 645-2000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) '1959 Vista Caudal, rThe Bluffs) CdM 675-5930 (Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom & Family or Denl 2152 National Ave., Costa Mesa 548-2703 (Shown by appt.) *706 K Thang a {Irvine Terrace) CdM 645-2000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 3027 Carob (Eastbluff) Ne\vport Beach 675-2101 (Sun 1-5:30) 219 Larkspur, l;::orona def ~1ar 675-0151 \Sal & Sun) 442 Riverside Drive, Ne\11port Beach 548-2986 (Sat & Sun 10-8) 1380 Galaxy Or. (Dover Shores) NB 642-11236 (Sat & Sun) 225 North Star Ln . (Dover Shores l NB 642-8235 ' (Sat & Sun) 2565 Greenbrier Lane, Costa Mesa (Sat & Sun 1-5) *1930 Con1modore, Newport Beach (Sun 1·5) 4615 Pertham (Cameo Shores) CdM 833-0700 ; 644-2430 (Sun 2-6) 1941 \Vindward Lane (Baycrest) NB 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5) **318 Buena Vista (Balboa Peninsula) Balboa 642-5200 rsat & Sun 1-5) 2341 Irvine (Back Bay) Newport Beach 540-1720 (Daily 1·5) 115 Milford Rd (Cameo Shores) CdM 67!1-6996 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 1101 \Vhite Sails \Vay, CorOna de! Mar 644-2716 .(Open 1·5) (5 Bedroom & Fam;ly or Den) 4536 Roxbury Rd (Cameo Shores) CdM 675-3520 . (Sat & Su n 1-5) 1712 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) DUPLEXES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) 719 Marigold, Corona de! Mar 675-2101 (Sun 1·5:30) 1201 IV. Bay. NewpQrt Beach 673-6210; 675-0998 (Sat & Sun 11-5) * , ... • * Wtterfrollt 1f * *_re~ _, WJ!!rfr_,., Costa Mesa 1100 OCEANFRO.NT 2% ~!' : 2 ~cs. Adult Prine only. 962-18S8 beach. Patios, deck 1 673-3806 or 675-0023. POUNDING SURF S I l /0 O<'Cup • rnr. VP· DUTCH HAVEN w/ocean view. Nds. painl.l'-========I . $23.500 full price. 4 lri BR's. o e , ease pt1on Cheahln Reil Estate etc. Shou1d gross SS.CW an-Bilboi 2300 2 ba, 24x15 ram nn 1-pool Modern 4 BR, 2 BA pl us • 675--2503 • S J.flN. to Douglas &. Frwy. nual. Pr. $69,600, T" d '' ==:....----=:= is only steps a\\'8.Y from Uris 3 BR 2 bath CORONA DEL MAR home located on [)Ah. Ila Street fabov• bif Cor· ona), "" f 1 be be l Bdnns., 1%. baths Many table or ? l mgl &: l •dbl am. rm. n st ac~ area. HARBOR VIEW HILLS Improvements, 22x3Q° P atio. considered. PENINSULA 2 Bdrm + gar. Crpts. Lr&: corner lot Available now. $62,51Xl -For Sale by Owner. 4 B.R. Block fence, 70, corner. MISSION REALTY 494.0731 den. Avail Sept lhru J une, w/fencd·in back yrd. $3500 0Wnel' 83J.2!8'7 Lv. nn., dn. rm., family T~ over 5~% G.1, Owner VIEW HOME $195 mo. dn, take over low in~ CUsroM 3 Br, 2~~ Ba. pool. nn., sep. laundry nn .• pool trans. • • loan, 1119 mo .. ,.. all S\1% loan. 148.SOO. Prin<:. ,,,. '""· Top vtew o! BRASHEAR REALTY e e BY .OWNER Shown by appt only ma Na-ol'lly. •548--0115• Hartlor. $<19,!liO. 644-7'16 84.7-35.\1 536-2123 Eves. New 3 Bdmt &: Den. Bearn Lido Isle 23St tional Ave, 5484103 CAMEO SHORES-0 BR'S. CdM: "INVEST NEAR. 'I'HE celling-a, outstanding VIEW. -FARM snLE All elec kitchen. Roman 4 BR, 3 BA, contemp. New- Ntwpirt FIXER--UPPER S20 • 950 After ~'!,9~~~ ~b, 3 ::!: 3~ ~~~ 2-story home. 3 Bdrma 2 bath, Must aell • $47.500 or ly dee. Avail Sept. 15, wntr Pri~ ~ • d 1 t .. .,. .._ -"er. OPEN ••T & SUN rental or yrly, 675-3504 "~ ,.,r •mm e a e build another home on lot. batM + lge, recreauon uu ~ ot Victorfe 646-1111 sal.e-.ubmit any reaaonable DELUXE Condo, ma n Y Some view, nr. beach !: room. t n t er c 0 m systmf 10 am • 4 pm, 1495 Skyline HAPPY winter rent.aj. Dome. n!fu. Eutside Cost& Mesa xtru, 2 Br, 2 Ba pool ihopi. Bkr. 673--20l0''. tbruughoul Lge, Cul de Sac n.ive, or phone 830-2825. 2 Bdrm, den, 2 bath. • 3 BR. hwd. fln., farn. nn. $28,SOO. ~t terms. J.gt. I t Ow ln t I • WALK TO TOWN • .. 6~ • l46-0732 TOP •• v•LUE 0 ncr mov g OU 0 -needs tender, lovina: care. ....___ willfffi "' 1 ol 1tate ard must sell. Only From lhi& spic ,a: gpan 2 Anytime Bring oHen: -cash talks. OWNER'S SACRIFICE vwm:r n&nce aa e $28 900 Bdnn. home w/view al Vie-Bilbo• lsl1nd 2355 "j CALL 56-8(24 South Coast 4 or S BR. 1 mo. old Harbor his comfortable, famil;y MUTUAL REAL TY tor J.lugo Point &. surf. YOll Sl•..,.7 Real Estate Hilla home .. LR. DR. Fam. hOmt on dbl. lot. ~ ••2 1411 An.a' , Beautiful, . small ,,~,n·,-WINTER rental Sept .June, 3 •• .., ·near land . value. $13,000 -• 1 .ime '"' BR. frpl, bay View. 107 Thts one Is going fur a Song, $26,950 Assume 5V4% R with frp1 6: bar. 3• Ba. handles. $&1,500 Fun · price $4,000 DOWN lge. dbl. iaraa:e with t'Xtra Jade-. $250 mo.-21J..838..f310 5 "·•room• 2 bat"· •· B' '" bd I I 2 Crpts, drps. many Xtru. room behind. $35,000 ~ """ • ··~ up...,. I&'. -' • r, g. am nn. Xlnt financing. M8-82a1 Hal Plnchln & Atsoc. View lot, 3 BR; Xlnt cond. '"-ne-·• t-· tlJe. miovte built-in' ranae ba. bit-ma, cpta, drpl, par. -E , Coast Hwy. GT.>4392 Take aver 69'. GI at pymta '"'MAfiS'aAf:i.''°& ROPP Vac1tion Rtnt1Js 2900 I and oven • double car 181' ~floor-. Sprinkl~ra. Stone ... wport Heights 1210 ..,, BLUFFS ..,, ol $161. per mo. Submit ol· :n1 Ocean Aw. 494-1021 age· 2 separate back )'Ql'ds. fireplace. nr S&n Diep trwy _ . fers DUPLEX wlttt view, private; Walle to C.OSta Mesa City ~J'1r.~. ·ew. By owner: · KNOm PINE Condo, l!nd unit, l level, 3 ' MARINER * * * avail. weekly during Aua:· Patk. Priced at $27,$0, ~ BR, 2 BA, custom crpts, REALTY ASSOC'S. Sept. 2 Bdrma, fireplace, ,.,2313 In abundance! Old brick ""'I., d-"'"" 2 pa"°" handy ldeal real estate location at -.II u•--· Rd _.,,. IMMAC. DUPLEX 3 BR. + lanai rm, for trlr. u;rPooi. SJ0.200 By' owner. 84.2-55<U: Eves 54.1-2442 320 N. Coast !fwy, LagUna. ~~ aJ~ 6 ;;;;.-· 2 =tte2nv:!!~ ~tint. or boat 1toraee. $.11,500. &M-2279. LIT11..E CASH NEEDED 4 private ofJices plus foyer, ====="====I IR THEREAL ~-ESTATERS landsca~ s Pr 1 n k l e~u.s Gr1ham Reilly ""'"1.414 VACANTI ODPENH~· lS03l. ~Ichester amplend ~ng, st,orare & Summer R1nt1l1 2910 ; ' · Near Ne..........t Post Office r., untington ._,..,at, Ex· ll'OU !, .,..,.,,,, mo. se, $35.750 ~,...... Oce1naide of Hwy, 2 Bdnn., dtina: Medlten-anean w/at. 494-4.39'1 or 5.11-5517. CLEAN Balboa1Beach Unltl. BEACH BARGAINS CORBIN-MARTIN Newport Shores 1220 fl!COi.t'ict~ ~51:, rium, k.lni sized bdnns., 2 1800 view, lust completed 3 Sleeps 2 to.10; Jor mmmer 3 Br., fam. rm. 2 Ba. $26,500 REALTORS 675-1862 · • ba., fam, rm., formal din. BR 2~;, BA. 300 sq ft reseivations call 673-9945 3m6 E. Cat. Hwy, CdM 2 srollY A-frame. 3 BR. 2 Gene ~:.:tf; Realtor nn., marble llrepl&Ct', fill-sundeck. Arch Be a c h 315 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Z.Sty, a-frame charmer BY OWNER : Clean 3 Bdnn BA, dbl. aara:. Spac. btam eat appointments lhru.out. Heights. $34,700. Owner, M'r. AUG. 9 to IS, SPAC 3 BR, 2 $29,500 E a I t s l de • New shai celling se,900. 642-3547 HEAR the turf! Fab white Brit: June B1alr. 842-6691 or Lewis, (714J 52S-501J, ll12 BA. pool. Blk to ocean. UXI. -carpeting. Extra lfl y a rd water vu ol Little C.Orona 968-3229 Noria. Lots park'&. F 11 n ton , j 4 Br. l Ba. "'ocean $32'.900 1'3.900. """'85 Dovor Shoro1 1227 Bclt. Imm•" 2 br, don, 2 2 BEDROOMS MAGNIFICENT 613-2110, """933. j 1.Sty. A-fra~ at $23,500 BY OWNER: Eastaide CM. 3 * UNIQUliLY ::. ~e:eo:~~P~~~~ fine. c.omptetely redecorated 4 Ocean view lot; $6,950. Small, OCEANFRONT, 3 BR. CAYWOOD REAL TY Bdnn, bltn kitchen, natural Different "Oki World" em.. ' refurbished, Ideal for oou~ but level. $1 ,000 Down, bal. fabulous view, Avail Aug. j 6306 birch cabinet.. 66xl26' lot CAMEO SHORES le • work frtt. Excellent lo-at $70 month. $350. wk. 2 BR avail Sept. W. Coallt Hwy., N.B. w/ alley access for boat or t~porary. executi~e ltui:· Oceanfront 4 BR&. Den cation ,..,.. 975 497.1021 497.1210 645-21133 J e 548·1290 • trailer. 6~o/o loan can be ury home. Unobstructed 115 MUlotd •613-6996 . ~· assumed $24 950 &n.-4l'r8 Bay & Mtn VU-most rms. . Rex L. Hod9111 Rlty. OCEANFRONT Apt Laguna BEACH HOUSES DUPLEX/ ' ' ' 5000 sq ft. 4 Br, 4.1,io ba + OWNER Sa.ttificlng 2 good a.17-2525 Sandi 3 Bdrm 2 Bath, Patio, 2 BR, furn. 7308 Oclan- G.I. BY Owner 3 BR. 1% Ba., maids qtn:. Ideal for enter. house& on dbl. lot S. of Hwy. BY Owner, Huntlni'"" ~,, Lrg. deck, Pool, Priv. bch. front, 962-9810. Or FHA terms. Live re n t t d r B l $58 500 673.-4169 "' ....,.., !roe, 2 BR. ••""-G•~•••· c r P a• P s • u Y taining, Easy ma nt. Inuned • · Spanish 2 story, red We Own('r. 4.94-2213 LUXURY, ,1,_ • •· 8 --.. eqUlty-usume 6% loan. occupancy Furnished 2 ~ ...... 11 '"" Priv patios, blt·lns. ~54t>-9627:;;-""';;,· =-::-=--,,,I $l7!000 Assum~ 6"'% 1o&n 1roof. 4 BdRI, ~ B3A. den, 3 Bed -1Batb 673-2223 Pyra,mld Exch1111gon 646-2629 ' · · Lido Isle 1351 am. nn, n rm. c. gar. C nd l l 1950 1809 W. Balboa BY OWNER-3 Bdrm., 1~ Box 1632 N.B. 543-7749. (n4 )968-D2 0 om n um baths, doubk pragt. 1958 1 YEAR-OLDI -B E AU TI FU L 1 BR .. 2 BR, 1 BA, adj. bay/lieacb. Ro&emary Pt, 548--8'786 University P1rk 1237 ELEGANT 2-ltory C\15tom Huntington Bayfront custom furn, Will Avail. A1n.,.~wk,. ~s~v'coiVWN~Eft.rn:isi>".-;~r.iwciAN~-1~~!!!'.!!.!:~~~..,!:~ home featured in '69 Lido Herbour 1405 aell on contract or lse op-1~~,-~~----,-~ East.Bide 3 Br, 2 Ba, family Choice Location Home Tour. A real "must L""''"'""' tion. $32,500 owner. 673--2259 2 BR Balboa apt adj room home. * 6G-5931 This almolt new, 3 bdnn + see" for the quality home ~ OR SALE-Davenport beaches/pier .$7f>.tl50 wkly. E 'ced buyer. $84.500. Island. 3 Br. 2 Bath. !am THE SUN NEVER SETS oll ~ 6'15-S810 Very lnter.stillll BIG HOM pn at $28,500 atrium home is 1ituated on LIDO RE •LTY INC. rm % blk to be_ ach 1. ..., __ ,.,eel's .~-n -•r. I =-c==...,...=--,--.,,,..1 ••':II for quick A.le. Nr shop'g I a $30» premium lot loca-,.. Marina (7141 84&-9508 ...._...... 1:uu ...... BALBOA 1 BR, redec. Nr. Simply exquisite 3 BR home schOol&. By owner. 546--9993 tion facing,park & pool arta. 3400 Via. Lido 673-8830 · For an ad to R D around ~l\rlw<s. $7>$1:15. wk l 7 . with family room, used FOR SALE; home ,.,.13 BR'• Truly, a beautilul aetting? 2 S C A R ( E White .t.1et'hantJ:? the clock, dial 6tUAi78. 536-3911or6'75-5810. brick, shake roof, huge pa-+ den on corner lot. Backa bath!. frplc, up.graded car-Immaculate 2 .Bel. on strffl tio. An homemakea extru on alley. 5%% F11A loan. pet 4 drapes. OUt of state to str«t lot. Beamed ceil·t.Ge;.;...ne_r1..;l _____ 2;;.000;;.;..Ge_n_1_r1_1 _____ 2_00;.oO_G;.•:...n..;•_••~l-----2-000.;.;;... incl. elect. bit-Ins &: dlllh-2288 Meyer, 548-GS Rltr owner has just reduced in&:t: _ aood cpts., drps. 1· washer. Better hurry -AS. price to $31.500 & wm help South i. Ea1l patios. Only ~1U76M/ABmoLEpa,!% ioa, .. ~ @U M1s1 Vtrdt 1110 with financing. IMMED, $42,500. • • ~0 every .. 1ng POSS. Be .utt to 1 e e this R C GREER YoU desire. Priced at $26,900, $26,950. Assume 5%. % ntA, one! 3356 · v~ Lido ' Rtalty Sl3-!ll00 540-llSl Httitage Real Es-3 BR .. 2 BA., tam rm, bltint, 808 PETIIT, R11ltoh ~ate (Open Evesl crpts. drps, immac pa.tlo 833-0lOl 2•1•2 ~Vacant. 0 w net . TRY $6500 DOWN Steps to ocean! 2 Br. furn. On this much deaired "Mal"' house + 2 Br, turn. Apt.. 2 BY Owner: 3 BR, 2 ba, lam q~ Model'' on rreenbtlt car garage, Would you be. rm. Trffl. block wall. patio. by adult -pool, 3 Br. 2 ba. licve $45,0l)J F.P.! Sprnlden. 2953 Royal Palm Very llJJnll'kMu. OWner wW BALBOA BAY PROP. Dr. $24,5tl0. 546-9896 can-y balanoe. lalbu l1lan4 1355 ----212 S1pplll,. 3 Br, 2 Ba A den. 24 x 30 brick paUo, expoetd beam ceilings, completely remod. By owner S52.500. 6~ 673--7420 ANYTIME t.ARGE lot with pll.)'house. 3 • Red Hiii R••fty $13,506=/•pARAOISE'1 Bedrm, ne'v \\•all·to.,vall 18068 Culvu Dr., J1vint Huntlnt1ton leach .1400 Bc&t the htat Jn the tqe crpts, freshly Pa Int e d • OPEN I AM~ PM 8J3.-0820 -,.========-·I """'d pstlo, cuadl"f °""" 5*-6784 ONE OF A KlND *WESTMONT-VACANT waterl8l1 ! BBQ, Bl1 bed· 3 BDR., 2 ba., lam. rm., 1645 FlNISH BONUS RM toom$, fittplacc. Full dlnlna Bimini Pl., CM 1$29..&5Q. Spacious 3 bednn. formal 3 BR il dep. IAlsh ~. cov. mom . Sprlnk.le.rg, S<M)-1720 ~ prncls. dinin;e: f'OClm, pool, truly for patio, bUt w•U. BRrltlldtn:, TARBELL 2955 Hirbor \be most cUlcrlmtnatinJ. boat aru. Only $28,500 ·low • "~"'-~-'I ... l'ar1< 1115 15<.!100. '33 Cam'° Kial> <In FHA no <In Ct. ~u1Yu:. 5%>% Io an on ~ lands. Cameo Hl.Chland• HAF'F'DAL REAJ..TY custom ex-ecutive Me s a QUIET OOUILI ()pe.n Sl.t It Sun afternoOn 8740 Wamtr, F.V. ~ Verde • Pool Home, Priced u.:.-•lhr Re tty below repla<ement coH Wm..,, A ... duplex.' Br. 11r111 ... , a DUP'" Owner. ~ 2 bl. lowtr; 1..SR. 1-ba. UJ>o LUi LOVELY big home t n !:i'ia_ ~1:r ~ •_:a~v!1,,.,==-6~-'""~'°~~-, 1 J -2 BJl-2 bat b. 4 ~·"' College Park, many ~t. quiet ntiithllol'hoOd $59,000. BLUITS elesant F plan, 3 youns, Income $ll0/mo. EZ By owner $~.51)(). 2372 BURR WHITE Br., 3 S. w/ Bay View, on tenn1. <>wntr wanta o.ti.r. Rutgt~. 546-9993 RE.At.TOR Fffnbelt Extras. Lo l&e, lo R. D. SLATES LARGE Sp.1nlsl'I home on l~i ZIOI Newport Blvd NB dn $41.500. f44..C365 M7·3tlt 5.16-4538 AC. for hot1ea, in Newport l'JS..4630 ga.2253 ~ PLANNJNG to mow? You'D MAKE A MEMO to pthtr 8,.'ltk Bil.>' area-30 ae. in · tirld .n arnulrw,..•mkr ~of op i>Ya ,._.I'll> )Oncer oeeo. mountaJm nr. E I 1 In o t • ·~AILY PIWf WANT ADS! hornet In todQ'a 0aaWW aiell"' tbtm 1v/ ca&h with 7141646-561)3 White elepbant.t OtrriH:fine Ad&. Otedc them ft&w. l>A.ILY Pnm WANT ADSI ITllFE I i.;.;.;1~1-r_r ............. A ~Ing prof_, • _ -_ ... Ho 'Pfnl'MWO \'9(11> studying ,_ ____ __,8-~9 why pooplo are oboonknlnd- 1 0 A IO pi i I td. T'1on ho promptly - -. h·-r~l~f .... w'-1-' o ~~:-.... eh=.~~ --• -vou dev91oP ~tom 1tep No.. 3 Mlow. • r:m.~~~"$ r r r 1· r r I' r 1 6 """"'""' '°'I ANSWEI ,_ I I I I I • I I -· SCllAM·LETS 'ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 1800 • RIAL ISTATI l !*~-111*~-"l*!l'ml-l!*--*tip' --*· UAL ISTAn ~°"'~~.,.~·~·~I ~~~~ ·~°"'--"'-'~·-i ~~~--1 F ..... ,-1.1.... I ' RENTALS llflhtALS RINTALI RINTALI H._ U""'"'"""' ~-~._ Fvmltho.r=--I ilpt1.' °""""......, Aots. u...u;,,......, Genoral 3000 l ido 1110 3351 N-rt llHdt 4200 -rol 5000 N.,,,.., -h 5200 Ronlolo W1nlwll 5"° lxch._, R. E. '2JO ....... .. ...... nn., i:uu-r .,.. n tt ren ,,.,..,.., ..-"'4ol\, on c an n t , W•tertrorrt 2 '3d1', 2 tip. Jit:w w-...-· -3BR ··-28&. ... ~v It tal "'-·ou-~ h I VENDOME NEWPORT .Pe,ch •ATTE NTION• BEACH COl'rAGE-11- i fenc'd )'d .. 1rplc. W/w p91111allyf\snilbed.2Bdnn. Newport. llland. Downltalrt luxury bldr. bullt·I;,&., ~tAU\llare&WhoD!.11 Fee land. Room to buUd. Avail 911. Broker 5JH980 l=d=•~;,;';'*,:;;th.:_,.,._....,=====1 2 Br 6 alteP}tll ~ &epL 111btem.nean .......... -, I VIC..,. Income propert)J ln Aslurne 1.5~ b.n. Tnde to Julu, S250 mo. ·u111tatn l JMM'Aetn..AT!: AP'l'S! _...... . of L.A. AIRPORT: ,.._ tor income ~. Call 0, 3 BR; fm . tm., tencd. H 3 Bo r.'.. I •• J .. 1 .. r.." \ADULT I: FAMILY &Upc avt.ll. _.ponslbl& ~ A 6 yr, old F01U Star Rtal"'. a,u.+m 1 Yd. W/w, Qllli:lttn I. petJ untlnpton Be•eh 400 ~~f150.., mo~ec: = $ECI'l0NS AVAILABLE Cari.be Balbo& dq)ltet <ao petal, aeelr a.a =::c;c; v O.K. Bkr. 534-6980 t BR. 2 Ba. bullttns, avail. Call sn..Xl&l. a,s or CIOM to .......... P.•rk 3.10 ~=SL Br. unfurn. home (court, It. I. WMtfM Jm. J BR., 2 Ba., Condo. carpeted Ii. draped. Dbl gar, 8t!f: &n)1l.me SWl. '14 38th * ~ s Bria. 2 Ba I---~;.:::::.,.___ Ill. dwelllnc or tome apu. 1 Ps.tio. RIO, W/V.'. rec Jo'cd, yd. ms lee.sf' m-0768 st .. upstairs. * 2 BedroomJ • YEAR.LY-#15. eon&ldtteU. nr. school, in f&clli~ Bkr. ~ -* SWim Poot. PuVsreen New l Btd. 2 Sith. f13.2223 nke '1.ttt, De~lnc tam. Ui0-2 br., child oli. New Fountain Valfty 3410 WINTER rental; Let Cf1)td 2 * F'rpl, Jndtv/\r4ry fac'b QU!dren OK lly will rtvw Mt\ ot care, u 1.;..;:.:;;;::.;.:;;..;;.;::.~_.::..;_:.;:I Br, 2 Ba. blt·lns, doled 1145 AMhelm A.. " llnl w. Baltm own home, to )'Out' mital erpb, dr)ll1 nlre yard. LEASE $300. Jmmal"u1t1.te Pat Io It I• I' a 1 e • OOSTA ,MESA, ~b=c-"'"-,.:='-°"":::_~-Can pa,y $125 or a bit more, = w-~ ~ pn.ge, Broker 66-0W year old Spanish 3 Bdrm., w1u1.herfdt')"l!l" Avail 8ept. SPAC new J BR. 211A. tJec but pleue iubrntt What )'OU • Mftr • Cht? local. 211 Blths. !2.13) J1l-~ 5000~ NeptuM, c.au TI4 : k.lt, trplc, enc ear. St~ to have. Area of Hawthonw, S CLASllP ICAT POR 11"-3 BR., ,,,,~ ... ,,,.., LEASE 4 bdo To-. 629-H92 • Ut(r • ~ ~i!F°· Mo.~ "°'""al•. otc.; h,..,,......,. NATURAL IORN,SWAPPIRS ,........., ... Encl'd. "'· • l25ll t I malntenanec. * ON T HE B EAC~. 3 R-.1 l'umltu.. ployed by Western Alrlll>OI. s,..i.1 .... '""· Bla'. 64>--0111 loeal. ,.._-":.-• OK · $20 "$25 .a UP BALBOA llAY CLUB U· Call """llv: -~·-S LI--S tllMO-5 lluclrt ,...,... 1 5 pets • Winlf:r Sepl 1Uhlune 15th. • •• quilile 1 Bi apt Furn or weebtld-a! · 11:\A,U -AO MU" tNa.UOI! " Co1t1 Mesi 3100 Long Buch 3500 ~~2 °::~ =~u!:tr.~ Moil~~;:' unf. lM. '400. 6'2.7fi3.1 :::'1 ':..-:.:., ":,.., ~ .C. '!:"' ...... ";': ~ •EXCLUSIVE 3 Br 2 u.. ~I!!~·'~· tALI -TltADll ONLYI 3 BR. 2 BA. Bll-in.t, carpets, ...,..,, per mo. 2 Br,<.&'Ba, 'pa. Appllahcn A TV'• avail. ' ..-. PHONI 642..5671 drapes. Small enc J 0 s e d FURN. or unturn -2 bdr., 2 tio down 1trs ~·'per mo. No Security Depoait crpta, drps, bllnl, $225 mo RENTAL FINDIRS T Pl y ba, den, pools. Year's leue. Ottice ~ll?t1 ..,,_,_ ~,. --· Jae. 645-J.O'J4 . -···-• Ice our Trad1r'1 ParadlN M I yard. Ooublt' I a r a g e . BJulli Condo. G«-1395 ..........._ ._...,._ ~ ....._ "'"""'tun R.entall Eu\l.ide. $115. lst Ir last 494-2935. 517 W. 19th. CM 548-M8l BALBOA Perrlnlula point. 2 -a...asms SKOPSMlnl complete plus $35 c::Jeanina: charge. L1tuna Be.lch 3705 SINGLE Young Adults~-l!i6S W. Lncln. Anhm 1'1'._2800 •tor)', 3 BR + de.n, Newi,l~~W~,~~lft.~-~-~~-~·~•~ll~I~ equipmtnl. jipaw, paint 549--0674 app·1. Avail Sept. L ury prden apt:s with coun-lk'rorated $285 mo. yr'ty. spray, mWlric equip: alJO $$ MORE Wit $$ For YOW' Home Eqult)' Abaolutely no cost ••• to you the Seller! 12 years ol PQ"1ni more cuh for °"""' Count)' ......... Call the Rest • . • Then can the Beat BEVERl Y JACKSON REAlTY 147-40)3 or 54M245 3 BEDROO!'.f, 2 balh home. LUXURIOUS Modem 2 BR 2 by club at.motphf:re and Costa Mlila 5100 548-3171 MATURE ~ woman. 5 mtnc bus fiddle FOR Vicinity Harbor Ir Baker. ba, frplc, bltins. dshwshr. complete privacy. SOt!I'H YEARLY -AvtU now 4 BR, no drinkin&, smokirc or auto or camper equl~. 20 Acre• ranch. s MoMm homtt. 2 wdll: fenced. Trainlne track. bure barn, 14 1talls; FOR land, unlt9 ... ' 115.000 F.<t • .,._ I ~~~~"'"'!'!!"'",...I BUSINESS and Comer lot, fenced yard, Util pd. '97-1405.. · BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at (OllS1RIJCTIOll 2 BA, 117 33rd ~t. Apt B. peta Medi amall apt or 83().2825. near schools Ir. shopping DISH\YASRER, stow, frig, 16th Ne== * 6~ • , h o aae, w/pr, Of area.1----TRAD==E~---!?!'~~!1"· Avail Sept, lsl. cpta, 2 bdr, den, 1 ha. JUST c-mW! 2 6'15-6545 •VU. 615--1900·~ FOR HOME, duplex or _,............., Fenced yd, petk>. Firlt & YEARLY RENTALS Ul'IFUlllN' East Bluff 524 3 BDR, boua «apt, furn or T.D. Well located C2 with !:~lh~:posT '~1~3t!n4=·~tso.i~~ H1rbor .H11fhts Four • NEW DELUXE. :A.:~~~.~~: ~ ~~~.: J. BDRM.. 2 Ba.; £.lid-:, I quiet street. Sl9S m o • ~ &37-64.17 or 548-63ll 49M93l&fter6~ to $350 pri' month 2&:3BRUNITS 5i!f.· 2 ba-~ ~.-1e:1 _,imn.=·=·"':.,vlco:,:;·;83M253;;_==·=· wltb$21,700equit)<.AaeJlt; PROPERTIES WEST •all with !lftplacn, opac. -·· ""~· 1· 616-TI!l du~·f=~~ &•~-~~: Laguna Niguel , 3707 1028 Bayside, N.B. m-tl.30 diihwuben &: 2 bathl. ~r !pe:~ ~~u~ Rooms ftir Rent 5995 ~HA=VE~,-,c...,;;R""-rum:;:__•_p_u_ln 2li8 Pomona SI. 642.-1151 3 BR. 2 BA. beautiful view. 1 BR duplex, sleep1 4. l 8llc Rental Manaeer -rec, area. Nr. Catholic ME.SA Verde area nice rm, Anaheim. $72,500. WANT 3 BR., 2 full Ba., stove, Bltl1'14. dlhwhr, crpta, drpa. oeean. SSS Wttk, Aua:.: 3117MA"c· OW!lel """A Church & 1chool, It Corona kitchen. 1arare. monthly, !!!!~. ~up~:.... .. ~U!eR. E°' ....... 1 ,_, •-le . ....., 1:-.cn .... ~~n ''"'" Winter rentaJ Sepl $125 ma. " nnarnon ve. del Mar High. JS86 w •v-• .....,e ""'"-'..... • rea:n&·· w=i""r . ..,,er. l:"=.•=~==·~==-=-=-=u=~=l lncl. uttl 3111 W. BalbJa Costa MeN e ONLY $2SS. e " ·Balcer St. 546-8229 * t99-l9!1() 4M-MSS * $215. Mo. eL--a.a.. SLEEPING room, lge pvt * 640-5386• CondominlUIT' 3950 &U-1772 rfNH9 .,_...1034 865 Amigos Way, N.B. be.th It entrance. ~2921.. UFE aiu Polar Be a r BR., garage, patio, crpts., drps., stove ttfrlg:., tropical setting for adults. 1 blk to 1hop $145. Mo. 5"-47M> 1 It 2 BR aptl. From S1lS. to DELUXE all elec, 2 It 3 Be, Costa Mesa ateL mount or man n.tlnc tlg- (ountry CIUb Villa $175. No cblldren or pelt. NEW SPANISH 2~ Ba. clo!ed gar. $.100. up. I =:-o-~~....c-......,~~ er, ~c. FOR late model t.ovety :2 Br, 1% Ba, crpt.s, 1325 Piacentia, Also avail. VILLAGE APTS. 752 Amlp Way, N.B. Near RM w/priv entrance" bath Cad, Chnt'l, T-Bitd, or 1im- drps, blt-1ns, Pri patios. unturn. 1 Ir 2 BDRM, Furn or un.J:t:Cdld=~H~t~So~hl."';;':6'1>-5033:==;·;;;,~J:~to~&d~w~t~ho~m..,•.,,Ftn...,,.,.V,.al_._""_,,, Oar luxury car. 96U671. $25. 837.91131). e WINTER RENTALS e tum. >Jr..cond, dahwb.rs. aelf . mo. 968-3445 TOWNHOUSE 3 Br, 2~ ba. 2--~~ .~~-plllptogo. "'2· D 1 U ·1u _ 5 WINIFRED t.. ~. Aet. ~~ant~~~ patio1, break·liCiioriiiiotiinoiiiidiioiiliiMoiiiiriiii~5~250~IFURN room in nloe, quiet Beaut. appt'd.' Prlv. patio, KlJl,JlM auu . up e•• n rn. ~YI ., ... '>GUI • .... .,......, pnvate undecks, home for \llOrklnc person. -"' ~ ... V" •M,= children OK. 646-:£14 Xl33 -• • .,_....,...,. ht 1toraae clolets. Heated _ Kitchen privp. 642-4794.. '-3 --...,.,_ Wallace. CM 4 BR, 2 BA., % blk to beach. MAGNIFICENT View, wffk -,.unaa. bar-'--~,, F.qty for T.D .• car. camper -" 2 ~-· ~ or '!' ! Owner 646-6654, NEW 2 BR unlum., married Ocean view. or yearly, .~t level. Sound proof walla, walk In Room & Baird 5996 couple or adult lady only. ** 673-5822 ** bedroom•. fireplace, garap, closets, coveml caipcrt. (],. •rt• LAKE Arrowhead Drama.- Near everything, n0 peta, 2 BDR. Duplex. crpt!.., ctrps .• 2001% Kings Road, ~2394 Adults, no pe'3. COLLEGE student nd1. room Uc 5 BR 4 Ba. Gol1 Cse. &: $140 mo. 642.-3837 alter 6 pm bit-ins., pr.. c I ea n ! after 6 p.m. TffE CAlJFORNJAN ON TEN ACRE.! Ir: brd. near Org. Coast Lake. View S125M Clear, 210 "·~· Pl LOWER ~ w p•·-· u•2727 t • 2 BR. ~-A u-.. -college. 213-833-7370 co!. Lo Dn. Plane or Boat 3 BR ~us guest room. Bii· $145/mo. "'-"=-' •• CM. ocean ...,..,nt · ~ -"'WTI ·~ Trade. Owner (TI4) 4.59-316.l tna. New """'"· . 3 3 6 .,._,,... No....,.. 2 "'" l% Ba. MARTINl"'UE T~-~ •1 .e-.:.."'1 8~'.!'-,.. Gvost Hom.. 5ffl "' 331-3169. Princeton. 1213) 343-4256. KcN f AL.~ Frple It pr, avail Sept L ,.. ...,... _...w. ...... ._ .,. .. OwlJet on prerniw.I su.n only AplL Fumbhed winter be, $210. 646-S832 GARDEN APTS. tirw trftll. * PRIVATE room for elder· l\'1U. trade llJtfboard, 2-6. 3 BR. 2 BA. upper. $175 mo. Excellent, park-like iurround-900 Sea Lane. CdM IM-:1611 lY lady in lk'd (UHt home, Hobie 9'6."' ior IC\lba tank EXECUTIVE 3 ·BR. 2 Ba, General 4000 Winter rental 1.np for adult& only. (MacArtbu:r df. Coast Hwy) good food served. 646-3391. ~ator. 64&-0757 a D d plua. Avail ~t 111. $2JO, 213-62Z-6036 Dr' &U-7821 Bach, 1, 1 • 3 BR. Apts. * S40-8DI * llOLIDAY PLAZA 1 & 2 BR turn It unfum apU. Poot, nr Moppin&:. AVAlL Now, large% bdr apt. Mist. R1nt1l1 5999 TRADE 2 ADJACENT 2 BDR Duplex, unfurn. gar, 11 yd. 3.) or older, no dop. DELUXE, spe.dllua 1 Bdrm. Pool No children or petl 1m Santa Ana, Apt. lll, new crplA, painted. bit-Ina RET. ailten wW care Jor LOTS on Santiqa in Weit. Furn apt. $135. Pliia util. ~ l6th St N.B. ~ e ~ e Sale or rent at $2()0. Couple dltt tor income property, Heated pool Ample p&rk··I;~"-'=~.:.:::::..::::;:::..: 1 --cH;;-:'=':-='::-=7-~=-I over 45. 673--0130 ~~la cJ.iUe ~u NB area. SJ0.000 each. ing. No children -no pell. 2 BR Aptl. furn. or unfurn. ARBOR GREfllS IDEAL for M:irking cpl 2 BR (2JJ) WE ~7 co t 6tS.s565 J BR. 1 BA, drpa. dbl gar, 1965 Pomona, C.M. To PX! yearly. + sundeck. Stove I refri&. ====-'-'---~~ "LA~KE~-.,.,.,,c.,;,;.;.,.hUd'--',~w&-1<-,,_ fenc'd yd. $175. be. Sl'pL l1iilSlliSO'.'i2~BB.,-;:,4...,..:;;;;;;:-, ;;w7-1w;;(ch:;;o:,.j:An~;~1a:..• :_Jo~"'~' _11RllJll>~-_!673-<2l~~O BACHELOR unlurn 1 r om No petl. 673-!Wf sro~E prqea;, fully front Jot SS0.000 val. PacWc 543-ml lst. 54~. dren '1pcta O.K. Br 0 k er 1 BR xlnt loc. Close ID Bay Ir:. SllO. Also avail 1 • 2 & 3l~M~O~D-. 72~B~R.-.~bl-t--.,,.-.-lt>0~-.-1•. I en · Avail Sept 1st. Pallsadn Ocean VU Jot, 2 BR. ai>ts, drpa, praae. 534-6980. ~ch. Ad~'i:,~if· 675-7816 Bdrm. J-leated pools, child dlsp, frpl, terrace. view uW. $20. mo eL 548-2921. C.M. $2'1,500. WANT: Income. Adults only, no pets. $135. $125 1 BR. nicely fun1 no ans. • -==~·I ~are center, adj IO shoppina:. $190 mo. 540-2'Xi6 Income Property 6000 Brkr. :i48-1TU. * * 3 SEP. houaes, rm. for 3 FINANCIAL more. Pretent sro&1 $43()(); F.q. SlS,OOO. \Yant Big Beu Bus. Opportunltf91 6300 home ar 1ocal lot or amal1 house. Call 675-(898 15' CRUISER, A/P, 2 depth finden, ranee 1200 ml. Re- cent 1uivey·will consider prop., TD ot smaller boat. Owner (n41 719-3400 2,lm SQ. rr., Capi1trano Palilades home on 12(be165 dble Jot, $10,000 equity. Tn.de for liveable duplex °" ! 496-27\Q alt 6 PM IAruna exec'• split-level hm:ne: 4 Br. 5 ba., Sauna.. Huae nns. Nr, beach. Ocean views. Val $87.~. For TO's or C.omm. 491...f8,5,1. 2 BR mountain home, near Running Sprlng1. Equity $12,700 for TD'1 or am.all home Co.ta J.feu area., 516-<217 BRAND new C011lemporary tum: chair a otto, tables, etc. Want late-model VW, Datsun, boat access. (Sea. iuJJ eng, elect windlasa.) ~135. AU. TRADER.S Paradise · 2-0UPLEXES E-Slde, Cos- ta ltfeta, Sl!i.OOJ eq, W /Tr for lot + paper. Entire pared li0x3Cfi. Bkr 642-5140 or 61>4ml, '60 CHEVY % Ton PU. 348 V-8, 4 spd hydro, 8' Alaskan ll!lescoplt camp. er. Want 4 •·heel drlw Jeep, waaon or truck. 513-llll6. PIZZA All plua equip tor pia.a bouae, incl: own, eled cheeae frinder, pizia pans. hot choc. machine, San!. Serve lee-cream m11.ktt (wa- ter. operated), Toastmaster cafe ftencb-[ryer, etc. 95~ profit marein. Total Value SS500, will sell all !or $2500. Call 925-llll or 658-1628 Qi&. lect AFFILIATE MANUFACTURIR desires associate with man- aa:ement or encineerinl 00.ckground to join expand. ire manufg. co. $7,500 in- vestment. Salary $250 Per wk + equal i;hare of profit. Should return $25.IXXI per )'r. For appointment call Mr. Obenour, 71~539-5600 CANOY Supply route, part or I u 11 time, days/evu. Retill • collect money from coin oper. Dispensers In Costa Mesa A vie. No Sell· Ing. $1650 Total cuh req. Send name, addreu A pho11e to: Route Dept. P.O. Box SM6, Anaheim 92803 •LIQUOR LICENSES tnter-County TrM&lers *ORANGE COUNTY* OU aale $10,000 • on 58.le $13,500. Limited Quantity! Winston (213) 172-4249 collect * * PROFITA'BLE , Major * Franchise drive-i,;:646-;;;;1509;;:·====== J Dcl·d g 1 r. Av&il now: *:ew ~ix:R~Ti!' 0 ~ Petermn Way l'2!BRAA'-;;..,.;;;;;th;--:ol;;-;hi;;·w;;ay;;,-;.,,.;;;;;.,;-_·, I !!!:~=:...::::~~:._~~ .. 3110 Btoker 534-89IKI 2 r, 2 d . Costa Meaa 546-0370 drps .. frpl., pre. No child. 4 UNrr ){ONEY MAKER "'°'-::::'"::....;Vc.;•:.ord;;;c.• _____ 1140 1 SR. . . __ 1 Slip avail. Furn., a ults. 1331 ;-:-:;;=;s;;o:::;::':-:=:;=~-I no -ts Yrly 1 .. flM mo $585. mo. inoome. lmmac. ----------REAL EST A TE UAL ISTATI rerotaurant. Principlea onb aft 7 P?.i 54&...fi681 -· , s:wunnunc .,....... )9th St., Apt. C. 675-0'236. I J -2 bdr, stove, cpts. drpa, .,.. · · · .,....., · rood 4 BR., f&mily rocm, leue, Avail 8/11 Bia. 645-0W pool, dahwaber, disposal, Avail 9{1."611. 7, 67>3717 P~.nrSe~·~f·6~ 5;· =~ dean, tmmed occup8.DC)'. loct.I. Bilbo. 4300 patio. Fireplace. 54.>-2181 Bilbo. 5300 Submit small house on TD. 0.-11 -·· FSJ'ABLlSHED beau~ lalon $32S. GaJ'dneT. 5t0-388S 1572 Orcbard Dr, Santa Ana '----"-----..:.::;;.: Call Four Star ~alty PMtt. LSE. J + 2" tam n:n, 2 tost1 M.... 4100 2 BR. Peninsula Pt. Heights. ' $l7o. Newer 2 BR, 2 Ba, 83S-44Z'J ~ Sundeck. $145 mo. · trpl.cs,, crpts, drps, bltns, no $30 OQ wk * 6T:>-0884 * !...GE Bachelor unit. Sharp. ~arly. Laundry Ir: garq:e. 4 NA'IT"l NlFTIES ~ c:uJ-de-ac. 5t6-30!K> • • up Cpts/drps, Nr. So. Coast Nr library. 673-3986 eves. Aii 2 BR -Elec blUna. Lush • Da.1, WMk, month. B1lbol til1ncl 4355 Plaza, OCC. ~125 incl refrl«. patiofl AND avu 12% net College Pirie: 3115 • Studk> I Badl. Aptl. &: utiJ. See at 913 Valencia Huntington B•ach 5400 return. Make Inf' pl'tM! it! e Ind Utils I: Phone &eT\?. Apl 2 alt 5 Pl\i wkdays • Jo Hansen, Rltr. 6t&-8226 MODERN 3 Br. house, xlnt e Maid Service.~ avail. BEAUTlFUL Upper duplex all wkendi. 2 BR duplex, pri yard, patio, lnduotrlol ii;,, -Acre• ,.c._:;,.:,lND;,,,;.;U;,STRUL.;,.;.,;,.;.;.,-.,-ea~tn 1l ACRES, on.nae A .vocado lus. Want.cf 6305 concrete bide. 3000 ICI ft. 746 pove. So. Or. County. j "-=-'-'-"':;,:.:.... _ _:= W.17th, CM (213) .fM..50D $1JJ.OOO on cash de a I Inter.steel parties with FOR Leu&-New 2500 ..;. ft w/$25,CO> down. No pymts ready c1sh, lookl~ indWltrtal bid&. 9c tt. W9 on eqUity for one yr. for r l9ht Hoffbrau lo- Monrovia, CM. 673-9017 1..:'""""::::;:.:c=""""::.::::!;'·~~--I cation Newport /Coste NEW bldg. nr. Briltol I Li1oun• Beach Mesa • re•· 6424061 6200 in Cdlof. 6 chain. newly decorated. 675-34~ l===='-'==I condition. Yr\)' leue. Avail e New Cale &: Bar Apt. Very clo1e to SL Bay. 4 1 BR, . "· all I crpts, dt'ps, pool. $135. Business Proptrty 6050 now SZJS. mo. Call 54G-6334. 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9'155 Br. 2 ha. $W0 per mo. yrly. pr1 pa ..... , e ec. 80-!540 VAL D'lsere ....__ Co's Salisbury Rlty, 673-6!KXI _ Crpta, dryt. cai:rY'· No NEW 1 BR dupl6, 11~. C·l CORNER ""'"-5.000 ... It A "P· 7 ACRES W/PERMIT oft 1 p M SUlllvan-TO KEEP HORSIS =='="'·=·===cl '""''6"' pets or childttn, resporuilble dshwhr, crpts., drpe. it70. VACANT ~ beautiful new adult .. H::•::•::ll::n!gl::°"::...:B::•::•::<h::..,::4400:::: 1,,•,.dc;;wi;t.';:mly;:.:;c;,· ,:11157='.c.;543-;:.l::lZl::.,~I Adults only. l5lll Oliff. L .-6100 hvu11 complex. Singles. 1 & _ 2 Br. 1 Ba.; lot 8200 aq, n. ..,,,. B / I 2 BR, 1 BA, from $1l5. 2000 MOBil.E home: 2 bdr., 2 BDRM, l'Ai ba, bltnl, uWl,.CSJS-8S23~:C:.,--=~-~ Xlnt spot for small busi.. iu.Rdlfii. 1-ait-·iOta-toifa Panons, C.M. 64l-8670 across from beach. Pool & nn, gar, patio. New crpts & NEW U45 up 1·2-3 Br 2 Bl neu. Price reduced to aell! Mesa. Al! unit A: a 55 unlL TOWNHOUSES LOVELY big 2 BR, 11k Ba. laundry facll. Adults, no drpa. No peb. 1 mile OCC. btd & sauna' pools,~ rm. canon Realty fm..3581 Excrl Joe. 645-2DllO or 3 Bedroom, 2 bit}\ split-Pool, patio, adul ts, $190. pets. $125 plus uW. & cl!an-!160 _mo. lit Ir: ilut, $50 •G.E. Dishv.'Shr. Mgr 84t)..3137 !i36--0J31, Anytbn.e, )evd. 3 car carport. Face1 2310 Santa Ana. 645-2933 1 ing fee. 21002 Ocean, HB see epos1t. Afll!r 4, 968-7272 & 846-4144 8u1lnffl Rental 6060 2 ADJACENT LOTS on San. pool $26.i AL'S1~ I ·~w~k.IB:icriVI'.'l'iiR::-Uiir.:l..Cm~n"~·~-A-"_11_s._:_pt_. _1 . * TOWNHOUSE * NEW Sl50 up. J-2-3 BR. BALBOA ISLAND tlaro irl we.11tcHff. Eaiy . 536-1674 2 BR, 1% BA, Ctl>'~ d'""s, Hoot~ • "'ma poou, -to-• pn· .... "~n nnn !&eh. 1Bedroom 1bath,split-lev-ATIRACTJVE,lBR.,util s. patio Ad·"u SlOJ~,,;'E H~ Al I ,,;;:.."Top location 300 +Ml ft, .. ~~ .. ~~::. ,_ _.,....,.. el. 1 cir 1ara1e. $225 pd. $99.50. Want older, DELUXE beach aplA, 1 & 2 . ... . . ..,... . rm. eil & it0nqu n. ,....,.. 4 YnJ remaining on lease. -~:::.:;;::=.,,~~.-...,,,;:-- month. sina;le gentleman only. Call Br. Sl2S. to SllK>. 219 15th SL 1'.feJody Lane. 6C2.Ql?2, 84G-3l37 or 846-41~ SlTS. ma. Write P .O. Box -Excellent view lot Bay. & •-ch aft. 5 Plot 642-6197 Apt. 7. f'OR L.EASE 3 Bdrm, 2 ha, Deluxe 2 bdr., pool Adults 15315 Las Vegas, Nev. Up)>l!r Th~ Arch Bay 81lftll crpl!, d""', bulltns, enclos· · 11~ B Owoo• ·~'lll90 2 BR I furn /bJr s ..... JV PROf"ESSIONAL 0 f Ii c.' ,,,..:;'c.c==.=-=-·i'~::::;...,..,,.., Rulty, Inc. • new Y w in Or ange County . 4600 ed patio. pool & clubhou.se * ~2398 • 1 '. 901 Dover Dr., NB Suit! 126 & hid. pool. Adults, no pets. privl. 546-407~~--~-1:,,=:;======;:".;':: 1pace, $155. mo. Muat see to SO. Larwia view level l o t. ... a,,~ ~145 + util 642-95"" SINGLE ~ ad--'t t apprectate. 1362 Placen"~ und_,. ul:ll, 8300" l : f . &l5-20CO Eves. ~ • · ""' ,,.¥ung "'s, UX· TAKING applications. Apt's, T. ·•;;•;o•:.:ln:._ ____ .;5_:640.:.; -··•· 1 BR. $145. incl. utils. Heated ury garden aptl. w/full 3 BR. 2 BA, frpl, blt·lns. 2 _ C.M. Phone 642-8907. Sl&,750. Owner 64f>..1653 BLUFFS LEASES pool, adults, no pets. recreation lacilitle1 &t com-tar garg. Avail Sept 1. S2l5 THE ASPENS ?.1.ARINERS CENTER 6150 2 & 3 BR. Condo&. Slna:Ie 549-2627, 968-1740. plete prh·acy. South Be.)' mo. S46-532'7 15652 'Yilliam St Of1ice &. 1tare bide, rent or i:Riiii'"iiciihooiii-•••oWiiti I levels. 2-sty. &t split-level. AIL Util pd, 1 bdr duplex, Club J\pts. 2TI So. ri.too-" 2 9 U d Tustin's prestiae addl'l'ss lease. ST5 to Sl.JJ per mo. I' MONTANA Greenbelt lie BluffJ; site. older adlts, infant, pets OK Brookhunt, Anaheim {714) "'"""'" r. cp • rps, Adult living, no pct1 1(9 Rivenk!e Aw. 646-2414 Cpls .. drpe. Dbl. ear. poola, $100. 7335 Elden. CM 7'f2.-tl500 ~~ ki~::.,~~r.r"· ~~buEs. Shag carpell 9 PRIME Rl!tall lncation • RANCH etc. $310 to $425. • "'"" rr • ......., . Total air conditioning Store 17:it40, xlnt ft. & auto Euthluff Realty 644-1133 lPoo& 1 2_ NB~·;,,1.uPrnal. m•,.","17rumE.· Gatden Grove 4610 20th furnished & Unfurnished tnU'flC'. 1871 Harbor, C.M. 1 Bllltter Root 1VaJIM,'.." 1 4 s~~. 2 bath A• .. cresl .._, " LARGE Unfurn bachelor apt. Gymnuiums & Saunu M6-66S4 4 m es south o ~llOU a, ~"';,/tenced ~ Al· 22nd. St., 642-J&tS. SINGLE Young Adultl Lux· 400 !Ill ft, Dec range & Apartments from $150 Montana. Both trHk i re• troetiv•, modem Ca"" Cod. FURN 1 BR Apts & Studloa ury gardl b'" ,•Pt.I ~~th coundn.-refrig. No pets util pd. $125. For informaUon 835-66.n Balboa Island ervoir water. 450 acre1 IJTI. Chll"-~ ok. Neu :;:hools. avail Sept 1st. SllO &. Sl20-try cu a ~prn;:.re a Srnilh ~!}.-3866 Store er olrl~. w/w carpetl. gated, tot&! 620 acrn: parl .,.....,, .... 2135 Elden. Apt (i. romplete privacy. SOUTH ..::=c=:;,;:;:=,..,,--l:oaatal 5700 11~ Bla 642 nu.:: under sr&vity aprWder sy• Adjacent subdivision o n e Money to LHn 6320 mile E. of hwy, utD •vail.1 ---'---'-....,--'= $2.S,000, ~ CUh, b&l Ist trust ..... MAKE OFFERll Wrlte or contact: Geora:e R. Kttss, Box 914, Lquna Be•ch or phone 494-4726. TAKE over 10 Acre• no down. $25 mo. Ranch site nr. huge lake. 894-4743 A.gt. hi & 2nd loam for quid: caab. 8oiTow on your ~ per1y eq wllhr.iul diiturbin& )'Out low inte~rt Ir. TDL Al8o b\zyen ftt 2nd TO&. &.!tier Mortgaae C.o. lnc, Servlne Harbor Ana 20 yn. 336 E. 17tt. St. &t2-21 n 5"5-061l Mount. lo Doter! 6210 Mortg-, T.D.'1 6345 ~ .. ;_;;_:;_;;_~-~-:;_;;_~;-:_:;;_;:::~ SMOG.fREE NEWBERRY SPRINGS City of Lakes MAKE YOUR OWN LAKE 20 ~files E. of Barstow. on freeway. Eleva lion 20CXI ft, 30 Attts adj. to Lake Lcreen. 100 Lakl!s {man made) in $75,000 1st TD on 11.00J sq. ft. brick commerc. bldg, on long·trrm leased I a n d . Payable ST;iO per mo. Incl. 10%. Rental income $2,400 per mo. 10% Discoont. BROKER 497-1210 $5.950 JST TD on ocean view lot, 8%, due 3 ye.an. 1D% di&COUnt. 497-1210 (f.97-1021 evenings) ANNOUNC~MENTS ind NOTICES Found (fl'M Adsl 6400 $.150 monthly lease. f'or a.p. • . BA\' CLUB API'S 13100 THE SEVILLE --------'-'-'-""• · .,,_,, tem. Law down pcu-ment, polntment call M&-2914 I BR !um, adults only, no CHAPMAN Ave., G a rd en 2 BR. W/prage, $145. Beach AptS. $60 PER monlh. E11t 17th 6% interest. Calilontla 1~ PURE Black cocker OT" rock· OC.;.;,EAN==vc,iow.;;;: ___ 2,.:,,8';;; . .;..,.2 7..,-.-1 1 :,,.=l=•=· $=95~-~M~0~-~:,;=="'l~~G~'°":::'~1~1l=<~l =636.JO=="=· ~:;,; 1 Adults -crpls -drps-Bii· St. CM Street Expowre. tereita fcn::e sale or trad•. a-poo. 1 lth collar, leuh. ... -.. * 646-f;,09 * , Ins. FenC'<ld yd. 2619 Sa.nt11. Realonomlc1. 67H?OO D •~ -•• alt 6 FOR SALE 111 the North IXlf' W·'I tmd. V'· Li'· ••-. uea! ucn, range, re .. ~.. pnr Ana A ti.'6-.41211 N • D I ay1. ....,.,.iJl;J'M, • • " I .. RESE i:o "' "" .,...,.,.. tected patio. yrly IM" S340 4200 Sant• An1 4620 =,:._.:.v:.c'.:.· .::.:...:.::.:.·-~-1 ew e UXe BALBOA ISLAND. Lease 644-0'123 on ° """ acres, RV. N.B. Da)'l 675-6383, eves •ft --' N1weort Beac_h NE\V 2 Bdrm apt E · d ( s !!!!'!!!!'!~· ~!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!~~I INC Soutll 10 •ctts JM. mo. incl. 5.u .. encr. Vacant. _ YRLY. 2 BR 1 BA. 2 car pr, · ·St e. 71 4) 53'-4616 2 tom, toeetheror 81!p. PROVED 1'ilh m 0 de r n ='=O=R....;S.c.3508.:.·::·_; ____ J Mr. Robin9on, Davis Rlty N Bf' h ·car Pt 1. drps, bit -ins, 1714) 5~1417 307 !'.farine Ave. 67J..8753 DOG ed fi42.-7!Xl0 ewport 1ir· Adulll. Nl" Brl!lol Shopping diahwhr, encl prage. Priv Or see your t>ro.er ~~ .. '! 6200 nnch house etc. Unlimited, -m . 1z. while, shq- COUNTRY CLUB Cntr. $145 mo. 646-25(2 patio. 6'12-QST 711 Ocean Avtnue .pl!'l'feci Wllttt, 301 GPM •t iY· Black collar. VI c SPAC. 4 Br. 2 be. duplex, 'i1 LIVING i-:'="':":,,':';:";,=,-===-13 blkJ \V, ol H.B. Pieri R .E. S•l11men W1fttecl 30 ft depth. Pr!c. SU,000 % Brookhunt -Slater, FV. blk to beach. Avail. 1 yr. 1..u.xury garden apartment11~ NOW RenHng : Ne,,.,, lge 1 BR Offic. Rintil 6070 Em.bll&hed Rtal E1tale firm, Cuh, bat lat TD. SubJtct 968-4644 leallt'. S300 per mo. Mu 11 oU!ring complete privacy, Lagun1 B•1ch 41'5 apts, cpts. drps. bltins, gar. Laguna Beach 5705 MODERN OFFICES 11pec1all1tna: in ll1tin&: and land h11 220 ft. frontqe o11 LA""'D~Y~'~S-,,.~u-ot_o_o_eo_rne_,-0-,1 have refer., no peta. beautiful land.9Caping l un· F DR E ~~°:;ld:n~u~1°,:· Mgr. LUXURY 2 BR Beach AP I. rnOM $65 PER MONTH sale of 11rideveloped acre• Sllwr Valley Rd., 1 ml. E. of Birch Ir: Palisades. "Siler". Agenl m-0820 paralleled ttcre11.t!OMI fadl· 100 CLIF IV A'---" for residential developmenl of .choot. Tor further lnfor-~Birch. SA Ht•. ~-~ r · ·~ 2 BDR, 2 •·, ~. ep" bit· Ptlv patio, pool. View. ... .... vil\I., parking, central Jo. WATERFRONT l1e 2 BR. 2 Uiet In a country club al· .... u uo=uroom UM\Uln•:u ....... .,.., ~ Bl tio' • ..___.. ... _, • nttds consclentloUI hone1t, mation pleue call &47-6&KI . Del F ' •• , ..... -· Ad""' $!4tt Ins. 12 mo I ea 1 e, ca I'll. ~-..,,an .. RfVlce, i....... BIKE found u-·-ide Dr BA. !rplc, Jo'A ~t. elec kit, mosptlf're. Now l!uing ln All uxe eatures ..... WM." ,,_, .,...,,. . 7141499-2835 230 E. 17th , Costa f\lesa run time Mlumen. Lllp. and afte-r ~Mk•~••.kdq1 or any. call and klenti~~ " patio NO pets or children. Newport Beach. Walkln& Disl.lnCt to Beacb Harbor-Baktt area. 546-0038 642·14&5 R. E. Lie. f"l!q'd Commillk>n ...... , ... 61:.-7899 1700 16th Street $225 -Yearly lease 1 Bi w/w crpll. drp&, bit-LUXURIOUS Modem 2 Br, 1[-;:==,;;..::._;;:::_ __ ...... "PARK LIDO", likC' new, 2 Furntshed or unfurrW:hed ~--4"94-'-'-'2~44..,9~-~-I ins. l·l children ok. Sl30. Bil, bltin1. adula, m peb. PRIVATE olllces W"/bath. Follownlg Ptlsitlons ~ Lost 6401 o. 2 I 2 Models open noon to 9 pm 2 BR duplex, furn & unlurn. I,';";.''°"· ';."~'~"~hoo~l~a.~9'>-3055~~~-li$21E.35i:.L<_91i'.)<"411lii. 'i'i;---· I crpts., drps 6 itorage ipac. Avallable: MAKE )'0\11' home in scenic DOG. small long • haired "'• Ba, frp c. pool. car n<·. "" 0 170 REAL ESl TE in the Olondal• F· .. ·vtns• • Saloom•n to•-~ liotl"" ••·• • .,.-•·· -·• 1 gar. S2SO. Bkr 64&-0732 OAKW~O-OD nr Vic H ll go, new SPACIOUS 2 BDR. cpts, A Bldg., Corona dl!iM-;,, $65 tl!rT1tory conw;,i'~ pri~ ~ c.oid" !'.j;d.llk,n :~: blonde color, curled up 111.lt. 3 BR 21.2 ba, bltina. pool :~~~· trpl, gar· ~·· ~ove. 357 Victoria, General mo. Call Evelyn H.albakken land 1uitabte for lin&fe clendu in Sky HArbor nea collar, ans. to ltikld. $265. lea~. Avail 9/1. GARDEN ~~:;_==~==I ;::;=;:;ta;,;1:::•,.::·:.,,...-...,=......,"°'l l•nttll Wanttd 5990 675-SMt or 5'6-.3165 and multi-family re1iden. Ranchos $21,900. 2 BR, 2 ~c ch.Cam«, Sborea, CdM 1'29.so.l8 alt 6 PM 2 BR OC'Ef>N FRONT. °'"LUXE AJ1ACiou1 2BR apt & SEE Al 118 E. 17th St. CM. ti.al dt"Ve~nt. U1t our BA. paMlled dtn. For local a •Wl"OX 7128· RE-APARTM£NT5 slttpa 6, private bf!.ach. no patio $140. lat & last. WANTED: 3 BR untum tw, Next 10 Securit;y Pacllic excellent buUder cont.cts info et.ll Mn. Panaborn cW=A"R_D"'. ,,'™"32...,,_. __ .,...,_1 Corona d1I Mir 3250 --'-iii,ij-i;i'ri;;;iii-·I~"'~"=· ~$2.'IO~l~w~k:.; .. ~"~'·~-~--548-Z39 or 646-<4760 \V~talde Costs Me 1 •. NafJ Bank. Plenty of park-for sales. STJ..1!28 WST: Family pet ~nib' ---------Nl!W SPANISH t BR., healed pool. ne.ar 1 BR unfum. Sl20 mo. Also $135-llJO. 3 Teens, cpl. JT'lf, all utll. 1 n c I u de d • Saletman to handle SO. Robert SchMnle:ber, lnc. "111lerlnn Aw & 19th St., ~ SOR duplex, 2~1i 00, VILLAGE APTS. beach. Year leue SJ'Jj mo. 646--5361 ...... ~"'o Oran&e CounrufN'ortl'ltrn Contrac!Ot, SUbd.ividtt CM. Ans to "A-'Mlotle." "'t I d·• -·1 Furn Bactw'lot $80 mo. utll•._,,,,...,...,______ ~' " •u ..,. -111. ,.,,w.~ltr, .t.aAJ llCf t. ) 1; 2 BDRM. Furn or un-494-3108 afltt 5:30 pald . .,.,m · 1• " _, -.:;;;-°"'=:-:=::---::---Son Dl•ro Coonty teni-Kl.89 29 Palms ui.i...,.., Y.'hlte nu1ll' ....., ---"'•. Y I l3001 ... _ 13 _,...... '•ant"" to leaR or rent NEW .DclW<e 0••-1~-, • .......,~-_, .,.,..,....., e•r eaM', mo.~... l"m. "--~.d·•w•-. ,.u1 -~-------:;,""c..;.""'"'7=---1 u.....,. ir-"'" t"-M"•t •·--tn y Vall "0 ·~1 ... -~ orr-• .. "'"""'... :oo• •ua ltEHT AL) ~ by rel\11.ble tenant, 2 or 320 to 1200 sq ft at Santa .,.,,._ -,,..e ~p. 1 " ====""';>=,;;:=:;"'== --........ w .. u """"· 1 2 BR llatUe, o:cellent cond. dean's ovtlll. patio. break· Apts. UnfurnisMd 2 BR upper. $140. per mo. 3 BR boUse, fe~ back Ane F'r.')' I Crown Valley llrtlng and sale of 1af'p 1 'LOST~~:~T-oy-.-,u-.,.-,-,-,malf--t 'MIJTied couple1 6 no fut ban, private fW>dl!i:cb. Baby olc. W/w crpls, Pa ':I yard. Phone !>19-«iJO turnoU. 83l·l400, 4.'&-4198 speculall\'e Pll"C'tla. Et-lxchlnt.., R. E. 6230 Poodll!, July 30: vie. Pacific chDdren. ST;)(! mo. * 6'15-J.291 ltJ" 1tonP doletl, 1.ll!l:ated ~--oool 5000 own utU. 646-2240 e LA O t•bllshed btvfttar clitnttlt --....:~;..;._..,__..:..; Sandi tn."' HunL Beach. pool b&r-b-«Jue ._.. NOL RDS e DELUXE ottice In C.O.ta prerd. TRADE .. ., ' BDR, V.'W q>ta, blt·lna, ' aaanu. •. N-rt ··•ch 5200 FREE RENTAL SERVI-Mo .. 1~ • , ... , • ..... ... ......... ,M_.. ,.,_ n.e .... ·ard. ~ drpe;, ear. No J>Pls. Sound proof wt.U1, W81k In f™I. 2 BR., All utll pd. • .. po .,.. WLo • ....,., sq. "· .J.K • Air -.al!ll\"lan 1"' ,..,,._, .a.nu Want urange Count.y exte I ~=~"""-'=----1 W.>-49M clOHf.9, rov~red cat])(lt1. Palio. w/Y.', r/o, Avail. STUDIO APT Broker _SJ4.6982'--· I cond .. f!rp!_s,, drpt. S481"l'n. suitable for .onunerc.laJ I "'ldence, Indus, prop or '!' WST: &by raccoon w/ ool· Adults no pela 3n9 Bkr 534-6980 * Rentaf Se rvice ~ Ofllce & desk ll:Pact, Induitilal devtlopme'.nt. Bu.rbMk: M2 SllXI M Ir or 1ar A leash, vtc Hnts cozy 2 Bcdnn coltqe, trpl, THE. "'LrrOn""A"' · · · 2 Bdnn, 2 blthl upttairs. Liv FREE TO LANDLO•o ~tart·• ,.-•,., Muit have con11derab1t Pua.dena R1 lT •c "1 n t Herbour Tame: lr IC&f'ff, ..... ~11-, !'\ blko k> ~ ~" " 1140 2 BR. 4-pl"' ..... • /~ di I II '" """"'"' ., .-vi _. R-.. 1-tl" ,_,., .... P h ~272T no. rm w .. .,.c, n "I area. A Blue Beaet"n 6'5-0lll Nawport Ctvic c.nttt, expe1·1ence in thlt field for •uh-div $150 M A or ...... 'IV" ,,. bch. DX) mo. 67>-4943 one rerri,., crptl., drp1., adul!J r:lee ldtcht.n, w1shf'Mm:rl==~-=----~l80t and ettabUahed cllentele Oltndora Ml S50 M A: or LOST OOBE'RNAN pup, flea 3 BEDROOMS, dining rocm. 5000 NEPTUNE Bkr. 645--0Ul IOcal. incl. Ot.rpet~ A dl'lped. En. NICE 3 or 4 BR,. •pl or houle prt_l'd. Ptl'Mpt form nu-JrwlndaJt, Ml S~ 1'.f calh1.r, female. Vlt. of clollcd -tlo. 2 cor 1 .... -. untum. Prtfer blutf1. Resp. LARGE Eucuuve oU'lce 1 1 "--,_., 11' -.. 110 'f 9 yft, Adult. oi'lly w..o AnlJ now, SR, 2 8A:2 BR , DON'T 1U!IT w::.,,.1 for IOll'lt-use oi ... chJhholllt, .,;i-;. m-s13'9 N.B. Alto lllmt.11 Offlc-e frOm ~:~al °"o~~~-erc:-~ w '' .. l'I, RM'fl M•cArthur It Pal\ladel. month. can ~DI . 2 BA. Call tTI41 628-1492 thl-~ ·-···· -~·-bo-·~ mo 0w.. -&.-.. N.EW ~r-t Bldg. In COllta ~180& M2.G35 673 ... •v ,.,..., 1'"'' '"" .aUM balh. s:!30 per mo. NEED 1 Ddrm. 111.pt In -• ,r, .,,_ 011\"E AND OOMPANY lNC. ?oftU. 100~ ltued·, FOR ~ collect AfttT t pm. . •• tlnd lft•t buy1 tn to-J\lacr .ui«ne Rhy H1'1"Pf'f' Sch. art• b)' Sept. 1. 600 t o 1200 Sq~ F;:--Ph (n4) ..._....,, •stoo f'OR RETURN CwtCE )wr 'v~l Ad "'°"'" CJfARGE .YoUr •·azu ~-now, 41.':J'• Oasslntd Adi. 642.JllQ R.euon&bl~. 64~ll55 Of'FtCF;, C.M. fi.tb..2130 w:k:di1y1, for appt.' :et'~ Ml,.. S 11 l I Iv a ti ~:ieSE 1:~eCD~n:.1JR. """ __________ ,.. _____________________ .,...., ___ ~...,-........ -............. -......... ....,.~ ..... \\A o:r• i • ...... o•-, .. "f'"''° "Ai 01-f"""~...,....-.. .. ,,.,._...,... _, •• _, .. ,. ,,. _., •1' J ( I When You Want it done right ••. Call one of the experts listed below!! 'rldat, August a, 196t CAllY '11.0T JOBS & EMPLOYMENTJOIS &.IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYM•Nl ~ & IMPLOYMINT JOBS & OMPLOY Help_~~ntod, Mon 7200Holp W1nr.d, Mon 7200 Help Want.I, -7200 Help WllllM. -7200 Help Wonted -Hofp Want., w...... 7400 wom ... * J. C. PENNEY COMPANY F1shion Island -Newport le1ch Hn Full Time Openings For AUTOMOTIVE SERVICEMEN * ACCOUNTANT To perform vuioul duliH in the accountini deprutment. 1\l•o )'elf'I ot industrlal ~ perieoce ot a dflfte requit- ed. Exoellent ttW.:e bcnafita. ITT IABSCO PRODUCT ENGINEERING e REUBEll'S • Costa Mesa NOW OFFERS A IOOKKEEl'ING SECRETARY Dl\lft'lt&d posilion& otrtrlrc both ch&Utna. " req>ol\llbll- ily. !.1lnimum 2 yean e» perlenct, shorthand nee. Xlnl trinr~ benetlll. Phone for a p P. o J n I, Mn. Koehler, ~ $f0.4020, 1' SERVIC& DIRECTORY SER,VtCE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY ~ecent experience in lubrication, brake ad· JUstme nt and w h e e I balancing required. Competitive salary arrangement, top fl ight working conditions with newest and finest equipment. Generous benefits includi ng hos- pitalization, employee discount and profit .shating. C•dill•c Contrel1 Dlvl•'°n of Ex-Cdlo Corp. 1166 Whitt.f•r Ave. Cotta Met• '4'-2~1 Crance CoWlty location. Dq:ree and three W live years experience. J.Je. cbanlcal enztneer ror de- a)&n and development of llutd handllnc pu1nps /,; systems. -POSITION-CHARTl'AK tport t1mol ROTEX Builders 6570 Bull de rs 6570 Hou1ecl••nln9 6735 An equal oportunlty employer Apply Jn person H2g:;e;Sj~N~:ER We Specialize in: f.1AINT·re.~/comc'I, \\'lndow~ our specially. Xlnt "''Ork. reas! Rers. &12-9.J4G CARPETS, \\'i1ldO\\'S, UN:, l'lc. Rr:!I or Con1c'I. Xlnl "'·o.rk Reas! Re fs. ~S-4111 Apply in person IO AM to 9 PM , llfonday thtu Saturday PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND Equal Opportunity Employer CARPETS, Wlndows, firs, * * SEARS Costa Mesa EQUAL. OPPORTUNrrY EMPLOYER t.flF. 1~ \Veit. Adams, C.?.I. cor~·EE SHOP C H I E Jo' TELLER/BOOK. Newportcr Inn, Newport Bc:h.. KEEPER, A i g res s I v e Excellent workin& condition• 1U5 DALE \VAY ...._. ·~ COSTA J\IESA, CAL.If. 92&26 young company n~s •'" salary and bent:fita. Write:- fTI41 ~82.>I ""ilh teller, ~w accounls Food &; Beverage Manaa:er,, 1-....,--c"-=-".:,:,C~---I and bkkpg, experic~ Jn 1107 Jambof'ef! Rd .• Newport * DRIVERS * S.mk .,. Savings & Loao. 1 8<0ct' Callt, ,,...,_ A -I lo N E to 2 yn pref'd, 21 to G. l-SE~-=-=.-R-1-,-L----nnovnco• -.-.. "'' r 0 xperlence Pio t all u; t ~"' " '""' . •m ' "" • . Does Tiie n-~h EXPERIENCED Necessa""! -.h•re. eontaot ",. - etc. Res Cl' Comc'I. Xlnt l"'J~ircffi'j~r,:~~r"""l~~~~~~~~!; work Reas~ Re!S. 548--011 I ANNOUNCEMENTS \VlNOO\VS DIRTY'!' and NOTICES * Room Additions Holp Wtnr.d, Mon 7200 * Apartments & Units * Custom Homes * Kitchens * 2 Story Structures Free Layout and Desi9n 2D YEARS EXPERIENCE PACIFIC COAST BUILDERS 2435 E. Coost Hwy, Corona del Mar -675-7191 J ohnny Dunn )'OW' loca! strvu:e. Free est. 640-3445 Personals 6405 Bay & Beach Cleaning Servi--------~. Carpets, v.•iJxlows. Doon, "tc e COUPLES e Res & Co1nn1c·1 ~1401 e SINGLES e Tired of Bars. f.Tail l:. Hi Cost Janitorial 6790 computer elubs: JOIN THE "'-"-""-'-'-------FUN! THE IN CRO\VD - \VALLS, \VindOY<'!'i, lloors. Orv. O!o• t.t.1 .P. !\.fttt others ear11et.'i. Con1n1crclal i:. 1vilh YOUR interests at our rcsiclentlal. Daily. \\'eekly weekly partiC!s or select -""";:;"~"='",;'='':o· 008='7=-7350===~! thern individuallv & <GALS -• join FREE1 call l...cah 1.9 Landscaping 6810 p.n1. GJ.j.9J2o. ===7.""-=-~~ * Lic'd landscape contrac-G~LE!\fAN, 39, 6 ' l '', !or; complete lnclscpg & also desires t~ hear from lady 25 Japanese garcl,,ns 83Q..3031 to 40. \Vr1t~Box &l 422 Daily Pilot. LANDSCAPING Yuceas for sale, call Juan Pantoja. Announcements 6410 DISHWASHER & BUSBOYS 18 or ovtr. No e.\'.p. Nee. Apply in person 2~ pm COCO'S ~131 \Vestelill. N.B. SALESMEN In Our Gun Dept. Fully experienced needed. Full time. Apply: GRANT'S SURPWS l 'f";iO NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA ~1ESA Paperhanging 6850 ~ Painting ---"------CC.. Undetectable Men's STOCK Cl.ERK Shipping, ~ivil1g, f i 11 Cus!om·made hairpiC!<'e from orders, delivery. No ex. PAINTING • SEAT· COVER INSTALLER --BRAKE MECHANIC • Al.SO FOR FULL TIME SALESMAN J·lard surface tloor-coverin£ 1.nd Interior dttorating. -·-Exccllerit EaJ'nin&s Plus • Profit abatinr' e HOl!lpitallution • Group We tns, • Paid vacation • I paid holidays • Emplo)'ff discount • Apply In Personnel 0(1ice Jl.Jonday thru Saturday 10 Al.1 to 4 Plil s r L!pp, f.tust haV• clean Cali!oml1 00\VNEY SA vtNGS "" a-L-on7 • drtvlrc noonl. Apply LOA.~ AS.SOCfATJON. UGW\ YELLOW CAii CO. !37-49Uor..u533 186 E. 16th Sl e e • Costa Mesa YOUNG man for local jev.·el- ry s Io rt. Sales "' related 1\·ork. No experience neccs. sary. Apply : Experienced -HOSTESS- Apply In pcrMln KIRK JEWELERS 2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa. CallJ. ACCOUNT ,, '""' '"" '"" REUBEN E. LEE f.ttg company, ntar South 151 E. Cotst Hwy. Const Plaza. Why be uptiiht Newport Beach with the miUtary-lndustriaJ I--'=:.!:::.:..=::::::..._ complex when YolJ can be j/)_ newport with a aood lM.inch of zuys " ' eals In a small company? personnel Do jn.ls, Jdgrs. a t m t s • payable.. l650 •wi. 1n. ~agency creases, benefits, JBi\f card equipment. KI >7101 Profe11lonal Service DELIYJ::RY Boy / Genei'&l for the employer Helper Full Timr position. and the epplicant MODS•rohoododlor Mecco in Newport Beach. We nffd the following to 1t•ff our ever growing BHch f•cllities. ' 1. SECRET ARIES , Good shorthand & typtnr skills, public rdation:1, Real Estate, c:on.!ltl'Uction back· , if'OUnd helpful. CLERK TYPIST Typing speM a mlnlmum II) "'Pin, alttntive to dt!t&lls. ESCROW CLERK ' Escrow and accountln& background in land de~ ment, n!alty or S&L. EX-PAINTER oow tr.11chcr, transparent llrtific:ial skin. pc1ience necessary. $430. quality painting \\'ct.>kl"nds, Comfortable, n.ituraJ.lookitlb. pr1· month to slarl. }'ivr. day I~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~ I vaca!lon, l"ree Eslunatc. Orange Co, Hair Replace. v.·cek. Chancr to adva~ r ~"""=~'"°""'-00l~2c.,,~~-I ment Centl'r. ~ll N. Tustin, \\'rite qualllications, heigh{ SUBURB1\N Painting/Dec Orange, (1) 633-0131 iind ""'eight lo Box Af.3.)6, \Veckcnd Appointinents Available SEARS !\lust be »eat and depcn-W Dover Dr., H.B. dable._ Opportunity for ad· 642-3170 549-2743 vancement. Apply I am lo 41-;; ____ ;;;; __ _ -~E.'tCt:Uent benefits and ~ starting: salary, Send. resumr: including salary history to: Btbysitting 6550 Electrical 6640 Expert Guaranlced \York .,... rt\f• • 1fz" 11 The Daily Pilot. Roebuck & Co. pm. Orange Coast PlaltiCJ1.l• 850 ,V. 18th., Costa f.le.sa. Personnel RepreMnt•tlv. ELECTRICIAN; no job too YOUNG responsible •adult small For prompt servioe will baby sit evening and call 545-4614 weekends. Own transporta· ========= Free est. No job loO large t.."11.'P Jo~lliera;lu 11hop men or too small. -494-3190 Cemetery Lott. 6411 CHOPPERS PATh.'TING Int & Ext Lowest -GEL. COAT contrac~ prices. Fully ins. 4 LOTS in Blue Spruce Sec-FO.Ut GUN OPERATORS SOUTH COAST PLAZA _.,,,..., 3331 S. BRISTOL COUNTERMAN & DRIVER MACCO CORP. COSTA MESA lion $1 hr. 642-0022 alter 5:30. Floor• 6665 Satisfaction guru. Free esL lion, Harbor Rest Memorial ROLJ..ERS , Cify Auto Pam Acmcy tor Carta' Ctrb Jin1 Weeks 673-1166 Park. 54&.3Cfi7. FINISHERS An 'E" .... al OpportW>tty 2012 Plaecntia, C.P.f. 410 W. Cout Hwy:;'N. B. Top 8Cale. Call Bill {'"") &.At"" n~ •-• .,.,. ~""" BAB'lSrrrlNG, 1ny ho1nr. :, C dny 1\·cck, 21~ yeurs up. Ex· arpet Vinyl Tile EXT/Int. pntg. Aver rm. $20 6 CEMETERY Lots, TIIH.t.50 .ow EmploYt'r RETIRED man for flt·~ YJ IJIP01.1n. -~ + good paint neat work In g I e \Vo o d . A 11 or -=====~=~-~ maintenance work at P. 0 . llox 217S Newport Be•ch, Calif. 926'3 loc ~''·Roy, 847.1358• • .,..,.atoly. Rrnf""" ""· ASTllOTEK CORP. J. W. Robinson t.vem, CM 6'&-7301 WAITRESSES • Jo'or bcurr painting rutl' ~-=-~~=~=== Openings: Experienced H I I e f.1ACHINIST Exp on mills , , t>xpcrienccd painters a l1J OBS & EMPLOYMENT Oiuckers and atSopoECUnRnglJYor: & lathe's. Prototype I! tool· Permanent. ..!.ltp d prefcmd. AU styles P.>ld colors per & 1'C'ls. 546-6077 ,. t'ec est. Lie. contr. equal opportunity employer BABYS ITTING by thr wk., 5.10.7262 5464478 Lathe i\fachinists in ... 54Ml4j2 Apply bet 24 pm Yliu furn ·transportation. S.17-2035 aJler 5:30 p.n1. Ca!l 6-l:l-1407 or by day. I"°===~=~~== &16-4017 alter 6 pn1. Job Wanted Me 7000 Top Pay. "' BABYSJTTING. iny homr whilt' you \\'Ork 11·kds. Nr PetTY school, HB. 968-2733 •CHILD care in my home Ill' Np! Harbor Hi, for work· in~ mom. 5-18-6301 Brick, Masonry, etc. 6560 BUILD. Remodel, rcpair. Brick. block, concrt'le, carI)t"ntrr. no job loo sn1all. Lie. Contr. 962-694;;1 Cibinetmaking 6580 G•rdening 6680 8 GARDENER .. EXPERT JAPANESE Commercial Landscaping f.faintenance and Cleanup MIKE INC. CLARK & CLARI{ ' n 1267 LCX::AN AVE. ,_Ian 17·21 . Sl.65 hr. CUSTOM PAINTING BOY JS needs odd job~. COSTA ?.lESA GUARD '''lNCHEU.'S • 64,2-2936 e 1.lov.'itig, edging, vacuum -~J~R~D:.:ro"1t:C..-,m=o::n:.:$~S~OO-Z'l3 E. 11th SL, CAf. PA PER SPECIALISTS -pool. Clean garages, knee Fresh out of &ebool ok. New Apply PenoMel Help W•nted MATURE Woman lot retail COCO'S 2131 Westclilf, N.B. I TELLER UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK Cal's best for vinyls, Docks painling. 642--926l div. of world "'ide Co. :\.'LNT lo to 4 p.m. Women 7400 bakery aa.les work. Shill foi l, murals. 847-1659 eves.' Domestic HilP 7035 oppty, Call Bt!rt 540-5410 Robinson's Newport, __________ , open b.fon thru Thurs., ' ?ll=h ~Plaza PAINTING ,Pa,.,ing 16 ,n · J11on BHI EXE.CUTIVE 1"30 AM 59 3 PM. Many 499-1.161 ir llarbor area. Lie. " George Allen Byland Aaency Employment ..... ,n,... N rt C ~,,.fi•·. Apply ,., -•. bo ,_ 64 Employer Pays Fee 2 ... '3 ewpo enter SECRETARY "" "' ..---Equal opportunity employtt ALLEN ndcd. Re..,. furn. 2-2356 IOO·B E. I Glh, SA .,7 .,......, 120 So. i\1ain. S.A. N I 8 h mominp, at Snack Shop BROS. .n ~ ewpor e1c N~ for exciting, temp!> WOMAN 1a lease n e w GARDENERS STUDENTS THE particular painter i\IANAGER ASSISTAl\'T 1:.1.1:7090 Bakery, 34<14 E. Coast lhvy .. CALL 642-5196 • Chinl!sc live-ins. Cbeerful _.. r&"'' a..uJanment. Good short. apartments In Huntin-'on working way UU"u colle..., tor particular people. YOUNG man \\'/cooking & ·~ • at Narciuus, Corona de! a• "· L. ..~. "l" A=•,. Permanent. t:...xperieneed. kit .__ • RECEIVING CLERK hand and transcribin1 ma-1-lar Beach 1.ract. No children, no r..."P· it;. Reas. 6464203 ,.,............... f3r East Agency 642-8103 . c ..... n ~xp to ass1s1 in Kerm Rime Hardwere chiTll" ikills needed. 1---~~~~--pels; 1 Bed room ~ * E.XPERT JAPANE.5E Pl . R • 6880 ° pte r a 1 1i 0 n 1 of lamily So-· -· .. n··oco p-r,-•, We1tern Girl Inc. SALES furnishoed apt, utlllUes Ir: GARD aster1ng -11r res auran . App y in ""rson """' ""' .. '" '''""' •--· ENER ' ¥... Helo Wanted, Men 7'200 ,,... CH A UFFEUR, part-ltm-. 5'1().()325 FULL time, «P<rien-d. "'-. commu.alOll. S 0 nie e~- ' . "-u· lo i\1r. Horrick, i\ffi, .. '""" "'-" 1 •-111 !'Ce i:..o. malt'. 6<Mi-Oll?.o e PATCH PL.ASTE~ING. • JANITOR O STEAK 2267 }'airvie\v Rd, Ne. \I' port· Balboa area SECRETARY: Seit ittarter. <.'Client Wary, comn1ission per enc:e ,..., 0 u · can !\fr. CLEAN·UP SPEClAL.IST? All types. )''rec C!'itlmale. . Ct.t. Furnish age and refs. R. Expand!nf div, Great opply and_ benclits. Call tor a.pp!. \Vy5lie 842-81ll bhvn 11 a.m. Mo\\·ing. edging, odd jobs. Call 540-6825 i\fature man. No cxperic:nee Schmidt, PO Box 75671,' for advancement Starts M0-5050, Ext. lO .r. p.m. \VE Clean out your garagt'. Rcasdnable. 548-S95.i necessary, ive \\'ill train. LOT MAN Sanford SI at ion , Los $500, Call Sally li~rt, JOSEPH MAGNIN P L A S T I C S I I t! t I d bu ·1d I Fl'('c meal~. unt!onns fW'Tl-""""" ~~inet~c on!'~~; 1~~~I. To~l EXP~IENCED Japanese _P_u~m=b~in,;g;,.,.,~==6~8~90--'I ished. insurance plan avail-FOR IC'ading dealer, All co. 0A="""='="=~------t COAST ~L A.GENCY equal opportunity employer Inj~tlon moklinc open1. 01 gardener. Reliable, 540.7313 PLUMBING REPAIR ablr. s<ock plan avail. Apply benelits. Permanent posi. TRAINEE_ young man, ter· "" HOSPITALITY HO~ESS ,., or tralnee.11, Openl11Js on Price Labor & l\la!criaJ 1 -... ...... tlon SaJ<>rv P< 646-9303 -'"-A be t ~· day and swin• shill. ~1Ull _ _, 1 ,. or .. ~ """''mate No joh too s1nall al: t.1cDonalds of Hun tington · ~3 0 n. · 1W.. potential, outstandlna mtm r 0 loot.:nn for mature ,..,._.,0 $225. Alsn rcmuuf' 1tchcns, ---------,.,,128 • d Ask for Chuck company, Sia"' ·~~ _,, Snt!Uina le Snellinc Jnc. ""16 ""''"" be dependable &: over 21. baths. Dutch cab I n ct JTh1'S (;ardening " lawn • ,,._..., -Beach. 16866 Beac:h Blv · 1--======--T,,.,,, 64>-zno.' ;;'ch:;', 2790 Harbor Bl, Costa Mesa to welcome newcomcr11 to Apply & to 4 pm.: 350 w .. Maken;. 6.16-5219 or 645-!786 maintC!nance. Res. & Com· , :.":c'c:·':c'OO;..,.,==~==-GARDENER'S 1--'-=""~'='==:C:.=CI the community. hfust have. 18lh. St Co.ta Mesa. n'1CrciaJ. * 548-8411 R~_model, Repair .. 6940 1-MAINTENANCE ASSISTANT Personnel, ZOO \\'estc!W SECRETARY type~Tlter, car, and be bon-~=~~-----r Dril·e ?i!AID AND STOCK WORK Cut & Edge La\vu BUILD. Remodel, Repair MAN . . EXPERIENCED dable. Apply 235 E. Main, Ptrmancnt, for finr: v.-omr:n'a hTalnt~nance. Littnscd Brirk. block, conc r ete' NEWPORTER INN CHEMIST BS:. dr~. ;:: to 5 Ptrmanent, 20 Hour, a day Suite 7, Tustin, Ca I i f. clothing itore. Rct&l.I u- CARPENTRY 5'1S-4808164>231D alt 4 crpntry, no job loo small N EWPORTER INN yrs. exp tn agnculturc '" t e k poslUon ava.ilableL.:.S#-<c....:::92::.'.-;c.==c----perience helpful, or will Contact i\fr. l1inM.'y Stocks chem l cal 1 surfactants N B I ,.,. u ~flNOP. R.EPAlRS. No Job Johnson's Gardcnini: Lie. Conl r. !Xj2-694S ' . ewport each, U'I, l~.u N RSES train. Apply: Carpentering 6590 TOl" Sinall. Cabinet in ~ar-r·inesl equip., expert care. * Ir i·ou need remodcli'""· Perrnanenf J)O!ii!iou, good &W·liOO LAI 80t RA~RYU 5• CP.t1.10 t & 1·3 Pt.I. Top salary. \Vrile • RN-Relief duty, h\'O day! BACK STREET Pl I. cl 96? ""~= ..... '--~1,·1.•.. E,.,,,·ng ,·ho.II 4 l\fAN lo v.·or k split shift inb Pan "'or... .. · · .. ""'.n. Box P-411, Dally P ilot. P<r t.·eek. Fu"'--!·'-~ ages &: o I her cabinets. an ing, ean-ups. .:.r...,..,.., pnin!ing or repairs. call ""''"-.. I"' Re bo nl 3:.o Dail '""'' ,.... ... 54;;..s175, if no ansv.·er leave IR v 'S GARDENINC.-Rcs.. DicJ.I'. 612·1'797 P~I 10 12· in Lag. Bc:h. arta. Some Pil~~.me x 1 Y e SECRETARY •LYN-Relief, four shlfts Newport Center msg at 6.llJ.ZJi2. H. O. Comm'! l:. Jn du !I 1 r i a I. ,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,,====I Contact BiU Bailey mechanical exp, required. ,.:.c=--=~--~ITyping 60 ihorthand 90 Ptr-p!!r week. Laiuna Beach ---~----- Anderson 642_17;i6 Sewing 6960 1)#.1700 3j hrii/wk, $400 mo. Taylor· 2 VOLJ<~\VAGEN mechanics sonallty, 'gooc1 on pho~.11, .r. Nunina Home SECRET AR Yi COOKS Dunn, Z114 \V, Ball Rd. for un1lo; room only, two aptitude more import.ant 494-8075 Rcspon!lblt position for peor. REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS Jlr..l'S GARDENING .t· la"'" 2a \'RS. exj'JC'r Scamstres.o;, Anaheim. ~26 lunt up and rbake 1:1ech.,~ 1 than expe.r. Salary open. BEAUTIFUL Girl ,v/rood manen1 lirl In ttaional CABINli'S. Any !>JZr job maintenance. Res. & Com· al1~rations &: repair. mens SALESM.EN, Shoes. F'l & pt helptr for lub "-oil, S0.50 Fo1· personal interview call flll'\lre for modelinf. Great sale.!1 ofrice ol nationall)j 25 yrs. ('Xprr. :'Hs-6713 mei·c:ial . * 5.1~~·111. i:lothins specially. 64~731 JS year!! or ()ldcr Guar. 1..'0mm. Pi\t'& JUarantee, \\'e P~Y full poop 645-0UO Pay! 3 to 4 hours pr:r wetk. known firm. Newport Na- QUALITY Repairs -Al1cra· Japanese Gardener -Alteralions-64l-Si4S-i::,-pe_Jicnc<'d pref<'m.'tf lime men. Exper. pref'd. Jn!!., vac . .r.. holidays. CO~lBlNATlON Sha•• Ila< No experte~. Hobby -tionaJ Bank location. 2-t:lrl lions -NC!1v const. by hour E.xp('r, comp! yard scrvitt? Apply 111 pc:L'SOn bet, 2-4 pin Guar. comm. Pl\!'• 536-1491. · •tri"tly ror fun. \Vn·•• oo~· oUlce. Good skills -.i--'.' Neat, acruratc, 20 years <'lfP. ~:c:c=~~~~--1 'laid• • Go Go D.,, ....... _ " " ~ .. "'1 ""'"' or Conh·art. IH6-3~·12 F ree est. 54S-7958, 5'&0'i'.11 Apply 0" E. 171h. C', t. -" .. ........._,.,, sl8'9 D II Pil I Xlnt benef!t.1. 548-1158 REPAIR, Partitions SrnaJI Rcntodrl, eic. Nile ot clay, Re/Li:: C/1\1 l\:EN rl'f0.·1679 -· -·-COC S """" 1' Electrical De1i9nera Top wqc1 $3.IJO..lJ.SO to " a Y o. General Services 6682 TILE, Car1mic 6974 O' ~lAN to \1·ork part lime in and Draft1men ala.rt. Ph. for int. 545-99&3 SECRETARY ~131 \VestcliU, N~. rrntnls yard. mornings & ~11nimum of 2 ye.an exper, SASS 1 Y LASSY, 2901 Harbor, Afternoons only, Trai~ ok. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS * Vrmr. The Tilr. J\lnn * . weekend.!!. \Viii train. Apply Commercial & lndu:i:lrial C.P... Gd. typlor &. shorthand or Cu~t. 11'0rk. lnstall & rerw:urs. BOAT CARPENTERS 1930 N<'wport Bl:vcl, Cl\t buildln1s. Top "'ares and E Cement, Concrete 6600 No job too small . Plaster Ex per irnced. JntC!r<'stinc 1 ·8"rn=v~JCE.::.::!:S::la.:.,.:,.:::,.:ac..t::":::"".;.•_nl, beneiif!. Ne\\·port Beach, xper. Waitresses Stenoretle requittd, 962-6912 Apply Jn P•rton *' CONCJlETE \Vort, bond· pa1ch. Leaking shO\vc r custom \vork. Top pay. all shifts o~n . .!lpply 2800 546'999:i. ,BAYSIDE INN bcforelpm. SURF & SIRLOIN HAULING, General. tn>ei;, hedges. topper!, trimmed, re1nol'cd. Big John. 6'12--4030 ed & lie. Palio:1/d['\l\\')'S Hauling" Cl730 repair. 847-i9:>7!84li-0206 Willard Boat \Vorks, l29:> \V. Cst lli&h\\1ay, N.B. SERVICE STA. Sale!lmen. 1 353 E, Coa.!lt Hwy., NB i\lAID. f'ull or part time, 5930 Pac. Cat. Hwy. ' etc. Philhp.~ cc 111 en 1, Baker. CM 548-:ml Full time (J'aV!yard shift GIT>-082S Sl.1j hr 6 das/\\'k. Lapna Newport Be•ch ;~" .,.,.,n HAULING, rlcanup, lo!s C'lr", T.c•oc•::•c...:S:.:•::..no;.;ic:<•;:._ _ _;6:.;9;:,;:80 SPORTING Goods Salei;man. C and 1-Parf Time eve.&: wk. \\IO?o.1AN-housewife, u1111: your Shores f.lotel. '4!M-857l , --~~·~;:_~=~~-~ H•ndyman nn)'t\m(' you call, -N 1. S 1. Good 219 ~1A HINJST, ~xp'd, able to GIRL, 21 . 0 _ la DEPENDABLE , exp'd 1-GENE'S TREE s ER v: ea s . por u1g s, read bluepn'nb & "wk "'ith ends. ?o!usl be !':<periencr:d spart tlmt to cam money. p min. auUae . .ncs u· ,,--•o 1,, port ti-·-•-* CONCH ET~ r\15. patios * * 642-:1398 * * E 41h SI S \ · -• 1v· ~ 1· It ot -~ o I u· < ·u""' ""' ..,.,. ---'-'.::..=:::..::......_ trcei;/shrubbl:!ry removl;'d, · " ·' · close tolerance. B t d a ·~. I. neat in appearance anu 111 p.-,zea. no age 1m , no ra1 . .. • r m · lo ••m<o'• •p-·-•. Ap•'" ct~. Conc:1'Ch' &: lilt top saw. -cl h -.J · · "'-J" •• ,. u· 1· ·1 Will tr I ' ' ~-~ YAIW/gar eanup Remove llimmed, hauled away EXP'd, busn1a n, top v.·ages. &Iachine Tool Set'vlcc, 1663 · a1 .... \\.T1ling . .x:e un """" me JlJll, an a!I m · · inJ:. R<'u~. Don, ~-8.'"114 trees. j\;y, dirt.' tn•ctor 5-1~13.1.ll Apply Nc111)0rt Grotto, 3333 Superior Ave., Ot. Neport Blvd .. C.t.J, Beauty Coun~lon1. S.11--0846 TI.f' OORTIIAN 67".,-2200 lJJ ~;A ll CLARKE'S CE!\.iENT \\.'ORI(. no job loo backhoe. grade 962-874.) FSfATE lolrunt Trer Serv VJ. Consl Hi\1·ay, NB. LOT i\Tan &. t::\.'JICrlenced Warehoute Mgr A.stlst. BIK I NI Barmakl/dancer. Housekeeper Wanted HA\VAUAN SHOP :;::~: l-l~~:~;il~~~·~~r5c CLEAN UP &:. lile moving RemO,•al & 1r1n1mi ngs. free COOJ.:, brC!akiast shift. cletnil man. Costa Ale.Ila new $2.SO hr Full or pa:rt·time. Costa ful~ time :m F1shion ll'liand Tree & shrub removal. r stun.atC!, Call 5'11-0088. Apply flying BuUcr car dealership. E."\cellent Son1r matt'rial handlin' tX· AJcaa 6'2-8044 Newport Beach Carpet Cleaning 66'25 ~"c':"~'"'"~'~b!;le:_. ~-~5''."0-'::l~J.>9:".1 [ :=:===::;~;;:~:'. 673-0071 v.· o'r king conditions. Lf:n perience. Good Co. Call Bert 64S.730l EXP'D SALESLADY Secretary to $550 :.:=.=:.-;;.;.c.:....-"---t-"ATliER & 2 $0ns, trash & Upholstery 6990 YOUNG men 16 &. over Huton 548-7i6a s.16-5410 BAR.AtAID. No exp nee. ~ten ilr: \V?menii Oothlllc Fee reimbursed, Beaut otlic- CARPET & Yuri. c:leanlng; i.; a rage clean· up.F r c e CZYKOSJ·a·s CUST. Uphot. ror Restaurant du t i es., Jo'ULL Tl.!\1E Service Stalion Jaaon Beat Mml be aharp. ApPly In * 548-5383 * es, Irvine Complex wllb xlDt for 1 day !'iel"\.'1¢e & quality estimate. 842-8182 European Crallsmamhip }~riar Fish's Ftsh .r.. Chips, llelp. OIM!, graveyard, E.<t· Employment AJency pcnon daya. V I KKI'S Experienced in single needle Co, ~'Ork. call ~crli~ for For Dally Pilot Y.'ant Ads 100~0 fin! 642-1454 1927 Harbor Blvd, Cfl.t. per. pr~f'd. Rich!Jeld, 19th 2120 So. Main, S. A. LOUNGE, 1791~t Newport and. overlock. Good piece ABJUTJ'ES bri~hfne~! f>.lztS53) Dial 642·56i8 18.'ll Nev.•port Bl .. C.?.f. Silverwoods, Newport & Newport. C.M. NO ph. Pick Up • Delivery driver. Blvd, 0.1. work prices, •lcady 1\'l'lrlc. UNUMITED AGENC'i Carnat Layin~ & ~ EXP. Tailor ntter. Perm. calls ?>tu.st know Harbor area. BABYSJTI'ER S day&, 1 am· EDDY MOS.S 14042 Locust ,._4!'3' E. 17th' St., Suite 224 •-lepair 6626 Your Ad Should Be Here, posiUon, fringe benefitll, gd. SERVICE Statlon attenclent. Full Ume 1\'0rk, Phone Bob J:JO pm. Cost& ~1esa \'ic St., We1tmtnster: 534-8138 -.-u ?>feta 642-1410 I I pay, Apply Mr. Wllllam11, 45 Exp'd, age no blt!Tier. Full at 642-2-154 llrbr & Baker. 549-1217. PART time typi.!ltg, no SH, BEAUTICIANS CARPET ,LAYING They're Look ng For It. Jo'ashlon lsland. 644-2-124 lin1c. salary + c 0 mm . ASSlfITANT CHEf "' all· QUIET lt'lkldle 11ged couple hrs flexible. E.xtra dollan Full or part-Ume f>.9 pm, I i-.l"li".Ali ... f~····-'·6~4-2-·20~70-~~---~--------~-~ CUSTODIAN II, grnvcynrd l\1obil Station, 2·136:.! El Toro around cook. Country club, desires gen. c I can In 1 Your lfpare time, 5.'>4-91-78 Bu~y salon in COSTA II shilt. Jflq'Uire Mr. C111')rmak, ltd .. Laguna Hills.___ lop "'age.11. 400.5446 v.·oman 2 morning• a wk. TYPIST-S:i wpm i. accur11.te. f.tESA. Good benC!fils i~I and NOTlcES ANNOUN'fMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES Sf\dcllnOOrk Collegt, 831·9'i00 PAN \\'a.sher, all around PART tin1e BOOKKEEPER. References. 0 iv n h'a.nsp. Se as on a I until Dec. vncalion & guarani~, call •nd NOTICES or 49"';i-6.~7 kilch<'n man, L1uigloi1 .. an· f.fa1urt l:. cxp'd, ~2. S days OR 3-~18. Calirornla Al1bts, 311 1-Tain ~',,'"',,,,,··;:;54;;-8-$=-"----~I ANNOUNCEMENTS ~1GR. lor yachl club located cy frozen foods, 21144 wk. ~5131' Seimstrffsea SL, Seal Btac:h. I 2 13 ) CllRISTlAN \\'Oman wanted 6'0S in s. Calir arta. JI.lust be Laguna Cnyn Rd ., Lag. B. DRIVER to drive car to Ohio S1llmakin9 t.~~-l371 ~~~W; e plo I!' ~s portnur&cry attendant at capablt' doing lite maint, 494-20XI bctoro A\11. 11, ORGJ::NT! Jllghest waa:es. new larse ""'l"a op.,......... m Y i: ew ijatbor Lulhi"ran \\"Ork. MruTicd cplt pref'd. EXPERIENCED ahoe aales-~2792 active loft, Newpt Bch, ACCNTS Rtt. A blllln& girl Church. every sun. 8:4:>-U. Los t 6401 Loat 6401 Person111 ·----~----~:::.;. _____ _.:cc:.: SMALL "'hlf. poodlr. vie. Harbor GreCI apb. Harbor, Adams arC!J. Rlac:k \"ell'el collnr 1v/Atincstones. Ans. lo Tofn. Spt'cild pel. Please. 540-193.1 er ~146-8961 LICENSED~ Splritual RrsdH'lJlll, 111dvlec en a.II mnl!t'n. 311 N. El Camul'l H,.11.I, &in C1rn1entc: <l'f2·91'.lfi, 196 9!'i07 10 A~t -10 P~I l.t\Dli'.:.i;; 11 ,allct. Vic f en11:1' St, 01 or lnl """·· l.:igunt1 Bt.:o.ch. .Fri 811. VillU3blc p A p e r 1. RC"\\·artf. <19').2369 Afl . 6. . I SIAMESE cat, anS\vrrs to frecklts. female. Lost \ 1c East Bluff. 64.f.-4529 \Vr1te Box M-494: Daily Pilot m&n. lnqulrt 245 F'orr:st AlL-1.round bench J.fA-6'BJ568 Rice Sailmakm. want!d, Exper. on?)', Ac-. Sl.50/llt. $48-9404 SERVICE Station graveyard ' =-·~""=··c;Loruoa::::,;:;=..,:B<:="::.":,,· ~-1 OllN1Sf -),fECHANIC for PART-mIE ho k ptr .>. curate typlat. Apply \V, oh PHONE SOLlcrroR ' ·r CTO all .~ , ·-· Sch "" " " Schock Co. 3511.l S. C~ Evenlng work No ~ opMirtg. Pre!tt older man, A RY TRAINEE, am -I'• _ .. na • child eare while mothe vUle St., Santa Ana Ap!>l1 In pera=,., 18SB.i Main P..l~n"t10 ~~~-itl aome.one must be txp'd. Apply servl~ completed, H .S . 491.8989. retu.rna to c:ol le a_e. *"**MAID**• SI. .. 15 Polllta Sbopplna ORANGf. CO. !'ili·r.668 ~v;.n s~:,n. a Ha~ I ~~~:· Phont for appt. TOOLMAKER or °!:ii A ~~~n& noYt', 961-3654. LAGUNA REEF MOTU. Center) JIB. :.i!<I hOtir fU'Ordln,;:; n iego \\' y, ' Maehlnlat, e.xper ln na: 1 P "'"· 30806 S Cout 49S-200S lofATVRE v.-oman ror nigh ~=-c,,,:::::,,;..:.=="--I SERY. STA. A'ITND'T, ever EXPER Bllllboy. 71 or over, and prololtpe. Cape Ena!-WAITRESS -CoUct' Shop. ' ' ' . *live! <f3 YR Old blind 111).n 'll1:1Ula JS. E>.:p. nee. see !\!Ike top salary. Bc'n Brown's nttrtni &: ManuJtcturlne, e:qierlenced, over 21. Full f'V home needs mother.sub-lll'lifl 11 to 7, floor dutJ. likt' plc11~nl comii-nk>n A1RPORT TEXACO, '1678 l 11D6 s. Coa.at llW)'. Soulh 2769-1 Camino C.pistrano, or part time. E\'e: 8h.lfl. stltute until 1ummer Vlds. SA \VY En II 0 ME• 6 ..... ~ \\lth cnr, :;,17.;!603 Cnmpu~ Dr .. N.B. Laguna. Stt; Jim aflfr 6 Lquna N~I . &n·llSJ. ShtralOn Bcoch Inn. 2UU 7~ ~tE. 96$.18'9$ after 5:30 _6~16'='~"=·~~---~I P«rsonals _,~ -L-1c~·0"0 ·..;:.,.:.;.;._.;;... ___ ...;..__.;.1 ALCOHOLICS Anofl.Ymous BOYS 10 -14 pm. YOUNG f.tAN, part time for Pacific Cotl!t Hwy. 11.B. P..fOT'EL !\Ill.Ida, pt'i'fer1bly """'~ Sh.ampoo i;irl LOST 3 dy~ Blk & Whl male kitlcn, \•le &-publk. CM. Child hcaMbrkn. · &1!"~1'8-1 LADY'S Eyegl&SSt:s, whltr frames, Laguna. CD\f, Cl\! aJT'a~. 613-3921 Alfraclive E.xpert YOUNG WOMAN dancor wm iead1 you all latc•t •ttp!!. Call ArdrU :nJ: !:A!t-15.'8 1·10 P~t Phone M2-721T 0t wrfta to CatTier Routes Opr:n _A._U_T_O_M_E_C_H_A_N_l_C_ Kennral rosta.urant work. AID \Vorklnc mother G d1.31 with exptrle:nt:e. ?llESA ntt<kd. Top pay. P .O. Bo'.'1: 1223 Costa Ml'lll. lor wtUt e.ll(ine eXPtr. Al i.u.1 be ove:~ 16. 545-1668. wk. 8:30 to s. Startin, Sepl )tOTE.L. 6t&«isl + 6'1~T * $100 Cil.d'1 for Austria IAl'UM &ft<:h, So. La;una \\'alt 1'1aya Amomotfve ESTABLISUED Ioaurance -~-; lime. Lita hoUsokeeplnlr. BEAtrrY 0 PER AT 0 RS Dress Operetor1 Flag Mobile conte&I or DAILY P1LOT 2007 l~arbor Blvd., CM Le1ds avail. N.B. otuc:e. own trtM. matun woman. wa.nted: No f o 11 o w t n I Top Nlary to 1• with WI S2{ll For Norway. 6'45-24ili Gfl-4321 6Q..5llJ Catter oppt. rTS-6383 call an I pm. ~1159 ntttuary. 615-4232, 6T;N'701 of expt.r. 6$2198. _____________________________ __,.. __ .._...,. __ ___..,....-·----.--........... -----------~.......---- ' I I 11 ' I ' ' ,. * J. C. PINNIY COMPANY fuhlon ltlo!"I -Newport Bo.ch NEEDS PART TIME SALESLADIES Hou-i•H & Molhol'I Ctn you opare a !ew hours each day and add to the family inc om e at the same time! Schedules convenient for you, mornings, •f· ternooils, evenings or combinations of all. Work in store under the finest of ·conditiOM and top-supervision. APPLY JN PERSON l'ENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND 10 AM 1o 5 PM Monday thru Friday All •tudent positions filled. Equal opportunity employer * ·------·---------- Holp Wentotl we .... I 7400 Help W1nted Women 7400 SECRETARY 1tfquired jn the sales ~part Mtnt ot electronic manurac-turi"I company. Minimum five ~an ot sec-retartal ex- perienet in enaineering or renera.I sales ottice. Ba wpm .lbor\hand, &O wpm typing. Call Jim Hyam! Day1: 642-2400, Eves: 540-0319. GULTON INDUSTRIES 1644 Whittier Av~. C.?l.f. Equal opportunity employer PAYROLL CLERK NEWPORTE~ INN Bank of America computer system payroll, 300 to 400 employees. Pmnanent posi- tion, a days a week. Salary open, Only experienced need apply. Aooowiting office. 644-1700 Ext. 513 DEPARTMENTAL -CLERK - Purchasing and pl.annin:-tx· perience nece11&&ry, to take over care ot all clerical, planniflC and pun::hasint du- ties. and assist manaser in vendor follow·UP. P~vious e:-:perlence desired, Typing acurately 45 wpm, Call· Jim JJyams, Days: 642-2400, Eves: 546--0319 -CULTON INDUSTRIES l&U Whittier Ave. C.M, F..qual oportynlty employer Experienced NCR l'ROOf Ol'ERATOR UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK '· c PENNEY col.PANY Fashion hlan4 -Newport Beavh Hot,J OPENINGS fOR * COOl<S WAITRJSSlS IUSIOYS With some experience and willing to learn. Top working conditions & environ- ment. CompeUUye wages plus \!:dais It Ups, all4 outstanding benefits uding hospitallzation and profit sharing. Apply in penon 10 AM to 9 PM, "!onday lhru Saturday - PENNIY'S FASHION ISLAND Equt,t, Opportunity Employ~ AU stutent posi\lon.s are flJled * * Jeba-Men, Wom. 7500 Job-n, Wom. 75'0 ASSEM6LERS One or m{)re years elec· tro-mechanlcal as.sernbly experience includins 1olderln&. Cell Persenne1 ·Dept. (714) 4Mof401 TELONIC ENGINEERING CD. L19una Be•ch Equal opportunity employer FRY COOKS Top wages, ~rmanent, hon- est, and \Vorking conditions in area's leading reataurant. Apply 9 &m to 5 pm for in- terview at BUFFUM'S NEWPORT Now Interviewing WAITRESSES Excellent hOw'! COSMETICS E~ril!:n~ only MEN'S Ski Shop Sports11·ear l turnishinss- LADIES: READY.TO·WEAR And Sl'ORTSWEAR LADIES SHOES And ACCESSORIES -·-Excellent company bl!:oe.fita 30:29 Harbor Blvd. MANNING'S Interviewing only those available to work from now thru the Fall for these per. manent positions. Studants applying brinf school ached- ule. FULL TIME must be week and Saturdays: PART Tl~IE days and/or evenina:s available for two nlQ:hls a as needed. Costa Mesa. CaliI. COFFEE SHOP 546-2033 24031 El Toro Rd. SECRETARY 118.les. Rapidly e x panding f.1a.nufacturing Co. in the Newport-Costa l\tesa area. hu an opening tor a girl Friday in the sales depL Varied duties with excellent tr i n g e be~its " \VOrking COil· dltion&. Short nand Ir typing required. Phone !or an ap- pointment 546-3300 NURSES nttd~ lot' PrivalC' Leisure World Laruna Hills Duty. Pr Act I ca T's • no 837·1014 ·--- license. Aides. Live in or -INSTRUMENT _ APPLY IN PERSON ONLY any shift. Also Jn fan 1 ASSEMBL y -11 fashion Island Nurses for flf'W borrus. ~Just TRAINEES lntrrvie1v1 bet :2-4 p.m. have refs. CaJI £42-99'"-" Prot.11ional abilities anlimiteo agenc;y PART Time to do our O~IV On,. year eleclronic i;chool-Employment \\'Ork. Your house or our of. ing ·High Scbool or Jr. Col-A1si1tanct lict'. 548--5294 li'.'ge required. One year ex-COASTAL AGENCY BABYSJ'M'ER or housekpr, Ber. 914 1 or 3 school age 1tlrls. Near Beach I: perlence &1Sembly or small A memb!r of Quality Positions for Qu.alUied Applicanl!I 481 E. 17th St., Suite 224 electro-mec:hanical parts de. Snellinz !. Snellin~. Inc. sired but not nc~ss.ary. 2790 Harbor Bl, Cl\f 540.ro.53 Coeta Meu 642-1470 Garfirld, HB. Aft. ' pm 963-4516 Call Jim Hyam!I Days: BEAUTY OPERATOR 642'2400• Eves: 5.46-03l9 Fashionable Newport Beach FuU ~ime PLEASANT. Neat Lady, for . Danish CoUee Garden. At· tractive position tor semi· retired 673-2740 CULTON INDUSTRIES salon needs an t-xperienced HOUSEKEEPER 164-4 W.!Jittie.r Ave. C.i\I. full time operator. Guar. A Equal opportunity employer l:ommi.ssion, paid vacations Apply in person Huntinrton Beach Con\19Jescent Hospital 18792 Delaware St .• H.B. LIBRARY CLER_K_ 1 ~·~"c,",c6.c«-~l'--S7~o-~"-- A 'ITR. woman JM!> to in· Full time 10 n1onths p e r SEMI-retired couple to help 1truet In makeup techniques year. Requires araduation. mana&e 12 nicely furnished or famous models. We will from High School, including 2 Br &: pool apt.'J, (Adultl train. 836-5743 or supplement~ by college only) Jn return for an apt at Pa.rt Tinlt KITCHEN HELP level cout11e in library sei-partial rent. M I n i m u m WIG Stylist. Attr. exp'd in ence. cata1oguina: or refer-duties. 64Z-9j20 after S pm. synthetics. Beaut, new flalon. 11$-.5743, 10-6 ence work. Two years ot ~-APARTr-.1ENT manager, 8 .::::=.,,:c,cc,.,=_;o."==~ I sponsible library clerical ex· units Cl\1, no children or \l.'AITRESS -OVER 21 perience. Final application pets. 5~~ poss rentals. Apply in person Evening Shlf! date August 15th. Ne\vport· 494-2453 Call $;l:r986.1 l\Iesa School Di~tric-t, 1901 I ='""':,:;;'==-~~"""°~ Huntington Beac-h =p-8-RM-. ~ .. :::_b::.y_::,;:::11::,,::..,-.,-,~,.-.I Ne.,..'POrt, Costa f..Iesa, BABYSITTER ."·anted : Hrt: Convalescent HospitaJ LI. hse\\'Ork 6:30 am to •i..::64..:5..:-0600=·------7:3Q..4. l\ton-F'ri. l..ocal attl. 1819'1 Delaware St .. H.B. pm. :'i days, O\\'ll tran!lp. Call eves 529--8360 NE\VPORT BEACH Call bef. 2:30 pm. 645-U82 Experienced RESIDENT DIRECTOR for Fast, accurate: typist 1v i t h Bookkffmr •nd boys. Older man or couple . . .... _ . bk"-"d TYPJST. for commercial Small private 1 ch 00 1. expene.""" in "1'1" req · bl · I ho O '1 ~-n•r•I 0 fie• Work ltlr S girl oftict'. Please uepnn s P· ver ~ · ""' 673--9410. phont 6TN:DI. 1..:P..:H::.·'c.::":: .. .:':::"::'-----l'dl•/YF, \\'~e~."';,·,f,•tn ~~~~n~ 1 ..:•..:•..:64.::>-c.:24..:54~· =-~---MAIDS DINNER-FOOD \VAJTRESS "' ,,..... a EXP COOK Ex-rlenced. lnter.oiews behveen IO AM-• Hotel/Motel e.xperien<'e .... 4 Pi\1. e \VAITRESS 673-9410 Ory Dock Rt-staurant e Dishwasher ~z of C•liforn ie 2601 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. FIVE CROWNS Apply in person. Swiss Live-in babysitter. 10 pm to RESTAURANT Chalet. 414 N. Newport, NB F•thion Island & Ar-.t 2 gmaJJ children. ages PRODUCTION ~t:ANAGERS, N t •-h 1 & 3 ~'"2492 3801 E. Pacific CoMt H1vy. " ewpor -ac · ,,...,.. · Corona del ?.far SUPERVISORS I: tNSPEC· Experienced assistant mana-TELEPHONE SOLICITOR TORS Top jobs. ll!l Pla- &tr, Call Mrs. J 0 h n •on, f-9 pm daily Mon-Fr. Exp'd -LINE -centia'. Costa ?.tesa, 644-44ll. pref. Dependable, CM ollice INSPECTORS RESIDENT DIRECTOR WANTED, Mature 1voman 10 $2 lir. 540-8164 E..'\~rience in el~trO.me-for boys. Older man or ail in my home. 01. w/2 DENTAL Assistant. ollice I: chanical a~sembly h<"liarc couple. Small Pr iv • t e achool age children. Short chairside. f 9 6 -S 7 7 9 or 1\-elding •nd gpol' ,ve-Jding ll<'bool. 673-9410 bouts, aood pay. 1 am a 499--1534. techniques. l\1ust i..-now HAIRSTYUST w/foll. Bet'r teacher. Trans. I< rels. re-I · PRIVATE Duty NURSES NASA '°de-ring. your incm by a bi&ger I'/~. quired, 540-3668 1lhil1 s. Call an~· ii our . Nu shop C . d ?i:t. 2640 E • • • OPERATORS • • • needed. RN's, LVN's. All Call Jim Hyan1.s. Day~ Coast Hivy. 6T~7321 Experienced in 1in&le needle 642-995,; 64.2.2100. 1-:ves. 54&-0319 and ovcrlocks, Good piece BARMAID \\'anted, exp'd CULTON INDUSTRIES work pricel. steady 1vork. EDbY MOSS 14042 Locust preferred. App I y the 164·1 \\lhittier Ave. WAILLER. 1506 Ocean HB. Costa Mi!:sa, Calil. St, Westminster; s,14-8738. E al rtunily l GENERAL OF1'~JCE 1-.."'XP'D Clerk typist (l), (ll qu oppo t-mpoyer part time • 15 hrs wk ::~:;.ry-Girl f "ridll)'. Call e BUSBOYS De~~:~~rso~rvlce EXP'D Ready. to Wear e DISHWASHERS 211.1 ...___ c Saleslady. e COOKS ~~·" Dr.. .M. * Coll 64>-7<24 * e WAITRESSES PART-TIME Sl!ctebu:v &: APPLY Bookkeeper, mugt type from EXP ' d C 0 t 1 e' Sh 0 P lnttrn•tion11 House dictatin& machine, ans Wailresses. of p 1 ,,cakt.a telephone, nan trial balance. I~~*;,,;""~' ,:"::':.·7:c"::'4c.,:*=-,.~1 .. -.•-, .,. -~ YS~" ·• •t 329 E. 17th St., ~...... ............,,. BAB • • • ""~ "'ant~: Y Costa i\1esa .1,. LA""w"----~. --,-.-,irc-,-.-xp-.d-.1 honie J\.ton-Fri. 7:4>:;:30.1'"'""'!"'!''""'""""'"""""'""" 1epJ st<:tttar)'. Eat pin. Own tral'l!I. 53&-SG85 aft 5:30. ?ofAN.\VO~lAN part or f~I- ' 0."P-vaJuatlle. ~VIII train or BEAUTY operator, full Ume. tlme. Pleasanl. eaay ~·ork. MTST. Pd bl':n s. W open. guar wage f( con1m. G\\'t-11'' good 11al1U'Y. No exper, no 135-(1581 Bty, Shop. 494-3'194 obligation, Call alt('r 8 pn1 \VAJTERS, w a It re. 11 es ' Busboy. Pref. exp'd. Apply: 2121 E. Coast Rwy. Cd ?.1. CHURCH ORGANIST $40.2279 or 548=721& EXP'D Bookkeeper capable 111 idloOl or C611cge-Girl, B L Edwards. 534-5142 or E or: fina.ncla1 atatementa. &: xlnt twlmmer to bab)'fllt 6 write 12262 f.1aypole Dr.. Now· 'S TH 1Qme tu exp, lor public dayt. 9-6, S40 wk. 642.01.55. Garden Grove, 9~ occt:. Olll<e. ~ MOTEL MAID. Expui"''" BUS DRIVERS TIME FOR REAL Eatate Uctnsee. Good ntQ('SIU')', 2205 Harb 0 r SUbstitute, J.l'll't lime l e n · ==e r:'~:Y Wvd, Costa Mesa. =~ !':~i~:a~lo~~ ~~o ~~ OU ICK CASH hHdf )'OUt1I woman to start Jobs Men, Wom. 7500 Thru-F'ri. 10 am to 4 pm a t lmmtdlatdy. 6'S-4llll. bw: rartie, 600 lrvinf Ave., HOUSEKEEPER. llve•in, 5 ~~!JE~~1:n=f~~~ NtWJ>OrtBeach,S42-7007 .THROUGH -A .t~ .. ~ ~ Ca1J COUNTER GIRL, O\'tl" 18, :Hus pm: ' !!~~.be~~ ~~"r1: J\tn6;~. ~~ ~~ken DAIL y PILOT CJW.D catt It.. bouWkpr f'uU turn. 1 ~ bdr •Pt. 546-9219 Llauna. Beich WANT AD Umt, no wlc:enda. Phone TEACHER netd1 mllablc • WG-<9U 8ABYSM'TER tor 2 yr old MEDICAL HOUSEKE£PER LIVE IN ch.lid. our hOme, Top or RECEPTIONIST 642-5671 M.01'1:1.ERJ..ESS H0~1E. \Vortd , Laauna Sch. Can ,,,,,. Expe:rltnced e &ols.3903 ON!: CHILD. P1f. 646-303! vidt tnn~p. 494-llfi. •· I • -~ ..... .•. ,. ,' ' . _._._ -• -...t ----· _...........__ - • Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 29. Bicycle 57. Electric Trtin 2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter 51. Kill.., 3. l•by Crib 3 l. Ber Stools 59. Cl•ulc Auto 4. Electric S1w 32. Encyclopedi1 t>O. Coffoo T•ble 5. C1mer• 33. V1cuum Cle1 n1r 6 l. Motorcycle 6. W1'shtr 34. Trooic1I Fish 62. Accordion 1. Outbo1rd Motor 35. Hot Roel Equipm't 63. Skis I. Stereo Sit 36. Fil• Cahinet 6-4. TV Set 9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65. Worklooneh to. Cl1rinet 31. Sterling Silv1r 66. Diemond Witch 11. ltfriger1tor 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-K•rt 12. Pickup Truck 40. Btdroem Set 68. Ironer 13. Sewing Machin• 41 . Slide Projector 69. Cemplnt Trellor 14. Surfboerd 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antl .. ue ·Furniture fS. Mlichlrio Tools 43. Pool T•bl• 71. Tlipo R.C.rdor 16. Dishwasher 44. Tlr11 72. S•llboel 17. Puppy 45. Pi1no 73. Sp0m Cir 11. C1bin Cruiser 46. Fur Coit 74. M1HrH1t ltx Spt1 19. Golf Cert 47. Dr1pe1 75. lnboer.i ,,,........, 20. leremtter 41 . Linens 76, Shotgun 21. St1mp Collection 49. Horse 77. S•ddle 22. Dinette Set SO. Alrpl1ne 71. Dm Geme 23. Pley P•n 51. Or91n 79. Punchlnt l•t 24. lowlint Boll 52. Exercycle 10. leby Cerrl11• 2S. W•l•r Skis 53. R1re Books ti. Drumt1 26. Frff1tr 54. Ski loots 12. Rifle 27. Suitc1s• 55. High Ch1ir 13. D•k 21. Cl0<k 56. Coins 14. SCUBA Gur ... Thae or any other extra things around th• house may be tumecl into cash with a D·AILY PILOT WA.NT-AD so • • • Don't Just Sit There!' DIAL DI.RICI 642-5678 <YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD-> DAILY PILOT WANT ADS WILL WORK FOR YOU! Get In On The Action Today! • • .. • •• • .. '·· • I ' " I j ' ...... ,.---·-----·-----·--··· --~~~-~··-----·-----------·-~------~~~·-r---~-__ ., -~·-....--------~-~~~·-·--~------ - • ' I " .. ~ ...... ,I, ]969 DAILY "rilOT H MIRCMAf<IDISI POil • MERCHANDISI '6li l'ITi !'!' UVISTOCK TitANSPOltTlfiOH MEJICHANDJS! FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR 1,SA=L;.;:l;..;A..;.N,..D_T_RA_;.D;ol_· -=;;...;..=....:.:=:.:...-_...;.;sA ... L;;.:E;..A_N..;.D;......T_ltA....o.Dl;;;.__c.SA..;.L;;.:l;...A;..;N..;.D;;_TllA=::;D;oE_ SALE .t:ND TRADI SALi AND TIW>I SALl"AND TllAOI D!J! am i,;;.. a Yochlt ._ •iiiiiiiii;;i;;;;;~ iF~uijrnijlijtu~reiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilC~t~OOijFiju~m--lt~ur~oiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiilOO~--· Sowing Mochlnn 1120 M l_ll_ • l600 Misc. W~ntW .. 10 ~ ..... ""'"' AKC. • DAVID I.. FRASllt 1969 SINGER ........... tic, .___ .... tlllil tt· P2t ....._ ·••11M9t WAREHOUSE SALE '11 ..,, ""'""' hoi<e. .. w, POOL TABLES wr: P'AY MOit! • ...... SU-1213 tr Ki..o"i'i'..ri ii;,_ on buttons. blind hemt. 314'' ·and l" slat. topa. New SAINT dl!iiNARD P«J14, 7 O' l>5l CUtttr, alt cab, 300 • ----~-------- Furniture 8000Furnlture 8000 Our 6,000 ft. ~·t• Public lat TIMe coin •ltt.chmtnb. rn stock: '73-6tlT pl hkl, 115 pl wattr. 134.SS or $4.16 mo. ~16 covtrbw. With Of without CASH "'*'-A.KC. c:bunplon Unc. O' Osl cutter, alt cab, 300 S I.. 111-.. H Mutlcal ln1t. 1125 2 ~--· ve ae..n•• "~ -•II , , , .. .,,.... ·-·· --~I, IOW" llhi>t. Priced AC>O~ABt,;; 1 wk old l"'PPY. rt ·· -·-P ii G It s I to tell! Llquida•1-vtndl-I L ,.._ She ., ... , __ .. Call : OrtJCK AVEJ\Y' SHOWROOll F RJllTURE ' u ar a • rouJ•. Phone ,;;;: &<J.:zsA For """"""· .,,,,._, ~~ . ..Ji.1" ~ 342' Via Oporto, n......, Eltttric slna:le pick up with 646-T'lOT. colored TV. piano., orprm 6T~ * ...._. 3 R0®1s Furn. Value Over $1000:Now $389. • 5 pc . euthentlc Splnl1h ldrM. set, • 96 ln • .nit· ff sof• with S6 111. matchj"I love .. ,, or chair • S pc, S,.nt1h Dlnatte, Hk .Wa top 9 3 h1avy Mtd- lftn'IMI• Mltchlnt 11bl1s, ttp dur1blt •novth for fltmlngo Dence. hamp los of a 1001 lif~timo Specials P11tt 111 •rtf• •peel•! •ff,....•f S!J. •ff•• ny $100. flllt• chno or 111•r• with • copy of tlll1 •d. , ,. F!; "ulltf'OI c-·~ .......... 11"·:1 • Pio .... lt'lll_lcrfl •1W Ill. lo ... M.t ....... , 1•.f e .. , liffY'I' s.aNlll COffN f.itlt ........ ,., ... Sl'f.t4 • , ....... m•ldlltlil lam• I.tile• , ........... 1 .. l'"ll • •1onlth :Wi• w Lim"" from . •. ....... It. • ...~" ' I & -fl'Wll • tlt.'5 • 11(~1 ~~ ' ~tr J'I". Qll":i~"il111e -~ M1' 11 TEa\1J1 U\llNGS IA.IOI: .£111MS St'>"!( CH.t.ltG' MASTIElt CHAlllGE a.t.MW: Of' .t.M(lt!CAIO A\.L. ACCi PTEO o,.. 9.9 ully -sat. u , s\"'. 1~5 541-9660 APPROVED FURNITURE 2065 Charle SI., Cnta M•n tott1"" ""H'"'°" cw w""' ~ ""H.,.,rrro.. ., ..,_.. •· A ltttt, ,.._. .. lll'llf 'but wan!! 1M clDlllr1 ,,_ ,....,, thb ad $9.95 * AUCTION * &Dd ""~"':;,. nlahl -IUO ~r..~ .. ~&""'.~ All ?iterchandlu U,YoU wW •tll or bu,y JfORSES BOARDED _ With Everythina for )'OUr" bolt.. Below Whale. , ·r ive Windy a try 634-300 fffd $41'.l, 'fllbout $3), 1urJbOard, car or boml.. Giant Music Auctions FNt.,, 7,30 p.m. $ WE b $ &4~ ·Boat ruin '"clal ,_ GOlll 1«161 Gttrden Grove Blvd., WiAdy's Auction B•rn BU J S3.9S pl retaU. Wind arl Ga<d•n Orov• llc~lnd TonY'• Blda. Ma!'l $ FURN(TUlit $ FREE TO YOU ::!;ei,131 S-1or. c.M. 5 String BANJO-:o75.~ Newport, CM 646-8686 APPLIANC'fS LIVE ABOARD 43' 'f'rl.Cab- $30 with e•sc t.IOVING P ink G.E, combo lll E B Balboa ~ 1-Colet TVl-fie 1-s •• ,... COCJ<-a.mt1., 1\ffdS • 0 0 d' 1n Chrig F.B. USO WSS, • · ay, re .. -,, """'"zer $1:J. Yellow 1 Piece """' fatbometrr, auto pilot, 6T"Nl60 Jo'rll'lciaire $90. Kng 11 tm-fCAIH INetl:w-:~:t:S. home. Ex~llent w I t h 2,5 KW 0 n a n, d&vitt and SALE or Ira.de : f'ramul!I dbl. 1prlnp & mall $50. 2 e S4l-4Sl I e children. Grey and white, 8 dlngtur anchor winch, Oltys. pick-up ba!ll ''"/cue. Alao burtau1 $:» ea. Babyline mos. old. Hu had llhots I: ·rmpel"lal encint~DO tradtl... f"tnder sccou1llc l\lilar. Bur'l!'au $35. Blonde fonnica \YANTED ~Wine Machine. IOna. 1SU Baker Apt. 8 . 141-J8211. Both new. M~n45 top desk $35. 9624752. Veey •m.tel,v priced. C.M. l/ll lB' 1968 Gla11pa.r Day Pl & 0 3 GOLF CLUBS: Portable. Aak tor Bec!Qt G~ .. ~ eyedh black femal1e Cruiser, 12) HP Cbrl. •nos rt•n• II 0 I irons, puUer, 2 woads, big 54$..1171 • ca .. ,,.., er own rose co · motor J/O Drive. Go '° & cart. \VANT To h ... (home) '---. ored Dea collar. Bahama 1.-lPH. New , ... le l"CCtlaed BRAVE THE HIATI * S3S * ~ ~ Ln 002-S605 g19 v Drive u, lO Santa Ana &: 1ee % l"\l'Und or L ah&ped. ?.11111. · d e c k , w a I k -I h r o Ulh UT E. Bay, ~boa be ft&IOr\l.ble . p h 0 a e KlTrENS, adorable, kq &: windshield. Sn.ti &.&. Run us about a Plano or Organ 675-5160 84f:.4687 · short furred, 2 calico, 3 40 noun. Perfect. Lilli al for your children's tdue&· b I e I w h l, 2 1 r a y . $4225. \Vill tl.ke wallo..i-Uon & pleasure before you A'ITN: Hobbyist's, Gd luk WANTED: OLD ~ASHION. .-... get involved "'ith Labor mahof1tny & pJ)'\1-·ood, sm E !lfAPLE HUTCH 64'-0688 818 l.!lt year depreclatioo. Call _F_v_m_l_tv_r_• _____ IOOO_ Garage ~ale 8022 Day we-ekend I:. a.nd all the .!l!tes/ .11 2323 Santa Ana • 548-"10S8* t~REE 10 good home ~'~1~0.~2~<02==-=-,,..,.,_,..,. __ 1 SOFA bed. lilic nc11·: den GARAGES -ALE--, _La_p_i-da-ry lhlllg& that go with &elling ~~CM. 646-3&40 alt 5 l: W.,'ED bricks one lo 1000 w/childre.n adorable l mo.., '67 GLASSPAR C I tat Io n . turn, desk, odd tables, unit w/n10lQr. tumblers, your olf~pring rcacly Io r w ff.eaaonably prittd. 64'1-4687 • tamale, p IC h I h U ah u a Inboard-outboard. 120 Mere. chairs. very reasonable. rock hound Items, G rand sehoo!. Renlals from $10 SHIPPING Crate for doc, 847-1927 or 968-4851 8/ll CrWser witb poftr jet A ••••••••••••••••• P. d A'· · monthly, Spinets & Consoles sturdy. especially built for ~ETS and LIVESTOCK 1 ClITE brcl\vn Ion• lla1rt!d power trim. Full cover. Costa hlcsa. 64.2-82'J2 or 1ano, e,..., patio booth, R d njoy I I 546-5210. clothing. dishes, mi 5 c. fl"um S579 lrlill Setter's air trip JO Pets Gen•ral 1900 female kitten, tr al n e d . ea Y to e . A * 3 ROOM GROUP *. Heins. F'rl, sat, Sun 17921 Gould Music Comp•ny \Vest Coast. Make ao6d ' 548-1932 818 maJnte:ia.nce rtoord11. l EARLY Amer. Kr o eh I er '""~ d ho f • ~-•.1 SC oY'flt'.r KI 6-4444 COMPLETE h' .. d• ··'-d. -n 1 ••. , •. ,1 ,,1 Alta i\-Ilrano Lan_c, 1m. ~ N. Main, S1\ ~7-Qi81 Oii use 0 r 'OUllUUt:" RAM LETS COLLIE/ Shepherd, large&: ' · ... """ "'' " " 847-1320 Open M'1n & ~~rl 'tll 9 anltnal. SI5. Call '847~ ' • birch \vood, &ood end $125. alter 6 Pl\I 1 aflectlonatc. Loves chlldren. MARLINE ER 'L•lwing Room .-$ 29 aoc1 7 room -Dinette 833-2948 SPANISH n1ocll.'rn sofa & r=ranchise Closeout ANSWERS Shots. S4S-<1468 8/8 'l love seat, like new. SpanJsh The faetory has ord~red close 113 01'T on all bikinis & Sl\fALL yard stones free for QUALITY King bed, quilted. k. . "·d & . -" -·t ol < Co··-•· & 2 Sp<·not eovtt-uiw. Any ,,_ top ••os 1ng-s1tt .,., n1te Slanu. '"' ·-r " ... ~ takl"" C·" "~"' ""11 alter 5 0 C Complete. unused .,.. : p no\v $9.80. Anythlni Goes, Rector -Hasty -Befit -.... ...... '"..-u' Like new $46,000 Da.)'11 774-6111> Mrs. Brown Ev~s 67l-9l91 Mr. Jamts WHkb' Payments .. We Carry Our wn ontracts Y:orth $2.10. Aft 5 or "·knds J\1any other misc items. Old ianos on a cost.plus ba!IL / bo Pl\1. 819 \ Chevy pick·up. Sat & Sun, Never again piano bargain• \V any ttom, flt 1ults Forage -FORGOT IT 13 · 6 · • o u T BO AR 0 , f VAN'S Discount Furniture 847--0406 329 University st. O.f like the!!e ! l"int come • lirst 2400 w. Cat Hwy, N.B. Open A wool·ratherlnr profesaor: KITIENS, 2. 7 ""'k.!I., 1o.ng. "F1uUJner" con I r o 11' ~ PAIR 0ran£:e vel\'et ehairs 6~2-674-t serYcd. sun. ... He 1pen1 se~·en years 1tudy-haired. l r old. 1 black. 417 . 4th St., Santa Ana Free Parking . · .. ~.. "A" ""ll 8/B Evinrude 35.. sm/whl bir. S35 eaeh, pair matchnig ot· ~~--------\\TA RO'S BALD\VIN STIJDIO ROTC>-Tiller 4 speed trans 1111 "'"" people ate absent. .,.._...,, O,.." ~•lly 10·1 _ Sat 10-6 _ 547·2412 ·10_'"' 110 ••·h . .,.5615 T\I. $35: slc:reo plus 25 LP's, 18 · · mJ-.1-.1 ...... .._ ,1.. Ne'v witinc ~ tail lites. "' . ... ....a-19 Ne\vpon, C.?.1. 542-M84 Excellent COnd.,llion. Heavy lfUnt. • '"'n llC promp...., 2 BLACK adorable pUppies S200. 962-1858 •••••••••••••• 4 PIECE G 0 • 1· nal • UOO; d•<k 110' '6' &;ck "'>"lOND d"'" •"Jh -· •l•·Jh. -w<FO.=R=GOT;,;...;:1Tc,· ____ ,\_~·~·~*'..:<~91'.:-~184~9'..:*~·~·:._ •• shaped co~~ ;'~10 sha; :~;l.'~H~·~;!~h~~;1 ';;h'::. nc~~tc:~aypia! d;;~ .. ;hat; 25"~ 1kxo11c Rats, beige and BLUE parakut, syn. old. 2l'DRAKE CRUISER, ~f EMPLOYMENT S35 642-6745. camera $10. 410 Iris, CdM ol all makeL Best buyi in engine. For, Sale or trade. white, black and ••hlte. Hu ca.~. :;46-1113 ~~. ~· ~ r ~ F ·1 1000 k ~7141 So Calif ..;,.hi .. __ IMW offer1 Ml-0483 Youn.a: rats or breedin• Sc•--l"lnolrucllon 7600 i-"-'"-'-"-'-"------WHITE vinyl couch. ma es .,,....... · · . ..,. '"''c• l J\IALE -'--rt haired "''P. BARGAIN! 515-3(32 -.. .c,;cc,c~~~~~-~-SO!l\-DT MUSIC co PORTABLE Hotpolnt d"•A.. stock Tx 10 ·~. "·&-~"~~. ~~ ·-into double bed, excellent •1QV!NG SAL"Mod -"-·· ·u ·I ,,..,. .., '" """" P> 1 w•· old ··--• -" SUMMER •~. "A" • ....., " c.-Yc.uvw ~907 N Main, 1J69 Donel Lane CM ' ,.., • ,...,,. _....,.,. 2 5 • CAB l N Cr U i I ~r. SPECIAL Sal A.M. seascape clan, )'OUJll people 9 to 20, st.artlnc Aug. 30. JoyCl' Clark Studio. 1434 s. Coast Hwy, Laguna B. 494-5829 Educational Vacation 5th gTader1 .•• Sr Citlze1111 Oiilcoat 10 lesaon typing Sch!. Trial Leason. 173 Del Mar, C.?i-1. 548-2359 WESTMINSTER Presbyter- ian Pre-School. open to all 3& 4 yr olds. Call now "'-'<>16. SITA'S MONTESSORI School 2% to 6 ~ars. Enroll now Jer Fall. &16-3706 or 541-5697 MONTESSORI Teacher of· fen mvsic instr, bc&in'g all "lllOOdwinds. advc'd nute &: oboe. 642-0957 SAl;E AND TRADE MERCHANDISE FOR ,,..... ......,........ rouch. matchd crib &: washer fl&, Double mat~u ' · · · hoiM. 542-7001 8/8 La k h··'J -•~ Santa Ana G:: box rprings $35. 2 bar RABBITS. -t YoUn1 does. 6 patra e w • •I•. •->'· CLEARANCE! BED Divan $39.50. Chair, dresser w/pcari inserts, lge ---~,=,~AN=-T=E=0=----stools $U. 257 Santa Tsabel, nlOs. s4 each. 5 space hutch CUTE little puppies need a head, etc. Xb:lt oond. ~· New beds: King sgg.so, Queen .shepherd casters, like new youth dressr, mah o g · SPINETS & GRANDS CM. free. Kl 5-6092 loving home. 646-0642 8/8 =Cal---1=540-0118----~~-~--I $89.50, Full ,$49.50, Twin l ~l~27=·='°=·='='"'=1=71===== :r:'i:~ i':~:l7'nbim:~ -.,.--=~6J6.""3620~C.,,~--DO~E bed, compll.'te $40. PIGEONS, GIANT HOMERS DOG, lives outd~ loves 26' Frisco Flyer Sloop, $39.50. fully gila ran. Sleeper-s1ools. 21S Fern 642--5532 * * CONN SPINET ** Ne,., desk $95. Tenn ls $1 esch. 548-6563 children. 540-J496 .J/9 Flbergla1 hull, wtth teak '10la mattresses, reg. 52· Office Equipment IOI I 7 J\1os. old, per!. cot\CI. rae)ieta, tennis shoes. TELl!.""l'YPE & a·m a I e u r trim. Cheoy Lee bit. Jubd, $29.50. New· 9 pc corner ar· GARAGE SMle: Mov ing · 9 Plants, /Ilise. S44-Z7S7 2208 radio eqUip. ~S 819 encl head. Boat ill very rang. choice of cll"!'i, reg. TYPE\VRITER, £.:o(ecutive. t.1p)e furn, man,y househlcl S-l4 646-7073 .... The C1t1 8820 clean! S7200. Broker 494-3916 1 30 9 itf!ms. misc ---Aies. 1589 PIANO WANTED .r ortuna. BluUs. --· ' 2 RABBITS w-c.age • 4 2 , now $14 .SO. Headbn:ls: Brand new at $700. This &""" GOOD 12' fiberglu• out· Kings, $15, Queens $12.50, week only $'100. 675-7312 bef Riverside Pl. CM. Sat & Sun 1213) 877-1035 Pvt Party PROF'ESSIONAL 1han1poo STUD Service-k It tens . guinea pigs. 646-6445 8/9 board. hull w/dual ltvtr- Full $10.50. Tu;ns $3.95. 10 am. or " 10 6 pni. 171707.m~~-~'~•~m7.~,-=--I b<n\'I "'/stainless 1tee1 Siamese, Persian, Burmese, a E A u t I Fu L bunnies shill, cable, wheel, Xlnt Sleeper sofa.!I, choice ol clrs: IT~Y""P=E~ll'~Rl=r=E=R-.-'-A-d~d=;~,-g GARAGE SALE. l\ioving. "T~•~l•~•=l~sl~o~n,_ ___ :12:0:5 upholstered, adjustable Aby~. RUM bluts. 5<16--8858 5'16-8335 -"&hip-to-shore" boat. tows Rl'g $219.50, now $1t9.50. mach, calculator, very Stove, refrigerator, wast\. chair, Both like new $85. LILAC Po int Siamese kit-3 MO. Old black kitten. easUy. $125. 67l-651A Klng-siu! spreads, choice of Id lb'· odd• & -~, $4.98 HOUSE eall on all color 613-2963 1 ·~ ,_ $30 L 'l•-u 1 =-~==~=~-~~t ell'i!I, reg. $20.!t5, now Sl2.99. reasonable. Xlnt c on d. er l')'Cr, ..,, euu · makes or drop it off before ens . ._, .., · · •• .... n, Desperately needs home. 16' TURaOCRATI' Jet, 217 ful sz. $9.95. SIESTA SLEEP 892·2"23 eves. 1401 Kings Rd .. NB. MS-6272 10 A~f &: pi(k it up at 5 PM. FROSTING &; TI pp in g 546-00fll , 1 ~·~94-:_::1354~-~---....:.8~19: I V-8, KreY mar In e, + b\1 SHOP. 1927 Harbor Blvd, All ehannel rolor antenna SPFCIAL 1 wk. only. Reg. BEAUTIFUL male cMcolate 10 Wk. old puppy, aome ""·hi. trlr. 646-t790 C:'f. 64:>.2760 dal ly l0-9 8022 ~e~l~-'~"~'":.:..----'~1~00~ Including installation S39.95 ~~e':w ~:~SfJ.: 3~1rld 811So6· point Siamese. 5 months, shots. Gd. with cata &. =s=R=Y~AN=r'"'i~1=·1~ .• -.,.,,-nath-,.,-.,,..,.,1 S Garage Sale -Do 1 111 "l '""'"' ... v . has shols $25 5'1S-ml3 chU'-n. <"' ~" gm Sal· un 10.6. --''----'------LARGE selection 01 re<:t1ndi· you wi.ve a ·~ or Coast Plaza ~7990 · un: .,.....,~ ·~ board; 35 HP Ev\muck TOO much lumitute Jor ·new EVERYTHING n1ust go· tioned appliances. ry'PGll. ap.. Stereo problem~ Have any SURPLUS factory d re 11 GERMAN shepherd collie w/llttle Dude trailtr, Xlnt home! Bargains galore on nany n1isc. ilems. Sal .. and j:lliances from model homes questions? PlcaM': c11l us. fabrics & remnant1. S o I d Dogs 1825 Gd. watchdog for ranch or fishing boat. 5CO-f6&3 m""> rme· p•'-•. Som• a~ Sun. 9 to 5, 7642 Anila Ln. _oil gu~~"tecd. 536-3377 h bl' 0 ~ fann . .(95-5103 819 1 ~~.~T~ROJ~~"--b~~~ .• -,-__ -__ ·t .... ........ ,,. ... ~. HARBOR TEl.t;\'ISIO~ to 1 e pu IC ..... ~londay SHIPPING Crate for dog, .... ..... ................ .._. llques. (Will 1 trade for ~"~".,.,,~--~----\Ve Sl!rvice -\Ye l-'lnance ~t:R\'IGE thru Sat. 1820 l\1onrovia, gturdy, e~iaUy built for 1 DOZEN ~gy sheep do& Inboe.rd. SIS radio, head, carpentry.) 54S-1773 MISC household·sofa, chrs. DUNLAP 1sSo \Vllit1ier, corllC'r 19111 Cill . hish Settcr'a air trip 10 pUpple!. rc11.dy 9/1. ?\1om & galley, cove.rs. $2695 or l\IOVING-Sofa and love scat. dinc!le ~I. baby tll'111~. f'1c. APPLIANCE &: \Vh\l!ler, Costa l!lf!!'il\ 3 \\'HEEL 12 in barid saw We-st Coast. Make good dad only 17" high. Come trade for trlr/boat. 646-2389 velvet; Hide-a.bed $12S. 2901 Paper Ln, NB. t'ri rvt.. 1S13 Nev.1>011 Bl\'d .. C.J\J.21 "-.. ~P~B:..::;to~l=o·:..::;TV=. ~ •• ~.~. =w~a~ln-.. -11 l\'ilh stand &. motor, as is doghouse 1 0 r ··outside" Pick yours now, &U.&852 24' GLA$TRON, 19 I '2 . Furniture 1000 Sora only, gold; fixtures & _s="~"=-----~-• 548-nlO • ' ~ .. 12:1. Pep•; Cola ma•h•."" animal. $15. ca.II 847~ =='';:'::'~~_,_=,..,,,..,.~·I lnboank>ut 235 tip. a 1:..o:..;.c;.;....;;______ .:: Sp. call. Remote contr, dual .. ,.,. 17 ·;C Kinn Sile lamps. CoUee & end tables, EDGER. P"T 1 mo1\'er, glass-GE frost·lree relrigerator ellt spkn:. Gd. working w!til .automatic coin cbaJl&er afte r 6 PM SCRAP \Vood 1909 Ftderal, radio, Loaded! MS-llU • '211 673-9393 top dreascr, o v e ·a• at, Big $50. Tappan top-oven cond. ,24:5. 644-132.f nlles or S95. 64.2-4689 "LASSI E 1n mln1ature" AKC Cl\1. 8/9 18' JOHNSON Cab crar 50 Bedroom * Studio Couch ""ilh one compl dbl bed, misc. Aui 9-slide.Out r ange \vlth cup-\Yken&.,......-with at t 1 chment 1 & Shetland sheep dogs, 9 wks. SACRJFICE: 2 Ador able hp. Evlnrude OB, Tilt Trlr, Larle g:<irawer dresser, mlr-bolster, $15. 645--0114 lO. 289 E. Wilson, CM ~"°"~~rd~•"'~""~l~200~. ~54&-~1~8~12:._I ~==~-======= polii:ht!r. Take over small Apt size collies! 16''·1all at AKC Boston Terr I er s, equlpt, $1050. 84174618. ror, 2 bedside stands, king 'co=1.0=N~lAL""""""1Urn1....,.~1-,,,..-.w~h,~"-· I GARAGE Sale, Sat • S ui n. DELUXE model gu dryer, pymts or SU.to cash. Credit mO.!lt. rJuffy! BeautUull adul!JI, one or both to nice l!IM Chi·ens XL inboard 19' ~headboard, frame, quilt-antiqued blue. dbl. dressel·, Radial saw, lawnmower, excellent condition $60, Hl·FI & Stereo 8210 Dept. ~7289. Xnlt 1v/chldrn! Easy to homes. Good with children. Superb condition. ind air. ~ mattreM, •'-"· blank· 00 .. n .... d••k. oombo ·"-•I 01 twin bed sets, and misc. 548-4213 L V train. 2 malt• $75. 540--0910 837-3400 8/3 •~""" 673-8593 '""' "'"' 712 La ks COM 1~~=~==---~ 1009 STEREO Console. db:, INYLTlLE,L i noleum, ,-0-~o'.~=o--~~~· ets, et (·. d r a we r-1 • bookcat1e, S80 -----'~""-'-·----12 cu INCH new GE Jn beiiut cabinet con1ple!e Asphalt 1'Ue ~ Beautiful col· POODLE pups, small st.an-HAMSTERS. Two baby ritale MAYDAY Dl'll'Of'Cttl a • w/ Choice ol Spanish compl. 543-5815 aft 4. GARAGE Sa I c ·Fur D & retrigerator. Used 2 monlhs. 1v/nr.w g u 8 rant e e. ' on a nd patterm. Free dard AKC, f1!g, Apricot It brothers plus cage. AU must 175hp Chcysler. n pier or l\1odern Style QUEEN Anrlf' antique earved CHRS. F'ri/S:it 10 a.in.-6 962--2952 Spca.ker sound system, 4 spd estlrnalea. Uc. Cont r . Champngne, 8 wk.s, with 1tay to&elher. Pell only, avail. $3800. 6'B-0285 AU for $249 &0J.1. Olive velvet uphob;tery p.m. 17831 Altamirano Ln, ·sro--V-E_G_a_l_J,-.,-&--Sa-1-tl-er, Eng:l'lsh changer, solid stale 5'1M478. shots. $50 ea. 493-3084 OP. 540-6074 TAKE OVER LOAN. 2Z' ~ No down • Pmts. only $9 mo. $1000 1 value, only $400. _H_8~· ~'-"---"-"--~---Xlnl cond. 6 yrs neiv, $S0 &: rthmond needle. Pay oil LOUNGE chair $3S. 7 BARKLESS BaSflnjl pupple1, ONE 5 n10. old female Cruiser, all xtru, rlapd for WUK'S WAREHOUSE 548-71\12 ANTIQUES. furniture, TV, {1Ias) 5,\6-9033 bal dt $79.10 or t'asy pymnt1. Colort'd plastic sheets 24x72 h Ii b r kn , a 11 shot I SlameM! kitten and Jive ~I fishing. s/s radio. 546-8172 DINING !>Ct: Italian J>rovin. and many ext ras. fri·Sal·ST '""o~V~E~. ~G~.~.~.~,.,-. -.--s.-1-u-er, ~It Dept. ~7289 S2 eaeh. Radlo/phOno con· Reasonable to good homes. Slame~ 8 1vk. old kitten!. 15, Boat, 35 hp flee 600 \V, 14th Sl.. San ta Ana cial table w/2 leaves, 4 Sun. 1017 B An1erican Pl. ga&. Good shape $ 3 5. '67 \VALNUT Sllvertone _:'°~'•:...;l~IO~.~rn-::.::~11~8'~· ____ l.~644--01Zi~::.::_______ 545-5978 8/8 star!. Afotor &: trailer Open Daily 9 . 9 chairs. China cabinet $175. ,c.C~MC,C.54~8-0!E6~"°'· ~~~--642-674:1 stereo A~f/Fl\f phonograph. GO.CfliiT Sl.25, i,; yr "'ar-CHIHUAHUA pup p I es, BONNIE. Clyde &. Snow S300 * 54;r291s Sat .•• 6 •··-. 11 . 6 646-1504 FREEZER, Refrigerator ='~-----~-~ '67 T.:1nllne Silvertone 21" ranty. Service sla coke creamy while male!I, Cham· White 3 atleclionate rats !==="==="==== ....,, . G.F.. auton1atic "'asher, xnlt TV. o.o •~ "".. 69 •LARGE round 1 a b I e \Vasher, odds & l'nds. Fn, _.:..:.c.~-=.,=:....---~ maehlne $75. Fan ta 11 pion stock. 5<16--.>W'S. 11 need new home 286 E. 23rd. S•llboob 9010 8' SOFA. never u-:~QuUt~ "'/glass top SlO. Table w/ ,4 Sal. Sun. 1537 Serenade, cond. S!°.847..Sll;) * "'?NY GOO lape deck, -•~'~''°::::"':...:l='·='°:...:••=·~":::'-~98'5=-=--1·.~Do=""=c'~La="'=·-C~.~M-._~= St. C.~t. 8/8 ftora:!. Scotch·gua . Sl · "h••·-12'. 6~ -·. . l ~C-d7>_J·~~~--~-~ tum-labll'. •mpllfier & QU LJTY ki ~ J ocrSH 0 -tt I AKC Kl ··•t l & M t h. 1 t 11 5 ~ "' " ·~ E 0 RE A ng -u. quited. "'" ~ er pupp es, , tten1, ..... pepper, SEA s c 0 u t • 1 "---•·•· a c mg ove.sea . F'RI II s ' 2 k K N l\I IV as b j n g L.,, •. 1115. ;r,., A""l .. bl! II 8 •.• ···1~· I ~-~·~ 537..ao32 ~ Li\.tNG room tables Oiled 1ru un, nex I\' s. maC'hinc S90. l\taylal.': Jta.~ I 0""";::=·~·==="'=~~='=== Complete, unu se d Sl05: .;e ne ne, w..a . ......-,..., tiger1, other co Ol'I. &ref!O. need a f\1AIN sail for 2:2 3 ELEC,s;mmo"' ,;ng\e bed!! ""·alnut, s~o each. Mise ilcms. Movir11: East. d 190 ••• 1146 Al ~ ""1>rth $250. Aftcr 'S or wknds or 642-4896 eyed. &36-4493 r"'OOT ALB AT RO s s . 369 E Fl C~l ryer · ....,,,... · tcr " Cam•ras & Equip. 8300 w·foam mattre:s..sell, xlnt 673-8202 ~. O\ver, ' · PW. 847--0406 TEMBROKE Wel&h Coral, l yr, spayed, altered cats, 1 "64"""Mc..,"';..,,~=~~~~ ' cond. ~ w/ wht vinyl head--H-AN_D_·_M_A_D_E--t-ab-1-,-,-o-ps. 2·FAMILY Garage Salf' 901C ·-0-L-D_S_POT---10-,-,-,-,--r 1 fENTAX spol.inatic f l.4 BABY Crib & mattress. pert champion sired, 5 m1.le11, 3 w/ail 100ts. Need cd bOme. AQUACAT .U' Sa i J l n I boan:ls. Orig. cost o/ $500 Clear resin "'i lh shells im-Aimone! Pl, Ea 5 I b I u ff Re lrigerator. Excellent eon-plus 135 mm, t e 1 e photo, cond: Franciscan apple din· fcmaJes. Priced according 897-5480 Catamaran &: trailer. Fast ea .. asking $195 ea .646-8128 bedded. I-lust See! a46-3749 1 _644-<J9 __ ,_,_•_1_1sc_._i1e_m_•___ dilion S!'JO. S46-~ both unused $225, 842-1039 ner wart: hM• guitar &. to quality. 546-1928. KITTENS, 6 wkl old, 2 tiger, & easy lo sail! Ex:. cond. LEAVING state. Beaut. 2 DOUBL" SIZ" R ,· v J • r, * k Garage Sale k * case, 1(1. cond. ~1219 TOY POODLE PUPPIES male, 2 calico female, Used 615-3194 alt !1:30 "' u " GE \Vas~. late 11100~1 S Good 8500 8 h mo. old 8' sofa &: love seal. ,,·al nut cabinet HlDF.-A· ~~~301i=-"~t_h_S_J7• ~N_B~~ xl porilng I BE AU TI FU L Chint!se adorable AKC. 145 E. l t to children. 96Z-51B9 8/8 SfAN MUler sabot, compl. 6' coffee tbl. '3 end com· BED. Very good cond. S73. GARAGE sale. odds & ends, Xlnt . workin~ ' O SURFBOARDS statues, aMOrted Chinese St., C.l\1. 646-!i650 White female Siamese cat, equip w/raciny cear, dolb' modes;· hldc-a·bed. 8 re. 67;>-7881 Desci·t Rose dlshc11, etc. $G.'i. Sacrif. 54 .67 PERt~ORMER 9.6. dishes, loads of India brass GERl\fAN Shepherd male blue eyes, to rood home. &: cover; aail no. 3350. $3()0. Span, kingsl:i:e bednn !!Ct. DINETTE Sj(}, table S3J. Sat. 338 Bucknell Rd., CM RCA \V hi r I P 0 0 I rcfl'I;:· Paid $90. sell S30. Rrl.lcles. All quality items. pop. AI<C r eg: Is t ere d. Good natured. 646-6317 8/3 120 Colltna;BeJ 11. 815-4798 Will sicrifiee; call coUe<:t dra\vers $2a. de~k $l5, bar GIANT llwlng: set, !win bed, era tor • freezer. Xlnt cond. * Over-bought at auction. Can Champ line. sso. 838--0312 PLAYFUL liltle k i 1 ten, AZTEC Sport Car. vw q . 213-43J..4l40 stools S!O. 54!-6903' baby lnfansear. youth bed. A~ing Sl20. 5J6.?456... 7' 10" RICHARDS S:>J ~ seen Sal l:: Sun. 23922 EN(;LJSH SP R 1 NG ER female, 6 "'k5., b I a ck Good tires It battery. SIOO i\tAHOGANY drop leaf din. SOLID Mrdrock ma P 1 e ass'! toys and games. 2079 LADY Kenmore auwmatic 1.17 E. Bay. Balboa :.ilhv~ter Lane, Laguna Spaniel pup.s. A.K.C. $75. w/whlte feet. 616-40Zl Pill or best otter. ~2024 !le~lm u:·lst~:· :=. dinellc, 10 yea.rs old, 2 \Vestminster Ave., C !'.1 , :~~~~15.l ~ t ~1~~t· :dnt ----'6~1f>..1~1=60'----~ \\f~a;;~~HT Iron inail box Only male1 left. 962.-8983 2 ALTERED n1alc cals: one • LlOO 14, Dacron sailJ, Sp. I34. i 24l Warntr AvP. Jeavl.'f!;. 4 thairs good $2:>. 0'47S-11~~"~"~--,..,,---BRAND ne\\• set or Arnold standards D 1111 nc 11 v e Full blooded German Ruu blue, l &reY & white. good cond. Sf;iO. DQI: SeaAira Mobile Home Prk., 5,io..5001 SAT, Fumilure. clolhe~. and GE 11,a;her S30. R~xood~ Pnlmer Golf Ou~. Very orlglnai. SI7.00 e 8 ch . Shepherd puppies $15 Recent shota. Owner died. SJ5...6.315. eves: 6'Jl..0064 HB. 341-2.639 2 ~·IATCHING custoni chair,; mlsc. 2651 Club J\1esa, oll 5.18.1,1196 rc11.SOnable pr\c.."t'. 673-l:JOO 837-4~ P.IV. ~2454 aft 6 Don't like c h i Id re n. Trailer for Kite or 14' san. ' Wl e11ch: qun!ity l.a.\\°50n ·~·~'"':::.=D~<.~C=>~l~"4:.:.:,S-~13l=·=·--SEE "'POOL TA""·LES" 1n AKC Poodle pupple1, brown 549-1846 Sill boat. Fine oond, SW . caD OON ·T Give up~ You n1ay --BUTANE Refrigerator · · sofa $50. 64.f-'ll.M GARAGE SALE J\·lis""'li~c'Olls for r.ale rol· ~ . It black 7 v.·ks old $75 Ir KlTl'ENS: Coal b I a ck, 6is.JO.i8 find 11 at Arr.erlca'1 largest. 1 S 1 Antiques ill 10 .... DOMESTIC. lor camper $75 ,. •• ~ .. 16 · r~~=-~----~-1 most u.nusual unllnished BEAUT. hte mahog dining Sat-Sun. 5~ P uml'r tree· u1nn. s 1in1 ray 1ype bike, UP. ~ · llsers. salt k pepper, etc. P-CAT, l'Ull race, trailer, furnitu.re store. Cot. Redhill tbl. 6 ehn; $95. Duo oorncr .°"=~"~M~'~"'~·-~-~ Tl~·FANY HOUSE mW open SURFBOARD -$$5 or BEST FirPstone $20. 548--1542 OALMATION male, AKC. 10 836-4493 ' 8111 $3000. 2912 West Cout It Santa Ana FW)', Tustin. 1 bed unit $95. 673-72'26 LIVING rm set, Spanish. Bar 111 lovely old 1\ r 11 0 g g OFFER. CON·!!·, no nicks., CARPF:J' weeks. cbamp'°" sire. $75.· 2 FREE ~ppies II wits, male Highway N.B. 6G-0810 mi So. of Newport F\\y. BUSIEST marketplace in &. ,,.;ne rack. VW parL~. 2218 Mansion. Featurlog leaded 968-4844 Shap, 1"'eeda, hi.Jo pile, All 968-:lllO & female. Small l>rffd, lo 12' ALCORTSAILFJSH C>Jitn 362 dsy• per yr. town. The DAILY pnm ~""':..:,~"~"c,.A"V<~·~C~'-'-,...,..,,...-hanging shad~. assorted, --11-N-l-Si>--rf-00.-rd--V-&rd_•_m-an. t.-olors. Frte est. Lk: Contr. IRISH Setter puppies 7 wks. good homes. 642-8043 g. P.fahoganyJ .• '!"'1¥ ftnllbed. 5#-541! 0.111ifled section. Save PATIO Sale. Ast0rted items. gay 90's furniture It ae-square tail·i\ffi, 7'8", 5 mos. 546-4471. AKC reg. Champion blood Kl'ITENS, 6 wk:s. Also Sl69. * ~123 2 'IWlN beds, whitt/rold, ~) money, lime & effort. Look 216 Orchid Ave, CdM. Aug ce$$0rles. 122 S. Orange, $15. 49-l-1559 aft S TV·radlo-m.'Ol'd player com· 'ine. 673-4448 mother cat. 646-1218 l /ll lJOO 1C. excellet canopy P o s I er, w/mat· l ;"';;w~!;:! !=======,.:.~'~· ~·~::5;·======="-':,Sa::,n,;':"=··="='=· =ll='=·=m~'="=l~p~.m~. l ~SU~R=-FBO=~A=RD::..::::.,7~.-~G-,-n. bo $40 A.Ir COnlprt560f' $40. 1 STANDARD Poodle. AKC. COCK·A·POO. black female condition. $850. tresses &: sprln&s. Antique Re.movable fin, S4j, 5~~2152 54~~ M11<le. Best oner. 8 m05. old. Had ahota, hu "* 57l-44'74 * l'le1k & dl"t's9f!r. ChUJerobe. Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 Furniture IOOO • ""0 ~·79 • ............... ho \Vhlte ~raw drapc11, HDCd. KING a . Red satin 1hctts. :J<IO"V' dog house. '" 5""" me SABOT Hberglua, rood Large 2-lonP. ttd rug. Pair Mi1cell1neou• 1600 washed once. 4 sheets, 4 AKC B•ss1t Pups with children. 64.2-9150 Sill cond. Xlnt. value al $22$. '"-en 'upbol•t"-d cha irs, s PAN Is H cues. $50. 642-3161 Tri-color 6 wk11 SM. S40-8638 LABRADOR Re tr I e v t. r, ·°"""':.:.:,c,;c"~·~~==~~-•• ~ .. ,,. La11·n l\10ll'l'r S1. al g Jd had hot • cheap. Misc. 1te1n11. 5~()...3J71 ~ioor Laniri $j NYLON olive carpel.Ing, 27 UIASA A~ pupplea, AKC, m e, mOI. O • 1 s. HOURLY RENTAL.! CHILD'S crib k n1all.ress, Olnrn<ttl' Set $30. Srneh MJ. yatd1 $50. Ornpe1, m· 1 "'ks, xnlt papers. \Vkd)'ll N e fl d s ( e n c e d Ya rd · * Rhodes 19'• * •"hll•. sa.;. MEDITERRANEAN ='=-·ha:.'';,;',.;'~' ~",.c'..c"·-''-'"""~'-0~1 pan<I• S50. S<...eJS '" 6 or wknd•. 6'1~ 645-0503 . 8111 P11n Z<>n< Boal Co. Balboo ..... ,,. As Shown In Model Home s ' NEWPOnT Tennis c I u b BATH·HOUSE or tool shed AKC Alukan Sa1noytd, lg, Dl\.RUNG. UJI)' k 11 ten COLVMBIA ,ChalleJlll!r, fWI MR. &:·Mn. chain. 1ood Family ~1embcrshlp $-ISO 4:<12, 2 doors, well made. rtWc, 2 yrs. puppy. S1:J. w 1 1011 of penonallty, ra.ct~ boat be.lb. efllfne, ex· WJiet •n ••citin .. sc•nel Your horn• ctn come alive with our ~rnorous ,, •• """~ ...... 6_ .,.,... e .... .,_,. female 6 'vka. Part trU. $4500 645--0hO u1C11rious Sof• plus ~er fer, Siamese. 67>Gfl'7 Sill bits, 2 cflstin· EXERCYCLE Good <ond. O'KEEF'E .l PttERRm 36" t.ABRADOii RETRJl-..YER UDO 14 No. ml Llke tllh'. <.'OlldWon, can be used with ,. .,......._. ,,..... •o1'V "' .,.._,QO modern or provincial decor. decorator·correlat•d p1cka9al Liv ing room Includes: l orp: Sp1nish :Z Commodes. m.mr after 4:30 p.m. a nd Lov• Se•t in quilted floral f1brics . l Spanish 01lr Ta NEIGHBORHOOD Gar age gui1hed Conquista dor Teble Lampi. ''Hectende'' lledro Tripla Oressir with Framed Mirror, Kin9-1i1• Headboard, ~~elhu. Ste,~..:~ 1!.~~ s.Pc. Wrouqht Iron Dinette Sat, Sp1ni1h Oe·k heiregol'! to[, Must b• , elsewhere ...., ' m,..;. Ml"PV• ..,_ b I , I Ln, RB-seen to e +ru y appreciated ••• so come in tov1y Pric •t sns.oo. NOW'5' THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH T:iROUC.H A DAILY PILOT WANT AD .. l•AND NIW IPICIAl I.All e C•N l:i• 'urchel-4 '''•r•f•ly le1y Cr•fif Tertr11 SANTA ANA FURNITURE I /. .. w. 'ovarM sr-• '4Hf.l AHA , 7-0789 ! $150: garden lraclDr $1>. s.1~21n STORED dinette &el. Ne•r new. $47.50. Clll M--1717 L.UUABY baby crib W\lh maltress. $13, 2 l\.letal b • r 1to6~' SI ea. Good condlUon. !!6M033. 8x3S h11. vtry act. cond. Pvl. ply. 646-llSS. Call eveL OATt.Y PILOT DIMU. UNts. You can use them for jUMt pe:Mi!!i a da1, DlaJ ..... 71 . I i;as ranae. Good condhlon. AKC Champ I Sbow~ld s.w. ~1-2535. 874 Dam:ll slk. Eute.n l<tnnel G73.40 TABLE saw on Ira.me. Has GREAT DANE pupp y. rolltB-R&ant .perftct 140 Black. AKC $lS. 1959 548--4152 Federal A\'~, C.M. 22 Rlrt.E, $19. Dnriftlns AKC COU.IE PUPPlf.S table 3' x 5' $19. Saddle It For 1how or lor lo\.'e tack S31. ~ l!H~. 642"0802 DAY bed Sl!U. Maple table PUC pups AKC. 3 mos, penn S7.50. Rocker $15. DrUtwood 1hots. Call Joyce ~1301 or V8IO $3. !>iS--30.12 ~~136 3 DRAWER mapl, dt!k $35. PEKE-A·Poo poodlts, ,,,.,. S<!wlna ~thine $20. Fold•• 11 w~ks. Beautiful Ir nun)' 'l\'lY doUble btd $25. 67$-118S S10. 646-10:J2 • ' v .. GRAVEL A. dirt mix. """" -· All ..,.1p. ""'"· '30-1916 8/11 $ll3S. 846--J.1&$ CUTE killen1, y;eaned • 22' Al.BA TROSS. equipped hawlcbrnken. 548-461.S S/9 lor raclna: $1100 (21S) 122- TRANSPORTATION 5653 aftft' 6 F)t. lloolf & y •<hh 9000 ALBATROSS No. 27. 5 Salls. boitt cover. Good mndJtlGft, BOS'l'ON \\'HALF;!\,;; wlcs., 673--0076 old. Ilk• n(IW, '° hp CORONADO 2S Cvlnrudt tngine It trailer ~" new • j)&fPlnl ·~ t:i.:triul ·SM:rltkel 643--0807 -14' HOii& CAT 38' ST£Pll'ENS Sldan. No. 363. ~ eve1. Bean I. rond. M.,, trade down. M'u&I atll. &46-.9518 White e .. phants1 O'im...unt ' ,... • ' ' I l I ·l i l I I ' I ' - I I . .. ,_ ' r • ~ I 1 I I • TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9520 Imported Auto• 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported A~tos 96QO ~ ' ' BY owner-# Aldcl'I Sloop, ~ C, IJC!W in!BkJr. Sl,ll'VeY $9,!ill)-lsf $7 ,500 C • I h • ft 0 h'•det See at 2MT \Y. Co6st Hwy, NB. Of'lfl door ta Dry GREENLE PARK Dock Rest. 642-1122 eves. or cool in clear, clean, I ,,:•~.,.'""'~5l&::.c4="~'=o::;:::c:::::: I l\tl'll.. Ne1v 92 space Adul~ CAL 20, MllOnal ehan1pion Park NO\V OPEN! Mobile ]968, All racing a:ear. New llame Display ?.1odela A &aa:ull motor. Xnlt rond. Sales office located at Park, mo ,.._,,,3. Slip ""· OPEN ' ~""8.lk \l'8Y Tl, Lng Bch M•riO .. 13200 o< m•k• ol-9 AM TO 6 PM ;:~E $3000 + •• , , " ACCENT MOBILE Newport 20 1lo11dr:~) •1"' " "' P 0 ' 1 moo''"' HOME SALB w/$3000 cash dO\\'n. call 1213, 681-58'11. • A LIDO 14 No. :iooo. "''" 10, 1750 Whittier ve racin1, immac-, ll !11os. old. Costa Mesa Comp. Uh"'""'-md . .,,,_ 714•, 642·1,50 er " 1rlr. Best offer. ~ 25~~AT, aux sloop, -llVE~NEAR-OCEAN~ ......... •un. "'"'""· "' New Mobile Homes boat. 2 sets dacron sails &: apinaker. ~fake olfer. ...,,,,, SABOT COMPLETE Ready to sail $26.S. Ir G~j..0810 26' T-BIRD SLOOP Best oller takes &IS.9000 Power Cruinr1 9020 32' TOLL YatAl<I ExpreM 20 AND 24 \VIDE INQUIRE SPACE 26 21-162 PAClf'IC CSI' H\VY HUNTINGTON BEACH 71.J..536...8500 21 X 60, 19SS "IOBlLE llon1e. Reasonable. 2 BR, 2 BA, (kn. Adult Park. 64~263.l Mini Bikes 9275 Cruiser. Ed r.tonk design. 6.xc 3 SPEED l\1ini-bike $50 SUZUKl't(J'rail Bike 120 cc F..xcellel'I• condition $200. 6U Kings Pt f.lc"'JIO.l'L Hela:hts HONDA C A 9:i f 130 CCCLEAN? S14:i ... ~-M8-n766 '67 SUZlIBl j) Trail-street.. rxC't'll cond, 01& lnJ, xtru, $185. \VkeJld.M,tJlis 8'13-7ffS '69 BUI.TACO Punang & ex· trai:! Xnlt cond. WJ. Aft 5 pm, 642--0697 BSA 500 cc SINGLE , DIRT Bll{E, l'CUbilt. $300 4~ 61 Li\~IBRl:.TIA 150cc Nrw ?Ylicht'.lhn X tit"cs. Runs .:ood S12:"i. 64~2740 Auto Services & Perts 9400 Twin 220 ~rey mnrines, law Bonanza i\1ini-bikf'. needs 4 SPD. Trani, Chrys/P\ym, houn. 65/\V radia/telt'phone, 11·ork S50. 646-4644 Hayes clutch. hook ups, many extras. Xlnt condi-TACO 44, 3~~ hp Hw-st shifter $125 847-$764 tion. $13,500. (Tl<I) l!J0.3796 Xlnt cond. $110 or besl offe r. TR.J rbll tran..c;, new syncros 34 FT. OfRlS CRMI Cabin 673--7584 & bearingll $100. TR.-3 ena: crui5t!'I', 'fi1 Cr u 8 ad e,• ~N~E~W~Z.~b~ra-;M=;,~;-~b;~,,~.~3'"H'"P $5(1. Joel, 846-9505. engine, \.'f'lvel drive, hea • M~ \1·hls. Front & back 1 -C"-o~-'-~~~.,,.-~ galley, bait tanlt, Ready to shocks. S I~. ~7Z7 FACT new. 150 hp. Corvair -1857 C:C='=':."-'='~-.~~c-1 rng, S500. & distributor $20. i:Q, ...,...... GO-KART. Tu•in i\lac 9"s 213: ·181-53.;6 213: 3.)3.815'1 • SKIPJACK 20' LOADED VERY FAST. All or part. ..... .. Bimini top & outriggers to _17200~. ~'"'"=""---,..-.-..,=~ 15:38 ratio posl-trac1ion early swim slcps " trim tabs. ~ M k Off Chevy, 5-15--02-16 ST.J..5126. Mini Bike • a e er Call a!I 3. 673-6787 .. """ •• '"l'c--' CA Mm KARMANN GHIA MGA S•f11• Renttll 1963 GHIA. Xnlt condlUon. '56 ?itGA ConYttt. X ln t Authorized DaJier Sl.295. Call 714/~ or 1ncchaqicaJ cond. wi"T"e Eldorado • Four Windt 63S-C3IO. w h t f' I a, new t I re a , s..aman • Bun.cud• I-=='======== I S<OO. - FREE ZEBRA MJNl BIKE MERCEDES BENZ 19'2 MARK 11 1600 Coov. with llW'dlue of any <'Xlr'l:l.S. Priced ri&bl, 601 camper or camper packaae! Powell Place N.B. 6*-3XJ1. Theodore ROBINS FORD 2000 Harbor Blvd. O>sta Mesa SU-00,JD or ges e ec 1011 New & U-.ed Mercede~ Benz Jim Slemons Imps. Warner & Main St. Santa Ana 546-4114 '69 FORD Cha1eau Club 8 pass wag., fac air, all ex- tras. 7,00J ml·immac. Incl. camper onit. $4395. 114 i\JUST SELL NO\V! SAC. EnlCrald, Bal. Jsl. 67J..9250 1966-2:',0 S. Allt COND. --;==~-~=""-"-"-I AM/1'~hl, P/S. P/B. Bl..K RENT·A·SHELL W/BRO\\"N INT, 6:.!,IXXl ,',1i. \VEEKENOS, \V EE KL Y IN CHEAT C.'OND. $'.!'.r:iO. P.10NTHLY * 839-1800 OR lSf GOOD OFF.t::R! '64 VW SUNDIAL RUSlf! :147~·169 C~J1600 ':>8 i\1ERCEOES 190SL Ro.la- • • stcr A Rea l Classic MUST sell, '69 Chev lnlck S9st Dee ls Are . At ~ ;!',;~;;., ... ' oUec. DEAN LEWIS C•mper R.1nt1l1 9522 1966 llarbor, C.i\I. &IS-9303 * X L·0· E GOlNG O\l"'rseas mu at E P R R * sacl"iflce rny \l"ifc·~ 1959 By week or month, Luxurl· !\1rrt.'edf'1'; 1!MJ sc-dan. \'('ry OU5, Sleeps 6. Self contain. clean. Askin$;" $.5SO. Cos!a ed. Llmilcd number. Call i\1essa. 5'19-1433 01· r11G-:>117 'L"'E'i's· URE RE 1960 !l.lc1"cedc.~ JOO. Clean. NTALS new lirc.s. $750 r ! rm. (TI4) 6~2-6611, (714) 837·3809 6tl ..... M:i2 ('VeS. tune ~uggies 9525 '61 ME~RCEDES190S[ $1800 JJ0-6998 DUNE Buggy Show Sale. Bodies from $149. Chassis .troiv-$249. La Paz Dunc MG Buggy Supermarket, 36231--------- MGB MGB '68 Conv. E\Jony Blatk F1.nlsh w 11 h n1a1ch"1ng lealht'r inleriar. .Fully equip, lncld. radio, wu'(• wheels. 'fonrwau. 6,000 m1ll'.t>. Aln1ost ne1\·. See &: drive today, J1rtuport 3l111ports 3100 \Y. Cea.st Hwy., N.B. 6-12-9-1(6 541J.l 7S. Authorized MG Dealer '63 !\IGB, hard & soft lop, new tires, radio, wire wheels. Very good cond. "lust sell. Mnkr offr r. '194·9808 '67 ~IGB/GT green, blk in- lcr. H/h, 11·irc whl.s. 23,000 mi. $~. 6-14-2887 OPEL '611 OPEL Station Wgn. Baby BluP. 4-sf}CCd, radio, rack. VZY163. $1597 Best Deals Are At DEAN LEWIS \V. Warner, SA. 546-4CM5 1961 MG Rondst!'r 1600, 19C6 Harbor. C.i\I. OPEN 9-7 wkdys, Sat l!J.5 :rcblt motor gd. top, tires, VW, shor1ened platform, ~nneau covefl'I, 83S-3j()() or IT'S \\'ONDERFUL the many complete running g e a r , 354122 buys in applia_ncps you find Corvair tngine & parts. TIIE QUICKE R YOU CALL. in the Oassified Ad:s. Oteck &1~1633 TIIE QUICKER YOU SELL !hem now? New Cars Speed-Ski Bo1ts 9030 Motorcycles DUNE BUGGY FULLY EQUIPPED 9300 Trailer, Travel 9425 Fun or SchQol 545-8195 17 FT. Airfloat Trailer _I========== sleeps 8, surge brakes, built lmp:-rt~ Autos 16' SCHlADA, blue flake, back-t<>back buckl't Mais, 85 mp r.terc, immac. $1600. 54>2759 18' HORJZON outboard Ski boat. Low prof1lc. 125 I-IP Mere., custom trailer. Xlnl cond. $2495. 846-2194 1967 16' Glastron, 50 h.p. Mercury. Xlnt concl. $1495. Call 673-2259 16' Ct.EN L (MalahlnH '67, 85 hp Johnson. $1 O O O. Hond•H * HodokcH Molorcycle l•oile~ Pottt * St-nice Fi11oncin9 & ln~uronce TUSTIN HONDA '24 E. F'i•it ot Newport fuuin 838·5112 AUSTIN HEALEY '57 AUSTlN' Heafey 100-6 BRG. Comp rebuilt"elngine. Needs clutch. $550 or best ofter. 646-6781 DATSUN ~--------...,.. '69 DATSUN PORSCHE PORSCHE '68 912 Co<1po Deep Bur&und.Y tlnl!!h \\Ith black interior. FuUy (•quip. Jnckl. AM/FM. Ch r onic wtieelJ, \vood v.·~cl, Etc. l6,<0> mUes. Showroom co11- dltion. J1rtuport 31111por1 s lloO \V. Coast 0 l·l"'Y·· N .B. 6·l2·9U)j !">-W-17&1 Authorized ~E-Dl>~ PORSC]liiE '68 912 T rga A gem! Every COJ1(•r1\ablr accessory u1cld, Chronic wheels, A~l/FM, E1c,_ I::tc. Yellow eitterlor with black interior. Se!'. & drive to be- lieve. J1rtuport 3l111ports · :11o0 \\', Coasr 11\cy .. N.B. 642·9·1o:i ~10.1764 Authurit.f'd i\lG Th:ah•r 'ti7 911-S, niug. 11hls. A:'ll I r r.t, PERFECr. J\lusl i;cll S5SOO Pri. Ply 548-7471 . * '65 CONVERT * Xlnt coud. All xlr11s, nu p11t, lop. f.lust sell. 646-123'1 '59 PORSCHE. Priced to .sell! ST:iO. Net-'Cls li1Uc "'Ork. 212'".: 30th SL, NB. DON'T JU~ WTSJI for some. thi.ng ta furnish your hon1e . , • !ind great buys In l<> day's Oassificd Ads. PORSetfE PORSCHE • 1967 Porscht> 9U-S Cou)M", !actor)' insta.lk>d. sports kit, Rally mUUl<.'t, (iyno tuned, A1nc:ir. mags. AM/FM, new Dunlops. $5000 t 1 r m . sn-3232. Xlll1, 1o1ork hours. -P-O-RS_C_H_E_'-65-S-.C-.-C-po !; Gleam~ Ruby Red w 11 h t black l.rtterior, EVf't)' pout-~ ble Pol'IC'he' exlra. Unbo- Uevablr t.'01ldltJon. 497-1558 hon1c , , J1rtuport Jltnports POF\SCllE '&i C Coupe. i ' w h I If' I bl k , At\1:/FM. 1 l'hron1!' \~hN>ll>, fog~ nc'"' ' clulch/valves. Xnll. S2'~:> J Prv prty. 4!12-l:llll 31~ \I/, Coo.st Hwy., N.8. : 6·12·9405 541J.l7~ ! ' TARGA ftx. fl. Wtnd. 911 Authorl:tX'd "'fG Dealer ' • '68, Full equip. G~n. [ _ _:::::::;::_cc;:. _____ .,._ Pcrlect Call 675-4971 11•knds. T!·W. QUICIIBR YOU CAU., l ; BRlliG R.ESUL TS! I Tl IF. Qll !CKER YOU SEU. .-: '. Imported Aut~s 96001mported Autos 9600 •1 ~~~~~[''· IOO~[Yl[Q][f]rtJl ~;. e HUGE SELECTION e ·1: '69 TOYOTA FROM $1790 :: o BIG SAVINGS • EXECUTIVE CAR SALE NOW! '69 TOYOTA HARDTOP ±;1977 . . 51977 '69 VOLVO SE DAN . Auto. ±;6590 .. $1977 NEW TOYOTA MARK II NOW ON DISPLAY! WE NEED YOUR TRADE·IN FOR OUR MEW USED CAR LOT DEAN LEWIS ORI.NG! COUNTY TOYOTA·YOLVO HEADQUARTERS 646 ·93"03 1966 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • . . . .. • .. ::. '. 9800 New Cars . 9100 •' """"'"' Boat Malnten1nce 9033 V.1ANTED: Cre1v or maint. job on sailboat . Ex· perienced. local ~fs. * 548-3341 '68 HONDA Trail Like ne1v. 100 miles. $ 2 7 5. 96&-22~9 S.....e at 9::i13 TurtJe- dovr. F.V. '61 HONDA 160. Brand l"IC\V rear tire. seal & clutch. Ex. cond. $385/bcst o If er ,,,...,.,. 1n range and oven, new wa t e r pump, newly rederorated interior, good tires, over ull excellent con· ditlon, Included al no extra cos!, casy-litf trniler hitch, two side mlrt'Ol'S, \l\'O ad- justable slam.I ~. A real bargain at $79;1. Sc~ anylinle al 1146 Charleston St .. Costa h1esa -just SQ\llh and r ast or San Diego Frreway and FairviC\Y Rd. intersection. SEAR'S Can1pcr ll'lr., hl'avy duty tent. Extra.c; incl. Coleman stove k lentrm; ---.~.,~e=u~L~T~A~c=o~--1 sips. 6. Like new $375. 100 cc LOBITO 962-7693 Big sedan, 4 dr, dlr, 4 spec~ front dis..: brakes, overhcadl com. spcedomc1<'r reads 32001 miles. Will niake exception- al deal lo prvt prty. Full pr, $1755. YNW 146 LB. Call Vic, 494.9773 or 5-15--0634. ORANGE COUNTY'S NO. 1 DATSUN DEALER DOT DATSUN CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY No Better Prices Anywhere ! M.rin• Equip. 9035 BENDIX MR 4. 32 ml radar, new condition. lli VAC or 32 VDC. Ideal for largc1· plea.sure cm.fl or 001nn1 vesM"ls. }IOOO radar for Sl!IOO + $200 lns!allation. "'-"" $225 Good Cond TRAVEi.. !railer, 14', sips 4, 6-12-9471 port. cabana rm. 'fjj model '61 'TR!Ul\1Pll Bonnie, G:;O cc, lots ehromf', new enr:. 1 owlll'r, Best oh· over $97j. &16-4203 '67 TRIUfltPH BON· NEVILLE T·J:20....R. Bendix poinl8. Showroon1 co n d • $900. 61.l-7467 in gd shape $700. 847-1358 HOUSE trlr .. 13", Very good cond. $300. 2431 Azure Ave., Santa Ana Jleit?.hts. 15' TRAVEL Trnilcr, sleeps 5. Xlnt cond. $:i95. *;1'19-1693• J883j Beal'h Blvd. Huntington Beach 812-7181 or 541J.0442 '68 DATSUN Big s!alion \1agon, auto trans, overhead cam, tllr. disc bra- kes. Pe rfect condi!ion. Tak~ P/.lR, 210 hp, V-8 Ma1inc enp. ?o.1arlnc head, Vacuum gauges, Elec. Tachometers, Kohler 2.Skw auto start marine generator. 673.-3261 WANTED: Live bilil lank !or outboard boat. Call art 5 pm, 962-8M8. Trucks only IJ500 !5.1• ~ A J s d' tradl'. Sacrifice. \VB.I 58!) -.....,.,...c .. , irt $300. 545·0246 4 \Vhcf'! Drive LB. Call Ken. a<l5-0634 ~'.:.._;_:,:_,_,~~".!:=-~"·:I •68 JEEP . , .... $2497 '65 ALFA Romeo GT Sprint '68 SUZUKI 120 Trail 7100 Coin1nando Roadster, i;harp. Coupe, ttd \\'·black int, mi. Ex. cond. Good 17o.:;o stereo lapes, $1800 as Is. dirt/street S250. 675-379~ all '67 TOYOTA .... $2297 714-496-1478 5:30 Landcru\ser. hardtop, looks "68 DATSUN Pu, R,000 n1\lrs. 1968 SUZUKI • like new, 500 l!kl! new. UOF 110 Likl! nc\v, All ex11-.is. $I62j FOR sale : Evin r udc Aquaoaut Like new. $150 or make ofler. 962-1870 miles. 20612 Kelvin La~. '66 JEEP ....... $2297 Priv Prty, L.:rrry 646-7290 11 .B. \Vagoflt'Cr, big 6. po11er s1ecr.I ~====··=====·I I ENGLISH FORD '62 TRIUJ\1Pll Bonneville 65() ing niresl \n town. SVE ?.68 BMt Slip Mooring 9036 CC. Just rebuilt. Best oiler. '63 TOYOTA .... $1597 67~1080 Lam! D:uisl'!r, hardtop, all I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. WANTED: ?S' slip f or """"'""""'°,.---,---,=c:-xtras + 11•lnch + wide tires sailboat. J\lr. 81~11. al '6~ BSA 650cc, xtra clean, ,. 4_ $150. Runs 11·e:JI. 545-7759. l.ir. "I~ •~. 547-5613 '67 JEEP P ickup $997 !JD' SLIP available A little \\'Ork horSC'. Lie. FSP South Coast Yachts MOTOR HOMES 9215 073. 6J5.1ll3 '52 JEEP ........ $997 Boat·Y•cht Charters BLUE\VATER U Drive Sall or Po11·f'r Skippcrt'd local sport fishini: Harbor Cruises 64&-90)) CAL 24 S2J day-S\50 \l'k; CAL 36 $93 day-$570 "'k, For Charter. 846-Zl57 Mobile Homes ANGEL Trailer on bea11tilu\ 5PQCf', Mari n & Park on Penn. N<'w S yr IC'll.SC. \vilh bay view. $7500. Gr;,-6383 or '1>-0912 I BLK , from Huntington State beach. 3 Bdrn\., 2 bath unfurn mobile home. Asking S900>, terms. 8-16-2674 wknds. If< aft. 5 ""kdays. 2 BR. tO' x 8', Full tub, ca· bans. nice park $19'3;; ~t come! 1st &erved! W-2139. 1560 Placentia A8. 28' ?llOBlLE Home on Space! 1 blk from Bay. $950. Joe Abraham 613-1418 afte r nooo. '62 LAKE\VOOD lOx~ den, 13500. * ~S31 . 10 x 46 1 BR Xlnt cond. Xln1 quality make offer. Sp ttnl $35. &U-4664 FOR MOTORHOMES ON DISPUT TKl lU. MOf DODGE "EXPLORER" Stlt-t1•1tftM •1'1111 lllr t•fl• llMlq, fllll ... Wla di""· lttclln, tl"'1 •IPL ALL lllt l. 11 fOOt, 21 fOOT, U fOOT, I 'lAlll fUIA~C- 1-Q All .lPPllO'lt• Clt Dtl. Mol>lleHomu 9200Mobil1 Homes 9200 BAY HARBOR "..".:!',' SALES Clearance Sale O• Al .,....., MMeoh 2t tto c,...._ fr•• .AN Sf-12' tto J4' WUe ..-----INCLUDING -----• "lilita1-y typt•. Only one in !own. LI('. \'XV 631. Best Deals Are At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.,..I. 6'IB-9.100 '68 Chevy Pickup Cus101n sporl truck, buckt't scats. fa ct. a.lr cond, p11.•r steering. rllr. i.upcr condi· lion! Cost $4400. Will sacri- fice 52099. LB 8S662B. Call Ken 49-1-9773 or 5~5"-0634 CAi\1P1NG & Surfing, '66 Dod;;f' Carry-all, V-8, 4· i<peed, lo book. 64~2238 11 SHELLS * Slight F r c i e: h I Dan1agt' 01£..\P! SD--1800 FORD PU. '54 t'lathcad rhlt motor. s~oo. 612-4248 212:> Ora~A\'e,01 '6.i \;, t(ln Fard, camper eqp"d. Sl~. 6\6-97o.1 e 195{! FORD PICKUP. Runs good. MUST SELL. $235. 4').1.-M)()j JEEP WAGONEER '66 4-\VD sl11.1k1n 11·ai; .. p11 r stcrnng. auto h'a.n~. hubs. 6 \\hc('l~. CXL"l'I lll'CS, \l.'I'}' )OIV ni\lt,>5, TEL ~33. $2495 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Jluntil'l$;\On Beach 8fi-Sa."J.5 ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME ENGLISH FORD DEALER SALES· SERVICE '63 ?.IODELS lmmediate dC'livery LARGE SELECTION Theodore ROBINS FORD 21)i(} 1-larbor Blvd. \ Costa Mesa 642·0010 FIAT FIAT For The e Best Selection • Besl Trade.in • Best PMcc CALIFORNIA SPORT CARS :; 12-.'i!lpl --~.6-7-FIAT __ _ 8.iO Spur1 Coupt-, ni,·r~I In IOI\ 11. ' 99'-"'l $1397 Best Deals Are At DEAN LEWIS 1966 llarhor. C.i\f. 646·9303 ---'59 FIAT 1100 Rrbu!H l!llg. -1 "P· Slit>k. B1•11u1Jful rond. ?-lust Sec' S:?:lO. 6 IG·~jl),'t --.~=== FERRARI • FERRARI !'\e'll."PQrt lrnporta Ltd. Or> •nge County's only author- ized d~11ler. SALF.S-SERVJCE·P ARTS 3100 \V. Coast H"'J'· Ne\l>l'Qrt lkaetl 642·9•105 540.1764 Authorized J\1G Dealt>r JAGUAR • IOLIAWAY CASA LOMA C.UrTAS SHIU.TON MANOa MIT ,,l.Ylrw ,. PRISflli'E IAT HAllOI HOMmE COIHILL CflflRnY COOT 4·1\"J\Cf!I dMve ~mpht· 1961 ,JAGt:AR 3.8 &•!:in. bklus'. Go anyv.·hen''. lnc-lud· Ai\T/Fi\I. 11.uto. chrome \111-c FASHION MANOI SAHAIA 1425 BAKER ST., COSTA MESA V1 11.c• hit .t H•tt.r "" ,__. <'l'i 11'811t'r, mud clcat5, prop, l~"~·h0l',·~',.'"'~·-';·~'i-'~'-~'-~"'~'=,.-,-ll~ clc. 4*8441. TllE SUI\ NE'\'ER Sl:.'TS o.. '5' ;EEP 4 whttl rln\•e Oassifh.•<fs: action po"·u. '67 MERC ED ES Bet>• 210 SL Cp•. R~''" !»r. AYlo .. P.S., ltru•d'· ul e te. UKH 'i45 55295 '68 DODGE Co•on1t 400 4.dr. l1cl. .,;, '""d .. 1ulo lren1 .. P.S., R&H. IVGB 979 52595 BRAND NEVI 1969 SPECIAL '68 IM PALA 1 Dr. H.T, Fee ei<. •ulo h1n1, power 1leeri n9. WJM 189 $2495 D~LUXE COUPE v.a, auto. trans., power steerin g, tadia, he11fer,, tinted windshield, white walls. Many other exfr.is. No. 4332792122721 $)09 5 '66 OPEL ~•1tb•c~. 4 •petd. •a· d oo. hea!e•. SVC 897 S1095 '65 OLDS 88 4 Door i..,dtop. f1clo•v '"" cond., powtr 1tee•., ra:!io. h .. ater. NOY 14& 51395 --------:---'65 MONZA '66 MERCEOES 200 Stdan. Auto Irani l11d ;o, hailer. !mM~tu· 1,.1, co"d. ! SVF 2~ I> 52395 '66 MERCURY Com•I Cvclo n1 HT Cpe. 6.or Cond. ,<1.T , PS, Low ,..,i,,. llOH 10• ~ S1i95 '67 DATSUN Rl 411. • •Pe•d, •adio, he•ltr. TZJ 19•. $1295 '68 BU IC K [lec+.11 4 doo~ 1eden. Full pllwer. FACTORY AIR COND. WID 345 53595 '66 IMPALA 4 Doe r H.T. Feclo•v eir cond., 1u!o. Iran,,, pow. t r 1!ser., radio. he1 1t r. 51695 '63 BUICK L. S1br11. F•cl 1ir con, p~w1r ti••• .le br•~11. l~YM 4111 S995 067 MUSTANG ConYlfl. va , " 1pt~d. r~d;o, heal~•. TXS IOJ 51695 '67 RIVIERA GS Cotjpf. Full powPr, ~ACTORY AIR COND. P I~ I $3595 '68 PONTIAC '~:;nneYoll1. I doo• hard. too, f A CT 0 RY Atll: COND., P.S., P.8. W XG . " 83295 H•rdlop. Auto. 1r~n1 ., o'l"lmfcul,.te cond,f1on. !iXJ 370 1 S995 '69 ELECTRA Cu1!om co~p•. F1cto•v "" cond, Full v pow1r 1quipped. YPT •4& $5195 '69 FORD LTD F~cr. , " PS. PB .. '"'" """'· Onlv 4900 mi on "'~"'"'~· YPS 810. S3495 '67 MERCURY Montcleir 2 d oer ~ard 'op. Auio. I•~~•. powo• 1ltt•. R!H. UON-704 . 51795 '65 ELEC TRA Hatd!t>p coupe. Full pow••· FACTORY A!R COND. NCB 410 51895 -~~~.---'66 CAPRICE ~-d r hdlo ~ufo. h •~•., FACT. AIR COND .. P.S, P.11., R3H TGJ 1~q 51995 OUR OPEL PRICES START AT $1 777 NO BETTER PRICES ANYWHE RE JAGUARS MAKE US PROVE GT! LA RGE SELECTION NEW· USED Complete Sales and Service Department Open 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. OP EL. JAGUAR SALES & SERVI C!o CAU 14 .. f410 TODA 't Statlon \Vasr:on $3.iO ror an ad to M-11 Around ___ .....:"~'~·~'"='~·---.--'"'--"=°'·····2·='='2"='=~=·""::c.':.... ''~iii!iii!!iii!!!!!!!!!!!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiii! • ' ' ' ' • • .... -.... ----·---~----··....._ ~-·---·----~ --------------~--·----------..............----------.----.---,. --· . --. • • rr1dlr, AtltUst 8, 1%9 _ 9tOONew C1n 9800 New C1rt 980bN•w Cara 9IOO MtW C~rt NEW CAR CLEAN-UP AT JOHNSON & SON DON'T WAIT TOO LO·NG ! ! UH NU.R NEW LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL 2 Dr eouf*, ..,,_,, I. rur ll'Mllt. ... thtr '"ttrlor, blKk vlnyl reef, hlfl'I tol'OU' u11, w 1 Wiii Ml!«! tlrff. POWW V41nl·Wlndo-f wtV pOWtr ..... '"''°" mule. •Ir t;Olld, AM rMllo, R.$. •PHk.,., tint 11i.u. comPllft "°""" dOor i.c.M. ftYllAlil.O:lt NOW ONLY ................ $5920 llAND NI W COUPI 1969 COUGAR Model tl MW. b~ ll'ltltlllo;. A~nc. w-Wllt. POWtr '"''" br1kn. 1lr cond, r-.:tlo, 11111 1111.-, i re. $ff,,.'"' lllCk , ...... WAS .~~.vE . s51548 NOW l ll$.t7 · LINCOLN-~ONTINENTALS ------.. HAND NIW 1969 CONTINENTAL COUPI SMUlll11t pltlitlllll'l. Fl.R """"' IH!lltt, Y.nla. I WIY '"'• fl,. ~. lilt ..,._t, 1\lfO., 1!r c:ond, #IM·FM radio, tint lllala, IOCb. wllHI r;(IW~. W• Ir. IMf tllll!ortc.-t 19 ''" you l\oW m11ell .,.ou11 NVI, bVt ll'I plll\ty, SM, # to75') Stoek I IW NOW ONLY ................ $6084 IRAND NEW COUP! 1969 COUGAR Model 91 Ugoht IVV ~llo\111. AlflOnllltC tr1.,., w"1f1l11, con-, pow.r 1tff•l"11, br•k•, 11r concl. AM r•dlo, llnl 11le11, r.fl'IO!• mirTor. Sir. I 5ll60ooft SIKll: # •511 w•• .~~.vE s517.oo NOW J61t.OO UH NU.R NEW LINCOLN°CONTINENTAL t Or. (OUll9, Lt f rtoeft, L11111et" lnterlot", dk told Ylnyl "'°'' Ill torqw Ult, w 1 wt!IJ llS.U Ml!ecl, po-v.,t wll'ldllw1, ' w1y POW•r .u.1. 1111 1i.w ""'"!, 1uto, 1lr cand, AM·FM t.cllo, rur •-k., llnl 1111ss, complUt pow.r IOc.ks, ll1r.i wr-.. 1 c:ov1r., I JYllANn11. NOW ONLY ............... $6080 SEE BOB MANGAN COUGARS • • • BRAND NEW 1969 ~UGAR Model 91 1.1. lql>I, ••Itel 1~m, w-w1Us, POWlr ''"'· brlk ... tlr cond, r1dlo, citcOI" f;<"l>Ufl. llnl glt11, cltl\IKI Ut'I< 1n. s ... I~ Stock #.SU SAVE WAS 4169.60 NOW 3645.64 523 96 • • • 1969 NEAR NEW LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL •Dr t.01n, Mod. t rttn. IM !tltr ln!erltf", 41k gold vinyl roof, lllgll IO~ ·~ ... WIWlll bsllM Urn, po-Vtl'll Wlndo'Nt, • \lllllV OOWt• IMI, Ill! llttr lfrlflMt. evtO, 1lr cond, AM·FM. ralJIO, ,..., ipHk ... , !!Ill gltq, power' doof' IDct,a, fll'"*' -I UIY,ts. f tYl1AllltlS. NOW ONLY_, __ $6260 SE! WAYNI SQUIER llAND NEW 1969 COUGAR XR7 ' 1969 NEAR NEW LINCOLN°CONTINENTAL 4 Or ...,.n. Front ~ rMt ml!1, loMlktr Interior. Vltlyl roof, lllgh !Orqu. IJ:le, WIW111$ 9111) bt!!td, JIOM• "''"' WI~ ' woy POwtr ,...,, i.par1 ll•e 1;0¥.,., ltll •1-lng ""-1, ffl:k lld rel .. H, 1"""6 tofllrol ..... "'°"""' 1uto, 1\r eano. Jo.N.-FN\ rWIO. tint 9Jaq, 11)11. PrO!tctlotl f l'Ol,IP, POW'ff door lock$. f1er.o wtlffl <Ovtn. I fYnMMnt, NOW ONLY .••..•....... $6490 S!E PETE PELIUS I S I RAND NEW 1969 COUGAR XR7 Whit• flnlUI, .. lll(t tlllf!, WIWllll, COOfOlt, ~ ol"r, brlk•, 1lr COM, AM r.Olo, !h'll Olli .. , lllNrda. Str. # 51l:IN S*ll: I oM$3. SAVE WAS 4SOJ .IO NOW l711.JZ SELECTED NEW CAR TRADE·INS. MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM! ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. •·• ............... . . . . . . . . . . -. • 1967 CONTINENTAL • • 1965 CONTINENTAL • • 1968 MERCURY • • 1965 MERCURY COMET • • 1968 MERCURY • a eon ... rt1tot1 bMullhJI oa.n TurtwDil-9 llnl"' wlll'I a .... 1en1no lfl!Ulor Ind Wlll!I fo9. Compl•~IY IUKU•V • • .quh>pld, tun powtr, AM /FM r•dlo, 11ctorv llr, tllt ~Ht, tic. ( brll'ICI Mw tlrft. Tt>l1 II'"' Clf must • • bl lffn to bl IPPtlClllld, UOA11A, : SAVE AT. ............ $3195: • • •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• • SPORTSMAN'S SPECIAL • • • • Convenlbi.. S1fln b11clc flnllll Wll!I bltck ltalhtr a iri""1or •nd bltck fOP, Full pOWlf t11ulppecl, rlClll:I •fld t>Nltr. f1ctory 1lr, blaul!l11I Condl!lon, Driven • Ol'llY 31.000 mlla. NOZBOI . • • P•rt Uf\e COl\Vlf'tlblt. ~Nu111111 901d brOllrt flflltfl • • • • Colonv P•rt: • ,,.ue..o•• stetlon WIOOfl. AitrKl!w • will! ml!dllnv lt!ttrlor end W!lltt 1ep. Full pOW91' S!tllop W1p. V~, 911'mude Slue M1st w1111 rN:tcr.. Cerllln.11 Rlld t1n1111 wllll bltcil cOtnfDrl·-,,. wlnyl a • .,quipped: t6dlo 11'111 l!Mttr, 1lr cond!llOrllnO, iflNr • • Ing lnttrlor_. Aul<l,.,.tle trlnt. rldlo I. llMttr, POWtr • a Interior. Autom1llc tr1,,. .• rldlo, htaler, ,,.,.., a f\IW, drlwtn <111!'( t,000 mllH.) SPt<;ltl 1111rd1111 • ifffrtng, t it condltlonlll\I, ulrl clMn. RIN.56.J • lei-. IK!Ory t it eondlllonlfllil, PGwtt 1t..,.1n9, ~ a a lrom Ford Molar Co. •rid Jtw!~ pllUld "" ta a a br1k~1. 4..,..1 1Cllon 1111 pall. Only IJ.GOO mll& a )'9\1, WVXU.Z. NI. )614 • $ •• $ •• $ •• $ • • SAVE AT ............... 2195 • • SAVE AT ................. 3195 • • SAVI AT ................ _ .. 1395 • • SAYE AT ...................... 3995 • . . . . . . . ~ . •••••••••••••••• ••••••••&••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . • ........... . • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : 1967 COUGAR : : 1966 THUNDERBIRDS : : 1968 CONTINENTAL : • 1968 COUGAR COUPE • • • • '"°' JE&P WAGONlElt $t91Mln W1;on. Cll1vrol•I • • v• eOflvtrlld q lnt, o1-whlll drlV41 wllll duel.tnal\C aaa111tl1,1I Roy1I ..,_roon •lt'h blle:lr. tnttrtor. Auto. traM .. reolll a.·t>Mttr, POW'ff .-.rino, l1c1ory l ir ~Ulonlng. Exc.tlen! lllro11111'1o111, VE1"2 a AttrK!I.,. llm1 Frost flnbll W'llh RWldllnv lnttrJ.or. a a ,• Auto. 111111., redlo & .... let, -ttlietlnO, R1dltl a 8 Pl}' tlrtt. etc. ~ ..... uc11i....1 ur•. U01r1117 CHOICe OF TWO-lltTBT2A. lal'ICla11. Brllllh ,...1,111c • or.en llnllll'I w!lll ll'Mltclll"D 1n11rtor 1nd bltc:lt 1tnda11 roof. f<iulpped wtlh 1uto. 1'1n1,, It&.~. P.$., P-wlnd,, • P·""' factory 1lr eondlllonln;, •le. Priced bllow • 4.DOOlt. Uf!Cl.tV, a•ulfllll For•I GrNn Mi.I tlnl&ll • with ..,,.Wl'"9 lnltrfor. luxury tqUlppitd lllfOtllll\O\ll. a f,..m wllttl• ttdk> 1. 11111t<", r111r llfW Comma...cio • a • tlru/ SH 111111 drhf to IPP~ltk, IJOTOt2 • • • $ • : SAYE AT ............ __ $2650 • • • • $ •SAVE AT ... -................ 2175 • • • • F11t1 ·-r. l'Ml9 • hlollt r, flctorv 1lr cClr!Cl!llonlno • • • K1lly'1 wt>O ltMlt Slue &ook. • • I. rnor•. Clrl'm! Ollly 11.000 milts, Like new, .ZLH:t21 a • • $ • • • SAVI AT ............ --·-1825 • • • • SAVE AT .................... $4395 • ; SAVI AT .. -.. --·-1495 : ••••••••••••••• 1 •••••••••••••• 1 '··~···········' ~ •••••••••••••• : , .............. : NEW CARS 540-5630 • 642..0981 WE NEED YOUR TRADE·IN -MORE THAN ANY OTHER DEALER .Johnson+ son ' ' 11!.U!IOIDll!.W ll!IDlllrDIUUS1'AR. • lll!lmlll! m • llEllll!IWIY • ll!lml!Dllil :MM HAUOl IOULIVAU, C011A ..... 9600 1~.~rted A_ut_o_•____ Imported Autos USED · CARS 540-5635 9600 lmPorted Autos 9600 lm~rted Autos VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO l 9600 L!O.VE· BUGS! ''Home of Herbie'' PORSCHE '61 Super Coupe Bahama ;vellow /black Inter-· ior, A Olerry! Olrome wheels, wood wheel. radials, Eec. Etc. Mint in every de- lail, *SUBARU VAN*11965·-vw---- F.or Immediate Delivery Sll50 1500 S square back. '62 VW sunroof, new eng. new clutch, good tires. $850. 962-8388 a(l 6 pm VOLKSWAGEN '68 vw VOLVO BUYS J1r tu µort 31111porl'1 31oO W, c.oe.st Hwy .• N.B. 642-MOS 540.1764 A1Bo one low mileage , . . 497 iBls Allk ~ DON '6!I ¥,am demo 14329 S995 I =-·=-·~~~~-* Set the new subanl 1100 '68 VW Sqbk. 20,0C.O miles. 'NO?' (In dlsolay! G~at condilion, AM-FM KUSTOM MOTORS radio. Make offer. 646-1996. 845 13aker St, Costa Mesa '66 -V.W. one owner , 23,000 540.5915 ml., ex. cond. $ 11 9 5 , 847-3351 H.B. TOYOTA '67 VW BUG. Good «>rnlitloo. -;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;;:;:;;;;;::::::;I s 12 1 s o r b e s t c ,. '66 V\V, xlnt cond. $1225 or belJl oiler. 640-6245 '65 BUG. Sunroof, 35,000 mi. New tires, tuned exhauaL Good cond. $975. 646-4a:JO '65 SQUAREBACK. one owner. Perfect shape! Pric- ed right! 673-1379 Camper Deluxe Llke new, -Fully equipped. Hurry! Lie W AB-314 o~.~oJl ~"' '67 122 .......... $1797 Automatic, radio & htater. 1TI'74.1 Extra Sharp. '467,144 'u" •• N ... ·uv· ~! . oor. c. o, IW<» Automatic t:ransmissiOll, air conditioning, '6S S44 .......... $1297 Fast Back, scarce model, radio, heater. 4 1peed. No, 1346. '62 122 ........... $997 h't th1 car th1t won't 1J iv• yo~ 1nyfhin9 to w-orrv about, W1 ma•• 1ur1 of tht f, Wt 9iv• it th1 VW 16-point 11f1ty and pt rform111c1 t11t. It hi t to p111. So w1 • 9iv1 it 011• 100% 9u111nl11 th1t wa'lt 11pl1c1 111 1111jor mtch1nic1I partt• for l,O d1y1 or 1000 mil11, wkich1v1r com11 firat. h n't th1t whtf 1 n1w car·ow111r n11d'17 A b119 th•t won"t clr iv• you nutt. Authoriz~ MG Dt-aler Porsche '68 (T)OIYIQIT@ :;; ~ ~4Squu, bad< Best O.al1 Are At See to appreciate! DEAN LEWIS '97·1835 A•k lo< Ooo. '66 VW Sq-bk, eng. comp. re- blt. Pirelli radials, Must drive to apprec. 83G-0194 '65 VW BUG, xlnt cond , new tires, low mileage. 549-3031 E:rct/ 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 4 Dr. &'(Ira clean ZACl13 '62 Pl800 ....... $1297 Sport coupe, Silver wl\b red interior, Lie. HIL.896. Low, Low Prices on Thew SPECIAL-LY PRICED BUGS! HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS '66 PORSCHE '63 vw '66 GHIA t 1z cour1 SEDAN c ourE Ouhl1ndin9, ori9in1I fint Automatic 1tick 1hifl, R1d'io Y1llow with bl1c• lnl1rior. clr ivfn9 ct r. i:; .. , 1pt•d ht•l•r. Ebony with con· Economic1I tumm1r '"' fr1n1mh1ion ' FM r1dio. lr111fn9 lnt1rior. l ow mil•· c•r, R1dio ind h11tar. l ie. ••• with black i11!1ri or. 191. l tc.No.XEW6!3. No. VTU s ••· U c. l G3349. $1899 $1699 $4399 167 vw 163 vw '66 vw S!DAN. CAMPI R l IOAT FASTIACK SIDAN W~i11 with bl1ck inltrior, l o•! i1 c1rri1d on lop of Go!d'tn I'''" fini1h -a rtdio • h11t1r • !la1uti1UI c1mp1r. P1rf•cl in1t1!!1tion b11utlful color. lt't ro11fy original cir. Com1 in ind i nd c1mp1r inl1rior it v1ry diff1r1ntl R•dio l h11ter. t11t driv1 thit ci r, Lie. No. cl11n. PNH •S6. RHX931 VEO 66J. $1799 $1699 $1699 '67 vw '68 vw '66 vw ••• SfUAll IA.CK CONYIRTllLI Hird to find', 1a1y t1 \uy Rod with bl1ck lnt1rior. Sho""" 1rc•fl1nl Cltl. ,, R1dlo ... h11f•r. Don't '"' ••c1ption11ly cl•111. nic1 •• "' 101d. R1dio mi11 thi1 0111. sts tss • YXV 516 l h11t1r. l ie. No. PIY 16 h $1999 $2099 $1499 Targa 9111. ,,,.,...,, Porsche 57 Coupe $900 Finn, also engine parts 675-5729 P ORSCHE '00, 9UT, 5.'1 wa.tT. AMIF"M/SW. Imma.c. Pri Ply, 545-9403 SPRITE '61 SPRITE BUGEYE S.175 * 546-8165 SUNBEAM '64 SUNBEAM Al p i n e tlardtop, new paint, lire11 &. carpets. Excellent condition, one owner. $1000 or be~t of. fer. Private party. 847..so84 Imported Autos 9600 SEE IT NOW NEW TOYOTA ! .~Jl~!:.~~ e 'Ply T"°" e to H.P. l ntilnt e 4 1peM e Wlnll• ahS.14 W•th9n '57 VW, new paint, Bahama yellow. Rebll eng. Empi ex· 1966 1-larbor, C.M. 646-930:! haust, new sunroof. 613--ZTIS BILL MAXEY '68 VW Bug, blu., 19,00o mi. ~~~-~~,,,..,......,1 wty. $1750, Xlnt cond. !Tl()IY(OI TIA) =~1Sodao, auto. lo mlg, 18841 BEACH BLVD. por!ect. Hunt. 8e1ch 847-8555 642-6938 3 ml N. of eout Hwy. on Bch '66 VW Fastback, 2'1r sedan. 1967 La d ,..__. HT 2000 Orig oWner, gd. cond. $1300 n .... , ulser. , S42-Sm mi, winch '& chain, A/C &I°"===~~~-~ heater. Awe gas. Custom top 1968 V\V Pick Up, Low mile· loader. 4 a lum. storage box-age, s1ill warranty 536-6405, es, trlr hitch, c:rptg, salety1 ,•~v-'~'-"-'-------belts & hand hPlds. Hubs. '65 VW bus, 9 pass, R/H, 2 Misc tools & equip. $4000 in-ne"' 'tires, gd cond. Service vested-for $3100. 546-5856 ~· e c o r d s a v a. i I • VOLKSWAGEN '64 VW bus, 9 paaa, xlnt. rond, new paint & eng, Call after 6 p.m. &19-3022. '68 VW Sedan e!Ml '67 VW Sedan/or trade for VW Bus. 96:1-2329 '66 VW engine & trans $3CIO. 419% Fernleal, Corona del Mar, aft 7 pm. 51· BUG R/H 63 full syn. cromesh trans. Tn1stworthy trans. 20 mph 645--2740 MUST Sell -'66 VW Camper. Full y eqpt, lo miles, xlnt cond. $2,495, &42.1536 $1350 * 833-2262 $900 495--4485 '61 BUG, Xlnt cond, $1500, Or best offer. ·~31 • '64 VW, clean runs gd. Reg. serviced. $975. After 5: JO p.m. 548-1883. '68 VW Bus, like new. 8500 milts, all e:rctras. Ownen transtemd. 642·1316 alt 6. '66 VW BUG SUNROOF. R/H. xlnt cone!, $1100. 495-4S50, Laguna Niguel • vw oBus • vwe Re. Bit. Big, Eng. Nu. Paint $1555. Cust. Duals. 642·3927 Find tt with ,_ want ad! '68 VW, auto stick, perfect cond. Radio/heater, ski rack. $1850, Call Mrs. Hott- man, 642-3870 bet. 8-5. '57 VW ~built engine, needs brakes, runs good, * szoo * 54n.0862 ' '58 VW S un roof, recent valve job, radio, clean in- terior. $350. 494-1559 VOLVO '59 VOLVO, needs todJi, $85. 6'&-0034 ·os Volvo P 1800."81ack. 47,000 ml. Orig ov.11er.$Zl95. * 67l-.1!113 MGC-GT COUPE MGB-GT COUPES MGB-ROAPSTERS MG-MIDGETS AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITES Tiie Fabulous, Fant mtle, Ama%ing AUSTIN AMERICA Best Deals Ar• At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, CM. ~93m VOLVO Btst Dealt Are At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-930S 1969 Volvo, 1800S. Top cond. Fully eqp'd pd. um mi's. For info. call 67&-TI4l bet. 9 AM- 5 pm, wk. days only DAILY l'Dm WANT ADS BRING RESULTS? 9600 9 lp1ie Tire. H11t•r ltaM&nl '63 VW Su nroof, runs GREAT. Oeanl Hurry $750. 642-3028 1968-VW 2--000R Sedan $1500 Firm 6~1135 e 1WO '69 '/W BUGS, 9,000 & 12,000 ml. MOVING, HUGE INVENTORY FINANCING AVAILABLE + Tj.x, Lie. 6 FrghL Bill Maxey ' I [T(OlYk)IT(Al \ 11."1 BEACH BLVD. : Hunt. BHch 147-8555 $1795 ea. • * 4!M·3198 '67 Bug. Excellent $1300. 835-1631 aft 6 pm. '67 vw 11525, 'kept in Xlnt mnd. FM ra.dk>, lo miles. 613-3261 '65 VW Camper. gd. cond, be11t otter. SJ&....2178 . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY GOLD SEi'L USED CARS C H 3 mlltt North or '68 vw, :xll'u. •59 \TW $.100. 445 East Oast ,· nhway ' Coast llwy. on Beach MllBI "11 bolh. 61Sj9.12 ':II 111'1 !!!i!~e~ .... ,;;;;;;;;,.,,lvw '61 Llk• "'"·Riff. 9,100 ~uth~rized Au stin America-MG Dealer ot ·llAYSIDE DRIVE, N EWPORT BEACH For o.uy PilOI Want Adi ml. $1.'lll5. 8'2-3024 3100 W11t Coo1t Hlw1y -N1wport BHth 642-9405 -540-1 764 ,_..,_.._.,__ ____ ._. ___ ._. ___________ ._._ .. Dla1642-5678 ~rRESULTS l·l~llbl~t.~•~l~,~~hA~o-~~!~Dl~m-... ~.U~no·lll .. !!!! ....................................... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,.....,,,....,~~~~ ...... ~~ .... ~~..,,...,...,,..,..1 ' \ l • • , • ' f· " • ' ' • , • ' I I • , • • j f 1. l l • I l I -~--------...-----------------.-.,.----------~----·-----·--------,-.... -. ----~ OAl\.Y Pll.OT F'r~, Augutt 81 196• •• :l.~l!.l...;::.;:.:f'iAi;;,-.;.;;;N¥;S"'"6"'.R°"T°"A"'T"'IO"'Ncr--.,TRA""N"'S'°PO~RT'TAi'Tri1i'iONM0 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION AT CONNELL CH·EVROLET WE WANT YOU TO ~PIECE OF THE • '63 FORD WAGON r1dio, h11t1r. COKM· $695 TOTAL PRICE +Tix Ilic. '65 CHEVELLE M1lib11 convertlbl•. Vt, 1111fo., PS., 11dio, h11t1•. ISIH 1l I) $1195 TOTAL Pl lCE + Tix I Llc. '66 Ford EconUne Van $1295 TOTAL PllCl R1dio ind h11l1r. IV226JOJ + T11 I Lit. CHECK THESE EXTRA • SPECIALS! • '67 OLDS~f.85 $1995 TOTAL PRICE C11tl111 S11prern1. Vi11yl roof, 11110· T 1 Li Mtlic., PS .. lllH. fTVR 644 1 + •• c. '68 CHEV Impala $2295 TOTAL S..5. Auto. tr1111.~ f1clory 1ir con• PRl~E . lllltioni119, redio, h1el1r. WAK 827. + T11 & lie. '67 CHEV. Caprice $2295 TOTAL St1. W911, Au to. tr1111., f1clorv eir PR ICE . co11dilio11i119, pow1r 1t11r., br1k1t, + T111 & Lie. r1dio, h11t1r, lir11. 197911. :~~ .. ~~~~: .. ~!~,;,~.~~ .. $1395 ~~:t~. k.1t1r, tir11. RIL489. +Tix & Lie. '66 CORVAIR Con• con¥1rtibl1. 4 1p11d, r1dio, h11t1r. I ROY 3651 '65 T0 8IRD Spo•h Coup1. Auto. tr1n1 .. f1elory eo11d., r•dio, h•1t1r. IXP 9118, '65 PONTIAC Grend Pri1 H.l .Cp1. A11to. tr•M.t f1clory eir co11d .. r1dio, h1et1r. NRY 9111. '65 FORD F1irl1111' Dr. V-1, 111!0. lr1111., 11dio, h111!er, YWB 025. $1195 TOTAL PRICE +Tix I Uc. 395 TOTAL PR ICE + l1x I: Lie. 495 TOTAL PRICE + lei & Lie. $895 TOTAL PRIC E + Tix & Lie. '67 PONTIAC GTO $2195 TOTAL PRICE Spts. Cp1, V-9, euto. tr1n1., fectory • eir cond., r1dio, h1el1r. Wll 712. + l~x I Lie. '59 CHEVROLET $49. 5 TOTAL PRICE , +T•x&Lic. '64 EL CAMINO V-1, 11110. tr1n1., El C1111i110, pow- '' 1l1<1ri119, r1dio, heeter. N76105 $995 TOTAL PRICE +T11IUc, '67 PLYMOUTH $1895 TOTAL Furv 111 2 Or. H.T. A.Ito. tr•n•.. PRICE Acow•r 1!11dn9, r1d io, h11t1r. + T1i I: l ie, TBMl 62, L '68 CHEV. MaHbu Sph. Cpe, V-1, 1uto, tr111t., pow1r 1!11rin9, r1dio, h11!1r. 210790, $1995 TOTAL PRICE + Te x & Lie. '67 MERC Caliente $2095 TOTAL COUl'E . PRICE F1cl ory ,;,, power 1!1erin9. Auto· + T & L' metic, t1dio, h11!1r. VOP 216. •• IC. '63 CORVAIR Monza COUPE 4 Speed. R1dio, h1et1r. GWll. 651. '63 CHEVY II red io, $69·5 TOTAL PRICE +Tix I Uc. $695 TOTAL PRICE + T11 & Lie. 546-1203 Sport Cars 9610 Autos Wanted 9700 Uu d Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 U sed Cars ·9900 U sed Cars 9900 Used Cars -------- '67 Corvette Sliritr•f F•lfb•ek. 4 tp•1d, AM/FM r•die, h11!1r, 10411), $3395 ~~:t~ + Tix • Lie. '67 Chev. Yz· T $1395 TOTAL · PRICE + TIX & Lit, '66 Cadillac Co11v. Y-1, eufo, fre11i., feci1,.., 1ir collCI ., full pow•r, r•dio, h1et1r. Sii 061. $2395 ~~r~ t Tu; • l ie. '68 Amb'sador H.T. Coup1. Fief. •ir, pow1t wi"dt I 1f11r. 11.lH. l'o1ili••ly lik1 br11Mi 111w. VSS 45J. $2695 TOTAL + r.~~«;~c. '67 Mustang 2+2. F1cfory eir c0Mlifio11i"', pow1r 1te1ri119, re•ro, h11!1r. TVY 4-40, '66 V.W. Bug ll.1dio I h11t1r. SNU 406. 095 TOTA~ PRICE +Tu•Lk. 9900 Used C1r1 '57 PORSCHE Sunroof, coupe, 1 jet black. JKF J.13. SALE! Will luy BUICK CHEVROLET COUGAR • FORD OLDSMOBILE OLDSMOllLE PONTIAC .$1 397 Bo•t 0..11 A,..AI DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor; C.M. Your Volke\\>qen or Porsche '65 LA SA'BRE convl, xlnt '61 CHEV. 9 pass sta \Vllg, is le pay top dollan Pa.Id for cond. Going in 5ervitt must running. Exe for surl bug. of not Call Ralph' sell quickly. No reasonable gy. Best offer o/ $100. • 673-0900 ofn; turned down. 673-J9Zl 67~736.) l ==_,,...--,-~~-r .lMPORT!i \\'ANTED '67 RS Camaro, bottle blue Ocange C.oonti.. CADILLAC grn, • '"" "'''· R/H, TOP $ BUYER 33,000 ml, xlnt cond. S1700. Antiques, Classics 9615 8Il..L ?ofAXEY TOYOTA '61 CA.DlU.AC" Sedan de Pvt ply. 548-TI83 alt 6 pm 1888.l Beacb Blvd. Ville. Al_I pov.•er Including '65 CHEVY. Xlnt cond. Auto 1938 FORD H. Beac.h. Ph. 847~ facto1-y air. N<'eds some mo. 1 Pl I' ~°"'"""======I tor \\'Ork. Body is sharp!! b'""'k · .. ~~k "'Pvw t '~1 '' Orl¢nlll Ford Coupe. Very •· 1375 00 870 en~~ ra es, s ........ s. pr y. good condition, Auto leasing 98 1 O , · · · . """"""' S995. Call 494-5687 645-1441 ¥.I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ 64 Cadillac Coupe de V!Ue, .65 IMPALA · t nd \• orig own<'r. ail', leather, '. mln ro ·• LEASE .. RENT Sl590. 642-2013 ~fr,, p/b, 11.1r. rl~. new ALL POPU LAR 1~~=~--=--·1 tires. f\lust see, S1650. MAK ES '61 CAD Sedan DeVille. Good !>4S.-lJ34 9620 FORD Cond. S,19S. 6-12-3850 Days: l-7.,~,~Q~IE=vy~~,-ooo=~R eves. 67~26.'l9 AUTHOR IZED 1=~==~==~=-1 automatic. 6 cylind<'r. '68 Cougar, full pwr, air, ~nt con<!. S2550. 962---0S42 FALCON '61 FALCON, n ew eng., brakes, painl, tir~. seat covers, generator, etc. $375. ~11 6-2032. FORD '67 FORD Fairlane 500 Excellent condition. Brand new tires -tape deck - $1800. 538-6306 Rice Ca rs, Rods '65 MUSI' ANG GT Serie1 4 1pd. fa.stbk. mags, cam, twln carbs, hdrs, HD clutch. 67""106 EAS G '65 WlflTE Cad. S2295, Like Good rond. $19.l 644-1368 L IN Ne1\', See at JaS E. 19lh, CM ========= '6!1 FORD Chateau Club 8 SYSTEM 548-6231 PDllll \Vag. lac air, all ('X· Get Our Competitive Rates r ~~==~~~---1 CHRYSLER lrai;. 7.00J m1-in1mac, Inc! Theodore '&I CADILLAC Coupe de ---·-__ camper unit. S4395. 11·1 ROBINS FORD Villi'. full JlO\\'l'r, air, great Emrrald, Bal tsJ. 673-92:'~ rond. $!550. 540-782S. '67 CHRYSLER 2000 Harbor .Rlvd. Autos Want.d 9700 Costa Alesa 642-0010 1--------CAMARO 2-DOO R HARD TOP '66 FORD Wagon, fully equpcl w/air . P/S. P/B. $2350. 642--8400 d a y s • S4S-0797 eves. '67 FORD Cortina, 4 spd • I.rans., 1 owner, xlnt c.ond., $1175. !',4;-Hlll7 aft. 6. '6T GAL 500 2 dr HT. fac air, p/s, P/b, auto tran<i. Vnyl int. A-1 $1175. 541)..3178 68 GALA.XlE 2 dr fastback. PI S • P /B. Auto. w/ta~ & radio. 54f>.. 7353 '68 Ford Torino 390 high perlonnance, 4 spd, dlr. P\\'1' disc: brakes, one owner, near new. 'Will take older car in trade. WIL 871 LB. Call Ken 545-0634. '65 FORD Galaxle 500, 390 V- 8. 4 spd trans. S900 or best orrer. 642-8434 aft 5. UN COLN • • TORONADO NEW & EXECUTIVE ONLY 6 TO CHOOSE FROM BIG SAVINGS! University Oldsmobile 2850 Harbor Costa Mesa 540.9640 • PLYMOUTH RAMBLER 9900 ' WE PAY ..• CASH '"'""'""''!"!!' .. ~!!"'""'""'"'J--.:::=:::=:.,=. __ Jv.g, automatic, factory air, ,,,,,,, LEA.SE v' i67 CAMARO 350 v..a power steering, po\ver bra· '68 Cadillac Coui>e de Ville, Auto, ps, fiM"misl blue, kes, radio &. heater. lmma- fully equipped. Sl29 mo. landau top. ITD212. culatc. (UDE 7431 '68 FORD F·IOO, Bl0e 8 oy\, 3 sp. 20,00J mi. Take O\"t>r payments. Pay off $1974.24. l\1obil Station, 101 N. Harbor, S.A. 531-9245 '60 l'ORD Station \Vagon. Radio, lK'a!er , w hi I e sidt'1Yal\s. Good rond. 1250 cash. 548--2879. 237 E. ~th. Ci\l '67 LINCOLN, orig. owner, immac. cond. Lt. green v.·/\·inyl top. Leather. All po\1-er &: air. $3295. 440 Seville, Balboa. 675-3506 REAL Sharp '66 0 I d CJtlass. Hol. Coupe. Gold v.·ith blk. Landau top, lo PONTIAC TR AN SPO RTATION Car-1951 Nash nins good, $100. 546--6656 aft. 5:ll pm. .. for U9ed can 6 trucks just can us for tree e.Umate. GROTH CHEYROl.fT Ask tor Salee Mana.au lB'lll Beach Blvd. Hunlin(ton Beach IO ""331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. C'neta Me!Ca 54&-1200 CONFIDENTIALLY We Pay More For Fort:ign Or Sports Cars PAID FOR OR NOT B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER 2833 Harbor Blvd. o:.ta Mtsa 540-f491 WE PAY TOP OOLLAR r.or cood. dean med can, Ill maJns. Stt George Rtl,J Theodore Robirui Ford 2fB> Harber Blvd. CJl. 612-0010 BUSIEST -"' town. 11le DAJL Y PILOT aa.USed 9'Cdor.. Save -· tlmt • •f!ort. Look -It '67 Fon!, JO J'&'S •totiM WO£· * AIR * $2295' on. r/h, air, ps, $75 mo. '67 Ouys Nwpt, rir $67.50 mo. Priced 10 ~en th is 1~·eekend. SOUTH COAST KUSTOM MOTORS ATLAS CAR LEAS ING 845 Bake1· St .. Costa Mesa 300 W. Csl Hwy, NB 6tS.2182 540-=;,.'i•;=;c---ICHRYSLER -PLYi\-IOUTH '67 CAMARO 2929 HARBOR BLVD. Used C•rs 9900 327. 4 5pd, dlr, xlnt condition! COSTA MESA 5-16-1!134 TRANSPORTATION CARS Flaming red ext., plush Open Daily 'tit 10 p.m. llWPORTfR Molonr bl".' '"I. .s.onr.~! Liko '61 CHR YSL ER IU foM!ign r.ar 1n trade. Full pr $1599. UJH 173. LB. Call Bill NEWPORT - 2 Door 2006 HARBOR BLVD. 49-.. 97i3. • CREAM PUFF -Black with l'OSI'A MESA black Int., auto. trans., NEW 548-5294 or l41-1511 CHEVROLET """"1'· radio.,,..,,,, pow" FINANCING AVAILABLE 11\cerlng, Have record ' of what has be@n done to c11r TEAOiER lelllviJli c.ntry '6.'i Chevy Impala 2 Dr1 Gnnd in past Only 2 owners. \Ve Musl !ie!ll car, Xlnt cond'. cond. Auto, V-8. $1200. have o\vncd car past 6 See at 3061'-farguerile No. 2, 675--6578 yl'ars. Have 3 Chrysl<'~ CD!'i-1 '61 6 cyl, r11dlo, sir, OC'ar new mus! sell Ont', this is th<' lil'l'~, runs \\'ell. n d 11. ONE! Xlnr running l"flnri~-BUICK ?"<'pa in. 67~9(2, G.7 pm !ton! S.195. Cali 8•17-66"<) af. _________ 157 OU.."VY, 210 Stauon 28.1 1f'r 6 PM .. Owner1Pn\•att '63 .RIVIERA, Sl.000 mi.. A.T. R 11. If. Good condltion ,,P,.'"1Y;;,·======= ~ rteords sinct n t' w. $300. 547...Jl82 '54 OIRYS LER CU'l'·A\\'AY. r, lthr, w/w, P/w, P/b, '59 CHEVY wagon. new \'i'ork car. v.·/bike ~uler. Pis. Lt. green-Firernlst la· lires. carbure1or l eng. 54!>--0246 tunc/br&.k'!s/tires. Dr ' a Good body rond. 8.17-749-1 I-;======== QIH!r R~nt tune • brake•/ '63 OIEVY II Nova. r/h CORVETI'E tlres.1?."'• car. SlNi or best .11uto, ad. oond. S550. 162.11--------- o!Jcr. f>46.-0164 or 646-0SlB Vernnno Pl, Ir1:int 83J..-10Z1 '66 VET Conv, 4-spl'Cd, '64 BUICK S<yh1rk convt. 61 Cllt..'V. Gia• bodied fliM .Ut/Ff\1. 377/350 hp. SJ.rm Pl&. buckrt scats. sm. bike l75cc BSA. Make oUer. or best ofter . 842-81.98 After 6 pm, 549-0120 pvt, 2218 Puente CM •''· ' CORVAIR '6$ RIVIERA. All Extru ~SPORTATJON Spl'Cial! • ----- plu11 11!crM . Must "Sell! ~1~-ar"u rur:;~~·1 · 61 BUS 65 f'nginc. 4 carbs. 4 ~. 968-lS64 aft 5 .,.,.. 0 t'r. •1 iipc'f'd. R11fllo, rhl'l'lme rin1,, 1960 CHEVY IMPALA Run11, nt'M f'nJ!i™' "-ork. '61 SPECIAL • dr V-8, P.s.. J200. Joel at '46-~ Good buy S500. 64.'>-27•IO P.B., auto, fa ctory air.1 __ =====~--i--~===~=-- Runs good. $385. ~ SOCK TT TO 'ENJ SOCK tT TO 'EMI MERCURY mlg. nu whl/\1-all !ires & "67 FIREBIRD 400, disc: T •BIRD brks, R/H, custom blk llhr brakes, tach, p/s, vinyl top, ---------11' Int &. bucket seau. Console 22,00J orig ml. Forced to 1966 T-BJRO, full pov.w. " with tach, P/S, P/B. P/W, &'11 $2195. 968-2840 LO\V BOOK. '61 FORD Ga!axir. Nrw gclll'rulor, two 11('\V ttrl!s. Good lransportalion/~~nd e&r. R:1dlo/lleater. $200 or Ix-st orfcr. 6·12-6401. fart air. :l\1ust see to * 833-2737 * '61 COLONY PARK \\'agon, bellevPf Private Party Best '64 Le~faJl.11 ~ convt. Nu Ir 962 2860 · paint. Orig owner. Best of· '65 T-BIRD, full power, ilir., ~ = ~f~ tires, clean. 0 r.r. • fe r In 5 day1 takes it. cond, wholeule blue book · . \Vhltt El:tpbants ! 673-3481 price, $1550 642--0ll6 '65 1'"'0RIJ \\'agon 6 pass. Fae air, radio, auto trans:. P/s. Polirl11111 tires. $ t 6 7 5 . 5'15-3952 ·57 f\·lrrc Col. Pk. \\1gn. 10 =========~========::=========it pass, a/c, rack, PIS. PIB. Pl\\', pwr. scats, spcl. C'Ont, au!o door IOC'k, Af.1/FM, mlK:h mo~. $2650. 830-6448 'Ii& CONVERT SSS. Xlnt ronrl , Beautiful. Air, P/S, P/B, S1600 645-4.JTO ·=~-~---1960 FORD. good trans .. radio, tires. S150 or best of- fer. • ~~l t • '60 FORD Falcon stahon \I agon, in sujl<'r rond.. for MUSTANG only $l;i([: H/H, auto. '67 i\1l!STANG, 'Lime Gold j!47-0.\1.1 ~ J-'11st bllck. Auto trRn11. ~1oos="G"'°A"LA:~x"·v".-,,-"-10-.,-,7;,-. I 1ur-roncl., dl~ brakes. P/s, JlO"'l!.r \\'1nii0Wfl & seats, many cxcn.50rics. Brand nt'\V 111-cs, :dnt cond. l'K'\\' ~u!"ipension i bJM-\lp. 968-l!i61 S1ill undrr \V!U"l'Rlnty. Like fl"W 11.I Sla). 8J9...U'4 '67 FORD Gal11.x1e 2 Dr. llT Fully equip, lol\' mi. V<'ty '68 FORD P.fu11tang a.ir con- cle11.n. See Supt>rio.r Shell dllloning, tak!. OVf!l' pymnts ServiCf', 1495 su~rior. NB. S•lriO. 67J..1500 'f,6 F'ORO \\'airon.. fully equip'd w/alr. P/S. P/B. OLDSMOBILE $1995. 542-8400 d a y I . '1)2 f"85 OLDS. 9--pa.!11 w.gon. MS-Om e~·~. 712 Larkspw' Avt., COl'Ona ---66 F-o-rd70F"•71r"'·1-.n-t--de.I P.lar. 549S 1 '·~66~D"LD~S~f~..,",~071x-4~d-,.-,~ir. 2 Door Loflded. VS. t'IC. I.le. !>""' llll'r &. htlu. Sac. prv IRP.f9-19, Phone 642.wll Dir. 11ty. 5-19'-Z\07 Rfl 5 p.m. OlAL direct &12·567'S. Oiru"&e '&..II OLDS r.as akllr'p. grey. your ad, then ail back &nd No c~h. Take ovrr pymnta. Usten to the pbon@ ting! $83/mo. (Sl970) 673--5561 I ' ,.......,._,_._,....., ... ,.-*•~·~··.-·. --~~~---...... -~----------·-·-------------. -----~ ---. • . I ' TRA"NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO"! TRANSPORTATION \ ..... ~ • .., • • , ' l • LEADING THE WAY IN AU.GUST-!. _______ _ • WITH ONE OF THE BIGGE ST STOCKS IN ORANGE COUNTY, GRAND PRIX ROY CARVER IS A GA I N LEAD· ING THE WAY IN THE LAST. MONTH BEFORE THE '70s ARRIVE! It's Only A Little Over A•l:.1.5nth 'Before Next Yee r's Models Arrive. We're Selli ng Th e "Car of the Year," Grand Prix, At The Most Reduced Prices Yet! WE'RE LEADIN&. THE:WA Y WITH GRAND PRIX! ••• But Not ONLY GranCl1Pri x. Our Huge Stock Of Over 150 Brand New .I 969's Includes Bonnevilles, Le Man" Fire- bird5, Catalinas, Custom S's, A Great Stock Of Wagons And Just About Any Model And Color You Can Think Of. So • e WHAT ABOUT LIASIN&? ••• IN MANY. INSTANCES LEASING YOUR NEW CAR HAS DISTINCT FINANCIAL ADVANTAGES. ROY CARVER CAI'! LEAS~ ANY MAKE OR MODEL AUTOMOBILE. INCLUDING ROLLS llOY:Ct. LEASING MAY 'e! FOR YOU. DROl'..ff,j· AND LET'S TALK IT OVER. BUY NOW I SAVE NOW! '68 !I~.~~!!~,~~ .. , ...... , ....... $3277 d ow1, r•dio, h•aler, while w1 ll1, f•clorv •it co~dilioni ng,-custom trim, r•llv It wh11h. (WFI 1651 I 6 7 ;~.~~~~:~~~:~,;~~~~:~~,~~'; $24 77 '66 FORD GALAXIE $1817 500 2 Door h1reltop. VI, 111tom1tlc, pow1t 1!11ri ng , power br•~•t, redio, hw1t1r, white 1id1 will tir1J, fectory •Ir conditlonin9, I RQL 1'51') whe1!1, 27,475 miles. Blue w/bleck inferior. IUJC t.951 '67! FIRiBIRD H. 0. $2377 '63 OLDSMOBILE $1177 '68 ~~:1~~ .. ~~~~:;~~;:: .. ~:i;$34 77 350 V8, ~ 1p11d, po ... 1r 1te1 ring, r1 dio t nd Cutl •n sport coupt . V8 enignt, hydren'lalic h11lt1r, while 1ida will lir11. burgundy with lrtn•n'lillio~, powttr 1!e1rinq , redio, h~•~~'• black ilYterior. (UJC 777 1 wh ;1, w1 ll1, feclory air conditionin1, tilver/ tir11, f1ctory •ir conditionin9. IWAE 5)$) 0 blu1, V1ry low n'lil1191. !FWX 78JJ '66 ~~~~~~~~'''"'"•· "''' ....... $2177 '69 TOYOTA $1777 '67 !?.~~~~~~~-~'"''"'"''"· $2177 4 1p11d lr1n1mi11ion, radio and h11!1r, whilt 1id 1 w•ll lir11, I 5,1'75 mi!e1. Light blue IT5l08) r1dio •nd ht•ltr. {UVH )431 ' with dirk bl u1 inl1rior. SERVICE DEPARTMENT OPEN, MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. 7rl0 A.M. to 6rl0 P.M, • • SAUS DEPARTMENT OPEN1 8100 A.M. lo 9,30 P.M. EVERYDAY []] I !TZJ 1a1'J (j 8 NOW ON DISPLAY ••• THE TRANS·AM. Fl~EBIRDI 0 Equipped with 400 c;u. in, Ram air en gine , 4 speed trans mission , push button radio, 'tinted windshit!d, F-70 wh ite ltttertd f iber9l•11 belted tir!fs, special hood with lon9er func;ti onal air sc;oops, deck lid 1ir foils, front spoiler, 1pe,i1I f1.1ll length stripes on hood. (223379Nl06455) ' ROY CARVER PONTIAC • ALL CARS PRICES INDICATED IN THIS AD ARE, Of COURSE PLUS LICENSE AND TAX. • 2925 HARBOR BLVD I COST~_ME_S_A,_ • • I ' ' I • .- l .J • • • ' ' ' .. • l • ------------~ ---... -----·~-~~--~· ~r-•--.•r~·~··---···~-~·-·~·~·~-~-~---•••••~·~·-_,,....,.,.,.,. • .,,.r;~,.."·"'"..,.,,.........,...,,..,.,,..,..~~. "·"""• =,,.,.,...,.,.,.,,_,..., . ....,.,.,,.,.,., =-.r . . • NEW · ·1969 THUNDERBIRDS OVER 2 ACRES OF ROBINS RELIABLE USED CARS NOW REDUCED FOR SPECIAL SPECIAL SUMMER .SAVINGS!! STATION WAGONS Finest Selection cf Fords •nd Chevrolets, Country · Sedan end Country Squ ires 2-68'1. bGIWplt: Some with Air Condltlonlnt 1964 FORD t PASSENGER ·5895 Y-8 ,ngirie, Crui1ometic trensmh;. sion, radio, heater. I ORNS44 I 1965 FORD f.250 PICKUP $1395 ~ ton Custom Cab. Radio, heater, , euto., new low profile tire1. IR19020) 1964 FALCON DELUXE WAGON 5795 V8, AIR CONDITION, lu99•9• r•ck. ISVY671 I 1964 DODGE llART 170 2-Door. Equipped, 6-cylinder. IPBYbOSI 5495 19'7 FORD CUSTOM 51195 Y-8, FACTORY AIR CONDITION, R&H, P.S., P.B. IYCUSSOI 1964 FORD CUSTOM -5995 4-0oor Sedan, V-8. AIR CONQ. euto., R&H, Low milea9e. I YWS- 4261 1''3 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 5795 Auto. •r•ns., R&H, P.S., P.B., AIR CONDITION. IJJV9201 UH VOLVO 1225 51295 4-•r••d tren1mission. IR E321 I - 14.fOOT TRAILER 51.195 Northwest Coach. Sleeps 6, stove, ice box, dinette; 2 butene tenks. Beautiful condition, I FE70 l 7 I 1967 CHEVIOL!T IMPALA 51795 Hardtop 4-dr. V-8, auto. trans., P.S., a ir cond., R&H. IUKU1571 4 Door Sedan, .City of Ne wport car. 1966 OLDSMOllLE s995 v.1, automatic, radio, heater, 131 126 J ' 1967 IUICK ELECTRA 225 52995 FACTORY AIR, full pow er, vinyl roof. Excell. cond. I 0110 I 1968 RAMILER ROGUE $1995 American 1 Door. Hardtop. Auto., R&H, P.S. Extre sh•rpl IVWV4031 196' FALCON 2-Door Hardtop. Auto. trens., radio, he•ter. INYP460) 1962 GALAXIE 500 4 Door Seden. Air conditioning, adio •nd h•ater. 100A62.3 I ' 1965 CHEVROLET NOVA 4 Door. Autometic tr•ntmission. •dio, heater, I REGl95 I ' I 963 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Convertible. Autom•tic transmis1ion, R&H, bucket seats. ! FWP792 ) 1 968 FORD CUSTOM $1595 C ity of Co1te Mesa l••s• car. Fully maint•ined at Theo. Robins. 390 V-8, cruiso., heater, P.S., •pprox, 36,000 mi. 1114907 1 1964 RAMILER AMERICAN 200 Wagon. Automatic transmission, radio, h••+er. ( KAN454) CREAM PUFFS Many, Mafty Mort to Sel.tct From! • '66 DODGE CHARGER F•ctory air conditionin91 •uto., R&H, power steer· in9, white w•lls, blue bucket seet1. Exc•llent con- dit ion, I RSW865 I "67 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU 2 Door. Purchased new here. F•c:tory e ir condition. ing, f•ctory warranty available. (VCK029 ) "68 GALAXIE 500 2-Door Hardtop, 390 .VB, automatic, vinyl roof, P.S., approx. 18,000 miles. Factory warranty •vai/. ablo. IWXG4751 "69 FORD F·250 3/•·TON Big 6, Cruisomatic, heater with SCOTSMAN C.b over Camper. Approx. 4,300 miles. '68 CORTINA 1600 2-Door Sedan. 4 speed, radio, heater, approx. 14 ,000 miles. Warr•n+y avail. IZDS84ll '69 COBRA FASTBACK Auto., R&H, P.S., •pprox, 4,200 miles, like new. Blac k jade. Factory warranty av•il. IZLH88l I rvW'JERJa<--. ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY AUTHORIZED . DEAUR I READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BUY! GOOO SELECTlON TO CHOOSE FROM RENT! ECONOMICAL RATES BY DAY·WEEK·MONTH Lar9e Inventory of New "69's For Immediate Delivery. Three only-New 1968's Now Slashed For Immediate Clearance! OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK ' , 00 OVER ~CTUAL: FACTORY INVOICE! NO SALES EXPENSE, NO PREPARATION CHARGE NO DEALER ADD-ONS OF ANY KIND! YOU CAN DRIVE HOME ANY NEW '69 T ··BIRD IN OUR BIG STOCK AT THIS PRICE! TWO-DOORS, FOUR·DOORS ~ 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 FO-RD TRUCKS OVER 200 NEW 1969 MODELS NOW AT FINAL CLEARANCE SAVINGS! ENGLISH FORDS 'of i1 ·i~ t1 f! li "a ANOTHER BOATLOAD JUST ARRIVED! En9land"s No. 1 SeRer ••• America's No. 1 Import Buy! Customs -GT's-Station Wa90ns. Lar9e Selection of Automatics and j=our Speeds! VACATION SPECIAL! FREE MINI BIKE WITH Every Camper, Truck & Camper Unit Or Motor Home Packa9e Sol~ ! WHY "BREAK CAMP" TO GO PLACES WHEN WE WILL GIVE YOU A NEW ZEBRA MINI BIKE ABSOLUTELY FREE WITH ANY CAMPER, NEW TRUCK & CAMPER PACKAGE OR MOTOR HO ME YOU BUY ! Example Vacation Packa9e: New '69 V·I Ford 1/2 -Ton Pickup I' IEO, OA\IGES, EXTRA LAllGIE RADl"TOll, HIAV1' DUTY jl'IUNOI. f UY RE'906J. Ntw B•rr1cud1 600 C•m~r CAl·OVE•. IUTANI! AND ELECTIUC LIGHTS. DIHIMO MODIC TA.LE. 1ros, llNK ANO !)RAIN, DllAl'EI, ETC. TRUCK, CAMPER, MINI BIKE N•w '69 Zebr1 Mini Bil(t tJ~ 53295 . VISIT OUR COMl"Lnr CAMPER CENTER -CRUISAlllf, 'Olll WINDS, IA.RltACUDA. CONTIMl"O SPOILIR, SUNDIAL, ELDORADO, GIM TOP, MINI HOMl, CHASSIS MOUNT$ , • , ALL ~fADT TO ROLLI . RENT YOUR VACATION HOME ON WHEELS! You 10 whtr• you want, 1t•y where you w•nt without 1ched- u1,1 or "urv1tlon1 when you rent • Robin Dlhtll• Pic kup C•mper or Condor Motor Hom .. REASONABLE RATES RESERVE EAIL Y (ALL SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH NEXT SUNDAY UNLESS PREVIOUSLY SOLD.) 2060 Harbor i A'·' • 'PM M(JNC"" r R1C•A r • SATURnA re AM ro 0 p M PARTS & SERVICE HOUR~ PARTS ONLY ' '1·1 •• 1, ,.., .... tv6rrr lh..M TC~PM MONDAY •7AM i06Pt) Tuf;r1 .... rrR.OA1 RA~.~ f(l6P~~ ')ATU1:[iA'r . I I I " ' ' ,